g ID tale Iwolwo Gay* 11,1411 Y. JIMUEST se, 11M17. WHAT THE PRESIDENT INTEND!. Not • few individuals rappOse that President Jonnsow, in the removal of Secretary STANTON, Gen. SHICIIIDAN, andother like movement; accomplieh• ed milk - prospect, is swayed mainly, if not sa° 3 _ .udtelro by opposition to Con. grass! They - conceive him to be a teat man, without method or contionitY, whoop peal= have been stirred up by contra:Scan, end-Who means to take the readiest end heartiest revenge ha can: !Such views are false and mislead ing, Doubtless the President has been soctiniy - theatiadi residence - of Coif; grails to his plans. But those plans of . Vintage the resistance of Congress, ! and made that resistance nemoutaty. Withthe termination of the Rebellion President JONSSON easily reierted to the ! politinlideas in which he waneducated.,l Maxie ideas were- not • only democratic, ! but southern. Personal association ind " pollttal affiliation helped him on In this naval, march. After he had entered up - coi it, with a And determination to miketa effectual, the impedimeomput in his way by, Congress chafed his natural inuaidity, caning him to indulge in outtarin'of rage and disappointment, which only distracted from his dignity and diminished his power to consom me his projects. This renewed accep ts , late in life and under clam of embarrassment and difticulty, of tionery ideas, rejected uport.full consideration in the maturity of strength and knoWledge, is by no means'uncom - mon. Inn &awns, whose philoso phy led hini to reject the aaologic no tion and observances in which ho was educated, when called to confront .the Unknown, went back to the simple fain his mother taught him,, and mended a .conic to - Eacmarnia. Instances illus trating the same habit, in connection withuery calculable system, religions or civic, are profanely scattered up and down through history._ - Preadent Tema= itappronehing tbe end at hliofficial term: Ilia ancesasor will be chosen next year.. The arrange. manta preliminary to that end will soon ! ' b e entered upon by both political parties. . ham evidently - resolved that the fell weight and influence of bin administra tion shall be given to the democrats.-To this end it is necessary to hinder the me. - mu of Reconstruction, and to expel Srom•hts Cabinet, and, as far as practi cable,- from ether places of authority untla the , government, 'all incumbents who are identified with the Republican erintasselon, or who rest under even re mote suzpicion of prefering its macros to that of its antagonist. Genera SZKRIDAN had so deported himself as to become, in a mania sense, an embodiment of the Congressional scheme of Reconstruction; that Ls, from „ludgutemt and sympathy, he construed • and enforced the Military Geiernmente Acta in the spirit in which they were framed. As those Acts were passederst against the President'srecommendation, and afterwards over his vetoes, the ener . 6twith which the General gave them exemplification in his District, was re garded by that functionary ass construe. tin personal affront. He has, indeed, referred to an expression of Snirionates, in a telegraphic note to GRANT, inwhicb the /knotty° was spoken 'of in 'kilns not remirkable for suavity, as the occa sion of his displeasure But that note wu private .and - unofficial, - ud up to this boar has not taken authentic form. Besides; 'the cc/tatty knows the President; was out of , patience with finiumnin long Mace that • note- Was written, , and was hunting for a pretext to get rid of hint. The appearance of the note was the opportunity, and the President his used it. Ha would have maditie'nuicial all the if mit note and sole of like import had ever been written. • gicrekairPTAmvir.lrak-Ideo, IR thi Praddeariiiiiy. Hisdiaplacemetit was needful to giving effect to the plans that bad been maimed. .We are sot admit. in of MC' STANTON. VOW' he =to , pilned his foothold in the Cabinet alter tho passage of the Office Tenure Act, we know and approve; how he kept it before we also -knew, but do not anontead. When be held by courtesy of the Prat• dint he made oronceadon of principle when we thought It would have been more manly In him to have thrown up and Zona into alnico life. His Mende said hi wisisettraideryligh pedosa con: - sideratiens; but as we .conid not take that eise, we ware compelled to dissent from- dist; "serpents.- But, . this is" plain, that in the progress of events Mr. STANTON nine teireprisent -la the War Department obedience to the laws, and in that position his removal was an insult to the loyalty of the na. It is now said that Mr. &NASD has fallen under the diepleanre of the Press-', dent, aid, in accombinee with his own ' sense of prnpriety, will soon tender his resignation of the office of Secretary of Stan Mr. Soweto) ha extraordinary ,aliflltka and culture. leo American statesman, unless Mr. AIRLANDT3 HAM zuroiforalshe? the I exception, has our. pealed him in scope of understandhig, in 'dexterity, in the development of Vaughts, And Intact In the management of =RADA Affairs. As an inculcator of ideas, that ta, lathe function of a teacher, • not one of our public men has 'proved las equal. When the conflicts of the present Gm shall have passed away, this, we Mak, is the teak he will take is history. But Hr. SIMARD is so con. Mated by nature that be mink Into at ' pinatas when his most cherished prin ciples were to recelye their Medication. lacking37s Is _ In Ploralcal hardihood or Karig& , - Whoa the hour of trial came, be quailed, and passed under a cloud, from which he will emerge nevermore. Re new beings to the past, and it is of MU* consequence to the nation what disposition is made of him. For a long space he ern the evil genius of the Cab but,-and now he is abont to be east *drift tidally because the few who re main Of his old Republican adherents will net follow him or the'Preadent into the Democratic rank; • ' Mr. Ittraux. never wu of special moans. A fluent and pleasant talker, ! plausible but not strong, ornate rather than anarbming, companionable in per . Sena relations, and complying when an advantage is to be vaned by stooping, be deserted the Reptblican party and went over to' the Administration when tt arse of importance for It to gain, re • cralig from that side and few were offer. - log. His ductility gained him a place la the Cabinet. The grand Conserva tive party shot rap lan day, sad denelved many, Hr. Restout. among the number. • Bat, unfortunately for Me, like.Tooan's gaud, - the Coaservatlve party withered over night: Row he wants to work . back into his old positon. Be thinks it will help his CIAO to , roam about, with his head ender his arm, to testimony of' ' Martyrdom. But martyrs have grown Male. There is no dab enchantment In them as there wu of yore, e.1y.". 1 . 1 1y in martyrs of this pattern. It nay he an tnterating problem to Mr. Bacroaa, *bat shall become of Mi, but nobody woad grieve wore he buried politically My fathom" deep, The Democrats, with the countenance the pasident, and the aid of Govern ment patronage, obtained through the 00111dnneli of the heads el the Been- Departments, mean to make a de. ariodood stud In the next Presidential ostevasi; They fancy a sort of omnipo tence nemesia purc,ziwi,r wbaii w'aldad dertM is if : lOC Wilk Itee stamiti 1113 71 .1 0 0 °Iete °me SOMeinterie • 'mem Jinn. "agd toes ' *cis* ailing aid !soil, pi ttkiaot Were dear at half that price. The ut most that patronage can do has been diinemany times; but it never has availed to. stay, much less turn back, the matured will of the people. It hasbeen the death of many a poor dog; never of a vital principle, that earnest men sought to en graft 'upon the Government 4: But this combination, and ther,rigor with which it is pushq; ought to Con vince the Republican's that no holiday parade is before theta If Intend to WOO the teeters styling out of. the war, and especially to reConstruct the talon, on the basis of justice, and with proper reference to the rights and interests of all the people, so that concord may be maintained for ages to come, they will take their measures wisely arid without delay, and then act with decision. :Theltrif Vbltit for them to determine is, what they will dowith the President That he does riot mean to execute the *ws, or have theni executed by his sub ordinates if he can restrain them, is su perabundantly palpable. The fact that Congress 'hhs been impelled, not by a spirit of faction, but by a calm and in— telligent sense of what is demanded by the public welfare, to press its authority to the utmdstilmit of the Constitation, and even to venture on debatable ground, in order to countervail the machinations of the President, affords conclusive evi dence that it has been false to its own convictions in not removing him from Office. When a man cannot be trusted in °facial positien, the sooner he Is dis: placed* the better. What would be thought of a bank, a railway or manu facturing company, which should con tinue In office a notoriously dishOnest agent, attempting to hedge him about with supervisory arrangements of an of knsr so nature and questionable validity? In like manner, the extreme measures that Congress has adopted to keep the• I President from febstrating the Will of the nation, and within the line of his duty are proofs that the Houses have seen what they ought to do, but have been doticient in resolution to perform it. The next point is to select a candidate for Presidentisho'has been tkoroughly tried In tempest u 'as is calm—in On Rebellion as well u futile dtßusslons preceded" it—end' had been found Wanting In no essential attribute. The Conservative mate that caused Mr. Rat tan to be set aside in 1864, and secured the nomination of Mr. Jourrson is his stead, are as busy now as they were then ha malevolent engineering. They want either a manwho is Imown to be against Congress and the people, or one who holds so ambiguous a position that the country does not know where he stands, and may with equal assurance be claim ed on both sides. The country is not In the humor to take each a man. If itwas its condition would be truly deplorable. linder a representative government it is I of the highest necessity that candidates for civil honors menial/Alit opinions on public questions, and particularly such as are of gravity, and that those opinions should be known of all men. Row else can the fundamental idea of representa tion be realized? When freemen reach the -point that they are ready to' bestow their, proxies lathe government upon any man without definite assurances 1111 to the manner in winch he will employ thhee they are fast verging to the point *here they will be ready to take the yoke of despotism upon their necks, be causefitted for nothing better. Another and final point to be attended to, is to take care that the elections about to be held do not give the Presi dent and the Democrats encouragement. For Instance, it would not only be shame ful for the Republicans to allow the Democrats to carry. Pennsylvania the coming October, but it would be highly damaging. Such a result would be Used as . solld proof of re action.among the people against .the course of their Representatives in Con gress, and in favor of the President. We 10 not anticipate a catastrophe of that * sort. But a knowledge of the fact that it.ia earnestly desired and laboriously straggled for ought . to inspire every genuine Republican with, a determirui ;ion, by, immediate and 'rigorous efforts 'to make anurance doubly Bare. I=S =1 • ...Hen diiido lairs into different elat.s. e , They .ay that there is' a law' which re lates to the flatly to, the body, and a law which relates to the mind. But the body is not more natural than the mind. The mind Is natural, and the law of the in tellect is a natural law. The moral na ture is natural, and the law of the moral feelings,-is a 'natural law. .That law *hien pamanizei you with 'your fellow man lea natural law. Is that a natural law which determines the fact that *eights shall gravitate to the earth? Is that a natural law which govern the of digestion?. Is that a natural process controls the various functions of the bet/ And is that not a natural law which ,determines men's thoughts and motives, and the results which are wrouglitoneby one and another class of faculties in life? There is no more mit' ailerons tendency possible than to bring up a vocation of, men with the 'mores sioh that • moral laws wait with their penalties till after men die and the judg meld day come& • I repeat, that all natu ral laws are moral laws. YOtleln against God when you sin against your foot;you sin. against God when you sin against your hand; you sin against God when you sin against your brain, or any pact of yourself, as • really—though perhaps not as seriously, not as helnettisly—as when you sin against- your neighbor, or against the whole of society and its in terest,. • When you violate a natural law, you violate a-moral law that is wrapped up In it. There la no such dis tinction of names in the mind of God. They may be convenient in our weak. ness for describing different classes; but in their interior and substantial nature, all natant laws are moral laws, and all moral laws are natural law& Boma 'facts. about crime in England and Wales hare just been publithed in the Blue Book of Judicial statistics for 1806. Compared wilh.lhe previous year, the serious offenses show a decrease, while, probably on account of more fre quent application of summary Jurisdic tion, the minor offenses dtspored of by magistrates show an increase. We learn that we have 23,728 policemen, who cost ns 41,827,105; being 478 constables and E 78,647 more than the year before. The criminal clams "at large" are let down at 113,566, butof these 83.101 are of the tramp and 'vagrant fraternity. Those not at large aro 16,708 in local prisons, 7,0181 n convicterdabliahments, and 3,635 in reformatories. In England and Wales there are 20,249 houses of bad character. • Dorton the year there were 50,549 in dictable offenses, in respect of which 27,- 100 persona were apprehended and com milted. The murders numberedl3l, be ing four less than the total of 1405. The attempts to murder wero 45, and there were 679casei of shooting, stabbing, dm.; 250 cases of manslangt ter, 8 of attempts to, procure miscarriage, 211 of conceal ment, of birth, 155 of unnatural offenses, 257 of rape, 022 of assaults with • intent, 4-c.,.2.72 of assaults and bodily harm, 207 of tommOn assault, and 104 of assaults on "peace otEccra" There were 481,770 persons proceeded apinit summarily, and of. these more than onerfotirth were. discharged. • A. =IOUS PETITION biz been present ed to the Assembly at Melbourne, Aus tralia, in reference to the Education bill. It was from a number of Chinese, and was written in Chinese 'characters, ac companied by en English translation. It was addressed "to the honorable and universally respected gentlemen in Par liament assembled, deliberating on the honorable adatra or state in obedience to the dictates of heavenly reason, and for the furtherance-of the well-being of the' people." It then elated that the "pal• toners hed heard that a 'proposal Lad been submitted for establishing among the Chinese schools for instructing them in riddr own and in English letters. They fell that the proposal indicated a bentrient heart and 6 philanthropic purpose; and, approaching the pretence of Parliament with "prolound prostra tion," they. Loped that it would give ef fect to this Wadable protect, "teeing that it is One that will help to show na igno rant. people, that we tie now to reject the evil and prefer the good." • —A negro man In Maury county, Ten nesseeparbase melon , pant' had Often . been inveded,'.ldred 'another magi° to widish the patch at night, girlng him a gun and orderinghlui to llre. on .see Log any one In the vkinlty, -The ampriotor =tandem' that be would walk around that night snd see Ithialunttuol ,was at, tottUtgridaty. , Tht.impl!i Gel Hainlltair on Marriage—Advice to Girls. I have seen girls—respectable, well tshicated daughters of (thristisn fami lies, of families who think they believe that man's chief end is to glorify God and enjoy Ilint forever, who profess to forsithe the canaltw of this world, and consecrate themselves to the Lord, who are yet trained to think and talk of mar riage ln a matter utterly frivolous.. Al lusions to and conversations on the stab lest. UrO of such a nature that they, can not remain unmarried without shame. They are taught, not In direct terms, at so much a leaven, like musio or German, r but indlrectly,.and with n thoroughness which nonan.sst ern equal, that if a wo man Is not married It la because she Is I not attractive; that to buunattraCtive to men is the most dismal and dreadful liadefortimm And that fir ntrunlMMTled woman, earth beano honor and no haps pities* but only toleration or tuarititigte. led conteinpt. - What in the burden of the song, that is sung to girls and. WOCLUdd. Are they counselled to be active, self-helping, self reliant, alert, tingeniuus energetic, ag gressiv,e? Are they braced and toned up to solve for themselves the problems of life; to' eet Its ills undaunted and its happiness unbowllderedf Go to!' Such thing was never heard of. It Is wo man's righted It la strong minded! It Is discontent Teithiourirpherel It is Mao culinol Milton and St.. Paul to the rescued `•For contemplation to.. and ralor Nrm.