into deadly hatred, and how finding that Sir Richard would be absent, he had resolved to wreak his hatred, enrich ilunself, and flee; how, feigning that night journey, and leaving his horge some three miles off, he had returned un seen to the house. He had thought to do the deed, and then escaping with what treasure he "light find, be far upon his way to London be• fore the morning broke. His horse was fleet ; the servants thought him at Chester; and long before suspicion could have turned upon him, he would have teen safe. Doggedly and calm ly he spoke of all this, and now bade them bring Sir Richard there to hear what his neglect and harshness had brought about. They car ried him bound hand and foot to Chester,where, three months later, dogged and calm as ever, he was sentenced to life-long exile. Many days went by, and still Sir Richard, ever watching by his wife, met only those vacant eyes, heard only that wary, ceaseless muttering. At length she knew him—at length, when weeks had come and gone, she came from her sick chamber, and leaning on hie arm, crept down to the drawing-room. Site had last left that room a bright-haired bride, radiant with health and beauty; she entered it again gray-haired and feeble, trembling at every sound, clinging to her husband's arm for preteotion and sup. port, And when years had passed away, and the roses had returned to her cheeks, the spar kle to her eyes—and when the fair children eke had dreamed of, clustering round her knee, looked up into her face and marveled at those silvery locks, then she would hush them with fond words and tender kisses, but never spoke to them about that night—never again trod that gallery, never again entered that room. ittt atrim tt& anion. SATURDAY MORNING, MAY 9, 1863. 0. BARRETT & CO., PROPRIETORW Cottunanieetiong will not be mblishedin the PATRIOT AND UNION unless accompanied - with the name of the author W. W. Krueszmar, Zeck, of Towanda, is a dal:- au thorized agentto collect accounta and receive subscrip tions and advertisements for this paper. NOVINNER 2, 1.862. S. M. PETTENSIELL & CO., NO. 37 Park Row, N. V., and 6 State St., Hastert, Are our Agents for the PATRIOT AN taros in . those Cities, and axe authorised to take Advertisements and Babaeriptiona for us at our Lowest Bares. FOR SALE. ./Lissond-band ADAMS Pazes,platan 39X by 25Incbsa in good order; can be worked either by hand or steam power Irlrann moderate Inquire at Wei:Ate. To THE PUBLIC. THE PATRIOT AND UNION and all its business operations will hereafter be conducted exclu sively by 0. BensErr and T. G. POMEROY, un der the firm of 0_ BARRETT & CO., the connec tion of 11. F. M'Reynolds with said establish ment having ceased on the 20th November, inst. NOVEMBER 21, 1862. cc Old Ben Bannister.YY After a careful search we have been unable to find the Bedford Gazette containing " Old Ben . Bannister's View of the War," and so con clude that it has been either lost or mislaid. We cannot,. therefore, tell whether "it meets our approbation." At this time we have a Leavy stock of ammunition on hand—more than we can possibly make use of—but if our correspondept will send us the paper, we will examine the article. That much, and no more, can we promise. Tux difference between the arrest of Gov. Tod and that of C. L. Vallandigham is this.: The former was arrested on civil process, in the form and manner prescribed by law, and in • open day ; the latter by a baud of artrel men, in the darkness of night, with no "otheT authority than a military order backed by the bayonet. The Telegraph, as usual, titters a falsehood when it asserts that we are "furious because the traitor Vallandigham has been ar rested." It is not the arrest, but the manner of it, to which we object. When we cease to ob jest to such arbitrary measures - of the military satraps of the administration, or to hold that administration up to the public indignation which its sanction of such acts so justly ea poses it to, we shall begin to think that we are in reality what we are now falsely called by the Abolition press—a traitor to our country. The Arrest of Vallandigham. The Cincinnati Enquirer, of the 6th, nye : Hon. C. L. Vallandigham, of Dayton, was yesterday arrested, about 3 o'clock A. ac., at his residence, and conveyed to a military pri son in this city. He was taken by the military pursuant to the order of Gen. Burnside. The grounds of accusation against him are, we understand, an infringement of Oen. Burnside's order No. 38, in his speeches at Columbus and Mt. Vernon, Ohio. We have seen no report as yet of those speeches, but presume they will be produced on his trial before the military Commission, and the -obnoxious features in them, if they exist, pointed out. The Enquir• cr says the arrest had given rise to much discussion end feeling in all politica circles, and advises that nothing be said of a provocative or offensive nature, as military law is paramount in Cincinnati. The Telegraph put out a news bulletin, about ten or eleven o'clock on Thursday morning, full of the moat palpable falsehoods, by which hundreds of people were deceived. It stated that Sedgwick had formed a junction with Hooker; that the pfsitiou of the latter was impregnable ; that he had Lee and his rebel * forces at his mercy ; that we had captured from 10,000 to 12,000 prisoners, and much other stuff of the same kind. We did not see the bulletin, but such we were informed wire its contents_ Whether it was a dispatch from Washington, an extract from the Washington Republican, furnished bp some passenger from that city, or thenninage of the Deacon's brain, in either case it was false ; and, because we disdained to deceive the people by placarding intelligence which we knew could not be true, and, later in the day, published reliable infor mation, which exposed the folly andfalsehood of the Telegraph, and showed the real condition otthe Army of the Potomac, the Telegraph in sists upon it that we "sympathize with trai tors." As to the dispatch which they received yesterday morning—the substance of which we believe appears in our columns this morning as an official explanation of, or apology for, Hooker's defeat—we believe that it is essen tially false, and that neither at this nor at any other time can full credit be given to any thing Visit comes from the war office. It may be difficult to "recognize a traitSr," but it is easy enough to recognizes liar, if they all carry the ear-marks as prominevl M the Deacon and 'Secretary St sr, f. Retreat of the Army of the Potomac, Etc. It is idle to assign reasons or excuses for the retreat of Gen. Hooker. He crossed the Rappahannock with a large army in a perfect state of discipline, well armed and supplied in every respect—an army in which he and the nation bad confidence. He formed his plans and fought his battles on them. He was de feated and forced to retreat. T ig s is the whole story, told in few words. Was it the fault of the army, the weather, or the General ? On this question opinions will differ. We have ours, and we will briefly express it. It was the fault of Hooker—he is a braggart, a boas ter, and not a General. The only redeeming quality he has is courage—and that seemed to fail him, if we can credit the accounts, at the precise period when it was most essential. It was not the fault of the army, for, with the single exception of Schurz's Abolition corps, all accounts eoncur in saying the army fought with the most determined bravery. It could not have been the weather, for he was forced back from his positions, and, in fact, defeated, before the rain had commenced, or at least joefore it had set in in earnest. That he was defeated by his :own bad generalship—in plain words, in consequence of his own incompetency to pro perly plan a battle and handle his army is, therefore, as unquestionable as the fact that he scar defeated. We ventured this opinion as soon as we heard that he had commenced his movement across the Rappahannock, and the result has proved that we were not mistaken. Against Lee and Jackson, and the splendid officers who hold subordinate commands in that rebel army of Richmond, we have not in - our whole army an officer who can operate successfully except M'Clellan. With the same army that Hooker had, and supported as it was by the Government, we should have been now recording a glorious victory instead of an inglorious defeat. But M'Clellan will not be reinstated—nor, were an invitation extended to him, should he again accept command with out the fullest and most solemn guarantees of support from the Government and noninter ference with his plans. This is ill we have to say at present. We subjoin, for the information of our readers, what is supposed to be the official explanation of the failure, and such other matters in con nection with the affair as we think will pro - ve interesting, if not instructive. OFFICIAL EXPLANATION OF THE EtTEEAT West:lmmo:, May 7.—The following is un derstood to be official: It is ascertained from the front that the Army of the Potomac has arrived, with all its mate, rial, at their old camps at Falmouth. The demonstration of Gen. Hooker has proved no disaster, but simply a failure, owing to the impracticability of the position which the army had gained with so much skill and energy. Less than three-eighths of the whole force was engaged as more could not be engaged, fr.be ground being covered with forest axd without any practicable roads. Our entire lose in killed, wounded, and missing does not exceed ten thousand. The enemy's loss must have been double of this; honorably to the arms, but lamentably for the country, the greatest pro portion of them in killed and wounded. Our loss of prisoners - does not exceed seventeen hundred. We have received twenty-four hun dred and fifty prisoners of the enemy. We lost eight guns and took the same number of pieces from the enemy. The relinquishment of the position was made simply because it afforded no field for the ma nceavering of the army and not from nos *0- Terse or injury sustained by it. The General and the entire army are in excellent health, and ready for a new movement. We will pro bably not know where this is to be made until after it has been commenced. The Richmond papers show that Stoneman's corps went within two miles of Richmond and effected many captures and a great destruction of property. At least a part of all this gal lant force has reached Gloucester, in Keyes' command, opposite to Yorktown, on the York river. There can now be no impropriety in saying that the President and Major General Halleck visited General Hooker and the army yesterday and returned to the city to-night. At nearly one this morning information was received that Gen. Stoneman has safely ar rived at Rappahannock Station with the re mainder of his force. He has cut the railroad eonnections of the enemy in all directions, and thus woua noble distinction. Mr. Greeley, of the Tribune, who was never backward about criticising Gen_ 11I'Clellan, is now,-we think. over-cautious. He ventures, however, to say : Gen. Hooker was doubtless keenly disappoin ted and greatly disconcerted by the panic flight of the 11th corps on Saturday, by which his combinations were defeated and victory snatched away when it seemed already within his grasp. " Ii would seem that he did not af terwards trust his men so thoroughly nor risk daring movements so freely as he had previ ously done, and as was indispensable to decided success. If he madwany grave ruietake—and we lack the requisite knowledge, even if we had the strategic ability, to determine that he did or did not—we should say that it was his inaction on Monday. • On that day the rebels, finding that Sedgwick was close in their rear, having successfully stormed the heights over looking Fredericksburg, appear to have turned upon him with the bulk of . their force, over whelming him with superior numbers after a gallant resistance, and driving him across the Rappahannock at Banks' Ford. Of course, Booker must have heard the roar of the can non and known that this fight was going on with the odds fearfully against Sedgwick, and it would seem that he should have thrown him self in full force on some portion of the rebel lines confronting him, as Sedgwick had pressed upon their rear the day before. We agree with Mr. G. It would, indeed, seem" that he ought to have done so—and, probably, had he been at all equal to the po sition, he would have done so. The paragraph which closes the Tribune's remarks is very con soling: As to the effect of this repulse on the pro. gress and issues of the war, it is too early to speculate. All our knowledge of what is yet future is summed up in the 'axiom that GOD axioms, and that all injustice and oppression are surely to be vanquished and overthrown. If the loyal millions deserve to triumph this year, they will.; if nor, we must wait till they shall hew been purified by suffering. The World is bold in its tone and positive in its opinions : Soule days must yet elapse before the hie tory of the last week can be correetly written. We now know only its outline, its tremendous disahters, its fatal results. Dividing his force to cross above and below Fredericksburg, where the main body of the enemy was rest ing, General Hooker violated the first princi ples of the art of war. It was trumpeted over the ra'ion as a brilliant and masterly manceu- Ter to which his dash and courage would insure success. In fact it only provided against great pert by contriving a greater. His plan exhi bqed hie damp and desperation, its execution his deliberation and delay. From the moment when his army was drawn up in line of battle at Chaneetiorville until—beaten day after day, and ford after ford repossessed by the enemy— the retreat was ordered, it was .General Lee who attacked and General Hooker who de• fended. The advance to an assault was stayed, as much by General Hooker's proclaimed de termination top, change a strategic offensive to a tactically defensive movement, as by the dispositions of the enemy. If ever an on slaught was demanded, it was then. General Hooker announced the enemy *as already it his possession, and wafted for the transfer to take place. The enemy waited for the crossing, and then on Saturday threw a heavy force upon our right wing, broke it down and got in our rear. Changing his front General Hooker the next day prepared to receive another attack; and again he was defeated . On Tuesday morn ing, before the rains, and not in consequence of them, as the War Department's despatches falsely state, General Hooker ordered the re treat. By Wednesday morning all but the infan try and artillery had crossed, and the enemy had discovered his purpose and fell upon his rear, The rest remains yet untold, In the two days battles we heard how Gen. Hooker led in person this or that charging column and put at the mercy of one rebel bul let the lives of *mores of thousands of men. Were his officers cowards all, that their com mander had to do the duty of a colonel and leave the control of the whole field of battle and its widely separated columns to a lucky unity and the co-ordinations of chance ? In this characteristic exhibition of a heady cour age but a lack of' self-mastery, not less than in the ease with which our superior numbers were outgeneraled, outflanked, and outfought by Lee, we find the secret of our defeat. Of the generalship, the courage, and the dash which can lead a brigade or- a division to vic tory Gen. Hooker here, as ever, exhibited no lack. What was under his eye—what could be inspired by his personal presence—that he could command, inspire, and guide. But the management of . large bodies of troops, the disposition of the parts of a grand army, nearly all of it out of sight, its movements changing from moment to moment, an advance here, a check thare, a rout at the .flank,,au assault in the centre; the calm clear brain comprehending all and controlling all, itself the intelligence which vitalized and guided all the army's parts as if it were one right arm, then fired with its most rapid perception and furthest foresight when confusion was thickest and peril most near, and pressing with the precision of fate to its single end of victory, in the darkest hour-of all this there was nothing. And of that still more superb generalship and that grander moral quality which under suc cessive and irremediable disasters sustains itself undismayed and strenuously presses on to the achievement of the best result yet pos sible, which measures out defeat as if it were success and holds ten thousand wills subjected to its own, then most firmly when subjection means death and despair is the price of life— of this there was less than nothing. It is said that in some hard battle, when the tide was running against him and the ranks were breaking, some one in- the agony of a need of generalship exclaimed: "Oh, for an flour of Dundee !" In those hard battles of Sunday and Mon day, when his ranks were breaking, did not Gen. Hooker cry to his secret heart for the help of that generalship which ambition made him once asperse ? At least the shattered battalions of that old guard which his commander led, at least the country which calls them children, cried—in the midnight and the anguish of this hour they cry— "Oh, for one hour of MTLauLast now ! f 4 Oh, for one more hour of that courage in domitable. "One mores ppeal from that voice which never called in vain. Once more that out stretched arm which twice has saved the na tion's life?! STONEMAN'S EXPLOITS We wish we had room for one half the sto ries told in the rebel papers of Stoneman's ex ploits: At present we have not. The follow ing is from a Washington telegram, Thursday midnight : On Sunday - . May 3, our cavalry went to Co lumbia, on the James river, and broke the banks of the canal. They then went to Gooch land, twenty miles from Richmond, took the stores there, and disturbed the inhabitants greatly. Another column, fifteen thousand strong, captured Louisa Court House and destroyed the same road. The same cclumn destroyed the road from Trevallyn to within eight miles of Richmond, and a portion of them were within a mile and a quarter of the city -of Richmond. Gen. Stoneman then started for the Penin sula, and the only force the rebels have on the Peninsula is Gen. Wise's small brigade, three or four thousand strong. The enemy have from Richmond to Peters burg most formidable works, facing west, and another line from Petersburg to the Potomac, facing east. Gen. Longstreet pushed his forces through on Friddy, Saturday and Sunday, before Gen. Stoneman had broken the connections. It is believed by all the paroled prisoners who have come here, that General Stoneman might haVe taken Richmond with a thousand of his cavalry. The city and intrenohments were stripped bare of defenders. All of them were with Lee on the Rappahannock, and. Richmond might, according to his account, haie been taken with out a struggle. It may be taken yet before the roads and bridges between it and the Rap pahannock can be repaired. AFTER THE BATTLE T. 'M. Cook, the Herald's correspondent, writes from headquarters May 6 : The fierce struggle of Sunday had crowded our brave forces back several miles, causing the entire relinoluithment of the plank road and the general headquarters, and leaving us at night, wearied' and exhausted, at the White House, situated at the intersection of the Wil derness and United States Ford roads, and about five miles from U. S. Ford. The whole of the fighting ground of that terrible Sunday had fallen into the enemy's possession, and with it the greater part of the wounded who had been too severely hurt to drag themselves from the battle field. The whole plain at and about Chancellorville was strewn over with those wretched ones, for whom the rebels had no word of sympatby or pity. Their own fear fully swollen list of wounded demanded all the attention they were able to bestow upon those who had fallen ; and those unfortunates of our army who fell into their possession were left to endure the tortures they were suffering until it should be convenient for their captors to give them a little attention. Fortunate were those under such circumstances, who fell is the woods, and to whom the devouring flames brought a termination of torture in a horrid death. ItEBEL ACCOUNT The following dispatch, from the rebel Gen eralissimo, is dated Milford, May 3 7o Fr4Ficient Davis:—Yesterday Gen. Jack son penetrated to the rear of the enemy and drove him f*om all his Dositions from the Wil derness to within one mile of Chancellorville. He was engaged at the same time in kont by two of Longstreet's divisions. Many prisoners were taken, and the enemy's loss in killed and wounded is large. This morning the battle was renewed. He was dislodged from all his positions around Chaneellorville, and driven back to ward the Rappahannock, over which he ig now retreating. We have again to thank Almighty God for a great victory. II egret to state that General Paxton was General Jackson was severely, and General Bello and A. P. Hill, slightly wounded. (Signed) We have no account of the retrgat—that no full : reliable account. AD we know ie what R. E. LEE, Gen. Corn the officials choose to tell us . in few words— that it was not attended with much loss—that the men and artillery are all safe across—that the army is not demoralized—that it will soon be ready for offensive operations, &c., and that our whole loss will not exceed ten thousand. We place no confidence in this information. If we can credit the accounts we have read of the -battles fought, it is impossible to believe it. When the whole truth 4s known we shall find our loss to be nearer 20,000 than 10,000, and that the men are in no spirit at present to ‘ renew the eontliet. It is rumored that Gen. Averill is under arrest for not pursuing Fitz hugh Lee at once, after having driven him across the Rapidan, instead of halting until morning. Another rumor is that Gen. Stone man has been superseded. And this, for the present, ends the chapter. NEWS OF TIM DAY. A Washington dispatch, May 7, says The wounded soldiers, who are arriving here now hourly from the late battle-fields near Fredericksburg, are receiving every attention from the hands of our army surgeons. Our army hospitals, the most extensive the world ever knew, considering the time in which they were erected, have been put in complete order for the reception of the wounded sufferers in the late contests of the Rappahannock, and not one who has been maimed in the service of his country will suffer for want of proper treat ment. Twenty-five men of the Twenty-seventh New Jersey regiment were drowned in the Cumber land river on the sth inst. by the upsetting of a boat. SALT LAKE, May 7.—A messenger from Beaver Head , for military assistance has just arrived. Twenty-four whites in pursuit of stolen stock were killed by the Bannock Indi ans about the Ist of May. Seventeen Indians in that town were immediately killed. Three hundred whites have started in pursuit of -the notorious Winnemuk. The Quebec Chronicle says that fifteen regi ments have,been ordered out from England in consequence of Minister Adams having notified the English government that, in case the iron clads now building in English shipyards for the Chinese were allowed to depart, he would con sider it equal to a declaration of war. It should be borne in mind that the Emperor of China is said to have ordered a number of improved ves sels of war from British builders of late, but it is generally believed that the Emperor is Jeff. Davis incog. Other Canadian journals report that arms, ammuntion, and military stores-are on the way to Quebec and Montreal on board nine vessels. ST. Louis, May 7.—General Blunt telegraphs to Gen. Curtis, from Leavenworth, that Col. Phillips crossed the Arkansas river on the night of April 24, and attacked the rebel forces that had been concentrating and fortifying at Weber Falls, in the Indian Territory, routing them and capturing all their camp equipage. A gentleman who left Shreveport, La., April 3, reports the rebels to have one gunboat and thirty transports between that point and Alex andria. Ten thousand infantry were reported at Houston, Texas. At Danville, ninety miles above Shreveport, he saw five mounted regi ments of Texans, under General Spratts, gqJng to Little Rock to join General Price. About 1,100 Indians, under Standwater and Cooper, were sixteen miles west of Fort Smith. Price's troops for the invasion of Missouri are all to be mounted, They were expected to start on the 15th of May and move up east of Black river. Preparations were being made to work the rich lead mines in Southern Arkansas. SUFFOLK, May s.—The reeonnoissance in force of the third, under Brig. Gen. Getty, re sulted in the retreat of the rebels from their position, after an obstinate resistance to our advance. On that occasion our troops were opposed by the flower of Longetreet's army oorpt3, composed of Alabama, Mississippi, Geor gia and Virginia troops. Every inch of our advance was hotly contested. By a refugee who was within the rebel lines on the day of the affair it is said that during the engagen;tent the shot and shell from our artillery made havoc among the rebel troops, and at the close of the.engagement the Providence church, on the road of that #athe, a few miles- from the .scene of the engagement, was filled with the rebel wounded. Private Chase, of the Eleventh Pennsylvania cavalry, captured three officers, two privates and a sutler. The latter had a wagon loaded with his stock in trade, all of which was brought to town. By telegraph bast night : WasnimoroN, May B.—The Navy Depart ment has received an official dispatch from Admiral Porter, dated flag ship Benton, Grand Gulf, Miss., May .1.1, announcing the capture of the forts at Grand Gulf, consisting of works of the most extensive kind. The forts were literally torn to pieces by our fire. The Ad miral says : "We had a hard fight for these forts, ant it is with great pleasure that I re port fhat the navy holds the door to Vicks burg. Grand Gulf is the strongest place on the Mississippi except Vicksburg." YORKTOWN, Va., May Kilpatrick, with the Harris Light Cavalry; has just arri ved at Gloucester Point, having accomplished the object of their mission fully and most gal lantly. They approached to within three miles of Richmond, and destroyed a large amount of property and bridges. HEADQUARTERS ARMY OF THE POTOMAC, May L—Major General Stoneman's aid-de camp, Capt. Sumner, is just in. He left his chief this morning, having disarranged all the enemy's railroad communications between this and Richmond, and one party having extended their operations to James river, destroying the canal, Ste.; three regiments of the command left his to destroy the railroad bridges across the Chickahominy, with instructions to go into Yorktown. PHILADELPHIA, April B.—The Age'placed on their bulletin board this afternoon what pur ported to be a dispatch, and had such head lines as "Illegal Arrests by the Government" —Arbitrary Measure," &c. This was upon One side of the board, and upon the otbcr was something like "Sigel Snubbed." A soldier came along about three o'clock and tore both both papers down. 'This created some excite ment, and quite a crowd soon gathered in the street. For fifteen or twenty minutes a disturbance was threatened. Such cries as " tear them out" were frequently heard, and some demon stration to catry out the threat was made.= Mayor Henry appeared upon the ground, how ever, and briefly addressed the assemblage. He std that Philadelphia is a loyal city, and her citizens have certain rights. These must and should be respected. He then called upon the citizens to disperse and go quietly to their homes. Three rousing cheers were then given for Gen. Hooker, and were quickly, followed by three more for Mayor Henry. The crowd then moved off slowly without further trouble. WASHIONTON, May S.—The Navy Department received to-day the following: FLAG SHIP BENTON, • GRAND Gui.r, Miss., May 3, 1863 5 Sin ! I have the honor to report that I got under way this morning with the Lafayette, Carondolet, Mound City and Pittsburg, and proceeded up to the forts at Grand Gulf, for the purpose of attacking them again if they had not been abandoned. The enemy left before we got up, blowing tto their ammunition, spiking their guns, and burying or taking sway the light ones. The armament consisted of 13 guns in all. The works are of the most extensive kind, and would seem to defy the efforts of a, much heavier duet than the one which silenced them. The forts were literally torn to pieces by the accuracy of our fire. Col. Wade, the commandant of the batteries, was killed ; also, his chief of staff. Eleven men were killed that we know of. and, our in formant says, many wounded ; and no one was permitted to go inside the forts after the action except those belonging. We had a bard - fight for these forts, and it is with great pleasure that I report that the navy holds the door to Vicksburg. Grand Gulf is the strongest place on the Mississippi. Had the enemy succeeded in finishing the fortifications, no fleet would have taken them. I have been all over the works and found them as follows : One fort on Point of Rocks 75 feet high, calculated for six guns, mounting two 7-inch rifles. and one 8-inoh and one parrott gun. On the left of these works is a triangular work Calculated to mount heavy guns. These works are connected with another fort by a covered way and double rifle pits, extending one-quarter of a mile, constructed with much labor, and show great skill on the part of the constructors. The third fort , commands the river in all directions. It mounted one' splendid Blakeley 100-pounder, one 8-inch and two SO-pounders. The latter were lying bursted or broke on the ground. The gunboats had so covered everything with earth that it was impossible to see at first what was there. With the exception of the guns that were dismounted or broken, every gun that fellinto our hands was in`good condition, with a large quantity of ammunition. These are by far the most extensively built works, with the exception of Vicksburg, I have yet seen, and I am happy to say that we hold them. am dismounting the guns and getting on board the ammunition. Since making the above examination new forts have been passed and nearly finished. They had no guns, but were complete of the kind, as regards position, and had heavy field pieces in them. DAVID D. PORTER, Admiral Comd'g Mississippi Squadron. A PROCLAMATION. By the President of the United States of Ariterica WHEREAS, The Congress of the United States, at its last session, enacted a law, entitled "An act for enrolling and calling out the national forces, arid for other purposes, " which was ap proved on the 8d day of Mar ch last : And whereas, It is recited in the said act that there now exists in the United States an insur rection and rebellion agginat. the authority thereof, and it is under the Constitution of the the United States the duty of the government to suppress insurrection and rebellion, to guar waive to each State a republican form of gov ernment, and to preserve the public tran quility And wherea, For these bigh purpnes a mil itary force is indispensable, to raise and sup port which all persons ought willingly to contribute : And whereas, No service can be more praise worthy and honorable than that which is ren dered for the maintenance of the Constitution and the Union, and the consequent preservation of free government: And whereas, For the reasons thus recited, it was enacted by the 'said statute that ;tall able bodied male citizens of the United States, and persons of foreign birth who shall have declared on oath their intention to become cit izens under and in pursuance of the laws thereof, between the ages of 20 and 45 years," with certain exceptions not necessary to be mentioned, are declared to constitute the na tional forces, and shall be liable to perform militady duty in the service of the United States when called out by the President for that purpose : And whareaa, It is claimed by and in behalf of persons of foreign birth, within the ages specified in the said act, who have heretofore declared on oath their intention to become citizens, under and in pursuance of the laws of the United States, and who have not exer cised the right of suffrage or any other poli tical franchise under the laws of the United States, or of the States thereof, are not abso lutely included by their aforesaid declaration of intention from renouncing their purpose to become citizens, and that, on the contrary, such persons, under the treaties or law of na tions, retain a right to renounce that purpose and to forego the privileges of citizenship and residence within the United States, under obli gations imposed by the aforesaid act of Con gress : Now, therefore, to avoid all misapprehen sions concerning the liability of persons con cerned to perform the service required by such enactment, and to give it full effect, I do here by order and proclaim, that no plea of alienage will be received or allowed to exempt from the obligations imposed by the aforesaid act of Congress any person of foreign birth who shall have declared on oath his intention to become a citizen of the United States, under the laws thereof, and who shall be found within the United States at any time during the continu ance of the present insurrection and rebellion, at or after the expiration of the period of six ty-five days from the date of this proclamation; nor shall any such plea of alienage be allowed in favor of any such person who has so as aforesaid declared his intention to become a citizen of the United' States, and shall have received at any time the right of suffrage or any other political franchise within the United States, under the laws thereof, or under the laws of any of the several States. In witness whereof, I have hereunto set. my hand and caused the seal of the United States to be affixed. Done at the city of Washington this, the Bth day of May, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and sixty-three, and oft he Independence of the United States the eighty-seventh. ABRAHAM LINCOLN. By the President: Wnt. H. SEWARD. Secretary of State. THE MARKETS. PHILADELMIA, iklay 8. Flour continues dull ; sales of 500 bbls, northwest extra at $6 25 and extra family $6 871®7 50; the receipts and stock. are light. Small sales of rye flour at $5, and corn meal at $4 25. There is not ranch wheat Offering, and the sales were only in a small way, at $1 68@1 70 for red and $1 78®1 90 for white. Nothing doing in rye. Corn is scarce, yellow firm at 91c. Oats are in good request at 80@82e. Provisions move slowly ; sales of mess pork at $l5, mess beef at $l2 614, bacon at slo@l2 and hams at s6®7. NEW YORX, May 8, Flour is dull; sales of 8,000 bbls, at a de cline of 5@.10c for State, which is quoted at $6J,6 10, Ohio sells at 86 05e7 10, ant. Southern at s7@7 N. Wheat dull and nomi nal : white lc lower; sales unimportant. V.l t it e corn has declined lc ; sales of 16,000 bus a: 81®890. Provisions—Beef dull. Pork heavy. Lard quiet at 10 ®lolc. Whisky dull at 456,. 453 c. SPECIAL NOTICES. S. T.-1860-X. DRAKE'S PLANTATION BITTERc• exhausted nature's great restorer. A delightful Dave rage and active tonic. Composed of pure St. Croix Sa m , roots and herbs. It invigorates the body without stim ulating the brain, It destroys acidity of the stomach, creates an appetite am strengthens the system. It is a. certain cure for Dyspepsia, Constipation, Diarrhe a Liver Complaint and Nervous Headache, and prevents Miasmatic disease from change of diet, water, &c. can be used at all times of day by old and young, and is particularly recommended to weak and delicate persons. Sold by all Grocers, Druggists, Hotels and Saloom. P. H. Drake & Co., 202 Broadway, New York. LYON'S KATHAIR oxr. This delightful article for preserving and beautifying the human hair is again put up by the origins prop e l s tor, and is now made with the same care, sk Muddier ton which first created its immense and cripreeedented sales of over one million bottles annual lis still sold at 25 cents in large bottles. Taro milks b o ttl es. can easily be sold in a year when it is again altoNsu that the Kathairon is not only the most delightful hairdres sing in the world , but that it cleanses the scalp of scurf and dandruff, gives the hair a lively, rich, luxuriant growth, and prevents it from turning gray. Thase asp considerations worth knowing. The Satbairon lisabeeo tested for over twelve years, and is warranted as de scribed. Any lady Who valises a beautiful bead of Ut r will use the Kathairon. It is finely'perfumed, CheSpami atuable. It is sold by all respectable dealers through. out the world. 8. BARNES & 00. noun-aawditwein Velr T;-, HICIMSTREETra INIMITABLE HAIR RESTORATIVE. IT IS NOT A DYE, But restores gray hair to its original color, by supplying the capillary tubes with natural sustenance, impaired' by age or disease. All instantaneous dyes are composed of tuner caustic, destroying the vitality and beauty of the hair, and afford of themselves no dressing. Rei m _ streets Inimitable Coloring not only restores hair to its natural color by an easy process, but gives the hair a Luxuriant Beauty, promotes its growth, prevents its falling off, eradicates dandruff, and imparts health and pleasantness to the head. It has stood the test of time, being the original Hair Coloring, and is. constantly increasing in favor. Used by both gentlemen and ladies. It is sold by all respectable dealers, or can be procured by them of the commercial agent, D. H. Barnes, 202 Broadway, N. yr Two sizes, 60 cents and $l. uov7-2aard&wera DIED. On the Bth instant, MARGARETTA HA EMILIO , wido 0 the late Albright Haehnlen, aged 69 yeara, The funeral will take place at 2 o'clock on Sunday afternoon, front the residence of her eon in the Third ward. Relatives and friends of the family are respect. fully requested to attend, without further notice. * Nam 7thertioentrits. AN ORDINANCE TO, FIX THE GRADE OF A 'PORTION OF FRONT STitEET. SEE. I. Be it ordained by the Common Council of the city of Harrisburg, That the grade of Front street, from the property of George W. Hummel to the property of Mrs. Shunt, in the Third ward, it hereby established and fixed as describedby a dot ted line on the draft furnished to the council by Hother Hage, chief surveyor or regulator, and the regulators are authorised and directed to set the pins in conformity therewith. W. 0. HICKOK, President of the Common Council Passed May 2, 1863. Attest—DAVlD HARRIS. Clerk. Approved May 8, 1863. A. L. ROUMFORt, Mayor 'WANTED—A first class woman Cdok. Good wages au! a steady situation. Enquire this of fi ce. may9-dat A. GOOD CHANCE FOR BUILD ERS.—A gond Frame Building, 22 by 63 feet. partly new, will be sold cheap. Inquire at O. SNAVELY'S Carpet and Furniture Store, Second street abore lo: oust. my9-2tdit- GREAT NATIONAL CIRCUS MODEL SHOW! Under the direct management of Mrs. CHAS. WARNER, . • . Formerly MRS. PAN RICE. , At HARRISBURG, Thursday, May 14, 1863.. Carlisle, Wed;,. May N. Lebanon, Friday, May 1:5. Reading,Saturcry, May 16. A modern constructed formation far different and much better than all precedents—with an OrTFIT ENTIRELY NEW. For the fist time put before the people. Admission 25 Cents. NO HALF PRICE. No extra fee for choice of placer seats for everybody. MRS. CHARLES WARNER, Forweriy • 'i; A --, l 41 7 4 " :::-.:------ .!--- Mrs. DAN DICE , Favorably known as. Queen of the Menage, who will introduce her renowned Blind White horse, Surly, and the high strung battle steed, CHAMPION. MISS LIBBIE RICE will appear in her favorite acts. Mr. HARRY WHITBY and his TALZIVTED FAMILY. WILLIAM KENNEDY the CJIAC:II7/%71%T. g . Mr. CHARLES REED) -,. The • 't CONRAD BROTHERS. • , -, -, , --- GEORGE BARMYS.rr a,„'t-e- C. . 2 , I- P.4 6 ; F 1K WHITTAICEIL GEO. IMEIOUS,awI Forty Male and Female Artistes. 'it: Including principal Trick and Menage Riders, Voitageure, Tam' lb. - 7- # .= . bless, Leapers, Vaulters, Acrobats, `--- -- '. o , : tH' Posturers, Dancer. Cleans su 4 • , •=-0"-• Gymnasts. The largest stud t'' blooded Horses, Ponies, Mules end' i. m (#. other rare animals ; ircluding ~L ....It: p• THE COMIC MULES, CUNNING AND CONTRABAND , ..,-- - #- THE PUBLIC PARADE --'--', ..:, tr i ll be made daily at 7.0 h: crutc.h: I f , _ ,_ f ~.. A. M. CHAS. H. CASTLE, A E eut- CHAS. WARNER, Treasurer. POTATOES. --1,500 bushels of Potatoes of various kinds for sale by m6-d2w* EBY A. KUNKEL. WANTED. -$75 A MONTH'! I =lit to hire Agents in every county at ST4 a month, expenses paid, to sell my new cheap Family &wiv: Machines. Addrese t 4. MADISON, ens-dBm Alfred. Maize. nov7-2wad&irtm AND Will exhibit