4 traultlin osgitm. Wethtesday,Jrnly 13, 1864. •• UNION NATIONAL TICKET. FOR PRESIDENT, .A.BRAJIAN LINCOLN, 9F ILLINOIS. - ~ z " • ,FOR VICE' PRESIDENT, . ANDREW JOHNSON, OP TEIT.VESSE.E. 'erma.-Conan and staff have been na il/10g in their efforts to protect this De ,partment and in:iepelling the invasion. To their energy and skill. are We indebted for the safety of Pennsylvania, and wher -I;eireithe foe they advance, there we feel anred they Will strike against the hosts -et treason. Headquarters haiiS not been -iternoved-from Chambersburg, although, • the General commanding may be called :Away temporarily by rebel movements in other directions.. - Pun OLD FLAG, oar illustrated cam :., paign paper, Will be issued on Thursday of next week,- the 21st inst. We have the most substantial evidences of the fa vor with which , it will be received by the - friends of Lincoln and Johnson. Persons caging clubs shoUld return "them within the next week. - We shall issue a large 'edition, but it will likely be soon exhaust ed, and late clubs may not be able to procure the full numbers. The first issue ' Mill contain an exc,ellent portrait of Hon. Andrew Johnson, with an interesting bio graphy, and second will give a portrait of President Lincoln. THE SITUATIOIII. At the time of this writing (31 P. M., •fiaesday,) coinfiaiive quiet has been testoreAl in , tilts section. The move ments on :our bOder were ,made by the 'libel cavalry,' which covered as much ,territory as, possible to reaquaphuider, .and distract attention from the real move rtmt-upon Washington. After the rebel infantry had crossea the Potomau on Thursday, and started -Tor Fredericli, their lines were withdrawii fix;tin Hagerstown, and the whole force moved East. Gen. Wallace made ft gal- lantstimd with inferior numbers nn Sat , • =day, on the Monocacy, near Frederick_ i but was, compelled to retire. " On • Monday the rebel cavalry severed both the Northern Central, and the Wit .,•mbagton -roads, and isolated Baltimore and :Washington from the loyal States. Ywo trains were captured on the Wil- "Ongton,road, and several bridges burn - - ed i on the with central, Communi :cation with Baltimore was soon resumed, :andthe rebel force seems to - have moved kstween Baltimore and Washington. - state that the main tiody Of the rebel forces is in the imnie- diate vicinity of Washington, and that P. :ikirifi t ighing is 0:414, on. The decisive I 'battle for the safety of Washington must 'be fought before twenty-four hours. The :,' - rebels dare not delay, as their lines are 'in constant peril. We have abiding faith its:the-issue. A just cause and a bray e -army stand between the hosts of treason and the capital of the Republic. , A rumor was started hero yesterday that the'rebels had re-oocupied Martins burg.` It is entirely Without foundation. . Sullivan, held. it yesterday, and no • rebels had been heard of in that neigh borhood'. Gen. Hunter's army is on from, 'Western Virginia in.force.• • We have no further advices from Gen. OVIC MILITIA SYSTEM. • We do not know whether. the new mi litia law,is perfect in all its.details; but it should be promptly and thoroughly ki4d, and let its defeats be developed so tbat. they may be remedied hereafter.— . We must have earnest, thorough, and ef ficient- militia orgzpizations at the earliest limey) period in.this State, or • perpetu- - ally suffer from raids and the consterna -116 natural' to a defenceless people when either or imaginary danger threatens them. lintels 'the war on the border. shall be practicapy ended with the summer cam ': yaign by Gen. Grant gaining possession 'ORiehmond - and Virginia, the Organism `llo of reliable Reserve Corps for State defence is an imperative necessity, and a `'Borough militia organization should also lye effected so that our force may be made F; available at 'any- moment. The Pennsylvania Reserves could be recalled to the sprviee of. the State almost ; entire, and, with the tried veterans of that corps as the neucleus, -- a bOdy of text 12 - r 7 litteen thousand men could be organizeq, UM would insure the safety of our, entire Wier: Had such a force been in eO - well officered, the marauding move ment recently' made into Hagerstown ° Igo zdsi never horde ; crossed the Potomac above MO mountains, -, Failing to capture -13igers stores and trains at Martinsburg, it~vettldhai r e ventured no farther in this - Nhe - enanties a Franklin and Adami _Dave thrice .been Aided and plundered AB re44ll , .;. , ctiwberias and! York ,Awe also been'.ender • rte iron heel of traitors, and the Western counties have teen seserat limes ithieatened;o2l/ fear lltverikAtteeMtw 44 . Pletr.sigfellaege ztl,coxj*kii,,o,lo4p ;Virginia is ,the theatres of war, and the immense weath of the border counties ,mast ever be a tempting invitation to the exhausted foe. - To wait for the foe to appear upon our borders and then call upon the general government or the militia, is to refuse to avail ourselves of our own inherent strength, and to incur vast expense fruit lessly. The militia of this State_ have twice been with us; after the foe had re treated, and it is no' discredit to entirely • raw and diSorganized troops, with no pur pose to fight veteran rebels and no ap preciation of discipline, to say that'they . have never accomplished anything be, yond a severe infliction upon their friends; and the display of a costly ornament to the State. This war is quite too earnest and_degiemte for rolieking militia to play a creditable part in it. The remedy-for all this is—first an ef ficient and reliable Reserve for State'de fence, officered by experienced men, and such an organization of the militia as will keep them in readiness to be called out by Companies and regiments at once. This certainly can be done, and to delay it longer is to trifle with the interests and fame of our great-Commonwealth. The power is ample; the necessity is impera tive, and let the legislature in August see that Pennsylvania is just to :herself and to her people. Wu give in to-day's paper the two proclamations of Gov: Curtin, calling for troops to garrison Washington, Baltimore and other points, and to protect•the bOr ber; and also two orders from Maj. Gen. Couch, one of which calls for 1,000 mount ed men for scouting and picket duty on the border. Franklin county sadly needs every man • in her fields for the next feW weeks, and even with our whole available labor much of the harvest Will be lost; but the de fence of our Sta,,te 'and of our homes is the first.duty of the citizens, and we appeal to every man who c , a),._ be spared to respond to these 0 6 7: • As the moun • s men are needed for special duty in !this immediate section, our young men should enter that service whenever practicable. They will be,on .duty near dome, and affording protection , to themselves and their county. Fiahltlin has never yet failed to respond to every call of thegovernmeut, State or National; and now, although sorely tried by threatened invasion and crippled in her industry, we hope to see her do her full share to ensure safety and tranquility hereafter. IT will be seen by a call in to-day's pa per that the Union County Committee have fixed Saturday die—th of July for the Union delegate elections, and Tues day the —th for'the County Convention. Although there are but few county offices to fill this fall,•the Union men should not fail to give their attention Ito the primary elections, and send reliable and Prudent delegates. Tl offices of Commissioner and Auditor have become trusts demand ing•thaltighest capacity and integrity, as our heavy indebtedness and disbursements for army purposes impose duties upon them directly and materially effecting the interests of the people. A candidate for Assembly is to be nominated, and the importance of the position cannot lie over estimated, in view of our spoliation by War and the necessity for permanent and efficient measures of bordendefence. In addition to these, conferees are to be chosen to nominate a candidate for Con gress and also a candidate for Judge. In the coming contest we must have our best and most available men, if we would give to our cause that signal triumph the safety of out Nationality demands. LEE in his extremity has divided his despairing army, and his last desperate effort for the -triumph of traitors is now being made with the energy of despair. Twice before, whet our armies were bro ken by defeat and depleted in numbers, has he pollUted Northern soil with the invader's tread, And fearful was the ret ributionthat was his 'reward. Again he hurls his legions across the Potomac, and Baltimore and Washington are beleaguer ed; and again, we doubt not, his army will reel back upon the land he has deso= lated by treason, defeated and hopeless. While we trust the majesty and justice of the'God of Nations, we shall luive un faltering faith in the triumph of the Re public. ' ' nix hour of-danger is the test of fl- AelitY. He who is ready to bow under the shadow of adversity, b,cte — iese the hosts ,of crime confront both Gat a;OA "ir 7 -:' i - #igton, prefers anarchy . orclei, and starle'ss desPotism to Constitutional free dom.nira He would cloud the yes of our Iflar,tyred dead with disho or and doom tt, tOivinto humiliatie an lawlessnew. tie..,4y, Atithful men—steady ! •AU im periled Nationtdity is to be rescued—the hope of the living and the fame of the dead demand it! - STRENGTHEN OUT brave soldieis and the soldiers' Cause. It is the duty Of all. Fill their shattered ranks; cheer thenrwith nufaltering fidelity, - and to a just GM and a heroic Army let 'our sacred cause* ea t:WO. .--!',', 41) - ilninitliif'Utpciiticitli l ': iltiftOtibiliiiiii t : pa. Tai Tribfene Urgis the election of the ablest men on both sides to the neat Con gress.. The Unionists ; it says, should elect such - men as Henry C: Carey and the Democrats such men as Geo. M. Dallas and Judge Woodward. Considering that Dallas and Woodward live in the city of Philadelphia where copperhead congress men are not wanted, and also that for aught we know, Carey„Woodward and Dallas live in the same district, we hard ly look for the fulfilment of the Tribune's wishes. True, some outside d istricts might elect Woodward and Dallus,such as Berks or the Tenth Legion; but - we donbt whether they are inclined to .borrow in that direction. Upon the whole we con clude, therefore, that Woodward and Dal las must stay out. ' MARK well the malignant,-treacherous copperhead in this crisis in our country's . cause. The shadow of adversity quick ens his whole perfidious powers into life, and he scatters unmanly treason on every side along his pathway. "Ele would yield to treason :because he loves it—because he hates the free institutions so saered to every patriot, and he serves the - purpose of Jeff' Davis with more effect than his murderous soldiers if he can Make loyal hearts despair. Let faithful men rise in their majesty and declare*ith one voice that the UNION SHALL DE PRESERVED, and THAT TREASON SHALL DIE! LEI. loyal men guard well against the insidious wiles of the faithless in this hour of trial. It emboldens th - e treacherous mid disloyal to predict the failure of the National cause, and, sow tlrir seeds of dis trust widespread in our midst. The man .who does so now, instead of resolving to resist the murderous invasion of treason, is ajfoe of the government and is seeking its destruction. c . Let loyal men stand firm. The last death struggle of traitors is upon us, and fidelity to' our Country and our Country's cause must triumph. THE quota of Franklin county under the calls of Gov. Curtin for 94,000 troops for 100 days is 349. We confidently hope to see more than that number in-the ser vice before the close of the present week. Chambersburg, reencastle,Waynesboro' and Mercersburg should each have mount ed companies under Gen. Couch's special call. They can be' more- useful than strangers on their own bolder; and it will be a pleasant service to protect their own homes.- .UNDER, the calls of the Governor for troops, they will' be accepted, in squads or companies. .A captain's commission will be - issued to any person recruiting 40 men ; a first Lieutenant's for 25 men and a second Lieutenant's for 15. The mounted Men called for are to serve 100 days, and to find their own horses. for which they Will bepaid forty Ceuta per day,. and the value nf . the horses lost in the service. • THE Harrisburg Patriot and Union has more than its share of grief. Gen. Couch had the impudence to send its Editors a copy of a cir cular, designed especially for civil officers throughout the State, asking " Official influ ence at once to raise men" to repel the inva sion ; and it snuffed military despotism afar off and berated Gen. Couch to the tune of a half column Again on Sunday Gov. Curtin issued an eppealto .the people and bad it read front the pulpits of Harrisburg by the ministers. As the Editors of the Patriot and Union were not at church they did not hear it, and they com plain of that; and another paragraph is devoted to a display of their grief because they were not furnished with a copy of the document.— After they had giving vent to their sorrow, they add -a postscript to say that they havi been favored with the call. We condole with the Patriot and Union. Its rebel lends are in peril in Richinond and on the Potomac, while it is * wading - through all manner , W tribulations at home. Upon the whole we Mink that Gen.' Couch should apologize to it for asking it to use its influence to raise troops ; the ministers should apologize for reading a call toarm's for common. defence when its Editors were absent,. and Gov. Curtin should apologize both for sending a 4y of hie call and also for riot Sending a copy. Would that do ! - The magnificent series of Senility. Fairs be gun several months ago at Chicago is now near ly closed. The movement was one of the most beautiful and gigantic exhibitions of patriotism ever witnessed on the earth. Its substantial results have been in the highest degree satis factory. The following is A tolerably accurate Statement of the net proceeds of the Fairs , Chicago 75,000 Cincinnati " 120,000 - _ Boston - 147,000 rooklyn . 300,000 . Cle eland : - 120,000 Buffalo .100_,0_00 liisw York ^ 1,200.000 - 14. Louis 575,000 Philadelphia 1,300,000 Pittsburg 350,000 ISmaller Fairs aggregate about 1 150,000 Total 'bo'scrtEss \ adjourned July 4th, at half-past 12 o'clock. Not much 'business of importance was on band except the special war income tax. The Senate. concurred with the House, and so the tax was laid. In the House the pro ceedings were closed with the reading of the Declarittion - af Independence, by Dr. Mehaffey, reading clerk of that body. WE are indebted to Hon. A. H. Coffroth for a copy of the Congressional Reports on.tebel brutality av gathered from the Fort Pillow univ • joncro:andieturned prisoner/. t AT last the President of the • United States Appreciates the= condition of -affaias - in Ken tucky. Since the inaugurAtion of the rebel.' linn,that State has been_ the hotbed in which treason has beer! hatched against the Govern ment;'and' whilst many—very-many—of her citizens have been bounteously fed at the crib of the Geniral Government, they- hav,e not hesi tatedlo, stab it on every convenient Occasion. The President, has suspended the writ of Imbeds corpus, and declared the State to be under mar• tial law. ' , 1 OUR old foeman of th 'Valley Spirit, Mr. John M. Cooper, has _turned up as Editor of the Lancaster fatelligenrer, nd the first number under the new firm is bjautified with new type and displays great en4gy and ability. We wish the new firm abundant pecuniary success, and when they get La caster revolutionized, we trust they will let us 'know. CONGRESS has decided that none of the States which have been normally declared in in surrection shall vote , forpesident till readmit ted into the Union. - JUDGE-KELLY, M. Ct, has our thanks for public documents. ,! POLITICAL INTELLIGENCE. —The Democrats of county will hold there nominating convention on Monday the 25th inst. ' _ 1: . —The Democrats of Armstrong county have nominated E. S. Golden for Congress and Alex. Anderson for Assembly; —The Cops of Clarion have nominated W. L. Carbett for Congrea; W. W. Barr for AS aembly, and A. J. Rheqor Sheriff. , . —H. H. Crapo has been nominated for Gov. and jobb Owen 'for St4te.TreasUrcr, by the *publiCan,Stato Convention of Michigan. —The Nevada ConstitUtional Convertion met on Tuesday and organiied with J. Neely John son, ealGovernor of Cilifernia, as President; the probabilities are that theConstilution will be adopted by thepec;ple —Nebraska has voted not to organize a State CevernniTit as yet. In this, we think she has decided - wisely. ..She MO' 'but 28,841 inhabit - ants ,in 1860; she has not more than 60,000 now; and she could hardly fail,; by making herself State, to•double her local taxation—a serious consideration in these days. i —Speaker Colfax has jest beeilzre-nominated by acclamation from the 9th Congressional Dis trict of Indiana. This is the seventh, time he has -been so honored, though the first be ivis beaten by pr. Fitch by ; 216 majority. Five timeshe has been elected; the last, however,! \ en a close vote,- his, majority being but 228 outs 'of a poll of 30,003. —The Richmond Ezamlner calla Abrabani- Lincoln "the Illinois rail-Otter," and Andrew Johnson "the Tennessee tailor." The New York World has excelled its Rebel ally in vul; garity, and calls the one candidate "a rail-split ting buffoon," the other "a boorish tailor." It is' Well to keep before the people this sympathy of 'the Copperbeada with traitori. —The tnion• conference for the 17th Con gressional district met at Tyrone on the 28th tilt., and had 375 ballots for Congress, but failed to nominate. The candidates were Hon. L. W. Hall, of Blair; A. A. Barker, of Cambria, and Wm.. of Huntingdon, each of whom re'acned six votes at different stages of the protracted balloting—within one of a ma jority. The conference then 'adjourned to meet again at the same place on the 3rd day of Au gust. - —Congress has , declared 'that me of the States *hi& have been formally 'declared in in- Surrection shall vote for President till re-admit ted into the Union.l The States thuS, excluded ,from participating in: the approaching Presi denthil contest are as folloive: Virginia, ' 1 tTennessee, , North Carolina, , 'Mississippi, South Carolina, !Florida, ouisiana, ' 'Georgia. - o Alabama, , - - Arkansa' . , ,Texas,. , . I . . I Our next President and Vice President are ;therefore to be chosen-by the following:. ' :gote,,:, Eledort :, States : - EU - dors: Maine : 7 Ohio - . 21 ;New Hampshire..: 5 Indiana. 13 ;Massachusetts - 12 Illinois . .... 16 Rhode Island.— .. - e iliMichigan Connecticut. 6'lVisconsin - . _ i Vermont . s'Minnesota .; 1 .. .. - New York ' , i'lllowit 'New Jersey... A.. - '7lKansas ' - Pennsylvauia , . 261Kentucky..i.... , Dela ware: __ ......: al Missouri, ..... 'Maryland: .. ....... 7 California... - West Virginia.-- 5 Oregon... Total, 24 States Electors".... NecesSary to ,choice SUIII2I.IIIFI OF WAR'NEFfIir —Gen. Grant sets at rest the calumnious re ;port., felative . to. Gen. Meade, in, a 'letter to a Boston gentleman, its follows : Gen. Meade 'on no occasion advised or, connselW calling hack toward, much less across the Rapidan.— There has been no word or act Of his from the !beginiehig of this .campaign which indicated even a belief on his part that such a step - would ;ever become - necessary. Such ruiners as you speak of are entirely idle and-without the shad ;l ow of foundation." • —Among the rebel .officers who have arrived at Port Royal to be placed unde'r the fire of the Charleston forts as retaliation, are : Maj. Gen. LEdward Johnston, captured at Wilderness, May 10, 1864; Maj. Gen. yrank Gardner, com ,manding Port Hudson, captured July 14, 1863; Brig. Gen. J. J. Archer, captured at ,Gettys-- burg, July 3, 1863; Brig. Gen..' George W. ,Stewah, ciptured'at Wilderness, itnylo,lB64 ; Brig. Gen. M.• Jeff. Thompson, captuied. in ' Randolph county, Kentucky, August :2,1863. —A soldier iii Crooks' -command of Gi3n. Hunter's army, writing from Charleston, West Va., since the return of the army to that point, says 'The impression on my' mind 'about the 'rebellion is . that the rebels are now using their last man, last • dollar - and last loaf of bread.— There is absolutely nothing in reserve. Ifheat _en now they go up' suddenly and surely. We ,could 'se!, this everywhere. Thu -last card is now being played, and if lost, all is limit for them. .1 do - ttopo our people will hold'out-tto ....$4;437,000 matter What happens -to Grant or anybody else. A little perseverance is bound to win the day., All rebels want to end the war now.— They prefer subjugation to another year of war. The Lynchburg Virgtion gives the follow ing doleful' account of he desolation produiced by Gen. Hunter in his raid in the heart of the Qld Dominion: "The damage done byte Yankees to the Virginia and TenuesSee R ilroad, while not fully ascertained, is reported to.be very heavy. Besides the burning of the ' ridges across Big and Little Otter rivers and Elk creek, the track is said to be torn up for several miles,- all the depots betweeh here and -Big Lick have been burned, and the water tanks destfoyed. If these damages be correctly Stated," it will take some time to put the road in running order again.' - "The scene of desolation and ruin in the neighborhood of this city, near where the enemy tn,:de their line of battle, is positively appalling. The people were stripped of every thing, fences were rs torn down, crops trampled up, and every species of vandalism that savages could think of was practiced. Hogs, sheep, cattle, poultry, were stolen ankcarried off, and when not need ed for food were wantonly slaughtered and left` to rot on the greind. Among others we have heard of as being thus brutally despoiled were Mrs. Poindexter, Gen. Clay, Capt. Armistead, Dr. Floyd, and N. W. Barksdale, on and near the Forest road ; and on the Salem road, Samuel Miller, Mej. G. C. Hatter and Dr. W. Owen. There were also others, of whose names we have not been informed; and along the entire line of the enemy's march, as far as we can learn, the same scenes of plunder and robbery were enacted. Capt. Paschal Buford was stripped of everything—cattle, horses, hogs, Provisions. &C.,- all were taken;- and so with Capt. W. M. Smith, living near Lowry's, and all persons living on or within reach of the road. At Liberty the ease .w 4 the same; and there is scarcely a family there who has a dust of meal or a ration of bacon." - Gener r al Hunter has simply subsisted upon the rebels—taking their stock, provisions, and other artieles essential to his army. Jitst as did Jenkins; Imboden, Jones, Stuart and other rebel raiders in this section ; ' but he did not play "free-hooter" as did Early at York last year, and Imboden - at Hagerstown last week, by demanding towns and property to be ran- Ruined in cash, to save it from wanton de&true tion. When Union troops take stores, stock, &c., from rebels:the. Virginian declares them "brutally despoile4",..when rebel raiders de• stroy and capture property of Union men, it is called humane warfare, The case being altered alters the case. I • 11 .... 11 24 211921 THE WORK DONE BY RENTER. THE CHICAGO CONVENTION, LAt last, says the Philadelphia Bulletin, the National Democratic' Convention has been brought to accept one horn Of the dilemma which , has so sorely perplexed the party for some months. The National Convention, call ed for -Jiffy 4th, is postponed, until Monday, Au gust ‘4th! The difficulty, like the Convention, is not settled, but only thrown over for eight weeks. The trouble will be kept up in the in terim, and when the body does assemble, the delegates will be brought face to face with about the most disagreeable difference of opin ion which ever worried. the patience of any clique of political wire pullers. What are they to do without a platform 7 Of what stripe shall their' Presidential candidate be 7 "Under which king Bezoninn? speak, or die," could net 'have been a more awkward query than those which the Copperheads will meet on the very threshold of the Chicago assem blage. The Pittsburg Post, which fights rather Shy of the, courtship between the Cleveland ll:ulieals and the. Copperheads, -wishes to cut the gordian knot by .having no platform at all ! !But this only arranges tkportibn of the difficulty. Suppose y.ili can persuade the peace men and the semi-loyal war men in, the. Convention to• evade any declaration of principles, you must Still have a candidate for President whose pro miuence be owing to his words or his deeds; and those same verbal and physical tions Must have borne either in , behalf of war Or peace. He must either be a staunch sup- Porter of the old flag, or:he must belong to the party of whom the rebel Atlanta Appeal speaks thus : "Every successful blow we strike is so much bone anffrausele to the arm wind', under 'the training of Long, Harris, Volirhees, and Vallaradigharn ispreporing to strike at the North." Ho* shall the suffrages of a majority of the northern people be won? How shallthe feeble remnant of loyal or semi-loyal Democrats be kept in line through the CatIVASS, and yet at - the same time hoW will the leaders preserve the votes of the New York murderers and rioters, the Illinois assassins, the Kentucky and Mary land resisters of the draft? These be hard iquestious, truly, and if .there be skill enough among the Copperhead managers to accomplish such a task, they will be equal to the work of mingling oil and water, or setting tho Delaware n'irti re. No sign of the utter demoralization existing l in the Copperhead ranks could be more conclu :sive, than this - vacillating policy; and if true patriots. wish encouragement as to our pros pects in NOvember, .let them contrast the ions unanimity which prevailed lit Baltimore, 'with the confusion, hesitation and panic which prevail in the ranks of the_oppOsitioA. ,REBEL DELLIETS AND COPPERHEAD BALLOTS. Tho following, from the Atlanta (Georgia) 'Register, must. be cheering to oUr Northern Copperheads. It shows them that 'their part in the woks of destroying the Union is appre ciated by their rebel allies : - Es-President Pierce; Seymour, of Connecti cut, Vullandighatm Reed,' Wood, Richardson, and hundreds of others, are as hostile to the !war as they are to black republicanism. These men are doing us an indirect service. They are not openly and avowedly our friends, nor 'could' we reasonably ask 'this of them. But 'they are tiotour bloody enemies. United against )Mr. Lincoln and his wicked yolity, breasting the power of an overwhelming majority, firm. to the traditions and precedents of constitu tional liberty, the noble band of patriots is striving-to erect a breakwater that shall arrest the surges of the unloosed deluge. If they did no more than resist the centralization of Mr. Lincoln,- that • far 'they tire worthy of our res pect and sympathy. IT they hold tip the ban ner of ;State rtghts, that far they are advocas ting a sentiment entitled to our admiration. _ Such is the • course they are pursuing, and ;Bache coarse ought to have our cordial appro ,bation. Step by step the same convictions and ithe mine temper that-have braced them in corn .pact unity and fiery valor to denounce ultra Federalism and. New England fanaticism, will 'inevitably bring them upon the right ground as 'it respects our independence. -We confess our faith in their . political . principles. We confess our confidence that eventually these men will seethe whole truth and embrace all its COIIilitl• 'sions. We can gain nothing by denouncing them.— We may lose much by presenting a hostile front- to .their peace movements. Live with them under the same government we never will. 'But, tnectstschile,if else the ballot July ,i:i ,i,p 6 4,. box against Mr: LincoirnoehiLettee est :the car. fridge box, each 'side will be a helper to tie other, and both to-opttote in accomplishing 0 4 :Ergatest work whit* this country and the continent /mac witneseed. ' DESTIBLICTIOX,OF THE. ALABAMA. • • All doubt of the destruction of the rebel pi rate Alabama is at an end. The rebeltaptain Semmes - and. some forty -of his men were res cued by a British vessel ; but- as was after - the pirate had hauled down her colPril,they are justly prisoners and should be surrendered. As England furnished and fitted out the Alabama: it was fitting that an English vessefshould have saved the pirates in the hour of their extremity. We subjoin. Capt. 'Winslow's official report ; • 'l5: S. STEASIgi KtAiiii Rot. June 19. p. m., hit 4 Slit : I have the honor to inform the Departs molt that the day subsequent to this arrival of the Kearsarge off this port on the 1 4th-inst., I , received a note frot&Captain Semmes begging ' that the Kearsarge would not depart, as he in te4Led to fight her, and -,mould not delay her but 3 day or two. "AePording to this - notice, the Alabama left the port- of - Cherbourg this morning, at about 9:30 •iiiilock. At 10:20 A. we discovered her steering toward us. Fear ing the question of jurisdiction might arise we. steamed to sea, until a distance of six or seven miles was obtained froni the Cherbotirg break water, when we- rounded -to and s eihumeneed steering for the Alabama. As we approached her within about 1,20 J ,yards she opened fire, we receiving two or three broadsides before shot was returned. The action continued, the respective steamers making a circle round and round, at a distzinee of. about nine hundred yards from each other. At the expiration of an hour the Alabaina struck, going down in about twenty minutesafterward and carrying many persona with her t it affords me great satisfaction to ntmounoto .to the Department that every officer and man did their duty, exhibiting a degree of coolness and fortitude;which gave promise of this outset of certain victory. I have the honor to be, 11204 respectfully. your obedient servant. JOHN A. WINSLOW,' Captain. Hon. GunoN WELLES, Seey of the Navy. THE Bedford Inquirer thus speaks of _the Congressionai . .nomiuidion and the two prominent Union candidates : “ The Union . candidates for Congress in this - district are, Col. Francis Jordon. of Bedford. and Gen. Win. H. Koontz, of Somerset. Otb” era are spoken of, but these two gentlemen aro most prominently before- the public; and it is generally conceded that one of them will , be the nominee. Gen. Koontz is an able man, very popular throughout the whole district;and especially in his own county. His integrity is beyond question. If nominafed he will be. , very heartily supported in this 'comply, by the Union men. " But every thing said in behalf of Geo. Koontz as a candidate fully applies toCol. Jor dan with the important and essential additiob in fixer of Col. Jordan of a larger experienee. Cul. Jordan has been favorably known in every part of this district for years, its.an able lawyer and public man. Ho is known too over the whole state, and is regarded as one of the strongest men in it. If elected to Congress, be would at once take a position of influence there, that a young man fresh in practical experience of great public affairs, would . regrdre many years to attain to. Bedford, we think has other claims to the nomination than the especial fit ness of the candidate presented. It. is twelve• yeamsitico'Bedford has had a represontative ip Congress." I i officially informing Mr. Lincolteof his re nomination the Committee of the Union Con vention say, among other things : " Believing with you, sir, that this is the 'peo ple's war, for the maintenance: of the Govere recut which you • have justly described as, 'of the people,., by the people, fint the people,' we are very sure that you will be glad:to know, not only from the resolutions themselves, but from the singular harmony and enthusiasm with which they were adopted. how warm is the pop. ular welcome of every measure in the prosecu tion of the war, which is as vigorous, untpip takable, and unfaltering as the national pur pose itself. No right, for instance, is so-pre eious and sacred to the American heart as that of personal liberty.. Its violation la regarded with just, instant, and universal jealousy.---. Yet in this hour of peril every faithful citizen, concedes that, fur the sake of national existence and the common welfare, individual liberty, may, as the Constitution provides in case of re bellion, be sometimes summarily constrained, asking only with painful anxiety that-in every instance, ana° the least detail, that absolute necessary power shall not be hastily or unwise ly exercised." d'Enats.—s9, per annum in advancer or s2.eo if not paid within the year. All frub*cripticut counts mug be nettled annually. No paper will be sent outof the State unless paid fo'r in adrenal. ADVERTISEMENTS are inserted at 'MN cent, perline for _first insertion, and rrrx eons per line for each subseanentinsertion. Advertisements of five lines dr less are oharged'so cents far find inser tion ands cents for each subsequent insert:on ; and Advertiserdonts exceeding five lines and not qa ceedingr ten lines; are charged $1 for firitinsertion and 50 cants for each insertion thereafter. .tir Leine Notice*, of creep kind. aid ail Or- . phanie Court and other Judicial Sales, are - require by law to he advertised in the REPOIAITONT-i: Ampex?' t the Mi.:telt eireuiation of any paper published is tar county .e All Obituary add Marriage notices exceeding five Ines, And all communications, resolutions and other notices of limited of individual interest.arechtFgad ten cents per lipC. Advertisementi Or enliseriptions ma* be sent di rectly to iho Publishers, or through any rimotwibta City Agency: ' Iti'CLtf RE d:-STOXEIt„. Piojniatoni. EYE AND EAR.—Prof. 3. Isaacs; At D., 0o culbit and .turist, formerly of Leyden. Holland, located permanently at. - . No. 511 Pine Street, PAite cdrlphia, where persons•afilicteil with distils° of the Eye or Ear, will - bo scientifically treatoitand cored. if curable., • ,• ricrAitArns inserted without pain. charges made for Examination. N.B.—The medical faculty is invited, ea he ti .t.i n too seereii in his mode of treatment. , A GENTLEMAN, 'cured of Nervous Pobility, Incompetency, Premature Decay and'Youtllfel Er ror, actuated by a desire to benefit others, will be happy to furnish to all Alio need it (free of diary.) the recipe and 'directions' for making,tha sin** remedy 'used in his case. Those wishing to Proftt b,y his experience, and possess a Valuable Remedy, will'reeeiye the. setae, by return mall; (carefully sealed). by addre.4ing ,JOHN B. ODDER. ma.slB-3ml No; 60 Nassau street, New Yorb. To CLEAR THE 110119 E OF FLIES, L Dufeher'seeeebrAted LIGHTNING FLY KILLBR a neat, cheap article, easy to are: Even tilled will kill a quart, •LVoid El:Amid/ere. ,-, Fungcs, - llacnis Bpi & en., 10th and MarketßOlL Philadelphia, wholesale agents. ' } hael 81 " .• COLGATE'S HONEY SiaAP.—=This ettlebiatett Town. Soai, in Such . uniiereal 'demand. is made rem the Mmacair mat erials, isituak and asounr: in its nature, l'ai4iawrLY- 4 stisirse, and extremebr szanricisi itsactien,njiett the skin. nr sale all Druggists and Banei Goo& Dealers. oyZ-27..