• ... . THE .110$Titosx:',DEBIOCRT, - -is i.ur.r.151161;41:041, - s, ity _ 1 OFFICE px runic AVENtE, vam . , tit nouns' All ovi: SEAll.loeololtt. • •• 'N:RNts.-41,50 annttin iti Atir.t . stu; .nn. rnille NOW be cbaryciliuld. centTi tinnum added to anvarap:%, at tlw option of ttniPribtls eri. to my ,—tputre of collection, etc. Dr.1.1'62 Inlynleht pinferfetl. .kl , Vl:lVilti6tisNTn . ' WM lie inserted nt the. me of $1 per sqnsie, of ten lines oriktis, Tor the fl el three sock.. and cents for each innlitiOnnt 'Wetik—Tas d0w,11.. • • And others, who. advertise IV the year, will he charged at the following rates., viz.; • For o'er ftqvgre. oxe year. ?HA ehanget i • ta l ara, al thr raUQ)" given es cep tto thoee of known rmxwieibiliiy -- .BUSINESS CARDS. Iii:NTTIN 4 11:001•LR , lIES UY 13111N.FEli.; W H. CO01.1:11 S;, - CO., I) AN RE - —3lNintrosv. Prn• Succenttm Post. Cooper Co. ffince.l.uthropsenew • • • - •••• • • . - ' sEARLE, k IC; KYS-anii Connrellors ! it.t.aw,—Montinee, ()nice in 1-eihtop ; ,' atm buildinz over the 114nk. • 1.114;N1tY.. AIeKEIN, • TTORNEY..and.Conttellar at Lavr.-Tcrratpaa, o titre In the -I:nton Meek, ; Iy3 si it DIZ. E. F. WILMOT, C . . ItATIV.Vic .4 th... Allopathic, and llomip tl pathic Col• leg , of Mmikine.— Great Rend, Pa. 001 CO. 'curncr of !klain'at I lilizal..vtluats. nearly opposite the N!ethodimt Cher. h. .nprk tf NVILLIAIII. W. WIIE.VI'6N, Z'CLI:OTIC . PHYSICIAN SURGEON' DENTIST. 117Til PP; 31 . 371()-Y 117/E.l TON. I MerhsTlical anti t . :17,q, , 1ttal Tient t. reectlily Bongtianden. Y.p1 . 0rt5. , 30111 3,l"Vif.r. 3 0 3333 Vlll3l appre, vale elm ..it , forra.- d l'rat2iOo of l'ltyai.t.:" m*11)1400 xrdful ni*,-.3dian. eq Terfh f with the unmd rireldltlc and Angie. Or 331.13CNVOTIL - Teal/ C-xtr333:33.3a ,ritalunt. p.tin and sSI nark kearranted, . .3 ,rirra.n...Tizrin 1431). 1:0143. DR. k„,;1`11..1Ei 1 1 , 1 DENTISTS, --I.ilontriwri, Fa. I.:lllinips: new over . 06" M. r Ills 1130.. All s iDental - operations iitbe k a 1,1 to: in good style and tyarraii!,nl. • J. 1.. 11E. Ell= DRS. OLMSTEAD & REtiD, Ivor .V.V.NI)I7.NC'E to tbat they 1...ve entered tato a rartinsr-N ip for - 0, I Practice of MEDICINE& Surgery, ant 111, lir"Parf lo alkali] to all calls in the lite 4,101,1 r 0:11n , --Abe ro.m-oy b • 1tr..1. C tilno.teati. in Lti Nnsrp, lay 1)1Z....N. Y. LEM', ry,• l ,,„•;a”. and .il - ,rgeon, Frier:d.riile. Of( 1.1.1 11•1 . 1.'. • - 11) It.?..EET parliblar tt etaient to the of Ow Eau and F.l - 1:: and b. tont hi, 1.1.10.;b•c14 , of. :1114 12N1leri&Ille 11l that brawl o•.• w 111 ...noble 1111.1 to ea, t a cure in ttot -0101 For treatini: dilkirooorrif the, on nn' he ,har,;.•,l 1,101111T,a by! Toro. (Augmq 401 sorrlnvoirm & vADAK ANI . F.D. 71 - It EDS.. AND PI:Al-MN .in .11 A meriean for Atonnmentrt, IL A Teml.nTaVeo. Alan:lm "Sink.. and Cent r.?.-Tat , &aim, in Alarhl.grml Slate for Alant , eg. Cent re ..*Snim a few dot kit , va.t. of :....earle's Hotel onl Orem; Montrane, W )1. A:, SN . 77 t srirr. 01 7 TILE (1c :a 13.r0d, ,trert. • TA11.1)11.- l'a, 111 . over Thalackr, (Irons)'. on Vain-,1 Th.o3.ful Tor fin,t favorn.ll , eonlinnn - 1 ,!,16,1; Itim-elf to (10.1111 cork gati,factorilY• d,,n, on ~11ort nal \VarnIIIICIVIO fit. P.t.. 4.1n1y P. LI NES, • I ,,,,silioN.km.r.:T.Nrimlz.—m, ,,, tro , P 3. :4 1 .114. A. vcr ' , ton, or live& W-n.r. . All wnel"...verninnit..ll. 3,:tir int :n.% tin gin n...linirt :Kith n•.iu ho.l n-0.11•. JOHN GEOVES, 7ASIIION.VIILE TAlLOR—Mill:trope. Iva.. 5 11,, the Rept i>t sleetin,7 .of Tlll - 111 re••• 1 order . filled I s olenptly. In fir , t-tet.• Clitting done MI .fiort kettle,. and wnrntnted to _ . L. 11: 1z:11E1.1, . - I lltrATTIKll.wt, at 11 ll ehorte.t nil jet. and ..k,n tend..' nrmnted. She... to Chandler, MONTIZOrst, ,IC-1•111. NV3I. W. s\ll'l'll Inf•;?..r AND el! AIR- I'd ANUFAyrt - I'M ' M'u Ylontr , ,e, Ps. j[C. 0. ACTI . IZER n OTS SIZOFN: TFlvre. storv. MI ' rnul, In "'II,. and repror:ng done Tlntly.' - • -- ABEI, TI - .IZIZELT„ ir.u.rut Orn.z... Medicine.. On:mil:A , . !I st,fl4. I:11 , 4+ War,. Pn;ttr. int , : • ltrocA•rir , . rung ittoodA, Jewett, YI - A zettkr..r .1111 inttut popular 1‘ . .11* NEt tI4IIAT.N.--`it'.lllrro ,, , . • -- - --L JJAYI 7 W; - . ---7 .1;116 - T - 11ERS, 'WHOLESALE DEALERS IN -sr.coays..mm xvcorxcfays; FANCY - GOODS. %vs: It vvItEN. l t soli% itAYDF.N. . . *t IMC:Y II AY1 2 .1.:::. NEW linrory, I - I • P BRUSTh 31. 11) 4 - , .Avirs s-oW LOCATED /I,:tr.MANENirI.Ti AT 5131.1,33.&ri01:1169 • Inend to the•irtiii. bi*lproge. , Sonliiro4ptly. 01:Bre at , .A. 1, 1 1 1 Eo3.sExpiarai IN KWLFO RD. PA .9 • I • IS TILE PLACE TO HARNESS cimap:rorticstsiz' AND dtr.TBE.woaTH YOUIk.MONEY. • _ J. 31. _ _ . X 34 BLE INSURANCE .COMP AA 1, CASH CAPITAL, ONE MILLION DOLLARS., ASSETTS Ist July' 1860, 51,481,610.27. 43,068.0. ' Char. S. Martin. MriitAcktit. 21. Vice I StrAft.F. , `eY John Mr . .. , t'olicier I•Aned :did re new4.ll:hy.flie mi t lerrined.,.id`ldo .0`.1r:,... one door ibuie Searle'. Ilotel. Montre.t.e. ra-1 - . rioc29 -y ' - BILLINGS srzioub, 1 +al.` a:r 14.. "1 1 • li_TASjavt received, a large i=tiiek (or nor', Stiisfeii, for I 1 rAinkinp,VPitrior, Office and .Shop ur Cuml,witti Stare Pipe, Zlitt...te.: • • aiiiiortmenti& oeleet find win tie fold ou the mu.i tavdriabie term, for Ca4.'or tit! IPtionjit Sir New Milford, 'ffith; . . The 'convention certainly a's:Li:oweit 1 any intent.ion.of indorsing the filial doo trines announced - by Mr. Spinner, : with . a distin4tness which - eau seareely he_ flat tering to that gentleman's ‘.!onceptien of hiS own influenee in Massachusetts.. ThO4 iit. , resoltitiolis offered.hy net:. Mr. Clark, - as - 1 a-crueial test of the' readinet ti it he. Con- J 'yen tiou 'to adopt open abolitiginism as its creed, went•to -the table - and % - L ei - i . 4 Iptrieil I never to rise. * - 4, . * ; * *. -4- ' - TAKE -N QT I.C___4 - f.. i l . It is alle , red that. the Coiii-entiou chetir-.. . - ~ . . ~.. led Mr. Stunner. Ins suPportkrs iiillong . i" - m-1 4 - 1 -41 1 : 4 " 1" -- t)P , 1))1e , y41-ns and Spectators - tutdonhtell4 - - - C Sheep Pelts , lita. - . 2 .il ' i ilk, for and pill hie& w 7 f I, - - tt - • ••••••.-,,t . -- Par. A gond a-tnortmeni id I,...ithee and Whitt , , and i did so, Ipt,i . whe does not see, tt-IlileOltitii! shweceonatantly tin haad. . Oth. e. T.:lnnerPl 4 & . ;' IW P P n ! „ t rk i z, r „ ot tii . i, g i ti : i i/A il iftg .0* , ~ Main Street. , , Ifontrette, Feb. fith. ' I ' ' ' . ' . " 4.who •1 - . . .1. I'. 4 . * 1-. c.i*Er.l-1 . ; a . I nits fact that the silent.par ', i isdp , I' .'i - -...• .Ipro - vedovere so much superior.in Intranet .D AVID C..ANKY,.211. D,. c l. ' us to-control' tt t ,.. 80 11 01 *. ilf ..the. Whole 'ET AViNGdweated pernuinently ai 'New kllfokit...PA.. 1' lirAl • ' - .. NC • s L....win attend pri.GliplAy-tv all cant , with t% iiieh he-ma y' 1, .... • • • , 'he favored. OtiltNi at Toddy lintel. .I' ! ' - 1 '-- A glance at.tnese flietS; as It Sftnlßß 'to ' N " .lc Milf " d '''" l Y• I.l * 1561 . '' ' 1 ' -- , • us, is enough tO silo* the extremn-unfitir .. ABEL TURRELL .. . 'less of - Oki attempts ..to eliarge. sinister • i purposes upon the Itepubliti;ins . or.M.asia- . ctrAs for *ate . . Metal lic • °B. ‘fm. Sewil7 i 42°u"eL -ChUSettil3g , ' a body :: The att eiiipt .litow iuse.iock a. Watch- Oil, Bed BO:. Bat'an4 1.% nnan Poi- , - .- '. • , ', . ',' • .--,,,,, . ' eon. Homeopathic Itemetlief,Tontre .Extrar.ar4a:reat...l eve , r , as Mil:lse - and' unpatriotic as ' it main- . 'artily of littintente.Satvet. ?BIN aud Pl,, , fCrl'i and an i fair' It potsrha*" ppeaf so to Mr. - Stitn ondleet variety of PALEnt. MtliiChag,, • . I . '-. - • .• 7• ; •". - -. ' - -•-- .. • -'- - Dandelion Coff6e,ll AHEALTHY 1...w:2:tr., One prtuad of hipettly woke if 'Mut* a* !Ito pontoltt of tethrr Con - eg. tale by - - AUL %rimy MEDICAL CARD. I,‘ ir..vcrxxamEciori„. 8.. Graduate LA. t`,l" the ..kiloptitle and llotuteupattac Co*gee it Red -I,lllr, would returollis Idneete ft) thel.eople Bend and riiinityne thtlic eery liberal patronage, with aldrli they have fa, for bin,. and he hopes by a strict ta p:aloe to bneintaeorederit a Liberal abare of the, .public confidence. great Bend. JanflarY 22(4 P*l, - 77- --- '- - - - - - --7-- -- - --: ---• :. • -, - --, --. ._ -•- --- :1' .:: , - :--,-- ".•_: -, :,- -,..,-.,•',..-.--- ,-..--.:, .-- - "' : '.'.- , '.', ... •• ' .::... ,":- : .' . ":::•7 '''' ' ' ' 'r.: '-'..-'''' ' ''' ' ''''.•'::'.l. .•'.7l:::'?.' ' ';'-::•- : -. : -1- ; .:-:-. ' ' : ' ,1 ; 7 . , ' , ' ' I ''':.:,::: , •:... 1 f ,- . E'. , ':.. - /:- -7 ;' -, . - .: ''''''''''''' 7, -if - ' : ',- -- ..';, - : 4 . 7 c , :;' . ... , :.f.'..-...._.1.. : : '_..-.,. i ,..-,...i:. - ..!; f , ,,;..;:1..,,..,, , ..:.?„ , ...., .., ..... , ~-;,. I,t : i 1:„,,. y .-, ii:l.,t ~,; . 1 t.- .. .% 1 •.?1.,_ , t , r.i . ..1. , _,.... 1 , 7.. , . , .. , :...1:; ,,,, ;••,- 2 ...—irx43 - w , A• :,.,.. ~,, ~ .•r. ~.....,. ~..,...:.,,,..;,... '., F :,:l'i.- ,:',• ~.;;:;, ;.., : • - . -... , . •`::. :: - • ki: • : 1•' , • :'• z : o'' • ~ '' , ;:i.'::: : :: : .7' ,. . ' 1:; _'. , r • •';',.•••• : , . . i • . , _. .• . . • • —. . .. . . .. . . . .. .. . ~. ~, . : . . : ,', ';,-; -':r - : . ..'.. :':;•• I - • -.. t i _ 1! We Join ' Ourselves to no li t VOL. 1,8. 1 . !W • ncip ill Ernaation Unite thet 1 - '. 1 Nort 11; ner.at d his supporters ,aitti - it',. Ma:- • be-. • , . • ; • ~ ,I forgotten by some - who oppose ! s hun;: but (Futisi THE'NEW Your: wog _n.). li e lio ; ld whir an tocoutestible truth, that' Wheittluieinaticipatimat - specch - Atiliv.. I neithqr man nor money will be forthcom lered by &miter Siintner hefoii the Wor- I ing fit: this war, if once • the ...people: are • , Conventioncostee was transmitted to us impr -sea with the belief that the • Obeli by telegraph, we preferred to publish it I tion of slavery, and not the defense of the . tuitircompanied.by any etammentsfliecouse I V n icn ,is its oiject,or that its original pur the ,delivery_of soch a speech by- bue ,h a ; pose i.t converted into a cloak' ler some man was too much in keeping! With his 1 new design of. Seizing this opportunity for character to be a faeVaf . :my - sign ificance. t the destruction of the secial system of the We waited to see what reception' it would ; Soilihit The people are heart ainlisoul with meet with . in Massnamsetts, 'and to oh i theirkovernmeut in support of , ' con- .' ! any . . . , : serve the.tone in - which it. wOuld •be erit- 1 stituttonal undertaking . ;We do. not be •i 1 • iused by the Republican press M other ;• ltcye that they .. will - follow it ..,,if; they are I,parts of. the cou n try ;. for although the ! made to suspect that they-are - : being de ' speech was of little consequence in itscilf,l ceivet into the support of any nueonstitu- , it 'might be of some use as an index ttkthe 1 tiona and revolutionary designs, , .- - present tendencies of public sentiment .ott i TII speed', to Which we haye several I a question of the very highest importance. I timeS referred, has Certainly done as much lln times like the e, men's opinions are las la . ), within the compass of Oie man's I mOulded - princiPally-by events, awl iris ol powel-s.to inspire this suspicion; to dis matter of interest to ascertain how f ar , if tract 'Find at taken the loyal, aMI, .by itt: at all, the course of the war has . develop. I direetion t to aid the disloyal. !But they ea a tendency in tlic public. mind io make; arc a:1 culpable and us dangerous to the 1 the emancipation of the slaves an instru- ' pnbli : weltiwe :is Mr: Sumner Who reek meld for its fill-flier prokention. The in. ' lesslv strengthen the effect -o f what be , . 1 terost we have felt in this question hilt I said, who represent a ;treat party as coo -1 resulted ftioM our solicitude that nothing, ' , sentiiu to the.schemes which lie disclosed. should occur to.break the unity' o f t h'e sod .1. ho are telling:the people, here and _ 1 hmYal states, whose hearty.and milted-sol.: eke u here, that the,success of certain nom ' port of the - tvar is the 011 C indispenSable ince,' whiar is- sure to oetair,*ill be the ; emnlition of its suceCss. If our Whole - pee- 1 trinniph of an unconstitutional, • wicked pie shall ever be brought to concur i n th e i :Mil ,-mragef,omis policy." - i . • . expedieney 'of proclidining the 'tnaneipa- M 1 .. Sumner is evidently more of a phi)- tion of the soutlin:slaves, it w ill. on ly i auth - opist than a statesman or, he would be. in consemienee of a succession of di,,..: not 1 Laced himselfin open hostility to the astrons• defeats by, whieh the ; uorthern 1 PolillS-°I . the adiniaistratiaa ou this sut'y Mind will be so sbtng and exasperatediteci,Lat a tune when the greatest sucejs. that - it. will not hesitate to resort .to the.' to 19iieh he "iild aspire is to 'id" ide the most blind and terrible measures of retab 1 North and Weaken the govi:rninentl-- lotion. The Tribune may deem' it design-' Even if he could at once bringl,the admin ble to " editeate" tin' public mind itp t o ~ istr4ion Gm•atloiit fiis scheme, this would this pitch 'of frenzy by the stern disci-, be 'its i"stalit eireet.' • pline- of neeumulated disasters, but it -is I lila Mr. Sunmer's plmilanthropy, too, quite certain-that the great .mass of the lis oil a one-sided and impractieUbje sort ,or northern people arc capable of acquiring 1 it wtlmuld never teach him Oust 0 cripple a this education only hi the schooLof ealant. 1 pa ng which is striking heavier blows . at its.. By the adoption of Mr. Stunner's t slavOy , than his showy - rhetoric ever saloon?! at present, th e government Nou ld i dreatmed Ofdealing, noel to prefer a bloody throw a firebrand of discord into the loyal randy` ioror spreading end for an institution stat e s . w e h ave „„ t hi ng t „ sa y, on ;„,, w e inevitable doom may be aA peace side or-the:other,- as to what, it;: troy 'be i t . " l as the Phialderiaa: " 1 the liPaS. • expedient to do six- months_ Iwnee. It is' Dangers of Northern Rebellion. to be hoped. that there will be sinlicient i - 11 t• copy till` 14 1 4101'6n , tri m the New statesmanship at , W ashingt oh , Ili . . deal , - '• , ! Yoti; Ilermild ? Nr, hit b jmortr:mys' a conditit*in wistdy with-any new . phase of 'affairs ! The only; of,pimblie feelmg dreadini to .eoptemplate which the Intare may disclose. quest,jon which coneerns us riotsis Wheth-; and mat prose terrible in its' consequen- There is hope only. in stistaining the er the present p o licy of the administra- ceea ' • tion,.one - ht to receive the support., of the; r '.. (a i i ' lcot la tuiallY ignoring all deltaic in eonntry. , I reference to. emanripat ion or any other It IZ:obvious that the war, cannot, he topit excemthe prosecution - of the war mint . i . t he sword decides. I al: there be no Immomme . ht to it sueeessful issue •by the men who tl Qum the ratiieni wine; or. the late : tHl"if public sentiment, if w " eitten llepubliean party. Unless they •can : fur- fa in 11r t . '"")ti'''flwl'L'iii . s.ilj ( .•vs•;. for mti nish all the funds and do all the i h rhthvr.. . Iy a one eau coMmand- trtumphant % ie- I they are not. entitl e d , to dictate ale pout; ;of the war." Nor would' they _ I,J, even them. for-the other citizens it the' 1 0 , :t t i Istat es; who so far outnumber then, have fat least as e-reat au interest in the country as•they has e, and as good a right to have , : 1 a 'voice in the management of the war. I i .N o thing but the terrible logic o f event,; . would ever bring these loyal eh izeims to Igive in their adhesion to the emancipation ilmoliry of Mr. Sumner even Wit siumld be i adopted by the administration. Unless 1 the public :•61tilnelit of the NI wig h Woke to : , DOCtilne nearly unaiminumS in &Vivi. of . el naneiltatiern, i(Wonlil he 3 gi-..-intie-blun der tier the administration to proclaim it.' The s u ccess of the war is the 'paramount . consideration ; but tiLere is no reason to ' hope that time war can be sluices:din with oat time united support . of time northern people. Whatever v irtne there may be ' lin emancipation as a. means of sub:Fling ',- the South. it is a pretty safe proposition., that a third of the North, with emaucipa- emu inscribed on its banner, would not be as,str.itmt: a.: the whole North without -it.' Laying equally out of view, for time pees- i cut, 144.! neg.rophilisto of the one side and 1 1 the constitutionalism of the other,. a m id looking at the question in- the. puede I practittal aspect, of probable military suit-,l eess, it is tolerably clear that emarteipa-1 :ion can never he an effective'' War MelS-; itre Until there is ..a genell conviction of; its expediency.. , . I ' It is in this single aspect that we have,' chosen to regard -Mr. Sunmer's Speech,l esteetn#l it of no importance whatever except as political chalf. for _catelming the t direetion (tribe wind.- . ' Massachusetts is, ' without doubt _the most, high-lured an ti-slavery' state- in time Tnion, it, and Sonth Carolina having loo:' been ret-arded as thi. opposite pe;los ',Wiwi .politicaf magnet. *hen, therel;mie, we ; find that the emancipation scheme,theMdi I broached by one ofher own „senators is , . revndiat ett with every Mark of disfavorin that , state, foul by the Republican party of that stab.% . we may interpret it its a pretty-certain indietition that the iMtilie. sentiment of the country is such that a proclamation of emanciinition would far tally divide . and distract the NOrth.• As iol , leoce of the manner in which Massa ehusetts repudiates the scheme of Mr. . ..ititoimer, we ask attention to the following extracts front an article. iti the Iroston Adyertiser, w paper , whose alfilitneon - dor; and Republivan antecedents :rive. peculiar keight to its statements on this subject MCEZEI I ~.a tritniet i lid, nt 'III t 'lt of yr, t• tli'llt. tilt 4 fee .will the tr. ftt h. 1,1 I. _ IN, don and 'nd tom , tblt Turnpdze .off ,t 101 , 1 •Irt• Ut 611 1111 rikl• I .1 It. '~ --- - - . —root tr 1 ovtroz, , U. I rt.. 'll , e tt i I I in rfu• • :mg If T Party that Des not, Carry the Flag 'and = kepp Step to the isilasic of the Whole- Union. -N9N7* . 05E,1TA., , T4.114.04 7 ,r,:0CT08 . Ek 24'i....11561:;•__ . ' ', "']the syMptoms of a mut Mauls and soli-, , tiou • spirit nguinst the.goN toinient are daily _awl lemrl3i fig:V(46Oll , Z 01121iIMAVVI , :11; I , the, unit in the radical wings of the Re pub lean party and among the Abolitio d l ists ' the tt(in. blue stripe. Both fartiZuts let% in:r been separated -by 'only' 'the bre: dth 61 a hair, or • the difference be two m tweedle duaninel tw - eedle doe, are con !ally united in ommsition to the Pres , - idet t, whose manly letter to - Fremont is the )Celt Inn for the opeuing ;of h general tire- upon him, ..from • the • big sixty-t Our pots n!er:: ., :il , own to - the popguns. Even the ele. , rnpit at St. Lillis is used to stiread mniiny throughout the . ' No i rth. [Mier '60 1 42 circumstances it-is thel duty or the eaml•ervativeTela4nents to ci(mte forward ati; ( l ...install) Mr. Lini olii and i:lcnottce the al. lition traitors who are the prime rouse of the pre, , ent misfortipes or the Country, Mk are drain! , their worst to' render ilea , neat the mischief they have wrought. government itself;-consulting its own ti-, ought to seize and ineareerate the lers, who:- are it thonsand times ,1 1 - e dangerous than the editors of North- papers sympatirizim , with the South- I; rebellion and opposing the war for the Ilion. The- secession heresy never had 1-3trengar at the North, F:mil- it ,is now t l nletely squelched here by the vig(or. . actfon of the r..t,overnnient. But a /•e formidable and far more extensive mint) element ,openly defies the Presi p, spits nikin and execral.es_the consti (ion, which is the bond of the Union, -11 threatens to subvert otti.- whole poll ti system,turning it either ;into a eonsoli e(l military despotism o' Onto aMcxiean trchy, in 'whieh nutnerotii . petty chief- Will' each play an' inithpemient Part• i‘Vhen th e Southern seve;isiobists were (ming their plans again 4 the federal (remanent we - warned W Thtehatia.n of danger :tnd called on him to t . .t with 2rgy. Nl , e told_ hint I luii, his l'oei were 1 iis qw u 12,01t50t01 , 1,1.13nf leading mem- Hof the Peinocratie partly meditated I. destruction oldie gorernmen;t.. Our I lmoniti•ms were unheeded and the :eiru. quence is.a bloody -war. !!W.'"l2, now warn 1 Lincoln that there is iiiisaflcetion. to governMent in his own : Tarty at the Prth ; that it .is . every. -day pining Inn' 'al sari Lsi nio ilei to 11.3 .. . . ength, and that _tutlesii •he speedify sit . it, it is very - likely toon to crush i and betray tlie i•auSeyof the . 1 7 nion i I o the hands of its Sot4liern tbe. This now the real danger of tlutscittotry,anti should he jtromptly!lneti l by the . rower- 1 1 arts of the go‘'ennuent, betore it-i fisolidates its 51. - rettgtit.apii matures its i Inns. ,i II the , poliey of the red . rev ol ut lunar); 1 iepuldfc4;' prevail'', Mu - 1 the gi - k-ern- i tent were weak enough tP succumb ti) it 1 ;d . endorse such , proelatMttions ::i. • Pre- . rioneti fir issue others to the same effect lat North. would hecoine a; Aivi.led instead 1 )ra pnitol people, and the `South .would.l vecome so thoroughly rmitea • that it viould,be;Seasy to fift;ta'white crow as a . ;ion Man heyorathe Itelalyare Ind the' (hio. When 'the ;kar commenced no slne ii -, ell informed i nuitijkopedlloc,the ., success f our willies uitleifitp - onf' o(os:wig-of ' a tenon , element- in' the' S'rnthern,r 'States,. rhi eh q f fßila beeOtrie="(lo - e'loped : as "our. lirrnies'fnivinesia,- The m'alignity of: 11) 4 417: ti 00! iiln seeks toille . §t,TO: 'that: . eleinec k t AndTconvert it int a' 'onit `at-:hostility, .And . it.is ortly'succeisfiit, • the :-uteri of ' the present ivenefation'icill 'Mit 11.4;n .. t0 'sne'tlkr . end- of the war ; and {refit -its vast:, .'l nattire,toveiin,g'OU'irea , oftwo' thirds of the Soil , :of the.'Vnited - :i.States,'' it': wilt exhaust nr.f ruin the' cotintry.._ : • ..•--.:'-: --,- ..,. • • • - . The. Land — T he Home-The:Reit, ... •• - :,. --Tt•Ns-=•Dtsrg." •• -': . i . .Thcre's a brighter tiss•lhan this world of sorrow, ,New joys dawrrtin each - to4uorro - vr. -; .. • Lo • Ok away! look away I look away ! • - 'Happy • Land ! 'lf faithful hero to ciery duty, : • Aline shall birthat Lind of- boa* ; - Look &Way! look amyl lookaway i " • ' ' • Happy Land. • . • . '" .. . Then Sing of the hinds° happy, : , ' . . All bright! . ' all bright: . • 'Tor the happy land 11l takerny stana, • - And strive for a crown in glory. ' Away, away, &Way above in glory, , Is Away, away, away above in glory. . There's a Joyous Honig .beyonddeath:s river, - Where bright angels dwell forever. N Look away I "look away! look away! Blessed home ! , 2' • : In that fair home no death shall enter, . Pain, nor grief, nor storm nor winter. Look away !, look away 1 look away! 1 , - - . Illesaixl home! . „ . - , Then come to that home so lovely, ' • • So pure, no sweet,, . . ' Ity prayer and filth come icek the path That leads toghomerindheril•en. .. Away, away, away above in hetil;1•II, ` ' • sway, away, away above in heaven. There's a Joyful intnt for tlu wora'und Weary Wanderers o'er thin desert dreary— • I;pabove ; up above; up above! peaceful rest. Amid( our hearts to Christ Wednay claim that rout In Leuven- -_ lap above! up above! up above! endlein rot Then turn - from thls. world of - sorrow. All dark! all drear! To that &righterland and jcwoltallenne, And eActl.:As r,4 in glory. Away, away. away, above in glory ' ay, away, away, atm% e In glory. Relative Power of the Loyalisti and Rebels• , Much leas been said of the prtiuder ent strength of the Government over that of the Instil:gents - to - force their trimillph in tin pending struggle ; vet seldom qr never has that strength, moral or materi al, been fully summed, because some of its . element,s hate been forgotten. or defi ciently estimated: The moral power that spring from the ultimate omnipotence of Hight, has perhaps been duly weighed,at least by all thouOtful readers of history; and, as correlath e to this, they •have cal- CU t he . i idiom feebleness and inevita self-dustructi, , n Hut .41'v have. nut sufficiently for ` tier' vast re ee i% e , despite their corruhtrul- crA, from"the symvally of :1,11 nations and from the nonsciences of thodsauds on thou- =E=MEMM!iII selves. , Nor have they thought: eneugh of the irresikil;le momenitint wherewith the perSerVatice of all Northern races, when once fairly.set, in motion, gNiril runtio"—‘g:titis strength as tt; aa vancys"—aml surely, crushes .out the fierce spasmoilie -resistance the fiery Soul hrel i ts. But this moral might, as overwhelm:lig as inipontlerable, we will leave kith The above brief hints, re- marking that. it!; quiet., but all-conqueting stra•ragth is hest set forth by Worflswortb, hi the nettle sonnet cerement:big-7 Itounad citenniscritud In time and space As regards our immense mastery over the physical resources, we otive' ,l a few details, adding in the elements gew orally emittd. A year ago hut June,the free people of the United "States-Audi:ins excldeml—Weretwenty-sevcm millions six'„ hundred and seventy-three thousand two h un d re d a nd seventy:4mo. Uwe choose,' for the moment, to 'omit Missouri, -Ken tucky, Maryland, and the District of Cikt-. umbia, as equally help and hindrance,there: remain twenty-fintr miliimMS nine hundred; and thirty-five thousand eight hundred' and tiftv-one ; or, for the Loyalists, nine teen uillians t wo hfindied arid sixty-three thousand six hundred. aid tWenty-nine, and five millions; six hundred . nna seventy <two thou :non two hundred and twenty two for time ftebels. Deducting, next,tfie free colored people—as available to neith er side, or to ,hoth sides alike—we have about nineteen millions against some five millions five hundred thousand. nual increase by eight hundred 2 thonsanitl in the last decade,lnnst now hay . e . grown to full nine hundred thousand, o r one Million two hunilreil in the sixteen nuinths since the census was taken. Of these about one million one hundred -thousand - I would be by natural increase, and sonm lone iminireml thousand by imigration.--/-- Our proportion ofsthe former would gi,ve, us abm\nt hundred and fifty then ' sand ; the immigrants We have had .in al- , Imost solid Imo-4,, making . nine . hundred ; and fitly tlumusand, and of the remaining tswo hundred mid lifty-thousana at least fifty thousand may be taken for fugitives or exiles by', m Sectissiou violence. This would - leave our present - . array - twenty e ctuillions strong against five millions' ! ilevtn. hundred thonsand ( , or. three and a halfto But again :-,-Whatever else - .111 Mil:of tinr the coining six months, it - can scarc e lie doubted that, by . April next, the three States Mentioned, With Western Virginia—to say nothing of East . Tenni:S st•e,, &e.--4.ont.aiiiing.some.three millions of - freemen, will he eontpleteiy pacifie:ned, :t w i, in least five'siXths; aetiVely on • Mir silo. To this add alt the half-year's `iii:. crease, since "Secession" Would, doubt less., lose fully its share. by, emigration . of the 'discontented or oppressed, mid live should - have next spring ;something'. like twenty-three milliong against six millions t wo hundred thousand, or near tierce 30,1 , - then-fourths to one.. - This is the hone and muscle account. • To arm, clOthe, train, port. mid feed this vast preponderance ..of. bone and muscle, we-hare - an, equally vast 1 preponderarkee in Meantt, T4ks,ds: 110111 1 M 01 our fiTniliiiii•of the OCeart, and our Ail -1 ity to buy : what. we want; And pay for it in breads-tuffs and meats ramie, our. ,bank . ing capital is over three, and a half, tiMeS greater, and, including the eashable means , . , 01.0nr.private.bAnkers,,.'wohers and indi- viduals, our available rosourees are 'doubt-. 1 less much More than five to one. I- "-Nest clearlyo;hen, as, Pr..Plissell bum= . , 1 sglf now openly admits, we littn,,„ftlyitil-, "iiiitatiVatutabsolt(tiioro, lt, w o . w d put I "it forth;;Werush.the,rebellice..witli iler- a tr n i d m i e n c a o m n tainty and ease.. And it ...Ain. &tiint 11. 1 00,) A he may rest vsareiV-and if not Rai: fast tts Cl o in un Y t'7o l le a lli rg ati 9' et t 4h7 Y o r.4 , l ; 3, i t f - 1 sure t . he_restfit - ide.siredpitikiqqPkiltlfAk : quirer, .. ~,, , ,'-':, .. :. , :- , - ...' ~- -•• ,- ' • The 41,y: PraSs:_ r • The report oftilie committee to. nftestr gee the friiuds alleked to hove Leer milted by . contcactorti stud others Upon the State for 'Cleating, . Jo;c.; -for the three months' volunteers,: • has jtist . been made. AMa ority of the committee were-rdiepublicans,.Und it is .a. noticeable fact that although the report -suites that it was. made Angina, :it was net made public till four days after the elect-' -ion! Aiigust i tIP it is dated : now , why ;n as it thus held back? Obviously 'for no other reason than -the - . fear that! it Avould- operate on the election to the tlet, Onion, of the. Republican- party. And yet' those people tell us, we'must have i-no party now ! All is sunk in_ patriot4m; but ter fear that the -people would 'not vote patrietieally, they must not kilow how the State had been plundered - and the soldiers robbed till after the . eleetien ! AWay with such patriotism—away With ; such pretences. 'it is a downright sham I —an imposition on the people of ithe State. On the subject of the blankets for `the soldiers, the report says, "Some of them were bought for *1,30 per pair, mid sold , 1 to the l•Ritte for $3,50." 'This price, how ever, was subsequently reduced• to $3,1 7 per pair ; and they add that such . conduct "from beginning to end will not commend . itself to the honest convictions of our IW I low citizens?". They also say WC must, ci ' 1 COMICIIIII the self-interest which, in; the hour of national peril, foroetfini , all pl. triotisin, seeks ()illy hove it may turn its N country's sufferings to its own peenniary advantage." As to the coGe that was furnished,they sav that the evidence of those,who roas ted it is; that it was bail. It seemed to have been brought in ships with cargoes of South American bides, and was so mach impregnaed with the smell ~ and 'taste of hides that it was called "bidet'." The 'Committee iis very severe upon Governor Curtin for the appointment 4 such dishonest and incompetent agents.— They sae: "T. . he appointment by an Exeetnive, from personal or partizan tAtives f of in c.onpetent agents to offices of great re sponsibilit v, is'at all times a greatderelie ion from duty, never more than in great political emergencies, when the - disasters resulting front the ignorance or incOmpe tc,:nry of the agents, for—whose appoint ' L ment he is responsible, will inevitably ex • cite suspicions of timid and will • return 1 home to the Executive in humiliating :charges of collusion!" , _ . The report contains much that is in structive in the wav of showing how the contractors and gi;vernment agents rob ; the treasury and the soldiers, but we lave only time and spaiie to refer •to it ' thus briefly. It shows that the charges Of in famotr, speculation. so freely Mad at the time, were true, thOugh it is plain 1 that the depths, of the mat ter have been so wen covered up that they have not been wiplored ' We irtist we ... shall hear no more of mobbing Democrats frir exposing these thing-., on the ground that: they thus embarrass the, government. It .is much more impottaut that the govern ment should lie li nest now, than in tilites of peare, when the treasury is overflow ing. I every man to a rigid acconnta , bility, and let rascals be exposed. • The Union. , Most of our reader havedoubtlessread that affecting passage,in the book of Huth 1 in which the beau iful - Moabitess,speaking to her bereaved Mother in-law, exclaims : "Whither thou goest,. I i will' go, and - whither ilion•lodgest, I will lodge,'' and the malediction s le called upon'her head, if aught but, Beat i. should part diem.— And it is thus every true jlatriot -now feels towards the Fnion. ALIA why should not every - American citizen; whether lie 'be native born oil naturalized, love it ? ilt has been our bulwark in war, and in peace it has madri Its the, freest and most, prosperous nation on the thee of God's earth. It has bed') a benevolent and kind i parent to all, and, has spread the same panoply of protedtion over the lowest as I well as the higheLt citizen. It is the leg -1 acy of Washing+, Jefferson, Madison, 1 and other illustrious revolutwnary , patri- I ots and statesmen who have 'gone to their reward, and we tould cherish- it,' as a i JeweLbeyoud all price. ' ,bet is there -1 flare, with one heart and one soul, gnaill, protect and deQ..MI it. %With it we are i citizens of a grel;t and free republie— without it, we would lie outcasts upon the earth, and a ly word and reproach-to i all nations. It i f controlled at the pres -1 ent time it is true, by men who, have la-- bored dilligentlyi to create :a sectional war fare, which has destroyed it, and by men who are, not eqiu l l to the task confided to them.; but that is no reaion why we• shoal abandon it'. It is freighted with all that is dear t ) us as memand as Amer lean citizens we ,Itould prizelt abhve all earthly good: The Democracy have al ways been true to the Union, mid in this trying hour, when the earth almortAit en ally rocks beneath our , feet, we -are conti dem they will SPll be found catiyiitg the glorious old tlag of our common Country, and keeping step to the music, of the Ult .. i • ton. .. . ------,...-....4.---------- I Saturday' aft&noon, one of ~the Ade graph officials ride into the quatkers at Alexandria, in company with.two or three orderlies and on :officer. Ite wasdreased rather shabb ' il -, though "a hamiseule min.!' As the passed along, a jauntier of young ladies Isaws them, and supposed Le was a prisoner, and, accordingly Pit,' owed along to see. He; wishing to carry out the joke, Old them, on thew arrival at their quartet*, OM be was a cOlonel of a Georgia reiiment. The girls, condo!. e 4 A yith bp, i v it promised Innate should . -be taken eaN'o .. .:Vpy All , VeTli. IllVilii . 1 and shortly returner With SOlne more of their_friends aMI :half a doien beautiful b°ffuetg;iccAinliallidd. • With their cards: tiimikperfuniel, 40 'One op with rib. bons arranged • in ,lleberstyle,. They did' not embrace hum then, but, werelto,come / round and sing' I{od song's, ..und,er his window that night; ;liiabout; d ~, ahouitsk -he had to leave fo,r Washingt.er4qailing off, his trophies midsleaving the' :iirls,to Sigh , I i for - the urtfortainate s Mpnel. +` .. - • "Ur 1 NO. 42. 1 The Volunteer's arewell- The reveille iti sounding, love,' • - It cans me Aim thine irmit _ • lt bids me leave my peaceful home, • To share in war's alarms. Yet though thy cheek b 6 pale, dcat love And pearly tear drops fall,— ' I know thou Wouldst not have me clay; shtink from duty's all. , Then once more fare thee well, my love ! Nay, cheek those falling tears!. , • , On our good stiords thit day depend The hopes of future years— . ' - On heaven we'll rest our conidenEe-- ' Who blessed our early love ; And faithful than our hiarts remain— , . Tiltsi ne the gars above. - .11In the conflict falling, love, .•. A bleating will descend— • • , Upon the grave of hhit who dies Ills country to defend. ' Though thou bewail my lost, dear Wye. 6nejoy is surely thine, • . • , - . Whichahall atisuage the present grief. And solace life's decline.' ' For long as summer'', pleasant gale e- 'ltipple theneria blue wave, A nation's love shall hallow ` The humblest patriot's graire; ' And dear to every faithful heart . ' Our names shall ever be.. While floats beneath the vault of hem-knit The banner of the tree, • No longer can I littger, love! - Our liag is now unfurled; Upon its course is fixed thlit day ; • . ' The gaze of all the .vnirld ; Our country:a natne.and thine, dear hive; a My battle rry shall he, And long as life will f rental", • - to it and titer.' - The Fight it Santa Rosa Nand. By telegraph from New Orleansf via Norfolk and Baltimore, it appears. that a body of Rebels---,afirriber. tinknownH,se- - lected Porn several Mississimii, Louisiana and Alabama Regiments, made ail" attack upon Col. Wilson's Zonaves, stationed on Santa-RoSa Island. The opposition of the camp of the Regi ment was pecidiarly exposed,to the ene my. It lay em a level plateau`, and every tent was in plain sight "ottime Rebel ' thr ees across the river. The commander - of Vert Pickens, Col. Brown, ordered the regiment to pitch their tents, there, : _but did not supply them with artillery, throw up batteries, or intrenehments - to cover them. s Col. Wilson, therefore,with the civil engineers attached to this regi ment, proceeded to ,construct -u system of intrenchinents-and places' of shelter for his force: - The difficulties in the •way of this undertaking were many, and of the most-serious kind. The rMulte the fort. was almost impassable with swamps_ and heavy cliapperai,alternated with-sand hills. This was remedied first, for the position was to the fort precisely that of an ,outly ing pick - et, and in Case of the landing:4, of an attacking paity, all the course left open for them to pursue, was to skirmish away to the flirt. • The road where it crossed swamps was filled in with' brushwood 'covered with sand, time sand bills wore •dug, thrmindm, the intervals were tilled in, and ,wherev er embankments were thrown up • they were disguised and masked by the bushes which they had to cut and dig out. They thus secur ed n Ihnvoi nil" way to within twenty rods of the frig, and the minim, able twistin!, , s'and windings of the road afforded secure positions from which their skirmishers could annoy and retard the advance of the enemy incase they should! Make an attack . .. -Attention was .next; _turned to the securing .of places of del ter for time men in case time bombardment of the camp should occur. . This work is-as done in the by the light of the stars.hione, so -that the Rebels - could have tlfi idea of the locatiOn of,these places of refuge. In. huildinf , these,- advantage was taken of the . "l:ty of the land," which is ribbed and corrugated :With sand hills that • sometimes rise ah , ruptly to the beightrof-twenty or 'thirty. feet front the leveli - Behind a nl. into these they dug and-threW op-sh It r snili eient to cover a thousand men. The ap proaeh to these shelters was proteeted,hy an embankment seven fret high and :four feet wide on, the top,while advantage was - taken of, every angl6 of elevated spot, to repel a three marching upon them. This was the place for sharp-shooter: to work. It Was stated that-a force clown .upon time regiment mould find that roads leading nowhere would lead them estray, :the verysand. hills hehind which they ex pected to advance in safety Were but the hiding placeS from which °a. murderous fire would decimate their ranks. - - This work was Completed in two -we.eks,, and with the expectation every weekthaf. the rebels would open their-tiro upon the workmen. The Rebels confess. that time Zonaves fought bravely, and they acknowledge a , loss Of forty killed and about eighty worn . ded. • They also state that they -committ ed great bavoc among the Zouaves; but, as they give no approxiMate number of the supposed killed and wounded, some doubts of that part of time accounttinty be allowed, After a consideration of the aboVe . description of their defenceS. They state that they, spiked the guts Tbelonging to • the regitdent,lnit w ehave yet to. learn ; .that the 4 ZoiciVes had been supplied with • artillery. At the date of our last adVisies - they had not,been so supplied. , The rebels ,do not mention_ anything, about the-tr Oops in the fort supporting; the volanteers,either by firing their metin-i ted artillery or advancing •their infantry. This certainly appears very extraordinary;!, but doubtless, when we-receive the UniOn statement of the engagement., we shall, have a different account of the The rebel surprise must have been very, sudden, and they Must also have • as snit doily ~ vacated* their newly acqUired • •••iound, else, the fort wonld have,;tssisted in the engagement, ifonlyfor self prOteett ion. The island is certainly forty long; but Wilson's troops were;as before. [, stated, located !Sear. tile regulars: r-fr A circular has been ;issued> from 'the Treasury Department hr • relation 'settlement of the ' - acCotintit of deceased soldiers: • The u'idou'.6f an officer or pri-, *atelt;:, eutitleit'to tei . ..eii•e 7 the MoOy dlte r if there •stiii ‘ a*i'the oar goP:te, 'children or then-guardian- 7 K the soldier dies unitiarried,The'father, - mother, hroth: `ers and.sisters, or heirs in general-teoeire the amourit applications mush be made under oath,and be address= 13..rieneh,See.ond 'Mahar Of the Treastiry DepaiiMent;;lVashiniton: • iIfm,PRIIMISIG of ALL . MD% DONE AT THE OPTICS. OF TILE rypat.c>" - - Ort:AL•37, 1 AND'PNOM - , Pra; AND AT "LIVE AND LET LIVE" piucza. 1 4 11 E , offi4:e or, :the Montrose - Democrat hte'recently been supplied with anewind choice variety! tipe, etc.. and we are now prepared In print punpbreni circulars, etc., ate., in the beat style, on abort notice. • • • ll4ndbillii, - -l'os'iers,:Piograminei, and 341ter kinder's( work in this dine, .done secording to wart. 13OsineSs, 'Wedding, and Ball Cis Tickts, ate.. printed wl;4 ACMWS and dtspattli: •- • Justivesl oiti-Cooltables'.l3lAnks; Notes Wide, and all'ather Blankf, vu hand . or. priatedio order. ["dabw.irkaudßlanka;tobepaidforordelivery [W.hatthe Abe Monists - hot* Do ne. Wendell Philips , the lead _ and higis pric4 , of Aimationismonade a speech I in BoStoU on the 23d of August laSt—the annis:ers:My . of the birth: day. of Theodore Parker. - 'We find tliis speech in the Pine aud l'alm, - anit we make a clutple - ol strik img extraets-from it; Speaking of the dead Parker,..Wcildell says . "Ile telonged tO that class-whieb,with iOut-ofliee has hews able by simple-weight. charaoer and to revolutionize- country.this llc die:d just at.the - •break of the sucee.:oftliose-ell'orts,_find to-day the nation reels • itoder the ... W*B of his in4tlity right,haifi3. thank God fOr it ! For us .a•lio sYttipathize with hint s 'we may lift' up our heads ;- for the-day of our deliverance, has . come. The ski- is all bright, front the centre to the eireunifer ence,with gleams of hope. God hes lira en up the foundation of the Uiuon and. he wilt eat 'renew it!", , • . Here we halve the distinct : avow:it of the purposts of Abolitionists—"to revolutiort; in this country." To-day • -the nation reel 4 under the hlow4'reeeirbillrom. AG. olitionists, and Wendell thanks. God for it ! Tbey may now lift IT their beads ; for the (lay ix their deliveratieo (the de strut:lion of the . eountry) i 3 come. Whilst patriot s are Mourning in despondevey'over. the sail prospeets of the country. - :to them. "the sky is all brigtt." They can impi ouslyexelainf, "God has broken up 'the Union,-and hu . *illliot renew, it," ; . the claim :of the. Abolitionists as having been the au thors of disunion and civil i'ar, Wendell proeei•ds to declare that they arc deter ininetlto prevent all rennalies for the rn- - in, they have produced. lie Nays . "The cabinet talk (Lt . reconstructing this country as it ‘vas.,blit we qtean:,to tell then that ean't, be done. (Cheers.) We - are to teach them that this war is. the most intolerable abitse of The 19th een- turn= the mateldesS criMe of that genera tion, uhiess it means the emancipation of fonr miWous orvietims. 11'e are to to the Administration that thirty millioias of people are nut hurled'into the hell of civil war,mpless they haye such a purpose as will make it the holiest crusade which► the annals of the world, basever shown., It shall be a war to cut out the: eating eau eer which :is destrfiying our leading men,-. :nut fur which thepe6ple are ready, need ing nothing but leader S." (More chpeni iietutn .of Dr. Expodition. A telegraphic deSpath front littlifax an=s - thi ners the arrival there last week of the schooner United kt.ate', the vessel in which Dr. Hays from- Boston on his last expedition: to the Arctic regions, bringinzs ' back the tiommander, and party -well but reporting the deaths of two • of their fell** voyagers, These two ant August,Somtag, the astronomer and seeimiol in command of the expedititin and , Mr.c4illson Caruthers, the carpool.. • , • .The expedition sailed front Boston the 7111 of . .Imay,;lB6o, in the. schooner - 17slitod Stairs-. i•tn ions Gm-thew which, had its name changed from that, 'to hi, Hill. The phims.waSto - proceed first to Upper Navick,in slat. 72 deg. 49 inin , ,• there to-procure dogs and furs, -to le-avo ,that port about the - end of Jule „ , proceeding through the middle ice; to reach Smith's Smits about the 15th of Au plist. •It was calculated tliat the first imumer would be exhausted -in rciehing that locality, the winter_ setting in' early in September.—Fruit that time,tilllfurelt. 1861, they were•to remain tlw earliest ret Urn of.sunshine, sledge imarties were to he formed. and engaged yr . - Making explorations: t The expedition reached Smnith's Straits, - about the' 78th ' degree of north• latitude, rift the ,26th of August, 1860, hilt' found that,the ice couldmot lie penetrated and that 'the schooner :could not, reach ally higher. •Therwintered at Port Foulke, expecting:to „. , et Into Bmith's Sound-wimen the me would' ne, melted in the summer., It -was in this. &mini, in longitude .78 de - grees 40 minutes, that, Dr.. Kane's vessel, the Advance, had' to be abandoned in 'May; 1855. But the 'Straits -continued sealed.ttp;and so far,as time navigation of the tioimml fornied part of the Tian, it had - lo'be abandoned: -parties, however, were formed, and ht one of those Dr, Hayes made, ex- - plorattons as far north as 81_.deg„ smin., about the saint latitude that, was reached - by slobrc parties in the last expedition cotninnthled ,by - Dr. liaime, This vac readied on the Id May, 1861. . - Mr. August Sonutag, whose deatit we Larc sorry to seelecorded, was an expert. ,envoi voyager,:a- -highly accomplished artist and a ; distinguisbed man science. lie was engaged In the service of. the Government.'on,thit Mvxiean expedition, on Dr. Kane's Arctic expedition, and', Fe believe, on . Commodore, Worry's Japan cr.- ' )edition. . Is. the Blockade EffectitO, It is learned Irma a te.,\St teliaMO Source, (a late officer in the rnited States Navy. %vim was compelled to-resign-on account of ill health,) that' the .fine Confederate State steamer .Nashville - succeeded in run-. niug the blockade off CharlestOd: South ' Carolina, during a late hour ou Friday. night last, and is pow,' rapidly speeding her way across the broad Atlantic. The . Nash,* is_ Commanded by Lieutenant Robert ft• I' run,' '.(This'Pegram enter ed' the ,United States service in 1 82p,,,and at the time listilitiecomnd.nce dl leas en - dutvat the Navy Yard,, Norfolk. Re is . a Virginian: by birth.) . . She takes' nut' as ilassengers ISon. Jas, M.' Mason ari•JohnSlidell,- - the first ono accredited COmmiSsioner to the Court of St .Taqes, arid, ..and th e latter going in the same capaeltV to the Court' of": St. Cloud. JanicS Edward McFarland, - of_ Petersburg' goes as private Seeretary.to. - ,Mr. Mason, and the 'George _Eustis a New Orleans, asSeeietary to Mr. - -ilea. The-Nashville ofcaurse, ,lakei out .a fidl and vahiaide dochments for the Coafederate,CoMmissiciners, who, havebeen on the Continent for many Months part; - 'The Nashville is said to b 0 one of the sniftest';ateameri: that ever plied the Arnetican waters, arid fbr sive. I Val 'yearkranasnpassenger and Mail heat ] bet:weep Ne* 'fork and Charleston. . -
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