TERMS OF THE GLOBE Per &num in adyiume Rix months Three months 50 A failure to notify n disoontinunnee et the expiration of the term subscribed (or will be considered a new engage. Dent. TERMS OF ADVERTISING. 1 Insertion. 2 do. 3 do. four lines or less $25 . $ 3734 $ 50 Joe square, (12 lines,) ...... .... 50 75 100 Iwo squares 1 00 1 50 2 00 three 'goitres 7 50 225 300 Over three week and lon then three months, 25 Ceuta 3er Square for each insertion. 3 months. 6 months. 12 months. tii lines or less, $1 50 $3 00 $5 00 .Me square, 3 00 5 00 7 00 fwo squares 5 00 8 00 10 00 filmes 'queues, 7 00 10 00 15 00 Pour nquteoly 9 00 13 00 20 00 Iltlf a column . 12 00 16 110...... —.24 00 One column 20 00 30 00.... ..... .00 00 Professional mid Inteinms Code not exceeding four tines, One year 143 oc; Administrators' and Executors' Notices $1 76 Advertisements not marked with the number of inser tions desired, will he continued till forbid and charged ac cording to thaw toms. TREASURY DEPARTMENT, • OPFZCZ OP TUE COMPTROLLER OF THE eunitENCY, Washington,Suly22,'63 WREREAS, By satisfactory evi dence presented to the undersigned, it has been Made to appear that the First National Hank of Hunting don, in the County of Huntingdon. and State of Peeneyb rants, has been duly organized under and according to the requirements of the act of Congress, entitled "Au act to provide a national currency seenred by a pledge of Unl tea States clocks, mod to provide for the circulation nod 'redemption thereof, approved February 25, 1661, and has 'complied with all the provisions of said act required to be complied alai, before commencing the busioess of Harikitqct Now, therefore, I, Hugh McCulloch, Comp. troller of the culireney, do hereby certify that the geld First National Bank of Huntingdon, County of Muting- Mon, and State of Pennsylvania, Is anthorized to com mence the business of Banking tinder the act afereeehl. In Testimony whereof, I hereunto set my band and noel of otlIc• this twentpaecend day of Jtily, 1363. HUG II McCULLOCII, (Seel of the Comp.} Comptroller of the -4 troller of the Car- Currency. I rutty. UNIVERSAL CLOTHES WRINGERI == No. 1. Large Family Wringer, 810,00 No 4 11 a. Medium " ~ 7,00 No. .§ tt It IC 6,00 No. 3. Small " (c 5,00 NII o. 8. Large Hotel, 14,00 No. 18. ..ifedium Laundry f tlrun 118,00 No. 22. Large ' iorhaf 80,00 Nos. 2/. and 3 have no Cogs. AU oth ers are warranted. *No. 2 is the size generally used in private families. ORANGE Juon, of the "American Ag riculturist," says of the UNIVERSAL CLOTHES WRINGER child can readily wring out a tnhfull of clothes In a few calnut,e. It le in re.dity a Clarets PAM! A Tuts SAVER! and a STA:et:ill Satan I The rit, ing of gar ment, will alone pay a large per centnge on its Boat. We think the machine much more than ..pnye for it,elf eve ry year" in the raving of garments! There ate wileral kindr, nearly alike in genetal construction. tort we con sider it important that the Wringer he fitted with Cogs. otherwise n Mors of garments may clog the 'oilers, and the roller. ripen the crank-abaft slip and tear the elnlber, or the rubber break loose (tout the thrift. Oar own to one at the first flake. and itie oe 0000 AS NOW after nearly COON SEARS' COSiTAST Ce Every Wringer with Cog Wheels is War ranted In every particular. No Mingo- can be Durable without Cog Wheels. A. good CANVASSER Is•anted in every town. car On receipt of the price from pla- CCFI where no one is selling, we will send the Wringer free of expense. For particulars - r dross . R. 0. III:OWNING, _s47 Broadway, N. Y Aurf. 12. '63. MEN WANTED FOR THE INVALID CORPS. Only floss faithful soldiers alto. from wounds nr the bartlabips of war,. n nn longer fit for active field duty. will be reeelsed in this Corps of Honor. tnilattnente will be fur three yearn. unless soont-r discharged. Pay and alloAtanre prune as for officers and men of the United Piste. Infantry; except that nn premium or bounties fur enlistment will be allowed. Thin a ill not invalidate any pensions or bounties which may be dun for previews set. tiers. For the convenience of service, the men will be selected for three grades of duty. Those who are most cMcient and Ate-bodied. and mtpable of perforating plant duty, ate., will he armed with muskets, and assigned to compa nies of the Find Battalion. Those of the next degree of enlcieucy, including those who have lost a hand or an arm; and the least effective, Including those who have lest a foot or leg, to the companies of the &•send or Third Battalions; they will bo armed with swords. The duties will ba to act chiefly as provost guards nod gaerieons for cities; guards for hospitals and Other public buildings sand as clerks, orderlies, he. If found necessa ry, they may be - ossinnea to en In, ate. - Acting Assistant Provost filarshals General aro anthor teed to appoint officers of the Regular Fen ice, or of the Invalid Corps, to administer the oath of enlistment to them moo who have completely fulfilled tho prescribed conditions of admission to the Invalid Corps, vie: I. That the applicant Is unfit for service in the Arid, 2. That he is fit for the duties, or some of them, Indica ted above. S. That, if no now in the \ sei vice, to was honorably discharged. ' 4. That he to meritorious anti deserting. For enlistment or further nsformation apply to tho Board cf Enrollment for the district in vrich the appli cant Is a resident . . 11,6 onler of.JlillE.6. B. FRY, Pi ovird 31nrinal General J. D. cAmenrad„ Captain and Provost Mar:lial. llnntingdon, July 6, 1863. S. I. F. D. E., STATON ISLAND FANCY DYEING ESTABLISH MENT. BARRETT, NEPHEWS & CO.,Pro prietors, WW-OFFICES, No. 47 NORTH EIGHTH. St., PHILALEL. PHIA, An 5 & 7 JOHN St., NEW YORK. Our name In DYEING & CLEANSING GARMENTS of Velvet, Cloth, Silk, Merino, De Laine, &c., etc., and SHAWLS of almost ev e,'" description, It so well known that we only desire to remind our friends and the public generally, that the sea son for getting ready their Fall Goode to now at handl igirGoods received and returned by .Express. BARRETT, NEPHEWS &: CO., ♦ugnet 19,1663.-3 m ISAAC K. STAUFFER, WATCH-MAZER AND JEWELER, MANUFACTURER OF SILVER WARE and INFORM. OF WATCIIES, No. 148 North Second at., Corner Quarry, PHILADELPHIA Ile has constantly on hand an assortment of Gold and Silver Patent Levers, Lepine and Plain Macho', 4- Pins Gold Chains, Seals and Keys, Breast Pine,. 7 . Ear Rinse, Finger Rings, Bracelets, Miniature : Cases, Medallions, Lockets, Pencils, Thimbles, Spectacles, Silver Table, Desert, Tea, Salt and Mustard Spoons: Sugar Spoons, Cups, Napkin Rings, Fruit and Butter Naives, Shields. Combs, Diamond Pointed rev, ate.,—at of which will Se sold low for Ctigh TOBIAS .d CO'S best quality full )(Ironed Patent Lever Movements constantly on bend; also other Makers' of superior quality. N.B.—Old Gold and Siker bought for Cash. Sept. 9, 1863-Iy. INSURE YOUR PROPERTY IN THE GIRARD Fire and Marine Insurance Co., PHILADELPHIA. NO MARINE RISES-FIRE RISES ONLY TAKEN Terixtuatrolicier granted on brick and stone buildings. Limited policies granted on frame or log buildings merebandise and furniture. ALLISI4.4 mad prensvon noka raqu lL irszt. conie ve .lllL ntly LE aaseti e. N 11, L 1Efp16,1863 A gt, for Iluntingdon & O adjoining Cea. EMI ~U ~ ~~ WILLIAM LEWIS, Editor and Proprietor. VOL. XIX. Che HUNTINGDON, PA. Democratic Frauds in Penisylvania. There are some facts connected with the recent astonishing vote in Pennsyl vania, says the North American, which are deserving of rather more than a passing notice. The figures we have already given respecting the extraor dinary increase of the vote in Berks county are sufficient to arouse investi gation. But the facts show that what is true of Berks county applies to the whole vote of the State, as the sub joined comparison will illustrate : Curtin. Foster. Total 1860 263,397 230,269 493,666 Curtin. Woodward. Total 1863 269,490 254,171 523,597 Gain 6,009 23,902 29,911 Here it is shown that, with an ag gregate gain of 29,911 votes over the groat total of 1860, the Union gain is only 6,009, while that of the Democrats is 23,902. Since that general rally of 1860 was made, the State has sent in to the field 163,000 soldiers, recruited for the three years' service. Of the 200,000 men reported by General Fry as having been discharged for physical disability, probably one-tenth were from these 163,000, so that by that cause some 10,000 have been returned home. Of the 88,000 deserters, per haps the same proportion were from these 163,000 men, so that here are 8, 800 men retnrned home. The number of men sent home in consequence of disabling wounds we - cannot estimate, but it would be safe to suppose them about 10,000 from this same force.— Allowing for the diminution of the force by other causes, perhaps 30,000 would altogether cover its returned men %vita were permanently at home to vote, and about 9,000 still in the ser vice were furloughed and voted at the late election, making altogether less than 40,000. Now of these men not one in ten voted the Democratic ticket at the election this fall, and yet the Democratic vote is increased 23,902.11 did not come from the Union ranks, for the lines have been very strongly -drawn nll - er tiket_Sfhte„ and = changes are just the oti”•ny Indeed the statistics of the election show that the Union party, so far from having lost any since 1860, has gained iu the aggregate. We polled 263.397 votes in 1860, and we polled 269,406 in 1563. Where, then, did the Demo cratic increase of 23,002 come from? Of the 163,000 troops raised in the State for three years the Democrats must have contributed at least one fourth, or some 40,700, which, taken from their vote of 1860, would leave about 189,300 remaining voters of that party. Let us suppose that of the re turned soldiers they had what we have allowed them above—one in ten still voting with them—that would be 4,000 men increasing their vote to 193;300. Now the natural increase of population would hardly keep up the strength of the party beyond this figure, when we consider the steady drain of the male population for soldiers and sailors and the far greater drain of the'Democrat ic ranks caused by the changes to the Union side. These conversions are numbered by thousands, and no one ever hears of any other way. Above we have the real strength of the Democratic party, estimated at about 193,300. Yet Woodward poll ed in 1863 no less than 254;171 votes. How is this difference of about 53,700 to be accounted for? Unless we be lieve that no Democrats enlisted in the army or navy, that no conversions to the Union side have taken place, and that the .party strength of 1860 was all at home intact, and that ;the increase of population among Democrats did not contribute a man to either army or navy, there is no other way of ex plaining this immense aggregate than by attributing it to the most outrage ous and systematic frauds. To render the matter clear, we append a compa rative table showing the increased De mocratic vote in certain counties : 1860 1863 Increase. Berke, 10,318 12,627 2,309 Luzerne, 6,916 9,808 2,892 Northampton, 5,249 6,538 1,289 Schuylkill, 7,667 8,547 .1,480 York, 6,665 8,069 1,404 Aggregate increase, 9,374 Here is an increase of 9,374 in only five counties, and the rest of the in crease was, not distributed throughout the State, as might be supposed, but in the Democratic strongholds, as will be seen below : 1800 1863 Increase. Cambria, 2283 3000 417 Clarion, 2297 2588 301 Clearfield, 2040 2483 443 Clinton, 1703 1911 208 Columbia, 2586 3342 756 Cumberland, 3716 4075 359 HUNTINGDON, PA., WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1868. Fayette, 2469 3791 322 Greene, 2669 2960 271 Juniata, 1465 1737 272 Lehigh, 4556 5526 970 Lycoming, 3034 3865 831 Monroe, 2163 2712 549 Northumberl'd 2955 3356 401 Pike, 843 1184 341 Wayne, 2537 3152 615 Westmorel'cl, 5276 5581 305 Aggregate increase, In these two calculations wo find that of the 23,000 Democratic increase, over 10,000 aro in those Democratic counties in places where, the election officers being Democratic, frauds may ho perpetrated with impunity. If we had the space wo might carry out the calculation still further, and show that this heavy increase is in the precincts and townships where the Domom•ats have usually polled their strongest votes, and where they control the as• sosaments and election officers. But without occupying time to do so, we will merely call the attention of our readers to the fact that the increase of the Democratic vote in Philadelphia is in the Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Eleventh and Seventeenth wards chiefly, where the heavy majorities of the copper heads came from. How our Prisoners at Richmond are Treated. A letter written by a Rev. T V. Moore, formerly a clergyman of Chum bersburg, but now a rebel in Rich mond, and in which it was stated that the Union prisoners in Richmond wore kindly treated, has boon extensively published. This letter was noticed by the Rev. George H. Hammer, Chap. lain of the 12th Pennsylvania cavalry, who has been a prisoner in Richmond for some four months, and he takes is sue with Mr. Moore in rather unequiv ocal terms. In a letter to the New ville Star, elated at that place, he says: "I have just been shown a letter pur porting to have been written by Rev. Thomas V. Moore., of Richmond, for merly of this place, in which the state ment is broadly made, that the Union prisoners in the various prisons of Richmond are well treated, well fed, and every reasonable exertion made for their comfort; that the citizens of Pennsylvania confined there have ev erything done for their comfort and well-being that the circumstances of their case will permit. Having but just returned from a kur_montlis ca tivity ill Libby 'prison, and b7 7 -' • 41 WWI ITIc a, _icing tully. converse:4, condition of the Pennsylvania citizens, as well as that of the soldiers and offi cers confined there, I cannot express my surprise at such a statement so false in fact and particulars as the one alluded - to. Rev. Moore, if be has vis ited the prisoners, (as he says he has ' done,) knows better, and states with deliberation a malicious falsehood. He knows that our prisoners there are treated like brutes, and not as human beings. He knows that our citizen prisoners are dirty, almost naked, their heads, bodies and clothes filled with vermin—that at no time since their capture have they received of the au thorities sufficient food, even of very poor quality, to supply their physical wants. He knows they are confined along with deserters from both armies and that their condition , is deplorable beyond uxrroczion all thin ho knowe J must know, and wore it not on a par with all other rebel statements, I should be surprised at its audacity and falsehood, as coming from a minister of the gospel. On the pretence of preaching to these citizens, I was up on one occasion allowed to visit them, while confined in Libby prison. I know whereof I affirm. The stench of the room was almost unsupportable, their inaction' very great, many of them through sheer exhaustion, hardly able to stand upon their feet, and but for the slight glim mering of hope, which now and then enter their prison, their condition would be one of absolute despair. I, myself, would rather bare my breast to the bullet or ascend the scaffold for execution, than take the place of any ono of them. Myself and others of the Union officers, after my visit to them, through holes in the floor, passed them broad and such other articles as wo could obtain, to add to their comfort and soften the horrors which envel ope them. When the prison authori ties discovered this, the holes were nailed up, we warned to desist, on pain of being placed in a dungeon, and a few days afterwards, to insure their isolation from us, they were removed to Castle Thunder, and placed in what is known as the Lion's Den, a worse sit nation, by far, than the ono from which they wore taken. As to the statement that our Gov ernment has refused to exchange them or to accede to propositions made for their release, there may be some truth in it, but he, like others of the accurs ed rebellious crow, takes good care not to state that the demands of the rebel authorities are so unreasonable that our Government cannot, in self respect and honor, accede to them. They claim, as the condition of their release, that our Government release all political prisoners now hold by us— many of them the most dangerous mon and rebels in the whole land, and ca pable of damaging the interests of the Union to an untold extent. Long, since would they have been released could the United States Government have honorably effected it. On the heads of rebels and traitors rests the responsibility. Persons desiring in formation can address me as above for twenty days." -PERSEVERE.- Rebel Testimony. What value the rebels set on Chatta nooga, and what they soberly think of the battle of Chickamauga, may in some in s)me measure be understood by help of the following article from the (sometime) Chattanooga Rebel.— It is not necessary to presume that that paper speaks with authority, but it undoubtedly expresses the general popular opinion on the objects and re sults of the campaign which Chicka mauga terminated, and it is clear that though the battle went against us on the field, the victory has been in most respects a barren one to the Rebels. EMI The rebels appreciate the value of Tennessee and Kentucky as we never can, for to them the loss of those fer tile regions threatens sore destitution during the winter; not absolute fain ine, but inadequate supplies, a discon. tented army, and a population oppres sed in proportion by its extortionate demands. 'Toad and raiment are our needs. We must have them. Ken• tucky and Middle Tennessee can only supply them. Better give up the sea coast, better giro up the South-west, better to give up Richmond without a struggle, and win' these, than to lose the golden fields whose grain and wool aro our solo hope." That is the cry not of a victorious enemy, but of one who sees that hip victory is yet to win, and who sees that ho has no hope if he does not win it. Chattanooga is moreover a base from which invasion constantly threat ens, and the mere' occupation of which by a considerable national force is a more dangerous menace to the rebel lion than half a million of troops in Virginia could offer. Bragg's army cannot be safely reduced, yet it is im possible that itspresent number should bo maintained without imperiling the rebel cause both Bak and West. "The enemy has just one army in the field too many for us," says thiS truth-telling traitor. So this superfluous force is to be not merely defeated, but driven to the Ohio, and the war therefore to bo ended next summer. Not altogether, however, by military success, oven so complete as this, but by "securing the election of a Peace 'Democrat to the Presidency in the Fall, and arranging the termsof treaty and independence!' The Administration at Washington is doing its part in taking due care that in Generals r.md,men the Army of the Cumberland shall be in a condition to meet the Rebels in the field at the point which they know is of the last importance. The people at the ballot. box will take care of the rest.—Neto York Tribune. The Situation at the South-West. (Editorial from tho Daily Rebel, Oci.9th.) - *pun raiititirk the 'Tonnes/foe River from the field ofitielf-nmanga, Rose crams addressed his troops :.."Follow. soldier; the object of our expeditioir will! the possession of Chattanooga-- and here we are." Brief and to the point, forcible, true, and adroit. Thus far the campaign, whose mysterious surges are rolling above us, has no clearer as it certainly cannot have a more laconic history. The few words of the Mutt' General illuminate the whole page as a ray from a dark lan tern, and no man can close his oyes to the somewhat painful glare which they throw full upon him. Not even Genl. Bragg himself can contradict them ex cept with his sword and such strokes as it may please Heaven to send us through his hands in tho few days a fair weather just before us. Unless we make hay while the sun shines, the story. aq, thus told will hold good thro' all time; the spring will open untow ard dangers to our arms; the cause which now turns upon the pivot of its crisis will droop like a flower which has been untended, and the end must fide out of sight in a rolling torrent of disaster—in fogs and Blooms. God forbid it. At present the case stands about in this wise : We have lost the gate to lower East Tennessee—the river, which was our base, and the facilities which these afforded for progressive movements into Middle Tennessee and Kentucky. We have gained a hand to-hand fight; wo have repelled a pow erful invasion; we have preserved Georgia and secured a coulmanding position around the enemy. Rose evens, on the other hand, has gained all that we have lost. He has reached Chattanooga and fortified it, taken up the river line as his base, and now prepares to winter quietly in his now quarters, leaving us uncivilly out in the cold to take care of ourselves as best we can or must. Physically, and to all appearances, in the aggregate, he is the gainer, and after the prison ers, artillery, and standards, taken at Chickamauga, are counted, our victory is told, while our deficit to the long sum total, glory included, is s set-off to make up for any results yet achiev ed. In a word, we have lost ten or twelve thousand men, without receiv ing an equivalent in 'producing terri tory. The whole question turns, therefore, upon the situation, and what we will do with it. In military circles it is generally be lieved that Roseerans has blundered into a position which, improved by an adversary with genius, might be turn ed in those adroit movements to his utter ruin. If this be so, and the movements speculated, but by no . incline explained, aro made, the victory of Chickamauga will be complete, and the many lives there sacrificed will be come as so many trophies to a noble work- But if this opinion be false, or if the movement suggested as possible fail to be made, and we continue to gaze listlessly from the bald knobs of the Missionary Ridge upon the com fortable barracks of the bile varlets below, then, then we may tremble for the next campaign; for as sure as there is any surety in the future, the ' 4r - iljt )/ ' . !s 'l:- ,'''''.:l^4t•': spring of '64 must see us far froth the' borders of Georgia or near to the verge of destruction. Nail it to your door post, men of the South, and refuse to be deluded into any other belief. Food and raiment aro our needs.— We must bare them. Kentucky and Middle Tennessee can only supply them. Better give up our sea-coast; bettor give up the South-West, aye, butter to give up Richmond without a struggle and win these, than to lose the golden fields whose grain and wool are our solo hope. The enemy has just one army in the field too many for us. We must crush this overplus ; we must gain one signal Stonewall Jackson campaign. Destiny points the very place. Be Rosecrans the vic tim. Defeat him, pulverize, run him to the Ohio River, and then close the war by the next summer. And how ? Nothing easier. The bee which has really stung our flank for so long, onee disposed of, our triumphant legions have a clear road before them. Fed sumptuously through the winter, well shod and clad, they have only to moot a dispirited foe, retake the Valley of the Mississippi, secure . the election of a Peace Democrat to the Presidency in the fall, and arrange the terms of trea ty and independence. Those results can be accomplished nowhere else than in this Department. The North. West is our real adversary. No mat ter how often we whip the East, the effect is still-born to the end. Let us teach the true contestants a lesson of peace and sobe-ness, and the difference will be speedily as our need calls for the deed. Thanksgivincr Proclamation. WASUINGTON, Oct. 3.—By the Pres ident of the United States of America. A PROCLAMATION. The year that is drawing to its close has beon filled with - the blessings of fruitful fields and healthful skies. To these bounties, which are so constant ly enjoyed that we aro prone to for got the source from which they come, others have been added which are of so extraordinary a nature that they ' cannot fail to penetrate and soften even the heart which is habitually in sensible to the ever watchful provi donee of Almighty God. In the midst of a civil war of unequalled magni tude and severity, which has some times to invite. and provoke the ag gressions of foreign States, peace has been preserved with all nations, order has been maintained, laws have been respected and obeyed, and harmony has prevailed everywhere except in the theatre of military conflict. While that theatre has been greatly contract ed by the advancing armies and navies 1 1 of the Union The needful diversions of wealth and strength, fronalhe - fields Of peaceful industry, to. the national" defence, have not arrested the plow, the shuttle, or the ship... The axe has enlarged the borders of our settlements, and the mines, as well of iron and coal as the precious metals, have yielded even more abundantly than hereto fore. The population has steadily in creased, notwithstanding the. waste that has been made in the camp, the siege and the battlefield, and the coun try, rejoicing in the conscientiousness of augmented strength and vigor, is permitted to expect a continuance of years, with a large increase of freedom no human counsel bath designed. Not withstanding the mortal hand had worked on these great things ; they are gracious gifts of the Most High God, who, while dealing with us in an ger for our sins, hath nevertheless re remembered mercy. It has seemed to me fit and proper that they should be solemnly, reverently and gratefully acknowledged as with one heart and voice by the whole American people. I do, therefore, invite my fellow citi zens in all parts of the United States, and also those who aro at sea and those who aro sojourning in foreign lands, to sot apart and observe the last Thursday in November next as a day of thanksgiving and prayer to our be nificent Father who doth reside in the heavens, and I recommend them that, while offering up the ascriptions just ly duo to him for such singular deliv erances and . blessings, they do also, with humble penitence for our nation al perverseness and disobedience com mend to his tender care all those who have become widows and, orphans or suffering in the civil strife in which we are unavoidably engaged, and fervent ly.implore the interposition of the Al mighty hand to preserve the health of the nation and to restore it, as soon as it may be consistent with the di vine purposes, to the full enjoyment of peace, harmony, tranquility and Union. In testimony wherof I have here unto set my band and caused the seal of the United States to be affixed. Dono at the City of Washington, this third day of October, in the year of onr Lord 1863, and of the independence of the United States the eighty-eighth. ABRAHAM LINCOLN. Wm. 11. SEWARD, Sec'y of State. THE CASE OF GEN. MILROY. Conolusione arrived at by the Preei- dent. WASHINGTON, Oct. 27. The following is a copy of the con clusions of the President, endorsed up on the report of thb Judge Advocate General, in the case of Major General Milroy. It will be observed that they are substantially in accordance with our statement of their probable char acter, some days since. In Juno last, a division was substan tially lost at and near Winchester, Pa: At the time it was under Gon. Milroy, as immediate commander in the field ; Gen. Schenck, as Department com mander at Baltimore; and Gen. Hal- TERMS, 81,50 a year in advance. leek, as General-in-Chief - at Weehing ton. Gen. Milroy, as immediate comman der, was put under arrest, and subse quently a Court of Inquiry examined chiefly with reference to disobedience of orders, and reported •the evidence The foregoing is a synoptical state ment of the evidence together with the Judge Advocate General's conclu sions. -The disaster, when it came, was a surprise to all. It was very well known to Gen. Schenck and Gen. Milroy, for some time before, that Gen. Halleek thought the division was in general danger of a surprise at Win chester; that it was of no service there commensurate with the risk it incur red, and it ought to be withdrawn. But, although he never positively or dered it. Gon. Schenck on the contrary, be lieved the service of the force at Win chester was worth the hazard, and so did not positively order its withdraw al until it was so late that tte enemy cut the wire and prevented the order reaching Gen. Milroy. Gen. Milroy seems to have concurred with Gen. Schenck in the opinion that the force should be kept at Winchester, at least till the approach of danger; but he dis obeyed no order upon the subject. Some question can be made whether some of General Halleck's dispatches to Gon. Schenck should not have been construed to be- ordo:a to withdraw the force and obeyed accordingly; but no such question can be made against General Milroy. In fact, the last order he received was to be prepared to withdraw, but not to actually withdraw till further order--which further order never rea ched him. Serious blame is not nec essarily due to every serious disaster, and I cannot say that in this case ei ther of these officers is deserving of se rious blame. No court marshal is deemed necessary or proper in the Case. A. laricota. Gen. Milroy, having received twen ty days' leave of absence, started. for his home in Indiana, which he has not visited for twenty-seven months.— Tei bung. Two Parties and only Two. In this country, at this time, there is but one real issue before the public mind. That is, whether the integrity of the Union is to be maintained through the authorities—who are alone charged with its defence—by war and all the justifiable instruments of war, or whether the Union is to be abandoned in order to secure peace. Accordingly, there can be but two real parties in this country at this time; first, a Union War party, deter mined to uphold our Democratic insti tutions at all hazards, and against ever , foe foreign as wellAns.dpnystip t , an, which is, therefore, properly: tbe - Democratic party of the day; and see end, a Peace party, whiCh is willing to . relinquish the unity of the mitten to the demands of the insurgents against it, or to patch up suCh a nominal rec onciliation of the dislocated parts as may serve for the time, but will be sure to load to a future rupture still, more bloody and terrible than the present. Both these parties are le gitimate, because they grow out of the actual question of the time, because they represent not merely a formal but a substantial division of opinion, and because the issue of events must be in accordance with the views and wishes of one or the other. Thus the Vallandigham or Wood party, which is openly opposed to the war and comes out squarely for peace with the rebels—which means disuni on—is a perfectly legitimate .party, whose ends are easily understood. Thus the Administration party, which insists upon war till the armed hostil ity to the government is abandoned and abjured, is a legitimate party, ari sing out of the necessary facts of the times, and quite intelligible as to its methods and purposes.--.N. Y. Post. All the Black Oats in One Bag. EDITOR-Azi old farmer in the' country was dreadfully troubled by rats. They eat his grain, invaded his larder, bled his children, and even as sailed his own life. He trusted' in his cats to free him from the vermin. But three of these cats turned out poorly. One openly sympathized with the rats helped them to oat the cheese, suck the eggs, and kill the chickens. Anoth er cat was for suppressing the rats without hurting them. He thought the farmer as much to blame as the rats, and bit the farmer twice where he bit the rats once. The old farmer became tired of such treacherous aids, and ordered his boys to enclose the two worthless oats in a stout sack and throw them into the river. The boys proceeded to do this work vigorously. But in the process a third cat crept unexpectedly into the bag. This last was a very sleek, handsome cat, and the farmer had once great expecta tions from him. Truo he bad never killed any rats, but his friends said he was always just about to slay the whole tribe. Ho lay watching at their holes day after day, and often bad them in sight and reach, bat was nev. or quite ready to spring. The blame of his ill success he always contrived to throw upon the old farmer, and by a mysterious quiet.and dignity made some of the children - believe he would yet do wonders. But all the time he had a real sympathy with 'the bad cats now to be executed. Bo at the list hour he crept into tbe. bag with , them and shared their fate. 'The boys killed ono cat more than they bargained for; to. the groat relief of the ,Whela-houae, hold.—Norta , American , pond' United States, Gazette, , . - lie., Fine Cigars isevi'Tobacbo for sale at Lewis' Do* Stoi - e; " • i THM' Cl - I_,OJE3H, JOB PRINTING OttICE. THE, "GLOBE J,OB.•OVRIOBP is Ms malt oompleie of any In the connarj e s /hi poem 'Bosse' the Feast ample facilitiesfot,promptly executing In the bat style, every yarliity of ffete Yittltta6 , auckaa NAND • • moanimmr.. • • • LABtI4, &c., &.c; Aps Aro mints ow:ism:4 .4; AT Lnwiti..pciog; Orkfiomud 3ltmax9 STORK Report of - aJlefugeo- fromlichmond; BALTIMORE, Oct. 22.4—The A.M6llCali has the follovvitge "A very intelhgeo young man, refugee from Richinond, who has been there all through the war, and who only sticceedeci in Making his escape' last 3.tondiey, has arrived bare and communicated to the military author ities. some impor t gni intelligoace tea:. ching the rebel - armies: "In regard to the strength" of 'their . armies, ho says that there 'is mush misapprehension at the North. Ho claims to have.gond authority for ster- - ting that the strength of Lee's , army previous to the sending of the two corps to-reinforce Bragg did not.ex ceed 60,000 efficient troops; that Bragg with these - reinfoicolnents; • hid not, over 40,000 men, and that he only managed to defeat Rosecre,ns by a surprise_ and attacking: his isolated columns. - - - NO. 20. "lie further statue that'the story of reinforcements having - been sent; to Gen. Lee from Charleston and else. where, is totally incorfect: . That. there have been no troops sent to' Lee except in the way of deserters and conscripts; that none have ,retarded from Bragg's army, and to such straits have the rebel authorities kipon redu. ced, that they are even forging into the ranks those persons who have pro— vided substitutes. . • - • "There was a.general feeling of; de spondency in Richmond, • and the fact was freely admitted that thefr`armfea• were none of them sufficiently Aron& to assume offensive operations'• drith any prospect of sueoess; and - that the' want of.men prevented. Bragg from following up his success, and prevents. him now from attacking * the Federal• army at Chattanooga.' Death of Released Prisoners from Starvation. The following letter was received on the 80th, by the Baltimore Ameri can:, ANNAPOLIS, Md., Oct. g9.—The flag of truce boat Now York arrived At the Naval School wharf this morning tivra City Point, with 181. paroled' ,nen. Eight of the nnmbor died on the-boat on the way hither, having -been actu ally starved to death. • . "Never in the whole course of, my life have I ever seen such a • scene as those men presented: They Were liv ing skeletons. Every man of them had to bo sent to the hospitals, 'and the Surgeon's opinion is that more than ono-third of them must die, be ing beyond the roach of nourishment or medicine. "I questioned several of them, and all ttated that their condition has been brought on by the treatment 'they have received at tho hands of the reb els. . . "They have boon kept without food and exposed a large. portion of the time without shelter of any kind, "To look at these , poor men - and hear their tales of woe, how they have been treated, _one - wou, I not suppose tiAaPi110y... 1 3.44 - 0/vOm - . the aciu tli ern -en lir - M . 6.TUE tyer r into" the kinds of stfvage desti -tutwof all humanity or feeling:". Dr. Browigion on the New . •Yorle Ri- . In the Petober — ,number of , Brown son's_ROview, .find' among the arti cles-one on "Catholics "and the ° Anti- Draft Riots." An article.- ono-this sub ject from such a source is etninsntly worthy of perusal. Dr..l3rownson un doubtedly wields an abler" pen, _than auy other Catholic writer in this country, and his productions always find .readers among thinkers, whether they agree with him or . not.. Ho seems to write what he thinks, no matter whether or not it suits the church authorities. • In his Review he has taken a most decided stand in favor of the Union, from the time that the.rebellion broke out. In his article on the. July riots he endeavors to clear the Catholic Church as such from the. responsibil ity. He admits that the rioters al most exclusively were Irishmen 'and- Catholics, but char g es the • responsi bility mainlyooathe.Dertiocratic party for arousing them, to do as they did. We here give a brief extract from the article : "These things they did, not as Ca• tholics Or Irishmen, bat as adherents to the Democratic-party, as partisans of Horatio Seymour, Fernando Wood, James Brooks, Clement L. Vallandig ham, and others, who by their incen diary speeches, and by leading arti cles in the Democratic journals, had for months been exciting - them against the Government, against the -conscrip tion, against the war, and had worked them up to uncontrollable fury. The shouts of the mob tell us what was its animus, and under whit influence or inspiration it' acted, and' these wore hurrahs for Governor Seymour, Fer nando Wood, Gon. McClellan and Tell. Davis. A Catholic layman or an Ir ishman known to be a Republican or a supporter of the 'Administration, was in no loss danger from the mob than a Protestant, a native American, or even a negro. • '!Colonel O'Brien, so savagely mur dered, was an Irishman and _ Catho lic; and ono of the best friends -of the Irish emigrant in this city—a , Catho lic and an Irishman himself—escaped: the fury of the mob only by keeping himself concealed. On the *Abel. hand Catholic Irishmen volunteered to aid the ,authorities in suppressing the ri ot, and were among the bravest. grid most efficient in protecting' ,the - lives and property of our citizens. , :No, the mob was literally a Democratic-mob, got up at the instigation of the Demo cratic leaders, and led on by, men in sympathy with the enemies of the United States— a simply • Pro-slavery Democratic mob. Not a Catholic nor an Liebman' not a Gerhian :nor an American, who was not a partisan of thiSeymonis,. the Woods and the ValittedighamS, not•eVen a Democrat not hcstiKto the war and to negro etai,iiekatisin; had, any,,part it, ei 0. ther instigs,fOr or actor.',' , , - BILL' lIE.NDS; otB.