171 H. H. FR.A.ZLER, Publisher: VOLUME 11. guointoo glitatorg. DR. R L BTAKr.ciLER PH YSICIAN AND BURGEON, bas located at Brooklyn. Bye. qaelliams UOM.ty, Pa. WIG attend mornplly to all calls clth which be may be riveted. Offlat al L. M. Baldwin s. Prooklm, July 10, 16115.—y1. Dit. E. L. GARDNER, 'INT/HOZ/OS AND BIIHOZON, Moats's, Pl. Office °vet E Webby Btars. Bossdt at Besrls's Hotel. , yontross,Jtme 3,1665.4 f GROVES & REYNOLDS, vekeIIIONAMLE TAIL9TIS. Shop over Mimelee' ju awn, Puh/le Amu.. id nevem, June 19,1865. Da. CHARLES DECKIA, PITYRICIAN `l'D SITECIEnfI, Luning located tinamelt al Blrclawrdville, Satquelmuna County. Pa., alit attend to all the wtuk smith Dummy to favored lto a/utopianism:ld attention. es, .1 Eta ouldeaca nour Oruatto Mar Ma. rntouttyllln. Susi. Co.. Pa. Ray 22. JOHN BEAUMONT, ITTOOL CL&MMER, Cloth Dreamer, and Manufacturer, at the old 1! stand known as Smith's Carding /tachlne. Terms made to , wo when the work Is bmgcbt, Jesup, Itar , h 1061. Da. G. 7, DIMOCK, PIYSICIAS CA SURGEON, MONTHOSS Ps. OflCleo on , ? . .rgarcet, crppaats the Itairmaaas ==. Baud" at Febrstz7 eth,1863.-Ipp C. ISL CRANDALL, al' 26.Ni:711MT11ES of Llnen-wheels, Wool.arbeela Wheel. Jl cende, Clock-laela, dc. ho. Wood-Coming done to order, and - • eArst nuener. Twutna Shop and Wheel FaelOtTin Urea' Bllldtryg, op anatra K.,Lnse, J.uarilotl4 1943.-t1 a s. BENTLEY, JR, NOTARY PUBLIC, MON'T . R.OI3M. pa KEY dernorrledirment of Deeda. Iforterdes de., for any I Nate to the Malted Melee. Penton Vouchers and Pay Cc, Jazes sdow - rloyced before elm do not require the oreltkate of the the Court. hientroas, Jan. 1, .—tr. CHARLES HOLES, E ALE}: IN CLOCKS, WATCHES. AND JEWELRY D done Its uattl. on dart botico and rastaable tam. , Fat tuic Public Aram. in F. B. Clatakes Mom. ti,ta Nov. 7.1264. DR. K. L. HANDRICK, prt ttCIAN .nad SURGEON, reepoctlhlly Under. prom ...fvlm to the eh:lents of Friendsville and vidulty. Of tte , tor nt Dr. Leet. Boards at J. Hoeford'a. y 1634.-tf B. W. EMTH, rro ILN ET a COI7NIBELLOIL AT LAW land Li=led Olga Agezl. (Mee ova? DroA More. Deal Jamul* 113, 1814. H. BURRITT, • 0 r itt E t• R ro th e S LlA.,.2 : 7aints, ( Ilo=tll4 Hate Caps. Curs Bualo bes. Gra:mica, Iloilklmu,ac. bic.llllo , ll, Ps- A 4 ,111 1864.41 S. H. SAYRE & BROTHERS, tr.tti t'FACTUREELS of Mill Coatings, Casthoga of nll kit& M. Soy , . To ood Shoe% boo Wort, Lgncult.oro.l Implemental. oe.lsr. it, Dry Ooods,Orocarles, Crockery. ttr.o. ll , Ltrase. I'a.Fehmarylll,lB64. lIJI LINOS STROUD, putE Asp LIFE ENISIIR&ZiOt Ms In Lath rue , br.:l4lcic. mat end of Brick Block. In hi atecnec, keel other wall be trameeerraell by C. L. Broaela. Yaarrose, February 1,1464.—U J. D. VAIL, M. D, 130.4tE0YATITIC PITYIIIII/A9, bus Fermnneatty bxsthe, cnnaelj liontroa, Pa., where he wlll promptly attend to n.l. n hls profession which be may he favored. °Mee !:•,1t... , West of th e Conn Hones. near Bentley &,,,Flteles. if,,str.we., Fernery 1, Bet -Oct, VS, 1661. A. 0. WARREN, rroF.Nar AT LAW_, KOIIITTI. BACK PAT and PEN .I SION CLAIM AGIIKT. All Penton Mhos muttony pre ;-,red once ln room formerly occupied by DT. VII, lb W. LI brio. BMW. Rotel. kontrote. P... rob 1.1564.-febl77l 1668. LEWIS KIRBY & E. BACON, ITEET. constantly on hand a ttal topply of every rmint7 et a oft 00 and CONFECTIONERIES. Ity driet att.- ,: to iturinica and Mirnmein deal, they hope to merit the liberal sta i n or the public. OTB le to the Granary, where btralres, in season. are served In es, •Or:v that the tut. of tbe public d em and. Rentemberthe Lace, In Mott Grocery stand, on Main ntrect, below the P it,,trose. Nov. 17. 1953.—r0ch17,63.-if DR CALVIN C. HALSEY, DHISICIAN AND PTTROZON. AND EXAIIINING SUN. G for PENSIONERS. OtNee over the ntora of J. Lyon. I Vcblic Avenue Bo It Mr. Ezterldgel. omber. 1659.4.1 D. A. BALDWIN, rroP.BILT AT LAW, and Paadoa. Balmy. and Back Pay a Arent, Great BoDA,fleagatAAAA2 Counts. Gnat Bend. A c A-at 10,1eGA.-ly BOYD . WEBSTER, nEAL.ER..7 Stovn. Stove Plpa, ,?ID, Copper, &am 1.1 Ir.r. W. also, nl.low bah. Panel Doors, Wlndo• s Ptne Lemberand all Lands or Building Materials amrle'rHotel. and Carpenter Stop tear the LUML. ti.NT Vj v. Pa.. Jannai 1. 1861.-tf Da. WILLIAM W. SMITH, 0 SURGEON DENTIST. Mee over the Rankine rkMce. of cooper Co. All Dental Operatio= performed to his =nal good style and ILarirmber, office formal). of R. Bmlth d Son. li.trua January 1. 1884..-41 E. J. ROGERS, 'I , IN . AACTTITLEII of all description, of WAG -11 uht, et.R.8.Le.133.t. BLEIGHM. ht. In theOENA %vs:y:o efts - m.2.We and of the bed metatele. trtll kmnre mod of IC. H. ROGERS, a few rods met t-carlp Etv! Montmee, whore he trill be happy to re. or ell trho want anythhig to hie Ilea. DR. JOHN W. COBB, rgitieN ana s UEGZON. t, cr.:sew of Su llmt guerab Oomaty. PHe .0.C.re..r....4.• mmtlon to 100 .d medical tt+stment of diseases of the .on: Em. ernmnlted relatice to auTriml opm-allema ta , L °atm mu W. J. Ji 8. U. iolfortratitore. x , 11- - Jrl, tweet. coat of J. d. Tarinelfa Hotel. 4 ,-, sues. ticmity, Pa, J one 1563.-tf BALDWIN & ALLEN, LIARS FLOUI3 3 Salt, Pork. 11. sh, Lard. Grain, Feed. Cl,Fer and rimothy Sood. Aldo GELOCEBIES, dvetue. edolasedo'.es, Syrup., J. Tex and ia. Ckdree.., Wan sidd"cd one below Etherld 1. 1614.41 Da. G. W. BEACH, FIET' , IIAN BUILGEOTi. having prrmerettly Ineeted I.lmwe at Brook:To (letter. tcnd r hla prormantos) oer "'t c''‘lcra or rhossuctsuans County, on terms comnisnamr ar-kes. Occoples the °MCA of the late Dr. B. Elchard re. Richardson'. June 11.11364..-1 T F. B. WEBICB, 1 CTIr'LL BOOT 6.14 D SHOE MAKER; also Deals: )`Vo . oll atm.!. Leather, and Shoe rtadinge. Repairing dose . .staan Tam dooas above &aria), Rotel. January 1, 1664.41 WAL tb WEL H. JESSUP, 1 - roicNETS AT LAW. Monter.. Pa. Practice In Bengal!, tre.lrord., Wayne, Wyomlng mad Lawn,. Cotentin,. P. January let„ 1661. ALBERT CHAMBERLIN, rillTlllC7 ATTORNEY AND ATTORNEY AT LAW.— LI ' , T., over tbe Store formerly ocerlylcd by Poll Brothers. January 1. 1660. J. LYONS & SON, V-LE:DS IS Dia GOODS. Groxdos.Crocted74lardsoara Mynas, Books, Ideiodoons. PISMOL and all kinds of Slued • .cents.Fillecl Mask, &c. 01no carry on the Book bind It all its branchea. 1. LTOII6. .re, January 1. 1804. T. ♦. LT0.51, A_I3EL TERRELL, DEALER IN DELFOS. MEDICINES. Nat, Clla. Dye.stolts„ Varnish., Window M.. Groceries. Crockery, Olusware, WuII-Yaw, Jew. ranc T tiovds, Perfumer), Surgical Inearuments, T. Brush., Perfumery Agent for all of the most prop • ..L., iit•tuctacw. liontnase. January 1, 1861., C. 0. FOPpLAIi, UFACTURpofBUO SHOES . Icatos e Pl. tf:d. ,Atk":km „E rpllt. neatly. Workdone pr Moutrne. L 21861-if CHARLES N. STODDARD, rItnLEIL In BOOTH dt BROM. CA:rah. and Find .,Men at. third door below Searles Hotel. Leh. al s truide to r t ge i r g. r e l so rr . pairing done nastly. L IL BURNS, TT. , ILNIET AT LAW. Office with Wfillaso J Tanen. I* t lioieL Panel= and Ltquoty Claims candul c. , .eetaoazpronaply made No , . f. 1.1564.- B. R. LYONS & CO.. D blare on the cast onto of rublk Avenue. 6a. Lawn. • ' •S. D. LYONS not , rosn.J.n.try 1, lE&I.-tf READ, WATROUS & FOSTER, REI,LERS IN Dar FOODS. Drugs, Paws, oils f! . lunliml l nackery . 641741,01.31.. k., W oelc,matches. Jew ,I,A.IS,4WA.TROLI c.10,11:11 _WILLIAM W. SMITH, • P os t-. IT. CORI= AND °Wan lILINI3. 14 4 .7.1-V d t: T r i Keeps constantty on hr . d r :11 , , t . see . st snort nottze. Shop and gore Rooms foot of Maio Et. Pa.. Muth D, 1863...tt PHILANDER LINES, I,lAstUuR ULF. TAILOR, Brick mock . one, Roll w Valeta. • /Niter's/31am Iltrmtnno*. Da. 5.1. el 14. 4, ,41 beprnbrnit PR) , i• - evalb plo:4:ti vui) ',Co viz, Summer Is come, and the blue wave is still; Theelonds are white and high and moons are yellow, And the long shades ether, slowly down the hill Till day and night embrace in Wight mellow, The evening bird has spread his languid wing, The vine begins to sigh on Etna's aide, In the unwavering elude by form I fling, And gaze upon the waters blue and Wide. For Ithaca is dim across the wave, The shores of Africa are hardly seen, Where the long billows gently lift and lave The plains that fringe them with eternal green. I'm detailing of a strange and mystic land Where Men have wandered and have come not back; For when they holdrastrange fruit in their hand; They taste it , and forget their homeward track. Their cares are dead; yet they have drank no wine, For on the pleasant hill the lotus swells, Ad deep wi th in the shadow of the vine In crystal springs the cooling water wells. At eve they gaze upon the yellow moon, And think: it fair; while through the heavy leaves The west wired murmurs in a low, strange tune, And 'cresefthe star-beams dim his web the spider weaves. Maids of Melling, with passion in their eyes, Come down and gaze In wonder and then weep ; The dreamers see them with a faint surprise, But love Within their breasts is long asleep. There is a lake surrounded with a wood Of cypress and tall palms, and there they stray To bathe their white feet in the silent flood For hours until the daylight dies away; But when the shades grow denser round their heads, And from the lotus boughs the night dews weep. Till the rich golden fruit It nightly sheds Falls in the mandrake's arms, they eat and sleep, They sleep, but do not dream; they lie like death, ith folded hands, upon the lake's dark brink, And not a motion, nor a sound, nor breath Scares the wild antelope that comes to Arink. The dusky dwellers of remotest lands, The islanders that love the Northern sea, And they who roam o'er Ethiopia's sands, And they that tame the steeds of Araby They come, but ne'er return , but 'mong the vales Far Northward of the Mountains of the Moon They rest for aye; the lotus never fails; And they that watch and grew not weary soon Die waiting, nor behold them any more. The stars are out and shining on the sea, The waves die sobbing on the dim-llt shore, The breeze is whispering to the hill-side tree, My dream is ended and an hour is done. Men call this fietion, fable, be it so, I own the lotus-eaters have gone, And that they ever were I do not know. But it is pleasant when our fancies build Unreal visions in the world of thought ; And 'tie an occupation sweet to gild An idle hour with colors from them caught. Flom the Atlantic Menthly fin. July. THE OHICJAGO OONSPIRAOY. On the eve of the last general election, the coun try was etarued by the publication of a Report from the Judge Advocate of the United States, disclosing the existence of a widespread conspiracy at the West, which had Inc its object the overthow of the Union. The conspiracy, the Report stated had a military organization, with a commander-in-chief, general and subordinate officers, and 500,000 enrolledofficers, members, all bound to a blind obedience to the or ders of their superiors, and pledged to "take up arms against any government found waging war against a people endeavoring to establish a govern ment of their own choice.' The organization, it was said, was in every way hostile to the Union, and friendll to the so-called Confederacy; and Its ultimate on eels were "rising in Indiana, Ohio, Illinois and "entuckv, in co operation with the rebel force which was to invade the last-named State." Startling and incredible as the report seemed, it told nothing but the truth, and it did not tell the whole truth. It omitted to state that the organiza tion was planned in Richmond; that, its operators were directed by Jacob Thompson, who was in Canada for that purpose; and that wholesale rob bery arson and midnight assassination were among its divigns. The paint marked out for the first attack was Camp Douglas, at Chicago. The 5,000 rebel soldiers confined there, being liberated and armed, were to be joined by the Canadian refugees and Missouri " Butternuts " engaged 3n their release, and 5,000 and more members of the treasonable order resident in Chicago This force, of nearly 20,000 men, would be a nucleus about which the conspirators in other parts of Illinois could gather; and being joined by the prisoners liberated from other camps, and mem bers of the order from other States, would form an army a hundred thousand strong. So fully had everything been foreseen and provided for, that the leaders expected to gather and organize this vast body of men within a fortnight! The United States could bring into the field no force capably of with standing the progress of such an army. The conse quences 'maid be that the whole character of the war would be changed—its theater would be shifted from the border to the heart of the free States; and Southern independence, and the beginning at the North of that process of disintegration so confident ly counted on by the rebel leaders at the outbreak of hostilities, would have followed. What saved the nation from being drawn into this whirlpool of ruin? Nothin but the cool brain. sleepless vigilance and wonderful asgacily of one man—a young Officer never read of in the newspa pers—removed from field duty because of disability, but commissioned, I very believe, by Providence it self to ferret :out and foil this deeper-bild, wider spread and mote diabolical conspiracy than any that darkens the page of history. Other men--and wo men, too—were instrumental in dragging the dark Iniquity to light ; but they felled to fathom Its full enormity, and to discover Its point of outbreak. He did that ; and he throttled the tiger when about to swing, and so deserves the lasting gratitude of his country. How he did it I propose to tell In this paper. It is a maryeldtus tale ; it will read more like ro mance than history ; but, calling to mind what a good man once said to me, " Write the truth; let people doubt It if they will," I shall narrate the facts. There is nothing rnmarkablkin the appearance of this young man. Nearly six reit. high, he has an erect military carriage, a frank, manly face, and looks every Inch a soldler—eneb a Soldier as would stand up all day in &square hand-to-hand ilLeht with an open enemy ; but the keenest eye would detect in him no indication of the crafty genius which deligh , s to follow the winding' of alekedneas whoa burrow ing In the dark. Bnt:lf not a Fonda' or a Vidocq, be Is certainly an able man; for, In a section where able men are as plenty asepple-blossoms In June, he was chosen to represent his district In the State Senate, and, entering the army as a subaltern offleer, rose, before the battle of Perryville, to the command of a regiment At that battle a rebel bullet entered his shoulder and crushed the hones of his right elbow. This disabled him for field duty, and so it came about that he Gemmed the light blue of the veteran., and on the second day of May, 180-1, succeeded Gen Orme in command of the military post at Chicago. When fairly settled in the low-roofed shanty, which stands, a sort'of mute sentry, over the front' gateway of Camp pouglas, tbo new commandant, as was natural, looked about him. He found the camp—about sixty acres of that, sandy soil, Inclosed by a tight board fence, an inch thick and fourteen teet high—had a garrison of but two regiments of veteran reserves. Numbering, all told, only 700 men St for duty. This small force was. guarding 8,090 rebel prisoners, one-third of whom were Texas rangers and guerrillas who bad served under Morgan —wild, whims characters, fonder of a fight than a dinner, and ready for any enterprise, however des perate, that hcld - oat the smallest prospect of free dom. To add to the seeming Insecurity, nearly every office in the camp was filled with these pris oners. They served out rations and distributed clothing to their comrades, dealt out ammunition to the guard', and even kept the records in the quarters of the Commandant. In fact, the prison was In charge of the prisoners, not the prisoners in charge of the prison. This state of things underwent a sudden change. Wile g the exception of a very few, whose character recommended them to peculiar confidence, all were at once placed where they be longed—on the inner side of the prison fence. A post Mace was connected with the camp, and this next received the Commandant's attention. Everything about it appeared to be regular. A vast number of letters came and went, - but they all passed unsealed, and seemed to contain nothing contraband. Many of them, however, we short epistles on long pieces of papers, a cations eireum- I stance among correspondents with whom stationery was scarce and greenbacks not over plenty. One sultry dayte June the Commandant built a lire, and gave these letters a ;Fanning, and lo! presto! the white spaces broke out into dark lines breathing thoughts blacker than the fluid that wrote them Conuoral Snooks whispered to hie wife, away down in Texas, " The forthe of July Is comb', Stikey, so be a man far I'm gwine to celebrate. Pm colas up Mike a rheket, of I does come down !elk° a stick." And Sergeant Blower said to John Coppe head of Chicago, " Down in 'old raglans' I used to think,tlie forth of July was a humbug, but this prison has rimde me a patriot. Now, pd like t o burn an rallied sight of powder, and; if you kelp, and God is willing, I shall do It." In a [hailer amain wrote half a score of them. Such patriotism seemed altogether too wordy to be genuine. It told nothing, u but darkly hinted at creels to come. The C h o bethought him that the Democratic Convention Would assem ble on the 4th of July ; that a vast multitude of pie would congregate at Chimp on that on ; " Freedom and Right against Slavery and Wrong." MONTROSE, SUSQ. CO., PA., TUESDAY, AUGUST 1, 1865. and that, In so great a throng, it would be easy for the clans to gather, attack the camp, and liberate the prisoners. " Eternal vigilance is the price of liberty," and the young Commandant was vlgilant. Boon Prison &mare received a fresh installment of prisoners. They were genuine " Butternuts," out at the toes, out at the knees, out at the elbows, out everywhere, in fact, and of everthing but their sere sea. Those they had snugly about them. They fraternized with Corporal Snooks, Sergeant Blower and others of their comrades, and soon learned that a grand pyrotechnic display was arranged to come off on Independence day. A huge bonfire was to be built outside, and the prisoners were to salute the old flag, but not with blank cartridges. But who was to light the outside bonfire? That the Improvised "Butternuts" failed to discover, and the Commandant set his own wits to working. Hu soon ascertained that a singular organization existed In Chicago. It was called " The Society of Mini" and its object, ea set forth in Its priuted constitution, was the more perfect development of the literary, ay-lentil:lc, moral, physical, and social welfare of the conservative citizens of Chicago." The Commandant knew a conservative citizen whose development was not altogether perfect, and he recommended him to Join the organization. The society needed recruits and Initiation fees, and received the new member with open arms. Soon be was deep in the outer secrets of the order; but he could not penetrate its inner mysteries. Those were open to oely an elect few who had already at tained to a " perfect development "—of villany. Ile learned enough, however, to verify the dark hints thrown out by the prisoners. The society numbered some thousands of members', all fully armed, thorougly drilled, and impatiently waiting a signal to explode a mine deeper than that in front of Pe tersburg But the assembling of the Chicago Convention was postponed to the '29th of August, and the 4th of July passed away without the bonfire and the fireworks. The Commandant, however, did not sleep. He still kept his wits at work; and the red flames still brought out the black thoughts on the white letter laper. Quietly the garrison was re-enforced, quietly ncreased vigilance was enjoined upon the sentinels; and the tanqull, essured look of the Commandant told no qbe that be was playing with hot coals on a barrel orgernpowder. So July rolled away Into August, and the Com mandant sent a letter giving his view of the state of things to his Commanding-General. This letter has fallen into my hands, and as might sometimes makes right, I shall copy a portion of it. It is dated August 12th, and, in the formal phrase customary among military men, begins: "I have the honor respectfully to report, in rela tion to the supposed organization at Toronto, Can ada, which was to come here in squads, then com bine, and attempt to rescue the prisoners of war at Camp Douglas, that there is an armed organization in this city of 5,000 men, and that the rescue of our prisoners would be the signal for a general insur rection in Indiana and Illinois. • * • • " There Is little, If any doubt that an organization hostile to the Government, and secret in its work ings and character, exists in the States of Indiana and Illinois, and that this organization is strong In numbers. It would be easy, perhaps, at any crisis in public affairs, to push this organization Into acts of open disloyalty, if Its leaders should so will. * I "Except in cases of considerable emergency, I shall make all communications to your headquarters on this subject by maiL" These extracts show that seventeen days before the assembling of the Chicago Convention, the Commandant had become convinced that mall-bags were safer vehicles of communication than tele graph-wires; that 5,000 armed traitors were then domiciled in Chicago; that they expected to be joined by a body of rebels from Canada; that the object of the combination was the rescue of the prisoners at Camp Douglas, and that success in that enterprise would be the signal for a general upris ing throughout Indiana and Illinois. Certainly, this was no little knowledge to gain by two months' burrowing in the dark But the conspirators were not fools. They had necks which they valued. They would not plunge into open disloyalty until some "crisis in public affairs" should engage the atten tion of the authorities, and afford a fair chance of success. Would the assembling of the Convention - be such a crisis? was now the question. This question was soon answered. About this time Lieut. CoL B. IL Hill, commanding the Mili tary district of Michigan received a missive from • person in Canada who represented himself to he a Major In the Confederate service. He expressed a readiness to disclose a dangerous plot against the Government, provided he were allowed to take the oath of allegiance, and rewarded according to the value of his Information. The Lientenant-Colonel read the letter, tossed it aside, and went about his business. No good, he had heard, ever came out of Nazareth. Boon another missive of the same pur port, and from the saline person, came to him. Hr tossed this aside also, and went again abput his business. But the Major was a Southern Yankee— the " cutest " sort of Yankee. He had something to sell, and wee bound to sell it, even if he had to throw his neck into the bargain. Taking his life in his hand, he crossed the frontier; and so it came about, that, late one night, a tall mania a slouched hat, rusty regimentals, and immense jack-boots, was ushered Into the private apartment of the Lieu tenant-Colonel at Detroit It was the Major. He had brought his wares with him. They had cost him nothing, except some small sacrifice of such trivet matters as honor, fraternal feeling, and good faith towards brother conspirators, whom they might send to the gallows; but they were of im mense value—would save millions of money and rivers of loyal blood. Bo the Major said, and so the Lieutenant-Colonel thought, as coolly, with his ci gar in his month, and his legs over the arm of his chair, he drew the important secrets from the rebel officer. Something good, might come, after all, out of Nazareth. The Lieutenant-Colonel would trust the fellow—trust him, but pay him nothing, and send him back to Toronto to 'worm out the whole plan from the rebel leaders, and to gather the whole details of the projected expedition_ But the Major knew with whom he was dealing. He bad faith in Uncle Sam, and he was right in having it ; for, truth to tell, if Uncle Sam does not always pay, he can always be trusted. It warrinat long before the Majorjeappeared with his budget, which he duly opened tb the Lieutenant- Colonel.. Its contents were interesting, and I will give them to the reader es the Union officer gave them to the General commanding the Northern DO partment. His communication Is dated August 16th. It says: "I have the honor to report that I had another Interview last evening with Major —, whose die closures in relation to a rebel plot for the release of the prisoner, at Camp Douglas I gave you in my let ter of the Stb Inst. I have cansed inquiries to be made In. Canada about Major —, and understand that he 'does possess the confidence of the rebel agents.,:hnd that his statements are entitled to re spect. 'lle now inform. me that he proceeded to Toronto, as he stated he would when I last saw him; that about MO picked men, of the rebel refugees In Can ada, are assembled In that place, who are armed with revolvers and supplied with funds and trans portation tickets to Chicago; and that already 150 have proceeded to Chicago. That he (Major and the balance of the men are waiting for instruc tions from Capt. Hines, who Is the commander of the expedition; that Capt. Hines left Toronto last Thursday tor Chicago, and at this time Is doubtless at Niagara Falls, making the final arrangement& with the chief rebel agents. " Major states that Sanders, Holbrook, and Colonel Hicks were at Toronto, while he was there, engaged in making preparations, ike. The general plan Is to accomplish the release of the prisoners at Camp Douglas, and in doing so they will be assisted by an armed organization at Chicago. After being released, the prisoners will be armed, and being joined by the organisation In Chicago, will be mounted and proceed to C..mp Morton, at Indiana. polls, and there accomplish a similar object In re leasing prisoners. That for some months rebel emissaries have been traveling through the North- West; that their arrangements are fully matured, and that they expect to receive large accessions of force from Ohio, Indiana and Illinois. They expect to.destroy the works at Morton. " Major -- says further that he is In hourly ex pectatidn of receiving instructions to proceed to Chicago with the balance of the party ; that he shall put up at the City Hotel, corner of Lake and State streets, and register his name as George —; and that he will then place himself In communication with CoL Sweet, commanding ni Chicago." The Major did not "put op at the comer of Lake and State streets," and that fact relieved the Gov ernment from the trouble of estimating the value of his services, and, what is more to be deplored, ren dered it impossible for the Commandant to recog nize and arrest the rebel leaders during the sitting of the Chicago Convention. What became of the Major is not known. He may have repeated of his good deeds, or his treachery have been detected and he nut out of the way his accomplices.it be noticed how closely the rebel offleer's disclosures accorded with the Information gathered through indirect channels by the astute Com mandant. When the report was conveyed to him, he may have smiled at this proof of his own sagaci ty; but he made no change In his arrangements. QnleUy and steadily he went on strengthening the camp, augmenting the garrison, and shadowing the footsteps of all ' , widow; newcomers. At last the loyal Democrats came together to the great Convention, and with them came Satan also. Bands of ill•Givored men, in busby hair, bad whisky, and seedy homespun, stamered from the raallway stations end hung about the street corners. A reader of Dante or Swedenborg would have taken them for the delegates from the lower regions, had not their clothing been plainly teirishable, while devils , wear everlasting garments. They had come, they announced, to make a Peace President, but they brandished bowie-knives, and bellowed for war in the sacred preclnts of the Peace Convention. But war or peace, the Commandant was ready for It. For days re-enforeements poured into camp, until it actually bristled with bayonets. On every side it ' was guarded with cannon, and day - and night mounted men patrolled the avenues to give notice of the first hostile gathering. Bat there was no gathering. The conspirators were there, 2,000 strong, with 5,000 111 in to back them. From every poingof the compass—from Canada, Missouri, Southern 1111- nobs, Indiana, Ohio, New York, and even loyal Ver mont, bloody minded men had come to give the Peace candidate a red baptism. But "discretion is the better part of valor.' The conspirators saw the preparation and disbanded. Not long afterwards one of the leaden said to me, " We had spies in every public place—lu the telegraph, llIce„ the camp it self, and even dose by the Cemmendant'e head quarters, and knew hourly all that was paesing. From the observatory, opposite the camp, I myself saw the arrangements for our reception. We out numbered you two to one, bet our force was badly disciplined. Success in such circumstances waa im possible; and on the third day of the Convention we announced from headquarters that an attack at that time was impracticable. It would have cost the lives of hundreds of the prisoners, and perhaps the capture or destruction of the whole of us." So the storm blew over without the leaden rain, and without the accompaniment of thunder and light ning. A dead calm followed, during which the Mini slunk back to their holes the prisonere took to honest ink- the bogus " B utternuts " walked the streets clad like Christians, and the Commandant went to sleep with only one eye open. So the world rolled around Into November. The Presidential election was near at hand—the great contest on which hung the fate of the Repub lic. The Commandant was convinced of this, and wanted to marshal his old constituents for the final a'ragglo between Freedom and Despotism. He ob tained a furlough to go home and mount the stump for the Union. He was about to set out, his private secretary was ready, and the carriage waiting at the gateway, when an indefinable feeling took posses sion of him, holdieg him back, and warning him of coming danger. It would not be shaken off. and reluctantly be postponed the journey until the mor. row. Before the morrow facts were developed which made his presence In Chicago essential to the safety of the city and the lives of the citizens. Thu snake was scotched, not killed. It was preparing for another and deadlier spring. On the et November a well-known citizen of St.. Louis, openly a secessionist, but secretly a loyal man, acting as a detective for the Government, left that city In pursuit of a criminal. He followed Lim to Springileld, traced him from there to Chicago, and on the morning of November 4th, about the hour the Commandant had the singular Impression I have spoken of, arrived in the latter city. He soon learned that the bird had again flown. " While passing along the street," (I now gaol , from his report to the Provosteldarshal.General, et Missouri,) "and trying to decide what coerce to pursue—whether to follow this man to New York, or return to St. Louis - I met an old acquaintance. a member of the order of " American Knights," who (wormed me that Sturmaduke was in Chicago. After conversing with him a while, I started up the street, and about one block further on met Dr. E. W. Edwards, apracticing physician in Chicago, (an ether old acquaintance,) who usked me if I knew of Seethes n soldiers being In town. 1 told him I did ; that Marmaduke was there. He seemed very much astonished, and asked how I knew. I told him.— He laughed, and then said that Marmaduke was at his house, under the assumed name of Burling, and mentioned as a good Joke, that he had a British pass port, eised by the United States consul under that name. I gave Edwards my card to hand to Marren duke (who was another old acquaintance,") and told him I was stopping at the Briggs House. "That same evening I again met Dr. Edwards on the street, going to my hotel. He said Marmadukg desired to see me, and I accompanied him to hie house." There, In the comae of a long conversa tion, Marmaduke told me that oe and several Rebel officers were in Chicago to co-operate with other parties in releasing the prisoners of Camp Douglas and other prisons, and in inaugurating a rebellion at the North. He said the movement was under the auspices of the " Order of American Knights " (to which order the society of the Mini belonged.) and was to begin operations by an attack on Camp Doug las on election day." The detective slid not know the Commandant, hut he soon made his acquaintance and told him the story. "The young man," he says, " rested his bead epee his hand, and looked as If he had lost his mother.' And well he might! A mine has opened at his feet; with but SOO men in the garrison It was to be sprung upon him. Only seventy hours were left! What would he give for twice as many?— Then he might secure reinforcements. He walked the room for a time in silence, then, turning to the detective, said, "Do you know where the other leaders are 1" "I no not." " Can't you find out from Mannadtthe " I think not He said what he did say voluntarily. if I were to question him he would sturpset me." That was true, and !derma duke was not of the stuff that betrays a comrade on compulsion. His arrest, therefore, would profit nothing, and might hasten the attack for which the Commandant was so poorly prepared. Ho sat down and wrote a hurried dispatch to Lis GeneraL— Troops ! troops ! for God'a sake, troops! was Its burden. Sending it off by a courier—the telegraph told tales—he rose, and again walked the room In silence. Alter awhile, with a heavy heart, the de tective said "Good night," and left him. What passed with the Commandant dung the nert two hours Ido nut know. He may have pray cd—he is a praying man—and there was need of prayer, for the torch was ready to burn millions of property, the knife whetted to take thousands of lives. At the end of the two hours, a stranger was ushered into the apartment where the Com mandant was still pacing the floor. From the -lips and pen of this strarater I have what followed, and I think it may be relied on. He was a slim, light-haired young man„zitta fine, regular features and that indefinable air Which de notes good breeding. Recognizing the Command ant by the eagle on his shoulder, he said, " Can I see you alone, sir?" " Certainly," answered the Colon °dicer, motioning to his secretary to lave the room. " I am a Colonel in the Rebel army," said the stranger, " and have put my life In your hands, to warn you of the most hellish plot In his tory." " Your life is safe, sir," replied the other, "If your visit Is an honest one. I shall be glad to hear what you have to say. Be seater" The Rebel officer took the proffered chair and sat there till far lete+ the morning. In the limits of a magazine article I cannot attempt to recount all that pursed between them. The written statement the Rebel Colonel has sent to me covers fourteen pages of closely written foolscap; and my Interview with him on the subject lasted live hours, by a slow watch. He disclosed all that Judge Holt has _made public, and a great deal more. Sixty days previously he had left Richmond with verbal dispatchea from the Reb el Secretary of War to Jacob Thompson, the Rebel agent in Canada. These dispatches bad relation to a vast plot, designed to wrap the West In flames, sever it from the - East, and secure the independence of the South. Months before, the plot had been concocted by Jeff. Davis at Richmond, and in May previous, Thompson, supplied with t 250,000 in ger- Hug exchange, had been sent to Canada tow ierin tend its execution. This money was lod in a bank at Montreal, nod had furnished the fun a which had fitted out the abort iv e expeditions against John son's Island and Camp Douglas. The plot embraced the order of " American Knights," which was spread all over the West, and numbered 500,000 men, 350, 000 of whom were armed. A force of 1,10:1 men— Canadian refugees, and bushwhaekers from South ern Illinois and Missouri—was to attack Camp Doug las on Tuesday night, the Bth of Noxember,‘ liberate and arm the prisoners, and sack Chicago. This was to be the signal for a general uprising tbrongh the West, and for aahnultaneous advance by Hoed upon Nashville, Suckner upon Louisville, and Price upon St. Louis. Vallandigliam was to bead tke mote moat in Ohio, Bowles in Indiana, and Walsh in Illi note. The forces were to rendezvous at Cincinnati and Dayton in Ohio, New Albany and Indianapolis in Indiana, and Rock Island. Chicago and Springfield in Illinois; and those gathered at the last named place, after seizing the arsenal, were to march to aid Price in taking St. Louis. Prominent Union citi zens and officers were to be seized and sent South, and the more obnozions of them were to be assassin ated. All places taken were to be sacked and de stroyed, and a band of a hundred desperate men was organized to burn the larger Northern cities not in eluded in the field of operations. Two hundred Confederate officers, who were to direct the military movements, had been in (Tanana, but were then sta tioned throughout the West, at the various points to be attacked, waiting the outbreak at Chicago.— Capteln Hines, who bad won the confidence of Thompson by his successful manerement of the escape of John Morgan, bad control of the Initial movement against Camp Douglas; bat Colonel Orenfell, gestated by Colonel Marmaduke and a doz en other Rebel officers, was to manage the military part of the operations. All of thew officers were at that moment In Chicago, waiting the arrival of the men, who were to come In small ennuis, over differ ent roads, daring tha following three days. The Rebel officer had knoWn of the plot for months, but its atrocious details had come to his knowledge on ly within a fortnight. They had sp; him; and though he was betraying his inc._ s, and the South which he loved, the humanity in }aim would not let him rest till he had washed his hands of the horrible crime. The Commandant listrnad with tieiTo2l ttlbgett to the whole of this recital ; bat when the Southern Officer made the but remark, ho almost groaned out, " Why did you not come before ?" " I could not. I gave Thompson my opinion of this, and have been watched. 1 think they have tracked me hem My life nn your streets wouldn't be worth a had hail dollar." " True; but what must be done ?" " Arrest the ' Butternuts ' as they come into Chi mgo." " That I can do ; but the leaders are here with live thousand Illini to back them. I must take them. Do you know them ?" "Tea; but do not know where they are quarter ed." At two n'eloek the Commandant showed the Reb el officer to hie bed, but went back himself, and pac ed the floor until sunrise. in the morning hie plan was formed. It was a desperate plan ; but desperate circumstances require desperate expedients. In the prison was a young Texan who had served on Bragg 's staff and under Morgan In Kentucky, and was, therefore, acquainted with Hines, Greaten, and the other rebel officers. He fully believed in the theory of State Rights, that is, that a part is greater than the whole, but was an honest man, whose word when given could be trusted. OM) glance at his open, resolute face showed that he fear ed nothing; that ho had, too, that rare courage that delights in danger, and courts heroic enterprise from pure love of peril. Early in the war he had encoun tered Colonel Deland, a formetcconuxumdant of the post, on the battle-field and taken him prisoner.— A friendship then sprang up between the two which, when the tables were turned, and the captor became the captive. was not forgotten. Colonel Deland made him his chief clerk in the medical department, and gave him every possible freedom. At that time it was the custom to allow citizens free access to the camp; and among the many good men and women who came to visit an aid the prisoners was a young woman, the daughter of a well-known resident of Chicago. She met the Texan, and a result as natur al as the union of oxygen and hydrogen followed.— but since Adam courted Eve, who ever heard of wooing going on in a prison? "It is not exactly the thing," said Colonel Deland ; " had you not better pay your addresses at the mys house, like a gentleman ?" A guard accompanied the prisoner ; but It was shrewdly guessed that he stayed outside, or paid court to the girls in the kitchen. This was the state of things when the present Commandant took charge of the camp. Ho learned the facts, studied the prisoner's face, and remem bered that he, too, once went a courting. As ho walked his room that Friday night, he bethought him of the Texan. Did he love his State better than ho did his affianced wife ? The Commandant would test him. " But I shall betray my friends ! Can Ido that honor V asked tho Texan. " Did you ask that question when you betrayed your country?" answered the Commandant. " Let me go from camp for an hour. Then I will give you my decision." " Very well." And, unattended, the Texan lelt the prison. What mussed between the young man and the young woman during that hour I do not know, for I am not writing romance hot history. However, without 'Ming the veil on things sacred, I can say that her Lust words were, "Do your duty. Blot out your record of treason.' God bless her for saying them ! and Amen be said by every American woman. On bin return to camp the Texan merely said, " I will do it," and the details of the plan were talked over. He was to escape from the prison, ferret out and entrap the Rebel leaders. How to manage the first part of the programme was the query of the Texan. The Commandant's brain is fertile. An adopted citizen, in the scavenger line, makes peri odical visits to the camp in the way of his business, and him the Commandant sends for. " Arratt, per Honor, " the Irishman says, " I ha'n't a traitor. Bless per b eautiful soul ! I love the kin try ; and besides, It might damage me good name and in party prortstalon." He is assured that his name will be all the better for dieting a few weeks in a dungeon, and—did not the some thingmake Harvey Birch immortal ? Half an hour before sunset the scavenger cornea into camp with his wagon. Ho fills it with dry bones, broken bottles, decayed food, and the rubbish of the prison ; and down below, under a blanket, be stows away the Texan. A hundred comrades gath ered round to shut off the gaze of the guard ; but outside is the real danger. He hai to pass two gates, and run the gauntlet of half a dozen sentinels. Hie wagon is fuller than usual ; and the late hour—it is now atter sunset—will of itself excite suspicion. It might test the plikk of a braver man ; for the sent ries' bayonets are fixed, and. their guns at the half trigger ; but be reaches the outer gate in safety.— Now Bt. Patrick help him ! for he needs all the im pudence of an Irishman. The gate rolls back ; the Commandant stands nervously by, but a sentry cries out— • . " You catil pass ; tiglu orders. No waging tin go out after drum beat." " Arndt, don't be a fool ! Don't be after abstime tin' a honsat man's business," answers the Irish man, pushing on into the gateway. The soldier Is vigilant, for his officer's eye Is on " Halt !" he cries again, " or I'll fire !" " Fire I Waste yer powder_ on yer friends, like the bloody-minded spa/peen ye are !" says the scav enger, cracking his whip, and moving forward. It Is well he does not look back, if be should, he might tee melted to his own soap grease. The sett try's musket is leveled ! he is about to fire, but the Commandant roars out— " Don't shoot!" and the old man and the old horse trot oil into the twilight. Not en hour later, two men, in big boots, slouch ed hate, and brownish butternuts, come out of the Commandant's quarters. With muffled faces end hasty strides, they made their way over the dimly lighted road Into the city. Passing, after a while, before a large mansion, they crouched down among the shadows. It is the house of the grand Treasur er of the Order of American Knights, and Into It very soon they sec the Texan enter. The good man knows him well, and there Is great rejoicing. He orders op the tatted calf, and soon It Is on the table, steaming hot, and done brown in the roasting.— When the meal is over they discuss a bottle of cham pagne and the situation. The Texan cannot remain In Chicago, for there he will surely be detected. He meat be off to Cincinnati by the first train; and he will arrive in the nick of time, for warm work is daily expected. Das he any moneyabout him. No, he hasten it behind, with his Sunday clothes, in the prisora Be must have funds; but the worthy gen tleman can lend him none, for he is a loyal man ; of course he is! was he not the "people's candidate" for Governor ? But no one ever heard of a woman being hanged for treason. With this he node to his wife, who opens her purse, and tosses the Texan a roll of greenbacks. They are honest notes, for an honest face is on them. At the end of an hour good-night is said, and the Texan goes to find a hole to hide In. Down the street he hurries, the long, dark shadows following him. Ho enters the private door of a public house, speaks a magic word and Is shown to a room In the upper story. •Three tow, prolonged rens on the wall, and—be is among them. They are seated about a small table, on which Is a plan of the prison. One is about forty-five.--a tall, thin man, with a wiry frame, a jovial face, and eyes which have the wild, roving look of the Arab's. He Is dressed after the fashion of English sportsmen, and his dog—a fine gray blood-hound—is stretched on the hearth-rag near him. Ile looks a reckless, desperate character, and hart an adventurous history. In battle ho is said to be a thunderbolt—llghtoing harnessed and Inspired with the will of a devil. He Is ust the character to lead the dark, desperate Won on which they aro entered. It is St. Leger renfelL At his right sits another tali, erect man, of about thirty, with huge, prominent eyes, and thin, black hair and mustache. lie is of dark complexion, has a abarp, thin nose, a small, close mouth, a coarse, harsh voice, and a quick bolster ous manner. Ills Lace tells of dissipation, and his dress shows the dandy ; but his deep, clear eye, and pale, , arrinkled forehead denote a cool, crafty intellect. This Ls the notorious Captain Hines, the rightband man of Morgan, and the soul and braise of the conspiracy. The rest are the meaner sort of villains Ido not know how they looked, and it I did, they would not be worth describing. tithes and Grenfen sprang to their feet, and grasp ed the band of the Texan. He la a godsend—sent to do what no man of them Is bravo enough to do— lead the attack on the front gateway of the prison. Bo they affirm with great oaths as they sit down, spread out the map, and explain to him the plan of operations. Two Rebel refugees from Canada, they say, and a hundred "butternuts " from Fayette and Christian counties, have already arrived ; many more from Kentucky and Missouri are coming; and by Tuesday they expect that 1,000 or 1,200 despe rate men, armed to the teeth. will be In Chicago.— , Taking advantage of the „excitement of election night, they propoae, with this force to attack the camp and prison. It will be divided Into five par t'ts One squad, under Greaten, will bo held le re arms a few hundred yards from the main body, and will guard the large number of guns already provid ed to arm the prisoners. Anothescommand of which is offered to the Texan, will assault the front gate ' way,and engage the attention of 800 troops quarter ed In Garrison equate. The work of this squad will be dangerous, for it will encounter a force four times Its strength, well armed and supplied with ar tillery; but it will be speedily relieved - by other di visions. Those under Marmadake, Colcnel Robert Anderson, of Kentucky, and Brig .-G eneral Charles Walsh, of Chicago, Commander of the American Knights, will simultaneously mail tbree alder of l'claeniquere, break down the fences, liberate the prisoners, and, taking the gerriega In the rear, ooat- pel a general surrender. This accompliehed, small parties will be dispatched to cut the telegraph-wI and seize the railway-stations ; While the main body, reinforced by the 8,000 and more prisoners_, march into the city and rendezvous in Court-House figure, which will be the bun of farther operations. The first blow struck, the Insurgents will be join ed by the 5,000 Tillni (American .nielits,) and, sea - lu• the arms of the city, six brass field-pieces and 800 Springfield muskets, and the arms and ammuni tion stored In private warehouses, will begin the work of destruction. The banks will be rob b ed, the stores gutted, the houses of loyal men plundered, and the railway stations, grain elevators, and other public buildings burned to the ground. T. facili tate this latter dogleg the water-plues have been marked, and a force detailed to set the water run ning. In brief, the war will be brought home to the North ; Chingn will be dealt with like a city taken by assault, given over to thotorch , the sword, and the brutal lust of a drunken soldiery. On it will be wreaked all the havoc, the agony, and the desolation which three years of war have heaped up on the South ; and its upgoing flames will be the torch that shall light a score of other cities to we same destruction. It was a diabolical plan, conceived far down In hell amid thick blackness, and brought up by the arch-fiend binelleic who eat there, toying with the hideous thing, and with 415 cloven foot berating merry tune on the dcath'a-bead and crosa-bones un der the table. As he concludes, Hines turns to the new comer— " Well, my boy, What do you say ? Will you take the poet of honor and of danger r , The Texan drew a long breath, and then, through We barred teeth, blurta out: " I will." On those two words hang thousands of live", millions of money! " You are a trump !" shouts Grenfell, springing to his feet "Give us your hand upon it!" A general hand-shaking follows, and during it, Hines and another man announce that their time is up: "It is nearly twelve. Yielding and I never stay In this d—d town after midnight. You are fools, or you wouldn't. Suddenly, as these words are uttered, a clenched hat, listening a: the key-hole, pope up, moves soft ly through the hall, and steals down the stairway. Half an hour later the Texan opens the private door of the Richmond House, looks cautiously around for a moment, and then stalks on towards the heart of the city. The moon is down, the lamps burn dimly, but after him glide the shadows. In a room at the Tremont Home, not far (ruin this time, the Commandant is walking and waning, when the door opens and a man enters. His face is flushed, his teeth are clench, his oyes flashing.— He is stirred to the depths of hie being. Can he be the Texan f " What Is Ole matter?" asked the Commandant The other sits down, and, as if only talking to himself, tells him. One hour has swept away the fallacies of his Ilfe-time. Ile sees the Rebellion as it Is—the outbreak and outworking of that spirit which makes hell horrible. Althea°, that night, he had acted from love, not dug. Now he bows only to the All-Bight and the All-Beautiful, and in hie heart Is that psalm of work, song by ono of old, and by all true men since the dawn of treatlon: " Here am I, Lord ! Send ma!" The first gray of the morning is streaking the cast, when he goes forth to dnd a hiding-place. The sun Is not yet up, and the early light comes dimly through the misty clouda, but about him still hang the long dark shadows. Thla is a world of shadows. Only in the atmosphere which soon enclosed him Is there no night and co shadow. Soon the Texan's escape Is known at the camp. and a great hue and cry follows. Handbills are got out, a reward is offered,and by that Sunday noonbla name is on every street corner. Squads of soldiers and police ransack the city and Invade everry Rebel asylum. Strange things are brought to light, and strange gentry dragged out of dark closets ; but no where la bound the Texan. The search is well done, for the pursuers are In dead earnest; and, Captain Hines, if you don't trust him now, you are a fool, with all your astuteness! So the day wears away and the night corneal.— Just at dark a man enters the private door of the Tremont House, and goes up to a room where the Commandant is waiting. lie sports a light rattan, wears a stove-pipe bat, a Sunday snit, and is shaven and shorn like unto Samson. What la the Cora 141Pkidant doing with such a man ? Boon the gas is lighted; and 10, it is the Texan! But who In crea tion would know him 1 The plot, he says, thick ens. More "Butternuts" have arrived, and the deed will be done on Tuesday night, as sure as Christmas is coming He has seen his men—two hundred, picked, and everyone clamoring for pick ings. Hines, who carries the bag, Is to give him ten thousand greenbacks, to atop their mouths and stuff their pockets, at nine In the morning. " And to-morrow night we'll have them, suret— And, how say you, give you shackles and a dun• geon ?" asks the Commandant, his mouth wreath ed with grim wrinkles. "Anything you like. Anything to blot out my record of treason He has learned the words—they are in his heart, not to be razed out forayer. When he is gone, up and down the room goes the Commandant, as le his fashion. He is playing a desperate game. The stake is awful. He holds the ace of trumps—but shall be risk the game upon It? At half-past eight he sits down and writes a dis patch to the GeneraL In it he says : "My force Is, as you know, too weak and over worked—only'eight hundred men, all told, to guard between eight and nine thousand prisoners. I am certainly not justified In wailing to take risk, and mean to arrest these officers, if possible, before month:1: 1;3 " The patch went off, but still the Commandant is undecided. If ho strlkPa - to.nlght, Hines may es cape, for the fox has a hole out of town, and may keep under cover until morning. lie Is the king devil, and much the Commandant wants to cage him. Besides, he holds the bag, and the Texan will go out of prison a penniless man among strangers. Those ten thousand greenbacks are lawful prize, and should be the country's dower with the maid en.- But arc not republics grateful? Did not one give a mansion to General McClellan? Ah, Captain Rine, that was lucky for you, for, beyond a doubt, It saved your bacon ! The Commandant goes back to camp, sends for the police, and gets his blue-coats ready. At two o'clock they swoop to the prey, and before day break a hundred birds are in the talons of tie Such another haul of buzzards and night-hawks never was made since Gabriel caged the Devil and the dark angels. At the Richmond House, Grenfel was taken In bed with the Texan. They were clapped into Irons, and drove off to the prison together. A fortnight later, the Texan, relating these details to a stranger, while the Commandant was sitting at his desk writ- Ing e said : Words cannot describe my relief when these handcuffs were put upon us. At times before, the sense of responsibility almost overpowered me.— Then I felt like a man who had just come into for tune. The wonder to me now is, how the Colonel could have trusted so much to a rebel." "Trusted I" exclaimed the Commandant looking up from his writing. " I had faith in you, I thought you wouldn't betray me; bet I trusted poor own life in your own hands, that was all. Too much was at stake to do more. Your every stop was alalui owed, from the very moment you left camp till you came back in irons. Two detectives were constant ly at your back, sworn to take your life if you wa vered for half a second." "Is that truer asked the Texan in a musing way, but without moving a muscle. " I didn't know it but 1 telt it in the air 1" In the room at the Richmond House„ on the table around which were discussed their hellish plans, was found a slip of paper, and on It, in pencil, was scrawled the following: " Comm. :—Tota must leave this house tomfght. Go to the Briggs Rouse to-night. J. An..DING." Fielding was the assumed name of the Rebel who burrowed with Hines out of town where not even his tollow.fiends could find him. old the old fox scent the danger! Beyond a doubt be did. Anoth er day, and the Tones life might have been forfeit ed. Another day, and the camp might have been sprung upon a little too suddenly I Bo the Com mandant was none too soon ; who that reads this can doubt that through It all he was led and guided by the good Providence that guards his country ? But what said Chicago when It awoke In the morning! Let one of l a te own organs answer: " A shiver of genuine horror passed over Chicago Yesterday. Thousands of citizens, who awoke to the peril hanging over their property and their heeds in the form of a stupendous foray upon the city from Camp Douglas, led by rebel °Moons in dis guise and rebel guerrillas without disguise, and con cocted by boron Copperheads, 'whose houses had been converted Into rebel arsenals, were swatted As though an earthquake had opened at their feet. • • Who can picture the horrors to follow the letting loose of 9,000 Rebel prisoners upon a sleeping city, all unconscious of the coming avalanche? With arms and ammunition Moral at convenient loca tions, with confederatan distributed here and there, ready for the signal of conflagration, the horrors of the scene could scarcely be paralleled In save his tory. One hour of such a catastrophe wo urd de stroy the creations of a quarter of a century, and ex pose the homes 01 nearly 230,000 souls to every con ceivable form of destruction."—[Caicago Tribune, Nov. Bth, 1/36C.1 But the men of Chicago not only talked t they act. ed. They went to the polls and voted tar the Union; and so told the world what bonnet Illinois though t of tmason. Wore arrests were made, MOTs arms take; but ea.oo per annum, in advance. 0 1 ,11111110DOIM1 the grat blow was struck and the work over. Its had gone, the Conspiracy was dead, and it only re nuked to lay out Its lifeless trunk for the burial.— Yet, even as it lay In death, men shuddered to look on the hideous thing out of which had gone 60 many devils. Mr. Nuby Lays Down a Platform for the Clam ing 0 arapaign. SAINT'S Res?, (wich is In the Rtalt tiv Noo•Gensy,).fane 23d, VOA These Is dark days nv the Dimocrisy. Tho nda forchoons that befell our armies in front In Melt motul, the tall nv our kappytul, foliated by the sur render nv oar armies 2 Grant and Sherman, hex hurt us. Our leaders- air either phgn In loathsome dunguna, inkarserstiti by the lieven-datyln, Kan destroyin, tyranikle edit nv our late lamented Pres ident, or air baskin In the free air nv Italy and Wan ady. We hey no way us keepin our voters together. Opposin the war won't do no good, far before the next eleclushon the heft nv our voters will hey dhe kivered that the war la over. The feer tit drafts may do stithin in some parts nv Pennsylvany and Southern Illinoy, ter some time ytt , but that can't be dependid on. But we hey wan resource fer Ishoo—they will al luz be a Dimocrisy, so long ea ther's a Nigger. Ther Is a uncompromlain dislike to the Nigger In the mind nv a ginoolne Dimokrat. The Spanish ball-fighter when he wants to inflame the bulitoex tra cavorts, waves a red flag afore him. Wen yoo desire a Dlmokrat to froth at the month yoo will find a black lace will anser the purpas. There 4 the nigger is, too-day, our beat and only holt. Let us use him. Per the guidance of the faithful, I abel lay down o few plain mole to be observed, In order to make the most av the eappytlo we hey: 1. Alluz assert that the nigger will never be able to talk care tiv hisself, but will alluz be a public burden. He may, possibly, rive us the its by gain to work. In sick a emergency the dooty nit emery Disnokrat Is plane. He must nut be allowed to work. Associashen• must be orgenir4 pie nee- ther to give him employment, to work with to work for cony one who willgive him work, or pat ronize easy one who duz. (I wood West that doh uv us ez Isez bin ioretoonit muff 2 git credit, pay • trifle on account, so m to snake our patzonlge worth suthin.) This course rigidly and persistently tolled wood drive the best uv ens to stmlin,and the balance to the poor houses,provin wot we hey allot clamed, that they air a idle and vistas race. Thinly my brethren, was a inspirin effeck our poor hostels en 4 Jails full cm Niggers wood hey on the people I lkfy sole expands ez I contemplate the deliteftd vishun. 2. Likewise assert that the nigger will cum north, and take all the good places, throwln all our ak iM mcksoiks out nv work by underbiddln sly ens. This mite be open to 2 obgemhums, to-wit : It cross elite ty Roca the 1, and men mite nay, ef there's get enuff later ter wat's here, why not perhibit furriness Mares cumin ? I Buser.. Its the hiznis nv the voter to me. motile the contradiksbun—he may bleeve eether or both Ez to the sekund obgeekshun, where le the ifimoknit who coodent be übderbld and stan It even to starvashen, ef the underbiddin wstz dun by a man „ or the prond Kaukashest race! and where la the Dimoltrat so lost to manhood ez not to drink bind, cf the same nnderblddin is dun by a nigger? The atervin for work aint the question its the color tre the cause us , the etarvaaheu that mares the Mem:a Nigger equality msy be worked 2 to advantage. All men, without diatinekshun or seeks alrl'ond uv flatrin theinselves that somebody's lower down in the skate nv humanity than they Is. Ef tenin't fey niggers what wood the Dimocrasy do for snmboddy 2 look down upon f Its also 'sheer to enlist stun stile ay wimmin on our side. In times gone by roe notlat gnehtn v , Irpfins us , 45, fall 16 hands high and tuff ez wire, holdln aloft banners onto with wuz In scribed "Save us from Nigger Equality." You see it soothed em 2 hey a chance UV adveytisin let, That they win ttale, helpils critters, and 24, That anahent and tuff es they wur, sum one wus still goin ter em. Ef there slut no niggers, Elentrel Committis must famish em. Half a dozen will do fer a ordinary coun ty; of they wont steel, the Bentrel Committee must do it their:selves. Show per niggers in a township In the monsin, and the same tate rob the clothes lines and the ben roosts. Ever willln.2 sacrifice my self for the cause, I volunteer to do this latter dooty in six populous counties. These Ideas, if follerd, will, no doubt, keep us to either till our inmates split, when we will reap the reward In our constancy and fidelity. May the Lord hasten the day. PETROLEUM V. Na.tnr, Leit Paster uv the Church up the Noo Dispense shun. Alphabetical Record of the Rebellion. An exchange inabllahee the following:— A--Btande for Andersonville—the ghastly monu ment of the most revolting outrage of the cen ury. B—fitands for Booth—Let his memory be swallowed up In oblivion. C-Btands for Canada—ths asylum for akadaddl and the nest In which foul traitors haws hatched their eggs of treason. D-Btands for Davis—the most eminent low come. dlan, In the female character, of the age. E-48tands for England-en enemy in our advmslq, a sycophant in our prosperity-(Mu lc by the band; air, Yankee Doodle.) F--Stands for Preedom-tbn bulwark of the nation. 0-Stands for Grant-the undertaker who officiated at the burial of the rebellion. 1:1--Stands for Hanes--his tactics couldn't save him. I-Stands for laniard-the spirit of trees= J-Stands for Justice-give it to the traitors K.-Stands for Kea:merge-tor tactile: particulars see Winslow's Soothing Syrup. L--Stands for Lincoln-we mown his loss. M—Stands for Mason—(more music by the hand; air, "There came to the beach a poor exile," dee N—,Staruis for No-where—the present location of the C. S. A. o—Stands for "Oh, dear, what can the matter be ?" —For answer to this question, apply to Kirby Smith. _ P-Btanda for peace—nobly won by thegallant sold iers of the Union. Q--Stands for Quantrell—one of the gorillas in the rebel menagerie. R—Stands for Rebellion—which is no longer able to stand for itself. B—Stands for Sherman—he has a Mend and vindi- cator In Grant. T--13tanda for Treason—with a halter around Its neck. U--Stands for Union—" Now and forever, one and inseparable." V—Stands for Victory—farther explanation 14 un nercAaar3r. W—Stands for Washington—the nation la true to Ms memory. %--Stands for %tradltlon—Engllsh papers please Y--fitaudcopy. s for Young America—who stands by the Union. Z-13tands for Zodlac—the stare are all there. (Mu - etc by the bane— ' The Star-apangled BannPr, 0 long may It mum, O'er the Land of the free, an d mum, the home of the brats') WHYS TO lIMMMI. At this warm season, when bathing is so popular, It will be well to observe the following hints, wbleb we take from the Lmuion : "On first plunging icto cold water, there COMM a shock which drives the blood to the central part or the system. But immediately a reaction taken place, which, assisted by the exercise of swimming, producing, even In water of a low temperature, an agreeable warmth. The stay to the water should never be prolonged beyond the period of this excitement. If the water be left while this warmth continues, and 'the body Immediately dried, the healthy glow over the whole snafttee mill be delightfoL To remain in the water after the first reaction ba over produces a prolonged ehMness a shrinking of the Scab, and a contraction of the akin, by no mean* favorable to health or enjoyment ; for It is only in water, thoroughly wormed by the summer beats, where we may bathe for many home with impunity. Certain precautions are necesssry. Moderate exercise, by summoning Into action the powers of the eystem, and quickening the circuit'. tie ,n IS better than Inactivity. We should never go into water Immediately alter a meal, nor while the process of digestion is going forward. Nor should we plunge into the water when violently heated, or In a state of prelims per. spiration. Such imprudent:les are often fatal, ea ally lithe water be unusually cold. If too warm, the temperature of the body may be reduced by bathing the body and wetting the head. Before meals, rather than after, and especially be. fore breakfast and supper, are proper seasona for bathing. The heath of the days are to be avoided, but In very hot weather a bath In used to cool the blood and secure refroieldng Sleep. If In the middle of the day, a ahmled plat:cab:told be chosen, or the head protW.- ea from the s enticed be kept pet. or by wearing a straw tutt, - as by the Padden able French ladles at their watering-place& 4 rZ/Ptio Providence frau y : T bt s man of our acquaintance living In tuts ci t y wbo boo b een wanted thirty-now years, has stillwedding snit, which he has worn every Sunday rinca , end it to dig in good condition fbr Sudsy tea; Ifs tiss worn It Inn all sensate= tinadred sad sixty eligtkt days."