„Seini-V.; ethig Olen. --Will. LEWIS, Editor and Proprietor. TERMS.-" Teta Gunn" Is publiehed twice a week at 81.55 a year-75 cent/ for air months--50 acute for 'tato uwatha—in advance. HUNTINGDON, PA. Thursday afternootr, July 18, 1861 COL. HOLT'S ADDRESS.—WO give in to-day's Globe, the powerful address of Col. HOLT of Kentucky. We want every man in the county to read it. TiE POLITICIANS AT WORK.-WO see by the Journal (0 American of this morning, that tho Chairman of the Republican County Committee has is sued a call for the election of delegates on the 10th of Anguest, to meet in County Convention in Huntingdon, on the 13th of August, for the purpose of putting in nomination' a ticket for the ensuing General Election. We bad hoped for some arrangement by which party strife in this county could have been avoided this fall, but it appears the patriot politicians of the Opposition party are determined to force the 1100- , pie into another political fight While the real patriots of all parties are in the battle field fighting the battles of the country. It was a great mistake that in recruiting for the companies - Which left this county, that the few political office-seekers who are now trying to disturb the harmony of our people, had not been forced into the ranks and marched down South—and if shot down, the loss to the country would not have been very serious. 8051ETMNG NEW.-IVIIA.T DOES IT !LEAN?—In the call for an " Uncondi tional Union Bejiublican County Con vention", we find the following: ~ The voters of the Unconditional Union Republican Party, and all others unqualifiedly in favor of the policy of the Administration of Abra ham Lincoln—of a vigorous and un compromising prosecution of the pres ent war until the authority of the PRESIDENT of the United States is established and obeyed in every portion of our country." Will the Chairman of tho U. U. R C. C. explain? litra RETURNING VOLUNTEERS.—The term of enlistment of the brave boys who first rushed to the aid of the Gov ernment, and saved Washington from falling into the hands of the Rebels, will expire in a few days. Many Reg iments will disband, but a majority of the men will re-enlist for the war after they visit their family and friends for a few days. Perhaps it may be neces sary to detain for a month longer many of the three month's Regiments after their term expires. If Gen. Scott asks them to remain, we feel very confident not a man will refuse. When our boys do come home they should have a pro per reception, and we have no doubt they will receive IL- Our ladies have this week for warded to .our three years " boys" some 56 under-shirts, a number of pairs of Stockings; &e:: They are now em ployed making upfelothing for the ar my hospital: sor Some thirty new recruits for the 2d Rog. Pa. Reserve Volunteers, are now in' town in charge of Major •Dare, waiting - orders to join their Reg iment. They are all able bodied men, and look as if they would work well in harness. Stir Prof. Coyle and Miss L. Day, 'are on a visit to Hollidaysburg. On Tuesday, the hero of Fort Sumpter, Maj. Anderson, who was also in town on a visit, called on the party at their hotel, and after passing a short time in a pleasant conversation, bid them a friendly farewell and retired, leaving with the landlord a gold coin for rilliss Day. Miss D. intends to have finger rings made of the coin and the name of Maj. Anderson engraved upon them. THE NEWS. WAstitseroN, -July 17.—Gen. Mc- Dowell's army commenced a forward movement yesterday afternoon. He has now fifty full regiments of volun teers, sent from this point, numbering quite a thousand men each. This is exclusive of regulars, 2,500 of whom have already joined him,, with 1,000 more, including 600 marines, two full batteries of light artillery, &c., yet to be transferred to his command. The grand corps d' armee will, doubtless, number about seventy-five thousand men. • The Republican of this morning says the general Movement was in the di rection of Fairfax Court House, to which it is no great march from the right of Gen. 3lcDowell's lino, though it is fourteen miles front the' extreme left. The army, it is supposed, would halt for the night this side of Fairfax Court House, which the rebels will probably take occasion to vacate, and resume their mamh in the morning. They took with them three days' rations.— Four mounted batteries of eight seige guns and several squadrons of cavalry are in the column, which consists main ly of infantry. CINCINNATTI, July 1.7.—0 n Friday night a detachment of three companies of Col. Woodroffs second Kentuckey regiment attacked 500 rebels between Mad river and Barbonsville on the Kan awha, comp] e tely routine' ° them. Ten or twelve rebels were killed and a number wounded. The Kentuckians had but one killed. Gen Cox's brigade, destined to operate against the rebels under ex-Gov.. Wise, was rapidly mov ing up the Kanawha. Brilliant Reception of tho Hon. Jo seph Holt, at Louisville, Ky. HIS ADDRESS [Front the Louisville Journal, July 16.) We have never witnessed a popular ovation to a public man that could have proved more gratifying to the re eipient than the demonstration at Ma sonic Temple, on Saturday evening last, on the occasion of the reception of the Hon. Joseph - Holt. The Tem ple was crowded with citizens of both sexes, who met spontaneously to do honor to the gallant Kentuckian, who, as the citizen and Statesman, had the manliness, the courage and the patriot ism to resist the iniquitous influence brought to bear upon him during the late administration, bringing all his great ability and the mighty weight of his influence to tho support of the government whose existence ho bad sworn to maintain. Mr. Holt was introduced to the aud ience by the Hon. Henry Pirtle, in the following eloquent terms : .31r. Holt : You are welcome to Ken tucky, your native State, you are wel come to Louisville. We are proud to shake the hand of a man who has been so faithful to his public trust—who has done honor to his State and honor to the nation. Out of Congress (there we had true men) it did our hearts good to look to wards two Kentuckians in the service of the great public, in the trying times of last winter and spring; Bolt at Washington (where fraud and treach ery- raged all around) almost alone, with a firmness, a capability, and a patriotisni that challenged the atten tion and the judgment of Christendom; and Anderson, left by. himself, sur rounded by enemies in the Bay of Charleston,whose fame shall live when the waves of ages shall have worn away the granite of Sumpter and it shall fall undistinguished in the sea.— I know you feel yourself honored to have his name mentioned now. It was you who would have relieved him, and helped him to maintain the ban ner of the Union. When you came to the relief of the country you infused life into the al most dying State; treason commenced scattering from Washington, and the people of this country began to have confidence that the Executive branch of the Government was again true to them and the Constitution. Your ad ministration of the most important di vision of the Executive Department at the time, was under the most embar rassing circumstances ever seen in this country. Your ministry was short, and after harm irretrievable had come ; States were marched out as if they were not States, but a helpless band under the dominion of a mob, and un der the frolic of the drum and fife; but History will place your name in honor when she writes of this epoch of de moralization, of win•, and the woes of war. 0 may she soon ho able to write for us a page of peace and Union ! Mr. Holt then took the stand amid prolonged and deafening cheers, and spoke as follows a - Judge Pirtle : I beg you to be assured that I fun most thankful for this dis tinguished and flattering welcome, and for every one of tho kind words which have just fallen from your lips, as I am for the hearty response they have re ceived. Spoken by any body and any where, these words would have been cherished by me, but spoken by your self and in the presence and on behalf of those in whose midst I commenced the battle of life, whose friendship I have ever labored to deserve, and in whose fortunes I have ever felt the liveliest sympathy, they are doubly grateful to my feelings. I take no credit to myself for loving and being faithful to such a government as this, or for, uttering, as I do, with every throb of my existence, a prayer for its preservation. In regard to my official conduct, to which you have alluded with such earnest and generous com mendation, I must say that no merit can be accorded to me beyond that of having humbly but sincerely struggled to pefform a public duty, amid embar rassments which the world :..an never fully know. In reviewing what is past, I have and shall ever have a bit ter sorrow, that, while I was enabled to accomplish so little in behalf of our betrayed and suffering country, others were enabled to accomplish so much against it. You do me exceeding honor in associating me in your remembrance with the hero of Fort Sumpter. There is about his name an atmosphere of light that can nevergrow dim. Sur rounded with his little band, by bat teries of treason and by infuriated thousands of traitors, the fires upon the altar of patriotism at which be ministered, only waxed the brighter for the gloom that enveloped him, and history will never forgot that it was from these fires that was kindled that conflagration that now blazes through out the length and breadth of the land. Bravo amongst the bravest, incorrup table and unconquerable in his loyalty, amid all the perplexities and trials and sore humiliations that beset him, he well deserves that exalted position in the affectiOns and confidence of the people that he now enjoys; and while none have had better opportunities of knowing this than myself, so I am sure that none could-have a prouder joy in bearing testimony to it than I have to night. Fellow Citizens : A few weeks since, in another form, I ventured freely to express my views upon those tragic events which have brought sorrow in every hearthstone and to every heart in our. distracted country, and it is not my purpose on this occasion to repeat these views, or to engage in any ex tended discussion of the questions then examined. It is not necessary that I should do so, since the argument is exhausted, and the popular mind is perfectly familiar with it in all its bear ings. I will, however, with your per mission, submit a fo AT brief observations upon the absorbing topics of the day, and if I do so with an earnestness and emphasis duo alike to the sincerity of my convictions and to the magnitude of the interests involved, it is trusted that none will be offended, not oven those who may most widely differ from me. Could one', an entire stranger to our history, now look down upon the South and see there a hundred or a hundred and fifty thousand men marching in hostile array, threatening the capture of the Capital, and the dismemberment of the territory of the Republic; and . could he look again and see that this ar myis marshalled and directed by officers recently occupying distinguished places in the civil and military service of the country, and further, that the States from which this army has been drawn appear to be one vast, seething cauldron of ferocious passion, he would very naturally conclude that the Govern ment of the United States had commit ted some great crime against its peo ple, and that this uprising was in re sistance to wrongs and outrages which had been borne until their endurance was no longer possible. And yet, nu conclusion could be further from the truth than this. The Government of the United States has been faithful to all its constitutional obligations. For eighty years it has maintained the national honor at home and abroad, and by its prowess, its wisdom. and its jus tice has given to the title of an Amer ican citizen an elevation among the nations of the earth which the citizens of no republic has enjoyed since Rome was mistress of the world. Under its administration the national domain has stretched away to the Pacific, and that constellation which announced our birth as a people has expanded from thirteen to thirty-four stars, all, until recently, moving, undisturbed and undimmed in their orbs of light and grandeur. The rights of no State have been invaded; no man's property has been despoiled, no man's liberty abridged, no man's life oppressively jeopardized by the action of this Gov ernment. Under its benign influences the rills of public and private prosper ity have swelled into rivulets, and from rivulets into rivers ever brimming iu their fullness, and everywhere, and at all periods of its history, its minis trations have fallen as gently on the people of the United States as do the dews of a summer's night on the flowers and grass of the gardens and fields. Whence, then, this reVolutionary out break? Whence the secret spring of this gigantic conspiracy, which liko some huge boa, had completely coiled itself around the jimbs and body of the Re public, befirre a single hand was lifted to resist it? Strange and indeed start ling as the announcement must appear when it falls upon the ears of the next generation, the national tragedy in whose shadows we stand to-night, has come upon us because, in November last, John C. Breekinridgo was not elected President of the United States, and Abraham Lincoln was. This is the whole story. And I would pray now to know on what was John C. Breck inridge fed that he has grown so great, ' that a republic founded by Washington and cemented by the best blood that has ever coursed in hinnan wind, is to be over-thrown because forsooth he cannot be its President?. Had he been chosen, we well know that we should not have heard of this rebellion, for the lever with which it is being moved would have been wanting to the hands of the conspirators. Even after his defeat, could it have been guaranteed, beyond all peradventure, that Jeffer son Davis or some other kindred spirit would be the successor of Mr.. Lincoln, I presume we hazard nothing in assum ing that this atrocious movement against the Government- would-not have been set on foot. So much for the principle involved in it. This great crime, then, with which we are grappling, sprang from that "sin by which theangles felt "—an unmastered and profligate ambition—an ambition that " would rather reign in hell than serve in heaven "—that would rather rule supremely over a shattered frag ment of the Republic than run the chance of sharing with others the hon ors of the whole. The conspirators of the South read in the election of Mr. Lincoln a decla ration that the Democratic party had been prostrated, if not finally destroyed, by the selfish intrigues and corruptions of its leaders; they read, too, that the vicious, emaciated, and spavined hobby of the slavery agitation, on which they had so often rode into power, could no longer carry them beyond a given geo graphical line of our territory, and that in truth this factious and treasona ble agitation, on which so many of them had grown great by debauching and denationalizing the mind of the people naturally generous and patriotic, had run its ca-gse, and hence, that from the natiiiffl disgust for this dema gogueing and from the inexorable law of population ; that the time had come when all those who had no other polit ical capital than this, would have to prepare for retirement to private life, so thr at least as the highest offices of the country were concerned. Under the influence of these grim discourage ments they resolved to consummate at once—what our political history shows to have been with them a long cher ished purpose—the dismemberment of the Government. -They said to them selves : " Since we can no longer mo. nopolize the great offices of the Repub lic as we have been accustomed to do, we will destroy it and build upon its ruins an empire that shall be all our own,- and whose spoils neither the North nor the East nor the West shall share with us" Deplorable and hu miliating as this certainly is, it is but a rehearsal of the sad, sad story of the past. We had, indeed, supposed that under our Christian civilization we had reached a point in human progress, ' when a republic could exist without ' having its life sought by its own off spring ; but the Catalines of the South havo proved that wo were mistaken. Let no man imagine that because this rebellion has been made by men re nowned in our civil and military his tory-, that it is therefore the less guilty or the less courageously to be resisted. It is precisely this class of men who have subverted the best governments that have ever existed. The purest spirits that havo lived in the tide of times, the noblest institutions that have arisen to bless our race, have found among those in whom they had most confided and whom they had most hon ored, men wicked enough, either se cretly to betray them unto death, or openly to seek their overthrow by law less violence. The republic of England had its Monk; the republic of Franco had its Bonaparte; the republic of Mato had its ctesar and its Catalina and tlio• Savior of the world had its Judas Iscariot. It cannot be necessary that I should declare to you, for you know them well, who they are whose parricidal swords are now unsheathed against the Republie of the United States. Their navies are inscribed upon a scroll of infinny that can never perish. The most distinguished of them were educated by the charity of the Government ou which they are now making war. For long years they were fed from its table, and clothed from its wardrobe, and had their brows garlanded by its honors.— They are the ungrateful sons of a fond mother who dandled theta upon her knee, who lavished upon them the gashing love of her noble and devoted nature, and•who nurtured them from the very bosom of her life; and now, in the frenzied excesses of a licentious and baffled ambition, they arc stabbing at that bosom with the ferocity with which the tiger springs upon his prey. The President of the United States is heroically and patriotically struggling to baffle the machinations of these most wicked men. I have unbounded grat ification in knowing that he has the courage to look' traitors in the face, and that, in 'discharging the duties of his great office, he takes 'no counsel of his fears. He is entitled to the zealous support of the whole country, and, may I not add without offence, that he will receive the support of all who justly appreciate the boundless bles sings of our free institutions If this rebellion' succeeds it will in volve necessarily the destruction of our nationality, the division of our ter ritory the pernianent disruption of the republic. It must rapidly dry up the sources of our material prosperity, and year by year we shall grow more and more impoverished, more and more revolutionary, enfeebled and debased. Each returning election hill bring with it grounds for new civil confine,- dons, and traitors, prepared to strike at the country that has rejected their claims to poiver, will spring up on every side. Disunion once begun will go on and on indefinitely, and under the influence of the fatal doctrine of secession, not only will States secede from States, but counties will secede front States alsq, and towns and cities from counties, 4ntil universal anarchy will be consumhsated in each individ ual who can make good his position by force of arms, claiming the right to defy the power.of the Government.— Thus we should have brought back to us the days of,fhe robber Barons-with their molted castles and marauding retainers. This doctrine when ana lyzed is simply a declaration that no physical force .4mll ever.he employed in executing the laws or upholding the government, mid a government into whose practica administration such a principle has been introduced. could no more continue to exist than a man could live with; an angered cobra in his bosom. If you would know what are the legitimate fruits of secession, look at Virginia and Tennessee, which have so lately given themselves up to the embrace of this monster. There the schools are'deserted : the courts of justice closed; public and private cred it destroyed : commerce annihilated ; debts repudiated; confiscations and spoliations ‘ everywhere prevailing ; every cheek blanched with fear, and every heart frozen with despair; and all over that desolated land the hand of infuriated passion and crime is wa ving, with a vulture4,tcream for blood, the sword of civil wfirr. And this is the Pandemonium which some would have transferred to Kentucky. But I am net here to discuss this proposition to-night. rwiSh:solemnly to declare before you And the world, that I am for this Union without con ditions, ono and• indiVisible, now and forever. I am for its preservation at any and every cost of blood and treas ure against all its assailants. I know no neutrality between my country and its foes, whether they be foreign or domestic; no neutrality between that glorious flag which now floats over us, and tile ingrates and traitors who would trample it in the dust. My prayer is for victory, complete, endur ing and overwhelming, to the armies of the republic over all its enemies. I am against any and every compromis,o that may be proposed to be made tin der the guns of the rebels, while at the same time, I am decidedly in fa vor of affording every reasonable guarantee for the safety of Southern institutions, which the honest convic tions of the people—not the conspira tors—of the South may demand, when ever they shall lay down their sons, but not until then. The arbitrament of the sword has been defiantly thrust into the face of the Government and coun try, and there is no honorable escape from it. All guarantees and all at tempts at adjustment by amendments to the Constitution aro now scornfully rejected, and the leaders of the rebel lion openly proclaim that they are fighting fordndependenee. In this contemptuous rejection of guarantees. and in this avowal of the objects of the rebellion now so audaciously made, we have a complete exposure of that fraud which through the slavery agi tation has been practised upon the public credulity for the last fifteen or twenty years. In the light of this revelation, we feel as ono awakened from the suffocating tortures of a nightmare, and realize what a baseless dream our apprehensions have been, and of what a traitorous swindle we have been made the victims. They are fighting for their independence ! Independence of what? Independence of those laws which they themselves have aided in enacting; independence of that Constitution which their fath ers framed and to which they are par ties and subject by inheritance; inde pendence of that beneficent Govern ment on whose treasury and honors they have grown strong and illustri ous. When a man commits a robbery on the highway, or a murder in the dark, ho thereby declares his indopen donee of the laws under which he lives, and of the society of which ho is a member. Should he when arraigned avow and justify the offence, he there by becomes the advocate of the indo ' penitence he has thus declared; and, if he resists by force of arms the officer, when dragging hint to the prison, the penitentiary, or the gallows, ho is thereby fighting for the independence he has thus declared and advocated; and such is the condition of the, con spirators of the South at this moment. It is no longer a question of Southern rights, which have never been viola ted, nor of seenrity of Sonthern. insti tutions, which we knoWperfectly well have never been interfered with by the General Government, but it ie purely with us a question of national existence. In meeting with this ter rible issue 'irhia. 'rebellion Las made up with the loyal men of the country, we stand upon ground infinitely. above all party lines and party platfiirmElJ--- ground as sublime as that on which our fathers stood when they fought the battles of the Revolution. lam for throwing into the contest thus forced upon .us all the material and moral resources and energies of the nation, in order that the struggle may be brief and as little sanguinary as possible. It is hoped that we shall soon see in the field half a million of patriotic volunteers, marching in col umns which will be perfectly irresis- , tible, and, borne in their hands—for no purpose of conquest or subjugation, but of protection only—we may ex pect within nine months to see the stars and stripes flouting in every Southern breeze, and hear going-up, wild as the storm, the exultant shout of that emancipated people over their deliverance from the revolutionary terror and despotism, by which they are now tormented and oppressed.— The war, conducted on such a scale will not cost exceeding four or five hundred millions of dollars; and none need be startled at the vastness of this expenditure. The debt thus created will press but slightly upon us; it will be paid and gladly paid by posterity, who will make the best bargain which has been made since the world began, if - they can secure, to themselves in its integrity and blessings such a gov ernment as this, at such a cost. But if in this anticipation we aro doomed to disappointments; if the people of the United States have already be come so degenerate—may I not say so craven—in the presence of their foes as to surrender tip this Republic to be dismembered and subverted by the traitors who have reared the stand ard of revolt against it, then I trust the volume of American history will be closed and sealed up forever, and that those who shall survive this na tional humiliation will take unto them selves some other name—some name having no relation to the past, no re lation to our great ancestors, no rela tion to those monuments and battle fields which commemorate alike their heroism, their loyalty and their glory. But with the curled lip of scorn we are told by the disunionists, that in thus supporting a Republican adminis tration in its endeavors to uphold the constitution and laws, we are "submis sionists," and when they have pro nounced tills word; they suppose they have imputed to us the sum of all hu man abasement. Well, let it be con fessed; we are " submissionists," and weak and spiritless as it may be deem ed by some, we glory in the position we occupy. For example : the law says " Thou shalt not steal" ; we sub mit to this law, and would not fbr the world's worth, rob our neighbor of his forts, his arsenals, his arms, his muni tions of war, his hospital stores, or anything that is his. Indeed, so im pressed are we with the obligations of this law, that we would no more think of plundering from our neighbor half a million of dollars because found in one of his unprotected mints, than we would think of filching a purse from his pocket in a crowded .thor oughfare. Write us down, therefore, "submissionists." Again: thelaw says "Thou shalt not swear fidsely"; we submit to this law, and while in the civil or military service of the coun try, with an oath to support the Con stitution of the-United States resting upon our consciences, we would not for any earthly consideration, engage in the formation or execution of a conspiracy to subvert that very con stitution, and with it the government to which it has given birth. Write us down therefore again "submissionists." Yet again : When a President has been elected in strict accordance with the forms and spirit of the constitution, and has been regularly installed into office, and is honestly striving to dis charge his duty by snatching the re public from the jaws of a gigantic treason which threatens to crush it; we care not what-his name may be or what the designation of his political party, or what the platform on'which he stood during the Presidential can vass; we believe wo fulfill in sight of earth and heaven our highest obliga tions to our country, in giving to him an earnest and loyal support in the struggle in which he is engaged. Nor are we at all disturbed by the flippant taunt that in thus submitting to the authority of our government, we are necessarily cowards. We know whence this taunt comes, and we esti mate it at its true value. We hold that there is a higher courage in the performance of duty than in.tke com mission of crime. The tiger of the jungle and the cannibal of the South Sea Islands have that courage in which the revolutionists of the day make their especial boast; the angels of God and the spirits of just men made perfect have had, and have that courage which submits to the laws.— Lucifer was a non-submissionist, and the first secessionist of whom history has given us any account, and the chains which he wears fitly express the fate due to all who openly defy the laws of their Creator and of their country. He rebelled because the Al mighty would not yield to him the throne of Heaven . ; the principle of the Southern rebellion is the same. In deed, in this submission to the laws is found the .chief distinction between good men and devils. A good man obeys the laws of truth, of honesty, of morality, and all those laws which have been enacted by competent au thority for the government and pro tection of the country in which he lives; a devil obeys only his own fero cious and profligate passions. The principle on which this rebellion pro ceeds, that laws have in themselves no sanctions, no binding force upon the conscience, and that every man, under the promptings of interest or passion or caprice, may at will, and honora bly, too, strike at the government that shelters hint, is one of utter demoral ization, and should., be trodden out, as you would tread out a spark that has Wien on the roof of your dwelling.— Its unchecked prevalence would re solve society into chaos, and leave you without the slightest guarantee for life, liberty, or property. It is time that, in their majesty, the people of the United States should make known to the world that this government Lin its dignity and power, is something more than a moot court, and that the. Citizen who makes war upon it is a traitor, not only in theory but in fact, and should have meted out to him traitor's doom. The country wants no bloody, sacrifices, but it initSt :Ind will have peace, cost what it Before closing, - 1 desire to say a.few words on the relations of Kentucky to the pending rebellion ; and, as we arc all Kentuckian!' here together to-night, and as this is purely a family matter, which concerns the honor of us all, 1 hope we may be permitted to speak to each other upon it with entire freedom. I shall not detain you with observations on the hostile and defiant position assumed by the Governer of your State. In his reply to the requisition made upon I him for volunteers under the proclamation of the President, he has, in my judgment, written and finished his own history, his epitaph included, and it is probable that in future the world will lit tle concern itself as to what his excellency may propose to do, nr as to - what he may propose not to do. That response has made for Kentucky; a record that has already brought a burning blush to the cheek of many of her sons, and is destined to bring it to the cheek of many more in the years which are to come. It is a shame, indeed n crying shame, that a State with so illustrious a past should have written for her by her own chief magistrate, a page of history so utterly hu miliating as this. But your Legislature have determined that during the present unhappy war, the attitude of the State shall be that of strict neutrality, and it is upon this deter mination that I wish respectfully, but frank ly to comment. As the motives which gov erned the Legislature were doubtless patri otic and conservative, the conclusion arrived at cannot be condemned as dishonorable, still, in view of the manifest duty of the State and of possible results, I cannot but regard it as mistaken end false, and one which may have fetal consequences. Strict , ly and legally speaking, Kentucky must go not of the Union before she can be neutral. Within it she is necessarily either faithful to the government of the United States, or she is disloyal to it. IF this crutch of neu trality upon which her well-meaning but ill judging politicians are halting, can find any middle ground on which to rest, it has escaped my researches, though I have dili gently sought it. Neutrality, in the sense of those who now use the term, however pa triotically designed, is, 'in ef f ect, but a snake in the grass of rebellion, and those who han dle it, will sooner or later feel its fangi.— Said one who snake as man never spoke, "he whit is not with us is against us ;" and of none of the conflicts which have arisen he tween men or between nations, could this be more truthfully said, than of that in which we ere now involved. Neutrality necessari ly implies indifference. Is Kentucky indif ferent to the issues of this contest? Has she, indeed, nothing at stake ? Has she no compact with her sister States to keep, no plighted faith to uphold. no renown to sus tain, no glory to win? Has she nu horror of that crime of crimes now being committed against us by that stupendous rebellion which has arisen like a teMpest cloud in the South? We rejoice to know that she is still a mem ber of this Union, and as such she has the same interest in resisting this rebellion, that each limb of the body has in resisting a poignant whose point is alined at the heart. It is her house that is on fire; has she no interest in extinguishing the conflagration? Will she stand aloof and announce herself neutral between the raging flames and the bravo men who are periling their lives to subdue them? Hundreds of thousands of citizens of other States—men of culture anti character, of thought and of toil ; wee who have a deep stake in life, end an intense ap preciation of its ditties and responsibilities; who know the worth of this blessed govern ment of ours, and do not prize even their own blood above it—l say, hundreds of thous ands of such men have left their homes, their workshops, their offices, their onises, and their fields, and are now rally ing about cur flag, freely offering their all to sustain it, and, since the days that crusading Europe threw its hosts upon the embattled plains of Asia, no deeper or more earliest or grander :Tint has stirred the souls of men, than that which row sways those mighty masses whose gleaming banners are destined ere long to make bright again the earth and sky of the distracted South. Can Kentucky look upon this sublime spectacle of patriot ism unmoved, and theh say to herself; '• I will spend neither blood nor treasure, but I will shrink away while the battle-rages,ruid after it has been fought and won, I will re- turn to the camp, well assured that if I can not claim the laurels, I will et least enjoy the blessings of the victory ?" Is' this all that remains of her chivalry ?—of the chivalry of the land of the Slielhys. the Johnson., the Aliens. the Clays, the Adairs, and the Davisses ? Is there a Kentuckian within the sound of my voice to-night, who can hear the anguished cry of his country, es she wrestles and writhes in the folds of this gi gantic treason, and then lay himself down upon his pillow with this thought of neutral ity, without feeling that he has something in his bosom which stings him worse than would an adder? Have we, within the brief peri od of eighty years, descended so far from the mountain heights on which our fathers stood, that already, in our degeneracy, we proclaim our blood too precious, our treasure too valuable to be devoted to the preserve tion of such a government as this? They fought through it seven years war with the greatest power on earth for the hope, the bare Imps of being able to found this Repub lic, and now that it is no longer a hope nor an experiment, but a glorious reality, which has excited the admiration and the homage of the nations, and has covered us with bles sings, as " the waters cover the chaonels of the sea," have we, their children, no years of toil, of sacrifice, nod of battle even, if need be, to give to save it from absolute de struction at the bands of mon who, steeped in guilt, are perpetrating against us and hu manity a crime, for which I verily believe the blackest page of the history of the world's darkest period furnishes no parallel. Can it be possible thht in the history of the Ameri can people we have already reached a point of degeneracy so low, that the work of Wash ington and Franklin, of Adams and Jeffer son, of Hancock and Henry, is to be over thrown by the morally begrimed and pigmied conspirators who are now tugging at its foundations? It would be the overturning of the Andes by the miserable reptiles that are crawling in tho sands et their base. But our neutral fellow-citizens in the ten derness of their hearts say; "This effusion of blood sickens us." Then do all in your power to bring it to an end. Let the whole strength of this Commonwealth be put forth in support of tho Government, in order that the war may be terminated by a prompt sup pression of the rebellion. The longer the struggle continues, the fiercer will be its spirit, and the more fearful the waste of life attending it. You, therefore, only aggra vate the calamity you deplore, by - standing aloof from the combat. But again they say, "we cannot fight our brethren." Indeed But your brethren can fight you and with a good will too. Wickedly and wantonly have they commenced this war against you and your, institutions, and ferociously are they prosecuting it. They take no account of the fact that the . masseere with which they hope their swords will ere long be clogged, must be the massacre of their brethren. How ever much we may bow our heads at the oan fession, it is noVertheless true that every Do" people that have existed have been obliged at one period or other of their history, to fight for their liberties against traitors with in their own hostons, and that people who have not the greatness in soul thus to fight, cannot long continue to be free, nor do they deserve to be an. There is not and there cannot be any new. tral ground for a loyal people between their own government and those who at the head of armies are menacing its destruction:— Your inaction is not neutrality, though you may delude yourselves with the belief that it is so. With this rebellion confronting you, , when you refuse to co-operate actively with your government in subduing it, you thereby condemn the government anti assume towards it an attitude of antagonism: Your inaction is a virtual endorsement of the rebellion, and if you do not thereby give to the rebels precisely that "aid and comfort" spoken of in the Constitution, you certainly afford them a mast powerful eneouragement,end support. That they regard your. .pFeoent.lpositnin its friendly to then, is proved' by the - fact, that, ih recent enactment of the Confederate Congress coulheating the debts due from their own citizens to ;those of loyal States, the debts death the peopie'Of.Kentileky'are expresly excepted. Is not this significant Does it leave any room fur doubt that 'the Confederate Congress suppose they bare dis covered under the 'guise of:your nentrality ft lurking sympathy , Immy their•cause mivhiplf, en titles you to be treated,as,friends if nutria active elites? Patriotic as Was,the purpose of her apprehensire statesmen in Phienig her in the anomalous position she - now occn piee. It cannot be denied that , Kentuety by her present attitude is exerting a pute'n in fluence in strengthening the rebellion, titivdis therefore false alike to her loyalty,nnd tolter fame. You may rest well assured thatthis estinitite;of your neutrality' is.,Ontefiitinaby the true men of the country in'all,,t4Stittes which are now .sustaining the "Gtiternnient. Within the last' fen , weeks‘' We many-of those gallant volunteers, who bkve left - home and" kindred and All that is dear to them; and are now under, a • Southern -Ann,' exposing themselves to death from disease and, to death front battle, and., are accounting' theirlives as nothing in the effort they are making fur the deliverance of your GM:ointment• and theirs; how many of them have Said to me in sadness and in longing, " Will not Ken tucky help me ?" How my soutsvonla have leaped could I hare answered promptly,:con fidently, exultingly, t' yes, she ;will.", Bet when I thought of .this neutrality, my heist sank 'within ruie, and rdid not and I chub' not look those brave mdkin' the - face:: And yet I could not answer "no."- I could not crush myself to the earth under 'the self abasement of such a reply. thefefore said —nod may my country sustain me—"l hope. I trust, I pray, nay, I believe, Kentucky will yet do her duly," , If this Government is to be destroyed, ask yourselves: are you willing it shall be re corded in history that Kentucky stead by is the greatness of her strength. and lifted , not a hand to stay the catastrophe? • If it is to be saved—as f verily believe, it is—.are you willing it shall , be written thatin*the im measurable glory which must atterfd the achievement Kentucky had no 'part? , I will only 'add, if Kentucky wishes' the waters of her beautiful Ohio to be dyed in blood ; if she wishes her herveit fields; now waving in their abundance, to be trampled under the feet of hostile soldiery as a flower garden is trampled beneath the threshiogs of the tempest ; if she wislieS ton homes where her loved ones are now gathered in peace, invaded by the prtnicripiivtadrY,of a military despotism, sparing neither life-nor property; if site' wishes the streets'of her:towns and cities grown with grass ant the 'steamboats of her rivers to lie rotting. at her wharves, then let her join the Sathern Confedeiticy. But if site would have the bright waters, Of that river ,flow on in their gladness.; if she would have her harvests peacefully gathered to her garners ; if she would have the-lulla bies of her cradles and the monks sif her homeduninvaded by.the cries and terrors of battle ; if she would have the str*itisof her towns and cities again filled with-the hum and throngs of busy trade, nod *her eiyere and their chores once Inure recall, with the steamer's whistle—that Mullein of a free;and prosperous commerce—then 'let her stand by the stars and stripes, and do her duty and , her whole duty as a member of this 'Union. Let her brave people say to the President of the United States, " Yon are our Cheif Mag istrate; the g.mvernment you have in charge and are striving to save from dishonor and dismemberment is our government; your cause is indeed our cause; your battles are hnr battles : make room for-us therefore!zn the ranks of your armies, that your triumph may be our triumph also." Even as with the Father of As all I would plead for salvation, so my countrymen, - ,as upon my very knees, would I plead with you for the life, aye for the life, of our great and beneficent institution's' But if the traitor's knife notv at time throrit of time republic is to, do its work, anti this government is fated tA, add yet another to that, long line of sepul chres which whiten the highway of the, i past, then my heartfelt prayer to God• itilhat it may lie written in history, that the blood Of its life was not found upon the skirts of Kentucky'. Pull Account of , McClellan's Victories. CINCINNATI, July 16.-1 special dis patch to the Gazette, dated on the field of battle, at Carrack's Ford, on,' the 14th, says: On the. night of the 11th, the rebel army, at Laurel Hill, under command of Brig. Gen. Hebert S: Gar nett, late a Major in the United States army, evacuated its camp in great haste, on hearing of Gen. McClellan's approach to Beverly, apparently hop ing to pass Beverly before General McClellan's arrival, and thus escape the trap for them by a passage through the Cheat mountain pass. • The evacuation was 'discovered on the morning of the 12th, and pursuit was instantly ordered. By 10 o'clock the Indiana Ninth entered the camp on Laurel Hill, and found a large number of tents, a lot of flour, camp equipage and clothing, and several sick and wounded, with a note asking us to give them proper attention. The whole road for twenty miles was strewn with baggage thrown from the wagons to facilitate their retreat. The rebel army .went within throe miles of Beverly and there met the rebels flying from Rich mountain, and finding escape to Huttonsville' impos sible, all united and returned towards Laurel Hill, and, took the road in the direction of St. Morris. Gen. Morris' division pursued them for a mile or two • beyond Leedsville that night, and halted from -11 till 3 in the morning, when the advance re sumed the pursuit and continued it all day, in spite of an incessant rain pour ing down. The rebel army left the pike and struck Cheat river and pursued the mountain road down the valley. Ottr advance, composed of the Fourteenth Ohio and Seventh and Ninth-Indiana, pushed -on, guided through the moun tain gullies by tents, camp furniture, provisithis and knapsacks,, thrown fi•Om the rebel wagons to facilitate their flight,- - " „ - Our troops forded Cheat river fbur times, and finally about 10 o'clock 'came up with the enemy's rear guard. The -14th Ohio advanced rapidlritri , the ford in which the enemy's whetnEt were standing, when suddenly- the rebel army opened a furious fire on them with small'arms and two rifled cannon from-the bluff on the opposite side at Cheat river, whore,.they had been concealed, but the fire, as usual, was too high to be effective::. Tho 14th re_gimont retarned the fire with spirit. Aleanwhile two pieces of Cleveland - artillery dame up and opened on the rebels, and the 'Ninth Indiana advanced 'to 'support the 14th Ohio regiment, left While the Seventh Indiana crossed the-river between the two fires and came in on the enemy's right flank. ,The rebels then fled. In great disorder leaving - their finest pieee of artillery. • At the next ford, a , quarter of m mile fgrtheron, Gen. Garnett attemp ted, to rally .his foreeS, When .the 7th Indiaria'eathe up in hot 'pursuit; and another brisk engagement ensued.--, Gen. Garnett was finally shot dead, when his army , fled' in wild confusio - n towards St: George.. - • The Seventh Indiana pursued - them a mile or two, but= our fbrees were so exhausted with their tbrced march of twenty miles with but little - rest from