NOW , - iraoes a ;mum ti " *Wet ever mother, Aid the dyi . rg ;wadi I bear; Ate FoOkieledater law dear mother A/ rt* Won 1 47 afrathieaaekpear% to.morrew thee elbow balarplaial, Thin isitsinully shig dais mother, t Ault°oa '~lD loot ogste. CseaMi.—FarewehttOther ied -- Rear my *Moo on ' , Mirth *pia, • - But oh I 7001 0411 remember mother low I dieriohed you(' dear name. • 4. cOllllll4llll . Mats are lying near me. Odid,in death they'reeleaping now, Bo Old mother bende above them, Praising kisses on theirbruw. Oh be* sadly yidid I hear them, ' Breathe the name of mother dear, Sighing death is gladly welcome If dear mother were bur bore. • Cnones.—Faiewell mother, be Now the shades of night are falling,. -Deng forms with choking vo l ibea, Bzloathe to all th It kat farewell. AA they through, the branches sigh, a Borrow in the sparkling waters, ' 'As they murmur sadlyby. ' Coolly! .—lfarewell mother, Is is Sion my voice shill cease forever, All my cares on warp be o'er, By this sparklhig'atinding river, I shall sleep•forever more. Comrades all around-me mother , Col 4 within the clasp of death, toes could tell you hdw I blessed you, With my latest earthly breath. Csonos.—Parciell *their., Am Tell the 0116 whom love I eherleb, Faithful friend of long ago, Death has surely broken now. Twinkling Ettaril rut watching mother,. From this silent gory sod ; White-robed Angela linger near me; Soon kr bear me home to God. Clissamir—rarowsdi 4;.4,1mr, apin heaven, Whom no Marmara ovor shod, lam waiting for you mother With a ciOwnntsm my hood. Published ty ,requul. A GOSPEL SERMON. Preached at Ottumwa, lowa, by, fider J. H. Flint—Addressed to all true Chris tians. , = thing are yours, whether, Paul or Appbllos, or Cephee, or the world, or life, or death, or things present, or thine' to come ; all yours, and yn are Ohrist's, and Chfist is 001's let Cur. 3d chapter, 22d, 23d ver ses. - What more Can 'God give or what more can a christiaµdesirel ely soul over whelmed in contemplating the gift, cries out "it is enough." What further enhan ces the value of this boundlese inheritance is that our Heavenly Father controls it, for us, causing "all things to work together for goat to them that love him, and are called according to his purpose." Rom., oth ohapter, 28 verse. But the most glorious provision of all is, that all God's children are joint heirs with Christ. The estate in llot parcelled to each heir, were that the ease, then some might possibly squander theirhportion, and fail at last ; but they are joint heirs, hence their destiny is identical with each other, and with Christ their el der brother, who has wrought out their re destpl'im by obedience to the laws and pre cepts and by suffering its death penalty by vanquishing and destroying death, and Lim that had the power of death that: is the De vil." He brought light and immortality to light He left the tomb a victorious conqueror. as cended to his Father, and our Father, tohis God and our God; whom the heavens re ceived, and (frowned him-Lord of all, and whom the heavens ntusb hold, until all the blessed children of God, his younger broth ern, are gathered honui to hear the-wel come voice of their Judge and King saying "Come ye blessed of my Father, inherit the 'Kingdom prepared for you from the founela- V 1 of the world.' Where they shall bid an inertial farewell to all sorrow, pain and death; where envy, malice, pain and war can never enter to mar their peace, or in tereupt their joys, when in that blessed State of immortality, they shall bask in the smiles of their heavenly Father, drink end lisa draughts of his boundless lovo, and spend an eternity in feasting on the - joys that are poured into their souls form God the fountain head of price. "Think Oh, my soul, if eis-so sweet, On earth to sit at Jesus feet, What must It be to wear a mown, And sit with Jeans on the throne?" Having this briefly alluded, to some ,of the blessings that God confers upon the peacemakers, I now appeal to you, ono and all, to answer before your God, and your own consciences the all important question: Are not those blessings worth laboring for! Are they not sufficient stimulant, and incen tive to prompt you to engage in this sat saorificing labor of love; for all those bleier ipge, are you not willing to bear and pa tiently endure the hate and malignant slan ders of wicked and blood thirsty men ; aro you bettet than the:blessed Savior who suf fered abuse and slander and cruel torture fir beyond what we can know or conceive ? They said If he be sutleVed to go on, and the Rouutue will come and take away our place and nation. "lie caste out devils through Beelsebub the Prince of devils.— The rulers and men in authority pursued him with a tlend-like,Seal,.until they indict rid upon him unjustly a traitor's doom, they "vrtisitha him upon a Roman 'roes ; yet Paul affirms, orhatlor the glory that wag eat upon-him, he endured the dross, despised the Shame, and he is set down-Off the right hand of God." 80. 12th chapter 2d versc*. 4.. Did my Lord suffer, and shall 1 repine." I *Tramways that many have and will falsely accuse me for treason= pronounce me a trai tor for no cause limier the heaving,' only that I labor and plead for peace. • I have to say to all each, that if from la boring to cultivate love, union ; and peace, among men, and pointing out the evns and calamities of war—if pointiaft out true Christianity. laboring to proclaim the gos pel of,posme and warning men to slum tho God dlehonoring. and earth polluting, anti- Christian religion, that has so long, And still contibues to. cause the worlddand cer , tainly it is for nothing else,' you choose to heap upon me these bite reproaches, than X ea] lo you, pour on yourabuso and slat der; I will bear it with'all the patience that God, gives me ► andirttut Almighty lots me live, I hope to p or you, and labor for peace. DOvid tit sweet singer of lintel said "41 my right hand forget her cunning, and myiongue cleave to the roof of my mouth, rather ``than I should oease to pray for the Peace of Jerusalem. I de .wire to emulate his example, and cease not to labor and pray for the peace of the cone- 4•17-4.• _ • appeal to you, ladies, though physically . . . . . • 1' I • . - . • • • - ~ (i_ • t.. '-; 1 jelnlinr 1 t • ~, A 1 . (. 4k r. . . , For Me Watchman. • 1110T01"- PM Vol.. 9. the wettkev vesSeha yet in point of intelioot and moral virtue far superior to man. The formation of woolen was the-last and dnish ing stroke of creation; open' her the Crea tor has beeteWed those liner virtues and an gelic charms that have so nobly fitted her to be the kelpie:tate and companion of man. Upon her the, oottliding husband bestows his entire love and affection, to the wife of his bosom_he gives his whole heart with out reserve, over which she can „sad does exereinsout a*QM._ unlimited control. Blr - • • t . ble sine, sEe Otens -doirn and controls hie angry' ..=• leads him in the noble paths of virtue. Bay notthatihts is a fano • sketch or an over 'rum eu ogy upon t e All history, lammed In -profane, demon strate that it's ander rather then over-, drawn. The Prima Creator has given to , a woman a mighty power, that'oan by hap bb exorcised for weal or woo. It was by the facinating power °falba women that man war first led into sin, and hurled from 'his primeval reolltude. Paul affirms that ho was-not deceived, then he was not influents ed, in his not by any other agency Or power than that of the woman. She cientralod the heart, and sealed his destiny. Sampson the Nazarite of bed, with all hie superior endowment, who hod resisted and slain his thousands of men yielded to a woman's power and lot his glory and life thereby.— It was a women that conquered the mighty King Ahasuerus, who reigned over the vast empire of one hundred and twenty-seven .rovinees to wit: Queen Esther. When Etunan7iTici - KiEWT - Colilef coonottor; had pllocured from the King a deoreo that doomed to death the whole Jewish nation —a decree that according to the laws of the Modes and Persians could not be altar ed. a=4k~_ aThea-oatuu Qus.co. mifl , Arln_royalStato. To save the Jews fro*the-dismaj fate. The King could not resist the pleading entreaties of the woman whom hp loved, he yielded to heSspetition, and grinted her re: quest, and thus she saved a mighty nation from destruthon. It was a womans influ ence that cr'nnoti Solomon King over is real, and saved the nation from a usurper's ponce enticivil war. Those instances, to gether with thousands more of Bible record, without going into profane history,, estab lish the fact beyond a doubt that a woman's influence to a very great extent controls the,gestiny amen. Then to you, first, I make my appeal to engage with all your energies in this hely and heavenly calling. Wives, you that have been led by a loved and loving husband to hymen's sacred altar, and there before Cod and twin have mutimHy pledged your hearts and affections to such other for life ; you whose liven can only he happy in the enjoy ntelit of the society of the man you love, to you I appeal„in the name and in behalf of the thousands{ ofgloving wives whose hearts have been made to weep tears of bitter sor row by the cruel and desolating hand of war; who have gazed for this last time upon the loved form of the man to whom she had confided her entire affections, to whom ills had looked forlootection and support while breasting the storms of life in thin unchari table wet Id, but alas! he is gone from her forever; he has fallen a victim to the demon of war, the said steel has pierced his heart and shed his life blood, the sad tidings are waft to ears, her only /Tope of earthly hap piness is blighted forever, and in many in stances, site is thrown upon the cold churl , ties of life world. Could you but enter those wretched hovels and mingle with the bereaved families, hear the erica of inno cent children in teal* begging for bread,' and behold the heart broken mother, clasp ins her babe's lovely form to her breast and wirth streaming eyes upturned to hea ved exclaiming: "Great Clod, temper the stoim to the shorn lamb, look litnoequisaion down upon a 'poor bereaved and broken hearted widowed mother ! Oh I be my hue bond and helper, and a father to these fath erless children !" would you not turn from sconce with sad and heavy hearts, and enter your closet and pray Almighty God to roll back these dark Floods of war, stay the effusion of bleed and speedily restore peace to our distracted country I Then I entreat you to labor to calm the raging storm, cast oilnipon the troubled waters, strive in the spirit of love to break down that spirit of hatred and revenge that may be burning in the heart of your hifsband, that lies at the foundation and forms the basis of all war and bloodshed, and endeavor to preyail upon him to cultivate in its stead love and good will to map, this do and heaven will reward you. • Mothers, I appeal to you. You whohave 'borne Warn in sorrow, and who love as none but mothers can, those gifts God hue bestowed upon you; those little ones are placed under your oars and tuition, upon you reete the responsibility of training the infant mind and edgrafting therein those moral principles that will guide their steps, and shape their social and moral character • . iper years. Few, indeed, are there era dictated from their minds the lessons of so eial and morel duty reoeived from their ten der and loving mothers. Theta then is a noble and heavenly work for you. Labor to sow deep in the hearts of your sone and daughters those heavenly virtues of love and moral honesty ; and bring them up in the nutirre and admination of 'the Lord; teach them to reverence the holy scriptures, and adopt them as their infalli ble guide through life ; faithfully warn them against the creeds and doctrines that al ways engender war and strife among 111011 ; .to do good unto all men, to walk by the gol den 411 e, do unto ethers as you world have them do unto yon; 'tib' deal justry; love mom, and walk humbly with God." To strive for peace and live peaceably with all mon; to suffer wrong rather than to do wrong to lead quiet and peaceable( lives, to pd Volters,ottlieir country and% yield a -cluiprful obeflience to its supreme Impress upon them the evils and ealattifities of war, and blessingeof -peaoe—in a word strive to teach the tO, be moeznakers in stead pf war aVitators;, and in so d oing you will have faithfully discharged your duty as mothers, and guardians, In the sight of God, who remembers your work and labor of love and will reward you bountifully. Fathers, eons, and beothers, I now appeal to yell. In the name of suffering huntanity; in behalf of the bleeding cause of Christi.- 'aptly, in the name of all that is sacred I entreat you to pause and retleet,' mainly con sider how many hundreds of MA:mitosis of our. bra hers and sisters have 'drank. to too dregs the bitter cup of agony ape, brought upon them by this cruel andtkytrl oidpl, war,and how many millions arc 'doomed the,eame,fate it the calamity 'is not" averttal. LoOltaround you aud:isee the' demoralisation; A pe , and crime that is swooping a e bestugt,over our fair and happy °gantry Quit ws„have proudly fled "the land of the freitind the. Vane -"Of -the brim." - - Can you behold gm rapid snide pf. • Attatr BgatONTE ; PA., FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2,• 18644 icism, infidelity, and crime, that is sapping the very fouudation of our magnificent tem ple of liberty, pourink out the heart's blood of hundreds of thousands of the best and bravest of Columbia's, sons up6n heir own pure uudulliecl Soil, that the Clod of Heaven has consperitterfo freedom •aud a resting plate to the oppresled of every clime. •- Cap you look upon the millions 'of your. fellow creatures whose heart', pro bowed down under intolerable burdeni or teetudtt lated griefs, and who• van only End' reposb' and, ru.d. iuL-gravif—frottr - those-16m%tog • obarehea desecrated, defiled, and polluted by b asp emous in .e : , *omen and ohilaritn'thriottonod to detittrfbr the heart. of noigkbor against neighbor, brothers against Milkers, thtentening de,- struotion and civil war 4 'I repeat, can you took upon such Bodied and not weep over ese calamities that are Vat tho'bitter fruits of war? Then I entreat you to .ko to work as,peacemaitera, first i to titek to drive out of yourown hearts the evil Spirits of malice, hdta, and envy, those lusts that engendered strife aud war, then go to your neighbor, in the spirit , of tivh, and, plead with Lim in restoring pence. l i enite off those insulting epithets of "secessionist," "traitor," tie., that'have •alinost become household words with many; remember suehepitlits are per tonal ingot's, end can do no good but arc always productive of oVii. "Angry words," says 6olomon, "att./Toth up strife, but a soft word tomcat away wrath." Guard well your language, and Inbar in ion" in the good samara' rac.c.-moeng, though compf_lled to differ with your neighbor or brother in your political faith, he willing to accord to him the stole that you claim for yourself, hon ed!, of opinion. Adroit that mon may differ in opinion rind yet be loyal and hondot. in n-woni.,-seett to cultirato love .iind good wil among meu, end positio will iwirtstirdy.fol. low. tun now done. I have labored to'oils charge faithfully and houestly a Ottly I owe to my God , and rhe cause of Christianity. I pray yhtt to weigh well the subject and the remarks I have to day presented. Bo ahapo your future action upon the issues now be tore you, that you may have a couscionco void of offence heforp God.,io whom we Milk. all render an recount for the part we nave acted to duef fearful drama, and may the God of Lovo and Peace be wijh you. The Burning of Chambernburg—Ttia • jeot of that Act as Statod by eral Early. As there have born tratlictory state- MOWS in regal d 5:7 - authority by which Chambersburg . s burned, and the pun: poses f-r whiCh it was done, we print 'be low, from a reliable corigispondent at Wil liamsport, Md., 'a report of the remarks made In that . town by Gen. Early upon that and other subjects. The' 'occasion of the remarks is given by our correspondent. It seems that some days after the conibigra do" • Chambersburg, (on Saturday - , August* Gen. Early, being then at , in Washingtoin county, Mary land, despatched a guard to Hagerstown, with authority and orders to arrest six named citizens of that place. The gnard arrested Isaac Nesbitt, A. 11. Hager, Fred. crick McComas, Samuel Ogilby, Rev. Mr. Edwards, and Bev, Mr. Hyde.' Mr. Ogilby hail permission from the officer in charge to go to his chamber for his coat, on a promise to return: He forgot to comeback, I hoWever, and in Lie absence of mind wan dered out through his back yard. Only five, therefore. of the prisoners were btOllghtle fore the Gorrerah- 7 -Previeuely-the -Rev, Dr,- KerfooL and Mr. Cost, of the College of St. James, in Washington county, had been arrested under similar orders and paroled. Several gentlemen who had been reputed to be, "Southern syrupathisers," and who are, our correspondent says, certainly not sup porters of the Administration, but ns loyal to the Constitution and Union as niiy who tread the earth, promptly repaired to `Gen. Early's headquarters, and, with a generosi ty which hod not 'been- manifested . by the, gentlemen under arrest toward .1 - 1;0;s when in similar trouble, urged with earnestness and effect the release of the prisoners. 'When the latter wore brought before Gen. Early, they were addressed by him sub stantially, our eurrespontlant believes al most, if not quite literailyr as follows: "Grs - rtritilf !tape had yon arrested merely as hostages to secure the release of six gentlemen residing near Hedgesville, is Virginia, who are now imprisoned by the Federal Government, in consequence Of the% burning of the house! of Mr. Coakus, by .4.d'infederate troops. I have examined the foots in the case, and am thoroughly oatished that the 'burn ing was Vainly aectdental , --that, in burn-. ing some railroad property which they had been ordered to ,destroy, the fire, ip, spite of their efforts, was curautualelite ' d to the house of Mr. Cookus, not far distant. And yet those six gentlemen, a Bev: Mr. Tongue, a Methodist preacher in that village, who was romorloble as a pious, good man, who did not interfere with politics, and five other gentlemen in the neighborhood, who ware I Jiiet as innocent ca ignorant of the approach or purpose of the troops as any of, you. are now in prioon in consequence of the Burn ing of that house. The.familios were sfripped of all their personal property, and having no means of conveyance the (laughter of the preacher and the 'mice of' one of the others, walked 1 1 -sight lifileb-to eat beadquartere, and with streaming eyes and sad hearts implored my aid in some manner 'to afford relief. They first wishetime to arrest some of their Union neighbora;*but I did not feel it proper fort the Southern Confadernoy to retaliate upon its. own citizens. Those men, however, misguided they may be, are still citizens of the State of VirFinia, - atul under the pm taloa:of Lei laws ; wo hepo and.trust they will keen spa ,their errors, and yield a ordlakettlegitutee to her ,Gonernmtint..; But .Mtheylalutabinat, it =met tievelie on, the Slate of Virginia to-deatiwitAthemaooord lag to her own lawn. Amer° difference of politioal Opinion outeornot Itnd. meet not Cub:tact them to military role.' And, there= fore, inflexibly opposed as I always have been to the destruction of private property, or the molestation ,of non-conibatcnt citi zens, yet it is always in the power of one army to force the other to retaliation. Tolllustrate my own views on , that sub , jeo, perationkto ea fit, very recently; a' 04)4 iljatimoe *pee t2e apyrayeit • . • , =I "smart *Lions's AND rzinsuum UXION." a Very severe sentence of Iwo- years 3n the, penitentiary, passed, upon a soldier for stealing the horse of $ nototionsly avoided .IJblon. man. I will furtlerremark that this ia the fifth , limo I have, been in liariMnd at the hepd'of an strntyl yet I belleie,not.one private hones has beekinjurpd nor ono,non 00Inhatent molested . . Once I marched al most to the babble of the Sustluehanneb Harrisburg, and thence down to Wrights ville; wheu ,the Federal troeps,,to escape ourparsuit, set 4,re bridge in the middle, whence the flames pidly extended westward, end from its prp ;why placed the . . troops bad jUst own o to len, • c • ; •y, l••• c• era army : a large r number of my men wer6 from that region; mid very 1111turs,117 tait •* strong impales to retaliation; but at my. very urgent amai Asti' with ahicrity and energy, joined in a • united effort Mid actually extinguished' the flames in lisle. .to save the town, ,and werviol•ly rewarded.by the grateful thanks of itattitiFens, who also bitterly denounced their own troops for ex posing than to eu.qh danger. In York, Pennsylvania, I found two large manufactories engaged in making railroad coin for the. Oovernmeut, which, of course, it was My duty to destroy ; but a slight ex amination satisfied me that' to`buen tgese would striouslY endanger a large portion of the tows; and hence I &pared them for a moderate ransom. Gn my return, I partly reirtterdtay advapeing track, and was great ly surprised to fluti so little evidencO or trace of the passage of so largo an army. rn irrtl — hrink tiro Mitniii army, very little damage had been sua twined. Recently, in Maryland, the house of Coy. lirailford woo hatincti without my orders. B r ut I must-IK4 4104 -approved-R.; -fsadilia4 I Imenimeseist. etnaltllinve =tiered it taliktion for the burning of the houssall GOV. Letoiler, whom LkoOw to be o ce , poor wed live .41er valtia r„..... 1 ront of Wash (a were very deter -7 , iou,e of Mr. Fraikk . actually It:moved, F.onier of rol.ahly supposing it, to he / on, the member 6f ;he Pederel .... As Boon as 1 comb up I bullied'. st.pped rho prooveding, and compell- nom, And whogo thmily WOM nA. a 71111110os to romoYe clothing o:digi Wes. Afterwards, alma it:igloo, some of my ts mined to destroy I'. Blair, who its furniture long to l Cabin 40,4 Fthe men to returumvery at tick - so far SS I knew, and plated • n guard to protect it. The house of hie ram, htenteoreery Weir, a member of the Cabitiet i was submitted to different rule, for °iflow reasons. Gen. Hunter, in his recent raid to Lynch burg, caused wide-spread ruin wherever he passed!' I followed him about sixty wiles, and language would fail we in describe the terrible dcsolatiou which marked Lis path. Dwelling louses and other, buildings were almost universally burned ; imple ments of husbandry, anti everything availa ble for the sustenance of human life, se far as he could . do so, wdh everywhere destru e y, ed. IVe found many, very many, fatuities of helpless women and &Mildred Who lied been euddetily turned out of doors, and their houses and ceidente condemned to the flames; and in sumo cases, where Awn:id rescued some extra clothing, the soldiers bad torn the gammas Ina narrow stripe and strewn them upon the ground for us to witneßs when we arrived in pursuit. Gen. Hunter has been much censured by the voice of humanity eyyrywhere, and he deserves it all; yid; he has caused seemly , one-tenth part of, the devastation which bee I been committed immediately in sight of the headquarters of General Meade and Gen eral Grant, in Eastern Virginia. °For exam ple—in Culpepper county, where General Meade held his headquarters, almost every house and building has 'been - burned; very few have escaped the 'Mines, and utter des olation is seen On every hand. Even a samil tannery in 'right of Oon. Mead's head quarters. whom a poor man tanned a few hides for the rreighbors on the shares, to furnish Ames for the poor women and chit dren who wore necessarily left there, was burned by the army, and the half-tanned skins drawn from the vats and cut into nar row strips to prevent the possibility of their 'being useful. Recently they have burned the residence of Andrew Hunter, near Charlestown, with all its conletits, requiring the fatqily to :Italia by and witness thwdestruction oT their ItOmb. They did , the same with the house of Edmund J. Lee, near Shephe.rdstown, and repeated it on the buildings of boa. Alex. H. Meier. Such things of course cannot he long en dured, and must provoke retaliation when ever It Is possible. Accordingly, I bite]}} sent Gen. 7%loCnr - uslatul to Pennsylviftin. did not wish to retaliate in Maryland, be cause we all hope and believe that Mary land will eventually be a member oc the Southern Confederacy. I therefore Kennlm to Pennsylvania, with written instructions to demand of the- authorities of Chambers burg a ,tfum whidlis would be sufficient to in 7 detnutfy flies° gentlemen, and also some other damages wltleh I specified in the or der, and on default in their Compliance, he was instructed to burn the tewn,,which I learn was done. I was very reluctant, and it was a most disagreeable duty to inflect such thunttgo_ upon those mitizone ; but I deemed it an imperative necessity to show he people of the Federal States that war has t wo sides. I hope and ',believe it has had, and will have, a good effect. I-saw with much pleasure, since then, an able hr ticle in the i'Vttional huelligeneer, which mil led uppk ti :lie North to eonsideg gravely whether, acs a ,node of warfare as they had inaugurated 'is I to yield a mumps com mensurate tosits cost. , And now, gentlemen, I wilt repeat my sincere regret that it am obliged; to subject you to this inconvenieneel have so ob ject but to procure the retest& of those six citizens of Virginia who ere now wrong fully imprisoned, and therefore will tmako you as comfortable-as possible. It 'is notb rious, that many of our. most respectable citizens, al p have been imprisoned by your Governmenl.• for similar or lees serious causes, have been confined lathe same room with conitertined malefactors. Gentlemen, you need have no fears of such treatment whilst in my custody. I propose to retain four of you, and release the fifth on hip pa role that he will uee his utmost efforts to pro cure the release of those six genilenfliai• If ho succeed, you will be discharged at igloo; but if he fail to ncoomplish this within two weeks, he must surrender himself again to my custody: In conclusion, I will add that no citizen or' resident of Maryland had any preyiens lithowleilge of my purpose to -arrest you;. that your names were Lirnishodi"by one oonnticit ed with my ar c 7 ; : l and without reference to b the greater a.lutaffaily of your., feel. Inge. The fa that you Ire riillutpd to be Union men causes he bitterness a ,tesslaßg on my part, for I - do not forget *MI was, a 'Union man myself sebilangt 11 /4 1 , Onion possible. 1 was en•ol&lissi g , ~.,:4111'. and voted for Bell and .Everett. I was delegate. from. Franklin co, unt,y ih the Vir ginia convention, and zealously opposed and voted against the ordinance of eigfessien from , the beginning to the end. Hut 4110 eourite or events has since thorougly Balls ; fled me of my error. I 110* ponsmenteusly believe that it was an absolute necessity; that the politionli salvation of Virginia de pended upon it. . Question by one of the Prisoners.--fie it kr u o Ile reporte4, that Om have oteo arreeed 44 ° 14 the lsr-oft conquered Miles Kerfoot-end Dr. Clost,.at the College-of-81. c eLeoe a eeiee, of atitlled, wail, And Rio ehn .e ekend teoene dr the bailee:lege Net • r I have arre James, tor the same cause ,sintithe • Ding.antlike a dirgeon the .e. • , of the but for a different lir .ose. There is tu , *.r.,ro seen front the ethekt • of flie burain .esera c o gy an a e• r . oy• advanced in years, a venerable gentleman ,distinguished for.. his Christiet• 'piety, and greatly roapectod In the community. Many months ago he Was arrested by the Fodernl Government. as a hostage for two members of a bops j.legillatuk in Western 1' irgillia Virginia, Whobad been-arrested by the Con federacy. ,Afler a long imprisonment, the Confederate Government, considering his age, his and Other circumstances, copacited to an exchange, and Dr. Boyd Was released. But very BOOR after, he was again arrested do a hostage for a man taken within our lines, in eititen's dress, and whom! paper. found upon hint furnished con vincing evidence that be was there under a corrupt agreement with a Federal Provost 11terebal in Maryland, to decoy uegroest •: • Virginia, trbe used as Stibstitutes soi -1 diers in the Federal army, the vy bouts- Jles or profile to be divid 'etweon them. " - as it might Mit r e mond as n Esi WllB fedi, • .-stonsented- to--as -exedmar; but its prisoner winr by that time ill with tynlielil fever, and finally died in prison, which f1)0111d, view, have released Dr. Boyd. 13u1 he is still held on the pretext of being itAiostagtx fur some other. But he is still held on. die preto_t of being a haste*, for some other. To effect his releivis, I have to-dAy arresked Dr. lierfooCand Dr. Cost, at the college, but paroled thenvboth on condi- Val that they procure the release of ,Dr. Boyd, or, if they fail to do this within two we'cks, I hitt.they return to 14 loustody. yhteblion by to l'it.oser, (Roy. NT? as)—Ploise, allots me to inquire' whether there, may not some tliffiewity arise from the fact- that you have only five of itt4 prison ers. and yet require the release of six? Gen. Early—That is very true sir, but I can hardly suppose the Government will raise such a question, seeing the only ef fect would bd to compel me to pick up Ofew more, sufficient to e(11.111.liZO the numbers. The prisoners feelingly urged bins to re lease them all, offering their parole in the strongest * possible langnage. The General hesitated a long while, and was slow to to yield. Finally, after 6 long dim:l66lon, and several personal friends of the prison ers had vouched for their good faith, they were all released on the Bathe conditions as were prescribed on the release of Dr. Ker r foot and Dr. Cost. For the substantial doeursay of the re pert.of Gen. Early's remarks as given by onr correspondent, he refers to ap kose who were piesent, including the prisabrs , theniselyea. In private conversation, and on many oc casions in public, iu the presenee , of °ill sens of all ehades of opinion, Gen. Early intimated that he would frequently visit Maryland and Pennsylvania, and that be would pursue the war of retaliation as long apd as bitterly as. eitetimstances might re . qtdre.—LAgo.- Now TAX Ixxsts.—lt is thought the abo lition members of Congress will put tho fol. lowing items iu the tax bill: For i4isrenpectfully spanking of Lincoln, tvio buhdred dollars and the, confiscation of• property. For dreaming disreSpeotfully of Lincoln, fifty dollars. For taking the natno of any abolition office bolder in vain, twouty five dollars. For speaking disrespectfully of private republicans, ten cents entffi. For voting a Copperhead Itioket, twonty live cents. -• Every Demooratlo"oeffiee holder taxed fitly cents a gay,, (3uildliy included.) lWcry man not drafted to bo taxed ten dollars. ( Abolitionist s except ed.) or eve).? , white male child born alive, Len • • . For every white female gild horn olive, ten oenie. For every male negro child born alive, a premium of twenty dollars. • For every negro female child born alive, a premium of ton dollars. For not believing that Mr. Llnodu is the Government, a tax of five hundred dollars. For talking against the right of Repub. Roans to steal, a tax of fifty dollars for each offense, a six months imprisonment. For dying, a lag drone dollar a Ilea save ruid except those Americans of Afri can descent., who have a right to die free of charge. No PEACE EXCEPT Tnnorau ABOLITION. —The people may cry for peace, but so long as Lincoln is in the presidential eliairthere will be no peace, for lie Mill listen to P 6 proposition for pease until Slavery has been abolished. To this we have at bust come. will the people fitment to ,thisf If not, they must at the neseelection vote him out of.eflice;- and if through fraud they are not allowed to do this they had bettor join the ranks of the Confederate array than submit to be made the "tools of milt an Abolition rule or ruin adral4ratitin.—ViisF•eite Emma, , • • !WONSEI THAN Tharrotte.--ln, his speech at the Cleveland Convention, (ion. Cooh rane delivered the t, following aentiment; which it was said, was received with much applause: • • "Intimately 4onneotea with, these ,rights is the freedom of thepreea ; and Mead-min istratton or the man who wouldsim a bloii at it is more guilty than•he salto iS a traitor —to the tante aids country.l— s-,A. tient interesting fight is nonft.ol . -1 ruling the Abotilidn party. Thy., jaunt shrewd -end- fer-seoing -of their leiniere-- melt se Seniter.. Wide, ar'Wnter Deere:" John W, rophiy,„AkAfti,:--;iireWit'ver, of ~e wappine anifoinfor eogie Other, 414. - ompo•halde4lqa *Willi it oad,tkr T 401 0 1 . 4 /.9e. 31Wieufte7. .11144 ;.! -WM ~M)lA . i irt l6 - - .0 1 0#0dokt 0 . 4 . 9 4 11 +44.* e.,;" :,• buL sent him to Rich _ Ler of war, and Dr. Boyd as tt hostage. After n long and pri gonment, the Confederate Gov • • • • • so g44d n man, II , e . 0 NO. 34. . . , HE 64,1ERRILLAS.. Awake and to horse, my brqdidl, For t,lle dawn la glionnetiag groy, And hark ! in thi cnieirlihrushirogl Thera are thet,that troaMlivray. "Who cmeth r;,"A tribtad." , q) . tiod ! I sicken to toll; Por thorarth 86 , 0241 earth no longer, Ad its sights are nights of hell 9,pir Ido .ord an aughters fly I've aeon /where the little children sank down in the furrow to die. "On the banks of the battle-stained river stood as the moonlight shove, ' Anti itglared on the face of Ay brother Aa thereat wave swept him on.. Wham my hem wait glad arn hsh A4d horrors arid alnium hat h t . or I found on the foreign li • Mitt trees of my rrifd. " TlPyy nro thrh , n, And with In ; U.!: Thai le entree upon tu , , thnn the Rena's ettitst art the tiro 1.1 the savage pt ip his untaught heart I rThe tree to out hearth that bound him They 'have rent t arises away, And thatitlertiq Tirol, riith their nratlaesa, — To be aluttatt• as brutal AA they. " With halter, anghlorrh, and Dade, And la • mar to t"......nd-of-tire-dintra r They preach the goryel of taunter, And Fey for lust's kingdomto ensue. To saddle: to saddle! my brothers! Look up to the rising sun. Anti rusk of the God who shines thliqn" Ziiietlinr docile 1110 fl ose ho done! "Wherever the, vandal coineth Peens home W Ihyu t. lth yew' otoel, And when nt 1114 bosom ,3 ou enuot. Mho the eerpcut, go dtritte at hid heal. "Through thieVod and wood go hunt him, Oreop up to hiq cittnoqire And let ten al•hia eurpnes blackan, W here one of our bruthers,htith thud. ...la his fainting foobsoroinarolies; • Tn liteflight flout tho striae', fray, Tn the +uan of,the lonely ambush, Thu 'dobta we owe him pay. "In (Imre band alone le vengeance, But he Arita; with the heeds of men, , And hie blight wodlt: wither our tuanbe ,, a - If we smith not the emitter .gain. • I "lly tbo grarea where our fathers slumber Ity the shrines where our mothers prayed, 13y our houses, mitt hopes, and freedom, Lot ovary morn swear on 64 blade, °That he will not sheath nor stay It, Till from point t 0 hilt it glow With the flush of Almighty vengeance In the blood of the felon foe." They swore—end the answering sunlight, Leapoilind from their lifted swords, And the hate in their bouts made echo 'To the prath,lp their hiirnins words. Thera's weeping in all Now-nsload.. And by Sehoylkill's banks a knell, and the widows there and orphans • Hew the oath woo kept lien tell. • —Rio/woad Examiner THISi THAT AND THEOTHE R. -The Contedorstat have regained al but a little oornov of Arkansas. k ➢Mies Belle Boyd the colebratet Confederate spy, Lae arrived in England and is.making a eenaation. , . • -The Atlanta papers say Vat Hood eaptured, In the battle on the 224, more spades than were ever seen in the Corded ate States. —Now England patriotisml—Sending agents into the rebellious &atos to stoat niggers and then soli them to the Govern ment for Soldiers. Lincoln's two greatest generals are Orneral naltion and Gen,ral amscKplion, tly these he oonquers, not the South, but the North --The new aboddy candidate fur Vice President is professionally ,a tailor. Lot him stick to his trade and make a straight docket for Lincoln. -- It is the easiest thing in the world to talk war, but it is the hardest thing.pos sible to fihrit. The proof of the puthling ie the eating of It. —Johnson, the Republican nominee for Vice President is nolot citizen of the United States, nor (Can ho rote, according toe Into act of Congress. The ministers who 'told Ike Al mighty in a prayer that ~v te are prone to chanyd," told a falsehood, for we are borri ribly prone to shiliplt4tcts m and there is no *align in ront•ill fast 3.. y a prominent clergyn,tah. it E., prayer, i4o(1: •;Olve to President I.iiia. o lu all the nLility conetiat eni with Thy far we L.Ltaw tbd heneeas Iluven —An auctioneer said of a gentleauan whd had bought n table, hot »oi er came to take It away, that he was ono of tho 'moat cent-for-table persons ha ever know - in his whale rionrse of --Of three republican papers in Mil waokie, two are for Fremont. The Daily ',Wisconsin, formerly a Lime*ln paper,_ has ieft Old Abetted come out for the man who parts his hair'in the middle, —A philosipber says that what Eln colnites mean by thoanettann and the last dollar, is that they will be the last to go to the front and that they intend to steal the laid dollar fion tho treasury. - Mita havi• change of adminis tration at Washington. If we are to be eursid another year with the present sort of militarnmanagement, livery town along the genneyhmaia border will'be destroyed. I.BBowe were told to lota for‘ldn; I coin and a change, Cotton Wars then tan . I cents a ,pound. The Vic& wad for Lini coin end the'' change." Cotton now le $L 94'a potion': MAD le, it - requires*, rest, deli pf ochange" now to buy anything. • " 1 —. 4 .Trath•tatho most potent merit the %out dreaded Ni r o; Ihicoln4 tratiun, and N dup r sviip • ungtinartal.lido of- Yortlitchitille its clarion ionniViNtaßitliks *be in& Iwraws;deep %waft miesitileargt ettlm JNrp itt ,(Maim: ma4eten whine!, .rOsePt4o/ 1 1,4-440 0 34.it.thl • r,urnaai; m whiptilso,;elaiSourated ndege *grit itrlatgy Ihiteod.;:reatratettc-LNWiI itereeM se hal honest aen may get theiiihw., • • , • • v-sit • -, Fbr Me Watslmmo& i STAND FIRM. ' • It is 4101 first. galled Ipy, Ten papr4lllll , adWSW . this al was too wiling to resit! I days atter 4 1 07:ntntrAn0 '— ,to fight 'for the Utiles* spine tbs • ol rebels.. ?f ere they' iigsdii riiititii• •• • n were not ao iaetly thfeel4ed ibis-1316mi; ma Abe!ti toadies bad to Wiwi their "gibellgt . " the lying blisinedesset - t` the soldiers that "we cold whip the PAW before breakfast.," anilthst "the'oidtreni tots would be geared into opener, and to lay down their wtms or searte.'' While bold, baie•leeed end 'tberftlati Bee I 'An." the beginning the" "Cforiritreitenr h&kept the soldiers enveloped in - darkness by mean* of greenback's, 'abolition -dleunions.:dderu owns's, and kowling 'monkeys - proftipsint to tho fdtowers of Christ. Ilse poor de luded, ignorant, rap-headed follower's of the itriwr *attire,. George • Thourpeens" ins& to-dty prvitching fire anti sword to their devoted "brethren" in error, instead of the pnfe doetrinei which the gospel ditiolosee. colot's , encases. of r Amor nosing that s'nl.jortty n'aeleers .are opposed Ito their able jargon. r ErEr! ly praying for bravery," tot , the er- To prowl the above, here •la out vtratit• front a letter from privatc J. If. W., to • gentleman hi Rebereburg. .• • ' "Well; 'hut do you tlituk about this • war ?" "I think ies's d-t-d . huAnik;4int to kill • off the men." We might quote numerpue others, but we hope, this will suffice to show that thlslitel fug of “humbug" is prevalent to u..;emtt,rk— able degree among the hohliere. Where is this great would-he-Copperhead-orusher tifaf ? or the'ehiet czevutiva of cae , mob4sar • officials? We were bola. Ymi prorateeS to exterminate the Southern peopleresti then turn the soldiers on the nortltem! . iMp porheads and ++lr.ve them hissing to thei!! holes." We _are fifty tiMes s&puger SAIL 4ftler—arow, Bring yout-nna-zrented diers, end you will never get them awe, again from "sweet home." Neither could"' you oompel them to fight, for they would consider themselves tree from martial Jaw and leave their officers "stioffing in the anutt."" in that case it would be tbevery acme of madness for Lincoln end hie mar plots to steal the amount of negroes neces sary to hnld , dlsautisfiod men in rubjeollon. Seldiers, maintain your rights and roe eert others! Freemen! never become serfs. We are not living under Government which submission to rulers was the first and only law. We. are American ciliate* Look at thii, toiling brethren. , Four 'care ego our Constitution 2nd laws were admin istered by Democrats, and wq were liiing in unity, prosperity and happiness. Now we have a tory in the White House wlso has changed - the programmountil it stands them fifer, disunion, demoralization,• misery' nal woe. flee the future of our country: ,Lin coln with his utmost power Is attempthorto presa,the last breath of liberty out of us "whiterasses." He endeavors, by Ms rile acts to extinguish eYery spark of "fitaleo , Sovereignty" and "White !inptesintojr.,':7- those blessed gems of which every Demo &at was and is the possessor. lie has 141.- _ . teeded on his career of dissipation-1M Ain potation till the Anteritlan people whited far their folly in electing a coarse, jesting and brawling horse-jockey to thrive and . fatten .. at the expense of our liberty. It human nature can no longei' endure the fond ode ddspodo rulers are heaping upon us, whit . then Rtpudiation. Sbduld that be reject ed and the taxes be enforced, revolution will follow. The'popular Passion valleys lea slough of catastrophes. It is` a moral natal. incise direetedbir deine&gues and fanatical impostere, which will at length spend 111-1., force, and subside almost as suddenly AS it arose, leaving the wretches who have en it on, stranded on the beach, where they will seek In vain to hide freer the fiirse wrath of the people whose rights and prop erty they have outraged anddeetroYed. The debt which Lincoln and his fellow-traitors have roiled rap over our beads we tnnst7 de artroy, or it kill launch us into the G Despair,. It is already more than. une-idf the value of the- property of the Mirth. Wilt some abolition war bully toll 'istatinar we are to preserve our liberty inviolettautt• der snob an taimenee load as thiek! Lee Pc not havo our rights trample etpoililtn.X3l44l- ger . by inftunouto mistiegonationiste 4o seek to transform us into beasts. They,nro waging war un sister co , equal ;linty!' forte purpose of separuking, theta Abraham Africvmus, the first. tills us ideally that "he will fluish hia ,jgb,ifit takes lain three years longer:" WWl!' nal we submit to nigger, tax,inearconu folk, and every diabolical artifice the itar-detiablis mu doyley, for the destruetien 'of_ e Atovezn. Merit on the uthitebasis,-41tree Tellrelotiger. God forbid! May the 'nasal lieeinliee We, and may Lineoly himself be 211nIshed bhg. before that plot. Ile lb 'a hese 0100,1 Ir. Thou subjected iii his trinity orwridemwrithe by the Constitution . .and 'the leers. -Ile whole world abberithict:— . la hat foiseclithn guilty of high treason. The- grind julep of justice, equity and moray has weighetUttjrn in its balance, and he- is found wanalikg. =cm Be must ta11...:- i 11. • Follow-Copperheads I The, maih' u.,fopus now, Is "Be unit*S4 end stand firm." ~,14 4 us not deceive ourseves s ep.loagerV ... and futile imaginatiop4 7 l-wvevellik ",..4 )1 1T 44 11! t minds purer and solemn knaghts. watchword be Liberty or peol / 114; ; 7 May Godgrer4 us puoooks: '...',. l• ' ;4,4460 ... ~ - . ' —Horsee aireetei,lilitinilleita I he New York Mhos, Midge. tp• blip Y en mee° with tioVottfedoosi.f l / 4 5- A ., ~ '. .;/ - a apt Fit s states tilts,,;, ; 4/-„; , ...,.. , , ,; ,, , ,k eat for pone '140.a po I " , ' • th e paciffitifijft Of iiiirr ,eoustir be . . so -alinpulCoor wialiot**l94:soll"4o4lo4l" even/ siPPPW, - , 4' , 4 .41 ,- 4 • __________ -'-'