# w £ *"ing elections, ‘and’ choose by ballot, the BELLEFONTE, THURSDAY, AUG. 8. ¢ Here shall the press the people's rights main- tain Unawed by party or unbribed by gain; Pledged but to truth to liberty and law, No favor sways us and no fear shall awe.” C. T. <1 AigR aves; } Editors and Publishers, Delegate Elections. The same good old Democratic party of the past, which has always been in favor of sustaining the Union and Constitution of Those who advocate and maintain the ry of the people of all sections of the Unfon under our present Constitutjon ; those who are anxious to perpetuate this, the best government in the world. and handgt down to their children, and their children’s child- ren untarnished, tothe end of time ; those who oppose fanaticism in the North and se- cession in the South, as the great evils of the times in which our lot is cast, and the pow- erful engines which are fast destroying our cherished government ; those who afocate the Democratic and conservative doctrines of the great founders of our government first promulgated by the illustrious WasmH- INGTON, perpetuated and handed down to us by JerrERSON and Jackson ; those who desire that PEACE, HAPPINESS, PROSPERITY, and UN10oN should take the place of civil war, discord, disunion, and the humiliating spectacle of a down trodden and 4X RIDDEN people, will meet on Saturday, the 24th day August, in ‘their respective Townships d Boroughs, at the usual places of hold- our fathers and the enforcement of the rr number of delegates to which they are enti tled, whose duty it shail be to meet in Coun- ty Convention at the Arbitration Room, in the Borough of Bellefonte, on Tuesday Eve- ning, the 27th inst., (Court week) at 7 o'clock, P. M., to-nominate candidates to bo voted for at the general election. 3 + By Order Stand. Com. Bend Good Delegates. Democrats of Centre County, the time is near at hand when it will be your duty to send men to represent you in County Con- vention, to nominate candidates for the sev- cral offices to ‘be filled this Fall. It perhaps is useless for ug to'urge upon you the ne- cessity of selecting your very best men to thus represent you, a8 we have no doubt that the events'that are now transpiring in our unhappy country, have fully aroused you to a sense of your duty. then, fellow Democrats, all little party ani- mosities and jealousies, and send in to our Convention, men who can not be swayed by mere pettyfogging politicians. Send men who will consult the best terest of the party in preference to men pledged to the suppor t of some particular indivi who happen to be their friends, and con- fident we will thus get a ticke st w have ever had in this County, hic! every Democrat can cordially t#not only this but one which hundre Repub- licans, who now see the ruin that Republican rule is sure to bring upon us, will gladly support, in preference to any that that de- funct organization can get Throw aside Union ‘$6 bad, let them vote for Democratic candidates, and we can assure them they will be woting for Union men. : eee A A The Church and the War, If there is one thing more painful than another in the present aspect of onr unhappy country, it is thesposition of the clergy, who have joined in the public - clamor of war. We make no distinction bt n the North and the South in this respect. The awful responsibility which rests upon the acknowl- edged guides of the consciences of nen will be felt hereafter when calmer moments of reflection come over them, That in too many instances it has proceeded from mo- tives of personal ambition rather than mista- ken patriotism, cannot be doubted. The opportunity affofded by a pulpit an an audience tg become a leader iff a gif pub- lic demogsti ation, presents temptaffons dif- ficult to resist 4 and the tempigiiplh once yicla#d to, the unhappy victim 16888 reason arff@judgment. The facility wit! old Bply truths are forgotten ofexmplained aWly, the cagdihess with whiclktests are hufited up in the Old Testament by way of justification of violence, the terrible ingenu- %y with which the words of the Saviour and His apostidfifiwe distorted into phrases of warlike encouragement, the blessings which are poured upon the warmakers, the pro- found silence of the bitter denunciation which is visited on peace makers,—all these things are characteristic of the course of too many of the clergy in all sections of the land. Had a different course been pursued by the clergy generally, what an amount of good the church might have performed in these dismal times. Its holy mission of peace was designed for just such days as these, God never charged it with the duty of stirring men up to conflict. He has provided other means for that. Govern~ | ments and authorities are the divine institu. [tions for wielding the sword of justice, and there was enough of the spirit of war, blood- shed, and violencesin the land, for all desira- ble purposes. The mission of the church is to be the promoter of peace ; to calm the minds of men ; to mortify human passions by suggesting the duties of the christian ; to be ready at any moment when the oppor- tanity shell offer, to step in between con. tending parties and reccive on itself the blessings pronounced on the maker of peace. Let us hope for better things hereafter and for good growing out of so much passion. It cannot be but that the men who have for- gotten the words of peace so long, will, when the excitement passes, finds their own consolation in returning to them. For the Cromwell times, when every deed of vio- lence was justified by some flaming passage from God's dennnciations of Egypt and Chal- dea, or the prayers of David. ; A very remarkable suggestion was made by a style it prayers in the churches of the belligerent clergy. It was this —that "al- most all the prayers which we hear, relating to the condition of the country, aré address. ed to the God of Battles, while ‘the Prince of Peace is almost wholly ignored. Wer the clergy to address their petitions to Him, ger. article stati i @itor of the Doylestown ibel, a verdict of guilty the libel being that the edi- . Black a secessionist and Boicia Stand a trai g this case as a precedent, Deme u are told by Abolition Re- | there i for any number of libel public 1tafs your duty to forget par- suits on F the faithful and good ty ginciple patriots and Union| Citizens , because they could not go in loving men e doctrinics you have blindfoled, without remonstran into a 5 ge you ever upheld principles that wasWital to the existence of this Government ? Have you ever supported issues that were opposed to any part of the Constitution ? if not, why should you now, at the order of a sectional party, repudiated your own ideas of right and forsake the only panty that will ever bring peace: and pros. petity to our distracted country. You bat- tled manfully during the last campaign, for the Constitution and the Union, but went down neath the fearful waves of fanaticism. You fought nobly for the nghts guaranteed you by the fonnders of this Republic, but were overwhelmed by the hideous doctrines of Abolitienism, and now the country is reaping the reward of the triumph of the Republican party. It is to you Democrats, that our country must look for support, and you alone can rescue it from the desolation that now awaits it. Stand firm, then, though the Abolition Republicans denounce you as *traitors’ for keeping up your party orgamzation. Heed them not—they are only unprincipled men who seek place and power, though they hurl at you the bitterest epithets their revengeful minds can originate. Labor on. Your du- ty Bg yourselves, your God, and your coun- .ty demand it; and if you vroul® 1k a rec- ord that will ngver fade, and a name + that will never We forgotten, stand firm for the principles of Democracy, the principles of WASHINGTON, JEFFERSO d Jackson. Hold your Township mecti Elect your Delegates to the Osunty @emvention, and instruct these delegates to vote fer none but true « Detnocrats, and when the ticket is formed, the. Republicans can cay if there shall be a Union ticket or not. If they wa ut ferocious wir, under the name of enforcing the laws, have been denounced as secession- ists, traitors, &c. Now, as treason is a capital crime, it stands to reason that to it, merely from political animosity, or to damage him or his business, is a highly ac- countable offence, and if the perpotrators are not taught this expericnce, it will be because they are treated much more for- bearingly than they treat others. EER a A Brown Republican orator told the citi- zens of our town last fall, that, “ seventeen men and a cow ”’ had nearly scared the Vir- ginians to death, and that 75,000 Northern men would lick these ‘* cowardly Southern. ers before breakfast?” This Brown gentleman has proven him- self to be an ASS tute prophet with a slight variation, By refering to the procecdings-of the gentlemen who are running the machine at Washington now, it seems they want 500,- 000 men and $500,000,000 and probably five years to complete the job. We wonder if the Brown gentleman has engaged in the scare ? —Clearfield Republican. A strange question friend Republitan to ask a :sensible community. . Why, Mr. Brown isin Bellefonte now, and intends re- maining here. H e goto war! Nonsense. A handfull of snow will drown the fire in the infernal regions when Biniy Brown goes to scare the Southencrs, A dog that barks will never bito, A bragging man ’s afraid to fight.” — AP. Though we stand alone, give us the right. We want no popularity which docsnot spring from an appreciation of our love and practice of right and justice. : —— ttl AA AP pe reit. Where are the good times promised by the Republicans last fall 2 #cho angwers— gotle to the-#—woods. present we have had too much of the style of B d some days since, on the present e case of Henry charge a man with it who is not guilty of SARI 7 — A Frank and Manly Article. i ® * Weare engaged a bitter, bloody and devastating civil war, with all the resources of both parts of the nation rapidly becoming involved in it. Our duty to ourselves to civilization, to man and to God, demands that we task our utmest: wisdom and forecast in esti- mating the objects of this war aright. Nay, more ; that duty demands of us not merely that we should ascertain the rightfulness of its objects, but also that we should have an assured moral conviction that the right means are used to accomplish those objects. If one were to state the rightful objects of this war to be the preservation of the capi- tal of the United States, and the vindication of the authority of the Union againsi the doctrine of State Secession, no reasonable man could dissent from the proposition.— The vindication of that authority and the restoration of the seceded States to the Un~ ion are one and the same thing. % * If there is a reasonable probability that war will do it, the means are appropriate to the end, and the end itself is a right one. If the military subjection of the South is not probable, or, if being probable, it is not likely to be followed by a state of things, which will again make such a system as the American Union a practicable government, then the means are not ‘appropriate to the end, and the end should be sought in some other mode. y With regard to the first’ of these condi- tions—the probability of the military coer- cion of the South—opinions may differ. The public mind has been so poisoned with de- liberate inculcation of contempt for our ad- versaries and their resourses, that even the Government has been driven to the sacrifice of lives which the public could ill spare, and whose private loss is irreparable.” This has been done, apparently, in sheer delusion as to the power of the enemy ; for there was certainly but one important man in office in the nation, and he the very man on whose judgment both the Government and the peo- ple should have implicitly relied, who is now known not to have shared that delusion.— Whether the North ' can ultimately reduce the South to submission, 1s a military ques- tion, on which it would ill become mere civ- ilians to express a confident opinion, In all the resources of war we are the superi- ors ; in'courage and in military capacity the inhabitants of the two sections are probably equal, But resources, courage and military shill arenot all that are needed to overrun | and hold in subjection so vast a country as the seceded Stales, if the peopls of that coun- try are united and determined. That they have become united and: determined, is ap- parent; and it is only encouraging a mis: chievous and fatal delusion to pretend the contrary. But, assuming that it will be in the power of our government to take military posses- sion of the South, there lies back of all that another question. T'Aat questvon. is, whesher the American Union, as we have known it, as it saoned to be, and as alone it can be rega practicable system of governs ment, ¢a Jestored by such means? A ungyopinion on this subjeet must depend greatly on the nature of the Union, and on the principles on which the practical excr- we should be calmer and more peace- | : : . ful paths, a s we might once in a cise of its authority necessarily rests. whila,get in lon of peage evén at the Thegovernment of the United States does shcrificewt RN tulius or age io n | pot reSfupon force, and its authority cannot be exercised through military means. Its ji 0 person and property of the his person and property can be through the judicial tribunals. pinistration, many and every carried on by local officers ; ust involuntarily participate e representative machinery by wich its central administration is kept alive. T ous heresy of State se~ nded authority of a izens from their legal obey the laws of the more inconsistent with the true character of our system, than is the idea that the laws of the United States can operation of the people, The monstrous character of the secession theory does not alter the fact, that every State possesses a government, and therefore possesses an or ganized and powerful means of resistance, rebellion and revolution. Let it be supposed, then, that the seceded States are overrun by military power and completely subdued. What reason exists for expecting that a people thus conquered will voluntarily return to the exercise of those cil functions without which there can be no Union, and no reliable cxercise of tie authority of the Union among them ? When the hate engendered by military conquest has become a passion, to be transmitted as a sacred duty of patriofism from generation to generation, who can look for that partici- pation of the people in the civil dutics and rights of the Union, without which the Fed eral Government is no Government at all ? If you limit yourself to the collection of your revenue, where will yi judges and jur- ors fo enforce your forfeitures 2° If you cn- force them by military power, what will your government bgeome but % military government? If ygm can gffect the con- quest at all, how gamyyou expect ‘to do it without making such isgoadls upon the gov- cenment and the State authority, that the political institutions of the people will be broken down 2 If you can hold the people in unwilling subjugation, how can you do it without destroying their acknowledged con- stitutional rights And when this is done to ten or more States at one end of the Un- ion, who can expeet that the character of be administered without the voluntary oe our Federal system will remain what our fathers made it, and what we have so boun» tifally enjoyed ? In all history, there has never been an in- stance of a free people, once participating in the voluntary administration of a free popu- lar government who have thrown off ther connection with it, and_have . subseqently been forced to resume it by a ‘military con- quest. However true, just and Jawful, in application of means entirely unsuited to the end. In the nature of things, it must ther off than it was before the consequend® was attempted. We need not ask if ghe Union ‘will be tolerable to the South, when they are thus conquered. Will it be tolers- ble to ourselves ? Can we successfully and safely hold in military subjection guch a portion of our common country ? Can we undertake to do it, without creating a mili- tary power, in which our own liberties must be merged ?—Boston Courier, July 31. re Ap nn nme, Patriots and Traitors, In good old times when we were a happy and united people, that mag! regarded as a patriot who loved his who revered the Constitution, obey and faithfully performed all his as a citizen. He might support the Admin- istration in power, or oppose it, without having his loyalty to the government or his patriotism questioned. Men equally good and true were to be found on both sides.— But in these troublous tithes a somewhat different test of patriotism is sofight to be applied. Loyalty and disloyaldy, patriotism and treason, are not what they ‘were in the palmy days gf the Republic. We live under a new dispensation, and words have acquired an entirely novel significance. If, for instance, a citizen who used to ex- ercise the liberty of abusing the President of the United States, ridiculing the Supreme Court, encouraging violations of the Fugi- tive Slave Law, advocating the ¢ irrepressi- ble conflict,” and hinting that, in certain contingencies, the Union might slide, is now a fast friend of the Admistration, in favor of gagging or hanging every person who ventures to whisper a word of dissent to its policy, he is a patriot. He may not be remarkabie for individual or official honesty, he may even be connected with the fraudu- lent schemes to take money out of the treas- ury, in plain words, he may be growing rich from the spoils of war, yet he is a pas triot. He may encourage violations of the | Constitution, infringements upon private rights, turbulence and mob viosence, and still he 1s a patriot. He must have a keen scent for treason and traitors. He must discover that his honest neighbor, who do. not participate in his violence, are * seces- sionists,”” and mildly suggests hanging. If these neighbors should intimate that the President of the United States 1s not exact- ly a second Jackson, our patriot will mark him as a suspicious’ character, and if he should go so far as to express the obsolete opinion that the Constitution is the supreme law of the land, suspicion will deepen into absolute conviction, and our patriots no lon- ger doubts the necessity of establishing the guillotine ‘to rid the country of pestilent traitors: On the other hand if a man deplores the exercise of unconstitutional powers he is a traitor.” If he doubts that war will accom. plish the restoration of the Union, he is a traitor. He may perform all his duties as an upright and loyal citizen ; he may never have been guilty of a dishonest, mean or discreditable aetion ; he may have fought the battles of his country and have contrib. uted liberally of his means to sustain the government and provide for the families of those who have gone forth to fight, never- theless heds a traitor. Our modern patriot, with his pockets puffed gt with plunder, says so, sand who shall gainsay his word ?— Let the good citizen be a Democrat, and venture to declare that if his advice had been follow! hese things would not now ban the gealous patriot does not have im 5 p for uttering treasonable lan- age it will not be his fault. Now at the risk of being denounced as traitors, we venture to affirm that every cit- izen of this Free Republic (we are not yet prepared to admit that this is a misnomer) has a right{o examine and criticise all the acts of his rullers—public servants th mit be called—and to express their #n approval or dissent. If the Executive exceeded the powers confidoige i the Constitution, hoflas a right say — and if the public money is squandered, it 18 his right and duty to protest.. The plunder ers may protest, but that is to be expected. They may prescribe hanging, but what of it? While law governs there is not much danger. Itis true that in these times, when the habeas corpus is a practical nullity, the citizen 15 not entirely secure against illegal incarceration—but this power has been'ex- ercised in 50 few cases that 1t has hafdly caused a perceptible flutter, Men still dare regard themselves as free Citians, free cnlightened country, and so long as they respect the laws and per obli- gations, they will contig to ex. press their opinions, unawed ®y power and unrestrained by the tnt of violence from pseudo ‘patriots. : B&F™ The large rified-capnon * Union,” now at Fortress Monroe, is to be mounted on the deck of the Minnesota, It carries a 350 pound shot, and is supposed to be the most destructive weapon ever mounted. Neither its range nor initial velocity is as’ great as some othefgguns, yet the weight of the shot will be sugh as tosink any ship, and ulti- mately ibeog almost avy (ortification, * ren. gy * % theory, such a conquest “may be, it" i8 the | leave effects which will put an end still far-. "The Object of the War. ‘The New York Tumes, in commencing on the late fight says: ¢« There is a divinity shaping the Course of this war, and we must accept its fortunes and its misfortunes with equal trust and hopefulness. There is one thing, and only one, at ghg bottom of the fight—and that is the negro. - And yet the North and South are Boul studiously ignoring the fact, and deceife the world as to the cause of the uarrel. The South pretends to be fighting: for #hdependence—but is fighting for the establishment of human bondage as the ba- ‘| sig of republican government. The North, or loyal States, claim to be fighting for the re-establishment of the Constitution, and laws, and to have no thought of property or social institution in their minds. But they know that until slavery changes its relation to government and becomes its complete subject, instead of its arrogant master, the peace and safety of the Republic are impos- sible. «If our army had been victorious at Ma- nassas they would have marched on to Richmond, and ended this war on a false basis ; both parties ignoring to last cause of the war. The God that rules over all, and does exact justice in the end to bond and free, would not permit a compromise of this sort to forestall his providence. And he has awakened the natipn as by the shock of an earthquake. « Would anything short of our unexpected repulse at Manassas have quickened the conscience and judgement of twenty mil- lions of people in regard to this conduct ?— The ghost of long murdered liberty to mil- lions of weak and despairing captives leaves its tomb, and haunts our army, and frights it to panic and to flight. Now shall we learn, anew and rightly, our position and duties. We have an enemy to meet who has, for years, setat defiance, alike, the laws of God and man—who has for two generations outraged justice and humanit; —and who threatens to extend over a whole continent the Gigi of his rule. Shall we strike the monSter where he is vulnera- ble? Shall w the cancer ot Shall we « hrust in our spear where crime invites to surgery ? t the devil with fire,” accord- ing to the y3Msdom of the ancients? Let a paralyzcd®nd a reeling nation answer.”-- The &ision Advocate and Journal says, ¢ Directly we are contending for govern- ment, but indirectly for Ziberty. Though ‘| the country takes the sword, not for the extermination of slavery, buf, for the uphold- mg of the Constitution, tf may be compelled to go farther.” The Northern Christian Advocate says: «The ery for the Union, the military ar- ray for the Union—the absorption of all parties in: this movement, only carries for ward the glorious car of emancipation.” The Washington correspondent of the Philadelphia Inquirer, writing under a late date, says : ’ : «It is understood that the Cabinet have decided that all slaves, in all places and térritories occupied by our armies are to be liberated, employed and paid,” a a IhsREPUTABLE DiSAPARAGEMENT'—In a time like present, when every loyal State is battling for the integrity of the Union, it appears to be ill-advised and importune in papers of New York city tobe fomenting petty local jealousies by studied and contin- al abuse of its neighbors. If we are to dge from the inflated @@lescriptions of their army correspondents, the whole success of this war depends entirely upon the courage of the New York tia. Every success which is yet achieved has been done by their troops, and everything they do isa success. We have copied into our columns those highly wrought pictures of. Gothamite glory, for we are willingito let the heroes paint their ogn portraits. But thé New York journals are not satisfied with this.-— They not only exalt themselves beyond measure, but they studiously and pémistent. ly disparage the from Pennsylvania, who are as fine a body of soldiers as there are in the army, and who will, probably, perform their duties before the war is over quite as ‘effcctually as any body of men from New York. Their insinuation against their pluck comes with an ill grace in ghe face of the facts at Bull’s Run. The Rogi- ment of Col. Einstein, the only Pennsylvli- nia Regiment in service in that division of the army, marched to the field of actiof on Sunday night in the midst of the retreg and brought off’ the batteries that more experi- enced troops left behind. Itis certainly a creditable proof of courage for one thousand men to march back to a field which forty thousand are flying from. If Pennsylvani- ans do not boast of this in the inflated pa- thos of the New York journals, itis because they are more accustomed to deeds%han to words, and are content whem thew duty is well discharged. Free Speecu.—We commen follow- ing sensible remarks to thoggl Who, just now, think it an awful for @ man to speak his senti ts u y happen to chime in with lic The extract is from the 2 G ew; of Massachuset Legis! a lew weeks ago. glad able to ccord such a thing for o m a Repub- lican : ned ¢ Let us nev饙=gnder gany conceivable circumstances ofprovocal or indignation —forget right of free discussion of all public qugilions is guaranteed to every in- dividual lassachusetts soil, by the set: tled conviCtion of her people, by the habits of its successive generations; and by express provisions of her constitution. And let us therefore never seek to repress the criticisms of a minority, however small, upon the character and conduct of any administration whether State or NatioNaL.” - rt —— A PAP nn a ’ . Goon—A Union Meeting of the law-abid- ing and Peace loving citizens of Medina Co., Ohio, was held at Sharon Centre in that county on the 4th of July. Among the res- olutions passed, was one to suspend all social intercourse with the town of Medina, except court session, and to withhold all patagnag® from the merchants of that place the people are cured of their politi gadnags. Washington Ni 7 Messrs. Garman, Abplegate; ind’ Sterling left Washington on Thursday with a flag of truce, bearing a communication from the Secrecrry of War, having for its object the recovery of the body of his brother, Col, Cam- eron. They yesterday returned without sué« cess, owing, it appears, to the communica- tion having been addressed .*‘ To whom it may concern,” and not to. §ome, pi lat prominent officer in the Confederate army. This objection removed: there is no: doubt the body can be recovered, as the place of interment ‘is marked and. every faculty promised to accomplish that purpose. The gentlemen’ carrying the flag speak in high terms of the courteous and kind manner in which they were treated by Col. Stewart, commanding the first Virginia régiment, and other officers within the field of his operations They, however, were not permitted to ap~ proach directly to Fairfax Court House. By the abandonment of the Norfolk Navy’ Yard more than twenty-five hundred cans non ahd a vast amount of ammunition and military stores fell into the hands of the reb-' els., By the first abendorment of Harper's Ferry all the costly machinery of the nation« al workships there fell into the same bands and taken to Richmond, and’ Fayetteville where thoy are in active operation. Cunpneg has now determined to investigate the facts connected with the abandonment of Govern« ment property, and on: motion of Messrs. Hale and Trumbull, a Committee are now inquiring into the matter. "The country will look for their report with deep interest. ORGANIZATION OF BRIGADES. ! One cause of the late disaster at Bull Run was the fact that the army at that time was but little more than a heterogenous mas’ of Independent regiments. This. grave error will never again take place. As the new reg- iments arrived here they have been organi« zed into brigades and immediately drilled as such. The want of such training was se< vrorely felt on the fatal field. ; THR PENNBYLVVNIA APPOINTMENTS. The army appointments, made at tho in- stance of the Pennsylvania delegation, aro at once recognized on all hands as appoint~ ments eminently “fit to be made.” That of Gen. McCall, especially, is: looked to with the s¥peciation that is will _redound greatly to the honor of the country. There are ru« mors here that still higher honors are in store for Gen. McCall. a AR ARTILLERY COMING, If the artillery continues to come on as it is new doing, we shall speedily have this arm of tke service in the proper degree of ef~ ficiency. Every day now, six peices bf eplen-~ did brass rifled cannon, with carriages, cas- sons, &c., complete, are recieved here. Maj Barry, the chief of artillery on General Mo- Clellan’s Staff, has this part of the service in his special charge, and will soon bring it into a state of great «ficiency. The" efforts in this direction will not be ‘suspended until wo have in the field a train of artillery em- bracing two hundred and fifty ‘brass ‘rifled cannon, organized into batteries and com- manded by experienced army officers. GENERAL BUTLER. i It is understood here that General Butle has been summoned to: Washington in order that he may be assigned to an important and responsible position elsewhere ; and not be- cange the Administration arsdissatisticd with his tourse at Fortress Monroe. THE DEFENCES OF WASHINGTON. Congress has now woke up-to a realizin sense of the becessity of strengthening Wash- ington ; and the House, yesterday, on motion of MF. Thaddeus Stevens, passed a bill ap- propHating $100,000. for the erection of field fortifications. No time should be lost in ex pending this amount in the most judicious manner. It would be folly, of course, for the Rebels to think ‘of ing Washington now. But the fortune of war is uncertain, and they are playing a desperate game. If they should dare to attack Washington, they would certainly be repulsed, rere rpm Gen. McClellan and His Men, + Headqarters Army of Occupation, - Western Virginia, Beverly, July 19th. Soldwers of the Army of the West: m more than satisfied with you, Yeu h#¥&anw~ nihilated two armies, commanded hy educa~ io and experienced soldiers, gatighobeil in untain fastnesses and fortified at ir leisure. You have taken five guns, twelve colors, fifteen hundred stand of arms, 1,000 isoners, including more than forty officers. ne of the second commauders of the rabels is a prisoner, the other lost his life on the field of battle., You have killed more than two hundred and fitty of the enemy, who have lost all his baggage and Samp equip- age. All this has been accomplished with the loss of twenty brave men killed and six~ ty wounded on your part. - You have proved that Uzion men, fighting for the preservation of our government, are more than a match for our misguided and erring brothers.— More than this you have shown morcy to the vanquished. You have made Jong and ar- duous : mar vide sufficient food, fre- quentlg exposed to tHe “inclemency of the weatl€r, I have not hesitated io demand this of yeu, feeling that I could rely on your endurance, patrictism abd eourage. In the futuge I may still bave greater demands to make upon you—still greater sacrifices for you to offer. Tt shall be my care fo provide for you to the extent of my ability; but T know now that by your valor and endurance you will accomplish all that is asked. Sol« diers—I have confidence in you, and I trust that you have learned to confide in me. Re- member that diseipline and subordination are qualities of equal value with courage. I am proud to say that you have gained the highest reward that American troops can plause of your fellow citizens. 8 . Geo. B, McCrrLLAN, Maj. Gen. "For the Warqmuax. ‘Messrrs, Epirors i —We need some one to represent us in the next Logislature, who has been tried and. found capable of filli so important a station. * A $han of determin ed purpose, one who will defend the rgiht of the people a gainst the machinations o political hucksters, should be our candidate. A Democrat, whose history is untainted with *jsms’’ ‘of any kind—one upon whom the people can rely. Such a ‘man in the Hon. Janes MAOMANUS, ef - your. To should the Convention see 7 r 4 coive—the thanks of Congress and the ay §