4 II IBM (N 4 Aro,2lorg* t.._. CI-LA:ILE7:3MRS - SijMa. z .„ Wednesday' Yarning, July 22, -1848, "t_ 4 l:ol=. Jonw L S#Rizoon: is irilthriied tti r®ceive,Snbacrinttona and Contract fue Adyeitisimenti thb-REPosixonylnthc, Eater ' ' ;SINGLE:, code 'af the _14F,60011.1 . , can ,be had •ot :the counter with' 9r - without IN - rapers: Price five cents. • TiL6 SirIIATtOk. Old:FlO;g Or.-the'-tfrtion" iu triumph at, ,- every: triots traitors- have 'confronted each other, to_ doeidi) the futute,des: tidy of. the Itopablie' l lay the shoill." - ,,0f "' : Vicksburg unit 'Port - 11iidson have fallen,—their rebel - 'garrisons are pri ; loners, and the Father of Waters is .s*n.to the free , naVigation of 'loyal inen from its :' e.,,, rentiss repelled. the attack.Of Price catituringsome 2,090,0 f liia men, and thuE , s . perished tholas hope of rebel. .foot hold. en the ifissisSippi: Six 'month -ago :Jeff. Davis declared .iiefore theatississippi legislature i that 1! the 'Confederacy must stand' Or fall " by the defence ,of the River !" The River has fallen - from the craeliem- Vrace of treason, and the confederacy Peels in the" laSt . ',violent throes of death. ' Kittle ROVIi.,(- the capitol of Arki has just: Bien' captured by Geri: Blunt, , and Jackson,. the capital of gissisSiPpiVillhas been'. -captured -ty Geri. Sherman'' With 6,000 prisoners: Johnston is ,now retreating''upon Rear' Riteriwith -his shattered and ktoPele B S . 0 1 layl :Bragg driven nearly :girt of 'Tennessee by Roseerans, with a loss. of 4,506 .piisonerS, and Chatti:- nooga and -allot' East Tennessee, with thousands of, loyal souls, aro now, or ii;km 4d9i the protection of the Old , Flag: , --Lee has-been retreating his defeated army toward Richmond as rapidly as possible, and Ifeade is parsuing him on the eaSteraiide 'Or the Ridge, and will, t.rust,l3triio the rebel: cOra inander' - at Gord6rlSVille' and Utterly' "route the deinerallied'and despairing: -remnant ; of;his - :ariny. • Invasion in :force is ended.kand the qifort hasgivell . the deepeSt and.heeni - Eif-stab to the, vitals o treason.. - . If •31 - eade. shall reach Lee': Gerdensville; the rebel `army 43fAraitini',Will cease 'to exist Pave • • Charleston,-the • hot-bed of the re-' %ellion, is abeiafte- s pay the' penalty" of her Cause ess upon,...the gov <ernment. The -cloom:ed cityLis now - closely, ,besieged• by . land and water; the out-Torksof-the enemy ha.ve been, ,gained, and ,it'ort:Srimter, on - which' °tlie'first; Amok to traitors, `must; toea surrender' to the gallant; Gilmore. r • - the bxieflcriod - of thirty days, , the ,mounter treasonhlaS:becn discom-' fited ut every point; iid the cause of Free Cr4:)*,Ciinnefit, s under the guidance of Rita iiik'O'holdi the reigns of Sue- , tire, seems to' break npon the noon 'tide olvietory • •.: IMPIt'I3IOIAEAT ttE. - _ The=popular,disappointment-at the; tetreat with the tuna ant of, *is ariny, , across', the 'Potomac with: 'teMparatiie is keen and nn:; ...With - inatiy the unreason able hppe, was, -cherished -with cont. tence - thai,Leaiviild be utterly de-, 'strove '`ox es,Pthredi'" but , With -pore ~efleeting,there prevailed a con. lictionthat Gen Meade would deliVOr 'battle' - with every chance- of success; and that the rehel,Aosts would, be' tooted and ,destroyed as „. . • -It is possible that General Meade could hare engaged Lee on ,Monday of last and Touted him. - •Cer -4,BlnlYhad ImpWn how helpless' _Lee was just therii, -with part of his artillery already across the river,:the destruction of Lee could have liOen attaecf.,*o4Gen.'Meade must ntit judged • and Censured- rashly. glance at the map giyen: on our first page will - show ;what sii herculeali tok he had to 'perform. It must-he home in mind, , to, 'that Lee had, gainOdTosse'ssicin of-the 'SOuthilliesuit. fain-pas.ses froY!' Aii;:k6toM-9.0 up,:; the _Gettysburg turnpike, before Gen. Meade :barFeMitmand of ~the -Army; and :that :Tiee'BvPPenAiike'.of mtrept hands and powerbi Meade toe-interrupt. Led 'eqmineneed - his retreat on Sites nrday merning t duly 4th, of cause =I presenting a strong ~ front to Meade artilloryyand :baggage:were safely oat, OPreach., A Ile = then with drew, his. rear giiard, leaving hia dead 'and !wontided to', the,tender - mereteis, of the ;laden eginmander. Leelad thus full twenty, -fok lintirs,'etait - of Meade in his movement, and he" was falling hack:Joy/Ird his baSe and 'shortening his lities t ,while the purs'ait hy *ado:extended his line 6 andr volved immense ;transportation' of pistons and, ammunition evertwo Moii,titains,Andbad roads; ' had hnt to, reereSS, the 'South liosintain'Uto Franklin: county by • - • the,GettysbUrglar,td4priterey,pdss6§; -and; from Straight line to the new Pcs-i7j ion in a marciref thirty:miles. •On the other hand - Meade's , army ,• had .„ been:brought _to Gettysburg .1y the most exhausting :forced inarclieti; With - the isMallest_possible aniount of trans, portation, •':and the 'very troOps:reached there thcenga,gement; , it e h andconimenced i for three days N. . ged withthedeadliest, fury.until full twenty thousand of hie gallant , war-- - lion were numbered with: - the dead; wounded and • captUred,T: , 'AlthOugh tvietorfons in holding hisfieSition and . . ntterly - rdefeating: and'. flirning baCk the - rehel:boides under Lee," still the shOck: of thatbattle, '-with, the, dead and ivotunied of both :armies in This Itank.-iefthiSuriny in a sorry condi 'thin proMptPursiiit:: He did PO- Su.4,:h.Oketter - , as rapidly as VaS possi, ble'to ini*eUnd supply his Men; b'ath'e s had to March nearly thirty miles to FrederiCli,' thence across the Catoc :auk South mountains to bore, nearly. twenty Miles more, and then'found-the rebel lines ;extendini fromShepperdstOwnte Williamsport;', r(aS'.-marh. - ed on , 'the 'niap :by dotted ,‘lines) . 3.3 - i'd also Covering - lia i gerstOwn:- pro4tly Made reeonnoisanCes 'froonil3oontSboro to,.the ul f .ntietam, to Funkstawn 'and, Hagerstown, . and Sedgwiek•• compelled Lee to retreat ;fro - in the- ShePperdstown ford' and tSheiten" his lineiinraediatelY around •.• " ',the 'PaSition thus - lieien Ify Lee Was - one - of 'singular - strength "natal - rally, and was: fortified so as to Make almost: Meade might faci e - att'.4. l -successfully on Sp.n.=, f clay,' but at aiatrifice - of -nearly two of :leis _ brave veterans to One of _the , • enemy;, 'and even if - succeSsful in „- - tlrMrig Lee frOtalis chosen' aiiafor. (;tifiedpoSition-:Ta sneceSs'aS, Yet,ne : irer `,achieved by :either 'side, in this '.war, although" atteMpted by Bnrnside' - at = and Lee at Gettys burg-lee could have retreated UP the Potomac, and, if pressed, could haVe clipsen a .position at 11m-ice-telt _in the Ininintaini: frerd,' which double* the for& of Meade could - not disltidge ;him. With an ,adeqnateSorcenn the ' :south side.erthe. Potdnrac, he- might there : haire suffered capture but he 'could, scarcely lave -failed -to 'make, good his-escapeucress the riier . befpre, 'the Union, army - could haye heen thus disposed . to cutoff - his retreat: We doubt not that 'Meade maurei vered his army nnderpositiveinstink tions from the Commander-in-Chief not to uncover 'Washington, or, in, other words, not to deliver battle with the enemy between him and the 'Na- , tional capitol • The peril, of, thiS Moirerant doubtless preVented Meade from throwing his army around kun Boonsborp' to Hagerstown to attack Lee-from the„.7est on his einnPara tively unprotected leftllank. - :But such a change. in the Union forces could not ba:ye been made for 'an at tack in less lhau twenty,four hours, and: Lee would'have simply declin6d battle by , crossing the Potomac, as it: 'Was passable by the - time'Me,ade,eould have reaehed a position on his left. It is due .to Gen. Meade, who so - nobly, redeemed Northern soil. fromrebel invasion by 'his skill and here 7, isinnt "Gettysburg, that the almost in uneasurable - difficulties which con= fronted him inlltlie„Pursuit and at tempt to engage Lee again, should be known 'and ' Censide,red. Itad he hurlea his - decimated army, upon Lee's : fortified lines on Saturday or Sunday,.;and `suffered a repnb3e t . Lee WOuld'haire,been re-infOrced _and _re •neWyd.his offensive movements. upon our. Soil; and the fruits of the ,'deeply crimsoned, yictory of - Gettysburg been lost. Instead - of A - shattered, dis pirited-and hopelessaarroy upen • ltiefl. Mond, Meade would now be retreat ing, withthe gallant Armyo'f.thO-te toinac uponthe defences 'of taltiMpre and--Washingten.-- Disariointed!k au T, T • tt, ' • 411j0 frltitkfitclitobtiAtotif“'ilfietttbet.ditifiLlitt.- we must be that4de hag not been de stroyed, - US be thanliftd ,the rich fruitS of Meade s signal Alone" incomplete triwnaph, Lather than un generous • We have much; ,not only in this, but in ‘ '4tVer eaniisaigns during this War 0* -4,e -- certainty - of Ps'bag-i, ging "- rebetiarmies; but in field op-) erations such results are singilyitapos4 Buri id e s defeated 'at# Frederiefiehurg rear, cannnanded bi - .1 - iebel batteries yet he withdrew his army safely, los ing his dead. and wounded." looker Was defea,ted„at Chaneellorsville : witk a river:in ids rear swollen to the an- ariest tide , - and tSedowick Was at the same. time rePulsed , with fearfal On the 'Fredericksburg ' heights,--Yei botg're : cressed 'cOfniaands saf'ety in - the very Taco and.under the very guns of a rebel •commander;to whom masterly ,abilitY''ltLcOnceded by friend and 'foe: Nor did and titrnside withdraw' their co- Mands:frimi before ah' ,ra byforced marchesi - and: just from fields dripping with theigore, of Kill" one. , fourth their 'comrades IWlio'entered the battle.. Lee's army was com parativ.ely fresh and on its lougocen piedground after the battles of,Fred- ; ericksburg and dttancelloriiiiii, -and their loss in ' 'neither engagemeengagement, . equalled ours. Yet the "Union army retreated in Safeti, as' "did - -Lee from the froptiof keade, nor, i'asleelield as 'wanting in:ability energy cause he =did ni4"Vag' - 'l3ainSide. and Hooker. And it'is worthy of - consid, , . oration that theTepulSes.ef Burnside and Sedgwiek at - Fredericksburg,,and the disastrous repulse of Lee at Get tysburg,',,were the,resultcof!,attacks againSt:skillfully i 'selected - and, forti r fted position's just such as Lee heid l and Meade must, have s aSsailed ut liamsport. Let deal justly, if not generously with our, heroes;.'and sus tain, •and 'strengthen %their heartsAr future. triumphs, rather thamicripple them with ill-considered and unmerit ed criticism. Gen: 'Meade: has done well=svho hasdone better.?, tosinotsAllb 'FIRE 12i41it 1t AB. THE Harrisburg „Patriot and Union , is the central :Organ of the'Democrat ic Party of the 'State: 'and clairae favor the -SuPpreiision: of- tiu - , - tx.e",2;!SOn - - able and. murderous re - balk* now seeking 'to deStroy the' Republic— :Few -and - heartless are the Words of encouragement it gives• to those:who are shedding't,heir; blood i to preserve the Government; end -it, .anileunces the triumphs of .theiJnionarmY with - confusiion - of terms' that but ' too clearly betokens the San disappoint ment that - rankles in, the' breast,that dictates its leaders: _ But-afew days ago the North stood appalled at the,havasion., oft loyal soil by eighikthotOand.:traitOri in arms, seeking 'at ,onee, to desolate, our fair `land and , deal: a, death-blow to our sa-, cred-Nationality. ,Tha Stoutest-and. truest hearteil quailed us the insurg 'cut leadJer hurled Ilia leiions; 'to the ;v'eirdOors af, : oUr capitol, and threat ened tamaki the line of the Susque hanna the future hattle-ground of ,'the war. With cioacled hope all' eyes turned- toward, the Army, of, the, tomac. as it madeforeed maretes to inset the insolent foe,- and .earnest rare the supplications to the . gii, of battles that lie Might shield it and the Nation from disaster., The gT;y! • field' Pe-Gettysbnr,g at tests how nobly, the A.rmyPf,the Po tomac fought.; how heroically its bra ves, warriors died hoW .its : ,hronaed and tatteredjlags bOre signal' of victory, after three days of the dead ; liest conflict. - The,, insolent invader was - turned hack Apop his boiim, Made waste by wanton, Wicked,. war, and half his, army ova's strewn in his bloody path ds:he--retraced his steps to . the dominions pf treason. Thus was our State; our capital, our Nation ality saved 'over tweitty thousand fal len heroes of the 'Army. nf the. Poto- army eighty thdusand Ara numbered With the dead, ;the woundalati(i the:disabled ease. _,,lts shattered, ranks a ppeal ,to the I anon by Its Many , battles won 'and lost with honorL by its deeply eyitasOited,bnt - gloriopS bistOu, 'and by its bright: hopes "of fatatatrioraphs for the eaiise,g_ltiglit appeals to every -loyal inii‘alse te" fill - ittalarred and blotted -rills, and swell" its col umni'until it shall be iniin:eible its holy war agairist the, treasonable ,-- y au thors this: , `sangninur ,fraternal strife:'- of • 1, The govern6entresponds to its cart: - "Who share thelaiceless blessings.-of , free .giivernment c =-Who owe to'it `e,' liberty' and every civil and religious pfiyilege, are - enrolled Air conscription /AO , give ,theart! and hope and Oro:4th to the -battle-scar red veterans ofthe,..4krtuy the,itoto mao. With II; victery so costly in loyal blood, so decisiVe in its ,ae that of ,Getty'sbuzi to inspir6 ; the friends of the., i toVerninent r n - one,"but aeraVeu or: a'traitOr could interpose: his ; voice_ against a Measure fraught with the safety of the remnant of our noble army • and the safety of - the Republic. , • ~,T o this call the Patriot and Union esponds - as if d - riven tofiendish +al ly by the victOrie - s of Gettysburg and Itielisburg streaMing ,our i eld . and honored ',flag. rln its issue;of the'l4th, - Ina., in fnn. elaborate leader,.abound ingiwith the most :reckless misreprer' SentatiOns and appealing to, the sest passioes;. it answers ,:the PM/ of the Army of the Po,to,mac ‘ for men in this wise :-.. l .":Yes, the • Conscription • , • act MUST be enforced at once; 'the al, " - tar.pf themodern. Moloch eds a fresh "supplyof victi ms. Itoines are to be • - " Made . desolate ; fire-sides, invaded; "children Must be..torn , 'fiem , their "TarentS; linsbandfrom wiVes'; broth " ers and sisters ,must be parted,: and "the clasped, hands, Of 'love, ,of, 'ev " cry degree_ he 'wrenehed. asunder "hy the" riideforce of, inilitary PoWer ",Stich is the fiat s pf Black Republic ''rim the same article it Sighg for ; the adient of a- WoOdWard. " - Pat, anendtnthis groVeling.position "Of ,our old' 'commonwealth;!";'and groans agony, "for that. ,glait and c,e,speedrapproaching day when :she I(PennsylV4nia) Will :take her ititiid " propei.ly',and prondly Abe side "of New' York with her admirable SE - VMOUT. , . a • . _ :The.same paper , g4 , es'tliesickening details of ;Ole legitiinato:. fruits teachings" and policy of the -",adruira= ble Seymour." An effort to swell our urmieoby conscription - in:New York resUlted in. a riot, inlinineilbythe men - whoin. humble echo. Forfour days.theaWorn ()Ricers of laW, 'bad their. heusei plund prod and - sacked and their, :lives jeOparded,:.and the !cadmirable :Sey= motir!,' addressed the m,ob his , should be fully respeeted;'! , _, a n d iinpio red ,theinto'moder,atiOn ii heir : steal: , ing :and butchery bUi c r t a - Word did he utter looking to the. enforcement of law 60r the strengthening of our armies in the field'r • Thus drags along: the slimy, loa:th some . reptile of treason in the North; crimsoned_ with hlood, and leaving plundered - homes, eonvtdsed cities, and anarchy in -its tread. 'As 4 • 'yet ithas a tangible . Tooting only in NC -T. York, under : the "adroirabe Seyinour;", but the sigh fer "the' ad vent of a Woodivard," who shall come 'with'socialChadsandlintehery in his -train:, is 's aPra.i amongst the lea,' dem,: Of whom the..Pabiot and - Union is the organ. The cloven - foot is now - striPped of all, guise,:uud rejoio e that against "the advent 'of „a ward"' - will be ;''arrayed every .. .heart ,that beats responsive . te the dictates *of humanity mid of social order; and ever' patriot Who would save out gallant army in the field; save, Untar nished the, sacred memory of he roic dead, save the, great cause 'of American NationalitY. DERIEOCRATIC NOIIIINATIONTie , The ,bemocrntio State Convention, which met at.. Harrisburg on the 17th ult,,after saVera,l storniy sesSions nom inated GEORGE, W. Wool:m.lmA, of Tigierim; for Governor on the nif4h.ballot . , and Chief JOStieo WA:t r TEIV LONVIIfS 'of Ailsgheny, for Supreme . ~Tudgel without the • form.. ality. of a ballot.. Thenontest , for the Grubernatorial nomination seemed the outset, to be.between Hon. Heis-, ter'Ciymer, .of Wittee,.of , i'hihidelOia—the rota er having.33VoteS oii+first ballot 'and 62 on the .eighth,- and, the, latter hiv ing 47 , the Ural' and on :the eighth, • Before . the "ninth. .and. list bOlO, )194, Fr#pcep W. ,Hughes, of withdrew:thanaine.df Witten; and urged ,the 'Witte° men to to,WOodwardoiltO had'then risen to but 13; and in obedience to orders, they gave._Woodward "75 votes; to 53 fot Clymer, Who.on tlin.previons a vote ofa ,nomi nation,: ..- Nike VOOdiciii;d :is - a, inaii. t ofietha. 040, '4 6 tri.o;4d a staAk r and flan; gerons, as he:. ficint,ett; . reer conaniemeiChy. his election as a Delegate , .to the,Constitutional Con vention in .18p7, -- in whichllody he was one of the , youngest ineraVers. l ; -31 e. ,took conSiderable part' in the 'able debates which characteriied its pro ceeilings,. and made his:, "mark espec ially in hiS earnest 'efforts to disfran c,hise all foreigners in. Pennsylvania, He made on?,of his ablest ,sie4hes -in- favor of incorporating the denial, of - suffrage to foreignetis with our or} dank la*, bitt he'failed,—so that, th 6 Irish - and Germans who vote for in 9dtolier, can do,so With'ihe,saiiii, factory assurance that if Wooilward had:,sUceseded in his efforts to -amend our Constitiltiou, - theklould now be without evtia ',the right to vote 'at' all: 1ni1842; or thereabouts,; Gov. Porter sipptiinted lilm-Preside,nt'Sudge of the Centre - I)isiliet. 411-'1845; Mr. P 4 -- l'chanan vacited',Ms - sent Senate to.aceepf, the Premiership ni;a der „President Yolk and the Deino7 cratie legislative caucus nominated Sudge-Woodward to,fillthe unekpired term. The legislature - Kits deinocrat: is in hoth'brauehes;`'hut Viroodward's ultra; "Free Trade ,doctrinee were 'SO, offensive. to A portion the, party, that thirteen 'bolted ,the-nomination, and joining the - Whigs ele ate& Hon: Simon Cameron: 21n 4846= President Polk, &siring itb_heal Woodward's Senatorial. wounds; norrkinated , bim.to fill a vacantly in the SUpreme :ooart of the United ~ .-States. The I:sefrate ' was largely emocra iiut, th,Ju diciary' CommittCe. =reported against him; and .he was rejected by Demo cratic r votes, - In '1852 Gov,'llifiler appointed hini to avaeliney,onfllA3,S'a preme; Bench ,of this :State,' andi the same full hp Was carried, into' . ,ati:-;'elee-' tion by the immense pOpUlar. tide ?that give' Pierce every- State but feint for the Presidency. 1 ' He has now been: One of the _Mem bers, of our bigheacjinlicial trihanal for, eleven years; but ,We 'believe that his decisions maybe - searehed in vain for a single' record ptiititing l to the progress• Of freedom , nr the strength ening of Our nAibualityg.' When the storm of treason:gathered , Over..s in 1861,1 because the :people,. had chesen Mr. Lincoln Pr'eSident; u stri t et formity with our laws; instead of dis playing the contmsSii manhood: due from every citizetand especially, due from one_ charged with, the Mainte nance of the laws; ho teinperized with and apologized for,";,the i ,Maidgous traitors in 2Snis,a4diti&pablic.speech in, Independence Square; denied the power of the Goveininent.to preservP its own existence , F : fii keeping with his settled purpose to „weaken:, the loyal cause and 'blight thebbOis of the brave defenderliif, Mir flag an the field, be_delivercd the, opinion of. the Supreme Conn', d,ett4fig the right of our own soldiera to „vote; although they had voted in the Mexican war without judicial hindrance, nomination. was the _result ofi the implacable hatred between the lead ing contestants for the empty prize, and it took that turtr mainly 'because no Man in Pemigylvania has fewer attachments than George W. Wood- ward. He is a'.tbilling accident on the ticket,ana hewill falllesalamented by friend anti fop thun i any other .an who Could hate been seriouslythought of as 'a candidate. We. thank - the o:invention for its iviirk I: • 7 ---Judge -TJOWRIE iS a'.man of 'high personal integrity, ofieryr Inniternte ability, of commendable; ; industry,,of Wonderful' self-appreciation and mid dling loyalty. the ._trpOn't : Chief Justice of the State, and has been on the : Supreme Bench for twelve Years. He willrise & mere appendage to the kite,' as the Gubernatorial contest ;will eutire -ly overshadow the • We .charge - hira nothing far advising Akim to look out for strong gales about felt October: ' '':'• • HENir STAirti, Of the Gettysburg -Compiler,7l4 arrested by Gen. Meade as soon as ha gained possession of towii; and, sent as AfelSlcury: - We cannot form anyjmig4 merit its to . 11!3 gp.l4; of grzSt4le From the' statements mut' denials • in the Gettysbnrg, papers t,in alleged that he •: gave the •r9bels infarniatiOn - where - the Union troops and)TOPerty were concealed, and Trenderedhini§olf in, other respeetintiful to the enemy. - ti7e trust 'that - Stable baii• ',not been, a:rrestettimd imprlscapd without Pitr:Poqe4 s : he :begn niitY,of the thargesvreferredngainit laim; he - should bo promptly , tried by a •mlli= !ww===l,==ml ‘taYlfO . Oirk t,Ohti;cted and isbntF -4 •if, lideen't;he should be alleived an 'early •opportunityitoestablish it and be dig"- charged. It is high time that military arrest's should:be, understood as Mark ing sOmething [ heyorsilimprisopment without nptice,of chargea-and rel4se without ,explanatiom • gad , Danicl Deehert, of .Hagerstown,. been tried, — I, convieted and ittexorably , eseented, as h - eqiehly desorvtid; when he - was de-- 1 tected as a spy Within onilines, cerre:; sPonling:with and furnishing m,s to bripithe'Oneink to Ida own justice., t wOUld have, been vindicated: and ~ a,: Wholesome practieal , lesson, would have been learned by traitors along the entire , border: We 'insia that military arrests shall mean the prompt trial 'and convietiOn or acquittal of the accused, and that Wit penalty of treason; when' clear ly Shown to e*.tend, to positive act's. of hoStility to the Government, shall, bq death. It j is alike just and humane to the loyal people of tie NettliAlutt they shall not be the 'victims of cow , : artily spies and traitors at home; and Stable has by his acts brought himself Within that' cIaSS, he should die: 'That -1f he is 'fbe Victim'c;f:per-: sopal orpolitical prejtidiCe, or , of - the Wit:Lined fCeling, nattqalb;re aulting-:frona theshock of battle be tween the great armies at Gettysburg,. he 'should-have.early and ample ~opp ortunity to vindicate himself, :and be discharged to prove his devotion "to the Government,,by an'earne'st port of Ale,proseention. of the I'n'this:itoiculaic‘NN;6 Must confes`?„ hc has roam for. inifrovement. Tat Richmond . En uirer of the 6th: :atuniunded =that "Lee defeated, the eiterny:On Friday last," that "they Oileade) are retreating toward more and fee pursuing,"..pad ,that "Lee has 40,000 prisoners on tbeir.waY to : Richmond !" But- a vein of itessiis manifested-in the \Enquirer's rejoicings'. beeitiSe, as its ealeulation denonstrates,'it will' cost the cenfe4 7 eracy $1.50 per man,, or 660,000 per day, to subsist the, 40'000 'Yankee -prisoners.. Naturally inclined, to - loV:e our eneniies, we freely mingle : our joy with the Enquirer's that it's 560,000 , per dayis saved! -It *doubtless sympathise with us when it is in fpithed. that, Gen: Meade ha t s irapcised , upon our GoVernment:the,, tasfe of subsisting some 15,000 Lee'o4.l- myi . but it seems to be Gen. 31eade's. way. Arid.•• we mast submit! ._When Gen - -Lee reaches Baltimore thq.En quirei. Will 'oblige us by giving early inforiaatitui of the fact! Gov. Othtrizz spent. Tuesdayof last week in consultation with , General Conan; anden Wednesday and Thurs day visited the -Pennsylvania regi ments Of militia 'at different' points. South of this 'place.'- Re "was received with the liveliest enthusiasm by the :troop and addressed theniat unuinber. of their camps. OnFridaymornirighe rot - mined to It is his pur pose t make. arrarigements for the prompt payment of the militia before they leave the : field. The fruits of hts ceaseless devotion to our trikips are manifested in the singular order, discipline . and spirit of thp men. fIQW, upon , 'onx border, As a military. or ganiiation it has never been surpas sed in efficiency in the brief timautn- Ployed to' create it. WE have unofficial but reliable in forrnation that G-en. Lealost, 4t4he battles of Gettysburg fully 6000.:kill, ed;, 1.0,000 wounded left, in our lianas; 7,000 '-wourided - ,taken with him: feet' and itt Wagons; and not less'Aan 1i;,000 in prigoners Y and ; :deserters:-- plaki - ng totalloss of )iot le`isithsti 35,00. pa crossed but ,Al,OOO men over the - ,Rotornaa., on his retreaty which, excepting. a few. cavalry, theientire force he has taken back to -Virginia. -Mut'El, `liionth - tigo &oat , ed Into Maryland with'"over',Bo;ooo G 4 ;nt 1 4 4 4e 7 8 o '' 6;3 • *trz-waq, abc;ut - : 4,500 .killo),:PPulA --wounded and 4,0(t0 captured.. ' - - r 'ANDRENV, •the : leader of: the ~l iTt4 Torli - riotisi* *ll.g - that:treated' or`iiiiiii- Ored:oo*ilegrof?*o Tithe #4,4 F4.§ eaPPIPc I 011 WOja 41 1 es4aS •49Vgc of ill-fan *, :with_ a - negro paramoux. He *as ;:t)ie 'chieftain'. of those *lota StiyillOttr"' ntidrezt:erd • as; amy frioioi,°*d ihif4tiooei gve - ",4 l4 l**teP.9l:fry)*l6, l Alo_ l 4 kinO: lie speech, *bile rioting, buplieryAnd plundering were going on :all around him. _ProgresSive Democracy that MIEI 11M 111511
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers