. . - . .-',4„... „ - ~.. . , . . . . . , ‘, • .. . , :.,. i -,41-tanktAtt......: , t , , . } e ' • By FCLURE & STONER. ttanklia, AlepioAttrivg. PLEASANTON - 014, YLEASANTON;S ART OF W. 4 k 8.. " Horc's a Ifikrice month indeed, 'That spits forth death, and mountains, rocks and seas; Talks as familiarly of roaring lions , , 9a maids of thirmen do of puppy dogs." - „ - B r i g. G en . •picasanton, commander of the Home Guard of the city of Philadelphia, in pursuance of an act of the legislature - of Penn sylvania, approved by the Governor ; chosen to 'isommand by the militia warriors of the city of Brotherly • Lore; confirmed by the sedate and upright councils known as the City Fathers, and • bearing commission as Brigadier General, "signed by GOv.Cartin i with the great seal of - the Commonwealth attached," has made of ficial report to the Hon. Alexander Hem 7, Mayor of Philadelphia, of• the valrous opera tions of the Home Guard in'general, and - of the, trials, triumphs and truMpet-tongued 'heroism of Brig. Gen. A. J. Pleasanton in particular. One hundred and twelve pages of pamphlet tell the thrilling story, and a hitherto unknown Hero,, Sage, Patriot and Prophet, stands self -unearthed, defiant of tht; malicious poet's surly rule that— • -; " The honor's eror forced, liThea ho that did tile•Akis commentator " The country will hail the advent of Pleasim ton. He biirsts upon its as the great central figure of this bloody panorama, until no* strug gling for his country's welfare in obscurity, re jected of men and military pretenders, and unknown to the hopeful millions whose blood and treasure have been wasted because Pleas &uteri-pinned military honors and grim visaged, te4entless war, under a multitude of difficulties— where distance lent iicroiC enchantment. The keen eye that greetedthe sun of Austerlitz, and the genius that gate victory to the eagles of France on that gory field, will pale before the searching prophetic vision; the crowning strategy and the hoarse thunders of condemnation, which alternately illumine and darken the pages of history, since Pleas anton has made re port of Pleasanton, and Portrayed the "con juncture of circumstances" which made Penn sylvania armyless and Pleasanton brigadeless.- ' As an important fact in the chronology of this conflict, we notice that the report bears date— " Head Quarters, Defences of the city of Phil adelphia,-December 31, 1863," and opens with the triumphant vindication of Pleasanton proph ecy. •,After the failures of Burnside and Hooker in Virginia, "it was easy to forsee," narrates the Brigadier, "that the seat of war would be transferred, to Pennsylvania with as little delay as possible." He knew it, and he alone ; but the brave are ever generous; and he_ scarrie4to - lie parsimonious with the gifts and powers which Heaven, the legislature by act of 16th of May, 1861, the City Fathers,and the Home Guard, 'had confided to his keeping. He gave "timely notice" to the authorities ; but having eyes they saw not, and with ears they heard not ; and stubbornly adhered to the same "incredu lity" that; has "marked their e.onductifrorn the commencement of hostilities." They "disre garded the warning, reposed in their fancied tranquility," and only hearkened unto the words of wisdom when the foe "swept down the val ley of the Shenandoah, like an eagle•from his eyrie; and crossing the Potomac river, marched directly upon ,'Pennsylvania in June, 1863." The Secretary, of War and Gov. Curtin were incredulons,"! and when the rebel guns thun dered at Winchester, and Jenkins w 4 fording the Potonme, the authorities concluded that the rebels were "making a raid ; " and instead of calling Pleasanton and Pleasanton's hosts of the Home Guard to turn back the bloody tide of treason, they searched the land of strangers and flung such pigmies as Gens. Couch - and Brooks to cope with :the giants of chivalry. True Plea sonton was but a single warrior; but he was Pleasouton--a broad seal, legislative, munici pal-mid elective Brigadier; with few men•but prolific of firoclamatious; and 'could he have been induced to "move upon the enemy's works" with printingpress, types and fixtures, with ink and quill, and enforced upon the insurgents the reading of his manifestoes as fast as multiplied by his tireless brain, the foe would harie reeled back in ghastly horror, and the crimsoned path of treason is Pennsylvania would have been without creation. More Milling than Grecian or ROM= story would have been Pleasauton's report of Pleasanton's triumphs; but a stupid Secretary and a doubting Executivemade Plea aonton mourn in retirement, and Gettysburg is the fearful monument of their folly. .But the page of history just now supplied has one bright star that glimmers through the mid . night of stupidity and infidelity that envelopes the authorities. There was one faithful man— Pleasanton was faithful to Pleasanton. The age of proclamations had daWned, and Pleasan ton protestid in behalf of Pleasanton, that six proclamations by the President, the Governor and Gem Couch in two weeks, was a double - crime—it was a lolly and an infringement. It was madness to call men when Pleasanton was burning to meet the foe in the name of the broad seal of the State ; of the act of Assembly; of the municipality, and of the heroic Home Guard, consisting, for active duty, of Pleasanton andPleasanton's staff with eaisonsof.portfolies; and it was an ungenerous infraction of the pro prieties of life and of the 'regulation's of the Home'Guard. for six 'proclamations to issue in two brief weeks .without Pleasanton's name to even one of them. He plead that they should— " Let fortune empty all her-quiTers on me— I have a seal that, like a ample shield, Can take in all, and.yerge enough for more I" 'With sublime bufraubdued deference to the evil " conjunctura - of circumstances," he ex claims—" Was there, ever such a spectacle ?" "The State actually invaded"—and Pleasanton snot even allowed to proclamato Pleasanton into Ilte field two hundred smiles from the foel In faithful sorrow for his own and his country's Misfortunes, rather than in anger, he modestly vindicates the ti-uth of history, by stating that Pleasanton was forgotten by ungrateful officials; and as if madness ruled on every - hand, the au thorities dreamed of the fabled days,of Cadmus, and -without having sown dragon's teeth, called armed men to spring-from the soil, like reptiles in balmy spring time. "Thus abandoned to ourselves," records the sorrowing Brigadier, ho resolved to make the banks of the Schuylkill historic ; and the Mayor called upon him to muster_" the whole of the said Guard-for the preservation of _the peace and ,the defence of the city." Pleasanton drew his sword. Little dreamed future hiStorians of the hour blg_ with - fate when Pleasanton threw himself into the conflict. His first triumph was " General Order N0.'1." In the name of the broad seal; the Assembly, the-Mayor, and the Home Guard, he proclaimed peace-and defence. But, although green with his laurels, he was generous in' the' midst of Ins greatness; and he forgave those who had spitefully used him. He did not sub vert the govhninent, either State or National ; but in sublime meekness he invited " the sup port and co-operation of his fellow-citizens, and of all the authorities, National, State and Mu nicipal, in the, performance of his responsible duties." Generous; benignant Pleasanton ! Nor did he stop with formal concession to the autherities. He sent copies of 'General Order No. I to Stanton, Halleck, Curtin and Couch, and-wrote autograph dpistles to each to advise them that hewas id the- field and the Republic was safe at last. He asked Stanton to supply his requisitions; but Halleck answered Gen. Couch was in command in E astern Pennsylvania, and " was charged with all matters." He wrote Gen. Couch, magnanimously proposing subordi nation to the authorities, and asking that his requisitions be ( supplied ; but Couch's hitinor never reached the answering point. He wrote Gov. Curtin for permission to charge the State, but Cu'rtin plead want of authority and absence of cash. With pointed grief does PleasantOn exclaim—" Here was an extraordinary state of things !" A Brigadier- General without a Bri gado, without supplies, without cash, and with out even recognition Heroically he rushed to his portfolio and opened upon Mayor Henry 'at destructive range, and called for $_500,000 More, and recited how his General Order No.l, had fallen upon listless. authorities, and -declared their responses were " by no means satisfactory or encouraging.", Failing to command stem from the National_ and State authorities, he resolved, in a spirit of generous unselfishness, I to co-operate with them, and • enfiladed Gen. Couch with a Plettnantonianepistle4levoted with udfaltering fidelity to Pleasanton. As Gen. Conch did not kno4r - the,ioads to Philadelphia, he gave , report 'or a raw tinnisance in force he had made from Philadelphia to the Susquehanna in 1861, and proposed to map it so that in their mutually co-operative - efforts the staff officers of Gen. Couch 'could find the " Head 'Quarters of the Defences of the City of Philadelphia," in the numerous exigencies in whiCh imiortant ad vice would be wanted at the " Head Quarters of the hepartmeut of the Susquehanna!' He informed Gen. Couch that he was Brigadier " under the authority of the Legislature of Penn sylvania, and of the Municipal Government of this City," and he graciously condescended to propose to be mustered into the service of the United States : his rank so honorably . conferred to be sacredly preserved and that he be as signed to cominand in Philadelphia, so that he could " organize with more celerity" the forces wanted by bungling commanders to resist the foe. And as Gen. 'Conch was unlettered in greatness, Pleaaan€l.mfonned him how be had been at West Point•-in 1822; promoted, trims ferred and 2d Lieutenant in 1826 ; -resigned in 1830; lawyer since 1832; Igigade s Major in 1835 ; Colonel of Artillery from 1835 to '46 ; assistant Adjutant General of Militia from 1838 to '39 ; Paymaster Genet:al of Volunteers in service (Buckshot, war) in. 1838-9; Railroad President in 1839-40; , commander of Artillery during the riots of 1844 Mai now bearing hon orable wounds therefor; directed to organize the Home Guards under an act of the legisla ture of May 16,1861, with rank of Brigadier General: appointment confirmed by Select Council ; afterwards elected "by the whole force" to the same position for five years ; una nimously confirmed again by the Select Council and "duly commissioned a Brigadier General of - Volunteers, commander of the Home Guard," and finally " assigned to the command of the defences of Philadelphia, under the aforesaid act of the legislature of the State, Juif 16,186'3." By this terrific bombardment in the shape of I a -sulphurous personal history, Gen. Couch's pickets were driven in and his line of reticence broken. An Aid returns thanks for th 3 maps of the roads, and another Aid acknowledges the receipt of the brilliant autobiography, but the. General commanding was "not authorized" to deer the muster, and the assault fails. Four • days later, and anothet stranger and adven: turer—" an off-shoot of Paine trans-planted to, Minnesota"—named Maj. Gen. Dana, was as signed to "the command of the militia and vol unteer forces and defences of Philadelphia" by order of Maj. Gen. Couch! It Would seem that ingratitude had resolved upon a harvest at the expense of Pleasanton, but, still with his eagle eye fixed upon the flag, he lookedraturve the groveling hatreds which beset him, and re solved to 00-operate with Gee. Dana. Buthere was modest Pleasantoniaiimeritidestined to re ceive -its crowning humiliation. After inforna itig Gen. Dana by what high authority 'he wore his honors, he replied that be didlit recognize either Gen. Pleasanton or Gen. Pleasanton's organization! "Pray, why not?" dematsled the Pleasanton Brigadier; and forthwith he emerged from the mountain of sorrows that surrounded him 'and became jolly. "This is very funny!" says Pleasanton; and Pleasanton made merry - over his own and his country's CHANI3ERSBURG, PA., WEDNESDAY, MAY 4, 1864. woes. He was powerless to serve; lie had mourned until weary of mourning, and none wept with him ; and he crowned_ sadness with the essence of mirth, - But in his facetious mo ments Pleasanter' .did not Mrget Pleasanton, nor did Pleasanton forget Pleasanton's mythical Home Guard, ten thousand warriors strong accOrding to the act of Assembly, approved May 16,'11361. "My commission" said he, "as Brigadier General, is signed by Gov. Curtin, with the great seal of the Commonwealth at tached. You may not, if you choose, respect anything here," hitt What instructions am I to give men when I have recruited them into my invincible Guard 7 -lawful alike by State and municipal regulation 7 Gen. Dana had not become humorous—ham was solemn as Pleasan- - ton was merry, and he answered—" None; send them to me:!" The report closes the'seene by informing as that Pleasanton "saluted him" and took his leave! But the Home Guard Brigadier was not thus to be driven from his valiant purpose to aid an imperiled country in its darkest hour. He had tried and failed; had (tried ,again and failed again; had repeated the trial again only to have failure repeated by unappreciative authorities. But he was mindful that - '"The mouse thfit always trusts to one poor hole, Can never be a mouse of any souP! —and ever faithful to the honor and safety of the Nation, the Home Guard, andthe Brigadier General Commanding, he resolved to defy diffi= culties and stupid and incredulous Secretaries, Governors and Major Generals, and persevere. At last fortune seemed to smile upon - him; and gave promise of rank, pay and honors, whether or not the Home Guard should muster 10,000 strong, in accordance with the act of Assembly of May 16, 1861. Ho met Adjutant General Thomas "in front of theUnimi League build ing,"about 1.3 S P. AL, 29th June, 1863,—"en old acquaintance and fellow student at West Point." Here was fortune unfolding her arms fora Cor dial embrace of Pleasanton. He suggested that :he should be forthwith Mustered into the Uni ted States service with the rank conferred by the act of Assembly; the Governor, the broad seal, the municipal authorities and the vote of the whole force. "Certainly, by all means!" responded Gen. Thomas. Go and tell General Dana "to muster you'at once into the service," - , says the Adjutant General, and forthwith Pleas oaten goes to have Pleasanton forthwith musi tered ; but the "off-hoot of Maine," madly bent upon the destruction of his country and ; his country's cause, interposed the red-tape of regulations, and refused to muster Pleasantom either forthwith orZthereaftCr, unless ordered: in writing. A pencil order Would do; but it must be it; form ; and forthwith Pleasanton rushed to the depot to catch Gen. Thomas, with a written ordo: directing the forthwith'iliuster, Gen. Thomas signed the order so pregnant with future glory, find fortune again smiled brightly on the path of 'Pleasanton. But alas! " The buds that piomised fair, Were early blasted, or but given to be A mockery—a harVest of despair I" At 4 P. M. of the same day the order was presented to Sen. Dana, and already the Pleas- - , antenian brain was crowded with Napoleonic bulletins to grace the morning papers, when he should be mustered forthwith and assigned to the command orhis Home Guard, -10,000 strong according to' i the act of Assembly. - But the "off -shoot" again interposed red-tape to cramp, the genius about to burst in effulgent splendor upon the military world. " When your brigade is full I will muster yon," snid the malicious Dana. "Pardon me," says the impatient war rior,—the order directs "you to muster me a Brigadier General of 'Volunteers forthwith —it contains nothing about a brigade!" The "off shoot" was defeated in his cruel machinations— it lyds so denominated in the bond, and he. agreed. to muster and announce the assignment to duty of the heroic Pleasanton in the morning papers. The shades".of evening gathered slawly after receding day, and long, 'long weary hours of night interposed between - Pleasanton and fame. But bright morning came, and the sun rose with unusual, splendor to smile upon a Mustered Pleasanton and see him wrestle with the Gods of War. But the morning papers were silent on the topib that had convulsed the couch and disturbed the dream's of Pleasanton. He charged upon Dana to know why he was not proclaimed with mustered honors; and the faithless Dana answered by handing several telegrams from Harrisburg which he said,._ "would 'explain themselves." Pleasanton grasied them: he read them and confessed that the explanation was free from ambiguity. The same Adjt. Gen. Thomas Who had, at 1.38 P. M. on the 29th of June, *ordered the muster, had, at or about 8.40 A. M.: on June 30th issued an order declaring—" Gem Pleasanton's ap pointment is revoked!" There had been "vio lent opposition to your twister at Harrisburg," says the imperturbable Dana, and it cannot be done. Pleasanton writes in behalf of Pleasan ton to his "old acquaintance and fellow school mate at West Point" to know why. his laurels had thus withered untimely; but in sadness the Brigadier declares that his letters "have re mained unanswered." But he resolved to, be greater than fate—he_did not sink down "Foiled, bleeding,. breathless, furious to the last!" —he rose above the injustice of men clad with brief authority and beheld onlyan imperiled State and Nation. He drew forth hie portfolio again and wrote to the off-shoot Dana, and proposed to organize the minute men. To this Dana re plied by his aid, that Pleasanton can organize minute men; but they shall not "be necessarily attached to the body known as the Home Guard, of which you are the Commander." "It is un deritood," continues the letter, "that that body was composed of only a few offieers, and a fc)vi, if any-men!" Here was tnlmiled 4'8414, stupid ity and treason. The - Home (Lard regally 10,000 strong by act of Assembly of 16th of May, 1861, approved-by the ficivernortdoclated to have bat few officers and no men! and the worn and impatient warrior must not "cheek the enc(!rkraging activity". in enlistments, by forcing recruits to join the Home Guard: but the jiope is expressdd that he may "fill his skel 'elon command with willing recruits!" With becoMing pride did Pleasanton "dismiss these insinuations with the contempt which they mer it," and thus ended the campaign of Pleasan ton; but 'not so the report. It is replete with the truth.of history. It tells of opportunities lost for Want of Pleasanton ; 'of battles won as they would have been won by Pleasanton . ; of military rifles and laws known only to Pleasan ton; of Aleut/men and States madelillipntians because the powers hearkened not to Pleasan ton, 'finalist but not least, it tells bow the jeal ous hatetri of Pleasanton's greatness poured out the vials of their wrath upon the devoted head of Pleasanton; how they defied every sugges .tion ofsefety by confronting the act of Assem bly of liith of May, 18C1 ~which declared the Home Guard 10,000 strong, and Pleasanton its Commander, by the broad seal of, the State and the sanction of 'the Executive and municipal authorities. Such is the unbroken record of wrong that :ever beset the hero Pleasanton ; and'at last, Weary of his country's ingratitude, be looks back "with perfect complacency and equanfinity upon the expedients which have been. adopted to embarrass and obstruct the operations otthe Home Guard," and thoughtful_ that-- "Whets boasting ends, there dignity begins" —he wrapped the drapery of his periled honors about him, and sank to rest in the midst of his admired and admiring Home Guard. • Au rceoir, Pleasanton Gov. CURTIN sent a message to the legisla ture tin S4urday, asking authority to issue bonds for a loan of V 700,000 re-imburse the Banks for money advanced to pay the militia, called out by the Governor in 1863, under the author ity of the President. Congress ,has not yet made the appropriatp, although the call was expresslyauthori zed by the general government, and the claim should in justice be promptly paid at Washington. We doubt not that it will be so paid; but the credit of the State demand ed immediate provision for paying the banks and the legislature did it at onCe. LEGISLATIVE APPOICTIONRIENT. • The new legislative tipportiontnent, under which the Senators and Representatiyes are to be chosen4uring the next seven yeari, passed the Sepate on Tuehday of last week by 17 to 15, and was'adopted in -the House on Wednesday by a vote of 51 to 44: It is rather conspieuOns for a ryllid distrihution of the Union majorities, so as tole there available in as many dis- tricts possible, than for the equities and affim: ides of association; and if not overdone, will leave but a moderate minority of Democracy in the next legislature. Of the 33 Senators, the ,Union mea should elect 21, taking the vote for Gov. Curtin last year as a basis, and the• Frank -, lin and Adams district may be counted as rather Union th ocratie in addition; and the . House - should °lea 5 Union men to 35 Demo crats. The next legislature will pretty cer tainly have a contrglling Union majority in both branches, unless improbable 'reverses to the Union armies should prostrate the Union party: but the unusual assortment of double Sena torial 'districts, and double; treble and even quadruple Representative "distriCts, with the natural estrangements so often manifested in local politics, will peril party success iu or dined. political contests. • , It will be seen that Franklin and Perry are associated for Representatives, and will eieet two members, and that the old Sehatoriatdis trict of. Franklin and Adams is restored. We subjoin the bill: , - - SENATORIAL. 1,2, 3 and 4. Philadelphia city 4 . 5. Chester, Delaware and MentgemerY.-- ........ 2 6. Bucks , .. 1 r 7. Lehigh and Northampton . 1 Er. Barks ' 1 - 0. Schuylkill • 1 10. Carbon, Monroe, Pike and Wayne 1 11. Bradford, Susquehanna and Wyoming., 1 12. Lucerne ' 1 13. Potter. Tioga,M'Kean and Clinton ' , 4. 14. Lycoming, 'Union and - Snyder '- ~..1 15. Northumberland, Montour, Columbia and - Sulivan ' 1 . 16. Dauphin and Lebanon 1 . .. .... . 17. Lancaster • 2 Is. York and Cumberland- 1 19. Adams and Franklin • 1 20. Somerset, Bedford and Fulton ' 1 21. Blair, Huntingdon, Centre, Mifflin, Juniata" . . and Perry , 2 20 Cambria. Indiana and Jefferson 1 23. Clearfield, Cameron, Clarion. Forest and Hlk. 1 24. Westmoreland, Fayette and Greene r 1 25. Allegheny' 2 26. Beaver and Washington 1 27, Lawrence, Butler and Armstrong ' ' 1 28. Mercer, Venango and Warren 1 29. Crawford and'Erie - • 1 REPRESENTATIVES Philadelphia.-- ...... 4. Delaware Chester Montgomery 8uck5......... Lehigh • Northampton Carbon and Monroe • Wayne and Pike • .' ' Lucerne Susquehanna and Wyoming Lyunn t ing, Union and Snyder.... Columbia and Montour Northumberland, Tioga and Potter Clinton. Cameron Ind M'Kean. Centre H un tingdon, Juniata and Mitilin Schuylkill - • Berke Lancaster 4 Lebanon 3 Dauphin ~ • . Yprk , - Cumberland Perry and Franklin •" ' ' i Ada m s ... • 1 s Somerset Bedford and Fu-iton IO Bradford and Sullivan ............... : ... '.....:,..,........., 2 glair % ambria '"•• . . - 1 - Clearfield', Elk and Forest' - 1 ' Clarion and'Jefferson .... . 1 Armstrong ,-. 1 Indiana and Westmoreland. • 3 Fayette !- Beaver 2 and Waah - ington . a Venangoeart Warren z - • ' 2 Crawford " . 2 Frio-2 Allegheny, 6 ',Amoco, Meteor and Butler • ' '.4 os op- • 0 -0: s 1.1 -2: 7 - -v.., OS . CO OW % 41. 2 e: R TUE NEW TWO CENT PIECE. We herewith present the readers of the RE• Posrrouy with an engraving representing the new species of coin, that is about to be adopt ed by congress. The great demand for small change, of a less denomination than five cents, has directed the attention of financiers to sup. ply the want, and a new eoih, of which the above cuts are a correct representation, heti been adopted and will doubtless be issued at an early day. The value of. our present nickel pennies being greater than the value of an equal amount of chrrency,' necessarily puts them to a - premium and withdraws them from general cir culation, and postage and' other stamps are of ten used by shopkeepers to make change. When the new coin shall be adopted and issued, -it will have an immense circulation so long as silver and gold are held at a premium.. It is said that the - expense attending the coinage of the nickel cents, in consequence of the increas ed price .of the metals used, makes them a pos itive loss to the government; and when issued they are intrinsically worth 'more, at the cur rency standard, than their'facical significance. The new two nent.piece is but little larger and thicker than the present one-cent coin, and con tains less nickel, and abundance of copper, with five parts of tin. In size -it may be compared to the silver quarter dollar, and resembles as much as anything can, a gold coin, and is really , beautiful. On - one . side there is a wreath of wheat, in the centre of which is stumped "2 cents". and around which are the words "Uni: - ted States of Atherica." On the other side there is the Shield of Liberty, bearing the words " God our Trust." , The old' copper cent, is inconveniently large. and heayy, and in color and-smell Is offensive. It contains ene hundred and sixty-eight grains. The new cent, adopted in 1857; is a vast im provement upon the old, alike in color, size and beauty. It is readily distinguished from other coin, even in the. dark, by its smooth edges, wherein it differs from all the coins of' 1 our Mint. It is composed of eighty-eight per cent, copper and twelve per cent. of nickel, and weighs seventy-two , grains. When it was adopted, the intrinsic valuit of the metals com posing it was 'ss6 for $OO of cents; but the value of the metals has so increased as to ar-, rest the coinage of cents. The new two cent coin is to - be a mixture called bronze, composed of ninety-five per cent. copper and five per cent, tin and - zinc, which wouldafford a dvelded 'profit to the government in its aoinage.. At the ordinary price of copper, the cost of the new coin would be but o little over twenty-five per cent. of its representative value ; and it is prob-, able that, when the government returns to a: specie standard again, the new coin must be withdrawn, for the profit on ifs coinage would be a great temptation to counterfeitera The present necessities of the people clearly demand the new coin, and we trust that -Con , gresS will tak6 speedy action upon the proposi tion and authoriie its, issue. The use of postage and other government stamps as currency is attended with great inconvenience to the peo ple ; and when they become defaced or blurred, as they must eventually by such use, the gov lernment refuses to redeem them.. It is due to the people, therefore, that Congress should sup ' ply this want at an etAdy day;and thus obviate i the necessity of using stamps of the denornina lion of one, two and three cents. If authorized and issued, the new! coin would be gratefully accepted by the people, and would at once have un immense circplatiOn. 1 —Coins were used as early as the Bth century before Christ,- and in the 4th century B. C. money was found in all parts of the civilized world—each State having_ its 'proper coinage. Copper Was firstitsed for coin by the Romans, and tinder Caesar, copper, brass and iron were in use, In the United States the government now reserves the exclnsive right to coin money; but individuals may make coin of anydenemin alien and shape, of gold 'and silver, provided that it be not "in resemblance-or similitude" of the government coins. In California and other gold countries gold is coined into half_ dollar, dollar, and =five, ten, twenty, fifty and an hundred dollar pieces ; but they are so made ,solely as a matter of convenience. Copper coins cannot, however, be made exeegtipg' b s y the government. The earliest coin to have been made in this country was of brass, and was issued in 1612 for the, l 7irginia Com pany. A description of ,it written at the time says that it had " a how (hog) on one side, in memory of the abun4upe of the hones which were found on theirAistlandlng.7 In 1645 the Assembly of Virginia decided that «t 1 iluoine (coin) eurreir Would ho of great advantage; authorizd the issue of copper pieces of two, three, six and nine pence, but they were never rtiadc: . The ,general court of Massachusetts es tjablished "a mint housae " at Boston in la 2 whieli order declared that certain coins should be made, wtiCIA A shall be for forme flatt." During the reign of 'William and Mary,-copper Going Were struck in England for New England and North Carolina,-having on them respective ly—t, God preserve New England,'t and "God [ preserve Carolina and the lords proprietor% 1694," Maryland authorized 'a mi n t in 1662, 1 -butit never went into operation. Lord Balti , more, however, had several coins struck in England, having on the obverse a profile bust of himself, which circulated , in that .colony. Now Hampshire legislated for copper coinage in 1776, but. did not issue. - From 1778,t0 1787 the power of coinage was exercised by Congresi and also, by Several States. 'Vermont and Con necticut establishednaints - ln 1765, and issued MI I VOL 71.....WH0LE NO. 31655. The following letter from President , Lincoln has justappeared in the Frankfort (Ky.) Com monwealth. It will written at the request of Col. Hodges, the editor of that paper, itnd ad dressed to him with •permission to publish it, that the people of Kentucky might hear - from the President himself what were the actual groundi upon which he based hiS policy of emancipation ;—so much Misrepresentation and vituperation on the part of most of the newspa pers publistetin Kentucky havinghithertokept the people in ignorance, and so succeeded in fostering a feeling • - of wrathful discontent throughout the State respecting that policy. Col. Hodges having - accompanied Governor Bram. lette and Senator • Dixon on 'their late visit to Washington, to consult with the President touching the draft in Kentucky, heard this ad mirable vindication of his policy addressed in the course of conversation to Governor Bram lette, Senator Dixon and himself,—and was immediately struck with the thought that the publication of such a convincing summary of facts and arguments could not but have a most beneficial influence in Kentucky at the present time, He, therefore, requested the President's permission to publish what he had said, and _ having taken • the matter into consideration, the President consented, and himself addressed the following letter embodying the conversation to - Col. Hodges : • • copper cents. New Jericy authorized 'copper coinage in 1783, and Massachusetts established a mint in 1786. In 1785 Congress adopted the plan of a National coinage proposed by Jeffer son, and, in 1787 - a mint was authorized and carried bito operation the following year. The United States - Mint is now locatedln Philadel phiarand has branches in Charlotte, Dahlonega, New Orleans and San Francisco, and private coins are notissued at all, excepting in, the gold regions as a matter of convenience-. LETTER FROM THE PRESIDENT. Ilxr.ctrrivs MANSION, Washington, April 4, A. G. Iludgcs, Esq, Frankfort, Ky.: MYDEAR SlR—You` ask me to put in writ. ing the substance of what I verbally said, the other day, in your presence, to Gov. Bramlette and Senator Dixon. , It was about as follows : I am naturally • anti-slavery. If slavery is not wrong, nothing is wrong. I can not re member when I did not so think and feel. And yet i l •have never understood that the Presi dency conferred upon me an unrestricted right toilet officially upon this judgment and feeling. It was in the oath I took, that I would to the best of my ability, preserve,protect; and defend the Constitution of the United States. I could not take the office without taking the oath. Nor was it my view that I might take an oath to get power and break the oath in using the power. I understood, too, that in ordinary civil adatinistration this oath even forbade tne to practleally indulge myprimary abstract judg- - menton the Moral question of slavery: — .1 - had publicly declared this many times and in many ways . . And I aver that, to this day, I havedene no official act in mere deference to my abstract judgtdent and feeling on slavery. I diOnderstand, however, that my oath to preserve'.the donstitutionto the best of my abil-' ity implOed upon me the duty of preserving, by. every indispensable, means that Government, that Natibn, of which that Constitution watt the organic 'paw. Was it possible to lose the Na tion and yet preserve the Constitution 7 • By general law, life and limb must be pro— tected; yet often a limb must be amputated to sate a life ; but life is never wisely given to a te -b. I feel that measures, save measures, otherwise tmcenst tutional, might became lawful, by be coming Fndispensable to the preservation of the Constitution, through the presevation of the Na tion. Hight or wrong, I assumed this grmind, and novel avow it. I could not feel that to the - best of my ability I had even tried to preserve the Coni c titution, if to save slavery or any minor matter; I. should permit the wreck of Goviern meat COuntry, and Constitution, all together. When early In the war Gen. Fremont atteßpt edmilittag emancipation, I forbade it because I.did not, then think it an indispensable neces sity. When a little later, Gen. Cameron, then Secretary of War, suggested the arming of the blacks, I objected, because I did not yet think it an indispensable necessity. When still later, Gen. Hunter attempted military emancipation I auin forbade it, because I did not yet think the indispensable necessity had come. When, in March, and May, and July, 1862, I made earnest and successive appeals to the Bor der States, to favor compensated emancipatiorl,. I believed the indispensable necessity for Milt ; tary emancipation, and arming the blacks wenld come. unless averted by that measure. They declined the proposition, and 1, was, in - my best judgment, driven to the alfefnatiVe, of either surrendering '‘he Unio'n, and with it, the Con stitution, or of laying litrthig hand upon the col: ored element. I• chose the tatter. In choosing it, I hoped for greater gain'than lose; brit of this I was not entirely confident. Mote than a year of tgiainOw shows no loss by it, in our foreign relations ; 'l4one in ourhotne popular sentiment ; none iirour' tvhite military force—no loss by it, any hew or' any where. •On the contrary, it shays again ofqnite a hundied and thirty thous and soldiers`, seamen and laborers. These are palpahle facts, about which, as facts, these can be ne caviling, We have themen, and we could not have hadthem without the measure. ' And now', let any Union man, who complains of the measure, test himself, b 7 writing dawn in one line, that he is for ?nbduing the rebellion , by force of arms, Mad in' he next; that he Is for taking these hundred and tidily thousand men from the Union aide, and plabing thent where they would be, but for the measure he condemns. If he cannot thee his cause so stated, because ho cannot face the truth, - I add a word, which was not in the verbal ; conversation. In telling this, tale, I attempt no compliment to my own sagacity. I clainrnot to have controlled events, but confess plainly that events controlled me. Now at the end el three years' struggle, the nation's condition, not what either party or any man devised ex ex- peeted, God alone can. claim it. Whither it is tending seems plain. If God now, willa the removal of,a great wrong, and with nlso that we of the North, as well as youof the South ? , shall pay fairly for our complicity La thatwroxkg, impartial history will find therein new cattse to attest and revere the justice and,_goodness of God Yours truly, • A. LINCOLN. GEN, SWEL was serenaded lastweek atOnr , berland, and the crowd called persi&' a speech, At last Gen. Sigel - Gentlemen : Ger non and writ Brie°' II