, e I' r t. )@ r .,_ ; 1 OUR PLATFO R 111 THE UNION -THE CONS Int ITION-ANr THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE LAW. H.A.RRISE tT IRA; e,.. Wednesday Afternoon„Tuly 10, 1801. TEE TARIFF. There seems to be a disposition among cer tain members of Congress to use the present crisis to attack the revenue laws, and if possi ble, injure the prospects of the producing clas ses of the country. By a vote in the House of Representatives yesterday ; it was decided not to consider any subject irrelevant to the war. This was of course proper,and in accordance with the purpose for which the present extra session was convened, but we can scarcely consider it fair and just that the present tariff should be assailed to gratify the speculations and pur poses of the importing interests of the com mercial cities of the Union. There are great interests involved in the revenue laws as they now exist, interests that were just gathering strength and importance when this rebellion burst forth to blast not only them but others equally as important. If they are to be given up to the merciless competition of foreign pau per labor, an evil almost as great as that of re bellion will develops itself in our midst, and when we have crushed the rebels and ended our struggle for the government, we will find more woe in our ruined industrial interests than could have been found in the triumph of treason. Whatever miy be our wants, the revenue laws as they now exist, should be sacredly guarded, and any alteration avoided as likely to create great future injury in return for any present uncertain assistance. The strength of the nation is vested in the prosperity of its in dustrial interests. Destroy these, or pl ,ce them in unfair positions or illiberal competition, and we impair not only the prospects of communi ties, but we arrest the prosperity of the nation itself. Tan 'No us or vas Sorra are beginning to realize the effects of their own acts, They are now suffering from results that are natural, and feel v. ry much like casting the blame where it does nor belong, and from whence it always returns to plague and annoy themselves. By the blockade they are literally bottled up, corked and sealed as completely as if they were within the glass embraces of a Jersey tankard, and yet , hey still persist in assailing tl,e gov ernment for its weakness, And denouncing the people of the loyal states as cowards. From the Chesapeake Bay to the Missis-ippi, this blockade is now as strong as fleets I men-of war, gun boats and forts . can possi oly seal up harbors, leaving the rebels no chance of com munication with the world, cutting off their commerce, and diminishing their trade to the extent of total ruin and destruction. The cot ton crop must find an outlet and a market on the railroads running from the smith to the north. It must be brought up the Mississippi to Pittsburg, and thence shipped over the various roads leading from that city to the eastern and northern manufacturing towns, or be carried over Pennsylvania's splendid improvements to the sea-board for trans-shipment to Europe. The southern planter cannot eat his crop of cotton. Though cotton is king. it is neither meat or drink, shelter or protection, while waving in its pods to the hot winds of a southern dime. It reo ives its power and worth after it has passed into the hands of the manufacturer—or, rather, it only becomes powerful when convert ed by the Gin, the Jenny and the Loom, into its various marketable fabrics. The irresistable and powerful effects of the blockade cannot be watched too closely, or esti mated too largely. By its influence the rebels will be brought to understand their true posi tion, if not appreciate the power and resources of the government they have so grievously wronged. DESBRTERB FROM THE RE➢EL AMY represent the condition of affairs in the rebel ranks to be of the most desperate c haracter —drunkenness, assassination, gambling and insubordination being the order of affairs in the entire rebel forces. It is asserted that a number of regi• meats from South Carolina, Georgia and Ala. barns, wese term of service will shortly ex pire, have declared their determination to re turn home, having become disgusted with the hypocrisy of their leaders, the helplessness of their'cause, and the bad treatment they receive at the hands of those who deceived them into this rebellion. The entrance of the federal troops into Virginia and their closer proximity to the rebels will increase these desertions, as well as augment the organization and courage of the Union men throughout the south. Davis and his associates begin to understand this condition of affairs, and hence the fact of their sending a bearer of despatches to the President, in which a demand was doubtless made for a truce or an entire suspension of hos tilities. It really seems now that the more vigor with which the operations in Virginia are carried forward, the sooner the rebellion will be overtaken and crushed. One effectual blow is all that is necessary to end its existence. TEE POLITICAL. AND FINANCIAL CONDITION of Missouri is so desperate that a call for a conven tion has been issued, to meet in Jefferson city on the 22d of this month, for the purpose of nominating a Governor and Lieutenant Governor and other state officers, in the place of Governor Jackson, who is a fugitive, and the others who are not willing to act under the laws and con stitution of the United States. It is thoiight that a fall provisional governirient of loyal men will be appointed by the Convention, to act in , the present ca'. - - • : - TILE GOVIERNME'IVT. When Abraham Lincoln was: inaugurated, those who now stand prominent as rebels, then were satisfied that the destruction of the Ameri can government was inevitable. It was made a b rast that the f _deral authority was repudiat ed in at least three states, while almost twice as many more commonwealths were ready to sever their connection with the Union of states, the moment it would appear practical for them to dissolve the association. All the while the declaration was indulged, that the government of the United States had become extinct in all its functions, and that there was nothing left of the old powers or prerogatives worthy of the re spect of the masses of the people. Those who made these assertions were of course the men most deeply implicated in the plots since de veloped for the destruction of the government. They were determined to forestall public opinion by poisoning the public mind, filling it with doubt and swaying itsjadgment with prejudices and alarms. Having thus had the start of the government, and having also had the advan tage of being in power in - most of the federal departments, it was not extraordinary that the rebel leaders should have succeeded in getting possession of certain points, and making certain preparations, which have given the color of fairness to their treason before the world. It is not strange that for a short period, the nations of the world should have paused before defin ing their position towards this rebellion, simply because it had succeeded for the time in assum ing a legitimate attitude, and in even forcing itself on the generous consideration of man kind. This was an advantage which treason derived from an imbecile administration, of which it was itself a component part—and with this advantage in its favor, the statesmen and soldiers of the world had a right, and actually did anticipate for the rebellion a result which would complete the destruction of every vestige of civil and religious liberty on both sides of the Atlantic as well as along the Pacific Ocean, the Mediterranean, the Baltic and the seas of the world. But the result has been different from that at ticipated by the rebels, the world, if not by every loyal man in the land. We had a right to look for disaster, not knowing or fully ap preciating the temper of the people. We had no right to believe that the government would be sustained with the unanimitynecessary for its complete success, simply because the political feuds of the day had engendered prejudices which were likely to arouse the bitterest pas sious, and array a large mass of the American people against a government whose interests they should otherwise sustain and defend in power and authority. All this constituted part of the fears and the apprehensions of the men who were summoned to grapple with the first outburst of treason—but the result since has proven how far we cm be wrong in our estimate of the loyalty of a people who have already tasted the blessings of freedom and experienced the elevating influence of an organization and a government based entire ly on equd justice. Instead of the people pausing, they have rushed to the support of the government with an enthusiasm in numbers almost unprecedented. In the free states, the support of the government is open, bold and vigorous In the rebel states, it has its secret friends while it is assailed by its open enemies, and even in some of these assaults, the friends of the Union openly proclaim they adherence to the government, by engaging in a struggle with those who are banded together for its overthrow. • In the whole history of the world, we do not find an instance in which a government such as our own has been able as successfully to cope with trai ors. The years that the rebels have monopolized the places of power—the precedents they have made and insisted upon— the utter recklessness w:th which they have seized upon and squandered the treasure of the country, gave them all the prestige they eves enjoyed, and made them the terror and power they represented themselves to be before the peace-loviug people of the loyal common wealths. It was this reputation that made the south the force in the government it has main tained since its organization the force of fraud, the power of overbearing and audacious assumption—and clinging to the same princi ples and practice in the present rebellion, they firmly believed that they could crush the masses of the free states, drive Abraham Lin coln from Washington, and violently take pos sesAon of the government. But they have been mistaken, and in this mistake we have the solution both of the problem of self-gov ernment, and the plots and efforts of those who were engaged in an effort to destroy such self government. In this mistake it has been de monstrated that while a free is as likely to brave traitors as any other form of government, it also produces a power equal to its own pre servation, and that power is in the hearts and the hands of the loyal people who are blessed by its administration. The IlissioN OF COLONEL TAYLOR, the rebel bearer of despatches from the traitor Davis to President Lincoln, has proven to be a failure. The precise nature of his communication has not been revealed to the public, but it is not improbable that the dispatches he bore were intended as a feeler of public opinion in the north, with reference to some contemplated offer of compromise on the part of the southern rebels. The speculation that Colo nel Taylor entered the lines of the army under a flag of truce merely for the purpose f making a reconnoissance w' conceive to be absurd, inasmuch as the rebel generals must have known that he would be placed un der such surveillance as would reader it impos sible to accomplish this purpose, as indeed the result proved, for he was sent back blindfolded to the outposts of the Union army, without re ceiving any answer to his communication, whatever its purport may have been. It is said that the document contained an impudent de mand, signed by Davis and Beauregard, and was read by President Lincoln, but its contents are necessarily kept secret. ' Tan undub- znortalit,y in one or' tivo of the New York ragimenti ie attributed-to tha exoei sive coriauxuptlon of lager beer. iPennoVivania natty eeltigraPhs Webneoban 'Afternoon,lp 10,1861. REPORT OF SECRECARY OF TREASURY. The Secretary of the Treasury is required by law to prepare and lay before Congress, at the commencement of every Bersion, a I eport on the subject of finance, containing estimates of the public revenue and the public expenditures, and plans I r improving and increasing the revenue. This duty, always important and responsible, is now rendered doubly imp 'Maur, and responsible by the peculiar circumetancee under which the present session of Congress is held. A vast conspiracy against the Union of the States and the very existence of the national government, which has been gathering strength and preparing hosti ities in Secret tor many years, has at length broken out into flagrant violence, and has assumed proportions so seduus that an: extraordinary exertion of the public. force; creating 'extraordinary demmds upon the put lie resources, is required for its speedy and complete discomfiture and suppression. In the judgment of the Secretary the clearest under standing of the actual condition of the public finances and of the measures demanded by its exigencies will be obtained by considering the whole subject under the following general heads : First. The balance arising from the receipts and expenditures of the fiscal year, 1861, end ing on the 80th of June. Second. The demands upon the Treasury arising under the existing appropriations and created by the new year 1862, exigencies for which provision is to be made during the fiscal year. Third. The best way of providing for these demands and the means available for that pur pose. As to the first and second branches the Sec retary shows an aggregate of appropriations al ready made of $17,710,870 68. He proceeds—The additional estimates here with submitted for the fiscal year ending June :30th, 1861, including the deficiency caused by the applications of $6,299, 868 96 in the ser vice of the preceding year, will require appro priations. For the civil list, foreign in- tercourse and miscellaneous ob $831,496 90 For the interior Department, 431,525 77 For the War Department, 185,296,897 19 For the Navy Department, 30,609,520 29 Making an aggregate of $217,168,850 15 In addition to these demands upon the Trea sury, it will be necessary to provide for the re demption of Tftasury totes due and maturing to the amount of $12,638,061 54, and for the payment of the interest on the public debt to be created during the year, which, computed for the average of six months, may be estima ted at $9,000,000. After further figures, the Secretary says : —The whole amount required for the fiscal year 1862 may, therefore, be stated at $3lB, 519,581 87. It will be seen that in the foregoing estimates no provision for the interest on the existin- I public debt specifically appears. The omission is only apparent, the estimate for that interest being included in the sum of nearly $66,000,- 000 already appropriated for the year 1862. • On the third branch, viz, the Ways and Means, the Secretary says :—To provide the large sums required for ordinary expenditure and by the existing emergency, it is quite appa rent that the duties on imports—the chief re source for ordinary disbursements—will not be adequate. The deficiencies of the revenue. whether from impor s or other sources must necessarily be su plied from loans, and the pro blem to be solved is that of so pi uportiouine. the former to the latter, and so adjusting tbt detaiis l of both,-that the, whole amount ueeileu etetteee,e—teee..teith.atee—ee. )my, with the least possible ihicunveuieuce, with tee greatest possible incidental benefit to the people. The Secretary has given to this important subject the hest consideration which the ur eency of his varied t üblic ileac)) has allowed, and now submits to the consideration of Con gress, with great deference and no little dis trust of his own judgment, the conclusions to which he has arrived. He is the of the opinion that $80,000.000 should be provided by taxa tton, and that $240,000,000 should be sought through loans. It will hardly be disputed that in every sound system of finance, adequate pro vision by taxation, for the prompt discharge of all ordinary demands, for the punctual pay meat of interest on loans, and for the ere .tion of a gradually increasing fund fur the redemption es ?he principal is indispensable. Public credit can only be supported by public faith, and pub lie faith can only be maintained by an econo mical, energetic and prudent administration ut public affairs, and by the plouipt and punctual u 'fitment of every public obligation. It has been already stated that the appropt la- LiODS f'r the ordinary expendi urea of the fiscal year 1862, including the permanent and indefi nite description-, amounts to $0,887,849 84, and the interest to be paid on the debt to be incurred during the year has been estimated 'at $9,000,000, making an aggregate of ordinary expendi urea of $74,887,849 34. If to theft sums be added $5,000,000 as aprovisionfor 4te reduction and final extinguishment of the pub lic debt, the total will be $79,387,849 34. To provide for these payments it is proposed, in accordance with the principle just sated, to raise by taxation at least the sum of $80,000,- 000. In considering the choice of means to ensure a revenue adequate to the purposes just indicated, the attention of the Secretary haa been necessarily drawn to the different modes of taxation authorized by the Constitution. The choice is limited to duties on imports, direct duties, and internal duties or excises. Duties on imports constitute the chief form of indirect taxation. Direct taxation include capitation taxes, taxes on real estate and proba bly general taxes on personal property, included in lists embracing all descriptions and valued by a uniform rule, while under the head of in ternal duties and excises may be included all taxes on consumption and taxes on special dets criptions of personal property, with reference to use rather than value. The principle advantage of the system of di rect taxes are found in the sensibility with which they are felt and observed—in the mo tives thence arising for economy and fidelity in the Administrdtion, and in the manifest equal ity of distributing burdens in proportion to means, rather than in proportion to chnsump don ; on the other hand, the advantages ot in direct taxation by duties on imports are found in the economy of collection, in the facility of payment, in the adaptability to the encourage ment of industry, and, above all, in the avoid ante of federal interference with the finances of the States, whose main reliance for' revenue for all objects of State administration must neces sarily be upon levies of property. These considerations have doubtlem deter min d the preference which has always been evinced by the people of the United States, as well as by their Legislatures and Executives, for duties on imports as the chiet source of na tional revenue. Only on occasions of specid exigency ha, resort beep. had to di , ect taxation or to internal duties on excises. No departur, is proposed by the Secretary from, the line of policy thus sanctioned. He ventures to recom mend only such modifications of the existing miff as will produce the principal part of the needed revenue, and such resort to direct taxa tion or internal duties aa, circumstances may re quire, in order to make good whatever want of dudes may be found to exiat. That the pre sent tariff ~ f duties will not produee the revs one required - by,-;sound :principles of finance, under 'the existiciK,cirety:kceh.-4 a proxisi, tiou which - Will" pordnaan4., PORI WO*. was frarLiCd,'Aideed; . viith"reloFenk . ia 'SW 4013; dithient danditga% attaisi::` TREASURY DEXAMMENT, July 6, 1861 The receipts for the last quarter of the fiscal year just closed, were only *5,527,246 33, and thoug La very consid ruble improvement in the revenue may be confidently anticipated during the current fiscal year, should no change be made in the rates of duties, it will be inade quate, beyond doubt, to the demands of the Treasury, which should be provided for without resort to loins. These demands, as has already been stated, will reach the sum of $79,887,- 849 34, a sum not greater, perhaps, than may be reasonably expected, in more prosperous years, from a welt adjusted tariff of duties, though greater than can now be expected !row any tariff. the disorders of business incident to the disturbed condition of political affairs. will be gradually redressed as new channels open tor ceive the trade obstructed informer courses, and new employments engage the industry dis placed from former pursuits. With this revival of trade and industry the revenue will improve, even though the resto ration of peace may be delayed beyond our present hope. It is hardly to be doubted, moreover, that the great body of the citizens of the States now involved in the calamities of insurrection will, ere long, become satisfied that order and peace, and security for all rights of property and for all personal and political rights in the Union and under the Constitution, are preferable to the disorder and conflict and insecurity necessarily incident to attempts to subvert the government, break up its iustitu tions and destroy our nationality by force and violeree. When, under the influence of this reasonable conviction, the people of the several States now constrained by the criminal folly of political partizans into civil war against the Union, shall, la their turn, constrain these par tizans to loyalty, to law and obedience to the Constitution, it is not unreasonable to expect that with restored union will come not merely renewed prosperity, but prosperity renewed in a degree and measure without parallel in the past experience of the country. While recommending the changes in the ex isting tariff and the other revenue measures which seem to him necessary, the Secretary in dulges therefore a confident expectation that they will ultimately prove wholly adequate to all reasonable demands, for the ordinary expen ditures, for the payment of interest, and for the reduction of the public debt; and that they will moreover, by establishing the national credit on sure foundations, contribute in no inconsidera ble degree to that revival of trade and industry which, by its healthful reaction, will, in turn, essentially promote the increase and security of the revenue. The sources of revenue most promptly to be, made available must be sought, doubtless, in the articles now exempt from duty or but lightly taxed. Nearly all of these articles have hereto fore contributed in full measure to the national income. It was only when the debts contracted in former wars for the estaidi hment of our na tional independence or the vindication of our national rights had been fully paid and the revenue had increased largely beyond any le gitimate uses of government, that it was thought proper to remove the duties on some of them and largely reduce the duties on others. That intelligent patriotism which cheerfully sustained the former charges, will even more cheerfully sustain those made necessary now for the pres ervation of our national Union and the main term/lee of the sovereignty of the people. Of the art des now hotly taxed, sugar, and of those wholly exempt from duty, tea and coffee, are the most important. The Secretary most respectfully proposes to Congress that a duty of .4 cents per pound be laid on brown sugar , of 3 cents per pound ou cloyed sugar ; of 4 cents per pound on loaf and other refined sugars ; of 21 cents per pound on syrup of sugar cane ; of 6 cents per pound on candy ; of 6 cents per gallon ou molasses, and of 4 cents per gal- Am on sour molasses. And it is ors° proposed that a duty pt 6 cents per pound he imputed on. wnL'ej -- rnr* tiactr - tore :0 cents per pound on green tea. Erom .thetie duties it is eiainaatk d that au additional revenue of nut less than 313,000,000 annually may be raised, while the Um then of this upon our own people will he to some considerable degree rani gated by a participation on the part of the for eign producers. Without oing into other details of less im portance, the Secretary thinks it proper to add in g. neral that from the propos d duties on ar ticles now exempt and from duties charged on - articles now either lightly burthened or so hea vi.y taxed that the tax amounts to a prohibi- Lion, a further increase of revenue to the amount of $7,000 000 may be anticipated, and that the improving condition of trade and industry war rant a just expectation that revenue from the duties of the present tariff not yet affected by the proposed ch ,nges will not fall short of $3O, 000 000. He estimates, therefore, the total revenue from imports during the present ) ear at $67,000,000, to which may be a .ded the sum of $3,000,600, to be derived from sales of the public lands and miscel aneous sources, making the total revenue for the year $60,- 000,000. While, therefore, there is every reason to be lieve, that under a moditied tariff, when the prosperity of the country shall be fully r stor ed, en annual revenue of not le-s than $BO,- 000,000, and probably more, may be realiztd, it will be necess.ry, in order to sustain fully the pu s bl:c credit, to provide for raising the sum of $20,000,000 for the current year, at least, by direct taxes, or from internal duties or excises, or from b.,th. The Conetitution requires that the former be apportioned among the states in the ratio of the Federal population, but the latter need only be uniform throughout the United States. Taxes on real estate, and perhaps gen eral taxes on personal property, must therefore be apportioned. Taxes on distilled liquors, on bank notes, on carriages, and similar descrip tions of property, must not be higher in one State than taxes on the same article in another State. The Secretary submits to the superior wisdom of Congress the determination of the question whether resort shall be made to direct taxes, or to internal, or,both, for the supply of the pro bable deficiency of that portion of the public resources, which, upon the principles already I explained, must be furnished by taxation. The value of real and personal property of the peo ple of the United States, according to the ceoeus o f 1860, is $1.6,102,924,116 ; or, omitting frac tions, sixteen thousandinillions of dollars. The value of real property is estimated at $11,272,- 053,881, and the value of the personal property at $4,882,880,235. The proportion of the property of both de scriptions in the United States excluding those at present under insurrection iB $10,900,768,009, of which sum $7,680,620,608, represents, ac cording to the best estimates the value of the ieal estate, and $3,230,227,404 the value of the personal property. At ante of} of 1 percent. ad valorem, on the whole real and personal property, the country would produce a sum $20,128,667, at a rate of one fifth of ono per cent. on the real and personal property of the States not under insurrection, would produce the sum of $21,- 80.0,056, and at a rate of ;three tenths of one per cent. on the real property alone in these !States would produce $22,891,590; either sum being largely in excess of the amount required. in some States the revenue for all purposes of. State, county and municipal expenditure is raised in this manner ; and the etsesswents of real and pers,mal property levied on valuatioes made under State authority form a certain end convenient method of collection. If such val uations existed in all the states it would not be difficult' through the assumption" and pay ment by the Several States of their several pro portions of the tax, or throngh the co-opera tion of the State authorities in its collectioic or through Federal agencies created for the purpose, bat the. State valuations to as /15- and collect the, levy for national purposes: It is the absence:of such valuationg in sdnie.:'.Of the State 4, and the uncertainty of 'effectiVe jct. ogetatlot la all, which maga the emptoyshout of an extensive and complicated Federal ma chinery for the collection of direct taxes ones'_ vary, and supplies the basis of the most serious objection against that mode of collecting reve nue... It has been ohjected, and not without appa rent reaton, to a resort to direct taxes at this time, that, in consequence of the disturbed cond tion of the country, the apportionment required by the Constitution cannot,be made. The Secretary, however, adopts the opinion that the constitution , I requirement will be satisfied if Congrvss, hi the act of levying the tax, shall apportion it among the several States in the required manner. The tax c ,nnot be co,,,e un,onstittitional, because it may be diffi cult, or even temporarily impossible, to cl Meet it as apportioned. If it were otherwise the ob jection would be fatal to internal duties as well as to direct taxes for, in the present condition of the country, it is impossible, whatever uni formity may be observed in the law imposing such duties, to make them- uniform in collec tion. Internal duties may be collected more cheap ly than direct taxes, by fewer agents, and with less interference with the finances of the States They may also be made to bear mainly upon articles of luxury, and thus diminish, in a cer tain extent. the burthens imposed by duties on imports upon the classes of the people at least able to bear them. It has been already shown that a light, direct tax, from which, the Secretary ventures to sug gest, very small properties may be properly and advantageously exempted, will produce the sum needed for the revenue. •In the judgment of the Secretary the needed sum may also be ob tained from moderate charges on stills and dis tilled liquors, on ale and beer, on tobacco, on bank notes, on spring carriages, on silver ware and jewelry, and on legacies. If both sources of revenue be resorted to, to the extent suggested, the amount required from loans will be proportionately diminished, and the basis of the public • credit proportionately enlarged and strengthened. Whether both these modes of taxation be resorted to under the present emergencies, or only one of them, the Secretary will but illy perform his duty to Congress or the people, if he omits to urge the great importance, the absolute necessity indeed, of such full provision of the annual revenue as will manifest to the world the fixed purpose to maintain inviolate the public : faith, by the strictest fidelity to all public,ongagements. It will not, perhaps, bethought out of place if the Secretary suggests here that the property of those engaged in insurrection or in giving aid and comfort to the insurgents may properly be made to contribute to the expenditures made necessary by their criminal misconduct, as apart of the punishment due to the guilt of involving the _ nation in the calamities of civil war, and thereby bringing distress upon so many innocent persons. Congress may justly provide for the forfeiture of the whole or part of the estates of the offenders, and for the payment of its proceeds into the public Trea sury. Before dismissing the subject of the proper provision for ordinary expenditures, inelud ng the interest of the public debt, and a proper amount for a sinking fuud, the Secretary re spectfully a-ks the consideration of Congress of the question whether the current disbursements of the government may not be themselves di minished? He ventures to suggrst that a con eideraele saving may be judiciously effected by a reduction, for the time, at least, of ten per" cent upon salaries and wages paid by the gen eral government, in cases where such reduction will not interfere with existing contracts, and that a further saving, perhaps not less consid erable, may be effected by the abolition of th franking privilege and a reducti n of postal ex penses. itetrenchmeut in other directions will Joubtless suggest itself to the reflection of Con gress; aud it tit rust respectfully recommended every retretaChinent compatible with, the vigor and ellicleocy of the publis: service be promptly and effectually mule. The becretary has hlteady said that, on th supposition that $80,00u,000 may be raised by taxation in the triode proposed, ur derived from the sales u 3 the public lauds and miscellaneum, resources, it will still be necessary, in order to meet the extraordinary demands of the present rims, to raise the sum uf two hundred and forty mi lints 'of dollars by loans. A. compari n of the acts by which loans have already been authorized and of the loans actually made, will show what resources of this description are vailab e and r existing laws. The act of June 22d, 1860, authorized the borrowing of $24, vOO,OOO, at en interest of not above 6 per. oeut. Clutter th 6 authority Mr. Secretary Cobb, in October, 1860, negotiated a lean of $10,000,000; ut, from causes not necessary to be here sped. ded, the takers of $2,K8,000 failed to make good their off rs. Tha amount realized was, tr erefore, only $7,022,000, leaving for future neg ,tiatien, under the act, the sum: of $lB,- 978,000. The act of February Bth, 1861, au thorized another loan of $25,000,000 on bonds at 6 per cent, and p rmitted the acceptance of the best bids, whether above or below par. Under this act, in February, 1861, Mr. Secretary Dix disposed of bonds to the amount of $B,- 600,000, at rates varying from 90 16 100 to 96 10 10U for each $lOO, and realizing the sum of $7,248,500 35; leaving to be negotiattd the sum of $16,994,000. The act of blanch 2d, 1861, commonly called the tariff act, authorized another loan of $lO,- 000,000, at an interest not exceeding 6 per cent., and also authorized the Secretary of the Treas ury to issue Treasury notes in exchange for coin, or in payment of debts, for the amount of any dis not excepted under the actof Feb. nary Bd, 1861, and for the amount of any loans restrict ed to par not taken under the proposals author ized by the act of January, 1860, or by the tariff act itself. Under the acts of February and March, 1861, the present Secretary, in April, 1861, disposed of $3,099,000 in bonds, varying in rates from 85 per cent. to par; and $4,901,000 in Treasury notes at par, realizing for the $8,000,000 offer ed the sum of $7,814,809 80 to the Treasury ; and in May, 1861, he disposed of $7,310 000 in 12onds, varying in rates from 85 to 93 per cent„ and $1,864,000 Treasuiy notes at par, receiving for the $8,994,000 the stun of 87,922,653 46. The present Secretary also invited proposals at par for $13,978,000, being the balance of the loan authorized by the act of 'June, 1860. No bids were received except three for $12,000 in the aggregate, which, • having been made under a misapprehension, were permitted to be withdrawn, or applied as offers for Treasury notes at par, or for bids under the act of Febru ary, at 86 per cent. The Secretary has since, under the authority of Elwell, 1861, issued Treasury notes to offerers at par, and in pay ment to public creditors to the amount of $2,- 584,580. The only'anthority now existing for obtain ing money by - loans is, therefore, found in the act of March 2 1861, which authorizes the issuing'of: bends bearin g an interest of 6 per cent., or, in default of offers at par, the issue or payment of Treasury notes, bearing the same rate of interest, at par, to the amount Of $ l O,- 000,0000 ; and in the act of ,June 22, 1860 ; .is modified the act of March 2,1860, under which Treasury notes at 6 per cent. may be issued or paid to creditors at par to the amount of $ll,- 3 83,450—making in all an aggregate of loans authorized iu some form of $21,893,450. This authority, under existing circumstances, is no further available than as creditors may desire to accept payment in Treasury notes at 6 per cent., which is not to be expected, perhaps, as an alternative for delays of which a just or pru dent government will not, unless under extreme fiee-ssity, permit the occurrence. It needs no arguint.nt to work the conviction that under the existing laws little or nothing of 'the required surn - can be realized. The mag nitude o ale - 060044 requires other measures: As the COnteet in , ihich the government's now owed is 0'994460 144. Wimal nistac!l sad _ the sovereignty of the people, it is evidently proper that the appeal should be made, in the first instance, at least, to the people them selves, and it is high y desirable, in order that the circle of contribution may be widely ex tended, to make the burthen press as lightly Re possible upon each individual contributor; and if possible to transmute the burthen into a benefit. To attain these desirable objec 5, the Secretary submits to Congress the expediency of opening subscriptions for a national loan of not less than $ 10 0,000,000, to be issued in the form of Treasury notes or exchequer bilk, bearing a yearly interest of 7 310 p r cent., to be paid half yearly, and redeemable at the pleasure of the United St des after three years from date. The sum of $100,000,000 is named as the amount for which it now seems expedi ent to rely on a subscription of th s kind. But it is not intended to restrain loans in this form to any precise limit short of the entire sum which may be required in addition to the sums to be realized from other sources for all the purposes of the year. The interest of 7 3 10 per cent. is suggested, because it is liberal to the subscriber, convenient for calculation, and, under existing circumstances, a fair rate for the government. It is beneficial to the whole people that a loan distributed among themselves should be made so advantageous to the takers as to inspire satisfaction and the hopes of profit, rather than annoyance and fears of loss. And if the rate of interest proposed be somewhat higher than that allowed in ordinary times, it will not be grudged to the subscribers when it is remem bered that the interest on the loan will go into the channels of home circulation, and is to re ward those who came forward in the hour of peril, to place their means at the disposal of their country. The convenience of calculation, incident to the rate proposed is quite obvious, for the interest being equal to one cent a day on $5O. it is only necessary to know the num ber of days since the date of a note, or the last payment of interest, to determine at a glance the amount due upon it. To increase still further this facility of calcu lation it is proposed also to issue Treasury notes of this loan in sums of $6O, $lOO, $6OO, $lOOO and $5OOO, with the amount of interest for specified periods engraved on the back of each note. The facility thus secured to the holder of determining the exact amount of the note and interest without any trouble of computa tion, will materially enhance its value for all purposes of investment and payment. While the rate proposed is thus liberal and convenient the secretary regards it es also, under existing circumstances, fair and equitable to the gov ernment. The bonds of the United States bear ing interest of six per cent, and redeemable in twenty years after date, cannot be disposed of at current market rates, so that the interest on the amount realized will not exceed 7 8 10ths per cent. Nor is there any reason to believe that treasury notes bearing an intertst of six per cent, recivable for public dues, and conver tible into twenty years' six per cent bonds, can be disposed of in any large amounts, so that the interest of the sum realized will not fall much, if at all, short of the rate proposed, for the difference of interest, if any, between such rates and those of the proposed na tonal loan, the Secretary thinks the absence of the feature of receivability for public dues in the latter is a sufficient compensation. To secure the widest possible circle of con. tribution, the Secretary proposes, in addition to the inducements just mentioned, that books be opened at the office of the U. S. Treasurer in Washington; at the offices of the Assistant Treasurers and depositors of public moneys ; at the offices of such postmasters and other select ed persons in such cities and towns of the Union as may be deeignated. That subscriptions be receleved for $6O, or any t•um being the multi ple of $5O ; that the sums subscribed be paid to cash, or if the subscriber prefer, In instal ments of one tenth at the time of.subscription and the tenth on the let and 15th days of each month thereafter, the first instalment to be f rteited in case of the non-p yment of the .;:übsequent instalments ; and that interest ac crue cud be paid as it becomes due on all sums paid in, from the day of payment; and that Treasury totes be issued if required for all pay ments except the first instalment, and for these on final payment. ~Die~. Thi - 4 morning after a short Maass Cram Bassi, is the thiriy-tbird year of pis sue. 3 03 2butt-tizements. CO-PARTNERSHIP 1/TANTED.—Agood businessman with if V from 5101 t• VW capi'al to enrrigo in a Artt etas* business, 10491;lif 50 I.of cent pfak. Address 6 Manufacturer, at thla LElca. Jylo (Me yi 0116 E WANTED.—A. small house for & recruiting readezvoun—nexr Railead pra te ed LIEUT. ORABT, ISM Artillery, jy , 10.dmaelt Joao, Boole. t'O ALL WHOM IT MAY CONCERN. NOTICE is hereby given that under and in pursuanee of the Act of Assembly in SUO7 ease mad' and provided, will be sold at public auburn 01 SATURDAY THE 26th DAY OF OCTOBER, 1561 ac the ware house formerly oceupid by John Wadlwer & Son, in the City of. Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, the foLowing g00d.,;, ware; and met.. hen 1153 to pay the charges there on due John Wallewer & eon, arising from the transr.or. tation, keeping or storage thereof : PitoEthTT COMO.= TO 3 Ploughs, Hunnagle. 1 Carrtige Pole, Owner. 1 Cooking Range, S. D. McCall, z Boxes Mdze, W. E. Pence. ' -T - Box Carpenter Tools, G. R. Darndoilar, 1 bedstead and Chairs, A. Fog. 1 Box Painphleta, Owner, 2 B.IX Household Goode, -.-- Owner. 1 Chest Sundries, Owner. 1 Chest BOOFehOId . GOO4 Wm. Brown. 1 Cart and 2 sieves, Chas. Smith, Lot Broke Stoves and Castings, Owner. Lot Household Goods, J. J. Cull. 1 chest Bedding, Owner, 1 Stand, 1 Bed, 1 Bedetead, Rock er, I Frame, ' Mrs. Baker. 1 Box Glass Ware, Owner. I B.:parator, Owner. 1 Plough; Owner. 1 Horse Rake, I.Drill, Owner. '1 Box eundrles, Bridget Gilmer. 1 -Box Patten a, Owner. 1 Box Furniture, Rev Miller. 1 Chest Tools, ()when 3 Boxes hidie, Mrs. M. White. 1 Bbl, 1 Half Bbl liquor, 1 Keg, Owner 1 Bbl, 1 Wed Break r &c., J Winebrenner. 2 Threshers and Power., R. T. Etter. 2 Boxes Paper, Own r. Bo! , < Cement, H. Ru2P, Let Tools ice., - O. P. Dull. 1 Smut Machine, Owner. 1 Lime Spree ler, • Eli Fry. A. O. FiIb.STER, - C. F. MUBNCEI, jylo-IdBtw Assignors of .Ino. Wall ,wer a Son. FOR SALE.—One of the best business stands in the city on reason .ble term=, or 'wed for Neu or aye years :it sled in Market saw. beftsosa Fourth and Fifth. lingufte on the.pren t•es of 9412 in • DaNIG LEEDY. SELF SEALING !I ! • TARS, CHINA. POTS AND TIN CANS or tji five varieties just re.ceived and for sale low ny jy 9 ' • WEd. DocH. Jtt., & CO. STRAY HORSE. TAKEN up to-day (July 9,) in the Sixth ard, astray ti KEY nOSSE, w.tuout ekddieyy :Lie or hirness, The owner can otn.da the andual ey prociag property and pa } tug aharE es. LOUIS KAPPHOM, Jy9 Ste Sixth Ward, EUREKA SKIRT 1 I. A Nialegant skirt. Belt adjw4ting in sit -1-36, tang, done. Ik• into and elegazd',lcaproyement, tLica please defy [O9-2U • ; TONES,-810.71.E. IMPORM BOLOGNA. SAUBIGB.-A varmint batjuit raving and for .4. Dy 1191 WiLa QV " a_o9,