TERMS OF THE GLOBE. Per tattllMlll in selimoce 3ix months Three months' . • A failitro to natty a 4.ll4contiiinanca at the expiration of Ito teriu glitoTribeil fur oil! be oinolidered n iron engage' meat. TERMS OF ADVERTIAIitO 1 hirmrtiun. 2 do. . 3' do. Fonr lines or lose $ 25 $ 37V o, AD Joe square, (12 lines.) ...... .... 50 75 - 100 two equates 1 05 1 50 2 60 three equhres ' 150 225 350 Oyer throe ireok and lone then thrte Inouthn, 25 crate )or mare for cacti insertion. • 3 6106t11.1. 5 months. 12 men thn .$1 50 -$2 00 $5 00 . vOO 500.. 7 00 .500 ' 8 00 10 00 . 55 10 05 15 00 . 0 90 1300 00 00 .1200 - 16 00 ...... ....24 00 .20 00 10 50.... ..... .50 00 fix knee or loss,. Joe 1111111111. , rwo sconces, three squares... Your nquaros,.... Italia column, 4ne column - • • Professional and Invdne.s Cards not oxceeding f rnr linen. One year e. 3 00 • Adsninistrotortr.and Executors' ...... Adze; ti4ententn not marked with tile nuuda•r of iu,,er one will be continue.] tilt Rabid out cliorged ar prdine:to them. (ATM'', Else Olabe. • HUNTINGDON, PA. Friday, May 15, 1863, Lines Written op ;the Death of Rob - brt D. Walker. BY. .1 .14. k llelentlesi death haft torn aside The ties that Ifund so fondly dear; rar from Menai and home he died, : With no one there to shed. a te.tr, , •Twas hut n [Mc short dap, at least ' We thought, oar loved cafe would be home; tutqth the solemn gloom is cast That looked for day Can never come. But then the Lord has thought it best To "take tor brother fro'm our side ; "Great honor crowns his noble breast, Fur in his country's cause ho died. Though we arc nut alone in grief,— There's runny more has &full..the cup,— In God (deep we find relief— In him we place our future hopes. rroi tbe Globe.) SERMON NO. 10 I= NOAil . AND HIS VINTYARI) !! And Noah lo•gan to be an Intehandnutn, and he plan ted a vinc)ittd."—GEzasts This, dear, readers, is a beautiful Itnafogy between Adam and Noah, the former the father of the old, and the latter of the new world, in the ON ocations'towhich their faculties were directed, as if there Avas something in the virgin freshness of the sow to soli cit the grateful regards of both as they respectively inaugurated new cycles in the history of the hittnan race.— Adam was the horticulturist, and No ah the. vine:dresser. The first revell ed in his floral parterre; the latter re , uvenatcd his energies in the culture of the purple grape. The venerable progenitors of the old world and the now, both held communion with na ture,'and watched the exuberant pro ducts of the soil in their ripening beauties with kindling ardor and grate ful devotion. , The early pursuits of man had a simplicity and grandeur which do not pertain to that perfected civilization which, while it introduces manifold pursuits, dwarfs the soul of man by the sordid character which as sociates itself with much of human en deairor. The pastoral Abraham, with his immense flocks dotting the oriental landscape, appears to want no crown of gold to transmute him into an acf,z,- al sovereign, for he is one already in the breadth of his pastoral character and the ramifications of . his business transactions. And Noah, as he walks among his purple grapes, appears to marshal his countless •vines with the air of the Roman in surveying his le gion of subalterns. In his ago of mus cular vigor, and with a hoary crown, lie plants and manures and trims and gathers in his prolific vintage, with his face aglow with satisfaction. When ho first issued from the ark, he select ed a genial locality, and di.opped his seed into the ground amid the gratula lions eff his children. We doubt not that this planting of the vine was -ac companied by every befitting demon stration. The earth had been, as it were, purged in the laver of regenera tion. Her baptism of Water had quickened her capacities for yielding her full strength for the sustenance of her children, and all she wished was the opportunity to develop her resour ces and be the abna mater to them all. Let us for a moment imagine Noah consigning a variety of seeds to the bosom of the earth at one and the same time, for there is every reason to think that tAio culture of the vine was not an exclusive pursuit in his case, but only a paramount object of inter ested regard, subordinating minor cul- AIR.S of various other kinds to this clarling pursuit. Gatho4ng around 449-4;.s all, as a sower be begins to sow an 41 thus Addresses rtfhom:: u 4y children, look at me as I give .to,earth in custody-the germ of tfuture harvests. For rolling seasons our earth has had no robe of vegeta tion, for heinonis guilt had stripped her ,of ,her 91deu garniture of ftti.it and .flowers and grain. The crown of glo ;ryilatid fallen from her iintternal brow; but to-day .17 0 pit the first fresh jewel this ihor .now torouet of vernal grace. From these tiny seeds will spring the mighty harvest. In a short space you will gather iu your yellow sheaves and sit in your orchards-and have your cheek tinged in the reflec tion of the gOlden orange, and bind (the chaplet of grapes to your brow, ; and shout your vintage anthem with cadence more musical because for a year and Moro it has been suspended. Now free is my range as thus I pass from .spot to spot, preparing future Samptets for you all. This mighty 'sweep of ac,tb9.l3, as ,y.atter the grain, is iv : . hry , ! our late im- . . . . ~ • . . .... . . . , • 0.q401 - 3:-.. '//,/s. .4,;•,... • . . . . . .- . • • ' . 1 . k.: •!.. ::4 ., ,e . ..j4 ... t . k..0tg . .;.' ,• .„ ~,., V,44%14 .•''' ' '''' 4. 'N '', ' / ~, ,' r 0 •'. •..•. . ' . ' . •. ' V • • '''. .•\ s • N, V.t • t a ?!$O .- ''. • ' . . .. s'''''''''‘'' ''' '''':'•',..:>, • ~: I': - ' .!.., -...,,, k.tiV ‘ 4: ' .>,,,., ''''..",, r,,-?......: ...`,....rk. ~, ..,1 , ..VV1X . ,4'lo;i'llS;,-'e.PE.,;...,'l'', •:;%:::::'''' ' ' ... ''. ' - '''' ,-',";' .:( .. , ~ .. ...,... ' .-%. ::„ ' - . .- ' '' , ., , ;"- ,4 „:,, -,,,, ...,, ...: -• ‘ ‘ Vg . ; \ s 4' \ •. , ;.--,*:: :f...ei.1.,'::.,,t,.',7.,:: ?. ' .Y ; ' •'- ..., ... -- 7 .' . •:: , ,; A ~ . .,Tig. ,-...,•!.,-::-.::,-. •. • -,,. ~,,,, - 1 L.... . ..,..„ ..,... . - ‹.- - r„....,- , =' ,, F7k4---.. , 1,11., , , , 24k.:3v. k :4,-..,, ~, , -. ::::-., : 4;, . .., -, -.-:,..-:.- . 4 . -:,..-r, ........' 1,.,. ,7 7 -• . . ..„...., .... , „.• ~. ~ (.... j .._____,H. d . '' ' r '''''' l ..; ii - '.-- • . ( _ ~ ~..:. . .4- -- s• -- t. - ...f,„--: ,. ,..7" -- ...., - ; . . .. • 1 .. 4- :t .. .-'4iN , :''''s . .. r,:, ,, , •F , „•:, ~,, , ...... . . ...,,,•••:. :,-,,,,.., . . . ' . . . : ~.. . .. ~ ,_, , -.;;..':-/- •• .'.... . s": . ' 5? WILLIAM LEWIS, Editor and Proprietor. VOL, XVIII, prisonment in the ark, that it exhilar ates my nerves. I feel that earth will prove true to her trust, and re store us a hundred fold:" The cere mony is over, and rapidly is the har vest yielded to expectant hearts.— Noah and his family soon walk down the colonnade of clustering vines, and the tropic moon, like a silver shield, seems to pause aboim the vineyard of the new world as if the products of the soil were more worthy of her queenly smile of patronage than when hoaiy crime rioted beneath her beams. At last Noah is a king iu the natural 'world and marshals before hint its va rious products, as once he did the ani mals when he went into the ark. Ile tastes the wheat and drinks the wine, and feels lahuselfa monarch. The pro ductions of the soil pass at once to his use without any intervention of trade or, commerce, - for barter is yet un known to man. The emporium of trade is a temple not yet dedicated by the high priests of Mammon, with their loins girt about with a golden cincture. As yet the atmosphere is too pure mill too fresh for the hot and fiery strife of speculation. With his wife and his sons' :wives around him, lie moves in the refining circle of fem inine influence and fellowship, a hale old man, happy in the heritage of do mestic bliss. The ark with its ponde rous timbers is . near him, for lie can not find the heart to demolish it for fu el. On the mountains of Ararat, where it first perched as a fatigued bird, it still folds its placid wing, and he some times clambers up the precipitous draggy acclivity Co worship in its ho ly ark. Perhaps lie and his boys take a few sheaves of the yellon wheat, and a few clusters of the grape to bind them as a chaplet around the old oak en sides, and the sunshine gilds the tributary donation as he leaves it thus far up the height.. The eagle flaps his wing above it and the swallows build their nests among its timbers, for it does not appear to rot like other wood, as though endowed with supernal vig or. It looks down on his vineyard 1 to watch his toil as lie trims the branches and treads the purple grapes, fur as yet his nature has not succumbed to infirmity and his twain is free from the stupor of intoxication. lie thus far enjoys, but abuses not, the bounties of his benefi• cent Creator. Alas I that the beauti ful scene should ever change, and the father Or the new world, dismissing prudence for his superior•, yield to the clamoring of appetite and become the slave of sense. Allis! that the first stain upon the regenerated earth must be time demon blot of drunkenness—a stain which has deepened with grow- ing dine BROAD TOP COAL REGION. (Front the United Statcsilailtuid and :Mining Register.] ENGINEER'S OFFICE, SAXTON', BED- ) FORD CO., PA., April 15, 1863 Taos. S. FERNON, ESQ., Editor IL and Mining 11egi8ter : I enclose you a map recently made of the .Broad Top coal region. On it you will ob serve the position of the Huntingdon & Bread Top Railroad, with its bran ches reaching into the coal field. The Bedford Railroad is a continuation of the Broad Top. Twelve miles of the former are now nearly completed, giv ing a rid! Doe from Huntingdon (on Pennsylvania Railroad) to Bloody run, a distance of 43 miles.- The construc tion of the Huntingdon and Broad Top Railroad was mainly intended to de velop° the Broad Top coal region, and thus far public attention lag been di rected excluslyely in the coal interests. The animal -reports from the region,. published in the Register, will show that its shipments have been rapidly increased, whilst new developments are being made, and the railroad bran- ches extended. It seems a singular fact, however, 1 that the coal of this district should have thus far monopolized all the. at tention—a district having within its limits vast quantities of excellent iron ores, lying along its main line of rail road, easily mined, and producing when "smelted the best quality of iron—the ,celebrated "Juniata iron." The prostration of the iron business, during the past few years. may account in part for the neglect, of' this interest, but, with the presonii lirdection and demand for iron, it appears to mo the time has come for the successful devel opment of its iron ores, and the estab lishment of ironworks along the valley west of the coal region. Three qualities of ore are presented to the consideration of (lie iron manu facturer—the proto-carbonates of the coal measures; the brown peroxide of irbn of the Umbral SQVi . CS, 'arid' the he nuotito and fossiliferous iron ores of the Surgent series. Proto-Carbonate of Iron of Coal Metz suros.—Very little haS heretofore boon done to devolope these ores; during tho period of river navigatiOii by arks, befbre the construction of the railroad, a few furnaces were in blast along the Raystowu Juniata, one of these, the Hopewell furnace, obtained a portion of its ore from the Chancy oro bank, up Sandy Run. Surface specimens of iron ore are found in many localities in the coal field', but no systomatie ex plorations ba,vc N'ot Leon reads to do HUNTINGDON, PA,, WEDNESDAY, MAY 20, 1868, velope the position or magnitmre of these deposits. The Peroxide of Iron of the tlmbral series has been opened and worked at a number of places •, it is found in the upper red shale, which accompanied by Terrace mountain, encircles the coal field. It has been worked at Par adise furnace, Trough creek, and at Hopewell furnace. In 1853, J. P. Lesley, Esq., Geologist, remarked of this ore : "The furnace at Hopewell has the coal within a mile of it, an im mensely valuable deposit of cold short iron ore outcropping behind it, an ore which will be pursued hereafter from I gap to gap, the whole length of Ter 1-race mountain, and upon which a hun- , dred furnaces might run a century." Iron ores of the surgent series.—These valuable deposits of iron ore are found in the Surgent red shale, which forms the base and part of the slope of Tus soy mountain ; it is also found flanking 'Jacks and Black Log mountains. The ores of Woodcock valley, along the base of Tussey mountain, have a gene ral range.of oaten?* nearly parallel to, and but a short distance from, the main line of the Huntingdon & Broad Top Railroad. whilst the Bedford rail road intersects them at Bloody-Run. Between this formation and the rail road, the scalent limestone outcrops along the entire valley, forming a sharp prong west of Bloody Run, and again flattening up Black valley. The fossil iferous iron ore is found in two seams in the lower portion of the formation, which are separated by an interval of slate and sparry limestone, from two to eight feet thick. The lower seam or member is of the hard variety, and the upper the soft fussiliferotts ore— These ores have been opened at nu merous localities along the outcrop from below McConnellstown, in Hunt ingdon county, to Bloody Run, in Bed ford county, presenting an outcrop of over 50 miles long. The upper or soft I ore is two feet thick, and the lower or hard ore averages 15 inches thick, giv ing an aggregate average thickness of ore over 3 feet. In the upper portion of this formation, and- connected with the lower layers of the sealent lime stone, are found a chain of deposits or 'pockets" of hennotile iron ore; the principal openings made in these de- ! -posits, have been at " Flack bank," about one mile west of Stonerstown— there the Ore was found 4 feet thick I and of excellent quality. llr. !Whit ney, an experienced ore miner, in- forms ale, that" he shafted down this deposit 90 feet. At the Bender bank, 3 miles farther up the valley, the ore was finund 6 feet thick ; the workings I extending beneath the surface 135 ft. At Cogans openi ng,near Bedford Forge, I the deposit is four feet thick, and at Bloody Run, near Bedford Railroad, on lands of Hon. W. P. Schell and oth ers, a new opening recently made by E. Trambath, shows the 'ore 10 feet thick, and of a superior quality. On the same lands explorhtions arc being made to fully develope the fossil ore , seams. The iron ores of the Premeridian and Meridian series (Warrior-ridge) have not...yet been sufficiently oiled in this district to determine their size and quality. Mr. Rogers refers to this in his report of the Geology of Pennsylvania, Vol. 2, page 731. For a full description of the ores of' this district, sec Rogers' Geology of Penn sylvania, Vol. 1, page 569, &c., and 'Vol. 2, page 729 ; at page 731 a tab!e of analyses of the Sargent ores will be found, giving their constituent parts in great detail. The iron ores of this district have been sufliciently tested at the old furnaces to remove any doubt as to their quality, and although no accurate record has been kept of the depth of the mining in the Sargent fossiliferous ores, from which to Obtain data fin• a calculation of quantity, enough is now positively known to show that these ores can be mined (along tho entire 'l'ussey mountain range) to a depth of fifty to ninety feet beneath their exposed outcrops; and this depth of' milling can be reached by the ordinary drifts or gang-ways, at water-level. Front a careful collec tion of facts in regard to the position and quantity of iron ores in this region, I have no hesitation in presenting it ass desirable field for iron.makei•s.— All the materials for its manufficture are accessible by railroad, and fuel in the form of coko, coal and charcoal, can be procured in ine4haustible quan tities. The coke from Broad Top coal is fbvorably known as a very superior quality, and is judged to be the fuel for smelting the ores of the surrounding valleys. No question of supply and demand enters into the problem of ironinaking, for the humiliating fact is well known by iron manuflicturers, that in the United States wo only make about Oh per cent. of the iron required for our own use; the balance has heretofore been imported from England. If the foregoing remarks on the iron ores of the Broad Top Baystown Juni ata district dill have the effect of drawing the attention of practical iron makers to an investigation of its min eral resources, the writer will have no fears of the result. Already the old furnaces at Paradise and Hopewell are being again prepared for work, and trust the day is not far distant whin capital and labor will fully resuscitate this extensive source of mineral wealth. Very respectfully, JOHN Resident anti * Mining Engineer; Jl. & B. T. R. R. S. Coal Co. GOLD Piss. LA flue assortment of Picket and Desk Gold Pens just re- Ceived at Lewis Book Store, The largest stock and greatest variety of stles of Pocket Books and Currency liorders, outside of Philadel phia, can be sril!! at Lewis' lioott Store. -PERSEVERE.- An Interesting Letter. We are permitted to publish thQ fol lowing' interesting letter, written by the brave son ofller- of this place: U. S. GI:SBOAT "LOUISVILLE : " in the mouth of Yazoo river,4llo, '63 DEAR FArrtEn.:—We are here yet. Our boat is all ready for running the 1 , blockade at Vicksburg. We have ' bales of hay around the pilot house ' and on the side at the magazine and on the stern. We have eight-tons of powder on board ; it is slowed in dif ferent parts of the boat. We have the spar deck laid with iron logs,.hawsers, &c., to keep a plunging shot froth coin ing through. We have a coal barge to take down with us; it icon the star board side of the boat. The, port side will he facing the batteries. . Th 3 transports are not ready yet;_ they are getting bags of sand to protct them. The men are wetting the bales of hay and it looks as if we were -going to night. On last night, the 15th, all the gun boats.were ready and at half-past 12 o'clock all hands were called,and the orders were to be ready to start down. The Men were at the capstan ready to hoist anchor—the •battle, lanterns were lit—all the other lights:were put , out, and we were ready. to start at a , moment's notice. • After waiting for more than an hour, orders. came to " turn in," as the tran.sports - were not ready and we had to Wait for them.— This morning the three transports that were going down with us canto over and are in the Yazoo- :Every-thing is ready and we will go 'down to-night. There arc eight gunboats—the Mound City, Carandolet, Pittsburgh, Benton, Louisville, Sterlins Price, Tuscumbia, and Lafayette. April 17th.—We aro' now at Now Carthage, Last night at halfpast ten o'clock the boats were signalled and we all got ready and started down.— Oar boat was the third in line. We proceeded down and were turning the point, when the rebels sent up signals, and then they opened their batteries on us. The shot and shell came whis tling all around us. It was not the intention to fight the rebel batteries at Vicksburg; but to run past them.— The boats that were all over iron-clad were to tire but the other boats- did not fire their bow guns. The rebels disabled two of our transports. Qne we burnt and the oth'er ;•'‘ , /tts taken In the canal to be repaired; if - not too much lin m aged. Oar boat got aground under the rebel batteries and the rebels thought they had us, and were preparing to boa - rd us ; but, we let fly throe of oar broadside guns twice. After that . they kept on'. If they came close enough we would have treated them with warm reception from oar hot-water hose. We had to cut our barge loose before wo could get oft'. After wo got past Vicksburg we stopped and canght our coal barge. • The Tuseumbla Look i•sirc of the transport that was disabled and towed it to shore. The rest oldie boats went down and soon the. rebel batteries at Warrenton opened on them; some of our boats replied, and, I think, silenc ed their guns, for when our'boat went past, (which was some time after tine others,) they did not fire at us, We anchored a few miles below there and this morning we came down here. The transport that got through safe is with us. It is to convey troops across the river. We have about forty thousand troops here that came across by land. We are g oing to attack the rebels at Grand Gulf and the soldiers are to co-operate. That place is about twenty-five or thirty miles front hero. Our boat was only struck a couple of times. One of the balls kit our thick iron and only dented it. There were none hurt on our boat. There were one or two killed on the boats and some wounded, but I do not, know for certain how many. None of' the gunboats were disabled. When we were passing Vicksburg 'the rebels set fire to a hnikling that had sonic combustible matter in it to make light on the-riv er, and when it commenced to blaze it was very light and they could see us plainly. There arc about three regi ments encamped here. - The others tyre a short distance off. The Benton is the flag ship. The Admiral is on board of it. They fired eighty-three shots Wont it. I counted over a hun dred shots that the rebels fired. Ido not think they have as many guns as is reported they have or else they have moved sonic of' them, and I think they would not do that. From the time the rebels opened on us until we got passed Vicksburg, it was an hour and a half. I was at the Port Engine from the time we started until WO passed both places, and done all the working myself. It takes three men to run the boat, one at the Throttle valve and ono at each engine. There are three engineers besides the chief' but he does not do any of the running.. When we aro running I go on watch at the engines but I take my turn only. I like it and would sooner do it than lay around. Your son, Win. AsumAN MILLER. LIFE ERlloll9.—ltow little self-ap pointed censors of others may know of those whom they condemn ! It is pitiful, the amount of pain, sometimes ignorantly, sometimes selfishly, inflict ed in this way. Love should be able to quicken the irontal vision in this respect. A careless foot may be plan ted just as crushingly as a willfully malicious one. Alai!' who can corn. pate the tragic moaning of those little words, " I didn't think," off• " I kriou-." Stoneman's Great 'Cavalry Raid Full Account of his Exploits. A correspondent who accompanied General Stoneman's cavalry raid gives the following Interesting account of the expedition : KELL - rsyrt.LE, RA . RPARANNOCK : En' ER, May Bth, 1803—One - of the most successful military enterprises-of the kind ever undertaken in this or. any other-country terminated, to-day. I refer to the 'recent raid 'Of. our cavalry to the rear of the rebel army and With in its lines. On the lath ultimo, Gen Stonemanrwith a portion of his caval-, ry command, moved up the left bank of the Rappahannock; with the inten tion of pierci - dg the- enemy's lilies at the most favorable opportunity, then, I if possible, cut his lino of communica tion and estroy public property wher ever found. On the -14th, the first se ries of rain storm commenced, causibg the river to become 'sn swollen as - to. render crossing impracticable until the 28th ult., and even then a pontoon bridge was used. 'Thus' the-weather detained the expedition for fifteen deyS. In - the meantime tho fords at different Points Were tested, foraging parties were sent across the river, and several skirmishes took place. without any important results. On -Wednes day, the 20th ult., the whole force was again put in motion, and crossed the river at 'Kelly's Ford withbut opposi tion. General Averill immediately moved his division to the Orange and Alexandria railroad, - where two regi ments of the enemy were met, and a skirmish took place, terminating by the enemy retiring towards Gordons ville. In this encounter only two' of our men were wounded.— General Stoneman moved tlic Main body of his domniand across Fleshman's river, and encamped for the night in. - open field .during .heavy, rain storm. At this point the enemy made a dash upon bur piekets; but did not alarm the camp. Thursday morning early General Buford crosses the Rap idan two miles below Raccoon Ford, (Morton's Ford,) and advancing up the the opposite bank caused 'a force of sixteen hundred rebel infantry, with one piece Of artillery, to leave in great haste from Raccoon Ford, where soon after General . Gregg crossed with his division. Here a lieutenant and -thir teen privates of a rebel 'artillery com pany were captured. Near this point an army•beef contractor was overhaul ed and 826,000 in confederate bonds taken from him. - . A rebel engineer with a wagon load of material was also captured on the road. The whole force encamped at night one mile from the river. Friday morning heard cannonading on the right, which proved to be General Av erill's command having a little fight with the enemy at - Rapidan Station on time Orange and Alexandria railroad. This was the last General Stoneman heard of General Averill. Next day, got close upon the heels of a large reb el force at Orange Springs, who, to escape, abandoned wagons, provisions, &c.; captured a lieutenant of Jackson's stale returning from leave of absence. At night camped at Greenwood, just cutside of Louisa Court House. Time town was surrounded, and Col. Kil patrick took possession of the place at li o'clock, A. 31., May 2d, without op• position, capturing a few rebel soldiers. The citizens were astounded to find, the place in possession of the Yanketo, and overjoyed when they became con vinced that the Yankees were really tit ilized human beings and that they h:id not come to murder men, women and children in cold blood, as was firmly believed, and supplied the troops freely with victuals and drink. The track of the Virginia Central railroad, connecting Gordonsville and Richmond, was destroyed at different points for ten miles, two trains of cars burnt, telegraph wires cut and destroy ed, and some commissary stores_were also appropriated. During the night a detachment of the First Maine cav alry, doing picket duty five miles up the Gordonsville road, was attacked and had two men killed. The enemy disappeared 'the moment a brigade ad vanced, after firing a few shots. On the afternoon of the 2d, the command moved on through Yanceyvillo to Thompson's Four Corners. From this point detachments were sent out in different directions. One party (lc strayed a portion of the railroad be. tween Gordonsville and Charlottesville; another, consisting of four hundPed men, under Colonel Wyndham, pro ceeded to Columbia, on the James riv er, where the Lynchburg and Rich mond canal crosses the river. An un- ! successful attempt was made to de stroy the aqueduct. Five locks were destroyed, the banks of the canal dug away at different points, three canal boats loaded with material fur the rebel army, and five bridges were burned. A large quanti ty of commissary stores, medicines, &e„ were also destroyed, and several hundred horses were captured. A par ty under Capt. Drummond, of the Fifth cavalry, reached the river between Co lumbia and Richmond and destroyed locks, levels, and set fire tog bridge across the James river. Gen. Gregg proceeded *to the Fredericksburg and Richmond railroad, and destroyed at Ashland the depot buildings, railroad track, a train of pars, proosions, and telepraph. .4e, sent 'detachment to burn the railroad bridge across the South Anna, but it was strongly guar ! ded by infantry, and the party sent out fell back. gen. Gregg Fe.wtiod io Thompson's Four Copiers, but a portiolitif his command under Col. Kil patrick, moved'oastward to the Cen tral road, 'destroyed the bridge on that road over. ho' South Anna, captured and destroyed a train of ears,plllyeTts and the railroad • track for miles, and then passed dc.'vn the liennisula. TERNS, $1,50 a yeah lin= advan.ce. , , Another portion IV General Gregg's command, under,:Col.- Davis, - Twelfth - Illinois, crossed - t both roads nearer Richmond, .destroying vtikroads, Ade"- graphs, bridge over Brook river, and railway trains., -.A detachment : W.9on. Gregg's.. command also burned all the turnpike bridges over the SOuth Anna, to prevent the enemy making f ; flank movement, and,catehing Gen, Stone ; man, , in 'a trap: 'Monday, morning, the 4th, Hampton anWD., with two brigades, attacked about,Sixty of the Fifth cavalry, on • picliet: duty, near Shannon Hill., A charge:of ,the-rehell wits met by aspqn ter,charge ;Abe rob of advance was temporarily repulsed, but rallying, captured.seventeen,qf the Fifth - cavalry.- -_Our :PATO captured thirteen.of the enemy. ,• Gen. IThford advanced upon the enemy command, but they fled. : • : The night of the 4th General Gregg moved to near Yanceville, and was fol. lowed to that point the.; next, dayi•by General' Stoneman with Hu brcPa command :-: Here a "Man, a native of North-Carolina, Came into'camp,,who had been concealed for a year.to..avoid servin g Jeff. Davis. "Neal,.Yanceville seventeen C. S. A. Wagons, with mules, were overtaken and captured.. On the sth the retrograde movementeommen, ced, and - crossing the 11 , accoon Ford the whole command .arrived at ICA ley's Ford Friday, morning, the Bth. Thus the' cam - hind of Gon. Stone man remained nearly: nine days within the enemy's lines, visited nine differ ent counties, destroyed all lines oteom.i munication between the-rebel bapital and the:army •on 'the , Rappahanpoek,, SQ they °apnet be used again for. weeks• to come,.' destroyed the Lynchburg canal-on whose. waters are tranSpor ted all. the pro Visions raised in UM rich valley of tile James; and l'romi whi - ch source alone the rebel•army in Virgin ia receives mere than half its supplies'; captured several hundred' horses,•and destroyed a large quantitpof;,pUblic property:all with only the.los's oftwo men killed and not over: fifty woun ded and prisoners:, Mit it:greater tri umph than all- this has been gained.= Tho people in the counties Visited have had a good,look at-tfic live Yankees and Tound thein nciilict• savages, nor bandits. . ' Thanks to the . good.imanagoirietit of the commanding General, thli peal. pie whom he visited Will have lint lit:- tle cause of complaint at the invasion. Priva tc • property ad- piqrAte t were nowhere interfered with, except itrsach eases"as•are'raeogifized - br' llt civilized nations. The people at the same time were astounded and grati fied; astounded in the first instance to spa a Yankee force in their midst, and gratified to find us a civilized people. A few Union families were met with. These could not restrain their tears when they saw the dear old flag again. The negroes joined the column in flocks, and bugged to be taken away. Some of these poor people were so overjoyed that they went into hysterics; others kneeled in the street and pray ed, thanking Jesus for sending the Yankees. All these people tell the nun) story; their masters had tpld them that if the Yankees came there they would he sold to Cuba, branded, and many of theM would be murdered in cold blood. They did not believe it The negroes everywhere gave valu able information and acted as guides. Hearingof our approzieh at several points, they sat up all night and baked batches of bread, which was' passed out to the soldiers, with milk, water and whatever else they had, with un stinted ha nds. Genl. Stoneman's Expedition—Col, Kir*trick's Official Report. NY4sruscrox, May 11.—The follow lug was received at headquarters to day : YonlcrowN, j a , May 8, 1863. Major General 11. W. Ifalleck, Com mander-in-Chief United States ,4r2np : GENERAL have the pleasure to report that by direction from Major- General Stoneman, I left Louisa CAL on the morning of the ad inst. with one regiment—the Harris Light Cav alry rf my brigade—and reached Man g:try, on the Fredericksburg Railroad, at daylight on the morning of the 4th, destroyed the depot, telegraph wires, and railroad for several miles; passed over to . the Broad turnpike and drove in the rebel pickets down the turnpike across the Break, charged a battery, arid forced it to retire to within two miles of the city of Richmond ; cap tured Lieutenant Brown, aid-do camp to General Winder, and eleven mon, within the fortifications. I then pass ed down to the left to the Meadow bridge, on thp Chickahominy - , which I burned, and ran a train of cars into the river; I retired to Hanover town on the Peninsula, crossed and destroyed the ferry just in titne tp check the' ad vance of a pursuing cavalry force.— Burned a train of thirty wagons load ed with bacon, captured 13 prisoners, and encamped for the night, five miles from the river. I resumed my march at 1 A. M. of the sth; surprised a force of throe hun dred cavalry at Aylott's, captured two officers and thirty-three imin, burned fifty-six wagons, this depot eontaining upwards of twenty thousand barrels of corn and wheat, quantities of cloth, ing, and commissary stores, and safely crossed the Nattapony, and destroyed the ferry again, just in time to escape the advance of the rebel cavalry pur suing. Tat,e in the evening 1 de stroyed s, third wagon 'train and de- PP.t a few miles above and west of Tap pithannoctc, on the Rappahannock, and from that point made a forced March of twenty miles, being closely followed by a superior force of cavalry, suppos7 ad to be a pertion.of " Stuarts," from the fact that Wo captiirect.,prisonerS trorntlie Ist:, sth, anii lOtb Virginia BM , . ~ Cavalry: . 1 , At isliiilOwn We liheovcro4 a foree2obeiviility2.lrit#4 , u'pla line of battl9 Ekticliging49ldgile.on 0.,11.--7-` Tho.fitrflogt . kovil T ttaitAoivn• t bit I .4iiiirfuotEat7Oada.f,q . l.lfe tAtiltole, only phinfitT 1411F 0 X.W.•0111#P.1 0 .71? 'olpil Ji. ke og_ ii.pompg Q :To' • A. 14 ft 14iFaliTiciiility, Nvlf9:yal, ptlforao-tie4a -ratedtterofti;'-thfi'eciminattitifelii t. COltifieltavie; , o - f the' - Etate - e — frigiO C .A al At 10 "':',?ti., on the 7th,. I found 'salt:. ty and lvitecior our own brlyft, 0,14 flag wt finti,lii.Jirica at Gloßeetiter Point. Alits 'staid '440 march about the entire reils4Otay.fie*arch near ly two Ikbili;etlnidletH*4been made in less titan Arb`-'04 . 1341i a loss of ono of6clr antlthiArei I. eiiezifinen`, while we captured and . paroleruilwards of three hundred raen. =I ME 1 1 NO, : ~49: I taiwPiefienletinairingiag to your notice the_oftlettre - oLany_stair r eeptain P. Owenl Jones - , •_flaptain Armstrong, .Captain, gelrvin, I slid, CBp,e . ci . 4lyAjie IrActig,,whin N oliw teOrocrto.cerry, deepatch .. .i&„ 'General frodkar.lll.o, qira in itt ,if teiltrett, he tajitiited' and 'Captains, anititttbiitiilf, add )16qrietirp , -- but was afterwards'.cuptureilAtiOself, ithlire - datFtiff - tiffdViraltlialtqcierilly recaptureallS;f:auire tsiraB; and ar rived hero this-p-ornippi. 21ptti44§, :praiseitb6 liigfil .the Eirartnin forti tude; taid untiringAmerg*, sitakivell .tbroughout - , the ,ntareit ihy:TiietAtrec,9l,p -,n'ey d)u.vjeS,eniithit`...qtAccre ~ap,r9AEL 'Of f the "Citi-til i ry; h due or w Kinn lnit' was -wi 1 I , 16ttel iitiorty ,or Lis li fo,:i he '-ettu in -the , gr'eat :battle -nowseing cetritO win I'9! himsOf t,be:PPP.Xi*ntiPl 2 .9..4l 3 chid fi Tieiyec4f9UY eninnitted laeilo% a ' uTr.lrirAirtferuff,_ . B ,,l , colotiel-Cot m'a'h d ne, lat vision,Ogralry . .Corpsef;:i; ,aIMC.I9.Vf.II jme . 43 - •' 7.1 Abolitiontgu.h as ..reitliy,run .l l9d 4 - b -r - Ple . ion"StategabelitiOniietltlietniejme oVer"EWV-Years deeltiftng-Ml - Government tibolislto.hmtoy abolish ea:their:oath of allitglane:o 7 -coml milted. perjury,; robbed t4 i - tggitiP, the . :euston•hoilse,;ferts;iirsetials, ain't post 'of and'been SBi p$ tang the-wsuM of all -villaibiesfbiti,U tomptinglo abelish;free,:govraffettlt and human liberty. itself J - - Thef,r,ahol= itioniam includes - robbery, ntiwilei i . treasen, in all . `tlieir 'fitoNt 'abhorrent forms. 'Their abolitioniiri aline atille destruction of tlur.bigheat :natiOrlit glory that .overfifiNnted the Hopes of the,,patriot,•okthe.surestgutirantiop of libetly,that ev,.er::§egirt FLO of 00 !nigh test'proSpeet`of natiOn l al intelligence, progresS. and'grandenr. Mit ever gladdened the :beery eft flip philanthropist..: -From any gullty pelt ticipation, in_ such a conibinittisin . oft, - telly, madness and villainy, :w r o aro thankful that iveareeieMpt; and' ei4y . do drop of our liked over be fettered with such alliell,hearted passion:. But Ahis.aktelitiortiern is not.confteed to the',Senift. ,Thete,-are_several war sipieuetiii"ohiefs 'Of tlijs Madile,sS in `the North, ling they areilaperitteln'theli . efforts tat corm p our- Whblepopulation, -41$0101.0. 2 0slYettlareaf,- erenY l thing . to , min. and nothitigk) loge tlAzr aro a - sring to prevent the eonstitution r al authorities from saving the Gove; moot from the-vandal hands 'of Aboli tionists, and are doing everything ptts , Bible to givo triumph to, this consurar mation'of all wickedness. The great prophet of the Northern Abolitionism has boasted that, ns n membet' of Con; gross ; he never voted h man Or a doll lar for the suopressfen of the rebellion! and when ho made this boast in-,New Jersey, his audicapp pearly lifted : 4M, rafters by their wild - applause! Among the other noted _Abolition ists of the North is Mr. Seymoult,-w-bp has just run for Governor of Connepti r cut, and who has held treasonable„cer 7 respondence with his brother' Abell tionists in the South.: Another rs i Mil Toubey, who , has boort stumping that State for Seymour, and who, as 44nertri ber of Buchanan's Cabinet, heippd..the Abolitionists steal. everything they, could get - held of.. And last Amigh not least, is Sam Cox, of Oliiii--"glort ous old Sunset Cox," as he was former; ly known—who made . speech, in 09ji, grass looking to 'the abolition of : the Northern Confederacy with a riotiv of independence or New England,'. dote - from Yankee. schooltnastorsi school-houses, and gone oral. • All those Abolitionists boldly deOnis that they prefer the success Of - 'the rel hellion to a restoration of "the '-Union under Lincoln t Saying. thus wo are authorized to, plfer-that they mean far.more—they intend, to pre vent the restoration oflito tin* And insure the triumph. et.t.beir infernal Abolitionism. - • •. • All the.traitors South and all their 'abettors North ar,o Abelitionistsjor they have " - fettling but Abolition—in, vie w=tibolition of all 'that is clesirahli to live for as eitizens,'of - ell that' cafe fathers fought for, and Of - all-ark the ) oppressed.of other lands: hare': - hoped: for. Call them, then, "kAbolitionists,-" because, in -tho larioltage of 13enure gard, it will have " a stinging effect.", 'true Loyalty, Tho following unreserved epro - spion. of patriotism 'wo take from the Mitt* of a gallant officer in the Army of the ," It is no matter what my views or, opinions were at, the pommencemenk pc the rebellion; k regard . to the pros ecution of the war. 'love of coun try, Government, anti 'flag, and two years' experieppc of most active cam paigning, have unalier'ablY fixed the opinion in thy, illd which I condonse and pack in anutsholl in favor of crushing armed rebellion at any cost, ana s o y 6qt:rifle°. I love country more than party, and ever stand ready to sustain every policy and carryout. every measure of the Government, tO - ; restore the unity of the States and the supremacy of the Constitution'. rarn in favor of the preservation of the - Union and the'proseentiop 'of the wart_ without an tf, a bid, or an'andr Fresh Fhtnror apq•Parcle'n"Seacle fsf sale at T2 . pwis' Store." - ugx„Finc) Oigitrei mad TRbaclx)' ftw : sale'cl,t; Bciok ,sCoro: . ALBl3 , .a—,nevir. and '141, 7 p.i.spOd 437,1ei—just i , recslivo and •Is 4 sala at Lxivrs' Book Stare MI