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ttM "3L.-i.;Tayar3ai . , ; . t- -a - .:. -.. . Ot ? . 'jr .r-.' ..M ,rwi mui lrraaT itirf ..h obLa La a .wen Mb rut RBI 01 Llnod witil nllc-i V iota .aoaimuli .: ? .raid bio f-Jiifll 4l Urn U'ftxrr&y?t. ?r .?r:?',t!.i' 1 .U&ttV ..;yi ill s"mi" n.f ban oT -..'.iug ilka iS ,i'31 no .rn number; 13. fit at I Re. fcf ii ."'i;t j- 3l 3: " 55 .-3Brt' "V il 'fi a) ii I feil f'-v a. t i i i r 1 1 ii J F A till jb i& i v -r- JTJ 1 All teilJI.ll ! """ ' i l" r'"'iT i . -....?TV..--t.,.,f. t - til j!'I bna" 13 -c.l ICDI St )i 1 OfiJjcJfl lYoduvdiQloel-SdfiLtorr 91 - T1C : Within fix. months: tUta (tmw thm n!1 limot;U4l9Ttbmf..ffrise.) WhereVaaTipw England ? ,.tl?iBefi : '- X V !:UE.' Til 9.U0 -T9 HSrtSli Its-, oH''-.. ,-- n&ovJ ? y.;:. - ; ,li THE UNION AS IT WAS. TKk-Votf&Mo$ a$ it is. Jj jo c3hi' ueBdajr even Ing'July there was a n Immense Union meeting in the City of New rI-.fAf, 1 W Vbic'bis emoataVftndu. otheir tXbioi arpatedt.? Speeches rere made ibj.l&qB.J C; A. - WicxLErra,' of Kf Hbns: wo. Witt. J)irx,sofew York JAirtS BaooKsof ;J" VTeloiiaV 'ropier of.ita speeebea of Messrs,' icajjtwa. and, Doaa. aa Collowat ri i tSpwoklcf Hon.1 Cha;;'icldiffe!.t v Lb n Mr. Jharrman van"4 FetWw5. .Citikena, baire come before yba to night euffiering pnder eone fdegree of pain from bodil afl3icLion and ad-15 vaiioecl 'ag;-' benyVHeagvei 'iSenator Crittenden 0oucf cbeers :whobi.' you would all - delight to heat. ras Unable to corned I come t io aTnion thank God jtis hot a political --'ii8ston7jbuta" mission to . lend my humble i -'Voioe-fn behalf of 'd Union and a government threatened by violence in . the 6ell. and )y. X- treacuery in ne congress or tbe United States. l (Applause!) I only wish that the- AboJition- feM.witfa 'vfpotn I have, been jq eonflict: this a trJnjtei' at Ihe. Capital could have been here, to. "witaesa the patriotic feeling that I havewit--! fiessvL tb-nrgbt. k (Applause.) . Mv text shall be;,:The XTniOa as it was, and the Constitution 1 as it i-itl bond of this Union , must and -hall-fee '.preserved. (Ixudl applause.) Fel- loW-5itizen8,' I have been engaged In my own - r humble way hi the State of Xentucky to pre-J enttlre 'people of that Coiqnjonweahb from t i'tl kin -i, that fatal etcp secession. The Union -"'pirty men of Kenfnckv have succeeded in qui- ing me puoiic exciiemenc growing out o lite I "ieeueipou which the rebelliou is based. Nevertheless our 'position haa- been 'misunderstood i-'abroatf. ' It baa not been; properly ttimated. -"Wetever entertained the ulea of making wnr e Constitution, but we desired if possible not 10 take part in the aetiyQ. conflict and to elied our . brotjj erstblopl. .f!Ve w iphW . to: preserve a KhrdOrTieuTralfty, 'audf this war should in its c0perueiices:lead'o the destruction of the --Constitution ahd the Union, we wanted hjjjto-- xy to-reoonl the feet that there was One green spot n - Uie Union1 in which- brother did "not 1 tl w.j ii itnjtner; couni ux interpose 'i whenever the-occasion should present itself In -i its hopeful aspeef; knd '.say to the two parties -f'hittit settle'thie Ouestion between .you." :Applausa,) : "But when the sacred soil of Ken- lecky wai invaded by the -Southern -army.- and it: became: necessary for th? men of our State to-:lake a': stand nfVatnst them, they sprang ibrth like the followers of Roderick Dhu, and we have now ii the field upwards of 30,000 nea vindieatiag and maintaining the ' Unica as it. was,b (Loud applause.) ' ' . v rSp imuefaifor the" position of Kentucky. Jlow.shehaa behaved - herself in the battlefield b oot for me to tell. What she intends " to doiereafter I could answerif it were not loc ihe -hiad,'beluih measures of the abolition- Utl(a.pplau8e); I will not go into the consid eration of the causes which have produced the present unhappy condition of the country ; but I must be permitted to give my most nnqu.ili-fied denial and denunciation to the1 assum ption that slavery was the cause (appfase.) ' It was the-o0nued-agitation6rthe questioo.ofsla-ery-lJe?aarrelllgiaid iwranglin'rn the C6Jtre(tf the Unit Slates, tending ook.to 1 VjShli6nl&fa9ctit')ie tWo 1 sections, ahi re-suiting in abilitkta'thelJorth, and secession' in the South (applause). The remark by Singkloinaf XMiawilSlpi?- Leeiby?or Illinois, calling litiwai aegrb'thiefdw much to wideo the breach between the North andSouth. I have hfard moie .than once'dufing the last eessiooi with pain and mortification, the remark; made, .that o slaveholder could be a Union man, My blood was stirred in tny old Teinsand I rose in py place, on one occasion, and gave it the Jie direct (applause). I mtt it by saying thajt eight-tenths of the slave owners in my section of the Union were uncondition-. al Union men, and desired only to restore it to iu wgmta condition appiausej,. . ; "We have ;been charced wi :h not beine Union men. because of our opposition to extraordina ry measures, wbicP. were caloulated.not ttf re- atere tbe Union, out to tear it asiinderorever We' liave opposed tb.e. dogma that .there shall b noUnion of thoet States until every-iblave ia'free'applause)..! but utter the laBgune or at least two represenUUyes,; irpna .your own State. whi: t aaj'ttliis, ,i(A oice-rThey;dis- grace' the State.) ,Xdo..not ey.that3 but I do eay-xnai iney pave Deen a; very, great anaoy- arcce to tne peace o' tne conntry. m Voices "Who are th7 Name them,)' Mr. Foster arid Mr. Sedgwiek r jGroao aud, exprasatons of-disapprobaiip) ,, We hiv jbeenlgraVelv told thaf there' ea'tj Vje jioV Union while siayery exlstsb' here,rill'bi 'aiiiyreval9tioii.'-r fe&f 'Caere VSJtiJ be' oo n?aoea unless the : Aboli tiotfSt thSwdbwD tiieir pn'sand hoW their tonWes1. : tApplauset) Z Tliy eay 4h at the Uve1 .rtujpjfbi- ovrthrow,. What do th'l.'bibe . sraive' pi5wer? 4 need not tellryoii thfct the only' power that can be wielded in thU,contry:jfl that given by the Consti- iTWWMWv ' entitled by th&rotUliCut'ori b a r three-fifths repreeent-tio4c ail tBetf'sIaves'. 'If that compromiae bad a beed akaiteji'w might hare beeri cbih petledto Kngeivoatf a m1serbl uekistevi'ce uni . de jOwloU ,iiCadtioMrat,'c:bun': vriea. x leu yojtuwcemprpmise.waa neces- A distinguished citizen of the North, once .aoDor- tioitiaOt:e4ThitMOVlioi'bf the CApsnhi- -upon inta. vovernmeni? wnicn uoa: gave vs -"through the agency of the men of the Revolr;- t ioYr 5 aa'd kif : the"-.Con volition that', framed the PrtaidWtofjtbaCDltefSutes, but afterwards a ntn&etdf (Ckrignitee'maae iiaef Ibis: IarfaruarittistfUMln!? viheooestidn xr: SoatwaraegateeJupOn -thtfcfWuKtV of WifrVifrAHWW W he rPneab'ntf ten? Aaod giee.tsa:lpevertanepBaK wieidlttfi'lpcn 1 win nnt t-MM. m- t.t .,n irAw..U--WI vw w k fei m M V UU1B M inu BWLiUI M " w?ai ?thTrfcWmne toJ ,tUf five tVawetaLV. i7i&ytt?i , - w t . " tiofcViyit imada Any blocd4 tdacold J;irhetr ii heasdit; and.titJmade'aW ia aa4 ca4wvv--oat!iieed; iniAiiiiflift ec.oUl J-tiew1tfc3eei Conatitation.. . -t . . ... - -.- j.t .titif rtAwt-wifS1 lwtwtlli-iT3 Loaieiana, Texae, and if ytr")ftart,1-Ca1lifo,,fe wi0thfl9,pat!tor'h7ti Who was at th jg. rw orrmettl fn to teavieed"1n this crieis. TJte, p9etiRP? TP QPfla aTVri?imtiTC VOtrr eeamenl .Jaea; T)obla thai trad; eW Xm -etiHttftofiHt v Who ; flock wtTyoar fetandaVd fo,t,W liae o awUh. tODtiat; r,Tk iMae 'saiktm Tight aeil free trad t:-Waa I U otxwliLet (.w. ahfroectit:tIi9!9Mui W vindicAtft tlir Rouih backward in thai lrnvre l I Wlfere w'asGoTernbr' Stronjf'a' hjifltui fr' Or.i ganitea. forr bie-4naiiHiWKhwnti8infe to . aurrepder the cosiroarfl, aaa jaaOfyib itl 1 f do hot Want to say jQiie-: word tobarui j any man ; I dp not want to' denounce the -people Of" Massachusetts' at 'the presenC tftne. (AK ;thousrh there .are some of 4hem' "very' 'fond of the Jiegro, others-I am;b&pp?46 eayar not' so (Laughter.) Let me put the ouest'toii lb 1 you wdo are citizens oi jewrxonc ; .-it, auw the battle OfBoH Etm-ino.' I will not call it. a battle.-H had been annotmeed that the States inxebelllon were tol-beome; territories, 'and that the property of citizen were to be confiscated and their 'slaves let loose, how . many, volunteers would have gone to th,e war from this .! State f (VoiJe-i-None' "None.;') I believe jou. speak (4he entiment of nine-tentlis of the nuen that are uow enlisted ia. the war ; ; - I was ftruck with, position, assumed.t the ' dbnimericemeiit of this process of secession, by a powerful and influential paper, that took-the ground that the Government; ought to1 let' the bouth go, and not attempt to keep them back oy any means. Lvoicea "is a me t lie pa per" '' The Tribune" groans. , Why the change in the tone of that paper since' it haa been held by memler8 of.Congrese, that the war shall continue till every slave ie free ? Let us look . at this question. Do oqt misunderstand me. If I have any desire on earth next .to the salvation of the country; it is its' restoration, as k was applause. The leaders' of the rebellion hive sinned greatly against God and thei country.. Had theyr retained their places in Congress, they couJd'have preservetl the Constitution. t They deserve to suffer the 1enaltiea of .tbe';law.. By the war, I wish I iad thought to bring a bundle of te Confiscation blfls with me laughter).: ..Why, sir, they' propose to confiscate the estate of every man, j woman and child not only in the Rebel States, but in the Border States also. They do not j leave a woman hardly a change of clothes, or a cradle for her child. A father is fighting anong the rebels son js enlisted in the Uihoii army. The father's estate is confhscat-e l. and the son is left penniless and houseless. They say that the confiscation "money is to assist in defraying the expenses of the war. The b II contains a provision that the first.money made out of it shall le paid into the Treasury, to be applied to pay the debts whieb the Southern, people owe the Northern neoijle. V They propose to raise -in thi way8300,000,000-1-and to take the .property of one man to pay another's debts t It was even proposed by Xovejoy that Uie land should be taken' and given to the negroes who were -to be - set free. (Hisses. . . ; - Now. I will not disrus the Constitutional question. It is considered rjt Of order by the Aliolit ionipts in Congress ur ' to even name the Constitution. Laughter. Some "0years ago, when I was in. Congress,, a member .from Tftfrncssee remarked to ine, of certnmnien who" were in .'the ba'bit VSf Tndilging in sbhie useless discussion, -tliat they "otigbt to have the oath administered to them every morning they forrti ito sooa lanhter. Make the application if you please. These, men propose to strip men of their homesteads and turn loose their negroes." Gentlemen, it is'an outragean unchristian attempt to carry on the war again the Southern people. .".-Why.- are we anxious to bring back the Southern peo- Ie ? The resolution tell you, - If it were on-y s queft OD of interest that would be sufficient. The prosperity of the nation demands it. Divided, we upon .the bordefa, no matter to which side we : may lean, are destined to eternal war. Bat what do these men in Congress propose to do T To turn our slaves loose upon na in the border States and impoverish ua. wSuch will be the effect of either of the confiscation bills that have passed the Senate or the House. God grant that such a bill may aoi, receive the Executive sanction That is my only hope. If he only has the nerve to do it the ; Union- is preserved and restored in leas than 'six months, or ybur may take :my head off loud applause.) But if juch- a law is approved, no man in this bouse will see the day wlieh the Union will be restored. You 'may, have a neminal government, a government of .force, but BO harmony, no effective .Unioh . ., . .- ' - - . i V Somepeople would get rid of slavery in this way. What is to become of your cotton mills jn New England if the growth of that article is destroyed f - And destroyed it will be if you destroy the labor that now produces it. The idea that the slaves when freed will work with willingness in the cotton field is fallacious. Ipeak knowingly. Xike the man from Pennsylvania, who, when the subject of taxes oh bogs was under discussion; said he understood t'lat business better' than any one present, because he was raised among them , laughter,' so I say ie regard to. negroes. "On ont of five . may make a living the reft will ; earn about a much' as wilt, feed and 'clothe them : br if they don't do that they will steal to make it tup. liaugntjr.j - v?pr oecreiary oi tne treasury nnaer some law it must be the higher lawI reekon Is undertaking-to work about 9,000 negroes on farm 8 at the public expeBSd.: The farm ijfj interest is under the military Government, and the' educational . interest is under the 'civil an- kth-flrtty, Tlaoghter.J and one Mf. Pierce;' I be- iieveVJiaa cnarge or tbe Uivjj lepartment. Tliey .tried what they call an agent they used tbtbe called , overseers.. jThese !agenta(ibowey-Vrfaid'nbtr uCceedunder'MKXVase'f plan j eb they tried the plan of -phtiToi One hro' Ov- jer a gang of20,"lci. "see."lhfhvweV to work ai the praper'me,,rtld qnHattheroper time, and did their work aa It should bei- The com se oeDe was, . tha-. fiegroee' i rebelled.--' 'They sjkid, "This is too .nuch like the-.way we. used tdO f caiue here to get free." Sutbey rebelled j and several undertook' to escape, and wiere shot 'by fh'e militam Thet a ' conflict arose between tbeivirwnd the, military authority aad tha oflieultiee'increased'.'ueh1 m th rsultrof tlJeUesAraction OE. tnat'systeo wi im.uof.pj manci pauen ir.r -r fcauftt d. wa djroJUjotl Xeyea.V hei terwOrk at your ballot boxes ; jStir the paWiojtiacK i the country. Do not seek lifc th ' aecession- 1 rT " Cr" VUJt restored as i wasu '4neTojiBevrna tiiattio - 7 'aim & . m . B37TDJCO Will? XIOC lITr fOD -T101 f rvtsVavek- wTt low, gentlemen, yoa an want, tms war ena: 'don'eTb'n t" fVoices" -yea; f es.'.' ri"ou M the Unto and IhConrtitutton restored. .-.ttUitaiOT ve aavertea snail Deoome the law I ipreeaiotf tt mel.. m . . r- rirJraJ5 71 LcappUuIJ- HeaVeithif tt wtiloci sliea he feaJadi KvL.t.S -i iTfIi ;f:L' tPTfr 1 Wq n IIW1 jgWIWHI WHMMi m eame put tfbwp.lbe. rebellion. - We ire-all tor,wtti Bat thequMtiort Bat the Qurttibrt m For w&at Bbaii ttb to eeeute the war f.; For the maintenance of Ibe Coostitution, or lor its ovfrtbwwrr ::Torwtore the Union orj to destroy itt :;At. tber lfwtb lUCICIO A If VVUUUfvyT -uvi(wng 1 -'t. i'lli'i.-j.V-i'li-.- ' ii'.L ntfeb of : high position, lei overthrow tlie 'couih try and the Unioa I say itd'eliberately-and to set np ajniHtary. despotism, or one portion oyer another. . A meeting waa receatlybeld in tins city,"-which was presided, over. py.y as. AT Hamilton.7 That' meeting debUred that the reber States were m longer States of this Union, but were! to belgovnasriraaTerritbriea. In so declaring they .sanction the doctrine of 6ecessionista-2o;&eCer&orDave agrees with them finjat sentimenUThey -both Say that the Southern States are out pf ;the k Union- they both afrm and sanction secession.'-'vUp. en that dbctriae this wafTs'wrbhgV the rebel States have seceded and are "constitutionally out of the Union. do 'not lneve that any of the States are oat of the Union. '-."'' v We have iwhat is called an Enjancipation. Leaeue ambag ue- -Senator' and members of Congress have addressed' it men who have sworn Joaapport the Constitufion. They need tp.be sworqfBOt ,qaly, every -morning,:aa;'my friend from Kentucky remarked , bnt,. every hour and triomehf. " And yet it would do no eood. -Perjury1 is "4he chief corner-stone of Northern ijeceseioru as rebellion is of Southern. rMenbersof Congress are doing the bidding of these conspirators. , ;( Those ,ho rote for confiscation bills are conspirators. . .Apr. plause.l : ' " ' ': ''- ' i - The rebels oqght (o'be punished ; some pf them, perhaps,; ought- to euffer death I. hope few. . . History has never condemned any people in suppresainginsurreetion or rebellion,-ibr being too lenient to the rebels. I would. pnnT ish many of them ; I would disfranchise many more ; but the masses of the people I wpuid pardon applause.) The masses have been misled there; have they not been misled ,asc well here, too . fapplauee.l The -next man I would march to the scaffold, after Jeff. Davis, would be Charles Sumner. I Here rbriqwed a loud and long outburst of applause, the people rising in their seats, waving their hats, and cheering. ;. .. i Mr. Duer went on to examine the confiscation law.' He showed that the Constitution prohibited the taking away of property without a trial. In the whole history of civil war in England, there had not occurred .an instance like this of proceeding against a man's estate without indictment. The proposition was an enormitv entirely new. It is said that our Constitution . was hot made for a stato of ivar.wiBut we had 'got alohg with Hhi the war :. T- i i j it.' . tj wmi xjiigiHiKi, anu- wrry not now i iuaeriiKt these, if earried far enough, would deprive every man of us of ; his liberty. These confiscation bills are also a gross violationof-humanity.-" -No despot .on earth had ever attempted to strip the mass Of the rebels against his power of their.property'. : We'caft never triumph ifwe..crry.ori vwar for suck a diabolical pur4 pose, v We ought : not jto ! triomph. have leenT f rom the tieginning, in favor of putting dowiv'this rebellion by" force. I have nevex-l had any correspondence ;Or dealings: with se cesionists. f Applause. I have always op posed them bitterly.- But let us remember thnt the secession iets are men. Cheers. We cannot restore the Union by making the people of the two sections; hate each othere-A 11 attempts of. the kind al! bloody schemes of revenge are for the purpose of putting an end to our constitutional Union. If you ask some men who shput for the Union if they really love it, theyi would 'answer like Mr. Greeley, groans, S"I will stand by;that Union so far as I can do it with conscience.'' The speaker then referred to Lane, Of Kansas, as a man whose hand was stained with his brother's blood, and? his mouth red with curses; and severely criticized his speech on that occasion, as well as the-jTemarks of- Eey.Dr. Tyng. ; The; Speaker then asked, .VHowVpnaU we counteract the efforts of their, Emancipation League ?"' ' ;i --...v. :.-' ;;, ,. A voice oh the rJatfcrmanswe'redj,"By roo-ine out the Abolitionists.''' 'Jj '!'" V ' .'.. oMr." .Iuer said that- Abolitiopts was the right, napis. . Cheers. Some .Republicans had shown moral courage in Congress by standing out against these ; efforts to abolitionize their; ipariy. 1 His plan for counteracting the Emancipation : League, was to form a"' Union league. . He would unite all loyal-' men from the North, East, West and the loyal.ibordei1 States in a grand organization to .sustain the Union and the Constitution. . He would have all lovers-of the Union from allrthese parts of 1 1 . . " v " " "V si . . me country join in a can, wi.in JOunuurttr tenden at the head, to meet in a great Union convention. Great applause. It would be the most august body ever convened in this country, i he great ideas of such a convent tion would be to save the Union as it was, the ConstitfitiOn as it is," and to give tne South simply its right. As for slavery, he would leave it where our fathers left it, gradually tb be disposed pf as those who are interested 'in-it may see fit. Cheers. That it will die opt ultimately no one would doubt. The speaker concluded bv urging a vigorous prosecution of the war; but while we fight the disuhionists with bayonets, we would whip the abolitionists at the , ballot-box. - Long and cbntihn'ed cheering. . .. . .j; '; : n - :..i - ' ":-b:-.rij:.Q Hxad QtraTX Ohio Militia. Colnmbnn. .Tnlv 7th iRfiO I - M9'u' GrEi?; At OR D ERS-p. ) I L ?f , 4tv. In addition to'-'.Camp Dennison.' neaV'Cip-cirinat! ; -and "C&tk p ', CpTunibus' otheJr:catnpa of rendesvouaian!insrnctibW'tO facilitate .Uie, , orgajzatioh:i of nei$nenls; and the recruit in z bfr those, in tha fibi..!ai -.needed and! will be , immediately established s:R)llowaf 1 l-J V , . " At of near Cleveland, to Be calfeJ' "Camp , 4 At or near, 7olato,o be called :Cp"T-cit iM or flear , MwBfieldr to te caJied- l t -Af near vayxoay : to be called Davtotu' 0O3 XO.TA i iiJyl..-WJ 'i4-':.H Steuben rtfr. ?wv- wtt-u strw r urn eauea 'vmnp t . -ii , - . . . 4 frtOlt ftA lAt or"near ZamlavlflJe'" la:. f rr'-rt T T7f". Wvm wvaw 'flif " .r.fi" r 'lff ireaer,al3ndCai!niIiarrinOnA i?a,A.'i liarrinsrtori.'A. C. Ui S. A. art hereby' detailed to aclecf; Hz grbuad, for eaeb-ef call awtamcsrsnd make all needfalcQcacj-' ijVjcirwcn'totLe'occu-rcy apdc$e.tJiT::C.ard.rDrfctheiaaafto these hea.'iaartera. r"Hectt ttsT"-rovlr Ui M ortoaai: Marietta-4 k? caed' SSp ifiaapprpvaT of iie CfemmandeMh?OvrJr4i el i.y order. GllI&StiXmhtthA aa 11 : v. v : . ;r A4jH Gen.Ohio.Vlc BEFORE BlCSIIOin! I'Ji Sol , Timeaetai the fbfioviagiBter rv--. -tKT-l,-t J t.x.L4 T-eee report 4o act come dotrn later than Monda' miihts v Mi rt " .f c: fhdw ----- oirntK JaarSiTB. v s-M4adayveaipoW30, 18G2.) j Acting anderthO' necessityhjch tnis Commanding Geseral ibas long iforeseea.T thewidely-extended Hnea, pfthe arywUh1itft'jnileebr well-construcled-.defences, Stretching . almost front the James 'River bn' the left, to' and be-yond.vthe 1 ChiekabOminy ' u ihe rrght; have beew abandoned, and tbaTarmy . before Richmond ha fallen, back, to a. mote practica ble lihi ' Qt ' defence and attack, tiponjhe Janiea River; 1 The 'army4 has bean .'engaged In coin-atant conflict with, the enemy for six days: 'du- I ring which their; highestVenerpea hare been taxed to tne uttermosuf .vave d;t,0; tno-meht or repose nb'bppbrtnnity scarcely to properly care for the wounded and to"bury thi dead J .-Theenemr have clcaerj watelffed'every moyement, andr withiaa array more than dowr ble our own. have had the ability to constantly launch fresh'irbops npon our rear, , an ad vah- laeewmcu intr DSfe unu qu ck io umcover. Land remorseieea''m -mpTOvflg;LiTheif 'perfect knowledge of tbf roads, paths and bridges, ayid the pograpby of( theconn try,. which baa-taken us time tbXearn .naslaAedjan immense advantage In their hands.' ' "" ' , "' , .Beginning with the -fight it Mechantcirvflle on-Thursday, onr advance forcea,twhile stead: "Urllfngbaok' have' had 'a'contmubns-rnn- nmg fight? 3 -ii'af .ci,rAlisq& ! ; .Q n . Friday, on e of the severest.battles 'tbich was ever fought on this conti nent, occurred oh the right of the Chickahominy, near.Gaines- HiJU' On Saturday, after our forcea'had retir- f1? fraer acrow iiws cre5s,..m)y.j j i - . ., - - : , v , . . . i i ed the bridgea.,we were attacked 5o front Off :r i ... n. 1 . . i j I theenetiiy, leaving the ground strewn with bis dead. : -is:r ,; i-.:.... s. i . , On Sunday morning, the arrancenienta hav ing been, completed, the wagon . train jwas star- ten on its wav to tne iames stiver, : and was followed on' Sunday morning by the artiflery an-t Commisearv's train; ' r':. ' ' ;v ' Meanwhile the eneinyi getting ecent of our movement, stronsly reconooitered our iron t. and finding that several ;of. ,our .positions had been abandoned,'- pushed in and attacked us vigorously. Generals Hooker and Richardsbn ' drove thein hack; and Genl Meagher's Brigade, always on haivd at the right time, charged, and csptured two of their guns: The rebels paid a dear price for the information which they ob-j tamed. The chief struggle was near Savage's Station.-. . . -r-:. - - ': vv Anticipating a movementon onr right-flank the railroad bridge over the Chickahominy was destroyed on Saturday! morning There--11 s, supposing we had fallen backon the White House, sent a large 4odc ef infahlrvf""'?! and artillerv in that direction but after ft long.! rapiil and weary-march-, discovered they had, gone on a wild goose chase in tne wro'ng direc tion. .They only found a emall.force Of our in-; fantry and cavairy scattered down to guard the! rear, who fell .back" and 'escaped froni Vii"(e House- Landing. The-'Test', was bne of tnose 'howling- wiUJernesses- which'the rebels intend to leave lor us.- AH the quartermaster and commissary stores had been removed two days before, and the rubbish, burned. ,r ; Gen. McClellan and Staff left the headquarters at Savage's Station at daylight on Sunday morning, with a body guard of the Fourth S: States Cavalry, and halted some five miles out kfter crossing the White Oak Creek. ; ' ; ' There were, on Saturday, about one thousand of the wounded and' sick, chiefly arcamu lated from the battle'of Friday, many of whom it was found impossible to remove, big: to the nature and-eeverityof . their, wounds, and as a matter of humanity, as well of necessity they were, left behind. great many.. howv? er, who could, walk slowly, followed the track of the arniy, and the ambulances brought away a great many oihers. - - . .-. .; . i - fiiHnaawiNo raox thx nonr. : Gen Hooker's Division broke camp- in.-the' entrenchments at three o'clock Sunday mornings and: Gen.? Sickles' and Groyer's Brigades proceeded to the outposts' tb' relieve Gen. Pat-terson'a New Jersey Brigade.'-' At fiveo'cldck Aj. Mi Abe three, brigadesi fell baclfto he-sec-' on d line of -redouts where they formed a line of battle with Richardson's -.and Kearwy'a Di- visions, and remained. until. 8 o'clock.' P. M. -. ; Sedgvick.'s"Divi3ibn left khb front at ldayight , and were engaged "by7. We enemy half wAy to SaVaga'a Stattoa, which; 'lhy reached at five P. M. Here the enemy's infantry, with a bat-' ery, came out of the woods on -the right, and attacked tli emv .'-rj.i,vjU ixJi jA : : Sedg wiick ' Di vision Crhssei ' the '-creek; : at White-Oak Swamp; about' foar o'clock," A. M. Monday. His rear "was-bot annoyed during thanight'i : --vH'. : w i . sirjo.-.na. ;n.x:: '. -Keyea'; anrd Porter's Div4iona'- had . already, preceded us on the marcK, and had reached a a poaiUpn on theJTamea Riverjiear Turkey 'a IslandrT which ; is abaut ten ot twelye miloa aboVe City' Point:' , . ' pxsTaubTibN or taa axpoj,- - . Aa the army'resuped ita marcH oAMonday-. mornini, -iifformatibn''was''receiVeJ,?throb Geo. Blchacdsoa that the enemy were parsu-jag an.4jordera were gyrex to destroy ; the bridr f'msi- tbW eob" ii jM'di.inoi.ru'c-' bii'sv; p. i; Tbe retreat was oonductclin tbe most peiv ictv uruer. lie re .waa ntrxrcpioauon PC oastet 'b'sah1np'-caTOn tirirjfig, and nox asinaaceideht'of airf ebn- seo. uen.ee ia belie ved to h a va oeiirrbl - A. Arrant I of 2,500 t&t catUennder the'eharge of Colonel yiarK, vniei uommJ4saraaad-CMpt. J. Jl. Uu- cbanan. (mmry:ptSibei4'ielcei)I Gener-1 at McClellaa's Staff. - were aneceaafnllv dri vkbM n"'6- icT uaa uwn vrougris. fin IFOmlO vy hue ilobse; hnd narrowly escaped stamping by tharebeisl stti. jfrafcriwo' ,-ri-wr infr5.' fT ttwweiiwjps anftjfmpaesaoJt greaiest'eaatli Ufleabbfttm :IAWof.jftxrcreMl wak divided; r -Aicn Plenty of proTiajcgjCahrtTTde cotaewill teiratfcfi axmycaxlhaitcUt tie arrangements liey were broujrlit from the Held. The worst cases were attcaded to first, but there waa and LyHailiIJN'XETAIBSi h I From tha coTtttpoodetiW of the Hgw Yorft ito tfragth Lima i'-i V"-i7 "7 ..iT'" roaoaM ffiT1nt lD, along which the immense Igapucu T.uw carrying out, oi part oi a ad;bein Jtftehih&&m&&ftttoi sjck and wonndsd. . . .m itmferkerathinwitVihe ore--ict ansjuarcuc .: j . , , w..;.t i-? iSMfiiw.iJ . - l-j ?f -' "-: 'iba eie-iv ciw miM vw. uwti CiatlimiSiCvf vvilcenti f r iaWaU and irWJ7, f? ' brit tr ffeoar?!, for the ai!r. and watt.. !Jl.ti'Sftnt eomr near enc'h mnaketrr la 1 fcsLva been a rreat man t- whoiieei: received at- teriMbba aL"r?l tire, ;f re , tfhtbf hick" Wa WHxWitZtr ;ofithe -nous7waa fcoyehd' ir.waa ut4mntiai ana taere were also some L. . . - - - - - - -'- ..- -. . 'I- t . cs. appaTeyflredinmoretaaBaatfc ateIT, ame sb exhaosted thaVtherfell br the way-P ideJ and'coald ouia oniy oe roasea anaceiped lor- wardhfs ihtoneatesC axertibti.' ' '' -" 4iw t liwiurwMw -iV'nau' Birn.t - i 3 Wheit;aajd'rf3eiw -McXnella'n ron'back- and reported' that the:' way -'waa - all open to dames. niyer, a wnii,. wreiiei-ra.ni urangn the whole line, and. the eight, of the grer neioKirang-iu nansa waa inoeea an .oaaia in Jth rterribia desert -of euepense and ap heosion . taroufaN which they had The teams, were now put upon; UteV trot in - i'-.C - I -1 . ; . oraer to reitevc tne , pressure .upon inai por XianttJl ii4hi ta. V - i - - - - .-j , Gen. McClellan and'J5taff bdeaheadi atd took poseeeoion of thy old estate" known as Malvern HilbLiOwned hv3. F. Dew. one mile hack frpra "Til rkeyAlsiand Bend." "It 4sU large. oU-fashioned esiatCi oriirttrall htiltrty "the French',1an(J hasnear it, in front, - an old earthworks fWns4rdctcd "SyOen i Washjnton dmrinit the RevolnridRarr war.c It" haa a spa cious yard shaded by venerable eima ' and oth I er treses. .t A pae v)ew of'tbe river can be had trontyne, elevated position Ueo. M-cvteiian axpressed the opinion,, that :,rith. a brief time tb p'fepare'. the positicyi-can -rbe held against any for.ehe enemy c'brin.agaixtet as. K y-'tu W' lit ooa TaABVi -.'" -' At 2 o'clock P. M'.,- firing'wai' heard in the direction bf Whito jOrtk Swamp, where it was supposed Ayree was holding in check tne rebel -force whojwerereupposedattempting to crcvss- , This ooa tioaed . foh" nearly? two hours. "when sudden and vheavyTfiring began-: farther to the left, m thft rdtrectioaaei CbarleS City Cross.Iloads vAt this rjohit'aa immense body ui.nnM w khj uo. imM.aaniErT kihi mmirr, uwi mil fMm Richmond. r., - 7-k-; wi r!Shsiwiw vw guard . the..roUn2 .f4 : :T -' ' 4 Ojrderaj were. Aeni im media t el ? to pur the troops' in line of. battle ; and Gens."' Porter's and. Keves'.comnaphr were poa -on-. -thelway hp the hill.'refurnine from, theT-.conjfortaUe ecwm'pnVent "beypnoT' Mai tern'"' Hills. By 4jj o'clock rC-at the road -was thrbnged with these trpopa.j with !arj jllery an d cavalry," "h aateain g to.resiHtiha advance of. the enemy., : , :' , VTHX .OtTWBOATS BaOUOHTXTO .CTIOI -. , ' . The firing pow became incessarrt, the explosion of "shells constant andjmQst terrific from both 'lines,' and the roar Of muskeiry, mingled with the shouts and cheers' of the' contending forces. If'we could have seen them, and.es-timated their strength or number, it" would have teen some relief, v but they were advah cing apparently,' to within ess than a mile; of our posdiuii, -nnder coveir of the1 woods.'' 'It was very evidentAdli'evrflitft t0r being driven, in, and that too,-by emerwheltniAg force At t h isutciura t o f tor- gtinboata, the ' G ale-i OTT0Bo1rv omhaff a" mile and opened fire, upon the left with their 4-pounders,' the sheila exploding in the edge of thVwtJods'aro'ng the hills' where it was sup-poecd thb enerfiy 'would attemjit" to turnr our letV -No doubt these terrific missiles had an excellent efl'ect . in deterring them : from . tbie enterprise, and 4. in retarding their progress During tiieevenlhg,' and while the fight was going on, crowds of dusty men rushed down to the.river, and plunged in to- bathe.. Considering the ciroamstances .-of- the army , this was hardly the time to adjust one's toilet.; .. . -. Meantime the contest raced with terrible fury along ouf wboI front and right.' "Exploding shells filled tbeair.and rifled Shot sCream-ejf overhead. ;. So. thick was toe cloud of dust enveloping the field, that it was -impossible except from the ebund,' to. determine which way the tide Of battle ebbed or flowed.' The goaboata:kept4ip afdiseharga: bf their ' heavy- sneiia -uponvyiaveneoay;a posiuon. f xrovost Marshal TPbrter meantime took har?e of the disablecfa'nd sick soldiers, and conducted them tathe rear. - ! - -! ; ; -" 1 ' ' " . -?Tbe day's contest woundup by a dimihuen do. of musketry, ud hj dark all firing, except ian occasional. shU hadreaed.' -' 'i ' ! It shputd -l home (ia miod that-the wide bottoms along the river separate the gunboats n many, places, soma two miles from the forces operating on the hills;'; -The gunboats Ga lena. Marataaza. Aroostook. Maraska and! Port Royals are neailby? aad aughtto4-abre to render valuable asswUnee to the army until it can be. placed in -poeitipn to operate. , tr Oair Xwaa Abont Tyrcxttj Txtonamnl. i . -The , Retail Losa Probably Greater. - HrAnoPARTxas or , raa. AaaT or xhi Potoac;- TraatT IsiAaP, July' 2. ' The troops which had fought, the battle of Sunday retreated under the-cover of night lb White Dak-Swamp Bridge, a distance ofabbut twelve tnilea. there to await the approach- of the enemy... -' ';' J ;-'" l; The disposition or the- troops on" Monday, the sixth! day .of battle, wa as follow- -1 - "? , ! General Smith'a diwion aupported by Gan- the bridge, while GepSamoer'aand General Frankt'm'a corps occupied the Jeftv, ii General n HeinUelman'a ! orpa,i with Gen. McCall'a division, wereout on ,the'",n)acL3to meet the fi -whw a Richmond. - : s ,!; '.tr,; -t .. J -IThe enemy. came on boldly earlv iatheioref 0n,v.ti2 -"toeri",heavUy .reiaforeed by'the irbopa.whii had fought he Ipattlelftf jFriday-o tne opposite siqe pi ue,uncxaaommy.ii .-i::.: iJil abbuihree, p'clock' ,it : becama evident tht Mme 'portion of our lines mntg aa, tha rebeia ,wera napUy throving Creah trbops. i.nto.action. , -; - .;H f; -yft-pur-troops id front of tis Widge now fell fiack to with iw three and a half milea of "Tut-key Islands widths fithtwassEortly-after-wardf yenfwexL,and eontinued.with. the great-est 'determination a, both aidea.- nv1" iraV'Jbaa 6n Mohdar1 waa verr BeavT oa hothaideaw Ik:- fiifctf n say j PuKpg theHdatfaJl.lhfc'eaiU portion, oi (USMMflporMwnmau Mini ww ed Turker Islani lJtl&JbiaiofC the rear aQn$4aL t$r, bacfbadoitedaarid txre3 tdl mae room.ior wif pigaoiHaferj t -.Vhti-r.trht wsmJ renewed aarfv-on ToMdif, mbrdht; by k yt&4 ahd avUciiily Inteadihgt1? - f ... . ... . . . . . , - iCiont comic sear caw- - a var aa&ketry become ensasd. " ? H t--3- - The loaa of our," army1 dniinjf these aerew a considered to. ba tas flearanysti-1 ia atitrenl''mven ,lir kilEed;! Noatrvaa lea won nded and musing. - V- V 'v " ;.'. f XU ipesrtaepemy ins kUied: must have I .T7 e vyg exceediajg xhatxafoaz r- J ' . - t. "'', a- -n ii-.-j "sit fir; we a are (a km about aeren traadred pnstn-- ea, among; whom are tbree lieutentat-colbn- eia ana paoxajnar i a-.it.z.'si' s-uu ei i v Tne reported captnxe .of ?Geu.' Magradet' is Idea In field ariillerV ii aboh'f thirtv DTDDioiT m. mnun. . . . . . , i . cea dorioSr the seven days. ii Qenerai Reynokhl andCarjUin KiastbarT of his staff, were taken prisoners, as ! also Col.' Stockton, of Michigan. -j-.. I -Jr. Ge trai Mead, of Pennrrlvania. was severe fa woonedJ.'j-ivf.'To-Oi' tr. ;'. - 'i -. -: ; General Burns yv$a Kbhaled w the faca; i General Sumner and .General Heiatz .man sre both slightly..wounded in- the left. arm. bat wcrer left the field. - -. : , Meaerat aLcaiiwaa eeea to raiitrom;h,ia horse doxiarhe battle on Momdariaad waa taaca pruoner. o extent -O BW Ujanea are Trrw Vnn ' "-' -"; ' f Colonel Go3fine. of JLha Mti Pennsylvania rezment, was anted.- j-"' '-v-- --..Captaia Gambloa.-of'tha Fifth RegularCav-alrv. waa also killed. . : , ... . ; . ' - Captain Whining, of the Fifth' Cavalry, was wounded and taken prisoner, and his son,, a lieutenant in the same regiment, lost' his left arm. . .- r".' : i-' ; - ' . ii- - ' Colonel xratt.' of the Thirty-first New ;Yeik The army is now encamped on' hizh. rbllioe ground,"on the bank' bf the.. James river, fifr are already unload inr supplies at the wharves. l ne Commancyng trenera-feels confident or . .. - -. .. . successfully meeting any attack the' enemy may make upon him in his present position. - ; r J he retnfbrcementa the rebels received trom Beauregard and Jackson" gave thera-a' force" double that of the army of tha Potomac, and many br the prisoners . taken dunngtae battles ' ' 1 - "' ; 1 " Fobtbxss Moiiao.' Jui y 21 . At ten o'clock thia morhiiig the Nellie Baker arrived . at Fortress Monroe, from Harria-bnjs Landings having left thereat -five o'clock thia morning. She -brings down? twenty-five rebel prisoners,' and has only, a few': wounded o0 board."-. , ' " - ; The most terrible fishtinff took place on Tu esday last, and with he most brilliant ! success. The rebels were defeated in every action and the rebel officers, taken prisoners .'admit the lose of at least ten thousand ; meti on' that day. r Our artiUery waa . moat aucceeefutly brought to bear Dearly all day, while. the rebr lels hate done, hut very, little execution . with theirs. Our loss waa very ' small when cbm-pamLwith that of the rebelsr ' -' v "'r 1 The fiehtinsron both sides was of the most desperate character; aa fast aa the rebel forces were cut to pieces other fesh troops were irai mediately marched forward io" fill their places. They appeared to disregard thc'livea. of their! men. and placed and neld them under the hoti test fire pf our artillery,"which.i waa r aweeping themdown and cutting, them to piecesaa fast as they arrived: ' ; ; '-';' '-'--.'"-: - y 4 a tar enemy have been' repulsed : and driven back in every fight ' for the 'last ' three daya---i Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, j : Yesterday, the enemy advanced about eiaht o'clock In the morning and opened fire, which was constantly returned, arid severe fiffhtine on both sides was: kept up -rfor 'three hours. when the rebeia retreated with considerable loss and badly .cut up by our artillery.. - v. r : Our troope are In' fine epirita, and never were so anxious to fight as they are ' wow. Most of ouT-wou-nded express a 'desire .tore-coverapeedily, that they can again return to their regiments. All seem anxious to be present when Richmond ia taken. ' - . . The steamers Vanderbilt; and Arrow-imith have arrived here with seven hundred wounded on the former, and three hundred on the latter. , . - '-- " - -- - " The steamer, Elm City haa about three hun- ed wounded men from McOlellan a arm v. "'The steamer John Brooks haa .arrived "from HmsonS Landing,' with four hundred wound ed on. board.' Tbeir rwoonda "were dressed to day, juid she ha left for Annapolis. Many of inem are omcere., ; . . , ., , - The vanderbilt and Arrowamith will go to ew-iora. . From Habbiso LaKPtKo, July 3, via Bxi rijioaa, July 4. Captain Speer, of General Reynold staff arrived here to dar, having- ien narnson l-ancung, -acvieitau a-xieadquar. ters. on Thursday morning.- '. . . " 's , ; i He reports the army aa ' thro encamped on the bank, of Jamea .river, in- good 'order, 'arid fast recruiting, Reinforcenr&nta were landing and were being received with cheers and tremendous enthuslasmi by .McClellan'a won out,' bat not disheartened men; , --''' The captain describes: the Tuesday's 'fight as the hardest-fought battle ; of the six, days' campaign. - Our men fotight , frobx 5 o'clock in the morning tilt 9 at hiehCdriviing tuei enemy at all points. : - " :' " " . ;'..:" -" Awenty-iourguna were taken trom the enemy, two oflhem Parrot guns of superior pattern. :; ' ' "- ""'" ,..:' '": : ' , .; . The rebels never advanced in aingla'Jine of oauie, out eame on sometimes three or., four lines deep. ' ' .' ."' '."'- , .', -.'" 4 ,, U -I ; The Canteens Of the rebels when taken 'were found to be filled with whiskey and gunpowder. Controry to the reporpifeVailiBgin Washington las evening, General 'McClellan waa not on-the gunboat daring the engagement Of Tu- eaday, but waa,, on landL directing the 'rnbve- ments. -; t,' -f f- j, vu- rx'Llri i Capt, Spear bringa jthe following liat of kUU edand woanded1- ( l ' "' . ' . : General ReynbWa; woiinded ahd taken pris- oner Assistant. Adjutant Gea. Kingsbury o General Reynold'", division oriaoner. 1 :ri .' -. li-ieutenant juoionei. Met n tyre, 1st Pennayl-J vaaia, wounaea in leg; qjutant Cttewarf, Jjst Pennsvlvania, 'woanded and brisbnier. Adhi- tanVHaxtahorn, Baektail Ilifles,: wounded and prisoner: , jaaier v eaieyi ;ti Fennatlvania wotlnded; Captain Gallop, 8th Pennsylvania, svwiaai , wipuua voancr, oui jr ennsyivania woaaded.' tt . l i'l-oyi s Captain Heea. 8th Pennsvlvania: 'avrTv wounded Id body; Colonel Simmona,5tbPennt ayjvania. and LieBteBaaef3tawait,iatPennayl- raia kilhsdijj 0 iwIsto ,..1 vGeneraJLongstreet(an4 General Magroder ware not taken prisoners, thousrh Colonal Pn. flvf; formerly of Cincinnati,, was Ihenguard-ad;as a prisoner -B tpnVV -.-"-".'-' 3- leaTailiava"heei recaired iVbnt eneiv IcClellandate4 as Ulaaa 'wo'4 'ha folle ii itary details and sent publication ??rXuUVAirfgh whs"thrntny irere rpr!?i with, grestUhtss.oslii ult : a to ice re- . '.o ? BjTw.-.csca- advsBta- Itttr in- tha Casks of our army ,.. -.. irl'o cane have been lost since th raea ment oa rridar. June 27thi when Geseral ile- tuousanu u , tLsaruy note t . J l-xsse it aTbrds greatly : ?encr ' ii fcrthai apcri'tLa'iof.ta t atoats, 1 '. Tib arvantecn aratsvaa Uatrtr lL.i Calri division yaa at tha onset" overwhelmed. ; and twenty five pieceafell-xnro" the -Lladii eft the-enemy. , -.; .- - ww - V -f r t "-' of 't&iti rVttla. '- r-Vii'''VT JVnV 7."-;'.--.. ltTJa"rnTa .are; have froa -our apec-Ufdetaili orf ueadav'a . battle.. ot heretofore . reported at lenglh x:"The tAt waaTarvaevare and extrnaea an aiongtbe unei a lost-ma.TtbSf rg; and ttaoXot-drovrtat rabela back. It was chiefly an artillery fig&x, bat pn;:Xoenrmadeaevetal eplebdid.-aiiccessfal chargea TJh1n4Bry: "wera. desperate, ' -Wng ' purposely maue ao sn .; annav aa axaerta ap to our unabny to ,be eatdowav by-liaa- In this. Tueadar'a fiht Morriir. divlaion iittered mbetJ Tha Xilfi regiment, ' a ; part of Bdoerfiald's briradewaa nearly annihilated. The 44th New York, 83d Penaajlyania and I6thtiehiara; abjo Offered, eeverely. x Bufc-terfield'a bngade broarht off j atanca of rebel cbloraJ ' Amojig the prominent cfScera of Mor-rilfa diriaibBi who: have given . Iheir lirea to the country, are Colonel Black. 62d Peanayl-vaaiar Colonel Woebury, r the h llichi- gao iioriei Oasa, of Uie Vlh 'Massachusetts, aod ie-Volpael Sjvitaer, ox the 62d roan-sylvanla. Most of.theae were killed Oa Tuesday. -General Porter'a" corca waa enxased. and did boUtY"' Hookera or the" figh ting di- yuRoa.wentto'fuc-' xreninsaia iu.uw strong, now. they jn umber leas than 6,000 oafiaotiva men. The severest sufferers ra.- thp liyjon were the Massachnsetta. 1st. 11th and 16th : of thelatter irgiment'about 80 were rebbried, q: oeing Kinea or aenouuy wotmoed, among whom were CoJonel ; x T. . Wyman "akot through the heart ; Lleul.-CoUmel GeorgeiI. M each am, Wounded;. Adjutant Wald'a Merri- am; wounded. - - . - .Sicklea' brigade also won new lanrelsj COW ingJi aa. the reserve, just al the right moment they drove the rebeia back with great alanght- r. -' : ;' " ' ;." . .- . - The Irish brigade of Gen. Meaghera, waa also prominent in thia' action. Also the 'Mo-zart regiment. .. :.. '. - ". '.. r -v The result of Tuesday's fight -was distinctly in bur faVor."' The rebeia -: were defeated n every action and - rebel officers taken prisoners, admit the loss of at least 10,000 men during the day. Oui-axtillery waaauccesafnlly brooght to bear nearly all day while, the. rebeia did very little exltcutlbn'- with" theirs. . Our Josa waa very amaH whn: compared with that of the-rebeia.'; The fighting wa of a desperate character; aa fast aa the rebel forces wera cat to'pieces, other; fresh .troops- were marched forward to fill their places. They appeared to disregard the lives of their wen." ' At the close-of the. fight the.Unibn' troop Were said to be in fine spirits and more aoxioaa Ahaojever o figbt. ,. : , - , r.r ; ;v i j. ' One of Our correspondents aaw . McClellan 'on"Wednesday4,t He came on board; the mall boat a& aba reached 'Harrison'sLafadiirg'.--He walkedj aft witaGen. Patterscm',who came on the boat. Qen.. McClellan waa. gea-ticnlating vioIeniTy with' his clinched hand; ; : but? his remarks :were- "not heaj.i ;Subeo-quentlyin reply to Gen. Patterson, Oen.' Mc-CJellan.eaid:, we have fought a battle.'. every dayfbf the lasl week and whippedibem iyery Our -dates by mail 'are down to Friday toom- ingfrnAt Boon on, rhorsdayxhe rebels appear ed i force, fbar muss from : JxcOIelian's Tront and began shelling hut - had no - effect. Thl gunboata i replied,' but-notbing impcitil occurred. It ia said that the enemy are is Jarpe foreeonthe east aide -4i the; ChltckahomTny and threaten McClellaa'e right, wing.- -Wi?t the rebeia are about On the .south side of the James river is hot known, but it is feared, thai on one aids or the other they will erect batter- iM to. command he nayigation. below oar pc "" sition. . .-V" . -,4L ' Theery latest news from Gen. McClellan-ia by telegraph, dated at his headauartera, Saturday evening: 'All waa quiet and the army waa in good spirits. ' " .. , :; . v,: ... . : , . ; - -. ; Bewi from ttcClellaa. r . '.'. ; : (CJorrerpoadenee of ti- Phfl. EnqairorO , ,t v' FOBiaisai Mbirao, July 5, 1852-7 J3xe eutrm.McCUUan is fflorimu- Y eeier-day, the day, we all dreaded, fearing lest the; rebeia would make a combined attack upon our" lines,, instead of having , to meet the rebels he hdd clear; ground and actually advanced his army, six mile. Praise God, McQellao is safe! The clouds have blown by the sun arises inBplen-doiy and the Union anny, about,-whose exist- ence the fears of the nation, have, heet) atew ted to the utmost height is no longer ia per- il.--"' ' ' ' J' J ' ; -;"" ' '' - - - i ?The entboaiasm of-our'-trobpa cannot Leex pressed in; language. The army of .jhe'Poto- mac is an army .of heroea and to them tlve I American people owe a debt of rratitude that . can never be cancelled. It haa braved ' battle ' fox every- aucoessiva day ia the week, anJ- againstsuperiar aambers it has.won the. vio- ' tory. Lee ia iq re treat oa .Richmond J .75,000 . Union.' troopa have repulsed 130.000. of the flower of Sooth ertt1 eh lvalrv. 'So "much 'for their vaanting and aotnucb for the' fiery spirit' infused into their apuls by whisky aad powder mixed. I,,. - : :"r'.-...-..0 . j. ,r . 7 ' Word from the army,' thla. moming, ; gives t the greatest satisfaction, Snd relieves the heart of any load-that has oppressed it during the last week.: There.waa noIfighUBgesrdafr except.io, picket rakirmiahing,. although 'ear : lines were extended front for., the six miles' ,, above raentiohed.';4 Reinforcements? are' arri-"' ag Bnd pushingi'B- to McClellaB and their naued wiuu ahoata - believe they caa ". ' any dar. and UcUlellan ie their idblZ- Ood bless the oblebOyk and their heroic.cosmandeti:'-i'i- 'Jrii- 'n- T-' : ' ! I 1 .. .1 11 . .1 ii 1 III niii ; J- tui . i;.jjV"-i L i A letter txthePmiT cwoiimta tha report of a akirmiah onTharadajrOai4lr tha capture "of six gana. and, oipc jprjeouers. - Gen.. McQellatt" bad removed his" headquarters, and the army -, had advanced abme five miles toward Rich-' '-' fTh rrtmnumlMtAftll - PhlUdalrjhla. ElW-ilV qttirerVatatea that the Richmond papers cf the 1 jtw-elaiiaf lh tctotr;-"' H- '."--f. r2ie.i eoTweponxlen the-TBnadelph tn, . acanowieog " . w,vw,.iun, ipni' Pros? pf tha aa.medata,r.repoTta thafMcCielv t-Z Ua is pbahfejrapMIy forward, drivrsg ihe,T5x,i enty at ail pmnta. ,, .,ne xuqpota accompanies . b"sadvaBca,ahelunhewoodsa3d'catter-ini the enemy! hi taaio force follow In 2 in sun t . port. . - . . - . . - -... ,, . i.f))W.li. ,-t, , , mm. - a ppcaraaoe in- Aba Aatd aa bf joy. rMcClellan'a - boya'? taKe xtichmond v fJx m -.aaavius -CJiiaa, m rerareaca t-; ' watcy any rtiti ; uaxrjiara in. irrf city --to'surpa.thia: Aholitioa 'cLqaeiB the bitter-sip aass of their phUippica asaiael the Utica ari bciJ. aa fiercely as their joke Southern: rebels, do, 3 s : . A'TpTtU : jTeUaion awt and jtAaT be prcerTeI., '.'"--Andrew vuclivn.' at
Object Description
| Title | Mt. Vernon Democratic banner (Mount Vernon, Ohio : 1853), 1862-07-15 |
| Place | Mount Vernon (Ohio) |
| Date of Original | 1862-07-15 |
| Source | LCCN: sn86079142, Mt. Vernon Democratic banner (Mount Vernon, Ohio : 1853), 1862-07-15, Vol. 26, 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: 00000000004 |
| Format | newspaper |
| Extent | 7840.29KB |
| Submitting Institution | Knox County Public Library |
| Type | Text |
| File Name | 0130 |
| File Size | 7840.29KB |
| Full Text | ttM "3L.-i.;Tayar3ai . , ; . t- -a - .:. -.. . Ot ? . 'jr .r-.' ..M ,rwi mui lrraaT itirf ..h obLa La a .wen Mb rut RBI 01 Llnod witil nllc-i V iota .aoaimuli .: ? .raid bio f-Jiifll 4l Urn U'ftxrr&y?t. ?r .?r:?',t!.i' 1 .U&ttV ..;yi ill s"mi" n.f ban oT -..'.iug ilka iS ,i'31 no .rn number; 13. fit at I Re. fcf ii ."'i;t j- 3l 3: " 55 .-3Brt' "V il 'fi a) ii I feil f'-v a. t i i i r 1 1 ii J F A till jb i& i v -r- JTJ 1 All teilJI.ll ! """ ' i l" r'"'iT i . -....?TV..--t.,.,f. t - til j!'I bna" 13 -c.l ICDI St )i 1 OfiJjcJfl lYoduvdiQloel-SdfiLtorr 91 - T1C : Within fix. months: tUta (tmw thm n!1 limot;U4l9Ttbmf..ffrise.) WhereVaaTipw England ? ,.tl?iBefi : '- X V !:UE.' Til 9.U0 -T9 HSrtSli Its-, oH''-.. ,-- n&ovJ ? y.;:. - ; ,li THE UNION AS IT WAS. TKk-Votf&Mo$ a$ it is. Jj jo c3hi' ueBdajr even Ing'July there was a n Immense Union meeting in the City of New rI-.fAf, 1 W Vbic'bis emoataVftndu. otheir tXbioi arpatedt.? Speeches rere made ibj.l&qB.J C; A. - WicxLErra,' of Kf Hbns: wo. Witt. J)irx,sofew York JAirtS BaooKsof ;J" VTeloiiaV 'ropier of.ita speeebea of Messrs,' icajjtwa. and, Doaa. aa Collowat ri i tSpwoklcf Hon.1 Cha;;'icldiffe!.t v Lb n Mr. Jharrman van"4 FetWw5. .Citikena, baire come before yba to night euffiering pnder eone fdegree of pain from bodil afl3icLion and ad-15 vaiioecl 'ag;-' benyVHeagvei 'iSenator Crittenden 0oucf cbeers :whobi.' you would all - delight to heat. ras Unable to corned I come t io aTnion thank God jtis hot a political --'ii8ston7jbuta" mission to . lend my humble i -'Voioe-fn behalf of 'd Union and a government threatened by violence in . the 6ell. and )y. X- treacuery in ne congress or tbe United States. l (Applause!) I only wish that the- AboJition- feM.witfa 'vfpotn I have, been jq eonflict: this a trJnjtei' at Ihe. Capital could have been here, to. "witaesa the patriotic feeling that I havewit--! fiessvL tb-nrgbt. k (Applause.) . Mv text shall be;,:The XTniOa as it was, and the Constitution 1 as it i-itl bond of this Union , must and -hall-fee '.preserved. (Ixudl applause.) Fel- loW-5itizen8,' I have been engaged In my own - r humble way hi the State of Xentucky to pre-J enttlre 'people of that Coiqnjonweahb from t i'tl kin -i, that fatal etcp secession. The Union -"'pirty men of Kenfnckv have succeeded in qui- ing me puoiic exciiemenc growing out o lite I "ieeueipou which the rebelliou is based. Nevertheless our 'position haa- been 'misunderstood i-'abroatf. ' It baa not been; properly ttimated. -"Wetever entertained the ulea of making wnr e Constitution, but we desired if possible not 10 take part in the aetiyQ. conflict and to elied our . brotjj erstblopl. .f!Ve w iphW . to: preserve a KhrdOrTieuTralfty, 'audf this war should in its c0perueiices:lead'o the destruction of the --Constitution ahd the Union, we wanted hjjjto-- xy to-reoonl the feet that there was One green spot n - Uie Union1 in which- brother did "not 1 tl w.j ii itnjtner; couni ux interpose 'i whenever the-occasion should present itself In -i its hopeful aspeef; knd '.say to the two parties -f'hittit settle'thie Ouestion between .you." :Applausa,) : "But when the sacred soil of Ken- lecky wai invaded by the -Southern -army.- and it: became: necessary for th? men of our State to-:lake a': stand nfVatnst them, they sprang ibrth like the followers of Roderick Dhu, and we have now ii the field upwards of 30,000 nea vindieatiag and maintaining the ' Unica as it. was,b (Loud applause.) ' ' . v rSp imuefaifor the" position of Kentucky. Jlow.shehaa behaved - herself in the battlefield b oot for me to tell. What she intends " to doiereafter I could answerif it were not loc ihe -hiad,'beluih measures of the abolition- Utl(a.pplau8e); I will not go into the consid eration of the causes which have produced the present unhappy condition of the country ; but I must be permitted to give my most nnqu.ili-fied denial and denunciation to the1 assum ption that slavery was the cause (appfase.) ' It was the-o0nued-agitation6rthe questioo.ofsla-ery-lJe?aarrelllgiaid iwranglin'rn the C6Jtre(tf the Unit Slates, tending ook.to 1 VjShli6nl&fa9ctit')ie tWo 1 sections, ahi re-suiting in abilitkta'thelJorth, and secession' in the South (applause). The remark by Singkloinaf XMiawilSlpi?- Leeiby?or Illinois, calling litiwai aegrb'thiefdw much to wideo the breach between the North andSouth. I have hfard moie .than once'dufing the last eessiooi with pain and mortification, the remark; made, .that o slaveholder could be a Union man, My blood was stirred in tny old Teinsand I rose in py place, on one occasion, and gave it the Jie direct (applause). I mtt it by saying thajt eight-tenths of the slave owners in my section of the Union were uncondition-. al Union men, and desired only to restore it to iu wgmta condition appiausej,. . ; "We have ;been charced wi :h not beine Union men. because of our opposition to extraordina ry measures, wbicP. were caloulated.not ttf re- atere tbe Union, out to tear it asiinderorever We' liave opposed tb.e. dogma that .there shall b noUnion of thoet States until every-iblave ia'free'applause)..! but utter the laBgune or at least two represenUUyes,; irpna .your own State. whi: t aaj'ttliis, ,i(A oice-rThey;dis- grace' the State.) ,Xdo..not ey.that3 but I do eay-xnai iney pave Deen a; very, great anaoy- arcce to tne peace o' tne conntry. m Voices "Who are th7 Name them,)' Mr. Foster arid Mr. Sedgwiek r jGroao aud, exprasatons of-disapprobaiip) ,, We hiv jbeenlgraVelv told thaf there' ea'tj Vje jioV Union while siayery exlstsb' here,rill'bi 'aiiiyreval9tioii.'-r fe&f 'Caere VSJtiJ be' oo n?aoea unless the : Aboli tiotfSt thSwdbwD tiieir pn'sand hoW their tonWes1. : tApplauset) Z Tliy eay 4h at the Uve1 .rtujpjfbi- ovrthrow,. What do th'l.'bibe . sraive' pi5wer? 4 need not tellryoii thfct the only' power that can be wielded in thU,contry:jfl that given by the Consti- iTWWMWv ' entitled by th&rotUliCut'ori b a r three-fifths repreeent-tio4c ail tBetf'sIaves'. 'If that compromiae bad a beed akaiteji'w might hare beeri cbih petledto Kngeivoatf a m1serbl uekistevi'ce uni . de jOwloU ,iiCadtioMrat,'c:bun': vriea. x leu yojtuwcemprpmise.waa neces- A distinguished citizen of the North, once .aoDor- tioitiaOt:e4ThitMOVlioi'bf the CApsnhi- -upon inta. vovernmeni? wnicn uoa: gave vs -"through the agency of the men of the Revolr;- t ioYr 5 aa'd kif : the"-.Con volition that', framed the PrtaidWtofjtbaCDltefSutes, but afterwards a ntn&etdf (Ckrignitee'maae iiaef Ibis: IarfaruarittistfUMln!? viheooestidn xr: SoatwaraegateeJupOn -thtfcfWuKtV of WifrVifrAHWW W he rPneab'ntf ten? Aaod giee.tsa:lpevertanepBaK wieidlttfi'lpcn 1 win nnt t-MM. m- t.t .,n irAw..U--WI vw w k fei m M V UU1B M inu BWLiUI M " w?ai ?thTrfcWmne toJ ,tUf five tVawetaLV. i7i&ytt?i , - w t . " tiofcViyit imada Any blocd4 tdacold J;irhetr ii heasdit; and.titJmade'aW ia aa4 ca4wvv--oat!iieed; iniAiiiiflift ec.oUl J-tiew1tfc3eei Conatitation.. . -t . . ... - -.- j.t .titif rtAwt-wifS1 lwtwtlli-iT3 Loaieiana, Texae, and if ytr")ftart,1-Ca1lifo,,fe wi0thfl9,pat!tor'h7ti Who was at th jg. rw orrmettl fn to teavieed"1n this crieis. TJte, p9etiRP? TP QPfla aTVri?imtiTC VOtrr eeamenl .Jaea; T)obla thai trad; eW Xm -etiHttftofiHt v Who ; flock wtTyoar fetandaVd fo,t,W liae o awUh. tODtiat; r,Tk iMae 'saiktm Tight aeil free trad t:-Waa I U otxwliLet (.w. ahfroectit:tIi9!9Mui W vindicAtft tlir Rouih backward in thai lrnvre l I Wlfere w'asGoTernbr' Stronjf'a' hjifltui fr' Or.i ganitea. forr bie-4naiiHiWKhwnti8infe to . aurrepder the cosiroarfl, aaa jaaOfyib itl 1 f do hot Want to say jQiie-: word tobarui j any man ; I dp not want to' denounce the -people Of" Massachusetts' at 'the presenC tftne. (AK ;thousrh there .are some of 4hem' "very' 'fond of the Jiegro, others-I am;b&pp?46 eayar not' so (Laughter.) Let me put the ouest'toii lb 1 you wdo are citizens oi jewrxonc ; .-it, auw the battle OfBoH Etm-ino.' I will not call it. a battle.-H had been annotmeed that the States inxebelllon were tol-beome; territories, 'and that the property of citizen were to be confiscated and their 'slaves let loose, how . many, volunteers would have gone to th,e war from this .! State f (VoiJe-i-None' "None.;') I believe jou. speak (4he entiment of nine-tentlis of the nuen that are uow enlisted ia. the war ; ; - I was ftruck with, position, assumed.t the ' dbnimericemeiit of this process of secession, by a powerful and influential paper, that took-the ground that the Government; ought to1 let' the bouth go, and not attempt to keep them back oy any means. Lvoicea "is a me t lie pa per" '' The Tribune" groans. , Why the change in the tone of that paper since' it haa been held by memler8 of.Congrese, that the war shall continue till every slave ie free ? Let us look . at this question. Do oqt misunderstand me. If I have any desire on earth next .to the salvation of the country; it is its' restoration, as k was applause. The leaders' of the rebellion hive sinned greatly against God and thei country.. Had theyr retained their places in Congress, they couJd'have preservetl the Constitution. t They deserve to suffer the 1enaltiea of .tbe';law.. By the war, I wish I iad thought to bring a bundle of te Confiscation blfls with me laughter).: ..Why, sir, they' propose to confiscate the estate of every man, j woman and child not only in the Rebel States, but in the Border States also. They do not j leave a woman hardly a change of clothes, or a cradle for her child. A father is fighting anong the rebels son js enlisted in the Uihoii army. The father's estate is confhscat-e l. and the son is left penniless and houseless. They say that the confiscation "money is to assist in defraying the expenses of the war. The b II contains a provision that the first.money made out of it shall le paid into the Treasury, to be applied to pay the debts whieb the Southern, people owe the Northern neoijle. V They propose to raise -in thi way8300,000,000-1-and to take the .property of one man to pay another's debts t It was even proposed by Xovejoy that Uie land should be taken' and given to the negroes who were -to be - set free. (Hisses. . . ; - Now. I will not disrus the Constitutional question. It is considered rjt Of order by the Aliolit ionipts in Congress ur ' to even name the Constitution. Laughter. Some "0years ago, when I was in. Congress,, a member .from Tftfrncssee remarked to ine, of certnmnien who" were in .'the ba'bit VSf Tndilging in sbhie useless discussion, -tliat they "otigbt to have the oath administered to them every morning they forrti ito sooa lanhter. Make the application if you please. These, men propose to strip men of their homesteads and turn loose their negroes." Gentlemen, it is'an outragean unchristian attempt to carry on the war again the Southern people. .".-Why.- are we anxious to bring back the Southern peo- Ie ? The resolution tell you, - If it were on-y s queft OD of interest that would be sufficient. The prosperity of the nation demands it. Divided, we upon .the bordefa, no matter to which side we : may lean, are destined to eternal war. Bat what do these men in Congress propose to do T To turn our slaves loose upon na in the border States and impoverish ua. wSuch will be the effect of either of the confiscation bills that have passed the Senate or the House. God grant that such a bill may aoi, receive the Executive sanction That is my only hope. If he only has the nerve to do it the ; Union- is preserved and restored in leas than 'six months, or ybur may take :my head off loud applause.) But if juch- a law is approved, no man in this bouse will see the day wlieh the Union will be restored. You 'may, have a neminal government, a government of .force, but BO harmony, no effective .Unioh . ., . .- ' - - . i V Somepeople would get rid of slavery in this way. What is to become of your cotton mills jn New England if the growth of that article is destroyed f - And destroyed it will be if you destroy the labor that now produces it. The idea that the slaves when freed will work with willingness in the cotton field is fallacious. Ipeak knowingly. Xike the man from Pennsylvania, who, when the subject of taxes oh bogs was under discussion; said he understood t'lat business better' than any one present, because he was raised among them , laughter,' so I say ie regard to. negroes. "On ont of five . may make a living the reft will ; earn about a much' as wilt, feed and 'clothe them : br if they don't do that they will steal to make it tup. liaugntjr.j - v?pr oecreiary oi tne treasury nnaer some law it must be the higher lawI reekon Is undertaking-to work about 9,000 negroes on farm 8 at the public expeBSd.: The farm ijfj interest is under the military Government, and the' educational . interest is under the 'civil an- kth-flrtty, Tlaoghter.J and one Mf. Pierce;' I be- iieveVJiaa cnarge or tbe Uivjj lepartment. Tliey .tried what they call an agent they used tbtbe called , overseers.. jThese !agenta(ibowey-Vrfaid'nbtr uCceedunder'MKXVase'f plan j eb they tried the plan of -phtiToi One hro' Ov- jer a gang of20"lci. "see."lhfhvweV to work ai the praper'me,,rtld qnHattheroper time, and did their work aa It should bei- The com se oeDe was, . tha-. fiegroee' i rebelled.--' 'They sjkid, "This is too .nuch like the-.way we. used tdO f caiue here to get free." Sutbey rebelled j and several undertook' to escape, and wiere shot 'by fh'e militam Thet a ' conflict arose between tbeivirwnd the, military authority aad tha oflieultiee'increased'.'ueh1 m th rsultrof tlJeUesAraction OE. tnat'systeo wi im.uof.pj manci pauen ir.r -r fcauftt d. wa djroJUjotl Xeyea.V hei terwOrk at your ballot boxes ; jStir the paWiojtiacK i the country. Do not seek lifc th ' aecession- 1 rT " Cr" VUJt restored as i wasu '4neTojiBevrna tiiattio - 7 'aim & . m . B37TDJCO Will? XIOC lITr fOD -T101 f rvtsVavek- wTt low, gentlemen, yoa an want, tms war ena: 'don'eTb'n t" fVoices" -yea; f es.'.' ri"ou M the Unto and IhConrtitutton restored. .-.ttUitaiOT ve aavertea snail Deoome the law I ipreeaiotf tt mel.. m . . r- rirJraJ5 71 LcappUuIJ- HeaVeithif tt wtiloci sliea he feaJadi KvL.t.S -i iTfIi ;f:L' tPTfr 1 Wq n IIW1 jgWIWHI WHMMi m eame put tfbwp.lbe. rebellion. - We ire-all tor,wtti Bat thequMtiort Bat the Qurttibrt m For w&at Bbaii ttb to eeeute the war f.; For the maintenance of Ibe Coostitution, or lor its ovfrtbwwrr ::Torwtore the Union orj to destroy itt :;At. tber lfwtb lUCICIO A If VVUUUfvyT -uvi(wng 1 -'t. i'lli'i.-j.V-i'li-.- ' ii'.L ntfeb of : high position, lei overthrow tlie 'couih try and the Unioa I say itd'eliberately-and to set np ajniHtary. despotism, or one portion oyer another. . A meeting waa receatlybeld in tins city"-which was presided, over. py.y as. AT Hamilton.7 That' meeting debUred that the reber States were m longer States of this Union, but were! to belgovnasriraaTerritbriea. In so declaring they .sanction the doctrine of 6ecessionista-2o;&eCer&orDave agrees with them finjat sentimenUThey -both Say that the Southern States are out pf ;the k Union- they both afrm and sanction secession.'-'vUp. en that dbctriae this wafTs'wrbhgV the rebel States have seceded and are "constitutionally out of the Union. do 'not lneve that any of the States are oat of the Union. '-."'' v We have iwhat is called an Enjancipation. Leaeue ambag ue- -Senator' and members of Congress have addressed' it men who have sworn Joaapport the Constitufion. They need tp.be sworqfBOt ,qaly, every -morning,:aa;'my friend from Kentucky remarked , bnt,. every hour and triomehf. " And yet it would do no eood. -Perjury1 is "4he chief corner-stone of Northern ijeceseioru as rebellion is of Southern. rMenbersof Congress are doing the bidding of these conspirators. , ;( Those ,ho rote for confiscation bills are conspirators. . .Apr. plause.l : ' " ' ': ''- ' i - The rebels oqght (o'be punished ; some pf them, perhaps,; ought- to euffer death I. hope few. . . History has never condemned any people in suppresainginsurreetion or rebellion,-ibr being too lenient to the rebels. I would. pnnT ish many of them ; I would disfranchise many more ; but the masses of the people I wpuid pardon applause.) The masses have been misled there; have they not been misled ,asc well here, too . fapplauee.l The -next man I would march to the scaffold, after Jeff. Davis, would be Charles Sumner. I Here rbriqwed a loud and long outburst of applause, the people rising in their seats, waving their hats, and cheering. ;. .. i Mr. Duer went on to examine the confiscation law.' He showed that the Constitution prohibited the taking away of property without a trial. In the whole history of civil war in England, there had not occurred .an instance like this of proceeding against a man's estate without indictment. The proposition was an enormitv entirely new. It is said that our Constitution . was hot made for a stato of ivar.wiBut we had 'got alohg with Hhi the war :. T- i i j it.' . tj wmi xjiigiHiKi, anu- wrry not now i iuaeriiKt these, if earried far enough, would deprive every man of us of ; his liberty. These confiscation bills are also a gross violationof-humanity.-" -No despot .on earth had ever attempted to strip the mass Of the rebels against his power of their.property'. : We'caft never triumph ifwe..crry.ori vwar for suck a diabolical pur4 pose, v We ought : not jto ! triomph. have leenT f rom the tieginning, in favor of putting dowiv'this rebellion by" force. I have nevex-l had any correspondence ;Or dealings: with se cesionists. f Applause. I have always op posed them bitterly.- But let us remember thnt the secession iets are men. Cheers. We cannot restore the Union by making the people of the two sections; hate each othere-A 11 attempts of. the kind al! bloody schemes of revenge are for the purpose of putting an end to our constitutional Union. If you ask some men who shput for the Union if they really love it, theyi would 'answer like Mr. Greeley, groans, S"I will stand by;that Union so far as I can do it with conscience.'' The speaker then referred to Lane, Of Kansas, as a man whose hand was stained with his brother's blood, and? his mouth red with curses; and severely criticized his speech on that occasion, as well as the-jTemarks of- Eey.Dr. Tyng. ; The; Speaker then asked, .VHowVpnaU we counteract the efforts of their, Emancipation League ?"' ' ;i --...v. :.-' ;;, ,. A voice oh the rJatfcrmanswe'redj"By roo-ine out the Abolitionists.''' 'Jj '!'" V ' .'.. oMr." .Iuer said that- Abolitiopts was the right, napis. . Cheers. Some .Republicans had shown moral courage in Congress by standing out against these ; efforts to abolitionize their; ipariy. 1 His plan for counteracting the Emancipation : League, was to form a"' Union league. . He would unite all loyal-' men from the North, East, West and the loyal.ibordei1 States in a grand organization to .sustain the Union and the Constitution. . He would have all lovers-of the Union from allrthese parts of 1 1 . . " v " " "V si . . me country join in a can, wi.in JOunuurttr tenden at the head, to meet in a great Union convention. Great applause. It would be the most august body ever convened in this country, i he great ideas of such a convent tion would be to save the Union as it was, the ConstitfitiOn as it is" and to give tne South simply its right. As for slavery, he would leave it where our fathers left it, gradually tb be disposed pf as those who are interested 'in-it may see fit. Cheers. That it will die opt ultimately no one would doubt. The speaker concluded bv urging a vigorous prosecution of the war; but while we fight the disuhionists with bayonets, we would whip the abolitionists at the , ballot-box. - Long and cbntihn'ed cheering. . .. . .j; '; : n - :..i - ' ":-b:-.rij:.Q Hxad QtraTX Ohio Militia. Colnmbnn. .Tnlv 7th iRfiO I - M9'u' GrEi?; At OR D ERS-p. ) I L ?f , 4tv. In addition to'-'.Camp Dennison.' neaV'Cip-cirinat! ; -and "C&tk p ', CpTunibus' otheJr:catnpa of rendesvouaian!insrnctibW'tO facilitate .Uie, , orgajzatioh:i of nei$nenls; and the recruit in z bfr those, in tha fibi..!ai -.needed and! will be , immediately established s:R)llowaf 1 l-J V , . " At of near Cleveland, to Be calfeJ' "Camp , 4 At or near, 7olato,o be called :Cp"T-cit iM or flear , MwBfieldr to te caJied- l t -Af near vayxoay : to be called Davtotu' 0O3 XO.TA i iiJyl..-WJ 'i4-':.H Steuben rtfr. ?wv- wtt-u strw r urn eauea 'vmnp t . -ii , - . . . 4 frtOlt ftA lAt or"near ZamlavlflJe'" la:. f rr'-rt T T7f". Wvm wvaw 'flif " .r.fi" r 'lff ireaer,al3ndCai!niIiarrinOnA i?a,A.'i liarrinsrtori.'A. C. Ui S. A. art hereby' detailed to aclecf; Hz grbuad, for eaeb-ef call awtamcsrsnd make all needfalcQcacj-' ijVjcirwcn'totLe'occu-rcy apdc$e.tJiT::C.ard.rDrfctheiaaafto these hea.'iaartera. r"Hectt ttsT"-rovlr Ui M ortoaai: Marietta-4 k? caed' SSp ifiaapprpvaT of iie CfemmandeMh?OvrJr4i el i.y order. GllI&StiXmhtthA aa 11 : v. v : . ;r A4jH Gen.Ohio.Vlc BEFORE BlCSIIOin! I'Ji Sol , Timeaetai the fbfioviagiBter rv--. -tKT-l,-t J t.x.L4 T-eee report 4o act come dotrn later than Monda' miihts v Mi rt " .f c: fhdw ----- oirntK JaarSiTB. v s-M4adayveaipoW30, 18G2.) j Acting anderthO' necessityhjch tnis Commanding Geseral ibas long iforeseea.T thewidely-extended Hnea, pfthe arywUh1itft'jnileebr well-construcled-.defences, Stretching . almost front the James 'River bn' the left, to' and be-yond.vthe 1 ChiekabOminy ' u ihe rrght; have beew abandoned, and tbaTarmy . before Richmond ha fallen, back, to a. mote practica ble lihi ' Qt ' defence and attack, tiponjhe Janiea River; 1 The 'army4 has bean .'engaged In coin-atant conflict with, the enemy for six days: 'du- I ring which their; highestVenerpea hare been taxed to tne uttermosuf .vave d;t,0; tno-meht or repose nb'bppbrtnnity scarcely to properly care for the wounded and to"bury thi dead J .-Theenemr have clcaerj watelffed'every moyement, andr withiaa array more than dowr ble our own. have had the ability to constantly launch fresh'irbops npon our rear, , an ad vah- laeewmcu intr DSfe unu qu ck io umcover. Land remorseieea''m -mpTOvflg;LiTheif 'perfect knowledge of tbf roads, paths and bridges, ayid the pograpby of( theconn try,. which baa-taken us time tbXearn .naslaAedjan immense advantage In their hands.' ' "" ' , "' , .Beginning with the -fight it Mechantcirvflle on-Thursday, onr advance forcea,twhile stead: "Urllfngbaok' have' had 'a'contmubns-rnn- nmg fight? 3 -ii'af .ci,rAlisq& ! ; .Q n . Friday, on e of the severest.battles 'tbich was ever fought on this conti nent, occurred oh the right of the Chickahominy, near.Gaines- HiJU' On Saturday, after our forcea'had retir- f1? fraer acrow iiws cre5s,..m)y.j j i - . ., - - : , v , . . . i i ed the bridgea.,we were attacked 5o front Off :r i ... n. 1 . . i j I theenetiiy, leaving the ground strewn with bis dead. : -is:r ,; i-.:.... s. i . , On Sunday morning, the arrancenienta hav ing been, completed, the wagon . train jwas star- ten on its wav to tne iames stiver, : and was followed on' Sunday morning by the artiflery an-t Commisearv's train; ' r':. ' ' ;v ' Meanwhile the eneinyi getting ecent of our movement, stronsly reconooitered our iron t. and finding that several ;of. ,our .positions had been abandoned,'- pushed in and attacked us vigorously. Generals Hooker and Richardsbn ' drove thein hack; and Genl Meagher's Brigade, always on haivd at the right time, charged, and csptured two of their guns: The rebels paid a dear price for the information which they ob-j tamed. The chief struggle was near Savage's Station.-. . . -r-:. - - ': vv Anticipating a movementon onr right-flank the railroad bridge over the Chickahominy was destroyed on Saturday! morning There--11 s, supposing we had fallen backon the White House, sent a large 4odc ef infahlrvf""'?! and artillerv in that direction but after ft long.! rapiil and weary-march-, discovered they had, gone on a wild goose chase in tne wro'ng direc tion. .They only found a emall.force Of our in-; fantry and cavairy scattered down to guard the! rear, who fell .back" and 'escaped froni Vii"(e House- Landing. The-'Test', was bne of tnose 'howling- wiUJernesses- which'the rebels intend to leave lor us.- AH the quartermaster and commissary stores had been removed two days before, and the rubbish, burned. ,r ; Gen. McClellan and Staff left the headquarters at Savage's Station at daylight on Sunday morning, with a body guard of the Fourth S: States Cavalry, and halted some five miles out kfter crossing the White Oak Creek. ; ' ; ' There were, on Saturday, about one thousand of the wounded and' sick, chiefly arcamu lated from the battle'of Friday, many of whom it was found impossible to remove, big: to the nature and-eeverityof . their, wounds, and as a matter of humanity, as well of necessity they were, left behind. great many.. howv? er, who could, walk slowly, followed the track of the arniy, and the ambulances brought away a great many oihers. - - . .-. .; . i - fiiHnaawiNo raox thx nonr. : Gen Hooker's Division broke camp- in.-the' entrenchments at three o'clock Sunday mornings and: Gen.? Sickles' and Groyer's Brigades proceeded to the outposts' tb' relieve Gen. Pat-terson'a New Jersey Brigade.'-' At fiveo'cldck Aj. Mi Abe three, brigadesi fell baclfto he-sec-' on d line of -redouts where they formed a line of battle with Richardson's -.and Kearwy'a Di- visions, and remained. until. 8 o'clock.' P. M. -. ; Sedgvick.'s"Divi3ibn left khb front at ldayight , and were engaged "by7. We enemy half wAy to SaVaga'a Stattoa, which; 'lhy reached at five P. M. Here the enemy's infantry, with a bat-' ery, came out of the woods on -the right, and attacked tli emv .'-rj.i,vjU ixJi jA : : Sedg wiick ' Di vision Crhssei ' the '-creek; : at White-Oak Swamp; about' foar o'clock" A. M. Monday. His rear "was-bot annoyed during thanight'i : --vH'. : w i . sirjo.-.na. ;n.x:: '. -Keyea'; anrd Porter's Div4iona'- had . already, preceded us on the marcK, and had reached a a poaiUpn on theJTamea Riverjiear Turkey 'a IslandrT which ; is abaut ten ot twelye miloa aboVe City' Point:' , . ' pxsTaubTibN or taa axpoj,- - . Aa the army'resuped ita marcH oAMonday-. mornini, -iifformatibn''was''receiVeJ,?throb Geo. Blchacdsoa that the enemy were parsu-jag an.4jordera were gyrex to destroy ; the bridr f'msi- tbW eob" ii jM'di.inoi.ru'c-' bii'sv; p. i; Tbe retreat was oonductclin tbe most peiv ictv uruer. lie re .waa ntrxrcpioauon PC oastet 'b'sah1np'-caTOn tirirjfig, and nox asinaaceideht'of airf ebn- seo. uen.ee ia belie ved to h a va oeiirrbl - A. Arrant I of 2,500 t&t catUennder the'eharge of Colonel yiarK, vniei uommJ4saraaad-CMpt. J. Jl. Uu- cbanan. (mmry:ptSibei4'ielcei)I Gener-1 at McClellaa's Staff. - were aneceaafnllv dri vkbM n"'6- icT uaa uwn vrougris. fin IFOmlO vy hue ilobse; hnd narrowly escaped stamping by tharebeisl stti. jfrafcriwo' ,-ri-wr infr5.' fT ttwweiiwjps anftjfmpaesaoJt greaiest'eaatli Ufleabbfttm :IAWof.jftxrcreMl wak divided; r -Aicn Plenty of proTiajcgjCahrtTTde cotaewill teiratfcfi axmycaxlhaitcUt tie arrangements liey were broujrlit from the Held. The worst cases were attcaded to first, but there waa and LyHailiIJN'XETAIBSi h I From tha coTtttpoodetiW of the Hgw Yorft ito tfragth Lima i'-i V"-i7 "7 ..iT'" roaoaM ffiT1nt lD, along which the immense Igapucu T.uw carrying out, oi part oi a ad;bein Jtftehih&&m&&ftttoi sjck and wonndsd. . . .m itmferkerathinwitVihe ore--ict ansjuarcuc .: j . , , w..;.t i-? iSMfiiw.iJ . - l-j ?f -' "-: 'iba eie-iv ciw miM vw. uwti CiatlimiSiCvf vvilcenti f r iaWaU and irWJ7, f? ' brit tr ffeoar?!, for the ai!r. and watt.. !Jl.ti'Sftnt eomr near enc'h mnaketrr la 1 fcsLva been a rreat man t- whoiieei: received at- teriMbba aL"r?l tire, ;f re , tfhtbf hick" Wa WHxWitZtr ;ofithe -nous7waa fcoyehd' ir.waa ut4mntiai ana taere were also some L. . . - - - - - - -'- ..- -. . 'I- t . cs. appaTeyflredinmoretaaBaatfc ateIT, ame sb exhaosted thaVtherfell br the way-P ideJ and'coald ouia oniy oe roasea anaceiped lor- wardhfs ihtoneatesC axertibti.' ' '' -" 4iw t liwiurwMw -iV'nau' Birn.t - i 3 Wheit;aajd'rf3eiw -McXnella'n ron'back- and reported' that the:' way -'waa - all open to dames. niyer, a wnii,. wreiiei-ra.ni urangn the whole line, and. the eight, of the grer neioKirang-iu nansa waa inoeea an .oaaia in Jth rterribia desert -of euepense and ap heosion . taroufaN which they had The teams, were now put upon; UteV trot in - i'-.C - I -1 . ; . oraer to reitevc tne , pressure .upon inai por XianttJl ii4hi ta. V - i - - - - .-j , Gen. McClellan and'J5taff bdeaheadi atd took poseeeoion of thy old estate" known as Malvern HilbLiOwned hv3. F. Dew. one mile hack frpra "Til rkeyAlsiand Bend." "It 4sU large. oU-fashioned esiatCi oriirttrall htiltrty "the French',1an(J hasnear it, in front, - an old earthworks fWns4rdctcd "SyOen i Washjnton dmrinit the RevolnridRarr war.c It" haa a spa cious yard shaded by venerable eima ' and oth I er treses. .t A pae v)ew of'tbe river can be had trontyne, elevated position Ueo. M-cvteiian axpressed the opinion,, that :,rith. a brief time tb p'fepare'. the positicyi-can -rbe held against any for.ehe enemy c'brin.agaixtet as. K y-'tu W' lit ooa TaABVi -.'" -' At 2 o'clock P. M'.,- firing'wai' heard in the direction bf Whito jOrtk Swamp, where it was supposed Ayree was holding in check tne rebel -force whojwerereupposedattempting to crcvss- , This ooa tioaed . foh" nearly? two hours. "when sudden and vheavyTfiring began-: farther to the left, m thft rdtrectioaaei CbarleS City Cross.Iloads vAt this rjohit'aa immense body ui.nnM w khj uo. imM.aaniErT kihi mmirr, uwi mil fMm Richmond. r., - 7-k-; wi r!Shsiwiw vw guard . the..roUn2 .f4 : :T -' ' 4 Ojrderaj were. Aeni im media t el ? to pur the troops' in line of. battle ; and Gens."' Porter's and. Keves'.comnaphr were poa -on-. -thelway hp the hill.'refurnine from, theT-.conjfortaUe ecwm'pnVent "beypnoT' Mai tern'"' Hills. By 4jj o'clock rC-at the road -was thrbnged with these trpopa.j with !arj jllery an d cavalry" "h aateain g to.resiHtiha advance of. the enemy., : , :' , VTHX .OtTWBOATS BaOUOHTXTO .CTIOI -. , ' . The firing pow became incessarrt, the explosion of "shells constant andjmQst terrific from both 'lines,' and the roar Of muskeiry, mingled with the shouts and cheers' of the' contending forces. If'we could have seen them, and.es-timated their strength or number, it" would have teen some relief, v but they were advah cing apparently,' to within ess than a mile; of our posdiuii, -nnder coveir of the1 woods.'' 'It was very evidentAdli'evrflitft t0r being driven, in, and that too,-by emerwheltniAg force At t h isutciura t o f tor- gtinboata, the ' G ale-i OTT0Bo1rv omhaff a" mile and opened fire, upon the left with their 4-pounders,' the sheila exploding in the edge of thVwtJods'aro'ng the hills' where it was sup-poecd thb enerfiy 'would attemjit" to turnr our letV -No doubt these terrific missiles had an excellent efl'ect . in deterring them : from . tbie enterprise, and 4. in retarding their progress During tiieevenlhg,' and while the fight was going on, crowds of dusty men rushed down to the.river, and plunged in to- bathe.. Considering the ciroamstances .-of- the army , this was hardly the time to adjust one's toilet.; .. . -. Meantime the contest raced with terrible fury along ouf wboI front and right.' "Exploding shells filled tbeair.and rifled Shot sCream-ejf overhead. ;. So. thick was toe cloud of dust enveloping the field, that it was -impossible except from the ebund,' to. determine which way the tide Of battle ebbed or flowed.' The goaboata:kept4ip afdiseharga: bf their ' heavy- sneiia -uponvyiaveneoay;a posiuon. f xrovost Marshal TPbrter meantime took har?e of the disablecfa'nd sick soldiers, and conducted them tathe rear. - ! - -! ; ; -" 1 ' ' " . -?Tbe day's contest woundup by a dimihuen do. of musketry, ud hj dark all firing, except ian occasional. shU hadreaed.' -' 'i ' ! It shputd -l home (ia miod that-the wide bottoms along the river separate the gunboats n many, places, soma two miles from the forces operating on the hills;'; -The gunboats Ga lena. Marataaza. Aroostook. Maraska and! Port Royals are neailby? aad aughtto4-abre to render valuable asswUnee to the army until it can be. placed in -poeitipn to operate. , tr Oair Xwaa Abont Tyrcxttj Txtonamnl. i . -The , Retail Losa Probably Greater. - HrAnoPARTxas or , raa. AaaT or xhi Potoac;- TraatT IsiAaP, July' 2. ' The troops which had fought, the battle of Sunday retreated under the-cover of night lb White Dak-Swamp Bridge, a distance ofabbut twelve tnilea. there to await the approach- of the enemy... -' ';' J ;-'" l; The disposition or the- troops on" Monday, the sixth! day .of battle, wa as follow- -1 - "? , ! General Smith'a diwion aupported by Gan- the bridge, while GepSamoer'aand General Frankt'm'a corps occupied the Jeftv, ii General n HeinUelman'a ! orpa,i with Gen. McCall'a division, wereout on ,the'",n)acL3to meet the fi -whw a Richmond. - : s ,!; '.tr,; -t .. J -IThe enemy. came on boldly earlv iatheioref 0n,v.ti2 -"toeri",heavUy .reiaforeed by'the irbopa.whii had fought he Ipattlelftf jFriday-o tne opposite siqe pi ue,uncxaaommy.ii .-i::.: iJil abbuihree, p'clock' ,it : becama evident tht Mme 'portion of our lines mntg aa, tha rebeia ,wera napUy throving Creah trbops. i.nto.action. , -; - .;H f; -yft-pur-troops id front of tis Widge now fell fiack to with iw three and a half milea of "Tut-key Islands widths fithtwassEortly-after-wardf yenfwexL,and eontinued.with. the great-est 'determination a, both aidea.- nv1" iraV'Jbaa 6n Mohdar1 waa verr BeavT oa hothaideaw Ik:- fiifctf n say j PuKpg theHdatfaJl.lhfc'eaiU portion, oi (USMMflporMwnmau Mini ww ed Turker Islani lJtl&JbiaiofC the rear aQn$4aL t$r, bacfbadoitedaarid txre3 tdl mae room.ior wif pigaoiHaferj t -.Vhti-r.trht wsmJ renewed aarfv-on ToMdif, mbrdht; by k yt&4 ahd avUciiily Inteadihgt1? - f ... . ... . . . . . , - iCiont comic sear caw- - a var aa&ketry become ensasd. " ? H t--3- - The loaa of our" army1 dniinjf these aerew a considered to. ba tas flearanysti-1 ia atitrenl''mven ,lir kilEed;! Noatrvaa lea won nded and musing. - V- V 'v " ;.'. f XU ipesrtaepemy ins kUied: must have I .T7 e vyg exceediajg xhatxafoaz r- J ' . - t. "'', a- -n ii-.-j "sit fir; we a are (a km about aeren traadred pnstn-- ea, among; whom are tbree lieutentat-colbn- eia ana paoxajnar i a-.it.z.'si' s-uu ei i v Tne reported captnxe .of ?Geu.' Magradet' is Idea In field ariillerV ii aboh'f thirtv DTDDioiT m. mnun. . . . . . , i . cea dorioSr the seven days. ii Qenerai Reynokhl andCarjUin KiastbarT of his staff, were taken prisoners, as ! also Col.' Stockton, of Michigan. -j-.. I -Jr. Ge trai Mead, of Pennrrlvania. was severe fa woonedJ.'j-ivf.'To-Oi' tr. ;'. - 'i -. -: ; General Burns yv$a Kbhaled w the faca; i General Sumner and .General Heiatz .man sre both slightly..wounded in- the left. arm. bat wcrer left the field. - -. : , Meaerat aLcaiiwaa eeea to raiitrom;h,ia horse doxiarhe battle on Momdariaad waa taaca pruoner. o extent -O BW Ujanea are Trrw Vnn ' "-' -"; ' f Colonel Go3fine. of JLha Mti Pennsylvania rezment, was anted.- j-"' '-v-- --..Captaia Gambloa.-of'tha Fifth RegularCav-alrv. waa also killed. . : , ... . ; . ' - Captain Whining, of the Fifth' Cavalry, was wounded and taken prisoner, and his son,, a lieutenant in the same regiment, lost' his left arm. . .- r".' : i-' ; - ' . ii- - ' Colonel xratt.' of the Thirty-first New ;Yeik The army is now encamped on' hizh. rbllioe ground"on the bank' bf the.. James river, fifr are already unload inr supplies at the wharves. l ne Commancyng trenera-feels confident or . .. - -. .. . successfully meeting any attack the' enemy may make upon him in his present position. - ; r J he retnfbrcementa the rebels received trom Beauregard and Jackson" gave thera-a' force" double that of the army of tha Potomac, and many br the prisoners . taken dunngtae battles ' ' 1 - "' ; 1 " Fobtbxss Moiiao.' Jui y 21 . At ten o'clock thia morhiiig the Nellie Baker arrived . at Fortress Monroe, from Harria-bnjs Landings having left thereat -five o'clock thia morning. She -brings down? twenty-five rebel prisoners,' and has only, a few': wounded o0 board."-. , ' " - ; The most terrible fishtinff took place on Tu esday last, and with he most brilliant ! success. The rebels were defeated in every action and the rebel officers, taken prisoners .'admit the lose of at least ten thousand ; meti on' that day. r Our artiUery waa . moat aucceeefutly brought to bear Dearly all day, while. the rebr lels hate done, hut very, little execution . with theirs. Our loss waa very ' small when cbm-pamLwith that of the rebelsr ' -' v "'r 1 The fiehtinsron both sides was of the most desperate character; aa fast aa the rebel forces were cut to pieces other fesh troops were irai mediately marched forward io" fill their places. They appeared to disregard thc'livea. of their! men. and placed and neld them under the hoti test fire pf our artillery"which.i waa r aweeping themdown and cutting, them to piecesaa fast as they arrived: ' ; ; '-';' '-'--.'"-: - y 4 a tar enemy have been' repulsed : and driven back in every fight ' for the 'last ' three daya---i Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, j : Yesterday, the enemy advanced about eiaht o'clock In the morning and opened fire, which was constantly returned, arid severe fiffhtine on both sides was: kept up -rfor 'three hours. when the rebeia retreated with considerable loss and badly .cut up by our artillery.. - v. r : Our troope are In' fine epirita, and never were so anxious to fight as they are ' wow. Most of ouT-wou-nded express a 'desire .tore-coverapeedily, that they can again return to their regiments. All seem anxious to be present when Richmond ia taken. ' - . . The steamers Vanderbilt; and Arrow-imith have arrived here with seven hundred wounded on the former, and three hundred on the latter. , . - '-- " - -- - " The steamer, Elm City haa about three hun- ed wounded men from McOlellan a arm v. "'The steamer John Brooks haa .arrived "from HmsonS Landing,' with four hundred wound ed on. board.' Tbeir rwoonda "were dressed to day, juid she ha left for Annapolis. Many of inem are omcere., ; . . , ., , - The vanderbilt and Arrowamith will go to ew-iora. . From Habbiso LaKPtKo, July 3, via Bxi rijioaa, July 4. Captain Speer, of General Reynold staff arrived here to dar, having- ien narnson l-ancung, -acvieitau a-xieadquar. ters. on Thursday morning.- '. . . " 's , ; i He reports the army aa ' thro encamped on the bank, of Jamea .river, in- good 'order, 'arid fast recruiting, Reinforcenr&nta were landing and were being received with cheers and tremendous enthuslasmi by .McClellan'a won out,' bat not disheartened men; , --''' The captain describes: the Tuesday's 'fight as the hardest-fought battle ; of the six, days' campaign. - Our men fotight , frobx 5 o'clock in the morning tilt 9 at hiehCdriviing tuei enemy at all points. : - " :' " " . ;'..:" -" Awenty-iourguna were taken trom the enemy, two oflhem Parrot guns of superior pattern. :; ' ' "- ""'" ,..:' '": : ' , .; . The rebels never advanced in aingla'Jine of oauie, out eame on sometimes three or., four lines deep. ' ' .' ."' '."'- , .', -.'" 4 ,, U -I ; The Canteens Of the rebels when taken 'were found to be filled with whiskey and gunpowder. Controry to the reporpifeVailiBgin Washington las evening, General 'McClellan waa not on-the gunboat daring the engagement Of Tu- eaday, but waa,, on landL directing the 'rnbve- ments. -; t,' -f f- j, vu- rx'Llri i Capt, Spear bringa jthe following liat of kUU edand woanded1- ( l ' "' . ' . : General ReynbWa; woiinded ahd taken pris- oner Assistant. Adjutant Gea. Kingsbury o General Reynold'", division oriaoner. 1 :ri .' -. li-ieutenant juoionei. Met n tyre, 1st Pennayl-J vaaia, wounaea in leg; qjutant Cttewarf, Jjst Pennsvlvania, 'woanded and brisbnier. Adhi- tanVHaxtahorn, Baektail Ilifles,: wounded and prisoner: , jaaier v eaieyi ;ti Fennatlvania wotlnded; Captain Gallop, 8th Pennsylvania, svwiaai , wipuua voancr, oui jr ennsyivania woaaded.' tt . l i'l-oyi s Captain Heea. 8th Pennsvlvania: 'avrTv wounded Id body; Colonel Simmona,5tbPennt ayjvania. and LieBteBaaef3tawait,iatPennayl- raia kilhsdijj 0 iwIsto ,..1 vGeneraJLongstreet(an4 General Magroder ware not taken prisoners, thousrh Colonal Pn. flvf; formerly of Cincinnati,, was Ihenguard-ad;as a prisoner -B tpnVV -.-"-".'-' 3- leaTailiava"heei recaired iVbnt eneiv IcClellandate4 as Ulaaa 'wo'4 'ha folle ii itary details and sent publication ??rXuUVAirfgh whs"thrntny irere rpr!?i with, grestUhtss.oslii ult : a to ice re- . '.o ? BjTw.-.csca- advsBta- Itttr in- tha Casks of our army ,.. -.. irl'o cane have been lost since th raea ment oa rridar. June 27thi when Geseral ile- tuousanu u , tLsaruy note t . J l-xsse it aTbrds greatly : ?encr ' ii fcrthai apcri'tLa'iof.ta t atoats, 1 '. Tib arvantecn aratsvaa Uatrtr lL.i Calri division yaa at tha onset" overwhelmed. ; and twenty five pieceafell-xnro" the -Lladii eft the-enemy. , -.; .- - ww - V -f r t "-' of 't&iti rVttla. '- r-Vii'''VT JVnV 7."-;'.--.. ltTJa"rnTa .are; have froa -our apec-Ufdetaili orf ueadav'a . battle.. ot heretofore . reported at lenglh x:"The tAt waaTarvaevare and extrnaea an aiongtbe unei a lost-ma.TtbSf rg; and ttaoXot-drovrtat rabela back. It was chiefly an artillery fig&x, bat pn;:Xoenrmadeaevetal eplebdid.-aiiccessfal chargea TJh1n4Bry: "wera. desperate, ' -Wng ' purposely maue ao sn .; annav aa axaerta ap to our unabny to ,be eatdowav by-liaa- In this. Tueadar'a fiht Morriir. divlaion iittered mbetJ Tha Xilfi regiment, ' a ; part of Bdoerfiald's briradewaa nearly annihilated. The 44th New York, 83d Penaajlyania and I6thtiehiara; abjo Offered, eeverely. x Bufc-terfield'a bngade broarht off j atanca of rebel cbloraJ ' Amojig the prominent cfScera of Mor-rilfa diriaibBi who: have given . Iheir lirea to the country, are Colonel Black. 62d Peanayl-vaaiar Colonel Woebury, r the h llichi- gao iioriei Oasa, of Uie Vlh 'Massachusetts, aod ie-Volpael Sjvitaer, ox the 62d roan-sylvanla. Most of.theae were killed Oa Tuesday. -General Porter'a" corca waa enxased. and did boUtY"' Hookera or the" figh ting di- yuRoa.wentto'fuc-' xreninsaia iu.uw strong, now. they jn umber leas than 6,000 oafiaotiva men. The severest sufferers ra.- thp liyjon were the Massachnsetta. 1st. 11th and 16th : of thelatter irgiment'about 80 were rebbried, q: oeing Kinea or aenouuy wotmoed, among whom were CoJonel ; x T. . Wyman "akot through the heart ; Lleul.-CoUmel GeorgeiI. M each am, Wounded;. Adjutant Wald'a Merri- am; wounded. - - . - .Sicklea' brigade also won new lanrelsj COW ingJi aa. the reserve, just al the right moment they drove the rebeia back with great alanght- r. -' : ;' " ' ;." . .- . - The Irish brigade of Gen. Meaghera, waa also prominent in thia' action. Also the 'Mo-zart regiment. .. :.. '. - ". '.. r -v The result of Tuesday's fight -was distinctly in bur faVor."' The rebeia -: were defeated n every action and - rebel officers taken prisoners, admit the loss of at least 10,000 men during the day. Oui-axtillery waaauccesafnlly brooght to bear nearly all day while, the. rebeia did very little exltcutlbn'- with" theirs. . Our Josa waa very amaH whn: compared with that of the-rebeia.'; The fighting wa of a desperate character; aa fast aa the rebel forces wera cat to'pieces, other; fresh .troops- were marched forward to fill their places. They appeared to disregard the lives of their wen." ' At the close-of the. fight the.Unibn' troop Were said to be in fine spirits and more aoxioaa Ahaojever o figbt. ,. : , - , r.r ; ;v i j. ' One of Our correspondents aaw . McClellan 'on"Wednesday4,t He came on board; the mall boat a& aba reached 'Harrison'sLafadiirg'.--He walkedj aft witaGen. Patterscm',who came on the boat. Qen.. McClellan waa. gea-ticnlating vioIeniTy with' his clinched hand; ; : but? his remarks :were- "not heaj.i ;Subeo-quentlyin reply to Gen. Patterson, Oen.' Mc-CJellan.eaid:, we have fought a battle.'. every dayfbf the lasl week and whippedibem iyery Our -dates by mail 'are down to Friday toom- ingfrnAt Boon on, rhorsdayxhe rebels appear ed i force, fbar muss from : JxcOIelian's Tront and began shelling hut - had no - effect. Thl gunboata i replied,' but-notbing impcitil occurred. It ia said that the enemy are is Jarpe foreeonthe east aide -4i the; ChltckahomTny and threaten McClellaa'e right, wing.- -Wi?t the rebeia are about On the .south side of the James river is hot known, but it is feared, thai on one aids or the other they will erect batter- iM to. command he nayigation. below oar pc "" sition. . .-V" . -,4L ' Theery latest news from Gen. McClellan-ia by telegraph, dated at his headauartera, Saturday evening: 'All waa quiet and the army waa in good spirits. ' " .. , :; . v,: ... . : , . ; - -. ; Bewi from ttcClellaa. r . '.'. ; : (CJorrerpoadenee of ti- Phfl. EnqairorO , ,t v' FOBiaisai Mbirao, July 5, 1852-7 J3xe eutrm.McCUUan is fflorimu- Y eeier-day, the day, we all dreaded, fearing lest the; rebeia would make a combined attack upon our" lines,, instead of having , to meet the rebels he hdd clear; ground and actually advanced his army, six mile. Praise God, McQellao is safe! The clouds have blown by the sun arises inBplen-doiy and the Union anny, about,-whose exist- ence the fears of the nation, have, heet) atew ted to the utmost height is no longer ia per- il.--"' ' ' ' J' J ' ; -;"" ' '' - - - i ?The entboaiasm of-our'-trobpa cannot Leex pressed in; language. The army of .jhe'Poto- mac is an army .of heroea and to them tlve I American people owe a debt of rratitude that . can never be cancelled. It haa braved ' battle ' fox every- aucoessiva day ia the week, anJ- againstsuperiar aambers it has.won the. vio- ' tory. Lee ia iq re treat oa .Richmond J .75,000 . Union.' troopa have repulsed 130.000. of the flower of Sooth ertt1 eh lvalrv. 'So "much 'for their vaanting and aotnucb for the' fiery spirit' infused into their apuls by whisky aad powder mixed. I,,. - : :"r'.-...-..0 . j. ,r . 7 ' Word from the army,' thla. moming, ; gives t the greatest satisfaction, Snd relieves the heart of any load-that has oppressed it during the last week.: There.waa noIfighUBgesrdafr except.io, picket rakirmiahing,. although 'ear : lines were extended front for., the six miles' ,, above raentiohed.';4 Reinforcements? are' arri-"' ag Bnd pushingi'B- to McClellaB and their naued wiuu ahoata - believe they caa ". ' any dar. and UcUlellan ie their idblZ- Ood bless the oblebOyk and their heroic.cosmandeti:'-i'i- 'Jrii- 'n- T-' : ' ! I 1 .. .1 11 . .1 ii 1 III niii ; J- tui . i;.jjV"-i L i A letter txthePmiT cwoiimta tha report of a akirmiah onTharadajrOai4lr tha capture "of six gana. and, oipc jprjeouers. - Gen.. McQellatt" bad removed his" headquarters, and the army -, had advanced abme five miles toward Rich-' '-' fTh rrtmnumlMtAftll - PhlUdalrjhla. ElW-ilV qttirerVatatea that the Richmond papers cf the 1 jtw-elaiiaf lh tctotr;-"' H- '."--f. r2ie.i eoTweponxlen the-TBnadelph tn, . acanowieog " . w,vw,.iun, ipni' Pros? pf tha aa.medata,r.repoTta thafMcCielv t-Z Ua is pbahfejrapMIy forward, drivrsg ihe,T5x,i enty at ail pmnta. ,, .,ne xuqpota accompanies . b"sadvaBca,ahelunhewoodsa3d'catter-ini the enemy! hi taaio force follow In 2 in sun t . port. . - . . - . . - -... ,, . i.f))W.li. ,-t, , , mm. - a ppcaraaoe in- Aba Aatd aa bf joy. rMcClellan'a - boya'? taKe xtichmond v fJx m -.aaavius -CJiiaa, m rerareaca t-; ' watcy any rtiti ; uaxrjiara in. irrf city --to'surpa.thia: Aholitioa 'cLqaeiB the bitter-sip aass of their phUippica asaiael the Utica ari bciJ. aa fiercely as their joke Southern: rebels, do, 3 s : . A'TpTtU : jTeUaion awt and jtAaT be prcerTeI., '.'"--Andrew vuclivn.' at |
