he TH atcha, Sof SUE | re, BELBEFONTE, JAN. 23rd, 1862. 77 The Philadelphia Bulletin, of Tues- day evening, says that Ex President Tyler, who has been. reported lying ill at Rich. mond, is dead. PraLic LEcturs.—We have been request. ed to announce that the Rev. L. M. Gard- ner will deliver a lecture at the Corit House on Tuesday evening, the 27 hinst. Subject —4 Our National Troubles—Their Cause and Cure.” Admittance—25 cents. Barrie ix Kesvocer, —The latest advices f om Kentucky state that a battle had been fought on Saturday, the 19th inst., near Somerset, in which the Confederate forces, under Gen. Zollicofler, were defeated by the Fuderal troops under Gen. Schoepfl. Gen. Zollicoffer was killed in the engagement, as was also Ballia Peyton, jr., son of Baillie Peyton, sr., who was formerly a member of the United States Congress, and Minister to Brazil, under President Fillmore. rn Ge i Apres. {== Hon. Hexry D.MoORE, was re-elected State Treasurer, on the third ballot. The Union Democrats voted for Dr JoNas R. McCraNTock, on the first and second ballots. On the third, sufficient went over to Moore toelect-him. Had the Union Democrats stuck to McCriNtock, Mr. MOORE could not have been clected’; but it was evidently as much their determination to prevent the election of Dr. McCriNTOCK as that of the Democratic candidate, Wx. V, MAGRATH.— The absence of one membar on the Demo- cratic side—Mr. Ross, of Mifflin— rendered itimpo sible to elect anybody over the Re- publican candidate by a union’ of all those who voted against him on the first and sec- ond ballots. The Government Robbers. We publish to day, on our first page, an extract from a speech recently made in Con~ gress, by a Mr. Dawes, which is an expose of a namber of astounding swindling opera- tions that have been perpetrated upon the government by a number of unprincipled po- litical thieves and pets of the party in pow er, that, m Buchanan's day, would have consigned any Democrat to eternal infamy. Mr. Dawcs states that on the 21st of April, there was organized, in New York, a corps of plunderers upon the Treasury, who bave been hanging on the Treasury like leeches ever since, and have succeeded at last in drawing from it almost the last drop of blood. Most of these robberies have been commit. ted by particular favorites of the War De- partment, who have granted contracts for the furnishing of horses, supplies, &c., for the army. Simon has said ‘wiggle waggle,” and his pets, fully understanding his system .of wiggling money out of the Treasury into his own pocket, have succeeded amazingly well in enriching themselves out of the peo ple’s money. If Simon be honest himself— (but nobody charges him with this) he has been exceedingly unfortunate in the selec- tion of the friends upon whom he has show- ercd his patronage. Horsc contracts, and beef contracts, pick- cled herring and linen pants contracts, (such as given Mr. Cummings) and contracts for the furnishing of arms, have been given to men whose patriotism has only displayed itself in their readiness to swindle the people and bankrupt the Government. Horse con tracts have been given out to favorites, mem- bers of the ring at $125 per head. The chicf contractor would then sub-let to other parties at $110 per head ; the sub-contractor would then sub-let at $95 per head to «ther favorites, and horse jockeys would go out threugh the country and buy up old broken down horses at from $50 to $80 per head, and thus the Government would be actually swindled, upon every horse it purchased, out of from $40 to $80. These horses would then be taken to Washington City, where a num- ber were tied to posts and left to starve and die. ’ Thus, then, the Government ir the first place, was actually swindled in the purchase of 60.000 horses, of not less than three and a half millions ; and then a number of the horses being entirely worthless, were tied te posts and there starved to death, which would be a total loss of the price paid for as many as thus died. The cattle contracts ; contracts for the equipment of cavalry ; contracts for the pur. chase of arms—and hundreds of other fur- nishing contracts have been given out at such figures that the lucky pets have real« ized, in c’ean profit, 50 per cent. on every thing purchased for the Government ; or, in other words, out of the three or four hundred millions of money spent in this way since the commencement of the war, the one half has been stolon by these robbers. Contractors have boen growing rich, while the Government hag been growing poor.— According to Mr. Dawes’s statement, it is high time a move has been made in the right direction, and Simon removed. Simon has had the giving of most of these contracts, and while he may not have made more than four or five millions himself, he certainly has been very unfortunate in the selection of his friends ; while those friends, no doubt, feel rejoiced that they had such a friend as Simon, who taught them how to wiggle wage gle. - EO mene Hus moderated-~The weather. Expelling Members of Congress. Both Houses of Congress, during the extra session and at the present session, have been occupied a considerable time 1n expelling members for treason. Had these bodies, years ago, shown their patriotism and ab- horrence of treason, by the expulsion of Sen- ators Hale and Seward, in the Senate, and abolitionists in the House. who presented petitions asking Congress to dissolve the Unmion—had they expelled Banks «when he declared that under certain circumstances he was willing to * let the Uuion slide,” our Union to day might have been in a prosper- ous condition, and the present civil war averted. At those times the on idea princi ple governed the fanatics who arc now so rampant for expelling members, Then if Senators presented petitions for a dissolu- tion of the Union and supported them by speeches, it was all right, and no treason was contained in such acts, because the ob- ject of the petitioners was to get rid of slav- ery. But now when the South proposes the same thing—:. e. to go out of the Union and take slavery with them, these original disun- ionists vote for the expulsion of their mem-~ bers traitors. In our opinion both are equal- ly guilty, and had a traitors doom been as- sigoed to the first man in Congress, who presented a petition for the dissclution of the Union, and voted to have the matter of the petition considered, the example would have had a good effect, and the hydra heads of Abolition disunion and Secession-disunion, would never have raised their hands again, to bring trouble, civil war and blood-shed up- on the nation. The Change in the Cabinet. The resignation of SiMox CaM EBON and the appointment of EnwiN M. StANTON to succeed himin the office of Secretary of War, was pro~ bably not a very surprising piece of intellige~ nce to those who have closely watched the current of events during the past few months. The developments of the Van Wyck Investi- gating Committee, the disposition manifes- ted by Congress to dive to the bottom of the frauds upon the Government, and the disap- proval by the President, of the Abolition portion of Mr. CAMERON'S report, were cir- cums tances making his retreat from the Cab. inet not only desirable, but absolutely neces- sary to the maintenance of public confidence in the Administration.— What precise cause brought maters to a crisis we will not under. take to indicate—but there is reason to be- lieve that his withdrawal was not entirely voluntary, and the reasons why he could no longer act in barmony with the Administra tion, may be found in some of the causes we have indicated. Mr. CAMERON'S special friends very inge niously endeavor to break the force of his fall by alleging that he accepted the office of Secretary of War with great reluctance, and that he has always declared his intention to retire when the interests of the country would allow, and he could have a proper successor. This is all moonshine, Mr. Ca- MERON was anxious to obtain a seat in the Cabinet, used all his influence to secure some position, and would not have retir.d so preci pitately had circumstances rendered hiS stay desirable or comfortable. The retreat of Mr. CAMERON and the ape pointment of sa able and conservative a suc- cesgor as EpwiN M. Stanton, will impart hope to the country. We accept it as evi- dence that the President has determined not to listen to the suggestions of the ultra poli~ cians who would destroy the Government and the Constitution, by perverting the war from its legitimate objects into a reckless abolition crusade; and also as evidence that an era of reform in public expenditure is about to com- mence. — Patriot & Union. The Victories of Delay. Alrcady the complaints are daily coming up from the South, loud and deep, against that Government ; the people begin to dis cover that those who are great in raising a whirlwind are not always g eat in conduct- ing the affairs of a State. The people are disappointed in the brilliancy of their Gov- ernment. Their Secretary of State saw the folly of attempting to carry out such a posi- tion as his in sucha Confederacy as that of Secession, and resigned his position. This was a moral victory for the North. The Postmaster General, after doing al! that mor- ta' could do under his unfavorable circuma stances, receives nothing but the condemna tion and abuse of the people who cannot see that it is a pleasant and convenient thing to be without the assistance of the North in carrying the mails, and be thrown into ante revolutionary mail carrying times. Jeffer- son Davis, the Dictator, President, Com- mander in-Chief of the Confederate forces, though first he was the deliverer of the coun- try, is now the head and front of all its ca lamities, and the people do not spare him in their maledictions, Mr, Memminger, the Secretary of the Treasury, is complained of as possessing little foresight. knowledge or capacity foc his position. by those who gave him such honors at the beginning of the war. And so, by the delay of the North, the- South has had a taste of 1ts ability to sus. tain a Confederacy, and the fruits are be- ginning to taste bitter. It is daily a weak ening to their cause, because it convinces thew of their co mplete incapability to sus- tain a government independent of the foster- tering and kind care of the Union. The win- ter of their discontent shows itself in grim gray upon the horizon, and those little flur ries of snow and cloud will soon be followed by the fierce temptest that shall shiver their miserable temple to atoms about their heads. —Boston Post. A Warning Voice Ma: None of the statesmen of the past genera: tion was more earnest in teaching respect for and obedience to the Constitution, as the duty, superior to all others of the American people, than Daniel Webster. This was the one great theme of all his speeches and writings. As an example, here is an extract from one of his specches, delivered in 1851, which is so remarkably applicable to the present time, tha it becomes invested ‘with all the solemmty of prophetic warning : «IfI have attempted to expound the Constitution, I have attempted to expound that which [ have studied with diligence and veneration from my early manhood to the present day. If 1 have endeavored to defend and uphold the Union of the States, it is because my fixed judgement and my unal- terable affections have impelled me, and still impel me, to regard that Union as the only security for general prosperity and na- tional glory. Yes, gentlemen, the Constitution and the Union ! I place them together.— If they stand they must stand together ; if they full, they must fall togethe).” Were Daniel Webster now alive, how would his great intellect, rising superim to all the sectional prejudices which dwarf the minds of the would-be statesmen of our day, confute and put to shame the miserable sub- terfuges of the disguised Abolitionists, who, under the plea of military and political ne= cessity, would teach the American people to believe that the Union can only be saved by destroying the Constitution! While the Gov- ernment is engaged in a righteous war for the maintenance of the Constitution against the deadly assaults of traitors who seek to overthrow it, our nggro worshipping party leaders are endeavoriog to rob the Govern- ment of the moral power which attaches to the justice of its cause, by forcing 1t into measures that the Constitution nowhere warrants, and so making it equally guilty with the Southern Secessionists, of the high crime of rebellion. At such a time, how full of meaning are the warning words of Webster, that the Constitution and the Un ion must stand or fall together !—West Ches- ter Jeffersonian. Mr. Ely's Views of The War. Mr. Ely, a member of Congress, recently released from prison in Richmond, in ex change for Mr. Faulkner, made a speech ou his return in New York, which he concludes as follows : “Gentlemen, I am persuaded that the vast army committed to the trusty hands of Gen. McClellan has much to do. If I h ve learn ed anything in theSouth, it 1s we fight a peo- ple terribly in earnest. The cry ot Palatox at Saratoga. **War even unto the knife,”’is still their cry. Firm in the belief that we sevk their subjugation, they have waxed desperate, and neither life nor treasure will be spared to prevent the advance of our army. A rebellion so extensive and zealous as that which now reigns throughout the South can only be overcome by the best and strongest efforts of a united North. We must as one man, shoulder to shonlder, heart to heart, forgetful even of party. of prejudice, of all but country, join with the Government in its exertions for the preservation of the Republic. So only may we, by God,s good help, restore the national banner whence it has been denly torn, and by conquest win enduring peace aud establish our power to cobe with traiiors at home as successfully as we have with foes from abroad.” eM prs AN Arrack ON JEFFERSON Davis.—The Richmond Whig, of the 4th inst.. in the course of an article on the Dayis Administra tion says: from the Tomb at eld. Tf they have not subjugated us, they have impigued upon cur soil, and they hold mili. tary possession of a part of Virginia and of the the three slave holding States. This, we confess, has always been to us an unmixed bitter. Aud what renders it sti'l more dis- agreeable, we cannot divest ourselves of che conviction, that it has been owing to the fault of our own Administration. Our army com- posed of the best material that ever shoul- dered a musket, went to the field to fight, and nothing else and has been panting for an adnance from the moment of enlistment to the present hour. Doomed te inaction, and rotting on straw, we have lost more by disease than a dozen victories have cost, and we have lost the national reputation we en joyed for dase and clan. Unless there is a promise and one to be relied on, of a total change in this policy of the great Cunctator we shall have no more volunteers after the expiration of the present term. Thisis a vital matter, to which all our authorities should at once direct their attention. Con- gress, as well as the Executive, is entrusted with the public weal. All should exert themselves to the utmost for the common safety and the common glory, for the for tunes of us all are at stake. Stel mee Tue TeA, COFFEE AND SUGAR Tax.--The following schedule will show the increase of duty on these articles since the passage of the tariff of March last: Tariff of March. 61 July, 61. Tea Free. 15 cents. Coffee Free. 34 cents Sugar (clayed) § cent. 2 cents. 3 cents. Sugar (brown) { cent. 2 cents. 2} cents. This addition, it is presumed, will yield Dec. 23, 61. 20 cents. 5 cents. seven or eight millions to the revenue of the | Government for the present year. Ths will defray the expenses of the Government four days, according to the latest calculation. as our expenses are two million dollars a day. ———— | stripes. WaAT AN ENGLISH ABOLITIONIST SAYS.— | The Earl of Shaftsbury, who makes great pretensions to Aloiitionism and Evangelical Christianity, is reported by the Albany Ev- ening Journal to have said : “1, in common with almost every Engiish statesman, sincerely desire the rupture of the American Union. It has been the poli- cy of England to brook no rivalry, especial- ly in the direction of her own greatness.— We justly fear the commercial and political rivalry of the United States. With a popu- lation of 30,000,000 now, thew will soon, if not checked, overshadow Great Britain. — | We cannot look upon such a monstrous! growth without apprehension.” ' | same time, we would give ub nothing to the The Southern Press on the Surrender of Mason and Slidell. [From the Richmond Dispatch.) All Hell shall gape for this.—Shakspeare. Among the many striking portraits which the great dramatic has drawed, there is none truer to nature than that of Ancient Pistol. — His swagger, his bluster, his bold front, his cowardly heart, his rant, his fustian, his strange oatas, have in them Something in imitably ludicrous. His bragadocia and big talk impose for some time even on the men such an army as that which Henry V. led in- to France, and which won for him the ever memorable fleld of Agincort. At last, grown bold by long impunity, he ventures too far, and his exposure is complete. A Welch gentleman of dauntless courage, but odd de meanor, becomes the subject of his insolence. He laughs at his broken English and derides his nation. The national plant—the leek— becomes the subject of his scurrilous imper- tinence. He finds that he has, to use an American phrase, waked up the wrong pas. senger. The gentleman is a man who does not dn- derstand jesting, especially at the expense of his country. He puts up with the affront when first received, because they are on the eve of a great battle : but the victory once won, his first step is to seek the aggressor, and to call him to account. He finds Pistol, presents him with a leek (the national emn- blem which he has derided) and tells him he must swallow it. The bully swears and swaggers. The Welchman does neither.— He 18 perfectly calm, but still presents the leek, and tells Pistol he must swallow it.— Upon further refusal, he proceeds to beat him without mercy. This was more than mine Ancient had bargained for. Neverthe- less, he at last gulped it down, protesting with thundering oaths that hereafter his per- secutor should be made to pay the penalty. He is treated with contempt, sneaks off, and we hear of him no more. If the Yankee Government have not en- acted the part of the ‘Ancient Pist 1" to the very life, in their embroilment with the Eng- lish Government, then there is no suck thing as imitation, and parallel cannot exist in na- ture. When the piratical onslaught was first made upon the British vessel, the yell of exultation which arose in Yankeedom re- sounded throughont the world. Vast meet- ings assembled to testify their admiration of the deed. City councils voted it unrivalled in daring and sagacity since the days of Bayard. , The press rang with applause.— The Secretary of the Navy was not slow in approving the deed. Congress hailed the rising glory of the new hero, and test figd their approbation of his exploit without a dissenting voice. ¢. The city of Boston dined him, and wined him. and listened to his narrative, and made the welkin ring with its applause. The newspapers vowed that they would see every American ship burned, and every Yankee own and city uprooted from the very foun dation, before they would shrink from the side of Wilkes, They were determined to back him at all hazards and to the last ex- tremity. Never was there such defiance as they hurled at England. Never was there as much insolence uttered upon any one oc- casion. Never were such threats heard be- fore, since the creation of the world The Herald led the way in these’demcnstrations. It was going to raise a million of men to overrun and devour Canada. It was going to fit out six thousand privateers to cruise against English merchandise. It was going to confiscate nine hundred millions of Eng- lish property. It would not let Kngland have a pound of cotton. It would get salt- petre from the Mammoth Cave. If .ngland dared to demand redress, it was determined to raise an insurrection in Ireland. Never was here anything like the ribald- ry. gasconade, bully, bluster and defiance in which the whole Yankee race—people, press, public meetings, Congress, Secretaries, and all—indulged. They have been compared to the Chinese, and we think with wonderful aptitude. But the Chinese never swaggerad in this style, And after all what has been the result # The Yankee fire caters have drawn back from the first piece of live coal pesentel them. The Yankee swaggerers have been the first to eat their own words as soon as it was ordered them, The Yankee Congress, who unanimously approved of Wilkes, abandoned him upon the very first intimation that it might cost them something to hold on to him, And Bennett, instead of eating up Canada, instead of exciting an in- surreetion in Ireland, instead of fitting out 81x snousand ships to cruise against British property, coolly advises the Yankee Govern- ment to knock under, and, in the very spirit of Ancient Pistol, cries, ‘All hell shall gape for this”’ hereafter. Wonderful people !— wonderful press! wonderful Congress !— wondertul Secretaries! wonderful Yankec- dom ! Certainly the world never saw your like before. Even Egypt, *‘ the basest of kingdoms,” is respectable when compared to you. re nl A AA Tue Stars AND Stripes AND Hai Co- LUMBIA.—An esteemed correspondent and a gallant officer desires to know if the South intends to giveup to the Yankee« notonly the old flag, but Hail Columbia and every thing good, to which we have as much a right as they. As to the flag, we have already giv en reasons why anything that resembles it is likely to produce collissions in action be tween our own solders ; apart from the odium that belongs to what is now an em blem of an inhuman despotism. It is no longer the flag of the free ; it is the flag of tyrant and oppressor, and is stained with the blood of our sons and brothers. Let it be henceforth the winding sheet of he defunct Uniou. As the body without the spirit is dead, so is the United States flag, when it ceased to be the emblem of a free Government, is dead also. We have no partiality, however, for the Confederate flag. Our objections to it are that it resembles closely the old and now hideous ensign of despotism. We want none of its unnecessary stars aud sickly The two flags of the two nations ought to be as distinct and different as the character and instincts of the two peoples. As to “Hail Columbia,” we are willing to say ‘Hail and farewell.” We think the theme 1s played out. **‘Columbia’ is uolonger a happy land. Columbia, we begin tosuspect. is a humbug. We want to have a new coun. try in its songs as well as its laws. At the Yankees that is worth keeping. They are by no means satisfied with any national anthems, for they have offered a prize for a new one ; but even thelr money cannot pro- duce the music. Of what value will “rit Columbia’ be to a people who prostrate “‘Co'umbia” at the faint roar of the British Lion? Of what value any national anthem to a nation which has neither national spirit nor national honcr.— Richmond Dispatcy. ——— Written for the Wea) Soldier, Where Wilt Thou Die? BY M. J. M. Tell me, kind friend, where will it be, Where will death’s shadows fall o'er thee? Wilt thou die in thy home, In the land of thy birth, Where a few gentle loved ones Still cling round the hearth ? Or the hand of the stranger, Will it turn down the sod, When the silver cord’s loosed And thy soul’s with its God ? But if to the battle-field Thou art hasten'd away From the loved ones at home, From a bright, sunny day— If there thou must stop, And there meet thy doom, May the flag of our freedom Be waved o’er thy tomb. In the red tide of battle, Where might marks the right, If there—let it be In the front of the fight. If, in freegom’s loved cause, Thou findest thy grave, Oe'r its green, grassy sod, Let her proud banners wave; Let her eaglets look down Erom their eyries on high, When the soul of the stranger Hath gone to the sky. If thy body must lie Where the enemy stood, "Midst the groans of the dying, In a river of blood, May thy slumbers be sweet And thy soul with the blest ; May thy spirit be anchored In that Haven of rest; And o’er thy cold frame, In the midst of the dead, May the flag of our freedom Be waved o’er thy head. If thy death slumber be Where no friends gather near, Where no loved ones can meet To weep o’er thy bier, If thy body lie mouldering In the heat of the sun, Oh! may it ne’er be Till the victory’s won. When the conflict is ended, If thou hast been kept From a death in the field, By Him who ne’er slept, Then await the last war-sound, Then turn to the dead, And plant ye a banner That will wave o’er their head. Alas! then, how changed, When the conflict iso’er, When those who the banner Of freedom hath bore, And the voice that commanded, In silence must lie, How changed! How changed ! Each body will sigh, Our heroes, brave heroes, In silence must lie! Then turn thee away From the battle of dread, When thy heart beats with sorrow, To gaze on the dead. Then may you ‘neath the shade Of the Rep, WaITE AND BLUE, Return to the friends I'o whom thou bad’st adieu. eee A Aen. 1 The Louisville Journal makes com. ments justly upon tha various propositions for new confiscation laws, and concludes as follows : — « Qur own conviction is opposed to any new confiscation law whatever ; but if a new law mus? be passed. justice and policy alike demand that it shall be prospective and con- ditional in place of retrospec ive and absolute and that the confiscation of slaves be so de~ tined as to exclude the alleged effect of cman- cipation. The sweeping confiscation of the property of rebels whether they return to their allegiance or not, sacrifices one of the ost poter.t agencies of the Governmont in bringing the rebels back. It gives the reb els no chance. It shuts them up between resistance and destruction. It drives them further away from their allegiance in lieu of nviting them to retorn. 1tis stupid as well as cruel. A well guarded confiscation law, however, taking effect a suitable time after the rebellion shall be put down and the auth ority of the Government reasserted, and de- pending not on the departure of the citizen from his allegiance but en his refusal to re- turn thereto, might exert a very wholesome influence. Still we question if the time has yet come when such a law can be either drawn with highest fitness or enacted with the best effect. Cur decided conviction is that for the present, at least, we have legis- lation enough on the subject. We think that Congress. for the time, may with great propriety resign the war tothe army. And we trust it will.” eel lee. Cost or THE ARMY.—The estimates to be submitted to Congress for the fiscal year, give the military expenses thus : - Cost of armv proper $343.600.275 Military academy 199.611 Fortifications, ordnance, &c. 16,160.100 Army militia 200,000 Total $360.159,986 That is upon the supposition that the ars my 1s not to be increased on its present bas sis. S— . Mr. RAReY IN SpaiN.—Mr. Rarey the horse tamer has arrived at Madrid. A letter from the Spanish capital says: “Mr. Rarey, strange to say, does not appear to have roused the curiosity of the Caballeros, who possibly consider their knowledge of horse flesh already superior to that of all others. However, he did perform before her Majesty Isabella and her Royal Consort, if report speaks truly, in white kid gloves and a dress coat, and having successfully calmed the fiery temperaments of two half wild Anda- lusian colts, recieved a donation of £200, which must have sent him on kis way with full purse and a light heart. Moreover ’tis +aid he has challeeaged the lovers of the bull ring to subdue, without the aid of matader weapon or Toledo blade, the wildest bull they cau produce.” AA AA —— A Bill has been introduced into the City Counci} of Nashville to convert all c:t- izens between the ages of 17 and 45 into policemen, for the purpose of watching tho city by night, all of whom shall take an oath to support the Southern Confederacy. Pass. Not v.ry good —The sleighing. ed first reading and referred to the Police Committee. ° GREAT BATTLE AT SOMERSET, KY. _ CINCINNati, Jan, 20.— A batilé was fought .y ip at Somerset, Ky., on Saturday, between the, _. Federal troops under General Schaipff, aud - the Rebels nnder General Zollicoffer. 2 The engage-aent was_commenced in the morning snd Iested till nightfall. =~ : General Zollicoffer was killed and his army entirely defeated. The loss is heavy on both sides, |SRCOND DISPATCH.) ee LouisviLLe, Jan, 20.—Gen. Thomas tels~ graphs to hesd-quarters that on Friday hight -* Gen. Zollicoffer came up to his encampment and attacked him at six o'clock on"Saturday morning, near Webb’s cross roads, in the vicinity of Somerset. " Ehime At half-past three o'clock on Saturday «fs “ow. ternoon, Zollicoffor and Bailie Peyton, Jr. *" * had been killed, and the rebels wére in full” °° Springs. 38 The Federal troops were in hot pursuit.” Two hundred and seventy-five (275) rebels were killed and wounded, including Zolki. coffer and Peyton. The dead were found on the field. 2a 0A ed The Tenth Indiana Regiment (oét séver- retreat to their entrenchments at Mill ty-five -killed -and’ wounded. "No “farther” ~~ particulars of the Federal loss’ has yet reach- ed here. _ . : Indiana Democratic State Convention. The proceedings of the Indiana Democratic State Convention have already been briefly stated by telegraph. The details present many features of interest. Thero was a grat- ifying evdence in the Conventioa of 8 willing- ’ 4 a ness to forget former divisions, and to unite = for the sake of the Union; upon the consérv- .,