U II II OLUME XVIII. , -NUMBER 33 'Tiro POTTER JOURNAL; TIIiLISII en By N. W. 31eALAILIVET, Proprietor. tar Devoted to the CaII! C of flepublicani era, the tn fereatsof Agria virtue, the advancement of Education, knd the beet good of Potter count). owning no guide except that of f'rinciple, it AIM endeavor touid in the work of mute fully Preedomizing our Country. Stir -I.dwertlSernents inserted at the followihe rates, except where specialbarstains are made, A "square" 1. 10 lines of Brevier or Ei of Nonpareil types : 1 .Iquare, 1 insertion $l5O 1 square, 2 o r 3 insertions ..... 2 00 Each subsequent insertion lees than 1340 I square, 1 year ....... ..... ..10 00 $u loess Cards, 1 years 00 Administrator's or Executor's Notices.-- 3 . 00 Special and Editorial Notices per line 20 6a' transient adtertisements must he paid In ledvance,and no notice *ill be taken of adverti-ements from a distance, unless they are accompanied by the money or satisfactory reference. • a 3 Job Work, of all kinds, executed with neatncse. and dexpatch. BUSINESS NOTICES /Free and Accepted Ancient York Masons EWLALIA. LODGE. No. 342, F. A.M. Stated P 'Sleeting: on the 24 and 4th `redoeiviap o. eaCh month. Flail, in the 3d. Story of the Ohni+tod Block. D.C.LAaniung,Sec. VOL SWEAR., 0. T. E LISON. M. D., PRACTICING PHYSICIAN. Coudersport, Ph., resnectfully informs the citizens of the villa re and vicinity that he will promptly respond to ail calls for profession .1 services. Office on First street, first dour west of his residence. 17-40 JOHN S. _ILANN, 'ATTORNEY, AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW. Coudereport, attend the fever.) Courts otter and Cameron counties. AI! bintmess en 'trusted to his care icid receive prompt attention. ?Office on Main street, in residence. OLMSTED and LARRABEE., A TTORNEYS AT LAW, Coudersport, Pcntea Will attend to all business entrusted to their mace with prataptness and fidelity. Will ab.o attend ;the several courts in the adjAnitt, counties. Office In the second storey of the Olrnstea Block.. ISAAC BENSON, . A TTORKEY-A Corder-port, £11.,, attend to all. btl-i ueesi entrmtvd to him %vitt can. :and prom innese.. Attend , Cooito of adjoioiott ❑ti i ties. 0 dice oo i•.li•cood rett,heav the Allemmy brithz, ' F. W. OX. A TTORNET AND 'COUNSELLDR AT LAW Gowlerwtiort, Pa., will attend the Uourts in Put •er and the adjoinitic count 'es. F. 1). BITTER, :ii. D.. 1)11YSICIAN and Surzeon would xespectfully 'form the citiz•lis of Coudersport and vieinit. that, he bri, opened an Odtse in the Coude:spart wilrbe ready .at all times to make pro faiisionial calls:. tic is a regular graduate of Buffalo Medicsl Cole...re of ISTAL Jan 1.'67. ELLISON NI: TLIOIIPSON, DEALERS In _.:Drugs, Medicines, Paints, oils', . Varnishes, Lsinps and Fancy articles, Books of sit ti rids —Schott: and Misseitsoecias, &Arkin ery,ln ke, /Cc. Is Manning's old Jewelry titers, J:01- 1, '67. atzLiEn d MeALAUNV.Y A TTOR EY'S.-...k.T LAW,' 11 AIIit,DCRI, Pentia.— Agent , . for the Collection of Clalin-attnitEt t_ tined States anti .Stater:overnr.ient. , ,.tidi as f'cueiu:: Itounty,A.rreiies of Pay,&c-Address 13.)X 93,,inrrt.6erg .W u. MILLER, t. C : ALAI.NEY 31. W. YIvALAIT.NEY, "DEAL ESTATE and UNSER...INCE A GENT.— LI:ly Land Bought and Sold, Taves paid. and Titles inveetigated. Insures property ajzsin , t to ein best Companies in the Country. sal Persuos a4ain..l Acci dente In the Traveiers insarance Company of Bart- lordi Businees transacted promptly. 17-'2l IL ARMSTRONG, Mercnant, and Dealer (n Stores, Tin and Shoe( I ron•Wiire, Main At reet:iiiuder sport, Peni.'a. Tin and Sheet Iron Ware made to iiiir±er, in gooil,tityle, on ?hart notice. • • P. A. STEBBINS at Cc., rERCII2I:S7S —Dealers in Dry Goods, fancy jj_j_ Goods, Grozeries.rrovisioncFlour,Feed,PorlZ, ;and cverythin? usu.lly kept In a good country Atom. irroduce bout: It :.td s“ld 17 214 C. li. silutioNs j ERCIIAS:T—WELLSV,II. I .E N. Y., Whole, male and Retail Dealer in Dry Goode, Fa ncy' and li.apieGood,cluthing,Ladies. Dre;sGeodd.Groceriee, •Flour, Feed, San, H...tailers.p.upplied on liberal terms . . , . Or -ARLES S. JONES. ilk TERCHANT—NaIerg in Drugii. Mediciner -, ,Pninte, Ili Oils, .F t liticy .A melee, Sint ionery, Dry. Good= (}r, ineriea, 5,-, J. M ath 'St et,r , i 'nut - r , r,port. Pa D. E. OLMSTED, ~ f Et-wit ..ikTCT-I*Ller in Dry ci.n,e,A, Mends-made ii 1 -ClAbinz, Crockery, Gro..cric-f., Fleur, Fcvd,o 'ark, Prov6ioliis, tkci, Main etreet, CoulerFport, Pa • 1 COLLINS SMITII, • fERCHANT—DiaIer ip Dry 00t3l1F Gmel.ries' Providiims, 16rdware, tve:,exar . e, Cutler}:.ll and all Goo !sin found in a coun try .rkllre. 11-611' COtEDERSPORT - 110TE7.. HC.VERNI I LYEA.,PROPFLUTOR, CAWIler:Cr 'Main . mid :Second Atreet..Coudt•report .Potter Corn. A I,.verr Stehle ie oleo kept in coneecih.o with thie Clot -1. Stmme tO aria from the . . Potter Journal Job-Otlice. ( TTAyiNG ,lately adde.d a tine new as.:tortnient of JOl3 :TYPE to our alrt, , i:t• larze a-scrrtnientr! We ire now•p'repar6l to do an istnd, , of word:, cheaply: and with INtai., and neatneso. Orders e•olicard. LYMAN HOUSE. Lewisville, Potter county, Pennsylvania. BICRTON LEWIS. Proprietor. 113:Im: taken thiA excellent Hotel, the proprietor vrielie , o make the acquaiiitance :11e - traveling pubic and eels confident of gi sing. eatief.iction to all wiJo all on him.—Feb,. 12,66 t • '.., - V A_RBLti WORK rliol, 1 . Monuments and Tomb-Stones -_,-- kr_ of all kinds, will he fusnis'ted on reaEona iligiN ble terms and sbort notice by t4,, , f, ' :,:i% C. Brennle. • ....m.'"k' Residence : El:Liana. 1S miles south of ••••••""'"" Coudersport, Pa., on the Sinneulahoning Road, or leave your orders at the Po.t Odic-. feCti DAN BAKER. pENSION, MUSTY and WAR CLAIM AGENCT Pensions procurod for Soldiers of the present I War •elho are - disabled by reason of wounds received or disease contracted while in the service of the Doite.i States; and pensions, bounty, and arrears of pay obi twined for widows-or heirs of those who have died or been killed while in service. All letters of promptly ansiverel. and pa receipt by mail of a MAR •ment of the case of claimant, I will forward the or- itessary papers reit heir signature. F..e , in Pension eases as fixed bylaw. ItorerF.. to Iloas. lane Benson, A. G. Olmsted, John Li, Mann, and F. W. Knox, Esq DAN BAKER,• JuneS 64 Claim Agent, Comb:report,: Pa. Itch ! Itch ! Itch ! SCRATCH: SCRATCH I SCR.kTCH WIIEATON'S OINTMENT, Will Care the Itch in 48 Hours . Alen cures SALT RHEUM . , ULCERS, CIITL. PLAINS, end nll ERUPTIONS OF TILE SKIN Price 51 cents. • F , .r sale by drnzziets. 1 V send:n..2 60 cents to WEEKS Sc. PO rrEn, Sole Azents, 170 WAsh!ngton street, 13 , 1,tan, I will forwarled Lv ta.‘ll, free nf pil•taV",l.l any part of the UnitedSt:itee tit:Lao 1,1803, Bp.no:iee wl:y lyr: . . . 1 ' _ I , . : . •-..-..:_. -.... ' , I 1 . 4 111 - 1111 P A. 6 , . ------...-. , • if . , r ~...,, , , ... ..•.„ t • p a . . ..., ... ~ --- so --.0 . 1e• - s _______ 1 . i . _ _ I ' i . , t / lall 1 -- - SPEECH OF HON. G. W. SCOFIELD, IN TEE DOUSE pi REPIII:SF.-9SATIVES, JAN. 19. The liourhaviiig under consideration' the bill to proliide for pstoring to the States lately in insurrection their full political rights:, - Mr. Speaker" as the confederate popula- Lion, live or sixlinillion in minibers, is to re= main in this claintry and te, some extent shape Its destiny. it•is all-itriportant that we so reconstruct the Union' that this pop ulation :may become an element of strength!, rather than of weakness to the Republic., Powerful as wi are we can Hardly afibrd to allow apoptilat i ion so large, brave, and reek-, less to Settle down into chronic discontent —forever to be to America what Ireland is to Great , Britain, Poland to Ruasia, or Huligary. to Austria—an ever-ready. ele • : 1 • I ment of revolution. To avoid thislresult is the avowed purpose 1 of both! political parties; but strange to say, ! with the same professed end in view, they start opt upon !paths leading in quite op. posite directions. • The Republicans claim that thb Union" can be best preserved by re moving: the causes of discontent and thus eictingliishing the motives to disunion, while the Democrats lthinkthe Union can' be best preserved by ielerating, conciliating, and fosterin cr..:, the errors and wrong from which c os disunion Sprang. For insiani the preservation of slavery I 'was the original' motive for sece.ion. To destroy this motive the Republicans pro pose to abolis and the Democratic' to los- I ter slavery. ... cting upon their theory, and I anticipating the. final overthrow of the re-! hellion, the RePublicans began early in the! ‘var the remoVal of its cause. They pre- hibited' the extension of slavery, abolished it in the District of Columbia, forbade the; retorn of slave r i by the Army, repealed the fugitive slave Ilaw, supported Fremont's. Hutrtei , ,..7. Phelps, partial and Ur. Lincoln 4 H ' morefgeneral proclamation of freedom, and I finally by an amendment of the Coustitn I ion ptoliih4e it everywhere and:forever.; rbus it wai hl)ped that when the rebellion should he stml)ressed no conflicting interest, would be left, labout which the North and 'South codld I quarrel. There appeared however, to b 3 a lingering hope:• in the minds of th I B,e t rte masters that in a separtite republic th i stitution might still be' re vived in in i e modified form and some ' thine. It at leistl of their larg e 'VeStiuent t, salved, and to ibis extent the, motive tore 1 new the stru4,gie in more propitious timesl survived. T4s hope and Motive' for diS-1 union would grow weaker and weaker as the subject-race become more and more in -1 tellig-ent, tliri y, and self-replant. To .facilitat i this result the, civil rights and, Fder reeet,'s Bureau, th franchiSe, and trinity other Minor bills of li -e import were pasied by C4gress. The advancement oft thenegro was,thought to be a greater bin -1 (Ira ice to thefteviVa. of.,thel disunion insti- Lititiop and a greater 'discOuragernent of confederate o„,tbreaks than repealable laws; or amendable constitutions:l This was tip; Republican plan of reunion: The DemOH erats, 'acting }iron their theory of fostering" and thus, conciliating the distubing etc- ments, opposo a'l measuaes for emancipa I tiein g and are still ! opposing bills for the im-' lprovingtlie colored race. I do not clues -1 Lion their's , ineerity. Quite likely they sin -1 cerely thought that the best way to unite 4, th'p North arid SOuth was to yield to,, ex s tehd,•cheti'sh and propitiate the cause of idiSaffreerne4 I3ltt. this is passed. The ' (! great w i hrk s nearly accomplished, and I ,I refer to the Course of the two parties upon I it only to ille+rate my position, that "they, seek the press I t of the Union in di- I 1i , I ametrically! , Opposite directions. , ! I The Republicans had hoped that by the; l removal of this original cause of quarrel all 1 incentives to diso mon N. onlti disappear; hilt son theAresh hold of reconstruction another 1 and to some extent tin unexpected trouble ! presents itself! : The confederacylhad four and 0 quarterlyears of nationality. Dir-I this time vast interests, paqions, and resentments 'grew up under" and centered in it. She eentracted many debts, a debt,', in bonds and Currency to her capitalists, of damtiges to her propertpholders, ,of honor to her s - I,ldier . :•', memory to her fallen, and alms .to the,,Suffering. ' The dead claiin homage, the maimed, widowed and orphans.; pensions, the, iMpoverished pavrhent, and the leaders hi !brie honors: These inter, estS and passions embrace all classes and appeal to all'hewts within the circumfrence of confttilerate power: This makez.. a cause ILtrotae than Slavery. There is more moa t 2, 1 ~ I et' ill it by. half, and quite as much to awak , en resentment...or provoke resistance. -' If:these people come back.with these in terests unbarred by a constitutional amend ment, how co they avoid struggling to sme in the Union all that was risked in thi4 confederacy? . if they do not ; they - ' 1 m :st be % use th an men or better than ‘,. ian els. But these interests are in direct I cot tlict with the corresponding interests of Ith Federal oov:ern . nt, The reunited nit ion cannot honor ;Tent for preserving the Union and Lee for attempting to de ' stroy it. 1 We cannotimourn for the three hundred thousand Union dead and pension the men a t whose bawls they fell. It will be anoth c4 war of sectional interests to be fought, bebote to tiit ?Enclitics of DcitioehOg, Ana ti) RECONSTRUCTION OUDERSPORT, POTTER COUNTY, 'over in the Halls of Congress, thi State ,Legislatures, on the : husting and then again,if opportunity presents, on the field of blood. The "lost cause wid take the !place of th., slave power" . with a larger in 'vestment to back it, and a less repulsive face to defend . What shall be done with this new ele ment of disintegration and strife? The Re- I, publicans propose to dispose of it as they !did slavery—bury it by anotherl amend ment of the constitution. And why shall not this be done and the Union tlius purl tied and harmonized, restored a once ? Does Congress stand in the way Y I No, sir for eight months the two policies4Repub lican surgery and DemocratiC opiates were discussed and contrasted in thes.c Halls !and almost everybody here camel to the (conclusion that it was better tol cure than palliate the disorder. The amendment was agreed to four to one. Do the peOple neg beet their duty? No, sir; the amendment was sent out to them and for' three or four months rediscussed. They approved it, and in twentyithree of the twenty-sift States elected Legislatures instructed to adopt it. Do these legislative servants disobey iristruc • tions? No, sir; they are now assembling and State after State is recording : its ver d id. Very soon these twenty-three States, having a population in 1860 of twenty-one million five hundred thousand, and not less than twenty-seven millions now, Will send to a perfidiqns Secretary the official ev i-1 deuce of the people's will. Delaware , three I counties large, Maryland, betrayed to the (confederates by a servant less treacherous I than weak, arid Kentucky, whose piltriotisni in the great strugglelardly rose ,above Idissembling neutrality, alone a negative an swer. By the census of IS6O the entire popu lation of these three Sates, white and black, was only 1;955,000, and cannot Much ex caed'those figures now.. Who. th4n stands in the way? Not the Democratic party; :the amendment was beyond thOr reach when it passed Congress and was indorsed !by the people: not the President; the con stitution withholds from him any authority over the question of amendment.. Who, then, stands in. the Way Y One iold man who is charged by law with they duty of l i proclaiming the adoption of the amend-1 ment, bu who (the Chicago def4at being still unavenged) has determined Ito incor porate into the Union the debris of 'the' late confederacy; to be in place of the ir repre sible conflict" the breeder of present broils and future rebellions—he stands in the way. He has contrived a theory of estoppel. The amendment, he tells us, is 'void without confederate sanction. The will of the people of twenty-thiee States, nay, the whole twenty-six if they' had been ' unanimous, must go for nothing unless ap proved by a few millon, rebels', seal tered through the confederate States.j Having set up, his theory, he undertakes to procure from these "misguided people"---oever more misguided.than when led by him—an ex pres,-•in of dissent. His machinationS are likelytto be successful. In 1860 the southern heart was fired by the taunts and promises of northern Demo crats. "The election of Linc4dn," they would say, "is an assault upon your insti tutions and an insult tti the South." They promised in case of trouble to take care ofl the abolitionists. • There should be no co ercion; but when the trouble dame they shrunk away front the ,people ithey had thus prompted, perhaps- unintentionally, to resist. A good deal of half-tremonable criticism on the action of the Government when deeply embarrassed and struggling for life, a little secret encouragement and silent sympathy, for the fue were, the only noticeable departur'es from a strict neutral ity. Their promise was broken', Let me warn these confederates who bare ahan dolled their scheme of separation in good fah to beware of their old advisers and their new leader: , Mere,. then, arises an intermediate ques tion. It is not whether confederate assets shall be buried in the ,same grave' with slavery as the Republicans propose ; nor whether they shall be tenderly I taken up and warmed into venomous life in the bosom of the Union as The Democrats pro pose; but whetherthis-question 'shall be de termined by the •Staees in the Union or by the confederate States. What then is the status of the ten con federate States! Are they Stats or Terri tories in the Union! if Stateg, they can control the other twenty-six on la question of amendment; if not, not. They mast be one or the other. Some suppose :they:strike intermediate ground by calling them over thowni disorganized ; or suspended States. But certainly a State overthrow or guspen ded is not at present an existing State, nor is' a disorganized an organized State. If they have no present existence as States trey are only. at the most theoretic' States 9hich are 0 Suites; or prospective States, •s o• % hick are' Ilrritories. They have certain- I: • not been lactin as States during the . I , t siN year 4 and aro =l,lcl:rimed to ble sb becausle no way for the sere:awe of al State from' the Union is provided in the donstitutior. Once a State therefore al- Ways- a State. If they are Statue now they 1 hai'e been so for the last six years. L i ook 1 DisseNiqptioß of Yoh 7..iiehigho agil , TIMSDAY° FEBRIJAII I i 5, 18 . the consequences. By article one, sec- Elm five of the Constitution, no bUsiness. In be done in the absence of a quorum,' Id a quorum is there declared to be •Et i f ijority of all the membere. Nov, if the hzetz mlederate States' were also Statt in the aion for the last six years this House coz Ited of two hundred and forty-tw'o•me - irs, and no business could be constitu ic.n ly done without the presence of o hun ed and twenty tWo members. ut for' this time we have acted on t e hypoth- Cuat the House was composed of onl/] one huadred and eighty-four members, de dUcting fifty-eight for the rebel States end that ninety-three made a quorum. The Senate has acted'on a similar presumption, counting twenty-six instead- of thirty-seven as the ed . nstitutional quorum, Probably ! more than half.of our legislati+ lifts peen enacted, as will appear of record, When ei ther the House had lees than one hundred' and twenty-two, or the Senate less than thirty seven members present. All this must therefore be unconstitutional and void. ~~ Again, a presidential election occurred during the war". lithe confederati3 States had not forfeited their privileges as States in the Union they were entitled Ito cast eighty electoral votes. These eighty votes might have decided the'contest, and they might thus bare chosen the Conitntider-in- Chief of our Army and Navy to e i encitict the ar against them; or by casting their votes for Jefferson Davis tiey might have defeated an election by the peooe and thrown it into this House. Whatl then? we vote by States, (article two, l section seven,) and two thirds of all the States must be represented. If Kentu i cky and Missouri had joined the confede+cy as they attempted to do—and they lactually were represented in it during the entire war —more than one third of the States would have been absent, and the election 'Of Presi dent would have become impossible. The I Senate: would have encountered the same difficulty in the election. of Vice President. To perform this duty two thirds of all the Senators 'must be present. That; number could not be. had in the rase supposed, and so we must go without executive officers until the rebel States choose to relieve us by sendino• ° representatives to aid in choos c.. in them for us. ° Suppose, again, that pending the war it had become absolutely necessary to amend . , the Constitution, that all parties concurred in its propriety, and the loyal States were' unanimous upon the subject, it could not have been done without the consent of the confederate States. Though formed into a seperate republic and - conducting a war with this, not the slightest change in our fundamental law, however necessary to our salvation, could be had without their con ; sent. i And this state of things would have continued as long as the war continued, even if it were a quarter of a century; worse ,than that, sir, in the light of this theory they were 'States in the Union until releaS ed or, expelled by an amendment of the Constitution. such tin antendment requir ed the consent of all the States. No mat ter, then, bow the war should terminate or whether it terminated at all, their power over us could never be severed withont their Consent. Seceding and fighting would not do, you say, because these were uncon ; , stitutional acts. But whipping qs, I would suppose, would be quite as unconstitutional as fighting. If they had succeeded in the war and maintained a separate republic they could have run their own government and in part controlled ours in spite of us. The absurdity of this hypothesis protes the, truth of the other. When a State rebels and levies war against the Union, it there by forfeits its privile g es as a State, and can a ' only be restored by Conress, Absurd as the other theory - i Upon it the Secretari - of State has undertaken to brinet back to the Union the confederate population, freighted with all the helligar ent interest collected by four and a quarter years of nationality and war. IlloW7 Not by conrineing the people; that! . has been tried and failed. Not by executive ration, age, that has failed also. Not by Corrupt ing Congress, for biS old lobbyist is power less berg No, sir; he Meditates Ithe se: ductibn of another old man who happens I to bold the balance of power in the supreme Court; va,(4ne rumors of a mission to Eng land 'are afloat: The Secretary seems to thitil that a man who can betray his con stituents and misrepresent his State will make a good mistepresentative of 'the na tioni abroad ; and why not send' a second chaMpion of his theory to flaunt his' soiled ermine at the court of St. 'James and nego tiate i treaties for th epaytnenvof confeder ate cotton bonds or a release of claims fur ! the piracies of the Alabama? Bat his judge must have somethincr to stand upon. The courts follow precedents and the Rhode Island case stands in the i way. This question s. there held to be a political one, to be decided by the political department of the Government. Eventu- Ally he will insist that. this decision has been made atd made in his favor. ' To meet I this emergency he is now and has been for some time preparing his facts. The email: cipation amendinent was agreed to. by twenty-three States out of the twenty-five thenin the Union—many inure than the ff etos number •qmred for its adoption; but in his proclamation ( h , e chase to omit firm his count a portion ot i tam Stated and seven con federateleOmmunities to make the number required/by his construction. There' is a recedebt for his judge. So he submited withotit authority to these same communi ties iihe amendment now under considera tionto be acted on by them in the apse itY of States. There is another precedent. The Interior is prompted to issue agricul tural land scrip_whieh can only be given to States to the Union, and the Treasury and Post Office Departments are ordered out'of their line of duties to make some small rec- , ognition of thtse communities as States. These will make so many more precedents for his judge. - The Secretary first declares they are! States, treats them- as States,:procures other j Executive Depattments to do likewise, and then cites his acts and declarations to ena-i ble a willing judge to decide that they are States, and thus launch into the heart of the Republic a confederate shell with fuse still burning by a single ; twitch of his gown. Mr. • COOPER. Mr. Speaker,' simply wish to ask the honorable gentleman from Penn sylvania; whether this House did not adopt a resolution making it the duty of Mr.Mc- PUERSON, its Clerk, to forward the very constitutional amendment about which he is arguing to the different States lately in rebellion before he knew the Secretary of State had forwarded it? Mr. SCOFIELD. Ido not recollect any i such action of tha House. But if sent tot them by us it was only to =allow them an; opportunity to proie their loyalty by giv-I ing it their assent. 'ln the preamble to the ; bill readmitting Tennessee their assent to: this aMecdrnent is recited, among other things, as evidence, of the loyality of the government de facto, and as a reason, for legitimatizing it and admitting it into the Union. Fur this purpose we of course de sired them to have a copy, but, unlike the Secretary of State, we did not expect that the assent of these communities would fasten this amendment upon the country without_the_soncurrence of three fourths of the adhering - States, nor that their dissent would defeat it if that concurrence was bad. The Bectetary is clever in work of this, kind, An English nobleman was at ones time ethibiting his kennel town American friend, and passing by natty of his show iest bloods they mime upon one that 'seem ed nearly tired up. "This ; " said the noble mai, "is the most valuable Animal its the pack although he is old, lame, blind, and deaf.'' "Ho* is that?" inquired the visi tor, The nobleman explained t "His ed‘ ucation was good, to begin with, and his, wonderful sense oarsmen is still unimpaired. We only take him out to catch the scent' and put the puppies on the track and then return him to the kennel s ' • Do not sup= pose that I intend any comparison between the Secretary of 'State and that teteran hunter. Such a comparison *mild be nei ther dignified nor truthful; because the Englishman went ere, to say! "I hate owned that dog for thirbsen years, and - hard as he looks he never bit the hand that fed him, nor barked on ti false trail." t Laugh-- ter and appladse on the. door and in the l l'galleries, promptly checked by the Speak er.] I mistook the fall of the hammer for s notice to quit. However, I have but little more to add. The charge is often made here aft i elsewhere that the Repub= liean policy of reconstruction leads to disin- . tegration father . than retittion. In reply I to that chargel am eucleavoring td show 1 that its tendency is to harmonize and ce- 1 ment the Union. I follow,this narrow line, 1 i of argument because it has fallen to others. 1 to discuss that policy in connection with' ' the abstract principles of republican gov 1 ernment, justice, religion, hunianity, and 1 civilization already. 1 When interrupted I wasgaing on to sat - that the Secretary, in his efforts to ;baffle! the Union policy of the Ilepublican party, will even claim that his guekrilla govern ments have the implied sanction -of Con gress. For more. than a year'' these organi zations have usurped the control of public affairs in their several localities and'system atical ly oppressed and persecuted the Union people there. For more than a year we have teen inactive, if not silent witnesses of these usurpations. We have takea no steps to suppress them nor to provide thelpeople with constitutional governMents. The ex isting ones are only the confederate govern ments ferived —mare opprive, ma' iguant, and resentful tinder the feeble restraints or a cowed opponent., than under the iron rule of the confederate, president himself. The despotisin and bartetrities of Davis were not wanton. They had a purpose—the suc cess of the confederate cause. The "stern 'statesman" hlloted no further license; but ( under the Settard dynasty lynching and murder has become a pastime. Better by far for the Union men of the South :f their governments Were again placed under the' restraining despotism of Jefferson Davis: At least he would not allow helpless and unoffending people to be mobbed and inur dered for no' confederate or public purpose. How M'LV:I2 lonis,r shit* we tuln a deaf ear to . the cry of the oppted? How 1 S..SLSO.PER AN:puur. much longer shall we stand- here Mid see the brute men who for foul , years, maid citdo= quy, persecution,imprisonmenti abd tortu refused to forswear the dag, now wheti the flag is triumphant, in part through their suffering, driven from their homes or shot down itt the streets like &Vs? If %e Ebbs Meanly desert our friends the rebels theme selves will despise' us. ;But how about Lb d Secretary, his etittning,hii precedent% and his judges? .They are not to be feared, dhey may protract our national ttonble and elay, the restoration of the Unit* 9 little ! l onger.; but that is . all. .The people have Concluded that the bst. way to harmonise and cement the Union is to bury Whatever is left of slavery and confederate nation:4x ity in a common grave; and it will be done: The Nile may be dammed with bUlruslim f but the just i benignant, and well considered purpose of forty-million nation eAutidf, turned aside by the tinkle of one old man's bell nor the rustle of another's gown. For one lam ready for the tote, • A Ornkard Menagerie. The most foolish predieament a man call get into is to get drunk. In drunkenne-s every man shows his strenge-t and most ardent passion. There are six kinds .cif drunkards, and if you go into a city drinking place,: *here there ate a dozer! men under the influence of liquor, you will find these six different animals:. 1. The . ape-drunk. He leaps,atid sings, and yells, and dances, making all sorts of grimaces, and cutting up all sorts of mon‘ I key-shines to excite the hughter of his fel , lows! 0, terribly silly is the drunkard clown. • 2. The . tiger-drunk, He bre:ls - the tot , 1 ties, breaks the chairs, breaks the heads of fellow carousers, and is fUll of blond and thunder. His eyes ate full of ventreance; I I and his soul raves with tnurdeous fury. Of this sort are those who abuse their Jinni liei. - : 3. The hog-drunk. He rolls in tile ditt on the floor, slobbers at.d grunts, and go ing into the street makes his bed in the first ditch or filthy cotter he may happen to fall into. I He is heavy, lumpish and sleepy, and cries in a grunting way for a little more to drink. 4. The puPprdrunt. He *ill sweep for kiciduess, and 'w pine his love and hug you in his arms, an kiss you with his slobber- , P aim how much he loveS ing lips, and c." you. You ate, e best man be evef saw f and will lay d wn his money or life foe' you, O. The owl drunk. tte' is 'wise in his crUli conceit: . No man mustdiffer with him, for his word is law, He is true itt politica t and all matter must be taken as authority: His afttl is the sttongest, his vette the sweetest, his horse the fleetest, his tutnipt the largest ; his town the finest 'of all the land. D. The sixth and last animal of out thetf %fetid is the fat-drunk mutt 14.4 is etatlyi ready to trade horses ; and cheat if he cane 'Keen to strike a bargain ; leering *found Keith ljny cunning; peeping thfotigh 'Citcke listening under the etives,watchina fof some auspicious tbing i sly as a fox ; sneaking as * wolf, he is the meanest drunkard , of theta all/ 1 Ind coliistitutional The number of States which have actel upon the Constitutional Amendment if ref , eteixe to restoration, excluding the disloy al States, is not as great as many trout! suppose: Up to this tilde the ratification of the Amendment in the States fepreseu- - - ted in Congress have been as follows: Cfm- necticut, June 27th, 1806, T.tiatt;see, July. 19th ; New Jersey, September 11th ; Creg —; Ohio; Jar:nary 4th; New York, January 10t10 g.ansa4, January 11th The oniy rejection has ,been .by Kentucky; January' Bth. The future probabilities are that; addition to the. seven - States friivd already ratified the ainendnient; it will be , Confirmed by CalifordiN Illiriois, In4iawk;,. lowa, Maine, Massachusetts, Minnesota, J.iss..uri, Ne:i•ada, New Hair* , shire, Pennsylvania. Rhode Island, Vefniunfe Virgit4 add Wisconsin, ritealciug: :a total of twenty-iliree. •It will be fej&t.gli, by Delaware add Maryland, maliing a t , .tas of three Ori that side. If the do trine is established• that it only requires- thre.4-- . fourtlis'of the loyal States' so ratify - fir 4 amend Men t, its sucCess is estabiisice . .i. Tire' 'Southern States have Urns:far vottedmr:Mirst the amendment as follows: Ge0q, 1 44 t•-• 1 1 - k- - teriabce 9th; Alabama, Decernbv.r South Carolina, December 19th, ViFf b intia r January 9th. There are yet to i he beard) from, Arkar. - ra•;; Florida,. IJoiiisherr; sippi, North Carolina; and Theses it may he yrresurned; wid go the sane way imaking the votes of the .States it Retr.d.- lion, ten in number, a*tiirst nve a r„ L ire. If it is assumed that these Stat6s right to: vote upon the subject, the 4. draw the votes of li-entucky,-Maqla:adantl Delaware,., making the total rejeetioti- - teen. The total ,of adoption' Will he twenty-three. The ConstittPion fe4frirtl.# three-fourths of the States shall' mi.let: Constitutional Amendment, and # the Boutheta SEttes have any t4i; is the . fnat. , - ter it will be rejected. c&'P s hilii. Johnson, lAlember 00tIv gress from this State, died MA, watk.