VOLUME 1. THE AMERICAN CITIZEN, iS published e»erv Wedn««tajr In the borough or Butler. Thomas Robijsox* C. E. AKDimao* on Main wreet. •opposite to Jnrk's Hot.l--.mce up stairs in the brick pridTnadvance, or within the first or?.' if not pai.l until after the expira tion of the first sis months. K,tßs or Aovfrthiko :—One square non.. (ten lines or thre* Ins'Ttlon* * Tgverr nubteouent insertion, per sqnare BuMnens card* of 10 lines or less foe one year, inclu ding paper •Card of 1") lines or le-w 1 year without paper * w y. column for -six months j-J (M) for one year • 2 column f»r mlx months column for one year 26 00 1 column for si* months m 1 column for one year LOUISIANA. On the 22d inst. Louisiana is to elect a Governor and other State officers, in ac cordance with Gen. Banks' proclamation, with which our readers are alreadyTa miliar. It is also known to our readers that the Free .State Convention, recently called to nominate a Stnte ticket, split up on the nomination of a candidate for the Governorship. A letter from New Or leans, dated February 7th, gives us the following additional intelligence : " A conservative Union ticket wife nom inated last evening, with Christian Rose lius at its head for Governor. Its constit uency is composed of the semi sccesh and Pro-Slavery Unionists. Its hopes for suc cess arc based upon the split in the 1* ree State party, but the friends of Mr. llahn are confident of beating both it and the ticket nominated by the bolters from the regular convention." By the same mail we also have the fol lowing highly IMPORTANT ORDER FROM GEN. BANKS. Headquarters. Dep vrtme!e Government, will not be resumed cx cr man and a greater fool, Jeff. Davit.—Knoxv illc IVh if/. Shall Not Stay Here, About the time of the breaking out of this vile rebellion, and at all times since, the guilty rascals concerned have publish ed, asserted, and sworn, that none of the Lincolnites, or thousands of Union men driven out of the country, should ever live here, even after peace is declared.— The Union men, on the other hand, have resolved, and very justly, as we think, that both themselves and these rebels shall not occupy this country. It is a settled principle that one party or the other must leave the country. The Union men in tend lt> stay, and their persecutors would do well to leave. Such men as Sneed, Bwan, Crozier, Charlton. Toole, Sperrv, Haynes, Campbell Wallace, that unmiti gated scoundrel; Thos* J. Campbell, and others, "too tedious to mention," never can live in East Tennessee. Indeed, we re gard Union men who have suffered at their hands, and because of their counsels, as justified in shooting them down on sight, before or after the war terminates, and we shall regard hundreds of them as wan ting in courage and in resentment if they do not dispatch them wherever they meet with their rotten carcasses. They have caused the hanging of better men than themsejves or associates; they have insti gated the shooting down of others, and yet the imprisonment of others. They have filled Eastern Tennessee with wid ows and orphans; they have destroyed houses and barns, fences and homes; they have plundered honest men of their stock and grain, and have filled the land with mourning. Let such Imps of Hell die the death of traitors, and upon the shortest possible notice!— KnoxvUle Whig. ftgF Two soldiers on guard were recently found murdered in St. Pe tersburg. It was suggested that the eyes of the murdered soldiers should be immediately photographed, ia the hope of successfully testing the dis covery recently made, when, to the surprise of all, the result was the pro duction-of the portraits of two sol diers of the private guard at the pal ace, on whose breasts were the insig nia of the Cross of St. George. The murderers were at once sought out and apprehended. NUMBER 11. MEXICO. Tlio news which we have this morning from Mexico via Havana is of the high est importance. If true—and wo see no reason to doubt its correctness—it indi cates the downfall of the Mexican Repub lic and the successful establishment of a monarchy on our southern border. The least important of the news is the reported adhesion of a number of towns and villages to the Empire. These totvns and villages are all within the lines of the French; they have had since their occu pation by the French troops and their Mex ican allies municipal authorities consisting of fanatical partizans of the Empire.— Isut the unobstructed progress of the French, the capture of Uragn, and the despair and resignation of President Jua rez, leave no doubt that the hour of ago ny has arrived for the republic. Ortega, who succeeds Juarez as President, and feibhido, still hold out; but for the pres ent, We see no ray of hope for the Mexi can Republic. Unless events extraordi nary and entirely unforeseen occur, and put to the long series of misfortunes a sudden stop, the Mexicans must soon givo up the unequal struggle. Mexico is, (le facto, an empire, and soon, as recent ad vices from Europe indicate, tho Emperor we cannot say the emperor elocf—who bus been thrust upon tho nation by foreign bayonets, will arrivo upon this continent and re-establish the throne of tho Montc zumas. It is useless lo venture any predictions as to the future. No one, either here or in Europe, expects that the National par ty of Mexico will refrain from attempts to- reconquer the independence of the country and to re-establish its republican institutions. The reign of Kniperor Max imilian is not likely to be a cahn one. There is news of a very contradictory character from San Francisco. Accord ing to it, the National party has obtained several important triumphs. The city of San Luis de Potosi has been recaptured, and the garrison taken prisoners. IJraga was advancing at the head of 9,000 men against Gaudalajara. This news is not of so late a date as that received via Havana, and is contradicted by it in all its partic ulars. If there is any truth at all in this report, the slight KUCCCSSCS of the Mexi cans have been followed by serious and decisive disasters.— N. Tribnne. TAKING CIIURU TINS AND HOUSES.—- The military authorities have taken all the Churches but one, an'l all the Hotels of Knoxville, and converted them into Hospitals. This is as it should be. The Presbyterian, Method ist and Baptist Chur ches here would be used for better purpos es if turned iuto grogshops, selling mean corn whisky for rebel money, than to be used to preach and pray such treason, blasphemy and blackguardism, as have disgraced their walls anil pulpits for the last three years. The Hotels of Knox ville, as a general thing, have been gamb ling hells and houses of ill fame for the last ihree years, under rebel reign, and if they were not needed for hospitals, ought to be burned. There arc rebel privato houses here that ought to be taken. And there are others that ought to he consu med by the devouring element! The traitors in business, we will see to it, shall be closed out in short order. They show ed their hands during the siege, and they have been marked, and now they must atone for it. Lot the military authorities do their duty, and these vile rebels and traitors will soon be able to report that they have obtained their rights !—Knox ville Whig. LOCAL BOVNTIES FOR REENMSTEO VETERANS.—Capt. Poster, Provost Mar shal of the 22d District, addressed a note to Lieut. Col. J. V. Bomford, A. A. Pro vost Marshal General of Pennsylvania, in which he states that there are numerous reenlisted veterans here, not credited to any sub-district; that thesub-di.strrctcom mittees arc willing to pay bonnties to these veterans, providing they can get credit for them on their respective quotas, and ask ing what assurances can be given to the committee. In reply Capt. Foster received the following: WAR Department, Provorn Mmhal Oenan>r» Office. . Washington City, D. C., Fob. Uth, IM4. j Capt. J. Ihron Fatter. Provost Marshal, 22d, District, Penna.—Sir: Your letter of the 18th ult., asking what assurapces can be given committees in paying bounties to veterans that they will receive credit for, has been received. It is not in the power of the Provost Marshal to give any assurances of the kind, as the men are already enlisted and mus tered into the service. The rolls are in the custody of the Adjutant General, and no change canbemade in than, with out producing confusiou and errors. The veterans have already received Government bounty and enlisted by virtue of it. Very respectfully, your ob't servant, HENRY E MAYNAPIER.Capt U S A,