(I: 1)c I)rtss+ TUESDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1862. ELECTION TO-DAY. POLLS OPEN, - - 8 O'CLOCK A.. POLLS CLOSE, - 9,:CLOCK P. 111 , THE PLATFORM. OV' TREASON, AS PRE. PARED BY' THE LEADER OF THE BREVKINRIDOE PARTY IN PENNSEL- V ANiIA, The follow log le the resolution wri ten by Mx. F. W. Deem, Ibe Chairman of the Brookbridge Demooratio State Committee, for the conslderation of the State Da reocratic Uonvention. It is the moot lucid and explicit declaration we have yet read of the opinions of the leaders of the Secession Tarty of Pennsylvania: Resolved, That Penrisylvent►owes her growth in yo- potation, and the increase of capital and wealth of her citizen', chiefly to .be aivaotages which the &merlon Union had afforded for the development of ber natural resources; and that her glory and. paramount interests are Mentided with the continuance of that Union. gg 1913011E , D, BOWEYEIL 06.IISEla HITHERTO RESISTED BY THE DEIIIOORaCY or THE COLIN- Prity bEND ABIINDER TEtR BONDS 'Ulla BEND TONETHER THESE STATES, AND SHOULD .THE FIFTEEN BLAVEHOLLINEI HATES, OLAIIIING TO BE DRIVEN BY , THE NEOESSIET Off' RIU TUAIA RROTAUTION AGAINST! THE ErrEor or, BC HI CAUSES, SUCCESSFULLY EdTABLIBII A.N OTHERUONFEDER&CY, THEN . PICNNEELVANII MIPS V REGARD HER REL&TiON CO THE reora WHIOH CIMAIBISTENOES BEYOND OUR CON TROL HAVE PRODUCED. She cannot then reface to perceive that she muet either take bar place in some Northern fragment of a onco-glorioue Union, and reef content to be shorn of the greater part of her manufacturing ltduetry, and of her export and import trade—to hold a secondary and helpiees relation to the Northeastern States, with no cutlet or approach from the ocean for her great East. ern or her great Western metropolis, except through the waters and - before the forts and guns of a foreign nation, and thus practically (for want of ability to protect, be made to yield up all reiiabic direct foreign trade. . . OR SHE MAY, IF A DIEKBER OF TICE .NS W CONFEDERACY, 8E005112 111111 GIIRAT NAND FAO tURLSG WORKSHOP Fun A. PEOPLE NOW CON Stall NO ANNUALLY saoo,oao.ooo woirra OF PIit.D'OOTB AND MANUFA.UTOBE 1 Faoll, AND IfdPO3TED THROUGH. THIO NOR MAHN STATES; ERR CITIES. BECOME THS GIiSAT S3OIHISIEROIAL DEPOTS AND DISTRIBUTING POINTS FOR THIS DONFSDERAOII, AND HIM WEALTH,,PaPULATION, AND GLORY, Bit PRO•' NOTED TN , A DEGKEE ITN PAR. s.LLELICD IN TH aa LtihTORVL I ND PROSPDHLTY OF ANY PSOPLE: 16 Tlup will be the right and duty of her citizens to consult their own best interests to a position so mouton tons, and decide between the lawful alternatives. And that in stating the truths here announced, we have no desire to conceal that our object is to present to the peo• pie of other States the position they may severally °CCU py if the coercion disunionists in their midst succeed in dejsating an equitable compromise of existing diSi. cuities." FRANCIS W. HC3HES. .TRE:WAR ; RIZ city was again startled, yesterday, by a de spatch in a sensation contemporary, to the effect that 30,600 rt beLs had crossed the Upper Potomac, and had actually entered Perry and Franklin counties in this State, and were believed to be marching on the Pennsylvania Central Railroad. It is needless to say that this despatch created the greatest excite ment, and many persons believed it to be true. Subsequently the rumor was denied, and con 1- dence again returned. The report gained credence from the fact that Stuart has never made a circuit of our army but his reconnoinitnoe has been follow ed by, a still, greater movement of the rebel forces. It was so at Tunstall'a Station, and again at War renton and Manassas, and many, therefore, thongla that the rebels would again carry out their old plans. • Brit we are rejoined to say that these fears hid no foundation in' fact, and instead of 30.000 iebels invading Pennsylvania it turned out to be only 50 or 60 cavalry, who have been cut off in their retreat into Virginia, and wore therefore scattering to avoid' capture. It is not probable that another raid will be made in this State. The recent exploits of the rebel Stuart have made our generals watchful. The audacity and boldness of the affair is everywhere apparent, and It should be seen that it is not repeated. . In the capture of the confidential papers of Beauregard the Government hes obtained a mine of informailon not heretofore excelled since the war began. Tbey disclosed , the complete plan of the rebel campaign in the Southwest, and if they had been carried out they would have entailed upon the people of that section of the country, especially Louisville and Cinoinnati, the greatest amount of misery LET every loyal citizen give this day to his county, and Treasun will meet As Waterloo. VOTE YOURSELF, acid then see that your neighbor has voted. OUR arrangements for obtaining the returns of the e!ection to-day are so complete that* we expect to he able to give the* whole result to morrow, so far as the City and State are concerned. • PENI4I3YLVANIANS I. In other days the na tion looked to you when Presidents were to be elected and grave questions of policy were to be decided. Your opinions swayed the balance and ruled the Republic. That Re public looks to you now with a far more eager, earnest, and prayerful interest—for your voice will say whether • the party of treason shall have a national power and ex istence. Let your answer thrill every loyal heart. DOUGLAS DamocrtArs, remember that in voting.the Union ticket you not only vote for your country, but against the men who del feated the regular Democratic organization in 1860, and persecuted your glorious leader to a premature grave. PINESYLVANIANB ! Your brothers have gone to the battle-field.. Many of them have fallen many of them are suffering in agony and pain —thousands of them are on the dreary banks of the Potomac enduring hardship and trial. AU this they have done tbaz the Union may be preserved. Will you not do your duty by. overthrowing the party that -gives aid and succor to their enemies ? • . DID STEMMA.. DOUGLAS, On the 10th of Januaiy, 1844, in the House of Representa tives of theljnited Biates, in his splendid de fence. of ANDEEW JACKSON for refusing to obey, the .tirannieal behest of Judge HALL, *hen t ! Tabrison suspended the civil authority in New-Orleans, ever suppose that such glo- Sons 'truths as the following, taken from that defence,.• would be assailed andridicaled by inch Democratic leaders as Tx. B. REED, VRRNA.NDO WOOD, and FRANCIS W. HUGHES? tt Talk about legality! Talk about formali ties? :Why, there was hit one formality to be observed, and that was the formality of directing the cannon and destrtlying the enemy, regardless of the means, whether it be the seizure of cotton bags or the seizure o f per.fon.r 3 if the necessity of the-case regurred zt. The God of nature'lzas con ferred this right on men and nations ; and there fbre let him not ie told it was unconstitutional. To defend the country, let him not be told it was unconstitutional to use the necessary means." Tus beat picture of the Breckluridge loaders is that•givieoy LEWIS C. CASSIDY, who is now running .on,their ticket for .District. Attorney. Ho said tide was not " LINCOLN'S war," and demanded to know if Mr. LINCOLN had ever shown any party feeling. Tee Democrats say, "Mr. LINCOLN is malting a" Black Republican war;" but has he not appointed Gen. BUTLER, who was a leading Democrat? GEORGE B. MCCLELLAN was also a Democrat, and was: known to be such by Mr. LINCOLN when he ap pointed him. He said that those who suatain ed party under such circumstances were little better than traitors, and that the only way to make the support of the Administration in crashing out this unholy and accursed rebel lion effective was by wipingout all party lines. " TILE "DEMOCRATIC PARTY " will be repro. • seated in the next Congress, according to the expectation of the sympathizers, by BENJAMIN WOOD, FERNANDO WOOD, SYDENHAX E. AN- CONA, JOHN D. STILES, PHILIP JoHNSON, JOHN .L. DAWSON, C. L. VALLANIHOHiM, S. S. Cox,, and several more, sufficient to control a ma jority, and in the caucus thus composed and controlled will enter, in the event of their election, JAMES B, NicuoLsox, JOUR KLINE, and others, who profess to be ultra loyal, and yet run on the Breckinridge ticket. 44 You are outside of the Democratic party," , is the cry of the Secession sympathizers in our midst to those Douglas Democrats who are re solved to vote the National Union ticket to day. It these very sympathizers had not gone outside of the Democratic party in 18430, and had frankly submitted to the election of Anne nen LINCOLN, we should have had rio civil war, or the rekelHoi would have - been speedily crushed. The Issue of the Contest The enemy's footprint is npon the free Oil of the Keystone State, and it remains to be seen whether, at such a crisis, the citizens of Penii s3lvania will show, by their 'votes to-day, whether they sympathize with the rebels Or with the Administration. For our part, we have no doubt of the result. Subtle is the web of sophistry which the friends of treason have woven to conceal their sinister purpose, but it is the more easily rent. Selfish aims and the wretched policy of disunion are appa rent through its reticulation. The design is undoubtedly to break up this glorious Union of ours by giving sympathy and support to its avowed enemies. We shall have no difficulty in. - driving the Invading foe from our ,sacred soil, but there is an enemy among us, farmore dangerous, because more insidious and unde tected—an enemy close to our altars and hearths, which hopes and labors, plots and prays, that, at the polls to-day, men, will be eleeted who, in the name of Democracy, are the swats allies and servitors of treason. To defeat such candidates is the duty, and ought to be the aim, of honest men. The result will show how small is their chance of success here ; the South, where their affections lie, surely would be the more suitable place for such candidateship as theirs. There now are only two parties in this country, the true men and the false; the lovers of that liberty which our fathers retrieved from foreign tyranny, and the advocates of the very worst species of slavery. This day's votes will test all citizens. Whoever does not vote for the candidates who support the Administra tion in putting down hydra-headed Rebellion, must be considered as an enemy to that gtori ous Union which has made a mighty nation out of a handful of men. The old republics of Greece and Rome became great by the soon naulative achievements of ages, but ours sprang into, vigorous existence at once, and his since progressed in a manner which excites at once the wonder, the envy, and the ill.:concealed enmity of foreign nations. From the hour when the United States, freed by their own valor, endurance, and wisdom, became knit together by a Constitution accepted by all, our eagle has steadily pursued his upward flight, with an eye that never winked and a wing that never tired. Hard indeed would it be if this flight were checked by dontestic treason, if the shaft which gave a mortal wound should have been impelled by a feather from its own pinion. It rests With the peoPle, aroused into action, by their , votes to-day. to Strangle the rebellions principle which; un der a feigned name, now seeks to obtain office and its influence only to throw obstacles in the path of the President and the Administra tion. The word is, Shall his course be sup ported or shall the allies of Rebellion be strengthened by to day's votes ? The Second District In this district there can be but little doubt as to the result. The candidates are Mr. CUARLES J. BIDDLE, an ex-colonel in the vo lunteer service, and Mr. CumiLcs O'NErr,L. Mr. Bmnr.E's record is enough to prevent him from ever receiving the confidence of his constituents. He his been so persistent and open in his attacks upon the Administration that he cannot, of course ba elected. Mr. O'NEILL is a well-known, highly respectable, public' spirited citizen—a gentleman of fine tastes and large legislative experience. His tomination for Representative was a tribute of his fellow-citizens to . these qualities. He hes merited their confidence, he has shown that be was a capable legislator, and, above all, be is undeniably in favor of the Union aid Administration. The Second district can be represented by nobetter man. • IT is related that when the infamous Bucit wan, .of Kentucky, whoswas released from Fork -Warren, and immediately after wards as sumed command of a rebel detachment, was dismissing certain paroled Union prisoners, he said, Go home are vote - the DeMocratio ticket, meaning thereby, go home and vote in favor of the Mends of Major General RUIN C. BaEcifixwmow, who afro now helping the rebellion by attacking the Administration. ' THE rebels In arms, arid the unarmed sym pathizers, are both terrified at the prospect of a victory for the old Union in Pennsylvania to-day ; and while the latter welcome with rapture the invasion of the former, both will tearfully mourn that the raid of STUART and HAMPTON, has only served to arouse the true friends of the Republic. THE Breckintidge organization, under WILLIAM B. REED, RUCHES, HIRST, WHARTON, BIDDLE, and others, struck the first blow at the Union by bolting ihe regular Democratic nomination, in 1860, and defeating STEPHEN A. Dona Les for the Presidency, which pro duced the present civil war. They now pro pose to strike the second and final blow at the life of their country, by overthrowing the Administration of Mr. Lurcout, which is the Government; and making anarchy rule in its stead. THE card of WILLIAM L. ilmsr, the Breck inridge candidate for City Solicitor, in which he denies having been a vice president of a Secession meeting held at National Hall, January 16, 1861, does not please his associ ates, and we understand that . WILLIAM B. REED, after reading it yesterday, announced his intention to vote against Mr. HIRBT, doubt less on the ground that as Mr. HIRST. was ashamed of his old friends they were resolved not to Rik:bort him. We greatly fear that Mr. Hutsv, in trying to gull war Democrats by eleventh-hour assurances of loyalty, has for feited the confidence of the men with whom he has sincerely acted. EVEN JADES GORDON BENNETT, of the New York Herald, who, with histeen Scotch'idtel ligence, scents tbe approaching• victory of the friends of tbo Union, abandons the •Breckin ridgers in New York, and advises Snymotra, the so•called cg Demoerade",candidatO, to with draw in favor of the nominee of the Repabli- Cans and loyal Democrats, General WADS . WORTH. Wrimr. it is very unjust, to* Say that every Democrat is a trahor, it is very true that every traitor claims to be a Dethearat. WHAT so-called Democrat inside the Breck inzidge•organization has had courage enough to ,deidinice the treason of FRANCIS W. iiIICIHIS, chairman of the Breckiuridge State Central Committee, as announced in his roso ution of February, 1861, suggesting a disso• Intim of the Union ? • • THERE ARE Two major generals in the field in hearty harmony with eacliottor ; the one, Major General 'Tons. G. 134;iitc*itings, at the head of a division of the rb?l . ,ariny,,the other, Major Generalissimo. 7.11.131018*. Hiorms, at the bead of the rebel sympathizing amp. The 'one attacks the 'Union with - - bullets, and the other with ballots. OS SA.TITADAY ,LAST;rit,.ASOIS W. HVdaES, offered two hundred.thootinnd - men tolhe Go- . vernor to repel the rebel invaders 'Yroiaa peal-; syliania. It is shr - e . 7411A , suspected that if: he had got to tianspoit iriends'io thOorder, they, w'citild t hiiie joined toe rebels as soon as they got ttrere,•.as his raktres did EiaMt time ago, or ;else the' febels'wo,,,ld have. assisted ther• in trying to control ..the : . ' As oossolzwTlovs MEN, hOijr• can J&us B.' NICHOLSON • and' Levis, C: CA'stpiig it* the votes of the Breekinri 4 gers,; whogt* they so; ,bitterly denounced in 18401 .i.a.tow cant they now assail Douglas Den:l6=U, who con tinue to stand where they Steed two , years ago? JAMES BUCHANAN'S organ, the Lancaster Ia ielligencer, asserts that c , the people swill again place the old bemocratic pilots on bOard who steered the vessel successfully for 'ignore than seventy years without ever harzng once stranded 'her on the shoals and quiqcsands which laid in her path." This looks as if there was to be a restoration ; that liticas.NAN was to be Presi r dent and Bizzottrntnxis Vice President of the new Confederapy of "Huorms, REED, Co. IT MAY BE said with abselute truth of-the Breckinridge ticket in Pennsylvania as DANIEL S. Dicattisox, a life.long Democrat, says of it in New York : iceould the murderous tatter dematlons of rebellion, who are described as reeking with a rank compound , of .villainous smells, shaggy with shreds of what was cloth : . ing, and creeping with -vermin,. attend our polls, they would give this ticket ii Unanimoue Tote." •••. GENERAL DANIEL E. SIOKLES will nomi nated as.,a candidate in New_York, agaimit BENJAMIN WooD, on the Uuion ticket. :11`e will of course be elected. Bigler In the last number'of JAMES'BUORANAN'S organ; the. LOwaster Intelligencer,welqd two documents, 'to Which editorial attention - is di _ s rected—the speech of Holum° SEYMOUR, of New York, the' Brechinridge candidate for Governor, in which he suggests the repudiation of the national debt, and hence the destruction of all confidence in the Government e and of the most important interests of society; also a letter from WILLIA3I BIGLER, trying to prove that if the Ctittenden Compromise had been adopted we , should have had no civil war. The men who 'were foremost in pushing the country into rebellion, like litor,Ett, cannot resist the , temptation of weaken , ;lig it, now ,that the rebellion is doing/ its worst. .'weak, timid, and insincere politician, as BIGLER is, one whp retreated into obscurity' fter be leftthe Senate, and trem bled at every sign of popular, wrath, because he felt that he deserved the' indignant rebuke of the people, becomes brave and .loud as he sees that treason' is permitted to flourish, and that there is some prospect for transplanting it here• under the agis of the Breckinridge party. Our loyal countrymen, admonished and forewarned as they are, can take no more profitable lesson to their hea.rts than that which is taught by the industrious and un ceasing efforts, at this moment, of the aban doned men who, under JAMES BucuANAN's Administration, encouraged the South to vio late every sound principle, and to prepare for the catastrophe which has overtaken our com mon country. • DANIEL Douonnutv never said a better word in his life,than when he, spoke the;following: "What did . Buchanan and his faotion do froth _November, 1880, to March; 1881? Why, the IN FAMOUS, in his message to Congiess, in December, 1880, declared that "a State has no constitutional right to secede ; kit if a State secedes; the consti tution gives no power to prevent it. This is their idea of the Constitution. We revere the Constitu _ tion. 'We intend to preserve it as a shield for the loyal, but not for traitors. Caitlin° prated of the Constitution; and Cato, in the Romanßenate, re plied, as the true men say to-day to our Catiiines, that the Constitution was not made for traitors." There is not a single leader of the Breekin ridge party that has ever publicly and honestly supported one act of Congress, or one act of the Administration, for a vigorous prosecution of the war. IF THE REBELS bad established themselves at Chamhersburg, Flux cis W. Iluouas, to be consistent with hinfself, would have nadoubt edly removed his State Committee to that beautiful town, and opened negotiations with Generals HAMPTON and STUART., to transfer old Fennsylvania, according to his offer of February 1861, to those who would make her cc a member of the new Confederacy and "the great manufacturing workshop" of the South ern people, and thus cc her wealth, population, and glory would be promoted in a degree un paralleled in the history and prosperity of any people." lifeprE has spoken—Pennsylvania is about to speak. We shall send to our sister, in her northern aeabonnd fastness, the cheering news that the Keystone is still firm and true. PEOPLE of Philadelphia i• Take inspiration front the associations in your midst. The hall of Liberty—the twine of Pssw—the graves of FRANKLIN, DECATUR, BAINBRIDGE, and Hum., •should speak in silent but irresistible eloquence against treason and disloYality. Be not un worthy of your proud name and pure fame THE borne of GEORGE B. MCCLELLAN will echo that brave soldier's manly and patriotic order, by endorsing the President . who has sustained him so faithfully, and whom he his . served Bo well., Doxyar.ss DEMOCRATS ! in 1860, the Brack inridgers.refusedio vote with you to save the Union.Tolday they ask yon to voto with theta;to destroy the Union. Tu soldier of the line, in his Potomac encampment, will look anxiously for the news from Pennsylvania. Send him words of com fort and encouragement by electing the whole Union ticket. David Tod; of Ohio . _ DAVID TOD, the GOVOTOOr et, Ohio, at tho breaking out of the rebellion was an scot:Tied and honored chief of the'Dernocratic, party. His, high personal character, and consistent adherence to Democratic principles, made him one of the most popular men in the Northwest, and gave to his example a wide and , salutary influence. He did not wait a moment in taking sides for the Government, and against the or ganization of the Democratic party; and such was the effect of his patriotism, that he was chosen Governor of Ohio, at the last election, by an enormous majority,---patriotic men of all parties contributing to the result. How ably and well he has discharged the duties of his station the whole country knows. He has not. hesitated or doubted in regard to any of the measures of Congress and the Administra tion. At a meeting in Columbus, Ohio, on Monday evening last, he made a speech, which we copy bel6w, in support of the President's Emancipation Proclamation. We commend it alike to 'the 'loyal Democrats, and to those who are , -allowing themselves to be mis led by the Miserable 'sophistry of our sympa thizers w ith se cession : - My neighbors, it is very gratifying to be thus cordially and kindly received. But I hope that you'll excuse Ina and not be disappointed that make no speeoh .I would be glad to do so; but the labors of the past few days, and the pressing labors now on hand forbid. A few words will suffice fiir me to speak my views on this proclamation. have studied it calmly ; I have given it my faithful *ration ; and Ihere say-to you . that I cordially eiedorse every ientiment 'and sYllable of it. I wenld be' sorry to differ with the distinguished Ge sic al,(Walleoe) as to its being in any wise ill-timed. 'I think that it is well-timed—perfectly well-tamed inevery'regard. We mast remember the potation that Der. Lincoln occupies. He is as much the President of South Carolina and Virginia as he is of Ohio and Illinois. 'And I tell you that his long forbearance in laying his hand upon slavery en titles him to a Monument that shall reach high to ward the heavens Few men in this world could have acted so carefully and so ealinly as Mr. Lin coln has done. This proclamation, is; in my judg ment, perfectly well-timed ; partictilarlv so as GO Ohio; for affairs had come to such a pass that the question was forced upon us--whether:we, with our army, should stay at home to protect our homes and our families from the rebels, or that they should be' sent baok to protect theirs ? [Cheers, and "good, good •Stupid 'though he may be, still only•let this'AfriMinhe made tree, and my w ord for it, they will'etiOn'giire'these rebel' rascals' enough to do to take care of their own homes and families. Cheers,] And, for one, I prefer that they should bo pat to the work of looking out forthemselvea, rather than that wo should. , I have soon for months, my friends, -that ex haution on one side or the other is to be the only end of this rebellion. For the spirit of their master, the devil, has so completely entered into and pos sessed the hearts of those rebel leaders that nothing but exhaustion will be able to reduce them to obe dience to the requirements of their allegiance. And this proillamation is the very thing to weaken them in a mmit . vital part. [Applause.] This proclamation—what is it? The President simply says to these rebels, cease your ungodly war, lay down your weapoes of rebellion, return to your allegiance by dueerepresentation. in Congress and 'obedience to the laws, and, all is right." Then the proclamation of emiunipation of your slaves won't burl you. Now, ire not ninety daYs time enough for tbemto determine the point as to which °curse they will take ? If within theie throe, months the rebtl.Statea return to their, proper acd fal co alition in the Union, then this proclama tion becomes a dead letter. Bat if they choose to continue in their ungodly.. rebellion, who is to blame but themselves : They invoke the come. quencee on their own heads. And who would be wil ling to stop them? Go ask the father whose manly eon has yielded up his young life before those rebels' guns, if he would have the Government :stop there. No; if they should stop there, if I have any influence with the Government, I will urge them to go farther, and to . go on till every one of these infamous leaders is /hanged, as an example to all future time. (Immense applause.] ' The best blood of Ohio ones from the battle-field and deresiods' the death of those leaders. (Great .iipplause.] To beggar them by confiscation is not enough They. must die? [Wild ap pl . There is no loyal .man in Ohio that can condemn i the Ptesident icor his proclamation. We must have' no divided issues among us. I am happy, my friends, to say that I have re cently made the' acquaintance of Abraham Lin coln. I had known him before as we know men : whose band we take and are gone. Bat non I've come to know him. I have had a long and con fidential conversation-with him. He is Icahn and undismayed; and I am satisfied, perfecitly satisfied, that in his hands we have, confided the affairs of Government to hands able and faithful. And let me assure you, whatever the newspapers may say to the contrary, that there is perfect harmony in the Cabinet at Washington. And, in my opinion,. all bids fair to sod tee war right soon ; and that, as I believe, after this winter we shall have but: little left to, do but to catch and hang the leaders of this infernal rebellion. And the - Governor retired amid. theinicist'entlin- ) finale applause, amid whieh, thellotind c istruok up the glorious strains. of "Hail 0°1M:obis:" - They - never fail who die mitt canoe: the block may soak their gore, Their,heads may sodden in the sun; their limbs , Be strung to oity'gitc Sot- castle wails:-' Des B p] rh'elr spirits walk Abroad. 'Though years ilatise, and others shire as dark a doom, They but augment the deep , and sweeping thcinghts • Which;Oversprusd all otheri;and oondnot The world at teat to freedom. loTheerreesocial:nation. r cr,1#0 ; ,04,, Nelsoni o Tennessee, neutral... hal 'published an sd r dress oondemning, in strong terms, Prosi? ant IdlnVoln's smociannatton to emancipate the slaves. THE PRESS.-PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1862. The cavalry raid of -SrtreaT and TON into the border counties of perm a yi. valaia has revived - the complaint• against the kited of horseg used by the General Government in the present war. Comparisons are everywhere drawn betweeit these horses and those used by the enemy. •The fact can not be denied, that our inferiority in cavalry is to be traced to our negtact in the breed of hones in:the middle States. 11r, Southern ers hart-, for 'many . years, devoted -them selves to the improvement of this valua ble animal, and they• are now reaping the advantage of the care and money they, have bestowed upon them. .It is stated by experienced farrierti -in illustration of this remark, that the. difference behween a blooded and a Conestoga horse can be illus trated in no better way than by examining the shinbones of both, the first being solid, tut ivory, and the latter as porous as a honey-, comb. Although the horses . of the rebels,• when they entered Frederick, were observed to be poor and half-starved, yet they had the endurance which springs from their blood, while ours, although apparently strong and in good condition, could not stand the wear and tear of the service. The SOutherners have turned their attention to race horses ane#l. ing horse s, while all our care has been to train a few trotting horses. When NAPOLEON invaded Russia, he suffered from nothing more than the superior blood, swiftness; and endurance of the tg Barbs" used by the Cossacks in their dashing forays upon bis flanks. In after years ho triumph antly Profited by. this lesson, when he intrO duc'ed against the Norman horse employed by the Austritms, the Arabian horse, which he had *ported in large numbers. The farmers of Pennsylvania have now an opportunity to open a wide field in which to display their en terprise, and at the same time make money. And the Government, which has lOst im mensely.by not being able to procure the right kind of horses, should take the lead in this important work. We yesterday printed the card of Mr. Eras; the Breckinridge candidate for Solieitoti;dei:: Dying the charge that he had taken part lira Secession meeting. The Evening Bulletin al ludes to his denial, and makes this statement: it Mr. William L. Hirst lublishes to-day a card, Baying that be was not an officer of the Secession meeting held January 16, 1861, nor present at the meeting. Probably not half 'the vice presidents and secretaries were personally present at the meeting. Mr. first's name, however, appeared in clear type in the Pennsylvanian and Inquirer of January 17,.1861, along with the other vice presi dents, and it is at least singular, if he repudiated the.sentimeuts of the meeting, that no public, dis avowal from Mr. Hirst appeared until October 13, 1863, nearly two years after the meeting and one day before an elretiOu in'wtOla Mr. Int, was a candidate for the office of City Solicitor. "It is edd, too, that Mr. Hirst should publish, the 'same day with his attempted disavotiral, a letter of recommen dation from certain political gentlemen, five of whom, at least, were also officers of the same Seces sion meeting, and one of whom acted as president, was present, end made a speech." • The following absnrd end dangerous falsehood was Vetted iu circulation yesterday morning by the A.sso- Mated Press, on the strength of a special despatch to a contemporear, It bad the effect of startling the com munity, and naming intense and general excitement until the contradiction came : [Br cial Despatch to the Philadelphia Inquirer] HARRISBURG, October 18.—Governor Curtin hai must received information,,dated Perryviile t Juniata county, film a reliable gentleman of Perry county, • that a Jebel foroi 30,000 strong, made their appearanco Albin sight Wife Ooncord, Franklin county, bet Digit at 12 o'clock, and had corded off 1,500 horses. The farmers of Franklin county are moving all their stork into Perry county. 'I hey are supposed to be making for the Pennolvaniaoentral Railroad. FROM .WASEINGTON. WASHINGTON, October 13, 1882 An Ambulance and 11432.pital Corps for It will be gratifying to the public to know that, error gemente for the organization of the camp-hospital and embalm:ice corps of the well matured systemiatio' plan of Mr. H . M. PIERCE, will be completed in a, feW . mos. Only the besSmatelial will be received into this impolant body. It will coneietof atleastl2 000mon Each member 'Will have to give tosilirioniedo of good, *mat character, andoound mind and. body. Dir. Ptnaoz will be happy to receive any suggestions and feet&onoorn-, - Innibe_wante,inaterlai, and organization of thie_pe: until the 26th inst., at No. 437FifficaVallitl - 4c Now York: His manual for the instruction of thpito entering the ser vice will form a part of Ganeral Elet.i.eoes ritar mili tary work for the U. EL army, now athiurready for the, 3wess. . Deaths of Pennsylvania Soldiers. Samuel &wick, Company E, 49th, at Columbian CMI loge hospital. JeEpe Gillespie, Company B, 2d'igipserveei at Colombia College hospital. CHenrylEt. Fay, Company 0, 61st; at Rosewood hoe picot J. B. Cable, Company l' - 84tb, at Harwood hospital. Samuel Klik, Bonn:tide's staff train. teamster. John A. Kale., Company ff, 1076, at Carver hospital. Abram Riling, Company 30, 49th, at Patent Office hoe plud. (tee 111.ulatne, Company D, 136th, at 14-t. Pleas bospilel William Miller, Company 0, 66th, at• Georgetown Gal legr hoepital, . . ''' .. .. , - , • ,. 1 , :r•f.?.'.. , "Henry a Fry, Company C, 61a', .M Hare Wootiiiii Orel. Reported Death of Bragg and Chelthallt: Jt is understood that a despatch trim General .6 'did at LeufsvWe, 10 P. hi heat evening. reached Wile this morning - , saying that it wee generally belisied tiieti the rebel Generale Eineacs and thisrritAw were botli killed in the engagement of Wednesday last, near • • Bardstown. Our lobe in killtd, wounded, and mieslng was hetWeert I,too and 2,0(0, while that of the enemy wee larger. We held the field on that night, and skirmielied With' thani in their retreat tier next morning. . When ihts'dOspai:ch left Louisville, a.coarier froirenV forces was exp . 6ctid'td ariive in the cottise of the` night, trilniinit &tittle of the purentrand the patt/e'whichivai nrebtibly i fought yeelerday. GenVral BOYLE expreesealle belief in the troth of the account of the killing of Beiosi aid CIISATILSM in the action of Wodneieley,`then prOvA: lent in Louisville. The Engagement between .rleonton put • Information received up to one o'clook ads afore ,uttera shows that the Bring yesterday, on :the :Upper PosOWtc between PLEAdONTOred and STUART'S fOTCB2IIII I / I Wah• ()litany materiel results Colorado Territory. - • Gailinor vANBc of Colorado, hieing anoompliehed the object tf mietrion---neniely, with reftrenoe to the tunitttrY Protection Of that Territori should it be dis turbed by Indian hostilities, left Washington' to-day on bie return borne, The Teiritoriesnf Colorado and Ne braska are now to be included in tlie - Department of the Missouri. • ' "- ' • Mei Frequent complaints baying m n aushisti,. Depaitment of the inefficiency of poe.in con- ducting the business of the offide:a9al4o4l.tioleithe rostfirastor General has suspended . siiittottiolefUrat Placed the Office In the handy Bored, will impart vlt tj finatigy to its iiierstioid. Nairal"didire. , -* t s ' Commander 13EitiliortY has been Oidtrietl toytlitilun 7 boat Eebsgo, at Port Royal. EI:II , 4DV BUDGRMAN, BROWN, ondHih[tht9e bs e not. tiered to the klOshwippi flotlile. • -;;: , Lieutenant Gommandei"Tauxiorr - hair itaitkitatife;ied from the Alabama with two weeks' le a ve iffisr which be le ordered to report to tiliejOilibitilrebo. cure. Acting Master Mua has been "doted 10 : ttie lieu! clad innboat Patapaci._ wr Brigadier °amok .f•AM rF;ti,: t rtrAtt#,Vtar, 13:ifted. States Volunteers, is telioirettiMa c dttly. Xorittown, , Va.; and endered to report ,totheGliratiti-chief. The, Rebel .Raid—WhOt ;Stuartlitteedcd tO doe • • The Star of this evening has the following , A man who arrived, here this morning, . from ; neaF Conrad's Ferry, Oates:that lakw,m in the presence of Gen. BTUART a few minutes before he crossed the river with his marauding force; in his retreat-from his late foray into Pennsylvania. Gen. STrAnr informed him, in ti sarcastic , manner, that he had t! fooled the whole party." Re rt wetted that he had. not .accomplhthecillikatoyill intended ',thee. he started, al he was expected tii — peach - 1 1 Frederick, Rd., destroy the Government stores at that, point, and then destroy the bridge over , ilionoostei river; but that, all things taken into oonstderstion, 1 had carried out his programme with much sue= Vetile.r •„..,Attiatir's men and horses looked extremely exhanited, - ; Wale former were to high glee, and from the 'coke of, the clothing on their persona, arid that which they tied cn tbeir extra (tiolen) boreee; (which nuthberidi about 1000,) they expected end 'said that the o t: Wal Would be very acceptable, especially the shoes and of 'stitch they had a large quantity, ' Gen. BTUART sent file Ootnpllmente to a numbed, United States officers wi th whom he was acqoaiated old times. Cool, decidedly! • 7he Minter-Roll of the Pennsylvania; HARRIBI3I7OO, Oct. , SB.—Letters are oonstantlY being" received at headquarters in relation to the manner cf: making out Amster. rolbi of companies of militia that' were reported And Arrived at Harrisburg under the late'. call of the poyernor. The names and residences ,of i officers and men are all that is required, and.when thus ,nv,,shonld be furnished to Adjutant General A L RZ111181.4 lierriabnrg,where they will be ready for fulnre reference when required, • • irrom Memphis 7 -A, gaccesaful Expedittott-; CAIRO, Oct. 38 —The expedition sent from hfemphia' on 'bundsy week to Wolf rirer, a few mile! beyond Ger- i nisatown, returned ou Tueeday, having surprised a robe( 'puny and killed four men, including a captain ; wounded feint. en; and ceptertd..lll4, together with a number, o tones and alma., Nd .A.".U.";,44... w ~ a The biaft New York tlstaialit,::.ocabbetallforrr.litr, day. has thus, far •be txtd OA' the draft". bat : lt l fs :inuderatond that an ord aplike PrOmidgetidlogooire7w direetin; teat, aolunteeris be 'reCiiiiir the lat OVlttivember c end i - draft take tine on the 10th of that month, florae/4 Mr. Hirst; • An Absurd and Dangerous Falsehood THE INVASION OF PENNSYLVANIA-30,000 REBELS IN THE STATE. Special Deiipatches to The Press." the Army Stuart The Cairo Post Office. The Rumored New lurasiOictrnfortnded. nARRISDIJRO, October 13.—Since, my last despatch 001. kloCaure telegraphed to Gov. Curtin the following: . 4 We have thousands of remora, but they are entirely unfounded. To approach Conoord they mn,t cross at London, ten miles west from here on the pike, and we have news frees there hourly. Concord is at the haul of the Path Valley, and to enter It they must go by Her cersburg and London, or cross Cove 111Juntain at Lou don atd Fanueitsburg, and we could not be without the Information. it is• eithely-unfoonded, and result , frOm exagge ilitßinnxits.of their. cavalry being at :Bt. Thenias on triaisy l uight. i • I 4 About sixty rebeloavalry are just reported by one of our egintra to,. be in. the neighborhood of . Fayetteville, six miles east, on:the:pike. They seeni,to have been scat- Jo; ed and retreating. We are amply prepared for• them, end every one appearing - will tired at. Col. Grant is here with the two Vermont regiments and artillery." -The following:has since been received from Colonel McClure ..,iirialansasio.aci, October 13-10 o'clock A. 111.-11ir. Orsinp, of-fiteyens' Furnace, has just Bent a messenger with inforpationtaf the rebel cavalry are . at 011.1htown, at the fo - ot Of e t.'oulri Stountain, in Adams county, in con- Biderable i t orce. 'They bare been driven back from the Potomac, and are trying to escape. Every effort is be ing =Bleb cut them off hers 'and at net eersburg. They have Logan, a man from Franklin county, with them, a superior guide, and they may escape. Our citizens all have arms, and will join the troops in cutting them off." Another Ideepatoh, joet receivtd, eaye that the tummy are at Oathtown, Adams county. They may attempt to pees by the mountain road, south, by Bbippenehurg, and It may be by Greentaide. The Escape et Stuart's Cavalry. lessnanicx, MD , Oct. 13 —The escape of the rebel cavalry 'acrossthe Potomao le fully oonflrnied. After be'ng driven from kiolan's Ferry, they divided, and crowd the river ID small bodies at different points. Two farmers, taken prisoners at Mercersbnrir, Pa., and paroled at the river, arrived hers to day. They report that Generale Stuart and Hampton were both With the expedition. The cavalry consisted of detach ments from Virginia and South Oarollna regiments. They eelzed no hones in Maryland, but swept the parts of Pennsylvania through which they passed, ol every horse worth taking. Mr. Clark, the newspaper express. Man: Wu captured, but escaped after they , had crossed the river. _ • CAnttst.r, October 18.. The excitement created hero, by the late rebel raid into this State, le enbeldiog. The trains on . .the Cumberland Valley Railroad have resumed their reguler:tripe.'. . A' large_ cavalry force left Hagerstown yesterday In pursuit of the rebels. Time was is fight !eat night at Knoxville, Maryland, which is on the Potomac, five or eta miles east of Har. per's Ferry. It is reported that a number of the rebate were captured in endeavoring to cross the river at that HEBEL PLAT' pp OPERATIONS IN THE VEST END SOUTHWEST. CAPTURE OF BEAUREGARD'S CONFIDENTIAL PAPERS, .WASIIIROTCK, October 13. —lmportant papers were some time ego captured by General Buell, while being transmitted for 61e to Brigadier General Thomas Jordan, aperient . adjutant general of the rebel army at °battik neer', Tennessee. These papers include coufighntial letters from Glenoral Besuregard, both to Adjutant General and Inspector Cooper and to GeneralHragg, specifically laying down a plan foi:military operatlbus in the. West and Southwest, by which our forces were I ffeotively 'concentrated to meet the demonstration» recently made in pnranince of it. According to Beauregard'e programme, the offensive 'POints of CA rebels were tirstLonisvillo and then Cincin nati, and ke was particular in stating how it would be best to retich them from Chattanooga, with Buell at annteTille) It was hie opinion that a detachment could take Lon!bills while the main body would be marching to'llaitcfneti Be contemplated the construction of .a yak. attislentuter city for the command of the Ohio, and \ kl:to canal; and the deetructtoa of the canal as soon sti - sposejlele, so completely that future travellers wculd hardly know whore it was. To keep thecommam of Cincinnati, he wouldtonstrnot a strong work, heavily armed, at Covington. Copies of those important letters will soon be furnished to the Cott:dry. tht - oogh the press. THE WAR IN ARKANSAS. EPRINGFIELD, &Jo , October 13.—Popers and de snatches, dated as late as the 6th instant, have been re ceived by General Combs from Arkansas. Hindman was then at Duval'e Bluffs. Parsons was represented .as moving towards Northern Missend, and seeking to unite his forces with Siemm and Mcßride, at Pocahontas. The rebel commander Holmes was at Little Book. General Schofield had arrived at Oaehville, in Berry - county, near the ArSenses line. lonthweetern souri is once more cleared of rebel fo 7ces, and telegraphic 'communication fs complete to Oaehrille. Two divisions of ihe army are left at Helena under General Oarr. Guerilla Bands in Missouri Broken Up- Activity of the Union Forces. SEDALIA, Bto , October 13. The 6th Missouri State Militia, Col. Catherwood, have in several scouting ex pedibone within the last few days taken -•up various bands of guerillas, killing the notorious Capt. Joe Kirk, who has 'issni . dered so many private 'citizens, Oast :I.oudere, qf the 3d nllesieeippi , Lieut. Col. Alexander, of the same rtsiment, and some ilftrinashwbackers. They also biot.abOk e io , camp this mortal:V., - Col: Wm. Li, Cowan, 0.11: - Je., wno - escaile - dYrom - stie-nr - uouts unttrary ;prison some time ago; by blacking himself, and thus pasting the sentinel. Tbey have else csptared a large fits 01114 of interesting rebel corresponden3e. ST. LOUIS, October 13.—The combined armloa of Mitsouri•aLd Habeas, as an army corps in the field, now commended by Brigadier General Schofield, will hereafter be denominated the Army of the Frontier, by order of Major Generals:hats. The - Rebels Acknowledge • a .Defeat: at Corinth:; : - r-..791nt0i Oct. 13.4141.9ieilsda,Ippeca, of the 10th bitat t Cmelies the;stliolt brthe-Optioth battle even more diagittvoi . tonlit:flibelti than onr . own reporta. It le eieieli 0;163 shack wee opposed by all but one of the probably; Van Dorn—against Fliom'tbefe le gretitfidignaiton mentfetted. • - From California. taxillylpid sorsa°. October 11.—?aibsf, ship Idemnon, for etratittr Coonlitntlon v for Penanta, with 88 fiiiiite).kery. and .809,000 .treanure for New York, l*d 5213,000 for England. • . • li..;;; , ;:trht, State treeenrer has paid the United Staten as -4: Adak Treasurer, on account of the indfreet tar levied on .'thin Rite for nations) PUSSIDEBI, 883,000 in legal-tender note,: Tbe'money wee paid into the State treaeury in gold; end. much Indignation le menifeeted against the trea eureilor changing the gold into notee before settliag with DA United States' treasurer. ,The . Governor has torment protfeted against the State epeculatieg at the engem)" ot the National Government.: and the public ate,apparently in his favor. 'Lis thought that the Legitleture Aral disapprove of eactiltnanclering, and ceteitlAbe treeourer to hand over for theleenedt of the Genttral•Govertment whatever profit the State realized. Erastus Corning Renominated for • Congrebs. . Aie.s%r, H, y.,"0 . ci,173 —Hon. Erodes Oorning was 'rebon.ta - ated for Congress to-day, by the Doi:neer — aoy of the Albany dletrict. 'o 4. PtlThelfaine geveilth at Horne. , Psa, October 13.—The Keine 7th Regiment ar• rived t,:st 1 o'clock this afternoon from Batton. A saluteJ„, Bramball, on. the arrival .of the train, vi ey were 'received , by-the' City Government with an escort of the 7th Regular/ from Fort Profile, portions or the 23d, 25th, and 27th regimente from Camp Abrabille p tincoht, the High School cadets of Portland, the iirelepactment, arid eecorted•tO the City Hall; where Goo .i l liaabburne addressed them. Accident to a Lake Propeller. ktrxr.st.o. Oct. 13.—The propeller Tonawanda, of the Western Transportation Line, on going out of the harbor Yestg Kai; ran on an obstruction, causing her to leak badly, and obliging .her , to pot , back. She wee loaded, and bold for, Chicago. The damage to the cargo is eaid to have` etn ikon $30,000. 'titian for The Prete ) . z.. • °''a,l. TO Loyal Democrats. 1 BY A DOUGLAS BAR. Yeiviiiikie your Country's weal '-',•.' . -.)34etter then your party's glory, 4 : :' ,. 514) have felt the' traitor ' s steel e field of battle gory • 1 91 • ' 7 80 ere, Patriots, to you, - „ . te , 4i. : , eFsof this glorious nation, . 44n' .1 ..., •• -..* .' ' 0 'I1E1•. A 1.:0we,..15ay,, , ~, -*.,•*. I, And vote this ,dsh . * , ( : r,g the .Adminis t ration ! . - 4 .,! ILittlo Mao and Linoojn pow. , 1" i i r jitOt i , elii irith L a wistful limos, airy. A the ...1 . from . ~s. o' ( ' .." .TSOI care - off their brow •-t• ---- ..Tire another-mu has risen ;.- , , "•W • Del, theWsee that Derii'oeilibi, iSillittful of this kloriwit nation,. "C 7 t. ' ,0 3( 111 4,i1,.1LTz.p,-- ,- cite l E.; "A ' l Viritli right good *ill, '•-*!`"" l.l. "Adlifth.VAdnitaistration !, • , . .4) .t1.0.,':i..i. - ;•) (1' f, 4. .; 7 s, .n0w.....0.f.-o..Were.theziwe,Dougit , ._.,,,. _ Ilfil./..A.-talgi. WO. .41 4 STL. 1 ,1'aidia°,ving , f , rel • With h i s broad and m assive broi, In - ~.T"r- d e r, trothitillloving ; xt , * ,, 3 1;8 p*ldsfy, As erst,h, said,, , ' . 1.11. eemin of uis glorioig nation, .1 Cart, 'I firiiii:Adlii'. ';','"e4 • - IT-4)" votes 4.? is daY, . 4 .%, • ~-,_,.. • For the AdMinistration !'?'-'-t r •r" rublic Enlvrtainments. A cenillti.,2llustc.—To / pronopnoe the Ravel troupe wondelineg 2 WitAlsti - 2 - 'Tie t#ime Vtivel tie is reett• ta t tjon, on . itseliciantk ntie whlch Am tang )eince ib t ar established. In the — present perFormance at theiCildbmy, however, there iionelteinvshioh !claims perforce the at. ; tortion ,of evltypplay l gff, i anyi dtutejicais4ipt,in etitl; ids he 'wonder a the world. Eti s. truly marvellobaj and the trans? the4delicacy, and the eStc, edinsllnntf'of thiej ?9ung boy '6,l!"trottataices, rivet the gazo tilt; tedally ictliffereiai a the crowds which nightly throng tha,,Aoadenty, Thevety,tiar ‘ ing of the act Tit. Three Flying Trapeze if 'seem to be trofirclint TnCitenientilini t>ie cOnfidedaand ease ,wititiv.hist it is plifffxrned are eomethiektrnlY wont gone. Too commendation - cannot - beintich^ el or his )onnelo6l4te, and tbernodeet gince with which the boy recelvsthis nightly ovation is particularly ap preciated by bis audience. • • - WALEUT. BIEJIET THEATRE —Mies Charlotte Thome- . eon lid ;bight nliadi lair entree upon the Philadelphia! ettigei , :joad the reception abe met with must have been; yoriiiva7tiff Ike iietk.t/iihe ' iatiat and the management.; With youth, talon!, and ticatity, this eminent actress can; lllTtt fall to yin, pearliestm and reap new harveete ofi fame. ' litailitaAtßflis Bateman :is nightly; received witta4thyriders -of:applause, whtitt evinces not only the excellenotof tho play but also the exoellenoe of the actress. .ICirtialtdiuns a d James W. Wallaok shared as they deserve, the honors of the hour. lbeleeptoduction of i• peraldine" last evening was a De* Pry In 1;1:Model but wee never bek er l. berforrad than, on last evening; Mr. 11:11:BaternairippeiAd 716 "ib - e 8.27 rd and obtained loiid appistise. more Geraldine' , when !be elettioti ea attempt is Over. Triennial Episcopal Convention of the United States. BLEVBN TR DAY. SPERM OF Jupot CONYNOHAM, OF PENNSYLV.A. NTA--ONE OF VIE SECESSION PAMPIILETS. [Plain N, Y. Commercial Ad Yet titter of last eveniog The Triennial Convention of the Protestant Episco pal (March in the Coited htstes met eget° this moruiog. The vpiklmt servicoe were conducted by tee Right Neva Bishop! Upfoid and Whipple. The Bev Dr. Mead presided, in the absence of the preeideht of the Convention The Bev.- Dr. Wilson, of Western New York, from the committs e 00 the state of the ohnrch, reported in favor of a blending committee on the subject of Christian edu cation. The resolution recommended by the committee were adopted. The order of the day was then called up. Judge Conyngham of Pennsylvania, took the floor. iRe said that ho agreed with all that bad been said by the !gentleman irons Idaesachueette, Mr. Winthrop. The comniittee had.presented bulb. tesointions as were wilco ilatea to keep open the door of reconciliation between the :Churches berth and South. Be thought, however, that 'it would be beet to adopt the amendment, inasmuch as is Would be more direct. Ile thought it would be clearer than the reeolution recommended by the committee. In regedd to the charge that had been made on that floor, there pas no evidence that the !Southern churches had acted iticonsisteolly. Now, although there was no testi mony tat en in the regular legidrnate warmer, they had the coincident history of the time. They had each testi n ony as came home to the hearts of the people. It was idle to talk about legal evidt noe as to the ex• istence of the rebellion. Doi any one doubt that Didion Polk, of Louisiana, was Major General Polk in the rebel army 'T Why were so many seats in that 0 .nvention unoccupied? Wes there no evidence? The /ay gentle. ' man from New York had moved that the tuthjeOt be re. forted to the committee to investigate the subject, and report at the next General Convention. He hoped, if not decided by this Convention; it wonlei be referred' to the gentleman from New Turk, as a committee of canons, and that he be sent down Son h to take' the neo notary testimony. Be thought the gentleman would come back with ut deniable testimony. He had jug been intiomed byi a gentleman from Yortreee Monroe that the Rev. Dr. Wilmot, formerly of Pennsylvania, bad requested that it ba said to the Gene ral Convention from him that he hoped no action would be taken to prevent reconciliation between the churches North and South. It had been charged that this was a political question. Now, be did not believe that it could come under the category of political questions, ae such questions bad been treated by that Couveution in former - times. Had it been a political subject he would not be found on the floor taking any part in the debate. Since he had the honor of being raised to the bench he had refrained from any naive part in polities; he had hotattended any Political meetings, had delivered no political address, and had heard none, Ile referred to the bond)y against rebellion, and asked if the re 01113 g of each spray or would be called politics Ile charged that the pr ai er-book had been broken—that the order of the ceremonies in the church, as set forth in the litn:gy of the church, had been broken np, and there was no way of avoiding the administration of rebuke. It bad been said that the offenders of the douthern churches could only be tried within the boundaries of their own dioceses respectively ; this was like the opinion that was given in reference to captured rebelelhat they must be tiled within the jurisdiction of their own courts, in their own States.' Gentlemeoa might easily sea how all practical measures wou'd be defeats: by any snob doctrine as this. It bad been hearts, d that the political party to which he belonged was disloyal; he might say that he hal four sons p3nelitleo of a Moral character and manhood each as any father mightbe proud of. Two of them were now in the talon sump ready to fight the battles of their c Jun- Y, wedveltin the' .recent raid was made Into Pennsyl vania; the other two went forth to vindicate the honor of theft State, while their father was appointei to the com mand of the aged and infirm at ,home, who might be needed when the young men had been beaten. The Rev. Dr. Neville, of New Jersey, next spoke. Be said that lie was at first unfavorable to the intro duction of all etch eubiects on that floor, but in the MAIM of the, debate, be bad become convinced of the imperial ce of malting some expression in reference to the tremendous rebellion under which our con dry was eueering - at the present time. According to some, that Oonveution tenet not say a word in sympathy with the devout:tient. Must they sit in peace on that subject when their Young men were falling on the tio!fl of battle in oelence of our common country? When Feeney'. bas been invades 7 we en the Bstitbernere were alining to bring the armies end the navies of the Oad World down upon our _beloved country? He eaid no; they must meet it boldly, is the spirit of love, to be sure, but in the elicit of Jove for justice--ieve for our country. It bed been said that they wore there as churchmen, not as citizens. Wes it so, that when they entered that house they left their citizenship behind them 7 He hoped not. It could hardly be that they, (the members of that Convention,) wire 10%1 tel their country outside, and *ben they entered the house they became disloyal. At any rate, whatever action the boase might take upon the question, be, as an adopted eitzen, would glory in the privilege of el:teething the lawfully constituted G.rvora meta, tato his motto through life would be G,xl bless the Republic ! . • The reporter of the Advertiser bee obtatael a copy of the SCOEIBBIOII pamphlets tent into the tionvention, ex tracts from which Will be found toofew Congress basso tight to exercise the least plwer, or do the least bushiest', not distinctly confided to its care by the fkanitittaion ; no one who is vigilant about his tights would 'subscribe to this doctrine of coercing a seceded-State into the Confederation. People belong to tbemeelves and not to - the Government. By war, or brute force, generally resorted to by the stronger against the weaker (we would not have war if the North con tained four and the South eighteen millions of man,) right Is never decided, but only a certain arrangement or a peace obtained. The war of our Itevolution against Great Britain might have been a failure on account of the weakness of the thirteen colonies, without the ma terial aid of France; still, not one true American, nor oron an unprejudiced European, will, if he paid ever so lit le attention to the history of the Revolution and to the Declaration of Independence, deny that the colonies had a right to independence,.self.matiagement, and, of course, to fight for it, just as the Southern atates are doing now " • ,„ . , t Suppose now, such alkatvemtlon should have been called, and it had firstly disoovared that the Southern States bad merely left the Union to part with Abolition. Sete, or go out of its way : then, perhaps, a clause added to the Gcnetitation,declaring_expreesii that. negroes form a distinct inferior race—although a notorious foot, sufficiently supported by toe Constitution—such a olauso, I say, might perhaps have contributed much towards a re coucilietion, provided the Abolitionists would have re started it, of which I have douote, for those atone are the opponents, and; Indeed, nullifiers, of the llonatitn • tion, and consequently dertroyers of the Confederation. Or, secondly, that a high tariff should be the main cause of Secession, then a similar compromise as that promoted by Henry Clay, the only check to Secession at that time. and not loan. Jackson's war mcesage, might perhaps have teetered harmony. sr From all sides the calling of such a Convention has ..Lheen_nracti. The grave responsibility was with Oons gress sand - tne -Preeirancto_ convoke one. You wilt hare noticed that State after State in 'toe - dente declared its soceetion by the same legal formality of Conventions, and without using the least violence against a single official appointed by Congress, or against Congress itself and Its officers in Wathiugton, or Mr. Lincoln. They dis solved the Federal binds in a perfect business manner, never visible in (real rebellions, and neither subverted ror overthrow the Government, as the colonists did with the English Governors, or Garibaldi with the Bourbons. That they occupied the common forte, Scc., within their 'jurisdiction was in keeping wish the regular course in ,ouch change.. From the moment of sooession the IlLited States were a foreign Government to the Con federate Staten." f. if niatnyy ham no record of a rebellion of a sovereign _State. ' The mime of rebellion ie committed by the old ; zmie agatnet the State. States may become decocts, wants, usurper'', constitution-breakers, bat never can be ramie " it This constitutional civil libertyiis substance, while • nationality is a mere name, sound, shadow, and show. When our Northern - States fight against the Southern upon the pritext ()leaving our national lifo or nation . silty, they tight for a stem, a abadow like the dog in the fable, who in napping after the ehadow of the sub'. stant al meat between his jaws, lost it by this operation. Nothing makes our Union a rope of sand, but dienuion, discord, aectionatiam, producing irresistible confliots, and nothing will destroy it with more mathematical cer tainty-than dill ;sir. It le Dimply absurd to think of rotting a confederation or union among free men and free States by blows" . . the foreign Governments must now also well know that the Union war is nothing but lan Abolition war, making reunion impossible 4, The pretext of this war is, preservation of the Union. Bat the originat Is of this war know perfectly well that this pretext is 'false...and that a war for Union 11.10 say the leart,,a contradiction in itself. A new law,of nations -. 1 4 higher US: , than the Oomititu tion--waa 'required for the 'Abolition war Eft Adams Invented it, and laid it down in VOSISIOSS. - Mr. Lincoln 1n carryicg it out. It is un necessary to add that no stick law exists, and that the war. blockade, at d. all the . President has done, so far, is mi. cons . * itntiohal." 4, The emitters of the Confederate States are entitled lo the same treatment as those of other Slates, ours in cluded. If these are pirates, as our Government main tains, then are our soldiers nothing better." t. Thi. book gains ground only among the better class, by the aid of patriotic citizens,. The utter imposeibility to dispose of it by the trade constrains the author to throw off anonymity, that orders may reach him. Brooklyn, April 16,1862, • • Affairs in New Orleans. TEE EFFECT OF. ORE., BUTLER'S LAST ORDER. The recent general order (tie: 76) of General Butler requiring every person who had not already taken the oath of allegiance to report to him, stating the members of their laminae, the amount of property they owe; &c.; and making it a penal offence if they did. hot comply with his instructions, created the direst consterwition • amonethe Seceastonlete of New Orleans. - The ntirre *pendent of the Now York Times thus doscriboe the et eye iu`ttiai city aa '-- the' •r days of grace , ' wore fast ex- Dicing : • .K.:414 4 .rt i• - • The - dirys'otwrace-began to draw to a close; but three days were left, and it was evident that many in the city, betetplcre Indifferent, began to reflect or get badly ecered, for the provost marshal generai'e .office, hereto. fore compwatively desertedomddenly, grew:popular, and a demand Wait frnellyseresttedfdr deputies In all tue dif ferent- 'verde 'of the 'city. To the City Hall the crowd most determinedly wended its war. It was pleasant for fashion to be wailed on by the highest functionaries to the ante-chambere of Goyernor Shepley's room, and Coloiel French's office soon overflowed, and the wide doors of the Lyceum, in which the ordinance of fines- Mon WRill }whited', Were thrown open, and the fine hall, with Its ecconipanikente of Stage; desks, 'and arm chairs, was devoted, as a sort of poetical justice, to the boble r work of restoring men and, women to their alle giancelo the Union: Tbeinromiectioas arowd irse a „stiedy,eurely, for never beforsey in New Orleans; bade its "Incongruous - social ma terials ir thereughly come in contact—the rich and the )661.; the belle arid the half-starved'itnittistrees, the'work - ing man and the fop, the dowager, with her queenly daugh ters,c,and.she shrinking women who hopelessly toll for a thelswarthy creole, the pale New Englander, and the_paler, faced Octoroon—t here they stood, anxious, - after their - long reflection, to outwardly accept the rule of the GovermientYtint er whit% e they wale horn, and all, most likely, destitute of the slightest patriotic ming- , meaty- •having• oio • teeing, • indeed, but ~the dead. ac duiddinii that 'follows adridtted inipotent opposition to a power that could not be escaped. It was evident that many took the oath under a degree of ex citement that would be bard to understand by persons Who hefts - notlived' , NeWl'Orlesits. :It Was a bitter draught to swallow that oath, particularly by women, Many exlernelly•beantifuJ,Who had rendered themselves locally famous for their neminclation of the National Government'and by their openly expressed contempt for the National soldiers. It was no small eensation to the young - girl - of - sixteen, - whe had- ofttimes erre. sandy; tiwnng . i . her;ileritioline . aside, as if7the possible touch of a National officer was 'Contagious. It was no pleasant position for snob a young after all bar pretests and vehement _declarations of eternal bate, to etard np On the Lyceum stage and be .foie a thonsatid people. bold up 'her email, jeweled hand, and, pale with confusion and indignation, swear to site- Vert the "Oonititntion her: father; and probably her brother and cocain had been teaching her for years to contemn and despise. Nor did many gentlemen kindly , assume the responsibility ; many of whom even a few days, perhaps only a few hoary, preCiously, had been ex- i ceedingly noisy in their denunciations or General Bat ler, and cociferously insane in their anitounCeinents of what they would do rather than bo thus disgraced ! But in spite of protean and wry: laces the work went :mg and many seemed better, and mine worse,•for the or deal One young wise, as she petsekid . out of the hall, ob served to her friend," Well, ,realty It ain't much, after all. is it, (flotilla?" ~One tall lady in black—a widow, I presume—of rather thetrigio • gneedetile: descended the marble staring most earnestly on the,contents of the oar tificate. She seemed ia tribe woliklianalhilate it with , heresze. I suspect aheihas lost a,bueband on the ,battle i fields of the Potomac: • the must siese4e property. in New Orleans. Her struggle to save her wealth from oontisott lion and her hate for th e Government that had, as she . supposed, robed her: in weeds, l ceade, moettikely,,,the let- • tern on' diet 44 certificate" - burn her 'oyeaill tire. AN a' antra+ t to this,"another 'came, and tripped away with the flippant remark to her i oompanton, " Upon my , word, this' affair has canard tai nine emotion than when I stood tip. to.be nue iled.'__ • Inimediately following the afore of the erentitddiiy of , ' the ,1511WGen.. Butler itieuedltiorder No. 78, iti.Whlch t "•"bsireitnired - every Person formerly a citizen ottlie .United' . }.,bat 'who did not , renew their allegiance," to, zlieeediejdy'-ier.ort themselves to , the ‘nearesCprovost Marshal, with • descriptive llst of their property,' do. ;j 'and , as it : idded - that,these persons who - had taken, - "the oath ere not obliged 'to glee in alfet of their pro ;;party,' it did not take a severely educated logician to understand that those required lists ;,wotild be immensely ,:gpnveDient for the:purpose of- parrying -Into snot the much. talked•of CClDllletritiODiAct,}Wharenpoll there WAII great conateroatdailandelie`dethredioedl Phild''euddinly began tis see th l aftbefe Oa lank , hat I that Gin. Butler had'bile . ii.all lbeNehile quietly bat steal dill drawing* ireitiod'tbeittifie Ctirtiori the law, and 1 into the trap, ors a Wife" caught' isppilently beyond hope, ' • )fl "Al. A. BICLITEE.."- The Generiil ?ilia - 14 . 114r o'irepresenting a merciful and long.suffeting rnitient,' name to the rescue of the delinquents, and notified than that he should still keep open the places for the people to register their names for allegitecele the ttovernment,'promising to send said fist on to thif President, that ha might, by virtue of his pre rogative, give them pardon." The consequence is, that the ihrting is obutipi in greater than ever ; and seems likely tc,centinue unabated until the last day of the ex piring month, when the hour of grace, so far as New Or leans is concerned, will be eloped until some future day, when President Lincoln may find it expedient to issue 'his proclamation of amnesty, announcing, that the re bellion is at an end. THE CITY.: VOIL AZDITIOM LOCAL /CAWS EIBE FOURTH PAO.) Rules and Regulations Governing the Election. *IIALIFIOATION OF VOTERS. No person shall be permitted to vote at any election other than a _white fteeman of the age of twenty-one yearn, who shall have resided in the State at least one year, and in the election district where he offers to vote at least ten days prior to the election, and within two years paid a State or county tax, and been etasessof at least ten days before the election. The person claim log a right to vote at any election, shall. if required by either of the inspectors, make proof, first-that he is a natural bcrn citizen of tide Commonwealth, and emend, that be has taken an oath of allegiance; or his naturali zation can be proved by the production of a Certificate in due form from some judge, prothonotary, clerk of court, mayor, &0., or 'by taking an oath or affirmation to that effect. No pereon shall be admitted to vote whose name Is not contained on the list, 'mien he pro . duce a certified receipt for the payment within two years of sAlate or county tax. In all - cases where the name of the person claiming to vote is not fur niehed by the assessor or commissioner, or hie right to vote is objected to by any qualified citizen, it 'Mall be the duty of the inspectors to examine such person on oath and see if he is qualified. Any one who may have re • moved front one ward to another ward ten days previews to the election shall be entitled to vote at the ward from which he hes removed. DUTIES OF PEACE OFFICERS. It shall be the duty of the mayor, sheriff, aldermen, end other tflicere:of the law, whenever called upon by an of of election or by three onalifiedvoters, to clear the window or avenue to the window that may be ob structed in such a way. fIL to prevent voters from aP proachthglhe same, and lithe said officers shall refuee to do so, they shall be judged guilty of a misdemeanor and be tried accordingly. THE CLOSING OF THE POLLS. When the polls shall be closed, the boxes in which the votes have been depoSited shall be opened one by one, and the inspectors, in the presence of the judge, shall delibe rately take out such tickets, and shall each read aloud the name or nemee respectively, and the clerks shall each carefully enter, as read, each ticket as it is taken from the box, and keep account of the same on papers pre pared for the purpose, so that the_ number of votes for each candidate tallied thereon may be readily cast up and down. If, upon:opening the ticket, there be found any more names printed upon It than is right, or such pater be deceitfully folded up, shall be rejected, but no ticket shell be rejected because it contains Sewer Emmett than the proper number. As soon as the election shall be finished, the tickets, list of taxables, one of the lists of Voters, the tally papers:and one of the certificates of the oath or affirmation, shall 'be carefully collected and de posited in one of the ballot-boxes, being closely bound rc mei by tape, and then sealed by the inepectors sun judge of the e/ection. Tarr, with the remaining ballot boxes, shall be depositedesvith some j cultic° of the peace, and the , boxes containing the tickets and other don. merits 'ball be kept by him until called for by some per non or tribunal authorized to try the election ; and the ether lists of voters, tally papere, and certificates, shall be fp:winded to the Prothonotary of the Court of 00/311310/3 Pleas, within three days after the election. THE MEETING OF THE RETURN JUDGES. The meeting of return judges will be held at the State House, in the city of Philadelphia, on tho third day afior the tlection. And if any lunge, by reason of sickness or unavoidable accident, is unable to attend, one of the in• epecters or clerks shall perform the duties required of such judge. They stall elect a president, and two Qualified voters who shall act as clerks; and, before they enter upon their duties, ttey shall be sworn to pallor= the duties of their office with honesty and fidelity. The clerks shell, in presence of the Judges, make out the returns, which shall bo signed by CI the judges present, and attested by said clerks. When the returns shad have been completed, the president shall forthwith lodge one of each each returns In the office of the Prothonotary of tho Court of Com mon Pleas; - and, in case of the election of a Senator of this Commonwealth, the same shall be enclosed in an en velope and sent to the alienate of Pennsylvania;"' and, in, case of the election of a member of the ROM, the mane shall be directed to the i 4 Rouse of Representatives of Penneylsania;" and each said return shall be-enclosed in an envelope, directed to tho Secretary of the Com monwealth, in like manner placed by said president in the nearest poet office. • The judges of the county having met, shall cast up the several retinue, avid make duplicate returns of till the votes given for such office, and the names of the persons elected. One of said returns shall be deposited in the office of the prothostitary of the court, the other being Bent to the tiecretarY of the Commonwealth. It shall also be their duty to•transmit to the persons elected cer tificates of election. It shall be the duty of the pro thonotary to send one copy of all returns to the Secre tary of the Commonwealth, and to lay another copy before the Court of Quarter Sessions. DUTIES OF TILE SECRETARY OF TILE COMMON- •YEALTII, The duties of this officer shall be to lay before the &esker of the State Senate, on the first day of January, 8U returns - 6f - the - election of Senators for that year 1010 i on the Same day, to present in the ball of the House of Representatives the returns of the election of mem bers of said House. ELECTION BY MILITIA 011. FOLIINTEERS. VhentVer any qualified voter shall be in any actual military service, he may exercise the right of suffrage at much place as may be appointed by the commanding offi car. In,sncb tang, the commanding officer shall act as judge, and the cfficer aeoond in command shall act as in Spector. In case of neglect or refusal of such officers to serve, the officer next in command shall act as judge or tr_speethr. Within three days the return of ouch votes shall be sent to the prothonotary of the county in which each elector would have voted it not in military service. Another return shall be transmitted to the commanding officer, who shall make a general return under MB hand and eeol of the Votes of all the troops under hie command, a,d transmit the same to the Secretary of the Common wealth. The return judges of the county in which the volunteer has resided shall meet on the second Tuesday in 'November next after the election, except where two or more counties are connected therewith, when the said meeting shall be yoatootod until the Friday following. WAGERS ON ELECTION. Wagering or betting on an election in hereby prohibit. ed. end all contrac s or promisee founded thereon are null and void. The inapeotors and ind :es of an election are empowered to reject the votes of any persons into reeled In the reault of any bet or wager on the election. PENALTIES FOR MISCONDUCT. If any elector rectivee, directly or indirectly,_ any gift or reward, in money or property, under a promise that such elector shell give hielvata for a paiticular candi date, he shall be adjudged guilty a of misdemeanor, and tried accordingly. INTERFERENCE WITH ELECTIONS. If any Denton shall obstruct election officers, rlotonalY isturb the peace, or endeavor to prevent any person by tu-eate from exercising the freedom of choice, snob per son shall be tined a slim not exceeding 8590, and suffer imprisonment. FRATJDULEI4T If any person not quail fled shall fraudulently vote, be shall, on conviction, be fined In 'a an not exceeding $2OO, and be imprisoned for a term not exceeding three months. VOTING MORE THAN ONCE. II any person vote more than once on the same day. or deliver to the inspector two tickets together, knowingly, he shall be fined in a BUM not lees than 816, nor•mrre than WOO, and be imprisoned [or any time not less than three nor more than twelve months. .lIsIEG FORGED RECEIPTS Olt CERTIFICATES. 41 any person shall kiowingly publish or make nee of any fatie receipt or certificate with intent to deceive inspectors or Judge, suchlperson shall be fined in a sum not less thin $5O, and suffer imprisonment for a term not less than six months. ;STATE TICKET. Auditor General. Union. THOMAS E. 000HRAN. Surveyor General. THOMAS E. ROSS. CITY AND COUNTY ,TICSET. Mayor. ALEXANDER HENRY. City Solicitor. ~ • F. ,CARROLL BREWSTER. wrurAir Receiver of Taxes. •: JAMES C. KELM. JNO. M. Icarskii. , . City Controller. JOSEPH R. LYNDALL. GEORGE GETZ City Commissioner. ••••••• .• • • • ELIB/11.. LOVETT. JOIIN 01111,N.' CaIINTY OFFICERS. plitrlet' Attorney. WILLIAM B.:MANN. LEWIS (7.,0,915EDY. Prothonotary of the Court of Common Pleas. FREDK. 0. WOLBENT. ALEX. T. DICKSON., ':S Congress. " • Marta. -- 14W;:i1ANDALL.. 2,1671 Aid DIDDL E. . 1 ..#PPT• 111 . 404 6 - IY:ni , District. 1. EDWAED 0. wirati).,'-: 2. CHAELES .8:: LEONARD ; • 4. WM: D. ICSIeLKY: . E), M. FAISSELL T.IIAYBIt.' I • .• . . • • • • .Sena. 2.' 3. X. ItIDOWAY. ' 'dEOKCIN OCiNNIVAL 1. ~ B. rpgrnC• 2., Ho. is EN.444A. 3. THOS. T. WILLS. '6.;Josnrn MOORR. • `l . : `. Tlioe:Booilt.64 l " 8. JAMES .N. %Hine, 9. J0Y64 4 "./initilaOlt . ' 191 32,1):V,53.00X5T. c "::: 11. F. r D•.STHENER. _ 12. ia. JAMES HOLGATE. 14. ALEX.„. 9 UWITiGS. 15. Irk. - I. intuit: • EDWARD *BE: okki: F. ABBOTT: 31$714P.410:61EILdih-tlifig(itillaida_ ter, 74edivi4 , 41*Taxiii;:ovit the! Rationalitrafoa l debit, s a instlPL*S4cter lattP.MtrjratniXtas, at •No: 508 ; Market flreet, , sad ilk ID notwaf . connected with the Highway Difiiitiaeurer has hem stated. $.O Breckiuridge. ISAAC SLENICER. JAMES P. BASIL DANIEL it. FOX. • • olununuano „m y.. _•••••' •1. TVS" A,. Rawl' ? 2. Atm 3. maw: Att . iiiplis h I 5. Irma Gei8K1141 1 " .106 . 611 A QHIGLET. i".-+S 11. t t . JAS. W. HOPKINS. . 1 ratzirlici i•eiloaez. 314.14497P...-ra -14. A. 4 ,8,.,.500inia). • 15? oiorwi• *ow. 16; GEO: PrifOitrE:Atit ' ----,. THM WORMENOMIN Altertigit b. . number of the employees In the loconnue, erra.i..-`4 W. Baldwin & Eno. petitioned Mr. Baidwi --"q as follows ni ree e ,,, l; .6 The undersigned, having entire COMldattoo 1 -' ,, . ability and Integrity of the different candid ha, ' 4 4 on the 1 National : Unioa .Ticket,' firmly N a t e ,: peel the true interest of State and city would be p ra ',.. ° 4 tho the election cf the above ticket ; therefore, It Be la requested that you address the hinds ectiolor,eji°6% establishment, this afternoon, on the gre at q . 4 1 e t a voting the whole National Union Ticket , , 'Wha t? Mr. Baldwin received the petitioners iaVerabl consenteo am refs menrkmen. at th e h ear r, et* ed sixt hundred had collected, wh o li a , Do Att. tentively to the speech, and received it with ea: It. thusisem. Et. In the coulee of his address, Mr. Baldwin 044 4 6, it wee well known that he bad never sought to 3,..74 the votes of the workmen, and never would., 4 1 wee an extraordinary occasion; there wer e to A. "' ills issues, except those made by parties io m‘j4ni the rebellion. Convention of the low s e r e ~T , ,,, ,h b bed been called-8 ticket nominated which 1 5 !" I le men of all parties. who were earnest in the 84 - 0 `" 41 4 the Governm e nt in putting down the tobollin. 4 1 1 . 4 ticket is before the people, and another neo a t ., re ci s known sympathy with the rebellion ; the su erl,,q ticket will prolong the war, and it is our dunce''y 5 , 5 ,`, 41 1 our Interest to bring it to a speedy and honors* I " 4 elusion. We have sot felt the disadvatit or th .c* homers, but the continuation of the war Fortn 0,4,4' yeas e will find our phone closed and men kilo a. ''' 4 are made be the prejudices of to a s t ai rs , :i snit of the abolition of slavers , . So far from ra; tb 7 I n g the riegroee North, it will lessen. that roe; 0 ?: 1 1 ; population among rte. " Mr. Baldwin urged his hearers to think re 9erintiqi), their duty to their country now, and ctit ny v•te lated to give aid or comfort to the rebellion , ' 'tt UNION RIZRTING IN TM§ A Ter 1 1,FrR WBD.—A large and enthusiastic nettle e c G eitimne of the Twelfth ward was held ho p r B , 44 sa Mechanics' Halt North Thbd street, belowtci'l la Leonard Myers, Esq., the Union candidate for „" 41 in the Fourth Congressional district, deibrete4 i y";" r il and eloquent address, in the course of which hs tc 7, to the proceedings of a meeting held at Nat ion4l erNd the breaking out of hostilities. Upon that ecet,,„, resolution was adopted by the atsembiate stantially endorsing the violent coarse of the 6)", 1°- trbitrrs. and sympathizing with them rthg t ,"'rt 4• wrongs " to Nitta they were subjected. le 11 1 , 41 ' °Moen of that meeting, as published in the dilly P. yivanion, the names of Win. G. Hirst, at twi le , t4 ' o . didate for the City dttheiter, sod Ja m E r ' the oiponent of the speaktr for Co.gresiew n t trier, wire to be found, to Mr. /dyers. called attention to this infamo rs his political opponent, and though roma" to 0 711 1 that the masses, of what is known as the b ero. , T Z party, were disloyal, yet he did believe that the rotas! suppress( d sentiments or the leaders of that ps i *, w .' unchanged, and that, therefore. lbw costa. n o t. 1 1 safety be trusted with the dieposition or Gortron" offal's. The speaker concluded with as eateest e r „, „; teflon to all Union losing men no got,h a nod discharge the duty they owe thew bulletin casshl Several atidreibes were then deiiverEd isc,, ta , after which, the meeting adjourned with aura ter ti e Union ticket. ,„ A NEW PACTORY AT FRAIIK4OIIIC Mr. John Olendenuing "hes just CCRlbtracto building, corner of Unity and delper streets, tsib y t r b feat, or containing nearly 20,000 eQuare f• et of rokena face. Part of the building ie four stories Inge, mattit Dix large rooms belittles office, engine and botlech n ii i i i The finieh - and general appearance of the boiling t x factory purposes• are very compress, and creditabltatty to the contractor a and proprietors. It fa said to hni4 of the best locations In Frankford for a mill, ant tidos On th e corner' of one of the principal etreett. tatotdt the neigh borhcod and those owning property aboSik proud of the improvement. SUBSCRIPTIONS TO VIE CITIZEV BOUNTY FUND'—The subscriptions to thecitze? bounty fund for volunteers received Yesterday, yo r ,,, follows FROM SIXTH WARD. Temple & Co .....,....$lOO B. B. °fantail &II), J. V- & Oa. 25 (additional) 3. !Mien .. 2S J. B. Mcßlnlen„ Woodward & Col 10 J. B. Keller, Oast) 10 T. M.B B. T. 25 Rt wired on Monday... Total PEDESTRIAN PEAL—A. grand pa x Irian feat and concert sill take niece to day, so 4,k George's cricket ground. Thirteenth area, abort t, lambi°, avenue. SWORD TO GENERAL BIRNEY.—n, sword, bone, and equipments, gotien up in We city General Barney, will be preheated to him the latter pr, of this week. CITY ITEMS Lecture by the Boy Preacher. The announcement that a lecture, on ,‘ Fanny fe rester," would be delivered, at the First Bawd Cele* Breed and Arch streets, last evening, by !Nun! Kennedy, the "Boy Preacher," attracted a TuThi audience to that place at the appointed hour, 9'44 etanding the unfavorable character oi the westhir The Baptis:s, not only of this city, bat througeme, country, feel a deep interest in the objects Ind Faxad his wondeiful youth, and the fact that he is &lin* this lecture for the 'impose of enabling him to coxfs, Ws studies for the ministry is enough to hatitini hearing wherever ho appears. Crammor.d has grown tailor, more Blush.; urn healthy•looking, since we last heard him, some ranted ago, when he was seventeen years of age. a Toi2 k more sonorous, hie manner wore graceful, sal kr appearance, upon the whole, decidedly more minty. & now weans a luxuriant dress of hair and a junta moustache. lie duelled right off le his lecture without an nee duction, and without anY Preliminaries. °Mir.° MI the remark that as a lecture on Nanny Fore3ter .al tr usual, it might be well to give some acm.ent of tor he mind bad been led to it, which he did. It wu it rralid r 4 . Wide, Wide World" that the character of YAM Forester had just shone upon him with awl 04ga:dr et. trapiveaess and beauty. n artist yiewirg a beantifnl sunset would loot bre produce such an image of it as would recall the ritrzi which the original had inspired. The same deilnes Iblt in attemnting.to"delineste a rare human chstetts He would, he said, dwell at length upon tier chgtal, On August 22, 1817, the subject of hti lecture hello born, in the village of Eaton, New York. There can said, sometimes more philosophy in the prattle of gbh of three stunmers than in the conversadoe of the us This had been trim of baby Fanny. At elms, owe the extreme poverty of her parents, the had sublet factory. Almost the first savings from her tows she had employed in affording her sick deters k? out through the country—a sister to whom the vont Immortality was soon after given by her Sarin . is afterward little Fanny might have been seen out evc aticke of wood from the winter snow to keep bengaf mother from freezing. This bed been a hard bt, tot was often so with Christ's most di Ali:quid:led fain This, be thought, had been fittingly fixeshadowed nds humble birthplace of the blessed Author of our relpi A few years afterwards his subject hid cause* reading Hume and Gibbon, when her bon Wl* battle• ground In which, between doubt std fsidde latter came oil conqueror. Though small anl heroine had been smart beyond her age, end write' came a teacher for a miserable pittance of pat Si wee never known to murmur at her bard let. O.'. a , contrary, she studied the clouds which hovered mete: extracting sunshine from the storm. Bidding adieu to her . childhood, he next cant'k 4 Fanny in a new era of her life and experience. Ail' soda, at thia point, upon the Christen haunt/dose ots greatest poets was finely introduced, cotatuutieg a at: , ine buret of eloquence and oratory. Fanny wan nearly seventeen when she, publidi to' reseed her Saviour. Her own witty dreams of Weber , life were. not like the early dew and the morning el° They had been destined to deepen into realities. Atte., point the lecturer made the following personal allcal Necessity, he said, was not merely the mother of tow tion—it was sometimes the mother of poor, 04 ' 6 " sickly books. Hadn't he himself such a chili ae! world 'I (alluding to his late book of Puelol 344° the Blade.") And what wouldn't be give :04 if, " Peoi; sially book bad never been born, er quietly buried; ' In his analysis of Fanny's various wort ,th ' lßE L irg evinced not only a thorough familiarity web therctu e genuine admiration and love for their gentle tal Peel author. Like a true woman, great as she losci ledge, that alone was to her unsatisfying Te o chambers le her heart et to lei," that could onit tenanted by their own true, predestinated aesbeent Judson, for whose sorrows she had mourned es' little child—Dr. Jenson, the St. Pant of modent tendoiri—a sage in years, bet a youth in love, et -2 bad knocked at the door other heart, and receive: o answer, e , Enter in, thou Messed of the Lord." Na then soon commenced its malignant work. She ra notion, and how could she be a missionary So" ambitious, and therefore she would be hire. JOS ! ir Bald the /rawlplug leeches of her day. Surety & I f, mine of Hrs. Jtidson could not add to her aims aucc2mranied by appropriate virtue's. She had WO ° shores, knowing that in eto doing she was World 41.1 the prospect of a rapidly-developing literary fo e ' ., she left for Jesus. Aye, it had been the Christ h"• Judson that had made him doubly socelib,o art loving and devoted heart. The concluding part of the lecture wm devoted la di wide-spread field of the future latent and 11 0,16511 and the interesting and eventful . expkience of kg et. waning life. PICTURES IN ALL WEATITERS.- 00 advantage possessed-by the celebrated Photostats' thief ilty Oleiers. Broadbent & Co.. le tee artedri/ i f; rengernents, at their splendid new galleries, hpt and ,914 Chestnut street,.for taking P lCtuni ir :sj e 141,1)11 . of,theieart ail weathers. To stranger , '7 O the - bi:y fora short time this is a very greet C""f s,; - FINE WHIT.II-CLOVER HONEY . FOB. Tilt •• i • : .4 O. H- Mattson,' dealer in fine Groceriet• and Tenthstreets, hew now In store a fresh 8 OP: 1 d new white-clover honey, put up in glass cseee, for' ly use. ANATOMICAL.—Th6re are 518 bone s human frame-14 in the face, 32 teeth, 24 in ther l :o inthe arid, CS in the hands, 14 In the sekiei, S' I . co feet, and '542 In other parts of the boo. tr'di trame-work of bones Nature Ins built a mod O r covering of fieetWrounded and perf ect In ell 1a portions, both for beauty and use, and it has study of art, from the earliest *Pal to covere r r body, to protect it with the most appropriate astio... tel covering. and this letter hat) been nvew and compliehed by Granville Stokes, the toed ° p i! IP Blotbier.'atNO. 609 Ohistont street Phil e ' deld r . 04 the finest assortment of seasonable garroesta is is kept constantly on hand, at reduced Vice s ' DiFranamos . .—ln the old fend3l t;t; when knights rode to iltite clad in iron .33.61,111' pd method with one of these unwieldy warrr ! w ee his horse. Hawn came the knight in 0 " e " :. t ot upon the ground, where ho was left till, eft r O O 0 0 the triumphant man-at-arms—there ndsill dsif days—had leisure to crack him ogee With to 1$ hammer. Nown.days, discreet relaters eg a "; , ,oll .blackipolth's tailoring, and they weer Tg al " frj , dt Can.loove actively and comfortably ice a n d , 0 ,0 4 'proinrent the Brown Stone Clotting gaff of a•Wlleg", Noe. 003 and 605 (Theetnut strest,"u"'" iOrt; S h OLIT.--The adu- Ike State law, exempt from :as they foruithe-population of the town - tv a, a s non, N. 'Y ; a difficulty has grimeloo; tc, making ont the quota for each toggle batants are uot considered exempt by the `",.. n yte officers;sishich makes them slgikers Indeed. u" - 1 „;/ hire t „stet!) of. hings they were told they mig o b , e , , totes .they concluded they could 11 0 ; oi 97 , kill." , ;blf 1ie:41,04;4y does no: Dreier" 40, r 0 gliton will go to th e 1 '7 0 ;00 " t o comfort wig . ei!fety depend oa the In lt 4 laws, we do not see • IIY-tfierab°l2ld be °!‘..:o do not preens their -lihntir Otothing baton ro seteji,f:wenhallijall be ' Ol libliker&" 1163 , (0 0 I t ' ClA*➢ ti'44" . notlav the vontineata.