$2 PER ANNUM. PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 28
RT SC RR a
THE AMI
{Written for Tho War Pr @LOOM AND GLARE
nd, every d
ig up with indig
ye made this trar
FORNEY’S WAR PRESS.-PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1863.
responilen:
[Special (
SIMILIA SIM nt doc
in excell thoo copperhead jou frighten the Administ
and restoration of a Young Nay aurieh over Geol
stupendous f time he leayes hia ror and publishing semi-v belng sump ‘a epeclal train to take ing, as all loyal ablemottve which fof the great military ein the frienda of
oaing "Ii
Jown by man tobe proportion:
Ine to be followed In t
ned to Washington in hot haste and | 8
men do, tho malignant and treason-
NEW YORK CITY. day. This queer in
and ehaped Uke a box. ‘of {scomprehcaalble pattern, the combined ball
ce of Tho Press.) New Yonx, Feb. 20, 1863. ILIBUS QURANTUR
two fect }
1 seek to of front,
ronls of ura Whi
ately bullt. Its ation into
ure, come week ay circulated, to avert eples and prying f
THE din the bai
a chan ny” by making 1 McClellan every min the Fifth-nvenue Hotel, eekly statements about hia
on Friday evenki Davis, and. refuriny ppecle, or Confeder. | than the notorious
alt
Richmonil for supper. Know-
ates all th’a absunt Honfzin fi he age, it Je b tho Administration to put it | who once eto like." Gea, Butler is the | setor In this city, relde, and | Garibaldt, in Italy,
tely
cartridge having the shape of a huge enue:
: willing with actual expenecs of postage, stat y, and | patent 1 rom AST REDED ENVOY clerk ire authorized by the provost mtshal » penerating titer Cc om of the St, Nicholaa Hotel, general ne . quent preeeryas | SEU. 17. And be it Furth That any per eres pt
Wheat. He led a rebel re
nvention is of tron, princlpally, | BILL. FOR BNROLING AND CALLING | alstenco white at the rendezvous, shallbe patd from | SCIENOE, 2 ngle large gun, | THE. N °ORCES. the appropriation for enrolling and drafting, " sre betang| COD THE: NATIONAL FORCES. — | stem seguintions ae the President of the vane Stutes shall prescribe ; and all expenges connected ge, ADOUT Whereas, Thero now existsin the United States an | with the arrest and return to thelr reg
width, Your corns will Ic — | narrow eole is the causo of mo NEW MODE OF GENERATING STEAM,— | ¢ielul study of the gentleman, Mr. J. 1. Li Now | fence of a marr
'T, AND
anil twelve Inches In width, ‘The con: | insurrection snd rebellion against the authority | ments, or such other dutics aa the provost marshals \apdltine ta tee eee aa for the pu Ohan eaten eae a -
wator, and Is the model from | thereof, wnd At te, under the Constitution of tht | shall He called upon to perform, shall be palil from submitting to the Fren M Government bis ne Wool hanga them every day. Before
whieh a larger submarine battery lato be immedt- | United States, the' duty of the Governinent to eup- | the approprintion for arresting deserters, under such enerating steam, ad of the iring 6 feed in cold water. Tub them har Which a Inrger submarine battery lato be tmmeill- | yess insurrection and rebellion, to. guarantee to | regulation toleum of uld that bo w Holdahe aaall thoy tray
ations ns the Preeilent of the United St
as the report of Ita complete fall- utat ane et ren : ; rdtonry coal oll; nd aa the mach RELICS ICKS.—Amoag t cach Staten republican form nt, and | ehall prescribe: Provided, The provost marshale machinery wh 1 KS.—Among the m as purposely Invented and | to preserve the public tras ml whereas for | shall in no enserecelve commutation for tranaportn- De employs ean be easily applied to the eteam- bof elit which fell in the ne the impertinent scrutiny of rebel | these high purposes mil ja inilapenen- | tion or for fuel nnd q| but only # In general use, he claims the merit of electing | Havre d
A Very considerabl patent particul
Die, to ral
a reons ought | When not furnished by
for drunkenly exalting Teil to take any other change than
ate notes, turnsout to he no other
tho provi Sever 0 ncceptablo eubst receive {gpm the board of enrolmen
| enrolled anddratted ace of Represerda- | tht of America in Congress asie@e | shall the
coal in tho same boller, rater 9.25 Ibs, to 4.25 IL
Colonel" Charles Carroll i itlaeng ot fie Ualied | a certiliente of discharge from euch dra ch S amailolathakenee on: 0 birth who shall: bece | shall exempt him from Huty no | | canoe! delivered in any port of France, | Would appea:
o.a8.0n tome eltizers | time for whieh he was de 1 such gut ane and subsequently served ‘thoreoh between | shall bo entitled to the same pay and alle
| provided by law ay [fhe had been originally of the United States
ppauy with ent on th
Into Gen. | the ages of Peninsula, | hereinafter ¢
cara, xcept 86 diated to conelic | Into the servic
Joyal journalists have but fay pent rable tall tute tho national forces, and shall be liable to per- | SEC And be if further enacted, Thint auch of the | ® tog hla progress fromolty to elty—Ju | at the is of Isu's memorable fallure before | fut Wt pation evict of the Dalted | yolunicers tnd mliitin now in the cervice of the | lent to 2 f at perheads have done with McClellan: the | Richmond, and was afterwards n member of Gen, | Sater when « by the President for that | United Statea ae m nilst to serve one year Bie PUFPOEES COL tator-ites with their own weapons. There's no- | Winder’s otsi, at the rebel capital. On being taken | purpoze " | unless sooner wach ter the expiration of | Tutt mea ne long with oll aa eth ) ANECDOTE.—W ¢ Fe es rey ja, | Wefore Gen. Wool, he admitted that nged to}. Sho, 2. And t acted, That the fol | thelr present term of service, shall be entitled ton | { h the use of all, in tho fl v thing like a Roland for an Oliver in a case like this, | pet . Doel: hecady Ne ‘ ne pereons they are bereby, ex- | bounty of fifty dollars, onc-hall of which to be paid | TOO™ ip are equal to fifty with and your correspon ent must. confess to fecling ee | the rebel army, and sald that he had come north for | cota aud oxcmpt. from the provicions of thie net, | Upon Buch re-énllstment, and the balance at the ex- | FON ne new mode can be eu- | Duke glying the oi cretly delighted whes he tinde in tho Tritune, or the | MMs health. He in a very suey | an'shatl' aot be tinble 10 military. duty” odes | Flratfon of the term of 'reeallstment; snd auch aa | HEelY extinsulsteu in one minute aad a hall, and ig- | urged him to walt unt oo : | the snme—to tv oKOsTe y | tuay re-enllet to serve for two years, uoless eooner | Pted with a full blast in the same time; Gthly. The | condition to support a «ce Times, or the Post, or the Philadelphia Press, or any | LITERARY BUSINESS he gwmie—to wits such ne are ree discharged, alter the expiration of thes piece | JAtgest ateamera uow running betiveen New York | turned round, mid noasered other patriotic leader of the press, a well-die | tina yery thriving condition with us considering | the Vice Presiden?of the Uolted stat term ‘ol enlistinent, RO a ore ere ee space for in for a penny, in for A po Played necount of bowthe gloriona old hero | the feightil price of paper. Recent publications of | of the various ¢ Of the “United. Stato, Hetment, twenty-five dollars of the one hui meagre ? of Now Orleans—the secon Juckson—as been | n good class aro aciling largely, and one new book— | heads of the various executive departimenta of the per tore e ke the féted and cheered at one point and another, | roils Work—has rold upwarda of four thou- | Government, nud the Governors. of the sexta nee, and eal very iy, “Da you suppose, sry Thero 1s no wan now In this war ten days, ‘Tho publishers ate not very san- Tabor for sust at of t know’ ho minnnd na army?” Lord popularity could and mad about their committce fa Wa auc infirm parent or orelng , and proteetlr t at once tet Dulee eeaecdiht tratle dnfriguers ae doce General I ceeding In Inducing Congress to reduce th eupoortsfoucth ure caacledi ak sn ele of 1 Tend thes ieal eae aly Sena etae hate him with an especial hatred, b on paper. They eay, in fact, that euch red Hinge onintien netholfion the NORING once heart and ¢ h them, bofore the w Would bo of no avail while gold is nt 61 pr pe exempt t the Presjdent every true patriot to encritice polltica for country, | Among the bouks issued to-day nro the Rev. ¢ tivelve yenra « Je compnnica of auch 1 * they krow that he ta perfectly n | Tunkin’s Political Fatlaelea, by Serlbx cue one’s fec tticetield ; spring, Jover, and ecrew, in their ifernal | Gordon's Memoir of Ohriatopher North, w ira regimental officers | t! > yourself or othera. ‘To march ir ine,” and is ous man to run against, | Shelton Muckenziea admirable Preface, by Wisdle- nto the reduction in the | 5t uths of a hundred cane On debalf of loys Tasy, let tho loyal | ton, lato Redfield, and Bucklo's Essay number of wil pour out ot and | tive ghout the country keep the star of * Old household, # of them wea 0 cin acted, That whenever Bouma Unst aes, is | process after th im the ascendant, and there will be | ¢ saber reslduo at auen feats | lowed by lave, no olllcera shall.-be appoint at n do : ss wwitneeecd a ¢ hat Democratie comet jousehold exceeding two, ziment beyond neceasary for the command of at Prederi ; Hous, ik who are in the which fs all t: dno peraons but such. ae arc A reduced numb awept by suc nabit of emok rooms nisy reat DA GEN, FITZ JOHN PORTER | by Frecman, of Lonion, ‘Next week Blakenan x | cepted hal bs exempts, ria hate Ta ba meh of | a il vt : ea fa atill in the cay nyuich good health as ah In book form the celebrated th the | geared, W nay -CLAD NANTUCKET.—The the preeent eho: r will peratt. You | Astronomy of the Bible, by the the Union, Lente aLaoldlexaine Ind Nantucket still Hee at the wharf at East ‘ou come to re | Jate General Mitebell, Who was no less famous as oval of the President 10 carry into | f Burt Workmen have bee upon her day falatered! Bf | service, enrolled execution feneo of u court-martial, be nspent and night £0 (AF com + s soldier | two classes, the fhrat of which 8 ” | the same ia hereby, repealed, na far a3 relates to cat- ay drawn Up pletet ithe latter yestenlay afte of cond tha tithollate very nenant(onall eee en eeN Foam crIneee et [Rate iRtoccrenit Parone eamny Heer field, watehiog the lat bite des Janee from the Common Coun aelty, om) td ht have inspired come Stedman \ thirty-tlve yenra, nad all 1 tial Against any person convicted as a spy or de | Ua and disappear in ‘a cl y “StI J. She will probably recent Inmentable dismissal from the service. fo court the sntirieal muse with | sons subj do military’ duty at erter, mutiny or murder; and hereafter andimen andl epjors. go i 1 WAR eneNED 19 sieken myst rac, Ue the\esaniered but the only metrienl commemo- | tond'aines shill compriee all Other fi ned it cutlon upon the approvel of tuo com: i SSIS ESE general survives, with a conatitntioa as unim- | AAvouncaconianacananyel| Garis and they ehnll not tmanding general in the fled ar own furb comes THE WORLD OF FASHION paired ns that of Uncle Sam, And yet, theae poor | t in’ verso cutitled The Plgmies and’ | be called into the service of the Un Six tyurth ted, That courts mar. | Moment the word Forward.” | It bring n etrange ——_—_ Common Councilmen meant well enough. Itianot | Ich {a offered at a few of th those of th inl sh power to eentencd oilicera who shall | Kind of rellef-when Forward) comes. You move PARIS FASHIONS FOR PERRUARY Chale (ales ita with val, thele cftorla)to inercase thie’ Ton: IREREATRIea ETS absent Ives from thelr ‘commands without enuly with tho rex fatrly in for It, wv that the formollties of New-yearviaillnga are valu Port y auceced In a! tire, and clumsily hal or during the war, 0 REEVE OPE YEATS | Comparatively nothing a ied | O¥eH the more ecrlous occasions for the display of greater demand for whisky ntly severe upon tho Sux And Le il further enacted, That th you nt firat; men torn to DEH Pe tign ares: constet tae eat the court, eolzéen ac SIGNS OF FRANO armo, military ourtite, and sccontrements fu h ttn BY : . [HE DESIGNS OF FRANOE al apotheosis Is thus des ms, milifa coutrements fur the mialstere’, tolr e families of distin EEE SGN OE RANOS, : poe A He Hol fab ones thc ss al future large-sized combats with forsign rms ho 2os0 tate the alr, | noth eoldler, or duly Holecea sa Mer Sal tehes (where, (however Auta R vent newepapera fn town, to the mascalines and >| 1 ited States, who has posscast jumph Sharer mel atte ‘ See dad Cie nt ve States, ts arms, military cultits, or accout i sastiona E pad aE 4 Anal teen ho people left the Mots of the | eeding the’ ¢ stitute ona: Pron as aforesald, and which have beet HIP MIN ate prations concerning th advieabllity of a ided, That in St pave not by their lays | f nny such entc change out ths , ; antersIBaint f nn divided in Congreastonal dla: | pledge, Joan, or gift, ehall hays alan popu bd woreblpp ‘ Bam Sitere i valiuts | Interest the but the ean f Great vide earolme ne | thken wherever fi . EXHIBITIONS OF ART he ates, civil or 1
fs * expected; bet
who pretend to be
aigus of the be the day desigaat Charl
newspaper corcepon:
session of * mortar, p: inspire the wonted
bosom
bat kai THE NAT:
at the Co by the Rev
speaker. It w
nelation {
encouraged, nd yle hundred thousan
of ammunil in the etore clty.
WASHING Is to be public exp f five
time by the forelock ary witha socialent
ous dend many by ah
THE
ker Be n badge
you by in. the
lain he emblem. fashionabl lordship banker's
mino, W ratlon at all, but 6 aX Upon dl reat of the
tasteful meaning, the
moved it from view fatr domino left him, traneptred. Si exctting tal opportunity to epeak: tlon of theo Abollt ta for t public a purely priy man’s private house aon of the story, the avery tremendous ef nation, and co I disml » not unsuitable the Bowery theaties. THE D. are edifying the Hon by spatting at dicted assertion that ( the eale of nny more Iden was o1 for the purpose of er present comma:
to pervert
der of some unkn host are and the by suthority—it is g
y of our Deme 1 that the
growling feroclously at the edict. Alne! that our | {70m Nearly 60000 to O31,000 tone, The (u sbllity-or any other chute, shall present thelr claims | ctested in the cavalry forees of the United | Ani eacos sao IE ie gallant era, who are proving their upphrtisan |} Maat ta AtyeeE cor leeaeus £bAa® | to be exempted to the board, Whose decision shall | Section eleven of the approved. reventceath as EEL Ae 2 4 s lag th cen dove to mmerce 10 that eily. Private | {2 Pe ¢ Tuly, eighteen hunddn Sato, cant for | up the tk Jxctitie patriotism with ther lives, muat be thus perpetually uta and public bodies have ndvauced Mberally 1 bea Aenea te We ii, | muring necompauinent Several gentle 4 tirana i 2 tovattain that end, re nll has been So. 16. nena hat any surpe | nings when It gives & concert thla hw
miarep cd ne engaging in all the petty splene cif mess tovattain thet end, Were all) a | charged with the duty of such inspection, whothaty | shall be pald Re a | als a clsma of the pol who stay at home to maliga | Stagnation snd Indifference.” recelve from apy Whonsoever ang money | Mlreary the same ag regimental querterm | the two wer r 5 them, Let Ith these disloyal aod unecrus | | A RIVERO DEATH-—Yazoo anid totean To- | rather valunble DUIRRToN AiR ter the nme ne chiet user | the two worl ; iretutivitely superiir fo 0 pulous political trickster, as {t Is eaid In scene 2, | ter or the river le always of a etignant, blimy thick: Pe A LIge RAI TORIeCKI TERT Tee Lee mpanycommlsenty sergen te ag | how foudly aarhor sepia tsi
et 1, of the firat part of Shakepcare’s Henry VI: | ness, and certain to produce au ble dle Incorrect report, or who. shall wilfully negleet. te y quartermarier’s sergeant That | caver, singing ia the halls, openios the old doors | nore than 1,40, nud the em “Among the soliicre this is mutt when used any ime. Nearly all of the | make n faithful ingpection and true report, shall be | the keado of supernumerary sceonid Heutennnt and | without tgere, ni ® me aad | It , ra. The ent Ani i Ts men in Gen. Sherman's army who went up the Yn- | tried by meourt magtin are two fenmneters for eel nind_ane-chlet far~ | ol 600g i anil Me nal y thee letter are
ANA IT Ai A AGN alas foo wero ulfeeted by the Water, and Fonte of the | ba iwuulahed by tine not ‘exccedtog. Nv rer nnd baoksintth iment, 68 allow ot ren an ere not wel kr
Yar Ta : Wounded ve returned are'yet suffering fron to deol hundiednenibe ta hy enlil section of thi and re hereby, | They SHTthevesnie we could not bell oir’atate Gae would ingeriog ware with little the disease then contracted. The river is properly | the disc The court, and Doone eee | aboltshed ; and exch cavalry com sy bavetwo | Their RE aR US ALASON10,-<laformmation’ fi Another woul ply swift, but waateth vi named. mleged from the eervlec trumpeters; to be paid an busle each reele | kip kit st for the cold sensone Yor y
A third man thinks, without expenee at all, THE DESERTER BOLSTER— While hunting | Seo, 16. And be i further enacted, That av coon as | Bent shall have one veterinary surgeon, with tHe | should be half an ineh thick;ia additior Vy Inia Hy tn session t By gulleful fair words peace may be outatne 7 deserte New York, the other day, the | the required number of able-bodied men Mable to do | FAK ut @ rerimental eereant major, whore com quarter of xn inch of rubber. ‘The tube I | rezalution oy
United States ottice vered in a house in | milltary be obtained the Ilet: of | Pensation ahall be eoventy-tive dollars per m ised for years; 1 Not part with a | intercouree w THE "WHAT IS IT BATTERY” Brooklyn, in a bed wh Ja charming young | those drafted, remainder lecharged = ueand dollars. It keeps out the damp, prevente | of drand I
of Capt. Hunt, of the {inmente wall 160 feet
Tipt gun, tired unde from the Narrows, wh being hauled upon the
N
AML not explain
well p
at artists, 0
view. Atthe Br from the
not'a pk Vernet’s
e Vell, Ib
The pictureepske!
i 00 | Richards, former! Bork and the | iy of Dealgn, are
Jenta with the army in Vir- | {7 :
round prices to the pickets for | "9 PUBL!
ow. From
f | are prosperous, aut but pre paragraph. F @ Chsrleatontane is | Kas aarot that the plentiful pos- | Aixhan, aad petard’” de ining confidence in the | ti
Tacon Theatre, and a not | he
just in time to fd snap.” Ti
of apades. in terrible excerations of our villainous “Yankee | ts duty i i uchilraft, or in perlorafunce of any" serv i = are met whth fuslon at the beat FREEDMAN'S assocra- | sins [ics EE a A A aoa conn Fae | rats ofa ue oes MEETIN | srt moratng, A iwia JBooth roceircdin t ay ing i oeel |, CELTIO PHILOLOGY —Aa singulas fatality ap- Area Tat ieewed | gra From bajo sSforatag hy Oniboceati ortis|| kta te Mary om appear at ne Re repeat Ip ornamented with «velvet i wife, who had been dangerously Il fo ie | OF snllltary post; to Inquire into and Feport to ade them from the per NE thar late ‘orators ware the bottom and trhuned before. Ofcourse thie ent event zo | oveatinsraul cenctatal enon ; 1888 oe | me beeaustiacaaloryellatoteimimeaisteig cae Tate teas =| seer aa cos a ea e have een Bh nail | Bre SGOE Wonk sey oes coea|| HGR ERE TUR aPlnies c enleaic EITHER GER ii aiay be ath of Dis Steriediae the fae uD ca tho a to th Pro at will appear at that house on nday nigh cerning the enrolment feallin urer in Sane i st r t de stained and | Mrs. Booth was formerly known upon the atage | ‘Mg natloual forces, FinonOntane ty College, Dublin ene verument over four g her brief dramatic | oni districte the bof eld puntahment bined n knowledge of ‘the Celtle lang t blue flue artlete | bo composed of t i further enacted, Ta ECE oth
ASURE, and being
acertain What ame
remained the
things ab
TON'S BIRTHDAY 1 in New York, at that amount he purpose by an Central Clu», tsk wil celebrate the anniver | Booth appreciated tion porelble t
rtninment to-morrow evening
to the iluatri- | past we
collection, Of Weer's tine work rep
to ree clothes, arme, militai
Persomnot
atronized by the communit:
nd poss J to announce th
reof valuable piint
cir treasures on troments t
ae t Tay deta the United States ehall be prio ing dame ther ee therdincetion such a éale, barter, exchange, pledge, 10, ekin to keep out the w
Voy ‘ole, | aforeenld : Sreerninceee tee oe eslter and Mig- Ske. 2. And be it furthere feet alx inches on each si
ps not subjest to the ritles and articl keleon. The plan which rT procure or entice, or attempt to Captain Ford, has Rio yanelzo - soldier in the eervice of the United S | » much more complete an
ahall harbor, conceal, or give employment to | much aaa cle eis 1 away, or ald in carrying
him awny, knowlng him tot 3 or wh
purchase from any eoldier his arme, equipm
Ammunition, uniform, clothing, or any part t
captain Mlesr of ap propensity forr
noy superintendent or con ater a few day
rany other public conveyance, carrying | duction of dead we | away any such eoldier-a one of his erew or other
him to have deserted, or shall refuse |
msofa yery tine |
seven feet six inches.
senting a Nui
| opace can be appited nre mo | Mitty Supptsabg wa
have made mention fn a prior let-
tchea, etudies, xe., of T t of the National Acade-
e Bold a
anil reaidences of tac
igging and the eno hip t
t t auction on Thura-
smanding oflleere ; to com- | ¥ rdera of the Prosidcntin re- |
1c
ational foreee ; to fuenih fon, be fined, at the | orvortion of the ef dc in varie any court having cogni: of the | ekin may be filled x no very Interesting novelties to same, in any sum not execeding ive hundred dol- | eee to or, Writ the See ee yee eae Beat | Jats, ‘and be ehall be imprieoued not exceeding two | maybe let lato the fields thing She Tanhiond (Feather years nor less than aix months. ¢ to the centre Mitferen " = allan Opera troupe from tho | | years nor tess than alx sah at aE ; alo the centre opes, : ed in. diflerent ways, and’ on ta eae mall 25. And te ilfurther enacted, That if any per | the consumption of (uel, neea | of the ehape ¥ generally oller a. cone 1 Medori, Mazzolenl & Co, arrive | | zon eboll reelat any“draft of men cnrolied under this | might determine. About hundred and filty | trast as to The ath of February wlll Brake thas Banncet olithe pease Jct Into the ecrvicoot the Unite States) oF all | Tong of wenter maybe tus the be vely whieh, for the y are sald to be already en Suc. % And be at further hat it [see ald any person to resist any euch draft, | of tho ably ect Tight inc jolet, cream, rote, |
fige of th issue hia proclam:
absent from thelr reg within a t
Booth and | 6nd two other | eldent of the United = licenecd! nod pract
Whi
‘or ever appointed d thia country, he ime in Wales in study of Welsh, fron which he paseed over to Ireland to perfect himeclf in Irish, His official du-
hr
is juting of blue nin Maintenon;
trimmed with a coiflure is arranged
J, the former sent her
DRURIESE Ant Hege 1 too much of his | Mead, eerves ni \pillary decora- . r husband oh Vtoapmotat,on orbetore | DRY at ; inbsencos and alt | Might have been, wish ‘Orfamented with two black Hor and fri n | and in each alteroste | deserters who return within the time so fH poe (© placed hor 1a the te ital ‘illeer for each aube | specified by the President shall, upon being arreated, | § hi «memoir ea art - h 7 be punished as the law provide cuished friend, : n to m r proper CleBxe 250 i And it , te t tica Celtica,” is path io which | ae ae cay ee reset ae nd the estate | of German Jearniog H ; a J both fame and fortune, Mr. | { cative pine midence nthe deat , ordi ich military courte ehatl paiagueNt vith oatrow black guipure all this, and repald it with al Tuly toile fF oceupation, and to alt may be taken In esses not capita | ea eee ied S—The front hnir is ardent nature. During the } thall, on or before porated | came shall bo taken upon rensonable ‘ n Weducstlay was | 18 legrams alternately cheer! ithenticated tacked, at Dublin, by brain fever,
Nitto | Opposite party, and du s ind’ be if
ne 10th, he expired. The Royal [rk
in the consclences of | Uesponding were reaching him, twico a day, hi afta | On rs That the j ’ 0 expl 10h red bert tho fact that, while the al- | wt times quite beside himself with apprehension, en advocate shall have power to appoint n repor sols SD oe a ek Se the ousaad, | and on one evening nrol- | Whose duty it shall be to record the procecd | pect.— a Atheneum Sarees sein vara Sacithtcs|(tatatenah cinadoscparately,andelvill | and testimony taken before military courts, instead | MR. CHARLES DICKENS’ READINGS xo witn T strange that AY Nie ALT £ | ages alin be, o of the judge advoonte; and such reporter may take | PARIS.—MMr. Charles DI at the L ghe, timo American wonten bestow ing, from 801 penne preeentiment, that | Joyol July thereatter; beteeen, twenty own auch proceedings amd testimony. In the fret In- | basay, for the benent rots eis | drew, go few kenow fyiate a sip e war | he might auddeni BREE || vay Cates nce in shorthand, ‘The repor all be aworn | Fund, hag been a great eu a Parla cor | With taste. ens, with niost, to ihilbfed late ‘ant old box and|{(bedalder Wat. Eeiday in sald uae || Sea tle Anes firmed falthully to perform uty before en- | respondent. He read an abri 1 | Wear rich mal pin gorccous style, ‘snd + that thus eproiled shall b ring upon it Gappertield, no elailfully, arrane lew of Ineo ay 1—'the fleld for strangers,’ | give her consent that h Te | Re een Su0.29, And be it fur J, That th thpiete drama, with a Mebt ap of the ge STUYVESANT, |. ment to come to her, and at clght K this morn | cntled ary servic all, for renonable’cause, grant nt continu woven. Lord Cowley’s Ihr To be well dn ine BRU MICUseTeRtuicnde see ls TSO Tice far ihtee yenra, orduring | elther party for auch time and 4s often ae ahnll ap- | quite filed with a, fashte ce—tadies, nil | ‘ eral tireauitetitstiotes 5 owels, resulting from a severe he leaves niled into eerviee shall be placed | Pear to be just: Provided, That if the prisoner bo In | in evening dress, formiog the ma The reaiiay,|\" vee, made In a becoming mabuer. “This nt- one a daughte STUYVESANT. | on the same footing, in all resp ccontinement, the trial shall aot be delayed for | lusted ecntcely more than au howe aawa halt, and it | c's shilling calico or s rich silk PELE SPO een | for three yeare,@r during the war, in 4 period Jonger than sixty days fs wonderful to think what varied emotions’ passed | pay acd bounty, as now provided Suc. 39, And be it further enacted, That in time of | through the mind in that short epace of timo. Ate. | ° THE DEPR JON OF PAPER OURRE further enacted, | war. insurrcotion, or rebellion, murder, assault aud | Dickens does ashe likes with his audien y | ae believed that When Tout. th battery with an Intent to ill, manslaughter, may- | are aw elay in the hands of the patter, a eg,
r ce
Im to wear St for
from the unoner of the
ust tve-eig
that the badge had come die- Premium on gold 1s not wow a teat of the te the number of mien to be e; aud any oflicer absent without leave'shnll, In | ie poetry is proved by the fact that a poem by th noble marquls obligingly re tthe bank and Government circulation the President. ehnll_ take Loto tion to alties prescribed hy law or a | BAR Tallesen, who lived anno 610, and who dee Upon noting this action, the | Phe premium varics from day to day, according to inter of volunteers and militia | court minrtial, forfeit all pay or allowances during | pcribed the denth of King Acthur sud the pla
the eaprice of the
he was has not y |
{4 the latest version of the | ti
tafforda the virtuous world an | ing circumstances, aa a standard of value nallag make enld aesignment. as to equalize’ the | Are hercby authorized aud empowered to gean n the churchyant of Glastonbu with much majestic indigna- | ‘SHE OATH OF ALLEGIANOE NO Ban TO | numbers among tho districts of the ccveral States, | loughs for n period not exceeding thirty Mays at any | there it was found and sdeutined. “2 eimtine dauapted to the
journala which nre ready | AN INDICTMENT FOR TREASON.—Anderson | considering and allowing for the numbers already | 99¢ time to tlve per centum of the non: very was made by the recitation of a harper of « hore {sno shawe’ ja wearing,
5 ¥ | N. Lowe, of Williameon county, Tllinole, has been | furaiehed ae aforcanid, and the time of their ger- | oMlicera and privates, for good conduct in the line of | (usa, on ¢ , Where Oscar and Cairbear ‘o be remembered thatno attire is
ake of a chan
to “make | arrested for treaeot
e alliir, oceurring In a geatle- | United States Dis Whichever is the true yer- | spring of 1561 In
aceis not likely to have | en county for the
¢ interests of the | ct upon the interests of the | ‘ers er
tle of F it As a mero bit of current | turned to hla natl to ve dramatized for one of | of allegiance, No!
MILY PAPERS
and helping to end the rebel- | been honsting of th
run the blockadi ut the authoritatively-contre- | number aa hi
3eneral Hooker had forbidder newspapers in the army. arted by thi cating SM feeling againet the | more than halt a f the »n, hina alrendy incurred the ratle compatriots, Firet, we
rebel Seerotary of theac for n° | duties, for ten mor opperhead pre, | Suan gon Tine con
the block to ti coinfort and ne
OITY OF QUE
ae is suppressed in the A
Hy tale can bo contradic
merolal prosperity ven out that the troops are | of sailing vessel
Engincers, which throws an | Indy, avery animat into the alr, fro dier enve Ls
: 1 aeeeae eon water, haa been towed up | Ringhed, grully ere it was fully tested, and Is | however, snd recl: dry dock for completion, to | Samuel,
eget Tenned rs; eerving n yearfad fighting. on the rebel site
ES a aT tah ear | Eaey aE ranma horize torecelveltiseshtares Ind be il further enacted, That all persona | #1iPey1n 4 battle fought between himeel{and Morne, | for mortilicution, ty the othe twithstanding this Just act, he | not exceeding three ed dollars, aa the Secre- | drafted under the provieions of thie act shall be as- | the {ther of Gaul, who was, supported by a clay of | thers should Carstully, pros tris] ae above stated, tary may determine, for the procuration of auch | Bikned by the President to military duty a ean Te tein an ene ne ee nea fector | tunteh throw i ;
FACTS AGAINST FANOY,—The rebels have | substitute thereupon such peraon, 0 fuk tre aki eeerente St otter branches of tho gervice as | Cr the Ayr Academy, and other gentlemen, had it | oveaing wae the s ‘morn he number of ‘Vessels which have | ing the substitute or paying the money, shall be the exigencies of the efrvice may require | opened, when It was found to verify Ozalan's de- | ste f wore attention to the au!
Potomac army, who, for | nearly a year canno|
ral advantages, is Ingging behio
xoluimed, “DIL fight. the’ whole | placeaof re
‘of. premiums for military service, the Pr Wwounding by shooting or stabbing with an In- | shape that he desires, ‘Lhe tranaition from ti
ifty cents, hod that ized to anelen to cach distr tent’to commit murder, robbery, arson, burglary, | of laughter at Micawber aud Mra. Crapp, to the the eame fa the furnished by snid district ; and thereupon the en- | FPS Aseault snd battery with nn intent to commit | tenn silence with which the pathetic gold. This error froin Ste confountin, rolling board ehall, under the dircetlonol the Presets | Fape, and Inrceny, shall be punishable by the ecu- | gotty and Emily was Hstened to, struck me | num with discount Fifty per ceat. taker nt, makea draft of the required number, and {itty {4 general court-martial or military com- | marvellous homage ton master inind, 1 article ia much greater than the addition of that cent, Inaddition, jon when committed by persons who are in the | there were about 300 people in the room ani the | am we ad 60 per cent.to 10, Einake 16, or | M of thi te the United States and subject to | price of admiseion was 20f,, Mr, Dickens must have : A s pinned upon his | ¢ re j if we deduct 60 per cent. it reduces | nod in which they were dravrn, 9 the articles of war; and the punishments for such | the gratifying reflection that besides affording im- | OPC Wrapper. One of the = pinged ure bis | So "a or onlin So m paper dour’ when gold Se ea acres oifegcen sil ever be Ysa Rona those foitertay | teweugung ranestion MAE besides afording im- | (3 died appropriately, a pia arrival ia Se worth 60 per cent. premium, Js worth Go& cents, irae 0 nd Aad FOOD Ad tng | the laws of tho State, Territory, ordistrict in which | whom Kaew hin is foes ee y muti aly wearing Instead of 60; and when gold Ss'at 60, It is worth 62 0 drawn notified of the samew they may have been committed er long to see him I ena enATa ESE te fustead of 49, ‘Tho follwing {3 n simple way ritten or printed not Sko. 31, dau be it That any officer * © ineans of putti fahowing this: Five gold dollura at 169 are equal | POT IenVIGi eR eaCer absent from duty wi oretckocesor | cum into’ : maxeclente Appearance
‘copy at th eauseO into the treasury « om to Appear nt | Wounds, shall, durin
pay and allowan
‘cesve hall of
100; hence each paper -OETR es preeeribed by law, and no |, CELTIO POETRY.—The histor
he of the other, or 62
af residence, requiring report for duty. In. as:
al value of Ce
i
his interment, was rep ry II. about th | year 1187, Tho King, to teat the hist ‘Jered a eoarch to be ini
ers and speculstor t3 of their alte
and it is tates Inwhich | euch absen ae ther | Sk¢ ind be it furt acted, That
Woh, and | Manders of regimenta and of batterie
role pin thie govern nte intlo- | yald dlatrista ire oitunted, nad. the conutantly chang: | gervice, elnce the commencement of the
rical value of je for King Ar
point, it fa dim
fell, in whieh ount ia given of the burial family which 18 not good enou;
| duty
Ske. 83. And be it further enacted, That tthe Preei-
py aud held for trial before the | vice
ict Court. He enlisted in “i
‘Conou, « 1 chlet or ki > fell
ted, That any per
Suc. 19, n f : tt Der AB 1 | dent of the United States uth ' lso there. The Irish Academy, to verify the bardfe | W ovlety cA
company recruiting in William: | drafted, an ppenr as aforcanid, may, on nl tea 1g hereby nuthorized and lc 4 ont : or before the day fixed for. his a {realest | empowered, during the present rebellion, to eall | Tecord, bad the apot excavated, when the graye was | a plain mor very
ee (rebel) Volun-
me woluck
| found as described. According to tradition | (pronounced Cole), thé father of Fingal, teil in
onal forces by di
{tin the manner y
ute ein the
secre
an acceptable substi
draft; or he may pay te Ayre | small eveniag party. In one ¢
a, inthe oth
Pitteburg Landing. He then re
charged from further ability under that dratt, And | SC. 95. And be it further enacied, Thn Nouinoear Liana thedaleanl ineiitateHere
nnd even Mr. Maeon putt ption.—The Lar
Poetry, anid Musi
four hundred te repott ar the | any person failing to report, after due service of no- | detail cial service shall only be mate with the | 6 by Di ‘Cam | caro on the brilltancy of her head-dreaa than the cone (fur bundred.. ‘The report of the | Foy arte tn niece, WIUHOUE Hut Alehing aut: | consent of the commnndlvg.cilleer of forces th the ns, by Donald ‘Campbe | ae eed Nernatens apanitbe con SAE Re URIS CEES 6 oF paging the required sua therefor, shail be | Held s andentisted men, now or hereatter detailed to | THE WIND A MUSICIAN “The wind a a mit —_.-____
mente, (he whole custom house!) ct emiada dererich iall be arrested. bythe special eeryice, shall wot receive any extta pay for | sloian by birth. We extend a eliken thread in the - -
hg ending in 1 Wer last at marshal, abd sent to the nearest Miltary fot | Such eervices beyond tant allowed to other enlisted | crevices of a window, and tho wind tinds St and] RIOH GULD DISCOVERLES IN WESTER
awerce that y but a ite | ¥o8! ‘cr It'and coca up apd down the scale upon | NEBRASKA.—TA
nilllion of doltsra revenue for | for trial by ¢ 3, Upon proper show= | MED. " mn. | 0 extenelve. ‘This fact proves | {0g that he 0 military duty, the | SEO. 36. And be i further enacted, That general o poor Tneiniot must go ik | BRetHS Rol a teen N
ea IIHS too etrlet for thd eked | board of enrolment shall relieve him from the dratt, | ders of the War Department, numbered one hundred ot the wind is perforn A slogle | kotah are deve ul re EOS DEES E rebel | Me eEO. LM.And be it further enacied, ‘That allihatted | And Hlly-four and one hundred And tlxty-two, [a re It tries nlmostanythir | tnx richne ers of t Nthe | if there 1 mus It per n this elty from gen
rancor Abe. tes | the great bell fo nent abatl be | hone aad asleep ; ttm
ginat pines, nnd itdoes cot dk i, Thnt the gradce | of 8 whistle cat:
At the rendezvous, be | ference to enlistments from the the bonnd whe | tegnlarfeervice, be, aod the sar the physteal co | Seluded; and hereafter, no euch eu ail perzone dralted and elaiming | Slowed. A Account of ale | SHO ST. dnd be it further enact
BEO.—Quebee, in spite of nntue | Rereons shill a trustworth ber rivals tn com. | CArcfully Inape
shall traly rep of onehouby an "
Within tw tering that pi
ST ACL a Sg eee eae aca vente (oe
ed bolster! It proved to be a sol | and all drai RESTING FAOT.—The magactic necdl: the cotton casing, who, when | de2vous, shall be allowed travelling pay from their | was used Io China 1040 years B. O. The frat ante fe is [oy fe. | juriedictions. 7 rsone di | ppase consisted of a common sewing needle, tou Slegardedss ‘Ther itetala in Secen
nce; nnd nll
charged at th
toward t
He was relieved from tuch atask, | place af rendezvous shall be allowed travelling pay | With a natural loadstone, mounted upon a’ piece o ttender, and elve Bus | t aimed to the service of Uncle | to thelr places of residence ; and all expenses con- | cork, and permitted to float in water placed In Stand on one foot, and mark | tween North snd | nected with the enrolment and draft, Including sub- bow! of carthernware around the outspread toca, Haye yourgoles exactly 18 significant,
t
I f b “I
ORNEY'S WAR PRESS.-PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1863.
poss a hia’ ata eau alt a8 it Nee ore . HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, | rabid Secession n West Philadelphia, was] LETTERS OF “OCCASIONAL,” | Revolutionary Congres It will gratify that, whlle he Js in many quarters denounced for | pisr, 1 wissourt, — | aummarily ejected from a b half shaven Pi y gress.
Thos. J. Foater Jaa ‘onrow | Bere tom a barbershop eit shaven —— eyery interest in the land; it will make the William K, Smith, Secon for indulging in tressonablo Inugunge. ‘Thin is un- ¥ inter u
John PI George G. Veat just to young however desploablo bis Wasmxoron, Feb. 17, 1868 ran of money fuel sater ill chcourage
ARMY OF THE CUMBERLAND.
= cotton speculations, hia letter ehows that he ia em, (Sreclal Corre c o Press barenssed by them, and feels himself to be the subject
the frat through CATIOLL
H 2 Mu 3 F i || & det T. W..Freeman eeut was u Md and te of the United Stat the fi n umm the Cofthe 12th Inet, I left Nashville for tha place, PY 1 ya Dguanrens, Diarnict or Wasp Ankansas, | 6. Brancls’s, Lyon. Tonics ae a uly b nate of the United State g i a In old times, th Henuva, Atk., January 29, 166," | 6 Win, P. Ohliton on nl whereas, Wilmer’s | 1 example to tle American which | heart ! it will 7 wl waa considered | Dran Sim; You may have noticed that I maden | 7, David Clopton. W hy eaenntce in | edi eee ae atthe most dangerous rallways 10 ountry theneartot Arkaneas, by wayof White | & tnmes DL. Pugh Robert | | the ge he rousclasa | will be productive of more decisive and | Teduet , the x one.of the.meat he portion between the | 9 Edward DL. Dargan. Owe hhehasnow | wholesome consequences th vellion former place and Murfreesboro tein tolerable condi: | mete suce y ny . Felix 1, Batson. Tho to hia what ouch venomous | ners, « 18, a large supply of forage, Grand D, Roye! Arlington e F Among tion. ae aateat [eee Tair lortitea tonteee be a See R couall| aaaetieason Eanes —-—————— nt once extinguish the rebellion, I allude L among Taal a Se tae barrack, | 1 then captured Olarendon, with a. fevr Thomas B. Hanly William Lander, CONFIRMATIONS, to fle debate in that body yc reel ei ley ds; it will ive the sympathizers of south of Nashville unt prizoners and more eupplics. I then proceeded ra- ELOMIDA B.S. Gaither Ke pA i a themes upon > dilate xi vill east to Stevenson and Battle Prom that | fidly upto Duvall’s dlutl threw my lutantey force | 1. Jameu'. Davileing, |10, A. T, Davidian, Mea seacis eek , tive | Mle Passage at midnight of the great bill, as | hemes upon ton dislej nad dave place F hurried to Nashville, upon the reception of | to the rear of the town to prevent the escape of the Robert B, Hilton. OUTH OAHOLINA. Senato of tho United States. In executive | estore Wilson called it, “for the enrollment y niass With the sen- the news of tho Assassination of Gen, Robert Mc. | Cuemy, and moved up to the raflroad dépot, where GEORGIA. John McQucen. session, on Thureday made the followl pofirmn- 2 5 ues A Vibe re Wwe captured ono company of infantry, ninety new | 1, Tullan Hartel W. Porcher Miles, | tions of the whole people of the United Enfield rifles, two splendid &inch columbind siege ©. J. Mannerlyn. L. M. Ayer. PAY DEPAR The and villages upon t gine, three tallrond care, lifty head of cattle, and | 3. Hinca Holt Milledge TL; Bonham. Rey Between Nashville and this place arethreetowns, | some other supplics. I’ burnt the dépét, and de- ‘Augustue H. Kenan. | Tames Farrow. ‘of which were probably thriving plac stroyed two railroad bridges, one two hundred feet David W. Lewle, W. W. Boyce all of Sehishi wera Nrobably.shxly Ag By erate | Mone ninety feet Long, between that point and | 6. William W. Clark, TENN HSS Tho first town fa called Antiooh, after a venerable | Tittle Rock, and went within twenty-six miles of Robt. P, Tripp. Toseph T. Helakell place of worship, known as the ¢ h Meeting | the Jatter place, where streams intervened which Luclus J. Gartrell, William G. Swan, House,” It ia distant nine milea from Nashville, and | were impassable. | 9. Hardy Strickland. W. i, Tebtis a age in Gibson cous e |. Inthe menatine, T despatched somo infantry on | 10, Augustus R. Wright, | 4: E.1. Gardenghire, u Woe fobmetly, & post village Ap, Gibson in Bee transporte, and two gunhonte to Des Are, whieh 1 KENTUOKY Henry 8, Foote, i f necessary and strengthen the surrounding country {e nearly level, and the soll | two hundred and eeventcen miles from the mouth | 1. Alfred Bo 1. Py Gentry Foe Aidiionat Payriters inthe Volunteer Fs war. Animated by this just and impartial | Administr of White River, amt within thirty-five miles of | 2. John W. Crockett. | 7: Geo. W. Jonce, Robert M, Lee, of Pennsylvania, July 23, 16 Senate felt t peal coulk \ next town Ls Laverg x LitHe Rock, which force eoon captured Dea Are, | 3 Reta. Thos. Mences Tames B, Sheridan, of the Senate felt that an appeal could } Wishin disposition cs : | with one hundred prisoners, two hundred stand of W. Ewing. ay é. Samuel Hell of Penna. i mnde to the ma: that would at once , H arms, considerable artiltery ‘auiaunition, 9. larg S, Obristuinn, Tom ¥ Azell, of Penus., Nov Fi Binthieriont county cla ebel'mall, destroyed the Little Rack telegraph, and Burnett . David MT. Surrin, ‘of Penna., Nov and forever d N doubt as to th ex, with a population two yen took n large amount of rebel corn and othersuppilica, y TEXAS walk, of Penn riumph of the Federal arms, and the reste A people, moat of w , e | This expedition compelled the evacuntion of the | 8 A. Wileo: 7 v.46 triumpl , the F asp Ane e flour and lumber business whole of East Arkaneas, aud bas left no rebel force 1. O. Herbert r D 6, 1 ration of the Among the prophe i ils side of the Arkansas river, - Ny expedition w 4 R liters of Lavergne were three o! wealthy fai a ; SRT RT STEEN AES Giny A anno) f the sympa hizers with Who, upon the aecesston of the State, took an act the Arkanene river, While i t 5 1 Ldwin ¥,, Moore nd the confident uc trailor part, financiqlly, with the insurgente, and Jr 4 from General Grant reach one gusts 6 3 V tie, of 'F by OATHS teat : oft P : thelr influence felt among the poor ui ons back to the Mi parle : 5 Hole, 0 ai 7 y, the conyie- c nat Viele Chatles N.C MI. Rt. IL Garnett ms 2 : ight fo BST the place, alt of w duced into armed op- 1 Generals Mo | 3 Kenner. Tohin R. Chawbli John W. e Ce 4 g i h he rebellion rograde . The en J. DuPre Francis 8 x 2 but one tion, Atertrying movement of General r Keburg, are probably “about job Lewis. Yaolel 1 D i nit nda fier ‘ : orcon beat any given time, with atrong for | 6, John Pericing, Jr. 4 i ¢ c , and de- See ape i F eoven hilles sround the H n Goodey, sa Le Penneylvant The imr Ponta niously ran away q t are Very formidable y. Clapp. Almer, of Pu tare i of Gen, Neeley, leaving D gobb it yet zi { iT 8. lade, of Pe s Str t ic e con-
| except, probably, a great viet would
do, but falle sof the towns ¢ | Sal vilage : sh principle upon which this compre- |
Dleutenant Colonel Timothy P. Andrews, Deputy | bensive act was framed and adopted is Paymaster General, to be Paymaster General, with | that in this, the mightiest 5 the rank of colonel, Sent & idem nies ered te | BSt ape epee Anotbor week's i ¥ Panorirat-Lernan, lo’ Deputy P or human liberty since the creation adnan ites : month: wa General, with the rank’ of lleut, coloael, Sept. 6, i i 2 dispose of all y all, the measures 1862, vice Andrews, promoted. bearing his full share of the burdens of the
world, nothing should exempt a cxtizen from
villag
position to the Gover ne re
that t Pennsylvar Tho adja . 3. Terac , of Peaneyls | every patriotic muy is gentiy undu svounsling in varied and RaoEN i Asura r 0A ; s ; aan pert ry, and has avery fertile lime | {PC lnvestt ut it miuot and vl i
stone soll, which was formerly extenalvely eultl- | taken. a vated, over two t ; i ¢ world that the r li athe Elouee Deen Faised in the vicinity aay 2 a 7 a ve undimini f and in the
Smyron is the th ww upon th »yernment ‘ | Senate 1 ion bi within ten of this place. It is enel = curl ‘ Peres ae <xs|| af SE rR pa neipation bill, fine extent of country, The town is situated fn a | drawback, Cotton Is Kin - | THE NORTHWEST DEPARTMENT. | v . - ee : Will leaye the impre the minds of Deautiful vale, aud formerly did a good business in | Fee the King’s advis ke mitet | ] ent mon sense, the y lumber. The lind sbout Is wooded with red | checks them. No ~ Dhetabattarol GOY. RAMSEY TO GEN, SIBLEY ec i Z 2 neils I hail with cedar, principally heir malice and slap ¥* MINNE A AS €O Nuch nec 1, t t i
ai hata staled! abore) allot thess towne, sale: | Tin, very t r frlond, EDs r PAUL, Feb. 13. YC. Rogers, of Peting., Nov W ich ni , y , to the country stronger evi- cedent to the rebellion, were in a louriehin Seaperoneacone Nae as found in the bill for the enrollment he veal and forethought of the Ad- tion, But now, adifferent gj One Fe REBED GAVAD RHEE ie peat Bee aaa peepee er, of Benna., Nov the people. The common objections, that tor ist could Gb enrcoonl eal aenl vast line of vastation mects the traveler’a arian rer airy St citing s deep anxiety tire tour frontier ecttle- Pen Nov. 26, 1 eyes upon either elde from the capital to this | The diegraceful state of discipline which cx ments ths ; : PIcORLEATE NAGiVlley sauireca a uncal asler | Stine Lear ORO eee e Seca From the well-known "i r ities ¢ war, were met at once | ajority of bi the frowning guns of Fort Negley, which topa than us appendage he brigade 1 tier, nf " to tl
nan vuadleta eppsatened nia frontier, n feverish apprehension exists that | alfred Wynk
onco romantic and beautiful St. Cloud The RO Ee eeornaes | | you may be wonble wilh the fore sur commit reality es inrefus ptt ruins of 5 er song to be of little or no wee to t i ft the passer he vi Antloch fulatate of things la wil | 1 " eranetiedts sac nce lett | the duty on the part of r t nin I a property everywhere on v L 2 7 i 1 prudence. standing in Ly y chimacys, c thei us ‘ r m.wh i m 2 art | fi Mr. Chase—the di- however, remain as land-marke of the rebellion, and | and 9 i inthe rent it he f rina re t a EM Seward the the p 1 destmnetion is alino f f the ominai ato make astrous of Penna, pe abet i. see re complete tate in the Union has eu‘iered like y 1 for bin ccd aginst or | f nlesaiieh wees haber Nov. 3 a gas oe Yr E recommendations reaneanen: nem : Lut his ion aura ample to 1 2, | that did not » | liry of Wace Mr But has under mt e cee Indiana te i rect the Dill, t cd hoy . of Mr. Welles, gone in nine months La t! J. From the i ry frontier, frat commencement of our National troubl i z al ; people of this place have becn rabid disunlon| ite ae 5 ‘ 0 ste rf. | 2 i . an authorizati ¢ of ‘The firet words of treason publicly uttered in M. ne t c ¥ : nt of Infane jc t i marque, in the spirit of which ‘Tenneesce, and unanimously resp eth Sal ¢ rang your alayeral c i
nll ee " f i ba = ns of the Attorney General on the curred before the attack upon Fort Sumpte Balt " 2 pinions of th y 1 on the
You know the geographical history of rees- | 6 are re o nl from Sioux 0 t r t f of the | numerous problems ¢ novel times— boro. It ie a
all their
tiful landecny sort of war- : stem which wo demonstra-
heir friends that their opposition is not opposition ti the Administration,
WV. A. GORMAN NERAT ; The prevailing rumors thnt the Sloux, CONDITION OF THE REBEL OAVALRY. | under Little Orow, are preparing {or a. resumpllon
ay classes have been exempted from the | xequieseence in ils general policy by the
‘ndian movements, and the nt of the ex- r ishyr rer —the Benators lGiessudden troderatios hemsely Every department has the ar border settle stealthy p mee
thy inven A S . r q y Was not r 5 out
the increase Navy,
ed the Senate yester masterly
cated c ¥ boxer t 8 arlow, of Peng m ¢ th vity of > Genc
sven ec Teieteate 1 4 r tu n Caleb \ a. m th th midst of the increased duties result three thousand peor at is true L jo ard of F i vi F + t 1 f igalenrambal nin nner ii ) ° ; d x e- | from the vast additis h Is from
sinecesanry to jusure their eccunit \ > the correspondence of ny, and the that Ife wee
rebels are now reaping the reward of thelr | ACHR Rao recess Glatlontobidle
¢ now reap e would, Uo t a ; by and the practical proposi- tera a ; re mntn force, eo aazo give i fol : i Interior, who , : thet ny : etermtue upon that course : " partisar r levelc sources all the people we ti a By: a ‘ evacuation, 1 I | sion ofa stealthy nttac William Thompson; of Penns 1 3 tion in the | army very b , conel ial liteneeteeoaer eonediatelemecaken sin 5 : Joseph P. Lougheall, of Pea 5 2 everything. 7 that at | i , or prefer written in the Nevy, : ute 8) from the st it oni? Ealward F. Cor t re moments, cat only bo maintain ; ; f DvtN Kindly i 1
ever, for thie a: A. large n Jor : king breach of duty BENS Witten better : He Resear bie eas
hospital | ever slight ime ModCnater t that y forever banish- | tive. It is something ta know
‘en would have a tendeney to : zy i b t on the side | of our
duty at Nashi E z t many regi supervision of | TP det : a om alone | of e acts of U vernment haye been not posaiply rendez the care | $y rt of all
and susta’ Congress.an@ the THeman P. cord Samuel k japetent ail Held ; tb tate that goue/ask William Tonweh Tet me assure ¥¢ et nt state that your con Ci melgles ae 6 ‘ aE MMECerelatine ho Unite
ed in thie military | ,2tle Perkic
agninet appre: vd Stat
tenith: hostile Sioux upon raul
le f : ve, and the readiness to attend ni h nd th
rdlacipt
aand, aud Ut it for the worl for whleh A x United States n .
he Cumbe Those alliecr ate not disposed. | the frontier settlements in the spring, 1 proceed ta | tHe Waited States nt : tevaute ne e H ad, I ron, Feb. 19, 1863. Pen perce we pene you, Urle mation 1s can properly
made public at the ttl siOnleanysiie
: / Tif nearly midnight yesterday the Hous and Stone's river, an + ey aBoLEAa ul) "Thave not fal myseif from the mo f ; H y sibs
a defeat : s | selingte xources of tho contitiey of ainice conn ¢ General To apt W ; 1 hej an excit i to con e's river will be com n | of incompetent comp ‘and the brigade | the Feveral Tailisn tribes to t y Bria 2 L f 5 r afd decide the rintnunicate It offiel rt 1 F : y : a Beene Noa aieplibentirer nents eon eco headquarters of t h 4 ‘ Quakeys, | House bil President 4 | Byorderof Major General WHE peal ttonieare rele i the writ tunt of eupplice here, whi to Pare 7 : int Wuisitions wil receive proper i ee 7 Sictasceartek a aes Ae take plac a E. S. Buvonp, Captain and A attention and the miltary atorea nnd other supplies States i 5 t us and the acts in pursuance Large foraging parties move into the y LETTER FROM AN AF s : has not yet bee pon by the higher nuthorl der escorts eve Zorn h H nd T erefot rance with r fodder are very ece hinagine w Gen. D. ree vat: paneer
eiatteaiay alll commanders will take eare to rid this brigade
general to mas!
ner, of New Yor) a military fines and duty. In | therec not reached, on ac eto of the army tround Waaliin It others nNOBNChI of major, ‘nly aly 1 obo r 1 that the Shakers should n emoeratic le but Dy ne of th F tes take all they | 7 returned from the Batesvi edittons chi T am endeavorlog of sil my availab s A. c t t hakers should Ned Democra at I Nafeoidyletatanccesydettae wa: Gt carrie arate m. | force eo as to nfford the protection fo the more a in the bill ise the Constitution el - | ed, there not being a man 5 nav Our part exposed points pe Tone protection fo them Lajor General DL 4 MME CAUSC Et ofthe eacmy werskilled: wma aight or sen wont b atthe several } C2 ork relieved them mind- | fully comy
st. When Senator at of t nal f moyements of t
e ven | ed, and it 16 eupposed several wero drow Hon D sive x R 4 i RaeTeaes m the river on horseback aud ; t ¢ en t being able to carry them over |r onetructing et ape : c 8 vor of the he | Iunced not remind you, who haye hac ticular p nay find refuge it + ks be ec iV eeveral deserters direct from Hindman'a nrc There will be t GEN, BUTLER IN BALTIMOT Let pas thelr accounts ho has the most 9 to eive notice if the Indiana mak - eight hours, nnd no ‘8 cessation F atled scl of menon en i any point of ny nto the ec 1 th — — ecileated a teaaateon ine eae ‘ BSR RR eae Bar.rimony, Feb, 19.—General Butler arrived here | shared the blessings of the Government | s the puni , hat every ‘ATES REBELLION ippiiriver able hal-breede up the Minnesot thls moraing, at te a cecorted to | shoulk that he might not be ca n t by the ¢ rament has ee as = | army can be subsisted within of | there during the spring, who will e ct the Butaw Howes by'n coi of Councils and : 2 8 Of fornge, for six months, at | the esvages show themeclves in that « i 2 ‘ ts defence in this fearful ¢ lowe 2 lent inyec- CAVALRY ente of a aay pat | nthe Sequlaltions for aren and pe eee ee ree ges Tesete COncat Puan Or Bate: Beant ; Waeas Fr Rea ne Tein oa fare mille within six miles of Bateeyille | filled, I will be enabled to nrm all the tnfantry. r aryland Institute thie ovening was a grand atiatr. i 1 hich, § r Harris H - Reser no BIR OO be sre eer BUGLE, tio 1,209 bushele of corn | ments with Springfleld muskets, and jm euch’caee x | The vast hall wan epleadid rated. wi gracefully withdrew his nmendment, ‘The Tenis iach indiguant the following letter hae stripped the country of all ¢ ahall apply for authority to turn over the arms now hears al FROM GEN. ROSEC <S TO GOY. OURTIN 3 aeequently we obtained but few ands of most of the companies for distribu: their fellow-sympathiz ns Devin o THe O , 1 i ‘n ordered to Vicksburg, but ty the State to the people of the Jocalitice moat | Ms ey a urms shall be enrolled, and if] than when they heard thet men of the same TORO’, T ‘an, 19, 16 troopa refused to go. posed for thelr defen ould reapect dally uz. you a 1 in whi Hi 4 Dr MeAucy oud Re iverr, of | Three hundred of Windman'’s men frozo t. that compe raved une bearing a flag plat willing to do y his} school had torn 5 between pure Decne penne Ate : Peavout LwOnumed ie eeeiee cane e athe cents he, State, go that in cnse of ne; | ring the eventing they sang patriotte aire contribution to the supj who are | Baltimore and Washi and hed fired yanla nuderstapd the thai ane and brush, within twenty miles of Bhtesvill uch an organization would. do | Muse Was ale enrolled, nses of the Goyera- | npon the sol f Massachusetts. and Mennonists, and | Penn: N ough, if ad
Pee nil and sce ‘ : came into our lines, Many more would have and tend to appense the | ‘The appearance of the General was gree ent he Omi ter. It stan but our stay wae too short, ‘Tho hearty | 8) generally Jong-continued cheering 1. They wai at their services | Prayer of a heavy majority {8 for the permanent v ‘mato the precaut He mal the citizens of | the Qual classes in | yoeates ne x , free States will be required na originally understood at Depart- tion of the country by the Fe« s 3 urity of the border Ihent headquarters. We took about forty prieoserg, L } ta renewal of the scence of Inst summer, 1 y y 2. They Wieers teine and one Heuteuant colonel oners all | close by: aesuring vou, that eo far as I have the | thetr enthusiastic greetings, wh aan Rak een ienrenl welleettled mecesaitios in | EO% so Yadly frost Bitten, Col. Waring was obliged to | means, they shall be employed to the beat alvane | earnest of their unaltcrabl my. judgment Dnouheement of their | parole them at Evening Shade, tweay-ve ‘niles clti appease the fears of | nd deter anphaP may arrival. But they ea aave were on the eve | from Batesville ; 1 dotern ; Bear ana ore they should follow |. Conseripta anawer very well tomake numbers, y own belief is that the hostile Jodians will
rue attendant upon this tiresome delay.
the Constit 1 niany exhibitions of the
the supreme law of the lar tizen who | thizers with Secession t eces-
THE AD
and deneely prekcll with « moat enthusisetic a: | bill thus provides that e st
very man capable of | over the arr
Baltimore for their kind expressions of regued, and | Pent hold sticlt proceedings of the Government in
, xpect, w y | horror, chamy nd cause in ure prospering under our institutions, the shave St ected to 1 luted to ls firat entrance into | saved from harm by the gallant men who | fest still more ¢ nt and resenttnent. fa part of the reserve t do 80 well to fight. i descent upon the border until they ind the nthe night of May Lith, 1861, wh ire fighting against tho holder Intruth, owing mainly to the diousandas- hoy aro prectvely ihe kind off medtT\ require: for ing home, it strikes me to the beart sceing the | are selves to be attacked in thelr praicie | the midat of violent storm, ho marched hi taal aying int r t3 A the work at hendquurters, and I (rust that fepa jelorable condition of my State, and hearing the + DUlll It is well to make preparation at all] Federal Hill and formally occupied the excepted irom paying into the treasury their | siduous eflorts against >yermm| their moet grievous fault ofnot marebing with eurneat prayers and appeals of both my yeraonal Tepel Them should onsInughts bo a eee ee ea paltincare then, full butior order that the good | nccount of these , some of the loy com! they may only need organization and and enemies for deliverance from the vile compara the conditlo Baltimore then, un A ‘ ; y Solas Fraiiraralaseranvaleyehteteiee m with which they are surraunded ery respectfully, your ob't sery't re HIDE ct RECARO AAG Sahat ie SpoRE, Ries Bo TA right, therefore, | men in the Border States have been shaken colone}, nad with his ald and mine all will bo aécom oi ree neh ete ig a : _H, H. SIBLEY, since, with the ald and protection of the Govern plished t em the State from In on Ac cna say to General Curtla that the very Brigadier Genoral Commanding, | ment, the true-hearted Unton men of Baltimore hyd nt o ater e of the ten in the State have been to Memphis, nud ee put down the rebel sway, He warmly culogized th i a8 E brought eslt and many other things they need in THE REY. REBEL DR. WILMER. loyalty of Baltimore, | other States, no matter what State con-|necount has been Henry Muy, a Repre-
OSEOKANS, Major General. | auond i
ror Cont - ECatheedeipenrac eA ee n ‘o e pro @ of the wat ¢ sald er itutions y Si oO ie subjec », | sentative in Congress fr ie cit
Governor Cor f the deepest dye, sent thelr wives from in and | The ose of the reverend traitor, spy, and whilo a it at ic p par wot he war, h a ie o| stitutions may say on th bject. So, | sentative in Cong rom the city of ti- wns much, very much, to &ncourage us in the pro=
ee Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. bout Batesville to Memphis nnd brought supplies | rector of St. Murk’s Episcopal Church of this olty eReea 4 rae ; | too, of the proposition to place cer-|more. Like mc his school, this man PROM COL. FRY TO COL. PALMER. of medicines, 1. PB. Wilmer, D.D {iNT attrnctiog unach eq | RFe#8 we hnd mado in the year, Let us pos i h : B. Wilmer, D. D., ia still attracting much at- tain clergymen, professors, and others in| was an ostentatious professorof Unionism a Gene lapunry 26, 1863, | [Artin Tue szcoND ronT poxetson DEFEAT.) | etrawo tell whlch way the wind blows, we rend in | Wet ho PAeeed throdgh th on his way to the | tl a aly | lite m an rs ago, and under quest I stato that t! A pal Mitte Sectatl, rosa quo locorum Dr. Wilmer the inearnation ofasnenklog Secessioniat thern coast, how did we then s| els | for our Government, but for religion, and] this guise obtaincd the seat he now fills. uly authorized by the Sezret Wan in . : : remap ne several weeks Lefore he made his fimous trip to | BN tl of pec Taney sen sans? consequence of urgent requcet to that elfect Me eub arcta vite bibentem. Dixte, vin Fortrees Mone. cunt, 1861, the | russe all of Virginin, except that portion under | +. the material most requite here cn s district ; reared he i made by Major Gencral Buell, thea commanding Hoxaor, One XXXVI | weiter heard Dr. W Wats Soh the | tho guas of Arlington Heights and Fortress Monroe, | #7¢ the material most required. There enn | of tus district ; reared amid the luxurie! the ‘Department of the Cumberland. n the parlor | Now we haye all of Missourl, all of Ket ro. | be litle comp as to the severity of this | aud advantages resulting from slave d Tt was to conalet of thrce battallona of four com- Hyapauantens Tontanoma, | of the United A , uoder uaeshis u S au n ry, und panics exch, Including the original“ Aaderaon | ebruary 1, 186d. tho following circumstances Wilwer thirds of Arkansas, at least halt of and | bill among those who always haye the hard | attached to the circle which a Lroop.”’ Mnjor Genera) Buell desired innd intended | bate, my boy Wheeler, old Abe's apparatus Rosceravs, thank God, wns there, an this esiment to be attached to bis headquarters In | Of herip garlands twisted to choko our ailiatus, en bas sation of 6ome | other ball. Wo have tivo-thir the field, to act as escort and for special eervice in | Cease to rove where that Stanley the devil {e play Th tha patton of tee eel eae stee8y | of North Carolina, nll of Florida, and ss SEI AE ee acgare ita ftnesa for moralogy| fn the Davlor of that hotel, but Colonel | Wee Cryoutsiana. And what wae lt t0 the ens, fortunately y who might | for me spoken u i these particular dutics expressly stipulated with here “Old Bosy"” te atay- | Beason, the propriotor of tho house, having | Het of Louisiana. And what was th Y : “ poken unhesitating you, that the men recrulted for the regiment should F Gonfederaayt! Texan, intriguing with the 1 mperor to get away from them; Mlssiesip
qui) in iatelligence, spirit, &e, those belonzin; Uncle Sam, meee ; | : the orlginsl " Andereon Troop,” who had pers | For & " enn't hutt with a Kederal ram, | Sbo¥e eusplelon, peremptorily refused his consent | jamn, Georgia, South Oxrelinn what remntne a : I cent
ten to any ap-| in their faith, Among the industrious de peals for others in the same sitnation in | claimers a: the Government on this
while praying men are needed, fighting men | Belonging to one of the aristocratic families
waa umes to itself
stopping at “The Surf,” and at the requeat of some work , and ‘isms from any other | the title of the better cla Baltinore, he disregarded. It lap-| soon disc the cloak of patriotism, and,
quarter can
jearned that hiv reverend gueat's loyalty was n wort: y and encour
fermed the anme gervice in the shoat eatiotactor > make my to this atcingement, whereupon the Doetor'a
muavner for nearly a year ; drink myself tight with a “tHe more grape.” | (rlenda, not to be ¢
Geu, Buell J by Ge : F Lowe-flung and have shown the white | for aod o Iperailieston'tortlec te hentia iat ¢ command of the department of the Cumberland, i Deh bt hold rorth
01h of last Oote fore the arrival of t nearly played out— T Thealiscourse which resulted wasn
ined the “Ane Your old friend, very reapectable sermon, The fact, however, that | to ,
edly have filted the BRAXTON mRAGG. | att eiatal detntls ; cre soru- | won see ge ater
a Hnairetlremeat tin THE PRESENT REBEL CONGRESS pulously eb rou Con federney
of North Carolina nnd Virginia. Very soon i lly come forw h Misulesippl river would t y liberally from thus the Confederacy would ‘ ght | th f 1 es, into th we truly with
ein thelr purpose, applied
Si lk ded folds rent node Bren We take from a Inte Southern paper the following | Which was omitted, taken in ‘ Nee Tene ed Ist of the Confederate Congressmen, now in | Meged ressona forthe Doct tal used our ellorte to ccomplleh | rent oe but Dr. Wilmer's frleuus contended that it had been (QUE {Haire Let ut com eon ‘ : best yy Gen. Rosecrap only becaute those efforts TOL A Us united a asoribing ft to © mighty power of the entire milt- 1 18 Hang’ o! Anas Ttobs nueoa,” Charles : lghty re, thousa vat of thee
tary forwe of tho whole nation, aad I€ that wero not tedly Sa cane right,
forelgn foes, would arm very man in the ni & others to do so for | however, he encountered
the mbelllon, and crushte He alluded to the
falled, nnd Ge crave exercised his undoubted | yiitenell Meena ness. We prea er command for that duty Florida: nea M. Baker, Angustue E. Maxwell, moe &¢ mental wbsence that will now ; ogecrane intended | Geor in H Hill, Herschel V son count for his recent mlerepresentatlo: ‘ereon Cavalry’ on duty at his Kenth Burnett, Wo. E. 5 li | HOsTqUATTEAS CATALOGUE eee Fat ean eA et He iivehitatiael MaeueRaN blanc all arapiiC: Boedsbe® | r vernment by their labor | tion, and was arr iE goon as they were cquipped, &e., had not {i Albert G. B Janes Phel, | (Great ohecting.} ‘The oath 8 but in its infan 1 the’ rT I reg: | 5 y Miculty arteen, ; ite ta ed rebel, while carrying among hile cori ‘ rent checting.) ‘The nation was bul ond their money. In short, f regard this | pions p another triby’: Bier ty auach rate Missoyrl—Jobn B. Olark, R. 8. T. Peyton, Te, while carry tt BW cofrespomience ey, ‘The western world hai ecarce begun to put | Hitt ag the best, the fair = : P iby tion has ¢ Gol, had Inte Ohist of Stale nator el North Carollon—Grorge' Davis, Wm. 'T. Djorteh, | n letter from Fetterson Davis to Mason and Slidell, | forth his strengths Thace t and ngoniea w pill as the be i¢ fairest, and most yigor- | time past the Maryland de® ae 2 ee ue dep ne South Carolina—Robert W. Baroweil, James L. | i ah tm a a Hau iaiistegertinnes atin tho teoth are | US that any Congress has ever passed. As] rally voted with the o”” Atha 4 Ke) RIG. GEN. GORMAN. ero Episcopal Ohureh. ee es tacle of appa- ’ - . fnlrly through, let trattora beware, and tyrants | a dis statesman sai s the | the Honec c apec ¢ are permitted to copy the following extracta L We sco by n Washiogton paper that Dr. Witmer | frye wk cecvene te , man said, “it is the) the House ; and hcsPMe from a private letter, written by Brigadier General | ‘Texas—Wm. S. Okilinm, Lewis T, Wigfall. fa confounded with tho Rev, Henry A. Wise, as 7 :
pr iC ey a ee ee | h and the most patriotic mea-| rent concord betw i Ra Gorman toa friend in Minnceota, It gives an ace! Vingiin—Robert M. T, Hunter. being the olergyman who, the day after preaching @ plaus sure that has been sdopted since the first! colleagues hns bes the subject o
rent recep- cham- i some
pretended mission to the North to pur pele of religious Hterature for tho benight
troducine him ag a fit representative of the South-
Langdon ©, Haynes, Gustavus A.
4
FORNEY’S WAR PRESS.-PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 28, 1863.
comment and _— surprise. When,Q about | country need not wait for orders, 11 re-assembled at Musical Fund | tion of the county debt is about fifteen ¢ [ab teenth ntoree ee ae RE INT cring.] Thirty thousand af our b nine o'clock last evening, this same | and glory seek him wherever he g | )e Hon. Joseph R. Chandler was | lars, and consequently the semi quate express Tt most be anld, perhapa with in dans shia, ex 1 think of Br. May denounced the» Administra. - ae eon AN ty 8, its occupant | terest to be borne by ench woul there have t Se eaoetetaiant | meat. They tion for making arrests, and stigmatized the | Wisnivaron, (fob, © long the | mount to forty-five cents, A. petition i re have ten. thoes | In example pi indemmifying the President and hh Dichita tis Segal aiow, storm of yesterday the Philadelphia vay, and go | the subject appears in another column. | BesholmnteciaIe Us abo ue agents, becnuse of these act@ so essential) 4 sontiment that hun Rnd] poe y em emablered Liy,th fession and Rae ee | * ‘ners to the public safety, and w cd expressions | rrousands of lips, au hundreds of | bli Messrs, Shovh und Gilmore pe- Av Arecent meeting in New York, a pe a rics full of bitterness nnd s¢ > show his pro- | ousands of !heart aro) on imed their oftiec Scereta Mr, | gon named Mastoxy made the following re- w neat: found hatred of the Government ofhisfathers, | yisorution for the ¢ { lant of Mu ‘ind Ha t i ascene took place which baflles all my powers | fiends and relatives in the army of the R Keeper iv iso. present. | arced of description. ‘Two of his colleagues, who Ta Ta aakenlot Gat try ts, indeed, | ERC proceedings | ‘i i four] Poatimaster Gener had heretofore been voting with him on) vinicted with many t t alone the : Rev. Dr. 3 St. Tame | Pr mnny questions, met hh cue “cruelty of the rebcliién | ml Chir hitade he yall to y ats. Pucsin manner that carried the Honse and gulleric ea iees eaten was call Tn the ¢ of t : sili compan | ute 2 py storm. Of course, you haye publish at aston sumone | & CORLEY fj : ‘ 7 lien of the “ on abstract of the speeches of Messrs. ae rant meet in 1838. mortality bid _ . Prinear Z Leary and Thomas; tho ishe aut n the tr i H ie Mnember Out of th 3 se t at first, also, © esentative from Balti- of the Government, but th c Tf 1: el the ‘body iginnlly’ con 1, 01 | sometime oe more; the Intter the far-famed and venerable |),.0 strangely cl ater nt sick " ¥ i ih applause, and | us of tho i orator from the Frederick district. But you Satu. tharelowe Tor | nANenc opnvterl eae oe HEIST ENTES vratetal f a ought to lve been present to haye seen the HEE ar Wau arian rae MB Ty ne the surviy acamnosti red. (Laughte v offect of their terrible rebukes, Mn. Leary : enig cou (ii ) uid somet tore than ane es not , 5 jind not determined to V the bill indem- Pate Mat ar friend i ith ae ut ae as F connected alee nifying the President, but the speech of Ms | 4 ragaittonntaaal roll gone through sn e business done, | INALGERATION OF TI NEW POST OFFICE. ti ft we of th - colleague had fixed his mind, and now he He ae y thie be Hourued (othe Git paces Val on of your goo fe would give that bill his support, Hts ec s, Have yon ever, as your'thoualits | House u ed th aly dinner fn | INTERESTING CEREMONIES. R i ; mie had) humiliated Maryland ; he Hp Pose cea oi Any Its hallowed prod : Post alls 1 asserted th: land was sub- ae sehotheriin sete areca When the u 1 ly sat, th nauet xt the Glrard House. | - re a to, snve jugated, which 3 pelled as a foul oa aaaieia tokens Meyoroniunenc Taian ite eat z — yr th oe Phin ersion; there never was a time when : eat Y fi ( , Monday nftern new post ofiice, on Chee’ i ue But nage and the press and liberty were dered ow patiently and, mae rath ientraas Sis Gag ated with rc miadeaesiag more wniyersa Maryland than now. | oo ivivati Dena 1 5; 2 ‘ Jut it was when the white-haired statesin Bare ‘i : i i pt of 1 ved pa f Goyernor Thomas, took the a A : ' hurled di and d i the 5 Renal aise tke ‘ i haracter, man who had thus assailed the Govern |g cunmission of the eae ea : 7 cricleod tf aes : ment and dishonored Maryland, that the SMe WEE GURS UL UGaTie ly members as had peominent part ower of patriotic eloquence was realize ss ee in th t t f the co Heer t of the His'@ Saree ae eee : 1. The document may! wen exc commission timore and : aed tionnbl \ ul hits, but it hac Maryland the Government aa rs pede ean _ wane fet. ‘Behind lisadvantaze of ¢ vil should be thay nd not abu: for | yi TAGAISRR GAR Liar Qorasninene f bei u il Chan- | these acts; and then, rising to an almost | pyece are Saaeaien a + dler, a prin RIOMeCHT eRe giant he plendid voice ag SOLE Wetse Gc Aaa it, to be re ito the when through hall like the bla 1 ticaetacn isones chased aelliKC However, it 1 called for Jo, he exclaimed, * Let tho |i tome outempt, he realizes the nerimoni. | Bot vi : looking to be m dM the dé ent ; = over Nh Tot he is ignor Honof.ths, ; ase professing no Tin : EN TSE anal a nee) : cane Beale him rather ngage |! . fishy nan dimer themselves in ni those | YS" passed off blitl responsibilitic As I LBeuLCHAny Dress ese , ction for tle eltizens of tt ' ence Write Lhave 1 1) ae ean i new erent acgomimod OSs cnparet wit e ph
number of colonel: Of the Army of the
ic the President and Got yNable va war ag e Tanee ‘ eat will take ocea without concert 5 many miles fre the patriot ped from their seats in order | pest evidences of th t elightful i ns Which he left | that animates th unking ight ne g sturbed spirit, strong ‘ r GIASEG: lnded to, i ir Ww INGTON, 0.1863. | in ¢ The more ovation to Benjamin F, | who BM vinating with and completed by robbed
the tendere
qualified patri warfare the use or are of Tre nonize Stonew Hindn Alabama, A lanthropists
vastate
are witnc
nd
so refined and polishe
tles of the new
for the base of their and treason = | itimat H is for their banne eof | — the Gaaventl anarte fo surrount ue, He had, Inc 7 they speak. If t 1 ESEN af th dead ar ter ADI ie pocEno ns 7 Butler saved theit A celebration of a ‘novel and very in- | "\S notiedeed dena ane ncconip: nares nest c wives and children of civil | teresting char took place, in this city The ( tio ah Pewee [ineantin he mere t and their tra 01 Saturday. It may he remembered that, | self the child of thatof 1700 att willbothe pareat | \tatow, visited. the Unt e Room: 100 ° It might be said tl ome of $, a Conven tings, 1 an neconienouste itself fo the | Mey were warmly recelyed by the variou i 4 the men who now were urnment n Musical eee ke May ‘ pn future a common fe from | Fund Hall, f e) nd r es of Farragut. Foote their cosy e the Constitution of the Common- | i ; , New York ; Senusylyanin, That good el 2 Ther t | Pad Se ee area ttiee ae : i it mn journ 8. It} went Girar for the ler the : opposition to. slavery | then ¢ al ning’s banquet. fe hoped we We0 Seat Ae act eee ell ee eat THE BANQUET AT THE GIRARD OU 7 f : Roe ea scale iiaby-wills the! iaoiloyas ade. ia in ess Jun ust, afler consultation among them.- | Re ee eae aT aia er WLC TLAISTRIEATIO ‘yy or furough which this nation can rebela i : cessive critic, but slays of the enemies of | selves and with others who also were in the | PRP THE ere Hay Sune eee IE tee Ofte Ea the Repu If he as any erre point | Conyention, nine members sent a cireular | t r (C6 ololuck, they sat down to an clecant twas wrapped the sup. out, it is those 1 disgure and disgrace | letter to all the survivors and officers, “to | ONet to her f ee er A Paread iene ilar Pie tnt fhe Cansif : the so-called Confederacy, ‘There is n pra! pose that they come 1 This was acknowledged by th of | le he denounced 7 tical philosophy in this common-sense exam- | ral meeting to be held on Saturd: Oop | Aidlin county, and the Hon, of he ‘eht It the ple. Gener knows that it isthe one | day of February, in a suitable room of the site ons the serpent wher rreat object of the President to do his best to | Musical Fund Hall, Locust et; and. Major T, Hennessy with American was the Prees—¢I r check and crush the rebellion, and that he Jafer a few hours spent jn interchanging walls A spler H : i S i a blighting curee whe ; should be 1, not weakly or doubtf indly remembrances of deceased colleague Tho next tonst, The Gentlemen of the Medical | ous c Meche terinte..7yrOR f Dies not by upport, but vigorously | and after transacting any business th | wav replled to. by Dr, Caroy GTNeey estat Atl ne OCouslOr Linton rong end i and confiding) le bad men | be brought before ther it they » | Dr. Bedford, « rhe coun | ar uen tana A ae Liwill call upon our SLE OEE aya poe i conspire and ¢ one of the hotels of the city, and parta 1 | ue conshutiog tonat was “The Hon, Joseph R. | Henry oazipled the chal, an tivchanged ite duties | TORUS to eletoncts to realene ae unite and m¢ dinner to be prepared for the occasion (pea ae Nan Asso ist eueott J wcth that altel digoity and urbanity whieh nbnys |, Soerten Cen amid great applause, and nrecent this rible troubles. president ofthe Pennsylvania Central, of the Mie enc adherredigconnlinentes emiaved, the intelléetual part of SPEEOH OF Gov, C Ser ael Louisiana, the rin was felt by | Reading, and ofthe North Pennsylvania Rail- | ‘The whol acety \iobitenminatedil |e MRAMES ORLTnMEFOOTAR wa TREC ERT ie the decided friends of the Government, | rond companies, kindly agreed to furnish | about cight went off in such a z of Pennoylvania with great pleasure—with if tit and deleg Y »n called upon | free passes to members of the Convention, in | tory manner that the | SPEECH OF MAYOR HENRY | lenaueaiyy nicki yor opty of Herz sittzens icucht ® have assisted the President, insisting upon his restora- | coming to and returning from this meeting next meeting came to be | 5 tilitiee in, tho ally” OR CS A RTE Fi en proud of our y atl FO tion, During all this period, no one heard | The circular letter of invitation igned h Mr. Banks, Mr. Darling- | testined for the postal nN Ceatiscen erase AeOR Ene eet as a word from General Buller that was | by George W. Woodward, Senatotinl dele- | ton, Mr. Pierce Buller, Mr. Overiield (Mo OF ite citizens, atforde ju mana lon} ohiet ofall we paws Gensted ar the loyalty ot her 5 4 not complimentary to General Banks. He | from Lu county, now one ol | roe , and Judge Woodward took | 2% ea haven ates mibled entog vinden thead | gre ntState int eal ined ito ibe au came here in obedience to orders. When | the lzcs of the Supreme Court of the | part. Afler some discussion, it was agreed | the favor done us by the Fame ormeaut test Grations were tendered him, they come) State; Dr. Abruham Helffenstein, 8. D > future celebrations’ should We an- | if, dr@xinitg uel enn of nccornoAation, and | down the Constitition y pe from undoubted loyal ho Secession | from Philadelphia county; Joseph R. Chand} nal, ‘The survivors and officers of the [JwEDeR TH pinged Hontaiee | Hvet trentenel she aetna sympathizer ed in his train; no fer, Representative Delegate from the city | Reform Convention of 1837-8 will, there ‘ Federal ered ‘econservutive” journals snug his praises, | of Philadelphia, and lately U. 8. Ministerat | fore, dine together gain on the 22d of ae sbrho |pPennny ° ‘ 1 When he spoke he was not afraid to utter 1 ill frown | Febru G4. ret then knew re : yybat was in his heart. He appealed to the R t ——————_= . pe Raver ies ry ‘ people in no half-way aor He | State; Matthia from th LLEGHENY BOND. ‘ as oa aimed dircetly at the great c sin | city ; William Morga leased to'learn that there | vert ; ofthe war, He lind no injuries to complain | Thomas, Repr ates from | renson to hope that the long-st sulntlon, OU of, and inyoked no commiseration from | Chester count Representa- | gheny-county ~Bc uestion i i Be men who ha for théscountry.” Dike | va Dele 1 ettled ina satista and honorabl th y i Ttosecrans, Burnside, Hooker, Hovey, un-| and ( igo | ner ee 3 ter, Cutts, Hurlburt, and Dix, when he met | county ou ex-| Mr. Senator Coxxztt, of he sought to raise, not to | pressed, i \ re. | mer Pittsburg, a gentler “n . He had no eabatistic | I friends, afer a sepn fn | to be well acquainted with { at 2 all, he did not look to the |< acentury, will be a gource of mu- } pa us introduced a arene He ha piness, /a filling reco; of the) I ture, pre Mr over i £0 aa ere annive rm | estup to J 1863, in twenly-y f on another missictyyhich will be as success- | ment of the conve 0- bearing six per cent, interest euanley) ful as his were hivgdministration in Bulti- | priate celebration of the | making’ provision, by special tayati more and his fearlas ‘rule in Louisiana | Pater the Country.” meet the interest_ and princi M To ene Ft ‘A soldier who trusts hitGoyernmentaud his hows that cach inhabitant’s | Other enterpriee Five miautes of 8h
TonnaTorent, 2 | SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 136 n Semmes, of the | === 105¢ und humane phi @ lite property : nd lie, their op | with emotions of ming by the hor ken i | | guration, anil | Age hath its privileges and ofllce its dutic the | Says 3 ten ‘| ; retired, an the ban Democracy, who haye slavery | . 5
and blessed by the smiles | 9
mutiful women. of | not be told ny, the i ar ; : : | : ue a terrible rebuke of | Meir lives for us 2» soweoiloyelthe [poo cl : ‘ lion that they titto be treat th lood and ficld : hee Hon. tiat they wanbiyto, be trentee ws | uanpy, uomes: ond » iM} occasion of sucha personal reunion, The = lona 1 and most loving care. These | tate their glorious ¢ Pees a eee are [eaten gers ae 2 : Sate suey O00 | Saree — mee | path of tho year; now! tied In its recur wielded for the advantage| 72 ran aie u nysy ¢ Wray ee. | a trey co} SIMLD § CHA gsres. | s
utle bul
Punctualy at noon,
FORNEY’S WAR PRESS.—PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1863. 5 cy wagon fa heard rumbling along | sntnry was fixed nt $1,000 a year. A scoretary and | time, been presented na the causes for tho present |
nklin | condition of things. It must now that y
constle ARMY OF THE POTOMAC.
Grama of the war, we have every reason to believe | institutions in this country, but the hopes of ,
i now | the light of vietory will avon eam. ‘The Gebenun | tutional freedom throughout the world. grim vieaged | of the watera,”” where rebellion struck her first | Washington himeolf was of that opinion, and de-
rothre , and the hi ’ riot Fae rot ena Ait tx aatisfaction.. They | comptroiierreceived ench $040 per anntim. Fra
Know that whence the poat office places its hand | was authorized to form a line of posts from Fal
flee to know
haye rebellion and war
rhrave i ow i ieee ofthousandsof sheets | mouth, now Portlind, in New England, to Savan- | war!—war the most direful—n conecquence of a | bloc it pints cn Feb. 23.—The anniversary of . They Upon those thousands and tens of thousan : Gears rosa. poate, ceded 10 ellion the m a a | 'y blow, reela before her impending doom; the | clarcd in his first luaugueal address to Congress, on tA Cucek, Feb, 23.—The annlyersory ae Moy wlll he deilverod, thele destination, Fa a EOE ie roe a een qoltng | ange Goverment, Ncked that bas occurred under | original rent of that tivin monster repudiation 8 | the 20th April, 1759, that upon the euccess of the ex- | Waehington’s birthday was celebrated yesterday 3 | » Mtoe ia catisited that his opinfonnwill be read, | mnila were carried on horaebaok, exch rider going qnnclent or modern, Its iimen- | even now being eneireled by tho two clements, the | perimententrusted to the hands of the American Soke 7 AM
im) a3 the prin 4 anil the Goes to breaktaat ‘cont
tho brave even sometimes hesitate, nnd the provalling tempest, by aalutes from eeveral batte- the genoral post | timfd grow elck nt i I ig tempest,
ray were | only
y ho many miler mway, | da
Pemany ee ea nuicatea that the rebellion 1a nenr its death }can model of government, but the preservation of
art, Jt is this question, and | etrugcte, | When that ts pst the blatant aa well ag | the sacred fire of liberty liscif. ‘Those nre his own | res
iubscriber, who
unta ¢
was heard from the rebel
Tho whole of the ace
Nothing of the kin
ering, Shoraing paper folded beside hia plate, ‘This antle- | oilee) from Nov. 1, 1776, for almost two years, were | only thig, that we have now to treat. a war that, | the emooth-spolen trenson-talkera of the North will | wordy, ‘The mon whocarried the country’ auecesse | batteries on the south side of the Rappahannos ent faction, confidence, and ral harmony kept [na common hinlf-b b pa yeaarue 1 Ht sucecas or falluro—a war | alculk Into obscurity, never again to have their names | fully through the triala and sufferings of the war A 5 z ages Potted in the. ¥ fo pyatom, and never nioro | quires of coarée paper for prpcinles pC ® wrest, glorious, and free | mentioned except in conteinpt, ‘hat hour 1s ny depeniicacs were & ipeiulerings of tho War ot | A snow-storm commenced late on Saturday night, which bode rbot nder the administration — fovernment, Shall we sustainthat Government, | proaching +1 Seer AS ROM nis Sno) Made enuen CaN at seer eee Gant, | and continued until yesterday afternoon, drifting in , hepes, coinpletely em pun me. [Applause] Aleo, letters from Governor Androw, of Maas. ; | Of shall we ‘permit in ita stead archy nod. con: | f Fee a a ean names inuses aoe Leal bea SOubliciA MAN And Aaa BEL DIOR. : cet, T ‘ ML with ofthe gentlemen 1 SS rabethe re c, EASA y : <2 | fusion? Shall have of i Be pears lor man’s convenience gresa, wrote to General Washington, on the break- | ome places two or three fect, The depth the Tlook: uy of the now poat oillee, | ptayor Opdyke, of New York ; Hon. S. Colfax, Se | © one grand nationality of | (The mower . i ut of Shay's rebellion, that unleas it tides oe tr. Mayor, {na thruc like thie, aa a subject for pride 4 . Hens SS | States, or a multitude of petty, Jrolated, incoherent, wer mows on thou! the adiler may wrlthe, | Ing out of Shayts rebellion, that unteas it was | enow 15 ayernged at about seven inches. ‘The eneral, Dr, My OF oa ie Gavitheanding we live aan | #atora Wilmot ond Cowan; Messrs. Verree, Leh J and digcordant eommunttlen Lam for'the Govern | AM the copperhead coil round the blaile of his | Put down, anarchy with all’ its calamitles wae | ahelter tents of the soliliers alforded but poor Fetes anding we iva tn sn | Tian, nnd Biddle, of the House of Representatives, | ment ge irwas bequeathed to ug wed, ener sevthe at nod.’ 7 eam ace no lifer protection from tho storm, The atmosphero armotwlthatandtine. t oaslnities tint tang |.qnd from the postnasters of the peiuetpal cities in| have, for the moments turned aikle trom my Ass SPEKOH OF REY. J. W. JACKSON- | rebellion, and the success of RcAuintcrciog ndcaWicatniae deen cibeuse Ulta ers Fon usand weich us down, we oan atill fini tit s United Stat customed commercint puraitits, and come up here to | Rev. alr, Jackson ti ae ebeliion, nnd the success o| a A g som i tor the upon w 1 (ny the United States, PAE PIRES Pio M | . Jackson then addressed the audtence, | Untll recently the man would have been thought | tremltie My ihe to foaterthearis of voness [Appts] We nor = | Fecertteld?anit to enfee" mp sales ieee aon | Al made ‘a happy apecch. He eal that he was | mnd who could advocate the opiaton that the Ame: | “Previous to-the storm, the mud had partially carta, T move on, amid firy and smoke, and earonse and | OETRBRATON BY TIE UNION LEAGUE, | ncrothers. tony thinte or feel tare sched fare Got | thle Febellion should be rushed, tis | ments without burying livery, pesca, aid reelal aes | dried up; but now many days must elapse im this arts, embxtlcfients, aad Brave. men yingvve bali What others may ihluke of tech wut when the Go- | country was intended for ond nation, powerfal and | doris ita ruins. ‘Tue war nssloot the. Unies, howe | locality before the ronda will become paseublo under Fallroads and iton-elads—vee ‘lig away obatruction y oneent to | Iniivisible Wn glowing tribute to the | ever, (lor thue it is that one unnatural crlue ‘begets | the most favorwble auspices
nag te ons in the
Part with ny portion of fta vast domain, or shnil | stars and siripes, and predicted. the
hitherto, diecouragements, painfull and bi uuragements; Dut node, sir, that have over, in the
miarke were
aco. at Jal oune bays; Anil baton AizayaOuabcua y ad Collati Patriotic Addresses, | sfeld one jot or sta authorlt thai t triumph over | a brood of otherg,) has given rise to 4 new sect of be a or that Missiasippt ‘river—fapplanze|—we form cotentitio’| Spleniid Collation and Patviotie Addresses. | yteld one joror tts authority over the whole, patrle | fors, domestic nad foreign, conclusion of | political phllosophera, who, in the bosom of the - a sayTaR ord {oF aerostations nicht atte ant, Conant, ttt ! clea | cutter withoua Govetament wormecareRege tm | Ms tutes, No remarked’ that he ul antictpated | loyal aud trnehcartea' Hh, boyaud the sphere ot | ARMY OF THE MISSISSIPPI. ‘ou all passing nn of general con ption, calmly pp: yey cF5 * ~ hy OF the name | replying ton tonst to the clergy; but al ough no | that pxesionate and. frenzied infatuation which hai a YGpon seeds down the calendar and takea up bill forthe | ge beautiful club-house of the Union Leaguo | *nywhere on the faco of the globe to protect me. | Been offered, he would neverthelees | darkened the undersiandicge of the Bounce 7 ser fs kind eatablishmeat of « national Academy of | Sel- Jon Monday to its mombera, and was for. | [Ofte of © Hear, hear) say that ifany of the “Learue" should plein, therefore, without the poor excuse of that PEPER AL RECOnA
ences, Carve on y at afllce, in letters of | W8 opened on Monday i Tn the prosecution of thls wat, we, aye hnd, | should not die without * boncllt af ler te i p i , Feb, 23.—A special Memphis despatch,
|
fathtnation, speculate with Indifference, oreather, 1 and Touilly applauded, should way, wlth apparent satisfaction upon the exe
sightat degre, uaturbed i conttence fo tiwnude | SPEECH OF DANIET, DoveHERTY, Esq. |pRleey fering ivy Uelore the wolence of
miate success of ‘ourcauec, When the bright light | | Ihave an old and valued friend, one from whom I | ene
of the noonday sun lins been for too long n {ime ob- | have recelved many favors, one who oatne to ary nKt | ea soe whlch threatens our destruction, and acured by porfentous clouds, awe aro apt to take | 1a trying moments, to whom I here publicly ac | an endnitention er ahete See eeyeee, TH counsel of our feats, and to begin toqueation whether | knowledce my obligations, nnd tu whose welfare 1 | Mypymamtan for, thelr Southern allies, and a iis
“land | mally dedtested to the uses for which it was do- signed. The reniling-room was arranged with tax ea, and a fine collation was spread, The par lor and other rooma were all tastefully decorated, the early part of the evening
sts epent the time ins
saturday, furolehes wdyieea from Vicksburg to the 18th.
Active hostilities against Vicksburg commenced | on that day. The mortar boats ware towed into |p olfect of their hots,
deeply eraven stone death 1863 the Netlonal Governine u- | race to build » palace in menaced Philadelphia, and that when men wero despairing of the Republic at | home, and enemies were ryjotoing In Its) tive | i downtall rhment Hteelf, supreme | Aad durin 2a of’ its own | member:
paition and opened briskly. Th as not known,
and)
and. sublime naclouen trength, wer pn in ite works of civil pro- | oinl asi agreeable Sntercouree, viewing the there will over be bri; sunlight again, willnever case to fecl the liveliest interest. And yet, | What they Inck sirength of numbers, and fo in: : frente (Apriauce.) We seo thio feeling In PR | een MeO. she various’ autjests of the | {cue of te phyalenl world fe nleo tru J have often seen his picture, Lnover saw | uence, hey aunke up et tis the erento iy | Re firlus was Responded to by three batterle, ! and we see it everywhere over the | hous sud discussing the various eubjecta of the | tieql; and possibly there are those here to-nj | hin but once in my life, and, what may ecem atill which ‘they are thel hgnos ene iy | When our position was found te too much ex- Uloce your book, patient student, | day. ‘The plotures of Washington, Scott, and Clay, | jn thelr efforts to penetrate the dark clouda whioh | Stranger, I don't care tt I never seo him azali—t | thee RTL | nosed foriem P h 7 - zo, | have seemed to thom for eo long a time to threaten | Mean the American Engle. [Laught b Tite ae Misra. hens the storm} Bost Cue iyat ve cnekatliks And Op am CBD EC. | and tell us no moro about Rome! A greater | the window and «doors, wore or ated with flags, | ave secmed to thom for eo lone a Saar peated | een tome a Ne ale Faas ee auahter] He haa | clouds of the preseat disastrous timo aiall have | ‘The bombardment was then renewed, in our enemy than Haunibal is at our gates, aad We | while over thedoorwas an appropriate decoration, | the fate ROMA ION UALS BB la ncnunl awa io en EEOC i a cleared away, and aur country shall emerge from ie factlon: ] fryniSeer J railroads and canala and palaces, You | At 9 o°clock the house yn 5 good cheer, for the dawn ie not far distant. Renew | ever cities, croased oceans, looked down on moua- | with Indistructable unity, history will take up her | fat we had taken Vicksburg. ‘This was two days at and seo it An. iy own profession. ‘The press ia In gome | Was quite proturezque and animated. Thla ts the | your faith ‘an for in 0 doing you will | tntus, cleaved the clouds, and on bla brond, expand- | pen, and in the clear sunshine of that proud and | @fter lhe bombardment commenced, as stated in the sini r ‘4 natiowa fecllngs—and tho | firat time the members of the club hare been assem- | sustain your ¢ ent; and, moroespectally, will | €d wings, have gonred into the blue etherlal vault, | prosperous day, write In her eternal teched the tes path. ; Bhave ¥ tim aod tmperturbable as | hed together, and the occasion was one of great in-| YOU suotain that noble and brave army of men who | ferried fora time at hs “mansion near the aun, and unalterable verdict of posterity against | q a ] of life. hough t ace. Tam speaking of Ite ee : | hove gone forth to do, if needs. be to die, om the field | And then safely descended to my home ayatn. But i diaalterable verdict of posterity ngainst | ‘The Indianola, which ran the blockade, had pro- ee eatinent ow fad Le-dizagesing Boland | treat - of battle. [Oheere.] | those days are gone; and, though I trust my friend’a | the temptation of self-interest, abandoned, Inthe | Visious and coal auiiielent for three nonthy. eer renieuethe wealin aywarfe, the cont trade, | On repairing to the banqueting room, Mr. Me-| Polltical institutions are not a more matter of oy- | Might may be always onward nnd upward, yet Ino | moment of her, most, lmaduent ned tonal yeah THE REBEL STORY the money-order systeut, the Ist navel, the play, | Michael, in a few rodueed Nr. Horace | price and cholee, It cannot be that demngogues cafi | More wish to ronm, and for the future prefer the | the country which gave them ‘biti, whe de. | dienes Be Nag ne cantare ative
eof Mr. Me Jorate ofticera
her grent struggle for selt-preservation, who | bung was
ported to-day, by Con!
| into their hauds aud shape the destiny of ana. | earth to theether. Therefore, unlike Heente, E will | rive |
the opera, the tox upon paper. ‘This inighty press | Tinney, Jr., who pre Ath hist fies that ites, nt th tride In the air to-night.” [Laughter ahd Ee the loners tht Eee ae ey) Tia ie pec Site eal history teaches that communities, at their | Not ride In the air to-night.’ [Laughter and ap | would have ateuck fron, her head’ theta | Co 7 a nd the : ule vashy er redith, and Fead'a letter from our distinguished | SEES Coen a eineceanararse WRI Wwould hte letruck trom” her hand’ the ‘avon | Who npptondhe our linen with 9 flak of tre Irom Spe Jercapbuall hslanp yh otto oe Pk ocasCangial [Wark that iy not thelr ova. ‘Twieo within ont | | We, on thio venerated npniverenry, formally Ine [iastahe RadetN ed ae gee eae ander | the rebel general commanding at Tulluhoma Fete rai ieee cenartta Hat aac as | MRE Ge hom, womaoe pinwcex,am, | Seo edit ad seta bet molly aM | aac Me Eteaeuucumany formal |e ho mae wir Geoey nie | “Capa bina ote nates saw D Y i attll and calm, Wolle; but she could not hold her pur- | Auamecss Whether tte career shall be for good or | with unconcern the Wlissolution of Government | charge of the mission remarked, “Well, you he t inst the ‘conditions in whieh ‘she found her- | evil remains to bo seen, I hope that our chitdren, | With unconcera the dissolution of vernment | charac tnlssion remarked, “Well, you have
an ineident—as something to be re- ‘ed and placed on record, but such feat or dread for the futny
ing of contid
les about tue vevr forme aad nlllantoe et | Sorat Er Te CTS
PERE eeaT ete ES ARSE LORE SLES AAGEAMTEL Te at
mr ous. L address myeelf to that honorable man who 1s the honor of Philadelphia and the s | nistratfon—I mena the Governor of Pennsylvania. | tloration of the Stuarte, fea are but the instru: [Applause.) We desire to welcome you to the home | inente, and when they throw theineelves In the way of sosial learning ; we are proud to see you. Our | of civilization and Goll'a progreaa of a nation, they
at last, though you have pald dearl After auverting to. the subjest rds, he refused to give Any particulare. The mor is credited at headqua
FROM THE ARMY NE
telf, ‘The Cromwellian Parliainent never dreamed | When we have gone, will proudly boast their fathera | Jative fa
ka | Mfr. Binney then eaid |
short-lived, a mockery to us all, and a standing jibe of after times. We must remetber that this h ened ng an elegant lounging pl
known. Thi: ‘and more than day when the f
for houra
VICKSBURG.
Waa unfurled over the new post |
| ct ic wae We the | creed Ja unqualified support of the Government and | put help onward thelr own destruction and ruin, or that ita usefuloces ie to give a meal to PROVIDI x a y | ottice, which w now as we sit pleasantly togeth- | G r ct ction aces © al anda determined support of the Governmi Pnovinexcs, La., Feb. 11, via Cairo, Feb. | er, alpping this generous wine, which atten unqualified loyalty to the cause, You have served | “Gur country has survived a war forts existence; | A bachelor in winter, ora married man ineummer. | procent contest, thee thie itty men. from rashua the Lage ail our bu Tosial relationes thie fecling, | {6 country Inithfully, and have carried suto ettect | yt wan baptized in blood and eoneesrated to freedom: | ‘The grand object te to link, In the doula of a He-long, | farmak We here tay avite allearticoe meee ties ee which, flean, Tai proul ace, and an | Me priceiples whleh our fathers have embodied. It | Our Government hoe succesfully restated a war for Iship, all who are true to their country ees to uuite our energies and our inituc munnded by ‘Captain ‘Tucker, of the tat ) Tam proull to sid Chia feels | 889 been truly eaid that war moves by tron and gold. | jts destruction from foea without, aad thoencred | S An institution Is needed by the highcat | In a comaon eflurt for themintntennnee ¢ npanied # small fornge train down tho ing will in the ead be the salvation of our country, | Your services we bey leave to thank youyand If) memories of the past have becn the fireside themea | Aictates of Realizo the awful peril | anit stitution, the preservation of o - he lake, bout ten. miles out said it ‘and for all time to come will be remembered ne th: u have not done all you could, we Know that your | through which we have beon taught to love our | of the k not to disgulse the fruit! | its nationality, ite ‘unlen Z Bi Kked, and routed nearly three hun- perity noblest trait In the Sen Arnone LA | Garneat wish was to afd the Government in t country. And shall the disgrace of a failure to pre-| From these days date either the downfall nnd | nower and tie prosperity. i Loulsinna Cavalry. Reinforeements of tho T To the momentous and magalficent fut | ing hour. T say, tu betialt of the Union Long serve tho Republic reat with the men and women of | ction of the Republic, or the triumphant | [qhoree with uy in ihivgrent cause ont dige too late to partlelpat were | oming Upon us 29 Tp BIL) Havin. great | SouWrill islwoye:findinyhentty nnd oval | the nineteenth century? I will not permit the Heation of free {oxtitutionein Ateries, to be fol- | tinction of patty, who are willing to unite with us | a in lellled and. wound right duty to pertorm. I think eak for the press | Within theze walle, z : thought. I turn fron it to Inquire who among us | lowed by their uprlaing ani spreading throughout the principles of active, earnest, vigorous, known, tenant and for Tle of this country when Teay, nyor, that in eve- | SPEECH OF GOVERNOR CURTIN to-night ehill ve to hear prattling childhood nelcof | the eivilized work. The nation has arrived at the | sternal heaillity ta thie rebellion, We hellove {ane | 13, i moat Fy continzency—in every Hime of every | Mr. Binney then introduced Governor Curtin, who | ld agen famillar story of the struseles nnd trinlsof | Very orisls of her fate. either sho ts to tse with | mane neutrallly. ‘They Wi not for the country | = ro #0 ideagure that looka to thy iG Republic, 4 | yeas received with loud applause our Government in this fratricldal wart history youth the master-spirit of the earth,or else | and for the suppression of the rebellion by force | THE REBE | Will be found ded am its devorton, tal | ene ome Ona + ang | pf lla proacrvation, hen nseniled by foca from withe | dle and leave he PEI Pee Cope A aE oR eee THE REBELLION. peakeof the liberal Jed qcihe Governor spoke of the slitteulties whteh the | jn, none enn toll, But when tnt day shall. are Admit | fapeliion Atta terpecetohete aaah penta toteeee sake Berane uneniay kepest ne. rebellion. “He sald he had endeavored to serve | Have Aved at this das, Ani to have eapauteed the fave ban | ge rea anne bs SULeoUnIEy Aad HB ake GEN. BRAGG ANGE DAD QUAD, BOL Dror KG MARGIE OCs a intr, aa reilet Honor pon th cause of the Gogeramest, Then sir wilt eome your | Uaya embittered Ifwe would not thnt comiag gens, | fee selen threatens them with destruction. They ld tha€ General lntaeela (Buatiy anyiore dinbrences About men bd measures and means, but | Chet, Exceutive he was, (Appian i fall honor ned the honor of al thot who. like you, | rations nll curée us I our geaveay wo muct bend | WRe,counsel usto ny daven our arms in th snod on the south side of. the riven ak eneatICe ling waves the cesgeleas current | fet¥ed Ms country ns well as he eouid, and If in this hour of trial, are now throwing the weight of | every energy, sacrifice all things save honor to con- | barter the Hbert A oes The Nashville Union ways that Gea, ia forevertloiing. We desire to sce this [he had failed to do all that was necessary, It | thelr influence and position foto the scale onthe | quer in this terrible war. We cannot triumph with | our country, fo able ‘optive | ion aa ese PET tOUFULEASAlcoM | me crand and mighty. — Ite greatness is | Wie the fault of the head aod not of the | pidoatthe Government. You nnd they will then be | Our people divided, ‘Therefore, in every way, there | nonce Witch smoultiliccr ned eek ed ee teceptive | our Heese po erecee ley ne grand an rs nelts, ereatn heart Un ilacussing the rebellion andthe. duty | Genuine covernment, You an | must b6 presented to the minds of our country- | Priore tharncrsunts ee aur cara a eee ts | 82, Zeinforsementa ifrom V nid three reste war, “we < peace—but it. ian | Which was demanded of Americans in this crisis, he | “The euemles of our country are not alone those | men the impending doom, Ifa raunioipal election | enemies etthe country, whether jneeaike | ments left hie a me days ago for Viekeburg. pence Which no journalist will ever bluch to | Ally contended that it wns the duty of all to Inbor | who havo deflantly taken up arma against the Go- | Were at hand the’ Knaves of the city, yolept po- | ern camps. or in Norte Agiinet the HOW TO SETTLE THE GUERILLA tothe PP Rconiie Tange soil exulth We preservation of the Re In speaking | vernment. ‘There are foes to freedom and to free | Hticians, would be at work day’ ‘and night | principles of these, thelr arlet their, machinations, | _ Gen: Asboth, commander of the post of Columbus, hem Rralaetavauor icaeure that way contemplate | he pald a glowing to Philndel- | goveroment everywhere, and the midnight acsneain apegeh and elzcular, pamphiet and paper, bon- | Pete disloyal neteant wc fa the duty of all | K¥-y haa issued an order , that, na disloyal ok Iyanin the fall of our ¢ ie BEARE heres RE eee acknowledged that he owed much to our | fs not more to bedresiet than those who, at home | fire sud procession, arousing the eltizen to thelr erists Bee Raa e a RENE Thee Paso | tiecamen ee DIGhloFAnMhO Rn otealiaantenccace en toe it, aswell as b SRONE SE thinl| voth for thelr support in the fleld and the | and abroad, couneel, alarm, and ery peace wher ere | sat nowa mation Is dying, aud her ehildrea are ine Z the guerillns to make raids upon that road, here- arches, finultuous W strengthen thie | “ble counsela which they had rendered him in the | cvq be no yeaee. ‘As our great nation enlls to its | Jnuitlerent to her fate—nay, more ; horrorof horrora |" yPejoice, sir: at the clear indications which are | #lter, for every raid upou that rond, and for every elds, Republic, and under ail must lie the groat prinelple of his arduous duties. He ¢ ald the loyal, thechivalrous, anil the brave, and as it,| —poaseacd by the malignant fiend of par | now beginning everywhere to be apparent, of a per- | Sttack upon steamboats or t on the river, ely ep ublle be ndessailimug sNeithe great penal Ng ented our” fovnemn, aM. Wilitm, ‘Ak | feoots aeit'ctoste to but forth with age tenable | ean animostlen ty are rendy fo. staneie cue | pon Deglaaing cveryiehergto Be apnarent of yer | HAG aan, EAM Oa oxtaty to th onlay Ith the century in which we live. “You might na | Mereditt who, he said, was a sage, oltting at his | force its michty power, and the craven-hearted and | Other and sco the atreeta of Northern capitals 1 inject. Factions and iisloyal men bave done | &cene of the outrage will be nad held ag. time, well eXpect the Ick Ia This Pebrusre aay | side, feady Ani y fo give him the counsel | the cowardiy, and. those who sympathize with | red \elth brothers! blood!” Unless these autmosities | Yet, Factions and Wsloyall men have done | Hote vt fo nea ort rpetrators, eae haa entivined around pillars of the Cap > muel, 1 i | treason, whisper “peace on any terms,” this | are removed, all ls loat,. I believe the hearts of the | sophistry nnd thelr tr We have paced THE CRIS making tol last forever, hope for any per e had received f Penn | olr, ia ‘but the cownndice of treason, What! | masses are right—generous to the care ; ff they could | through-the most dangerous period of our trials. | cProm the Richinond Dineen ; FS re mad Manent compromise or concceslon. To educate the i the rebellion, was warmly culo- | shall my Government accept an Inglorious. and | Wut see where bat men are drawing them—it they | the perlod of doubt, PSPS AIR CATER ULC ee ees ey Boul ie re mad Foyle cl aiberies Into terse dectrngs sures eene | gush tndlecourcing octhewar forthe Untouiear:| gieracehal eseees” pense thas wil rise: wit, | Wit lnovs the real matives nad eentinementtentters | he, Betled, of doubt, of diatrust aad uncertainty |’ Wve have always beea of tt casa win have en- hee duty of the prese, and T am proid to think, Mr. | ved that there could be but one party in the North, | it dichonor—a peace that will lore us the reapect | Who napire to lesd them, they would turn from them | eee teil Union nk ne thet cooky re | deavored to ilissbuse the popular mind whenever 1t ) army Mayor, that ia this noble work the press or thiaeity | HAmely.a party ofunqualiticddevotion totheGovern: | of ‘the uations! of the earths. peace. that wilt | with terror and. oxcerntions, fi War will go on, ‘The rebellion will be eubdued. | tines bere carey eee di ee teas we have como- a ATTY file prese of the State—jhe press of the country. | Ment, wud earnest in ita determination to crush the | Joaye me leas than freemane—-a peace that s | from the eyes of tho citizens; the veil must be torn | Our liberty and our Union will be preserved. to- | arged with discouraging our people; Riera catenin tdlind@hendcutsnreeavaver yan al a. ‘Phere ean be no divdelon of this country. | knowledge a failure of my country's fast | asunder; and they must, on both sides, ceage their | coher, nnd we slinil yet, by the blessing ol rt , them plainly, and io England and Germany, and Italy and Greece, has so ordered it that in this country | Never! Never! (Tremendous applaw J. Rather 1 partiean divistone, or bebold in tho near | fransmitto our children a free, a powerful, and au | jros ferctoe that they had nothing to hope audio and Atucrien=e fenting thin geen bat: | here ean be Lut ove Government for no great na | Jef'ua have eat, And mite fo" peaileo a | naatly ape A ruined natfon—a | undivided country. +8 powerful, and aa | from foreign Mon, oF from auything lye tle of the age ta a speedy, glorious, and perpetual | fon. is war, he continued, can result in nothing | famine; let nll euifer, and the patriot die, but ever ople, wil ir ecated at eve! eee d . ve God ane: own right Arms. ome people dunphiet Apninuee Thais Perpetual | wut plete guljugation of the rebeliton and | Keop ralecd high aloft, ani proudly unfurled evers= [Lota appinu 7 | A the conclusion of Mr. Thayer's speech, Mr. | nmong us have been amuzitgly slow in discovering neta Ee ete t of the supremacy of the Union. | where throughout ourbroad Tand, the ensign of the | faim to Ud all We can, by Individual | Binney announced that the League House would be | this patent fact. Hut we are glad to sce that It beeing United y The Governor then eloquently depleted the | Republic, that Inviting slgnal to the oppressed of all | examples, to banish partisan diescaeiona. Let our | opened every Monday ni F members, as an | BOW to be pretty generally admitted. Tho Tronsides Uni Our Flag. — : | worthlessucss of those who, in this hour of | jands—the emblem of freedom, [Great cheering.] | (ellow-citlzens know that the lesue 1s not the auc: | cvemmy fre conetal eewverentlon At ae ort Royal, the ltnmenae teeta of transports, the "One Ela thy folds shall ly, Jour country’ peril, fail to give her their! Pot come failure sf you will, but never a peace Uutll | CC38 OC a party, but the slabilily of the Governn ning for general conversation. A oneluaton | huge army those transports carey, the treaerdous 9 ONS The roma ticenhatens Unqualified “support. ’ ‘There can be but two] every traitor in the land shail have unconditionally | Let ue ecek out nll who disown ¢ of he remarks, there were loud cries for Mr. Me- | preparations at Vieksburs, the heavy force of R persue When speake the signal trumpet tone, parties now in the North—those who are in favor of red_and renewed his allegiance to the Go- | Let us claim as brothers all whe Michal from all parte of the room, who mado a few | &t8us, and the enormous army of Joc Hooker, are ead and And the long line comes gleaming on. | theGoveroment, and those who nre ayainst It. In| verament, ‘To promote this end, T underatnnd, ig | love to thelr elty and State, but who belley pleasant remarks, and proposcd six hearty cheers annot be overlooked or galne endand teor glances E10\y speaking of the part which our State has taken In| the gole object of this asgociatlon, and therefore I | 25 eomething ‘dearer, awecter lar than all th SE RRaUIoS a tremendous struggle H pea shall eink beneath | the present war he spoke in the greatest praise, an) here with you; Lam hore to do my duty as bi no, at home and abroad, olnlm no prouder name 7 gaition 1s 1 gellan arovehal etcakes belo enid that he was fully convinced that the masses of | J may than Americans [applause] ; an who acknovwledce | Shortly after nildnight the asaombl thought of; even the most eancuine give it up Inde 4 at lovely mezsepger of death." the heople of Peunsylvanin were truly loyal Tr and Joave the Iecue to n watcbfal God."" > | JOSIDE ditegtance to. tot eovercignty: whose symbol ase SSS UME A FEAT ABC = ‘This was responded to by Mr. George B, Lincoln, | Neither would our people consent to a dishonorable nd Joa polenta 7 | lathestrlpes and stare, (Continued applause. re ¢ it was coming, that iroatmaslerDluaciokle al AS peace; but the blood of thirty thousand Penney! (Grent applause] | “Tam no adherent of Mr. Lincoli Micpeeeane MEETING OF THE OLD SonpiEns oF 1812. | it Would be followed by intervention, and that Inter~ The Inst tonst Vanlans, sho lay buried upon our battle-lelds, was | SPEECH OF MR.’FREDERIOK FRALEY. | clestion to the last, T would ecorn fo ask a favor of | —Mtonday, the old survilyng eoldicrs of the war of | Yestion would put an end to the war, haa done mis- hoveht ne Ue | the mutiil pledie thatthe peaple ofour State were | PTE CH OP AUR Fi him, and wrould not accept of one it offered, Lteclno | ys1a celeterted. the arate or the ae We hope it will not be allowed todo ace Fa orate ae ully pledged tocrueh the rebellion at all hazarda, In| | Mir. Fraley made a brief and eloquent speech. He | partiean intereat in the success of hla. Administ ¢ a ary he birth of sin you all that we belie shorting the audience irduty in thepremleea, | looked upon this war asa provideatial war; he | tion joue many acta of which T do not ap- | WAehington, by # patriotic meeting, held In the Su- cnough that in the multiplicity of
be brightness, purity, ant he eald, let us atand by the people of our State, anil | had no fear of the result, when he looked upon | prrmcnone h mes ee OF which taaig: | preme Court room. The attendance was not yery | Attucks to be mnie upon us some of the : ral joy, and everlastiog Jove! not hy certain disloyal dignitaries fn this city, ho | the hope-beaming faces ‘of his audica Hon? but T’ deem ith dutyen holy detyc tees | i wing ° near a Ty | successful, “Hut, untess ail eucceed, our exdee te Se aoa cnee dire a aes: dole tathe wine | looked back fo the-apicit of eat, when ous | lon but 1’ deem f'n duty. n holy duty, to take | Jorge, owing to the bail walltlog, In consequence of | HiCrCas, But, unless all euccved, our cade is zal eces of right and) Gov over trenson and Asaxtulted before Sumpter's wails, ‘This w to counsel, assist, and sustain the conatituted uz | (Be eBows Alderman Peter Hay presided, and Joha | pared to tations of an anaconda in the act of Nauee.] A number of letlere were reecived from aistin- | Fevellion. “In, reference to the “league,” and | pen the material Interests of tho country | thorities of my country In. thia war on this hideous | H Frick, Een, a sceretary stilling Wi n. tig good simile. Wonnd the mr have eulahed géntlementt Wosasike the fallawlug extracte:,| Gtu saa Obl for which it was formed, | lag will wave in triumph over thia Ind; fr ni hell-bora revelllon, Again, gentlemen, we must | Captain Emerfck moved that Col. Robert Carr be | 8nxconis in any hia body and you break his ave g g spoke In the eat terme of praise,| to South, from Enst to We will be an area | demand from our public sorvants, high and low, the | requested to read Washington's Farewell Addrces, | Bld. Delent any part of this expedition und you ynariica, FROM GENERAL SCOTT. le would not only purage the league, and | conecerated to freedom. He his band | exercize of scrupulous integrity, and strive to see i pons ape! rewell Address. | destroy the wh Suppose the Yankees should eas New Yoric, February 1, 1650, _| [t@ pattlotic members, but he weuld eapeeially'advor | Aad volee ngatnut the rob ley con- | once more pudlicvintue. ‘Te ihe strictest mecounte, | AgTECH tO-_ . ura Charleston and. Vicksburg. (Of what aval nus of Lhave the honorto acknowledge your | cAte all agenclea which capecially aimed nt eustain- | cludell amid great ap plause, followed by | bility hold every oficial. Punish with the direst | Captain Emerick, on behalfot the Executive Com- | would it be to them {{ Hooker should be beaten here patt of the Corn Exshan} ing the Goveraineat an crushing the rebellion, | SMP Lew. | pennitics the defaulter and defrauter, for it there be | mittee, then present following preamblo and | 10. Virginia ag McClean waa ast spring 1 Ut Whnt ; Gt Phiindeiphla, inviting me Governor closed ble remarks by a noble tribute EOH OF MR. LEWIS, A villain more damned than a traitor, It is he who, | resolutions avail woul it be to the Yankees te Hold Chncleston aucveation of the new Unite naylynnta, and Weavors 10/ arn presinnxn: ‘The necessity of the proeent or-| YUE the elonkor patriotism, woul fob and plugdet | “When tho agcoslatlon convened, a year ago, 1a nity, while we hd -an immense. foros the Bast the rebellign and sustain the Ge 5 i Teonalder te have eeu imperntives Our | {He Meeting and snering doldters of the Uaiyn. | gn pinea, to celobrate the anuiversary NUthay of ington, with the whole her r ee B esis nd honor, a conaldcs nperative. UF) (Appiause.) Itcorruption cannot be punished, the | PePlAce, to ce Anutvecsaty pur our eoterprlicat or her ER RATE Oe ee Spe valioves; Eaequavetsalitue Oaited States gue niny be viewed asa great moral sant | CHO J wenihtptercering. (honda nee: {he | Hie Father of hincountey, the immortal Washin pul oheer Tao ange mate ot fcmost pleasing ¢ Bue eaguot travel | Sanitary Gommiseioa, was then introduced cae ical amon ae nerentomsehich | "Yet us, aecllizens receive no longertolitttne base | Uanentte were cheered with the condient nop ro, iit expecta fo | fa was even a short distance without pain and ¢ | PEECU OF REY. DR. BELLOWS. etl) and man 1 li trosteneealitrenn th adera of corrupt organizations to officea of honor, i pr Els el LAR CEE AAA thing worth Oghting for, Partlal AO. AR IE er a Va f ized, ancl men and true’ saved from the | Jeaders ot corrupt i 0 fratricidal strife; In which the American people lo.” And even if th . ei, but Fam therefore, ob Jecline your courteous | After looking round upon thieassembly, nnd hear | lontheome infection, Tt wae indeed high time to tak | Let the high places of the State and nation be silted | then involved, was drawing to a close, and that. the TetCHTiE thee Rica e er'can nvithtion. etfnlly, vous, "1 veraor seak, it scems ag If Penneylva- | the matter ia hand when we heard our Gayernunent | With wen fanied for integrity and incllect restoration of the Union, In nll constitutional intes | Charl Savaunab, ALobile, pasion conch G og, «INFIELD 'SCOTT. | pin alone should conquet thie rebellion, and L feel | denounced by prominent politiclans bi i the Repibtic. (Lond i Hty and vigor, as altiost Af the point otnecom: | Guucstom SaeAnnab, Aoblle, DUEL, 1or had 3 1 Eaqny Sey Ses Tshould not offer New York to ald in the under- | partial on of measures deemed ne Tees ue eyuctenta anil disasters | plishment. We sincerely rearet that these expectn- | survive to bear the banacr of U th i 1 every rer se qaking. You number some five hundred or six | its self-preeervation; when we saw every att | rom our supincness. Reinsplred | tions have not been rea and that nothing has | field. Awe oxnrot alent et in the NS EORETARY SEWARD {indcalor them nent andl Influential citf- | ployeil to bring our own rulers tuto contempt and to | ‘lorlous memories of this day, let us | recently occurred that Kives <ertal nine ofan |'ueesceyoullt beta Torin eens ae ee es After EST oF STATE, WASHES | zenn of Philadelphia, - This should not bo called sreb rebel Into st of aulmiration | emt ra it, the dara Tamedinte termination of the strugsie. Whilst our | a2c3SGs Wu a a a Tee aide Ret 3 24 Bs n League of Philadelphia, but smply a sun men base enough | Counsee nati L rautnpyent Mee nn sure Lace ental tinct tine eel ie war iinmortal. { fon ol nS 0 the com- ague of Natfonnl Leagite, having one to Tanglbg our own great and | Pese af cried, bloody, and unrelenting treason ral splendid vfetorles, they have aleo sulk v : Is not lost— { ed the milttec appotr citizens | every city. Safety of the Ualon Is the sentiment | true Commonwealth under the rebel bauner. | proud efourelty “lovers of our State—lettheeentl: | ga reverses, nod the waratill lingers on ue plod ; ons of of Philsdelphis for their kind remembrance of me hould prevail in all our hearts, 1 thanic our| | It 18 not that our home traitora are ao numerous, | Meat tat aways our hearts be, Gur country—uay | however, that tho powerful military movements 1 pagraaenes yield Mant 1n connection with the occasion of inaugurating the at Governor), for telling us | f thelr detiant bearing, and the boldness | FC eur be ENE bul Fight op Wrong, our country. [1p progrces will be completely successful, abil t hail “he C er ore mon people 1s4ound to the they pro resies, that tt haa | [a mige,’ and which Mr, herty Fe | ournext aunlvereary will witaess the ol’ Union -asion! e loyal men ot , and even tried, to leave New | become necessary t and feel thelr In« | eds] in all Its con: Myigor, and the Stai 4 F occu 2 are of eh in the ¢ You ean't do it; her heart | significance fo this loyal community. Let ua re- | SPEECH OF MR. SCOVEL OF NEW JERSEY. 1 Banner gracefully waving over every elty, forbid me that b e at present. is foo hot in the Work. (Great applause.] You | member thatit was by the activity of euch unsere | pir, Scavel ealdghte is the time of plain Inngunee ‘and haniet of the land. a wee opwamy, | enepot gueagy the volo of Venu pulgue runt ae of the pateiolls | a Mite Seevel ealdbis ie tho time of platn Inngunge. | Y potieg, ‘That wo. Fecal. the commemoration of LIAM H. SEWARD, hank God the people ara In earnest In the great | masses, that Louisiana, North Carolina, snd Vissi | orn by adoption, thie assembly of grave nud rove. | his anniversary ae peculiarly important at t pe eee scant of erusng (no Fetcion List coal eset | alos wera free te aay thomeattes senians me Ce | ort eyneantton Aa assembly of rave nnd seve | Sa nT ci histor dal nenar othe | whet pl {9 by | M SECRETARY CHASE the secret of unconscious eoul, ‘The spirits of cur | vernment of the Union. ‘These unworthy consof | {int eeeEors WH pardon 1 See is | valuable leseone of purity aad patriotiem, co beautt | ¢ cra ne “It would _cive me creat pleasure to mect the | sires declare, and £0 do our posterity, thnt we have | thelr cauntry, lost to all eenec of shame, andl willing { Gibt Man who love my country. {© | fully itiuatrated in the precepte and example of hina | fell ; itted to the citizens of Philadelphia on that oceaston, but | A nation to live for, a nation to catablish, and that | toric to temporary power on the ruins of the falrest Ethalormenocein thosvordite, aac att andirat in the | ceatral gnarl c a They had oillcial dutice will make Impossible for ihe to | It miuat go dosen Undmpalred to tho lstedt genera. | fabric of liberly ever reared by human baad, are nt ea, My con," gal he to his eldest born "it of bia Sea eave Washinetod o—but, gentlemen, not detain you—other | this moment exerting all thelt faculties In etriving Teo hen AiAll le'SoeTetiaye anyaolemy nal feed, a 7 EPARTHENT oF Hexpico, } 2 ee ntlemen are to follow and 1 will leave you. fosap its foundations, They preach anew the ex- se nity, thal my oly palitert cod ee Hele | gallant oficers, eoldicrs, ‘nil sailor i UMOND, Vacs Feb. 10, 1569. i FROM SEORETARY WELLES. SPEECH OF PRESIDENT KING. ploded doctrine of remacy of State rlehts, | Jaren bcctral head ete ee aincaterced Js when | rivations and’ perils. t h they’ arc | , Mts Troanuter. ya citizen of France, having “It would ve me pleasure to be present onthe | ate, Preojdent King, of the Columbia ._ | the ve tb troubles, They denounce} tion hus driven back the law of force, and since | Whilst patriotically defer titution and | taken, the oath [of slleviance to the Confederate ecanlorenitiden’ to, ERE reese ceo Mr. Prealdent King, of the Columbia College, N. | ns tyrannical or unsound every military-and finane | LS hale tia ; Tinintalning the Union, iuable leaney be | Stated of Ameries, and being plelged) nov to reread Gia p les | y., waa introduced. After what hid been sald, he | clalmensureof the Admioler by only | qumMter enw, that drooping and dishonored | tveathed to ua by Wasiilngton higeombatriats Wirectly of indirectly say intormation that oe ha tte fondu in concurrence of the noble. gen | ean wo hope fo euppre e revolt which bas| rattlesnake. braves, whether they! be ealled | 2% 8rme and to councl. 13 hereby permitted fo pasa ‘beyond the } FROM THE ATTORNEY GENERAL. a Ge wallespreseed | drenched our Iaud in blood. Whey abuse equnily tho | called Brooks or not, with canes rich with cold, and |. esol n ollr opinion the widows and | lulls of the Confelerate Ststca, subject. however, LHS RRUISL EE GEN ns of the ho preceded him. In| just and humane polley of compensated emnaneipa- | Gearing thie device, “iC Aim again’” Did Tsay | orphans emen Who have lost their lives | fo such delay and restrictiony ax'may be Imposed _Aam conateningi to deny myself the pleasure of | New York they woult vladly imitate the example | ton, and the bolder anil more ncarssary one of Ue | CeieS hie Gevtee, NHI him again’ Did Tsay |i the gorvieo of their country are justly entiict fo | tne military wuthoriiles, Not to pes through Gee \ Lite 5 Ww 5 E fore, them, and co-operate with us ia favor of abso- | throning thefr chon Wo}, by declaring the slaves Of| Geation, aio would have the spure iron the reereant | the fostering eare of the Goveramedt af the Union, | neral Lee's army nor south of Taniea river. Dy of } GENERAL HALLECK ind the crushing of the rebellion, ‘et it be ailtraltors ta rebellion feo, | ; Knight who strikes dawn free speech with a brutal | | Resolecdy ‘Chat while ally anprova’af tha} Her of tbo Seerckary Of Wan te it Reereis {bet omelal. ti too that arcest of ploticrs ngainst the nation’s life, and | KMghe whe strikes down free apevch with « brutal | coneral provisions of the conscription law. no JOHN NDER, Provost Marshal. | Hepreta that olllelal duties prevent his accept. | stop thet there could be ng, comproniee. Ores | thelr being mercifully placed for a timo where they | Republi live ‘3 : Yefore Congreas, believing it to be more impartial | ‘The words printed fu brackets were marked out f Ance.' of "g00 and applause We do x od would be harmless, ino of their ng cons pitrte and ‘han any militia Ja! erto enacted, 1 ent! tI tl par meet FROM HON. J. COLLAMER, U.S. SENATE. | When our country blds us svar, We should do so. | beeackndthe tempornsy suppression or eecadiers | longed the Ife of Liberty, Cataling and the worst |e aperchensive That Mt will he nganied by tor the th pasa swore ted out P EK, UL s Sa ie ee , au been—nnd the tenpornry euppreesion of Incendiary | conspired against tho liberties of Rome. ‘The ene- | PFE)” F more eevercly than Am rty was folind about $9,090 in Southe when “Tam gratified to learn that the new ost office | We have among us persons who profess to be ex- by one kelfstyled con- saith A : Resolecd, That we conaider It the imperative duty | ern loo anid about $5,000 In gold. wee | In Philndelphiats now completed. “T put forth some | emely In favor of pence. ‘The man who speaks in | gervatives, heteointalerablo oppression, andebame: | Wce, OF Que Republis live nat atone on the Latte | oc! shonal Government to tse all the meaue ta | partica.it ia sald, adknosledee fiat teed oes dora, cliort In the Senate to elleet this object, and nm | Jellsn eGovernment, should be strung up, Conatitutlon, But. for ihe] Lelda Of Virginia, and’ donot only guanl the living’) ty, ‘nocer to farfet out and punish, In the most ox- | Fegulnrly engaged inearryloe goede take eee f Die happy to see thet it has been eifected, Metal | [APH aes ot wenn ta roace: Alar enor | e-livered renegades,” who, while holding bigh | 8 5CA tiene and fovs in the Ine of thelr birth." cinplary manner, traitors, perpetrators of the cignn bit be uo. Soutae r dulies will deprive me of the privilexe of accepting | Men in sims because deleated at the polls. Tity in our Government, whieh they hailgolemmly | They are here at hone, They ate eniled. “Coppers | Ue. frauds coromitted by’ Unprincipled contractors, SS { your invitation, and J can only send the Philuler | ushed to arms becauso they could not rule. Why to uphold, were secretly ploiling Ite over | PhCy Are here at home, Chey are called © Copper. | and other swiudlers, whether in ollice or aut of of ee ae Filia ine hicheat reapesta aud eincere congratula. | Atteaipt to make peace with hove yhoee gunranters | throw, And Who now. wield all power Anethe. revels | REN" OF | Ghunkrends’) (oy jar taa) or from the highest to the lowest, without feat ALLEGHENY TY BONDS. ] tiona on ihe ovcasion in the past afford no peace? They aay, “We | Jous States, ruling them with a rod of lronefor . 2 iconetie oF, OF allection. publish the following potition of the holders oe j MIRTS Co BOA qSE SPOR TG ace Tl | yommsstatess ruling; them) 0 | chip at the shrine of Vallandighamy, and consider D. ! per renweend: tanec Sie ; = - maean to gopauer you." | We, must put them | those penjured traitors, who epurntte Constitution | {"!Mtnhong a bleeding. martyr te then the | y fsleoh That tee again most emphatically urge | of the toms of Allegheny county to tho Legisature, FROM HORAOE GREELEY Mt ey neo Win fo. Mba Rete Meee eeeE| AEM lteule Hts eafesuarde, and who persistontly| flag that oat aloveus tonight, nidiog lustre to ine | the several denariments of Government, fo waking | anteing the pnesage of nn act by that body author “T long ago decided that I would not quit my im-| the law.” ‘We might have. it. patched-up peace Wy teat they will never ozata live under | heavens themeclves arc a hissing and n reproach, | sPpolntments to ollice, to give a decided prefercace | sizing the funding of the accrued Intercat up to Ipxted meilste post of duty for nny purpose that did not | Tt Je'n naked question of extatenee te Le pent rt Fons yegontemantion, have: our | hey prefer being partieans for Jei Davie, to being | to,wounded or crinpled eoldtera nnd eattore, Heine the ant DO com to me cseenttal nintil the war fer the Uulon be | to be. js A question who i faoley on-lovera to utter? Not one. | natriota on the elde ol Ap honest, God-fearing Preal- | Otherwise qualified to discharge the duties the b 4 keepa ended,” In pursuance of this resolve, Yam obliged | Seo ie 2h Aya ueptiog who, shail jive, |For that What te “more atrocious still, theee fallen | Henk, ‘Pale about liverty to thet, and they whinper | _Lciclted, That the serious attention of ( To the Honoratle Members of the Senate end House of | y. and aulschine yduritied inettations dat poor Ne eee | SOAK Be permission of nnsbouy, We aro in Ne pong us exult In every occurrence which | Warbitrary arreste.” Point Them tothe man. |eAled to the delays that occurs to applicants, for | Raesentatives of he State of Pennsulvanta i ma oflice may coon be In the dally receipt of letters from | the moat unqualitied. Faecal that Goal over rode, Q wrong doers. “A momentary pause iar ane | Clee, form of our beloved country, wt rwhose | Metout roree. ih the proper departments ands less | goWvej,tus woderslzmed petitioners, cltizens of Phitne ectlon the capitals of every one of the thirty-four Statery | They can do whatever they please and call inv. | advance of tho engles of the Republica momentary Serine aide, by a common tmputee | enthers | tog urooriety of exempting all such claims from | APH l fo represent fo your honorable | nad FO and that they mey bear none other then a United | teiwiit that in the city at the Hall of Independence | shea to cukr eee eee OF the Kepublio—a momentary overy patriot, and they will siriek "Democracy | fortho provricty.of exempting all such dlaima front | yody, that vome years since the county of AlleRbe | nee Rs SAE rete CMTC Ee ee We shouldcome here, and learn that our Govern | ill-suppreseed delight. By them all our victories Sith a preternatural ingcnulty of error they talk | Th stremely oypreselve t0-many poor widows. aad | Mvesauthorlty.of the Ditetaincure of thts nce Re Youre, HORACE GREELEY.” | ment must last forever. We enrry out your pre-| are underrated, all our dlexstera magnified, Oni Cf coercion, when we only aek that the laws of the | coigterg. Yo yi fo dn large number of bonds in payment ¢ anenre sa OE ol cepts, I have taken courage from the words of | monstrous! Oh't shame to human nntiee that there Lnited States be executed against every c ‘The resolutions were | ns to Ihe stock of several rallronds termie | EC. of FROM W. 0. BRYANT. yourGovernor. The heart of the people 1s sound. | should be living, in theenjoymentotall tie bleasings 128, citlzen of these Unltod States, whether 1D | oy motion of Colonel Jobin | neald county; and inorder that avid boods j oa “IT needed any inducement. beyond the kind | Whistle the demagozues tothe winda!, The speaker | otour bencilcent Governe ok h Str ARCS at SA td Foy nine. | directed to be eent to th ht be disposed of on the most favorable term ae terms of your invitation, 1 should” find, It in the | concluded amid lond applauce slaughter of their countrymen Nenting for the pro, Ley, ate Submlsstoniste, * In 1776 they would | tone of the United States there was an act of the Legislature f } sims general istriotien, which, tn'the present crise SPEEOH OF Mit. JAMES MILTLIKEN rervation of that Government, nnd olfering up their Neve been Cow Los, Skinners or Hesalane, Now | tyouse of Hepresentatives them legal Investment for trust funds, and, {a fast, } T national stInirs. animate so large a portion of | aster Mr. King had concluded, Mr. James Milli- | ives In Itedefence with the devotion of true martyra, Wey, Are only traitors. | And Ict then Won Colonel Carr thea read Washington's Parewell-| }FE¢) abet area aac | the people of your city. Reasons of s pereonil nae A i) aes & yre, wy While they attempt murder, they will only fo with th thority of enld act, unrdinna, execittors, ‘nd ) thegeomeot your city: aie pera kan cena atadaeed aoa ae Pheto miserable men feel no inllsnation nt the cold Wyrnmatt mutotde,, “The Goverment will live, and | Adress, which was Hstened to with the clorest at- | trustees, for te use of osphase mate hrs ited oat 4 J , Nr. Onatnscax :"The aesoetation which wo are | Pooded mutders of unarmed loyeliste, committed by they will sink deeper than. plummet-line ever EOI oe tas meats | others, all of whom have. long. been “deprived a ) FROM EDWARD EVERETT, assembled here to-night Lo inaugurate Impee Pear eth eae tte arriba Agatust Us, and sounded, fenving no bubble to tell where they went | , After the tr He business, the mecl- | the use of eal money, and many of them Are at {| “Tt would give me great pleasure to visit your | Cath of ua a Moughttul cou fon of the ¢ from uamelera eructiies, when bearing tor their JOM, TREY, Ae Me te aie | ————_———_— Ht fe an # Degiteave to re: | | SUE mould lve i, great pleasure 10, visit sour | fo bo nttahed ume to per | femishing patents food, helng tore tee pheee ie cou to a mintater when Kicked out af ihe door, STUNG ETERSEN IR wane see ea i { faced mihi Y Gmbed in at the whadew. Mut thelr servility — Hon, Ancon Burlingame, our wtotster to China, |) That the leeallty of sald honds has Intely The firal, and to mind ther of the | Wasit not time, then, 1 ond Jeiterson Davia will not save them, in announetng the death of Gen. Ward, enys that in | tabliehed by ou8 of the several court, ! asit not time, then, my frlends, that we.who a Government go down, ft will be with ) this State and St h | « egret very much my inability to bo v hal he com membership shall be unqua- mauy of whom have found protection abroad under Utarnished hoadr— ke ‘the old | bute ten thousand taels to t Government of the | ComMmUsalonera o legheny county | in Philadelphia, on the 231 of this month | Uted Floyatty eGovernment of the United | the follsoE that teapleadegt Geaueee Met ae as TOO COI CMI [eaters ian Alnlae the Unto tae | bested by the United Ststes Dietriet Court to | ae ates, and uniwavering supporto ite efforts for the | typify, ax we well know, the sentiments of mora RISB ISLES SOL NEI ESTE LEER mount of taxes ent to pay the acer Tent FROAL HON. J. P, KENNEDY fuppresston of the rebellion.” This, sit, compre: | than nine tenths of the inhabitants af this (alr city, 5! EECH OG HON RUSSELL THAYER. | before Mr. B. could reply to thie patrlotle offer | terest on eal bonds ; but na the collection of 60 i read “1 bog you to assure she committee. that T ect a | RE‘UeA duty webich to tinics of pace wheare too apt chould iif the voiee of warning. na Well seainet the Hon. ML, Russell Thayer then spoke es fol Ward was killed. Mr. Burlingame eaya amoun ig tne wiht be eae pH NACE Ge Mehity to roentd, but whieh, in tmes of rebellion | parlor traltors who Infest the more rellned walks of, I tejoice, Mr. Chalrmaa, to bebo io. thie . sh, though unexcouted, find worthy record in the Qe {| think Gpinion, and would not fall to acknowledze my gra | COU NAT nape disregard, oe We! private Wey aa neainst thelr tesa cintocnt ani Ye sn of the frienie of the Union, so many men Ofc | archives of his native land, to show that nelther ia gplntoni nnd wrontd not fal fo neknos Glee ayer 4a Vaal snot, dleregard fisted follostere, tlt Instruments, to 1 NER jeuwteicediiniuence: woithis coeamialty |. show thal ae le fn person. by presenting myself on the oscas | "A ight (oour country’s ble “gloziag Hes anil treason they have beck thught, terce here so many men of intelligence ani virtue, | &elbextle nor foreign service, nor the Incidents of a pate son they purpose to toe ft Zcqull overcome the ne: | tory chores ujiod us, there artee an iporaiive ne, tavong thelr hustler compcert BNOUBEY Ch, amid the per(ts of tho presenterisie, are Willing | stormy lite tingufsh from the Ci geclly for thore who’ are truly Toya § ylfafte You know, ae. Breeton to euch » psa fentanan ail minor politcal Iau, hildof the republie the Gres ¢ a ‘ ib et Se Ne ear aT emeclveR, iad the ineolsace of this unchecked treneon reached, Chees, and to unite their tufluence, thelr ae an. by akntion, fot a FROM DR. 0. W, HOLME i another, only that with all our preponile tn mets thelr means, thelr time, and thelr. je x vot the baud tinal “J muat content myself with thanking you for the p preponderance ofnumbera, threats thelr mexns, thy ieee = | Ee pouabena| ee thes to stant by ¢ her, and’ by the side of our Gor have beon ured that we should not ascemie here In to ald in the. geeat struggle which hae f ue , : bonds. Kind invitation, on behalf of the committee you | vernment, until the bright light of the morning— the ischarge of onr patriotic ‘ Mal nA uurgelves And ou THE ANDERSON TROOP.—We learn that all | All of which we beg to submit for your favorable Papresent, anil necure Sou that I sincercly regret my | Veenmeat, untll the bright light of the moralng-— the lechurRe Patriotic mission uamalested? the preservation of m country for ourselves And our | THE ANDERSON TROOP.—We learn th All of rentchiwe bemdo aubmlearigone Ay arat Inubiilty to be with you at the inauguration. Yawn upon us, There ie thin day a necessity that {lon of the PubC press, Ceuphece Tee aoe ee ee ae arlen kigpiee | Wrned to the service of thelrcountey, aud'will soon | May Ve specilly craated. eS te a SHG patrlots should take thelr places in line, and that, in ber of this League that doce not despire them, and (Lda, not invent the phrase, sir; it is one. re | be again tn active eervice. The elxteen referred to | And ‘8, Wwe shall ever pray, | PO eHInE GRACE fo Philadelphia | {elt lorsward march, thelr step should'keep harmox feel Mv good purtoses rather whotted thon tinted eatedly weed by John Marshall, wad with ee | Above nre now belng trled by court martin = ve Who opening poat office {n Philadelphia | nfous time to the music of the Union. (Applause) by such an attempt to tntimidate ; ony mor Tam hela enphastes in. that parsage of hia great | A NEW IRON-OLAD Gt eae erton, Tee's chlef of arte euggeatem contrast. Lesa th PeMrwage the | Lt would be tdle for me to detaln you with a rele allre there fs none who would not defend aur rieht Mistory In Which he eecribes the formation of | ironclad gunboat Neosho, intended for serviceon | lea srulumeot West Point ond an Eplecaal "ate Hirst general post oillee for the buditing United States | rence tothe theoretical enuscsof tho present rebel- to nilvocnte the cause of our country here.or cle: the Federal Constitution), that upon the perpe- | the Mietlesipps, Nas just been Taumebed nt Carondes | uleter trom Mlusisalypl, who resigned teaPord of Government was opencd ja Philadelphia. lion. Tt would be tedious for me to argue with you where, if need be, with the strong arm, , tulty of the American ‘Union depend in no | let, Mo, She will be ready to tickle the rebels about | the epirit for that of the flesh, and righto@aaCaa for
pucks
‘ostmaster General, and his! the num ican the tiret of Apell rebellion, at the beginning of the wat
(Dr, Franklin was us questions which hive, from tlme to ‘But most happy am Ito say that, on the great small degree not ouly the preecrvation ot rep)
6
FORNEY'S WAR
PRESS.—PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 186
Sorney’s Tar Press,
BRUARY 28, 1803,
FORNEY’S WHEELS
“WAR PRESS.”
CHANGE OF TERMS.
In announcing the commencement of a new vo
Tame of the WAR Press, it is tho publisher's fnten- tion to show his appresintion of THE GREAT SUCOESS which the paper haz rselved, by mok- ing many nnprovements In its contents, and adding
to Ita attractiveness by every means 1n his power,
Since th first number of this
paper, on the 1éth of November, 1861, Its ist of
scribers has stendily increased, watit its weekly elr-
elation is now
EQUALLED BY BUT FEW COUNTRY
appearance of;
PAPERS IN THE
‘Tho War Press will continuo to publish, week
00D ENGRAVIN
FOR MORE
on Ilustrating some important event in the presen| of the Union, or
atrugele to preservo the perp: a MAP of a recent Battl THE LATEST From ail sections of the countr: and tel
THE EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT ‘Will continue to beret:
All the Letters of © Occasional’ That appear during the week in the daily paper, will appear, without curts War Pueas, This feature of the piper has done much to place it in its present exalted p
THE LATEST MARKET REPORTS
in Cattle,
WAR NEWS
recelved by mnil
aph, up to the hour of going to pre
conducted as wbly as it has been
Iment, in the
‘Will continue to be given, the Philad Money, and Produce Markets receiving more than onlinary attention,
ORIGINAL TALES AND SKETCHES,
Written best and most popular authors, the subjects taken principally from evente transpirin on the battlefield, are published from week to week.
In aduitio nothing will b and make it accept WHE FARMER, THE MECHAN
THE MAN OF BUSINESS.
Neither will the LADIES be forgotten. CHOICE POETRY, USEFUL REOIPES, HINTS ON THE TOILET, and HOUSEKEEPING MATTERS, Will all receive due att In short, the Wan Pu ill be agit can be made by mon Will be left un Visitor to every
he above depart:
d that can add Yo Ite Interest,
ent of the payer,
neglee
, AND
thing able weekly
loyal man ai eouatry A@r In consequence of the great advan of paper—being nt. sin tus for the second Volume was tea 1s compelled, to sare bimecit frou Tose, to change the term TERMS OF TH WAR PRESS: Gnecopy one year, == Five copies one ¥
Ten copies one ye Twenty coples one year, =
Be The getterup of willbe entitl
Jn no inst WMfford very little more than the cost of the paper.
C&T PRIVILEGES TO THE GETTER UP OF CLUES,
‘Those forming Clubs will be al
In thepri he Pro
the publist
7100
he following ratea:
a Clut
to an extra coy
ice can these t
they
the privilege
of having papere cent to onc Post Oitlee and, also, of adding additional subscribers from time to time, ns they may be ned, at the Club Price. ka Persons for 1 ©, when con venient, have the RZ Specimens of the will be for-
warded when requested. 49> NEWSPAPERS giving ¢ or more insertions, will be entitled Aud
Prospectu
n exchange
JOHN W. FORNEY, 111 SOUTH FOURTH
TREET,
PINILADELPIIA
THE SITUATION
“ANl is quiet on the Rappahannock!” Murfreesboro answers the call—Vicksburg Tepeats it—Texas takes up the word—and | North Carolina joins the chorus. From camp to camp nothing is heard but the
gentle bustle of military life. Tu the Army of the Potomac courts martial are pa doom upon deserters, the is pry’ and the hard-pr a skirmish, a rpid, or even a fla tion, tells us t
ng
y8t marshal
tler’s «
ng into the s and stores,
d repor iring of
al, through a powe woods can I ri ty of the rebel encampmer Rosecnass is putting his neg and writing patriotic letters to his friend the West. General Smerycan is reer the strength of his army at Memphis, punishing certain unscrupulous membé the pre General Gran is gradually investing Vicksburg. General Banks is menacing Port Hudson and managing New ns. General HusvEnand General Fos- sing their forces; for an attack upon Charleston, For the first time since the war began, it may be said that the clamorous report of war, is hushed. The North is peace—the South is pence—and in want of other objects of interest, our eyes are turned to the West Indies, and a ce rebel pirate now prowling around th
tral American seas, There was wu Jittle plosion at Charleston; but nothing was jured except the reputation of Beaur and Ixouanas. Navorron by the m of intervention has ry SEwanp to immortalize himself by a magni- ficent exposition of the Americun policy ; Congres drawing to nm close one of the busiest and most history has known. the De which its unscrupulous leaders haye been
seen to disapp the vieini-
General
‘oes to work,
nd
are 1
ARD nace
nabled Mr. Seere
remarkable s¢ Ia ub eratig party, aflt
OS OU;
hted ut the record
permitted tomake, is endeayoring to deceive the people into the belief that it is honestly in fuyor of a war which it has endeayored to render futile and barren, Its coune lors ure at peace, and patiently ‘vents. Every where there is silence and BOV¢ nee in the camp, the cabinet the cousej] chamber, the cauc The busy dands are a4 yest, but busy brains are thin
‘The only sounds that disturb this vast an
waiting
nde—
: Northern Stute s|
profound solemnity of national repose come from the mountains in the Southwestern
States. True to the inspiration which seems to dwell with the cagle in its cloud-wrapped
eyric, these mountaineers are as loyal to freedom as the mountaineers of Telvetia, and Caledonia, and Circassia, and New Eng- Innd. Tt seoms to love the puro nir, the rude cliffs, tho barren fields, the lofty habitations of the almost empyrean earth. It is the ery of smothered despairing loyalty— supplication and a prayer, We can only listen and mourn for brothers so sorely op. pressed, and take a lesson from what we in the Southern States, These oppression: of the South, this hunting with guerillas and bloodhounds, this wniyersal and unre- Jentin, their
another
hope—ot
conscription—dragging men from hem to th
mes, and driving ods,
like hunted bensts seeking for cover—has |
another mening to us than the mere suffering of men and brothers in the Union cause. Let us look it fll in the face and prepare to meet it, These notes of woe are notes of warning. The rebellion, terrified and despairing, finding no hy iuteryention realized, and se
we of ing the Union armies encircling it like an impassable wall of fi with clements of sedition, insurree- tion, and death molten luya,
sea ¢
, nd ready to burst forth, for the final denth-struggle. Jerrenson Davis is massing te
is prepar
army greater than eyer before Men of all a are taken from their
lowed his ud conditions
banners,
and farms und In overy part of the , Wherever @ man can be found capa- ble of beari
home hurried into Sout!
camp.
a musket, he is clothed in the
taitor's uniform, and compelled time to traitor's mu At Charleston and Fredericksburg, and Vicksburg and Ohatt , these poor creatures are being mass
to keep
noc ed, drilled, disciplined, and prepared for active war in the earnest, Jamentabl ing in these preparations
spring. There is an
thrilling, terrible mean
The spring will bring this mighty army against the nd we trust vernment is taking ample measures to mect it. We cannot permit the camp: of 1862 to be dupliested, Our lines are mo! concentrated. The law of war, of strategy
and necessity, has contracted; aud consoli-
our Go-
gments become masses, divisions merge into armies. The rebellion, like the Lernacan hydra, has 1 to three heads, and our Hen- finish the monster in th coming ¢ t. Vicksburg, Richmond, Charleston—these are the final points of attack, When we capture these places and crush the armies that surround them, the ellion will Becau: thus reduced it ; because it is known by few names, we must not un ate the rebel power or deceive ourselves as to the task before us, We are convinced that there ar more men at Fredericksburg now than haye These conscripts are being rapidly drilled and inv life, and when the order to advance is given We must meet them m
dated, and compressed ; fr
been rec CULE
mush
be over. we haye
eyer been there before
ed to camp
it will be obeyed
D
for man, gun for gun, life for life. If we can outnumber them, so much the better,
for the war will then be short, quick, de merciful, If our armies are Inrge If they engthen
cisive,
énough to do this, all will be well. are not, Jet them be recruite invincible. We
men, the
and rendered haye the
means—the We haye everything that God ever the champions of his holy truth comes us to look at the situation with a
courag
power, th
calm and us eye, concealing no.
thing, avoiding nothing, misrepresentin! nothing. It is best know ourselve: Haze we now an army large enough to meet
the armies of the rebellion, swollen by the con-
scription? If we have, we are master of we nod gifts of Providence, and are un-
the situation ; if we have not, the
vase
‘ood cause committed to our
THE ICE BREAKI.
are disposed
G.
eat deal of
are coming
rumors that to us. fre thern Alabama, Georgia, and North Carolina, rebellion against the rebellion,
L
importance to the
There seems to The §
slatures have recently passed con
on bills of the most oppressive churacter,
extending their conscription more partic the districts of Tenne e that d to the Union, with unrelentin ppose, from the
op
larly inte have hitherto been de} This is being enforce rity. We should
charming narratives that occasionally ¢
into our Northern jou! ‘n papers, that the uch things as dissension a
» Were da nd
uthern pec
united, that want of harmony were never known, that throughout the Sonth there w eeling but a general détermination to dic, rather than submit to a hateful Yankee tyranny. Whatever the Southern newspapers may think, it is evident their feelings are not shared by Mr. Jerre Davis, He de ve in thi nating rhetoric of his follower
other
s not be
quite disposed to close his eyes evident facts, In many parts of the and more particularly in the States where the Union sentiment lingered the Jonge there have been armed outbreaks against the Southern The conscription has been resisted, and men have been slain in the effort fo enforce it. ‘Th The eases are not isolated. The disaffection extends districts—affecting whole States, and requiring the strong arm of the military power to enforce ol In Northern Alabama and Miss reign of terror is said to be exis every twenty mil nel is in command, and t him to drag the people from their homes, and com pel them to fight against the flag they lov
This district. hus always been warmly at luched to the U Its citizen ed every attempt at secession and treason until they were themselves repressed by a supe- ‘They haye lands and cotton,
‘ocs and me
wer.
is is common,
through wide
ience, sippi a s. In
a recruiting cc
armed menu
ior power. and 1
ey—they a
wealth and influence, Under the pretence | produced a report of the most fa- of enforcing the State conscription laws the | yorable character, fully sustaining the rebels are punishing them with merciless | recommendations of Mr. Wannory. Mr
severity, aud Corinth, a military post in the hands of the Federal army, is now a refuge
tives of all ages and
usands of f
for th conditions. They are exiles themselves— | their homes are In the hands of the spoiler. |
Enstern Tennessee is the Piedmont of the Southern persecution. On the sides of her mountains the bones of slaughtered Union
nee that freedom |
rising in its midst like a |
nals from the South- | of to-day, certainly affords matter for the
! men of |an able
|
martyra lie scattered and cold, died for their faith, and tt military exeeutioner is dripp blood. When this ceased the began, and those who had 1 | by the stern power of the | the
Men have sword of the with their onseription
bayonet to own to the Southern Contfede- were now compelled to tnke
alleginnce
| | i}
rac
up the
| bayonet and fight bat loved and the rep ed. There w lions “and out. | brenks—mectings in the mountains and con. | spiracies; bridges were bur tracks were mysteriously | when the rebel flag was le no words of joy greeted mountains and
gainst the Dag
lic they acknow-
© rebe
cd, railrond ken up; and among them s followers. The rivers were between them Jand succor, and the?rebels crushed them, The effort was protracted and fearful, but it ueceeded, aud all w hundreds of ‘Amer sons, is the occasion:
know of the fate of as best and bravest Darrative of af tive yictim, and the whispered confirma. In North are other eyi- ) nnd rebellion, Tere | jthey have assumed x formidable shape, and the general in c iment speaks of | been sent against them, no doubt, did their work very eflectually could be expected from men
tion of the Southern newspupers
Carolina and Georgia therc
dences of disatfec mmand of the expeditions These expeditions,
having
r nway ay Union army, surrounded on all
sides by the flames of treason, and under |
| the iron hand of military despotism? ‘Their
history is one of those sacred and sublime examples of heroism that the world never It must have been the desperation of y that prompted them to such a mad undertaking 5b rie
it let us honor their meno-
and their courage, though their names | may neyer bi
known to us, and the story of their self-sacrificing valor never w |we honor
ten, a heroism and devotion in wh ever cause exhibite It is not bravery and that we speuk | South,
0 much as mere records of self-sacrifice, of these occurrences in the To us they hye a higher ineaning. | The ice is breaking, The long night of | slavery has passed—the sunlight of Freedom floods a thousand hills and streams, and this yast, bleak, ice-boximd rebellion
devotion and
melting.
The people have experienced war and sut- fering and hardships; they see that no pos- sible result can come from it beyond the ag- grandizement of bad, ambitious men; the
infamous institution; |
dreadful
perpetu burdens
ion of an
debt and muemoric
that generations will not efface, It is no | wonder they rise against their taskmasters | and oppressors—the men who have de- |
ceived, betra; nd murdered them, We welcome their efforts with
joy, and honor
|themas men whom Americans forall time J will delight to honor, A little longer and | all will be well, The gathering strength of | the Government will soon be hurled upon |
them, and
then our suffering brothers will |
be relieved and their enemics overthrown. |
THE NEW POST OFFICR,
The public of this city nay at length con- gratulate themselyes on the suitable and conyenient post oftice. W speak only within the bounds of strict mode ration when we say that the new building on Chestnut street, inaugurated Inst Mon by the T excelled, in all the require ce by any other in the co
possession of a,
stmaster General, in person, is not ents of n first- ry. yet judiciously-planned nccom- of its interior aflord every facility L of the constantly-increasing
class post o
icioy
modation:
for the desp
business of the Department, while the ex- tobea ical piece of ar-
terior must be allowed on all sid
dignified, correct, and cla: chitecture—and, as such, a conspicuous or- natent to the important thoroughfare on which it is located. We belitve that care has been taken throughout, to introduce every improyement and every convenienc
Which experience has shown to be really | yaluable in similar establishments thro
out all the largest cities of the Union. | i}
It is doubtless known to u renders that more than ten y gress did its whole duty in this matter, by the appropriation of a ‘most liberal sum of
structure
ny of our
enrs ngo Con
money for the purposes of a new But the attempts which were made to carry out the intentions of the General Govern- ment by Finavon rendered abortive by local interests aud pre. the discordant enees at work umong onr own citizens. final triumph of the its sucee
© successive administrations of |
, Prence, and Bucianan, were intlu- The project therefore, and ful completion in the ceremonies
judices, and foiled by
most satisfactory reflections to those who | have at heart the welfare and conyenience of our growing population
The present postmaster of this city ¢ tainly has shown himself, in this respect, tobe entitled to the energetic public officer. In the month of June, 1861, this gentleman, on a review of the position of the United States Govern- ment in the matter of the two estates then on, the Bank of Pennsylyania and the Bamxy and Levy propert cided that the true interests of the Post Office Department could best be subserved by the remodelling of the buildings on the lnst-named estates, for a post oflice and United States courts, as a substitute for the costly palace which, in the month of Decem- , 1860, had been proposed by the Admi
praise of an intelligent and
its possessi
8, de-
H been laid aside at that time, under the emer- neies in which the country had so suddenly come involved, Ina communication made by Mr. Wa1sory to the Postmaster General the cramped, inconvenient, wretched, and even filthy condition of the old post oftice ) ated were fully and clearly
cogent statements made
shortly to be va set forth, and suc in reference to the feasibility of preparing on Chestnut street for the artment,as to decide Judge nd thoroughly to investig subject. The Avan, Bsq., as and intelligent master mechanic,
the two esta ets of th BiAm fully J the whol | Taxovor
appointment of
an expert, and
(1 in his examination
Bryant, of Boston, an
| Apams was. ai¢ by Mr, G. J. FP, architect of much judgment and exp well known to Mr. Apams, and em| by Judge Buarr to aid him in elucidating his views by plans and estimates of cos The result of the united labors of these gentlemen proving of the most satisfactory
rience,
pwered
| separate
|told that her cargo belonged to Spanish
character to the Department, the Postmaster | talintion which it has all along been in our
General thereupon decided to recommend to him the necessary authority to contract at once
Congress the passage of an act granting
for the construction of the present building. | ‘The necessury formalities haying been com- | plied with, Mr. Bryan received | to prepare all the plans, working-<drawis pecifications, and other pi and under # con
El builder
nstructions
works have been executec with Jous Kereman, Esq., master city, und with the constant supervi- Mr. J. Fraser, architect of | as resident superintendent . Both these gentlemen have been constantly in communication with Mr. Watnony in regard to all the details and arrangements of the post office, and with United States Marshal Muctwanp with re- their
throughor
spect to those of the court rooms and The result of their labors cannot Jitself to the fuyorable judgment of our citizens, nearly every leading pos
nddjuncts,
but comme)
oflice and court room inthe Unie aving miuntest details, with lel of Gover
been examined in it a view to makix inental oftices of the kind, as it unquc
this the mi
ua. bly is to-day, of the whole country.
The arrn
ements of the new building will be yead with interest by our peopk The first story and basement, throug
the entire }
cond and third s
ies of the Chestnut-stre building, are appropriated to the post-oltice department, the entrances to which Chestnut and Library streets, int which ¢ street, and affords com
from
mple |
1 corridor,
ds from street to inication with the e. Tn addi- there is a street, to Jadies can corridor, t side from in these buildings
everal departments of the oftic tion the public ludies’ entrance apartment,
entranc from Chestuut where go without entering the public ‘There are entrances on the the passage-way, betwe and the custom-house, fo master’s private ro:
cess to the post.
nd for the clerks
ud for receiving and deliyer-
and assistants ing the muil-b: The entire building on
Library street, above the first story, and of the building on Chestnut street, | inted to the tes courts, and oflices connected The principal entrance to the
no:
bove the first story, are appr United St therewith,
power to inflict. On Tuesday t at
Si
come law in a few days, whereby the system| We are s
of privateeri ‘alty, @
lantry, lo:
commercial marine, will be estublishe arm of national de
the present rebel); Once that. this commence in ¢ Every port will
sels, and the Alabama and her a
passed a bill, which we hope
so well
mond ; no matter issuc of this war might be, there must be strife and contention and agitation, until the true pre- vails and the false is overcon Ty that En e this thing as it is seen by us. They can find parallels in their own history for they now sce in A E
what the
¢ Senate of the
Unitec will be-
ishmen cannot
uited nd enterprise of our noble
to the gal
fence and oflence, during Lin future war
law, a new era will present nay commission i
our existence as a people erful that we
should do so
aman nature and mauly pride ild be willing to suffer so much, ‘0 many perils and privati and our flag, ‘The
warfare
ack ye and ¢
ons,
for our country
‘ociates
| very Will Lave to look to their own safety, Where | sentiment that English opinion now scorns rebeldom has sent out one privateer we can | and despises is that which her re- supply fifly. We know not what may spected and powerful. Within the m be the next phase in this war. ¥o.| of men now living, Eugland was compell reign interference, under the guise to fight for her liberty and existence as wa
friendship, may then, sea, we shall be 4
blows upon these false int
our priyatee)
and bravest seamen in
defy the we
agai Humanit
Goyernnent issue it
we shall soon ¢
we can make the 1 of cot
f a poun or Havre, it mu: hip, but establishment of
with our volunteer ye
abroad, manned by the best
Id at arms
MES and his
in a balloon.
nd | 3 on every able to inflict the heaviest | 5 With |
array itself
are fighting now. “Naro.eon
meant her 1 by long nm of the sand mem
iction, and she
depreciat
stagnation of manufact Is there nothing in the te her sympathy and approba- it possible that a people still pan n Waterloo, and still blessin: mexpected salvation, ean find no-
meer and a go all that
the world, we can |
against
really | tion
y and Freedom. Let the | ing
God
letters of marque, and
heck the career of Captain coff for f
eemen
mate ble
Nor this ulone
| cy have unde ade so effectual that | a1 t be conveyed, not ina Altogether, the re-
our powerful occan-militia
national
lom, and
ton get across to Liyerp:
ISION OF BPNGLAND. im jester. Whenever
RENO INY
will be accepted by the country with joyful | B€ Yentures upon the humorous, his per- satisfaction, It might properly have been { fTmance is as heayy as that of an elephant suhictsed ttoiesae eee dancing on the tight rope. He has lately eee presided, in Paris, at the distribution of re-
COTTON. wards to the French exhibitors in the Lon-
The French compliance with Navoreon, in h the Session, has ($1,000,000) to t cotton.
sum states some Fran price, and its
cotton in
has eyer been.
of Ameri
an Co!
360 francs, In
The report o
y franes the September it had reached
Oorpa Legistatif, acting in| don Exhibition of 1862, a demand by the Emperor | burst out =F
peech at the o
ind, in his speech, into the following bit of fun: 3chold, then, the realization of onr long- soil?’ Here
because the audience were not quick at taking the joke, The Ew C
voted five
million france | ‘ he ¢
ressed workm
the bill
n in nting this
very curious facts. First, ror relaxed the muscles of his has reached a famine | face, to show that he was mirthsome, and value is ater than it| preceeded: ‘1 am happy to reward the Two years ago the val ue | bravest of the brave, In fact, we tton was from seventy to| crossed the Channel, and
hundred pounds. Last | English (great sensation]—
350, and even | arms, which n, but with those im-
November, it fell down | Plements which confer prospc nd com-
courts is from Library street, by an ample} '® franes, but was up to 800 francs in | He went on, then : eriously, staircase, and a private staircase leading | December. The result is, that the mi-| t9 brag of having borrowed from England | facturer who formerly carried on his trade | ‘‘that spirit of hberty which, being extended
from the public corridor of the post office. |
The court apartments and offices in the| Chestnut-street building are connected with the Library-street manner, by a corridor
building in a conyenient The United States Marshal's offices are located on Chestnut
with 100,000 fran
that amount to ef
The whole
rope, was 90,000 bab
calewated that t 100,000 b
street. ‘The prineipal courtroom is in the] jroke out, and et Library-street building, and is a pleasant, Punteretonicoe conyenient apartment of ample dimensions. | tie close of 181
Every part of the buildin
ly number of la
is well lighted by | xe windows and sky- and is thoroughly warmed by the most approved steam heating
a goc
light
in use, having connected with it a “fav-blow- er," for forcing in warm airin cold weath
and fresh, cool air in summer, to take the place of impure air which is fc off through a suitable of’ yentiducts,
thus rendering th fort
healthy, ¢
ole, and pleasant throughout, at a g of the year.
OUR OCEAN MILITIA the pirate, flushed with L ception at Kingston, Jamaica, where mer and others exhibited Bri tality,” by making lions of himse socintes—welcoming them w
Seyores,
compli-
mentary hnrapgues, and cheering his br gadocia reply—has again been heard of, ou the 26thult., off Cape Tiburon, on the
west coast of Huyti, The Alabam plundered, and burned the bark Rule, from New York to Aspinwall, and, on the 28th, captured and burned t Chastelain, in the » vicinity
Senmus captured the Golden I
Golden
> brig When he was
French, and E Unfortu- ly, her commander could show neither bills of lading nor
showing that part of the property belonged
consular certificates
to neutrals. Hence, with an amiable af tion of re
and bum t
MMES. [ to rob
ocecded vessel. When he captured the Tonawanda, from this port to Liverpool ct for the nature of the British consul at
but seized the ¢ mmed on a bond, ) though there was official proof of neutral ownership.
SexMes made no seal and
Philadelphit wards ran
how of resp
0, Cafter-
No doubt, Sesates, however if not a duty, at least a right, if he sails and act
letters of marque.
clares that no citizen of one “belligerent
ecuting rtain
under Confederate The law of nations de-
Stite can complain of the hostile ucts of any citizen of another, Ifa State does sess, or is disinclined to ships, it may commission 1
t pos
employ its own 1
Is to
ivate ve seize its enemy’s merchant ships, It is usu ally declared in letters of marque that the ts of neutrals shall be observed. We} capnot say, of course, on what terms Mr. Jerrerson Davis act as a privateer, During both of our wars with England we freely of privateering, which ws sity, indeed, sceing that our national marine was much smaller than that of the enemy Yet, soon after we became an acknowledged nation, we endeavored, throtigh Dr. Prax iy, to oblain a general agreement that iu future wars allowed. In 1824, when the proposition was brought before the British Cabinct, by the late Mr. Rusn, then United States Mi ister at St. James's, the reply was very d
cided—that unwilling under any circumstances, to accede to the
authorized Se:
MES to
exercised the right
an act of nece:
privateering should not be
Great Britain was
abolition of private war Thirty
commenced, in
upon the ocean
Russian war h Ministry |
bolished,
rs later, when the 1834, the Bri suggested that priyntecring be and the United States
that we could not agree not to resort to ou
Goyernwwe
In this view, ration
of war,
merchuntmen in cuse we did uot accede to the dee at Paris, in 1856, European and some Stutes
igned |
whereby the leading |
| condary American |
with priva-| nited State
militia
agreed to dispen
In other words, the up thut oce had uchieved so many and such | Important victories ix days, Yet, during the present war, while the rebels have inflicted great injury to our commerce b ville, the Alabama, the Florida, &e,, we haye not yet had recourse to the eflective re-
leering,
declined to gi
which
other
uch privateers as the Sumpter, the Nash-
c t now have five times | to all insures the deyc et the ns, | all interest
imption of
pinions pment of
same operat
sounding
Eu- These arc whicl
cotton, in week
plira
and it wns ulinched so
his would be inc to 1a special
1861. But the mM M. Drovys p Lavye, Naror
it off the supply ti- | Lead man at present, expressing the
cotton held in at | n and gratitude of the British Goyern- as follow at for such noble sentiments, Napo-
land, | n truth, is the yery Joseph Surface upon rest of the continent, 100,000. | of modern politics, He always breathes Total, | the most elevated and moral sentiments
was from India.
cht (fr L Allowin
port the Ist of the stock would week:
Januar
york
out, are nerative pr
the price ¢
England is ve I A
amount of sy
merica,
upon this county
public press, the
meetings, their their statesmen told that we have
bave been happy
1 fiom India and elsewhere, betwe
Tt greatly | He talks ver cent.) in | time wh 12 dd 7 that 100,000 b:
mann
om
miles are
| publisher, fu Ist of March, | the Duc p'Avstave’s ! be only sufficient for tive } de ¢
yand th
nde, during the sixteenth and
he stocks of manu- | teenth centuries,"’ his Prefect of Pe 20ds, which imm nud confi ted the whole edit mand When the ws of publication, Where, whi are done thet fine which Navonzon
Was the ad oa
» high, that the Frer
annot afford to take the saic
ry much exercised out of bond sad thing to sec : ———___ ARE beneatl THE DERALE IN PAR NT. y by the writers im their] Ptliamenthasa 2 Queen's speakers at their public | SPeeeh hns been read nothing members of Parliament, | 2 Mer Majesty's addrc and politicians. We are | £¢Mtlemen, beyond the me n great country; that we | With which theso mysteric y hereto that it is a | ®bound. Her Majesty is
the war in Ame
terrible thing we not happy now. We 1, and our pre condi- are furthermore assured that the U 2 | ‘ ‘oneern.”” She great institution ; that hitherto we have had | Which the war enta
liberty and prosperity, and that in other} "P02 Lancashire, and finds a source of con- times we have been the terror the prospect of 2 renewal of em- admiration of the earth, Phen . the manufacturing districts, minded of our present unhappy condition ; ate that attended the delivery of the nccording to them all, unhappy, | SPeeel is looked npon by the London Limes Our liberties are lost ndersthe (ita) 8 markable stration of heel of the tyrunt; our annies are in the |e feeling of. the English nation upon ditch or the hospital; we are on the high | tbe pe As The road to bankruptey and ruin; j Min pict oe of the
tion and desperat ing, aud the No:
Opposition acquiesced in the
policy of the f Derby was sorry
ion are every where
rth ts Ti Government. The Ear
Accldama. After this horrible pi that there had been no joint mediation in painted and repainted in darker and deeper | CoMMection with France, as he was confident colors, we are nsked to confess that after all ich a course would haye » the we are engaged ina futile and unprofitable | AMerieans eclive and repentant, and, {aslef We nreimploved tovatay perhaps, ended the war, Mr. D'Isnasut acknowledge the Southern) Confederacy, | ™ ide a few flippant remarks in reference to
We are told that
of nations by the
that, if we would
world as Christian men, we had bette
our quarrels, surr mit the Union to
and ant There is citation about the
and provokes the
men talk in this way, there cau guments used to alter or conyi!
opinions, Th the English min and liyes— lives 1 disaster, and b;
> mn
many
contest on this
the want of harmony manifested
we shock the sensil by the
members of the Government, but could fine shedding of blood, nnd | @° oe nt, but could find |no fault with the policy of ne ud be known throughout the | * e the policy of neutrality and cease | HOn-interference. Other addresses wer put _no definite poliey was developed
ender our canse aa need , but no definite policy w velop
| It is probable that a bold ef
t
vill be made
separate into insignificant
‘on the part of the Sout sympathizers in iguey andl | Parli ment to force n vote upon the ques.
a critic that irritates | 0m of recognizing the Southern Confede- loyal an, When} ™cy. Goyernment may oppose be no ar thi « but. we do not think
it or its succe
s will in any way aller the moral effect of England's atti- tude in this war. We cannot but see that ed to this Republic, and that ginning she has never given us ragement. EF
is simply so many dollar
ed and so see nothing but ruptey, and death. ‘The
ich money
They from the
word of comfort or ence
lishmen may glory in this now—and Ameri
do not realize the great principle that un- |
derlies and controls this war. We claim to | © M4Y be silent and submissive; but when rs 5 | the war is over ne, and the tion is fight for liberty and constitutional exist | y nd the nation i
We recognize i
Which we now
ny are tion—Liberty anc plied by the
Republ
and the
the rebellion again: t replied | |
There were in
been ¢ We m
darkn
w
V n Me gradation, Libe cept degradation, lo give mere North might kn
FEKSON Davis ii
his forgiven:
ld be spurned ly means strengu and whi and predominate
ever it
memory of these days
in je through | ee : pass a sublime desti- | saat eam hy English- two elements of conter with xy American
i Slay Liberty Ss in-|, Yeis thetotentioaor the gudedl of Nalaynt
Unic Constitution, | erect 4 monument to Ser
Anderson T
it who
ell. comp: t nd night rror, | Herre is no doubt oper, but it Compromise de. | does the Anderson Troup a great injustice rty might It 1ot alone one company that went 1 i ree hun.
but its antagonist disdaing | to the f n } y it would notask, The | dred me were ldiers from all Jatthe feet of Mr. Jer-| movement which led n sackcloth and ashes, and | ir mutinous comrades
ess and his friendship, It
from his presence, Lib
rand just
and pre must over It must reign in
GENERALS IN THE aR number provided for ta the act of Congrees increst fog the xencrala In the army, there will be sixty
or generals and two hundred aud fifty brigadiers,
goes it
Rich-!
FORNEY’S WAR PRESS.—-PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY FEBRUARY 28, 1863. 7
= = = “) 1G N., | ment, that members of the Senate Committee on | yacillation ane Inconsistency on the part of ¢) yY INTE TENCE. purchase a ream of p: ‘ommon white writin; | then taken into slavery, and. remained n elave unt of FROM WASHINGTO} at sath ciao Mensou esl an ae eC ae CBee ABS HINER Se re aal Sed laae panera olihene ca haeainnl ecto trations of frlendship to M. Misnorir and to | hat tho North was fighting fony emplratand) tae. - tie rebel army in Arkaneaa have all kinds of | dk She then came Phi Iphia, aod has re and SPECIAL DESPATONES TO TIE ‘WAN PRE aa a ‘outh for independence; but the President of the | A Crarren on Logusrs.—The loc 1m Enfield rifles dowa to the old int locke. ere ever since. Her meatal facultlea she still ay SPEC ESP ATOMS TO THE [eee or sedchosiewad that the curae of tlavery WAE | tribe, {ta said, willbe on loa mia yearsca 2a ‘aajority of them, however, have good Enileldo ther phyaleat have long been impaired, | She } jai fod lacnt the M. Munorews de- | at the bottom of the war,The Ohnneellor of the EX- | tn geyentecnth y 1 Were. obtained from England Idiere! | la unable to support herclf, and, therefore, depends rotary On h France, a3 eh hequer wae warraly in favor of the South, but he | teenth Le aaLD para consists of corn bread and beef. Tho men dio | entirely on her friends. Fifty dollar ald support ANB STAER LO LASS hes, have Was. followed by the Seoretary of War, who avowed | From notes taken at tho following dates, we learo | rapidly of the measles, which 1s no fatal discs s remainder of the year 1883. Any dona- qui rofits accruln it ke a Fe trloally opposed thereto ; and, lastly, | that these Pharoah locusts maie their appearance | that State. ‘The pe geueraliy k of the | 323 Market atreet would be ted for wane iar { contrabands a et tee nor. £2 2t known <tane the lared that It waa {on the wing May 19, 18{6; on the 22d, commenced | WF, and care not Low It Is it TREAGUE aa tration to X ae Mt with sundry i tet need boring trees n Tir IVATI ¥ AX > sin: I honor to acknowledge the rec SE tees ee eal the te 8 iter etin thelr forelgn poliey, ant | 20Ying eg t nity eGHaenee | tants Coutryation oF FrAx—Cot- } of n resolution of tho House of Represe ¢ Fe ae as FEORDEMDIO“ oy the Tonian Islanda, the males ti th of the sa: for 3 scar aity will toon 5 wore matlo dinner of Mr, Sewann, given elnco the publiea- | ) Palwerston repited, but eald nothing of mo- | they were rit. Many ariiers and dated J tion of the deapatehes, nt which relonize tian F The Greeks, it se ve given 2ome atte tl tivation airecte ud ly. WE 8. LOMOEAEY, \ 7 ane Mr, Layard, | Pr 1 them in ¢ sie eat 5 ut ten bushels of gerd, and a ton ani s half i nance of slave 0, 08 Ree ae said ho believed that trlendly relations | styled him the nigh thanves hreiner, erect mach in our State that to what extent will ncompen- | here Tie | emarkaon the Aineriean | PFoPbet of summer, the loy Der for the se. Th ade | sated for by the aervi hot re m mediation, what: | relleved that If the proposal | French have teated tho cdit te Ml bo prepared the as for In response following 9 brought forward it would | and mANB proved that ould b own otatement Wirsox, of Massa- | be supported by Parllament heathens gratitied thelr ¢ alnte Braud tae itecs town ble. Soon after the taking of Port Royal and the occu- | c ma fort, The Times, ndverting to the American question 19 | yrexth, Chey frat Hatened to. the locust “ " nea Montgome nnd used linen towels and table forces, acting tho provi fthenctoftuly | First. The medieal department shall unite with | recess of lx eventful months, there is not a alngle agorna, alluding to the malea only p e D. Cribbs, F Enuistinc CoLtorep MeN.— We leam Statea In insurre and on consultation with the | ene an important sanitary men- | Storation of the Union, ou the teria ef the original : LE s were opened, somewhnt privately, in this ity ] Quartermaster General, I appointed Ti | it ohall promulgate to its officers euch | Compact Ie joedlbte ; not ono who belly ea Tie Ay jevless ve Se a t colored goldiera for Massachusetts reek: Colonel Wx. H. Revsorps, of Rhode le [ireeuiationa?anddinatsu ne may tend mono who declares that it euch a before Ser W nen have been forwarded to Hoatom, Governor An Tunteers, detached for the duty as speaisl agent for | preparation of the ratlons of the , would only prove the | ciatheliin 2) Fy 6th Pa ISRNAO EE EG Ree Co rehta halt ote eaineat Ee Late | the collection of property abandoned by the rebel | Second co shall bo detailed in tura from Kmerieas We arrive then at the | unconect roviue i. Priv | eadiog men of color nnd the interview, If is said, owsers, without coinpensation other than hls | the privates of ench yany of the troops In the nc}usion, that separation on penceable terme, | ¢ lve finds ve Cast, ©, 5th Pa, Should the Governor con” wo pens mula) | thawnelya RECOM ES E nt the catliest moment, is the result which the | f aauabe vary H ‘ed to, which relates to be and Inetructiona jesucl by me, it ws made | for eac uumbering Iees than 30 and | T has another disparaging article on | irra ea 33, Privates W ocallst in Massachusetts his d rintend the receivl 2 | ompany numbert e meetings and t who take part in | ‘mer der, E, ath Pa. F nt- k Stine Ee otto acl ret ee | Ee. cogs m Renviseeencl . h will maintain {ta tun proteat ts, and considered such fn- | py’ fan.6, Private John E found ught the districta occur | Third, That the Peceident of the Unite bey | thon v Lnjurte dita $ 5s on Daniel were framed with a view to the vo wn frlean de Fedu veusela and nearly 1 t re would read grassh Ve Powe ccAG ee (zens whi receive f peneation ‘kn Important trinl ngainst the Admiralty, in puteofore this sonraiprnleh cnet P . Thex jaro ore the Govern: and one rat $Jofthe month- | which Mr. Olnre sought to recover half a million Reta, INGEE UMBC ete Mae Lem ke oie The Bomenaniyn 105 The marriage contract of the Prin of Wales Sx a! +
lished. ‘The princess ta eecured £10,000 « year D. ‘and that tobacco be furnished to | 4p, chee hoa ben extiibiting witht creat r ommlesary depart succe orking of hia telegraph instrument re. 1 ts cost, and charged against ther tiatas ing men of Liverpool and Aanehe ested, cr- uctions ail property was ahipped to D re Sceretary of War may tres of tho United Kingdom Tell
graph Company, Great eatisfaction was given, nnd
i brought praettcally
nt consigned to Hina Barney, the Colle nd the Lustrum
‘ 1 sell | t tl u ius give cif! 4 auction, alter sdvert|senent, whatever was co con- | nploged by authority of the Sur | hind secured the excluatve right to thelr use th’ En a pp he ole $ enc to him, All expenses of collection, trane- | geon Goner: ; hall recetve | 04, Wapaters ave eiloztstic of the faatru- Hotiok's house, for the n- portation, and ale, were to be pa pro- | $10 per m n per day in kind, pro- | erchanta of Liverpool, in the Brazi : Eaton silo ube h, ccods of exlea, and the balance was t the tals may be given out by | had held a meeting, and adopt zolution, d ae Tate te thane 4 benefit of whatever e might be found entitled the the summary and extreme measures tal py aeeanbatinn (oar (illy AgiEhe a: Hon | fcainst Hraztl, ing on thelr members of Pare hokinviage rans ivania ad to the as lixment to ask the Government for inforn a ERA “ motor July las alrosdy referred to, au the rutject ink hundred fathoms wide, three miles lon, re ne President to permit commerelal inter A'Parla ictter gives a report that Pr e. such re Oe Se 6 feo aki of tha, interprataton to be pubgn his | weston of ths Lecuntn 1 is Buon RRB TE | letter to Gen, Forcy |Tatarica and Migratorin, and Mr. : degree ¢ 0 ‘ i hla ¢ 10 that por! exempt fr th ax duty 3 Leg oneral debate on the ne tates # de ‘properly a The rumors which have been paraded in c 1 al frat paragraph was re Batatt of z ing and the modifications of the c h 1 the lize os ny means af A cradle ntisne nad 2 ln Care ie of theabtomen, J H ; eat 1 sad . are bel jonens ntness Seca re bel Parle, although membrane the sharp, eur ea fae tant et eee ; perf dparespAtheE ts pene rie stata ue inal HAIR COLORI js constantly ine d tof the ; se eavens in are both harmivs | Indica. It ts sold b ble deslera, or can d y trouble F ‘ernment of War Dm ‘extraordina’ ik ° | e arquis of | ja the popular veliel that th | Elva ri CET colvent t 10 propose several : nypeared in iinmense quantiti ith infantry, Captaln Joho Shull pune ta he I nent is anid to snd another very Inrge awarm in | ce ei f i | Philae plage jo contradict. the c mh 2s ite W co y f 2 this mh | ies been formed at Sloozor He found 10, opposition in segard to prook | an this f a the nl GREECE. Vin a dati atate, lve for two yen in ad, or againg’ Chinn, | t t Vhen fully developed, tl 3 senclee referred to, there t | dat SR RT ro a betantiate. Ne a descrip of the nppearal (expenditure will eae ae territle Insects fu the most su A : rae ear B anywhere to be (ound. Thelr nbility atthe. x Hurchase, renting, Ht: a pra 0 4, like all their o attri mer ““Flora,"? In the prosecution of int | The Kio fo an addreaa from the Chamber | utes, ia mentioned by some writers, and dented by HER —HIS yy the jal agents, s steamer of | of Deputt proccedings of the Minis- | others. It dependa upon the species and the age of Hoy. WM, eye eee ere nclty W try, nod pron complaint of the Obamber | the. inscof, the state nnd ireotion of t i and ae ration to be unfounded. He i A Cuntous SaLe.—Sonie days ago a lot he ciatlaay ¥ Baie \ itor 7 sl, dis Of Might fe eal varlously to ’ t SH 2 be ‘rmination to malntain the righte o! from south to north, from packages left at one of our railroad u TF i v = ¢ . nod th Mouse, but deplored the | EiOlonventandl Pontteeatte mackag oe 1ett Ae one cu ong rues | Skcet Character, ty: | : dUferences OF x Hope Tox .a recouctlia: Te ginahints of Tse spored of by pale. The eollection.wax.} Soy ects i : Lit r fh rapes naked Spata | ton Hind eoliiers to fight ag tise wero most oxtraordinary F a t Seer tach ri ee cee | ———— SE Jered all the men tbe bu ‘ of lottery, nnd afforded abuo- | _ fans es Ae q ndered Inte } | SPa a syle JRAFTED MEN WWANTA, [under the circumstances. e - | aTGTEEeCaal Ss / ¢ io mullite oth while | hae eo Reountry it Ne, sae eee RD e eae NEES branchea p trenches, and then sul ntion, | LYE POWERS.— LE- 4 ! earth Department | i ne Ata New orl as recolved vornor. embody- | them, 1, has been employed with erst | et dev ¢ f oAn's powers. } and sin ranafer to the en London Tim S that it is reported that 8 lowlug Exhibiting tho anota of each ao In this country. A.| gcraplng thelr throats and How to augment maulieod. Ark What Keeps k and can ne 1 er 19 made two mon requ Nat ¢ nent | shower of them fs sald to hay ‘n not very many | the samo breath. Travel ‘ f By b f Qe LQ arta ais number actually tn co before the fyenra ago in Jatit ni ni eails, | dezcription of style, from the last ne Tabs ee a a vance on her sovernmen five millions sterl nusl tigging, deck, and ¢ e are Hi sand to the Inst dilnplunted red ilk pocket | FOWLFE i Be eT Pe ee ee o..| leo locust stories, is truth enough about ere scattered in elrcumambulator oe dashed atenvat ; airerolatlonl| thecet eet aTICRE GertaLa henaOR Ores uo genus t@ provide materin for hoveat apectils-| The outward appearance ot fANtne WH 992 C ors ite Sean i, | cotton for Confederate bonds xt 70, b {lon : there fs be about al &pecie kage, Was very sugz mm Thy DI 7 é of the Senate ey} jeobiou iors Gantererale Uongalay to nllord rome c or the comparatively ement, A lumbering, b THE FAIRY WEDDING! the time of es - | small ovils which at this period and in this countr hinted at purple E + ni p ively with the smount paid for commissions and ot Wales HAs -talcenchin aest. inthe hey xometimes inilict. wily procke ker the CARD PHuTOGK APH LILLIPUTIAN No information le in my possession as to expen' 12 —_— re ailent Bi in hin
en when it waa
| Inrenestine STATEMENT OF AN ARKAN-| Requninted, witht the
ations, since the tranaf
n
alent EEN'S SPEECH
urea on the p
speech has been delivered
Be oe eae ae Bane } as Revuars.—From a young man, a ontive of t When one has his fc Bae eee re eae ffm: Ee tree | city, who hos just effected hie cecayo from Arkadel- | 8nsWers to ble own liking. In this ense, every ; ry on account of the collection of cotton, or for jpnta, Arkanasg a arrived h mg a nen the fl g| its preparation for eale; or for uitivation of the 2 jercating fac ative to affalra in plantations; or for the hi slatence of 1ubor- } puanlal teen or forthe RES ae AM ce 13) Mn, eebet ontnance, department sstatished at | ; stowed upon them. ‘The only qualificstion of this | guecees eens ee ‘Prescat under the | ‘work for enttiosity, ‘he en general representation, required by the exact facts jeaty has viewed, with the deepest bout 160 men employed in manufacturln ies, | Seat gave zeat and vigor to the &3 S olnting \warfar hich atill rages artridgea, shoes and stocking 6, and rr of the pac a a: Pal eo Ope Eee oan pu Has yrltnearell with heart(elbgelel, The guas ‘manufnctured here are of avery fi contents, would have pointed ¢ furnished bs the War Department for ag a Bete