4. H Cljt littsturglj etayttt. PUBLISHED DAILY, BY PENNEILIN, REED, CO., Proprietors. F. R. PENNIMAN, JOSIAH KING, T. P. HOUSTON, N. P. REED. Editors and Proprietors. , OFFICE: • GAZETTE BUILDING, N 05.184 AND 86 FIFTH ST. OFFICIAL PAPER Of Pittsburgh, Allegheny and Allegheny County. TK,m• . Stmi- Week/v.! Weekly. One r....$ 1.4.0ne year.t.2.so,Slngle c0py...40.50 One im,nt . 7. Six mos . 1.a); 5 copies, each. 1.25 y the week t !Three mos 75.10 " .• 1.15 Mom a er.) I I—and one to Agent. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4,186 S. National Union Republican Ticket. NATIONAL. ' President—ULYSSES S. GRANT. Vice President—SCHUYLEß COLFAX. PRESIDENTIAL ELECTORS AT LARGE. G. MORRISON COATES. of Philadelphia. THOS. M. MARSHALL, of Pittsburgh. • District . District. 1. W. H. BARNES, 1 'EL SAMUEL SNOW, .W. J. Pot,Loca - , !14. B. F. WAGONSELLER. RICIIARD WILDET, 15. CRAB. H. MILLER, 4. G. W. HILL, • II& JOHN STEWART, 5. WATSON P. MCGILL, .17. GEORGE. W. ELSER, 6. J. 11. BRINOIIURST, 'IS. A. G. OLMSTEAD, 7. FRANK C. lIEATON, , 19.. 1.A.31ES SILL. • 'B. ISAAC ECKEIIT, '33. H. C: JonNsoN; 9.. MORILIS HOOFER, 121. J. K. EWING, 10. DAVID M. RANK, 22. WM. FREW,• 11. WIT,. DAVIS. CIL A. W. CRAWFORD, 12. W.' W• KETCHUM, '124. J. S; BUTAN. STATE. Auditor General-J. F. HARTRANFT Surveyor General—J. M. CAMPBELL . DISTRICT. Congress, 22d Dist.—JAS. S. NEGLEY. 23d Dist.—DARWIN PHELPS. COUNTY. State Senate—JAMES L. GRAHAM ICEEMEM GEORGE WILSON, M. S. HUNIPHREYS, GPO. P. MORGAN, ! VINCENTMILLER, JAMES TAYLOR, !SAMUEL KERR. District Attorney—A. L. PEARSON. Aas't District Attorney-J. B:FLACK. Controller—HENßY LAMBERT. Commissioner—JONATHAN NEELY. Surveyor—H. L. McCULLY. *County Some Director—J. 9. MURRAY. CITY. .Mayor—JARED M. BRUSH. Controller—ROßT. J. .MaGOWAN Treasurer—A. J. COCHR AN . - WE PRINT on the in,side pages of this morning'S GAzETTE = Second page: Cam paign Poetry,'`, l Let Ui Have Peace," (Origi nal,) Ephemeris, Interview with Gen. Long 1. street. Third and Sixth pages: Commercial and River Intelligence. Seventh page: Interest ing Letter Concerning Affairs in Tennessee. GOLD closed in Ncw York yesterday at 143'1. • Tim article on Tennessee affairs, ta which we alluded yesterday, appears, on an in side page of this morning's GAZETTE. Mr. fifty-fifth anniversary of Perry's victory on Lake'Erie, will be observed with a grand Republican mass meeting at Erie on the 10th inst. THE appearance of the cattle plague in Poitage county, Ohio, on or near the line of the Cleveland and Pittsburgh . Railway, is reported. Vigorous measures have been taken to check it. THE NEWS from Vermont continues .to grow better. There is no shrinkage in the returns, which, when fully in, will bring the majority for the Republicans quite up to thirty thousand ! . Tam THANES of all Republicans of the city are due to the Secretary of War, Gen. J. M. SCHOFIELD, for his prompt response to at request for artillery at the Vermont celebration last night. THE VERMONT Vi icTonY was celebrated last night in an appropriate manner by the Second Ward Grant Club and citizens gen erally. One hundred guns were fired at' midnight on the Monongahela wharf, in honor of the Green Mountain State. "IF ANY MAN PULLS DOWN THE AMERI CAN-FLAG SHOOT HIM. ON THE SPOT." Sikh were the orders of a distinguished Democratic official under Mr. BUCHANAN, who loved his country more than his parti. The min who made that memorable order wag General Join.; A. Dix, who afterwards, when in command at New York, told Gov. SEYMOUR 'that he had troops enough to manage his "friends" and him too, and who is now the' American Minister to France. Nb one, therefore, need be sur prised to learn that General Drx declares now earnestly in favor of the' election of GRANT and COLFAX. - SECRETARY IlifcCOLLoat, declaring that "tte financial „policy. of the. Democratic party.wilf certainly bring financial ruin upon the country," yields, nevertheless, to his "paramount aversion to the reconstruc tion" of the South, and, therefore pro nounces for SEYMOUR and BLAIR, that is to say, he 'hi willing tO BLUR'S rebellion and Piwnt.,krox's repudiation together. Henceforth, the Democracy are Pre.cluded, from holding the itepublicads responsible for his financiering. Hence forth, it is possible that the public debt statements and other official ;expositions froth the Treasury will be "cooked up" as electioneering documents for the Democra cy. "Henceforth, it may , be regarded as openly acknowledged, that the whisky and other "rings," 'which have long been om nipotent in the Executive departments, will continue to run the governmental machin ery in , the interests of their own perpetua tion. INDIMPENDENf- VETIERABIS FOR THE UNION. A meeting of the Veteran Soldiers of Al legheny county is called, for assemblage on fu! 10th inst. Oen. A. L. Now, of Bal timore, formerly Adintanreeneral on HAM coon's staff, and Gen. J. F. HARTBANIIT will be present. Let every soldier, Inde pendent of party, who Is In favor of Peace and the Union;, attend. THE BOND QUESTION. I. ME BONDS At the outset of the argument upon which we are about to enter, it is beht to obtain cri full. and definite ideas as to howk any kinds of United States Bonds there are, when they are redeemable, and what is he amount of each sort„ - _.__...,__.._._._T__....______. 13's of SI, dated in 1861, and redeemable 20 years from January Ist, and, July Ist, of that year. They are called 1881 s, being due ihen. Interest on them is 6 per cent. in Gold, payable January Ist and July Ist. There are three series of the Bonds, to wit.: Issued under Act of Feb. 8, 1861, Issued under Act of July 17 and August 5, 1861 t 50,000,000 In Exchange for?-30's Act of July 17 and - August 5, 1881 ..139,317,150 Issued under Act of March 3, 1863, (and Principal specified in the Act as payable in Coin,). 75,000,000 Total, June Ist, 1868 *282,782,150 Old s:2o's, called old because they were the first of these popular Bonds issued, and . deMgnated 5-20's from the time they have to ruh. They bear date May Ist, 1862. Redeemable after May Ist, 1867, payable May Ist, 1882. Interest at 6 per cent. in Gold, - payable May and November Ist. The Coupon Bonds of this issue sell high er,than the other 5-20's because having been the'first to be placed upon the For- - eign Market and largely sold abroad, they are always in demand for remittance and investment there. These Bonds are issued under __..ket of Feb. 25th, 1862, and amount to $514,771,600 5-20's of 1861, dated Nov. Ist, 1864, redeem able after Nov. let, 1869; payable Nov. Ist, 188 I. Interest at 6 per cent. in Gold, due May and Nov. Ist. These Bonds are issued under two acts of Congress, viz: March 3d, 1864, (Principal speci fied in the Act as payable in Coin,) , • $ 3,882,500 - June 30th, 1864. 125,561,300 Total, June Ist, 1868. $123,443,800 5-20's of 1865, Nov. Issue.—These Bonds bear date Nov. Ist, 1865, redeemable after Nov. Ist, 1870, payable Nov. Ist, 1865. In terest 6 per cent. in Gold, due May and Nov. Ist. The Coupon Bonds of this issue beginning to be sought after in the Eng lish Market, they bear a higher premium generally than the Bonds of 1864. They are issued under Act of March 3d, 1865, and amounted June Ist, 1838, to. 5197 - ,777,250 5-20 , s of 1865, July Issue.—These Bonds were issued in exchange. for 7,30's con verted, and bear date _July Ist, -1865, re deemable after July Ist, 1870, payable July Ist, 1885. Interest 6 per cent. in Gold, due January Ist and July Ist. Authorized by Act of March 3d, 1865. Amount outstanding June Ist, 1868.. $334,072,350 .5-20 , s of ISO:. issued also in exchange for 7-30's converted, dated July Ist. 1807, re deemable after July Ist, 1872, and pay able July Ist, 1887, interest 6 per cent. in Gold. due January Ist and July Ist. The Act of March 3d, 1865, also authorizes the issue of these Bonds, Which amounted June Ist, . 186 S, to $317,421,050 This will be increased, as 7-30's are still be, ing converted into them._ 5.20's oflS6B.—These bonds are also issued bY"authority of the Act of March 3d,1865, in exchange for 7.30's converted; are dated July Ist, 1868, redeemable after July lse, 1873, and payable July Ist, 1888, interest 6 per cent. in Gold, due January Ist and July Ist. The amount of ri2O's, 1868,-pannot be, stated until the 7-30 s are all sent in; as these not converted accord; ing to Treasury statement of Juno Ist, 1868, were .$105,610,650; and as holders have the privilege of choice between '67's and '6B's. 10-40 Bonds. bearing this name from the number, of years for which they are issued; being redeemable aster ten years, - and payable fortyyears from March Ist, 1864. Interest at 5 per cent. in Gold, pay able on the .500 and 1000 Coupon Bonds, and on all the Registered, March Ist and September Ist; and on the 100's and 50's ,Coupons, yearly on March Ist.- They ate authorized by the Act of March 3d, 1864, and the Principal is specially provided for in Coin. Amount, June Ist, 1868. $194,291,300 U. S. Pacific Railroad Curreney ,Sixes.— These are issued by the Government to the Companies chartered by Congress to construct Railroads to and from the Pad.; fic Coast, and on the completion of twen ty miles of track at the rate of $16,000, 832,000, $48,000 per mile, according to dif ficulty of construction. Interest at 6 per cent, in Currency, and payable Janu ary and July Ist and 16th. They are redeemable thirty years from the dates of their is , ue, and are all Regis tered, in Bonds of $lOOO, 85000 and $lO,OOO. Amount June Ist, 1868.... 825;902,000 Alll the Gold Bearing Bonds are Issued either Coupon or Registered. Coupon Bonds ere issued in denominations of $5O, $100; 8500, and $lOOO. Registered the same, with 85000 and 10,000. Any Coupon Bonds will be exchanged by the Government f.n. Registered of the same issue. 11. HOW THE BONDS ARE PAYABLE The answe r to this inquiry must be sought, First, In the acts of Congress au thorizing the Secretary of the Treasury to issue the bonds; Second, In the acts creat ing the Legal Tender currency; Third, In the nature and limitations of unconvertible currency-; Fourth, In the understanding of the two Houses of Congress on . those three points when the aforesaid acts were under consideration; and, Fifth, In the as surances given by the Secretary of the Treasury, and other officers and agents of the Government, while engaged in nego tiating sales of the bonds. That we may find the pioper answer, let us, at the be ginning, carefully scrutinize the acts desig nated, bearing is mind as we go along that the Bonds and Legal Tenders were both au thorized in each of several different enact ments. Feb. 25, 1862.—SECTION 1. The Secretary of the Treasury is hereby authorized to is sue, on the credit of the United States, $150,000,000 of United States notes, includ ing $50,000,000 of demand notes previously issued not bearing interest, payable to bear er,_ * * * receivable in payment of all takes, internal duties, excises, and de mands of every kind due to the United 'States, except duties on imports, and of all claims and demands against the United States of every kind whatsoever, except for interest upon bonds and notes, which shall be paid In coin, and shall also be law ful money and a legal tender in payment of all debts public and private, within the United States, except duties on imports and Inttirest as aforesaid. * • And such Un ited States notes shall be received the same as coin, at their par value, In payment for any loans that may be hereafter sold or negotiated by the Secretary of the Treats nry." Sao. 2. "That to enable the Secretary of the Treasury to fund th Tr( asury notes and floating' debt of the Unite?! States, be is nereby authorized to issue, on'the credit of the United States, coupon bends, ar regqis• tered bonds, to an amount not exceeding P 00,000,000, redeemable at the pleasure of PITTSBURGH GAZETTE : FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 4, 1868 the United States after five years, and pay able twenty years from date, bearing inter est at the rate of sit per centum, payable semi-annually. SEC. 5. "That all _ duties on imported goods shall be paid in coin, and in notes payable on demand, * * and the COIN so paid shall beset apart as a special fund, and shall be applied as follows: First. To the payment in coin of the in terest on the bonds and notes of the United States. _. . JS'econd. To th e_Tnrchase — citliiikiireirt of one Per eentunt4rilie entire dot of thelTriit,'kr' States, to be made within each fiscal year after July 1, 1862. The act of July 11, 1862, provides that any legal tenders issued in compliance with it may "Be paid in coin, instead of being re ceived in exchange for certitleateli of de posit, at the discretion of the Secretary of the Treasury. tAnd the- Secretary of Treas ury may exchange for such notes, on such terms as lie shall think most - beneficial tai the public interest, any bonds of the United States bearing six per centum interest, and and redeemable after five and payable in twen y years, which have b en or may be lawf lly issued under the provisions of any exis rig act, and may. reissue, the notes so received in exchange; may receive and can cel ny notes heretofore lawfully, issued and r any act of Congreas, and in lieu the of issue an equal amount in notes such as a e authorized by this act; and may pur cha eat , rates not exceeding that of the cur ent Maket, and cost of the purchase not xcecili.ig one-eielith Of one per centum, an bonds or certificates of debt of the Mil ed States as to may deem advisable." The joint re olution of June 17, 1863, reads: "WHEREAS, It is deemed expedient to make immediate provisions for' the pny imnt of the army and navy : therefcirb be it "13es/ored, &S., That the Secretary of the Treasury be, end he is I hereby authorized, if required by the exigencies of the public service, to issue on the credit of 'the United States the sum ofone hundred millions of dollars of United States notes, in such form as he may, deem expedient, net nearing in terrst, payable to bearer on demand, and of such denominations, not less than one dol lar, as he may prescribe, which notes so issued shall be lawful money and' a legal tender, like similar notes heretefOreauthor ized, in - payment of all debts, pUblic and private, within the United S.ates, except for duties on imports and interest on - the public debt; and the notes so issued shall , be part of the aniouiit provided for in any bill, now pending for the issue ofl Treasury notes that may be passed hereafter by this Congress. The Act of March 3, 1863, provides : " , "That the Secretary of the Treasury, be and he is hereby authorized to borrow from time to tithe, on the credit of the United States, a sum not exceeding $300,000,000 for the current fiscal year, rind 8600,000,000 /Or the next *fiscal year, and to issue therefor coupon or registered bonds, payable at the pleasure 'of the Government after such periods as may be fixed by Secretary, not less than ten or more than forty years from date, IN COIN * * heariug interest to not exceding six per cent. per annum, pay able on bodds not exceeding 8100, annually, and-on all :other bonds send-annually, in coin, * !, * * And ali bonds and-Treas ury notes or United States , notes issued under the previsions of this act shall be exempt front taxation by or under State or municipal authority." . SEet. 2. $400,000,000 Treasury notes au thorized, bearing 'interest; exchangeable for legal tenders, and $140,000,000 of legal len ,. ders authorized to facilitate exchange's. Sal. 3. •qhat the Secretary of the Treasury be, and is hereby authorized, if required by she exigencies of the public service, for the payinent of ithe army and navy, and other creditors of the Government to issue, on the credit o' the United States, the sum of one handsel and fifty millions of dollars of E,Tnited States notes, including the amount of totes he;t tofore authorized by the joint resoution apprdved January 17th, 18113, in ratsuch rag he may deem expedient, hot 1 k i\fo bearing interest, payable to bearer, and of such denominations, not less than one dol lar, as he may prescribe, which notes- so issued shall be lawful money and a legal tender in payment of all debts, public and private, within the Unjted States, except for duties on imports -and int,erest On the - public debt; and any of the said notes, when returned to the Treasury, may be reissued from time to time, as the exigencies of the public service may require. And in lieu of any of said mites, or any other United States notes, returned to the Treasury and canceled or destroyed, there may be Issued equal amounts of United States notes, such as are ' authorized by this act. And so much of the act to authorize the issue of United States notes, and for other purposes, approved February 25th, 1852, and'of the act to authorize an additional issue of United States notes, and for other purposes, approved July 11th, 1862, as .restricts the negotion of bonds to market value, is here by repealed. And the - holders of United States notss, i-sued under and by virtue of said acts, shall present the same for the purpose of exchanging the same for bonds, as thersin provided, on or before the first day of .Tuly, 1863, and thereafter the right so to exchange the same shall cease and de termine," 18,415,000 189,317,150 - JUNE 30, 1864. Sne.= - 1. Secretary of, the 'Treasury authorized to borrow $400,000,000. "redeemable at the pleasure of the govern rnent, after any period net less than, five nor more.than thirty years, or, if deemed expedient, made payable at any period not more than forty years from date, * * and bear an annual interest not exceeding six per cent., payable in coin., * * exempt from taxation by or under State or muni cipal authority. Sm. 2. That the Secretary of the Treas ury may issue on the credit of the United States and in lieu of an hqual amount 'of Bonds authorized by the preceding section, and as a part of said loan, not exceeding $200,000,000, in treasury notes,* * * Provided, That the total amount of bonds and treasury notes authorized by the first and second sections of this act shall not 'exceed $400,000,000, In addition to the amounts heretofore issued; nor shall the total amount of U. & notes, issued or to be imied, EVER exceed $400460,000, and such. additional sum, not exceeding $50,000,000, as may be temporarily required for the re demption of, a temporary loan." MA nen 3, 1865. Secretary of the Treasury authorized to issue $600,000,000 5.405. "and the principal or Interest, or both, may be made payable in coin or in other lawful money, provided that the rate of interest * * when payable in -coin, shall not ex ceed six per cent., and when nu i t,, payable in coin shall not exceed 7 3-10ths perent. per annum." APRIL 12, 1866. ,"That the 'Act entitled an Act to provide ways and means to sup port the Government, approved March 3, 1865, shall bo extended and con- strued to authorize the Secretary of the Treasury, at his discretion, to receive - any Treasury notes or other obligations issued under any Act of Con- growl, whether bearing interests or not, in exchange for any deccription of bonds au thorized by said Act. * * * P,ovided that of the United &wet, not,' not more than ten millians of dollars may be retired or caneelled within six months after the passage of this Act and thereafter not more than four millions of dollars in any one Month." IWe have now recited the laws sufficiently in detail to allow their spirit and scope to be got at. The natural and unavoidable con struction of them leads to several conclu sions : 1. That the Legal Tender notes were designed oßur to relieve a dire necessity of the war, and that the idea of uslog them as an ordinary financial instrumentality VW not expressed or even entertained because in viohition of all sound principles of admin istration. 2. That these notes were fundable up to July 1,1863, that_is, could be exchanged for bonds at the pleasure of the holders of them, and that the Setietary of the Treasury was authorized to redeem them in specie, pct pars and - thattlinfsiiiiishins for funding g and_ude_emin _ re—re--pealed-only:e when the expenses of th war pressed so heavily upon the Treas9r £6 to baffle temporarily the forecast of tie wisest statesmanship. April 12, 1866, the funding process, in view of the bettered aspect of the financial situa tion, was renewed, with the full expecta tion of rapidly; retiring the whole legal tender ci,culations, and this wise arrange- went continued i force until the inflationists raised so violet a clamor as to frighten Congress from lowing the dictates of its judgment. , 3. That it is p rt of the contracts upon which all the bods now _out were- issued that no more tan $400,000,000 of Legal ,Tender notes shuld ever be issued. If it is urged that Congress can repeal this clause, the answer is, that this is not a question of power but of honesty. Congress can repu diate its obligations, just as a swindler can cheat his creditors. For Congress to re voke this pledge because it can, and in de fiance of right, would be no better in point .of morality than an act of highway robbery. But it has been abundantly settled by tho Courts that Legislative bodies can pass no laws impairing the validity of contracts. 'This principle applies with equal moral force to contracts between governments and its creditors as between individuals, not withstanding the fact-that the , government cannot be impleaded before its own tri bunals. 4. What the government manifestly. in tended was to have all the bonds, which were not specifically made payable Ili cur rency, mature at periods so distant from their date of issue thdt specie payments WO uld be resumed before the cancellation of them would become obligatory.' If this expecta tion shall not be realizalhe event will con tradict conclusions drawn from all past, ex perience. , 5. That six per cent. per annum was deemed the equitable rate of interest on bonds payable in gold, and seven and three-tenths was fair on bonds payable in currency. The inference is irresistible that all six per cent. bonds are payable in gold unless the contrary appears on their face. - • , G. The fact that legal tenders were fun dable compels the same inference. A bond is a higher form of security than a note; indeed, the highest known to the laws. To allow the lesser secutity to be exchanged for the higher was a privilege and an in ducement which it was in the. power of the government to hold out; to demand the sub stitution of the higher security for the -lesser would be an injury the government has no right to inflict—a condition it could not rightfully enforce without having made it, in plain and unmistakable language, part of the original contract' 7. Legal Tenders are payable in coin. There is nothing on the face of them to in dicate that they are not payable on demand. Special qualities were imparted to them in order to keep them in circulation; but as no provision now exists for their payment, they are practicably irredeemable. To compel_ the holders of the bonds to accept an irredeem able premise, not bearing interest, for a re deemable promise, bearing interest, would be downright swindling. If two men should contract for the sale and purchase of I a farm on credit, end to secure payment, bond and mortgage should be duly executed, and the buyer should attack the seller, take from him the bond and mortgage, and thrust into his pocket instead a due bill, he would earn' a cell in the penitentiary, and would get it upon the facts being duly proven. 8. At the time the bonds were issued and taken the manifest undErstanding, on both sides, was that they were payable in coin. Payment in currency was an 'after-thought, and tutu, not of the government, which up to this hour has abided by the only just construction of its duty in the firemises, of some of the people; a sharp dodge, save money by defrauding the public crecli- tors 'Dr. PALEY, in his Moral Philosophy, re iterating the teachiegs of ethical philoso phers in all ages, sets forth as the scope and extent of the obligation incurred_ by a promise: "11. In what sense are promises to be in terpreted ? "Where the terms of a promise admit of more senses than one, the promise is to be performed in that sense in which the prowl ser apprehended, at the time, that the promisee received , "It is not the sense in which the promisor actually intended it that always governs the interpretation of an equivocal promise; because, at that rate, .you might excite ex pectations which you never meant, nor would be obliged, to satisfy. Much less is it the sense in which the promisee actually received the promise ; for, according to that rule, you might be drawn into engage ments which you never designed to under take. It must, therefore, be the sense (for there is no other remaining) in which the promisor believed that the promisee accept ed his promise." So much is made out from the language of the laws. Going back to the debates in Congress upon the bills _authorizing the Legal Tender notes, we find indubitable evidence that those notes were not only in tended to be temporary, but that their tem porariness was confessed to be the only possible excuse for putting them afloat. Congress understood that as a pernianent currency unconvertible paper was not to be tolerated anywhere or by anybody.- Mr. E. G. SPALDING, of New York, who introduced the original bill to authorize legal tender notes, declared that he offered it as "a war measure —a MEASURE OF NECEB srry and not of choice." Mr. HOOPER, of Massachusetts, sai d "The unusual- exigencies of the country require that we should look for other and deeper sources of revenue than any to which we have been heretofore accustomed." Mr. ALLEY, of Massachusetts, said: "Nothing could induce me to sanction this measure but uncontrollable necesait,y ." Mr. Pus, of Maine, said "Nor need we fear that what we do will be used as a dangerous precedent; but the _circumstances which form our justification MUST BE DUPLI CATED before our action can lie taken as an example for others." Mr. CAMPBELL, of )'ennsylvania, said: "The bill now before the Committee is necessary to sustain the credit of the coun try, and to carry on the'yar.': Mn. -- STEVENS, of Pennsylvania, - said ; "This bill is a measure of necessity, not of choice. 7" - Mn. llrciorAN, of Pennsylvania, said .: "I am disposed to wah - o the question of propriety or expediency, And vote fur it as a necessity." Mr. FESSENDEN, of M ine, said : "As surance should be given tlie country that it {Legal Tender) was resorted to, not as a policy, but that it was, what it professes to be, A TEMPORARY NECESSITY. II is . put on ,the ground of absolute, OVERWHELMING NECESSITY." Mr. SIIERMAN. of Ohio, said : "I agree that this measure can only be justified on the grOund of necessity." Mr. Ilownito, of Michigan, said : "It is undoubtedly a hard necessity to which we are driven." Mr. SUMNER, of Massachusetts, said : "Your soldiers in the field must be paid and fed. Here, there can be no failure or post ponement. A. remedy which, at another 'moment you would reject, is now proposed. Whatever may be the national resources they, are not now within reach, except by sum mary process. Reluctlantly, painfully, I. 'consent that the process should issue." Other Senators and Representatives can be cited to the same effect; but these are suf ficient. Each of those quoted sets forth the only ground on which a paper currency not convertable into actual money at the will of the holders is allowable upon just principles of public policy and equity between man and man. There 'oust be an absolute necessity arising out of the existence of war, 'which necessity, in its very nature is of short du ration._ To adopt, this policy, in time of peace, and for an indefinite period, cannot be justified. To sanction it through con siderations of economy, that is, because it is Cheaper not to pay interest - than to pay it, or more convenient to let the public faith suffer than to maintain it, is rank-dishonesty. But members of Congress did not stop with these declarations as to the legal tender notes. They went on to declare expressly that the bonds were payable, principal and interest in coin. Take the strong averments of Mr. STEVENS on this head as a specimen of the whole. .In the debate on the bill anti - prizing these bonds, he said : • , A dollar in a miser's safe, unproductive, is a sore disturbance. Where could he in vest it? In "United :Rats loans at six per cent., redeemable in gold at twenty years— the best and most valuable permanent in vestment that could be desired." Again "But widows and oiphans are interested, and in tears lest their estates should be badly invested. I pity no one who has his money invested in United States bonds, plyablc in gold in f wenty years, with inter est semi-annually." • Again : "Let me restate the various projects. Ours proposes United States notes, secured at the end of twenty years, to be paid in coin, - and the interest raised by taxation semi-annually—such notes to be money and of Uniform value throughout the Union." Again "Here, then, lies your choice. Throw bonds at six or seven per cent. on the mar ket between this and December, enough to raise at least $600,000,000 * * * * * or issue United States notes, not redeema ble in coin, but fundable in apeciepaying bands at tiventy years." During the last session of Congress,'when the scheme for redeeming the- bonds in greenbacks was under discussion, Mr. GAR FIELD, of Ohio, said : "Thus, Mr. Speaker, I have shoWn that, when the original Five-Twenty Bond bill passed the House in 1862, ALL who referred to the subject stated that the principal of those bonds was payable in gold ; that the gen tleman from Pennsylvania [Mr. Stevens] so stated five distinct times, and no member suggestea anything to the contrary; that when in 1863 that gentleman raised a doubt on the subject, he wa , a promptly met by the statement of a leading member of the Com mittee of Ways and Means that lie never be fore heard of such a suggestion, and nobody on the Committee of Ways and Means dream ed of the possibility of paying them in any thing but coin." , Not a member, Republican or Democrat, ventured to deny this broad and - positive de claration, and for the plain reason that it is abudantly sustained by the records. Three different gentlemen have presided over the Treasury Department, since the bonds in questinn were issued—two of them Republicans, and the last a Democrat. These are CIT.ASE, FESSENDEN and McCuL- Locu. Each of the Secretaries has unhes itatingly declared that the bonds it is now proposed to pay in currency are honestly 'payable in gold. - Only a few days ago Mr. FESSENDEN, in responding to a welcome from his fellow citizens of Portland; took occasion to affirm that• he never had any other conception than that the bonds were payable in gold, and that he so officially au thorizedfall the agents of the Department, in this country and Eurotie, to declare in negotiating loans. All the agents employed by him, as well as by Mr. CHASE and Mc- CULLOM:I did give the assurance. Mr. Mc- CuLLocn now states that to adopt the Dem ocratic financiaL policy, would bring un speakable ruin upon the country. It sometimes happens after two men have made a contract for the performance and re ception of a particular service, both under standing the terms of the bargain alike, and after the job has been duly executed{ that the one who bas the money to pay strives to torture the language of the agreement so as to force a meaning that would let him off by paying only a pert of the stipulated sum. Everybody acquainted with the facts, com prehends at a glance that his 'purpose is to cheat the man he 'owes. If he succeeds in that object, be damages his reputation more than the money frathlulently made Is worth. In this situation are all citizens who seek to to cancel the 5-20 s with greenbacks. Juift here another'consideration stemands attention. In interpreting statutesand ap plying them to matters in di Fpute between in dividuals, Judges always rely upon the text, and not upon contemporaneous exposition. That is because it is Indelicate :or courts to go back of the laws to find the intention of the law-makers. But when the exposition of a law devolves upon the body that framed it, this rule is not applicable. Con gress is bound, in honor and equity, to be true to itself ; to meet the national obliga tions on the terms and in the spirit in which they were contracted; and, to scorn all sub , Unties of pleading to avoid doing what it -plainly-or by fair inferenceengaged_ to do. We ha:ve'now made it appear, from the laws authorling the bonds; from the law limiting the - Mcnount_of greenbacks that may e•er be put in circulation, from the declara'- tions of members as to the "nature and con tinuance of an irredeemable paper currency, and as to the medium an which the bonds were to be paid, from the position steadily maintained by • the Treasury Department and by its agents, -that the agreement eras that the bonds should be paid in gotd. 111. ARE. GREENBACKS DOLLARS! In a legal, technical and subordinate sense, they are. That is money which the law makes money to the same extent that what the law makes property, is property. By this latter maxim - Mr. CLAY sought, to sanctify slavery. Yet every man and 'wo man whose moral consciousness vas not sadly corrupted felt that the maxim involved both a falsehood and an absurdity. All the laws which! governments could possibly frame could not rightfully convert a human being into a chattel personal. So, all the laws which it is posSle to enact cannot transmute paper into dollars, except as an article of merchandise. Read a greenback and stand convinced that it does not profess to be one or more dollars, but only a promise that at some time, not specified, a dollar or dollars shall be paid for its redemption. We once encountered a man, possessed of a smattering of legal knowledge, but with out a Particle of honesty, who boasted that he had paid all his numerous debts. Aware that he was not in that line, except by de ceit, we interrogated him as to the process he employed, when he naively replied that he had taken up his old notes by givingnew ones which he did not mean to pay. It was stretching the case far enough to make unconvertible paper promises a legal ender in time of war and under direst ne cessity proceeding therefrom. The war has now been_closed for nearly three years. It is full time' government and people went earnestly at work retiring the greenbacks, either by funding them, or by redeeming them, according to agreetnent, in dollars. IV. HONESTY THE BEST POLICY Upon supefficial inspection it may seem a master-piece of financial strategy to pay off these bonds in greenbacks, thus ap parently saving large sums which wouhl otherwise have to be appropriated in pay ment of interest. What seems so plausible is only Dead Sea fruit, It will turn to ashes in the hand that grasps ? it. Of neces sity,it will cost more, in the end, to pay the bonds in _currency than to pay them in money. Financial laws are as immutable and inexorable as auy other. Why, as) the effect is popularly expressed, did gold go up as the currency was inflated? Because every producer and dealer added per tentage to the price he put upon his goods and wares in consideration of the in security of - the medium of payment. At last these per centages became so large that gold rose to 2,80. Assuming that part of this premium was exacted not id conse quence of the actual condition of affairs, but through fear of what might come, still the penalty inflicted for the introduotion of unconvertiblepaper was enormous. Congress was torced to 'calm the agitation by a sol emn pledge that no more should be issued. To disregard that pledge, and to resume the manufacture of , Unconvertible paper, would certainly transmute the fears which were universally entertained into absolute reali ties. All Writers of authority estimate'that pro ducers and defilers add from one to two per cent. to prices in all transactions .in conse quence of- depreciated currency. At one per cent. this premium is judged to amount to $130,000m0 yearly; at two per cent. to $260,000,000. As the total interest on the public debt is now only $128,000,000, the penalty for sustaining a depreciated curren cy is manifestly greater than what can be made by avoiding the payment of interest on the whole debt. Take another view of this point. ; The population of the United States is estimated at forty millions: an average of $3,50 for each man, woman and child, will pay the interest on the entire national debt. Let a man calculate the difference between what the greenbacks he expends in the course of a year will pay for, and what the same number of actual dollars will purchase, and he will see that he must suffer just in proportion to the inflation of the currency. The fact that the bonds—in some cases, few or many—were sold for Legal Tenders, which a less amount of gold sufficed to bdy, is neutralized by a reference to another fact that the depreciation of the currency repro sented the rate of rtistrnewcz the govern ment had to stand to satisfy the risk of ultimate inability to pay which the pur chaser naturally feared. But it not must be forgotten that many of the bonds were marketed by the govern meat while the paper currency was nearly or quite on a par with gold. Let us recall and adopt some forcible words of Mr. R. B. CARNAHAN'S on thrs point. "•What was given was accepted as full' value, and in fact those sold in 1861 and 1862 were purchased with coin or its equivalent. The war aitually `•, began in April, 1861. Until Febru ary, 18q2, the - paper currency was. at par with gold. From that period until July, 1862,-the I minium on gold ranged from one to five per cent. From July 1861 to January 1863, the average premium was per cent., but prices ha.i not yet become inflated, and'the paper currency was prac tically the equivalent of coin. "During these twenty-one month; of the war a large portion of the bonds wore sold, including tbe $250,000,000 authorized by" the act' of the 16th of July, 1861, and the 1500,000,000 6-20's of February 25th, 1862. All of these were paid for in told or its practical equivalent. In 1863 the average premium of gold was 48y4' per cent. and in 1864-102%. Of course the loss in discounts to the government was very groat, or