, GIBSON PEACOCK. Editor, VOLUME XXL-NO. 102. THE EVENING BULLETIN • PUBLISUED EVERY EVENING • (Sundays excepted), . AT TIME NEW pucLETaN 607 Chesithut Street, Philadelphia, 11Y THE EVENING BULLETIN ASSOCIATION. GIBSON PEACOCK, ERNEST C. WALLACE FETLIEICSTOI. THOS. .1. WILLIAMBOk CASPER SOLIDER,'FILANUIS WELLS. -The Btrtt.tris is served to subscribers In the city at IS cent of week, payable to the carriers, or 58 per annum. SEDOMACKER dt CO.'S CELEBRATED Pianos.—Acknowledged superior in all respects any made in this country, and sold on most liberal NEW AND SECONDHAND PIANOS constantly opp for rent. Tuning, moving and packing promptly attended to. Warerooms.llll3Chmtnut street. Jel9.Bmq MARRIED. GEST—THORNE—On the 6th inst., by nee. Alexander .fteed, D. D., Jacob T. Gest and Emma A. Thorne. Lancaster and Went Chester pap ern please copy. • bCil HADER—MENDEL—On the Mat instant, by the Rev. Wm. White Women, Mr. Frederick lichrader to Adelaide Mench, both of this city. • NINIUS—TUOMFX—In Baltimore, July alat, by the Pry. Dr. Mahan, Rev. "Reuben S. NeViUM and Minnie, daughter of the late Profensor Toomey, of the Uniyersity t,f Alabama. DIED. I6 . ISLAIIt.--Near Cameron Crowing, Kansas. June Loth. Duncan Within Baltimore, %Id., from effects of an accidental wound received near that ylace Juno 1411, MONTGOMERY.—In New York on Monday, Aug. 5, of dthMoe of the heart, John C Montgomery, kle(i., formerly. of l'hiladaphia, in the 75th year of his age. DYKE Et LANDELL HAVE THE BEST ARTICLE OF Black Iron Bartle, two yards wide: also, the ordinary frailties MITRE & LAND ELL VA Have reduced all the Summer Silka and Spring Drees (ioodet ATLEE & CONNARD, Paper Id anufneturera, 44 N. Fifth atreet, Manufacture to order the tineA gradea of Book; also, mood quality Book and Newepapere, at ho nottets. my2,2-3lnt SPECIAL ) NOTICEN gerPENNSYLVANIA MILITARY ACADEMY. BOARD OF TRUSTEES. Ilan James Pollock. LL. D. t Pres., Capt. Wm. Apple, Vice Prier., W. F.. Barber, Esq., fiec'y, Jas. IL Orne, Esq., Ttear.. Pt. Rev. Matthew Simpson, D. D.. Itev. 'Richard Vevvton. D. D.. Rev. 'William P. Breed, D. D.. lion. Chas. 0'1 , 4013.135n. W. E. Lehman. Slaj..Gen. S. W. Crawford, Cot Wm. Bell Waddell. Major Wayne McVeagh, T. B. Peterson, Fag ,James i.. C'highorn,Esq.,C. B. Dungan.Beq•, S. 6L Felton. Esq.. Samuel A. Croner, Esq., John Cochran, C. P. Morton, Esq. The Sixth Annual km/40D of this Academy opens Thurs day. September 6th, MI. Educational advantages of a high order are afforded. The Departments of Engineering and Military Instsee ttipa'are under the charge of a Weet Point , graduate of fth scientific attainments. The Claealcal and English Department/ are conducted by expetien.ced and thoroughly compotenlProfeseOns and Instructon. - • Particular fitteeion given to the morals and personal •habits of Cadets. . For Circulars apply to James IL 011ie, Esq.. 626 Chestnut street, Philadelphia; T. B. Peterson, Esq., 3U6 Chestnut street. l'hiladelphia: or to CoLTIIE.O. s IIYATT, Pres. P. M. A., Choster, Delaware county. Penna. MEM pa r PARDEE SCIENTIFIC I.DCRSE LAFAYETTE COLLEGE. The next term commences TOCESDAY, September Celt. Caruildates for admhsaion may be exarninod the day before (September 11th), or on TUESDAY. July 30th, the day before the Annual Commancement Exercises. For circulars, apply to President CATTELL, or to. Prof. R. B. YOUNGMAN. Clerk °film Faculty. IYZ.Ltf f:ASTC , N, Peons.. Ju1y.1867 air REGISTRY OF ItEPEPLICAN,.. VOTERS, EIGHTH WARD. linAmtvAnynng EXEOUTIVE CI IM merge. AUSUPt GUA. IEO7. '1 he Registry Boar& of the Eighth Ward will meet at the reiTeetive Precinct Holimm on TUESDAY, WEDNES DAY and .TIFURSDAY EVENINGS, Wt. 7th and Bth intd.. between the hour* of four and eight o'clock, for the pr rpow of making a Regietry of Republican Voter, All 11101161.114 of the Republican party nre earnestly invited to .have their mimeo registered, to enable them to vote at the Delegate Election. Find precinct. 810 Sanoom etrect. Second ' S. W. Corner Twelfth and Locuot eireetzt. Third " 219 South Brood ttre,t.. Broad and I lteitintt etreet.i. • N. E. cor.Ta enty.tinit and Locust rtreet. , .. " RCN Sannom street. notithwe-t corner of Sex enteeuth and Lattimer etre,tl. Ity order of the Executive Committee, so2g ci.ArriiN Scc'y. sir FIFTH WARD.—IN ACCORDANCE WII'If the infilcucttons contained in the Supplementary Ruler, of the Republican Execdtive Committee of the city. the I iegistering Dineen+ of the Div4ione of the Ward will sit ouluoiday, Wednesday - and hursday, of thin week. between the hours of 4 and ti .1% M., for the pur p.m , of refrAerinv the: itrpuhtican rulers. viz.: First Division at A.l3cliwartz's, Ind Gaskill street. - second Division at 8. Schnell'e, 210 Pine street.. • Third Division at IMcNickle's, Southwest corner Fifth and Lombard atreets. . . . t )1 rtl IYfth th Nellth ••• • • , Fonrtb divielou at O'Brien% northwea corner Front :end Pint streets. . Firthdivialon at Fischer's, 218 Dock street. Aixth di% i6lOll at Burns's, 438 Spruce street. Seventh di% ision at Wiegand's, 435 Spruce street. Eighth di% ision at Bender's, Deck and Exchange Place. B. 1112CKE1., President aii6-3t t3arrir; secretary NINTH. WA T ETINO "I.' 4 * lr Union Republlct Asnotiation tE ei Ninth k. Wa ll rd L , held tit their Bull. Merrick and Market stre;te, on August sth. BC, the Association adopted the supplementary oleo, as agreed upon by the City Executive Committee, and thc following places were selected for conducting the enrollment t— • Fist Division—S. E. corner Eighth and Filbert streets. Second Div Ision—Newland's, No. 62 N. Ninth street. Third DMEILOU—S. W. corner Eleventh and Filbert Ytre et H. Fourth Division—No. 139.3 Market street. Fifth DiNiatcrn—No. 18 S. Broad street. Sixth Division—No. 1619 Market street. Seventh Dix ision—No. 1911 Market street. Eighth Division—No. 2129. Market street. - The enrolling officers will be in attendance at the hove places between the hoursof four and &light o'clock ,, 31., on the sixth, seventh and eighth days of August. By Order of the Association. WILLIAM 8. STOKLEY, President Amu L. 1111 Secretaries, DAVID BEITLEII. , s e r NOTICE.—TILE MEDICAL AND SURGICAL Wards of the St. Mary's Hospital, cor. Frankierd road and Palmer street, are now optic for the reception of patients. AN cases Of 'accident received gratuitously if i presented within 24 hours after the reception of the m Jury. The Sisters of St. Francisgive their personal at -tends/me to the sick. Apply for admission either at the Hospital, or Mother Agnew, Convent of St. Francis, Reed eet, above Filth. auS42t rp,s 1 ,2 -7 7 OUR CITIZENS SBOULD NOT FORGET THE great Excursion of the season to Cape May, on Wednesday. August 7. The advantage over all others is, that starting at 6 o'clock, A.M., and running at the speed of the fast trains, it arrives before the bathing commences. _ft also allows persons who wish it, to see the great Double Team Race for $2,000, at Diamond Beach lark. and re maining on the Island until 736 o'clock; P. M. au3 3trp' INSURANCE COMPANY OF THE STATE OF PENNSYLVANIA, usT Uth, 1861. The 'Directors have this day, declared a Dividend of Three Per Cent.; or SlN,Dollarevettahltre, clear,,of United States and State„Of "Pennsylvania Taxes. Payable to the Stockboldqm;or their kind representatives, on demand. WILLIAM HARPER, Secretary. jgglim- THE REGULAR. MEETING OF THE YOUNG America Cricket Club will be held at the Club House, Germantown, on TUESDAY EVENING, August 6, at 8 o'clock. it. ALF. 7tIELLOR PEN Is ;SYLVANIAMORTIOULTURAL SOGIDTY 11 "." —Emmy Tins (Tueodav) EVENING, on "Window Gardening," by fl. SCOTT, Eco., at thu Now Bali, Broad .above Spruce. It air HOWARD HOSPITAL, NOS. 1518 AND 1620 Lombard Street ,Dlspeneary Department—Medical treatment and medicines furnished gratuttounly to the poor. WIUTE WrrnEsszs.—The mouth of the man who purifies his teeth with SOZODONT is a witness box and every time he opens it two rows of gleaining witnesses testify. to Its beautifying properties.. —A very religions old lady, being asked her opinion of the organ of a church, the first time she had ever seen •or. heard one, replied "It is a pretty box of whistles, but, obl it's an awful way to spend•the Sabbath." • —A touple in St. Louie wore tined 4115 for kiss- Jug in tho.ntrect. A couple of what? . , . The Negro Being Found not Available, Plr. Nusby and His Followers Decide to go Back on Him—A Meeting, the Efleet of Which was Spoiled by Pol lock, the Illinois Store-Keeper, and Joseph Bigler, late 4.1.5. A. ...POST OYFIS;'COISTEDICIT X ROADS (With is in the Stall uv Kentucky), July 28,1867.—The specu lashen in wool, into wich the Dimocrisy uv the South embarkt some months ago, hex,l regret to say, resulted disastrously. The igger ain't fitted for co-operashen with the Dimocrisy. In stid uv hungin onto us like the ivy onto the oak, he diskivcred that, In the South at least, he wax really the oak and we the ivy; instid uv lookin up to us, he contracted a disa greeable habit uv lookin down onto us. There wuz other reasons why he •coodent be made available for our uses, and therefore it wnz decided to go back onto the Afrikin, and to agin attempt his reduckshen to ez near his normal slicer ez the abnormal condislin uv the times wood admit. The directers uv the college met and changed the name uv the Institooshn back to the "Southern Military ct.• Clasikle Institoot," and the Corners wuz itself agin. Deekin Po gram lookt ez tho the ten years bed bin lifted off him. "How pleasant 'tis," sed he, "to walk erect agin in front uv a nigger, and to pass em ez tho they wuz niggers!—Oh of I cood only wallop one wunst more, methinks I coed die happy !"'' • . We lied a meetin last nice to consider this nig ger question, wich wood hew resultid in great good and bed a powerful inflooence toward strengthening the hands ov our brethren in the. North, who are fightin the heresy uv nigger suf frage, bed it not bin for that irrittu3hen, Pollock, and that pest, Joe Bigler. I hed made my regler Speech on the nigger and with much etnet. I bed quoted from sumboddy's quotashen front Agassiz, with demonstrated the radicle difference therels atween the Afrikin and the proud Caucashun; swill' from the length uv his heel and arm, the thickness uv his skull and so forth, that the nig ger wuz totally unfit to exercise the rites uv free if men. I wu• pplauded vociferouSlY and by none more than ollock and Joe Bigler. Ex I took my scat and, •uz a wipin the perspupashen from my classikle brow, feefin that I bed settled that • question, Pollock riz and desired to say a few words avd make a suggestion. Sed he:— ' "I, bey listened with interest to the elokeut &pecker and am happy to say I hew learned fax wich is new to Me. Ef I bey ever doubted the inferiority of the nigger them doubts are re moved, pervidin alluz, that the statements of the , speeker is troo, uv wich I hew ntr doubt, ez the , character uv the epeeker is a sutlishent guarantee for the trooth uv wichever he•sez." I bowed stately-like, with the air uv One to whom rich compliments wnz a every • day affair, wich they aint by no means, on the contrary quite the reverse. "But I want it demonstrated to the satiSfaek shen uv the most obtooie--I want rite here a measuretnent uv the average Afrikin and the av erage white man that all the world may know I • the difference. move that it be did."' I acceded. "Let It be done," sed I, "that the vexed question may be settled forever." Sevral of era. askt to submit to the measurement, but all refused. Finally Joe Bigler sed he saw Napoleon Johnson, a nigger wich wunst belonged to Deekin Pogrom, in the audience. "Napoleon," sed he, "will yoo con- i tribbit yoorself to tbegrealselence_uv eth mdogy?-4 Sint woo willin to let usyoose yoo awhile to • demonstrate the grate arid grcrvrin trooth that yoorgrandratber wuza monkey? Step up, Napo i Icon. , ' . • Napoleon, nothin daaht, slept up, and Pollock, Bascom, Bigler and I measured him with the fol lowin result: Height Weight Length uv foot Breadth ni foot Length uv hand ' Breadth nv hand Length uv forearm... Length uv bone from ankle to knee Projekshun nv heel Capaseity qv skull. wich heirs the top or cap uv the vertebral column, so to speck, is accor din to Hippocrates. a trooly ecientific Greek. and Hon. Wm. Mungen, uy Ohio, a very im portant bone for pretty4nuch all ur the races 66 cubic inches "Now,!.',.sed Pollock, "let us examine in the same way - a avrage specimen uv the Caucashen race, ez be is found in this delectable spot. Will Issaker Gavitt be good snuff to step torrerd? I perpaee to demonstrate the sooperiority - ay the Caucashen with a two-foot rool. Figgers wont lie. Step up, Issaker." And Issaker slept up, and wuz measured with the follerin result: Height Weight. Length uv Breadth " " Length uv foot Breadth " " Projecksben uv heel Length uv forearm. Length of bone from ankle to knee ....15 " Capassity uv skull 97 cubic inches. Pollock wuz dented ! "Here," sed be, "it is in a nut shell. Issaker hez a shorter hand, a more narrer hand, a shorter and narrerer foot. and his heel projecks less than the nigger's by 2k, inches! Good Lord, how I hey bin deseeved! Wat errors I hey bin nussin! How kin a human bein hey in telleck whose heel projecks four inches? How rejoict am I that I am at last set rite on these im portant pints!" I smiled beninantly onto him. - Bigler riz. "I, too," sed he, "am satisfied that the nigger is not wat we,who wuz disposed to con sider him fit to exercise rites, supposed him to be. I held firm when the measurement uv his hands and arms wuz being- made, but the heel stag gered me. Its clear that no one kin hey intellek whose leg isn't set in his foot better than that. I shel persoo this investigashen. Hevin now a startin pint—a heel, ez I may say, to stand on— I shelgo on to prove the inferiority uv the nig ger. With that heel for a fulcrum, I shel, wit the lever of trootli, proceed to upset the fabric uv nigger ekality and carry confooshen into Boston. I shel assoom that Napoleon is a ave rage specimen uv the lower or unintellectool African type. Is it so ?" "It is! it is !" yelled we all, dented at the happy turn the thing wuz takin. "I shell also assoom that Issaker Gavitt is a avrage uv the higher or intellectooal Caucashen type. Is it so ?" •‘Certinly ! Certinly !" "Very well. Now quake, Massachoosets. Na poleon, kin yoo read ?" I saw the trap into which we lied fallen, and risin hastily protestid that the oxaminashen hed bin carried far enoff, and so did Deekin Pognum, but Bigler swore he wuz agoin to kiver Massa ehoosets with shame, and I sot down paralyzed. "Kin yoo read, Napoleon ?" "Yes, sah!" "Read this, then," sed Bigler, handin him a noosepaper. The nigger read it ez peert ez a Noo England skool warm, wich well he mite, ez ho learned it from one uv em. "Kin yoo write ?" "Certinly," and taidn a pencil, he writ half uv the Declashen uv Independence. "Set down, Napoleon. It's a devilish pityyoor heels is so long; otherwise yood be credited with hevin intellek. Now Issakor, my bold Cancashen, kinJoo read?" "I protest !" ehreeked; I, in agony. "Issaker, don't answer the skoffer at ethnology!" But Issaker, ez white ez a sheet, and tremblin under the eye uv Bigler, who knowd him from infancy, stuttered out, "No !" "Kin pan rite, my gay descendant nv the sob periorrace ?" And, still under the innocence ttv Bigier's eye he =swan "Not" aug6,3t (From the' oledo Made.] 5 feet S incles 150 lbs. averdupoise .12 inches. ..5 inches. 83..; inches, .4 inches. 11 inches. G inches. 4 inches. 5 feet 8 inches 150 lbs inches • • • • 3 14 11 • . 1 34. " 10 " PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY, AUGUST 6, 1867. "Kilayou cipher?" "What in thunder's the goose uv clpheriu when the old man alluz kep. a nigger to do his fig gerin?" "Bet down, Issaker. We're done with you. There's an error sumwher. The nigger's eapas sity nv skull is less by sevral cubic inches, but he seems to hey usedwat he hez lively. But it's all rite, Pareon. Issaker shel vote and the, nigger shant. Reedin and writin never wuz a (Malifica alien for votin down here, any way. Possibly the eeat ny the intellek is in the heel insted uv the brain, wich accounts for the nigger's, hevin the most uv it." And Pollock and Bigler and the niggers present left the mectin house, lafflu- uproarously and throwin all sorts uv adoos back to us. I doubt whether the result uv the investigks_4l, will help our friends North, The fact is, it wuz, overdone. It wuz carried too fur. There is a! pint at wich facts ought to stop—Dimekratic facts In partikeler. In this instance the investi hashen shood never hey bin carried beyond the eel. Hed it stopt there, we wood hey hed cm. But carryin it to the radical pint Bigler and Pol lock took it, the fonndashen we built wuz upset and we are all at sea Agin. Wood, oh' wood that we wuz rid uv these jeerin fanatics. ' PETTIOLEI:M V. NASI:Y, P. M. (Melt is Postmaster). ALEX ICO. The Illuratnation at Vera Cruz in Honor of Madame Juarez---Thu Aus trians Remaining in Mexico- Ortega — Coining to Mexico as a . . Pris oner. i VERA Carz, July 16.—The revenue cutter Wil derness left Vera Cruz so suddenly after her arri val with Mrs. Juarez and family that it was hardly possible to get a letter on board. The public honors bestowed upon the family last evening were of the most satisfactory and gratifying character. The palace was illumi nated with over eight hundred tapers, and In a very tasteful and appropriate manner. The pri vate residences of the citizens were most elabo rately adorned, and the street in which is the re sidence of the ladies with whom she is stopping was lit up by over a thousand ornamental lanterns hung upon Wire across the street, and for three or four hours the • scene was further animated by music from two bands. one of string and the other of brass instru ments. The evening was passed by the party in receiving their friends, and the display of ladies and geurlemen in fine apparel could not . have been excelled in New York or Boston, which could scarcely be believed by those in the Statevho have the impression that Mexico is inhabited by an uncultivated and uncivilized FriZe. This entire ovation was not conducted by the authorities, but was the spontaneous act of the citizens of the place. The day and evening passed without any disturbance or accident. except the death of a cannonier by the premature discharge of a gun which was saluting her landing in the morning. By the cutter Wilderness a, special messenger hits arrived; it is said, with' despatches to. Mr. Otterbourg, announcing to him his nomination as Minister to Mexico. I 'have conversed with . many Americans in Mexico, and ,it is difficult to discover the first man who can understand - what the United States mean by such a nomination. It certainly cannot be expected that such an ap pointment can be pleasing or acceptable to the Mexican Govermitent. A t thismonient it is pro bable that the, nations of Europe will withdraw their ministers and consuls, sad the United States ;..-remain atone as- the-aolelnendlt-nution,--and-yet a minister is named who, if fit for the position in -this critical moment of the constitutional history' of MeXico,.K . iii consequence of his antecedents, most likely to be rejected by the Mexican autho rities, and I even predict that Mr. Otterbourg will not be accepted or recognized at Mexico city, or that at least the Uuited , States will be requested to reconsider his nomination, and send some one who is well known as a ates ' manand diplomatist, and one who speaks Spanish and is famillapwith the past history and the people of the country. Is it likely that Gen eral Dix or any foreign minister will feel that his position has been dignified by such a nomination? There aro- plenty of competent men in the States who know Mexico. and who cannot be Influenced by any bugaboo of the danger of travel, who would, by appearing upon the scene immediately in part atone for the sad results which have fol- I lowed the absence of a minister with Juarez dur ing the past year. We have had enough of im becility. and the people of the States should I. demand that more common sense be immediately displayed by our Secretary of State. The ques tion is raised here, if it can, be possible that Mr. Seward desires to provoke this distracted people by thus insulting their manhood? Sp well is and has it been understood that Mr. 'Otterbourg is of reactionary sympathies, that . in February last, when the gentleman attemptedto effect an arrangemvnt 1%, tween General Bazalim arid Porfirio Dia4 . .so that the hitter General should occupy the city upon the trench evacu ation, General Diaz refused to make any arrange ment assisted by Mr. Otterboarg. . We have received _papers from the States by . the- revenue 'cutter Wilderness, which depict lu gubriously the - sad cannibalistic animus of this people, and are, most amused at the lachrymose wit inings of rebel sheets, who moan over the just punishinent of Maximilian and the Insult to the Stars and Stripes, forgetting thatfor the past five . or six years they have been cursing and besliruing that banner. Apropos: We saw some sixty or more Austrian officers and men, late prisoners of war, who were captured at Mexico city, passing freely about our streets to-day, and embark upon the Austrian vessel Elizabeth. There are said to be about one thousand Austrians, late of Max's army, in the country, who have no means of getting out of the iterior or away . front these shores. They walk be a valuable acquisition to the - Working class o the States on the northern border of the Gulf of Mexico. It is stated In this city to-day that private de spatches have been received from Mexico city unfavorable to a hoped for liberal and generous amnesty. We prefer to await farther confirma tion. Despatches by telegram have arrived which promise immediate amelioration of the excessive Custom House exactions, and mer chants of this place aro in better spirits. The collection of exorbitant double duties and additional twenty-the per cent. will not be carried out. Citizen President Benito Juarez makes his triumphal entrance into Mexico city to-day, and it is expected that the city has never witnessed such joy. -At is reported that Ortega is to cuter the city at about this time as a prisoner. Last night, the late Imperial offi cers were removed from the city prison and taken to the castle of San Juan, where they will await their trial. Most of the banished Libeialshave re turned amid great rejoicings. This afternoon, a gentleman rode into the city from the interior on horseback, himself surmounted by an immensely tall beaver hat, of Knox's best, the lower part of his face being covered by a sort of mask ancl,..as his whole appearance was tether inajestic, he was taken to the - Palace. The search for Marquez and. such others of his chiefs as have eluded , the libexgl officers, is so thorough, that all magnificent or grotesque travelers are inquired after. The individual proved to' be an „inno cent American of the medical profession, and for the information-of sensationists was not Mur dered or eaten alive. 'We have t °thing yet as to the fate,of Santa Anna. The panish steamer which has been overdue some days, has, hear, changed her time of sailing, and will not be hero till the hitter part of the week. The general be lief is hero that he has mot been executed, how ever much he may deserve it, and that he will be tried by court- martial. What will be the policy in the States if he too shall eventually share the fate of Maximilian? ' The prisoners of Spanish and Mexican birth of the late Imperial army who are at the castle, are allowed fifteen dollars per month by the Liberal authorities for their food, and therewith must provide for themselves by 4 purchasing from pro vision•keepers at the' castle, who sell at reason able rates—like reasonMg' . and people--; N.Y. Horal4l. , OUR WHOLE COUNTRY. The Resignation of Secretary Stanton Reports of the New York Press. The Washington correspondence of the New York paperti contains the following versions of the reports in regard to the resignation of the Secretary of War. [From the New York Herald of to-day.] A week ago I telegraphed you that the Presi dent positively contemplated the removal of Sec retary Stanton at an early day. My information at that time was based on reliable authority, and to-day it has been verified. President Johnson has at last undertaken the step, and this morning sent Secretary Stanton a letter requesting his withdrawal from the Cabinet. No reply has - been received up to this hour, and none is expected until to-morrow. The regular Cabinet meeting will be held at noon to-morrow, when no doubt the subject will be discussed. It appears that for more than a year—and this I have from the best authority—the resignation of Mr. Stanton has been looked for. Week after week and month after month the President waited, expecting each day to hear from the Sec-, retary; but no word came, and at lasta letter was drawn up by thePresiderdasking Mr. Stanton to resign. This letter was also held back •for some time, because the breach between the Secretary and the President was daily growing wider and wider. This hostility was so decided- that it was thought Mr. Stanton could not go on much longer without tenderinghis resignation. But Mr. Stan ton did go on, in spite of hints and the evident desire for his vacating. As I have stated already, it was not until this morning that the letter was actually sent. Should Mr. Stanton decline to yield, I have authority for stating that the President 'will undertake, to re- Move him, and the Tenure of Office billit=elf,. it' is claimed, .will sustain- bins in this exercise of power. The President believes that the first sec tion' of the bill does not take away his power of removing Mr. Stanton, as the latter was ap pointed by Mr. Lincoln, and not Mr. Johnson. it reads thus: Provided that the Secretaries of State, of the Treasury, of War. of the Navy. of the, Interior, and the Postmaster-General and the ttorney- General shall hold 'their - offices respectively during the,term of the President by whom they hare been appointed, and one mont'a thereafter, subject to removal by and with the advice and consent of the Senate. The President takes the around that lie can re move all his Cabinet except the three appointed since his accession to office. As to who will succeed Mr. Stanton nothing has yet been decided. It is probable that General Giant will be summoned to act temporarily, and the President considers. Ault it would be the wisest choice for the p cut. General Grant, being familiar with army a ffairs,and the chief of the army, would undoubtedly be an admirable selbc flew. In making this statement about General Grant,'l am but giving the impression of people of - all shades of opinion here. The news is known to but few here, but when published to the country will doubtless cause an immense sensation. I From the N. Y. Tribune of to-day.] There is no longer any necessity for specula-. tion as to the purpose of the President With ref erence to Mr. Stanton's continuing in the Cabi net. Mr. Johnson, this morning, notified him in writing that his resignation as Secretary of War would be acceptable. So far Mr. Stanton has not been heard from on the subject; but his friends say he will rel4n, and that heis_prepar -ing a-written - respOagAwhe-note of the Presi dent. In ease Mr. Statfton goes oat of the Cabi net Gen. Grant will be appointed to perform the; duties of Secretary of War until the. President shall have time to consider who he will name as the successor of Mr. Stanton. The rupture between the President and Secre tary Stanton is still the chief topic of conversa tion here.' Stanton's friends, who have been with him to-day, state that he gives out that he will not resign. He says that if the Presidents wishes to oet rid of him, he will have to do so by olatin4 tote law and removing him—that he will never yield. On the other hand, the Johnson men, who claim to be posted as to the President's opinion, assert that he, the President, will re move or suspend Stanton if he refuses to resign. The contemplated removal of Sheridan is lost sight of since it has become known that John son has stated that Stanton must go first, and all interest is centered in a climax to the John 1-on-SMirton quarrel. The White House and War 'Department politicians are very active. Stanton has been run down with visitors most of 4he day. Since writing the foregoing, we learn that certain friends of Mr. Stanton, who called pu him to-day, say he assured them that he would not resign. , [From the New York Times of to-dry.) TLe rumors regarding Secretary Stanton's intention to resign from the 'War Office have as sumed a more definite form to-day, and seem to be woe thy of credence. It is certain, at any rate, that the President and his friends desire that he should leave the Cabinet. and Mr. Johnson did not hesitate to say as much in a 'very public man ner last Saturday. It is also known that Mr. Stanton absented himself from the Cabinet Meeting last Friday, when the .question of Sheridan's removal was discussed at length. The frequent rumors of his resignation, which have been published heretofore, and which have had their origin in similar disagreements, have never been so well founded as thos,e now afloat, but it is nevertheless possible, if not probable, that the whole affair will blow over without any change in the Cabinet.' The Secretary's friends announce publicly, to night, that he expects to receive a request to resign very soon, but say that be will not comply without mature consideration A Military titian of the Two Countries Necessary for Peace and CrtlHum. lion. The Edinburgh Review contains a very careful article on "The Military Institutions of France," founded on the recent writings of the Duke of Aumale and Generals Trochu and Changarnier, from which we take the following extract. The Review says: • "We do not conceal our opinion that the power, and even the superiority, of the French army is an essential condition of the liberty and independence of Europe. France has ere this giyen liberty to others, even while she denied it to herself; and if the, fuhtfre has in store a military combination between the Powers of the North— the forces of Germany backed by the forces of Rus sia—it is only by a close and intimate alliance of France with thlicountry that the cause of West ern civilization, and perhaps the independence of the East, can be upheld. No truces of past rivalry and animosity, no apprehension of future differences, shake our faith in the alliance of France and Great Britain as the best security of public law and of peace; and we therefore regard the efficiency of the French army with an inte rest second only to that which we feol in the efficiency of our own forces. ft cannot too often be repeated that the peace of Europe is threat ened, if it be threatened, not by France, but by the changes Prussia has made iu the distributi ou of power. If, moreover, we turn our eyes to the New World, where another great military and naval Power has sprung, into existence, and where we are sometimes met with tones of hostility and de fiance, it is mainly the state of our relations with Franco which may accelerate or arrest a rupture of our pacific relations with the United - States: The alliance of England and France Is, therefore, especially valuable as the pledge, of peace, for though either of them might be attacked singly, they will not be defied with impunity as Wog as' they act together. In' that fundamental doctrine of, the policy and the reign of Napoleon 111. we cordially concur, and. e believe. 'to be 'Shared with'equal sincerity by men of all. parties In France, however widely they may he separated from the imperial:regime. . Fpjee Islanders call humeri flesh “long pig," It 1,8 tttrtle and venison to them. The name aCturateli describes wino mom wo knom AN ANGLO.FRENC Eif ALLIANCE. =IIM Colored ]lien ass Oillee.Holderoi The following letter is addressed to the Rev. 11. H. Garnet, pastor Shiloh Presbyterian Church, New York, by Major Delany, a colored ssoldier: Mr DEAR Stu: In such' times as these it re ! quires men, of the greatest, practical 'experience, acquired ability, mature intelligence, and discre tional wisdom, to speak and act for the race now an integral part and essential element in the body politic of the nation. Therefore I do most sin cerely hope that you and the other leading minds among our people May take your stand, speak out, and define your true sentiments in relation to the greet points now agitating the public mind, especially the black man's claims to Mike. The great principle always advocated by our leading men has been to claim for us, as a race, all the rights and privileges belonging to an American citizen of the most favored race. But Ido not think' that those who have : so long, so steadily, and determinedly stood up as you and others of us have done, even to a national con cession of these claims, ever contemplated taking any position among our fellow-citizens, till we at least should be ready and qualified. It follows, as a matter of course, that ;awe than we should be ready, before it Is possible to attain to such Positions. lam sure that upon this point, - there will be but one sentiment among the old line leading men of our race, cotemporaneous with us, when the subject is placed betore them. I have been indneed to pen this letter to you by seeing in the telegraph proceedings of the Co lumbia (S. C.) Convention a claim put forth by Mr. J. J. Wright. in behalf of our race, for the Vice Presidency of the United States. I hope no such nonsense as this will for a moment be enter tained. Our enemies would desire no heavier nor stronger club with which to break the heads of our friends and knock out our brains than this. We are not children. but %men, comprehending the entire situation, and should at once discoun tenance anything that would seemingly make us cat's paws, and ridiculous in the eyes and estima tion of the, political intelligence of the world. Let coloredjnen be satisfied to take things like other men, in their natural course and time. Prepare themselves in every particular for local municipal positions, and they May expect to at tain to some others in time. Mr. Wright is a young man, of some twenty seven or twenty-eight years of age, and conse que:4ly without any political experience, except . such as acquired since the war commenced, and therefore may be excused for so palpable a po litical blunder. I am a personal friend of his, therefore take the liberty of speaking frankly about hint. I ant, Sir, for our race and country at large, your friend. _ _ M. R. DELANY HILTON HEAI ), S. C., July 27, 1867, THE INDIAN WAR. Gallant Fight Ncar Fort Hayes... Cap. rain Arnim and a Troop of Forty 41ay. alryluenut Surrounded by Indians... They Fight l'hehr Way Out. LEAVENWORTH, Kansas, August 5,1867.—0 n the Ist instant Captain Arms ' of the Tenth cav alry, with forty-four men of the same regiment, started in pursuit of a band of ludiad raiders, who had been committing outrages near . Fort Hayes.. After a hot pursuit of forty-flve miles our troops overtook about seventy-five Indians on Sabine river, and a hot fight ensued, when the Indians were reinforced by about two hundred braves, all armed with Spencer carbines, and commanded - bytwo - white - men. captain ,Arms was surrounded, but fought his way out and fell back towards Fort Hayes, closely pursued by the 'lndians for a distance of fifteen miles. Several Indians were killed. Cape. Arms was wounded in the thigh, and . seven of his men were also wounded. ' • After falling• back this distance, Captain Arms sent to Fort Hayes for reinforcements. Forty additional men were sent him, since which time nothing• has been heard from them.' • The Indians are in strong force ; and threaten all the posts on the Smoky Hill route. CIVIL SUITS AGAINST SOLDIERS* General Pope Prohibits Suits Against Soldiers in His District for Acts Corn. muted by Authoritt. MtiIiTGOMLItY. Ala., August 5, 1867.—General Order No. 45, from General Pope's headquarters, • meets that no civil courts will hereafter enter tain any action whatever against officers or sol diers. or any other persons, for acts performed in accordance with orders from the military authori ties, or by their sanction, and all such suits pend ing now, or in which costs have not been col lected, will be at once dismissed. Any judge or other civil authority who attempts to disobey this order will be immediately reported to head quarters. The Threatened Itemoval of Sheridan. NEw Onia:ANs, Autzu s,l.Bli7.—Great indigna tion is felt here among the Union men at the. threatened removal 'of: General Sheridan. The rnovonent here in favor of his removal emanates from speculators, including prominent Johnson office , holders, who are afraid of his honesty. The ret,els are, greatly rejoicing. A great mass meet ing wal be lield - to-teor"ow to protest against it:, [For the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin.] The Children's Home. There exists in West Philadelphia an institn lion of great importance to the, moral and intel lectual life of our comnitmity, au] which is little known outside of those immediately connected with its support. It is called. the Western Provi dent Society add Children's Home of West Phila delphia, and is located at Forty-first and Vc ming° streets. It was organized about twelVe years ago. and has continued up to the present time; during which period it has been kept up only by the untiring zeal and • self-sacrificing spirit of a few noble women, animated •by the true spirit of that religion whose- work and duty it is "to do good and distribute," and whose re ward is "for with such saerific•a , s God: IS, well pleased." The importance of an institution which takes children from the evil influences of a depraved home and giVes them a Christian edu cation, cannot be questioned: • Respecting the nature of the Rome, it mar be said that Protest ant children only are received; that It is not sec tarian in its management; that the children arc taught the elements of a common school educa tion, independent of regular Sunday School in struction,and upon arriving n.t the proper age arc either bound out, or provided with other suitable homes. Many are taken back to their original homes. and who can estimate the amount of good that may be infused Into the hitherto de praved families? The institution Is in want of funds. It appeals to the generous. Christian hearts of our city. Will you respond? Contri butions may be sent to the Home, Forty-first and Venaugo streets. Be ye not "weary in well doing, for lu due season we , hal :.eap, if we faint W. Law RF.P.h.:T:i.-I:niced States Cir,:ult Court Importantto Deplers in India ilub;.er Goode.— H. B. Goodyear,A.dministrator, see., and Conrad Poot.: - .lms.m, • vs. NVlillain ..)full?.. and John Miller.—William Mace and. John Miller were attached to-day by Judge Blatchltd, of the United States Court, and are now M . prison for violating an Injunction forbidding them to make or sell India rubber goods. It i 3 said that the •parties are old infringers of the Goodyear hard-rubber patents. Mullee claimed that his combs were made under a patent or process of his own. The Judge, held this to be uo defence,but only a subterfuge and attempted evasion of the Goodyear patents. Leon Abbott, W. J. A. ,Fuller and Charle*M. Keller for complainants; Gardener Spring, Jr., Edmund • Wetmore and Thomas Darlington for defendants.--N.Y. Post. I:000k !J &mace of. ,the Peace thought he could, triteArky as , well as marry-4 •very logleal conclusion. certainly, :He tried it the other day; and the. result is two , cases of bigamy, for both parties of the divorce were warned again by the same Justice. ' We do ant vouch for the truth of this "Jersey item." E L. FETIIERSTON. Poblister. PRICE THREE CENTS. FACTS AND FANCIES. —Tegethoff has conic to get otf Maximilian's remains. —Chief Justice Chase p iys income tax on *700,000. —Michigan is going to disfranchise prize.. fighters. —Mr. W. F. G. Shanks succeeds Mr. H. EL Alden as editor of llarper',l Weekly. —Longfellow has been engaged twenty-eight years in translating the Divine Comedy of Dante. . —The original meaning of chignon is cabbage, Heads of cabbage—oh, ladies' —Horse-hair matrasses form part of the armor of the Norwegian monitors. If a shot Strikes them it is 'Buret° be imbedded. —A butial party in Kansas recently sktier grave—actually jayhawked it—and choused ffrf proper owner out of a resting place. • —Mrs. Disraeli sits nightly in the ladies' lery, watching, through a lattice, the brillkut fence of her darling husband. —An Englishgentleman offers - a reward of $1.0,000 to the discoverer of a permanent anti dote for pain. He can keep his money. =Miss Marg - aerette Power, the last survivor of the brilliant circle who congregated at *Sous House, is dead. She was a mete of Lady Bless ingtou and an author of some repute. —Queen Victoria is building a new house in the Scottish Highlands, seven miles from any other dwelling. She intends it to be a plaeo of retire ment for herself and a few select friends. —Some of the recently arrested footpads hi Australia attributed their choice of avocation to the perusal in early life of certain novels by Mx. Buiwer. —The Independent, after praising the "ortliO4 dox flavor" of the Antwerp raspberries raised on Mr. Beecher's farm at Peekskill, . slily says: "A minister, like any other person, is to be judged by his fruits." —The Buffalo E.rpress gives some very interest ing statistics of the frog trade in that vicinity. It says a man or boy can earn a thousand dollars in the season by catching frogs and preparing them for market. —A review that was to have taken place lately at Hounslow, England, was postponed tan ac count of the death, of Maximilian. A cavalry man told his companions that it was because of "Prince Macmillan being hanged in Jamaica." —Herr W. Haring—the blind " Walter Scott of Germany," who writes as W. Alexis—has received from the King of Prussia tho cross and pension of the Knights of Hohenzollern—the first tired the order has been conferred'upon a poet. —The Rev. Rowland Hill once said, on oh, ger - Ong some persons enter his chapel to -avoid the rain that was falling, "Many persons are to be blamed for making their religion a cloak; but I do not. think those much better who make it an umbrella." • .• . —lt has been decided by a Ventunk court that a- school teacher has control over a boy at honie., ithis con - duet is such. as is calculated injure the interests of the school. 'Between the teseltel* and 'their Idlidditi f the. • l'aiya. Terthont Mat . have a hard time.. • • • ' - . • , —Tile NO( York' Evening Gazette says t', f' Th ere were never so Many empty tiotiNixig:honses:ha New York as at prevent. Rooms arelolet.'Oralr, the etreeALMi annueseit tittlituyz. , * had tinted hci - uses, thinking to re let'; them to lodgers ; have 'gone to smash.'" , —The Salt Lake Vidstte says everybodylegoing SO the Green river mines or sending a man. J3rg-, ham Young is encouraging the , hegira in that rection, but cautions the settlers to keep °lli:knia. at home in all the settlements to do the haivest-*. Ing and Sail!' the crops. —An AmboY correspondent of the Monmontlt Inquirer says: "I have it from a good source of our, oldest Democrats went to Trenton, not long ago, to recover the pensions o:f. two . uncles killed during the revolution. After a long,, search their names were found among the list of, killed—but on the wrong side. They were Hes sians." —The inhabitants of Paris, says a foreign journal, must appear in the eyes of sovereigns and princes who visit the French capital to have among them a very considerable numberof men dicants, since those illustrious persons axe be-. sieged with applications for pecuniary assistance under all sorts of pretences, and for snots of money from 20f. to 1.00,000 f. —The facetious Paris correspondent of a Lon don paper writes: "The Bourse was very dull to day, ter humidity damps the'speculator, and the speculator when damp generally canards." Also: "A British gentleman, a very muscular Christian .indeed, complains that the entertainment to hp had at the watch-houses of this city is dreadfully a 3 t q viriance with the spirit of the ago." —The Paris critics are loud in their praises of Mr. Sothern. TheoWnle Gautier, who acknowl edges that he has no English, says he almost un derstood and thoroughly appreciated the actor. The•critic of the Constietttionnet, beating about for terms to describe Mr. Sothern's Was of faculty, is complimentary, and says he passes from "vegetative imbecility," to "ruminative idiocy." —)Mme. Olympe Audovarde, has had in Paris this experience of red tape: She directs the Revue Cosmopolite, and, desiring to turn it into a poli tical journal, made the necessary application to the Minister of the Interior, who declined on the ground that it is legally impossible to give such a mmit "except.to a Frenchman of full age, en joying his civil and political rights." ,--At present, there are eight benitices in titer Irish Church, worth on an average more than £OOO a year each, and containing an averagti church population of more than five thousand - souls, whose incumbents are under the_protection of the Court for Insolvent Debtors. During tbsit last twenty years a large proportion of deans, archdeacons and other dignitaries, holding large livings, have been insolvents. —The reason assigned for Mr: Tennyson's abandonment of his beautiful residence at Far rington, Isle of Wight, and his retreat to - Raile. mere, in Surrey, is, that he was tormented hydro obtrusive attentions of the "Hon hunters,' whci hung . on to his palings, peeped through his gates, and - fairly crammed Freshwater Church on Sun, day in the hope of seeing how a poet laureate said his prayers. • —A table has been made in Birmingham, - England, as a present for the Sultan. Itis cir cular in form and six feet in diameter. The material is electro-ulate, panelled oft the upper surface In arabesques, and richly engraved with representations of fruit and flowers. The border, consisting of raised clusters of fruit and flowere r _ parcel gilt, is of very bold design, The value , oC the work Is two thousand live hundred dollars. • - —The quaint old wooden-fronted house near the palace of the Bishop of Hereford, in Eugland„ where "Nell Gwynne" was born and lived,. 'law , ' been entirely swept away. Every visitor to' Hereford used to call to see it, but it has preloo Obnoxious to an ecclesiastical digultattr, and wee-- been in consequence entirely . demolished: The house was pretty filled in with qualrit'i old r wooden piles, and In King Charles's time, tech* ' as it did a pleasant bank sloping" down to; the river, it must have been a charming home. -' —ln a very , few years thli Almanac), de. Gotha will ccai•c to be published. The spirit of revOlum: don is so strong on the Continent that all the. old reigning . families will be swept away, and the.. hnonach does not recognize arvenus.' There: has just died a European sovereign of whim yeti little notice was taken, yet Henly LXVIL of Items Behleiz was th e oldest sovere,iglkintriOri":' Ile was a model ruler in his , way; began, stitutions, at pleasure, and in fds, . 1 withdrew them. He was a'fit rePttlie • ••p 4 Heine's Prince, who had .to cross the ripe of hin.doinain to turn hls : herse ,r9llner ,Jl/4 1 had an army of 907 men rteraltuillyvirt,or , half that number. The number l4` was 83,000 and hi revenue 11200, dead evet us Caesar t ' '