VOLIIIIE XIV.--NUMBER 25 THE POTTER .TOURNAL • PUBLISHED BY $l6 W. MeAlorney, Proprietor. $l.OO PR YEAD, INVARIABLY IN .I.DVANCE. * l* *Devoted to the cause of Republicanism; the interests of Agriculture, the advancement - of Education, and the beat good of Potter county. Owning no guide except that of Principle. It will endearpr to aid in the war pf mare folly Freedomizing our Country. Aovslit ISEMENTS inserted at the following fates, except where special bargains are trade. 6 1\ Square [lO lines] 1-insertion, - - - 50 " II . 3 " -- - .sl' 50 .lach subsequent insertiondesdthan 13, - -25 - .1 Square three months, . 2 50 t ;If six " 400 1 " nine " 550 / " 'one year, ' 60 1. Column six months, 2O 00 , 1 it Is " - /0, 00 4i ll " .. .. 7QO 1 " per year. ----- ;- - - 40 do i_ " ----ft&- _:-. - - 20 do Administrator's or Executotice, 200 Business Cards, 8 lines or less,F:ft - year , 5 60 special and Editorial Notices, per line, 1:0 * * *Ali transient advertisements must be paid in advance, and no notice will be taken of advertisements from a distance, unless they Si?. accompanied by the money Or satisfactory I I reference. , ; e * *lllo.nks, and Job Work of, all kinds, at ten 1.. i nyomptly and faithfully. • , USINESS CAEDS. E1114, 1 -1,.1.4 LODGE, No. 342, V. A. 3. sTATF:i Meetings on the 2nd and 4th',i ednes dars 91 each month. Also Masonic gather= i figon • very Wednesday Evening. for work ,and:pravtice, at:their Hall in Coudersport. TIMOT,4II' IVES, W. M. flev.cm, Sec'y. • , • JOHN S. MANI;4, tTTUIt:\ . Y AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW, Couder port, Pa., will attend the several Court, n Potter and SPKean Counties. All basin, -. entrusted in his care will receive prom!): attention. Office corner of West and Tip rd streets. ARTHUR G. OLMSTED, &TTORNEY & COMCSELLOit AT LAW, Coudersport, Pa., will attend to . all business entrusted to-Isis care, with pronaptnes arid fide ity. Office on Soth-west corner of Main and Fourth streets. ISAAC BENSON . . ATTORNEY AT LAW, Coudersport; Pa.,l will attend to all business entrusted to him, with care and promptness. Office on Second st., near the Allegheny Bridge. F. W. KNOX, " [ ATTORNEY AT LAW. Coudersport, Pa., will regularly attend the Courts in Potter 4.d the adjoining Counties. • 0. T. ELLISON, PRACTICING PHYSICIAN, Coudersport, Pa., respectfully informs the citizens of the Til lage and vicinity that he will promply re spond to all calls for professibnal services. Office on Main st., itt building formerly oc cupied by C. W. Ellis, Esq. C. S. &'E. A. JONES, DEALERS IN DRUGS, MEDICINES, PAINTS. Oils, Fancy Articles, Stationery, Dry Good:, Groceries, Sic., Main et., Coudersport, Pa. D. E. OLMSTED, - DEALER DRY GOODS, READY-MADE Clothing, Crockery, Groceries, kc., Main st., Coudersport, Pa. COLLINS SMITH, DEALER in Dry Goods,Grocerics, Provisions, Haidware, Queensware, Cutlery, and , all Goutis usually found in a country Store.— Cuit'lersport, Nov. 2i, 1861. M. W. MANN, DEALER LN BOOKS & STATIONERY, MAG. AZINES and Music, N. W. corner of Main and Thir d sts., Coudersport, Pa. third HOTEL, D. F. GLASSMIRE, Proprietor, Corner lo uaia and Second Streets, Coudersport ; Pot ter Co, Pa. . A Livery Stable is also kept in connect tine with this Hotel. L. BIRD, SURVEYOR, CONVEYANCER, Ace., BROOK LAND, Pa., (formerlyggs4iOgv,ille.,) Offiae in :,•s Store building. I►IABK CALLON, .TAILOR-,4early opposite the Court House— mike ail clothes intrusted tp him in the latest and best styles —Prices to suit the times.—Gire him a call. 13.41 ANDREW SANBERG & BRO'S. TANNERS AND CIIRRIERS.—Hides tanned on the shares, in the best wanner. Tan nery on the east side of Allegany river. Coudersport, Potter county, Pa.—Jy I'i,'6l Z. J. OLMSTED ,OLMSTED & KELLY. 1 1 3EALER IN STOVES, TIN & SHEET IRON WARE, Main si., nearly opposite the Conti House, Condei-sport, Pa. Tin and Sheet Iron Ware made to ordei in good stykt, shoit notice. ' " THE ITNION ARCH STREET, ABOVE THIRD, . Philadelphia. . UPTON S. NEWCOMER, Propnetor. This Hotel is central, convenient ' Passenger cars to all parts of the city. rind in , every parti"ular adapted to thel st ants of the b witness public. - Terms $1.50 per day ! . UNION HOTEL, COUDERSPORT, POTTER COUkTY, TEN N., ___ A. S. ARMSTRONG 1 APING refitted and newly furnished the 11l house on Main street, recently occupied ity:4:- Rice, is prepared to accommodate the traveling public in as good style as can he had in town. Nothing that can is any way in growths centtbrto of the guests will be ne *OK MIL 11,18611 - . • " ' _ ' • . 1 . • •-• 4, •• ~; • •• - "' I• • :it;• • •-•- • .••-, • • , I i 0 - .114 If 4 . • • • N • I' 11 • ••• 7 1 : I,• • - ' 1-• •. . , , - • • I „ Q4O " I • , 1 t 1 . ; • , i 1 - • • ; • I , - . :'; • ; • • r • . 1 • :• • , • • j: : / • „ . " OLD JIMATIOIRED, t - ; In a rustic Old church opposite, we write, a company of worshiPperi are singl i ng t he old; old hymn: 'Bel thou, 0 God, exulted high!" The air as old, also—the immortal .01$1 Hundred." ' If i.t be true that Luther cotnpmed that tuue4 and if the worship of mortals fa car ried On the wings of angels to heaven', bow often he heard the declaration, "They are singing .Old Hundred' now." ' The solemn strain carries us bank to the time of the Reformers—luthur and his devoted band.: He doubtless, ,was the first to strike the grand old chords in the public sanctuary , of his own Ilermani. FroM his own stentorian lungs they rolled, vibrating, not through vaulted cathedral roof; but along a grander arch, the eternal headers: He wrought into each note his own' sublime faith, and stamped it with that 'faith's immortality. Hence, it can-I not die ! Neither "man nor angeli will I let it pass into oblivion. . Can you find a tomb in the land wberel sealed lips lay that: have not sung that tune ? If they were gray old nien, they had (heard or sung "Old Hundred." If they, were babes, they. smiled as, their mothers rocked them to sleep, singing "Old Hundred." Sinner and saint ha% e joined with the endless congregation wiiere it has, with and without !the peal ing 'organ, sounded on sacred air. The dear little children, looking with wonder ing I eyes on this strange world, have lisped it. The sweet young girl whose tombstone told of sixteen summers, she whose pure aud' , innoent face has haunted yo,,:k with its mild beauty, loved "Old Hundred," and as she sung it, closed her ,eyes and seemed communing with the angels who were so soon to claim her. He whose manhood was devoted to the Service of I his God, and who with faltering steps as-1 cended the pulpit stairs with white hand placed over his laboring breast, loved "Old Hundred." And though sometimes his lips only moved, away doWn in his heart, so soon to cease its throbs, the holy tuel'udy was sounding. The dear; white headed father, with his tremuleni voice, how he loved "Old Hundred." Do you see' him now, , sitting in the venerable arm-chair, his arms, crossed over the top of his cane, his silvery locks floating off from his hollow teuiples, and al tear, per chance, stealing down his furroWed cheek, as, the noble strains ring out ?I Do you hear that thin, quiVering, faltering sound now bursting forth,, now listened for al most in vain ?' If you do not, we do; and from such lipi,lbailowed by fourscore years' service in the 3.laster's cause,,"Old Hubdred" sounds indeed a sacred melody. You may -fill your churches with choirs, with Sabbath prima donnas, whose daring notes emulate the Steeple, and nest almost as Much, but give us the spirit-stirring tones of the Lutheran hymn; sung by young and old , tegether. Martyrs have hallowed it; it has gone, up frcim the dy ing 'beds of the saints. The old churches, where generation after generation has I worshipped, and where many scores of the dear dead have been carried and laid be fore the altar where they gave.themselves I.to qod,seem to breathe of,"Old Hundred" from vestibule to tower-top—the very air is haunted with its spirit. Think, fora moment, of the assembled company who have at different 'times, and in different places, joined in the familiar tun i c.? Throng upon throng ',the stern, the timid; the geutle,ihe braVe, the beau tiful, their rapt faces all beaming with the inspiration of the heavenly sounds. 14 1 01 d Hundred I" king of the sacred, baud of ancient airs,-never shill our ears! gr+ weary of leering, or our tongues ofl singing thee And when we get to heaven, who knows but what the first tri umphal strain that welcoines tol may be— "Bo thou, oh God, exalted hi i gh P A THE PRESIDENT.—.A. correspondent .1 writing from F'ortress Monroe, saps, How etilliustiotically all speak of ;the noble hezid of our nation;—the Providential moo, the Moses of our Israel! I never wit neesed so much enthusiasm about any as abjut that plain, homeli, gaunt bein,g who walks noostentatious auiong our soldiers, and whom they greetas their truestfrtend. Tolday he visited the hOspital at Fortress Mdnroe, and spoke to every wounded man in these crowded ward rooms, Where Reb els and Unionists lie side by sideon beds of pain. "God bless lam !" said inany of our wounded boys. "Amen rresponded faihtly, but ferivently, some Rebel 'soldiers. I do not wonder that some of the Rebel prisJners refuie to go back to their army. where they Were so differently !treated, and where they must contrast the unfeel ing traitor, Jeff Davis, with • th4t truest twn, God's noblest work,,the Man for the hour, Abrahatn Lincolo. S. D. KELLY fa• Senator pwin of iCal., who whined 'cioletully about being sent to Fort La iette, having been !released, jis now etly with Jcff Dafie' tatailyset so fo3i i op o ?iiqpiiiies cif -TN& :Qshioerqeg, 'WO, the ' VsSeiltil4l . iPll' . l4 -3)1004; _Kite: Debot4 tp fib OUDERSPORT, POTTER CO Death lot Gen. Win. It. helm. aftRaiSBURGI, MAY .10, 1862. Gen. Wm. H. Keim died; of typhoid fever on Sunday last. His remains will be sent to Reading to-morrow to be in.: terred there. They will be accompanied by the heads of the military and civil del partineots. Gen. Heim has always occu pied a prominent position in the - Govero , meat of Pennsylvania, and the experience which he thus acquired, added to his marked abilities, qualified him to fill any position in the, councils of the State with credit to himself and to the , satisfaction of his constituents. Gen. Keim was a native of the city of Reading. For many years be commanded the Fifth Division of Pennsylvania Volunteers, and held the rank of Major General. From his en trance into public life he took an evident interest the internal improvements of Pennsylvania, and' from one position to another advanced to the position of Stir, veyor General, having keen elected to that office by the Republican party. Upon the breaking out - of the rebellion, feeling that he could be of more service to his , country ia the field than in the council chamber,' he tendered his services to Gov. Curtin. 1 They were accepted. Two Major Generals were accepted from this State-4en. Patterson and Gen. Kelm. He was immediately ordered to duty on the Upper Potomac, and bad command of one oflGen. Patterson's divisions dur ing the General's campaign. By his ac tive and INA condnet in- Maryland be overawed the Secessionists of that State. The three months'campaign havingended, he was mustered out of service, simulta neously with Gen. Patterson. •He at once resumed the duties of his office, which had been entrusted pro tem. to one of his subordinates. Several months ago he again entered the service of his coun try. as Brigadier General, and joined Gen. McClellan's army, having previously re signed his State position. Having been attacked with typhoid fever, he was com pelled to return to Harrisburg for med ical. treatment. He arrived in.that city only a few days since, and on Sunday last his friends were startled with the an nouncement of his death. WIliT GOOD Luca Is.—Some young men talk about luck. Good luck is to get up at siz o'clock in the morning.— Good luck is, if you have only one shil ling a week, live upon eleven pence, and save a penny—good luck is to trouble your head with your own business, and let youi neighbor's alone—good luck is to fulfill the commandment and do unto other people as we would have them do unto us. They must not only work, but wait. They must plod and persevere. Pence must be taken care of, for they are the seeds of guineas. To get on in this world, they must take care of home, sweep their own doorways clean,' try and help other people, avoid temptations, and have I faith n, truth and God. Then good luck will come to them. STRONG ARGUMENT VS. STRONG BUT REO---"My son, why is it, that when you drop yam bread and butter it is always the butter side down ?" "I don't know. It hadn't orter, bad it ? The, strongest side ought to be, up, and this is the strongest .butter I have ever seen." "Hush up; it's some of your aunt's churning." "Did she churn it? The, great flay thing." "What, your aunt ?" "No, this here butter. To make that poor old woman churn it, when it's arcing enough to churn itself." • "Hush, Zeb, I've eat a great deal worse in the most aristocratic houses." "Well, people of rank ought to eat it." "Why people of rank ?" "'Cause it's rank butter." "You varmint, you! what makes yOu talk so, smart ?" "'Canso the butter has taken the,skin off my tongue." "Zeb, don't lie ! I can't throw away the butter." "11l tell you, ma, what I would do with it. Keep it-to draw Waters.' You ought to see the flies keel _over as soon as they • touoh it." "Zeb, don't aggrevate me; but here is a quarter, go to the store and buy sortie fresli butter." 1 The statement is now made by author ity, that the visit of M. Mercier, the French Minister to Richmond, was made without instructions from his Govern ment, or its knowledge, but in conse quence of a conversation with Secretary Seward, in which the latter expressed a willingness that the other 'should visit the rebel Capitol and judge for himself of the hopelessness of the rebel cause; The President . also approved_of his going. He held no official intercourse with any one at Richmond, and his whole course was most discreet and friendly towards our Government. • 1 People criticise higher than they attatn. , PA., 'WEDNESDAY, 4matt 4# From 14e OW' Fa. IplegitfM G O&M= NAVY 'YARD NEAR SIORYOLE ! Tt ' Ile;, 22, 18621. ED. JOIDI NAL :: The 58th Pa. a Volunteers, under the command of Wool, is now snnoy quartered amid ruins of the Gosport Navy Yard. i t destruction of this Fara is compleki far as fire and saltpetre could matte No vandalism of modern times even I sued the policy Of this unholy and ca less Rebellion; bridge ; horning, 11L burning; and a general destruction can everywhere be seen in the 'track d i the Rein! army, Soifer as, .9 personal liberty and the rights oflproperty! are concerned the French Revolution of '9B pales before this rebellion of ihe South. The hiker the grade the more atrocious wil)1 the actors be found. It is among the F.FIV.'s that, the real virus of the rebellion exists and is there developed in its*most malig nant form. Astthe Confederate., became advised of our advance upm Norfolk ithey took occasion to; retire.upon the plCal that it was a military!necessity„with thHview of concentrating all theirstrength for the defence of Richmond. We found the people thoroughly rebellions, the Cicep floes were only to be totind amoo the laboring class, all otheri! 'iiing sighs of their displeasuie. Stpreti and altPs of all kinds were closed and even the blinds of private housee [ were shut!, and their doors thoroughlybolted. The! great *Bs of people were taught and believed t at we li were so r many devils incarnate, nayp of us with horns like beasts !whose t,tilY ob ject was plundeT: The truth' is that hu man Slavery and treasJM are' syniytnous In the South. It is so even in the pule State of Delaware. Wholiever Owns hu- Man chattelß desires the destruction of the Government, and will leave no I dwell- , unturned to accomplish their helliidi pur poses. ,The only mode of Stnkipg the •Rebellion is • to • .hike at the iu stitution, of . Slavery. The UniOn can never be restored in state 4uo anti peffunz. Slavery has got to be made subordinateto the law, and in Order to do this it over must be weakened if not destroye l . Per haps measures looking to its gradeat ex tinction may be the besf. bht like the girdled tree, it eoust be so fliedt.llat it will grow no more and in the end surely die The effect of our occupation here is to abolitionize the blacks. Xhey thikik that their, shackles have already fallen and they know of no such obligation I ser vice. Whatever they emit] they as i ... I imonionsly pocket. Soctiehow they rea. son strangely, for blacks.; They say that whatever may be the frutts of their labm belongs te them: It is in vain to tell thew that such notions are unc,institutiond and wrong, according to Southern etlOs. for they uniformly say -to yen that GOdmade t all men of one flesh and! they cant see why they ought'not to have the! b oat of their own labor They are a very Christian people and they; have dip Impu dence to assert that it is anti-Chrtsttan to separate husband and', wife, parent and child, and then doem them to evert sting servitude. '. What force there nt y be in 1 i 'their arguments I leave it, for yo r read erstt to determine; suffice it to a that, they look upon the detested Yan eel with favor and many there arc who think the., day of the millet:ikon is dawniog. 1 .1 Through the instrumentality of i a Chris tian Association in Maslsachusetits la Su• M I. perintendent; Chas. F. Wildeys, ha bee sent to .Fortress ouroe 'to look after th ' interest of the contrabands who .are su - plied with such assistance as the's waif want. Mr.. Wilder , discharges 10auties faithfully with this exception, I tbiat op slave who sought his presteci ion to ever found his way back to his master. In a democratic genie this is evident* wrong, but not knowinz. of the tirocess by which they income free I aut ciot prepat',ed tht pass judgement . upon itsi legality.cir uti constitutionality. 'tsk the negr9 ho he belongs to, and he will say alums nut versally that his masteriis in the Rebel army, "don't know whose I belcug to, 'Master Wilder nye I don't belon , t i t any body, supposehe knowit,, guess II free. Don't see why. One thing's surd, I'Llu never going back' any mere? W i ere the war to cease to-day, Slaverti has received such .a stunning `blow that it (satinet re cover. If the i independence of the Con federacy was acknowledged to-day, still hudian Slavery is doomed. Thielyelic df barbarism mast give way under thd prey-' sure of Christianity, pare phil . ,`tbropi, ai and modern'civilization. , I great [ strength and safety was Under' th strong arm of the Federal Government; I Tht f . shield withdrain,' and 100 _ other pow r having that institution i ns "cornor-Ston , can save it. Division weakens it, and in whatever light!we, may kiew it its; doors iis sealed, and reconatrueti o n, division 4r compromise of! any kind cannot 6v..e rt . The blockade hatcatisect great'dtstres in Rebeldom. !,Bread, pork and henimiy I are among the; Jesuit; The' following a t• a sample of prices; Salt, 88 perl 1 arre, ; coerse sheeting, 4 shillinka per yard; b •• ter, 60 cents per pound ; Sugar, 6,aHi per pound ,; Quinine, jib& what lOU in y -1 . figke Wetros! ask, Whisk ey,-(rot:t) 64,40, per galjqll coffee; 6 shillings Per pound ; tea, $4 per pound; and all other articles proportion: ably high. Fifty years of peace will ibe required to restore the South te the pros perity !which, shed enjoyed prior tv -the rehellion. Surely "the way of the , traiw gressor is, hard." :that the war will close by the entire subjugation of the , Bond), no one can now doubt, but - the future status of the Southern State; is specu lative: I venture- the opinion that a dif ferent-people must eventually inhabit the Seuth, carrying them Institutions more compatible with the civilization of the progressive age itr which' we live. • _, C. B. :Cuttm.' hate .en. the he " as nee -013110 The Goddesi of Poiertyl, Paths saaded with gold, verdant hestbs, ravens laved by the wild gnats, great mountains crowned with stars; sundering torrents, impenetrable forests, let the good geddesii pass throogh- . —the Goddess of Poverty,? Since 'the world existed, :since men have 'bed, she traverses the' world, she dwells 'among men • she . travels Singing, l and)she sings working, the, goditess, the' . good Goddess of Poverty ! Some men assembled to ;cur.e. her They..found her too beautiful, • too gay, too nimble, and too strong. ...Oita hilt her• 'wings," said they. "Chain her, bruise her with blows, that she May 'suf fer. that 'she way perish," tliGuddess of Poverty I They have chained. the geed goddess; they. have 'beaten 'and persecuted her; but they 'cannot disgrace het ; She has taken refuge in the soul uf poets, in the soul of Peasants, in the soul of iu.artyrs, in the'soul of saints, the - gobd ocidess, the Goddess of Poverty. She has .walked more thiai the Wan• dering Jew ; she has traveled more than the swaliusi; she is older than the Collie dralluf Prague.; she is yininger titan the - egg of the wren ; she has multiplied more upon the earth than strawberries in •.13i;.• hemian forests, the goddess', the, goud Goddess of Poverty I ' She always_ makes the grandest ' and most beautiful - things that we see qua the earth ;. it is she who haS cultivated the:fields 'and pruned the trees; it'is she who tends the fields, siugihE the Most beautiful airs; it is she who ices the first peep Of dawn, r and receives the last smile of evening, the good Goddesi Of Poveity ! is she who carries the sabre and the gun.; Who makes our war and conquests. It is she who collects the dead, tends the wounded; and hides the Conquered, , ttie good Ouddests of Poverty ! !- Thy children will cease One day ,to tarry,' the world upon their shoulders ; they will be•recempensed fur their:labor and toil. The time approilehes . when there will he . netther rich - nor !Tour ; When all Men shall consume the fruits of the earth,; and equally enjoy the gifts of Goa; but thou wilt not be furgoltee •in • their hymnS. Ott. good Guddess of Pov..erty I George Sand. - : neer- - I A Life Thought. I heard a wan who had failed in busi ness,, and whose furniture pi's sold at atiction, say that when the, 'cradle, the crib. and the piano went, the tears would couie,•and he had to leave the house,to I.;e a man. Now there are ifiousands'of men Who have lost their pianos, but who have found better music in the sound- of _their children's; voices and foOtsteps going awe:fully down with them Ito ..poverty, than any harmony of a cheitlea instru ment. Olf, how bletsed is -bankruptcy, when it saves a man's _children. I see many men - who are bringing up their children as I should bring wee, if, when' they' were ten years old, should lay thew on a dissecting table; and cut the sinews of theirarms and legs,iso that they ceuld,neither walk nor use their bands, but' only sit still and' be fed.; Thus rich men are putting the' knife of indolence and lUxury to their children's energies, and they grow up, fatted, lazy calves, good-! for nothing at twenty F five but to drink deep and squander. wide, .and 'the father must bea slave all his lifoin.order to make • beasts of his children. IlOw blessed, then, is.the - stroke. of dimister which sets the children free, and gives them over to the hard but kind hollow of poverty, who says to them, ~ !work," and working makes them men.--2.Beerler.- - .There .are increasing evidences of a strong and extended Union feeling in North Carolina' Union m e etings have been held, ,talk of ah - rog i ting • the ordi nance of Secession is becouiing common, and GoV. Clark has refused more :troops to . JefE Davis, and voluntarily o ff ered to suirender. allithe Union prisoners held in the State ' , except cool initsicined - officers, to ,the '.Uuited States. They nuTber alroi filar th‘usend.-- Events at 'Raleigh iodate that the State tiothOiities.and the friends of. the Ilnion are about to Carp crate. • jant a man turn" rebel, and all other crimes will come , etur3r to kilo. MR=M r.:x _ .~'u:. ..-'.. ,-- - - ,14:-",1 - :..i1 - ...,,a,....., '4,1; ", t It t: . : ',...4iir" ... ...`.' - '."`'- ',- ,..'- rt . - -- - -1,4 =I TEREiIi.-41.00 PER ANNUM • - !:Offa fat - Front Royal. On Friday, May 23, 9,000 Rebels 'our ! rounded' the brave Col. John R.Kenley's ilegimePtirf first Maryland,infrinitYZ!nd several camisoles of Michigan - Canary, numbering in au. about - MOO - Men! Front Royal, Warren county, Virginia. The most; of the eavalryfurcaped but the) rest _-were mostly captured. ' C ol. Kiraly was wounded and tahen„Prilecei,. - Won! Royal is ahout twenty miles directly !optli of Winnheatar,.and fifteen ;Miles semi of Strasburg : The first information Col. Kenley,bad of his dagger was by a colored man, whq aline riding furiqusly tcrthe;ciunpoaying .the Rehirle were coining -rand before-we were fully formed, they were - 'upon oui, army, xyllich fought' des perately , retifint in good order as far as posirible t and Only yielding to absolirte negessitv. 8914 of our escaped men say Rebebi unarm. ored ogr wonnded and prisoner!, Ilia; bayonets and ievolvere ! The Rept!lae at flitaplataltet!. On Saturday, Gen. B;Wke telegraphe that COl.ketiley'snoMmand had•been•de feated anifdriveu back from FrOcti,Ro: al Gen. Banks was then at Rtrasburg. .ten miles west . of Front Rpyal, at the 'w - ...tern terminus of the Manassas - Gap R. rpac3. It, order - to protect hiS stores and gaue traitisAie fell back to Winchesief,(.2:! ..• eo or twenty miles in a not:theasterly,flit\ec . tion.foward Harper's Ferry. :On the way, he had smug unimportant This was all the actual tiews we had ay to SutidaY Werning: ` The following' it Gen. pankp o e offictil,accauct, dated at Mortinshatg, Sunday afternoon: ."The Rebels attacked 'us this morning, at daybreak, in great force, estimated ai 15,h00, consisting of Eivell's. and Jackrun's dis4sious. The fire of pie. began With the light, and was followed, ,the artillery until the lines were fu • under fire on ",fitalt Llides. • The. left wi stood firmly. holding.jts ground viell;atid the rijltt did the same for sixho,nrs, whey the right wing fell back, Were ordered to withdraw, and the troops yasseil through tke town inconsiderable confusion. They were cinickly re-forwed on the other side, and continued their march erae:r to Martinshurg, where they arrived at 2.40 p. m., a distance of 21 milea• 'trains are in . advance, and 'will cross*he - river in safety. bur entire foreeengaged",wasless.thsp :consisting of. Goidores and ,Bon nelley!s brigades ? with two , regitnepts . 4 - cavalry under Gen. .Hatch, -add two Aeries of artillery. Our loss .was consid- e,rable, as' was . that the enemy , lint tutu not be stated. We were reinforced by tit; 15th Maine, whieh goOlservice,,atl a regiment of cavalry. N. I'. Bni ss, Maj -Gep..Com'g. Among the incidents narrated is,,thr,t l i the women of Winchester fired upon . My I eoldiers fiom their' houses and sick mei] were killed or thrnym out Of the Hitipitits! Banks' force eroased safely at`.~Villistns port, having lost only a few wagone,.cinr ing the rapid and aangerons o ronte,aisliiled on the flank, front and rear ,hy'sn,qpr whelming force. The hnd4ng nf sur men was cautious but •beld. and no,cne faults the Generals or the soldiers for the coroculsery withdrawal. Gen. Saxton commanded our tope at Harper's Ferry, and it was ,tbOugl)t 'a Rebel force was attemiting to cruaii?pth there and at Williamsport: Rot our men prepared to disp,pte any ertch passage. • Great ,F.Pbel „Failure. The strengthening of the gr_eat series of -Al'Clellan and '4l'Dowell, ,Ht Banks' forCe the weak pokrit,in our ,Ens. their usual sagacity,.the Iteheti; saw:this, and hurried on .a large force of !folks I men" under_their favorite lksep,,to eat off Bank's army, eaptam t' i, and ssgars his coveted supplies. B 3inka wary,lor them, and althoy hirdiqvgea and : peeled oa every si ,e he saved .s`o ,tniktis of his men . end olnitioqs as to thwart his 2 ,adv.er_sars in hisdesigne, and to extesttoe admiration Of all. If the enemy hoped to tiithdrAw.aty of our 'force from Richmopcf,tbey.faileil- 7 the pew trot were to meet the ditmer, _ _ • There were several disturbances in. 1381, tiniore, Sunday . and 00 ... 4 day of last wcek, A tiuMber of Secessioeilts, encouraged by the success of the raids at 'Prw. Rust; insulted Union men ..and Wer e se. Verelylbeatcp. lifcts. ch:ogod thirteqn months ago=th-n. 4'43, gion lb an darfdlect" declare hice . saff in spalikmore Secessionists are ,b!ciaming Axe *ex, ions than Abolitipuists. *. Itis hard to tali wheeler :the .Rsinel , or: th 9 ,Preckititidg Delaporatt;delloossea Frem_ein the grist. B snodef'sis;alisig with tiviebOo4ita:ia is rreion is TaCkiw-I - nian:and effectige. • •`• ••••• ••• • 4 _ ii-je° ll 94‘P r s' Th,sl 4T ln g trie.Piessone.s comae:pawn Aeles, be-had - the Catlijul of nesday; June lest' to, nominate. - matt Moons. fEMMI II I=ll6 El =MI