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It fits into the ear and is not perceptible, re =ores staging in the head, and enables deaf persons to bear distinctly at church and public assemblies. A Treatise on Deafness, Catarrh, Consumption and Cancer; their causes, means of speedy relief, and jilt! mate cure, by a pupil of the Academy of Medicine, Paris. Sent free for 10 cents. Scrofulous diseases successfully treated. Dr. T. 11. STILIVELL, 31 East Washington Mee, New York City, where all letters, to receive atten tion, must be addressed. Dr. STILWELL, of New York, will he professionally at 103 Pine street, Philadelphia, luesday next. from 10 to 4. ocl2.l%tu,th-3m EVENING BULLETIN. Thursday, October 17, 1867. FOREIGN CABLE NEWS. The cable newsman, who furnishes Rung' from London for the American Associated Press, reveals the important and astounding fact that "Napoleon and Eugenie are residing at St. Cloud;" also that "the prize fight be tween Mace and Baldwin has been indefi nitely postponed, owing to the arrest of, the former." These stupendous pieces of news, sent according to the heavy tariff of the cable, would lead one to suppose that there were.no more important facts worth telegraphing from the old world to the new. And yet one can not help thinking that some of the other pieces of intelligence, vaguely mentioned, might have been worth a little more detail than the mention of a postponed prize fight, or the announcement that the French Empe ror and Empress are at their usual autumnal place of sojourn. - For instance, there is mention of a Fenian plot to seize Queen Victoria at Balmoral, and the doubling of the guard there to protect Her. Majesty's person. This is a. matter much more interesting to the American public than a prize fight that did not take place, and there is a natural desire to learn some further par ticulars concerning the plot. The Fenian movements in Great Britain must be on a formidable and alarming scale, it' there has been any good ground for suspicion of au attempt to seize the Queen. It is hard to be lieve that 'the Fenians.seriously contemplate such a thing. It would be audacious and foolish to the last degree, and it would stir ,up the pop ula6 to resistance to the con spirators more than anything else that could be imagined. If there is one feeling more deep and more wide-spread than another in Great Britain, it is loyalty to their Queen, and love and admiration of her character Any attempt to insult, injure or degrade her would fre the Fenian cause more than any thing tai has yet occurred. On this con tinent there is a very strong feeling of respect for England's widowed Queen, and the cable newsman might have vouchsafed a few more words concerning the supposed plot to nelZe Jana.. Another subject that is unlci. 01, interesting to all Americans, and especially to those 01 the Roman Catholic faith, is the movement of the "Party of Action" in the Roman States. But the cable newsman condescends to give only a few vague sentences concerning it. He says: "The Papists are falling back on Rome. The whole press of Italy urge the immediate seizure of, Rome. The Garibal:- dians are growing hourly stronger, and there are reports of fights near Forense and Alfine. The Pope has called a convention of the Car dinals to consider the situation." These are much more exciting items than the fact that a prize fight in England will not take place, and the public curiosity is aggravated and tantalized by them to an extraordinary degree. Cannot the agent of the Associated Press in London be instructed that he does not com prehend the wants of the American peOple, and that they care more about great political movements than about prize lights and horse races? THE EIMST FRUITS 01' .I'llE ELEC TION. One of the most significant results of the little victory of the . Democrats in the late elections is, that it has brought to the surface such men as Vallandigham, Pendleton, Voor hees, and Jesse D. Bright, men whose record as alders and abettors of treason condemned them to disgraceful obscurity so long as the Union men of the country did their duty at the polls. But now, in this hour of Copper head triumph, we find Pendleton preaching repudiation, Bright urging Kentucky to• re fuse payment of United States taxes, Beaure gard hurrying to Washington-to •consult with . the President, and Vallandigham spouting treason and insulting the men who -succeeded in defeating his efforts to give victory to the rebels. On Saturday evening last, the Ohio Demo cracy held a jubilee meeting in the town of linmilton. Yallandigham, the man whom repudiated by one hundred thousand majority, was present, and made a 'lengthy speech: The occasion of this was a resole- Lion nominating him as the successor of Benjamin F. Wade in the United States Senate..a resolution to which an amendment was offered, urging hint to run for the Presi dency of the United States. Vallandigham accepted the promise of the Senatorship, and asserted vehemently his determination to occupy Mr. Wade's seat. This speech was so tmasonable.-in its sehtiments, that it is surprising that even an assemblage of Democrats, some of whom, at least, are • certainly advocates of the Union, could have listened to it. The opeaker gloried in the triumph of his faction, because it was a re buke to the Union men of the South, who have dared to lift tip their voices against the ' traitors in their midst. He rejoiced because it seemed to him to prove that the people re ' grettedthe abolition of slavery, and the emancipation of three million human beings; because it proved Abraham Lincoln to have been a scoundrel; because he believed that it - consigned the black may-to irreieemable de .ol,fiatiQa, And deprived him forever of his rigl4a ; and becausd Would place bbitatlf and his fellow traitors in power once zd":l)ed enable them to accomplish In dingress the work they had failed to perform elsObere• • , Vallandigham rabii?ly thanked, for this victory, the Republicans, who, through any motive of prejudice or passion, did not sus tain their own party. This is the bitterest shame of all. The loyal men who stayed away from the polls, or who cast dieir ballots for Democratic candidates,are responsible for the result which gives this blatant traitor such occasion for rejoicing. They did more than rebuke their own party ; they placed in power men whose constant aim in years past has - been to destroy this government, anti who,before the war, played the spaniel to the Southern chivalry in Congress,until North ern men, who preserved their self-respect, bowed their heads with shape at the humilia tion. Vallandigham will "go the Senate; he may even fulfil his promise to succeed Gene ral Grant in the War Office. If he does, the Republican voters whb helped to place him there will probably find that their old leaders, with all their faults, were purer and wiser and more patriotic than this Northern dough face, who pins his faith to the skirts of Jeff. Davis, and knows no higher law than the political dogmas of Calhoun. THE VOTE or DESERTERS. The Legislature of Pennsylvania passed a law, during the war, which disfranchises de serters. The law was , a very proper one at the time, imposing, as it did, a just fine upon those whose failure in duty contributed so much to embarrass our military operations and to retard the overthrow of the rebellion. It might be proper now to consider whether the penalty already sufibred and the disgrace incurred do not constitute a sufficient pun ishment for the majority of these cases, and whether the Legislature might not now repeal the law. But whether that be done or not, next winter the law, as it now stands, is per fectly valid and ought to be everywhere operative. This, however, is far from the case. Out of the 400,000 men put into the field by Pennsylvania, there were ten or twenty thousand deserters, and, the large majority of this number are Democrats. In Republican districts, where the election laws can be enforced, few, if any, of these disfran chised Democrats' are allowed to vote. They are known,• registered and challenged, and the law is thus vindicated. But in many Democratic districts little or no opposition is made to their votes, and there were probably several thousand `votes of deserters cast for Judge Sharswood, last week, which were as illegal as if the voters had been subjects of Great Britain or China. This subject deserves the searching investigation of the Legislature.. It is already plain that there was no fair Republican defeat iu this State on Tuesday last. Judge Sharswood's paltry majority was obtained by systematic and well-con; ducted frauds, backed, to be sure, by the stupid apathy of thousands of Republicans, who stayed at home; but even these' would would not have been able to defeat Judge Williams, without the aid of deserters who, by perjury and fraud, neutralized the votes of honest men. Thdre is plenty of time, between now and the meeting of ' the Legislature, for the State Central Executive Committee to look closely into this matter, and if they, find that Judge ,Sharswood has been put upon the bench by disfranchised deserters,by all means let the seat be contested, and the claims of its rightful occupant be recognized . and vin dicated. SUARSWOOWS AIXJOBIIOI7. Jua(s , - 3harswood's majority appears to be about seven or et tit hundred. Apart, from the Democratic frauds, which ”: - Ore prohn.bly ten times greater than this petty majority in dicates, this result has been secured by means of Judge Ludlow, although without any di rect agency or connivance ou the part of that gentlenian. There were probably four hun ched Republicans in this city who recognized the claims of Judge Ludlow to who were too stupid to distinguish between the cases of Judge Ludlow and Judge Shars wood, and who voted for the latter gen tleman, simply because he.was a judge, and they had a vague idea that therefore he was to be re-elected to something for some reason they did not exactly-know what. Judge Ludlow thus carried Judge Sharswood on his own shoulders, for which it is hoped the latter will be duly grateful. It is not com plimentary to the intelligence of the four hundred brilliant Republicans who gave the State to the Democrats by their stupidity; but it is satisfactory to know that their num ber was so small as not to naika }their con duct any reflection upon the intelligence of the Republican party at large. Chief Justice Chase has been making a decision in Maryland which has two great merits. First, it is eminently just and rea sonable, and secondly, there is a . crisp terse ness and a logical force about it that contrast 'boldly with the wordy opinions of Attorney- General Stanbery, And the windy inanities of his squire, the irrepressible Binckley, The opinion of the Chief Justice is a settler for the keen expedient resorted to by the slaveholdere of Maryland, in order virtually to retain the institution of slavery after its abolition. had been decreed by law. The test case in which the decision was made came up upon a writ of habcn•s corpt