n't Vress. FBIDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1861. EXTRACT FROM THE LAST SPEECH OF STEPHEN A, IDOUGLAS.— ,, The conspiracy to break up the Union is a fact now known to All. Armies are being raised, and war levied to accomplish it. There can be but two sides to the controversy. Every man must be on the -side of the Patted MAtes by against It. There can be no neutrals in this war. There can be none but patriots and traitors. +t A PAPER FOR THE CAMP AND FIREgIDE FORNEY'S WAR PRESS. CONTENTS OF NO. 5, FOR SATURDAY, DE anthEri 14. ILLUSTRATIONS -1. Accurate Portrait of Colonel Richard P. Rush, of Philadelphia, commander of the Mounted Lancers--'. The proposed Boundaries of Diary laud, - Virginia ! and Delaware, a very flue Map. A annsummEn RECONNOISSANCE—A. Story of the War. WAR k OETPX—A Song for the War Meeting—The Volunteer's Wife—Sinikspearo on the Times—The Sol dier's Oa h—The Defenders. EDITORIALS—The Latest War News—The Navy Report—Our Foreign Relations Complications with England, Ac. TEE 6 , LETTERS FROM OCCASIONAL"—The Po• sition of President Lincoln—The Defeat of Fernando Wood—The Destny of the South—The Indians and the Rebellion—The Treasury Notes of the Southern Confe deracy—The Conservative Policy of Mr. Lincoln. SPECIAL DESPATCHES FROM TELE CAPITAL —The Removal of the Confederate Congress—The Ex change of Prisoners—Movements in the Army,--The Pension (Mee—Death,: of Penne:Jvania Soldiers—Sue awful FOlllaing. Party—Charlet! Fanßunn , to be changed for Mr. Ely—The Confiscation of Slave Pro perty—Gen. Robert Pat letson—West Point and the Na;. val Academy—Moderation in Congresa—A. Bill for the Confiscation of the Property of lintels, anal giving Freon dam to the Persons they hold in Slavery. PUBLIC DOCUMENT—Report of the Secretary of the Treasury. NEWS FROM THE SOUTTE—Gen, Price Superse ded in Missouri—The Rebels Strengthening Columbus, Ky.—lmportant from North Carolina—Disaffection and Demoralization among the Troops—The Pensacola Fight —A Savannah Account of the Invasion-Important front Oolumbus—The Black Flag, S:c Ac. FROM KENTUCKY—The Aspect of the Camp Retreat of Gen. Schoeff—Breckinridge Racked Down" —Rebels ?reviling to take 'Winter Quarters in Ken ttlekr—" Brother Asolit4 PrAet"—N9Tetticali§ of the Rebel General Z Ihroffer, &c., FROM lIIISSOURI—Army Orders—Secessionists to Take the Oath or Dig in the Trenches—The Rebel Move ments, &c., THE NAVY—Letter from Port Royal—The Penusyl vanians Connected m ith Gen_ Burnside's Expedition, &c. 111ISCELL1NFOrS—The Propomi .14w Itetuidario4 of Mar) land, Virginia, and Dehware--Important Onler from the State Department—Our Army Correspondence, &e., &c., WAR WIT AND BtiMOR—A Model Body Guard— A Chapter on Cootrabanth., LOCAL INTELLIGENCE FINANCIALAND COMMERCIAL NEWS—WEEKLY 12 EviEw or THE MARKETS—CATTLE MARKET, &C. Siogie Copies for axle at the Counter of The Press. TIMMS :—One copy, one year, $2; Three cDpies, ono year, $5 Five copies, one year, $B. British neutrality It appears that, after having run the block ade at Charleston, the pirate-steamer Nash ville tool; liermuda on her way to England. There she was supplied with coal, though the Confederate flag was displayed from her main, not only when she steamed into the harbor of St. George, but during the whole time of her stay. Moreover—as happened at Trinidad with the privateer Sampler, on at least kwo occasions—the vessel was visited by civilians, as well as by members of the local Govern ment, and by British military and naval offi cers, and Captain PEA - WM and his officers re ceived considerable attention from all parties. We leave lawyers to determine whether sup plying coal to a c= belligerent " war-steamer is or is not a breach of the neutrality so osten tatiously proclaimed by Queen VICTORIA, on several occasions—especially at the close of the last Parliamentary Session—but it is a fact that, but for this supply of coal, the Nash ville could not have crossed the Atlantic, and, of course, could not have behaved so pirati cally to the clipper Harvey Birch as to plunder her, take away her crew in irons, and then burn her to the water's edge. This piracy was the fruit of the breach of neutrality com mitted by the British authorities at Bermuda. The "aiding and comforting" of the Sumpter at Trinidad, and the giving a passage to Su- DILL and MasoN, in the imail-steamer Trent," after they bad been formally introduced to General SEnsiso, Viceroy of Cuba, by the British Consul General, arc other items in this account: That our readers may know who are the responsible parties in this case of the Nash ville, we beg to inform them that Bermuda— "the still-vex t Bermoothes" of SHAKSPEARE'S cc Tempest "—has for its Governor and Com mander•in•chief one Colonel F. AIIJARLY, whose salary is $18,780 a year; that there is'a Legislative Cbuncil and House of Assembly ; there is a Chief Justice, with two puisne Judges; there are Comptrollers of Customs and Navigation Laws, and, for fear that Governor MritRAT should make a faitx pas from ignorance of law, the Colony is further isupplied with an Attorney General and a So licitor General. There must inevitably be an inquiry, one of these days, into sundry broaches of neutrality committed by various British officials, and this reception and supplying of the Nashrille at Bermuda will be among them. arl Bus- SELL, as Foreign Minister, will have to deal with his Consul's acting as Master of the Ceremonies to SLIDELL and MASON, (JEFF DAVIS' ". mbassadors,") at Cuba ; but the investigation relating to Trinidad and Ber muda will have to be made by the Duke of NEWCASTLE, Colonial Secretary—a gentleman who knows something of America, and is not wedded to any ‘ 4 belligerent" principle, as RUSSELL and PALMERSTON are. General Patterson In another column of to-day's PRESS we give an abstract of the speech delivered by our distinguished soldier-citizen, General PArrua- SON, at the last anniversary celebration of the formation of the First City Corps of Philadel phia—an event which occurred eighty-seven years ago, antecedent to the Declaration of Independence. The speech was wholly ex tempore; nothing like justice was done to it in the reporting, nor has the abstract we pub lish received the benefit of the gallant speak er's revision or correction. We publish it, partly at the request of several who desire to see it on record in this journal, and partly be cause we think it only fair that an officer of rank, who has been subjected to considerable anonymous criticism, if not slander, should be allowed to mention the leading facts which jus. tify his conduct and judgment in command, and obtained him, when his term of service ex pired, the distinction of an "honorable dis charge. " It is said that the General bag ap_ plied for a Court Martial, no doubt as the readiest and most public mode of vindication, but we do not exactly see how his request can be complied with, however forcibly his per sonal honor may induce him to press it. There is no instance Oli rt cord, we believe, where an officer honorably discharged" has had his conduct made the subject of personal investi gation. And to be candid, we think that General PArrErsos's self-vindication, in the off-hand speech we now refer to, will justify him not only to his friends and the public, bat also to those who, in ignorance of the facts, have thouglttle: l sly taken up an impression kiejudleldl to irndergrowl of the British Lion The arrest of NA sox and Sranzw. was known in Liverpool on the 27111, and an indignation meeting was improvised, which appropriately took place in the cotton salesroom. A rood deal was said of asserting "the dignity of the British flag by requiring prompt reparation for this outrage," but one of the speakers shrewd ly suggested, on the opinions of the law offi cers of the Crown, that the arrest was legally justifiable. On this, resolutions striking out the demand for prompt reparation " were adopted, and the British Lion lay down, in . gentle repose, after his great effort Southern Finance Among other financial suggestions of the Richmond Divatch, is one ct that each bank in the Confederacy redeem the bills of every other bank." The wisdom and justlee of this are—clear as mud. The proposition amounts to this, that A, besides paying his own notes, shall also pay the notes of B 3 C, D, ete., down to Z, at the end of the alphabet. T. Blum & SuN'S SALE To-DAY.—New and BC COIId4Ind household furniture, at the auction store, No. 1 1)14 Chestnut street, at 10 o'clock. PAINTINGS ANT ENGRAVINGS.—At 12 o'clock will be sold a collection of valuable oil paintings. water colors. ra.ll engravings, comprising some choice worP by American [MIMI, The Papal Difficulty The Papal question appears to be approach jug a crisis. It is impossible, in the pre sent temper of the Italian people, and in the circumstances in which VICTOR Emm,tx FEL is Placed, that the present uncertainty can long continue. Our own decided impression, as already expressed, is that NAPOLEON ex, cept under the pressure Of contingencies which we have not yet been able to foresee—will not withdraw his troops from Rome during the pontificate of Pars the Ninth. Every one knows that Pope Plus is retained in Rome only by French bayonets, and that, the mo ment NAPOLEON withdraws these, the Sove reign Pontiff may as well prepare also to leave, OP dubtilit, at the dictation of' VICTOR. EMMA NUEL, to a great change in his government and power. A difficulty is to be found in the impatience of the people to occupy Rome as the capital of their newly-organized, inde pendent, and united Italian Kingdom. It is said that the Pope is in bad health, and that he is aged_ People sometimes live a long time with bad health, and the Pope, who will not complete his three score years and ten" until the middle of next May, cannot be looked upon as extremely old. His Holiness may live for many years. The session of the. Italian Parliament was commenced at Turin, on the 21st of Novem ber, and Bsron RicAsom, Who became Prime Minister on the death of Count CAvoun, ex plained the present state of the Roman ques tion-adding that thO Emperor NAPOLEON, who had been requested to intervene, as mediator, between VICTOR EMMANUEL and the Pope; had his overtures so coldly received at the Papal cottit, that his efforts had been dis continued. , Notwithstanding, Baron RICASOLI had drawn up a project of arranging the Ro man ha 4 heel} transmitted to Cardinal ANTONELLI, through the medium of the French Government, with a request that it might be placed in the hands of the Pope, to whom it had been addressed. The Pope had not accepted it. The articles proposed for the acceptance of the Pope are as follows: "ARTICLE 1. The Sovereign Pontiff preserves the dignity, the inviolability, and all the other pre rogatives of the sovereignty, and, in addition, the precedence established by custom over the King and other Sovereigns. The Cardinals of the Holy Chinch shall retain the title of Prince, and the ho nors which are attnehed to it. ci AUT. 2. The Government of big Majesty the King of Italy pledges itself not to interpose an ob stacle on any occasion to the acts performed by the Sovereign Pontiff in virtue of the Divine right as Chief of the Church, and in virtue of the canoni cal law as Patriarch of the West and Primate of Italy. APT. 1 The same Government reeegnises the right of the Sovereign Pontiff to send nuncios abroad, and undertakes to protect them so long as they shall be in the territory of the State. Awe. 4. The Sovereign Pontiff shall have full liberty of communication with the Bishops and all the faithful, and, reciprocally, 'without interference on the part of the Government. He shell also be able to convoke in the placei and in the forms that he shall judge eXpedient , the councils and the eccle siastical synods. "Any. 5. The Bishops in their dioceses, and the curates -in their parishes, shall be exempt from all Governmental interference in the exercise of their ministry. " ART. 6. They shall live, notwithstanding, in subjection to the common law in regard to offences punished by the laws of the kingdom. Anr_ 7. His Majesty renounces entirely the right of patronage as respects ecclesiastical benefices. " ART. 8. The Italian Government renounces all interference in the nomination of the Bishops. 4 , Aim 9. The same Government undertakes to furnik to the nob, See a Axed and irrevocable do tation, the amount of which shall be regulated by mutual consent. "Any. 10. The Government of his Majesty the Ring of Italy, in order that all the Powers and all the Catholic peoples may contribute to the main tenance of the Holy See, will open with those Pow ers the proper negotiations for determining the quota of each of them in the dotation spoken of in the preceding article. " ART. 11. The negotiations shall also be directed to obtaining the guarantees of what is established in the preceding articles. " ART. 12. In accordance with these conditions the Sovereign Pontiff and the Government of his Majesty the - King of Italy shall come to an agree ment by means of commissioners delegated for that purpose " The articles of this programme much resem ble the suggestions contained in a pamphlet recently published in Paris, (apparently semi oilicially,) on the best mode of adjusting the difficulty with the Pope. On one hand, as the King of Italy does not reserve the right of veto upon ecclesiastical appointments made within his realm by the Pope, he concedes a great deal more than could have reasonably been expected,—more than France, which maintains Pius IX., in Rome, has conceded since the Concordat granted by NAPOLEON' 1., to Pius VII., in 1302. On the other hand, the programme, while -it would continue the Pope as Supreme Head of the Church of Rome, all over the world, would have hint merely a Spiritual Prince, deriving no revenue, as his 258 predecessors have done, from tem poral possessions, and supported on a pension. This is the difficulty. The Pope will searc4 Iy submit, even - though the States of the Church have passed ont : of his dominion, to accept less than even the nominal territory which former Pontiffs have ruled over, as Tem poral princes. We shall be surprised if Pope hus accept the terms proposed by Baron Ricnom. It may be urged, with truth, that RIOASOLI very well knew, when he forwarded his propo sitions to Rome, that the Pope would rojeet them. But the mere publication of articles so liberal and so moderate will familiarise the Catholic mind to the pressing feet that, sooner or later, if Italy is to continue under the scep tre of VICTOR EIRRANUEL,Rome must be its ea pitab-natnrul, historic, end lAtiOlud—and, that the power of the Pope as a Temporal sovereign cannot long continue. The Pope, we are sure; will remain : firm to the end—whatever that may be. Financial Position of France During the ten years which have elapsed since, on December 2d, 1851,Loms NAPOLEON made himself master of the position in France, by the celebrated coup d'ital, the Government of that great empire seems to have been carried on, "regardless of expense," as advertisers say. The result is, that, though money has been repeatedly raised by loan, there remains a terrible deficit this year—estimated in the gross at a milliard of francs, which is equivalent to two hundred million dollars or forty million pounds sterling. Being cc hard up" (to use a familiar but expressive phrase,) NAPOLEON hag exhibited his usual good sense in acknowledg ing that France cannot continue to have the candle burning at both ends—in other words, that a change of system must be made, and that Retrenchment should be the order of the day. He has given the office of Minister of Finance to M. FOULD, who is expected to be the COLBERT of the present regime. Extensive reforms in the administration, particularly that part connected with the public revenue, are announced, and NA POLEON pledges himself to surrender the privilege, • heretofore freely exercised by or for him, of raising money, for national expen diture, without the sanction of the French Le gislature. This, of itself, is a great concession to constitutional principle. The English jour nals declare that the Emperor's Civil List is greatly in debt_ Perhaps so, for NAPOLEON has shown himself one of the most liberal and generous of rulers. But sneers at the results of his princely magnificence come with the worst possible gi , ttee fi , ohi England, Whore, though GEORGE the Third had an annual al lowance of $5,000,000, and was one of the meanest (as well as the maddest) of men, his debts were thrice paid, b) vote of an Obsequi ous Parliament, to the tune of $25,000,000, and his hopeful heir_ and successor owed $5,- 000,000 to his tradesmen before he had com pleted his twenty-fifth •ear. NAPOLEON, at least, has something to show for lth3 espenditure. He has encouraged Art, Literature, and Science, and has munificently employed and rewarded their professors. He has improved the architecture not of Paris alone, but of almost every other city anti con siderable town in his empire. He has encou raged trade, manufactures, mid agriculture. lie has ctended railway communication all over France, and also made improvements in the ordinary roads. Lastly, he has not only elevated France in the scale of nations, but has been the chief instrument, under God, of obtaining independence for beautiful Italy. His ten years of almost absolute sovereignty have wonght wonders for France. Retrenchment, if carried out on a great scale in France, would seem to require a pillion of the army, and a cessation in the in crease of the war-navy of France. If these reductions take place, other European nations will be enabled to follow suit, for it cannot be denied that the war-power of France ; albeit restrained by the wisdom and forbearance of NAPOLEON, has a tendency to keep Europe in perpetual apprehension. • Captain WILKES and family, and Lieutenant FAIRFAx, arrived in our city yesterday even ing, and will remain here until Saturday morn ! Mg.. LETTER FROM " OCCASIONAL." WASHINCTON, Dee. 12, 1861._ A good deal of nervous anxiety exists as to the apparent delay in the forward movements of the Army of the Potomac. General Mc- Clellan is criticised and censured in 601110 quarters, because he will not advance his *tender& into the heart of the Old Dominion, These demonstrations result, not from a dis trust of him, but from an absorbing desire that a bold blow should be struck at the vitals of Treason, and that quickly. He is extremely self-possessed, and self-poised. Ile feels that he has had confided to him much power and many responsibilities. His quiet reticence silenees fair complaint and satisfies honest inquiry. He is never seen about the Halls of Congress, nor any of his aids, and I think he is resolved to let his deeds speak for him “unbonnetted" before the world. He certainly selects the right policy upon which to succeed, and it is because I be lieve he intends to do a bold and thorough thing soon, that I rest upon his sagacity, and confide in his policy. His whole theory teems to be unfaltering faith in the triumph of our arms when he strikes, and a proud conviction that he can afford to select his own time for striking. A more patient and trustful people and army no General ever had around him. OCCASIONAL. Edwin Forrest as Claude Melnotte The incidents of the play of the " Lady of Lyons" were taken, by Iluiwer, from a fugitive tale, called the " Bellows Mender." It is somewhat curious that one of the first character-writers of England should have located his three great dramas in Prance. Of these, the L= Lady of Lyons" is the simplest and best of all ; for " Richelieu " is loosely constructed. and "La Vellielre " signally failed upon dramatic representation. The scenes of the present play wore laid in the stirring era of the Republic, as the most extreme changes of rank and position were then of every day occurrence. Claude 11.Ieluotte was made, by the dramatist, the expo. heat of this spirit ; the principles of youth were at that time unsettled, and the passions of individuals, taking the passionate development of the nation, were easily enlisted either for good or for ill. Rank was almost equalized, for all were citizens—not subjects—and the ambition, the bravery, and the high spirit of the gardener's boy were qualities &ion appreciated. The play is not one of diameter—for acne of the personages have individualities—but of passion. The language is, therefore, sensuous, the event chiefly domestic, and the plot of the simplest de scription. At the same time, there is enough of spirit, of talent, and of virtue in Claude to invest him with dignity. He is imaginative, impalslye, and manly. flis experience has been that of all gifted youth, and the play of feelings is given in him a like passionate expression with all who have loved, sinned, and repented. To play the part, there fore, requires at first an accommodation to the sim plicity, the ardor, and the wilfulness of youth. The discovery of Claude's deception is the turning point of his character. It changes him from buoy. ant boyhood to stern, moody manhood, and the re turned soldier has no longer the sensuous utter ance, the playfulness, and the overreaching am bition of the boy that wept in hie mother'd Mr. Forrest dressed for Claude in the first act with a blue smock or blouse, and, as the Prince, wore a powdered wig. The latter gave him an elderly appearance, that passed away soon after he began to speak. Ile looked, as the widow's son, a hearty, great-limbed boy, brown with exercise, who had no affections that his mother should not know. His anger was that of a boy, wild and vindictive, and he accepted the opportunity to be avenged with the same impetuous utterances. Some may have found Emit with his appearance on the score of youth, but youth is not to be gauged by size, and the active peasant boy of Buiwer was no miniature. He was described by the village landlord as "stout," and good at wielding a cudgel. So, as the Prince, Mr. Forrest looked to be well conditioned, and a rare grace attended him. In this connection, the description of the palace by the lake of Como—itself most sensuous and beau tiful—was recited by Mr. Forrest with rare soft ness. The concluding paragraph— I' The perfumed light Stab three 1i the mists ithiklaottr lamps, And every air was heavy With tho sighs Of orange groves and music from sweet lutes And murmurs of low fountains that gush forth 1' the thitht of roses-." w givca with a music of voice that nomad as beautiful as the music of the text. The crowning effects of the' delineation occurred in the third not, where ilre/notte accounts fZrr his deception. Here, Mr. Forrest seemed to lose his figure, nay, his very personality. His apology was earnest, contrite, and passionate. All seemed to feel that 44 heaven left some rernnant of the angel still In that poor peasnve, um-km I," As the soldier, Mr. Forrest was sedate and mar tial. He looked, indeed, the First Napoleon, and in contrast to the stipple, flexible boy, was all of the man, made strong by trial and clignified by sin, Mr. McCullough as Beauscant—a very repul sive character—was well received. lle has earned a merited reputation since he appeared with Mr. Forrest. Mrs: Ferret. played the widow Melnotte with feeling, and Mrs. Gladstane was beautiful and emphatic as Pauline. _ WALNUT-STREET . TREATER —Ms. J. R. Roberts, a Philadelphia tragedian, takes a benefit to-night. Mr. Roberts has been known in this city for many years as an exponent of legitimaoy. Many of his portraitures have been remarkably powerful and faithful, and in the two dramas in which he appears to-night his excellence will be particularly mani fest. These are the plays of "The Corsican Bro thers" and "Faust and Marguerite." ARCH-STREET THEATRE.—Frank Drew takes a benefit to-night. He is a comedian of the gonial school, whose conversation is a comedy, Known in Philadelphia from the beginning, Mr. Drew has many friends, and hundreds of citizens, to whom he has commended himself by social urbanity and public excell,ence. His programme combines dra ma, comedy, and burlesque ' and two of the pieces are new. /lam/et—the stu dy of a life—is one of the features of the bill. LATEST NEWS BY TELEGRAPH. FROM WASHINGTON. Special Despatches to "The Press." Wesaurarom, Deo. 12, 1861. A Midnight Serenade—Speeches of Hon. A. B. Olin and Mr. Townsend. This evening, ABRAITADC B. OLIN, member of Congress from troy, New York, and MLRTIN D. TowNankin, Esq., Troy, were serenaded at Wil lard's, by the band of the First Long Island Volun teers. After playing a number of popular airs, Mr. OLIN was called for and appeared on the balcony. He addressed the large audience in front of Wil lard's in patriotic language, sustaining the Presi dent in his conservative and constitutional course. His remarks were cordially endorsed and loudly cheered. He concluded by introducing Mr. TOWNSEND, whose speech, though brief, was replete with excellent points. He complimented Mr. Oils for his faithfulness and devotion to the in terests of his constituents and his country. Mr. TOWNSEND visited Washington to see and witness, with admiration and pleasure, the grand army of the Potomac, but mesa eSpeeially those brave men who were recruited from his immediate neighborhood. He was among them to-day, and he could but express himself highly gratified with the condition of the men, end their fine soldierly bear ing. They had volunteered to fight the battles of the Union and American liberty, whose blessings they had enjoyed and were prepared to transmit to pos terity. Ile had seen the noble and wellAiscipliavd English soldiery ; he had seen the active French soldiery, who were so famous for their adaptation to emergencies, and irresistible in dashing bravery, but the persosind of the American soldiery was .superior to that of both. Ito attributed this in a great measure to free schools and popular suffrage. They were educated, and from their ranks would come forth generals litto command. Many of them were from among the yeomanry and mechanics, and today he found that, North and South, the honest yeomanry wore in favor of the Union. In Western Virginia, in Georgia, North Carolina, Tennessee, and other Southern States, good Union men could be found in large numbers among the yeomanry and working classes. It was only in that once . glorious old Commonwealth, Virginia, from the lips of the effete first families and degenerate sons of noble sires, and those who used slavery as a means to per petuate their power, that the blessings of liberty and union, free schools, and popular suffrage were do• cried, and the Union and the Constitution denounced. Ile had beard restless miuds express complaints that the army had not moved forward, fie was himself a profes , sional man, and he professed to know how to con duct his business. General MCCLELLAN was a pro fessional man—his profession was war, and he un derstood his duties ; he knew bow and when to move. 'Enthusiastic cheering.] He would lead his army to victory in good time. The General was once a railroad superintendent. We all knew that after the sleepers and the rails of a road were laid ; there was a good deal of grading to be done. The General has marshalled his troops, and he is now gra ding up for a movement. He concluded by thank ing hie friends for this demonstration. From the Lower Potomac The Stepping Stones came up tram the flotilla Pat evening, TAO I ?remgbt Ile newt The reboil ap pear to be strongly entrenched in Oscoquen creek. Numerous encampments were visib!e from the decks of the Stepping Stones. The rebels seem to be again strengthening their most important batte ries along the Potomac. Death of a Pennsylvanian A. D. litnwar.L, a private in company H, Fifty ninth Pennsylvaniaßegiment, died at the Columbia PQM yesterday afternmi THE PRESS. - PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1861. Com. Lot - roily, in his communication to the Navy Department, dated the 4th inst., says that the ap prehension of losing possession of the hay of St. Helena, so exceedingly valuable for a harbor, from its proximity to Charleston, and for the command it scoured of largo rivers, supplying interior com munications with South Carolina, induced him to send a second expedition there under Commander DRAYTON ' with orders to bold the Aland until General SHERMAN' is prepared to assume military occupation of it, when he will transfer the post to his troops. The reconnoissance by Commander RODGERN, of Warsaw Inlet, was in order to ascertain the posi tion and force of the enemy's battery there, in formation of which the commanding general ex pressed his desire to obtain, before landing 11 , 06i,s on Tybee Island. In the necessary occupation of St. Helena Sound and Tybee Roads, and in the ex amination of Warsaw Inlet, a large number of the youth 9f the squadron are engaged, which will be released, and employed in blockading duty, as soon as Otter and Tybee Islands are held by the army. Warsaw Inlet and Sound constitute n second en trance into the Savannah river, and as twenty-one feet can be carried over the bar at high water, this passage is but little inferior to Tybeo entrance. It appears from a private letter that our arms are but ten miles from Savannah, the ste,eples of which are plainly visible from the decks of our ships as they ride at anchor. It seems to be un derstood that, in addition to our occupation of Beaufort, General VIELE was at once to be sent with a considerable force td occupy the most im portant point in the near approaches to Savannah, and that another force will go about the same time on a similar errand in the direction of Charleston, to hold certain Sttategic i)ointS From the Other Side of the Potomac. There was a movement along the outer lines this morning, from the neighborhood of Alexandria, but it appeared to be for reconnoitring purposes. JOHN BILL, of Maryland, a member Of STEWART'S rebel infantry, was captured by the Second Michi gan, /10 ISM liligtllltdY 9 1 ,40100 Rid says that no inducement could take him back to the rebel ranks. A man by the name of MonoAs has been cap: tured by General HEINTZELMAN'S brigade. He had a heavy amount of Georgia and South Carolina money in his possession. Ile said he was a broker. He has been sent to Washington. Gen. HEINTZEL- - MAN also captured six more contrabands;who said that their master was a major in the rebel army. Captain GEORGE NELSON Sutra, quartermaster of General 11fonnaLL's brigade, has reaeived the new Zonave uniforms for Colonel SAM BLACK'S Katy-second Pennsylvania Regiment. The men will appear in their new uniforms on Saturday. It is a remarkable fact that there is less sickness in the Permaylyania regiments on the opposite side of the Potomac than in the regiments from any other State. This is attributed, in a great mea sure, to the many necessaries and eomforts whieh are sent to them by their friends at home: Military Appointment. Lieutenant Jona HANCOCK, of the Forty-ninth Pennsylvania Regiment, has been appointed ne. sistant adjutant general to General llAxcoca's brigade. Melancholy Affair. Two privates belonging to the Vorty-ninth Penn- Sylvania, who were performing picket duty from General SMITH'S division yesterday, having strayed beyond our lines, attempted to return this morning, when, on being' ordered to halt by the guards, turned and ran. One was shot by the guards in two places, and has since dkd, and the other was taken prisoner by them. As the guards had been changed during the absence of these pickets, they evidently supposed them to be enemies. The Emancipation of Slaves, There is no doubtbut that BINGHAM'S bill for the emancipation cf slaves found in our military dis trict.s will receive sonic important modification; so as to MAO it acceptable to the legs ultra Repub licans. A provision will be inserted to indemnify the Union men who may lose their property through the workings of this act. The new bill will ba brought before Congress during the coming week. YALLANDIOHAM will take the lead on the Demo erotic side of the House in opposition to it. Complaint against General Stone. Formal complaint was made to-day to the War Department by Governor ANDREW, of Massachu setts, against General STONE, for, as is alleged, compelling the troops from that State to assist in the restoration of fugitive slaves. Passes Not te be Transferred. The provost marshal has determined to revoke all passes which have been transferred, and to punish #.1459 trgnPferring them. A number of ar• rests have already been made. The Nebel Force at Leesburg, A rebel deserter from Leesburg, who loft there about ten days ago, states that there is encamped at that town a rebel force consisting of four regiments of Mississippi infantry, armed with Mississippi and Enfield rifles, and smooth-bore muskets, one regi ment of cavalry, who are used as skirmishers, and one battery of artillery, consisting of three small field pieces, numbering altogether upward of 3,000 troops. Gen. EVANS is in command. Rev. Dr. TISCHEL, of New York, had as inter view with the President for the purpose of 'urging the appointment of Jewish chaplains for every military department, they being excluded by an act of Congress from the volunteer regiments, among whom are many thousands of Dratlites. the meantime, tin' Doctor 'wishes to takelharge of the spiritual welfare of the, Jewish soldier& in the army of the Potomac. The President assured him that the subject would receive his earnest attention, and expressed the opinion that this exclusion was altogether unin . - tentional on the part of Congress. Codification of the United States Laws Senator SUMNER intends pressing to a consumma• tion the measure which he introduced ten years ago, for a classification and codification of the sta tutes of the United States, which hee new been re commended in the message of the President. Con gress has, since the organization of the Government, enacted some five thousand acts and joint resolu tions, which All more than six thousand closely printed pages; and are scattered through, many volumes. A bill for the purpose mentioned has been introduced in the House. Last night the United States steamer Stepping Stones, on the lower Potomac, ran into the Ocoo quan river, the mouth of which is some twenty-five miles below Washington. She discovered a large increase of the rebel forces stationed in that neigh borhood, and retired. Army Sutlershvg. The bill to abolish sutlers in the army, which was before the Senate this afternoon, it is believed, will pass in a modified form. The bill is very popular among the volunteers in its present shape, From the Upper Potomac. Thore was some little skirmishing between the advanced pickets yesterday, on the roads leading to Winchester and Martinsburg. A careful room notwance showed that there were about sixteen hundred rebels in Martinsburg, last night. Thera were ten companies of infantry, four of cavalry, and four pieces of artillery, according to a rebel desert er, in and around the place, at two o'clock, yester day afternoon. It appeared to be a force sent for ward to ascertain the position of Gen. BANKS' divi sion. Captain JAMES SUTTON, of the Fifth Connecti cut; and Captain JAMES E. Wmnicw, of the Twenty-ninth Pennsylvania, have been granted leave of absence, and have gone home on a visit to their friendgf, 4Ppilull W,ViRICK has been super seded as Provost Marshal of General BANKS' divi. sion by Colonel RIMER, of the Third 'Wisconsin. The following Pennsylvania regiments are in General BANKS' division : Twenty-ninth, Colonel Joni K. MVItPHY j the Thirtieth, Lieutenant Colonel JOHN PATRICK, and the Forty-sixth, Colonel Kiiirz. All letters for soldiers in General BANKS' Uri doh should be addressed to Frederick, Md. Washington News and Gossip. The roads on the other side are now in fine con dition, but there is no indication of any forward movement. Reconnoissances are now daily made by brigades and regiments, but they do not appear to accomplish anything further than to exercise the troops and make them acquainted with the comtry. The rebels have concentrated a large force between Centreville and Bull Run, which appears, from the reports of our scouts, to b 3 con stantly in motion. It is very evident that they in- Wad to dioputa any deumnatration which may be made on Fairfax. Rebel Flags to be Excluded from the Ports of Egypt. The following cl I. fr0m6441..c our Consul Getters! in Egypt is of such public interest that the Boom. tary of State has consented to its publication : p UNITED SPATES CONSULATE, ALEXANDRIA, Nov. 13, 1861. %, SIR : I have the honor to announce that the Viceroy of Egypt has again shown his good will to the United States by directing the captain of the y port of Alexandria to exclude all vessels bearing l an unrecognized flag from the harbors of Egypt. Instructions to this effect, I am informed by the Minister of Foreign Affairs, wore issued about two weeks ago, in consequence of a suggestion ad dressed to' his Highness by this Consulate Gene ral. At an interview which I had with him on the 3d inst., at Cairo, his Highness also assured me that no privateer in the service of the domestic ene mies of the United &atm will be altowod to be filled out, OF to being in rises LS Bert in liid dominions. The following passages, translated from a note sent to me by his Excellency, Nebar Bey, in behalf of the Viceroy, show that in the facilities for ob taining Egypt - Inn cotton, otit',hienweacturers are placed on an equal footing with those of Great Bri tain. The note is dated October 18th, and is in re ply to some interrogatories which had been verbal ly made to the ilsoretary MONSIEUR LE CONSUL GENERAL : have had the honor to report to his Highness, conformably to your desire, what you have said to me on the sub ject of the words addressed by his Highness to the deputation of the Manchester Association for the extension of the culture of cotton. Ms Highness has charged me to inform you, Monsieur, that what he has said for any association which may be formed in England for the above-mentioned purpose he says equally to any which your eountrynien may 9rgantni Despatches from Com. Dupont Je-;i§h Chaplains. A Reconnoissance in the Occoquan. At the interview to which I have referred, the Viceroy repeated this assurance to me in person, saying that he had never intended to exclude my compatriots from an equal share in the privileges accorded to the capitalists of Groat Britain. I may add that, at the same interview, his Highness manifested the liveliest interest in our national affairs, the journals tut he said, bein g raw with nothing else. Ile seemed to appreciate the differ enceenem thee e s n o d u h re ad es n b o e d t o w u e t e t u tha t t et e t c* - e o r y n o m mn en i tAzi suie ts , twined as it was by so large a majority of the people, would successfully quell the insurrection, though, in consequence of the extent of our Southern territory, the contest might be protracted. Ills _Highness ap proved the large Seale of our military prepara tions, saying that the only policy was to push the war once begun vigorously to the end, and that ball-way measures were es bad in war as in every thing else. The Viceroy, who is the son of the celebrated Meliemed Ali, may speak with heredi tary authority on einastiang of this kind. It VMS very plain from the tone of his remarks that our Government has lost none of its prestige in his es timation. Court-Martial in the Cnse of Col. James E. Kerrigan, Tweitty-fifth Regiment New York Volunteers. The following additional testimony was elicited today by the court-inertial convened for the pur pose of Investigating certain charges against Colonel JANES E. KERRIGAN, of the Twenty-fifth Regi ment of New York Volunteers : Sergeant Robert 111.'Moran, of Company I, was called for the purpose of giving evidence on p e a, cation third, second charge, alleging that Colonel Kerrigan restored to duty a private who had de serted, named Patriok Gaffney, without trial. Iletestified as follows: I knew Patrick Gaff ney; he deserted the service of the United States, to the best of my knowledge about tile 21th of July. Our camp, on the 4th of ? September, was in the neighborhood of Ball's Cross Roads ; I saw him there shortly after that time with some re cruits, brought on from New York; to the best of my knowledge he had been absent; he was re• stored to duty; at the time Gaffney deserted, I think we were at Alexandria; the commissioned officers wore Captain William C. Geyer, First Lieu tenant John Barry, Second Lieutenant John Kel ley our eompony was doing picket duty at the time ; do not know where Colonel Kerrigan was at the time. In the absence of Gen. Wenswonrn and other important witnesses, the examination was suspended until half past ten o'clock to-morrow morning. XXXVIITII CONGRESS-FIRST SESSION. WASHINGTON, December 12, 1861 SENATE. Mr. TRUMBULL, of Illinois, presented a petition to repeal the law which prevents Jewish divines from oili -6164 as chaplains in the arm, Also, a resolution that the Secretary of State inform the t enete whether any persons hare been arrested and imprisoned by his order, and if so, by what authority. Laid over. r. Doom TVA ef Wiaconejn, presented a memo, rtal from the Board of Trade of Racine, Wiecousin, rela tive to the establishment of a national armory. Dir. HOWE, of Wiseman, presented a number of po titiona of the same character. Referred to the Military Committee. Mr. ARMSTRONG, of Innate Island, offered a reso lution that the Naval Committee be inttrncted to inquire into the expedienyc of appointing pupils in the Naval 404011 Y rn the grvund of merit. Agrotd to. Air. SUMNER, of Massachusetts, introduced a bill to provide for the appointment of a solicitor of claims in the State Department. Referred to the Committee on Foreign Affairs. Also, a resolution that the Committee on the Judiciary be directed to inquire into the expediency of providing by law for commissioners to revise the public statutes of the United States, simplify the language, and reduce the size so as to be accessible to all. Agreed to. Mr. FOOT, of Vermont, introduced a bitt to authorize the President to fill Of the corps of cadets at West Point Referred to the Military Committee. Mr. WILSON, of Massachusett9, offered a resolution that the Inspocter General, Quartermaster General, and Commissary General of Subsistence be directed to inform the ',emit whet nrtichlonntit to be sold by the sutlers to the rolunteere, and such as best promoted to secure their efficiency. Be said it was necessary that the xolunteers non - in the field should go back without being demoral ized. Be had information from all sources that the cut ler system, as it now exists, is a prolific source of demo ralization and degradation to the volunteers. The evi dence of medical DIE 11 shows that the system tends to sicken the teen. The Sanitary Commission passed a re solution against it In thirty-one regiments liquor was gold 'with the consent of the Mears, in one hundred and thirty-seven regiments it wee sold with or without their consent, and in only twouty.tbree regiments is it entirely excluded. There is a system existing to-day which is robbing these men of their hard earnings, which ought to go to theit families at home, Ho said that the sutlers had determined to make a fight on the question, and read a circular which was sent out by the antlers to collect twenty-five dollars from each sutler to defeat the bill. Be bad been told defiantly that no such measure could be passed. The other day, when one company in a regiment was paid F 2,300, over 431,100 went to the Antlers. Mr. BABBIS, of New York, was glad that the subject had been brought before the Senate. He was satisfied that this was a most crying evil, and belieied that tho whole system should be promptly abolished. The resolution was agreed to. A joint resolution was received from the Hotta., eN preseing the feelings of Congresa in relation to the gal lart conduct of the late General Lyon. Referred to the Military Committee. A joint resolution from the House, in regard to the exchange of prisoners, was referred to the same Clommitise. • oilAiilitEß, of Michigan, introduced a resolu tion that the Military Committee be instructed to in (mire into the expediency of appointing a commbtee of both Houses to refites improper officers from the army. Mr. CARLILE, of - Virginia, opposed the resolution, fititi was afraid it WAS a tOlifiMil devise t #oi control of the army, and he thought Congress should not have control of the army. Mr. DOOLITTLE, of Wisconsin, offered a substitute that the Committee on Military Affairs be directed to in (Mitt, into thr s expeffiency of providing a more efficient mode for retiring any improper or incompetent officers of the army. The substitute was accepted and agreed to. Mr. FOOT, of Vermont, called up the resolution to ex pel Wanlo P. Johnson, Senator from Missouri, from the Senate of the United States. The Clerk read an extract from a Secession speech which Mr. Johnson delivered in Missouri. Mr. SAULSBURY, of Delaware, said he thought the Senate could not expel a member unless it was shown that he had done something unworthy of his character RS a gehetoi.. There Geemed to be nothing against Johnson but mere rumor. Ile moved that the resolution be referro to the Oteromittoo an the Judiciary. with in structions-So obtain further evidence on the subject. . Mr. FOOT said he lied no evjection to such a reference of the subject. After a further discussion. the resolution was referred to the Committee on the Judiciary. The bill to promote the efficiency of the navy, as re ported by Mr. Grimes; of lowa, from the Naval Commit , tee, was taken up. Mr. GRIMES explained the bill and urged its passage at some length. The bill provides ler retiring officers who have been on the register for forty years. It authorizes the President to select an officer from the grade of cap tain of celeffitander, and tmaigli him the_ eoinmand of squadron, with the rank of - flag officer. It also provides for striking off two hundred medals of honor for petty seamen, as rewards for gallantry and merit. It also con tains some further regulations in regard to navy yards. On motion of Air. DOOLITTLE, of Wisconsin, the time of retiring naval officers was made forty-live instead of forty years. After further discursion tho bill was passed. Ifr: WILSON reported back from tho Military Com mittee, a bill relatire to courts martial in the arm!, vi - bith was considered and passed. Dlr. JOHNSON, of Temessee, moved that so much of the President's message as relates to the expediency of a railroad to Western Kentucky and Tennessee be re ferred to a select committee. Agreed to. The Senete then weut into executive 'suasion, and tub aequently adjourned until Monday. HOW, OF BErRESENTATIYEB. Mr. BLAIR, of Missouri, rising to a question of privi lege, caused to be read the following extract, as further explanatory - of the remarks which be made yesterday, on Mt. Lovejoy's resolution having in view the revoca tion of a part of Cert. Halleek's general order relative to thane slaves. The resolution, it lute already been Stated, was laid on the table: ' , HEADQUARTERS DEPARTMENT OP 'MISSOURI. Hos. F. P. Brain, Washington: Db• Dear Colonel : Yours of the 4th instant is just received. Order No. 3 was; in my mind, clearly a military necessity. Co autheriged persons, Mach or white, free or slave, must be kept.out of our camps, unless wo are willing to pub lish to the enemy everything we do or intend to do. It was a military, and not a political, order. lam ready to carry out any lawful instructions in regard to fugitive slaves which my superior may give me, and to enforce any laws which Congress may pass, but I cannot make law, and will not violate it. "You know my private opinion on the policy of con fiscating the slave property of rebels in arms. If Con gress shall pass it, you may be certain that I shall en force it. Perhaps my polio as to the treatment of rebels and Their property io as well set out in order No. issued the day your letter was written, as I could now describe it. "Yours truly, 11. W. HALLEM" Mr. LOVEJOY, of Illinois, in explanation, said that, in introducing! his resolution, he, of course, did not desire to revoke an order that an. Melte& did not mean to male. He would say. is regard to himself, and others, that an attempt has been made to convey the impression that ht and others design to support the war not as against the rebellion, but as against slavery. He be lieved in taking aaay all the property of the rebels, and emancipating their slaves, as the most efficient meagg of suppressing the rebellion. Others might differ from him as to this policy ; but while be was not in favor of carry ing on the of nr for the specific end ultimate purpose of liberating the slaves, he was against carrying it on for the protection of slavery. He was opposed to the army being employed as slave-citteliers and to giving orders to throw hock eu the masters those who desire to escape, ttwhether free, or slave, black or white." Consequent- . ly, he thought that if any order had been given to drive elefes back into the hands of the Secessionists, or into the hands of slaveholders, whether loyal or not, it was con trary to a sound policy in carrying on the war and sup pressing the rebellion. In conclusion, he said, If any of our soldiers want to fight simply for the purpose of re turning fugitive slaves, he had only to remark that the army would be stronger nitle.ut them. Dir. BLAIR, of Missouri, from the Committee on KlS tary Affairs, reported a bill authorizing the raising of a -volunteer force for the better defence of Kentucky. It proposes to raise a volunteer force of twenty thousand tram, for twelve months, to be employed within the limits of that State, to repel invasion, and guard and protect the public property ; but, whenever necessary, it may lie employed temporarily outside of Kentucky. The rogi 'mental and company Akers are to be apystiated under such regulations ad the Kentucky Military Board may prescribe. Mr. WICKLIFFE, of Kentucky, who, several days ago, introdne,cl the bill, proceeded to show the importance of passing it, Mutual) he said, WAS to be the groat battle-ground of this war. The people of that State hoped soon to see the day when the invader'', foot will be expelled from that territory, which is now invaded. Pro perty has been ruthlessly destroyed or carried oil', home steads made desolate, bridges burned, Ste, and it is to Newt the State while the army is matched elsewhere, that Ms volunteer force is required. Mr. LOVEJOY inquired, why cannot the regularly mustered threes accomplish these objects. Mr. WICKLIFFE replied that they wanted the vo lunteer force to protect the State from inroads on the border, no well as at any thins to render aid to the-main army. Mr. LOVEJOY wished to know whether it was im portant to aot on the bill to-day- WICKLIFFS replied that he had received front the Military Board of Kentucky an urgent application to call On the War Department, and ask for just such a corps as the bill provides. He -lead brought the subject to the attention of the President and Secretary of War, and it bad met not only with their approval, but that of all the Cabinet. Mr. MAYNARD, of Tennessee, spoke of a recent so journ in the part of Kentucky so much ravaged and laid waste by the rebel troops, and said he would at some future time allude to the distressing condition of affairs in Eastern Tennessee, which lie had alone the honor Yo represent. His people, ho said, had been left tintwo tested by the Government, notwithstanding their firm devotion to the Union. He held it to be a duty not only to protect the loyal people in Tennessee and Kentucky, but in South Carolina—everywhere in this Union—as much so as in Pennsylvania and the iulioining States. The present war is against the Government on the part of the South, anti should be promptly suppressed. We have expended millions on the borders to protect the whites against savages, and certainly we should bo prompt to protect all loyal men against the rebels. tlos further consideration of the bill was postponed lilt Monday. The House then proceeded to the consideration of the special order—namely, the various propositions involving the question of the emancipation of the persons held as slaves by rebels. Mr. ELIOT, of Massachusetts, proceeded to explain and enforce his resolution, declaring that the war has for its object the suppression of the rebellion, and the re establishment of the rightful authority of the National Gonstitution and laws over the entire extent of our com inon country, and advising that military orders far the emancipation of slaves be issued whenever the same shall avail to weaken the power of the rebels in arms, or in suetaining the military power of the loyal forces. Slavery, be argued, was •at the root of the rebel lion, and, therefore, is an outlaw. There was no 4q it that loyal men should be proteoted, because it • should be understood that the men who stand up far the right ehould be held close to our hearts. This war had been called an antislavery war. It was no such thing. Though slavery caused it, and though by it slavery may be overthrown or removed, nevertheless the object of the war is to recover the Haifa' authority of the Govern ment and to put down treason. Ile spoke of the dn. sertion of the country around Port Royal, and, in reply to Ids own goestion, What ought to dt, clone t said Lot our military commanders organize a bureau of agricul ture; let black hands gather the white staple. The shackles will fall off the limbs of the slaves thus employed. his resolutions do not determine what is to be done in the future. Let us, 11, , said, IL, the work put upon UP, and after that the way will be opened to us. As our army advances, the re-establishment of the former order or things would be apparent. Already a post office has been put into operation at Port Royal. Soon the school , house and church would follow, and oven in the Palmetto State the banner of our common country will "wave over the laud of the free." Treason will be. uppressed, the re bellion overcome, and the rightful authority of the laws and Constitution maintained. In the course of his re marks he 1111n11 Canwron had 6110 MTN in throe months, to raise his name higher among men and the lovers of freedom, ns en opposer of rebellion and treason, than during all his previous long career in public life. Towards tue conclusion of his argument ho said it was time there was a definite policy dermoined upon On this eubject of confiscation, and nuttier contended that, as slavery Wlls at the root of this treason, it should lie eradi cated. Be quoted front authorities to show that, by the law of nations, it was competent and right for the Govern ment to pursue the course which his resolut one indicate. Mr. STEELE, of New York, said he would endgaiyar not to exhibit had lake by following in the Minor discus sion pursued by the gentleman from at I nssac.inse..s, a wo hnd asserted in broad firms that slavery is the cause of this war. This proposition he (Mr. Steele) denied. Ile asserted that it was caused by the unnecessary iwitation of the slavery question. Proposing to test the gentle then't: argetneid Ly the message or tine President, which boil been quoted, he insisted that no sentence therein Could he construed to mean that the. President desires any legislation on this subject. Ile had supposed that the test of loyalty was, mho will stand by the Govern ment in this its time of need, and had hoped flint gentle men here would rise chore nil passion awl prejudice, stud stand up for the country. He was ready to go as far as any gentleman on the other side in support of this sen timent. In further response to Mr. Eliot, ho said, let it be proclaimed that this war is for the extinction of sla very, and, whether you believe nie or not, the pcnycr of our army is paralyzed. Mr. CONWAY, of Kamn:, contended that the conflict which has been preparing for nine months has changed its original character. From the attempt to put down insurrection it has settled into n deliberate war. We have not eflrolinterfd lie enemy in any battle in which we have won an unquetflionable victory. With the ex ception of the advantages gained by two expeditions on the Southern coast, our arms have everywhere been overborne, notwithstanding our volunteers have dis played a gallantry rarely equality" The general pur- MOS 14 the thyiernment have been defeated, and the rebels have secured, in the eyes of other nations, a bstli gerent character, in derogation of their responsibility to the Federal Union. How, then, cmdd they have rights under the Constitution which the Government is bound to respect, while they exercise the rights of belligerente, arising teem incompatible relational We cannot treat them at sister States while they are warring upon us as a foreign enemy. In condemning the slavehobling power, he said its lust for domain would cover the whole continent with its black pall. It was Kansas that first interposed a barrier to its despotic rule, and stayed the despotic tide of slavery. History has no brighter page In all her annals than that of Kansas. Absolute security is what slavery wants, hence unlimited power alone will suffice. The principle on which the war is conducted by the Administration would restore slavery to its former re lations to the Union again; disasters similar to the pre sent would result, and GM causes which now operate would, in the future, involve us in the horrors of a civil war. The old issue would revive with all its political earnestness, The emancipation of the slaves should be declared a military necessity. }dr. BARBING, of Kentucky, obtained the floor. Mr. FOUTilf, of Illinois, ineffectually asked him to give way, as he wanted to bristly reply to the 114.01 , 4ileataitiii6 from Kansas, (Mr. Conway,) who had said that the bat tle of Belmont was a defeat•. In justice to the brave soldiers who participated in that action, lie wanted to nail the falsehood. Mr. WADSWORTH, of Kentucky, commenced a :: , 1.1,1.3 for a motto:. to o.4ljouro. Mr. CONWAY wished to know whether Mr. Fouke in tended his remark to him as personal. Mr. ROBINSON, of Illinois, said that Mr. Fouke had left the ball. Mr. RICITARDSON, of Illliiole, would say +but what eTer his colleague (Mr. Fonke) had oak) on the floor, of a personal character, ought to be settled elsewhere. Mr. CONWAY remarked thnt he did nut whilt to be autijeet to the imputation of having told a falsehood. lie thimpAit he uuterstood the proprieties of this flange to well ae any other member. On motion, the Douse then adjourned tilllllonday. The War in Missouri---Secessionists to Support the Refugees LOINS, December 12.—The following general order will be issued to-morrow morning : HEADQUARTERS, DEFARTMENT OF Missorni, Sr. LOUIS, Dec. 12. Jt The suffering families, driven by the rebels from Southwest Missouri, who have already arrived here, have been supplied by voluntary contributions made by Union men. Others arc on their way, to arrive in a few days, and these must be supplied by charity from the men known to be hostile to the Union. A list will be prepared of all persons of this class who do not voluntarily furnish their quota, and a contribution will be levied of $lO,OOO in clothing ' provisions, and quarters, or money in lieu thereof. This levy will be made upon the following classes of persons, in proportion to the guilt and property of each individual First—Those in arms with the enemy who have property in this city. Second—Those who have furnished pecuniary or other aid to the enemy, or to persons in the enemy's service. , Third—Those who have, in writing or by publica tion, given encouragement to the rebels or in surgents. Brigadier General Curtis, B. G. Farrar, provost marshal general, and Charles Barg, assessor of St Louis county, will constitute a board for levying the aforementioned contribution. Aq soon as any part of this contribution shall have been assessed, the provost marshal general will notify the parties assessed, or their agents or representatives, stating the amount of provisions, clothing, and quarters, or the money-value thereof, required of each; and if these supplies are not furnished within the time specified in such notice, he will is-me an exe cution, and sufficient property will he taken, and sold at -public auction, to satisfy the assessment, with costs, and, as a penalty, 25 per cent. addi tional. If any person upon whom such assessment shall be made shall file with the provost marshal general an affidavit that he is a loyal citizen, and has been true to his allegiance to the United States, ha win be allowed one week to furnish evidence to the board to_vindioate hie-character; nua f. - an. end of that time, be shall nut be able to SAI tisfy the board of his loyalty, the assessment shall be in creased ten per cent., and the levy immediately made. A Rucce§t=ful Scolitahg, Expedition. BEDALIA, No., Dec 12.—The scouting expedi tion, composed of a part of Merrill's horse, and two companies of regular cavalry, returned here this afternoon ? bringing in as prisoners, four captains, two lieutenants, and about torty rebels. They also captured one mortar, and a large number of horses and wagons. The expedition went as far as Waverly. They report that a force of 2,000 rebels remains at Lex ington. Shelby's men were seen and pursued several times. The report of a fight near Waverly proves to be false. The man who hauled down the American flag at Lexington after Colonel Mulligan's surrender has has been arrested here as a spy. The supplies so collected will be expended for the object designated, under the direction of the provost marshal general, and by the State military com. mission. Where money is received instead of sup plies, it will be expended for them as required, and any money not so expended will be turned over to the sunlit.* commlstioh, foe the benefit of the sick Feld tem Any one who shall resist, or attempt to resist, the execution of these orders, will be immediately ar rested and imprisoned, and will be tried by a mili tary commission. Major General Haunch:. From Gen. Banks• Column. FREDERICK, Dec. 11.—The Nineteenth Massa chusetts Regiment, of Gen. Stone's division, has been sent to Muddy Branch, to picket the Potomac, in lieu of Gen. Banks' division. Their post office is Darnestown. Gen. Stone's command will thus keep river-guard from near the Great Falls to No lan's Ferry, above the mouth of the Momacy, Assistant Adjutant General Copeland is on a visit to the North. His duties are now performed by Captain Scribe, of whom meritorious mention has frequently been made by your correspondent. Colonel Ruger, the Provost Marshal, has re moved his quarters and the army prison into the city. He occupies a large unfinished building on Church street, locally known as the "haunted house." His assistants are Captain Bertram, Com pany A ; First Lieutenant Van Brunt, adjutant; and second Lieutenant Howard, Company A, in charge of the quartermaster and commissary stores, all of the Third Wisconsin Regiment. It is understood that it was by desire of a large portion of the citizens here, without regard to poli ties, that Colonel Ruger and his excellent regiment were appointed for provost duty, they having had charge of the city for about two months last fall. Some of the commanders of regiments are insti tuting vigorous measures to prevent the clandestine introduction of poisonous beverages into their camps. Colonel - Knipe, of the Forty-sixth Penn sylvania, caught a colored man in the act yfister dby, and administered to him a severe castigation, threatening at the same time to inflict the same penalty on all others of that like, black or white. General Banks and staff yesterday sr,t , ktt. same time with Colonel Maulkhy, at the encampment of the Home Guard, about throe miles northeast of the city, during which time the regiment , went through a drill and dress parade, which was highly spoken of by the officers of the staff They return. ed about dusk. • - . The humanity of the ladies of Frederick towards the sick of our army is worthy of lasting record. Last summer, while our division wasat Sandy Hook, and the general hospital was located here, SaYeral ladies formed an association for the relief cud at tendance of the invalids. Their efforts were re warded by liberal donations of necessaries, comforts, and delicacies, as well as personal attendance and nursing, from a majority of all the ladies of the city, without regard to political opinions. When the Federal troops were withdrawn and the headquar ters of the Home Guardislablisbed here, this hu mane course was continiitd, and now, on re-esta blh'hing 4130 general illgpital hero, their labors are unabated. Ladies surrounded with the clegancies and luxuries of life vie with those in a more humble sphere in unremitting attentions to the sick soldier —n beautiful illustration of the angelic attributes of woman. Sergeant Ames, of Company D, Ninth New York, died in the general hospital to-day. lie was universally esteemed for his qualities as a g,on- Henan and a soldier, and his loss is deeply re gretted by all. On Monday night the solitudes of midnight wore agreeably disturbed by a visit from the band of the Twenty-eighth Pennsylvania (Colonel Geary), who serenaded General Books, General Velem (vf the Maryland Brigade), Mayor Cole, Colotiel Maulsby, Dr. Win. B. Tyler, Chas. E. Traill, 11ev. Mr. Sey mour, Mrs. Diehl, Miss Patto, and other staunch Unionists, not omitting, in their compliments, the Examiner and tiniest newspaper offices. They were escorted to the various localities by Lieu tenant George Heimach and a guard of his Zou eves d'Afrique." Yesterday afternoon heavy and rapid cannonad ing was heard in the direction of Conrad's Ferry, but nothing has yet been ascertained as to the cause. The weather continues mild and spring-like. g FREDERICK, Ilth, noon.—Up to 10 o'clock no in telligence bad been received at headquarters as to the Mtn of the firing in the direction of Edwards' Ferry yesterday. Gentlemen who came from that direction, Bay the firing continued irregularky all day- YosterdaT morning , the enemy gent several shots across the river, at Dam No. 5, and the skirmish ers on both sides kept up a scattering fire on the shores for some time. No person was injured on our side, nor is it known that any were killed or wounded on the side of the enemy. Major Copeland, Assistant Adjutant General, and Capt. Collis, of the Body Guard, have returned to their respective posts. Everything is quiet in the city and enoampmsnts. The New Yen Nineteenth reaohed here, from Mudd? , Branch last night, LATER FROM EUROPE. ARRIVAL OF THE HANSA THE NEWS OF THE CAPTURE OP MASON AND SLIDELL. LIVERPOOL INDIGNANT. A Public Meeting Culled to Sustain the Honor of the British Flag. THE ENGLISH AND THE REBEL STEAMER NASHVILLE, European Political Affairs. LATER FROM CHINA AND JAPAN New YORK, Dec. 12.—The steamship Hansa, from Bremen, via Southampton, with dates to the 28th ult., has arrived. The steamship North Briton vras insured with tier cargo for 1120,000. An arrival from Australia hail brought $227,000 in gold. The American ship Corinthian had been burned at Lisbon, 011 the 20th ultimo. The Webt India hteamhbip La Plata, from St. Tho mae, arrived at Southampton en the 16th, with the re port that the rebel commissioners, Mason and Slidell, were forcibly taken from the steamer Trent, on her way to St. Thomas from Havana. • November 27,--Consols closed at 94'u for TUO/WY and %IN for account. toited States fives and New York Central shares bad advanced. The bullion in the Bunk of Franca had increased £lOO,OOO. GREAT BRITAIN Captain 'Nelson, of the ship Harvey Birch, had entered hie protest against the capture of the c hi p by tile rebel steamer Nathville. The Southampton notgistito re fused him a warrant for the search of tho Nashville, and referred him to the Secretary of State. Captain Pegram and Mr. Yancey had returned front London together, and the latter states that it hat beep ilitiniatt4l to Linn, through a thiril party, that Om tulle is recognized by the British Government as a na tional vessel, and will ho allowed to refit and repair at Strithempton, as was the ease of the James Adger, so as to exercise perfect neutrality between the two Con tending MHO, The London Times, of the 28th Mt., contains an ac count of a meeting held in Liverpool, with reference to the Mason. Slidell affair. Thu following placard was posted on 'Change Out rage o the British Ebro—Southern Commissioners forcibly removed from a Brilah semmee. A pid, lie meeting will be had in the cotton sales ram, at 3 &deck., In pursuance of this call the room was crowded to ex cess. The chair was occupied by James Spence, who read the following rosolution . . “Ites'otrth, That this meeting, having heard with in dignation that an American Federal ship-of-war has forcibly 'Wien from a British mail steamer certain pas sengers who were proceeding peaceably under the shelter of our lbw, from one neutral port to another, 4q ornebtly cell utwa (10, aoyernment to assert the dignity of no British tiag by requiring prompt reparation for this out rage." This resolution was advocated by the chairman, who considered that he was expressing the feeling of the pep. pie when be Raid that it was the duty of the people to im press on the Government the imperative necessity of vindicating the honor and dignity of the British name and flag. Mr. John Campbell considered that there was reason to doubt whether the facts related and acted on by this meeting were in reality a breach of international law, and referred to the opinions of the law officers of the Crown as being in some measure inclined to show that such a step as Wien with respect to tho Southern Com. missioners was justifiable under the existing state of in ternational law. Ile urged the prOpriety of postponing the consideration of the subject till to.morrow. Mr. Torr sustained Mr. Campbell's views. The chairman suggested, in order to meet the objection of - Mr. Campbell, to strike out the words "by requiring prompt reparation for the outrage." And thus amended the resolution was passed by nearly a unanimous vote. Several merchants expressed their views after the ad journment that the meeting and its action was rents. tore. The London Times is more moderate in its comments on the Mason and Slidell capture than the JVewo. While denying that. the Federal Government, on its own position that the existing war it a mere rebellion, has a right to overhaul neutral ships, it peyerthelesS admits that Eng. land - herself has established precedents which now tell against her in this matter of the Trent; but those prece dents were made under circumstances very different, it asSertN from tlim which now mum. England was then fighting for existence, and did in those days what she would not do now, or allow others to do. In discussing the question wether Mason and Slidell were liable to cap ture, as belligerents or contrabands, on board the Trent, the Times states it as the opiliioll of Very eminent judge that fins was Lot the 11.11CStiOR to be adjudicated by the boat's crew. The; legal course would have been to lake the ship itself into port for adjudication. It concludes with the expression that Englishmen will discuss the question with calmness, and appeals to the Federal States not to provoke a war by such acts. In ieply ko the application of Captain 'Ralson for a warrant to search the rebel steamer Nashville and re cover certain property belonging to him and the owners of the Harvey Birch, Earl Russell directed his secretary to reply that he cannot authorize the magistrates to issue such a warrant, and declined to interfere in the matter. The nlitaleation had been made on the MOM mutilation of Mr. Adams, the American minister. A letter detailing an account of the seizure of the traitor commissioners states that a shell was fired at her, exploding within one hundred yards. It also states that the indignation on board the Trent was inteuse, and all the mammon were ready foe a fight, If the eat.tela wished it. Also, that the captain of the Treat supplied stores to the San Jacinto for the use of Slidell ani - Mason. 'The despatches of the traitor corn nissioners escaped the vigilance of the officers of the Son Jacinto, and Fairly arrired in the La rlata, in charge of it gen. ileum of the party. On arriving at Southampton, the remainder of Messrs. Slidell and 'Mason's families and suites went on board the steamer Nashrille, and the next day the despatches were taken to London. No repairs had yet been commenced on the Nashville, .The Shay- of Tuesday says: A numerous party or loyal Unionists met on Monday, in St. James' street, Loudon, to celebrate, by a dinner, the victory of Port Itval. The company heartily approved that General Scott should he entertained at a banquet in London. DREADFUL CATASTROPHE AT EDINBURGH...OR Snada morning last, a building of seven stories, in High street, Edinburgh, suddenly fell, burying nearly the whole of the imputes in the ruins. The house was several centuries old ; the whole gave way at once, collapsing inwards; 22 bodies have been token out dead, aui about 12 injured. The Millions block of buildings was densely popillated, and it is estimated that not lees than 100 people must have dwelt in it. FRANCE Tbe. Federal Council of Switzerland had demanded Coto fat a freak - violation or Swiss territory by French Bens tr,traits neat- ct,:,npva. The rebel steamer Bermuda arrived at Havre on the 24th, from SaTumult, with two thousand hales of cotton, and Woe difiCliflllifig on the 25th. Garibaldi is reported to have replied to the Neapolitan address, that he regrets being unable to go to them, but that ha will bo with them when necessary. lie expects :/1 41 4 , 1fis to have MOT nor4ti ready. Nov. 10.—The bank has reduced its rate of dis count from 133 cc to 5,,Ai per cent. TURKEY Dowisch Pasha, with eight battalions, had encountered six thousand insurgents in Boznia, slaying eight luta drol, and routing the remainder. The European consuls propose an armistice CHINA. The allies were leaving Tien-tsin. The trade in Nin g po and B ankow was obstructed by the rebels. Tito French were in want of men and guns to protect Poo- Chow. JAPAN. Affairs in Japan had talon a mom favorable !nrir. SPAIN. The Sardinian minister has demanded passports, and leaves DIM' id—tho two Governments disagreeing in re lation to the Nenpolittoi Commercial Intelligence. LIVERPOOL, Nov. 26.—The Cotton market is doll, Mid quotations generally unchanged. Sales for two days 0,000 bales, including 4,000 to speculators and exporters. The advicos from Manchester are unfavorable, tho mar ket for goods and yarns Laing fiat. Breadstuff's are generally heavy and dull. Flour is dull at 280325. Wheat is easier t'i•eil West ern, 12s 4d ; red Southern, 12e 6 , 10120 9d • white West ern, 128 9cl; white 'Southern, 1350:13g 9d. Corn dull; Sts 6dee2.25 ?di yellow, PciaNa; white, Si CaSs. PROVISIONB.--The market. Is generally steady. Beef steady. Pork quiet, but steady. Bacon has an upward tendency. Lard nominal at 4Seasls. Tallow quiet and steady at 50.2r525. PRODl7 , o)s.—Rosin has a downward tendency ; 12s 8.14/Els &I. fiplrita Turpentine flst at 10‘&725. Sugar steady. Thee steady. Coffee inactive. Ashes firm at ass for Pots. Linseed Oil steady. LoNoos, Nov. 28.—Consols clo;;ed at 91% for money The Esc}►pe of the rtrate Sumpter, Nsµ• - YORK, Dee. 12.—The brig T. TV. Row land, from Rio Janeiro, via St. Thomason the 27th of November, confirms the escape . 01 the pirate Simper from Murtinique. The U. B. stenmer oquois, which was in pnr. suit of her, returned to St. Thomas on the .25th. The gunboat Dacotalt arrived at St. Thomas about the 23d, and was despatched with coal and provisions for the Iroquois, but missed her. J. C. Johnson, one of the crew of the brig D. Trowbridge, captured by the Simptcr, arrived here in the brig T. IV Rowland. The War in Kentucky Louisvitr.m, Dee. 13.—Tho roport circulated yesterday that three Federal brigades had armed to the south side of Green river is authoritatively denied. No information Las been received at headquar ters here that Captain E. F. Prime, of Gen Buell's staff, and Major Helvelll 7 of Gen. Sehoeff's statflhad been captured by the rebels near Somerset but well-informed outsiders say it is true. Johnso , n, the Provisional Governor of Kentucky, in a .message to the rebel Legislature, says he will gladly resign his position when Al:virtu shall es cape prom his virtual imprisonment at Frankfort. From Harrisburg REYIS/ON OP THE REVENUE LAW-SANITARY CON- 13=1 llinnisniqw, Dec. Itt.—Hon. 11. M. Smrser, of Mont gomery county, Win. McClelland, of Franklin county, and James I'. Sterrett, of Allegheny county, commis sioners appointed by Cormier Curtin, under the act of Assembly of Nay last, to revise the revenue laws of the State, are now here, organiv , d and. engaged in the task absigned•them. Alt letters should he adarm,oed to them here. It is expected that valuable improvements and modifications will be mule in Ont• revelino lawsounch nteded at this time, and the high character of the-gen tlemen selected Justifies the expectations that. the. duty will be fully and well performed. . The Pituitary rouditiOn of comp Curtin it Moilt cm:cl ient: A record, kept on the ground, shows that but 39 deaths have occurred there since the war cCantaftleed. This fact is more remarkable when the number of troops that have occupied the camp, 09,000, is taken into Con aideration. The nninhee of into Ilk the heeidtel tat tide time is not 5 per cent. of the whole, while the average of sick in camp, at all seasons, is generally admitted to be from six to ten. These are gratifying (VitiAlleet. of the witiclt the sanitary department of the came is managed. The' Fifty-seventh Regiment,. Col. Maxwellt was fully prepared to go forward to-day, and transportation pro vided, but, because of some unaccountable obstruction on like part of the United States officer here, with regard to 11111001 1 iti3 the wen, the reglarmt 19 contarlkil to hold over till this duty can he nertOrmed. rroferFor AIIINFa 'McCoy is to deliver Ida, celebrated oration on the London rimgs and the Amesican Rebel lieu,-in the Representative Chamber of the Capitol in this city, before the Governor, heeds of departments., and citizen=, ust eatnribly °Wang. The Prefeeeor deli Feted this oration before the President and Cabinet, at wool ington, out the National Fast Day, Pardon of Mrs. 'Hartung Ai. 11 D6o_ 11—Mary Ilartung- 7 who hoz been, imprisoned three years, and a half on the charge et poisoning her husband, was unconditionally releasaa, by Judge Wright.to• day. From rdist.ottri. Sr. TosEmi, Dec. 12.—General Prentiss' COSl wind was to move from Platte City to Richfield on the nth. A reLet camp, Deiebeilfig 4111456 thouaend mea n Is reported near Albany. The report that General Prentiss had bagged five hundred rebels is not true. The raanufaotory of Buell Sr, Cc, was destroyed by fro last night, Loss unknown, Gen. Burnside's Er.peditioin NEW YORK, Dec. 12.—Three hundnrd fiats, each 2 feet long, are being shipped t aoeome►uy Gen. Burnside's expedition, THE THUNDERER ON THE TRENT • [From the London Times.] It requires n strong effort of self-restraint to discuss. with coolness, the intelligence we publish to-day. An chellsh men steamer, under the nritleh Hag, and carrying letters and passengers from a 6panisli port to England, has been stopped on the high HMS and over hauled. Four of the passengers have been taken out (Lull tarried off as prisoners, elaimitr, and vainly claim ing, as they were being forced away, the protection of tin. flag of Great Britain. These are the naked facts. We pnt out of sight the accident that the four gentlemen thus kidnapped were accredited with a diplomatic mis sion from the ConfOletate dtiites of America to the Ciffirta of Europe, and else the peremptory manner in which the Federal frigate acted in making her seizure. The in tention of the Federal Govt rnment evidently was to act upon their strict right, and to do Is, in as little ceremo nious a manner as might be. If they are instilled by their righbl its helligerente in whet they have done, the memo, of doing it is a mere question of good or bad ta=re. If a rude fellow claims his rights coarsely, we must yet give hint his rights; and if we would not find ourselves in the wrong, we omit not quarrel with him on account of lie itt manners. Is it then trite that every Officer of the Ames:kis navy Can stop and overhaul our Ships wherever they may be found, and can take out of them any persons whom he may claim to be citizens of the United States or OffiretA of the Confederate Government! If we ware to admit the Federal view of their own position It would be plain that no aucb right exists. They tell us that they are not at war, but are only pitting down a rebellion. They say, or said, that they are not blockading their own ports, but are simply enforcing a law which has closed the Southern ports its ports of entry. They insist upon putting their ;Our° uPall the wore gralllVl fit if the Queen of Eng. land were putting down a rebellion in the Isle of Wight. Now, if this were so, it is clear that the Federal States of America have, in stopping our mail cleanser, been guilty of an nr t of aggression which could only be pro perly punished by laying an embargo en every Anterican Pll// , In Dritbili Porte, nod interning their little neer from the seine. They would, according to their point of view, not be at war, and would have none of the rights uf bal. ligerents over neutrals. They would no more be belli gerents than England was after the celebrated Smith O'Brien bottle in the cabbage garden, and they would !MC DO more right to atop our Ships and entry off our passengers then we should have hail to stop in French ship and take Nr.Sinith O'Brien out of her. But this assumption of the Federal Government has been disallowed, The:world generally has refused to see in this disruption and reconstitution of the North Ame rican Republic ft naive rebtilloti. We hove vseogniseil Loth Republics as belligerent States. We declare idl trality between them as between two warring Powers, We mete out a precise degree of equal consideration for the ships of scar of each. In everything hut cur dial°. "eV np beer ouraelre6 MIMI between them. whenever the Southern States shall have given proof of such stability as may make it sure that they can sustain their independence, we elicit doubtless recognize them diplomatically, as we already do de iturte. TWA is the most applied by all writ,re on International Law. To tuipport a claim to outer into Ike comity of nation the only proof required or any people is that they are able to make their independence respected. Kings and Emperors, and even Dukes and Electors, have sometimes refused to recognize the Government for the time being of England, or France, or Italy, but only to their own ultimate ridicule. We have already recognized these Confederate States as bellittereht Power, had MT shell, when the time comes, recognize their Government. Therefore we have im. posed upon ourselves all the duties and inconveniences of a power neutral between two belligerents. Unwelcome as the truth may be, it is nevertheless a truth, that we have 1111PAelYed established a ashen, of international law, which now tells against us. In high handed, and almost despotic ma ' man we have, in former days, claimed privileges over neutrals, which have, at different times, banded all the maritime Powers of the world against tie. We lutee in-lsted eVelt %tom stopping the ships of war of neutral nations, and taking British subjects out of them; and an instance is given by Jeffer son in his "Memoirs," in which two nephews of Wash ington were impressed by our cruisag at they were re turning from Europe, and placed as common seamen "matt the discipline of ships of war. We have al ways been the strenuous asserters of the rights of bellige rents over neutrals, and the decisions of our courts of law, as they mulct now be cited by our law officers, have beets hi tesdishusilois of these nnreaeonahle clai ms , which have called into being confederations and armed neutrali ties against cue, and which have always been modified in practice when we were not supreme in our dominion at sea. Owing to these facts, the authorities which may be cited on this itostion are too hinnerane and too midterm as to the right of search by belligerent Philp of war over neutral merchant vessels, to be disputed, "The only security that nothing is to be found incon sistent with amity and the law of nations, known to the law of nations," said Lord Stowell, in the. celebrated cans Of Maria, "is the right of personal visitation and search to be exercised by those who have an interest in making it." Again, Lord Stowell, in the same judg ment, which is the storehouse of all the English law on this subject, says: "Be the ships, the cargoes, and the destituttlob %Odd th ' eY inay, the rightl of visit and search are the incontestable right of the croisers of is belligerent nation. 'Till they are visited and searched it does not ap pear what the ships or the destination are • and it is for the isiiiiese of atteertaining then. -points that the necessity of this right of visitation and search ex We. This right is so clear in principle that ne men can deny it who admits the right of mari time capture i because, if you arc not at liberty to asters laic by eufficient inottiey tebt,fe there Is property that can be legally captured, it is impossible to capture. The nuuty European treaties which refer to this right refer to it as pre-existing, and merely regulate the exercise of it. All writers upon the law of nations unanimously acknowledge it. The great American authority, Kent, treating upon the same subject in hie Commentarier, say's: " Tire ditty of self-preservation gives to belligerent nations this right. The doctrine of the English Admi ralty courts on the right of visitation and search, and on the limitation of the right, has been recognized in its fullest extent by the enurta of justice in this country." So far as the authorities go, the tostim my of interims tional law writers is nit one way, that a belligerent war : cruiser has the right to atop and visit and search any merchant ship upon the Lich !lOW. We quote these authorities because it is essential that, upon a matter so important as that now before us, the public mind stlfallti Jye Belt infilliwth Dot it mud be nmemberea that those decisions were given tinder cir cumstances very different from those which now occur. Steamers in those days del not exist, and mail vessels, carrying letters wherein ell the nations of the world have immediate interest, were unknown. We were lighting existence, and we AM in those clays what sec should neither do, nor allow others to do, nor expect omselv. to be allowed to do, in these days. Moreover, if we gave full scope to all this antiquated law, it remains stilt to be asked whether the men who have been taken frOlti beneath the protection of oar flag were liable to seizure. They were not officers of the army or of the navy of the Confederate States. They were diplo matic envoys, wanting only in sonic formalities to be ambassadors to England and France. We do not say that there is . RAY' provision in the law of nations which will entitle vs to maintain that their persons were sacred by reason of their mission; but, on the other hand, we are not aware of any authority which will show that these envoys were contraband of war. If we had recognized tine Ginfederate State's, we apprehend that we *Monti have been perfectly justified in taking these ambassadors on board our own vessels of war and bringing them to England, ulthout in any way forfeiting our character as nintrals, lint, even if it were accessary' M Admit that these gentlemen were in a belligerent or contraband character on hoard the English vessel, it is, we believe, the Atsthlt,e Of ewes , etWitialt fitrist that SAE( wes net a question to be adjudicated on by a naval officer and four boats' crews. The legal course would have beets to take the ship itself into port, and to ask for her con denmalinty for the eishilembatkh of the passengers, in a Court of Admiralty. The result might, no doubt, have been the same, but if the proceeding was irregular, we have surely a right to demand that these prisoners shall be restored. When such tremendous interests are at stake, we feel deeply the responeibility of discussing a question like this. Our first duty is to calm—certainly not to in flame—the general indignation which will be felt In thee islands as the news is told. We cannet yet believe, although the evil, nee is strore, that it is the fixed deta ruination of the Government of the Northern States to force it quarrel upon tho Powers of Europe, Wo hope, therefore, that our people will not meet this provocation wbh an outburst of passion, or rush to resentment without frill consideration of all the bearings of the case. On the °thee Baud, we genial to the feeteottahle ,assn of the Federal States—and they leave some reasonable men among them—not to provoke war by such acts as these. It is, and it always has been, vain to appeal to old folios mat bygone authorities in justification of ache Which every Englishman and every Frenchman cannot but tee] to be injurious and insulting. Even Mr. Seward himself tenet know that the voices of these Southern COlUntiFsiottor,, sounding from their captivity, are a then- Mei tinge more elnuttlent in fienden and Paris, than they would have been if they had been heard at St. James and the Tuileries. Questions of this kind in countries where . the people exercise power, puss but too quickly out of the hands of lawyers and statesmen, aunt give irreeietiliste power to neither the wisest nor the most peace-loving limb( rs of a community; ee 'Dint this meeting, having heard with indignation that alt American Federal shipeef-war hos forcibly taken from a British mail steamer certain paesengers, who were proceeding peaceably under the shelter of our flag from one neutral port to another, do earnestly call upon the Government to assert the dignity of the Brinell flag by rcnniring prompt reparation tor this outrage." On hearing this resolution read, the meeting expressed, in a most unmistakable manner, the feeling by which it was pervaded in favor of the view, included in it. When silence had been, in some measure, restored, The Chairman remarked, that when the news et the outrage readied this town, thin feeling crested was ono of surprise, mingled with indignation. Ile remarked that e had all heard of the wired dignity of the AilleriCitft flag. That dignity, lie protmeiled to say, was a meanaby which the persons engaged in the nefarious slays trade could at once protect themselves. by hoist lisp the AttialOfill flag, which fully enabled them to resist any attempt to search such vesselss. He trusted it would not be allowed that men prosecntingumnefarious a trade shined be protected, and that men peacefully pro reeding on their own alleles., under the protection of our flag, might be forcibly taken nut of our ships. [Cheers.] On the contrary, be believed that the people of thiaconis try would not, by any means, la snit such an outrage. [Cheetr.] lie bald, in having agreed to take the chair on this occasion, he did el/ without reluctance or regret e sta he felt deeply that he only expressed the feeling, nut merely of the meeting, but of the community in general', when herald it inns. the ditty of the people to wet en the Government the imperative necessity of vindicating the honor amid dignity of the British name and neg. [Loud, and continued cheering.] Mr. IT. C. Chapman, as a mere matter of form e mered that the reedutlon be adopted. Mr. A Forwood Paid he felt much pleasure indiecondiag the adoption of a resolution which must fled an echo iu every Bugled! h01:0111. Mr. Jelin Campbell. while fully concurring in the pro priety of preventing any outrage front being offered to the I - Mittel, flat—a sentiment whirl truss univereallr eetipewledged threitgliqut the liitigdon—tad he felt os- • slued that there Was no Englistinien, Irishman, or Scotelenan w 100 would not sit once, end promptly, resent any ieselt attired to our ,lag. [Cheers.] While feeling tins in the strongest manner and to the fullest extent, he cmmidered that there still remained soon- reason todltobt WllOlllOl , the fade related, and acted on nil - cailiu¢ this meeting, were inn reality ii breach of international law. [Cries of " So, no 1"] Ile referred, at some length, to the opinions of the law ellieers of the' Crown, as being in some measure inclined to sheen that such a. step as that taken with respect to the South- - ern CaillilliADUCTll tinder the eating state of international law. In conclusion, he propene direct negative to the resonate». As, however, he wan not desirous of doing anything which woulifereate a spi rit of illiosenSloll, he was willing to adopt a middle course which could be suggested; and urged the propriety of 1,001),(1113112 enneiderahen of the subject till tee morrow ktlits day.) The Chairman suggested that, to meet the objection thrown out by Mr. Campbell, it would be- sufficient to strike out of the reeeletion the words, a=hy requiring prompt reparation for ads outrage." Mr. Painld , oll Aid! ire &Mid tint enneur tut the sugges tion of the chairman, and must decline to. do en. tin. Tarr expresrecb his concurrence• in the views put ferwaird by Mr. Campbell, and in doing, en met with fee. &mem interraption. He argued that the present fleeting' Wfiti Osil4 ))44 IN ito proseNing4 fl--.. reedy prejudged the case, with the merits of which the. meeting Wag unacquainted. He itmieted that there wan ma reason to believe that the Teepee:Vele ministers of the Crown evoidd ekbe - e- any insult to ....offered to the ltritlaht flag. [Loud Witness] Ho urged trite advinititgo of ma ceeiling calmly ins considering a exp. such as the nresea. which, if prematurely urged to I , • ttretnity, might reseWnt involving this et:auto , in it wee.. Demi t intern' ption..l, Ida contended that, to urge on al* Government a pattlf:u. ler line et remitter in reamed , of the proceetlings.now melee eeeeldesedien lass imps:Jibe:ma nuj ask, hot, and :so EngliStilnan wonith, advocate putting otewith ineett ; but in the present. ease, let him attest the Autoricesne dome'! ElVlre.eleumnati. They tired' a shot acre-c' tine bee sof the ulna steamer to 111111 e hse to, and es ales aid led stop for hut they fired a shott at her, *Melt. hated i 1,,, tleretesdidotte Awe" Me. Tore nroceieleil to say that there WItA ems; reason to avoill coming to a I,,eety resolution, an,h, in thank. ins the meeting for the Patience with which they had heard him, [lote3 and ll.lllllCai ctior.r,] he steals ; IiSSA on thins preee4t, to eeneldei. the isellee snfhihly walk and. not to lie carried heat by the bar pulee of feeling in, it (lose which reunited mature jteig 'strut and calm delberation. A least , bad been see,ests is, him by a gemz.sitern oentlemmh which it was visaed alit unman e hits annul Itlp Itiw 9lYbelit of the Crertoihdi t in ithhchint i el , expressed n derided opinion in to- of of the legality of a prtweiding ttleilisr tin that wheels had just taken ?Mee im reatird Gm Trent by the San Jacinto. 111 rs Jr T urner ntxt attelgatkil to aildrees the mooting to the game eduet as had been lane by Mr. To and Mr. Campbell, but the feeling, of those present wKS to decl., derity oppo.cd to that v lew that he WAS furc4d to assist, The resolution, as preio,orql to be aorended by tlya. chairman, was then o 5 to the meotino,„ and curried b.x a MiOOTIFYI iintt maid the degenina and enthusiastic cheers. For the negatlw, only a low Amnia wore held up. At the conclusion of the tortilla, which bsOs at four o'clock, n uuniber of the eltiopmeinhants ou Tbanas pressed, privately, their conviction that tItO, rilett4gArrit Pracrrillirgis had been ifoiostoro,