110auttribttri elittrOttlier 41140 gaper---poottb to Politics, Agriculture, fittraturt, science, Art, foreign, Postai( nob Quad jutelligena tcr. ESTABLISHED IN 1813. THE WAYNESBURG MESSENGER, PUBLISHED BY JONES & XENNINGS, WAYNESBURG, GREENE COIINTY, PA IP 21181/tat it SUBSCRIPTIGN.—C 50 in advance; $1 75 at the ex• plmtion of six months; $2 00 within the year; $2 50 after the expiration of the year. • ADVERTISEMENTS inserted at $l.OO per square for three insertions, and 25 cents a square for each addition al insertion; (ten lines or less ermined a square.) tV' A liberal deduction made to yearly advertisers. Ur' J OB PRINTING. of all kinds, executed in the bes style, and on reasonable terms, at the "Messenger" Job office. Ur Publication Rooms on east Main street, nearly opposite the Court Meuse Square. c ichtt tiottrp. "THE GREAT HAVE FALLEN FROM US ONE BY ONE." BY R. STOCKETT MATHEWS No great men in a land of arts ! No statesmen in the midst of law ! It cannot be; there must be hearts Which still hold History in awe ! If recreant to their holy trust, And deaf to lofty calls of fame, Some voice would speak from saintly dust, And wake them to their country's shame! Our own—above all prize supreme, A freedom won by common blood ! The patriot's fact—the poet's dream'--- The highest reach of human good ! A nation in the largest light, Whose codes of earth and heaven blend, To sanctity the ruler's might, And make the law the poor man's friend ! She must own some one yet unheard, Whose will may bid the tempest "Cease," To speak some just, commanding word, Fraught with the very balm of peace ! Some earnest mind, as fair, as broad, As ever shaped the ages past, Strong by communing oft With God, And in his mould of wisdom cast ! Some man, undwarfed by selfish life, Born from the•travail of the times, Alien to mean, belittling strife, And pure from party's nameless crimes— Whose heart recoils from small intrigue, Nor seeks applauses of the hour, Who'll dare bring right and truth in league, With all the enginery of power. Is there not one, whose large eyes scan The perils of the madman's game, Who'll dare to work for future man, And leave his recompense to Fame 7 Who'll stand a PentroT,hrave, and grand, Self-poised, the maker of his fate, And thunder through the reeling land, THE UNION IS THE ONLY STATE —Baltimore American. Elisatincous gealfing. Infirmities of the Great. Handel, Milton, and Deltic: were blind ; Lucretius, Tasso, Swift, Cowper, Rosseru, ana Chatterton, are melancholy cases of insanity. Richelieu had occasional attacks of in sanity, in which he fancied himself a horse; he would prance around the billiard table, neighing, kicking out his servants,• and making a great noise, until, exhausted by fatigue, he suffered himself to be put to bed and well covered. On awaking, he remembered nothing that had passed. Shelly had hallucinations. Benardin St. Pierre, while writing one of his works • was 'attacked by a strange illness.'— Lights flashed before his eyes; objects appeared double and in motion ; he imag ined all the passers by to be his enemies.— Heine died of a chronic disease of the spine. Metastatio early suffered from nervous affections. MeHere was liable to convulsions.— Paganini was cataleptic at tour years old. Mozart died of water on the brain.— Beethoven was btzatre, irritable, hypo chondriacal. Doninzetti died in an asy lum. Chatterton and Gilbert committed suicide. Chateaubriand was troubled with suicidal thoughts ; and George Sand con fesses to the same. Sophocles was accus ed of imbecility by his son, hut this was after he was eighty. Pope was deformed, and, according to Atterbury, he had mensa curvy in eurpore curvo. He believed that he once saw an arm ;fro- jetting from the wall of his room. Cromwell had fits of hypochondria.— Dr. Fiancis was unequivocally insane.— Dr. Johnston was hypochondriacal, and de clared that he once heard his mother call to him 'Samuel !' when she was many miles distant. Rosseau was certainly in- sane. St. Simon is said to have commit ted suicide under circumstances indica ting insanity. Fourier passed his lite in a continual hallucination. Carden, Swe denborg, Lavater, Zimmermann, Mahom et, Van Helmont, Loyola, St. Francis Xavier, St. Dominic, all had visions. Even Luthur had his hallucinations ; Satan fre quently appeared, not only to have ink stands thrown at his sophistical head, but p 9 get into the reformer's bed and lie be side him. Jeanne D'Arc gloried in her celestial .visions. A Romantic Adventure. A very romantic adventure is related in the New York papers. A young girl of thirteen years, of respectable parentage in the city of Dublin, Ireland, fell in love with a ycuth of seventeen, of the same place. lie came to America in the capac ity of a ship carpenter. She followed, in search of him. Her subsequent history is thus told in the New York Journal of Com merce of : Saturday : She shipped as cabin boy on board of a vessel at Liverpool, and made several voyages it. that capacity. After spending two years in this way, she shipped as a deck hand cm hoard the ship Resolute, in which vessel she made ur.r last voyage, but had never succeeded in finding her lover. Daring these three years her sex was not discovered, and probably would not have been for some time hence, nad she not re fused to treat, the second tittle, a party of sailors with whom she was drinking at the Water Street Saloon on ThursOsirAssen fag. One of these men becomin g angry k her retasal, struck her in tte breast, and . - inmenqately suspected bet of beings fs. ECZI male. He accused her of being such, and he, as well as some of the others, express ed their determination to ascertain whether or not the suspicion was correct. She screamed for help, and a policeman came in and hearing the story, took her to the station house, where she made the above narrative. Yesterday morning she was brought before Justice Kelly, who commit ted her for the present to the care of Miss Foster, matron of the City Prison. The girl is quite intelligent, and, strange as it may seem, exhibits evidence of refinement. She states that she has no relatives in this country," A Melancholy End A young man named Pratt. about eigh teen years of age, and Miss Vanderworker, only sixteen years old, who were uncle and niece, eloped from Rome, in June last, and went to New Ashford, Berk shire county, Massachusetts, about ten miles from Pittsfield, where they were married. 'A horrible tragedy, the re— sult of this early clandestine marriage, occurred in that village on Monday last.— The father of the girl, who had learned of their whereabouts, started in pursuit of the couple, acd arrived in New Ashford on the fatal day, declaring he would have his daughter. She saw him coming to the house, and went up stairs, and in five minutes afterwards the youthful and mis guided couple were found with their throats cut, and so closely clasped in each other's arms, that three men could scarce ly separate them. The girl died immedi ately, and the husband lingers with little prospect of recovery. Shocking Death of a Lady The wife of Dr. Brodhurst, a London physician, has met death in much the same horrible manner as the wire of Professor Longfellow. The doctor left her writing a note in the drawing room, but was re called by loud cries of " I'm on lire!"- He rushed down and found his wife in the middle of the drawing-room, enveloped in flames. Her clothes were entirely consum ed, and the furniture near her was on fire. She had on a white muslin aress. She did not seem to have lost her presence of mind, for she requested the rug to be roll ed around her, and the bell to be rung for the servants, which he did, and extinguish ed the flames about the upper part of her person. Immediately the bell was rung, three servants rushed in, and he believed the reason of their being so near the door was because his wife had rung the bell be fore for prayers. Unfortunately, she had one of those crinolines made of steel hoops. Every means was tried to extinguish the fire about and under the hoops with the sofa cushions and °ther things at hand.— He also knelt on and tried to compress and break them, for the purpose of putting the fire out, but all without avail, and they had to be cut off before they could be ex tinguished. She had been writing with a candle by her side, which had burnt down in the sccket, and he believed she had tried to teach an envolope from the case when the light caught her muslin sleeve. Rev. Dr, Spring's Marriage The recent marriage of Rev. Dr. Spring is alluded to as follows by the New York correspondent of the Boston Journal:— Some time since I wrote you of the pro posed marriage of Rev. Dr. Spring. • The event came oft• in the chapel of the Brick Church on Thursday last, in the presence of a small cqmpany of visitors. The af fair has created much talk. The Doctor is well on to eighty. He is quite rm and his sight is poor. The lady bri is five, and is a maiden. Mrs. Spring has not been dead quite a year, and in New York it is regarded as quite an impropriety for a widower not to wait at least one year. In this marriage quite a little romance is blended. The lady has a fortune ofs3oo, 000 in her own right. She has long re sided with her uncle, one of the most be— nevolent men in the city, and the lady is reported to say that it has always been her great desire to become Mrs. Gardner Spring. The bride and bridegroom left the chapel and at once proceeded to the cars for a bridal trip to Niagara Falls, both seeming in need of assistance and help, although the bride was sprightly for one of her years. A Fact for Business Melt If you wish to sell more goods this year than you ever did before, advertise more. The unparalelled success of those men. chants and traders who have kept their business and their goods before the people is a lesson not to be disregarded by any one who depends upon public patronage for a living. The best customers are those who find out what they want before they leave home, and these are the ones who invariably look in the newspaper to see where the article is to be found. If you want anything whatever that you do not know . where to find, or do not choose to run after, advertise your wants, and ninety,nine times in a hundred you will be gladly served at your door,, far cheaper and Netter than by any other known pro. cess. The newspaper is the established medium of exchange between mind and mind, in regard to nearly all the wants of life, and its usefulness is rapidly extend ing among all classes. Every body reads the newspaper, rich and poor, high and low—and no part of the paper gives so fresh, voried and comprehensive pictures of the age as the advertisements. Union Volunteers Shot Two Union volunteers, named J. H. Debolt and F. Brooks, residents respect ively et Masontown and New Salem, Fayette county, were shot the other day while returning from Bidltown, in North- Western Virginia, whither they had been with despatches for the commander of the federal troops at that point. It appears that on their return from Bullies n, they were fired upon by a party of secessionists, concealed in the woods, Debolt received two bullets, one in the head and the oth er in the back. He had sufficient strength to shout to Brooks to avenge his death, and then dropping from his horse expired. The horse was also shot, and fell dead near where his meter lay. Brooks re ceived two wounds, one in the side and the other in the shoulder, but succeeded in making his way to camp on horseback.— He was not, at last accounts wetted to recover. A detachment was sent from the camp to the scene of the attack, sad Dei bok'A. body recovered. lt was sent to Varna"r W. tObrfes ter int. WAYNESBURG, PA., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1861. Something about the Rebel Generals Some particulars, in the nature of a biographical notice, of the rebel Generals, will be of interest just now. General Sam uel Cooper is the senior officer. This gen tleman was born in Delaware county, New York, and was sent to the Military Acade my, where he graduated in 1817. He was soon placed on staff duty, generally at Washington; was Military Secretary of Mr. Poinsett; Chief Clerk of the War De- ' partment, then Aid to General McComb, General-in-Chief of the army, and subse quently an Assistant Adjutant General. in this bureau, by personal and political in fleence, he went through the various grades till, on the death of General Roger Jones, he became Adjutant General, which place he resigned last spring. General Cooper married Miss Mason, a sister of ex-Sena. for Mason, of Virginia. His son-in-law, Frank Wheaton, now Colonel of the Sec. and Rhode Island Regiment, was appoint. ed a Lieutenant in the First Cavalry, where he remained until transferred as above. General Cooper never saw a bat tle, and, except for a few months forty-five years since, never had the actual command of a man, much less an army. Generals Johnston and Lee had a regu lar military education, and most of the lat ter's service in our army was in a staff po sition, and he never has had an important command. He is a Virginian by birth, and an accomplished man. He married Miss Custis, the only child of the late George W. P. Custis. She inherited from her father Arlington, opposite Washington. and also other extensive plantations on the Rappahannock River. Mrs. Lee is in lA vor of the Union, and was, a few weeks since, residing, almost unknown, in Wash. ington. Gen. Johnston held a stall aps pointment as_paymaster for some time, and was one of Ire army for several years.— His battle record, except in a subordinate capacity, is yet to be made. He and Gen. Lee were always deemed efficient and in. telligent officers, but never ranked above many of their associates. Gen. Beauregard graduated second in his class, and became a brevet second lieutenant of engineers, rising to a cap taincy, which he held when he resigned. Passim, we remark that Rufus King, of Wisconsin, a native of New York, and George W. Merril, of Cooperstown, both teported appointed Brigadier Generals in our service, each graduated first at the Point. Gen. B. was never considered su perior or the equal even of Major Barnard, Captains Benham, Frazer, and other offi cers of the engineer corps. His experi ence was in Mexico as an engineer officer on a general's staff. The duties are sim ply to direct and construct fortifications, batteries, &c., and have no more connec tion with the disposition or handling of troops in the field than belongs to the du. ties of the medical staff or the chaplain.— At Bull Run he had an opportunity to show his engineering ability in erecting masked batteries and other works, and then fought the battle. At half , past three o'clock he was defeated by our forces, and itrould have fallen back on Manassas or. Richmond but for the appearance of General John ston with 4,000 fresh troops. This was Gen. B.'s first battle. Its results, while he alone was responsible, do not warrant the high encumiuins passed on. him. Reminces of •Geu. Lyon We rind the following in the Sr Louis Democrat:—'Physically, General Lyon was one of those hardy, wiry men, that cuuld undergo any amount of fatigue.— He possed an iron will, and he was a man at indomitable perseverance. He never knew what tear was. He cared Ititle for himself, all for his country. At a time when it was asked by some of the press, 'who is Gen. Lyon 1' a friend wrote to him requesting him to give the principal events in his history in order to answer the inqui• ry. •That is of no consequence,' answer ed Lyon ; 'for myself I care nothing, but if 1 can be instrumental in putting down this wicked rebellion, I shall be perfectly satis fied. From a letter written by the General to his cousin, dated Springfield, July 21st, ten days before the tattle, lam permitted the following extract. It gives his views of the Manassas retreat, and the deep anxiety which filled his mind in regard to his own critical situation is indicated. He says: 'We are deeply grieved over the retreat of our forces at Manassas, It our people shall learn from this a little more modera tion, and substitute a little resolution for the overweening confidence in which they have too much indulged, this defeat will have its benefits. I have been compelled to remain quiet here for want of supplies to move, and I tear the enemy may become emboldened by our want of activity'! I have constant rumors of a very large force below, and of threats to attack us with over whelming numbers. I should have a much larger force than I have, and be much bet , ter supplied.' " How The Springfield Girls Wel- coined their Volunteers Home In noticing the return of the Springfield companies frotn the First and Second Ohio, the Springfield News says : The incinents of this occasion were varied and rich. Will Sykes came into the supper room in advance of his comrades. A little woman we took to be his mother charged upon him at once, capturing him without difficulty, and bore him off, danc— ing with delight at the conquest. We watched "Will's" contact with his young lady friends with some interest At first they shook his hands, but one lair young charmer, had spunk enough to smack him outright, and then the others pitched In and did likewise. "Will" stood it like a soldier. After the girls got in the way of kissing, it was an easy matter for them to put the tiest of the boys through, The greeting.; were peculiar and im pressive. Bill Thomas was greeted with —"God' bless you all over." Others— t•God bless every hair of your head," &c., &c. Captain David King was nearly pulled in pieces by the ladies,—but we believe he is , •aboet" by this time. If he don't like such treatment, he masa% be so good. looking. "That's what's the matter." A Gallant Irish Brigade, We learn from the best authority, says the New York "Tribune," that a new -Ir ish Brigade, 5,000 strong at least, is to be immediate organized in this city, the command of which wilj be tendered to Gen. James Shields. The lat Regiment of thethrigade is now forming under the gallant Lieut.-Col. Robert Nugent, of the 69th, and will be known as the 69th Vol unteers. Already companies from Phila delphia, Boston, Cleveland, and other cit.. ies have pledged themselves 'to press for ward in this new and brilliant movement, which speaks volumes for the generous loyalty and unconquerable spirit of our adopted citizens. The Irish spirit of the North is fairly aroused, and thousands are ready to obliterate the sad memories of the first engagement in which the green flag waved gloriously beside the Stars and Stripes. In view of this organization, Captain Thomas Francis Meagher will de cline ;the high position offered him by Major-Gen. Fremont, and once more take his place in the ranks of his gallant and devoted regiment. The Rebels Withdrawing The War Department has information which leads to the belief that the rebels have withdrawn a mile beyond Fairfax Court House, leaving only pickets in the village. The movement was made with such precipitation—it is said some of the sick died on the way—as to lead some to infer fright as the cause. More probably it was intended either to lure us within some• ambuscades, or, preliminary to a concentration of their forces on other points. It is reported that the rebel force at Leesburg is increasing, and consists of several thousand men, supported by artil lery. Gep. Banks is near enough, how ever, to present serious shot•and-shell obstacles to crossing, even if the river were fordable, which will not be for a day or two yet. Another Fight in Roane County. A gentleman who arrived at Wheeling on Wednesday from Roane county, brings intelligence of another fight between the Union men and secessionists, at Spencer, the county seat. The Union men again took refuge in the Court House, and maintained their position, the rebels again abandoning the idea of capturing or kill ing them, as an undertaking of a little too dangerous character. Two of the seceshes were killed. For the Blockade Thirteen vessels, seven of them steam— ers, carrying 2,000 men, are expected home within forty or fifty days, and will be added to the blockading force. The Brazil squadron, the frigate Congress and another is expected daily. The Atrican squadron, three vessels, one the Mohican, equal to the Iroquois, should be here early in Sep tember. The China squadron a month later. Escape of Prisoners from Richmond Capt. DeGolyer, of company F. Fourth Michigan regiment, and Assistant Quar termaster Henry C. Jenckes, of the Sec ond Rhode Island regiment, escaped from the military prison in Richmond, on 'Tues day, the 13th instant. From the escaped officers we give many interesting particu lars of their fellow prisoners in this room. They say the Hon. Mr. Ely bears his con finement with equanimity, and that Col. Corcoran is well, and was not wounded at all in the engagement. ( :apt. John Dow ney, of the Fire Zouaves, (reported killed,) is there uninjured and in good health.— Col. Wilcox is slightly wounded, but do ing well. Mr. Alvin Huson, of Roches ter, New York, is in good health. The Confederate papers claim that they have, as prisoners, two members of Congress. They probably count on Mr. Huson as one. The prisoners are fed on fresh beet, (gen erally boiled,) and wheat bread, with an allowance of bread every other day. Every fine afternoon there is a crowd of visitors, male and female, "to see the Yan kees." This exhibition the prisoners play fully allude to as "stirring up the animals." Many of these visitors would no doubt treat the prisoners with kindness if they dared do so. Amongst others who visited the prisoners was ex-Senator Wigr,fall.— He said if their government choosed, they (the prisoners) might all be exchanged.— "It;" said he, "they want to fight us as Christians, we will fight them as Chris tians, but if as Camanches, we will fight them as Camanches." The officers of the prison and the surgeons acknowledge their loss at Bull Run in killed and wound ed to have been greater than ours. They claim to have one thousand three hundred Federal prisoners at Richmond, of whom two hundred and fifty are wounded. We have already stated that among these pris oners are about sixty officers. Capt. Todd, said to be a brother-in-law of Pres ident Lincoln, is in charge'of the prisoners, and they allege that he is very harsh and unaccommodating, but they speak in the warmest terms of the kindness of Major Winder and other Confederate officers. More Secession Women Arres- ted Mrs. Greenhow, a widow lady well known in Washington, was arrested by the provost guard of Brigadier General Portor on Sunday. Her secession pro clivities have long been the subject of popular conversation. Mr; Greenhow died in California in 1844 or '45. He was twenty years ago employed as librarian and translator in the State Dedartment here. Afterwards he was translator for the commission of private land claims in California, where he was accidentally killed. Also Mrs. Philips, wife of a for mer member of Congress from Alabama. Both are fashionable women, of a bold type of character, with rebel affinities, and are accused of carrying on treasonable correspondence, telling the enemy about our forces, fortffications,showing our-weak points, and exaggerating everything in their favor, and enjoying intimate person's al and epistolary relations with them.— One of these women, who:are under guard at their homes, with the family who refuse to leave them, boasts of her imprisonment, and glls from windows to passers by that their t "is a free country." There is a re port that Mrs. Senator Gwin has been ar— rested. Inquiry assures us, says a Tribune dispatch, that neither she nar Mrs. Slidell is in Washington. Mrs. Gwinn is at West point, where it is presumed she is still waving the magic wand by which two cadets were estranged from their alles glance two months since, Mrs. Gwin's trunk, ordered to go on, was examined, and plans of the fortifications at the chain Bridge on the other side of the Potomac, traced on paper by some clerk in the Wad Department. woman fresh tram Bean', regards headquarters, was arrested while passing through our lines into Alexandria. She manifested great indignation, claiming that, as a lady, she was exempt from ar rest. An Irishwoman of one of the regi ment searched her and found, among her underclothes, some twenty letters address ed to and implicating prominent citizens in Washington and Alexandria. She was sent to headquarters. Another Arrest in Philadelphia. On Saturday 'afternoon another arrest was made in Philadelphia by the United States Marshall. The prisoner is one Samuel Eaken, an agent of the rebels.— The •'lnquirer" says :—"Mr. Eakin is known to be a very ingenious man, and an extensive pattentee; but we are not at liberty to say for what he rias been arrested. Eaken acknowledged that he lived on Palmer Street, between Richmond and Queen, and his house be ing searched, a large quantity of papers, about $l,OOO in money found, a coif of tel. egraph wire for field purposes in blowing up fort, field batteries, &c. ; a pass over the East Tennnessee and Georgia Railroad, and charging the passage of himself and freight to the Government of the Conted erate States. Eaken is apparently about forty years of age, has a dark complexion, black hair and black whiskers, and was very well dressed. Eaken came to this city on Saturday week. He is an accom plished gentleman —a chemist and a tele grapher. [From the discription given, we believe that the Eaken above alluded to, was, some yaars since, a resident of this city, and was well known, and generally respected here.—Catofr.] The Arrest of Mayo rret. The telegraph has alreaWntormed us of J. G. Berret, Mayor of Washington city, and of his having been taken to Fort Laytayette. His arrest produced consid erable excitement but no surprise, it hav ing been previously expected. He had been made, ex qffi el"), a member of the new Board of Police Commissioners, and on entering into office it was necessary for him to take the oath of allegiance to the goy-. ernment. This he refused to do, on the sole ground, as alleged by him, that hav ing been made an ex officio member of the Board, it. was not necessary, as the same oath which he took when elected Mayor applied to all cases in which he was called upon to setve the public. The govern ment, however, did not seem to under. stand the punctilio, and ordered his ar rest, and on Sunday he was conveyed to Fort Layfayette by order of Secretary Camaron. Before leaving Washington the officers searched his residence, but nothing was found to implicate him with the rebels. lie claims to be a strong Union man, and only refused to take the oath of allegiance from an empty assertion of dignity. In addition to the other charges against Mayor Berret, it is well known that he was a prominent member of the Na tional Volunteers, an exclusively rebel or ganization, and that he had organized the police exclusively of men of secession pro clivities, and when men were turned out of the day police on account of their dis— union sentiments, he immediately made places for them on the high police. Tennessee Threatening Kentucky. A letter from Georgetown, Kentucky, dated August 19th, says: "To-day, being our regular county court day, was selected by Col. Roger W. Hanson as an appropri , ate occasion for making a very inflamma tory and traitorous speech. His object was to stir up a hellish spirit ot war. He began with an attack upon the camp in Garrard county. He declared that, if those troops are not disbanded in thirty days, they will be put down at the point of the bayonet. He said he saw Governor Harris, of Tennessee, a few days ago, and that Harris declared that he should consid er it a violation of Kentucky's neutrality, and that Kentucky would have to meet 50,000 Tennessee troops in battle array it those camps are not speedily vacated.— Thirty days are given you, Union men ot Kentucky; use those thirty days to a good advanthge, or a civil war will confront us with all its horrors." A Belligerent, Mail Bag. In cleaning out "The Farmer and Ad vertiser" office in Bridgeport, Conn., a United States mail bag was fbund filled with papers addressed to leading Seces sionists in Alabama, Georgia and other Southern States, also some two hundred wooden billies, turned and furnished with strings for the wrists. These clubs were made from shovel handles, and were prob ably furnished by a secession shovel man ufacturer in Bridgeport. Some curious letters were also discovered, exposing the treason of politicians in Hartford and else where. One of the editors of The Farmer has gone to New Haven, threatening to issue his paper from the Register office to morrow.. Starvation in Memphis. Hunger begins to pinch the rebels in Tennessee. The Memphis "Avalanche" says that the destitution of the poor in that city- is daily on the increase. The sum donated to the wives and children of vol unteers by the county court is no longer paid. the a.nount, having been so much larger than was anticipated, emptied the treasury. The result is that those soldiers who enlisted, relying upon receiving the amount appropriated, now see their wives and children in an actual starving condi tion. Gone Over to the "Rebels. First Lieutenant Manning M. of the Second Cavalry, who was at Bull Run with a part of his regiment, has re signed his commission and accepted a Captaincy in the rebel cavalry in Missouri. He had the new commission before the battle. Two other officers in the same reg iment are suspected, and it is believed that they also have commissions from the rebels, which they are debating whether to accept or not. Oft with them. .wasselllMp',ooo,ooo. It in stated on reliable authority that an offer was lately made to Secretary Chase, on behalf of foreign bankers, to take $50,- 000,000 of the loan, provided the Govern ment would promise to pay the interest at E'rankfort-on-the-IkLsin. The Secretary, however, declined the offer, as he is con fident in the ability of the Government to maintain itself without asking the aid of foreign capital. Etbn of Ipt flag. fortress Monroe Items. FORTRESS M °NEM:, Aug. 23.—General's Wool and Butler have spent part of the day at the Rip Raps, experimenting with Sawyer's Gun. The second shell fired burst in the Confederate camp at Sewalls Point; broke down the flag staff and scat tered the rebels like chaff. A propeller, which was about landing troops at the Point, put back toward Norlfolk. The whole affair was witnessed from the New port News steamer. Grand reviews have to-day been held at Newport News and Camp Hamilton. Col. Wardsop has taken command of the Naval Brigade. The gun boat Seminole has arrived from the blockade off Charleston. She brought up as a prize the schooner Albion, formerly the Wilmington pilot boat, from Cardenas, with a cargo of sugar, coffee, fruits and segars. When taken she was sailing under English colors. The cap- , Lain and nearly all the hands were drunk. She had run the blockade off Wilming ton. The Seminole has overhauled several vessels showing English colors. She spoke to the Dale last night. She will coal and undergo repairs at Old Point. The blockading squadron off Charleston consists of the Ranoke and Vandalia. The recent gale on the coast was se , ve re. The Confederate prisoners who arrived here this morning from Baltimore will be sent to Norltolk in a few days• The propellor New York sailed to-day with nine prisoners for New York. Improved Condition of the Army WASHINGTON, August 23.—The con tinued improvement of the troops, in all re spects, is the subject of congratulation in the army, as well as the Executive quar ters. This result is mainly from strict discipline. The line of the upper Poto mac is now well guarded, and at the la test reliable accounts Gen. Banks was still resting on the Monocacy, The ad ministration of the oath 'of allegiance, as prescribed by the Act of Congress, was a matter of interest to the clerks in the Bureau of the Auditor of the Trealfury for the Post Office Department this morning. The Rebel Pickets—Union Men .elated— Civil War fit Kentucky 444. WASfiINGTON, August 27. The rebel pickets are reported to be nearer our fortifications across the liver than ever before. It is not believed that the rebels have now any design to attack. The Union men here are very much ela ted by the election of Wallach as Mayor, in place of Berritt. Mr. Wallach is a warm personal friend of the President, and an old line Whig. Amos .g.andall is removing his furniture from his country seat, near Wallhington, purposing to reside in Trenton, N. J. till the war closes. He is writing his life, and needs quiet. Private advices from Kentucky represent that State on the very verge of civil war. The Union men are ready. Capt. Keys was arrested at Chain Bridge this morning. He belongs to the District Troops There was an alarm at Chain Bridge last night, and the troops turned out in force. It proved false. Secretary of State, Seward left this morn ing for New York. W. Mayor Herret a Prisoner—Court House Fired by an Incendia- ry. Bimmotta, August 24.—Mayor Berrit, ofWashington, passed through as a pris oner this morning, destined for Fort Lay, fayette, in; New York harbor. The liialtimure county Court House, at Towsontown, was fired this morning by an incendiary. The record office was de stroyed, but the rest of the building esca ped. Arrest of an Officer in the Rebel Army PHILADELPHIA, August 26.—The police last night arrested Wm. Johnson,a nephew of Gen. Johnson, of the rebel army, and an officer in the same army. The prisoner has been in the city about two weeks, stop ping with a relative, and was arrested at the Pennsylvania Railroad depot, after he had purchased tickets for Louisville, Ky. He was brought with his baggage to the Central Station, where he was searched.— No commission was found on him, but in his trunk a number of letters were found, directed to parties in the Seceded States. Some of the letters mentioned the prisoner as an officer in the rebel army. He was sent to prison, and will have a hearing to day. Adams' Express Company Refuse to Carry Letters to the Rebels. WASHINGTON, August 20.—The Adams' Express Company having applied to the proper authorities for the construction to be placed on the President's Proclamaiion relating to the interdiction of commercial intercourse with the so called Contederate Slates, and learning that it was intended include letters, immediately issued orders to all their officers to cease receiving let ters without waiting for the expiration of the limit of time numbered in that docu. ment. It is not known what action, it any, has been taken by the letter express com panies on thissubject. Arrival of Mutineers—The Flag of Truce Dodge atc. FORTRESS MONROE, August 26.—The steamer Philadelphia has arrived from Washington with one hundred and fifty nine mutineers, sentenced to two years' imprisonment at the Tortugas. They have been sent temporarily to the Rip Raps.— A flag of truce arrived from Norfolk this morning with three ladies and a number of prisioners captured by the rebel priva teers. As the object of sending the 16. g of trice at this time was deemed ratherin quisitive, Gen. Wool decided to detain the flag until late La-morrow. It is high time that an end should be put to this constant intrusion of the enemy. Whenever they think any important movement is on foot here they are sure to be on hand with a flag of truce. Capt. Davis, the Provost Marshal, yesterday arrested the crew of the schooner Chitt, from New York. Gen. Wool sent tello the Rip Raps.— Seven spies have beealiffsested and placed in eon4nement. NEW SERIES-VOL. 3, NO. 13 PEN AND SCISSORS. GEN. MCCLELLAN.-Mr. Willis writes to the "Home Journal" that a distinguished civillian who had called upon Gen. Mc- Clellan on some matter, if inyortance, concluded his visit by a ^ire comment or two on the state of affairs, venturing a question, at last, as to wh at McClellan thought of our army's probable recovery from the late defeat. " I don't think," musingly replied the hero of Western Vir ginia, "that they will whip us again; but, it they do, there will be two men left dead on the field—l shall be one, and Lander will be the other." FRIGHTFUL ACCIDENT.-A frightful acci dent occurred the other day in Spring township, Crawford county, through which. a young man named Aaron Ward, son of a widow woman residing in Crossingville, lost his life. A number of young people from the neighborhood were enjoying themselves at a social pie-nic, and a swing which they had put up for the occasion having become entangled in some way, Ward undertook to ascend the tree from which it was suspended, fur the purpose of righting the rope. He had nearly reach ed the limb, when he lost his hold, and was precipitated to the ground below, a distance of some fifty feet. His skull was fractured by the fall, and his brains scat tered in every direction, to the unspeaka ble horror of his young associates, nearly all of whom were assembled around the tree, watching him make his ascent. De ceased was twenty-four years of age, and was highly esteemed as an industrious and promising young man. COL. BLACK'S REGIMENT.-A private let ter from Col. Black's regiment says:—"On our way through Baltimore, the pavements were lined with spectators, some of whom expressed their approbation, bat there was considerable underhand muttering, and some of our men who had rambled from the main body were insulted by the ladies (I), who called them Northern ragamuffins and Union hogs. There was one man shot dead last night, and one man hung up by the wrists. They belonged to Captain Holme's company. GEN. BuTuts.—A Washington corres pondent writes: 1 hear Gen. Butler is not particularly well pleased to be pent up in Fortress Monroe—says he has been keep. ing a "nigger boarding house for govern ment." GEN. HEINTZLEMAN. - Gen. Heintzle man, of Pennsylvania, has suffered a re lapse. The public will be ooncerned to hear that the wound on his arm threatens inflammation. GEN. LYON was unmarried. Re left three brothers and three sisters. CONGRESSMAN POTTER'S COMMITTEE re ported Friday to the Secretary of War the names of twelve disloyal clerks, and of not. a few disaffected army officers; to the Sec retary of the Treasury, the names of fifty one disloyal beyond doubt, and ten sus pected; to the Secretary of the Interior, twenty disloyal and seven who are sus pected. Similar reports wilt be sent to the other Secretaries this week. GEORGE D. PRENTICE, the editor of the Louisville Journal, is about to receive a handsome testimonial from the friends of Liberty, Constitution and the Laws, real-. dent in New York. The bold and fearless position taken by Mr. Prentice, in t:efence of the Union, against the fanatics of the South, has been the cause of much gratu lation in the North, and no where more than in New York. A HAPPY ESCAPE.—Mr. H. F. Eastman, of Rochester, New York, writes to his sis. ter that he has escaped from his forced ser vice in the "Prince William Cavalry," in the rebel army in Virginia, and has found shelter in Washington. He adds : "I de serted and am now here, bound to be re venged. I want to get upa company of as desperate fellows as ever looked down on the muzzle of a gun, and go right forward with the Federal army." GEN. FREMONT has been authorized to take and use the Illinois Ceffiral Railroad for military purposes. FINE PICKINGS:—The Philadelphia Ins quirer says that the contractors who fur nished blankets to the Government for our soldiers, have realized the handsome little profit of TWO HUNDRED THOUSAND DOLLARS ! And a cotrespondent of the Cincinnati Commercial states that one of the sons of Secretary Cameron is said to have made about $20,000 en a single horse con tract ! A LADY, Miss Arabella Smith, writes to the N. Y. Commercial her impressions of Washington society. She finds only one fault with Mr. Lincoln, viz : "He has not yet appreciated, socially, the position he has been called to occupy:: Of out Piasidentess, Arabella writes, "I saw Mrs. Lincoln, and I don't think, if.l had been the President's wile, I should - have dressed exactly as site did. But, then, tastes differ, or I should not have been a spinster at this da3 . And I wouldn't have talked _quite so freely, in a promiscuous crowd, about my husband's affairs, Mad am is a smart woman, however, with an in comitable spirit lurking behind her brigett eyes, and will not live four years in the White House, without making her than ence felt." INTERESTING TO LETTER WRlTERS.—Post master Walborn announces that, in accord. ante with instructions from the Depart , • ment, the period fixed, flir the redemption of the old envelopes having expired, let ters deposited in this office, under cover of the old issue, will nut be forwarded to their destination, but sent to the Dead Letter Office at Washington. MOVEMENT IN COTTON. — During the past week a large quantity a cotton arrived at New York from Providence R. 1., for the purpose of being shipped to Europe. This is owing, no bouht, to most of the factories iu Lowell being closed; and the price of cotton at presen is from 16 to 18 cents per lb. The stores in Providance are said to be full. Another Privateer Afloat. BOSTON,. August 27th.—The schooner Agricola, Capt. Herrick, arrived from Ells worth, Me., reports that on the :25th irrst., when 20 miles north-east of Cape Ansh, he was overhauled by the privateer schoos= . er Freely, of Charleston. Not wishing anything we had on board, the piratwiet us go, but wished to be reported at Boston.— The Freely is a clipper of about 140 tons, and bad 40 men on deck. 4 r -