TERMS OF THE GLOBE Per annum in nthance vx mouths Three mouths 50 A failure to notify a discontinuance at the expiration of the term subscribed for twill be conaidered a nun en:lgo. tient. TERMS OF ADVERTISING ' 1 illenrtion, 2 do. 3 do. four lines or lola,. $ 25 .5, 371 , 1" $ 50 /no ware, (12 Ilnee,) .50 73 1 00 lota squares 1 00 1 50. 2 00 three squares, 1 50 3 00 o,er three week a n d less than three months, 25 touts 'or agllttro for each hosortiou. 3 months. 6 mouths. 12 mouths gin lines or loss, gt 50 $3 00. °5 00 Inv equate 3 00 5 00 7 00 rw,, eqUarea 3 00 8 00 10 00 three squoros,... ........... -.. 7 00 10 00 11 00 Four squares, . 0 00 03 00 20 00 IMP a column • -"I: 00 10 00 ...... —.24 00 Ono column, 20 00 30 00.......-.50 00 Professional and Business Cards not exceeding four lines, One year $.3 00 Administrators' and Executors' Notices $1 75 Advertisements not marked with the number of loser tions desired, will be continued till. forbid and charged uc cording to these ternie. The latest and noblestwork of Rebeldom [Front the Na , hville Ireton.] The rebellion has failed to produce one useful and humane invention.— There has not been a redeeming trait of character exhibited in alt the rebel crew. They have fought like Wild cats against all the graces of civiliza tion. They have exhausted their pow ers of invention in the channels of bru tality. The civilized world is not pre pared—it is impossible for it to believe the ht.lf of the fiendish outrages that have been perpetrated by this race of incarnate devils. They have changed the whole moral code. Theft, and murder and falsehood, that were ban ished from earth among heathen races, have become objects of worship. Of all the outrages to which, any people have been subjected, the last institute of tin-tare devised for'East,Tennessee, is the most vile, the most brutal, and the most congenial to' the morals and spiritual culture of the rebels. The women of East Tennessee have been forced to go into the fields, andla btu' to raise bread for themselves and children. They have, toiled so earnest ly and faithfully, and succeeded in raising such abundant crops, that the brutal leaders of this rebellion have appointed a commission to accompany the conscript agents to ascertain whe ther they *really aro women, or men in disguise. This most inhuman com mission is now subjecting those patri otic mothers to an examination the most cruet and barbarous that has C erdisgraced humanity. We know the education and instincts of these animals and can credit, the statements of men of veracity who have recently fled from that persecuted land. Those persons who aro ignorant, of their characters cannot believe sucha cruel mode of torture. When the annals of this barbarous rebellion arc written, a tale of cruelty will be unfolded worthy of the, knights of the lash, revolver, and kllife. This is but the male side of the story; the female portion is still more painful and degrading. It is painful to contem plate the outrages now being enacted in that most loyal, most patriotic por tion of this Union. When shall it end? A Specimen Rebel Clergyman. The southern pulpit is largely re sponsible for the rebellion which for two years has filled the land with mourning. It has from first to last done everything it could to "fire the southern heart." The character of the men who are thus employed, as events gradually disclose the truth, is found to be precisely what we should suppose in men of their action. There are southern clergymen, doubtless, who aro honest and sincere in their course, but the greater number are probably men of the stamp of Bishop Polk, and of that chaplain who lately attended John Morgan as a guide in his dash through Ohio, pointing out and helping to rob and kill Union men, Another fit representative of this class is one Rev. Dr. Marshall, who former ly presided over a Presbyterian church in Vicksburg-, and during the war hits I been a sort of general-utility man for Jeff. Davis. In Vicksburg' this divine lived in style, borrowing money of Union men to maintain his establish ment, and preaching secession on all possible occasions. At ono time he elegantly said in his pulpit: "I know we shall succeed, unless God Almighty shall pay a premium for rascality."— On another occasion he declared that "if any man has any sneaking feeling of Unionism about him, he ought to bo crushed to the earth." c, A year or so ago this reverend advo cate of rebellion constituted himself an agent for the distribution of contribu ted supplies to the rebel troops, and it is proved against him that ho took great quantities of socks, shirts, draw ers and other articles manufactured by wives, mothers, and sisters at home, and peddled them at retail in Rich mond, putting the proceeds therefor Into his own purse. Very naturally, these proceedings made the reverend Dr. Marshall decidedly odious to the rebel troops, but he was allowed to go unpunished, his services to the.politi cians being altogether too valuable to permit his removal from active life to the jail for which his criires bad fitted him. It is a satisfaction, however, to know that the reverend rebel was oust ed from his line residence at Vicksburg by General Logan, who put it in pos session of an old and tried . Union citi zen whose home had been destroyed during the siege of the rebel strong hold. It is thus, through the pulpit and by pensioned clergymen who are but mere puppets in their bands, that the rebel chiefs have incited the people, even through their religious emotions and sympathies, to the commission of crimes at which coming generations will stand appalled, !Il WILLIAM LEWIS, Editor and Proprietor. VOL, XIX. OUR CORRESPONDENCE. Mn. EDITOR,: For more than throe hundred years, an odious traffic in•hu man flesh, has been carried on from the Western coast of Africa to the con tinent of America, which in its conse quences has produced more unmingled woo, than any other calamity, which has befallen the human family. It is not my purpose to enter into a minute detail of this abominable, :Heaven-de tested commerce. Suffice it to. say, that for hundreds of years past, about eighty thousand btiman beings have been torn from their homes, and their friends, and all their earthly attach ments, in each and every year of that long and dreary peliod.. 'When the, Spaniards discovered the Island of St. Domingo, it was suppo sed to contain upwards of a-million of inhabitants. And in the shoft spice of fifteen years, that vast multitude had been reduced to about sixty thou sand, and they were diminishing dai ly. About this time it was discover ed that the Western coast of Africa was peopled with a hardy race, who were capable of enduring toil, and whose constitutions were adapted to UM heat of a tropical climate. Thith er the Spaniards turned their eyes, as to a place where slaves could be pro: cured to labor in their mines; and from that accursed hour until the pre sent tilde, the inhab;tants of Africa have been torn from home and all the sweets and comforts of home and have been dragged into bondage under ch.- cumstances. of cruelty and barbs ri which has stamped everlasting infamy on all the actors in, and aiders and abettors Of, this horrible traffic. When the slave traders first visited the western coast of Africa, it is said to have been a most delightful coun try. It was thickly studded with villages, and swarmed with a popula tion who were simple in their man ners, amiable in their dispositions, and wore in the quiet enjoyment of the bounties which nature had bestowed upon them in great profusion. It is true they were not civilized according to our ideas of civilization ; and it is also true that nature had stamped on them a complexion differnt from ours; but still they were comparatively, an innocent, happy, unoffending race. But the scene has been sadly changed in that ill-fated country; a country red with black men's blood, and black with white men's crimes. The slave traders introduced among thesd simple people every thing that could please the fancy, excite the en-. pidity, or rouse the passions of unciv ilized persons. They fomented quar rels among them, and furnished them with the means of destroying each other, until at length-every man's hand was turned against his brother. The consequence was that the native tribes on the coast of Africa made war on each other, in which the great object was to make prisoners; and every person who was taken prisoner was sold to the slave-dealer, and was hur ried on board the slave ships, which were constantly hovering off the shores of that devoted land. But indeed it is impossible to pour tray the sorrows and the sufferings of the wretched sons and daughters of Africa. Think if you can conceive it, measure, if you can ascertain its dimensions, the length, and breadth, and heighth, and depth of that tremen dous load of grief, which presses on the heart of the captive, when he casts the last lingering look on all ho is leaving behind him—when he is about to be torn from home and all its pleasures, from his kindred and all he holds dear on earth ! Form an idea if you can, of that unutterable desola tion which encompasses the father and mother whose children have been torn from them in a moment, and of whom they are never again to hear any in telligence on this side of the grave I Conceive if you can, the bitterness of that cup of woe which the captive drinks to the dregs, as ho is carried gores. the ocean in a floating dungeon, the draught continually embittered by the rembrance of that home, and those friends he never more shall see ! Bring these things home to your own doors and measure them by your own feel ings, and tell the result if you can ! Think not these poople, either in the land from which they came, or in that to which they are going, do not feel like other human beings, in like cir cumstances. It is a sad mistake to to think so,— " 'Fleecy locks, and black complexion Cannot forfeit nature's claim ; Skins may differ, but affection Dwells in white and block the came. " Happy indeed would it be, for these wretched captives, if they lost their feelings at the same time they loose their freedom. But they do continue to feel, and that most, keenly and such is the'effeet of that unutterable despair, which takes pesscssiOn of their whole souls, that it prompts them to adopt every means in their power to destroy their miserable lives. Of the eighty thousand persons sup posed to be carried captive yearly from the continent of Africa, one third of the whole number arc supposed to (lie on the passage, from causes, some of which I have enumerated, and thrown in the ocean. Another third arc supPo sod to die in what is called the season. ing, so that out of eighty thousand persons torn from Africa every year upwards of fifty thousand have died from evil treatment and of broken hearts, and other causes, in the course of a few months, from the time the galling chain of slavery wai fastened around their necks * Oh I what a prodigious waste of human life ! Let us pause fora moment and form an fdoa, if we can, of that mighty multi tude of the murdered sons and daugh ters of Aftica l who on that day, when the ocean shall give up its dead, shall . appear at the bar of God to demand vengeance of their cruel murderers ! Can any one, for a moment, contem plate this long protracted scene of villainy, and not be satisfied that there is need for and must be a day of awful retribution approaching ? WILBERFORCE Birmingham, Hun. co., ) August 26, 1863 f * " It would be easy to prove" says Hum bolt, "that the whole Archipelago of the We' t Indies which now comprise scarcely 2. negroes and mulattos, [free and aa~esi received from 1070 to 1625, nearly live millions of Afrituanki! In these revolting calculations on the consumption of the hu• man species, we have not included the num ber of unfortunate slaves who have perished in the passage, or been thrown into the sea as damaged merchandise. EDITOR GLOBE: Dear &r--With your permission, I want to give you a short account of the way some of our Democrats have acted out hero since the breaking out of the present rebel lion, and what they remind me of. For the purpose of finding out wheth er the matter is local, or whether the same peculiarities have been observed in other places—in the first place some of my old friends lamented a groat deal about our "Southern brethren" and their " rights," the poor fellows seemed to have no relations in the North at all, or if they had, seemed to care nothing at all about either them or their " rights," and they were great trouble about the "Constitution"; were very much afraid "Old Abe" as they called him, would ruin it forever, by calling out men for three years, when the law only provided for three months. They seemed to have no fears for Jeff Davis, and the secession ists doing any harm, if old Abe the Abolitionist could only be kept in bounds. They had a great deal to say about how this war might have been avoided—and they laid the en tire blame of its not having been avoid ed, on the North, and refused to do anything to get out of the serape, be cause as they said, it was not their fitult that the country got into it— there seemed to be different stripes among them. Some of them justified the Secessionists, and hoped they would succeed—said they had just as good cause for revolution as the colo nies bad when they revolted. They reminded moot' the traitors in tho South only they were twice as mean. Oth ers said the Secessionists were wrong, bat they would neither do or say any thing in favor of the war for fear of strengthening the Republican party, and weakening ours. They put me in mind of the firemen of Brigine No. 1, at a fire, because No. 2 got to it first, they refused to do anything, but cool ly stood by and lot their own proper ty burn for fear No. 1 would get cred it fm putting out the fire: Others wore willing to support the Government—to put down the rebel lion, only they were afraid, the war would go too far and would bo carried on so as to interfere with slavery; and so they hold back and not only did nothing to aid the Government but threw all their influence against it. They remind me of a stout able bodied fellow I once saw at a barn-raising— a largo heavy bout was going up, and all hands were at their best lift, the "Boss" sung out "yo heave" and all hands pushed and strained till it stuck, when on looking round here stood a big fellow with a rope attach ed taking a half hitch on a stump in the rear, for fear it might go too far and fall over and hurt somebody. Another and large class put mo in mind of an old goose we had when 1 was a boy; she was set to hatching in a fence corner, below the barn and by some means her eggs all got damaged and were, finally destroyed ; and to get her away, her nest was filled with HUNTINGDON, PA,, WEDNESDAY, MONMOUTH', ILLINrnS, August 13, ISG:3. j. -PERSEVERE.- brickbats, but in spite of all this, she stuck to the spot and hatched, away for a summer season, hissing away at every attempt to induce her to leave, till the flesh wasted from her bones, and the feathers from 'her belly. So it is with these fellows, they stick to the old political nest, and hiss at the Administration and every move it makes, with the pertinacity of the old goose, and with as lunch prospect of bringing forth any good thing as the old goose from the brick-bats. Bet there is another class of recent growth whd professed to be in favor of a more vigorous prosecution of the war, talked about our army, and tried to get positions with good pity . and . safe m places, and some of them ade the same professions to get votes to elect them to the Legislature, and to Con gress; the first when they failed to get positions, and the last after they were elected, fell into the "fire in the rear" peace party, and used their in fluence and position to encourage the rebels and discourage our army. They remind me of Judos Iscariot and Ben edict Arnold: They are called "cop perheads" now, for I think it a disgrace to the snakes to make the -comparison. Indeed, I know of hilt one serpent that would not suffer in a. comparison with such, and that is the old serpent the Devil, and I don't know that he would consider it any compliment to be compared to them. There are other small shades of difference among them not worthy of note. Douglas said in this contest there could be but two classes patriots and traitors, either for the Government or against it. I don't like to say .hard things about old friends, but they Certainly don't seem to be for the Government. Yours, &e The President, The practical sagacity of the I'resi• dent is daily justified. Ms impulses are wiser than the wary plans of more cunning men. It is true that, in wri ting the letter to the Albany Commit tee, lie was faintly _accused in some quarters of want of dignity. But both the resolution to write and the time of writing were most happy illustrations of his shrewdness, while the letter it self is unanswerable, and will hence forth be a constituent part of the body of Constitutional interpretation. Ills replies to Governor Seymour are not less excellent in their way. • In fact, from the moment of his in auguration it will appear that he has fulfilled every duty of his great office with an ability not less remarkable than his honesty. The desperate ef fort to make him seem to be a partizan has utterly failed. Ho has aimed only at the maintenance of the government; and to secure that end he has no more hesitated to adopt a policy which his own party approved than he has to take measurcS which tiro party op posed to him applauded. He has filled the chief posts of command with men of all political views. Yet he has been most sharply denounced from the be ginning of the war no less by his old party friends than enemies. The con sequence is, that, at this moment, he stands a little outside of all parties, even among loyal men. The rebels, and their tools, the Copperheads, of course, bate him. TheLWar Demo crats doubt some points of his policy. The Conservative .Republicans think him too much in the hands of the rad icals; while the radical Republicans think him too slow, yielding, and half hearted. And yet, without doubt, the more thoughtful and patriotic men of all parties can not but see how time confirms his wisdom, and were a Pres ident to be named to-morrow they would declare for Mr. Lincoln. So calm is his temperament, and so patriotic his policy, that thg,emancipa tion act from his hands could not seem, and never has seemed, to be a partisan movement. From thd beginning he did not doubt the right of emancipa tion as a military measure. But he carefully declared the object of the war to be the maintenance of the Govern ment. When Fro'iaont and Hunter issued their orders ho quietly revoked them, not, as he said, because such. measures were wrong, but because in his view the time for them had not come, and when it came, ho must ex ercise the power. When it did come, he warned the rebels last September that he had never doubted the possible military necessity might arise; that a military measure so grave and so long agitated should not be summarilyadop ted ; that he admonished them, if they feared the consequences of such a mea sure, to escape them by submission to the laws ; and that if they did not sub mit within three months the measure would become a part of the policy of the Government. The rebels tint:ol . od, and their allies, (tL.t Li • SEPTEMBER 2, 1863. I the Copperheads, organized. The dis astrothi failure of McClolian's and Pope's catnpaigns, with the retirement of Leo in good order after Antietam, the long inaction of, the autumn, and the removal of McClellan, dispirited many and disaffected some to the war. Tho consequences were' seen in the elections. Mr. Horatio Seymour is a specimen of the result. But the .Pres ident did not waver. The country was to be savod, if at all, by a policy which was not approved by the viitualfriends of the rebellion. The opposition of such gentlemen as Mr. Seymour and his managers was the conclusive argu ment for that policy. Therefore, on the 14 of January, the Order of eman cipation was issued and all persons held on that day as slaves within spe cified limits were freed. To that order, and the policy which dictated it, every sincerely loyal man accedes. Fcr it was clearly not an act of the President, as a partisan Repub lican, but as Commander in chief, sworn to defend the GovernMent, by every military resource. The loyal men who sustain it today are of all the late Tolitical parties and of all shades of opinion in regard to Slavery. The order was not issued by the Comman der in chief, nor is it supported by the loyal country, because slavery is wrong, but because it helps the enemy.— Doubtless the conviction that it is the root of the war has made many assent with more alacrity to the act of eman cipation; but the President adopted it as a military and not as a moral meas ure The way in which it was done, and the time, are both indications of the practical wisdom of the Chief Ma gistrate. History will vindicate the President, even if our impatience should be unjust to him. It will show that succeeding to the executive head of the Govern ment at a moment of most complica ted military and political peril, and when national salvation seemed almost impossible, he displayed such simplici ty, earnestness, honesty, patience and sagacity —neither overwhelmed by disaster, nor confoundod by treachery, nor disquieted by the distrust of friends —that be may bo truly called a Pro vidential man.—Harper's Weekly. Execution of a Deserter. [Correepondenco of the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin.] CAMP NEAR MORRISVILLE, Va., Aug. 20.—0n0 of those melancholy events which seldom take place in the army —too seldom, many persons think, for its efficiency and well being—took place this afternoon, at throe o'clock, in the rear of the Second Division, Sec ond Corps, General A. Webb, comman• ding. The name of the unfortunate man is Mabury.' Ito belonged to the Seventy first Regiment, P. V, better known as Baker's and Wistar's California, The antecedents of the poor man I am un acquainted with. Suffice it to say that his crime was desertion, of which he had boon proved to be guilty twice, and for which he was executed this af ternoon in the presence of thousands of' the Army of the Potomac, The scene was a most impressive one, and doubtless has nuide an indeli ble impression on the assembled null % titude. The troops were drawn up in' throe lines—one in front, one on the right, and the other on the loft of the prisoner. Our Brigade, of which ho was a member, occupied the front line. The prisoner was conducted to the place of execution, preceded by the Captain of the Provost Guard and the Brigade Band, who played an air ap propriate to the melancholy , occasion. The guard, who were selected as the firing party and numbered thirteen men, followed in the rear, preceded by the coffin, which was carried by four mon. ID was • accompanied by the Chaplain of the Seventy-second Regt, The prisoner walked with a measured tread to the place of execution, and though he seemed to realize the solem nity of the scene before hiM, and the occasion which had called together so many troops with sad and melancholy countenances, betrayed no fear or' trembling emotion and shed not a tear in passing. He was conducted to the spot which had previously been chosen as the place of execution. The grave, which was soon to swallow his bleed ing remains was already dug and yawned before him. He was directed to be seated on his coffin which was placed in front of his grave, this, how ever, was of but short continuence.— The Adjutant General of the Division (Capt. Woods) then directed the pris oner to stand up while ho read the pro needing and findings of the Court to the unhappy man. 110 listened with respectful deference to its recital, still evincing no weakness or faint hearted ness whatever, outwardly; however, much of it he may have felt wringing his poor heart within. He had evi- TERMS, $1,60 a year in advance. dently nerved himself for the great struggle which was to dose his oyos forever in this world from the beauti ful landscape which for miles spread out before him. Externally ho per formed this part well which induced every ono to form the opinion that cowardice could not have made the man desert but some other. motive or motives best known to himself and his God. When the Adjutant Goneral had concluded, he sat 'down on his coffin, when the chaplain who'was in attend ance on him, addressed the multitude; and the unhappy man , also spoke for fe* minutes. Nearly all of the ad dress of the latter was inaudible; enough however could be heard to un deastand that he asseredt ho had not deserted on account of cowardice, but I from other motives which were not enunciated to the multitude. A ferv ent prayer was offered up in 'behalf of the.prisoner, which I feel quite sure was participated in by nearly all tho troops, though I believeall wore of the opinion that the sentence was a just one.and ought to be strictly carried out in his case. I might remark here, that quite a revolution in sentiment I has taken place in the army in regard to the punishment of deserters of late. Thousands of instances have occurred of men deserting from the army, and little notice taken of it—there is gen erally some flaw found in the proceed ings which exonerates the guilty ono and ho has been returned to duty.— The very case we have just, been giv ing an account of is a case in point— had more severe measures been resort ed to in the early period of the unhap py rebellion, the discipline of the army would have been better maintained, and where insult and contumely is thrown at it now, respect and obedi ence would occupy their place. Why, it is notorious that many men desert for the purpose of joining some other body to get the bounty money. I am told there aro some cases of this kind now to be tried in our brigade— desertions from our brigade since the war began aro-not counted-by scores but hundreds. it is obvious then that something should ho done to arrest ab, evil of such magnitude and ono which has been so baneful and demoralizing in its effects on the army. Doubtless there aro many cases 'more aggrava ting than the one which is the subject of this article, who have not suffered the penalty which they so richly merit or that he has paid. But that is no reason that justice should be overlook ed or abandoned in his case. Bettor begin late than not at all. Some good I may flow from the execution of the sentence in his case being carried out which will prevent hundreds, perhaps thousands, from following his unpat riotic example, and conduce to elevate the sentiment of loyalty to the good old flag, unfortunately in too many in stances permitted to fall to a very low standard in the army. The prayer being finished, the pris oner was approached by the Captain of the Provost Guard, who directed him to take off his coat, while ho tied a white handkerchief on his eyes.— ile then shook hands with the Captain of the Guard, the Chaplain and one or two others, and then sat down on his coffin. The signal for the time of be ing ready was then given by the unfor tunate man himself. It was to raise his right hand out right. As soon as tliis was done the captain of the guard gave the commands to the firing party —"Ready," "Aim," "Fire," which was done as soon as the commands wore given, and the lifeless form of poor Mabury lay by the side of his coffin.— Thus ended the mortal career of a man who, judging from his appearance, was a man of some intelligence, by no means unprepossessing, and with a conformation of body above the com mon standard. I.have no disposition to speak lightly of his character. Ho was enlisted as a soldier under his country's flag; he deserted that flag in its day of tribulation, and for that of fence he has suffered the punishment duo to the commission of a heinous crime. It is probable that bad compa ny and evil example has led him to do the deed, and be who could have giv en his life in his country's service, the memory of which would have :boon handed clown to posterity with the blessings of his countrymen, has been ,considered too unworthy to live, among them for ever more. May his exam ple prove beneficial to others who may have cherished similar propensities, and save them from a like fate. Ho was a man over thirt§ years of age, I should think, and I am told leaves 0 , wife and two children in Philadelphia. Yours, PHOTOGRAPH ALBUMS-110W and im proved styles—just received and for salg at limns' Book Store- THE G-I_IO3BM JOB PRINTING OFFICE. THEIiGLOBB JOB OFFION 4, ii the most complete of any in ilbe conistryi mad por. sesame tbo moat ample facilities for promptly executing M rho beat style, every satiety of Job MAW& Boob as: HAND BILLS, PROOBAMIVIES, BLANKS, POSTERS, - - CARDS, CIRCULARS, BALL TICKETS, BILL HEADS, LABELS, &C., &C., &C. NO, 10. CALL AND lIAS7rtl oPECOCINII or worn'', AT LEl9,lB' BOOS, 13TATIONERT t MUSIO STORE COLD BLOODED MURDER OF A CHRIS TIAN MINISTER.—The Rev. P. Glen, a pious and . devoted nrinister of the Lu theran church, a Pennsylvanian by birth, but for a number of years past a citizen of Indiana, was cruelly mur dered, and his house burned to the ground on the 9th of July, by the fol lowers of John. Norgail, during their recent raid into the 'States of Indiana and Ohio. The rebels first attacked and wound ed Mr. Glenn's sou very severely, and then_ plundered his house of all they wanted. Fearing they would take his life, ho fled to the woods for con cealment, but on seeing his house on fire, and fearing that his wounded son and perhaps his wife might bo consu med, he felt it his duty to return, if possible, to rescue them. Just, at that time . three of the seonndrela thAt bad passed the house returned with a flag of truce. Raving no idea of the perfi dy of these mon ho.returned, and was met by them with extended hands and friendly greetings. On their complain ing of being thirsty, Mr. Glenn gave them water, and as soon as 'they bad drank, ho was shot by one of them .in . his house, doubtless supposing that he would burn up with the house. But after ho was wounded, he walked two or three rods from. his house, remark ing to his son, who was lying under a tree, "I am also wounded," and expi red in about fifteen minute,. Whilst the house was burning they would not permit Mrs. Glenn to take out anything but a small portion of clothing, and when robbing her smoke house they would not allow her to take a single ham or bar of soap, say s ing she As not worthy of there. Could the wild savage or the Sepoy of India do worse? Meeting of War Demoorats in In diana. A very large and onthusiasiic meet , log of War Democrats was held Mere to-night. All.parts•ef-tho'Stitte,4Wre fully represented. 'Gen: .Drathatr-Kini.. bail presided, and Major Gon. Bohn JL'Clernand; Gen. Dumont - and Hon:. Henri Sacrist wore among the spoal ors. • Letters were received' from Hon. Lewis Cass and Gen. Logan and Dan. S. Dickinson, all of whom expressed their sympathy with the objects of the Convention. Resolutions were adopted favoring a vigorous prosecution of the war e sustaining the Administration in all its efforts to put down the rebellion, denouncing the State agent Auditor and Treasurer of tho State for their willingness to repudiate the public debt and sacrifice tho honor and cred it of tho Stato for partizan purposes. —The Lebanon Advertiser says:— "The only thing that the opposition have thus far been able to say against. Judge Woodward is, that, being the Democratic candidate for Governor, ho has not resigned his position on the Supreme Bench." Perhaps the Advertiser forgets that Judge Woodward was the author of the decision that soldiers have no right to vote; and the author of the resolu tion excluding foreigners from 'tile elective franchise until they bad been , twenty-ono years in the United: States;' and the author of the' infamous doc trine, which all loyal Democrats have repudiated, that secession is right, and that the South is right in rebelling against this Government. The Adver tiser seems to be oblivious of these amiable little traits in the political character of Mr. Justice Woodward. —The Bedford Argus utters the fol lowing trenchant truth : "Lot the peo ple of Pennsylvania elect George W. - Woodward to be Governor of this great Commonwealth and wo would goon see the same disgraceful scenes enact ed that have disgraced the ity of New York. His principles, and those of the miserable crew who nominated him, aro the same as those of Wood and Seymour." AU of one EDW.—As a train toad , of Morgan's men wore passing through. Newark, Ohio, ono of thorn, as the crowd • assembled to see the horse thieves and murderers, asked if there were any Vallandigham men about f " Yes, sir," said a raw-boned chap * "I fun a Vallandigham man." "All right," said the horse thief, get right in hero with us; we are all Vailandig. am men," ge,„ Tho largest stock and greatest variety of styles of Pocket Books and Currency 'folders, outside of Philadel phia, can be seen at Lewis' Book Store m.Fino Cigars and Tobacco for sale at Lewis' Book Store. .An assortment of Card Photo.; graphs at Lowia' Book - Store. INDIANAPOLIS, August 20