ghe l'ancaofer Notelligenetr, PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY BY COOP'ERANDERSON S CO CREME Wm. A. MOSTO.* ALFRED SANDERSON TERMS—Two Dollars per annum, payable in all cases in advance. OFFICE-SOUTHWEST CORNF.II. OF CENTIIE SQUARE. At letters on business should he ad dressed to COOPER, SAS:DEB-SON & CO. k?orirj. For the lutelligencer Inscribed to the " Loyal Leaguers." "whert• go }•nu bold Repliblit!,ll, gn . I,IIIIIIW 10 -day? Tll,-1 11:1,1 a bright triumphant Thou lawa a banner ga). Thy hail-, ,st!,•cloai with wil•ntl,:111,1110,,1* \l/4-11:4: gear What 11;at you go to SAS, What is it So to hear?" •• graeiom, ,trang:er, haMt you hen rtl Di I lit; great ,tenionstratimi, We Imike I(,.hiy, in MVOY 4)1 Wal . Ini"-r - ot•zial ion V, 111E,111 to Sill's) . the Democrats, though ,t lie nation sever • We're VOlll . to the t,'it're :toil,' to tiizht forever. \Ve, want to whip the Soulloo.ner, 111E=M1=!1=01 Anal NVI. 411 hail you bold ltk•puhlicim ! I 1,,,n0r mnclltln.hrav, flip 11:1111e, for 10, I.ivr , ,‘,i•t•t idiot., hi, gray... _What Loyal one! 11:,t, you to join to-day? JEC)NS , litany bray, i.ti•lrk IJ:it tit. in •1.1.• fray ?•• Th..tl's:kl),lllll.- ~/..o,•st I I ',2:110,,, 110 11,1t1011 ilr vc•nlttrihig ///y p1 . .•••ii,t1.. ju such hi flarlit.,lct,llll,lr.i . .,: t. AVIly iu . G1,1111:Si011y I puid t 0 ,2. 1 .1. a ,:ai,:;1111I ME=EM MilMlN=Mil E=M=l9 utlii•r n1(1111111,1 s,veet, I ut P.r ti hi, t , i,P,NN 111.1 \t lull. do you ;2.1v4. 410,1 Utim • cla:nor for tio•ir P 1 , 11 . 1.11 who,. We hon 101...1 Now ,Thp Bali 1,1100 inv• motlth 4,1 st.t. vt,lrt• It, iiy ,1 1 . V.. rt. 'TI Vi -t 11,111i,,11 ..l'ur , o,l Irl 1111. 111 11'iI 11 Iv!of•II you lain 111 711.1 try Tu sl np 1./1“ TII 'lush I II .111,11,11•, 11.1 If, 'I 11111 ,11:111 1,, 111,1,111111,1 II Vf•c:lnnol Theo 11'111A, to onll \ 1111,11 , ..1 11 „„,,, 1, t:1111,.”. A Nappy Holm The first year .l . niarri,at 1—• in-1 itli.pttrtztiti vra iti the ~:11 1: 1 1 1 tt, it i alnio,t all stil,,eouenl \vile and the 1111-I.:itHl their Vie NV, and their -, or el-e, eorljurillg 1111(111 their HIPy :11111 111(4 10 lhl it allllllo , lll,- plr ,t•l' ),,,\•,,,,,1n t - \\ here read Aft'. \VI -4 , , in hi, tt wh,) Li- ce , en trieities. Ile reque , toli h" , - ',did- 141 :u• emiipany him into the u,ipi,•a. a 1::y tqr IWO alt rt. their \vethling. Ile then drew tt tier] the tutu of 111..ir Nvir, one Iri it, he I reated to I he ,q ;lud " the line." ;- 4 lie pulled it at she I . l)Uid. lli Cried : " it ()VIT." " I eall'i,"•lie replied. " Rut pull with all your liC:LJit," :-,liouh,l the Pita in v iu were alt flit , etiori- of the bride to pull over the lice , ,o long zo, her hu•Thand held the oppo , ite cnd. - when lie came round, iti he pulled ;it, the smile elid, it catlie over with great " th, nn, tl u • '•1"()u how lt:n•tl and ineili•etual our labor When ice I , utli pulh•il in “ppositinn to eat ll other : Ltit. In w nosy and pleasant it \vas when pull ed together! It will lie sii with us tlu•ough life!" In this illustrati,in, homely as-ii flint 1 , 0, there is sound philiisiiphy. hand and \vile mua mutuall hear and euneede if they wish to inaki: Inane a retreat of joy and Hiss. ()no:donee:ul na nial:e Inoue happy. There needs unison of action, sweetness id spirn and great forbearanee and love in loth hus hand and 'rife, in secure the great end of in:l,pi nn i in thi: Ilotne is no sweets: the elen.•nt , of pe:lee atel true liappine,, are there, to., :ire the plettuillts of discord :mil it titititis °illy th( , trend without to itial:v it a paffli,l,lonitoo, or the loving genin, of harmony t. I.:tke it the prompter ..von' ,fibsuHwtite Mount trarat I.Julit Ararat i , WHO ret:t na, and 1 7 c2S feet higher 11):111 :\ Hunt 111;tni•---the latter th, pohil ult•vntiml hi - Huron,. It lin• other Inotintztili, tli vi(luti into tvin IZolel't l'ortcy 'mini, in V: thc . magnificence of the spc,t;l(•!k , \\Awn lie first came in sight ()f .\ I: ruin front .1!.(.(.11 plain, fertilized hy the w.der-, the Ara , ,, Lille ancient ~nd covered with .Arnieniiii, -. In variou s paints of view, Ow -.!ii t hus a , •trikin_ resenildance to a 1,1,1 which ha, ',wen roconli•,ll\ ~ .veler, to the spot, and the . c,el i , full of •aditiu:rar sioric , .• Noah', ark :Ind the It is a common belief among (he Ar menians and Persians, that the remains of the nih still exist 00 the Several attempts have been made to reach the top of the nmuutain, but uu•eLv have any 511011 attempts succeed ed. Moving sands which threaten to overwhelm the traveler, 'flinty roads which c•ut his shoes to 5110 , ,15, terrible precipices, with overhanginii. rocks, and, above all, nestsorsnakes have constani lv struck terror• into the stoutest heart , , and nearly in all cases induced lie , abandonment of the euie:•prise. Ervin, the Armenians show the spot where Noah first planted the vine, and the town of Nakluijovan ;place of de scent) is believed to mark tin , spot where the patriarch first settled nn quitting the ark. tis related of tin wit ty Dominican monk, lloceo, that he had a great dis like to tokacco; and when once preach ing 1,, a crowd of Spanish sailors, he astonished them by telling them that then• were no Spanish saints in heaven. A few, he said, had been admitted, but they smoked so many cigars that they made the holy virgin sick, and St. Peter set his wits to work to get them out. At length lie proclaimed that a bull fight was to be held outside the gttte of para dise. Thereupon every Spanish saint, without exception, ran off to the fight, and. St. Peter immediately •closed the gate, and took care never to admit another Spaniard. " Why," said a country clergyman to one of his flock, " do you always sleep in your pew when I am in the pulpit, while you are all attention to every stranger I invite," "Because, sir," was the reply, " when you preach I'm sure all's right, but I can't trust a "'stranger without keeping a good look out." J. M. COOPER, VOLUME 65 L The Springfield Republican writes as follows of a visit to a Quaker meeting : The room was high, square, and un painted ; furnished with wooden bench- This was all, except a stop e which might have come over in that capacious vessel,' the Mayflower, had such inven liens tdf the enenly been known to our forefathers. T hose benehes I never, never shall forget ; I can truly say they impressed Inc, deeply. Made of the har.iest of all hard wood, without even (Ole mitigating Coat of paint, so narrow and so slippery that one enuld not slide forward into the grar . eftl.l posture astlined I,y ellUreh-gners, I.llt must I,erieree strain every nerve to sit bolt upright and keep on the seat, with a little slat for a hack eontrived to rasp the 511....1.1.1•1.1a.1es no the lint degree or 111110511 enduranee, they were evi dently designed to mortify the flesh and promote I'llolll had tliNt drk.ary (,1 , 1-1'n.1ii , ,0(.(1,,rt of a , intql to kupt o io ,t o f tit,. I h.:1 , -. Not "Hl` il , le ,peok of dirt ( . o)ll,Ll,lillatcd th , 11. , t a Ili- hrol;t ,:11011,1• hy 111*-4 6 . 01h152:, SMH , NVII:I( hivreasod hmvling "I' a an+. v. ulrl, Nvas.iii. or iwiiit•-,i,kiwss. Gradu;,ll\ - , hy 1“••.::l11 drt,i, ill ; 11“, i,/il.ll ;1. , :11Id III(' ‘ , 41 , 1. 1! luny -aril: ly un II:, ..it and itod I 5•11- I WI•IV ' , till ill " Are NV.111 , •11, 011 , 1 , )\ V ,, 1 %Nit' !warts, 1111' 1 , ,t of in-: if so, why don't tite . Ilwir 1,01111 ,trintn., :01just th 1 . 01(1 , - ilwir their Bair li•±!,*oollllwir , :iovw , ,looson tiwirshay.ls ra-1 ncca•-iona tiluhroadhriin , idenrtlicliouse and, iu , linvt, cnininct in that wanner, \n, itli llwir • (•y(., and eye 1id...H.:n.2.10 \II, they ii tin ,If liailn cx , \\ lin will V:1!11-.11 1111" Ihill air :II tile IINI lic thalllici,,l•." %IP.II rid- ()ffi, \\"(•Vt'r, \\ i actuttl. tlit• 1 in)ticut sevoral t:n.lu,:unl _~•nrral:,ttirr iffili,ated Lheu thy Nvorld', peroph• der,.iver , sat kith their hat. ,;ic. R~ ~ C,Wly , 1;11 I I [crmi, making. even 1!:(J IJI.JJ;tdo-t lI I 1,1,4u - 11,1'1ms sto.:Jr a li:4111 and Iri i;(1fol lu \\" 11l II NV:IS l'atiily Iry Ole lirstivtir:ll , 11 ,1 Qh l akt'resi-ic , • ln::11:1•J• popos preverbially httni he:ivied twin ofthe worlii the ineti yr- , of Ihose \VI)IVCS ill sheep's tiny' lie easily divined. Tile excuse hypiierisy the laol nl the zirgrerating i pretti- !;ilakere- , e. ill yies,i - ion. They 1“)( have desired a iinn . L• be they been the most arrant Fancy a bru\vn silk exllanded ITV a lloop of lollacst nionsion,, ahuv - othisoHackrloahnicer fitted t“ the .4 . l . aeet . til t',lrtu, still almve this a eottaLD. hat ,liirrod silk, It the sant Sl)ft rieli brown, nut ntuhich 1101 s a Heat, _irli.h fare, in11111•ent bro\vn eyes to inateh the dress--and then deliberate ,re you -t•ou• a your (Tr- For zi \ I•1*\" Ill)Velly of the 1:opi Cron) Nvenrine , s. I \r:l , c.v, ry hroth(T utter:t subdued I :' I in-4:1110y expected to ,tti hint ri , c and NN li:i , :li oh-4Typ 111::11!'llt.11/110:11' , 11 . :1111- 1:l lino: her. l'/1.11 :1, , 11, all , : tln (It•alilly , llolll . l` -11:: 11111:Hikl•H, se:l,llo:l,lW gan oveNvioilin mt. . I trivd to fancy ( 211ahol, to vit it . their method of Setu'~Lil: front hoir l5l I , 1:111111101111, 1:14 , 111:11c on priditahlt. 511 1 61 , t5, hut in vain. I ft-tir the adveri-ary that (lay me hi; 'Flionali the pecu liar inittitai of roc litipatit to hy ocaniii in my MI :wilt , iii My Hu.k, att.' a huthltmo , s ht htults, p.t. I thircti h.! ens,. ntv ITV \ . aryitc2; my posture. So prikilounkl Nva , kik,. silence Hurt the least noise \\.kkutil have luol the offoot of a humicr. The onit - relief I found Iva- iI , v.ikkno(ving 11111 SOOll 1 1W . 1.1":111 li. 11111 i y this made a rattling, klistinctly throughout rk.kin. Then k.:11111' roaolikkintry shot th ro ugh uky mind. .A , :t ikerskkli soknotimos . ll.els aki almost lignin the ecru horror of the thin„ to throlv hinisell over, so I felt a suklkleitkk.sirk. to risk., throlv nnth - I.enniet:it tha i ni the prosikling olklor, :nail vivo vent to nit- h.ling, in --k.k..uk. Him, I 5tru2 . ..2.1kal ihi, hopuise, tlik. I'll,W - 1- n:11111(Z dill 111 , 14 , 111 e. I ttionderekt what punishment tt . kkithl hokanksiklerkal Nvorthy such a crime, and \vhether the astonish ed root' woulkl fall on my sacrilk•gious I jappfly I Nvas sp:11 . 1,1 111 , SOlll - 111/111i1s. The pri,j(ling elder if that ho his title—at least the inan with t h e lkiakitklest-Ikrinkined hat camel most geometrical coat tail k gave his i . l;2111 hand to the plain sis ter :it his silo , and In! and NVII , "Vl . l' without Dreamily I satint~a'ril forth. I NV he mu in the streets u, the sigind of a human voila' Wan -tart ling. As for milling I kliklkukt venture upon that till ninny Lloela lay hettceon 111(' :111(1 that enchant , ' grokinkl, the Quarlter A story is told of a King of France who told his Minister that complaints of justice deferred had become so clam (woos that he was determined, for the future, to look into the atihi,rs of the state himself. Next morning his Ma jesty, looking front his Bedroom saw ..lx huge '“`agons, from which bundles or papers, duly red-taped and ticketed, were truing discharged. On asking the :\linister who accompanied the papers what this meant, the reply was, that these wagons contained a small instalment—the rest were to fol low—of the papers which his Majesty, in following out ins praiseworthy deter mination to attend to business himself, would require to examine. The King countermanded the wagons, and the Minister, as before, was left to manage th State as seemed to him best. Hans, who is a judge of morals as well as money, says that being tender to another man's wife is not a "legal ten der." We accept his opinion—though we have no interest in the question. • gixitt/4- - .tet - : - . -itt-Alzi*it/e.it Quaker Meeting I'ubiir Ihisin4'ss "From Strength to Strength." My brethren, first by thoughts on self examination, then by an exercise of the will, then by prayer, then by watchful ness and definite resistance, will you proceed " front strength to strength," and, laying aside every weight, and the sin which doeth so e'sily beset you, will you run with patience the race which is set before yotti for the prize of your high calling in Jesus Christ. Oh, what a noble, what a God-like life I—a life which adds to faith virture, and to virtue knowledge, and to knowl edge temperance and brotherly kind ness, and to brotherly kindness charity ; this is the ladder which reaches from earth to heaven, and thus may we fol low the path of the bright spirits who have gone• before us. Do not neglect the least etlhrt, the meanest sacrifice, the smallest vietory in this holy and heavenly service. Do not despise the day of small things. Powerful your sins may he as the' raging breakers of the ocean ; yet, as in the midst of the toss ing, and - treacherous waves, the coral islet rises tirm, in spite of such billows as would shatter a granite nick—the coral islet which is boilt by the toil of weak, and tiny, and ephemeral insects of eountless centuries, till it first mulled the surnme of the sea , and then Jill' ch:utcr rhillk 11115 thrown Upoll it, or the trunk of some tree, carried Ili/Wll by river waters, rested against it, :11111 the sea bird built her Iles] there, and till' Wind hum In it Slane seatten4l seed, un til the little island grew, and while the lurk waters heaved vainly around, be gan to ••lothe itself at leng - th in emerald foliage, and ring itself with a circle of glittering sand, and mirror ill the green waters of its calm lagoon the erowding huts of the savage, and the feathery crown of tropic trees, and defy the ocean and bela back the surging of the storm --even so, by little cllhrts amid the sea of teMptation, will your virtue- , groat firmer and limner, and your righteous ness be hilt deeper and de e per iota Christ, till' liyiug Hoek, while, situ , - ing on your Way, you Illsofieeil tram Strelli.llll to strength," and appear at last before the lied ufgods in the heav enly, eternal Jerusalent.--Plrir/ir. Words for Poor Boys When I was a hoy of twelve years, I was workjw , fur cents a week, with an old lady, anti I will tell you I had tuy hatnk ; but I did my work faithfully. I used to cut wood, fetch water, make tires, and scrub and scotu• of mornings, for the old lady, Ite fore the real work of the day emu niemed. :\ly clothes were had, and I had no m ea n,: of buying shoes, so I Was often barefooted. One Morning I got through My work early, and the old lady, who thought I had not done it, or especially ill-humored then, uses dis pleased, scolded toe, and said I Was idle anti had not worked. I said I had : she called flue "a liar." I felt toy spirit rise indignantly against this, and standing erect I told her that slur should never have the elituMe of applying this word to toe again. I walkedout of the hou s e to re-enter it no more. 1 had not a rent ill my pocket when I stepped into the world. \Villa do you think I did then, bays? I met a countryman with a team, I met him boldly and honestly, anti offered to drive t h e leader if he would only take me on. Ile looked at me in surprise, hut Ile said he did not think I'd he of any use to him. " Oh, yes, I will," said I ; " I can rub down and watch your horses, and In Illally think for you if you will only let the try." He no longer objected. I gor'on the horse's hack.' It was hard travel ling, for the roads were deep, and we could only get along at the rate of 12. miles a day. This was, however, my starting point. I went ahead after this. An independent spirit, and a sturdy, honest conduct, with -WIWI ',parity (;otl has given tot---:1:4 Ile has giccn you - havecarried n 1 ,11 1 ,101211 the worlil successfully. Don't he down-hearted al heint_t or havinu: no friends. Try and try again. N'ttu can rut your way, if you live so as to please God. I know it's a hard time for some of you. You often are hungry, or wet with rain or snow, and it seems dreary in the city to have no one to care for you. But trust in Christ and Ilc will he .y(tur friend.— Keep 6fg.til heart and he delerutinc,l to nuike your own way hones( ly and truly thrmtgli the w,trld. .\ said I feel for you ; hocituse I have gone throutrh it 111. I know what it is, (;oil Idvss Sinai! Altno3attees. it has Leer said liv a cynical writer that the first feeling a man experiences on hi aring or the misfortune of another is a pleasurable one. 111 is glad that lie himself was not the sutl'erer. Ili this as it rimy, it is pretty certain that the suspicion—would it lie trio nice to say the hope.'—that our nciehliors are not exempt from." eatim,i; cae , ." enable us to hi•.ip nor own little trot:ldes will more equanimity than we borrowed Ho/its. It is a sad thing to lie morbidly irritable, for this is an irritating world, and the man who is thin-skinned is sure to have his tender moral epidermis rub bed down with sand-paper every hour in the day. The moment society finds out that a particular individual is sensi tive and easily annoyed, it begins to halt him, just as reckless boys pester a staggering drunkard in the streets. If he has an especially sore spot, that can not be abraded without u h him ex quisite pain, his acquaintances a r e sure In find it lutt - and 11/ '• IOU 1•11 him nn the raw" frequently as po,:sildo. Pooph who fret anal fume over eyory potty rrievance—who take harmless Mkcs or nsults, and are continually groaning and worrying over fancied wrongs or rifling disappoi t men ts, 7 -are great iiiisanees. There is but one cure for hem that we know of, and that is a real calamity. WO ()nee knew a chronic grumbler who was entirely cured by a compound fraeture of the thigh. It is possible, on the other hand, to be too "good-natured." Your very acquies- Cent " Ott , yes—certainly " sort of peo ple often agree to much that it is their duty to oppose. A temper that is neith er touchy enough to be disturbed I al trivial cause, nor so yielding as to lie in capable of negation, is an unspeakable blessing. Some elderly gentleman will please inform the public whether the pain is greater when a man cuts his teeth, or when his teeth cut him ? And whether it is more disagreeable to have no ap petite for one's dinner or no dinner for one's appetite? A recent African traveller says : " A cannibal is not necessarily ferocious. He eats his fellow creatures, not because he hates them, but because he loves them." LANCASTER, PA., THURSDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 13, 1864 _4tiwllantous. "WE'RE CUING FATHER ABRAHAM!" :Vlore Converts to Meflellan Unionism! And More of the Same Sort Coming! The Polon is the one condition of Peace—w, ask: no more !"—Mer leltqn From the Patriot and Union The list wegave a few days ago of dis tinguished gentlemen who have come out from Lincoln's support in favor of McClellan, has had such an excoriating effect upon the Shoddy press, that we have completed another, hoping that, ott the counter-irritant principle, this blister will cute the efreets of its pre dUCeStiOr : Mr. I). C. GILLESPIE, of Jefferson county, a member of the Republican State Central Committee of Pennsyl vania, has cut loose from Old Abe and come out squarely for McClellan. He made a speech in Philadelphia, in which he said : " Let me here say that my whole life, heretofore, has been spent in hitter op position to the party I now address. I left the Republican platy because I religiously believe that the Union can only he saved by the Democratic awl conservative citizens of this country. I conjure all by the love they hear the hunt of freedom, by their God, by every hind attachment on earth, to join 115 in our good work. I have not in my possession very much of this world's goods, ,at poor as I 'nu, I am tree to say that thi, Administration has not green backs enough to Purchase my free ex pression of opinion." (491. EDWA Ill) BALL, of Zanes ville, ()hi". an ex-member of Congress, nets a Lincoln elector in 18no, and a member of the State Convention which soul delegates to the Baltimore Conven tion, is a convert to Democracy, and is supporting McClellan and Pendleton on the stump. 1i0n..1 MIN W. ANDREWS, of Co lumlito,, Ohio, has repudiated Lincoln. l on. Z.\ Inn' LONE, of Maine, has written a lot h letter setting forth his reasons for advocating :galena!' instead or Lincoln. J. H. It I LEY, Esq., the present Comp troller of the State of Ohio, elected by the Republicans, has repudiated Lin coln. Col. 0. F. MOORE, of Ohio, ex-mem her of• Congress, who has served three yi , nrs in the army, has renounced Lin coln and his party in thvor of Little Mac. Hon. SHERLOCK J. ANDREWS, Itepulilican ex-member of Congress, of Ohio, has repudiated Lincoln for Little Mae.: A ItNE . It THOMAS, Esq., who was last year Chairman of the Republican county committee of mifflin county,pre sided at a Democratic meeting last week. A. W. STETSON, Esq., writes to the President of the Boston M'Clellan Club: In ls.id I voted for .1. C. Fremont, in Isati for Abe Lincoln, but in 18134 if I have inc health and strength. I shall vote for Ocorge B. McClellan. It will be my first vote or a Democratic candi date forthe presidency. With the heroic McClellan I would say, " The Union, the one condition of peace; we ask no more." Four year 4 of misrule, imbecil ity, irresolution and corruption, has sat isfied inc with the present administra tions." Hon. \V. I). PA ItSONS, long a Re publican leader in Kansas, and candi date for Congress, is out fur _McClellan. Comptroller ROBINSON, of Albany, elected hy Repuldicans, lots come out for McClellan: Mr. VA N DEVER, of Albany, for o env Clerk of the Court of Ap peals, under the Republicans, is for fcClel tan. REFES Esq., "a life-long hosoni friend. of Tlinrk(w NVeed," nii(l flepul(lienn, ((I ((earse, is out fill. Little :Mae. ( ;4/V. WI r...\1011 I . :, Of NVW 1 - 11111111 Shirl. —lie4 year eleeted itepublicans—it said has declared for Al i cClellan. Ftlt()W, EsQ., tor of the (tido penitentiar,y, (appointed In .. , tipp,rtilig I !Z.\ a prominent IZeptililican of Cleveland, Oltit , i, out lOr . A1,4'1,11:01 and. l'endleton. JOSEPI I CAKE, EsQ., or Pottsvinc, Pa., is out Mr McClellan, and promises Schuylkillfor 3,00 ii majority. B. N. CCRTIS, of Mass., late Judge or the pined States Supreme Court, was a Vice President at a McClellan meeting in Boston. lion. WILLIAM M'CLELLAN, the leading Republican lawyer at the ('ham bersburg ra.) liar, is a strong advocate of the election of Little Mac. Gen. C.- E. SWEARING, of Fayette county, Pa., son-in-law of Hon. An drew Stewart, who had served two years in the army as Major, and been au iw tive Repuid lean, is out for M'Clellan. Hon. EMERSON ETHERID(IE, ex mend ,or of Congress, of Tennessee, who supported Lincoln and his policy till a short while ago, is an ardent supporter of AU( lellan. Ft. F. LORD, Esq., of Wayne county, l'a., a Fremont elector in 18:56, hoisted the first M'Clellan flag in that county, on ri,eipt of the news from Chicago. Ilan. WILLIAM GROESBECK, of Ohio, heretofore a supporter of the Lin coln administration, has signified his adherence to the Democratic nomina tions. Hon. MARTIN GROVER, Judge of the Supreme Court of the Eighth Judi cial District, l'slew York, one of the founders of the Republieau partpoeett. pied a seat on the platform at a M'Clel lan meeting in Buffalo, and is warmly supporting ArClellan. THOMAS RUIZ LOCK, Esq., an Ilepuldrean, of Derby, Conn., who has heretofore always supported Lineoln, made a stmng:\ E'Clellan speech and gave in his adherence to the Demo cratic faith. Hon. WM. M. M'CARTHY, of Min nesota, and formerly of Indiana, from which Rtate ha and .151. Lane, were elected S. Senators by the Republi cans, but whose seats were successfully contested by J. D. Bright and G. N. Fitch, spoke at a Democratic meeting in St. Joseph, Indiana, and proclaimed that the only hope of the country lies in a change in the National Adminis tration, which he was sure would be effected in November.by the election of 'McClellan and Pendleton. Ex-Gov. BAIISTOW, of Wisconsin, has renounced the Republican party and is out for Little Mac. He addressed a McClellan Club meeting at Milwaukee a few days ago and urged the election of the Democratic candidates. JOHN .J. CISCO, late Lincoln U. S. Treasurer at N. York, was Vice Presi dent or the McClellan meeting in that city on the 17th. WM. B. ASTOR, the millionaire of New York, is out for Little Mac. Hon. GEORGE LAW, the Republi can candidate for nomination to the Presidency in 1880, is now laboring for. the Dernocratik.candidatea. W. 3.1, H. ASPINWA.T.,L, of New York, heretofore opposed to Democracy, is now supporting McClellan and Pen dleton. JAMES GALLAT IN, the great New York financier, heretofore supporting Lincoln, is out for McClellan. JUDGE DALEY, of New York, om of Old Abe's firmest supporters, is now advocating .INI telellan's election F. A. TALLMA DUE, a prominent Republican of New York, is out now for :NlcClellan and Pendleton. H. H. DAY, the great India ['tubber man, heretofore strong for Old She, has stretched himself over a very !woad area for Little Mae. _DELOS (IAR EV, Esq., of Oswego Co. New l'ork, formerly a prominent Ile publican, is stumping for Little I\inc. A. G. Co:\EsTocK, Esq., of New York, always heretofore supporting Ohl Abe, is now making spee,hes for Little Mae. ] fon. JOSEPH G. LA MB, of Norwich Conn., 00 old Republican, high in thy• confidence of that party, publishes a vigorous letter endorsing 1\1 ,41 1 , 11:11 , ; 111 , 1 Pendleton. j,r(11,7S PECI, of New 1-fampshile, all influential leader of the Relalhtieall party, I I'olllo "Lit for ('ASI'Ert EsQ., a ‘venhily and prominent leader anions tile 1 ieilnan, or lim on, or Liii.•ohc, „,i v ,„.„ 1 ,., in 1,4;1), i, now “ppo,iliu him ( . “1. .1 MES \l. )SS, if )1 isstm ri the leading spirit of the Cleveland lie mow 'onventi,,n, is nut fir NATHAN IM\VE, "f ()- ""g" , New York, one or ()lii forme' supporter,i sitiondie4 fir Little Gen. JOHN A. I,GGA N, is a supporter of :\lcCiellan. Gen. PALMED, of supporting :\ fcClellan. Major t leneral JOHN . S('OFIE1,1), Illinois, has ;Lunounetql his intenti,'w to support ( kuwral Col. .1. ;-' , WEITZEU, late the 6 . 2 d hi. regiment, and rw - ni,rly the Repuh lieun district attorney of A Ilegheny county, is on the stump for Little Mac. Afaj. General H El NTZELMAN, com manding the Department of Ohio, it is said, will support Little Mae. Hon. H. It PAYNE, of Cleveland, 0., who had left the Democratic party, has returned. 1-lon.llA IZNABAS Itt-ENS,oiMans field, Ohio, formerly a Democrat, lies retorted to his first love. Hon. NV.M. FLAM;,oll'incionati, Ohio, who had left for Old Ahe, ha:, re turned and joined the 110,4 for Little Mae. The independent war paper, has (ain't. mil far Ale( lellan. It will ! The IiEITIISTIVIM Ill.) OBSERV ER, one of A.lte's supporters, hurt. the MeCtel tan ling and rtototillet- , Shod- The CH ICAO() TELEORA Ell,:a rad ical Fremont paper, has concluded to give its support to mi.clidlito. The CLVDETIM ES, \Vayne county, N. V., hitherto a staunch and influen tial supporter of Lincoln, in a county heretofore good for from 1,000 to 1,5110 majority for Republicanism, has put up the name of M'Clellan and wheels into line with the Democratic people. But we lutist 51011. It is impossible for us to spend time in gathering sup porters of Ohl Ale, and Republicanism from the Birth of that party, who have given in their adhesion to the Dentol (Tittle nominees. The changes of opin ion among . the masses front Old .\ wism to McClellan Unionism, may he surely estimatobfmm the changes among the Republican leadership. hosts or D en , omits who went over to Lincoln, are now returning and vigorously support ing 'McClellan. 'FMc reaction, in every State 10 .• the North--even among some of the radical Abolition States of New Enghind—is most extraordinary awl gratifying. May the good work !_!. un till the peOpil• arise en masse, and will] one voice exclaim--" 77if Uoio, oond m —wcrisq,* im,r, As an °Met to our record of converts to Dennwracy, the opposition can point to hut one histaiwe, during the canywis, of it Democrat yielding to the seduc tions of shodilyism. That illustrious "iinytriot " is—save the marl::— job, Ro3al Road to Scienc( Purport', nn( of the ilicist illustrious masters in Italy, conceived a friendship for a young pupil, and asked him if he had courage to persevere with constancy in the course which he skull mark out for 11 im,.however wearisome it might seem. Upon the pupil answering in the affirmative, lorpora noted, upon a single page of ruled paper, the diatonic and chromatic seales, ascending and de scending,, the intervals-of third, fourth, fifth, etc., in order to teach him to take them with freedom, and to sustain the sounds, together with frills, groplps, rip porvi,thoy s, and passages of vocaliza tion of ditti , r,nt kinds. 'ffilis page is• cupied both the master and scholar du ring an entire year, and the year follow ing was also devoted to it. - When the third year was commenced, nothing was said of changing: the lesson, and the pupil began to murmur ; hut the master reminded him' of his promise. The fourth year slipped away, the fifth followed, and always the same eternal page. The sixth year found them at the same task ; hut the master added to it some lessons in articulation, pronun ciation, and, lastly, in declamation. At the end of thiayear, the pupil, whosup posed himself still in the elements, was much surprfse,l When the master said to him : " my son ; you have no thing more to learn ; you are the finest singer in Italy and of the world." He spoke the lentil, for the singer was ( 'a Sleeping with Open Windows A letter in the London Times says : "There can be no doubt of the beneficial effects to health of a free communication at night of the air of the sleeping room with the external air. This seems to be becoming more and more pressed upon the minds of the public, in opposition to the old notion of the noxious quality of night air. We remember to have read an account a few years back of the tes timony of a gentleman advanced in years, we believe a clergyman, who at tributed his health and prolonged age, entirely to sleeping in the room with an open window. From my earliest life I have, whenever I could, slept with my bed-room window partially open and have always found that early exercise in the open air is the best of medicines. reir Julius Caesar Hannibal giving an • account of his sea voyage, says: "All de passengers was now heavin', and as if that wasn't enough, de cap tain gave orders for de ship to heave too, and she hove to." Second Chapter from the Secret flistor) of the War. another Letter from General Naglee to J adze Kelley—Astonishing- Disclos— tares—The President and Secretary- of War Seriously Implicated—Twelye Mil lions of Dollars Expended for Monitors that Would Not Float—Rend the Con viDeing- Proof. PH I EA DELI' II A, Oct. 8, 1804. _lig Deo,- once went hunting, and tired at a mischievous, chattering chipmunek, and found when the smoke had cleared away, that the eltipmunck although badly WM11111(41, made a great pretence that he was not hurt at all.— But strange to say, when tiring at the lessor game, I had hit a ftlx, and that fox, one 1 , 1 the most cunning, destruc tive an ilinds that had ever infested the nehrlthorhood. Would you believe it, I never stopped to listen to chipmunek„ 1.111 loaded again for the fox. Now. Judge, the moral: Without a Wt.nt ttt all my part to lustily it, you attarkwl Inc, and I reponded; al though m ivied you declared you are not hurt, but the President and Secre tary. I and inn•rint , d,al.• badly hurt, the latter - mortally. The former so much that I shall 10 sou flutter Until I try allotll,l' on, Judge, he nfflet, atieit yullr time: I have ammunition t"x ittid 4.14_ • 111 .1)M ;Hid and ill AI of hilVe 611111 d 1 . 1111()\%111U : EiLk N.\ (u,Ers .k 1.1101 : 11. •\ 1 , 1 N11:11. 1 Iler . \of 1”11,1,-,,, The copperhead pe, , or the eolllltry die giving rirciihition to a letter ad- Gent•ral to II II Willi a m It. kelky, ~r ii,,• ,peaking of General nntl:e , the rolloNving ,tatu to,nt Ni 1 . :11* ophit•ctitollS to ore co:leered, I have only w remind you that, within the Ina sixty :t ontidentiul friend of (he pre , id,ot ot as>ivlt to tql'er hint one ,•f the Inoa importa.rit (aatinta.nds of the army. !tut t hi- prop”,iti(lll 00'it11 the 1:00,4 dishonorahlt. condition-- I hat he shottld deeline to he a candidate or the Prusidt.iivy. 1 ;viler:ll rostrainctl hi- inglignziti,n, and replied ::: :h e hearer o,f ilto , message, ;0, hark o \Va,hingt,al, and -off to, the l'resi dent, low nie, that whoa' I recut \-e ortieial written orders, he shall have , 101°, allS \\*Vl": " \V e ar c a l it liiininv.l to say that the President ha, no recollection of send ing any message or messenger to (lets. McClellan, or of receiving arty from at any time since he was relieved of the command of the .Army of the Potomac, and certainly none such as mentioned in the puhli , hed letter of (General N:112 lee. I r the President sent a 111QSSII.g.i' in %% i rking, the writing can he produced if a messenger, he can he valued. Let either be done if it this 1 \Veit', that before the as seinhling of the t'llicafto Convention, :Moot the middle or .\ ugust, the Presi dent sent one of hr-old and vontidential friend s to propose to ( 4meral McClellan [hat if he a oold declitt'e to he a candi datefor the Presidency before theCldea go convention, and would consent to throw the weight of his intlnence, with the Itentocratie party, in favor of the I;epuldicannoininee,he,l,ool((llorrc uldri mil;irirg, /Le wh, ~-(//,•/ (1, !Ili,/ thlti 1/11 • 1///(1/1 iI( . 11111%/r•I of t/ , /if T ih, I we Idd hold still just ooe moment longer, that I may inform ou, that prior to this, there was a writ ten cm - respondence between the son or leis ,q,nlidential old friend of the Presi dent, and a prominent Democrat, oinking sul,tontially the same proposi tion, Now, in connection with the abov.•, let me call the attention of your friends to the following extract, front the published speech of the Hon. Mont -4,1,1)11.ry 111:011' since my letter to you or the 27th of September, wn, written : 111 his Vallandigliztin's , motion, every voice that hail heel] raised to fury against the nomination of McClellait \vas silenced. und the vote in lUs favor made unanimous. There was a potent spell in ids vole.. that made ' n cessation of hostilities: :1 'onvention of the siutes," of /'ours/ us equals and inde pendent, :Ind ti ~ , , ,/doon chief of the Federal army-- one \vliom to the last I h e hey e d to he rilie to the cause in tvl tilt /'male)' is (.11th:irked. and, ;old, who", lire l're . sift( I,•iedi” !Old here/ rir w ill, ~„F (6,„/ fir lrl 'is Iris , / , /j , 0 ,- 1, h , 111,-rri rl his ty . Ihr ilor junto it, 71;1,1 . 901 --io lea d Ilia 1:1 , t assault hi' the l-lotlierne(mspirator , , conci,•nanced by - forcign PONVers, tigaill-4 111, it 111 .0 . the enUnt l'y." Let ns rejuiee. Tlicre is sonic Itui,e fur uttt . cuuutry. Let us rejoive that we Bare ro un d o n e how.st man, mu , Nvl) \vi uld. tliit sell iiiiu,elC. awl I,,etrzt -15,11111.1'y. ;old \vim, amidst the tnost per-e4•utiln that ever a ,trong ,4, cruniew inllii ie t upuu a single ilieNllcrit•lio,ll young . , i1i4•4•1 . , had iheeuurage 14, resent a dis.4racen4l 1011, ;Ind in-ult. hav“ allirnii,l and re-affirmed, that I len. l\leCh•llan had no plan, find hal finally about the end of Fehruary, in your own words, McClellan had ex hausted the l'resident'sstock of patience: but that he had in the kindness of his heart determined I give (;en. )1(4'4 , 1- hkit a chalirc to rc , [4,111 lihust•lf front niter ridiride, :lid had given him ten d a y, in which to proli,ose a plausible plan of a emu paign. ,It was then "yOl.l said Ile had no plan, and that \Olen several (In. promised ten days had pasself he Was Mill Withoot a plan." You farther sac, th:11 (leiter:ll Naglee reeei veil n emnmuniention front a I/prim er:it :-.eflator, Mr. Lathan), of ('leiG,r nin, is 101 you Nagleel know tluit . ileClellan was iu danger of removal, heeause he had stipulated to sulunit a plan of campaign, "within a certain munher of days, and would Ire removed if he did not, and requested you I Naglee) to hasten to Washington." And now, Judge, listen to the truth. No doubt, having indulged so freely in fiction, the truth will hea little distaste ful to yon, but as a favor to me, listen to it until I have done, after which, as far as I ant concerned, you may resume your natural inclinations. I /id it ever occur to you that an empty canal Moat, in the hands of thousands of men, could he transferred down hill, fl•ona the canal to the river, with but little difficulty, and that there might h ave b een. some other reason than the one assigned by you ? But, admitting all that you claim, did it never occur• to you that it is not expected that the en tire detail] attending the movement of a large army, is to be superin tended by the Commander thereof in person? I will even grant you that in t }•ou are right, and that General McClellan should not have had officers attached to his staff, who neglected to use every precaution to prevent failure. Rut be charitable—don't fail to remem ber the awful disappointment when that pontoon train failed to appear upon the Rappahannock, and when the vials of wrath were poured, not upon the head of the favorite of your party, General Burnside, but upon those of Generals Meigs and Woodbury, and again lie charitable, and do not fail to remember how carefully you have se creted that more terrible blunder than ever occurred in the annals of this or any other war, by which we have no less than twenty-three monitors, con structed at an expense of over twelve millions of dollars, and which, by the nice calculations of the naval engineers brought in after one of them was launch ed, it was determined that with their armament. they would float just five inches under water. Now, Judge, who is responsible for this? Again be char itable. But do not fail to remember that the President and "Fighting Joe Hooker," carefully concealing their plane even from the CoMmander-ilig. Chief and the Secretary of War to th extent that, whilst the battle was going on at Chancelloraville, I was informed dlrectlt, by the best authority in the NUMBER 40 premises, " that neither Gen. Ilalleck nor the Secretary of War knew :nore what was going on than T did," and "that all of the requisitions made dur ing the preparations for the moventent, instead of going through the ordinary channels, were ordered directly by the sideni; " and do you not know that, to the present hour, the country was never informed that, on that occasion, Hooker and the President fought the best army that was ever got together, numbering no less than one hundred and sixty-live thousand men, against (Ten. Lee, with an army of fifty-seven thousand—lost thirty-five thousand men were completely rooted, and to such , - -ttn extent that, as I said before, but for the providential killing of Stonewall. Jackson, our army would have been annihilated? Why have you not told the country this, instead of tin , more pitiful story, that " the 11th Army ('carps gave way in confusion," Why did not your Committee on (Ito Conduct of the War exhaust a few of those ace hundred days, and a portion of those seventeen hundred pages, es pecially devoted to (len. upon the milittiryStlCCe. , SeS lint great leader, (ten. Buller, before Petersburg, where six I hoasand of his area marched prisoners into Richmond—al most without his knowled,,,.__d m a wl Mr. Stanton coolly assuring the I,,un that there had been a great to t ., a nd that it (-ann. before break fast ? Ilelore I leave your friend Mr. Stan ton, I will instance another cvidvm•e his treachery to (tell. ALl'lelLut. .Ail know or the disasters tam-ed by the in terference of the President :Hid :Mr. Stanton with the Artily or the it was'necessary to have a victim, and (tell. :McClellan (vas soliclod :Ind IV moved. A short time afterwards, Pope being placed in command, thiled most disastermo,dy, and Washington was again threatened. The . President and his Cabinet were alarmed to that extent that at ste:nner was prepared and ready to assist in their escape. With earnest entreaty and supplication, McClellan was solicited to assume i•oniniand and save them and Washington. Ile con sented—ignoring the_.l-:olicitations of his friends, who desired that lie should first insist upon the removal of Mr. Stantel,, which he utterly refused replying-that he would not permit any personal con siderations to influence Ilk conduct when the capital was ill such imminent danger. lie then accomplisheol the greatest Military success of the war. Ile re-organized the demoralized army of Pope whilst on the mareh and gained the glorious victory qf Antietam. .le- Clellan's star was again in the ascen , dant. Mr. Stanton begged lurgiyeucss for the past, and promised his devoted friendship for the future. Again, General McClellan's trusting nature prevailed over the advice of his friends, and the treacherous conduct of Stanton Was forgiven by General MeClellan, only to lie again more wiek edly betrayed than ever. Washington WaS 1111 sooner relieved, and Ile dent and his Cahinet sale, than IJy the influence of Mr. :- , tuntoo, l ;en. MeClel- In was again 1:11:o led front the com mand of -Army of the Potomac, when 1111011 the Verge of battle, and ordered into retirement. You call up the ghosts of the departed soldiers. Ile assured, Gen. Met lellzin's sleep will not he disturbed by them; but what 11111,4 he the broken :dunilwrs of those who are responsible for the ten. of thousands lost ltv Pope, and Burn- side, and Hooker, in attempting to carry out what the President called his " plan ;" and the hundred and lift', thousand lost - since the 4th of May, south of the Rapidan; and what Must he the dreams of the President, who could, amidst the groans of the dying, that lay upon the gory- field Of Antietam, call for the singing 9,f a ribald song? In times like these, we Want son' other than the Weak and vancillating President who assured Mr. Crittenden and the patriots that. accompanied him from Kentucky, that they might go home and inform their friends that he would not violate their rights and in terests by any proclamation of emanci pation. Before there assurances eould betransmitted to thepeopleof Kentucky his promises had been broken, and just such a proclamation, violating all these pledges, was issued. If any State has done nobly, earned distinction for pure patriotism under the most trying,, dreadful suffer ings of this Wall it which :t whole peo ple have been despoiled, families em bittered against families, tool nieniliers of the same family against eaeli other to that extent that harmony eau never again prevail, it is the State of Ken tucky ; and if there Was ally one State that should haVe had intl linner Willi till' Achuimistralinn, it waslltat Slate. Rol her voice, amidst the din and Idood of batch., ha,flever been heard : or it heard for the moment, it was soon lost under the influence of Massaelmsetts, aided by the demon yells of rutlioul men, wbu cried OM extermination, and in tiro same breath proclaimed a higher law than the Constitution, which they only denounce as a covenant with hell. First, then, for I he purpose of falsifying your declarations, read the 1 - ollowing : Ex M A NsioN, WAsittNicroN,Feli:', .141/ De a r : l ou and I have distinct and ditTerent plans fora movementof the Army of the Poto ma: ; yours - to he done by the Chesapeake, up the Rappahan nock to Urbana, and across land to the terminus of the railroad on the York River; mine to more directly to a point on the railroad southwest of Manassas. If you will give So / h f f,olopy n„srrev to the following questions, I shall gladly yield my plan to yours: lst. _Does not your plan involve a greatly larger expenditure of lime and monry than mine? 2d. Wherein is a victory ///017' ertdnin by your plan than mine? id. - Wherein is a victory 10th,', by your plan than mine? 4th. In fact, would it not be valuable in this: that it would break no great line of the enemy's conmumieations, while mine would'? sth. In case of disaster, would not a retreat be more difficultly on your plan than mine ? Yours, truly, A BRA liAII 1. lAiol,x. Major lieneral And for the further refutation and fal sification of what you have said, I here by assert what I know to he trite. Dur ing the month of January, (=en. McClellan had been VITy it j. The Pres ident became very restive under the outside pressure which demanded, through the Republican press that the army should "on to Itiehmond," and was about to COIL , CiI I to movement proposed by (len. McDowell. On Ilcar ing this, (len. McClellan arose from his sick bed and proceeded to the Presiden tial mansion, there to join the President and his Cabinet, who hail lure assem bled to meet hint. Ile was asked by the President " !lire is p/rut r, ,roil prtign." He hesitated for a moment, during which he remembered that I d! information furnished to the Cabinet found its way to the confidential friends of sonic of them, and thence by the mul titude of spies that infested the War and other Departments it was forthwith communicated to the enemy, and he re plied, that he would do so if the Presi dent ordered it, but as the President must 'know how immediately such in formation was transmitted to the ene my, he, McClellan, preferred not to make known his plan of campaign to the Cabinet unless the President should order it, and the President declined to make the order. Mr. Chase remarked to one present, that if Mae persists in thus refusing in formation, he is a ruined man. These circumstances occurred in Jan uary and on February 3d. Do you still intend to reaffirm " that McClellan had no plan, until the Democratic Senators, Mr. Latham and Mr. Rice, and a briga dier, from the column of Joseph Hooker, concocted one, and packed a council of war to approve of it `.' on the Stli of March thereafter. Now, Judge, you will save yourself and friends much confusion, which you have caused them in following you, if you would read the orders and letters that have been published upon all of these military subjects, and which may RATES OF ADVERTISING. - Rosimmas AnvizarismonrtsrBl2ra year-per - square of ten lines; ten per cent. Increase for fractions of a_,N , ear. REAL ESTATE , y=soNAL PEO'PESTicand GMT= ExtaL Anvnartsnto, 7 cents a line for the first, and 4 cents for each subsequent Inser tion. PATENT MEDICINES and other adver's by the column: One column, 1 year,.... Half column, 1 year... Third column,-1 year, Quarter column BUSINESS CAnns, of ten lines or less, one year Business Cards, five lines or less, one year LEGAL AND OTHER NOTICES— Executors' notices Administrators' notices,... Assignees' notices, Auditors' notices , ....... Other "Notices," ten lines, or less, three times all he niund in your favorite work ofthe report of the Committee on the Conduct oft he \Var, or in (ien. McClella's Re port, which is not so great a favorite with von. evhice again, the most extraordinary confusion when you as sert t hat the Presidentgave him ten days to flint a plan, and cunMund the orders I have referred to with the following or der of the President : "E X ECUT IVE MANSION, 1 W. 1,411 I NUToN, March 8, 1862. j ~,,of (rtlcr, S " That any movement a., aforesaid, en route for a new base of operations, which Illay be ordered by the Comman der-in-chief. and which may he in tended to more upon the Chesapeake ,Thall la , a;in to move upon the bay eariy as i b e lsth of March, inst., and the enevai - in-Chief shall be responsi ble that it [Hove: , as early as that (lay. "A. LINCOLN. NA=III=MSZ= . 1 II \V 11 irh VOU will observe, he did not *,r,liT (; , m•ral 2\lut,'lellim to produce a plan ‘N ithio ten days, as you assert, hut that his ;1101 , 10, lil should commence within tell ,!acs. shiitin 2 iron] your original nomen clature, that the council w a s d.,ignap,l ( * OilllCil of ;Ind that, with the exception elieral Naglcc, it was compo,ed ut hivi,h , fi\ Generals. Now, sir, :IS usual, you falsify the record. 1011. Welt' OffleerS ti , 1,111,11, :old it was convened by Gen. ici 'lellan as a " Council of \Var." !'our voluntary, unprovoked attack made upon me on the . 2:ld ultimo needs no shell iii, riir the mere fact of my being nomiii•ii of a council of war convened Iry order te'i ien. :\ 'ellen:in shows of it self that I was on detached duty by pro per :tut hitrity, over which neither your friem I :\ tr. Stanton nor Gen. (looker had any control. The attack upon me un der such Cil . l•lllllStallUeS,lis well as your assertion that nett. .NleClellan has no !daft until it was prepared for him by Senators Latham and I iice,and General Naglee, on the sth of March, 1562, in face of the letters and orders of President of Fehruary :1 and .\ larch 5, herein refer red to, and loin: since subjects of con stant public discussion, ex hibitson your part .1 rtick lessmiss of assertion and in iiiltcrcucc of seld-rcspea that few or your ilium's will comprehend, and none of limn attempt to justify. Judge, if ever a question of veracity comes 1111 het wetin you and myself we alone must settle it, and you must not attempt tuslinflle uif your responsibility and plaoe it Iti,on others, nor to protect yourself Lchind siteli "well-known in dividual.," " " Mnore and il'OrLfe I I:1 , •kt•r. 'Phis may have been your praetiee heretofore,' and you may have so ;toted impunity,but rest as stlised it V, not be permitted by me. You !vier to some great surprise that C: ,, neral Met 'lel lan proposed to make on the rebel line at Itrentsville, and you make out, no doubt to your satisfaction, that the suceess of the surprise depend ed entirely up o n a certain bridge to be constructed of canal boats, that were to have 'wen passed into the Potomac near 1 inrp,r's li't , rry, and that it was found, 11,1 the movement was about to be =BM row the boats. Now, this surprise of ilrentsville may be entirely clear to you ;eel ' .., 1'11:1(1,1'S Wade and Johnson, lint as to .tiiyscii . and to my military \VP i%11:11 , ,1 understand how the rebels in the direction ,of Brentsviile c•ouhl ha vc hwell nrpri.sed by any move mnt in till. di n.ction indicated by you; but I suppose t hat is not important with con, your real ohjeet being only to relate the story of that obstinate canal boat, that had passed t hrough all of the other locks upon the canal, hut refused, in the face "f the enemy, to pass the oittlet- The people or the Smith are members the national flintily with us; hey nue:t iumight hack by continued 'oree, ii they will not come back by con et:l. Rut we must respect their rights vh:d ever (l y are. There is no more =EM tales to emitrol whatever right of pro theie may remain to them in the lave on theilay On whieli they lay down heir arnis, than there is in the sheriff insist that the poor eulprit, who has violated the law in the most outrageous manner, shall he deprived of his food or his clothinlz,, prior to hisexecution. The tin tary antliority claw President dur lig the existence of the war, can apply nly to personal property iu the actual ,o,session or the army, and all military, tit horny cctisc-, the moment peace is cstored, and the only authority that in he cx ercitied ()Vet the same from the lonient hostilities veztse, is lodged in he Constitution,: and laws of the States nd tln• United States, whose mandates it', Icy the (uuotilutiou, is bound by his :all to ()hey. \" t • rest e 0 fully, Slv. HENRY M. NAGLEE lhoz: WILLI:Im I). KELLEN', 'Mita A Shrewd Fellow. In 1 , %.2:2, Lahouehere, then a clerk in the banking house of Hope & ..sonsterdani, was sent by his patrons to \l r. Baring, the London banker, to ne gollate a loan. He displayed in the all'uir so inueli ability as to entirely win the esteem and confidence of the great English financier. " Faith !" said Laboueltere, one day to Baring, " your daughter is a charm ing creature ; I wish I could persuade you to give me her hand.'' Young man, you are joking; for seriously you must allow that Miss Baring could never become the wife of a simple clerk." "But," said Lahouchere, " if I were in partnership with Mr. lope'.! " Ulf ! that would be quite a different thin ; that would entirely make tip for all other deficiencies." Heturn, , ,l to .\ mstenlam, Labouvliere wt to Lis patron : " Yoa must take inc into partner- My young. friend, how can you think ofsuch n thing.' It is impossible-. You arc Without fortune, and—n " lmt if I heetane the son-in-law of Mr. I faring hat ease the aulhii would be soon settled, told so you have my word." Eorti fie( I with these two promises, Mr. I.a honehere returned to England, and in Iwo months after married Miss la inmr,bocnuse Mr. I lope had promised to take him into partnership, and he thus hecame allied to the house of hope ‘k Co. His was a magnificent eareet'. Yl Sadie!! the comedian says he was present at the White House, the other day. When the following was per petrated. An old farmer from the West, who knew President Lincoln in days gone by, called to pay his respects at the Presidential mansion. Slapping the Chief Magistrate on the back he es (claimed : "Well, old boss, how are you ?" Old Abe, relishing a joke responded : ";o I'm an old boss, am I? What kind of a hoss - pray ? " Why an old draft boss to.be sure," was the rejoinder. An exchange thinks it a curious' fact that the California fifty-dollar gold piece is the only coin on this continent that is round. We don't know where he lives, but this way we can't find any coin 'round. g 3 An English judge, in sentencing a man to death, added, "You will now have the satisfaction of having ,your case transferred to the tribunal of a higher, and let me add, abler judge." —A Western editor offered his devil a - dime a week, or a share in the ittpei.l; , ,. - the cute young chap unhesitatingly tobk the dime. 2.00 2.00 1.50
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers