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officers to their own interesting scene occurred in the U. S. Representatives on the 16th, while making an appropriation of thirty dollars to enable the Government to the two and three year volunteers was consideration. Dawes, of Mass., said it would be to have some friend give a information as to where this thirty was going. There were, he knew, regiments, composing all officers, their pay, and not in active service. Vallandigham of Ohio, said it was, to rumor, not to justify him in referring to rumors of this kind. It would not do for the friends of the Secretary of War to put on the garb of virtuous indignation after the mass of evidence produced by the Committee on Government Contracts. Mr. Dawes, of Mass., thought the proper authorities ought to furnish some information upon which Congress should act. Nobody could fall to see in the streets of Washington men who ought to be with their regiments, who were after the first drafts upon the Treasury.
t know that we are any better, in that regard, in the anti-slavery days. Mr. Wilson, of Massachusetts, he presumed the officer referred to before Yorktown was General W. F. Smith. He had himse authority. The resolution was then adopted. Negro Colonization. Mr. Sumner, of Massachusetts, urged the adoption of the measure at some length illustrating the trade and productions, thr here, or at least that there were here of his own thought and sympathy (the Senators from Massachusetts and New --Sumner and Hale — among them) who would succeed by their arts draw the conservatiificed, and was not opposed to employing the negroes against the rebels. Mr. Wilson, of Massachusetts, moved to amend Mr. Herman's amendment by adding, after members of Congress, "and members of Mr. Lehman, of Penn., resuming, considered that South Carolina was much in the Union as Massachusetts. Several members asked and obtained leave to have their remarks prepared and printed in