0 tip Ett-tgutglj;Gaitttt, PDBI;(BHED DAILY, BY PENN IMAN, REED & CO, , Proprietors. • F. B. PENNIXA.I.47. JOSIAH KING, EYYJSTON. • N. P. 'Editors and Proprietors. OFFICE: SAZEIXT BUILDING. NOS. 84 AND 86 FIFTH ST. OFFICIAL PAPER Of 'pittebnrgh• Allegheny and AUG-, grimy County. ten ne—Datty. :Semi-Weekly. . Weekly. Osielyear...sB,oo hie year.V..6o Single copy ...LEO Ow, month 75 Six mos . 1.50 - 5 copies, each 1.2 S Bly the week 15,Three mos 7610 " " 1.15 CP eolft carrier.l and one to Agent. , THURSDAY, ' MARCH 4, 11.069. WE Puna on the inside pages of this morning's GAZETTE Second page : Ephemeris, Review of Monthly Maga vines; A Sketch by Parton on Paintings. Third and Sixth pages : Commercial, ..Mercantile, financial and River News, Markets, imports. Seventh page: General _Miscellany of Interesting Reading Matter. . - U. B. BoNEs atiTra:tkfort, 64. PETP.OLEIIM at Antwerp, 57@57if. Goias closed in New York yesterday at 134. THE n - th Amendment has already been ratified by Kansas, Nevada,.Louisi ana, West Virzinia and Missouri. IN CONSEQUENCE of the snow-blockade, which has entirely 'suspended through carriage on the Union Pacific Rail Way, since early in February, the mails for the Pacific States are ordered to be senti by gamier via Panama. --"" - TICE Canadian journals announce an expected visit, this summer, from Prince % daTUVR, third son of Queen VICTORIA. There are intimations that the Dominion may be ultimately erected into an, inde pendent monarchy, with this young Prince on the throne. This would i be a critical experiment upon the good neigh borhood of the great Republic. IT IS TRUE that the Amoskeag Fire lEn gine Building Company, of New Hamp shire, threaten to seize upon several steamers of the Fire Department, if debts long sinceSast due are not assumed by the city or paid. Councils should lose no time in looking into the matter and pro viding against any evil consequences which may ensue through longer delay in settling the claims. THE FIFTEENTH CONSTITUTIONAL AniEsramir will come before the Legis lature of this State soon after its reas sembling on the Bth of the present month. A Republican majority exists in both branches; and we feel warranted in pre dicting that the Amendment will be rati -sfied by each without much delay. This will be strictly in accordance with the - tendencies and principles of the Repub lican party, which has organized, and has been maintained thus far, for the defence of Liberty. CorisoNANT with our belief, yesterday, declared, , that to•day's Inaugural will be simply a re-affirmation of the cardinal principles of Republicanism, we shall expect to hear that the President -urges upon his countrymen \ the plain duty of maintaining-the public faith, at home or abroad, and their inevitable responsibility U. the principle of Human Liberty which the 307th Amendment embOdies. These questions are no longer confined to the LegOlative forum, but stand subjected to the final judgment of the world. OF cetruss., no intelligent man antici pates any; declaration, by the Senate, of its specific grounds of objection to the Alabama treaty. What Senators really want is not only payinent but an apology, and, knowing that this means war, they prefer that the country should drift irto a collision, without being warned of its' dartgei by a timely public discussion. This proves rather a low cunning than a creditable statesnianship. We believe that the President does not concur, as re ported, in this dangerous policy. TEE SUPREME . COURT is Cautiously paving its way to a final decision upon the Legal-tender Act. First, it held, in the Oregon case, that State taxes may be made specifically payable in coin; next, That private contracts, ante-dating the law -and made similarly payable, may be en forced, and now, in the case from Bahl - .more, on ilonday last', that the law not only does not prohibit but impliedly sane ,. tiara the validity of such contracts made sines. After the Court shall have thus exhausted the wide range of exceptions ', — to the operations of the act, it will leave ( so litto of its „body remaining that the revenant may be squarely endorsed with %out 'nay terrible shock to_public or private `finances. , , R. BAair,s may be congratulated upon - his succesiin inveigling the House into a falte and most discreditable position, rela liv, to Spanish liberty and Cuban inde pendence::His amendment to the Senate resolUtion is so .'adroitly worded as ,to secure the unanimous approval of the House, and yet the moral effect of that Note, if it amounts to anything at all, will be to aid, directly and powerfully, in the- Anovement to wrest Cuba from the Spanish crown. A Senatorial'approval, in this dope; would be• effectively data- Agin to the cause of Republicanism all over the world, and is to be deprecated accordingly. As for the President, it will be time enough to count him among the• faithless propagandists, when he forgets the great principles which his to•day's Address will avow. CITY COUNCILS yesterday by a deci sive vote recommended a bill to the Leg islature providing for the establishinent of a Water Commission, who shall have almost unlimited control over the water department of the city. The original bill was stripped of its objectionable featnies in Common Council and as returned by that branch to the Select, will prob ably be favorably acted upon and forward ed to Harrisburg for legislatiob. We conceive this measure to be of great im portance, and one that will meet with the hearty concurrence of every right, minded citizen, as it is designed to effect a reform in a matter closely allied to public health, comfort and convenience. THE FORTIETH CONGRESS passes into history, with its last hours signalized by such a decisively emphatic proclamation of an Inviolate Public Faith, as to dis arm the criticism which might point to its short-comings upon other questions of deep interest to the country. The broad, clear terms in which Congress, yesterday, affirmed the plainest of the public obliga tions to alt creditors who have trusted the public faith, will put a final end to the in famously impudent quackery of "green backs for bonds." When Congress de clares that the public creditor will be paid exactly as each party understood the contract when the obligation was in-_ curred, that simply jist enunciation was in itself a splendid triumph over the most insidious, and therefore the most danger oils of temptations. Let honesty Le hon ored! THE LEGISLATURE made a'mistake last winter in that it did not repeal the tax upon moneys at interest ISo lone as landed property was subjected:to levy for State purposes there was room for clamor that cash capital should be taxed as well; but even then there was no real basis for such clamor. The taxation of moneys at in-• terest constrains capitalists, and even small holders, to seek other forms of in vestment, This fat, is evidenced not on:y by the meagre returns of moneys loaned, but by the experience of all,busi ness men throughout the State. Men who bad moneys loaned out among their neighbors, when the tax was• imposed, called it in, and sought for other kinds of investment. The Commonwealth reali zes, next to nothing by the tax, while it operates injuriously in the cases of multi- trades of persons who want money ac commodations. THE LETTERS OF "FRANCESCA.” We publish this morning, the first of a series of promised letters from an Ameri can Lady, who with her husband has wintered at Dresden, Saxony, and is about to extend her travels through sev eral of the German and Slavonic States, as well as through Italy, France and Spain, and possibly fuither East. She belongs to one of our best American families, is herself an amateur artist, has painted some pictures for her friends that world do credit to a professional artist. She is moreover a lady of much culture and re finement, a close and intelligent obser ver with fine descriptive powers. Already we have orders for, her correspondence froth New York, Massachusetts and Ken tucky, and we feel sure her letters will prove a most agreeable intellectual treat to our readers. GEORGE M. BLACKSIOCK, ESQ This gentleman's numerous friends will be pained to hear that he -was attacked, a few days ago, while on a business visit in Philadelphia, with inflammation of the bowels. The symptoms are so malignant and his prostration so extreme, that ac cording to the latest dispatches, his recov ery is dispaired of. He is lying at the Continehial Hotel, attended by attached friends, and has been -joined from home by his brother and sister, so that nothing that affection or science can do, will be left undone. We sincerely hope that the imminency of his danger has been exaggerated by the reports, and that his vigorous constitu tion will suffice to restore him to his home and friends in his wonted health. —Since writing the above ,we learn that the gentleman died yesterday after noon. His 'death will be universally re gretted in this community, wheie he has so lone resided and transacted business as an Insurance; Agent. He was a man of many: fine traits of character, and pos sessed the confidence and respect of his fellow-citizens. THE CIIARYIERS RAILWAY. We-regret to learn that failure has been encountered in transferring the new sub scriptions to the Chartiers,Valley Railway Company, so aitto meet the views of the managers of the ,Pennsylvania Central. About two hundred thousand dollars have been transferred, and the signers of the other sixty thousand refuse to make the desired change, though the latter con ditions are easier than the former. Most of the persons who refuse to transfer are residents of Allegheny county. Their idea probably is that the matter has been puSbed so far that it will go through without their aid. It certainly will not, unless Mr. Timm sori shall conclude to amend his proposi tions, which were very liberal at first. What he will do we have no means of determining. Put spring is approaching, 1 1 1 T rSBURGH GAZETTE : IHURSDAY, MARCH 4, 1869. and if the Work is to be prosecuted to completion during the current year, ar rangements to that, end must be made without delay. The subscribers who re fuse to transfer) are certainly subjecting the enterprise to peril, which may prove fatal. • All the laWyers who have examined I L the original subscription papers, pro nounce the to be valid, but whether Mr. Tnontsos will accept them, iri the face of probable litigation, must be re garded'as altogether' doubtful. THE NEW CONGRESS In the oganization of the new House, to-day, the Louisiana Representatives will not be counted, their certificates of elec llon being imperfect in many respects knd widely t variance with the legal re quirements which it is the duty of the Clerk to he d. Two of the South , Caro lina distric s send double delegations with con file ing credentials. No question will be presnted concerning Georgia, as she has not 'et attempted to elect mem bers for this Congress, but will do so on the 6th of April. Nor do Virginia, Tex as or Mississippi claim any representa tion. , The Alabama election has not yet taken place. New Hampshire eletts next Tuesday, and Connecticut on the sth of April. Thus the new House, which when full will have two hundred and forty three members, meets, withithirty-six va cant seats. Of the Representatives elect, one hundred and thirty six are Republi cans and seventy opposition. The seats of sixteen members, five Republicans and eleven Opposition, are to be contested, but the holders of the regular certificates will vote until displaced. In but one of these contested cases, that _of our adjoin ing Westmoreland district, is the claim ant without the regular credentials. The terms of twenty-three Senators having expired, seven of them, all Re publicans, have been re-elected. The other fifteen are new members, except that two of them, HA.311.1N, of Maine, and STOCKTON, of New Jersey, have had previous Senatorial experience. Ten of the new members are .Republicans and five Opposition. RETIRING PUBLIC SERVANTS ' At, noon, to-day Messrs. JAMES K. MOORHEAD and THOMAS WILLIAMS, Rep resentatives of the Twentf-Second and Twenty-Third Districts of Pennsylvania in Congress, will close their terms, and retire to private life. Mr. MOORHEAD was first elected to the House in 1860, was afterwards re-elected three times, and has consequently served for eight consecutive years. This period of service csivers_the most eventful years in the history of the Republic. Entering public' life with no other prepara tion, than;`was acquired in active business pursuits, his strong com mon sense , and natural capacity _ for the management of important affairs, soon made him both conspicuous and in fluential. What he lacked in oratorical ability was abundantly compensated by the accuracy of his judgment and the tact Which he brought to the duties of his po sition. Comprehending fully the peculiar interests of this city, from long identifica tion 4 with them, be has mode one I f the most successful and honored repr nta , fives it has ever sent to Washington Mr. WILLIAMS was first elected in and was re-elected in 1866; his per, service extending to four year's. scholar of exact and varied learni ' lawyer thoroughly trained in his p 1 sion, a rhetorician of surpassing ferl and an orator of the highest type, hi specially prepared , to grapple wit great questions growing out of the gress of the war and the reconstr • of the States. In this departme particular. he rendered services the of which are beyond computatio established a reputation honorable name. JOHNSON'S FARE ELL ADDRESS. GEORGE WASHINGTON'S Fare W e ill Ad• dress to the people has now a companion piece in that issued yesterday to the dear ly•beloved citizens of the United 13tates by the unappreciated, misused, abused patriot, ANDREW JOHNSON, who lets fall from his shoulders this- day the robe of office. The man of many vetoes, not satisfied that his record is sufficiently eiear in itself, utters a few solemn parting words in vindication of his course. He is not too modest to claim the honor of the people for the disbanding i o l f an army of a million of men, all ar 1 ed to the teeth, and restoring them to their vo. 'cations in civil life. The people will congratulate them Selves • that they were spared the ruinous condition of public ilaxt affairs that would have resulted from the continuance in service of so man men after peace was declared. What a rand military feat was that, for. the Co an der-in-Chief to scatter a million f sol diers and strip them of their arms and ammunition,—anti not &man lost! GRANT. won his laurels in handling armies, but JOHNSON claims place in history for dis persing them at the beckon of his hand. He spared France the humiliation of be ing.whippen in Mexico, and, the nation is called to rejoice •that he did not wander forth in search of new conquests when the rebellion .was closed. ,He could have kept the high office, now quit, for any! length of "time if he had had criminal ambition, but he hadn't, and is satisfied to retire with a copy of tle untorn Constitution to the quiet re treats of Tennessee. His acts - have en tered into history and need not be ex plained, and in his own estimation at least, unborn millions will laud him for the innocent ambition displayed to pro tect, defend and preserve the Constitu tion and restore the Union. He calmly, dispassionately and like a father tells the nation that the war was a stupendous and, deplorable mistake. Neither side understood the other, (we fear the President stole J. N.'s thunder,) but in the future all such errors may be obviated by clinging to that great pan acea,-the inevitable Constitution, the en croachments on which no President can" prevent unless the people array them 'selves against the inexorable two thirds of Congress, (no reference intended to the -way they did interpose in the November elections, we' imagine.) We have not the patience to follow the outgoing President in his remarks illus trating his own devotion to the country and his fear that Congress is engaged in undermining the very foundations of liberty, justice and good government. We have no tears to shed over his polit ical death, and after perusing his last words to the people, can only accredit him with that desire so commonly mani fested by desperate men—to shame the au thor of evil and die game. SOLUTION OF THE IRISH PROB- LEM. How to deal with Ireland, has per plexed ten or fifteen generations of British statesmen. Each Cabinet has sought to detect the real causes of the distress and discontent which have been the heritage of the Irish people, and to apply an effec tual remedy, and each has fallen into sub- stantially the same mistake as its prede cessor. The conclusion arrived at has uniformly, been that the great evil un der which the Irish were laboring was their attachment to the Catholic faith, and that if a change could be wrought in that particular, all would instantly be well, or, at least, such ameliorations would forthwith spring up, with inherent power of perpetual expansion, as would soon - re move all real ground for complaint. The fallacy that lurked, in this conclusion was the product of religious bigotry and fanaticism, which never will allow those who are victims thereto to fully perceive more than one side of a case. The English people, for many ages, professed the Catholic faith; but they never were in so miserable a condition as the Catholic population of Ireland is now in, and have been in through successive genera tions. Nay, when the Catholic religion was introduced into England the popula tion were still in a (state of barbarism, from which they gradually emerged, un til they, attained those degrees of civiliza tion, learning and refinement in posses sion of which the Reformation found them. These reflections ought to have convinced British statesmen that they were searching in the wrong direction for the evil to be cured, and that reme dies devised under a broad misapprehen sion of the malady, would be certain to do no good, and probably would• result in making the ease worse: But those states men were smitten with a judicial blind ness and could see nothing , except through the medium 'of their own uncon querable prejudices. Measures of repressibn were devised from time to time, and executed with ap palling rigor, under the absurd expecta tion that disabilities and seventies would suffice to superinduce new ecclesiastical affinities. Even in the face of successive defeats this fatal policy was persisted in for a long period. At last came an era of Religious Toleration, followed by the admission of Catholics first, and after wardti of Jews, into Parliament. This apparent concession was of ne use. It rather served to make the dissatisfaction greater. In 'the nature of the case, it could not do otherwise. If there is any thing in which a person has a right to de mand to be left entirely free, it is in his relations to his God. Between the indi vidual soul and its Maker, all interfer ences are wrong.' Invariably they,excite antagonism. In any matter in which a man feels that he is by Nature endowed with Liberty, he,resents as an insult the offer to grant him Toleration as a favor. Mr. GLADSTONE now perceives this; ,though even he was in 'almost complete ignorance of it until he was subjected to - defeat and ferced to relinquish the admin istration of the government. Adversity has been useful to him: The bill he has introduced into Parliament for the discs tablishment of the Irish church, is much more thorough and complete than any previous formal proposition to the legis lative bodies on the subject. But little doubt remains of the passage of this bill. Upon that consummation all cause of religious discontent will be removed from Ireland; and the way will be open for the elevation of the inhabitants by means of an educational system in which all classes, and of all shades of opinion, can partici pate. . • • But something more, than this must • done if the British Government is in tent upon effecting such an improvement in the pecuniary condition of the people as will suppress discontent by making them prosperous. Ireland is essentially poor. The traditionary policy of Great Britain has been to prevent the diversification of Irish industry by the introduction of man= ufactures. A popnlation subjected to that policy cannot fail .of being poor acid wretched. There is an abundance of cap ital in England; and if the men who hold it, encouraged thereto by the Gov ernment, will employ it in establishing manufactures in Ireland, a new and per manent prosperity will be witnessed, in the presence of ,which the past will be '1864, od of g, a • fes- ''lity, was , the pro ction . I t, in !value ' and to his forgotten, and the populations of the two islands become so identified in interest as to constitute, for practical purposes, but one nationality. But the disestablishment of the Irish Church will not finish the task Mr. GLADSTONE and 'his associates have before them. All the reasons which suggest perfect equality of religious rights and privileges in Ireland, suggest the recog nition thereof in England. There may be questions of degree, which can be of fered in abatement, to stave off immed iate action, but all the questions of prin ciple involved are identical. A Church Establishment in England or Scotland is Just as much out of place, and as abso-, lately in conflict with the essential idea of Religinus Liberty, as in Ireland, and cannot long survive the demolition of the Irish establishment. The example of the United States, ex tending through nearly a century; dem onstrates that Religion can lose nothing, but must gain much, by avoiding all en tangling alliances . _ with governinents. Statesmen, intent on bolstering up politi cal systems, based not upon the consent of the people, but upon assumptions, sus tained by force, may find advantages in misdirecting religions sentiments, which are among the rqost powerful incentives to action. Despots are always. ready to invoke and profit by the sanctions of re ligion; thus misapplied and abused, ,and whether they feel any genuine respect for religion or not. But the essential con ception of pberty requires that men and women shall be free in all relations; in those which are religious as *well as in those which are social or political. Hence, while the English friends of Reform will gladly aid in the proposed movement in Ireland, they will not stop there; but will go en and demand the application of the same principles to all parts of the Empire. `-- IT IS BELIETED, at Washington. that the gentlemen selected for the new Cab inet were notified yesterday of the Presi dent's choice. The latest speculations give the Treasury to Mr. BOVMELL, of Massachusetts. Ohio is ' counted out. I The New Yorkers divide their expecta tions between Pisa and PIERREPONT. The selecticn from Pennsylvania begins to be very freely assigned to Hon. G, A. GROW. A. diipatch says: 1 "One reason cited by General Grant 1 for refusing to disclose the name of his Cabinet before his inauguration is not a little curious. He said, a few days ago, in explanation of his reasons for keeping his Cabinet a secret, that few of the Presidents who had done otherwise had been successful in forming their Cabi-. nets as they desired, and cited among others Mr. Lincoln, declaring that. of the Ibriginal Cabinet list prepared by him in 1861, only two were permitted to take i their portfolios: All the rest were t dic tated to him by parts , leaders and inter ests. He ° did not explain how he had come into possession of this fact, but sim i ply stated it as a fact by which he had taken warning." • _ 1 Washliigtou Items. The Inaugural Address of President Grant will endorse the new suffrage amendment, and it will take decided ground against all forms of repudiation, and in favor of paying all our indebted ness in gold, except where the law under which any part df it is made explicitly provides for payment in currency. Four. bank bills from' the Senate were acted on in the House this afternoon. That requiring additional reports from National banks at the call of th Control ler of the Currency was sent to a Confer ence Committee without muchopposi tion. That looking to partial redistribu tion of bank currency and of wh ch the Co burn amendment is the las section, .which was adopted the other ay, was taken up again, and after so e debate sent to a Conference Commi tee by a small majority. That prevent* g certifi cation of checks when there are no fluids was unanimously agreed to, as was also that making accessories in Nati nal Bank frauds liable to the same penalti s as prin cipals, and both measures will go to the President to-morrow for his si ature. There is little doubt that a n w policy in regard to the Alabama cl s, West Indian annexation, , &c., wil prevail under the next Administration and that it will be acted upon at once It may not boas discreet and wise as that now being pursued, but it will certainly be more in accord with public fee 1 . g in the matter. . . Among other prompt and p Lions of the new President, on tion into office will be the re : Rosecrans from Mexico. I:I3IDiSIISADM: —Wednesday morning, by a vote of sixty-two to twenty-nine, the Constitu tional amendment was ratified by the Wisconsin Assembly. President Grant halt given a New York benevolent society 'the exclusive right to publish tor its benefit a fac aim iie of his certificate of election. —Over two hundred complaints have been made to Government special agents at New York by widows of soldiers and sailors that they have been swindled out of money collected by lawyers. Col John Van Horn, an ex-Alderman 4Chicago, was arrested Tuesday night for shooting at his two daughters, one of whom he slightly wounded.: He was held in 15,000 bonds to keep the peace. —Tueiday night the Wisconsin Senate, by a vote of twenty-one t 6 six, indefi nitely postponed the House bill propo sing to submit to the people in 1870 the question of extending the suffrage to women. —On Friday the four Chesapeake pi rates, Wm. Wilson, Wm. Wells, Frank Romunds and George' Bailey, are to be hanged at Princess Anne, Somerset coun ty, Md. The crime for winch they are *to Buffer death was the murder, in March of last year, of the Captain and Mate of an oyster schooner in the Chesapeake. —At the Commencement of the Medi cal University of New York on Tuesday the degree , of Doctor of Medicine was conferred upon R. C. Graves, of Indiana; W. Hughes, of Ohio; J. W. Palmer, of ,Ohio; R. R. Stockard, of Mississippi; J. Paul and R. B. Townsend, of Ken tucky. Professor Thompson delivered the valedictory addresQ., in which he ridiculed the idea that nature was the only healer of disease. - and argued that no true physician could entertain such a heresy without moral paralysis. PR LSIDEAT JOHNSON'S LAST WOE (Continued from First Page.) net be censured, if my efforts have been Impeded in the interests of party fac tion, and If a policy which was intended to reassure, and conciliate the people of both sections of the country was made the occasion of inflaming and dividing still further those who were_only recent ly in arms against each other, yet as in dividuals and citizens - were sincerely de sirous, as I shall ever believe, of burying all hostile feelings in the grave of the paSt. The bitter war was waged on the part of the government to vindicate the Constitution and save the 'Union, and if, I have erred In trying to bring about a more speedy and lasting peace, to extin guish heart-burnings and enmities, and to prevent trouble in the 13outh, which was retarding material prosperity in that region and injuriously effecting the whole country, lam quite c •ntent to rest my case with the more deliberatejudgment of the people, and, as I have already in timated, with the distant future. The war, all must remember, was a stupendous and deplorable Mistake. Neither side understood the other, and had this simple fact and the conclu sions been kept in view, all that was needed was accomplished by the ac knowledgment of the terrible wrong. and the expression of better feeling and earnest endeavor at atonement shown and felt In the prompt ratification of the Constitutional Amendment by the, Southern States atlthe close of the war. Not accepting the war as a confessed false step on the part of those who in augurated it, was an errOr, which now only time can cure, and which, at this late date, we should endeavor to palliate. Experiencing, moreover, as all have done, the frightful cost of the arbitra ment of the sword, let us in the future cling closer than ever to the Constitution as our only safeguard. It is to be hoped that not until the burdens now pressing upon us with such fearful weight are re moved,iwill our people forget the lessons of the war, and that remembering them, from whatever cause, peace between sections and States may be perpetual. The history of late events in oar coun try, as well as of the greatest govern ments of ancient and modern times, teaches that we have everything to lose by a departure from the letter and spirit of the. Constitution, and the unane ascendency of men al lowed to assume power in what are con sidered desperate emergencies. Sylla, on• becoming master of Rome, at once adopted measures to crush his enemies, and to consolidate the power of his party he established initiatory colonies through out Italy, deprived of the full Roman franchise the inhabitants of the Italian towns who had opposea his usurpation, confiscated their lands and gave them to -his soldiers, and conferred citizenship upon a great number of slaves be onging to those who had proscribed him, thus creating at Rome a kind of body-guard • for his protection. After having given Rome over to slaughter, and tyranized beyond all example over those opposed to him and the legions, his terrible in strument of wrong, Sylla could yet feel safe in laying down the insignia of power so dreadfully abused and 'in mingling freely with the families and friends of his myriad of victims. The fear which he had inspired continued after his volun tary abdication, and even in retirement his will was law to a people who had permitted themselves to be enslaved. What but a subtle knowledge and con viction that the Roman people had come changed, discouraged and utter: broken in L spirit, could have hindere this glaring assumption ? - What but pn o lit indifference to consequences so terri ble as to leave Rome open to every cal amity which subsequently befel her could have justified. the conclusions of the dictator and tyrant in his startling experiment? We find that in the time which has since elapsed human nature and exi gencies in governments have not greatly changed. Who, a few years ago, in con templating our future, could have, sup posed that in a bitter experience every- thing demanded in the name of military emergency, or dictated by capriee, would come to be considered as mere matters of course; that conscriptions, . confiscation, loss of personal liberty, the subjection of States to military rale and dhdranchisement, with the extension of the right of suffrage merely to accom plish party ends, would receive the pas sive submission, if not acquiescence, of the lieople of theßepublic. It, has been clearlydemonstrated by recent oc currences that encroachments upon the Constitution cannot be prevented by the • President. However devoted or deter mined he maybe, unless the people • i interpose, there s no power under the _Constitution to check a dominant major ity of two-thirds of the Congress of the United. States. An appeal to the nation is attended with too much delay to meet • the emergency, while if left free to act the people . would correct in time such evils as might follow legislative usurpation. There is danger that the same power which disregards the Constitution, will deprive' them of the right to change their rulers, except by revolution. We have already seen the jurisdiction of the JudiCiary circumscribed, when it was apprehended that the Courts would decide against laws having for their sole object the sunremacy of party, while the veto power, lodged in the Executive by the Constitution for the interest and pro tection of the people, and' exercised' by Washington and his successors, has been rendered nugatory by a partizan majori ty of two-thirds in each branch of the national Legislature. The Constitution evidently contem plated that when a bill is returned with the President's objections, it will be *. calmly reconsidered by Congress. Such, however, has not been the practice under the present party rules. lt has become evident that men who pass a bill under partizan influence are not likely, through 7. patriotic motives, to admit their error, and thereby weaken their own organize lion by solemnly confessing it under the 1; official oath. Pride of opinion, if noth ing else, has intervened and prevented a calm and dispasscionate reconsideration of a bill 'disapproved by the Executive. Much as I venerate the Constitution, it must be admitted that this condition of affairs has developed aflefect which, un der the aggressive tendency of the legis lative department , of the government, •:c., may readily Work its overthrow.' It may, however, be remedied without dis turbing the harmony of the instrument. The. veto power is generally exercised upon Constitutional grounds, and when ever it is soapplied, and the bill returned with the Executive reasons for withnold luithis signature, it ought to be immedi ately certified to the Supreme Court of the'United States fir its decision. If its constitutionality shall be declared by i that tribunal. it should then become al . law; but if the, decision' is otherwise, it should fail without potver in Congress to re-enact it. In cases in which the veto rests upon 1 hasty and inconsiderate legislation; and in which no constitutional question la in- ; volved, I would not change the !nude mental law, for in such cases no perma nent evil can be incorporated in the fed- • eral system. It is obvious that without such an amendment, the government, as.. it existed under the Constitution prior to the rebellion, may be wholly subvert- , I sitive ac 'hi induc i of Gen E2l