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- w t'-'"' I -lIlllMawaBnwBBBw ' 1 ." 11 " '-sawasBBwa- i J"" ' " --- qbw, i i VOLUME 3 Ik yi. fittaoefa'ie Banner di l. iunrcn. O ' ee la XToiiTr rd' Block, Third Story $ J J ithla aU Btlu f 9,00 tUr th x- : rnm Mon'iBtnlN YorVr. UXGS TO KATE. V ' '' ; ar. a vc'cuiit. . Tb trmita of oia mt thm. Cld 7o ber m4 obUi, SH lead Tm ia tn pmti T hUaM, If or plead yoor ai in ralau Thtr! dli-EU, BodeJtdaxM, And worthy -of y oar 1ot j - aico asd boaaUfI ia &UM A xentlo m a doT. CoaaiBi-Kata iaUllifoat, At wo may woll appoao j Bor fraitfal Blind U oror boat Oa-tellif ktt abo knows. . IWi iitri-TAd : abo'a w bsearo, " Tim hard to and bor oat, ; for abo ia oftoa vary aaro . To pat yoar wita to roato. ProTri-Eato'fl a atabbora maid, Ebo'a nro to baro her way, Tb cavillias and ooniraryjado Objoeta o all yoa aay. - Tbero'a alter-Kato, a perfoct pet. Much ginn to dirpato, Htr prating tonguo can aoror rait Ton eaaaot br rafau. Tbere'a dUlo-Kato.nito in a fret, Who fail to her iini. Her eao i qnito nnftirtanate, - And aorely ont of joint .Eqiro-Eate. no one will w, Tbo tbinjc woald bo abanrd. She if o faiiblci and nntrue. Ton cannot take her word. .-; There 'a rindi-Kate. ahV gfx-d and true, And trivee with all her. might JJer duty faUbfully to do, i, - 'And iwtilea for tbe rlsbt. Tbero'a rutti-Kat, a country lata, Qnito fond of rnral Frenea,-bo lurea to ramltlo in the grata And through tbo eTor-greena ; Of all tbe -maidens, yoa ea?rftndf j TberaV none like edue-Kate, Boeanae he eloratea tho niiud, ; And alma for aoiaetbing great. ; HAXIMS OF WASHINGTON. ; The following maxima of Washington ooght to be published io every newspaper in the land mce a year : Use no reproachful language agaii at any oa" neither curses nor revilings. Be nol hasty to believe Ijing reports to the disparagement of any one. In yonr apparel be modest, and endeavor to accommodate nature rather that purchase admiration.Associate yourself only with men of good quality, if yoa esteem your reputation, for it is better to be alone than in bad company. Let yoar conversation be without malice or envy, for it is a sign of a tractable ar.d commendable spirit; and in cases of passion, admit reason to govern. Use not base and frivolous things again!t grown and learned men j nor very difficult qaee tions and subjects among the ignorant nor things bard to be believed. Soeak'not of doleful things in the time of mirth, nor at the table ; nor of melancholy thing as deaths or woonda; and if others mention them, change, if yon can, the discourse. V Breathe not a jest when none take pleasure in mirth. Laagh nor at all without occasion. Derive no man's misfortune, though-there teem to be some cause. ' Speak not "ipjerioaa words, either in jest or ia earnest. Scoff at ao one, though yoa may get occasion. ' . .. . " Ba aok forward, bat friendly and coarteoae the first to salute, sear and answer aod be not pansiva wheaJl is lima to converse. Keep to the fashion of your equals such as are civil and orderly with, respect to time and place. Ooiot thither when yon know not whether jou shall be welcome or not. . Be prebend not the imperfectioes of others, for that belongs to parents, masters and superiors. ..; Speak not in an unknown tongue in company. but in yasir.pwa .language and that those of quality do, and not as the aJgar. Sublime matters treat" seriously. . Think before yoq .'speak ; pronounce not im-perfeUyr nor bring put jour wotds too hastily, ibat orderly and diatint-tly. V - Tbera dwelt ia A 'tllajre of Mo&tange. at the teriod of the French Revolntion, two girls, Feii tt and TbeopbUe ; FernigV Both postered beauty of a! a weei.rand, attractive kind both vera modett,', utetnd mni apparently timid. The yoangeat was thjrteen JJL.?B: ; tha BightlT.sUtaekaC the ABStriaaftdananded no' imaaediaJUi and - stroeg: resistance, : B'ildieri 4iuj5 wauW. thestiUrtpu cjothea, araied ttaauelTn,aad eharxel iliw-pla- aWit parties in th front rack f th,iratioaa,l Oaards, v KotwhsUnding av's"r -S'jd pus tbaasaelTae ereetnall, GraeraJ Caeraoa Hie dUcoTerad ten nsarKed their )ntrept4 eoa daei aad preaenled than to Oenerai Damearieav who attached them, together1 with their father aad brother,. t hia ataXr , Nek -only pare, bat fw frent saapicioa, the srersj' the admiration ava jyide of the.erTaoU arnayi? 4 Thej istiagni ai themselves ia every actiao previoaa to April : 11 J3. Ia aa engagement Bear Braeeela, they ' nl lUailoaj lata ta mUaft f the UMatj Ipijctrg.. itcrarg Misccllnii when a general officer caHed I tbeoi to Burreo-der." The reply was a ball from the pistol of the yoo tiger,"whicb laid him dead at ber feet, and in lb v-broeotarj confusion they drew back in eafe-t.'V The Bme aiater, at the battle of Jemappea, ebarred a ETnngariao battalion with a email par. If of hone, and herself disarmed and took prisoner one of the most formidabfe of the grenadi ers. Oie bight on foot was nearly tbe same h her own when mounted and he was ia despair whea the mosical tones of ber yojee iajieg. 'General, this is a prisoner I hate brought yoa," MTealeA u Vim the sex of the brilliant officer. Felieite attended the Duke of Cbartree, aod neer. failed to charge the enemy at bis aide. Both the aiaiert aided ia tbe eaeape of Damou riez, accompany iog on theai aJ they passed. Ooce beyond porsoit, they reaamed tbe attire of their aec, made ao unnecessary display of courage, bat labored industriously to support of their aged father.: Thepphile died at Brussels nnmar ried. Felieite vedded a Belgian General. . Booth Beading' of the 'Ancient Zlan- ner." - - - A writer in the Atlaatie UonthTj gives an in- terestiog account of the late J. B. Booth, the tragedian. Among other instances of hiselocu tionary powers, he cites the inimitable manner in which be read Coleridge's "Ancient Mariner :" I have listened to Macready. toEdnnad Keen, to Rachel, to Jenny Li od, to Fanny Kemble to Webster, Clay. Everett, Harrison Gray Otis to Ur. Uhanning. Henry Ward Beecber, Weudell f hillips, Father Tnylor, Ralph Waldo Emerson ta Vic-tor Hugo, Coquerel, Lardaire ; but none of them affected me-: as I was. affected by tbia reading. I forgot the place where was, the mo-tiro ofay coming, the reader himself. 'I knew the poem almost by heart, jet I seemed never to have heard it before. I was by the side of the doomed mariner. I was tbe wedding guest, lis-toniDg to his story, held by bis glittering eye. I was with him in the storm, among the ice. beneath the hot and romper Bky. Booih became so absorbed in hia reading, ao identified wilh the prem. that his tone ai d manner were saturated with a feeling of reality, lie actually thought himself the marinr -ao I am persuaded while he was reading. As the poem proceeded, and we plunged deeper into its mystic horrors, tbe actual world receded in'o a dim, indefinable distance. The magnetism ol this marvellous inter preier had caught up hiniself. and me with bim. into Dreamland, from which w gently descended at the eud of Part VI., and ' the spell was snapt.". "And now, all in my own souatroe, .1 stood on tbo firm land,' . returned from a voyage iato the inane. Again I ftuud myself aeuing in tbe little hotel psrh.r. 'y the side f a man with glittering eye. with a third nomrb idj on th other side of the table. How Burnt fft hi Wife. In the tiogrphy of ft .bert Burns; by J. il Weern the fjltdaing account of the poets' roortship : '0f all ihe heroines of Robert JBieereorig8, the most celebrated is Jean Armour, daughter of a mazier mason of Mtuchlina. The poet perfectly described her as . " A dancin' sweat, youag baadsomo quean of gulls. lets heart." There whs a race at Mauchline towards the end of A pril, and when the dance com mejcedi in the evening, the lads were fooud in a large OMjorily. "In such rases tbe custom in Scotlai.d is for the young rnen desiring pa-tners to s'and at the door and invites, tana cerctnonie, the first girl that passes, until, the requisite number ha hea secured : and so it was that Jean Armour was invited in as partner of Rob Hervey. It happened that she and the poet were in the same figure, though unacquainted, when a little excitement and merry confusion was caused by a dog dashing through the window into the room, and running from one to another till.he found his master, who was none other than Burns himself, at whose feet the brute laid quietly down. The poet remarked, half aloud, 44 he wished he could get any of the lessee to love him as well as his dog." and the evening passed off without further reference to the unexpected intrusion. A short time after. Barns had occasion to pass through Mauchline. To save distance, be made from one point to another, "crosa fields," tbroogh the grounds of Mr. Armour, whose daughter Jean was out hanging up clothes to dry, and aprea ding aome on the grass to bleach. The same faithful dog was with him, but ran ahead of his master to the busy maid and laid down upon and muddied her clean sheets. When Burns came up, she n qnested him to call his dog jff, which be did, and with the same breath, paid her a handsome compliment. She blushed, and asked him with a smile, if he had "yet found a lass to love bim aa well a hia favorite dog." "No," said Barns, "aolees it is injou, Jen- J-. ,: ' :s-r- , And from that time forth they were betrothed and finally married. - A DiiScnlt Question Answered. ; Can any one tell why, when Eva was uiano-faetnred from one of Adams ribs, a hired girl wasn't made at the same time to wait ou her V We can. easv I . Because Adam never came whining to Eve with a rnpged stocking to be darned, a -co liar-string to be tewed on, or a glove to he mended,rigjit away. qaick now I" : Be cause he never read the oewspaper until the ton got down behind the palm-trees, aod then stretching himself, yawned out, 'Aint supper 'nostrea dy. my dear ? Not he. - He made the fire and hneg over the tea kettle himself, we'll venture, and polled the radiahee, peeled the bananaa.'and did every thing else that he'dvtgbt to.; iHe mU-ked the cow, fed the chicken, -aad looked after the pig himself. - Hef never brought home half a dosea fneuds to dinner, whea Eve aadaYaoy fresh pomegranate, aad. the mango aeasoa was Oter 1 1 Ha never stayed out anUl elevea o'clock to a ward aseeting, hurrahing for ma out-and Ou r-candldate,' 'and J theW sooIded becansa'.'pooi dear Ere was iitUng ep aad crying inside the galea; i He nerer played billiard, nor drove fast hones, mow choked Eve with; cigar-moka? He never load around eornei groceries, while aoli t ry Ee was rocking little Caa' cradle at homa. Ia short,' he didn't thiak she was speeiafy erea t-j c , gM;;.AM kim mmA I woaaas aaicauen oi osbisi uarroa, coiaiu.nu xg tedI for tbo purpoae of watt ng on him, aad waa I h forwg Fort Batterat j Cannot adai. the nder tbe tmpraastoa thai it disgraced a maa toitetma prr.poed. The terms offered are these: Itgatas a wifs'a earaa a tula. That, ike rea-, MOUNT YERNON, eon that Eve did not need a hired girl, and we wish it was the reason that none of her fair dea cendanta did; Life Illiuiraind. ' ' .' . . , Hechahicf. ' ' No country has greater cause to be proud of U mechanics than tbe United States, ,1a the pursuits of mechanism thousands have won for thevaelvea a;name that will never be forgottee and our list of most illustriona etateamen abowa that very many of those who have risen to .the highest distinction ware edacated to gain their bread by mechanical labor, tie is, in every sense of the word, a creator bringing some thing into existence which did not before, in that form, exist. By his energy and industry our country has been belted with iroa roads, and the water made to ferment with shipa, steamers, etc. Cities, no der his intellect, have, as it were, sprung into existence at the waving of his magic wand. Tbe hum and buzx of his machines are heard stag ing their monotonous tongs ia every city aad Tillage, each proclaiming tbe majesty of labor. We honor and respect the Mechanic, aod cordr- ally invite anch si desire to express their opinion on the Science of Mechanica to furnish us short essays, and whenever we can do them a lavor we are in readiness and willing. : One object of thir paper is to protect the rights of Mechanics and Inventors, and if we fail to do so, it shall be by on intentional neglect of out.- Scientific Am erican. FORT nATTERAS TAKEIV. OFF1CAI BEPORT. THE EXPEDITION ENTIBELY SUC- CESSFUL. . ; Over Six Hundred Prisoners Taken. . Washinotok, Sept. 1. The following ia an o&loial report of tbe Hat teres affair : To the Secretary of the Navy :---I have to in form you that we bare been eminently success lul. All tbat could be wished for by the mos1 bopeful baa been accomplished. We are taking on board the Minnesota officers and men num bering, six hundred and fifteen, who surrendered afer a bombardment from our fleet during the larger portion of two days. After landing the prisoners at Ne-York I aball return to Hamp ton. - T (Signed,) S. H. STRIKOHlf, . Blockading Squadron. ; The articles of capitulation agreed on between Com. Siritigbam and Gen. Boiler and SaibDoi Barron. comisand:ng the naval force jOS.-lsri- CoH" Martin ' and Maj. Andrews, commanding lnd forces nrider said Barron, Martin and Aa-drevyr and air munitions, arms, men and properly be unconditionally surrendered to the Govern merit of the United States on terms of full capi tulation and tbat the officers and men shall re reive such treatment as is due to prisoners o' war. ' - . Another official account aaya ihe expedition to Hatteraa inlet reeolted in a signal victory ov er the rebels, capturing two forts, twenty-five cannon, a thousand stand of arms, and 615 pris oners, among whom are Capt. Samuel Barron, Liewt. Sharp and Dr. Brown, late U. S. N. and Maj. Andrew, TJ. S. A. ' - The loss on their side is not learned. A few are known to have been killed and a number wounded, many of which were carried away, Lieut. Murdot-k. late of the United States Nevr among the number, with loss of arm. We had no casualty of conseqoence. The surrender was unconditional. About three hundred men 'were landed amid heavy surf. When the men were hauled ia and commenced cannonading at 10:15 A. M., on the 28tb, and kept up at intervals all day, recommencing on the 29th .with increased effect. Tbe enemy attempted to land about nf- teen hundred men, but were driven back. At 11 30 they displayed the white Sag and were for oed to surrender at discretion. It is believed that, many of the wounded and killed were sent on board rebel steamers in the Sound prior to the capitulation. Gen. Batter has arrived in Washington. The new of the victory caused unbounded ln7- . . . . . . . . The result of tbe expedition is said to be our possession of the eBtire North Carolina coast. The expedition waa plaoned by experienced of ficers in corinecti n with the Navy ' Department before the meeting of tbe last Congress, but had been delayed till the 26th. . ' Among the papers captured waa one from the late American Consul at Rio Janeiro, to Robert G. Scott, giving a list of al! vessels leaving or to leave that port during the month, with a full de scription of cargoes. Ae.- By this rebel priva teers knew when and where to look, aad six na med in the liat were captured. : - Col. Max Weber is placed ia" command at Fort Hatteraa and Col. Hawks ia Fort Clark. A portion of" th fleet remain there. Several important book and paper were captured, dis closing plan of the rebels. ' -r - i e . " Horo of the Hatteras Inlet Affair. ; ' WaSBnrcToar, Sept. 1. The agent connected with the expedition re ports that the force were landed and drawn op ia liue ou the beach, when it was found that there were 319 men under Col. Webber, of the 20it New York regiment. ' At this time "the wind raised a little, and "it was found impossible to land more troop. They proeeededup the beach, capturing one brass field piece aad one horse. The force then advanced to; Fort'Clark.'whieh bad been evacuated, but were1 compelled to re tire again, owing to the shells of the fleet falling therein, and marched ba;k to the plaee of land ing, and there bivouacked for the night.' " . " " Early the next morning, they again returned, and the fleet com menced bombarding the second Fort, called Fort Hatteras, which soon afterward displayed the white flag, when the Fort wa en- tend by our trooper - - - - Oar officers were conducted to the tent of Commander Barron who was in command of the force. : The Commander placed in the hands of Lieut. Neigel the following proposition which was immediately carried to Ga. BotlerJ' ; Memorandam of the flag officer, Saauel 'Bar roe, C. 8. N.;-effer ta arreadet Fort Hatteraa, with all tbe arms, ammunition or war(;tae oncers to be allowed to go out with side arm, and the nea witkoularms ta retire. 51 ' a.:'av-. (Sigaed) ! m ttMXLOtt; Commandiag aaval defense of Va. A NC--' Fort HaT-nwir?: 2---Tbe following dia-patch by CaaL Crosby; 0. 8. and Lieut. Nte-gel. waa.taade.ua reply t ' ; a s Memorand am of Major F. Butler Major Ge era! commaodiag the U. 8.' A. inT reply to th, r T . . u .kJi. 2 Foil caj italatioa. The oficere aad aaea to be OHIO : TUESDAY, treated as oriaoner cf war. No other terms ad m issable. Com mandicg officers to meet on boa(d the flag shib Minnesota to arrange details. Upon tbe reception of this, the Commandant called a council cf war oi uia neta omcers and accented the term offered and proceeded to the flag ship to arrange the deUils after which the prisoners were put on noaru in- nag . snip and tbe stars and stripe hoisted. ' . The official account of Geo Bailer give ry minute particulars of the' expedition and engage-meat, but presents no aew features. lie aays Fort Hatterne mounted 10 guns and4 numoutt- ed, also 1. large 1& inch Corn mb tad ready for counting. . ; - :Z" l : The position .of the Fort is an exceedingly strong One. nearlv surrounded 'on all aides by water; and only to be approached by a march .of 500 yards cireoitoosly over a long neck oi fund, within a half musket range and over a causeway a 'few feet only in width, which waa commaaded with two 32 pounder gens, loaded with grape and canister. 4 -' ' r Fort Clark, which la about 700 yards northerly ia a square redoubt moon ting fire guns and two six pounders.- Tbr" enemy bad spiked these guns, but io a very inefficient manner upon abandoning tbe frrt the day before. .'- V . Gen. Butler says oa consultation with flag officer Strrngham and Commander Stillwager, I determined to leave the troop and bold the Fort, its importance, and because if - again in posses -ion of the enemy with a sufficioct armament, of the difficulty of recapturing it. '- . ; The importance of the point cannot be overrated. From there the whole coast of Virginia and Morth Carolina, from Norfolk to Cape Look out, is witbia oor reach by light draft vessels which cannot possibly live at sea daring the win ter months. . From it offensive operations may be made upon the whole coast of North Carolioa to Bogue Inlet, extended many mile inland to Washington. Newburn and Beaufort- In the language of the Chief Engineer of the rebels in an official report, it is the key of the Albemarle. in my judgment it is a station seeena in im portance only to Fortress Monroe. - On this coast as a depot for coaling and-eopplies for the block ading sqnadron. It is invaluable. As a - harbor for our coasting trade, or Inlet from the winter storm, of from pirates, it is of the first impor tance. By holding it, Hatteras rgbt may again send forth, a cheering ray to the storm beaten mariner. .'--.'-'-- . The remainder of Gen. Butler's report is ta ken op in making honorable mention of officers and men under him, who ' distinguished them selves. I t BDpearf tbe Harriet Lane and trans port, with Col. Haakint regiment aboard, got ashore on the bar previous to the " -"capitulation, and were immediately under the guns of the Fort. Missouri Proclaimed TJnier Hartial Law Proclamation of Major Gen. Fremont. . ' ' t : St. Lopts, Aug. 31. The following proclamation was! issued this morning: : ... . JiEAIHjnARTKRS WtSTEtty DEP T, F St. Locjs, Aug. 31, 18GI. j ' Circumstances in my judgement of sufficient ' urgency .render it necessary that tho Commanding Genera cf the Department should B'sur- ad ro i oistrari po aet-.of 4V .Siaie ..lia denized condition, ihe' helnieseoesi ol.' the civil authority, the total insecurity of life, and the de vast at ion of property by bands of murderers and marauders who infest nearly every count? in the State, and avail themselves of tbe public misfortunes and the vicinity of a hostile force, to gratify private and neighborhood vengeance, and who find ao enemy wherever they find plunder, noally demand the severest measures to repress the dai ly increasing crimes and outrages which are dri ving off tbe inhabitants are ruining tbe btate. In this condition tbe public aafetv and tbe suc cess of cur arms require unity of purpose without let or hindrance for the prompt administralioa of affairs. In order, therefor, to anrpresi disorders and maintain, as far a vow practicable, tbe pablie pace, and to give security and protection to the persons and property of loyal citizens I. do here by extend and declare established martial law throughout the State of Missouri. : - The I,nes '6f the srmy of occupation in this State are for the present declared to extend from ieveoworth by way of the posts of Jt-fferson City, Rnlla and 1 ronton, to Cape Girardeau on the Mississippi River. AH persona who shall be taken with arms in their bands within these lines, 6hall be tried by court martial, and it found guilty, will be shot. The .property, real and personal, of all persons in the Stale of M.swuri, who shall take up arms against the United State or, who t-hall be directly proven to have taken active part with their enemiee in the field, is declared to be confiscated to the public use, and tbeir slaves (if any they have) are hereby declared freemen . All persons who shall be proven to have destroy ed, after the publication of this order, railroad tracks, bridges or telegraphs, shall suffer tbe ex. treme penalty of this.1avr. All persons engaged in treasonable correspondence, ia giving or pro curing aid to the enemiea of the United States in fomenting tumults, in disturbing the public tranquility by creating and circulating false reports, ot incendiary documents, are in their own interest warned that they' ar exposing them-selvet to auddea ani severe punishment. All persons.who have been led away from their alle giance are required to return forthwith to their homes. Any such absence without a!uc;at cause will bo held . to be presumptive evidence against them. - Tb object of thi declaration ia to place in the hand of the military authorities the power to give instantaneous effect to existing law and to supply such deficiencies a the conditions of war demand ; but. it is . aot-inteoded to suspend the ordinary tribueal of the country ; where the law will be administered by the civil offices in the usual manner, ard with their cua-i tomary aotbority. while the same can be; peaceably exercised. - The Commanding: General will labor vigilantly for the publia welfare, and in his ; efforts for tbeir safety, hopes to obtain not only the acquiescence but tbe active support of the people of the country.'. - . : : : ' j ; :v (Signed J. C.. FREMONT, ' . - : i ; Msjor-General, Commanding ; ; t"Voat tAa Xaeroota Democrat,, Aug. V27.j ' Great Excitement near Lacrosse, T7iscon. Dan. Bice's Rhinocerot in the HiTerir . 'v ' It will be reoolected that, on the 20th instant tbe ateamer Key. City, bouad dowai eolltded with tbe steamer Luxerene, having i-ea -hoard Dan Bice' Circua troops, trained animal, etc. The oagecontaining the trained Rhiaocaro. svelghing over four-thousand pounds, which wasoa a barge alongside, was knocked into the river;;. .vThe door of the cage was apen, the animal -being tied to the front end of it a chain whiei -ra faatoaed to the aaouater'a , noe. . Ia hope; that athe : cage might ia aceideat have been broken o as to af low the Rhinpcerou to escale, several of Rice' men werasnda3oBj5 thabaak-of the rirer, but, whsn, tsoxning caBa.aoivsM-xd; Mm? ioald be een, and after waitinj a few days the raen returned to tbe company) ..,,;f;. ';.Z Saaay moreing, two me? b'viag six mile below here, aw from the bank of the irirer, .wha , they supposed tobe a raw-boat bouom tide ep in the aloogb.2 , They soon ot a akiff and pulled to the place, and when within, aa.they tbnogbt about six rod of tb suppoaed boat, h tank and they returned. . " "' ; '. '.--: Tbe pilot of th steamer Golden Era, censing up Saturday, aaw near the same place whit ha took to he a lar browa kena floatiB ia the' SEPTEltfBER 10, slough.'aeveral tods ahead but as it sank be paid do attention and kept on with the boat. , - Sunday afternoon, Charles Wrightman, P. W. Brown and Robert Bggleston, while roasting green corn on the bank of the alpvgb, five miles below here were half scared to death by hearing a heavy tramp, and in a few moments tha. Rhinoceros as he appeared here on. the occasion of hia first visit in July- mlaut ' the blanket and chain in hia nose, rushed upon them with a terrible bellow, catching Eggleston on his snout and throwing him, as he says, at feast fifty feet over and back of bim, breaking an arm and two rib ia the fall. The monster plunged into the river, aad the other two persons, badly scared bat not hart, procured a boggy took tbe seat out, filled the box with grass, and a blanket and brought Eggleston to hia home in the city, where be it now under the care of Or. Cameron. The riba were evidently broken by lie snout of the animal as the fleak waa badly torn. The"slough" in which the animal la at present, is about fire miles belotr here, very deep, with muddy bottom, and though it ia just such a place as he was captured from in the East, there ia now telling how long he may -remain qaiet without taking a notion to prowl around the conn-try in search of better fare. -This farenooa ser. era! sportsmew went down to the epot to make arrangement for his capture, when, if successful, they can start a show of their-own. He was seen this forecoon, swimming in the water of the slough, but aank after aporting, if we may call ft, a few moments with back and nose above water. About a hundred persons have gone down there to help in hia capture. Another Skirmish in Western Virginia. Wbkeuxo, Sept. 2. ; Tbe secessionists encamped at Worth ingtoa, Marion county, 400 in number, were attacked by Col. Crosamaa. of Gen. Kelly'a Staff, with two companies of U. S. troops a little after daylight this morning. The secessionists were too strong for him, and he was obliged to fall back with the loss of two men. - The expedition from here last night had not reached the scene of action. At our latest advices two pieces of artillery were sent to Cross mau'a relief from Clarksbcrg to-day. He reports that he can hold the enemy in check until reinforced. - A Dearly Bought Victory. - From late Southern papera we make op tha following list of field and regimental officers killed, at the battle of Bull's Run, from which it will le understood why Jeff Davis pronounced it a "dearly bought victory." CONFEDERATE OFFICERS KILLED.7.'- .'- General Bernard E Bee, South Carolina. Col D. K. McRae. North Carolina- Col. Charles F. Fisher, North Carolina. T-.Brig Gen. E. K. Smith, Regular Army, v Gen. Francis A. Bartow, Georgia. Col.. Lamar. Georgia. "- . 4. . r . . - tioUoaj Second Virginia ttegiiwwt.-;-- Col Mason, of General Johnston's Staff. . Col. Francis J. Thomas, of Baltimore.' . Lieut-Cot vBenj. J. Johnson. Hampton Le Kon- -. ;:7v ; -..-: COXFEDEZATE. OmCKSS WOrVOED. Capt. P. T. Mooie, First Virginia Volunteers. Maj. Robt. Wheat, Louisiaua Battalion. Col. Gardner." '. Col. Wade Hampton, Hampton Legion. ' , Col. L. J. Gatreli, Seventh Virginia Regiment. Col. Jones, Fourth Alabama Regiment. : Col. C. H- iavan, f Ge. Ree' Staff. 'Maj. Scott, Fourth Alabama Regiment. Maj. Stevens. Aid to Gen. Smith. Major Wheat was previously reported deal -H( mere are now prospect oi nis recovery en tertained. The Federal forces lost no field or staff officers. The following ia a complete list of the regimen, tal officers killed and wounded. KATIOXAlr OFTICEBS KILLED. : ' Col. Cameron, Seventy-ninth New York. Col. John S. Slocum, Second Rhode Island. Lieut-Colonel Edward B. Fowler, Fourteenth New York. KATICNAL CFFICERS WOUKDED. Msjor Sullivan Ballow, Second Rhode Island. Lieut-Col. John A. Creiper, Fire Zouaves. Lieut-Cdl. Robt. S. McK. Elliott, Seventy n-nth New York Militia. CoL Farnhara, Fire Zouaves.. Col. Heintzelman. Seventeenth U. S. Infantry. Col: Hunter, U.S. A. Col. W. G. B. Tompkins, Second New York Col. A. W. Wood, Fourteenth New York. CoL Corcoran, prisoner, slightly, hurt. TThat Mr. Corwin ! Doinj. Some weks since, Bays the New Orleans Delta of the 25tb, we stated, on the authority of a Cincinnati paper, (Tbe Gsiette,) that a letter had been received from Corwin, the Federal Minister to Mexico, atanng that he hadlobtaTned from the Mexican Government the privilege of marching Federal troops through its Territory, for the invasion f the Southwestern portion of the Southern Confederacy. The subjoined extract, from the Mexican paper at Matamoras, El Noticioaco, see ma to be a confirmation of the statement. The Houston Telegraph, of the lTtb inst from which we take the translation, remarks editorially t From' the Matamoras Noticicioso of the 2d inst., just received, we take the following extract from a Journal published at the city of Mexico. The Noticiosco donhts it genuineness ; we do not however, for reasons we have twice gie"n before. Corwin i carrying oaf his mission as sure as fate, and has thoroughly involved Mexico in bis plans. Our belief is that' Texas ia to ae invaded both by land aod sea aa sooo as the weather be comes cooU The invasion will doubtless be by tbe southwest. , It is not impoasible thai Wilson's Zouaves ar being acclimated at Santa Rosa Island for us in Texas.; Let a beprepated. . Tbe extract from El Noticioaco ia as foQowa : We give now a report conaeeted with raet previously published by at, aad which ia tall of im-portance and interest.- . . i- : : - . Mr- Corwin has petitioned ihe Mexican Gov-ernment to grant free passage through Mexico, to such troops as may be Ordered by tha . Govern meat at Wtehiagtou to operateagainst the South? era States of the Union, ; under guaranty of a special treaty wjch it aaid to aHay all urpieioo which might otherwise .have arisen aa to their destination and th intention of tbe Government k represent; .-.IL ---j li-.-t-r- .t.,-;-. -- Tb;GovernmeBt hat at once granted.tha. rai quested permission fully and without aay eortui-tioa of guarauUea, and Mr. Corwin tayt ihat tki ample preofof the eonfldenca aad good oi behalf of Mexico eaaaot fail io isSaeoce its futtrre destiny, and will at all event be grefBDy.acknowl-edged by the American Gorerament. Aa aooa as thia arrangement waa mad public, it caused intense' excitement 7id eaibasiasm amoog the Strang rs here, of whose about Yix hundred are actaellv under am?, and who la'elv co-operated eSoieoey to bring about the defeat just sastaiued by the ractlouary Fart;. Interesting Darietir. 1861. Captul?. a .Tederal Captain and JZiHizs , - - - -j --; uuara. ; v- i Accounts 'from - Weston, Va., represent, that that section has been ia a feverish atate of ex citsmeut for several day. Mase-gers hare been arriving at brief periods,-reporting' the appearance ef detachmeat of rebel iafaatry and cavalry at various point along the wagoa roads leadlag ta our force oe the Kaaawha,' coming even withia 23 mile ot Weatoa. . No train goes out without a guard. Ou- Wednesday, Captain Spragoe, of the Ohio Tth, waa on hie way home oa fariongb, with a guard cf four dragoon. When some 15 miles .beyond Sattoa they were fired itito by a party of rebel cavalry, and one of the guard, named John Dsbolt, from FayeUe county, Pa., was killed. Another, Htnry Brooks, was wounded. The attacking party was la too strong force to be resisted, and Captain Spragce, with two others, were captured. One mie-esce pad and brought tbo inteiligeoce. The body of the wounded man was afterward discovered, e tireiy stripped, aod left like offal, by the wayside. Captain Spragoe commanded Company E of tbe ?th, aad it well known throughout Northern Ohio. The cavalry company who attacked and took prisoner Captain Sprague are said "to belong to Ex Governor Wise's command, and the fact tbat they have committed depredations with o a short distance of our force, and that other parties ar marauding through the woods between Weston and Gauley, indicates that this section of the State is to be the theater of annoying and destructive guerilla war far, ta which ao man's life will be safe. How a Han Feelt when he it 7orLnded and How it Goei to be Shot at. W take the following from a letter writtea by one of the gallant Iowa volunteers, who fought in the battle near Springfield, Mo. I was standing, or rather kneeling, behind a bush, reloading my musket, just before the reb els engaged in Ibis close work retreated, suddenly I felt a sharp pain ia the shoulder, and foil to the ground. Jumping up, one of tbe boys asked me if I was hurt. I replied I thought not, drew op my masket to fire, when be said: "Yes you are abot right through the shoulder." 1 think it was this remark, more than the wound, which caused the field all at once, to commence whirling around me in a very strange manner. I started to leave it, with a half Obbc ball in my shoulder, and oaea or twice fell dowa with dix sioess ; but in a short time recovered sufficiently to be able to walk back to Springfield, nine miles where the ball was taken out. I was very much pleased to find that the wound was not a danger euaona.'. .V- . . ' ' -' ! - - --;-In the battle, every sensation was drowned in excitement. We had no time to think of being ktMed, except ween standing to ba shot at by oaanon. without a chance to ahool back. - This, ,r-!?e 4TljretUel Wfaeo we bad a chance to use oar muskets, ev ery thought end feeling waa gone, except the one thought ofabooting down Abe rebels a rap idly as possible. Our regiment certainly did it snare ot toe worx tbat o ay. - CoL Eohert B. ZlitchelL' We take the ioUowiBg from the Chicago Trib une t Col. Mitchell fell ia battle at the tame time with Gen. Lyon, by a shot tbroogh the thigh by a musket bull. It teem that in the charge in which Lyou fell was not participated in by all tbe regiments, " as has been stated, but was really made oy toe riaosae Zd, with tro or three companies of tbe Kansas 1st, lad by GenLyon and Col. Mitchell. Tbe Kansas boys did not call oat lor Lyon to lead them on account of their having no commander. They bad their own Colo- nl, and be foogbt as bravely at any man could, and did aa nobly. The eoemy were -lilng on the sootberty slope of tbe bill and in tbe underbrush on the edge. Lyon, approaching trom the north, enaeavorea to take possessirm. Three charges were made tbe fifat by the Missouri regimeBts, and toe second by the 'owa. In both these the men were cut down like grain by the discbarge of tbe concealed enemy. Then the Kansas 2d, which had a porition across a Utile ravine, were called to the front. They had been impatiently waiting for their tern, and now they were ready. Wilh Gen. Lyon and Col. Mitchell at their head, and a few companies of tbe Kansas 1st, t bey marched gallantly op to the vary brow of tbe hill, when a heavy fire proceeded from the enemy concealed among the trees, and Lyon and Mitchell, with a score of men,, fell. The regiments did not yield, however, but held their own under a destructive fire, until the enemy were forced to give way. bat of &00 men in tbo Kansas 2d, 90 wete missing. CoL Mitchell was too badly wounded to be brought away, and waa left ia the hospital at Springfield. At his fall Lieut. Col. Blair took command and showed himself fully equal to the new responsibilities so sadly t crown upon bim.- The Body Onard of a Begro 'Sang. - The King of Dahomey, an African monarch who almost everybody baa heard of, hat a body guard of female which the European call th "Amazon Guard." The West African Herald that describes them : Tbey ate 3,000 in number, all females, and display such a degree cf ft. rocioos blood-thirstiness and hardihood as to bear a great resemblance to a host of mad tigres ses than to human creatures. They, utterly des pise death ; they show no mercy, to any living being in war j they are mad after , blood, ad seem not to know what means. Tbey are,' in fact, a troop of devil, ao to speak, who hideout wild Dees of manner, and the savage madness of whose demeanor ia times of excitement are to appalling and inhuman, at to bare - led many well judging persona to opio that these dread. fal creatures are periodically aabjeered to the influence of some species of drug which has this effect. The dress of the Amazona consists of a pair of loose trowsers, an upper garment covering tba breatt and a cap. - They are armed with gun. kaires and dagger t aome have blunderbus ses, others long elephant gun, while the remain. er carry to ordinary musket. , in their militarv exercises they display good discipline, well as a a . - v - onoenui uexteniy ana agtutj, r, IO The daapatch to a New York paper, that Ur. Ad&mi had .written hoot freos England that tha Coafedaracy would' -aooa L racegnixedj by Great Britain aaaotr Carpean Government, is aathoritieely denied. - Na deapatehee'aaTe beta Mceiveffffora VKaZ foraeveral flsj. ar,i. ( 7 : - . . r Xasaea Gtr. of RoekU?t Coaa,, lately moved a chimaey, 70 feet high, aH ataadi.g. fai or eight rod, turned it partly gonad, and raised it npo. a toee foaadatioa foufi-.... r . rMn tba a-rouad. A as oat remaikall frv-asj iv-ui Aswt- rr NUMBER 21. SH-Sorts of -hsgrsSis. S3- The hatury of tplndd eteel riled noa purchased by. Geo. Fremoat ia LI vwrpoot. arrived at St. Loait oo Friday. -; t SJ 44 Compromise rather . thaa rpitlomf, it the motto of Dwaaocrafj. " Separatloa talta thaa tamftiwise, it the declaraXloa of Ce;uh Iicant.,'t.;. :. - ; .iw-i AO It it reported that Major Get aril He Qellan, in ipeakiag of the hattl of Bait Cam, and depleting it, added, " but it wat a teaii reeoanoisance for Be. ; .. . t3T Holme county brags oe good hoeta aad plenty of 'them. The Republics states that withia the past two tnoath about t"3,CT3 Liv been paid oat in Holtaet ooasty for horaae. - gCj" A great ezefuaeot was got ep ia XTortht ampton a few etaningt since on eceoesi cf tbt) lost of a child. Tbe bells wore rung aad a general search Instituted, in the midst wbica lie child was found where it aad th heat right to ha xitQvttmndinlxd. . On Saturday last it bad been arranged ta destroy the office of the .Democratic Xlrvwvy a Marion, Ohio, but th design waa defeated ty two or three hondred Democrats, who were, on Itad to defend it. ' ' tT In a circular for hankers, just published in London, is given the amount of America ae. euritie held ia British hands, State' "stock, city bounds, railways, A. The 'amount U atlOO,-'000,000. " XO Five new companies are reported la ha organiting in Licking coonty, two at GreavCs, on at Newark, one at Kirkerarilla, aad pee at New way. ' ' JO Committees hare gone from PaioasvZle and Oberlia to Western Virginia, to attaad ta the dead and wounded of their respective vicinities ia the Seventh Ohio Regiment. ' " ' XQT The Boston Commercial BuUetiUTirt business changes gives seven failuraT and ' ao. pensions in Boston, fifteen in New York, tlrea ia Philadelphia, and twenty-five in vit place ' a total of fifty for the week. " g There ar said to be nine hundred colored contraband now in Fort rest Monro, of th fol lowing classes and vainer Able bodied idea, 300 ; old ma, 39 j - wotnee, f?S ; children, J35. Tetal-i-900. Value t506,000.i ': ' SQr Eight companies of CoL Gibson e meot, organising at Camp Nob'e, near TiCa ar already in camp, aad four of theca tare hea mustered iato tbe service. - ' ' tZJ' Mrs. G reenho w, lately arretted ia TTtul ington for treason ia the sister of lira. CtU, atid it therefor tbaaaat of Mrs, Stephen A. DeegUt. -" IO1" The Gazttte says th Commercial Hm done it utmost by wholesale denunciation and vituperation, without a tiagl fact or SpeeiCeatioa to destroy the public confidence in the Gorarve m9ot.n ; ' - - Massachusetts has thus fag purchased ae thousand seven hundred horses for military 'peg. poses, at a cost of $200,000. ' V. tSf Th War Department baa ordered - the recrniuog officers to cease paying the usual tVt) of two dollars for recruit. . ... .: ? 3" A Saratoga correspondent taytthai at a. large number of codfish dealers have lately fTed there it not so muck ef that M jilocraxy'attie springs aa usual, but that it place it toppUcd tj the famiiiet of army contractors. 1 gQ Two new steamer are being built ia England for the United States Gorerntoeat. which are to be plated with steel of four iaokea thickness, rendering these vessel shot aad bombproof, and protecting the boilers. , OVTht English Government Inspector of railways hat slated that th rata of speed oe railways should not exceed forty mile aa hour. . Jim. Mac, who whipped the Staley bridge Infant, wishes to accept Heenan's challenge, but dislikes the large stakes f 2,000 which Cn-an propose. The" American Champion' Jeavat the matter in the hands of hi friend, George Wilkes, who hopes soon to arrange the prelimi-nariea. - ' v-' gSy A quaiat writer of tentencet says, I hav seen women so delicate, that they wvra afraid to rida for fear the hone a-igbtTue'ewayi afraid to sail, for fear th boat might overset I afraid to walk, for fear the dew might iaJl hag I never taw one afraid to be (named." . - . tSf A caaaaamed Spenoeri-ef CiacionatLhas it is stated, invsnled a submarin bomb, that eaa be thrown into the water, and will explode aAeg it is submerged. ; - "'" If the Mobil New it good autuority, tba Congress ia session at Richmond ha impoaed a tax of fifty sentt on the hundred dollart in rsJae upon real esUte--slaves,merchan4ixe, rooeej a . fnterest, cattle, furniture, Ac. ; hut exsaapCrj the property of families having lest than gST According to the Richmond Enquirer tbe State of Virginia hat furnished tie IConfad erate service seven hundred aad fifty companies all uniformed and equipped according to lew. ' KJ ItttinUmated thU the Admi&Utratioa vnll no longer allow Kentucky to oceevy i ur' tral poaitioa. - - - tZT The Cleveland Herald publish t a patch from GatTIpolis, to the effect thu'tlsr .-were aot mora than 50 men missing from the Tik regiment, at that date; the Jlst. .Tie enum claimed io hav slain 15 aad Uka 60 pTisooers, Cpt. Shurtllff of Company C wat taiea prioa e f. j gy'xhe? CiBciaea Telegraph sUUf llui' ii'LktA.. Pimll arrived at Roma witL!atwa an.wvr " i r , w j day aft ni8rfro- New York. '- He fseid1 h Tepeli xeal!aat healih, aotwi;l.;a:gj tl-wspapef report of tit i tamineat CisihV ' " rOir '0,BB' li"0!. ci ritiii,. 1 is V-" uppoialed aa Asc!stast' A"JatTil Ce- rriT cTt-C- tnteir Is tie aroycf ll TJt u-X daJU. y12U yoBB 'genUsm'ea itrtt "vfclrf, for hia age, aad ef gr;ZI wtUil L;":-v'-l O- The 'Piuiior-; C-: : iltayt Ci t Fort Pitt wot Vf la tli1, ".-, Uvaracofveliat. -; der for tU 14. t- JciifatZ'... J ib asertereaadC:? isii "tlX-wi The-e taortare whea finished, wu! Beteafe C'j. lbraa inoha axiariar i'tfSAt i tZj foar Izchr ! ee ertrerae Hagth.
Object Description
Title | Mt. Vernon Democratic banner (Mount Vernon, Ohio : 1853), 1861-09-10 |
Place |
Mount Vernon (Ohio) Knox County (Ohio) |
Date of Original | 1861-09-10 |
Searchable Date | 1861-09-10 |
Format | newspapers |
Submitting Institution | Public Library of Mount Vernon & Knox County |
Rights | Online access is provided for research purposes only. For rights and reproduction requests or more information, go to http://www.ohiohistory.org/images/information |
Type | Text |
Description
Title | page 1 |
Place |
Mount Vernon (Ohio) Knox County (Ohio) |
Searchable Date | 1861-09-10 |
Format | newspapers |
Submitting Institution | Public Library of Mount Vernon & Knox County |
Rights | Online access is provided for research purposes only. For rights and reproduction requests or more information, go to http://www.ohiohistory.org/images/information |
Type | Text |
File Size | 7869.14KB |
Full Text | - w t'-'"' I -lIlllMawaBnwBBBw ' 1 ." 11 " '-sawasBBwa- i J"" ' " --- qbw, i i VOLUME 3 Ik yi. fittaoefa'ie Banner di l. iunrcn. O ' ee la XToiiTr rd' Block, Third Story $ J J ithla aU Btlu f 9,00 tUr th x- : rnm Mon'iBtnlN YorVr. UXGS TO KATE. V ' '' ; ar. a vc'cuiit. . Tb trmita of oia mt thm. Cld 7o ber m4 obUi, SH lead Tm ia tn pmti T hUaM, If or plead yoor ai in ralau Thtr! dli-EU, BodeJtdaxM, And worthy -of y oar 1ot j - aico asd boaaUfI ia &UM A xentlo m a doT. CoaaiBi-Kata iaUllifoat, At wo may woll appoao j Bor fraitfal Blind U oror boat Oa-tellif ktt abo knows. . IWi iitri-TAd : abo'a w bsearo, " Tim hard to and bor oat, ; for abo ia oftoa vary aaro . To pat yoar wita to roato. ProTri-Eato'fl a atabbora maid, Ebo'a nro to baro her way, Tb cavillias and ooniraryjado Objoeta o all yoa aay. - Tbero'a alter-Kato, a perfoct pet. Much ginn to dirpato, Htr prating tonguo can aoror rait Ton eaaaot br rafau. Tbere'a dUlo-Kato.nito in a fret, Who fail to her iini. Her eao i qnito nnftirtanate, - And aorely ont of joint .Eqiro-Eate. no one will w, Tbo tbinjc woald bo abanrd. She if o faiiblci and nntrue. Ton cannot take her word. .-; There 'a rindi-Kate. ahV gfx-d and true, And trivee with all her. might JJer duty faUbfully to do, i, - 'And iwtilea for tbe rlsbt. Tbero'a rutti-Kat, a country lata, Qnito fond of rnral Frenea,-bo lurea to ramltlo in the grata And through tbo eTor-greena ; Of all tbe -maidens, yoa ea?rftndf j TberaV none like edue-Kate, Boeanae he eloratea tho niiud, ; And alma for aoiaetbing great. ; HAXIMS OF WASHINGTON. ; The following maxima of Washington ooght to be published io every newspaper in the land mce a year : Use no reproachful language agaii at any oa" neither curses nor revilings. Be nol hasty to believe Ijing reports to the disparagement of any one. In yonr apparel be modest, and endeavor to accommodate nature rather that purchase admiration.Associate yourself only with men of good quality, if yoa esteem your reputation, for it is better to be alone than in bad company. Let yoar conversation be without malice or envy, for it is a sign of a tractable ar.d commendable spirit; and in cases of passion, admit reason to govern. Use not base and frivolous things again!t grown and learned men j nor very difficult qaee tions and subjects among the ignorant nor things bard to be believed. Soeak'not of doleful things in the time of mirth, nor at the table ; nor of melancholy thing as deaths or woonda; and if others mention them, change, if yon can, the discourse. V Breathe not a jest when none take pleasure in mirth. Laagh nor at all without occasion. Derive no man's misfortune, though-there teem to be some cause. ' Speak not "ipjerioaa words, either in jest or ia earnest. Scoff at ao one, though yoa may get occasion. ' . .. . " Ba aok forward, bat friendly and coarteoae the first to salute, sear and answer aod be not pansiva wheaJl is lima to converse. Keep to the fashion of your equals such as are civil and orderly with, respect to time and place. Ooiot thither when yon know not whether jou shall be welcome or not. . Be prebend not the imperfectioes of others, for that belongs to parents, masters and superiors. ..; Speak not in an unknown tongue in company. but in yasir.pwa .language and that those of quality do, and not as the aJgar. Sublime matters treat" seriously. . Think before yoq .'speak ; pronounce not im-perfeUyr nor bring put jour wotds too hastily, ibat orderly and diatint-tly. V - Tbera dwelt ia A 'tllajre of Mo&tange. at the teriod of the French Revolntion, two girls, Feii tt and TbeopbUe ; FernigV Both postered beauty of a! a weei.rand, attractive kind both vera modett,', utetnd mni apparently timid. The yoangeat was thjrteen JJL.?B: ; tha BightlT.sUtaekaC the ABStriaaftdananded no' imaaediaJUi and - stroeg: resistance, : B'ildieri 4iuj5 wauW. thestiUrtpu cjothea, araied ttaauelTn,aad eharxel iliw-pla- aWit parties in th front rack f th,iratioaa,l Oaards, v KotwhsUnding av's"r -S'jd pus tbaasaelTae ereetnall, GraeraJ Caeraoa Hie dUcoTerad ten nsarKed their )ntrept4 eoa daei aad preaenled than to Oenerai Damearieav who attached them, together1 with their father aad brother,. t hia ataXr , Nek -only pare, bat fw frent saapicioa, the srersj' the admiration ava jyide of the.erTaoU arnayi? 4 Thej istiagni ai themselves ia every actiao previoaa to April : 11 J3. Ia aa engagement Bear Braeeela, they ' nl lUailoaj lata ta mUaft f the UMatj Ipijctrg.. itcrarg Misccllnii when a general officer caHed I tbeoi to Burreo-der." The reply was a ball from the pistol of the yoo tiger,"whicb laid him dead at ber feet, and in lb v-broeotarj confusion they drew back in eafe-t.'V The Bme aiater, at the battle of Jemappea, ebarred a ETnngariao battalion with a email par. If of hone, and herself disarmed and took prisoner one of the most formidabfe of the grenadi ers. Oie bight on foot was nearly tbe same h her own when mounted and he was ia despair whea the mosical tones of ber yojee iajieg. 'General, this is a prisoner I hate brought yoa," MTealeA u Vim the sex of the brilliant officer. Felieite attended the Duke of Cbartree, aod neer. failed to charge the enemy at bis aide. Both the aiaiert aided ia tbe eaeape of Damou riez, accompany iog on theai aJ they passed. Ooce beyond porsoit, they reaamed tbe attire of their aec, made ao unnecessary display of courage, bat labored industriously to support of their aged father.: Thepphile died at Brussels nnmar ried. Felieite vedded a Belgian General. . Booth Beading' of the 'Ancient Zlan- ner." - - - A writer in the Atlaatie UonthTj gives an in- terestiog account of the late J. B. Booth, the tragedian. Among other instances of hiselocu tionary powers, he cites the inimitable manner in which be read Coleridge's "Ancient Mariner :" I have listened to Macready. toEdnnad Keen, to Rachel, to Jenny Li od, to Fanny Kemble to Webster, Clay. Everett, Harrison Gray Otis to Ur. Uhanning. Henry Ward Beecber, Weudell f hillips, Father Tnylor, Ralph Waldo Emerson ta Vic-tor Hugo, Coquerel, Lardaire ; but none of them affected me-: as I was. affected by tbia reading. I forgot the place where was, the mo-tiro ofay coming, the reader himself. 'I knew the poem almost by heart, jet I seemed never to have heard it before. I was by the side of the doomed mariner. I was tbe wedding guest, lis-toniDg to his story, held by bis glittering eye. I was with him in the storm, among the ice. beneath the hot and romper Bky. Booih became so absorbed in hia reading, ao identified wilh the prem. that his tone ai d manner were saturated with a feeling of reality, lie actually thought himself the marinr -ao I am persuaded while he was reading. As the poem proceeded, and we plunged deeper into its mystic horrors, tbe actual world receded in'o a dim, indefinable distance. The magnetism ol this marvellous inter preier had caught up hiniself. and me with bim. into Dreamland, from which w gently descended at the eud of Part VI., and ' the spell was snapt.". "And now, all in my own souatroe, .1 stood on tbo firm land,' . returned from a voyage iato the inane. Again I ftuud myself aeuing in tbe little hotel psrh.r. 'y the side f a man with glittering eye. with a third nomrb idj on th other side of the table. How Burnt fft hi Wife. In the tiogrphy of ft .bert Burns; by J. il Weern the fjltdaing account of the poets' roortship : '0f all ihe heroines of Robert JBieereorig8, the most celebrated is Jean Armour, daughter of a mazier mason of Mtuchlina. The poet perfectly described her as . " A dancin' sweat, youag baadsomo quean of gulls. lets heart." There whs a race at Mauchline towards the end of A pril, and when the dance com mejcedi in the evening, the lads were fooud in a large OMjorily. "In such rases tbe custom in Scotlai.d is for the young rnen desiring pa-tners to s'and at the door and invites, tana cerctnonie, the first girl that passes, until, the requisite number ha hea secured : and so it was that Jean Armour was invited in as partner of Rob Hervey. It happened that she and the poet were in the same figure, though unacquainted, when a little excitement and merry confusion was caused by a dog dashing through the window into the room, and running from one to another till.he found his master, who was none other than Burns himself, at whose feet the brute laid quietly down. The poet remarked, half aloud, 44 he wished he could get any of the lessee to love him as well as his dog." and the evening passed off without further reference to the unexpected intrusion. A short time after. Barns had occasion to pass through Mauchline. To save distance, be made from one point to another, "crosa fields," tbroogh the grounds of Mr. Armour, whose daughter Jean was out hanging up clothes to dry, and aprea ding aome on the grass to bleach. The same faithful dog was with him, but ran ahead of his master to the busy maid and laid down upon and muddied her clean sheets. When Burns came up, she n qnested him to call his dog jff, which be did, and with the same breath, paid her a handsome compliment. She blushed, and asked him with a smile, if he had "yet found a lass to love bim aa well a hia favorite dog." "No," said Barns, "aolees it is injou, Jen- J-. ,: ' :s-r- , And from that time forth they were betrothed and finally married. - A DiiScnlt Question Answered. ; Can any one tell why, when Eva was uiano-faetnred from one of Adams ribs, a hired girl wasn't made at the same time to wait ou her V We can. easv I . Because Adam never came whining to Eve with a rnpged stocking to be darned, a -co liar-string to be tewed on, or a glove to he mended,rigjit away. qaick now I" : Be cause he never read the oewspaper until the ton got down behind the palm-trees, aod then stretching himself, yawned out, 'Aint supper 'nostrea dy. my dear ? Not he. - He made the fire and hneg over the tea kettle himself, we'll venture, and polled the radiahee, peeled the bananaa.'and did every thing else that he'dvtgbt to.; iHe mU-ked the cow, fed the chicken, -aad looked after the pig himself. - Hef never brought home half a dosea fneuds to dinner, whea Eve aadaYaoy fresh pomegranate, aad. the mango aeasoa was Oter 1 1 Ha never stayed out anUl elevea o'clock to a ward aseeting, hurrahing for ma out-and Ou r-candldate,' 'and J theW sooIded becansa'.'pooi dear Ere was iitUng ep aad crying inside the galea; i He nerer played billiard, nor drove fast hones, mow choked Eve with; cigar-moka? He never load around eornei groceries, while aoli t ry Ee was rocking little Caa' cradle at homa. Ia short,' he didn't thiak she was speeiafy erea t-j c , gM;;.AM kim mmA I woaaas aaicauen oi osbisi uarroa, coiaiu.nu xg tedI for tbo purpoae of watt ng on him, aad waa I h forwg Fort Batterat j Cannot adai. the nder tbe tmpraastoa thai it disgraced a maa toitetma prr.poed. The terms offered are these: Itgatas a wifs'a earaa a tula. That, ike rea-, MOUNT YERNON, eon that Eve did not need a hired girl, and we wish it was the reason that none of her fair dea cendanta did; Life Illiuiraind. ' ' .' . . , Hechahicf. ' ' No country has greater cause to be proud of U mechanics than tbe United States, ,1a the pursuits of mechanism thousands have won for thevaelvea a;name that will never be forgottee and our list of most illustriona etateamen abowa that very many of those who have risen to .the highest distinction ware edacated to gain their bread by mechanical labor, tie is, in every sense of the word, a creator bringing some thing into existence which did not before, in that form, exist. By his energy and industry our country has been belted with iroa roads, and the water made to ferment with shipa, steamers, etc. Cities, no der his intellect, have, as it were, sprung into existence at the waving of his magic wand. Tbe hum and buzx of his machines are heard stag ing their monotonous tongs ia every city aad Tillage, each proclaiming tbe majesty of labor. We honor and respect the Mechanic, aod cordr- ally invite anch si desire to express their opinion on the Science of Mechanica to furnish us short essays, and whenever we can do them a lavor we are in readiness and willing. : One object of thir paper is to protect the rights of Mechanics and Inventors, and if we fail to do so, it shall be by on intentional neglect of out.- Scientific Am erican. FORT nATTERAS TAKEIV. OFF1CAI BEPORT. THE EXPEDITION ENTIBELY SUC- CESSFUL. . ; Over Six Hundred Prisoners Taken. . Washinotok, Sept. 1. The following ia an o&loial report of tbe Hat teres affair : To the Secretary of the Navy :---I have to in form you that we bare been eminently success lul. All tbat could be wished for by the mos1 bopeful baa been accomplished. We are taking on board the Minnesota officers and men num bering, six hundred and fifteen, who surrendered afer a bombardment from our fleet during the larger portion of two days. After landing the prisoners at Ne-York I aball return to Hamp ton. - T (Signed,) S. H. STRIKOHlf, . Blockading Squadron. ; The articles of capitulation agreed on between Com. Siritigbam and Gen. Boiler and SaibDoi Barron. comisand:ng the naval force jOS.-lsri- CoH" Martin ' and Maj. Andrews, commanding lnd forces nrider said Barron, Martin and Aa-drevyr and air munitions, arms, men and properly be unconditionally surrendered to the Govern merit of the United States on terms of full capi tulation and tbat the officers and men shall re reive such treatment as is due to prisoners o' war. ' - . Another official account aaya ihe expedition to Hatteraa inlet reeolted in a signal victory ov er the rebels, capturing two forts, twenty-five cannon, a thousand stand of arms, and 615 pris oners, among whom are Capt. Samuel Barron, Liewt. Sharp and Dr. Brown, late U. S. N. and Maj. Andrew, TJ. S. A. ' - The loss on their side is not learned. A few are known to have been killed and a number wounded, many of which were carried away, Lieut. Murdot-k. late of the United States Nevr among the number, with loss of arm. We had no casualty of conseqoence. The surrender was unconditional. About three hundred men 'were landed amid heavy surf. When the men were hauled ia and commenced cannonading at 10:15 A. M., on the 28tb, and kept up at intervals all day, recommencing on the 29th .with increased effect. Tbe enemy attempted to land about nf- teen hundred men, but were driven back. At 11 30 they displayed the white Sag and were for oed to surrender at discretion. It is believed that, many of the wounded and killed were sent on board rebel steamers in the Sound prior to the capitulation. Gen. Batter has arrived in Washington. The new of the victory caused unbounded ln7- . . . . . . . . The result of tbe expedition is said to be our possession of the eBtire North Carolina coast. The expedition waa plaoned by experienced of ficers in corinecti n with the Navy ' Department before the meeting of tbe last Congress, but had been delayed till the 26th. . ' Among the papers captured waa one from the late American Consul at Rio Janeiro, to Robert G. Scott, giving a list of al! vessels leaving or to leave that port during the month, with a full de scription of cargoes. Ae.- By this rebel priva teers knew when and where to look, aad six na med in the liat were captured. : - Col. Max Weber is placed ia" command at Fort Hatteraa and Col. Hawks ia Fort Clark. A portion of" th fleet remain there. Several important book and paper were captured, dis closing plan of the rebels. ' -r - i e . " Horo of the Hatteras Inlet Affair. ; ' WaSBnrcToar, Sept. 1. The agent connected with the expedition re ports that the force were landed and drawn op ia liue ou the beach, when it was found that there were 319 men under Col. Webber, of the 20it New York regiment. ' At this time "the wind raised a little, and "it was found impossible to land more troop. They proeeededup the beach, capturing one brass field piece aad one horse. The force then advanced to; Fort'Clark.'whieh bad been evacuated, but were1 compelled to re tire again, owing to the shells of the fleet falling therein, and marched ba;k to the plaee of land ing, and there bivouacked for the night.' " . " " Early the next morning, they again returned, and the fleet com menced bombarding the second Fort, called Fort Hatteras, which soon afterward displayed the white flag, when the Fort wa en- tend by our trooper - - - - Oar officers were conducted to the tent of Commander Barron who was in command of the force. : The Commander placed in the hands of Lieut. Neigel the following proposition which was immediately carried to Ga. BotlerJ' ; Memorandam of the flag officer, Saauel 'Bar roe, C. 8. N.;-effer ta arreadet Fort Hatteraa, with all tbe arms, ammunition or war(;tae oncers to be allowed to go out with side arm, and the nea witkoularms ta retire. 51 ' a.:'av-. (Sigaed) ! m ttMXLOtt; Commandiag aaval defense of Va. A NC--' Fort HaT-nwir?: 2---Tbe following dia-patch by CaaL Crosby; 0. 8. and Lieut. Nte-gel. waa.taade.ua reply t ' ; a s Memorand am of Major F. Butler Major Ge era! commaodiag the U. 8.' A. inT reply to th, r T . . u .kJi. 2 Foil caj italatioa. The oficere aad aaea to be OHIO : TUESDAY, treated as oriaoner cf war. No other terms ad m issable. Com mandicg officers to meet on boa(d the flag shib Minnesota to arrange details. Upon tbe reception of this, the Commandant called a council cf war oi uia neta omcers and accented the term offered and proceeded to the flag ship to arrange the deUils after which the prisoners were put on noaru in- nag . snip and tbe stars and stripe hoisted. ' . The official account of Geo Bailer give ry minute particulars of the' expedition and engage-meat, but presents no aew features. lie aays Fort Hatterne mounted 10 guns and4 numoutt- ed, also 1. large 1& inch Corn mb tad ready for counting. . ; - :Z" l : The position .of the Fort is an exceedingly strong One. nearlv surrounded 'on all aides by water; and only to be approached by a march .of 500 yards cireoitoosly over a long neck oi fund, within a half musket range and over a causeway a 'few feet only in width, which waa commaaded with two 32 pounder gens, loaded with grape and canister. 4 -' ' r Fort Clark, which la about 700 yards northerly ia a square redoubt moon ting fire guns and two six pounders.- Tbr" enemy bad spiked these guns, but io a very inefficient manner upon abandoning tbe frrt the day before. .'- V . Gen. Butler says oa consultation with flag officer Strrngham and Commander Stillwager, I determined to leave the troop and bold the Fort, its importance, and because if - again in posses -ion of the enemy with a sufficioct armament, of the difficulty of recapturing it. '- . ; The importance of the point cannot be overrated. From there the whole coast of Virginia and Morth Carolina, from Norfolk to Cape Look out, is witbia oor reach by light draft vessels which cannot possibly live at sea daring the win ter months. . From it offensive operations may be made upon the whole coast of North Carolioa to Bogue Inlet, extended many mile inland to Washington. Newburn and Beaufort- In the language of the Chief Engineer of the rebels in an official report, it is the key of the Albemarle. in my judgment it is a station seeena in im portance only to Fortress Monroe. - On this coast as a depot for coaling and-eopplies for the block ading sqnadron. It is invaluable. As a - harbor for our coasting trade, or Inlet from the winter storm, of from pirates, it is of the first impor tance. By holding it, Hatteras rgbt may again send forth, a cheering ray to the storm beaten mariner. .'--.'-'-- . The remainder of Gen. Butler's report is ta ken op in making honorable mention of officers and men under him, who ' distinguished them selves. I t BDpearf tbe Harriet Lane and trans port, with Col. Haakint regiment aboard, got ashore on the bar previous to the " -"capitulation, and were immediately under the guns of the Fort. Missouri Proclaimed TJnier Hartial Law Proclamation of Major Gen. Fremont. . ' ' t : St. Lopts, Aug. 31. The following proclamation was! issued this morning: : ... . JiEAIHjnARTKRS WtSTEtty DEP T, F St. Locjs, Aug. 31, 18GI. j ' Circumstances in my judgement of sufficient ' urgency .render it necessary that tho Commanding Genera cf the Department should B'sur- ad ro i oistrari po aet-.of 4V .Siaie ..lia denized condition, ihe' helnieseoesi ol.' the civil authority, the total insecurity of life, and the de vast at ion of property by bands of murderers and marauders who infest nearly every count? in the State, and avail themselves of tbe public misfortunes and the vicinity of a hostile force, to gratify private and neighborhood vengeance, and who find ao enemy wherever they find plunder, noally demand the severest measures to repress the dai ly increasing crimes and outrages which are dri ving off tbe inhabitants are ruining tbe btate. In this condition tbe public aafetv and tbe suc cess of cur arms require unity of purpose without let or hindrance for the prompt administralioa of affairs. In order, therefor, to anrpresi disorders and maintain, as far a vow practicable, tbe pablie pace, and to give security and protection to the persons and property of loyal citizens I. do here by extend and declare established martial law throughout the State of Missouri. : - The I,nes '6f the srmy of occupation in this State are for the present declared to extend from ieveoworth by way of the posts of Jt-fferson City, Rnlla and 1 ronton, to Cape Girardeau on the Mississippi River. AH persona who shall be taken with arms in their bands within these lines, 6hall be tried by court martial, and it found guilty, will be shot. The .property, real and personal, of all persons in the Stale of M.swuri, who shall take up arms against the United State or, who t-hall be directly proven to have taken active part with their enemiee in the field, is declared to be confiscated to the public use, and tbeir slaves (if any they have) are hereby declared freemen . All persons who shall be proven to have destroy ed, after the publication of this order, railroad tracks, bridges or telegraphs, shall suffer tbe ex. treme penalty of this.1avr. All persons engaged in treasonable correspondence, ia giving or pro curing aid to the enemiea of the United States in fomenting tumults, in disturbing the public tranquility by creating and circulating false reports, ot incendiary documents, are in their own interest warned that they' ar exposing them-selvet to auddea ani severe punishment. All persons.who have been led away from their alle giance are required to return forthwith to their homes. Any such absence without a!uc;at cause will bo held . to be presumptive evidence against them. - Tb object of thi declaration ia to place in the hand of the military authorities the power to give instantaneous effect to existing law and to supply such deficiencies a the conditions of war demand ; but. it is . aot-inteoded to suspend the ordinary tribueal of the country ; where the law will be administered by the civil offices in the usual manner, ard with their cua-i tomary aotbority. while the same can be; peaceably exercised. - The Commanding: General will labor vigilantly for the publia welfare, and in his ; efforts for tbeir safety, hopes to obtain not only the acquiescence but tbe active support of the people of the country.'. - . : : : ' j ; :v (Signed J. C.. FREMONT, ' . - : i ; Msjor-General, Commanding ; ; t"Voat tAa Xaeroota Democrat,, Aug. V27.j ' Great Excitement near Lacrosse, T7iscon. Dan. Bice's Rhinocerot in the HiTerir . 'v ' It will be reoolected that, on the 20th instant tbe ateamer Key. City, bouad dowai eolltded with tbe steamer Luxerene, having i-ea -hoard Dan Bice' Circua troops, trained animal, etc. The oagecontaining the trained Rhiaocaro. svelghing over four-thousand pounds, which wasoa a barge alongside, was knocked into the river;;. .vThe door of the cage was apen, the animal -being tied to the front end of it a chain whiei -ra faatoaed to the aaouater'a , noe. . Ia hope; that athe : cage might ia aceideat have been broken o as to af low the Rhinpcerou to escale, several of Rice' men werasnda3oBj5 thabaak-of the rirer, but, whsn, tsoxning caBa.aoivsM-xd; Mm? ioald be een, and after waitinj a few days the raen returned to tbe company) ..,,;f;. ';.Z Saaay moreing, two me? b'viag six mile below here, aw from the bank of the irirer, .wha , they supposed tobe a raw-boat bouom tide ep in the aloogb.2 , They soon ot a akiff and pulled to the place, and when within, aa.they tbnogbt about six rod of tb suppoaed boat, h tank and they returned. . " "' ; '. '.--: Tbe pilot of th steamer Golden Era, censing up Saturday, aaw near the same place whit ha took to he a lar browa kena floatiB ia the' SEPTEltfBER 10, slough.'aeveral tods ahead but as it sank be paid do attention and kept on with the boat. , - Sunday afternoon, Charles Wrightman, P. W. Brown and Robert Bggleston, while roasting green corn on the bank of the alpvgb, five miles below here were half scared to death by hearing a heavy tramp, and in a few moments tha. Rhinoceros as he appeared here on. the occasion of hia first visit in July- mlaut ' the blanket and chain in hia nose, rushed upon them with a terrible bellow, catching Eggleston on his snout and throwing him, as he says, at feast fifty feet over and back of bim, breaking an arm and two rib ia the fall. The monster plunged into the river, aad the other two persons, badly scared bat not hart, procured a boggy took tbe seat out, filled the box with grass, and a blanket and brought Eggleston to hia home in the city, where be it now under the care of Or. Cameron. The riba were evidently broken by lie snout of the animal as the fleak waa badly torn. The"slough" in which the animal la at present, is about fire miles belotr here, very deep, with muddy bottom, and though it ia just such a place as he was captured from in the East, there ia now telling how long he may -remain qaiet without taking a notion to prowl around the conn-try in search of better fare. -This farenooa ser. era! sportsmew went down to the epot to make arrangement for his capture, when, if successful, they can start a show of their-own. He was seen this forecoon, swimming in the water of the slough, but aank after aporting, if we may call ft, a few moments with back and nose above water. About a hundred persons have gone down there to help in hia capture. Another Skirmish in Western Virginia. Wbkeuxo, Sept. 2. ; Tbe secessionists encamped at Worth ingtoa, Marion county, 400 in number, were attacked by Col. Crosamaa. of Gen. Kelly'a Staff, with two companies of U. S. troops a little after daylight this morning. The secessionists were too strong for him, and he was obliged to fall back with the loss of two men. - The expedition from here last night had not reached the scene of action. At our latest advices two pieces of artillery were sent to Cross mau'a relief from Clarksbcrg to-day. He reports that he can hold the enemy in check until reinforced. - A Dearly Bought Victory. - From late Southern papera we make op tha following list of field and regimental officers killed, at the battle of Bull's Run, from which it will le understood why Jeff Davis pronounced it a "dearly bought victory." CONFEDERATE OFFICERS KILLED.7.'- .'- General Bernard E Bee, South Carolina. Col D. K. McRae. North Carolina- Col. Charles F. Fisher, North Carolina. T-.Brig Gen. E. K. Smith, Regular Army, v Gen. Francis A. Bartow, Georgia. Col.. Lamar. Georgia. "- . 4. . r . . - tioUoaj Second Virginia ttegiiwwt.-;-- Col Mason, of General Johnston's Staff. . Col. Francis J. Thomas, of Baltimore.' . Lieut-Cot vBenj. J. Johnson. Hampton Le Kon- -. ;:7v ; -..-: COXFEDEZATE. OmCKSS WOrVOED. Capt. P. T. Mooie, First Virginia Volunteers. Maj. Robt. Wheat, Louisiaua Battalion. Col. Gardner." '. Col. Wade Hampton, Hampton Legion. ' , Col. L. J. Gatreli, Seventh Virginia Regiment. Col. Jones, Fourth Alabama Regiment. : Col. C. H- iavan, f Ge. Ree' Staff. 'Maj. Scott, Fourth Alabama Regiment. Maj. Stevens. Aid to Gen. Smith. Major Wheat was previously reported deal -H( mere are now prospect oi nis recovery en tertained. The Federal forces lost no field or staff officers. The following ia a complete list of the regimen, tal officers killed and wounded. KATIOXAlr OFTICEBS KILLED. : ' Col. Cameron, Seventy-ninth New York. Col. John S. Slocum, Second Rhode Island. Lieut-Colonel Edward B. Fowler, Fourteenth New York. KATICNAL CFFICERS WOUKDED. Msjor Sullivan Ballow, Second Rhode Island. Lieut-Col. John A. Creiper, Fire Zouaves. Lieut-Cdl. Robt. S. McK. Elliott, Seventy n-nth New York Militia. CoL Farnhara, Fire Zouaves.. Col. Heintzelman. Seventeenth U. S. Infantry. Col: Hunter, U.S. A. Col. W. G. B. Tompkins, Second New York Col. A. W. Wood, Fourteenth New York. CoL Corcoran, prisoner, slightly, hurt. TThat Mr. Corwin ! Doinj. Some weks since, Bays the New Orleans Delta of the 25tb, we stated, on the authority of a Cincinnati paper, (Tbe Gsiette,) that a letter had been received from Corwin, the Federal Minister to Mexico, atanng that he hadlobtaTned from the Mexican Government the privilege of marching Federal troops through its Territory, for the invasion f the Southwestern portion of the Southern Confederacy. The subjoined extract, from the Mexican paper at Matamoras, El Noticioaco, see ma to be a confirmation of the statement. The Houston Telegraph, of the lTtb inst from which we take the translation, remarks editorially t From' the Matamoras Noticicioso of the 2d inst., just received, we take the following extract from a Journal published at the city of Mexico. The Noticiosco donhts it genuineness ; we do not however, for reasons we have twice gie"n before. Corwin i carrying oaf his mission as sure as fate, and has thoroughly involved Mexico in bis plans. Our belief is that' Texas ia to ae invaded both by land aod sea aa sooo as the weather be comes cooU The invasion will doubtless be by tbe southwest. , It is not impoasible thai Wilson's Zouaves ar being acclimated at Santa Rosa Island for us in Texas.; Let a beprepated. . Tbe extract from El Noticioaco ia as foQowa : We give now a report conaeeted with raet previously published by at, aad which ia tall of im-portance and interest.- . . i- : : - . Mr- Corwin has petitioned ihe Mexican Gov-ernment to grant free passage through Mexico, to such troops as may be Ordered by tha . Govern meat at Wtehiagtou to operateagainst the South? era States of the Union, ; under guaranty of a special treaty wjch it aaid to aHay all urpieioo which might otherwise .have arisen aa to their destination and th intention of tbe Government k represent; .-.IL ---j li-.-t-r- .t.,-;-. -- Tb;GovernmeBt hat at once granted.tha. rai quested permission fully and without aay eortui-tioa of guarauUea, and Mr. Corwin tayt ihat tki ample preofof the eonfldenca aad good oi behalf of Mexico eaaaot fail io isSaeoce its futtrre destiny, and will at all event be grefBDy.acknowl-edged by the American Gorerament. Aa aooa as thia arrangement waa mad public, it caused intense' excitement 7id eaibasiasm amoog the Strang rs here, of whose about Yix hundred are actaellv under am?, and who la'elv co-operated eSoieoey to bring about the defeat just sastaiued by the ractlouary Fart;. Interesting Darietir. 1861. Captul?. a .Tederal Captain and JZiHizs , - - - -j --; uuara. ; v- i Accounts 'from - Weston, Va., represent, that that section has been ia a feverish atate of ex citsmeut for several day. Mase-gers hare been arriving at brief periods,-reporting' the appearance ef detachmeat of rebel iafaatry and cavalry at various point along the wagoa roads leadlag ta our force oe the Kaaawha,' coming even withia 23 mile ot Weatoa. . No train goes out without a guard. Ou- Wednesday, Captain Spragoe, of the Ohio Tth, waa on hie way home oa fariongb, with a guard cf four dragoon. When some 15 miles .beyond Sattoa they were fired itito by a party of rebel cavalry, and one of the guard, named John Dsbolt, from FayeUe county, Pa., was killed. Another, Htnry Brooks, was wounded. The attacking party was la too strong force to be resisted, and Captain Spragce, with two others, were captured. One mie-esce pad and brought tbo inteiligeoce. The body of the wounded man was afterward discovered, e tireiy stripped, aod left like offal, by the wayside. Captain Spragoe commanded Company E of tbe ?th, aad it well known throughout Northern Ohio. The cavalry company who attacked and took prisoner Captain Sprague are said "to belong to Ex Governor Wise's command, and the fact tbat they have committed depredations with o a short distance of our force, and that other parties ar marauding through the woods between Weston and Gauley, indicates that this section of the State is to be the theater of annoying and destructive guerilla war far, ta which ao man's life will be safe. How a Han Feelt when he it 7orLnded and How it Goei to be Shot at. W take the following from a letter writtea by one of the gallant Iowa volunteers, who fought in the battle near Springfield, Mo. I was standing, or rather kneeling, behind a bush, reloading my musket, just before the reb els engaged in Ibis close work retreated, suddenly I felt a sharp pain ia the shoulder, and foil to the ground. Jumping up, one of tbe boys asked me if I was hurt. I replied I thought not, drew op my masket to fire, when be said: "Yes you are abot right through the shoulder." 1 think it was this remark, more than the wound, which caused the field all at once, to commence whirling around me in a very strange manner. I started to leave it, with a half Obbc ball in my shoulder, and oaea or twice fell dowa with dix sioess ; but in a short time recovered sufficiently to be able to walk back to Springfield, nine miles where the ball was taken out. I was very much pleased to find that the wound was not a danger euaona.'. .V- . . ' ' -' ! - - --;-In the battle, every sensation was drowned in excitement. We had no time to think of being ktMed, except ween standing to ba shot at by oaanon. without a chance to ahool back. - This, ,r-!?e 4TljretUel Wfaeo we bad a chance to use oar muskets, ev ery thought end feeling waa gone, except the one thought ofabooting down Abe rebels a rap idly as possible. Our regiment certainly did it snare ot toe worx tbat o ay. - CoL Eohert B. ZlitchelL' We take the ioUowiBg from the Chicago Trib une t Col. Mitchell fell ia battle at the tame time with Gen. Lyon, by a shot tbroogh the thigh by a musket bull. It teem that in the charge in which Lyou fell was not participated in by all tbe regiments, " as has been stated, but was really made oy toe riaosae Zd, with tro or three companies of tbe Kansas 1st, lad by GenLyon and Col. Mitchell. Tbe Kansas boys did not call oat lor Lyon to lead them on account of their having no commander. They bad their own Colo- nl, and be foogbt as bravely at any man could, and did aa nobly. The eoemy were -lilng on the sootberty slope of tbe bill and in tbe underbrush on the edge. Lyon, approaching trom the north, enaeavorea to take possessirm. Three charges were made tbe fifat by the Missouri regimeBts, and toe second by the 'owa. In both these the men were cut down like grain by the discbarge of tbe concealed enemy. Then the Kansas 2d, which had a porition across a Utile ravine, were called to the front. They had been impatiently waiting for their tern, and now they were ready. Wilh Gen. Lyon and Col. Mitchell at their head, and a few companies of tbe Kansas 1st, t bey marched gallantly op to the vary brow of tbe hill, when a heavy fire proceeded from the enemy concealed among the trees, and Lyon and Mitchell, with a score of men,, fell. The regiments did not yield, however, but held their own under a destructive fire, until the enemy were forced to give way. bat of &00 men in tbo Kansas 2d, 90 wete missing. CoL Mitchell was too badly wounded to be brought away, and waa left ia the hospital at Springfield. At his fall Lieut. Col. Blair took command and showed himself fully equal to the new responsibilities so sadly t crown upon bim.- The Body Onard of a Begro 'Sang. - The King of Dahomey, an African monarch who almost everybody baa heard of, hat a body guard of female which the European call th "Amazon Guard." The West African Herald that describes them : Tbey ate 3,000 in number, all females, and display such a degree cf ft. rocioos blood-thirstiness and hardihood as to bear a great resemblance to a host of mad tigres ses than to human creatures. They, utterly des pise death ; they show no mercy, to any living being in war j they are mad after , blood, ad seem not to know what means. Tbey are,' in fact, a troop of devil, ao to speak, who hideout wild Dees of manner, and the savage madness of whose demeanor ia times of excitement are to appalling and inhuman, at to bare - led many well judging persona to opio that these dread. fal creatures are periodically aabjeered to the influence of some species of drug which has this effect. The dress of the Amazona consists of a pair of loose trowsers, an upper garment covering tba breatt and a cap. - They are armed with gun. kaires and dagger t aome have blunderbus ses, others long elephant gun, while the remain. er carry to ordinary musket. , in their militarv exercises they display good discipline, well as a a . - v - onoenui uexteniy ana agtutj, r, IO The daapatch to a New York paper, that Ur. Ad&mi had .written hoot freos England that tha Coafedaracy would' -aooa L racegnixedj by Great Britain aaaotr Carpean Government, is aathoritieely denied. - Na deapatehee'aaTe beta Mceiveffffora VKaZ foraeveral flsj. ar,i. ( 7 : - . . r Xasaea Gtr. of RoekU?t Coaa,, lately moved a chimaey, 70 feet high, aH ataadi.g. fai or eight rod, turned it partly gonad, and raised it npo. a toee foaadatioa foufi-.... r . rMn tba a-rouad. A as oat remaikall frv-asj iv-ui Aswt- rr NUMBER 21. SH-Sorts of -hsgrsSis. S3- The hatury of tplndd eteel riled noa purchased by. Geo. Fremoat ia LI vwrpoot. arrived at St. Loait oo Friday. -; t SJ 44 Compromise rather . thaa rpitlomf, it the motto of Dwaaocrafj. " Separatloa talta thaa tamftiwise, it the declaraXloa of Ce;uh Iicant.,'t.;. :. - ; .iw-i AO It it reported that Major Get aril He Qellan, in ipeakiag of the hattl of Bait Cam, and depleting it, added, " but it wat a teaii reeoanoisance for Be. ; .. . t3T Holme county brags oe good hoeta aad plenty of 'them. The Republics states that withia the past two tnoath about t"3,CT3 Liv been paid oat in Holtaet ooasty for horaae. - gCj" A great ezefuaeot was got ep ia XTortht ampton a few etaningt since on eceoesi cf tbt) lost of a child. Tbe bells wore rung aad a general search Instituted, in the midst wbica lie child was found where it aad th heat right to ha xitQvttmndinlxd. . On Saturday last it bad been arranged ta destroy the office of the .Democratic Xlrvwvy a Marion, Ohio, but th design waa defeated ty two or three hondred Democrats, who were, on Itad to defend it. ' ' tT In a circular for hankers, just published in London, is given the amount of America ae. euritie held ia British hands, State' "stock, city bounds, railways, A. The 'amount U atlOO,-'000,000. " XO Five new companies are reported la ha organiting in Licking coonty, two at GreavCs, on at Newark, one at Kirkerarilla, aad pee at New way. ' ' JO Committees hare gone from PaioasvZle and Oberlia to Western Virginia, to attaad ta the dead and wounded of their respective vicinities ia the Seventh Ohio Regiment. ' " ' XQT The Boston Commercial BuUetiUTirt business changes gives seven failuraT and ' ao. pensions in Boston, fifteen in New York, tlrea ia Philadelphia, and twenty-five in vit place ' a total of fifty for the week. " g There ar said to be nine hundred colored contraband now in Fort rest Monro, of th fol lowing classes and vainer Able bodied idea, 300 ; old ma, 39 j - wotnee, f?S ; children, J35. Tetal-i-900. Value t506,000.i ': ' SQr Eight companies of CoL Gibson e meot, organising at Camp Nob'e, near TiCa ar already in camp, aad four of theca tare hea mustered iato tbe service. - ' ' tZJ' Mrs. G reenho w, lately arretted ia TTtul ington for treason ia the sister of lira. CtU, atid it therefor tbaaaat of Mrs, Stephen A. DeegUt. -" IO1" The Gazttte says th Commercial Hm done it utmost by wholesale denunciation and vituperation, without a tiagl fact or SpeeiCeatioa to destroy the public confidence in the Gorarve m9ot.n ; ' - - Massachusetts has thus fag purchased ae thousand seven hundred horses for military 'peg. poses, at a cost of $200,000. ' V. tSf Th War Department baa ordered - the recrniuog officers to cease paying the usual tVt) of two dollars for recruit. . ... .: ? 3" A Saratoga correspondent taytthai at a. large number of codfish dealers have lately fTed there it not so muck ef that M jilocraxy'attie springs aa usual, but that it place it toppUcd tj the famiiiet of army contractors. 1 gQ Two new steamer are being built ia England for the United States Gorerntoeat. which are to be plated with steel of four iaokea thickness, rendering these vessel shot aad bombproof, and protecting the boilers. , OVTht English Government Inspector of railways hat slated that th rata of speed oe railways should not exceed forty mile aa hour. . Jim. Mac, who whipped the Staley bridge Infant, wishes to accept Heenan's challenge, but dislikes the large stakes f 2,000 which Cn-an propose. The" American Champion' Jeavat the matter in the hands of hi friend, George Wilkes, who hopes soon to arrange the prelimi-nariea. - ' v-' gSy A quaiat writer of tentencet says, I hav seen women so delicate, that they wvra afraid to rida for fear the hone a-igbtTue'ewayi afraid to sail, for fear th boat might overset I afraid to walk, for fear the dew might iaJl hag I never taw one afraid to be (named." . - . tSf A caaaaamed Spenoeri-ef CiacionatLhas it is stated, invsnled a submarin bomb, that eaa be thrown into the water, and will explode aAeg it is submerged. ; - "'" If the Mobil New it good autuority, tba Congress ia session at Richmond ha impoaed a tax of fifty sentt on the hundred dollart in rsJae upon real esUte--slaves,merchan4ixe, rooeej a . fnterest, cattle, furniture, Ac. ; hut exsaapCrj the property of families having lest than gST According to the Richmond Enquirer tbe State of Virginia hat furnished tie IConfad erate service seven hundred aad fifty companies all uniformed and equipped according to lew. ' KJ ItttinUmated thU the Admi&Utratioa vnll no longer allow Kentucky to oceevy i ur' tral poaitioa. - - - tZT The Cleveland Herald publish t a patch from GatTIpolis, to the effect thu'tlsr .-were aot mora than 50 men missing from the Tik regiment, at that date; the Jlst. .Tie enum claimed io hav slain 15 aad Uka 60 pTisooers, Cpt. Shurtllff of Company C wat taiea prioa e f. j gy'xhe? CiBciaea Telegraph sUUf llui' ii'LktA.. Pimll arrived at Roma witL!atwa an.wvr " i r , w j day aft ni8rfro- New York. '- He fseid1 h Tepeli xeal!aat healih, aotwi;l.;a:gj tl-wspapef report of tit i tamineat CisihV ' " rOir '0,BB' li"0!. ci ritiii,. 1 is V-" uppoialed aa Asc!stast' A"JatTil Ce- rriT cTt-C- tnteir Is tie aroycf ll TJt u-X daJU. y12U yoBB 'genUsm'ea itrtt "vfclrf, for hia age, aad ef gr;ZI wtUil L;":-v'-l O- The 'Piuiior-; C-: : iltayt Ci t Fort Pitt wot Vf la tli1, ".-, Uvaracofveliat. -; der for tU 14. t- JciifatZ'... J ib asertereaadC:? isii "tlX-wi The-e taortare whea finished, wu! Beteafe C'j. lbraa inoha axiariar i'tfSAt i tZj foar Izchr ! ee ertrerae Hagth. |