RENE .1 444 9 41 ‘0' 1 1" . MIMI MEE EMI =MI=E EINEM IBM ;•,; • =OM '~.b.'l. r!.;- MEM .• • . ••• ••• ' 7 •" ` '• I*, 4; ,i* , • • •.• " ••• I :•,e. !ir r 14 1 , •; , ..'.• ••• • . • • '•• • • • ' . • • l'••:! • , .;.• '' -• • • ' ..~ a~?~ . MEI ENE =ME Vittsbitrgh-• oSazettil. TII6DAY AUG. 11..,, ~.:UnioLState Ticket, ,T 311,001111111011: ANDREW G. CIIILTIN,, of Centre. roe JODIZ 07 ?HZ OIIPSZIII 00[47: DANIEL AGNEW. of Beaver. EM=EM o...di cr E.. .p.. 4... mi. ot A. mad.. - ' .-• L ions . • U. /LUISE SLAM. cr. NENE H. HEZMON. fr. WW. H. DICENINTON. • . - THQ.E. - J.. /HAMM " " 4;64e Of Words. • UrN...411111111011. Crii4 ; • 4 . B DLIL.SIVOLVNIM. • . lie. . . WM. J. Ricrasso n tre ';.. py, Par. Dfrodoo of dr • Poor. JOHN T. MIMEO. " Symptoms Of . Collapse—The Break. • • • Saint Foreshadowed: more unto lbs . brow*, dew friends, oars moral" While our armies are apparently me _ dukes wider the sweltering heat of an An snit sun, and only an occasional skirmish comes to stir the leans, and ruffle the cur !see of the waters, the symptoms of a gen eral collapse of the rebellion are multiply ing in every direction. For the 'fleet time, the papers 'of the South begin to confess that their cause is droOping, and that there ,are agencies at work, _which_ arn fast un flernithing the foundations of that gigantic 'despotism, which hie astonished the worli, and iniplied each manifold misgivings among the men of little faith, who were ready to faint, and die, in the presence of its unwonted and terrific phemomena. For the deal time in its tragic history, we hear IC wail of woe-a , mingled burden cf rage, eeproaoh, and despair—coming up from those monsters of humanity, the fierce andurtameabkt spirits* the fionthemtpress —the .bloody Dantona—the hell-engender ed blood-hounds—who have bayed in ad varies et the whole infernal peek, theirjaws dripping with the gore of butchered Irmo cents,andtheirbloodshoteyeestrathing with savage phrensy, at the glorious perspective of new fields of carnage under northern skies. All le now wrong. The armies of the Mississippi are diindling away. The "timid and cowardly" as they call them, are leaving the ranks by thousands, and clamoring fee peace, and a 4eturn to the old Union, on any terms. The people do not respond to the heart rending tippets of Davis and his myrmi dome. The troops of Peaumasos are pre cipitated upon the starving camps of Ami no; only to eat out, demoralise and deci mate his' ranks, and thence turned loose beyond the Mississippi, to seek their homes, from which they never can -be re-called. North Carolina declares that her Me have been butchered in a quarrel which was not theirs, and defies the mums of the Bich inond organs, in a way thatbodee anything but good to the Confederacy. The people 4 are organizing Union usocbstions to resist the terrible conseriptiin, endue for resto ration and, peace. Clufrlostnn, it is con fessed, must Lath Mobile is preparing for the same fate. Penunron is denounced MI II traitor, and DAVIS au a tyrant—while, to erown all, the hope of foreign mediation is abandoned—Confederate money pays - ble on the acknowledgment of their inde pendence—which will be, in vnlgarphrese cloy, "the nut day Slier sever''—is down to elyht or seise cents on the dollar, and with it, the British cotton loan, and the whole system of Confederate finance, has tumbled into ruins. All that remains, in deed; is the one inspiring hope of aid from the Northernryinpathisers, upon which they rut, as the last resource of the Confeders ay. "Give us," they say, "but one more , victory, and it will be impossible for Lin. . • cult to enforce his draft, and ierit his armies, and then our independence will be achieve:l." Yes I it is, by their urn confes sion, upon the very copperheads whom they despise, that they look as their only possible Saviours.. The copperhead. will be flattered, of course, byeviat such an so knwledgment. Like the Irishman, who - Siegal of an intimacy with, a noble Lord, on the ground that he bad done him the honor, .on one oceasion, of kicking him down stairs, they will rejoice to see even this been of recognition, and will be stim- Matedtonew efforts, to deserve an addition- al application of the pedal extremity, as soon es the condition of their Southern brethren will enable them to provide them _ selves with the necessary shoe-leather, to perform' the operation in a gentlemanly way In answer, however, to the appeal of the Southern preei, we have only to say to the loyal' men of the iforth : " Your time has num. ;in reindilon station under your blows. Deernik your , armies. Gin no heed to the scoundrels, who fall ion that you cannot ethane the South. Collect your mien& for s_ fsal effort.. Let it be teen that you are ins condition to strike harder than ever, and there are grave doubts whether Yon, withers occasion to strike at all. Disappoint the hopes which are grolind" ad an the expectation that their allies hare wiliha able to interfere etc:. neeftilly wiik-the draft, by the laW, either through corrupt, courts, or by "'`'the 'avail of headlen molts. Show the rebels, thst there are yetyontig witienough 'atiome, to Tannin? their Win 'diepitelt ing, this bides, which - now :ban; no beads left but a single cue: It will submit to flatly the ;moment it &nevem that its fate is rested. lien one more effort only: Veoe'lsorejoseo the knob, Ow Moab; *not Do Radical' Measures atte . the ti South? Tits shameful falsehood that UM- COntle ' Gallon ma sad the Ettmacipatice Pools matfett have united WI South has pas far - enough. The martin-;of a proposition dOOll not 4111101illifige its truth; but ells , - well - persevered in sotataines Is_ *envied as.a Taft]; eall for tide roma we desire ' to:eall atteatlon to theiater reekleasness Ova did*Asde byths Copperhead sews. itittlMM upita this pow. Darya the dist,yair sad a haw of the liar; is toolteriifiyi p 91107 was adapted, 54 . 01 1000#0" * 1214 07 1 i* WW I Border State adrleere, wikole isleful ,snos at Weahlegion kept lettompetent, gee orals In the field, is every way obstructed , • • . 'the progress of the war, and proundi . d sus _ oeu toinr arms. Maryland teas oily held in the Union by the sinned heel of the gov ernment; Kentucky hung midway betw loyalty and treason; Missouri was— occasional intervals—one of the,.4,.. the grounds of- thewithk..East Unitise. de- i 4 , speared of assists*;. - IKi nail of her loyalty withiliibt oilier patriote; ' North Carolina strut Atill, for treason, with 05,000 men leg 4rebel army ; Louis iana floated=` It reconstruction on alit tehriii - Ova Texans were smoth- Aretfiri fitlirtesonof their rebel neighbors, tfd. Mississippi I—why Mississippi was -Amply the headand front of the Bebellion With South Carolina, and this, observe, too, under the conservative leadership of 810- CmciLas and Beni, in the field, and the influence aid -domination of PRZHTIC; Catrrssnrs, WICKLIFFE, and their sup porters in the capital, andover the Cabinet. How is it now, since the two great radi cal measures of the war have been adopted and applied to the rebellious States? Let us - 'examine. North „Carolina, disgusted with the rebel; openly threatens a counter revolution; and - mounring for 50,000-of her eons slaughtered in this contest, is taking active measures for returning to the Union, and partaking of its blessings. Louisiana, humbled and repentant, bas already Sought lit-RAD/tin Wale the govern ment she affected to despise so thoroughly. East Tennessee is intensified in her un compromising loyalty to her first love, and ' looks to the renewed vigor which the radi cal policy has infused into the war for a speedy deliverance from her heirible thral dom, and to these alone. Kentucky, not withstanding these two radical measures, has just k ,ocked the conservative theorists to pieces, by electing unmixed Unionists to office, and re-asserting in the most unmis takable terms that she is for the Union, without ifs, ands or bats. Mississippi, thrashed into a submission as complete as her insolence was disgusting, now stands' shivering in fear of being punished for ber mighty crime, and trembling with a hapset a remission of the self-invoked vengeance of theout raged Union. And Mizsouri,the State ithich, abcive all others, was to bo thrown bodily into the arms of treason by aboli tion, is at this moment in the throes of a revolution which has for its object the practical application of the emancipation polloy,of the president; and she is alas! restrained from the fulfilment of her noble efforts, by the very hand that wrote the Proclamation of Freedom! In the light of these current facts, is it not well to look from the miserable lie of a year ago, that the radicals would unite the South, to the truth of to-day—the historical truth—that the making of war, as earn estly as it can be made, has destroyed that unity which conservatism produced, and the namby-pamby policy of the cowards who restrained the government as long, had well nigh made fatal to the Republic? And is it not a hopeful prospect for the loyalists everywhere, that the application of earnestness to the conduct of the war, in the adoption of radical cures for radical evils, is frought with the glorious promises of a united North, to be more and more a unit, while the South, staggering under one heavy blows, is day by day falling into discos and disunion, while treason crumbles to d warm:don_ The President Jusuded When three citizens of Louisiana recent ly waited on the President, and under the pretence that they represented the people of that state, asked him to take certain ' measures proposed by them as lhe best means of bringing the state back into the Union, Dlr. Lincoln told them that he de sired a farther and faller expression of the sentiments of the people before he thought it proper to act. For this caution he was blamed, at the time, but it now appears that he refrained wisely. When the "Unionassotdation of New Orleans" heard of the affeir, its members met and passed resolutions denying the authority of the gentlemen in question to speak for the peo ple of the State liere, then, is a division of sentiment; and every one must own that the President is fully justified by the event, for the pm. deuce of his course. It appears that the three gentlemen who visited Mr. Lincoln claim to representthe "planting interest," and the Correspondent of a morning jour nal sneers that the "Union Association" of New Orleans has among its members none but paltry working men. Now, to our mind, the working-men should have the preference. We have had enough of the "planting interest" It was that which oenspired against the Union; it was that which abolished free speech in the cotton statem it is that interest whose rep resentative', Davis, blemminger, the Ithetts, Toombs, Slidell, -Benjamin, Bishop Polk, and Beauregard, head the eouthern insurrection; and it was the unjust predom inance of that "planting interest" which tied the hands of the southern people, and enabted a comparatively small number of cotton and sugar planters to revolutionise the South and plunge the country into a costly and bloody war. • The people of this country have had enough of the "planting interest." The phrase linemen'. Let us hear the voice of the working-men of Loui siana and other Southern; States. They are the majority; they were not conspira tors against the Union; they .have a right to be heard, and when they come to the President and express their' Idaho, no doubt they will be received with the at tention and regard 'which our republican Chief lifigistrele always pa ys to the'just wishes of "theplain people . "-IV. P. Even ing Post. Gen. Fremont in lissouti. 'The following passage concerning Gen. Fremont's campaign in- Missouri is from the Rebel CoL Retran's liWar Pictures from the South," recently published In Rich mond: Meantime Generals Sigel and Fremont concentrated their troops at Springfield, with the intention of putting an end to the war in Missouri. Sigel having proceeded thence with the advance yard, to Wlison's Creek General Price naked our ` troops to retire on the appearaned;of the enemy . ; but whilit about to carry out this order oar rear was attacked by Fremont's body guard, under the command of ldsjor Tag°. ay, formerly in the Hungarian service, do ing no a pod dal of /damage, and com - - polling us to acalerea our retreat. On reaching Pineville" eierst Priee made ar rimeemintal toawait General riemont'l at tack, and then to les= Missouri without once more, trying the. chances of a battle, He well knew how to inspire his men with confidence in his plan,. And now that General Fremont Midi:aught us, as it were, in a net, 'what saved' us?. -A battle 7 > No; the • Government at- Washington at this juncture deprived Fremont of kticommaqd._ Thileausedacomplets changsbitheenemy's Omit, and allowedeur Generals fall scope to alter Weir position. The Federal army WM now oOutpelled to beat a retreat, &ban donlag thus - rah tlistria if Springfield to Gem Price. ' The latter at- once 'took pos session of and settled himself down cam ' fortabli for a time in timpani= abandon= ed by the enemy. , ~ .g4 x.re .rOTWEI. ) r---. Tsalonviu.. ,.. inrAtiINAT.ON-. ..- —4, piinnta for Parole la the fallout., btr cta will new for examinasi •a as follows: • Sewickley. Cr..crnt end raekkleyvilLe, at intact /07n iv Ac gni 16, 9 a m 11.11 e sport soli Venality, at HcKesepto, Aug. lnh, it a et . -Rot& inn nod Woolson Sciacot No 1,1: Boblinon tcw•ebsp, /Mutt tiith.* a m. Hop r St..olaliand ill.ath Fayette, at Bridge - BIN Argun 1718 9. ID. , enowdstk end J. Mn is, at Tory nail 6ckool Hccuil, Aro tut 1218. 9 a. m Eitaaneth and West Ills loth. at killsahein, Aug. 19th 9. ca. kl • tilin at Itabanos t uost 20th. 9e. to. Baldwin, at Hughey. 'shoot Bonne, t u.ust Slit, 9a ca. Vindley sod No th Faystle, at Fayetteville School Hone. August rate, 9. tn. Pa , t L..er, Wawa and 141 , thou, et Tsreutuus, Amgen 26th, 9a. sc. noniron 504 slot onto. at f. clad Horn Zin. 4, in Banton I p • A agvat 1.7t ' 0, 9 a. est. West inn anAklicklind, at Bakentee tl, dogma. Nth, 7 es. in. P.n. and If arshalLat Plankerton's &tool Ham, sktlynat Vilth 9a. an P•his e . at Hebron Chant,. Sept la, 9 . In. Plum, at Nallittlea tir.beel have., vent. ild, 9 s. an. Patton, at Turtle Ortek,l3.pt lath, 9.. tn. • - Ohio and trantlin, at ,No. a Fnuakiin, Sept. 7th, 9a m IV atlas, at Willinabting. Sept. gib, 9 a m Indiana at Battle n roholl Hoare, Sept 9th, at 9a m bincton oil plum gin tonne to Tambora as no Teactore will be examined ID any other than the District In which they are Razing applicatittu. Tie examination commence ptectialy at 'the nue ex. d Pleue punctual. Pinata examinationt w are abeanittely ed. ID/rectum not baring Int In the annual rep ot, will piens to so at ore., as they are wantad by department. Teacher. will plane come provided with a .tamped .metal., bearing their address, and enclosing use r last year's mink ate, ant alio alive Mott [avenue rump A. T. DAP! NETT. County Superintendent. mum RAJ].) UNION PICNIC, • ♦T Loll‘bnB OfIOVE, (war Teuageranowals,) THITILIDA r, dugout 12114 1863.