THE FREEMAN BXSBUAa, PA., TmvntDAX, : : : JJakcm 11, 1869. The Inaugural Address. Id another column will be found President Grant's Inaugural Address. It it brief and is not remarkable for either purity of style or originality of thought. Unlike fimilar addresses from Washington to Lincoln, it betrays up want of self-confidence in his abil ity to bear the heavy burden which has been imposed upon him, and in that respect is in bad taste. Gtn. Grant' professionu of re trenchment and reform are common to all tucb productions. Tudeed, an Inaugural Address without a declaration of rigid econ omy and vigorous retrenchment would be ike the play of Ilamlet with the part of Hamlet left out. Gen. Grant is no doubt incere in this regard, but we look upon Congress as so essentially and hopelessly cor rupt that, in order to carry out his honest purpose, he will have to resort to a very lib eral exercise of the veto power. That he will avail himself of this constitutional right, so much denounced by the radicals, ia not to be doubted, because ha brandishes the veto power in the very face of Congress. As to the manner of paying the public debt he is heart and hand with the bondholders, and therein differs materially from tha views of many of the prominent leaders of Lis own party, fur Senator .Morton and other radicals ia the Senate, and Gen. Butler aud others of his faith in the House, have peclared within the last two weeks thai to pay the debt in gold was no part of the contract. General Grant's theory or plan of paying the public debt is as novel as it is ridiculous. He i-eenis to think that nature has liberally applied us with the moans of doing so, and hat all that is necessary is to dig a sufficient quantity of gold and silver out of the bowels of the Rocky Mountains, transport it over the racific Rail Road to the Philadelphia mint, and the question is solved at once. The debt of no nation in the world was ever paid in this way, and General Grant will discover before his term of office expires that the publie debt of the United States cannot be liquidated by any such process. A care ful reading of any treatise on Political Econ omy will very speedily cure him of this de 1 jsion. We did not expect from General Grant an unqualified endorsement of the universal negro suffrage amendment. When he ac cepted the Chicago nomination he also gave his adhesion to the platform, which declared language not to be mistaken that the question of suffrage in the Northern States, at least, was to be left exclusively to their own control. It. is not in character with the honor of a gallant soldier thus to repudiate his own deliberate act. But in this respect Gen. Grant only follows in the footsteps of his'party, and both have kicked the platform from beneath them. While he expresses the "Aope" and "desire" that the right of safTrage may be conferred upon all the ne groes in the North, Gen. Grant has not one word to say in favor of removing the politi cal disabilities which stand between twenty tiro thousand intelligent white men in the South and the ballot-box. As the majority of the popular vote in his favor was made up entirely of the negro vote which he re ceived in the South, it is fair to conclude that Lis 1 hopo" and "desire" on this subject spring from a lively sense of gratitude for . favors received from tha "man and brother.' In his address Gen. Grant is painfully si lent on the subject of protection to American ijdustry. This is certainly a poor way of backing up his friends and ought to create a howl in the camp of the protectionists. But the most noteworthy feature in the whole aldress is. that from the beginning to the end of it he does not once make use of that ttereotyped but much abused word loyalty. Nor does he make the sligheat allusion to the "slaveholders' rebellion," that prolific and inexhaustible source of radical buncombe. There are cfluces not to be condoned by a loyal league association. We now Lave Gen. Grant's professions. Let us patiently wait for his practice. CilliM S CAB1XET. An unusual degree of curiosity existed in rcferenco to the Cabinet of Gcneial Grant, from the fact that he was resolved not to make it public until the names of its mem bers were sent to the Senate. The following is the list : Secretary of State Elihu B. Was-hburne, 111. Secretary of Wsr Maj Gen.Jno. M.Schofield. t: ,.r V Ailnli.h R Rur'e. Phila. Secretary of Treasury A. T. Stewart, N. 1 . Secretary oi Interior jacoo u. wi, vjuiu. Postmaster General J. A. J. Cresiwell, MJ. Attorney General Saasuel T. Hoar, Mass. The M saying that "the mountain was ra labor and brought forth a mouse," was never more fully verified than wheii the fcregoing names, excepting that of General Schofield. were sent over tie telegraph wires on last Friday. It surprised both friends and foes alike. It is unquestionably the weakest Cabinet that has been selected by any President rrnce the formation of the governmeat. The Radicals may affect to be atisfied with it, and Borne may even eulo gise it, but to the leader of the party it cannot but be deeply humiliating. It is not the entertainment to which they hoped to be invited, and cantot fail to produce weep ing and wailing where every thing was ex pected o be lovely. Heretofore it . has been- supposed- that a Secretary of State ought to possess the very highest order of inlellect. It has aecovding Jy been filled by our most able and distin guished statesmen. We need only mentioc Clay, Livingston-, Forsjth, Webster, Cal houn, Clayton, Everett, Marcy, Cass and Seward. When compared with such intel lectual giants Elihu B. Washburne assumes the dimensions of a mere dwarf. lie has acquired some notoriety in Congress as the ! Iglf constituted guardian of the treasury, 1 and for that he is entitled to credit. That he is a man of any decided ability is not even pretended. In Illinois he has occupied a respectable position as a stump orator. In Congress he has been perhaps its most windy and turbulent member. His selec tion betrays a sad dearth of first-class intel lect in the Radical party, or a lack of judg ment on the part of Gen. Grant, or perhaps both. Of A.T. Stewart, the new Secretary of the Treasury, nothing more can be said than that he is a wealthy merchant of New York, and has never been supposed to hare inheii ted the mac tie of Alexander Hamilton. His reputation is based simply upon his enor mous wealth. We admit that because he is rich, it does not follow that he is either fit or unfit for tho position. But from his antece dents we infer that he is not the right man in the right place, and we think it safe to predict that he will prove a stupendous failure. Adolph E. Borie, the Secretary of .the Navy, is from Philadelphia. lie is no doubt a respectable gentleman. But what Radi cal outside of the loj al league club in his own city ever heard of him as a prominent party man ? Borie is the tub thrown by Grant to the Pennsylvania radical whale. Such a termination to the Cabinet drama must be especially mortifying to Curtin and his man FriJav. Col. A. K. M'Clure. That all the acknowledged leaders of the Radical party in the State should have been ignored, and that one so utterly obscure in politics as Adolph E. Borie should be thrown to the surface, is a curiosity in Pennsylvania poli tics. It shows that professional politicians are not truswp caids with Grant. If a Cabi net so weak in the brain element can man age to keep both its head and Grant's above water for the next four years it will have accomplished a task for which it is not now regarded as competent. AMALGAMATION. We lire in a progressive age, but whether our progress is downward, or upward and onward, admits of grave and serious doubt. Three years ago the man who would have been raeh enough to even hint at the social equality of the white and black races in this country would have been excluded from all decent society. But now, so rapid has been our progress under the benignant sway of radicalism, the advocates of this infernal doctrine are not only tolerated in respectable circles, but they have even entrenched them selves in the pulpit. It is a wonder to us that the avenging wrath of Jehovah does not smite these clerical reformers in their impious attempts to change and set aside His wise and salutary decrees. Mrs. Child and Anna Dickinson occupy the foremost place in this new field of social reform, while Theodore Tilton, a leading radical, boldly endorses it in the New York Independent, of which he is editor. A short time ago he published a sermon on "Ameri ca's Past and Future," delivered by a man who disgraces his sacred office and who has a local habitation and a name somewhere as the Rev. Gilbert Haven. The following is an extract from this sermon, prefaced with Til ton's remarks endorsing it as "a fine spe cimen of the sort of 'political preaching' of which the people of this country stand in great need." Can any decent white man or woman read it without a feeling of the most unutterable loathing and disgust? The sermon nn "America's Past and Fu ture," by Rev. Gilbert Haven, which fills so large a pcrtion of our space to day, we very earnestly commend to the attention of our readers. It is a fine specimen of the Bort of "political preaching" ot which'tbe people of this country stand in great need. Mr. Haven is one of the most eloquent and powerful preachers in the Methodist Church ; and his fine powers and wide culture are all made tributary to that Christian Radicalism which is tho glory of the age and the ripest and best result of free institutions. The Reverend gentleman is speaking of the bright future of America under Grant, and among Us blessings he thinks is to be the inauguration of this greatest of all Unions, the vnion between the while and black races : But cquailty at tho polls is not the only work laid upon the coming government. There must be such a disposition of its pat rouage, such a steadfast expression of its convictions, such an employment of its influ ence, as will tend to the abolition of the whole mass of prejudice that stillJJefiles the national heart. I am aware that this evil cannot be utterly abolished by any enact ments. The leprosy lies deep within. It dwells in onr churches, in our souls, in our education, in society. It still makes us look at a face with repulsion which is of the very complexion of the mother of our Lord nay of the Lord himself. It still leads us to erect barriers between us and our kindred, and to make us and them talk of "our race" as if they and we had a different parentage, Savior and eternity. It must come to an end. It is coming to an and. This election is a great advance towards that end. If the Administration as faithfully adhere to its ralmg idea, and put men into office every where without regard to color and with re gard only to capacity, it will greatly prosper this reform. Let him make Frederick Doug lass a member of his Cabinet, and the nation will commend and imitate his courage. But under it, as well as through it, will the work go forward. Senators and representa tives will enter Congress of the condemned hue. They have already become Mayors, Secretaries of State, Lieutenant Governors ; they bold no small influence and office in the uplifted Sjuth Yet more : our feelings of aversion will change to feelings of regard. The com plexion at which we now profess to revolt we shall look upon- with pleasure. Vice is not the only thing that is at first hated and afterward embraced. Virtue is more fre quently subject to this experience. It is very rare that a real gift of God ia fallen in love with at first sight. How few behold in religion all "the charms with which she is divinely invested. How many turn with dis gust from her pleading, pleasing counte nance. How few are instinctively drawn to temperance, to study, to work. The world beholds in vice everything charming, in virtue everything repulsive. But acquaint ance changes this experience, and we cling to the good we at first disdained-. If ay, we usually are the move bad ia proportion as we were hostile. It is the law of our nature that we choosfl that which we say we will never hare. If yon hear a person declaring that he will never be a Methodist, be sure that he will yet be of the most earnest type of that religion. If he Bays, "I will be any thing sooner than a Congregationalist," you may mark him as foreordained to be a sober deacon of that orthodox church. When the young lady says, "I'll marry anybody but Mr. Simperton," she vtill soon be found cast ing her most languishing meshes around that jut despised youth. When pompous young Jones say S,"I hate the very looks and van. name of Miss Marigold," be you cer tain he will ere long say to her, "Your face is angelic, your name is sweeter than the lutes of paradise. I can only live in the light of your affection." So shall we treat our brethren of color. We shall "see Helen's beauty in the brow of Egypt." We t-hall say, "What a rich complexion is that brown skin." "It is Italian, Greek, Oriental, perfect. How far it excels our chalky hue." We already paint our houses after their color. Our girls crinkle their hair after the natural outlines of their sister's locks. Th is is one of God's modes of curing us of color blindness. We shall see, as Mrs. Kemble says, that there are qualities in the human skin superior to a pink aad white tint, and that in velvety softness, in fineness of fiber, in richness of tone this despised flesh sur passes our own. o o Already, too, our romancers and poets, the imaginative foreflytrs of the slower-footed fact, are putting this future into their fasci nating tales, and all the greedy crowd of novel readers are finding their freshest mor sels flavored with this celestial truth. The stage makes an octoroon a heroine, and wins thousands to the admiration of a color on the boards which they still falsely profess to detest in the parlor. Mrs. Child, in her "Romance of the Republic," gives a vivid portraiture of the wrongs and rights of this married life and love, in conflict with the curse of caste. Anna Dickinson waxes yet bolder, and, in her "What Answer?" shows how inevitable, how beautiful is this true affection, despite, nay, including this difference of color. And the hour is not far off when the Y,hite-7iued husband shall boast of Vie dusky beauty of his wife, and the Cau- cassian wife shall admire the sun kissed countenance of her husband as deeplg and as unconscious of the jnesent ruling abhorrence as is hit admiration of her lighter lint. Desdemona teas as deeply fascinated by Othello's visage, as was he by Desdemonas. Thai hour is not coining it already is. blot a few of Viese marriages which God has made, and wluse legal validity man, in a few instances, has rductantly acknowledged, are already filling homes with happiness, and both prophesying and leading Vie way to the future unity and blessedness of America. Amalgamation is Godrs word, declaring the oneness of man. and ordaining its universal recognition, ll'io art thou that fghtest against God f THE AHESDMOT. The negro amendment to the Constitu tion, having been kicked to and fro like a football between the Senate and House of Representatives, has at last assumed a defi nite form and shape. It is as follows : Be it resolved, Lc, Two-thirds of both Houses concurring, that the following amend ment to the Constitution of the United Suites be submitted to the legislatures of the several States, and when ratified by three fourths thereof, it shall be a part of said Constitution. Akt. 15. The right of the citizen? ef the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by ti e United States or by any State, on account of race, color, or previous condi tion of f ervitude. Si:c 2. The Congress shall hare power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation. Many of the radical Senators voted for it under protest, in order that it may be sub mitted to the Legislature now in session for ratification, and for the additional and weightier reason that their party would not have a two-third majority in the next House of Representatives. As a conspicuous in stance of violated faith, the passage of this amendment by Congress has no paralled in the political history of the country. The Chicago platform, in plain and unmistakable terms, pledged the Republican party not to interfere with the question of suffrage in the Northern States, and on that distinct prem ise it went into the canvass and elected its candidate for President. It now repudiates this prominent feature of its platform, and with shameless duplicity does the very thing which it had solemnly pledged itEelf not to do. After havicg obtained the support and confidence cf the people, and secured another lease of power, it deliberately betrays them. Some of the radical Legislatures in the ex treme Westeru Slates have ratified the amendment with indecent haste. The fact of the passage of the amendment by Con gress was sent by telegraph to the Legisla tures of Louisiana, Nevada and Kansas, and on that information they proceeded to ratify it. Their action in the premises is simply null and void, foi the reason that the law requires the Secretary of State to give to the different Legislatures official notice of the passage of the resolution. When that has bc:n done the jurisdiction of the Legislature over the question commences, but not before. What official notice had Nevada, Kansas or Loui siana cf the passage of the amendment? They had son at all, and consequently their action was premature and of no effect, as thty will hereafter be given to understand. We suppose it is safe to assume that the radical Legislature of this State is prepared to eat the dirt that is set before it. Judging from the past, it is vary evident that the majority of that body aie fully prepared to sound all the depths and shoals of political infamy. What do they care for plighted faith or violated pledges? Their rule of political action is that the end justifies the means. Are there not twelve thousand ne groes in this State ready to vote tho radical ticket when this amendment becomes part of the constitution ? If the present Legisla ture ratifies the amendment it will perpe trate a gross and unpardonable fraud upon the people. It was net elected ou any such issue, and to settle that question now would be a flagrant usurpation of.legislative power. When the amendment was before the House for the last time, on- the 20th of Feb ruary, Judge Woodward made an able speech against it, from which we make the following extract : "Now, sir, it k from considerations of ex pediency that J oppose negro suffrage. It ia the good of the negro as well as of the white man that prompts my opposition. It is my desire that they may lire together ia peaee and happiness, as always heretofore in Peanajl vama, that leads me to deprecate this amend ment. And especially bare we ia Pennsylva nia a right to complain when, in violation mt all precedent, of all constitutional law, ot your own party platform, and of the peace of our Commonwealth, you repeal our constitution without giving a a right to vote against your amendment. If such a highhanded wrong does not wake up the people of Pennsylvania to the revolutionary schemes of the republican party : if thev can be beguiled by fair speeches into the support of such a measure as this if they are ready to have the negro thrust into political partnership in contempt of their sol emnly recorded will, why then, sir, a sad and sickening degeneracy has come upon my native State, and, tor the'firat time in life, I shall blush to own myself her son. Africa never so demeaned herself. The bardy savages of the roouutain slopes in the interior of that conti nent never debased themselves to the level of the Bushmen and Hottentots of the Cape of Good Hope. No, no, sir, they could be torn from kindred and homes by the cruel slave trader, and borne away to distant lands to be slaves, but they never would, and never did, voluntarily surrender to an inferior tribe of tbeirownrace, much less to an inferior race. And iave we, proud Americans, so lost our ancestral traditions that we can no longer bo inspired even by African example t "We have seen in history the'proudJRoman refusing citizenship to the roost illustrious aliens : we have seen the Goth and Hun and Vandal trample Roman grandeur into dust ; we have glowed over the struggles between the Norman and the Saxon, the Cavalier and the Roundhead, the Briton and the Scot, all of them jealous of their nationalities and ready to abed their blood in defence of what they had inherited from their ancestors. But now, in this nineteenth century, we are to be held up as the first example in the world's history of a great people surrendering political trusts to one of the lowest and feeblest races of the world's population. The Aoglo-Saxon of American descent giving up the inheritance which has made hint great to the African ? Not to the African in the wild freedom of his native jun gles, but to the enfeebled, timid, ignorant de scendant of a race of slaves ! Andthese are to be made voters and law-givers, to be our judges and representatives. Is there any pro louuder depth of self-degradation, thanthis ? If there be 1 have not courage to explore it. Bates' History Once More, y' The Committee on Printing in the State Senate have made an investigation of the probable cost of publishing Bates' Military History. If this precaution had been exer cised by the Legislature at the outset, the project would not have met with any en couragement.and Bates would have remained in merited obscurity. The Committte report that if Bates concludes his work in four vol umes the entire cost wili amount to one hun dred and seventy thousand dollars, as follows: For compilation, twenty thousand dollars ; for printing, binding, etc., one hundred and forty thousand dollars ; and for expressage, ten thousand dollars. The Committee fur ther report that if it takes five volumes to complete the work, the total cost will amount to two hundred and seven thousand dollars. The Committee also say, as we understand the matter, that in as much as the Governor directed the woik to be done the Legislature is bound to comply with his order. But this cannot be so, because it is expressly stip ulated in the appropriation bill of Aprill 11, 1808, that the amount then appropriated "shall net be paid unless the proposed history of the Pennsylvania volunteers be completed within ne year from the date of the passage of this act." It is perfectly manifest from the very terms of the act that Bates, not having finished the Job as he was bound to do, has no claim whatever against the Slate for any further advances- This leak in the treasury must be stopped. The Legislature will surely not make another appropriation to this useless project, in view cf this startling report of the Committee. By stopping it now the State will save about one hundred and fifty thousand dollars, while the muse of history will not be seriously of fended. Let this huge swindle have a qui etus now and forever, and let the irrepressi ble Bates hang his historical harp upon the willows. Important Announcement. The tiro Lading Magazines cf the South Consolida ted. With the issue for April. 18G9. The Land We Lote and The New Eledic Maga zine will be united ; Geneaal D. Hill re maining an Editor and partner in the con solidated magazine, which will be published by the undersigned from their office, where all letters must be addressed after the 1st of March, 18C9. There will be no change in the character of The New Eclectie Magazine, except that to its present features will be added such characteristics of The Land We Love as have heretofore made that publication so acceptable to military readers. The obligations of The Land We Love to subscribers and advertisers will be assum ed by the undersigned. General Hill will continue to reside in Charlotte, N. C, where all personal letters and correspondence relative to tho military departmeut of the magazine should bo ad dressed. With the increased facilities thus secured, we feel confident of being able to make our magazine the most interesting published in this country. Lnder the new arrangement, the circula tion of the Magazine will be larger than the combined circulations of all the Magazines of the South ; it thus becomes a most valu able medium for advertisers. The terms of the Magazine will remain as heretofore, $4,00 ter annum in advance. We are offering very liberal premiums to all who will canvass for us. Address Turnbull & Murdoch, 51 Lex ington street, Baltimore. An Affecting Scene. Kissing a Wife while Dying of Hydrophobia. Mr. Eeker son, who died of hydrophobia at Saddle river, bad to be held by five or Bix men, and during his lucid intervals begged to kiss hw wife, who was very ill in another part of the house. Just before his last dteadful fit he pleaded so piteously to kiss her once more before he died, that, risking the consequences, they took her to his bed. The dying man carefully wiped the froth from his face, and compressing his teeth tightly to prevent any of the poisonoes sal iva exuding from his mouth, kissed the lips which he had so often pressed in Icve aud affection, and then, resolutely turning away, after bidding her adieu forever, relapsed ro- to a dreadful paroxysm and died. The man who kept the dog which bit Mr. Eek erson, after knowing that it had been bitten by another mad dog a week before Mr. ckersonrs death, gave him fifty dollars as compensation for injuries sustained, and persuaded Mr. Eekerson to sign a paper of release from further claims. The neighbors are very indignant, amd talk about clubbing together to carry on a suit against the own er of the dog on behalf of the widow and orphaas. The neighbors think that the very least Mr. Hopper can do is to pav ofTa mortgage of $700 resting on the Eekerson place, and thev threaten a law suit if he does not lift that mortgage. Trenton J.) True American, President Grant's Inaugural. Citizens of the Uniteu States : Your suf frage having elevaten to the office of Presi dent of tho United States, I have, in con formity wilh the Constitution of our coun try, takeu the tat'a of office prescribed therein. I have taken the oath without mental preservation, and with the determin ation to do. to the best of my ability, all that it requires of me. The responsibili ties of the position I feel, butaccept them without fear. The office has come to me unsought ; I. commence its duties untram meled. 1 bring to it a concientious desire and determination to fill it to the best of my ability, to the satisfaction of the people. On all the leading questions agitating the public mind I will always express my views to Congress, and urge them according to my judgment, and when I think it advisa ble, I will exercise the constitutional privi lege of interposing a veto to defeat measures which I compose. But all laws shall be faithfully executed, whether they meet my approval or not. I shall on all subjects have a policy to recommend, but none to enforce against the will of the people. Laws are to govern all alike those oppos ed to, as well as those who favor them I know no method to secure the repeal of bad or obnoxious laws so effective as their strin gent execution. The country having just emerged from a great rebellion, many questions will come before it for settlement in the rjext four years which preceding Administrations have never had to deal with. In meeting these it is desirable that they shonld be approach ed calmly, without predjudice, hate, or sec tional pride, remembering that the greatest good to the greatest uumber is the object to be obtained. This requires security of per son and property, and for religious and po litical opinion, in every part of our common country, without 'regard to priudice. and all Llaws to secure thf-se ends will receive my X he lit fiffnrt for enfurrpmpnt. A great debt has been contracted in se curing to us and our posterity the Union. The payment of this, principal and interest, as well as the return to a specie basis, as soon as it can be accomplished without ma terial detriment to the debtor class or the country at large, must he provided for. To drotect the national honor every dollar of Government indebtedness should be paid in gold, unless otherwise expressly stipulated in the contract. Let it be understood that no repudiator of the farthing of our public debt wili be trusted in public place, and it will go far towards strengthening a credit, which ought to be the best in the world, and will ultimately enable us to replace the debt with bonds bearing less interest than we now pay. To this would be added a faithful collec tion of the revenue; a strict accountability to the Treasury for every dollar collected, and the greatest practicable retrenchment in the expenditure in every department ef the government. When we compare the paying capaeity of the country now, with the ten States still in poverty from the ef fects of war (but soon to emerge, I trust, into greater prosperity than ever before), with its paying capacity twenty-five years ago, and calculate what it probably will be in twenty-five years hence, who can the feasibility of paying evtry dollar then with more ease than we now pny our useless lux uries ? Why, it lookt as though Providence had bestowed upo.i us a rstrong box, the precious metal locked up in the sterile mountains of the far West, which we are t now forging the key to unlock, to meet the very contingency that is now upon us. Ll timately. it may be neces.iry to increase the facilities to reach these riches, and it may be nectssary also that the General Government should give its aid to seenre this access, but that should only be when a dollar of obligation to pay secures precisely the same sort of dollar to use now, and not before. Whilst the qnestion of specie payment is in abeyance, the prudent business man is earcful about contracting debts payable in the distant future. The nation should fol low the same rule. A prostrate commerce is to be rebuilt and all industries encouraged. The young men of the country, those who from their age must be its rulers twenty five years hence, have a peculiar interest in maintaining the national honor. A mo ment's reflection as to what will be our commanding influence among the nations of the earth in their day, if they are only true to themselves, should inspire them with national pride. All divisions, geo graphical, political and religious, can join in this common sentiment. How the pub lic debt is to be paid, or specie payment re sumed, is not so important as that a plan should be adopted and adhered to. A uni ted determination to do is worth more than divided councils upon the method of doing. Legislation upon this subject may not be necessary now, nor even advisable, but it will be when the civil laws are more fully restored in all parts of the countrv. and trade resumes its wonted channels. It will oe my enaeaver ro execue toe laws in good faith, to collect the revenues assassed, and to have them properly accounted for and aconomically dispensed. I will, to the best of my ability, appoint to office those only who will carry out this design. In regard to foreign policy, I would deal with nations as equitablo law requires indi viduals to deal with each other, and I would protect the law-abidiDg citizen, whether of uative or foreign birth, wherever his rights are joepardized or the flag of our country floats. I would respect the rights of all na tions, demanding equal respect for our own. If others depart from this rule in their deal ings with us, we may be compelled to fol low their precedent. The proper treatment of the original oc cupaut of this land, the Indian, is one de servipg of careful study. I will favor any course towards them which tends to their civilization, Christianization and ultimate citizenship. The question of suffrage 13 one which is likely to agitate, the public so long as a portion of the citizens of the nation are ex cluded from its privileges in any State. It seems to me very desirable that this question should be settled now, and I enter tain the hope, and express the desire, that it may be by the ratification of the Fifteenth Article of the Amendment to the Constitu tion. In conclusion, I ask patient forbearance, one towards another, throughout the land, and a determined effort in the heart of every citizen to do his share towards cementing a happy Union, aud I ask the. prayers of the nation- to Almighty God in behalf of this consummation. There was a strange and startling ex hibition at Laeonia, N. II., a few Sundays ago. As the people were assembling for worship a well-dressed stranger coolly as cended some ladders which still remained upon the new Unitarian Ohnrch, mounted to the very top of the steeple, surveyed for a few moments the- landscape aud those who were watching him in terrified groups, turned a somersault, gazed about a few mo ments more, descended to the grouud and walked out of town, without uttering a word or manifesting any emotion but of calm etelidity. ne is thought to have been an escaped lunatic THE ClIHAKT. We present this morning, says the Hur risburg Fatrioi of the 8th inst., the following brief biographical shetcbes of the members of General Grant's cabinet. The lives of few of them present any points that are of much real importance to the public, but as they have been suddenly elevated into promi nence, any facts concerning them, the dates and places of birth, even, may not be with out interest : TUE SECBETABT OF STATE. Elihu B. Washburne was born in Liver more, Androscoggin county, Mtdne, Septem ber '23, 1816. Two of his brothers, Israel, Jr., and Cadwalader C, bave been members of Congress, and many consius and half cousins of the same name have taken nearly any public office they could get. )5!ibu served an apprenticeship at printing, studied law at Harvard University, and commenced practice In Galena, Illinois. He was elected by the Whigs totbeXXXIIId Congress and has been elected ever since. He was chair man of tne Committee on Commerce from the XXXVth to the XXXI Xth Congress. At the death of Thaddeus Stevens he became chairman of the Committee on Appropria tions. At the Senatorial election in Illinois in 1860 he was beaten by Yates. By favor ef his fellow-townsman, be now becomes tho chief member of the cabinet. 6ECEBTAHY OF THE TREASURY. Alexander T. Stewart was bore near Bel fast, Ireland, about the year 1802. He is of Scotch-Irish extraction. He is said to have taken his degree at Trinity College, Dublin, about the year 1822. In 1823 he landed in America, and commenced teach ing school. He afterwards inherited a con siderable sum of money, with which he em barked in trade. Ho has amassed an cnor ruous fortune in business, estimated by many to be an great as fifty millions. Iu 1847, when the Irish were suffering from famine, Mr. Stewart chartered a ship, and filling it with provisiohns, sent them as a gift to Ireland. In 18G2, he contributed 10,000 to the relief of the Lancashire op eratives. He was one of the earliest sup porters of Grant fr President, He is a rather tall slim man, with sharp, cold, ava ricious feature ; a countenance furrowed with age and care ; a voice harsh and un friendly in is mildest tones. He has found delight, in business alone, lone life. Ho uow propr-ses throughout a in his extreme ago, to amuse himself with politics. SECRETARY OF THE NAVY. Adolph E. Borie was bom in Philadel phia in 1809. When 16 years of age he graduated at the Pennsylvania University, and completed his education in Paris. Af ter traveling in Europe, he returned to Philadelphia aud became a member of the firm of M'Kean, Bori6 & Co., in the India and China trade. He amassed a large for tune in business. Mr. Borie was one of the founders of the political club known as the Union League, and is now Vice Presi dent of that association. It was at the Union Leage rooms in Philadelphia he made the acquaintance of General Grant. BLCBETARY OF THE INTERIOR. Ix Governor Jacob Dolson Cox, of Ohio, wa3 born in Montreal, Lower Canada, on the 27th of October, 182S. His parents were natives of the United States, his lather, who was a master builder in New York, having taken tho contract to build the Ca thedral of Xotre Dame in Montreal, tempo rarily residing there when his son was born. In 1846, he removed to Ohio, and graduat ed in 1852, at Obrlin College. He studied law aiid bK:in the practice in the town of Warren. In 1859, he was elected by the republicans to the Ohio Senate, and was soon recognized as one of the leaders of that body. He was appointed by Governor Dennison a Brigadier General of volunteers, and first served in the Kauawha Valley. He was afterwards at the battle of Autle tam. He served subsequently under Burn sides, Thomas and Scothild. He participa ted in the whole cf the Atlanta campaign, from Kenesaw to Lovejoy's. He command ed a division uoder Scofield in the splendid battle of Nashville, and afterwards took part in the movements in North Carolina at the close of the war. In 1865 he was elect ed Governor of Ohio, but having opposed ro negro suffrage in his inaugural, in 1866, he was not renominated. Since retiring from office he has practice! law in Cincin nati. He was requested by President Johnson, during the trouble with Stanton, to take the post of Secretary of War, but declined. TOST MASTER GENERAL. John A. J. Cresswell was born inElkton, Cecil county, Maryland, in 1828; was graduated at Dickinson College. Carlisle, Pa., in 1848 ; was admitted to the bar iu Maryland in 1850. At the outbread of the war he was bo violent a rebel as to raiee a company for the Confederacy. But Henry Winter Davis succeeded in converting him to the Union cause. He was elected to Congress in 1862, and afterward, in the death of Senator Hicks, was elected by the Maryland legislature to the Senate of the Unitee States to fill the va:ant term. In 1866 ho was a delegate to the convention cf southern Loyalists in Philadelphia, and drew up the platform and address cf that body. When Joha W. Forney resigned the Secre taryship of the Senate, Mr. Cresswell was urged to be a candidate, but declined. Since then he has been an active, but un successful radical politician of Maryland. ATTORNEY GENERAL. Samuel T. Hoar is a son of Samuel Hoar, of Massachuetts. who was expelled from Charleston, S. C, in December 1844. His mother was a daughter of Roger Sherman George F. Hoar, who is a member of the present Congress from Massachuestts, -is a brother of the new Attorney Geneneral. Judge S. T. Hoar, was born at Concord, Massachusetts in 1816. lie graduated at Harvard College in 1835. Immediately after leaving College, he engaged in teaching at Pittsburg, Pennsylvania, and for two or three years lived there and in other Western towns. He was admitted to the bar in 1840. After a few years, he was appointed a judge of the Court of Common Pleas. In April, 1859, he was appointed a Justice of the Supreme Court of Massachusetts, and has held the office until summoned by Pres-. ident Grant to take a seat in his Cabinet. The Society of the protection of DestN tute Roman Catholic Children of New York city, in its sixth annnai report, states that, during 1868, it has received and taken care of 1304 children, mostly boys, and has bow under its charge 867 children, of whom 702 are boys and 165 are girls. In 1858, the total expenses of the institution were $178,-50O-, ef which 1107.330 was defrayed by the city of New York, and $4,905 by the State of New York. The Society has ex pended $651,108 during the six years of its operations. The children are not merely clethed and fed, but are taught useful trades, sush as shoemaking, tailoring, bak ing and hoopskirt making, and are besides instructed in farming and gardening. A few days ago two men fired at sense wild clucks in a pond near Kufcstown, Berks county, when the ball from one of their puna glanced from the water and passed through the bead of a boy some four hun dred yards off, causing death in a few hours. At Bichmond. Va., 00 Siturday, the jury in the case of James Grant, indicted for the murder of H. Rives Pollard, return ed a verdict of not guilty. Mrs. Straddon, "of Downington, while removing the carpet in her kitchen upset the cooking-stove, spilling a pot of hot wa ter on her little child causing its death tie next day. The non. James G. Blaine, the new Speaker of the House of Representatives, has ben six years a member of Congress. lie was born in Washington county, in this State, in 1830. After graduating at Wash ington College, be emigrated to Maine, where he successively edited the Portland Advertiser and the Kennebeck Journal. Ha was elected to the State legislature, aod was twice Speaker of the House. He is au active politician, and hss borne a prominent part in the business and debates of Congress, IV O IV .4 ME. It is a common thing now-a-daya to heir persons complain about their physical disabili ties, which bring so much discomfort to bjtii mind and body that they find no gratification in anythiag around them. Oue has no satisfy ing rest at night, another n always peevish aui despondent, still another takes no delight ia society, and others again find no compear a tin 5 pleasures in labor, exercise, or even life. Jfa name is given in pathology for their aiiraenta, nevertheless, the causes are always present. They Bimply lack vital power, and Pref. Bi ker savs that "the best remedv for this data U MISHLE1VS HERB BITTERS," which La has ''used for several years, and with unifjrm puccess," as it tone the Stomach and Liver the seat of the complaint and reconstruct the shattered constitution. This vitalizing tonic speedily removes ti)9 cause of languor and dis content, imparts a calm force to the nervouj system, rouses the dormant organs of the body, and blesses the sufferer with perfect and lait ies heiltb. BALDNESS, GRAYNESS AND OTIIEr. imperfections of the Hair will be regard? i as inexcusable after a trial of Mrs. S. A. Allen's Improved new style) Hair Rs stober or Dressing, in one bottle ) Fjvery Druggist sel!s it. Price One Dollar. OUR RETT SEWING BIACHINE ! ! The saperier Bents ef the "Singer" Mi ehinea otw all lb era, either for TaoiHy r Manufacturing pnrpoe. are o well tatnoUahti and o generally admitted, th.it au tnntncr.irija of th ir relative excellences U no lacger csa idered ncetarv. OUR NEW FAMILY MACHINE. which haa been brOB jht to pr?enon regard i of time, labor, nr exp Me, U ov conHfn'Sr rrentd to tha pub.l as itcomTifirHMly tt.a Bvar Uicbixi 1 imrrcr Th raschine in question 1 f-IM TLX. COM PACT, DURABLE and BEAUTIFUL. It ia quiet, liht mntii'ir. urnl cim ior n- r RMlS A tiFtl A TA5.iT! CF WORE KfeTtr beiore attamptM upon a si;iie llach.i.e. r.;:i:j either Silk, Twist, Linen or Cotton Thrvj, and sewing with aqnal fc;litT the vary ft:.t and coarsest material!, an4 anything l.iw8i the two extremes, in the niot bent:fn! "aid ubstantial nnnner. Its a'ts.ihmenta for Hotii niinj, Briing, Ccnliaj. Tuckii.j. Qailt:r.f. Fellinc, Trimming, Bindiug, Jtc, art JTcitfl and Pxactical, ami have bn invented di.d adjuated especially for thla Machine. New deeigns of the Unique, Ueful b-1 Fop ular Folding Tops and Cabinet Cam, peciri-u to the Machine manufactured by tais Cui. ny, have been prepared for enclosing the net Machine. A (ainl Idea, however, cm tbet bi veyed through the iridium of a (decma-i!;) limited advertisement ; ar.d we therefore 017 1 every peron in qneet of a Hwinr Machine br all means to exax.ine and tent, if tbey cn pos sibly do so, all the leading rival Ma'chiue be fore making a purchae. A eelection can tLra be made understanding. Brnchee or ajrrn ciee for supply in jr th rSin2r" Machinee il be found In nearly every rttvtiid town throi;5 out the civilised world. whro Machines nil be cheerfully exhibited and any iuformafio promptly furaisbed. Or commaidcatier.s be addreir d to Tha Singer Manufacturing Company, BROAD IV A T. !f BIT YORK. Pbilabklpmia Orpicc. 11C6 CiEiwct SrRrT. i2T"C. T. ROBERTS, Agent for Ebenehurg and vicinity, keeps thete Machines cnuiiiiy for sale al his store on High street The pub lic are respectfully iarirad to call and e tbnn in operation. Instructions given free. M chineeeoldatcity pricea. NomtitiTCBiKit. AUo, Siuger'e Needles, Oil, Silk and Cetwa always en hand. aug 2D.-1 v. A NOBLE ARTICLE. The testimony of intelligent men and women, in fivor ot nr given thing, cannot be thrown aide, and ro parded as worthless. Da. Uoofland's Gisiiax Bittv.rt hive ra ceived the endorsement and cordial approba tion of the most eminent men in this hnd other communities. The human system very often needs a Tonic to strengthen it, and to aid ia the performance of its functions when it be comes debilitated. The German Bitters does this, and possesses the additional advantage 0 being non-intoxicating. For the cureofiiver complaint, dyspepsia, nervous debility, and all diseases of the nervous system, it is unequal et!. and is recommended by physicians of the high est standing. The wonderful Bale which thi article has, is of itself a sufficient guarantee of its surpassing excellence. This Bitters is XNTiaxtT frex peom all Alcoholic admixturk. HOOFLAND'S GERMAN" TONIC if combination of all the ingredients of the En ters, with pure Santa Ciua Rum. oranpe, ani-C &c, making a preparation of rare medical val ue. The Tonic is used for the same disease as the Bitters ; in cases where some Alcoholic Stimulus is necessary. Principal Office, C31 Arch 8t., Philad'a, Pa. Sold by Drupdsu and others everywhere. feb.25.-lni' THE UNDISFUTED SUPERIORITY cf the medicinal virtues of Robach's Blood Pill Stomach B-.tters and Blood Purifier over all other remedies, prepared to relieve Buffering humanity, is shown in many ways, but especial ly is it evinced in this important fact : That re sponsible druggists and merchants all over th country take active interest in introducing them to their best customers and frietds, while, ' the same time, it is qnite as much to their p' cuniary interest to recommend other medicine The reason for this ie obvious. They ar 'u positions to see the pre-eminent efficacy ot to pills in cases of Liver Complaint and all structions- of the bowels, and, ia fact, in all cases where cathartic medicine can be employed While the Bitter?, by their gen?e tonic, stinra lent and laxative properties, and as a safe a'"1 certain remedy in Dyspepsia, have won the tJ miration of every one who has given them trial, and the Blood Purifier is acknowledged to- be one of the best remdies to se j-ch oat disease, cure Scrotula, U;d Sores, Eruptioui and skin Diseases and to puri: v the blood ex tant; hence the people must' naturally g'va their voices in favor of remedies whioh effect much real good in the world.