ft FW ""'W P 0 If V iTsT y i n D. V. MOORE. l-DJi.. 0. B. GOODLANDER. J VOL. XXXIII. UllOt.t MO 1731) PRINCIPLES, not MEN. TERMS-$1 23 per Annum, if paid in advam NKWSKHIKS-lVOK. III. NO -21 CLKAKFI KM), I'A NVKDXKSDAY, I)K( 31, IftG'i. 1 M Hll'.! 1 lU.I.MI'A, ltll:! rom ih CrUis, Ghlo. Ffmen, arir.0, if nill ona drop Of palriotie Hood flown in jour veio i If Hill on r apiLrk of freedom's r, I'pnn your n'liri yet Miuain. V'il ye ptiii.il lamely hy and hop Your br.iili " our lyrnnt's chain ? II nuch 1 1. in ; in ujr lind way bo Then have .or full died iu viu! A lua ! for frecd'ji", 'if her ons Must lili'Cr in u felon's cell. i '.t daring to ii'.'oi't the rij.'htii i'or liiih nor fathers f atjrht and fell. Ami hnvp tlicy wuplit ",lr Katie's wins To Hwccp lliro' heavi-n's broad arch in vain, II, fore mnnn iniL'lily power to bring Thoo heiues from their gravo again ? Tlnv would ti ll trailer's spirit grieve, How would caeli ouwiird's i-ye frrow Jim, It' eolioiniron Itu- sudden (jiilo, 1'hT" cwnn tho living voi'-" of liim V.'h,. si-banner waved o'er Hunker's height ! Whof:c voire rung frro on Monmouth jiluin. (I ! that ins j i r i ( . power ami might. Might (uidi; our nation' Lehu agai'i 1.4 tlii t!ie noble OldV reward. 1 4 Ill's the garden of the free, l.eng in . 1 . 1 1 of weary silent toil, A UK- of!' 'ple4 flu wry 1 Jionealh on: country's Hug ( f light, If such niu i. ho tin) patriot's doom, Blot out i'1'.j Mar ofulury bright, And chain her Eale to tho touil.. II from 'he BoTr.oi'rat'p fair ranks, llir a i.le.-t o,ii liiUJt lh oo tirn, oon shall the Ut de.-pari" cry of freedom on tho winds be toirno. And we fhnll see u de ot's (la;. Valine ah: ' e our father's l-mes. And need a revolution! fir, To nirily our fallen '.'irou-'S A Hasty Woman. Is she not the very sparkle und sunshine of life ? A woman w ho is happy bet .i-e she can't help it whose smiles even the coldest ? rinkle of niisfortune cannot dampen. Men nmke a terrible tnistuko when ihry many for beauty, for talents, or style. Tho sweet est wives pre those w ho posse's the magic secret of being contented tinder hny cir cuinstai'ccs. liich or poor, high or low, it makes no difference ; tho bright little fui; :i tain of joy bubbles up just us musi. eal'.y in their hearts. Do they live in a log cabin, the lire leaps up on its humble hearth becomes brighter thuii the gilded clmn lelicrs in no Alladin pal.ice. Were th'- sleum of life fo daik and unpropi tionst! at t!ie tunshine i.f a happy face fil'.inc on the tuibin tide would not awa km an answering gleam. Why, these jo ous ttni ereil people don't ki.ow half tho good the) lb'. CaT A country girl desirous cf mat l iinony received l'r )in her mistress a bill ns her marriage gil't. Her mistress; desired to see the object of Susan's l'avoivuid a ditiiu.iitivo fellow, swni'iliv as a .Moor ami as ugly us an ape, mad his iipeasaiK-e. " ( th, Susan !"s:iid her miMrcssy'how small! what a slrunge choico you have made !" "La, nia'aia !" answerO'l Sue, "in Pitch hard times as these, when all the tall and handsome fellows are otl to the war, what more than this could you expect f'. r twenty dollars." Or A wretched editor, who hasn't n wife to take care of hi in, went the other night to a ladies' fair. He s-ays he saw there, 'an article which lie fain would call i is own but it was not for sale.' lie declares that since that night lie has been 'wrapturonsly wretched.' As the article was hound in hcip, the supposition is that it was either a girl or a keg of whiskey. SyT-eaii Swill was once called up- . . . m on to deliver a chanty Hcrmon. i kin"' the rmlnit. lie delivered the fol lowing, and sal down : "Jlc that giv- cth to the poor lendeth to the Lord." 'Ifyou like the socurit-, down with the dust." The result was an unpre cedented subscription. 8ayA Publin journal observes that a handbill announcing a public meet ing in that city, states with hound-fesSlioC.'Hlit-v' lli;t,tho ladies without distinction of bc, ni' invited to in tend. jjciirWhat a good lesson the oiil ma-o.-m tnti'dit to children, when she sain "C hi? 'ren, you may It.ive anythir.g you want, lut you musn't want any thing you can't have.7 J"Soine ardent devotees of trade would go to lull itself if they could get bargains there There first salu-i tation or. meeting with tho devil would lie, "Well old boy, now sui pher r V:yAn old sailor finding a corked bottln flout inf on tho sen. opened it, with the soliloquy, Hum I hope ; gin I think ; tracts, hy jiugD !' and threw ; it hack into tho watVr. i Bt&-If every word men ntter fell to tho ground and grew up a blade of grass, most public speeche would be worth ten times as much as they now are. Isjrrromissory noteB Tuning tho fiddle boforo the performauo begins. Corrf'pnndcnce of tho Philadelphia Bulletin. Horrors of the Convalescent Camp. H'AsiiiNuToy, Suturdiiy Ev J)co. 1.1. I IjHvejust returned from the so-rulleil j Convalescent Camp at Aloxamlria, liaving spent tho day in penivh of sick 1'rnnsyl vanin soldiers. More, than ever do I re alize something of 'mun' inhumanity to man.' You rnny have heard a gnocj di.il about the nhunes In that camp ; but the half has not heen told you. The lre.it mcnt and condition of some of its inmates some of it victims is positively shock ini. (toinf! out from Alexandria, I paod the tintrious slave pen of Trice, Kirch & Co., dealers in Slaves.' 1 conjured up all sorU of horror insido of thoo hioli brick wulU in day tn:ie hy. i imagined, or tried to, fortieth ingot' I fie crushed spirit? and bleed ing hearts and the physical torture of tho i thousandsof human beings, oldund young, j knocked off to the highest bidder in the souis and bodies of moil, women and chils ! iicn in that dirk, dirty prison place. Kut j coming I aek by it after one day's visit to that camp in tho mud, alter looking into . itio wan, spiritless, pitiful faces of the ; thousands there, who have hoped against hope, till a'l courage is lost, und seeing ( don't keep them there to die by inches. w here they cat, and si op, and live, or ras ' Hundred- ol lives, 1 doubt not, have b n ther die by inches, in the filth, tnd ver, uselessly, rcckle-siy sacrificed there alrc:. tnin, and mire of that place provoking')' dy, and hundreds more 'A ill be, onle.-s nicknamed a To ".'-.':; Camp,' 1 con-1 Congrois ,ip.'lies the teiaedy, for the Med eluded that tho old slave pen of so many cal L'epartnu'iit won't, or it could h ue ic'.'iitl and imaginary horrors, would be a done so lorgago. eV'ted luxury to fiatiy of tho brave, j Then, I mistiust, there are a sit of good-dieaited fellow on t lie hill. And so thieving, shiftless middlo men and under it v.eu'id. otlicials, who ojipress the soldier hy their In the first place ihe whole bleak, bar-1 petty power and filch his foo l. If he ren hill on which the camp is located is w ants to sell some articles for others his this day covered in mniy places with sickly appetite will relish, w hich is uccors itiehy inud, when wo iiave had no rain ding to army regulations the rations uie fji-a week. In stormy times one can't stopped. The presumption is that when fail to go in ankle deep at every step. soldiers ate rhort, ia tuch a place as Alex I'huS.bley tents an huddled 'ogether andi ia, there ii a gio-s neglect of otfieiid without floors or straw. 1'iteh the soil ns duty or thieving otlichls somewheie, for you id and it is damp if not soaking wet. the Government is not ut fault. Xo sul This is the convalescent's bed. If he lias jim Wl.,.e cv(.r Iuore bountifully furnishs a blanket, wLi-.-u imt ftUvnys the cac, ej ns oms are now. And iIhto is not o:io that i- his covering. His fuel he brings on ,,., ticle of necessity or excuse for tufi'cr. his hack two or threu miles, having to j,, 0r even hard fare in this or any other I ake the linibi out last winter at that point. CJI11p so easy cf access, if ollicials do their I saw at lcat a dozen cany ing their bun- juty ni lnpn (vj;j ,j0 tieirs. dies of sticks thus to day, like tho old ruin jt js j,iti P10ugli to see so many poor, iu the child story, who was met by den h brekenispiriled. crippled fellow gather on the way. And vet I saw at least twen- n.ou,,j u mull w,0 ,.otej i Q n(,k up a ty cords of good dry wood piled up in friemj, ami plead .vith tears and oilers of camp ! I asked one in charge why they a thcir fouPi 01. siXf ort!jj.ht months' back did this, and ho thought they didn't- ror nl,iny of t)icm ,.ivil't livi :l oent thought it wasn't necessary-yet 1 saw it, j() fjx montll8i ;fho WJlllll on)y hclj, lheln and it is done every dry. I ho papers . .... t.aveak0iJ an1 looked and have said that several men froe to death in one cold night while thus engaged. lie said but o ne h'td died by his pile of sticks, and they thought he was murder ed ; one was found in the privy, hut they didn't think he froze to ileath ! Heaven !y convolution to his friends that will be, won't it ? I asked the boys why they had to baik wood when there was wood in .... . t . : I. camp .' : hoy saut they got part oi a buck from some under oflirer locouk their food sometimes, ami sometimes, they inn nt never half enough for cold weather. I asKo-i wny iney .mmh n,ui ' , i , . , l: i. . .1 -.1' timber standing hall a m.lc or more trotu camp, ineysaultl.r.titwasguarue'i.anu the guaids had orders to fire on a trespi.s- hoi.0i wUh a t,lowit,g embusii'.sm to carry ser-thatafewofihemgotsnmerailsone ie ,j fl.lg bravely through the buttle cold night and a guard of soldiers cocked ; mm or (,ie lt.neftth it3 slnrry f0ll,,. bes their guns and (ompclled us to abandon incomes the spiritless, dejected, ruined t'lC"1' ! objects of pity, caring little, whether he I saw two roer washing their shirts in a',ivM or dies. sir it is ono of the sadde:!, creek two mil.-s aw.iy-the nearest good i fMi of my. ljfH And the reniedv is u iih washing pi i.e. I asked them if they be. (lje anJ t(jp ,c Iet U(tfil ut longed to too convalescent camp. J"o ! rep'ict 'no; we belong to.the JJeath m ana 1 believe turn : l heiiM ai: assist-. nnt tnrgcen toy that a young soldier of his ward w3 then lying in his tent on tho ground, with a raging fever find had been for twenty four hours, because he had no vacant l i d in tho hospital. I remarked that such a state of things ought to bo exs , , I pei"i. no repneu. you i nn i say too . ... , l . . i .....U A'tatnur tin, nhnanu l,tl'A Or mnk'n. IUUCU . - - them is b.vl as they are. Kut we (the Aisiytrinls) lire il-H to bhnno ; we do all we can; wohve na power. I tried to have pas issued i.: fet" friends who have Vieen there since July, to l.C csanun, ed. He couldn't do it stid t.joro pnsses were out then than could bo examined in three days. He andother Assistants had been prohibited from examining and a spe cial board of three had Wen appointed. On their door was written. 'So business don toi-day nor till Monday' by which tiuio a doien ca-pg or moro s ill have pas sed into tho other world for examination 1 They were probably off to Washington having a good time ; they never work hut threo or four hours n day. I heard a gentleman telling a member of Congress from Ohio who was there, that he had just found Iwo men from that Slate who were never muttered in 1 They enlisted, but were rejected cn examination and went home Subheijuently they were i r rettcd us deserters, put in there and can't get out. Col. lk'lknnp, who wni in command, seemed willing und unxiou to mend mat-, tcis. Ho sail' lie would shrink from no responsibility or duly, but he had not lull ccntio; ho was interfered with ; ho could not compel tho surgeons toact; and two of them weio at loggerht-ncU, i-ach claiming to bo chief. Ilia leqtii-itioti-i were not promptly tilled, and if he sent to the Cartel-master Heneral for teams, h,j was told they had ueh a number and that ' was enough ; while the lact was, many of those charged to him had been captured by the rebels nomo time ago. The trouble, I think, begins with tho doi tors. Nothing can bo dctio without an ollii.iul examination, and they don't exam me nijuarter fast enough. Thef should be iud!' a lo.en examining bouuls. Vet slow as they are, (he papci 8 will be gone tivo or three weeks to Washington for aps pioval. They should examioo every toon at once ; il he is down sick, si iul him to a hospital; it well, to his regiment ; if in curable, discharge him. Send them otl somen here, anyv here, hut for God's sake, waited, month after month to be examined. They think if they have some member of Congress, or influential friend, to give in their names, they will rcceivo attention : and so they will- But alone and unaided they look upon nil cll'ort as use'ess. If they make complaint of abuses, they say they aregrullly repulsed and told to mind their oh n business. Thia for men living perhaps in luxury at homo, and ouito sus perior ir. position and worth to many of their petty tyrants, comes ti litlle tough on true, frecborn American citizen;. And ' t)lU3 ie bl,ave, high spirited, enthu.dast c ung men wl)0 patriotically loft friends ,,,...:. RnJ ... heart calls s their Congressmen at work, for they c:o in rcf(rn, ti1(!S0 abuses if they will. Bemakalle Works of Human Lobor. Ninevah was 11 miles long, 8 wide and 4'i miles round, with a wall 100 feet high, and thick enough for throe chariots ablest. Kabylon was 50 miles within the walls, which were 75 feet thick and 100 feet high, witli brazen gates. I ho temple ' n 1 . , 01 jJinnnii iu r.poesus was .120 feet lo support tho roof. Il was 100 yeurs in building. The largest of the pyramids was 481 feet high, and C53 feet on the sides ; tho ba.-e covered eleven acres. The stones are about oO feet in length and the layers art H emplojed 3S0HtO men in building. The labyrinth in Egypt presents ruins 17 miles round, and 100 patet. Carthage was 2'J miles round. Athens was 23 miles round, and contained 3riO,000 cit izons and 400,000 slaves. 1 ho temple of Itelphos wns ?o rich in dona tions that it was plundered of 5O,OO0,Ot0, and Nero carried away from it two hun dred statues. Tho walls of Rome were 13 milei round." We find the above paragraph going the rounds of the papers, and stop it for the purpose of correcting some of its errors. It is an unfortunate fact that a vaat deal of '.be history and information which is giv en to general readers who do not study authorities i- of the clavs contained in this paragraph grossly untrue, and mad- up by seme) sen-at ion lecturer or penny. -i-liner. J'orhaps no better illti'.ti:itie! can he given than by referring to a common Tr ior taught in minv books and mo-l Sun day Schools, that Titus, tho Iloynl hopes rial c'ltcpieror of Jerusalem, plowed up the sits M tho city and nwrd it with salt. This I f. i.mi Wius f-tti y f,riein:ited Wiihii) the present century, mid is without the slighte.-t foundation in fact. The stones in Jerusalem that remain in their anon tit sites to-d.ty show the utter impossibility of the occurrence, which 'vas net er heard ol by any hi-tui.ui i r w iter of earlier times. We find ropeati ,1 in the above pa ra . graph a very common story about the fi.e of the - tones of the pv ami: Is of i'.ys it . They are commonly reported to 1 e ol great si,. The wiiter above named mak.'4 them sixty feel long! Tho size of the stones forms no pat t ol the w onder ot the ;.vt..iii I liere 'ire many st tr.cl tire iu the worhi containing tnuuh larg-'i nie.u oliths, und modern archite' t Ireipicntly use stones larger and heavier tii.m any in the pyramids. Tho large-it cotir-e oi s'.ones in Cheops are only four feet ten inches in thickness, and I ho tOoio..- vary ir. leng'h fro n four to eight iVot. Theic ve soir.o stories in the inl.tioi', roofing the p.e-s'i'.'s and chambers, which aro larger, but these ate not much heavier than the slabs wo i'reiiuenlly seo carried alor.g liroadwny and placed on the sidewalk" in front of new buildings a- pavement, and also roofing for the vaults under the street. Thowoiid-r of the great pyra mid! is that such a vast mass of stones should bo t'ilcd up, but it is not to be doubted if any one eaii'd to sen l a few million dollars in America, a tac-simile o! the pyramid of Cheops could be er-cted here to-l.iy. Much greater wonders are found in 'ho Monolithic statues cf Egypt, Mi l in the columns of tho gicat hall of .'Cat i;-h. Still the paragraph that w- ot: le is again in gross enor when it desoii! i-s the luin of 'l'hebes as twenty. seven miles in cir cumference, and the story of a hundred gates but a passage fiom ancient poetry. The ruins of Thebes arc but few in numlci and lu iu detached places nvo miles or so apart on one side oi the hill and about tho sane on tho other side. The mono, li'.hic statues, one of which lives in tradi tion as tho vocal Memnon, aie indeed wonderful remains of tho grandeur of an. cient art, and so are nearly all tho Theban ruins. Nu architect of modern times would undertake to build one column ot the twelve gret columns of Karnak. F.ieh of these is a column tweve feet in diameter and nearly ninety feet high made of sections of stones piled one on the other. The great stones of ancient art are found at K.iulbock in yaria. The Woman ruins there overlie the remains of a Cy clopean age. History ami tradition arc silent as to the men who hewed those grandest remaining memories of the days of giants. Ten stones in one course, side by side, are each about thirty feet long, thiil. en feet high, and tor feet six inches thick. At right angles nith this cour-e is another of six similar stones al out the same si.o as the former, and on these six stones lie tho three, groat monoliths of an cient workmanship. These three stnn- measure, in gross l -.i l.-et iu lenirth each being feel long, 1J feet hih and about the same thickness. No man knows who hewed them and laid them there. A fourth stone of the same general dituens sions, lies iu a quarry a mill. distant, win nee it never was removed, doubtlos it has lain there more than three thous and years. W might correct other err ns in the paragraph we have eopied. The siege ol Ninevah and that of Kabylon are merely conjectural. Tho story of tho Egyptian labtynth is from the fa.her of historian,, and some piolane people have regirdel Herodotus as a father of fuhehood ton, thocgh, it is not to be denied that modern ij.sooveries are doing much to establish the credit of the old Greek. iV. '. Journal if Commerce, j C-f"I am glad this colfee dont owe me anything," said Krown, a boarder at the break last table. 'Why?'' said Smith. "Because," said Krown, "I dont believe it would ever settle !" JsyTwo kinds of eggs are ,..-ed in ma king 'Tom and Jerry,' namely, hen's egg and nu tm eggs- jptrjuWhy is a lady who has bought a sable enpe at half price, liko nn offi cer absent on leave ? Iketusc she's rot her fur-low fisa? Why is a kiss like n f e-rinon ? It requires two beads r.nd an application. From the New Ilainpsl.iro I'u.ri.a. I BATTLE OF FREDEP.ICKSBUHO. How Richmond wn.i not Taken. pFsrA'l'('II Ff:nM (,';.v. JU llX.SIDK When (ii'ii, Met'lellati went, to York-; yrj f,7,',. IA I.I.Fa'K. town hist spring I,., bad the p.omiso of! Partieulai'g of the Engagement ce.tain forces for the rapt urn of h'iel.nionil. 1 1 k: not iu. rs Aimv or ruu 1'otomac, ) I'pon h is in i ival bcfoi e t he ri b, I works Deconiber 10. j Mt Voihton-n he was informed by tho ; To M,ij.,r (, r,d I. It'. 11,,'la-k, (Jo.crat Washington authorities that u largo por-' ta-(7 ,',. S. A ., fl'uio'ii-'.Vn : tion of tho-e fin. Mchowi 1!V. corps find j i.lcucnv. : I havo tho honor to offer I'YntiUi'iY di'.'i-i'.i'i, some lH',('.t.i,j w ould t he following reasons for moving tho Ar not he oil...'. . 1 to joiti hi:, i : h;it Meitow- ' my ot the I'oiom.ii- across the liappahan ell's -!. were m nt to i . I in idleness n I j nock sooner than was anticipated by tho I i ei!.i ii 1 kit g. Tin- inlei iereiice with ; I'revider, t, Secretary of War or yourself, hts plans aie I diminution of his forces not land lor crowing I a point different from only pit vi nte I I. rebel army ,.t Vm i ing the ea pi u; i: . ;n fiotn ''bagii:,!'' the l.iov, n. nnd thus s.'tu I' Wiclimend, but caused all the terrible h .-...-, and suil' ring- of tl: -tib-equc.nl c ampi.i!:;n. AlleiwauU, in Mvy, when ien. t'oit-r'i.r.f his force down tho river and el.-owhore, cotj s marched to If. imve.r Court 1 1 u-r, t Injs weakening his defences in front ; and 0 miles nrilh ot Wiehmond lowanls j I nho thought 1 discovered hint ho did bredei icksbut".', it M.-hoivcll then i:ad been pciiiiitteil to join him there, Ki. h inond would have been taken, and all '.he I. uses and suil i ings id hope's red eat and the Mar) l.'.r. 1 I'ampaign would have be in kvo: le 1. 'I he-e :ue nov: facts of history. suh-Uu-tia'.ed as conclu-ive'y as such lac's c;.n ever be pioved. Such is the te-'.imniiy t,l Gen. McClelian, irn ntiy given in a Coun Martial at W,i diieton in thoca-e o: 'Jen, Meliowe!!. In (ii.it ("-tiniony ne raid : "I huv.) no doubt said, fir it has ever been in)' opi'iiioi. that ' Army it' ','ic' ' .,;..' U0-'l'l ,"' "' li,cfi:n0,.i ' ( Ihl r-f.i nf (J:-n. M ' ' e, ',' l,o''1 t- irutMf ". It isals.i my opinion thai had the com mand ofGen. MehoPcll joined llie Army of the I'otoin.ie i:i M.av, by wny of Hall" ver Coin t l!i. use I iv. in I'leden 'li-burg, n.v ."A ,,; I, hi l;:,'hi..- I e -'.i.l . '.' llf'il t,'.hrt;., 1 i'o llOt bold lieu. Mellow. cil i e-pon-i1.!.', in toy mind, tor tho fail ure to join me on t iitier occasion-" i'e i)l-o testiiied that the troops for the deli'iisc of Va'iiiigtoii numbetcl about 7n." , exclusive c) Mcilo'.vell's corps. ''o i.. M !'e Ilan, in Mi-wer lo certain e.isl i i'-. to' t i.o 'jitrt , ve his cpiui 'i; ' li'i! I :eh on' movement a rain.-1 I ielieial "an! s was n prevent reinl'.rvment.; be icg -cut to the army of the Potomac, and he r-;p!issod that opinion to the Pr-i dent in a ti legrani within a day of the lime he (McChdlan) received information of Jackson's movement. If Mchmvell had moved direct upon Hanover Coin'. II mi.-e instead of in the liircel ion of Front h'oyal, Jack.-on would have rapidly rev traced his steps to join the main rebel ar my at Wiehmond. With a strung army ol oiir om n in the vicinity, and threatening il, McChdlan did not think the rebels wor.ld have detached a sufficient force to seriously endanger the safety of Washing ton." Here is the opinion of the i.bkst mili tary commander cd' the country, that but for the withdrawal of Mcl '.nvell'.s corps Wiehmond would have been taken. Hire is n ho hi- opinion that il Mehowell had been permitted to joi'i him in May, W;ch monii would have been taken within a week. Put this does not rest up .n his opinion alone. Such was Mclloweli's opinion and that of the a'. lest command ers of tho Army of the Potomac, Such is the recorded opinion of tle Prince de Joinviile who was with the army; and .oi,', ,: ix ',.' .,y ..'..'.'( e'i ,'...''' i.'o,l t,f(: j,,:,. ol' l:;.-hm l-.il I'.' This latter fact is stated by Mr. W. II. Helbelt, who was then a pri-oiie;- there and had favorable opportunities of b-urning their views and fears. Now it is an .-tai'i'siic.l and admitted fact that Abraham Lincoln alone is re.-, ponsible l"r 'hi- w ieked in t erlereiieo with Gen. McClclhiu's pi in and for defeating Ills success; an'! it is thereby prove! that the ',"-' '' !l Uo-Ioi-h I "'is ..! '. .', in the space of cannot mov Lincoln w le two months, by him. This be denied. It was Abraham i divided the At in)' of the Potomac, and : ive it n. Mcll.i-.vell a rep- arate comm 'lid. It was ho who iclu-ed III ii ow .Hi '("vei o iiihi leu (Clin, i ,. lrviro-ii4 vheii Mellowed v.voto (o .11:1 .''' that Little Mac bad reached Hanover C'oiiit House, and added, "For God's sake, l'"J Mr. President, let me join him at chicl moment." It was ho who rd,r-; ,.,,am, we wt.r9Suppliel much soon ed Mclmwell's retrea', even after Serre'a- t-.c ,,:l!orollt bt,f,:U(.part,nents tha:. rv Stanton, bi'ter .s he ivh (."am-t Mes . , , , ,, . .. , r . , i was auticil ated when I hist sow yn". ( lell.'in, had '.oven him pr-roiis-nm to ml- . ' 3 vance. In his Icstimom before th- Court 1 ( 'ur ku" 1 """""t 10 hlj- m" f'"''1"' Mail al, Gen. MeCled.in aid -'T:u- l'rcv about our prisoners nbout yOo !.,'' ..'(). the r'7'.i.s'.'.y i-i 'viiich bavo I paroled nsd excunng'-" ' MW'' ttin." II,! wanted ' M.v ' fur a,ollt ,he ,amc nutabcr takci by u Inwell to defend Washington, "ml houh ' t j n l . .u .. . ,i .,,,! w l , ii J he wounded were all removed to thi the force m and reun,l Washington, ' says McClelian. "ftas double that deemed side of the river bofor th" ..icuadoi. neeesfai. by the otlioers." It .;! I'resi- nnd are being well car'-' r.i . Ihodea , t7.-.o who has, in every in-'-in . yielded to l.jried under a flag of truco. the politicnl p-issure fir interference will. .i i( jr ,Pil)it ,0)O. t a ,ullc!l ,nre McCiellan's i ans. And wlv did ho thus " f , , , , . willully, as i! ..ernis.defeu. t'h great pnr..P"' .'Oporlmn of sughl wounds. l.Gd pose? As the Providence says, "we only I cing treatc I in the ! -i,itu's. had Wiehmond al our fingers end. hut the I am g'-'d ' '.ep-es-nt Hie army at th pri:e : . tnutchrd aval, h' Ahrnham l.in-ohi I prosnt I, on in ;-oo:i Condition, t'lar.ki" Was McDowell needed to defend Wash- the governn "nt for that entire suppon ington" Nobody believes it. lie and mm 'i ' m e which i hi.v i Iways jo , , Ahrnh on Lincoln he'ieral ',! at the reived t. ;u them. time' Tho truth is, it was loomed better 1 re'i . u, General, very respectfully, that e should lose a thousand chances of. Your obeilient servant, capturing Rich moDd, than that George K. ! A. E. KURNSIDE, McClelian should capture it '," 1 Mj. Gen. Coro'g. Army ef thorotoma , the one i.'idii ated to ycu a our lait meet ing lit t ho President's : h'iriiig my preparation s for crosing at the place I had lir-!. . el .d.Idi e '. red that the enemy had thrown a .rge pttion not anticipate the crossing of our uhc'.o force at l'leilerich burg, and hoped by rapidly throwing the whole command over at that place to s.'perale, by u igo: -oils at lack, thp f'orec-of thr. onetr:" on the rivjr l.eow from tho forces behind and on the i.iest, nnd in the rear of ih town, in which ca-e ( c.-;ul 1 fight him with j-rcat advar.t.ace in our favur. T.iiiotl.is wo had to gain a height on the .vtreme right if the crest, which height coiiil .tided a new road l.r ely mado by the enemy lor tho purpose r i ijjore rapid communieatini al-.nghn linei, uLieh point paired, his I'osiiion along iheeiest v.ould havo been -( "lteely tenable, and he could havo been driven from then .. ily l-e to. ..ttaek on Ir frvtit in connection t. u movement in the i I ".' of the crest. Ilov near wc came to nerimplishingonr "i';ect futuro reports wi'l sn.nv. put for hofogand uttitT'tcd and unavoidable deiay of b..il ling 'he bridles, which gave the enemy twentysf.'uv ho";.s moro to C'.r:e'ntr.!,'i his forces in his strong posi t:oe , we c mid certainly have succeeded, in which i ase tlm battle v.-oul I have hrn, in my opinion, !'ar niiro decNdve than if we had erosred at the place .-'tr.J ; ns it was, we cime very near suce. . ,. Failing in aecotni hshing tho main ob ject, wo remained in order ol battle two days, long enough to decide that the ene my would not come out of his strongholds to fight us with his inlV-nliy, uTtcr which we roero'sod to (his side cf 'lie river un, molobted, without tho loss of men or properly. As tho day broke our hng lines of troops weie seen marching to their dif ferent positions as if going on parade. Not the least demoralization or diaorgam hatien existed. To tho brave ofti v.-s and soldieis who accomplish! d the feat of thus reerossing in the face of tho enemy, I owe everything. For he failure in tnoiittack 1 am respon sible, ns the extreme gallantry, eourutro and endurance show n by them was never excelled, and would have carried th-1 points had it been pos-iblc. To the families and fiiends of the dead lean only offer my heartfelt s)mpalhy, but h.r the wounded I can oiler my earn est prayers for their comfort and final re covery. Tho fact that I (leaded to move from Washington on to (his line rather against the opinion of iho President, S'; tnry. and your-elf, and thai you have 1 't the '.vholo movement in my hands .ithout giving me orders, makes me the .io;c re sj oiisible. 1 will vi-it ) DU very soon an 1 i lvu yon more definite in format icr , nn 1 Ii-. d , ml send jou my defiled iq -.ri, in ... ;, .. ;. special acknowledgment wdlbemid" o' the M'l'v'c.s of the difl'oreut gt.o: 1 divi -ions, corps, und iny general and pscsona' stall'. iepatlments of thej Army of tho Po totn.'ic, to whom I mil much iu btod fv ,. , , i' . ! I icir s'i..oi t and nearly c:i-opei itnn. I IVi1 ...o .... ......... ..i . i ,t..k no uiov.'iiieiii, iv. . mad.-earlier than you expected , and a! , tcr the Pie-i'h-nl, Scrot;iry mid yourse' ! re.oii'sted tne not to be hi l.asi,. f , ( b.