) 4 NEW YORK HERALD. JAVIE3 CORDON SENNET ~ PSOPR IETOR. JAMES CORDON BENNETT, JR. MANAGER IIROARWAY AND ANN STREET. All business or aows leUcra and telegraphic despatches niu?t be Addressed Nsw York Hsrami. I etters and psckajjos should bo properly g?alal Rejected communications will no! be return > 1. Volume XXXII No. viH7 AMt'HKMENTS TIM> KVENIN'i. BltOAI>WAY THEATKB. Br??dw??. corner of Broome street.?Jaok Caob. minn::ivki if .iirui-n.' \l. <1, >.,-t. M,. or iiViummo. WORREM. SMTER*' NEW YORK niK.VTRK, oppo it* Navr Yuri Hotel -Vsonr. u< Ua? french THEATRE. Four lean til street aul Sixth a??. But ?T.iu 'Iiunj Ul'.-iiei* or (It ;oei-?r Itutna ZUX Mar:?TiE.N J no ww Mann. FIFTH AVEVfl-, TUB ?.TK'<, Vo?. 3 and 4 Wmt Tvrentr. Ijh ,i ? Diai'.m i?Vo;> Mv'.i ;'0K Hoou NafUitu TIIP.VTC COMTQt'K. 5U B.-oudway WUITB, COTTON AND -.-I liirl.KT'a Ml.NSTRkl.N KAN FBASCtRCO MINSTRRIiN. ,VW Broadway.-EraiO r IS E~T.iBT.ltAIIBI.TH, tlBOlMi, I'l.NCIMI AND He til H - i J 1. KEI.r.Y * l.EOJTK MINKTRF.f.K, T.M Proalw.y -So.njj, I>iNC?i, KC( KNTRICITtki. V. PHI ? JUES. At'. tory > tstoivk v ik'fkk it i ruwu.-y. ?r nit Voi'aliik N?3 Broadway ? toiMM ..so Am. TRIPLE SHEET. Nrw York. Tur?day. Nrpnimbor J. ISK7, w ?* aa ii w i. EUROPE. The new report by the Atlantic cablo is datod yesterday aft era Aon, ?eptainber 23. Gsribal I. was at Arrozo, forty miles from Florence. Tho funeral of the policeman who lost his life daring the Femun rescua riot in Manchester waa largely attended by the respectable citizens of the town. At the city of Paris races tho horse Patricien woo the grar.d pr.zs. Consols rated at 01 for money in I.ondon in the afiornooa Five-twenties wore at 7V4 in London. Tho Liverpool cotton market opened quiet, with middling up'and" a' 03?d at noon. Breadstuff's quiet. Provisions slightly advaticod. THE CIT1. Ttie City Council met yosterday, but no business of tnuch interest was transacted in eltber Board A reso- ( lutiou in the lower P.oard, to sup tho pay of those niotn sufficient excuse*, was reforred to tho Committee ou Law. Tlio Hoard of Supervisors met yosterday and passed a number of bills lor work and materia1* used in the cou tructioo of the new ( ouoty Court House. The Board of Audit met yis.'erdav and hoird tlio case of tiu JrCmne Association. It was a claim of $12,'J0S for county advarUsinr, and snath r of $1,700 for city advertising, which bos been running on since I'd.' No other c.vo of auy ; .xttal interest came up. , The oxpre's c*.- of the Merchants' T'nion Express C'o.npiny sttact "d t * tho t ontreal train from Albany, which arrived here on Saturday night, was found locked 1 by tho officer', and < u breaking tho door open It was (I hoovered that 179,000 bad l>een stolen uud the nunsengor was missing. A nolo was found from bim, ho*, evsr, stating thai it was oil right and ho would bo back on Monday. The case of Call: \ift, Allen an I other.?, charged with frauds in ths Collector's office In Ibooklyu, was before t ommlssionor Nswton yesterday; but a discussion cna.t"l among lbs lawyers as to whether all the parties should b# tried together or separately, and t'.io examination was finally p stpeiicd until Wednesday. Tn" stock ttiarko* was linn yesterday inorn tig, but afterwards became weak and unsettie), and closed in a setui-panic Uovsrnaisnt securities were dull. (lold was unsettled, au.1 cl" "d at 143. There war little anonatun in the marke'* ves'orday, but previous prices were demanded in almost all Instances Ciffi o w.vs s'< ?dy. Cotion we? dull and hesvy tin 'Change, flour was dull, bf ivv and 10a. a 20c. lower on the common and medium v d- s Wheat eontiauctl irregular. -Spring was Lea* v n.i to.vcr, wins wiuter wr.is t.i go id demand and be'tt r. 1 orn and oat* were active anl higher. l'erk and led ed.< d dull and heavy, while beef was steady. l"Y . is s-ere lower. Naval stores woro dull and depressed. I'o'.rolcum was without decided cluing*. The msrket for be >f catlto w.aa active and Closed firm at the following quotations, via:?IrttjC. a 17c. for xtra, 16t^c, a lflc. for prime, 14'.'a. a 15c. for flrst quality, lie a 13c, for ordinary, and 10'. a 11c. for inferior. About 1,690 bead were on sale. Milch cows wero in belter domaud and higher; tho inquiry wr.ua principally for prime, which sold ut $110 to $126. Oilier knds r*ng?d at from $.'>5 to $96. Veal calvea ware in fair demand and ateady at 12'. a l'df.c for extra, 11c. n 11 *gc. for prime, and 8 ,c. a l?l;r. for inferl?r to good. Sheep and lambs were in good demand and clo?ed very firm at about last week's pr res. fthesp ranged at froai 6'^c. to t^e., and iambs 7*,' a 8',.-, The latter were scarce. The hog market was dull and In avy and prices were \a. to per ib. |.>ne- Tt.irnr car load* sold at the fort.Aih afrttAf varHd t* :i si (or hAK'i V nrillio torn fed, 7',e. a 7liiv f? r fair to good, and Ac. a 7c for rem. most and r u.ii. Tlia u-tal recatpts were 7,307 beeves, 41 cjws. 1,600 veal calns, SO,27* sheep and larch*, and 30.113 wir.a. riSCELLANF.OUS. Advices from the Mat ot war n Paraguay state that tha allies wee ly:ng ldla before Uumatta, hiving n.ade no further advance since their first eocccse. In tbe Constitutional Convention yeaterdiy Mr. Curtis movfd an adlournment until tbe second Tuesiay ia November, which vr.it tattled under the rule. The cona deration of the reports on floancee and duals was resumed, brit there being no quorum present, an adjournment t-H)g place before any bus:nee* we* tr inserted a republican eatsc-.s was afterwards held in the Henste chamber, tiovemor Browniow and the Vavor of Nashville are at odd* regardng the power of appointing election offlrsre for tho ?otu iu ? !f toa m K**hville. Two tsof ofTiiort have t??en epp >tnto-l, one set by each of the two dls> putnnis. Brown'-ow threaten* the municipal anthcrtt es with his militia f tl y persist, and the city authorities have appealed to IV-i b-ut Johnson. A Woody c-I isla ia consider 1 martniut, and C u*ral Co per, or the State Ouard, IBCohCcn'rat u; u- ops at Nashville. Our special doepawh from Key West states H at the yell >w fever on t e I'ry 1 irlugei hae assuioed a nioro mat grant form. It t' estimated that oaettuth of the entire D'initier of soldier* and prisoners ou the is!and have died since the fever cornmoneM its ranges. The T'oiteJ S ate* steamer Yucca Is at 1'ortress Wonr e with 'seven cases of rellow fsver on board. Tho British steamer Narva arrived at the New York Quarantine yes ler lay from Kev West. whers she ba* b?en eucacsl in the work o. laying the Cuba telegraph cable, sane las lest fourteen persons by tbo yellow fever since ergte ng In tbe work, and I* now In quarantine with four esse* os board. Tnere were oue hundred an J forty-sit uvstlis Is New Orleans during tbe last two days. Judge Resse, of tba Sup nor Court of August*. Ca, NKWjrORK re'uses to obey the order of Goneial Tope reforrtng to qua'..Aeatioua for Jurors. Geir'rul IVpo ha* asked him to tesigu or curry out the lew, aul bo refuses to do either, 3u Jgs Kionoy ?ruw r~ the charge* against htm of misappropriation of public money so I of fraud iu th > dispesal of gooaU of the Uraud Army of the Republic last niiht. Mo made a short speech thanking the parly for the honor, lbs baud thon proceeded to where General Sickles was stopping, and in answer to a similar compliment he made a ? poocli of 30ine length. Geoeral Smith, at Leavouworth, Kansas, yosturday, In answer to s request from tho contractors on tlio I'uctflc Railroad to furnish more troops to protect ttio laborers, rnnliiwt Hist h.l hail nnnn In in9? Wn nilhhah lo-tUv detailed accounts of the couucils of U19 Pooce Commissioner*. General Rousseau arrived at San Franclsooon Sunday en route for his now command in Walrnss.a. Sovoral emigrants from tho Slates, also bound for the now possessions and a fortune, arrlvod in tho same ateatuer. General Ord has appointed a former slave and business manager of JortT Davis to he a Jualico of tbo 1'oace. captain General Manxano, ef Cuba, was taken ill at Itavuna on Sunday, and became so much worse yesterday that tho charge of the government of tho island was placed In the bands of Count Bulmo/.ado. The United State* sloop-of-war Dal^, one of tbo practice squadron, fur whore safety learn have foreomo timo boon entertained, arrived at tbo Naval Academy at Annapolis on Uie 221 inst. Toe Coroner's jury in tbe c.isa of Johu Fitxslmmons, who eas killed by policeman Wells 011 Saturday night In Albany, rendered a verdict In accordance with the facts and exonerating ibo oflWr. One juryman, however, iKs3ented from tbo latter portion of tbo verdict. A savings bank in Norway,'Oxford county, Mo., was rohbod of olevau or Iwoivo tliou^an I dollars on .Saturlay. The Itepubllcnn I'nrtv ntid llie ApproachInn Stnto Elections. Tho republicans ot this Commonwealth moot in State Convention nt Hyracuso to-morrow for tho purpo-u of nominating a State ticket and platform. From (ho manifest design of the p rtv leaders in (lit Consti'u ional Convention to put off Iho tost question of negro suffr.'igo till n-'xi spring we gue-o that Mii< Syracuse assemblage will also postpone* (h'.s issue to a more convenient season. That tho party loaders and m lingers throughout tho country are alarmed in reference to the approaching clec lions in Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Now York, cannot to doubted. Their apprehensions are betrayed in thoir explanations of the late results in California and Maine, and in their appeals lo each other and their followers everywhere io east aside all personal disputes and all side issues, in order to present a solid an l unbroken front against tho advancing columns of the enemy. The Times of this city, which, since its daring adventure into the Philadelphia Johnson Convention, has been on the back track to the radical camp, (insures its readers that the late elections furn'sh no ovideuce of a political reaction; that no siens of such a thing can l>e found anywhere; Hint (he republican lines remain intact and unshaken; but still it appears there is danger from extraneous i-sir s, and that the republican rnuP not suppose that the power which they hold ctu be prolonged without nn effort. Now, we hold the ground thai the elections of this year, beginning with that, of Connecticut, indicate that tho tide is on the turn, that in last year's elections tho republican party reached their topmost hi^li wator mark, and that in abandoning the sound and pooular plaliorins upon which those elections were carried they arc nil adrift. If they flat! their new ultimatum of univer.-nl negro suffrage uphill work, even in Ohio, and if t'e y lied it convenient to evade this question for tho present in New York, it i> be tiuse thoy aro losing the public confidence in their l.ot" d -parlures from tho line of policy laid before the people, ami approved by tho people, from Maine to California, In last year's elections, and with an emphasis unparalleled in our political contests. A?, liowevcr, poor Pierce and the democrndc psrty were curled away to destruction l>y their vanity and folly in consequent of their great triumph of 1852, so the republicans appear to have concluded from their successes of IS'JG that their power had become too great to be disputed and that they could do anything that pleased them. A tew little sklrmhehoo liaro served not only to remove tlds vain conceit, but to satisfy tho party lead -rs that us matters now stand before ill people there is no relian?v to bo planed n last year's republican majorities of Aflc.-n, twenty, thirty, forty and flfiy thou ;and, since, by deivult, if you nl~t\v, a California majority o< twenty thou*ind has b en fi-ii.tevd away, .m 1 a mijority in Maine has be >n re luce I from twenty-seven thousand to e'even thousand, on c 1 irge total vote, in a sin do year. Wo hold tha' such results on both sties of the Continent a' the natno time indicate llio oxis-etice ol some general and pervading causes of ropu<>licati apathy an I demoralisation, aud n general reaction in the drift of public opinion which for shadows llio near approach of a groat political revolution. Personal quarrels and jealousies, restrictive liquor laws and Sttinl iy prohibitions of cider an 1 lager beer, will not serve n? explanations of these late republican loss >s; for it is apparent that the same apathy prevails in tho party ranks in Pennsylvania and everywhere olse that lias boon developed from Connecticut to Maryland. The true explanation lies in the departure of Congress from the platform of Southern reconstrnct on submitted to and approved by the Northern Slates, an l in the subst'tution of the extreme radical programme of universal n gro sufTYago and negro supremacy in tho South. Hence the radical lute and cry of impeachment a ainst Andrew Johnson meets with no encouraging responses from the rank and file of the republican party; and hence the radical design of worrying General CIrint out of Johnson's Cabinet has Ignnlly failed. Southern reconstruction, it is seen, under the present laws of Congress, is sure to place the control of ton or eleven Of the Southern States In the hands of the ignorant and credulous blacks who but yesterday were released from the darkness and degradation of Southern slavery. Nam >.11y enough, thinking men, in looking lo t' ? probable conscquonces of this startling revision of our political system, recoil from the thrcatenol dan er. Herein, wo contend, lies the secret of this reaction against the party in power ; and from Pennsylvania an I Ohio wo ox; oet in Octeb r s iw evidoneo upon the ubject which will s.%?i financial question appears to li? ns nit to bo!vc as lias been tbo revolutionary problem. Tito - latter, happily, lias reaebel daylight, anl li^re ia hopo ot peace. StiS 1, there is much depending upon the ability of tbo Mexican* to support themselves until suoh a time as their financial system, turned into vigorous channels, will give them suflioiont funds to moot t'10 exp'ndlurres of the government. Ti.4 pos:ntf* 2f ^-lr day is, financially, elm i'-r to 7 ;it it was just previous to the allied invasion. At vi,Qt time, so exhtiumve had been the rule of Sip ditf rftii parlies in power, there v/as absolutely noth'ng loft with which t^ carry on the government, from clay to day. Of the revenues roceived upon French imports but eight per cent was available for government use; wbilo upon English imports all but Iwcnty-flve per cent had b'?cn plodged for payments to foreign bondholders. Tho30 pledges still remain, an I Mexico c.-m?* Into bor new lito sod l!ud with a pcore of treaties which liamyr her exchequer. Efforts have alrondy .1 oen msdo with our Congress, by those inte osted in restoring tho Mexican financed .to a healthy condi ion, to have us guarantee a Mexican loan of fifty millions of dollars. No diroct application lias beon made to ua for aid by the Mexican goverr.mout; but tho parties in'oresled fancy tlid we, Dun Qu'xotc like, are will.ug, in o ir reckless ex'rav gance, lo look about t e world for opporiuuit es to do bai'.Io for o'hors and prop (hem ii |> by an oxtrt issue of gro -ubneks. ThoMexicans nev. r coked us for money ovon in the darkest days of (heir misfortune even when their govo.anient was driven to our llio (Jrai.de f oati?r. Wo can rc.rccly in di-ni'y proffer thorn a service which (i.ey refuse to ask from us, and which, w re we to offer, they might rcjoc*. In a practical view of tho question it would be fol'y for the M xioans to saddle themselves with a debt lo the United States, for of the proposed amount (hey would probably uot r.oeive more than twenty millions. It is well known that of the fifteen millions which Mexico was to receive for tho Cal fornia and Arizona purcha-o, not move (h n live inill.ons ever reached the Mexican Treasury. Were wo to pour into Mexico (he results of a fifty million loan, it would bo !ho worst thing wo could do for our republican neighbor. The money would not 1 si two years, and at the end of tlmt time what would be the support of a people who had beon taught that -they must not look to their own resources, but to foreign aid, to maintain their government ? If they iravo not the elements within themselves to regenerate their government financially, then j thoy arc a people al-ealy pa it resuscitation ; aii'l whatever money wo might lend to them would only bo the first st p towards taking possession of their country. The guarantee of a fifty million loau by out Congress mea is additional corruption at Washington an l the annexation of Mexico. We Lave a great iutcr. st In tiio prosperity of i Mexico, for we ar so closely linked with hor I geographically that mnoh of our future progress depends upon her advancement Uonco it Is unwise lor us to do any hing which will retard Lor bom soeking wiiiim herself the means of national salvr.tion. That she possesses nil th elements for solfsrestoratlon there is no question. She has them, too, in at least equal ratio with llio United Slates, when considering the relative population of the two countries. The Mexican silver minoa alone li tvo yielded, through the worst wars, not less than thirty-five millions annually. Upon this product they reap a yearly rm etmo of tivo per cent for export duly. Th s is the ouiy industry through ail the Mexican trouhi-w which has | rem lined untouched. Tiiey have wisely saved ?!. . H.-l 1...0 ?!..? ?.1 1,.? .... Tl.i. :i_? il UU U fin ??r> -J HI V, * / I viv41 v;/ ",. &II13 PllVUI product may be ineroa.-?ed enormously, r.nd with pence illicit in three y ra'f. reach one bundro I million dollars. Add to I ho revenuo received from iiis source tint which comes from imports, and cv -n at the lowest ebb of tho Mcxic.n finances there is ?vn annual revenue ot about fi'faea in llions iufnlvr. 0 i tho lot ot July, lrf?7, the Mexican foreign debt amounted to? Engl *li debt $69,311, do T ,S;i:iui ll dool U MK>,t)s6 Ftvucb ilobl ii,SiS,l'XT tjui , $e:.(we>30 To'hia we may ad.I acknowledged capitalised claims ant unpaid iuteres1, which swells ihe told l> $91,932,175. Adding to this amount the claims which e*is< iu the United Slates,and it may be said that the Mexican foreign debt to-day is about one hundred million dollars. The war claims of Frsuco wo do not tako into consideration. Mexico Las swn-n to iuakowar for a lrin lrokens moreover, tho early party beg in lo hear from Iho people again. There c .rno an election in Connecticut in which the republican voters stayed at home and permit' ed their ticket to bo beaten. There came another in Vermont, in which Iho victory was far iroin inspiriting ; another in Maine, showinj a great decrease in republican majorities; while far away California matched Connecticut with positivo victory for that som (me unlicard of thing, an opposiiion. Maryland showed (he case oveu more clearly. Uor peoplo voted on a constitution made in a spirit very distinctly hostile to all this nigger suffrage tendency, and it was seen that her republican voters would not declare against that constitution, but permitted it to bo curried by a very largo majority. All these warnings have begun to open the eyes of the radicals, who supposed they owned the country, and now fill thera with natural alarm. Their demoralization is most apparent in Albany. Radical leaders there hold in ihcir hands the constitution made this summer, before their eyes were opened?the constitution containing the whole radical scheme, nigger suffrage and all. It is a while elephant that llvov know not wh it to do with?an internal machine that may at any moment blow them all to pieoos. They have made this constitution, and they daro not submit it to the people; lor it is a dead certainty that to go before the people now with such a programme would be certain destruction, tbat it would revolutiouizo the Stale, and th it the lost vestige of radicalism would be swept away in a whirlwind of popular vongeame. Worse than all, it is impo- him ; and it Is very doubtful if Louis Kapolfior t will von'ure to Interfere should Heme hi (?,< i mtkt fall into tbo hands of the Italian*. Tin s Italians havo no desire to do injury th< ' p.-fs >n nf his Holiness or to detract from tlu r i dl^nl y ef his sacred offioo. If the Pbpe, there I fore, is ti >t uunocessarilf stubborn, m arrange PLB SHEET. ment satisfactory to the Italian kingdom. and not disadvantageous to the Holy See, nuy be come to before we are aware. It matters Uko the turn which we are disposed to believe they will take, another serious blow v.'ill hum been givoa to the prestige of Napoleon. - Yrtlaw Fever lu ilic Month* The Gulf States have b, on a -veroly scourged this fall by one of the ino?t terrible visitations t>? Provldonee?namely, yellow fever. Evjry mail and telegram brings the same sad intelligence of hundreds of viotims bein^ carried to their graves, and of the oxoJus of those who escaped the fearful malady. In Texas and New Orlo&n* Jho disease is most malignant, and the mortality is of A nature sutBcleni to str.ke terror into the hearts' 0* the survivors. The proportion of suff-rers is, however, terribly on the side of Northern people living in itiose districts. That circumstance alotie ought to arouse the sympathies of our capital sta, independent of the common feelings of humanity towards distressed follow creatures. If the real state of the sufferings of the people of the Gulf Stales from yellow favor was laid before the public of tho North by our health authorities, and means of alleviating this distress suggested, there would be, undoubtedly, an instant and adequate answer given by tho metropolis at least Let there b a proper and responsible land inaugurated and the real at it; of lbs caso lail before our people, and their g-merous, humane and noble fo dings will at once rcpoud to the call. The facts of (h caso are 1 irlrendlng. Our eorrospondent from Galveston says that the yellow lever has been decim iting tiiat city for tho last two months, and that nin hundred deaths occnrr d from the end of July to tho early part of the present month. Sixty-four died at Now Orleans within the twenty-four hours cu ling at six o'clock* 011 Saturday morning. At Corpus Christi, Indlanola, Houston, and other towns, the mortality is of the most fearful kind, ihcse facts will suffice to arouso tho sympathies of all in the Nor h, and they call lor immediate assistance. Some of those cities resemble vast hospitals, and are deserving objects of commiseration. Let aid be given them at onto, and with unsparing hand. Wlini la (loins On In tlio Noutlif?How (las (ho Praali'.ovt Atdeil Keconntmcllon ? Tho returns of registration in the South are sufficiently complete to establish the fact that the negroes and their whito sympathisers are in a majority in nt least seven out of the ten unrocons.'ructod States. In Virginia the whites are in an apparent majority; but it is not known how many ot thorn ire of the radical stripe, who, of course, will cast their lot aud their ballots ~i4i. 4u~:- k??ii...An tU/i wibii nji'ir uuiuiuu mruwiu^ buv radicals out ot view for the time, the question becomes interesting, How far has President Johnson aided reconstruction t Being lately called upon by certain politicians, for the purpose of U'giag him to reopen registration in the South, ho informed them that he "could not do so without incurring certain risk of impeaohment, and admitted that the reconstruction laws confer on tue District military commanders sole control over registration. His only power of interference was the removal of commanders when they failed to execute the laws in accordance with his views ol their legal construction." There is the whole story in a nutshell. It can bo imagine.I from this how tar the President has proceeded in his policy of reconstruction, lie lias, in reality, himself given the South entirely over to ttio negroes, aud although bo has removed cortain radical idols from their | military positions, he has in no manner effected a change in tbo radical Congressional mode of reconstruction, nor ameliorated the rigors of the double star and shoulder slr k 1*. M. f A oonfliot of authority has arisou between Governor Brownlow an J tho city authorities r. j to who la the proper party to appoint ollicors to conduct the oleclion which takes place hern on Kit onlay. Tho Kesistratlon ConiraiM-ionore havo appointed one set or oflloeni, by direction or tbo Governor, oh lo the City < ouncil has appointed another Bet. The Governor has 1-siiod a proclamation threatening miliiii iuiarie- nee If the civil anlhoritiea pers;?i, while Mayor Brown baa laauod a proclamation Inatatinff that the city nppoltitooe will eiiperintend the elccuon. General Cooper is now coocentr.itlny mlbila here. On the olber hand lha Mayor will swear lu a lar/e number of axtra police to reaiat lite tnllitln If nccewnry. A bloody collision Is imminent If Fome party does not bark down. Hresidont Jobnsou has been appealed lo by tbo city authorities. JUDICIAL INSUBORDINATION IN SEOiMUA. Jnrtffo Reese Refuses lo Cnrry Out Grseral Pope's Jnrv Orders?He Is Keqsrst'jd to It aalttn. htlt Wflll^lewllliiiHiaiilnn Hnl wria.m t Judge and Ike (lenrrnl. ArottsTA, (3a., .cept. fj&, 1W7. Judgo Reeae, of tho Superior Court, wrltc< to General Pop* lb at bo cannot carry out the recent joyy ordcra, the erne being In violation of tbe laws of 9 eorgia and tho State and federal constitution. Judge Reeee claims thai registration Is entirely optional and not compulsory, and because a man who may be otherwise a loyal citisen d oos not register it is no reason why he should be excluded from aorving on a Jury. General Tope replies that ',he military bills gtre him tho right to set aside any le.w or the State which cotnoe In couflict with Ihe minis n t>ul. Orders No*. 63 and 35 were issued by virtue c'g the power vested In hlin by Congress. He conat<,j()rs me jury order* necessary to the execution ?l tho? reconstruction acts, wtnrh became Isws lu Who inanner> provided by tho constitution. A* that question has t>con presented to the .supreme Court, end tttat tribune', nas decided it had no Jurisdiction, the further c >nshl( .ration of thai question by the subordinate tnil'tary orJ^jdlotal officers is scarcely admissible General I pp* concluded by requiring Judge Keese to carry out pi( orders. Judgo Reese in a second letter ?" - ov? / similar grounds as at first, arriving at tba concbtalor, th?t he cannot conlorm lotlon ral Pope's orders, ''ul ' usll contlnuo the duties or his oltloo as heretofore *D'?II prohibited. General I'ope then requested Judge r.c?se to rosigo, which he reload to do. but oonsldcrs his loiters as a positive prohibition against the lurtber exero so of Judicial powers. i. THE FUNERAL OF SIR FREOERiCK BRUCE. S Bostoh, Sept. 23, 18 ; Tie following gentlemen will act as pallbearers at m* , funeral of Sir Frederick Bruce, to-morrowS'?Governor Bullock, Monsieur llertheney, French V,o sier Sena5 lor rumner, II J. Pratt, or tba Rt?;w Department; . Samuel Hooper, Henry W. l,oogfeHe> Richard H Bav. ard, Mayor Norcruea Tba CtMMT, |f(>UM ?u, M cloaed from ten o'clock A. M, to cof ?* ui^t P. M. 1 ' * ' THE PARAGUAYAH WAR. fir ATUfiTiC CABLE. * Tli? AKIfi n( a Klnml Siill Urforc flumaiii, I.DNUOW, Sept 2U, 1MT. Later ad/iocs from Rio Janeiro siala ittii at last acOjuu'rt iVotu die scane of war the allied fare as bad made no fufUer iJ? brette, and as Mademoiselle Mignon, the juvenile danume. Miss Lizzie Bernard sustained a triple role with great force and apparent ease, gaining much applause trout the enthusiastic audience wbiob crammed the tbealr# (roiu pit to colling. Mr. bludlev's acting of tbe drunks* sot. Rtienue Mionon, was roally admirable, and the eem. blauoe of delirium which he puis on in tho second aot Is almost frightful in Ma intensity. Mr. Cunnlagbai* gavo a fair rendering of the unprincipled but yet good* hearted Lieutouant of the Guards, who Is the hero of the plot; and tbe rest of the characters are ably sustained, particularly ibat ol Mr. A. Poud. Orland promt ns to have a run, and the engagement ot Mine Bernard will doubtless prove a successful hit for thn enterprising leasee of the Bowery. In the afterpiacn last ovoniug of the Toodlos, that inimitable faroe ereciaiod hy her auliewea, wbu testifio I their approval by many hearty rounds of R( piau.so. Tbe other characters were well sustained bjr tbe moinbcrs of the slock company. Mr. Frank U?M as Master Wslter, altbiuigh at times a littin florid la stylo, received some well merited applause, as did aha Mr. K. L Til ton in tbe part of 8>r nomas Clifford, and Miss Annie Hefton, who sustained the rM? of Hel*a with much sprighlliness and vigor. TUE BOARD OF IMNIHTERN AT BUFFALO. SPECIAL TELE6RA1 TO THE HERALD. Burt'ALO, N. y., Sopt 2.% 1867,1 8 o'Clock P. M. f A numlier of ministers Uavo arrived hero to be preetah at the opening of the American aed Foreign Board of Ministers, which moot In this city to-morrow, the Hoard expert to be in aesslon daring the week. The Rev. J. P. Thompson, of Now York, will deliver the annual sermon. A CIJAPTRR OF ACCIDENT!. SPECIAL TELECNAIN JO THE HENAL!. TiIosirrai., Sept. 23, N6F. I 8 o'Clock P M. J A man was killed in this city Ibis morning by boh^ ran over by a train on the railroad. A little (J.ud who was sitting on the track at tbo lima was liter?',iy cut to pieces. Four men were blown up on St. Hebef Head ible morning. One of tbeui was mortally aed another seriously wounded. INTERNAL REVENUE MAIW'.tS. The excitement In relation to t'jh Uleged frauds of tbe K?ntuoky Bourbon Company ta dying away, and lie place it teing supplied by al^horts of surmises as to whet is to be the Collector in the Third (Calllco IN) di-tr.ct. A number of applicants fro /n both political parties are la Washington pressing it .eir respective claims; bat as yet the fortunate appo nt /a j* not known. Meanwhile thh Interests of the revr tut in tiio Third district aro being looked arier by Dc^.py Collector Andrews, who Is anilously awaittug B.o action of tlis He r-'ary of iho Treasury to relieve '*iui