TERMS OF THE GLOBE Per annum in advance .=ix menthe Three motithn 50 • A failure to notify u illqcontinuanca nt the expiration of th. term autiariliial fur will be considered n new engage r-neut. TE1913 Or ADVERTISINO • . . • , 1 insertion. 2 do. 3 do. Four lines or less $ 25 $ 37 !, $ • 0 Joe square, (12 I ines,) ...... .... 50 75 1; 0 Pur:, , min : arcs 1 00 1 50 2 .0 chreo squares 1 50 - 2 25 3 t 0 IClvet there tveok and less than three mouths, 25 cent, zer aquaro for each inset tion. 3 mouths. 0 months. 12 months. !ix Mei or lean, $1 00 $3 00 $5 00 Jue square, 3 Cl) 5 00 7 00 rive minaret; 1 00 8 00 10 00 Ihron squares 7 00 10 00 15 00 Your squares, a 00 13 00 "0 00 I/fat( a cohintn, 12 00 10 00 ...... —.21 00 na, I "0 00 ^0 00.... 50 00 Professional and Business Cards not exceeding four lines, one. year .$3 on -AomtwAroore and Executors' Nottees $1 75 Advertisentents not marked with the number of inner. Vona desired., will be confirmed till forldd and charged or- Ftrding to these terms. Ely HUNTINGDON, PA. Friday, November 14, 1862. N I B : We'have nocthe time nor the incli pation, to dUii personally, a large num kr, of persons who have unsettled ac counts upon our books of several years standing. We shall, therefore, from gay to day, without respect to persons, place into the hands of a Justice for pollection, all accounts of oVcy tn-p years standing. All those who wish to save ekponse, will do well to give us a call. • § § § . k § Thanksgiving Day in Pennsylvania. "ILAntusnunn, Oct. 21.--The Governor issued the following proclamation : In the name and hi the authority pf the Commonwealth of ( Pennsylva pia, Andrew G. Curtin, Qvcrhor of' the said Commonwealth. A PROCLAMATION. WitEnnAs, It is a good thing to rem der thanks unto God for all his mercy and' loving kindness; therefore, I,'Andrew G: Curtin, Governor of the Commonwealth.of - Pennsylvania, dorecommend that Thursday, the 27th lay of November next, be set apart by the people of thiS CoMmonwealth as a day of solemn Prayer and Thanks giving 'to the Almighty—giving Him infinble thanks that he has been gra ciously pleased to protect our free in 'stiLutions and Government, and to - keep us from sickness and pestilence— 'and to cause the earth to bring forth her increase, so that our garners are choked with the harvest—and to look so favorably on the toil of his child re-n, that industry , has thriven among us r itnd' labor has its reward; and also that Ile has delivered us from the hands of our enemies, and filled our officers and men in the fie:d with a :loyal and intrepid -spirit, anti given -- theni 7 Viettiand that ho has toured out-npon us (tam, r ly) otAer great and manifold blessings. Dese'eching Him to help and govern us in his-:.steadfilst fear and lo'-o, and to put into our minds good desires, so 'that by his continual help we may -have a right judgment in all things; and especially, praying him to give to Christian Churches grace to• hate the thing which is evil, and to utter the .teachings of truth and righteousness, declaring openly the whole counsel of God ; and most heartily entreating Hint to bestow upon our civil rulers wisdom, and earnestness, and counsel, and upon our military leaders zeal and vigor in action, that the fires of rebel lion may be quenched—that we, hieing armed with his defence, may be pre serVed ; from all perils, and that here -after our 'people, living in peace and •quietuess, may, front generation to generation, reap the abundant fruits of His mercy, and with joy and thank fulness praise and magnify His holy —name. Vim under niy hand and tlie great seal of the State, at Harrisburg, this twentieth day of October, In the year of our Lord one thousand eight Itiindred and sixty-two, and of the Commonwealth, the eighty-seventh. ANDREW G. CURTIN. By the Governor. DA SLIFER, Sce'y of Commonwealth WASHINGTON DICTATOR.—Some re ference has been made to the dictato rial powers conferred upon. General Washington during the War of the Revolution.' They are contained and enumerated in a resolve of Congress, lated the 27th of December , 1776, (to be found in Spark's edition of t W'ri lings of Washington, Vol. iv., page 550,) and were limited to the term of Fix months. With a single exception they relate exclusively to the organi zation and control and support of the army and confer no civil authority.-- , •- The exception allude'd to is of a char acter to deserve attention at this mo pica. It is the last enumerated pow er and , reads thus : "To arrest and ponfine persons who refuse to take the ;Continental currency, or are other :wise di6.ffeeted to the'American cause; and return to the States, of which they 'pre citizens, their names, and .the na ture of their offences, together with the . witnessesto prove them." The _Damage to the Baltimore th Ohio .Railroad.—The breaking up of the 'l.3altimore and Ohio railroad is one of - he sad results of reducing our armies last spring., The. cause of the rebel Mite in the premises was the fact that 'the General Pope's army was greatly Served in its exigency by the rapid transport of Gen. Cox's Division from Ve.st,ern Virginia. The rebels know • the value of railroads in military ope rations, and hence, while they keep,on -building them in the South, they do ,their best to destroy ours in the North. .. r ler The National . T44-taw em : bodying the organic sections; the gen end and specific provisions; previsions for the appointment and governance of collectors, assessors and their assis tants; alphabetical schedule-libt of at.- ; tidies taxed, with rates, etc., ete. For sale at Lewis' Book Store Cigars and Tobacco for Lewis' Book Store. ti .'-'• ' . ,--,',.win,A\-.1 --:- • . A .4. i•*••4444;:,?,'0 , ••:,- A v••• s- , ,„ ~,,,N,.., . • •'•,,,:•., ~,,, .."....:, „. .. . . .„ ~,,-2.„—,,:,- . -, ..1,• ,.- .f '' '• 4„,k2k, , . - ---- „,-,...,*-=‘ , •.,..,.,, ,, Ag ,_, ... , ---_ ,- ,r_: - .A=,,-._tc,: : .,_ . . ~..., • . • . . . . . . , _. ... ..,-„... . . • .„ .„..... . . 4. .. 1 1111 r :. . . . !.------ ~-..;:..:;.:,,,.,.. .. . . , , , ....4 .. .. „,.....,, „...,::....,.,:.:...„,..„,.....,„,.„.....,.........•....._. ~.,.. .:_. i...: .:..;:....: ' F. . .. ....?........ ~.. ..,„.,.. Ell WILLIAM LEWIS, Editor and Proprietor. VOL. XVIII. The Fight at Chaplin Hills—the Heroism and Horrors of a Battle- Fields [Corrospondence of the Lola9vlllo Journal.] TIARRODSIWRG, Ky., Oct. 11, 1862.- 1 purpose to relate, as an eye-wit ness, the modern incidents of this " Dark and Bloody Ground,v which I am confident will surpass, both in ho roism and horror, those of the old " In dian days" of Harrod and Boone, or of any other stricken field, at this, our battle of" Chaplin Hills," fought on Oct. 8, 1862. General Buell having completed his preparation of the Federal army, had been pressing General Bragg of the rebel army invading_ Kentucky, from within ten miles orLouisville, by the different roadS leading toward Frank fhrt, Taylorsville, 13ardstoNN'n, and Shephertkville, since the Ist of Octo ber, driving in the rear of his army and cannonading on each of' the roads, with more or less skirmishing each day, as we marched forward for sev enty miles. Bragg moved his main army from Bardstown to Springfield, and as Bu ell's troops converged near that place on the Gth, Bragg made a stand to check us east of the town. Heavy cannonading and shelling took place, and the fruits were several slaughtered men and horses. some prisoners and a devastated country—barns and hous es, hay-stacks and fences being swept away by the fire enkindled by burst ing shells. Bragg was compelled to fall back. Aga n that day he made a stand on the precipitous eastern bank of Pleas ant Rim. Another engagement took place, Bragg being compelled to recede, leaving the same desolating marks— the face of the dried-up country being again swept fhr and wide as by the besom of destruction Ile tried to burn the bridge after passing, but was pressed too hard to effect it. On the morning of the 7th, Bragg's rear guard madez stand and prepared for battle, at an almost impracticable hill for our cavalry and infantry, east of Lick Run. A few field pieces of ours proved the position to be unten able, and Bragg drew off his pieces and men: On the afternoon of the 7th, he made another stand, with his rear_ on the crescent-shaped hills of Chaplin's branch of Salt river, and planted his artillery, shelling us. Our battery dismounted one of his pieces - • iti imrct • them over the hill. The rebel troops gitye it up, (I presume in a mistake) mid a great mistake it proved to be for them, as it was the central stronghold and very key of the whole position, proven by the obstinacy with which it was fought for the whole of the next clay. Our army had been march w ing since October Ist, through a country that afforded but little water for man or beast, and that of a very impure quali ty. There having been no rain for many weeks (I may say months), riv ets and creeks were dried up. I saw not one drop of running water on the road from Louisville to the battle-field, 70 miles, except a little trickling among the loose gravel -south of Bloomfield, twenty miles distant. In the lowest places of the beds ofstreams, were larger orstnaller pools of impure water, tasting and smelling of the or dure of the cattle of the country, and our horses and mules that had been ridden in to drink the filthy compound frantic to get that as they would be in the deserts of Arabia. Where the shallow pools were rocky, the soldiers were fain to fill their canteens far in the night after the cavalry horses had done stirring it Where there was -a gravel bottom, the poor fbllows made a natural filter by scraping hOles with their hands near the edge of the wa: ter, and you would see a long, dark lino waiting patiently through the long hours of the night for it to trickle in, and, their canteens, carry it two and three miles to camp. I paid one poor soldier a quarter of a dollar for a drink of his cow ordure and water, and felt that he had done me au ines timable fltvor. The rebel army had drained all the wells on their march, and we could only get the slow trick lings into them; as we marched along crowds of our men were waitingaround them all the day and night. Not one Federal soldier • uttering a complaint that I heard, or was there a single quarrel for that which was so precious to cool the tip of the tongue. It will be understood that on this march of two great armies over the same road, the horrors.of thirst were aggravated by the condition of it. Each column of troops could be traced many miles away, by the clouds rising from their march at least half a mile high in the air. The dust was instep deep to the infantry. You could not see the sem blance of a man on the march in the road, but it all flitted by like a great phantasmagoria or a horrid nightmare dream, day and night, continuously in ono stream of cavalry, artillery and infantry, with a score of miles of am munition-and baggage wagons. Our front moved in day. and encamped..as •far as the eye could see the fires on the hill sides and in the valleys at night; the rear moved on at night to encamp in the day. Men and horses were choked and strangled, and dust! dust!! dust!!! and no relief of'rain or water to cheek the suffering. It is over now, but I have a 'recol lection of it that will last me to my grave. The enemy knew they had its in the " dry valley," and were deter - ined to keep us there at any expense of blood and men. They boasted at Harrodsburg on the 7th and on the day of the fight, that water was fifteen miles in our rear, and that thirst would be our tle.struction ; that they had the springs in front and would hold them. They proved to be not Pertmacions 01104:14 F... 6 make zood their bpast HUNTINGDON, PA., WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1862 At 2 A. M. on the Stb the rebel ar my forced back on our cavalry pickets on the central crescent-shaped bill; the cavalry sending for reinforeemen ts, two regiments of infhntry and a bat tery of artillery were sent to make the positions good during the night. Bide firing continued until day dawn, when " flaShed forth the red artillery" on the enemy advancing to re-take the position ho should have kept the even ing before. Battery was opposed to battery as they threw themselves back on the roads from Perryville to flank us toward Lebanon on our right and toward Bloomfield on our left, and crush out our advance before the cen tre or rear could come up, until the line of battle was extended one mile on our right, and four miles on mar left, in shape like a gigantic reaping-hook. Their artillery was of the- best con struction, and was handled in the most admirable manner, as witness the murderous precision of their fire; smoothbores, rifled guns, and the un erring and fhr-shooting " Parrott," of all calibres, from sixty to thirty-pound ers, raining on our heads and around us storm's of shot and shell, shrapnell, grape, canister, and every conceivable projectile invented by man to slay his fellow-man. The earth now is literal ly covered with iron and lead for miles upon miles that was thundered forth by both armies from before day-dawn until the second hour of the moon light. The roar of artillery was inces sant trout centre to right and from centre to left, except a partial lull. in the afternoon, when the enemy was marshaling his forces for his last &km perate and fearful attack on our left. Then as he extended his lines, ours were extended; as ho, opened a batte ry we galloped one up in opposition, until the fire appeared to be intermi nable, when the artillery was all un masked. Our infantry regiments that were formed fon.the support of our artillery, were attacked by the rebels with the Most desperate valor; charge after charge was made all day on our cen tre, but it was of no avail. The cheers of our men could be heard above the roar of battle a mile, as they repulsed him, and charging in turn drove him back. The roar of the cannon; the death-like shriek of the elongated shell, the whiz of the round shot, and the whir and rush of the many varieties .ofdeath-dealing rifle balls, the rattle of the musketry, with the boom of the cannon and the sharp-ringing, air-sha -king explosion of the Shell, making the air hideous with noises, were enough to 'make the strongest man stand aghast and to realize that the dread king of terrors was himself di recting the storm. And, horror of horrors, men who had sucked at the same breast took deadly aim at each other in this State of Kentucky in this civil war. Surely Ciod's peculiar curses will be rained down on those who inaugurated •this fratricidal strifb for nothing but lust of political power or an abstract idea. We held our ground firmly all day and night on our centre. On our right our tide of battle prevailed, and the enemy were swept back past Perry ville, and we captured there a large number of prisoners and ammunition wagons, which were sent to our rear during the night. On our left were his most determined attacks in the en deavor' to force us south, cut off our supply trains from Louisville, and force us into a country more desolate than the one we held. His attacks there were fearful ; his men, with reserves, marched from their coverts of wood in solid lines up to our regiments, posted in line of battle, with his artillery play ing on them from his cross batteries on the distant hill-tops under cover of the woods. Our batteries had to be placed on open heights, as he had chosen his position of battle on his retreat, and our artillery and infantry were both exposed and in full view. His skir mishing infantry took every advantage Of tree and stump, stonewall and fence, as he came on, and some of our regi ments were decimated before the charge and shock of arms took place. He was repulsed and driven back, but came up again and again to the charge in the most gallant and determined manner, and at last, at a fearful cost of life to hiinself, captured and hauled off to one of his hospitals, one of our batteries, and silenced two others that he was unable to move; the horses be ing all slain: His army was so horri bly cut up that he was compelled to retreat before day-dawn on the 9th, and 'left our battery at his hospital with the wheels chopped up. A great part of the men of both ar mies who fought this battle were those of Shiloh, who were used to scenes of blood and carnage, and unwilling to retreat on either side, which accounts for this deadly struggle—they say that Shiloh was but tho introduction to this consummation of battle. The bravery and the heroism were unparalleled. Of hundreds of such in stances, I give a few. One Illinois regiment of Federal troops stood on the crest of a hill until all the field officers had fallen, and there was no one to command, their ammunition was all expended, and that they died like Romans, on their post, is proven by the fact that the next morning of sunrise I counted forty-four of them lying, shot dead in the forehead or throegh the heart, in their exact straight line of battle, with their.arms at their sides. There were one hun dred and fifty more arms lying in the same straight lino, proving that num ber had been too severely - wounded to carry their arms to . the rear when or , clued back. There were fifty more lying dead in the sip= field with their arms ' b ide them, SW: before they gained the cover of the next bill, and the enemy Checked by the reserve reg iment. One 'regiment of Federal -PERSEVERE.- troops from Michigan stood in line of battle awaiting the storm ; at the first close volley their standard was shot away, and the flag torn to shreds; the soldiers beside the standard bearer, caught RIO flung up In the.air the tat. tered remnants of the stars and stripes until there was a heap of sixteen men shot on the spot. When the broken remnant of the reginicnt fell back, they carried all the tattered fragments of the old symbol as carefully as a mother bears her child. The standard of the 79th Pennsyl vania Infantry was shot down six times, and as often reared aloft, and when forced from the field, the Colonel car ried it off. The 9th Pennsylvania Regiment of cavalry sent out three times in solid Column to draw the fire of the different batteries of the enemy that were con cealed—was rained upon by cross bat teries with every conceivable artillery missile. With no orders to move, and unable to return the long range fire, they sat on their horses like statues, excepting those who were struck, and went to the rear. When ordered off the field each time, they went off at a slow parade walk:disdaining to strike a trot, after receiving fire for two hours. One Federal regiment, the Sixteenth Michigan, and a Georgia rebel regi ment, met in line of battle in open field ; they deliberately planted their standards at 40 yards distance from each other, and stood and loaded, aimed and fired; both flags were shot down—the Georgia regiment almost totally destroyed, and their banner captured. In front of the destroyed Illinois regiment was a worm fence, from which the rebel soldiers took such deadly aim; in nearly every fence cor ner lay a dead or wounded rebel sol dier; the fence was fired by the burst ing shells, and in the morning a fear ful sight met our eyes—in the ashes of the fence lay a scorched and black ened•mass of humanity, a roasted man, and to all appearances, from their struggles,, many of th CM Only wounded when the fire caught them. The death of our,poor meny even with all the ag onies of thirst on them, in the scorch ing sunshine and the dust and the chil ling of the long, elld October night, was merciful compared with the tor tures these men net in the slow but sure approach of the flames creeping along the fence to the spot where they lay writhing. A flock of sheep were in the field ; the carcass of the dead ernes lay - scattered and thc. wounded ' ones crept into the same fence corners with the men, and man and beast were roasted and charred together. * The terrible inhumanity of the com manders of this rebel army is proven by the fact that on the left they had driven us back on our second line of battle. They had possession of that part of the field, and held it until they retreated at day dawn. During that time their dead and living were liter ally roasted (it is the actual, horrible fact.) Our dead, and many of our wounded, lay there stripped by them of all their coats, hats, and shoes, and sonic of them of pants, and in the morning they raised their heads with ghastly chattering jaws, unable ,to speak, and fell back senseless. There was mßny a wounded man who was stripped, who had the life frozen out of him on that bleak hillside on the cold October night when it 'required blan kets or a fire, to keep a 801114 well clothed man comfortable. The enemy carried, through the day and night, his thousands upon thous ands of wounded to his rear, crowding and crushing them into Perryvilld to overflowirig,and into every farm house, shed, and stable within throe miles of his line of battle. Pardons and or chards were strewn with them. As usual, the fierce cannonading brought on a rain; the evening of the 9th was cold and chilly—piercing to the very bone. I ,went to ono of their hospitals on the morning of the 10th. The house, sheds, yard, and garden wore crowded to overflowing with crushed and wounded Tennesseeans and Geor gians strewn around on the cold wet straw and earth, with a poor tattered blanket for covering to keep off the peltings of the pitiless storm through that bitter night. Poor human nature could not withstand the chilling air that pressed the vitality out of them, and in the morning I saw two long rows of white corpses awaiting the soldier's hasty burial, and I was confi dent, as with chattering teeth the poor survivors begged to have their blan kets dried at the fire, that the cold night air had slain as many as our bullets had done. The miserably weak rebel hospital force left to cope with the awful work before them were totally- unable to at tend to their wants at any of their hos pitals, but death was fast making their work less. The amputated legs and arms were lying piled up like cord wood. The Federal dead were all buried by their comrades on the 9th and 10th. On the morning of the 10th I estima ted three thoqsand dead rebel soldiers lying on the ,Fight, centre, and left, in an extent of six miles of theline of battle, their commanders Mitiching off leaving them unburied—never even sending in a flag of truce asking us,,to give them sepulchre. They were then lying mangled and torn ? festering and parleying, and the hogs devouring them ! It is the actual, horrible fact ! The citizens of Perryville then began to bury them to prevent a pestilence, but there are hundred of them lying where OAS:, .prawled to die,, between the logs and in the ravines and bushes arid ledges'of rocks, that will never bq found until the hist trup will round, whcp, if their conscience does not sinite them before, these gaunt skele tons will rise up in judgment before these unchristian and inhuman men— the chiefs and leaders of this bloody re hellion, who turned their backs on their suffering and unburied men, and held high church at Harrodsburg next day, where, with backs well clothed and stomachs well filled, were congregated Bragg and Smith, Hardee and Cheat ham, Buckner, Marshall, and Morgan, and last, but not least, on this fist of names, Leonidas Polk, late Bishop, not even asking for their dead " a little earth for charity." The righteous Lord is long suffering, but for all , these things these men will be called to judgment, leading these poor, misguided men to whiten this land with their bones and distributin g whisky to them without stint on the morning of the battle. Truly this land is made a darker and a bloodier land than the inhuman Indian made it in days of yore. Were these poor men dogs even, they should have been better cared for by their leaders and not have been left to the mercy of the elements, and the dead to be eaten up by the hogs roam ing the woods. If this is the Southern chivalric idea of treating your fellow man who has served you faithfully to the death, God save me from chival ric honors. I fear they would press me to perdition. Can it be wondered that on the stacks of arms they had piled up to be burned near their hospi tal we should find paper inscriptions of "home or hell," portending a muti ny in plain terms. That their com mon soldiers are brave, our own dead And Founded too plainly attest in characters of blood. They swept up (while their great leaders kept at a safe distance) again and again to our batteries and were decimated and driven back repeatedly eye they silenced three of ours on the left. Our artillerists, when closely pressed, filled the cannon with infin• try cartridges by the capful and swept whole scores of rebel soldiers to de struction at each discharge. I coun ted in one heap twenty-one men lying torn and dead, sixteen in another heap, fifteen in another, while around -they lay scattered like leaves swept from the trees. This has ended the memorable bat tle of Chaplin Hills, where Braxton Bragg, commanding the rebel army invading Kentucky, made his stand on his retreat, on ground chosen and engineered by him, and lost his battle, crushing his regiments so much as to nearly annihilate_many-of.them. Eer m-pri-eic hundred men fought at it. And of those there were fifteen or twenty thousand either had the semblance of humanity crushed out of thelik cri• lie and 'linger in over crowded hospitals or in the hot sun shine and chilly night air to yet die of their wounds by thousands, or trav el to their graves through long weary years of pain from wounds never to be healed, and with amputated limbs, begging their bread from door to door. We have since pressed his army to Harrodsburg, where ho made prepara tions for another battle. He burnt the bridges and left the ground on our ap proach. We are now pressing, his rear closely south and east. If he makes any more stands, we expect to have these horrors re-enacted again and again until this invading army is swept from Kentucky, which they have devastated as a plague of locusts would. Carr. JONES, CO. A. How the Late Elections are Viewed in the Army. A letter from General Milroy's com mand to the Cincinnati Gazette, says: The feeling manifested by the best men in the army here, in reference to the late elections in Pennsylvania, Ohio and Indiana, is very strong, and of a character which might readily be inferred frotri then:Opinion of the proc lamation. Their freely expressed de testation ofsuch men asVallandigham, Vortices, Cox, and the "lesser lights" of that school—of such papers as the Cincinnati Enquirer, Columbus Crisis, Pittsburg Post and Wheeling Press— is such aslo cause a thrill of joy in the heart of every patriot, whose love of country is, greater than his party prejudice. 11.owevor the peopl6 may be deceived and misled by the machin ations of such men, striving under the sacred name of Democracy, to carry out the programthe of that midnight conclave of *traitorous cowards—the Knights of the Golden Circle—the ar my, at least, 'will prove true to the Constitution and the Union it , is SWOII to support; and after the war against armed rebels is done, will turn its attention to plotting, canting hyp ocrits, who are endeavoring to put "fire in their rear" at home. West ern Virginians express the most pro found astonishment that such men are permitted to prate their rampant treason in Ohio. ' Here it would not be' allowed for a moment; and the -man who would dare to call this an " Abolition war" in the presence of Virginia soldiers, would do, so at the peril of his life. The conviction is very general that in the late election the rebels have re ceived greatYencouragement by , the evidences they seem' toxive of a " di vided North." It is believed, also, to a very considerable extent, that the Northern, Democratic leaders are in .seeret league with, the heads of the Southern fJonfederacy • and that, in the event of a successful campaign, which will destrpy all hopes 1:4'" mde : pendence" on tho part of the SOo,b, peace will be offered by the rebels on something like the " Crittenden Com promise"basis ; - and then, by 'flip tlld of their Northern sympathr4ers eo-workes, Davis, Tecnnblyigfisll, and' the' remainder of siol4'Southern Democrats," will Ir?o 'return'ed to their old places of" honorand profit" in the General Government, that is if,: iu $1,50 a year in advance. TERMS Iview of the " horrors" of war," the dread of" high taxes," and the most persistent howls about "niggers," the people of the North can be brought to set the seal upon their own eternal shame and degradation. The false pretences of 'peculiar love for the " Constitution as it is," by those Nort hern traitors, who wore always ready to change it at the behests of the se cession leaders, is thoroughly under stood, and properly appreciated in the army. A Graphic Picture• of a Southerx Empire. The London Daily Hews draws AN picture of the character of the South and the probable consequences which would follow its achievement of" inde pendence:" "As far as England is concerned, we may judge from the past. Many people say, in excuse for their state of mind about the war, that they detest the Amesicans. Very well; and what does this mean ? It means an association of ideas made up of troubles about search of slaves at sea, and brag about the Monroe doctrine, and threats of Canada, and slanders about our cruis ers in the dulf, and outrage on San Juan, and the bullying of the General Harney-s, and the sharp practice of cabinets at Washington, and aggres sions upon our seamen in port, and universal rudeness to our representa tives in the States, and to our Govern ment through American representa tives in England.. "All this, with impressions of Hi bustering, threats about Cuba, an un repressed clandestine slave trade, lynch law, marauding Ti Kansas, brag about liberty; together with tar and feathers, cow hiding slave markets, human stock breeding, and all the rest of 4-r-these impressions combine to make up the sentiment expressed by the avowal, "I detest the Americans! But for every element of this impression confederate society is answerable. It was the South resigning at Washington, the South importing ne , roes, the South sending Walker and Lopez into the territory of an ally to stir up insurrec tion, the South sending ten. Harney to San Juan, the South getting uP Monroe doctrine, the South lynching clergymen, and burning alive travelers suspected of. disapproving slavery— the South as universal aggressor, bul ly, braggart., traitor, mischief maker, nwril bore—thEkt,§94oV. getting to detest more and mora4very year. Wait follows, if the same South, inflated with pride and revenge, could actually recover her dominion ? "The Dred Scott decision would be actively enforced, and the whole ter ritory of the Union made slave soil.— The popular vote would be overruled, or practically precluded, • as hitherto in the South; and. rights of education, of free speech,' and a free press would be extinguished. Labor being discred ited by the extension of slavery, the pauperism and degradation of the free workers of the North would corrupt society to its core. The concubinage of the South would spread beyond tie present dividing line, and the morals of the whole nation would be &in dag ger of becoming like digs§ ofttlic slave States, whieh are grosser than can be eonceived of in any other partof Christ endom:'Every ether nation would be perpetually on the verge of war, or engaged in it, kocauso the slave power cannot abstain from aggression, nor maintain its position by the arts of peace. " We should see a retrograde period arrive more disastrous to civilizatiOn than the advent of the first Napoleon. We should see a buccaneering nation turning the progress of political liber ty into a mockery; destroying 'the freedom of the seas, and tho seCurity of territory, and-the prosperity of la bor. We sinsuld-see the natural laws of industry and trade tampered with, civilization turned baca, a canting pa gaibism set up in the name of Christi anity; and the Old World, infested with the piracies of the New, in every department of politics, of business, of territorial possession, and of intellectu al and Moral intercourse. lithe Con federates could prevail and reinstate the spirit and policy of the South at, Washington; it'Would be the_ greatest calamity that has befallen 'the world for centuries: But'it will not' be.— The American people will not permit it; and the rest of the world; once aware 'of the danger, will not endure it!! Surrender of Harper's Ferry. Report of the Investigating Com mittee. The Commission, consisting of Maj. Gen.. D. Hunter, U. S. A., of Vols., Pres. ' • Major General George CadWill ader, U. S. A., of Vols.; Brig. 'General C. C. Augur; U. S. A. of Vols. ' ; Major Donn Piatt, A. A. General of Vols.; Captain P. Ball, A. D. C. ofVols. ;' Col. G. Holt, Judge Advocate General, called by the Government to InOsti g'ate the conduct'of certain officers con nected with, and the circumstances at tending the abandonment of Maryland Heights and the eltrrender Htirper!s Ferry, have the honor to _report 01'6 following : • On the 3d of September General White entered Harper'i Terry With his force from 'Winchester. The tr;f, day be was erdered to Martinsburg to take command of the fOrpes there:— On the 3.2 th of September ho again re turned to Harper's Perry,, where he remained Until the sUrrender without assuming the command. On the 7th qt' septombev q,tioval 3.loolellan, the most of-his forcq 111,y ing preceded him, leftVadhington under orders issued some days previ ously, to'clrivc the enemy from Mary . 1 1 1 13 - E., Cl-- - LO33M JOB PRINTING OFFICE. 11" mos t "GLOBE. JOB _OFFICE'.' the complettP 44.5- 1n the country, end pee 'mese/ the meet ample facilltlet fOrprorontly executing to the best style, every variety of Jolt ft - luting, teeth as HAND BILLS, , • PRODBA)I3IES,. • BLANKS, - • POSTERS; t 1 , 4 1 _ _ CARP% • CIIICULARS, - BALL TICKETS, LABELS, &C., &C., &C NO. 24. CALL AND 6ZAIC46 SPECIA!ANO itptr, AT LEWIS' ROOE, STATIONERY & MUSIC STOUR land. That night he established hl4 headquarters atlOck:yillc, from "hied} place on the 11th of September, 116014 egraphed to General Halted( havq Colonel Miles ordered to join him 0 once. On the sth of September, Colonel Thomas H. Ford. Thirty-SeCond took command of the forces on Mary: . land Heights. Forces were plaeq444l, Solomon's Gap and at Sandy /rook, Those at Sandy Hook, under, 'Colonel Maulsby, retired by Col. Miles' griler to the eastern slope -of Maryland Heights two or three days prdvious tq their evacuation by , Colonel Ford. Oa the 11th of September the force at omon'a Gap was driven in kly the en q, my. Colonel Ford called uion Miles for reinforcements. The One Hundred and Twenty-Sixth New York and the Thirty-Ninth New York (Gar: , ibaldi Guards,) were sent him on Fri; day, the 12th of Septeniber, lola on morning of the nth he wasfurther:re; inforced by the Ono Hundred and Fif teenth New York and a portion -cola Maryland regiment under Lieutenant. , Colonel Downey. Col. Ford made requisition for axes and spades, to enable him to construct defences on the Heights, but obtained none, with the exception of tan ales belonging to some Maryland trolls, hiring all that could be obtained, d slight breastwork .of trees was. eon structed on the 12th near OM. crest a the Heights, and a slashing'Of. timber made for a short distance in front; of t•.. the breastwork. The forces under _Col.. Ford ,worg stationed at various points on the. Ma. ryland Heights, the principallorceke. ing on the crest of the bill near thq breastwork. and loot; out":• commenced on Friday thel2thoog the crest of the hill. Early on the• morning of the 14th, the enemy made an attack on the crest of the bill, and after some Aitne,Alie troops retired in some confusion 'to the breastwork, where they were* rallied. About 9 o'clock, a second attack was made, which the troops behind thq breastwork resisted for a short titri9, and until COL Sherrill, of the One hun t . dred and twenty-sixth N. Y. regiment, was wounded, and carried off the field, when the entire Ono hundred: an 4 tireniy-slxth regiment, as soimi. *4l nesses testify, all but two 'companies, Major Hewitt states, broke, and fled,in utter confusion. Men and most ofthe officers all fled togothenp9 effort being m_n(lc'*G_i.tilly the ri)g. nun, atop 4 CoiOn et Ford, Liont„Barras,:Aetiot Au tan t, offieem re g iments, directed by Wee, then on the Heights. - Soon after, the remaining forces • at the breastwork, fell back, undom sup : posed order from Major Hewitt, wh9 himself says that- he gav,o no sneh or der; merely sent instructions to the Captains of his own regiment thap,:if c) T they were compelled taigg al: ! in good order. Orders wore given by Colonel Ford for the troops' to return to their position. They, advanced* some distance up the Heights, but did not regain the breastwnrks. ,That evening C o l o nel , F4B Rti• Maryland Heights for sorno•hours, con sulting with Col: Ford;., left, 64; tWecn : ll: and 12' o'eleek, Witheatdi ; reedy ordering Colonel Ford to cyatt uate the Heights, but instruetiliihitn, in case he was comPelled*t r o to Spike his guns, and • throw the ',heavy siege guns, down the mountain. • About 2 o'clock, perhap4 a little la ter, by the order: of Colonel PoFd; ,the Heights, were abaridoped; the gnus tie in g spiked according to "inStruetionS. , On Saturday, Col. D'Ertassy Opt over to the ,Maryland Heights, four companies under Major , Wood, whp brought off, without oppositionjour brass 12-pounders, two of Whidliwore imperfectly spikcd,4nd a wlig4l 19.41 of ammunition. , • • General Whito;, on his ref.iii:,: , to Harper's Ferry on' the 12th of s4itein her, suggested to Colonel -. 211iles, % the propriety of contracting, hiS•lines,on Bolivar Heights so as to maye a 'better defence, but Cid: Milei adhered' tii 'WS original line of defence, stating that 4Q was determined to makc'his . stand;Ori Bolivar Heights. Gendxal Virl4fte alio urged the importance 'of holdi rig M.ary. land Heights, even , Should. It 'teguire taking ti entire force ever there from Ferry.. ' . Col. Mires; under his orders to held, Harper's. Ferry to, the last', 'extrMnity;' while iultnitting , the i inportance Of Idaryland. Heights, stunn ed to regard them as applying tp tlfe town of Ilarper:s Ferry; and even to, thig tO leave Harper's,F,orrY eyett to, g0,.51 i n Mdryland lreightS,,l,vdtild, ho,disohey ing' his instructions.' " i ,;,:"',. --' ~:;. General McClellan eStabliehetl ‘ 4l,p. headquarters at . ,Frederick, City;i on the 13th'of September. Cfrl the night ot the is t h ; .after the evacuatiOn iof 31arYland Heights, Cq. Milos difecte4 Captain (now Major) Rusiblf, 'of, the Maryla'nd cavalry, to take With i liiiii,'n, few men and endday,orite" - get,threner the enemy's lineS and readh";Soine . .g our forces—GeneraLlATOGlellan, if Os sible---apd to - repertt O he klipia .of il Iliiiper's Terry, that it,cottld fioi: `64 mit more:than fertY.eight lionrinnle4s reinforbed, and to urge, the sending Of reinforcements. Captain Russell reach ed' Potlevil MeClellan's 'headqUart,o r itt at Frede'ri'ck, at 6; A. M.,'ori . - Sunda*, the 14th• of Septeintler> . '#N4 Ttfil:4 4S - directed by .Colonel Mile!?: •,,', tufiti,. : diately upon'his airivab - Gfinprat xt.,. Clellan sent - off a messenger,"as Capt. Russell understood; to General Frank- lin. - ' ' 'At 10 A. M., Captain Rus.sell loft. for Conoral Frei*lin's, een] and; witii. a commumoittion to Genova Franklin r . rqin GonerailteClellan..' e reached Oeboral Franklin aboyAl) o?clopk t tli4t afteinOon, and found him . engaged With the enoM;l7,ap C . J•hapton!s Gap!.:•—• The onem3i wore d)iven'ffoin tho Gap, and the nowt morning, tho 13th Con. BILL IIEAJ4S,