6 ....,.....-- ...,...,....t. ..„..,..,_., rtr Lif st tr THURSDAY., JUNE .Ist, 1865: e . V tolLellell NT =re MI PIMO or A 111.1111.1/J1 Jacksoia. The New York San suggests that Jeffer toii Davis will raise an important point in hi.:; trial as follows :'`,Was not, his -discov ery, notwithstanding, the crinoline die oy.e, a recognition of the 'Confederate Uoverninent "On the Republican theo ry grit the President is the government, ~ ,r taittly was. ThA Louisville Journal thinks, and n e my people will agree with it, that. " .untried law officer of the Government i . alway-i liable to incline, perhaps un (,,m.,ciously to himself, to the nation that , ► part of his official duty to find au thority for what the Government wants done " :zenAtor Wilson, of lisisaachilsetts, %aid .peech, a few days ago: I have no faith in what is called Unionism iu the rebel Statee. I was at that leston and Savannah the other slay, MY but one Union man who admit -1.•.1 li.uaself such. I have no faith in their love of the Union. They are simply de , they have been beaten in the tirlcl '' SUMUN AT WAssmuToN.—lien. llorni•in, while palming down Pennsylva nit Avenue, at Washington, a few days whi so beseiged by his enthusiastic a ‘lid i rer, es to be forced to take a carriage t) t•-..;apo , their congraulations. Even trriaga was not permitted to be dr i sooi oil until he had shaken hands with lot fifty of the undaunted. XTANTON'a Restorteriox.--The Washing. ton correspondent of the New York Ez priss says: " The resignation of Mr. Stan too is positively asserted by,members of tos own fatuity. The cause is said to be a difference of 'opinion in regard to Gen. _Nterwsn, Mr, Stanton and another mem i, 9 of the Cabinet being opposed to the President and a majority of his advisers. The friends of Gov. &wird are openly res joicing over Stanton's resignation, but are decidedly opposed to Montgomery Blair as his successor." Vhe Abolitionists of• Bedford county h,ive chosen the fidgety little renegade, ,loho Cessna, to represent them in the next Abolition State Convention. The delegates to the Convention from this county aro both very respectable gentle men,_to whom we should regret exceed ingly to have any accident occur, and out of the kindness ofl our heart we advise them to take the precaution of stuffing cotton in their ears before the sessions of that body open. The cracked voice of Cessna will be sure to monopolise the at 7 tention of the Convention, and to those who are not accustomed to it, it produces more disagreeable sensations than the tiring of a thousand pistols. &mirth or Mr Celebration. We take pleasure in announcing that it has been determined to celebrate the ensuing anniversary of Independence day in a manner batting the occasion. In accordance with a resolution adopted at the entertainment on Friday evening, Mayor Farrar has appointed the following committee to confer with Councils and make the preliminary arrangements for the celebration : B. F. H. Lynn, Wm. L. Scott, and J. C. Burgess. We hart& confi dence enough in the public spirit of these gentlemen to believe that they will giire the. matter the attention it deserves, and not permit it to fail frbm any cause. ,- If the Council) will not render any assist ance, we are assured that enough priVate subscriptions can be obtained from our young and enterprising citizens to render the celebration suoh a one as will accord with the importanca and prosperity of the place. Whatever is done, it ought to be in sisted upon by fair men - of all aides, that no political demonstrations of any sort shall form a part of the proceedings. The Fourth of July is a day that above any other should be observed with entire free dom from anything of a party nature, and now is especially the time when the good of the country requires united, harmoni ous action. Let us have a rousing, old fashioned celebration, where men of all parties can assemble with confidence that no act will occur to wound any one's sen sibilities, and that will assist in extin guishing the angry passions engendered during four years of the most heated po litical strife the country hot ever known. Pretest Oared Mt liaised. The offer by several leading citizens of New York, of a carriage and horses, with harness, blankets, ttc„ciotuplete, to Presi dent Johnson, has been respectfully de• °hued, as will be seen by the following Letter : Wesel/ Gros Car, May 22, 1885. Messrs. A. A. Low,- Esq., Phelps, Dodge • & Co., Hoyt Brothers, J. S. Schultz and others : GRNTLIIIZN and in receipt of yo ur very complimentary note, dated N ew York, May 17,1805, wherein you request my acceptance of a coach, spill of hers*, harness, Sio.• as a token of your high ap preciation, of my public course. While I fully appreciate the purity of your motives in thus tendering to me such substantial evidenoe of your regard and esteem, I sin oompelled, solely from the conviction of duty I have ever held in reference to the sooeptance of presents by those occupying high official positions, 'to decline the offerings of kind and loyal friends. The retention of the parchrgent con veying your scniiinenta and the auto grapihs of those who were yawed to unite in the nianifestwkice of regard, is a favor I would ask ; avid I assure you, gentlemen.' i.shau regard is ! one of the rt• t Dierks of rei: , • Any p rtec •try, Trusting th vAll continue to u►.+rit your coneaft::.f ti •ad esteem in the dis charge of thr. !arid important duties upon whist:, ; • Nit juit entered, and with the beat ' ?or your besltls, I sus, go.usubsu, yours truly, Anossw Joissou. THE Democratic convention of Pike county passed the following resolution Resolved, That C. B. Cotter, Esq.; by his industry, faithfulness and ability in con ducting and editing the Milford Herald for the last four - earvia entitled to and is hereby the thanks of the De mocracy of the count!, Is this. our old friend Cotter, foimerly of Harrisburg ? If so, w 4, want to placti the Ewald ea our list of oittbongo. Thl leg* egees4ol..., f Thee sues ot the negro isbeoonaing now the subject of ll discussion in the VerIOU parts of the nouiitry. If seems to us of no use to argetia st it is a question of local jurisdiction The Abolitionists hes% the same reiesints for discussing it as they had for disculeing slavery. • IR is true that one eanuot sac. bow it is the businesS M Illi• nois or Kseses to determine the right of negroes to vole in New York wiihout a property qualfficition, but discussion is free and people'will discuss W cannot have I evc forbidding. it io this country. As the law nom st itirli the subj.-se. belongs to the severel States to determine. each for itself, and it will probably be a suliect of inure or 10,4 .lip'ereuce of Opintilll for years to come 11tWIS always a more serious question.-than the slavery ques t*, for it was the subject which Involved the slavery question, as the greater in crudee tliii less. And as it is now discussed the people will begin to see more plainly the truth of this. It is possible for castes to exist, in any country, but not probable that they can exist iu a republic without causing difficulty and differences. In mon archies they may be part- of the system . of government and help to strengthen the system. In republics they must be weak ening in their effects. ft is of no use to argue that the difference between whites and blacks is founded on prejudice. That argument has no more weight than it would have in an African country, where the blacks regarded iheentelves as supe rior to the whites. The prejudice, if it be one, exists, aml is as important an ele ment in the questiou as would be a mani fest mental or physical difference in the qualitif of races. Prejudices, when they are common to a whole people, or a large portioh of them, are serious matters in politi?, and Lot to be disregarded. If the question were simply what shall be the status of the negro, and all men were open to conviction on the subject, seeking light and wisdom from discus sion, then there might be hope of arriving at a solution of the difficulty. But it pre sents itself now in a different form. The advocates of the equality theory present the distinct claim of equal political rights on behalf of the negro. Of course this is running a tilt against the so-called preju dice, and of course it meta and, if per sisted in, inust conquer or be conquered by the prejudice. There is no compro mise 'ground, because equal political rights in a country like ours involve equal social rights. For social rights are the subject of law, and result to a great extant from the existing laws of the country. Take a plain example. The freedom of public conveyances to all passengers is regulated by law. Equal political rights to the negro would secure his right to a seat in - any public conveyance, and the laws relating to cOremon carriers would protect him as much as a white man. But the laws go a step farther. Americans use hotels and public inns more than any other nation. The law requires the keeper of a hotel to give lodging and food to any respectable traveler, so long as there is room for him ; and the same principles would extend to state rooms on steamers. As a necessity, the equality of rights - would demand and secure the right of the negro to share the cabin of the steamer, the parlor and din ing-table of the hotel, and even the state room or the bed-room of the white man. For in many parts of the country it is the custom to place more than one traveler in the same room, and the hotel which has beds unoccupied must receive the decent guest. The advocates of equality think that it only needs to introduce the law of equal rights` and the prejudice will give way before it. But there is possibly an end in this idea. Even Massachu setts has held pretty strongly to the pre judice in past times, and holds it still with a remarkable degree of tenacity. And we should not be surprised to see the ques tion which was raised and rioted about in Philadelphia, of equal rights in public conveyances,' transferred to hotels and theaters and other places of public resort. For there does not seem to be any inter mediate ground on which the siatua of the negro can be satisfactorily settled. It mist be decided that he is inferior or that he is equal to the white man, politically and socially. If inferior, the law must recognize bin inferiority. • It is perhaps suggested by some one that hotels might be opened-exclusively for whites and others exclusively for blacks. But this is just what the equality people refuse to agree to. They are not content at the furnishing of first-class rail cars exclusively for negroes. They would not be content with a hotel table skein siVely for negroes, though it were much better and more elegant than the table for whites. The trouble in churches has been, not that negroes could not have pews, and as good peWs an any one else, but that the churches insisted en confin ing them to one. exclusive locality. It walkno answer to tell them that the whiles were excluded from the coldred quarter. They replied, " Oh, the whites don't wish to go into the negro pews, and we do wteh the negro. to go into theirs," and in reality the idea bf negro equality has not been pressed by its advocates so much for the purpose of securing that equality in public rights, as to secure the right of interming ling with the whites. In hotels the claim will be urged not for as good a rood .as the white man has, and as•good s dinner, but for the same room and the same din ner. I. We hoe paid thus much on the snhjeot, without' arguing the question on either side, in 4der that our readers may see the Pulses of-the question. Bat if asked for our advice we should respectfully advis' • that it be let, alone and not made a sub. ject of wrangling or dispute. Above all let it, if possible, be kept out of Politico. It will settle itself in time, one way or the other, if let alone. But will it be let aldne t That is the question.—lowmal of Commerce. Tar "female attire" in which Jefferson Davis is 'said to have attempted to escape, has reached Washington and been pre canted to Secretary Stanton, who, in turn, is to give or loan it to the Sanitary Fair at Chicago. It consists of "a water proof cloak, well worn, part cotton and part wool, and of a pepper and salt color. and a black woolen shawl with a fancy colored border." We may be utistalum, but it strikes us that theho is: nothing in this collectio' n but whit an indiridiai of the "male persuasion" might his" alined and worn with perfect pr' y. Prodaagifileas. The expected autoesty oroclamstion from President Johnson has appaisredi ender date of May 29.; I 1 i ir-e7;•tr... .n ) - fOr ail '11414 , 1.%. 4 111.1 II Iwo It-s-m Ist nsiteeiio t : sittinst 111.. UtliiPil S rtes, "Fib otiireayou. ~eteeption., upon their _ iiiising itits oath to support 411.1 defend the fjor k atitsmon, and all laws and proclama tions relative to slavery made during the war. The exceptions embrace all army officers above the rank of Cllonel, all civil or diplomatic officee4 of the Confed erate Government, all Governors of States all persons sttzgaged in the destruction of Federal cornmeree on the high seta, raid era from Canada. all persons whose taxa ble property is over twenty-thousand dol lars, who have voluntarily participated in the rebellion, eta. Another proclamation of the same date appoint+ W. W. Holden, Provisional Governor of North Carolina, who is required to provide rules and reg ulations for convening a State Conven tion, and " no person shall be qualified as an elector, or shall be eligible as a mem ber of such Convention unles he shall pre viously have taken end subscribed to the oath of amnesty as set forth in the Presi dent's proclamation of May 29, 1885, and is a voter qualified as prescribed by the con stitution and !awl of the State of North Carolina in force immediately before the 20th day of May, A D IAI, the date of the so-called ordinance of secession." The President has thus disposed of the ne gro suffrage question, so far as he has the poster to determine it. The loyal people who are voters according to the constitu tion and laws of the Southern States, as they existed prior to th. rebellion, are to be vested with the control of the restored State governments, and are to peas upon the subject of who shall and who rhall not be invested with the elective franchise. In connection with - these 4locuinents, en opinion of Attorney-Getieral Speed is published, which is evidently designed to present the President's views in a more extended manner than it would be proper to do in a formal proclamation. Mr. Speed; who is speaking foe the President u well aa himself, tikes occasion to say that no such thing as " re:-construction " is needed ; that the Constitution is as per fect as human wisdom can make it ; and that the duty of the administration is simply to restore society in the Southern States to its normal* condition. He says further : " The grace and favor of the Government should be large and gener ous. and the operations and effect of its proffered mercy should not be left uncer tain. * * Some of the great leaders and offenders must be made to feel the extreme rigor of t law, not in a spirit of revenge, but to p t the seal of infamy upon their combs t, and the mercy ex ,.), tended to the great mass of the misguided people, can and should be in used its to reorganize society upon a legal and a free dom-loving basis. It is manifestly for their good and the good of mankind that this should be done. The power of par don and mercy is adequate to this eni4." It la clear that the exceptions mentiin e d in thWamnesty proclamation are not to be regarded as absolute and final denials of pardon, but only as a precaution against the :escape of notorious rebels, who, as they cannot all be designated by name, can only be found by sifting the classes in which they are included. The following significant language shows that we do hot misapprehend the scope of the excep tions : " Provided that special application " may be made to the President for par don by any person belonging to the ex cepted classes,and such clemency will be " liberally extended as may be consistent " with the facts of the case, and the peace "and dignity of the United States." We think, on the wholel-the proclama tion may be regarded more as a sop to the radical faction of -the North than as a de claration of the real intentions of the President. We would almost be willing to Usk* all we possess that not oni us ten of the'claeses excepted will ever receive the legal punishment attached to the crime of treason, if they are not allowed to slip clear altogether. Aside from this opinion, however, we look uptin the am nesty proclainanon as au ill-conceived , and dangerous measure that will tend to keep up the bad feeling in the South, and prolong the day of 'harmony and real Union.. " PRIISIDINT JOHNSON ha.s • declared that the question of "reconstruction" must be decided by the loyal white people of the t3outbern States, and thatihe negroes be ing excluded by the State laws, are not entitled to the right of suffrage. The radioals are indignant in consequence, and express their dissatisfaction in tint tennis not loud but deep. ,The Wash ington correspondent of the New York asettwrcial (Republican) sends that paper the follnwing " The proclamation - for the reorganisa tion of North Carolina is regarded shore At definitely excluding negroes from suf frage in Southern States and as delegat ing the matter to the people'. There are already signs of an active political cru sade by the radicals on this question. geeretary Stanton's friends indignantly deny that ha will leave the Cabinet. The Bad • !Mg. The Springfield • (Kass.) Republican, the leading journal of .its party in Massachu setts, outside of Boston, and one of the most, sensible, generally speakiag t in the :Country, says of the hinging policy u Do we wish to finish the rebellion. to tam out its very althea - Then make no .121=. The wounds bladed In cold n are what keep animosities Wive. At this moment there are a million of women at the South Who' wouldgive all they Da v e to save Jed. • Davis' l ie , who would 'conduOt sad shelter him as Flora Kenos ald 4111120 u Charles Edward. It his life Is taken they ere ready to dip their handkerchiefs in -44 blood, to beg looks of his hair, end to perpetuate-tors I,au dred years. the sentiment of vengeance. Unless we present them this grievance, in flistleme be fiill be, remembered only u thAsuthor of Innumerable woes." " Raise no questions and revive none; shake hands mid 'forget, the past, live in Union together as you lived before, and papist* by industry and concord the looses of war—were he recommendations of , President Linooln to his countrymen." Thom ..very truly. remarks the London link are Weide of' nisdotn, end f the lest legaq a repre sentative American we hope, end be lien that America will adopt theta as-its guide to pope and tutored nationelity prom the South. How Tali Bone* RIIIIIMILDS rile Asassr "OF %%rte.—The private atioectary of one of Jeff. Mavis' Cabinet tilrmers hie airman a litter to the New York Allis, Oiddl,' fa bins* op pored to Devis,\ln whisk he If Ml' Oasis were to emceed in saaldiii his way to Europe. heir:sad pin pass Into ItiMsly sa an incompetent, *to had brought rain on UM cause h it bad aspired to lead. Hardly any of the public men of the South have any liking for him, and every one would have his history to 14 of blunders sod mismanagement. As it is, however, Mr. Davis is a Austad fugitive, Hoeing for life, With • price att on his head. The Southerners all feet that the North de sires to punish him, because be was their chosen leader and representative, and, as such they desire his escape. At this moment, Mr. Davis rallies around bim the sympathies of every Southern man and woman, and no where more than in this pity, where thous ands have been beggared by the incendiary proceedings which attended his departure. The Southerners nay that there is no mon reason why Me. Davis should be punished than themselves for rebellion. They put him in his position, and kept him and approved his opposition to the national authority. " Aran, whille all Southerners look with horror and dalmatians upon the crime by which Mr. Linoelu lost - his life, they all re pudiate the idea that their government had anything to do with olt. Even those among the most bitter upon Mr. Davis affirm that he would never for one moment have counte nanced so infamous a resort as assassination. It is not believed that Mr. Divis cherished any special hostility for the late President, or for the members of the Cabinet. His hatreds were for the leaders of the Sentli, those whom he feared might outstrip him in popularity, or who ventured to question his infallibility. He hated Joe Johnston and Beauregard. was jealous of Hunter and Lee ; but those in the South who most sppreoisted and suffered by his resentments would be the first to acquit him of an imputation of a thirst for blood. bike Mr. Lincoln, it was almost impossible to obtain kis oousent to an execution, and thus the disc ipline . of the Southern armies was lost, never afterwards to be regained. At one time, throughout the South, there was a aamor for retaliation for alleged out rages by the Union armies. Mr. Ravi*, ben. Lee, Mr. Hunter, and others, steadily resisted this demand, and no light share of blame fell, in consequence, upon the Confederate Gov ernment. Even Gen.: Lee, the idol of the South during this war, did not escape cen• sure. It was well known In Richmond that Dahlgreu's command would have been exc. outed a year ago•but for the interposition of Hr. Davis and Gen. Lee. 4 It is well that these facts should be known in forming an estimate of one whose charac ter all are now discussing. The seine South ern gentlemen who repudiate as absurd the idea that Mr. Davis could have stooped toito infamous a crime as that of procuring the as sassination of Mr. Lincoln and Mr. Seward, will tell you that he was obstinate, narrow, self-milled, domineering, sad selfish, a man whose faults of temper and intellect would have ruined a far stronger canoe than that of the South. As they speak-from this point of view, their testimony le entitled to the more weight. It is a verdict of acquittal from a hostile jury. • "The amount of spode taken hence by the Confederate Government has been greatly overrated. It did not mush exceed half a million of dollars ; but a large proportion— say half--was in silver, and hence the bulk . would give the ides of a greater value. The Richmond banks took away their specie and this amount may have reached several mil lions of dollars. It is an error to suppose Mr. Davis took away this or any amount of specie with the idea of providing for himself in Europe.' The balances of the Confederate Government la foreign countries, constantly kept to procure supplies, dm., are subject to the cheeks .of Mr. Davis and his Cabinet, and are ample to meet their wants if they -get abroad. Resides, it is well known that when Mr. Davis left here he,. of all men in the world, had the least idea that the Confederacy was about to tumble. The eels was to pro vide funds for a war in Armies—to buy food and munitions of war. He thought, in hls folly, he could give up the capital and the great State of Virginia, and, with the cotton States, keep up the contest until the North should be wearied out." The Allude, (Gs.) Register, of the 13th, says, wader the head of " Business :" Under all the ciecumstdmoes, nothing else could be expected than an almost complete stagnation of business of all kinds. Gradu ally, however, we notice that, day after day, increasing symptoms are being manifested of returning activity. Much cannot be expected at this season, as farmers are endeavoring to prepare for Crops. Otioalionally our ;oyesdis cover the metal° luster of- a long-treasured dime or quarter, and, as if to 'tempt our cu pidity to deeds of desperation,' a full-grown dollar cautiously emerges and clips around, and then hies him my to his nest, leaving us but the recollection, or, perhaps, a doubt as to oar 40118010Witleatt. 'As to the golden eagle, he HMS either to have preferred a for. sign clime,„or is so fearful of being gobble* up' unoemonionsly as not to come from MO hiding place. The people of Georgia have made up _their minds for pease, and reckon upon the speedy, dlsappearanos of slavery as certain. Many ere glad that the peculiar in stitution is dead i nearly ail are resigned to it. The whole mass of the people are deter mined to discountenance guerrilla warfare, and will heartily assist in platting it down. This determination, indeed, is not confined to Georgia, but is common to all the Soißbeni litotes east of the Mississippi." Sensual es Attune/La.—No State; except Virginia, has been more pitilessly:outraged than Arkansas ; the meat ernel and wasteful of warefare, irregular and partisin in its character, every man and woman feeling uu certain what moment a ballet, directed from ambush, might- pick these off. As a armee queue*, people deserted their homes by scores and hundreds. leaving theircrops ungathered and thole lands to grow up is woods and this, ties emelt manias year, Those who remained aegUnted to pleat and sow, sad the ems. quence is great destnation and suffering. Capt. Iteusit, of flea. Dodgeli staff, who wee lately is Atkins* to receive the surveil-, die of Jeff.' ff.katapies,- glees a 'bloomy Pistol* of the oondition'of • thiap is the Smite. Ile does sot think there are ire bushels of, corn to a family la Northern arksalms, said as for boom very few have :Wad that luxury for months peel. Salt is suety to be found, and sugar and codes ars only among the cherish ed memories of the olds" tiros. . • Affliterat papers are reporting Ask lands in Virginia, worth folly $l5O as acre at the breskiag eat of the rebellion, are being offered for N 2 or $3. And " Northern capital " talks already %bast haying up these isdeii not cheap estates, and makings good thing Oft. Perhaps it would be no bad thing for " Northern capital " to study the hiatery of Norther' 1001md• for s eillior7 or too Put, beers imMeNag. • Pesos le being rapidly restored Imtlaltika sae; the people gelds, the 'lmaasipment of gssughw vain-t err elm has*. The Southern General Joseph E. Johnston, dlreeily after I. surrender of- his forties, issued the following letter, explanatory of the reasons ihat compelled him to pursue the course he did : "On ha 26th of April, the day of the eon 'option, by the returns of three Liseteasst Generals of the Army of Tennessee (that wider nay eosantsad), the number of infantry and artillery present sad absent was 70,610 ; the total present, 16,678; the effective total or fighting fort*, 14,179. ' Oe the 7th of April. the date of the last return I .can find,, the effective total of the cavalry was 5,440 But between the. 71A and 20th of April IL was greatly reduced by mints in Virginia and ap- prehensions of surrender. In gouth Caroline we had rouses division of cavalry, less than one thousand. besides reserves and State troops; together much Inferior to the Federal force in that State. In Florid& weorere as weak. In Georgie. our inadequate force bad been captured at Macon In Lieutenant- General Taylor's department t• ere were no means of opposing the formidable army-under Gen. Canby, which had taken Mobile, nor the cavalry under Gets. Wilson, which had cap tared every other place of importance West of Augusta. The latter bad been stopped at Macon by the armistice, as we had been at Greensboro', but its distance from Augusta being less than half of ours, that place was in its power. To carry on the war, therefore, We had to depend on the Army of Tennessee alone. The United States could have brought against it twelve or fifteen times its number in the armies of Generals Grant, Sherman and Canby. With. such odds against us, without the means of procuring ammunition or repair. tog anus, without money or credit to provide food, it was imposmble__ to continue the war. except as robbers. The consequence of pro. longing the strteggle 'would only have been the destruction or dispersion of our bravest men, and great suffering of women and chil dren by the desolation and rain inevitable from the marching of two hundred thousand men through the country !laving failed in an attempt to obtain terms giving security to citizens as well as soldiers, 1 had to choose be. tween wantonly bringing the evils of war upon those I had been chosen to defend, and averting those calamities with the confession that hopes were dead which every thinking Southern man had already lost. I therefore stipulated with Gen. Sherman for the security of the brave anti true men committed to me on terms which also terminated hostilities in all the country over which ray command extend ed, and announced it to yopr Governors by telegraph ak follows : " The disaster in Virginia; the capture by the enemy of all our workshops for the pre paration of ammunition and repairing of arms, the impossibility of recruiting our little army, opposed to more than ten times its number, or of supplying it except by robbing our own citizens, destroyed all hope of successful war. I have therefore made a military convention with Msj.-Gen. Sherman to terminate hostili ties in North and South Carolina, Georgia and Florida. I made this convention to spare the blood of this gallant little army, to prevent further suffering of our people by! the devaa tatton and ruin inevitable from the marches of invading armies, and to avoid the crime of waging a hopeless war. " The alsoon Telegraph gives the following advice to its readers. It accords with the general tone of the Southern papers—what few remain in existence. All our information leads us to think that. the South is preparing to accommodate itself to the altered circum- Aimee, of the case, and that good order will soon rnettme sway in all the country east of the Mississippi. The people have changed none of their views, and ars as strongly secession as ever, but they confess themselves Rubin plod," and have concluded that the sooner they return to the old paths of industry and peace the better: if Some may think it more compatible with personal dignity and the spirit of freemen, to insintain a position of imbecile and ineffective delance-'-e, sullen and vindictive demeanor toward the victor—a resolute determination to hold no intercourse with them, either social, commercial, or pOlitical—to refuse all co operation, even in the essential matters of preserving public order and adjusting affairs pon their new basic, eo as, if possible, to secure public security and tranquility. These ideas and purposes seem to float in many brains, but, in our judgment, they are• the offspring of an excmble wounded pride, die appointed, and tempM.ary passion, and not of common sense or sound discretion. If your house be in flames, no matter who set it on fire, the best thing you can do is to join in with any body who will help you save the building, or even a portion of it. So we be lieve it Is now the part of interest and of true dignity_and manhood for every Southera man to assist in restoring peace and public order under the new condition of things. The foot that one purpose's have been defeated does not release ns from a common obligation to God, society, and ourselves, to do the best we can under the situation in which His Providence has placed at RIOONSTILUOTIOX.--Illustrationq of the scarcity of reconstruction material in the South ere of daily oecurronew A gentleman whe left Richmond at the beginning of the war, lately returned there . lie was recase nixed by very few of his old acquaintances. Meeting one with whom he was formerly in timate, he asked why he did not recognize an old friend. The answer was. ''' We do not consider such as you our friends." Another gentleman, whO formerly lived in Fredericks bang,i lately sent his family t that plane, in tending to make it his res denet lie has since received a letter from his wife that i$ will be exceedingly unpleas t nt tI: theca to re main there, as the feeling against them is in tenee.—Tribues Cot. A Virginia paper says that many of the ladies on farms in the eastern portion of the State, from which all the negroes hare gone during -the war, and where other labor could not be procured, have engaged with alacrity in 41te lighter duties of agriculture. Three young ladies, , of one of the most relined and formerly wealthiest families in Hanover, have planted on their own father's farm a larger crop of corn than has been grown i' ura daring the war. Every negro has ler, them except a few helpless women and cv jun ' a. Gen. Forrest, of the Southr „ it army, upon tweet: daring his forces, l 'o r .ed a forayed ad dress to his soldiers, of v: Thich the following is .'portion " Thai we are bea'..en is.a eel! evident fact, and any further r esistance on our part Would be justly rallaro4 as the very height of folly and rowan's!, • * * damn dictates and humanityaa 'etands that no more blood be shed- *lay realising and feeling that i ,meh is the eatif.l,, it is your duty and mine to lay down otre arms, submit to the powers that be,- sad La* aid in restoring peace and establishing law Lod order throughout, the land, Thu term' upon Which, yea were surrendered IU4I fatorabhi, and should be salisfattory aruise **table to all. They manifest a spirit of federal y and liberality oa the part of the authorities whir& shoakt be 1114.011 ear put by faithful osatpliaess with ill stip Wallas and eonditloas therein esprosted. An your ealunander, I sincerely hope that every *Seer and saldier of my ooetakaad rtUi obeer- Adly *JO,* the orders given, and marry out in good Rath all the terms of the cartel. Those who nettled the terms and refuse to be paroled nayly expect, W/TC! . .. Nrreated, to be seat = d ud imprisorm A DIVIDED Ass.notagar % = A. H. it Stuart, of Virginia, in ak. Nosh at the Reconstruction Union Convention In Virginia, aid: ig The restoration of pesos will bring up for disoussion.and decision many novel and cone. plientsd questions. The experience and the precedents derived from the history of etha r nations will furnish very insufficient guides is their gelation, because the history of the world sitords no case that Is parallel to ores. Is other countries the relation of the eitkim or WOO to Ids Government is *lapin 'and &wt. Ile owes allegisnoe to. but one .grov ersiseat. r Under our complex system weer Alm owes allegiance. to two government& Bohn Asyu t Irreg . (litho* owed siligipaile to his State, se well as to the Unite States. lie fru bound to defend both. It was thui double or divided allegiance. with the line of demarcation not very distinctly defined. When, therefore, a conflict occurred, it was not always easy to determine the path of duty. or to pursue It ; for what was obedience tp the one. might be treason against the other." Urrtrtrurtnit 1111.01101101/L—The Chattanooga Gasati of Thureday nye, from every direc tion in'Cleorgis summits reach it of starving women sod children. For miles there is not a horse or mule to be seen, sad no seed for the people to plant. Gen. Wilson has ordered that all the produce gathered for the rebel Government, in the shape of taxes or tithes, should be distributed to the people, and that. all the extra animals and wagons should be loaned out to _them, his QUiliteruissters tailing receipts for them. Bat all this, good as far as It goes, is not sufficient. Some means should be adopted to feed these women and children now, or they will positively die of starvation. A private Weer from Richmond esys The people, as a general thing, are poor and even penniless, and there is no business doing ex cept in the bare necessities of life. 4Vegeta ,bles are very scarce, and I have not seen an egg or a fowl on the tattles sinoe my arrival." hionsoasv.—The demand for unquestioned ourreney is so inexorable in Georgia, that all paper money is at a heavy discount. All treasury notes and bonds issued by the Con federate States are absolutely and perempto rily refused, except in eases where parties have contracted debts payable in that money. In the event of raising that triad of money for that purpose, it. is readily obtained:At the rate cif five hundred for one. The railroad. and express companies, receive all issues of the State of Georgia, and issues of our form erly well knewn banks, at par upon their face. It is proper that everyone else will speedily do so too, and thus relieve the stringency of the money market. The Union authorities at Savannah have secured two hundred and forty-three thous and dollars of gold and silver, seized as pro perty of the Confederate Government. One hundred and eighty-eight thousand dollars was taken from a Confederate baggage-wagon, found In a by-road, and the balance was taken from various parties who had it In trust, but acknowledged that it belonged to the Conte& irate Government. The Southern ram Stonewall, which was blookaded at Havana by a Federal ft set, has been turned over to the Cuban authorities. The captain of the Stonewall tried to extort a promise from the Captain General of Cuba, that the vessel should -never be given up to the United States, but this was refused. Pre vious to the, surrender Admiral Stribling and General Newton informed. the Captain Gen eral, that as the Confederacy had no longer any existence east of the Mississippi river, the ram must be regarded as a pirate. The Captain General in reply said he epald not treat her as such, not having instructions t o that effect from his government. - J. ,I:. JOUNATON &feelings are being held in Texas is foliar of continued resistance to the United The Confederate forces in TOM are said to umber eighty thousand, and are receiving asoassions from the States east of the Miseis• sippl. The assassination of Kirby Smith is oontradiated. Uen Hood has gone to join the Texans. It appears to be the detertniustioa of the Government to maintain for 8011311 time longer an army of at least one hundred and fifty or sixty thousand men, duly apportioned into cavalry, artillery and infantry In time of war it is estimated that the average cost of each' man is one thousand dollars per annum, and in old times, with a rigid system of economy , and profound 'peace, the average cost was five hundred dollars a year. We may therefore fairly estimate the cost of this farce at least seven hundred and fifty dollars per man, which makes an item of one hun dred and twenty millions a year while it is kept up. Within the last three days 4,6til emigrants from Liverpool, Hare, Hamburg 'and Bre men, have landed in New York. The emi gration for the next three months will be lm manse. The cause of the movement is not so much the idea of returning to peace—which has not yet become thoroughly circulated is Bnrope--se the inducement in land offered by the United States Government, through the new bureau of emigration. The Army of the Polomao, which passed in review on Tuesday of lest week, returned to its camp on the Virginia side of the river, a few miles from the Long Bridge. Sherman'' , army is at present encamped on the P- .orth and east of the city, and the cavalry P darpa at Bladensburg. Preparations for t ae speedy payment and milstar_oat of s'.aa troop s are going forward , and it le V olleyed that bat a few week* will be cow ..imed in the complete disbandment of the armies of Sherman and Meade. Gov. Curto'.n has decided before the Penn— ey/vat" " .roops are mustered out, to fill up Vs°l 4".ies in all company and regiment or 'eV mations by regular promotion. Re is now ir a Washington personally attending to this duty, examining the claims of those rithin the line of promotion. By tide arrangement many brave men who were debarred from promotion by the rigid enforcement of the order insisting on the main:was number in (summands will receive honors and be muster ed out with the commission which they have fairly earned. IX is estimated that there were 66,040 men belonging to the Army of the Potomac) in the grit day's review at Washington, and 80,000 of Sherman's troops on the second day.' Mrs. Davis, her tour children, brother and shier, and Mrs. Clay, go to Savannah from Fortress Monroe, in the Clyde, as permission for them to proceed North he. been refused by the War Department. The Baltimore American mom that. es-Gov. Weber was arrested at bit home in Lerlag ear, [tic?taus, on Sunday last, add on Wed e; ttielit arrived in Washington In ous -11•4 . of the negro soldiers a Mesephie to minder Wary Confederate p °led prisoner &ern, wee discovered and t warted last week. Thwedaw night was the time filed ter the nt*r`«•°•, hot white troops had bites placed ww •i-*- • when the negroes attempted to 0114 !Ll' Weir quarters, they met a deter caned resiotance. to the fight which took place twenty of the aegroes were killed and wounded. Since 'heaths), have been strongly guarded. A telegraphic; dispatch yes since ap peared, contradicting the above story. A committee of the °Meer,_ of the Army of TenneaN hiui decided to give en annivenery dinner and hell in honor of the NI of Vicks burg on the 4th of July next st. Saratoga Springs. Gen. Grant is expected to preside. Proddest Limo's', body insrd Is to Ds to taling by 2nsidest Joitasoit. GENERAL NEWS. The New York herald, posed tat the tusatease aatioual ,10, 1 .t> 2 up by private mutetariptioul. Thi4 prqreiti has tesea m•ie.l ut set falLtws • Cornelius Vulerbilt. -•) H. A. If elle mime. I ;:9 . 4, ) 11. A. Ilevite lions, for s trlrl,d,'l ;.!i ) Rol)Prt. Bonner, Jordsn L i ) . loet. Jameslionot6tt - (," - IL i 9 of course! understood t h 0 ,f etdosestptiont ore to be p.wl up wit,/ amount m suhtcriked for It iv no Hrt 1 ,: plan to pay oil •L-qutorter'or 119,11 . 1 h,, while c4pit , tivit4 wr - to trAve rratat , ii subscription' profit bj th , liher,ll, L.,,, whQ HUbNeribt• Ilterr are cool in the Country te pay the whob. the liret of January next, mad a I , e Then Congrel will 'at core : Lion, and the Secretary of the Trf.t., jr7 , place the e•ittutry la the ham, which It 'her:opted tivo ' asp!: After all, theie subscripttm4 aro Li, ing our taxes in .advance— eatam,,hre ‘I, derbilt subscribes five hundred ilicum u i lars In five years his taxes r.„; that amount. It i.s best for the rich rain better for the poor men to aholth and the taxation without delay, entim g present. cumbersome system of collv, z , revenue awl the espionage upon our 'p and our silver, and restoring the repobh:4 the proud position of a nation which ostic man a dollar." We think our opinion will be fluid that this i•i only a sham scheme to oL;„" cheap reputation for pstrioti4m above named know welt enough th amount will never be .9116+crito t I r Many -thousands of mules Oro posed of at public sale in Wasl, k o z ;,„ United ritates quarterrnabter s ,tep ar ,„ :, The !Mie9 wilt continue until tlt.• animals is reduced in proportt ,n't I.:,rf ctiiction of the 'armies, now trolo.- There are in the armies of the t',t Tennessee, and Georgia protuld . , ,nr and of the finest six-mule testae to toe r< I Many of them were bought in the bet z. , i of the war as young mules, have ace:mita-4 the armies in all their marches and and are thoroughly broken and Liv.leztl! 2 l exercise, and are gentle and (swillsr being so long surrounded by the e./!1r The animals are sold at public auction, not bring anything like their true value A dispatch from Washington important decision of the Attorney- Ile declares that the Amnesty Precis becomes void by the suppression of the lion; that the decrees of confiscation full force, and that the exercise of ete. clemency cannot extend to the runlet. wait -the full publication of, the duct, the Attoruey•t3eaeral before ruck ih; comment ou a point of so atuc't The Philattell hta /artrer, alnacs lion paper, on which no reliance , plaeed, preteuda to have receive 1 ;:t • • ing from its Baltimore corretpou L'ue " I learn from a well informel who left Fortress Monroe yesterday that Jeff. Davis has manacles ~n lai with a chaiu connediug about three He stoutly resisted the process of ru and threatened vengeance on tho,e it. Rather than submit, he waute4 it It became ueoeb,irf I to shoot. him him on his hack and hold hits cLe were eliucketi by a eon of Vai,-Itt ti hibited iutetit.o agitation and 4e..tru. t.t• • caved in and wept lie ithite,tel w misanthropy, and an 'actin uk, r. de se No Lnivei uur for1:1 tier ,vo cell ; more destructive. 1;1.1 spoon. Ter„ guitrcli are ill tense horror." i doubtful. flte ti.tvernatrut 14 It,.i have authorized s, bart)reui a.' place Dovi.l iu trau3, and magi who wool , ' conduct ner described. A terrible ruirai passel over 1 pr. Johnson couuty. Kansas, ou 1V e lue-liy lest, blowicik ‘toWn, boluses, trees, and doing witch damage' ?eve sons were badly injured, but 114 lost. The storm also entered Missouri, au easterly course, and inflicting damage until it reached St. Louie. At several card were blown off a side trt I freight train ran into them, wreckiug the engine and au c-s.r. The grand jury ofe Dv' th -i aiet de' have indicted Jeff. Davie e ara John t , inridge for high treaso• n. The indictment i 3 thl , l%, as i on of ti July, DR t. Th° CoDltect icut Legislature by .1:t T`3te an a l over has adopted .1 )11-. 210 :ailment striking out the a ri and giving the negre the birls,l 1 1 : the Reptiblicans have power. they r oring to place the right ,f su•Stv , hands of the negro John Mitchel is represeme lately met him in ltiohmoni U V?li a rebel as ever We had one million ono hualrel ty-five thousand' men on the araij when the war closed. Atout o number were in the field slop other half were in—the nattooll oheet One Senor Payel, a shaamaker t hie been recently elected Presider,: CONFECTIONZHISS AND FIRE Wul ars. Bener tt Burkina, Erie, N engaged in the Wholoille Fruit, and Notion Trade Iter reputation of tuanufaeturinc tso Candy—both plain and im:y... z ry of Notions and Small War tensive. Oranges, Lemons, 0.0 1 o:': make a speciality, and can !mix. , quantities to suit. They are Excelsior Piro Works—the 1.:4t can fill orders for the country bitions. Grocers and dealers will do. well to call and see their ordering goods, they may be c ui their orders filled promptly to supply first-class goods et le prices. Two bad osses of Piles cure,' land's Pile Remedy. Dlr. Olsss Wiseensis, writes for the beuent suffer with the Pilots, that he has for eight years with en ag gr Piles, and his brother was *bounty se incurable o (he bet used with the Piles). bt u tht cases were cured with on ' land's Pile Remedy. these gentlemen, beside it., do received by Dr. Strickinna, 0,41 those suffering, that the utott chronic eases of Piles are ettre. l t land's Pile Remedy. It i 4 everywhere. =3l STOP TII SeRATOIIMI ' do if you drive the import., 11. 1 ter out of your system kt Carter's Compound Eitrs , 2t I Bittersweet, and ri pplyine, date! Yellow Ointment llnuttreJi they have used these articles 16 00118 and satisfaction, after bar other things to no purposo say use the 4e two art:clei cud IV. Price of Bottle anti LW dollar and fifty cents ;told 'Sr. by