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AW TIRTY-NINTH YEAR. ca NEW YORK, SATURDAY, ak PRICE TWO CET y Jointing por, * mil N YAN oe Seaton ter tee Beara nee’ BY **% ” or forcing a rolation on a reluctant people, Te- | by the pubtte conscience, and the just aversion | nlainty untepublican, offensive, and indefensibie, | soothed hie anxteties by promising a deputy | was sent back to the usurper with Instructions iN Hl | been employed at hin Whe ,thiihas tween these two typlenl instances 1 hositate | to any rembiance of bargain and aale, or bribery | Hut this same usurpiig spirit, born of an une | who would do the work. And thus was this | to negotiate two treatles—ono for the annaxn yo ih 1 YO te reward his frig HS promote ‘schemes, which to place foremost; butainee the nepotism | in the public seryice. ‘The cage of our Presidout | tutoved egotlgin, brooking vo restraint, showed it department made a plaything. But public | tion Of the half tsland of Dominica, and the | and toadvanee **-”, w punish his opponents, of the President is # ruling passion, revealing | ts exeepilonal. Notoriously he has taken gilts | Itself In anocher clase of transactlona, whe jon and other counsels arrested the sport, | other for the lesse of the Day of Samana by the — wis election to @ second tcrm, | the primary instincts of his nature, since tia | while in the public service, somo at least aftor | law ond Constitution were Nile regarded. Fention, that when this Incumbent left | Constitution of the United Siates. Ambasea: » assumptions have matured Ina | malutained by him In utter unconsctousness of | he had boen elected President, until the Galena | pugsipesTIAL ASSAULT ON TI sAPEULARD | Hs uiportunt pest vishal government serml-military tn character, ts offensive characte -instond of hushe | finer of a few hundred doyare year, to borree ‘oF aha tihiotne, ‘ ed to nuininate id breathing the y apirit, be pec! ‘or spy mistake. continnes | the words o olleague, Mr, Wilson, one of i " oie RATT mie {renting the snlitary spelt belng a species ini for it an an. unhanpy mistake, he continues | the words of muy colleagues M GnG | dewt in.time and very indigenous tn character | PRESIDENTIAL rer ow all | Hows Is understood tinat he was | dors and other public BMinisters are appointed successor, by the President, by and with tho ndvice and arc ny | Consent of the Senate, but our ald-de-camp HON ON THE UNDIAN | TT Otani guint greece Maguificent Speech of Sev hold It; Kine it has be y raat y i (I 1 ad publican institutions, where subservionce to the tors et Chie elirye being pr heat | Soo the Presidential attempt against one the BUKE empower MAO? sinner, vresivontis the supreme law. How, in mains 18 for republiva ne win nye Wasi ing use | S1-red safeguards of the Treasury —the original | At the same time v« effort to abse Nor w e wanti h three war ner. taining this subservience, he haa operated by a hencone toy he ePebe se ect Haat) cane painted to hi Tamong | worsnianaltn OF Alexander Tamiltoni—being | tho Tndinn Dur at hoe in neotlme syetem of combinations, having thetr orbits am al probabivity af repetition, T begin | 8 hearin ming to ing Joes than the act to establish the Treas | chaning tte char part with Harz md obta Twn trontien, —- - about him, ao that, War the plinet Saturny he de | with this undoubted abies { corum, i not the fndece of the None thar ut. Here was an iapodtant pr vice. Congress had already repudiated such an araily, force was np to keep the usurper surrounded Ly vinus. Nor does the similitade | There has boon no coll of Congress for a return n. Atleast two if nut tures, of these | pilin that no, person appointed to any oMee | attoinpt, but (he Prosident, nut disheartened by | In power walle he aold his country, and naturale PUBLIGANISM V8. GRANTISM, one hero; for his rings, Ike those of the | of the relations holding office, stipend or money- | Greeks, having no knoviy osivion ta the Ropubs | [netituted by the act, shall directly of indirect~ | jogisiative failure, xougnt to accompllan it by | I¥ such w transa Gon required a Prestdential planets, are held in position bys tellites. How | making opportunity un: President. ‘The | lican party or influence in Ui. e ‘have | ly be concerned or interested in carry- | Manipulation ection. First elevating | Ald-de-Camp, unkhown to. constit law, sins this utterly ‘unrepublican Cwearian has mass | country ieteft tothe prea for Information on | been selected gs his counsejtins in national uf- | IZ on the business of trade TP ST OE ble tate atek’ ter the. howd of ane | fas aT Bich Glanl Gale ‘Gopolnead nocoedlt i K toro the Meiitbitoan party and aerated’ the | thiv important sunforts Tf there Iyany exnager. | fale and heads of areat depactiiente of Gor- | Mewee. jad, any pemon sn offending wat | Direwu. ho then, hy om Iniitary onion dated | to tnth. ‘ | Presidential sill, stalking Into the Senate cham | ation, the President is in fault, since, knowing | ert 1a te foots Oe Fenty sy ore Boe 1889, procee: to detail for the Tndl m Noe ee aie iWisee Uae [Per itseit, whiten vindictive xpirit visits good | the disereditable allewetions, » he hing not Nor does the onsa of the first Secretary of State | was to forfelt tothe United States gin, with serpice mine ie ers ett at ok nels Cheat epublicnns who cannot submit, How the | hastened to” furnish, the. precise fac er in far fiom the other three, ‘The | femoval frovn office, and forever thereaftcrto be | fogmeutal organization by the consolidation o aie a Plaything. | Preetdent, himselt, unconactousthat President | or et least. his partisans, havo, failed in Ting under peraonal obligation to | Ineapable of holding any office under the | the infantry y On other or coms | a member of his late staff to the head of the | ratior than a civilian duly appointed according VIOLATIONS OF CONSTITUTIONAL heen my solemn to do this by | to expose the outrages which attend thla i j jhasno right to quarcel with aaybody, insists | hot calling for ‘the oMlelal Information, | Mr. Washburne for important support, gave him | Utived States. (Statutes at lance, vol. 1 page the authority of the act of Congress of June 90, | businous. wl 4 ‘ ‘ | Upon gus » has bacome the erent | evido ssolution calling fo! 1 jominn ender: | September 2.178.) From the beginning this | jai. which, after dects mr oF anes, wher a step We are brought face nat he has become thie great | Itisevident that any resolution calling for | fimentary memination, with Eade ee eiite Had Hover heen aiteationed at ke Rad | Aste Which, ation declasing the number of In- | ty tuce with lal pretensions, Wiret with me els than | 1 ot known to be ig that after cont nato’ iarrel! shall inted Prealdents 64 ed by and how the re of the. war powere of tha mental Inw. r m. | Mcuulred the character of fur sign. Teannot forget the indi THE USURPER ARRAIGNED, | set ngethe r on, wo et with oppositi vant ¢ tit shall be com rt AR cle I nt I fied by himself’ How his personal tol- | effort to vindteate republican frstit the late Mr, Feavenden aa we passed out | And yot the President. by a special messa, D require any militarromicer of the | pacwinrnl. cay he were already Cerenr + foretbiy _ lowers back him in quarrels, insult. these he in | be denounced as an assault on the Pre: nate chamber, immediately after the | dated March 6, 1869, being tl Unie tates to execute the duties of Indl Bayt oi of which i a Brahe omvat | {fults,and then. not departing from hie spirit, | Hut ie newspapers have placed enough beyond aon. Who,” suid. he, “ever honed | first service ay a civilian, ay acent "The Statutes ar Large, vol, tv. p. oh | ports of the State Department aiid ay eae . ‘ | ery out with Shakespeare, " We will, have rings | question for Judgment on. this extraordinary eofaman nominated of State side, so as to enabl show that obviously this provision had refers Meine nol Personal Government and Presidens | wia‘thinus and fine antay,” Asdcfnally. hew | asecaithoucdl thus far tere. has Teen ho ate yasacomplinent ?’ But this i only an ly nominated nd enoe to somo. exceptional exigency, “and | sutice ietesen ot They nie eben ay Rte of that diatinetlve pel : + | the chosen head of the republic is Known ¢hiefly | tempi to appreciate it inthe light of history. One | other case of the pablic service subordiuated to tial Pretensions, | for Presidential pretensions, utterly Indefens ble | list makes the number of beneficiaries as inany | personal considerations. In character, derogatory to the “auntry, and of | as forty-two, being probably every person known | | Not only inthe Cabinet, but In other offices, aking personal objocts to be altied to the President by blood or marriage. | there is reason to believe that the President has f, Inatead of u benet Porons seeming to speak for the President. or | been under the Influence of patrons, Wh na hrough Whom | atleast after careful: inquiries, have dented the | he go blind to Thomas Murphy? ‘The Custom | statut can be no authority for the general sub- | of reput i ep government first embodied In our stitution of military officers Instead of | Constitution which places the war powers under llans confirmed by the Senate and bound feguard o aia : and his imports were « h sureties for the falthfal discharge of their | any “Macguard of the legislative branch; making magnitude as to clog the Custom House. Ifthe | Qatte " m anything but one of those cobwelrs | ou! rs | clare war” an undoubted usurpation. Wut oy, Gy thio bist one OF thgse cobwens | were t service. | our. President, like Gallo, cared fur none oft upward of sixty ar jatod Into the Indta . and ye this way fi TUE KING OF NEPOTISTS. fitutlons sulfer and the people | accuracy of this ts ng it to thirteen, It | House of New York, with all fis capacity as a | Which ratch the weak but yleld to thy ho this | ‘The act of Congress of July 15, 1870, already 4 x pee | il not etl there | Political engine, was handed over to thisagent, | 8s the oeeasion for it-and the Presidentshould | quoted, creating. an incompatibility. between Ee: TCR POU ee berets | t these thing: Vaker's dos In ry. Thirte en ittor n the Rew bite faye rieded Phan adores sae Be Ghd ee me the milltary pervice an the civil, was aimed disregard of that orttity of nations which it oform a4 ari yvorn- through offic tions of the Prestd on party was out “I by Presidentia or, | Indecor ol 4 efforts stands out more palne | especially at this abuse.and these officers ceased he Bret pehclole. oF ie Rofi'rm and Parity of Govora ists upon a soce not one of whom but for this relattonshlp fund whose pfte he notorionay and when | fully eminent when it te considered ‘that | t2''he Indian agents, Dut this at Pondsted and Pale cile ere ade mont Demanded. rons dy will y have been brought forward, the whole conatl | the de rn Iwas Irresistible, the | the merchant for whom he wished to | other illustration of Presidential pretensic sult and inenace: Taye. deine unto use blake teoue rate Ces eae ree ae ene aieeree his resignation with an ef | OF" chose from. thom he hut reectved gifts. Buch MILITARY INTERFERENCE AT ELECTIONS. Hopublic what we would hot have that Reyunite —— a discount; that pers of the worst ¢ nments, whose office ts a | fusion of sentiment natural toward a patron, those from schom he hart received ots ae " ass i do unto us, hor what we would have dene { beaten in that ancient field, and that Cwsar with | family possession. Beyond ‘the list of thirteen | but without justifeation inthe character of the | Was the necommodat ‘owed military interference In elen. | do init us. Nor, ould haye done to rvaton, May SL—At the expiration | @ Senate at his heels is not the ft model for | are other relations, showing that this strange | retiring offic How truly spoke the lord who | Senate that a bill exe f the military in fo these eminent and most palnful Prest ‘ing In the Senate toaday, Mr, Sum. | OUF Republic. “King George II}, of England, so | abuse did not stop with the President's relatives, | suid of Timon, “No gift te itm but breeds th, enefactor from the u FST trey gn pe ening | Ger , Mr, § peciliar tor obstinacy and narrowness, had ro- | but that these relations obtained appointments | giver a return exceeding ail use of quttance,” | Was promptly us fast G LCG BE TTT n RR the Semon deter the Corse 1), Mass.) moved that the Apportionment tainore Ip Parliament who went under the name for others in the circle, so that every relution bes | and such were the re urns made by the Frosls Waeliee eee ere Ca Bos aol felt ny my " ‘ates waning a cbare eure: UE pre: | tio: t, nad the tmprisoniments oF aNd baetons si] be indednitely postponed, and announced | of the King's friends. Nothing can be allowed | came a centre of tnfuence, while the Presidential | dent. Thus much for gift-taking reciprocated uty to object to. ensideration, si jon, dling ¢ Wi vested, be i I iA hg A A tag 2! Le Aah here to justiiy the inquiry finitely. Only one Presl- | by office, ‘The incident Is original, and without | cording to the Globe: “1 think it ought to be " jan in Domintea hy the Presidential conferlce “ilave we a King | family extended {nc phased precedent istory. The Presidency {sa} Most profoundly considered before itis acted if relations, and that was John | precodent in our history esidency ony the Senate thie objection ented ite he 6 IN, rule De {upon this motion he intended to make a for fear of hix hostility to the treaty. it while, this s tial usurpatic he were allowed to reach New York, all of which nating all to ‘ame palpable in | Wes known to” his subordinates Babcoc! Tanxiety was commu; form, It was aaid of Gustavus Adol- | and Caznoat, and doubtless to. himaclt. Whad Titan AY the heat imeeune phus that he drilled his Diet to vote at the word | tus (ie tibet, of an Aierican citizen compared dys later, the President sent | Of command, Such, at the outset, seemed to | wilh the Presidential prerogative to one who had Ag permission be the Presidential’ policy with regard to Con. | defet the Constivution, on which Gependta the Ui dent ‘or that other question, a party in the Senate of the King as appuinte Adams; but he found public opin by the example of Washingt. ERNMENT CHRBYURLTOAN, ii thet, after a slight experime fan applicant: You know It {s Imporstble for me to appoint my own - AONE LO MnyINDe withone drawing fort m torrent | himself, Here is no portrait drawn by eritie in vindication of himself. The Senate onsented to give hin a hearing on a | friends ¢ ee not having more convenient occasion, he was obliged to PERSONAL ¢ take advantage of this opportunity. Personal government ts autocratic. It is the Mr. Conkling (Rep., N.Y.) called Mr. Sumner's | CAC-Man power elevated above all else, and untry Was startled 1 the survey of the two | Pusthouemoer sam and uift-taking of- wh: clegraph the. gene ented to W the Se ty he replied to hre reque, gress. We were to vote as he desired, He did not | erty of all.and then defied in therefore In direct conflict with Republican relations to anything without drawing forth a ti Starciiy. cit te tia Chanel WhO arate Tort, apresaton produced by 8 n of uattomal law, on attention to the fact that Mr. Hamlin, the Chair- | ernment, whose mmate form ts tripartite | JuVrhduias etka sor teens eames Apri ast SNR Elta ihe eecle’ f orarice tl Yaw to promote his personel desire. ke the Renure-ot-Omice act, and during the | whit tepenie the peace of the, tv : praia. heen ate papeurlve, legis 1 : ¢ | dou q H i ractiae to fs ee honth of nistratlor citizen {iamured imp dungeon was man of the Committee on French Arma Sales, | exscutlye, tex! and Judicial each inde; | ‘The judement of the country found voice In | my felations at the expense of the public ser AL MILITARY MING AT THE EXECUTIVE | Wie both branches of Congress to recurs | amall moment. But this ls paly an illustrat! had been called away by afamily afiction, and theaccumulation | Thomas Jefferson, who, in a letter written short. | vice, al that Mr. Carpenter, also a so the gifts Ttake, and then my way of MANSION. its repeal hands may justly | ly after he became President, used these strong | rewarding the petrong al a { more ustons | Add now the lawless occupation of the Hay of wes the eshen ‘The military spirit Jered that he en- | Samana for wa tis after the lapse of thi + all of which seem vhich failed in the effort to | ishing when tt was coi ua Federalist” we learn th ember of the com-| of these powers in the 5 i public service.” In this open exhibition wi 4 ‘ 1 Def Hi i be pronoknced the Gery Geknition ar irannuy | words the public service.” In i ih aside a fundamental law as {f it were at tered upon his high trust with the osten- | treaty, keeping tt jonal flag flying they mittee, was not In his seat. ehdvas any Attempt Dpoither paya M a Mr. Adazos degraded himself Infinitely by his conduet | Pe eoaat ala Pe t order was more successful at the Bxecu- | tatious avowal i at a laws would be faith Hy and assuming a te ritovial sovereignty which did subject. ital instances, and Important as ls their condem- mansion, witch at once assumed the chur | executed, whether they met his app ornot, | not exist. Then add che protracted support of acter of military headquarters, to the dishonor | a he should have no policy to enforces | Ba of the elvil servi and in total disregard of inst the willof the people. That beneficent | ing precedent the President surrounded him- | statute, which he had upheld In the tae sfliction,and regretted it. He observed, how. | ways reprehensible fn proportion to ite extent. || Hut John Adams, besides trausferring his son, . Mr. Carpenter, the author i The Constitution 0! setts, dating | John Quincey Adams, from one diplomatic post | HMton | ‘ te . “ fer; Chat Mis: Catpencary th hor of the | erin 1740, embodied a principle in these memos. | to another, appointed only two relations, ‘Fray, | dene! d Ht Cbas iow, Ge TI REERE TS ere Frou) aris report, was now in his seat, and | able words sir, what Words would Jefferson use ii Self with officers. of the army. and sub- | ment of President Johnson, was a limitation on | cost and to the neglect of other service Where did. hete to speak on the open and multifar at fhetean do such things and not | stituted military forme for those of civil | the Presidential power of appeini sand he | the navy was needed, ism of our Presiden appointments to | Teenie ipl LA ow ¥ + | life, detailing for this service members | could not break it. Here was plain interference | presipenriAL EFFORTS Ft 7 po 4 fiows supereminence of egotisin under | Uf fo : ee are iat baice, me not blo st ree . ‘ of his late stat. This Presidential pretension, | with his great perquisite of office, and Cong MARGE BcooniOn Mice, merit and not blood te the only just ree | which the Constitution, international la which ts continu present time, is the | must erced to repent it. The House acted a tok b precedent commendatios munietpal law. to say nothing of republican gov- Misidered thatthere | pre in his usurped power, to the extent of place ihe national fay at his dispostl and gindling he | he island with our ships of waar, all at Immense nation. so that they may not become a proce- therefore he would proceed, which ME, SUM RS SPERCH Mu. Paeesipent: I haye no hesitation In myself a member of the Rey Hie CONTRIVANCE ts, which, iffeme id overturn Cons 0. bean Helative and executiy more unnat aptly and passed tie de-tred Lill, In the | stitution and law was followed eels nd one of the straightest of the Of them, tn the end that 4 may De govern Here Mr. Sumner made many extracts from | crninents In Ita primary. principles, are all subor= an | whe dered thatthere | promptly and passed the d bill. An the ution wits followed by another eles Hey Wei ator can Deine ¢0 aariler tore | and not of men. lotters of George Washington, Thomas Jefter. | dinate tthe Presidential vill; and tsis is por: | fre prec G\gerent arecutey if ta cmncnt dunn whieh tho oicial Jourdal a fa: | Gaacpetenes oiaeliy OY enh Pete aime Re in its bebalt, I nat the | A government of Inws and not of men is the | son, and John Adams sonal government, And_an Insensibility to the 50, Heart the emplos ue r Renate eu on | honest convictions of others, and you have a be | characteristic Incident of this prete wyers cite what are called “ leading case: teers denouncing nepotist When it bee | the part of a President, and holding it t nal govern- | criminal. The letters have been repeated! d , rms, and ‘especially when 1 | printed in ‘THe SUN ¥ pw of these show the Pre: tal will in | seeks to sway the action of any other braneh, or ai constant operation with little regard t beginning, and from that failed to sustain its eand ‘or these 1 have la ate and e st, AS Bt have neve » advance Lae peach Jendoney of the treaty, vetting the Capitol as a lobbylat, ant summoning them to his presence tn equals, in obvious pursuance of te atipulation wide Dy ils atdecdeceamp, andl niever disavowed by hin, beng Intervention ih the Senate, reinforced by all the Influanee of the appointing power, by reward ormenace, all of which waa 1 in charmcter as t . Hand th: when the t solemn vote, we were call 180%, It was expllcltly” pi t no army. ‘officers should ty arated from their regiments and corps for employment on elvil works of Internal tm- provement, or be allowed to engage in the ser viee cf dncbrporated comp nor any line ofiver to be acting paymaster or disbursing | Cabinet presse The President, in conversation ator af ve stnes, declan principles by speech aud note, in the Se: ai irst with few only, but gan to dawn, tien Witt r ar 1a netitutional negative, i Nustile fo PLEOUDENTIAL APOLOGIES YOR NEPOTION dent or so ne i ward, In this cause | never asked why wore my first princtples. of republic uy dnet iter end | Without the avalanche of testimony agatnat | Pot a prejonslan. | pitati oe % 5 ” associates, or how many they would number, 1 unguestionatle outrage. That our President | this Presidential pretension, tt is only nocessar The e Pree 10% fi ‘falls! ‘iit nt for the Indian Department, if such extra | to the repeal, seying that 1 ident felt the consciousness of right [ was willing to be | has offended in this way is unhappily too appa- | to glance at the defences sometimes set up. For | tatlous assumption of In! seals. employment require that he be separated from | stron; My upon'it. “I could not understand how a arty, With Which so much of | rent. ‘The President 4s a civilian, ‘To compre- | such is the Insensibility bred by Presidential ex- THE PRESIDENTS INAUGURAL ADDRESS, his regiment of company, or otherwise inter- | Republican President could consent to weaken ve no common at- | hend the personal government that has been in- | ample that even this intolerable outrage ts not Other Presidents have entered upon their | feres with the performance of the military du-; the limitations upon the TE: tive, and said over! ite dd that a member of the to withd? t em in Osten= | Mr. Sumner said he had heard of Mr. Hamlin's | howers ofanother 4 o tyranntent meteion, al, | ob tt lone, To such ay ni my life is intertw BIN LOCAL PoLiTics | by which “our large debt abroad is tobe ultis resumption of | mately extinguished,” and gravely charging the 7 “ willed effre y in prosecuting the fatal errot tacho Not without regret can I see it suf- | stalled over us, we must know its author. His | without volces speaking for the President. ” y dist proper. Obviously. the will of on | thatin my judgment he should rather stretch te aenmeithout a peng can T eee if changed | pleturo is the’ necessary frontispiece-not asa | Kometimee it ts said. that hiesalary being. far | Cece, with, &, Certain, modesty jand distrust; | Hee, Proper, ObiOmnys hat “olcers shail | forth he’ hands: and sak to ha m, tied, | Fetuening to the charge in his annual mensage af fron Its original character, for such a change is | soldicr let It be borne in mind, but asa civilian. | from royal the people will not scat closely an | pita netony 1m, Wie ini at re the marie | Hat be allowed to leave the posts ny service | Detter always a government of law tec: of men, | tHe ensuing session, insisting upon his cone j h. ‘Therefore do Taek with no common | |The President is the titular head of the army | attempt to help relations, which, being inter- | tae and déiculty of the trust.” awakening @ Ie Might Interfere with che performance of | pRestDENTiaL INsunrERen ne deach, feeling that t {the United States, but his means that the Mee is | preted resident may supple- | Mie etfalweruth nilitary duties proper. ‘This language Is ex y into his qualifeations. In this technical spirit and in th oy pase | and nary ¢ away. [stood by its cradle. Let me not follow | not military or naval. As if to exclude al ques- | mont the pettiness of his salary by the app: ft. | = Selerar c Orel ict. Then came the act of March a, 1 n ate ally" In rede ; its hearse, Uion he is classed by the Constitution among | ing power. Let Join Adams, who did not hesl- | with political wisdom afterdeciiring hia sine | which provides: that any officer of the army OF Ms sontral Gaperiatiem, be has invectersd with Fac bite caaking tisaneonadiie charge cealaet TUR REPUBLICAN PARTY SEIZED BY THR Presi. | Cl¥!l officers. ‘Therefore, as a civilian is he te tate to bestow office upon a fow relattons of uns | Core consciousness that the task 1s above his | Navy of the United States who shall, after the | Political questions and party m ent in dis- | foe coUrdinate branch of the Government an 4 Dane seen. ‘Then perhaps we may learn the secret of | questioned merit, Judge these pretensions. I | talents," saya: Dassuge of this act, accept oF hold Any Appoints | ee tee eee i itt a the people should | claiming such astounding profits, he blundered HMeult to indi Pee pole 20 Searels ha oecuiiae ee |e: Tapproach it with those anxious and awful presenti. | Went In the diplomatic or consular service of anipulating Louisiana. thro Hicatiy in dexcribing the prises te when the disas- | he perseveres. ‘To appreciate his peculiar char- #. exalting the will of one man above | acter asa civilian (tis. important to. know hls | iE e, not merely manifest, but pain- triumphs asa soldier: for the one fs the natural ple gre Gn e | ea this diversided performance, with ite vari. r Fy public man should ve honestly pald for hie eer. | monty which the greatucas of the cbargrand the wean. | the Government, shall be considered as having AY entricity of effort, failed. "The rej Bathue should Be restrained front every petaul. | Reacof my powers sa duety Maite, and Thunbile my: | Fesignod bis eal office, and the place held by finly conapleudus, Already it had bemun, to | Cumpla cae ener fer Mae guecesafat sok, | fists apes tie wratiiude ob the pubsiccncr cvereate | eit before the sagnitade of thevundertaking. min) the military ior naval service shall he show Itsolf in personal pretensions, to which I | Goris rarely changed tothe successful civiliat, | ferau thee within his patronage upon asoneaproer, | | Our soldier, absolutely untried in ctvil life, en- Hand taken to bevarant. ent thall refer soon, When suddenly, and without | ‘There seema an incompltability, between, the | &ftiend, upon pretence that leis uot paid for his ser: | tirely anew tan, entering upon the sublimest ronsiderate and circumspect Pr tny warning through the public press, or any ex- | cwo'modihed by. the extent tocwhich one has | vice by the prosts of his omice. duties, before swhien Washington and Jefferson | bo recognized the law in its spirit as well as rf fromm public opinion, the’ President | been allowed to exclude the other, One alway: It is impossible to deny the soundness of this | bad shrunk, said In his taaagural: 7 riler statute, would have been tected by the Republican party precipitated | a soldier cannot late in life become a statesman, | requirement. and lis completeness asan answer | | The responsibilittes of the position I feel, but accept | frend by the earlier statute, would have been upon the country an ill-considered and ill-omened | One always civilian cannot late in life become | to one of the Presidential apologists. Sometimes | them without fear. prude of ction i ane ane ead there- | doubts the inthnacy between tho President and | that he | would proceed ho further “in scheme for the annexation of a portion of the | q soldier. Education and experience are needed | the defender is more audacious. insisting openly with ample preparation | £Fe-an, Insurmountable obstable to a preten- | the Collector, who are hound to each other by | this business. Ills Senatorial partizans, being Kind of Kap Domingo. In pursuance of treaty | hireacl..” Washington and Javkson were clvilians | \ipon the Presidential prerogative without ques had shrunk back with | proper duties, and-makes (him Presidential Seee | other.ties then those of seaside nelghborh a malority of the chamber, after denduncing negotla ya person of his own household, vel tion, until we seem to hear in aggravated form . He had none, Either he did not sce the | BrOPer BOR Uae ter cma art tree eter ‘The Collector was determined to obtain the ose Who oppose | , areal tipling Mimact? audaeccamp of the President of the | “yy"thelave training and experience of anti- | the obnoxious ery "To the viclor belong the | recponstbllities or the Carstr fate begun tostir dn | Fetariesg A, tater statute adds to the obstacle, | pit ofthe Hepublican State Co the discussion, In obedience to irrepressil United States, Had this effort, however | quity the soldier and civilian were often united, | spoils.” Tdid not supy y oki ice ang sentiments, feoorli cto the fowte of 1 e 0 Presistent Ww appointed Collector. With Custom House seems less a place for the ¢ tion of revenue than an engine for political faiuence through which his dictatorship may be maintained. Authentic testimony ea this tyrannical abuse beyond question, Ww York {8 the scene, and ‘Thomas Murphy, a message charged with Parthian Collector, the Prosidential lieutenant, —Nobod: the President at length announced ple rose against the and insisted upon its abandonment. patriot citizen for b ginent it would bi se that this old ery | his tosom. In either cuse he was disqualitied th pealed to : nes » Ine h squalitied, lat it shall not be lawful for any officer of the ra but since {bis hear SELECTION OF HIS CADLNET. army of the United States on the active lst to | thatin bis Jud Injudiclous tn object, been confined to | isutin modern times this bus been rare, ‘The | could be revived tn any inary and constitutional proceedings, with a | duinpris pes ; ne it exercises . Pchyose to expose itz and here 1 tise ti iyo he : ter for ¢ ders to nndertake to dictate t Jorgive me, and his peculiar represen. priper Tewird. for. coordi nute Branch of {he | ee eee ieee itis hot the educas { fanmuage of Madison’ In his judgment the pre: | Next after his inaugural address, his fret om. | Bold any civil office, whether by election oF ap- | tho associations in the different districts. wh ‘ound me disloyal to the party which I Government, it would have soon dropped out of | tion of the statesman, SH | tension was odious that offices and emoluments | cial act Was the sclection of his Cabinet, and | Dolutment, and any such oflver ucceptin should go from them to the State Convention,and | had served so long and helped to found. ‘Then i and it was not 4o-strangely and Unaccountably, | endowments of inthe training of our chieftain | of the successful candidate for the. Presidency Iinas pressed for months by every means and | endowments or in the training of our chieftain | of ance adds in words not to be forgotten nt tht appliance of power wise a nape or abroad, worded, Was nature | moment: athe TEN " huw reaching into the Senate chamber and now Wan witk Braribavoln ee ciate ILavowed withiout tbe erection orioraas | Yak (ies, Hed) geen flow comp hese y army off y thio we waters “about the Hsland:”‘Weluctant Me RASIDRUOTE POAC HER | UAC RAEN TEAuTCmOl CURT SEC Tat UN teaenR ee | lortatle, was tal Tnitiad act. "Looking ‘bark | lst can hold any civil oftce; apd thes to Senators were subdued to {ts support; while, fs experionce of life a Hetter | sdiministration--both togetivr completely so. Upon It, we recognize the pretension by which | $e inhibition itis provided that in wece pt treading under foot the Constitution {n ‘one of ree Riis Speci ani ce OF 1116 & esiar, | Oe Lgictiod all traditional usage and propriety were discard. | ¢xereising the functions of such olllee the com~ cen remembered only as 4 blunder; rould bake = it ve | were the spoils of victory, the personal property | bere the general disappointment was equalled | &™ . . “e It would be hard to @nd anything in the native | we p p wey | bys the “general wonder, an “the “Presie | once cease to be an officer of th dent was litle known except from the | Commission shall be vacated 4 o fende It is dificult to tmagine anything plainer th Sie nedh how bret oe bine te] these words. No army officer not on the roticed still more delicate to attempt to control the | Was devoti judgment of men employed tn the different de- | beleth of partinents as lo the best men to represent the of the nati fhe brave Collector, lientenant of the Such ts a summary of the San Domingo bust {that ie should not hesitate todo it; that it | ness in its characteristic features, but here are wos Gen. Grants wish, and Gen, Grant ‘was the | transgressions In every form—open violulion head’ of the Republican party. and should be | te Constifulton ty more than one rowiult rs quits sident made the shilbe Was the grand inquest i bi army, and ' tion than their? And yet they failed, 9 are strong 1 my site venated: Mow the Hine lock: authority on this subject. (New York Custoin | ment; open violation of International law tn its mt distinctive Hepublican principles, the | Dreperanon nan ate ee dat our entation | tonne ary strona words. aga By Mood y which the Just expectations of the pasty Buse On TA Caceres STOR, coe Blue Hecke ee vestigation, Vol. i, p. 5st, testhnony of | more than one of ts most beautiful principles} Pre-ident seized the war powers of th had any exportence as a civilian until he became | rt uy now. this degrading rule is urtoeaea, had elected him were set at naught, and the | ! our political almange, has under the head o dimer.) Plainly the Republican party was | flagrant Insult to the black Republic, ‘with "Executive Mansion’ list of secretaries aud justituted foreign Intervention, and_eary climax of usurpation by menace of vic the black te of Hayti, where the » of war; complicity with the wrongful ment ‘of an Aumerican citizen; * assumption of — territort: of constitutional government were nal pretensions ofone | clerks, beginning a» persons having small retarie Gen, F, T, Dent, Gen. Horace his perquisite, and all Kepublicans were to do his bidding. a. | From the same testimony President ; nor does any partisan attribute to him | und wo are told that fo the President's family bes | Safeguar that double culture which In antiquity made the | fy these ee” seident's family be- | gubordinated to the pers same man soldier and statesman, It as bi man. In this Cabinet were r, at th appea\ n Another apology youchsafed even on fr ok. Bovery rave have commenced the experiment. of self. | Spiug ! ty MEO ROOT d eat Felations with the Republican party and little | Q.f: Babcock, President, according to. th tot his in a. foreign “Jurisdiction: employ: overnnent, thus adding manifest outrage of | paca ald thas he to k no note of public afalrs, | this floor is that if, the President can- | Dosition in the country; some absolutely with | Whon. in fact, there are no such officers authors | leutonunt, wanted to ho reprosented Inthe the national navy to ‘sustate ind then for | not Sppoint | bie relations, they alone, est Point he | of all citizens, are excluded from office, whic Out claims from public service, and some abso- | rized by law, ‘th lutely disquallfed by the glits they had made | tary, assistant to the President. Such was the political phes | clerks autucrle international law to manifest outrage of the | James Buchanan, After leaving ¥ jonstitation Yeeume a Captain im the army, but soon aban | fr is said, should not be But le Me autfor a Ali those things, so utterly indefensible and | doned the service, to reappear ut a later day as ublic good that they should be e: f\ watt. HTL therefore te be promptly Meee sire mestur uncial “Ttrere ke nerrexson tober bWast?e wise prigrent vfde Fors nomenon, presented for the frst thme tn Ameri- | unauthoriz | wwned, found defenders on this floor. ‘The | jieve that he employed the Intermediate period in case of positive merit, de can history, To a coumuiites The Preatdcut de- ‘ Presidnt, who Was the original author of these y Way calculated to improve him as a staces- | zen for a partie 1 Pretie: scribed ls Cabinet as his family, with which no wrongs, continued. to matutaln thet, and ap= | se ee ea ee a eatin supperters. tay een ora Peat on Tie would be only wher Ree, | stranger could be allowed to interfere; and to a executive mansion, must be a | cure the nomination of certain persons as dele. | and the tutu ‘of the appolnting pow. peated to Republican Senators for help, thus | Colleague, Mr, Wilson—in a speech intended to | nidrt wan wo ng that his absence would be | f of Congress he announced that he se iboffice, And yet, in defance of Lie, these | gates from his district, and be promised | er tyrannically (reat ved by the Presiden. uifiling the eccentric stipatation with the Gov | commend him for reticetion, sa Hefore the | hoticed “At least, It must be such as to | lected bis Cabinet to please himself and nobody | army oricery ciatinuue to cucretse ite ‘func. he would, “Mnumediately gond their | tal tobbyiaty aud Anally, urged anew in a erninent of Hueg, executed by bis aide: ve knew ho of ‘wan earn give 4 ree tat, £2 | else—being good rules, unquestionably, for the | tions and. some — en’ Senate “with | names on to Wash) and have them | annual nesage, where undisguised tueull to the Sen At last a Republic ator, Who. fell war. we khew novalag gn carn. | make the citizen @ candidate without regari to ation of a household, and the choice of | messages from, the, Br ringed (bid 428, testimony of NV Aa baeg wtih the abeurdity tn deckaring the proy ectte pro detail following, the private secre- | Convention—being the Republican State » being all acts of substance maintained ate secretary, and executive | vention of New York —wanted to have his | by a tan calling himself alde-de-camp of Ulys- ¥ law, but pldsed betow those | fronds therein the Gurrention: avd the Prost. | sea. Graat, Preaidoat of the United Stotes, aud. Nothing Is sold of being detailed | dential Heutenant, being none other than the [| stipulating that nia chief sh au EY © ie lobby~ ao. atney are renly “enliod fo feavons Cotes 7, “ofered to eppint taug- maa. fiat to held, the contriance throuxh Congreen which is a title of office: and, | inthe Custom Hause If the witness would ae- T then urged by private’ &pydaly” wo“ Behators: eu y ing a few hundred doliars a year by tanning | family. fut no such merit is “l'to the | orwal Herat vy gengraphteal ign dtieh! fn ‘bee | Constitution and of, incernational 1a to be President. And such was is | have done little but bring scandal upon | bgen likened. : thority ean he shown for tt. aw nistered. OMe the Custom Hou is Tot much aggravation “aw to mart) Sie tn ab F4 then in obedience to the irresistible prot Preparation to govern the Great Republic, | the public kervice, At least one ts tainted with | y2MA personal government, flowered In the | surd ty suppose that a rule agaiust the exercise | openly bartered for votes, In tho State Cony soloma fudgments Why ! the grand tngiest. of the vse of bis nature, and in harmony with his whole | POSPi Oo oe ee ATE EDWIN M. STANTON, | frau, and another, With the commission of the | Nay Department, where a'vitt-bearlng Greek | of a civil office can be evaded by a detail, If it | tlon, Here was Intolerable tyranny with tun uaich drought Andree Johuson tothe bare the Ufe, pleaded for the equal rights of the black i ‘ + STANTON. | Fre niblie abroad. has been wuilty of indiscretions | Was suddenly changod to a Secretary, No less @ ye done for three army officers, why not for | tmoralization like that of the slave market. But | Sevate houid Tare ‘stent on this conglomerate mtadee fepublc, who declared that he did this as a] Something must be attributed to individual | inconsistent with his trust. Appointed. origins | Persobage than the grand old admiral, the brave e dozen. Nay more, if the clvilofice of Seere- | New York Is not the only scone of this outrage, | Manor, erery park uf ihieh yous ft neyOnd Republican, and to save the party from this | character, and here Lexpress no opinion of my | divin “open defance of Fopuuilean principles, | Yet modest Farragut, was reported as askli tary at the Bxecutive Mansion may be « The. Presidential pretension. extends ever ence charged agate Als uredecessorgs hy Wrotclied conspiracy—this Republican Senator, | own. I shall allow another to speak in solemn | fiicy have boon retained inaMice after thei une | te,oth of March—the very da without laws Why hot some other. evil where, nor Is iteasy te measure the arrogay und cartons t 2 oreo Ff engoved in a patric rvice, and anxions to | words echoed from the tomb. On reaching | ftrass became painfully conspleuous. Hy the | ek Was announced—in unaifected , | And what isto hinder the President from sur | of corruption or the honest indignation that tt teertent, the ridal [J save ihe colored people from outrage, was de- | Washington at the opening of Congress In De- | fiatimony before a Congressional. Committee, | "D9 you know anything of Borle yet | rounding himself not only with secretaries, but | quickens into life, latory: ti the exte ao inved on this Hoor as a traitor to the party, | cember, 1808, L was pained to hear that Mr, | festinany Deture wis. tmpltcuted this unconapicuous citizen, bearer of giits to | with messengers, stewards. and personal attend- |" puesipeNtiaL CONTRIVANCES AGAINST san | @ shleh tie oue-tian ‘1 Vin subjuces and this was done by a Senator speaking tor the | Stanton, lately Secretary of War, was in falllng | bribery anit corrup sald that at the President, was constituted Farragut’s naval | ants, all detafled from the the army? Why may SOR mG, Ing the Goverumncat porty, and known to be in intimate relations | health. Full of gratitude for his unsurpassed | after considerable d President has con. | Superior, If others were less obscure, the Cab- | he not enlarge the military circle at the Lx. | 4. ne beatles SULY TO THE APRICAN RACE, With Lie ident guilty of these wrongs. Evi- | services, and with a sentiment of friendship Taha eetne Heave fer tho | 1et as a unit, was none the less notable as the | ecutive Mansion indefinitely? If the President hese Presidential pretensions, in all thelr eon nit, that While at cach stage T have dently {he party was In proces of change from | quickened by common political sympathte: nt this enormous pretension of nepotisin, | creature of the Presidential will, n be justified in his present course there is no | Variety, personal and military, with reckless ine 7 feit tis tyranny ical heeuly, and ever nek hae Mit Reucruus ussoclation dedicated to human no tine in seeiag him, an Pre on to clephantiaate; which mohody marie: | chance vied with favoritism as’ al limit to his pretensions in open violation of the | difference to law, naturally ripened In the con ae 0 impeachniet, my feelings have rights and to the guardianship of the Afri my visits, until his death, Ee i . All ils sso strange, when we siatute, “Here the Ilte Hock testifes again, for | Wivance, nursed in, the hot-house of secrocy, | heen most ativred ‘by the utrage U6 Hast, whe. foo plainly it was becoming th of the same month — my . AES the true Idea of a Cabinet. Thou it records the names of the secrotarles in their | Aewlnst the peace of the Island of San Dominci, | Met Dinas tuba Marie mack apa es wae an tne fone man and his persona last visit was marked by a communication never . Mos Bad ‘G macinn _ | named in the Constitution,by virtue of unt Proper places as army of thus } nting | } say. deliberately, against the How achief strate, with four tlilions nore which, with our President, lias assumed an un: island 3 f der the guise of ‘ tone of colot how much he set at desanee the Constitution tol forgotten. Aj ntered his) bedroom. yrecedented form. Sometimes public 1 Usage among us, and harmony with them as holding two Inew tible offices, and ; for under the guise of a fellow ¢ could have done. Uis- thing, passe Honiltnw, or how much heinsuted the | where L found him reclining on a sofa propped | precedente form. Sometiines publi | nen ‘Aments everywhore, the Cabinet Las | dismiss this transaction as another instance of | ton, there was menace to the prehension, “This outrage was” followed. by ¢. The President was to be t hy pillows, he reached out his hand, already | Wit iawn that any President has before repald yustitutional body, hardly less than | I dential pretension which, in the interest | Haytt | ‘This whole i bsolutely ti Hdent in which th seutimenis w if iat oll bagards, notwithstanding his cfammy, ootd, and in reply tomy Inquity “How |e Ata Ath once. Kora pubic man te fake | expressly established by ‘the Constitution | of republican government, should be arrested. | defensible from begin > end, being wre peated Frederick for i Tations, and ail who called them in question | are you?" he auswered, “Waiting for my fur- 4 : ; nalt Itself. Its members besides being the heads of | exagpeniicaN GOVERNMENT sSUnORDINATION | SL every point. Tt hs t Pokal and most ¢ Heotal yo whe Ye ater a i : a7 gilts is reprehensible. a President to select | Itself |i \ i UNREPUBLICA ' ATION | Brinatin product of che Adnilnintrations tito | pereaual wh In skin nut en wee th be strack down, In exhibiting this | lough.”” Then at once, with singular solemnity, | Bapinet councillors. and other officers among | grea! departinents, are the counsellors of the OF THE WAK DEPATIMENT TO THE GENERAL wee i Ad niinieteasiony inte | trey Cauca President ms one sioeratic pretension, 8 revolutionary and un- | he said: “1 have something to say to you," | ¢abinet councillons and oiler uficgrs among | President with the duty to advise him of all TS-CHIEE, Which it infused and projected —“itsel€ | of ik Domloge, and. yee r jaracter, | mean to he moderate Twas seated he proceeded, without a} Vivin republican annals, Obaerve, ein that f | matters within the sphere of his oMlce, being Hnght atanel Gt no | More than Into anything else. | Tn this | on his return and sight of Wi hy hd to keep within the strictest dof Introduction: "1 know ‘Gen, Grant ee tt enuy, unwilling (o exhibit the ine | Bothing less than the great catalogue in the pro- | From the Executive sion pass now tothe | multiform disobedience’ to" law we | Maisto, he was repelled frota’ the comm bo, The trots adisput and iobody than any other person inthe country'can | Speak, of It gently. unwilling exhibit the ing) ainbie of the Constitution, beginning with duty | War Vepartment and there we withess the same | belold our President, | 1 have refered | the tail steamer on the Potomac, ‘whore ‘the ote on mn clolition of the Constitirttan ¢ Icnow him, Twas my duty to study Dim. and 7 | eet ee ee ce aa a ene ein try teat | te tie tion and ending with the duty to eridenthlpecténsions by which lawausskeand | to this contrivance, as marking an epoch int Fomulestoners were siready seated, aod. throug Wa cit the ineuit to the Lack | aid wo nicht and day, when Law hin and when jie Ie and bictitoutas an ekampler diners blessing of liberty to ourselves and arses t principle are lost fa the will ofene ian, | siiential pretensions. Tt is my duty, now, to | Hcl ase the Ate timuited and their equal riqtig & le case being n ¢ nest Tuid net see him, and now I tell you what we ula Riche CAPRGK Chinen erily supremacy of the elvil power oye » mille | shot a true character, as awaraing against ite | fenieds Mut the Hresident. whose ¢ ealon he ba wily mare unconatitition don more | know. He cannot govern tht Have been EmOuanOuy Mistery SOrrUbE. ChArao. side's consplouous itnees for the exalted | tory fs typited In the Secretary of War-acivile | author, A few weeks only atter begining his | wring, uta few days fa haa rr i nything alleged against Andrew The intensity of his man Fe ee EN Ua a AS Miles as head of Cand aa a fraria when army oficers recelve orders. reer as aelyilian, nd while oenpiod with anile | Oooh reat Executive mansion, wetually forge J fue Unipsckeninie Sit nens of his judgment surp for though I A aAtiRS and’ ROWhARPS with more a member sh hh aes tt autiful rule, with Its lesson of sub; rry weurpations and the perquisites of opler ‘h tor vioe wevetees he had song, Kut a a lyf site niat aware the late secretary at War dad noe | She {king Of gifts an pe eh aa 14 min the Mt Ms dinatlon t he milit ary, W as suddenly aside u 14 tempt by overtures of Dominican plotters, | thls iuctgnity is ty unison willy the rest, Alter Insulte he judgment already recorded, it itwere | place the President very high in general capaci- " Mie aner mnie a bEsENe lansyad Adence and gives strength [ Oy our President, and te Secretar AL ties | ped try the uamerpey Breese vent ‘thee epoeniniterr: fais ie Nae kL Renn Rois again By the extraordinary | ted wasn reine pr audinent hosteinals *Thow shalt not wrest Judaments Thou {OTe Adinihisiration, How little those things | graded to be a vlerk. Whe Sth of Wit | Cazneduy the fre wh adventurer,” conspl rd ‘ r nygon overy line of otfive, to place | couched, At lust, after some delay, occu. aetna’ th Hh were regarded 1 6 President necd not be | nessed a most tnporty order the | rator, and trickster, degertbed “hy one Herre teal ond term as Prosident 5 and in “meditating upon his remark. | Hoth blind the eves Of the wise Here V told. Unquestionably the President basa dis- | President reconstituting the. military departe | who | knows him well, as the worst | 1). Ald + gives conseat these efforts ave statement, [ observed; “What you Re ee te Dose net | cretion in the appoiutiment of lis Cablnoty but | ments covering the South States atid placing | man living of whom he has any personal know tare | stay tite jst t become more noteworthy is ry broad vit is as te as prie, Hose a bas ie nti onal al ration regul 4 by then tinder oth ors of Me be oy whe pur vdeo. and the second one of Nur own country pokaetaa i ¥ 1 that the name oft br ie repiled promptly. 1 added: ey a regyeds rogard for the Interests of the country, and not | Ported to he s hy the Adjutan eral, en. tong resident on the island, known as dis i 0, W golty tothe Afr has becomes sign rare tardy. Wity did ou Wall Cll tis late Under the induehse OF wife it mercenary, | fy mere. personal Wilby statesmauship, and | by command of the General of the Ariny, but | loyal throughout the war, and entirely kindred | oy coupler, fut becaune It hs r 14 noord—dividing Insteac Why did you not say It befere his nomi. | Sitor. the gift is equally perniclous, Ariane | Bet by favoritism, A Cabinet isa national instil | actually ignoring the Secretary of War. ‘Three | in. eb roto Baez toning to these | sorrow duspen have Tomade va ry ehorts tend dircctly tothe hou a, and had ny opportunity ecuing a roverih bug | OUF President Is allowed to copy tho example | Proceed from the, President. whereby, in ex- | In the press su Ingannexion of the Island oF | wish expunged from biter: Wub d had ne h by ilenee ratities. Let ie party | much oceupfed at the me Wit) Die Cut eRe Lee eee eens eee ees nee enich only ments the Cabin selucted on public t hited fo the GencratineCites, belng Willian 'T. | trivance, and here we ein every form Wil hot allow them to be the Pre i He ie Twill not renounce yor ae HH Bis banks Bt ita w at ben at his peril, At thelr appearance the prayer Sarwan: er of itp bbe Ruble npr ORs yy Phd RBH see are tlk a « , ht i He y at pal ad ! eaion he invites ® varty ro the willdtian indie } succession of speeches for, him tn Ohi and hight, setting himself se iftetaking ay | eles At is only by rome extraordinary halluel: | will tevort to. and r glie hnuwedia tout a youn aniver win the sie 1 ba bt a pels to consider his pretensions, | Pennaylvania, "Ld spoke,” sad he, bub hp) fe ean f nation that the Presidentota Republic dedicated General Comma rin; a cL thot is} ledlasive enn crite 1 rare in issue, : never introduced the name of Gen, Grant, 1 potism, in Wis Wifes | cy constitutional Hberty ean lnagine himself in Lhis act of revolution, exalting the mititary | te it the Breeutive Mansion, ant oleaasa | 2 4 mis upture top ale raceeecnts weat dowh this our Cwsar feod that | "This was the Jast thie 1 saw Mr, Stanton, A | became >uld not be induced to | counsellors are changed from public officers to | mand, proceeded to plave the several bureau | Mantels, but the plot appears ina communica HE Where tore what they do ahd Wht they. way Ww sume so imuch. No honor for vie- | few days later followed him to the grave wiere | Berepta certaln amount f canal stock, offered | remwonal attendants, and a gr constitus | ort of the War Department upon his military | Yon of the same date from the Secretar ust be consideredas done and said by the chi: fain : a) justify disobedience to the Con- | he pow rests. Ag the vagaries of tl ident | Bim by the State of Virgls me SP ppare in an | tonal body, in which all vitizens have «common | st that for the time there wie a nulitary dice | Navy, directed to the captain of the Hex, ADE Were 18 6 Hew manifestation of thar s ‘ty Tew nor can it afford the least | he. ame sivré and more mani j fiid the Prete ometal communication, “Thus he wrote: | tuturest, is made a perquisite of the President. — | tstorehip. with the President at tls heal, noc me nol’ a war ship with ab, armament ¢ Mg Mivotlve For aMniaee Tite Me petaiet eee Ae } aan dential office seemed more more 4 ~ low would ier be viewed by the eye of the )PROPRIATIO: ¢ OFFICES, Onspirit, but in detual form tinch gun and four 32-pounders, to y wictus 1 Thin and perquisite, thle dying Judge ot eee aaa oie oe ean a a a ee oe les which faa Hy-and-by John A, Rawlins, actvilian by edue | him oral support Nis guns, THR GIR AT PIERS OAT QUAKE LL i hart the at citizen who knew hitn so Well haunted | under whatever py ie, Bnd howerer bostoined Jarked among t ry ios witloh followed, | cation and a respect the Constitution, this was followed by a telegraphic instruc Any pr i Shin hat ine Hight and day, and Lnow communicate it to | (use gifts are mate th Couuttier? iT avccpiot | and Kindred ju character with the appropristion | cane secretary of War, and though bound to the | to Key West for ap hip to proceed | when didnt vey hit adit in) country, fecltng that It isa legacy Lhave no | shoudl not heucetorward be considered as a depeud, | OC the Cabinet as individual property, was tio | President by personal thes, he said check to. without a moment's delay to San Domingo cfty [ Mreake fort in yun A ihe law; bound to obey Its slightest | fieht to withheld. Ont? Lnever fora moment eaterta ned the lea vt-ace | &ppeopelation of the of he country. Obs | King, by a General Order issued from the War | tbe placed at the disposal of Gen, Babcock | dental auarreter ou ty. Aw in A» the elect of the people he owes |" froyand tho intrinsic interest from its author | Cepting Ht: How dan irahly he touches toe polat whey | scure and undeserving ony marriace con | Department, March 2 18, and signed by the | While on thatcoast, Withsuch "moral support” | ey) hihi on p (he example of wilting obedience, but | jt is not without value as testimony, in consider. | Re asks: VIL accepted thls should L uot hencesormucd | nections, personal retainers, army wssuciatess | Secretary of War, The offensive order was re- | the emissary of the President obtained from tho | ix'toreinusty hav lag quart Ny elity and industry inthe discharge of ing how the Pr Jent could have by Jed into © CONSISTED 88 8 Cetendan' friends of unkuewn fame, and notable only a8 7 scinded, and twas e njoined that all oficial busi- | Usurper Baez that famous protocol stipulatin other President, ut more than all others toy r, Miah ts office, with an abrogation of all | that Quixotism of personal pretension which it According to our Scripture, the gift binds the | personal frl sor friends of his relations, ‘ey hess witch by law. or regulation requires the annexation of Dominica in consideration of | from George Washing! inet, Hisown Calinet, bode Hs) bothing for self, bat all for the | j, my'duty to expose. Pardon meif Lrepeatthat | eyes, According to Washington, it makes the | dently absorbed the Presidential mind during | qction of the Prosident of Secretary $1,500,000, Which the young oMleer, fresh from | the Senate, the Hous of I ativer, the diploma (vty wid now, as we regard the career of | {tig my duty to make the exposure, spreading t r a dependent, In harmony with this | those months of reticence When a generous peo | ho wnhmitted by Chiefs of Stal, Corpa, Doe | the Executive Mansion, professed to execute a vice and the civil Kervice rally, all have thele fia oaidldate we find to our amazement bow | fore you the proofs of that personal government nt was his subsequent refusal to be | ple supposed the Cabinet to be theallabsorbing | partments and Bureaus tothe Secrotary of War, |" Aldo-de-Camp of bis Excellence, Gen. Ulysses mL aver ae Be non Reece Maelog, tha in this simple requirement, hich will only pass without censure when it | President, as is recorded by an Ingenious writer, | thoug Judiing from the fact, it would seom | [Ah port sald that this restoration of the | & Grant, President of the United i ra, hile Companions in the oF t Bry only | passes without observation... uaisting upon re: | He was exceedingly careful about committing | as ifthe chiof and most spontaneous thouht | civit power to ia rahtfulsupremacy was not obs | Heailof Chiol Miwistvate of Hea He GUID BAIUDDR 1H BBB REID, OR Fi Beat flection, the President challenges Inqulry_and | himself, would receive no favors of any kind, | Was how to oxplolt the apwoluting | tained with resignation on | dent waa ct military eldeflrin wilh f i const ¥, but i f puts hinself upon the country; but even Uf his | and scrupulously pal everything, A largd | power ty bis own personal, be \! | Uie part of the Secretary. BLOM HUG TU bh rt ye cdtaalihl utee ah i Pressure fur reglection did Hot menace the tran. | House wa xot apart for him on Ninth stroot, on | this period | the | New | Yar, 1U% SECRETARY OF 1B NAVY uy Depury, — |, {e.sAMe nAtraetion contalie d the unbtush ren vuid th Wuns Or Biekes } \ fuillty of the country, itis important that the | the grounds now covered by the Pennsylvania | | ented Ttaoll to the Imaging ine Pe tulee wea theG pn thats ile. Hy Gen Grant Pitan, PUN yc eed i He aha 5 Herscnal pretensions he hay setup should be ex: | University, which ho refused to accept, By | lett written con a mitita mebaracter was th 4 i he Valle Bromniea pele | Aheary te Minted oan ad alt quarrela Woe ' his drop a personal in- | Posed. dial no Prestdent hereasier may vente | sich instances, brought to Neht recently and | dent to the generosity of the Collvc atieinpt to devolve the dutios y y » all is influence dy order that t Bgl a ai MA EUR oars ae MLHOe AA ' f here pata rs, fast hol MT ae pou wh ways and no Seaator presen sining In contrast with aur times, welearn to | know the rst Dr. Jubnson geting as executor | parth orders were to | ide xii the Donia Kopublic tothe | evuiently our President bay never read the Eleventh Beir laitert fuure more than duties, How per- Lis defend them, The case te clear as neon, | admire anew the virtue of Washington, Itwould | in selling the distillery of Me. 'Thrate, said," We | be st ot the Navy, | kites Hip Hequire such a deg of onuantieity © A President of tie Uoited States shall m MUL icky have been more prot , ‘i be easy to show bow tn all ages vie refusal | are not sol Moftubs and oats, w per A Aduriral penn in tie | pop ly among the members of Congiesn as | bover quarrel,” avle ut hy honthe public dr s. How the Prost TWo TYPLC INSTANCES, of gifts bos been recognized os the sign | selling the pote: ity of growkn eh beyond | opted Fol May Ui, be; or acoordin Will be nevossary for its aeconipl mt hich i Sobbing he 1 ue nu y advance tis In opening this ¢ wue Iselect two typioal | of virtue, Hf not the requirement of duty, | ine dreams of avarice.” If the F did | another instance, © David D. Porter, View Ade | ds simpli Une Crestdont sliail bee Bb lolileyiat y wu danyenary , leaf nepotiom dwartag everyt noownees nepotism” and gitt-taking olcially | The Constit testifies net the taking of | not use the sounding phrase of the great Bn: tniral, for the socketary of Ure Navy The ob- | to biting avout the annexation by ¢ he's of no right to te ie heel an aur aatany, and Havdly equadlad tn | « Vitcdooachcatachitey, indefeasible in] gifts hy ofleers of the United States. When it | lish moralist itis ovident that hit military de- | vious object of this tlegal arrangement was to | such was the strange beginning, Hizb uncon rel Witt at hide te cin Asai tie " ' erin nis where Us db Moe ice miant | dof a Republic pernicious in-ex- | provides that no persons holding any offic Rendent felt in that letter allthe potentiality ad- | enable the ineumbent, wha stood high on | sticutional, and offensive im every partienlar, but | ci oie Withua Martie ta ae p Mw i the same quintt opice has bon | any nd showing beyond question t oft or trust under them shall, with Priised in the prcase, and he acted accords | lie Hat of Gut maker, to be Bocretary | slowing tie Presidential charac toe | patrlourin, Without_a shock to ti suf life, § ci yon’ thie fiom wham he had ves | olism whieh ch the Proside ent of the Congress, wecept of any pr Ibis not necessary” to way Without bein troubled sith) the busiaess | turn t Moar nd PW thobt a Zar to the harmony of theo f Wor bevents, (nwa making He comutey | mee Inte & personal Iisth tality not unlike | or emolument from any King prince, or Toreken there waswdepaetire from t of the omios. Not sly ho Was un invalid, | mesnaned t anipiot hy " WUEY OF Vale waist v1 : Fanataig teas. Haw personal de | the trunk of ian elephants apt tur all things | State. ‘The acceptance of if prosent or emolu- af law, whether in the appolut who, aeoording te Wey contestant iy | Genoral Uiys 1 had Hound tie Pres Aint nw the question ity 0 pte ei ueete eather than punlic or party | small as well as great, from’ provision fora relne [| ment from our own constituents was left with: | Cablnot or of personal favorites, ever plowed Mat hee bry Hansel co work | dent ty Geomme alubbyinl foray ‘ ' ‘ my e eo eed Wade Lhe standard of favor, | live to pressiog w Lroaly vu & reluctant Seuate, | out coustitutioual luhibition, to be constraingd | for versonal Lenviaglions, although it wae | tore Cian an hour @ dey, Bubthy Mesidont | liotoad af boug dieaeivod oud teyuauded, itnued ute Thirds ged