. .w" """ ft ll, -MM D. V. MOORE. ) VAtnr. 0. B OOODLANDER. rdltor8- VOL. XXXIII. WIIOl.K NO 1733 PILINCIPLES. not MEN. TERUS-$1 25 per Auntim, if paid lr advance M:V8F.UIKS VOL. III. NO 22 CLKAHKIKLl), iA WDDM'DAY, 1)1. V, 17, lG2. II . Mm It T rait i nr. ihvU'tiim;i Dm flu era Unit (kirt ttin moiititnin'i' trow. Tlio hi in hut rl"ti I thiil tliuiv tin- pi. j, The flurry Iii-hvcii, with lr.lli.inl Lri.w, i'r.iliiiiii " tali- i'l' myHrry ; lii- lim lli-iiutil'ul i Tlj"iliw ilropn l.rijjlit licit 'if.' 'liriil, 'I In i- rfiiii. j t 'i!c tliut rAiT ti J wings, Tlio cus ml -'j lull, thtf iiiunmiririic. nil, 'llio tiiiiiiiil Li '-'J on Hiry w inert; eili,y-uj! hw bt'itu:iiuli Tlio gp'i'ii fond Lie., in, in Itriiuty'i. prime, 'i'lio yi'llnw, t"", t!.mij;li in t mi fur, LliVI'.i ,l-ii' IC'trS, ill prr lill ill ilnt, 1 lie (Ire :in'i rimr, tlio tt'.-i'i, ilm air, J'i.ijl:iro llio l.e'iiulilui ! Tin" inf.n.t'i i-ii.ili.. t!:C lu'V'liin f vi-, 't lio i i llml iiit'iirn, tin: t.'itrs lliut lleiw, Tin1 L.iriiu''s witrh.i e''.-t,'i'-y, A;!, uil. '.I; M. t: tl iir rhiiriii.- tie'i-tow, Airl t'.i.-v iiro lltautili. 1. .i.l "f l iiri .liun i i . ' and llraiil) '. "iir n,l u'-i'jV.'. nrili nllnel Vt i'v ii IN nutifu! ? fi:i C 'Y ' ' X ' ll ----,, , t t( .. j 1' ill', tlli'll, Si ' ' -V s I .-,..,. ,i, . ii"t 1 1 r. i -o V lion nil i!m- i Mill -Xr'r.'st.-vetic, trom th? IIou.v Coim.iit.i.icr our -".ucaUons a i.ovt secure. i ,i'Vil mJ M. nnt turn i i I n iillICi d n Wi! .110 IWCn'V-flVC UiilOs flOtll ..."""niOtlU, l.,il .i'i'Iiii i 'ni' tl.e Si'i-ietni'v i.TiheTi-f as- to i-stie u t,o:is:ii,J liiilli'i'ie ol Unit' d Stat';.-bonds, :.imi!nr in Hiiiuuiit and form to ll, ;e :iuilioii-cd by the act uppiored I t'. riiiry, .'), 1M'2, with interem payable -ci; i-:'iiiniKilly m tiie lawful money ot'lhe 1 ni'.cd State.-, i nd the principal payable in twenty e-in in .'old or silver coin of the L" lined States ; "idbo to ivsuobf.'al ten. del notes ol the United States, the ain't not to exceed, w ith then; already tiuthot- ized, live bundled milliot s, tc etiablo 1 j i ill 10 call in ail tho hve-tiventv unU seven- thirty Tie.isurv botnls now in circululion, n ful I'iiiicil ibem, and autliori.ing him to f cdccm the United Stn'cs legal lender Voti.s lie-Id as a loan ami 1 ea' ing interest. 'I be law .lull. Oi uii'g such lorns ii to : ril l'!:u'i. I The bill Miv.pal ti c iitual suppression r f ti e banks 1 y the imposition "f a tax of ro ,.,,i t, ii il.eir circn an, in over cne-ha f 'be amoun it of theii ciipital paid in, to go into r.pM'atson t:inety uays utter the 1 a.--:'u'e ( I' the bill 7nfri.it and Vnivi. P.issmohe Wii.i.i.'. jison.- 0 ir readers will K- ! rei.l!.-e.t what a t-t.r this great negro liilaulhropi-t created in Atiolitu ti circles, in l'hil.i ielphin, n f -w year njo. ile w as the vc'-y h. ftd atnl tioi.t ct ttiat-' ! a,l pait. l'.v ms pieicii'i.-'i if . . . . 1.. 1 1. ... r.w the tie-'o tie manageii, siu.i.- un.u .'. ....it, tli. nliih 1:1? o! an a; e.l col on-. 1 woman owner ol muuo property in West 1 hib'di-lpl.ia. Ilediowawid in his iwn I..11 I wiitoig and p. r-uadrd tl.e wo .nun to s'gn i' it. the id ..-en re ol her bus. land, and friends. The wiil set f or: h tlott a s-i,'.'.M aii'ount .should g" to In r husband, nnd the balance, the my-r part ...f ,ei ("late, to Pas-moro V illi.uiison's vill, 1. had seen th' old woman Of ly iiv. 'i'l.e neg'O wrniau died recently, ; nd hrr liusbaou cn'-'s'i'd the will. The jury, befote whem tbe fa 0 wa tiiel iA.oul three weeks n?r., dec'ftred tl.e will null and void, it being executed t') sn;l l.: ili.hnnesi r iirtiosos e.I iini'i"n 11: i...,l ..''ilie iironer le its. So :.Uc , li f r nci-ri nbilanthioov a:id Passmnre il ,.,m..,n ,,!- .c,',r luhilhio-c-r. I'iie "i.M) Arwv '. The Union fir es, consisting now of over seven Ian die I thon-atid men. are di-tribute l nnd com nuu.ded as l.!h a-' : lien. Burrisid-'. with the whole Army .1' the Potomac, lided by Hem' .elm an and Sige' it t' take care of i;i"hnrin I :iieii.('..x is making a rapid march ton .ml tie I'irg.nia and Ten lies see Pailroad; ticii. Peck and (ii 11. Fuller a.e to look 1 ut for tiio .Southern com 111 11 nit'.iiioiis ot Ki' hmcnd; Gen. Hanks and (len. Hunter are to look in at some of tlio Southern ports now beb by the rebels ; (ien. lfii-cci ans is mo ing through Central Teiini's-ce, (i;-n. ''oan""i' t'iroigh Ken tu. it. ii. n. (ii'.nt nt) Mi-si-si pi ; (ien. Scho'licld defcii'lii Ml-soui i. and 1 ien. Cur tis i- lelow him on tho West sidffoftbfi liver; and (len. 'cClerand will soon be on his way elo'vn the Misissippi river. I'n mi 1 Pi ntN 111: coil Eh home. A Vucii.lo! ours, who bad taken piidofor K veial yeais in cultivating! a full crop ot haii on his face, was called away from homo on business some I, no since. While uh eflt, an inexp-n ieiiced bai'bcl spoiled his -tlii-Lers iii niminilic them, which so -h 'ninned him tliat he directed the bar- j bernmakc a clean job el it ly maving wliiBkfrs and mustiudio . Ik.IIi oil. llio l I ...... ...n fvi. ('.-A WAS Ian urr ..oe'yt'ii, nun t.tii i.tt-.-.o ....v. as Hi.ooth and as d. lielo as when in his i icens. ho returned honi in the nielil. : 10 returned honia in the night. rni-ig his little girl lil not recog-, . ot, waking up. Looking over ! .er.ani seeing, as she supposed a I Next morn 1,;... Kr mother, ani seeing, as she supposed a i urancer in the U'd. fcho remarked in her ! 1 the Ud. she rcmarUe.i in her jnplicitv, "Mister, get out c,f; U-U 1'a .n he amirj home." childish s here; I'll JIi man Gi.okv. The Parthenon is nor a total ruin, whe-te bats and owls nest, and where Yenus is more honored than Min erva. The Roman Forum has no become a cow market, urul tho Tarpcrian Hock a cabbage-garden, tho Palace of theCiesars a rope walk ; and from Hie seat once held by Washington, Jefferson and Madison, there now issue "letters to Horace Gree ley," propositions lo " Border Stales," and "jiroc.himatiot.s of abolition." Hartford Timri. gr?), v. . 'Imse,"' frct-d lo buy gold t iw,'n.;irtet.t.ui''"'. Py interest to theVre.liu.ra t.ill. " tnent within a fori-niglit. There are one hundred .1 .! i.iu,. 1,. duv who havo not t 411 m ruin vi eii iim seen h dollar months. for th.-ec, four and six I am surprised, toy dear, thai I liava never sn you blush.' The ftvct , bus hand, I was born to bliuh uniNi!. ' , EVACUATION OF THE PENINSULA. Important Correspondence. The following ar- tln lipnteho9 which I naed between Gens. ATi 'lellan and Hals jleck on i ho ulijcot of leaving the Pct-in- iiln. ,MH Iclhin s di-natch wits lv tele.. li-iiatch was ly I graph, and in cipher ; tlmt of Ilallcck, in reply, was in manuscript : Ktiiimt No. I. Copy in cipher. ! 1'Frk lev, 'a.. Auir. I. lsT.2. ' Msj. General llallrck. Corinniilider in I C'li el i our dispatch of Inst cvofiitig is I i , , .... i nie'iiui intj eiifuiy unu louii'jiitia uuuck !ed met,,eg.eatest r:ii I .Ver exper.ensvouiM ,-,,, fo,,Vi Jn othf.r words tll0 ;ce,l, lr I an. convinced that tho order to oM Ar3 . o) J0 rotoil)ac is F.ilit inU) ,VV() . raw tins army to Ac...,a . reek will prove , ll t whll tllli ,or(.0 (nf niy ' lllClik 1'MMJ III t !. nvtH..m I . n ... I ' , rei riven, i musi con icsn mat ii lias caus' IT . ' , ' ,u C,U !,: ! Icar it will bo n fatal blow. .Several dav6 ar? necesii ry to completo th prepara tions for no important a movement as this, find while they at? in progress I be;.' that cnrefiil considci ation bepiven to my htate iiict't. This army is now in excellent .lis- I'lphiic an condition, wo hold n debojche on uoui oatiK-i oi uie James river, so llnil vrc are ncc to act in miy direc'.i.ui, anJ, it'll , I ,i ,.tl,.n0,.ri ,- i . mt- i4i-t.-itt,t ui nit: uu uutlis, 1 CUII and are not likely tr, n'e -u the cik d v in1 force fcullicii tit tu lihl a kittle until we have reached lilt ien or eighteen utiles, which brings us juacticully within ten miles of Uichuioi.d. -hir largest line of land tronspor'.at:.)n would be from this point twenty-fivo miles, but w ith the aid of the gunboats we cm supply the army hy wuter during its advance, certainly to within twelve miles of liiclmiond. At Acquiit creek w e wc u'.'i l"i H'vct.ty-iivc mi lea from liichtnond, with lana transportation ail the way. l rom here to l ort Montoe is a mnrcii of about seventy milei ; for I regard it as inv racticable to wit hdraw thisatiny and its material exce t by land. The result A this moveme nt would then bo lo march f.n.t I . ll ti 1 1 t'tt t .itid f.-tilt t.-til..a I ft rn.i.'li .........v. ....j ..,,, ,t. ,t..t.. .. point now only twenty-five nul.;s distant And to ilepnve ourselves entirely M th. now ci i ui am oi i no mi mm :,ti nnd watfi t ran-poi tation. Add It this the cett.iiu lernoralization of this annv whi-h won 1 ensue, tii terribly depressing ellect upon tl.e people of the Nort h, and the strium probability that it would iiillucnce foreign ttoweis ta i e.'oimi.e our adversaries; and tJies appear to mo suthcient rca-ons to niake it my imperative duty to urge, in iH. strongest lenns ol n,ir language, tlia this order may I f- rescinded, and that far from recalling this 111 my, it bo piotnptlv reiiifoicid to enable it to rfoiima the (-fen-ive. It mav Iv said that theie are 1.0 reinforcements available. 1 point totit ii. I'.m nside's iorce to that of lien. Pope, not r.ece-'sary to inrinlain a strirt defence in front of W&shii.e'.on and Harper's Fer ryto thoe pm iions of the Aimy i f tli. V.",l not reipiiic-d fur a stti. t I efer.ee thct". II. re elirccMv In front of this, ar my is the heat I of the rebellion. It is lute that ali our resources should be col. letted to strike the blow which will de torinir.e tl.e fate of the nation. All points f.f secondary importance tl.-ew here sho.tld be lib indoneel, and every available man brought h"te. A decided ioior.- here, and the military strenglh of the rebellion is crushed. It mutters not ihat parlial reier-cs we may me et it ith ebon hero here is the true defence of Wellington. Il is hero, on the lank? of tho .lames river, that the fate f.f the Union fhould he decided. C lear in my convictions ol right, siiottg in the consciousness that I h.u -p ei . 1 I'.-eti. and still am, actuated solely Ii 'oveol my cum Iry.koov-ing that 1.0 ambitious or selfi-h motives have in flu enced toe "10111 the commencement ol this tviu-, I do now, what 1 never did in my life b. !ore, ent-.eat that this outer may be rcscir ileel. If my counsel does not pre vail, I wiil, with a sad heart obey your or ders to the utmost ef my powers, devo ting lo the movement, one of the utmost difficulty, whatever skill I may possess, vhatever the re-u'.t may be; and may (iod grunt 1 hat I am mistaken in my fore boilings. 1 shall at leat havo the inter mil sutisfactifin that I have written und spoken frankly, and have sought to do the best in tny power to arrest disaster from my cOJi.try fii.n. 11 McClki.i.an. ftinior Generul. Otuciul copy. Head'iuarters Army, Wasbirgton.Ib C, November lstli Exhiuit No. 2 j ASIIINeiTON, AUgUSt 0, lll. Msjor General McC.'lellan, Comn.auding, Ac,, j.erkley, Ya. General : Your dis- ' natch of ye-lcrday was received this meitnt , t;.i.i iii r ing ,md I immediately telegraphed a brief fl'tf. promising 10 w rue you u.010 .u.iy "T'Ji "s..u.,..,fc n,c JUU m by mail. General, certainly could ni0,e l'""ned t receiv ing not have l,ll'n ,J10,e lli,ied el receiving my order "" 1 w"s -ue necessity ol issuing iC '" w"s 'ue necessity o. n I was advised by high officers, judgment 1 have great confiden in whose ence.tc make the order immediately on my arrival here 1 . t . .1 . .l .:! 1 i.ui 1 aeieruiinea noe 10 uo so unu. could earn your wishes from a Personal interview, and even after that interview I triel every me. ns in my power to avoid withdrawing your army, and delayed my decision as long as 1 dared to delay il. 1 assure you, General, il waa not a hasty aiu' inconsiderate act, but one that caused me more anxious thought than any other ofmy life. Hut Hfter full and mature consideration of all tho proa und cons, I waa reluctantly fnrrwl . .1 ,'.- that the order must be issued.' ThS was t to my mind no alternative, I Allow rue to allude to a few of the tacts ' of tl.e case.. You and your office... at the; interview, estimated the enemy' lorce in and around Kichmond at two hundred thousand mep. Since then, you and oth ers report that they have received, and are receiving, large reinforcements from the South. Gen. Pope's army, now cover- ing Washington, if only fotty thousand men. . Your eU'ectiveJiorco is only about riine ty thousand men ; you nro thirty miles from Kichmond, and ieti. Pope eighty or ninety, with tin; enemy directly between yon, leadv to full with I. is Htpui'.or num bers ii'i:ii one or the other, us ho may se lect. Neither can reinforce the oth.r in fuse of such an ul tuck. 1 1 General pope's tirinv be diminished to reinforce you, Washington, Maryland and 1'tMi n-iy 1 van in would betleft uncovered nnd expoicd. f ynur force bu re. uoed to H'reii).'thei: J'opo you would I'O too weak to even hold the position you now occupy. 1,1.. ..i i ,i : . i .. i . . . . .1 directly bc-tweon th. tly bt-iwi'pn them. Thev cannot b. uniteil by latnl without exposing bnili to destruction ; (ind yet they must be united. To send Tope's forces by water to the 1' niiiNiil.i is, under present circumstances, a military impossibility. The only alterna tive lu to kciul Itie toii'i' on the IVnilisnlx ,(1Komo ,,n,n, i,v .1:i:i. kliv l,.,l..rii ks. burg, where the two armies cno be united T...I mn rn.( llii,l,i t rt L.rttn .if lliA riliv ;nii,tn. i,i.'i. t,.. ,i v,t.. t I j v viLt .i ii n. J vii nil t it i i vii C"J that to withdraw from the present posi- ! I.... ttiit ,..,',. .t.,.n,i.: . L.rt...i;,.r: ! . , i i ... ..... , of the auiiv, which is nort' in excellent i .,( uiscline nnd condition " 1 c.i ino I uu der-tandwhy a simple change of ,o,t on to a rew and by no means disU H b. s.s will .K-morai,.e an army ... oxcf.Ieni Ji.s . ion itin in ibU i in i en :m vn v vs sist in lii it eleiiicralizalion, which I am satisfied thev will no'.. Your change of front from your extreme right tit Hanover ; i i ii,.... i.r..;t;...t u', Ullllll 11"U-C IU IUUI 1 l t nt 11 h i-.F-1 t; -ii I'u'i i over thirty miles, hut 1 have not hcurc' i that it (Icmi-iialii-ed your troops notwith-i stanttir.g the fevrre losses tliey susmineu: in ellceling it. i A new base on the Joippabarinock, ut I- redei icksburg, brings you w ithin 'ibout! sixty mi I'd of liichtnond, and sccu.es a rcniforccnipnt of forty e'l lii'y tho-:sn J fresh and dirciplitu'd troops. Tim change with f-.H'li adviintaees will, I think, 11 properly reoieacnteel to e.ur iit inv.cncoui - , . aire rather than ilemoralize our .', .. 1 o ' 1 iii:t.i till Li ... .til... . uu" n 1 Moreover, vo'ir-clf sugg 1 that juno 1 1 yj 1 ' 1 ' t . lion might bo e llected at Yoiktown, but thai a Hank march acto.s the Pen insula would be more hazardous than to retire o Fonre-s Monroe. You wiil reuu'inber that York tow n is t w o or thiee miles fur therfrom Kichmond than 1-1 edei icksburg ; besides, the la let-is betne-e'i. Kichmond at.d Washington, and covets Washington from any attack by llio enemy. The po litical etfei'l of the witlidiawal may at first hn unfavorable; but 1 think lho pubiic arc baginning to understand its necessity, and that th-y will have much more con ii lence m a unit.d army than in its re-pa-rate f-i;:mi:i;ts. Put you will if ply, why not reinforce me here, so that 1 e'.u viko Kichmond from my present po-:'.u;:? 'lo to this, you ' iid ut t ur interview that voj reoiiire.l hllv diou-aml a.lelii.on- al Irooos. 1 laid YOU il H L'ive von so uianv. You ti you would have '-some chance of success" tvith tivtnty lliins.md. Put y. u after vv.irJs telcrapheil to me that you would eiu:rc thirty fiv thousand as the enemy was being laigely reinforced. If y.mt es timate of ihe t n'em'b sirengih was cor reel, your reijuisiiion vvas pet icctly roa-on- .iblc.lul i vva utterly ituio-s. Lie to li'.l it, until new troops could be enlisied and or ganized, which would r.i'iii.? several weeks. To keep ynur army in its present position until P ould be b3 reinforced would almost dc-troy it in that 1 limale. The months of August and September are aluiesl fatal to whites who live on that art of .lain.s river, and even after yon got the teinforccnicnls asked for, you ad mitted that you tnusl reduce Fort Dats ling ami the tiv r batteries, bt 'ore you could advance on Kiehaiond. It is by no means certain that the re duct ion of these, fortifications would not rem re considerable lime, perhaps as much as those al Yoiktown. This delay ought not only be fatal to the health of your ai ray, hiit in the nienn time gen.r at Pete's forces would bo exposed 10 the heavy blows of the enemy without lho slightest hop'.) of asi-tance lrom you. In regard to the demoralizing ellect of a withdrawal from the Peninsula to the Kappiihannock, I must remark that a large number of your highest officers, indeed a minority of those whose otinions have been reported to me, are decidedly in fa 1 vor of the movement, hven sevc rai of those whooricinallv advocated the line of ,0S,,Wn; g "'. .1 .,":.: 'r 1 1 I'liiiiHii i iinw nuv itr iia nunii'it'll advise its abandon merit. 1 have not inquired, anil an not, desire to know, by whoso advice or for what reasonn, the Army af tho Potomac was seperateel into two parts, 'j' 1 ue en emy between them. I must take Ui.ngs, . . ... , as 1 find them. 1 find tho force divided,! and I wih to reunite them. Only one feasible plan has been presented lor doing fl.lt 14'vrt.t r,t Itrt V fta flun ItAil t-.r.-sen I Pll . ' ' , ..(l.inv .i101.: j .ltlV0 a. j0)lcfi ,t . but all your plans require re. ' , . .. - imp0Sfcii,B t0 give you. It is very easy to aK ior rein forcements, but il is not so easy to give thbiii, when you have no disposable troops at your command. I have written very plainly, as 1 unders stand the case, and 1 hope you will give me credit for having considered the mat ter. iilthniiffh 1 may have arrived it dil leront conclusions trom your ow n ery re'I,eC,f;inVJXLLE".ene;dn.Chief. . Jl' . Halleck, uenerai in vuiei. V"'?mTl COpy : . . . . i- . . r J'C- Kr',T0J'' Assistant Adjutant General. Tublic applause is even jealoua of its own verdict, and thus the men who have been the most abused have been generally these who have been most praised. An Iriah lover said : 'It is a great r.leas- are to be alone, especially when yerswate. heart is rid ye.' Fr.iui the N-w Yiirk Horn 1.1, Itcc. 3. Letter from Judge Gould, on the ar rests by the Wnr Def nrtment. Tho lctier following xuMicieiitly ex plains itself. It was fent to tlie 1'resi ileiit two days alter j date by a friend ol his, who iill'orded the first cp oi lui'iiy that could be relied on to in-nre the de livery to tho 1'rcsi.lcnt in peiHon. mid it Wi so delivered. 1 1 vvas read, and a vcr. bal rebly that thocaie would be invest i jjated "van given. Itut no pretence was made Unit the causo for the arrest was not corietlv fla'.ed in my letter. Thougu the claim to '-investigate" by means of an mlii itrary arrest, p. isnnal du ress, and whatever seeict. appliance a Cabinet inuisition might see lit to resort to, was reasserting the right to so arrest lor such causes, and thus was n claim as utterly at variance with all law, as would have peen the similar arrest of a m in who (in New York) had picked the Secretary's pocket, still steps were taken I present the case again to the President and the Secretary, through their person d tivd po litical friends (and they m hii,;i po-iiion), in the hope of obtainu, redress w llhout ii- Pu,l"l!"y - . But as up lo this time after nearly turee weeks) nothing luu resulted, except . . ' . f. . ' .. an infamci'is rigorous imprisonment ol .Mr. iorxmxrcc has m.ohed its limit, Umi t!llll h!lul(1 tL ft ,,cinc lMi.llH.nt lho snn.mily 0-uclUill oppr,:?in exercised in this case, as a winning to thojJ and the? adiniiiisl ration. Yours, A ,., v v (il.O, (jOLLI1. Dec. 4, IS;'.'... .., .-, i jUDOI' fiuUI.I) T(.) Mil. LINCOLN ,'f,v York, Nov. 14, lH'.J To his Kxceller.cy Ahaiiam Lincoln, Pres ident of the United Stales : - Silt- On my arrival in ibis city, from mv residence in Trov, X. Y.. 1 iind that a cousin of miiie, (i. l 'olden '1 racy, a bro ker of this city, lias been, liist arrc-te-d ; and sent to Port Ltd'.iyci te ; and iM-condly, lt..t-l' TMlv l'Il Hr- 11 -il l LIJ It I'.llll.l. t"ll. . .1 v.-.. 1 ., J ' . . ho iienvsnaicis sav ami so l.ir as lea 1 . . .. . .. h'" ul ," '"'y Vl ' ' , " ,l,ls ' K '" v.oirnu ..u.e-r en.-iae u e e. - H'C e-t is some d."a,ings ho h ,s h ,1 it. conlraciois ei:an on uu ci ni;ieiu ohil'. i - el raft lor moneys : ami. it i-sai l, scino fraa were committed in or by l lie drafts, and he is charged with complicity iheie.wtii. If this be so. it is a crime cogniz. ible bv the courts, and only by the courts. And I am a.nazcei al the fatuity of public otli cers v. no can take to wattling trom Ji tinetly uttered voice of a free eoph . I am, and always have been, an unwa vering enemy ol this 1 c U'llioii (cursed in its origin, most accursed in its pro. gressj and a suppoiler of the admiois-. liatioti. 1 am a Judge of this highest court of this State. And if 110 honest voice has yet reached the cars of our gov. eminent, I wish to sry.and to be In ai d in saying, that star Cuaniber process, and a impossible to Secretary's warrants are dangerous intru finally thought T'"1' to jll'-v wilh u"'1 U"lt' T?" u' I.iOliUe, stauncii siippniieis in uie tun criitni'iit, who would crush treason with the iron heel, but who know tbe law, are compelled to bang tn'. ir hen Is in silet.ee at tl.e mention t'.f cases which have occur red .11 euir :.iid.-t. Spies are hardly i .iuiioned w ucii 1 ie. are where ihey can do infinite harm ; but a powerful hand and an oppres-ive one is bud 011 a person h. ie, w in is nnt in a po sition lor eioini! mischief, if he would, and who is suppo.-ed 10 have no triends. lu this respect, 1 thank God, lucre has been 3 mistake. It is true that he is a young man, of not much means or ioil.i ( no: ; il is id o true that lie li is a youi.g wife (married not long sinc-J : and f r no assign eu can-.', and lor io assignable cause ti. ut those in power elate to give breath to, he is taken away hum home, without giving to his wile a:i instant's interview or a e or a eli.uieo lo sen n:m. is tins country 1 lie r ranee 01 a cemury u.-o t . . l- 1 The young man is the gratid-on Uriah Tracy who lived and eied a Senator of the United States fiom Conn.-c: i.'Ut, who was the lir-t man buried in the Con., gressional bntying gtoutid at ' : diington, and whose ashes are in-ultcd by this jtros cious invasion ol the liberties of the pie in the person ot his ddicetidaut. I am not merely speaking my own opinion of such at rests. 1 know the opin ion and the leelings of many ol rr.y breth em of the bench. And if t givtrn- ' men I is really desirous of so proe. e ling as ....... ..!. .1 . ..,' . ... ,..1;.. -,,rl i lu . ,lVu l,u. f , : I opinions they w.ll be heat.., n;t merely, . . i . t lho iviii ril iiniiiXia iirt.i.c; nt i n i(n iiiclaration to tlio world IlaJ I been o i' liours earlier inu'le n 11' n n t Ii la fi.un I 2 1 1 1 1 nnt. ll '1 VP , fl T f k I V I tlllU V.UOV 1 I JII.UI'I troubled you with a word; but I would , Court of this M ile was so execute.! as to protect its citizens accused of such offon ccs lrom any arrest, other thanor.e under the appropriate process of the 00111 W. I beg again to assure jou, in all sinceri ty, that this kind of proceeding lias gone too fur already, und that, while to the last of our men and our means wo nro rc-nly and determined to sus'ain the law, and the government in enforcing lie law over this w hole land as otia country, we are ah so determined to be judged by the law, and noi by any Secretary or any one who is not commissioned for that purpose. We know and acknowledge lho rules of war, where the necessity of the rase re quires the existence of martial law. ISut we know.ilso, the common law of liberty, and the broad, great charter of tl.e con stitution. 1 wtite warmly, zealously, because I cannot bear to think of our cherished government's taking any course to injure itself ; at a time, too, when ojr only hope of en-japing the eternal di -grace and hu miliation ot letting tl.e cause of human I borty perish in our hands is to sustain Ibis government of this VTnion, and to have it ft government worth sustaining. With great respect, yours, tve, liliuliiiK tiCd'Lli. Gambling at Washington- A Val ii.gtoii correspondi ii t has ''been lo see the t igci." ar.d heie H the way lie mo-ci ilit s li e animal .- A ring at the door bi ll, and a recoimois s itieij through ils grated uper half by a slal.voil negro, t hen up a pair i.l' stair", through an iir.le-room, and we tand in tin; carpeted, elegant jungles eil the mod el n "li''or." Inere are two wide, lofty rooms, divided by folding do'ii', both lliizlll.g Willi llglit, tot tly carpetC-d, (tee.)- rated with eieiiiiiil and vohiptuoiis paints in-'-, Mini seeming v ni t Hi st ot w lierc poor tired humanity would come lu et a loi'clasti' of Lilen, avid id ji;. ralo lor the stc;n battles of life. In tiie lir-it room is a sideboard, upon whoso shelves are rnw.-. of cb'gat.t elccantcis, through which blushes the purple stain, or Hashes the crystal extract ol thejuniper .-1 nylic? gin. In this room is uUo a roulette table, which as we enter is vacant, 11 round which is gathered a half dozen men, so ab.-orbed 1 1 is stated in Yankee papers that e.T in the game that were (bibrial to lock the jSerator Iligler, of Pennsylvania, has writ cut ii with a blast !iom his t rn.pel, they 1 te n a letter proposing a plan of peice. would r.ever hear it. We have not eoen it, nor any hints u ti I won t describe lho game, for what lit. tie ii'ur.y one is known about il it. Chica go, i-- not known any where else, even in this city of inioiiity Va!iirglou. P.ehind the iabld sils the dealer long in finger, while it) hand, anel with the in evitable cluster ol brilliants eparkling from digit and shirt bosom. He is grey eyed, pockmarked. 1 1 solute, and yet pleas ant in appearance, with a breadth of shoul der and depth cf chest that show him to be no mean man in cuti cf an exciiangs oi 1 fistic courtesies. On the tight hand stand a captain, playing with half-dollar checks, and in-ve.-ligatiiig one at a lime, evidently a iosi'r, lor, ii:s his check is raked down, he follows it wiih a sigh, and I doul t not a etiisc upon the ei.pi icidii-ness of fortune. He has hut a hall d"-n checks, in a min ute they are cone, and aflcl going to a corner and examining 1111 empty pocket book, he turns and stands moodily iva'eh I ing the name. Next to him is a '.bick-et young man. ' who, with some-thing less than a bushel of j ten and twenty dollar checks at his sid i-, ith tho most perlect nonchalance, bet ting from cue to five hundred do'l.irs upon , hU cuds, nnd winning and 1 ising without the slightest change of cr u-itcnance. H i! j In- m lucky; every card be bets on wim, Until, UIICI liulf all lieur, Ik. 1"' - - lltvoo "i I lour times in succes-ion, and then, with ' the remark, "My luck is changed, I guess ' 111 rpiit," he c.suiitsover his chee!;s to the dealer, who coolly, as if it were a matter i of live cents, passes over to the lucky iu ' divi lua',, thirty sever, one hundred dollar iLreo p:r cent, coupon- l United States , Treasury notes. Thru-tiiig the immcii;.' p;le of paper in hisco.it pocket, the g m' . tletuan rises, takes a segar and a drink at j tho sideboard and then with a "goxl night gentlemen" lie walks out. The dealer proceeds unc. nceriieu'.v, while 1, dazzled at such resultJ, draw o it a solitary five and dep. sit on tho kin.:;. In ju-t three seconds the claws i.f the t: gti covers 1, iy lonely and lot.g Jrc-n-uri-1 live, aid I s-v it no more nnd I may a id that I h iv en '. recti il since. A v Oil iv l 'otlenian, -vi.1 -tttlv a ciei i in .1 elrv run 1. store sits on my 1. .1, auu 1 belling and lo:in:!- Two or thre times his c iici'Iis r;;n out and then he goeitj.i friend a:;d tinaiiy letuins wi'.h a ten, which ho inve-ls in clicks, an 1 loses. At last he cotiics back lioUl one of hi- side excur-k.ns with a lowering brnw and no money, lie situ down, watches the game a tiioiot-nt, and leave.. About in this stile went the game one man winning and all the Ulanee losing, l'.v and by : n elegant supper was serve; in an upper room, and then the paity commenced pl iving rouk-lt", and oilicis R, .iiciro.l to 1 out ol luck, lor here., m 1 less than half an hour. 1 saw a Pede ral captain 1" ..-e some six liunoif ty dollats. Fve-i body to-' tii I n'i'J twen- jjst before I left, when th" young geiitieiii.m who had been borro.ving and be'ling on faro, returned. Iletrnlclied the spinning of th ball a short lime, and then took a by stander aside. "Hut you owe me fifty now, I heaid the other sav. ' I'll give 'it all back to morrow," was the reply. fi.t-illi- t. cimn back with a "ltreeti . . ..... .j .... - ... ... back" to tl.e amount or iwenty. puv .. fin rn(. . rt)ll won. n,,. -.le , pile ng. ted Wit" and bi.ii Uid his in event on the red ; and again winner, lie changed to black. :k won. In short, everything, he money on was the winning color In less :han five minutes from tho time he began, he quietly cashed his checks and left with over eighteen hundred dol lars. So much for luck. I luring the two hotns that I wns in the establishment, some live or six thousand dollars changed hands. There are some live or six first c.!as es tablishuients of the kind in Washington, beside any quantity of others of lesser note. They are -nll known to the police, and in fact to everybody else, but are nnt disturbed. They are as necessary to Congress as the negro question, and near, ly or quite as much patronized. 'Pa, didn't I hear you say the other day thit you wanted a cider press?' 'Yes, daughter, where can I get one?' Why, you try Zcke Stokes, he hugged :ne the other evening at the party, anel I le'.l you he made) me grunt.' A beggar woman, when questioned if she were not an Irish woman, dtopped a courtesy and addod, 'Shure I am, yer honer, and have bsen ever ainoe I was a child. I GOV. BIGLER S LATE LETTER. No publication since the beginning 'f j the war, has had a wider circur.i'oil than . the bile leller of (iov liig'.er. Its sugges j lions are universally approved by ilni con .si'i'valive pL'opIe of the North ; .oid, from 1 the foil iwing 111 tide from the Kioiimaid UVi.y w liii !i in prc-ume l t utter tlio sentiments oi tbo Pavis (iovernment it is not hard to gut ts that it abo expteseoi j the sentinicnts of the conservative, . , ilhoso who ;.i' be Union men in the, Soul!i. l.rt us stir ; so H al tins paper s, Ihesentimenls oftliel.ln I rovefn. i .... .,,,,1 . . i,,, ,w K,,nll,,s,, ...... (ioicrnmeiit at Washington was actuated by such seiiliincnls as are expressed in (iov. P:gler's letter, is it not very clear that neither government would havo to sacrifice any cardinal principal in order that they might boil, meet upon a com mon basis of adjustment ? Peace. Krum the Kii'hnioml Whig, N07. 29 tlio terms lie bi.ggosti;, but as we supposo he was in earnest, and meant to submit something practical, we are forced to con clude that bo advises the North to aban don the war und let the South ulono. Nothing less than thi would be practi- cable, fir havo the appearance of being in earnest. With his appreciation of the merits of the controversy and his knowl edge of Southern character, he can have no doubt that so lung as the Xottii con tinues to make wnr the South will con tinue 10 make resistance, and thore can, consequently, bu no peace. Tho first step toward pacification can come oniy from the North, and it must, be a suspension of hostilities: and the pacification can then be completed only l.y making tho suspension permanent. This is inevitable from the character of Ihe war itself; they invade.we resist ; they assail, we defend ; they seek to subjugate, we to maintain our liberty. They must cease to invade, to assail, and to attempt to suiijugato, for we cannot cecs.i to resist and defend without ruin. All this must bo plain to Mr. liigler, and when he talks about peace, be will talk idly and insin cerely unless ho calls on tho North to stop making war on the South. This ii all we ask, or have ever asked. In the long controversy that preceded and bi-iunht "on the war. the cry of the .South is always "let u.- t.!nr.e." Aggrca--lon was from the beginning the policy of the Abolitionists. 'J hey sought by every possible att of legislation, ly all the influ ence of popular commotion, by stealing our skives or tampering with their fidelity, and through e.-f ry meatu by which they might ie r.de;- tlie possessioii of su 1. props ci ty insecure and dantieious, to destroy t' 0 vi'.lue cf the institution aod to cornnr.l us, against our wishes, ,jr li.uats, ft. 1 sit-r interests, to give it up. We protesud and depr.-c itc-d, and implored i f we attempt cdVi.o-lation, il was on1' to repair son wrong of llioin. or guard against some t in re:i'bng danger. We acted always on I the defensive, an el with a patienc" and I foi'uc.ualice that ft -re but litllo -hort of I pusillanimity. Put nothing c 'Id make I iher.i i-i-e. After year-of outrage ;nd endurance, 1 finally ut' qnuring of any rcloi ma. -n, we re.'. lived that, as we could not enjoy our light' in the Union, we would separate, and this we proposed to do pe iceahl" with no iitr ntion" of 'taking .r claiming -V thin.' that did not belong to us; willing, indeed, to relinquish much that d'd oo long to us. : ::d to hav? an eq-iit cae ,k oning with our late partners up::, all questions of --rorortion that were mcV'tii-bl-foal the a ' 'f separation. In this p uiiful but unavoi ! :bl step we a, i;n be-smu-lit them lo let us alone to 1 us go in peace. Put l':ev would not. Their infitti.it ion and r:.g br:;ko f i"'- wi'U re doubled fury, and ihey ; " ate I war l: on us. It i.- sl.eer nonsense, too contemptible even f t a quibble, to talk nbmtonr hav is;g beiin the war because we Iir the first gun. The fact is they bad been pres sing us bae-j. for mirty years. When we reach .d the wa'.l and could go no 1 'rther. we struck. It vvas a blo.v of s -M'-' -fence. Lvery bluw that has bean struck sn.. n has been prompted ly the f.nrue' imp ilse. We fight beeuuso we are unwilling to ba overrun, plundered and en. laved. We will so coniinr.e to fi?ht so long a ve c,t lift an arm. The simple question, then, for Mr. Big! r : nd tho Northern peopleto consider is,' whether they will cf-asa to nv.ko war upon us. When they have de termined on this, the formal stipulation of peace can easily be arranged. U.itil they have so resolved, they will pet no hearing from us for anything they have to prop jse. Of this they may teel assured. Geological Wonhlr. About thirty years ana. somebody made th? discovery that the ice fields cf Siberia contained immense numbers of elephants and mas tadons. Whero they came from, or b thev gat there, is a problem which, per liaris, may never bo solved; their exis tence, however, was no mere chimera, and as ivory is one of the most valuable commodities of trade in all nations, soma utilitarian Englishmen conceived the idea of turnin ; these vestiges of a former ago to a profitable acewnt. Accordmgly about thevear l.Vi Thompson. Konner A Co., a rich London firm, fitted out an expedition to seek for ivory in the .Sibe rian ice. Novel and incredible as it seemed, the exhibition was crowned with complete success. The ships returned to Knglanel richly laden with the choicest, ivory ; and even to the preseut timo, al though the world knows little about it, the ivory market is mainly supplied f;r-m th ice field of Siberia. i i , fc' i t t