.[For the Agitator.] A Word to Soldiers. INTO. I. Comrades : Signs are pretty safe in dicators; straws tell whieli way the wind blows. Plain facts require plain words. In a few familiar letters to you, I shall try to bear these facts in mind. It is common for us to say, " The war is ended." We have laid aside our war like accouterments; the drum and bu gle no longer call us to the field; other implements fill our hands, and, to the unreflecting, we have peace. But the war is not ended ; its form only is chang ed—not its nature. As soldiers, we had a work to do; un der God we did it. We had armed trea son to put down. We fought, bled, en dured—conquered ! And treason was put down—degraded, and made odious. Our fallen comrades were buried, we thought, on the field of honor! To-day treason is up ; and men who then said it should be made odious, are now striv ing to make it honorable. As citizens, we have a work to do.— We are organized : we can do it, and we will. Then, we had an open foe to fight. That was at least fair play. And when they were whipped, they acknowledged it. Now, we have a more cowardly, but more stealthy enemy. Then we had a foe—the one at our front—worthy our steel. Now we have one who would treacherously stab us in the dark ! Then we used the bayonet ; now the ballot— if we may ; the sword, if we must ! Your knowledge and convictions of the past and the present, tell you that I have not overstated the fact, nor the danger. I will not deal in epithets, though cases of enormous depravity seem to justify, if not demand it. The President is a renegade to truth, to principle, to most sacred vows and solemn obligations! He is a traitor to the principles of the great party that placed him in power—the principles that changed our liberty on a parch ment scroll to something like reality ; principles that alone can save this coun try. This man seeks deliberately to subvert all that was gained by the war. He has no claims to statesmanship, on the broad and only true ground, of hu manity, immutable justice, and equal laws and right& to all men. His 22d of February speech reveals the animus of the man. There is no use denying— there is no need of it—that he is hand and glove with that type -of men who in the darkest hour of our national peril declared the war a failure. Neither is it anything new to say—once a Hunker always a Hunker. Meet it is—set it down,—the man is Southern born, and his defection is bred in the bone ;—and his natural instinct will crop out. And it is having its natural effect. Union men to-day are leaving the South by thousands, to escape the reign of terror'. —the mobs, the riots, the assassinations, the murders, instigated by his express sanction ! Who'does he have about him—closet ed with him? Vallandigham, a man who wonld gladly have led an army of Northern rebels against our rear, in the darkest hour of the war. Rebel Gen erals, who did lead armies against us, and would gladly do so again. Men who, living in the North, made slavery their god, and Smiled and smiled, when our armies were defeated.• And other real and would-be .assassins and cut throats, who toasted Lee and Beaure gard upon similar occasions. Men that worshipped Jefi. Davis, whose hands are red, and whose soul is black, with the blood and ferocious deeds done at Andersonville ! These are the men whom he delights to honor! A man is known by the company he keeps.— These men—l bluish to call them such— want the array disbanded, and the freed men handed'over to the tender mercies of.their old masters. He is in favor of it: They want to revive the traffic in souls, the gag, the whip, the chains, and the tortures ;—he is in favor of it. They want to redden the streets of every Sou thern city with the warm life-blood of every man that wore the blue uniforha ; —he is in favor of it. They want to le galize the inhuman and brutal massacre of peaceable men, assembled under sanction of law, for peaceful purposes; =he is in favor of it. They want him for their next - President; he is in favor of it. They want to see Thaddeus Ste vens, Wendell Phillips, Sumner, Bee cher and Greeley, guillotined ; he is in favor of it. Finally, they want to rule again the country they tried to destroy because they couldn't rule it ;—he is in favor of it In short, they mean, to "rule or ruin ;" and in the event of heir failing in the first, they intend—no matter what they say—to wreak their revenge for the loss of power and position, at the expense of the liberties of the people ! To this fearful pass are these wicked men driv en. Crafty, desperate, unscrupulous— were there a hope of success, they would again plunge the country into a bloody revolt! If they do, a long rope and a short shrift will tell the story. An enlightened statesman, whose acts are sanctioned by his conscience, com mands our admiration • but a truckling demagogue, imbued only with hate and partisan prejudice, merits our contempt. Words of censure, we know, should not be lightly or hastily cast upon pub lic men, on mere conjectural grounds, or for unintentional mistakes; but the coolest-headed man, if honest, will pro nounce theabove statements to be lite ral facts—and damning to those whose perfidy they record. Prejudice and hot-headed passion are apt to lead men to extremes. Let us avoid both ; but with unswerving fidel ity and devotion to the ideas that we fought for, let us fight manfully the bat tle out. Our country's affairs are alarming enough to arouse the attention of every man that pretends to any concern for it; and those whose patriotism prompted them to offer their lives to save her from destruction in the past, will not be found wanting now. Loyalty is a rational at tachment to principles—uotmen. It is the noblest passion that can animate a man. It characterizes every good citi zen. History scarcely furnishes an instance of so sudden and extraordinary a change as our nation has undergone; and it needs men now with heads and con , science aright, hearts to guide that con ception, and hands to execute. Con gress will do the first, and a loyal people must do the rest. Every man who loves _his country should act ;—a long pull, a strong pull, and a pull together. All men are in terested in this question; it is a com mon cause. He who neglects it now, by inaction or indifference, strikes a blow at his own interests. Boys ! let us stick to our colors—the "old flag"— come what will. Dare to do right, and face the worst. Beery Saturday, a weekly Magazine of foreign Literature published by Ticknor it Field, Boston, Mass., has achieved a substantial success, and-is to be enlarged to 40 octavo pages. This Magazine contains selections from the best British periodicals and copious foreign notes every reek--all afforded nt In cants a number. ,It is beautifully printed, and when bound will form a most valuable addition to any library. Godey's Lady's Book, for September is received. It maintain,s its position at - the head of Ladies' Magazines. most successfully. It s fashions, its patterns, and housewife's departments are beyond competition. 19itaton. WELLSBORO, PENWA WEDNESDAY, 'AUG. 29, 1866 ib '