tit ;I: *int ttfr nxgn FRIDAY MORNING, MAY 16. 1863 0. BARRETT & CO., PROPRIETORS Communications will not be published HI the PATRIOS AND trinoi unless accompanied with the name of the anther. W. W. KINGSBURY, EBQ., of Towanda, is a duly au thorized agent to collect accounts/Lod teeelva aulwerip *lona and adaertdananente for this paper. Noma's 22, 1862. S. M. RETTENEILLL in CO., Be. 31/ Path Rew, N. Y., and 6 State St., Beaten, Are oar Agents for the PATRIOT as UNION in HMO slides, mad are antbarind to take Advertisements and linbeednidons for us at our Lowest Rates. FOIL SALE• ilaeoond-hand ADAMS Passa,pletensom by Winches in rood order; can be w.rked either by hand or item paws* forms moderate Inquite at this Alas. TO THE PUBLIC. Tau revaror AND Usaon and &lilts business operations will hereafter be conducted exclu sively by 0. Bennwrr and T. G. POMEROY, un der the firm of 0. Beanwry & Co., the connec tion of H. Intsynolde with eaid establish ment having ceased on the 20th November, inst. NovEscona 21, 1862. A Few Words on Our Own Account. Some Aistant intimations have reached us to the effect that the amiable suggestions of our agreeable cotemporary, the Telegraph, are hav ing their effect among the soldiers in camp— that there are reasons to apprehend en attack upon this office by the misguided disciples of the Telegraph's teachings because of a certain sprightly comparison which . the Telegraph garbled from our news column on Tuesday. The occasion for such an attack is as oppor tune as our friends over the way could possi bly desire—there are at present several thou. sand soldiers, returned from the war, in town, and the Telegraph's wanton perversions and in flammatory appeals to incite a riot in our midst may possibly Wing about the consummation these gentlemen seem so ardently to desire. In view of such a possibility we very naturally have a few words to any. If the office which we occupy, and our law ful property and possession, were to be raced to the ground in some untoward outburst of mistaken zeal, by a mob, civil or military, it would be no singular circumstance in times like these. Such a circumstance, however un fortunate for ourselves, and while its ultima • effects could not be otherwise than unfortur 14e in all respects and to all concerned, wont Ate indeed, but a verification, in part, of w' be, have been accustomed to think by nr AS we unlikely—in fact, a fulfilment, in sor of the frequent prophecies of disord ne sense. lence we have not sparingly hints,. er And vio paper. We desire to avoid, to p- Aat in this Bible, the evil day of all such It off, if pos we do not pretend to court or dieturbances ; if a pretext so simple, so el!' Anvil e them ; but absurd, can be made at any gdently false and of an unwarrantable outrir time the eccaelon plated in the intimations hge like that contem sooner we realize the fe we have received; the teetion as the laws e ,et the better. Such pro failing to obtain a Lord us we may invoke— teem the officers r :doge in them, we shall es and the common' if law recreant to their duty, extremity of ity given over at once to the full rioters and i* .olence.—Once and for all, to all feared p er , salters of riot, and to the pro that thie r fliers of public peace, be it known timenta r _Japer intends to print its honest Ben of its o hs heretofore, in the perfect security intim; forn sense of right, heedless of every filer- Adieu meant to restrain the publishers tio - eof from the pursuit of their lawful avoca r 4, in the manner they shall see fit to adopt, .nder the warrant of freedom of Speech and of the Press which the Covenant of the peo ple's liberties guarantees alike to them and us. We submit to the free interpretation of all whom it may concern, this deliberate determi nation. We should infinitely prefer to aban den at once the post we oeenpy than hold it subject to the control of every chance excite ment of the hour. Gen. Franklin's Reply to the Report of the War Committee. The administration and its privy council who sit in the seats of the faithful grow singularly desperate in recourse, as the logic of events and the misfortunes of the war turn to evi dence against them. In the consciousness of their own treachery and weakness, they resort to a multiplicity of expedients to distract the public mind from the disasters their policy has brought upon the country ; they seek for vic tims on whom to shift the responsibility of their own malfeasance, and their ingenuity in finding a pretext for a delay, or an excuse for a defeat, is as admirable as their perversions of truth are shameless and abandoned. The Committee on the Conduct of the War mutt have been esteemed a valuable adjunct in the gen eral scheme they have deliberately lain to heart to—deceive the country, and vainly en deavor to set aside the inexorable verdict of history. Its institution may be looked upon fairly as a device to distort the evidence of their own failures, and cover up the naked re ality of facts which are stubbornly accumula ting in numbers so strong as to them become the reasonable subject of alarm. This purpose the committee carried out faithfully and persistently to the end of their report. Having, by the basest infidelity to Muth and fairness, by the grossest suppressions and perverelone, thrown the whole weight of the failure of the Penin sular Campaign upon M'Clellan, they proceed at the close to fix, with curious caprice, th e fault of Burnside's -defeated demonstration against Fredericksburg on General Franklin. What temporary political effect they seek to achieve in this last and crowning act of injus tice against a brave and faithful soldier—what private griefs may have impelled them to it— St is difficult to divine. In the abandonment of candor and truth, and the reckless pursuit of partisan purpokee, they seem to have run mad with an insatiate eagerness to destroy and pro scribe every General not entirely proselyte to their uses. WClellan, Porter, and Franklin have followed each other to the block, succes sive martyrs to the unquiet apprehensions of their self-constituted enemies. The official privilege of falsehood, which the committee have used so freely in their report, eon avail 4hem nothing in the end. Developments, here 4efore shrouded in the suppressed history of the times, are slowly effecting -their ultimate conviction and discomfiture ; these will super sede in the memory of mankind the passionate perversions of partisan malignity, and descend to posterity, the truthful records of the day. The statement of general Franklin is among them; it furnishes to the candid observer- of the great struggle express truths of historical interest and value; it puts the aspersions of the of demagogues, so wantonly bent on the destruction of his military fame and honor, to the severe test of truth; it convict] them of foul and ungenerous falsehood. On the night before the contemplated assault on the rebel works at Fredericksburg, on the 12th of December, Gen. Franklin, it appears, had strongly urged a plan of attack, beginning in force of at least 30,000 men from his posi tion on the left of the army, then across the Rappahannock, early in the succeeding day. This plan Burnside gave Franklin to under stand should be followed, with the assurance that the necessary orders should be sent him before midnight that time might be given for a proper disposition of his forces for the attack. Notwithstanding this, nothing trans pired until between seven and eight o'clock 'on on the following morning, when Ger. Hardie, of Burnsidoe's staff, reached Franklin with an order "to keep, his whole command in po talon," sending out a division on his left to take and occupy a point known as the L hei ghts near Capt. Hamilton's," closing with th command "to keep his whole force in readiness to move as soon as the fog lifted." This order General Franklin and his corps Comm ,adders, as well as Gen. Hardie himself, con. Aimed and acted upon with perfect unanimit7 / . At nine o'clock Meade's division, posted o A the left of Frank lin's corps, advanced to the attack indicated in the order. Of this r .dvance Burnside was immediately informed ' oy telegram from Har die. The advance c ontinned, as appears by the various advices r .tom the field sent to Burn side, up to 12 o'elc ck, when the telegram from Hardie at that ho or announced "Gen. Meade's line advancing in the line you prescribed This morning." T 4 -- A fighting was kept np hotly on the left wit' a some progress, telegrams from Hardie la kitting every quarter of an hour with who the after noon, result, until a quarter past two in :noon, when an order from Burneide arrive a, as follows : " Your instructions this morn ing are so far modified as to require an adv ance on the heights directly in front of an;" to which Hardie immediately replied, 4 Franklin will do his best—new troops gone in." Three quarters of an hour later Hardie sends word that " troops in front are engaged; I fear it may be too late ;" and an hour later, " the enemy in force left , and front—Too LATE for an advance either to the left or front." It appears from Burnside's testimony before the committee, quoted in Gen. Franklin's statement, that he changid the plan of Frank lin to which he had signified his approval on the night previous to the attack, (the 12th of December,) which readily accounts for the de lay in sending the promised orders and the modification they had undergone before the receipt of them by the corps commander. When asked in substance what duty he expec ted Franklin to perform, he replied that he expected him to carry the point (the heights near Uamilton'e) at the extreme left, which, he says, " I thought would shake their (the enemy's) forces to such an extent that the posi tions in front could be easily stormed and carried." When asked to what he attributed Franklin's failure, he replied simply, "To the great strength of the position and the accumulation of the enemy's forces there." When asked how much of his whole force was engaged in the general attack, after testifying to the good conduct universally of the men and officers, he said all of them were under fire, and "every man was put in column that could be got in." The friendly relations between the corps commander and the commanding general ap pear, from the statement of General Franklin, to have been, both before and after the disas ter, of the most cordial and confidential cha racter. Burnside is said by Franklin to have assured him, in so many words, that he was 'the only man Who Lad' held up his hands," and to have indicated 11 intention to recom mend Franklin as his successor in command. The testimony of Gen. Hardie was not allowed to be taken at all, and the whole investigation was conducted as a secret inquisition, the wit nesses testifying in utter ignorance of the concealed purpose of their inquisitors. In the face of facts like these, the conclusion of the committee cannot stand a moment in the mind of any one rational enough to form a judgment for himself, or fair enough to wish 49 be just in his decision. A more pusillani mous and ungrateful attack on the fair fame of a faithful public servant than this by the War Committee on Gen. Franklin, it is hard to conceive. The brief authority which confers the privilege of such attacks upon the kind of men who composed this inquisition, and ren ders such contributions as they have made to the history of this war is surely:sadly, wrong fully bestowed. It is our intention to re view at length, at some future day, in the light of the facts now made public, the whole of the War Committee's report ; the melancholy com mentary it offers on the meanness and partial ity of the men who compose it is as depressing as the indignity of the work they endeavored to perform is unworthy of the high positions they presume to occupy in public confidence. The intimate relation of their labors to the sinister aims and motives of the administration makes an exposure of their falsehood and malice of much importance to the people. , means ADDRESS OF MR. VALLANDIG HAM. —The newspapers publish the following address is sued by Mr. Yallandigham to the.Demoormey of Ohio before the commencement of his trial.— It defines his political position at the present crisis: MILITARY PRISOR, CINCINNAIT, May 5,1563. To the Democracy of Ohio : I am here in the military bastile for no other 6ff61166 then my political opinions, and the defense of them, and of the rights of the people, and ofyour con stitutional liberties. Speeches made hi the hearing of thousands of you in denunciation of die usurpations of power, infractions of the constitution and laws and of military despotism were the sole cause of my arrest and imprison ment. lam a Democrat, for Constitution, for law. for the Union, for liberty—this is my only "crime." For no disobedience to the Constitution; for no violation of law; for no word, sign or ges ture of sympathy with the men of the South who are for disunion and Southern independ ence, but in obedience to tkeir demand, as well as the demand of Northern Ahotition dieunion fists and traitors, lam here in bonds to-day ; but "Time, at last, sets all things even Meanwhile, Democrats of Ohio, of the North west, of the United States, be firm, be trae to your principles, to the Constitution, to the Union, and all will yet be well. As for myself, I adhere to every principle, and will Make good, through imprisonment . and life itself; every pledge and declaration which I have ever made, uttered or maintained from the beginning_ To you, to the people, to time, I again appeal.— Stand firm Falter not an instant ! C- L. VALLANDIGHAII. MOSMON COMPLICATIONS —The Mormons are playing a big game of bluff on Gov. Hardinge. As we anticipated,Brigham Young is too shrewd to engage in military operations against the Federal authorities, and relies on other and perhaps more effectual means to accomplish his purposes and maintain his ascendency. Every device of saintly ingenuity is resorted to for the purpose of harassing the Gover nor and defeating the operations of the Federal law. The latest and most notable expedient is the action of the grand jury in presenting his Excellency as a "dangerous min" and a nuisance. They present him as an " unsafe bridge over a dangerous stream, and as a pes tiferous cesspool, breeding disease and death." This is decidedly c001,,t0 say the least of it. The real motives of the charge, however, are betrayed in the statement that he withheld the " Royal Sanction" from appropriation bills, without assigning any cause, and thus thwarted legislation ; and also converted justice into a mockery by extending the Executive clemency to convicted criminals. The charge that the Governor withheld his signature to appropriation bills is simply un true. The fact is, the Mormon Legislature re fused to print the Governor's message, denied Sim copies of the journals of the House, and even forged his name to a bill that was hurri edly recorded by the Secretary of the Terri tory as having passed. Upon this Governor Hardinge with his own hand corrected the re cord, and adopted means to prevent the recur rence of similar acts. With respect to the ap propriation bill which was vetoed, it contained, among other glaring items, a grant of $86,004 to Brigham Young and his nephew for bogus improvements in the territory. The Governor gave good reasons for his conduct, but these were never suffered to appear before the Mor mon public. As for the charge respecting the abuse of the pardoning power, it arose from the fact that Gov. Harding° refused to permit the civil power to be used as a means of religious per secution. A short time since, it will be re membered, seventy-six persons were convicted in Judge M'Kinney's court, whose chief crime was that, under the guidance of a crazy zealot named Morris, they threw off allegiance to Brigham Young, and were found guilty by a docile Mormon jury of trumped-up charges. Gov. Hardinge, of course, had no alternative but to shield these victims of religious persecu tion. An amusing instance of the peculiarities of Mormon doctrine and statecraft was the effort resorted to at the outset of Gov. Hardinge's ca reer to obtain an ascendency over him and en list his feeling in their behalf. With a sublime faith in the divinity of crinoline, the Mormon elders invoked its aid as an unfailing specific. When he first arrived in the territory it was announced that the "hand of the Tiord" WAS with him, and painted and scented crinoline, dressed to kill, waylaid him at every step.— Presents of fruit and flowers poured in upon him, and old saints trained young and beauti ful ones of the feminine gender "to put a hook in his nose." To the credit of our excellent and vigorous Governor, the trick failed, and other tactics have since been adopted to coun teyact his authority, The latest of which cul minates in the presentment of the grand jury.—N. Y. Sun. A FOREIGN VIEW OF LOYAL LEAGUES.—The truth of the classia statement., that it is some times good and wholesome to learn of an enemy, is illustrated in the following com ments of the New York correspondent of the London Times on the Union Square Loyal League meeting, which be describes in the columns of that journal ; If the pains and interests engendered and fostered by this . cruel and illogical war had not blinded the eyes of Americans to the dangers to which their liberties are exposed by its con tinuance, they might have seen by the multi plicity of banners and placards bearing the words "Unconditional Loyalty," how low they have fallen from their once high estate. That a free people, justly jealous of their liberty, should allow such banners to be flaunted in their faces without indignantly tearing them down, or that they should accept the doctrine of " unconditional loyalty" without scornful repudiation of the political slavery and degra dation implied, shows how much real freedom and independence of mind the war has already destroyed. Unconditional loyalty is more than the Russians give to their Czar, or the Turks to their Sultan, and has never been yielded to King or Government by any people speaking the English language since the days of Henry VIII. Is it not strange as well as humiliating that such a doctrine should first be hard of in the English language in a republic founded by English men 1 And should it not lead modern Ameri cans to inquire whether it really had its origin among men of British blood and lineage, or whether it is due to the Celtic, Teutonic, or other alien races that have adopted the English language without' adopting the English liberty of thought that should accompany it ? What ever may be the reason, it is not creditable that a doctrine so long ago buried and forgot ten in civilized Europe should be exhumed in America, under the leadership of fanatics upon the one hand, and of selfish traders making unholy fortunes out of the war, upon the other. The fact remains, however, that the liberty of the Americans is rapidly slipping out of their grasp ; and while they avow a sentiment so slavish, not to a King or Emperor claiming to rule by Divine right, but to a fetish of their own making, such as Mr. Lincoln, it is scarcely surprising that military men should be ready to take them at their word, and to prepare means for their final subjugation and reduction to that state of thraldom to which they would subject their brothers of the South. Potter County. A meeting of the Democratic Central Com mittee for the county of Potter was held at the office of F. W. Knox, Esq., in the borough of Coudersport, on Saturday, May 9,lB63—called for the purpose of appointing Senatorial and Representative delegates to the Democratic Convention to be held at Harrisburg on the 17th day of June next. The meeting was organized by calling F. W. Knox,,Esq. ' to the chair, and appointing Sam uel Haven, Esq., Secretary. After consultation, the meeting proceeded to ballot for delegates. Whereupon, the Hon. T. Ives was declared duly appointed a delegate for the Senatorial district, subject to the concurrence of the De mocracy of the other counties in the said Sen atorial district; and Miles White, EN„ wag declared duly appointed delegate for the Re presentative district. Resolved, That in case of the inability of either of the delegates to attend the Conven tion, they have the power to appoint substi tutes. Rooked, That the proceedings Of thi s meet , ing he published in the several Democratic pa pers in this Senatorial and Representative district, and in the PATRIOT AND UNION, pub lished in Harrisburg. The meeting then adjourned. (Signed by the officers.) A cooventioa of too flict-game manufactu rers of the United States is to beheld in Pitts bvrg some time. in June. HEWS OF THE DAY. Governor Morton, of Indiana, has asked the Secretary of War to order the confinement of 800 of the rebel prisoners now in our hands, that they may be held se hostages for the .en charge and return of the 400 Alabamians be longing to Col. Straight's 51st Indiana regi ment, who were not paroled with the other troops recently captured, but sent to Richmond, and denounced as renegade Alabamians. Rebel Commissioner Robert Ould came down on the flag of truce to Newport News, on Mon day, and reported that five thousand Union prisoners were now at Richmond waiting to be exchanged, and that five thousand Are will be there in a few days. These were all taken, according to the rebel commissioner, at the late battle of Fredericksburg. Transports have been sent for them. The Washington Star says that it has every reason to believe that there is no truth in the story that General Halleek designs taking the field in person in the next movement of the Army of the Potomac. ' The Democratic General Committee at Al bany has called a meeting of citizens for Sat urday to express indignation at the arrest and sentence of Vallandigham, and to • protest against their consummation. The marshal for the District of Columbia has seized the real and personal estate of Charles S. Wallach, in Washington, under the confis cation act. The property is supposed to be worth $BO,OOO. From intercepted rebel letters, intended for citizens of Norfolk, it has been ascertained that the secesh intend making a raid with their new Merrimac between the middle of June and the Ist of July. The " Dry Tortugas," the place to which Mr. Vallandigham is said to be consigned, is a large fortification now in course of construc tion by the government on Tortugas Islands, off the coast of Florida, near Key West, and all persons thus sentenced are forced to labor on the works, without discrimination as to former rank or station. A number of soldiers are now there under sentence of one and two years, for various acts of insubordination. The N, Y. _Herald of yesterday has the fol lowing : We have some important news from the Southwest. Gen. Grant had a severe action on Wednesday last, at Clinton, ten miles from Jackson, on the railroad, with a rebel force under General Bowen. The fight lasted all day, and the rebels were defeated. Reports are said to have reached Gen. Grant that large reinforcements of rebels are coming, up from Mobile and Charleston to protect Vicksburg and Jackson, and that he (Grant) has accor dingly fallen back to the river to await fur ther support. The stories circulated by the rebel authori ties at Jackson, Miss,, that our• forces wore beaten, after a severe battle of four hours' du ration, on the 4th inst., on the Big Black river, prove to be entirely without foundation. A telegraphic dispatch from General Grant, dated the oth, two days later than the reported fight, was received in Washington yesterday, and it makes no mention whatever of any battle at Anderson's ferry on the 4th inst. A skirmish between a party of sixty mounted rebels and a detachment of Union troops oc curred on Tuesday between Franklin and Woodburn, Ky., on the railroad, in which the former were routed and driven back, our forces still pursuing them at last accounts on that night. The rebels in front of Murfressboro', Tenn., continue to exhibit symptoms of activity which keep the army of General Rosecrans on the qui vive. The cavalry of the enemy is con stantly changing its position. The rebel Gen erals Morgan and Wheeler are said to be at Liberty and Alexandria, with a force of 5,000 cavalry, and are supposed to be meditating an attack on Nashville. Rumors prevailed on the streets yesterday to the effect that General Lougstreet fought a bat tle with General Keyes, at West Psint, Va., in which the latter had been beaten. It was said that ex-Governor Morgim was the recipient of a telegram to that effect, but we believe there is no truth whatever in the statement. With regard to the case of the Hon. Clement L. Vallandigham, recently on trial by court martial at Cincinnati, on a charge of using "treasonable" language at a public meeting, at which two military officers, .disguised as civilians, reported his speech, and testified against him, a report was circulated and pub lished in a Washington paper that the decision of the court condemned him to two years' im prisonment and hard labor et the Dry Tortugas, off the coast of Florida. Now, as the pro ceedings of a, court martial are necessarily secret, until promulgated by the commanding general who orders the trial, and as all the members of the court are solemnly sworn not to reveal any portion of what transpires, and inasmuch as General Burnside has neither ap proved nor disapproved of the finding of the court up to this time, it is difficult to imagine how the vote of the majority or the minority of the court, as stated, could be made known. It is fair, therefore, to conclude that the story is premature, to say the least of it. We have some interesting news from Gen. Foster's command at Newbern, N. C., to the 7th inst. The nine months soldiers are about to return home, but many of them have ac cepted a furlough of thirty days, and are wil ling to re-enlist after that time, provided they are again permitted to serve with Gen. Foster. The General highly compliments them on their bravery while under his command. The rebels, it is said, refuse to receive the disloyal citizens sent outside our lines, unless they can give a guarantee of their ability to maintain themselves. By telegraph yesterday : NEW Yost;, May 14.—Advices from Puebla via Havana to 21st ultimo, state that the French were repulsed on the 13th in an attack on the Convents of San Augustine, Comorn and Mer ced. On the 14th a battle occurred at Alexio between part of Comonfort's and the French, in which both parties claim success. Reports re ceived from Vera Cruz state that the French were driven from San Xavier and the hill of San Juan to their former position at Amalcuan. The French account disagrees with this, and reports the capture of the Church of Comorn. There is little change in the situation since the Ist of April. General O'Heran, with 1,500 Mexican cavalry, had made a sortie from Puebla to attack a French supply train on the road from Orizaba, and several expeditions had been gent to annihilate the guerillas; but they were all unsuccessful. The French in Vera Cruz had great fears that a million of dollars, with a large amount of ammunition about to leave for Puebla, would not arrive. Gen. Comenfort had been reinforced by . 7,000 men from the city of Mexico. Wasnisarox, May 13.—Gentlemen arriving from the army last night, who certainly speak advisedly, say there are no indications of a mcrvement to the South side of the river by our army. CLEVELAND, May 14.—Graham & Co.'s tub and pail factory, in the Old Exchange Hotel building, has been burned to-day. The loss is between $30,000 and $40,000, and was in ettrtid at $17,000 in the eastern companies. NEW YORK, May 14.—The steamer Plantage net has arrived with Jamaica dates of the sth and Port au Prince of the 7th. Gen. Segroe attempted a rising against the Haytien gov ernment. He was arrested, and the affair squelched in four hours. The Express says, It understands General M'Clellan last week sent a request to the Presi dent, either to accept his resignation or give him active service. Rumor says that the re signation was not accepted, but the reply was accompanied by an intimation that his active services will be required at an early day. WASHINGTON, May 14.—The rebel prisoners still remaining here in custody are, under proper regulations, permitted to be supplied With whatever may contribute to their per sonal comfort. The censorship over telegraphic messages, instead of becoming relaxed, has, if possible, become more stringent. Thousands of discharged volunteers—their term of service having expired—passed through to Baltimore, homeward bound, on Tuesday, and regiments, yesterday and to-day, returning from the Army of - the Potomac, pa raded our streets. The men generally appear to be in a healthy condition, and many of them, by their own statements, say their bodily condition has been strengthened by their two years' or nine months' service. Their power of physical endurance has been put to the test by carry ing about fifty pounds weight—musket, ra tions, ammunition, blanket, etc., while on the march previous to the late battle. In addition to the seizure, under the Confis cation act, of the real and personal property of Dr. Cornelius Boyle, and of Charles S. Wal lach, of this city, orders have been given to the occupant of Dr. Garnett's house and others, to pay no rent to any of the agents acting for the rebel absentees. John Orcutt Carpenter, of Kentucky, who was convicted of treason, has been pardoned by the President. The exercise of the execu tive clemency has been procured through the intervention of his friends, on the ground that he has repented of his crime, voluntarily aban doned the service of the rebels, and returned to allegiance, to live at peace as a law abiding citizen. The Navy Department has received informa tion that the steamship Cherokee was captured off Charleston, while endeavoring to run the blookade. CINCINNATI, May 14.—A dispatch to the commercial, dated Somerset, Sy., May 13th, says no doubt exists that the enemy is in force across the Cumberland. Morgan, with the commando of Wheeler and remit, is at Monti cello. All conversation between pickets has been stopped, and affairs wear a stirring as pect. The Chattanooga Rebel says Van Dorn was shot in the street by Dr. Peters. It refuses to give particulars but regards the act justifiable. Peters is wealthy and was formerly State Sena tor from Hardin county. • A rebel captain, writing from Huntsville, Ala., under date of May Bth, says : "We have had a gay time during the past fifteen days, hunting Abolition devils, whose advance and retreat through the valley is traced by burning dwellings, corn and bacon, and innocent women and children leaving the roads in their noble efforts to escape from the more than savage foe. Thanks to God and Forrest, not a Yankee treads the soil of Ala bama, save as a prisoner of war. Among the captured are many belonging to the First Ala bama Federal cavalry, taken in the neighbor hood where they were raised. The prisoners taken compriad the force under Col. Straight, and were cat tared at Rome." ME APPROACH OF DEATH.—The article upon "Death," in the New Encycloptedia, has the following : "As life approaches extinction, insensibility supervenes—a numbness, and disposition to repose, Which does not admit of the idea of , suffering. Even in those cases when activity of mind remains to the last, and when nervous sensibility would seem to continue, it is sur prising how often there has been observed a happy state of feeling on the approach of Death. If I had sufficient strength to hold the pen I would write how easy it is to die, were the words of the celebrated William Hunter during his last moments. Montagne, in one of 'his essays, describes an incident which left him so senseless he was taken up for dead. On being restored, how ever, he says : ‘Meihought my life hung only on my lips, and I shut my eyes to help thrust it out, and took pleasure in languishing * and letting go.'—A writer in the Quarterly Review records that a gentleman who had been res cued from drowning declared that he bad not experienced the slightest feeling of suffocation. The stream was transparent, the day brilliant, and as he stood upright he could see the sun shining through the water with a dreamy con sciousness that his eyes were being closed for ever. Yet he neither feared his fate nor wished to avert it. A sleepy sensation, which soothed and gratified him, made a luxurious bed of a watery grave" THE LATE COLONEL CROWTHEIL—During the recent battles at Fredericksburg, Col. James Crowther, of Tyrone City, this county, was killed whilst commanding his regiment in ac tion. Col. Crowther removed to Tyrone from Centre county, a number of years ago, and was engaged in bueiness in that place till the break ing out of the war. He served as a lieutenant in the three months service, and at the expira tion of his enlistment raised a company for the 110th regiment, in the organizing of which he was elected major, became lieutenant colonel, and was finally proMoted to its command. The fortunes of the 84th and 110th have long since became historic, and Col. Crowther participated in every action in which the 110th was engaged, and it is notorious that these two regiments have seen more active service than any other regiments in the army.. It was mainly owing to the energy and military skill of Col. Crow ther that it was brought to its present state of efficiency; but he dice, leaving his name not only linked to the fame of his gallant com mand, but respected and beloved by all who had intercourse with him in the service, and by all who knew him in his private life. Col. Crowther was about forty-five years of age, and leaves a wife and family to mourn his untimely, yet glorious death. Peace to his manes.—Holtidaysburg Standard. Tun DOUGLAS WILL CASU.—A decision has been finally reached in Shia will case. Among other points decided by it, we understand that the Auburn Theological Seminary, and the Presbyterian Publication Committee ' ( new school) will each receive the $lO,OOO left them by the testator. DIED. On Wednesday, the 13th, after a severe illness, Mrs. BABAS 13., widow of the late M'Nair Willson, aged 72 years. Her friends are respectfully invited to attend the funeral, on Friday afternoon at (o'clock, from the real denee of John Tlll,llalent street below Fifth. "Messed are the dead who die in the Lord.'' Nan) tAtruertistmentn. EXECUTOR'S ICE.--L e tetset e r s t Testamentary upon the erase of D %NIEL g. KEEFE SR, late of Jefferson township, Dauphin county, decd, having been granted by the Register of said county to the undersigned, all persons indebted to said estate are hereby notified to render immediate payme n t , and those having or demands against said a are requested to make them known without delay to JONAS SWETGABD, Exeessor, Jefferson tow'p, Dauphin co., P A BOOK THAT EVERY KAN() /1.. PLAYER should have. toyls4aw6wit THE WELCOME GUEST. A choice collection (224 large quarto pages) of m u i e arranged for the Piano, consisting of the most popular Rondos, Transcrip ions, Nocturnes, Marches and Quick_ steps, Waltzes, Polkas, Schottishes, Mazurkas, Gallop ! Redowas, Operatic Airs. Quadrilles, Ootillions, Dances' comprising abut Two Muudred Pieces of Muir', which, in sheet form, would cost not less than Up Price, in boards, $2 ; cloth, $2 25; cloth, gilt,s3. Beni per mail, post paid, on receipt of the price. HENRY, TOLMAN & CO., Publishers, mayls•eod2t 291 Washington street, Boston. GREAT NATIONAL CIRCUS AND MODEL SHOW! Under the direct management of Mrs. CHAS. WARNER, Formerly MRS. DAN RICE. SPECIAL CARD. ONE DAY AND NIGHT MORE mr4-MP rt Al :Ili' = K_4-1! This Friday, May 14, 1863, At 2 o'clock and 7 1-2 p. m- AN ENTIRE NEW PROGRAMME WILL BE OFFERED, BRINGING ALL THE TALENT OF THIS COLOSSAL INSTITUTION INTO REQUISITION PARTICULAR NOTICE. Owing to Circumstances the MODEL SHOW Will not Visit LEBANON s As advertised, but will POSITIVELY OPEN i « ! ► I ► t I MAY SIXTEENTH. REMEMBEP. THE GRAND CRNIVAL TO-DAY AND WIGHT IN HARRISBURG! pROCLAMATION. MAYOR'S OFFICE, Harrisburg, May 14th, 1863. WHEREAS, It is the duty of every citizen to lend his aid to the preservation of the public peace ; and whereas, the unlimited and indis criminate sale of intoxicating liquors to a large population must inevitably lead.to serious disorders and breaches of the peace; there fore, it is hereby enjoined on all tavern keep ers and retail dealers, within the limits of the City of Harrisburg, to close their bars and to discontinue the sale of all intoxicating beve rages, including lager beer, at six o'clock p. m. of every day in the week until further no tice. A. L. ROUMFORT, Mayor. TAVERTAVERN LICENSE.—Notice is hereby N given that &Krum W. ROBERTS has filed his peti tion to the Court of Quarter Sessions of Dauphin county for tavern license, and that the same will be presented to the said Court on the 29th day of May, instant tnyl4-Std WANTED.—S7S A MONTH I want to hire Agents in every county at $75 a month, expenses paid, to sell my new cheap Family Sewing' Machines. Address, S. MADISON, m5-dBm Alfred, Maine. WANTED.—S6O A MONTH! We want Agents at $6O a month, expenses paid, to sell our ' , yealasting Postal*, Otieutea BurrtAYS, sad thirteen other new, useful and curious azticles. Fifteen circulars sent free. Address, m5-d3m SHAW & CLABK, Biddeford, Maine. SPECIAL NOTICE The American Annual Cyclopeclia and Register of Important Events of 1862. to be published by D. Apple ton & Co., will be ready for delivery in June. The very favorable.; reception given to the volume fee the preceding year has induced ns to make special ef forts in the preparation of this one. ItN contents will embrace the intellectual and material progress of the year, the important civil and political measures of the Federal and State Governments, an accurate and minute history of the struggles of the great armies and the many battles, illustrated with maps of the country and plans of the battles taken from official copies; debates of Congress, Commerce, &c.; the progress of foreign nations, the developments in science, the progrone of literature, mechanical inventions and improvements, religious statistics of the world, and biographical sketches of eminent persons deceased in 1862. The contents to be arranged in alphabetical order, accom panied witha most extensive and complete Index. ,Va active, intelligent man wanted in every county to caL vase for the work. Circulars and subscription - boa furnished on application. Address J. F. 'BTEASBAUGH, Harrisburg-, Fa., Only agent for the counties of Dauphin and OsteW land, and general agent for Pennsylvania. H A MS!!!! 20,000,1b5. Composed of the fol.!.) , Ring Ens.4-k4 just received NEWBOLD'S—Celebrated. NEW JERSEY—SeIect. EVANS it SWlFT'S—Superior. MICRDTER'S EXCELSIOR—Gan vaned. MICIIINER'S EXCELSIOR—Not canvaeret7 IRON ClTY—Canvassed. IRON CITY—Not canvassed. PIJAIN. HAMS—Strictly priuw. ORDINARY 'HAMS—Very good. fp - -• Every Ham sold will be guaranteed as repreek.n ted. W M. DOCK, jr., L CO. ROBERT SNODGRASS, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Office with Hon. David ilfummajr., Third :tree, above Market, Harrisburg, Pa. N. B.—Pension, Doody and Military ',lame or sal Made Foment, d and collected. Refer to gone John Q. Emilie : David Mamma, yr., and K. A. Lamberton. inyll44torfhn En J. O. YOUNG, C:erk of Sessions