statement of several Generals, that men never fought, better.- .:•Still, I cannot refrain froin x Press itig7the - infe - thoughflln cpbeseseed me et tfie'titne-Hthe fact that ' IO,OOJ men were in full retreat. - , Sonic time after the main, body had passed ou, when that 'stream had beimme" decently small, in company with Gov. Wood, FrOde to Sud the, Illinois Cavalry, andcame upon them stritchedadress theplatu halting every,un• wounded man. They bad cooped up several thousands, but the task of re forming them was found impossible by oven such officers as their Colonel and Major Clendenin, and they were at length permitted to continue rear ward. I crossed the Chiokahominy at 11 r. it., at which time comparative order had been re stored. The enemy were in possession of our Jaospitals and the battle field, Litt we still showed a determined front. It was not known by the Brigadier Generals whether we should_try te_ho!d the position the next day, or orois the river during the night. At 0 o'clock this morning I rode to the bridge, with the intention of recrossing, but was some distance off when I heard the explo lieu that destroyed it, the force having passed over mainly after night. It is Impossible* this day to estimate our lose. Hitt a fgw of the dead were brought from the field, and not ooe half the wounded. linndreds of the latter were brought as far as the river, but could not be brought over before the'destruction of the bridges. Bas• ing my opinion on the number who were brought over (about 8000 and the proportion that number must bear to the remainder. I estimate the entire wounded at 3,500, and the killed at 800. How many prisoners and what amount of stores are lost it is oven still more difficult to estimate. I judge but few stores and several thousand prisoners. The lose in officers is particularly severe. Cols. Gore of the 22d Massachusetts; Black, 62d Pennsylvanian ; McLean. 83d Pennsylvania; Major Naghle, 83d Pennsylvania ; Col Tuck er, 21 New Jersey ; Lieut. Col. heat, sth Maine, aro among the killed. Col. Howland, 16th New York, slightly wounded; Lieut Col. March, 16th. New York, slightly Wound ed; Cul Simpson. 4th New Jersey, wounded and a prisoner ; Col. Pratt, 31st New York, wounded. in the early part of the day one of our men captured a Rebel knapsack, hung to which was half a skull, used as a drinking vessel An inscription upon it stated that it came from Bull Run. During the stampede, for a moment the attention •of hundreds was at• tracted to a horse galloping around, carrying a man's leg in the stirup —the left log booted and spurred. It was a splendid horse gayly caparisoned. Instances of extraordinary gallantry are not wanting. Gen. Butterfield led his, men like another Ney, and when with that Mar sharegood fortune, escaped without a watch. A shattered scabbard, clothes torn with bul lets, and a hat wrenched from his head end demolished by the fragment of a shell—the General might predicate a fatalistic belief in his •• star.' Ile was also one of several in• stances whose officers left 'dolt beds raiher than their commands should go to the field without them. The French Princes—the Prince de Join ville and the two young men—rode upon the field in hot haste during the engagement, and seemed übiquitous, as they certainly were daring and efficient, especially in rallying and re forming the men as they came out of the woods. The circumstances under which Lieut J. Howe af the lid New Jersey met his death. show' him a hero. After the panic, he had gone down upon the plain, found a portion af Company 11, of his regiment, and with them, as a nucleus. was rallying to his colors a pro •isional regiment from the manse( stragglers. 11. had gathered several hundred, was ad dressing thorn in stirring words, and pointing to the flag, when a conical rifled shot struck him in the bream, passing through his body and into the ground at the feet of the men.— It wee the only cannon shot that felt iu that vicinity. Summing up, we had about 30,000 men en gaged, the Rebels at least double that num• her, with Stonewall Jackson in command.= Asa great battle, this one of Gaines Gill (it will perpetuate Go name of a rank traitor) ranks, I judge, only second to Shiloh and Fair Oaks ; low disastrous, or whether die • astrouc, remains to be seen. If I have guriss ed out the correct theory of the campaign, it will neither change nor - hinder future opera tions, already determined upon. The Bad feature is t h at our wounded are tr night subjected to, not, only the neglect of -those of Fair Oaks, but, perhaps, to the ad ditional barbarity of those of Bull nun. The Battle of da . inse's Mills—A Desperate Encounter—Killed and to .unde,d, 4,500 —30,000 against 75,000—The Reroism of the Union Troops-7he Fighting by .the Regulars—The Casualties at the Battle qf White Oak Swamp. WHITE O& SWAhII'9, WITH THE ARMY BEFORE RICHMOND, Sunday, Ju e 29, 1b62. The battle of day before yesterday—l call it the battle of Gaines Mills—now that 48 hours have passed, is found to be one of even greater magnitude than we thought when we saw the angry red sun go down on our beaten—if not beaten, say shaitered columns. The number engaged were, as I then estimated, 30,000 upon our side. Upon the enemy's fully 75,000. We have brought across the Chickabominy 1,000 wounded. The killed and wounded left upon the field cannot be less than 4,500, and• still there are 3,000 to be classed as missing. Some of these last will come in, but as many others will straggle into the hands of the enemy-, Not far Rote twenty guns were left on the field. Each of these estimates is something less than my Tears. And the terrible fighting—the tornadoes of musketry, and volleys of thunderbolts from - hundreds of cannon— ' "The 40:4d:tot, and burst of stmll, And hollowing of Um mortars," these have not been paralleled by this army, despite Williamsburg and Fair Oaks. The swollen list of martyrs is the terrible sad evidence. The movements of the lain hour of the battle, by sifting and compinsing the state ments of those engaged, 'are assuming a more definite shape in my mind. Our lines were broken at_the left of Martindale's "Mai Lion, not, because oar men there fought less bravely than. elsewhere,. but because the enemy made that the point of' his - last des, pearate, repeated uff..irts. They were ,simply overpowered,-mortal men could do no more. The, 12th aid 83dPa ,of Butterfield's brigade t 'phsted ut his right,witlislcioli a part of these - assaults, ;and then' gave.way only oii findiag their Rink turned. Thal2th forever erased the discreditable .record of _Bull Run. It actually' faced about at , the quick eye which dictated the prompt command of its officers and 'fought into the Rebel flank as t hey-1m sh ed : 4 ft reit ghEheline.--It was then and., therelhat Major Barnum;: Lieut. ea Riehardsen;.and - Lieut. Col. Rice were be roeit. Copt,: Rucker, of, the 12th, came - last . froilithe wends; bringing but: J 4 Men of his company.." Capt. Hoyt', - ef the brigade repeatedly rode'' through, every regiment, waviolf, therm .'on With; a • tegirnentaiffing, he hackamid.froto . w man. ouelyi apO.frem the su Orlin hien im • plea, ' O en. Butterfield 'wits ^ tiotog Abe ,inethe tbing,with,the other tattored , colore,. - At.terothet nie; learning ; that. the.colors of O. tegioiew by, a`misapprehension, cif 'in orderkle bury thenrin the eoioi'of treett Wt. they servo as a target, wire.nßon thtgr,eliad; the *rn ee ..OViteritt...rode-lto: the front, raised , . their' from the„linst,, flatinted 661,6..1)00re his mond stitred , thejn:with,hot weltds.. - .That biolieeyvee nol . ,again trailed. - ; , Aiiil6l4We'lo;c,i4piiis"ofiVe attenipt to stay tit ' s falllng'beleleaval(asharge.nfihe sth • Cavalry, (regtilaiiYfrem' .. .lhe flat at the:left,. - strata Ilia base if :the hill. felt info ' 4 *III= ering , :firs:;.:Bat.i>ne.thirtft etlifeni came buck., Harp . ( lalici l K, .th° B ° mOet etrwancinlaßYing the 4 me..Ona - and -1 4pmeilitil,.wlieti,tlie peter:l;s;6lml "en. eral;''vlad`den. Butterfield liartiridare; , Oiid" . tliii'Fteech:,,:t3,fitieds.:'` got: Iterdtin. Watt .friiiitie , hie.,ialet . ol9'"efferq, stetio,tiljv dUchnigi ok./.lliit 14 W-B . :the runttwOys. - . thesa,tiltd.. other./ off. cersbreught:n , :rgathering i dark:teals must by, tti enemy tor reiorotOieewtel4feece. , "(The artillerymen did,their whole duty----therpeo p.led Hades. Those who lost their guns stood by thehi , until hill the , corn pany4l. men and horses, were struck down, and the am munition expended, and in several instances draggol them some distance by hand. ,'Had they not been sold as dearly as they were; had they been brought off when it was . pok• sible, the main body of the corps must have surrendered. . • - - The reader ivy not be able to reconcile the fact that Ift; were defeated, with my almost irdiserimivate award of praise, and accounts of hard fighting. Let him bear in mind that we should have held the ground had not our ammunition given out; that the 'lumbers opposed were in vast excess of ours; that the enemy were desperate. and finally that they were led by Stonewall Jackson, who is just now, and with reason, their favorite leader. 1 have•said nothing of the generalship CipTiiykrtiff - rho field: WhothFr - the — fteld was judiciously chosen I have said nothing Whether there was any necessity for allow ing a battle to come on with such fearful disparity of forces, I have said nothing. These are questions that should be held in abeyance. Were I to listen to the coin 'plaints, and accept the opinions of several prominent officers engaged, I must answer them in the negative. Were I to put on record the assertions of those who have seine claim to speak ex cathedra, I should say each of the a - ove points were made with more than ordinary generalship. For the present, let the whole matter rest I It my letter of yesterday is safely trans. mined, you will notice that 1 give more prominence to the fighting on the left of the field. Naturally, I have written first and most of wh t I actually saw, and if I ha. e seemed to bring myself in the foreground of the narrative, it is because I could be cer tain of only those mo ements that came under my eye. And could easiest recount them by making the account one of personal observation. On the right, 119 st ted in yesterday's letter, Gen. Sykes's division, consisting of two brigades of regulars, and Warien's brigade of fitlt and 10th New-York and Ist Connecticut were in the first line. Tali the day together, the action was less severe here than at the left. I think I sin warranted in saying this, and also that the regulars•did not fight us well as many volun teer regiments—if as well as the average, certainly not to compare with the 12th New. York, ifte 83d pentißylvania, the 2d Maine andAe 22d Massachusetts. In one item thcy'excelled the volunteers—they could be retorme , when hey had fallen back corn pletely out of fire, with less difficulty It is the first battle in which the regulars have taken any considerable part, and fight ing side by side with volunteers they have nut shamed the latter. 1 must advert once more 'telhe terrible scenes with which the day closed, in order to again t ote the super human exertions made by officers to rally the stampeders. I add these names to those I mentioned yesterday, 41h1 d serving the same enconiums—Col. Roberts, 2d Maine, Major Von Vegesack, Butterfield's staff, Maj. Welch, 16rh-Mich., and several t.flieers of the 9th Mass., whose names I failed to learn. Of course there were hundreds of others of like gallantry, some in every regi went, but no one man can speak from per sonal observation of a tithe of the gallant efforts to stay, that fell disaster. The work of Evacuation—The Removal of Stores from. hite Louse, Savages and Dispatch Stations —Appearance of the • Rebels—A Check. LANDING ori JAMES RIVER, 17 MILES BELOW llactimose, Monday, June 30, 1862-12 m., 1111 There has been a aeries of battles—fierce. ly contested, bloody, exhaustive battles— floin Thursday, June 26 at Beaver Darn, near Mechanicsville ' up to this hour, when 1 bear artillery and Musketry and shelling from the Galena, and wounded men are being borne by. The army was put in motion for this point on Saturday morning, Gen. Keyea's.corps taking the front, next to which. followed, Porter's thinned ranks and the enormans trains of baggage Sum nor's and Franklin's coros were left to face the 'enemy and protect the retreat. The railroad was at once given up. Troops of the, enemy's cavalry appeared simultaneously early on Saturday morning, at half a dozen points between White House and Savage's Station. Early on Friday morning, before the bat. tie of Gaines's dills, Gen. Stoneman left Porter, taking with him the 2d and 6 h (regular) Cavalry, the lith New York, Col. Lansing, and the 18th Massachusetts, and some artillery, and marched toward Old Church and White Hodge? I have no word of his movements,butl presume tie guarded the railroad until the stores at the different stations could be destroyed, and the scattered detachments along the road could beat a timely retreat either, to While louse or to Savage's, and then fall back upon Yorktown, Col. Farnsworth of the Bth Illinois Cavalry sent two companies of his regiment, antler Capt. Farnsworth, to Dispatch Station. 'six miles from Savage's. The Captain emptied the hospital, then burned all the stores at, the station and protected the hospital train into our lines, not, however, without brisk skirmishing, and the loss of several of his command. On Saturday the baggage tra 118 ut the whole army were started. Keyes moved his divisions to White OA Swamps, six miles south .of Savage's. At midnight the l stores had been removed 'rom Savage d, or heaped for burning- More than eight hundred wounded were there. Becoming aware that the place was not to be held, perhaps a third of the more able wandered, lame, and bleedmg, out in o the darkness. and Ellowed th wagons. Surgeons volun leered to remain with the others, Dr. Page of Heintzelinan's division in charge. day.broak on Sunday morning the works in front were evacuated, the troops falling back in line on the railroad, two miles back. By 8 o'clock, the enemy appeared, and engag ed portions of Smith's, Biehart.l son's and .. Sedgwick's. divisions. He was repulstat.by banes heavy fighting. The affair fought near Pairs Oaks, in which our loss was several hundred, may be known as the battle of Peach Orchard. Again thit" liho faced about, and took a position hear Sevage's. Late in the afternoon the enemy Caine 'and a similar struggle, with eianilar.result, brought on night. these ougagetneuts . the artillery was of the utmost service, raking the enemy with canister, repelling him, aided by but few volleys of musketry, and Making his doss ten times our own. ' The- action- at-Savages, -the-more-severe---of the two, was Splendidly fought by both sides, and the final repulse of the 'infuriated hordes, of toe enemy.was completO• and destructive. Glen. Ileinizelman commanded on the field. In the early part of the same day Keyes came'upon the enemy in front a small dis. tenet; beyond White Odk Swamps--;squads'-.of oavalry io every tood. Half reginieut came charging full into Couch's Division, pursuing dozee entirely un suspicious of our approath in force: They swept furiously, on, yelling and -brandishing thhir , enthrtle; when, .01A porder.flash, they-Iteredytta,ted tremendous surpriee, Missked.battlrics - turned upon Rebels slough ter as freely when they "quenched the genius qtalVintbrap, -arid pid.t., 'Lillie% - band :came spare up' tenve , gunti. a alight earthquak'e, and, there_ were ;':thirty saddles. The: . pureted- become the: : pursuers. _Sixty, one pr)ionoie were takeit; nine-of i,--ItetenetoyAilled t inoltiding, Major Ard,. two Wrid, tOntywounded:' Wo did not r iosirii n. Thiertioe - .little'job -- , vies - exeeutdd -- :by;Klapti. - Flo94's..Qth det,Penneylvan4Xrtillery. )'rota 10 o'olopic.,,uutil; , - Go.he freet the oeturnee ` helted. ;ItioQleliatt t .'Keyee, 'Porce,r;'Pebk; gorrelf, .13Utterfield. 1- ••• " -vicrein-anx.o r s'oodsu tette t e. enc. my penetrated our design iri , -IteeliolOci;loter- • iOoPtwit oortehfe'rable lie -*tie °lode ttud, etroug'ppote. our Oar : vfaolio Otos° I .4 l( totr - eitg.)o.:front - WOW(' the .rtiar guard' 'ght hint 'We could' hear " t o ugh -old af 'Elint victory wtie, the ipoken * .lot.'7untivoken:'irayCi; of , all !beard's, - ( Wiirelleirittelmon,lieatett;itivntOt-'; ,tilt' r)!iti.S If IheTa' ;TM* 4t ! " . i.t ) r,itk UPbei ion.in front, the march to the James would 'be.disptited and delayed. It was an absolute "nedelisiii that the. way-be tr , itapoded - - -- •There were twenty-five miles of trains cooped up be tweet' the advance and rear-guards. Huddled among the wagons were 10,000 stragglers—for the credit of the nation be•it. said that four fifths of them were - wounded, .sick, or utterly exhausted, and could not have stirred but for dread of the tobacco ware houses of the South. The confusion of this herd of men and mules, wagons and wounded,' men on horse, men on foot, men by - the road side, men perched on wagons, men searching, for water, men famishing for food, men lame and bleeding, men with ghostly eyes, looking out between bloody bandages, that hid the face—turn to soma vivid account of the most pitiful part of Napoleon's retreat from Rus sia, and fill out the picture—the grim, gaunt, bloody picture of war in its most terrible fen• tures. It was determined to move on- during the night.distaticol-e-T-ut-k-ey-ieland-Bridge the point_ on_ James_liiver which was.to be reached, by the direct road, was six miles.— But those vast numbers could not move over ono unrrof road in days ; hence every by road, no matter how circuitous, had been scorched out by questioning prisoners, and by cavalry excursions. Every one was filled by one of the advancing columns. The whole front was in motion by 7 P. m ~ •G un. Keyes in command bf the advatice. I rode with Gen. Howe's brigade of Couch's division, taking a wagon track through dense woods and precipitous raxines, winding Skill ously far around to the left, and striking the river some below Turkey Island. Commenc ing at dusk, the march continued until day :- light. The night was dark and fearfuL— licavy thunder rol cd in turn along each point of the horizon, and dark clouds spread the entire canopy. We were forbidden to speak aloud, or lest the light of a cigar should preseut a target for an ambushed rifle, W 2 were cautioned not to smoke. Ten males of weary marching, with frequent halts, as some one of the hundred vehicles of the artillery train, in our centre, by a slight deviation crashed against a tree, wore away the home to dawn, when we dettouolied into a unignifi cent' wheat field. and the smoke stack of the Galena was in sight. Xenophon's remnant of the ten thousand, shouting the sea! the sea! were not more glad than we. • Wakened from my couch of newly cut wheat by sharp spears of 8 o'clock sunlight stabbing my eyes. I fade to this place, and have since been industriously trying to ascertain the nit tuition. I learn that 25 miles of wagon trains were moving last tri,zht., and that not a single disaster occurred to them The entire siege train, one only of the heavy guns expected, is brought safely off. The rear guard hold White Oak Swamp, with prospect of heavy work to•day. A word as to the destructou of stores du ring the last two days. Porter's entire train. Was brought over the Chickahominy before the battle of Friday, hence nothing was _lost there. At Savages, when inat place was abandoned, 1,700 cubic feet of ammunition, and enormous heaps of quartermaster's and sutler's stores, officers' baggage and soldiers' knapsacks, were do: stroyed, and at every halting place since, the fagot has been busy with whatever could be transported nu fin they. 1 can form no esti mate of the entire value, but it is immense.— One thing is certain, but little has fallen into the enemy's hands. I close to ride back to the renr—uovr our front. C. A. P. FOUTREEIS MONROE, Tuesday, Ju'y 1, 1862. A gunboat has just arrived from the scene of notion yesterday, - ten miles above City Point That division of our army has been figh. ting four days, and has retreated about 17 miles. The fight of yesterday was most terrific, he enemy having three to our oue The battle commenced with our laud for ces. and after about hair hours' fighting, our gunboats gut in range, and poured into the ltebels a heavy and incessant tire. , This tire the Rebels stood for a couple of hours, and then retreated. Our troops have captured, notwithstanding then disadvantages, a largo number of artil lery pieces and 2,000 prisoners. Among tho prisoners caPtured Is the Rebel General Magruder. The p 1 .co where this last action took place is near Turkey Creek The retreat of the Rebels last evening was with great disorder. and their loss has hem) very heavy, much greater, it is thought, than ours. There is nothing definite, however, in re gard to losses. lu the retreat forced upon Gen. McClellan by the superior numbers of the enemy, I learn that be had to spike his siege guns and leave them on the field, after burning the carriages. The nature of the ground render ed it , impossible In move them. In the retreat many of our sick and wound ed were necessarily lett behind. FORTRESS Mormon, July 1. 1862. The loss of the enenty hi killed and wound ed alone yesterday (Monday) in said to have been nut less than 4,000 SP Gen Shields' army arrived here this morn ing, and have proceeded up the James River They conic in Vessels via Annapolis. Cul restioudence of the Associated Press FORTRESS MONROE, July 2 The steamer Darnel Webster has just arri• vod here from City l'oiut with upward of 800 wounded on hoard. A gentleman, who came down in charge of them, informs Me that yesterday was the sixth day that the ,bottle had been going on with the moot terrific fighting that the Bun ever shone upon. It extended the whole length of our lines. We have lost a great many men in killed wounded and missing', probably 15,000 to 20,000. le informs me that Gen. Illcelellan's headquarters are at Hardy's L too. ° today, and his, lines extend live ; :miles above, toward Richmond. This move of the right wing of thO army was predetermined upon and planned ten days ago, and would -have been carried out sooner but for certain reasons well known in the army, but which it would not be proper to state. The enemy's forces have greatly outnum bered ours in almost every action, but not withstanding this they have been repulsed oftener than we have, and their loss tar ex• ceeds ours. 4 i is now's* that we have lost yery few of our AT° gnus, most of them having been tuoved in-safety. There have been a great many wounded prisoners taken en both sides Our informant says that Gen. Idcelellan and his staff all agree shut the present posi tion of our army is far more advantageous as a base of operations against Richmond Riau that hitherto. occupied. The guithows can now be brought to hear and materially aid in carrying ou the work. Some of our regiments have suffered terri bly, while whirs, have but little The New York .sth suffered terribly. They made a most heroic. straggle, and did great havoc atnong the-enenty. About—one-half-,-of—their number are killed, wounded and taken-pri soners- Our left wing wationgaged yeaterday, July 1, up to 2 o'olocli with the enemy, moatly with artillery. The: enemy's force, as gnat: ered front prisoners, who were tuenibere of Beauregard'e Western army; was 185,000, men, while our effective force ,was not eicteed' W.ABIIIgOTON, July 1 ,A dispatch frocn Geo. ltleGlellen:. just. re, noire(' at the War. Tiepqrtment, tdated L. Front , Berkley,.ftarrison's Bir, Jul); 2," states that be has succeeded' in getting his' ariny te that place„on,the hanks of the James River, and: has lost: .hut otte.gun, which had to lie nbrui, donid last night (Tuesday) because. it brokO down. Th`at. nil hour and "a half agdflie Veer of the wegod• train Was wltlito mile of the dainp; and only one wagon ab'andeded-;:that.:we'had iseveru battle yesterday (Tuesday); that 7l e" beat , the' eiiiimy .rifed ttfitjpg even, beteiii.; , that , all the- men. ar,e'- In good, "and ;,that the. vi-enfovoetuentii - Teem 'Washingkosi l have 'ikyrlve,d. ,The - Chßtgc ,q/ Nighe March, ' Through the. ' 'March iout of RfichplVizel: • ' • • ',; T • .1' • 1, - Mohdrky,-.Jun'a 8(i-43' , p: re' Keyes's corps marthed :through the White • OSk .Swamp.' by, the bridges of.'thpt, nem), :Peck's Otyisirin tirrived,'st 1l .Tw/It' OSki :.farm hotitie 'eutiset. - StrAggling.lieglie to ,trtlinifest its evitonitztifrOwthe , mornettt the coin rnaneForward" was given at the Seven ..--• • NreThittieitConr blankets not with" - ,eheer- Jobless on,Siattirdtiy, , night. ...The change of tier:firnife b'ase , is as etceedingly delicate operatiOn,:whoso snecess. must: nedessarily depend tin 'celerity. , Why was this division _ordered hal( hero?• We can. march by night:Jos' well aa' by 'day 7 , -aye, and better Why do We halt? Sanditi morning came, and soon brought With - . it a,strange stampede ul hundreds of mule teams with their, wagons attached, parked its the further side of a vast wheat field, The'. terror that impeded the muss into frantic.; motion was electric from one end of the line to the other At the • sane 'time, and with the square front of a cavalry brigadeilhese obstinate animals, coupled by sixes, charged forward, scattering dnvers, soldiers. and officers. The thunder of the wagons and the cries of the teamsters, ads --Underatood-by--the-eamped_soldiera-in-ad vance-of khe Beene, shook the nerves.of the timid, and it was but a moment before the demoralizing cry or "The Rebels are corn ing," thrilled through the regiments. Had I a list of. the names of the officers who ran under its whipping and spurring, I certainly would publish it. Musketry firing and the near report of cannon, about tii o'clock of Sunday fore noon. Saddles welt on to excited horses in double.quick. The, sounds ceased with th thorough excitation of the troops within hearing of it. A North Carolina regiment, coining in,unconsci .us of our presence, was fired uptn and charged upon baron! it could get out of the way. ,O.te of the Runts of Carolina was among the 22. priso 'era brought in—the Major of the regiment—shot through the lungs, and the Inlet of death wits upon his brow as he was carried to headquarters. The hours of suspense and of torment go by-and the orderto mach does hot come. It is the continuous. gate like switig, from right to left which shall make this change or base successful. Wiry do we not march. Four u'clock• Hurrah I An orderly, dis mountit', from a horse whose flanks heave with the haste with which he has been rid den, brings a message to Gen. l'eck to the effect that his division will march precisely at 4 p m. I kissed my steed as I tightened Ins saddle girth. But was there ever punc tuality In tho movements of an army .?•• six, the column of Abercrombie le.ving filed past, we came out from the shade of the Twin Oaks, and went into the shade of the forest. A guide led us. We were to march y a side road toward the Turkey Bottom Bridge The distance to the base upon James Baver, which we sought to establish, - was reckoned upon our imperfect maps, to be only eight miles. We brought up the rear of the column. Its head was tiles away froth us. The path was an ancient road for planters' use, over -- ctirdee by - ti ine - anff rains. Darkness came soon with its shades, and from the tnoment that it grew dark, the iminense line of wagons and troops began to catch, arid hitch, and halt. A night march of our army, through a forest was a new experience to me. Fifteen feet—fifty feet, was a considerable . dvanee, when in,y horse stopped ; at the instant the. Captain's ahead of me stripped—and Ins stopped, when a wagon half a toile ahead stopped. There the'hub of an ambulance was locked into a pine, atid the sleeping driver of the succeeding carriage had unconsciously choked the narrow road by allowing his horses to try to pass the disabled ve idle. Alf night long, these stoppages and delays occurred— occured from bad driving, from the iniry depths of the streams which crossed the highway—from the narrowness of the road, and the intrusion upon it of the Incest trees. Acid as often as these delays took place, the footfalls of thit litragglers upon the dried branches in the woods on either side could be continuously heard, and when forced, to the road, their stealthy march could be seer, flitting by in the faint starlight, which stole through the treetops. A breaking short off of the tongue of a caission, ~ w.gun imposed a long - Witter beerinie Ait ?Object of passionate' and savage search. ' Where there re lights there are farm hooses; and five of us rode towards the CD Ildhl'S beams With a snort and a recoil, my horse kept shying objects on the field which I could tiot distinguish. • Halting arid marc hing, waiting and mov ing, silent and listenin ', the g eat corps &armee crept through the dark woods. To light a match to fir • the tobacco iu the pipe was a crime. Mules had been excluded from the column, to avoid th.-fir ever tuneful throats. Cum versa( ion, save in whispers, wus interdicted. The armed thousands, no the batteries of cannon, and the iinuruense trains of wagons moved in darkness and silence Byer the sandy and tree capped old road. Lry two o'clock in the morning the irritating and consequently exhausting character o f' the march began to tell on the column. The upsetting of a buttery forg e wagon in a unit' made a halt that promised to be long. We tumbled off our horses and soon were asleep on the 'ground. It seemed but a minute before we were all ou our feet. A. charge like a thunderbolt, down the steep roadway, parted ours ,and our escort's horses in the centre, and scattered the dragoons into the woods: A span of runaways produced the effect of:a squadr.oi of cavalry. The panic subsiding in laughter, the orderlies began to look for the animals which had been given them to hold. Three were mi sing among them a horse in whom I had a vital interest. The search Ut him Was thorough and gen erons—but Behemoth could not have been found in that forest by night. I philosophi. , cally arranged in my mind the style and quality of my walking for the rest of the campaign in my poor old shoes, and laid down to sleep again. Befors I lost myself, a net' laughter among the dragoon, and. a whispered; cry of re lie is after all," culled me quickly up and into the crowd of horses. There was ••Bayard" induced, at his customary amusement of biting his near• est neighbor horse upon the rum p. I mount ed him to make sure of him, and . then pulled out my watch to feel its hands and the hour of the night —and,then, clasping the horse around the - neck, fdl forward and went to -810ep. When in motion again, a gond soldier whispered to me, 4 •Thereis ever risk, you ktilw, of talking wrong roads on night, march. es and retreats, in a strange country." "But every column is provided with guldens . ' -"So . eyeiy regiment is provided with porn• tnissarins,J and yet ell of them have' at times been !deviled for food." ; • Listening for distant musketry on our rear. Where Sumner and Ileisitzelman wore, anti listening for cavalry on our.. flank, and halt... ing.and_rnarohing, :Ind- sleeping find waiting —silent the while as in funeral procession we walked and walked till-a reached and a clearing to the east enabled us to see the corning: dawn- of day. , Welcome I The clear light Came at hat and 'revealed the prirt,.. ipnl cautte i tif the most ", halting end Wearing, march I. over made, Nearly every tree on the road wits barked and torn by the, wagon Istibs The.evidencee of the 'necessity to pry' and lift the veltielos.baolt into .tbe road-bed' were copstant,-• , . AS 71. - the'rear. of the divislpn came . out. 'o the' forelit untie 'the - great. 'oOti,er: 'and wheat ,fields 'of the llnt alt estate 'and ution.tho - blgh groutid.whieh-skirted Alieta it was evidont AO. our.- artillery; Wan to, be , . planed .And off to, the , West`tbe, niattts,•of ibe iron clad steninera at anchor in tlie, James ItlVeriWeren.visible. :Were' the.baoks. Opposite their guns'ii-highl Cstedint their tire toireeP ' f tlferplairr ? MustiGfall.in% paraboye . 06* throne . ' Abe sir 3 s'l ' - • Ile tens f' are4iitobed. the cradled wbitat is brougitijn,ln :bundles; an d titter wrinotred.ool, fee-and curse,.or hard broad liave.ogain been. enditrtl,,,ke fell Ce'the untbrailnid,ttirnw, 40d are ' nee.foir•lo lig ' There' is :that' In, War fropi the roar artillery.. Oar - retie guard is. engaged otipeslin Sav , nge's, Station', 444'.8 11 1n1 • ,her, and Kearney, - and !looker. and Sickles, •b# the..poOsuit - of the enemy ! What. no de le thietiti=th,Oefi, . POrter is -- kiatight.. while yet, in!.,the 'Woods. • 'Battles ere to be loreed on_me then before we ire in , position, •on the '4T111:110tl River.! Thursday, Friday,laturday, Sun(bly,i - ,nd now „..15londay—iighting a - nd inerchiug wlthout'oiMatioti. troOpa,`cian it t - ebolo will certainly etooft. no We have got to fight:. Thtsy_will make_us.fight, -They-can - afford - fili - iiike us fight, for they have three soldiers to our one, and their eon' soription law will keep their NO regiments chock full, slaughter them as we may. , And mind me, Northern friends—their regiments' fight with a desperate courage. They go - with orderly joy upon the muzzles of our guns.— Neither French nor British infantry ever charged field batteries with steadier fury. The fire from Porter's column grows louder and louder. Rebel artillery, and infantry; discov.red about 1 o'clock in the afternoon, tiecretednear us in the woods, into which they had marched down from Richmond, drew the shell-firing of the Galena, or her edisort.— Thrown high in the air, the immense shells exploded above the ambush. Of course, they must go. But Infie Sumner, and lionized. man, and Franktiu, and Porter, got to fight thlir way to the' river—fight in the woods, out of sight of the positidu on the riven which was to ho our aro of safety ? If they have, _can_ ite_oltanze_othase..o.f_tke_imporiled_artn be acoompliShed ? Oh, where are the reenforcements that should equalize this unequal and bloody butchery in that dark forest Farewell! The order is given for the regi ments to form- in line of battle. Prisoners sent-in by Porter declare that. 116 regiments marched out of Richmond this morni.g. The Battle of White Oak tivrariap—The Pennsylvania Beverve—Exeellent Be• havlor of the Men Generally. TURKEY BRIDGE, JAMES RIVER, Tuesday, ' July 1, 1862. f Another tremendous battle, more' terrible carnage yesterday. From Wednesday to Monday has Ode army been fighting—a six days' battle. or, if you please, forty battles. Early .yeeterday morning the enemy an peered in force at White Oak Swamp, the po• sition we had assumed during the night pre vioue. In this retreat—why hesitate to use that word ? —he has not, in a single instance, long hesitated to attack--he slid not now.— By noon the action had commeneetl—the bat. Ile of White Oak Swamp. Musketry had not ceased when 1 left the field at 10 P. m It Will scarcely rank in magnitude with Gaines Dill, and yet we did not suffer more, nor cause to suffer more, at Fair Oaks. It. is impossible for me to give a circum stantial it coount of this battle, raging as it dbl ten hours, and extending along a lino of 2i and fonght on ground euch that net one•tenth of the field was in view from any one point of vision At least three fifths of of what remains of McClellan e army was en gaged or in immediate insert's. Ileinixel tnan's, Summer's, and Franklin's corps were thus. and a portion of each of Keys' and Porter's. More could scarcely' have been brought. into an action had the fate of the country depended on the one effort. Not so many can be brought into line to day. And yet we only barely held our ground—per hope not mute. I shall have to hurry on to the results )ur less of_ymeterdssy, s irmy be estimated at .000. Many of these are prisoners. The Munsylvania. Reserve were again in the thic k. This morning they do nol muster 8,000 men. Add to these 1,000 who are straggling and will yet come in, and the—number ie less loan half that they began with at Beaver Darn. They lost severely there, they were more than decimated the next day at Gaines Mills. and yesterday they shrank to this small measure. The leader Gen McCall, is severely wounded and in the enemy's hands• Our Brigade Com wander, Gen. J. J Reynolds, is a prisoner at Richtnond, another. Gen Geo. G. Meade. lies iu a.tent near us seriously wounded. Officers of lower grade they have lost in about the same proportion. Of the Bucktail REtiment not a hundred respond to the toll-call. And. HO with other divisions. For the lose• es of the last six days cannot be less than 15,000 It is only hoped that they will not reach 20.000. Our Generals behaved like Napoleon's un der his oAn eagle eye. Geo McCall was se verely wounded in the ettuulds, but refumil to leave the field or dismount. At night, when the enemy had been driven back, his lo r 32. waeloand dead and this is all that is. known of his fate. • How Generals Richard eon and Dana, always well up in the melee. escaped unhurt, seems miraculous. The same may be said of scores. Gcn. Burns and Gen. Brooks were - each slightly wounded, but. neitiv• or so disabled as to leave the field. Col. Wy man, 1001 Massachusetts, was killed iu the let day, under.what. circumstances I cannot say, but in a bray tight it may he warranted, for such was the place he always sought.— Col Oinks, 1911 i Massachusetts, fought his regiment until he had less officers than coin p odes, nittle two bayonet charges, and fought his men until at length he fell wounded. Let it be recorded here, thatn regiment al ways fights precisely like' its officers. This faot recurs to tile as 1 speak of the 19th, since that furnishes one of the most notable in stances bearing on the assertion. no vary • ing fortunes or the field are shown by the tact that each side took guns, and large numbers of prisoners. Among thous taken from the enemy are Col Lamar of Georgia, ex-M. C., the noted Secessionist of long standing, and Col Pendleton, of a Louisiana regiment., for merly of Cincinnati. A whale brigade was captured by Ileintzelman --a small brigade, 11100 strong. Perhaps 3000 were taken during the day. That the enemy's loss of the last week more than exceeds our own. is as nearly certain as anything can be of which there is no direct proof. Ile has lost fewer by capture than we, ( but his killed and wounded must fully,halance the account. By fighting the enemy in chosen positions, where the arti.lery could play havoc with all who should attempt Its approach, we piled his dead in wiurows. Our superiority in artillery has saved the army from utter annihilation. And yet the most tenacious struggles have been over these very guns The enemy never fails to attetnpt their cap ture—evidently having a wholesome sense of their value. Yesterday the gunboats participated to the extent of stlencing,a rebel ,battery they had succeeded in getting into play upon our bag gage trains. I THE LATEST WAR NEWS On the afternoon of the 4th, Gen. McCallan telegraphed to Washington that no fighting had been done since irtiesdnoy, when the ene my were repulsed with great slaughter. The present position of the army WilB taken for the purpose of being covered by r ur gunboats. Our forces were not beaten in ,nny conflict, nor could they he driven from the . field by the utmost. efforts of the enemy. No gunsAave been lost since the 27 ult., when Gen. ‘411,o• Odrs division was suddenly overwhelmed by superior nunahersOind twenty•tive pieces were copier - oil by the enemy. On the 4th, the ar my was drawn up for review. The sick and wounded are being Bout forward to the hospi tale. No rliii emont of 'the eitrualitlee of the eight days' tiohting can be furnished at. pres ent. General Nlcelollan's present poeition oau• not be flanked, no matter how superior the force liis army has received supplies of all kinds in abundaboo, The position where Oen.Clellan's army is now encamped: is between eight and ten miles below City Point, on the opposite side of theidver, and' is about twenty •eeven miles i old Riehmond. The rebel gunboat. Teaser was capteired in the Jimtis river, on the 4th root. Very im portant papers were found on her.% . • ' • On the let, inst., at lloonville, the 2d Michigan cavalry, two regiments; oomprising ,"428 M ' en were attacked, n by saline three of rebele, ahont-4700 in number. ._ After seven hours' figliting,. the rebels .w ere driven back.' With a heavy ..' , , • Tho War Department—lies received official intorm a tien of the capture; on • the 15th ult., of , 0 tilt at Si. 11Iarke, F10rid a ............ • the V. S. solitiotter Benuregard has esp,-' lured ihe',Eliglielf schooner Lucy, from 11a-, vane. while endeavoring' to pull, the r blockade. The--steamer- -Somerset has captured the 'enlionnery-Curlevr,• froth Havana, and 'also a el.eattiegioading - wi(ln - nottotrin , Dead _Vay.,...Tne % nlgut gowery, has capt9r44..., 011 11 1 . 9 -. the .W1:4 3. .. The, lZienville lice cai4ured; oft Cape schooner Nlorning , ,Star, Scrota rinstiatv. Richmond vole illuminated on ilie.2,r , idet, fionor of tne yie‘dry over, the , Fetleratarniy.. Tnemiailsdo theittriny,will,ho.thrivarded,ati; ati,lierciftiftire ," ' Ftiteltiousiggi tragrodelbildlietin 'orderpd. by GeM"Lititler io work* eittlid the'"Crese Betid,:oPpititi.Vlottatturg • ' ',fltelPreeident, Wm, geminated • z'oltnan...Sdniner z Reysntad yliz:4ll4, aeireritle in the regd . tar groV2titia' hfajor Clonoials'ot voluntei)rn. Gem - MeChillaiTeeeiVed additional troops on the fourth of July. Artillerymen, horses, &0., have been'sent him. It is understood that Brig. Gen. 'Andrew Porter, Provost Marshal of tho army of the PotomnO, has arrived at. Washington with dis patches from Gen. McClellan. A squadron has been formed in the James river under command of Capt. Chas. Wilkes In a skirmish- on the 9th inst. on General McClellan's left wing, 1000 rebels and three Small batteries were taken. For the past low days the rebels have shown little disposition to fight. . .. The canal across the neck of lent opposite Vicksburg is nearly completed. The channel of the river will he thus turned, and Vicks burg left about two miles from the river. The rebel force which was at Vicksburg is staled to have been 16,000 men. The return of the French Princes to Europe is in pursuance of a purpose formed several weeks ago. attd postponed at much inconve nienee, only Irons their anxiety to "assist" at the impending battles before ittch - intufd. Spirited Address of General Merlon an 11l his Army on the'Fourtit of July. Headquarters Army of the Potomac—Xamp_ near Harrison's Landing. July 4, 1862—Sol diers of the Army of the Potomac : —Your achievements of the last ten days have illus trated the valor end endurance of the Ameri can soldier. , Attacked by superior forces and without, hope of reinforcements, you have succeeded in getting your base of oper ations by a flank movement., always regarded as the most hazardous of military expedients. You have saved' all your material, all your trains and all your guns, except a few lost; id battle, taking in return guns and colors from the enemy. Upon your march you have been assailed day after day with fury by men of the same race and nation, skilfully massed and led. Under every disadvantite of number, and nece , sarily of position also, you have in every couflict — lieaten back your foes with enormous al.tughter. Your con duct ranks you among the cele brated armies of history. No one will now question that each of you may always say, with pride, "1 belong to the army of the Potomac." You havereached this new base complete in organization and unimpaired in spirit. The enemy may at any time attack you We are prepared to meet them. Let them come, and we will convert their repulse into a final defeat Your government is strengthening you with the resources of a great people. On this, the nation's birth clay, we declare to our foeS, who are Rebels against the b, et interests of mankind, that this army shell enter the capital of the so called confederacy ; that our notional constitution shall prevail, and that the Union, which can alone insure internal peace and external security to each • State. must and shall be preserved, cost what it may in time, treasure or blood. [Signed] OLOROM B. MCCLELLAN, Major General Commanding: The Enlistment of State Troops Important Generni"Ordar Harrisburg, July 7.—The following itn. portant genet al order has just been issued: flechlquarters of the Pennsylvania Militia Harrisburg July 7th,. lb62—General . Or der, 'Nu. ..28—In organizing, the •iuote re quired from Pennsylvania, under the late call of the President of the United States, it is ordered First • Troops will he accepted by sqado or c , meanies, as hereinafter is icated,and will as rapidly as rOzSild • be organized into comp knies and regimen's. Secnd. Persons prop( sing to organize coir.panies witl lin accepted titider the follow in provi•io is, and nut otherwise, viz: To he commissioned 'a captain, the applicant must hay. , furnished forty or more men who have pas ed the surgeon's examinants and been mustered in the U. S. service. To be commissio ed a first lieutenant from twenty five to forty men must have becn furnished as above' To be commissioned a secund lieutenant from fifteen to twenty five men must be furnished as , above. Third. Transportition to the central do pot, Campeurtin, will be furnished on appli cation, in person, or by mail to Capt. R. J. Dodge, U. S. A., Superintendent of the Voiunteer ite,..ruititig service for Pennsylva. nia, at Ilarrisburg, to wham report must be made. Fourth. The actual and necessary expen ses for boarding and lodging 01 troop • raised under this order will be psid by the United States disbursing officer at this post, for a, period not exceeding twenty days, at rate nut exe 'eding forty cents per day for each matt mustered Into the service of the Uni , ell States, on the atlida .it of th officer furnish ing the men, supported by the receipts of the party to whom the money was paid. • Fifth. Squads will be organized into companies at Camp Curtin hs rapidly as possible, the companies formed into regi ments, field officers appointed and commis Biotic(' by the Governor, and th regiments initneili.itely placed at the disposal of the War Department. . . Sixth As a r.ward for meritorious con duct, and also to secure valuable military experience, appointments of tiold officers will be made (except mder peculiar e reumstan ces) from men now in active service. By - order of A. G CUItTIN, Governor and Commander in Chief. A. L. RUSSELL, Adjutant General The War Department has issued the fol lowing orders: War Department, Washington, D C., June 21 1862—Pursuant to a joint resolution of Congress t,p encourage enlistments in the regular army and voluuteer torces, it is or dered that a premium of . s2 shall be paid for each accepted recruit that volunteers for three years or during the war; and. every soldier who hereafter enlists. either in the regular army or volunteer force, for three years or during the war. may receive bii first mouth's pay in advance upon the mus hiring of the uompany,into the service of the Duited'States, or arta. ho shall have 'been mustered into and joined a regiment already in the service. This order will be transmit ted to the Governors of the States and mus tering officers (Signed) EDWIN M. STANTON, Sooretnry of %Vor emerald. • CARLISLE, PA.. - Friday, July 11, 1862. 14,111.. N 0.87 Park RoW, 'New York, and 6 State St. Boston, aro our, Agants for the Masi.% in thoso and. aro.autirwlsod to take Advertise— ments and fiubsoriptions for neat our lowest rates. ~ rota„;tl. very large pintion n . cif..eor paper this week, is,given to W. tietalletLitnit very grophie deso s ription of the recent bloody, women:tent& in whieh the Union artnieehaito het= engnioil. • We ask pojailulgeneo of oor readers for this #lling our paper; for we know that nothing we could givethem , , EV t.) OTI with one.. the interest whieh Invests_art iQtolligilile to , krrative of helf our , sows a 124, bro,thers , strug-. •glesi for :theleu t rentady (Coe . government.- ROMLUITING COMMENCED. --T hirty• offers or . Coaqiiities have already . been made to the.Atl-, j i itani.Generares•Department: of thlis State,-in -eetiimase-to the'GovernoemprociamatiMi. No . i j oginsMatal.olficers,. will be itppo.inted until regiments are formed of comptitilea inyeatap, and company officers will he eitpointed - ,in, pro. portlon tpl thy numtnii'Of 2 mint , • • • g.After eeaeon'oe cold" niteiet -weather, the sun bee come out In its atreestli, eitesmg , rigetat toe to take e fresh' alert.% The W!ilather tie heetta too'aplttperh'slis,' het pi• ;An dee , etwoo* tied the , preateei: :whaiiittat'7l6l4 of 15t. t "TO ARMS, YE BRAVESI" Oncethore is Pennsylvania called 'npOn to contribute more brave men to aid in saving thp_sounjry.__Sliall_the appeal be unheeded? We should be sorry to say it would. On the contrary, we believe that our full quotti will be furnished. But to do this requires some efL fort on the part of our people. We must not waste our time in framing feeble excuses, and paltry subterfuges. Our trothers upon us to re inforce them, now that they are placed in an extremely harardouy position. Shall we leave them in this, their dire ex tremity to struggle against triple their nuns• ber ? The very bones of those slain in the swamps of the Chickahorniny, would rise up and rebuke us. Let us then, at once com mence recruiting, and before another week we can have another company from old Cum- I,ts wny to rescue. Meeting of the Senatorial Confer- once The Senatorial conferees of Ole 16th Sen atorial District met at Newport, on Thursday, July Bth, 1882. JAMES M. &units, of Juniata county. was unanimously elected to represent this Sena torial District in the State convention. He was-instructed to vote for the nomination of TnomAs CoonaAN, of York, for Auditor Gen eral, and JOHN Rowe, of Franklin, for Survey or General. The Tactics of Traitors in Lan caster County. Under this caption, the Lancaster Exprfie publishes several notes from subscribers who have requested a discontinuance of their pa per, on account of the unmerciful' castigation the Express has been adminisferirg to the Northern secessionists who inhabit that fair region We too, in Cumberland, are cursed with the presence of some just such miserable, wretches; and although, as yet, they have proved too cowardly to rainounce their sym pathy as boldly as the instance we give below. yet their covert treason' is so thinly disguised as to leave not tne slightest doubt of their real sentiments. To all such, we commend the remarks of the Express, as portray ing the determiaation of the loyal sentiment of the North, to root out and furnish traitors' at home, as well as insurrection in Secessia.— The following is the note of the #ubscriber, and the remarks of the editor : MMUS. PE•ELSOL k GENT: Stop minding that Ylta nhoot the _Saturdny—Expresa to my nildren , .../f you think Pim, you can give thu Bain:ince in four hands to TUE P 0•10 THOHCIIILLKSH BEINGH Ni Hu C1...TH1, IMPL'I BY OF THIC 51004e0T :iloctourintri TOE 311.10ICHT TO KILL 1111111 •ere poor Widd'•wa & orphan Chi Wino now sulluriog for the nessennaries of life—You have n per foot right to be MI abolition harpin but you hara not the Fb•ddlnr of right to insiounte Your VULVAS lirownio se-itimunts in my family ago ust my wish. 13. M. MARPLit. My address is South lleruiltsg• 1' 0 Laucab3if Couuty. Mr. Marp}e is entitled to more credit than some others of his own way of thinking, inas much as lie don't disguise either his sympathy for his traitor " brothers," contempt for our loyal soldiers! Ills contemptible lau gungws applied to his brave autl luyalneigh bore, now fighting the battles of the Union, proves hint to be us good a rebel as any man within the lines of the Confederate army— only lacking the courage to f.houlder a mus ket; and-•the only objection we have to him is that lie is. on the wrong side of the military liner;. The sooner be leaves fur Dive, the better it will be for himself tind the credit of the county, and the Intro like him he takes with him, though they be :übscribers to the Expreact lie better we will like him! Our book•kreper informs us th.st there is a balance" of lifty•elx cents due this Salle:- buery revel. /t is subject to his order and we hope, he feta come to Lancaster and collect it in person. We would like to look hint in the face niitl t3eo' how much he resembles his 490 “brothers” who paS - sed through on the cars the oilier day, and whom '• the poor thought less beings. who, in the impulse of the moment, shouldered the musket," in tiritabright's gallant regiment, did not happen to "kill" when in the act of making war upon the Union and the Constitution of our lathers! We want Mr. Marple to, distinctly understand that we will not give the balance ut tiny six cents due him to the " poor widows and orphan chil dren" of the brave and loyal men whom he, andlraitors like him, reg rd as " thoughtless beings" and murderers—tor that is the plain meaning of his language. The loyal men and women of Lancaster will see that those do not suffer for the necessities of life. The Jews of old would have been leas guilty in giving to the poor the o 0 pieces of silver, " the price of blood," with which the Saviour was betrayed "into the hands of sinners," than we would did wo give this rebel's fifty . six cents to the holy cause of killing his " brothers" who have taken up arms against the government of our fathers. Let him call for it It is a badge of treason. It is the insignia of infamy. We would none of it. It he don't take it away we will put it in a glass case, with the origi nal manuscript of his letter in the bielcground, labelled in red letters, "A TRAITOR'S PEI 1011," and place it on ethibition as a warning to traitors iu loyal communities for time to come N<. 13. If there aro any more of the Marple stripe among our subscribers. the tio. ner they let us know their real sentiments the better. We have "enlisted for thii war" against trea son, whether armed or unarmed, and, like the gallant. Itousseilu, are " for the government. of our fathers against all thine), and every body." Supported as The Express is by every loyal 111 , 111 in this community, we are just as well prepared to battle with treason in the aggregate as by detail. Er The Democratic State (laureation, met at Harrisburg on the 4th inst. On the sixth ballot, ISAAC SLENIS.EII., Eiq., of Union county, was nominated for Audi tor General, It L. Watour, Esq., of Phila delphia, the candidate throe years ago, 'vim led off with 39 vdtes, and retained them 'to the end, being the leading competitor. They were unwilling to take any man, however faithful to 'their organization, who had to boar the prestige of defeat, and, therefore Mr. Stcskisit was selected, who has not been in public_ life for thirty years. ..TAMES P. Bang,' of Allegheny county, whose great disTinotion is that ho hail the boldness to nominate JAMBS BUCIIANAN for reelection to the Presidency, in the Pittsburg Pad, .of which ho is publisher, was nominated for Sarveyer. , ,General-ou the;so - - A long series of resolutions were passed, which with some few exceptions - breathe - the spirit of resistance to the Nat tonal Govern ment, and sympatbymith armed treason, on 'which the Breckenridge.Vallandighata De. mooraoy expect to carry Pennsilvanis, next. Gociattrb• the country, if these intlitr- Xpotionists are . to' have any' control of it,. ikarNowls, -the time to cleanse cellars, yards, alleys and - 'lanes in the city, and throughout the Cotiety, as 'a meniure of pre caution against ,epidemios likely to break out during th:e hot', weather—of Summer. Comte quenify disinfecting Agenta.are desirable ; and we, submit , the.iollewing either of which will be found ilsoftil,f . , tinepint - of the liquid of chloride of Ole, in ono pailful of water. , This ie. perliapic; the iriost effeotille of anything that can dio and Vvhen - dfirriwo upon decaying vegetable patter of any Jeseription, vrill - effeotivelY de elroY-sWeilfeueive- odors. .., . 2.. Three or four,pounda of, mlphate oflroa (ol‘'PPere;fllY4iialve4,itt'‘ii oc rid n wotqr, nMay,,bbaeabq'autTileut tO,remoye liffece:ivo odors. i 8 Obleride qf HMI): ie beet to eaatter•aboat lipap places; in yorde, -- la damp cellars, and poll !laps of4lth. , . te..ThoPotter Investlpung•'c.,onstaittee, has Caused ths,distnissal or.five hundced disloyill'aUlidayees of tho davorrnitint 26th Jun.% 1862