II. II. WILSOS, VOLUME XIX, NO 3G. TERMS OF PUBLICATION- Ta Joita Sekti.hl is published every 'YTeenesdey morning, on Main street, by H. H. WILSON. The ?rBSCRIPTIOS PRICE of the paper will be TWO DOLLARS per year in advance, nd 2.50 if not paid within the year. BENo paper discontinued until al. ar rearages are Tpaid-axeept at the option of the " a..t,...T1,. of ADVERTIS ING are for one square, of ..oht lines or less, one tinw, 75 cents; three. $1 oO: and 50 c,.. for each subsequent insertion Administra tor's Executor s and Auditor s .Notices, S--,0J. Professional and Dimness Cards, not exceed ing 25 lines, and including copy or paper. $$00 per year. Merchants advertising (changeable quarterly) $ 15 per year, includ ing paper mt ,neir Sl0"""- Notices in reading .olumns. ten etnts per lino. Job Wo. The prices of JOB TV ORK, for thirtr Bills, one eight sheet, $1,25; one fourth, $i,(H ; one-half, $3.00; and addition al numbers, half prict and fur Dianas, $2,00 per quire. MESIDENT'S . MESSAGE. rtUov eiliiau of tfie Senate ani Houte of Repre$mla(icet : To express gratitude to God, in the name of the people, for the preservation of the United Slates, is my first duty io addreaaing you ' Our thoughts next revert to the death of the lt rrei-lvnt by an act of parricidal treason. The grief of the" nation is stilt fresh; it liuds some solace in the consideration that he lived to enjoy the highest proof of its conndence by entering on the renewed term of the Cuief Magistracy, to which he had been elected ; that he muiihl the civil war substantially to a close; that his loss was deplored in all puis of the L'nion; and tbat foreign nations have rendered justice to his memory. llis re moval cast upon me a heavier weight of eares tiiat ever devolved upon any one of his pre decessors. To fulfill my trust V need the sup port and confidence of ail who are associated nitU ine in the various departments of gov ernment, and the support and confidence of tlie peopic. There is but one way in which 1 can hoj a to gaiu their necessary aid; it is, to stale with frankness the principles Which guide my conduct, and their application to the present state of affaire, well aware that the efficiency of my labors will, in a great meas ure, depend on your and their undivided ap- The l:uion of the Vaited States of America ws intended by iis authors to last as long as the States theuiselvcs shall last. "The l nin thall be perpetual" are the words of the confed eration. "Toform a mure perfect Viuon." by ,u ordinance of the people of the I'uited States, is the declared purposo of lha Consti tution. The hand of Divine Providence was never more plainly visible in the afliiirs or men than iu the framing and the adopting of that inslrunicnt. It is, beyond comparison, the greatest event in Aa-'rican history; and indeed is it not, of all events in modem times the most preguant with consequences for evry people of the earth ! The 'members of Con vention which prepared it brought to their work the experience of the Confederation, of heir several States, and of other Republican governments, old and new; but they needed nd they obtained a wisdom superior to ex perience. Atd when for its validity it re quired the approval of a jet-pie that occupi ed a large part of a continent and acted sep arately in many distinct convention", what is More wouu rful than that, alt.-r earnest con tention and long discussion, all fec'iiuk and nil opinions Wi;re uiinuait.iv unr,a iu u" way to its support ! Ihe Constitution to which life was thus im parted contains within itself ample resources or its own preservation. Is has power to en force the laws, punish treason, and insure domestic tranquility. In case of the unsur psifon of the government of a State by one mac. or an oligarchy, it bscouios a dmy of the United Stairs to make good the guaran tee to that State of a republican form of jrovernment, and so to maintain the homoe noousness of all. Docs the lapse of time re veal delects T A simple mode of amendment is provided in the Constitution itself, so tint its conditions can always be made to con 1 orm to the requiremeats of advancing civili jation. No room is allowed even for the thought of a possibility of its coming to an end. And these powers of scs'.f-preservation have always been assorted in their complete integrity by evry patriotic Chief Magisirale by Jefferson ami Jackson, not less than by W ashington ami Madison. The parting ad vice of the Father of his Country, while yet President, to the people of the United States, t,..t "the fra Constitution, which was HAD I""" Ihe work of their bauds, might be sacredly : 1 .' a ti A tin inmicrtirfLl wonla ,,f i mainiaiuct, --- - a President Jefferson held up -the crcservation tif the general government, in its constitu tional vigor, as the sheet anchor of our peace I home and safety abroad." The Constitu tion is the work of "the people of the United Kales " and it thould be as indestructible as tho people. " It is not strange that ihe fraraers of the Constitution, which had no model, in the past honld not hve fully comprehended the ex cellence of their own work. Eresn from a struggle against arbitrary power, many prun e's eutlred from harassing fears of an ab sorption of the State governments by the gen ral government, and many from a dread that the States would break away from their orbits. But the very greatness of our coun try should aliaj he apprehension of encro achments by the general government. The subjects that come unquestionably within its jurisdiction are so numerous that I must ever naturally refuse to b embarrassed by ques tions that lie beyond it. Were it otherwise (he Executive would eink benenth.the bunlen. ,he channels of justice would be choked; Wi station would be obstructed by excess; so th at there is a greater temptation to exercise .ne of the functions of the general govern ment through the States than to trespass on fheir rightful sphere. "The absolute acqui escence in the decisions of the majority, as, t the beginning of thejoontury, enforced by Jefferson "as the vital principle of republics, -and the events of the last four years have stablised, we will hope forever, that there tit no appeal to force. Ihe maintenance of the Union brings with it f he support of the State governments in ail their rights ;" but it is not one of the rights .f any State government to renounce Us own rtlice in the Union, cr to nullify the laws of ih TJii. r liberty i ta. ,,V)cj:n Cc .V.eo of i c. the Federal government, but there is no ap- peal from its Uws, except to the Tarious branches of that government Uaalf, t t tbe people, who giant to the members of tne Legislative ana esecutuw Departments no tenure but a limited one, and in that man ner always retain the powers of redress. "The sovereignty of the (Streets" is the lan guage of the confederacy, and not the lan guage of the Constitution. The latter con tains the emphatio words. "The Constitution and the laws of the United States which shall be made in pursuance thereof, and all treat, iisniade or which shall be mads under the authority of the United States, sh-,11 be the supreme law of the land ; and the judges in every State shall be bound thereby, anything in the constitution or laws of any State to the contrary notwithstanding." , I found the States suffering from the effects of a civil war. Resistance to the general gov ernment appeared t J have exhausted itself. The United Sates had recovered possession of their forts and arsenals, and their armic. were in the occupation of every State which had attempted to secede. Whether the territory, within tLe limits of those States should be held as conquered territory, under military emanating from the Presideut as the head of the army, was the fir3t question that present ed itself for decision, Now, military governments, established for an iudefieite period, would have offered no se curity for the early suppression of discontent; would have devided the people into the vau quisbeiv and the vanquished, and would have envenomed hatred rather than have Restore affection. " Ouee establish.', no precise limit to their continuance was conceivable. They would have occasioned an incalculable and exba'tsting expense. Peaceful emigration to and from ttiat portion of the country is one of the best means that can be thought of for the restoration of harm.ny, and that emigration would have bceu prevented, for what emigrant 'rom abroad, what industrious citizen at home, would place himself williugly under military rule? The chief persons would have follow ed.in the train in the army would have been dependeuts on the general government, or men who expected profit from the miseries of their erring fclluw citijens. The powers of patrenage and rule which would have bceu exercised, under the President, over a vast an I populuos, and naturally wealthy region, are greater than, unless under extreme ne cessity, I should be willing to entrust to any one man ; they arc such as, for myself, I could nrver. uulcss on occasions of great emcrgen- ronseut to exercise. Ihe wiltiui use ot uch powers, if continued through a period of cars, would have endangered the purity of lilt general auo-inisiration auu iw uunun mi the States which remained loyal. Cesides, the policy of military rule over a conquered territory would have implied that the States whose inhabitants may have taken part in the rebellion had, by the act of those inhaoiiants, ceased to exist. Hut the true theory is, tnat all pretended acts of secession were, from the beginning null and void. .The States cannot commit treason, nor screen the individual citizens who may have committed treason, any more than they can make valid treaties or engi-re in lawful commerce with any foreign Power. The Stnles attempting to seoodo plaeed themselves in acondition where their vitality was impaired, but uot extin guished their functions suspended, hut not destroyed. liui'if any State neglects or refuses to per form it oihees, there is the more need that Ihe general government should maintain all its authority, und, as soon as practicable, ro- ;-uue the exercises of all its functions. On I his principle I have acted, and have gradual ly .v.id quie.ly, and by almost imyercept.b.e 3:eps, sauglit'to restore the rightful energy of the general government and of the States. io that end. Provisional Governors have been appointed for the SAtcs. Conventions called, Governors eh;cted, Legislatures assembled, and Senators and Representatives chosen to the Congress of the United States. At the same time, the Courts of the United States, as fir as could be done, have been reopened, so that the laws ot the United States may bo enforced through their agency. The blockade has been removed and the custom houses re established in ports of entry, so that the re venue of the United States may be collected, j The Post-office Department renews its scase less activity, and the general government is j thereby eua'.iied to communicate promptly with us officers and ageuLs. Tlie coutts bring security to persons and property ; the open ing of the ports invites the restoration of in dustry and commerce ; the post-ofiice renews the facilities of social intercourse and of bu siness. And is it not happy for us all that the restoration of each ane of these functions of the geueral government brings with it a blessing to the States over which they arc ex tended " la it not a sure promise of harmony and renewed attachment to the Union that, after all that has happened, the return of the general government is known only as a bene tijence ! I know very well that this policy is attend ed with some risk that for its success it re quires at least .the acquiescence of the States which it concerns ; that it implies an invita tio l to those States, by renewing their alle giance to the United States, to resume their functions as States of the L'nion. liut it is a risk that must be taken; in the choice of ilif ficu'.iies, it is the smallest risk ; and to dimin ish, and if possible, to remove all danger, I have felt incumbent on nie to assert one other power of the general government the power of pardon. As no State can throw a defence- over the crime of treason, the power of par don is exclusively vested in the Executive government of the bniteu States, in exer cisinff that power I have taken every preeau- to connect it with the clearest recognition of the bindini force of the laws of the United States, and an unqualified acknowledgement ! of the treat social change of condition in re- ' gard to slavery which has grown out of the war. The next step which T have taken to restore the constitutional relations of the States has been an invitation to thein to participate in the hitfUoffice of amending the Constitution, Every patriot must wish for a g?icral amnes ty at the earliest epoch consistent with public aiifetv. For this great end there is nee I of a eonrurence of all opinions, and the spirit of mntial conciliation. All panics in the late tcrrible'v-onflict must work together in har mony. It is not too much to ak, in the name of the whole people, that on the one side, ihe plan of restoration shall prouccd tif conformity with a will'ngnei-s to cast the disorders of the past into oblivion; and that, on Ihe other, the evidence of sincerity in the fature maintcn--." of "V ITTi.-i ih-?l 1 T)'l beyond any .Iji.'d". tT !' i.V-9!i,,i ' fmpwd TH COH8TITCTI0M TBS VXIOH MFFLlNTOWtf, JUNIATA COUNTY, ! amendment to the Constitution, which provides for the abolition of slavery forever wlthtnlhe ', limits of our country. So long as the tdop- : tion of this amenluiem is ueiayeu, so long jll doubt, and jealousy ana uoceriainty pre- vail This is the measure which will enace i pai." ..o r - - the sad memory of the past ; this is the meas-1 ed, loci an estimate made of tne appro ure which will most certainly call population priationa that will be required for military and capital and security to mose parts u in. purposes in the uscal year coruinencinj: Union that need then i most; Indeed, it is lot fa . f j um Th natio. too much to ask of the States which are low "c "?"lu UJJ " " ' p . . - ' i ,. ,m;i r th. al mi itarv lorce on the first of -May, 10D, Union to give this pledge of perpetual-lovalty and peace. Until it is done, the past, howev er much we may desire it, will not be forgot ten. The adoption of the amendment reu nites us beyond all power of disruption. It heals the wound that is still imperfectly clos ed ; it removes slavery, the element which has so long perplexed and divided tfie country ; it makes of us once more a united people, renew ed and strengthened, bound more than ever to mutual affection and support. The amendment to the Consitution being adopted, it would remain for the States, whose powers have been so long in abeyance, to re sume their places in the two branches of the national Legislature, and thoreby complete the work of reJtoration. Here it is for you, fellow-citizens of the Senate, andfor you. fellow-citizens of the House of Representatives, to judge, each of you for yourselves, of the elections, returns and qualifioations of your own members. The full assertion of the powers of the gen rt irnvernment reotiires the holding of Cir- errit oni of the Coiled -States- within the districts where their authority has Been lnier rupted. Iu the present posture of ourpuhlic affairs, strong objections have been urged to holding those courts in any of the States where tbe rebellion has existed ; and, it was ascer tained, by inquiry, that the Circuit Court of the United States would not be held within the District of Virginia during the autumn or early winter, nor until Congress shall have 'an opportunity to consider and act on the whole subject." To your deliberations the restoration of this branch of the civil author ity of the United Slates is therefore necessa rily referred, with the hope that early prov,. sion will be made for the resamption of all its functions. fl-iirfunt in It is manifest tnai treason, uiook i.rafft.r. has been comitted Per- r, .r charged with its commission should havo fair and impartial trials ia the . v.,. -:;i it,MTia1s nf the country, inorder UICIH'31 liH.it " , - , , ,. that the Constitution and thelaws may be fully vindicated; the truth clearly established and affirmed that treason is a crime, that traitors should be punished and the offence made in famous, and at the same time that the ques tion may be ju lically sett ed, finally and for ever, that no State, of its own will, has the ri"ht to renounce its" place in the Union. "But while 1 have no doubt that now, after the close of the war, it is not com petent for the general government to ex tend the elective franchise in the several States, it is equally clear that good faith requires the security of the freemen in their liberty aud their property, their right to labor, and their right to claim the just return of their labsr I cannot too strongly urge a dispassionate treat ment of this subject which should be carefully kept aloof from all party strife. We must equally avoid hasty assumptions of auy natui3l impossibility for the two races to live side by side, in a state of mutual benefit aud good will. The ex periment involves us iu no inconsistency ; let us thou, go od and make that experi ment in 'good faith, and not be easily dig heartened. The country is in neod of la bor, and the freedtnen areja need of em ployment, culture, and jrotection. While their rl"'lt OI voluntary uiijijiiuu uu expatriation is not to be questioned, I would uot advise ineir lurcuu itai aud coliuization. Let us ratner encour age them to honorable and useful indus try where it may be beuslicial to thetu- , J .mintu an. I. instead ot selves anu iu i , , -- hasty anticipations ot tne certainty u. failure, let there be nothing wannu . tho fafr triul ot the expenmcu.,. iuc .i .K.;r, id Mia Kiinstitu- Clianire in ineir ro" " tion of labor by contract lor tne status , slavery The treednien cannot fairly be accused of unwillingness to work so long doubt remain about ms ireeuom ui choice in' hw pursuiu, anu tue cuiui.uij of his stiDuIated wages, iu mis uk in tercuts of the employer and the employed coincide. The employer desires in his workman spirit find alacrity, and these can be permanently secured in no other way. And if the one ought to bo able to en force the contract, so ought the other. The public interest will be best promoted if the several States will provide adequate protection and remedies for tho freeduieo. Until this is iu some way accomplished there is uo change for the advantageous use of their labor, aul the blame of ill success will not rest on them. The lamentable events of the last Tour years, and the sacvilices made by tho gal lant men of our army and navy, have swelbpd the records of tho Tension Uu reau to an unprecedented extent. On the 30th day of Juno last, the total number of pensioners was 85,986, requiring for their auual pay, exclusive of cxpeuscs, the sum ot S,0'23,445. The number of applications that have been allowed since that dato will require a large increase of th's amount for the next fiscal year. The means for the payment of the stipends due, under existing laws, to our disabled soldiers and sailors, and to the families f such ns have perished in the serviae of the country, will no doubt bo cheerfully aud prombtly granted. A grateful people will not hesitate to sanction any measures having for their object tho relief of sol diers mutilated and families made father lcs in the efforts to preserve our niitional existeoea. In tho report of tho Secretary of War, a geueral summary is given of tho mili Ury c4.Tini.t2n3 of' 1 3r3i acd 1 855, ssiisg AID VI ijf OECIMIKT OF TBI IAWS. . PfSl'A. DECEMBER 13, 1865. in tvtopppresftlOO of armed resistance to he.fiatfeoal SHthority in the insurgent q;n6 operations of the general -dginiatrative Bureaus of the War De- jr. , . Mrf e Aetjdl numbered 1.000,516 men. It is proposed to reduce the military establishment to a peace footing, comprehending fifty thou sand troops of all arms, organized so as to admit of an enlargement by filling up the ranks to eighty-two thousand six hundred, if the circumstances Of tho country should lequire an augmentation of the army. The voluutcer force has already been re duced by tbe disctarge from the service of over eight hundred thousand troops, and the Departmeot is proceeding rapidly in the work of further reduction. The war estimates are reduced from 516,240, 131 to 833,814.461, which amount, in the oninion of the Department, is adequate for a'peace eitablthuient. The measures of retrenchment in each Bureau and branch oi the service exhibit a diligeut economy worthy of commendation. Reference is als!Ja ia the report to the necessity oi providing for a uniform militia system, and to the propriety of making suitable provision tor wounded and disabled offi cers and soldiers. The revenue sjstcm of tho country is a subject of vital interest to its honor and prosperity, and should command the ear nest consideration of Congress. The Sec retary of the Treasury will Idy before you a fall and detailed report of the receipts aud disbursements of tho last fiscal year, of the first quarter of the present fiscal year, of the probakle receipts and expen ditures for the other three quarters, and the estimates for the year following the : 3()n f J une, 18G6, I might content my- self with a reference to that report, iu which you will find all the information re quired for your deliberations and decis ion. Iat the paramount importance of the puhjectso presses itselt on my niina that I cannot but lay before you my views of the nieasucs which arc required for the good character, and, I might almost say, for the existence of this people. The life a republic lies certainly in the energy, virtue aid intelligence of its citizens ; but it is equally true that a good revenue sys tem is the life of an organized government. I meet yon at a time when the nation has voluotarily burdered itself with a debt unprecedented in onr annals. Vast as is its amount, it fades away into nothing when compared with the countless, bless ings that will be conferred npon onr coun try and npon man by the preservation of the nation s lite .Now, on the hrst occa sion ot the meeting of Congress since the return of peace, it is of the utmost im portancc to inaugurate a -just po'icy which shall at once be put in motion, and which shall commend itself to those who come after ns for its continuance. We must aim at nothing less than the com plete efTucemciit of the fiuanciul evils that necessarily followed a state of civil war. We must endeavor to apply the earliest remedy to tbe deranged state of the cur rency, aud not shrink from devising a polily which, without being oppressive to the people, shall immediately begin to effect a reduction of tho debt, and, if per sisted in, discharge it fully withiu a defi nitely fixed number of years. It is our first duty to prepare in earn est for our recovery from the ever-increasing evils of an irredeemable currency without a sudden revulsion, and yet with out untimely procrastination. For that end we uitlst. each in our respective posi tions, prepare the way. I hold it the duty ot' the Executive to insist upon fru gality ic the expenditures; and a sparing economy is itself a great national resource. Of the banks to which authority has been given to issue notes secured by bonds of the United States, we may Tequire the greatest moderation and prudence, and the law must be rigidly enforced when its limits are exceeded. We may, each ont of us, counsel our active and enterprising countrymen to be constantly on their guard, to liquidate debts contracted in a paper currency, and by conducting busi ness as nearly as possible 00 a system of cash payments or snort credits, to hold themselves prepared to return to the standard of gold and silver. To aid our fellow-citizens in the prudent management of their monetary affairs, the duty devol ves on ua to diminish by law the amount of paper money now in circulation. Five years ago the bank note circulation of the couo:ry amounted to not much more than two hundred millions; now the circula tion, bank and national, exceeds seven hundred millions. The simple statement of the fact recommends mora strongly than any words of mino coul 1 do tho ne cessity of our restraining this expansion. The gradual reduction of tho currency is the only measure that can savo the busi ness of tho country from disastrous calamities; and this canbe almost imperceptibly accomplished by grad ually fuuding the national circulation in securities that may bo made redeemable at the pleasure of tho government. Our debt is doubly secure first in the actual wealth and still greater undevelop ed tstoueza ot the cojjtry; sad flcxt iu the character ' of our institutions. The most' intelligent observers among political . economists have not failed to remark, that tho public debt of a country is aafe in proportion as its people are free ; that the ! debt of a republic is the safest of all. Our history confirms ami establishes the theory, and is, I firmly believe, destined to give it still more signal illustration. The secret of this superiority springs not merely from the faot that in a republic the national obligations are distributed more widely through countless numbers in all classes of society ; it has its roots in the character of our laws. Here all men con tribute to the public welfare, and bear their fair share of the public burdens. During the war, under the impulse of pa triotism, the men of the great body of the people, without regard to their own comparative want of wealth, thronged to our armies and filed our fleets 'of war, and held themselves ready to offer their lives for the public good. Now, in their turn, the property and income of the coun try should bear their just proportion of the burden of taxation, while in our im post system, through means of which in creased vitality is incidentally impaired to all the industrial interests of the nation, the duties shouldtbe so adj us ted as to fall most heavily on articles of luxury, leav ing the necessaries of life as free from taxation as the absolute wants of the government, economically administered, will justify. No favored class thould de- maud freedom lrom assessment, and the taxes should be so distributed as not to full undgly ou the poor, but rather on the accumulated wealth of the country. We should look at the national debt just as it is not as a national blessing, but as a heavy burden on tho industry of the country, to be tlisohargcd without uneces sary delay. I have dwelled thuslullyon our domes tic affairs because of their transceudeut importance." Uader auy eircuuistauces, our great extent of territory aud variety of climate, producing almost everything that is necessary for the wants, aud even the comforts of man, make us singularly independent of the varying policy of for eign Powers, and protect Us agaiust every temptation to "entangling alliances," while at the preseut moment the re-estab-lishmcnt of harmony, and the strength that comes from liarmony, will be our se curity against "nations who feel powei and forget right." For myself, it has been and will be my constant aim to pro mote peace and amity with all foreign na tions and Powers ; and I have every rea son to believe that they all, without ex ception, are animated by tbe same dispo sition. Our relations with the Kmperor of China, so recent ia their origin, are most frieudlv. Our commerce with his dominions are receiving new develop ments ; and it is very pleasing to find that the government of that great Empire manifests satisfaction with our policy, and rct)03C3 iust confidence in tho firmness which marks our intercourse. The un broken HsvVmony between the United States and tho Emperor of llussia is receiving a new snriport from the enterprise designed to carry telegraph lines across the conti nent of Asia, through his domin-.ons, ami so to connect us v.i.h all Europe byafiew chanuel of intercourse The relations ot tho general govern ment towards the four millions of inhabi- ttiuts whom the war has called into free dom have engaged my most serious con sideration. Oa the propriety of attempt in" to make the frecdmen electors by the proclamation of the Executive, I took for my counsel tho Constitution itself, tho interpretations of tbat instrument by its authors aud their contemporaries, and recent legislation by Congress. When, at the first movement towards Independ ence, the Congress of the United States instructed tho several States to institute governments of their own, they left each State to decide for itself the conditions for the enjoyment of tho elective fran chise. During tho period of the confed eracy, there coutiuued to exist a very reat diversity iu the quaiiiicalions of the electors in the several States ; and even withiu a State a distinction of qualifica tions prevailed with regard to the officers who were to be chosen. Tho Constitu tion of the United States recognises these livprsitii!M when it enioius that, in the choice of members of the House of Kep seutatives of the United States, "the el ectors in each State shall havo qualifiea- riitn4 rnnnisite for electors of the most numerous branch of tho State Legisla lure." After tho formation of Constitu tion, it remained, as before, the uniform usage tor each State to enlarge the body of us electors, aecsrding to its own judge ment; aud, under this system, one otate after another has proceeded to increase the numoer of iu electors, until now universal suffrage, or something very n-nr it. is the seueral rule. So fixed was this reservation of power in the habits of the people, and so unquesuoueu uas ua-u thn interpretation of tho Constitution, .inntr the civil war tho late Presi- Hfnt never harbored tho purpose cer- nprr avowed tho purpose of disregarding it, and in the acts of Con gress, during that period, nothing can be found which, during the continuance of hostilities, much less after their close, would hare sanctioned any d.rarturo, by EDITOR AXD Fl'BLISIIER. . WHOLE NUMBER 972.- the Executive from ' a policy which has so uniformly obtained. ' Moreover, a concession ot the elective franchise to the frecdmen, by act of the President of the United Stated, must have been extend ed to all colored men,' wherever found. and so must have established a change of suffrage in the northern, middle and west ern States, not less than in the southern and southwestern. Such an act would have created a new class of voters, and would have been an assumption of power by the President which nothing in the Constitution or laws of the Uuitcd States would have warranted. Ou the other hand, every danger of conflict is avoided when the settlement of the question is leferred to the several States. They can, each for itself, decide on tbe measure, and whether it is to be adopted at once and absolutely, or intro duced gradually and with eonditions. In my judgement, tbe freedmen, if they show patience and manly virtues, will sooner obtain a participation in the elect ive franchise through the States than through the general government, even if it had power to intervene.' When the tumult of emotions that have been raised by the suddenness of the social change shall have subsided, it may prove that they will receive the kindliest usage from some of those on whom they have hereto fore most closely depended. Our commerce with South America is about to receive encouragement by a di rect line ot mail steamships to the rising empire oflirazil. The distinguished par ty ot men ol science who have recently left our couutry to make a scientific ex ploration of the natural history and rivers aud inouutain rangcsof tbat region, have recoivea irom tne JMiiperor. that generous welcome which was to have been expected' from its constant friendship for the United States and his welt known zeal in promo ting the advancement of knowledge. A hope is entertained that our commerce with the rich and populous countries that bordei tbe Mediterranean sea may be largely increased. Nothing will be want ing ou the part of this government to cx teud the protection of our flag over th enterprise of our fellow-citizens. We re ceive from the Powers in that region as surances of good will ; and it is worthy of note that a special envoy has brought us messages of condolence on the death of onr lata Chief AJaistrato from the Bey of Tuuis, whose rale includes the old do minions of Carthage on the African coast. Our domestic contest, now happily end ed, has left some traces in our relations with one, at least, of the great maritime Powers. The formal accordance of bclig ereut rights to the insurgent State." was unprecedented, and has not been jusiiSed by the issue. But in the systems ot'neu trality pursued by the Powers which made that concession there was a marked differ ence. Tbe materials of war for the in surgent States were furnished, in a great measure, from the worshippers of Great liritain ; and British ships, manned by fliith subjects, and prepared for receiv ing British armaments, sailed from tho ports of Great Britain to make war on American commerce, under the shelter of a commission from the insurgent States. These ships, having once escaped from British ports, ever afterwards entered them in every part of the world to icfit, and so to renew their depredations. The consequences of this couduct were most disastrous to tho States then in rebellion, increasing their desolation aud misery by the prolongation of our civil contest. It had, moreover, the effect, to a great ex tent, to drive the American ting from the sea, and to transfer mcch of our shipping" and our commerce to tho very Power whose subjects had created the necessity for such a change. These events took place before I was called to tho administration of tho gov ernment. Tho sincere desire for pcaco by which I am animated led me to ap prove tho proposal already made to submit the qucstious which had thus arisen be tween tho countries to arbitration. Thcso questions are of such moment that they must have commanded the attention of the great Powers, and are so intervroven with the peace and interests of every one of them as to have ensured an impartial de cision. 1 regret-to inform you that Great Britain declined the arbitrament, but, on the other haud, iuvited us to the forma tion of a joint commission to settle mutu al claims between the two oountries, from which those for the depredations before mentioned should bo excludsd. The pro position, in that very unsatisfactory form, has been declined. The Uuited Slates did not present tho subject as an impeachment of the geod faith of a Power which was professing tho most friendly dispositions, but as invol ving questions of public law, of which :he settlement is e.-soutial to the peace of nations; and, though pecuniary repara tion to their injured citizens would have followed incidentally on a decision against Great Britain, such compensation was not their primary cbjact. They had a higher motive, and it was in tlio interests of peace and justico to establish important princi ples of international law. The correspon dence will bo placed before you. The -,i, n,l mi whinh the. British Minister rests h'a justification, is substantially, and (thai the auicipu w w . ,