'W c • Ai r - (\\ iv .0)4 41 ttL )_) ) )_/ ffi Afamiii VapermiWOW to Agriculture, fiteratut, Sfitilft, Art, fort*, Poutestic aaa Queral )uttifigtort, ESTABLISHED IN 1813. THE WAYNESBURG MESSENGER, PinsidslizT) B. W. JONES 6c JAMES S. JENNINGS, WAYNESBURG, GREENE a►., PA (D-ofrinics NEARLY OPPOSITE THE _ PUBLIC SQUARE. -al tt ill XII 121311113CRIFTION.-2i 50 in advance; SI 75 at the ex piration of six mouths; 22 00 within the year; $ 50 after the expiration of the year. ADVERTISEDIENTh inserted at !1 00 per square for three insertions, and 25 cents a square for each addition al insertion; )ten lines or less counted a square.) 117' A liberal deduction made to yearly advertisers. Joe PAINTINO. of all kinds, executed in the best style; and on reasonable terms, at the "Messenger'' ' Job offire. niquesburg Xiusiness Carbs. ATTORNEYS. A. A. FURMAN. .1 0. RITCHIE. PURMAN & RITCE{IE, ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELLOR:3 AT LAW, Waynesburg, Pa. IrrAll business in Greene, Washington, and Fay ette Counties, entrusted to them, will receive prompt attention. Sept. 11, IS6I-Iy. J. A. J. BUCHAN•N. WIN. C. LINDSEY. 131708ASTAN & LINDSEY, ATTORNEYS AND couNsELLeas AT LAW, Waynesburg. Pa. Office on the South side of Main street, in the Old Bank Building. Jan. I. lStl2. A. W. DOWN EY. SAMUEL MONTGOMERY. DOWNIST do 3VIONTGONZEB.Ir ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELLORS AT LAW, icr Office in I edwitlt's Building, opposite the Court House, Waynesburg, Pa. Y. A. M'CONSEI.I,. J. J. HUFFMAN. M'CONNELL Qi lEtri s rlitAN, 47'1'ORNEYS AND COUNSELLORS AT LAW Waynesburg, Pa, V-Offses In the "Wright (louse." East Dont. Collections, kr.. will receive prompt attenlion. Waynesburg, April 23, 1262-Iy. DAVID CRAVVFORD, Attorney and Counsellor at Law. Office in Sayers' Building, adjoining the Post Office. Sept. 11. 'ci6i-Iy. C. 4. BLACK. JOG PtIKLAK. BLACK & PdELAN, ATTORNEYS ANo COUNSELLORS Ai LAW Office in the Court House, Way ueiburg. Sept.. 11,1861-Iy. PILYSICIANS B. M. BLACHLEY, M. D. PILTSZCIALN di. BURGEON, oMoo—Blatbleea Building, Main St., the Hospital Corps of the Army and resumed the prac tice of medicine at this place. Way nod's' rg, Jane 11, 136t.-1). DR. D. W. BRADEN, Physician and Surgeon. Office in the 01.1 Bank nildin . Main street. Sept II . 1861—Iv. DR. A. G. CROSS WOITLD very respectfully tender services as a PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, to the people of Waynesburg and vicinity. He hopes by a tine appre ciation of human life sad health. and strict attention to business. to merit a share of public patronage. Waynesburg. January 8, 1862. DR. A. J. EDGY RESPECTFITGLY offers his services to the citizens of Waynesburg and vicinity. as a physician and /Burgeon. Office opposite the kepablican office. lie hopes by a due appreciation oldie laws of human life and health, so native medication, and strict attention to business, to merit a liberal share of public patronage. April 9. 1862. DR. T. P. SITIELDS. PRACTICING PHYSICIAN. Office in the old Roberts' Building, opposite Day'e Donk Store. Waynesburg, Jan. 1, 1@(I. DRUGS M. A. IIARVEY, Draggist and Apothecary. and dealer in Paints and Oils, the most celebrated Patent Medicines, and Pure Liquors for medicinal purposes. Sept. 1 I. 1881-Iy. sinutosAirrs. WM. A. PORTER, Wholesale and Retail Deals, in Foreign and Domes tic Dry Goods, Groceries, Notions, &c., Main street. Misfit. I I. MI —I y. ANDREW WILSON, Dealer in Dry Goods, Groceries, Drugs, Notions, Mardware, Queensware, Stoneware, Looking Glasses. Iron and Nails, Hoots and Shoes, Hats and Caps, Main street, one door east of the Old Bank. Sept. 11, 1861—ly R CLARK, Dealer is Dry Gonda. Groceries, Hardware, Queens ware and notions, in the Hamilton Douse. opposite the Court House. Main street. Sept. 11. Ditil—ly. MINOR & CO., Dealers in Foreign and Domestic Dry Gonda, Grii cerise. queenaware. Hardware and Notions, opposite the Green [(mtge. Mail, street. Kept. I 18ti1—ly, CLOTHING. N. CLARK, Dealer in Meti'n and Hoye' Clothing. Ciotti,, Canin o/erns. Satinets, fiats and Cape, &e., Main at,. es, op. poeite the Court House. dept. 11, A. J. SOWERS, Dealer i n Men's and Boys' Clothing, Gentlemen's Fur nishing Gongs, (Stints and *hoes, Hats and Cars, Old Batik 'Building, Main street. Sept. 11, 1861-4 m SOOT AND SNOB DEALURS. J. D. COSGRAY, Boot and Mine Maker, Maitt street, noarly opposite the "Farinsr's and Dmver 4 o Hank." Every style of pants and dlfoea mid:ugly qn band or wade to order. Kept. 11, 1861-Iy, N. M. McClellan Mind and Shoe maker,Blaehley's Corner. Main street. ffrdit Ighnett of every variety always on hand or made to order on short nonce, dept. 11, 1861.—1 y. GRCMIRIES & V4ILITITIIII3. - . - - JOSNRH WATER, Dealer in Groceries and Confeetimiarim. Notions, Medicines. Perfumeries, Liverpool Ware. et., m ug „f all sizes,' and Gilt Moulding and Looking glass Plates. irreasb paid for good eating Apples. Sept. li, 186I—ly. . . JOHN MUNNELL • Dealer in Granaries and Confectionaries, and Variety o flo geggenerany, Wilson's New Building, Main street. Sept 11. 1861—ly. 111001101. &a. LEWIS DAY, if e sod Miomitoseethe looks. Illation try.ago Ad Topers: One door east of Porter's 'lox*, gas suest. sip. 11, WI ly. The Democracy of Westmore- land in Council. SPEECH OP HON. JOHN L. DAWSON. The Democracy of Westmoreland county held their County Conven tion a few days since. It was large ly attended and passed off pleasant ly and harmoniosly. Hon. HENRY D. FOSTER presided on the occasion. The Convention having been or ganized, J. C. Clark, Esq., in a few appropriate remarks introduced to the Convention HON. JOHN L. DAW SON, of Fayette county. the Demo cratic candidate for Congress, who was received with enthusiastic ap plause. Mr. DAwsoN began his address by referring in sttong and denunciatory language to the prevalent slanders of the Abolitionists charging our prom inent leaders and nominees with dis loyalty and Secession sympathizes. As our opponents have already be gan this course in relation to Mr. Dawson, he, to place himself fairly before the people touching the questions now agitating our troubled country, and that there may be no misunderstanding hi% true position, read the following enunciation of his principles : Ist. No State has a right to secede from the Union. Secession is rebel lion and treason. I admit the revo lutionary right of a people to resist a ruler who oppresses them by ille gal acts ; but this right of resistance goes only to the extent of the illegal oppression ; it does not in any case authorize the breaking up of the government. This rebellion com y,►enced in resistance to the just and lawful authority of the United Ttatos—is therefore altogether with ont • justification. It must be put down, the authority of the govern ment should be vindicated, its integ rity preserved, and its power en forced. This is the prime object of the war, and this being accomplish ed, the legal and constitutional rights of all the States and all the people ought to be protected and se cured. 2d. I am persuaded that the Union nannot he restored to its old harmo ny on any other terms. It is a fatal policy to insist on illegal and uncon stitutional conditions. There are, no doubt, many ambitious and rebellious men in the South who are and were unwilling to submit to the mild rule of the Constitution itself. But the masses of the people were not with them. On the 4th of March, 1861, nine-tenths of the Southern people were as true as any of us to that Union for which their fathers as well as ours had shed their blood.— Mr. Lincoln in his first message to Congress at the extra session of 1861 said what was clearly true, that the secessionists had not a majority in any State, except, perhaps, South Carolina. Now, all accounts concur in saying that there is great unan imity and stubborn determination.— What has wrought this unhappy change in the minds of so many ? It is attributable in my opinion to the threats of confiscation and emancipation. This was the expla nation which the members of Con gress from the Border Slave States gave to the President in a recent communication, and I have no doubt they were right. 3d. if elected to Congress, I will maintain and ever defend the free dom of speech, the liberty of the Press, and the Habeas Corpus. I will oppose all unconstitutional mea sures whether aimed against the South or the North, the East or the West. I must swear to support the Constitution, and I will endeavor to keep my oath with all due fidelity. I am satisfied that it is only by an ob servance of the Constitution, and a proper regard for the rights which it secures to all sections of the coun try, that our present struggle can be conducted to a fortunate issue.— We can restore the Union as it was only by preserving the Constitution as it is. It is idle talk to think that we can bring or keep the States together by mere force with out regard to their local laws, their individual rights and their domestic institutions. I agree with General Jackson, who said in his Farewell Address, that "the Constitution can not be maintained, nor the Union preserved by the mere exertion of the coercive powers of the govern ernment—that the foundations must be laid in the affections of the peo ple, and in the fraternal attach ments that.the citizens of the seve ral States bear to one another as members of one political family." I concur also with Mr. Seward who, in his instructions to Mr. Ad ams, our Minister at London, de clared that "only an imperial or des potic government could subjugate thoroughly disaffected and insurrec tionary members of the State, This Federal Republican system of ours is, of sit forms of ,government, the WAYNESBURG, GREENE COUNTY, PA., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1862. very one which is most unfitted for such a labor." 4th. These are not times when bit ter partizan feelings should be in dulged. I will give my hearty and unreserved support to any adminis tration, or any man who with the Constitution in one hand and the sword in the other, will aid in bring ing our country through its present troubles. sth. I repudiated with abhorrence the first proposal to create a section al party, or to introduce sectional is sues into our political discussions, because I believed that success upon such an issue would endanger the Union. Ido not say this is a good reason for destroying the Union— far from it; but I feared it would have that effect. In this I took but the advice of Washington, of Jeffer son, and of many thousand others, the greatest and wisest men of the nation, living and dead. I did not and do not believe in any "higher law" than the Constitution. I did not and do not think there was any necessity flit. an "Irrepressible Con flict" between the North and the South. We had lived together for three-quarters of a century, and it was our duty to continue so with a mutual regard for one another's rights. I, in common with other members of the Democratic party. believed that the wretched slang of the Anti-slavery press. pulpit aneros trum, by means of which demagogues tried to excite pl ejudice and hatred against the amthei n people was dan gerous to the peace of the country. 6th. At the same time we did not propose to make concessions to the South of any thing beyond their plain Constitutional rights; we were willing to give nothing and take nothing but the Constitution and laws as expounded by the Su preme Court. This course, if it had been followed with fidelity in refer ence to slaves both in the States and in the Territories, would have kept the country united, tranquil and prosperous. 7th. I will insist that oppressive taxation should be avoided, and that taxes to be just. should be equal—that the wealth of the world consists of labor and production and bears the burthen. That in the management of public affairs economy should be the rule and not plunder. Bth. I will oppose the scheme of emancipation with remuneration, for the reason that even $3OO per head (the price or valuation fixed for the slaves in the district of Columbia) it would cost the nation $1,200,000,000 --uould withdraw 4,000,000 of pro ducers, cast them upon the country as either competitors of white labor, or as idle consumers and eat out and destroy the substance of our people. In conclusion I will take a deep interest in the success of the army and granting in proper supplies in fighting the battles of the Union un der the shield of the Constitution and will welcome the return of our gallant soldiers to their homes with lawful pensions and bounties. IN the course of Mr. Dawson's re marks, lie paid the following elo quent and well-merited compliment, to lion. Edgar Cowan : DIY FELLOW CITIZENS Or WEST MORELAND, I have thus given you, in a brief history of this Abolition segment of tho Republican organi zation, whose fanatical schemes, thus far crrried out, have done much to involve this country in an almost hopeless accumulation of troubles._ It is a part of the policy of this sec tional party to asperse, and seek to cover with oploquy, whomsoever they may find indepentent enough to act out the integrity of a lofty character, by opposing, in any de gree, the madness which seems their only principle of action. This they have sought to do in the person of your distinguished fellow citizen and neighbor, the Ilon. Edgar Cowan.— In the seat which ho occupies in the United States Senate, that eminent gentleman honors alike, his immedi ate constituency, and the State which he represents. This is a dec laration demanded by his whole his tory, and particularly by his bold and patriotic course in the Senate. Who of you does not know that Ed gar Cowan was.but a poor boy, and that,by the forced intellect and indus try. he has attained success and dis tinction. He has thus illustrated in his career, the influence orfree insti tutions, upon the native power and energies of the mind. It is natural, as well as just, that.he should de fend against infringement, a Consti tution to which he owes so much. His speech against the Confisca tion Act was the effort of the lawyer and statesman. His manly defense of Jesse D. Bright against the most disgraceful persecution, was worthy of Cato in his best days in the Roman Senate. His resistance of the crazy project of Charles Sumner to treat, by legislative enactment, the States in rebellion as escheated or forfeited territory, is the more to be com mended for his declaration in that connection, "that the only way the Union should be rstored was that every part should enjoy its rights." His opposition to the scheme of sub stituting paper money, in the shape of the legal tender, for gold sknd 511- ver, was based upon Constitutional law, and, in the progress of time all must agree, was as full of warning as it was of wisdom. In the general scramble for plun der which has appalled the nation, and covered all over with blotches some in Congress as well as in the Cabinet. Mr. Cowan, with his robes unsullied, walks abroad in the light of the sun, and like Cazar's wife is above suspicion. . History is full of examples of great men, who, in the boiling cauldron of revolution, and in the excitement of terrific passion have suffered con demnation for having dared to do rig,ht. In defense of . a great cause, talents, integrity, and courage have ever to contend with ignorance, en vy, prejudice, passion, and tyrranny. These are the obstacles everywhere to be encountered in the battle of life; in the struggles of a nation to retain, as well as to acquire, the principles of free government ; and in the pur pose of Providence, seem to be the destiny of mankind. Mr. Cowan, then, in his able and manly effort in defense of the Constitution as it came from the pens of Madison, Franklin, Hamilton and their corn peers, and as it received the approval of Washington, could scarcely expect to escape the censure or notice of a faction, by whom this matchless in strument has been pronounced a "covenant with death and an agree ment with hell," and in whose re gard nothing seems to be sacred or venerable. Cicero at the imminent peril of his life, opposed all the pow ers of evil in Rome, in suppressing the conspiracy of Cat4ine. He did it to save his country and succeeded; but it sent him into exile as soon as Cinsar and Clodious succeeded to the Consulate. Edmund Burke and the elder Pitt. in their immortal speech es in the British Parliament, defied the Crown in doing justice to the American Colonies. The great French lawyer and unblemished pat , riot. Malesherbes, at every personal hazard, defended with unavailing el oquence the Unfortunate Louis the XVI, against the clamors of a blood thirsty mob, for such had the Nation al Convention now become. He failed but his devotion brought him to the scatibld. Daniel Webster, in 1850, in defi ance of the heresies of Massachusetts, stood out upon the ramparts of the Constitution, and defended, with the zeal of the patiiiot, the noble charter of our institutions and the Union of the States. In which of these in stances does not the clear disappas sionate voice of history, rise in ring ing tones of approbation of the mor al heroes who stood by the cause of justice, and of truth ! If Mr. Cowan, therefore, has incurred odium in re sistino• the mad torrent of faction, in his noble efforts to suppress this mad rebellion under the broad Ages of the Constitution, that will hereafter constitute his best title to the grati tude of his country. Biuttlantcruo. BRITISH BARBARITIES IN INDIA Many of the English papers are trying to prejudice the public mind against us by harping upon the cruel ty and ferocity which our command ers are said to exhibit in the conduct of the war, though there be no proof to sustain the allegations; and when their falsehood is clearly shown, our accusers have not the magnanimity to recall their slanderous reports.— The Boston Journal has collected a few examples of British atrocities prac ticed during the rebellion in India, which have never been condemned by the British statesmen and press. We quote them together with the Journal's comments, as follows : In this book entitled "My Diary, in India," Dr. Russell says a French of ficer had complained of certain vio lences attributed to some British of ficers in cold blood. "But he should know," says the Doctor, "that there is no cold blood at the sight of a re bel." He then adds : "When Neil marched from Allaha bad, his executions were so numerous and indiscriminate, that one of the officers attached to his column had to remonstrate with him on the ground that if he depopulated the country he could get no supplies for the men." At Delhi a certain house was held by the rebels with a resolute bravery, which Doctor Russell says, was worthy of being chanted in national song. But after the house had been completely perforated by artillery, and entered. and most of the remain ing inmates dispatched. the narra tive proceeds thus: "One of their number was dragged out to the sandy plain outside the house; he was pulled by the legs to a convenient place, where he was held down, pricked in the face and body by the bayonets of some of the sol diery, whilst others collected fuel for a small pyre, and when all was ready —the man was roasted alive ! There were Englishmen looking on—more than one officer saw it. No one of fered to interfere. The horror of this infernal cruelty was aggravated by an attempt of the miserable wrote& to escape when half burned to death. By a sudden efrort he leaped away, and, with the flesh hanging from his bones, ran for a few yards ere he was caught, brought back, put on the fire again, and held there by bayonets till his remains were consumed." Dr. Russell refers to the hanging of a relative of a Hindoo prince, "un der circumstances of most disgusting indignity, while a chaplain stood by among the spectators," and adds : "All these kinds of vindictive, un christian, Indian torture, stieh as sewing Mahomedans in pig skins, smearing them with pork fat before execution, and burning their bodies, and forcing Hindoos to defile them selves are disgraceful, and ultimately recoil on themselves. They are spir itual and mental tortures to which "we dare not perpetrate in the face of Europe." What a confession is this ! But what reader of these extracts will not feel that it is too true ? To proceed, however. Here are two brief extracts which speak for themselves: "One of the civilians of the station who visited me boasted that he had hanged fifty-four men in a few hours for plundering a village." "In two days forty-two men hanged on the roadside, and a batch of twelve men were executed because their faces were 'turned the wrong way' when they met on the march. All the villages in this (Rena ud's) front were burned when he halted " Recording a visit to a particular locality, Dr. Russell says: "I heard a story which astonished me—not the tale so much, for I have heard many of them, as the way it was told." This is it, and we think it will astonish others : "On a certain occasion a place was strongly occupied by the enemy.— Our men carried it with great gallan try, and bursting in proceeded to kill all whom they found inside. The work nearly completed when this of firer perceived a number of Sepoys crouched upon the flat roof of the en closure. They had been firing on our men, but seeing the terrible fate of their comrades they sought to escape notice, and had taken to this place of refuge. They made signs to the offi cer that they would surrender, and he ordered them to come down the nar row staircase leading from the roof, find as the first Sepoy appeared he told the man to take off his belt' and pouch and lay it with his musket down upon the ground. The same thing he did with each succeeding Sepoy till he got them all, fifty-seven in number, upon which, he said, fell them in against the wall and told some Sikhs who were handy to pol ish them oft This they did immedi ately, shooting and bayoneting them, so that, altogether, they were dis posed of in a couple of minutes.'" Is not this enough, in all con science ?—And yet this is but a frac tion of the list published and unpub lished, of the atrocities perpetrated by the English in suppressing the re bellion in India. They are as oppo site to the course of our Government in the present war as the blackest darkness is to sunlight. We know that they are condemned by the great mass of the English people.— But while they are freshly on record, before the eyes of the world, can any English statesman or press, with the least regard to justice or propriety, attempt to direct public indignation against our Government ? There can be but one answer to such a ques tion. :THE REV. SIDNEY SMITH. Of all the estimates which have been written of the genius and character of the Rev. Sidney Smith, none exceeds in truthful illustration that which Earl Russell has given in the Memoirs, &e., of • 1 homas Moore : :His (Sidney Smith's) gteat delight was to produce a succession of ludi crous images : these followed each other with a rapidity that scarcely left time to laugh ; he himself laugh ing louder, and with more enjoy ment than any one. This electric contact of mirth came and went with the occasion ; it cannot be re peated or reproduced. Anything would give occasion to it. For in stance, having seen in the newspa pers "ha I,Sir JEneas Mackintosh was come to town, he drew such a ludi crous caricature of Sir .Eneas and Lady Nee for the amusement of their namesake, that Sir James Mackintosh rolled on the floor in fits of laughter, and sidney Smith, strid ing across him, exclaimed: 'Runt Justitia.' His powers of fun, were, at the same time, united with the strongest and most practical common sense. So that, while ha laughed away seriousness at one minute, he destroyed in the next some rooted prejudice which had braved for a thousand years the battle of reason and the breeze of ridicule. The Let ters of Peter Plymney bear the great est likeness to his conversation ; the description of Mr. Isaac Hawkins Brown dancing at the court of Na ples, in a volcano coat, with lava but tons, and the comparison of Mr. Canning to a large blue-bottle fly, with Its parasited, most resemble the pictures he raised up in social con versation. It may be averred for certain, that in this style he has nev- er been equalled, and I do not sup pose he will ever be surpassed. "Sydney," says Moore, "is, in his way, inimitable ; and as a conversa tional wit, beats all the men I have ever met. Curran's fancy went much higher, and also much lower.— Sydney, in his gayest flights, though boisterous, is never vulgar." It was for the first time learned in his daughter's book, in what pover ty Sydney Smith spent many years of his life, first in London, next in a Yorkshire parsonage. It was not, however, that painful kind of pover ty which struggles to keep up appear ances. He wholly repudiated ap pearances, confessed poverty, and only strove, by self-denial, frugality, and every active and economical de vice, to secure as much comfort for his family as could be legitimately theirs. In perfect conformity with this conduct, was that most amusing anecdote his preparations to re ceive a great lady—paper lanterns on the evergreens, and a couple of jack-asses with antlers tied on to represent deer in the adjacent pad dock. He delighted thus to mock aristocratic pretensions. The writer has hbard (he believes) an accredited anecdote of him, with regard to an over-flourishing fiimily annonce in a newspaper, which would have made him out to be a man of high grade in society. "We are not great peo ple at all," said he, "we are common honest people—people that pay our bills." In the like spirit was his an swer to a proposing county histori an, who inquired for the Smyth arms —"The Smythes never had any arms but have always sealed their letters with their thumbs." Even when a little gleam of prosperity enabled him at last to think that his family wanted a carriage, observe the phi losophy of his procedure: "Atter diligent search, .1 discovered in the back settlements of a York coach maker an ancient green chariot, sup posed to have been the earliest in vention of the kind. I brought it home in triumph to my admiring family. Being somewhat dilipated, the village blacksmith repaired it; nay, (but for Mrs. Sydney's earnest entreaties.) we believe the village painter would have exercised his genius upon the exterior, it escaped this danger, however, and the result was wonderful. Each year added to its charms, it grew younger and younger; a now wheel, a new spring; I christened it the 'lmmortal ;' it, was known all over the neighbor hood ; the village boys cheered it and the village dogs barked at it ; but 'Faber mete fortuner' was my mot to, and we had no false shame."— Book of days. THE SUNSET OF TWO LIVES. "A. K. H. B." writes in an Eng lish Magazine a pleasant essay about "Beginnings and Ends." Here is his description of life-sunset. ' I have been touched by the sight of human life, ebbing almost visibly away; and you could not but think of the sun in his last little space above the sea. I remember two old gentle men great friends: both on the ex treme verge of life. One was about 90; the other above 80. But their wits were sound and clear; and bet ter still, their hearts were right. They confessed that they were no more than strangers and prilgrims on earth; they declared plainly that they sought a country far away, where most of those that they cared for were waiting for them. But the body was very nearly worn out; and though the face of each was pleasant to look at, paralysis bad laid its grasp upon the aged machinery of limb and muscle which had played so long. I used, for a few weeks, to go one even ing in the week and sit with them, and take tea. They always had tea in large breakfast cups- Y other cups would not have done. I remember bow the two paralytic hands shook about, as they tried' i to drink their tea. There they were, two ;old friends; they had been friends from boyhood, and they bad been over the world to gether. You could not have looked, my friend, but with eyes somewhat wet, at the large teacups shaking about, as the old men with difficulty raised them to their lips. And there was a thing that particularly struck me. There was a large old-fashioned watch always on a little stand on the tea-table ticking on and on. You seemed to feel it measuring out the last minutes, running fast away. It always awed me to look at it and hoar I it,. Only for a few weeks did I thus visit those old friends, till one died; and the other soon followed him, where there are no palsied hands or aged hearts. No doubt through all the years the old-fashion watch had gone about in the old gentleman's pocket, lifh had been ebbing as really and as fast then. And the sands were running as quickly for me as the aged pilgrims. But then with me it was the middle, and to them it was the end. And I always felt it very sol emn and touching to look at the two old men on the c mfines of life, and at the watch loudly ticking off their last hours. One seemed to feel time ebbing as you see the setting sun go down. NEW SERIES.--VOL. 4, NO. 15. I A Battle at Richmond, Ky., and the Union Foroes Defeated. A battle took place on Saturday, near Richmond, Ky., lasting from morning till four o'clock in the after noon, resulting in our troops being driven back with serious loss. The particulars of the affair are given as follows in a telegram from Cincinnat ti :—On Friday afternoon the rebels beyond Richmond drove in our cavalry. Gen. Manson, with the 69th and 71st Indiana, moved up, and after throwing a few shells, the enemy retreated rapidly beyond Rogersville, leaving one gun behind. Gen. Manson bivouacked for the night. On Saturday morning Gem Manson advanced with two regi ments and four guns, and coming up with the enemy, an artillery fig,ht began, with heavy loss on both sides. The enemy attempted to turn our left flank, when sharp fighting oe cured between the skirmishers. The 69th Indiana advanced through a dense fire of shot and shell to the re lief. of our skirmishers, and behaved like old soldiers, but the rebels final ly turned our left flank, and advan ced in full force on our column.— Gen. Manson ordered a retreat, and fell back three miles and reformed his line of battle on some high hills with his artillery in position on the right and left flanks. Firing by ar tillery was recommenced and kept up briskly on both sides. After fighting about two hours, the enemy advanced on our right flank, under cover of the woods, and after severe fighting succeeded in turning it. A retreat immediately took place to the originally camping ground.— Here Gen. Nelson came up, and, aft er great efforts, succeeded in rally ing the men, and formed another line of battle. Our artillery ammu nition was nearly exhausted, and some guns left without men to work them, all having been killed or wounded. General Nelson was wounded about three o'clock P. it., when our men again fell back, re treating to Lexington. The ene my's force numbered from 15,000 to 20,000. The Federal forces engaged consisted of the.9sth Ohio, and the 12th, 16th, 66th, 69th and 71st Indi ana, and Munday's and Metcalf's cavalry. The loss in killed and wounded are heavy on both sides, but the number is not yet known.— Lieut. Col. Topping and Major Kunkle, of the 71st Indiana, are killed. A Louisville dispatch of the 31st gives the following additional : At Lexington, last night, all the bells were rung, and all male citizens or dered out, who slept on their arms. Major-Generals Wright and Wallace are in Lexington. The Federals are fully prepared in case of an attack. Gen. Nelson left en route for Cin cinnati to-day. A Bowling Green dispatch says a large rebel force un der Buckner, was at Tompkinsville. The rebels destroyed the telegraph to-day at the State line, thus cutting off communication with Nashville.— Gov. Morton and suite arrived at the Galt House this evening. Con siderable of excitement prevails in the city. WOUNDS FROM BULLETS. The terrible experiences of the battle-field gives our thoughts and inquiries at present a war like direc , Lion; and it is well for us to know ' somewhat of the chc.nees of life which our wounded soldiers may have la ter being once hurt. A recent vol t time on military surgery, by Dr Ap pia inform us that" bullets are some : times found in the body of the wound ed person quite flattened out; some times they split in equal halves; and sometimes they will strike against a stone and be scattered in all direc tion like a shell. 'ln Algiers, a ball broke into five fragments on a rock five or six paces frofn a grenadier, the first fragment struck and broke his right ancle, two other pierced fur , ther down, the fourth wounded his right thigh, and the fiith lodged in the skin at the back part of his head.' During the revolution of 1848, Dr. Appia made many curious observa tions upon gunshot wounds. The low er limbs, he says, are struck in the proportion of about five to four with respect to the upper. The prin cipal cause of this difference is evi dently the greater bulk of the lower extremities, while the movements of the arms presenting a forshortened appearance to the ball, also probably contribute to it. The following is the relative frequency with which differ ent parts of the body are struck by the bullet: leg, 100; thigh, 97; face, 61; arm, 90; hand, 57; chest, 53; abdomen, 52; shoulder, 42; skull, 37; foroarn, 36; knee-joint, 34; foot, 29; elbow joint, 22; neck, 22; ankle-joint, 25; hip, 6; vertebra, 10: wrist, 2. The treat ment of a gunshot wound is often much complicated by the foreign bod ies which the bullet carries in with it—pieces of wadding, of efoth, of shoe-leather, of worsted, of :hair, of linen, and of wood. A eipzeu of Lyon in 1835 had twenty Napoleons in his pocket, which, struck by the, ball, were driven into his stomach, and, adds, the practical Laroche, 'al more or less spoiled.