liu.7- .tositerg. Wednenday, July VI, 1865 THE LINCOLN CABINET. Of the itiginal Lincoln cabinet but two rem nine& at the tithe of his death, and the : third incumbent of his selection had charge of two of tho cabinet portfolios. Mr. Punerqn was the first to retire from the War Department, and was succeeded liy * Mr. Stanton, who still remains. Mr. Smith followed by:resig,ning the Interior Deprtment to accept the office of United States Judge, and was succeeded by Mr. Usher, who in time gave way to Mr. Har lin, the present incumbent. Mr. Chase ' . resigned the Secretaryship of the Treas ury, and Mr. Fessenden succeeded him, who in turn Was succeeded by Mr McCul loch. Mr Blair vacated the Post office Department and Gov. Demison took his place and still remains. Mr. Bates re signed and Mr. Speed succeeded him and still administers the Law Department of 'the government: All these changes were made by Mr. Lincoln during his first term, excepting the selection of 3lr. Harlan to the Interior and Mr. McCulloch to the Treasury ; 'and President Johnson has re tained the Lincoln cabinet intact, even to installing Mr. Harlan who had been ap pointed, by Mr. Lincoln and confirmed but had not entered upon the duties at the time of President Johnson'saccession. —During Mr. Lincoln's life there were few reasons given to the public in any 4111- thentic ' shape for the various changes — made by the President in his constitution- al advisers. There - were newspaper par aga pbs in abundance explaining the with- drawal of cabinet officers to their credit or discredit; but none ventured into an authorized exposition of the'ruses which led to the frequent disruptiqn of the cab inet. • Since the death of the President, however; we find the secrets'W the inner workings of the administration leaking out in various shapes. Some are credita- ble and some discreditable. Some true some shaded with truth, and some with out even the shadow of truth. It seems to be deemed safe to invade the recesses of the political scenes in the White House, since no process can enforce the testimony of the departed. We seethe secret of Mr. Blair's withdrawal leak out in his at- tack Upon Secretaries Seward and Stanton in his HagerStoWn speech of last week. He seems to'have simply sought an occa sion to make a .bitter assault upon two cabinet officers who have survived him in official position, and the world learns that he left because he and they could not stay together, and they were mightier with the President and country than he. Were Mr. Lincoln alive, the literature of the nation would bare been without Mr. Blair's Hagerstown speech, and lircamil lian might have enjoyed his Precarious throne without the trumpet blast of evil from the ex-Post Master General. The truth is he retired because the Nation . aJ ) Convention. the Republicans of Congress, the Union men generally and Seward, - Stanton and Chase in particular wanted him out, and finally Mr. Lincoln notified him that "that time has Come." and lie retired. Mr. Chase withdrew from the .cabinet with the cordial consent of the Pres ident. He had great. confidence in. Mr. Chase's financial ability, and that confi dence was unshaken when he gladly Made the change. Mr Lincoln had his share of the infirmities which variegate mankind. and during the year preceding the Bal- timore Convention of 1664. his chief ani- bition, after his conceded singleness ,of purpose in desiring the Safety of the Re public. mas to be re-elected to thei Presi dency. The writer,hereof has freOently f heard him discuss the succession ' ith his characteristic frankness and with . n earn estness 'Unusual in , Mr. Lincoln t uching, his own interests. He was deeply grieved' at Secretary Chase for 'months before his withdrawal from' the Treasury Depart ment, and the breach, widened until a new cabinet officer became a necessity. They differed as to the policy of the gov ernment, although not materially as to the end in view; and Mr. Chase persisted in pressing his claims for the Presidency even after his own State had declared, through its legislature„ for Mr. Lincoln. Phis weakness he did not excusejn a cab inet officer, and it did not take a serious financial pressure from some Gotham ti- minders to set Mr. Cha s e as id e . Lik e Blair, Cameron and Smith he resigned under compulsion—a chalice the proyer- Uial ldndness of Mr. Lincoln would give to any erring brother. Mr. Lincoln hav ing been so triumphantly vindicated by bis.re-election, and the fitness of his am bition being confessed by even Mr. Chase himself, he ditt an eminently proper and generous act by giving Mt. Chao , the Chief JusticcAip. If he had had any other worthy]eonmietitor for the npwina tion, he would have done likewise with all of them. . , Mr.Fessentlen retired from the Treasury because of his re-election to the Senate, and Mr. retalloch was selected solely on 'financial grounds—the finances of the na tion then needing more care than its poli tics, , Mr. Smith retired because of grow ing dissatisfaction with him and his dispo sition of patronage, in Congress and in the West, and his successor, Mr. Usher, was wrecked on the same fOck. f Secretary Harlan was finally installed because both Congress and contractors would respect and fear him. Mr. Bates. like Mr. Fes sender', retired finm choice. He is old, has outlived his Presidential ambition, and seeks private life full of years and unspotted honors, because lie loves it. Gen. Cameron withdrew from the War Department because like Blair, Chase, Smith and Usher, he was politely request ed to do so. He was appointed, with Bates, Chase and Seward, because he had aspired to the Chicago' nomination and wial a competitor of Mn. Lincoln for that h k r ,4l. So little did Mr. Lincoln know of public who were prominent merely _loa ;:politicians rather than. as statesmen, Ant he did not know, two months after - -..- if - fiit election, that Mr. Cameron had a ihm ler in Congress from 1846 to ;43ilitt, Lincoln was a liepreBel2- tative. He knew but little of public men, save those who worads heart, or judgment by the eminence of their Altaiiiments iii the 'nation4 councils. Ile, was seldom out of Illinois, and was without national time 'until his memorable contest with Douglas in 1858. He appointed Mr. Cam eron, 'therefore, because Pennsylvanirhad presented him for the Presidency, assum ing that so great a State would award, its highest honors to its most worthy citizen The statement of the Chicago Republican. ,that Mrl . Cameron voluntarily - Withdrew from the 'Cabinet because he' would not consent to remain longer -with Gen. Mc- Clellan at the head of the army, is purely gratuitous. and we hazard little in the as sertion that lie never made the statement or authorized its publication. That Gen. M'Clellan and Mr. Catueton differed at times about appointments we do not doubt; butlis portfolio was not surrendered for that reason. _He withdrew simply because resistance to his administration had cul minated in so imperious a demand upon, the President from Cotigress, the Mouied men of the cities, and the country gener ally, that it had to be obeyed: The lead ing Icie - w York financiers demanded his remqal or shattered government credit as the penalty for denying it, and a Re publican Congress became decided in its hostility to his continuance in office,—so ' much so that that even after his retire ment it formally censured him by resolu tion formal-administration ; 4d be was ignorant of his own resignation until Sec retnry Chase called upon him with a let ter from Mr. Lincoln, in which he was in formed that he was no longer Secretary 'of War, hut Minister to Russia. Of his successor be had no knowledge until qe nomination of Mr : _Stantou was sent to the Senate, together4itit his own as foreign Minister; and his letter of resignation, afterwards published, to which the letter of President Lincoln seemed to be a reply, was written some days after . Mr. Lincoln's letter had been delivered, and Mr. Came ron had retired from-the eabi t. The arrangement of the corresPont ence was an after-thought, and one of Lincoln's many balms to the wounds he w, s so often compelled reluctantly to indict. —Mr. Sh - iith is dead and cannot partici pate in the manufacture of history to pre serve his fame. Chase is Chief Justice. and deems Ihimself vindicated. Bates needs none anil feels sot but Usher will probably soon join Cameron and Blair in explaining how the country - happened to suffer the misfortune of losing' a good cabinet officer. INSCRANcE. Insurance-is a thoioughly mastered sci ence. It is reduced to a mathematical certainty how many buildings will be burned in a given number of years: at what age sound men and women. will die; what number of travelers will be killed and maimed out of every thousand, and how many days, weeks and months hear ty people must devote to sickness or cur ing broken limbs or bruises from accidents. True. they cannot calculate just when any particular individual will die, or take sick, or 'suffer n fracture of the leg, or when any particular house .or barn will take fire but it is ascertained-to a reasonable cer tainty the average life of healthy men and women : the average number of accidents inflicted upon a thousand travelers, and the average per ventage of property de stroyed by fire. Years of patient toil have been devoted to research on these points, and the result is that any soundly established and judiciously managed In surance company cannot but make money unless it fails in securing adequate pat ronage, or meets with some most uncom mon ruistOrturre before it has attained a good fonting. While the great science of Insurance has been thoroughly mastered by men who have devoted their energies to the establishmgt of profitable Insurance com panies., the-z - visdom, indeed the necessity of insurance is very far from being prop erly appreciated by the people generally. Kest persons have learned that when they have erected good houses, barns and pla ces of business, it is but-the part of wis dom to protect themselves from total loss' by insuring them in one or more compa uies: but beyond that the question of in surance is as yet in its infancy. The time is past when men are entitled to sympa : - thy who suffer serious loss by, fire becau they have. from parsimony or neglect, tidied to effect insurances*: and the prin ciple is a correct one. TherA is no excuse whatever for the neglect to insure.prop erty when it can be done without fear of swindling almost at their doors. Anyone who can afford to build can well allbrd to insure. and those who can barely affOrd to build, cannot afford not to insure, for the reason that in case of loss by fire, they cannot replace that which the, have lost, while if insured, they can rebuild and none feel the loss materially. - But insurance is steadily ramifying into every channel that opens the way to ail: ford protection against accident or the loss of the source of liyhig by death. Each year lieu insnradee is widening its sphere of usefulness until it is now very generally adopted by judicious business men. One ' half of the active men in Chambersburg who have families have their lives insured. We know of two of our citizens who have each au insurance of thirty thousand dol lars on his life, and there are very - many who have ten, five and as low as one thou sand to pifitect, their families from want in ease ofttheir death. It is regarded by well inftnined business men as the best investment that can be made. We have well established companies—such as the Aiherican, the Penn, and the Girard, each of which have agents here,—which have stood till the. financial convulsions of the last twenty years without impairing their credit, and it is a well ascertained fact, that unless their assets are stolen, they must not only remain solvent but increase in wealthfor an indefinite period. Insu rances eau be taken in every conceivable way. Yon can insure your own or any other's life—can insure in favor of your own estate or in favor of your wife, child. creditor or any one die ; and you can pay the whole in ten years; pay semi-annual ly, or talk' a -non-i7rfoiture policy.. which ebe Stanklin itqausiturp, eliambasbutg; Pct. will iemain good forany proportion of the policy that ispaidfofeven if the payments _are discontinued. By life insurance every family .can 13e made secure against want. Two-thirds of the families in every com munity depend wholly or measurably upon the eftbrts of the head of the family for support, and suffer either absolute want or grievous curtailmen t Of the comforts of life when the avenging angel: strikes at the father and Jiusband. We know of hun dreds of widows and orphans who have experienced sad changes in life because of the failure of their natural protector to re sort to life insurance ; and we Know of a few whose sole dependence now is,upon the income derived from . the money re ceived on a lifeinsurance policy. There are few industrious and thrifty men who cannot afford to Otapart a portion of their income to provide a certain revenue for their families in case of death ; and we com Mend the subject to every careful and affectionate parent and husband. Accidental policies are also issued now .by responsible companies, and they are worthy of the attention of business men, particularly those whose families depend upon their daily labor for support. Trav elers can, for an additional ten cents paid when pkrchasing a rail-road ticket, get an insurance for three thousand dollars, which will be valid for twelve honor. If death ensues within that time by acci- - dent, the sum is paid in full, or if by any casualty the person insured is prevented • from attending to his usual business, he is paid fifteen dollars per week for a pe riod not exceeding twenty-six weeks. Similar policies can be taken for a year, at the rate of five dollars for every thou sand insured, and if any accident prevents active employment during that time, five dollars per week is paid for every thou sand insured,' and in case of death from any accident, the whole sum, , ,is This feature of insurance is especially adapted to mechanics who work upon buildings or about dangerous machinery, and to persons who travel frequently upon railroads. It is very cheap as the number of accidents in proportion to the amount of travel and the use of machinery is be ing reduced each year because of the vast increase and perfection of both. It - isnot uncommon for families dependant upon daily labor to sailer serious want because of accident preventing the father from pursuing his calling, and the pittance of less 'than two cents per., day • will secure live dollars per week. f4ir the support of the family, while the diiability continues. The same principle applies 7 to health in surance ; but it is fast failing away be fore the progress of life insurance. though some companies still incorporate it with the insurance upon life. • —The whole subject is woithy of the careful consideration of all classes, for there are none so opulent and none so poor that they cannot find a system of insurance adapted to their wants and circumstances, There are three. agents of Life Insurance in Chambersbnrg—W. G. Wed, of the AmeriCan ; S. S. Shryock, y of the Penn. and John Mull, of the Girard ; and Mr. Heed is also general agent for a member of Fire Insurance companies, and the only agent, we believe, for Accidental insurance. MEXICO-THE MONROE DOCTRINE The emphatic dCelaration of Hon. Mont gomery Ilb;ir, iu his Hagerstown speech last week, that our government must prompily demand the surrender of the Mexican throne by Maxatidllian and en force the demand at every hazard. has a peculiar sig,niticaner. Upon the face of the address it seems to be a mere ebulli tion of petty spite against Messrs. Seward and Stanton, two fellow cabinet officers who ( retained their portfolios while Mr. Blair reluctantly retired ; but as a politi cal manifesto, considering the relations of the author to the powers that be, and the military movements in Texas, we regard it as tbreshadowing important events. That it assaults Mr. Seward is no indica tion'that Mr. Seward will surrender the Premiership, nor that he is - in the way of the policy apparently to be inaugu rated. Mr. Blair would doqbtless prefer that Mr. Seward should resist the enforce ment of the Monroe doctrine, and fall in the effort; and the labored argument that he has antagonized it and means to persist in it ,:proves - simply that Mr. Blair wants Mr. Seward-out of the cabinet or intends to strip hint of all credit for the inaugura tion of the new policy. Iris true, as charged' by Mr. Blair, that Mr. Seward has not insisted upon the en forcement of the Monroe doctrine. Mr. Lincoln wisely adopted the motto---" One war at a time," and Mr. Seward faithfully carried it out. Both would doubtless have preferred to restrain Napoleon from inter ference in Mexico_ and to declare the usur pation of the Mexican throne by Maxamil lian as an act of hostility against the Unit ted States; but inasmuch as they found quite enough to do to enforce the laws within the territory of the United States, they allowed the question to remain in abeyance. According to the settled policy of the government, the declaration of Con gress and the platform of the Baltimore Convention. they were bound to protect Mexico from French and Austrian domin ion, just as they were-bound to maintain the sovereignty of the general govern ment in all. the States; but it required over four years to discharge the last duty. and it was but, the part of prudence and the certain road to success in both, to overlook the lesser evil until the greater was overcome. Now the_authority of the government is confessedly re-established. and the question of French interference in Mexico becomes a legitimate issue, and we must prepare to meet it as becomes-a great nation. Mr. Blair has not spoken at random in the important enunciation of our true for eign policy. He is *own to Sustain the most intimate relations with President Johnson, who was the guestof F. B. Blair Sr. from the time of his inauguration as Vice President, until his shattered health - was entirely restored ; and when he ap peared before Chief Justice Chase to (pal ify-as the chief ruler of the nation, the two Mail, father and son, with Preston - King. were by his Side as friends anti counselors. Since then they have been tireless in their attendance upon the new President, and he could have - tew more sagacious advisers on all public questions in which their personal prejudices and disappointments do not enter. Besides . Mr. Montgomery Blair is a politician, -sa gacious and tireless, and not wanting in ambition. He has already been a cabinet officer, and lookS_confidently to a seat in the Senate. Cotdially as hates Seward and Stanton. he would not proclaim - a policy not likgly to be accepted by the administration and the people, merely for the sake of making mouths at two cabi net ministers who have been more fortu nate than himself. He proclaims the Monroe doctrine and demands its imme diate and earnest enforcement because he believes in it: because it is right; because ‘.t will be the policy of the a inistration, and because it will meet the pproval of the people generally and Mar land in pa- Ocular. So much we learn from Mr. Blair's Hagerstown speech. —This view of the great issue is fully sustained by the military 'movements in Texas. When Gen. Sheridan was ordered to Texas, Kirby Smith still defied the government, and declared his purpose by proclamation to his soldiers to maintain rebellion indefinitely ; but before Gen. 'Sheridan had reached his new field, the entire rebel forces in the Trans-Mississip pi department were surrendered, and no ' armed forces remained any where to re sist the proper authorities. It was gen erally supposed that Gen. Sheridan's mis ,sion was ended before he reached his head-quarters; but instead of returning or disbandingliis troops. .his army has been steadily - strengthened until he has fully 100,000 men in his department, and an army of 80,000 men ready to take the field for active operations. The Presi dent has not sent a fighting Allier like, Sheridan to Texas to amuse himself by putting 50,000 men throne!, the evolu tions on dress parade every few days, nor would so strict an economist as President Johnson incur sneka vast expense for naught. He keeps an immense army there and there are no rebels to fight; no ' internal disturbances to quell ; no Point of our 'southern frontier or Coast isthreat ened by any foe, and yet Sheridan is dai ly strengthened instead of mustering his men out and sending them home, as lids been done every where else. He evident ly has a most important mission to fulfill, and the government manifestly 'expects the bloody arbitramdnt of the sand to be necessary to its solution. The first step taken is the formal demand made by Gen. Steele. one of Sheridan's lieutenants, upon the Imperial General fOr the surrender of the rebel ordnance and. arms sold the French by the rebels, and we regard, that as but the beginning of the end. Unless the signs of the times, both political and military, prove singularly deceptive, it cannot be long until Napoleon and Max imillian will be notified that Mexico must be allowed to adopt and maintain her o . lfll form of government, and Sheridan stands , in waiting to enforce it. It may result in war with France; but we think it will not. If it should, it would be-best to accept it now than hereafter when France and the Empire in Mexico shall" have become much better prepared to meet us in the field. It is evident that this government'cannot be secure while the :Nionroe doctrine is insolently defied by the governments of the old world ; and ' it . will be the part of wisdom to grapple with the foe before he has attained the full measure of his, power. Maximilian must—leave Mexico, or this government must confess its inability to maintain its own dignity by enforcing its long settled policy of non-interference with the sister , governments of the continent: and if the administration shall determine that now is the time to act, the nation will cordally sanction it and cheerfully bear every nec essary sacrifice to sustain it. THE Union State Committee will meet to-day in Harrisburg, and-a call, will doubt less be. issued for a State Convention. We hope that the time fixed will not be later than the last week of August, or the first week of September at thearthest. - The issues of the pending contest will, as here tofore since treason culminated in rebel lion, be made up by the enemies of the administration or there would be none to decide.' The course of the Union party is so clear that a way-faring man need pot err in seeking it. The administration of President Johnson is to be sustained and its wise and patriotic policy approved ; and none will question that the devotion of the State administration to the honor and interests of the - Commonwealth, as well as to the preservation of the Repub lic, meets the hearty commendation of the loyal men in every section. • t Candidates for Auditor General and Sur veyor General are to be nominated; and the tone of the Union journals points with ,unusual distinctness to the selection of one or moriTof our battle scarred heroes. Generals Selfridge and Hartranft and Col. Naglee have been warmly urged by east ern ,journals for one of the places. ,Of the civilians named we notice Hon Join A. Heistaud of the Lancaster Examiner for Auditor General, and W. Harry Markle, Esq., of Westmoreland, for Stkrveyor Gen eral. J. W. DE4L, Esq. has been re-appoin ted Post Master Of Chambersburg for the term of four years by President Johnson. So accgtedly has he discharged the du ties of the office during the last term that his re-appointment was conceded by gen eral consent, and the universal approba tion of the people as manifested - in the desire for his continuance, is a rare com pliment to his effieency and fidelity as an officer. It is but just to say that he emi nently merits it, and we heartily join in the geneml approval of hisre-appointment. WE have recently received many let ters from soldiers and their friends desi ring discharges from service in the provi sional corps retained of the Army of the Potomac. In answer to all we would state that the entire corps will be mus tered out and discharged in a few weeks, so that applications for individual dis charges are useless. . I iVE give in to-day's paper a communi-i cation recommending Col: FrazdeJord.an, l of Bedford county, for Governor. -Col. Jor- , dan has risen to distinction at the bar ,• has served with great credit in the Sen ate, and has given four years.to the ma ; tary service—the last of which he'has voted to the responsible position of Mili tary Agent at Washington, rendering in-, valuable aid to our Pennsylvania soldiers; He would make a strong candidate aiad a faithful and efficient Executive. ,Tiie annual report of the Female Medical Col lege of Pennsylvania, just issued shows that, del spite all prejudice and all opposition, the institu tion is becoming as famous as it is useful. It IS now in the sixteenth yew; of its existence. :It has bad warm and earnest friends, with liberal hands and ample purses, or it would long since have sunk out +of existence. The outbieak of the war swept away the feebler of the medical schoolii, but the Female College has successfully with stood the brunt. The class of 1864 i, comprised twenty-three students. Of its graduates many are . now in successful practice, and in various parts of the country. When this 'school _WM founded the medical education of a woman was an untried experiment, regarded by many excel lent people as a thing of questionable propriety. Things now are materially changed Ix last week's issue the name of W. Harry Markle, Esq., - of Westmoreland, was given in, connection with the Vnion nomination for Audi tor General. We learn by a communication given elsewhere that he will be pressed by the Union -men of the Western counties for - Surveyor Gen eral. He is a devoted and able Union man, And his nomination would be gratefully received in the Western portion of the State. WE devote most of the first page of to•day's pa per to the eloquent oration of Gen. Howard de livered at Gettysburg on the 4th inst.; the brilliant poem of Col. Halpin (Miles O'Riley) and a Patri otic letter from President Johnson, addressed to the Committee at Gettysburg. M. EDGAR - KING, Esq., has returned from the Fultonrkepubtican, and is succeeded by E. B. Beirman, Est. WE are indebted to Hon. Thaddeus Stevens and Hon. A. H. Coffruth for valuable public documents. WASEINGT9N The Trial of Jeff Davis—The Bodies of the Executed Conspirators-Trim of Miss , Harris—The Army in the District—The Crops—New Mode of Selling Mules— Dealth of the President. Correspondence of the Franklin Repository. ' WaainscroN Cirf,•July 15th, 1865. We are'now informed that Jeff Davis is soon to be brought to this city, where he will be tried, as most people think and wish; before a military commission. The attorneys of Davis have made application to the Secretary of War asking per mission to bo all Owed to' visit Jeff at Fortress Monroe, and also that his trial take place at an early day. They were informed that no commu nication would be allowed between Davis and his counsel until he be brought to this city, and that a trial should take place as soon as possible. The court room at the Penitentiary is being fitted up for some purpose, and froueihe preparations making and the gossip of well informedpersons, we opine that he Will be tried there, and as one of the chief instigators of the murder of Mr. Jlc coin. There is no doubt but that the government has now in its possespon eviden.".3 against him, unknown to the outside world, which willcou vict him in short order. - 1 The bodies of Mrs. Surratt, Harold, Atzeroth and Payne still rest in the graves to which they were consigned immediately after the execution. The friends of these four persons have receivod rio-aseuranee that they wilt be <1.U...r0d np.. Mudd, Arnold, O'Laughlin and Spangler Still remain confined in the Penitentiary. Some think the reason is that they may perhaps be put upon the stand when the trial of Davis or Dr. M'Cul lough comes off. These prisoners have greatly improved in health and spirits since the trial. The trial of Miss Harris for-the murder of Burroughs, in the Treasury Department, is nearly concluded. The plea that she shot him while la boring under a temporary fit of insanity, arising from a real or imaginary wrong, is .pretty well substantiated by medical and other testimony. ,Her _defence hris been ably conducted, and the general impression is that she will be acquitted, some think without the jury leaving the, box. There is much sympathy expressed for her, and the court room is daily crowded with ladies. We do not, however, think the taste of ladies who sit there listening to the evidence very refined, and especially wondler that parents allow their daugh ters of fifteen aini sixteen to visit the court room as they have been doing at this trial. It certain ly can do them no good, and on the acquittal of Miss Harris we should not be surprised to hear of some of them; procuring , shooting-irons and blazing away at lims poor• devil for the fun of the thing. Very little of the army remains in this District, hardly a respectable corps - division. On this ac 'count the city is very dull 'and from present ap pearances and the rush of Southerners here, it looks as if the city would ere long fall back into that dull, dead state for which it was noted be fore the 'war. Hon. Isaac Newton is daily in receipt of infor mation from all sections of the countshowing that the crops of the present year areAnuch lar ger than any previous year, especially the crops of hay, corn and potatoes. The hay crops will be fully one-third larger than any previous year. A new mode of selling mules is to be tried by the Quarter Master General. Brevet Brig. Gen. Ekin invites sealed proposals until August Ist for 'the purchase of 2,300 mules in lots of 50 and 100 each at Pittsburg, Harrisburg, Wilmington and Washington. The mules will be put aside, each lot by itself, and will be free for the inspection of bidders at the places named ten days prior to August Ist. The President has entirely recovered his health and is now devoting all his time to the vast amount of business: that has accumulated on his tesk dur ing his illness.' Delegations and visitor; still be siege the house from morning to night. S. c. THE - NEXT GOVERNOR. To theEditori of the Flakkiin Repositor, I have observed that several of the leading cit izens of our State have been publicly recbmmend ed by their friends as suitable persoesio be pre sented to the Union Convention, as candidate for its nomination`for Governor. Among the claim, urged in behalf of those gen tlemen, that of locality isprominently set forth. I accept it as having much force, and assert it as peculiarly our own. This section of the State is strangely overlooked in making selections for the bestowment of State— or Nationaftonors. That it is important enough in the Commonwealth need nei be argued. - But something else is wanted than locality to commend a candidate to the people of Petussyl vania at this momentous period. Never before was it so important to hunt out carefully a man fitted to the high position of administering the affairs. of this great Commonwealth, burdened now with debt and groaning with unavoidable taxation. Locality: has its gaims,.public service in the cabinet or the field has its claims, but these alone are insufficient. Locality may lack every other qualification; public service may not be ac companied. with Integrity, industry or capacity. But honesty, energy, ability are the requisites de. mended imperatively by the - financial condition of the State, and,by the influence !Nub she is to exert over the councils and policy of the nation. A mere politician Worn answer, letihie orthodoxy be never so pure 'and his intellect never so bril liant. 'Wisdom and good management in our Executives are more needed now than the more shining but less sub4antial qualities, which often :03 mislead us in the choiceof ur rulers, belt - seldom do so in our private conce . , ' h i r I believe, wh il e 'e hay especial claims as to locality,. that, we h e also, most fortunately the man. One who had ample experience in pub lic affairs, who is well knoWn throughout the State, who had ample experience in business af fairs; whose ability is concededby political friend . 'and foe, whose honesty is without spot or ques tion ; a gentleman of industry, of excellent busi ness habits, of firmness, who would administer affairs of the State prudently,econoutically, wise ly. I refer to Col. Fri - India Jordan, of Bedford, and am confident that the people of this Congres sional district will endorse my 'declarations, and labor to secure his nomination. FRANKLIN CHASILIERSTILTG, July 18, teal DOES IT PAY! To the Edam of the Franklin Rrposit' ory In 1862 the ministers of Chambershurg, at a weekly ministerial meeting, called up the subject of intemperacce, and resolved to take a financial view of the great evil. They appointed a com mittee of two to inquire of the proper authorities to obtain facts and report. Their report was as follows—allowing three-fourths expended by the county for Jail, Poor House and criminal courts as the results of intemperance, which 'is below the real result: EXPENDITURES Poor House .... Prison Criminal Courts LICENSE INCOME Taverns. Restaurants Distilleries $7, 826 , $7,826 expended over the gain, or in other words, the taxpayers of Franklin county fire paying that much in taxes to afford the sellers of strong drink the privilege and profit to supply.strong drink; to make men drunkards; to tempt young men and boys into the snares of intemperance; to de stroy the Pe' ace and quiet of families; td unfit a class of men for business and usefulness, and S piny to fill scores of graves with drunkards. Can the working and business men of this county of ford to pay $7,826 in addition to their other high taxes ? Can it financially or humanely- wise, or good policy, to give their influence by legislation or by petition sto keep up such a useless expenditure of money I Surely every financier will say nay. W. MABRY MARKLE, ESQ. To the Editors of the .D-arthlin Repository In your issue of 12th July, you say that W. Harry Markle, Esq., of Westmoreland, is urged, as a candidate for Auditor General. Mr. Mar kle's name is pressed -14 the nomination of Sur: reyor Central and is meeting a warm response in the West. All recognizing the facrthatthe name of Markle, which by its sacrifices for and labors iu, has been a tower of strength to the Union cause in the West, never yet bas been associated with an office. 'This, in connection with the high pro fessional ability and excellent character he sus tains as a gentleman of honor and integrity, seems to be concluding all in favor of Mr. Markle for that place. ONE IN TUE WEST. PERSONAL. —Got. Curtin is at Saratoga in search of health Fie wilt be absent several weeks. Kroorson Etheridge, of Tenneitiw, has. been arrested at Columbus, Kentucky. —The health of Davis is said to be better now that at any other time since his imprisonment. —Gen. Dick Coulter, says the Sunbury Herald, is quite unwell. His old Wilderness wound has broken nut. —William T. Avery, ex-member of Congress from Tennessee, was pardoned on Tuesday weak by the President. —Ex-Governor Letcher has been released on parole, on condition that he go to his home, in Virginia, and remain there subject to the order of the President. —Hon. 0. N. Cooley, of lowa, bag been appoin ted Commissioner of Indian Affairs in place of Mr. Dole, resigned, —„Ex-Senator Yulee, and acting Governor Atli son, of Florida, have been arrested, and con fined in Fort Pulaski. —Judge Wm. Marvin, formerly of Key Wert, has been appointed Provisional Governor of Flori da by the President. - —The degre of L. L. D. was conferred on Pre sident Johnson by Columbia College, New York city, at its recent Commencement —An Augusta paper says it understends that Gen. Tombs has succeeded in making his way on of the country, and is now in Cuba.' 7-General James L. Selfridge has been ap pointed Assessor of Internal Revenue, in the 11th District of Pennsylvania. A better appointment could not have been made. —Senator Wallace and Representative Boyer, of Clearfield, have been unanimously renomina ted.—ln boring for oil in Clearfield, salt" in stead of "oil" was struck" at 760'teet. —Mrs. Douglas, the widow of the late Senator, made two personal attempts to obtain from the President a reprieve for Mrs. Surratt, bat in each case was firmly but courteously denied. —Secretary Seward is quite restored to . health, the splint having by order of his surgeds been removed from his face, leaving very slight traces of the original accident and the subsequent as sault. • —Major-Gen Sherman was publicly received at Columbus, Ohio, last week. In the course of an address be indorsed Gan. Cox, and for himself, de clined in advance all Gubernatorial or Presiden tial honors. --General Lee is said to be writing a history of the - campaigns in Virginia, from the time when he took command of the reble army after the bat tle of Seven Pines down to the surrender of that army in May last. —Professor McCullough and General Thoft. A. Barris, of Tennessee, have been arrested and taken to Washington. The former was head of the torpedo and infernal machine bureau of the rebel Government. —Mr. Stanton is very well, even hearty, and as attentive to his official duties as if he intended to stay in his Department till be concluded to re sign—an event which he does not contemplate, nor the President desire. • , —A colored woman, in conversation with a lady just before Davis was caught, expressed her confidence that Jeff.. would be taken, sayingl— itien wife will ' peach' onlim for a hundred thousand dollars"' " Oh, that is impossible." re. turned the lady. " Oh, no, there is nothing im possible with them folks; if they will sell their children for two or three hundred dollars, I guess they'll sell a husband or.a wife for a hundred thousand dollars." ,--The long-promised volume of Mr, Buchanan is now in the hands of the printers, and will be published in fine style by the Appleton's, the cel ebrated New York publishers. Itivill be a full 3iatory of the last Administration, from J. B.'s • July 19, 1865. • own notes, wri*n by himself, in:the t montbs of classic quiet at Wheatland, while his theory that the Government could not protect itself from an nihilation, was being tried at the cost of precious blood and life on the field of battle. It will be a , work of some fire hundred pages duodecimo. gives us pleasure to_ record -the appoint ment of Col. Horatio G. Sickel as Health Officer of Philadelphia. Governor Curtin has displayed his characteristic regard for our brave soldiers by this selection. Col. Sickel entered the service in 1861 at the head of one of the Pennsylvania Reserve Regiments, and most bravely and worth ily did he follow the fortunes of that gallant or ganization through all the trying segnes of the war until its shattered remnants were disbanded in 1864. Col:Siekel again took the field, in that year, at the bead of one of the Union League re giments, and while commanding it received a se rious wound. Such men have a claim to the-ho nors and emoluments of civil life which cannot be too generally recognized. IliLI TANN INTELLIGENCE. —Henry A Wise has made application to the military authorities for a restoration of his for., mer estates near Norfolk, with rather a poor prospect of succeeding. —During the' last week there were released from prism stations 591 rebel prisoners, making a total of 43,391 discharged by President John son. There are now none but sick prisoners —Gen. Hancock and staff will remove their headquarters to Baltimore on Friday'or Satur day, when the General will assume command of the Middle Department. The troops of the First Army corps will be removed from Camp Stone man to some point in Maryland, probably near Monocacy Junction. In a very short time there will be no troops in the vicinity of Washington but the bare garrison of the city. $5,297 1,713 2,626 -$9,636 81,260 250 200 —The Provisional Rebel Convention at Mont gomery, whose are'hiveg were captured byGen. Wilson, intended to .call the " Confederacy" the "Republic of Washington." This proposition was defeated by one vote. Washington's' name ;vas therefore saved the discredit of being spew : gor to the Rebellion designed to overthrow the- Union which be fought so hardto establish. The Montgomery conclave met in the days when their ambition was full blown;.tuid nothing short of the possession of Washington would ever permit them to make peace with the North. —Miss Oars Barton, daughter of Judge Bar ton, of Worcester, Mass., who has obtained na tional repute by publishing a list. of missing sol diers, and by her heroic deeds to the wounded in battles, and even under lire, left Washington last week, on a government vessel, with a party, for the PurpOse of enclosing the area of ground at Andersonville, where so many Federal prisoners perished from want and exposure, and of putting up head-boards at their graves. She conceives that she has a suitable list of the deceased, and has accordingly obtained seventeen thousand Iliad boards for" the purpose. May she be rewarded with perfect success. —The Richmond correspondent of the New York Herald says: "Gen. Joseph E. Johnston, in a letter to a friend in this city, remarks that the southern cause could not have failed with anybody else but Jeff. Davis as its leader. That opinion seems now to gain ground very rapidly, and public sympathy with him is diminishing in proportion as this fact is being realized. Colonel Northrop, Davis' Commissary General and pecu liar protege, condemns without reserve the policy which he pursued. The Colonel says that so dis gusted did he become with his whole course that he refused to speak to him for nearly twelve months before the evacuation of Richmond. • JusricE '—Gen. Torbert, commanding the Army of the Shenandoah, brings the rebels up to the mark. A Captain Somers and a rebel lieisttaant, after the order proclaiming as outlaws all persons found in arms after Lee's surrender, :attacked some of our soldiers in the vicinity of Nei/ Market, in the Valley of the Shenandoah, fired: , upon them, robbed them of their effects and of their horses, Gen. Torbert issued special orders that if caught and recognized, they should not be brought with in the limits of the camp, but - Should be shot wherever caught. The order was executed to the letter, upon the above officers, last Tuesday a week, by . the commandant of the forces near Mount Jackson, Va. —A rebel war department dispatch lately dis covered in Richmond adds force to,,statements heretofore made to the effect that Robert E. Lee, recently commander of the Rebel Army of Nor thern Virginia, is the person really responsible for the burning of- cotton and tobacco in Rich mond and setting fire to that city at the time of the rebel hegira. It also shows that the evacua tion was contemplated at least six weeks before it took place. The dispatch, which is dated Feb ruary 22, is from Gen. Breckinridge, then rebel Secretary of War, to General-Ewell, and advises Ewell to see Gen. Lee for the purpose of receiv ing definite instructions regarding the lattar'ii or der for the burning of cotton, tobacco, &c. —The State authoritaes are arranging to pro cure the names of all, Pennsylvania soldiers Who' perished. at any or all'of-the rebel prisons, and who were buried at such localities. Wherever the marks correspond with the records of the prison, and there is ro doubt of the identity of the remains, the same wilt be published, and at the proper time transportation will be issued for the removal of the bodies. Active efforts will at once be made to gather all the facts of importance in connection with the Pennsylvanians buried at Andersonville. A State agent will be despatched to that locality fully instructed to examine the con dition of the graves; secure full 'particulars con cerning their marks, and make such other ar rangenients as will facilitate the removal of these honored-remains with the least po'ssible trouble to the surviving relatives of the dead and as little necessary expense to the State. - —President Johnson has divided the entire country into military divisions. Gen. Meade com.t mands the Division of the Atlantic. Under him Gen. Hooker commands New 'England, New York, and New Jersey; Gen. Hancock commands Delaware, Pennsylvania, Western Maryland, and West Virginia; Gen. Schofield North Caro- lina, and Gen. Gillmore South Carolina. Gen. Sherman commands the Division of the Missis sippi. Subordinate to him are Gen. Ord, com manding Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, and Michigan; Gen. Pope, commanding Wisconsin, Missouri, lowa, Minnesota, Kansas, Nebraska, Dakotah, and Montana; and General Reynolds, commanding Arkansas and the Indian Territory. Gen. Sher idan commands the Division of the Gulf: Sub ordinate to him are Gen. Slocum, commanding Mississippi; - Gen. Canby, commanding Louisiana and Texas; and Gen: - Foster, commanding Flor ida. Gen. George H. Thomas commands the Division of the Tennessee. Under him are Gen. Stoneman, commanding Tennessee; Gen: Palmer, commanding Kentucky; Gen. Steedman, in Geor gia; and Gen. Wood in Alabama. Gen. Halleck - commands the Division of the Pacific. Gen. G Wright, under him, commands the Territories north of California; and Gen. McDowell com mands California and the Territories east of it. General Augur commands the District of Colum bia and Eastern Maryland. THE Atlanic telegapti cable has beim satis factorily tested on board the Great Eastern, a message having been sent through the wire is a minute and a quarter. T wErr y thousand persons have died of the cholera at afecca,in Arabia, and one - thousand at Al exan d r ia, in Egypt.. The disease *moving westward.