when any State should adopt the amend ments of the Constitution as to civil rights, basis of representation, ineligibility to of fice, and the public debt, and should modify their State laws to suit these new condi tions, their members, after taking the odi ous t< st oath, might be admitted. This bill, however, was killed, 101 to 35. Thus, no condition? for the admission ofStates ir. the form of a bill, not even the atrocious ones proposed, were adopted. (3.981,) So that after eight months of patient incuba tion the only egg laid, over which there ha-| >eon s >]much cackling, is this Tennes see fiasca The whole question remains as open as it was in December, 1865, when Mr. Speaker saw all the stars, only a little paler by rebellion, growing brighter, and the chaplains thanked God for the ac ceptable year of a thoroughly reuovated Republic! CONCLUSION. Thus, in conclusion, 1 turned to the overmastering problem for the people to solve. Shall Congress lead these eleven States through the indefinite future captives to make an abolition holiday; or shall an other Congress, aiding the President, en large them in, the liberty independent and self reliant stateshood? The historian of Rome draws something from his imagination when he pictures the proud Queen of Palmyra, Zenobia, array ed in purple, yet loaded with golden chains to aggrandize the" ; procession in honor of the conqueror of Asia, It needs no imagina tion to picture the fate of eleven States, not of foreign origin, but of one blood, lan guage, history and religion, followiug with downcast eye the triumphant chariot of congressional power! States whose area is over 725,000 square miles; larger than England, France, Spain, Portugal and all Germany ; having a population of 10,000, 000; whose annual product from a little pod i greater than the wealth in which the Roman bore in his stately galleys to Rome from the golden and jewelled Orient! [Cheers.] Virginia, too proud, perhaps, but with such a grandeur of great na.nes on herrols; the Carolinas, weary of their waywardness, but still the home of the Pinckneys, who gave the Constitution to America, and of those who at Mecklen burg anticipated the Declaration which at Kings Mountain consummated our Inde pendence; Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, whose feet are kissed by the waters of a thousand rivers, which, rolling through the valley of the Mississippi, gath er their volumes of wealth from Minnesota to Louisiana; these are the subject States led in fetters at the car of this Impeiial Congress. (Cheers.) Such exhibitions dis honored the greatness of even Pagan Rome; they would not be tolerated by ambitions France, which takes Venetia as a gift from the Kaiser only to set in a jewel in the crown of a united Italy. (Cheers.) It might find its counterpart in the great land ani mal of the North—Russia—in whose em brace prostrate Poland groans. Forget ting her own grasp ot Ireland, England as sumes to be horrified at the spectacle. Ev en in Turkey, the policy of strangling bro thers by the sultan no longer makes the traveler shudder as he crosses the Bospho rus. But for this Christian land of Amer ica, the people do not ask such a mockery of triumph and such a degradation of pow er. (Cheers.) They will write the epitaph of the Congress which proposes it in letters of fire; "Here lies the fragment of the thirty-ninth American Congress, which, starting with a furtive conspiracy against the 1 President, with opportunitiesjnever before vouchsafed for blessing,it postponed the Union; and putting the nation in peril of another civil war, it died under the just indignation of an aroused people, and is damned to an immortality of infamy [Cheers.] Col. Davis and Gen, Geary. Col. Davis, the Democratic nominee for Auditor General last fall, and a member of the late Soldieis' Convention at Harrisburg thus expressed himself, through the Doyles town Democrat , in reference to the Disun ion candidate for Governor. He says : We have never yet written a line in crit icism or derogation of the military career of General Geary, the Disunion candidate for Governor of this State. We have known hiui for years, and our personal re lations have ever been of the most pleasant kind. We served together in the Mexi can war, and were both officers in the late war, which were additional reasons why we never assailed his military record. We have opposed his election solely on the ground of want of capacity as a statesman, and because ot the radical disunion platform on which he stands. It appears, however, that he has i.o regard for the military rep utation of gentlemen who differ from him in politics, whom he assails, regardless of truth or common decency. At a speech which he made at York,on the 9thinstant, in speaking of the late Soldier's Convention at Harrisburg, he made use of the follow ing paragraph : "When I look around this assemblage, and feel that arouud me are fellow soldiers who have home arms with me from the first battle on Bull Run, not one or two of them from a regiment as was the case a few days ago at Harris urg —shysters and cow ards, skulkers and hospital bummers. 1 know such is the fact, for I have driven them trom the army myself." \\ hen Gen. Geary mads use of the above expression he knew that he was telling a LIE, but this knowledge did not restrain hiru from committing an act that disgraces hiui in the eyes of ail honorable men,— Such a known and wilful falsehood will lender him INFAMOUS. The cloak of charity, that has covered Lim in the past, will no longer shieli him from the merited castigatioii Lis short-comings in military and civil life invito. For ourself, and the thirteen other delegates who attended the Convention from this county,we pronounce the charge ot General Geary to be false in every particular, and that in making it he has proved himself an unmitigated liar. About a year ago the Disunionists de clared that "Provideuce gave us Andrew Johusop as President, for a wise purpose*" Now they declare that the "plague came from John Wilke9 B'Kith." Cljt democrat. HARVEY SICKI.ER, Editor. TUNKHA4NNOCK., PA Wednesdy.Sept, sth 1866. FOR GOVERNOR, I 111 HUTU CIYMEB, OF .BERKS. FOR CONGREB3, HON. Wm. ELWELL, of Columbia. (Subject to deciaiou of Conference Convention ) FOB FHERIF F, M. W. DEWITT, of Tunk. Boro. FOR PROTHONOTABT, E. J. KEENEY, of Braintrim, FOR ASSOCIATE JUDGE, GORDON PIKE, of Northmoreland. FOR REGISTER AND RECORDER, O. L. PARRISH, of Monroe. FOR TREASURER, JEREMIAH OSTERHOUT. of Tunk. Twp, FOR COMMISSIONER, G. W. SHERWOOD, of Falls. FOR CORONER, A. H. BOLES, of Methoppen. FOR ACDITOR, JAMES R. ROBINSON, of Fork*ton. fsHt Look at the list of fighting generals who have sigoed the call for a soldiers' convention to sustain Johnson in bis ef forts to restore the union, and remember the radicals call all such "copperheads." The Democrats and Conservative Repub lica ns of New York State have united and will hold ajoint Stata Conveution on the 14th of September. Our County Ticket. That our county ticket, as a whole, is an excellent one is best shown by the fact that each member of it received the unanimous nomination of the Convention—a Conven tion chosen by the people with especal ref erence to fitness for the responsible duties devolving upon i'. M, W. DEWITT. ESQ, oor candidate for Sheriff, , is a gentleman who has been long and personally known lo the people of this county, and one whose fidelity to principle has been very thoroughly tested and estab lished by his steady adherence to the prin ciples of the Fathers, while the leading and controlling influences in the Church of which he is a faithful member, taking their direction from the impulses and excitement of the hour, were steadily employed in the pulpit and elsewhere, in vindictive opposi tion td those principles and to all who ad hered to them. Mr. Dewitt, faithfu' to his own convic tions of duty, stands to day where he stood at the beginning, and iias the satisfaction of seeing his principles amply vindicated by the steady disintegration of the proscrip tive party that assailed them. MK. E.J. KRENET, of BRAINTRIM, our candidate for Prothonotmy, has been equal ly faithful to principle, and equally steady in his support of the true Union policy of the country. Mr. Keeney is eminently qualified for the duties of this office, and has special claims upon the sympathy and support of the conservative people of the county.* lie is disqualified by lameness for severe manual labor, and the office will therefore, prove a benefit to him, while,per haps to men differently situated, it would be of little advantage. GORDON PIKE, Esq. of NORTIIMORELAND our candidate for Associute Judge , has been long known to the people of this county — so long that it is hardly necessary for us to more than announce his narrn in con nexion with the office to which he has been nominated. His high character and long continued and consistent support of those principles tt at ma le the country great and prosperous before the war, and that will in the end restore the Union, and set it again upon its grand career, are too well known to require any effort at our hands to give them additional publicity. J EREMIAH OsTERIIOtJT, of TU.NKHANNOCK TOWNSHIP, our candidate for County Treas urer, is also in all respects qualified for the office. He is a straight forward, consistent, reliable democrat, and a deserving man.— Mr. Osterhout voluntarily offered to resign the nomination if it was thought objection able, on the gronnd of location or otherwise but the Convention refused to act upon his suggestion. We mention this as evidence of Mr. Osterhout's commendable disposi tion to promote harmony in the party, even to the extent of sacrificing his own personal wishes. O. L. PARRISH ESQ., of MONROE TOWN SHIP, was re-nomin ateu for the office of Register and Recorder. Mr. Parrish is the present incumbent of that office, and since the commencement of his term has introduced improvements in the mode of keeping the records, and in the means of reference thereto that greatly faciliate the dispatch of business by these having oc casion for reference thereto. No more efficient officer has ever held this office in Wyoming county. GEO. W. SHERWOOD of FALLS, received the nomination for County Commissioner. Mr. Sherwood is just the sort of man need ed in this office—a man of Fair scholarship of strict integrity, and of extreme caution. Under his administration as one of the Doaid, no man need apprehend any rash experiments, or reckless management of the countv finances. For Coroner, DR. A. 11, BOLES, of ME -BHOPPEN, received the nomination. Dr. Boles is too well and favorably known in this county as a citizen as well as a medic al man, to need any special notice at our hands. For AUDITOR, JAMES IF. ROBINSON, of Forlcston was the unanimous choice of the convention —a man in every respect emi nently fitted for the responsible duties of an office that needs, quite as much as unv other, a good man to fill it. Such is our ticket. In respect to dis tribution through the different sections of the County, we do not see how it could be well improved. Brain trim, Meshoppen, Forkston, Monroe, Northmoreland, Falls, Tunkhannock township and Borough are all represented. Of course, there are town ships and sections that are not represented, but this must always happen—sometimes indeed, when the unrepresented districts present just as good names as any that are accepted. But this affords no substantial reason for a reluctant endorsement of the ticket when formed. All who participate in conventions are bound by their action. If particular claims are overlooked or ig nored, the disappointed parties must hope for "better luck next time." It does no sort of good to scold about it. So far as we are informed, this ticket has been very generally approved by the conservative Union men of the County. The "Union savers " have made it, and mean to elect it. HENRY WARD BEECIIER On the State of the Country* The fallowing letter written by the licv. Henry Ward Beecher in response to an in vitation to be present at the great soldiers' convention to he held at Cleaveland, on the 17th inst., contains some of the best ar guments we have seen against the revolu tionary disunion schemes of the radicals, his former associates. They may well ex claim as did Caesar : and you too Beecher ! PEEKSKILL, August 30. CHARLES G. HALPINE, BRIGADIER GENERAL ; W. SLOCUM, MAJOR-GENERAL ; GORDON GRANGER, MAJOR-GENERAL — COMMITTEE. GENTLEMEN —I am obliged to you for the invitation which you have made to mc to aet as Chaplain to the Convention of Sailors and Soldiers about to convene at Cleveland. I cannot attend it, but I heart ily wish it, and all other conventions, of what party soever, success, whose object is the restoration of all the States late in re bellion to their federal relations. Our theory has no place for a State ex cept in the Union. It is justly taken for granted that the duties and responsibilities of a State in federal relations tend to its political health, and to that of the whole nation. Even Territories are hastily brought in, often befoie the prescribed conditions are fulfilled, as if it were dan gerous to leave a cofhmunity outside of the great body politic. Had the loyal.Senators and Representa tives of Tennessee been admitted at once on the assembling of Congress, and, in moderate succession, Arkansas, Georgia, Alabama, North Carolina, and Virginia, the public mind of the South would have been far more healthy than it is, and those States which lingered on probation to the last would have been under a more saluta ry influence to good conduct than if a doz en armies watched over them. Every month that we delay this health ful step complicates the case. The exclu ded population, enough unsettled before, grew more irritable; the array becomes indispensable to local government, and su persedes it; the government at hashing - ton is called to interfere in one and anoth -3r difficulty, and this will be done inaptly, and sometimes with great injustice ; for our government, wisely adapted to its own proper functions, is utterly devoid of those habits and unequipped with the instruments which fit a centralized government to ex ercise authority in remote States over lo cal affairs. Every attempt to perform such duties has resulted in mistakes which have excited the nation. But whatever imprudence theie may be in the method, the real criticism should be against the re quisition of such duties of the general gov ernment. The federal government is unfit to exer cise minor police and local government, and will inevitably blunder when it at tempts it. To keep a half score of States nnder federal authority, but without na tional ties and rcsoonsibilitics; to oblige the central authority to govern half the territory of the Union by federal civil offi eers and bv the army, is a policy not only uncongenial to our ideas and principles, but pre-eminently dangerous to the spirit of our government. However humane the ends sought and the motives, it is in fact a course of instruction, preparing our gov ernment to be despotic, and familiarizing the people to a stretch of authority which can never be other than dangerous to lib erty. I am aware that good men are withheld from advocating the prompt and successive admission of the exiled States by the fear, chiefly, of its effect upon parties, and upon the freedmen. It is saitl, that if admitted to Congress, the Southern senators and representatives will coalesce with Northern Democrats, and rule the country. Is this nation, then to remain dismembered to serve the ends, of parties ? Have we learned no wisdom by the history of the last ten years, in which just this course of sacrificing the na tion to the exigencies of parties plunged us into rebellion and war? Even admit that the power would pass into the hands of a party made up of Southern men, and the hitherto dishonored and misled Democracy of the North, that power could not be used just as they pleased. The war has changed, not alone institutions, but ideas. The whole country has advanced. Public sentiment is exalt ed fa** beyond what it has been at any former period. A new parly would, like a river, be obliged to seek out its channels, in the already existing slopes and forms of the continent. We have entered a new era of liberty.— The style of thought is freer and more no ble. The young men of our times are re generated. The great army has been a school and hundreds of thousands of men are gone home to preach a truer and nobler view of human rights. All the industrial interests of society are mov ing with increasing wisdom toward intelli gence and liberty. Everywhere, in church es, in literature, in natural sciences, in physical industries, in social questions, as well as in politics, the nation feels that the winter is over, and a new spring hangs in the horizon, and works through all the ele ments. In this happily changed and ad vanced condition of things, no party of the retrograde can maintain itself. Everything marches, and parties must march. I hear with wonder and shame and scorn, the fear of a few, that the South once more in adjustment with the Federal government will rule thia nation! The North is rich, never so rich ; the South is poor, never before so poor. The popula tion of the North is nearly double that of the South. The industry of the North, in diversity, in forwardness and productive ness, in all the machinery and education required for manufacturing, is half a century in advance of the South. Church es in the North crown every hill, and schools swarm in every neighborhood; while the South has but scattered lights, at longdistancos.like lighthouses twinkling along the edgS of a continent of darkness. In the presence of such a contrast how mean and craven is the fear that the South will rule the policy of the land ! That it will have an influence, that it will contrib ute, in time, most important influences or restraints, we are glad to believe. But, if it rises at once to the control of the govern ment, it will be because the North, demor alized by prosperity, and besotted by grov eling interests, refuses to discharge its share of political duty. In such a case, the South not only will control the govern ment, but it ought to do it ! 2. It is feared, with more reason, that the restoration of the South to her full in dependence will be detrimental to the freedmen. The sooner we dismiss from our minds the idea that the freedmen can be classified, and separated from the white population, aud nursed and defended bv themselves, the better it will be for them and us. The negro is part and parcel of Southern society. He cannot be prosper ous while it is unprospered. Its evils will rebound upOn him. Its happiness and reinvigoration cannot be kept from his participation. The restoration of the South to amicable relations with the North, the reorganization of its industry, the rcinspira tionof its enterprise an j thrift will a ! re dound to the freedmen'sbenefit. Nothing is so dangerous to the treedraen as au un settled state of society in the South. On him comes all the spite, and anger, and ca price, and revenge. He will be made the scapegoat of lawless and heartless men. Unless we turn the government into a vast military machine, there cannot be armies enough to protect the freedmen while Southern society remains insurrectionary If Southern society is calmed, settled, and occupied and sooth.d with new hopes and prosperous industries, no armies will be needed. Riots will subside, lawless hang ers on will be driven off or better govern ed, and away will be gradually opened up to the freedmen, through education and in dustry, to full citizenship, with all its hon ors and duties. Civilization is a growth. None can es cape that forty years in the wilderness who travel from the Egypt of ignorance to the promise land of civilization. The freed men must take their march. I have full faith in the results. If they have the sta mina to undergo the hardships which ev ery uncivilized people has undergone in their upward progress, they will in due time take their place among us. That place cannot be bought, nor bequeathed, nor gained by sleight of hand. It will come to sobriety, virti.e, industry, and fru gality. As the nation cannot be sound un til the South is prosperous, so, on the other extreme, a healthy condition of civil society in the South is indispensable to the welfare of the freedinen! Refusing to admit loyal Senators and Representatives from the South to Con gress will not help the frecdmen. It will not secure for them the vote. It will not protect them. It will not secure any amend ment of our Constitution, however just and wise. It will only increase the dangers and complicate the difficulties. Whatever we regard the whole nation, or any section of it or class in it, the first demand of our time is, entire reunion. Once united, we can. by schools, churches a free press, and increasing free speech, at tack each evil and secare every good. Meanwhile the great chasm which re bellion maJe is not filled up. It grows deeper and stretches wider! Out of it rise dread specties and threatening sounds.— Let that gulf be closed, and bury i.i it slav ery, sectional animosity, aud all strifes and hatreds! It is fit that the brave men, who, on sea and land, faced death to save the nation, should now, by their voice and vote, con summate what their swords rendered possi ble. For the sake of the frecdraan, for the sake of the South and its millions of our fellow-countrymen, for our own sake, and for the great cause of freedom and civiliza tion, I urge the immediate reunion of all the parts which rebellion and war have shattered. I am truly yours, HENRY WARD BEECHER The following letter from a candi date for the office of Prothonotary, at our late Democratic county convention, ex plains itself. In our allusion to unsuccessful candidates last week, we distinctly avowed our con fidence in the fidelity of all those named in the convention, t;> Democratic principles. We knew the writer too well, to enter tain for a moment, a suspicion that he, un der any circumstances, would swerve a hair's breadth from them. The letter has he ring of the true metal. Read it. (For the Democrat. EXETER, Sept. 1,1866. To THE EDIT>R OF THE DEMOCRAT :—I want it to be distinctly understood that the Democracy of the southern part of Wyo ming county never have failed to give the ticket put in nomination by the convention in which they participated, a hearty and vigorous support. It is true the people may prefer the nomination of true men who have always been thus consistent in the support of their county ticket; but in dividuality sinks into insignificance in com parison to the weighty principles involved in the issues of the canvass, and individual preferences ungratified, in regard to nom ination is n-> excuse for dereliction of duty. The late declaration of President John son that he 'Stood upon the broad princi ples of the Constitution and no power on earth could drive him from it," shou'd be the position and resolve of every Demo crat of our county, and I believe, is with out exception. The above avowal would seem to be un called for but for the obvious intimation of last week's editorial allusion to "unsuccess ful candidates." Yours j&c,. S. H. SICKLER. The Presidential Tour. President Johnson, left Washington on Tuesday morning last, to be present at the lying of the chief corner stone o<" the mon ument to he erected to the memory of Ste phen A. Douglas, at Chicago. He is ac companied, as folllows, by Wm. 11. Seward, Secretary of State, G. Welles, Secretary of the Navy, wife and son. A. 11. Randall, Postmaster-General. General U. S. Grant. Gen. Rawlins, chief ofstaff to Gen. Grant Admiral Farragut. Lieutenant Ginley .Secretary to Admiral Farragut. Rear Admiral Bradford. Surgeon-General Barnes. • Minister Romero, of Mexico. Senator Patterson and wife. Snrgeon.Norris, United States Army. Col. W. G Moore and Col. R. Morrow, of the President's household. Marshal Gooding, and his deputy, Col. O'Beirne. Major Seward, Lewis A. Gobright, of the Associated Press, W. W. \V& den, J. R. Doolittle, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. McGinnis, Jas. Donaldson, R. S, Spofford, Edward Potts, Cols. Floud, and H. A Chadwick, The last named acting as purveyors of the party. So far his route has been marked by grand and imposing impromptu outpour ings of the people, in testimony of their respect and admiration of his administra tive policy. At Annapolis, at Baltimore, at Havre de Grace, at Perrymansville, he was met by dense crowds and encouraged by the greatest mark of enthusiasm. At Wilmington, the city authorities cow ed before the spontaneous outpouring of the people, and slunk away into their holes to hide, while the populace responded with the greatest enthusiasm. In Philadelphia, which heretofore has been prolific in ovations at the public ex pense, the Mayor and Councils refused hos pitalities, and—to use Geary's language towards the defenders of the Union flag— became "skulkers and cowards"—they left the city, afraid to meet the issue ; never theless the people were out by hundreds of thousands, urged by a spontaneous patriot ic impulse, making a spectacle never before witnessed in the city. That guerilla sheet the Ledger , says, editorally, of the demon stration : As an impromptu popular movement, with scarcely any previous notice, and with very few of the nsual means adopted to call large bodies of the people out, it was al most, if not quite, without a parallel in Philadelphia for our people are not natu rally demonstrative in their temper. In the neighborhood o< the Baltimore depot, and all along Broad stieet and Chesnnt the crowd was great and dense, and the reception was hearty and enthusiastic ; but those who only saw what occurred on the route of the procession can form no idea of either the mas* of people, or tho spirit that pervaded the entire body in front of the Continental Hotel. From the vicinity of Eighth street up Chesnnt nearly to Tenth street, there was a compaot mass of people from the walls on one side to the walls on the other, and on the appearance of the President and his party on the hal cony, the cheers and other signs of gratifi cation were of that genuine, spontaneous, universal kind that leave no room for misl take as to sincerity and heartiness. We speak of this event with no feeling of par tisanship. but simply as a remarkable occur ence, for it would be idle to waste words of unmerited laudation on a matter witness ed by so many ot the people, and equally idle for any one to. attempt to belittle or depreciate such a demonstration. w _ _ Jt NATIONAL, SOLDIERS' CONVENTION. the Real Heroes cf the War Moving for the Union and the Convention. At a meeting of solJiers in Washington city the otfier day it was resolved to hold a National Soldiers' Convention for the purpose of adding the combined voices of the true soldiers of the Republic to that of the late National Convention in favor of the policy ot President Johnson, in order to secure the legitimate fruits of the war— a restored Union and the rights of the States unimpaired. The city of Cleveland ( Miio, was designated as the place for hold ing tiie convention, and Monday, Septem ber 17th, as the day. A committee was appointed to make all necessary arrange ments and is?ue an address, or call, for the same. The address appeared in the daily papers on Wednesday. Its endorsement of the President and the National Conven tion is full and complete. We will print the address in our next. We call atten tion, however, to the names of the soldiers endorsing the call. They swell the list of those whom General J. W. Geary, the Disunion candidate for Governor, denomi nates as SHYSTERS, COWARDS, SKULKERS and HOSPITAL RUMMERS! The General knows such to be the fact r for his own word?, M HAVE DRIVEN THEM FROM THE ARMY MYSELF." IJThe address is signed by llajor-Generals At D McCook, L. 11. Roussenn. G. W. Cook, S Meredith, Brvt. Thos, Ewing, Jr.,' Committee To which is added— WASHINGTON. August 19, 1866. We cordially approve ihe call for the Convention, an i recommend the hoi ling of local conventions to co-operate in the movcincat; MAJOR GEN URALS. John A Dix, Frank P. Blair, Daniel E, Sickles, J. A. M'demand, W. W Averill, Orlando B. Wil cox, Gersbatn Mott, Theodo-e Runyon, Win. B. Franklin, Marsena R. Patrick, J. J Bar'lett Jeff. C Davis, Fitz Henry Warren, John S. Clark, James B. Stcedman. 11. W. Slocum, Gordon Granger, D. N. Couch, 11. E. Davies Jr. A. S. Williams Hugh Ewing, Thmna. K Smith, Thomas L. Crittenden, A'vin C. Gtllem, G. K. Warren, Joseph F. Knipe, C. C Waleott. Joan Lane, A- M, Markland, Supt. U. S A Mail BREVET MAJOR GENERALS Maitin T McMal.cn, Jurors M Oiiter.f Henry A Morrow, 11. H. Heath, Wm. T. Ward. BRIGALIF.R GENERALS. Geo. P Este, Anson G. McCook, J. B Sweitzer. W liter C. Wbitaker, Win. McCandless Samuel lieatty. J. S. Fullerton, E B Brown, George H. ll.ill, James Craig, James C . MeFerran, Fred Van Derveor, James 11. Ford, Charles Ewing, G. C. Max well, George Spaulding, W W. H Davis, John L. Croxton, A. B. MeCalmont. Wm. Hartzhorn, G. E. Winters, J. G. Parkhurst, R A. Vaughn, Morg n L. Smith, Joseph W. Frizell, Lewis C. Hunt, Thom as Cuiiey, E. S. Cragg. BF;HVET 4 BL:IGADIT R GENERALS. Charles C. llnlpine, 11. C. Hobart, C. 0. Lootr.is r Henry lerani, James K. Mils, Durdin Ward. Henry S. Coinmager, 11. C. Dunlap, Cassius Fair child, Charles W, Blair. Charks W. Black. COLONELS. John Levcrance, Qumn Morton, David Murphy. J* M. Richardson, Marsus Bcyd, James 0. Brod head, W. B Rogers, James Peckhnm, T. T. Critfe*- den, Samuel H. Mott, H. F. Baker, P. II Allback, James Munn, Henry Barnes, Richard McAllister, Seth B. Moe, D. W. Bliss Suigeon, John Atkinson, Col Graham. M H. Fitch, A. M. Wood, Win; B Sipes, L. D. Camp ell, J. Patrick, Henry Starr, Wm D. Lewis, Oscar F Moore, Levi A Harris, Geo. Gray, W. II Ent. John II Linton, James George, John Hancock, John II Ward. Wm B McCreerv, H M. Bulkier. C. D Pennibaker, Joseph C McKib ben. John F Phillips. Miles K Green, John M Glo ver, John E Phelps, M Flesh. Col Pryne, George A Wood, P B Fouke, E McMurdy, J M Council. LIEUTENANT COLONELS J G. Lae, James R O'Beirne, John L Trainor, Wm- II Ross. Walter Barrett, Farnham Lyon.James Reiner Hugh Cameron, MAJORS. 11. S. Sleeper, James H. Steiger, Henry Weil, B. F. Dale, L. Pritchard, Frank J. Porter, H. Tomp kins, Augustus Ward John J. Ely, W, Jones, S. Montgomery. R, H. Newton. William Lusk. M, A. Talby, F. A. Clark, Sauiuel Smith, S. M. Cumn 0. E. Davis u CAPTAINS. James Saffington. John W Lewis, A. W Rpbintm James Walters, S. Burnett, James L. McDowell, Thomas Barker, L. B. Brashear J. M, Walker, Chas. F Pot ter, M Mausfield, J L Gooding, fe F Humphrey W J Hawkins, R J Ferguson, George A McGuir®, Arden R Smith, J L McKernon, D J Rasseon, D W Wallingford. Frank Long. LIEUTENANT?. J R Johnson, Rufus Champion, J S Sea ton, Ed ward H Stephens, E T Armstrong. The following are the designs on the bricks of the several do nominations of tional bank notes viz: On 1,000 note?,. Washington resigning his commission; SSOO notes, surrender of (Jen. Bovgoyne; SIOO note*, Declaiation of Independence*, SSO notes, Embarkation of the- Pilgrim; S2O notes, Baptism of PoeaJiontas; $lO notes, De Scoto Discovering the Mississip pi ; SSO notes, Landing of Columbus, 1492; $2 notes, Sir Waller Ualeigh, 1855; $1 notes, Landing of the Pilgrims. Ail na tional bank notes the backs of which do not correspond with tho above are bogus. SOLDIERS' NATIONAL UNION CONVEN TION.—A large meeting of the officers and soldiers of the United States, was hold at Washington, lately, which resulted in pub lishing a call fur* National Convention of all soldiers who sustain the Uaton cause, to be held at Cleveland, Ohio, on tbe,l"th day of September. The call is signed by Gen. Custer, Gen. M'Cook, Gen. Rouseeau, Gen. Meredith, and Gen. Erving, Jr, and attached to the call is a long list of names of officers and privates from different parts of the Union.