The Franklin repository. (Chambersburg, Pa.) 1863-1931, November 30, 1864, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    tr,11 . 011.12 Tl,:p3:o.l:ttrt)..
I!
144 einentiaY. -November 30. JS6L
[ ire Any of our patrons haring copies of the
first and second numbers of Ti-tr; Oct, FLAG mil confer
a urent favor upon the publishers sendinu them to this
Mllee. They are wanted to eomplete our files. All our
copies on hand of three ntolurs, were burned by tire
rebels.
ITENTEForrn the subscription price of
7 9
° 4 , f e FRANI:LIN REPOSITORY will be $2.50
Per annum in advance, and all accounts in
arrears will be charged at the same rate.
This increase is rendered imperatively ne
cessary by the steady adance of labor,
inataials and evegjripg used. in the pub
lication of a n4spaper ; and we confi
dently rely upon the patrOns of this jour
nal to sustain it with the .same generous
fidelity they have hitherto given to its
suppint. We spare no expense to 'Mahe
it in-all respects worthy of an intelligent
and faithful people, and. we need hardly
say that in the future, as in the past. it will
be second to none in completeness as a
public journal atulin devotion to the cause
of i t,idon and Freedom
Zri,t.J. GEN: Couctt has been relieved as
commander of the Department of the Sus
quehanna by order of Lieut. Gob. Grant,
and assigned -to duty in the field * with .
Gen. Thomas in the Department of the
Cumborland. .Gen. Conch was called to
this command. in June, when the
athiffice of the army of Lee had.already
invaded the State, and when military
abilities of the highest order were required
for the protection of the Commonwealth,
'old in co-operation with the heroic Army
of the Potomac in its almost superhuman
struggle to hurl from the tree soil of the
North the;:polluting tread of the invader.
Before lie had so much as ii regiment of
men to command; the 'enemy held Chain
bersburg, the location assigned as his head
quarters, and he had to improvise an army
to save the State from the humiliation of
the .capture of its Capital. With tireless
energy did Gen. Couch and Gov. Curtin
meet the. impending peril. and when Lee
was brought to, bay in his retreat by the
surging Potomac, the raw levies of Gen.
Couch were on his flanks. Since then the
position of the commander of the Depart
ment of the Susquehanna has been ime of
ceaseless toil and anxious care. With a
border ever exposed to incursions. and
but too often without' adequate force to
give assurance of safety, he has e shaved
our perils, and most intimately identified
himself with ourconnnon interests. Called
here a stranger to our peopre.die has had
to deal with our internal disorders and
maintain the supremacy of the laws under
circumstances demanding the highest
measure of Prudence and administrative
.ability, and he retires enjoying the respect
of all elMi4s ffit.: — the inflexible integiity.
-uniform courtesy, and general tianquility
which have marked the discharge of-his
responsible official duties. Especially will
the, people Chambersbarg, with wlunn
he has been in daily intercourse since his
assignment to this counnand. cherish in
grateful remembrance his most bairn:au
identity with them as a soldier and friend
-He leaves them as widely regretted as he
is personally or officially known. and ,veil
bear with him from tlieir midst many anti
earnest aspirations for his future success
Gen. Conch fitly retires from a commam
now tranquil and comparatively free fron
- peril, to give his well tested qualities as:
. field officer to the country at the point 0
• greatest danger. Ire has fairly won hi.
title as a soldier and his-fame as - a skil
leader at Williamsburg and Fair Oak:
a divishin commander .at Malvern I
Acliere lie commanded the left wiM2-,
was proinotc&l for lii gallantry : at (Aim
tidy and Antietam with a d6inet tom
mamt and at Fredei ieksburg and chaiteel
lorsville!ai; the honoretlemumanaer of the
261. Cou6. He i now called upon by
Lient-Gen. Giant to
.join Thomas in 1
impending struggle with hood for - Te
nessee and Kentucky, and he will be w
coined thet e as the brave ever greet t
unobtrusive lint sueees-iful
• —Maj.'Gen. Geo. CadwalhobT succeeds
to the command of the Department as the
ranking officer, and either has been. or we
doubt tint will soon will be, formally a,
signed as its Commander. lie is an ex
perienced and gallant soldier : an accont
plishedgentlemen. and loot earneAly de
voted tit the e:htse of the Country in its
.
struggle with .1 ,1
re.o.on. Himself a l'enn
slvanittn. in - 52, - nrpathy with our people
and their interests, and as skilful as lie is
faithful, in official frustwe 1 . .44 well as
slued, fharthe internal tiimptility of oar
.1.4 5 ,
great State and the pi etion of oar often
threatened people of the bottler. IN ill re
ceivelik ceasetess elfoi t s and care; and hi.
general administration of the Department
&ittiot !fail to be at once ereditable to him
s O f and acceptable to loyal . people and t la
governinent.
' Gen. Couch is still ab,ent on leave, na
we have no announcement of the changes
if :Mb; in the subordinate ollicets 14 ila
Department.
c r
1114)1 ' St:LILL Sl.l4lEit.l" DIE ?
-We do flt, close our eyes to the fact
that there" ate tlionsauds of melt v, 110,e
honegti a.,pii nth Ins are; for ,1 he stlft'tY "I .
the lietimblie. Who vot..tl tt,...t:titt , t 311. Lin
(1)111 ati the, bite election her.titm• they fetti -
c* 1 hal under his tittlititti.-4 rat ion, I he ,Lt
.
vvy'y 14,-.11(. Illay ,illiordilmic• the pi userva
,4,:tion of our Nationality. That the , e ai)-
Prehension:: are imaginary 117111 not in any
--' sense and that they are Inemattahly
- •
- or Ithidly the natural iluit‘s of parr i
1)11.1plice inaeiusibly a•-erting ',-
limey,: we do 'not doubt: lout let II deal
with tiler and projudie•-; 110 y e. for
-in InV , `PlNltinli (if our imperiled L2,v
- ertnitlnt their , enough to demand the
energies and cot dial co-opel a tion of ev•-i'y
thithfhl citizen. NOMn emu l I be spared on
mere itbstraction , —enOnglt ni-t N.:pared
on pftitive hostilily to ; our 1 . 11 , 01 _
try's eallSe. For Ibis 1.% Ito haleth u e in
stitutions whose la aelic••l,,, the h,"
enjoYed, and who woad, epotally ,
.e ide
of any caus e to weaken the loyal powl.r
- of the Nation, we have no word cif expla -
nation, for none could make them faithful
but we would not thrust froth our side in
the gTeat battle for Liberty and Law` those
who, however mistakenly, desire to secure.
enduring Peace and an honored tnion for
ourselves and posterity.
"Recall your Emancipation Proclama
tion!** is the stereotyped objection of many
honest men who bid, for long cheriAed
and lingering . A m.:indices would bel.tbre
most among the faithful in this Mdmen
tons struggle. To them it is zusturnibling
block because their habits of thought and
the aliiliation of years with the devotees
of Slavery. haA : e left convictions which
stubbornly resist the light of trutkand
progress. They will concedti that Slavery .
is dead ;' in many instances sincerely and
in all cases effect to rejoice that it cannot
survive the war: but with the same breath
they will insist that it must die some peace
able. calm ;Ind honored death, rather than
pass away in the midst of the ewbvtilsive
Heroes of revolution. They forget that
Slavery is the parent of this cruel war and
its wide-spread mourning and desolation:
that the unnatural strife that has. made
continent trmnble front centre to circum
ference and dotted our fair land with un
numbered hecatombs- of untimely - dead, is
but the hitter stream from the ever dis
turbed and distmbing fountain of Human
Bondage: and having flung the dark pall
of fratricidal yar upon A people with a
common language, a common histoty and
a common glory in the record of National
greatness. it is not within the province of
diplomacy to dictate liciw the terrible
sword of retributiV - Cinstice shall fall.
We are not of those who believe that
precedents or adopted policies nmst be
perpetual. We hold tied chan g e (d..-
dienee to enlightened progress is more
wise than the prid(. that yield , not to the
ever shifting canva ,, ((f the Fuesent.
do not ; cal' /ur Shively shall die. tab- does
the honored-anthor of the Emancipation
Proclamation. Ile aims at the ga eat end:
the disentbralment ()fa great pebple tram
the gigantic clement of disorderand death
in their midst. and step by - step. as the
peciple . and the interests of the Nation
have &mantled. he has steadily - lint stuely
advanced toward tile clowning eonstun
matioli of deliverance. That the Eman
cipation Proclamation was an imperious
necessity at the time it was is tiedvuin
mit doubt. It wa , . :just then - 4e; essential
to our national safety 1111:i ever been :t
- victory in the field, and it, bettelici.ut atilt
eonles,edly but, a tellex of thesetticd
convictions of an cal nest people inv4,l VIA
in a death-smuggle with a relentless foe.
That it was regreted by many - . is. but the
truth of history. "Those who counseled
with their fear: looked for iucteastd des
peration ()utile part of the insurgents. and
Many who blessed its nuiyeisal lnoiler
of 'Freedom trembled lest it should fail in
crowning its own proposed
I, deli vet amp
with-success. That the wounded. Art idling
monster itself should' greet such a deadly
thrust at its A - ital.: with cer , es loud and
de,,p, was but ; but each Ray
strenri lulled the right and weakened he
power of et bile, until nearly fonr years id
war brings us to a great national verdict
teaching iu twaii , takealtir terra; that
'f rea;.(nLand Slavery must die. and that
to that ghat end the whole Moral. Plis
scial and Financial potter of the People is
pledged.
What we would,havehone4 but doubt
ing men understand is that the extinction
of slavery`is 110 Av conceded by friend and
tbe. Loyal men of every- shade demand
that it "hall die as the c010 ,, a1 suicide 'of
the histmy: that it shall not say
vive the milmly ire it swcalt-clog*
auginated in the ntidst!“ . pt 114 , e ;Ohl
pctity. They haVe liXed col Ac hich
it must pa.- , from existence. but that it
must Itencefoith be a thing. a blot, a Idis4
h•ting stain of the pa.4,'is as firmly settled
as the stars in tht it sphere , . And with)
their voices arc now 'Mingled the voice .. 1
of the leaders titent , elve-r. The
cruse they leviped to maintain has strewn;
their path; thickly with the Iruits, tut-;
miliation and shame, and they, in flu ii
despelation, now collie-el how they ctrl
make Sho y deluge it -.elf in the final
overthrow of tivason. It , abandonment
trravely discussed by tlu. 11,411•11 en tt ho
el,ihn, tole the F.XveatiVe:Of the reVolted
and his es i.-distracted with
the sant/1 castles, ev.er di-durbing
ey new pmelnim to us and to the civil
ized t\ Idly that Slavery is not all in
this strug , de : that it tilay (lh , and the ton-
te,t vivt.. anti t boy ail•
to the 1;14 11 , 4/11 Of CI illre uitl east 110111
theta the giant pat (1i. , 01 ilia. and NVOV,
to ellabil• them. a, a last ri.fu:T., to cali. 7 4
t .cuti atliie.of clui , tian tiatioo,in their
mad p•rlidy and wan s
ton war.
• \Viten ti ot: , licavgdyr•sNt
;limn :•-la . vi•ry a , a ptetext for armed
against the go\ - vi 'lntent. abandoit' it
to it, late, and (.01.1c,-; that 'it
La, no futon., what i tied to divide loYal
utrn Ho the i..tio ! As to how it nit,‘ due,
svhill ail agree that it 11.1 , :iiicadYreeci'k j , , ( 1
it, duttlt tottll tint ,ttrvi i• do.
1,1no:ly ,troggli• it inmegniated imm ~ • laach
is not a (inest ion tut monuenj. The Eman
cipation proclamation cannot lit in the
way of peals. I r is the olnpring of the
War power of the or . gattii. law, :toil the
Of those lioWeN
merest (ease tchea
ever:ntoetl Ll , l-4 toce in the i.ca , P•
The cluannels wlinqinem h iim , it 1 1l
peace ;Lint the civil pov:er'ot the n
mem, wont then resume their supiemacy,
1.04(1 '.vitatt , ri , r may have be i m Ili,
1)f 4.liy gi iitg out of theexer
t•im• i (•Xt poNv(t: for
«ovnlion ;;Lipty. it t•alinirt Fttt viVe 11 . -;
11)1*.Iti , 111 the govt riliiiillt
;tntl pre' ~ f pea Cl.. ill 11111( . 1' In
trnn
'MI11111:1.1 I. it d )cork, Ynthe
accepted law , of thi cit iliZt'd NrOt
plOehl111:d tea; -
(1 41 , -a t hat: 141 . -
t fine , : 'of &urge' (lull) rivil t‘II,
the terttlatly l'ollst MIA alit liOl h . ..• 1 tint t
he 1 he ,ide
. judge. So long a, ii is . ilL force
power:, are-Nttillettle.`„No slave made
flee ItY iti command call lt‘ 611tovn
law again iterttitte, a ,lace. Butt :-11 1 1,111(1
armed ve.ktttitet ! te the [llion eett.e telthy,
till' :;ovrtl:uu•n+ 1/11:11 11.111111t01111. -
C 1•40 Or th: • 1111Vk
Ntfily, and a men:aut. oC'wili
ta V nccc.: , it•• could /lot .-,nrrivo to Yon:-
plete its tc:ork. Slaves not actually made
free by the operation of such a measuiv,
coultlpt, after a return to peace, be lib
eratedby its power. What means shall
lie adopted to adjust the issues growing
out of the war, we cannot now foresee
but the steps taken will be in accordance
with the requirement.. of the Constitution,
vesting the peace making power in the
President and Congiess. Tht:y. with the
courts, ants hold flint the net of rebellion
destroyed Slavery. It being the creature
of otir organic law, and that protecting
power having been spurned, rejected and
defied by armed resisttince, has been for
feited and cannonbe revived:—or Coligtess
may,prefer, as is now warmly urged bS the.
fliends of the administration, that aft
amendment of the Constitution abolishing
SlaNiery shall he adopted by the States.
These, and the additional resort of a con
vention' of the St rtesfor the revision of
our organic law, die all in harmony with
the purposes I'tithe administration and the
people, who demantt that. Slavery shall
cease to be a disturbing element in our
midst.
-4-Agreeing in: do the people without dis
timition of party and "the admilli,tration
t 1(( Slavery' ninst not. :111 - rvive the
114 110 man permit hi-4 partizan prejudices
to cloud his devotion to the great cause of
saving onr government from at med. rebel-
lhtn. Let us unite u brethern to de..tep
the military power of the foe. and wlkil
relistance cea-e:.., as in time it nue-t,.we
fell well a,aired that no, more ale.traet ion
will he allowed for a moment to rut aid a
juit and honorable puttee that give. prom
if enduring tranquility, by the remov
al tlie crowning cause of our disem i l
and dez.olation.
Tun l'ittshurg Gazeity tloest'lle 4reate4
in,ipstive to the despoiled poople of the
hortlyr coantie, iu clittrglig that many
of tlicir' t• laiiit, 1 daint - 72;es hays hem'
trtunpell up :Ind i an of them exagger
ated:" Several Itillitar civil emu
littvy arljtulicated celtain c'hu . —es
of these claims, and the teNtimony ofeNviy
(Ifllll°F who examim:tlatt them is eMt
eihrent that the people have not:Nought to !Attu tin their charges. Do the ro.voili
livers. both citil and of the (;4-
bet..t kuow whether our people are
lione,t or not
the ((t.:rttc ,
The priurtp.ll pa-fit, hltur , r elainir•
1 1 - 1,.. ha .1..•111 at kl 110111iII:11pt and
r .11.4 d.1,,a1i m a ‘‘ide , rwe
ziAaZion at' lla:
...: Thi•foil. g oin,:-st:th.ww-nt i,,,titoi w ith
out foundation iu fact. :\:‘,t a ,ingie claim
ha. la.t.ii t; air-Sell til or I , lllllla-4.d at ally
juke that NN l' CVVI 11C4111 Of. anil ~\ l• ishi)w
that the holdel, of theta ha \c. ii , 4 a nth..
determined out to ili,po,c• of them. leNt
inc.i .iittelt reckle , A foes of ju,lice as the
(itit:i:fte .]Could plentilice their -itcati4c with
the giivvrranent. t Will the (;a:ette reran
it, migebertm: - ::a,Nault ilioft a fai , piewilo.e.
only et ime i, that they have done their
full Antre tic ,uppicef tlii• e,oNet timent. and
li-it .uctite 1161E01is. and many of them kink -
xtrpfeil heettleg• of the inahility of the cut
{
ti ,
toritie, tic all' c: il thest pt otection ..' We
nictnit that they hate •turip) ell • elitagh
Ifoini the (common Co.e v,ithout hence: ex
,pic,eil to eaftunny at the hand. tif tht:it
1 friend:. _ _ .
I..— . rp• Hon. Alva. K 3.l . elury and
env Harn...1001 , .. Tfliyraph are at odd , at rvlattou
to t 1..• cane ut non. l'amoron .,
L i t e can n ot
H.:A' The I thlrr4 of :It teat-11,n, invn ttt thi-.
in 1.70 r ut Lmvoln dania2',l ith
,onn , pv,ple v.buld de.ignatv Calve
] M'Clure, 1:t.:,1 (too. F. Tlaili nilll , tint
27e/ph, rumrcrr. Umthi ii- ••r itarr. , l
NN LIM thew, .tr ihein.—Pia•l , llr , ll
le:lN‘‘e to soLt , .4v,t to oor amiable
etttemporary of the Diyaleh that it have
the •• tied up and flogged.— its I,ll'ol
- Illethoil ut dt•a11112: with oli,ilein - rotb;
Since its editor 1 , often not al
lowed to tun at all in. All(•glivily 11 aye,
1)(•Iiinil. and occa,1011:111 - ~c •ts.delvat.
tvliete otht•r4 get thousand. of ni.kjor
ities. it can It \ ullgt• it-.1 , 1f0111y 1' malting
nunnlt :ti somehody after _a ,aeee,...ful
eanip,ti2,ll. It' the iti. , /,ahlt (lon • t ce,n , e its
wanton upon lis.2.l(tt ill &iVe it
timely notice that We will-In..vt• the Tele
' ir'a ph :Teak' w'ell of it.--out i•x01 , 111
,t• inva
nut e of irpft , nee inlwn (Toll (I,d In the
NVe h•ave the eonelutling exelvisos in the
va,e of the I)i , p(t tell to Bergner; Cameron
:11141 Tntiir.
become more profiment in
r alit, fr t• m111'01;0.4 into ottiee by Mltimt a 1 1 . w
the eclitt.r 0r IL, .I:rpn,ilory. HI!
quite :in odert . at the :t r s ep
oration in that line, ,moml to that M . WI
C.lllllll , ltlVellitil t.% ell Sllll,lll Cllille/1.11.
the Spirit oblige 115 apd its end
bv statingwhen :yid where rite
c.,‘
T . „
,11 - Or of the hcpu.cTfni,r/ either p:uticilat
ted in or sanctioned a It :nut upon the pu
rity of the ballot-1)0a is" an adept
at the lin...hies," he nitt , t have committed
sonic wrom , that is tangilai. and Call be
refeucd to, :11111 ;I j1111111;k1 1110 . 1..611g r 0
grave a charge should lie pripated to give
n.10(1 teisons therefor. Let its know
when and whet e the che.itingu coin -
tcd, or have the ItLialitiess to admit
that in the hlittilite-zs, if parti, , an fancor
the knows not witeteof it speaks..
TitE Spiritlately iniblitibed,alettet fton
a soldier stating that lie eras rertt,44l per
wi;;inu to vote,Thecanst• \vrts a Mlle'
lan man. We have a listjer from an offici ,
in the -.ante regiment - , VI. 110 :111111it• that ill
WI il(:1' or, the complaiiting letter 11:1 ,
I ' ll-Ad a rot,.: but Ilk f,'ltgot to ,ay that i
eta; herattso M. had no lt•gal tight to vol.
thele. That ,oldivr •.-,hould have , repto te,
to imp " frionits " tut
tt:tidedhi , lahLtt is outitfytlu a irluuxt•.
Spirit - infolin, ns 111.1 t itN IZonsti.
"hits Ictirtql to at(' -lift . in di.g - oNt
Thf• NUM . :IV/Cll. add
that hi-, ooNter , h ip outluv “enierg
floto hi , retilyincot too bdil ihe (taut]
that litiglitt,q• (lay" Achim Dclllo(Tary
bp rt . :40114J to ' hooter.. If No, ht , xx ill ho
4he ohh , t yooNter k;!olvti to histor . \ -
A 1:051,11l . :11 plus ups 0tt . 1111,11.41 iu . .\ - 1 . 1
Yo; I, On F. t11 . 11.1 . l last. N , alll
k 111 Ilt . pill ua. li".4i alti9tt in --..*,•10,1, 4 i1,:t
Lilt
lin v‘,lf hill.. harm dol..
It Si..ialitoz ! tit. Nicholas, La Large,
Qtlte iranklin ilepositorn i ifijambetburg, Pu.
politan, Tatnany Hall, Belmont, Lovejoy's, and
Barnum's 'Museum. v.f.re all fired almost simul
taneously. It R.is evidently 'lone by'a combina
tion of rebel refugees and (lovernor Seymour's
friends," %vim w.ve on linial, to do th e itd,wing
in,the most am.roved slyly. Gen. Dix leis
an order relative to it in which h:• sat, that any
Sue canVicted of having 'participated in the plot
will be executed " %shout 11. M; delay of a single
day:' Socei al arrest 4 have:been made.
WI: have at last the full vote from nil the eoun
ies Of New Yolk. There may be a few trifling
•h.mge, 14 the ultimate yturva,s, but they will be
mimport:uit• The grand re,ulf in a.; follows:
Union. . Iteumerntiv.
l'reqi,lent itr Vl',o
I'r'rcirif•nt in INA 361,934
Governor in 1 , 62,
Govemor id 1 , 61 ~d:1 , 7, 7 6 ,;;;;1,1269 '
Uniod m.rjufit•l on .PreNi,l, , qt in )-;',1), 50,1;16;
Union mitjority 1,11 6,71)6; in
reiev of Union Nni on l'r..6i‘b;iit, G.O I; inerranb
or Deinornitie vote, ' , 111,-;*2l. Irtcri•a.,, un total
vote.in 1;101). :15,50;,.. 111 about , ;' , l 14 rent. On
Cloverli(a•Alw Unimi iaer,,ae iroal
and llr• INtinverata• airri , a-a:, 54, lY24)—iii all, 1,2 4 ,
(;(,‘ Vel.ol` F. 1110:1 t . - 16 :otop. itH.re (hail
Pre,id,at ex4 . ;oNt.raor ':moat
is 665-
WHEN Slr. Lineolyiliz•tilrod the vn ~q 1; rat'aii
cy lin the Sup cute Coln t 13e1101ju+tOf 11110
011111 trill rof:t.iNed thru upyoiuttucut tow!
him. Of the nino prrarut Int•lnlirn., of lilt! COM t
liir. , t • alintr ha% hero appointed under
I,l* 111.,
Ili ( : 4 a;n1,1.1'•1_ , . of foi‘n, St‘iplivit
Fivitl, of Tb,:,,ther liit.
toniwr
t t1:11:1( • 11111. - d, of of
Furl:, Robert rip': of Pvisn
ut Cotr,,n, nl T• 21111,4,..
1.11:: T. I; I.N. ; INT, \\ le:tel:2d Walthinvit;ll
on Wetlne,tla;., r 111.1:let isit At NeIN Yuri, in
rozhvany ith trout
ceetl.l quit tly and I:l;4l: , (;(; vort.ii_iti a t•ttert,e;o:
to lii. iptart,•r. at Wili.,rtP, hotel, .Afrer conmil
lat.joiil% it Prei.i.lent, t. 4 t.eretary of War, Gen.
1 111.111‘ el: anti -. , ,:..taut Ncr,tt4,u l'ox, he ieft - v.itti ,
Ins :4,111, on his boat, dubs n the
river, tot •he :root. Ile !lot , bath to tat: ;iota.
nwcit teit•e-loqi in mind :ilia boity.
•
lii did melt at late election.
31(•Clenat!': - itatjorir %% The vlll .
i 47-1 t•ino:: 110,s of :L
oer.itie 1. , - year, and tt la r ',
1 - 1,;,, , wen e:,',!.-ted davit) , the year, :+e.freei a
eat. itito - the rani..., ( File I:llmbliresn'
ju,tly rout lit f)r. 1 tittlie'.,l for hi d cfii
e,
Loalr,:D•oleat at the ea ite.t
1111`11 01 • tin' P•.liiri
pal
in 1110 W 1 .% lel , Ti..,lll,<J„vllo, 1,, ,•;,;1-,, ,
110% orool . (':1110,01. 10 Ili, 10,0•0101,Lti011, 00 , 100, ,•,1
1101. :he ftt...iti::lo .
anti 'titi• I/1'0 , 11 . M, Of 4.1
$lll, 113 If4 . 1:11 alio:, 10,- 0111%,•r•at, rtt...(l, in.
'HE tug Scdr. Ifl.l bcd.i svatititit 11
tit,t;t d nrtc 'NUN . Of 11.11,1•Miii ,
1.1t•ITZ1-1 it • y. .0 1.111.11 troneht I t 1.1
t 4, .11
4 , ,Eca1,13ar tIL1'11111i1`1)1•P
"i Wilt 01111411'y llOtt,, wr till'
l;ltiL haiit
The Trionliffh in Penn... 3 hoof:l—The
ciaol railore of October—Goa. Curtin
itz the l oofe.i-,Ca bin el Ito ut o r,..--.4lr
g-aniz:ftion of fife' 1.e;.71,..1ature.
, h'
Th , ( 1 0,1 , 1 , Z1 erdivt V:141,1,..1 by tile poopie of
fii‘or ol 3 7:41to
, 1 , 111 I.mooln. 2C:042, It 'lint
(11.1 111,• arlinini , tratitin in its o...rnoqt of,
fort, to .hipper., ‘l.ll. r,sbellion, but by it , poi.-itivit
putter 004- tho tpry• di-10y :11i.tts and Ltd , thorn
ob. Relict! to tip' N , •tv,
Yot it It, eii oat •i , •il alt,:t . not ti.o rnion ,-,tll-0,.1, it
%%0111,1 h: ,,• 15 tr at ol, 1 1 , 1 ,1 n o t 1-1,j,•
lIL .111 Gt.% littol;:,
:tl‘l
;mutt \ ott• 151111 1 h'tObtr. .•
)4•011t11ia,4 . 11.0i .•:1111 411-q111. , •i,
lila. Mai ' , I:. 0! .1:4•1,11 , , , ~1141 111% i• WI
-111:0,1 ,%1:11 .- 111!:1111- , 1.14 . 0.t.•
Nertliot t, gixing 14)0.111
ei:hjor»y.i':• t•11 , 11r,1111.11i!cId
at hums•,
In Oro' rio.l. •
1 )itt6t.rte faltered kother tt lido Indiana and
Ohio more than met the exp. , eations hi.ll
inen.'solely because of the imbecility and 'inetil
ciencY with which the conte'st wa: inanaged.' It
Via.: not the want of for they wer'e alani
dant,—never 111011,11,U11il ery vivitzviit of pt!nrr
ith a cordial support on es er3 band and a is
and earnest people, combined to make the path
to decisive N ietory, au ea. one. Cut while ail
enemy polled their full rote for the purpose of ex--
hibitito , their tit rengt h aml gaining the vant' i agt.
grtnind for Noventhei;, the Union , frength
of l~tu
cat.ter, Allegheny. 1....ba110t]. and aunt
of our ,trongliohls NVOI,• allowed to go by default,
content with i‘imply !decting their local tir,kets.
'tints was Penns) train lost 'in tctober `lllO
IMMO vet..., and lint , Gtr a gallant and iliithfal'
bare. given her potential spice
ror of an " immediate ees.ation hot :tad
pronounced ti.. NS ar, a " ,I - ottintOely
thio and Indiana, iMder , kilfill leader-% pronona r
ved their Veidiet , trumpet-tongued. and (Frei:in-a
to the Notion that With or I%lololli 1 ' e1111,3 Iva:4
the Natant sLonld den ide iu fits or of its own
the au n, of the' treaeherons were paralyzed
mid an compar..ti.,elY , vas) sietorl. won Inc the
NM rather.
To Iboy. Curtin, Inure than all others, i. the -
Nation,iii.lebtett • for the proud ple.ifion-l'enit
vitnia ,:suited Noy,:tober ; lihoneh plo..it
by ph)qiyal infirnutiel so that I rook! lila ti;ter
into the a;tcl. at the 2reaty. t peril:to hi:it
self; he ;wrertheless threiv the Migiji of; I, s
gooney into the stro l ..: L .b. when 1... roolia his n;uble
State had to on 11(.11 nigh ..,(.ruined m ib-tol.r.
;old, labore.l ce:!....1a.513 until thy-Ili of November
er.e.vily 1" the izreat army with riclor.
Nor mild-hr Er,r
thrum into the Great bat tle Ic.r flit ,•ii to the r tine.
the holm of Iwl., lttmni.. Vo.netal;
)alipliii; lwro thy;peri Am , . 11)11 11 0n. , of the ad
mito,tration is aunt felt: Whyte Ili,
'.\;ljulant (loner:Ll re-a.les;
younties mrhere ir.a t'..iiiini,ary,(;eleial
devotyd hi.; personal ell.' 1...; lame hew
(,mitre Ma-ter irollik to
ulnrh the eNitati,ll%! .•Iforts of I loy. (' , 11.1110‘..re
.4..(1 to wipe upf t1,1:1;101 of lletober, ;ill di.-
lippoloied friend and toe in their2;ifte: ti.V. Lincoln,
and 'Lave tlo. State to nor pall;o:ie I'u xidri.t ht'
liTleei(l,4l majority int the r1;14...
'chew aloe!, di-cuss - am',lwo.. iu poblw;.l
vies as to the probably chain:es in the Nit-
Ilona] aillifinl•tration, .1 r , \ ',ion - or M
yablilet it eel ; limit to I. hat extent
not yet determined: Set eral Peon.) e
been !mined for a position in ilianrx tal l owt ; but
I think it iligirolmble ;hat any kill br zippiiitileA,
There will not he that mi;inbinity iu hour of any
oi.e twin to . 4 erlin , -
tlit: not . .. df prvparatimi m %iNuille fin
the uppulurhing th,
•are_beilit! rtq...valed, and v, -he ili etmt
plete ~rder in a .shoe t time. ;lid our lanilll.rd , ale
prepay,at! 'for a thrmi and in*,diioldo %“I:ter.
will priiltyclit re-Modell
Spealser tit the Sethite, and t )11ipite.111,
or I',dt , r, «ill sitholit 1.1”111,1 be Speaker it the
anill.lo, nprizlit and ettirient
11.11Z1Z1s111"1;c:
=II
islator, and will. make a mast impartial avid -re
[Tooted pii.sid.ing ofkei.r. Nossrs. HameMy, of
the Sedate, Bmieiliet, of the Hoare, be
n•-elected Clerks without a contest. Holum
P )LlZ'l('.\L.i \'l'E7.ld S;E' '7•
i. tb first pr,,idt•ii,i from
the Norther:l . . - St a te, I%ho has Ileetit \Nice e;ec•trd.
—The D a venport o”.7.(tle „,
110111, cote
of lo a „ill gi% e ttearly" 110. "nio:i
Ina it.
tu re (Y, 31.10131.3au!ztai113:— . 1.731i0n,
6:3: Delinvrarie, :3:: ; d iLtiiil, :3. ;flu
jority is t 11:: State 9ver
11e(i revisited ,inalle:lt.rote of any
Fre,idential vapdidatt...3:6T: Pi j orline.t . , the Fed
eral randidatr in 1 7 , 04, .I,‘ ho got oldy 11
fflujorit - - in Nov: York ,Sttite fr.ln - t,-
i . koa Footoo. 15 lir - 17i olocrea entor over .11.,
ratio 1 4 .03 nt*, kilo:lily ::000 gri.:itor awn th , r;
for .Mr.
-! —TheOhio zii,lda'rF, rote at the Ort,AL.l
(~ 1 1 S. Vrt . tai'3' of:State) ).:114„
Ihnnuci*:“ie, :,1;16 For t
tffileil 1.11,T
Iv. \V: ,L'oon; Ln< LAI, it a iorj
ico to 14....11 - vd up, t: Vom•bei , ,
cov,t ~ of the twat Ito cl;litas m Congros , ,
from tit. Vlltli
—I lon. .`, 4 ;.•1111 (`1,11:1s. 'of. tivvti:(l
of 'Ow Tuirty-oilith
lion. 1:111:u B. Wadi-
;lit:rue are• a 1; ~ trow4l:. tt•i•
rut 'it:
ar anr
faly giltio.a. hitt i,,*:, : w„(-11:41, fl ial „;1
1:11'er”(1 ato I :Aioui-t, e.-.oopt ro,zu
•-
Ful',;ml (011,,t)
e 50,, , 5, :nut
ninir 1.,r " wher : it I.:tit: itti
I.ll:viatt. ;1.4 itt:nitt :hi'
ttltitt-%1 t, ar, Uttr
rite i.th;N- - mu% !!,.1.1-1N "Ira NNl , :tdor:)lth .
1:1
—Thi. Lnni.rillc Journal has d wont a
i•eV: hi! ''&4 hy,ry --he,
ah:!indt,fih,a , ht. tilt ntlq li-S•I:II . CrY
ty 311 tlirki tl Isy
:111*. Neque:init• 1,14,-S:ar tl- 1
'rids cia,:igt: i.. lox Ltinikti, - fuF tie I.lual ntil,'
:111.1'i! I , al .1, , :I.i, asdi• N\ hit', it hn , :
00111.1 under l'rea;;ts.:
anti r icn.r.4 t, ne.liwil'h) the , dratefid •RPd . d., 2 ,
Ni.:a that ,Itivvry iu K and el er. Whine
pr.e i.. tlopmetl. •
the Twenty-icy S7a,t, Nitti•lt at the
cut!ree k ideilil:ll, Are 111
t 1 kh the Iliiye itt thi. nett
a' ,finale ripri:entwiar; :!.ere ace
Stat, an..
i_.lll, in rat h of v,1,1,.:1 they ‘..**.A ,naq.
, i11:411):11.' ;111:11 . 1111voltio•I ' t7 - , Wail yet it i,
ilat' fritll,l 4 .
01 Irte. Irt‘ii Ia 'rue I. X. ;' , 11111t: at the
,Irenill l l 0( the ,
1 - . N. ofn•- d r,-,•10nt,„
hein:2; a inajorit:, etwil
=I
..1 1 .1. : f.;111;ll 41: tiu 1•111 , :al Ntzt” Slct,
ta,t tov int-11411.0 Ihtt at•u is
iTht. army and ,la s aia- sa,t,
putvd a..pd d lan 1. burg . :01:yt:a.:?iti,
t ;,yt tfiYt v11i.1.11 lama- . tote.
inaill,l,‘\il . ii a lt;:r (-") are e;ected
lIMIIIMIN
lEMINI
,W3ll. ! , L.1:611!,.. Ne.l
n‘k
4 I:O. t' / K.
5 11 P. 11 It 11-1 H
MIMMII=3
7 .I-1 nl' 7 - -;.11 .1. .1
, 1: Ala on.i. 12117 n ... M 11.n-n.r .
1 . IL 71 7.,,t!, .7 141 .:.T • 4, 11, 11,901
1 1 1 141•• 11 I'l4 II ols 1111 7 1
11. 1 1 1..'11,41/13,Lin' 13.310... .1. IL: 9 1 4‘11r,14.•
12. De11134.4.1,1'.. 10.:173 .... W IV. F. 0: 1 1, ,
1.!. V. E. 1'.14.11... r•es 141,4141- 4 ... 9 7:94
14. ‘VIIL I!. Millen 11,E/42... .44, F. 2.1411t•r...2 1 ‘ 10419
17.. A (;1.”.bren444:1-4 13,3F2... J. 4.4 1 ,11 11.400 y...., 10..576
16. A. 112 Cutln all. 11.174.. . I WnLjf. Komte. 11141
17. 11. 1...1011,t0n. 71,1 ...A. A711.14 - kci.... 1 9 99.3
15. I'. I'. \\"n I'. . 11,L.4.3
19. Wu,. "9': 1 14 ...G. NV, 5e4314.1,1 - ...' 11.611
911 \C. 1. IL. 13 7., ..4 1 1k.,r1, V. Culver. 14 314
11Q11, 1 10,7341
.1 H 7,01 t .J. K. 11 41
12i ....1
li , 112 (;eo. v. I,:m renue% 11,727
llliouist 1(i:
. Doinoi.riits S' It is nialrostoad
that Staith r Mill routo,t I)awsou's Beat fir
the 31st and (11.11 t'ollr‘itli-iiii+posos to
rooks: (ion. Kooutz'S for this: distrh..i.
the :.‘oral districts are as joilows
2. . 1 477
.....' 1 17:7
:1711
, 27, , • . 17.
7. . 3,077 . 1 1 1, . 1.717
10720. 334
4.401 .21
473 22. v..,
4
11. : • 111,23 . .
. . 113,!4..., 1,1113
EMI
- 13 z,..!0
St:Cl/AMY Or WAR NEWti
--6.-11.1hiihridg,i ;aid his runinuour haTv-iir
rivi.a at Cumberland
s—Gep•ral Ilipihnith (rebel) and body guard
crossed flu. ;%fis.sissippi riNer a fey, days ago,
route thr Arkansas.
—All the - rebels emelt in Federal uniforms
liace lulion ordered by Gen. McNeil to be hung or
Idiot to death in ',exit:litiin s Mo.
—lTooits array, it i. reported, (Welniii` 'Waynes
boro; 1111111 V, 114'11 point he iliratei,s both Nal l -
Padileak ,Our tbrees are at Pit
—Atformittiou from tl , . Army of thel'otottlite
the otroot tliat Thatik-uliviou . 1)ay: wzotrub a
ovea,ion auuo thr soldiers.
atiViVb tatr that Ti
:VIZI+ duly celcwated. Ih•s:•rters
liar Garr grvatly inerea.ed. ainrn there-elemion
or Pr,,idoot
Clihter etas started' upon a rid in Lon
dmin,(...unt) 10th a ~I,•temitrthun - to clear that
1.-Lion'uf -mna. sudden
avii:hburhood ere I i i. -
—S , nei. the - nws of President - I..lnvoltisre-elve-
I ion Inv• been eirelilate,i in the rebel ;,iny, tile de
,crtioni to our lines hare increased lamely Itris
said hy the de.xelte'rg that th] , number, of soldiers
to be a atching for favorable opportunitie,,
to escape to our lint-.; astonishing, and the de
znoriffization getwial that the officers flu to
true any or fiwirtroDps on picket._
—Thi•Anifatmliarl,rrrspieat of
:pit, i.; Of
tin. first ve-ta , !...iciiiiiiffis'ff
viith , 11111 livnu
SUN 9.11:1)1 rfhlr Ste4M- ,, r , eee it AthlUti.o ' 11 1.t•
Gray, and ii13(11t11011,., Capt. 111 , farmer
havitra•lni - board 619 ta l.4rtota ansl
(load badii.s. atlif:r• v.vro buried lin the
pas4afii.. Such na, ttit..i‘itti•lfiari.fai. tcif 111,1'
pair Hien that oar ...art:Tans ap
ifalloil at tla.. a‘‘ rat si;zlit. !Nat a siatds , tuna iif
ilia shot' uumhlrhnt had to 111 , gout to the
ina6 to loallo Cloth atilt I, o-
u4poig are mach I..keib'll Shor
males az:uvulae+. Sbnaiuti I i—au,l appeal
to thi , iu•oplu of fieuraia uu fhu.l- , tb, appro‘,4l by
the rt•b••1 War Ibparlawat,icallbar. ala9l hu t peo
ple to I:ento (• all prurisma , , , , rat all übstt:uctukne
in I 1u6.% ay 14: the 1 7 ‘ , :lual rtrp . .... 1 and to retard
aa•marb Gen. 1 '4.l;b - lka4
is tail ha order oat ,;eery' mat 1:111):1111i..11 .
at.d all s‘hut (111 aut. respnak! ars , ar
!u•tea.; Whu. lur I 'repurtud •In hate
funaht the 'Fvflordit ruup.g nvar ;r:tlin uu ttae 1:;t11.
but tlu; result is 'Hut Siates
truur adviinriql iu tlNueultuaus,
awl 164 fury. , is e.tbnatell int from ..±:,,000 tin :30-
P,entiregAril i. , tcd au appeal to tint people
on tLe I •Ttli. On the =oth the Central Railroad
tU•ar Orist‘oldrille Was cat. and the telegraph
Coninautleatiou bet Savan
nah mat the Nvires have,
6, 2 ei," cut het w,,en (teriloo anil 'rue
S;wzoloalt Netts Of —llll.' report-that
the county tow n of Jasper county, Laa
been burned, 3131 1 0 :3: cs tillt the Feder:in.:is will
prooe,.l to Camp Lawto 1 ill releat:i. the
Vidor. pri.olief,. It 1, aiso that ifio
troop , t ere reported at F0r , y1.1,,0n the lrih.
—GZod.Slioridan's eaeairy Lave 11..tla;:otlivr verS .
:Tinted anti auecia,lul e tr agettiezit Nvith Earl)'.;
3t,t,d,,y e.erh .he three divi,ions of
eau.ilry hi 11a• Sliviiataloali inaler
Cadet'. Po wi•il , commencpzi a ;ovo
theitt joy porpo , e of it:Feet tahibig ti e
a. 1.1 :4;1 marelloi up the
Luray' VvIley;:11..1 tLe clivtf,hius kishefl
iiireetly op :: . he : , hoo.ualoali Valley, tola-titig alit!
hetore Ada!! p..rties of flehell... No
r e .: l 4 ;ll:ee of itopoi WaS tnet I% lilt anti!. till
TIII 111 , • hatin army of lice eon,i4tia:4
of o.b.mt- till, en thous4l.d iuinntt t ai , d
of a , . , :L • 11,4 at !till, a pi, i'sitat
Fighting
dhd ly einiiiiu•neott, and us tig et u:limed il,r,sh;
Lear s. hviti.: ;lie gn•Lt.fr part
.or th, timi
•
gt..h•:r.t.rr. repeatNi att,a.rt.4
j'ay.z-li.ia ail or which 1 ia:lvd.
T;:.• i[• during
ti . 1., Li
Rae! ,
cto.lnienevti 1,•1jn.. tiortt•
f•rb: aitinipt , t., •i , 11.1 , 1% V t
111:` , 1e, hl,; nt c r tti
,V.l , ll'4liNt tital\ II tht. y-ti hil
tht.;l•
i .1:. 1.1,
Joh,l P. 11;,I,, Of N. IL,
f:,x \Vt.dno..l.ty
—M - r.:„.T.511:1,, di,tl
Imla ;iu • I - ;11i lin-t
hi, ro , t
Nt•W 1111\ 4t1:1.1:
t;toV. .1,1vol•s, to Kentucky,- his becn
0 t. loi aile:xtl trva,oti. -
lats. i 2 rt•ceived at the,W,n•
1%1,1 ; 1!,,t ing
. lII',I I I' , 1441: II 11 , 4 to hiQ daug;i
tvr,, hu aro at wh'uol in NIII.V,Jeret - I.
r :;;•1, I Ward ha, hero , '
Eic•
Ctat....;; L. Vall.o.aliallan: Adler:l , o, th.tt,
• 11;1, rr•ac , r,i tlO , . p:ardr,• II:a law ill 1)“y-'.
or tit,. la:, S,r,v.t.tr ).,fg:
aud 1, a', I I.ro a: lur tl.r sviduN',
41,1 Iv, chdtitrn. ' '
eqm icted in lialthi,orti
NI UN L. 1 'al ha, been Sell- 1
liv.• year ,. itnpri•oilipeht.
—ft :liat t-fet•rot•a;) 1:1•11t.it - %sill hid,
t!'ttint.t.it• Juth iu tne vo.c:utt Indiana
Ti.o Lnnoun, the death, at
IL:•n.. of elglit!.-,21.1 . 11t. of ct•ii. Liprnudi, vd.a
1,1-4, of •
•
np,2lted 'tultive c ticeeptei
the rio.itten nt tl engineer - in one if the tleparti
inents gtO, ertiweut.
111
—.Lat K proli,t-th,..rhlu'il at flail-
Captain Hutt,
61/: I - . avair), defiiil n h earn on the ottio't.
MESE!
ofAhibaina, Ct tueutlpir
th,. C,,agres. 460, 11;11,i1ISt boeu expolhil
jroilk that eunclave, fur having ".ccetled" from die
Cmili•Elorate
—The 1 1 , - ;ishington correspondent of t
3drerti>tr " Good authority says General
Burnside is not likely to have a command again
ill the Army of the Pllow:le, but is likely to late
a eon/maid in -a quarter, mhere lie has alrt!agy
dour good service."
—General M'Cla.in's resignation reader:,
Hint:el; the senior \l' jar Genet al of the tegulti' r
army. 1t is 4 significant Lie, that the late Pres
idential eni,x 0,0 ha 4 been the tin•ans - of deprivi i ng
the many of ite Inn rankipg 3lajor Generals, )le
. lelhtu
and
L
—.lttorneleneral Bates has 'tendered his IT
i‘iguation as CabinetThlioister, to take effect 1)o-
i•endior 1. lii, - 1.0 iiy start for St. Louis uixt
week, he haviluz already Orilored his furoittue Ito
he sold. Rumor fails to desiguate his •luecessbr,
iiud it is a matter of doubt whether Mr. LiacUlu
has biths,ilf fixed' on-any one forthe position.
fi
Louisrillc Dcniocrot sar.3 that the Liim
tmiant-Governor of u•ky, R. T. Jacobs, i ,j 4lio
Brae: ricently ordered tlirotigh the CourOdei l ate
lines by the milit my authorities of that Statol, is
110 . 1 V at 'Gallia, Ohio. The Rebel authotiOes
re:Msed ti revive thi• "76ey;a0
not intend to let President-Liiteoln make a Biqa
io Bar of the South." • - '
131 7 1
.1!",7
f.N. 411E11.11).1. N-70 rfn Giuccifkr;‘ "r
A correspondent of the Tribtme, writing fit?ln
the field, near 'Winchester, on the Itith instant,
gives the hollowing botching incident of the late
0.11 airy t'llgagement iu the Vall,l :
It is well knoWn that t,ur army now covers
Winchester, by uceupsinnihelineut Ihe Opequan -
Creek, five miles south of the town, the only tine,
it is thought, on which the place is eyaly detllnsi=
Lie. It is ten miles north ot our former link at
Cedar Uteck, and the space between is an admi
rable bailing ground, on which the kneniy. - how
ever. dare not set Ilk ring his late experience,
for four the trap will unexpectedlyspringandlfidd
the arms of oar cavalr, which stretch out oil
- either flank. again around hint and reetore LIM to
the l - mo» iu
,spite of' himself.
Ile ha, become too shrewd lately under the
douhie mnek drill of :Shmidan to bite any more at
lore hook. and it t het elbre became necessaiy on
Saturday last to them out a brigade to the front
t o b a it him smug mail roweit and Custer, nor
rigid and left Eh:ohms, could get well on his
but Mien tiu•t did ge: in there was such a rattling
amon g the dr, bones a , the Nalle3 of Jellintaiglig
enillg not 1•1 1 ing.
1,41. in patficulnr,nar N ailing ; km
Mulder, went in with a single et to the public
good (as he has but one), and the remit a his
dates work w tutu eopture of two neWll2-IMund.
ers with cal,,ous and tunmitnition wlltgou
complete, two amlndanues, the r e beautiful Vattle
-11.m•onle'Colonol, two }laic s, five rCar.
mho, ele‘ en Lieutenants. and about two hubdred
enlisted Inca, with horses, •addles, hat ne , s,lsmall
arms, A. c, Ay:llW, , MO i.ion his thus tmlitt
'taim-,1 its reputation tor tighting. and itti new
General has honored its stars with which Ili' (in
\ ill:Weill eiti •
"hall) tor )(et - W tote Torbert in rekiy tio the
tli•patvli him that the I , ,aNtiris , ri
Front IZokal on the qt, RN Clay 1111108 I'olll
till . pierce i tattac•k.
oil the right 111 d 1111 f U.T1111111 1 .1.11 SO
much. though lighting gallantly all din' • aial tail)
holding lug 01‘n. Gru. she ridan hard triaile 1118
heiolgitarter: at Ira rtom I,linijr)
for niore than it past, of the .1 tOrtong
.18 11 0 88 Vre I,ile Ot thruwnt'traltlti and
aristovrittic ot lw ,t ee..js '
'lle line ,tone inaiodon tVa, Ori.V.I}I I IIV built
for .1 1011, ;did %a, low.; ocouvoll as a fronll4 post
it: olden and viten garri:oavd again:4
the ttul,:in , . hitn,elf i, .ad tt ha% t•
sltpt %% idol' it , walla -
•
• It statath on tini vallvy facing we?..ftv:arti at
the the t tre,inznyui its ma-hive :walls,
s till bonii.pruel. thso,igh enlarged.. and r•tti rinitided
e% et thing nett and elt•gaitt,stigg, ;st , MI titter.
•Nure . c%ll and telmable in an Aitterteaul l tntitily
Iti•tort. •
It 'broad fi.nevle , s :tad wast,l;(l. and'
it- heantltul Emit ;11.1% sited in tla• light of plor,-
dcd cztittptire,, annul one ol
,
w
iii,des.qatn _
.1.'1,0:111(ii111 child ini , tarty upwi the 11 rch,
,a
girl ui tell 'Sunnite's, rl.sy mid bright, Fannie Mar
name. a great araml-datighter Of the iIL4-
i:t I:!t.ti';`,-.)C'..101-',34
ttainit”:lt•llt Itilto
ajvct- and
=
firs; DI January
November -30 ; 1864,
titumi:hed Chief-Justice of the -United States.
She clings to the hand of Maj--Gen. Sheridan. who
lii•tens to her prattle, and looks up inquiringly'
to his face as the sound of distant cannon conies
nearer to warn him he is needed at the front.
(ten. Sheridan is a good-looking man, in spite of
the wretched pictures of him which preiad, and
by means.the brutal ruffian which he is some
tines represented to be, hut' a most genial, kind
hearted, amiable man, with a thee running user
tilth quiles, and a disposition full of humor and
&en boisterous good nature.
As he stoops to cnresslhe fair child, the human
f,r;, moment evidently subdues the heroic fur
he Lagers at the parting as if lie knew, whittle
'child probably 'does not, that her father (Col,
John Marshall, of tho'Rehel army) is the gallant
itfieer who so fiercely presses forward the Rebel
artlllery, already within sight of his homestead,
Ind whom it is his duty to sweep from the very
hearthstone it his flintily.
Ou come . the Rehel troopers, evidently urged
by more than ordinary zeal and impetuosity.—
Charze follows charge and volley answera volley.
'Our bravest are. falling:the line wavers; even
ct,rer ie forced backward: and the Rebel father
hommvard to his wife and child.
A strange tight 'kindles in Sheridan's eye. Ho
•no longet: but hastily and gently carcase..~
t he dal& and after ordering his headquarters
ahore real-a , the ho,tile cannon come near
le r ....lib all the soldier zombi Mills lace Impresses
rarialy fn tile front.
the sad fate of %Var., the presence of
-Stieridati i, inevitahle death and destruction to
the enemy.
He hail •:careelV reached the held ore the gal-
Niar•iliall i. laiu at the head of Ins coin-
hracctr pressing foro.ard
immedi
ate:y 1.71 of hint hoinestead and not three
,;I.tttut therefrom. W. W. IL
" . *so
. _
From tiro N. V. +ribune.
TUE (MEAT
1 , 11'1,1 n tbm. l' r, hw wa: chosen President, only .
ftxt, , , , i, ..,,ary, a, 2 0, Ile didmot receive a single Eke
teral Vole from the States lying north and west
,,:. th , ii7er 011ie. Abizthain Lincoln, favored by
I' the ,ii,,- , en on, autaug hi , opponents, earned all
', lii" , , , Stale in I , sitili, t.oine of them by meager ma
jo -ltio›, hot received searcel a tenth of the pop
o F,, r vote of Mi- , zinri. Now, he carries every one
, t' ;limn I,) I;m...rally increased majorities, and
-:` , lissom IIAIt il them by a very decided vote. He
I:n4 al , . ;!arned the new titate of Nevada, and has
, large ab , d Mite itl.oritie in California and Oregon,
,where, though he carried their Electors, he had
,Larch 11111-lath , of the popular Vote in 1560.
'ill , majorit:es in that great section, which is soon
1 to prepmelerate in oar National councils, may be
rutiL:lll!, ,'.,:teci a; follim4:
01 I
I I
1 ,
nn,aLi
I,va
1,1
'II'
C.. um
(.Irtz
Tiqi..l2/2 RI.OOI
—These States gave an aggregate popular ma•-
joiitc against Lincoln in IStill; they'noW giva not
less than 240.000 for him, with ping of members
of Conzress in every State ts, here there was any
'thin. Lett to nail. And there is no pretense that
a , *thing was lost to Lis adversaries through di
visuu.s, .
Tho vote of the North-West is the strongest
gn'aranty yet proffered of the perpetuity of• the
Cairn. The alienation of the North-West has
been plotted and sought for years: To this end
uncounted lodges of "Knights of the Golden Cir
ele,” "Sons 91 - Liberty," &c., have beeen organ
ized. To this end, New-England has been per
sistently definned and r& - iled by the basest of her
renegade sons. To this end, constant stimulus
has been given to Western jealousy and hate of
the East. The Puritavisal and fanaticism of New-
England have been rculpa'thd as plunging the
country into a gigantic. civil w ar for the benefit of
her cottonaMllsas if cotton-mills luxuriated in
the dearth and dearness of Cotton—and now the
Great \Vest re-ponds by larger, more decisive
m..jorities for the War, a heartier support to the°
Administration, than are given in the East. And
the rattle of riven fetters in Maryland is more
than paralleled by the - crash of the prison-house in
Missouri.
r;ii let us rest in the confident assurance-that
the Union will endure forever, under the guar•
dianAip and protection ofthe Greatbecave Free
North-West !
AN EICA - OF GOOD FEELING
The National Intelligencer, after having'mada•
a rigoious battle for M'Clellun, quotes Mr. Lin
coln's late speech to the Union State Central'
Committee of Maryland, and appends the follow;
thg- remark -1
•"I'lle most embittered opponent of the Presi—
dent will not deny that such expressions do honor
to his heart; and they should go tar to disarm po
litical defeat of its sting in the breast of the van—
oni‘lied. And ‘Ne do trot hesitate to say for our—
selves. that IA e shall accept thrtse declaratiebs of
the p,,,ia,nt in the same sincerity we.
belie . t e them to be made, and shall be prepored.to,
judge his future administration of the Government
simply Ly his acts, without any otherpreltiktrmin- ;
orlon than that of cordially co-operating in , alb
measures IN hieli shall seem to us judicious ard'
proper. without seeking to find in ally of them the
grounds of thetious op on.
"The ili , tinguished Premier of the Administia
thin, in replying to the congratulations of his po
litical tricud, on theelOth instant, was frank to
i.a ); that in the debates of the canvass they may
halc done something less than justice to the pa
trioti,M of their political opponents. To this ef
feet bel.poke as tollims:
'•' With tau• Democrats we should be friends..
Thy have voted against us t'vf e have voted against;
them. If they arc ink willing to cry quits, it.
would he well to reflectipat, all things. considered,
we hale judged them rather harshly in some res
pects. I believe that perfect harmony can soon
be restored, net holy throughout the Free Stutes,
but throughout all the Liqu. ` * It would nut
be the fault ot the AdmiuMnation if they did nut
establish an era of good feeling. The re-clectioh
of the President has placed him beyond the pale
ot Infanta envy or detraction, as he was abuv,e hu
man ambition, Aba all would soniatiarn to see him,
as the , peaker and the audience• had seen him, a
t rue-pft t ri,
it, benevolent and 10y:1T:honest and faith
ful. 'Thereafter all motive of ; detraction of bins
mould cea.r ti exist. and Abraham Lincoln would
take his place math Washington, Jefferson and
Adams, among the benefactors of his country and
the haulm: race:
"The candor of fir. Seward should be met with
emml candor by the friends of Gen. McClellan.
It etas- he that the latter have, - " all things comas
judged Mr. jdneoln and. his party 'rather
harshlv in some respects.' At all events lee it be
no l'ult of theirs, as Mr. Seward says it shall be
no float- of the Administration, if an 'era of good
- feeling' is not re-established. The times aro pro.
'MMus to such a desirable consummation.
"They' who undertake to oppose the Adiniffis—
triition merely became it has not been elevated
to power by their votes, willsou n surely find that
they do not 'understand their epoch.' And they
who give the Advomistration ' unquestioning
support' will just as surely discover that their
maxims of partnerslnp belong lb an age that has
passed hi the history of the country. The issues
of the times are too momentous and farreaching
to admit of such narrow-inhaled views in the one'
dheetion or io the' other. It thould be the aim
of all to co-operate with the Administration hdi
its legitimate efforts for his preservation of the.
Coveiument and the restoration 01 the Cmon s re—
membering that wisdom and victory are the um—
ehisive-posession of no party. and that, therefore,.
if no party is; to be implicitly trusted, so Deno iss
entitled to ad exclusive right of censorship. since
the ono ease; equally with the other, implies the
;ism:option of human infallibility."
PILESIDEVI"S LETTER. TO A WIDOW
Mr, Bixby, the recipient of the following letter
from Pie,ident Lincoln, in a poor widow living in
the Eleventh ward of Boston. Tier Kati' rum,
Hilo uas'Feverely wounded in n recent battle, is
BOW lying in the Ito:idyllic Hospital:
- Dear Madam : I have been shown on the file
of the War Department a statement of the Adju
tant tietleral til lassaelinsetts, that you are the
mother of tive retie who hate died gloriously on
the held of battle.
I Mel how weak and taultles.s must be any word.
of mine wiLich should. attempt to beguile you from
the grief of a loss so or v rwheluriog ; but I cannot
ref rain front tendering toyim the 6nsulathirt that
may be found iu the thanks of the Republic the}
-
died to save. -
I pray that our Iteacenly Father may .assusge
the
anguish of your bereavements, and leave only
tla• cherished noutimy claw loved awl losl, and
the solemn pride that must be }ours. to have laid
so costly a sacrifice upon the altar of freedom.
Yours, eery sincerely and respeetfull,
A. Liscots.
fn Mrs. 13Ixby, Roston, Mass, •
Lincoln's )14. Electors.
'4/ Dil) 21
:10,(0.1 13
36 000 16
16.066 S
„ 5.000 4
46160 ......
... LS) 000 11
: 10.(06 :1
3.000 3
5
3.000 3
MEM
EXECUTIVE, ANstox, II
W.icjIN..TON, Nov. 21, 1861. 1