"ttrra - 4 7. - Vitttintrt 4aot, „ _ln -BIDDLE( EIc•CV., solioaa tat , rsorsiossas. frag en Offies, W stns.!, near B=bithfieid. tt[osnl_ and Evening Editions daily. -,::onstialoing the Latest News up- to this IWO ofpubllzation. .koritas .1140:101&4e per suntan in sauna., or 12% i laterm—sa cirfl".. priiiinam fa lialinCe, oe 40. is, week from carriers. fiV4DyItfiTIHING AT 2.2.4003AF1LD RATIP. PIT' . II3I3ICRCIFFX 3 MONDAY MO&NING, SEPT. 80, 1801. General Fremont. ...„ I ._.The elder Blair, whit "ran the machine" under Jackelitn,loei the same now. Ho is 'ths influential mut-with the President—the 1 , "tower -behind the throne, greater thin the throne itself." ' It eras he wit" urged the appointment of Hoax C. Fusion as Major General and his itsivuttent today in Missouri. Ho waited , upon the President with him when he re turned from litirope in * Jcine feet, petted him androids. a magnate of him. True, Mr. Blair knew that he bad gikert, as yet, het little Ovldence of his special Salem for mil 'Huy command; as it bad never been tested; '—but he hid a high reputation for energy, - 'lntelligence, and resolute enterprise ; and .2 It was not doubted that , his good sense would lend hini to liana promptly and titer . oughly whatever he did not already know, of the special duties of the most important p i ost about to be committed to bin osre. His menet bearing In , the Presidential ea - Mum of 1556, hid led Mr. Blair to regard Ida as Jest the man for the place :—and when the appointment was announced every body hoped that he would - render egos! ear vice to the Colon, and inflict a .fatal blow upon rebellion. In the West, although there , were moor who had illetleflatid double of his sacoesi. Marshalled thus into a commending posi t lion, it was the height of folly for Gen. Fremont to quarrel with the Blair family. 'Col. F. P. Blair, Jr ., Jr. has an undoubted hold upon the soldiery he is serving with; and his entire bootie hes shown him to be not only a good soldier but a statesman and pa -11110t. S ir sweet, therefore, - by order of Gen. Fremont benixtso be could 'not stand tamely by and see Missouri lost through what he thought rho errors of ble comenand- S hi/Oilloer, wa4,one of thih, military Wan ' dere whisk wear a worse look than a crime. tEvents are showing that Col. Blair was reight in distrastiog the generalship of his 1 commander. The blame of not reinforcing 1 LyoMitai, at l a te thrown upon rho War Department d the Administration ; but 4 , "lidstuquitint rseelations chow that Gen. Fre - 4- moth thought Hen. Lyon did net need rein ; • foreemente ' arid he accordingly tsetse regi- MWMIr. after regiment to Cairo and Bird's Point, when, Ilf merely two of them had Ibeen sent to Springfield poor Lyon would , have been eared, and a defeat turned into a I' victory. 1 1' But let tba i pas": The, question now : ie llthstherc he its eel blameable for not rein. fOrethig Mulligan, and the evidence to our Mlind, is clearly against him. The encase, holster, is again plat forth, that it was the fault of the ;government at Washington. ; Thu, for iihtanoe, the Chicago Tribune ; 'lt was Geg. Fremont's plan to let Price • ; work his way; up tolexlngton unmoleited, •'; sad then send a beivi' column out from I - Jefferson City to getialls to march opals tile rear, while Gen. Pope's army sbonld move simultaneously from the north, and surround and capture or destroy the whole rebel f 0100: 00 SiturdaY laity General Fremont ' I received • peremptory order from Washing -1 ton for Bre gegitnento of well armed and. ; disciplined .troops. This order was promptly Ifl led, not With too wont, bathe very best regiments ChM* reach. The raw troops at Button barrages, whenever bad a musket la their hairdo *hail they went to fit. Louis, Gould not of coarse be diapatched to Wash.., tarot .or -Selena. This, we 'satiate, ad) Icount" in 800 mraeore for the interruption of 01 Geo. Frerobot's plan to send s outcome 'overland to onset Price In the rear. His only recourse was to rend-relnforcemente to Col. Mulligan, by water, and run the riatof the had batteries planted by tic rebels at , Glasgow and elsewhere to command the 1 channel" _The Washington City. National Ttepubli ego answer, 4his attempt to shuffle the oponeibili \ ty upon the President by showing '':Alutt the order en General Fremont for five, 1 regiments Aotio .Centfrom there was not re ceived at 81; Louis until. the dig after tbe eurettder OE , Col. Molligan.. Of coarse, it . could not hale hindered the reinforcement of Mulligan - Bealdeo, is wo learn from the - -E , lllLoole ifrone Journal, the only regiments ; 'that moved Ail, in obedience to the order, Were Turchiteti and Hecker's regimente, , stationed nod within 'Prominti immediate '‘"riesett,'''', - _brit, Way :down in Kentucky . _ The other mita:eats under order" were two at the' camp in Springeold, - Illingia, and one ,Chloago,l none of Which were either Hirmed'or disciplined,' bet absolutely raw 'troop', 'who had Bever had a musket in tbeir Linde.. They in ell./gale mile their . ringements .1 to more eastward; and thee, without say farther delay,-the order belog sountarmen ad, ~proceeded to Bt. Louis. Bo much foilthat. -- • desperate!pituation was well mown ett Sti Laois longbefore the=tree" dar e and Gets. Fremont took sundry steps _ for reinforclighim. Gen. Sturgis- left Bt. 'Lo I O ! tie 6 - .14 with s !aryl - ugly, and ' =p oceedingby the North Missenti and Han sthel Bt. iJoatiph road", at once formed • Soothe' .141 Gen. Pope's army for that ex _ preen joirPotte. Indeed, Gen. Pope was 1 .2; alluring with all ,speed toward Lexington, there,st Lb 1 and would , himself have been e head of at least 8,000 mem, on the %duca -1 - 1 7 - day before ' , Abe surrender, had he not-been ordered,-bark in all baste to Bt. Louis. ;Troops were also diepstobed river ;and ,0111. Lane Iras also ordered to march to !relief: There were, In thus sitars! commands , plenty of troops for t h e of :Lexington; sod the sting of the Fremont . had not troops enough,. but_ that he did not start ; Abets soots enough or handle them properly. I `Mulligan w e e compelled to surrender, with troops enough within fifty miles of him to hors • whip ped Price Milo" over, bat the sgegltaa_st Elt..Loitte preemie their reach •klog him..+There`were, Outage, large ;mum- •tiers of troops at 13t. Looll;with 'which Gon. .1111110IIS Igs sines teltett . the Bald, est recap. - lure Leitioon;:gbrefere they not iegt fore ttiiiiteoreolty of reaspturbittit? : Bat tilit&.! Emit:nt 'hoe undertaken Ocr deetti-ble Piet blandere by *bold movement its person `against ?deer We hope he may . It, he does be will - wipreat. - -the I;lilT4l,ollOttrii*-siiupon the result ethte preiti4eitetlitrauAtiPeade theTainttea to `t.kli mliUaz obi sty. ; ; • ; ~~~=;: =2:: • REM wakens-Do the sseseetewtsts euttpott That !here are BcoMaloalattle this county every 04 win adeiltt Theywre:net very lomeroas o ~tee be_ earel- hat ,everY rose asp put his eager on ohs or more whole sympa thise email with the Rebels. Whom, now, do tiese Eletessioniste sup poit ?_- Ask and see; irwilibe found, upon inquiry, that every one of theni supports the mieealled "Union" ticket. 'the editor who was warned by the U. S. 24grehal on eceount of the Secession proclivities of his paper, wee a delegate in the denuntion which Dominated le, and itipporls it In his paper; while every other of t the less prom inent among them goes in heartily for it. Why these syiopsthizare with rebellion eupport that ticket! Beesue the defeat of the Republican party would bee triumph to them. They oOuld herald Over the South as a great ,viotorY In the county which gave the largetaxasjority to Lincoln, and foul-mouthed fiebeis in the camp.of the enemy could chuckle over it an ojer the fall of Lexington. If a man is to hi known by a t e company he keep*, Republicans ought to be ashamed at being found in company edible* roan. Ratunuces Vibrontas.—Thi Repaid!. cane of hiatus. Yermont and California pat up straight or exclusive RepubliOan tickets, and elected than. They entered into no MR *call, attempted no -"Union" experiments; but planting theinnives firmly upon their platform as the only perky which sustained the Government in its struggle with Rebel lion, invited the Qo•operation of all loyal men, and fought the battle through success fully as the only real and true friends the Union. The result has shown that they were right. In Maine and Verinont they gloated their tioketa by more than the usual majorities. The "Union" Coket dodge was not tried to Blaine; but in Vermont it was, and it met Us fate in a path , 2,000 rotes oast for it. In California the Republicans made -- a straight, atand•up fight, major thefirst thes have elected their entire State deka and carried both branches of the Legislature. 1 . It is remarkable, also, that Abe election -of the Republican tiokets in these States is had evergwdere as a great victory for as Mien. The people have learned" to iden- tify the Republican party with the Union cause and to couple the metess of one with the other. They I .know that the Adminir tration was elm:Red by It; that the respon sibility of conciliating the government is upon its shoulders ; that' every man in it is committed unconditionally to the war; that it la the only - party which can successfully sustain the government; and that its suc cess at the polls is the best possible guru tee that the hand/ of the government will be-upheld. And what to trim of Maine, Vermont and California is truelalso of Allegheny. county, No ono doubts. tliat the election of our en tire ticket will bei hailed every where u the beet possible evidence of the devoted Union feeling in this 'county ; While Ile. defeat would afford moss substantial aid and com fort to the enemes of the government and the ,Union. Le -the Republicans of the county, therefore, vanish' the •example of their brethren elsewhere. • PRAOr/01 &1111 PRIICEPT.—The Pest of Saturday contains au article pitching with maligniutt vehemenoo into P. C. Sias - so; Sig., his offenoo consisting In basin left the Democratic, party. For this he ieroundly abused. The same paper apolitical:other artiole urging every one to forget party, tco., &.o. Thus while the Post urgesEepubli cans to "forget•party" and vote the Demo cratic "Union" ticket, it , does its best to keep party alive by abusing a man for leaving rite ranks. Every Democrat, it seem,, who does not. import the "Union" ticket has left his party, that party and the "Union" Organisation being, In the estima tion of the Post, one and Ole same thing. Wi publish, to•day, the article from as Bt. Lou News which led to the order, from Gen. Fremont, fa Ito temporary sappreP eon. The article WM. nothing treasonable thaj we. can lee ;and the arrest and imprisonment of the editor, for publishing it, wean sot of pure tyranny. Ws set attrition to the manly teller of T. M. Bayne, En t ., to another column. It will be eeen that he repudiates the "Union" ticket-trick lie showy, an we have before said, that the ticket was "cut •and dry" when the Convention met. BY 'LAST EVENING'S MAIL. WAIMIPICITOA, Sept. 27. 1841. * _rteleue of Furst P. Blair Ordered. TtorPresident bu to-day forwarded an order releuing Frank, Pi - Blair from andrt. Gen. Fremont wrote that he had no time to mate* and Faint his charges against Col. Blair, when Mr. Ltncoln at onu took the above action. ; - Arrest for Treasonable Complicity.. - A marine arrived here to-day in irons from Baltimore, one charge of inciting the crew to run a boat "store, containing arrested members of the Maryland Legislature, in order that they might taupe. It is stated that the menus wu offered six hundred collars if successful In car. rying out the deal& . She Dobai flattery as irreeetene Pabst. The transport Delaware wu fired at yester day as she paned that pointoreven slain being tbrowe striking , over and around berarithont the lou t damage. The battery be represented ae being a large one, with the rebel flag prom. ineptly: ,It le thought .by officers, at. tattle Potomac flotilla, that there are other- ions or batteries between Fueston• - Point aod - Acquin Creek, but that, u yet, they are'. concealed by the uses, which are thick Meng the shore. The policy of the rebels seems to be to first build their °freesias works and then to Olen the woods in their front. This view of their operations it strengthened' by the report of a farmer from Oticoquan, that the rebel troops ere in considerable torte be. tweet Oecocuas and Acquit Creek. Be for. 'tiler says they are building . forts and drawitig cloaca thither. ' " The schooner William Allen, Captain - Croat. mar, of New York, lorded with key, has ar.. tired at Alexandria. She wu fired at twelve times from a battery at OccequanCreek. • Two shells entered her deck load, and another struck her cabin fortinately not exploding. nay - were grad from a : SO pound rifled can. non. There are xi/Garnitures leading to the belief that this cannon was' Glistered at Bull Ron. The flitesunerAitaany Dare:bet Pees The battery. , Captain Crammer -reports the gnawer Al. belly. which left the nim yard yesterday mare lag, Wititabanebar, and' wee tying off Indian Head: this 'side at OeOwipitt Creek; being afraid to MN the rebel batterbw. .The IMearosYlideaneleg. ' A billooe reconaiwarnee to-day. dirtmered ' that tie enemy had ado:nerd towards-Akron. drid; from tee - dimples' of Springfield, and were ereetLeg batteries on Ender'e Bill, where. they were working with great energy. - 4 Ova resderai. will= :probably barn. already noted that • Geis. Oustsvas Adolphus Bb'oggly of Buffaloitrel' Hoe. Daski Ullman. of this city, propose IQ pet a brigade of *meld. Imuut oes gainii!itgalost 457 wont sactidurts tall Ile %WU tubotista ut nitti L ls ••biebstr-oCiAre-AilloW , Witt au pi 4314f96uin or Irish - NON that they bare sot** laid otdscUuti, P 1 t r,«. ~.c .cz.~«~+'~S'.:r%~w