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About The Oregon statesman. (Oregon City, O.T. [Or.]) 1851-1866 | View Entire Issue (March 5, 1866)
! Si f ,. If-.. : ..-' 7 THE OREGON STATESMAN. fUBl.imiEU BVIIlf MlM II A, lit The Orogon Printing and PaMlshlug Company. D. V. CK.tlO. BiiiiiH'HS ifluiiuifor. Tsums Olio year. in coin. Sis nuinlln, fy Remittances imiy be made by imiil uc our rink, when mailed in tlie presence of the tiiutriiustcr, O. B. OfBolal Paper (or tht Stats. Latest News by Steamer. WE iHke pli4itiruin announcing lo our old patrons and tint public in xeiieral, Unit wo have JLTHT llliCHIVKU, Direct from tho Eusl. and Bun Francisco, The Largest and Rest Assortment, FALL & WINTER GOODS, consisting of the following articles : Gents' and Boys' Clothing, of tli. BEST and LATEST STVLIIaf Dry GootU, Fancy Goods, Boots, and Shoes, , Hats and Caps, . Groceries, Crockery, Glassware, fcc., ibflt has ever been bromrbt to lliii city, and alto tliut we are oncrmg me lauie Cheaper than the Cheapest. Call ourly and satisfy yourself. All kinds of PRODUCE taken In exchange, for wunm we win pay me ninem market price. S. in ITCH ELL & CO, Sulcin.Bept. II. m. Wit llraudrctli'H VEGETABLE UNIVERSAL FILLS. IT is trenprally known llmt my Gran-lCutlier war. tlie orijfiiml inventor of tliew retniirkHlite pills. IIu wiih h scientific niHti, Htid u tiipriirit. practitioner of lh Old School. But Itccoming ului'ined at the itxjr talh y timt utt'iiJed the Hluuriiiitf nnd Alinurul i'rHfi tire,' he turned hid (attention to the study of imtiiieMiid tlie philoHophy ol'iiirtwtMB, h aim) to tliu nut tint I retne diul iitfeiitH which he found to exivt excliiuivuly in tlie Vendible KitiK'lotu. In hm t'enuHrdiu and invueti trtitimiii, he bentuie fully nut iutied Llmt the life was in the blood; that by whatever name djueuitei were din lititfninhi'd, impurity of the hlood win the source of all a limpie ami truth fill doctrine, which, in redmduv all dieaiiei to a niiit, necuMMarilv etablinied the fact thai all were to he treated on the swuiu general prin ciploH. vis. by purHiton. Now the grand diitii-tilty rnnfUled in devising u veg etitble compound that would invigorate, purity, and clean kg the blood, correct and reguhttu all the differ eiit Hecrelioufl. and hy purgation dirtchurge the whole mum of morbid matter from tlie body, without reduc ing the Ktrengtli. After thirty yean of clone applica tion, he considered his object fully aecnnpliMhed in the production ot thete piiU, which have now been before the public One Hundred and Fourteen Yean, and it in now IIHI&) nearly 'M year since Dr. linm dreih'it Vegetable UniverHtil Lite I'reKcrviug Pills were Hrt preHei.tud to the American public during which time their superior excellence and virtues have been extensively proclaimed by papers and pamphlet, and a rapid yearly increase of the sale of them ef fected. To know what will save life, to know what will restore health, in a knowledio not to he hidden, I, therefore, us a mail desiring to do my duty faithfully, have dotted down mmv tf my thirty-live years' expe rience with Urniidreth'4 Pills, which are an effectual asflistnut of nature, and cause the expulsion of acri monious humors the occasion of every sickness. Let us admit that corrupt humors prevent the free circula tion of the hlood, (hat Hrandreih's 1'ills take out these humors, giving health for paiu, and strength for weakness. No in.m is sick save when the principle of comtp . (ion gets the ascendency; Hrandreth's Pills aid the Life Principle to naiu t he empire by removing the corrupt humors from the body. Many a time 1 have ' seen life apparently at the last ebb, when these Pills were given, and tu a few hours the danger was past, and health's flood lide gave the patient renewed! ife and vigor. Many are the fathers, mothers, sous, and daughters, thus saved. These celebrated Pills are composed wholly of me dicinal herbs, and do nut onntuiu any mercury or other tninctal. being perfectly harmless to the most tender Bite or weakest frame; yet sure to search nut the cause of sickness, and restore the health if tukeu according to the directions. Let no one imitifine they are too weak to hear the e fleet of these Pills, which put no weak news into the frame, but draws weakness out. A few doses will be get confidence, and then the beauties of purgation will gradually become unfolded to our view, which, en forced with Hrandreth's Vegetable I' ni vernal Pills, is able to cure every disease where theorems are sound, and greatly Increase the averaire of human life. j I have now used on my own perwui, and prepared and administered, Hrandreth's Pills tor thirty-five years. I believe they are the best purgative in the world; and with this medical quality they have also a tonic effect. And us I urn of the firm opinion that inflammation and fevers are canned hy corrupted blwd not being timely evacuated, because it reuurgi-1 tates, so to speuk. over the whole body, and thus cor rupts the sound blood that should nourish all the mem bent, and actually destroys and paralyze member or i organs that are unsound; and as 1 know that these Fills have a direct etlect to remove all corrupt blond and acrimonious humors from the bod v in fact, nil humors below the vital standard of heiilth; so I idiouid be guilty of a irrcat sin, did I nut do all in tny power to propagate the use of a medicine which is Hssesped of properties so calculated to save and increase the average of human life. The public servnnt. HKNJAMIX ISKAXDKKTH, M. I. Prineiiml office for Hrandreth's Vegetable Universal Pills, UKANIHtiairS litlLDIXO. New York. V. V. BIIA'MUKKI'II. Office at CKAXK & HUIUIIAM'H, San Francisco. For sale by all reKHrtahleripalprsiumHliriiiHs. ly New Firm,New Store, New Goods BROWN, COX & CO. yHOLESAI.E AND RETAIL DEALERS IS GROCERIES, PROVISIONS, "Wines nntl Lijuors, Wood' and Wllloft Ware, Hardware, YANKEE NOTIONS, Tobnrro, fiKnra, At. Ac. Center Store, New Brick Block, NALEM, OREGON. We bar now on hand, and at now re reiving, the LAKUKNT and HKsT SK LKCTKH STOCK OF OOODS in our line ever offered FT?. THIS SIDE OF SAX FR ASCI MO! Which we rropixietoexvlianiieal LOW KATES for But.er, Enr. Baron, 0t. Wliml, and Produce in frrneml: and. rather than keep hooke, we will SOT REFUSE GOLD AN' I) SILVER. Pinnae Tall and Eiamine onr Slock of. Ten It Grindatnnei, I'iK-ket Knivea 6i CnlTce tc Nuils. Starch. Sugar Ac A tin, 'Sonpi it Hnnry, Syrup 4c llluo Vitriol, iCInihc Rakela ti gnleralnp Ac Waeh- j Picklm. B'arJ, Rnpe Sz Tatnarindi, Cn-ani Tartar & ('.ml Oil A: Honey. Broom,. ! tioetf tlrr'a llittt'Vt ii Tolinccn & Chew. j Onlinrnl, Ciitara 4: t'rrti Kat-ketf. Dre Stuff & Farina. SlinTrU & Nntmrca, MerrK-liaain Pipet A; Cilrun it 'ah Tulit. Spadra, Kaivin tc Mime Trnp WiikI Pipea Ac Shot, Rive A; Saliprlr. Confi-clniiirry Ac Salmon Ac WooJcn Cl'ithrvPi". Botrlf. Mackerel Ac Poaaer, .TII.rKV Ol'TFIT.1 l FIXLl In fart, everything nrually k'pl in a Flnt-riau Srof trj and froTlslna Btorc t :..!. a OOODS DKLIVEUED To all pacta of the eiiy, FkEE nF CHARUF.. Don't ForR-et Ihr Plarri Oct. a, i"y BRow, co.T, v r. Farm for Salr. THE rnidrraanedonVrafiiriailea Mne FARM MA.nt 'J-JH acre. 'H arrre in mltivalion. irood nrrhard. dwellina hrtai. and oathnil'hoe,, iineted in Clacka ma eonnty. lirrfon. near Itntie trrk. on the mad frmn Silvrnon to Orrirnn t'i'r. Addrrm HKNUV MNMM), at. Louie, Xanonco ,0u. Kov.v;a3pd MARBLE WORK. A.J. MOSKOE. EALEtt in i'lifornia. Vernionl, awl Italian .Hi MM I. KM. loiiarnli, ObdUki, Hrad ind Fowl Stooti, StLEM, OIIEOOS A'ks, Mai.trfa ti.i t'jiuilai 2I.jl!e famntid (a order. Vatqi VOL. 1G-N0. 1. NEW DRUG STORE Union Block, Salem, Oregon, W. X. Ill G BY, tTtrOl'LD respectfully announce to the citizens of t naieui aim vicinity ttiat lie has opeiteuea a Wholesale and ltelall Drug Store, where he hopes to merit the patronage of those who may ixvor nun with a cult. lie offers to the public, in quantities to suit, at low rales, a general assortment of CHEMICALS, DRUGS. DYE STUFFS, PATENT MEDICINES Ayer's Airne Cure, Cod Liver Oil. " t'herrv Pectoral, Scbenck's Syrup, 14 Hunmparilla, Kwaim's Panacrii. ' Pills, MiifiUng Liniment, Jayne'e Expectorant, , Perry lMvis's Pain Killer, " Alierutive, , , Baker's Pain PaiiHcea, " ' Vermifuge, Kennedy's Medical Discov " Carminative llulsani, erv, " Sanative Pills, ' . Ointment, Oraefenberg's Catholicnn. " Ointment for " Sursaparilla, Halt Hheum Sl Piles, Hitters, Rnssla Halve, ; Children's Mrs Window's Soothing Panacea Green Syrup, Mountain Ointm't, Keuting's Lozenges, " pysentery Kvrup, Hryait's Wafers, Hembold's Harsupurilla, De'vine Lnxenges, ' " , Ex true t Hi ich u, Mclaue's Ljostenges. , Hose Wash. " Pills. Wistnr's Brtleaai of Wild Kcwell's Cunuh Synip, Cherry. Mrs Stipp s Thoracic Hal- Hall's Luuir HhImuii, ,- sain, IToofland's Hitters, M'att's Kervons Antidote, Motf at's ' G ron tier's Headache Heiu Pills, e.ly, i Sundford'M Jnvigorator, Toothache Anodvne. " Pills, f French Patent Medicines, .lamb's Ovsentery Cordial, Drakes, llnstetter's Hanse Townsend's 8arsapnrilla, vain's, and Richardson's Sftids' " Hitters, Hull'i " SoBodont. tui elegant tooth Hull's wash. Scovill's Blood & Liver All kinds of preparations Syrup, for the hair. Winchester'sSyrupof Hy- Teeth Brushes, Hair Brush- phosphate Lime & Soda, es, Combs, Rhodes' Ague Cure, All kinds of Per times and India Cholagogue, Toilet articles. American " Trusses. Shoulder Braces, Hamburg Tea, Letter Paper, Knvelopes, Platter, Pens. Ink, etc., etc. Brown's Bronchial Trochos And such fancy articles as nreiiriualtv kept in a first class drug store. Please call and examine for your selves. Physicians' Prescriptions compounded by acompe tent Apothecary. Salem, Oct. '1SH.V ' 35: 1 V A CAKD roil Tin: ah k ibih mm in OF HA. FKAXCISCO. BADGER & LINDENBERGER, IVoa. 411 413 and 415 llHttnry Street. Cur iuercliaut, Sun I'mncisco. Importers and Wholesale Dealers. ENTIRE NEW AND FRESH STOCK! WE would call the uttenlinn of COUNTRY MER CHANTS toouriiHiially large stock of Goods. Onr stock comprises every urticle in the Clothing and Furnishing line, ve nave coufltamiv on hand ine largest stock and greatest vtiriety of CuKsimere und Wool HATS of anv house in Sun Fnmcisco. and our prices for these 6'ods are lens than those of any bonne, as we receive them direct from the manufactu rer's consignment. Our stock of Fall and Winter Clouds is particularly attractive, and the great feature to the country merchant is the tmummlly low prices Lm Thiin the Crst of Imparlnlion! WealHokeep the STAPLE M.TICLES in the Dry Goods line, which Goods we have purcluti-cd in thfs market under the hummer, and are offering them at New York Cost, and less. Wo nnblisb this card in order that we may make new acquaintances, and induce those wu have not heretolore purchased of us, to cult and exuinine our mock. Good Articles and Low Prices! Are the great inducetueurs to all who purchase to sell agrtin. Merchants who buy of us can make a good profit, and sell lo their cu Homers at a low figure. We reuutiu, renpect fully, lour iMieOient iservnnis, BADGER & LINDEVBERGEll, . Wholesale Clotbin.' mid Hut Warehoune, Nos. 411. 4i:i mid 415 Battery titreet. Shu Franchc. .Ian. ii't. IHtiii, 'Anv.i AB C. BRADFORD. Importer and Jobber In WINES &HD LIQUORS, Front Street, Portland. Oregon. BltA.MMS: hisqi'it. nrnout'HK. & d. iiHii.i.na ix, IIKXXKSSY. 1'IH KT. (' ATI LLION, t Co., HOXNIOT. 4 Co., MAHtiL'ET. Old Jiiiiiait'it ICiuil, -v Eiiil:nl Rum. SCHIEDAM CIS. OLD TOM. FINE OLD -WIIIHItlKH. J. II. Cutler. Old Uourboii, Old Vlru'iiiiii. Eurrka. Kye, A PURE WINES: Oporto Port. Burgundy Port D. G. Sf Co. Sherry, Anchor Shrrry, Sautertie, Anfielita. and California While H'ine. CHOICE CLARETS: i.iiitti:; i.kuiimc, poxiard, t'UA.IIBICIU'l.'V, 9III.ON FAMI.I.AC, I. A UONiC, C'A.MTAWAC. CHAMPACNE: CIIAS. HF.WSA1CK, C Alii SET. UUEF.S SEAL an JACQUATAS. ..ALSO.. Ab-hith,-, Curncon, Vermarth, Ditlera. Syrapm Jamaica GiiiRer, F. seuce Pepprrmiiit, Ten ant ' A I c and Porlpr. Maurice, Cox, & Co's Ale and Porter. And all other Paw Good pertaining to the trade. Mrrrlianta and dealer, are paHirnlarlr invited to examine my .tock hefore ptirrliawntt elsewhere. SEW BELVIDERE SALOON, . AT THE OLD STAND ! THERE will alwam ha found the FINEST UHAX'DS OF LiqrOR AD (lAK llial Hie Market an"nrdi. Alio, a fine II 1 1.1,1 A HI) Hl'OM.eonlainina three Tahlen. one nl which took Ihe premtiim at lite laet Merlianiew InMitnte Fair in California. PLAMO.NUOX at OliKK.N. haleai, Oct !, HI If eio M.CHaci. Hinitli A. C'lmnee, Hnrfical and Mecbaaical DEPTTISTS, tiriawold't Block, tnrner touiaiercial A; Sine ttreata SALEM. OREGOX trill Oar Denial Work taaranteed.j atari aoly For Sale. AHOCSE 4tJ I.VT, " Lwd A -py W 6MlTUiCAkrWK10Ur. SALEM, G, W, GRAY & CO., DEALEUS IV . HlffilKILMilll QUEENSWARE, Boots, Shoes, Hats, Caps, &c, &c, at Tiimn NEW STORE, Corner of State and liberty Street, SALKM. The puhlic Are reipeotfully invited to examine onr FRESH STOCK, JUST OPENUD, and NOW OFFKKUD FOR SALE As Cheap as any In the Market. C7 The bixheet price paid for Butter, Eg. and all kinds of Produce. a. w. oiur co. Salem, Nov. U. 1HT.5.. Dthnlpri MYERS & HUGHES, - Wholesale and Itt'tuil . Dealers in all kinds of Groceries, Paints and Oils, Brushes, Putty; Alcohol, Crockery, Glassware, Lamps, Pocket and Table Cutlery, , , Wood and willow ware, Dye-Stuffs, Tobacco and Cigars, Ba con, Lard, Butter, Eggs, Oats, Potatoes, &c. &c. Store under the Legisla tive Hall, Ilolnian's block, oc9 SALEM. ' 32m0 HELM & J&CKSQH, Slate Street. Sal'iii,Oi'oii. fin the Uulldiii formerly occupied by Kenyan. DKALEI1S III Drugs, Chemicals, Taints, Oils, Dye Stuffs, Fancy Soap,. Perfumery, HAVING lurKcly increased tho Slock of Helm & 8 in, wuare tinw prepared in mipply the citizeim of Sulctu und the eurroundiiiK country with ' Drugs that are Pure, Ami a, Chenp aa cau be liouxht in thia Market. Also---Constantly on Hand TUB BKBT WINES AND BRANDIES, For Medicinal Purpose. AIin a well Delected Stock of Puinti and Oils. Window Olast and Putty, Garnish, Varnish Brushes. Ifc. I'liyniciatu' Piencriplfoua properly compounded. We tollrlt the putimiae of the Public, feelinit cotiII- dent that we can p-ive uelienii iatistai-llou. DRAKE'S PimmiBS BITTIRS. S. T.-1860-X. The rapidity with which MIME'S Pimilll BITTEHS IlaveliecomeHlllirSKIIOLDNF.CESSlTVtliiooijh out rivilired imliotiH. l wittioiil a par allel in the hirlorr of the world. OVER TWO BILLlliy, ONE lU'NDItED THOUSAND Were Sold in TWELVE Months. The Demand ia Unity Increaaing ! Kit' II and POOH, OLD and VOtG Ladle, Physicians and Clergymen FIND T. T IT Kevlvcat Di-oopinjf Mpii-itM, Lends STKEVGTII to the System Vigor to the Blfnd, iKD II Exhausted Nature's Oreat RESTORER. Its efiert, in casts of DYSPEPSIA, Lo of Appetite, Weakiieatt, Fxee Ive I'Mlitfue, SourMotnat li, .Men lal Dffcpondfiiey, Ar. 18 HOST EXTRAORDINARY. It ia compoecd of ihe rh'tret root, and hertm, the Ihe erlelirnlcd V LIMA Y B ARK. ele. all pre erred in pnre ST. ( HoIX hl.'M. A a aenlle Ap titer, and healthe, aiiwalile Stimulant, it ha. no eljnal. Ii in olk br all renpeciuble dealera. in every Town, Pari.ll, Villain, ar.d Hatulel. lhrouiilit Sorth and Sftiih America, Europe, and the Limn!, of the Ocean. None eaa lie i-uuine nnh-ta Warin the pri. rale I'uited Staiee Stamp orer the cork, with hitna ture on ateel plate laM of P A DRAKE, at CO. HMITH .V DAVIH, 71 Front Hrei, Portland, OreRon. noi.e a a k i t roit orkkox, and the Territoriea. Kept V,. I Kill 3(1 RECONS TRUCTION ! rpilE 1IENNKT IIOl' -E.at Salem. an h.n 1 and favorablr known aa a quiet and mm fnrtable ho.n fir -Hoanlen." travchra. Air , fj g hai thi. dar rhaoired rniiTielor, br the with drawal of Mr. Hrnd.rnll'Mt. The Doom, alier haviiiK rereired a ihomairb reno. vaii.n. it now under Ihe wifwrriti'l and niaiuueraeul of the nndeni yitrd. who wi!lpre neilherailenli.it Or expense to make h what a Rood hotel .hinjld he My aid fnenda. former eatmn,. and the trarellinir eonunuuiiy, are refpectlulie invit-d to yire tne a rail liEn. SMITH, l'r,.rieor. t. S. The lahle will at all tlniea b- furoi.hed with the eery beet toe market ilFonla, and ebarvea reeaou able. Halm. Ilw tM, Ilea 44lf. Of. W. B. 8IS0XT05. CtllAM'ATP: nf the P.,i,.yltnta MedinJ fYtk'ire T f I'hiladelphiM. havittff nernHmentlv IneHtrd iti tlneeny. reenerirollr lender lil. nrolrwaaainl aerrirra to th citiieBi f talent and it. 'iciuitr. Olric and r-.(r.,c at ltr P.rt-I.r. hmiftc, ucutty opf-oette the Earaka Mxble, HaWia, Uregva. Hy OREGON, MONDAY, MARCH 5. '1806. ihe (Drciau f tatosman. SI'Ktl 11 OK SK.VATOIl 000LITTLK. Mr. Donlitilr, r VVimsoniiun. moveil that the Senate proceed to the coneiileratlon of the red olulinn reoentljr oflVred hy Mr, Howe, for the eitnlillrhiiKMit nf proviainnal guvcrtimi'titi in the lately aeornnd Blatca. Tho motion prevailed, anil the ruaolutiou wat read. . Mr. Dotilittlo addrecned the Sennte at lenrth. tay'mg, in the conne of hit remarki : Two ratl-J ical idea, radically lalnctmtvrt'ur, brnnght nn thin civil war, wliluh bun curt the nation more than a million of lives nnd untold million of trcamro. Firrt, that the Stnte had a right to weed ; aecond. Ilia' alnver)' in a hleaaing. The mrrender of lhee two itlea hy the Soiuh now form the liaaea of permanent pence. Sir, thir qneation whether llnwe Statu are atill Stntea in Ihe Union, under the Cnimtitiilinn. ia no vain iihitraction no Idea without immediate prno tical nntl most grave oounoqni'neeii. VI it of no pructlcnl cnnrcquetioe whelher, to adopt an nmendment, it rcnuirea the rntilicnlinn of twenty eeven or twenty nr Statea ? la It of nn practical conacqni-noe whether eleven Stntpa, wtth their ten milium or people, lhall he taxed and governed without repreaeiitntion? With leca than nno-thii'd, .that nnnbernf pen-. pie, nr inreratiien. neonoi. i lie i-nriiameiuoi Great Britain, in which tber had nn repreacn lation, pasted lawa to tax them, declared the independence of theae Slatea. Ia it nf no pruo Ileal iiunnrinnce whether there eleven Htalet and ten million! of people ahull govern thein elrei under a repnliliuan fnrin of State Gov ernment, auliject only to tho Constitution of the United Slain? or whether they ahull he held at auhjeot vataiila, to be governed for an indefinite period hy the unlimited will nf Con greta, ur liy the award f ! it nf no practical importance whether the flag of nnr t tiuutry. for which half a million have laid ilotn their hvea. and which beam thirty -eix alnra M an eiuhlnn of an Union of thirty-nix Slate, apt-nka a na linn'a truth or in a niouatroiia fulnehiHiil ? Theae mid tunny like tiieatliina ore Involved in (hit dircueainii. and depend npoD the tnawer to Ihe lint. Thia ii therefore, in my judgment, a iiiettinn nf great magnitude a qaettion which neitner men nor partiea can avoid or put mule. It demand ami will have an aimwer. it ia a question upon which there it and there can he no com prom ire mid no neutrality. Their nre State in the Union under the Conttitulion or they are not. We iiiuet affirm the one nr ihe other.' We mnst atiind upon one tide, atipport iug the Lincoln and Johntiiii policy of main taiuiug the Union of the Slntea under the Con ttitutiou In he nnhrokeii. or we mint take our stand with the Senator friiui Mattachnai-tlt up on the nther, and maintain llmt Ihe Union it broken, that trci-Mon ia a tuccew nnd not a failure, far at leatt na lo withdraw eleven Statea from the Union, nr reduce eleven Slalet lo the territorial condition. First, I cull to mind the language of l'reaitlent Lincoln' procliiiiia tiou of Dec. 8lh, ISIM. lu that he aaid : " I make known that, whenever in any of the Statea of Atkaiitna, Texiit. Louitiiiiiii. Min- ti'tippi, Tcliiieiuee, Ahiliania, Oenrgia, Flori da, South Carolina and North Carolina, a num ber of pertona nut leap than one leiith in num ber of the volet caul in audi Slate at the i'rea- ideiitial election of the year of our Lord ISliO, aach having taken the oath afuretuid and nut having tince violated it, pud being i qualified voter hy the elrelion law of the State rxiiling immediately In-luro Ihe o tlyled act of recet tioii, ami excluding all nthert, thnll re-entail-lith a State Government which rhall lie repnli- licnn, ami in no wife conliiivt-iiiiiir aiuil oalh. toch boll he recognized aa tint true G"" - nient nf the Male, nnd the Stale ahall reeetre the lieiiefltt of the conatitiitioiiiil provieinn w hich declares that I lie United Htalet thall guarantee to every Stale in thi Union a republican form of government, nnd thnll protect each of llieni ognintl iuvatiun." - 1 he policy iliu announced wa entered upon at once in tlie State nf Lonirinua, Tennetree and Arknntn. It received the unaiiiinoui tup port of every member nf hit Cnliinet. While that great man wna alwayi npeu to eonviutiou and ready to hear the oggettmua of olhern. he liecame mine mid more tell led in lit c livio lion na to the witduui of that policy from the dale of that proclamation down to the very day of hia death. Sir, on the I lib of April In't he tpoke til Ihe people of Wnthingtou. It war on the occation of the illuminnlion, hut three dm belore In nmittinniiun. The great nriny of the rebellion had lurreiidered. lie hu.l him- elf vitiied Ikichniond. where, from the verr llonte occupied by Jell'erton Darin, he bad from time to limu telegraphed the gladdrniug newi of victory upon victory to a n juicing pew. pie. lie hud returned frimi Ihe chief sent of the rebellion to the ca.'itnl of tho Union, bring mg Willi him. na the tpnila of victory, not gold nororiiwut norjewelt, but Hie broken cliaint of four milliout of alnves. lu that hour of In umph, and that moment of supreme exaltation, he coo Id not refrain, when invited, from ap pearing belore the people to add to the general joy. Among other thing, lie earn, in Ihe an uual meatage ol December, ISIiJ. and accom panying proclamation, I pretenled n plan of recoiirlroclion, as Ihe phrste gm-a. which I proiuited. if adopted by any Stole, thoald be acceptable to ami untamed by the Kiccuiiv. government id ihe nalion." Thi plan was in advance uhuiiileu to the then Cnbiuet and dittinctly apprnved by every member of it every part and parcel nf the plan which hat since been e iiiphr.nl nr touched by the action f I.nultiiina. Tile Senate will remember that Mr. Lincoln's Cabinet then contitied nf Mr. Seward. Secretary of Stnte: Mr. Chae, Sec retary of the Treamry. now Chief Justice; Mr. Staiilon, Secretary of War; Mr. Welle. Sec retary of the Navy; Mr. I'ther, Secretary of the Interior ; .11 r. Jllutr, Kiwtmatter (ieiierul, and Mr. Rate, Attorney General. Let us re member that each and every one of tlio.e men apprnved every part and parcel nf that policy. Mr. Doolitlie read etill further Iroro that tpeich. in which Mr. Lincoln gave, in tmwi forcible language, the rraanna whioli made him adheie to and cherith that policy up In the lime of his death. These, be added, slate Ihe mi- fmrtant fact that thia poliey waa entered upon iy him with the lull approbation nf every mem ber of his Cub net as Ui avery pari and parcel ol that policy. I repeat, and ark the Senate and the country to hear, we have Mr. Lincoln's positive testimony tha' Mr. Seward approved in general and in detail. Mr. Chase approved it, and every pntt and parcel of it. .Mr. Stan Urn and Mr. Wellea altu, who atill remain in ihe Cabinet, fully and cordially approved It. And now, sir. I propnte In show jon that a h'ghrr tribunal than Congress, nr the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, nr tlie i'retldeul and his Cabinet, approved and sustained that pof'cr. The loyal people of the United Slatea, represented at Baltimore, approved it hy the rrnoininalioa of Mr. Linolu lor Ihe l'rra'iden ay j and. as il to make the indorsement of this part nf Mr. Lincoln's policy mora emphatic, Mr, Johnson aas nominaied for the Vice ('res idency, the very man nf all others who had for a long time'bren engaged in the great work ol r.-cntrucliug civil government in the State of Tennessee npon the liatis nf that policy. Il mat objected by some In that Convention, as It Is hen-, thst Tennessee had no right lo repre tentntion; hat. on motion of the dilingaihed cx-Senalnr from New York. Preston King, now no more, her delegate were admitted. One of her sons, in tpite of Ihe objection nf Mr. Thad dent Stevens that he was from a foreign Stale, at writh Ihe United Slate, and therefore an alien, was nominated for Vice I'reselent. Itr throe nominations thai policy waa aottained by the Conveniion. The election came on. That policy and the Administration which pro claimed il. and Ihe Conveniion which Indorsed it, wa anttamed by the people of Ihe prnpkt or Die Lulled Stale. Next to the (real work t omening tha Mutuary potter ot tin NUellwu, tho policy nf reconstruction was dearer lo Mr, Linooln.nnd more cherished n; him than any other. Nn ooner had the harden of hit smil been lifted nn sootier had he teen the snrren. der nf the great army of the rebellion than. In the lullne arid gladness nf his snnl, he made Initio lo give to the people his view nf the grunt theme nf reconitruotlon. I have ut read them In yonr hearing. Thefienator from Mnssnchiitetts may denounce them aa puerile and wanting In statesmanship ; hut there they are. and there they will remain forever the farewell address of Lincoln to the people nf the United States upon this suhjeot of reconstruc tion. That Mr. Johnson, anon whom the office of President fell by the dealll nf Mr, Lincoln, thnultl substantially pursue the policy begun ny hi preneoenr, was therclure not only nat ural, hut, by the Inglo nf events, almost a ne cessity. How conld he dn otherwise? Sod- ileniy m a moment, as In the twinkling nf an eye, the lead is thrown from Mr. Lincoln's thiiulder's upon him his groat, rsspnnsibility. hi duly, and why not his cherished policy t He was surrounded by the tntim Cabinet. Wlii would expect them to advise any nther policy f That policy ho been fully entered npou, and in sense States the work was really done. Mr. Johnson had himself been long engaged in that in ks in aiditig Mr. Linoolu to realise it In Tennee. Hotide, the Convention at Balti more had MstHined it. The gieai Union party ahich re elected Mr. Lincoln as President, and made Mr. Johnson Vicn Prr'ident. had in dorsed It and sustained It triumphantly at the election. Mr. Johnson onuld not abandon it without reverting the policy of Mr. Lincoln. That policy was advised by every member of the Cnliinet. including, ok I have stated, among other names, tho very distinguished names nf Mr. Seward. Mr. Stanton and Mr. Welles, still members of the Cabinet, and nf Mr. Chute, Chief Justice, who, just from the presence of the dying l'rrsident, administered to Mr. John son the high nnlh of ofticn, How onuld he re call that lust speech and look upon the dead body of his predecessor t How could .he look into the luces of tho Chief Justice, ns he swore him into office, and of those men in the Cabi net, nil of mIioiii had approved every part and parcel nf that policy, and upon whnm alone h could then rely for countel and support in the mint trying and difficult cris's through which any man wat ever called In pass I llow, I re peat, could he look unoii all these s'irrnuniliiii't nnd tnen deliberately abandon tht cherished policy ot .Mr. Lincoln's ntlmiiiuunitioti j tram ple upon Ihe advice nf Ihe old members of his Cabinet ns well hi of ihe Chief Justice himself, abandon his well known convictions of duty. laleiiy in own record, and betray the Union party which nominated ami elected him, in the onuiiiigoiita which hail happened to the Presi dent of Ihe United Slalet I Had ho done to, the whole country would have cried oiitngaintt him. and with rvutnu. lu mid nut of Congress men might have denounced him lor betraying Ihe ptibhn confidence, and etpeuiully for be traying tho parly which elected him.' The Cabinet wnnld have remntittrnleil ngnintt it. And more than nil. the President would, in my judgment, have been what Mr. Johnson was never known to be fultu to his own convic tions of duty. 1 put aside, therefore, as not worthy ol coiitid"rnlion, Ihe tuggestions some times made, that Mr Johntiin, by adhering to this policy of reconstruction, is rendy lo betriiy Ihe Union cause, or the great measure of the Union party. ,i lluviug Unit stated the question, und shown the ground iH.'Cupii'd by Mr. Lincoln, anil that Mr. Johnson is substantially pursuing his poli cy. I return to the main quotum, uud Will state at briefly as I can the main grounds up uu which 1 ainnd, and the reason I enemy in p port to whnt I call tliu Liiionlii-Jnhuiuii policy of reconstruction. Where -are thine eleven Slates, and what is their situation and lirtt, ttlu-ro are they in this Union, un der the constitution, or no'. I That Ihey were once in this Union nil conceded. If they hare gone nut Iroui llns I nu.u, it must have been by one nr more of throe woys. First, by the way of pes eel u I secession, by voting and re solving iheiuselvei out; or second, by success ful rcvciliiiiuii, bp lighting llieir way out In a succcstliil independence i nr third, they have been put out by aut of Cuugress. There is not, and there never bus been, any oilier way or ways conceived or staled than one or more nf these three.' Strong men of the South have maintained that the first way was always open to I lli-lli . They asserted Ihe right nf peace ful secession. It was always mel, however; it was ulnar overpowered by tho Inglo nf Mr. Wi-hiter in Ihe body, ami re.isted by the lion will of Andy Jackson during his administra tion. It but olleu been reasserted in this body since I became a member, and at ofteu met nnd refined. In their fully ami madness ihe people of the Soul II appealed In anus lo dis cuss the tame iiiettiou on Ihe field of liultle. They tried Ihe second way, namely, hy Hay of revolution, cut their way nut Willi the sword. That for a lime Ihey made learlul progress In iu that direction no one denies. But did they succeed t Nn num. North or South, dure sf firm it. No. Sir ; nn. Thanks to tho Al mighty Being who rules the universe, the great Ijeiietalt were louiid at lat uupable nf orga nizing and wielding our .Immense force.. Grunt, und Sherman, and Tlmiuns, nnd Sheri dan, and the great ollicers and men nnd r their coiiimuud crushed the rebellion, wrenched the sword from Ihe hand of revolution, and then in the lust tribunal known lo mankind! in an appeal to the Und of Battles by the utftma ratio rerum, decided, and in sutib a way as In leave no donbl in any sane mind Norih nr South, that nn State can go n.it of Sua P'jion by the way of peaceable seees.ion, nnr !y way nl sncossful revolution. They neither have the right nor the power to do so. Mr. Doolmlc sauj it remained lo coinider Hie only oilier way Ihe third way which for brevity he would call, Willi no disrespect lo his honorable friend from Massat-liUM-lt. the "Sumner" way, for Stale to go out of the Lnion, namely, liy act of Congress; the Sena tor having at the funeral ceremonies here upon the death ul Judge CoHsunr, taken occn.lon lu announce hi theory ul disunion, awarding in great measure the honor, if honor il he, to Ihe deceased of separating ihe rebel Slates lioiu the L uioii. Mr. Diadittlo then showed the Southern States to he In the Union under the constitu tion, aud inquired what Is their true situation and what right Ihey have aud what duties devolved upon them, saying! 1 nave shown that in view nf publie law nothing on be more clear thaa that a Male does not ennsisl In Ihe lor in of ill goverumenU That t one uf It antecedent thai may be democratic aristocrat io or theocratic. ' It may he military, it may be repuhlscau, despotic or monarchical. Il may have been any one uf thus tortus, or a mixed oue, aud yet it I a State. It may change il government every year a a tree cast ebT it luliag. Tha Stale ao more consist uf it form of government than a man ennsist of tho garment wilb which he is rhxhed. He may change that every iay. Ho mar ho stripped nf any garment whatever, but still the man remains ; and fur a Stale In ihang Its lorm. or for the lim bsing to be stripped of all lorm uf government can no more destiny it existence than is a man destroyed when he lakes lf on oral In put uu another, nr I stripped entirely of hi garment. Nor I a Slale destroyed by the declaration uf maitial law In It. nor by war. onles conquered hy a foreign Poaer. ur dismembered hy revol'jiion. an i made into lw or more State. Job in vaded dee but dettroj ,1, if it expel Ui int. d. it. To b torn by oirtl war. and even be drenched io fraternal blow), doe not de.lror ft eillier, ules lb bnal tssaa of arsn shsll lw agaiusl it. In III course uf his argument Mr. Doolilile sanl lougrra not only empowered bat re quired IL President to psiluira a two fuld da 1) ; iiM. tu OiuLu vtai, aud too u&u lu lUin WHOLE NO. 781. making war alter ii end is reached In other words, to make pence ; first, tn draw and wield Ihe sword ; second, after making pence, tn return it tn it scabbard. Tha first of these great duties, namely, the drawing the sword and wielding it. rested mainly upon President Lincoln ; the second, namely, making peace nnd sheathing the sword, rest mainly apou hi suocessor t although mnst fortunately for him and fur Ihe whole people, Mr. Lincoln had al ready entered upon the great work of reconstruction-of making peace, In order to he able after peace had come (tn borrow his nwn beautiful language.) after peace had come, and come to stay tn fnlfill that nther great duty imposed upon him by the law nf Con ... .. -L . 1.- .1: .1 l i . l Ifirn, tis.i ii, uiauiinu our u.iueiiiir army aim send them home in a word, tn restore a na linn's peace In a union of State and people under the cunttitutinn, with their nghto unim paired ; and after that great work, tho end and ubjeot uf all nnr Struggle and sacrifice, was done, to slu ath the nation' sword. While he lived, Mr; Liuonln performed these duties, and performed them well. It is true there were nine mistakes in the beginning) with oar in experience and impaiienoe lh wonder is there were no more. Time was necessary tn ac complish Ihe great work, to educate the poblio mind, In prepare the armies and tn find lea der wbn were capable of commanding them. How uouW.Mt.-Lluoolu, Uruiw, ante gifted omniscience, that iu the nersmi tif a teacher of a military academy in Louiiia'na was tn lie found that ' Mnjnr-Gen. Sherman, "wlm; like Hod's flaming minister nt the head nf hit con quering legions, wa to sweep through the heart ul tlie rebellion. How con I t ho know that in the quiet inmtentatiou citizen uf (ia lena was tn he found the great captain nf the age, Lieut.. Gun. Grnnt, alio knew when, like r ubins, tu he the cloud, nnd like Scipin, In be the thunder bolt ut War. Thank Heaven, he found the great commanders at lust, whn, tn God' own good time, brought the final and supreme victory over the rebellions Thank God, Mr. Linoolu wua permitted tu live until the first great work of oruthiug the reliellinu was almost done, and the second hardly lets important work nf reconstruction vva already ell begun. I have already called you( at tention tn tils assassination, in which tn ihr gladness of a heart whose. exprestinn cmild not he restrained fur the hnpn nf a riehtenus and speedy pence, and In which, with n pow er nf' logic and olenrnet of statement and force uf illustration, never surpass-d in Ihe best efforts of that great ami good ini.it, ha ex plained and defined nnd enforced thia policy of reconstruction. It was at such a moment of exnltation, when the prayer nf his soul was wa nnswersd, when Ihe lung uiglit f blond and agony and tears was passed, and ihe gol den light of tliu morning of peace dnwiii'd up on his vision, he fell by the nsnin's hand. His ciintoiniisnrss suspended In u Instaut. From the acme uf human glory he passed tn the glory uu high ; from the mortal In Ihe lm mortiil life ; a martyr to Ihe cnusu of his coun try and of liberty to all mankind. t It was what the ancient wnrld wuuld cull an aptithen sis. Thus the great nfjiue ef President provi dentially fell upou Mr. Jnhiitnn, with fall it duties nnd all lit respoiisihihlie. The gravest nf them all know that the armed forces of the rebellion have surrendered, and it Is the see nnd grand doty nf making peace and then dis banding Ihe army. Wlisu he took lh Presi dency iliure were more than a million men upon ihu rolls uf the army, and many nf the rebel nrinies were still in the Held. He then cunshlered the most Important and just at this moment, perhaps, tha iuu! prac tical questimi, namely ; What were the pow ers and duties imposed by law upon the Prtal dent In closing the war nnd nmtilng pertM, wind! of necesnitr must precede the disban ding of the army, t What terms,, ha asked, had the President a right tu duiunnd uf the States or of the people as conditions precedent to peace and the withdrawal of tlie army. First, aud before nil and at the basi nf all. unqualified submission tn lh Constitution nf tin- United State, and all law nf Congress passed in pursuance thereof. Second, the an nulling uf acts, laws and proceedings, hy which Ihe State made or prosecuted war agninitlhe United States, including the rebel Slate. Thus, acquiescence iu the .situation whioli the war ha brought upon them includ ing ihe abolition uf slavery, for and on account nf which they made ihe war ; lor the sincerity nf such acquiescence, and as the supreme lest nf its guild faith, the adoption nf the Constitu tional Amendment, hy. which slavery, the cause of tliu war, is surrendered and made iui posijhlc, and liberty made sure, by being placed under ihe guardianship of Knngrets, in every Stale and Territory forever I the praerifl ul resumption of their political duties upon ihosu terms as Stales iu the Union. These are lite conditions in sulntnnre, which Mr. Lincoln three year ago announced lo the peo ple of these Slntea as In the lerm of panitic ation, aud to which be pledged III support of I lie government. 1 beware Ihe sulislnnoe nl the terms offered by president Johnson Suveral nf the Slate, or Ihe people of several ut Ihe Stale have, auoepied llieni. and idler huh to resume all tliu political duties as Stales in litis Union, nnd practically enjoy their rights as such. Shall we allow them as emu us these terms have been accepted by Iheee Stale or by the prnpln of Ihrse Stale III good faith T Jost as much pledged hy the terms contained in the surrender of their armies. Mr, Doolit lie stated other consideration! in support nf tin. President's pulicr. including I hut ul Finance and lnduslrv. Let nn man misunderstand bis posiliiiu. With these guilty leader who. If, tlie neiinle. excited lu people 1 1 lliose male tn revolt, he had. and could have no sympathy. They deserve none. Since Ihe Angels re belled io Heaven there had been, iu bis judg ment, no such crime against (hI ur man. In conclurinu, from the beginning and frem before Ihe heglning any separation or destruc tion of the Stale waa impossible. Under lh uld confederation wa made perpetual, and the cnusiitnlbiu was funned to tusk a mnrs per tfect Union. To admit, tbrrelore. either Ihe 'right of Slates to secede or Ihe hiwer of Con gress tasxpel Iheili, would lie lo admit into our ystviu a priuoiple of sell-detti notion wholly at war atlh a perpetual and perfect Union, 1'he romtilutlon in every part nf it and ihe spirit which give it life, are against peacea ble rcesimn. And that eoostltutloo clothe lh government which it create with every human power lo prevent a separation by force nf arms, and those gigantio power which had slumbered su long that they Were wholly un known In lh wnrld, and hardly heard nf by ourselves, bsv bees lately hruagbt Inl full play. Whatever may be said uf Ilia crime of Ihe rebellion. History will record It a on of lb mmt perswteuti sell sacrificing aud tre mendous struggle Ihe World aver saw both nn th part nf ihe rebel and nn tha part of til loyal peopln nl I be United Slate. No other people on earth could bv to resitted, aud no oilier people and Uu niher government Onuld have overcome inch rrtisiauce. But we dnl overcome it. W did prevent the sensra linn of these Stale fimu the Union by lure. Kveiy law of Congr, every awt of lb Presi dent, every blow we struck. ev ry shut w fired, every diop uf blend we shed wa not lo overthrow these States, nor to open a a ay for them lo go oat, Oct to reduce I be in to Terr, to rn-s, bat to keep them as States In Ut I'dhni and lo compel Idem lo remain as Stale ia the Union ander Ihe constitution. Tha flag of our country bear thirty-tit star a the emblem of Ihiriy-slx Slates. Wherever tt float, over this Capitol, at lb haad uf oar armie. tn Ilia slurm f baltl and In th hour nf victory, over Ihe sea a well as over th land, that sa cred entign, which, next In lb G"d of Heav. en, w hive and reverence as representing lb food. Ihe great and Ibe true, everywhere bear linriy-six Mar, and thereby prucUiwa In th world the ereat fundamental national train. ItOOli AI JO1 "IT10, : "f Kveri-r ,,,,,,,-,, , . , '-j KXKOt'TMi WITH N.I.;-. ilUa AM) fJlaPATtiH. : oi4usjifiito. 'first ir.sertw.il, (iX-r wjfin tt teS lhn-s or hi, iitrl.a awaur.t l lor rt u lonrtloa. t A'lrerliilnirjjJi; when aot S'l'l In ailnct, aa-1 11 bt charted totaiy-Uri par asm. additional, ki cortr llitosrt sf sollsetloo. ,,, ..... t A llcl u.,1u.Umi from Ui abuts raljs wlU lu m Ida tt faror ef I1i.it. mm trrtl by tlir naarter. ' 1' that there am thirty-six States in the Union under the constitution that thirty-six Statea constituted the great repnhllo which tha World call Ihe United Stales nf Amerioa. Upo that line and under that flag we began' ttia gral ; campaign., Upon that line and under that flag half a million nf nor son and fath er and brother have laid down their" live. Upon that lino and under that flag we fought it out tu vioWry and now, Ood Wj-ipj, jne I will continue to fight it out on that line, ,ani nmler that ring, to the end, whoever mry abandon ft. " ' ' ' l! v. . '. . ' . !n . ' -,-,) ; COPPERHEAD MKKT0Q AT RlTir ;i. Ed. Statesman t Being at Sublimity n f t 17th instant, I had tho cariosity to a' tL Copperhead meeting advertised at t.. . i xi ami place. Th nieetin being sailed ta . ir, Uncle Sain wa installed Cheenaaa, ad ?sai Secretary. .;,..- ! ,, -p The "Cheer" appointed commit'" to bring in Bnnlmiu'a reinlutloD. after whiuh tho Captain, with n any nf the rank and file, re tired from th meeting to renovate tnainnar man and prepare fur tha great work r;fero them. Soon lb posse returned, beartrr thts aforesaid reinlrjllnns, which embodied I fal lowing or ti-e --( nriiMtpt, rlrti'.Car ot ernment waa made by whit 2n, and. ( f t' benefit of white men forever; th C tv . . ronst lie and shall be ru.iortd u . . j must immediately and unconditionally b ad mitted in all their former frmotlnn ; Govern nient bond must be taxed ; th nlfger ii still iu the fence, ,, . . ,,.',., ;,v; , Col. Sliiel wa culled, mid after some una voidable gyration, illuminated the stan! with his (jonuttmaiioe ' The Colonel eswiyrd to fath er in the tender feelings of his brethren be al luding tu his former astociationa. wilJi, tlien), whioli I noticed brought u tinge nf crimson to tho cheeks of the better class nf tlie fraternity. Sunn, however, the Colonel's idea became so muddled and estrange! from eanli elWr. by the fumes nf bad whisky. . llmt iit fancgd an iipproaohing fue in n ditunt corner nf the room, nud furthwUl) the doughty Colonel pitched into hi Imaginary antagonist,' . ouf n mari accoa turned t tmike in his bmiu know he'." Hia patriotic (! ) teal bavin; thai enivd out In hose of hi imagluary foe, the Colonel' lungitndinal inulinalinn In Ihe plane of the horizon brought him in contact with a fir plank, where tie toon became quiet and ciimf.'rtulile in the arms nf Morpheus. .Thai only hit he mud was In charging the Union party witli changing their imnif as clrciniittanue required, while Demoo racy wa the same ut all times nud in all pjaoee, the name In Oregon a In South Carnlinn. Next in order yea the ever ready, ever wil ling, ever on hand servant nf tliu people, Un cle Sam Parker. . Wnrds fail uie Id repeat tha deep-seated and tender nutation he eipreisod fur the linie-boiiorcd Deuiocruoy." ur tu ena inemre Ihe untold service! the dear people bad received at hi hand. : He then charged furi ously upon Ihe Stata Adiiiiilrmtioa, einosiof io his own laold. manner its cxtravagauoe, op- Kreesiun and downright rascality. , He showed is appreciative brethri n that aixty thousand dollar military tax had been raited in tb State, und of that sum Wily six thooiand could be accounted fur, tt baving gone Into tb land nf Governor Gibbt and wa lust to tb State. To aliow that poor men paid all tb taxea, he iufuroied a lint three of hi poor neighbor Wui. Uerrau, John Savag and Rily Mouker paid thi year aiz thousand dollar. Among nther topics appropriate to tb nocaslnn, he aa serted that Father Leslie, nf Salem, bad pro fauely sworn about certain thing not necessary tn mention here, and that in veaaoo Father Waller tald ho wnnld be 4-d il Father Leslio hunldn't ha turned out af the oboroh. i.Thbj lirllllanl display uf wrtatld ssrauity was oif erously cheered by til Cops, who hanjf with Increasing admlrniinn upon hia words. 'Th proper lim with Uncle 8am bad now tome, and. like a'tkillful tactician, be aeiied lb fav orable moment lu nnveil th momentous secret that he wa willing to serve the dear democra- or a a candidate for 8enstor. promising that, if Ifiey would snake bins their representative, be would guarantee that their taxe should not -exceed Ave mill per dollar. Having thni safe ly delivered himself, the 'Cheerman' with great gostu rruomed his'seat, feeling good all over. It is u oessary tn allod t (abtenuent peakers, a ''pole Strn ouvered lb wbola ground, . Ilonlk,-' repeated substantially hia speech nf eight year ago, leaving out Lecomp ton. and interlarding with a prolusion of abow nf nnr lata lamented President aad bi fxcel lent suouessos. He did not annaono bimaelf, a the great furor fur Uncle Sam eeujed to in dicnle the moment unlarvabht. It is rumored tbat Mr, Ctrl spnke, but a I am not quite sore that the rumor i well found ed. I will not attempt In relate hia speech. ( Th ipeechos were all bitterly ranenroue, and showed Ihe nnmanly and deep-seated hat that inspired their language. , Your, etc.,' , C. COXCEBXUU THK FgEKDH K7(S BCBKAV. Washington, Feb. 23.- Major-Oeneral How ard has prrpared the billowing circular letter In be Irausiultted In eaoll uf the Assistant Corn niis.iourrs uf the Freedtnro's Bureaa t , . Wnshiutnn, iy'. 2ti, IflOfl. To the Aseia tant Cnnimlttinner Dear Mir : Antirlpatiog the excitement that will necessarily follow tb action of Ihe Government with referents to lb new Frredmen' bill, yn may feel svjawbat embarrassed in tha duties devolving apna, yon under Ihe law and regulatium already eiuting, and that you may aot steadily and firmly in any emergency, yon mint he prepared for any increased bnetiltt; nn Ibe part el those who have so persistently hindered ami troubled yon and ynur agi-m ;. aud there may ha ao in created reilrsin'ss amongst tho Prerdmen. The Problem li,ts assured the Ceoimissioner that be regards Ibe present law a onallnoiog lim exislriMs of ibe Bureaa at least a year I nun now. please ascertain and report what steps have been taken in yeur district by tb Stale and lunniolpal authorities to provide far the absolutely ludlgeul aad furTerlng refbgaes aud (rredraau who are bsing threw u upon tb Goveruweut fur toppnrt, Coniiou to nan vry pussilil effort i Hud good home (nr too orphan minor wbn ar dependent. Keduce by mean of empkiynisnt aeemulaiin af people iu th different oitira and Tillage aud hnd borne and labor for Itina. Yen have sao oeeded io allaying sirifs by arrangiag labor and promoting adueatina in Ibe midst uf great dilliuulties. C'ontiuue with your utmost effort In pursue th same coarse so aa to demonstrate to lh people of roar distrwt tb good totn luiu uf lb systeiu uf free labor, liiv a thor ough lotpeoiiun tu viy agent for whota you are responsible. Irnmoralilie. oorrupUoo, neglected doty and Incapacity ar aomstiro nnialaiaed ef agaloM 9lot aad ageata af Hie bureau. If either of the charge be sn Uined oa iiivligiioo. Ihe guilty party vnyiCl be at nice rruiuvtd whelher b oan b replaced or not. Thanking yua heartily fur lh energy and Idellty you bar thus far displayed, the Cumroisioner ks pleased lo lrui an onwa veriug ouuHdence iu ynur ability lu cop with any new difficulty thai may art. I aa re spectfully, yoar obedient servant, (Signed) O. 0. Uowaud. Nsw York. Feb. lil.Tht Hirald'i Rio Janeiro ourreuondul aya ag01 Suulhern Emigrant Association bav been cordially reoeived by tb Emperor of Braail. They ar prnmised any qaaatiir ef bus, im mediate Mliiensbip, (reeausa rf religsso, eon tml of uiantcipal regulatioaa aed free laipav Ga llon fur Ur year of all aeceasavr article. lu Ui House uf Commons on lb 8lh. O'Do iieliu muvsd tbat tb Miuisur tanilu into lb easts and dMaaatisfaotssn ef irsloed and remote tb Mm repc led. 3itt agaiusl '.' i. A motieo waa mads ia tha Spanish I"r s Ue for a rtaluotiesi la lb bear t expeaJ t. aud a return nf tb taaaetal tmlu-ry J l i vmftrf win felbrw. - --"' -: