PER A

(From the Boston Transeript.} SHEFFER SKETOHING AT THE DEATH.

BY WARY

Tho young Venetian exile Held out her wasted hand,

‘And traced upon the paper Thus, of her oativeland

Noyer to watch the gondolns ‘Glide from thy suony shore!

Noyer to zee the palm trees Touched with p silver light,

And the fair fronta of thy pal Gleaming out of the night !

Never to olng of tho splendor That crown Imperial Rome— Dying upon thy borders! ‘Ap arrow's tlight trom home! Oh | beautiful nstive ol Whore turf blue waters lave, ‘Thy child slelde fo for freedom, ‘Aud Venice for a grave.” AULidle fell the penell, The eculptured hani wna clay, Some glorious, strong-wingé seraph, Oharmed the aad aoul away. Oame Sheffer to her bedside, Sheifer, tdol of art— Anold man, loaning on him, Cried, with s bresking beart, ‘Oh, child!” and bent biw, tremblia: Bowed him bealde her bed ; «Oh, angel!” cried the painter, ‘\T'will not have thee dead." Then selzed his glowing pencil, ‘And wrought in wondrous dyee, The rich bloom of her lips again, Tho warm light of her eyes ;

‘The brow’s most eniotly beauty parted gold,

lifelike splendor Each fair trees to onfold,

‘Ob! bleat among immortals! ‘Thou liveat evermore,

Within cejestin! portals, And on Italla’s shor:

{Written for Tho War Press.| ABIGAIL.

BY M. L. 8. OHAPTER I ‘And we passed to the end of the viatay ‘But wore stopped by the door of a tomb— By the door ofalegended tamb— [Poe,

Happiness cannot be noted. We can de- scribe neither happiness nor melodies so they can be rewlized. We must taste, hear them, to know them. But Abby could have said on every-ane of the nearly jive hundred mornings that) had pnssed since she promised to marry Majér Reynolds and ignore all ob- stacles—she could truthtully have said that she was fiappy ; and there are very few of us who can do that.

For more than two years she had been his wile, and had never repented it. She had not deceived, him when she married him, The afternoon that she yielded, sit-

NNUM

ATURDAY, DECEMBER

3}

PUNISHMENT OF A PRIVATE AT HEA

DQUARTERS OF THE ARMY OF THE POTOMAQ, POR BEIN(

making some calls, making purchase cessary for our journey and for th

for I want to haye all things re ‘and not |

>- | cable Jaws ot society that surrounded her, | perception of her own me

ly doing si ever shock her moth

mething that would for

thought th

y must be evident to every one | else in

= Si SSS’ coatata

that she! the floor again. As be went out of the door, | urly head in the door

he ran back, put his

soon as he sa began to ery.

illo moment, and looked at her. She let go his little hands, and drew herself up on the pillows. Then her mother took her hand, and placed her finger on her pulse. Abby put it out like a child, too much frightened to | but

drew it away. Mra, Reynolds did speak, but took medicine from the table and drop ome in water, and was about to givo it to her, when Abby drew 1

Mrs. Reynold

lisobe lisobey

e let Catharine raise my head.” s. Reynolds stepped bi bby raised her own head, but, Catharin drops, OHAPTER XI. And Fear ‘alked with me, by hills, and {no valleys, and near o (Hood. Mrs. Reynolds thought, feverish excitement

she had feaved; on

her listlessness, her indiflerenc

and was ‘prone to too much exertion, rode out every day, sometimes with Harry and his nurse, even with Mrs.

times ; but as she grew t child only. To her mot unusually communicative, and with Laura, almost sociable. She wns subject to times of great depression, but they would pa and leave her full of a strange, fitful She kept Harry always with her, neve mitting him to leave the room without her. ‘As Laura said, she had a mania about |

If Laura had known how compl

one iden—her

her-ii

ayet

Pp had bad ing, mysterious malady grew stronger on her. The agony had passed, but not the consciousness. With that won- derful, subtle power the insane so often pos- , Abby guarded her secret well, paying ference even to the Woman she hated so strongly. Butit wasa perpetual struggle She was conscious of such a new fle in he the possession of a secret, a bright, secret, that made her long toclap her hands and shout out. But she kept gher secret well,’ and only in her bright eyes, always averted from any one he talked to, could it have thus, by her cunning, she bl to her scheme, It was not harc vnolda was unsuspici

vi

June,

ars shone With their warm summer so different from their kee

snow is on the ground.

leaves

as silent, dim,

nd bent the ro: and quiet, and alm

-in-law, Whose inex som But Laura, quiet, | and cried—** Good-bye, orable eye always watching for it. | keen-sighted girl, saw it all, and when she When in her own room Abby would resolve | judged proper she resolyed to couviace | | to love her mother-in-law better, to be f er also of Abby's feeling; but for the | and more natural with h at her with nt, she let it pass. She was sorry for affection; but her pre: froze her | Abby's sickoess and suffering, and would

gain, and made he willingly haye relieved her if she could have Laura, they we done so, but she could not refuse herself the of the same house ; the a °s queer fancies and thought of enc other As she grew better th ferent sojourners at the same table might | did not diminish. She had certain ¢ haye done. to the most trivial things that amu Such an incongruous family would | very much, and she was highly edified one haye fallen apart, but for the bat | morning by an account Catharine, Hacry’s bound them toget! Abby's love for her | nurse, gave her on th irs | child was a passion, too vehement, Mrs.| ‘Do you see this wrapper, Miss instead of thee’ alw: | Reynolds thought, who loved her’ son’s | the young mistress has worn it, see, until it “Jt is the fashion of my people, thee | child deeply and proudly ; while it would | is fnot fit for any one, much less a clane, eaid Abby, smiling, | have been unnatural for auy woman, even | nate craythur belike her to put on, an’ jist But you promised me you | more indifferent than Laura, to have not) now when I tould her so, she said, ‘thin would drop it—at least, before we go home; | been attracted by sucha blooming, lovely | she would stay in the bed until it wus you know how much my mother dislikes it.”” | babe as little Harry. Hisfair skin and pret- | washed, fur git up and wear another she Here he touched the key-tone to onc of | ty lips were counterparts of his mother's; | wouldn't.’ Och, it is full of fancies she is the few of Abby's life—his mother. | while his eyes and brow were kissed daily | now.” ‘And to this mother, at once so considerate | by his graudmother, who remembered her| She would lie for hours looking at one of, and so intolerant of her son's wife, she | oldest child in thein, the babe who smiled | window where the sunlight fell in broken was going. Shefelta greatchange, but not | in her arms when she was as young and fair | patches through the blinds, or watching the a pleasant one, awaited her in her future. | as Abby—the boy who was now periling | playing of the wind amoug the leaves ot the War had been’ declared with Mexico, and | life and limb in the battle-tields of Mexico. | prairie rose in the evening wlhien it was know how persons suspected of any tend her hysband’s regiment was ordered off; | But the three women lived as many other | opened. Or she would send for flowers, cy to it were watched—were talked about. | the lithe boy to be her only comfort | households do, apparently quiet and peacen- | and deck the child with them in such a fan- | r y, “bad rather s Twished to escape the fire of suspicious | now, | ble, yielding their prejudices for the sake of ciful way, singing songs in such a pitiful, | ¢ How her head pained her! tongues, Do not blame me; intend never |" And so I will, or at least I will try. | an outward harmony. On Abby it pressod | trembling voice, that brought tears even to | if he should be killed ! to curse any husband with it—to darken any | « You’ comes strange and bard to my tongue. | hurd, for she had to obey, while Mrs. Rey-| Laura's eyes. But most noticeable was her A dead father, aud a crazy—yes, crazy, keep man’s life by it. Do not blame me thatI| But Imet Mary Gray to-day ; her husband | nolds and Laura only refrained from requir-| complete loss of memory of all current | to the word—a crazy mother! Then his @id not tell it. If I had suspected thou| has resigned his chaplaincy, and will stay | ing as much as they would have wished. | events. She would forget whether she had | grandmother would have him. Perhaps he wouldst loye me, I would rather have | st home: I envied her,” | cis almost impossible, certainly improper, | ad her breaktast or not; whether the post | would grow bard and cold, and call her Abi- warned thee by speaking of it.” You’ need not. Perhaps a chaplain’s | in newspaper limits, to aualyze the life at} had arrived; sit mourning because she had | gail! But how foolish she was ; it was only «Blame you! Lcould not do it. Iean| sense of honor is different,-but 7 could not | Lansdoune ; it is enough to. pass hurriedly | no letter, when she had received one only | the fever; people never knew them: well imagine all your sensitive heart would | shirk my duty now. It would have been dif- | an hour before. All this Catharine noticed, | when they were going mad—yes t have had to bear, if it had been known.’ ferent had I done so a year ago when we wondered about, but, attributing all to the | she had forgotlen-—sometines they did—but *Tywould have died if Thad been whis- | talked about it.” | fever, she didnot spenk of ittoany one. She | she would not—it was only the fever; her pered about as some poor, aillicted people} + Yes, I know; but baby and I will be | repented of her silence afterwards. Bat, of | pulse was throbbing now, and her head was are. When every look is watched to see if | yery lonely atter th—you go." course, Abby did not note her own vagaries, | very hot; she was very f 0) it is wild—every incoherence noted! Per-} The young gentleman, in flat contradic. ut her forgetfulness was forced on her one | and she would be w ad haps my secrecy has made me morbid, but | tion of ‘his mother, took his little fist out of She had sent th e down stail in New Orlegus it came I cannot bear to have it sneered at. his mouth, and began laughing in that wise, an errand, and totally denied it when she J to 8: “You say Dr. Drummond has no fear} secret way babies have, looking as if they | came up again, Catharine tried to con’ rine did; she forgot everything so—her les whatever of its return ’" would not tell their funny little notions if | entire want of harmony in their dis ier that she really had sent her, and ex- | sons, the errand she ran up stuirs for, every- “None—he says I will most probably | they could. | tions, habits, aims, For a year they lived | claimed— . thing ; her head used to feel just so. have no more trouble.” She evaded the| What! you are glad of it, you little} thus. Lite Harry could ruo about, talk| ‘'Au’ were yo Perhaps she was wrong—ob, she would name always. ‘None of my fumily have | scamp ?’ said his father, leauiag over and | quite fluently, and was very energetic ou the | Whin ye were si Kk pray that it might not be go with her! The any tendency to it, and it was caused by an| pinching his little red ear. The smiles ) subject of “' Harry's papa,’ who, of course} _ When she was sic Horrible words! | doctor would tell her; perhaps he could accident.” i tee Pided fiom his baby face, andthe child gazed | was his. mother’s principal topic. ‘Theu|| Bad she lost her memory again | Oh, could | cure her before it wastoo lute; but he would | She insisted on his referring it to Dr. | intently, clearly into his father's eyes. there came to Abby a severe sickness, an] it be possible |—it could not, could not be! | tell Mrs. Reynolds, and she would not let} Drummond, and promised to abide by his] {do wish I had noticed children more, | attack of typhoid fever, from whieh she was | Her poor head reeled, memory, thought, | her keep Harry ; and she would come in| ision, What that was their marriage in-| go I might know if they are all like this | Jong rallying, She continued weak and list | consciousness seemed slipping from her, and | softly, with that horrible scent of dead rose dicates. : i chap. Are they; you kaow, Madame 30 dull and dificult to urouse,| with a faint cry she sprang trom her chair. | Jeayes about her, and say “poor child, Upon this cold winter day of which I to interest in anything but Hurry, that Mrs) | Half stuoned, pale, nud trembling she would | she did when she was sick Ro: write, Abby stood before an open stove, Reynolds became very much alarmed abouj | have fallen, but Catharine caught her, car- | ad rose t lavender I. warming herself. Her bonnet and cloak on, Her. She was utterly ignorant of the keen; | ried her to the bed, bathed her head with her furs thrown buck, she looked happier ness of Abb: cling ubout her; how het | bay-water, rubbed ber hands, and fanned | and prettier tban ever, She was talking to presence, every litte attention aggravated | her until the color rushing violently back to | Hurry’s Jittle hunds would soothe the pain | her husband, but looking at her child, who n ; how steadily during her| hertuce, Abby turned ber head way and | in her temples. She sprang trom the bed ; Was very intently examining his little pink sickness there had been growing in Abby's| buried it in the pillows, Suddenly she| fever and excitement gave her strength to ‘cks, and occasionally pitching backward mind a deep aversion to her mother ia-law ; | looked around, aud saw Catharic | ruu to the window, push it open, and look ‘his attempts to taste them, when he would she hated the sound of her voice, her ficur | ut her with a perploxed, dissutisfied face, | out, ‘There was Harry, down on t his back perfectly grave and content steady eyes, her footstep, the color of bor} ‘Go away !’ y, Violently ; “I with his grandmother ing ut the Abbis laughing father put him right again. dress, her smooth hur, gesuure, ever | do not ik so at me; | gz led loudly to him. Stoop¥on threw off bonnet and cloak, and movement, ‘The touch of her huud was | sit down do nvt | ickly around, s crowedtook him wp ss he Inughed and horrible ; she would rather lie with the bioud | nived t 1 face, gave the child to hy “ah, Yt delight throbbing in her temples than Jet her raise May Lal ot him it ith young pretty, girijitde love,” she cried, in her her pillows, To see her do anything | } ue tre ad her lyiv under the chestnut tr ding at him \Yolce, Kissing him and nod Harry was torture ; him of bis awn “No, no, feet on th x. & } her | L Here they took t 118 mamota RE Up tushion ot mothers: will climb up into her lap would make Abb “ah, mamma, he bad been a child, longago! She leftthe foot While she wus yXt cold now ; was he gor cry out in such anguish as to fright and weat downto M in the road. His horse Was thee a good tht Well me, little monke, mother-in-law, Who supposed her to b y little Harry ! Oa, on near the been in, Henr How long bas thee pain. She never fet Mrs. Reynolds sve ow)‘ i Teva Y i « " Joseph Kingston lived; flying “Quite lony enough she loathed her, for subtle instinct told he! “A huudred time the gate whe pect the boy did, wucre @vouder, as I ex- it would never do ; it would raia her uo blood running trom bis throat on the grass— late, my lady.’ Sowere, Youare happiaess. he 4 i aud going up| acrazy man, woo killed himself! On! how “cate |? Mrs Reynolds r suspected any one| cheek, on her | found Abby cowered dowa in the bed, hold- | dark the uight was, aud the wind moaned in of a dislike to” herself; she hud so put ou | iag tue child’s hands on her head, while he | the trees. Runniog on, punting for breath, | |

ting in her brother's staid parlor, she spoke ly to him, not without shrinking, how-

umma, Harry will

bring you up a ros | His mother lay with the sweet smile her

boy had kissed to her lips

pale face for some moment it too

faded, and the ghastly look of pain

back 4s she clasped and wrung her bands. | How could it b God would not be so

cruel to he What would become of her?

The very fear of it.would mak

mad, mad ! What would become

midnight. Up in Abb

on he

have any worry be “Did you bay me anything pretty 2” said

her husband, geyly, as he eaw the cloud on

her face.

| Lam afraid not.

em $s room yy the table putting Harry, who lay in

d thee before,” she said, “T did not intend telling thee why I did so but I must now. After I heard thy opinions | pretty for Harry upon uny one with any taint of insanity | please thee.’ marrying, of course I felt I never could mar- What was it? Very pretty, is it?”

ry thee; I felt sure thee would not wishit if] “A crimson cloak with furon it. [looked thee knew I had once been thus afllicted, | jong at a white one, but I thought thee | and Iwas foolish enough to think thou the gay one be Am I not goc wouldst think less of me if I told thee—re

spect me less I mean,””

«When was it, Abby, that you were so afllicted 7”

“Six or seven years ago, Iwas only a child. Perhaps thee would not suppose I was very ambitious, but I was then. The regiment was then in a fort on the gulf, and I was at school ; we were very anxious f prizes ; I studied too much, and while atte ted by the oyer-exertion, a fall brought on— the disease.”

How long, darling ?””

“Tr Insted nearly n year. Very few per- sons knew it. I think my family are the only ones north who know anything of it. I could not bear it to be known. Oh, I

a heavy in the de

But I bought something ey RIGHREe GE , because I thought it would | already on, a shawl loo: Eyea the and he wor black and white. him up, but d Fearful th the auld \ she hi

pas. it ions

ga a|

friend, losing. her memory crazy /—his mother her husband v be

What was his name ! Crazy? Yea, ye 4s put in an asylum, nt off, and took their little Henry ?—no, that was not his name ph—and he was crazy and killed him- , Her pretty boy—oh, suppose he should 0 So | Suppose he should curse his moth curse her and say, thou gayest it to me!| Her pretty boy—/e'crazy! What bad she done?—oh, why should she be so afllicted be- fore all men? And her husband—what would he do when his mother wrote and said that Abigail—yes, hard, cruel woman, cold as snow—she would say Abigail was— | would she say crazy, or mud, or insane What could he do? Would he be c sor-

you it aura? enough pare 8 finish:

, put his shawl up, put arm, und the stealthily open

his sleep. sing him, raised bag on her lsmp she vad Went out. She stood and li The house w silent. The bed-room doors were closed. Then she went on, She could not shad the Imp, but it was very feared p her way in the dark v » child arms. The tre rds 10 matter how The dog and growled, but c to him; butaltho he looked suspiciously a She put ber lamp on the on. the sofa, oftly—there were t qui atry how poreh, and look« He all was wel chirped merrily, ateadily away, the katy- dids rang out’ their ce charge; she could hear the drone of the frogs; the per- fume clung v to the dewy air, Ul abe roses ull bloom ; there was no hu- man bi ht, no bhumen sounds dis- turbe back and took up her child again ; left the light still on the table, ed the dog ba wed her, and t down into the gurden path, Just as ft the porch the great clock in the hall igh the 1 syringas, b the dark, invisible eat bush of snowball hts into the g Jan dhe walked on ste: ; she bad five miles the child was heavy ; she was not yery strong, but urged. by her fears, nerved by her love for her child, she was able to do her work, She was afraid of © public road, and

them y? He would had | the b ied !"" And

Poor little Harry !

nings in thi out on the

‘ound her. The crickets

teppe

aced the feelings of Abby—the continual worry it kept her mind in, the only refi for peace being near Hurry; the only port in her husband's letter, to whe never complained, aud who ‘felt qui

that his wife's sweet nature would win hi family to forget her lineage, her obnoxious! quaint name, He did uot realize w

aughat all, But just 80; the girls as Cathe

er so forgitful before,

calycan past all her old del

a leaves !—

OHAPTER X. how she |

And I sald—! What ts written, avweet alater, ‘On the door of this legeuded tomb" She replicd— Ulatume. Ulaluae— *Tiw the tomb of thy lost Uistuae 1 A few weeks passed quickly, and Major Reynolds leit his wife at his mother's house, and journeyed onto Mexico with his regi ment. All the time of seemed to Abby lik

ecting some on her puth lay y the river to the t ed the garden and s heard mpiog in their stal she passed them; a cock started up in the barn- yard and crowed; it mid- night, it wus so corn, waving the leaves r ing among th

6 on back n

But if she laid there she would go m

her married life now adream, Lite Henry and her husbaod’s letters alone binding ber to the deligouul past, It was a new lite to {the Quaker girl, educated ia the freedom of life in a fortress. Mys, Reynolds had a keon sense of propriety, a deference fur the opin ions of her world, a stroug love tor her son, which led her to treat witb respect his wile, a complete absence of the organ of individa, ality, and inubilityto understand her; while the restraint Abb ntly while with her, made her lose one of her cbiet churms— her freedom of action, her joyousne-s thut pad charmed the Major. She was constantly afraid of infringing on some of the inexpli

Ids turned ¢ her yuu 8

tharine bed, ber up asal

to see

» Where tly by re he had Jaid dead, with the » his mother, sud brow

one on each |

oud them with of

nyree to

but Thaye been erywhe

Lips, dud tur

2 FORNEY’S WAR PRES —PHILADELPHIA SATURDAY DECEMBER 5, 1563.

ae <back, the child un- E80) AN | war ie at berta torribio subject for reflection, but | Richmond, may do #0 at nny time by pending it to | aring to look back, the child un. THE NATIONAL | ni te en ene ol 1) but | Rebs i

1 dy may do #0 feasurer of the Comminsio anithe Et ne and pour out upon us the riches of | been # patient and faithful to sEaEPaY in liberty, = erH0D er 0 mianion, | his holy spirit, whom all the brib oney could no! 7 1G.c + (1 | by retele, against the integrity of tho Dest Govern: | at the Weatern Bank, he proces Neat ns R hom all the bribery of money could ot TU 4 / Q Ho droceedings hero concluded, and the Bishop, | from thelr convictions and eenee of duty toward ul Gor the trees, down to the river. . She eat J: AS NG, | ment tiiaeever'was given to man, it has become a | nure DAY AT THE ARMY HOSPITALS. | murroulited by the members of hia tsmally, placed eee | The laboring clatses of Eoglaad took 4 noble atand, « great stone, Inid the child down : a Heceaity, ani it imposce upon all of ua a duty from ee - ae ueteie Sreperty into the banda of bia estima | which they have never yet dererted. Thoy sald down ons gt ong, ia; sho.ching to | Which no man may sbrink, It must bo endured with, SOUTH-STREET HOSPITAL, | bie wite. Pesce ee cotton supply cease; let our looma bo downr knees, and kiseed him; sheehing to) thursday of lust week—the 26th of) alllte sutcrog, Si Be ean disastere, and | The oldiern of tho South-street Hospital wore | |The entire party thea procoeded to ayo (ie > eee See OT tein ah Hanopened ) UB i pasieierane | party thea proceeded to another por- | hushed; betterythat than that we should give one his innocence for protection. ae ongni Noyomber—was observed throughout the United a all ite aeants anda: hors id pyeloal ails agreeably catertained on Thankegiviog day with | aS OL the Route, whoto thoy partlelpsted ‘a s | esmpathy to the causc which 1s oppression of the his eyes, and began to ory-very I intly ; she | Stntes ea day of Thaokeglying and Pralec, In| very forms there Is ero 1s doath 1a oem pe | the many Good things of thia life. The dining hall PROSE are Oa Tear aye heoxful | pot. They are heres a leas them le eked him inher arms, and gently sAg © | Phiiadolphia the observance Vacuaiversal, In all| Qomnt tc nimost covery heatthstoue in tho | was gaily festooned ‘ith the national colors, and | the widespread elty of Philadelpt ning, in | _ Lot ua not forget our sarneat:{ricade a rT * 8! tho widespread elty of Philadelphia than among | Lect us not forget the glorious paitet of Bright and cradle song. A cradle song! Under t tho churchea seryicca were held—every branch of | lsnd—all | these must bo ecdured as the | tho tables filled to overilowlns with poultry, frult, | the party at had tuus sasembled bencath the root | Cobden, Foster and Newman, and othera who bare ‘aight, alone py the river sough- | tho chure, every eect, nad class, and bellef uniting | Datorat, consequences, of war But, yet in this | and ealce, which the dnvenders of law ant (Ue. | oftHempfendid building pretented to Bishop Siaptoa. | stood by us. Jaet ug honor them for thelr, YErIENS. stars Wt tho shore, whore the startled rabbit | in te own way togiva thaales to Almighty God. | Pe aNlehg Hrogceay what havo sau. not to | Neartily partoole of ‘Tho sceno was gratifying to | eenbnn ence Tg) State malker no. with lifted ears flew by her—alone, forlor In the church at Teuth and Locust etrecta the | be thakful for? And not only the people of thir Jook upon, Thess heroce, who whilo io tho army SST ee Meogiand wh With but one idea in her poor brain, sho sang Roy, Wm. H. Furness delivered a discoureo from | city, but what havenot the neq Jo of thig «reat and | were accustom

searcoly 4 easily Jehing, away (rom the lune, from wn-

stars at mid

| made by both, for the aristocracy of England who to est nothing but fat pork, cotfee, | =

f ta have atood by'ua bave a double parentage. We have oNeity North tobe tuanktul fort The deeolstiog | and hard tack, felt and looked joyful when partal the mothers heart with us.‘ The Queen of Eoglaad

or little cradle song How often bad her tho text of Proverbs xiv, veree 34: Righteousness | Paves of rs nea > your property aod ing por art s of ho, ile cade Song, Hoy teense [enliethn anion’ Aon other stuinblepy | Patt tes area oneemia sour ycperty Aol | Gf tho many feliencien provided for them. Such seing Day wha quite generally observed | EMTtNy fapstaisy with ie people ue Teste ss for none | ta Now York ity and Broolrlyn. ‘The charebee ia | Lot us look as to the rperess of emancipation. It

Mt if, from ‘his tout in Mexico, he | ges, us sermon contataod the Tallonriag eloquent | Leicemod argaieh, aud there aro,menyh Dereaved | mosis rhould be given to them wt aft tins

sang | K Hm an SAnELGR EN ;

= 1 > ir! 0 di neo) o! | and ON cl hearts smoug you; yet compare | aro more deserving or haye earned {t than they, | both cities ro very largely attended, by devout | has become the bond U bv forth is for it ae ace hen uo jut he could not de- | trlbuto to President Lincoln, au one of the gifts for | and sorrow-attickea hearin ano at ney, 7 ) by has become th 1 Unto. rth io for ould see her now ! But she ennld not de re oe ton thaDk Ce ea pedrg ee onioary clade |""Pvcrioog tothe dante the aatlona, bya, | sud ative waninere, Tos Chore of EEL: | South nsataat ik Where shall we gec auch 8 Tay hore; she raised her boy, took up he Four condition ns a peoLlo ey Hor youre has becs | « America,” and tPratee God from whom all Clee | crits, Brooldyo, wan filled to tte utmost eapactty, | Fhe avery abc iow aa there has beea at the North

at slavery ebould be upturoed } Wo owe agreat debt to God in our Chlef Magir no | trate. Ho la Winely and surely plooeering too way

» bag, and went on her way. She kept OUR CHD:Y MAGISTRATE | Invaded'oriati ante ; no wholeasle conilagrstions | ingg row," were sung by the soldiers, aud lea Ebeling pine cd close to the fences, : : Ore aera ee ehrowott the foul wrong that threst- | bas been Ield wpon that witch Te eet fand dear to | Site aud hin 1ady.» At tho close of there intar- | fico nt least an hout be foro the commencement of easier; it was rough down near the river. | ened its rulo ts tho crowning blersing for which we you—your domestio hearth ; bo nufering has aitiiot, Usting proceedings chcers were piven for the sur- | exerclees, The popularity of the eloquent pastor, | of liberty to this pation. One man there was whom fre wide, dark river made her feel very | ows “grateful vow and rolemn, praise,” theys A Ea'Vou, except that appertaining to the lonsot KIn- | goog atinchel to the owpital. the jady tn charge, | Rev. Henry Went Beecher, is more than sufficient | God's hand ordained to brealt our foreign homage, de ais avns still a goft under-tone | omer apectal mereles whieh clain! our moKt cordial | dred and friends in battle. God lee you ln | ind tho excellent aad worthy steward ee ee ear er eee alslbey Sud ft wear) AC it Were, ORAS 10 Boer One er dane him lonely, but there wos 8 A ne | other special merely vee srenese, edo uot know | tho teed timo and In tho harvests HNO PE ER EET PR EE rar ec ote Be ereesrecar 8 | {hom God bas ordatned to break the bondage of & Hed which whispered as it broke on the Peb-" One that should be montioved berore tho aut whieh | Fer A nine employmenta whieh from day to Gy | ataried ta the cig, and although euail {a alee pre hot remarkable that although Mr. Becsher had re- | Wworea oppression in an ne eecond Dies of tho sweet quiet under the water, but) the bounty of Heaven hao bestowed upon us in the | you sre following; your ysrntre co reple | sents ao appearance which, for order and oleanil- Jated his foreign experience frequently alnco his | should be greater than tho Br. together, Wes Ofarry was still. breathing near her | man who Ot Hea ve tints momentous hour to | Hon; your storchousea are throngty! ye ty, co which, for order and slesnit | Tetum, thero waz manifested o intense an interest | O"¢ and, Heeeparat®, we TAAL TOTS gatho tho. ittle Harry i. i ocoupy the highest pincoin the nation, 1f Lreeol- | SoMmey 1s everywhere teomibs with prosperity. | pablo of holding 263 men, nud te bow fully occuvled: | to heat him again, to his iaimit blo way, tell of th ‘asbiogton and Lincoln, tho fathers of heart, aud she shut her ears aud walked on. | foot tight, Ebeltove oo. a fornir thankegiving occa. | WU s portion of your fellhw-citizens are bat | The library contains s Lumber of wnotructive and | io ReaS Rene Nae Ey» ols boare Then she canie to the narrow, quiet road | slon (Cthink it wao the firat thanksgiving recom: tllng io this war to reatore Tas unlty.o the Statce | plenslog books, which the soldiers take great Uelight | S7mpsthies in Europe for our esure, and their besr- |" Let us not fore

which led into the town, passing houses | Bs ed by tho Preslient,)Lnamed the Presidout him. | and tho elarg At your Foy sramenbee tae and | in peruriog. ‘There wero voluntarily contributed, | Inge upon our wars

cb inkose NADOSEIE monded bY the rer coribea for whieh wo were bound | Home aa peaceful and. contactor af Elev but'moro are needed, and pereons having en abun- | ‘The exerelees we where people were asicep, he naif an one of tho blesslot ior onsga to be thankful | aale an you wore before the Par TES roliglous | forwnsaing them to tho hoa Dortow agrent favor by | py Nr, Beecher, a ¥ ow houses. In one» light burned ; " svondered if a babe was sick there

sopencd with a fervent prayer | Which they that F alnee the open

the of thors who tho approach of nve eo Well, wader vesofthe South. And

religtou h he commended to the | Wor §

foc him now tha wo had then, @Ho hss gone | 10 th {Ull enjoyment of all your elvil and religious | forwarding them to the hospital, where they will be r | word of complaint

| for him Dom cial, avin oaid” of Bes gone | Fightes you worabip In your temples with nove 10 | thankfully received. pital, where they WIL be | throne of grace the care nod protection of his nativo | have been waiting

oe ney eduego, nod upon his soul the fro | Tolest OF malco you, atta, rete Ttarally Dank | ‘ORD ty rece ie conducted somowhatdiserent | 1nd, ito wounded dofonders, Its rulers and ell Hs ) liberty. Naver did a ye elreumatan

iy dogs growled ut her from behind the | hanhad ao power, ‘nor tine n halr of bie bead Osea, | (2 valighe Of that protection whic our {ree | rom others ofa similar kind, there belognolady eam | people, concluding with aa impressive invocation 2 ra was 0 faint, mysterious hint | singed, nor hes Ais cost chontged, nor te amell of | Government affords to ils oltizone, Caves ‘wall } mittee attached to It, Misa Hannah Davie, who bag | for pence : : how bas the free uepro acted since he Las thrown ott Pees, Tho sky was brilliant | to ire parsed, through IL ive cates ERC OF| thist, Kuow you nothing of blasted deida that ¢x- | yeon weith tho Doppltal aluco it first ptarted, haa te | ++ ciyq an peace that : Sale tho chains of rlavery Bo a Tae CL tho tre parsed throush table patience, to hin | tend from tho northerato the Son N TTT A eee | entice to tie. eueriog. Soy harllindness and at- | (erly Capeecate tt winverr. usdistartod by 1 in aay of tho telde wh We SH aras surely near dawn, | RR NE el honesty, to thst singular wisdom by | Southern Starca Hho Th auything of the pre | fention to tho fulleriog ones, J deserving of the rity, nnalatorbed by slavery. aailiacarted Uy jueod. | thanks God that, while ind cool; she wrapped | whieh be has been guided, 1 thinlk without bee being Sour eet ot that ones Denutiful nod fertile | hignest commendation. The medieal department fs | Ford Chi atid to. #10.) is oh the AIDE eee

by th

givo Usp: singing a)

n out of Thing own bose cr usual oxo

4 f ver which ilo lian swept, catvitche while atudying | country over which, the tle of war » | conoueted by Dr. Edward Shippen, Surgeon U.S. oe eee taumort tho son: | Jeaving behind ono vaet. necno of ula aad | a. formerly connected with the Army of the Poke. wcrvato the utmost thocon: | Gepolation? Know you anethige ofyfue Tete. | mio, but relieved from thera to tale change OF ts

nwaro of bimeclt, an flwaya soxtoudly to

bin by the 1 in wa

nd

around her child,

her shawl

walked fast ‘ow into the town, on to | otituftonsl limitation ot

Her vaveiments, distant wheels sounded over | in bonor to observe, bo bes never io roatanig nth | oe bleh atslie abroad in Yabrt once fait | Fosptal, ‘Tho excsutive officer Le Surgeon JF. | Beecher annoudssd to tho his cermc te

Neier RR Ne eee Ory | a momont te be donbted that all bis personal alma, folds whero now to heard tho rosr of exnnon spd | Maury, U.S. A. aad the assistant eurgcons are Dr. Sth Pealm, 13th, ith, nad Jott yere Ho has piven, his

the streets; past the church, the bank, the | (clings and opinions were on the side of Hborty Yor theelneh af armat No, you have seen none of this: | ni. KC." Knorr, Dr, By F. Butebery aod Dr. O. H.]|~ When the Preeldent’e proclamation appoint And ahall ho be

gardens of houses fneing the river, through | every'mac, woman and child|on ourgenl, Neves Fee And why! Becauso of that gallant page oF MD | Boardman. Teena fee iene ae Pressived im England, the 24th abecr at victory, tak pomes f Sara ewer street, where (he dimly-lighted | wan imposed upg any man ro clmaule pret oe Who sprang to arme when their country’s Inti WOLUELAN HOSPITAL. London Times, tat weath na a Se Ee Ts ae : Wan imposed upon 809, Met yey “aul mover bad such | Hone were imperiled, We csoe ny Maat ea volun const the eu which ‘gives

y ruling rt ep) ard: BB ° eglvin; vee appropriately celebrated at | iteelt metry and ecoraful | a‘problom eo suceeseful a a9 over bad ouch | Willing to the tank, but sprang forward! ex volun ‘Thankeglving day was approprintely celebrated nt | Htelt merry Sf Cotta in bel

& PrOvlOM £0 areal and personal duties go woll | teers, with thets wbolo Tears Eateoulein the cot | this aaslum for our sik and wounded eoldlere. The | Gifen. mad tere fa indeed its that would be lUcely | Prarancal aides contilct, of offen thus far by Prealiont Lincoln, | eet, Hesauto that gallant and Ot mare anding | tervtece tn the chapel wero particularly intercatiog. | to ex hn thera ip indeed I? preanve of thoro tor | Grant, whlch had b

ie cea thue far by President Liseo': | petwcon you nad the armed host that ia rendy fo rath o ae At nandoes i x Bice nottled 2a fe Pnavove reason,” tho wisdarh of God, | Detween You hod We Acie coe gine an opening | At the appornted aot tol; A. DL, the surgeon in | whom God hardented faith and conscience, but we | no

Teen ich uo een and’ maxed with, the very | !Bvada your Howes © 8y AUAeEA ame band of aol | charge, the medical etal and Wi the pattenin Art to | lod tranacendant ieroles mingling Ww

| Hacer aie tea eke ureter trap oto | wen are acme! fpr ue Ae | de i

n! Si

depot stood. I She ard the distant wh tive. Y ew men on me

and covering

“OuE nille- | yeading of It waa recel re darlty te | and go, if you are n

ple

face with Thy

| dreame troubled, and Ita watehlog m

went into the a ticket tho men wh iked it by thelr unholy acts, and ; f >

s ti ticket. ‘There | he workiog of that wision in bim. But we hare | Peo tcy who provoked it by thelr unholy sete, sul | ¢o the AlleWieo Creator for the any and signal | {thas had its stare, nod they have rations 1 have. urced, then ask God to

was no one there whom she kuew, BO ONC | pover so far misunderstood It se to Nace Sranees Oy beaauso they atand fe 8 well Of firg petiveen ZOUC | penetite ho haa vouchsnfed to us ana nation. After) ing whose twilight is on the hille, give sou n heart of tleah Of a heart of atone. The-sgent looked curiously | us say id you. hore wo, fe Tithes goncthrough tho | While sou rejoieo, pray enemies, pray for

HUE that he was all right and sound | enerote . °

erjous doubt that ho wae sll Fight and sound eh AD yous ement What ecourty have you | the beautiful rituel of the Eplacopal Church, andi [haod, the nation ts to live. | A ne cortuern fricuds, have charged bim withtyran- | 12 your parrone ot property if your defenders in the | an cloquent and patriotie discourse by the chaplain Toe itaeil 40 A BS Need A ceed as rber the beLeaved Mosslota, with a dieregard of just conatitutional re; field atand nati and ‘allows revel Invasion to dee | nad been concluded, the hospltsl band performed the | Not the strength ‘of our hand, but the mth Let us pray for the slsic and wounded Bo gras strainte, nt was to be expreted. He never could | 1a! your cou nationel aire. These wero followed by the «Preels | our hearts to the sign that God inte cious 20 Wh wt down In slok- Meso hoon the truc tan that he is if the foes of our | | Tho npeaker eloquently exhorted bis hearers to | 7, # i them maby

Rtthecentre of him, His enemies, the rebels and sire, Teiaprov- | theslsve. Forget p

her the ticket. ‘The came rushit , sl hurried in, shook, gave & shudder tof ag

and s

monstration

The iew ngers disturbed from thei oat ite full exhorter arvioes aud sa- | dent's Hyma, “Gloria in Excclolo,” Rock ‘of | Victory in the fleld te now becoming ad | have been the Mreedom had uotbing to eny against | ApHrcclato at ite Cull messi, Ni Erte j A | Victory in theft tea cepregent betty, Hot pre sleep I ; it was only awoman, gountry and of freedom ne aura tlie comostto be | stiller of our represontatives 12.0 Och, Ais | Ager” and other anthems, sung by DMies Jenny |{ 25 NeePat ett tess iu this alga shail wo con- aa

to ba the

im. When the latory, of tus He featin hina | ordinary sentiment of gratitute waa OOF, SNR, | Buskinor, Msces Dolly ead Anne Roberta, and Mr. | quer. Both vides in this conflict are A.

dow, lik her child, and they 5 yee gon 2 , Tho 0c rot St ent to awaken m proper spirit of eympathy, the E i erlesa, If na the down to § in, wrho occupied the ebalr of State in tho midct of thle | Co on 3 thy, the | Felix de Crano. ‘The singing was admirable, and | elther conquer, what ‘ben! Tila not neh ‘agaioat ace sou low who oseupted the qhaoan was never lost in the | conelderation of duty Fouls certainly Influence oy and | elhes congue woe ean, agMat Turics et

; : : iy Anduenee | ve marked aatiefaction, At the conclu

Bilee, nor tho office in the man, tho popular mind.” He continued: Tho hiz- | gave msrice sagllah ¢ eta hot Ruselar peers enn ice, nor tbo offee 1a th ADs eatnat Abroham | tory of tuG world, may, be besrebealige Ny | Oxerelee te eer our Be Gros Reve periiel thels | SPPSOMIL ON Aces ee eee yobs Rot ezattdhathe i gbiemtnie alegther too fond | OF a ener Tn 2a tape tO mc eee en i teature country were boun- | mena tometiing mori, The distinction between ut was not the same thing sald of Lor lenco 0! voto Ley} 0 Buns, y v “ere: orte,”? plied Nort ad Sov mn o be found

at, ‘But wae not the gnc tag anid of doe |whten ths Jove, a0» ft eople 10,5, county | ttfally regaled with ereature comforts,” supplied | the Norther ny ker artes tate found 8 | orl

THE POLISH INSURRECTION.

era Lane Hospital, Twontle atreets, waa on thankegiving day the scene

A SKETCH OF MUESIAN DARDATITIES. ih | “Poon R aoevation, anit from various | the principle for whieh tb 2 ee And Te not the asme thing satd of Lord Pal. | lowere as our ova ‘The anuals of history do not | by the Penn Relicf Arsociation,” an jous | the principle for wine notion that it may preserve | OC Intereating exercises, In the rellglous denice of the London Time 2a ie not ae aceentinlater! And fait not | foralsh a parallel to the apontancers aed Prompt nc: | private eourecs. Altogether tho occssion was one | Ifvorty on this costinent and the world, OS eee ory nth SHER

Nov. 4. | true, alto, that when Linintert, And ie lt not | tron of our citizens volunteers. “They lisro given | of joy nnd feativity, long to U eae b s thie t t ite ni onaaor, Now. 4c, | uaa tage mney tel eden MEE | Gelder talc dewaon eae Pate Rue | yas tits ovemente ym | pe ait ay ‘ot froma 17 to 19 years of | that it needs, in thin way, that it turns to laughter cvldemsornot to Ue mlataken, Lat ue Treat then fa | Who parle Pa Ne a aet Walle rie? ‘Te-ia the moral significance, ‘th

| tua toe to relreoh Ite exhausted streagth, to repair | the samo apis There ot pect ne treat then {2 | ye eannot close without eaptog a word or two n | the carth, Tf 8 Id Tcriciies, ate bercaveraeat | table

i lain of the uity on | At Dy that | At

ring rermon. dlers 10 releht of tho g:

Young Ines sto con Fifty, for the moat part g

o'alo benul!

ee bomoot themeven pounger—were taken. 0 r : Nessa x

Seq tome nl thems FFE FOUNELT ete toa Old | fefowere? Audit this be eo, then the Jata of Oe) {06 THY ot NT Tee a POPU Ruf measure ot | commendation of tho excolleat manger io whlch | Tar ue pause upea the Unresnold to pay a tibute fo | things whlch the seseacd Indien Intorost Dighton ody aud women, are all treated alike sa | Lincoln, so far from indicating levity, only shor, the way of reaching topic of the North would, be | this hospital is conducted, Dr. Lewis Taslor, © | et ue Dat pn ae are hve wenbifented the things which th ri a 1 intares gud young, mes and women, arg oll Weatel alee no | (gopportune ea ‘bey sometimes, may seem, how ab | FNL SF! ot ine people, oF tne Nome YP etying | thiabospltal iscondusted. De Lavi Tged for hs | gobieat. coursge and. endurance.” en, thousand in the hospital had provided, At 5 o'clock a fag, the sinter of ar7eeh And are oar feyinita may | vere ia tho teasion to which bis miad te autjested, | (Oem heh cutedantinl ald whieh ‘they deetz¥o, ve | Ax the tare cara ow N qualified for ls | node, courees, A tho bigs, at te housant | srnich Dr. Burpee, onv of the auigcons of tho host middle of the night. heen nocturnal Waite az | Thorotado levity traceable fa hls acts, Thee arc | Will et (eh ery hele neatte by the evigence of | position, nad undoratande emper juatics | youth have dropped In the, Moon, rath so tray | tah bad been instrumental io procuring, was prox

y Ee sTte Sho feel It; and, Ou the other hand, tue teandal | oll terlous and well coustdered Gur whiinences and determination to do ail’that we | with moroy. He Ja ably aesiated by his matient | Alas! that for fo Tea Th ears reveal that would be caused by taldog 6 number of {nao- tous and well cousldGred, aay. ygqy | comin their behalf, ‘Thus they will beeheerel 8 | gtaq, Ax long a our army hozpltale Aro managed | Southera heroca died for nue that Would eo ae TEGUER the eticole in daytime | cmty tliat he te a man sdmirably titted to the thm can in thelr benettconroled ia the hour of death. | | SEAT At Cine ore may reat assured that our | 20 much bravery had ¢ bett Sn the cusrody of soldicra fe avolled. From 10 at | have yet to hear auother man eine well fitted | In conclusion, I know of no language io which I 00 y reat h no much brav ery had § bet night till sae eenet sue ero the Ruealxa offi: | to the country and to the hour ashe, and go signal could suificlently extol the great purpose which yon | noble zoldfers aro amply an judletously provided for. | oP ent pncced ho RIED ura for decda {DAE WH upt bear thie light of | ao the favors whieh the Dirine bounty Js thon gag have Indored 10 Neo eA a of this wa 1B yk CIEMRY:BTREET HOSPITAL. Ieeedifal, wat theie oblivion m tal houra for deedg that will apt Dear the Ventiog | upon ues eo manifest ost that this antion jy deat to | CUMOme Tete at an T have of thie war The 1s of the Broad and O os. | deed # sad future for thoee who 1c day. Though? i the regulation tine Jor Esra | tho goad God, that Lam it Unt this Prinere had been | termunot eo moderate aa I havo vac here ten gh, The patients of tho rus and Cherry atrests Hos: | deel # a5 (anit wee Or ginvar stopplag out ister may be seen here and there | eo Stor men for us, Abraham Lincoln would never | Nothing over yet touched my feelincs Bo, doeply ae | pital partook of an clegant Thaukegiving dioner, | wader, the “sti fetne’ ACER BS BOMPIRE Othcte @persite’' do not save you {rom | have becn chosen. “He Is’ blessing to be mone cope sreietomplation, trat, of tho excritices which our | furnished ebicity by the lady visitors to that hos | joy their BoD ppeccords Poel 10. deland norched to the hearest poat by | clally gratefulfor. We annot pay him for what he 1s, noble vovuuteera ace aie wo our hehal gai pital. Pe tby pettlotian ia to draw a vell over their

patrol of soldiera usable to read, nor Stine | He has his reward io the public confidence whic ho great me of gratitude we owe to them. Seapine 9 dine 21 ori =| ite bem bo forgotten. O' aver | aero Mfowalt goudo uot keep eudlelen He Had hia svar ia tbo publi cootdenee whieh | WesFie'ipe men wo gave vata form of xr |, iQ {bapina Hiclaey aad Chases Eek Ee liven, Lot them bo foreertee: so (alert Lot ele Yargc’ in pasting & reatinel, who, howwer' He ok voinct, that at tlmce iiice theao he ie | ment, there will ataad upon tho page oft blatory the | held by Chaplain Helsley and Oberits Xt Tt eed e hand of charity, ean only vite (ee tt | ane: Rebacnoter obliged to know that you do not ‘mean to ssa eee tAnwbieh there can be | men who, when that Government wap Imperiticd, | While the patients wera at the table the fine brats namee and mistakes b forgotten." Bul how ght | “Our correaponiento Diiged to Know that you do nat mean to sesaetl | nono mote declalve, of Lia Goiborented integrity. | Aad Mecetenny je Breer uaood forth to | band attached to the hospitel played #eversy Be | AT hinge that th h awalf thote ho have endured | been a dally visltor to

ale are not eateguarde, and | And itis a cauee for thankfulneea that the people nt fupport it, My friends, T need urge no furtoer ar onal sad oparatio airs, and at soeclone Barty end MO a he how cosas not | tmpreneed ‘tha ze

rho lisa not beeldes tho 'p wehave known how to appreciate n thorougbly | Suent, and therefore 1 bid you good night. Proenaed crucon In charge, and sleo for the Isties, | honoreddend! They that died for n good cause ate medleal otatl sro perform SE ee ee ena inet tary is REMARKS OP GEORGE H, STC OA Teheed exertions $n furnishing and decorating the | redeemed from death. Their name: athored fof bis all-important dep PICEA ACA en Mg Mr. Stuart ame forwa cteodured the next | tetle too. much praise esnnot bo given. Several | and garncred. Their memory le Precious amet ti Te Seen cle

nt Dr. Adama Brat lend in p

f'Soung | vented t ation, uli that | "Rev.

@ display iteolt | aome apnroprinte remarke by Way of prexcating the

aincery Fae eetith yeas then ran op of a Uagetait 100 fect high,

fake more | accompaned hy three hearty cheers. Ubaplain Ho-

ertalo. It iein- | kum tesponded, and the Rev. Dr. Bratuerd closed tn

ons slain | Ws udual bappy strain. Before parting, the whole

ly. jotaed Tuo Star Spangled

Ta the events tho auspices of the

by sovoral ante

erformers, consisting of vocal and joatrumental

stice to any taat the perfort-

he i

rand then made

ing n year he b Ho in dee

ins private houe

‘Then the areata begin of which one heare the hoxt | yeata previous, is the high oflice ofjthe nadon: sp SM Naior Bolen, whou bo complimented for | diotingulshed visitors, were present, aiwobe Whew | fh proud that heroce were bora there. Pious | with which ted iu the bo day from the friends snd relniions of thoss taken: U, S, ORRISTIAN COMMISSION. spealicr, Major Beret ta nad personal Bseridces in | wero Professor Bache, of the U, S, conat aurver, | ere analy Write tender neeriptions,upoo their tomb= See tare io he Then, too, Uegins the marching off Snto exile, of SAR) POMC EVIPo. a cmire of the Union. The following Jetter from | who made n few brie? remarks to the men, Tho | stonca. The natioval festivala shall give thousands whic lispa, ene doen not hear st all, though tt | MUEDEO. S05 “aye nano Por Sr RT ATO UN | Major General Cazcy wae reed by Mtr. Broad and Oheres-streets Horpital is ono of the old. | of patriot names for the orate ‘glips. Orphan chile Tiny baveporied 9 few day stterwsrts that ach | eae eat son Bon avo ayaa Broad aod Qherty otro fro dole adcniniatration of | aren ehall Sud thousands ol fathere to Jove and bel THE PRESID and eich pexcons are already on thelr way to Sl- ORO. STU. REME—OFER s ; gat in the alts, ne a paiae are eparedto provide the | the children webo have Deca Jeft ns a legacy to U8 | The following byma wis bere reovea RUANT)/ AND_ OTHEIE-OVER TEN | George HSieet eye ne OO every coufort nad convent | gratitude of the public. Tellme not they aro.dond an wing ym we

ls ta ovelock nt pight a ring at the bell wit | THOUSAND DOLLARS CONTRINUTED VORTHE RY | Doan ie snd weounde fort nad coavent- | gratitude of the Di thoy } | ntupteaborg, the enthor of the

: Bord e TEE Ow TEU BONERS IN RIOHMOND. ans exca, and the bre Sloug remeniber thelr | that Invisible band of heroce. | Are they dead that

Warenw n moet ala Tune: NERS 1X Pa snuder then. %oyepeak] Aro they dead | mencing “I would not lve It io called

pega

be present at, tho n | Thebleegiving dinner nt that hospital ‘ot epe privatise inte for a viestor, and obly «| It is very seldom that a spocting Is held in this tmleeloli, 0 Thebkagiving (nner at that heapirel i Tne polls, No ove ta en(e, sud it | city which attracts 20 larzé dr 20 accomplished an | olnting every, one feel the” GAL: | qyjfence aa the ono anxembidd'te tho evening at the | {caury

That yet pmovetis 1n 00! insplxing ‘0 people A] RH 2e,Cherols patrlouai) “We Shae mourn, et gindness mingle with your tears. Tt wan your ton,

1 \aa eung on tle

a gathering,

SPERESTING OEREAIONY. ATION OF A MANSION To MISHOP >

= “Seane niiaelog” from Ak THOM | Corey ot the Bplphnoys carne of Fifteenth aud | Sotie t te hora over SH Sisirgoxy oP THE METMODIGT CH a I Pee epee (a Salar e a pe ROue of the inost unlikely por | least an hour before the commencement, whea | gure of atveneiis, That the inepiration of to | que very plesennt ecremony of presenting 8 well- | pov a brother to every generous you 0

and to take part

| purnfahed manslon to the Rov. Matthew Simpson, | waa carrow. Now, be b

He le ours now

eons in 8 jongstoall. Ho wna yc

nn conspiracy tvs | tne people began to pour ia by hundreds, and in | SpIcit may attend yore B

Deen ve tare dally expoalng thetr lives by the elteve me, truly youre, a <0. | died to the family th been selz2d Due are ay retin the torvica of | @. snore. time afterwards 16) was; AUIS’ to over Bellove Mey WHT AS OASEY, Major General 1p of the Methodiat Church, took plac at No. | then idiea to the tamily that «to the Lord eae Hue would tiink it eufloleat for | Howing by an (ntelligent and Lntoreating audience, ot | seiantoune avesnon’ treat Lhe eee N ho shall bear ;

Mr, Stuatt then eald: I eboutd love de he lnrgest | enter into some details of tho work of tho

happy gathering of tho ladies ail gentlen | wounds through ory | Cuamolenion, but 1 truct tet it ts eg wall Jeon iu | contibated to Whe gift, and who are efilctent mom- | limpa; they will uncover ta Moe esr are located, | bers of the cburch. Among the prominent individus | whote feck ove ee Jan able

the urease’ to confine thelr pursull fo the men, | Notwithetanding that this is one of Pe an RATE ee ee rel Pt arora eset ec Hot pretead thet if they once defested the conapira- | Available spot wit Ove apled, oad many hundreds | this community, hore 1 te that way that leads to 4 tal cy of mon the womenof Poland alone could keep up | were unablo to gain adoilttance, that tt will be entirely ua sary for me to say | als present we noticed Col, Alexander Cummin Be A SATU er FE een emmut aa long ag. they take their | Among thore pretent were tho distingulshe Pe ORES lke it sinter agtitaloos | afr, Charice B, Barrett, Dr. Thomas Price, Rev. My | sand. whe DISTR LENE EST a ea toe aincraciog: | Smee oe Gavetner nest of | ee sete comfort of bur brave zoldiers In tue'| Atwood, Tey. Ns. INetl, and Nir, William Steven: | shall in the coming dapa be bleszed vw whom they srl They ore got atid of digratiae | Onio, Hoa. Heary D. Moora, of thle State, and | LeOs2 in Hhonitial, in the peisov, or whercver they | 20a. Hea of peace abe anil not forget * seemetiod throughout the winter. ‘They wtter an ea ee oar ocad, the exer | iayrbe found, We iter trom some otzer reuni: | Therap doubt ith kde panera eneh | OA EST ccumerate rome bvloue truth when they state that every other Go- 4 comma alfpast seven by the Re muay De foun Me dicet, that we combine fue tea | juminated with slxclight chandeliers, 9 hall and vets | osu sgiving, | eoumerste come of obvioueuthnnea they ata ho ene obey Ge | ces eomnencad a Delfgnatgocen Oy tho Ker. | yaad i te eo ea nay a cat | Juminated with sxciight chandeliers p helt sou Vor, | thanlrgiving, (or oever bad x Dati Fn i r Ce eomapaouncing the #sth bymn, whieh waosung | bread that periaueth i 'the ono hand, and in the | Ubrary, eltting room, reception Foon, Ke. Tae ‘pnole | look at these mercies that come 1 aera anette by the audience present; | other ths bread that ‘if a man oat he shall never | belug warmed by means ef tm | ture. Wo dread to think of the

y bim who preseace of those marob, except on

i wealth, s breathing bealt

toa ia ite provincer; but they decelve themsclyce

shotsy ie ahes realp bale oramoment tht 203) S122 Spicy the same geatlemen offered up to the | PNEETTS he stascenty of he Austin pe | "The corenoa fiolahed iu al ite ah | our people been eal to rearelty 9p

Russia 10 0 vlog agniuet Poles of Aiuighty God an earnest and heattfett praser in | £1e°tncougn ihe, bend aity of the American peo- | | The ceremonies of presentation, eeemicncsy Oy Heharrained broad aud manna tous as we FNta, and af every clave, condition, and age. Meee a Ne cout auilithetpoorgauterlie Fler through the bonds of volunteer, unpaid dele. | the singing of n portion of @ bynin, beginning as aero asia be on aaa SE ee eee ara ena ragngtot | Pemeuotie coumtra e the poor, sutfering heroes | gates, who sorve our commistion for the save of the | followa: Duar seal arene 9 tha promised In "epg Rarsiny ites far icing fa MG end of |e gro gow connued inthe Southern dunccos,| SBpeDeatey Cod erase ba atte wepleatbe te tie that binds And once ree er to. civil

: o denugetntion of ance; QUEA CD a Tr yor the want of [000 RO DOPE EEA oe eo a ee nea conn Oise hearts in Obristinn Io HES CE prem niey eoe

farned to us tole us that that is the best cola they | Cverreceived for any service. We have diatributel | 1 which all the company joined harmoniously. for ne, Our harvests bave helped ain this ance

8 as follows coer ioe gud publications overhnit amillion | ,,7he Rev; James, Meth mddeeared the ‘Throne of | equse of liberty, Naturo haa been moved In ti

SEee ae a area gh We have bon only a ittlomiors | race ins fervent aan app ‘| and guod men go much lov of dollars, elthough Wan mrecent emexgengy, we | Preliminaries haying hace Bone Mt et that wo have been favored

the sentences, unlece th ratlon lato take p)

seateuce be | moo seo in Warsaw

Phe pretidiog olleer of tho mecting, Bishop Potter, thea aross and apo!

or Wilna

of course, met by them with wf

spriate manner. There | vice whieh G sh with, the | should we fo

REMAINS OF RIGHT REV, BISHOP POTTER.

Fequest for proof, when it Is eviveut that Wo are wet to-night, my brethren, to return thanks | jeked the SE Oe oatan [orierrthous fh Piet tomas C. Tasker, Sr, advanced to the | pre-eminent health, There have been no pl i chen of riot eee tisea' the pome of a fru: | tothe great Giver o€ AltGood and £0 collect, with | Theyrrce ferchnute of Boston forlenowsarsécinr. | centre of tha eaatera parlor, aa in a volce gears Bee test The tropice appear to have beca to pants. noe On Buch a aubjeot would be-to | this offering o&thapkegivivg, contributions for the | aq yreeponded Py Been the Commission. to-night, | audible oe aneid in bis bande tho deed | of thoir venom during the threo yeara that have | 4) a anahl tow Point out Fyn HISD ftinto mee As | felt of ils sultry. cllofon aod out uttodog | {ip gum pret work (extending, ne dors eines | ccetutve of th, contibuo ate, of their Weng Mune advantspesor rociety, that | ~ 2 below prisoners. ‘alowed to talk freely with | brethren In the prigope of the South. Wherever e . < h from | preeentative of the contributors, desired to present | Lave grown stronger withioa ghorttime. V\

Orleaue, ail along the Southern coast, over Viretola, across the mouctaina, ths

Pri irieuia, and are ofted not permitted to ave | throughout te world n signal of distrese is hung them at all—never 6 in precence of auotiiolal | out, there tho sympathies of the Christian heart

y appesr diftieult to i positively | ehovld be attracted and tho eoatributtons of Obric Whetticr or not they ate benten (8 tho Poles belleve | tign harda go readily forth. | Ayenr ainco wo reoely Ube often the cage) with the view of extorting | ed intelligence that operatives of Jancashiro, In

ein eonat, over Virsila | to the Ishop, tatthew Siuopron, of tho Mfetho~ | pot been weatenwd Veena: OI line brolle Rea e aaa a erect ouk delegates agata.| lat Oburely se) a homo for, Ate el( snd his family, | thio there has been anoverruling Providene

approaching us from New Orleang,) to aa teat that | herein ho mieht enjoy the enelety of ‘tho brethrea | territic wronge—thote rioty which bave marked t ft ; Wetne Obureh in the elty of Philadelphia, In thus | month of July in New Yorlcelty—havo revealed t

Commisslon {cole Itsolt unable to mest satiefac- 1 v Heer eee eae oys ated hag como nda ux | ESMISE, The ree ee aoe eee he was au | asture of the insidious faction, od what thoy m

confession, § Un the Emperor Nicholas there | England, were in danger of & ing, sud you May thorized to psy th it oan be free wil ering 7 r .

onfeaal Em nod, wero in OC starving, sud you may fy thie neve ome ene) What in that omer orized to Bay tliat {t canto as tbe free will offering | by tho ery of We heve been mado to sce

Sua myatcry ou tbe wuect, nor fe Rherenow In | renee tho promplinue with which, versels wore tn the providence of God, | What a that one thorized to nay that if came ae Oho CeSreb acheare | What daoger’iheto Je Iu ignorance. We must | SE ee Pianta, under the infamous Mouraviert, Xt 1s | loaded in this port aud other porta sed cent over to | cn gallant eolslers who havo endured all the barde tho venerable speaker now proceeded at eome | cducate. ‘Theee riots, have ehawn how cruel hauuer of frend certain Alko—there aro proofa of the fact—that | relieve their distress, How much more liberal sud) k Ic Jenath to epeatc of the vast extent of Philadelphia, | aud wicked is tho "spirit of | csste, | snd i} od tha F

ftle-ield,'and who are to-night en- Ouring mertyrdom ip Soutbera pricone, On, alr, if thoee sutlering three hundred and fifty who, this | L - | Gaya week avo, arrived at Anaapolie, could be here yy and of iteunlty. | then, sir, Goveraor rough'a valve nid. te voice of this hoblo soldier of your own Stato might be alent, Tho speaker then touchively reforred to the scene ehlch tranupired at Annapolis, upon tho arrival of the prironers alluded to, and eloquently apper.ed to

ships of the b

Givorhis

seen toees ita business generally, its prosperity | bas ramoved that prejudice which Aad ine hospitalltics, to all of which he heartily wel | vented bumanc.men from sotlng out thelr cy: Maed'tho tecipleat’ As velty, wolhayomade wiuch | thics towards the deaplesd, It was yp torribic fe, LETTER Fon coed tO Tot ej we will yot achieve more, though | son; but now tliat it 1s over we may thaol God Eee sea e ean ray with truth that we bave 8 greater | that eo much cood has been educed trom it.) Re ae

DOW Mer of churches thau any other eity in thocoun- | mark, too, thegcowth of Lndus Uyrend we will yet bave more. He heartily wel- | Prosperity has smiled upon v U1 atthe Blehop toa city of kindness, whercin the | had been told that we coulll not have Cfory of the Lord has been mado manifest in vatlous } the South. Now wo zee that we capo

two gentlemen, named Revwicz aod Oboreii, who | moro prompt should bo our efforta in bebalf of out

Wrerclately arrested at Siedioy, $0 the kiogdom of | own brothers, In behal€ of thero who left thelr nod, (i which distriot important dicoveries are | homes, their business, thelr cares, to devote them.

sald to bave been inade ao to the organization of | eclves to the defonce of our cou local. National Government), were viol and coyerelgaty 1

beaten, M, Oborsld hos since become Insane, and | 1t may be, my friends, that at this moment thelr

if in hie present etate he should speak of the tor | wants are not eo great na thoy wore ten Ynys ai

{ure Jahiered upon him the Rusalane will be able to | Tho reverberstion whicb! has beon. 0:

ny that helsraving, It la ccldom that men ikely | throughout the land by the arrive] of that interntle

HON. JOE

dene » Washlugton Chrotlete.

vucrs, Culpeper county, Va., Nov. 2 In your paper of tho 2uth an article headed with Hive | My Dame, over the sigonture of * Bohemian," ap-

i ne Audience In behalt of the coldicra’ cause. He

ree hve been benten comer out of prleon at all, un- | vesee!, which dlzoharged its freight at Annapolii ene pudlenoaiia & wal s t ° south. \ peared, ia whieh the writer represent a

By bent i Uy eel, which tee! z Ani ae ate that the door was npw open by which | Vaya without tle South, but in spite of theSouth. | What ih iter roprescats himeelf ys fobnvo ves bent comen out of prison tal, ues | veel, RICH eeDaTE Ca aligeaton of aoe | FeMAPkd, TONS ne oer Other aeobeearies could | yt SPRe}SleDy he, teens ypare te eof the | take pace South, but inapite of thesouth.. Wbat | Reviae'vislted my bouee, and that told him of%e

Jeeta to 60 to Snel nein trieuds | olbere have at | euleringe, But 1 know from the testimon proviatocn, cloth era Werings, But I know from the testimony of 8) sont to the prisoners at Richmond, and elsewher

frat been Nberated or have escaped ; an to others, | most intelligent and conscientious woman, who bas | snq wats the couditien of thelr backs baa heen know | devoted her entire time and talent to the service of nnd ouflctent information had Been ree eee FE ote oer aan eaeat out tobe | {ee Mok in this, war, that a tore miterable con: | soles whleh bs natisfyithem of the safe delivery of mr from the state of thelr ue Whe are otnar the | eregatioa of human boines wan never beheld by | “ero not hsd been corsipned to Richmoud, Thatom in Ruewie to bo suddenly. discontinue by | sympathizing man Than wae prcteaked Ny Ane Dea | a Sg ET ele ee subordinates oven sf thelr superiors go ordered It, Wn ies Aro. questions in rerard to the ox. | SO% APpropriste nace say OP eanas eacrsdes 4 Rovio the fogeiog of women it is kunrrn that the | change of prieoners now peodiug of fhe gravest aud reatiaent ‘experienced "by, ninveclt and eoradey 2 Cen oe nee ee or oT eon ia Boland, | men ’monienteus. linporksnee, Let us, then, not | Tavoy Prisons the fa Johmond, The conditien 0

vartety of things that [ad entd to Gen. Stuart, = 1p of Which would bays been ottenaive to Gen.

that a‘Rind Providence would opare the life of the | take plncet We can take caro of that after we ge Tighop for many yoara to cajoy this home, and the | rid of the cancer, We ean bring the patient up pnd PienGtyrelatiogs, that oxiat in the Church iu our | are not afraid that he will dic in the reaction. Tet Stuart and to that portion of the army under hix com ttenalyye felt quite cure thet. the vast cougrega- | usnot look with a worldly eyeupon our worl Will you, 1a justice to myaelf, allow mo to Sy at lance, Will be geatitied to know that they | perity; but let ua thank God for it all, for it 1s the nay that, If Lam dot wisinformed as to the author ot fone a mtuodg them towhom they could all look | evidence of his overruliag Wiadness this communication, he bas never visited my houro haye'one auorg then to WhOm Uintmioas,. ‘The | We must remark the incrossed growth of moral | et On eryatia and that havo never held Roy Ghekchcrin, opets wide ite arma to embrace you, | and civil Inatitutiens, We have not abut up a oo) with bin or apy other peraog, had, In future seats, Ita membera will Jook back to | lege. We have morsl, or educa not have d

done eo without a yor

a pouitivaly forbade tt, and. it Ioto be hoped that the | merely atrengthco our apperte to the Goverume Libby Prieon, the fare given to its iamatea, sod the in future este, Ite mente Wr rood & ThIDE On. a4 oral; OF a no fata or daepat cy TONE ay : only te, Groat Dinke’s eubsttute, but no, W | Morea but Lot un suly our llores to welt abe leagth. Hie remarke wore interepersed with Pa tens that Bishop Simpeom came fo lve among Ut | to ygaderrul a preparation {or war twhoro clee hns | spy eublect - : ed co ae ea painred hls muczeraor | ani‘iet that grave afl) gst mowentous question | MYEUs Ae scabighiy Interesting, Oconto ci: | Philadelphia. so wonderful 4 pre for war) Wharo clee has | PEF or ivcr, fall the writer eayx were true, noth fa th n be formally appalned tulnaetero® | and 1et tae er na ae sect aol | Gotu .fmd, nrovedBighis Interesting, osentio7™ ly Biebop Siarpron, aiter alluding to the emotions | there bees such preparations, Gt Tot or Arman oy | could have justi fa furatentag it for publiestiog y St aca entne other day (the | die audcof thelr commanding officers, bo acttled as | TATE F rth applause from the audience whieh bo experienced ineldent to such an oceaalon, | Of wats MTS Forth a ngtting as yet with oply one | Witdout x oLity, Jonerauch ne every rulo that Gaugaters of n rico brower named Kinvo), and the | rig ueness requires. No asorifico in too great to | aster Whe inteeting and truthful picture af tha | said he destred to expres hin thapke to Brotnet | pes The North is Oghttog na yet oth iy ono | Teulates Li Fee ar ad Foucgeal of them, a girl of 12, whipped, ia order to | procure the instant adjuetment of that question sufter the setoreating sod truth Te emf the | Taeker for his kind remarks, andto theirlen’s PS | iO i warden, Timo nourishes ue, ‘Time, wantca bid any m publishing the private convel FOE Oe ere of the visitors ar her far | Huts my frends, 1 will not detaln you Weare | Hv Of tho Unlon prisoners nr gall Tea | cont for tho maquitiecnt property given Th 4% | the South. W Ww they rot. This I prove | eation th tongue without pertuleelon, Fauo het toll the eames of the visitor a ero | attuned neverunder tho nuspicee of the Ohriatian | 68 awful thine to, tani at, Sh Bnclept dase Of | teutimony of Chnietian iedner Mprovidence from | deseo, not an eee et ne of thors provi. | | Fhave alresdy bees made n victim to reat outrage nation, aud s rz mubjeots Of thor eOnarS| aRseme Oe see ne rar ahora good dste | DArOStinm Suould Some COW Oe ree eds Blow ai been ted nll hia life by ® kind Providence from | (Per nich act through Iaws aod inetituttona, | {rom ations (perhaps unlateatioual) of Jari’ Bibacada Ret 'Y coanakenyy but foeyoor | pre knowatormoatoutthetani Thmvebga more | gly deat with thoes ba, shua frosted: HOW | doy tusk in of the country to RNOLRET, Togo he was | Wo know bow to develop ore; Wo, . | Tepe T hace sald, with noexpestation, howeser, of eblid war whipped. Cea et ae ee OP the Ganitery | shall wo dest with those men thet Bian ei th say that {n coming here It war no uso he was | ee em Syeroradon y portio tla communica Md wan wehtped, is shat have the Ruslans | Gommislon, tu the operations of the Saaltary | ing to our herole soldiers. Retallate { pot tt, tho sleeatlfied eleewnercy £05 05 Miaces tho chureh | fered mag thiven Bar that which wobavo learn hasty: fohemfan? dealre Fee eee foluwie evidence on the subject, | pacte of our army the mont effictent relict, Tut all | fan” coat yuk ty Kiudoere, Let us, by our Gbris- | had been kind to him Tha fe no when ® doy, SAS ee aabe gee " tho vengeance of the Soutbera to. aay fo Hie TOO ee nee aa eae (Anctrcttel Tint it tho. commissions wit but mil ffan®oparketer, make Heaven nad cheitzatiog one | 80H 00h 8 ory Telianes on him, he bes | cll mort la the ee a on | to cta7 tiiould return to this vicinity? £ suppose Wer a trirou, a Bole, Dut ia Ru advertisement | raae can gle will be (adequate to tho et n wee | HHends Hae wanted to know where all tho wealth | euyiaiiey A Ja maphool, no matter where Tie oe tule rat, It wo fail to eb BE ee eee mich ueutnorizeedetnteneatal Eutiehed ts wicstot wamberof the Wareny Offa | that can give will bo (oadequate to tua emergeosies | anu happinoea that is enjoyed ule iy Ob travelled. | Wale Io the Yho Ear, amd the. pre‘o- | male all its eittzene free and equal What Lhave to esy 1 z Goueral Stuart oF Aimadl/. By thie advertiroment, numbered 4,721, | the advance of 0: ‘i seneee aod Hen P ieen forthe soldiers Who fought co iobly | tarned towarda s how ne East, and tho prefe fe all ita eltizens free and equal aa General Stuart Fee eae aa ee emaned near ielltz, Ene | the. Governor eledt of ja. Twill call now upon) aPgeutyaouie ‘There ia no geed to tacos the | Fence We St a wile to PhHndeln in. The | eae Tafa thout peel a ready furnished Court of Uorreet nleo} near Kali, ths | tne Governor elect of Cnio, Who, bepnena to UO duty.of Philadelpalane at tne Pease OU Hane | rence wae Bee Wicewaany aetratione, pronnent | the providence of Go, fy aM oo ven | algantur, high, 1 t ours bf orrestonel roles On ea capa kicdiby:| poerea a) Mesto duryorBitinsonhings at th, preeat Ue HEM | SOC vue to neta may af rately | umaeh Ye ous eo might not bare aera eee me oF Tuy; nent ano villago of | TXAKES ov 1 sa eet tite enfno nnvonucored [grey aad ne bad 0) Me MCCA iets BS | our Uaten who camenmig wih em OUCH | ano acon bia f naea that ls Bory aboit in tho district of Pyzdi Here follows a ELECT and are aufforing in the South. ho property, he deatred ta retusn Ty Reenter alotiecd would have been fearful to contem- | time aince a ublention ared in & Northera pa- Toth in too, duntnet Of Eaar agan were found |, Upon taking the atand, Gov. Brough remarked | | Hewes fount any uth. “J aE, Onutle, who | halt of hie family, moro for its membera than fo Ficed would have been fearful to cont. SE eee er a OnAyDaparay Pe jptipaa taktog the stand, Gor: Brourh remarked | He.S0 oun pod tho creat good perform by | humaelh for he bss Mp nie fern lod of Wate ei Fe ere ‘Ono he 41 threo outs in the bend, ania | tee epesken, sud thereforevwaa not prapared for any | the membora of the Corns aia fie E | deece He nnd chosen the Ifo OC m, Mothoulat | forels eivis f'n conversation whlelt f 2 fourth in the neck, eleven wouoda on tho ctest, at | formal fotroduotion hospitals nud oa tho battle-tlelds, by miniatering to | pressher, Here the roverend speaker alluded feel: | 1 Mite NAY OF Gur contest. ‘The tweea ewjamin and mreclf, whe the back, and under both arma, aud bore ecveral blue He continued? I ean coneetvo of no language suff | the wants of the alc. sod dying patriots, Otierad. | ingly to the desth-bed of hls father, who ealled 1a a | moral [ete ot entry ero isin truth I Heneed ei = marke resulting from blovwa, olently adequete with whiob to clothe an appeal to | drceees were ivered by the Rev. Robert B Methodist minister to administer to him. in bie dy- | Yooe seain oo cernments abroad are le Bepjamia, 2 ‘Auotber had had tho left side of his face cut by eople Cf thia Union to aid, succor, and befriend | tHeon; ani the Rev. Dr Newton, who mados at ing momonte, the consolations of the Christian reli: | Moraine: Los thet Cats abremerous neutrality, | conversation wi eight wounds in different d{reolid 2 Had had nine | their gallaot eolulers who are pricogers in tho South, | Appeal to thowe J esent for 5 Tiberal coatritution, gion Since, be tue Te a tee ont ty not forget to be thankrul > God and to our | I had given to m eight wounds Jn diferent, directions, and had ping | Piet eeifestarstion other tha the simplo ond that | which Was DONy Tone ge roe hestiog-| calling he had vielted mauy placer, in distant | 1 Fi pithant te Se ie and il * a Y h joe 7 ae he had visited aor ay hardships and | frieods under God, who comprito o larg portion of | ment, both civil and m both shoulders; total, seventeen wounds, uf whtel they aro t! suffering for you I who are here | smountiog to over ten thouasnd dollars, willipr parte, War ¢xP d many har Pp E z TBO PO acai Te t h Of Wh , ag for you and 1 who aro here aad Cat of posed to many, hardahipe 800 | the French people, who have maintained unilinca, | Jamie solve he died the nex? dey. Shop ara there, aulfering for you and Leno are Pers | peotsof baring tinereared to ftteen thousand Yo: Chey but the Lord had sustaloed hun al E Ie weho have rasintalned unilnca> | Ave eu) th ealamin nh kbLrd nt reo ee eerie cheatatd arme” | the heart of tho Americon citizen; ani {tebould not | thwesed Nok ea Asicr the collectiga patort | handsome preset, for he well ener nes tak Ln eee ay aud allies, nad I you pi with the nod know they ooly move his heart, but untooso his bands inevery- | 200 spirited address wae made by the Rev. Samuel abou ravel again where he thoucht his duty to hi ~ en reuint ir taxati applause. y whie auatib! of galy more hishoerh but untooge hla Danie eves, | By parnite of Weat Virgiols, wuleh, was flowed | Fon oor unowieg th era ho thought his duty to Hts | North, we shall realst your taxationn”” (applauso,] | Paste aeleh for ausstblley Oe tn a Porassiow To Paevest LEAD Porson.—A paras | not onl A ts ble, but imperative and netes: | bY the audience sluging th ‘ology and Bianop. | faction of knowing that his family was in 6 comfort- You owe much, my f ds, o 0 emocratic | may | have don + he ren ip aor ectting graph ingolug the rounds of the papers to the etfect | tary in ite character. ets L nttor pronounced the boaedk MP | Ae nome, surrounded by brothere, sisters, friends, | mAs a and nations of the < atinents for, when mbreprerentation would be, thtaman: (or ect Frat Dr. schwarz, of Brealau, Prusats, obvintes tho | seed ey eh t F nes of human belngs wende pout y home, HurrO ene West; bia partlalities were in|there haa been B, thoussed min Dalle might have no mcang & Pane Sarg lend watenpipes OF. peaston: | pane Neate tes eck a eae hat cou: | BE 4 nari with the TI F out | Ho was bora th the aircog attachments for the | thelr own, th eee nn thew: | myuelirieht lm pour paper, an | . Mange fro hotsolution of polesstum: whieh Ie | ocmace io the name Cee t you vrcight, though | | a consequence of te, Spat tt ctuar? beg | Exstennd will remaia here sa my home, an sand men prayers have. coe up, ood to inaagg thinar obellent serrata. eaid eald to convert the toterlor autface 1bto A ule | 5, on i eve je another appeal which I may sens OT any could not obiais alate |{n my power to advance tho cause of the Obu: the suc he North, We should yrespecttully JOHN M. S | Phite and proteata tho water from the deleterious | SOLE MECH Tay had ocduty—the duty of the eX NY eotnelower room, 7hera | with all the etrength and knowledge whteh od A thanleful s accidental sympathy of Rustla a Ettou of thelend. Thiaetater claax under the broad hi y ora | with all the strength oe i ee cTesker hos atfudod | Russia ig an eutocracy, just now RAnpear! Tp, p —consuserrion ~The Mesteat

ting was beld, Wh ar, Who mad

nt chnnot poesloly Ue | C\tizey to hie fellow correct, aa potassium always igoites in water instead | tho exjoyme ofdiewolvivg,and by 20 combination or decomposition | Wwould it traue(orm the lead into a eulpbite, Per- | | bape tt {seul of potaran’or tho sulphide of po- Yarelum Which the savent employs.

ty of the man who fein | 8 lively my ta braving | by the Rey. Dr. Sp he posia of war ropriate adre T knaw nothing, or very little, of your organiza 3, Slo: Meet Lorm itte proposed that you shall | sth New ¥ in what wrk that has called you heroto. | smounting to nearly two hundred d eget a matter of detatl which others will | All persons yho ware bor pre

the dui sco to the soldier whi

nier prince than spy who hav v orthier Prone; but republics cannot | Reporter enya toate, cream with better elle, Wy m allianoce with deapotisma of any kind, | treatment, is thin ‘sliver oll, 1reviounly We aust malotain institut! lengaris for all who have, or think they, must malnrAla thout oienco io | tried. Ourgyroorte adopt a crosm dict. Eat tho So faras Ruseia studies to p 0, CODE eee toe ndantly, a6 much As Ihe 3 of the people, wo shall bo with : rand wedoubk pot that LE ‘an ebe pute ber foot upon the ber Hal as the purest cod-liver earo agningt her. Let us be { Lancashire; they

Anaumptive patients 00

1 Over | i the caterpriaiog spicit everywhere manifest in | blest ty an, Who made an tnicrestiS Ore. | Paliadelphin to do all for the kingdom of God. He | Pe MULCH preci alto? a private 10 the | hoped that God would bless us all, nnd pour out the | afford it Regiment. ‘A. collection was ts souie of his lore upon all the people of thin great | [Apr } lars. apirit pi Ronelucion, be would say to bis friends | and dene, ore tat the me Tate that he returaed bis most heartfelt | aby govern (Thatia.s mart tjoover form you ave eailed | Inst eveoing, and feel It thelr todiviquel duts to co sround Tints happy gilt, of 8 comfortable home for } mote the ibe Uk In oa tty work, Turge you aaa | tribute of thelr earthly aloresnce, to the Que ivan himeelf a0 ratly hoped that God, | her ; tat & {0 tote mignide and your hearts on the | Commission, for the rellet of thoxe who aro cuver- Inhis ioflaite merey, would give every ono prescat | tl ing, and eyen dying, in the wre 15

ho enjoyment of p

‘Tne fret gun was fircd nt Gettysburg, it Le claimed- by the 66th Pennsylvania Voluotecis. The resi ment ls commanded by Colonel Ho!lman, and num: |

| bera about 100 men,

FORNEY’S WAR PRESS. PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, DECEMBER. 5, 186 New

ene, Grappa HORRORS OF THE RICHMOND PRISONS

AN NEWS.

THE REBEL PRESS,

ISSER - f that elavery mu

BNNESSER shortly after the capture of Memphis, and the open: ble, and argues ust be

(For T TENNESSEE. {ng of tho river to Vickeburg- Completely before It ean be done, The course he RRS So <oitioNs TERE oer

: Steamboat property hne had some strong fuctua- } has.takon ts Mavis vent enect throughout Me | opyyoraL STATEMENT OF THE RELEASED F DR HEGHNOND xz TER

LETTER FROM MEMPHIS. Caen Te dar, When the troubles broke out, | State wherever Colonel Goat Is known, le at BURG EONS f seo a te RES. a Teele (Spactal Correspondence of Tho Press. Hone during the Wor. Tein who rebel lines. ‘Theuc | areas Js very extensively ores) ated, and has foun Pan iment Hea FO eae eh blab the eter

‘The fotiowing statement, by surgeons just released from the Libby Prizon, of the treatment recelved by our prizoners at Richmond, has been presenter to the War Department

Wasuixaron, D, O,, Nov. 27, 1863.

aoe sen nearly ail destroyed at various times, | ite way into the rebel army. ‘The rebel gen uaa During the first aix montha of the war, steamboats | destroylog 1 wherever they can find it, but nen: Tay lle at tho St, Louls levee, walting for some: | mre have been taken for its private distribution, thing todo. After the fall of Fort Donelson, there Tho effect ie visible 1u the {ncresaed number ode ag to eoaand for boats, and they kopt a high value | ferters during he paat tivo weeks, Several offloers

burn as much se poraible of eR ruich plot waa ventilated in theso oc Fit seems was first diecloral to the ‘of the Yankee prisoners

tituted, di

murder the guards, aod Tichmon

Joma yeater’ nuthoritics through ooe And an lovestigation, immediately and anno etartiing fact that such a plan was really

}

}

1 Mauris, Tenn,, November 2

} ‘Two daya ago this olty wan thrown Into great ex 1 1

, 1363,

An early pub= nat journal; but ss tho copy addressed e German Confederation had appearal in @

ment by the Announcement of # now onler from Ge. noral Sherman. It provides for tho enrolment of

‘Thauua to a provideotial interpositien, the rities, forewarned, are forearmed, and tho day or i nities, Jocn auch n revolt could have beon suocesaful | Field to nn Loy

If [take the toltistive ia this ae of vanity

vertura, I do not

cruiting officers have done pretty well throurh the Dut as Tam 8 8o-

4 effecta of the ecare, and are obtaining more now in

New Or

‘more ignorant than those of | cable, Itwould never bave answered

all ableboudied citizens of West Tennertce into a ; y svunad | of the rebel army have sent word to General St6s\0| gorvigned aurgconn of the United States od the tt that iis timely discovery alone prevent 1 Military organization, and suthorizca the command- | fora time, TP 5 again fell after all the troops had | of £ Sear Wo, the undersigned surgeons, SERGE) om tons - x : al tho motive for any further post i een of detachment, regent and attriet to Den LF MOYEN A ate, ACT heart aces Eire rrna neater reson Paes acts Ua eae 1 cad the attempt being Deere mado about the 21th of | Ponement of Itno longer existed: 7 a Saige ota | ena yw hrm | mn ove |i hecag eA pment |e tgatas as carea| puta ete aa their commands up to tho maximum. As none ‘of | manding a high figure the most of tho) Hine. Just aD pepe STA EATIEE ths pamphlet a co tal attached to Libby Prison. eee ee mone posltivaoridenea Bash Fought to ils Nal web | relena, and Free ities composing the Most Sereno ny 01 a ne prop 0 the best props the Wea! dea, haa) De £ We enjoyed for several months daily acocss Daiowe combinations esrly in November, Soon eee eae eee papananlore WS, 1 Sec ccacetcaranar et | oro onto rome ety, tee dann ee oes | ate cedar aves | en amereeis a Gefoaay” st pear of ee + " nl ortion of x ‘Gantt’s county 18] Union soldiers recolved treatment. Asn result Before it came to a heading, and It wan accomplished sable whole mind to the q Will tako all the able-bodied eltizens 1m the reglon g matorial portion of it. Colonel beliet that te to the ten or twelv aaiioe all the apeltaes x CANSAS. b our observation, be fa aueb a manner as to lodicate to tho F twell ‘elgna to a tho deatiny of peo © Ta Memphia nothing-clee waa talked about the rat ARKANSAS, still in the rebel Ines en eal time tnetba age ur Delleh We | Wauenod coospiratore that hele game wee tn ouc | ce s day after {ta appenrance. On the following morning eae A petition has gone to ‘Warblogtén cr a es deaths per a ._ Tho pre: | own hands, and that the authoritics were "masters |. © W heneyer profound abozks have unsottled the another onler male Its appearance, sean N tS LETTER FROM EYRELE ROOK: polatent oF 9 I a eee plse Blu, | foetitonta OF inte the sipapeatry and NL | Oh MSs amt tat the Yases | Hotacony bre akan nn Tere 4 Cnrolment of all pereona liable to do ‘military duty | (special Corresrondence of The Press. (OF reed in the petition, and the chanceaare | groatly nenenent th pet centage Of aoe ave | commanter ay Fortress Monrov ean in tho ccrctsof | the now clemonte, and to consecrate, by onmonta within the Itmita of the city; all who neglected to Litter Rook (Ark.), Nov. 13, 156: has pee “i cats Mie, Rogors | been long at worlk; auch a I ot ment. food, cloth- | the conspleators. who wero to receive very tunterial | thom. te trail’ rations effected. n has beea 1 comply with the order withia ten days to be forced ee "}, Nov. 19,1603. | {Pat ne will reeclva the appointment. Mr. Rogers} (5e,nq guelter, combined with that, tebrcwsoe Ty | Me keetas ac iRichmoad (ie not kara) upon | the chet of the treaty of Weatphall tthe 17th 1 4 je to be forsed! | ruansns has no largo ettes tn ber limita 50° 1 Is pete ok Tigh terme by the prominent men | jyffits brought on eo often by loax confinement; 17 | the riser oy Fee are eee thy. Fortunately for | century, and of the negotiations of Vienna in Tet to ranie. ‘This waa oot a great modltiontion, | Atisnen OTe ON Cresent, Little Rook, contato-| of Suittle Rock and of the State, Hr rat Anat | 2EUtA DrOUELS incredible, when we athrm of our | the Confederacy, the dlacontees Tot Prtunatiswed | 1515. Lt ir on this iatter basis that the political | ater all but gave a little time for breatiine 1 ae over tive thousand, Ja tho | his appotatment would be acceptable to the peor. may Hoon almost inereePIr, Tye three hospitals for | the denowemcnt bave xed the angus cies ct Vin fale of Europe nox teats; mad set ot are DOE Rar all But gave'p Ugnment was construed literally | De & populations © oo) Sot idu.the,| his sppolntne ergounl unowicige that OF ortallty ia near 10 per | vornmeat upon such, Aad, true, a8 Uaslight cates ot Fite lets crumbling on all alden ‘at Corinth and Lagrange. The eutlers’ etorea were TIargeat corporate olty In the State. Helens, Fay | On the main queation, with reference to making AT] G7". cq ypon the moot reliable testimony Wo Ate Joram they will ope day be broughtto standin | | “Vif wo conaldor attentively tho situation of aie 5 4 snd Lagrange, ora afore roe | sttovilley and Cnmden are but second-rate, he On the maln dite bo fa understood to dela favor | Na) to helteve that the deatne in the tobacco fee: | an, ighon teas ML oe ey Meno publi If Lot to | ferent countrier, it te Imporsible not to. recognize y o10s6 (a8 te ae ee he FAM, | poleon, though long famous, te far down on Ba nanan vrement. ‘His courae would be oxcecdlogly | tories and upon tho island wi Tone the otal mor | hao in estate of euepension Ustweea Heaven azd | tbat oa alwoat ali potnts the treatiex of Vieaus aro 4 Catton evacnlisets and’ o ee athia( he lines verte ta population as well asin morals, The peo- | mild, ani not calculated to create dieturbsnce In the tality among sil Tie Union prisoners to 60 perday, Jeart at OMDPLEC. . sx9 epartmect of destroyed, moditied, disowraed, or menaced, Hens ike manner, and every man found rieultural Ln 1 rank 1 ; ng | ootigperal scommanting thé mtmect of | duties without rexuiatloa, righta without ttl, E b * | pic of the State aro almost catirely of) political rank! 1,600 mon'hty. aduced condition of thore brought | North Caroling snd Eart Viralnia, waa undoubtedly | pretensions without restraint cer the moreto be iy to ohoulder a musket. Never before, elnce ou as aro not in need of any great commerelal contrer. | the citizens ‘and the military. Most of tho houses } Je(t behind, who with ye would be soualdered ft aldand countenance promising to have A fores of | civilization, which haa united peoples one wl etal sneha | ye hice aren | wena ota mt ete | a targa eee Say sey do let oh Sea mats | ade ars areca 4 tho rear of the army. Every man, The cout U8 | through the wear will oe Miroir wants feayest re-| hone have secuted quite eltelo of acquatotance, | cian trom that comp Mom to ent their way to Fortress Monroe. There ia matter for acrioos teditation, Lot us a nny means of gettlog away availed bimecif o| maine to be seen. Hitherto thelr wants have been | General Steclo had adopted the polley which he) Tho same, to a degree, Hulde truc of the prisoners | The plot, it hae been further Tearoed, lacluded the | not walt In order to come to « reeolution, till sude aa acer ompbla tho order waa enforced uso | Toy and thoy have cultivated an exclusion almost | judged beat for brissing the People to frlendly | in the elty. Tt would be-n reasonable catimate to pul | deatrustion om te eereaaie,Cloverament works, the | den and [eaatible events distur) our judgment ‘and many of the thieves and gamblers who ere niet equal to that of the Japanese. For yeare before the | terme, and has met with a decided success, It ix in the sinmber who, are Ht sunsets Forshonpltalss ae impor tant bridges can the James, snd he fru | Jase Us in aplte of ourselves, lato oppoaite (ree ing tho town, and ono of the FeRimene Com atno | Was ovary he of improvement mot with a deadly | gueh exnet contrast to tbe conduct of Uatms A Who Ate re already under trontmeat In the three | intimate that thie deatriotts pr rmame could | “1 eome, therefore, to propose to you to regulate 1 having maie eeveral recruits in this manner. 1 Pevpaition ; the overiand mail, the telegraph, and | Hindman that the natives eannot fall to appreciate | hospitals, ad the Confederate surgeons themeelyse | have bees ae ee aetput would rather congratu. | the present, and to stcure the fature, in a Congress, c disreputable clan is fast belog tatan out were ephtwaye wore ateadily fought, untll thelr establish: | jf, ‘The feeling that the rebel forécin thoSouthweat | say the Lumber of patioats ts on ,jimaited by the | Inte the eitizeoe of Richmond 00 redelivery from 1, Called a t he throd by Provide g and tue i of ‘o thus far been molested, and tt ishardly | oot rendered further contro leas. Some complete nbined | sey iP eaccommodations provided. ‘Thus we have | the barcat posslliiity of oul sentiuleceacsna must | ofthe French people, but tralned in the school of a ofsers bas as meat rendered further controveny va Inichmplately::brokensNPy combined with the mild ver a percent. of the whole number ‘of prisoners | have rt bad the plot ripened into open revolt. adversity, it ls, perhaps, leas allowable for me thaa rb that th All be. to thank God that thi over tea pel P P g Sa ee nout i sian i) of;hor people wrant 0 far a0 to TRADE Oi Te thell tenants ry aver them, jn dolng more toopea | CVT Sel PEFEEST. Aen Yen weed tho mort auakdu: | "Few who alept soundly In to oresese uenson Auother to fgnore the righta of sovereigns and tho ‘Tho enrolment 4s made to embrace cvery one, 801 | Arianens was inaccessible to ateamere through the | the eyes of the unlettercd natives than could be ac | ong and Akiiful attention. Yat 1p ORE aaitlal | pene aware or even dreamed of the volcanic demon | leeitimaty ‘Aspirations of T al 1 s Ss bos ana " ; C in betog rapidly filled up. Allover the townio! croater part of the year. complished by dozens of gencral orders and bulle- | matter of rations they are receiving nothing but corn | that feigoed slumber in their midot, only waiting | ready, without a pre-conce! 7 |S 'y it jot G 1 y Moen avnad tn each ward, 90 that eltizeos may | "hy ay the Southern States, none were more fondly | thar The cowdition An which we find the people | bread apd sveet Hotatoes. neat Is no Honger ture | for the sent 10 Duet the cords of military maint ) ap iniarantionsl Congress lb “moderation iia, The re- Sen H a0 of 0 oners, except to the | snd rio ne and blood tice ordinarily the portion of those who hav a aa ee aera nding piaece to fallin. ThEre | strsehei to the inatitution of slarery than Arian. | males this mode of manveower me tgalestsapnk | Rialto, 8a clea of Our Pras aE tak or | ot in flame sb aa justice ordinarily the port 2

\vell oflicera or privates are now furnished with &

Her people were place of wheat

une.

the other States, nod thie deep ignorance made | Jenne, aud would have been equally ont of place In | very poor article of corn bread in. c! eee an ae 4 r ay : a day than they used to get Ina week’a time. It ie | them fanatical and almost superstitious In regard | Memphis. For thee olties rigorous dealing was the | broad. This te very unsuitable valet for hospital {s past. veralpui to wehom, thet mont am sitlous wraiaets Tey alMoultto obtaln passes for leaving the “MY, | 49 ¢hoir pot concern. When the war broke ‘out | only kind that could be appreciated by the treason: Patient on rr vot the bainbeD? iyaentery, aay PRISONERS AND THE GOVERNAENT LATIONS. | fragic and loyal atep that my sole onfeck to azrive,

‘An article 10 the Herald, which speared a few | wit nya ago, beaded "Brutal Action of the Rebel Go- soyement—A, New Crusade for tho Union Prieon- eens drawa forth the following statement from the Richmond Examiner of Nov. 24:

Gen, Meredith, on the 12tb, ene

puta shook, at the pactication of Europe. “Ta cate the princes, allieg, and friends of Franco Jeom it suitable to enhance by thelr preaence

of the dell a, T ahould be proud

Sener up or down tho river, and the provost mA | tore wan a strong fecling In favor of remalning, 19 can ae eva hourly the aceno of many bitter dle- | {Pe'tya16n, more because the people were opposed to appointments, AN kinda of rusce aro attempted: | i ,ovatione, than from aay partlouar revernie® for aerretmy thom euceeed. Yesterday a woman avKed | ¢ro yj gion, This loyalaeatiment wont down in the pass for herself and little boy's the clerk rondily Yon whirlpool}, though It was by no means en-

bly disposed. ere there hax beon no occasion for {t, and there {ano probabliity that there will be. The country people go and come, aubject only to a mild rvefilance, No apecial exertions need be made to Keep out spies, aa they can only tell the rebela what

Srectliog instances of Individual suffering and hor: Ha pletures of death, from protracted slekneas and Tinulatarration, wo have had thrust upon our at tention.

‘Tho first demand of the poor creatures from the tejaud wae niways for something to est, Sell-re-

ed to our com+

ace eee Capt

gave tho ono for hersolf, but refured spy pase for the | tiroiy plotted outs The Tobe] Gorernuent almials- | they already know, that we are too much for thom. | speek gone, Hole ‘and ambition gone, half clad, and missioner the ol ater san cee ety vt

chili until he ehould be brought connie see terod aifatre very njudiclously in Arkansas, and in| Stores are opened, and the citizens ean purchase covered with vermia, and “nite, many of thes too seater ee ee rae Se Ee ee eer an Sui) Vetuotaat to produce him, but finally ald €0. | ¥h4y way created a strong opposition. The worst | snytbing they tive What Got contraband, The | often, bevond all reach of The eeen to the hospl | Copt. Edword A. Foocs Libby Pri octrens aa | at tae tila occasion to renew to you tho asaue

fe attachment and lively interest romperity of the Stata of the

rancea of the sinc Which I take in the

Peet vend by flag of truce this day twenty-four

He proved to be a youth of five feet ten, aporting © | ceneraia in the Confeilersoy Were sen! Here to com- thousand rations, the diatripution of which T autho-

a Taules appear on the etreets or at the windows, sof rerpectable moustache. ‘Tho ‘ittle boy”? wns told ) ang, and they ruled with a mont bitter tyriody

grect us with smiles, which aro modestly recognized

falvand during the night seven of them died. Agaln, tighteen were brought, and eleven of them dled in

that he would make an excellent soldier, and W"0 | ntany mei at the outect enamored of the urned rao sthelr nequaiotanee, and | twenty-four hours. At ‘avother time fourteen wets | Ty Ya To euperintead. You will please forward | Confederation, aces % requeated to enroll bis name in a book resdy for 1h So cer orget a with the SEE ot eee and | twenty uand in A single day ten of them died. | merecepta for the tune. Seould the Confederate | Wherefore, most high an lustrous princes, r : recceslon movement, became Hegune’ Te find them disposed to be In every way courteous, them dict | me foritiea allow this course to be pursued in aub- | sovereigns, nnd Ores a comporing the most serene

Sudging from what we have ourscly

pnfederation of Germany, I pray God to

2 you

rarene ‘The mother of the Uttle fellow veas inveb | Coc guct of tho rebel leaders, and.estly sworo them. | Winter quarters ip 2i8%0 Hee rey unable,” | HOURISE fom array eat nay that, wader aroxt | alatiog our privoneys, 1 Will cont at ie ° Chagriged nt tho falluro of her stratagem, TR¢ | geivca out of the lines of the, Paty. he ro them. | Winter quarters 1p TisHe Tot qhreareglmenta 4a | monv of ayatomatie abuso, neglect, nud semb-stares; | pe crt tet tt Whe at wo wil kee uy foe muy. | Bolg mad Worby ete, Ws ane of crowd of applicants te very great, and but few of | tory, Isjor General | Price’ rf 1 Tiga’ the bumber who are becoming permanently | Very respectfully, You obedient eervant, itten aria, November 4 1n the Foar

P terly abured man in Arkaoess 1s Mejor General) Price's army recently ecatso mu nous and threw | ton, the oumber The, At tions must bo recuor. See TEREDITH, guaco 1863. WAPOLEON.

them succeed in obtaining permission to leave. .

‘Phose who pousees the misfortune of being without

Drovry pe L'Huys.” ENGLAND.

own their guns, The mutiny was quelled by mur untersigaed

rounding the insurgents with » atrong force, and

Brigadier General acd Agent of Exchsoge,

We leave (t to others to say what Judge Ould promptly returned it, with the follow:

Hindman, snd from all I can Iarn the abuse is mont ; things.

richly deeerved.

cd by thourandi fo demanded by this atate

physical defect aro just now particularly lugur | ppree years ago it would have provoked a smile| gompelling them to submit by forse of arma. All| | The Confederate taly Parsi ip general terme Ao- | (ng eaJoraemen RUMORS OF CHANORS IN THE Dn brious. The loss of a toc or of an oye is NOW CON: | of jnoredulity had avy one gravely stated that there | the desorters that come from the army represent & knowloiga the truth of silwonave sftimiat, BEDS aera rer to Buleadler Gane rere | eho Liverpool Mercury, a journal of little dered a grest boon. 5 polltior : cling, ant knowledge the Gousivo ciitorisls by declariag that | ith, This letter will not, bo dellvered to spent | ter, « Averpool Mercury, ® journs aldered a great boon. canes Abolition sentiment in Arkansas. It 18| very bad stato of fecling, and say that the ioet | AU clON6 Bel Oe ee a eating Yan: | Pobe, have toway na letter informed you that | ter, couaplcnowe montly xs au organ of the se

Jate in Engisod, hae ad article oa rumored changes

‘Accompanying this order was another, closing the in the Britiah Gablact, in whieh it 1o eald

Maes against all trado in elther direction. Thia will

quard constantly Kept up alone preventa the cs | xeca deserve. The Eoamindr In n roca article, bo- th bo served to your

highly probable that no sysh sentiment then extated, sovrations, tecluding candles,

Bighly Prog ese than a great war could ave| cape of Iarge numbers, Tho rebel army 1p the | gris deatrve. The Fie roadghe prieoners uldteccive, | soldiers. he manger in which that ie to be ont te td P H f Wie u red that Lord Palmerston ts 20 prevent cotton coming in or goods Bus out beyond | A vayened it. The prejudices of an ignorant people | Southweat is de ined before many months to be- | and the boxes ent to us from home, and slosed, by | will be governed iby our regulatlo bot yourt If | sagsauvitt tie conduct of the Foreign S ay

r 2, OY litsry authori we always ; oth! Culogizing the system of eemi-starvation aod expo- ecot satiated with those reguiationr, you can | foe h tho co! ok they orsign) Roun ou bine ary paultaey sathontleanhare ove wore very dificult fo overcome, and. nothing but 8 | como one of the thinge that were, In my last letter | Our, pe the Pytlinted. to dlapore of Us. ‘and expo; | you are not satiate fond, and withhold om FOU Gh | wnt his lordahip made bis retention of often 20 alls een disposed to Bhow aA ie vervulsion of a moat rerlous nature ean accomplish | T gave you n statement of ite condition, Parties | trae’ aad yet cold weather is hardly commenced, er HO. OULD, tional upon the tealgaatton of Earl Ruse j and it ple of the country, and have allowed them conaldetiy "The people of Arkansas have been educated in| who haye arrived since that was written confirm | We arehorritied when we picture the wholesale ‘Agent of Exebapgo. | |1#.sdded that at lense one other miaiater, has do it. peop Ww tho ¢: ‘ect by tho Promler. In

Tie latitude. This favor hsa been abused constantly | yorqugh school. Their trainiog hes been E00%, | the atory. RTERMONT. | misery snd death that willcomowith the biting froste |_| Another letter, written OF Ov smamienioner On Mow the example et Oy thos Frererttood by tho sending of improper articles in greater | tough the tuition is expenelve to tho Inet dcgrey ee af winter. pheceatly,anveral ‘hundred prieoucrs per | the Tsih, aeeured General Meredith that while out of Earl Rumeelt resieh oulertaxe the duties q ita allowed. Last week af vi NY. E, 1 z yg. | day were ing removed to Danville. In two authorities would not allow directlons to issue from ry : pan Z jusntities ban tbe permits suse Haast weet) iood, tressure, préspecte, and prosyerity, have all) JENNY /WADE, THE HEROINE OF GETTYS- | OF Nore Pere standing in view of thom sa thelr | Fortress Monroe tos Federal prisoner tn Richmond ten Gees : our troops found, ne earn ees been offered up. The Statehas been purified, / / BURG. stonces 7) paste Lt waa asad night to aoe the attenu- | to attend to tho distribution of raylone, Fer tts Rie THE PROPUSED GONG onus {com three) Bewage Entec all of Sem | There ia own Ankneae 0 GORE ‘ata tn faybr| theAountry han already heard of John Barns, the | ated features and nati a of men a fee monte | vialoog would Da dlatinuted ta confor ith ach SR Ecing run by Jews. Letters were discovered tnt: eae vi ooked up a ated features an Teygorous health, Numbers were | rerulations aa vould be estabiiehed by the prison Ores Aare eE

Eegiihe eee enrow of slavery. It 19 looked upod!as| pero/of Gettyaburg—of how the old man tallied | without health j numbers were witons abocs | nese puthoritlea. Ber

plicating the abippera in other smuggling trans hetlone, An order was st once ireued closing thelr stores snd confieesting thelr atocka, The Govern- ment will recelve about $200,000 by the operation, the stocks of cooda being quite Inrge. Oneof the firma deale in boots snd shoes, and had just Inid io a large quantity of beavy boots, evidently designed for the contraband trade, These boots will be found excellent for our envalrymen.

‘The order for the etoppage of trade caused much commotion emong the cotton dealers, ae it will ma- terially affect their business. It ta In direct conflict with theregulationa now in force, in which it is de- clared that the Treasury Department shall have the exclusive management of trade matters. At tho oame time It ia. manifestly proper proceeding!

the eavec of all the troubles through which /the Stato haa pasged, and the detestation of it is now a8 | hy stung aa wee tho love of it before. Arkaneat is] j\Gored many shots from hie trusty riile into the long way in advanceof Mieeourl, Maryland, ‘of Ken: | heen and tho. hearta of bia country’s foes. John alljranka: be et CO ape a tucky. Ttrwould surprise the Emacelpationieta of | ‘Byron! name fa alrendy recorded aon the immor-| fay the ides that thelr Government had forgotton thoee States if they could vislt Arkanean arid note tai, to tive there with American valor snd patriot- eneanthey exe held faat ‘their confidence in the therfeeling that prevails here. The scalea have | yen,have an admirer and sn emulator. But there inal and specdy success of our cause. eilee from the ever of the Arkapelans, and they | yas q heroine as well as ahero of Gettysburg. The pan aduition tothe above statement a Tate itt have determined to make a neve record. Conslder- | ojd hero Burns atill liver the bereinis sweet Jonny | caloficers connected with the borpitals referred to— fog what they bave passed through, thie remult 18| wade, parished In the din of that Sietul fray, and | Quagesos Willipe, Siwmoas, and Sabaly and the not, after all, to surprising, Had any of the Border) sho now sleeps where ‘the flowera once bloomed. | hospital ateward, Hallet—are nat in any way, Bo far cee eiteuffered equally ns much, they would have | and the perfume-laden alr wafted lovingly over ns our obuervatloa bat extende eaponnibie for the Dan just as thoroughly dieguated with the war, 8nd | Cometery Hill, Before the battle, and while the | MAY OF, lore bound. in justice to bear testimony to that which csuecd It, national hosts were awaiting tho: assault of the | their kindne ‘and the faithful performance of thelr ‘The tyranny of the Confederate lenders was made | traitor foe, Jenny Wade was bually engaged in unusually severe in Araneae, and ite soverlty was| psing bread for the pational troops. She Sonupied

host within himeelf, “to fight on bis own ik, and how be fell wounded after having de

Jy all without bisnkets orovereoste, and not 8 man Uldwe seo who was well and fully oad But to the credit of the prisoners in Richmond, of

These letters were delivered to Lieutenant Colo | cp nal Treine, the officer in charge of the boat that brought the rations to City Polut, After ome cua- plderable hesitation, be concluded to take the Sielone back to Fortress Monrve, ard immediately, Trom that sest of lea, iasned the report, which seems fo bave inflamed all Yankicedom, that’ the Confede tate authorities had refused to receive the rations Heatined for the “atarving prisoners {n Richmond.” |

The fact of the oasc ie, that the Identical pro- visions earried hack to Fortress Montoo by Lieut Colonel Irvine were immediately despatehed by tho Cade hands to Olty Polat, to be received upon the terms proposed by our commissioner. and at the very tine of tho apperrance of the Herald's editorial were | ¢ helping to Gllthe greedy atomacha of the Yankee Privoners. It ecema the ateamer that conveyell the Pitions back to Fortreas Monroe remained thers Just about long enough to allow thia monstrous le to be hatched.

the London Times.) The Queen reeelved on M autograph letter from the E which his Xasperial Afajeaty reque pend representatives to a congress pean States, whore duty it ehall bad recogoize the polata in whic nu Thee been infringed, and to miopt auch mes cance with Feapcct to present complications aa may

tre the general peace, We helleve that her ¢ Minietora will mect in Cablact on Tues aay, Pot the anawer to be returned by her Majesty to the Emperot of the Fr

m the Parls Patrle.) Letters from the Emperer, 1ay to ‘sn. European congress, were ‘Thureday, tmmediately after the op in the anmie journal, treatiog of the ¢ Emperor's apecch, maine

Yovember 9, an the Frened, ia ed the Cueen to {the chief Euro= pe to take note of Treaty of Vie

ing the sovereigns

despatched on ech, An article arious opinions

duties with the Hmited means nt their dlapdsal. : DANIEL MEEKER,

‘tstea Volunteers,

*2-ce kaon alonted Jong 880: Bed We r a Surgeon United ‘atertained respecting

Tor thors tarde gooi. Ta Tea Wciiasiee agMi er | BURT et = wetha spaliaation of Phe too Ae of | n houge in range of the guns of both armies, and the 2 75000 "0. T. SIMPERS, Pe natebed a enough here to atato that we havo | trina tained respeet punly expressed by tbat Journal; ipWwhat they bave neéded fora long time, ‘Tho om 0, the owner of sTaveR PDAIN HOT bie GFAfted, If] OUBUY ergMRES te antnane nents tee thesmamiscn, | Asdistant Surgeon 6th Regiment Indians Vols, | pen officially informed that, ihe Fedoral ngeat of | and reposts that the word expressing the presant Sra Ra tua tate tor ence oir tale Rint | heen omen any MAN ne esEalow Balto Say, fat) | plgrcod her puro henrh and tne (e's Holy yaar} etn r se ABGTNG, pace | Sxebange notltied, Judge Gund teat iC the rations | hositlon of things 1a not so much peace oe the liber- der hare cls owe of th ono |e wt raion, eo tat foe ny] RRC aaa eet wae ao Wak nian Sua rae peer mes ee eee a ae ab |Z OUREUG 9 Mtbrcn en toed ee

rebel offleer of bigh rank fell near where Jenny Wade

“alu. not be

ming 8 congress, hen all

: Wan obliged to go to the war. From thls eprung

goon. A 0 prung up| had portshed. The rebels at once proceeded to prepare = the Yankees would be reduced. saree eat bia nag|ie aud conciliatory inten-

oe es Ges eeation Tara bow] | Aunyine nat © Le anh ich mad war anda poor seer yes: thelesfallentisnaen, but about the tima lf RAO Vu eee REBEL PRISONERS. THE YANKEE PRISONERS, LTR a Sl Devitt the prines "Tete foF Compoigne ob Stik * Where

a ee man’s fight.” The military rulers ayplted That was finished the surging of the confict changed |W pu ost painful evi 1 | the : serion of operations. v plied tho Inv | That was Gnlabed toe tuice and Tonay Wave's bedy e have published most painful evidence of the | (Fram the Rlchm they will remain s month.

Gen. Poll has been gent there nd Engairer, Noy. 9.)

Hee ee err au Gen tice ohare Na yIlt ave | Hy Ak kal severity, and thus catranged trod 2Rém| way placed tn zho coMln designed: for Hes oountry’ sufferlogn of our pritonera tn Richmond, including | 9, Wve Publish tony, from Te No Fee hmond Pale r

out of contac with Gon. Hrga, where he wil ave | gh'yno were oot owners ofneg property. Tove Yranpineed foe ofa tener ner sunt | ne inkutmn, murderous eatmeot of” out Ang | november 1 nm aiticle on «The Kietmoad Pri From La Frases ;

imei Std a whlch ti oparata po) Ait pears coe | ng tho meres of the costa. deoty/aa) dle tls AI and thus the heroine of Gettyahurys Wat solaiers in their hospitals, Wo condente come of | juafed the course SEE eee Ave ear ot | actively tu the Polish question en

tent, He is placed in common of allthe troops i> | yg, tt did not require a Jong time to rouse them to of Gottyabure are beautifully touching, goble, mad] the teatimony of William F. Swaine, Mf, D., inspec- | exchange, Mir. Ould has 60 coupletely vindicated the | Peau question. Upoa the table oft

peas Sin Gan ton Peri ne DeGTEry aie Heanor ao om Mea They reseliy maw that they ee Ge pene ener iman of Get-| tor United States Sauttary Commlanlon, who r6- Just, proper, and humane courte pursued by him on | Emperor will op book of th ty of

ee a ea eee ae ener ac eat eee erate ee alr thas weitalbezent || Nout from Jneaslons alle the etruggle to enve the | cently ioapected the hoopltal for rcbel prisoners at ‘bis sahject, at I may appear auporfiuaus to eom- | nations, to eatablleh public right, anew 5 & clear

arma, ‘Tho conscription law is sgaly raking the | °Meone Devices tionuelvess Wor'the only escrides which the people of that | Point Lookout, Maryland, He found the sccommo- ent furtir on ie AUNeet ted to | not cific, founded upoa the vrei Teta toon actor

See ER ee TE Ro ee ean nae wa TAL iat stented Cor Teeanity, had to olfer on the ebrine of thelr coun-| dations there much better than he expected to tlad | accept the alternath 9 low a to be compelled t0 | Tests of soverelgan aad aatlones SS Meete eee tek bat, cad mea were attaines | FY, ct & monument bo erected on the ground them. Eight of thelr own men, #lx them gra- | OF desperately cruel!’—but we are desperately deter- fe contitnts goverment ia nce

likely that many will be obtained. Gen. Loring ia in command under Gen. Polk, and {2 to act as his executive officer. It {snot knowa what movement they have in view, though it 1s probable they Will attompt to destroy communication between this city and Corinth, It is hinted that they deslgn an

iene te ane ae epee nen oan bow and bices the memory of Jenny Wado, It Peete ener rin Senne ahaeemibeinen, ghia t her ter hei snd out Ittle boys and girla will scsist In eoliciting

mined to measure the exact treatment received by Our prigoners to thoze of the enemy tn our hande, fad when they acnd to City Point our prisoners eo | Framnme emaciated with pickacas and autferiog that many | l@ Peace. have died on the way, or Immediately after arrival, | (Frou itis but fair to elect the esmo cles to rend to the United States.

tory, aud elyilization society {taelf, This pro- empire

for the army only by s most rigid conecription. Many fled to our lines or concceled themaelves in the awampa and mountains until such tle aa thoy could come out with cafety, Since our army ob- tained ponsceeioa of the State these men have boca

duatee from mcdical schools, and the other two etu- dents, aro dotailed to superintend one hundred pa- tients, Thelr rations are ag follows Fit Dier.—Dinner—Beef or pork, 4 oz. ; pote: toca, 4oz.; hard tack, 3 oz. Breakfast and Tea—Cof- feo or tes, 1 pint; rice, 2 gilla; molasees, 1 02.5

‘The King of Italy has accep!

the Invitation to a

Stack upon Memphlx; ia’ the ‘event! of ‘tho troo flocking to our standard, but there ia still a Iarge| subscriptions for this holy purpose. Bel a pugress, and has congratulated the ta 4 of the troops ete purpose. Before the | hard tack, 2 07, Ded et propeeca: Qatilla| Goverment aball!| GUS MENS ee ieee now here being withdraws for operal number concealed In tho mountains in the south- | Summer aunsbine again lisecs the grave or yD ator} 3d provisio anes ban leets nt ball | his generous Initiative.

5 Toroperations eluawhers sees nea ee im mmet susabino again inet the grave of Yeony || HaLy, Dier-Dinner tea 2 ors potatoes, 2 | fd provisions an wall a bianketatothelrprisoners | “ihe Constitionnid argues the neceaslty, of estas

oz; hard tack, 20z. Broale(ast_ and Tea—Coftee ‘or tea, I plat ; rice, 1 gill; molasses, +; oz,; hard tack, 20% '

Low Dirt. hatd tack, 1 oz

Threo regiments of Union yolunteera have becn ralred, and a fourth 1s {n process of formation, Yell county alone furniab- ed five hundred men, and it ia reported that more

While we are not authorized to aay that tho Confederate Goveruuent would parmit thin, wwe are prepared to urge our Government to permit tho United States to send anything, clothes or pro- visloos, thoy may think proper. But we would call

Itcan hardly be possible that they would venture ‘an attack here with so amallaforco. Our defences ‘are now 20 good that they would find much trouble ntaking them. Tho attacke of the rebels upoa our

hing a new public law, aa peace docs not exiat in the preeent day, but armaments ruin all, The con grees proposed by the Emperor would accompital the work of univereal progress and goaeral clvilizae

where'she alecpa In glory; before the flowera again Teck tho plain made famous by gallant deeds, 1et-n monument riee to greet thealies in tokens of virtue, daring, and nobleness.—Horrisburg Telegraph.

Dinner—No meat; potatoes, 2 07 Breakfast aud Tea—Cotfee or tea, 1

works, of late, havo not been very successful, will be on thelr way hero before long: Good judges pint; rice, 1 gill; molasses, 1 oz,; hard Yack, 1 o7. The Trlunc's attention to auother mode of reaching | “x” eoaful, 53 aa 1 OF, ky 10: wore o another mode of reaching telegram i of November 9 aay Tne fenpearole faseoeeerilual ive Clase raliisanen fal eee ee ea aceon OEE OASE IN THE NEW ORLEANS COURTS, | jegy.? Ant 80% bread'are'aleo given at leat once a | (heaemecni, Ch? tether Goversueat will seud al Ahslbiiede Grant deleted {0 Osuht Res

exceas of pi the prisoners it holds to Richmond, the Coafederate Government will send all It holda to Washingtoa, the excess on elther aide to be on parole.

By such an arraogement our ‘dire poverty? will be compelled to fed many more than by the preseat arrangement; the Yankee Government will be 1c- Heved from all apprehensions of their men starving on our hands, aa Well av fron) any neveanity of end Ing quartermaster or commissary stores to their pri

peers in Richmond. If tho Trivune really belioves

time, there will be clght regiments of Arkansas vo- luateere in our service. Thin is exclusive of the con- siderable number that have gone into regiments from other States, and, when we conolder that Ar \canean had been drained of men for the rebel eervicc, we can appreciate the value of this teatimontal to loyalty

_A strong movement Js belog mado by the leading

(Correspondenes of the Herald. }

As [tated in the letter soot previous to thie, th judicial courts: in this city have entered RaPORaun upon thelt winter's work. Wo have a Provisional Court—eomething of the nature of the Common lose Gourt of New York the United States Dis

jot Court, anda half dozen losal diatr not to speak of the milltary courts aay

To the Second Diatrict Court, on the 11th instant, Judge J.S. Whittaker prealding, an toterestiog de-

berg, on tho 7th, the copy of ag autoztaph lotter from the Emperor Napoleon to the Euperor of Aus- tin, Inviting the letter 1o 8 congrers of aovercls at Baris, The Vicona jouraala slvocate a clove nlll- ance with England and Pruasls Prince Metternich hss been. al to the Emperor Napoleon that co-operate In an European coi yet tobe determined, (or t publlo European right, with ap

LUkely to put s oew phaeo upon rebel matters in Texas and Atkanens. Parties recently {rom Kirby ‘Smith's locality ssy the rebels are talking of moving overything to the Texas border and attempting to cross into Mexico in the event of being hard pushed. ‘They have abandoned all hopes of recovering Ar- kansas aod Louisiana, and say that Texasis the only thiog to fight for. Ifour troops had not gone to the

‘The cooking is dono by their own men, and we have heard no complaint in this quarter, except that they svete poorly eupplied with cooliog utensila, ani were very much in want of tha eups, knives and

They had a large cooking-stove, but they com- plained that it was not oulfleteut for thelr purpose, Asit kept them at work all the time—the very rea: ton that {t should not be changed or another given, them. The cooks, tent, and stove were dirty—the

rized to declare uustria in ready to co upon a basis reoxtheoing of the ial regard to ao

Hrantice tut plon of setrest Ip that dinectnas trauia | Hc of the State to recover ita return to the Uaion | claton was given touching the statu peculiar charact we are ately poor,”” that "dire p . compan ee

a tates na frat nt dston woul | mcr hans a ple’ Tey nee he] pmatoaeseh ee ear oe ee | ey senate en teat whats the | Re ee) Fer ond Wea tee Wie she PRUSSIA,

of Goncral Banks’ position on the Rio Grande effec- proclamation as in full foree, and admit that it frees | “24 to be emancipated under the laws of Loutbinay! | altbough I am glad to say the table from which Thay | Confederacy is on rhort rations.” thea policy, as well | OPENING OF THY PRUSSIAN DIET—SPEEOH OF THE

Fi aoe anna dirin that quartoranesrt tewhat ig | Welz slaves forever. Even were tt not #0, they It golvea several polota heretofore 1n controversy, | Ste wan soni und lecked very clean, es alco the | 98,justice and humanity to their own mon, should RING, known as the 01 would wish to be rid completely 0 ‘The following Ie the history aud decision of the cnae: | P/stes and cu) faite the United States Government to'tax our |, The full text of the apeceh of the King of Prussia

as the upper route, by way of El Paro. The pletely of the fnatitution of | Deceated, n free man of color, made two wills, | Ho heard necesaitics with the feedingof our own eoldie tothe Dict reaches us by this arrival. The K!

Coe a et attake kamaca | Havers Before comtag brck to tho Unios. They | each by anthentie parties; the y luande/twalwills | #.210| beard no! complaint phous tent accommcds..| much es_posatuley and relieve) ‘Bele wo. a0} ers a8 | te ea ag oUatloate, Iccturlag the devuties muaaanets in, and must look upon thelr position ax one that | ohote ® convention of tho people as soon aa an Ship, 1857, In whled ho deslares ho was nover mar | “vse The Inspector continues Truck pange inflicted necessarily by our atraltened | dutica to hia, and expressing bie own views 1a might be better. vredion’ of delegates, cumbe "held arith: eatoty: LA | Tess, that he. bad a natural son,-Jean. Baptiato, Concerning the rations, I heard a grost doal of clreumatanc terme which are little efse than defiant, though

With oo r 4 h army fast diminishiog {twenty-three years of age; that he owned the ne. | Complaint U t they did not get enough to eat; | The United States have many more Confederate masked under a thow of courtesy, He eaya

the thmo the State seceded the old constitution wae

by dezertion or diseseo they will bo com : : ompelled to twenty three years of nee, that Ne Owned tnene- | they wanted more meat; what they did got they’ | prisoner aan i ears neccealtate fre Teed Fy ie Souedioge whlch ‘asra aritea bet Bye oceans thy tae Hmo tne Stato sceeded tho ol coustitution wae grees Euoatie porebaed trom one Senite Ceayrew | spoke of ia the highest tara y | pruners than the Confaernc nota U9 es | uc ay Gaoiesoga whey, uvta sled bene renmp Gis soutess before ones DW OR aIN 1 referenco to an existence in the Confederacy, This yt ‘cmanelpated; butha require her tobe ao, the| Loe,tatton of the wall men i and clothing of maay more than at preaent. Why, | @y goverameot and a portion of the represents. a cri aoratie sizes om ite epae to dhe MclstnstiyplS GO| ee era eon eae On aeeaoa OCS, ae pee Pierce CIOL TELAT A recta ae ato ee esti 8-08 ¢ malt: Beef, C0731) nase they cop thelr prisoners abut up ina iand | tives of the country. Oy royal duty enjoins upon rf nav’ d PPL, to | Yatted Staten, and would need to bo rav nnd be constitutes hie naturalaon hi eole helr, and | DAr# tacit 1G oz. s-coltee, } pint. mast papi tence gadetorefaguct at | Hee yeoman ta cbatetoand cut off navigation, How truit may be itis ditt | tho State could ed to bo revoked before | ‘appoints an executor, H ape eive ‘aces wetlyfotatory and nano | xiqustdy Of esp oso tek glee | Heh cet toe fefsetanion, of ant cult to eay, but it fs possible that Kirby Smith may | to ¢ ome back, “Ta calling 8 eouvention | BY bis second will, mado the Gth day of April, | CVe"y Ave days, soft bread once a weelk, nau inceh exbausted ist of a aterving, autleriog people, they | privileges of the representation of the country.

meat has beep ia

wed to them once aeweek up to

so ape ot charge cruelty where necossity admits of | Confilcting concentions have beca brought, to bear

to form a proper constitution, it {8 proposed to con- | 186% he names DI. X. Bosslere,f m. 0. hls executor

hayo cent a detachment in that direction, It is

Y slavery ren the fact that be bas ow pra weekatonO) ace re a pe che Hee topeescorativen of a inte sat» dah : defo per coanits ine de rata lte cea Utara ifmne hie exeritor; 1 ooerae eT otuelty 1a, practieed by elther | upon theextent aud limite of thouccontested rightof P hat the foree in question is nothing | pyey well understand that tho on); tte It forever. | cloven sears) ner obligation of freeing her: coo- Gulere ten ald not dnd fault with the rations | overament, it eaaaot rationally be cher Os | the ital exininipentof the de "ia order to sore robate that he area sn quston iy setg | hey well uaderntan ha ote At forever. | eleven sears unet obligation of freeing Ret; cot-| nye the cookteg, tat st wax uot done wel, apd | ub elace wa “retire ta anbjest a greater number of | the legal catablishment of the budger. In order to siderable numbers on eome grand stealing expedi- ono whieh phall do away with it en- | ecutor names antd cxcoutor aa tls, Untvcreal jeqa, | *DET# URE to be change mado, Ke. So I visteathe | OO oth en now ta Yaatce prvone tata ce | SA yftendel to tegulte tbe rica of the, Coe

KITCHEN AND Divixc-rooats.—These are in the northwest corner of the camp, and are composcd of six wooden buildings, 160 fect in length, and 20 fect

ta of the Go- obtata n legal army Govern+ mm to an unl

which fw totended to regulate the ri yernment in cage the budget doca no eatabllabment, and to mect the fear th ment io sueb a care intead

poverty” thal 1s now asl to be atary pritoners. ‘Gur seseveration will rot convince the Trivune,we

tirely. ‘They propose, in applying for rendmission, to make their application a8 a free State. Among the repentant rebels who havo come back

tee, declnring that be ban no helr having righte b pater {veritas dnd bequests to Puontie, three Bendres :

dollars, revoking nll prev tamenta,

tlon, The gucrillas along the river are everywhere abundant, but they have not, thus far, gathered in large bodtes,

off from the leitohen

It would be perfectly natural for them to bring a Inrge number together for an expe-

to us, Is one Colonel E. W. Gantt, of Hempstead

Peenoges dice August dthy 1863, snd on. the st oatster Borslere. petitions for: tho probate or the

Oaly tive of the bulldings are

in use, The kitchen arrsogementa are very good,

know, and it will never publiah this article; but it may underatand from it that a people who are aut-

mited cont)

lay ¢

Lover the state funds, without regard

aitiGa ot/extra' importance. county. Before the war he wae a prominent man | at will; 1s contirmed as executor, and obtaine ap Me Meo notaining four gauldrons and ove fire, | fering like ourrelyes are ot to be expected to do | to the right of the representatives of the country." Sn eee gaat baal of; thistyomma|saito (oe {nthe State, both apa lawyer and a politician, Te | Ofer {oF an inventory, which waa dled on the Stat, each cauldron capable of containing trom tty to | more for thelr enemies, who are prisoners in our | | The speech closes with the follovving significant y ok: | espoused the Seccsslo 1 sau shows property exceoding In value threo thou’ | “ty. galléas. hacde, and who bave ruthlessly destroyed our re- | bint man, Ky., and captured nome clghty mules and} tonal, Hi jon cause, and Jabored hard in tte | sand dollars | Zeek tant and aupper they relled upon hard tack, | sources, than they do for thelr own foldlers, | Aad “Gusteuwun : Wo stand in an excited time, per- many Heys and septured ome CleMY miles od Ybohalt, Ho raised a regiment of Infantry fbr the| The Gout te att cd that Theatle was fren at tno | 2h arenas aud, me sali Gelore, tere eco Ua: | truth démnde ua to nay, oat wen tho iaueot star: | FAL Of The brink of-e more excited future, T ade eae ere cee Puc rnr oe Tobe) inca tianddieeal self Toctoaelalloomntanlont time of the marriage, and. that ‘lena Daptite Nr | Hondo thelt starving, The diniag room, son sae truth demands rgurawn soldiers or people and the | dress, therefore, tore-urgently to you the request Gamage was done tothe tows Ny there queries, a8 | Ho was among thoue captured at Talend No. 10 by time of the marriage, and that Tenn Baptisto Nt | three tables, and cach houso feeds 1,629 men—g0o at | Yenkea palsoners 18 Presenecs, {he ate will cor: | to undertske the solution of our interior question # u E a alateyatl | en eeas eee ate emt te irae ch Noe 09. || Hythe Wok off Hanslare, the unl arent gates a Aime Three tables, and cach Nouro feeda, 1,679 men G0 20 | Timi dle). We will ahare sith them our scanty | with sn earacat ell to, Dring ehvk 90 ete er ‘ou may recollect my mention, # short time ago, of ‘an in-| {ng nothing under it, the will has become without | Ott for kitchen and dining room. tainly difivide our balf rations; but whea the | ing. This object can only be attained if the power,

mate of Fort Warren, At the time of the general exchenge ho was returned to the Confederacy, and wae agoin captured at Port Hudson, After the enp,

ut bea te Joc the royal Government, ioclspensable for the’ 2 Wil'| Prussian monarchy, mafntatped unimpatred, and

Irio the exercise of your constituted rights I be sup

y you in the fultiment of my duties as

‘The siek to quarters average {rom Uylog polar fa reached, the Yankee valllog Cluesce, rourvy; yet m great maoy are | de the first to mect that alternat ve. Yroubled with the diarrboss, and aa they gradually | meantime, We are proparal to renew the cartel prow wotve, aro admitted to the hospital to be sent

pre

etiest, and the property must pass vo the legal hel Theatis, the wife, is the only on a ai under artiole 913. EOD CUTE Ee

the firing upon the Orescent City about acyenty miles above hore, All the guerillas who took part {n that enterprize have been arrested and brought to

te Paes Tt 1s therefore ordered that Thoatla bo recogatrzed nny PRISO fe tintin er peeney hese arested bad DQURRE Ua | pure of Dla Hoa Nadbsea te Laokupoa ie robel nx havo of tnedecatey Nichelne Desmugearaea | to thegenozal hospital. ‘Those men who. aro sick tats thet thla King Hee o ee a TER aera aTatere| PEE eR RUSE AIEEE RE That abe io entitied as heir to the cileota of hile sue | 12. qUe7ter#, nod who are unable to cat the Tate The Exquirey {ovlata that thia prison ls managed | ©” ‘on- | wire dotermination to abandon them, cession, after payment of the exp tae glven then, have lostend: vinegar, three o properly, and bringe a eerlour charge against our oor vietion, be Sater aOR ant Ho fe now in | S¢t#lon, after pas xpenses avd charger | SWetoes fives Mi = Vinegar, three ouncet ; | management of Fort Delaware. it saya TOs ria his oltgh acd al GUIGETRRURCEISE Hare Kathe ame. potatoes, Ave; Flee, one gill; molntves, one zill— | "yy P Spparl 2s ; On ascendiog the 7

2 nie 5 oie ane. tatocs 0 anagement of Fork Delanarc:, mere bow mat,|,, Hecuenes < Oa ascending the throne to which T

} ‘Tho Secersloniate of thie clty are much annoyed | ment fora return to the Union. aoe tian interesting ease before one of the courts | One day's tations, Exch tian cooks for himsell. LSA ET Ae a rear te og bow mat | nave becn called by your mutfrages, I {cel the desire

‘the placing on duty of s considerable force of was one In which m rebel oaptain is sued for n | (ot pes bane MUNRO OE a are unbt f not: | {era Ato MADAREE hmont, And tue treatment of tha | £0 say Sfew wonls to you. brings sou, neltier

Col, Gantt has written an address to the people of| divorce by hie wife, the platati charging her ro | Withstending soveral of th

So soldicra, Most of them were recruited h reli arnt far eee lexperienconiuriwlMicn=—ay which d here, | Arkanans, in which he mi aie ee creant lord with belog disloyal to The watere of those not in uec are ng for use: | prisoners condiaed there, could rcarcely be Improved | EXP nor sw lelors a ual ite tee lo by ou esAn: Shop prove naret suse Ia the ratka, ‘he | theese tation, maken» carful review of] 758201" ropa to caabt her ormty an er | fae aver owt oti ne are atrgusl Waptee | fvout tur pine ie to m aloskery. The | Biased waa lace dlotion, aw ale) wich ih be Donne of te wow order pullg sale oded | ne made tn the euch an bone, by Die exten huitaou'steestog, “Tao plata Hasna Lyoae, | MO"5th,UENy conte ater aud od excise wwhateret pened eee es quaiereareeytetenn, a | Misa tuebveypety of guy lature woth pre ri FS eae all iota Be abforsedtoe ; , by bi Fee aan eeaanee aagea E5008, | abundance of good water, nad no excuse whatever | the general axnita net GUA eT ny aud | Mise to devote my whol 7 leh Xp There many ile See ee ee ee eee paar aevan aan: We tes bus tongs that he rbot | teu fom tae, tne th nokae plsetFepeneats | forbengotherse tamu clnoiy Sut the aver t9 | uguely attended to. 10, ithe prison isaeru | Mea respect eal eootclostlondly obsorso your here ed here, | newshercefter to. mae up fn somo saenanre fr tBO) Bet Uo ae ae ti te month of sareay (2 | ROREE ace abd rater at neh hele arpa | glee attended to, In eootraat with this, We | 1.44) and expect lly the conetitut coal they are stan abundant aa they were Deforo the | equto fe Bopeless, and ailviser all who ate to evel they lived together, and sho. al mth oF Mareby 1862 | fniteatca. A great maby cant, their anpenranee 00 | Give the following extract from » letter trot an | Op vs and eupeo ally the constitution, that keystone i duty nee Me equtttthemucves Dnulsssy | henan the wwact op nrge ouster o saan re | tha Munro eatery Heyer vi: baad Glues gnoy Woeietee ip maton Hash | ayo Or tee ighen tcneenen. Chae aes [UNIT aoaadn veyousitendye q crete rebel sai oarricr was captured under | them. In taking up the syvord he expected to abide ho lelther aod went tothe Statoot aclesippiwoere | DOtSe enouEd you'll fin nnd gagged aba lines (or ing ta to the tablottee, | Tere cng, ARatated t Hou¥oany eagarcne os ea pasted uuperecinegaze, Would. havo ordinarily | bythe reavits of tho war. The resulta TORCH Wat Inst sccounts setlog | Korn for money anil rations, T Oifferent quality sod sean ta foaten shietmutnerous a CBE BY panel uapercelved. The mall ie now being | adverse to him. The President ened he proslama- asian ofeer thereia,,"Thoplaintit'furtbersays tbat) Cyycq, reno, aweab cloth, owt Alen on This street | The pany d ny ea ath nad vert by the wil cor material resoureea of your Lovie couatry, ‘The "boats of the mice tlon, nnd the advance of thearmy ha ee ee a or rae Ease aunt, | thew dg thelr trading—han-tack for tobacco, a7 rect | The gard, dooreo, barracke, and even the erackia h henceforth {s mlae no Nap ph rmy has applied it to ther husband has been ever 8 q | our bunks, were full of the most detestable of ambition ts to make Greece the model Stato doing Doateof Mie Mlssalypl marine brigade are | Arkanexe. Dy It tho slaves nro. free, and he bas no United States, noi tuat her butband hae been over | bacgg for hardrock. It ie here that you Will Hod | Sreeplog vermin. Listle oF 10, ro aunadiaiot East panics Greeoe the occa Fre maioge aeiingss roa thos have eaptured | defeated ia hie attempt to ano ia slaves by the| wen, jth having lived in adultery with divers, Wo: | srtao dia:atlefiod at having Jost wmen, and, are them | and the feclitice for keeping clean are by no menaa pitta my Hoste, He will ald me oot to tua o-nes mona of oar peetrna ath, [ror Ma hah It soa be wane Me or aaen, Tots whieh havo but restotlp come to her | Fumie thus enesged,taey are seta of the | FY eee TIE B, ation whteh I have contracted lesth of Colonel Ellett, the brigade Since the | treme for him to ask the Government to give him | C2 Do feaue from the marriage, and that the cou | ° | aNew D Acnoss THe Sv Whereon I pray God to ‘ou in bls aafekeep= seat oF Colon Gat the brigede ig been in com | paniatance Yo nccomplieh that object to give bio! munity property at the time of bia deserting her | | Theleotshecncempment eaten aixteen acrea;| THs Nontbin Spy learos that tho Reeulog and Go- | 19K. mLiprey. God tober aon GEORGE: tantly on the move, wad whenever ate are co | against tho Govermnent, bo does net thick it the Mine moat uprancs of one huadred mid Gity thon, | top whole surrounded ya boarl fence tela fect | Wats Natioes ta ean iF the Reastog and Co | "Xraexs, Ost 30, 1869. portunity for work, they ai ‘isan op | part of a roliier te aek it to give him wh | Pe oe he sariatforer co the outelde for the seat. | Tosd at Salunga, toeross the Suequebands at Chi —————_ Tuisorguaaation Wav delgend by Cote age | Bgl fo ioe him what be was] Rech tbe essopslsssmaunity mrjary fed | el quent big for nim to vk witha tela. | GF oa temo: ac wepover toy, owe ott | Tec any eat Ratatat patie is that ed by Colonel st | , . tone naif thereat, *nd”a. eeparatio Sa a aT a an eee oa an aetromaniee | Qty weve mot ie eaumy yesterdey, a yia. that ' Treg a espa ER EeSTIICET IG sre. Ttlavithis this that there ate coctned | Osumbia lige, burned Uy Out toops aut sommer, | ity seal he ass esterday, sud are out natrimonti. ut eight thouzs: jnonert | forever. on parole this moraiog.””

4 Hornen's Wav Lvess,

SATURDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1868.

ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS.

Bins. L, D, U.—Tho story ip interesting and well told, and Will be published as noon aa we can make room for it, Which, however, may not be for eome months to come. With your permission, wo shall take the Iberty of omitting the Eeq."" after the title.

St, Manks,—The Ines are ingenious, and will Appear in our next paper. They are decldedly an improvement on tho

E.E, IoNA—Your note of the 2th ult, 1 re ecived. The title shall be changed as you suggest, You are correct in the opinion that we are “over yun with MS." Neverthelers, articles from your pen are alyays a

optable, Send along os many a you chooro; but be patient, for we cannot print them all for several months, ani’perhapa longer.

23-We had expected to have completed tho story of “AniGArL" In thio number of T%e War Press; but We fiud, on recelvlog tho balsnes of tho msnueeripty ‘that {f will run two or three weeks longer.

THE GREAT TRIUMPIL TO THE NA- TIONAL ARMS IN GEORGIA.

As the }

months ago, was celebrated in immortal

‘ational jubilee, less than five

deeds upon the heights of Gettysbu the brave army under MEADE, s0 now has the National Thanksgiving been made for- ever memorable upon the heights of Chat- tanooga by the anny“ of General GRANT. As though by some Divine dispensation, each of these national occasion signalized by a magnificent triumph to the Union arms ; so that henceforth the observa- tion of both anniversaries will become a pa- triotic and a Christian duty. These days will teach us rightly to estimate the value of our Federal Union, and gratefully to re- mémber the men who haye given up their lives that it might not ‘perish from the earth.” The victory just achieved in North- ern Georgia is, perhaps, the most complete of the war, and the most crushing blow yet dealt to the rebellion by Gene Ganz, who in so many ficlds has done in- valuable good to the cause of the Union, and irreparable harm to the plans and pros-

by

has been

pects of the rebels. We are progress now to that advanced stage of the war when the results of single encounters be easily seen and appreciated. For a lon, time our loyal people complained, and with much truth, that although, they contributed freely of their wealth, and sent forth their sons and by

thers to the battle, they could ea balance that would show how much the sacrifice had purchnsed They could count the enct byt annta——+ count the gain, Tennessee was redeemed from the rebels only to fall again into their possession; and so alternately, as the tide of battle swayed further North or further South, would Virginia and Ken- and Missouri, alternately fall under Federal and rebel dominion. At last, however, the superior military power of the North, and the justice of our cause, are beginning to make their mark upon the fortunes of the contest, and the day of ‘un- Aecisive battles” isatanend. If ourarmy is but properly sustained, and Grant shows the

nowhere stri!

or his career leads us to expect, this

battle will be the d To make it decisive, we at home must do

ye battle of the war.

our duty, Gaining this, the enemy might haye hoped to prolong the war until fo- reign intervention, or dissension in the North, should enable them to make good their claim to a distinct nationality. As it is, the theatre of their military operations becomes now contracted to so small space that the alternative of retreat, which has so often sayed their armies from an- nibilation, no longer remains to them; while the diminution of their armies by ten thousand men, at!a single blow, is a disaster which not all the shrewdest coun- sels of the Bouth, nor all the rigors of another conscription, can possibly repair. No single battle of the war has shown more clearly the strength of the North, nor more clearly demonstrated that the task of at- tempting to destroy the military strength of the rebellion, so far from being hopeless, is perfectly feasible. Nor has any single battle more fully established the skill of our commanding generals, and the yalor of our armies’; or more fully vindicated the wis- dom of the Government in the plans it has selected for the guidance of their opera tions. In every aspect of the recent conflict we haye abundant cause to be thankful that it was fought. We have no way to estimate its value to the Union, We cannot measure it by any human standard, We rejoice that so many miles of country have been gained, so many thousand prisoners captured, so many pieces of artillery taken, so vast and formidable an army as that of Bragg put to rout and flight. Butthese things are no gauge to _messure the dimensions of our victory. In so far as it must result in breaking down

the most infamous rebellion against law, the most audacious conspiracy against hu- men Ircedom that the world has eyer its beneficent influence will be felt fo: not for this nation or for this generation alone, but for all nations and geuerations capable of appreciating the priceless bless- ings of civil liberty, and of remembering with gratitude the efforts of the noble- hearted men who haye yielded up their lives and fortunes in that sacred cause.

i /

FORNEY’S WAR PRESS—PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1863.

3)

THE VALUE OF THE VICTORY.

The most gratifying item of the intelli- gence from the West is the aunouncement that ‘'an order from Brace recalled Lona- STREET from before Knoxville, on the morn- ing of the 26th instant” We do not know how the press correspondent obtained the confidence Lonostreet, nor have we the authority for the additional statement that ‘* LonastreeT was endeavoring to join Brae by a circu tous route at Dalton;" but we accept the in- tolligence as the greatest value of our yicto- ty, We should have felt humiliated if the great victory at Lookout Mountain and Chat- tanooga had not also been victory at Knox- ville. General Burnstpe was hardly press- ed, was making a strong defence, and could not easily haye been driven back. But the full meaning of General Grant's advance is unfolded in the retreat of Lonostneer The moment Braco’s defeat became known to him, that General was bound to retrace his steps, to hurry with all speed from the soil of Tennessee, with the unpleasant con. sciousness that his advance bad accom- plished nothing, save disaster for the rebel cause, It is more than probable that Gen. Burnsie was placed in an apparently un- safe position, but one in reality secure, simply to tempt an advance of the enemy ands division of his forces. Gen, Grant made no movement until LonesrReer was

so far on his murch that communication with Brace was impossible; then he advanced upon the works on the Chickamauga. LoNGsTREE! force added to that of Brace would have probubly saved the re bels from their utter defeat, and Gene Brace cannot be proud of his suicidal tegy in dividing a strong unit into two weak parts, and in losing the strong position be- tore Chattanooga for the sake of a doubtful victory at Knoxville. In the entire ma- nagement of his campsign, General Grant hus shown military genius which places him inthe first rank of modern soldiers. For once, we heye proof that strategy means something more than an unwillingness to fight, or a fixed resolution not to move an army out of a uwamp.

Tennessee is now free from allinvasion or danger of invasion. Lonasrnner is Jiteral- ly defeated without a battle. Hooker, when he stormed Lookout Mountain, and fonght, like the angels and fiends in Para. dise Lost, above the clouds—Smenwan, when he carried, by his impetuous assault, the works on the rebel right, actually drove back Lonestreer. Victory for Braco would bave been ruin for Burnstp, but victory for Grant has sent LoNGsTRERT a fugitive among the mountains, in danger of interception, and impotent, either to tack or defend. The liberation of Bur sIDE’s army is a matter of great import- ance, not only to the West, but to the war in Virginia, Itmay again advance castward- ly, and will embarrass by its influence upon the railroad system of the South the whe mililary conduct of the rebellion. The results are the value of the victory, and are not to be eclipsed by the incidental glory of the battle—the rout of Brace'’s army, the capture of ten thousand prisoners and sixty” guns,

The completeness, the perfection’ of the victory, is its revolution of the entire situa- tion, of the whole attitude of the war.

THE Wan. Knowing as we do the exhausted condi- tion of the South ; the scarcity of provisions, of clothing, and of munitions of war, and the impossibility of raising another army of any formidable numbers by the most rous conscription; and knowing, too, the terrible blow dealt to the rebellion by the conflict, at Chattanooga, it is no longer pos for the most faint-hearted among us to be haunted with fears of ‘¢a long war,’’ a calamity which certain Copperhead news- papers have loved to prophesy, and zealous- ly endeavored to bring about, by resista

to the draft, to the enlistment of colored and to all the other war mea- sures ofj'the Administration. There was a time,/not many months ago, when the dangers of a protracted war seemed very imminent, ‘There was a time when the at- titude of Europe was threatening, and the enemies of the Union here in the North were bold and defiant ; but theee dangers, we think, no longer exist. Yet we cannot but deprecate the spirit of over-confidence, that flying to the opposite extreme, con cludes, from the result of the recent bait! that the war will be finished up by Chyist- mas. Thus, the New York Herald says:' “Phe Confederacy is in danger not so much rom Mxape's force in the front as from Gnanq’s fire in the rear. Starvation, too, is helping the good work, and Providence is on the side of the Union and the heaviest artillery. Under these circumstances we expect that the war will be practically ended by the ist of January, and after that it will not take many months to gather up and settle the odds and ends of the conflict.” This is certainly a very sanguine view of the situation—almost too sanguine, we fear, to be j The gathering up and settling of ‘‘the odds and ends of the conflict” will probably be a work of considerable magnitude. As the New York Zimes truth- fully observes: “For a long time, certainly for months, and possibly for years, it will be necessary to maintain strong National garrisons in every part of the rebel States not only for the purpose of enforcing the authority of the National Government, but or the preservation of domestic peace."” Until these objects are accomplished our work will not be ended, The war has, in- deed, made rapid progress, and so far as the mere fighting of battles, the marching of armies, the devastation of territories, and the destruction of humanlify are concerned, we concede that it mow scems to be very near an end.

A great work, however, still remains. A few large battles must yet be fought; the wreck of the rebellion, the shattered rem- nants of the rebel army, and guerilla w fare in general, will have to be cleared away and extinguished. Clearly the duty of the nation bas not ceased. Urgent reason still exists for the reinforcement of our armies, and the earnest support of the Government. The full force of the nation thrown upon the rebellion may crush it out in a short th parloying, indifference, aud self-gratulation may produce new complications, and delay the result, \The vigor which we throw into this last and crowning effort for the Union will determine how soon the Union will be and how lasting the restoration.

i

wun ND O.

troo)

r

restored

of General Brace or General |

TL

BATTLES BEFORE OHATTA- NOOG A few days before the victory at Chatta- nooga, General Braco, by flag of truce, | ndyised General Grant to remove nou-com- batants from the town. The Jatest number of the London Times assures the world that troops are being hurried up by General Gua7, not to invade Georgia, but to detend the Federal communications, and that if he | maintains his position during the winter he will achieve all that we can hope. The menace of our enemies, the criticism of their triends, seem equally unfounded. The non-combatants in Chattanooga were per- fectly safe, and General Gran‘, utterly re- gardless of the feelings of the injured gen- tleman who does the strategy for the 7¥mes, not satisfied with maintaining his position, has successfully attempted to improve it, Throughout the war these threats and pro: pheci¢s, and the exposure of their empti- ness, haye been go frequent, that we are | almost justified in claiming a victory when | thé enemy announces his immediate inten- | tion to defeat us, and in feeling certain that | we are saved when Europe solemnly assures | us that we are ruined, ‘* The best that can happen to the invaders is to be spared an ignominious and. ruinous retreat.” How strangely these words rend in the light of the triumphant battle which ended in the

rout of the finest and strongest army of the South ! tn

Yet, there is eomething unexpected and | startling in the victory. Not that an ad- | vance was not anticipated, or that its success was doubted,- but because, unliké most of our other victories, the yalue of this cannot be measured by carnage. When we re- member that upwards of twenty thousand men were killed or wounded at Gettysburg, and think of the terrible losses that over the glory of ‘other triumphs threw the shadow of death, we are astonished that so mighty an advantage has been won with so litt Vloodshed, Qonetal Guawn, not by a fie and desperaté onslaught, but by superior generalship, by orgsnizing victory, as is the ipbrase, bas wrested from the grasp of his adversary the key which opens the whole South to our armies, and has Jiterally ruined the rebellion in the Southwest beyond hope of its recovery. Yet, this victory wns not achieved merely by strategy. The re- port of General Meres to the Secretary of War is a singularly picturesque and glow- ing narrative of the three days’ contest, and ample evidence of the gallantry and covrage of our troops. General Gnanv is not a leader who shrinks from sending his troops into danger; but it is also to his) credit that his path to victory is not always through the infernal fire, and the yalley of the shadow of death. General Meras says that probably so well-directed a battle has not been delivered during the war. Cer- tainly it was an energetic, continuous, un- interrupted, masterly, and triumphant ad- vance,

The telegraph has probably greatly wronged General Mxros, especially where it makes him accuse the full moon of being the traitor’s doom, but his despatch seems to inchide all the important events of the battle, On the first day, the 23d, we © 25,000 troops deployed in Jine, and marching with such order and coolness that the watchful enemy thought the mévement aren amrtnendge parlisy occupied, S multaneously General Hooxen stoms the batteries on Lookout Mountain, fighting all the afternoon above the clouds. When night me our army was strongly posted, and 1 the next day seems to have been devoted to preparation for a combined and irresisti- ble advance on the 25th. Itwason that day that the great deeds were done which he had such immense results, General Fooxer occupied the waole of Lookout Mountain, and swept down on Mission Ridge; on the left General Smenrtan made a gallant but unsuccessful assanlt upon Braca’s right, strongly entrenched, in Which our troops seem to baye met their reatest loss. Then a adyance was ordered in Jine of battle ten miles long. Everywhere it was successful. ‘The enemy fell back, fighting at first resolutely; then many of his men threw down their arms and fied or surrendered, Gun after gun fell into our possession, The pursuit was warm and clo! and when the sun rose on the 26th, it shone on the defeated and routed army of the rebellion, hunying to escape utter destruction, and the legions of the Union resting in their perfect triumph. But not all were resting ; Gencral SHERMAN’S troops followed the footsteps of the flying foe, and hour by hour the sound of his guns came (ainter and fainter to the heroes of Chattanooga.

‘Thus the great battle for which we have looked so anxiously has ended well for the Union, Greater victory were scarcely pos- sible. We haye gained everything the re- pels feared to lose, and more than we hoped. Geneml Granv might now close the cam- paign with honor, but no doubt it is but begun. Close upon this victory must come the permanent occupation of Georgia, and what that menns no one of intelligence need be told

THE BUROPEAN SITUATION.

We have European news to the 18th No- yember. It would appear that, up to such date, not one of the fifteen Sovercigns to whom Naroxxon had sent bis inyitation to attend a Congress, at Paris, had responded to his letter. The avowed object of the new Congress is formally to declare the provisions of the Treaty of Vienna, in 1815, as no longer binding, and to give a good holding title, ns lawyers would gay, to the Sovereigns who, ‘whether by diplomacy or conquest, had changed their tervitorial pesi- tion from what the combined Powers had acknowledged it on the final fall of the First NAPoLEon.

Lord Parserston’s particular newst pers, the Globe and the Morning Post, not much in favor of the proposed Con, and truly declare that the various changes in Europe, since 1815, with the exception of the scizure and occupation of the free Republic of Cracow, by Ausizia, in 1548, (which the other great Powers protested against, ) haye been recognized and adopted. Among these, the leading ch haye

been the severance of Greece fiom Turkey

and its erection into an independent king dom, with, more lately, the deposition of its Sovereign 1 the election of a Prince of Denmark us his successor ; the overthrow of the Bourbon dynasty in France, in 1830,

| Nice to France, which followed the Ital

| th

Puuirre's reign; the exodus of Lours Prunirre and of the Orleans family, in| 1848; the establishment of the second Republic, followed by tho restoration | of the Empire, with Narovzox IIL as head of the State, though the Treaty of Vienna had placed the Bonaparte dynasty | under the ban of Europe, if ever it a empted to regain s' in France; the separation of Belgium from Holland in establishment as a king with Leoronp of § " throne ; and, finally, the Italian ev 1859 and 1860, which tl throw and exile of the sovereiz Naples, Tuscany, Modena, and Parma, dis- possessed the Pope of most of the temp ities of the Church, wrenched Lombardy the iron sway of Austria, and trans- ferring th NURL, Taisud him from the small sove- reignty of Sardinia and Piedmont to the rule of the newly-erected kingdom of Italy. Even the transfer of

| |

m1 xe-Coburg on the |

‘oy and

an war of 1859, was a violation of the Treaty of Vienna, but has been permitted by Europe. Such being the case, Lord Pataerstox does not see any especial occasion for a|

Congress at Paris formally to adjust matters which adjusted themselves along ago. The | Timer hints that perhaps NaPoixon did not

expect his proposition to be accepted, and t England might be playing /i# game by declining it.

If newspaper statements be true, as many | as three Cabinet Councils had been held in London to “determine whether E should or should not send a re tive to the Congress. Up to the date of our last advices, no decision had been made. Tt was thought that Austria would | adopt the polie: d in this matter— that Prussia would simply decline taking any part whateyer in the proceeding. Tus- sia, which bas no desire to precipitate a ‘quarrel with France, and wants to gain time for its contest with the Poles, will probably comply with NaroLgon’s invitation. The King of Italy is too much bound to Nar LEON, by gratitude and hope, that he, too, may be counted in—as, also, his son-in-iaw, | the King of Portugal. Leoror of Belgium | will take the same policy as England, The French journals have declared that Spain would be represented-in the Congress.

Perhaps so, for Queen IsaneLLa has been right royal and )iberal in her recent recep tion and entertainment of the Empress of the French, but it cannot be forgotten that NX a grudge for the Mexican deceit, and Navorron cannot be

ry Sriendly to the Queen of Spain, if the report be true that the Count de Panrs, head of the exiled Orleans dynasty, is about marrying her eldest daughter, the Infanta of Spain; rather a youthful bride, as she will not complete her twelfth year until the 20th | of next month. As yet, therefore, it is not only uncertain what Powers will accept the Congress, but whether there will be 2 Con- gress at all.

Regarding other European matters, there ittle to besaid. There is a pause in th strife between Germany and Denmark about Schleswig. The contest in Poland is con-

gland

nta-

of Eng!

Spain owes Navor

tinued with varied success, but the power of Russia is very great, and the Poles are fight-

ing almost against hope, for England de WAL pIUBEE CO MUCHAS, WIE

England playing the game of neutrality. The King of Prussia hns opened his new parlia- ment—the third which he hus convened within less than three years, and it is already apparent that he purpc on things with a higb hand, in violation of the | Constitution, and thet the Opposition in the Chamber of Deputies is stronger than ever. ‘As before, this f r branch of the Leg lature will not grant the supplics until they have a guarantee that the King will govern within the law, and also, as before, his Majesty, who desires to be absolu will dismiss or dissolve the C levy mony by taxation without any legal or | parliamentary authorization for doing so, What will be the end ?

LETTERS OF «OCCA

Wastuxaton, Nov, 2 When I anticipated that 3 would pronounce the finest oration of his life at the dedication of U Ceme- tery, L meant to intimate that I believed he would be equal to his mighty theme; not | that I knew what. he intended to utter. I} do not now propose to praise his great ad- dress; everybody is doing that; much le do I claim it ss a merit to say here | that he finished the task set before bim with the ability of the polished scho- | Jar and the soul of the patriot; for everybody says this, too, What I wish to print this morning is that the friends of the Union should preserye and promulgate the truths he has set forth. Principles and maxims which are the offspring of eternal truth can never be improved upon. There js nothing more exact, and severe, and un- deviating than the right. But there sre many ways to illustrate and defend the

continuing to carry |

amber, and |

ettysbu

|

right; many ways to make a plain principle look brighter to the common hen and

mind; many ways to strei enforce the unchanging maxims of good government and good men. The gilt to do all this belongs, of all living yacters, in my opinion, mainly to Edward Everett, What a profusion of thought, and toil, and genius, he brought to his country’s cause on the 19th of November, at the sanc- tification (if that were possible) of the Wa- terloo of the rebellion near Gettysburg ! ‘The flowers he laid upon the nation’s altar that day were not made to wither, but to wear. Their perfume will last through generations ; for are we not told that

‘pbe actions ef the just ‘Smell eweet, and blossom in the dust”?

‘And has not Mr. Everett devoted his best talents to commemorate the bravery of the gelf-sacrificing dead and the obligations of the deeply-indebted living? What he wrote and spoke must therefore be preseryed Hf oration should be made as famihar to the s the Vicar of lized world. It

people of the loyal Stat Wakefield is to the

should be regularly read, or at least t, in our schools, The Le

n docusi

d it the ce of

every loyal paper which bh should do so. For ne

justice of the Union cause, the rebellion, and the American people inthis great W forcibly, faithfully, and

been so

followed by nearly cighteon years of Lovrs

territories to Vicror Bsa- | by General Ro:

———EE

Wasnincton, Nov. 26, 186: upon the subordinate rebel officials at Rich. One of the best causes for greeting Thanks- | mond. Considering that an o giving Day with a hearty zest is the gratifying | announcement wes made by these bold, intelligence of a Jong-expected and substan- | bad men, that they would allow our people tial triumph in Alabama. How suggestive | to send forward these contributions so that and touching it is that nearly all our great | the bodies of our brave fellow-countrymen victories occur under such auspicious circum- | might be clothed in this inclement scason, stances, and are commemorated on days set | and their lives saved from death by starva- apart for expressions of gratitude to God !| tion and neglect, and then see the delit Thus the crowning success of Meade at Get-| ate manner in which these essential ne. tysburg reached the loyal States on the aries hayo been withheld from the he heroic Union army | Union prisoners, and of course used for ebrating the surrender | their own purposes by tue rebels them. pational birthday. | selyes—who will measure the height and Jif the next intelli-| depth of this unspeakable turpitude, or gence from General Grant realizes all that| aftix the proper condemnation upon has been expected since the department of | the authors of it? Iregretto say that my that illustrious soldier has been extended to | formation leads me to believe that at least sixty inc tofore commanded | of the Union soldiers are perishing daily rans, for it is reasonable | The surgeons now here testify not simply to to hope that when the rebel forces around | the insolence and the cruelty with which Knoxville hear of the stupendous success of | they have been individually treated, but Hooker in the vicinity of Chattanooga, they | also that they had not seen any meat for |

burg on thi I shall not be surpri

lude the column he

will cither beats hasty retreat or be forced | four long days before they left, and that to an unconditional surrender, Burnside | there was no immediate prospect of relief, writes in fine spirits, and probably before | in view of the fact that, while the goods this the great s been accomplished— | sent by our Government and people were Eastern Tenn rebel hordes, and Ge conqu

ork hy

e entirely cleared of the | accepted by the rebel authorities, they never in opened to the | reached the Union prisoners. Another piece of intelligence is only a

ug march of the defenders of the Union. If these events are corsummated | new evidence of the infumy of the rebellion by General Grant, that blow ‘will be struck | The rebel chiefs haye had the audacity to at the rebellion so much dreaded by Jeffer-| propose to exchange the Union prisone! con Davis, and our ¢ Northern | provided our Government will consent to

erations in

| and Eastern Virginia be so strengthened asj return to the South all the rebels in our

to render them irresistible against the forces | hands—a proposition the nature of which, which are still congregated there under Lee. | and the guilt of which, may be appreciated

The action which is known| when [tell you that they hold but twelve to have Davis and his} thousand of our troops, while we have, ex- cons 1 by the] clusive of the prisone t captured by Union victories in Alabama; and that| Grant and Hooker, more than forty thou silent, yet all-pervading prot sand of theirs, What isto be done? This his tyrannies and his is the question that every patriotic man he contemplates these frightfal

against

will be

surpatic broken, and thousands of tongn fore compelled to be quiet, will assist in] disclosures. The Government is doing swelling the chorus of condem ond has done, its best, Our patriotic peo- A gentleman lately returned from Rich-| ple haye done, and are doing, their best. mond, who has had rare opportunities, | How are we to muster this monstrous owing to his peculiar position, to under-| evil, save by awakening the Northe stand the relations of the Southern lead. | heart to 2 new sense of the villainy ers to Jefferson Davis and his Cabinet, | and barbarity. of the rebels, I cannot assured me, a few days ago, that no|say. The effect of this inhumanity words could de: y and} upon the soldiers of the Army of hatred which they entertain against the} Potomac, and, indeed, upon the braye men head of the so-called Southern Confede- | in every Union column, cannot but be elec- racy. His bearing is nt once insolent | trical; how the masses of our countrymen and dictatorial, and his oppression had/|at home will treat it I have little doubt, become so insufferable when wy informant | tering for the redemption of th left Richmond that many did not hesitate to ic is a noble emotion, and when to th declare that he seemed to be at work | is added the stern determination to rescue earnestly realizing the predictions of the

|

| our inends and relatives from the inhuman friends of the Union, who always asserted | grasp of the tyrants at Richmond, such a

that the whole aim and object of the rebel- | popular feeling should be aroused as would lion was to establish a severe and remorse- | fill the ranks of the old armies, and precipi-

less military despotism in the Southern | tatea new one upon the rebel capital. Meot-

States. Men like Robert Toombs openly | ings should be held in all parts ot the lo; took issne with Davis—a fact which is} States, and the facts Ihaye luid before abundantly confirmed by his celebrated let-| which will soon be verified by incontroverti

ter some W

ks ago, in which, with signal | ble witnesses—be presented in such a light ability and pluck, he compared the decaying |'as would Jead not only to the extinction of and despicable finances of the uur Government, but Confederacy wit and to the punishment of all those who bi popular system ¢ the head} stood by and permitted these outrages upon of our Treasury Department. Donnel, | civilization and upon humanity, of North Carolina, is writing with immense Occastox ability against the conspirat-rs, John M. | Botts has just published a letter of uncom-| ]

mon force, in Which he arn-s«9 Uiem be pol OWn Neonle as twrante and betravars, it were necessary. But that which, apart

from the moral eflect of this great Alnbam iumph, will be the best result, is the striking off the chains of the Union people of Eastern Tene people who, by their valor and perseverance and i ficing patriotism, recall the e pust- history, when men welcomed the] < teaffold for opinion’s sake, and gladly gave | Fat topic, v up their lives rather than do violence | ..7;4 revolution of public sentiment, and the to their consciences. This incaleulable | 519 stride towards radical anti-slavery ideas advantage, won on the yery threshold of Ketween the sth of July, 1801, and the 1st q cudliatta: penod when’ b of December, 1863. Not to remind the 1 BBE Os en gee 1 jc men who, atermany doubts, have finally ot only open to our own troops safe and | accented the remedy by which alone th commonious communications; bubwil pour|ssesniou'can ha utienie seieiuisied= Time into sections held heretotore by the iron hand | +5 gradual but sure abolitien of slavery— of the rebellion, the life-blood of trade and not to remind such men of the new position those domestic comforts long withheld from | they occupy, what a spectacle the an

and denied to our friends in that section. | Gavory mon of the Border States present The utmost joy prevails in loyal circles in| \ yon contrasted with the persistent pro- Washington on this bright and beautiful | States! ‘Take such

; | slavery men of the fr morning, and the bells which atesmen as Andrew Johnson and Parson eratitude of the churches to God are in

| Brownlow, of Tenn Winter D happy accord with the thankful feeling of) gnq the anti-slavery Con, ional delega allcasses thut He has again interposed to| tion from Maryland; Mr. Davis, su give us another great victory, | of Samuel L, Casey, of Kentucky ; Green x QccastonAL. | Cay Smith and Anderson, of the same State.

Wasuinetox, D. C., Noy, 27, 1863 Take also the anti-slavery and almost Abc Facts {rom the lips of brave Union sur-| lition Representatives to the next Congres geons, directly from Richmond, and now in| from the State of Missouri/and then turn this city, which they reached Jnst evening, | tothe position of the two Governors of West more than confirm all that has been stated | Virginia and of old Virginia, Pierpont and rd to the horrors suffered by our pri- rman, and, I believe, the entire de! soners in the capital of the great conspiracy, | tion from West Virginia, chosen to the next Civilization will stand aghast when the de-| House, and we find that these gentlemen tails of the cruelty and scoundrelism of the | are only the hands that mark the rapid pro- rebels are revealed. Human imagination | gress of events upon the face of the political cannot realize, much less attempt to give 4] timepiece. The inner temple, the internal picture of the ayful sufferings of the more | works, the masses of the people, are, if pos- than twelye thousand gallant patriots con-| sible, now more determined against slavery, fined in the several rebel prisons. The po-| and more resolved that the rebellion shall verly of the rebels themselyes, the priva-| be crushed, and that the rebel leaders shall tions of their own people, the starvation of | pe punished, than those who haye thus their troops, might excuse them when they | gallantly put themselves forward as the failed to supply the ordinary necessaries of | executors of the popular will in the South. life to the Union soldiers, but when the | A distinguished soldier, justin from Knox-

»-called | the conspiracy agains the flourishing hi

AL.

Wasmxaton, D. C., Nov. 28, 1863,

t of the present, which Fed Les aWhRe prd= I allude to the strong | grounds taken by many of the politicians in the Border States, heretofore influential pro- slavery men, in fayor not simply of the emancipauon proclamation of the President, in favor xtremest and most titution of 11 upon th wonderingly. measure the

And as W

oth armies

winte

were sufi

a

ont the

ealing of clothing and provisions sent] ville, Tennessee, gives me an interesting rward by private as well as by Govern-| description of the feelings of the loyal men

| | ment Union subscription, is connived at, if] @2¢ Women in that neighborhood, and of |not defended, there canbe no limit to the | he almost irres| stible power wielded by that |e is | patriotic priest, William @. Brownlow, in | indignation of our own people, and to the | nis opposition to slavery and to slaycholders, scorn of the people of other lands, against | and in his eloquent arguments in favor of | the authors of atrocities which have no pa-| the Union. His followers, like himself, are rallel in the history ot war. It ia stated, | nearly all emancipationists. But while upon distinguished authority, that when | thes wonderful scenes are attracting t}

a Sat ° or of | attention of publicists everywhere, and |General Solomon Meredith, the brother of | Strengthening the hunds of the anti-slg.% | |

the Hon, William M, Meredith, and now| men of the North—while the peop|gns commissioner of exchange at Fortress Mon- | the statesmen of the oppressed anf ie! roe, told Robert Ould, commissioner on the | ridden South are rising against shell part of the rebels, that the food sent for the | trayers, what Sea ot Contin gerous relief of the Union prisoners, as well as the | Be awarded to the degraded anand else- clothing, had not been received at Rich- | \here ho Rony ister ete Demos mond, Ould indignantly denied it; and | cacy” to insist Unat slag nl be con | when General Meredith appealed to him to | tinued, and that rather yo separated 2 Jallow him to present witnesses in proof | be destroyed, the Unior yerween Andrew Jor the charge, from the released sur-| Run the contrast, reg,” and Samuel L. |geons who were then on their way, | Johnson, of Tenn both of whom have | and waiting for transportation homewards, | cuteetd beeauy ‘of thelr soda he at figst refused the request, but finally | yar, and bot) As Ait RL Reed att \agreed ‘to hear two of these gentlemen—| their slaves“

| personal acquaintances of General Mere- | Charles js

1, of Philadelphia, neither 7 G) y' zy of the war or 0! tith,‘The= pocively and publicly stated | Of WUOHAtons of tue Goveramenty24ve 10 to Onld that nohe of the goods and none | 2¢'H" the one and to increase the other, | of the clothing had been received at Rich. | ¢2P'you have an illustration that applies 10 |mond, upon which Ould prevaricated, certain leading classes of public men No

and attempted to throw the responsibiliy ®4 South. OcoAsIONAl.

Tl

P75 Ss Se a

= oo 09

an

FORNEY’

WAR PRESS—PHILADELPHTIA, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 5,

| od back by our alelrmlshors for one mile and a | of skirmubers followed by a deployed line of battle

rebel left on Lookout Mountaia, in order to tal

day atternoon he drove them back upon thelr tofan- | p

. THE 0 ew in length. At tho sigoal o! Mie position, or to compel retaforcomenta. General | James Har f Pléasant. ARMY OF THE POTOMAC, to itncn, when bo in turh was compelled tofall back, | half over the Mine run, near Verderyille tome ten wile a length At the algonl of the Leader | thie poeitiony or to compel rainforcomed. ste | Taites W. ria ties Ho eeee remit to be about twenty-five killed and| On hoth aldes of the rond, sloplog for half n mile | (shots from the headquarters on Orebant Kaob) they | Hooker began his athaak 9” the Bina Mae | : = 4 DOE etary se : 3 apidly and orderly forward tarly hour, with Geooral Geary'e division of the | Timothy O. Howe ee Da DAM i | wounded. ‘The 6th Corps comtog up, the exemy In | on exch aldo of {tho river, there fe an-open space sod | moved rapidly and orderly forward. | ear ion Socerat Onterbaua’ division of Sber- | Tamea. 0 How sass sGreen Bay Heavy Skirmishing on Friday and | Wonyar competted to retrent, Oo the edge of the wots, Weat of thetun, the eaemy | ‘Tho rebel pleats dlechanged thelr muacets, and) TD Se ee ee dreron poakies| Uo vvenreninca-Baeloe. i - mat mail Greta Ot te root gh eidcs of the road with | ran into Melt ridepits. Our skirmishers followed | man’s corps, anh hivene toe licen T "day ‘about alxty wore wounded in the 2d Corps, five | were in line of battle on 2 s SE ean wot far be | of Stanley's division of the 4th Corps. arene Paul Saturday. killed, and seven minalng. thele Datterten entreached. The slope theneo to the | on.their heels. Tho linc of battle was not far General Hooker moved up the valley west of Look: en Mania!

nlc batterie entrooehed,| The 210s Tone Tarp. | id, and ee wa tho gray Eebela warm out of the sovedupthe alley west ot Look SE ee nag soe aaa espa tou rilepit in auubers whieh eae | out Mouatatn tomard Trenton, Tue enemy Mp | ote arvgincks in the aftersoon tho elouda broke, | prised as, snd over the bare of the hill s few turned | Pia Thlatt6 be worl ee | _qhbout1olton tn tha afternoon the Soret ont | nnd dred thelr cess; Dut the greater number eol-| of Potnt Lookout Wt baviss, Ye BO ohn ho ronde Wer denies (red | lected into the mang roa which cross obliquely up | Fently didnot feer hie attack. Oa the A

: a pry | vOa the right, General Froneb'a 34 Corps, when THE ENEMY REPULSED IN EVERY) ecto, encountered Eseclls Ooms before be

saat aerated velVh tuo centre, and! afters acvera Tight ENCOUNTER, ho held his position, but lost heavily, He, however,

Atohinon, Lawrene

hovin

| gona ¢

jenn San Francleco.

Dougall viShn Frauelteo, —— Pantured $00 reticle.” The 6th Corps was then thrown | an impareable condition. One [ UL aT | jnountaln, above the psilendes, the rebels bad tv z OSitioms Of tLe FTO | foraniand ied theigap between the eeatra and] afew shots, to whlch the rebela replted with great TE rerrtet nan warmed up tho | ¢-pouniders§ on the west slope of the mountats hey Le ere Posttna Armics: gt in of the sth Corp, advancing on the plank: | "The following positions for battle having bean at | steop aides of the rive. ore Ht thore a color was ho PRE G8 Thana a Pelt at : oa r 0 aeeeraes rond, was attacked on the tiane by robel“eavalry, | algned to the several corps, they wero taken by them | adyaneed beyond the aaa ioe sUont pepentte meat piso ocartlleey, HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. [Speclal Despatch to tho N. ¥.Times-} \oho destroyed fifteen or twenty wagons, aad killed | during the day, and ench wan ready to perform ita | tobe moat dangerous, but the advance wae Hh | MAT Ce caine down on the Weatern al w bea |i aeieie eer pane Povostad,Romunrson’s TATE | 1166 ment and eovernl mule dung the one ene oa ocmanied by | ported, aad the whole line oxdered to storm the | | Husker Sine dime on Ue aes tog vetore It | "Pear D, Sent Bot op " Konunrson’s Tose, | Pwomeainod several miley at tho enemy | Mfor General Sedgick, on the right, next to tho | helghts, upon whieh not less then forty Fie ot | Teh wan taken by nunprno at belog attacked | 2, sluney Porta Portia AM Thuraday night troopa,waxon tains, and AF | 4.09 Yqifeq Hack from our eeutro to two males nearer | 21 Corpa, Major General Warren, which helt Loe Ailey o0d no on Koow how maay cuatetestod | Tes eneny wos Ach Meares terneaiieon | 2: Jame tin rales tuners wore eyorning the river. A sulctent f0re0 | & Geagge Court House, Bear ns ine with the iat Oamne Mor | ready toalaoghter tho aaiiants,| | Seat Se one of ae monntala, Gen. Hooker | 5 {etter Ht Pi Ulery wore crossing rmursday afternoon; on the| “re hove intelligence fe up to Friday, aud was | General Nowton, formed the contre, With cera noneriog cers tho| mon, awarmed | the rales ele oF cco an ee owent | © oe Gormantn plank road, to cover the front, brought to Wasbinglon by aspecial messenger, who | _ The left wing wae formed by the ‘3d Corps, under | uprvarda. They gathered to the po!

Color sf-| sround the tmountsin, cut off and secured several |.

rps moved from reen’s cavalry

Daniel Ma

cult of ai saanet? 2) foliward H

ent, and the line was broken, mmit, while musket | huodr:

veto ‘The nddt-

Friday morniog the oth and tet © came nea captured by guerillas Major Gon, Freneh, and tho reservo was compoced

San, Sy! jor wan planted on th WV. Patt: ay ¢ ation which baa nieo come to band to- Sth Corpe, under Major Gen. Syltes. ter color was plan - , ithe mouatato, | 3: James W. Pattertoo neat the river up the ptank rond, Greee’s eavAl’y | tional information which bas nixo come to hand to- | of tho Sth Corpe, under Se ae ciba tient: See sued tarnaianmaid Ji . taling the advance, driving tho cnemy’a CO¥AITY| night, through another source, atatca that the line | About sunect co yeral guns were fired from our | aud eats exon at pe SG an Fear e eared alma qlestseld oa the mpacot | teas: back, nnd skirmishing to Oak Wood _| was formed on Fridny, about noon, om the roadsleai- | ine, but falled to draw the enemy's fre. A welidrected eon eee gun was | the point, when be found tbe enemy ta hie rifopita 1, Frode sat this point, and one mails beyond the €B€™Y | ioe, Orange Court House, Geo. Grege’scavalry,on | The folloving additional pariculers Of tuo en: robs nimon onthe wumaly and the eye, | Toe fe cht slaps, whieh ero oystewatealy ea | 3, Portus Banter sin at, tale Pommtfe resistance, both aides beviDg OU | Tor ham m govere fight with the rebel cavalry | gagemeat on Friday have becn furntaheds | | Sat ong to sar soliiore latercepted thew, | tured ani immediately ceeupted by Geary But the | Cee atrong skirmich lines. Ohargo upon chars” TY) ang drove them back upon thelr tnfantry, and then | The umber of pritoners taken by the 34 Corps | horses. “A Pay Oe So oe are aaa and meege-a. charge for Use postesaiog aa URE T Ts satond

sodthe ‘A fierce mueketry Aight broke where, between Generals Thomes aod

lias been greatly exaggoratcd. Caly alxty have an yot been reported to the provost marehal. ‘Among the wounded aro Col. MeOlellan and Col.

made on both aides by the elcirmlen line - | fell pack himeeif upon the 6th Corps, who io turn my wero jovarisbly repulsed, and Govlly suddedly | a-ovo the rebel tufantry back and took position as Jntroduced a line of sofantry #uirmishers to repel ® | te ieft wiog,

LT 8) Onkes ame 4, Samuel Hope

‘out to the left, | of the works they bs Goary, belog out of ammunition, was ab

{ juat relinquished. | mut being |

Shormsn, 8

* Inforeemente arrived under a aie <ret live of the ridge was atill occupled by the | overpowered, whea reinforcement ed 6, John BAL charge. | "Warren'a 24 Corps, on tho turnplle, drove the | Higgina, of the 86th Ponnaylvanin ; also, two cap. wie eee haneeat Carlin, and the 29th Indiana and 33d Oblo | 6. Daniel W. Gooch

‘We followed it up promptly by a counter MVC | royeigy alirmishora beyond Roberteon’s tavern, and | tains, whose names are unkaown. rebels. George S. Boutweil

in vt the double-quick, the enemy gaveup and ‘ue fre to hastily con nnd covering the Sum

hold nis | goto fell

Bragg left the house in which he had hendquart rear oa our troopa y crowded the hill on either eldo of bun. struated works in the rear,

mont with Infantry. For a few moments they forced | fn. the centre,

On the right, Priuce’s division our live back, but were finnlly repuleed by # vigorous | 4

pe met n heavy body of Ewoll's Corps, acd

Tho iaedical director of the corps cstimates our wounded, and about 100 killed.

Toba D, slives Heury L. Dawes

pack under A mur

ows at

our line bad Mut wer om abe sth New York TOU | 1,cre" em overel hou, uatll to remainder of| ‘Tbe enemy retrented (com the front of the 31 | TOT Grae pepeecll tothe ausimit, nul only | mertown 004 vthomas A, JerteOE TEAR. Pendoat Battery, Captain Mtartio, Tho 18t BAER | We Cor yp eqme up, In the intter, the 6th Corps, the | Corps duriog the night, Ieaving thelr dod RPA) iia oe now steholght, Some of the captured!) Oailin bal come, Yo about dum, and bis repulse | 2) Nathan P. Dic Weoterly Br Grece’s Cavaity divlelon, uoder command of CO) +414, partiowlarly Priuce’s division, whieh Jost | wounded on the field oo ne caput into poritios, artilierista were seat | of tho cuemy left uz in posscesion of their works | cowsEcTICUT Seer Temion did tho heavieat part of SBIR WOT. | SOAS Ty eatianted at five huodred killed aad | Owing to the exoms’s change of position, It be | ley Was put into portion, ariere cearchedfor| and the tire field |, Henry ¢, Deming iret see et ompared 0f Ee TOO a ee se ar atnonert, but they aoverely puplebed | camo neccesary for ue to Joave them there. Thelr | D4 Nii NA ee 2 Hames 6, Bowtie aco a tho enemy Ba kllted_s6d- wounded, and.toe 08 | yah a a aaa Ming breastworka were torn topleces and | Gqatraxooas, Nov. 20,—The loa ta Sherman’a | 4, Jona H. Hubbard itetisids ‘Third Pennoylyapia Cavalry: French reporta, nine hundred prieonera, Our forces Pee oa ae eee eee eee a ee ee saheivee: ie ml probily oo Bieat Pennosivanis Oavalry. See eeeere pad no heavy, Hehting, and coDse- | clear, with the two armies Iping in line on the oppo- | ¢Prnt" fy rt slumn yesterday ee quiteheavy, Temi PONY | y, Hoary G, St Mfr First New Jersey Onvalry Tae en ems ll esceptiog. In| gle ties of tho Rio Ke valley. On exanaaation, [MOHINEMATIOCT | sored nthe rearof| rate of ued and wounded ennnot bo neat Uy te | Moqey fs Ugelenes.crss- rook + Pint Massachusetts Cavalry. Grega’s exvalry division. se aerescn that tho ground on, both sides of tno | ,fs8rong Ine of Infact va er sey | ccuke Tee reported that the major of tho 731 | 3 rool Picesivede Meat Owaiye aoe lossatstay, moral wae lacorossd tt the | ign, excepting ere eowed by te turpis, was | Stith ye reel tthe Het, and evute| Puuneptvoksinexpune; ecole! oie sal | 6 Nee tare RE Oak, Wood Companies K and Ty Oxptalan | rece nad fallen back, Thelr akirmleh | impassable by our troops, owing to Ite boBKY AND | OA eat wens co , : OER SECT j Retanodg Wodaces rn cn New York Wight aud Waleb, si Pennsylvania Cavalry, bad the | io 6 on the road te come mile and a half nearer to | swampy condition,” arate lt, to the right of our centre, aAjor W, S. Marehall, of the 6th Iowa, with tho | 7 Joba TV. Chanler New York. huvance and benaved in the mostgallsntmwnner. | Graggo Covet House. The heavy tain It was all wna qule io the fronton Sundey. [ie ie antl 2 A eee ee of Soapeng Aone | & oT Our loft, Inst night, waa two miles south of HoPe) thought, would binder any heavy offensive eld d the summit, 2 y

On Monday morning, at $ o'clock, all our batteries

om aoe and fed, General Hooker, coming Loto A] right nud left, were captured. Lieut. Col. Arcber, | 10, Willlam Radion Meeting House, or Onk Wood, twelve miles from | creations on Saturday. eoeneney ere epoation to ext upon the [arms and fed General Hooke, eomies, te A | re etith dows te woud and prieoner, Gap | Charis 3 Win Germants, on the plank rond leading from Fredy) te reported that, Kilpatrieu'e eaval Rappahannock, were ordereil to open upon the ene | rrr ey a risomora Pickerel, of tho 6th Towa, 4s a prisoner, and tho ad- | 12. Homer, A. Wiis Hckeburg to Orange Court Houre, under Garter attempted to cross undor the eaemy capt 3

13, John B. Steele. tot that regiment fs Wounded aud a prisoner. | 14

O'Mehre, of the 9th Illoole, is not desd, but | 16. A through the kidness ut. Col ic, may poraldl

my:

‘The alego train was placed In porition in front of Sedgivick’a command, After bal en hour's slow cannonading, to which the enemy fecbly responded,

Broge’s remaining troups left eorly in the alght, | juts anu the battle of Chattanooga, after three daya of | ‘Qu, manouyting and fighting, waawon. Tho strength of the rebellion ia the centre was broken, Bur

Tuat aa the rebel infantry was eo unexpectedly | yatteriea nt Raccoon Ford on Friday, but was called upon to repel a charge of the sidrmtsh tne, | griveq pack, Heavy guns were heard there all this Sa atowe recorded, the advance of the Sth Corps | Shornoon, tenillog to confirm the truth of the re-

Ellzsbethtow anber Falla.

mortally wound mh Dito

Hi : Stuart, of th jaivin J ae eame Into position very opportundly. fort, The enomy ured no artillery om Friday, aac | qq attack was ordered. oleved from danger, East Tennessee, Kentu Colonel Wiley, of the 4tot Ohio, AB, Tomes Te Seine eae Throwlvg out a atropg skirmiah line, the enemy | yur very little, owing to the densely-wooded and The le(t wing, uoder Gen. Warren, oame upon tho rei Tennessee reseued, Georgia and the Southwest | nicore, of tho 69th Obio, had anarro setae Sues Berio opened with a heavy fire of artillery upon tt Whi | nearly level character of the ground. enemy, who wax found to be In atronger numbers | re enesin tno rear, and another victory added to | Opdyke, of the 125th Obloy wh a1, Francls Keroso ten. grav responded to in a almilar maoper from our olde, | "Ty ig noxen that thero waa heavy slalrmlsbiog oD | nod position than was anticipated, aud further Le | oh ter of Unconditional Surrender Grant" | yamed Sears 2, Demite 0 LAC Javon ‘and for an hour quite s briek eannonading waa kept | ¢,qeuropie at nino o'clock on Saturday morning, | stryotions were consequently aeked for. Thereupon | "5, one tho estimate of captures iv ceveral thous | horses shot ; Lieut. Colonel Glass, 321 Indiana, died! 31° cheodore M. Pomeroy x upon both sider, Inone of the charges by tecaval: | it yo particulars have beeu received ard movement Was obecied, and all further | | Tonight We : rae way : ae nenatee eee ot but'ng Par the forw sand prieonere sud thirty pieces of artillery. to-day in the hospital 35 Daniel Nore ry twenty-four prisoners were taken THE SKIRMISHING ON SATURDAY. | firing ceased. lots for so great a victory 1s uot severe. New YORE, Nor. 23.—Tho Times received a epe- | 23. Giles OF. Houtchiles Minedaa ‘Asthe train of the 6th Corps was turning from | 3 BS aT iibe 0 fi ee P 2 : : » | BF Sil OF Hoch carga PST eer RTT Ol ee Ceca eae eA = Boe ere tho ralirond as be retreats towards | eiai despatch from Washington thle aftornoon, tat: | 32° Fesmaa Clan pg Batliave vs tho brook pile into the plank ro ad, 6 fire Huds) ished an extra, with advices from Gen, Meade’s | ITE WAR IN THE SOUTHWES Dene Sherman ia in hot purmult. fant shat hy an official staforeat, our loxtcs in killed Hreeman Cin : Roches denly opened upon It from a concenled fot, hea | gray, qted on Saturday night. It tase: Thie iiton. Sherman te Medel, which oxteods | gut wounel on the 2, 2b, aad 2th int. at the | 32, Toa H-Gnpg cco. fone man and aeveral mulcs we A. j i Aa 4 1 ace acted on the 2 lost atthe | 33, Join BGnger wt. = 6 che | Horning opened with # ran storm, by ii or aix miles sigyg Mitsion Ridge, and for zeveral | atormiag of Lookout Mountain, were 4,060, and the ST AE ere aoeee cpu the ndvance at an early hour. Theat|The Three Days’ Battle at Chattas (errr rennet Mountain. Probably not 60 well | arssult on Mistion Ridge about 200 epnetraerete Ri ter Sp roaed Ger Hoe ean rare. g-| Corps, which crossed the Rapidan at Jacobs! AI, ooga. ee on oom oeiLosterod a battie has been deliver- |" Our Wounded aro all under cover and well eared | J: Ziteray nidatatan... #.-- alentowa, Hnving erotted Germania Ford, the 24 Corps yee- | Coma which sransc tT Tag from Locust I

terday took the first road to the right, the Orange

fed during the war. Butono assault was repulacd;| for, the houpite pelng abun-

all other euppl Allantowa. Grove, on the road leading to Culpeper, deployed to

1 i : fault, by calling to that potnt tho rebel | dant 4 Newton Court Houre pike. 5 Sth Ce edon the | ACCOU P QUARTERMASTER GEN, MBIGS, | bat that azsault, by calibre oGthe OLED PRISONERS &, Nehemiah Perr Newari 20 bi A the leftof ourliné. The 6th Corps remained on the | AQCOUNT OF QUARTERMAS . iS, rea, provented them from repuleing any of the PAROLED PRISONERS, 6. Nebemian Perry _ Inte ditance bad been made fore the n0-| yy and te team te tof te th, Tho 2 ve pained raerren ipa AROLED.PRISONE BS ire

tained ite position, while the 6th deployed from ita fret povition on the left to Locust Grove, aus re-

mt Philadelphia. Philadelphia. Pinindelphis.

Samuel Jf Oherles O'Neill Leouard Myers...ccseee-+

amoug th

large

prisoners taken at Chattanooga were & | 1 thore paroled at Victaburg, and

mish wan kept up to beyond Roberteon’s Tavern. Here the enomy brought forward their infantry,

nt to Gen, Grant a

udeat

‘A few days since Gen, Bragg fag of truce, advising him that it would be pr

A SURPRISE IN OPEN DAYLIGHT.

num

: : + | serve. ME re a eaute who aiight til bo ia | never yet exchanged, aud nuke whethere shall prov | Wililain D. icles Philsdelpote and for fo houre there was heavy, skiemahiog |" euirmsbiog commenced ns ourtinereachet | oyenting: among the Clouds pe aie inet thets according to Mueeatablished usage | 6, M. Rusvell Thoyer---.-+----Cheatuut HL ‘and conciderable artillery practice, until it wes quite arene 0 wert of Locus! Me By AILS: GEE (Cee a fs the established uani an | So Yokn D, Silte...,.cssc--o+-Alleate dark Eee Ee ea a ally Soak === ee oer seca eturaet, but the combstans| i auch ace As the etoiney wing Lo wh | 088 A diac a in 7 ec Polat Grove, Our forces pushed steadily onward, 7 7 Ponoved from tia vicinity, {t {8 provable | enaca fe to ehoot the persona so foul, probable | Sedenham E. Ancona. Reading. Nee is te ea Os al Conpe ie the 8. CorP® | yowever, driving the enemy's alirmfahers, aad base | The Bestedirceted Battle of the Wa Areca rey wiela tty Tneug Iaprur | ft yill not bo followed, but it a equally probable | § Tha Tor Lancaster, ‘and then aga orp ee ean from our oe = 1 HL not. be sl nol rt ter the | 10 ‘or Strou Pottaville toning their retreat by an occasional shell {rom 0 ; MLO. MEIGS, | tat there will wot be any more paroling a 10, Iyer Steoue alderable ekirmishing in front, i aie nea Jen E ae SEE eee ea aco what re. \it; Philip Jobos0o.- Easton. AC Gad Hine’ Test: Bight bo peNeraljougegement | batteries; to whleli the: runalof The. caony, did not | pOoSsSES AND CAPTURES. Z monster Geoeral, | Vicksburg fashion Le 4s not cagy to sco bat to | 1): Chtfea Dewan Weare, f ely dress we ean have for the etime thus commultted by | Dennis SR ear eanet seemed imminent. The reason It did not como ott | TMF eau > : Sa Oe tliing thane ta 13, HLM. Troyes ae In faat, was doubtleas beeaure neither side waa | | Cencral Menlo bad sive Ue bas) eae kate Heapavanters, CHATTANOOGA, Nov, 26 ANOTHER AQOOUNT OF THE BATTLE thers e) authorities In requiring thess men to break 1 LE aia Hacclsburg. Robertson's tavern. The headquarter in wa u , Bana scale despatchiea from |stbtlr Paroles 5, Joreph Bailey goct. ready. adque ain W82) awin M, Stanton, Sreretary of Wor Omomnnatt, Nov. 30.—Thespesal desi pilrOothess-scvscesees Somerset, ‘We may have it to-day. onlered back out of range, long traina of artillery, | “7 “oy Con) inetant, at 11.30 A. NL, General | Ohattenoogs are conficed to liate of the catualtice in tr Archibald Modilster. Spriogtield Fur Fe ey ar wey. pand of Kilpatrioi’e ea. | aromunition wagons, and ambulances were movi0E | (°°) Crasrey q demonstration againat Mtason | the threo dase’ operations. Our loses ate, Atak OntouseAT, The following private de | ts, Samen 7, Hetictuete. : B i e front, and thing ed n gent | Ge 5 Geartte’s ao. | spateh has been recelved here Gleani W. s Warren, salry division, was 40 anxious to mix in tho Mgnt | to thefront, and avery ae, Ot na ga | Ridges to develop the force holding it, The trons | ome ee operat From the Ceail® 00 | et an; Teany Not, 29—To W. @. |i, mos Myers. Olarion, that eecmed to be impending, that he made adash j EAgoueN Tl Fee tena orcer art advanced tn ise | count of theac operatlane 1 malgothe following ab- |, CUMBEILATE, Ginny Meeks Aor stoma, from | a1, Toba L. Daveeog.<2-0-0.....Bmeuev ile crore Raccoon Ford with the Mlicbigan brigndo and | ter prove laren fall, but atill our troops | of attlo ap ifon parade, Tho rebels watched thelr | stract Beow stip rent, arrived ast night, Helen Knox- | 22, Jawes K, Moorbesd.....-..bitlaburg FON eee eceyvand commenced work in rest _ TBO Fala continued to fail, but stil oUF HOPS | Torcstion and movement from thelr pleket ines and | A. fow mloutea alter 1 A. OU om Tress, OD) ville on Waleuadny night He ae Sen, Bura- | 23. Thomas Wiiliame “ictoourg. earnest, As tho potition he was in might become a | Preened forward, skirmiahlnd ads Hitepits, and from thosummit of Mitton Ridge, five | troops all belng in line of battle aud the enemy cheerful. 24, Jeseo Lazear...

fell back until tt reached the ng run, two end a half miles

bel Une graduate of

DELAWARE. Nathaalel B, Smithers... MARYLAND,

critics! one, and ac bis movement would eomewhat interfere with other arrangement on foot, he was

Tho lower portion of the town has been burned, including the Esst Tennersec aud Georgia Rallrosd Mike ani BUl Brapver'a residences, and the

Lining the creat of the hill looking upon the marnt foent array below, the heavy lego guns of Fort

hundred feet above vs, and thought {t wana review and drill, 00 openly nnd deliberately and ro regulapy

“Dover. weatern bap!

from the tavern, and a short distance from Old Ver-

i ed to reoross the river. waa it done. Wood, under the chargo of Lieutenant Dunwidiio, Se aor a revacan to-day: J, A. Js Greawellecr-o+-+e+-EDeton, S eee eee ents our sahale army in:pasition end'| Aleviilo vas It oat go advanced, preceded by aktrmiubors, | AC the 10th Wlaconsin battery, opeacd tre, and JOEN D BROWNLOW. | 2 Bava WL Webster. 0 -Bslaie x tory nageAaie-uoint. there were ovideacer Of an intens| Te | Oe TD TT hea our pivket lines, | Geooral Wood's division moved forward. At the| It is supposed theso hausce were orzupted by the | 3. Henry Winter Davis. Baltimore, he country hereabouts {a one of the woret con- | clearing beyond. Gez. Meade accordingly disposed See 1eedrtaw mio muere Auvaneed Hines OF | and OB UelDg reIMTOTCEG, Urovo: tiherenersy’ rMIF | revel ghareanquderp ons dertroyed by uF nelle, & Bebjomin G Harris TiLeonardtown. celvabie for fleld operations. It ie truly named the | his forces along the denscly wooded creat of hills | M#e-pits. After them went our sldrmiaers, and | rflepite along the creek nad at the base of sn STS SIS eI PEC ESTI OH RESPECT windiNias i gelvatie for eld operations. Tt it Sruly named the | le coy one ate a eet eloring | into then along theceutrvof the ingot 35,c0 roy, | kolated sod, half way etween Chattanooga nn | too late to mate e iuuetion with Dregg without | & Toreph Seaat.: None veel severe ininectenths of the whole turlace of atlillery, and even tnfantry, through the woods on | Which General Thomas had to quickly deployed, | :isslon Ridge. i too inte to) malio a junction with Bragg without | 7 Pep yhmin Mi, Kitehea.<--sAartinabUrg. the country, So depec are these young forests, that | either aide of the road, rome time elepred before | | Ustil wo opened fire prisone 1 SEN -

aseert thoy thought

‘At the same time the cpemy openc the whole movoment was a review and general drill,

from the Ridge, revealing three bate

with artillery lea in the cea: |

ould,

Generel? 1, George H, Pendleton...

ide waa thought to have followed it a impoamble to penetrate them, except where | tho formation of our line. Night soon came on, sae wee

Oiueinnath

SaRe are gHOES wee Kepoad the tnfow of plekte, nud. aa, oveastonal | And that {twastoo lato to seni! to their eamps for ro. | tre of thelr ling; but nove of the guns were of mull Map aeaiell Pogtar hat ceiehed eloeall eT] | ot Rote Gc seek ee ewaytone

‘This enabled the enemy yesterday to hover on our} shell thrown from our Mines, nothing of importance | !nforcemento, nad that thoy were overwhelmed by | elent callbre to reach Fort Wood, See han licoual bate orses lt lathecentL 4 3. F Melinney Piqua.

fleoke, often within eight of a moving column, al-| tranepired, | force of npmbers, It was 9 suzpriee in open day- | As General Wood advanced, he son got under (ama Neoae TART pea Clevelacd Eee OR ee most with impunity, twas oot until laté in tho] The army of Geo. Meado occupies a section of | light. Hhelnce ob tiers guns, and suiferod/ecneldacablé frowall piace Gal teliswe bla eer d ceroeetc ok: SAR ah Beoreno wn.

evering that our line {n front waa so connected au to | what le termed "Tao Wilderness.” | “ata p. nt, tho tmportant advanced position of | them, General Wood moved with a part of Hozel's| the forces of Thomas, Sherman, and Ho earn l e eelliien Toberoar: ‘Staustleld:

Koep etraggling parties of cavalry outside of our| Anny officera diseroait the story that Leo will | Orsbard Knob, and the lines right and left were in | brigade on the right and Willich on the left, General a gtrhomas, Sherman nnd Hooker: Warren P. Noble nino ince. During the day, It waa Lmposaible for any | give battle ou this aide of Orange Court House or | OUF porsession; and nrrangomento were ordered for | Sau, Beatty being to reserve, Tho §th