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Front Washington. Washington, March 8. Sknatk.?Mr. Van Winkle presented a j 'int resolution from the West Virginia Legislature asking Congress to pay the war debt of that Slate, growing out of the equipment,arming and paying the militia, liefer red to the Military Committee. Mr. Poland presented a joint resolution ti allium) il>" i-' ? v wiioviiukiV/il U) 111 SKJ II HIJI \ ' | ing from voting, or holding office, all who j liavo wi lingly taken part in the rebellion. Referred to tho Committee on Reconstruction. Mr. Henderson offered a series of resolutions declaring that to Congress and not to the Kxecutive belongs the power of reestablishing civil government ih the lately seceded States, etc. The joint resclution to amend the i Constitution on the subject of represents t tion was debated. [ Horse.? Mr. lioutwell,from the se'ect Committee on Reconstruction,?uiade a! report, signed by himself and Mr. Wash" burtie, of Illinois, setting forth that lv?st I Tennessee !s loyal, but that Middle and ! Went Tennessee aro disloyal. The num ber of while male adults of the voting J ago is 120,0U0, and of the blacks of the j voting age SO,000 ? in all 2OO,09(J. In ! order to insure and maintain a Stale Government, these two gentlemen pro I pore, as an additional condition for the admission of Tennessee, that the right of | suffrage be conferred without regatd to | 0 race or color. The House debated the bill declaring tliset all blacks are citizens of the United j States, and conferring upon them equal rights and immunitiee. Washington, March 9. The Senate discussed further the ccn- J stitutional amendment apportioning isp1 ' scsentation among the States according j m to their nnrnilu'1/.t. * ........ .-..vr.., <-AVmUIM-r 1 II <.11 it II S II OX I ' 1 / ? taxed H^ii narrowing the basis of representation in proportion to those excluded { froiu voting on account of color or race. 1 Mr. Henderson oll'ered a substitute for j the resolution, to tbe etlect that no State, I in presenting the qualifications for voters, s'tsll discriminate on accofnt cf color or race. 11*>. 9aid tliut hie own State (Mis Rouri) will give negroes tbe right of suf frege, and the South would be compelled, in ?ve years, toilc the same. The pro I poted substitute was rejected?yeas 10, I nays 37.* Tbe House resolution was then rejectei?yeas 25, nay a 22; Mr. Sumner and the other Radicals voting against it because of the absence of provisions for negro voters. A twethirds vote w?s requisite to secure its passage. LIo'vsk.?The I'll to sccurs the civil ' rights of all persons, without regard to J color, in all the States, was tha subject of j further debate. It was recommitted to | the Judiciary Commutes. Wasi?'noton, March 12. S :..atr.? Mr. Sl.ennan presented the 1 petition of a citizen of Columbia, South ! ' C itohna, asking for indemnity for lo:s 1 sustained by tha burning of his house. J In presenting the petition, Mr. Sherman I. read a letter Irom General Sherman in j relation to the burning of the town of' Columbia, alleging that current reports of this matter weio false; that Columbia was not tired bv the Vedera', but l>v rebel authorities ; that General Wade Hampton i had, before leaving the town, given an ' ? ' " | i order to* urn it "on the apptouch of the Yankees,etc. General Sherman itaUft < | i that the town was on tire when h?*ni?n?H I " " "" I { it. The petition was referred to the , Committee of Claims. i 11 di sk.?A resolution was adopted 4 fcaviog in view the purchase of a portrait , of Joshua H. Giddings; and Mr. Sheila | barger, of Ohio, ottered a resolution in ! , ctructlng the Judiciary Committee to in , quire into ami report upon the expediency | and propriety of providing by law that 8 no person disloyal to the (Juited States , Government, or who has been engaged in f armed rebellion, shall be entitled to the , exercise of the right of electors in anv i rs % " j 1 State in Federal elect ons. The resolution (. r at adopted. I Washington, March 13, Senate.?Mr. Sherman introduced a c joint resolution that 'he aggregate out c standing amount of United State* notes s not tearing inleiest and including the o fractional currency, shall not be diminish- T ed below four hundred and twenty mil . ri Jiona, end that all sirrplus in the Treasury, * exceeding forty nnlliona in coin and forty f< niillioo* in currency, shall be promptly ci applied to the payment of accruing in ll deotednes* and to ttie purchase or payi n ment of the interest bearing debt of the a' \Joiied States ; bjt the amount of iuter III ' smpr i , ? * est bearing legal lender notes shall not be dimin'shed by payment or conversion at a rate exceeding four millions per month. The second section provides that this joint resolution shall remain in force one year after its pass'ngo. Referred to the Committee on Finance. The bdl for the admission of Colorado ! was taken uj? and after d -bate the Senate, i by a vote of 22 against 14, refused to pass it to a third reading, because it ex* j eludes negro sulfrage. lloi SK ?The House by h vote of 109 against 3D, passed (lie Senate lull with ae amendment, that all persons born in the United States and not subject to anv foreign power, excluding Indians not i taxed, are hereby declared to be citizens of the United States him! that such citizens ' of every race and fcolor, w ithout regard to any pffevions condition of slavery; or Involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the parties shall have been duly convicted, shall have the same right to make and enforce coti- I tracts, to sell and be parties to and give j evidesce, to inherit, purchase, sell and convey real and personal properly asd to j as full and equal benefit of all laws and proceedings for the security of person and properly as is enjoyed hT the whit# cili, zens ; and shall bo subject to like puri isiiment, pains and penalties and to none other; ar.y law, statute, ordinance, regu. lation or custom to the contrary, not- I withstanding. The penal section of lbs bill is, re- i lained, providing that any person who shall deprive any one of any of the rights 11 u u\ Ail 1.l.:n ?i?? ? > .......ata lino uin Mian re nnocJ one thousand dollars and imprisoned not less than one rear. An additional section is added to llie j bill providing for a tinul appeal in any crtoo tl>ast mar arise to the Supreme Court of tiie United Slates. Nothing in ; tiiis act, however, is to he so construed as to affect the laws of any State concern ' mg the right of siili'rcge. The Senate will undoubtedly concur in ! the amendment, hut after that it must he submitted to the President for approval. A flairs in Canada. Toronto, Canada, March 12.?The number of volunteers answering the call ! of the government is largely in excess of j the demand. flie . commander in'chief' has issued a military order regretting I that he is compelled, as a measure of pre | caution, to call for the services of so large a number of volunteers, and asys this step doos not result from the existence of a 1 ? .v..ul.m<i ?.i w?r uNivreen our sovereign and h foreign State, but h the necssctry performance of a duty which haa devolved upon the government, who are bound J to make provision for protecting the lives and property of the inhabitant* of the Provinces against threatened piratical at tacks of lawless men, who are rising in J the territory of a neighboring power for the purjepse of openly organizing au en- | terprive against llie sovereign rights of the Quean, and (lie security of her sub j?eta. He relies upon the success of the ' volunteers in repelling any attacks which may come. A IIoki:11> Mi RbKK.? We learn that Jacob Jilackwelder, living near Slirewait's Mill, in (Jabarruft county, about five miles Trow Concord, killed his wife on Sunday f morning the 4 tit inst , by cultmg ber throat. He acknowledges the deed, and -tales that lie first tried to cho&6 her to ' loath, but not being satisfied with that lie cut her throat. On Saturday ev?o ng, previous to the murder, IS luck welder lent his children away from home, so \ ,hrtt there might he no one present but limself and wife when he carried hishor id purposes into execution. It is said hat jealousy was the cause, though it is relieved that there never was good resion for such feelings on the part of Mack 1 vekler. Some suppose that "he is deran* 1 red, while others think that he is as j 1 ouch in his right mind as he ever *as.? In w is immediately arrested, and is now t onfiued in jail at Concord. , i Ckar/otle JJtmocrat. i Maj. General Howard has issued a ciri ] ular letter to the Assistant Commission' 1 4 rs of the Freedman'a Bureau- <rivin? in. 1 ? pi B "*' I (ructions for dealing with the question ( f matrimony among the freed people. | 'hey are to consult the State laws with ^ rgard to the marriage and divorce of ^ 'hile vs. white pertone, and embody them c >r tlio benefit of the freed men, ae tar aa " hi he done, in a circular, and desiring , ( it-in to frame such a system of marriage ^ ilea as would be approved by (he Stale j uihoritiee, with the formal approval of ie Governor on the subject appended. d ICiumwtfi linger. PUBLISHED AT LANCASTER C. II. S. C., by CONORS A CARTER. WEDNESDAY MORNING, March 21, 1896. Subscribers finding a (X) cross mark on the margin of their paper may know that their time id about to expire. t*r Mn. Thomas P. St.irKR, is our author* ized agent to receive advertisements and subscrip'ions for the I.kdukh in Charleston. A l*ro|?o?itioii. Any person sending us a Club of rtvit new subscribers to one Post Otticc address, accompanied with the cash, will receive a copy of the paper extra for one year. Lecture. We are requested to announce that the fourth Lecture in the (cries, heretofore published, will tc delivered on Fiiday night next, by Kev. D. P. Kobineon. Subject : "The adaptation of the plan of Redemption, (both in its nature and in the method of its development) to the condition and wants ?!' the human race, as an evidence ol the Divine origin of the Bible." The Eastern S. C. Journal. The above is llie title !' a tow paper, published fur the liist time on the third instant,at lJtnncHsville, ? . C., by C, I*. Townscnd, as Kditor, nttd W. F. K. llende:son, I'roprietor. It in neatly gotten up and ahly edited; and is, upon the whole, an interesting family newspaper. We wish all parties the highest measure of success. The i'rospoct. The weather for the last three 01 four weeks has been exceedingly lavor'iblo tor laimuig opeiatious. We have had hut little rain, and it has been plm.-aiil and Spring-like. We presume the liirmcra have taken advantage of (he good season, and have their plantations ill a forward state of pieparatioii. "A iih the aid ol tiie Military and the whelc-omc examples which tbi y have made where con. acts for labor have been violated, lit*; Irecdniel) are generally doing well, unt' in many iniUnccs are reported as working bi tter than when slaves. The prospect for n crop, uuiler the new labor system, is fur bettor than the most Sanguine among us anticipated at tbe beginning of the year. Stay Laws. We see it stated tdat the highest Court in the Stale of Mississippi has declared the stay law passed by the Legislature ot that Slate to be unconstitutional. The Columbia J'hsrnix, in making the above announcement, says* "'flic same result is inevitable whenever the question shall be brought to n final test in the States which have, by similar enactments, sought to impuir the obligations of contracts and enable their citizens to repudiate their just debts. wv, me i niit'u unties Mipreme Court nil) decide against all these Uw? a* far as nonresident creditor* are concerned. What lolly is it, then, foi the legislative bodies ol Southern States to hitter away their time in the discussion of "bills to prevent the collection ot debts," when, after they agree upon a particular form, the U\" will itot be woith the pilfer it is written upon." , It is undetslood tVat the constitutionaM'y cf the stay law ol this Slate will be argued before llie Court ol Appe-iu Columbia, at tba setting in May next. Court Wack. For the foal time within atvord yearn, the old lu*hioucd and regular Court of Sessions i and Common l'leas has calivened iu our Village. This is gratifying, no doubt, to all good citi/ens ; lor aveu a partial restoration of the | civil law ia tar better than the condition ol dis j order and uncertainty through which wc have just passed. Tha stentorian veice of the ven. viable Crier, ?o familiar to every tne, as it j Bounded from llie portals of the Com t rcot'a, I reminded us of other days, when the civil law I w - the only rule and government known to our people, and under its protecting a*gu* they I realized the blessings of prosperity and hide ] pendence. The Court convened et the uaual hour on : Monday morning, his Monor Judge Clover, presiding with his accustomed digidty, courtesy and ability. The Judge is looking verj well, 1 end is apparently in much better health than when he wut here several years ago. The charge of his Honor to the Grand Jury ' was brief and pertinent. The law upon the subject of distilling liquors, aud their du'ies in respect to public property and the public oflieea were particularly adverted to. Up to Monday evening the Grand Jury had returned no bills, nor rendered their usual report. This will pro- j liably be done Tuesday morniag (to day) and rtiould there bo anything In their r..^nr? ??# jublic interest, it will be the subject of notice ; n our neit paper. The Petit Jurors were discharged oa Monday. ' Diere was but little busiaesa for them. No State saaca were t.ied, and but a few 6niimportant aae* on the Issue and Sum Pio Dockets. The lusiness was mainly continued, except where uits bad abated by the death of aunae of the tarties. The business upon the Enquiry dockit. was more generally die posed of, and judg> aenta obtained in moat of Ike ualitigaled asea. The Bolicitgg, C D. Melton, .Esq , is in ateidance ana exhibits his usual ability and la- ' lustry in the discharge of bis laborious duties. The Court will, without doubt, adjourn toaj (Tuesday.) Mosses from a Rolling Stone, j We are indebted to the Publishers, Messrs. [ W. B. Smith k Co , Raleigh, N. C., (or a copy of the above work, being a volume of charming j , poems by Mrs. Mary Bayard Clarke. It ia j 1 neatly bound in cloth, and ia a valuable conj tribution to Southern literature. We commend the Book and hope it will receive a patronage, ' Cdisrmensurate with its merit?. | Also to the same Publishers, for the March- i numh^r r?f tho Rov StAna 1 | ? ' - ? 7- j which should l>o in the hands of every Mason ( who wishes to become familiar w ith the princi* I pies and teaching'! of the Order u( which h e is a uioinber. J Restoration Terms to be Proposed. Representative McClung pioposes to introduce a joint resolution providing that i either of the States of Vi-ginta, Tennessee, [ fJorth Carolina, South Caroline, C^rgia, | Florida, A'ahaiua, Louisiana, Mississippi, i Arkansas or Tex.1l shall he entitled to representation in Congress and f> resume complete practical relations with the j United States Whenever the said State by ! its Legislature, or by a convention, shall formally adopt the following irrepealable fundamental conditions, namely : First. That all constitutional provisions, laws, statutes, acts, oidinauces, rules and regulations heretofore in lorce or held | valid in the said State whereby or where- I in any inequality of civil or political j i rights or immunities among the iuhabi | I tants of the said State is recognized or ] maintained by reason of or founded upon I distinctions or differences of color, race, or I noon a nravioua condition ?i?m? < ( - - , " V. | *iitv??ry or invuliin tafy servitude, be deI c'ared absolutely null ami void, thai it shall be forever unlawful to institute, j t make, ordain or establish in the said : ! Stal3 afiy euh constitutional provisiblic, ; I law, g'atute, act, ordnance, rule or re guiulion, or to enforce or to attempt to j enforce tlie satrie. Second. That no payment shall ever j 1 he demanded by the said State, or any ' part thereof, of the United States, nor be j made by llie said Slats, of any part I thereof, or by tbe United St a lis, fjr cron j account of any debt contracted or in: I enrred in aid of the rebellion against the ! United Stales; and that sai^ Slate shall faithfully and punctually contribute its share towards paying the debt of and j meeting all its pecuniary obligations to | ins K?jT?riiinani 01 ill* United states. I Third. That tin loHuain^ described | persona, having taken a Ending part in I ' th* la.a million, shall he fcftclddkd from I I the right of suffrage or of holding of office, I mutely : Whoever, as a citizen or officer, j member of the Legislature or convention ' of any Stale, has voted for, signed or ad j vocated '.lie passage of any ordinance of I secession ; whoever has sought or held { any ofii -e of the so-called Confederal* i government other than ministerial, or h* I low th* grad* of captain; whoever has voluntarily loaned or donated any money or property to the said pretended govenn i inent, or invested in it* bonds, whoever, while sii otlicer of the United Stales, has . ! aided, counseled or encouraged any seees ' J siou from or war against the United j States, or left the service of the United i Status to take part in the rebellion. Sec. 2. The prot'sions of tb* total resolution shall take effect as soon us either of said Slates, by its Legislature or by a convention, shall, by a solemn act or or ' din.tuce, declare the assent of the said | Stale to tiie fundamental conditions here' ' ir pr'es'cribad ; which conditions shall ha in the said act or ordinance declared fori ev?r irrepeaiable under any circumstances whatever. Mr. McClung proposes to refer the ' above to the committee on recccstruc 1 lion. How Immigration to thk Sooth in IVkvkntko.?The Radical press, English and Herman, team with fabricated letters 1 from the South detailing aiiociuea and outrages perpetrated upon Northern men and emigrants who have settled in the Southern Stales. The object of these tieiions is easily delected. Immigration at lh? North doea not accord wish the plant of the Radicals and must be pre- | vented by all meant. Soulharn white people must be made depended upon the necro for labor srwl if ruwaiki- r~- I rot*a. W* regret to Lav* toeoofeae that ill* effort* to tbwarl immigration have b*?ri but two tucceaaful. Th*r* ar* alto other agenciea beaid** the pr*?a at work | to accompbtb ili* tame object. Io the tt arch number of Dt Ilotpt lie I view, the editor, who haa juat completed I a tour through the cotton Utate*, eatn I male* the next coltor crop at not more than on* million fir* hundred thousand i bale*. 4 + 4 News Summary. The Camden Journal announce* the 1 death of the Hon. A. II. Ho\kin. \ | "S. Cooper"?do you remember hiufl | all ye that used to be under titty ??is in ' Richmond. (ieneral 1). IT Hill i? rrn'ritr In nul.Hali r paper called "The Land We Love." iin n a'.ional Intelligencer Stale* that > the public debt was reduced two millions of dollars in the month of February. Reports from various quarters rep'rei tent the Fenian excitement more than ordinarily intensfe. General Til'ton, of the Freedmen's Bureau in Georgia, has imprisoned several ' parties whe have been enticing negroes away from their employers. A Mr. Jacoby, who had recent'* erni j grated from Massachusetts to Savannah, ! was lined by the Bureau there $:)0 for having whipped severely three times a negro boy in his employ, in order to extort a confession of a theft. A petition ninety feet long, signed bv six thotisand five hundred citizens of Philadelphia, favoring Sunday cars run' ning, hat been laid before the Penntylva> nia Legislature. General Longstrcet has been elected ; President of tho Great Southern mid . Western L ft and AcJder.l insurance Company. The Cluvr'ottsville (Vh )Chronicle say*: I Tite wheat crop in tins section presents a most wretched appearance, and will be an utter failuie. Tiie Lynchburg New# says t.The wheat, crop in (Ins section is poor indeed, and but very little can be made, even under the moat favorable circumstances. The { most of (he field* we hava seen are en* | tirely bare, the gin n liavit g beer, frozen 1 out by the excessive cold weather, some weeks ago. The Chicago Republican lias a tele grain from Cincinnati!, staling that a pri va'.e despatch entirely reliable from Washington, received there elates that | Mr. S'anlon will toor. resign hie ofl]:e ae ' Secretary of War and that Geri. Steadman has acccepled h<a position. Mr. IltiodMa, of Lagrange, Texas, find- i in? himself, at the end of the w?r, by the lost of Ins slaves, $10,0U0 in dvbt, but | will) ample means it* par, conveyed all 1 In* property to trustees to secure his cred- j iters and giving the overplus to his wife, i and then blew his hrftins of I. The Nsw York Commercial A'h'erti- | ter a Washington correspondent says : ? The belief is general among the be?t in* formed members of the bar of the So. preine Court, that the trial of civilians by the military commissions will be pro- 1 nounced unconstiluliohai in the teal case ' now being argued. Bishop Lynch has issued a circular de- 1 nouncing the Fenian movement, snd one is published by the Custom* Department which specially instructs the tl^-erslo thoroughly search all the bairtraire ot tias stoger* coming into the Wo fine**, nml to drtaui all Anns, weapons and muni- . tiont of wai found. Hon. Jame* Jolw fcdh, 'ate Provisional Governor of Georgia, who is now .in Washington, a?\s tli* condition of affairs in that State ia very far frotr. lump as satisfactory at whan the civil government was fust restored. Ha speaks of the Freed men's Korean as an absolute need, sily, both for the Union men and the blacks, and that it is vary important that more troops be sent into the Stale at once. The Augusta '('omtitLtidnalisl says that two cilizers, hdward Coleman and Humphrey Kauieware, both of whom ' were intoxicated, had a difficulty at KJgefield C. II., a few data since. It appears that a soldier, who wss also intoxicated, interfered, end commenced fighting with Colemkn, 'Whom he shot in the back of the neck, whereupon Coleinan drew a pistol and fcliot and killed the soldier.? Coiemao is serieuslv hm ?ai d a.t- ! J V wouoded. The Supreme Court of LotiieiXna lie* rendered e decision id a euit of a depoaitor against ?acob Itarker, lit At Cnnfederate money depoeilvd with a Tinker created no contract ? Licit could be enforced by our Courts, that eucb e transaction erne contra bonus mores, the depoekor intending to give ovulation, a? currency, 1 to one of the menu by which the re | bellion wet to be aided and promoted.? i Die depoeitor therefore, could recover ! lotbiog, and be wee din mined with coeta. i Fudge Haley rendered the decision. Washington Humors. The Ridiiah insist (liHl (be \Vbit? House shall La painted Black. General Joe Johnson arrived here thi? Morning to testify befote the Reconstruct lion Committee. It ie said tb^t the special Treasury agents and eub agents in the South will soon p 11 be withdrawn and their operations brought to a termination. There ii a rumor that Mr Voorbees, of Indian*, who was ousted from bis seal in tba House a few days sines, will bs cared for by the President ai lbs fira( tilling opportunity. It is commonly slated among Republic cans that Genera! Giant is to bs the!/ candidate far the Presidency, but it is uoderslood that ne resists tbe importunity to oppose th< Piesident'e policy. One of the doorkeepers of the House of Representatives at Washington eras discharged oo Thursday, on account oi having expressed hie approval of Presii dent Johnson's reconstruction policy. , ' It has been rtnnoiinced by leading members of the Reconstruction Commit* tee that the Supreme Court will soon deliver an opinion declaring thai the test oilli is unconstitutional. It Is said that this announcement caused great consleri nation in the Radical ranks. The President d.en! ?- ^ III* pui' sage of the concurrent resolution by the two branches of Congress, as he looks upon aucli action as tantamount to an exclusion of most of the Southern meiu< hers. Other*, h.iwever, 'lo not think a*; hut regard the measure as of no practical effect whatever. The negro orator, Fred Douglass, oc? ctipied a prominent seat in the ladies' galleries to day during the delivery of Mr. Snninei's speech. Just in front of Fred sat three dames, who industriously phed their neeJles and as assiduously listened while Mr. Surtiiier read bit lengthy effort. ? Unless Congress, and jiarlicularly the Senate, makes greater headway with ihd burues* before it, the session, instead of * closing in S!sy, as was at onetime heped^ will extend into the dog dave. Un Sin?ans i* to aaoura an idj ourntrinni by NtofJuna, but will fiuil it ad ujt hill talk. * ?# A strong eff. ?rt I: baing made before lli?s proper authorities for tlia ra establishment of the Government gun shops and arsenal al Harper's Kerry. It is as;una te<l thai two millions of dollars or tlierei about* mil replace lha Government proparty at timt point destroyed during lha war, nod lha Shenandoab paopla ara anxious that the tome thou'.d be appro* prieled. *'* *. A report war mail* from tli* Reeon- , ^L. truction Commitlaa, embracing folumiut ? out letlimony of tlia wilntatea letlif) i?g?*^^ as to 111o pretlimfed dittos ally of lb* ni4* "** % oriiy of the people of the Soriih. Oenerale Thotnxa end Onarton a ?y they bare VI* c?i?e<l intelligence of a contpiracy to opt pose the (io?er.Mimnl, and encourage a foreign war, in the hope of joining the enerniAs of the country, in order to eecure Sotilhtt-u in dependence. It it reported tit At it ia terioutly under contemplation to abandon all auite againat ? tba Treatdry Agent* who bate behind ?>? disreputably in connection with their cotton dealing at tbe South. The reason of this is because of the tremendous talent of the diai.ooestj that baa been dieeovertd, and the u'.ter hopelessness of e?er being ab'e to aave even a ahred froto the gehernl wreck. * Tlia't). Sterdfts wit approached laat nglit by an acquaintance, who aaked bun if tit intended to tote for the admit* aiou of (be Tennassse tutiiibera , without hesitation he responded in tbe affirm*' live. ''Will you not," saya hie question* er, "by ao doing stultify jouraelM" Th wblcb ha replied?"Yea; but I shall Vvbte thus, Us t t lie country might it ink the happy relations beretbfore? ekiatlfg bah tweeu me and the lVepdant bad bnnn disturbed by recent aVeus." fnF inrnn A<*mm * ?. ...... un;? miuuiir rumor bwo currant of a compromise of confieti log tiewe between ilia President and lb# Republican majority of Congreaa, wbdre* by tba lattar will eaae tba offices u4 yield tba Tennessee point. Under ibis plan, ererytbiag ,fter tbe edmiaeiou of Tenneteae would be left ea it ia till Cod! great alia11 meat at tbe eeit regular eee? lion. Tba ermy would ratneio io lM Southern H'alee, martial lew would eoOLinne, end lie Freed men'e Bureet be idea. *