•..-. - -, - *---. - . . . . ...... .g., , , - . ~ - . . • ,_ • -- . . . \ . ,---.......# :71 a )* \ _ . 7i\lll . , „.. - ~... i (4v 1 nI k \ C. (i ' '1 ) 1 r . r ,,,, \\ ) Li.c.t, i t [ll I , r , A, 4 kt iLy L ,_ + I.i , , 1j t k l ' l ' 0 L D „___ 4,o}tN 1 i a r . , 1 ,I -. I-1 / ate* ifoitrnat---P6M to :11 olitits, Agriculture, fittrature, lartign, Domestic anb' Otneral futtßigena, ESTABLISHED IN 1813. ',TEE WAYNESBURG MESSENGER pUBL]SHED BY W. JONES AND JAS. S. JENNINGS. Waynesburg, Greene 'County, Pa. yOFFICE NEARLY OPPOSITE THE PUBLIC SQUARE. _al :LI 'a lit ER SUSECRIPTION,—V2.OO in advance; $2.25 at the ex piration of six months; $2.50 after the expiration of the year. ADVERTISEMENTS inserted at $1.50 per square for three insertions, and 50 cts. a square for each addition al insertion; (ten lines or less counted a square.) EU' A liberal deduction made to yearly advertisers. irrJou PRINTING, of all MINIS, executed in the best style, and on reasonable terms, at the "Messenger' Job °glee. 'Eapuesbarg `)Ausintss tarts. ATTORNEYS. 1= PITRIVIAN & RITCHIZ. ATTORNEYS AND COITNSELLORS AT LAW Waynesburg, Pa. OFFirv.—Hain Street, one door east of the old Bulk Building. j~j All _oisiness in Greene, Washington, and Fay ette Counties, entrusted to thew, will receive prowl) attention. N. B.—Particular attention will he given to the col lection of Pensions. Bounty Money, Back Pay, and other claims against the Go vent went. I. ISM —lv. _ R. A. M'CONNELL. J. J. HUFFMAN. MILVONNELL 8t surrmAN, 4TTORNEYS AND COUNSELLORS .81' LAW Waynesburg, Pa. 4D Office In the "Wright 11i.t.ve," East Donn ColtPetions, eir.r.. will receive prompt attention. .Wayneshurg, April 43, 1862-Iy. DAVID CRA WFORD, Attorney and Counsellor at Law. Office in the Court House. Will attend promptly to all business e ntrusttd to his care. Waynesburg. Pa...101y 30, I= BLACK & PHELAN, ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELLORS Al LAW Office in the Court Roue, Way tteilurg. lept. IL 18b1—/ SOLDIERS ) WAR CLAIM!! D• R. P. HUSS, ATTORNEY AT LAW, W•TNEROURO, PENNA., uAB received from the War Detrainment at Wash ' inquiet city, D. C., official copies of the several Jaws passed ky C.mgress, and all the necoseacy Boring and instructions for the prosecution and collection of PENSIONS, BOUNTY, BACK' PAY, due dis charged and disabled soldiers, their widows, orphan children, widowed mothe,Le . , fathers, sisters and brOth erg; which business, [upon due notice] will be attend edto promptly and accnrately if entrusted to his care. Office, No. 4, Campbells Row.—April 8, 1863. PHYSICIANS Dr. T. W. Ross, 3'hy+slioian c* Eixirgeic•za., Waynesburg, Greene Co., Pa. OFFICE ANL) RESIDENCE ON MAIN STREET, east, and nearly opposite the Wright house. Was neslerg, Sept. 23, 1663. DR. A. G. CROSS WOULD very respectfully tender his services as a PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, to the people OF Waynesburg and vicinity. He hopes by a dne appre- Mafiosi of human life and health, and strict attention to business, to merit a share of public patronage. Waynesburg. January 8, 1862. WM. A. PORTER, Wbernesale and Retail Peale! in Foreign and Domes ., Pry Goods. Groceries, Notions, &c., Main street. Sept. 11, 1961—W. MINOR & CO., Dealers in Foreign and Domestic Dry Gonda, Gm ceries, Queensware, Hardware and Notions, opposite the Green House. Main street. Sept. li, 1861—Iy, 'ROOT AND SHOE DEALERS J. D. COR,RAY, Boot and Shoe maker, Main street, nearly opposite the `..farmer's and Drover's Bank." Every style of Boots and Shoes constantly 001 hand or wade to order. Sept. 11, IS6I-Iy. GROCERIES & VARIETIES JOHN NUNNELL, Dealer in Groceries and Cotifectionaries, and Variety onolls Generally, Wilson's NL.w fluilding, Main street. Sept. 11. WATCHES AND JEWELRY S. M. BALLY, Main street, opposite the t'right Home keeps always on hand a large and elegant assortment of Watches and Jewelry. 117• Repairing of Clocks, Watches and Jewelry wil reettive prompt attention r Dec.ls. 1851— ly BOOKS, &c. LEWIS DAY, Dealer in School and Miscellsni nua Dunks, Station ery, Ink, Magazines and Papers; One door east et rnrier's Store. Main Street. i•irit•r. 11. IP6I Iv. sammris AND HARNESS. SAMUEL M'ALLISTER, Saddle, Harness and Ti utak Maker. old Bank Build ng, Main street. Sept. 11, 1861—In BANK FAMERS' & DROVERS' BANK, Waynesburg, Pa. C. A. BLACK. c'res't. .1. LAZEAR, Cashier PIBCOUNT DAV, WEDNESDAY dept. 11, ISM-1v glue lanbillg, • DAILY MAII, HACK RUNNING REGULARLY BET% 'REM ing, simi ims , tor 11110. p . THE undersigned respectfully informs the generous Fatale, that having the contract for the carrying ofthe mail between the above pointa, he has placed upon the yenta two new and commodious Hacks for the ad ejanimodation of the travnllng community, One wit Wive the Adam's HouYe, Waynesburg, every morn ing. Rundays except...l, at 71 o'clock, and will arrive At Muse' Landing in time for the float to Pittsburgh, the other will leave Rice.' Landing at theatame time and arrive in Waynesburg at noon. No is will b e spared for the accommodation of passengers, TIMOTHY DOUG HER. Proprietor. ugnst 7th, 1861. no. 6. WAYNESBURG STEAM MILL. TT ming, 1100ERil respectfully inform his friends and the public that he has leased the NEW STRAW 111 ILL at Waynesburg, Fa., where , ewiUalwaysbe lows& ready to accommodate all who may call en the artniFe. Glihding dean nn -the gibtU to ldet as steht, MAUR laid FEND %1300coilisaill liget„ONONENoll4o4 l teiN Wl.* attire Minor* IlWe• , (ha. 27,10! niutitaittouo. The End of Our Great Men. The four great personages occupying the worst conspiciou9 places in the world's history were Alexander, Han nibal, Cesar, and Bonaparte. ALEXANDER,—after having climbed the dizzy heights of his ambition, and with his temples bound with chaplets dipped in the blood of countless mil lions, looked down upon a conquered world, and wept that there was not an other world for him to conquer--set a city on fire and died in a scene of debauch. Thaixiii.‘i.,—after having, to the as tonishment and consternation of Rome, passed the Alps, and having put to flight the armies of the mistress of the world, and stripped three bushels of golden rings from the fingers of her slaughtered knights, and made her foundations quake, fled from his country, being hated by those who once exult ingly united his name to that of their god, and called him Hanoi Baal, and died at last, by poison administered by his own hand, unlamented and unwept, in a foreign land. CiESAR,--after having conquered eight hundred cities, and dYing his garments in the blood of one million of his foes— after having pursued to death the only rtval he had on earthy was miserably assassinated by those whom he consid ered his nearest Men& ; and in that very place, the attainment of which had been his greatest ambitioa. •• BONAPARTE,—whose mandates kings and popes obeyed, after having filled the earth with terror of his name—after having deluged Europe with tears of blood, and the world with sackcloth, closes his days in lonely banishment, almost literally exiled from the world, yet where he could sometimes see his country's banner waving over the deep, but which could not bring him aid. 3. a. RITCH/li. EE= When we speak of a man of princi ple, we do not mean a mati who does right for tear, of penalty, or one whose virtue is ostentatious. We do not mean a man who keeps true to morality as the world goes,. but who . violates the great spirit of morality by numerous evasions. We do not .speak of the man who is clothed with respectability, while he is secretly mean and fraudu lent. No . ! We mean the man whose heart is the seat of honor, whose hand is the agent of conscience, whose lips are anointed with integrity—the tau• escutcheon of whose character is not tarn'shed with the least blur of shame, whose fingers never itch for unjust gain. The man to whom we would trust a lawful secret with all confidence that it would be locked in his bosom as in a chest of iron. Whose midnight action is as honorable as his noon-day bargain. Whose clasped hand is as a sealed bond. Whose promise is comparable to ster ling gold. In whose soul justice is so equally balnced that no passion can swerve it. Whose honesty is so sturdy that it will not bend to any expedient Whose dear eye of purity and truth fairly shames temptation. Such a man, though clothed in home-spun apparel, has something great in him. Rich men touch their hats to him. Kings feel less regal in his presence. He asks not our respect—he commands it. He has au unconditional surrender of our confi dence, for he is a man of principle.— Chapin. Said Daniel Webster : once de fended a man charged with the awful crime of murder. At the conclusion of the trial I asked him what could induce him to stain his hands the blood of a fellow-being. Turning his blood-shot eyes fully upon me, he answered in a voice of despair, "Mr. Webster, in my youth I spent the holy Sabbath in evil amusement, instead of frequenting the house of prayer and praise." Could we go back to the early years of all harden 7 ed criminals, I firmly believe, that their first departure from the path of morality was, when they abandoned the Sabbath school, and their subsequent crimes might thus be traced back to the neglect of youthful religious instruction. see- Some years before the death of the Duke of Wellington, he was sitting at his li brary table, when his room door opened, and without any announcement, in stalked a sin gular figure. 'Who are you?' asked the Duke, in his short, dry manner, looking upon the intru der without the least change of connte uance. 'I am Apollyon.' 'What do you want ?' am sent to kill yon.' 'Kill me ? Very odd.' am Apollyon and must put you to death.' 'Obliged to do it to-day?' am not. told the day or the hour, but mast perform my mission.' 'Very inconvenient--very busy—great many 'atom to write—call again or write me word--I'll be ready for you.' The Duke went on with his correspon deuce. The maniac, appalled by the stern, immovable old man, backed out of the room, and in half an hour was safe in custody. *A wag lent a clergyman a horse which ran away- and threw him, and then dahnederedit for ahEng in tread ing the gespal, The Man of Principle. Sabbath Bells. WAYNESBURG, GREENE COUNTY, PA., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1864. To the reflecting mind Nature's Works are filled with instruction. The sun and moon, the raging tempest, the murmuring brook, the succession of the seasons, all, with eloquent voice, speak to man. The Christian reads not Nature's book in vain. - While in contemplation he roams through the forest or climbs the mountain, he be holds Autumn an Emblem of Life. "Books in running brooks, Sermons in stones, and good in every thing Autumn may appropriately be styled emblem of human life. It is the season of change. The bright sunny day and the chilling storm follow alter nately in rapid succession. Now the warm, cheering smiles of summer play around us, while the heavens are calm and serene ; but anon the gathering va pors darken the sky with clouds, while the approach of winter is heralded in the angry tempest. Thus with human life. "We know not what a day shall bring forth." Sunshine and storm, hope and fear, joy and grief, alternatq ly mark our path-way through life.— To-day our skies are clear, our pros pects bright, hope beats high in our breasts, while the star of promise beams brilliant by in the horizon of the future. But now the clouds of disappointment gather thick around us, darkness over shadows the future, and all oar schemes which imagination wrought with de light, unaccomplished, fall around us like withered leaves of autumn. And as the tall oak, shorn of its green foli age by the winter storm, stands alone and unadorned, so the inconsistency of friends, disappointments and afflictions, rerder us desolate, while our minds re tire in solitude to brood over calaini ties. To-day prosperity may lavish its blessings around us in rich . profusion ; ! to-morrow, adversity's frown may dry up the resources of life. To-day we may he surrounded by all the fascina tions of wealth, and riot in luxurious ease; to-morrow, we may walk in pov erty's humble vale. To4lay may sit on honor's throne, while a thousand syco phants loow at our feet and court our favor; to-morrow, beside the beggar we may walk unheeded and unknown. What reverses of fortune I What can stant mutation ! How indelibly stamp ed upon all human things! Autumn is the season of decay.— ,Lite forsakes the vegetable world. The .groves are arrayed in sere and sombre hues, the withered leaves are driven before the blast. Even so with man! "We all do fade as a leaf." 'Tis but a step from the cradle to the grave ; and though life.'s journey be thus brief, 'tis not one calm, unclouded day ; for "Midway so many toils appear That he who lingers longest here Knows most of care." All around us leaves are rustling to the ground. So with our friends. One by one they fall around us. Before the touch of the chilling frost the deli cate leaf withers and falls from its stem. Death, with his icy finger, touches the silver cord of life and we ade away. Although we fade as a leaf and our bodies commingle with earth again, yet they are not lost. The delicate fern leaf, which was brushed from its stem myriads of ages ago, might have mourn ed its consignment to oblivion. But 'tis not lost—'tis not annihilated. The miner, in his experience, identifies it. and traces its embroidery, as pencilled by the hand of Nature. Autumn, with its melancholy scenes, will soon be past. Winter, with its howling tempests, will come and bind nature iu its icy fetters. But all this change is necessary for the introduction of Spring, with its amaran thine flowers, its balmy skies and sil very streams. So our bodies shall fade as the leaf; and moulder into dust, that they may again be resuscitated in im mortal youth and vigor. This life of care, of toil, of disappointment and change is preparatory to that eternal state which awaits us beyond the win ter of death, when all that sleep in Christ, God shall bring with him to the enjoyment of unending felicity ; "Where bliss is known without alloy, Where pleasures bloom without decay, Where thoughts of grief in cloudless joy Shall melt like morning mists away. ' Why Bees work in the Dark. The movements of these active acid intelligent little insects, as they have been interperted by science, are full of interest and instruction. The form of the cell of the honeycomb was discover ed by mathematicians to be that which most perfectly combined capacity and strength. Chemistry has recently dis covered that the action of light upon honey fresh from the comb, which is a clear yellow syrup, with no trace of solid sugar in it, causes it gradually to crystallize, until it becemes a solid lump of sugar. This is the reason why bees work in the darkness, and why they are so careful to obscure the glass windows which are sometimes placed in their hives, If the light were allowed access to their cells, the syrup would become more or less solid, sealing up the cells and destroying the inmates. Arr EFFEAZIVE "PAIN KlLLEn."—Mel vile A. Fronson, of Fall River, Mass., died very suddenly on Monday even ing. He applied some pain killer to a defective tooth, and a few minutes af ter raised his hand to his head and ez olainied,."o, my -head I" fell forward on the floor and died almost instantly. Grand Duke Nicholas in a Sad Plight. The heir-apparent of Russia, the fu ture master of a realm of more than seven million of square miles—an em pire comprising one-seventh of the ter ritorial part of the globe, and about one twenty-sixth part of its entire sur face—is in want of a wife, and cannot find one. This astounding piece of news, says the Lontlon Globe, is going the round of the continential papers.— "Grand Duke Nicholas, heir-apparent of all the Russia; twenty-one years old, tall, good-looking, in splendid uniform, speaking five languages; and with all the accomplishments, is willing to wed, yet cannot get a wife. It is said that Grand Duke Nicholas has only five my , al princesses offered for his selection ; and that, unfortunately, of these five high-born ladies, he does not like three, and his imperial father does not like the other two. So that, in point of fact, the heir-expectant of one-seventh of the earth can get no wife . at all.— Poor Nicholas. There was - a time when the Czar and his tinnily were allowed to pick their partners from among a whole flora of fair princesses. It is said of Peter the Great, that when he want ed a spouse for his son Alexis, he cir culated a round robin among the five score of reigning families in Germany, bidding them to send all their mnri ageable daughters, deducting the plain ones, to Moscow for inspection. The invitation was responded to by a crowd of fair and illustrious damsels, and the fairest flower from among them was picked for the drunken and dissolute heir-apparent. "Subsequently the business was con- , ducted mainly by advertisement, A hint given in one of .the - Hamburg pa pers, then considered the organs of the Russian government, generally brought a lot of portraits to the Imperial Court, from the inspection of which resulted further negotiations. Princess Clara, of Hohenhausen Ohnebrod, being held the most eligible of the matrimonial candidates, was then invited, together with some,old Ohuebrod aunt, to spend a couple of weeks at the Imperial Court, where she was kept if finally approved of, or if not, returned to her loving pa rents at the grim of castle of Hoben hattsen. The Congress of Vienna, when by sweeping away of nearly a hundred crowned heads from the field of royalty, had the effect of greatly .les sening the charmed circle within which the Czars were wont to rove, and Czar Nicholas when not yet heir-apparent, had to pay assiduous courtship to win the hand of the King of Prussia's daugh ter, and his three younger sons experi enced actual difficulty to get a bride.— The younger ladies of 'good family,' finding that they were eagerly souobt atter, and that, in fact, the demandlris far greater than the supply, refused to go to Russia. They objected to the country as too cold, and to the rulers as being given to the ugly habit otbeat ing their wives royalty notwithstand ing. Thus the circle narrowed more and more around the Czar's proud fam ily, until it has now become the humil iating necessity to declare that the heir apparent of Russia cannot find a wife. at all. It is the greatest victory the la dies have achieved in the nineteeth cen tury." An Enterprising Woman. About six years ago; says the Wheel ing (Virginia) Intelligencer, an active little German woman, a widow, was seen every day in our streets, alleys and by-ways, gathering up old rags in her arms, which she washed and sold to the dealers. She was very industrious, and consequettly very prosperous, and about six months later she got a little hand wagon in which to convey her rags to market. A year or so later the same woman was sees driving a shabby old horse attached to a shabby old wagon, and she appeared to be dealing in articles other than rags, and appeared to be im proving rapidly in wealth and goods.— Now she drives two good horses, hitch ed to a substantial wagon, besides which she has accumulated a handsome little fortune. Although she works as indus trionsly as ever, she dresses on the Sab bath, not exactly in "purple and fine linen," but well and neatly, and is semi.; ing.her daughter to boarding school in a distant town. She says she intends to work until her two children are well ed ucated and well provided against the probability of such adversities as she has had to encounter. Those who Run may Read. Some years ago an effort was made to collect all the chimney sweepers in the city of Dublin, for the purpose of edu cation. Among others came a little fel low, who was asked if he knew his let ters. "0, yes," was the reply. "Do you spell?" "0, yes." "Do you read?" "0, yes." "And what book do you learn from?" "0, I never had a book in my life, sir." "And who was your schoolmaster!" "0, I never was at school." Here was a singalar case, a boy who could read and spell without a book or master. But what was the fact! Why, anoth4r little sweep, a little older than himself, had taught him to read by showing him the letters-over the shop doors which they passed as they went through the city. His teacher, then, was a little sweep like hitnseif, and his ypoks the sign-boards on the haws. What.eannot be done by trying! A Happy Home. The first year of married life is a most important era in the history of man and wife. Generally, as it is spent, so is al- most all subsequent existence. The From the Washington Union. wife and the husband then assimilate Who is George B. McClellan? their views and their desires, or else George Brinton Mcdtellan was born in P conjuring upon their dislikes, they add Philadelphia on the 3d day of December, fuel to their animosities forever after- 1826. His rather by skill and ability gained wards. high position in the medical profession, Mr. have somewhere read," says Rev. a Europe, and al. Mr. Wise, in his bridal greetings, "of a both in this country and in Eu bridegroom who gloried in his excen- though we do not wish to forget the man in tricities. He requested his bride to ac gazing at his ancestry, still Democrats may company him into the garden, a day or be assured that the nominee of the Chicago two after their wedding. He then drew Convention for the highest office in the gift a line over the roof of their cottage.— of the people came from a respectable source. Giving his wire one end of it, he return- The sturdy Scottish • stock from whom our ed to the other side, and exclaimed: candidate inherits many of the great qualities "Pull the line." of heart and brain so honorable to him, none She pulled it at his request, so far as need be ashamed of. Irishmen, as well as she could. He cried: Scotchmen, have reason to claim our "gal " Pull it over." • "I ca't she replied. bun, Little Mac" as a child of that brave old n . "But pull with all your might," still Celtic race that has given to the world so shouted the whimsical husband, many heroes, statesmen, and pure-hearted But in vain were all the efforts of the patriots. Some one learned in pedigrees has slide to pull over the line, so long as conclusively proved that Gen. McClellan is her husband held the opposite end.— a kinsman of that brave old soldier Sir Colin Campbell, who wrung from the purse proud But when he came round, and they pull- British Government a tardy ed at the same end, it came over with ! acknowledge great ease. "There!" as went of his great services, after a long life the line fell from the roof, "you see how hard and ineffectual was time of arduous toil and severe service in the our labor To Americans it is ot little interest when we both pulled in oppo and whether our chieftain was related to the sition to each other: but how easy pleasant it was when we both pulled to- Scotch peer or not; we are satisfied with the °Tiller: It will be so with us through man, and care but little how he may be con-' nected by the ties of relationship. At an early age Gen. McClellan discovered In this illustration, homely as it may that penchant fur the life of an engineer and be, there is sound philosophy. Hus band and wife must mutually bear and ' soldier, and his ft:jet - ids gratified his desires concede, it' they wish to make home a b , . a . . ing for him a cadet's appointment in retreat of joy and bliss. One alone can- ! Y the West Point Military Academy-. This not make home happy. There needs unison of action, sweetness of spirit and happened in 1842. great forbearance and love in both hus- He graduated with high honors in the class bared and wife, to secure the great end of 1845, was assigned to duty with a compa of happiness in the domestic circle. ny of the engineers, and ordered, before the Home is no unmixed paradise of close of the year, into active service ou the sweets; the elements of peace and true i line of the Rio Grande River. The war with Mexico was then fairly begun, and Lenten happiness are there, and so, too, are the elements of discord and miserr: and it cut aj.evlellen reached his post just after the needs only the bitter spirit of the world without to make it a pandemonium, or Battle of Monterey. the loving genius of harmony to make After some time spent in active service on it the prompter of every affectionate im- the Rio Grande, Lieut. McClellan was order pulse. . ed to Tampico in January, 1847, to take part in the grand movement on the Mexican capi tal. We next hear bin> mentioned as distin guishing himself in the hard fought action of Molli) del Rey, where he was specially com plimented by the gallant Worth for "merito rious and gallant conduct." The brevet rank o f Captain was offered bun for his services in this victory; but McClellan, with that modest depreciation of his own great worth which is one of the most pleasing traits of his charac ter, "declined to receive it, on the ground that he was not fully entitled to it, having been concerned in the preliminary operations alone, and not in the actual assault and cap ture of the enemy's works. The part he took, bovvever, in that mag nificent achievement, "the storming of Chapultepec," brought him promotion in a way which he could not refuse. Ile was therefore breveted "Captain," September 4th, 1848. The End of the Carcassian Slave Trade. It has already been announced that the Sultan of Turkey has prohibited the Circassian slave trade. The Levant Herald of Constantinople gives the fol lowing particulars : "We feel lively satisfaction in report ing that the Porte has at length put his definite veto on the traffic in Cir cassian slaves. Last week firmaus were dispatched to Samionn and Tre bizond, absolutely abolishing the trade, and forbiding the further purchase or sale of slaves of either sex. This excel lent decree conies, it may be said, rath er late ; but it has been accompanied by action on the part of the Immigra tion Commission, which goes for to atone for the tradiness. Very many of the sales which have been hitherto ef fected took place under pressure of the captains .of tl,e various transports, who, though chartered by the Porte, drove, it now appears, a regular and most profitable trade by exacting passage money from wretched mountaineers in every case in which it could be forced out of them in either money or 'kind.' In the latter event, the custom had been to take one slave for every thirty pass engers, lots being drawn for the wretch ed boys and girls who were thus sacri tied for the transport redemption of their fellows. This fact having come to the knowledge of the commission, an inquiry was instituted, and a large num ber of free born youths and girls who had thus passed into the possession of the dealers and private purchasers have been summarily set free and restored to their parents." A Horrible Situation Mrs. "Win. Evans, of Mercer county, C., W., a woman of 36, has had a dif ficulty in her stomaeh for several years. Lately physicians have decided that the trouble is occasioned by a live and grow ing snake in the stomach. It has now grown so large that it distends the stomach so as to produce a bunch upon the outside as large as a quart bowl.— Upon pressing this bunch with the hand the reptile recoils and produces great distress in the stomach. When fish or meat is being cooked iu - the roVn, if the snake is not satisfied with food, it rises up iu the throat producing strangulation. When desiring food, it manifests it by rid.ng up in the throat. Physicians see no way in which this snake can be removed without certain death to the woman. ile London papers are enthusias tic over a "most interesting marrive ceremony" which took place a fortnight ago in Piccadilly, the parties being Miss Belle Boyd, the notorious rebel spy, and a Lieut. Harding of the Union Na vy—who figures only as as ensign on the Navy Register. It appears that when Miss Boyd was captured on the Greyhound, this gallant officer was put onboard as prize master. He tell in love with his prisoner, was persuaded by her to desert his allegiance and go over to the rebellion, followed her to "England and was married The pair pro pose to run the blo4apie thi fall, end titer the rebel tervice. ;Politica. As Captain McClellan he retrained with the army in Mexico till the signing of the treaty of peace with that republic. The ad ministration of a conquered city necessarily afforded to a soldier of his character and training many valuable opportunities of ob servation and reflection upon the relations of the military with the civil authority. The impotence of mere force to maintain or re store a solid tranquility in the social order is never so apparent to a clear and vigorous mind as when force is clothed with a tem porary omnipotence; the beauty and the majesty of law are never so apparent as when the claim and constant operation of the law is fin. a time suspended in favor of the sword. In June, 1848, Captain McClellan retnrn ed to the U. S., and was almost immediate ly ordered to the post at West Point, where, for three years he remained in command of the company of sappers and miners. In June, 1851, he was removed to Furt' Dale ware to superintend the construction ot the works, and early in the next year he fulfill ed the common destiny of the officers of the regular army ot the Union by joining an expedition for the exploration of the far west tern territory of the Red river, under-cowl mand of Colonel Marcy, whose daughter has since become his wife. From the Red river he passed into Texas upon the staff of General Persiter F. Smith, and until March, 1853, was occupied in the survey of the Texas coast. He was trans ferred to the neighborhood of the Rocky mountains, going to Washington territory in the Spring of 1853, and remaining there until May, 1854, in charge ot the western division of the survey fix• the northern route. the Pacific ocean. In March 1855, he was promoted to a full Captaincy in the First Cavalry, and, with Major Delafield and Major Mordecai, was ordered to proceed to Europe, to study the operations of the great war thou raging between the Western Allies and the Russian Empire, When McClellan and his companions reached the Crimea, in the early4iart cf the summer of 1855, the most trying period of the great allied inva sion had already been overpassed. The bat tle ot the Alma had been fought and won ; Sebastopol had been invested, so far .:as its investment was practable ; victory Lad been i snatched by tlle tows of France and Eng NEW SERIES.---VOL. 6, NO. 16. land from the very jaws of ruin,, on the "'eights of Inkermanu. After the publication of his Report of the Armies of Europe, in .January, 1857, Capt. McClellan resigned his commission in the army and went into civil life. He was ap pointed chief engineer of the Illinois Central Railroad and upon the completion of that enterprise, was elected Vice President of the company, which post be continued to fill, residing at Chicago until August 1860, when, having been chosen President of the East ern Division of the Ohio and Mississippi Railroad, he removed to Cincinnati. Gov. Dennison of Ohio, in response to the first call of the President of the United States tor volunteers to aid in the suppression of the rebellion, and in maintaining the supremacy of the Constitution, appointed . George B. McClellan Major General, to command the contingent of the State, being thirteen reg iments of infantry. This commission was offered and accepted on the 23. d of April, 1861. On the 10th of May, 1861, the General Government assigned Gen. McOlellearteAre Department of . 0;iio, embracing Ohio, In diana and Illinois, with headquarters sat Cincinnati. Four dppa- later ha w com missioner' Major General in the regular my, which rank he now holds. The part bJrne by Gen. McClellan in the great war through which we are passing, is too well known to heed any special recital. The persistent attempts of the Administra tion, and Party journals, to. blacken the tame of our hero, has made the public take such interest is the perusal of the many hiAtories of his campaigns, as to render it unnecessary to renew the narrative in our columns. We feel assured the people have had impressed on their minds, in characters never to be erased, that brilliant career which began in victory among the mann tains of West Virginia, in the summer of 18E1, to end in dignified patience under the unparalled wrong among the hills of thie Shenandoah in the autumn of 1862, is the simple task of recital. At the James of Yorktown, Williamsburg, Fair Oaks, lifsl - Hill, South Mountain and Antietam, the heart of the nation will beat out a no bler commentary than words can frame upon the merits and the deserts of the heroic young commander, who gave these trumpet names to its and to our children. The writings and addresses, as well as the "orders of Gen. McClellan, stamp the-author as no ordinary man. It we commence with his first address to the troops assuming the command, the reflecting reader will observe how clearly the hero and statesman stand forth, above and superior to, the mere mil itary commander. Notice those golden sen tences addressed to the troops. "Your mission is to restore peace and con fidence, to protect the majesty of the law, and to rescue our brethren from the grasp of arm ed traitors." "Bear in mind that you are . here to protect, not to destroy." "We Lave come here to save, not to . upturn." "You will respect the right of private opinion."— "You will punish no man for opinion's sake." The celebrated "memorandum" containing his plan of operations for the Union forces, and addressed to the President on the 4,th of August, 1861, proves conclusively that Mc- Clellan alone, of all the men connected with the army of our govet mon r, understood at the beginning fully the vastness of the civil war into which the nation had been plunged. It lit.s truly been slid: "This most remarkable paper, though thought to be visionary then, is nos- historic, for it foretold substantially the whole his tory of the war from that day to this, and stamped General McClellan as the muter mind of the day. It is enough to say here that where that plan has been followed out, success has attended our efforts to crush the rebellion, and nearly evet:? deviation from It, has resulted in disaster." His instructions to department command ers are models of clearness, directness and 'brevity, and show that he never forgot the political, as well as the military bearings of the conflict. "You will please constantryNo boar in mind," he writes to General Buell, then commander of the Department of Ohio, •`the precise Issue for which we are fighting ; that issue is the preservation of the Union and the restoration of the full authority of the general Government over all portions of our territory." And then follows this most memorable sentence : "We shall moat read ily suppress this rebellion, and restore the authority of the Government, by religiously respecting the coustiturional rights of all." That General McClellan has a heart astreat as his intellect, has been shown by all his dealings with his fellow citizens and brethren in arms. There are no more pathetic words in the English language than those wrung from his manly spirit by the sacrifice of his army on the Ohickahominy. Thus be wilted to Secretaiy Stanton from Savage Station, Jude 28th: have lost this battle because my force was too small. I again repeat that I sin not responsible for this, and I say it with the earnestness of a general who feels in his heart the loss of every brave man who has been needlessly sacrificed to-day. I still hope to retrieve our fortunes: but to do this the Gov ernment must view the matter in the -same earnest light that I do. * I know that a few thousknd more men wculd have changed this battle 'from a defeat to a victory. As it is, the Government =Mit hold me responsible for the result,"_ EMI