C ht i ?4 ?- St ; if if vt fa i'' '" b 3 1 1; f !! 1 Raftsman's Jimntal. S.vr7 TTV.V K?: , S -J f i K--'J BY f. J. KO CLEARFIELD, PA., NOV. 2, 1864. NATIONAL rXIOX NOMINATIONS. ; " ror. pbesidet. ABRAHAM LINCOLN, of Illinois. ANDEEW J0HI30N, of Tennessee. I'M O.N ELECTORAL TICKET. S KN ATii:I At kctr S . -MORTON M'.MICIIAELs f PLiiadelpLia, THOMAS CUNNINGHAM, of Beaver. 1 P.obert P King, 2 Oe'..MorriiOii'Joatei. 3 Urrj Eoa-.m. 4 Vt'i;iiaui II. Kern. 6 Eartoc 1J JeLk3. ft Cuarie M T.uak. 7 .Robert Parke, 5 Williatn 'f ajlor. S John A. Hiejacd. 10 Richard H. CoryeU. 11 Kdward Haliiay. 12 CbarSt-fP. Kced; 13 Lliaa V.'. Hl.-, . 14 Charles H. SLriuer, 15 .1'rtm Wiatr-r. 16 liavid M'Oonauety. 17 IiaviJ W.Woods, IS Isaac Benson, I IV .John l'atton. J 2 i Samuel B l'ick, j 21 Ererard l'ierer, j 22 John P. Peuriey. 1 2i John W. l!Jar.cLar 1, DO YOUE DUTY. Union Men of ClearSc-ld .County! but a fer days remain until the struggle wi!! be determined between tho.se wuo pronounce the war a "failure" and demand "a cessa tion of hoitilitieV and those who beHeve that the caue for which our brave soldier are righting is just, that they are not sl icing their lives in vain, and that no terms of peace, ?-hort of submission to the author ity of the National Government, should 1 e accepted of traitors in arms. This is the is f ue which is to be decided on Tuesday the fth cay of November, 1C4. This is what .vou will be voting l'r or again.-t on that oc casion. It wiii not be for Abraham Lincoln or George B. McCiei'an. as nicn, that o-i will cast your ballots ; but it will be for them. ! na the representatives of a widely differing poliey of con-iucting our National arTairs, that you will vote. Abraha :i Lincoln is . working with all his might to preserve the government. He is laboring to prevent its destruction, with all the 1 r-.ri -:it his com- j mand. And just as his efforts are bringing ' -. forth good fruits just when our gallant, ar mies, east- and west, are reaping glorious victories will 3-011 so oast your ballots as to ; pronounce, these triumphs a "failure." and join in the demand fr "a cessation of hos tilities," or will you ie governed by the dic tates of patriotism, of humanity, of honor, o gratitude to the brave men who are fight- ' JDg the battles of the country, and vote that traitors shall yield- obedience to the laws the same to which we yield, obedience and thus bring about an honorable and a lasting Peace? As we said leforc, this is the issue which is to be determined ntsxt Tuesday. It remains for you to decide whether you will, by casting your votes jor Abrrht.m Lincoln, express your approval of the latter policy, or cast it for Geo. B. McClcllan, an armis tice, a separation of the States, and the es tablishment of a Southern Confederacy, with slavery as its chief corner-stone. " THEOWIXG AWAY GU1T3. Sheridar'o army in the valley has ft the Union army in" the North a good example. He pushed the enemy so hard that they were obliged to throwaway their big guns. Now let the Union men give the Copperheads Fuch a rout. that they too will be glad to a handon their "big guns," for example, Sey mour, Fernando Wood,Vallandigham,Voor heas, Pendleton and Little Mac, together with a miscellaneous lot of little gotta ;(cor respotfdingto muskets)such aslYank Hnghs, "Win- B. Reed, CapL Kountz, Dawson and others of this Stat and the Brookses and such gentry of New York. It is said that the way the flying rebels threw away their guns of all kinds in the valley, was wonder ful ; but it was nothing to the way the big and little guns of the same party in the North will be discarded after the 8th of No : "ve ruber. The only difference in the two ca se; is. that the abandoned guus in the North will uot be worth gathering up. A v70ETEY. EXAMPLE. Gen. David B. Birxev, almost iu the hour of his death, presented an example of . patriotism which should be a reproach to all the htkeuarm in the Union ranks. He was . brought to Philadelphia on election day, Oc tober Uth, with the impress of death upon - hi features. Before allowing 1 imself to be taken to his home, he insisted upon being carried to the polls, to vote, as a citizen, for the cause for which he had fought as a sol dier. And yet we know of men in this coun ty who live but a short distance from the polls, and had r.o special reason for not go ing to the election, who remained at home. WY"e hope that all such will remember the laudable example of Gen. Birney, and that on next Tuesday they will go to the polls .:. without fail and cast their votes for the U ' rion candidates. ; Gov. Bradford of Maryland has issued a .'proclamation announcing the adopion of the Free State Constitution in that Stite, by a majority of 376 vote.' sr. - , n" ' ' 1 ' : ATS IEATE EDITOB. t there is proof enough besides to establish The ostensible editor of the Clearfield j the dread conclusion. That wen Trill reject Jtrpullicsinht-i the public know, in his last . it all, and jet pretend to be loyal, is a diffi issue, tlm he. is out of humorthat he is j cult thing to comprehend. Nothing is more "riled" that his un usually placid" temper ! certain however, than.tb.at should the spirit is greatlv uist-url-ed. and gives notice for evey j an I blindness which control them prevail, rv body to "stand i'rom under." The cause ! they will lament their fata! error amid the of this mental tempest of Daniel's, we are j ruins of the Republic and in the gloom that p!ain!v given to understand, lies in some of; will soon overcast tie world. - -the editorials of the Jovrnal. For "any- : ' -""" ' thing -id-oh or alui the editor, and '"THE EEBELS EOR LINCOLN." . "many valued friends," or "about hi or Such is the caption of an article in the last tLeir jolitieal acts, in a fair and ytist and j number of .the C'ipf rliftJ oryati, of this truthful spirit of critieim.,! h'aiiit-l says he i place, in v.hkh the editor tiies to show that doesn't icare a groat'- cot a Continental j the reliel favor the re-election of Abraham '"cuss" ah- no, not he. That, we aro to j Lincoln as "the South'sbest ally," and to es iufer, he could patiently endure. But .when j tablish his position, quotes what j urjtc.i ts to it cou.es to "vile personal abuse" tuot be j be an txtract from the Richmond Examiner. won't stand that forces, oj-cn the iafety valve, and Daniel, with expanding i.o.-trils and flashing .eyes. valorou-Jy exclaims, it "js! cfisc.!" not hereafter net in a year, o. a month, or a week but "imrufxh' airly!'' We hope he wont doanything rash, anl we trust bis "many valued friends" will, for a time at least, restrain Lis impetuosity, lest he collap.-es his "Mkr" an 1 brings de struetioa uj on him.-elf. But. seriously .-jeaking, it is not so much with tb ; editor of the J-jh.-.i"!. as with a certain "itidivi'iuai" whom h charges with writing lur our cui.imns th lie e utor ol j the licjivLli'can has iu.-t his temjer. IB. Swcroj.e" is "the thorn in hh iride." 1I-; is the "iiilividiial ' who, it is alleged, m .ce particularly, is guilty of " vituperation and persona! slaiider ' of our "citizens and neigh bors," through the (.obtains of the Journal. We are n t the apologist or defender of Mr. Swooe. lie is able to take care uf him self. But us the '" !vw, dirty personal abuse of respectable citizens and neighbors" is al leged to have been made in our c-jlumn-s, we woull be wanting in manhood if we did not pronounce the. charge unwarranted and u;i triK1 in Mjiutof fact. We have never made an attack upon the p'-nonal character or jtri'.-'.'ttr reput ttiou of any private citizen in this or any ctbereommuuiiy neither do we 11 ten 1 to do so. But. in regard to the po litical positiuijj: and opinions, a yd the public acts and doings auJ sayings of editors of newspapers, public speakers, and 'public of li .ials. we, have spoken plainly and freely, and we intend to tlo so as long as a frr j fend free $peh are tolerate ! in this county an oligarchy and a despotism and a tyranny, like that which has muzzled the tmgues'und the pvc-s in the Southern States, behi;.' alone sufficient to deter us from exercising this ri.aht holding ourselves a m?nable for any violation of that Constitu tional prerogative. But let us see how near our neiphbor's practice come3 up to the standard of his prrcpfs: In the very article in which he chtrges us w;:h"vituperatioii and person al slander" of our neighbors, lie attacks one of Oar citizens jui-J calls lfim an "irrttpon fitjf: jn'hlir and pvicatp Offai,ti:r"' a lijHthy ecretch," a "common nuisance." a l'vrriMe inJ revolting dcfurntity' of" whom i'the huft'lrerfth part lias nvrtr been till ;" and yet, the editor who uses these yhtinlerunt epithets towards hi '"neighbor" has the brazen faced audacity to lecture us on ''per gonal slander." 'U thou hypocrite!" :) thou viper!" "Than blind guide, which strains at a gnat, and swallows a cana l." "first cast the beam out of thine pwii eye, and then thou shalt see clearly to pull the mote out of thv brother's eve." DESIGNS OF TEE COPPEEHEAI T3 That the election of Mct'lellan, remarks the Pittsburg Commerciol. would be imme diately followed by a disruption of business, a financial revolution, and a permanent !i visou of the republic, no fair minded mart will for a moment pretend. It is always dif ficult to believe that great calamities toe near at hand. All the warnings of stales r.ien and patriots could not awaken the na tion to the fact that Buchanan's Cabinet were plotting rebellion, and that the .South would really take up arms against the Gov ernment. But when the storm burst, all the hitherto hidden machinery was uncovered. So it will be" in the event of McCIelian's election, and the fact will have been learned too late that what Buchanan's Cabinet be gun, McCk-haii will finish. It is really amazing that any one should entertain a doubt. The evidence establishing the fact that the success of the Chicago ticket will be followed by negotiations for a final separa tion of the South from . the North, is vastly more conclusive than that which went to show the treasonable purpose of the Buchan an Cabinet. - Whether we take the author ized declarations of the Chicago Convendoa, the utterances of the journals and orators of the party, or the antecedents and surround ings of the can iidates and their immediate advi'ers, to the unprejudiced mind the con clusion is inevitable that a permauent divis ion of the States must follow the election of McClellan and Pendleton. We need not point, as proof, to the fact that the Rebel holdiers everywhere cheer for McClellan, and feel as deep an inter est in the election asjs felt in the North; that the leaders of the desperate fortunes of the Rebellion, in the language of Mr. Boyoe, of North Carolina, "give this par ty all the encouragement possible, " and hold that "the Chicago Platform is the true one;" nor that throughout Europe it is the accepted conclusion that the success of the Cbicago ticket will surely eventuate ra 6ep- 1 aration, to these we need not refer, beoiuse liie genuineness of this " extract may well be doubted. A party, who is guilty of such a wholesale fraud as has been attempt ed by Democratic politicians in regard to t lie New Yoik soldiery' votes, would scarcely hesitate to forge a newspaper article to cover un the complicity of Southern traitors with Northern Copperheads, in an effort to elect Gen. McClellan President. That such a complicity does exist, and that the rebels really desire the election of MeCielian, the intelligent reader need only refer back to the "war despatches" published in ail the newspapers throughout the country, within the last two weeks, for the evidence. In those despatches he will find, that during a battle iu the Shenandoah Valley, the rebel War cry wa- "Jfvrrah for McClellan." Sucdi was the case, too, during the late fight at Allatooua, Georgia, where the 1,1 Hurrah for McC'nH.on" was frequently heard alove the din of battle. And but a few days since, before Petersburg, the rcbs jumped up on their breastworks and gave "three cheer for Mc( lil in .'" These instances are sufficient to convince any reflecting man. as to whom the traitors wish to see elected President. But, as a lurther evidence on this point,, we will tive several extracts from Rebel pa pers. The v,ta.rh:ou Mercury i? Septem ber f.th, says: "The dutiuil of G'rD. Me Chil! an. (upon such declaration of wrongs and platform) ni'.txf lead to pence and oi'r inthpiiob itce, with one essential condition however, that for the next two months we hold our own an 1 prevent military sue-.;,-, by our fois. I!" we !o thi- there isevei v probabiiitv that McClellan will be fleeted.'" The Charleston Courier of Sept. 7 th says: "All of us perceive the intimate connec tion existing between the armies of th: Con federacy .and the Peace men of the United States. Utr s-p resf in L ttth; innre-i (he hucrtfs of McClellan.'' More positive proof than the above, that the rebels are for McClellan lecaue his elec tion will insure the Independence of the Southern Confederacy, it is impossible to procure, and should be nifiieient to deter ev ery lover of the Union from voting for "Lit tle Mac ' for by voting fur him you vote for Rebel Independence. But. if you vote for Abraham Lincoln u iote for the per petuation of the Union. Loyal men, of all parties, we hope that you will se:S)usly ponder and reflect upon these great and indisputable truths, and that on next Tuesday you wiii go to the polls and cast your ballots on the side of the Union. and against the Rebels and their Northern allies. WOODWARD AND K'OLELLAN. Below we give several extracts from the sayings of George . Voodward and George B. McClellan, which will be read with great interest at this time : "In my judgment, our only course is to withdraw ali our armies north of Maon and Dixon's line, and o'er terms to the Rebels. " . . . ". '"Slioull there be a separation, between the North and the South, I would prefer th" line to be drawn north of Penn sylvania." .... "We bear it s:id. let the South go peaceably. I say let her go peaceably." Ceo. Yoo luard. "I desire to state ch arly and distinctly that, haviner some few d-iv.s at'o had a full conversation with .Jude Woodward. I rind llaif e,ur t-ien-n anrre. and I regard his elec tion for Governor of Pennsylvania called for bv the interests of the nation." Ceo, B. McCl'Jlan. "Woodward says : "our only course is to withdraw our armies north of Mason and Dixon's line, and offer terms to the rebels." McClellan "agree icith Lim." Woodward says : "should there be a sep aration. I would prefer the line to he drawn north of Pennsylvania. " McClellan 'iaarees icithhim." Woodward says : "we hear it said, let the South go peaceably I say let her go peace ably." McClellan '"agree with him." Woodward also said : "to think against slavery is a sin, to spealc against slavery is a crime." McClellan "agree. icilh him." Woodward also said : "slavery is an incal culable blessing. " McClellan "agrees with am. Woodward also said, "that the draft was unconstitutional." McClellan ''agrees iclth him." Woodward also said that the soldiers had no right to vote. McClellan "agrees with him." Friends of the Union! the above are the views of George W. Woodward and George B. 2IcClelIan. Their "views agree"' in ev ery particular. Can you longer doubt that McClellan and his party are in favor of sep aration in favor of acknowledging the In dependence of the Southern Confederacy ? We trow not! Then go to work at once, and never cease your labors until next Tues day evening, and the result will -be a tri umphant victory over the enemies of the U nion both North and South. "THE LAW THE CONSTITUTION., LTnder the heading of "The Law," the Clearfcll Republican of last week, publish es the following words from Purdon's Di gest, page 3S3," Section 10. "No body of troops in the Arm v of the i United States, or oi this Commonwealth, 1 shall be present, either armed or unarmed 1 at any place of election within this Com j monv. ealth during the time of such election. j We presume that no person, except the j editor of the HepnbUcan, or some offender t- against he laws of the land.has ever thought of stationing troops nt "any place of eke- tion." . If such a necessity, however, has ! arisen, the Copperhead leaders them?cives are resi-onsible for the act. from the fact that ! at tne last election they run a notorious de- serter, (and row a murderer ) to the i oils, j under an armed ouard of seven men, and, had him vote their ticket. Whether the : authorities have the right to place troops at j or near the place of be f ion. "durimr the time of such election, we do not pretend j t.. discus BMiorlheWmlitof t!,f! ' " I "?W" cri . jujw huwjKEAD aitd reflect:!.,, .tsr r fling (j lneuds. we ouote the 41 Section oi ! . s i"iti...n. h.-j Article 3d, of the Constitution of Pennsyl- Everv State that hns held an election this fCf vPUW WK& JOii yf 4 "J en. ... r . ! including nianv officer c, . ,; , vama. to wit: f f;.t. ha been camel bv the friends of .the I ,- , ' .. l'"i UT "ur "Electors shall, in all cases, eyepf frrirtn jeloiiy oti'l oreavlt or 'fti rt ty oj t fa. peace, 1 i privileged from arrest dining their attenc 1 a nee on elections, and in going to or fro! j them." ! N ow. we presume, that this section of the w-, ...... , , Constitution wiii at least reach the case of their, friend Lounsberry, who is' not only guilty of a "breach or surety of the peace," "j but of murder ' Will thev briiis him to the polls on Tuesday next ? But, we opine, this Section will reach oth er cases also. Are there not numbers in this county who are guilty of treasonable acts against the Government of the United States in that they have encouraged the enemies of our country by threatening to resist the Conscription law, etc? If so. are they free from arrest on that day by "troops," either armed or unarmod? Could you bg-iVy de bar "troops"' irom being "present at any f daee of election" ' under sueh circumstances '! We think not ! Will our neigirbnr "stick a pin there." and digest it at his leisure ? The D'iDD Trial. The evidence ad duced in the Dodd trial at Indianapolis shows that two thirds of Virihindigham's or der were armed ; that the number enrolled in the lodges of Illinois was 4'.U.K0, in Mis souri 4.'M Ni, in St. Louis alone -O.O'.X) ; it was already in testimony that Indiana had fiom 4il.i.00 to CO.thHt enrolled ; that Ohio was to be invaded at three points l,y" John Morgan or Wheeler ; that Indiana was in be invaded by . Longarreet, aud Missouri by Price and Mariuadnke ; that the ioya jiug rebels, with Yahurliehum's Sons ofLilx rty, were, in all thee S".atcs, "to shake hauls and be friends;" that the invasion of Mis souri was posted iu the order for October, and that it was understood in the lodges that Prices 'now progressing) would stay in Mis souri until after the election. Yallandig ham's chief staff oiiieer seems to have been one Capt. 1 line-, formerly of Joh Morgan's statu to whom was committed t lie uutv of releasing the prisoners on Johnson's Island. Lost various Democratic majorities, an assortment of Democratic Congressmen, sev eral Democratic Senators, a score or so of Democratic As-emb!ym-r.i, and thousands of Democratic soldiers who Were expected to make th ? Nation redolent with the music of "Give us back our Old Commander." All have disappeared most vexatiously and inop portunely withiu the last two weeks. Ap ply to the chief mourners the editors of the Clearfield Republican. Early informa tion much waited, and would greatly relieve several families. TO THE POLLS ! TO THE POLLS ! ! Remember that next Tuesday is the elec tion. Every friend of the Union should vote then. The best interests of the Union demand this of all. Then go to the polls and vote the Union electoral ticket, and we shall come out of this contest crowned with a greater and" more glorious victory over the enemies of the Union, than that of At lanta or Cedar Creek. LOOK OUT E0E LIES! Just on the eve of the October, election the Copperheads circulated die most iLsurd iddevelish lies in regard to our armie- . r, i , , ,,r , atmg that Grant was driven back to ash- an statin incfoii. Sheridan to Harper's Ferry, and Sherman to Nashville. So look out for an other batch of the same sort of falsehoods before Tuesday next. "A word to the wise is sufficient." EXAMINE YOUE TICZETS. As the Copperheads are resorting to. ev ery species of rasealitj' to make votes-for lit tle Mac, we advise the friends of the Union to be on the lookout for spurious, or mixed tickets. Look well to yeur ballots before you deposit them. Official Vote of Pennsylvania, Below we give the official majority of Penn sylvania, at the October election, as printed in several of the c"t3' papers : Majority on home vote, 391 Majorit3 on Soldiers vote. 12,656 Total Union majority, 13,04i The President has issued his proclama tion, admitting the new State of Nevada in to the' Union. f?f;2. -.W 1 " ' ": " :C:-t''s. : '" -1 ' - 1 Srm&Hr-h - k "Q"D A TT A TT T TTTP'OT TT AjjJLbAjllLxlu. JiXlN UUJ-llx FO"" VICE PRESIDENT, ANDEEW JOHNSON. Union. 17. HAMPSHIRE BY 6,000 KAJOEITT. MAINE TY lo.OO'j MAJORITY. : r-i.-r t- , ,.. ..- r t-.htpv ' J'.liAiU-M Jji It. ".' .M.X.lUUl 1 1 ! FENXSYLYAXIA BY 13X00 MAJOEITY INDIANA BY 20,000 MAJORITY. OHIO BY 80,001 MAJORITY. i The result in the above named State-: j give unmistakable evidence that th I eople , , , , . , , , . nave iieterniiiica to re-e-eet .vt-ranam jjiu- ; coin President of the United States. Then "Rally round the Pol's, lys." f nee more on next Tuesday, and v e shall achieve the most grand and glorious victory over the enemies ot our b loved Union ;m!h North and Sotirh that the world ever witnessed. Startling Disclosures! HOW THE DEMOCRATS EXPEC TI!D TO CARRY X. YORK 11 FRAl'HS I'l'OX THE SOLDIERS!!! Astounding discoveries have been made, during tiie past week, by 'i lie Government, of a gigantic fraud in regard to the soldiers vote iu the State of New York. The evi dence leaves no doubt- that agents of the Democratic leaders of that State, at Wash ington, at Baltimore, at Harper's Ferry, ami in the Army of the Potomac, have put up many thousands of ballots, purporting to be those of soldicrs.and forged the signatures of soldiers who have fallen iu battle or died in t he hospitals, and of pel sons w ho have no ex-i-tenee at all to pajers transmitting. proxies l-r McClelhin and Seymour. When it is stated that New York soldiers can vote by pro";y iu other words, by enclosing their tickets iu an envtlope and sending it home it will be readilv urderstcod bow this 1 Il'a';'1 ''ouia ,X; suwmui" earned tiirougn. .Several oi tne agents orgagci m tins ne.a- rious conspiracy have been arrested, and are now In jail, aud others wiii be arrested as soon as he necessary roof can be collected. The crime is pronounced by Judge Advocate Holt, "one of the most m-ions character." A Military Commission has already con vened at Baltimore, with Gen. Poubledav as presiding officer, for the trial of two ! of the leading actors. One rf them. named Donohue, has plead guilty of having signed certain blanks- with the name of C. S. Fortune, Captain. Thus the crime is es tablished beyond the possibility of a doubt, an J it is to be hoped that prompt punish ment will follow this outrageous villainy. Another device, in perfect keeping with, and doubtless part and parcel of this same game of rascality, has also been exposed by Gen. Dix, who in a general order, dated at New York, October listb, says : "Satistactory information has born re ceived by the Major General Commanding, that nbel agents in Canada design to send into the United Stales, and colonize at dif ferent points. Iaree numbers of refugees, deserter-, and eneV.iies of the Government, wi'h a 'view t vote at the approaching Pres idential election' and it is not unlikely when this service to the rebel cause has ieen per fi'ri!ie1' ibat they may l organized lur the purpose oi rhootmg uown i-eaeeable citizens, 1 :Uid phiuderini: private proi-ertv. as in re- determination of the Maior-Geiieial com nianding to guard by every possible precau tion, and to visit on the perpetrators, if they shall be detected, the most signal pun ishment. All the classes of persons enu merated, whether citizens of the insurgent States, who have been in the rebel service or engaged in acts of hostility to the Gov ernment, deserters from the military ser vice of the United States, or men drafted or are subject to draft who have fled to avoid their duty to their country, and are liable to punishment for the crimes they have already committed,, no effort will be spared to arrest," It is by such villainous mean? that the Copperheads expected to carry New York for McClellan, and explains the seeming con fidence which the leaders of that State had in doing so. We do not sec how honest Democrats can longer stand hj men who are guilty of attemptingstich outrages against the soldiers and the country. i cent iiredatory' incursions on the Detroit nv- i . "T 0ftl.nr,f unnort Gen. McCLr.LL.iN up er tnd at St. Albans. Against these umnit- Cn the Chicago platform, nor caul i'f igated outrages oni he purity of the elective ariv circumstances cast my vote r-.r .V-. franchise, and these nefarious acts of rob)- pEjfDLETON', who is in my jadgeta-:, "' berv, it ccndiansm, and murder, it is the tb. vitl ....t'on cf tb, hour, ai h-.'"."0.-- THE WAR NEWS Army of the Potomac. Ot R TROOPS IN .MOTION. ADVANCE OfIjaNCuCK vt . WARREN'S CORPS." .15 M1LE.S OF COfXTR V G AItu A Rebel afUck on llaucck ll.-y.-,-. OVER 000 PRISON EUS C AP r l'Rtu On October 27th, a reconn :':sa:icc iu' was made by Warren and Hancock f- steadily-advaueed f"r 15 miies.. it " ? j point the enemy was i'oun 1 t-;, ir f.; entrenched and his orks uian:....-i. , tack was made during theuV iV.., . " i i the pickets and cavalry in:... theaiu v r' Our casualties were !t- i)lf.n m. i- i.j i .. , " - S;-iti. wouiKieu auu missing u,e ret-d.s lino 1 ell -back abemt two n.i ,- ty h st j sition, which tlsey held a; ;at ; I,ts. w!io'e number of reVi i durine the day was -u. During the recvimoiivi;; on ft, i,.,-. gallant sortie on a rb?i fort w.-m r, ti, (blown up by Burnsld-j last made, and its entire gir.-i-, i.) ca; . Gjn." Butler also in .-:?,,',.., w and penetrated as far r x: -:...-j ! , ec.st. of iuehmond, and th- r..-j v everywhere to be strong'y t-ntrnrkf in -.ini1 C -n 1 ..,.. . ::!il , , , . J-ceii jarffeiv reiniorce-.b THE INVASION Or .MImIHI. . prick sm.L ur.v.; sot 'i'n. 1 ,500 Priso: s .in-- V2 Onus 'L.h:z. SHLn.MA.fS A!!.MV A 1,1, UIGni. Sr. Lous, October u7. Our fl.r.-es J s? been driving Price rapidly since FriJuy. At last accounts he was I wenty 5 ve or thirty lu'.Ies southeast of Fort Scott, and hi army rout ed and dispersed. On Tuesday we hr.l sev eral f ghts with him bet.veen Mounl City and Fort Scott, in alio" which he was b-i r whipped, losing l.o prisoners aniten-.-r twelve pieces of artillery. Among the j ri. oners are Major General Marmaduke. iiiig adier General Cabell, several Colonels hni other officers. He was again attacked yes terday morning a short distance north of Fort Scott, -and driven je!! mcll in a southoastc-r- ply direction. He burned two hundred wug oii yesterday to prevent them being et; tured. Nothing is stated about the c cither side, but there f c-enis. to be uo uou;t that Price's army is completely demeiiiliz i and scattered. The telegraph is sorting 'j Fort Scott, but- no'biiig was receive J b re gard to to-day "a operation-:, except that our forces still vigorously pursue. , Gen. Sta, with heavy reinforcement- at Fort SL::th, with the prohable vie of coi.te:.:ir Price 'a entrance into Arkansas. New Yof.k, OcroUr 1?. Tho ihrali learns from liigh military .authori'.y tLu". the reports of the critical situation ofShir man's army iu Georgia are totally uutV-ui.d-ed. Atlanta has nearly three months fuj. plies for its gai risen. Allatcu' na is well sup plied. Chattanooga is Sherman' ircseat base, and is well snpplied. A GALLA1TT EIGHT AT BE7E2LY. Tim rebels i:i:rt'LSEn On the morning of the 2ith October, Ma jor Hill with 250 men of JmboJcn' eo:n mand. attacked the sn si! garrison atlvwprij, West Yiigiuia, but were rej ulsed at-.?r two hours fight. The rebel las wnl!' prisoners, 1" killed, and a large number f wounded Major Hill being among the lit ter. Our loss was 7 killed snl 21 wauni.d The rebels retreated to the mountaia-" H00D DEFEATED AT DECATCZ. On October 29th, the relxds under H -.-i made an attack on Decatur, Alabama. Iu were repulsed with a loss of 130 prison-ri, 4 cannons, besides his dead and wound-! AsniJEL Gkeex, a prominent tni If'" long Democrat of Bergen County, N- J., has published his reasous for ha ing det mined to vote for Mr. Lincoln. U'uh one n: i nest as Jefferson Da vh himself." 'Another Eebel Outrage. We learn that the rebel return j'"',;- Lycomine countv have thrown out ''(' votes enough to'elect their cand;eV.f -"f the Senate and House. This game w:J -work, gentlemen. , The voice ot the ''; shall and will be respected. This n as-. 1 u..i tVa r.-.r.nt-heacisi"1r: I ' '. Ill - - ......w.----- - I i . toward Union soldiers. Tcleprcp lueiicu yn iuv ihu-.-"iiucivij.- ' Star "a4rrrti$fiafni$. Attvrrtirmtlet inlcrgt type, enu,uTOa f''l Ktyl-viU be charged douUi VrU for iTffzlL ST R AY CO '.-Cme f rep 'nc ", i.-e of the subscriber in Chest 'lL.r, the 1st of last August. r"l cow, wi!b nloni the bck, urpocd o be about -T"r ,v. The owner is requested to come forM-a.i property, pay chr)re nd tkher. will be sold tbe!w direct nl'F.I1 'T..?4,.,.K!"t. 5.Pir5J ut i . t - V,,