SrilUT OF THE PRESS. EDITORIAL 0PIMI05B OF THB LKADIBO JOURNALS prON OrRRINT TOPICS COMPILRD It V BUT DAT FOR THK BVKNINO TRLRORAFR. Itepudlatlon'a Doulil Kdg. pyont the IV. Y. Tribune. The Albany Argus smacks Its lips over Mr. Pendleton's recent demonstration against the national creditors, saying: "The subject attracts great Attention In the wHirn WiHles. end Hie policy in apparently taking the nhupe (i a popular cry. NliiKiilarly euouKit, 11 is a viy taken up from the vocabu lary of the olU euennm ol Hie Democracy, wuo resisted tlie Independent Treasury policy of Van Hureu's adiiiliilHtrttlloii, and the reoognl- Void v ....... nroii ihn name cry bcalns to be heard No more gold for the creditor, and greenbacks i..r .nm i.foolo!' 'One currency for the oredilorl ie for the people! 'Greenbacks for the oredl inr! Greenbacks for the people!' Or, as It In else wiiAia phrased, 'Let t he debt oontracteU by In flation by paid by 1.. nation!' The loglo of suoU nopular cries goes straight to the hearts of the people, for It is addrehsed not to their reason, but to their interests and prejudices." It Is utterly false that the national debt was "contracted by inllation." It was con tracted by war by a war waged by slavery and sham democracy against the Integrity of the republic That war cost our people half a million of lives and five billions of money; and every life, every dime, is righteously scored up against the authors and abettors of the slaveholders' Kebellion. Had they submitted to the result ot a fair election, as all beaten parties had previously done, there weuld have been no bloodshed and no debt. Not till the last dime is paid the last mourner consoled, can the plotters of the Rebellion and their abettors be forgotten or forgiven. The one righteous way to reestablish a com mon currency for people and Government ia to resume specie payments. Bat this is just what they who clamor against " rags for the people" will not have. If they will unite with us in calling and working for resump tion, it can be had directly. But, while they pretend to deprecate inflation and non-redemption, they are laying plans to perpetuate and even aggravate them. The Argus calls lor a forced withdrawal from circulation of our National Bank currency, and for the Federal taxation of the public debt. The income from that debt is taxed already, and is subject to Federal taxation like other income. The right to tax is not "an unlimited right," as the Argus terms it; but we see not why it is not identical with the right to tax other income. But Mr. Pendleton's plan of paying off the whole debt by further issues of greenbacks to the extent of two billions rather staggers some of the weaker brethren, and thus demurs the Argus: "The proposition of Mr. Pendleton goes further than the substitution of a Uoverninenc currency for the present bank circulation. It proposes to lbsue for the whole body of the debt, as it falls due, an equivalent amount of paper money. The process is to be graduated in ionie way; but in what way? Toe ttve tweuties are due in large amounts a large part of the debt ia convertible Into this form. Can we afford to flood the country witn the thousands ot millions of greenbacks requisite for this process of debt-extinction? We can see how easy it may be thus to swamp ttiedetit, hut would 11 not swamp all debts aud flood ail property ? Would not the deluge of paper sweep away the whole iabrio of credit and ex isting valuations? We must learn how this process is to be made gradual, before we can realize Us value as a measure of statesman ship." The Argus is evidently not up to the Western standard of Democracy. To "swamp all debts," by making money so abundant that a creditor will instinctively run at the sight of his debtor, fearing that the latter will insist on paying him oil', is the hoped-for Millennium of the embarrassed and the thriftless. Most men could easily pay their debts or suppose they could if we only had ten times the cur rency we now have; so that $1000 worth (at present valuation) of corner-lots or wild lands would readily pay 810,000 of debt. Only pass the word that the Pendleton policy will "swamp all debts," and its champions will be rapidly multiplied, especially at the West. ' The Treasury Department ill Danger. From the If. Y. Jleratd. . It is necessary that President Johnson should turn his attention at once to the condition of he Treasury Department. The recent letter of McCulloch does not meet the case. The enormous frauds that have been committed upon the revenue in whisky, tobacco, petroleum, and other things amount, as far as they have been discovered, to little less than a hundred millions of dollars. What the undiscovered frauds amount to we cannot say; but judging from the gross mismanagement of the Treasury in all its branches, the losses of the Government are much greater, probably, than those that have been brought to light. Then there are the startling revelations of deficiencies and Irregularities, involving stupendous sums, which we have referred to before, and which the extracts of secret and suppressed investi gations in our hands seem to confirm. The aggregate amount is said to be hundreds of millions; so enormous, indeed, that we have been afraid to publish the evidence. This was brought out by a committee of the House, not yet published. The specific amounts named, about which there appears little doubt, Is in one case over fifty millions, in another twenty millions, and so on of other sums. Some of these deficiencies and irregu larities date back to the time when Mr. Chase left the Treasury Department. But although the extracts we hold, taken from the invetti gations secretly made in the committee, show a fearful state of things, the evidence has been so carefully withheld from the public, or ' J A i . . .. . suppressed, that there is reason to believe the whole truth has not yet been obtained. We want more light upon the subject. The bond holders and the people generally will feel un easy until the Treasury Department be thoroughly overhauled. It devolves upon the President to see that this be done without delay. - ' lie must not be satisfied with what this or that official may tell him; but he must know, and must let the public know, the true condition of the Treasury as investigated by a Com mittee of the House. Mr. Chase, when Secretary, organized the T)enartment in all its details; but he was not much of an organizer, as we have seen from the looseness of the whole system, from the TnrtnnitiM afforded for frauds, and from the .n,,mnlation of a stupendous debt for which there was no necessity. Had the Treasury yn nrnnerlv managed by him, and the amount of revenue raised at that time which we now raise, instead of borrowing and issuing bonds at a ruinous rate, the debt would not i.... mnn than half or a third as large. ' He was utterly incompetent for the position he held. He had but one idea, and that was to . lxmdholdiner class, a moneyed on earthy, and the powerful national bank system, of reaching the Presidency through their influence. He left tho Treasury THE DATJLV in such a condition that President Llnoolnhad great difficulty In finding a man to take his place. Finally Mr. Feseenden accepted the po sition; but he was so disgusted that he soon re signed. Then acreature and financial duoinle or Mr. Chase, a small country banker from Indiana and the Comptroller of the Currency, was made Secretary. Through the Chase influ ence, and because no statesman oould be found Willing tO take Cliarge Ul m urjrai luirrui. iu m oonditiou at that time, Mr. McCullooh was, unfortunately, elevated to the position. Since j he became Secretary, our financial affairs have ! been going from a bad to a worse condition. He has been floundering about in ignorance ! of where lie was or what to do. At one time he raised the cry of on to specie pay- ments, in chorus with the same radical organs which nearly ruined the country with their "on to Kichmond" cries, and at another time he stops the contraction of the currency becanse be sees the revenue going and ruin staring him iu the face. Had it not been for the wonderful resources of this great country, the Treasury would have been bankrupt before now, under his misman agement. Should he remain Secretary v or three years longer, there will be reason to fear a bankrupt Treasury, notwithstanding all our national resources and the surprising industry of the people. No people or government can stand long such incapacity as he exhibits, and the stupendous frauds and losses that are the consequences. To save the Treasury from bankruptcy, the republic from great financial disasters, and himself from blame, the Presi dent should suspend Mr. McCulloch at once, and appoint some experienced financier and able statesman as Secretary of the Treasury. This only can save the Department from im pending danger. Italy Home. From the iV. I'. 2ribune. General Rufus King, our late Minister to Rome, has closed the shop and returned to his own country. In this he has done exactly right. Congress refused to make an appro priation for his salary after the 30th of June last; and he took the hint, as became a gentle man by birth and breeding. From no dislike or distrust of General King, but because it believed the mission no longer required, Con gress stopped the salary; so the General con sidered his mission at an end. Rome is a part of Italy. Her people are Italians; the walls of her capitol should echo the debates of the Italian Parliament; they would do so if her people were not awed into servility by foreign policy and foreign bayo nets. France, Austria, aud Spain say that Italy shall not have her ancient capitol, and Italy is forced to wait. But it was a scandal and an amazement to the republicans of Eu rope that this country should seem to be a silent partner in the conspiracy against Italian unity. Let us take care that she be so nevermore. The Law of Impeachment. From the Washington Chronicle. The remedy of impeachment is not a novel one, although its application to the President would be novel, and we presume it is because of such novelty of application in the contem plated impeachment of Andrew Johnson, that it is magnified into something terrible and startling. We do not see any justification for the impressions which have been studiously cultivated regarding it. Everything has been done to make it appear that Congress in im peaching the President would be exceeding its powers would be perpetrating some dreadful act full of evil portent, and fraught with trou ble to the country. There is no reason for this. Impeachment is a constitutional remedy, especially provided to meet just such cases of ollicial malpractice as President Johnson has been guilty of, and we do not see why his re moval and disfranchisement need create any greater disturbance than the removal of any other President by operation of law. Every President, except two, who died, has been re tired by operation of the law, and Andrew Johnson will be retired also, whether before or at the end of his term remains to be seen. A serious error has been adopted by many people in supposing that an ollicial must be guilty of an indictable offense to be subjeot to impeachment. This is not the case. Every publio officer is as responsible as any private citizen to the ordinary process of the penal law, and consequently the constitutional orga nization of the departments of the Government only requires that the power of impeachment should apply to public officers for official offenses, by an immediate removal aud per petual disqualification. The subjects of im peachment are "treason, bribery, or other high crimes or misdemeanors." Treason is consti tutionally defined; bribery is determinable by the rules of law, "other high crimes or misde meanors" are an indefinite classification of official delinquencies intended to subserve the public good by leaving it to the determination of the high court of impeachment, whether the offense charged shall be so classed,and the party on trial convicted. These embrace equally those cases of official misconduct which may also be prosecuted by indictment or informa tion, as those cases which are only cognizable in a course of impeachment. For instance, every species of direct corruption committed by a judge, whether off or on the bench, would furnish occasion for an indictment to punish the offense, as well as for impeachment to remove the offender. Jiut for the arbitrary deportment, the oppressive conduct of a jus tice in court, the ordinary tribunals can afford no redress. The judicial history exhibits a great variety of both these descriptions of offenses. Lord Bacon is a memorable example of the corruption of money, yet he could not thereby produce as much oppression and wrong, as the judicial aberrations of Jeffries, bcroggs, or Tresilian, from party hatred and passion. At a period of great party oontest, when popish plots were the bug-bear of religious factions, the non-conformity of the Duke of York, the presumptive heir to the crown, and a great body ot tne catnoiio noDiuty, nau raised a hue and cry throughout the kingdom, Lord C. J. Croggs heard that the grand jury intended to present the illustrious offenders, and be dismissed the grand jury before they had completed the business of the sessions. nobody doubts the right or the court, in tlie exeroise of a wise discretion, to disoharge a grand jury, yet the circumstances surround ing this case caused an impeachment of the chief justice. The act was charged as illegal and arbitrary; a high misdemeanor, a violation of his oath, and the means to subvert the fundamental laws of the land. Hon. Alexander Addison, chief justice of the western circuit In Pennsylvania, was im peached, tried, and removed from offloe for a similar offense by the Legislature of Penn sylvania in 1 802. H Interrupted an associate judge, who was not a lawyer, in instructing the Grand Jury as to the law, and adjourned the court so as to prevent their hearing his associate's opinion. But a C. J. Soroggi and Judge Addison both actd in,L In court, the ordinary tribunal ooni.i rrvn or pnnibh their misconduct, andUe process of EVENING TELEGRAPII PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, Impeachment was Indispensable to the pur poses of justice. Neither of these Judges had been guilty, of an indictable offense, or a technical ' misdemeanor under common or statute law, but of arbitrary conduct in office, which numerous settled parliamentary cases, as well as American ones, make- an impeach able misdemeanor. The difference of time and place makes often, in law and reason, an essential difference in the delinquency and punishment of an offen sive act, even by a private citizen. The giving the lie, in a street or a tavern, is a breach of good manners, and generally terminates in a personal rencontre; yet it. is not an offense in the law, but if the same indecorous expression is pronounced in a court of justice it Is highly penal. If a man swears in the presence of a justice of the peace, he may be fined and com mitted. A blow given in the highway is a niero misdemeanor, but if given in West minster Hall it has been regarded as a species of treason. If a citizen were to threaten a judge on the street or in a private roam for his con duct in court, it would only be subject to the operation of the laws regulating individual intercourse, but suoh a threat in court would be a contempt for which immediate commit ment to jail would be the penalty. Such being the case with-private citizens, it is also the case that certain officials may not be at liberty to act as base men without impairing the dignity and authority of their offices, and thereby undermining and bringing into con tempt the institutions of their country. Judges have been impeached and removed from the bench in this country for getting drunk off the bench as well as on. Unfitness for duty on the bench because of drunkenness 13 an im peachable, but not an indictable, offense. Drunkenness off the bench is an impeachable misdemeanor because of the degradation into which it drags an important office, destroying us respectability and usemtness. The same reasons will apply to the Presl dent. The Executive office, like that of the king, never dies. The President cannot shift it from his shoulders, aud we have never doubted the present inoumbent's liability to impeaohment for numerous offenses against the law and publio morals. An Attorney General has been impeached in England for giving a "wrong opinion." This would be harsh if it were merely an error of judg ment; but it was not an error of judgment. Like btanbery's opinion on the Keconstruc tion laws, it was intentionally perverse, and the intent was a question of fact, to be de termined by the jury, just as malice is in a case of murder. Sensible men know what an Exeoutive means by his course, iust as they can trace the purpose of a criminal. Who can doubt that the assaults made by the President upon the Civil Rights law and Freedmen's Bureau law, after they had been passed by constitutional majorities over hi3 vetoes, were impeachable offenses 1 He was bound by his oath to execute the law3 in good faith, instead of which he endeavored to excite the passions of the multitude against them by denouncing them as unconstitutional and otherwise obnoxious. In Wooddeson's "Essay on the Law of Parliamentary Impeachments," page 596, he says: "It is certain that magistrates and officers intrusted with the administration of publio affairs, may abuse their delegated powers to the extensive detriment of the community, and at the same time in manner not properly cognizable before the ordinary tribunals;" and further on, at page G01-2, he continues, "Such kinds of misdeeds as pecu liarly injure the commonwealth by the abuse of high offices of trust are the most proper, and have been the most usual, grounds for this kind of prosecution. Thus, if a lord chancellor be guilty of bribery, or of acting grossly contrary to the duty of his office; if the judges mislead their sovereign by unconstitutional opinions; if any other magistrate attempt to subvert the fundamental laws, or introduce arbitrary power these have been deemed cases adapted to parliamentary inquiry and decision. So, where a lord chancellor has been thought to have put the seal to an ignominious treaty; a lord admiral to neglect the safeguard of the sea; an ambassador to betray his trust; a privy counsellor to propound or support per nicious or dishonorable measures, or a confi dential adviser of his sovereign to obtain ex orbitant grants or incompatible employments. These imputations have properly occasioned impeachments, because it is apparent how little the ordinary tribunals are calculated to take cognizance of sucli offenses, or to investi gate and reform the general policy of the State." Instead of the law favoring the doctrine that a public officer can only be impeached for an indictable offense, it distinctly sustains the opposite ground, that impeachment is the re medy for official offenses which are not reme diable by ordinary course of law. The Duke of Buckingham was impeached for the pur chase and sale of offices. Have we any Buck inghams in this country f Lord Finch was impeached for unlawful methods of enlarging the forest when assistant to the iustices in Eyre, for delivering opinions which he knew to be contrary to law, and for drawing the business of the court to his chamber. How moderate and venial these offenses seem com pared to the stupendous outrages to which the American people have been subjected by the President I We confess we have never seen the necessity for the extended examina tion into his personal habits and delinquen cies which the Congressional Committee has undertaken. His public record convicts him of impeachable offenses enough under the law to remove a score of Presidents. General Grant' Position. From the Chicago Republican. It is useless to deny that the acceptance by General Grant of the office of Secretary of War, even though it be temporary, has dis appointed many of his most cordial friends and ardent admirers. Here in Illinois we have not been in the habit of questioning the propriety of Ids conduct, our admiration for the achievements of the man having been so great as to almoBt preclude the idea that it was possible for him to make a mistake. He "swung around the circle" with Andrew John son, and his friends were satisfied with the ex planation "that he was obeying the orders of his Commander-in-Chief. "He made few or no speeches, but his remarks, in publio and private, were of such a negative character as to please both friends and foes. Even then his admirers never wavered in their support, but upheld him as the high-toned gentleman and thorough soldier. It is true, Mr. Wash burn and others who claim to know in formed us that Grant was "all right, and these repeated assurances tended to relieve the publio mind of all anxiety with regard to his real position. ' 1W tV.lo 1a 41, it trv to fiatisfy the American people with the asseverations of friends. . Andrew Johnson's assurances were never once doubted by the Republican party till after the assasination of the lamented Lin coln; and, although we would not insult Gene ral Grant by making such a comparison, still the treachery of Mr. Johnson will mV tha people more cautious in the future as to whom they wm support for the offinm of Prnui.innt and Vice-President. i It may, however, be at,l ;m. ia; 'nt General Grant that he W nu;n,i done anything which can lead any one to sup- .uv.uiara iue acta and nolinr or the l resident; but it is this very reticence of which his friends and admirers complain. True, they have heard his Chief of Staff sneak, and several prominent politicians have claimed to bo the exponents of hiJ opinions; pui au mis is unsatislactory, and, if persisted in, cannot fail to damage his chances for the highest office in the gilt of the people. The time has passed when that man who was never known to utter a single opinion or sentiment was the most available candidate for office. We must have men for office who are of positive character who have identified themselves with the party to which they propose to be long, and with which they claim to act in sym pathy. General Grant is a great man. He has demonstrated this on many a bloody field: and to him may fairly be ascribed the honor of having been mainly instrumental in subduing the Rebellion. But he i3 not greater than the people; and much as his character and genius may be admired, he will have to demonstrate to a certainty that he is thoroughly sound on all the great questions of the day, before he will receive the cordial support of those who, during our darkest days, proved their loyalty both by word and deed. General Grant, Mr. Stanton, and the i President. From the N. Y. Timet. The removal of General Sheridan affords the Tribune a pretext for again misrepresenting and assailing the position of General Grant. Our contemporary divides its attention be tween Mr. Johnson and the General, charging them with equal responsibility, and repre senting the latter as voluntarily and faith lessly instrumental in carrying out the Presi dent's design. Here is an exemplification of the tone kln which the Tribune renews its assault: "That) instrument which Edwin M. Stanton refused to become, which no power of the Pre sident could make him, Grant is. We Judge by the facts. For one year Andrew Johnson con templated the insult to the nation of removing tne soldier who of all our soldiers best repre sents its principles, but dared not, could not, while Mr. 8 tan ion was in the Cabinet. Un August 12 Mr. Hi an ton is removed; ou August 12 General Grant aocepts his place: ou August 19 General Sheridan Is removed. Why, this Is logic I une utile ween arter Uenoral urant be ; comes Secretary of War, Uherldan is disgraced. How is the conclusion to be avoided that the President sought aud lound iu General Urant the means by which he might break down Bheridan, and with him the spirit of the peo pie? Bitterly, indeed, have tlie loyal been de eelved who thought that General Grant might have said to an apostate President: 'If I beoome a part of an administration wnlch every patriot despises, and tuke at your hands this civil office, which I have as much right to refuse as that ot Postmaster-Ueneral or Postmaster, I do so on this condition: you shall respect the loyal principle of the nation you shall not remove Bberldun.' But as General Grant did not say this, the President took him Into bis Cabinet, aud dictated to him the order by which Sheri dan Is dishonored and the people threatened and defied." According to the Tribune, then, General Grant is the "instrument" in Mr. Johnson's hands for waging war on the reconstruction policy of Congress. Grant is "the means" "sought and found" by the President "by which he might break down Sheridan, and with him the spirit of the people." What Mr. Stanton doggedly refused to do, General Graut has cheerfully and readily done he has be come a party to "the order by which Sheridan is dishonored, and the people threatened and defied." Such are the Tribune's alienations. What are the facts ? The first point that challenges remark is the new-found fondness for Mr. Stanton which the tribune displays. We are asked to eelieve that "for one year" he alone prevented the removal of Sheridan. Now we are not un mindful of Mr. Stanton's firmness in opposi tion to the ill-advised course of the President, and on that ground have regretted and con demned his suspension. IIow happens it, how ever, that "for one year" and more the 1'ribune uttered not a word in Mr. Stanton's praise, but on the contrary uniformly did what it could to break him down ? How happens it that when Mr. Stanton was suspended the Tribune looked on complacently forgetting public interests and party necessities in the gratification of a long-cherished personal grudge 1 The Tribune then said nothing about Mr. Stanton's support of Sheridan nothing about his fidelity to the Republican policy nothing about the outrage to the party implied in the President's act. What is now printed in Mr. Stanton's praise is a mere after-thought, a piece of shallow hypocrisy, dictated by no regard for him, personally or politically, nor by any other consideration than a desire to tarnish the reputation of General Grant. In the pursuit of this object, the Tribune's only chance li-'t in the falsification of unques tioned facts. As the basis of its attack, it as sumes that but for Mr. Stanton's suspension and General Grant's temporary acceptance of the War Department, Sheridan would not have been removed. The hypothesis is too absurd to deceive anybody. Mr. Johnson re moves Sheridan now in defianoe of General Grant's remonstrances; as easily might he have done so six months ago, whether Mr. Stanton concurred or not. It is an assertion of Executive authority which the War De partment could nowise hinder. Save in the form of protest, both Mr. Stanton and Gene ral Grant were powerless in the premises. All that is needed for the justification of either is proof that he did exert his influ ence, honestly and energetically, in support of Sheridan. So far as Mr. Stanton is con cerned, this is admitted. How is it with re gard to General Grant f We are not required to go beyond the columns of the Tribune for an answer. From its editorials, brimful of malice and perver sion, we turn to its Washington despatches. These afford conclusive evidence that General Grant was not the passive "instrument" he is alleged to have been that he was not the willing "means" in the perpetration of a blunder and a wrong. And on this subject our contemporary's correspondent is in har mony with the correspondents of all the daily iournals. Without an exception, so far as we lave observed, the Washington despatches, from whatever source, bear testimony to the fact that before and since his acceptance of the Secretaryship General Grant steadily and earnestly opposed the removal of Sheridan. To this extent Grant stands completely justified. He has not accepted the President's polioy. He has not identified himself with the Presi dent's insane conduct, lie has not made him self a party to the responsibility of the Presi dent in this deliberate onslaught on the polioy of Congress. But does not Grant's issue of the order im plicate him ? Most assuredly not. We can Imagine the form of an order whioh General Grant oould not have signed without self stultification and dishonor. An order, for in stance, embodying censure of Sheridan for the manner in which he has executed the Recon- AUGUST 23, 18G7. QMMye HIE LAKGEOT ANDi;BKT STOCK OF F I KM E OLD R Y E. V H I 8 K I E 3 IK THE LAND IS NOW POSSESSED BY - II N 11 Y S. II A N N I S & ' C O.. Kos. 218 and 220 SOUTH FRONT , STREET, : ' WHO OFFCKTIIF. NAH1R TO THE TBADK IJI lTS 0 TtKT ADTiitTAVCOCI TEnni, Their Stock f Ry . whiskies, IH BOWD, comprise all th favorite brand eitant, and rune through the various month of lb63,"00, and of this year, ap to l"Bt date. Liberal contracts mad for lot to arrive at Pennsylvania Railroad Depot, Krrlrsson Line barf, or at Bonded Warehouses, a parties may elect. Btruction law. Nothing, however, could more i plainly reveal the attitude of General Grant inan ine terms of the document which he has iSSUed. The fifth Rertinn la in 11 ntitnta And purposes an indorsement of Sheridan's orders and acts, and so it is everywhere interpreted, llie lnbune's Washington correspondent shall be our witness. His despatch opens thus: -l,m,?0jt?nt artny orlfir which has bean contemplated tor some days past. maklnK radi cal change lu three military department, was made publio this aliernoon by General Grant. Ihe way It was worded oioated some comment, and the oplulon whs very freely expressed that the President and Grant had had an open rup. Jure, and that the latter had Issued the Instruc tions to Thomns in the fifth section solely be cause the President would not heed his advice not to remove Sheridan." Does this look like collusion with Mr. John son f Does this indicate that wicked and wanton compliance with Mr. Johnson's will, for which the 1 rib une would have General Grant arraigned at the bar of loyal opinion? uoes it not ratner snow mat, while in the per formance of a mere routine aot General Grant carries out the order of the President, he does it in a manner which most effectually asserts his own authority to control the administra tion of the law 1 In effect, this fifth section declares: "Mr. Johnson may remove district commanders, but appoint whom he may, their administration of the law shall be subject only to tne orders of ueneral Grant." We shall not be accused of piling up proofs unnecessarily, if we add to the Jribune's state ments those of the careful correspondent of the isoston Advertiser. The despatoh of the latter is as follows:- "The style in which General Grant Issued the President's order relieving General HUendan is very distasteful to Mr. Johnson's friends, and particularly so to the ring who have beeu clamoring for General Sheridan's removal. "1'be President has made no allusion to General Grant's written protest against it. and the evident intention is to suppress General Grant's letter on the subject. At any rate, the President went so far last night as to Intimate that no suoh document existed. It is, however, known positively tbat when the .President an nounced bis intention to suspend Heoreiary Stanton, General Grant sent in writing an earnest remonstrance to the President agalust the proposed action. "This paper is now burled at theWhite House, In the same manner General Graut, on receiv ing the President's order yesterday, atouce called upon him and protested against it, and afterwards sent a written proiest couched la very strong and pointed language, whiuU will, in an probability, De wituneiu." Beyond doub), the style of General Grant's order "is very distasteful to Mr. Johnson's friends." It shows that he will not yield to Mr. Johnson's dictation in matters which Con gress has confided to the General of the Army of the United States. It shows that his action is only in the line of his .duty, and that his real influence will be-exerted in. support of. the intentions of Congress touching the ad ministration of the law. In confirmation of what the Boston Adver tise! 's correspondent affirms as to the written communications of General Grant to the Presi dent, we are enabled to state that these docu ments were couched in the most emphatic language, and that they leave no room for a repetition of the misrepresentations indulged in by the Tribune. These letters should be published, and published they will be when Congress assembles, if not sooner. Were General Grant a mere partisan, a popularity hunter, their publication would not be con tingent on the selfish caprice of Mr. Johnson. The same reserve, the same disinterested devotion to duty, the same consciousness of strength and assurance of final success which have characterized the soldier, now characterize the Acting Secretary of War. He can patiently await the time when the publication of his views will vindicate him from aspersions cast by those who, like the Tribune, disguise the trickery of partisanship under a shallow pretense of patriotic) zeal. In the meantime, the order to which General Grant's signature is attached sufficiently indicates the principles and purposes by which he will be actuated in his present sphere of duty. It is enough to know that these are as far removed from the principles and purposes of Mr. Johnson as from the aims of the Southern malcontents to whom the Tribune would extend amnesty and power. Mr. Carlyle In the Hapld of Niagara, PVom the JV, Y. Independent. Bewilderment, when not too stunning, is a pleasing sensation. It prioks the mind into a delightful activity; it wraps one's facul ties with a cool and bracing sea-mist of agree able doubts; it is, in fact, a genuine refresh ment for a languid summerday. For instance, on such a sultry forenoon as the one that now finds us driving our accustomed editorial pen an occupation which, at this season, men in more favored professions can exchange for blue fish we find ourselves under obligation to our old friend, Mr. Thomas Carlyle, for a variety of cool, refreshing, bewildering, exquisite sensa tions, consequent upon reading his last lucu bration, entitled "Shooting Niagara; and After ?" No bluefish at Fire Island is so full of game as our stiff and stubborn old friend, Mr. Carlyle. A perusal of his last paper has made our very nerves tingle with merriment, indignation, pride, and grief. The venerable philosopher is still full of grandeur, conceit, tolly, wisdom, nobility, and meanness. There is no man like him. When he dies and is buried, let his name not be forgotten; for nature will never reproduce his like; and if he is lost from remembrance, he is lost to the world forever. Apparently the object of Mr. Carlyle's latest lucubration is to protest against Democraoy. He begins with America, and ends with Eng land, ridiouling whatever ia noblest in the democratio tendencies of both. He is, perhaps, the only distinguished literary man now living who spells negro with two gs. We have not counted, but we make a rough estimate that he says "nigger" about a hundred times. For instance, he wants to know whether a "Quashee Nigger" is equal to "Socrates or Shakespeare." Of course not; for a Quashee nigger, like Mr. Carlyle himself, cannot justly be called equal to Socrates or Shake WMslcie, KJ to speare. Ue says that "tne nigger is evi dently a poor blockhead, with good dis positions, atltctions, attachments witu a turn for nigger melodies and the like." Juy which it does not seem to have occurred to the angry old gentleman that "nigger melodies" are written and sung exclusively by white men, who blacken their faces with burnt cork in order to attain by art a status in humanity which they were denied by nature. "Ser- vantship," says our grumbler, "ought to be a contract for life;" to which ha adds, "aui this was already the nigger's essential posi tion." What a pity it is, therefore, that American slavery has been abolished I "The American case," he says, is "begirt with frantic abolitionists, fire-breathing like the old chimera." Accordingly, he throws oold water on the abolitionists, in order to put out the incendiary flames. "The nigger's case," he adds, "was not the most pressing in the world, but among the least so." And the wrinkle-faced, shaggy-browed cynic Is aotually in a pet because the good-natured nigger has had the luck to get his unimportant case so early attended to. The grim critio describes the British colonies in general as "all ungor erned, and . nine-tenths of them full of boa constrictors, rattlesnakes, parliamentary elo quences, and emancipated niggers, ripening towards nothing but destruction.". He then, in particular, describes Dominica, and says that it is governed by a "piebald Parliament of Eleven," and that "the head Demosthenes there is a nigger tinman." Well, these extracts are enough for spool mens. Now in what state of mind must a man be who can sit down, in good health, in comfort able circumstances, and in the year 18l7, and write such a diatribe f What can be tha fibre of his brain f What are the compo nent juices of his blood ? Is this the same man who once taught us to revere Oliver Cromwell ? But certainly, if Oliver Cromwell were alive to-day, there is no man in England whom he would so roughly rebuke as Thomas Carlyle. In former days Mr. Carlyle rendered great service to progress. Ha helped to eman cipate the intellect both of England and Ame rica. Thousands of yonng men, in both coun tries taking up his books, and reading them with unwonted eagerness grew strong with the strength of this sturdy master. But tha palmy days of the old hero are past. He has outlived his better self. He is in his dotage. He is . fallen into a peevish garrulity, lie insists on making himself an enemy of liberty. Once, when his hands were strong, he sought to push the world ahead; now that they are weak, he is trying to hold it back. What business has Thomas Carlyle to be . taking the side of the American slaveholder against the American negro and his emancipa tion ? What business has Thomas Carlyle to be taking the side of the British aristocracy against the British people ? "How are the niijjhty fallen !" The Martyrs. From the N. Y. Evening Fjpress. We really do not see what the radical breth ren are going to do. The "Martyrs" are mul tiplying so rapidly on their hands that they cannot tell what to do with them, or where to put them. When the President ejected Mr. Stanton from the Cabinet, the other day, the sympathies' of the brethren were aoutely touched, and in a moment of gushing benevo lence some of them resolved to make him a candidate for the Presidency-if only to spite President Johnson and the Copperheads. But now that General Sheridan has also been shown the back door, the "moral idea" party find another martyr upon their hands, lie, too, must be provided for. But how, is the thing that perplexes them. As there is only one President to elect, it is perfectly clear that the nomination cannot be distributed among several. In this dilemma, we trust it will not . be deemed an impertinence on the part of the Express to suggest to our radical friends a ready mode of freeing them from their embarrass ment. We propose when the Rump Con gress reassembles next winter, that the Con stitution be so amended as to provide for the election of several Presidents and Vice-Presidents. The power to accomplish some such change in the fundamental law is undoubted. As the same power has been exercised in vari ous other cases, why not in this f To make assurance doubly sure, the majority have only to turn out of their seats the few Democrats that are still permitted to sit there. They have the "power" to do that too, and as they have not scrupled to exercise it time and again heretofore, when some "moral idea" was to be realized, it is not to be presumed they will hesitate to avail themselves of it now, when "martyrs" are to be provided for. All the fat offices of right lelong to the radicals, and if President Johnson expel the one, or remove another for cause, ways and means will neoes earily be found to repair the loss. Hence the necessity, under existing circumstances, of the Constitutional amendment. MILLINERY, TRIMMINGS. ETC. eMHS. R. DILLON, ' MOS.taa AND 831MOKTT1I MTBKET, y nandaouue assortment of 8PRING MILLI- tow's,birrmy .'.y-hu,bun- rjJOURrJINC MILLINERY. ALWAYS ON B AND A LA-ROB ASSOBTMKNT Of MOURlWIlsio BONNETS, AT NO. WALK IT STBEBT. 8276m MAD'LLE KEOCH. TXT ILL 1AM a GRANT tV COMMISSION MEKC'UAM , NO. It fi. lJtX,AWAl(K Avttuuo, 'iiUdaipla mint ro Pnpont't Oanpowdr, Itefluttl Nitre, (.frarcoal, Etc . Hkker A Co.'s Chocolate, Ooooa, and Hriua. Crocker Hr. . U.' .Yeiluw 6Uil buetUtaf Bulla, and JSaile, ... f 1