14 SEPTEMBER 1867, Page 2

Mr. Johnson has not only dismissed General Sheridan and General

Sickles for their Radical policy, but has dismissed General Howard,—the Havelock of the American War, but a man of less stern and perhaps sweeter religious nature than Havelock, from the care of the Freedmen's Bureau, and sent him to preside over the wilderness of Walrussia. This has deeply offended the whole feeling of the North, and especially the reli- gions and philanthropic part of society, to whom General Howard was a true hero. He had shown great ability and wonderful patience in working an institution open to desperate abuses, and had made it an instrument of immense good. But Mr. Johnson can do as he likes,—till Congress meets again.