II VOLUME'. 17,i, POTT R JOURNAL, PIAILIS3SD BT' • ' IL /Ws MeiliAlltlirElt, Proprieicit. eari'aevoted to the et - use of Republicanism, tbem te rests of A grio vl tu re, he advancement of Education, •isritethe best goed contity: -o.omlng no guide eicept that. of Principle, it. Will endeaVor to aid in the Work of more fully Freedoralting our Country. • Dar Advertisements InSortea af th'e following rates, except where special bargains are Made. A "agnate" le 10 lines of-Brevier o'r 8 of Nonpareil types : .. ',Near°. 1 insertiou' slso equare, 2 or 3 Insertions ....... ..... 2 Do Racti sulisequent ineertlim less than 13--1000 40 square, 1 year 00 Be bless Cards, year - 500 Administrator's or Executor's Notices 3 00 apeolal and Editoribl Notices per line.— 20 • 5...77A1l transient advertisements must, be paid in advittice,and.no noticelwill be takeh of adverti.ements ' from a distance, unieSs they are accompanied by the money or eatisfactOryl reference. Bar Job Work, of all kinds, executed with neatness and despatch: ' I • . BUSINESS NOTICES. Free and Accepted Ancient 'fork Masons TPULALIA LOD,G , „E, Igo. 342, F.,A. M; Stated LEA Meetings on thel, 24 and 4th " , edacstays °leach month: Hall, in the ad Story of the Olmsted Mock. LARRAD B,Bec. WM. 8 HEAR., W.M. 0. I'. 1E L480.N, 11. D., , iIIaRACTICING PITYSIOLAN, Conde:sport, Pa., respeetfully informs the citizen.; of the Villlrge and vicinity that he will rromptly reqpond to all dulls fur professional services. Office on First street, first door .west of his residence. 1740 • • JOII iT S. 1.11,L.NN A I TTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR. AT LAW. 2-1_ Coudersport, P.., will attend the serurai Courts in Potter and Came . a counties. 411 business en• trusted to-his care viii receive, prorup;, attention✓ Ulnae on Nlititt street, in residence. AIIEtTROt G. °MISTED, / rA TTpriNEr AND CpUNSELLEIii AT LAW, it Coudersport, 1'3., will attend to n 1 business en wilted to It le cite with pram ptuess and thltrlity. Wilco au the sceond storey .( the Olmsted Block. . . , ' • ISA'IC'BENSON, • - • A.I7OI3;NEY-AT-GA.W, Coudor , pqrt, Pa., ll Il k . attend to all b ineea oniruated to/font witt care ant promptaega. AtCantls.Cou:ta of 3.lJoiainz ointn cies. Oifioetia Seco oil street near the Alle , ank bridge ILSON. A TTORNEY A . NID COUNig.L.LOR. AT LAW, 'Cou4orsiiiort, 1 a., Avdl attend the Uourts iu rot nnd 'the ailjoinint counties. MILLER .t NeAILAILNEY, TrORS,EYS-AT LA7, 11.inytAnege, Penn'e.— Agent-ilor the i Celleetiatz .11) . C:1:tints ageh.et the tx, fed Statue and:Sta 61;oVerattient.- ~ ,u ch Penet ens, Boenty,dsreare 01174.y,&c.-.S.direzt6 x 05, ;:trri,hueg W. IL )ItLLEIt, ; J. C. ALARSEY . , . EAt 'ESTATEIand NS ft INCE .. O .,GE NT.— 1I"1P *ranll4: Abneht Sold,!flotua paid. and Titles 1./1 veatigated.:'Tnlnr a property ncalust file in the best ontpanlea in tlib'Country, and 'Persons Aeei dente In the Travele inatranle Company of Ilart ford:—Baninesa trarmAtted prat:L*l . ly. 17.29 „ A. , STEBBINS A: Co E.RGCoolldttioTrtfl e u s ar r d e, io D n o G u o r oe . % 4 T o n r iz land everything penally kept In ss guud country gtore. rroduce bought an.' Bold • 17 21.3 . . C. fi. .5531.3.10315,, , 311ER:sale 14:10..37'PalleTiTstled Staple Goode.lottling,f,lics DressGiants.rneeries, Floar, Feed, Sc.e, It.A.Alas supplied on liberal terms ca.lau..Es to,. JONES, flkirEßCHAi4T—D4lets £n Dings. Mediciner, Paints, in Oils, rktr,y lArtyClea, Btationery, Dry Goods, ltpircerl*lirti, Main tr .. eit, Coudersport, Pa .::.; • . - D. lE. OWL %TED, -Arti,thlng-.1".-t,rpegg;n(li)rrO'ce.GrVesd,s Ae„au'rlY;T:eadn ,! Porte,' rrOvi,..lotis, ee. ~ ISltin street, Co l . yreport, l'a COXlhrift ?CriiTiC i , t, pi- t .. b •aler'iu n (5 'er i ry orr A, rocer.e., ill_lClPCrulTeltsiNott.ra,-lEra'rlvrA,re, Q;eensjare, Cutlery, tut all Goo uivally fotna in a countr.t store. ritil .. 1 " ILIJ - OLMSTED, . . lI2i.R.DWATIS ercnArt, and beAi,sr fn Stores, Tin and Sheigt Iron.V4Tare,lialnq;reet, Conder sport, Pond'n. Tid and Sncet Iron \V re made to order, in good 13 tyle., l / on short, notite. COLTDS 'PORT .ITOT.EL: F. GLASSUOS, PROPRlrfort,Zorner of laain nnttlieenndntreets.Coadersport,rotter Cal's. .kiforery 8t able ills() kept In conneotinn with this ITet ei. Daily Stilis to And from the. lisproads.. Pottet Journal Job-Office. Ts APING lateltadded a fine new nasortment of JOB-TYPE o our already larr . lasecrireent. we are now prepardd to do all kiwis of Wort, cheaply and with taste and neatness. Orders solicited. LY HOUSE. Lewjsitille, 'Potter . ounty, P .nsylvania. Duirroltr LEWIS. Proprietor.. Hieing 1.1 taken this eac9llent Hotel, the proprietor wishes o make the acquntidance of the traveling'', public and eels confident of giving satisfaction to all who may on Min.—Feb. 12,60 tf -* MARBLE AVORK lo g Monuments ands Tomb-Stones of rdl will be furnished on.reasona IV We terms and short notice by B " • C. rennle. NPIL.sz. Reeldeacci: Mihail, 'IS mill:8 south of Coudersport, Ps on the Stnnemahening Road, or leave your orders at the Po.toface. feG`f - DAN BAKEU, .TENSION, 110/T I NTY. and CLAIM AGETSTY Pensions procured for Soldiers of the present at. who are disabled by reason of wounds rec,4ved or disease contracted while in the service of the Ut.ited States; and pensions, bounty.; and arrears of pay ob aained for widows or heirs of those who have died or :been killed white lin service. All letters 3f Inquiry promptly answere,,and on receipt by mall of a state ment of the case of claiinaut,.l will ferwaiq the ne. canary papers for ; heir signature. Fees In pension ,curs as fixed bylaw. Ilefore to Dons, ;sane. Munson, A. G. Masted, John El, Munn, and F. W. Kinn', Esti ••• ;DAN Claim Agent, Coudersport, Pa. Junee GI p.,s(),4•Peir Fant agents every are to. sci. ourturaoran : • inswing ea ones. Three new kinds, „ Under and upperLfead, - - - Vi r srranted Ovs.:yours. alovo salary or lade ooramlssious paid. The °tax Machines sold •111 United States fur loss,tban On, N 'sh kb aro l u ny 'licensed`-by: flows, Monist'. e. (royer & Sa -kirr,Sleter &••Cti- & rkictielder. At..t. tainr clierlp ma shies& ar e infringement& and yhe sailor pr • user arc liable to arrest, lithe, and tiaprisonrimut. Circulars rres...•.A.ddtels.'orcalL upon Shaw an Mark,' Binds iird,arres, e pta cago, Zlll.Don.- 26.18915. •'-!ital-!I ti3hl;frb4li • 3CILMII-: 'SCUT SCRATOII! •• WHEATON'S ,• . . • **lotire, the ilogir I );i3O Cures BIAIN ericl• RUM/0; 1 d 813 : 1 N. tnesbotents. Iforstelby. all draggle* By sendil e n , l cente2tc!WEßs9 do l'arrzir ErcaihlAgeals,-,17 lakitagton'strect; Boston , it" will lie' ftsrwarded'b mall, free of peatage,t any part of the United States. J Liao 1, Ise*, orpasotle ° 6 wiry 1 yr. I/. . . • .. ,i/ , , 'r I . \ , - 1 i t - . . • • ti • I i . \ I . . , -' "•''''- --- -- ' • -, -:r: -.."" 1 "---- ,, 7 , - -- - i 1- ' - , z:=t - -•- -, f 17,1 ^ - - - , i . -, 1 . -:".- . ... -- ----!,^.:"., f. , -7, '. ... . . 1 , - , ... , ,, . ~,,:- . .i. - 7..".4::,...,- 2 2,.., . ,- - "r..-- . ..=" --- ~,,, ,,•- . :11„.., - c.., , , , , -, ,,,,1fr_•,,1 , .:= -- .. - _ , - - 4^5'......,::::,,,-.., -- ,1, -:.:..,,, w- -- .. -_,-,-- .- .. - ...', ----,,..••,, . . , .. , - 4 - ‘444Z.,'r 4 ' .7 .1 4.- .- ..,-:, " 7-4 .....--'" 4 ' ."'" 4 -.1.7.... 4, .:. ,-.. ..:; ., .." ' '''' 4.-- " , "` 4.- -..".--'''''°\'`, '' ''' t -. - 7 ., ....', ...::: . 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END ItIF •IT HE SESSION - , ~. , The Spirit l -finst the Work- of the First gehiien ,Of the Thirty-Ninth Congress? . &vim' of thel.Poll4 . of ROMlStiliction. i• . \ When'the Thirty-Ninth Congressassembled \ at Washingten,l December 4,. 1865,:it found the national affairs in uuprecedented!confu '' sion. &ven4 't ial n hs before the President had declared all arrcle'd oppositioh to the Govern- ment ended.: Fyn mine, months Congress had not been in session. When it Adjeurned,March 4 the war still ii.,4;iiii. Sherdian Was sweep ing throtigh North Carolina, and had not yet. I reached Fayett+ille. Sheridan • was moving up. tlie Shenandoah. beating the Rebels under Gen. Early on his way to Lyn c hburg. Peter sburg and. kin:timid still bristled with Rebel • gunil and ,Grant l vast arm;y; lay mud-bound •befede their wall . Led was Inppealing to the people of 'North arolida for provisions,and at the entitle time t Southern press was loudly boasiingthie Grant and Sherman 'Would !be beaten in detaiL , l . .No one could certainly say when the war ' - i onld end, though jail knew that the•eed was near. Recruiting,. stimulated by an orerlittneir,g draft, was proceeding in the North, antrthe Rebellion presented a bold 'and defiant frdithl Abraham Lincoln was still President, and ori the vlery day of its adjourn ment the Senate Was convened in extra session CO take !tart in hls rei ituguratiou. None of 1 the, men 'who listened that day to theinaugu- I rdl Adliresb of, AddrewJohnson imagined that ti l in a feiv•'weeks' h 6 won d 'become the head of the Government.; The f tore was bright. The Clouds of warlw ere disperSing, and the Thirty- Eighth Congress; ends "its existence in the faith, that our; Na 'roubles were nearly over, and trusting implicitly in the abilityiend ; icitegritY of the Presiden t who by four years i of war had been thoroughy tested and taught. For nine month's the ;administration pf the GovernMent . svasi to be!triisted to the Execu tive alone, yeenc one fire:tined that the ,•Na tional PO ' ti lm as to be reversed. I ' • Hard -had the Membets of Congress reach ed thei homes h fore the whole country was filled ith rejOiei g over tbd fall of Richmolid; (ay and, t iiimplilaft r trtuinphi came tl;e surren der of Lee and is wwile! army. Then the i i shootings, the th tu ult, he tinders of a thou sand cannon were silenced by the siegle pis tol-shot thatlended tho lifel of Sera am Lin coin. Even while his funeral procession pass ed slowly ilir•olidli the landl Sherman received fr:om the hand lof 'Jblin;oh the !alit broken sword of the Rebellion. The terms r be grant• ed to ilie iMemylweiti thought far too lenient by the people, a cA ,were I instantly „;.eseinded byrthe pew Pr ident.l ; Then, a .persons few ersons insulted Congre s by 'declaring that ;God had removed Mr. Hi edit' a because sterner mind was uended for thet work. Of reconstruction, as if, like-,a poor Politicion4lleaven was only to succeed, in its pOrPeses by-the • assassination of a odd man. ;Still, the nation felt safe,! with [Mr. Johnson. Had he not said that treason was a dritne th4 - must He. Made odious, and that traitors thilstt•be pitnished ? He would hang thein as high! as Haman,: he naid, but the viali of the filter; was not yet lifted tore veal Only the fPul assassins, and Wirz, the wretuihe'l tool of worse men, swinging, upon the gallows. No Otte looked forward to the iong.,lwearisome imprisonment of Jdtf. Davis, and till humiliating spectacle;of al Goverd mentla raid, either Ito try or release its chief enemY.l , Tite people lied net yet .recovered i from the shuck Of 'Mr. Lincoln's death before a Presi4ecitial Praclamation,i dated May 2, offered a•reward•ot, $106,000 for 'Jeff. Davis, Ited charged him with inciting, and procuring the assassination.' His .arrest speedily fol lowed,' and the rebel leader was placed in Fortress Monroe, and up to this time the ter rible charge haS never been Withdrawn nor proved l• About the time:of his capture, the Presithint in repeated speeelids declared that the a:tempt to assassinate th 4 Republic was a greater criniel•than the murder otan indi vidual, and deservdd as severe a punishtnent. 1 In this spirit ' MaY 22 he apologised for ex tending raO•cY, to deetain misalled-"Sons'of Liberte ill Indiana; and hope that bis action would riot be; donstrded into a preference of elerhency : to iJstice. • His. Proclamation of ' Amnesty folloWed, dray le, a nd excepted 14 classes, iniwhich were included nearly'all the influential:Southern citizens. ; Itfully 'carried oat his'anbobhced 'policy of dealing severely with the,leaders of the . Rebellion.: Eayly in May the trial of thc assassins began,'and an effort was!made bythe prosecntioe, itrbehalf i of the•Go4ornmeng to prove Davis pre-cOg niz.ant,of the crime. From all these events lit was reasonably Supposed that the PresidPrit l oultl:continuelto Cuforee the stern principles Which tie, had so !Often and so einphUtically defended. '• • • Il• * • • • But! before midinmmer a new policy was indicated. , In June delegates from the. South were first admitted to private interviews with the Pre.sident. On the 17th 'of June his prOc lamation.providirig• for the restoration of civil government in Geergia and' Alabama! was is sued, and it disappointed the nationi,bY its deliberatc ex4lnsi4n of;hlacks from the-cate gory of loyal 'citiOns entitled to vOte.' Pew; 4owever. were dip posed to censure Mr. Itliti.: son severely for this ,omission, thosgh a ina joritY of thelTnicili party held that•the Gov ernment had la perfect right to entrust State reorganization ;to all loyal, citizens, without the sll,glitestrefereneeto the dead IOW-s which Weii:pased ba the, slave 'system; Other anti; mations' of oPp Ositlon . to tho' established' prlii ciples of tbd . Unitml party Tree's . Boat ,gi yen : The President's :nppeintments ; of ;Provisional I Governors for ; the, Southern' States, Were re ceived with joyi by, the' late' Rebels; ' and *with sorrow `:by the; North, Governor Perry, of Sordb Carol ni4 shortly after his appointment, Said lull. pablit speeeli,l.nlyl3,' ,, Thereismot now in'the Spitbera States any one who feel. 4 more bitterly. the degradatioa of 'going hack into the 'Union than I do." . These:words Motley it' Was thonght, al/bold - have' kedured his instant. : dlsiidas Etl-. f i rma- dillie, - hal they Were "coupled Itvitti. significant, praise, of the presidenprtise; which, opirly iiiteitpretid Was, elnsure. l Governor, Perry' 11, s people, that the death of 11 , 1r...iihicolif s ous no 'loss te:theScrith" ,whili 1114, had; 'every: : hope :that *r i .lJolinelin, azatio d elhvehOlditigpern oeretvxdplcl. iie Art ... celve tage , l lerunediatejY following thescrevents:--, Ten in:Areigitdita, 4 , uncle;•the'very eyes of the Government—,,the 'Deboila to t he .Tilißelpies of Iflie letc)cetilog 'qqa the is4el - 1)111glion of Uol „ 7.ifehtithe aqa . 'COUDPASPOBNi',?OTTER.•COUNTY, PA.,' TUESDAY, AUG I T14,-L866 1 • ...Ella Optrit of secession, Which seemed to Itav ; pieiisbed with Lee'it . peini,',..feilved •liltli Pew yiger. Southeinleaders - ppenlyTellonedGOv . - ernOC,,PerrE In 'deeleridg the regroration'ooe Union ,a. degrading :13'0.004y:I;.In I Alabania the qonr.eqiipp prohibited . ; n egroes fromteiti, Tying ill the,,courts.. .Tlie peopfe.Wbeb4d! l foi . four , years done fain Iheir,powertitl.deitiq the Union, now coolly beg4n.to,talic of j.,altlng an immediate part in.the:Government. : .Goy. \perry, in 'November, again. eulogi2ing,.;the Presidentiedupled with hislcompliatents.a.per eMptOry dernand•tbat, when:Congress.met,the Clerk of the House shonldl.:call the names ..of menelected - from:thetterecOostructed"States. IP theetuale month Ilr:' Johnson wrote to Gov. Perry,' \ who hesitated about adopting the amendment abolishing Slalvery i that the cla”• giving Cohgress the power 'to enforce it by 7 / appropriate\ legislation, 'Aally limited - on gressional control over the subject! Thus sssured that Congress had no riglit tb legis late Ter the negro after he hid been ' freed, Gov. Perry's fears were allayed, / ," and South Carolina • adopted\ the alnendment. " People, wondered at.Ntr. Johnson!lx strange exposition'. of Caugressional . enaptmeate(aed . their cur- 1 priselwas not diminleljed / wheu'le publicly disclaimed any intention/ to dictate to the Rebel States, adding taut .he wished only. to Mildly and kindly adviSe..lThese.signs,which alarmed loyal men, delighted the old Northern friends of the Rebellion, and\cs early as An gust a Copperhead convention indorsed.' -Mr. Johnson's policy. In Sepiember \ the Majority of the .Copperhead- papers _began- to praise him. i Still/the Union • party did not oppose him ;. lit dissented •frotn the tendeneles . of his policy,l i hut 'it waited, endured, 'add\ hoped. Its organs even, declaimed 'against' 'the' Cop perheads who insulted him' by afsrming;tbat he / had:deserted the party Which elected•hipi, / sCoinlng The idea with au indignation Whleh 1' time has shown' to have, been the Most in ' tensei though unconscious irony. '. - "Ati Johnson," said:TllE . Tßiavon;in•replyLtAthese terrible. accusations of the,: Democrats, "has fittingly characterized thernipahlefatnity of John TYler.in seeking a Self-aggrendizement '.through the ruin of. the' great party'Which t eleCted him,. and po'naan has, ever 1....a,a deep- loathing than he for , the tharaeter of 4ea- t edict Arnold." betober: and NoCembee the President employed in atfempting.toFeconcile his old policy.,:ivith the new one,, but: with less I success. than he'probably- desired: „-Vire*,did I not complain of: his,ricag,naniruity tO :Rebels , 1 that We could-.li-dye heartily approved if its dangerous:_ tendencies had been 'nentrslized by justice to-black . Unionists... 'The bitter - conviction was forced upon us tbattlie kind of Merey:4e extended to the' enende§ . - 91 the Union *as destined .to be nuinitigated cruelty 1 to its friends. • ' '1 1 •` • Thus When Congress itl33einhled; DeCernbey 4, it found that g,rent things' jid•beia . during the legislafis r e vacationlt had ileft the war raging ; found At' 'ended.' It 'left Jeff. Davis, a tyrant at Richmondit found: him a pri3oner in solltnry.,echthnement,,,nnd charged trait conspiracy in murder. It. le.ft Abraham Lincolu the ruler of Atte nation ; it fotind r -not aim, :but his,, grave. It found Andrew ,Johnson the Auecessor of his place,' but practically the repudiator of his policy. It was confronted with new men, nud .d u .ties, with a political situation unprecedented in the history of the country. On•the Very opening day of the - session, the•representa. I tives from the Rebel States attempted to take part malts proceedings l Fortunately for the nation, Mr. Edward McPherson, the Clerk of the House, had the ability to undeistand, and 'the courage to execute his duty. 'The IlduSe was organized by the representatives' Of the loyal States alone, and the election of Sehuy ler Colfax removed all immediate danger.; • But the future was dark with peril:3'6f 'Unknown magnitlide. ~ Action Was dernanded. We hold it well for,the United States that Thaddeus' Stevens on, that day offered the famous reso lution by ladich Congress was saved fromthe disgrace of laving Rebels to legislate upon the conditions of their OM:lreton - h. 'Re.roked (by the •Sendtors and House of .Representa tives in Congress assembled), That ft joint Committee of FS shall .be.appointed,•nine of whom shall be members of the House , . I . and six of the Senate, who :•shall Inquire 'lnto the; - condition of the States Which formed the so chiled• Confederate States 'of America,-and re pport•whether they,or any. of thetti,ate' entitled tio.be represeitted In eitlAr'House orCopgre4s With leave to, report at 'any .time, by bill or otherwise;and until'sneh' report . tare , beertMstdennd finally acted upon by don -iiress; no Member shall'he received in either HouseTrom any of the - so-called Confederate States, and all papers relating to .tl , 4 Repre sentatives of the said StUte.4 shall:he referred to the said. Committee." This resolution; &lye Congress the. basis of.a policy froin the be ginning.,lt was passed in ;the Hohse by a rote of 123 to 2G, receiving the apkoval, of Mr. Raymond and a few • others, who have since opposed the principles- it. embodies. Though the last clause was struck out by the Senate, its efficacy was not impaired. • . The President's' message, which Was read the-next day, though More. moderathan had been expected, placed him at once inopposi don to the' Union pirti.by his assertion that ''a concession of the elc;ctive franchise to the I freedmen by fiet.of,the,l'reSident of the Erni teal States must have heen extended to nill colored 'men; wherever lounil, - 'and - so Must r i . have es ttiblislibd a change l of suffrage in- the ;North eit;•Midclle,,Unii• Western States, not less than in the Southera undiSouth -Wester)." This argnment, if valid io °Le Fespect tyd.s valid in all; from, that daild this no iinsilitis dired to deny that want power`lb iiiteilere; with the Rebel' States in this•itiatand•--, implied Want ;of pniver altogether; e held. then, We hold now, that the' President hart pree4ely the same right.to auhorize loyal black Fiti ions to ,vote liel`hadl.l6 -appoint' Pievis iBnal Governors: Oil argiiiietit"6o' ittedthe aliiiinportant -fact that. the"Tßebellion 7l had placed the Isl'orth and Soritlf:in..veri:difihrent relations to, the GOvernment. _ _ f i • :Early Session the_ spirlt : or• Coogreas found ,p.sp,ression• . in numcronsii proposed amendmentfi 'the Conitaiitien,rproviding for the cainhifshMent of civil.i l ightefor eitizens,' Without distincilon'orcriliiii and de nutdditig,:;that:•representatron dn :' ; the lower Hormel shonld•Abazhe'sed Upppi the Tatillhed number 'of raters. each Sato.l.Bills pro- ) hibitinfr the. i assumptieis or. pajrnont 044 Irelierdebe, or Vie' repttdiation 'of any. p aitrof sue National debt, were offered and referred tO,the respective .committees. Others con . Xemelated•the establish pent of impartial suf rage in VI e s ,DlStriet of olumbia. All of these I / inealiure.s . received tb, determined opposition of the Dernecratic inerity. Another differ ence-betviven the resident end Congress Was caused by his• raroval of the Provisional Gov ernor.of Alaktme., and presentation of .the State.Gover Mint Co the officers elected by the' peOple. This 'action 'was - thought to ti._ / letiiiiVnln to a ‘deelaVation that CongreSs had i no tont of of the \ s`object, which Was espee lialfy ' rprisitig, asst was. then employed,in \ legislating for the restoration of the States. December 20, the Sena% in.reply to a reso• Ilution.requesting informatiun as to - whether /the Rebellion bad been suppressed, ete., re peived a message from thaPresident, inelosing special .reports from Gen. Carl,Schurz end Gen. Grant upon the condition °Nile South. The message was characterized by Mr. Surti ner as an attempt to "whitewash" tie un happy ccndition of the Rebel States, andniany facts were cited by him to show that the Prqs ident was mistaken in his statement that‘a, spirit of nationality was succeeding, the sec tionatanimosity of the South. The report of Gem, Seburi contained the strongest eVidence that the late Rebels had little sense of national obligations, and were chiefly anxious to regain political; power, and compensate themselves for the loss of Slavery by keeping the negroes in abject servitude. Both Houses adjourned Dedember 21, until January 5. Up 'to this 1 point no important measnres had' been ma tured, though many had been proposed. . • January 5, Congress, resumed its .session, and acting upon the information the Presi dent had furnished in the repotis of Gens. Grant and Stiliarz. Mr: Williams introdheed a resolution deelnring it the sense of the House that the United States troops should not he I withdrawn from the South. Gen. Grant shortly after indorsed this opinion. , In virtual, reply to this and similar acts Mr. Voorhees of 'lndiana, January 9, iotroduced 'a resolution dtc.lariug that Congress- indorsed the whole policy of the President, but the matter pus refe\red to the Committee on Reconstruction by a I large majoriti. The next day 3h. Kelley of Pennsylvania stated in the House that the \ - President had personally assured him he was, in favor of negro suffrage in the District of Columbia \and in Tennessee. This, subject' continued te , be debated till the bill estab -1 fishing inipaVal suffrage' in the District finally passed the House, -January 15,1 by al vote of 116 to h.' In the Senate the subject was repeatedly taken up, but not acted upon. Continual atteMpts were made from time to time to bbtain the ddnaission of Senators and Representatives frorn\Rebel States, but tlitir- Oetleetiall when presented Were either lnid On the table or referred o the Committeeitin Repopstruction. such in'tlie ebsence of a de elated p,olley ? such Men as ershel'lT: John sonl\ of Georgia could hardl have Itopedl 6 gain admittance to the Senate February, l l9, the liouse,lby a series of resolutions offtit•ed by Mr. Longyear of Michigan, ''itr•tually es .serted the right of Congress to deal with the whole subject of reconstruction, declaring the existing governments of the ,Rebel States to be provisional" and temporary, and offeing its , constitutional authority to guarantee t each ' a Republican form of Government. In the meanwhile the President had a few intervi vvs with colored delegations, and 'a greftt nutty with f Rebel. ,embassies,• ands hi 6. publishe speeches showed 'that the negro loyalists had 'littler reason to hope for .reward, while the ' pardened traitors had - less tnfear Tun ishmcint BUt Presidential: Opposition, and that of the Democratic minority, were not the only diffi- culties which Congress had to overcome. The I .; , Unioh party ia ad bat one object!, 'but it was divided opon..the best. nienes to attain te, 'it- Three,ideas of, reconstruction were 'unfolded early in the session. They May.' he elassihe - fi thas : • 1 • 1 Mr. SUroner's :idea, that. no Rebel St 1 I should be readmitted to kt's old place in the . lUnion tilt it had;'Wade its; black and whitel ' citizens equal before the law. Mr. Ste,wart's idea, that universal aratiesty should lib offered the South, and universal suffrage imposed. ' ' • 1 1 : The popolar idea embodied in the • Civil Rights :biltand the ConStitutipaal amend's:teat re forming the basis of plans representd,tiep th... .. , I To e first of these there 11 . 113 Mtl . 'ohjeCtion other than its impracticability. ' -d the force-or this MeySatuner seems to' hare finally acknowledged, It must be•conceded, even by those who -most earnestly opposed him; that he honestly - - and bravely did his best: for fteeddra r and that the failure of his plans was• not from any want of earnestness or ability, in advocating them. "But whD stall tie Tizi.r.flian God, stronger than Destiny?' Mr. Stewart equally"failed in his More pop ulitrpolicy—a policy in' which we firmly be lieved fronithe first, and• have not ceased to , advocate. :But while•inen like Wendell 'Phil- Ilips.ttand apart and influence the nation solely 1 by the uncompromising declaration of Prin -1 elides, Congress ' has "another duty. It is, cha;lged with the creation oflfeasures, and if l_thesc, sometimes fail Co embody principles to , the fullest extent, let it be ronembered that no iiractical statesman has ever yet succeeded in reconciling facts:with his ideal. - "-- . The. backbone- of the .XXXIXtIa Congress wasrthe Reconstruction ,Corunilttee of Thad- den§ Stevens. That. Committee, denounced by every traitor, and by every luau who in his heait - sympathized. with, traitors, has done a noble work. It gave ,Cougiess it:center. L i • shaped a policy I . vhich.has been triumphantly ex.e uteland baffled all.the plans rinclseheMes of t ie minority' to entrap:Congress into a de•-• , par tire from its principles. By referring to !it the innumerable questions 'concerning , re [ conigtruction Cbligress secured consistent. and ' deliberate, anti On.... Those -- who declaimed , against it as a tyranny" forgot that it had no more power than any other Cerainittee; and itbat it could do "nothing withoUt•the'conserit 1 of Congress, of which" it Was the creature I One of the moSt, important,; measare.s . which had Committee,birth in this is the concurrent .resolution,,refuirted February 29, that rio•Rep lresentative or Senator shall be adrultted'from any of the 11 Rebel Stat 4 till Congress shall :have declared such State..eutitled,,tondmis siert.: ..This,roolation papsed; the,,iloifse..,thi same-d4plty2 409 Ailaa, to 444 Nays, sod- was debated in the Senate till March 2,!•whatt,it *ai, passittlM-20. ta I.B.....Thiabplied_aadli iir i: .. rod the door that had previously; been locked': Vainly, Representatives and Senators from Rebel States preaented their cridentielif; in every case they, were laid-pa the table or re- ITerred to the Committe'e:- The Committee, acting, by authority of congress,, spared.no labor to obtain a thorough' atiowledge of the condition of the Southern States, and freely 1 . used' its power to send for persons and papers:.' It- :scorned no evidence. Union, and Rebel soldiere were summoned before it, and even the Vice-President of the Confederacy, Alex., under H. Stevens, gave his testimony. • 'The, results of, this vast antiforofound investigation; were 'embodied Id the report of'Jene 8, in which the Committee declared a policy which Congress has,, in. the main, consistently care ried out. It may be said. to be embodied ite the three great measures —4llO Freedmen's Bureau bill,' the Cilia Rights bill, and the amendment to the ,rUhited States Constitution. The bill to enlarge' the poweri of the Freed men's Bureau was early itelthe session intro duced into the Senate, and it passed that body dantary 25. The history of this important measure may, be briefly traced. The House ‘eontenued 'to debate it at length ; the Demo- Melte of course,oppeisine itstep byestep, Itwas • e amended and adopted FebruarY 6, by a vote of 131 e to 33, and referred back to the Senate. Most of.the House amendments were approved by tne Senate, by which the bill was aenin; passed February 8. On the'.9th, it stoodtri-; umphantly approred by two-thirds of each branch pf Congress, and 4nly needed the-Pres ident's signature to become a law. It received! Mr.,Johnson's veto on Februaey 19, aceorupa. I riled by a long message in which his reasons were set forth. 3 WO could not repeat his ar- I emments, nor those by which they were re futed. Pei haps the most dangerous of all the ehjectibes advanced by-the President. was "that at the time of the consideration and passing of the bill there wris no Senator or Representative in Ceng,resi ftem the 11 States which are to. he mainly tiff,cted by lte pro visione." This objection; If stilted at all. would have, made worthless ell Of the legis lation refer:ir e ; to the Rebel States. There • were other iteints in the Presieent's Message more painful, as showing the blindess or indifference! to the condition of the fre dmen. but there was none more 'alarming, fo it in ri dicated that he was readyet once to g,ve the 1 traitors whO bad fought fiercely foe four years to -destroy the Union, 6.4 equal voice with loyal.men in determining the terms of ita-re- I construction. On February 20 the, Senate failed , to pass the bill over the . veto, by 30 Yeas to 18 Nays. . Six,ienators who had voted fee the bill,now 'sustained the veto. The 'reasons given by Messrs. Dixon, Doelittle, Morgan, 'Norton, Stewart, and Van Winkle, for this sudden change of policy were various, Init.. the .dist - epaiecies made : no difference ; theiretetiert tries the Only, matter of impartance. The failure of the Senate was hailed with ae. lelanrationsin the South, and by: the'Copper heada:- . Mr.• Yalandigham's voiCeeequld not -express his delight, and 'he bad 100 cannon fired in Dayeen, Ohio, to. faintly signify his admiration for the yresidente -This joy was bat ehhrt-lived, foe the Senate and House! nit/test immedietely in troditeed; eesolu Bons' to , continue in force the existing Bureau. ! These 1 inea'surea eel:fanned to be deteated,'nuit,"May 1, the House passed art approppatioe of 511,- 000 . ,600 for the Bureau by a vte 'of 79 to 41. - May 2, tleo House 'passed a bill continuing the Bureau for two Years by the decisive vote! lef 96 to 22. The I Senate in - Coe meanwhile li'ad been chiefly occupied, with the • Civil: Rits bill, but, June 27, it attlipted'a bill for i the ontinuance of the Freefiaan's Bureau, Idiffere g from the House bill in a very bn 1, portant mutter _—it 'did not guerantee peeees- 'Stoll LO t e, freedmen of the lends on. the. Seal Islands of 'outh Carolina, whidh they held be order of G ' . Sherman. JulY, 3, the House i ' agreed with the Senate •amendment, and the; bill was sent to the President I fur his signa- I lure. On the 16th it was returned to Cen-; I C - ress without his approval, Mr. Jeheison of-_l firming that the Clyil Bights . .bil made thi bill 'finperfluoris. This singe:jar argument ; failed te.convinee:Coegress, and on the same day the , bill was adopted ia both Houses by) two-third. majoritics—in the IS.enatee by 33 Yeas to 12 Nays, mid; in The Reese. by 104 I .Yeas to 83. Nays„! Thus this important meas.; nre for the protection of the Southern blacks, which, in ite firse and best:form, passed thel Senate, January 25, was for nearly six menthe i threatened with defeat by the opposition of! the' President, and it finally became a law' 'shorn of much of iteoriginal force. But the iwinei:Ple it embodied was triumphartt, and the fidelity of Congress 'received the earnest thanksiof the'nation, I- • ' ' , The second . of the great measures fer the reconstruction of ~ihe Delon i was the .Ciiii, Righte bile. introduced is ;the Senate by Mr.' 1 Trumbulfi. After-,some amendments the bill I was passed, February-2. •I In the House it was I debated - thbreitighly,„ and! on March 9 recbm mitten to the Judiciary Committee for alter ation• in its , details', The House,. March. 13, adopted it as amended byte vote ,of 109 to 38. ;The, Senate. March 25, passed it, and it was cent to the President / IL received the usual veto March 27, the President opposing not the terms of the bill . but its Pbrpose. ;Mr. Trum-1 hull, a few days afterward said in the course of a very !able speech, revi4win,g the Pye.si .dent's message, that Mr. Johneon, thoegli shown the bill while. it Was before Congress, and requeSted to make known his objections that, - ,if possible, it might be modified to snit his wishes, never sig,tlified any opposition :uptil'after its.passage. .' Apeil 6, the bill was passed, by the Senate, over the veto, by .33 Y.eas.to-13 Xey.s. The ;House, on •the. 9th, ,•I , , neutrallzed the vet? by to 41, 'and ' ` the rote wits received with tnnitiltnoree cheering. Mr. Raymond•of NeW York was the only Re publicaninember who rated to sestain-the veto. The hilt thnei became n law, hut well founded feats, NVere 'expreised that the Presi delot would n?t enforce it./ Events soon jns tified this ap9rehension. Gen. Howard of the 'irre;edmen'e Bura:att received reformation near the end of June thatllie bill was entirely dis yegarded in 'parts of Maryland, and a case cited, where !the Criminal Court of Calvert County had4old mea iuto Slavery Tor various Periods, tod truly represented the spirit throughout. l.he South.: Still the principle, hal been affirmed, the :courts, were, jegally bound to enforce .it,•Gengress had ,done.. its • hest 7 and fonthe!recui-exention of the late the President wits xespon.sible. .IWhen--wee cone eide,r -the bpi, .wea.relsatisfied ehat e ciatwess could' scare, cily - fut ve fririeid ff better'one. Ii TERMS.--$1.50 PER AXNUN. establishes universal and impartial coadititiatt of eitiaenghip and gives .to all citizens - kill: spective of race and, colOr, - the right to.testitir in the emirts,'sue, make 'contracts, lee:l'l46- hibits illelgalpunishinent, 'and; in Thief, tAii`A the freedmen from an anomaloult . and unjust condition; of serfdom. •The question oftltl/Je fragc is riot touched by this, bill, Cengr,.ga having, attempted to reach it by ether mean!. The thitd measure of reconstructlon - wnh reported by the Committee on Reconstructlei January. 22. It was a joint resolution 'pro posing an amendment •to the. ConsLituti;n, basing representation and, taxes..upon PoPrn tion,;exceptthat where the elective franchise ii.deniedlor , abridged; on account of race'er color, all of such race or,Colcir slionld be exelnded from the 'comFutation = It !was referred back to the Committee by the Route January 30, and next day was reported bnek ; with the lause concerning taxation excirded. The Hot* then passed it by a two-thiid's vote of 120 to 46. Iu the Senate it met vilitti a different fate. Mr. Sumner, whose pellet we ,have lreedy stated, February 5, offeriztd n substitute declaring that in all States lately declared [to be in rebellion there . shouldf 11 no denia of rights, civil Or, political, On kil,.. court f o Galin. or race. lie saliported thib measure tin a speech of remarkeble 'earitesti -I[lft's• Mi . . Summer's substitute was. neL I v ,' - passed, hilt the original resolution was lie f ' rented in the Senate March 9, by. 25 Yeatt lc? 22 Nays, on the motion to adopt. The stilt i i i ject thearested with the Reconstruction peta mitten until April 30, when Messrs. Fesseedea' [ and Steclens:presented a report upon willvt.b it was thought the Union party in _Congreti.s would' agree. It offered another ainendineet to. -the Constitution, forbidding State's, - et abridge the rights of eitizena; etc.; npporticei - in rept esentation according to population, but redecing the basis of representation adieu the elective, franchise was dented to, inale leit izens not less than 21 years of age. . It{ eX.- eluded until July 4; 1870, s l alt personi in, voluntarily aided, the •Rebeillon, from' % Otiuit for President, Vice-President', or Members of Congress ; it prohibited the payment ol] the Rebel debt, either by the Uniac eti States or by t , the Statei,which contrted l ~ le this shitpe it prise.eff the House, Xhy' ] f?, 1 e vote' of it [to 37. The Senate continutaleto debafe it k;t• i several Yveeks,',:Mr. Stewart Powerfully ur'ging for a time his policy of universal:runnetnytauit urtiversal.suffrege, but, there beiug.no eh:wee for the adoption of this plan. - the reioln tine, in an amended form, Was pasted, June 't, 1,1;- 1 .3317eas[tri 11 Nays. ' On the :131.11, it t-Whil !adopted . in .the.s_House, ' br.120 .to. 32:. Tile First Section was amended;ta define eitlzeti ship,moraclearly,and:the Third i received :ea important change. . The clause - dispeltiet.e4a; all Rebels-till 1 - 870 ' , was stricken put Rip jt was declared, instead; .tlitiChnr - Nhtioti.,[rlp;r State officer ,who hid 'given thisellebeliiba aid should notisecorne:a.Senator or Repfeeentt .tive,,,,au 5.:/ectoe for President, or , Vice-.PrbSl - or hold civil or militrry 'Office undeatlfe [ 'United States. CongresS was gieen Pt:tire - hi) remove this disability by:a two-thirdslt:tbig. The President was reviested ..to I send .the '.amendment to the sevecal States:for ratificap ,tioa Mr:Johnson; June 22, - sent Congress a message stating that Copies had,,beea trans mitted to the States by Mr Seward; Pustly he a: ministeriel duty; The President disapproved the amendment.in Positive . langhtige, :chiefly _npola.the old ground r -if quicksands can " t ile so.,tertned—that the Rebel .States • were; not represented .in •Congress wheo. the attieli[l meat was passed.: Thais, this great_ measure, after [ Congressional consideration , of live mouths; was matured, and[is no* before , thit people. Few. of lb e. Sta tes.haye. thps far -rat ified it, ()wine . ° • to the non-session.of. the Leg. ; • !Stature, hut Connecticut, Now e rfanapshire, and Tennessee are already upon the record. l:lnlhis plan of reconstruction Congress met the determined opposition of the President, .a misfoxttine which nentralized i much c[f [dfs effect. Mr. Joimso,n,made na,secret of hip hostility to the Union party,,very.early, "in l session, end in his celebrated speech of . felt . 'l [nary 224: In which he: addressed reitirge I_crowd, in the street, - he dent:funned ' , Charles [ Sumner,. ; Thaddeus Stevens,'"aud the 1/tsion I _ma jority ge.neraliy. in Congeess,,.art tra Rees e -, !,eipially criminallii the Southern Rebels...Oh this occasion he also introduced' tiaieW befit kat ternairbY calling JolitilV, :Forney, Bette (tag of thaSennte, a DeacbDuCk.,, INtiVeen ; tent.with this,.the . President, atter y.t.todenta. ' ing, the whole policy of Congress as disinien, 'accused its Radical leaders of anlatterept't.i procure his assassination. "It must beremern , tiered, hewever, that he had previously made a similar charge against jeff.:D,ivis, and if that, precedent is of value, Cougreis array hope that Mr: Johnson will. finally become its I.)Pst, frietill. 'Under this ;Presidential ;opposition,. the policy of Cengresi'ar last triumphed the .case of Tennessee.: The attetnpt to force its members into Congress having &tied, after the passage of the joint resolution, proposing an umcr.dmeut to the Constitution, the, Union men.of' Tennessee regolveno a doPi. it; and though the PreSident's infittefice in' hi owe State was-thrown against the_ amend/new,: it was passed by the Legislature, July lu. he a vote of 43 to 13. The question bf the admit ; sion of her representatives_ came, up et .telye in CotigresS, antra bill for the re.,toration' of the State to her former p'ace - in tile Unlati was finally paSsed, July .23. The next flay the President returned the bill:with bie:qtgea ture' but protested against the retie:al terms in which it was framed. It is iteportent te note that a bill from the Reednitrubtiou tiia mittee, providing that any State'ratifying.the Constitutional Amendment' mighisenti retire'- :set:datives be :Congress_ was defehted du .[tie House, hy 75• to 48,, Congress thus refltedeet, pledge itself in advance, and make the Aineti . ll.- ment the sole 'est of re-admission of Rebel, States. The restoration' of. Tenoesseit is is deciSive proof that the Congressionatplaa - iif Reconstruction, if sustained.by the..Vressident, would speedily lead to the admission ,[[f eA,ery Southern State. To snit the case of .4.1, Par tot son, one of the Senators froin Termersi'e, the son-in-law oftbe President, who had field an office under,' the ~/Lebel; Gaverutuent,' the Senate - yoted-to !modify the test 0a.h,l but the House by a int? vote refused toe •nt!ur..' SI% Paiterson final] obtained-his see t - aittiMtser -difficulty. -With these measures in,i'l . raint , r bilis,intended to enforce their prinettlea.raste copusteted.- : Ofittlis kind was ,111..Jtaa . 4.[LIW, OfferedFeb.,B, odispose of the nuAie inis in the South;ir(Stath a way 'as. to -46 J.i .t.lifie; • . (.4, 2 1•n r ,P.4.0.11 . fetir1h page,: __"..... . ._... _ 1 . ; I =I _~«,~~ ~_:r~ :~. I ~V; LEE NEVE , 7" ~. El WM