61je Cartrin atm Publiahed avery Wednesday Moritink, at - 2,00 a invariably in advance, by COBB & VAN GELDER. s, e. con.j fn. c. ran' princa. .es.3ZYTT3EiPLTI..S.I'I , I - Ca ..scs..2.ES. laio. 1 6 mo. 0 too. t V mu. ‘l yr 1 5 1uA m.,..—....1.2,50 5.00 7,50 10,00 12.00 2 Sqoares 3;75 6,00 , 12.00 1.5,00 18,00 1-41.1010t00...... 7,00 10,031 15,40 20,00 25,00 1-2 Column 12,00 2040 ' 20.00 28,00 45,00 1 Colman 'O,OO 55,00 45,00 65,00 80,00 a Spare 1 Innen tl,OO —5O ets.tath week thereafter. Ailadnlstrathre Stud EzeoutOre Notteas $2,00 each. Business Cards of nee lines $5,00 p e r year., BusiNEss DIRECTORY. - W.• D.• TE ELL WHOLESALE DEUOGISTS, and dealers in Wall Paper, Hernsene .Lumps, Window. Glass, Perfumery, Paints and Oils, to., Corning, N. Y., Jan. 1, 1866.-Iy. I = NICHOLS as. lUTCIiELL, ATTOENEYS : AND COUNSELORS AT LAW Mee formerly occupied by Ames Lowrey, Esq Wm A. Nivuorz. join: I. MtruttraLL. Wellaboro, Jan. 1, 1568-Iy. liniLtilAtii El. SMBITEC ATTO.B.A.EY .AND COUNSELOR AT LAW Ineurenee, Bounty and Pension Agency,- Malls Street Treinstero, Pa., Jan. 1, 1886. S. -F. IVlrisoyz WILSON & NILES, ATTORNEYS t COUNSELORS AT — LAW, - {First door from;Eituney'S, oxi 'the .A.vrieue)—, Will 'attend t 9 bgainess. entiiitedto,,thelr,eaie i n the eentitiee of Tiogs 114 - I f ilt'4i• Wellshoio,.Jan. 1, '1366. F'. W. CLAIM', ATTORSZT >T Lew—MatlEfiekt, Tioga May 9, 1868-Iy. GEORGE WAGNER, TAILOR. Shop runt door north of L. A. Sears's Shoe Shop. - "ger Cutting,-frittin-CaTarepair ing done pro:Aptly-end weli. Wellebbro, - Pa., Jdn. 1, 18613.-Iy. JOHN B. WHEAKSP.EAR.B, DRAPER' ADD Stop civil' Beiien's Store, second floor. ra.Catting, Fitting, and Repairing done'prtimptly andln best sty/0. Wencher°, Pa.. Jan. 1,1.866-1 y . _ JOHN 1. MITCHELL. AGENT. fur the collection of bounty, back pay end peneione duo soldiers from the Govern- Went. Office with Nichols and Mitchell, Wells. bore, Pa. . . m3e, IZALAK WALTON HOUSE, Gaines, TiOga County, Pa. E. C. VTIIMILY.t.A., PEoParatort- -This is new betel located within easy al.coees of the best faidnic and hunting grounds in North ern Penns.) , ifattin... No pains mill be-spared for the accommodation of pleasure seekers and the traveling pribl c. . [Jan. 1,1860.] Pennsylvania Rouse. ELM AXE ELs.tLETT PROPRIETOR. T rnz popular hotel has been lately renovated and re to.-nishel, and To) pains tral be spared to render lti lia.paatitias acceptable to 4.ga.rons. . . . • Welleboro, May 9, 18e6. 3. 'HERVEY E%VING, `. ATTORNEY A-ND COUNSELOR AT LAW, No. 1.1 Law Builiing,—St. Paul St , Baltimore. RE'rEacircts.—Levin Gale, Attoroey at Law, Edward Israel, A tt'y at Law,Rev. J. MeK. Rues, D. D., Rev. Henry Slicer, D. D., Coo field, Bro. & Co., F. drove & Co., Ludwig & Mosherry, John F. Meillton, Eeq., Robert Law. son, Beg, 3. Sutherland, Req. [Mr. EKING is authorized to tratuait any•bneinetie appertain, ing to this paper in Baltimore.] • Jan. 1, 1858-Iy. BACON, M. D., late of the 2d Pa. Cavalry, after nearly tsar years of army servicel, Vtlebtia emea. oil chi Juaypital ptactioa, u • •••. for the practice of medicine and autliarls to all fu brarcbsa. Patton* from a Cliittbee can find good boarding at the Pennsylvania Hotel whoa &airs/ Will shut any part of the State In consultation, or to perform sursucal operations No 4, Unt.n Block, up stairs. Wei/snore, Pa, 'Slay 2,1588 VFW PHOTOGRA•Pti - GA.LLERY.— ~.'t - - / PRANK SPENCER koo'the plearome to inform the citizens of Tioga cointy that they have the best opportunity ever effered them, to procure Ambrotypen, Ferrotypes, Get* Cartes de Visits, Vignettes, and all kinds of rainy and popular card. and colored pictures; _ .. t.)Ais Gallery on Elmira Sheet. liandeld, Nov. 15, '65-tf. F. M. FTENCUR. A B. EASTMAN, SURGICAL AND ME.. .Ll.• CHANICAL 01tOr t i Itt. Weald. inform the' citizens of Wcilsboro and vi dairy, that he has fitted np a desirable suite of NO MA over John It. Bewen'ti store, No, 1, -Un ion Block, where be Is prepared to execute all work in his profession.- with a promptness and style that will enable him to offer superior induce zents to those requiring dental operations. All work warranted, and at reasonable rates. Please all and examine specimens. " Wellebore. March 21, 1886.—tf rd l-1 "-;14 ' 11 14.a.0. N; D - A R-T T, :WOULD say tp the pettlic 114 liede-pertna nently located in Welleboro, (Office at his 'ft : Jaffee, near the Land Office and 'Episcopal Crarch) where his will continue to do all kinds of r;ti confided to his care, gnara.nteeing copiplete iitiEfaction - where the skill' of the Dentist 'can utd Sh the management-of cases peculiar to the Re will furnish . ARTIFICIAL TEETH ; " set Danny material desired. FILLING ka,IRACTING TEETH, I.:tended to on shortest notice, and done in the beat anti most approved style. TEETH EXThACTEDAVITHOUT PAIN Ly its she use of Ansestketics which ftli'pei r : Itezly harmless; and will be ad minietesea r io every ctss *hen desired. 1i 70 .1.5b,,rh, Jan. 1, 1865-Iy. ATTENTION SOLDIERS.. WM B. SUITE, Knoxville, Tioga County,' U. licenffed Agent; and Attorney !•tt'elebers and their friends throngheat all the 1 .91.1 States, tciil uneocate and collect - with relied success., SOLDIERS' CLAIM AMPD,US,',S T a , l kinds. Aleo, any other kind of claimt~a.att the Government before any oL ;o:meat: or in Congress- Terms moderate, All y - mardeetions Bent to the aboveaddrese will re. IJrc,uapt attention. . Jan. 17. V.:66. UNIMED ' , STATES HOTEL. Main street, Will2buro, • D. G. RITTER,. ProntazTUß. , •r ' . . s th , Y:ng leased this popular Lintel. property,‘ occupied by Mr. ...Zelson Auetin) i 61.4/11 ' , Gr to 'nuke it truly the traveler's Lar.l attention will .bo given to the table, the corafvrt of guoeta will bo u prime object. ". 5 [tablet will be under the care of an experi. ‘Ltel butler. • Ztll.tb , ,ro, Jan. 1, 1866-Iy. tivrvizir.amd. Hair-Dressing _Saloon. T" tiitsctib.rn take pleat re to onnon nctng to the /krciil. of Welloboro Lod vlcidaffy that they lakve ".tpct F.lute hurber,tinst hair. %,eilel.nro, end. Lime Sated op zest Sod ' viTacox'e store_ where they, ou hand to wait oa their euetomiens; will there no - pits to plehee, they bops to latr: , zage , of the coirrmunity. 44 Ttler et tenttott pato WSW hodr-enttitbs, shau,- dy. Ladles' brutal, puffs, salebee, cobs tri, thi ou band, or =dello order, . DOLtZt. Jolitstiox 2.% 1866.47 VOL c. r q SWAN, • , A 4ENT, for, the Lypoming County, inauranoo 1:12 krp'mliany,Jet Tiottti,-Pu. June 1886.-3mt, FARR'S HOTEL- ' T I - 0 G A Tr° 43- A c o trx P A Good stabling, attauhad, 'and - an "ittatitiv'e hea -1 tier always in attendance. it. 8. FA1111,..:1 . . . Proprietor. - • :01111 L. )ILTCELLI.: MINOR •--W, AU 'MAI , . Proptletot:l xbia.ilouse ie situatid'Ori Xasn Street, in Wallsbore, and je surrounded with beautiful Shedd Tries, and bag all the : npreirgy aosomranSatbins for man and , beast--aug..2; ly, WELLSB ORO lICYTE‘4- - (Crs67:;!doi?: 4 3trpyan4i tht Avenue.) WELLBBORO, Troprjetor. THIS is ,911.4.0 f inoistakopular lioness Itij the county. This Hotel is the principal . ; Stage-house in Wellsboro. Stages leave daily as follows : J:-B. NTLE.B POT Tioga, at 1Q ; For Troy, at 8 a. m;; For Jersey Shore every Tuesday and Friday at. 2 p. m.; For Coudersport, every Monday- and Thnraday stT p. ru2 - ' STALess .Apseprre"-From Tioga, at 121-2 o'clock p. m.: From Troy, at p. o'clock p. m.: From Jer sey nitre, -Tneidaj and - Friday 11 a. m.: From Coudersport, Monday and Thursday Il a. m. N. B.—Jimmy Cowden, the wall-known hoot , ' ler, will be found ofi hand: Wellaboro, Jan. 1, 1866-Iy. . • NEW FIRM & NEW GOODS AT TIOGA ~ Woeld reepectftilly • announce tto " all whom 'it may conoprit,' that they,lreep ponetantly on hand a large and well selected aelortment of DRUMS AND ItIEDICINES, GLASS AND WALL PAPER. JI!E STIFFS, FAMILY DYES , LAMPS, (44,4 35 - Adr:KA.T.E.D.:WARE, =rack aeMASTORS, SP6ONS, CAKE titS . HES, &c. • WIIIITI,NG PAP/PA, ' ENV LOPES, SCHOOL- PATENT MEDICINES, Tea, Coffee, Spice, Pepper, Gin ;ter, Saleratut, Starch, TOILET AND WASHING SOAPS, YANKEE NOTIONS: Tioga, Pa., oaf. 4, 1.865-1y1.5. , . Seelei's Third Rubber Truss' cures rupture, frees the cord from, nil press ure: will never-ruse break, limber, chafe, or be come filthy, (the tine steel spring being coated with herd rubber); spring made any power re quired; used in bathing, fitted to farm ; renhVes no strapping; cleanest, lightest, easiest, and seat Truss known. Send for pamphlet. • I. B. SEELEY, sole Proprietor, apll 98 1347 ebestnat at., Phila'a, Pa., THE THIRD LQT New Spring Goods, JUST - RP:CEIVED AT UN NUE NUM ~,,-;‘,- 7'.? - Qa*,.4'+ . - FT-;:i • • UTE 'lJl3Bl`.. ..11-EO3l,lVEti 1•114 W TT Acd:.well minted. ctook of gotide:i , : which we are selling very LOW FOB CkS2f.V* 1 144b1,;;F:kt1 Good ja i rctlvide sheeting Heavy yard wide sheeting for Delninea, Srandarct print! 9tOit We *leo keep aonstantiron head fi-oboice stock of GROCERIES; T.LOTTR„"MiN., At very . kite A LL pansonstaving=knowlede opfacts coin ruing lA_ killed 1014 voinided taldierajriitio -Tnim etn4tY, aro reepecifdllii:eputehtl tov.farritali:ColAL.C.Vlark, of Man.fii4dl Pa., with the folltwlng stati.tica : . ':sine* of Soldiers. ptaco ot resideac,... , .„.„date of enlist ant and muster Jetltt_thailliiiled , 'State* eirrvice ' letter company, number of egiment, when wounded, and what engafament. date and place of death, andcangte , pa w*. i n . CLAII.I7. " „ s - -.I.I,.•MSEELY, , NT: D. MATTESON. THOS. J. DAV/ES, August, I, 1046. COMMtttoe'ciii Statistic*. T -1 1:7 - 0 ICE.—.Netiee ie hereby given, that Roh -1 IN ert Custurd,'Senior, has been placed in eberge of tract. Zio. 1590, and those parts oflrett No- 1589, in the yielblWof -tables eretai!; belong ing to the heirs of bike I , 7,lslOrris'r and all per eons ate forbid trespassing thereon, under pennity . of pruseration. ELLISTON---P.-MollRtg; 805 Markerst:TPßiltidelphia., I , Joky 4,11880.-04 n ' - GOLD yeeoived on deposite, for which oertie eves will be issue 4; bearing intertat in gold. E. W. CLARK & t 0, Bankers, • no A 5 south Tkipj. street sPbila: Vt.B. CHRVAUFSIII.4.IR'TO29I,Id!4/5p - DRB9B/IR,At • - W2.I3WSISIIVG ETO4% • • . . '... s.- .. .. . .. . . . . . . , . . . „ ... „._ _ _ . ......., .•, . • •3411:01BIo DEPARTZENT, , - ... , . .IThetPropriefors tiav a stocid tho eltabl/.41.1n4.1nt .--..iz.h...:,,....,., h ' .----s,: . . - ~ -7 - •....• „ . . ' • ." 1 : - - .' • " , . B TAND C.4.1.1D • YpE _ ,_.:,,,,,::,,:, . -; ..) , , v . ......v., ~..... .....„, , lc _ , N ;" Y y i -r - • 1 . • , 1 '•• ~ . . 11 A " \ .... - (....„ VI I f U ,AA 11... ft. -- N , ..,,f..atts jo ortment of umtlertf....tyleo AND EAST 71 . 4*E•ISES, and Are 'prepared to execnti, zeo.-tly and rem? .''''''.... POSTER", HAlsi DBILLS, (Ii LL LA R." C.. 4 RILI, BIL HEADS, LETTER HEADS, :OTATE.3I7.NTS, , •- -,, I: I .:..! ~ ; .E.,-, - ., L TOWNSHIP OP.DEllii, S:c., .ic. ----, ' * ' "'"";......' ...- I.' t'', -.•:. . '•il. .: i—: • 'r . - f ‘c-.• 1 .. . • Desch!, Mortgage q, Leit , wl. and .1. cult lc:or/mow. of .*‘.. ..! . , . . „ . . . Constables' ttnct Justices' Elltilt...,c , nitrintty ..n .11.1 r 1. .., • . . . Peopleliling at a ditt ir/ A4 candl , en.lrmh,rnp... , , ...n.r.r ..,., . .. ~. . . ... , .... - . ' NO. 36. work dons promptly-, and illlt ba.cic in v3turn „ILIA. * - VIII. ''- ' . ' 1, ,- - :•-, A= -• t - '''`, ' .WELLSBORO.' PA SEPTEMBER 5-1866. _ .. .. ADPOirroc—RoVs block, Secon.lT.lccr. , .. . .I. - ', ~.... . introit novsE. [Formerly Hares Hotel.] BORDEN BRO'S PAINTS, OILS, TEA. fr,"TABIE, FORKS, and an.eadiese variety of : ; MEM 25 ,` May 30,180, TO SOI~nTFRS. LINES or , TRAVEL. Elan - ELAILWAT • ' and nouda:y, Juli-,19,18843, Mini will 'ciao 'Corning at the followinv bocat: trr,giraan ammo. 1 7:05 aa? Night Expreee, Dlonda3 - )0 excepted, for Nochl ester; Stiffen, Salamanca; and Fn ,kirks Malang di rent tionneetion-viith trains of the 'Atlantic & Great Western, Lake Shore, and Grand Trank Railways, for . 111 1 Pomp -Wear, t:.28 a. o,,joightuip4,l2xpre,o2, Dally, for Sechtetv Bnf &to, Sareatica,Dinokirk and the West.. , 10 . 123 Mail Trait, Sundays excepted ; for Itarttio . tens fir.• ' • _ _ lith p, rs , .Rinhmmut Oohs, Daily, for the Wert. - tivie,p! Day toprose, Sundays excepted, for Roche.. tar, Buffalo, Saltimansti. end the West, connecting -ot Salamanca with the Atlantic 9, W. Railway, and at , Bmtialo with -the„ pator.Shcre tied Trunk ' for pointitzekt end eolith. pall a. at., Express 91x31, Sundaya ascaPtad, for Bun: 10, Salamanca. end Dunkirk, commtothig with trains for the West.- --' • '" $44 Cincinnati.B.xpreas,--Mondayaexcepted, eon , ! ;tenting at Ilitira-lor ffitirfahurg,Thiladelphia, aad SouthiAtTheregu for Ithencal atT Cpshamtop for Sy retiree; at, Bend for Scranton and Philadelphia-, At Laciaterixtui::'fo.t ilittuity; and , at GraYobilrt for illetrburgaz4Wargricl;-: ,„ - Li. `1244. - di,l:Partxprate,Bundayatitapted;o:annecting liStlfitiV42 - WOO for,soll•4l67l,MabaelzhitAttSonth' 4:15 p. m., New Yorlr and Baltimore Mail, Bundaye'es, toted, ColinnotingatlAntirn for Efarrialrargir, Phila— delQbiatind Strath.' "t:10 pp.. Yn., Lightning Lipreia; atuadaya axeepted. 1212 A. ria; Night. Exprece, Daily; connecting at court for Ware:lot,. 12:25 v. at. way i+ fight, Sundaya excepted: ' _BABB:, I - ~ -.H. Bllttn.i., Pass.-Aguut. Garet Sart. • •Blosiburg &.Corning,-& , COrning. Esti 800 a in ail, u. Aciaommodapotb 530 p miaccoramodation4o as aza L. H. SHATITCA - Supl. ;' - it: Traine.mill arr.and depart at WilliainiPort at fellow , - , Eastiyard ,Westward .' , Erie Mail Train... 9 65 p m Erie Mail Train... 7 20 azu R. Express Tiain.:4 20 a m Erie EVee Train..o 00 pln Elmira Hail :Train 845 ata E 1,.. t lmit Taas, o 1 s MailTr e a n tn 8,,5 u 0 p p in Supt , i. ~ . ', , INEI Elmira & Williamsport R. R. Trains will Arrive and Depart from Troy as follows - Mowing South. • • -Moving-North. t Ex , 6:45 P zalExpreas, 10;23 P M 3181tf 4:21 - Xtili 0:30 P M gay - 8:118 n Way Freleir, ' P Coal Train, irlB.A. id Coal Train, 4:26 • - •'l.roy; May 16, " STOVER; &Wt. :IY4HOLEPktf - : DPOVSTfift.t.; ,S.` CORNING; Y. ORM pa, 11=H, • ..;1 TIRDGS AND MEDICINES , PAINTS 1! AND OILS, TRADDEIjA 04.*Ite WKS, „ tONPEN TRIATgD CINNATI WINES- AND- ; KEROSENE LAMPS, PATENT.:KEDI- OrNESzPNTROLEMILOIL,. ;At. ROCHESTER PER- • sAi AND F 'O TO EXTRACTS,'"WALL ' , ANDOrarx.A.44BS7 - 4 ND D A VE Sold atlllLiblile4td . Ande‘tihrietra'atitliequeeted to call audf.tet quotatididi befartr gobig further Bait: 4`4 ; 7 : ,fr W ABELL & CO. ‘q: - 61 • r S4Y4 YOUR ' • ...'.&.Nrr GALL- coti—zist AT ' 2." i ..11Tast - ac , Anerbach s. .ostrAp'clau pirpAt,- Vittere.you:cairAhrays die! bt"Ltititiiteci DOMES? 6 & 'FANCI ))13,17 GOODS CLOTHS, • NOTIONS,: RE~DY --i;,- OLOTHiNG;- • .•J litantiractutea tii'dißetteir ifs ,- vn‘ Aiso furtiMing goods , tE•c' ~d their ixieichwit tafinring establishment th.ep tiefy competition; Leving the beet t allots - of ,Neie , 'dd ten -extertenee.4 cutteP, Mr. R:P. -- Zioin:lfeti2loc3- •. - - - , a - -, .--/20ote !. 25'" NEW-SPIIINW , gO,I I OiI'S I,'l AT REDUCED PRICES. areEkt Inducements to the Pnbiial O,T, having big stock of OLD GOODE tai N bbof off- at auction; I am , enabled tot take advantage_ of the presentliir prices, and am'rea dy to supply_ the public with a splendid stock ..1 NE W. SPRING DRY -GOODS LATE* Styles;o_9febE9ed_tp agFtztnmudatathis mat, - k e t. - •. • el Laii,rit) ► Partianitirlettpiatiodi.i'fireetaq i niiipi 4iratas'efiiii;ll!,'Ot GOWS,. l AlpaCeaa, Poplins, Prints, Detainee, Added tn vrbieh I: am offering' it Ittrie . and apiendid ateck ' GROCVRIES,B'i*ind and' CAPS. , at Oices to suit the 1,000,000,„ at Osgood's old etaach.Wellsboro, Pa: C. B: KELLEY. ' . Ap 114,186:' • CE CREAM!, ICE 'CREAM !!—Every ov.or 1. nieg, - (SobSapk.excepted), et S. S r Epencex'c,: Drat door Iceloe. hop's block, :Wellabo_ro..EA, Ales' wisbing. fee cream, can .be 'any time AitY'itee'!'enit%-i'l'ciasi 75, AeAte.,per quart creams 15 ceoll. Talk vake atd l edogliike2s*ti., July 18,1886. LAJ37WAJID BOtUD IIIII! =I f BRANDY, WHIT WASH LIIIR, lINIMINIMIII Origin" al netre LITTLE HANDS littic: banal, dial Died to come And eoothe mo with eares2ing, Afititteriug o'er my burning brow-- 0 dainty bands ! where circle now;' With calm, and balm,-and blessing— With :weet charm .. of ,caressing,?, lily- iloogo.tbat pulled ..the ilovers, That coaxed them into,blcoming—, - That ea,lo LW . cibior"froui tic& And brought-its sweets fur - yoti and mei': ; When ,June wait, st noon/Lig,. And rare; roses, blooming. Q preeioue:bandal,.o:wee white hetida,t -;- The clocr now is bluoi . zing; The d„ - urway"vine'ie t:tw , The orange drops its seenced snow ; "-- • 1:11e summer's ' And smiled) in its going. _ • - • . pearly beitdstt 0 •anspal and s•!: Xwch with divine caressing,, , Ala seo inh'te:„Piat heavenly shore •Wliere , elniied•Atints areeiert no'Mokb, l ' - BLitt e.serlibtteit I.llcesiril—;. l - In calm, and balm, arid blessing. E.-S. S. • - _ lit lit. ri tell • EtTE;C q - E9ftir,=T l E -...1341TT,LE or KM AU E3i ATCIIIE Louis, Aug. 10, 1b66 To'ttd' Editors of Pittsbii,•g Gazette: _ '•Gentlemen-v 4 4 any a AVestern man, and have-pover li.ved.ift your-noble-old E - -Sateolor.arn:l a politician—having vo ted but once during the twenty odd wears since the light first accrued; but. l Wish to give honor where honor justly belongs, and-to - refute , route -of the un el-writable aspersions against ttuthipol ished gentleman anti tried titaldivr, Gen. John W. Geary. I wish to - prove in 'the just equity of things, that not 6nlY big native state, but that; the, whole:United -States (Ave him g debt of gratitude _that fionl.d,for ever endear and,ini tam talize.his name; and place it 'among the um - A -Must rious of their-Eork- - " -Tile:country can, well remember the •loom and anxiety that pervaded• the orth after the disastrouaday of Chick= anatiga. ,Kentucky = and Tennessee Swailned With - Predatory bands 'of reb els. Bragg, flushed with' victory, had •hurleti - back our •silattered columns on ghattanooga, stud :Boecc ra US, on the first paralysis of 'defeat-, .(ur perhaps of fear,) had ig at a rid o n - ed Lookout 'Moun tain, the - key - to - the - south' banks - Of the river, as far as Bridgeport, where the railroad crosses the Tennessee river, and from whence all our supplies had to be draivn. This moral error and mili tary blunder •netessitated the drawing of all our supplies from. Bridgeport to • Chattanooga-by a circuitous mountain route, (up the Sagnatchie valley, near Maclamonis cove, thence over the rug g-cid nitiontaios to the north bank, of the ricer by a pontoon bridge to 'this city.) some sixty-Miles in length. The coun try around, :even In times of plenty, scat cals produced enough to teed its 'scattering 'papal/at:3:i, hut now Ulu:a ided,' broken, crushed and devoured by the oscillating tread of hostile armies, it was thoroughly denuded of all kinds of subsistence, and eSen the wretched inhabitants held daily struggle with famine, 'and looked with despair to the rigors of approaching winter. • • From Bridgeport to Chattanooga by the South Bank was less than thirty miles, and by the North Bank, 437 which the Confederates forced us to haul, we Were compelled to make an elbow of more than sixty miles, and that over the most e.xecratte . , roads imaginable— either through the slush of swamps, rendered doubly dangerous by the rains of autumn,' or over StonyheightS, so steep that a cat cdcild scarcely craiv with rocky ledges' cropping out, often three to four feet perpendicularly, at each one of whieh•the wagons had to 4e inilOaded and hauled up by hand. -•- The OhlO'riVer waS really ,our base of 'supplies'; and'a: wretched single track railroad from thence through Nashville to Bridgeport, Alabama, a distance of „nearly four hundred rniles,,requiring full army corps 'for its defence, was our Sole dependence. • - ' _ Our di-pirited army, thus cooped up, and half, beleaguered in 'Chattanooga, was wholly ,unaiile, either to meet_ the enemy in the open field or. to wrench from him the southern bank of the riv er, and :thins orfety a gate: for -food and 4nunitions.• „'r• Rein foreemen ts had.:_been: ordered frOM Mi:.,sissippi and from the army of the Potomac, and to hold their position and with it the grea t of -Tenties see-and - Kentricky,' - 'with 'all the'UntOld resnlts , -thereanto belonging,: until-the j pronataed aid .could arrive, was the gieat problem of both Gen- Rosecrans and Glen.. Thomas, the latter of whom about this'iiMe had assunied the Chief - cow.- mend.- The depot supplies of Chatta nooga were rapidly meltingaway ;. eve ry energy, • every resource, and every ap pliance in the,rettai of the (3T.:ernnaent was set - fir motion to feed our starving forces' and enable Its to hold on-until the expected succor-came to hand. • ` • - j Our army was too weak. to light, and• our means of transportation too limited to feed it or to keep it hi munitions for its proper status for the field; and to re treat under the eireirmstanees ; would probably produce the .most unheard. of. disasters,. perhaps millihilation.- and in its train woes unnumbered and unheard of; for to retreat-would not on- . ly bS-to. saerillee the' thirty its` etquipruents.,• but all our "-vast' chain of depot4aiid detacionentstnronghout.the states named, with the . .touritiess nnlh iohs they : cost," but`also - the scope of ter:. ritorY they covered; and with the grand inoratetiects of: Victory, • .w.hietrs:at that juncture would inevitably have turned the scale4igainst us ; for just at that ino.„ uientous,be ribd Of oar struggle the scares:, or s Cern ed 1. 4 0 - vibrate. with Such au . even beam that the breath of an infant Might htiVe changetrtliTtillance. The national destinies hung on. single thread, and dangled suspended- on,:the tieeident.4 of chanee f or the moral tour age and valor of m`sinele - heart and arm In this case necessity. ,W . inexorable:- Thearmy must be fed. Thelildee must sustained at every sacrifice;:possible. Lavery ration, every round of - Anamipk. and'eVery pound Of forage required /uu't'be broUght frain the distant - line of- the Ohio, and it bec 4 meapainful et:dation between resistance and -enda rance--between, the -lives ,of rue,n , and; the con.suniptniii,a Mures ; Mr. as,.con stalit ifs e des& roYO.d the ward,, it required tweiVe iirsoirteen. - thilletti to haul - a' sin gle ton .of freight over the. Intblerable roads, ta say nothing—et- provisions, which could not be carried, and for want of which the poor anituaL, died by thou sands' and tens of thousands--beyond anything recorded in history, save per haps the retreat of the Frenchfrom Mos cow. In spite of this frightful sacrifice, the subsistence in the depot at Chatta nooga became daily lower, although the army was reduced to half, and a large proportion of it even to quarter rations. §till the-mules died. Still our means of transportation melted away. Our fam ishing army became hourly more gaunt lattd hollow-eyed; while the pale, over floWing throngs in our hospitals found vent in our. crowded graveyards. [For the AzltAtor.] At this critical:juncture Gen. Hook "er,'with General - Grant, who had about this time been appointed to the supreme command of-our armies, arrived at Nastiville s with - the nth and 12th corps from the armysof the Potomac, and pro ceeded at once to Bridgeport, to concert with the veteran, Thomas, as to the most `fettsilble, mode of relieving his sorely ,pressed. and , ,fardishing forces. After -brig c,onsultaticm, the, llth corps and `the. 2d division (Geary?s) of the 12th last'atGeafy's earnest re quest—were ordered to Bridgeport, and after a hurried preparation, crossed the Tennessee on pontoons at that point. To make their movements perfectly intelligible, it will be' necessary to min gle with the account a cursory view of the scene of their , operationa on the south bank of the Tennessee, where the enemy bad destroyed the railroads and bridges. - - - The road from Bridgeport to Chatta nooga, after crossing the river, occasion ally hugs its banks and passes by Shell Monad:and through a-series of low roll ing hills, and then eaters the .deep val ley formed by Lookout MOuntain on the right, and by Raccoon Mountain on the left. The latter rising bold and rugged from the river, is in one or two places pierced with gloomy gorges, and raises its wooden heights almost to the level of its more renowned neighbor, the Lookout, which, starting almost in the suburbs of Chattanooga, towers abrupt ly, into the very clouds, and stretches ,1 away, diagonally from the river many nille4 to the souths'est. The river oere is exceedingly hirtuous. Passing the city, it stretches to the south, then don b- - lingback to the north, and then again to the south, and then to the north once more:•:-it tbrins the long tongues or pe ninsulas below the tow n—the first on the northern side, locking into one ano ther like the cogs of a wheel. Opposite the town stretched a pontoon bridge.— The plan of the assembled Generals was to let a large force under Hooker ad vauce up the valley, while a commen surate force from the town, under Gen. Hazen, dropped down the river in the pontoon boats to Brown's ferry, at the lower bend of the first peninsula, where they hoped to surprise the enemy and effect a permanent lodgment, and at the same time form a junction with the for ces under Hooker, which were to leave Bridgeport the morning before, and pen etrating Lookout Valley,' drive in the scattering outposts of the Confederate,', uncover the gorge through Raccoon ' Mountain to the river at Kelley's Laud ing, to which boats could then ascend from Bridgeport with supplies, and there fortify theifp3aitions. This land ing on the south side, at the base of the lower peninsula, to which I have allu ded, to cut a road across this base to Where Hazen was expected to make a foothold and then cross on pontoons to the northern side, and thence across the upper tongue tothe bridge at Chattanoo ga, would give only six miles of land to travel against sixty miles over the worn out route on the northern bank—:is boats could transfer everything from the railroad terminus at Bridgeport to Kel ley's Landing which, as I said, is only six miles from Chattanooga, and just opposite and only two and a half miles front Where the Trenton branch joins the Nashville and Chattariciogarailroad, in. Lookout _Valley, about five miles from the point that frowns over the city. This plan seemed the most feasible one for getting immediate supplies to our army in Chattanooga. Time - was pre cious, and Hope - gambled - with Chance, while Fate seemed-to verge on Ruin. On the 28d of October, 1868, all being ready, Gen. Hooker crossed the river-at Bridgeport with the Ilth corps - under Gen. Howard, and boldly pushed - for ward into the gloomy recesses of L'ook out Valley. This _corps, composed. al most entirely of Germans, was still suf fering. under . the oe.moralizations. of ' Chaticellorsvilles'and only 'numbered about nine thousand Men; hut about four, miles ,in the rear followed about two thousand two hundred of the:2d division ,of the 12th, corps, a splendid body of-veterans, with - brdnied faces and iron-nerves, under- the immediate command. of .the indomitable Geary himself, proudly. hearing_ the " white star," destined to be the "star of the I east," and - of hope to thehaticin and to the beleaguered army ahead. " - So exhalisted-had become the Means of, transportation at this time, that the Quartermaster ,at Bridgeport could only furnish Geary'a Whole . counnand some. four mule - teams, which, with a scout improvised train, picked up on the route from Nashville, was all •the -command ' had.for . their iationa and munitions-on this expedition. The poaitions_ of the enemy Nvere unknown to them. They were supposed to be large force at Trenton, and might come in on their rear, after they bad passed the junction, or descend, their flanks . from the heights of Lookout, for we did not then know' that' this was _itiaphsgble, and hence moved - with cautious step. Hook er acid; the 11th corps, unencumbered ,and , well"in the_ advance, and Geary itli his ren zed veterans guarding the trains; repairing the way and coming on as fast as they could; never in the history of this,-nor- indeed of any war, did there hang more mornentensse_veuts: on - the success, of an enterprise. The failure "of one of its parts 'would - involve the-failure of the Whole ,"and the failure of the whole the loss of Tholtias's army, and the loss of the latter the loss of Ten nessee and Keil-Mei:v s -and-with them the probable loss of our eause, with .re sults before which the heart and imagi nation-stand appalled: :But Hazen was : Successful, and not only surprised the :enemy, but-after routing - i him • spanned 'this - river; svithshiaspontoons, and pro ceeded:to:fortify his position, and estab- Colaftislifsicatione with Gen. HoOker and which ar rived in due time,- the Et 's outposts retiring before - them: --- The, - road from Cba,ttanooga.to Bridge port crosses the road thatleadsfrom the toWn - te 'the' tiumiliit: Of. .LO - okout, and tiSen winding . round 'the point of the mountain close'linderitsA frowning hat tleraent4,...lQ4dh oti wn,into.thP valley, and erosing th,e,,f4rocTs Yi'mamtchle creek' ' by a bridge, fbllawa tlae, raill'ors4 track-on towards Bridgeport Just be low this bridge a fork from the road led off to the left, up the valley to Brown's Ferry, where Hazen had made his lodg ment. Hooker, coming up the valley, followed this road, and leaving the fork unguarded, encamped about a mile from it, above and towards the river. Some three miles below the bridge, as you come down, another road sprang off at right angles and led down through the gorge at Raccoon Mountain to Kelley's Landing, and aboutthreehundred yards farther down the railroad forked, the left branch following the bend of Look out off to Trenton, and the right thro' the appendages of Raccoon Mountain off to Bridgeport, some twenty odd miles distant. As I said, Hooker's command, being unencumbered, formed a junction be fore dark, and quietly went into camp. His instructions to Geary were to come on as fast as possible, and if be did not overtake the 11th corps, to encamp at the fork ,that led off to Kelley's Land ing, unless night sooner overtook him, in which case he teas to bivouac for the night and conic on next morning. It so chanced that he reached the Forks just at dark, (liut without knowing it,) and made a hasty bivouac around some farm. houses in the margin of an old held on the north of the road, whilehia wagons were parked in a wood on his left, and his artillery, consisting of two sections of Knapp's Pennsylvania bat tery, was on a knoll in the center of his camp. Geary, ever vigilant, knew he was in the face of an enterprising yet he hardly suspected that General Hooker had uncovered and - left unguar ded the road leading down to him; from the summit of lookout, but rather ex pected danger from the rear ou the Tren ton side, and made his dispositions ae cord i ugly. . Sentries were posted and the men had their suppers, but weary as they were, they seemed impressed with some great impending danger; yet how little did they realize its magnitude, or dream of the mighty results that hung suspended in the gloom of that: autumn night!— It was a fitting time for the phantom of ruin to battle with the exaltation of pa triotic resolution. The men were or dered to sleep on their arms, and it was welt they did, fur while Geary's hardy veterans were wending their way up the valley, and while the sun yet cast long shadows before them, a group of Confederate officers stood on one of the boldest projecting crags, hanging over 'the valley nearly 3,000 feet below, watch ing their progress until the sun's last rays lett the castellated rocks around them, and the depths of the valley deep ened into night. Their position com manded bird's-eye view of the whole length, and they saw at a glance the ' fearful error of the 11th corps in passing -beyond and leaving unguarded the junction of the road leading to Brown's Ferry and around the point to the sum mit of Lookout. They saw Hooker en camped among the wooded knolls away above, and Geary and his handful of men far below ; and counting on the paucity of their numbers they reckoned it feasible to here enter a wedge, that would split the hopes of relieving our army in twain ; for what was easier than to dispatch three strung Confede rate divisions of infantry to sweep down from the summits where they lay, and while one guarded the bridge over the Wauhatchie creek, and another' the forks of the road, let the third press over, and by a night attack in over whelming numbers crush Geary's little isolated detachment of veterans, while the division at the Forks kept all rein forcements from Hooker from reaching him; then quickly retracing their steps, form a junction with both the divisions at the Forks and the bridge, and push ingup the valley, fall on the skeleton -11th corps, and by their numbers and the bayonet, annihilate or drive it with Hazen's command over the pontoons at Brown's Ferry, and thus precipitate the retreat or surrender of Thomas. That 'knot of officers thought the plan both simple and easy—and we afterwards learned the knot was composed of Gen erals Polk, Longstreet, Breckenridge, Hood, Cheatham and Claiborne, and I numbers of their respective stark. They could see that our united forces would hardly reach 13,000 men. Three well-tried Confederate divisions were promptly set in motion. It was ' an hour pregnant with danger to the Union. Our cause, with all its hopes and- aspirations - for all time to come, hung upon the vigilance and nerve of a single man, and that man was Geary.— The enemy knew the locality well, and Marched with stealthy tread. Long street,- from amid the clouds and chill ing night- winds high over head, anx iously listened for the tirst fusilade of battle to reach him from the abysernal darkness below. It was about nine o'clock when the hush-of our-camp was- startled by the report of muskets from our line of sen tinels, quickly followed by others, and the call of the long roll, and the hoarse cry of " tall in" broke the stillness of night; but our men, tempered by disci pline and experience, were soon in line ready for the foe. It proved to be a false alarm, and investigation -revealed the body of a - donk6y, that browsing too near the sentinels and disregarding their challenge, had paid for hiStemerity with his, life, but in the words of the old hymn we can truly say, " Great God, on what a slender tht4ad Eternal matters hang." Fur, but for this incident, the fate of the battle might have been. very differ ent, for it influenced Geary to take ad ditional mbilsures against surprise, by strengthening and extending his line of sentinels ; and tearing down some log houses tilid.feuees onhis front, and with the.materiarsr construaing a rude barri cade at the foot of the., knoll = touching .on; the railroad, an. -elalkaniuneut here some six or seven feet higli,and stretch away'at 'right angles to it on the north. Thus our right was protected. by the railroad, our rear by aguish and swamp, and our left rested- on our little train ; our four Parrots being on the knoll in the center of our - camp. The men were ordered to sleep on their arms in ready line of battle. when the Gen eral retired to a tent that had been erec ted for headquarter uses, just in the rear of the barricade on our left. It was now near eleven o'clock, and all was once more still, when we heard a senti nel some distance in our rear shout out " who 'eomes there?" followed by the report of a musket, which was quickly succeeded by a startling and most un earthly yell—the,Coufederate battle cry —which must be heard under like eir eumstanci.s to fully realize its appalling discord: Without artillery or cavalry, or throwing out skitraishers,. they had .t 3 t*llf.WW_**.llurtitttkey Rat our senti. nets, and then rushed forward with their demoniac yell in dense quadruple line of battle. Getting into the open field in our front, and seeing some o f our camp fires yet burning on the rising ground behind our breastworks, they paused and poured in a volley, and then charged tumultuously forward, fuily ex pecting to finish us at once by their numbers and cold steel, and probably would have done so but for an obstacle as little expected as the sunken road way at Waterloo by the French cuirass iers. To oar left, and about midway on the northern side of the field, commenc ed a gully, which traversed it, parallel to our front, and about sixty yards dis tant, and passed under the railroad by a stone culvert. The rains operating on the friable soil, had worn it from seven to eight feet deep, and there was noth ing to mark its existence. On they came. The hail of lead over and around us was truly frightful ; but, deceived by theglimmering lights on the rising ground behind our lines, their aim was generally too high. But the white walls of the General's tent were a conspicuous mark, and quickly riddled into shreds, it became the focus of death, and to remain near it was suicide. With the first challenge of the senti nel, Geary, already booted andspurred, threw himself into the saddle—for his horse was ready hitched and at hand for the emergency—and with the only three of his staff present, rode up and down his lines, encouraging his men with stentorian voice, heard even above qie din of battle, and ordering stteh fresh dispositions as his cool and fertile brain and the emergency of the moment re quired. While his battle line replied to the enemy, his reserves, laying down their arms, tore down all the huts and fences within their reach, and pressed every rail, log, rock and chunk they could lay hand on, into strengthening and extending their breastworks. Bits stalwart. form towered above the lines, a conspicuous mark for the rebel rifles, and both men and officers besoughtbim to dismount and not wantonly expose himself to such inevitable peril ; but his heroic reply was, " Defeat is death to us all, and death is preferable to defeat. The fate of our country hangs upon our success to-night. Never mind me, for can work best in the saddle. God is my shield ; by His Grace we will make a't'hermopylie, or win the tight." He continued to move amid the smoke and uproar as imperturbable ns an iron statue, although the enemyls charge promised to be irresistible, and annihilation seemed inevitable, while despair alone gave us courage to die with honor. On came the enemy, mad with excite ment and the flush of anticipated vic tory, little dreaming of the treacherous gully, into which they plunged and dis appeared as if swallowed by au earth quake. Whole ranks plunged into the yawning wash, and those behind press ed forward to a like disaster. It was too wide to leap, and once in, too steep to crawl out, And amid the roar of con duct came curses, groans and shouts from its muddy depths. Geary, prompt to take advantage of this obstacle and diversion in his favor, immediately or dered his men to lay low and sight along the surface of the ground, and thus keep the rebels imprisoned in the trap into which they had so - unexpectedly fallen, and at the same time ordered his artillery to shell the dense woods be yond the fields in front, in which the enemy seemed massed in great num bers; and as the shells were screaming and crashing through the tangled wood, they became a fit bass to-the rebel yells and the patriot shouts, and the incessant rolling musketry that reverberated a gainst the rocky heights on either side with prolonged and - deafening roar, and rumbled far away in many an echo.— The conflict was fierce anddetermined; hilt the fatal gulch and the sheeted flame of fire that leaped along our line, carrying a storm of death over the brink, and the hoarse execution of our heavy guns among their crowded ranks be yond, was too much for even Confede rate enthusiasm and desperation, and backward they reeled, sullen and disor dered, into the obscurity of the woods beyond, leaving the field strewn with their dead and woundedond hundreds of' their comrades imprisoned in the gul ly in front, who dared not raise their heads for fear of the leaden hail that swept just above its brink. Their charge was fiercely made and bravely repelled ; but the confidence of assurance and their overwhelming num bers, added to the importance of suc cess, made, - them quickly- rally .their shattered columns and make ready for a second assault. Our dead and wound ed were speedily removed to the rear. where a farm house was improvised for a hospital. Our breastworks were now strengthened. Troops were shifted and every measure taken that could add to our hopes of defence. The interlude of battle hummed on the night air, but did not last long, for pressing up dense mas ses of troops to the very edge of the gulch, they poured in an incessant and deadly tire on our barricades, while strong columns deployed right and left to turn our wings, and if possible at tack us in thank. That on our right partly rushed along the railroad em bankment and partly to the right of it, while that on the left crept along the margin of the wood, turning the head of the fatal gully and feeling their way along the margin of the swamp, struck us heavily on the left wing autl stub bornly forced it back inch by inch—it turning as if ou a hinge about one-third of the way down the line, thus forcing, us back and back until we Overeat right angles to our original position, and our condition of battle being on three sides of a square at once. Tina forcing back of our leftwingtothe weak-. -ness ouralefenceee diatadireetion, emit awung.us around through Our trains parketbond hat side, and left. them' en airely uncovered,. and outside of our litre; and, strange,-to say, it .created diversion in ou?favor. As soon as our troops swung fairly clear of tile wagons, the.-rebelia ceased firing and'comnienced plunderingathus giving our sorely pressed • veterans a. chance to rally at the foot of the knoll on that side. But 8111.1 • the tight was fierce iudeed, and along the frontitava.s 1. one incessant :sheet of tingly lightning; sleaping up and down tae lines and '_flash: u g on the miduight darkness with vivid and constant play. Again the artillery came iu need. It swept the railroad embankment on MIT right, and one gnu, ient)l-al over rha grade by hand, enfiladed' their advancing racks axed mowed them down:by!aceres. until baf ded anti bleeding they.oar,e-paore. back on their reserves-in'lyi, - dbsetirity of the waiod ; wlien Ci6tf•g#lbg our trains - Captured and onr Idft-OraiserY press ed, ordered our guns to lire cauibter add.