'era; : CARLISLAE, PA. Friday, Aug. fi, 1863. S. 111. PETTENGILoIs di , CO., NO. 37 Park Row, New York, and 6 State St. Boston, are our Agents for the Umtata in those cities, and aro authorized to take Advertise ments and 'Subscriptions for us at our lowest rates. Call of the Union County Com mittee. The mornbers of the Union County Com mittee will meet at the public house of JOHN HANNON, in the Borough of Carlisle, On Saturday. August Stb, 1863, at 1 o'clock, P. M., for the purpose of setting a day for Primary Elections, &c. full attendance is earnestly requested, as other important busingss may come be:, fore the Cbmmittce. THOMAS PAXTON, Chairman. The following gentlemen compose the Standing County Committee: Carlisle, East Ward—John frutton, Jas. It Smith. Carlisle, West Ward—John Early, Thos Paxton. Lower Allen—Dr. E. B. Brandt, Dftn'l Shelly. Dickinson—John Morrison, • McLanthon Wood. East Pennsboro'—lT. D. Musser, A. B. Erb. Prankford—J. W. Fair, M. D. Lackey. Dampden—Jacob 4. Bashore Daniel Rupp. Hopewell—Janes Quigley, Col Peter Lush er. Mechanicsburg—John Sadler, Robert Wil son. Middlesex—Thos. U. Chambers, John Co ble. Mifflin—Nathaniel BroWn —Hammer. Monroe—J. K. Nisley, John Lutz, Sen. New Cumberland—Owen James, V. Free man, Newville—Joseph Burst, Sam'l G. Wild. Newton—George Gunkel, John Sharp. Newburg—Hugh A Frazer, Jus• Green. North Middleton—l'.llenderson, D. Kiefer. South Middleton—Dan'l 11. W. Cauffman, Jacob Muter. Penn—Sum'l Ege, John T. Green. Shippensburg—D. W. Thrush, John W. McPherson. Shippensburg,, Twp.—C. M. White, Isaac Koontz. Silver Spring—Martin Mumlna, W. Parker Southampton—W. H. Allen , James A Clark. Pcnnsbor& Laughlin. Upper Allen—Jacob L,, Zook, Win. Med. ling. UNION CONVENTION The Union State Convention to nominate candidates tor Governor and Supreme Judge, met at Pittsburg, on Wednesday last.— ANDREW G. CURTIN, was re-nominated for Governor on the first ballot. The vote stood as follows : A. G. Curtin, 93, H. D. Moore 18, Penny 14, Mocrehead 1, Brewster 3. Hon. DANIEL AGNEW, of Bever county, was nominated by acclamation for Supreme Judge. Hon. L. Todd, of this county was President of the .Convention. The proceed• ings of the Convention will be published in our next. WASTE OF MEN BY THE REBELJACIN. —A pri• vote of the 3d regiment (rebel) Louisiana Vol- unteer Infantry, captured at Vicksburg, writes to the Missouri Republican, in which ho says that regiment numbered 1,185 men when or ganized at New Orleans in May, 1861. :The writer says that this regiment left Vicksburg after its capture with less than one hundred of the men who belonged to it when it was organized. Bata. Gen. QUINCY A. GILLMORE, who is in command of our Forces operating against -Charleston, -is -a-native. of. -011io,—and—was pointed from that State to the Military >Aced° my at West Point, from which he graduated in 1849. He was First Lieutenant of En gineers when the war broke out. Under his command, Fort Pulaski, near Savannah, Ga., was captured, over a year ago. He was af• torwards transferred to Kentucky, where he whipped the rebels under Pegram-eeveral times, capturing many prisoners, He was taken out of Kentucky, when was assigned to the command in South Carolina, relieving Gen. HUNTER. He is evidently a live, go a head officer. His name is QUINCY ADDISON GILLMORE. MAsolitc.—The tenth Annual Conclave of the Grand Commandery of Knights Templar of Pennsylvania was held at Greensburg, June 9th and 10th, 1863, A. 0. 745. The following officers were elected and install ed: • R. E. Sir Stanley Goodwin Harrisburg, G. C.,; V. E. Sir Isaac Whittier, Pittsburg, IL G. C. ; E. Sir Robert Pitcairn, Altoona, G. G. ; E. Sir Wm. Chattana, Brownsville, G. C. G. ; Rev. H. M, Johnston, Carlisle, G. P. ; E. Sir S. E. Bilger Carbondale, ." W. ; E, Sir Jos. Godfrey Scranton, G. J. W. ;E. Sir John Edwards, Harrisburg, G. Tr• ; E. Sir Alfred Creigh, Washington, G• Rec. ; E. Sir Gem E. Fox, Towanda, St. Bearer; E. Sir Earnest Knapp, Phcenix, ville, G. Seo B. ;E. Sir Z. P. Bierer, Greens- burg, G. W.: E. Sir John Harder, Carlisle, G. S. We learn that the Sir Knights have made the choice of Carlisle as their next place of meeting on the second Tuesday of June 1864, Royal and Select Masters:—The' seventeenth annual assembly of the Grand Council of Roy al and Select Masters of Pennsylvania was held at Greensburg, Westmoreland county, on the 9th and 10th days of June, A. D. 1863, Ano. Dep, 2833. Seventeen Councils were represented. The session was the most in teresting ever held—as the Grand Master, Creigh, introguced some important measures, ' whiCh wo hope will be published for the bene fit of Cryptic Masons. The following persons were elected Grand Officers for the ensuing Masonic year: M. P. Alfred Creigh, of Washington, G. M. R. P. G. H. Turner, Saxton, D. G. M. ; R. P. Ctias. P. Knapp, Bloomsburg, G. T. I. AL; R. P. Thomas D Watson, Phila., G. P. C. of IV.; R. P. Wm. Chattatia, Brownsville, G. C. of G. ; R. P. 11. L. C Creoellius, Reading, G. Treas ; EL P. T. W. Wright, Pittsburg, G. Reo. ; R. P. J. C. Mann, Altoona, G. Lecturer; R. P. Rev. J. J. M'll yar Pittsburg; R. P. Rev. J. Clark Ilaguey, Catawissa ; R. P. Rev. R. W. Oliver, Altoona _ ; R. P. Rev. J. Dimm, Bloomsburg, G. Chaplains; B. P. Eph. Corn man, Carlisle, G. M. ; R. P; JOhn Harder, Carlisle, 0. B. M. P. Alfred Creigh consented' to serve as- Grand Master, and acoordingiy has entered upyear..on his tenth -The eighteenth annual assembly of the Gritml,Counnil will be held,in Carlisle, on the second 'Wednesday of July. 1804. „ SEirWcalth is a. false diamopd at the top of a greased pole, which all try to clinib and secure. --Pet or Ritner, John A It is therefore ordered that for every sol dier of the . United States killed in violation of the laws of war a Rebel soldier shall be exe• anted, and for every one enslaved by the eu• emy, or sold into Slavery, a Rebel soldier shall be placed at hard labor on the public works, and continued at such labor until the other shall be released, and receive treatment duo to a prisoner of war. We heartily and gratefully welcome this long-delayed announcement of the policy of the President. Acoompanied, as we doubt not it is, by suitable instructions in reference to the exchange of officers and soldiers; it will be efficient to compel the revocation of Jeffer son Davis's December proclamation, and to put a stop to °Wield encouragement of the savage - brutalities :heretofore inflicted on ne gro prisoners. We take it for granted that until the whole matter is definitely arranged, there will - be'no exchanges. -While the Reb el' persist in discrimination between °lanes of prisoners, or while - they refuseto exchange any officer or soldier who, Under the laws of war, Is entitled to be exchanged; no Rebel ought in any oircumatarices, or on any, pre. tensei to be yaroled or delivered up ; by otir Government. And this we now infer to be the Bottled determination of-the President.-- I So Bays the New York Tribune. , ' I THE — GIckfAT - ±civ lIEFOP.EN :On July 17 the firstfifeamer ,from St. Louis arilved at New Orleans ; signaliiing_the re lease of the Mississippi from a blookadolwhiat beget:Almost before t he ear itself. 'theieri earliest of the hostile ,-demtiostriiiionCaoseem ponying secession on t the waif:to plant a battery a Vioisburg, aOd to'bring tti such of the river iteamers' , as odme from the upper waters, or could. be regarded as the property of the loyal people 'of the north.-- From that time forward the rebel strength along the great river was certainly very great, and the sternest, the most thorough and des• perate.fighthag of the war has been,4required to break the rebel power in that quarter.— From the mouth of the Ohio down, and in deed above it on the Missouri aide, one strong hold after another has beep assailed and ta ken by the glorious army and fleet of the west, until the consummation, which was be lieved to bo the most difficult of all in the crushing of the rebellion, has been fully at tained. The great Mississippi is open, and regular steamers, regular mails, and ulti• mately regular trade, will be the daily pulsa tion on that great artery as heretofore. It is said that the people of New Orleans were enthusiastic over the event of the depar ture of this steamer on a return trip to the north, and they well may be. Bitter as the treason of a majority, perhegs,,ef,..the-inhab heats of that city was in the beginning, the sifting processes, first of volunteering in, the rebel service, and next of involuntary as well as voluntary exit of the disloyal since our 00. cupation of that city, have reduced the pop ulation to a much larger proportion of patri ots and men of sense. And all these rejoice over the changing prospects of a city nearly ruined, and see that it may again receive its commerce, and become prospe . rous as it re turns to loyalty. To a few the event must be one of surpassing intemt 7 -1 return of liberty they have long been denied, and a vindication of principles for which they have suffered a' martyrdom such as no man dreamed of in . these latter days. A few true and always faithful Union men remained through all the terrors of the rebel rule in New Orleans, and this is their day of glorious liberty. But still more to' the great army of brave men in the Mississippi is this opening of that river a bright day in -the calender. Service in the armies of the east has been had enough, all will admit; full enough of hardships of distance from supplies, and battles of severity. But in the Mississippi valley the service of the soldiers of the Union has been on a scale of severity vastly beyond that of the east. In labors of every sort, in risks and dangers other than those of battle, in exposure to fe• veers and distance from' hospitals and homes, the soldiers of the Great Valley have had great burdens to bear. At Ist,s.t, titese are great... Iy relieved by the free use of the great river from St. Louis to the Gulf. By steady and unfailing valor in a hundred battles, this ar my of heroes has won the greatest prize of the war; and who will hesitate to award them honor ? The army of the west has a right to a special thanksgiving and holiday of rest to signalize this great achievement. It might with preperiety ask the assignment of not one but three days of solemn commemoration of this event—three days in which the sound of saluting cannon should be simultaneous at every fort, every city and every camp from Cairo to the Gulf of Mexico. A Richmond paper feebly declaims about the power of the confederacy yet existing along the Misisssippi, and asserts that its banks are not yet abandoned. But where can a single gun be planted on it to annoy our steamers ? A few miserable guerillas may fora few days fire rifle shots from the swamps, pee ihly,, but_noching_like_serious. obstruction_ can be interposed to the freest navigation even by unarmed boats. No town, bluff, or bank, on which a battery can be planted, remains in rebel possession on the .Mississippi itself, and all its tributary streams are now open to our fleet and fearless gunboats. Whatever may be the hick of vigor to push into the darkness in other pldbes, there seem to he no ghosts capable of frightening our brave men from threading the bayous and side rivers of the deepest swamps Louisana and Mississippi contain. We plunge after them in every case without hesitation, and therefore always with success It is absurd to claim that the rebels can possess anything valuable to them, or in jurious to us, within at least a hundred miles of that river hereafter. The great river is ours ; let the glorious army that has 'won it be honored by a grateful nation. Protection—Retaliation The President announces that Rebels are no longer to be permitted with Impunity to enslave and murder the soldiers of the Re public. In an official order, elsewhere print ed, be recognizes the duty of the Government to give protection to its citizens of whatever class, color or condition; declares that the law of nations, and the usages of war, as carried on by civilized powers, permit no distinction in the treatment of prisoners of war on ac count of color, and denounces the sale of ne- gro prisoners as a crime against the civiliza tion of the age. He proclaims that the Gov ernment of the United States will hencefor ward give the same protection to all its sol diers, and will retaliate'upon Rebel prisoners in its possession for offences against the rights of colored ,soldiers. Ballots and Bullets. ~ • . For the first time iti.the history of' tour na ,Von, there is a close, cooneCtion . between the and !hi ballot. If:the pen is mightier than the sword,the balloi, is suptitfor to both. In'main do v4ifight battleCand win victories if ottr trOphieil are:to be seized upon and soat:. terod to .14 winds by partisan and: . a vitiated public sentiment. ifedent events in sister States shoiir , us the -importance of a correct vote at the ensuing election, unles we would ignore all the labors of the past and all hope for the future. To this end, and in or der that no false issues may arise to divide public sentiment, it becomes necessary that extraordinary care be taken in the. primary erections about to be held, that suitable mon be selected by the different nominatipg con ventions. Upon these bodies depend, to a great extent, whether the friends of the Union shall be triumphant at the next election or whether 'Pennsylvania shall be nursed with men who hold that a State owes no allegiance . to the General Government, and that it is "a soleMn question whether Pennsylvania should not cast her lot wilt] her brethern of the South whose wrongs they feel" eo keenly. Let good men be selected in every precinct —men of intelligence— men who can discern the signs of the times, and who deeply feel the perils t hat would accrue from the succes of the Copperheada in securing control of municipal and State affairs. Conservative men are scanning the field and hoping for the nomination of Union men whose past record will allow them to sink party for the sake of the Union. Let our friends see to it that judicious Union men get control of our nomi• noting conventions. The Press and the Dead heads Railroads, steamboats and -stage.coaches complain of dead-needing—that is to say, of preachers, editors and brethren of the craft, riding so much without pay. The newspa • per press endures [Here of this dead head than all three of these modes of conveyance combined. The pulpit, the bar and the thentre; corporations, legislative assemblies. societies—religious, benevolent, agricultura —mercantile establishments, railroad com panies, stage lines and every variety of-indi viduals, including politic it parties, draw largely upon the liberality of the press. The press is expected to yield to all these inter ests, is requested to give strength to all weak institutions and enterpris'es ; it is asked to puff some preachers into overshadowing pul pit orators ; to puff small politicians and un• principled demagogues into great men and patriots . ; to magnify incompetent railroad officers into railroad kings; it is expected to _herald abroad.the fame of-quacks of-all-class• es, bolster up dull authors, immortalize weak Congressional speeches ; it is required to give sight to the blind, bread to the hungry, talents to the fools, and honor to the thieves and rob bers ; it is asked to cover up the infirmities of the weak, to hide the faults of guilty men, and wink at the fraudulentschemes of scoun drels ; it is expected to flatter the vain, to ex tol the merits of those who deserve nothing but the scorn and contempt of all good citi zens ; it is required, in a word, of the news paper press, that it become all things to all men ; and if it look for pay, or sends out its bills for subscription or advertising, it is de nounced as mean and sordid; and its con ductors are wanting in.-liberality. There is no interest on the face of this green earth that is expected to give as much to society, without ~pay or thanks, as the newspaper press of the country. The little souled man, ivit9Linsert&M._your..CiilUULLlSJl. LAY o dollar - advertisement, expects you to write out at least five dollars' worth of editorial notices. And the obscure and niggardly man you have written into a position of importance far beyond his merits, considers that his name adorns your columns, and gives circulation to your journal. `Adopted Citizens." From Ilurper's Weekly, we take the follow- AMERICAN CITIZENS —The meeting of "adapt • ed citizens" a week or two since was unani• mous in its expression of enthusiastic loyalty to the Government. lint why •• adopted Dili zeus ?" There are but two political classes of persons in this country, those who are and those who are not citizens. if the gentlemen who express these loyal sentiments aro for eigners, their hearty sympathy and interest aro most grateful. But if they are American citizens why not say so? Why endeavor to emphasize the, fact of foreign birth? Why create more Masses and divisions than actu ally exist? Whoever is an American citizen can have no higher title. And obviously all judicious men will wish at this time to blend as closely as possible to the great mass of loyal citizens—and to avoid classifying them by any Came of party or country. For all loyal men there is now but one party, that of the Government ; but one country, the United States of America. When the flag floats au prerne once more we may remember t .at were horn in America or Germany, in Ireland or France ; we may discover that we belong to some political party that marches, with all th.• other parties, b.•netuh that tl.g. But now all our hands and hearts aro needed to hold it aloft and establish it securely, While the war lasts we are not Republican or Democrats —we are not foreigners and natives—we are only loyal American citizens, resolved to stand by our Government and the Union, and to support it always iu every way that it requires our aid, knowing that when the Government falls, we fall with it, and that, the end tf the Union is the end of peace and prosperity in every Stare in every country, and in every town of the country. It is these political distinctions which have led to all the difficulties we have had to en counter against foreigners. We do not moan "edtmated foreigners," who become citizens from conviction that our Government is supe rior to that of their own. They throw aside all tire allegiance they owed to monarch rule, and became not merely " adopted citizens," but Citizens de facto. But we allude to that class who so distinguished themselves in New York daring thelato riots.. They may have been "adopted ! citizens," but we think, as they left their rountry for their country's good, their coming here .and being-natural ized under Detnoct•atio " suasion," their ad vent has proved a ourso rather than a• bless ing, such as Bishop' Buenos termed emigre-, tio'n• in 1841. It would ho to :insult an edu-: cated foreigner were we to place him among these who tortured to death poor Unoffending blacks, and who robbed and burned the prop erty•of the people, but when it: has' been prove'd that •two-thirds of those', engaged in the bloody business were foreigners it• is his duty Mi'prove his inneoence, and. convict the . guilty. , • - • THOSE LAZY NIGGEES The indotisisteney in the , arguments of the 'advocates of:d3lavery may bo easily demon= 9trpt9d by Collating artioles in De Bozv'e-'.l4e. , eie!o, and other - Southern journala • For' Altman, if we want to prove that titq negro is ,ilO2 a:lazy,ahiftless animal, take the follow ing [Fr . om,Deßovee Review.] " The peculium of Southern servants, even on the plantation, is sometimes not trifling. We make a few selections, showing— TgiE nEGßpss' CROP A friend haeieported to us a sale, on Tues day, of a crop of — cotton belonging to Elijah Cook, of Harris Co., Os.; amounting to $1421- 96,100.—Cotambus (Ga.) sun, Dec. 29, 1858. Mr: J. S. Byington informs us that lie made two cotton purchases lately. One was the cotton orop 'of the negroes of Dr. Lucas, of this vicinity, for which he paid $l,BOO in cash, every dollar of which goes to the ne• groes.—Monlyomcry (Ala.) Mail, Jan. 21, 1859. Speaking of negroes' crops, the sales of which our contemporaries are chronicling in various amounts,—the largest has come to our knowledge is one mule in Macon, for !lie ne groes of Allen McWalker. It amounted to $1969,65.—Mac0n ,( Utz.) Telegraph, Feb. 3, 1859." All these crops are made by extra work, af ter the regular task is finished. Upon Louisiana sugar' plantations, the ex hausting work of the grinding season can only be tnaitAiiied by a system of premiums and rewards equivalent to the payment of wages. Under that system the negroes of the sugar plantations are among the most healty and contented in the South; while the same labor performed in Cuba, under the most severe compulsion, causes an annual decrease of the slave populution, and the product of the island is only maintained by fresh importations of slaves from Africa. Or if wo are prepared to admit that the Southern negro is day and shiftless, and want a good reason for it, the Rev. Mr. McTeyire —the son of a large planter in South Carolina, gives it to us, and it cannot be better stated than in his words. " Men," ho says, •' who own few slaves, and who share the labors o: the field or workshop with them, are very ti able to deceive themselves by a specious pro cess of reasoning: they say, ' I carry row for row with my negroes, and I put no more on them than I take on myself.' But the master who thus - reasons is forgetful or ignorant of the great truth that the negroes' powers of endurance are less than his, while in the case of the lattter there are wanting those incen tives which animate and agtoal y strengthen the master. This labor is for him, the gains of this excess of industry are to make him rich. What is the servant bettered by the additional bale of cotton extorted from ex hausted nature, only that next year he shall have more companions in the field, and the War put; but Itcv. Mr. McTeyii'o, of South Caro. lina, must have been unaware of the foot that it is not-possible for a white wan to work row for row on cotton, or else we have an admis sion which the Rev gentlemen would have been slow to make, had he felt the full force of it. Thus do the friends of Slavery constantly contradict themselves, and prove how impos sible it is for the wilful advocates of a had cause not to make admissions by which tLeir whole argument is rendered worthless and ri diculous, The Emergency Ended President Linen officially announced that the extraordinary erect gency, abler which lie called out one hundred thousand militia in the States of Pennsylvania, Maryland, West Vir giuia end Ohio, to serve for the term of six months, is at an end, and that the order call -ing out-this foreg istherefore revoked; - -These men were designed to repel the southern in vaders from our own soil, and not being in tended to serve in any other field, the term is ended. As the conscription law is now in full operation in Pennsylvania, Sew York and New England, all the men needed to carry on the war are being obtained by its operation. Doubtless thousands of the three and nix months men, on ref uruiug to their homes, will either bo drafted themselves for three years or will go as substitutes for others.— Their present disci' irge, therefore, will great ly facilitate the operations of the conscription. A Conviction Under the Treason Act On Wednesday last, in the Circuit Court of the United States, sitting at Louisville. Ken tucky, Thomas C. Shacktett, indicted for trey son against the United States, was found guilty, and sentenced by the lion. BLAND BALLARD, presiding Judge, as follows You were arrested at or near your borne —not in arms—away from the lines of the enemy, and have been brought before the civil tribunals of your country to have your guilt or innocence adjudged. You have been found guilty, and the enormity of your of fence would justify the infliction of the high est punishment known to the laws In all other countries the laws, it is believed, require judgment of death to be pronounced against all whd are found guilty of treason. But our goo I Government. in the exercise of that wi L gunni m ity which has always characterized it, and in view of the different degrees of guilt which the judgment of mankind 11003 and will attach to those who incited and set on foot this war, and those who were their instru ments, hay vested in the courts a &sorption, and authorized them to pronounce either judg meat of death or impri-unment and tine In the exercise of that discretion, anti under a full sense of my respensibility to G o d a l ai toy country, I have concluded to spare your life, but the m , gnitade of your crime demands that your plinislllllClit be severe. The judgement which 1 approve, tied which the court now makes, is, that you be imprisoned anti con fined in the jest of Jefferson county, in the State of Kentucky, for ten years from this day ; that you make your tine to the United States , by the payment to them of ten thous and dollars, and that your slaves be free. The Herb of Vicksburg The initials of Gen. Grant have been for some time a source of some trouble to his ad. mirers and others.- On one occasion the fol lowing dialogue occurred when epoaking of him - Who is , this Grant out West? Is ho a retell" No. His initials plaiuly show that ho bo longs to US." Another asked, "What do theinitials real ly stand for?" • "U•nited we'S•tand," answered one. . "United States Grant," °Limed in a sec ond. No I.lu conditional Surrender Grant," as-, serted a third, and that ended the contro versy. . HAVE Imo a good thing fur a cold among us i' '.'Yes. Bryan's l'uluonnio wafers, 25 cents a box, will cure a cold in four bdurs, stop a cough in five 'minutes, and heal your sore throat in'-a very short limo. Try them.= Sold by S. Elliott. . .tt Fighting' Dem o crat on Vallandig= ham and the Copperhead Tribe. Cen.:John 4. Logan, a well known Illinois 'Pemocrat; connected with the'. army 'ef:l2leti eral Grant, is home on a. sliort visit to his friends:-. In passing through Cairo the people gathered around him, and ho made a few im promptu remarks, which we give-below.— General Logan, it will be remembered, was strongly opposed to coerdion. After the at , tack upon Fort Sumter, and when there was I a hope that the difficulties might be settled by compromise, be went to Richmond to talk to the leading politiciaris there on the sub ject. Ire was told that if the Administration would give them a sheet of white paper, and allow them to make their own terms they would not accept the offer short of a dissolu tion of the Union. • Logan then made up his mind that the Union could only be saved by war ; he abandoned his anti-coercion ideas, came home and girded on the sword. He has since been serving his oountry in the army.— This is the man who speaks ns follows: " It makes no difference whether you call me Democrat, Republican or Abolitionist—as some have of late named me. It does not change my feelings—does not alter my ac tion. lam for my country every time—for my country first, last and always; and I nm lighting for the right of that country to he numbered among the honored nations of the earth. •Until that is brought about, and this rebellion crushed out, I am but an American citizen. When that right shall have been as serted, then, should we find that, there is. something wrong in the fabric, that our fath ers reared, something we desire to change, it will be time enough to cotne up and demand the change. Now we have this Accursed re bellion to root. out It, tuna be rooted out. I am for using every means and ALL means for putting it to an end. If .the people at the North would use the same force Jeff Davis and his"minions use—and were as unanimous ns they are.—for in the South force of arms corn pets every man to act as though lie sanctioned the rebellion, whether he feels incline.' or not —this our woith/ he sucees.full y tumult: tol in less than Xl s .r 171,1101 R. f , Every mother's son who iv opposed to the war should he compelled either to take up nis again-4 011 or for us Then there would he no talk for ',mice It , re in the Yo-th, no talk of re,istance, no such men as Fallawhyham nn aurh cowards as those who stip! , Ur t al/ such horn, n>ed s,, APS(' thiva. Vallawii2hatn says ho has travelled over the Cov;Werary—using (he let en "eonfeder acy"--not the phrase .• so called Conp der icy" (for I do not acknowledge the existence of any authority or government in America aside from that, of the Unite 1 Sta.es)—and 11(10 not met 111/10, woman or I timid who does nut Sll,Oll/I the war, and who is not deter mined to tight it out to the death or the bit ter end. Vallandlyhain here simply Iles. Ile tells what is not true, and he knows it Vol landigham, aside from the leading men—Jeff Davis, Toombs and Stephens—dill not, I ven lure to say ,speak with a dozen persons while taking his involuntary trip through Dixie.— Ilad he done so, his' report would have been of a different oolor. The peoplautho_ara _fighting__ against-Allis_ Government—the poor whiles comprising the rank and tile of the rebellion—nine•!emlis of them do not know what they are fighting for; do not know what they are fighting against. A majority of them do not know anything, and hundreds never saw the American flag iu their lives until they saw it march into Vicks burg in triumph. They do not know the Fourth of July, or anything else that is good. But poor and ignoraht as they are, let them express their own free minds and they wil , a most to a man, demand a speedy termina tion of this war—would submit to almost any. thing rather than fight one day longer as they have been fighting. 11 Is may by the force of haynn - ets that Mei/. army is•Rept togeher. Even that cannot proven; their deserters from Hocking into Jackson by hundreds, to take ttir oath 01 Jilleginnee or join the .Union ranks.— And I tell you what 1 know when I say that it will not be many days ere the entire States of Mis.us.dppi awl Tennessee will he knocking, loudly for re admission to a Union which not long since they thought their puny efforts could quickly dissolve. They are till/cloy of it even now. “Speaking of being united, I tell you, by the Eterue — G - 0(1, -- there wits nevr - r a — mnre truthful sentence than that of Douglas : Tho.e who nee nut ?rah us are against us” and I reiterated it and add that those who :ire not with us should /t hung, or qtould l e with Muir Southern brethren, fighting with (hem. Let them either aid the Government or go where th.iy can bol,ter up the tottering for limes of reheldom. Better have a dozen foes in the field titan one fighting us behind our back 3. To all copperheads, pence men, agitators, anti war men—he they Republicans or Demo crate—for we have them here pretending to he both-1 have a Moral to say on the behalf of our brave soldiers. And you have undoubted ly been told that the war has its opposers io the ranks of the Union army. It is an tie cursed and foul a-persiou upon fair fame of men who are willing to spill their blood, give their lives fur their country. They are for our Union. They tight for the people and their country, for the suppressidn of the re• Million. Let me say to all opposers of the war The time will come when men composing this army will conic to their homes. They have watched the progress of events with in terest. They have had their eyes upon these unmitigated cowards, these opponents of the country and the Administration—and the Ad ministration, I contend, is the country)—and when they return it will do the soul of every true loyal man good to see the summary man ner in which avy wit/ cause these sneaks' nun' peace diptutur3 to sick their holes." For a tew moments the crowd that had' gathered around was deeply absorbed in what their "lighting, general," as many called him, said, and his remarks, though given upon the spur of the moment, struck home to the hearts cf all who listened Could Logan make the leaders of our people feel ns he speaks, th s war could not last three months. It would be crushed out by force of numbers alone. After expressing himself somewhat warmly against copperheads and sneaks, General Logan conducted with the following characteristic apology: "You will excuse me gentlemen; if, in say ing what I have said, I have been rather pro fuse and heavy in the way of emphasis. Two years away from civilization, with my men, hss made me rather. emphatic in all my thoughts and words in regard to -certain things. I speak emphatically because I em phatically feel that which my tungub finds to say." New England and Kentucky This is a . strange 'conjunction. But we find the following passage in a recent letter of Dr. Robert J. Breakiuridge, declining to attend the meeting of the Alumni of Harvard University, to which ho had received an•invi• union, though the Bon. R. C. Winthrop It may he the will of God that the meat dreadful changes await our country. If the very worst comes, I look that true and regu lated liberty will perish lost., in New England. 'ln past, ; years I have sp'hken- freely in dis epprebrition-of- much that hits felt an evil in fluence froth New:Eugland,'as it-eirportreci.to ,rnO.' But I never doubted—had now lase than ever- I -that the roots of whatever produces freedom, equality, and high civilization, aro' more deeply set in New England, than in any equal population on the face of the earth,— As for Kentucky, I wilt not trust myself to speak. I heard Gen. Burnside say that he considered theloyal people of Kentucky the Most decided and disinterested, he had any. Where seen: and that embrace:a two-thirds 'of her entire population. ;16-is a people -held by its Atnernies to be boastful: but they will do," alwayti, more than they ever say they.will do. , •. Letter of the King of Siam to Ad- miral Foote HIS OPINION OF THE eLAVEHOLDERS' lIEDEL LION AND SLAVERY It is.well known that Admirable Foote was. I,n the-habit of receiving letters from the sec -.and King of Siam, with whom he became ac quainted when in command of our fleet in the King's waters. The letters are- autograph, and evince much intelligence especially with regard to our affairs. This is apparent in the letter which we are able to present to day.— Considering its date, we may be surprised at the clear appreciation which it shows of the relations of Slavery to the war. The King does not hesitate to speak of the forces of the enemy as "Rebel forces ;" and he "earnestly wishes success to the United States Govern• ment, and the complete suppression of the reckless Rebellion." Then again, mark how clearly ho sees the fatal consequences of a failure to deal with Slavery. "If Slavery," Ile says, " remain unimpaired. you will be exposed to all the perplexing difficulties of the past." He then declares himself for "the complete annihilation of Slavery." It is interesting to read such generous words of sympathy from a foreign sovereign. No such wprds have come from England or France; but then they are civilized. This letter had been submitted by Admiral Foote to the President and his Cabinet, all of whom read it with much satisfaction; but he hesitated to communicate it to the public.— Only a few clays before leaving Washington, on his way to his honorable c ,, mtnand nt Charleston. he gave a copy of it to Senator Sumner, with authority to use rt, as he should think proper.. Now that the excellent Admi ral has been ° renioved by death, it has seemed that the letter ought to be generally known on his account, as well as from its intrinsic value, and the Senator has consented to its publication. PALACK OF THE SECOND KING. IS } ANGicoic. 6iarn, Alay 22, 1863 Commodore // /4,oef!, (Veer of the film,ivs;plst Uuo~l Fled : IN.aa Sin: I look with intense interest for Atneriean intelligence. I see by the papers that you are honored with an important anti critical post. Recent intedigence, announces your biilliant success• a on the Tennessee. 'Cumberland, and Mi-sissippi rivers, in the Liking of Forts Henry, Donelson, and the town oh Gotitiittni--1 he Si rong posit lens of the rebel •oloes We earnestly wish success to the United States Government, and the com plete suppresdon of the reckless rebellion : and of. the :Mine time I deeply regret that tiny of the Southern States have placed themselves in a position where the maintenance of the United Slat es Government [oust be attended with-such sad consequences to them. The al ti rnale succes9es and disasters indicate that the struggle must be a bloody, and we some times fear a protracted one. We wish and we expect your triumphant success: Yet we con less that the intelligence received sometimes Itg.gests the possibility that the United States m,ty become two Republics. which to us is an exeeedingly repulsive prospect. Should the United States Government be SllceessfuLin_t_he.present cuntest_and_ Slavery_ remain unimpaired, you will again he exposed to all the perplexing difficulties of• the past. The complete annilidatinncf Slavery alone will put an end to the disturbing elements which have fomented the present rupture, rind which unchecked must initiate still more fatal ones in the future. I have learned with pain that you have re ceived two wounds in your recent engage ments; nod am thankful that they were so slight as not to prevent you from vigorously pro , eenting your all important work. I think of you much while you are contend ing with a stubborn foe, nod wish for you and your glorious country such triumphs and such successes as will briiig back every Silte to its allegiance, and place the peace and prosperity of the whole and unimpaired Union upon a lasting basis. I wish, too, the uni versal prevalence of the 1111111a:1P principles of your celebraled D, , clarat ion rif Independence rulasl freedom to 101 in the pursuits of life, and happiness For months past my health has been but is now improving. My palace, too, has been undergoing repairs, but is nearly corn. plet ed. Ware when you can. Kind regards to all the mombo's your family. --- runni I rnly, S. I'. I'AwAnENDuENNEsn., Second Kini of Siam, Nz.c , Lc - ---- - ARMY OF THE POTOMAC A Pr»-tion (4'olll Pwceg A'•rn.c.s the Happ,a hanuork—,Stuart's Canitry mid to Flight —A Brisk Fight, near Culrep,oer—Lec's headquarters at Sterenshuig —A Skirm is.4 Between 011 Fon.cs and lloscbu's Guer illas. 11 EADQUARTERS :ANY OF POTOMAC, A 11 , USI, Gen. Beford'A ;cavalry, artillery, and a tupporting, infantry force, 'crossed th,e,ii/ip pallannnck at the railroad station yesterday, and tht rice, with his cavalry and ho proceeded towards Culpepper, driving Stuart's cavalry forge before him. Wiwi' near Culpepper Gen. Buford en cow tered a large rebel force of infantry and artillery and a fierce fight ensued, lasting until dark, when he withdrew to a strong po sition east of Brandy Station. The luss on both sides was considerable. This reconnoisance confirms the reported concentration of Lee's forces near Culpep per, and indicates that his present headquar ters tire at Stevensburg, four miles southeast of Culpepper. Tne 29th s itler's wagons, captured near F,airfax on Thursday night by Moseby and Iris band, were recaptured, on Friday morn ing near Aldic, by the 2d Massachusetts cavalry. A skirmish ensued between the guerillas and our advance guard, but on the approach of the maid body Mo•eby fled closely fol lowed by the cavalry. Several of the enemy are reported killed and wounded, but no report has been re •ceived of the result of the pursuit. This morning a detachment of our caval ry killed two and captured two b others of Moseby's band, near New Baltimore, and were. engaged in ferreting out others. The weather yesterday and to-day, has been by tar the hottest of the season. All is quiet to-night. - • •-•-- , The Attack on Qharleston THE LATEST REBEL ACCOnNTS FORTRESS SlosnoE. Aug. 8 —Theßichrnond Whig of August 1 has been received here. It contains the follosving di-patches,: "CHARLESTON, July Bl.—Cummings' Point, was Severely bombarded yesterd !y. - morning, commenced at ahotit 10.e'eloelt, The Iron sides and two monitors were engaged. The bombardment laeted until about,3 o'. clock the afternoon, when the vessels with drew. "The batteries Gregg. Simpkins. Wagner and Sumter responded to the enemy's, Two men were killed and one woundodat bat tery Gregg. " The-battery was not materially injured. • "There was nolling oh James Island' to day, and very little frau Furt Wagner. ' "General Beauregard visited the the James Island works today." SECOND DISPATCH ",PgAItLESTOII. July 31 heavYboinbartl meta was commenced at *daybi'eak on the enemy's welts from Sumter. and Wagner con., tinning until 2 o'clock' when it ceased. • , ,The .111Clinsond Whig Of the let also con . tains the' following : ---• t. WuLnort, - N. 0., July 2'J.—rho - latest. in telligeucto l that the rebels were retreating bulow Jackson, destroying the bridges as they go." , . liaportant Oidei of the PreEddeni of the United States. 'PROTECTION 10 'BE GIVEN TO ALL UNION SOLDIERS. Retaliation fOr Rebel Barbarities WAH: DEPARTMENT, AIMUTANT GENERAL'S} OFFICE WASHINGTON, July SI. General Orders No. 252. Tilt following order of the President is published for - the infdrination and government of all concerned : EXECUTIVE MANSION, • WASHINGTON, D. , July 30, 1863. f It is the duty of every Government to give protection to its citizens, of whatever class, color or condition, tied especially to those who are duly organized as soldiers in the public service. The law of nations and the usages and , customs of war, as carried on by civilized powers, permit no distinction as to color in the treatment of prisoner of war as public enemies— to sell or enslave any captured per -8011, on account of his color, and for no of fense against the laws of war, is a relapse into barbarism and a crime against the civilization of the age. The Government of the United Stales will give the 511111 C protection to all its soldiers ; and if the enemy shall sell or enslave any ono because of his color, the offence shall be pun ished by retaliation upon the enemy's prison ers in our possession, It is therefore ordered that for ever; 9°l. dier of the United States killed in violation of the laws of war, a rebel soldier shill beet_ ecuted ; and tor every one en davod by the enemy or sold iato slavery, a rebel soldier shall be placed at hard labor on the public works, and continued at 'such labor until the other shall he released :tat I receivet the treatment duo to in prisoner of war. ABRAHAM LINCOLN. By order of the Secretary of War : • E. D. TowNsertn, Assistant Adjutant General. George Wilkes on the Mob From the Spirit of the Times I=l It was the etrhorts and henchmen' of Fer , nand° IVoOd, and the unprincipled orators who adifre,seil the Southern conspirators and spit.fs at the that let , 100-fe the fiends of ti issaere and rapine on our city, and furnished to the ferocious substra tu u , which Mozart alw.,yti holds iii lea-h, the thieVeti and intirdereis to stimulate and lead it. This is the revelation of the hour, and those who fail to see it have but a poor and defective mental vi,ion It is due to the cun• fling of Ferran to Wood, to recognize the Not, that lie was the first politician to hit upon the plan or silting the foreign element, and of or ganizing the utterly VielUtl9 portion of it in a se, arate cla- , s In his contest with the regu• tar Democracy in 18157, he lied been worsted and cast out, and it was then, probably, that he was first visited with the idea..t at the ruf fians of the city were, under the popular ex amples afitirded by the city councils, sofri (newly numerous to be entitled to an inde pendent organization, of their own. And, possibly, considering that he had peculiar claims to their respect, ho set himself up for theirdeader,-nod lairt - thelotrndarbiti 'lTiair Ile was 80J11 surrounded by a formidable ele ment, and aggregated under 'his -(!ontrol suf ficient voles to enable him to destrify the plu rality of the Democratic vote. Oq this stock in trade, he h is been able for some years to pursue the business of oividing the Democrat ic party in the city, and selling back to it, at the election, the Juirtioni which he stole for certain considerations in the shlipe of cash and place. This business proved very incra live. and enabled him to mike large donations to Catholic ins Cottons, and it is worthy of remark, that. he 113 s always beaten even the roust, popular Irishman, in bidding for the political influence of that church. The last proof we have, is in the speech of nu arch bishop, who calls the Al.oz ,rt rioters together, as lie assures them riot to scold them," and neglects to uttereven the slightest reproach for burning down an orphan asylum in direct proximity' to one or his own. These things are startling, when viewed in logical conjunc non; and they reveal to us the meaning of that lofty carriage and defiant la nguage , v.hich indirates,, in Fernando, the master of the city. While pluming ourselves upon be itrepthlicati community„ c have really sunk under a humiliating despotism, turd Fer nando Wood is as much a noble, over us poor private men, arid are tire dukes of England, or the Clown Vrinces of the 'thine. suriett4lipiny lords who circulate as satellites, and niAit -, ionally kick 119, in the in terests of the goiter, are such of his depend- ants as have recently been braining Children, stabbing fallen soldiers, and who, having had their laces temporarily washed, and clean clothes pot upon them, were thrust in the COM , IIOII council, to manage the tr otmry and make our laws. We trace them unmistaka bly is every act; and in none more clearly has their origin been shown, than in the re cent donation of two million and a_balf of our money, as a tribute to the thieves' victorious arms. =I This is the local phase and philosophy of our recent troub:es ; but if wo look beyond our boundaries, we shall find the mischief has a heavier hacking nod a broader scope. We shall feud, that while Fernando Wood has been playing his part. here, in the intermtt of Southern treason, such men to Seymour, Val landigham, Cox. Pendleton and. Wall, have been equally active in the same interest, iu their re-pective districts; and consequently, it is not to be wondered at to see them all working harmuniodsly together, at every op portunity and upon every incident, which of fers to impair and subjugate the Government. The rebellion embarked wirh two great hopes. The first was a division of t h e North, that would leave the South superior iu arms; the second aas European intervention. For I the first it depended on such men as we have named, but they were awed for fir - Hide by the popular fury at the fall of Sampler., When iQurepean intervention failed, the South turned again to it. first reliance, and commenced to nurse Northmi ire ison for a lima trial.— They hail been able to raise many millions in gold for European purposes, and doubtless they sent some millions here. The ••nigger" was adopted as the watchword of the faction, because they knew it . would most easily Ae leyalize that foreign lab,,ring element which dreaded competition ; and the always unwel come draft was selected as the best signal for the culminating overt ant. Uponithis focus, therefore, all the Copperhead orators cNicen troted their indaming eloquence; anti :they did not hesittite, in 'Many Osos, toadvise the people 1„0 openly resist the power of (pi) Gov ot entente 110RATI SEYMOUR The most insidious and-dangeroue of these demagogues was Horatio Seymour,' the Gov ernor of this State. With far interior talents to:Fernando Wood, nod, in fact, less honor in dealing&with associates, Seymour brought a specious eloquence, and the 'character of a professing Christian, to the support'of-the ca bal.. Ho did not advocate a resistatice.to' the draft. 'Oh, no; ho simply contented himself with, denouncing the war, &man unlawful - one on our part; and with throwing •ont n flank ing,proieetion to the orators wll3 repudiated the conscription, by demanding- an impunity for their seditious. He did not justify the se cession in the'South, in so many direct words; but ho declraed there were no powers in tho Constitution to coerce a state, and. insidious ly endoreed . theAssetfoo of the Southern tree 'son, through the doctrine of 'plirtunotint'Stato 'sovereignty& • Ile mourned over `the War, he 'sighed utter peace, he insisted that the Union -could not be restored , b7 : foece-offarms, !Ina fOrMally declared, in hia last message. Ahat no causes then- existed for 'ilisoortl with' the South more than had always' existed. ' When his friend, Thomas If : Seymour,' ran for the Governorship - of Vonneetiont, on on avowed retastanco to the -clFaft, ho addt•eseed .that State, in association with Fernando and Val-