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' c*, 2-k ~-,_ , v 4,..„....„... --„:„„•_,.,...--- .t...... , •....,....... ..... ..,_. .-, ..,..,-.:„...,.,......... ..,.,_ -.-_-____ .....- ...,„‘....„...,.-.... ......,..--,„,.. • • ... . . • . !"1. 91 . -' , .. .. . . .......„- -.-_ ---,,,.--..,..,.._.• . • ... —,-",....1!„.-.-,. ..-. _ _,• . . • • .., • H.. H. VRAZIER Publisher. 1 141. m m 11. going gluing. CHARLES HOLES, • BALER IN CLOCKS. WATCHES, AND JEWELRY. P us waft on I n notkc and ntoonable terms, '77.0t Mac Public Avinitut In F. B. Changlersa Mtge. Dia,?..gg, Dn.. Nog. 7.15C4. r Da E. .._ art ittem_ straav r. r Diti lty C tA .... ir2dril V1601 17. Of 4,aororrLeit.—=4amiolia. K. W. SMITH, k 'noway • coußrumon AT LAW and Lareamed Claim Mete- dlee over Los' _store , eeuepsdounis O Depot Janos* . 'J5 ." 1154 DA. D.per A. LATHROP, MON It Post,Ooo_ , Colt old Banking noun oppotta Isdnill9, ll %12s. 1 Mers3tare. EIUMMILY Parllenisz. uzsznaz..... liontrom „...MarS y ullSellllpne. Bouts at flsub's Hotel. K BURRITT, DLULL'S In ne a t! Taney Dry Moods, emetery, Hardware, Stoves Otln. and Pants, Boob and Shoes, Hata Onn, Fun, Bunt* bes, Grandes, rrovnton. ac. Neur MMus% Pa-,"Apnl 111,54.41 B. H. SLYRE & BROTHERS, ANUFACTURZRB of XIII of oil kin& PI Moves, lin %Wilbert Iron NW, Zig= /mOrzarark. icri Marmot Dry trooda,Orocertee, Crockery, &c. Moan's., Po, February 29,1864. f w. F.. &J. a KIRBY, rcr comlantly on bead good saaortment of GROCERILES ; also. kgood alsortuaeut of FRESH MEAT. gbop under W. rd's Tin Shop. Mon vow, February S, ISK BELLENGB 'STROUD, AFID LITZ IMIURAIME WHOM Mbar InLah r roo). builillay„ &PI old of Ma Block. In hie at bud,- am at the aloe will be tiansucted by C. L. Brown. beetroot, February 1. 19114.--tt J. D. VAIL, IL D., • OM 160PATTII0 PEITBICIILN, has permanently located H himself in Montrose, Pa., where be wild promptly attend to al fills In his proftaslon with which he may be favored. 011103 Itealdence W eat of the Court Holumotaar Bentley &jades. Brad:roan. rebnary I. 1284.-0,1.216 1661. A. 0. WARREN, TTOKNAT AT LAW BOUNTY . BOUNTY. BACH PAT and PEN &lON CLAD( AOVNT. All Penslot Clams carefully pre wed. Offloe la room formerly ocomlal by Dr. VAIL toW. ii Lord's budding, below Searle. Hotel. Mootrom, Tx— Feb. 1. I.96i—tebnyl 1863. S. S. ROBERTSON, At aziumurtrazn of .6jo S 1300treet '1 , Mo S & ontrose, Int. Montrose, January 111, MLA( CHARLES MORRIS, FesaioNAßLs RAILIIRM and limn DS EWES, over Weeks's b'hse Store. Montrose. Hair Onttles, Shamßoo • Murree. and Whisker Coloring done In the DES 1' STYLE. Mrs' Hair Dressed In the meet APPROVED FASILION. Montrone, dept. 11,1868.-31 LEWIS KIRBY & R. BACON, ESP constantly on hand •• MI supply of MUT variety al K GROO WILES and OONFECTIONMRISS. By strict attar los to business and fairnsasln deal, they hope to merit the liberal patronage of the public. An OYSTER and EATING SALOON Is !attached to the Grocery. where bivalve/I.ln smarm. are served In ev ery etvie that the team &the palate demand. Remember the lace, the old flat Grocery stand, on Main Street, below the Montrose. Nov. 1T,1883.—mch17,0.-tf DR. ceLvra C. HALSEY, ' YBICIAII AND MURGEON, EXAMINING BUR- P ICON for PENSIONERS. OM= over the store of J. LYtt. lk Bon, Public Avenue Boards at Br. Etheridge's. Yoram*, October. 18511.-11 D.-A. BALDWIN, A TTIMISET AT W, and Pension, Bcamt_y, and ears rs) Oret7Great Bead. Sosixtetuums Ocnalty, I. 4er.d. Antall 10, 1e61.-17 BOYD & WEBSTER, PSALERS to Stoves. Stone Pipe, Tin. Copper, and Sheol Imo Ware' Wan, Window Sash, Panel Doors, Window ods, Lath, Rue Lumber, and all lunds of Bel'Moo ILateriala 71. Shop south of Searle'. Hotel, and Carpenter Shop neu the Yethodha Church. Mormon. Ps, Jalmsry 1. 18644.1 Dn. JOHN W. COBB, "DEormaten 1111 d SURGEON, rexpectfolly tender. Me Weeks. GO the Gildulug f name bad altrratAG 1/..." . 11 =pal.. o tnie United States ArGay. inpUrreoll,o9.l.lll 10.1.411Alein WM be riven to SURGICAL OPERATIONS.. nr Residence on Maple Street, East of J. S. Tareelil Rotel. Montrose, Snol. County, Ps., Jane 14.18A3.-tf Dn. WILLIAM W. SMITH, SUMMON DENTIST. Ottice over Um Danlam Ilia OLIMe of Cooper & Co. AU Dental 0 .peratlour & be performed In his usual rood style and erarrantut. Reromnber,ofllee formerly of R. Smith & Son. 11=trosa. January 1. 11364.-0 B. J. ROGERS, trAtrurkortrasa of all deacrintione °VW/LG. TA ONS. CIA.IIIIIAGES, SLEIGTIS, Ge._. In the beeteryle of Wlrkmanahlp and of the best material's. a the well lowa rand of E. K. 1100 E R.S, a few rode ea".l or. besrles of In Idenrtrese, where he will be happy to re. cel•e the call. of all who want anything in his llne. 11 outran, Jane 1, 1818.-tf BALDWIN & ALLEN, DSALICRS 111 FLouit. Salt, Pork, Flab, Lard. Oren. Teed. Candles, Cam= and Tbnottry_ Seed. Also OSOOSIUSS •oub ns Sonars, Molasses, Syrups, Tea and Coffee. West side of Poollc &venue, coss door below J. Stherldce. Itootrame, January 1, 11164.-41 WILLIAM W. SMITH, /AI MOM= /NM CHAIR MANP. fedora. K constantly on band all ktntis of Cs ome t Prearroan. or fur atsbed at abort notice. Shop sad Ware Rooms foot of Main 51. Montrose, Pa., March 8, 1561.-tf F. B. WYPKI3, FACTIOAL OT 8110 E MAKES; ain minx to Hints, Mon, Leather, aid Sine Mann. itemising Eons orlth neatness end dispatch. T doors above §oorle . • Hotel. Monteme, January 1, 11164-11 - JOSEPH RICE, IiKAISIITTACRIETEER and DEALER:II all iltolsof •to: at Shop Paw miles azat of New Milford Borough. New Milford, October L 1861-11 Dna PATRICK & GARDNER, oHMICIAIig AND SHBOEONS, 8111 attend falthfhllyanC punctually,...) all btunneasttat may be entrusted to their cm J termscomisetiouratt with the tangos. Diseasee and dffonoltle, of the St E. Surgical Operation; and all Surgical Dlseaaraparuca nrlattended to. Office on, Wubb's Store. 0111 ce bourpfrato a. S. 8 Montrose. January 1.1864.-tt N. L. GARDIn.r./t. WDL & WIEL it, JESSUP, A TTORNETP AT LAW, Montirone, Pa. Practice in Swipe ,101. banns, EitinitnnL Wayne, Wyoming and Luxe= Ocrtalt ilantrow, Pa., January tat, 1861. BENTLEY It FTTGEL A'MINIMS AND COUNCEI.OIII3 AT LAW. Office wal. of Ile Court Home, .I.Lontrose. rm. 11. G. lIIIMSIar M 0111"... JIIIIMITY 1, MO, ALBERT CRAMBERLIN, IIkISTRICT ATTORNEY AND ATTORNEY AT LEIL— A" ORM: enter Ite Rtore formerly occupied by Pod Brotherl. Yontrore, Ps-January I. j.tat, J. LYONS & SON, 11LICALLESS IN MT GOODS. Oroceria.Crockfory.Thriftwsre Tinware, Books. idelodaans, rlsfros. sod Liods of MP° eta Instrument; Sheet Basic. dm. Also Cain 011 Is Book Bind to business to all Its branches. A. .foL50.0•01. moatro.c. January l a 1844. 2. ABEL TURRELL, aISALLE lA LRAMs, atEDICIT4 CIIEM/CALS. Palnla. OWN Dye stuffs. VarsJahee, Windom, Glaze, Liquors, Onxerlea, Cnxkery, Elias/mare, WaLl-riper, Jew- Cep. Fancy Gonda. Perthmel7. &rreenllnearemente, True ea, Otholeaßruakee. A:roe—and Agent for ela of the moat Ipopu ar Patent Miallicinea. Montane. January 1. 1861. C. 0. FORDILtiId, 111. s A Y rr op _ol°Tll.*.rE,B7if SHOP r.V7Merai ,and reparLog done neatly. Wor k done when prom. Nod. Montrose. Zril 1. 1241.41 CHARLES N. STODDARD, 121SALTA to BOOTS & MOTS, Leather and Find 84 , on Mate et. third door below Fwarles Hotel. 11". . B. Work nurse co order. and mulling done neatly. Montrose. Pa- Beoetnberl.2. B. R. LYONS & CO., DCALI= InDIST GOODS, 013.0t7ERIE& BOOTR, RlllOll ll ., Lathan . eater, QtrOnla, 011 Olotba, Wall and Window Po- Per, Pain% 0114 ao bunt on the cant glitz of Public Manic. Montrose../.rutry 1.1661..11 READ, WATROUS, kt FOSTER, rI C A LERSIN Dlllr (1 . 00D21, Drags. 11 , ...licium raw,. .oil . 14 . 4=rta. Ilan= Jruck . ez1r 3 .31.4 1 =11 1 the.., jew. O. I/. AZAD 111 .4.11:200S al- O. 1 1 9•232. Aloutroar.. Januar/ 11. PHILANDER LINES, ILleaittioN&ULE TAILOR; Brlrelt rote. crrer Bead, Walsers dt Foster's atom *Matzos% is. v ignatmee, Pa. July T. IPOS. JOHN . GROVES, mlentionstLa TAILOR. ehop oppeelle the BePa l licau Steam reaps Omee. llontraie. Pa., October IS. 1259.-if • WILLIAM 11. COOPER & CO., DeN H g 69, office Its A. Lathrop's brier oo the tooth / rhie of •Zuroplko fate. (Mon hours Rom 1110 . clOct a. m., to t o'clock, p. to. Montrose. ,RtetVol. RS. ittoraY - L YONS, AEALZWID Dry - Goctett., Groccrin, Finr. Crocked. Hardwire, ft, &Are on' 11.469 hiavet. ' - my bolus EkToli Fetrpuirr , JV BEAumorrr WARD', veg. casmisom th D A rl ar d Mantietureis.. at the W Y " E I ELIArcaI. - icang lansalle4 -Sria It 19h TEM LESSON OF THENTATEMILL Listen to the water-mill ! Through the,live•long day, How the cllnklug of its wheel Wears the hours away._ Languidly the autumn - w . Stirs the gieeolri - 1110 wading up their sheaves. And a proverb haunts my mind As a spell it east - " The mill it cannot grind With the water that Is put". Autumn winds revive no more Leaves that once are shed ; And the slekle cannot reap Corn once gathered. And the ruffled stream flows on, Tranquil, deep, and still, Never gilding back again To the water-mill. Truly speaks the proverb old, with a meaning vast— " The mill cannot grind With the water that is past." Take the lesson to thyself, Loving heart, and true! Golden years are fleeting by, Youth is passing too. Learn to make the most of life, Lose no happy day ; Time will pever bring thee back Chances thrown away. Leave no tender word unsaid, Love while love shall last— " The mill =not grind With the water that is past" Work while yet the daylight shines, Man of strength and will ! Never does the streamlet glide Unless by the mill. Wait not till to-morrow's sun Beams upon the way ; AU that then can'st call thine own Lies in thy •to-day." Power, and intellect, and health, May not always last— " The mill cannot grind With the water that is past" Oh, the wasted hours of life • 'That have drilled by ! On, the good that might hose bag, I.ost without a sigh 1 Love that we might once have saved By.a single word' Thoughts conceived, but never penned, Perishing unheard. Take the proverb to thine heart, Take, and bold it tag— " The mill cannot grind. With the water that is past" PTMI7WW I TIITZW*4I Complete Description of the Grand Expedition; Wo copy from The Nail York .iileniog liar, the fol lowing very intemting account of Shen:lama's march, by an officer who accompanied the enteditionl Naas AnAicrA, Oct. 14th, Mt The last few days havebeen full of excitement and deepest Interest. The strategic combinations of Get. Sherman, which have mystified many and called forth the anxiety and curiosity of all, are beginning in part to unfold, revealing a plan of operations con ceived upon the broadest scale which, it is not ex travagant to say, has ever been known in milltatl science. We begirt to understand now why the ar my was in our late campaign moved to Home, after passing through the Allatoona Hills, instead of marching direetcly on Resaca. Hood at that time was three days march in advance of us. Gen. Sher man knew very well that In no event could Hood be overtaken should he - continue to advance, and he much preferred that his swift-footed foe should pass to the left, rather than to the right. If Hood had gone cast he would have damaged the railroad again near Atlanta, and then kept to the southward when be would have been In our present front, offering ob• starriensowrinnv-.P•N•10.4.4.4... ... movement now in progress. flow Mood was Baited. Shernum's rapid wheel to the left, through Snake's Creek Gap, forced Hood either to proceed directly South toward Montgomery, or westward. The con queror ot Atlanta, prodigal hi his well-won wealth, offered the golden applo of West Tennessee, with its richly-stored alike, alla prize easily gained, with a vista of glorious probabilities opening up in Ken tucky, and it might be he and the line of the Ohio. Well might the Rebel, General gladden his heart with the anticipations of riot and plunder, and he thought he saw clearly In the Immediate Muth the fulfillment of Oc promise and prophecy of his mas ter, that Atlanta should be evacuated in thirty days, and the dreaded Sherman, with hts Yankee bond. follow - Mg fast in his footsteps, to save the North front invasion and pillage. And thus, giving no rest to the naked weary feet of bibs soldiers. be moved of once in the direction of Florence, on the Tennessee Meer. Meanwhile Sherman had arrived at the foot of the Chatanooga Valley in pursuit. Retaining his main force at Gaylesville, throwing out strong reconnois sances in the direction of the enemy, until ascertain ing beyond a question that Hood had gulped down the bait, he detached Stanley with the Fourth Corps, sending him to the North toward Bridgeport. " Ala," chuckled Hood, " this is as 1 hoped; my strategy suceeedse Following the dcparturn of too Pcmrth thwart:Ps su-my arcrrcd beet to Rome; Schofield, with a portion of the Army of the Ohlo, was at once sent to Chattanooga. These, with Stanley's troops, furnished Gen Thomas, who held supreme command, and who had full instruc tions from Gen. Sherman covering every contingen cy, with n veteran army of some thirty thousand men, which, with those already in the department, and recruits coming into the field, composed a force 'sufficient to demolish Hood, if they should meet ; an event which will take place at Gen. Thomas's op tion, and not at Hood's, if that person remains much longer at the river's bank, where he has halted his columns, as if doubtful what course neat to pursue. Preparations for the Tharchl Gen. Sherman has called to him from Atlanta his Chief Quartermaster, Gen. 'Easton, and Chic! Com miseary, CoL Reekwlth—men of great eoneeptive and executive capacity. In four days all that Rome contained of sick and wounded, stores and machin ery, was removed, and the city evacuated ; a few , days more, and the vast amount of provisions, for age, machinery, store', of all kinds, with the invalids and incompetents, which had geeUUndated at Atlan ta and along the railroad, the surplus artillery, bag gage and other useless wagons, everything, in truth, which would impede the celerity of Movement of the army, was gathered up and sent safely to the North. On the - 12th Instant the last train of ears whirled rapidly by the troops moving south, speeding over. besdees and into the woods as if they feared they might Deicrt Inapinns In the dam - rand land. At I Ravine the last communications with the North were severed with the telegraph wire. It bore the mes sage to Gen. Thomas. " All Is well." - And so we have cut adrift from our base of operations, from our hue of communications, launching out into un certainty at the hest; on a Journey whose prcqeded, end only the general in commad knows. I 013=21 As foe the army ' they do not stop to ask queitions. Sherman says "Come," and that Is the entire 'vce cabolary to them. A mast eheerfal feature of the situation Is the fact that the men are healthful and jolly as men on be, hoping for the best, willing to dare the worst. Behind us waleave a track of smoke and flame.— Half of Marietta was burned up, not by orders, however; for the command Is that proper details shall be made to destroy all property which can ever be of are to the Rebel armies. Stragglers will get Into these places, and dwelling houses arc leveled to the ground. In nearly all macs these arc the de serted habitations formerly owned by "Rebels, who are now refugees. • Yesterday, as some of the men were marching to ward the Chattahoochee river, they saw ,In the dis tance pillars of smoke rising aloe" g the banks—the bridges were in flames. Says one, hitching his mus ket a bit on his shoulder In a free raid easy way, " I say, Charley, I believe Sherman bas set the river on arc." "Beckon not," replied ,the other, with the same indifference. "If ho has, it's all right." And an they pass 'along, obeying orders, not knowing what Is before them, but belleveing in their leader. Destruction at the Ralissuid. yrota Kinn ton to Atlanta the rails have bent ta ken up on tie road, tires hat about them, and the iron twisted into all aorta of corms ; thus they are left, never to be straightened again. Me secesh In habitants are in agony of wonder at all This queer maneuvering. It appears as if we Intended CC9CII2- tlng Atlanta, but our troops are 'taking the wrong direction for the hopes and purposes of these people. Atlanta is entirely . deserted of haulm beings, ex cepting. a few soldiers hero and there.. 'The - bonsea are vamnti -there le no trade or trellis of any kind; the streets are empty: iteattliful rosin bloom in the gardens of tine houses, but, a terrible stillness-and solitude cover it all, depressing the ;hearts even-or those who ure glad to destroy it,. ; Id your , peaceful homes at the North you cannot conceive how these people have angered to! thelterimei.. A.thgatA ULM*, Night of the tun Norraim Agniadsatinifal eratacle,tf. pew* to, th e - MONTROSE, SITSQ. CO., PA., tuiSDAY, JANUARY 3, 1865. beholder In this beautiful city, now In Baines. By order, the Chlet-Engineer has destroyed by pnwder and fire all the storehouses, depot buildings and ma chine shops. The heaven Is one expanse of lurid tire; the air 1s filli.•d with fl ilg, higrelnz 34Y --- .coYeripgTitcres are In ru- 4. ~rniistantthere is a atm de iunatinn or the smothered burning sound of explo diug shells and powder concealed in the buildings, and thenthe sparks and flames shoot away nia into the black and red roof, =altering the cinders tar and wide. ' These are the machine-chops where have been forged and cast Rebel cannon, shot and shell, that have carried death to many a brave defender of our nation's honor. These warehouses have been there ceptacle of munitions of war, stored, to be used for our destruction. The city, which next to Richmond, has furnished more material for prosecuting the war than any other in the South, exists no more as a means for the enemies of the Union. A brigade of Massachusetts soldiers are the only troops now left in the town. They will be the last to leave It. To-night I Imairi the really fine band of the Thirty-third Massachusetts playing " John Brown's soul goes marebing on," by the lights of the burning buildings. I have never beard that no ble anthem when it was so grand, so solemn, so inspiring. The March to Milledgeville. Muzurtaevrtia, Nov. Sith, 1861. We are in full possession of the capital of the State of Georgia, and without firing a gnu in its conquest On Friday last the Legislature, which bad been in Reston, hearing of our approach, hastily decamped without any adjournment. The legislative panic spread among the citizens to such an extent as to depopulate the place, except of a few old gentlemen and ladies and the nog - rocs ; the latter welcoming our approach with ecstatic exclamations of joy : "Brass de Lord! tanks be to the Almighty God, the Yanks is conic ; de day ob jubilee bob arribed ;" and then accompanied their words with rather embar rassing hugs, which those nearest the sidewalks re ceived quite liberally. Gen. Slocum, with the 30th Corps, first entered the city- arrived by way of Madison, having accom plished Ida Mission of destroying the railroads and valuable bridges at Madison. The fright of the leg islature, as described by witnesses, must have been comical In the extreme. They little imagined the movement of oar left wing, hearing first of the ad vance of Kilpatrick on the extreme right toward Ma con; and supposed that to be another raid. What their opinion was when Howard's army appeared at McDonough it would be difficult to say ; and their astonishment must have approached insanity when ' the other two columns were heard frotn—one di rected toward Augusta and the other swiftly maretr ing straight upon their devoted city. It seemed as if they were surrounded upon all sides except toward the east, and that then- doom was weird. With the certain punishment tar their crimes looming np before them, they sought every possible means of escape. Private effects, house hold furniture, books, pictures, everything was con veyed to the depot, and leaded Into the cars until they were filled and heaped, and the flying people could not find standing room. Any and every price was obtained for a vehicle.— A thousand dollars was cheap for a common buggy, and men rushed about the street' in agony of fear lest they should "fall victims to the ferocity of the Yankees." Several days of perfect quiet passed, alter this exo dus, when, on a bright, sunshiny morning, a regi ment entered the city, with a bandplaying nation.] airs, which music had many a day since been hushed In the capital of Geergia. What Sherman did at Milledgeville. But few of the troops were marched through the city. Some two or three regiments were detailed under the orders of the engineers to destroy certain property d es ignated by the general commanding.— The magezines, arsenals , depot buildinga, factories I of one kind awl another, with storehouses contain ing large amounts of government property, and some 1,700 hales of cotton beamed. Private horses were respected everywhereeven those of noted Rebels; and I heard of no Instance of pillage or insult to the inhabitants. One or two of the latter, imown as h.av lug been in the Rebel army, were made prisoners of war, but the surgeons at the hospitals, the principal of the ituftemu . is 2251Mt i l l ata Laammtaita throughout the city. Gem Sherman is at the Executive Mansion, its for mer occupant having with extremely bad grace fled hisdistinguished visitor., taking with him the entire furniture of the heeding. As Gen. Sherman travels with a mtnage, (a roll of blankets, and haver sack full of hardtack,) which is as complete for a life out in the open air as la a palace, this discourtesy of Gov. Brown was not a serious inconvenience. Gen. Sherman's opening move in the present cam paign has been successful in the highest degree. At drat moving his Army in three columns, with a col umn of cavalry on his extreme right, upon eccentric fines, he diverted the attention of the enemy. ea eses he concentrated his fon...at catrettle points, Macon ertaa.eensta, leaving unimpeded the progress of. he main body. In this campaign-4h° end of which does not yet appear—it is not the purpose of the , General to spend his time before fortified cities, nor I yet to incomber his wagons with wounded men.— His instructions to Kilpatrick were to demonstrate I against Macon, getting within five miles of the city. A Fight. The roads each column was to follow were care fully designated, the number of miles each day to be traveled, and the points of rendezvous were given at a certain date. All of these conditious were fulfilled to the letter. Slocum, with the Twentieth corps, ar rived at Milledgeville on the 22d instant, preceding Davis, with the Fourteenth corps, one day. On the 1 same Kilpatrick struck the Macon and Western road, destroying the bridge at Walnut Creek. The day following, Howard, with the Fifteenth and Seven teenth corps, arrived at Gordon, and began the de struction of the Georgia Central railroad. It aide near here that the most serious fight of the I campaign occurred to this date. Gem Wolcot, in command of a detachment of cavalry and a brigade of infantry, was thrown forward to Griswoldville, toward Macon, for demonstrative purposes merely. I The enemy, some five thousand strong, advanced upon our troops, who had thrown up temporary breast - Works, with a section of a battery in position. The cavalry fell slowly back on either flank of the brigade, protecting them from attack in fl ank and rear. The Rebels are composed of militia chiefly, although a portion of Hardee's old corps was pre sent, having been brought up from Savannah. With that ignorance of danger common to new troops, the Rebels rushed upon our veterans with the greatest fury. They were received with grape shot and musketry at point blank range, our sot diem firing coolly, while shouting derisively to the quivering columns to come on, as if they thought the viable thing a nice joke. The Rebels resumed ' the attack, hat with the same fatal results, and were soon in full leaving more than three hundred dead oh the field. Oar loss was some forty killed and weemded, while their killed, wounded and pris oners are estimated to exceed two thousand five hun dred. 'A pretty severe le s ion they have received.— It is said, "Ce ri cot quc premier pea qui conk."— This that, step has been a most expensive one, and mag,lng from the Met that wu have not heart from them since they seem to have interpreted the pro verb ellisrwise than In the recognized sense. Marching On. NEAN TONNILLE STATION, ON TUE GEOI7.OIICILVOLAL RAILROAD, Nov. 27. Since writing the above the army has moved for , ward all along the line. The Rebels seem to have I understood, but too late, that ft was not Sherman's intention to make s-serious attack upon Maeran.- 1 They have, however, succeeded in getting Wheeler across the Oconee at a point below the railroad bridge. We first became aware of their presence in our front by th4struction of several small bridges across Buflalo k, on the two roads leading to Sandersville, or which were advancing the Twenti eth and Fourteenth corps. We were delayed but a few hours. The passage was alto contested by the Rebel cavalry under Wheel er, and they fought our front all the way and Into the streets of Sandersville. The Twentieth Corps had the advance, deploying a regiment as skirmish ers, fOrmhag the remainder of a brigade In Rue of battle on either side of the road. The movement was executed In the handsomest manner, and was so effectual as not to impale the march of the column in.the slightest degree, although the roll of musket ry-witti oncoming. Our loss was not serious, twenty odd killed and wounded. Near the Oconee. As the Twentieth Corps entered the town they were met by the Fourteenth, whose head of column arrived at the same moment. While these twoto*s had met with the obstructions above mentioned, the army under Gen. Howard were attempting to throw. a pontoon across the Oconee at the Georgia Central' Railroad bridge. Here they met a- force under the command of Gen. Wayne, which was composed pf a portion of Wheeler's cavalry, militia, and a band of convicts who had been liberated from the penitenti ary upon the condition that they would join the army:: The moat of these desperadoes have been taken prisoners, dressed in their Cate prison clothing.— " Gen. Sherman has turned thentloose; believing that Gov. Brown had not got the full benefits of his lib erelity.•• The Rebels did net ;make a remarkably Stem defence bridge, for, Iloveard was able to. cress his army yesterday,' and commenced breaking railroad again to•day.- fact, till of the army except one corps, are engaged ha this tame -work. allergen, With bit array, was - hardly able to, reach , this point when he met Gen. Hardee, who has wunati„oed to get around here from Macon. -- Otif troopo, struck the - Mil station few Mari lifter , the filiti!.-1 17:173 The Army. " Fre ii;l2 [Thanksgivln' Day Kept. We had been 61d that the eonntry was Vary poor east of but - our experience has been a do-. nafati ilig'aronlamic contradiction of the statement The cattle trellis arc getting so large that wo find difficulty In driving them along. Thanksgiving Day was very generally obsereltd In the army, the troops scorning chickana in the plentitude of turkeys with whith they hare supplied themselves. Supplies Abundant. Vegetables of all kinds, and in unlimited quanti ties, were at band, and the soldiers gave thanks as soldiers may and went merry as only soldiers can be. In truth, sitfar as the gratification of the stomach goes, the troops are pursuing a continuous thanks giving. In addition to fowls, vegetables and meats, many obtained a delicious sirup made from sorghum, which Is cultivated on all the plantations, and stored away In laves troughs and hogsheads. The mills here and there furnish fresh supplies of flour and meal, and we hear little or nothing of " hard - tack" —that terror to weak mastication. Owes the sec tions of country lately traversed I find very little cultivation of cotton. The commands of Davis ap pear to have been obeyed ; and earl ergo droves of cattle are turned nightly into the immense fields of ungathered corn to eat their till, while the granaries are crowded to overflowing with both oats and corn. We have also reached the sand regions, so that the fall of rain has no terrors, the roads are excellent, and would become firmer from a liberal wetting.— The rise of the rivers will not bother ns much, for each army corps has Its pontoon, and the launching of Its boats is a matter of an hour. Howell Cobb'. Plantation. Just before his entrance into Milledgeville General Sherman camped on one of the plantations of How ell Cobb. It was a coincidence that a Macon paper, ' containing Cobb's address to the Georgians as Gen et commanding, was received the same day. This plantation was the property of Cobb's wife, who was a Demar. Ido not know that this Cobb ever claim ed any great reputation as a man of piety and many virtiles, but I could not bele contrasting the call tl [t on his fellow-citizens to " rise and defend their lib erties, homes, it e, from the step of the Invader, to burn and destroy everything in his front, assail him on all sides," and all that, with his own conduct here, and the wretched condition of his negroes and their quarters. We found his granaries well tilled with corn - and wheat, part of which was distributed and eaten by our animals and men. A large supply of sirup made from sorgum (which we found at nearly every plan tation on our march) was stored in an out-house.— This was also disposed of to the soldiers and the poor decrepit negroes, which this humane, liberty ' loving Major-General left to die In this place a few days ago. Becoming alarmed, Cobb reat ao fa.' , pram and rentOeed an uortnne-vomettllMles, pones, cows and minces. He left here some fifty old men— cripples, and women and children—with clothing scarce covering their nakedness, with little or no food, and without means of procuring any. We found them cowering over the fireplaces of their miserable huts, where the wind whirled through the crevices between the logs,frightcned at the approach of the Yankees, who, they had been told, would kill them. A more forlorn, neglected set of human be luga I never saw. General Sherman distributed to the negroes with his own hands the provisions left here, and assured them that we were their friends, and that they need not be afraid that wo were their foes. One old man answered him : "I sposo dat you's true ; bet mama, you'll go 'way to-morrow, and anodder white man will come." He haft never known anything but per secutions and fears from the white man, and had been kept in such ignorance of us that he did not dare put faith In any white man. Rebel Lies to Negroes. This terrorism, which forms so striking a feature Of Slavery, has hod marked Illustrations ever slum we left Atlanta. The ncgroes were told that as soon as we got them into our clutches they were put into the front of the battle, and we killed them If they did not fight; that we threw the women and chil dren into the Chattahoochee, and when the build ings were barrio' in Atlanta, we filled them with ne grim to be roasted and devoured by the flames.— These stories, widellampear so absurd to us, are not 4allafigaWrittiliiiPAlWllliiMarifitYit6 cti superstition. In most any other Instance, such biody tales would have frightened them entirely meat our eight to the woods and other biding plac es; but they assert, with much earnestness and glee, that " massa hates de Yankees, and he's no free ter we; so we am de Yankee bas fren'a." Very simple logic, that; bat it is sufficient for the negroes. What the Negroes Think. Near Covington, one Judge Harris has a large plantation ; before we arrived It was well stocked ; I can't answer for Its condition afterward- A jollier set of negroes I nave. 1a... than hi. .....n. ...bon the OHM coats came along. Horrible stories of their cruelty to the negroes were also told by their mas ters to frighten them, but the negroes never put one word of faith in them. I asked Judge Harris's head man: " Well, how do you like the Yankees?"— "Like him! bully, belly, belly. rise wanted to see 'em long time; heard a heap 'bout 'em. Say, Sally, dese here be gentlemen data 'lamina" A compli ment to our soldiers, which they DO doubt would have appreciated coned they have heard Mr. Lewis. " Yes, ear, I'se hope de Lord will prosper dem and Mr. Sherman." " Why do you hope that the Lord will help the Yankees?" aßecanse I tinks, and so we all Units, dat you're down here In oar Interests." " You're about right there; did yon ever hear that President Lincoln freed all the slaves?" "No, sar, I never heard such a tine ; do white folks nebber talk 'fore black men ; day mighty free from dat." In other parts of the South the neemes I have seen seem to understand there la a man named Lin coln, who had the power to tree them and had ex ercised it. We have reached here a stintum of Ig norance upon the subject. All knowledge of that nature has not only been kepi from the blacks, but only a few of the whites are well Informed. The lieutenant commanding the cseart of Gen. Sherman was born and has always lived in Milledgeville, is an officer in the first Alabama cavalry regiment, tells me that he never saw a copy of the New- York Tri bune until he joined our army. His history, by the way, is a most Interesting one, and will one day be wo'rth the telling. Ills adherence to the Union ar my grew out of his natural silhorrence of Slavery, whose errors he had wltnessid from childhood.— Ills name is Snelling. A young man of good educa tion, of high Integrity, simnlahearted, brave, and has been most useful to the came of his country. Gen. Sherman Invites all 14h-bodied negroes (oth ers could not make the march) to Jobe the column, and lie takes especial pleasure When they join the prcicassion on Wine occasions letting them they are free ; that'Massa Lincoln has given them their liber ty, and that they can go wherethey please ; that it they earn their freedom they, should have It—but that Massa Lincoln had given ft to them anyhow.— They all seem to understand that the proclamation of freedom had made them free, and I have met but fel instances where they &loot say they expected the Yankees were coming dawn sometime or other, and very generally they areposseased with the Idea that we are fighting, for theinand that their freedom is the object of the war. Thh notion they got from hearing the talk of their =stirs. "Stick in dar," was the entry exclamation of one of a party of negroes to anotttr, who was asking too many questions of the °Mao - who had given them permission to join the coleys'. "Stick In dar, it's all right; we're gwine along we're free." Another retitled to a question, "Oh yasa, mama, de people hereabouts were heap frightened when dey heard you'se coming; dry dusted out yer sud den." Pointing to the Atlanta tad Augusta Railroad, Which bad been destroyed, the question was asked, " It took a longer time to build this railroad than it does to destroy it?" , "I would think It did, maeia In dat ar woods ov er dar is buried ever so waxy ' black men who were killer!, ear, yea, killed,a working on dat mad—whip ped to death. I seed 'em, sat" "Does the man live here who beat them?" "Oh no, ear; he's dun go rat Meg time." , Destruction of Railroads. By the way, the destruction of railroads in this campaign has been most thorough. The destruction of such lung lines of road necessarily requires time, which in an expedition of thla kind Is valuable In the highest degree. The ordinary method of sit.- truction was to place the rails across a pile of burn ing sleepers, their own weight bending them: Method of Destrtertion. - But this does not injure the Mil so much but that It may be heated and straightened again.. Instru-. Mesta have been made • one Is I clasp, which locks tinder the rail. It Pais ring in the top into which Is inserted a lang lever, end the rail Is thusdipped from the sleepers. When the Mil has becomd heat ed a wrench is applied, whith tits close over the ends, of the full • by turning them hi opposite dime- Gotta the ' milis so twisted that even a rolling ma chine could trot bring it back into shape, -In this manner have been destroyed settle thirty miles of rails which lay hi the city of Ailanta,and also all the ' tails on this Augusta and Atlanta road from the last. amed plate to Madison ; and thus far the Georgia Central road, from ii few miles east of Macon to Ter ryville Rhttion, where I am now writing. • ')lhe Muth to tile Ogee. , a. /14„ .. . . JORitSON'll ON THE Bourn t.DH otorjez t , Alaortau Rattail:Ma), Roy. ;0, 1864, - , - I the Deitti We bi, e ..uot beard - 6ota th 9 tlcAlf On , . aide of the 111/road - &Lae it =as at Bandersviliss; ' nor tona !Wield* ma tot% sY44 t4ou Inaufsq Tharp di C Js • tbrouitili f...negro. who:reports that the son of his insister rode tile irsv from Louisville in great .haste reporting that Wheeler' was Sgbting the Yan kees, whet weft advancing on Augusta. Veit fillet--1 man's second step in this campaign will have been equally successful with tHe first, if be Is able to cross the Ogeekbee to-morrow, without ranch opposition. Davis and Kllpatrick's movement has been a blind In order to facilitate the passage over the Ogeechee cif the main body of the army, which, for two days past,_ half been =arching on parallel roads south of the railroad. Thus Sr we have reason to believe that the Rebels are Ignotant of our principal movement, and are trembling with fear that Augusta is our object, Kilpatrick is doing 'the same work he ac complished with such high honor when covering our right, flank in tha early days of the campaign. His column now acts as a curtain upon the extreme left, throtigh which the enemy may in vain attempt to penetrate. The most pathetic scenes occur upon our line of march daily and hourly. Thousands of negro wo men join the column, some carrying household truck; others, and many of them there are, who bear the .l, heavy burthen of children in their arms, While older boys and girls plod by their aide. All these women and children are ordered back, heartrending though it be to mime them liberty. They wont go. One begs that she may go to see her husband and ehildretti. at Savannah. Long peens ago she was forced from them and sold. Another has heard that her boy was at Macoti, and she is "done gone with grief goin' on four years," But the majority accept the advent of the Yankees as the fulfillment of the millenial prophecies. The "day of jubilee," the hope and prayer of a lifetime, has come. They cannot be made to understand that they must remain behind, and they are satisfied only when Gen. Sherman 'tells them—as he does every day—that we shall come back for them soma time, and that they must be patient until the proper hour of deliverance comes. Thu other clay a woman with a child in her arms was working .her way along amongst the teams and crowds of cattle and horsemen. An officer called to her kindly: " Where are you going, aunty." She looked up into his face with a hopeful, be seeching look, and replied: "'lse gwine velum yOu'se gwinc, massy." At a house a few miles from Milledgeville we halted for an hour. In an old hut I found a negro and his wife, both of them over GO years / old. In. the talk which endued nothing was said which led me to sup pose that either of them was anxious to leave their mistress, who, by the way, was a sullen, cruel-look ing woman,whon all at once the old negress stmt' iat ened herself up, and her face, which a monacnt be fore was almost stupid in Its expression, assumed a tierce, almost devilish, aspect. Pointing her shlet,g u.tays.- rmger to the old man crouclmdlto Dm cooler of the Ilre-place, she hissed out: " What for you sit ear; yon spose I wait sixty years for Mitten? Don't yer see de door open. Pee follow my child; I not stay. Yes, nodder day I goes long wid dese people; yes sar, I walks till I drop in my tracks" A more terrible sight I never beheld: . I can think of nothing to compare with it, except Charlotte Cushman's Meg Merrillies. Rem brandt only could have painted the scene, with Its dramatic surroundings. It was Mar this plac.t that several factories were burned. It was odd to see the delight of the negroes at the destructlon of places known only to them as task-houses, where they had groaned under the lash. Areros.tlas agatelime. SawrnforoF Gnoaomeesmat. RAILROAD, I I November 80 With the ei'reption of the Fifteenth corps, our army Is across the Ogeeettee, and without fighting a battle. This river is a lino of great strength to the Rebels, and they might have made its passage a cost ly effort to us, but they haVe been outwitted and outmaneuvered. I am more convinced than ever that if Gen_ Sherman Intends taking his army to the seaboard, It Is evidently his policy to avoid a,battle, or any contest which will delay him in the estab lishment of a new base of operations and supplies; If he is able to establish a new base, and at the same time destroy all the lines of communication from the Rebel armies with the great cities, so that they will he as much Isolated as if those strongholds were In our hands, we wiffhave aceorteithed,the .4 . • ~,areiraeitiles&'- --1 76ioriatignata; Savannah or Charle s ton are of no special value to us, except that either one of the latter may be useful as a base of supplies. One andall of them are of the most vital importance to the Rebels, as the source from or through which they draw their stores or ammunition and the largest part of their supplies. We have heard bp-day from Kilpatrick and from M lieu. Kilpatrick made a splendid march, fighting Wheeler all the way to Wayne:thorough, destroying the railroad bridge across Briar Creek, between Augusta and Millen. ,It is with real grief that I write he was unable to accomplish the release of our prison r, .I t appears that for some time past the Rebels have een muerte, prisoners from Millen; the officers have been sent to Columbia, month and the privates further south, somewhere on the Gulf Railroad. Tbe Paseage of the oga:oboe We have had very little difficulty in crossing the Ogeechee. The Twentieth corps moved down the railroad, destroying it to the bridge. The Seven teenth corps covered the river at this point, where a light bridge was only partially destroyed. It was easily repaired, so that the Infantry and cavalry could easily pass over It, while theFlnts and ar tillery used the pontoons. The 0 ee is about sixty yards in width at this point. tis approached on the northern and western side through swamps., Alllich would be impassable were it not for the sandy soil, which packs solid when the tv , ter covers the roads, although in places there are treacherous quick sands which we are obliged to corduroy. Ina Fog . sonn the fog, which settles like a blanket over the swamps and forests or the river bottoms, abut down upon the Beetle, and so dense and dark was it that torches were of very little sae, and men were di rected here and there by the voice. "Jim, are you there?" shouts one. "Yes, I am here," is the impatient answer. "Well, then, go straight ahead." "Straight alumdt 'where in thunder Is 'straight ahead?' " An Original Character At this station we came across an old man named Wells, who was the most original character I ever met. Ite was depot-Chaster in the days when there was a railroad here. He Is a shrewd old man, and seemed to understand the merits of the war question perfectly. He said: ' " They say you are retreating, bat it I/3 the stran gest sort of a retreat I ever saw. Why, dog bite them, the newspapers have been tying in this way all along. They ears are whipping the Federal armies, end they alters fall back after the battle is over. If was that aeldee that first opened my eyes. Our army was oilers whipping the Feds. and we alters fell back. I alters told 'em it was a d—d hum bug, and now ,_by —4-, I know It, for here you are, right on old John Wells's place: hogs, potatoes corn and fences all gone. I don't find any fault. l expected it all. , " Jett Davis and the rest," her continued, "talk about splitting the Union. Why, if South LUrolina had gone out by heraelf, she would have been split to four pieces by this time. Splitting the Union I Why, .d.-n it, the State of Georgia is being split right through from end to end. Ills these rich fellows ,who are ms - this , war, and keeping their precious bodies out of bargee way. There's John Franklin went through here the other day, running away from your army. I could have played dominoes on his coatrtalls. There's my poor brother, sick with smallpox at Macon, workin. , for 511 a month, and hasn't got a cent of the d—estuff for a year. 'Leven dollars p month and 11,000 bullets a minute. I don't believe in it, Sir. "My wife came from Canada, and I kind o' thought I would somethne go there to live, but was alters afraid of the lee and cold; Nit I can tell you this country is getting too cussed hot for me. Look at my fenee-ralls a-burning there. I think I can stand the mild better. g " I heard as howthey cut down the trees across your road up-couutiy and burnt the bridges; why, (dog bite.thelr h ides.') one of you Yankees can take up a trte and carry.it off, tops and all; and there's that bridge you put kerma the river in less than two hours—they might, as well try to stop the Ogeechee as you yantmes. ' - "The blasted raseala who burnt this yere bridge thbnght, they did a big thing • a, natural born fool cut in two tied more sense in'either end than imfor them. ; "To pring back the good old times," he Bald," it'll take the help of Divine Providence, a heap of rain, and a deal Of elbow grease, to fix things up again." r 4110- ' - ' glysrruaa'alfaaeamers. SeAsnonovon, GA., Dee. 3, 1964. _ . . Pivoted upon Millen the army baa swung slowly mund,from its eastern course and is note moving In six coluninti upon parallel roads southward. Until yesterday U was impossible for the Rebels to decide whether ornot It was Gen Sherman's Intention to march upon Angasta. Kilpatrick had destroyed the bridge aboye Wayriesborough, and failing back had again (trained, supported by the •Fourteenth Army 'Corps, under Gen, Davis. South or this column, moving eastward thretuth Birdsville, was the Twen tieth Corps, commanded by Oen. ulocurn. Yet far ther 'sauth the Bthrenteentit Corps; Gen. Blair In command, followed the railroad, destroying it as he advanced.!Plod , and south of the Ogeechee the Fifteenth Corps, Gen. Osterhaus in immediate cow. mend, bat. under We eye of Geu, liowar‘tuta moved In two cologne: trllA t nor' vorti i to tql pi pa ti#4,l4Toinm so!cy and shield to the real movements!las, it been Valuable for Hardee to interPeikegir - soottaiti obstacle to the advance of the mitiaasaurai" Qu i r. V.lrnyALPl.r_l4l2Lio,g_hes - siWaYs been a strong arm thrust Out In advance, rally to put in chancery, any•lbrce which: might attempt to get within its guard. The Rebel councils of war appear to have beet completely dedeived, for we hear it reported that Bragg and Longstreet *re at Augusta,wtth ten than-. mad man, made up of militia, two or three South Carolina regiments and a portion of Hampton's Lei &In v -sent. there for one month. It is possible, novt that the curtain tins been withdrawn, and as irmay Aln,.*....rthrit we are marching straight for Savannah; their gener-...., with th eir tsn thousand,- issiy-attema to harms our rear, butileyittraccomplich nothq but the lose of a few lives, without checking out • work 60 admirably performed by our left wing, BO far as it obliged the Rebels in our front to retreat, by threatentnei their rear, now becomes the office of the Ffteenth Corps, our right wing, off the right bank of the river. Its two cob: mad ate moving one day's march in advance of the main body of the army, utdrchhig down the imolai/1a between the Savannah and Ogetcheu rivers. Tim nee .Intelti' and value of these flank 'movements first or the light wing with Kilpatrick's cavalry, then of Dada and Kilpatrick on the left, and now of Howard on out right, is because we cannot run over and demolish any and all the Rebel force in Georgia. They could not for a moment stand before this army upon any ordinary battle ground, but a very small force of in fantry or cavalry at a river could delay a column. half a day, and Iterchance longer, and as our soldiers have got tired of chickens, sweet potatoes, sorghum. itc., and have been promised oysters on this halfsheg, oyster roasted, stewed, &c., in short, oysters, they don't care to be delayed. The Georgia Railroads. The railroad which has been receiving our Imme diate attention within the last week, is altogotlier the best I have seen In the State, though the rail [had( Is not so heavy as the T on the Augusta and Atlanta road The rail on the Georgia Central Is partially laid with the U, and a portion of light T rail, but it Is all fastened to parallel stringers, *bleb are again fixed to ties. The station-trouscs are generally built of brick, In the most substantial Manner. The very large depot at Millen was .a Wooden building of!Mal form, and admirably Ovule. It made the b gcattlre I have seen since we left Atlanta, and deli ghted the soldiers amazingly. The taste fer conflagration has been so cultivated In this community of late, that any small affair attracts very little attention. An. Irishman, the other day, while engaged in the useful occupation of twisting rails, remarked: • over, Geri. Sherman will buy a coal mine in Pennsylvania, and occupy his spare time with smoking , elgars and destroying and rebuilding railroads.' Great corn Field* We daily traverse Immense corn•flelds covering from one hundred to one thousand acres. These were once devoted to the cultivation of cotton, and It is surprising to see bow the planters have car ried out the wishes or order of the Rebel Govern- went In this respect.' There has been a largo amount of cotton destroyed in this campaign, but it must have been hut a small portion even of the limited crop raised, as the destruction has chiefly been away from the railroads. As near ea I can learn two thirds of this has been sent over the Georgia Central Railroad to Augusta by way of stuteni from thence a limited amount has been transported to Wilming ton for trans-Atlantic shipment ; the balance yet re mains in the vicinity of Columbia, South Carolina. It is well ascertained that the country west of Sa vannah river is expected to furnish soppUes for the Rebel armies in the, west., although corn and beef are sent from this district to "Lee's army, yet ho draws the bulk of his supplies 'from the States east of the Ravannah, and there is no region so prolific as that about Columbia. I have digressed thus far from the history of the Georgia campaign, because I wish to correct the impression so general at the North that their Eastern armies are fed from the South West. One thing ha most certain, neither the West nor the East will draw any supplies from the counties in this State traversed by our army for a long time to come • our work has been the next thing to annibi anassossexhriserii it signets. As mentioned above, this place is five miles above Millen Junction. A space of ground some SOO feet square, enclosed by a stockade, without any cover ing whatever, was the hole where thousands of our bravo soldiers have been confined for many mouths past. F.xposed to heavy dews, the biting frosts, the pelting rains, without so much as a board,or tent even, to protect those poor naked fellows, who were almost always robbed of their clothing when captured. Some of them have adopted a wretched alternative, and dug boles In the ground, Into which they have crept at times What wonder that we found the evidence that 750 had died there! From what misery did dcall release them! I can realize it all now as I could not even when listening ry mo .tory of prisoners who had fled from this hell; escaped the davits b, hot pursuit ; foiled the keen scent of the track-hounds put upon timir path. Here is the uselessly cruel pen where my brothers ba•o been tortured with erptisnre and starvation. God certainly will visit the authors of all this crime with his terrible lightning. Jeff. Davis knew that the Northern people would see the condition of the victims of Belle Island. How fearful must be the condition of those who are removed far from the hope of exchange! You at the North may not feel the ' necessity of retaliation, •and may continue to clothe warmly, feed plentifully, and comfortably house the Rebel prisoners, who are happier far than If free with their commands; but you must not expect those who have and those who may endurp those agonies, to feel or act with the earns extravagance of gener osity. Concentration at Ogeechee...A Ocieecetr.e Cuenca, Dec. 6, 1861. The army for two days past has been concentrating. at this point, which is the narrowest point of the peninsula. Den. Howard is still on the west side of the Ogeechee, but is within supporting distance, and has ample means of creasing the river should it be necessary, which Is not at all probable. Kilpatrick has again done noble work. On • Sunday last, while marching toward Alexander, for the purpose of more thoroughly completing the destruction of the rail road bridge crossing Briar Creek, be found Wheeler on his way near Waynesborough. Ito fought him oweral thous punishing him severely in each instance, i driving his infantry and 'Cavalry before him through Waynesborough and be and the bridge,..whlch he co npletely destroyed. He rejoined the main. ody of our army then marching southward. lulling Bloodhounds. A significant feature of this campaign, which has not before been mentioned In this diary, received a marked Illustration yesterday. Except In a few In stances, private residences have not been destroyed. Yesterday we passed the plantation of a Mr. Stubbs. The house, cotton-gin, press, corn-ricks., stables, everything that cfluld burn, was in flames, and in the door-yard lay the dead bodies of several blood hounds, that had been used to track and pall down negrocs and our escaped prisoners. And wherever our army has 'passed, everything in- the shape of a dog has been killed. The soldiers -and Officers am determined that no more flying fugitives, white men or negroes, shall be followed by track-hounds that come within the reach of their powder and ball: A Bold Movement. Gen. Howard has just returned from a. very one- cessful movement. Fearing that we shotdd detach a force for the purpose of destroying the Gulf Road, which they arc using to its utmost capacity Just now, they pushed a force across the Ogmbee.. While this 'body were covered by a strong riverside line, Gen. Come, of Altoona memory - , showed his division be tween the Little and Great Ogeechee, thirteen miles in advance of the main column to the canal, which rues from the Ogee chce to the Savannah River. Re bridged the canal, crossed it with his division, and now holds a position out of which Rowi'lt army could not drive him. This bold step has forced the Rebels to evacuate the line of worhs stretching from river to river, and they have now fairly sought refuge In the fortid catiens proper to Savanna h Cknlng In Upon Savannah, Daemons 9.—One officer and *several men were severely wounded by the exploetou of sliel wh a ic hijd tor pedoes burled and concealed in the road, nh was an attempt at cowardly murder. In tho'' entrance to forts, or In a breach made in a line of Works, such implements may be used to defeat the assault, but the laws of war do not Justify an attempt !of the kind which has been so disastrous toil* • The pris oners were marched over the road and removed two of these treacherous, death-dealing instru ments. Strong Linea of Rebel Work,. Maus= 10.—The army has advanced dome alz miles taday, and have met everywhere A stro ng rgn line of works, which appear to be held by ale force; with thittptwo pound guns In oposition; their line, although extended, is more cagily defended, because of is succession of Impassable swamps Which • stretch across the pelnsula. All the openings between these morasses and the roads which lead through them are strongly fortified, and thin approaches Wive been con tested vigorously, 'but with little loss to !up, Gen. Elherrnan seems fs. avoid the sacrifice of life, and doubt his making any serious attack ,until he has communicated with the fleet. Lupins* of Fort ItleAlllster.; Diciesima 13.—AtFort McAllister. TO:day I have been si spectitor to one of those &riot& eights where the actors posing tbraujith the ittottleadul orded of Are which - WIWI the Nagler Ornit r ians Cf!Klaa WPM" IMP OW _ - . • - ••Z' 02.00 per ann 'ln Fidlrout.'L- The Second Division of, tb.r, 7,:ift e e n th cokin.,b2 T o marched to-4g. ..file,tarmlles; and, without. the as. • u!'" 2 .7:iritillery, have crossed an ppm:fawn: of six hundred yards, under a fierce fire of twenty heavy guns, crawling through A thick abatis; crossed a ditch of great depth, at whose bottom WerB:drirm thick palisades, torn them away, surmounted tho crest and palisades, shot and bayoneted the gannets who refused to surrender at their poets,,. end_ planted the Stars and Stripes upon' the work in. triturrPh. The assault was made by s single line, 'which ltP" . proachr4l the fort from all sides but that Of the river at the eama' instant, never foray instant wasering,, no man lurking shelter, but acing the Are =ray. • The explosion of torpedoes at this point did: he: deter them. General Sherman'a _9l4"...entkin and .Mates harri-te ue sd mid, "Carty the place by assault to-night, if possible," they resolted to fulfill their old commander's Irish, and they dhl it. Perhaps in the history of tilts war there bin not, been a more strlkZ i l example of the • evidence of quick determined on. Had we wailed, put 'up en trenchments, shelled the place, and made the tuitral approaches, we should have lost maisy mom !lives, and time was invaluable. As It ls, our entire loss is not more than ninety men killed and wounded, and are haves }mined a necessity, is brad of supple& Our whole army are eager to emulate such a glorious ex ample, and their eaprlt du corps has been raised to the grandest bight. MR. RAMEY PROPOSES THE MUM= OF THE SENOR= BADrel; REV, Welt is in tho stet uv Noo Gersy,) Nov. 37th. 1 I reed in the Scepters, (a book I alluz perooze whenever I'm bad rick) .ettlain about ten tribes of farel that wuz lost . A lies struck me. I see a way by with the present unholy, devastatln war kin be stopped, and niter given the matter doo cotudders awn, I'm conwhast uv Its kezihility. It Is ESIIGRASIIEN I The &intern branch nv the Dimocratic party ought to be convinat, by this time, that theyski a match for the Abliahnists a tightln, jest ez the No t r thern wing hen desidveted that it rant no match far cm a votin. The fact iz the entire 'plan nr repalrin the old temple nv Dintocrisy with seciesshentnorter hez very much the appearance tar a faleyoor. My father, (a Noo Gersy Dimokrat,) wont spilled lamp Ile on a 1100 kote. lie aakt a nabor, who mut mac hos, wat wood talk Lt out, and ho told Wei sulphuric./ acid. The ole man got some, and poured thou, The next day ho went over to his adviser In great wrath, with the remnant& lithe teaks. , wee sue No gen men, S yOO tell me that this yore acid wood enulikate grease frtim kote?"mi " Certainly ; didn't It ?" "John, why didn't you likewise tell me that it wood also cradikate the kote 1" Alas the remedy Dimoemsy swallowed to cant the cramp colic it got In 1860 Ia =win. Its bowils.— I t is cane its ilia ea stryknin doz hyderphoby in a dorg. tesoom. 311 lice Jr Mcziko. Leta be made, the terms uv which air that }at nv the people nv the ole Yoonithi Stets en heti nudd up tiler Individjlle!! minds that they can't live under Ablishlon tyranny, abel her the peel* uv leevba with all thergoods andehattels. Then we'll go to Mexiko, upset that offshoot nv European monerky, Maxemtlyen, and set up pure Democrisy, with Ekel Rites and !Revery ez the corner stunts. Sum may obgeet on the Ground that mavemllyen is by this time 2 hefty 2 lao Meld. Here la the Lame we kin kalklleit on: • Northern dimokrata in' Sandy in corm uv deans, • Z:10,000 'No k r e the n= rn 43Imokrats at home who !peek, °Ms under Mick Lel" 1,460,000 Eintluirn army, say 200,000 Grand toile, 4E60,000 Cood Marhnilyen stand afore deb a array ez that? Not enny. Bat see won, ov wet loose wood them peese dim okmts and draft skeedaddlers be to a mllltery_ expo. dishnn—they won't nth- MI gentle trend, Jerson D. blows biz biznis. Let him whisper in 2 ear ears "PAM grziplatfu Pox thmttaw' Oit wood a cheerio site 9 see them a chargln up the steeps or Shipultepce, with the insplrin cry, " Post steep s !" Every won of them would bee ho ro. There we'd set up Dtmocrisy agin.The country ov coarse we'd divide; North and South, Free and Slave, ter a Northern Dlmokrat wood feel oneasy in his mind, et he hadn't a south to serve. We'd hold Nehnel Convensinms in the halls nv the Monte moment, and oh woodcut it be soothln 2 agln beer rooms and Nett, and them high-minded feller' a bully-ragin nv as! Methinks. Ea every wnn uv us wood be offla-holders where wood we git constitoomee P Nacher hen perwided. The natives nv that country wood serve admirably. But tha coodcnt understand poor speekent. Troo, but them Meanies wood soot us all the better for not noderstandin English. Whenever a Dlmokrat got cense muff Intl him 2 comperhend our talk, he annr left the party. Giv me the voter who talked his faith on trust—Ws your inquirin mind Chet hen • played the devil with us. 1 shel immejltlp perpose the matter 2 President Davis. - Pernoutum V. Nagar Latt /Leer lie the Church ex the NooDirpewasilen. The following touching story is told by the Mel- bourn (Austinlie) correspondent of the London Tirncr - . "Some weeks back, at the station of Mr. Dugaid Smith, at Horsham, two boys and a girl, aged re spectively the eldest boy nine, the girl seven and the youngest boy five, the children of a carpenter named IDinfr, wandered by themselves into the bush and wore lost They bad been sent out by their mother as they had often gone out on the the same erran t before, to gather broom, and not returning before dark the parent became alarmed, and a search com menced. The father, misted by Mends and neigh bors In large numbers, scoured the country in every direction for nights and days in vain. At length, in despair, the assistance of some aboriginal blaclus. was obtained, these people possessing an alraoit • bloodhound instinct in following up thevery , faintest trucks. The blacks soon came upon tho trams of the little wanderers, expatiating, an thesetrackere al ways do, at every bent twig, or flattensitn ft of grass, on the apparent acting' of the objects of their search. " Here, little One tira , . • sit down, Big one • kneel down, carry him along . ' Here travel all night ,• dart;, not see that bush ; her fall on him." Further on, and more observations. " Hero little one tired again_ ;; big one kneel down ; no able to riuo , it on Ws face." The accuracy of these readings by the blacks waa afterwards curiously corrobated toy the children • themselves. "On the eighth day after they were lost, and long after the extinction of the - Witted hope of their ever hid= again seen alive, the searching party came on them. They are described as having been found lying all in a row on a clump of broom among some trees, the youngest in the middle, carefully wrapped, in his sister's frock. They appeared to be In aeleep and not unpleasant sleep. On. being awoke the. eldest tiled to sit ups-but fell buck. Ills face was so emaciated that his lips would not cover his teeth, and he could only just feebly groan " Father."" Tho youngest, who had suffered least, woke up as from, a dream, and childlike demanded "Father,why . dn't you come for us sooner? - we were coeying , for you." The slater, who was almost quite when lifted up could only mormur, "Cold,M No wonder, at the little creature had stripped her. self of her frock, as the elder boy 5 a 1(1 1 "to corer Fmnk, for he was crying with the cold.'' • . _ " The children have all since done well, and ira rapidly recovering. They were without food, and. by their own account, bad only one drink of water during the whole time they were out, and this was from the Friday of one week until the Saturday of the next week, in all, nine days and eight ulf,htaP A Thom: Anvols.—Adam Slomaker, a , number of years ago, came to thunlingdon Forma and tor tug there for the drat tlino a - pair of antank be oak" ed : ..What's them fort" .- k "To 'snuff tho candle." ~ • - '-- • . The candlejot then needed attention, and Adam with hie thumb and finger plriched oil Itio =ad. au& carefully poked it Into the imagers, 14 1 3i11g : " Well, now them': handy." - .-.- eW" la death's door opened with a - *detail t Would you say a lady was dintaesillotut who was' covered all over vrltlr Wks , Is there say troth In the report that the Ants who live Itt the desert h 2 0 .0 11114 3 1 hair? rff•A Denzocrstro tiotinipontry consoles Itself as follows: "It is no shame to beWng to the tqlnorl , ty, Noah and , his family ware In. lho, minority, , while the vast nasjottty wen t to s dtstntotlo4•'!, • W.-The water Wit 'meat; , the ilr w that•hsa no odor is freshest; and of sit the modifies•: lions of meaner, - thoprost generally Itleasolt There to a man la Boston so' ient's that hie; viire.truthufecturee all the buttatit Atli!? o=4 TAW 4pm Alm' cream of hle jokes . - - _ 'Or Tree peli= front_iffecairte lo the =pan! 131. sainftl!wviiiimmol *IMMO .r. ~-Yr' F'iss~,. lINI • er", NITAIBERI_ BM HABIB IN THE WOODS. tam .^ 1