tt't ?rtss TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1864 WO THE FRIENDS OF THE SOLDIER IN EVERY coNATTY- UNION STATE CENTRAL COMMITTEE R 00319., NO. 1.1.0.5 eh( stunt Street.—Our friends in every county and. ills rtrict in Pennsylvania should immediately, cf about one • day's delay, send to the State Committee a correct copy • of their whole ticket, giving plainly the•4lame, of each candidate for every office. ' All this must be done to ena ble the tickets to be prepared to send to the several regt meats • of the State. County Committees should also prepare and send with the COMMiSSIOUB their several county tickets, or send a special agent with the Commissions to carry them. What General McClellan. Gannet Do. GEORGE B..IIIcOLELLAN - has shown that he is capable of cluing great-things. Pro bably no other general (Messrs.. pop, T ER, and BuFair, may have been exceptions) 'could have kept one hundred and fifty thou, sand men 'idle around Washington for six months, while sixty thousand of the enemy' blockaded the Potomac. No other gene ral could have been stopped at Yorktown by a feigned resistance; no other could have led an immense army to the walls of Rich -mond ; kept it there six weelis.in a Swainp kept it there till sick, weary, and weak,.it. was driven back thirty, miles. No other,' after ruining an army and wasting a year, could have asked another army and another year. No other, with every offen sive weapon in his band, could . have stubbornly remained on the defensive . in defiance of repeated demonstrations of -its folly. None but he, probably, wearing the uniform .of a soldier, the stars of a major general, could have dared to accept anoint nation for the Presidencypifered:by-a Con 7 Tentien avowedly opposed to the war, and made unanimous by the, intercession of TALLANDMITAM. None but he, accepting a doubtful honor from these men; , could have refused the stipulation that accompa nied it. No one but he could haVe taken VALLANDIGRAX'S bounty while deny ing Mr. VALLANDIGIthe§ ; principles, and having asked his party for office while,pro-: fessing perfect independence of his party's wishes. These were great. thinks to do, `but General McCLELLA.x has &Me; them with an audacity that commands astonish-;; anent. , - - But there are certain things which have been and are impossible - to him. He can more escape from the thraldom of aParti san pledge, implied in the acceptance of a 'partisan nomination, than he could have - taken Richmond. It would not be too bold to say that if he were, now in command 'of the army he might even'-win a victory more easily than he can free himielf from the party which stands pledged- , to 'make': immediate peace. He ishotind in honor to stand upon the platform of his party or to ,decline his nomination, and, though he may write letters of explanation and apology from now to November, he cannot write the seal from .off ,the bond, or finally evade its terms. The Rebel Press and the Chicago Platform. Now that Atlanta has fallen, and the :Democratic party is committed to the pro posal of an armistice, the' Richmond pa pers are full of instruction. The supporters .of WC - LEL/AN will discover in these jour nals a mass of interestin,prediction bear ing upon the fall of Atlanta, and those who attribute to the leaders at Chicago designs more or less in accordance with those of the rebels will find their suspicions more -or less approved. The rebels still hold - war to be the paramount peace-maker, and every victory obtained by them over the North a triumph for the Democratic Peace party. " The scales of decision are hang :Mg in uncertain balance at the North," says the Richmond. Sentinel; "let us, by brilliant exertions in war, throw what. we can on the side of peace." "If we would have peace," says the Examiner, "we must conquer it," and it calls for twenty thousand more men, while the bushwhack ers are shooting vigorously at the,rehpl con scription officers in North Carolina. Still more impressive is another editorial of the _Examiner, which shows that, after the fall of Atlanta, " Peace platforms," inviting ;Southern recognition, have, no chance of success. " Nothing which can possibly occur at Chicago is so momentous to us as the events which are taking place on the Weldon Railroad, around Atlanta, and near Harper's Ferry ;" and— "lf Atlanta were to fall, or Petersburg, or If Sheridan should drive Early back to Lynchburg, or if any one of these events should befal, then .all the peace principles and peace Presidents of Chicago would be at the election next November whore lust year's snow is, and last night's moon shine. Wur for another Presidential term would sweep away every vestige of opposition. But, on the other hand, if Grant's and Sherman's armies should have no more success within the next three months than the last three, and if Sheridan's army of the "Middle • Department' should still be pre tending to look for Early and taking care not to tied him, or else, at the first sight of him, running straight away, as for the last few weeks, in this ease, it will not matter to us in the least if the Chi cago Democrats break up in utter confusion, and the Fremont party collapse and the Davis-Wade party wither up, and Lincoln and Seward reign su preme : nothing would avail ; the scale of peace would preponderate; and that of war would kick the beam." But, supposing that there will be a favo rable chance to negotiate for peace should the Democratic party obtain power, the .Enquirer of a very recent date provides the - world with its ultimatum in this striking manner : • t , The simple recognition of full and absolute inde yendence of the Confederate States is the one great con •dition upon which alone we can conclude peace ; we .ask for no more ; we can accept nothing less. All other questions of territorial limits, of payment of national debt, etc.---nay, oven the vexed question of emancipation, sink into utter significance by the side of the fundamental condition. Independence and peace is what we pray and tight for; war and death is what we are equally prepared for. Our re cognition yielded, we will discuss reconstruction with our enemies, and, when convinced that our interest lies in once more trying one government, there will be no danger of our people disregarding their plain interests. Without recognition there can be no armistice, no -convention, no discussion—nothing but war ! war ! - war ! They must choose between recognition and. war; there is no middle ground. Here we plant our banner; and here, with God's help, we mean to maintain it, for us and our children." All the later Richmond papers bear out this view of the Peace question with a po -sitive and meaning unanimity... Thus, even before it is possible to negotiate with the - South, the Confederacy itself must be re-: cognized. Thus, granting that the South is not a submitting rebel, but virtually- a con queror dictating its own terms, it is willing to enter a joint Convention and discuss the :reconstruction of the States. " Whenever a treaty of peace shall be made;" says the Richmond Dispatch, "it must he done -solely on the basis of the entire sovereignty •ancl independence of each particular State,'_' • and, as if to explain the fatal purpose of The armistice proposed at Chicago, "it - follows that there can be no such thing as treating for peace in earnest until every hostile soldier shall have been withdrawn 'from our soil, and every hostile ship from our waters." Regarding the proposed Convention of States, the Dispatch is not less explicit : It is wonderful, in the meantime, that intelligent men like Vallandighant and Fernando Wood—who 77114.81 be fully acquainted With Me Southern doctrine of State rights, and must know that all this blood has been shed in their defence—should think it possible to get us. info such a Convention, or lo More the Union by means of it. What we want, first of all,ts entire and sepa• rate independence. The Confederate States can go into Convention with the Yankee States in one way, and one only. They can withdraw from the Confederacy, each State on its own separate account and responsibility. They can then, each State for itself, go into such. a Con vention. This they will be pretty sure not to do, so that the hope of getting them into this scrape is but a lost hope. The very act of sending delegates to" such a Convention would- be construed by the sister States into a withdrawal from the Confederacy. The sending delegates to it would be an exercise of sovereignty, and, as the Confederate Government is :not Sovereign, it follows as a necessary consequence -that it can neither send delegates nor compel the States to do it." The Richmond editors are probably mis taken in their conception of the intelligent . - views of Messrs. WOOD and 'VAitais-nto- . lIAM. The precipitate method proposed by these gentlemen is the one of all others by which the North may be betrayed into, - a recognition of the South. Let our armies. .be withdrawn from Southern ground, and . • our ships from Southern waters, -before the rebellion has yet shown ones evidence •of -submission to the authority of the and . the Confederacy is; to all 'effect, free and -independent,:and may die- . tate its own terms. The armistice pro posed is naught-else than tacit recognition . .. In such a dilemma, the loyal 4 North must . tither officiallY-recognize the Confederacy,. .or proceed to‘war,again in the, face of anal.: chy at home i t ra . interventionfroin. abroad. 'The theory of rebel independencQallewed, , The problem' Of; :reconatructian w ill , of course, be debated, , and-Itessrsi . iY;Ard , A EgetTAll, Wobis, and ODItHO*WPI . liberty to present their sometime concealed petition for the wholesale dismemberment of the country. Reconstruction as thus interpreted by the active leaders of the Chicago Convention is the partition of the country into four Confederacies—a (14a drupled iniquity, disunion added to dis union, and upon this the infinite crime of anarchy. ' The leaders of the Democratic party have adroitly endeavored to deceive the people by holding out to them the prospect of peace and Union as the result of a negotia tion based' upon an armistice. But the dullest intelligence should now compre hend that the stake is a fearful one upon. which. they assume td hazard the honor and the safety of a free nation. As we have seen, the first condition of peace by n.ego tiatiOn is the recognition of the indeirenct ence and sovereignty of the rebel States. Only the profligate leaders'of Chicago will dare shame the manly sense - of the North by"; tellingus that the Union May be restored after we _have admAted the principle of secession, and recognized the South as an independent negotiatingi Power. Let it be borne in. mind that recon struction, is not restoration•, and -that it is only possible to revive the Union by com pelling submission. These principles the most inveterate Democrat should be able to perceive, and perceiving these, should not fail to see the real disposition of those mlto constructed the Chicago platform. Union, if possible, by negotiation ; dis union, if it must be—but, at all events, ne gotiation ; these are in fact the terms , of the humiliating hazard by which it ha's been proposed to gain a Southern peace Score tary SEwARD's question, in. his late Au burn speech, here challenges answer : When .and where have the insurgents ofered•peaceon the basis of the integrity, - of the Union — ` l ", .The nation will find its own , eonvictions in his subsequent lan Anne " Nobody has offered it The re bels never will• offer it They are deter inirted and pledged =to rule this Republic or' ruin it " TuP, New York World affects remark able jubilation over the withdra*al of the_ unconditional Peace faction from the' sup port of Gcie,ral AIcCLELLAIT. "Thank God for a purified, regenerated, disen thralled Democratic party !" The piety of this ejaculation is more than suspicion% What must the Democratic, party, and its, prime organ, the World, have been, before they were "redeemed, regenerated, and disenthralled ?" Here is more: "The men who have, been the curse of the party have gone out of the party. Close up the ranks I Wel come the new recruits ! Now we go into the Novem, ber fight Without a flaw in our sxmor, without a speck in our stainless shield, and with no dread of a fire in the rear." This savage rejoicing is full, of grim irony. It is interesting to hear that the escutcheon of the Democracy is - stainless, after.the inspired 31cOLELLA1r has stolen one platform to build another upot it, and then usurped a nomination. This coup cretat has failed ridiculously, and the Peace men have carried off the ark of the party. From this day to election, the World should be employed inspecting its record and defining its position ; but above all, it will.not cease drumming. It is the 'lndian doctor's method for curing a head ache. . THE CHICAGO PLATFORM NOT FOB PEACE.—After having read over the Chi cago platform . carefully a second time, we are rejoiced to be able to make the an nouncement that it is not committed un conditionally to peace, as may be supposed, but the Democracy pledge themselves to .resist revolution with all the means and power under their control. The resolution is as follows : " .Resol , so, That the direct interference of the military authority of the United States in the recent elections held in Kentucky, Maryland, Missouri, and De laware was a shameful violation of the Constitution, and the repetition of such acts in. the approaching election will be held as revolutionary, and resisted with all the means and power under our control." 'Ofstoutie;sii tlitlink an iffair -as the.reb el! lion of a deieti of so of • States is not "held as revolutionary " by these Chicago Union savers, and will not be " resisted with all the means and power" under their control. To the Government they Would tender the sword—if they dared—to the enemies of the GoVentment` the olive branch. What wonder that Peace and War Democrats are equally satisfied ? , AT TirE beginning of the war General .3IcCLELLAN dictated to General SCOTT, his superior. After his army had been driven back to Harrison's Landing (thanks to a bad distribution of forces, and a long period of wasting idleness), he attempted to dic tate to pie President - the policy of the na tion. Now that he is nominated for the Presidency, he would dictate to his party. If he were elected to the Presidency we may logically presume he would make it a Dictatorship, and be as indepexident'of the people as he now professes. to be of, the party which nominated him. THE FREE MILITARY . ACADEMY . —Want of funds alorie has 'compelled the public spirited committee having charged of the Free Military School on Chestnut street to close it, we trust only temporarily. This school is already NY ell known throughout the army and the country, and the fruits of its labors are - Worthy of the thoughtful con sideration of those who are able to help the cause. It has sent 463 students to Wash ington, all of whom have passed the Ex amining Board, 3 of• them as colonels, 7 as lieutenant colonels, :15 as majors, 110 as captains, 143 as first lieutenants, and 185 as second lieutenants. More than two-thirds of these were veteran privates or non-com missioned officers. The school is, of course, vastly popular in the army, and, by supply ing the colored troops with so many earnest and efficient officers, educated from the ranks, has done much to overcome preju dice, and win fame and honor for a hitherto despised race'. The Free Military Academy is too Valuable as an auxiliary to -the war to be discontinued. The devotion of our s6idiers cannot be raore highly recognized than by the support of an institution which has helped so -many from _the ranks. But $l,OOO per month is necessary to maintain it, and one gentleman, who has contributed libeially to 'every public call, stands ready to give $1,000,,if others will raise $5,000, to susain this school, whose . admirable working has reflected so much credit upon the city. Six thousand dollars should be easily raised among our numerous wealthy and patriotic citizens, and we trust the appeal of the committee will riot remain unanswered. We shall ourselves be happy to receive any contributions to this good cause. A Rebel Analysis of the Chicago Platform: "This platform is a declaration for peace upon he basis of the Union. "It is a good deal bettor platform than we antici pated or conjectured, in this particular : that it nowhere holds up the prosecution of the war as a remedy against disunion. "On the contrary, it declares the experiment of war to restore the Union to be a disastrous failure. "It may be said that a threat of a resumption of hostilities underlies the declaration of the specific end for which a cessation of hostilities is to be de clared—to wit : That peace may be restored on the basis of the Federal Union of the States. But such' an Inference is, at best, remote and doubtful. "Nor isit strengthened by the preliminary decla ration of unswerving fidelity to the Union under the Constitution,' inasmuch as that may be A DE CLARATION. OE OPINION MERELY, - +Hp , COALMITS THE PARTY TO NO ULTIMATE POLICY:• • " ;" Nobody will doubt that the Convention regards peace, upon the basis of a reconstruction of the Union, as the beat mode of settlement for all par; 'ties; but there is NOTHING in tho resolutions WHICH COMMITS THEM TO ACCEPT THIS AS THE• ONLY Nona, and to continue the war if the South refuses to make peace on that plant) This is the exposition which a prorainent rebel paper gives of the Chicago platform. Is if not candid and true ?. The same paper earnestly desires this platform to be adopted ihNovembe , r, and clairiA that this wilily. sult in Southern independence. It will not make - General AIcCLELLAN more popular with patriots that his election is desired by traitors. YALIANDIGEAM, BENJAMIN IiVOO,E,,MIIL LADY, and the Abbe McMAsTicits: are 'read Opposition : by the Tf7e2lA,',But yallandighign platform: , stands • .... these gentlemen may defy excomnumicar tion. The men who made that* platform play be supposed to understand it; `and it was because VATILA2iDIGRA3I believed it to be for peace that he moved to make Mc- CLELLAIO3 nomination unanimous. Recent Barbarism in Ireland. ...Thu riots in Belfast and other, parts of the north of Ireland have been suppressed, by the strong arm of the law, aided by a competent military force. The civil power seems to have been inactive, the civic ma gistrates have been either too much fright ened to act, or sympathized so tho roughly with the Orangemen, who began the riots, to interfere against them. It is melancholy to know that,-in the nineteenth century, and in the wealthiest, most indus trial,- and not the least intelligent 'province of Ireland, several hundred men, women, and children should have been killed and Wounded, simply because certain intolerant inhabitants 'of Belfast should have broken into riot, whereby life and property have been destroyed—and this only onoccount of a public procession having passed through Dublin, eighty-eight miles dis tant, to assist in. commencing the erection of a public monument to a man who died seventeen years ago. There were several points in DANIEL O'CoNNEnn's character, several passages in his public career, of which we could not approve ; but he was the greatest Irishman. of his age, his, perseveranee was only equalled by his great ability, and we firmly believe that no man of his time did so ,much, by speech and, pen—more effective weapons to persuade than sword or gun—to advance the great human izing cause of civil and religious_ liberty. If he successfully battled for the 'political rights of the Catholics he was no less, ef fective in assisting and vindicating,' those of the Protestant Dissenters—i9s," ,of very Presbyterians who grew mad- and violent because liberal men,,of all persua-. sions united to raise a statue in Dublin to his memory • When it = vas clear that the riot was be . &ming' deadly, it 'VMS the duty of the Belfast magistracy to have telegraphed to -Dublin, the seat of government in. Ireland, for a strong military force, and for the Go vernment to have ,placed Belfast under martial law. Lord.CARLISLE and Sir Ro- BEirr PEEL, (the Irish Vicero 9 y and Chief Secretary,) were in England when the riots took place, but their powers are al ways delegated, in the Viceroy's absence ) to certain - Lords Justices, who have full right to exercise them. The riots began on the 10th August, , and the magis trates did not swear in special con stables and take possession of such gunpowder as the rioters had left in the shops, until the 17th. Seven days' inac tion, on the part of the local authorities I Even then, only a temporary lull was the result, for, on the following evening, a battle, took place between the ship-car penters (almost wholly Orangemen) and the "navvies," in which the latter were driven down into the mud-banks of the harbor—between it and the North Twin Island—where many of them sunk up to the neck in the slob, and were fired upon from the banks of the river by the exulting Orange party. A correspondent says : Ig From the North Twin Island the navvies made an attempt to wade along the coast, though at a groat distance from it, to point near the railway terminus ; but the foundrymen were too quick for them, and, running round to tho spot, received them with a shower of lead which drove them back as the tide was rising; and then, coolly sitting on the green bank, the Orange party loaded and fired, and loaded and fired, at the wretches in the Mud, with just as little mercy as if they were popping at sea gulls. It was a strange sight on a lovely August evening, with all the picturesque iurroundifigs of .that beautiful coast—with the spaikling may-co bored sea, and the stately ships that gleamed fn the broad glow of the setting sun, and the jutting moun tain-shapes that keep watch over the harbor—to see these good Protestants blazing away, as they sat at their ease on the high green bank, and ' potted' man by man struggling for life in the black mud below. The large torte of hussars and armed constabulary who were sent down by the magistrates, and who quickly put an end to this one-sided warfare, did not arrive soon enough to prevent bloodshed. Eight of the navvies were hit with slugs—some dangerously ,• and I saw d one poor old man dragged out covered with mud and blood, and with his brain protruding horribly from a scalp wound." The,se 'riots 4isgrace religion, in` whose holy name they were commeneed—cwiliza- Jion, which they outrage—and that INiobe of nations,: which they cover with reproach and shame: If they arc to be prevented, it must be, done by enacting a law, and rigidly enforcing it, without re spect for perion or party, that membership in any secret society, Or§ngeism or Rib bonism,-shall be punishabre, on proof, with irinsportation or penal servitude for life,' and classed as a felony, and the convict shall be treated legally as a felon, forfeiture of 'all his goods and landp, as BLACKSTONE expressly tells us, following, by common law, the conviction for felony. As for the feeble, and, if ft be, erring magistrates of Belfast, it is to be hoped that their names will be struck out of the commission of the peace, and that every one of them who did not manifest the strongest desire to main tain the peace, shall be cleclared incapable "of !vei,holding any appointment, actual or honorary, under Queen VICTORIA. The British Government has got to suppress and visit with condign punishMent every secret society in Ireland, Protestant as well as Catholic. The Latin Race in America. The Orleans Stock appears to be rising in the royal market. The only daughter of, LEOPOLD of Belgium, grand-daughter of LOI3IS PHILIPPE, of France, has been elevated, "by the grace of God, and the will of NAPOLEON III.," to the imperial throne of Mexico, and it is now announced that the young Count d'Eu, eldest son of the Duc de Nemours, by one of the lucky Cobourg family, will shortly proceed to Rio:Janeiro, to marry-the Princess ISABEL LA, eldest daughter of PFnno 1.1., Emperor of Brazil. The gentleman, now a captain in a Spanish regiment of hussars, is in his twenty-third, and the faiedemoiselle lately completed her' nineteenth year. Her aunt is wife of the Prins de Joinville, third son of Louis PHILIPPE. " The happy couple," therefore, are cousins, though not in blood. The Emperor of Brazil has two daughters and no son by his marriage with the. Princess THERESE, aunt of the ex-King of Naples, and the intention is, in case of - his dying without male issne, that` the Count d'Eu shall- succeed him. lEthis . , take place, two grand -children ,of .1 4 ovIs _PHILIPPE will reign over the only 'two empires on the American continent. Ac cording -to the recognized law of succes sion Don MIGUEL, uncle of the present Emperor PEDRO 11., would probably claim the crown of Brazil, as, on the - same grounds, he claimed that of the late . Queen of Portugal, thirty-six years ago. He has one son, now nearly eleven years old. It is worth notice that in the family arrangements which transfer sovereignties from one person to another, the people are never consulted. They have to pay taxes, and accept the ruler and the form of go vernment which is provided for them. Trim rebel papers continue to find hope for their cause in the nomination of Mc- CLELLAN. The Richmond .graminer, of. September Bth, makes the following em , phatic argument.: We, in defending our own rights and homes, are perforce working in the cause of the opposition. Every defeat of Lincoln's forces, even holding them steadi ly at bay, inures to the advantage of McClellan, Or rather to that of the dexterous manipulators in whose hands he is a puppet, and acautaulates for them the much-desired capital.' Every effort of the present Administration will be put forth, every species of lie be invented in , order to influence opinion : and every exaggeration of their successes and palliation of their defeats be artfully used. We have met with reverses lately Which will enable them to give color to their representa tions and buoy up the hopes of the people. Yet vigor and prudence can turn these tempting fruits to dust and ashes on their lips. In far more gloomy ;periodi the spirit of the conntryhas rebounded under the pressure of disaster with healthy elasticity. So - will It be again. Victorious on nearly the whole theatre of the war, we can bear with firmness and repair with energy. the disasters we have unfor- Xunately met with on the field. Military success, then, will not retain Lincoln in his seat. The in- Vitience of the South, more powerful in the shook of battle than when throwing her minority vote in an :electors.' college, will be cast in favor of McClellan by this indirect yet of means." iAms'ofavwiseL . N. Y., Sept.l2.--The aohooner Apache°, "rota Toledo, on the 2d Inst., for this port, sup. ciaed to have foundered with aLt on board, In the .tate gale on Lake Erie. THE PRESS.-PHILADELPHIA; TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1864: A Proposition. In a letter received recently from a soldier in GRANT'S army, the suggestion is made, in view of the large number of sym pathizers with the rebels, now in full cry in . support of IVIcCLELLAN and PENDLETOi, that the rebel Governors have permission to recruit in States not' in instarreqtion for the rebel armies, with the additional power to conscript all who are avowed Copper heads or Peace-at-any-price men. This suggestion, if carried out, would not, it is true, add a very desirable element to the rebel army— T for 'grumblers such as these are incurable—but it would increase the majority of Inccorai and JonxsoN, and relieve the loyal communities of a great nuisance. ALLEGED ILIeTREA.THRNT OP REBEL PRISONERS IN FORT DDL.A.WARR.—The Richmond Sentinel; of the 9th,.prints a long letter from a Major Arnesy to Col, Ould, the rebel commissioner of exchange, complaining of the "brutality" he suffered "while in the hands of the Federals." He was taken pri soner at Clarksburg, Virginia, and after being trans.: ported from place to place, brought up, at last, at Fort Delaware. Of his treatment here he particu larly complains. He says : "Four weeks after I was captured, I was sent to Fort Delaware, where, n n my arrival, the -authori ties forced me to strip entirely naked, and seized every article of my personal property. I was forced to put on the uniform of the Federal convicts in the prison, consisting of a blue coat, with broad stripes of yellow cloth on the tails and collar, a multitude of brass buttons, &c., to render" it - lad! , crously . conspicuous ; a coarse shirt, rough brogans, and int old wool hat. I was then put among about 280 Federal convicts similarly uniformed. These men represented all offences known in the calendar of crime. With them I was forced to eat, sleep, and work, and to their indignities was made to sub. mit by the Federal authorities.. I was harnessed to a dray, and forced at the point of the bayonet to haul stone for ten hours a day. . I cannot here enu merate all the insults, outrages, and sufferings of which Iv as made the victim during this period." Catholicity Opposed to Disloyalty. To the Editor of The Press SIR: In your issue of this morning yott - deSignate the Freeman's JOTurnal and Metropolitan Record as "the organs of the Irish Catholics of -New York. ,, This is a mistake, and an insult, though; I have no doubt, an unintentional one, to the loyal portion of the Catholic community. Of "Copperheads," Fe- Stc„ they may be the organs ; of Catholics, never. The Catholic Church, "the pillar and ground of truth,?' against which " the gates of hell shall never prevall,” has not, and by her innate principles cannot teach disloyalty, or sanction such rotten political doctrines as those of which, these sheets are the exponents; and this is, doubtless, the reason which induced Archbishop Hughes to with draw his official Episcopalsanction from the Record, and the Catholic General liosecrans to stop its cir culation within his military department Your mistake is, 'I am afraid, sir, a common one with Protestants, who accept such clap-trap as the ex. pression of Catholic sentiment. Be pleased, there fore, to correct this erroneous idea, with the firm assurance that no true Irishman; or Catholic of any nationality; who understands and observes the -principles of his faith, will ever be found among either the secret traitors or open, enemies of the Union. A LOYAL AMERICAN CATITOLIC. PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 12, 1864. The mistake to which our correspondent alludes is not a "Protestant " one; nor do we think the representative character asserted by the pa pers mentioned is altogether what is designated by the term " clap-trap." The great mass of the Catholic population of the country is, without doubt, heartily loyal, and however at times dis graced by its politicians, is admirably represented by its priests. Many of these are what would be called "genuine Abolitionists," whose hostility to the cause of our troubles dates both before and since the war. Archbishop Pnrcell, and Bishop Rose craps of Ohio, Bishop Wood, Bishop Timon, and many other distinguished Cathollo clergymen, are well known for the unequivocal character of their patriotism. One priest in this State, whose name we know, has a Democratic congregation, but is, nevertheless, a radical Abolitionist, and has always voted the "Republican" ticket. The most Intel lectual class of the Catholic clergy is upon the humane side of politics. Though generally silent, from religious prudence, upon affairs of politics, our leading Catholic clergymen have Certainly not' shrunk from their patriotic duty during the crisis. While earnestly praying for peace, they have never found it in their hearts to denounce the war or to mourn our victories. In contrast to this we might give the in stance of one who both prays and preaches against the war here in our own city. What is true ingeneral of the Catholic popula tion is not so true of the Irish Catholic voters of New York. Thousands of these are patriotic, and have given gallant service to, the 'war; but many more are simply deluded by their politicians, or we should not find them on .the same platform with their .British tyrants 'and the • tyrants of . the South. These often 'non-practicing, but al ways professing Catholics, have blindly follow; .cd ethe . lead of such men as Fernando Wood, sta_ their habitual and well-known preja. dice against the negro. They will always vote. against " interference with slavery," .to. The forward leaders of this large class (an illegitimate one, we grant,) are represented in such papers as the Metropolitan . Record and the Freeman's Journal, although . the Archbishop of New York' firmer`: We 'did' . not :hraTni".llitt: these journals were the organs' of Irish -9atict• lie sentiment, while a pipet:: as loyal as the Tablet enjoys so much prosperity; but • in' connection with the'New York Daily . News, and the professional practice of Messrs. Benjamin , and Fer nando Wood, they have undoubtedly exercised eon-. siderable influence over the poOr and the ignorant. New York, however, is the exceptional case, and its Irish voters only share . in the disgrace of the city itself, which always yields an influence for profli gate politicians. New York (especially in Catholic affairs) is very seldom regarded as the index of the country. WA.SIXING-TON. WASHINGTON, Sept. 12, 1884. THE NEW LOAN. A large portion of the recent loan will be appro. priated to the payment of the army. TEE EMPLOYMENT OF SOLDIEBSASSRIWANTS. By a law of Congress, passed in July last, an offi cer employing a soldier as a servant is subject to a reduction of his pay to the amount of the legal allowance for a servant or servants, and also the cost of the soldier to the Government. This provi sion was evidently intended to check an abuse of long standing and great magnitude, namely, the withdrawal of soldiers fromlactive duty for menial purposes. Therefore, if an officer enjoys the luxury of a sol dier for his servant, he has to pay the entire ex pense out of his own pocket. In cases where civilians are employed by those who are allowed Servants, this rule does not apply. Many of the officers have just been made aware of the provisions of the new law, and its practical application to them is a matter of surprise, and an unlooked-for deduction from their pay. RECRUITS FROM PENNSYLVANIA.. . Quite a number of Pennsylvania recruits arrived here yesterday and to-day. Amongst the 'number were several well-known typos. They will probably leave for the front to-day. AIIRD7.AL OP DESERTERS Fifty.one rebel deserters from Arnzasonla divi sion, who racently came into our lines, arrived here to-day on the mail-boat from City Point. They say a large number of rebel troops are anxious to desert. From all accounts received, It appears that the Army of the Potomac is unusually healthy, and the hospitals contain but few patients. COIIIII3TATION OF SENTENCES. The sex, tences of four privates connected with New York and Maine regiments, who were con victed of desertion, have been commuted to punish ment at the Dry Tortugas, instead of being shot to death. PERSONAL. DEATH ONtA WELL-KNOWN MINISTER CARLISLE, Pa., Sept. 12.—Rev. Rohert D. Oham bers, a prominent minister of the Methodist Epis• copal Ohnreh t and well-known for his fearless ad vocacy of Union sentiments, died• here on• Friday rag.. 'CAPTURE OF QUANTRELL, THE GUERILLA CINCINNATI, Sept. 12.—A dispatch' from Indiana polis to the Gazette announces the capture there of Quantrqll, the Missouri guerilla: lie was recog nized on the street by a refugee. : •.; • • • : I : • ; : Censo, Sept. 11.—It is reported at bele Rook that the rebel Gen. Price recently died at Arkadel phia, of dysentery. DEATH OF A PROMINENT LAWYER. Beinisionz, Sept. 12.—Nathaniel Williams, the oldest member of the bar of this city, died on Sa turday, in the eighty-seventh year of his age. • The Maine.Eleetion. RBI' 1:IBLIOILN GAINS-CONY ELECTED. PORTLAND, Me., Sept. 12.—Samuel' Cony, the Republican candidate for Governor, has received 2,374 votes in this city, and Mr. Howard, the Demo cratic candidate, 1,760 . votes, being a gain for the former of 295. . Seven towns give • Cony 3,892 votes, and Howard 2,950, being a gain for Cony of 876. LATER • Thirteen towns have • been hoard from, in 'which Cony has received 2,780 majority, a net gain of 890. The returns come in very !slowly to-night, owing te'the severe storm which-h4s prevailed.- - PORTLAND, Sept. 19-9. P. M.—Returns from thirty-nine towns foot up the following vote : For Cony, (Rep.) 14,745 For Rowaxd, (Dem.) • • 9,169 . • -The same towns last year gave a vote of 16,096 far Camt, and 10,231 for Bradbury (Dom.). • Saco gives Cony 676, and Howard 391. Bangor gives IZlony 1,568, and Howard 751. List year Bangor gave 1,731'f0r Cony, and 862 for Bridburjr. Piimern, Sept. 12-10 P. M.—Fifty one towns give Cony 7,177 majority this year against 6,493 last year, showing a net gain 0f,:684. Augusta gives Cony 414 majority in six wards. The Vermont Election. TWRICTY-ONR TB orsew D MAJORITY POR THE UNION CANDIDATE Britian()Tow, Vt., Sept. 12.—Returns from 171 towns foot up—Smith, 26,219 ; Redfield, 10,371. The same towns, in 1863, gave Smith 23,596 ; Redfield, 14,016. Smith it'll have nearly 21;000 majority in the State. Returns from 230 towns show the election of 213 union and 20 Democratic Representatives. The Senate will be unanimously Union: A Nomination. Acrßunn . , N. Y., Sept.l2.—Theodore M. Pomeroy has been renominated for Representative •in Con. grew from the Twouty-fourth district of this State. THE WAR. NOTHING' NEW FROM PETERSBURG. TEE SITUATION ITICHANOED IN THE SHZEANDOAH VALLEY. CaTalry Reconnoissance to Winchester. THE ENEMY DISCOVERED IN FORCE. ACTIVITY OF OUR BLOCKADING NAVY. The 11otorious A. H. Vane Captured. A VICTORY IN TNNNESSEE. THE ARMY: 111EFORE PETERSBURG. A SURFRIBE ATM OAPTURR OP REBEL P TOR ET a RETURN OF A GENERAL OFFICER. HEADQUARTERS ARMY OF TRU POTOMAC, Sept. 10--Evening.—Firing has been kept up quite briskly all day on the centre and right. The rebels seem to have got their temper excited by the surprise of -last night, and are determined to annoyour pickets as much as they can It was the 2oth Indiana and 99th Pennsylvania that effected the Eurprise. A portion of the latter regiment advanced too far, and a few of them were captured. These two regiments made the attack under Lieut, Col. George W. Mickel, who was shot through the hips and died on the field. His body is being embalmed, and will be sent home. Our-eastt aides amounted to thirty altogether. Lieutenant Disbrow, of the 99th Pennsylvania, was badly wounded in the head. The prisoners cap tured say they were asleep at the time, and that our men were on them.before they had time to resist. General Patrick, provost marshal general of this army, was today presented with,a beautiful sword; sash, spurs, and shoulder•straps, by the enlisted men of the 20th. New York, whose original term of enlistment has expired, and those not re-enlisted are , going:_home. PGeneral P. made a verrappropriate speech onAhe occasion. Brigadier General Eagan arrived at the front yes. Aorday, htivi*--almost entirely recovered from the severe wound he „received, on the:22d of Jane, in front of Petersburg—having on that occasion won for himself,the proinoliOrt he so well deserved. He will have a command in the 2d Corps. THE ISHENANDOWEE VALLEY. .enzaoricoissiwas WITHIN THREE MILES 01+ wnsr- 11.1.31P.E . R'SFILRRY, Sept. U.—Gen. Wilson'a ea valry made a reconnoissance along the Strasburg pike to within three miles of Winchester, where they unexpectedly dropped in upon Kershaw's di vision of rebelinfantry who in a manner stampeded. ; They rallied, bowever, and made a stand, but Gem Wilson, having accomplished the objectof his mts- Sion, withdreW. A reconnoitring party from the 19th Corps, sent out from lerryville On the Winchester pike, pro ceeded as Tax as the Opequan without folding the enemy. Col. Lowell, of the 2d Massachusetts Cavalry, want out on Friday and destroyed several flour mills on the Opegnar, which the rebels have beeriusing for grinding Meal. He also captured a rebel lieute nant and twenty:of his men. It is not deemed safe to push the repairs on the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad,at present. NO CHANGE IN THE MILITARY SITUATION. BAnminionn, Sept: 3.2.—,The American's special Harper's Ferry despatch of to-day says there has been no change in the military situation since the last despatch. Parties recommenced work on the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad this morning, and it is expected that the road will be in running order throughout its en tire length on Friday next. "RABE', ACCQVNT OF THE LATE TIGHT AT -BEBEY• The special correspondent of the Richmond Sea tined gives the following account of the late action at Berryville : -An engagement occurred at . Berryville yesterday (Sept. swan which Kershaw's division - attacked the enemy's 6th Corps, and drove it out of a line of breastworks at Berryville, with comparativelys mall loss on our side. In Worth's and Kershaw's bri gades the lots is but slight, probably not more than a hundred. Another brigade, name not heard, lost rather more. Total loss, probably, three hundred. Wounded men who have just come in here report that all is quiet at Berryville this morning, and that the enemy is believed to have left. •A . drawn fight took place near Bunker Hill, ba. tween a part of Lomax's cavalry division and the cavalry of the enemy. Harry Gilmor was wounded in the neck, but is doing well. A cavalry fight also occurred about seven miles from this place, on the' Valley Pike, in the direction of Newtown. I have not heard the - result. Our infantry is here and at Bunker Hill: FORTRESS MONROE. NEGRO • RECRUITS BROBI 'NORTH CAROLINA-CAP TORE OF A STEAMER BY THE REBELS FORTRESS. MONROE, Sept. U.—AN:lnt two Wm dred able-bodied contrabands from North Carolina arriired at FortreSs Monroe to-day. They have en listed for.servieelp the army. •The .‘ llllaiiizniarolvii man was washed ashore aYi Upon Idm was found &badge= marked “Geolge OlairiCo. it,2sth lilassachusetts."- Dennis bilHafogoeHbirpit t al since last report • S. W.-Fullei, :76th Pennsylvania; John Grove, 2d Penits3lvanlaArtillery ; SaMuel liochenburg, 65th Pennsylvania. The steamer Fain, running upon the line between Norfolk and North barolina, was captured yester .awy on the Dismal Swamp Canal by a party of rebels. .The crew and passengers are prisoners, and the boat was burned. One huniired and two blockade•running prisoners 'arrived here to-day on the captured steamers taken lately off Wilmington, North Carolina, THE BLOCKADE. CAPTURE OF TWO BLOOKADE•EUNNERS WITH VALUABLE CARGOES • WasamoTow, Sept. 12.—Captain Gibson, of the United States steamer Santiago de Cuba, under date of September 11, informs the Navy Depart ment that, on Saturday last, when on his way to Hampton Roads for ooal, he discovered, chased, and captured a blockade-runner. She proved to be the English steamer A. D. Vance, late the Lord Clyde, from Wilmington, N. C. SheLls an iron side•wheel steamer, two years old, and very fast. She had on board 410 bales of cotton and some tUrpentine, but her full cargo cannot be known until she is broken out in Boston, for crhich port she will be despatched, 'in charge of Acting Ensign E. G. Bowers. This vessel has been one of the most successful blockade. runners, and those on board say she was Only caught In consequence of the bad coal she used. .Rear Admiral Lee, in a despatch dated Beaufort, September ith, says the Elsie ran oat of Wilming ton on the 4th inst., and was captured immediately by the Keystone State and Quaker City. . *The Elsie was seen'and fired upon when shesan out by the Niphon and Britannia, and was chased off by the Santiago de Cuba, until lost in the dark ness.. At 10.80 A. M. the next day she was seen and cap tured, without papers or flag. - A shell from the Quaker City exploded in the fore hold of the Elsie and destroyed about one hundred and fifty bales of cotton. Part of the cargo was thrown overboard in the chase, and there ate now about two hundred and fifty bales on board the prize, which will' be sent to Boston. The Elsie is a new steamer, of light draft and fair speed, of the Roth'ay Castle class, and this was her first trip. She will be made a useful vessel on block ade duty. - The blockade is closely and vigilantly kept up, but it is Impossible to prevent its violation on dark nights by steamers built for the purpose. BLOCKADE.BITNICRBE IN POET AT HALIFAX-THE; . TALLANABBEE 817P.POSILD TO BE ABROAD AGAIN. HALIFAX, Sept. 12.—The blockade-runner Old Dominion arrived here . on Saturday night, and the City of Petersburg on Su ay morning; They have abotit 1,800 bales of Cotton destined for Eng. land, and , said to be in payment of the interest on the rebel loan. They left Wilmington last Monday night, and re port that the pirate Tallahassee was to leave on a piratical cruise - on Tuesday night. Two blockade runners Were also to leave Wilmington on Tuesday night. The. Alexandra, now called the Mary, arrived hero on Saturday for repairs. The following blookade•runners were also in port: Stoamerst Little Hattie, North Heath, repairing; Flamingo, Lady Shirley, Condor, and the steamer Asia, tender td the rebel fleet. ARRIVAL OF PRIER STEAMERS-THE CAPTURED PTRATE GEORGIA AT BEAUFORT NEw Yong, Sept. 12.—The prize steamer Elsie, captured; on the bth inst., while on a voyage from Wilmington to Nassau, with 320 bales of cotton, ar rived this morning, but Bailed again, vie, Long Island Sound, for Boston . ,The prize steamer Geor gia arrived at Beaufort, N. C., on the 9th, bound to Boston.- 7 .1t was reported at Beaufort, on the 9th, that the rebel steamer Edith was about to leave Wilmingtori, heavily armed, for a piratical cruise. VALUE or THE CAPTURED BLOCKADE-RUNNERS: WeargwoToll, Sept. 12.—Gentlemen connected with naval affairs say that the English blockade. imnneteElsie and A. D. Vance, recently captured, together, with their cargoes, are worth probably $1500,000.. The officers and sailors who seized these prizes will therefore realize havalsome dividends. The officers of the Vance said she was captured only because of her bad coal. The obstruction of the Weldon Railroad by our army prevents the sup. ply of a better article to the blockatie-runners. KENTUCKY AND TENNESSEE. A VICTORY BY 'A PENNSYLVANIA RIIGIRANY. Ciliciricsm, Sept. 12.—0 n tho 6th Instant a rebel force of 1,300 men, under Col. Dibrell, was encoun tered by the 9th Pennsylvania Cavalry near Ready.. vile on Cripple creek, Tenn., and after a sharp fight, with sabres exclusively, the rebels fled. The Nashville Union says•the Pennsylvanians lost only one killed, while they killed twenty-six rebels 'and captured one hundred and sixteen prisoners. The rebel force retreated beyond Murfreesboro, and was endeavoring to reach Wheeler. THE DEFEAT OF MORGAN-EIS PAPERS CAPTURED cmonni,(7l, Sept. 12.—The following additional despat'oh relative to the defeat of Morgan was re ceived by Gov. Johnson: - • BULL'S 0.6,. Sept. 6.—To Gov. joartsori : All of Morgan's papers fell into my hands, and show his forces to have exceeded 1,800. His dead exceed T 5. ma command fled in great confusion after his death. I puisied them eight miles, but the chivalry use the spureirith more vigor than the sabre. I will for ward:all his papers. - Ar.vix C. GmLam. MEMPHIS ILLUMINATED Callao, Sept. IL—The steamer City of Alton brings Memphis advice' of yesterday and New Or• l ea ns dates of the sth. Memphis was to be nated last, night in honor of the recent victories. The post of Cairo was to be_ separated from the Western . ICentticky District anti attached to the biOliO, -.4:4 10 % under General ;.flaiberl b, 'NIA General lilereditli has left for Paducah to take command of the District of Western Kentucky. Seventy-five hogsheaVeof tobacco. have arrived from Paducah for New York. Bavrtgosa, September 12. ANNIVERSARY 07 A BATTLE - ITS OEIIEERATION. The anniversary of the battle of North Point, fought fifty years ago, occurs to-day, and is being celebrated with becoming spirit by the survivors of the noble band of heroes who, though not disciplined' soldiers, yet boldly marched forward to defend their homes from the foe. The members of the Association of-Defenders met" at nine o'clock this morning, at the old City and, in accordance with the proclamation of - Mayor Chapman, many of the isitisens of Baltimore will display the national flag, but beyond this there will be no other observance of the day. As usual on the Sunday preceding the anniver sary, the Defenders attended divine worship in a body yesterday. Under the guidance of Chief Mar• shal ljams, and headed by the president, Captain A. E. Worner, and others, they_ proceeded to High street M. E. Church, where • the pastor, Rev. S. A. Wilson, delivered a discourse. There were about fifty members out on the occasion, each one having 2rape on his left arm In respect to their deceased membei s. The provost marshals of this• city have received from the Bureau in Washington instructions to pro• creed with the draft—first In those sub•districts which have exhibited the least earnestness in filling the quotas assigned: Several of the wards are re• presented by their committees as having filled the quota, and there are others which aro supposed to be very near that desirable situation. In the remaining wards great activity prevails, and expectations are confidently indulged that ere many days elapse they also will have placed the necessary number of mon in service to relieve them from the draft. Last week quite 'a large number' of recruits were sent to camp. Grain inactive and drooping. Flour very dull: Whisky dull at $1.8443i1-134 X. Provisions quiet and firm. Bacon Shoulders, 2034 c. (Special Correspondence of The Press. l NEW 'Kona, Sept. 12,18e4. THE QUOTA. xxxVirm It would appear to be definitely settled that the quota of this city is full. SuperilOr Blunt, having dragged the fat book of naval enlistments on to Washingtonpand submitted It 'to the appropriate authorities; seems to have obtained a recognition Of the fact. At which there is much jubilation. It is more than 'possible that recruiting will be stimu lated by the announcement. Hundreds of men, who have been secured by substitute brokers in antici pation of the draft, must he thrown upon the mar et, so to speak. In mere self defence, the brokers, who have advanced various slims to their men, will enlist them speedily. IkLITERART ANNOUNCEMENTS for the coming season are. not very exciting or in teresting. A few so-called "novels" are on the list, all of _which, with,, perhaps, one or two qg oeptions, are by nobodies. ".T . idas Godfrey ' s Fortune—based probably upon the sale of Ginifrers cordial—is the name of/Bayard Taylor's new attempt. A new magazine is to be published by Carleton, who has also in press a fresh work by Michelet. "Howard Glyndon,” the deaf and dumb poetess, and former Washington correspondent of the St. Louis Repub lican, bets a volume - of poems in prose. THE TURNERS' FESTIVAL will be held in New York this year, and the Tarnerg from various localities have flocked In for purposes of participation. • W. D. blc(3-. Sensational crime appears to be somewhat on the increase. A clerk in a William-street banking house has been arrested for procuring fifteen thou sand dollars by forgeiy. Numerous cases of high way, or rather low-way, robbery are recorded. Heads are being split open with axes, and miscel laneous shootings and knifings are of general oc currence. Messrs. Carl Anschutz and Carl Formes having undertaken to. produce Haydn's oratorio of "The Creation," yesterday (Sunday), at Jones' Woods, and, moreover, to .produce it in marvellous excel lence, with salvos . of artillery, Chimes of bells, etc., the music-loving German population hid looked forwird to the event with no little,ariticipation and pleasure. Saturday evening, however, it was stated that Police Superintendent Kennedy had an nounced his intention to preient the performance, it being in:contravention of the Sunday law. A post ponement was necessary, In consequence, much to the disgust of the proposed audience. [By Telegraph.] - • BAFK STATEXECNT. The following is a statement of the conditiOn of the New York banks for the week ending Septem ber 12: _Loans, decrease $2,000,000_ Specie, increase 460,000 Circulation, decrease 19,000 Deposits, decrease ... 8,000,000 DEOLINE IN COLD. Gold closed this evening at 219. BABEBALL MATCH. The base:ball match between the Atlanta vs. the Mutual, resulted in the success of .the latter by six teen rounds. About six thousand persons witnessed the gato. Arrived, barks Aranisle, from Rio.; Theresa, from Maracaibo.; Momink Star, fro& St. Jai de Ouba ; i Sallie:. :Bonsai]," from Brazos, Texas ; schooner EleCtra, from Falmouth, Va. . ' MARINE. Arrived, steamship Saxon, from Philedelphoi, ship Harrisburg, from New Orleans. . , Three Days Later Bens—English Views of the Coming Presidential Campaign— Renewed Activity of the African Slave Trade—The . Conference on the Parti tion of Denmark. NEw YORa, Sept. 12.—The steamer America, from Southampton on the 31st ult., has arrived. The American steamer J. T. Wright has been lost in the China Sea. The Hibernian arrived out on the 30th, and the City of London on the 31st. - ENGLISH COMMENTS ON AMERICAN AFFAIRS. • The Times says'if the account of the ram Tennes see's doings be true, it is one of the most gallant ac tions of the American war. We look with great in terest for the rebel account of the loss. The loss of life on both sides makes the action still more extra ordinary. The A9-my and Navy Gazette (Russell's paper) thus speaks of McClellan : "We declare .our belief that the existence of a peace party is mythical. We are told of one hundred thousand men meeting to support General McClel lan. Does any one believe a military President, who has been beaten in the field by Confederate ge• nerals, is going • to proclaim peace at the head of •his armies 3 Certainly, it he does, it will only be the signal for a danger to the neighbors of the North." THE PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN - POLICY OP A The Times of the 31st has a long article on the coming Presidential campaign. Following is an extract giving its most important points : "Nobody, can well anticipate that Mr. Lincoln would be reelected without a contest, or that the contest could be otherwise than desperate. But a desperate contest implies conflicting principles, and Mr. Lincoln's principles have been distinctly pro nounced. His policy, as at presentavowed, is war— war 'to the bitter end,' and •it is on the party pro fessing similar views that he has hitherto retied for support. But this adoption of the war on the part of one political section leaves the other no alternative but to adopt, in 'tome shape or other, a policy of peace. It may be transformed or con cealed under various disguises, bat to this end it• must come at last. Whoever condemns Presi dent Lincoln's policy must virtually condemn the war. It is vain to talk of the prosecution of the war on better military principles or a more skilful plan. All plans and all principles have now been tried. Every general has had his chance in turn, and all have failed alike. McCiellan's scientific caution fared no better than Grant's invincible obstinacy, except that under the former commander there was not so great a sacrifice of life. That the war has been wasteful beyond all precedent is perfectly true, and if exceptions were taken to the prodigality with which blood and treasure have been lavished, they might doubtless be sustained. But though the war might have been managed more cheaply, we not see how it could have been conducted more vigolonsly. No minister could have raised more men than Mr. Stanton, or more money than Mr. Chase. No chief of the Republic could have kept 'pegging away' at the war more indefatigably than President Lincoln, or rejected more bluntly. all4proposels of compro mise. If the Republicanst.vHth their unsparing efforts could do nothing against the South, it is not to be imagined that the Democrats, with their half-and. half policy, could do any more. If Mc- Clellan is to be their. champion, we know already what may be expected. The armies of the North would be more prudently handled, and after a check would be more expeditiously withdrawn, but they would certainly make no • more impression on the South than the armies of Grant or Hooker." . . `THE DANISH QUESTION : The Conference sittings have been adjourned, probably because the Danish plerdpotentiaries are awaiting the necessary documents. Up to the pre sent time the Conference has been occupied. solely with the territorial question. ' - - • The Neue Preasche Zeilung says there is no ques tioh of the withdrawal of troops from Jutland be fore a definite conclusion of peace. The return of all the Prussian troops from the Duchies is, there fore, far less to be expected. • A semi-official paper, published in Berlin, says, in reference to the Danish finances, the Minister's' statement! of the instructions which were sent .to the plenipotentiaries at Vienna was drawn up with the object of the recovery of North Schleswig for Denmark, and says that it was only on the suppo sition of loyalty, and the absence of reserve on Den mark's part, that peace was agreed to. _ GLNERAL NEWS. In Tunis, fourteen tribes have submitted, butforty of the chichi in Insurrection dare not sign the con ditions of peace. The Persian Gulf telegraph cable is again broken. The difficulties between Turkey and Monte Negro have been settled. Arrests continue to be made in Trieste and in Ve netia. The police have discovered arms, munitions, etc. , The St. Helena Guardian says It is reported that the slave trade has been carried on very briskly for some time past, by means of steamers of such a class that our cruisers have no chance of catching them. One steamer of nine hundred' tons has got away three times, each time well laden with negroes. The, barracoons are full. • Commercial Intellirence. The Timm says the FrankfOrratock market is glutted with American securities, and parcels by the last steamer sold at 2 per cent. reduction. The present bond holders are strong, and a speculating panic is conse quently avoided. Virginia es and Illinois Central declined 1 her Illinois Central paid. shares suffered a still fa de cline oft per cent. Consols heavy at 88% to 88%. LIVBRPOOL COTTON MARKET. —Sales of cotton for two days 13. M O bales. The market is firmer, and all qualities have advanced to a •trlding extent. Sales to speculators and. exporters, 4.000 bales.' The market • opened with an upward tendency, but closed quiet and steady. - • • • • The advices of the state of trade in Manchester are:, favorable. . LIVERPOOL BRRADSTIJFES •MARKET.—.FIan and,' Wheat quiet and steady. Mixed Cora inactive at 30s. LIVERPOOL PROVISION MARRE —Beef dull and declinin g. Pork dull and *ache u gad. 2 Bacon Auteianit: steed? Lard firm. Butter firm • • 11NEEPOOL PRODUCE. lIARKEI' firm- • Sugar quiet and steady. Coffee steady. Rica gates.' Ashes dull. ;Linseed Oil firmer. Rosin—no sales. Spirits of Turpentine, inactive. Crude 'Petroleum atea3y at : 2s al. FIR.nIEN'S ELEarrox.-, was: Conover - of the Fraiklio "Etre Oogipalkil was ifot night eleoteLl... agalrtant toogiao9r:9ll-.6110 Sixth Fire dtitrtot.• • • • - • • BALTIMORE. IRE DRAFT NEW YORK CITY. THE POLICE ARDTIIE SINCERE. MARTYR BOSTON. BOSTON, Sept. 12. EUROPE. AN OPINION OF IecLELLAN. PEACE PARTY. Ain . 'mai:bens. Contilagratton at Car,— Sinking of a Steamer. Oarno,Sept. 12 —A fire broke out at 2 o'clock this Incoming, in Commercial avenue, between Eighth and Ninth streets, 'consuming all the , buildings on the west side of the avenue, except Winter's block. It then extended on the opposite side of the avenue, destroying the United States Hotel, and spread. rep Eighth and Ninth streets, consuming Brown's Hob tel, Rising Sun;and other buildings. The houses b urned on Commercial avenue include the Planters' House; Shamrock House, stove; hard ware, grocery, dry goods, clothing, book, and other stores. Among the principal losers are: 0. O'Callae han's three-story brick, and entire stock of Stoves, tin, iron, and copper ware. The loss Is $40,000, in sured for $5,000. Wm. S. Wayne, grocer, loss $15,- 000, insured $3,000. J. L. Brown, .grocerlea and liquors, loss $13,000, insured $BOO. Martin. Tomers, Shamrock House, loss $7OO, no insnrance.• The total loss will probably reach $200,000, with an 'in surance of about $40,000. . . The steamer John J. Roe, bound for New Orleans, with a battalion of the 2d Missouri Chivalry, sunk. in thirty feet of water, above' New Madrid. No lives were lost, but all the horses on board' were drowned. The steamer Robert Barnes,. from Memphis to . Cincinnati, has 184 bales of cotton, and will take on , hoard 80 bales here. . The Crops of Pennsylvania. The following estimates of the crops of this State are based on those of last year. From the facts in dicated by the table it is evident that the crop• of grain will not be two-thirds of that produced in 1863. The hay crop In the eastern part of the State was superabundant, but will scarcely,cover the de ficiency of .that produced in the western counties. The crop, therefore, may be termed scarcely_aat average. In the following table, when the crops are In dicated "good," they are above the average (av 3 ge); and very good (vy. gd.) distinguishes them as still better. In all the counties, with but few exceptions, the barley crop is reported as but little raised, but the quality good. In all the counties the, weather is reported as having been very dry. West of the Alleghenies there was reasonably good growing weather until the second week in June, when a dry term com menced, which still continues at time of writing. In all the counties we ha - te reports of dry weather This does not exclude brief thunder-showers, which, being the result of excessively warm and sultry weather, naturally visit every part of the State; though it may be proper tb remark that of even these there were very few within the time stated, and, from their light character, scarcely proved of any permanent benefit to the growing crops. For all practical purposes, the weather within the time stated may be properly distinguished as "very warm and dry." The -apparent discrepancy in the reports of the corn and potato crop, in which some counties they are given as "average" and "good,"` may be explained by the fact that in such cases they are growing in a soil either highly retentive of mois ture, or so loose as to absorb moisture from theta. mosphere—both of which are well-known agricuL tural facts. In Fulton county the Oat* orop'was a failure. A general complaint is made that many of the early spring potatoes took a second growth, which, of course, deteriorated the crop. Both the corn and potato crop Is estimated from present appearances, and it. Is possible that they yet may be much benefited by supplies of rain, yet, under no circumstances, can those not already marked "average' , be brought up to near the standard, especially the potato crop. COUNTIES. E Allegheny -Armateg Beaver Bedford.. - Barks Blair ... .. Bradford - Bucks .... Butler .... Cambria.. Carbon ... Centre .... Chester... Clarion... Clinton... Clearfield Columbia • Crawford '• C umberld Dauphin.. Delaware Erie Rik Fayette... Franklin . Forest .... Greene-... Buntgdo n Indiana .. Jefferson. Juniata... 33 good k • good e? avge a , N-')re a ' We av ge av'ge av'ge good good good good good good gcood good good lancaster Lawrence Lebanon.. Lehigh. Lnzenie Ly coming DI ercer hi' Kean Monroe... Montgomy Montour.. Northplon Islorthumd Perry Philada Pike Potter .... Schuylkill Snyder ... Somerset . Suauneha Tioga Union - Venango W arren Washingn Wayne . . Westmlnd Wyoming York StV ge good good at go av'ge good aY'ge av'ge • t 461-Cameron county same as Elk or Potter * Little raised. • t Egle w ra a Ts e e r d a ,liit good. • Public Entertainments. AItaf•STREET THEATRE. -NO small degree of talent fly required in a company which shall bril liantly produce one of Shakspeare's.most brilliant plays. The dramas which, during the past week, have been presented at Mrs. Drew's theatre, belong to that school In which wit corrascates and Sparkles like the emanations of some dazzling gem, bat in which truth and nature havebnt little share. "Much Ado AboUt Nothing" was played last night, and in this Shaksperian selection some of the finest wit and some of the broadest humor of the world's dramatist Were blended in that mirroring of nature which is inevitable with him. For however forced or unreal may seem the plot of the poet, the distinctness with which he individualizes his characters reflects upon it the naturaltess of life. With whatever strange scenery or incidents they may be surrounded, they .staid forth as vivid and life-like as stereoscopic views. Yet, "Much Ado About Nothing" might •be'read as much for the intellectual enjoyment of its poignant wit as for the less refined pleasure of its plot. Benedick and Beatrice, Hero and Claudio, Dog. berry and Verges • furnish the sarcasm and the son-, timent and the humor of the piece, whose happy harmony of itself suggests that it was the pro-:. duction of a mature mind, when: experience had checked the inadvertencies of youth, and toned down the rich but garish colors of unrestrained fancy. The wit of Beatrice and that of Benedick are like a splendidly scintillating diamond out into halves, of which Benedick'S half is streaked here and there with slightly tinctured veins that detract a little from its lustre, and bespeak the muscular cha racter of the man. All the sentences of Beatrice are of transparent brilliancy. She uses the stiletto of her wit, not to stab, but to prick and trifle with. It is without malignity, and is ceaselessly employed in the mere loie of frolic. Vanity has no share In its display. She is witty, because she can no more help it than the poet can help being poetical or the dullard can help being dull. She is not merely smart, and that conception is false which represents her as a glibly.tongued virago. Whether she made Benedick a good wife and whether he made her a good husband are questions which admit of being very 'shrewdly argued. A woman who can so spicily use-her tongue in the wooed _state will not be very • likely to hold it In the wed. Even when the gene rous temperament refuses to barb with malignity its shafts of wit, it is no reason why those shafts should not sting. Take Benedick, also--Benedick, the bache lor. Hazlitt stigmatizes him as a woman-haters though there is nothing in Benedick's general course of conduct to justify this. When true passion first fires him ho is transformed into the most 0,1)- sequlous of lovers. Although the perverse wit of Beatrice sorely tries him, he remains wondrously patient and enduring., But this is all in the hey. day of his love. Who shall say what the Benedick and the Beatrice of the comedy became, when life . ceased to be w ith them a comedy, and when each • was called upon to comfort and sustain the other in those rare trials of which mutual sustenance and comfort are the sole and sweet alleviations? How ever, the business of the players, who present the play for the pleasure of audiences, is only with the comedy, and not with the possibilities beyond it, and Mrs. Drew's company as a whole performed • it very acceptably, indeed. As Beatrice, Mrs. Drew acted with all the charming impertinence, fire, and najolery which she so well knows when and where to best employ. In this class of character she has always excelled. Her voice, which is deficient in the tragic requirements of depth and passion, is admirably suited for those light and ever -varying intonations which give so fine and captivating a meaning to every sly, insinu- • sung passage. All the expressions which comedy requires, all the thousand little gestures and looks she has at her absolute command, employing them with a nicety which paints every color and shade of the author's meaning Correctly. In the marriage scene, where Hero is rejected by Claudio, and Bea trice has but little to do but to remain quiet and to look by turns sympathetic and defiant, Mrs. Drew was as attentive to these requirements as to those which marked her tournaments with Benedick,.never relaxing for one instant in her consolations to Hera or her indignant confrontment of Claudio. Miss Annie Graham was a respectable Hero. 31r. James Carden is not the very best Benedick in the , world. He seems a trifle too heavy and phleg matic for that character. He should nom, indeed, be light and frivolous, but he should be alert and brisk. Benedick's witticisms are good matches for those of Beatrice, and if he Is not as nimble and sprightly as she, he need not be lagging and un couth. In the few passages where fervent expression was tube made, and inhischallenge to Claudio, Mr. Carden was 'very good, his voice and his bearing impressively sustaining the seriousness of his busi ness. Mr. Robert Craig made a young-looking and modest Claudio. 14Ir. Griffiths was positively amu.- sing as Bayberry, and Mr. Stuart Robson, although he had scarce anything to. say,, was superlatively so as Verges. His make-up was a perfect disguise, and the quiet manner in which he rendered the hopeless ly stupid character was very funny throughout. The play was handsomely placed upon the stage and .passed off very smoothly.',At its conclusion Mrs. Drew enjoyed the habitual honor of a call befere' the curtain. - In this connection we take pleasure In referrinps.to the . b4autifill interior of the theatre, and 'tc. "thii chasteness and good taste which mark all tbli deCo: rations. . • „... . . "The Rivals will be played to-algitt.witk . Draw go Lydia Languish; „ • av j 'p good av'ge good av'ge good good Irege good good ale avg . ° avge av ge nt B.‘" ar.ge ar•ge av'go good Tr ga -04 vigo 32 good good ar ge avige SU. av;fie good av_'ge good av'ge av'ge 55' 5i good e 3 # g - ood ge WAralVT.Erairirr TELICA'rtm.--Mr. Edir,in Booth's engagement at thil theatre has been ft higitly cessfnl one. Indeed, it could hardly fall to be se, the large audiences which assemble each evening Mug attiaCteo by his able and intelligent perform. anew. Last night, Mr. Booth enacted thcr part of kick:lieu in an affective manner to a crowded,. house, Mrs. Alexhus Fisher Baker appearing- are Julie de Morfernar. The afterciece was "The' Muhl With the Milking PaV," a and amusing co , - medietta. The same bill will be• repeated Mitt evening. CHSSTIWT-EITRUT THEATRE. -• The* gorgeous spectacle of ".Adaddin," which has had niche. 61114 Dant run, is now in its last week. Next Mondar willbe the commencement of the fall and winter -season, when the popular drama of "The Sea or Ice "will be produced. Trim NEVI Yorne OPERA-SEASON began last night at the Acadeniy of Music with . the performance of "Faust," by the German Company under theme nagement of Mr. Grover. Polblicatians Received. Frerif:W. B. Zieber, 106 South Third street (who. has the honk on sale), "The National Banks - of - the • United . States," published at the office of the Bankers' Magazine, New York. This contain; in , fall, the National Bank Act of 1864, with an analysis Of each section ; an alphabetical Index to snbjects in the Act ; a list of 461 National Banks in opera. • Lion, June, 1864; the names of Presidents and Cashiers, with capital, and the Gold Act of Tune, DIM It is also interleaved for memoranda. From Dlr. Zieber we . &lad have the September • number of the United States Service 'Magazine, edited by ProfessorCoppde, and published by Chas. It.Bichardson, New York. It contains biographies of Generals W. T.. Sherman and Alexander Hays, and, among other articiee, well-written papers on the Militia, the Naval Hospital Establishment, and the Invalids 7 -a French institution commenced by Philip Aughstus, revived by Henri 111., favored• by Henri IV., and extended by their successors, in- eluding the Napoleon dynasty. The official intelligence, which concludes each number, is a valuable portion of - thts magazine. It am braces the Army, Navy, Marines, and Volunteer Navy, and will be found useful in coming time for reference. We notice, under the• military section* an amusing blunder of the authorities at Washing ton. Under the head "To be Recommended for Dismissal," official notice is given to a certain Cap tain of the U. S. Infantry, reported for absence -without leave. Having some doubt whether a man• could be recommended for punishment and diagram, we looked into Worcester's Dictionary, where " commended" is set down as a participle of the verb active "to recommend," which means "to commend or praise to another; to declare worthy of esteem, . trust, or favor;. to make or render acceptable ;to commit with prayers; to commend." Therefore, the notice-writer in the Adjutant General's office blunders when he "recommends "—that is, when he commends with praise to the President an officer to 'be punished with- disthissal, for absence without leave. A man may be recommended for promotion. reward, or honor, but surely not for degradation, dis missal, or disgrace. From Ashmead" & Evans, Chestnut street, three new publications by G. W. Carleton, New York. The first is "Centeola, and. other Tales," by the author of "Green FLountain Boys." There are six tales here, the first and longest - of which gives its name to the volume, and is an ingenious story of the early race who founded the Aztec Empire. Of the shorter tales, the best are "The Starving. Settlers " and "The Rustic Financiers." The scene of " Victoire," a novel, shifts • front Europe to America and back again. The- plot is intricate, but not involved, and the author (a lady, we suspect) sketches society in the- New and Old World- with a free pen, which evidently owes its facility to observation and experience. Some weeks ago, we copied in full, from . the &he meals, the first extended London review- of "The Cruise of the Alabama and. the- Sumpter, frOas the privnte journalsimd other.papers of Commander R. Semmes, 0. S. N.; and ether officers." . The work has been repUblished at-New York, by Mr. Carleton, and fully deserves-the bad: character the Athenceune gave it as . a half-Confession, half-brag of aheartlesa and impudent pirate and scoundrel. •The perusal of this book, relating Semites' buccaneering adven tures from the time he turned traitor, early in 1661, to the defeat and deEtinction of the Alabama, will undeceive all who fondly fancied that there was even the shadow of chivalry in his thoughts or ac• tions. A common housebreaker has. nobler feelings than Semmes indicates as possessing. The book deserves to be read, as showing what sot of a champion "the sunny South's is proud of. His por trait, given here, would properly - grace the next edition of the Newgate Calendar as a suitable frontispiece. It exhibits the features of a thorough bully, who never fought of his own free will, but at tacked feeble and defenceless foes, and showed "a clean pair of heels" wherf threatened to be met and matched by equal force. It is. singular that, in this journal, Semmes never once mentions the year. His- English editor is equally inexact as to dates, for giving Mr. Laird's Speech in Parliament on the Alabama, he merely says it was delivered "on Friday night." The appendix, also, contain the correspondence respecting the British seizure of the Tuscaloosa, late the Conrad of Philadelphia, in Simon's Bay, and her subsequent restoration to Semmes. •-The letters of Mr. Graham, United States consul at the Cape of Good ]lops, which had very nearly caused the restoration of that vessel to its owners here, show zeal tempered with discretion, and a great deal of reasoning ability. We have the new'number of the Philadelphia Pho tographer. It contains the usual variety of practical information about what is at once a science and an .art, and ii_very charming landscape photograph by Mz' John Moran. f r - - From Septimus Winner, music-publisher, we have two of his own patriotic songs, viz: " Our- Flag o'er Georgia floats again," -with a rattling chorus, which we cordially recommend. The other, "Oar Nation calls for Peace again," is much inferior ; the sentiment of the last chorus, ixpressed In the lines If gentle words cannot prevail, It must be conquered by the sword, rescues it from being characterized as having a copper tinge. It is not actually essential, we be lieve, that there should be reasoiras well as rhyme in a song, but there ought to.be grammar. In the lines Ye roatiepB of the sunny South, How sad to see thy many graves, And ob, ye silent rivers. now How many lie beneath thy waves,, there Is a six gular confusion of plurals and singu lars—a breaking of Priscian's head which is almost Sufficient to make the bones of Lindley. Murray rattle in their coffin. Lemon Poerrivn SALR of Boors, SROXB, BRO. GARB, ARMY GOODS, TRAVELLING BAGS, &G.—The early attention of purchasers is requested to the large assortment of boots, shoes, brogans, travelling bags, &0., &c., embracing samples of 1,100 packages of firstolass seasonable goods, of city and Eastern manufacture, to be peremptorily sold by catalogue, on four months' credit, commencing this morning at 10 o'clock, by John B. Myers & Co., auctioneers, Nos 232 and. 234 Market street. LAMM; SALE TO-DAY—COAL LANDS, CITY Pao- PEATY, STOOES, Pc..o.—See Thomas & Sons' adver tisements and pamphlet catalogues. Sale bn the premises, Germantown, Thursday. SCIENCE AND ART. Nuremberg promises a monument to Stone- I wall Jackson. The way in which Nuremberg has come to promise it Is rather curious. A young man from Nuremberg, named Yolk, emigrated to Ame rica as journeyman cooper. After arriving there his early passion for art grew stronger; he made sketches for illustrated papers, and gradually .be came a, self-taught artist. The war Sound him at Baltimore, whence he wandered South, and was en gaged as tidraughtsman on the staff of one of the Southern generals. Re made a bust; of Stonewall Jackson from a mask which he took from the dead face ; and when the monument was pat up to com petition by the . Southern Government the young German artist won the prize. But even then he had to find means - for executing his work, and for this' he ran a ship laden with cotton through the blockade and brought it to Europe, where the sale of cotton gave him the lands required. He is now at work on the monument, which represents the General on horseback, a fine Arabian steed from Stuttgart serving as a model for the horse ; Jack son's left hand holding the reins, his right resting calmly on his hip, and his whole bearing character ized by native boldness and energy. Sir Roderick Murchison has been Informed that a fall of manna has recently taken place in Asia Minor. This mansals a lichen which is formed in the steppes of the Knrghis, and is often carried ..in these Jails far to the west, across the Oaspian.f. The grains, which are always perfectly detached,'. 'have ranch of the form of a raspberry or mulberry, and are found frequently to be attached to a stony support of granite, sandstone, and lime. Thie manna is ground into flour, and baked into bread, -and is khown among the Parks by the name . 01 kerdertboghdasi, which means wonder-corn, or grain. The aggnosa,te area of the five chief _coal fields of the Ame eau continent amounts, by careful esti mates based on the latest surveys and the best geo logical maps, to over 200,090 square miles ; a surface greater by about twenty times than the sum of all the coal fields of Europe, or, indeed, of the whole Eastern world. Gunpowder is proposed in England, to consist of 48 parts of chlorate of-potash, 38 parts of ferro cyanide of potassium, and 5 parts of sulphur. The ingredients, after being first pulverized, are mixed into.a.paate.with water; when dry, about ten parts of caoutchoue are added, and the compound is com plete. LITERARY. THE PLOT OF "ENOOH Aanay."—lt Is notaens. rally known that Mr. Tennyson is indebted to Kr- Thomas Woolner, the-sculptor, and the author of a recently-published volume of pleasant poems for the story and the plot of " Enoch Arden." Mr. Woolner was a guest at Farringford, the laureate's home in the Isle of Wight, and told the story as having, in the main,actually occurred. The poet was struck with the simple yet startling narrative, and determined to make it the groundwork of the poem which has just appeared. The number of the iirst edition has been variously stated, but we are, enabled to give it correctly. It appears that seven teen thousand copies were struck off" as the first int pression,.and the whole of these were delivered to the trade in two days. A second impression of tin thousand copies was then_ struck oft.—London Re view. A Commis STO.F.T.—The Gazzeta di Venezla is answerable for the following story : About a mile from Cavarzere the Marquis Flails has some.land, part of which he wanted to turn Into a rice field. In order to get the necessary humidity for the soil enclosed, a stream of water was secured from the river..A.clige by means of a. cylindrical syphon forty five metres long, with seven metres of asc.vosional, elevation, and a diameter offorty centimetres. It , worked well whenever required to do so,and such was exactly the case on the sth of August, at atlent. three o'clock in the afternoon. I report the time, because I find it stated in the organ of. Venice, which must have its Austria's reasons for being so very particular. Well, while the azehed water-carrier 'was thus on duty three -boys were bathing in the river, when to one of them, 'Gio vanni Boetio di. Angela, twelve years old, broad shouldered, and of. Roman Catholic religion, was seen to disappear suddenly, . His fellow.urchins (who were not otherwise described, from their hein,g, I guess, too knell for being Lacked, in brainier the syphon or the Gazzeta) seeing him' gone, began to ry and the moat pitifcXy, when who should re appear on the bank but. Angelo himself, "singing cheerfully," the syphon having given him up again all right on the ricollehl ! IT is commonly said that Admiral Farrespie L 2 the first commander on record who, during ahatille, stationed himself in - the masthead. This isa popu lar error; and it b but simple Justice to itata.that it is claimed for. General IldoClellan that, during the battle of Malvern Bill, he occupied:a:similar position on one'of the gunbilats:on the .latnes river. [See testimony befote QOM/Otte° i4ll(JOrtdact QE AID Ww^-1 • ---: