1 II I I I TPnMcs.S-OO PER AXXUSf. t I . i iRRBR, Editor and Proprietor. I "WOULD RATHER EE RIGHT THAN PRESIDENT. Hesby Clay. VOLUME 8. EBENSBTJRG, PA. , THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 1862. DIRECTORY. ,aEPASED EXPRESSLY FOB "THE ALLEOHAMAX. Post Offices. Bnn'9 Creek, Bethel Station Carrolltown, Chess Springs, Cresson, Ebensburg. YisTOFPOST OFFICES. Rost Masters. uisincu. Joseph Graham, Yoder. Enoch Reese, Blacklick William M. Jones, Carroll. Danl. Litzinarer, Chest John J. Troxetl, John Thompson, r.lleo Timber, Isaac Thompson, Wm. M'Gough, I. E. Chandler, P. Shields E. Wissinger, A. Durbin, Francis Clement, Andrew J. Ferral G. W. Bowman, Wm. Ryan, Sr., Georjre Conrad, "n. M'Coltian, B.'F. Slick, Croyle. Miss M. Gillespie Washt n. Morris Keil, S'mmerhill. Gallitzin, Hemlock, Johnstown, Loretto, Mineral Point, Minister, Pershing, PlaU?viUe, Eoseland, St. Augustine, Scalp Level, Sonman, Suminerhill, Sammit, Yv'iUnore, Washint'n. Ebensburg. White. Gallitzin. Washt'n. Johnst'wn. Loretto. Coneavgh. Monster. Conem'gh. Susq'han. White. Clearfield. Richland. Washt'n. Select ffoctrg. THe Volunteer's Ulotlier. CIU IICIIES, MIMSTERS, &C. Preachin" every Sabbath morning at 10 Jclo5k and in the evening at 3 o'clock. Sab bath School at 1 o'clock, A. M. Prayer meet-in-r pverv Thursday evening at 6 o clocK. .VethodistEpiscopal ChiirchREv.S.T.SBVW, Preacher in charge. Rev. J, G. Goglet, As St. Preaching every Sabbath, Iternately et 10 J o'clock in the morning, or 7 in tue Sabbath Sciiooi ai u o "i " V meeting every Thursday eveningrt 7 Ll. R. POWTIL, tveiung I'raver o'clock. IHIUI j.nv.-t'- : Pastor.-rreaching every apoain u.u -a 10 o'clock, and in the evening at . 6 o clock. Sabbath School at 1 o'clock, P. M. fJr meeting on the first Monday evening of each Southland on every Tuesday, Thursday and Friday evening, excepting the first week in each month. ,,.. Cahinatlc Methodist Rev. Jons Williams, ranor.-Preaching every Sabbath evening at :"nd 6 o'clock. Sabbath School at 10 o clock, A M Prayer meeting every Friday evening, at' 7 o'clock. Society every Tuesday evening t 7 o'clock. jyipUsVx. W. Lloyd, Pastor. Preach in every Sabbath morning at 10 o clock-. "Particular Baptists Vzv. David Jexkixs, Pastor. Preaching every Sabbath evening at 3 o'clock: Sabbath School at at I o clock, i . .u. Catholic Rev. M. J. Mitchell, l astor. Services everv Sabbath morning at 1 0 o clock ad Vespers at 4 o'clock in the evening. ne is hy boy, my only boy ; IlisVther died long years gone by; And Hue have I known of joy, But jzing on his dark blue eye. 'Tis liged now with higher glow IIi3 cou-y call3 him : let him go ! lie neverVrieved me ; tender, kind, Strong,pying ; full of hope and grace ; My life wn his own entwined, My heartuit mirrored back his face. With stern iolve he seeks the foe ; His country ll3 him : let him go ! How often I tve sat beside Ilim sleepin, clustering round his head Those rich bron locks, my praise, my pride, And now thearth must be his bed. rTis wrong to give for this, I know His country callsim : let him go ! Ah! in how manytcarts this strife Is waged in pra; by pray(won ; There is the wood,e f.re, ihe knife, And for the sacriic our son ! 'Twould kill me if hcfcll , buL no Hi3 countrv calls him. let him go! For God, who gave ouand so blest, Would have us guarjt, heart and home, Give up their best at s behe?t; The gulf was closed iheathen Rome With oxe young warrioiVeal or woe, Hi3 couniry calls him : lhim go! SPEECH OF GEO. FiflCIS TRAIN. TO MR. JOHX BtLL, tETIXG. EREXSBIRO 3SAILS. MAILS ARRIVE. Eastern. dailv at 12 'cl,oc'' n0n' Vetera, " at 12 o clock, noon. MAILS CLOSE. Eastern, daily, at 3 o;cloc; P. .1. Western, " at 8 o clock, I . M. The mails from Batler,Indiana,Stron?s town, 4c, arrive on Thursday of each week, at 5 o'clock, P. M. , Leave Ebensburg on Friday of each week, E?. The mails from Newman's Mills, Car roiln, kc, arrive on Monday, Wednesday and Fridar of each week, at 3 o cIock, l . i. Leave Ebensburg on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays, at 7 o'clock, A. M. 5?-Post "Office open on Sundays from J to io o'clock, A. M. "Spread Eagle" Train, i grcat Yan kee Street Railway man, been ven. tilating the American Questi jn London again. Having been invitco lecture lor the benefit of a charitable.(SOCiotion, after devoting an hour to a lupous re cital of his experiences in diffeu lands, and having thoroughly won the)0d will of his audience, Mr. Trai.i delicely in troduced the topic of the veningAmer ica, thus : j t More than an hour, !Mi CIiairE.n, la dies and gentlemen, I hve spok? for your amusement; will yet now gn me a little while for my own First, I, me il...j- T or., nn f iifinv itR'OUr P.fini ni-ht, for 1 bear you a fla of truce, nd constitute himself an Admiralty Judge upon the seas.. Pray, where is it written that Lieutenant Williams, the mail agent, who became so presumptious in the mat ter, pronouncing it an outrage against international law, was appointed an Admi ralty Judge ? "NVhy should he be better posted than the older explorer, Wilkes ? England decides that he could have le gally taken the Trent to New York, but had no right to take out the envoys ; or, as General Scott has clearly put it, the greater crime would have been the lesser. This is the first time I ever saw Napole on's remark verified, that a blunder was worse than a crime ! There are several ways of Fettling the matter without war. I wish our Government had tried the traitors, convicted them for high treason, and sentenced them, to be gibbeted, and then, in its strength, generosity and clem ency, banished them forever from the country they betrayed. Had this been done before Earl liussell's dispatch, all would have been in order, and your be loved Ambassadors would shortly be your guests again, with the brand of treason on their passports. England says it would have been in order had the Trent been taken to New York. Why then not send her over, keep back the specie, the pas sengers and the mails simply send the ship there or if not, the affidavits, and let it go through the Prize Court. I will guarantee that Slidell and Mason shall have a fair chance. Another way re membering how well Lord Ashburton and citizen Daniel Webster settled matters on a former occasion why not let Milner Gibson, or Gladstone, or Lord Stanley, or Cobden, talk the matter over with Edward Everett, Thurlow Weed, or Bancroft, or Seward, or some properly chosen referee. Again, let us see what the meaning of international is. From what I observe, the word seems to mean England alone; I but on examination it may turn out that it means more than one, or several na tions. If so, then England has no right to settle it, nor America why, then, not allow Hussia, Prussia and France to put the matter straight, and give them one per cent, on the estimated cost of the war towards wiping off their annual deficits ? That is it settle it by contract. Suppose Mr. Seward, as he most likely will do, condescends to argue the point has he not a right '! Suppose he takes out of his pigeon-hole he .always has these Things handy some chap., some see., some page, a lonir suit of references. For instance, ty old lawyers who have been so long dried up. The senior partner of that dis tinguished firm Grotius says it is all right ; Puffendorf says it is all right. Hurrah for Puffendorf. Lord Stowell says it is' all right. So does Chitty and Parsons in the law of nations. Hurrah for Parsons and all the junior members of the firm say it was all right Wheaton and Kent and Pratt in his work on Con traband. So does Phillimore and old Vat tel. Hurrah for Vattel. They all say that Wilkes wa3 in order and 1 propose as the last way of avoiding a conflict :- Let the Lord Chancelor sum up the evi denceand if England will say that all similar acts on her part were illegal, then America may fairly say that this act of Wilkes was equally so. Why has England the right of monop- J oly in all these good things ? England i is always a Christian America a heath- j en. England is the law, America the I -nrbpr You sneak of our irettins up a i n,;nnnl ilolrf. Pr.iv tfill me what riuht ! Your papers are "uilty of goading you on England has to monopolize all the nation- i to all the horrors of a brutal war, and lead al debt of the world ? Why is she the 1 you to suppose that America is your bit only nation allowed to put great burdens i terest enemy instead of your truest friend, on her unrepresented millions ? You say j Perhaps I can bring the frontier closer England has seen the evil of them. home by drawing auother picture. I will America wants to see it, too. England i in a few words state who has sown her wild oats on the battle-field ; who your enemy. Well, then, France ts America is emulous of a similar amuse- I your natural friend America your natural ment. How singular that tne yueen s , enemy . ui cuursc me .lucuwus ;reat army of oluuteers is got not vour old mends, A 1 V hv is it that the Con led- Prance, lour enormous Army anu avy erate i?ant ct nvcr tlip Jjrm- America ! Let me show vou the force of anu kjiiiuta i n a. ivi-u cv..w - don American are ordered down by the nor privateers, but with regular commis sions from the United States navy. These vessels will not hug the coast to meet your Agamemnons and Warriors, but start for Australia, and India, and China, and take your merchant shipping prizes into a thousand Eastern port3. What can you do ? If it has taken twenty men-of-war to find the Sumpter and Nashville, how many ships will it take to catch five thous and privateers ? War with America means the destruction of British com merce. It means more civil 'war in this happy land. Revolutions are contagious. Revolution in New Zeland, revolution in Hungary, in Poland, in Italy, revolution in Russia, revolution in America ; and pray why do you except England ? AVar with America is not like war with European powers. It means the destruc tion of twenty-five millions of Americans, or victory. I would rather you would ex press no signs of Appreciation or disappro bation until I have painted my picture. NUMBER 19. Let us respect the disrmtv of our re spective lands respect each other's prido and do anything but dishonor each other rather than go to war. If America is wrong she is manly enough to make it ri"ht. If England finds herself in error she is too proud to do eo mean a thing a3 to strike a nation she thinks paralyzed by domestic discord. Hurrah for America ! Hurrah, then, for England. Mr. Traiu was frequently cheered, and spoke for two hours and a half to an audience who ex pressed a desire through their chairman to hear him again. mm m TIic ISattle of Somerset. ment. HOW Singular uiui me vuccu o j vvuij .vv proclamation should come out just alter that your great arm the Southern cargoes of arms and powder j up against them had sailed ! Why is it that the Confed- France. Your enoi fla" is allowed to plant its traitorous I they know is not against tneir true inejiu tho Stmnd r while the Stars i i ranee, but a-ainst their natural enemy America ! Let me show vou the force of argument in During another way Chief of Police '! Is it the way England j seven hundred vears have you not always lino rP cli rv i n nr Lrr npntmlitv i Are youJ been friends? Jfavc you not a common aware that the pirate Nashville is now in literature, a common law, and do you not vour graving-dock at Southampton ? i speak the same language ? What better Von have kindlv let me state my case, proof can you liave that i- ranee i3 jour . i . p i -i i . i.ii .: :4i t and if you are willing to allow America best friend than by talking with the oui any of the rights that England assumes, t cers ct the rrenen xNavy, wno worsmp vou will, I am sure, give me a verdict for J England for the burning recollections of nil, v i i ; I i 1 1 1 rii 1 1 . i iv. u i . i v. i i j - ders of your journals such animus is sel- , brother, for the sterling lessons you taught dom seen in the English press. Do you i them at Waterloo. The merchants like believe it all? You cannot, for those I you for having rivaled them everywhere meet are not anxious for war. The pa-1 in trade. And the , priesthood almost so mucn lor , i io,i i- r. cunnA thfit. the adore vou lor haviirtr uone moment Ensland said war, America was J their religion, and showered so often bles- a dead mam As you have heard your j sings on the head of their Pope. kJ.Ip. should vou fike to hear mine? Havel not proved that Franco must ! Will vnn lot me talk it riffht out, just as naturally be your friend ? If not, then, I feel. Yes. Well. then. I I have another argument stronger yet think that war with j The people they must naturally admire tell you in the name of oufieople tha'we ' in 3812, the right of search was then uis want no war. We are totbusy with W ; cussed, and don't be surprised when I re- own affairs to think of yo much nife ; mind you that Lord Palmerston was then j natu :Vmeriu j Secretary of V ar, or Jot me start with uoor America is the worst thing that could hap pen your empire. America can shut your jroau vou on to bloodied. gate and live; close England's lou are in no En aland is not irm c and she must starve to ennu vou um tu ui". u . T .1 ll, .i v. irV.Oirnf.il .. r.r.-' ' Al 1 .1 : l1 ,.P tl.n '.-.nrvi-n: ctn.il ! lioiltinn tfl T tf WaT. his nr-.lril OI me man " nv vui- 111:11 uiiimieu. mv v, uni , . . . . 0 . fort-ible livelihood solelyy minding hi ' President, II. Laurens, ambassador to IIol- military nation. Y oa nave always lougnt own business. Your goC nature, I an; ! land, fercibly taken out of the Mercury by J with hired soldiers Hessians in Amer i i :n fmri vmi intnlr li.nvin.f snml lMtl tl.in Vptnl r-.nrriod to Fit-- La. Swiss and Germans in the (.rimea. SUTL, Vim j f tr v..,. mi; jiiu." ""'i' - 1 a ., , i.'i irliot- T mn 7 v. T am t?.! To,i nnvloA of ImIi frMnn. nn.l To-dav. vou have not lorty-thousaiKl men iiLiiuue iii ,,...w , - 1 iaiiu, i t . .. !-' " 1 RAILROAD SCIICnULT:. WILMOUE STATION. Test Express Train leaves at Fa?t Line 41 " Mail Train " " Fast Line " Mail Train CRESSON STATION. Vt'cst Express Train leaves at Mail Train " East Fxpress Train " " Mail Train " The Fast Lines do rot stop. 0.44 A. M. 10.03 P. M. 4.01 P. M. 8.23 P. M. 2.28 P. M. G.23 A. M. 9.22 A. M. 3.31 P. M. S.53 P. M. G.50 A. II. lofV-nilnnt. vou the juryind you, Mr.1 sent' to the Tower to await the malefae- Chairman, shall be the iniel come to ; tor's doom. That was iti 1760, and this judgment. I am but otimong many. was the man afterwards exchanged for 1 have no friends outsi: lou are in Iy)rd Cornwallis, whose remembrance we your own camp, and ha five hundred , continue to celebrate on the 10th of Oc papcrs advocating your i Therefore, j tober. it is for you to say whethvou will allow j Take another question say nothing of a hearing to the defeat. Cries of I the kindred cases in tho Foreign Ollice, ear, hear V and "yes, j. J ; the Leopard taking tue man out oi tne All' I ask is not to" be irrupted when Chesapeake, and the Leander's cxperien- T .rrt lnv steam up unvou gci your ces dui lane me mnji-an "r"- "hear, hear my money's worth. To coence, t Ill I'll! let me gay ihat I am delighted a'ilkes having ; Sardinian captured the pirate ens delighted, liuiperor i les in the Levant (1810) putting into a port with the brother of the on board. Ihe moment the in vour einr.ire, and what are forty thous and soldiers, fighting for a shilling a day, ugainst our two millions who fight for the gTory of the nation ? You are in no posi tion to go to war never so weak as riow and America never so &troug. Here are some obstinate truths. It looks as though England was short of corn this jear. Is that so? and Ireland is short of potatoes. Then you have elements of famine in the land; famine means the imnnrration of 150.000,000 bushels of t - -- - ' grain . v iierc France ? No. can vou She is short, it? From and the COt'STT OFFICERS. Jvlges of the Courts President, lion. Geo. Taylor, Huntingdon; Associates, George. Eft'lcv. llenrr C. Devine. Proihonoiary Joseph M'Ponald P"j;rr and Recorder Ed .vard I . Lytle; Shtrif John Bock. District Aiiorncy. Philip S. Noon. I). T. Storm, James Cooper, Peter J. Little. Tmaturtr Thomas Callin. . Poor House Directors Jacob Horner, H il liam Douglass, George Delany. Poor House Treasurer. George C. K. Zabm. Poor House Stc'cord. Jaiv.cs J..Kaylor. Mercantile Appraiser John I-arreJl. -la liters John F. Stull, Thomas J. Nel on. Edward Ii Doanegan. Cou,ity Surveyor. E. A. Vickroy. Coroner. James S. Todd. Superintendent of Common Schools "W. A. Scott. EREx&mrnc 5oR- officers. Junket of the Peace. David II. Roberts "arrison Kinkead. P'tirge David J. Evans. Town Council Evan Griffith, John J. Evans, William D. Davis, Thomas Ii. Moore, Daniel u- Evans. Poroujh Treasurer George Gnrley. Vvyh Master -William Davis. ScAooJ Directors Vv'illiam Davis, Reese S. oj'l, Morris J. Evans, Thomas J. Davis, Hnh Jones, David J. Jone3. Treasurer of School Board Evan Morgan. Conitable -George W. Brown. Tar. Collerfor George Gurley. Jvfye f Election Meshac Thoma?. ffprrtort Robert Evans, Wm. Williams -4t:;wr Richard T. Davis. revere and respect the nation that took their royal guest out of the Ucl'erophon, and sent him to die, Parrhasius-like, on a sterile rock in the Southern Oeean ! Oh, yes ! France is your friend. Head the "Delate, the Monilcur, La J'rcsse and the Constitulionnel. Don't you see how friend ly they are? How dificrcnt from the hostile comments of your national enemy, America! A natioa that takes twenty three millions of your manufactured goods, and gives you forty-four millions of your raw material, must naturally be 3'our enemv. Are we not always you .' KrnJ your papers what an that was fourteen years ago how insulting to sell Erin, pale with want, large cargoes of iuoAfor nothinj. Admitted gioss insult was o lie red by our haviug burned down the City Hall to honor your off. cers in New York at the time of the Atlantic cable- And more yet, that outrage of sending out the Arctie wanderer as a token ot our lCSUiUUg outrage . -. -.. i 1 1 1 f? V. C .Inlnlnmr!! f-irr thflt I because I can now maKagiisnmen un- captain or uie a. , " " j0 tiic fxint of Secession desire to insult your Queen. Eat if I demand what we are fi,ng for . We , ,h? name of Bonaparte, he boarded tne , cv Tril i have failed to show that America is your never thought of your flaever intended ship w-th drawn cutlasses, and forcibly j J;P natural enemv, ob,ervc how we outraged to outrage your laws ct, we never seized Lucian Ponaparte, and earned him ! and J3iac-k bea vnl ask n.ner price. ' tt tl IP SgKtill of Ju il affair. Our a primer to Kngknd 1 belie., the , S fiT. SwfS Government had nothinj do with the Amcr.ean had no ma.l sften on board, J'hf.j;i? 0?at nron the throne of a mighty peo. , Uiike, acted o o, re,pon- TtotZ -P Sp pie. Xha? insuit shouid never Leot- "ffi say I am very jof it, heeau,e Kf the f j- S S if En-land will lash hcpple into war prevent tlu3 ease from being exactly anal- land t ben, cannot Oo pre, i 1 rcopicciTil. 1 . . over an alleged insult f this lor her fia", what reason has si suppose that merica will remain si' en traitors fire upon our standard,! dng the em blem of our nation bei their prison ers' feet? My child! s associations are as dear to me as j are to you The family ties that t Americans to cethcr are as sacred aSe which belong to England. My rela! are as near to me as yours may he tcj, and I love my flag and my country My as you can O " i A rn hrtff At thill I love your?. 1 love iv- " - y. it 1 .inr.lfl hotter thnii like Lngland, l love YV-, rTu I love yout people, otonld I tell you to the contrary, yould know that cither I did not spe truth or else I was a traitor to thtflthat gave me birth. England is sM mto fury, for she is proud and serf s the ocean. ljut let us calniipc the point. First, the captain f Trent outraged the proclamation olpeen by taking the pirate envoys isengcrs: second, he laid himself op hag the ship i. i.:.. -.,.,ir nrocecdincs. cpizf-n i'v nus iut( . . " Enghnd says that s had no risrht to arous T:ike another epoch. The Caroline Lord Palmerston was Premier then, also was said to be assisting the Canadian Ilebels in the Niagara river (of course the Permuda, Fingal and Gladiator got off their arms as a matter of course, .bug ent tune. Then look at Canada. Not a gun, a fort, or defence on a thousand rfcles of frontier? What protects the Canadian towns ? Can you depend upon the Or angemen of Toronto? The French Ca nadians of Montreal T And are you sure land being neutral.) Col. McNab, with . you have not some belhgcrants nearer IIOUIU man tut; v""" j his anned men, boarded her in the night time on the American fchore, killed Amos Durpee, set the ship on fire, and let her drift over the Falls. England said it was all right, and the gallant Colonel was knighted. Stand forth, Sir Allan Mc Nab ! He was the Wilkes of that day, and last week was the guest of the Queen. Later still, did not your officers board the N- 13. Chase and take the Irish patriot, whose funeral was celebrated by some fif ty thousand of his countrymen the other day in Dublin, forcibly from under the American flag, and bear him away to Eng land ? All these cases I find in the. law books, chapter on chapter, page on page. You say they are not analagous what of that ? Thero arc certain rules laid down, and 1 hae consulted all those rus- not think that workmen crying for bread may make good material for belligerents ? And for your sake look at Ireland be fore the war commences ! Is not the O Donoghue a belligerent ? And Sullivan of the Nation? War with America mwins fighting with your own blood rela tions. What other people sends you over a million a year in small bills of exchange to your emigrants ? Depend not too much upon your navy. Navies are deceptive. No worse investment can be found. There is no bar in America that will take the Warrior. Twenty-seven feet is too deep. America has five thousand fishing smacks coasting packets, brigs, barques, and ships that don't pay just now in regular trade. They are ready for action, not as pirates uprising ot your peop ization is barbarism when its result i3 anarchy. Americans want to come out to your Exhibition next year. How can they in the midst of war then you will want to turn it into an exhibition of improved fire arms. Americans do no; think that Eng land would be guilty of doing so bad and dastardly an act as to strike a nation when it i3 down. It is unworthy of great Eng land. If she agitates on this issue, rest assured that no apology rrould suflicj. It looks to me merely as a ruse to get arms into Canada, to be prepared for European complications, and to take advantage of leading tho passions of a strong people in order to keep up a weak ministry but there will be no war. My instincts are sometimes prophetic there will be no war; just thirty years ago placards were posted all over the Kingdom with these words : Stop the Duke, llun fur Gold ! The remedy was powerful the cure perfect in fifty-eight hours the Duke was out of 0fce and tho home guards did not shoot down the people. "Occasional," writing from Washing ton to the Philadelphia Press under data of January 21, says : "The battle of Somerset, Kentucky, is a terrible blow at the rebellion. It is a forerunner of their defeat on a more ex tensive field, and a sure pledge of the de liverance of Tennessee. We shall now almost daily hear of victories, and it is possible that as the traitors are struck in the flank and rear, the great host on tho Potomac may make a comparatively easy advance on Richmond. The friends of General MeClellan justify delay in this quarter by the argument that he will not move till he can do so irresistably. And if you have carefully read the late Rich mond papers, you will remember that they no longer conceal the panic and discon tent that have beeu created among the Southern people by the formidable prepa rations of the Federal Government and the poverty and indecision of the rebel usurpation. Day is at last dawning; and when it comes upon us, the heart of the nation will be lifted from despair, and every element of society, business, poli tics, and religion, will feel its reviving in fluence. "Felix K. Zollicoffer, who fell at Som erset, on Sunday last, was one of the most reckless and gifted of all the rebel chiefs. He was cruel, remorseless and cold. I knew him well as a Representative in Con gress from the Nashville (Tenn.) district. He was more of a controversialist than an orator. Tenacious in debate, logical in his argument, and perfectly fearless, he was a formidable adversary at all times. A highly educated man, he became a prac tical priutcr after he gratuated at college, and was directly or indirectly connected with Whig newspapers, even while hold ing official positions, for twenty-three years. From being a Whig ho advanced into Know-NothiTigism ; - and from being a vehement Uuionist, of the Henry Clay John Dell school, he broke out into a worshipper 'of the Calhoun doctrine of Secession, giving up his life as a sacrifice to that shameless heresy. Is it not strange that so many of the Southern Americana should have become so activo in the re bellion ? John Dell, himself, Zollicoffer, Percy Walker, of Alabama ; Jere Clem ens, of the same State; Humphrey Mar shall, of Kentucky; Albert Pike, ot Arkansas, have been among the most un forgiving of these lenders. The sccret is undoubtedly to be found in their hatred of the adopted citizens, who are distrusted in the South, and recognized in the North for their loyalty and courage oo the side of the Union. "Zollicoffer was not quite fifty when he fell. He resembled John Iliekman in appearance, though a little tnller, and was" greatly confided ia by his followers. He has shown great tact and energy since the breaking out of the re bellion ; and was, beyond doubt, the best "cneral that Tennessee has furnished t9 the traitor forces. 'The next news from Kentucky will prove that our Pennsylvania boys have been doing good work. ' They are regar ded by Mr. Crittenden, Andy Johnson, and tho other Union men in Congress from Kentucky and Tennessee with hk-h favor; and they will do honor to their State and country when an opportunity is presented to them." Health of Jeff. Davis (in a Horn.) At a festival on some occasion among the soldiers in Missouri, one of the men from Adrian offered tho following extrav agant sentiment, which wo copy from a Missouri paper : "Jjf. Davis May he be set afloat ia an open boat, without compass or rudJer ; may that boat and contents be swallowed bv a shark, rind the shark swallowed by a whale, the wha! in the Devil's belly, and the Devil in hell, the dcor locked aud key lost, and further, may he be chained in the southwest corner of hell, and a north east wind blow ashes in hi3 eyes to all eternity, G d d n him." JE2"The soldiers who fights may indeed be said to belong to the Army. The sol dier who runs away should rather bo con sfdered as belonging to the Leggy. A nice distinction, truly ! v In
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers