The Watchman, Sof W FUREY" | Editors * BELLEFONTE, April 17th, 1862. Ameeting of the Democratic Standing . Committee of Centre county will be held the Court House, in Bellefonte, on Tuesday evening, of the April Court, to select Dele gates to attend the State Convention, at Harnsburg, on the 4th day of July next. S. T. SHUGERT, Chairman. COMMITTRE : S. T Shugert, Bellefonte. Henry Noll, Spring. Alex. Sample, Eerguson. John Poorman, Boggs. Joseph Roller, Benner. Joseph McCloskey, Curtin. R. M. Foster, Miles. D. O, Cower, Haines, Dr. J. M. Bush, Patton. John Divens, Walker. Jared B. Fisher. Gregg. Geo. L. Peters, Union.— W. W. White, Harris. John Garbrich. Marion. John Copenhaven, Taylor. Eb- enezer Records. Huston, Daniel Fleisher, Potter. Jacob Pottsgrove, Halfmoon I. Buffington, Milesburg. John Smith. Peon. Wm. Holt, Snowshoe. 0. Munson Rush.— John M. Holt, Burnside. S. B. Leathers, Howard. Emancipation is Revolution. . While our country is being tossed to and fro upon the billows of civil strife, and whilst the rebellion, although apparently beginning to wane, is still formidable in its proportions, the true Union men—the lovers of liberty and free institutions—are watch: ing, with sleepless eyes, the movements of a certain Northern faction, in and out of Congress, whose every endeavor, in fact, whose every desire, as manifested by their acts, appears to be the overthrow of the Oonstitution made by our Revolutionary fathers, and the substitution in its stead of one of their own making. It is hardly credible that any American citizen, who looks upon the resplendent achievements of his fathers in establishing, upon this conti- nent, the purest, the happiest, the most prosperous and most powerful Government on the face of the globe, should so far be fed astray by the teachings of a poor, mis- erable, false philanthropy, as to desire the change ot a single item, either the dotting ofan '¥ or the crossing of a ‘t’ in the wording or the spirit of that Constitution, whick the vencrable men of ¢ '76” cstab- lished as the inviolable charter of the rights of the pegple of this great Government.— Yet, however incredible it may scem, it is. nevertheless, true, that there is a great body of men in the North in those States which profess to be loyal to this Govera- ment and which have manifested their de- vorion te their country and her institutions by sending their best blood to be spilled upon the battle field in the contest with our erring brethern of the South, who open ly advocate the violation, yea, even the de- struction of the Constitution and the old Government, in order that their false philan- thropy for the negro, whom the Almighty created an inferior being, fitted for no other condition than that of being held in subor~ dination to the noble Caucasian, may be gratified. Those whom God has made un - equal they would make equal by placing the negro upon an equality with the white nan, and granting unto him liberties and privile ges which he does not understand how to use nor how to appreciate. Insane and crim inal in the sight of Heaven as are their ef forts in thus attempting to overrule their God 10 his immutable decrees, and treasona- ble to the Government as is their every ef- fort to effect emancipation and the conse- quent overthrow of the Government, some unaccountable leniency or sympathy in those having the authority to stop their treasonable and blasphemous mouths. per mits them to persevere in their unholy efforts to effect their cherished purpose. Emanci~ pation is Revolution. It is admitted that in times of peace the General Government hae no power to interfere with the rights of the States, but emancipation is urged a war measure as a means of subduing the rebel. lion. If the preservation of the Union de~ pended upon the abolition of slavery, we would cheerfully grant them the right, but every sane man cannot fail to see that it doesnot. On the contrary, even the agita tion of the question will drive many men in the border States into the Confederate ranks and the passage of an emancipation bill by the present Congress, would, to a man, unite the entire South in the cause of the Confed- erate States. This is certainly not the true policy for our Government to pursue in these trying times. © The object should be to weaken the rebellion in every possible way. Anything that would have a’ tendency to convince the deluded masses of the South that it is not the intention of the Northern people to overthrow any of their State insti- tutions would create a strong, healthy Un- , ion sentiment there, that would, in course of time, of itself overthrow rebellion. But a8 long as abolitionists in Congress are per- mitted to talk their treason and threaten the destruction of the Constitution and the rights of the loyal Southern man, making no distinction between him and the willing traitor, just so long will the Union senti- went in the South be smothered and the bands of treason strengthened. Emancipa- tion is revolution in that it effects a radical change in our syatem of Government with- out the sanction of the people and in dero- gation of their rights. et A Beant 057 The rebels who lately occupied por- tions of Kentucky ought to feel a deep inter- est in our State. The thieving raseals took 8 vast amount of stock in it. — Prentice. Congress. One would suppose that in these perilous times, when the country 18 heaving and shaking with the agitations of the most for- midable rebellion the world has ever known, that our National Legislature would find enough to occupy their time in devising ways and means for the subjugation of y® rebels and providing for the wants of the six hundred thousand volunteer soldiers now risking their lives in defence of the Consti tution which makes us one ‘people. But it seems that such is not the case, and that these necessary measures are but secondary considerations with our Solons at Washing- ton. The present, when, on account of re. bellion, many of the slave-holding States are unrepresented in our Senate and House of Representatives, is deemed by the aboli- tion fanatics of the North as a most suitable and opportune time to legislate on the sub- ject of slavery, and when the slaveholders’ interest (we speak for loyalty only), has no power to resist encroachments upon its con- stitutional rights in the Legislative Halls, men who, all their lives, have been busy sowing the seeds of dissension and civil war, eagerly embrace the opportunity pre- sented to place their peculiar views upon the Statute-Book of the Nation. The prin- cipal acts of the present session of Congress —those which have occupied most time— are the expuision of Jesse D. Bright from the Senate, the passage of a Bill to abolish Slavery in the District of Columbia without a vote of the people thereof, and an Act to confiscate all the negroes in the South and turn them free and helpless upon the country. Now, while some of these objects may in themselves, if wisely framed into a Bill, in ordinary times, be unobjectionable, (and it is not our purpose to discuss their merits) this is certainly a bad season at which to agitate them. It is well known that the formation of a sectional party, based on a platform the main feature of which was hostility to the institution of slavery, and the election of a President thereon by a portion of the Union, regard- less of the wishes or sentiments of the other portion, constituted the pretext by which wicked and ambitious Southern leaders have led the people of the South into rebellion and arrayed them in arms against our beloved country. Now, when thous: ands of the fathers, husbands, sons and brothers of this land, are risking and sacn- ficing their lives in the camp and upon the battle-field to preserve the Constitution as it is and to restore the Union as it was mn the days of prosperity and of peace— now, when a mountain of debt (which the loyal men of this land will cheerfully pay). is rolling over our country—now, when the the civilized nations of the world are look- ing, wjth horror, on the spectacle of men of the same race and same blood slaughtering each other by thousands, it should be the tobject of the Representatives of the people to do all in their power to allay the bitter passions which have been aroused by sec~ tional conflict, and to re-establish, with the march of our advancing snd triumphant army, a heartfelt and devoted loyalty in ev ery Southern State. If the people of the South have been deceived by their political leaders, into the belief that the party which clected Mr. Lincoln would, by a sectional administration, deprive them of their con- stitutional rights, it would seem to be the duty of all patriotic members of that party as fast as the Southern ear is . pened by the Federal bayonets, to attempt to undeceive them, and by every honorable act to endeav or to convince them that the fanaticism of the North has not yet subverted that mag. nanimity of mind which comprehends th« whole Union and accords to every individu- al the rights provided for him by our fun- damental law. The masses of the South are not more fond of war than are we—they have no desire to see their country devasga. ted—their homes destroyed—their fortugbs wasted and their fields turned into a deso- late Golgotha But, as with us, to them liberty and honor are sweeter theft life it self ; and, as we have already seen .. demonn strated, when wicked and designing leaders get them to believe that the party in power are despots who intend their subjugation and conquest, parents surrender their sons. wives their husbands, and men their lives in defence of what they believe to be their manhood and their freedom. There are many intelligent people in the South, ani mated by good motives, who. deceived by Representatives in whom they confided. have been plunged into this tarrible and wicked rebellion. All they need to induce them to return to loyalty is to be convinced that they bave been deceived, and that the Government will continue to be the same kind and impartial parent in the future which it has been in the past. This we cannot do by the agitation of the very sub- ject upon which their minds have been in flamed. We cannot culm the ocean by in- creasing the storm that lifts its waves and rolls them with destructive force against the old ship. Let our Congressmen and Sena. tors look to an early and permanent resto- ration of the Union ; and to do this every sound that reaches the Southern ear from our National Capital, should be * The Con- stitution made by our fathers and cemented with their blood.” If slavery ought to be abolished in the district of Columbia, we would do it when the slave-holding States are all represented, and if rebellion is to be punished by confis cation, we would provide for that when the rebels fall into our power. Our article is becoming too long, and we will defer further remarks on this . subject until next week. From the Phil y of April 10th) Ihe Great Battle a nrg anding. To those who have learned s+ gacity by the experience of this war, there was evidently something in the Rebel despatch which came from Norfolk, uid Mobile, of a great battle near Corinth, and which was generally pro- nced a canard, designed to keep up the i ey spirite of their troops. But the true version of the story has now reached us, and we areable to present our readers with a connected summary of the rincipal events in the giant battle fought at Pittaburg Landing on Sunday and Monda last—not less remarkable for the bravery of our t10ops and the admirable conduct of our Generals, than forthe great results whch must ensue from it. The concentration of the Rebel army at Corinth seems to have been determined upon several grounds. It is the junction of two important railroads — the Memphis and Charleston and the Mobile and Ohio : 1t com municates directly with Mewphis. it covers New Orleans; it offers great facilities for the transportation and collection of supplies; it is near the frontiers of Tennessee, Alabam and Missssippi ; and the hilly narure of the surrounding country renders works of de. fence easy of construction. Here the Rebel generals had concentrated an army of from seventy to eighty thousand men; and here it seemed their dete mination to await the atta-k of Grant and Buell, in the hope 1hat behind their entrenchments. they could de feat the Union Generals, and perhaps retrieve the fortunes of the war. But finding Grant’s command, of McCler- nand’s: Sherman’s and Hurlburt’s Divisions at Pittsburg Landing. the temptation was strong to march upon them and overpower them. and if possible, drive them into the river before Buell’s expecred reinforcements could arrive. To thissend, the Rebel General. Johnson, moved forward in two heavy col umns, each about thirty thousand strong the left one directed upon Purdy, a smal town on the Corinth and Columbus Railroad and the other on Hamburg, a village a short distance towards the Northeast. Between these two lay Pittsburg Landing, on the Tennessee ; and thus their plans were laid to enclose Grant’s Army on both flanks, and make 2 Western Ball's Bluff. Their generalship was excellent, ag their fighting was afterwards proved to be, yet both were defeated, and their fortunes are ten times as deaperate as before. Our troops occupied the field just beyend Pittghurg Landing. on a line of fiom two to three miles, hardly expecting the Rebel at- tack, but ready, upon Buell’s arrival, to ad vance upon Corinth. At day break of Sunday, the 6th, however the Rebels were discovered in advance on our left, when Gen. Prentiss sent three hun dred men to drive in what he supposed to be their advanced pickets, hut what in re- ality was their vanguard ; and thus the bat- tle began. Prentiss was, for the time, over. powered By the storm of shell, grape and canister which opened upon him. “Grant for: med his line with McClernand on the left, W. T. Sherman in the centre, and Hurlburt on the right. The tactics of the Rebel Gen eral were soon obvious; he made a strong effort to pierce the Union centre. designing. a8 800n as the wings were attracted ta its support to throw his masses apon both flanks and push Graot into the river. The exact details of the battle tactics on either side cannot be given until we receive fuller reports. The struggle was tremendous and doubtful from nine o'clock on Sunday morning until night. Late in the afternoon was the critical time for our arms. Buell’s reinforcements momentarily expecacted had no: arrived: the men worn out, faint and hungry; the losses had been very great; throughout the day they had been conten- ding against tremendous odds, 38,000 to 60, 000, and their retrea;r was eidangered, if not cut off. Under these appalling array of circum- stances, the noble leaders did not blanch for an instant. Colonel Webster. Chief of Grants staff, with remarkable activity and energy, got a number of heavy guns to bear upon their right. and did great execution upon their ranks, while the gun-hoats, Tyler and Lexington. poured in the'r shells with tre meandous effect. Thus the matter stood on Sunday night; it was evident that a second hattle vas to be fought the next day; and that fresh troops would decide it, by estab lishing something like an equality in num bers. Just then came the welcome intelli gence that Buell was on the opposite side of the Tennessee in force, and that a strong column was also coming up the river from Savannah. The troops who had fought so nobly, and yet had not been able, against overpowering numbers, to achieve a victory, .rested on their arms during the night, whi e Buell got hig fresh troops across the river and into po- sition, and awaited the dawn. At last it came and with it the battle began anew.— Wallace rernforced the right; Wilson took post on the left, supported by Nelson. = The {fresh troops bore the rrunt of the battle of Monday, while the veterans of the day before who had already won laurels at Fort Donel son. although worn out with fatigue also accomplished wonders. The Rebe's fought desperately, as if the fate of their cause was at stake, Like the battle of Sunday, the renewed fight swayed backwards and forwards—now with a thundering advance of solid Rebel masses. aod anon with the crashing of the Union artillery. dissipating and scattering them like chaff before the wind. Buell, when he perceived their successful advance at a point on their left, threw regiment after re- giment of fresh troops upon them. under Genera.s Wood and Thomas. in a most Na poleonic style he was at once and by intui- tion *‘ master of the position.” At length, at half past five o'clock, Gen. Grant riding to the lefs, found the itebel troops waver nz and. dividing his bodv-guard into five parts, he sent them to head five re gimen's, which he led in person in an im- petuous and decisive charge. With a suc cession of yells. which added to the disso- nance of the batile, they moved forward at tae point of the layonet, and the panic struck Rebel host fled in dismay towards Corinth. pursued by the cavalry, and thus the day was ours. This battle will be long remembered by the casualties which'occured and the dan- gers to which Generals were exposed. Gen. A. 8. Johnson is said to be killed ; Beaure gard to be badly wounded—an arm shot off, and. on our side. Sherman had two horses killed and was wounded in the hand. while MecClernand and Hurlburt each received balls through the clothes. General W. H. Wallace was killed, as were also a number of acting Brigadiers, Grant and Smith were both wounded. although they seem to bear a char med life, movine through both days, amid showers of sh ¢ and shell. Confederacy i out of season — Prentice. Y | ing, we simp! ‘Toe Great Battle at Pittsburg Landing. CINCINNATTL, April 12. The Pittsburg, Tennessee, coirespondent of the Gazette says: The sum and sub. stance of the , is, that on Sunday we were pushed from disaster to disaster till we lost division camp we had, and were driven within a half mile of the landing, when the approach of night, the timely ar- rival and aid of the gun-boats, the tremend ous efforts of our artillerists and Gen. Bueli’s approach saved us. On Monday, after nine hours hard - fight- regained what we had lost on Sunday, Not s division advanced half a mile beyond our old camps on Monday. except Gen. Lew Wallace's command. The lowest estimates place our loss in killed and wounded at 3 000. and in prison ers trom 3 000 to 4,000. The rebel loss in killed and wounded was probably 10.000. — The rebels in their retreat left acres covered with their dead, whom they had carried to the rear. They destroyed the heavy supply trains which they had brought up. ANOTHER ACCOUNT. The Times’ special correspondent says : —The re sponsitility of the surprise rests with the commanding officer. On Friday a large force of rebel cavalry appeared in sight of our line and remained there, but Gen. Sherman. who occupied the advance had | een ordered not to bring on an engagement, con- sequently he sent out no corresponding force 10 meet them. They remained in that po- sition until Sunday morning, and served as a screen behind which Beauregard formed his troops in line of battle undiscovered — When the attack was first made, the Fifty- third, Fifty-seventh, Seventy-first, and Seventy-seventh. Ohio regiments displaye inexcusable inefficency. The latter fled without firing a gun ; others fired one or two rounds, then fled. The cowardice of these regiments left that point undefended. The enemy immediately closed in and sur- rounded the more advanced regiments. He also stated, that the Eighteenth Wis consin, and Sixteenth Iowa, fled alter firing two or three rounds. When the enemy fled they burned their wagons and left their wounded behind, all of whom are prisoners. W aterhouse’s battery lost one killed and sixteen wounded, Willard’s Chicago bat~ tery five killed and thirty wounded. One New Orleans regiment, the Louisiana Tigors, were almost entirely left on the bat~ tle field, killed or wounded. They were nearly all weaithy men, dressed in Zouave uniform. Gen. Prentiss escaped on Tuesday and came into camp alone. In the coafusion of the retreat he managed to elude the rebel vigilance. Beauregard intended to make his attack two dnys previously, but extraordinary rains impeded his progress, and delayed his arrival. Had the attack been made at the time intended, Buell could not possibly fave reached in time to save us from de- eat. Huntsville, Ala., Occupied by the Fed eral Troops. WasniNGroN, April 12. The Secretary of War, has received infor- mation that Huntsville, Ala., was occupied yesterday, by Gen. Mitchell, without much resistance being offered. Two bund ed prisoners were taken and fifteen locomotives and a large amount of rolling stock was cap tured, Huntsville is on the Memphis and Charleston railroad, about fifteen miles south of the Tennessee boundary and forty- five miles east-of Florence. Ex. President Piereoand Secretary Sew- On the 20th of last November a certain Guy S. Hopkins. of Detroit, was arrested on suspicion of some imaginary off:nce against the government, and thrown into Fort La- fayette, to gratify the spite of some political enemy. While there he wrote an anony- mous letter giving a pretended account of an organization in the North, rejoicing in the initial title of K. G. C. S. The ohject of this new, and wonderful secret association was, to overturn the present government, and play various most fantastic tricks. The initisls of a number of leading Northern Democrats were given as among those hear. tily engaged in the work. Awong other ab- surd things was the following, ** President P. has in his passage drawn many brave and influential men to the league.” The letter was intended #8 a hoax on the Detroit pa- pers, and was so full of ridiculous absurdi- ties that any editor of moderate capacity would have refused to be sold by it. Bat, instead of finding its way into the Detroit papers, it got info the hands of the remarka bly astute*S:cretary of State. Wm. H. Sew ard is & right smart Yankee, but he was completely Guyed this time. He thought he had a sure hold on one of the most hon ored, and honorable men of the Democratic party. Accordingly he deputes his werthy son, and private Secretary. to address a note to the Ex President ; ard just such a note as might have been expecied was sent. It was addressed to Franklin Pierce, Esq., was insulting in manner, and assumed the guiit of the party without further inquiry. To this insulting document, Ex-President Pierce replied in a very sharp, and most ad- mirable letter, concluding as follows : * Love for our whole country, respect for the reserved rights of the States, reverence for the Constitution and devotion to the no- ble Union, which, for ro many years repo: sed securely upon that sacred instrument have been interwoven with my best hopes for civil iberty—my deepest emotions and wy sternest purposes, from youth to age.- - If [ have failed to illustrate this in official station, in private life, aud under all circum- stances when it became me to speak or act, I have labored under a singnlar delusion. consciousness of which would embitter mare than anything else, the present hour and such remaining nours or years as may be in reserve for me.” To this admirable and patriotical letter Mr. Seward was not the man to make the reply which one gentleman would have been entitled to receive from another ; but mean contemptible, cowardly trickster, that he is. he creeps out of the affair, by one of despise more than any other, that man is Wn. H any other man in the land. He never was a statesman, and, by tl to bs = gentleman. — Fulton Democrat. [From the New York Herald.| ] Gen. Halleck's Opinion of Gen. McClellan. Our Oairo Correspondence. Caro, Ill., April 4, 1862. The Dearth of News about Cairo—Interest- ‘ing Conversation with Gen. Halleck—His Opinion of Gen. McClellan—The Reasons that Influence Success in this War— The Careful Strategy of McClellan-The Deeds of the Army of the West— Halleck and McClellan, Agreed in Principle— Present Desolate Appearence of Cairo— Heath of the Town —Music of the Bullfrogs, &c. The dearth of news from hereabout is get- ting truly deplorable. No fights, no ad- vances, nn retreats, no nothmng to vary the dull monotony of camp and shipboard life. In conversation with a geutleman from St. Lows last night, T learned some things that 1 must confess were new to me, and as 1 think the ides will be new to the public generally, and as in presenting it I shall not transcend the rules laid down for the government of the press. T will endeavor to jot it down. The gentlemen referred to I know to be a warm personal friend to Gene- ral Halleck. and shares much of that ster ling office1’s favor and confidence. Hence a weight will be attached to what he says, such as does not accrue to the sayings of or- dinary men. I wonld like to give his name, that the public might the more readily com- prehend the reason why I assign so much paper to the chronicling of his ideas, The conversation turned upon the operations of the army and elsewhere. 1 asked — ¢ What is General Halleck's opinion of General McClellan 2” ¢¢ Sir,” said my friend, “I have heard General Halleck say, in substance, repeated- ly, that he considered the military skill, science and penet: ation of General McClel~ lan as second to that of no man living, that whatever had been done in the West and elsewhere was but the carrying out of McClellan’s great plan of the war ; that the general idea of each and every of these move- ments was the frait of his foresight and knowledge of war and its appliances, and that McClellan had rough hewn the whole work and only left the finishing touches to the department and division commanders.” This coming so direct from General Hal- leck, led me to push my inquiries sull fur- ther, I asked :—** Can you give any reas- onable solution of the mystery that hangs so heavily over the operations of the army on the Potomac 2” He replied :—I cannot explain anything ; but I may advance an idea to you that I re- ceived from General Halleck not a month ago. In conversation with him I made near- ly the same interrogatory you have just pros pounded to me, and the General’s answer to me must be yours It is this, as near in his own words as I can repeat them :—¢ This is 8 war in which success rests upon consider- ations that do not generally enter into men’s calcalations, You are aware that the revol- ted States occupy a vastly different geo- graphical position from the loyal ones.— Health, incident to climate, food, water, habits, &c., is as different in the two sec- tions as could be conceived of that of two distinct nations. Certain Hygienic princis ples are to be studied in carrying on a cam paign as well as the more extermal appliances of war ; else disaster and defeat will follow. An army must be sound physically as well as patriotic. Enervation, prostration and climatic maladies must be avoided if possi ble Now the seceded States are eminently unheslthy during a certain portion of the year. The months of August. September and October a. e those during which the trop- ical diseases rage, which so fearfully deci~ mate even the native population, and the more generally carry of those habituated to a different clime. The yellow fever rages through the South periodically every two or three years, and as that walady has not ap- peared during the last two seasons it may naturaily be expected this year. In view of this state of well established facts, a far seeing general would try to devise means to avoid the consequences. Ifa Northernarmy should be marched southward to the Gulf shore during the sickly months. and should there be attacked by a maladiac foe and cut «ft by sickness and tropical ennui. the exe crations of a nation would be vented upon a general who would thus expese his troops. Hence it becomes necessary to do what bas to be done in the extreme South early in the ear. The Southern Atlantic coast, the Gulf rates and the Southwest must be overrun daring a season of comparative healthful: ness. Rebellion must be crushed out and rebel troops driven back to the cooler re gma of the mountains of North Carolina, estern Tennessee and Southern Virginia during that season when nature is in favor of, instead of against, an exotic army ; then once hemmed in by an overpowering force, the enemy must fall—it is inevitable. Now under these circumstances, it is not hard to see why a skillful Commander in-chief should exert himself to retain the bulk of anenemy’s army in a position where he can at the prop- er time strike a death blow the more surely. If the flower of the rebel army be coaxed to remain at Manassas or north of Richmond, so as much of its strength is wasted ; our armies in the West and South have the less to contend against and our victories are the more certain. The Western army clears the great Valley of the Mississippi of scces sion ; The Gulf squadron re-establishes the coastitution in the popular cities of the South the Roanoke and Beaufort forces are push~ ed inward and norihward ; aod next autumn when the sickly season approaches, all, con- jointly, are driving the rebels back to the locality where a fresh army of loya! wen are waiting to receive them, in & country where Southron has no advantage over Northman. Then comes the great decisive action of the campaign. The Union troops flushed with constant victory, meet those dispirited by constant reverses. Who can doubt the result ? Un the other hand, we will suppose that the commanding General and the War Department yield to the ‘clam« or of those who only seek for carnage regard- less of consequences, and order an advance upon Manassas or Richmond. The result would be simply to dri. e the rebels away to his Yankee dodges. He apologizes to be second stand, and a third or 3 fourth, each sure, but not inan honest, manly, gentle-! time leading the federal troops farther and manly way. He shows his dirty spite, and | i narrowness of soul through the whole affair. | climation, and into more sure sud terrible He cowers under the lish like a whipped: mortality. No; let McClellan work. Let hound, but he snaps maliciously «8 soon as | him keep the rebels concentrated as far he can do so without danger. If there iS one man in this country whom the people should . Seward. A dishonest politician, a | come which will justify the present appar corrupt schemer a cowardly and unprinci- ent inactivity of the army of the Potomac. — . pled man, he h 8 done more to bring about ‘ the prege t unhappy state of affairs than! 5 ; rrespondence be 07 There is no salt in the Soyth. The |fore us, he shows that he does not know how | some other point, where thcy would make a farther away from the localities of their ac- North as possible, and so keep rebel forces from coming farther south, and next summer or early in the autumn a denouement will If the enemy shall retreat, let General MeUlellan advance to their positions ; if not let him remain in ‘statu quo, until he is Louisville. Tribune-ated indiciduals and ues —who wil a i. and at puilosophy, sneer at its humanaty, and affect fo doubt resto ableness ; aad will howl at every breath for an * advance upon ’* though it cost the life of every Union aow in Virginia. But, thsok God, their number is sul, and their cali~ bre easily measured. Theyre of the genus *¢ negriphobi,”’ properly defined by Webster —people who shed great tears of sorrow over the wrongs of antiquated Afrique, in- flicted by the juvenile Americus ; men who not sacrifice the chivalry of the nation upoa the altar of their negro mania. 1 suppose: you have a few such people at the East. Cairo begins to wear a sort of Neapolitan look, anything but agreeable to ‘the eye, and the odors that salute the olfactories are not as fascinating as nitrous oxide. About one half of the entire surface of the town plot is now under water; the streets are impassable except for boats: the wooden. sidewalks are floating around in a sort of free and easy style ; the steam pumps lull us to sleep at night witn their puff, puff, puff- ing, while ten thousand bullfrogs and aquat- ic songsters keep us awake all night with elng: Still, strange to say, the health of the town remains good, or rather is getting, better, and it is not impossible now to obiain_ well people enough to nurse the sick. The prevailing malady here is dysentery —regu~ noxious miasmas that can be conceized of, and more than ever were named ox claysi- A Cool Letter. Col. John Morgan, the notorieus maraud- er, is an enthusiastic admires of General Buckner, late of Fort Donelson, now of Fort Warren, So, as Buckner wrote to us from Fort Warren, Morgan, after bis late exploit in seizing the railroad cars at Gallatin, Ten- nessee, thought he must right to us too.— There is no telling how extensive a rebel correspondence we shall soon get to have. —' We snnex Morgan's epistolary . performance premising that we vin nothing about Robert 0. Wood, Jr.,”’ whose name is uni-. ted with that of the more famous land- pirate. GaLLamiN, TeNN., March 17, 1862. * &. D. Prentice Esg.. Louisville : Sin: We beg to express our disappointment in not meeting you here as we had anticipated, and to assure you that we feel confident that bet- ter luck will crown our efforts at some future time. We trust you will not long delay your promised trip to Nashville, as this would put us Ay in- convenience of visiting Louisville. : All well in Dixie, and send their kindest re- gards 4 “ ROBERT C. WOOD, Jr., C. 8, A. JNO. H. MORGAN, Com’g Squadron. The precious pair of bandits profess to. have felt great disappointment at not find- ing us on the cars seized by them and their accomplices. at Gallatin. Unquestionably they would be very glad to get us, thinking no doubt that they conld readily exchange us for Buckner and his army, but we don’t believe they had the least thought of encoun- tering us on the cars they captured. We have reason to think that they took very . particular pains to satisfy themselves that we were not on the train before they ventur- ed to attack it. We won't call them cow~" is not equal to. They didn't like with, their small band, to seek a combat with the man, who armed only with pocket pistol and; jack~knife, had crossed Green river at an, appointed day and boldly and successfally defied Buckner and his whole army in what was claimed as their own territory. Wood and Morgan express the hope that we shall not long delay our promised trip to. Nashville, and they promise themselves ‘bet ter luck next time.” Out upon their poor and pitiful hypoerisy. If they had wanted us to go soon to Nashwille that they might try their hands on us, they would have left the road in a condition to be travelled, but, instead of that, they tore it up for a great distance between Gallatin and Franklin.— Yes, the rascals destroy the road so that the. trains can’t run upon it, and then indite a brave letter, professing a hope that we shall immediately set out upon it because they are impatient and chafing to meet us! These two wandering robbers say that if we don’t make a speedy trip upon the road they have torn up, they may be put to * the meonvenience of visiting Louisville.” Ah, that’s a thing, if we remember aright, that their master, General Buckner, seriously: contemplated a few months ago. Indeed it was a darling project of his, He fixed the. feeding day, and had his dinner ordered at the Galt 4 guests invited. The day arrived, and the. bat che dinner wasn't. M and Wood, may soon dine with their idol, but not in If they want so much to visit our city, one would think they had better have taken an opportunity when their heads quarters were at Bowli en ot rive, or, nearer still, at Nolin, instead of waiting to be driven, as they have been, one would thus bave saved themselves a long: ride ; but perhaps they consider that the longer their trip the more plunder they can gather up in making it. We do wonder how such fellows as Mor» gan and Wood feel in view of their own deeds them. They may congratulate themselves nately for them, they have necks, and nooses. ‘We have no doubt that the shockingly nervous and catch their breath the apparition of everything be Siightast resemblance i: two up-righta and a cross-piece. 4, We can tell them for their comfort that this morning we selected the tree that we in their 1gst moments, and several enterprig- ing young men out of business have alr : applied to us for the privilege of turning a penny in these hard times, by cutting blocks and boughs from it to Suscdiate upon as James B. Clay did upon his father’s house. We have no objection to sending one good stick to Morgan and Wood, for they deserve it, We are not disposed to close without ad. ding, that if Morgan and Wood will pledge to us their knightly word (there may be honor among robbers as well as among thieves) to attempt in person to take us dug- ing our trip to Nashville, we will, as soon a8 the mischief wrought by them to the rails road shall have been repaired, name the day when they may expect us. What say you Rebel ¥— Lowwsville Journal. ron ready to'make every shot tell its most against ’ n.'’ There are those at the West—certain (7 Fort Pulaski has been captured by the Federal troops. preach long homilies upon humanity and’ - curse a general for a fool because he will their infernal and intolerable nocturnal rev~ lar Cairo dyrentery—aggravated by all the ° ards, but there are some things their courage louse, and his. male and female assembled guests were ‘* down in the mouth,’: reen or on Green hundred and fifty miles further off. They and the startling events going on around / that they have no consciences, but, unfortu- : 2 we’ feel at the sight of a rope-walk, and shudder at: |. bearing. the shall use our influence to have them grace . vr