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r'ui,Li . . pw! . - . ' 1 ' ''-"-"' rrr, . .. . . - . - - '- .".. j , farts i'iar.: .s3 ? i Vi ... . . . - .... -..-- I C- v? js ; frkfijSr! . -. . , .y-.-.t- Si ( YOLTJXJE BDIIED .BT.I... HARfJR. B tl A.KKAJI "WHOM flB TlDTI Ilktimi. JgLT 18, ISM h 1 ; Peacd Piicst ti. T7ar Trlcei. ; 1 7 annex tabli lehowin the tfiSernc to he pric ptii fot ,Trbus prodact of tbVfario to-ij, mad the prices paid ea yer go to-dj: JaTj l;60. " Jol 1, '61. Lom. .Corn 'A 40- 20 - 20 Oiu-.;..;....; - 85 is it Bye v" - -90 40 - " 60 Es..;. .;...ww 5 10012 v7( 8 3 4 la 1SC0 oor pepl fer t peace, and bad an UBobstrtjeted Jrade with be people of. tbe South. Ia I86l are enazed , la civil war, and have no trade with the Suatb.' . Heoce ihe. difference ia , favor of 1850. ; . ' " ;. Farmers eboald remember , that tWwar has : oolr joat eommeoced, and that oar tradewTth the Smith has been stopped but a few weeks. Should the war be continued any length of time, of course the prices will fall in proportion. s r Ther ihosld also remember thai tne same . cans which brings dowa the. price of theit crodace. will, at the same time, increase their taxes. ... . .,. The Admiaistration must atx piorteit-neetrlif . Hoe' hundred millions a vear to keep op the war. To raise this enormous amount the people , cf the North, and especial! the West, mast nec-essarily be taxed hoivily. These are plain fxcta, easily understood by the people. Our friends in tbe country- those who re ur?in? on the war should calmly study what most be the iaeiable retails from acontiuaance thereof. - . Uegro Voting Returning Sense. Last year, the Republicans in the Connecticut Legislature ted by a large majority, to amend the Constitution so as to allow negroes to vote. It is required, that the amendment should . be again submitted to the Legislature, and if approved by two-thirds, then to be submitted to the people. It hat again been submitted to the Legislature, and was voted down by yeas 44, nays " 130., ; v. : v . r V - J : ' - . ' This is alarming to tbe " irrepressibles,", and . would indieate that the people were about taking ... the "sober second thought. ' .The revulsion ia pablij sentiment on this ni . gro question will be terrible. The Journal of Commerce adds : " . ' . So 8a'mbos hopes are quashed and his position as a citizen more shady than ever. : Perhaps tbe Republicans never desigied to let him vole, but acted favorably to the project last year merely ' for party effect. Poor Sambo has been extensively used for party purposes fur many a year bat wn guess tbs war will about use him np 'for aure." ' ; ' ' :-'" - ; Ttia Attack on Potomac Batteries. . A high military authority, long in the regular United States service, has called my attention, writes CwL Forney, to what he gives, as a fact( that the several attacks made by vessels of . tbe navy upoa the rebel batterie, on the Potomac, at SewelTs Point, 4c, have been without any de&aite result. To uso his own words : ,.. These batteries should never have been, at-' tacked without a determined purpose to carry . them To assail tbem with a few shot, aqd then fall back, is ao way to carry 00 war. .The rebels , proclaim every such act as a victory 00 : tbeir partj and the moral effect on the enemy ia great. . It has never yet transpired by whose order these isqlatel and foolish attacks have been made. The public should know who is responsible for them. : A few more such will enlighten the world .4 ia oar mode of warfare ; and if the war is to con-. sist of each acts on our part it will be no wonder if England soon recognizes the Southern . Confederacy.' Those remarks vera made with . evident feelings of mortification; and I report them as they came from tbe lips of an officer . of - long sad active experience, so that they may reach the eye of those more '.immediately con-. ceroed. -. . , .. ... -1.: .. ' . .'A Great Had Storm.. ; ' . The tornado and hail storm which passed - over soma parts of New Jersey, on Sunday last, was very severe. "A letter says r V '1 Tba force of the bail may be demonstrated ' from the fact thai round holes were at first ' made in the windows, the same aa if a bullet , ; from a pistol were shot through the glass, al ' , though-the steady fire rapidly knocked out all lh rest that was left of the pane ; and pales were . . nnocied from the fences in some instances. A 1 jrtntleman on the road hoisted bis umbrella, (a ' stoat s'ukea article,) and held it firmly for an in-:: "Tstanf 'to protect his head from' the .hailstones ; ' - oat the hail went through It as if it were wet paper, and the ambrm was riddled and rendered' worthless in a moaeat.' - , . .A little girl bo a way to Sabbath school failed to react shelter ic lime, and her bat was cat from h bead, whilst she was finally beaten down And pelted with bail ,00 til she' was unable to arise, when she was rescued and had to be carried ia by the Postmaster of the village, who ran oul and rescued beraud conveyed her within bis house the nearest shelter. Her bead was bruised and cut, and; presented the appearance of having been pounded with a stick, her flesh be-' ing io ridgeaand lamps, Otherwise she was on- ; -; East Tennessee. .: - ---ri -I Lata ad wees from East Tennessee, where the predominance of a Union sentiment was so '3 fflesrl proved at : the late election, indicate that i o t f sopla of that section are likely to follow the ejxamla of their compatrioU in Northwestern . Virir:v la a Gouveption recently held by the utuci .r ei3m .ub. vk.fa were, wita lor vQU . maictauaace ot a peaiuonModepeosent of that . iitn vA'cIi tie Stita has beenlhrast by the Se-..liCieesstsn 1. s.'ers,"aud in wtich the Confederate ao- -rr 4-r' Ja .Jcoabtleas seek to retain bet. : t.!-; : j c-i?rst3nd thst. it Is the fixed dsterainiu -! ' C:a cf .t'.s reierai Governooent to sustain suad rr-lc;t ile'r constitational and legal sights d t ttoerr t'.',:ziT ol TeuaeMee who, ia tieir da-j u -.- rcUci C9 us Uawa, are now ilrBZZ"nX to wrest : i lhe'r C'-Cj Coreraaent "from tha hands of its :c:2s:::s::3CiI raters, aaJ that it wi3 4efend v- all C'-tcs tjaiaat parts thereof claiming to have ss : zlzl, aal thaa will aTTord them - every frct5cca's;aust coawiie .yulsnceiinsnrree- a C3J re.3U.oa.' : Ihe C -7;raasct;:j f;rsL!x tislajtf clens cf ci:i Cl-'.:j it -A all ' tl; oes cecsssary b :?tz-l pr'servaUon, sxd, if tslieved ti Ic.'jad twecselrss -iizz it&lr crrncrt,::i-;rTS8i.'r 2ato ; t:- - csa and arcia, ia Ctzl-r aid atUinT IL zlei tlxX ct the -: United Dates, : :.7. iQvg j-1t la Yirrfnia. The following Mghlj -intsrasting' iatfilligence we clip from the ipesial telegrsph 10 correspondence ot the, Cincinnati CPiaIf; l; BoccBxyvoy, Ya., Jnly A rwaltant band ot - fifteen7 Baokeyes, Third Ohio Bezlmva t, aadef Capt.O. A. Lawson; pf Cola mhos, mada a good rwcord yesterday after ternoa, at ITiddle Forlr Bridge. ' Fridajf after noon, without CecW.UcdeUan'a knowledge Can; Schleich ordered Col. Morrow to dstseh fifty men for a. scouting- axpeditioa. Sargeoa UeLIeatu aocompsnied the party,' five snea- being taken from each com oahy of the regimen ti The et-peditiOQ preoeeded by the bridle pstV across the hills to a poiat a Beverly pikv, five miles this side of Middle Fork Bridge, and encamped for the night. ' About midnight CTaiou men appealed to them for proteetioa against maraadiog rebels, who had forced their women aad children to flea to the wood for safety and bad pillaged tbeir houses.- Lawson ' sealed rough mountain and . crossed Middle Fork ia the morning, two and a half miles above the phage. He followed the stream wkh great di&Tcnlty throogh the aabroken thickets,' ahtil be reached'4 good ambush 'within range of, the. bridge which was-crowded with rebels.' The enemy' discovered his party and an advance guard of five cautiously approached him from the bridge,1 alf ready with their tnuskets- Bis men stood op, aad both parties bred simultaneously. Three of the rebels fell at ibe first round, and the othe other two dropped immedi-j a tely afterwards. The enemy now opened upon his little band from three sides from the bridge, behind its embankments,' and the thickets 00 tbe hillside. ' :; " ' . 'V- ':: In order to get a belter opportunity, he moved his men into an open space seventy-five yards from, and commanding tb Eastern end of the bridge, and poured into the crowd of rebels a galling fire ; the effect was awful imprecations and screams of "murder, His men obeyed br ders with absolute composure. A number had already oeen hit, and one was killed in the act of firing. ' 'After firing four rounds ' into the bridge he'ordered Vretreat and the lads backed : slowly into the bushes carrying the wounded. The enemy did not persue,and bis party recroesed the stream a mile and 1. half above tbe bndga. Capt. Lawson brought away ibe mnRket of bis dead soldier, but was unable to carry off the body, the enemies ambuscade from tbe hillsides being too hot. He says bis party Was not much bar rass-d by the rebels at the bridge, but the ambuscade was annoying, ' . .' ''' " ' :- " Those in the bridge and behind the embank-' raent would pop np their beads and blase away without good aim, but those in the bushes were more deliberate. An Irishman in tbe party says it was " hot as hell." Lawson says bis men behaved splendidly, not a man flinched, and the obeyed orders Just as promptly as if on dress parade. . " . " ' - -:- , The men say the Captain himself animated them by his cheerful vsiee, which was heard abovij the dm of tbe conflict. Dr. Mc Means says the Captain was as oliected as if lie were playing soMier." : ' ' .' X - ? . The casnalities were as ' followa: " Samuel W. Johns of Hamilton, Buttler Co., shot dead by a ball through the breast :' Corporal Joseph High, of Columbus, shot in the right foot by s rebel from tbe bill side. The ball struck bo the top of bis ancle, and passed downward, shattering the small bodes of ike foC Tbesargeons hop to. save tbe foot, bat it is doubtful. High was ia front of the baule, and fell exclatsaiusrv Cap tain, I m bit, but I must bave another shot; raising himself and standing o one- foot, he loaded and fired twice more, when, being faint. two of bis comrades assisted him Into tbe boshes. Nicholas Black, a Brighton botcher boy, of Cincinnati, was. struck : in tbe forehead, over the right eye, by m backshot, which -lodged between the skall bones, a severe wound, but not dan. geroua. He fell, and, rising again, he took two more shot at the enemy. .: George W. Darling, of Newark, was . shot in the left arm ; the ball entered at the elbow, and traversed the muscles of the arm seven or eight inches, plowing up a ghastly farrow ; tb bone was not broken ; David Ed sou, of, Barnesville, Belmont . county, slightly wounded , in the- rigbr arm ; Joseph Bacns, of Newark, alight wounded iu the .left - leg; Wm. Deaeiog, of Hamilton, Butler countv, had the akin above his right ear cut by a ball ; seven or eight of the men received scratches and had their clothing riddled. Cap, tain Lawson says JIft Uiur, of. Wortbiortoo was the coolest and pluckiest tellow in the fight tie was toe last o q the aeld. and. 4eH the bashes twice to ret a fair hoc but Dr. MoMeana said every . man ,- of the party displayed , good,. pluck, ine wounded were brought to the hospi tal 10 wagons this morning, and are comfortable. Captain Lawson and his men are confident thai some were killed : in the bridge..: Seyea . were killed outside of the bridge. .. All aeconnts agree that the rebels were about .300 strong, mostly Georgians, including. 40 . horsemen, armed with Sharp carbioea. . - ... . . . , . v - Gen. McCIellan is janch. pleased with the gal- lautry of tbe men, but severely censures the expedition , Lawson . gave valuable information about the topography of Middle Fork, v - Col. McCook took command of the advance, and . moved at daylight with -his own regiment, the Ninth Ohio, Andrew' Fourth Ohio, Loom is' Battery and Bardaall's Dragoons,. which- const lute the. advance ,aard,Oa Fourth being de tached from Schlejch's ; brigade Rosecraa's brigade is under marching orders. ".TheTenth Iodisna .bave left to-day. the remainder of the brigade leave at daylight to-morrow. ; , .. General McCIellan goee forward to-morrow. ScUeich's brigade wUl follow immediately.) The Tenth Ohio just arrived; it is ia SphieicVs brigade.; ; vrt .;-.?t- :'":! Gen. Morris received orders yesterday, to move his whole force last night to strong, position, within a mil of the nemyfs fiortificatioos, at Laurel HilL. Tb order was obevedLas davits ht Gen. Morris was ia, position,, JTon perceive the army is rapidly closing for eonfiicW i-,...,w 4 .... Ibis division wiIL probablr meet1 the eaemv first at Boarin Ban, 12.miles. beyond Beverly, me enemy is reported zo.uoo, strong east of , the middle fork, incladin all their posts. Ther are either very strong or they don't know what they are about. Bipley. California. CharUeton. Qlenn- ville, Bulltown, nod . Fraochtowa stra ordered to be iOccu pied by i atrong detachments O Jen- nisgs Wise! escaped front Cipley.1 CoL Norton went after sua? on tbe 4 la but Wis retreated on Charleston. CoL Coasell. of lb JJth Ohio; is appointed commander of this post -; ' f .Capt. Barrett's company, iSih Ohio was pa-radad before the regiment this mornin.disarmed, and ordered to reocrt at Colsmbna. iThrw m1 diajraced for outrages Twrpetrated oa the prop' wfa 'jif mmm . . . w - A . ' r":'T--occw,aiswroj wieo. i;trtton ad eight privates f the eocspan. . CsrluCarrett was profoundly frirmd - ... , -v Subseqwentfy the mraif?foned ofScers of lie regiment eppealed to Gen.McClelan to revoke the sentence, and giye tb innocent members a cUnc8 ta redesaUs re?au:;a cf the company. After eojisidenns the ease; the Cenertl tccedad WUd ic:;r8, Snd' thf trns we: retored-Li;tXi-iUoa til V raUty f.:;-:4 Lca U 4.racir ',; - V - v-'i . lIcCas,ttc::Ul la arrival g.t inIli rctV of Jcbns, w9 was killed la L . s t"': '., Va cZJiJL xiKl f.:u CX:. t, i raj tifi momic' at 7saton, s'-j Ci cf hla men surprised sixUco oooLfsd taeOfia camp, between tftstoa, and Callww-a, yertsrday, a&4 -vtpsk six of ihsns, with tielr arms and hortesv prisorrs. They wiU be seat to Colombo t-u l,.-"-.' ; -'A eorrespoaJebt of the Provideuc Journal, who has fast returned front !vislt to Fort Sum. er, My - that Vingb. the joutiesi; and sooth waSs,' froating !Iorris IUnc bUrieV terri bly battered, they are tfot permanently damaed, Although, the damage to the' outer, walls Istr1:1 fling, considering tb severity and uratiotv ef. the aackrand tha heavy brdjoadco used aiiast It, the heavy sixty four pottnd baflS enly pent trating the outer brick watl,.while teyon3 It were Cronr five to ten. feet concrete-. whicbV:o bad made neatly permanent as the solid ratk-.Tbe (aside presents a Scene of utterfuin and -desola tion. 'Heaps bbrokea brick, stone and mortar lay a tattered about, an utter confusionEverj vest&ge of woodwork is entirely Iomed; uW r About 6'ne h a nd red laborers were employed rev moving the bbishrTbe by about two tandredi regaiar soldjerii), mpatly Irishmen, and apparently of the lowest class The Beal Condition of tb Soatlt: v F'roa statement made to the New; York Iot by a gectlemanf honorable; name who hat just arrived from the Socth, it appears that the south- em states are overwhelmad witll 4ebt,nhav i"no trade or money, no cotton on band except in very limited quantity 'apdwiU gather but half a erop this rear. , Ther are without materials for cloth ing either soldiers' or-eiviliansr beyond " s, f months' consamption. ' The osusl channels :' of trade, and even of internal traffic, area closed, as for example the communioatioa between Mobile aad New Orleans is all carried on by roundabout and tedious railway finesend floor is now sailing at tne latter piece at.eignteeo.aoilarf per barrel. notwithstanding the good crppbecanse there is a convenient way of transport-: it. ' The Miss issippi is effectually blockaded. - .The population of the most flourishing towns is dimiaishinr b Skbeenteeism ; as for example, there are-at this moment one tbonsand - three .hand red vdSTted bouses in Ms m phis, and the last and only hope or tne (Jonlederatesr ia tnat inriand mU become their ally without delay... If this is aot dose ther' confess themselves lost. .! . IV-4-i r r This gentleman thinks.that if the North would make known to tbe South to some unmistakable way,ihat it does not make war to abolish, slavery. tb war migat be considered as almost over.- ine secesssoaista leei ana snow . tney fia.re . en- tirelv. mistaken, their case and their remedy and the leaders tremble for their own. personal oafHy i. ? DesttraetlT-'Toraaao'.- -vt-.. 1 ? Cfltcsoo, Jnly 8. .. a violent tornaao, accompanied by a rain storm,' passed over Freeport, this State", ibis aC- ternoon, : doisg - considerable ' damage. ""The freight house of tbe Illinois Centra! . RoAd. wi unroofed machine shop on the racine and Musimppt Road, demolished : the bridges over the Pecatonica River mhd "at YelloVCref t"f rear the city,"'were blown dowd. Also, noroofed several houses at Itockford. c ' ' 1 - i - - ' ? - A thunder storm prevailed here' all the ' after noon; preventing the working of thetelegrapb wires ; therefor we are unable to obtain further particulars. ; ' - : - - ' ? ... i: ; OsrosH, Wit.; July 8. " A destructive tomalo swept over this city at 2 o'clock ibis morning, nnroofing houses in every dire:tion, ; blowing dawn' trees- and doing immense damage.' .The' large flouring mitt of Green & Powers' Was ! unroofed," upper portion demolished,1 the store of Bigger & Hill we oa-roofed and filled with water, damaging' goods to a large 6u sf.' ' :.5'- i : " The steamer Shawana'w'City at her dock was made a complete'." wreck.' Also tbe.atesmer-Berlin City has smoke stacks and upper cabin carried away. T : '' " '" - ' '- Also damaging- houses to alt parts of the ckr. lifting op, turning round and carrying some several feet,' .Some were entirely demolished. , The wind was accompanied by a vivlenrhail storm ; tbe lightning was terrific, striking Several places no loss ot iu yet reported. - :t Kl 8eixnire of s eteainer by Pirates tiore 6ecession,Treachery , ani Hobbary.- v -,: -; BaLTUtoasv July 4.. . Tbeseirure of ih steamer 81, Nichols, from this port, proves to have been a: bold piratical expodiiioo. l; When the steamer JeA here on Friday evening, she had aa board about fifty secession passengers, most of whom were isgsised as suechacics going to point wu ! the- Maryland shore of the Potomac Amonjf tha number Was Capt. Hollins, lat of the U. 8. ship Soaqnehan na, who was disguised, some accounts say, as a woman, and that be retired to his berth tatmadUuly on going on board the tteamet. - After the boat had left Point Lookout, rCaptaia . Hollins threw off his disguise, and with th aid of the paaseo-gers seized the boat; which waa'imniediauly put across to Con river on the Viriaiaaid. " Here the rest ef the passengers; not a party to tbe plot, were landed, including the Captain of the boat, who was placed under t SU guard, .The St earner then went on a piratical cruise toward the Rappahannock river, eaptariag three vessels 00 the way laden with to, coat, aad cofoe, with all of whkh Captaia Hollins raadebis way to Freder. icksbarg. : . -. ixHIi. iMis Seeeesiea papers here publish accounts ef this aifsir, this evening; calling it a ferillisct exploit, -The account asys that some two hundred rebel troops were place! oa board at Cone .Tb two deserters represent the fore-Tae thousand' strong. r -.They reached the point two -milesi this Side Great BetheLJ The Expeditionhaving-mis-carried, the rreater. part probably reternd to Yorktown. Nothing has sine been . isard; of ; ITtTf Bait, Ho Uacon f - .The blockade is , desti ned to too ch th e Rebels ia a tender place we bad not thought'of Salt being Contraband of waa.'and theinte!! jent" Southerners knowip uotbiog ' tibont its nanny faeture, there is a probability that Ahey will hare some trouble in saving -.their bacon wbenj kiL ing time.F comes. The - Savannah EipuUican say B, "Next to food and water, rJt is r?ost fees-essary to esv If th blociade t3 cZ'aivB we th. ba Without it. y Th bealth of t ' pec ! wi'l be destroy edf . an iwherj the winter ro--? 3 "end it is tim to cur beef and r. ':'A I'J r- cponf tbe gronnd,? ;vi7o ep!:.:r1 tzzl'. J-7 Ct time winter comes th ReUtlarmy wii bar consumed all ia BPer!! c?" er-ja eee?-'3r'l?i ertaic!r Uteri tietbei-a' , 1 ... --fr.. alt, lei lie UZs'zz sf-ii' -1 i -r; i "j V .J'r;Ds.m, TTs-tT r ..: rr! r hc..3 'Tatsil-t' l' 3 t I.- ; Lt Ca La way H - - ' . . -Till bead of which is a ewra, io he Ucse the rider should loos his way. . ' rC ..11- t .:&fe'x'iZZ9Zli-'- y Uken from 'jara-' eeat t : i a Eenry .Ma'rd "Ce'c itefl paper, ,,Tbe rrsnd esolt tbe only, sol on on; of the nestipBis fast com tn- rp the .-,erir?rpc.'i"o ' 3 tlavcs. by lb t i f h t c -t er (aca pe is there from our. diCc!. iea? ; A.'hv ahouh4 dcI our people and our staUsaea look it fair in- tke face ? i--r.'-L.4:i', 'V.-?;-.?' l'-'i The Cjui is fir'stroojer and better supplied than we sup7cse: -e eimcsl. be-Heves hrse!f bitterly r -c --adr:-.bejs eel likely ;to tb ink; herself less e3 after a tlockade'end a campaign. -Ch is;,incouraged,4by tb base ytnpathj of England - -e rievet could feelany sarety for slavery ia aaot' ?r Union with 83j."Jhe laic u -- -f- ,V' -: fhj I ' j 1 t Evidently, there is fcttt r -e path to eafety- and vie lory on to a perms: at e-ttlvent ers9 to the quiet orufcjngst en cf the South. Do wot feat it!- Look it boldly in the face namely 1 the emanctpati Bcipation of the lav ,at ..., Let ear arm tea, as- a f"n i fary necessi t si. and strategctical act, declsre rreedoUo all, and ia a tnomenVvj bave so army of 4,000,000 human; beings on oor side allies in every house aad on' very plantation. The enemy -is demoralized.. Panto eweeps through the Southern land.. .Ue.re is a foe raor0dreadfal tbsn, Nerlhef a armies, . j .- .Fighting so near oar own forces, w may hop the revengeful feelings of these poor - oppressed create res would be restrained. . Still, there would inevitably be desolation and destruction sweeping like' a tempest ever the Souther n'Kland'Aii it teould e . juitt. These sraea. have ; borne; the Wrongs of eentories. and why,' should not their uprising be Woody t 1 t pitat, have their freedom, if they can win it,;; even, thongh.it be'over the corpses of their masters and the ashes of the ruined, homesteads,. Afte.r!rthia. tempest of fir and havoo would arise a belles era. fcr the South. Free laborers would pour in j wasted fields would oe cultivated by new aand j ruined cities woId be built up bv Northern capital and isrennity. and the problem and the task for the civilization of the, cemieg'asre .wonld be the. education and preparation, of . 4.0 00, 000, of- blacks pern a pa through some system' of apprenticeship- Jor the rights and the privileges ot free Jaborers. Z - j ? . . br 'swcA s florioMt result, even if, U'jcome through tear land blood, do tee devotUly pray. f f -These sentiments are atrocious. ',- i. bis ia Abvlitionism nndUgnisedi These are the result which" would necearify follow from the carrying out of'thes doctrines. Th paper which .puts them forth aablasbingly professes ;1o b Christian, claims to b inspired with the Corgi v log-charity ad. Iov which charaderlxe the doc trines of the Christian religion.:; What' mockery I Fiends in human shape devils incarnate: may stoat with horrid aalkfkction over the picture which their imagimtioris hare' painted as the re-full of (hU un fbrtunat contest and: for. te real' izttion of ahicb they-may fiJevouilyprtnf ; but every -real patriot, every true friend of the humso race wilt shudder at' the bare contemptalion of the scenes which' fariaticat 'Aboliiipnlsm had it the power, would spread oat beforeoor ,ew. laagin one-half our country give over to sdl the barbarities which eha -rt- rl belilonip-AjjJ thlsai-CtiwiJ.t.i a , . .y ... . . -. u such Christianity, uGoodJLiord deliver - as." He say of th Soaih..S'ir kale us Why does she hale us t Because of the preaching wl' just such'diabolical doctrines" ai "are 1 here rVet' forth.1 Wiiboat lhat tb conspirators could never .hsve brooght her people op to th point ofrevolution. It i theeontin nance in pitting forth-such sentiments, which are republished at 'the South, thatTkeeps the fires of rebellion berning sq fiercely. -Jt must d remembered- that this-' earn Henry Ward Beecher has raised regiment for ibe war,' arid", we believe,' had it accepted at Washington. Theogh we have seen no evidence that, the . Admioistratioa rire r coanteuanc : to sucb sentiments In fact bav evideaoe to the contrary, Wathiak,! iu moral effect upon the soatuera people, lb rejecUOd ' of all snob aid would bav done store toward potting the rebels lkm fhasf thebaic of ism regi meats of men. - , We regret to kaow that such SentiaieaU: are not confined to the AboJitioo party proper.;' JRad- ical Republicans are here and there preaching similar doctrines. -' Th Washiagtoa eorreapoa-deut Of the New Ynrk Tribune irhos sentiments aia.'ividently' approved by that pajper has th following ;,v;3- ...;..Z? t Jfthis war were for any thimi short of realizino a perfect equality of rich'sfor toery human being, I. . t. - . . m j. - 1 . 1 ' . . - . wiuu ve te new oevMHs enuaas or u atresi butchery that the world was even stained wit Vol. Un the triumph of freedom. ver alaverv rests the honor and tb!Gu of this nation. W a-cbie red national liber tf through lh Ce volution. to make as a peODle the worth v lUndard-beerer of that holy cans which we claim to have eapoua-ed CjtsJl th' rorld- - -; . X While such1 thlpgs' are-written here and Wpob" lished i.nt th Soatbern priotSjiJhow ca. it . s peeted that the Sontera people.eaa be mad to tieifrr tost tnia is not a war for theisaxnihua UaaJ --Detroit TixtTrtss 4 i;1 n j j it tJL - j z a i rxt o i3 zizm ' ST : yCrcssSi.tf.Tr8'sttvT riacca I6S2J- ift:i--ektrntsh at llalnerrille j.,;r. UQ&t'z? -. rc":"Js ' ,''! " vu.'' &-" Uur Frederick aad,,Uagerawiexchanges givet detailed statements of thaaCirs on the upper FotomaCf between the adranca-of Gen.' Patterson's army end; a portfon of; the Confederate troops, under command of f4ener&t.."J'ohna6n. rVesutj oio tie fiillawing from lher; iXagersto wu -Major 'QeaeraV , tattei8bnsro'mm.ani'd with th exception of tie 4th CoDhecticut..ll?gimentt which is atill io c-xrzp Baoth of town; aodiIajor Doubledays co-ip&nj, and the l.h Penosylva nia Regiment, which remaiued'at V.T.IIirj sport,) crossed thePotomaa at Wil'iarasort en Tuesday r.or2g.r;::.:;' -;;r'r--- -v-s',..-. K Tbe .f!rst V. I. . -ia end C.' pi, . l!c? 'lexSi I.rr .3 lei I, a sirs or-, fo,.o jlvaI 11:'. cov -;1 1 y'Pe'rr' ".' C d 3. 1 - . i jS L ; .Sl.w r.-.'rsrf.'rr;" , t. l tzz'z l' tll.e, Ccfa'-j I., cf t: 9 K .I1 t !vr ce.'rr-1 it ij t:;:.;J v - i 1 ty i' 3 Penn-.'s I ' '.tr: . tery. it Jt I 3 rc , j r. l .3 tbe 3 i .rrc-ut ":i by a :', ? 1 f"y cftie-J .. ii Lil'Ciu ' :-y 1 5U.S r -I.T-r .". :r cat. r t --re c rred is .. . 1 v ... : ivcr- I. - i r i (Li h-sl-Zj eff-t ' t't maa t!rt I . raC-.. ' 1 C - 3 i r - u : 3 i- ? rl- :.ut 1-v 1 Ciea tl.ro c t j t- Tha tEE3 I ? J C I 1' tie tsrc-'lj. : - :lz I teen of ua c.y ti. ' :'.ti. v-?., vrjr-. "-- Notiia? was 3 t I m fcco-o, until the Federals arrive near UaioetviLV, cexr which pot&t a ciatidoXiL! tody of Soalhera ' i& fan try wer stationed ia sv wheat --ellv Tbeyx opened rw on tbe Federal advance which was retorned, and the firing for a whit was quite brisk.' .Tbe Southern troops stood their ground until Perkins baUerv arrived, and siir a few shots they retreated The, sldraisb lasted bat a abort time, i don's? whicn;.the bni pf -ir..-;PorterfieI4 rs.e.Set on re by a shell from Perkins' battery and: entirely co"unaed. "A cannon bait passed tbroa;h f tL .vb...ogof tTf.'P. ' The wheat fields, at the Sc ene of lb fight; juat ready to e arrest.' were set on .Crebyjbe.TBiscbare of thguns and consom ??55rVv ri '-' i 4 V7 give the names of the killed and wounded, ksvfiuf as we have been able to gather the as t- - 3eorga Prakefc company. Ai.-froav- ililwaukee, lit Wisconaia rvgiment.- , . - . ... . " A member of company IT, 11th Pennsylvania regiment ";' .-" ' -V 4 - ' - j-A member of com paay B, Peonsy Irani - reg lei -''it' ' itJ -i"- . :6 VjVgOtV. , ' ..m .-! j-Wca. A. Matthews,, 1st Wisconsin rrgimecL Frederiek Bonner, (slightly) com p. G-i do. ' 17. G. Young 1st Wisconsin. ' ' ,:- ' John Tiaad, -ll'lh Pennsylvania rejjiment. ..VjJame MorgaO, severely, 1st Wisconsin , , 11. F. Dammacker, 1 1th. .. B . ' Sergeant McGinly, Mcliullin's" Bangers slight ' wound ini the an kl. ' v AsKtter,aaa unknown. ' J " k a a ooif re in pospiai tu nuts putcr. , v- ; Four more are reported .to. be desperately wounded, wtio had not been brought on. ';- CONFEDERATE LOSS. ' It is reported that there wer several killed and wounded on the Confederate side, bat . nothing definite is known with regard to numbers. The bnlv person taken bv th U. 8. trooos was wounded man, who was ahot in the head, near the svaa t--Vi4 '- -j ff'.: j -. i Thar,. Federals encamped -oa Tuesday - night four miles this side of Martin aburg, on the farm of Adam Small. At the time of going to press, (Wedneedav afternoon) we had no intelligence vh w.vivj m uiiiMio, - - 4- Archbiihop Hashes on Ciril Kar. T-vrcnbnt)0p tiognes, wso, some w.ck agn, mad a Union speech: in New Yerk, bas pab- lished his views of civil war in tb Metropolitan Record. We make a few extrasts : ,v Above all the wars a civil war is the most de plorable aud lhe. mo8t destructive , in , its .onsc quences. both to tbe victor and vanquished, , Its progress is marked by ruin and , desolation. It gives- loose reia to tbe worst, passions of bur man,-nature rapine and carnage, though- horri ble to gaze upon,, though . terrible-to .witness carr not be compared to the moral evils which it iocts upon society. ; . It. is tot in civil strife that tbe nobler attributes of our nature are ahownj the mind of man beooeaes hardened and callous amid , scenes of blood ?od .devastation, c iThe tranaition trora, a peaceful republie to a military despotism is more easily. effected through such a medium than people generally Suppose. 'Hen- j kind are pretty much the sam in every age of the worlds Utterial civilization, it is true,- assy develop the mind and sharpen the, intellect,, but it does not purify "tie espiratioa nor lev t the moral nature of the race ' .. '" '. ; ' We bav heard . proposition made by a prominent speaker, at the great demonstration which '--'- -H t TTin S(im.. thai ankvtntil was ei.uor but eriuuiyeukerta!iBed,ror' bad , its 'origin la the 'excitement of !be moment. . It was nothing esore or less than recommendation' of the- policy which tteglaud Bad-pursued 'toward Ireland, .The speaker expressed himself in favor of taking away, the plantations from the Southern owners and bestowing them as land , boa ntiee npo th Northern soldiers. Th Idea, as we intimated, i tot-at original ene, as it wa partially carried into effect against the people of Ireland, and as a means by which that people were to be utterly exterminated. For oor part, we protest against such a wholesale system ef spoliation a system- whiHi is calculated to plung the couatry irremediably into a .-war that this generation sua? never . see tbe end ef, and to aroase . feelings of hatred and revenge that may live through cento: ries.'-' ' - - - - - ' , - Th proposition So which w have" referred" is, hewever,; comparatively .mild ia ?it . character when compared with the soggestiov that -has been published in. one or two- of oor New York daily papers. It is nothing more or' less than ' proposal to incite the' -negroes - to insurrection, aad,byjodoiog,;to .precipitat. -th Southern portion of our con a try into alLthe horrors of a servile war, This woujd be to re enact on our own soil the fiendish brataTities recorded in tbe history of St 13oming6. It would be to . rouse the savage negro against our brothers in race and blood t it would b toeoanteuanve atroctliea j and barbarities at th sight of which owrwhole country .would stand appalled ; it would: be to encourage the whole black population in the South w rue is arms againss ine wanes vo. rouraer women and children to massacre helpless- infancy and age, and to give a license-, to the ex cesses and cruelties which characterise elf: negro insurrections. V- ... Have we no sunk so low in the scale of huT manity have' we so far forgot tee oor ebligattooa as Chriatise men,' even before ' v have rightly ulered into the heat of the -conSict. to ";caImy tolerat or sanction a propwaition as fiendish; aad asMahamaa as that against which the 'elder Pitt raised his voice f " ; . - - " '; : ' ' '-K' 'Eif ti Csbu&nn$ Icebergs, j ' ' 'The'Bbstod'Jouroalssys V' "i f :-' ; '-The Eeglish. screw steam fngat sllersey, Captain, II. ..Caldwelln has reached Halifax.-When .epproaching- the banks of Newfonndland, Captain CJaldwell fell in;with som icebertrs. aad ,thoeghit would be ioterresting to! experiment on Jheta, with riqed ; cannon. , Accoi diuf ly aa Armstrong sbeli, wss,. bred,,a,t, a? smair.iceberg about one nnnared and btty leetrbigttt . irom a distance ef four miles and a half... Seek' was tbe effect that a block of ice, judged to be about 6ne hundred tans, fell from the summit. This Urge weight from-th top of th bers removed taecen trwef gravity which ceed tbe wholefkbric to roll ever and rock to end fro, TJt was considered a-most satis&ctbry test of the. vast rsjige sad de- stnictiveness- of tis, icusilra 5 -Further, trials wer made with other projectilessnpplied to the navy, hollow, shot percussion and shrapBcD. end time faze shell taolten ironsbell, ail tending t exhiiit onafaaiure In modem warfar at S, fix r the extreme probability of every vessel bev tog la fiamsisoca slier she is engaged-v.- i B ; ...! ;s-.C;';"CSS.--ir ? wrI'"-'Xoorcsi- r-.!s a goodJbeginning ,In ti Senatev Bavard,crjDjawere Jjlreckinride aad Powell-of-IIertnru7 Polk, of tIissoari ; Pes r re and Keane i ! :j 1 tad Johnson, f Ten- r"?,'-rr""""" : '' f"5??.' ;,-,'! : - Tie f-s; cf Tree' "-ri'-'i and ro?k in th fce tf, s,:l tie re;orUcf tLeir 'adbesion, to lb tii!UwUS f.-5-ict cf JtHl Batla, is very sig- tu.cas. 1 . tne t"sr an- :rracss ox jtieectron Cir?H !T '-r' y e- i .-son ; vt: e tbe prrs- trm cf L;--r Jcir"i.fr'"n Teonasee eiows tLa utc, rc . .'.i t.re. .a cf lj Ucloa leulitc&i j Tia 3ve.T v. c?.1ZJb cc.Ice eras g'vea r. -.-t -- - "tt-'Vl! - r -1 r--"'-' rrr i 5 cf J ilea is sa; iott cf t" 1 1 . .".2c - it r poUcyl ' .' " Th op......? y.vc. -siallciU acLltd trorh without loss of time. Secretary Cameron presents to Correas bis first Bcport, gi tine., a clsax' stateaaot ct what has been done'ia the military department. since the 4th of larchj and Jm what remains' to be dooe. We 'present below a brief abstract of the The . forta. arsenals, e belonrias?to the Uaited Slates, hut stolen by the rebels, are eao merated, and then tbe heroioaud honorable conduct of SUjor Anderson and Lieulensuts Slecu mer and Jones is eontrasted with th treason Snd infamy of jQea. Tsriggs. ..A' high sensa ef satisv factton is expressed at the emphatic manner f which the peopl ha v rallied to sustain the Gov ernment; this being d5u lo auch an exteat even thai' tbe Government' is embarrassed to know bow lodtspoi of th troop that are offered. U; tbe otates called upon, to furnish troops by th proclamation oftbePresident, the Governors of Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, Arkan sas, Kentucky and Missoori refused 'to foroish their qaota. . .The people of Virginia. Delaware and. Missouri, however, did volunteer to the sup port of the Government- The District of Columbia also furnished no leas tbn 2.822 oCicers and men, making four full 1 regiments. Under the first eall for -r three months troops, the Covers meet has now in service at least 80 000 men. Under the second proclamation of May 4th, call ing for volunteers to serv during the war, there bav been reeeived 203 regtment8,'Tt infantry and rifiemen, with - th exception of four regiments of cavalry and two battalions of artillery. Of thes 203 regiments ther are now 153 in ac tive service, and all the remainder will be in the field within the next twenty day a .Th total fore now in th field o y b computed as follows ; - .; ;. Regulara and volunteers for three snontha ..and for the war... ... ............ .. 235,000 Add to this the fifty five regiments of vol.- " unteers for the war, accepted and not t yet in th service ..............50.000: T New regiments of regular army 25,000 7i,000 Total force now at command of Govt ' . ernment..., ......................... .."..310,000 Deduct the three mouths volunteers.. 80,000 Force for service a A sr tb withdrawal of the three months' men.................... 230,000 It will thus be perceived that after the discharge of the three months troops there. will be still an available ' force of volunteers amounting to 188000, which, added to the regular army, will constitute a totals fore of 230,000 officers, nod mea. . . . - , ,v- -, . .: .- " The increase of the rVgnTar army consists of one regiment of cavalry, of twelve companies, numbering in the maximum aggregate, 1,189 officers and men ; one - regiment of artillery of twelve batteries, of six, pieces each numbering in the "maximum aggregate, 1,909 officers and men; nine regiments of infantry, each regiment eontaining three.' battalions of eight companies each, numbering in; ibe maximum aggregat, 2,a52 officers and men, making a maximum in crease of infantry of 22,068 ofScers and men.--'A aimilar increase was' made in 1813, but a re-dactiow was mad afier ward. ' --Tb stimates for th;. probable expenses of thearmy amount in the aggregate to f 185,29 G,- 397 15. . .. .. ; The Secretary suggests th expediency of au enlargement of the powers of the Commissariat, flat good and palatable rations may in .alt cases be furnished ; the troops. The Report also eon eiders it necessary for Congress to adopt, measures for the re-orgnnlzation, upon a uniform ba. sis, of th military of the country. ' It atser recommends a further distribution of improved arms amosg tb militia of the Stslrs and Territories. : ' - . ". In view of the vastly Increased labors of the War Department, the Report commends the appointmsnt of an Asaiatant Secretary of War. From -iTartiiuburgv Va;DestuctIon of Fortylgiit Locomotlyesby the Confed- : crate Army. '-"-.- '- 'i Weieam from tbe ageaf of theBaltimor and Ohio railroad ut-ilartiasharg, who left that place en Monday morning, that the work of vandalism en the part of the Confederate army, in tbe wan ton destruction of Ibe property of the Baltimore and Ohio railroad and of the State of Maryland was resumed ' at TUvtinthurg -a Sunday. All the esxs svod toroosstivee that they could not carry away from Harper s berry were destroyed and- oowwe. neve hidings of the destruction of the locomotives aad cars at-.Mnrtiaibarg, -Our informant states that the work of destructions was accomplUbed . in the most - effectual. manner by piling immense quantities of cord wood over and around lee locomotives and nnng it. A number of gondola ears and coaf hopper were ! similarly' destroyed. 'Tb- entire valoe of ih property thnS rivsato th flames cannot be less than $O0OO9-I- S,::. z-, -.L ; The boul occupied by .B. H. Carpenter, Evj opposite tbe snops ol ta company, was with great, difficulty " saved, th intense' beat several time setting - fire to it. The . shops - were not a red, thong sj they, would have -casght from the . intense heat bad - it not been . for the effort of ova of th employees of the enmptar, who were , present aad extinguished th names. Ouriofor rosct, wilh th master" mechsnic," Ur Edwards, was arrested end taken before General Johnson, what is in charge onh Confederate -.troops at this poiat. ebarged- with- endeavoring to put oat th fir over th" locomotives. Tbey proved, however, that' they ' were merely " preventing th flames treat xUn4iog to th shops aad ware dismissed. - . .2 . :-- -. . r - The Confedsrat troops at Uartinsbnrg - and in th, vicinity are said to number about fiv thoasand five hundred, being a portion of Gen. Job nson ' command -from flarper's Ferry, tbe advaac guard - towards" Wilhsmaport being in eomssand of General Jack son. A collision with Gen. Cadwlders comatandV which 'was ap proach ig from several points, was confidently anticipated. Halt. Am. . , - . - i " j. - - - eTaeeBawsTi ' Y O J r v.. , i4:-&ji IaAiaB'BatUtV;-.-5r--' t , .'- - M l-- -CHtCldo; July 8, t- The ScPeel Pioneer of th 3d inat. gives psr- Ueulrsf a ngbt oetwren a party of.Lhippewas and Sioux. On th 1 0th of Jun it appears that the Sioux ttrited at SC Joseph, on th Pembina river. That day they " purposed returning some stolen horses : they were. fired upon by a party of Chippewas-encamped-in the vicinity. The Siou immediately return the fire. Six Chip De ws, three Sioux and. two Assinboioes killed. The Sioux finally escaped, leaving behind ;4Q horses. AUhonrh the half breeds at C Joseph refrained from t-.Iing part in iL fight, they are apprehensive of an attack. from at body, cf SiotXX sow encamped at Devil's Laie, 5 j . '' ev? - - A tzzzx. " ?"V 4 i tt ThfLTrPJ. IT j i jj After tb"ceremoni tt cf r 'l! "Pn'-rrowaell, who aa, gaUartly--aTSBg?!- XL deilh, being 'on tie stssd, tc-rb-, r:"c J pp.tls sect::"3.n Cs takes at Al3J;s2,:a, tier was a -eoeral 4eend t!rt tla.tistbgtioa'.l. be dbbyei as ae-jriosi-ty. ' A f ?nenj K-Vwu Ri'l tJJtl3 tick cf t a ju.2. ta 'tiUu ta vLaw. Lrowcen t 3 '.z,l lln li&rs.went vp ffc.ni. lis t-.--:-.Ua;a. r-z'rrrz'l rro-u, 1"-"- il 7 li-iJy BroceH t 'aced t at . his Teet, stepped upon aadcovering. arflopdly tieerai" wu -1 'Hase 'Cos.CcUii:tpic2 ta riser tl Lc j cf oar friendsand brethrsn Jift bei'u l ti ia'eai native Ohio, we send yea forp altlcailoa a por 'of a Wsiocic Coamualcatioa .Laid Lerelut eva-,- etfi - '--T.--.r--v V-f c Ji--r u , ;44A called eommuaieation of rnneer ili!:ry Lodge, Fourth Regiment. O. V. II. was boJ !s nt th Uasoaic Call of Jetterman Lod-e. ITJ. 00 the 24lh day""of June, a.. L- S Ral : - Brethren. Ktaent j J. Y. CantwelL V7. il. 1 James Cantwe'LS. Wj John Green. J. IV 1 J. II. God man. Treasurer; C B. OSmatead,' Seer. tary fl. N.- MeAb. 8.-D. j'T; O r.t-kr.W. J. I.j Col Lerin Andrews; Cpts.TT C T a-ning, J: McMillan, end Geo.: Weaver. ;.d Q ir-termaater, I.re (7nderwood.'Menbers of i'je. neer JITlitary Lode; Chas.-A. Hmmn; laao Kahn, JI T.- -Newbroujrh; B.J. -B,il!win,rJ." S. White, Albright; T. K. B. Kennedy. Wse. Mclvoekry. and, Israel Furrvosru-.il ewi he re- of Feuerman Ldg, 170; John IUlao.'f UotsQ Idge, M4-, lOOj A. Stsger, - lri Lev"-, ).r O. Ferri?, Walpole Lodge, , Oj M. ilotnlr Mt, Zou JLodge, O.; T. ' J.. Kinney, AbUod Lodg. O j and N. Mowry, Vnns Wge. O.' " ' On motion, a Committee' of Seven' was appointed -to draft resolutions 'expw-Miv ftf lie brotherly love ed fellowship vbat we most ror-dially extend to tbe brethren ef FWm n Ldge, and to all Brother Uaon ihreuzhmt -Yirgtnia. Broa. Banning, James Cao'weIJTobumaSu ger, Ferris, Mowry, aod iloody, were,anpaintl on said Committee, who reportei the followiur resoiuiiaos, wpion, alter remarks nd4 by Bros, Andrews, Olmsted, McAbee, Stager, Ferris, How ry, et a I., were unanimously adopted i ' ' Where&s, ll is fitting" on" this great day of Mason ie festivity, to rettrw from the-tomalt of military strife to th taered retreat ef th-Lodge Room, to renew upon the Altar of Idssor-ry" cc vows of eternal fidelity to iU principles., Bd.- IFAereas, In oar absence from- home, friends. . aad the fraternal association of much loved Ohio,-w have met in our sister .State of Virginia with warm hearts and true friend, who iiav kicoly tendered to us the privilfgea of their Lodze-r 00 m, in which we may erjoy the pleasures of f.ki fs-tive occasion! therefore, - - ?-"-." IietoUed. That for thii expraesloa .of their Masonic favor, we tender to them oar heart-fill thanks, and pledgv to them .our , supportand countenance in all their lawful aad laudable en. dertakings. . Reaolced. That in aceordaooe with "ih aoiri of Masonry, we extend to all true and loyal Ma-sonf wheresoever dispersed. .the warm, hand f fraternal greeting, nd -pledge - ttiem- oarVid in quieting our distracted country by evry means in eur power, consistent ' with our d uties 19 our Government, and the teachings of ourorder. Resolved, That the principles ,. and teaching of our patron saiot should b constantly l;rpt before us in all the ' migrations rJt "our mi'itsy career, and. exert n poo our lives that Infiasaoa which their high Mason i source suiiCca tisot to command. . t: , tJ There being no forthAr burines, the Lsfga closed in due Masonic form and 'barmonv. . 1 3. Y. CANTWELL, W ti,' : E. B. Olmsted, Secretary, .-i - - - Comptioas ia the War DepartiesV We copy th following front ibe Philadelphia Enquire?, a Eepublican paper.; V, . j tt It appears that the same system of plunder for-favorites, is beidg carried on by the Gcoersl Government, that was perpetrated in th t !", only on a larger scale"; , . ' V ' . j "A'Sattt Bcsisc38 roH a 'Cs surer Hixirm. On our aecood page will be found an abl aad dispsssionate letter in the New York Times, fr Jjort Alonroe ( where tbe editor now is.1 exrciln the extraordinary, proceeding of the Secr-ry f War with ' reference to th post of Sot'f at that -place. It appears that a Mr. Wood. ho bas experience in the business cf HmUr. has been d-splai-ed by Gen. Cameron, and that a ilr. VV Mtar, we believe, f this.city. who fcas o e perience, has been appointed, and that th baa been done in Ufinnoe of the r?oUr r,fT.r.s.i . tion' of n Oiuoril of Administration,-reach to the damage of tb7pflii!ics;rvire, ancL, for no other reason than -beewbae the Sec ery-tf War desired to give a at office to one of his personal adherent. -' ' v - - : '- i x : " It will.be seen, from this rorrespondeocelhat Geoeral Cameron ia ot oifly a"xjing tie poar er of his high c fSe. by conferring hijrh, vpiU'ery 'a't oo the gang of worthless pofiMrisoa ia'hia trainy as we hsve" - heretofJre shown, but is act ally dejrrad ing his rwiiion as CahieM MuUr, bJ sTrasping the prt-fis of .the ca? ffand th garrison, with a ?iw to ihir diversion ietajji. pockets ot bis own .ner friends. . ir - - OYerw helming Defeat of the Sts :Ir-L:ts -i - . ia Seatttckr Glotious Stt:;,l Never was a party so utterly and fgnoml&Lasly routed as. theSecessiooists of Kentucky ver at ih lat election. , The popular, voice, ia over- . whelming for the -Union, fo the Secotd Con gressional District the DisafiiooUta r.a u-i ear-riedone coofttv.- In th Fon rth Ceo Tniitml District they have not eucceedVd is csrryir - any. Ditto in the Fifth District, They have r-ried no county in the Sixth Dwtrict. Di:Lo i 1 th Seventh District. - In the Eishth Diitrlii tie Secessionists have carried but three coqUlci. lalbe rfio'b District thev bav not saccr-r i in a. solitary county. In - tbe Tenth D;tr-' ibey have' carried" but one' eoantv: Iu t'. SoU State the mij rity araiost th SccessiouuU will be full fifty thousand. V' - 1 !l -. : .This expresmon Cllowinr ibeorrrei:'. aie vote fur tbe Uaton. Border-State Con should think, wjold -put a q-ieius to its Zicer sion fiction in Kentucky. 1. ThejStale bat coma, fo the glorious determination remain in ti vuion come wnat -tio. Una. 7 ASaening CorisutUa -XTesiti If our memory serves us rirtL Juia flif V an instigated appointment of. avsnaeliisa' eomntte to examine into th Hv Oak coarrac-v tered ioto by Isaac Toacev. late Secrets r? - f tie Navy. The Ciacmaati Caix mrrciL tl s .. - Bepoblican paper In Oh'o, makes grsve tii-tf of. wind ling and incapacity-against Ciieoq tveiies, tbe present incumbent of the same cdoe, Would it sot be well for John Helper Sberta ta ree the apoointment ef aootber amellifj com . mittee for tb benefit of Mr. Welles net fcr rate tip? tbe chief of swindlers Simon Carrr'-. We would also suggest that tb rtsa snd Gibson commi:t?,i:eir, Z',onn, l.:st Jin, and Edgerton, loll tt-Tiselrea ia rea-JIoei . to examine into, and report c--n, tv4 f -. iscisl transactions f WilTLam Dttiz. .'.. a 1 ( . tSUnd; Crom'nxider Ti.a i..': ... itVw3aV - .. -.iz.-.:. jCw" Thai" CioCiauAit Cuuii&UiJ. ,2 American ptople tn r-:cvc J, j- 3 '7 '--V "tiattierSf s2l Is r ""'- r" oil tta VTrrfMa i r" .." i 1 Tb Bepui;--s iv had powtr'-s' months, - I -.r Ceser-! Lt-c t s r . . 1 $ 7 rr Pres'.Jent's 'rc-.i tTcc-s, "Isjt-- -- Atlic-tc.n Zc-LtiiLt Ti;jutls 1 (loT"n""?tl. cp??r i's r,??9ct f-r..a UcI'-t D: -.""-ziy w. I.taaxU Cen X ft. "sUaen." Ls cads tie annoo&c- rt crrwsr6eJ--Mrearlaed.', Lt -"'".; motto.
Object Description
| Title | Mt. Vernon Democratic banner (Mount Vernon, Ohio : 1853), 1861-07-16 |
| Place | Mount Vernon (Ohio) |
| Date of Original | 1861-07-16 |
| Source | LCCN: sn86079142, Mt. Vernon Democratic banner (Mount Vernon, Ohio : 1853), 1861-07-16, Vol. 25, No. 13 |
| Format | newspapers; microfilm |
| Submitting Institution | Knox County Public Library |
| Type | Text |
| Digitization Information | 300dpi, 8-bit Grayscale, Model: NextScan Phoenix Upgrade, Software: iArchives, Inc., 3.240 |
Description
| Title | page 1 |
| Source | Reel number: 00000000003 |
| Format | newspaper |
| Extent | 7841.07KB |
| Submitting Institution | Knox County Public Library |
| Type | Text |
| File Name | 0694 |
| File Size | 7841.07KB |
| Full Text | r'ui,Li . . pw! . - . ' 1 ' ''-"-"' rrr, . .. . . - . - - '- .".. j , farts i'iar.: .s3 ? i Vi ... . . . - .... -..-- I C- v? js ; frkfijSr! . -. . , .y-.-.t- Si ( YOLTJXJE BDIIED .BT.I... HARfJR. B tl A.KKAJI "WHOM flB TlDTI Ilktimi. JgLT 18, ISM h 1 ; Peacd Piicst ti. T7ar Trlcei. ; 1 7 annex tabli lehowin the tfiSernc to he pric ptii fot ,Trbus prodact of tbVfario to-ij, mad the prices paid ea yer go to-dj: JaTj l;60. " Jol 1, '61. Lom. .Corn 'A 40- 20 - 20 Oiu-.;..;....; - 85 is it Bye v" - -90 40 - " 60 Es..;. .;...ww 5 10012 v7( 8 3 4 la 1SC0 oor pepl fer t peace, and bad an UBobstrtjeted Jrade with be people of. tbe South. Ia I86l are enazed , la civil war, and have no trade with the Suatb.' . Heoce ihe. difference ia , favor of 1850. ; . ' " ;. Farmers eboald remember , that tWwar has : oolr joat eommeoced, and that oar tradewTth the Smith has been stopped but a few weeks. Should the war be continued any length of time, of course the prices will fall in proportion. s r Ther ihosld also remember thai tne same . cans which brings dowa the. price of theit crodace. will, at the same time, increase their taxes. ... . .,. The Admiaistration must atx piorteit-neetrlif . Hoe' hundred millions a vear to keep op the war. To raise this enormous amount the people , cf the North, and especial! the West, mast nec-essarily be taxed hoivily. These are plain fxcta, easily understood by the people. Our friends in tbe country- those who re ur?in? on the war should calmly study what most be the iaeiable retails from acontiuaance thereof. - . Uegro Voting Returning Sense. Last year, the Republicans in the Connecticut Legislature ted by a large majority, to amend the Constitution so as to allow negroes to vote. It is required, that the amendment should . be again submitted to the Legislature, and if approved by two-thirds, then to be submitted to the people. It hat again been submitted to the Legislature, and was voted down by yeas 44, nays " 130., ; v. : v . r V - J : ' - . ' This is alarming to tbe " irrepressibles", and . would indieate that the people were about taking ... the "sober second thought. ' .The revulsion ia pablij sentiment on this ni . gro question will be terrible. The Journal of Commerce adds : " . ' . So 8a'mbos hopes are quashed and his position as a citizen more shady than ever. : Perhaps tbe Republicans never desigied to let him vole, but acted favorably to the project last year merely ' for party effect. Poor Sambo has been extensively used for party purposes fur many a year bat wn guess tbs war will about use him np 'for aure." ' ; ' ' :-'" - ; Ttia Attack on Potomac Batteries. . A high military authority, long in the regular United States service, has called my attention, writes CwL Forney, to what he gives, as a fact( that the several attacks made by vessels of . tbe navy upoa the rebel batterie, on the Potomac, at SewelTs Point, 4c, have been without any de&aite result. To uso his own words : ,.. These batteries should never have been, at-' tacked without a determined purpose to carry . them To assail tbem with a few shot, aqd then fall back, is ao way to carry 00 war. .The rebels , proclaim every such act as a victory 00 : tbeir partj and the moral effect on the enemy ia great. . It has never yet transpired by whose order these isqlatel and foolish attacks have been made. The public should know who is responsible for them. : A few more such will enlighten the world .4 ia oar mode of warfare ; and if the war is to con-. sist of each acts on our part it will be no wonder if England soon recognizes the Southern . Confederacy.' Those remarks vera made with . evident feelings of mortification; and I report them as they came from tbe lips of an officer . of - long sad active experience, so that they may reach the eye of those more '.immediately con-. ceroed. -. . , .. ... -1.: .. ' . .'A Great Had Storm.. ; ' . The tornado and hail storm which passed - over soma parts of New Jersey, on Sunday last, was very severe. "A letter says r V '1 Tba force of the bail may be demonstrated ' from the fact thai round holes were at first ' made in the windows, the same aa if a bullet , ; from a pistol were shot through the glass, al ' , though-the steady fire rapidly knocked out all lh rest that was left of the pane ; and pales were . . nnocied from the fences in some instances. A 1 jrtntleman on the road hoisted bis umbrella, (a ' stoat s'ukea article,) and held it firmly for an in-:: "Tstanf 'to protect his head from' the .hailstones ; ' - oat the hail went through It as if it were wet paper, and the ambrm was riddled and rendered' worthless in a moaeat.' - , . .A little girl bo a way to Sabbath school failed to react shelter ic lime, and her bat was cat from h bead, whilst she was finally beaten down And pelted with bail ,00 til she' was unable to arise, when she was rescued and had to be carried ia by the Postmaster of the village, who ran oul and rescued beraud conveyed her within bis house the nearest shelter. Her bead was bruised and cut, and; presented the appearance of having been pounded with a stick, her flesh be-' ing io ridgeaand lamps, Otherwise she was on- ; -; East Tennessee. .: - ---ri -I Lata ad wees from East Tennessee, where the predominance of a Union sentiment was so '3 fflesrl proved at : the late election, indicate that i o t f sopla of that section are likely to follow the ejxamla of their compatrioU in Northwestern . Virir:v la a Gouveption recently held by the utuci .r ei3m .ub. vk.fa were, wita lor vQU . maictauaace ot a peaiuonModepeosent of that . iitn vA'cIi tie Stita has beenlhrast by the Se-..liCieesstsn 1. s.'ers"aud in wtich the Confederate ao- -rr 4-r' Ja .Jcoabtleas seek to retain bet. : t.!-; : j c-i?rst3nd thst. it Is the fixed dsterainiu -! ' C:a cf .t'.s reierai Governooent to sustain suad rr-lc;t ile'r constitational and legal sights d t ttoerr t'.',:ziT ol TeuaeMee who, ia tieir da-j u -.- rcUci C9 us Uawa, are now ilrBZZ"nX to wrest : i lhe'r C'-Cj Coreraaent "from tha hands of its :c:2s:::s::3CiI raters, aaJ that it wi3 4efend v- all C'-tcs tjaiaat parts thereof claiming to have ss : zlzl, aal thaa will aTTord them - every frct5cca's;aust coawiie .yulsnceiinsnrree- a C3J re.3U.oa.' : Ihe C -7;raasct;:j f;rsL!x tislajtf clens cf ci:i Cl-'.:j it -A all ' tl; oes cecsssary b :?tz-l pr'servaUon, sxd, if tslieved ti Ic.'jad twecselrss -iizz it&lr crrncrt,::i-;rTS8i.'r 2ato ; t:- - csa and arcia, ia Ctzl-r aid atUinT IL zlei tlxX ct the -: United Dates, : :.7. iQvg j-1t la Yirrfnia. The following Mghlj -intsrasting' iatfilligence we clip from the ipesial telegrsph 10 correspondence ot the, Cincinnati CPiaIf; l; BoccBxyvoy, Ya., Jnly A rwaltant band ot - fifteen7 Baokeyes, Third Ohio Bezlmva t, aadef Capt.O. A. Lawson; pf Cola mhos, mada a good rwcord yesterday after ternoa, at ITiddle Forlr Bridge. ' Fridajf after noon, without CecW.UcdeUan'a knowledge Can; Schleich ordered Col. Morrow to dstseh fifty men for a. scouting- axpeditioa. Sargeoa UeLIeatu aocompsnied the party,' five snea- being taken from each com oahy of the regimen ti The et-peditiOQ preoeeded by the bridle pstV across the hills to a poiat a Beverly pikv, five miles this side of Middle Fork Bridge, and encamped for the night. ' About midnight CTaiou men appealed to them for proteetioa against maraadiog rebels, who had forced their women aad children to flea to the wood for safety and bad pillaged tbeir houses.- Lawson ' sealed rough mountain and . crossed Middle Fork ia the morning, two and a half miles above the phage. He followed the stream wkh great di&Tcnlty throogh the aabroken thickets,' ahtil be reached'4 good ambush 'within range of, the. bridge which was-crowded with rebels.' The enemy' discovered his party and an advance guard of five cautiously approached him from the bridge,1 alf ready with their tnuskets- Bis men stood op, aad both parties bred simultaneously. Three of the rebels fell at ibe first round, and the othe other two dropped immedi-j a tely afterwards. The enemy now opened upon his little band from three sides from the bridge, behind its embankments,' and the thickets 00 tbe hillside. ' :; " ' . 'V- ':: In order to get a belter opportunity, he moved his men into an open space seventy-five yards from, and commanding tb Eastern end of the bridge, and poured into the crowd of rebels a galling fire ; the effect was awful imprecations and screams of "murder, His men obeyed br ders with absolute composure. A number had already oeen hit, and one was killed in the act of firing. ' 'After firing four rounds ' into the bridge he'ordered Vretreat and the lads backed : slowly into the bushes carrying the wounded. The enemy did not persue,and bis party recroesed the stream a mile and 1. half above tbe bndga. Capt. Lawson brought away ibe mnRket of bis dead soldier, but was unable to carry off the body, the enemies ambuscade from tbe hillsides being too hot. He says bis party Was not much bar rass-d by the rebels at the bridge, but the ambuscade was annoying, ' . .' ''' " ' :- " Those in the bridge and behind the embank-' raent would pop np their beads and blase away without good aim, but those in the bushes were more deliberate. An Irishman in tbe party says it was " hot as hell." Lawson says bis men behaved splendidly, not a man flinched, and the obeyed orders Just as promptly as if on dress parade. . " . " ' - -:- , The men say the Captain himself animated them by his cheerful vsiee, which was heard abovij the dm of tbe conflict. Dr. Mc Means says the Captain was as oliected as if lie were playing soMier." : ' ' .' X - ? . The casnalities were as ' followa: " Samuel W. Johns of Hamilton, Buttler Co., shot dead by a ball through the breast :' Corporal Joseph High, of Columbus, shot in the right foot by s rebel from tbe bill side. The ball struck bo the top of bis ancle, and passed downward, shattering the small bodes of ike foC Tbesargeons hop to. save tbe foot, bat it is doubtful. High was ia front of the baule, and fell exclatsaiusrv Cap tain, I m bit, but I must bave another shot; raising himself and standing o one- foot, he loaded and fired twice more, when, being faint. two of bis comrades assisted him Into tbe boshes. Nicholas Black, a Brighton botcher boy, of Cincinnati, was. struck : in tbe forehead, over the right eye, by m backshot, which -lodged between the skall bones, a severe wound, but not dan. geroua. He fell, and, rising again, he took two more shot at the enemy. .: George W. Darling, of Newark, was . shot in the left arm ; the ball entered at the elbow, and traversed the muscles of the arm seven or eight inches, plowing up a ghastly farrow ; tb bone was not broken ; David Ed sou, of, Barnesville, Belmont . county, slightly wounded , in the- rigbr arm ; Joseph Bacns, of Newark, alight wounded iu the .left - leg; Wm. Deaeiog, of Hamilton, Butler countv, had the akin above his right ear cut by a ball ; seven or eight of the men received scratches and had their clothing riddled. Cap, tain Lawson says JIft Uiur, of. Wortbiortoo was the coolest and pluckiest tellow in the fight tie was toe last o q the aeld. and. 4eH the bashes twice to ret a fair hoc but Dr. MoMeana said every . man ,- of the party displayed , good,. pluck, ine wounded were brought to the hospi tal 10 wagons this morning, and are comfortable. Captain Lawson and his men are confident thai some were killed : in the bridge..: Seyea . were killed outside of the bridge. .. All aeconnts agree that the rebels were about .300 strong, mostly Georgians, including. 40 . horsemen, armed with Sharp carbioea. . - ... . . . , . v - Gen. McCIellan is janch. pleased with the gal- lautry of tbe men, but severely censures the expedition , Lawson . gave valuable information about the topography of Middle Fork, v - Col. McCook took command of the advance, and . moved at daylight with -his own regiment, the Ninth Ohio, Andrew' Fourth Ohio, Loom is' Battery and Bardaall's Dragoons,. which- const lute the. advance ,aard,Oa Fourth being de tached from Schlejch's ; brigade Rosecraa's brigade is under marching orders. ".TheTenth Iodisna .bave left to-day. the remainder of the brigade leave at daylight to-morrow. ; , .. General McCIellan goee forward to-morrow. ScUeich's brigade wUl follow immediately.) The Tenth Ohio just arrived; it is ia SphieicVs brigade.; ; vrt .;-.?t- :'":! Gen. Morris received orders yesterday, to move his whole force last night to strong, position, within a mil of the nemyfs fiortificatioos, at Laurel HilL. Tb order was obevedLas davits ht Gen. Morris was ia, position,, JTon perceive the army is rapidly closing for eonfiicW i-,...,w 4 .... Ibis division wiIL probablr meet1 the eaemv first at Boarin Ban, 12.miles. beyond Beverly, me enemy is reported zo.uoo, strong east of , the middle fork, incladin all their posts. Ther are either very strong or they don't know what they are about. Bipley. California. CharUeton. Qlenn- ville, Bulltown, nod . Fraochtowa stra ordered to be iOccu pied by i atrong detachments O Jen- nisgs Wise! escaped front Cipley.1 CoL Norton went after sua? on tbe 4 la but Wis retreated on Charleston. CoL Coasell. of lb JJth Ohio; is appointed commander of this post -; ' f .Capt. Barrett's company, iSih Ohio was pa-radad before the regiment this mornin.disarmed, and ordered to reocrt at Colsmbna. iThrw m1 diajraced for outrages Twrpetrated oa the prop' wfa 'jif mmm . . . w - A . ' r":'T--occw,aiswroj wieo. i;trtton ad eight privates f the eocspan. . CsrluCarrett was profoundly frirmd - ... , -v Subseqwentfy the mraif?foned ofScers of lie regiment eppealed to Gen.McClelan to revoke the sentence, and giye tb innocent members a cUnc8 ta redesaUs re?au:;a cf the company. After eojisidenns the ease; the Cenertl tccedad WUd ic:;r8, Snd' thf trns we: retored-Li;tXi-iUoa til V raUty f.:;-:4 Lca U 4.racir ',; - V - v-'i . lIcCas,ttc::Ul la arrival g.t inIli rctV of Jcbns, w9 was killed la L . s t"': '., Va cZJiJL xiKl f.:u CX:. t, i raj tifi momic' at 7saton, s'-j Ci cf hla men surprised sixUco oooLfsd taeOfia camp, between tftstoa, and Callww-a, yertsrday, a&4 -vtpsk six of ihsns, with tielr arms and hortesv prisorrs. They wiU be seat to Colombo t-u l,.-"-.' ; -'A eorrespoaJebt of the Provideuc Journal, who has fast returned front !vislt to Fort Sum. er, My - that Vingb. the joutiesi; and sooth waSs,' froating !Iorris IUnc bUrieV terri bly battered, they are tfot permanently damaed, Although, the damage to the' outer, walls Istr1:1 fling, considering tb severity and uratiotv ef. the aackrand tha heavy brdjoadco used aiiast It, the heavy sixty four pottnd baflS enly pent trating the outer brick watl,.while teyon3 It were Cronr five to ten. feet concrete-. whicbV:o bad made neatly permanent as the solid ratk-.Tbe (aside presents a Scene of utterfuin and -desola tion. 'Heaps bbrokea brick, stone and mortar lay a tattered about, an utter confusionEverj vest&ge of woodwork is entirely Iomed; uW r About 6'ne h a nd red laborers were employed rev moving the bbishrTbe by about two tandredi regaiar soldjerii), mpatly Irishmen, and apparently of the lowest class The Beal Condition of tb Soatlt: v F'roa statement made to the New; York Iot by a gectlemanf honorable; name who hat just arrived from the Socth, it appears that the south- em states are overwhelmad witll 4ebt,nhav i"no trade or money, no cotton on band except in very limited quantity 'apdwiU gather but half a erop this rear. , Ther are without materials for cloth ing either soldiers' or-eiviliansr beyond " s, f months' consamption. ' The osusl channels :' of trade, and even of internal traffic, area closed, as for example the communioatioa between Mobile aad New Orleans is all carried on by roundabout and tedious railway finesend floor is now sailing at tne latter piece at.eignteeo.aoilarf per barrel. notwithstanding the good crppbecanse there is a convenient way of transport-: it. ' The Miss issippi is effectually blockaded. - .The population of the most flourishing towns is dimiaishinr b Skbeenteeism ; as for example, there are-at this moment one tbonsand - three .hand red vdSTted bouses in Ms m phis, and the last and only hope or tne (Jonlederatesr ia tnat inriand mU become their ally without delay... If this is aot dose ther' confess themselves lost. .! . IV-4-i r r This gentleman thinks.that if the North would make known to tbe South to some unmistakable way,ihat it does not make war to abolish, slavery. tb war migat be considered as almost over.- ine secesssoaista leei ana snow . tney fia.re . en- tirelv. mistaken, their case and their remedy and the leaders tremble for their own. personal oafHy i. ? DesttraetlT-'Toraaao'.- -vt-.. 1 ? Cfltcsoo, Jnly 8. .. a violent tornaao, accompanied by a rain storm,' passed over Freeport, this State", ibis aC- ternoon, : doisg - considerable ' damage. ""The freight house of tbe Illinois Centra! . RoAd. wi unroofed machine shop on the racine and Musimppt Road, demolished : the bridges over the Pecatonica River mhd "at YelloVCref t"f rear the city"'were blown dowd. Also, noroofed several houses at Itockford. c ' ' 1 - i - - ' ? - A thunder storm prevailed here' all the ' after noon; preventing the working of thetelegrapb wires ; therefor we are unable to obtain further particulars. ; ' - : - - ' ? ... i: ; OsrosH, Wit.; July 8. " A destructive tomalo swept over this city at 2 o'clock ibis morning, nnroofing houses in every dire:tion, ; blowing dawn' trees- and doing immense damage.' .The' large flouring mitt of Green & Powers' Was ! unroofed" upper portion demolished,1 the store of Bigger & Hill we oa-roofed and filled with water, damaging' goods to a large 6u sf.' ' :.5'- i : " The steamer Shawana'w'City at her dock was made a complete'." wreck.' Also tbe.atesmer-Berlin City has smoke stacks and upper cabin carried away. T : '' " '" - ' '- Also damaging- houses to alt parts of the ckr. lifting op, turning round and carrying some several feet,' .Some were entirely demolished. , The wind was accompanied by a vivlenrhail storm ; tbe lightning was terrific, striking Several places no loss ot iu yet reported. - :t Kl 8eixnire of s eteainer by Pirates tiore 6ecession,Treachery , ani Hobbary.- v -,: -; BaLTUtoasv July 4.. . Tbeseirure of ih steamer 81, Nichols, from this port, proves to have been a: bold piratical expodiiioo. l; When the steamer JeA here on Friday evening, she had aa board about fifty secession passengers, most of whom were isgsised as suechacics going to point wu ! the- Maryland shore of the Potomac Amonjf tha number Was Capt. Hollins, lat of the U. 8. ship Soaqnehan na, who was disguised, some accounts say, as a woman, and that be retired to his berth tatmadUuly on going on board the tteamet. - After the boat had left Point Lookout, rCaptaia . Hollins threw off his disguise, and with th aid of the paaseo-gers seized the boat; which waa'imniediauly put across to Con river on the Viriaiaaid. " Here the rest ef the passengers; not a party to tbe plot, were landed, including the Captain of the boat, who was placed under t SU guard, .The St earner then went on a piratical cruise toward the Rappahannock river, eaptariag three vessels 00 the way laden with to, coat, aad cofoe, with all of whkh Captaia Hollins raadebis way to Freder. icksbarg. : . -. ixHIi. iMis Seeeesiea papers here publish accounts ef this aifsir, this evening; calling it a ferillisct exploit, -The account asys that some two hundred rebel troops were place! oa board at Cone .Tb two deserters represent the fore-Tae thousand' strong. r -.They reached the point two -milesi this Side Great BetheLJ The Expeditionhaving-mis-carried, the rreater. part probably reternd to Yorktown. Nothing has sine been . isard; of ; ITtTf Bait, Ho Uacon f - .The blockade is , desti ned to too ch th e Rebels ia a tender place we bad not thought'of Salt being Contraband of waa.'and theinte!! jent" Southerners knowip uotbiog ' tibont its nanny faeture, there is a probability that Ahey will hare some trouble in saving -.their bacon wbenj kiL ing time.F comes. The - Savannah EipuUican say B, "Next to food and water, rJt is r?ost fees-essary to esv If th blociade t3 cZ'aivB we th. ba Without it. y Th bealth of t ' pec ! wi'l be destroy edf . an iwherj the winter ro--? 3 "end it is tim to cur beef and r. ':'A I'J r- cponf tbe gronnd,? ;vi7o ep!:.:r1 tzzl'. J-7 Ct time winter comes th ReUtlarmy wii bar consumed all ia BPer!! c?" er-ja eee?-'3r'l?i ertaic!r Uteri tietbei-a' , 1 ... --fr.. alt, lei lie UZs'zz sf-ii' -1 i -r; i "j V .J'r;Ds.m, TTs-tT r ..: rr! r hc..3 'Tatsil-t' l' 3 t I.- ; Lt Ca La way H - - ' . . -Till bead of which is a ewra, io he Ucse the rider should loos his way. . ' rC ..11- t .:&fe'x'iZZ9Zli-'- y Uken from 'jara-' eeat t : i a Eenry .Ma'rd "Ce'c itefl paper, ,,Tbe rrsnd esolt tbe only, sol on on; of the nestipBis fast com tn- rp the .-,erir?rpc.'i"o ' 3 tlavcs. by lb t i f h t c -t er (aca pe is there from our. diCc!. iea? ; A.'hv ahouh4 dcI our people and our staUsaea look it fair in- tke face ? i--r.'-L.4:i', 'V.-?;-.?' l'-'i The Cjui is fir'stroojer and better supplied than we sup7cse: -e eimcsl. be-Heves hrse!f bitterly r -c --adr:-.bejs eel likely ;to tb ink; herself less e3 after a tlockade'end a campaign. -Ch is;,incouraged,4by tb base ytnpathj of England - -e rievet could feelany sarety for slavery ia aaot' ?r Union with 83j."Jhe laic u -- -f- ,V' -: fhj I ' j 1 t Evidently, there is fcttt r -e path to eafety- and vie lory on to a perms: at e-ttlvent ers9 to the quiet orufcjngst en cf the South. Do wot feat it!- Look it boldly in the face namely 1 the emanctpati Bcipation of the lav ,at ..., Let ear arm tea, as- a f"n i fary necessi t si. and strategctical act, declsre rreedoUo all, and ia a tnomenVvj bave so army of 4,000,000 human; beings on oor side allies in every house aad on' very plantation. The enemy -is demoralized.. Panto eweeps through the Southern land.. .Ue.re is a foe raor0dreadfal tbsn, Nerlhef a armies, . j .- .Fighting so near oar own forces, w may hop the revengeful feelings of these poor - oppressed create res would be restrained. . Still, there would inevitably be desolation and destruction sweeping like' a tempest ever the Souther n'Kland'Aii it teould e . juitt. These sraea. have ; borne; the Wrongs of eentories. and why,' should not their uprising be Woody t 1 t pitat, have their freedom, if they can win it,;; even, thongh.it be'over the corpses of their masters and the ashes of the ruined, homesteads,. Afte.r!rthia. tempest of fir and havoo would arise a belles era. fcr the South. Free laborers would pour in j wasted fields would oe cultivated by new aand j ruined cities woId be built up bv Northern capital and isrennity. and the problem and the task for the civilization of the, cemieg'asre .wonld be the. education and preparation, of . 4.0 00, 000, of- blacks pern a pa through some system' of apprenticeship- Jor the rights and the privileges ot free Jaborers. Z - j ? . . br 'swcA s florioMt result, even if, U'jcome through tear land blood, do tee devotUly pray. f f -These sentiments are atrocious. ',- i. bis ia Abvlitionism nndUgnisedi These are the result which" would necearify follow from the carrying out of'thes doctrines. Th paper which .puts them forth aablasbingly professes ;1o b Christian, claims to b inspired with the Corgi v log-charity ad. Iov which charaderlxe the doc trines of the Christian religion.:; What' mockery I Fiends in human shape devils incarnate: may stoat with horrid aalkfkction over the picture which their imagimtioris hare' painted as the re-full of (hU un fbrtunat contest and: for. te real' izttion of ahicb they-may fiJevouilyprtnf ; but every -real patriot, every true friend of the humso race wilt shudder at' the bare contemptalion of the scenes which' fariaticat 'Aboliiipnlsm had it the power, would spread oat beforeoor ,ew. laagin one-half our country give over to sdl the barbarities which eha -rt- rl belilonip-AjjJ thlsai-CtiwiJ.t.i a , . .y ... . . -. u such Christianity, uGoodJLiord deliver - as." He say of th Soaih..S'ir kale us Why does she hale us t Because of the preaching wl' just such'diabolical doctrines" ai "are 1 here rVet' forth.1 Wiiboat lhat tb conspirators could never .hsve brooght her people op to th point ofrevolution. It i theeontin nance in pitting forth-such sentiments, which are republished at 'the South, thatTkeeps the fires of rebellion berning sq fiercely. -Jt must d remembered- that this-' earn Henry Ward Beecher has raised regiment for ibe war,' arid", we believe,' had it accepted at Washington. Theogh we have seen no evidence that, the . Admioistratioa rire r coanteuanc : to sucb sentiments In fact bav evideaoe to the contrary, Wathiak,! iu moral effect upon the soatuera people, lb rejecUOd ' of all snob aid would bav done store toward potting the rebels lkm fhasf thebaic of ism regi meats of men. - , We regret to kaow that such SentiaieaU: are not confined to the AboJitioo party proper.;' JRad- ical Republicans are here and there preaching similar doctrines. -' Th Washiagtoa eorreapoa-deut Of the New Ynrk Tribune irhos sentiments aia.'ividently' approved by that pajper has th following ;,v;3- ...;..Z? t Jfthis war were for any thimi short of realizino a perfect equality of rich'sfor toery human being, I. . t. - . . m j. - 1 . 1 ' . . - . wiuu ve te new oevMHs enuaas or u atresi butchery that the world was even stained wit Vol. Un the triumph of freedom. ver alaverv rests the honor and tb!Gu of this nation. W a-cbie red national liber tf through lh Ce volution. to make as a peODle the worth v lUndard-beerer of that holy cans which we claim to have eapoua-ed CjtsJl th' rorld- - -; . X While such1 thlpgs' are-written here and Wpob" lished i.nt th Soatbern priotSjiJhow ca. it . s peeted that the Sontera people.eaa be mad to tieifrr tost tnia is not a war for theisaxnihua UaaJ --Detroit TixtTrtss 4 i;1 n j j it tJL - j z a i rxt o i3 zizm ' ST : yCrcssSi.tf.Tr8'sttvT riacca I6S2J- ift:i--ektrntsh at llalnerrille j.,;r. UQ&t'z? -. rc":"Js ' ,''! " vu.'' &-" Uur Frederick aad,,Uagerawiexchanges givet detailed statements of thaaCirs on the upper FotomaCf between the adranca-of Gen.' Patterson's army end; a portfon of; the Confederate troops, under command of f4ener&t.."J'ohna6n. rVesutj oio tie fiillawing from lher; iXagersto wu -Major 'QeaeraV , tattei8bnsro'mm.ani'd with th exception of tie 4th CoDhecticut..ll?gimentt which is atill io c-xrzp Baoth of town; aodiIajor Doubledays co-ip&nj, and the l.h Penosylva nia Regiment, which remaiued'at V.T.IIirj sport,) crossed thePotomaa at Wil'iarasort en Tuesday r.or2g.r;::.:;' -;;r'r--- -v-s',..-. K Tbe .f!rst V. I. . -ia end C.' pi, . l!c? 'lexSi I.rr .3 lei I, a sirs or-, fo,.o jlvaI 11:'. cov -;1 1 y'Pe'rr' ".' C d 3. 1 - . i jS L ; .Sl.w r.-.'rsrf.'rr;" , t. l tzz'z l' tll.e, Ccfa'-j I., cf t: 9 K .I1 t !vr ce.'rr-1 it ij t:;:.;J v - i 1 ty i' 3 Penn-.'s I ' '.tr: . tery. it Jt I 3 rc , j r. l .3 tbe 3 i .rrc-ut ":i by a :', ? 1 f"y cftie-J .. ii Lil'Ciu ' :-y 1 5U.S r -I.T-r .". :r cat. r t --re c rred is .. . 1 v ... : ivcr- I. - i r i (Li h-sl-Zj eff-t ' t't maa t!rt I . raC-.. ' 1 C - 3 i r - u : 3 i- ? rl- :.ut 1-v 1 Ciea tl.ro c t j t- Tha tEE3 I ? J C I 1' tie tsrc-'lj. : - :lz I teen of ua c.y ti. ' :'.ti. v-?., vrjr-. "-- Notiia? was 3 t I m fcco-o, until the Federals arrive near UaioetviLV, cexr which pot&t a ciatidoXiL! tody of Soalhera ' i& fan try wer stationed ia sv wheat --ellv Tbeyx opened rw on tbe Federal advance which was retorned, and the firing for a whit was quite brisk.' .Tbe Southern troops stood their ground until Perkins baUerv arrived, and siir a few shots they retreated The, sldraisb lasted bat a abort time, i don's? whicn;.the bni pf -ir..-;PorterfieI4 rs.e.Set on re by a shell from Perkins' battery and: entirely co"unaed. "A cannon bait passed tbroa;h f tL .vb...ogof tTf.'P. ' The wheat fields, at the Sc ene of lb fight; juat ready to e arrest.' were set on .Crebyjbe.TBiscbare of thguns and consom ??55rVv ri '-' i 4 V7 give the names of the killed and wounded, ksvfiuf as we have been able to gather the as t- - 3eorga Prakefc company. Ai.-froav- ililwaukee, lit Wisconaia rvgiment.- , . - . ... . " A member of company IT, 11th Pennsylvania regiment ";' .-" ' -V 4 - ' - j-A member of com paay B, Peonsy Irani - reg lei -''it' ' itJ -i"- . :6 VjVgOtV. , ' ..m .-! j-Wca. A. Matthews,, 1st Wisconsin rrgimecL Frederiek Bonner, (slightly) com p. G-i do. ' 17. G. Young 1st Wisconsin. ' ' ,:- ' John Tiaad, -ll'lh Pennsylvania rejjiment. ..VjJame MorgaO, severely, 1st Wisconsin , , 11. F. Dammacker, 1 1th. .. B . ' Sergeant McGinly, Mcliullin's" Bangers slight ' wound ini the an kl. ' v AsKtter,aaa unknown. ' J " k a a ooif re in pospiai tu nuts putcr. , v- ; Four more are reported .to. be desperately wounded, wtio had not been brought on. ';- CONFEDERATE LOSS. ' It is reported that there wer several killed and wounded on the Confederate side, bat . nothing definite is known with regard to numbers. The bnlv person taken bv th U. 8. trooos was wounded man, who was ahot in the head, near the svaa t--Vi4 '- -j ff'.: j -. i Thar,. Federals encamped -oa Tuesday - night four miles this side of Martin aburg, on the farm of Adam Small. At the time of going to press, (Wedneedav afternoon) we had no intelligence vh w.vivj m uiiiMio, - - 4- Archbiihop Hashes on Ciril Kar. T-vrcnbnt)0p tiognes, wso, some w.ck agn, mad a Union speech: in New Yerk, bas pab- lished his views of civil war in tb Metropolitan Record. We make a few extrasts : ,v Above all the wars a civil war is the most de plorable aud lhe. mo8t destructive , in , its .onsc quences. both to tbe victor and vanquished, , Its progress is marked by ruin and , desolation. It gives- loose reia to tbe worst, passions of bur man,-nature rapine and carnage, though- horri ble to gaze upon,, though . terrible-to .witness carr not be compared to the moral evils which it iocts upon society. ; . It. is tot in civil strife that tbe nobler attributes of our nature are ahownj the mind of man beooeaes hardened and callous amid , scenes of blood ?od .devastation, c iThe tranaition trora, a peaceful republie to a military despotism is more easily. effected through such a medium than people generally Suppose. 'Hen- j kind are pretty much the sam in every age of the worlds Utterial civilization, it is true,- assy develop the mind and sharpen the, intellect,, but it does not purify "tie espiratioa nor lev t the moral nature of the race ' .. '" '. ; ' We bav heard . proposition made by a prominent speaker, at the great demonstration which '--'- -H t TTin S(im.. thai ankvtntil was ei.uor but eriuuiyeukerta!iBed,ror' bad , its 'origin la the 'excitement of !be moment. . It was nothing esore or less than recommendation' of the- policy which tteglaud Bad-pursued 'toward Ireland, .The speaker expressed himself in favor of taking away, the plantations from the Southern owners and bestowing them as land , boa ntiee npo th Northern soldiers. Th Idea, as we intimated, i tot-at original ene, as it wa partially carried into effect against the people of Ireland, and as a means by which that people were to be utterly exterminated. For oor part, we protest against such a wholesale system ef spoliation a system- whiHi is calculated to plung the couatry irremediably into a .-war that this generation sua? never . see tbe end ef, and to aroase . feelings of hatred and revenge that may live through cento: ries.'-' ' - - - - - ' , - Th proposition So which w have" referred" is, hewever,; comparatively .mild ia ?it . character when compared with the soggestiov that -has been published in. one or two- of oor New York daily papers. It is nothing more or' less than ' proposal to incite the' -negroes - to insurrection, aad,byjodoiog,;to .precipitat. -th Southern portion of our con a try into alLthe horrors of a servile war, This woujd be to re enact on our own soil the fiendish brataTities recorded in tbe history of St 13oming6. It would be to . rouse the savage negro against our brothers in race and blood t it would b toeoanteuanve atroctliea j and barbarities at th sight of which owrwhole country .would stand appalled ; it would: be to encourage the whole black population in the South w rue is arms againss ine wanes vo. rouraer women and children to massacre helpless- infancy and age, and to give a license-, to the ex cesses and cruelties which characterise elf: negro insurrections. V- ... Have we no sunk so low in the scale of huT manity have' we so far forgot tee oor ebligattooa as Chriatise men,' even before ' v have rightly ulered into the heat of the -conSict. to ";caImy tolerat or sanction a propwaition as fiendish; aad asMahamaa as that against which the 'elder Pitt raised his voice f " ; . - - " '; : ' ' '-K' 'Eif ti Csbu&nn$ Icebergs, j ' ' 'The'Bbstod'Jouroalssys V' "i f :-' ; '-The Eeglish. screw steam fngat sllersey, Captain, II. ..Caldwelln has reached Halifax.-When .epproaching- the banks of Newfonndland, Captain CJaldwell fell in;with som icebertrs. aad ,thoeghit would be ioterresting to! experiment on Jheta, with riqed ; cannon. , Accoi diuf ly aa Armstrong sbeli, wss,. bred,,a,t, a? smair.iceberg about one nnnared and btty leetrbigttt . irom a distance ef four miles and a half... Seek' was tbe effect that a block of ice, judged to be about 6ne hundred tans, fell from the summit. This Urge weight from-th top of th bers removed taecen trwef gravity which ceed tbe wholefkbric to roll ever and rock to end fro, TJt was considered a-most satis&ctbry test of the. vast rsjige sad de- stnictiveness- of tis, icusilra 5 -Further, trials wer made with other projectilessnpplied to the navy, hollow, shot percussion and shrapBcD. end time faze shell taolten ironsbell, ail tending t exhiiit onafaaiure In modem warfar at S, fix r the extreme probability of every vessel bev tog la fiamsisoca slier she is engaged-v.- i B ; ...! ;s-.C;';"CSS.--ir ? wrI'"-'Xoorcsi- r-.!s a goodJbeginning ,In ti Senatev Bavard,crjDjawere Jjlreckinride aad Powell-of-IIertnru7 Polk, of tIissoari ; Pes r re and Keane i ! :j 1 tad Johnson, f Ten- r"?,'-rr""""" : '' f"5??.' ;,-,'! : - Tie f-s; cf Tree' "-ri'-'i and ro?k in th fce tf, s,:l tie re;orUcf tLeir 'adbesion, to lb tii!UwUS f.-5-ict cf JtHl Batla, is very sig- tu.cas. 1 . tne t"sr an- :rracss ox jtieectron Cir?H !T '-r' y e- i .-son ; vt: e tbe prrs- trm cf L;--r Jcir"i.fr'"n Teonasee eiows tLa utc, rc . .'.i t.re. .a cf lj Ucloa leulitc&i j Tia 3ve.T v. c?.1ZJb cc.Ice eras g'vea r. -.-t -- - "tt-'Vl! - r -1 r--"'-' rrr i 5 cf J ilea is sa; iott cf t" 1 1 . .".2c - it r poUcyl ' .' " Th op......? y.vc. -siallciU acLltd trorh without loss of time. Secretary Cameron presents to Correas bis first Bcport, gi tine., a clsax' stateaaot ct what has been done'ia the military department. since the 4th of larchj and Jm what remains' to be dooe. We 'present below a brief abstract of the The . forta. arsenals, e belonrias?to the Uaited Slates, hut stolen by the rebels, are eao merated, and then tbe heroioaud honorable conduct of SUjor Anderson and Lieulensuts Slecu mer and Jones is eontrasted with th treason Snd infamy of jQea. Tsriggs. ..A' high sensa ef satisv factton is expressed at the emphatic manner f which the peopl ha v rallied to sustain the Gov ernment; this being d5u lo auch an exteat even thai' tbe Government' is embarrassed to know bow lodtspoi of th troop that are offered. U; tbe otates called upon, to furnish troops by th proclamation oftbePresident, the Governors of Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, Arkan sas, Kentucky and Missoori refused 'to foroish their qaota. . .The people of Virginia. Delaware and. Missouri, however, did volunteer to the sup port of the Government- The District of Columbia also furnished no leas tbn 2.822 oCicers and men, making four full 1 regiments. Under the first eall for -r three months troops, the Covers meet has now in service at least 80 000 men. Under the second proclamation of May 4th, call ing for volunteers to serv during the war, there bav been reeeived 203 regtment8,'Tt infantry and rifiemen, with - th exception of four regiments of cavalry and two battalions of artillery. Of thes 203 regiments ther are now 153 in ac tive service, and all the remainder will be in the field within the next twenty day a .Th total fore now in th field o y b computed as follows ; - .; ;. Regulara and volunteers for three snontha ..and for the war... ... ............ .. 235,000 Add to this the fifty five regiments of vol.- " unteers for the war, accepted and not t yet in th service ..............50.000: T New regiments of regular army 25,000 7i,000 Total force now at command of Govt ' . ernment..., ......................... .."..310,000 Deduct the three mouths volunteers.. 80,000 Force for service a A sr tb withdrawal of the three months' men.................... 230,000 It will thus be perceived that after the discharge of the three months troops there. will be still an available ' force of volunteers amounting to 188000, which, added to the regular army, will constitute a totals fore of 230,000 officers, nod mea. . . . - , ,v- -, . .: .- " The increase of the rVgnTar army consists of one regiment of cavalry, of twelve companies, numbering in the maximum aggregate, 1,189 officers and men ; one - regiment of artillery of twelve batteries, of six, pieces each numbering in the "maximum aggregate, 1,909 officers and men; nine regiments of infantry, each regiment eontaining three.' battalions of eight companies each, numbering in; ibe maximum aggregat, 2,a52 officers and men, making a maximum in crease of infantry of 22,068 ofScers and men.--'A aimilar increase was' made in 1813, but a re-dactiow was mad afier ward. ' --Tb stimates for th;. probable expenses of thearmy amount in the aggregate to f 185,29 G,- 397 15. . .. .. ; The Secretary suggests th expediency of au enlargement of the powers of the Commissariat, flat good and palatable rations may in .alt cases be furnished ; the troops. The Report also eon eiders it necessary for Congress to adopt, measures for the re-orgnnlzation, upon a uniform ba. sis, of th military of the country. ' It atser recommends a further distribution of improved arms amosg tb militia of the Stslrs and Territories. : ' - . ". In view of the vastly Increased labors of the War Department, the Report commends the appointmsnt of an Asaiatant Secretary of War. From -iTartiiuburgv Va;DestuctIon of Fortylgiit Locomotlyesby the Confed- : crate Army. '-"-.- '- 'i Weieam from tbe ageaf of theBaltimor and Ohio railroad ut-ilartiasharg, who left that place en Monday morning, that the work of vandalism en the part of the Confederate army, in tbe wan ton destruction of Ibe property of the Baltimore and Ohio railroad and of the State of Maryland was resumed ' at TUvtinthurg -a Sunday. All the esxs svod toroosstivee that they could not carry away from Harper s berry were destroyed and- oowwe. neve hidings of the destruction of the locomotives aad cars at-.Mnrtiaibarg, -Our informant states that the work of destructions was accomplUbed . in the most - effectual. manner by piling immense quantities of cord wood over and around lee locomotives and nnng it. A number of gondola ears and coaf hopper were ! similarly' destroyed. 'Tb- entire valoe of ih property thnS rivsato th flames cannot be less than $O0OO9-I- S,::. z-, -.L ; The boul occupied by .B. H. Carpenter, Evj opposite tbe snops ol ta company, was with great, difficulty " saved, th intense' beat several time setting - fire to it. The . shops - were not a red, thong sj they, would have -casght from the . intense heat bad - it not been . for the effort of ova of th employees of the enmptar, who were , present aad extinguished th names. Ouriofor rosct, wilh th master" mechsnic" Ur Edwards, was arrested end taken before General Johnson, what is in charge onh Confederate -.troops at this poiat. ebarged- with- endeavoring to put oat th fir over th" locomotives. Tbey proved, however, that' they ' were merely " preventing th flames treat xUn4iog to th shops aad ware dismissed. - . .2 . :-- -. . r - The Confedsrat troops at Uartinsbnrg - and in th, vicinity are said to number about fiv thoasand five hundred, being a portion of Gen. Job nson ' command -from flarper's Ferry, tbe advaac guard - towards" Wilhsmaport being in eomssand of General Jack son. A collision with Gen. Cadwlders comatandV which 'was ap proach ig from several points, was confidently anticipated. Halt. Am. . , - . - i " j. - - - eTaeeBawsTi ' Y O J r v.. , i4:-&ji IaAiaB'BatUtV;-.-5r--' t , .'- - M l-- -CHtCldo; July 8, t- The ScPeel Pioneer of th 3d inat. gives psr- Ueulrsf a ngbt oetwren a party of.Lhippewas and Sioux. On th 1 0th of Jun it appears that the Sioux ttrited at SC Joseph, on th Pembina river. That day they " purposed returning some stolen horses : they were. fired upon by a party of Chippewas-encamped-in the vicinity. The Siou immediately return the fire. Six Chip De ws, three Sioux and. two Assinboioes killed. The Sioux finally escaped, leaving behind ;4Q horses. AUhonrh the half breeds at C Joseph refrained from t-.Iing part in iL fight, they are apprehensive of an attack. from at body, cf SiotXX sow encamped at Devil's Laie, 5 j . '' ev? - - A tzzzx. " ?"V 4 i tt ThfLTrPJ. IT j i jj After tb"ceremoni tt cf r 'l! "Pn'-rrowaell, who aa, gaUartly--aTSBg?!- XL deilh, being 'on tie stssd, tc-rb-, r:"c J pp.tls sect::"3.n Cs takes at Al3J;s2,:a, tier was a -eoeral 4eend t!rt tla.tistbgtioa'.l. be dbbyei as ae-jriosi-ty. ' A f ?nenj K-Vwu Ri'l tJJtl3 tick cf t a ju.2. ta 'tiUu ta vLaw. Lrowcen t 3 '.z,l lln li&rs.went vp ffc.ni. lis t-.--:-.Ua;a. r-z'rrrz'l rro-u, 1"-"- il 7 li-iJy BroceH t 'aced t at . his Teet, stepped upon aadcovering. arflopdly tieerai" wu -1 'Hase 'Cos.CcUii:tpic2 ta riser tl Lc j cf oar friendsand brethrsn Jift bei'u l ti ia'eai native Ohio, we send yea forp altlcailoa a por 'of a Wsiocic Coamualcatioa .Laid Lerelut eva-,- etfi - '--T.--.r--v V-f c Ji--r u , ;44A called eommuaieation of rnneer ili!:ry Lodge, Fourth Regiment. O. V. II. was boJ !s nt th Uasoaic Call of Jetterman Lod-e. ITJ. 00 the 24lh day""of June, a.. L- S Ral : - Brethren. Ktaent j J. Y. CantwelL V7. il. 1 James Cantwe'LS. Wj John Green. J. IV 1 J. II. God man. Treasurer; C B. OSmatead,' Seer. tary fl. N.- MeAb. 8.-D. j'T; O r.t-kr.W. J. I.j Col Lerin Andrews; Cpts.TT C T a-ning, J: McMillan, end Geo.: Weaver. ;.d Q ir-termaater, I.re (7nderwood.'Menbers of i'je. neer JITlitary Lode; Chas.-A. Hmmn; laao Kahn, JI T.- -Newbroujrh; B.J. -B,il!win,rJ." S. White, Albright; T. K. B. Kennedy. Wse. Mclvoekry. and, Israel Furrvosru-.il ewi he re- of Feuerman Ldg, 170; John IUlao.'f UotsQ Idge, M4-, lOOj A. Stsger, - lri Lev"-, ).r O. Ferri?, Walpole Lodge, , Oj M. ilotnlr Mt, Zou JLodge, O.; T. ' J.. Kinney, AbUod Lodg. O j and N. Mowry, Vnns Wge. O.' " ' On motion, a Committee' of Seven' was appointed -to draft resolutions 'expw-Miv ftf lie brotherly love ed fellowship vbat we most ror-dially extend to tbe brethren ef FWm n Ldge, and to all Brother Uaon ihreuzhmt -Yirgtnia. Broa. Banning, James Cao'weIJTobumaSu ger, Ferris, Mowry, aod iloody, were,anpaintl on said Committee, who reportei the followiur resoiuiiaos, wpion, alter remarks nd4 by Bros, Andrews, Olmsted, McAbee, Stager, Ferris, How ry, et a I., were unanimously adopted i ' ' Where&s, ll is fitting" on" this great day of Mason ie festivity, to rettrw from the-tomalt of military strife to th taered retreat ef th-Lodge Room, to renew upon the Altar of Idssor-ry" cc vows of eternal fidelity to iU principles., Bd.- IFAereas, In oar absence from- home, friends. . aad the fraternal association of much loved Ohio,-w have met in our sister .State of Virginia with warm hearts and true friend, who iiav kicoly tendered to us the privilfgea of their Lodze-r 00 m, in which we may erjoy the pleasures of f.ki fs-tive occasion! therefore, - - ?-"-." IietoUed. That for thii expraesloa .of their Masonic favor, we tender to them oar heart-fill thanks, and pledgv to them .our , supportand countenance in all their lawful aad laudable en. dertakings. . Reaolced. That in aceordaooe with "ih aoiri of Masonry, we extend to all true and loyal Ma-sonf wheresoever dispersed. .the warm, hand f fraternal greeting, nd -pledge - ttiem- oarVid in quieting our distracted country by evry means in eur power, consistent ' with our d uties 19 our Government, and the teachings of ourorder. Resolved, That the principles ,. and teaching of our patron saiot should b constantly l;rpt before us in all the ' migrations rJt "our mi'itsy career, and. exert n poo our lives that Infiasaoa which their high Mason i source suiiCca tisot to command. . t: , tJ There being no forthAr burines, the Lsfga closed in due Masonic form and 'barmonv. . 1 3. Y. CANTWELL, W ti,' : E. B. Olmsted, Secretary, .-i - - - Comptioas ia the War DepartiesV We copy th following front ibe Philadelphia Enquire?, a Eepublican paper.; V, . j tt It appears that the same system of plunder for-favorites, is beidg carried on by the Gcoersl Government, that was perpetrated in th t !", only on a larger scale"; , . ' V ' . j "A'Sattt Bcsisc38 roH a 'Cs surer Hixirm. On our aecood page will be found an abl aad dispsssionate letter in the New York Times, fr Jjort Alonroe ( where tbe editor now is.1 exrciln the extraordinary, proceeding of the Secr-ry f War with ' reference to th post of Sot'f at that -place. It appears that a Mr. Wood. ho bas experience in the business cf HmUr. has been d-splai-ed by Gen. Cameron, and that a ilr. VV Mtar, we believe, f this.city. who fcas o e perience, has been appointed, and that th baa been done in Ufinnoe of the r?oUr r,fT.r.s.i . tion' of n Oiuoril of Administration,-reach to the damage of tb7pflii!ics;rvire, ancL, for no other reason than -beewbae the Sec ery-tf War desired to give a at office to one of his personal adherent. -' ' v - - : '- i x : " It will.be seen, from this rorrespondeocelhat Geoeral Cameron ia ot oifly a"xjing tie poar er of his high c fSe. by conferring hijrh, vpiU'ery 'a't oo the gang of worthless pofiMrisoa ia'hia trainy as we hsve" - heretofJre shown, but is act ally dejrrad ing his rwiiion as CahieM MuUr, bJ sTrasping the prt-fis of .the ca? ffand th garrison, with a ?iw to ihir diversion ietajji. pockets ot bis own .ner friends. . ir - - OYerw helming Defeat of the Sts :Ir-L:ts -i - . ia Seatttckr Glotious Stt:;,l Never was a party so utterly and fgnoml&Lasly routed as. theSecessiooists of Kentucky ver at ih lat election. , The popular, voice, ia over- . whelming for the -Union, fo the Secotd Con gressional District the DisafiiooUta r.a u-i ear-riedone coofttv.- In th Fon rth Ceo Tniitml District they have not eucceedVd is csrryir - any. Ditto in the Fifth District, They have r-ried no county in the Sixth Dwtrict. Di:Lo i 1 th Seventh District. - In the Eishth Diitrlii tie Secessionists have carried but three coqUlci. lalbe rfio'b District thev bav not saccr-r i in a. solitary county. In - tbe Tenth D;tr-' ibey have' carried" but one' eoantv: Iu t'. SoU State the mij rity araiost th SccessiouuU will be full fifty thousand. V' - 1 !l -. : .This expresmon Cllowinr ibeorrrei:'. aie vote fur tbe Uaton. Border-State Con should think, wjold -put a q-ieius to its Zicer sion fiction in Kentucky. 1. ThejStale bat coma, fo the glorious determination remain in ti vuion come wnat -tio. Una. 7 ASaening CorisutUa -XTesiti If our memory serves us rirtL Juia flif V an instigated appointment of. avsnaeliisa' eomntte to examine into th Hv Oak coarrac-v tered ioto by Isaac Toacev. late Secrets r? - f tie Navy. The Ciacmaati Caix mrrciL tl s .. - Bepoblican paper In Oh'o, makes grsve tii-tf of. wind ling and incapacity-against Ciieoq tveiies, tbe present incumbent of the same cdoe, Would it sot be well for John Helper Sberta ta ree the apoointment ef aootber amellifj com . mittee for tb benefit of Mr. Welles net fcr rate tip? tbe chief of swindlers Simon Carrr'-. We would also suggest that tb rtsa snd Gibson commi:t?,i:eir, Z',onn, l.:st Jin, and Edgerton, loll tt-Tiselrea ia rea-JIoei . to examine into, and report c--n, tv4 f -. iscisl transactions f WilTLam Dttiz. .'.. a 1 ( . tSUnd; Crom'nxider Ti.a i..': ... itVw3aV - .. -.iz.-.:. jCw" Thai" CioCiauAit Cuuii&UiJ. ,2 American ptople tn r-:cvc J, j- 3 '7 '--V "tiattierSf s2l Is r ""'- r" oil tta VTrrfMa i r" .." i 1 Tb Bepui;--s iv had powtr'-s' months, - I -.r Ceser-! Lt-c t s r . . 1 $ 7 rr Pres'.Jent's 'rc-.i tTcc-s, "Isjt-- -- Atlic-tc.n Zc-LtiiLt Ti;jutls 1 (loT"n""?tl. cp??r i's r,??9ct f-r..a UcI'-t D: -.""-ziy w. I.taaxU Cen X ft. "sUaen." Ls cads tie annoo&c- rt crrwsr6eJ--Mrearlaed.', Lt -"'".; motto. |
