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-yr s From Washington. Washington, January 23. | The House resumed the consideration j of the Constitutional amendment fixing j the basis < f representation. Mr. Stevens wished to bring the House to an immediate vote, but was defeated by bin friends, who, not understanding (he exact etfect of the proposition, desin # ed further lime for examination and de bate. A discussion of several hours duYa'lion ensued, which vatious amendments were suggeste 1, in order to prevent the South ern States from cutting off lue negroes from voting, by requiring of them prop ertv, educational, or other qualifications. The Senate was engaged in the discussion of the bi'l to et.Targe the powers of the Preedman's Bureau. No vote (Aketf. Washington, January 24. 'fhe proceedings in the l!ou?e to day were nevoid o! interest, except the debate i on the report of the Joint Committee of reconstruction. Stevens did not attempt j to drive the previous question. He finds his power whs not so great as ho had calculated. The Republican team will not work well in the traces. The whole thing boiled down amounts to this: Most of those who at first expected, and whom Steveca relied upon, to vote for the resolution, now upon reflection oppose it.'' Everv member haA an amendment to offer, oiniting his political idiosynocracy. About twenty amt*niunnts have been offered?more coming. Now the plain facts are, the House will reject the resolution, or order its recommittal. Hut something even more offensive to the isouth may be looked for when t he Com> mittee again reports. Sekatk.?Mr. Wilson offered s joint resolution for an amendment to the Constitution prohibiting payment for slaves. or for any debt contracted in behalf of tbe rebe'lion. Referred to the Judicia ry CortimJtten. the discussion of the bill for tbe on largement of the powers of the freed' men's Bureau, was resumed And con tinned till adjournment. Hoi's*.?The House resumed the con idera'ion of tbe Constitutional amendment as fixing the basis of represent*! tion. A nsw amendment was offered to ap point representatives according to tbe number of t he voting population. No decision was arrived at. Washington January 25. Sknatb.?The Senate after further dis c'Jssiotl, passed tbe bill etdargin g the | power of the Freedmen's Bureau. llbtrsE.?The House adopted a reso'u> tion instructing the Committee of tbe l?*' ui vyo.uinma 10 report a bt'l excluding from the right of suffrage in the District all who have voluntarily borne arms against the United States in the naval, military or civil service of the late Confederacy. The House resumed the consideration of the Constitutional amendment reguta' ting the basis of representation. During the debate, Mr. llingharn, of Ohio, who is a member of the Reconstruction Committee, said the Coibmitiae had under consideration another amendment to tha Constitution protecting the rights of all persons, b'ack or white, which rights had not heretofore been enforced owing to the want of power in Congress. Mr. Eldridge, of Wisconsin, (Democrat ' in opposing lb* measure, asserted that the rebellion having teen suppressed, the Southern States were restored to their rights under the Constitution. Justice, harmony and union ought to he main* tained, and nothing dohe in I spirit of furious fanaticism. Mr. Strouse, of PenhivlvArtia, (Demo, i crat.) and Mr. NibhoMnn, of Delaware, I (Democrat,) favored the admission of Southern Kepreaentatives to participate in 1 the debate on the measures which so touch affect tlirir interests. Vatiouit Kepuhlicans favored sotne | atnetidinent apportioning representatives, but were not agretd on the one pend | . -n<?- ! i Mr. Ward, of New York, like other Republicans, would do nothing to ?iv?] ; tbe Soutli mi opportunity to excluda ^ black* from voting. Wasiiinotov, January 2fl. The Senate conaidered the Joint r**o? Jution for the appointment of Provisional ' < GovdVnorsi? theS >uihern State*. Howe, ! f of Wisconsin, who introduced the bill, . I made a speech in favor of it. ' t Toe House resumed the consideration t of tlie propose I Conatilutional amend* ment relative to basis of represnntati n. ' liarJ ng of Kentucky, and Wright of ( New Jersey, made spoecbei in fbvor of I 0 the admission of Southern member*. They could see no reason for the Constitutional amendment. It was designed by the Radicals as a party measure to secure the suffrage'of negroes The House will vote on the question on Tuesday. Washington, Jan. <l\. Governor OrV, or Soirth Carolina, has sent an agent here to remonstrate against the passage of the Senate freed men's bill.' Mr. Treacott, the ag?nt, will appear before the House freediiren's cofo'mittee on Monday to' state (lie objections to tlio bilf. Washington, Jan. 29. Sknatb.?Mr. Griine* offered a resolution tendering the thanks of Con press j to Rear Admirsl Ifarragut, aha the officers and men under Isiin for gallant conduct in Mr.lilt bay, in August, 1804. Referred to the committee ou Naval Affairs. The bill tor the protection of all person# in their civil rights was called up, when Mr Trumbull offered an amendment to ! insert, after lha enacting clause, that all j persons of African descent born in the | United States are declared citizens of the ' United States, lie addressed the Senate , in favor of the bill, contending for the i civil rights and privileges of all persons j citizens of the United Slates without dis. tiuction of race or color. Mr. Saulsbury replied to Mr. Trumbull, contending that the (till before the Senate was tbe most dangerous one that V I had been introduced, lie said we had shed tears enough f?ir the neg'o. It was '.im# that the whites should have some consideration. IIocsk.? Mr. Raymond, of New York, ; lefuted the arguments of those who 1 maintained that tliO Southern Stales | were out of the Union. lie maintained j that Congress had oo more power to do I anything against them than against the other States. The Southern Stat<*s Ijh* ing re organized,- the only question *vss | the admission of their Representatives. { Congress should act separately on the | cases, from each Uislrict, and admit those i who can take the oath. We have :olive j i with the South, and good policy, as well | as patriotism, should induce Congress to i ' reconciliation, lie said llie South owed : , it to their dicnitr. as weM as t<? I - r ? I ism, to repudiate the select Committee on Reconstruct on. All the paper comrn t tees would not save the couutrv unless | there wss sufficient patriotism among the people. Jeff. Davis?Strange Humors. The rumors cf the rescue of Jefferson Davis from prison are assuming a new 1 1 and strange character. It ia now hin'ed i 1 that the authorities desire his escape, and | ' that facilities have been offered him, but | that lie won't gd. '1 here i* little room | to doubt the awkward embarrassment I ] atteiidaot upon his confinement and rei 1 jecled trial. Chief Justice Chase does | not hesitate to say that he cannritbe con ! victed of treason, and Thaddeus Steven* declares that ha ia nothing mora than a foreign leader, about aa much amenable to the lawn of the United Statea as Maximilian. I have it from the beat authori I tjr ? from authority which you cannot [ i question?that Mr. Davis feels the most 1 ample sectlrity. II3 ?aid less than a , week ago, "my defence is complete now, ! and rests solely upon the law, which will | be administered fairly, I know, and in | perfect accordance with civil justice."? 1 The shameful petticoat story will he put 1 to the blush when that time srrives. Mr. j 1 Davit js at present in good health, eats . heartily, reads a good deal, and possesses as he said the other day, "a good diges- j lion and a good conscience." lie receives letters from his wife three times a week, , and keeps a journal every day. |i f Washitlgtotl Car. Xashvil/e Manner. , ' mm M j 1 A Southern Patriot.?A few days 1 ' 1 ago a gentleman from the country while | ^ purchasing from one of our merchants a I hoop-skirt, remarked, that the girl for I ' whom he was buying it, was bis twenty ninth chi'd. If many, encourage! by , this example, will go and do likewise, the ' ravagea of war will anon be repaired,and ( negro nuH'ruee. should it come, would , jrove a hanuleaa avil.? purling. South' \ irner. j < Tors or Wors HiLta.? We warn 1 >ur friend* not to taka worr. or torn | greenback" or am all currency, that it ( n?uc)t defaced, aa tliey afe not current , and *re heavily diacodriled. Dont "and ! j* audi IrilU or thev will he returned.? Uv the way ih? public ought to he pro. < tec led in lluqpnatier. I* tliere no place < where U.S. currency is redaeuiet) when i 1 tl becoWs defaced f 11 I THE LANCASTER LEDGER. WEDNESDAY MORNING, February 7, 18C6. Subscribers finding a (X) cross mark on the margin of their papbr may know that their time is about to expire. vr Mr. Thomxs P. Sunca, is our authorized agent to receivo advertisements anil sub> scrip'ions fot* the I.kdokr in CharlestcTi". READ THIS. Persons who have had printing done at this oflicc under the cash rules are earnestlv rennost J " ~1 cd to settle their bills. We cannot do a credit business. Those who are indebted to the office for service rendered previous to the 2?W? of August last (uhder the old rtpimr) arc also requested to sctile. Four tifiha of the white male advlts in the District are inifebt'^d1 for either subscription or advertising previous to the date mentioned ai'd perhaps not a half dozen have paid up to this time. The amounts due are smail ? tiiflcs to the debtors, but in the aggregite iin portant to ns. All accounts contracted pievious to 26th August are due the Senior proprietor. hut payment may be mad5 to either ol the present proprietors. With every disposition to indu'ge those who are without.pcans, we know there are many who can pay without inconvenience to themselves, and we trust, that, reminded by this notice, they will seek an early opportunity of doing ? . Close of the Fourteenth Volume. The present Issue of the Lolr/rr completes the fourteenth volume and the fourteenth year of the existence of the pupcr. The fir*t issue appeared on the 12th of February, 18A2, under the editoiial and proprietary n>ann?enie'rt. ol our deceased kinsman, Kiuikrt S Itali.t. In May 1866, a little nVore than lour years from its birth, we look rdiaige of the paper, and from that time until the 23d of February, >866, wncti me omrc was ciestioyed by KlieruMn'ii army, the paper tya* iasijod weekly to its suh. scribers without a niomission or interruption. On the Vtlth i>l August, 181(5, pablication watt returned under the present rrgime, under circnrfstatices anything else than favoiable ? w ith no mails, scarcely a * money in tlie conntry, an I induced from necessity to do only n cosh business. Still we hare managed to keep afloat, mid business has revived more rapidly t'tan we anticipated. When the mail route* throughout the District arc opened, which will piohahlv he before long, our subscription list will soon swell to its former numbers. Ha a ing survived the calamities of war and tha worst privations of defeat, th? 1-tdgtr may he regarded as au institution that will live long al ter its present proptietors will have passed away. The first of she aerTes of Lectures on "the Evidences of Chi istianity," may h? expected in the Court House on Friday night, Fcbiuaty 16th, by Ilev. J. X. Craig. The Mails. We understand that contract bids for some of the mail routes in this vicinity have heen [orwarded recently. The prospect, therefore, ,.l ... ....I- -i r -_.;i ? ? ? .mi rniiiiini?ii ? general mail icrrire i? Inightenirg Applications for tha appointment of Tost Musters at those ottcaa which hare not been supplied, should now l>e teuton. If there are no msles who can "lake the oath," doubtless tonic cornpeteHt female can be prevailed nil, in a spirit of accommodation, to be Pott .Uith ru. Destitution. It ia reported that lu aoma portidns of thia District there ia actual suffering among the poor (or the want of provisions. Tbev have no menus ol buying com, and if they had, the xrliclc cannot now be procured, owing, either to ita scarcity, or to the unwillingness ol those who have it, to sell. Cannot some measure of relief ho suggest*] for these poor people ? It iaalong linio before another harvest, and if there ia suffering now, what way we expect three mouths fiom this time, if no relief is given * Something should L?e done, either through privsto charity or by authoiity of law, and we respectfully direct public stteutien to the sut jet I. The Price of Gold. Wi understand that the premium on gold is rated at a very low figurv by some of the dealers in this market. As we have not noticed my material change in the quotations elsewhere, we would advise those who have specie not to part with it eicept at its general value. It would be assuming too much cossequence Tor our little town trf undertske to regulate the great question ef Kiraneo ATI Within ourselves. We mast necessarily pay adrne regard to New Vork sad Charleston quotations. Some time ego it was the common belief that "greenbacks" would soon become ra worthless is Confederate money. Wa did not coincide nitli this impression and sb advised eur readers; neither are we inclined td rtln into the oppo tito eitrenie how, and say that "Greenbacks" sill suddenly become as good ss gold. Both >f thess piopoaitiona are equally absurd. It oeU several /ears to accumulate the large debt 10* lunging over the country, and the process >f getting r>d ol it must likewise be gradual, iome years must elapse before the flosncl&l 'ondiiioti of the country cau be restored to a bat it aaa before the war. Savannah, January 25.?Tfce Confetl sra'n General Mercer, tried by a military ;oinmiaaion tor the murder of seven Union pr sonars, was acquitted dot] re leased from prison yesterday. 4 The Committee on Reconstruction. Repot^s from Washington inform us that the imn.ortat Coramittca of fifteen, known as* the "Reconstruction Committee" of Congress, is about ifo visit the Southern States, charged with the gruvo duty of ascertaining the exact | state of o?r loyalty ; haw long otrr probation should be continued an I when it would be advisable to admit iis into fhe society of the '*dia> rulected" Stale*. The South can etpltt no advantage from' the proapective labors of this roving c >m'niss-on. Wejielicve with the Richmond Tim'* that every act of Congress shows that it is the fixed and settled purpose of unit body to keep the Southern States in their present degraded and J colonial coud'tion for a very great length of time. There are no signs that their present policy of exclusion of the ' oulh ro,n all pan ticipation in the legislation of the nation it to J be '.einporary and transient. At first the most > sanguine among us believed that all of our Congressmen elect who could swallow the test oath would be admitted to their scats. When tha do'or of Congress Was insultingly *hmm r<l in the face of irtl cf these Representative#! ! w ithout an inquiry as to their eligibility, so far ; as the "test o.itli"' affected their admission, we comforted ourselves with the hop* that, in a few weeks, all would he admit.ed. This lmj pressioii kepi u few Southern Congressmen in the throng of Washington claim agent# and lothyists, hoping for admifsion after the nolidays, Contact with their n.osl excrvrpl.i-y and conservative constituents would, we were assured, "bring the radicals to their senses.'' Hut they i etui tied to the federal Capital mote delermin* cd to rivet the chains of colonial inequality up, on the S nth than when Congress li st assent. bled. We see nt Ibis lime no more proipert ! of the admission St the Congressmen elect from the Southern States thnii of their direct I tianslation into heaven. Tlic Unheals are pil, j ing Pelioii upon Ossa in the whv ot oppressive j legislation. T ie deliberation and rare wiih which the; are laying the foundation ot a policy which seems intended to last far many years is the very wo st Ifttuie ot the piesent Itudictl crusade. The pains which they are taking, by the appointment of loving Congressional commissions, to collect the most ample pud heteiogeneons material for luttre use arc not concealed. We are to be declared by committee* of Mr. Ccllaa's sppoiatment unof irlby of bflng restored to our political light*. We cannot, witliout the most complete and humiliating selljib-rseineut, protect our fair fame from these assaults No Southern gen wuiu iwuiiuiiii; piitii'ic Dt'liirc * riiTing Commission tin; proof* ot hi* sincere loyalty, lie cannot stiuggle with mendacious letter writer*. "ferret*," and intellgcnt contrabands, in the'r ruali (or the ear of a roving Coininls/iioh He cannot parade before a committee, which ha* probably pre judged the whole case, proofs of hi* devotion id the fUnian, llence it will probably happen that alter * vcral months of careful mousing and smelling, the rloving Commission will leturn to Washington with a budget of "facts and observations," which will gladden the heart of both Sumner and Stsvens. The License I>a\v. The following are the amendments to the I/cense Laws of South Carolina, for j the snlo of spirituous liq-iors, passed at j tba last session of the Legislature : I. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Kepreaenlat ve*, now filet and tilling in Uenoral Assembly, and by the authority of tlifl satrfe. That the City Council of Charleston, the various Mttnic ipal Corporations and Hoards of Com* , luissionvrs of Il iad*, and all other tartars i . - *' - , or oooifl* corporate, in whom the ri^lit j to grant tavern license-, or license to re| ttil spirituous liquors ia now rested, be ! end tbe seine ere hereby authorized to i fix the price of audi license at such suina hs to them may seem proper : Provided, That the ssmesbnll not be lets then fifty j dollars lor each license. II. That any person who shell violate the License lew of ibis State, upon con. viction thereof, shell be fined in a sum not less than treble the amount of tbe price of a license prescribed, and, at the time of the commission of the offence, existing for the local jurisdiction wherein such o(Tenet it committed, and shall be imprisoned at the discretion of the-Court, The Fen itins. New York, January 29.?The address , of the Irish It-public*, dated at Dublio, it | published today. It says thai "the work I of preparation in Ireland is ddne. We know our s rength. We are not grapi pling iri the daik. A point has been reached from which we see the goal | clearly. We call upon you to aid the Iriftli Army of Independence which will aoon aland or full wuli ilk fice to tbe en?my. We atk n loan which shall be paid within lis month* after tbe establish meot of Irish Independence." The a<Mr?*s is endoraed by a card from O'Mahoney, urging prompt action by tba Kenian Brotherhood. burton N. Harrison, late private See* retary 'of Jetl'araon Davis, who haa for aome time paat been confined in Port Delaware, haa been released by the l'rae* ' ideot. 9 1 ' 3, Washington News ani llutnors. A Washington despatch say a : "It is understand that lbs Committee on Bank ing and Currency will report unfavorably upon the petition placing lb# note* of lbs National Banks on the sauie legal lender bas s as greenback*. The House Committee on Freedtnen's Attain will shortly take a tour of inspec* lion in the Southern Slates. The Orange and Alexandria railroad authorities have tendered them, which they have accepted, the use of a special train froiu Washing, ton to L\ nchburg. It is said that some revelation^, which i._ ? t: -L. s ? to juni tuum iu ii|{ni in rvgaru l I col* loo fraud* at tlie South, implicate high military and civil officials, and present most astounding disclosures. From the War Department records, it appears that over $301,000,000 h?ve been paid by Government in bounties to volunteers in the Ute war. The total number of men who enlisted eras 2 401,OOa, of whom about ?3I,0W> received no bounty from the National Government. The Wational InMlliytnctr says that Mr. Lalrobe had mil interview with 1'resident Jolirtitotf last week, in which, speak !ng of the negroes, the Presi Jem declared that, whatever might Its his 6bnvic(iota in regard to negfo sulf'ags in the District of Columbia and Tennessee, he was firm* ly opposed to forcing such sufTmgA' u'pou die States by national legist art iotr. lbs distinct impression was [eft that her was not friendly to indiscriminate negro sub , frage in this District. The commanders of the several mditai ; ry departments in the South and South west have been directed from beadqiinri lera to issue stringent orders for the pro< lecliou ol the freed men against ill* negro vagrahl ].??*? passeJ by most of the Southern Legislatures. It i* reported that th* douse JuJici* ry Committee, in consequence of the host if* legislation of aoine of ill* Sou'.L* ern Legislatures in regard to lb* freedi men, have determined to mport a univer* sal suffrage bill. Some of them claim that the second section of the amendment abolishing slavery confers upon Congrsss tl.tf power* to regulaltf suffrage in the S.atee. The President lias stated to a distini guished Senator that the agitation of the negro franchise question in the District of Columbia, at this* time, a mere entering wedge to the % jit alios of the question throughout the Slates ; that it was ill timsd, uncalled for, and calcula> led to do great iigrm. 11a believed il would engender mm if and airifa !>? ' " ! tween the two meet, which would reault in great iiijurr to both, and tbe certain xierminatioo of the negro population.? Precedence, he thought, eboutd be given to more important and urgent mattere of legislation, which wee essential for the | reetoration of the Union, the peace of i the cotlotry and the prosperity of the : people. The above ie etrictly true. The Petersburg Jnitz learns from a well informed source, that the following Republican Senators may he relied on, upon test vols, to aoel <in the President : Dooliltle, Morfan, Harris, Stewart, Ci* an, Trumbud, D.xoti, Henderson, Autho uy, Lane, of Kansas, and Lane, of Indiana. The Democrat!, wtio number ten in the Senate, will uphold biin to a man, which will give the President a majority of ooe in the S?nate. In the House, the calculation ie not eo favorable, but enough I. L.._. ' -it - I ? wo buu?ii iu iisij an parties o| lb* impossibility of passing any maaaura oeer lha President's vato. This secure* to ilia Ktecutiee, beyond a peradtrenture, ulli> mate triumph. Congress liat never yet bean able to sustain aod socc-*a?fuMy con ! cluda, any war with tlia l'ru*id*ni which waa begun witb lata than two-third* eota. I*, is efcpeclsd that iba at* miasma of lbs Tsooeaaaa delegation will ba lbs tirat trial of strength. The member* sleet t> Congress from the South wast are on tba point of return ing boms. It is due to truth to state >l..i I I I i ' - ! ! Illmj um nop* irom '.III lint, Tbe bop* of nioai Congressman to de*ig< ; nat* p?raone for Southern ufBrn for pur poses of ulUrior advantage* in trad* af fair* i* what hardens tb?in Agaiotl reconstruction. A deapatcb frcm Washington statas that Govarnor Aikea, now in tbat city, saya lb* n*gro*a ara doing nothing, and new crop* ar* likaly to b* a failure ?n? I*** aomatbing ia don* to compal tb* n* groea to work. U* baa b*?n appomt*J to lay tb* matter b*for* tb* President and 0*nera| Grant, and a** if aoin* mean* cannot t>4 d*ria*d to remedy tb* J difficulty. 4 Correspondence of lt?e rii rnit, Washington, Jab. 22. Tho'g'rett qneitioti wliieh nbaorba ptfblic slteulioo bare now ia iba bill to confer fiee auffrsge on the necrose in tbia Diatrict. The bill having psaaed the House, giving the negroes suffrage with* ' out any liinitetiona or qualification*, A?e public execution it oo tip'tot to im what iht Senate will do. Great political results depend oo this action of the Senate. It it ascertained, beyond doubt, that the President will veto the bill in r% present form. If, therefore, the Seatft* tusiaio the action of the llouaa, the President and Cotfgreas are at oc.ce placed in direct antagonism. The President and the Kepublican party, in Coo* pre*#, will be at dagger's points with eaek other, and the President will has# %cf throw himself in the arms of the coneer' ritiTM of the country. This breach wilf undoubtedly inrolre a reconatructioa tf lite <J -biuet, in the interests of conserva' listn. The conservative* are watchia^ the crisis with deep inie/eet. The oalp apprehension they base is, that ttis Seaat* may modify the bill in aucb a way as to avoid the Presidential veto. A lew daya will develop the action of the Seaale, and it ia to he hoped that fftey will have hack bone enough to follow their doctrines of negro equality, to the logical conclusion the House ha*. I think it likely that the Government will not attempt to try 0?ptain S?u> n%. The case ag?iu*l bun is a very feeble one { Km sotry to say, that an amendmeat to i.in ? ' -? .......... V.MUS1 |IWI?| me Olltu t confirming tqth* negroes thelitis, for three j?nn, to tb* lands thay ara I* poeof on ilia Sea NUqJi of St/tflb Carolina. As lha lIo?i?* is much mora radical than ilia Senate, it is almost eartain this provision will become tb* law, unless tba President vftoai lha bill. Tba Piasidaut, I bav* reason to know, do** not favor this monstrous it justice to tba Sea Island planters. Hut it is not kaown wbelbar lie will veto tb* bill or coL Tbar* seems to be no doubt bat tbat Congress will repasl lb* taal oatb re<j*iiy* ad of lawyers practicing in the Unit ad States Courts. Tbia liberality of Cwa* grass arises from tb* fact that tba asaj-wi* ty of tba Supreme Court bolcj lb* laf *o be uncotietitutioaal. Such is lb* opiaiaa of tba Court, though their daeiaioa baa not baan announced. Such a daeiaioa will, of course, vary taucb shake tb* la* galily of tb* test oatb aow required of public oHuift, an I aiaoolb, to auasa at* lent, tb* obstacles to the admission of tba mem bus of Congress from tba South. A* tba matter uow stand*. I think lb* Coa* grass are determined not to admit any mam bars front tb* Sou h, ascapt tbaa# who c?n take tba taat oath. As regards M?iico, frum what I laavfc. ] il ia ilia poiicy of o-ir Ktaculiro to prourr? tli? poaco with M*xitndiaa until 1 harmony it raatorod at iba S >utb. WkM maturation ia complain?amy two or ibrao yaara frotn now?in lima to oparatn aa iba nast I'roaidantial olaction, a vary 0*a> pliatic no ioa to toavo tba praiaiaoa will bo a*rv?d on Maximilian. In talking witblotdin^ Do noar^U oaa mvota bar# from tbo N ?rth, aurprioo ia eonaiantly oxproa?od by tho?n that tba I Coufadorato Stataa did not bold oal ta tbo North tba poaaibiiity of a paeila wadj'iatmant in tbo ovoat of kfoClallaat olaciion to tbo Prooidoncy. Witb lb at to go on, Utoy aay, tboy would bava baat i tbo lUpublioana la doal b. i Tlio paaaago of your oogro ooda iaaaav | aiJorod a gmal rnitfortsao bora. It ia mado a grant ban-Ho of by tbo radieola. Removal of Troops. Afftira bavo for aoma tiino iadioatad tba rpaody withdrawal of Uia Fad oral tro.p* from tbo Stato of Alabama, tt4 tbo diacbargo of tboir duuao laft ta tba militia. G?n. Tlioioaa baaapprovad tba rrq'iiaition of Governor Pattoa for ansa for iba militia, and aignifUa bia raadiaaaa | to turn ovar tbo control of tbo Hutaw iw civil officers, whenever the local military orgsnii uiout ere completed. Gen. Great, however, in eetiag upon (lie spplicstioe of lh? Governor! throwf cold weler upon the whole scheme, lie sejt: "For the preeeot end Mill there b e security for equitably meinteinieg ihe rights end safety of of all oIsmn Stilt iriu in the Statee laiely la rebellion, I would not recommend the vitbdraoel el the United Statee troops from thee ess. The number of interior gnrvieowe might be reduced, but a moveable force sal* I eieot to insure tranquility should he re* I tnined. While ouch e leree ie retained iu the 8outh I doubt the propriety ef ' pulling arms into Ikt hands of tht assfs't i ?... fiw. M