ik 1:-' 1 ; i V, r WITH MALICE TOWARDS NONE, WITH CHARITY POR ALL, WITH FIRMNESS IN" THE RIGHT AS GOD GIVES US TO SEE THE RIG IGHT. Hincon, $ imk IfrHN I'M', f ittratwtf, prip, ome and pflcrflaneou! pt ?. VOL. X. WAYNESBURG, PA., WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6, 1866. NO. 2. 1 i : L:'. r 1 i ' - '! J: ! 1: , , 31k !i t. f : wy 11 t , Tl H ifj a im .1 Y "" iiiimi mmiavaa ntnmmmummmamamtumtmnu Lxenrnr-nmim , wwM J AS. E . SAY E R 8 , editoii and I'lioi'iiiKron. .OFFICK IN WILSON'S BDIbDINO, MAI BTKBJtT, TKRM8 OF BUHSOIUPTIOX TW'flollars a-year, payabla Invariably In advance. One dollar for six pionths, payable, Invariably In advanooi TERMS OF ADVERTISING. AnTBRTIBKMHKTB ill .1 1 1 :il $1 50 perStlliarO for three Insertions, an l.iOcts, a square breach additional Imwrtloni (ten Hues or loss counted a wpuiro. ) Local advertising and Bpeoiai Noticbs, 10 'cents per line for osb insertion, with ssrA liberal deduction made ti yearly ad vcrtiscrs. Advertisements nol marked with the num ber of Insertions deslrod, charged lor until ordered out. Obituary notices and tribute i of rospoct inserted as advortlsonients. Thoy musl lie paid or in advance. W.E. OAT EN, ATTORNEY AT LAW, W A YNESB'jnS, PA. sOtpicb In N. Clark's building, feblO'tititf A. li'coNSBU,. J. ' norvMAK, M'CONNELL & HUFFMAN Attorneys and Counsellors ut IHW swOmci .n tho "WrUrht House," East doore. Oollooi'ons, &c, will receive prompt 'attention. Wayneabnrg Ad nst 20, 1802. tf. R. W. DOWNEY, ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW O-Oraoo in Lodwlth's Building, opposite the Court Hnuso, NVaynosbiirg, Pa. Nov. . 1805 ly. OBO. nr. A '. BUCHANAN. WVLY & BUCHANAN ATTORNEYS & COUNSELORS AT LAV ibt OPFIOB in tho old Bank Building, Wavnesburg, l'a. February :!d. isc.-'.f. T . W . ROSS, PHYSICIAN AMD BURGEON, 0 l'TK.'E in .If well's Luii 'Iii Yosl rn.l of Mamstreot, Waynosburg, Pa. apl,-tl T, P. MITCHELL, Main St., nearly opposite Wright House IS prepared to do Btitclicd and pegged work, Itom the coarsest to the finest .- also, puts mw latest style of Boots anil Shoes, 'oi lilinj; done on resBonablo terms. JIuy2,flm, w . h . fia ii v v n i li , MERCHANT TAILOR, BOOM IN BLACHLKT'S UUILIUNU, WAYNBSBDnO, ISTORK made to order, in finest and best T style, Cutting and Pitting 'lone prompt ly, nml according to latest lashtnn plates. Stock on 'mud an i for sale. May 2, tf " "W333.7 :oitil ey, Watches and jewelry. MAIN sftlKRT, OPPOSITK WniflllT 'HOUSE, KEEPS ON HANDS ALWAYS A choice and select assortment of watches and iowolry. Repairing done at tho lowest rates, apl, ly DENTISTRY. TEETH ! TEETH ! TEETH DR. S. S. Patton Informs the public that af ter February 1st, 1 804, ho will bo ai Wayncs burg, when his dental servlcos will bo tender ed to any and ail making application, Ho is now extracting teeth positivbi.y without pain, and fits new ores in to poifoo ion, and restores decayed ones to soundness. Ho invites all who are suffering from dlscasod teeth to come and have their aches relieved, and their mcuhs (liled tvith gold. January 20. lEiud'-if N. G. H UGHES, SADDLER AND HARNESS MAKER, Main St., nearlij opposite WrigU House, READY made work on hand, and having secured the services of two llrst-class work men he is prepared to execute all orders In the noatest and best style. MayS.Gm. TIhTr S T N OMOR E ! CO TO ''J'OO" BSa-0.1?23.02?5'3 IIC HAS JDST 0PBNBD A N E W S A LOO N ! ! Keeps Good Rye Whiskey, Brandies of all kinds, Obi, Wine. Ale.&o. Andhasth'o where with to put up Fancy Drinks. Call and see him in the brlok part of the Adams Inn. npr BB Cm 'WU.lsls.eT's 47 0H3ED TO FiOW On the Smoothest Face ! 11 y CHARLES HICKEY, A'o. ii. Oamvbelt s now, m 30,'G5- WAYMSBUEO, PA. Valuable Recipes for tale. The following reelpi s can he had by calling bn r addressing the undersigned ; Hair Dye, Nn. l, for 7. Hair Dy' N i. 2, BtlrAUlatlrAgl OngUent, Huir Renewer, Hair Restorer, Cure fbr, Pim ples and Bletehes, Remedy ftr Freckles and Tun, all for ft, Thcso recipes are as t;ood ns nnv In use any where THO FERRBLi mar3tr vayueburg, ra. "MY POLICY !" SCATTCINO ANALYSTS OP THE "PRESIDENT'S PLAN!" MHS ANNA T.. DICKINSON'S LKCTUIUi! One of the largest and most intelli gent audience of the season assembled at i lie Academy of Music last evoning to listen to Miss A E. Dickenson's fine iduress, known as "My Policy." Miss Dickinson came upon tliu stage at a ' ' quancipu-io o ciecu, her appearance I. . ., f 1 ... I .1. .. nemg uic sign oi proiuugeu ana eutiiu- siastio cheers, Mr. U. II. Ncdless, in ' simple and eppropfioio language, in troducod lier to the audience. Miss Dickinson spoke with more than ordinary fervnr. rind v.-ns Ii-fniiflntlv intnrrnnlfld i .. l J "F with hursts of loud applause. She had a thoroughly appreciative audience, and her address, in every respect a most suo oessful one, was the subject ol hearty congratulations among .her numerous friends and admirers, We herewith publish her speech in lull : "Monsieur D Conway somewhere tells the story of a young cavalher, who at a ball became enamored ol a mask. no wiiowea ncr irom group to group. from room t-) room, the mask Still el lids lug her pursuit, till alone, far Irom the music, tho light, nud tho crowd, in a dark and solitary chamber, ho unmask' ed his with a kis, discovering somc thing, what his quivering lips never could be brought to describe, but n creature ndl ofllesh and blood, and tin iiterahly loathsome to behold. So, twelve months ago, in ihe midst of the music of triumph, and glare ot victory, this gay young oovallier of a nation stood enamored in a mask, which it endeavored to clasp in its arms: and1 hold as its b :-i beloved. It followed this mask, whithersoever u led till away from the light, the triumph and rejoin tug of victory away in the gathering gloom of doubt, and (ear, and lot boding the mask has f'alhn Irom the lace m the tVhite House, revealing something bo terr'ble and hideous that our lips fail to describe what our yes are compelled to heboid. Twelve moths ago, a man standing on tho grave ot a martyred President, stop ped to his place and assumed his power. A nation bowed to the earth with unutx ernble grief, listened through its sobs, and watched through its tears, while this, man gave to it and the world a prom ise of his future career. A promise to annihilate Rebellion, uproot treason, and bring to swift judge ment conscious and leading traitors. A promise to maintain the policy of his illustious predecessor, which policy- was to bestow amnesty on the masses ot white Uebel, and suffrage on the mas ses of loyal blacks. promise that loyalty should be lion- ored and treason ma le odious. A promise that so far as he was con cerned, all men should havo a fair start and an equal chance in the race of life. A promise that merit should bo re warded without regard to color. A promise that traitors should take back seals in the new Union circle, and that loyal men whether white or black, should control its destinies, A promise that the cause of the peoplt should be upheld against their oppres sors against the spirit of caste, aris tocracy and slavery. A promise that justico should bo es tablished, equality secured, a..d freedom maintained. How have these promises been kept? Shall we answer ! There is a French provi :b to the effect, "When the saint's day is over farewell the saint." I charge this man with the breaking of every promise, tho non-fulfillment ot every pledge, the falsity lug of every dec laration ho at that lime mado. 1 charge him with betrayal of trust, with degradation of oflicx, with desecra tion Of power. I charge him as an enemy alike of his parly, his country, and his God. What has he given us in exchange for Lthese promises, those pledges, and these oaths? Has his step kept step with the i give him the farce of a trial, that will march of tho people? Has his heart I release him, acquit him, fail to condemn ami conscience been enlightened yot I him, or condemn him to Exeoutive olem- further with the heat and. conscience of j ency and pardon, the nation ? Has he advanced with the I "Tho pardoning power should be us onward sweep of the republic? In brief cd most slowly and sparingly. We has he given us something higher, must not forget that what may be mercy nobler, and better in exohange for that ! to tho individual Is cruelty to theStSte." he offered us a twelvemonth ago? Let Thus said Andy Johnson a year ngo j tho grief ot his friends and tho rejoicing then pardoned nil, save a few executions of his foos answer. Let tho insolence of issued pardons for the expected till Rebels and tliu mourning of loyalists answer. Lot t ho renewed spirit of trea son South, and the outraged indignation of tho North, answer, Let the Presi. dent himself answer, as he tells us that in exchange 'or all this he has given us that a1 amenable and rotten thing "My Policy." It is useless now to recapitulate the acts of almost a . year ago useless to speak of the steady 'growing doubt and pain of the people through the mouths r.i. ,.. i . . ot the summer and autnm following his ala-.t!on to Vet it w!is those I acts ot li:u. his unili'an .it ihiai liinn ilmt i.ij .... ,u i .. i . j ' t i lam slrong the lound .tions and madu secure the cornel- stem! upon which was npresred the edifice that threatens the welfare, security, and even the hate of the nation tot-day. Had ive not then withheld our hands, his hands would have been powerless for evil. Had we noi, said, "Wait,'1 he would have had time to consummate his iniduiiy. Had we not slept with the harvest of the war under our cure, the enemy could not have stolen in and sowed tares. Slept! My friends we are awaio now I oani one io y.i oinwen. winie no was , Bghtina for the liberty of all Eneland 'Jt thou wort to meet the Kiiigin battle what WOUld'Bt th'ou do T" "11 the King Quid meet me in battle " was the reply 'I should kill the King," Because 1 believe the President of the republic to day to bo the greatest enemy of the re public, I would have him politically so slain that for him there should be neith er need of prayer nor hope, of resurrec tion, Politically I Bay, physically, he need have 110 fear. It-is his old foes, not hi old friends, tln party to which he has gone not that from which he has deserted, that breeds murderers and light with the weapon of assassination a weapon not to lie used on so faithful and 'devoted a servant. Andrew Johnson lins declared, "Ho who is mt for me i -. toiM ire ; l e who mi porls hiy policy is my friend, he w ho opposes it is my enemy." II this were all, it would be little indeed, but be has declared further, "lie is a U'liun man who sustains my Union restoration poli cy, and none other." It behooves us then to look to this policy, standing as tho touchstone by which every man's loyalty in the land is to be tested to-day. Months, nay years ago, Congress passed a confiscation act by which lead ing traitors should be compelled to re pay somewhat to the nation of the losses they had entailed on it through the war. A confiscation act which Andrew John sou declared to be too lenient and len der by half. Leading and com-coius traitors must be punished, said he, their lands taken awry, their social power broken. The land thus confiscated tilled by li e freemen, enriched by their toil, more valuable than when they fell into our hands, Andrew Johnson has rcstor . ed to their old Rebel owners a premi um set on treason by giving more than was taken away. "No man shall be qualified for power, nor bo able to take oath of office, who is not also able to take the test oath of present and past loyalty to the United States," said Congress, "Who is to do this work of restoration 1 Certainly not tliu Rebels who havo fought, or those who have given aid or influeuoo to the Uubel cause,'' responded the President then ran with swift feet to appoint Perry and Johnson, .Sharkey and .Marvin. Governors, Judges, Collectors, olliciais innumerable, not ono of whom could take tho oath, nor Stand tho lest Con gress and himself had prescribed. "Treason is the greatest of crimes and must receive the greatest of punish ments," said Andrew Johnson ; then signed the death-warrants of a few hired cut-throats in Washington, and turned to grasp the hands of Lee and Stephens Floyd, Toombs, Johnson, Morgan and Beauregard 1 turned to watoh the great criminal, traitor,and assassin, till the first flame of indignation had burned itself down, till it was no longer possible to try him by a tribunal that would mete him out justico, till it was allowable to they count by thousands1 Pardons in such numbers that the Executive arm was too weak, or unsteady which was it? to sign his name thereto, and a stamp was u-ed instead. Pardons so liberal that counterfeiters and criminals in the North rejoiced thereat, and men who never existed received absolution for crimes that they had never perform ed. He is tho loyalist, says the President, who assents to shcIi acts as these hff lS tho traitor who opposes them. Let tho whole North cry, as one man, "I de nounce them, I ojiposo them; I do my Utmost to counteract their evil effects; and, if this be tremon, make tho m9st oi it." But tho Presideifs polioy which is to stand as the lest o loyalty, has found other developemejts than those devel opemonts so rare so strange, so mar velous "That v.-c who tow behold these pres ent, days, Have eyes to wilder, but lack touglies to praise." Dcvclnpementsii the shape of speech es so lofty, and Site papers so just, that the good taste, the.ntelligeiice, the loyal, ty, and morality o( the world are alike astounded thereby. Speohes, clmraoprizod by so delicate a modesty, so finei humanity, by such an utter ahsoenoe i'self, by so complete an ignoring of th upright vowel that standeth in tho alphabet botwen II and J, that it seems erti-1, not to say brutal, to even mention Andrew Johnson in connection liiereivih. Speeches so grafcmatieally correct, so j ,,ltemPWnoe, the cruelty, tho oppress choice in words, I elegant In' diction, ion ot ne ra'lioa,a 1111(1 Congress. 1 so keon in invecti so i t-lii ate in sar so sub caini, so it- uisite n rhetoric I'uhe in eloquence, hat it betokens har dihood indeed in lis man not to say woman 'who woifi! dare essay to crili else thorn, Speeches so elovned in tone, so faith ful in principle, sopevoted to truth, so grateful to the paly that, made, so de nunciatory to the party that opposed him, so tender to oj.l li lends, so merci less to old foes, BO (narked in apprecia tion of chai ael or,' so statesmanlike in statements, so cotrtcnus to the people and iheir represenktiyes, so apprecia tive of his own and . her high offices, so noble and beautiful, t!4: they will hence forth stand unapproanble nnd alone Words ol mine tail M do them justice. Let silence, then, cxwst the apprecia tion which language 1 inadequate to convey. I do not intend to a into any extend ed discussion of the I'uaous vetoes ot two of the most impoi'tanjsills ever passed by emigres.!. The staqlnciils Used there in are so obtrusively False, and have been so overwhelming refuted, tho ar guments are to m.aifpily weak, and have been so repeated destroyed, that it seems useless to devtc further timo to them. Andrew Johnson pofcably know bet ter than any other ma why he gave his assent to the Frecdnws Bureau Bill before it had passed to; ordeal ol Con gress, and rejected lhaaino bill when it came up to him for linl decision. Was not every oojjopablo feature of the bill as plain hfore him w hen it was read to him Blowlf clause by clause by Generals Howard ad h'iske, as when it lay on his table unirhis eye, an act of Congress.' "Tut hat bill through Concress and it shall ieMvtlititrlu receive ! my signature,'' said It to the one "1 re ject the Hill and vilihohl my name Irom it," said he to lliiOthcr. "Il is a war measure Bud wc are nt peace. It can only Mtolcruted as a military necessity, andiitj war is ended." Three .days tht rcaltcr f.nits the deelara. tlon, "Tho first bill M more than a year of time to stand, Ai endures for a year aftet tho close ofilejwnr, and the war is not, yt eudul I huvu not yet madu an official doclarMMi of peace." We are at war we H at peace. I have not yet declared Closed peace war war-peace as ltuIU tho whim ot policy or the President "Consistency, thou art a jewel" ti-fiter a President. "I am afraid the CuiUltuiion will be trampled on j it declaim fiat a criminal shall bo tried by njuryiff his peora in the district in which thjerimo is com mitted. This bill is iuieflunee of such position." The President knov.iliftterthnn most men, that so far from lie ,""', or any ol its rlgteous acts, this 0 neluded, des troying the Constituli d the laws, wc, through them, hurt been engaged in establishing laws and their forms in places where all law has for a generation been persistently overthrown. "I demand that every man be tried by a jury of his peers," says this bill. "1 Stand 00 the everlasting foundations, on the Constitution itself. Until this plain provision ol law and justice is complied with, I shall stand between thu people, lour millions of people, and the nniusl and illegal oppressions of unconstitution al laws and wicked men." Ah, but the expense ! tho expense ! the frightful expenditure.! $11, 745 000 oaiioci tor I $12, ouu two for the nation to spend for freedom and justice seems to mo but, a slight onset to the $145,000 000 spent in the past to introduce slave ry into tho tingle stale of Texas. Au drow Johnson did not object to that his sense of economy has largely increas ed since 1846. They say, however, that people grow mean and mercenary as thoy grow rich. Mrs. Cobb's agency may stand responsible for this change of front in the matter. Besides when the condition of affairs in every Southern State is fairly repres ented by Arkansas, the last report from which shows that the Bureau is feeding .IOCS white people to "(17 colored, it tu. ..(.. I. . ... luigiiv Buiuiy ue nssunioa mat mo ex I penso is to be borne rather for the supporters of "My Polioy" in the South, than for its oppoin nts. "What matter?'1 Fays the President "It. is ncl for my opponents I care; it is for the black people I havo a tender I regard I would save them from the would nave these people protected, but it. must not ba by the, North, it must bo by the civil power of the States wherein they live" "Agreed," cried Congress, and replaced tho military; bureau by the Civil Bights. "It will not do, it must be accomplished by tho States themselves. "This is no better," responded the President, and returned tho bill to their hands. A man once came to iho Slliek Abdaibm to borrow of his possessions A rope- "I cannot lend it," said the Shiek I have broken it to tie up n treasure of land." "A treasure or land: impossible!" cried hi wondering nud incredulous companion. "Oh, friend," replied the Suiek Abdal lah, "Knowest thou not that any reason in sufficient unto him who does not wish to lend a rope to his neigh bor?" Andrew Johnson's assertion that the treedmen of the South are protected. by State law that the best possible feeling exists between them and their late mas ters that tho Rebels ot the South are more truly their friends than the loyal ists of the North that they are almost on nn equal with the whites- that com petition enables them to demand and re cetvo their own pay for service rendered that they have full and free right ol looomotion, of contract, and of work, these assertions, I say, remind one of tho story told of a certain Scotch divine, who was trouMod by n congregation afflicted by a sort of moral cbliquily through, which th y saw everything crookedly and distorted. Ouo Sabbath morning coming into his pulpit, and opening the Bible, to find his text, his eye ftllghed on the words of tho Psalmist, 'I said in my haste all men are liars." faking off' his spectacles and putting l''em down by the book, and looking iround his congregation with a signifi cant glance, he ivpcut'jd the text, "I said in my haste, in my httste all men are liars." "Gin ye'd ben here, David ye'd said it at your lalslire mon,'1 Head ing son.o State papers, nnd listening to some politicians, one is very apt to say in one's haste that. State papers and politi cians are greatly given to living. Head ing these State papers, and listening to this politician, onu is very apt to say it at one's leisure. While thesn bills wero under dlsOUSS ion, eyery wind that blew Irom the South was heavy with tho sighs and groans of a Buffering and wronged hu manity; every flash of the wires gave a glimpse of tho charncl house ot the South, wherein this humanity was being tortured every report that lound its way into a Northern paper was freighted with a record ot horrors and abomina tions indicted by our enemies on these, our faithful frlendl and allies. What need to repeat tho dismal story of men worked through a season, then driven out with their families to starve; of tho children of loving parents toru from their arms and sides, and bound out from them tor years; of Union soldier shot dead i the wives of Union soldiers dishonored; thu orphans of Union sol diers given over by thu State without mercy, to the cruelty of their co'.d-bloodetter, every speech, every report that hits td masters; oi houses burned, and liehls laid waste, and property destroyed of men and women lashed, paddled, im prisoned for life, and hung for paltry buses by duo process ot law: of human beings citizens of the United States carried into the open market place, and under thu shadow of the Constutiona' amendment, sol'd, enslaved for a term of years, or for life? "For God's sake," orted the human ity of the nation, "for decency's sake, let us put an end to these abominations!" Congress heard, and answered. "For the sake or the colored people' I object," responded tho President; I'f'ot the sake of morality, for the suko of religion, 1 forbid thi - as an effort on the pai l of the radicals to legalize amalgamation in our midst, to compel white mon to marry black women, and tho reverse." I should pass by this whole silly and disquieting argument, if argument it be, in response to the plea for equal civil tights for American citizens, were it only still and disquieting) but it is, in addition, su wicked ami abominable, and its results so evil, as to demand the oenaure and indignation of tho world. It is the old argument old ns sin confronting just demands by appeals to ignorant brutality and petrified prejudioe Andrew Johnson knew full well, no man better that civil rights have more to do with social equality than his polioy has to do with tho principles of sound morality and righteous law. I stand a woman, disfranchised by the State, incapable of Bitting Oil a jury, or of being tried by a jury of my pi ers, ranked by the la w w ith black people, children, and idiots: civily, Immeasur ably iho inferior of the voter who first helped to mako President, and was thou made PresidtfPt himself, Civlty, I say, in point of law, I stand immeasurably tho interior of the voter who. first helped to make President, and was then made rresiaoni nitnscti. uivny, i say, in point of law. I stand immeasurably tins man's inferior. Yet I speak the words of iruth and sobornoss when I say, that I do not believe any amount of equal degradation, of civil rigths withheld and wrongs inflioted could ever reduce me, or nny other respectable woman, to the social level of tho nnfti capable of making the speech of the 22(1 of last February. Beyond this, Andrew Johnson knows, without the telling, that it was the tumbling down and riot the building up process that gave to its a race of mixed blood: that it was tho withholding, not the granting of human and civil rights that worked the dishonoring ofthe black, and tho degradation of tho white race in America. "Negro equality, indeed!'' exclaimed Andrew Johnson, on tho 24th October, 1864, in the city ol Nashville, "Negro equality, indeed!" Why, pass any day along the sidewalks of High Streets, whoie tho great slave-owners more particularly dwell, and you wall seo as many mulatto as negro children, tho former having an unmistakable resem blance to their aristocratic masters " It is civil wrong, not, civil rights; the degradation, not the elevation; tho South not the North; the lire-eaters, not tho radicals; it is the slavery propagandists and sleaveewnerj of the South ; in bi ief, Andrew Jobusop and his friends, not Congress and his enemies who introduc ed, defended, maintained, and extended the blessing of amalgamation in our midst. I protest against tho President of tho United States using the influence of his high olb'co to Strengthen n cruel and unrighteous prejudice already existing against a pom- and defenseless race. 1 protest against the Chief Magistrate of a Christian nation pleading lor and defen ding a feeling that finds outlet In cruel ties unopproaohed and atr cities unparallbled in tho annals of the world. Bald tho Norfolk (Va.) I'osi iat Februaryi 'Them has been no such manifestation of joy and Jubilation in ths t'outli since the route of the Federal army nt Dull Run as Unit hiliir in,; us ol tiic 1'icsl dent's veto of the Frosdmon's Bureau Mil," Hear nttlie same time the Richmond A'tiJM Irw declare: "To et rid of stril'u we must get rid of the negro. There is hut on alternative. Wo must reduce die negro to slavery or wo ' must exterminate Mm," Bo declaring', it was suppressed by General Ch ant and restored by I (be President, of whom it soon after wrotet "Hu is our tried and faithful friend, ho exorts himself to Ihe utuiott of his p i wer in our bo- ! halt, lie dofumls our rights, au.l devotes alibis snprglestd our interests' Wo arc safe." Tbon feeling safe, hcing sire of their triend' these men fell tooth and hail upon tho hapless Victim of their hatred and thu President's policy. Every Statement, every record, eery found it:i way to paper or print, North or South goes to prove t!.ut; from the moment the posi tion of tho President was fuirly and fully understood in ttteSoutk, t'i display of cruelty, thu persecution of the froedmen has fright fully increased and Intensified, I solemnly bollevo, as I make the tremendous charge that had Andrew .lohnaon matntatasd the position bO assumed tWolVfl montha Attn, tlm innaannm of Memphis would have been bapoasttdei that hill for tbe favor he basSbOWO thu spirit of caste, rebellion, and slavery, and thu insults he ha i heaped upon tho patient and helpless blacks, humanity would not have appalled as it was through those Ihiee days of cruelties so abominable and atrocities so hideous that tho pcu refuses to write, the tongue to speak, or the ear to listen, to the talc. i i) , because I believe I am compelled to Bay that 1 would pray for thu rocks to fall upon and annihilate me, rather than stand In the plaoo ol the President of the United S atos when the Ureal AI-ister maketh inquisition for tho blood of the slain In the streets of that city ofTbnnessee. My friends, let us consid er this seeiiu well and carefully, for Memphis Is but a type of the spectaclo the Whole South will present If tbe troops bo withdrawn, tho civil power re-eBtabnsbed, the .Rebels onfran ohl: d, the black loyalist disfranchised, tno Stales restored to their old basis, in a word,' if tho President's policy ba cstibllshed in gov ernment. Never eonlil these bo a more over wli timing refutation of the President's theory that tho ballot would superinduce a war of racos and the consequent extermination oftho blacks, than In tho recent, riot at Memphis. Hoes any oiu suppose, it thoso blacks had a fair opportunity to defend them selves by Ihe ballot, if the authorities and city officials had aught to gain or to lose by some thousands of their votes, that these outrages would havo been tolerated for an hour ? Snlf-lnterest is stronger than hatred. If black votos could hurl them from their places, they woi id sou that tho blaok voters wore proteoted, their friendship gained, and their ballots secured. ATI history demonsti-.itpi that ono ba man being never is safe in the hands of another. When Emperor Nicholas was told that his oharacter was as good as a Constitution to bis people, "Then' said ho "I am but a lucky accident," and of a surety such lucky accidents do not abound in the South. The only seenri. ty for the welfare of tin so people, aud consequent peaco of the republic, is by gran ling to all its citizens absolute erjuali ty before the law, and, as De Tocquoville has somewhere said : "I know of only two methods of establishing equably in the political world. Every citizen must bo put in possession of his rights or rights must be granted to nouo." A war ot races, forsooth ! Why, what is this of which tho President talks? The argument was worn threadbare in the service of slavery, by more cunning and subtle tal Iters than he. betoro ha had acquired even the alphabet of sip. prosslou, A war of races ! Does tho President remember that black men voted tinder tho Articles of Confederation, and at tho ratification of tho Constitution in 1789, m every Slate save South Carolina ? that ill the Congressional legislation for thu Territories, treedon, not color, was tho only tost ot citizenship, up to tbe your 1812? That it was tho boast of Mr, Badger, of North Carolina, and John Hell, of Tennessee, that they each took their seats in tho Unitud States House of Representatives on a majority of black votes. Docs tho President remember that blaok men voted in Maryland until 1838. In North Carolina until 1835. In Pennsylvania until 1H38. And that In Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, New York, and some of tho Western States, they vote to-day ? Has this anywhere superinduced a war of races? The President is "fond of declaring that he treads closely in tho footsteps of his mar tyred predecessor. Does ho remember what Mr, Linoolofi sail shortly before his death, in conversation with General Wads worth "If I grant universal ami, neaty I shall oreate universal suffrage I" 1) jcs any one tor an instant suppose that our good dead President devised in his kindly hear tbe horrors of a war of races thereby? Does the Presiden remember what one Andrew Johnson said in Nash ville on the 24th ol October, 1864? "Rebellion and slavery shall no longer pollute onr State: loyal men, whether while or lilnck, shall, alono control her destinies! 1 speak now as one who feels thu world to bo his country, and all who love equal rights his friends!" Did Andrew Johnson plpn, when he ipoke these noble nnd heroic words, to entail upon his own State the misery of a war ot races f I trow not. I appeal from February and May, lNfiG, to Octon her, 1804. f I appeal from "Philip drunk to Philip sobor." A war of races ! Who will begin it