tpoiterg. MelakaWay, March 8, 1863. Limn- GEN. Gas= telegmphaSecretari Stanton en - the sth that it deserters from every part of the enemy's line - confirm the report of the capture of Charlottsville,Va., by Gen. Sheridan," and he adds that they report the captor° of Gen. Early and nearly all of his command, consisting oflBoo men. The capture of Early may profe unfound ed, but there can be no doubt that Phil Shedd= is on the war path in earnest again, and has penetrated within fifty miles of Lynchburg without attmcting the atten tion of the foe. Charlotterille is east of the Blue Ridge, whence he moved from Staunton doubtless, and is on the direct route to Lynchburg, which is certainlyhis objective point. If he is moving upon that place with the .7iew of ' capturing it. then he must Confidently expect to be joined there by forces either from Thomas or Sherman. His own force we apprehend is inadequate to the speedy reduction of so strong a position, and- he could not main tain aprotracted siege for want of supplies A few days will develop° the grand com bined movement upon , Richmond, and when it comes to light we feel assured that it, will add greatly to the prevailing con fidence of the loyal people in the early and decisive success of their cause, _AB . LUJAN Luccomi was again inaugur ated President of the United States on Saturdaylast, with the most imposing cer emonies, and has entered upon a Presiden tial term that must be fraught with the mightiest consequences to our institutions - . Unlike his first inauguration, he was this time free from personal perils, and the bat teries which glistened on capital hill on Saturday last were those to proclaim the victory of the Nation over its deadly foes, and not to protect the officers of the gov ernment in the discharge of their solemn duties. Four years ago, he was surround ed by &liking assassins, and a population that heartily sympathized with those who sought revolution—now he is inaugurated in a National Capital made free by his own administration, and he can point to the eventful history of his reign and rejoice with the faithful people of the country that the end of disorder seems so nigh at hand. Four years ago he had to accept the ter rible.alternative of war—now he has to grapple with the question of peace, and until he shall have finished this work well, whether he Shall be honored or contemned by the people who have so generously sus tainedhim,musthe undetermined. Great, ail has been his responsibilities hitherto, they must stillibe greater hereafter. Ce mented as the people have been by the common danger, they will, as peril fades away,*sabject this administration to the sahie ,independent criticism and dispas sionate approval or condemnation with which they have vindicated or censured other administrations in times of safety; and in the adjustment of the issues which must necessarily arise as thelegacy of civil war, the profoundest skill and unfaltering fidelity and heroism will be essential to success. The peril to our institutions from war is past; but the perils of peace are just about to dawn upon us. The govern ment cannot survive either a dishonorable peace or the refusal of peace on fanatical abstrukions ; and•with these delicate and momentous issues the new administration must deal. We have abiding faith that Abraham Lincoln will henceforth, as hitherto, keep hisheart steadily fixed upon the safety of the Nation, regardless of the passions which may play around him, and that before his second term shall be closed, he will preside over a restored and honored Union. TB MILITARY SITYATION., The movements of both armies are , shrouded in mystery. Just where Sher man hasilirected his steps from Columbia, we are not advised; and the rebels seem to be quite as ignorant of . his purposes as we are. They recently announced that their papers would give no information to the public of Sherman's movements until he should bo met and defeated ; but they will likely reconsider that determination when his plans are developed and his guns thunder at Raleigh, or Lynchburg. or be fore Richmond. Of Sherman's ability to maintainhimself wherever he has marched, we do not doubt. We know that he start ed northward fully appreciating that he might have to accept battle from the main army of Lee united with that of Beaure gard, and he is prepared for such a con tingency. 'His array is as large as any force that can be brought against him; it is composed wholly Of veterans who are ,strangers to defeat, and we regard its dis comfiture as not within the range of pee- sibility. We doubt; not that a portion or Lee's'force has been sent to aid in arrest- - iiig Sherman ; but Grantinei been demon strating heavily against Lea's extreme right, his most vital point. for more than a week past,. and Lee's army cannot maw be reduced for - any purpose, without opening the door to Grant. It is not improbable that Lee must accept battle from Grant within a very few days to ,defend the Sehth-eide road—the leas of which would be fatal to Lee, and render it next Ulm posaible to holdßichmond for twenty da.Yb. Lee is therefore confronted with double danger. If he weakens his ranks to arrest Sherman, Grant will sweep around hie right wing and compass his lines in his fatal grasp ; and if he concentrates his forces to -defend against Grant, Sherman will'soori thunder in his rear' and compel the evacuation of Richmond without a general engagements In the mean time Sheridan *moving, butwhere or in what force, we are not prepared to say. It is evident, however, that the various armies which encircle Richmond—Sheridan's on the North-west; Sherman's on the South ; Schofield'e on the South-east, and Grant's ' on the East—are moving on in concert to effect the capture of Richmond, and unless all signs prove 'deceptive, the rebel capital uinst bo abandoned before thirty days, and probably without a sanguinary battle: , uow amp inevitable. Lee must Asmion gialmand this spring we do not thitik it probable that be will riab a gen- eralengagemetit before :I;lilirg 80. If he must retreat; he Avilkilo with hid army as strong as Tesiallde; a iiiksai most 'favorable opportunity occurs he Will not deliver - battle. He. cannot do'- so when and where he may : prefer. If he fights at all. it must be in. an open field in de fence of his lines, and he must be'tlie at tacking party. and he will not thus give battle to superior numbers, when even should he gain a temporary success, he must still abandon his capital. Wejudge therefore that he will wait and watch for opportunitieato attack in detail, and when he is compelled to accept decisive en gagement or retire, he will retreat and leave Richmond and Virginia to the con queror. Where he will go, in that event, has already been discussed in the Rich mond papers. Some have predicted that he will move North and make a desperate effort to transfer the war -to our own soil ; others that he will move South-west to Knoxville and. Nashville and open com munication with the Trans-Mississippi rebel army, and still others predict that be will establish himself in the Cotton States and attempt to prolongthe war indefinite ly by avoiding decisiVe battles. We feel well assured that Lee will sever cross the Potomac when he is retreating from supe rior numbers in Virginia. He is too great for so hopeless an enterprise. Of all things we should . prefer' - that Lee nuty cross the Potomac with- his entire army. He might do incalculable damage to cer tain sections of Maryland and Pereasylva nia--smight even penetrate to the Susque hanna and reduce our State Capital to ashes; bat it would be his last cam paign—it world be the end of this wicked rebellion, and we'should willingly accept the consequences for the g reat end to be attained, But Lee wilLriot thug close the war. He has never assumed the offensive excepting when our army was defeated and greatly weakened by' the expiration of enlistments; and he will not now at tempt it when he is' weaker than' ever be fore, and the Union armies stronger.-- That he will attempt a bold movement when he abandons Virginia. we do net doubt, and we shall not be surprised any day to hear that he is marching for Ten nessee, where he could by celerity of move ment, and the concentration of his entire forces, open his communications with Texas and Arkansas, and compel a bloody and protracted straggle to dislodge him. True,.such a movement would isolate him from all resources from which - ,to replen ish his ranks. It would - resolve the war to the mere endurance, of the army he 'could retreat from Virginia with, as it would be the end of rebel government and !conscription, and when that army should lbe broken by battle. the war must end, !but it seems to be the most feasible of all 'plans suggested as likely to - be accepted iby General Lee, and we think its adoption 'more than. probable. —Gri forces now greatly out-number Lee in- Virginia—certainly not less than three to one, and the draft is sending thousands of fresh soldiers to the army every day. If the government shall push . the draft with the same obstinate energy it is displaying here, there must be one hundred thousand added to our ranks within twenty days, and if so. there can be no more bloody battles , in this war. i Overwhelming numbers will . economize blood and treasure, and before autumn 'our troops will, we, trust, be-returned to their homes with the most beneficent gov ernment of the world secured to them selav and posterity for all time. Heaven speed the happy day ! COPPROTH EXPLAINS Gen. Coftivtli has Lui elaborate letter to Mr. Weyaud, of Somerset, in de= fence of his vote in favor of the amend ment to the constitution abolishing, Sla very, and in vindication Of his consistency as a Democrat ; but he seems to have failed to satisfy Mr. Weyand "or any other man" on that side of the House. From this ex traordinary epistle we learn that Gen. Coffroth knew in advance that when he cast that vote, his " political enemies, in order to exasperate Democrats, world be fulsome in their praise," and he adds"l feared more the praise of my political foes than I did the criticism of my friends." 'As to the criticism of his friends we can not pretend to speak advisedly ; but we are not perspicacious enough to see where the " fulsome " adulation of his enemies coineS in. He will bear us witne l ss that we have not been malicious enough to speak - well of him in terms of unusual extnivii gance, and we are not aware that any of the Union journals of the district have been so ungenerous as to damii him. with violent 'approbation; while, it must be confessed that the criticism of the Demo cracylas been rather more candid than complimentary. We assure Gen. Coffroth also, by way of "indemnity for the past andlecurity for-the future," that we shall be most careful hereafter not to shock his sensibilities with rude commendations rel ative to his Congressional career. To the best of our knowledge he has cast but one vote on the side of patriotism during two sessions. and that he has been persistently trying to explain into suspicion or positive disrepute ever since. Rest easy, General —you shall not fall by the " fulsome " praise of your foes ! But Gen. Coffroth goeS into the future. When no one was accusing, - hAn in any public manner of a disreputable compact , with certain -Republicans to secure a seat in the next Congress, in the face of his defeat by the people, he rushes to his own vindication and insists that if any per son should happen to think he was so influ -1 enced in his vote, they must be at once undeceived. He gives the world to know that he don't affiliate with RepubliCans. or Abolitionists as he calls them. He did not mean to give vitality to the Republi cans by his vote, but he launched it forth upon them armed with death and wide. spread destruction. He says—"l' assure the Abolitionists -that are now praising me. I did not vote for the amendment on account of any love I had for-their 'party or their principles, but it was to stab them!" Thus while Coffroth has been censored by `thoughtless triends for supporting a favorite dogma of the Republicans, he was in fact playing the part of political at3s4s. *it !laid meant ily_one grand siteep of po litical stra — te . gy tOokill.amtentembihe op position to the Demociaiy. far from being in apostate to Dencty, he would Prove himselfthe Brutus ofßepublicanism, and go down in histiiry as the hero WliP bought gifts to weave in chaplets for the dead. When the impartial limner comes to paint the startling events of the last Congress and' the death of the Republican organization, the central figure of that panorama must be the Brutus of the 16th district. with the dying party uttering its. last sad words—Et fate Coffroth! Two reasons are giVen in detail by Gen. Coffroth for the vote in question. He vo ted fiir the amendment 'to destroy the Re publiCan party by destroying slavery, and again he tells his Constittients that be vo ted for it to run a corner on the President because the States would inevitably , de feat its adoption ! Profoundly ! Since both propositions cannot be accept ed, will the General oblige us with a brie! letter of not over several columns telling us just what he did mean when hoTeast the vote for the amendment I Had: he men silent; his vote would _have needed no explanation. It would have stood for ever as a record of which himself aid his children could have been proud; but since he has given half a score of reasons for it at different times, no two of which-har monize with each other, and all of which confront the vote itself, we beg the Gen eral to give us one sensible explanation of his explanations. and then—stop !_ THE bill authorizing the collection by taxatian of the additional $2OO of bounty paid to volunteers la.st year in this count?, had passed both branches and is now a law. It provides that the additional sum shall be collected in accoreatale with the provisions of the general law authorizing The collection and payment of $3OO. The special law passed in the Reuse by Mr. Mc- Clure, authorizing Guilford and Green to pay $3OO to drafted meu or their families at such times as the School Directors may deem proper, _has not yet passed, the Sen ate. .It has been delayed because of the probability of the passage of a general law to the same effect. If the general law does not pass, the special law will be passed, and so amended as to embrace all the districts of this county. Surely no man can be so indifferent to the interests of his fellows as 'to deny to drafted men, or their faMilies, the sum of $3OO. THERE was but a single 'change made in the cabinet of President Lincoln as con structed for his new administration, and that was necessitated by Secretary Fessen den's election to the Semite. Hon. Hugh M'Culloch, of Indiana. succeeds Mr..Fes sonden to the portfolio of the Treasury, and his appointuipit seems to inspire un bounded confidence that the finances of the government Hill be most wisely and frugally managed under his direction. The cabinet now stands as follows : Secretary of State—Wen: 11. Seward, N. York. Secretary of the Treasury—Hugh M'Culloeh, Ind. Secretary of Wor-1. M. Stanton, Washington. Secretary of the Navy—Gideon Welles, Conn. Secretary of the Interior—John P. Usher, Ind. . Poet Marter Genend—Wm : Dennison, Ohio. ===iliEMMl THE draft has been made for a number of the districts of this county, and those who have been conscripted are now re porting. ,It has fallen Nc ith peculiar harsh ness upon our people, and it bras been the more keenly felt because of the wide spend conviction that our quotas are :unwarrantably large. Considering WIC sacrifice this county has made—the less of Property by military occupation, and the fearful draw now-pad r e upon the clas ses whic:h can be least ipared, the prompt ness of our citizens in their responses to the call of the government displays the highest measure of patriotic devotion to the Republic. THE Union men of Franklin county ,should not fail to be fully prepared for the Spring Elections to be held on Friday the 17th inst. Often the supineness of our friends has given the Deinocrats easy vic- Aories in our strong-holds and the effect of it has been felt by theircontrol of the Election boards at the fall election. Let. UniOn men be ready, for exert struggle with the foe, and secure their just supre macy wherever it can be honorably achiev ed.- • Mason I)onGE. Asst. :4 t, vest Marshal of this State, was relieved last week, and Gen. Hiuks, a wounded soldier, appointed in his stead. We think that Maj. Dodge might be safely trusted at the front at this stage of the war, and trust that he will be afforded an opportunity to win a soldiers' honors there since he has failed to 'Win then in the peaceful channels of military life. R%;; give in to-day's paper the second in augural address of President Lincoln. It is remarkable alike for its simplicity and brevity, and will - commend its author to every devoted friend of the government for the plain, frank and earnest tone of patriotism that pervades it. Goy. °mum, we learn, has beeu pre vented from going to Savanuakand Char leston by the pressure of public business. BOTH branches of the legislature have agreed to adjourn on tht24th hist. A. H. C6FPROTII, Esq., Member of Congress, from this district, has written a long and able let tor in deleuce of his recent vote in favor of abol ishing slavery_ by a Constitutional amendment. He concludes his letter with the, following para graph, viz: "The only denunciation I received bus been through the press, and all started ut Harrisburg. It' I had handed over the black mail, I presume would not have been abused from that source." Will the Compitir and other Copperhead pa pars in the district be good enough to explain. WE ore indebted to Capt. J. K. Gilmore, of this pace, for a copy of the Charlekon Courierof the !loth ult. It is a little four•Colutan halfsbeet, printed on coarse, dingy paper, and seems to be neutral in polities; religion and on the war. Its tone has been immensely subdued by the advent of " Old Tecumseh Sherman," as his soldiers call bin. WE are indebted to hiessm.Olmstead and Brovai of the legislature fpr public documents. AruinittiA_ titgatitoto 4 410114etabuts, Pa. ARLINGTON ?LAC. r i g=rtalA t te lltatta nees ta " it°l44t E. it ..latalutes for the Capture of ataziestoss '...-soldierie (*meter: The Bulldito to Sad Groundo—The itetrlbutioui , ' - Editorial Corror.poodores of the B7rsnklia fleno,Kocy. Ain,L - vmve. PiAce, Va., Er'braocy 24.184 Arlington Place—the Mane. of Robert E. Lee! What a flood of memories-crowd upon the visitor -to this beautiful spot ! Alai ! -how pride-and am bition have chevered and eititusoned their handi work in these venerable halls.' Here it winild seem that, there Wag every incentive to fidelity, to 'honor, to peace. The Old Mansion was sanctified to its occupants by the beneficence of Washington. Here his adopted child, George Washington Parke Cnstis, made his home nearly three-quarters of a century ago. ' The same deep ; blue Potomac flowed serenely by its portals, and the same na tive forest surrounded it_thut now breaks the storm as it slugs Its plaintive dirges in the deserted halls of Arlington- Place. Hitt as_Wirstand amidst the colossal Greeist; ' , Mars which grace the im mense portico, the sullen booming of artillery :breaks the puinfal silence that reigns here. The signal gun had scarcely ceased to reverberate along the bluffs or the Potomae. until itseeMed es if Heaven itself had respelled with its . fi e r e ,,,,t, thunders. The very earth trembled, and the webs which bud gathered on the corners and flitches of Arlington waived responsive to the deafening roar of a thousand guns, us they shook the ancient, mansion to its very foundation. Hard by on every side; further gill on right and left, and rear, tlw hoarse answer came, and front the opposite shore rose the flitting stnoke that told how loyal hearts were there to deleede common capital and re-' joice over the triumphs of a common country. . Charleston has fallen ! The home of treason— where it was nursed in its ',waddling eloths anal nourished by perfidy and treason nu tfi it became mighty, had but a few days before ) ielded to the triumphant tread et Sherman, and its Sumter ugaiu flaunted the old flag that traitors had hi it stricken doWn in the toad triumph of v.-time over peace and goyim:meet ; ..nu the various b t atteries andlorts of thellefences of Washington mimed the victor at twelve o'clock to-day. I u ould that Gen. Lee could hare stood with me here in front of hit idolized home, nod ;ward the loyal artillery play,theirT wild melody" iii honor o f th e restoration of Charleston to the Ilnimi. It was in Charleston that the first overt - act of r o h e m o ,, Was cOruniitted. Judge 3PGrath, the Presiding, Judge of the Ullited States court inn Charleston, adlOurned the (mart sine die the day after the election of President Lincoln, and '4 igpincNi the National flag from the builtAng to fling the Pal- weft° banner to the breeze. Four years later he is chose,' Governonof South Carolina; and be fore he held his office one nunith, Sherman' made him a fugitive, and hoisted the stars and stripes over his capital. It was there, too, that the first appeal Wan made to the terrible arbitrament of the sword, sad It was made mosesauselesslY., In the face of the proftr of the loyal commander to evaeuate Sumter. in three days, because of his ex,. busted provisions, the merciless spirit of treason flung grim visaged -war upon a people whose whole thoughts. hopeti and efforts were for peace. Wh...n the. thunders of Forts Moultrie, Pinckney, and Sullivan's Island. 'proclaimed fraternal war, Gen. Lee was here in u home consecrated to Union by the name. the fame and the hallowed patriotism of Washington, He had been the child of favor. Al.florotlE. nation had educated and honored lint: an accomplished wife had brought him fortune ; from his own green lawn the Na tional Ca star, founded by Washington to be for all time the fOuntain of political power of a united people, horned up in view, and the many menu.: meats of National greatness with which it has been wthrtted, must have struggled with the mad pride and ambition that made Robert E. Lee a fugitive from his home, a stranger to, his noblest inheri t... amt a 100 to liberty mid free goverMaJno. Long did. he hesitate. and earnestly did hie faith ful wife- 7 -true to her patriotfc ancestry-:-plead for fidelity to the hest of civil govenimenta. But Virginia faltered and was swept into the vortex of treason, and wftl. it was swept Gen. Lee. I would, that lw were heri,'s-sky to take a re trospect of his murderous, desidatinz work, amidst the dealeuiug thunders coining up from his own once blomnim: fields, to tell a ‘thithlitl people that anotldn•link is broken iu the chain that Would have li been woven in the chaplets of the relentless des-, - pot upon thirty millions of freeman, but for the ' nnexanipled heroism of the sons of the North.--- : Smirk indeed ' would these salutes fall upon the heart of the once happy master of Arlington I r Place. They would come as the terrible prods -1 oration of vindicated justice— , But, although far off at the head of his shat tered and despairing army of crime, he is there greeted with the same salutes coming from the abetted guns of Grant. Nor there alone, for from the green Savannah of the South to the farthest gun on the Nurth-East coast ; from the Atlantic shore to the sunset side of the Father of Waters; , from the Northern Lakes to the very heart of the .laud once enveloped in the deadly grasp of trea son, there are salutes this hour proclaiming that the day of Our National Deliverence is' nigh at hand. Fitly, indeed, might he look out from his deserted home to the thousand graves whicki are hard by his old-time walks, each of which is an eternal monument to his perfidy. 'Shedd he the beautiful grounds of Arlington now, he Must pass beneath a graceful arch, on which is woven in evergreen—" HERE SLEEP itUR PA- IitfOTIC DEAD," and turn whence he might, the mournful track of war would' confront him.- 7 - Thousands of the brave defenders of the Repub lic rest in the very shades of Arlingtoh, and now the warblinga of _heaven's meet 'choristers who people this lovely.ibrest iu spring time. must be alone-for the heroic' dead, or the sad visitor who Sere fear lis country's woes. -'" . , When he rued at once open his home and his country, treason held supreme sway • in all the Southern and Bord,w States; and the 'cowardly treachery that was smouldering in the North, prO raised an easy victory to those who Would have dismembered the Republic. Since_ then four years of 4arible, exhausting, devastating and bloody war have been crowded into history, and the fair land of the South is one vast cemetery ; mourning and vvantshadorr every house-hold; despair reigns in the councils of crime, and soon I pray and trust an all-wise and ever just God- will erovvii the Right with decisive victory. Around me on every side may now be heard the voices of the oppress ed who have been freed in the throes of civil war, and those who confessed the lord of Arlin*n as miter. niw ri•turn thanks to Him who accepts alike the.praise of the honored and the lowly, as the guneof Fort Whipple shock the neglected halls.where they lived in servitude. — . int a truce to painful memories. George Washington Parke Cnstis was a grandson of Mrs. Martha Washington. She was the - widow of Mr. :Cnstis whet she' monied to Gen. Washington, and G. W. Parke Castle was the son of her only son by her first husband. He was adopted,. by' Gen. Washington and raised and educated by the Hero-Statesman of the RevOltion. He became , proprietor of' Arlington Place, whether by pur chase or by' devise from Washington, I am not informed, - and lived here until he had more than attained the age allotted to mortals. He had but One child, who married Robert E. Lie, and thus Captain Lee (as he was then) became the posses. sur of the finest estate on the Potomac, eakalso of a large estate known as the White House on the James River—a place that has figured largely in military operations on• the i'eninsula. lam not familiar with the history of this estate, but ' And make the key-note of the eaddeat•dirge That fancy ever played to nalanchaly.'' the , old mansion looks- ash ; had-Attired the storms Of-a -ctintii4 - '-4.lirettiWisediOnliive j teen in' ear4ny ii:and . - .1,4 II: "ThiCit 'lnititY ' of vendable Inge is damped - upati 'everOature Ofi.thelduselitud, gioaids: ThWcidostad pillars ,on the large liorticii are nearly Six feet in diante,7_, I ter: the spider has woven his silken net kale crevices andfon the high cornices apparently un disturbed byl the 'tidy servant for a decade, and -the bat may have reposed -here as generations ; have departed without resistance to his daily re pose. The tan columns support a plain reioteov ering the portico, and rude but elaborate carving finishes both the external and internal ranges Of this, massive structure. The house is entered by n wide hall: on the walls of which are a series of i very old paintings, mostly representing revolu tionary. battles. They are but indiffereutly exe cuted, displaying very Moderate artistic skill, and the frames areienvy, stained pine, and have been I innocent of varnish tier a quarter of a century. 1 The doors inside - of the halt, and.the angles to-' . wail the stairway, are graced with huge deer ! antlers, probably trophies of scone gay sporting days in the 'early hil:dory of Arlington Vince. Over' , the windows, and irregularly in various places hi r the hall, are indentations in' tile pinstnriog, on which the art of frs;•;coeing seems to have been ire vented. Here a pack of hounds are iu full chase en a ban-, and a troop of deer, and various other chronicles of sporting life,' are daubed in the ru t dest style. In the large rooms are but few evi -1 deuces remaining of the 'once liberally furnished 1 home of Gen. Lee. The paintings are still on the walls, and a few 'sofas and chairs, all the worse of use and age. are here; but nearly everything that could be carried off has gone its a memento or the rebel General-in-chief. This curiosity seems to be irrepressible with the American , people. An intelligent contraband, formerly one of Lee's pieve., informed um .that' when Lee left be toe& only the furniture" that bclouced to Geri. Wash ireztos, and "My Lady Lee's"' silver ware. A portion .4 ti4e in ruiture end articles lie left behind are me?: in the Patera Office, but vandalism has' ICiltile Litliell to make vacate planes in Arlington. Hard by the rnauAieu are the negro houses;and a little'to the rear is the stable—all hearing the same evidences of effort at display iu JirciAtieture. The negro houses have frescoed pictures ore* the nindows--one of which represents an eagle with a serpent'iu its= clans, and tile stable bun' the massive pillars of the muusion in miniatare, and all bear the 'same marks of age and ravages of time. It would seem its if no repairs had 'over been made. ~ The large. estate of seine bundler's of acres seems to have been dei•oted wholly to plea Sure. "Master Lee," said .me of his old slaves, "didn't raise nothing here, and he kept only sixty slaves on this place. He mists.' all he used at de White House—dere lie kept over three Intudred slaves." This was the whole story in afew words. Arlirg totl Place was peopled with consumers—with Fixity menials to minister to the wants of hnlf score of whit4s, and indolence bus lett its tracks in wide-spread :decay.. Now, however, a village of freedmen are quartered on the place. Much oC the native forest has-been-felled to clear the sweep for the guns of the forts, and the lone worn tint and neglected fields are now made to bloom apd give.golden fruits by the labor of the saute slaves who basteried, its decay. A portion of the Mate, encircling the mansion on the left and in the rear, is devoted to a soldiers' cemetery, and there are thousands of graves in regular rows to tell the sad story of this wicked rebellion. Terribleithleed has been the retribuhon that has fullowed.the efforts to establish Slaery by an appeal to war. Lee yielded to the triad current of perfidy that swept the Soitth in 1861, and drew his sword against the most beneficent government of the earth to make human bondage eternal.— Since then four long years of bloody, appaling war have crimsoned our history. At times the rldr or victory' On. seemed .la-swell tr.isVara.tho deadly ties of the Republic, aril again Abu trem bled in the bulave as if ready to sweep resistlessly upon either side of the unnatural conflict;- but at last, after years of agonizing doubt, of feud@ sae tifiee, of sublimed heroism alike. in behalf of right - and wrong, the fulness of His time seems to be reached and the life of the government to be fully assured. The slaves who Atom _exhausted the :fields of Arlington as menials, now make them .rich With the fruits of industry inspired ;by free dom' ; and their once proud muster is driven to the sorest, eitremity to defend the capital of trea son, and appeals in rain to those who plunged hint into war, to emancipate theirslaves and send theta to his side to save the remnant of his }Mat- . tered army. Truly— "The mills of the Godi grind elowly, But they grind exceeding tine l" —But enough of Arlingtoa r and I must hasten from this grand theatre of retribution and death to deal with the future and the living. A. K. nt. 1 HARRISBURG Adjoiirnment to Attend the Inauguration .Coral Bounty Bilhs—The Claim Bill Reported—Payment e gat iv e d—T b Appropriation C u rtl moval of Major Dodge-Pennsylvania and the .Cabinet. • Corrospoetienoe of the Franklin Reperitery. • HumsßuEd, Marehl, 1.266.3. The legislature adjourned on Wednesday even ing last until Monday next, la enable the mem bers to attend the inauguration of President. Li ncoln. Notwithstanding the known fact that there will be few Changes in the aPpointmen6 in the gift of the national administration, i there are in numerable axes to grind at Washington, and the members of the legislature take their hand at this interesting operation. I presume that two-thirds 1 - .. f the Union members of both branches will be idWashingtOn today. The bill authorizing' the collection by taxation of the $2OO, paid as bounty to recruits last year in 'excess of law, in Franklin county, has passed both branches, and is a law. It provides for the collection of the additiotud ,sum accordance with the provisions 'the general - bounty law en der which the $3OO is authorized. Since the passage of the bill in the House by Mr. M'Clure authorizing the School Directors of Green and Guilforil townships to pay .1300 bounty to drafted mee, west of the townships of Franklin county have petitioned for the same law. The bill has not yet passed the Senate, as a general law much of the sallle character has paAed that body; and it will doubtless' be passed finally. If it does not pass, the spell law for Franklin county will pass next week. Considering the pe culiar hardship of the present draft and the scar city of substitutes in the agricultural distriebi, it is but fair that a reasonable bounty should be paid to conscripts. By the provisions of Mr. M'Clure's bill the bounty to draftedmen is to be disbursed. 14 the School Boards to the draft6d man,fiimself, or to his family, as they may deem just. ' The bill providing fur the ndjudication of claims for militiFy damages in the border counti,es, has been reported to•the House by the-committee on elahns, with a proviso that the Stale shall not as sume the pay medt of any pelt of said claims -The bill was held in committee until last week, notwithstanding the earnest efforts of both the Freekliu members to have it reported;' and it fin-' ally came with a provisti appendedl by the com mittee that precludes payment. The bill will be considered at an early day, and the binder Mem bers will make a test struggle on striking out the proviso. If the House refuses to strike it out., then ie all hope of appropriation dissipated. The appropriation bill was taken up on ed-k nesday afteinoon and passed through m a single session, while an unimportant local bill often times elicits more extended esaminatiort. It is unexampled itt z the history of legislation that the. general appropriation bill, involving millions, IMO should be disposedd — of tetbd-. svilio. of the iegisla*,,iti st:-*,-.:** •Oliii:llo6rSilt section, lairwitotriiski,4, ilarlPfter that walitnride safe, it would *au that 4 i - Tottewline r :iiinl4. that all the i*eitOtOittiaeglis.., , ,ititito the increase of the pay, Of the ii . Mnberi frs*l $7OO to $lOOO, which was carried . by a bare majority. ' It, will probably be stricken out in the Senate: Ca r linGorl:r is about to 'gir to; and ... ,_. .Savannah ta,visit.the.r.etmaybrania-soldierse . mai _, I be will be absent about Mu days, ~ He is unceas ing in his care fig &brave snus'ef Pennsticanin are a they aro fr be found, and they kit , honor and lore him ' ' '-",' -• ' 1 - 1" i; •I • Mai. Dodge has removed, and will grobti bly be transferred 4 , Name snore northern cliMate .where soldiers wi I stand in..ezing better than they do iu this S e. Although a regular. army officer, it has never been thought beat to send him ,to the front. His sticeessor is Gen. E. W.Hiuks, who has seen itenve service and bears honorable wounds. - It is understood that Pennsylvania will not be represental in the new cabinet of President Lin coln. A t'eeble effort was made some weeks ago to put Gen. Cameron inf t i the Treasury Depart ment, but it had a short life; and a more eartiest effort was made for Forney but it will not suc ceed. Pennsylvania is fearfully dwarfed at Wash ington, and ever will be wail her best men are sustained with more unanimity than hai been manifested heretofore. , Hou.tcvL NEGROES AS SOLDIERS. When the proposition- was thst made byqhe North to arm the negroes and use them as part of the military force to suppress the rebellion, it .:et-as stoutly resisted by a large eines in ourown midst, and condemned as savagery by the foe. So strong was the feeling against the measure, that the go vernmeut bad to employ them under various pre texts, and get them into the military service by: indirect means. Time, reflection and experience, howeveridually dissipated' the- prejudices in the North,.and row no party could sustain itself on the proposition to withdraw thy accrues from the loyal ranks. At lust the rebels themstdres have opened timir eyes on this question, and now they are demand ing that their own alacei shall be put into their shattered army to strengthen it. Darin is in th vor of it; Lee strongly urges it, and the rebel press is nearly unanimously demanding it. 'yra recent speed delivered In Richmond. Secretary Benjamin declined that ,ideas the slaves were employed Richmond must be abandoned ; and the Biehniond,Enquirer, of the 23d ult., charges (that the Gulf States have deserted the Border States by defeating the bill to arm the tflaveA in the Senate. The folhesing is the article from the Enqnirer: " Virs;inia did not commence this war, nor -did - Tennessee, Missouri or Kentucky. Its magni tude and losses were perceived by those on whom the brunt of battle would fag'. The Stutt*fur. ther South, protected by those on the border ree idled advice, rejected concert, and, with fancied se curity, cut the fastenings which bound us togeth er, and east Virginia and her children,-on the 'exposed western frontier, adrift amid terrific and increasing . war. In vain did these States' foretell the future, and protest against the ungenerous rashness of' those who expected by the misfor tunes of others to escape the calamities of civil strife. 'We told them that the storm would in: dulge its fury ou our soil. We pictured to them a' devastated country, pillaged _fields, burning towns; insurgent slaves and - a hired soldiery in e , flamed to crime by the " smooth-skin women ou the ottoman and the silver plate on the board." Neither did these just appeals, nor the terrible fate which was increasing and advancing check the selfish impetuosity of those who.riskedlittle Of dis aster to be endured by others. We were told we must follow Our own people, or be against them. The alternative presented an abhorrence to com mon enemies, or an abandonment of common blood. The choice was at 'once made, snider a solemn compact, to stand faithfully together until complete victory blessed or 'a single fate pealed ' the at - magic. Amid all the ceremonies of galen a! tart-tette states-sestet sponsors to the cause, and Sy sacred oath pledged all the lives, all the in terests, all the property, in mutual eupport and for general relief. From the nature and motives of the war, and by the bond which united those, who were - struggling to save all that is prized among men, there was nothing too sacred -to ap propriate or abandon, except the blighted faith to be true to each other. These oaths Virginia and her frontier children have not yet broken.— The lives of their people are now-in the trenches, with a daily sacrifice equal to the necessities of defence. Nearly all their property has I been yielded to the enemy, in obedience to the request of strategy. The slaves have been appropriated and losses suffered according to the demands of the advancing enemy. This appropriation of ter ritory and slaves by these States was so much a voluntary contribution by there to the wants of the war as if bills of grunt and emancipation had been passed by their separate sovereign conven tions. They were a part of the price contempla ted at the time the struggle commenced, to be paid for blessings to be common to all pit the tide is now rolling toward those States whomade the light, who affirmed success or universal de struction, and who swore the oath., Thia oath has been leokin, and therby whom the first blow was stricken are the first to desert those whose breasts hare, solar; received the fury- of the storm 'raised by others. After the Border States, have,. offered lends - and slaves, as necessary sacrifices tel .- success, they still declare that wife, child, bride,' a free tongue and an unchained neck are things to be fought for. They say to the States of the Gulf,' now make the same contributions of; lands and slaves that you forced us to make, and senti ments, relations and people will be secured.' "Monday the compact of mutual support was broken. The bill to appropriate the slaves, s 0 as to secure honorable existence, was defeated in the Senate chiefly by the , votes of the Gißf States. The Border States • had previously contributed their share to the &mime defence. It makes no difference whether threw shareil were lost to their owners by the strategy of war or by the, action of Congress. They were equally sacrifices of prop erty to the national defence, sacrifices foretold by some, and, which all swore to share idle. The vote'by which that bill was lost must be recon sidered. The slave must be given or we may per ish. They who watch the destinies of the State declare its wants and demand the relief. lie for whom the love of the people is only exceeded - by his own pure affection for his country, the hero of twenty victories and the conqueror of every igno ble aspiration, implores the recreant Stateatiot to abandon the lory won for them at Chancellors-- vile, and not to refuse the liberty he secures by his lines around the still unconquered capital of Virenia. The army demands that its dePleted ranks shall be strengthened by more men off what ever color, and it is sometimes impolitic to 'refuse the demands of an army lac that which Lei coin. nutnds. The Border States i4gat that such laws as are necessary - to save the State shall be passed, even though those laws affect the slaves in the ..South as the war has affected them on the fron tier. That vote must be reconsidered. Perish property and all the luXuries of profit, bat we will protect our social existence and oar pride as free men. We prefer to do this by manly battle ; but if they who demand to share our success, now refuse the means to win that success, they can so act, but Our wives and our honor must still be aura. - The difficulty in obtaining a peace has been slavery. 'The appropriation by the Border States of their slaves to the public use has removed that difficulty-in negotiations by them with the enemy. There is not a slave in Kentucky, Missouri and Tennessie. Slavery has disappeared in one-half of Virginia, and practically exists no where in her limits. Let such appropriation - of interest be at once made as will save to each State the rights of all unconquered people. If this be refused, and the sacrifices of -war are so imposed on some as to imperil relatiena, without which life is intoler able, then" let provisions of safety be immediately made b'y those who value family honer and indi vidual pride alsove sordid property ; and let those who are willing to have masters above, that they live upon the hope of having slaves beneath thorn, seal their fate with the enemy now thundering at their gates. Perhaps it would be zeal for the Gulf States to reconsider their xote. Virginia Tennes see,Misseuri and Kentucky will yet see that their people be not slaves in order that the incimbenien ces of war may not be felt on the Congaree and I Tombigbee." The following ie Gen. Lee's letter on the eubjeeb " HELQUARTELY C. S. Amass, Feb. 19, 1E45. "Hon. .03arkedole, Haute of Riff tsenktivos, Riclunond. " SIR : I have the honor to acknowledge the re ceipt of your letter of the I2th inst., with refer ence to the employment of negroea ae Soldiers. I this& the meaeurg fug only expedient, but flee scary. March 8 3 iB6i - The enemy Will mist* use_theni avast us if he can gerpoisit#ouref them , Sind its his present numerical supe.rtority illl enable hini to penetrate _many, parts ofthe country. I canuot•itee_the wis dom of ,the Wiley of holding, them to _await his arrival, when we may, by timely action and judi cious management, use them to arrest his progress. I do hot think that our white_poPulationean sup ply the - necessities of a long war without - over taxing its- capacity and imposing great suffering upon our people ;and I believe we should-provide resources for a protracted struggle; not merely for a battle or a campaign., .- " In answer to ,your second question, I can only say that hi thy opmion, the negroes, ander proper circumstances, will make efficient soldiers. /dunk we could nt least do as well with them as the en emy, and he attaches great importance to their assistance. Under good qfficersand good instruc tion, I do not see why they slsoulifnot become' sol -diers. _ The) possess all the physical qualifications, - and their habits of obedience constitute a good foundation for discipline. They ftwniell' a' more promising material than many mules of- which we read m history, which owed their efficiency to I discipline alone. I th ink that those who, are evi -1 PlOyed should be freed. It would be neither just nor , wise, in my opinion, to require them to-serve as - slants. The best course to pursue, it seems tome, would-be to call for such ns are willing to come 1 with the consent of their owners. Animpreas :tient or draft would-not be likely to bring out, the best class, Mid the use of coercion would make the measure disfirsfefitl to them and -- to - their owners. . 1.. " I have no doubt that if Congress would au " thiliiie their fe - Cepthitantti - serSice"; alitT eirquiwer the President to call upon individttals or States for such na they are willing to' contribute, With the condition of emancipation to all enrolled, a sufficient number would be forthcoming to enable - us to try the experiment. If it prove successful; most of the objection to the measure would dis appear, and if individuals still remained unwilling to send their ne groes to the army, the - f0rce...44 i public opinion n the States would soon bring - about such legislation. ai would remove all ob jection. 1 thilik the matter should be left as few psible to the pe - ople and the States, which alone can legislate as the necessities of this particular nu-vice may require. As to the mode of organ- I izing them, it should he left as free from constraint - 1114 - pwaible. Experience will suggest the, best course, and it would be inexpedient - tol trammel 1 the subject with provisions that might, in the end, ' ,peevent tile itiloptiou of reforms suggested by se ! fluid trial. - - IVith ;:rvar reypeet, your obedient servant. " R. E. LEE, General." Innugn ration of President Lincoln ! IMMENSE PROC.VIEISIOX! The Oath Administered to the Presi dent and Vice Presidenti Inaugural Address of President Lincoln Ileirep4ll UNBOUNDED ENTHUSIASM OF THE PEOPLE! THE INAUGURAL ADDRES4 I WASITINGTONi March 4, The procoision reached the capitol at about a quarter to 12 o'clock, escorting the - Preaideiat elect. • • At a subsequent period the President and Vice President, together with the Justices of the-Su preme Court, members and ex-members Of Con gress, foreign ministers and other persons of dis tinction, assembled in the Senate Clamber. There the Vice President elect took the oatli of office, preceeding it by an address.. Chief Justice Chase'admiuistered thelaih of office on the Eastern portico. wheetbe President delivered hie Inaugural Address. There was a very large attendance, and the scene was ene of Mach interest The weather cleared:off bright and beautiful. . 'As the President and others reachiAthe plat form the band played 'Hail to the Chief,' and sa lutes were fired. The Presidedt was cheered by the immense throng, composed of civilians and military, and after the delivery of his address was again and again cheered and saluted by cannon and music. DIAVGDRAL ADDRESS. - WASEIN6'i . I:IN, Match 4. FELLOW COUNTRYMEN :—At this second ap pearing to take the oath.of the Presidential office therein loss occasion for an extended - sdit•eiiiit' -- than there was at the first. This a statement tkmie what in detail of a course to be pursttedieetubd fitting and . proper; now, at the expiritiorrof four years, during which public declarations baveboen constantly called forth on every point-am t. phase of the great contest which still absorbs the atten tion and engrosses the energies of 'the nation, lit tle that is new could be presented. • • - The progress of our arms, upon which all else chiefly depends, is as well known to the publicus myself, and it is, I trust, reasonably satisfactory and encouraging to all. With high hope for the future, no prediction in regard to it is ventured. On the occasion corresponding to this four years ago; all thoughts were anxiously directed to an impending -evil war. All dreaded it—all sought to avoid it. While the Inaugural. Address was being delivered from this place, devoted al together to saving the Union without war; insur gent agents were in the city seeking - to destroy it; and others without were seeking to dissolve the Union and divide the effects by negotiation. Both parties deprecated war, but one of them would make war rather than let the nation sur vive. and the other would accept war rather than let it perish ; and the war came. - One•eight of the whole population were colored slaves, not distributed generally over the Union, but localized in the southern part of it. These slaves constituted a peculiar and: powerful•inter est. . All knew that this interest was somehow the cause of the war. To strengthen, perpetuate and extent this interest was the object for which the insurgents would rend the Union, even by war, while the Government claimed no right to do more than to restrict the territorial . wiarge merit of it. - - _ Neither party expected for the war the magni tude or duration which: it has already attained. Neither anticipated that the cense of the conflict alight cease with or even before the conflict it.- self should-cease: Each looked for an easier triumph, and a re sult less fundamental and astounding. Both read the lame bible and pray to the - same God, And each invokes his aid against the other. It may seem strange that any men should dare to ask a just God's assistance in wringing their_ bread from the sweat of other men's Laces. out's let us judge so that we be not judged. The-pray ers of both could not be answered; that of neither_ - bas been answered fully. The Almighty has his own purpose's. " Woe unto the world because of offences ; for it must needs he that offences come; but Woe - 0 that man by whom the pffenegmotneth."-• I - If we shall suppose that American slavery is one of those offences which, in the providenpe of God, must needs come, but which, having con tinued through His appointed time, He now wills to remove, and that he gives to both North and South this terrible war 1/e the woe due to those by whom the offence came, shall we discern thine in any departure from those divine ittrltites which the believer§ in a- living God ascriberto him I Fondly do we hope, fervently do we pray that this mighty scourge of w* may speedily pace away ; yet if God wills that it continue until all the wealth piled up by the headmen in two hun dred and fifty years of unrequited toil shall be sunk, and until the lash shall be paid by another drawn with the sword, as was said three gams and years ago, so still it must be said: "The judgments of the Lord are righteous altogether." With malice toward none, with charity- for tiil, with firmness in the right, as God gives us to bee the right, let us strive on to finish the, work we are engaged in—to bind up the nation's wounds —to care for him who shall have borne the bat tle, and for his widow and his orphans--td do all which may achieve and cherish a just and lasting peace among ourselves and with all nations. EYE AND EAR.—Pfvf. J. hum, M D.,03. culla sad Atuist, formerly of Leyden. Holland. to lroa ted permanently at No. 411. Pres &red, PAilagV where persona afflicted with disease of the Exam, . will be scientifically treated and cored if curable: Airrimmat. Eum inserted' without 'palm No charges made for Examination. N. .—The medical fiteulty la farited, as be zeta ensti in his mode of treatment. - _-• DisPEPeu.—What every body nye rmiat true. We have heard Dr. Strieklarel's Tonto When ciao frequently by then wholuive been benefited by It, theist last we are compelled to maim it knows to the public:Dud we really believe it effects a cure Inevery ease: beretbre, Vie say to those who are autferhwr with Dispepds or Ner vOus-DebtlityAo arthelr Druggestatedges boetta-of• Dr. Strickland% Tonic. A-- • • : • ; WSKUIa! kers or III lifaultaolas t Oar Goad= carropo•••- . ... them to grow an the itmootbast -too oo o" ". to Li w bald heads . to fax _weeks. ' -- sikryhm, &web, aOsdod, ottloOolPO of C gt i 'RA' iraana CO.; Ekr i allk , ablady • -