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2. NEW YORK HERALD, MONDAY, JANUARY 6, 1862, or the Commissioners’ js going on as to the cause. i other measures | of the federals to return with‘ i + General in here, Court | secret, investigation ca | demoratization in our army-—withont 8 cortain'spaco of time, OF | _ ie ggg — res oe tomate know whether the Gly auchoritien are placing the city under an w guard, i France would demand that the federal government receg: ea 4 rae eh to the root of the evil. ‘The authorities | be consicered quomies. Pots SOME ht sn tnege tn vene chorn oc nfederacy aR | austin ‘ag | stances, the ity * ae in EWS FRO, THE SouTH. enee of we es 14. not only Fecog- _Richenond mee Sone Gunenivee: sae, 8 ne 98 being teaiviavally 2 tug embodied, and each absentee operas Grates me, hve are anes . OO nmmmennnnnnnnne glad of the chance. {nereof Doce | 41 its dirty, slugger Jamdifon, tas rillp poglected, the |. ‘The | tamil yg remaining are. now | crratod, Tam uot willing to bellove that the representa- MESH US ITEMS. Interest» Leading fear of emaeguncss om he PO vee. | bait rath cine mamingaricn winked at, the Fowdzicm | 347),,07 "ao unclean ‘epolers on Tlf atone | Ot ot Ea ea et, of twciee ma Pos remy Mey 3 , 7 | officers ei over, and acaucy idloness women are included W charge Nave Mmil- -§ Editorials from acy. or co im ovening the te | % opal re Dratet gp ld tah Mo are eer hare fed | lous of*poople, Intend to act T bad fail tO me. Tho MEMOYAL OF YANKES FRUUOUERS. 5 008! think ‘the South hag so long 4m defonsive policy” belt out as rewards to volunterring, i . Se filled and replontaued but from few ®” Jong whom Col. Dickinson, Mr. Manson , Juo. McCoy, T.. chivalrous people of the South and all ti is ha 0 Secoanded dea hieh best uth and all the journaisbave | 1) the Yankee prisoners trom Charleston, rmy will not Southern Papers walt e country which has so hittie sense of pub- | the army wi ok o | classes <f our people. s Joves, John Marrs, Jobn B. Jones, Clerk of the Courts; ded measures of tne United States |. Corcoran, arrived here ‘afternoon in & rit or national honor. | The tn eat eee ‘Why waa it that when oft veMiors wore daily dyiti" “gy | Judge Baley and others. Nogroesare spirited away con- | government in suspending the haboas corpus act, sup- See Poem EAT te ee Bee nngen , pt and brave to resent indignities for) | Dundreds the goverment <a not show the COO” yer py. | tinoally, wholesale and wanton destruction stalks; among | Pecésing publio journals and incarcerating citizens t of this city and conducted gd the American fiag; but that was aa b 2 Lage x of | manity of the small mAasures of institutin: @ Ghetical | the aificted families of Fayette and Raleigh, aud to | bttres cachet, and’ I will not allow to believe that MCLEE! ‘AND TARE LINCOLN CONGRESS. ‘PROGRESS OF THE REACTION, | wien Northern men Le ag Ry he Strymen, | CcmMMission to expimine the CAMPS, “ed,” if possible, | those favored at frat by heaven, with true loyalty and] the Conferlorato goveruinent vill resort to similar txi-ke. | yp eee cemented emanate took injustice and oppression towards, elt NT Gwar which | beck the progresy and ravages of “isease?” Wliy was it | Sel-sacrificing devotion to our bountiful and much covet- | Iam, sir, very respectfuity, Se, W. G. BROWNLOW. — | eno Washington Congress to superseto Gon. McClellan by ~ fas wade cowards of all of them who have & that, whou tm government had gonirol cf the whole line | ¢1 South, have come the curses and vengeance of that RINGS aT MEMPHTS. the Massachusetts lawyer, Nathaniel P, Banks, They of conscience. Whe would be b- Of traaporiation from the Carélinas and Louisiana to the | weloan and vile portion of mankind—the Yankee. | From the Mem) nis Argue, Dec. 29. complain that McClellan is 100 stow, and they want a com- saw Colonel Dickinson, a few days eince, an exile from home—bis family,’ and all is dear, except his smitten yet triumphant South. He was formerly a citi- zen of Nelson county, Virginia, but has for many yoari 0 3) It is time, more than time, that the people of these | mander who will respond to the popular oe for au Slates should awaken more fully to the pee ‘at-home, | onward movement. The Yankees Te been aie ‘and bend their eyes more on their own government and | engaged in the work of subj gating the South, but are Eee and less on the relationships of foreign nations. | still as far from acoomplishing their purpose as they were a ‘national emblem | Gepots w, yunassas and Centreville, and could have bought py lye’ Sirip ws ee ont ‘humbled under | 6U#@t ian New Orleang at three cents, is permitted our the fierce gaze of the British Lion? Who dovs not desire | 8S y tocuffer for months for rice, sugar and molasses, thee overy star and bar erased from our own flag, that | Pid wluked at tho practice of buying sugar from the THE CONFEDERATE BONDS. E 4 ‘ensign which oan by any poe- } satlere at forty cents a pound? Why is it that to-day the lived in Fayetteville, where he his beea by that people ilitary movements seem coming toa stand tell; with every | at the outset, We do not wonder, therefore, at their - QUAER WAY TO PAY THE INTEREST. Seay (he Bifacee ‘or time which hae ‘become 0 foul | government necks not shal rene ad dalretmanais of'| suiratied wish high cMOinLetStOOA uals inducement act, we are ‘only industrious in doing | impatience. pestis > i intemperance among ere isuse regiment “ 7 eon , | nothing. Our embassadors or commissioners are sei THE SURRENDER OF MESSRS. MASON DELL. mee and degraded in Lincoln’s bands? Grillsin our army on the Poomac? all of these acts of | et in previous years, have imbibed the spirit of | ana we look (o othors, insisad of ourselves, to force tholt | "A despatch received in oficial quarters atates that the their father. One of thom whose bitter lot it,was to see her loyal and beloved husband carried forcibly away and started a prisoner to Columbus, was a few weeks ago con- fronted by Gen Rosecrans in person, who informed her that it was by bis orders her husband had been arrested, aud if she would) make certain ac- knowled; nts and make certain pledges he would have him released and restored to her. ‘The storm of woman’s indigpation was stirred in her smitten bosom; she replied that her husband “had done nothing to request an atone for, and sooner than purchage even his pardon in that way, she would live on dread and water the remainder of her days.” The people here, in Monroe county. yal, and wish toremain so. Their sons, brothers and hfsvands are in the Contederate service, and they are true; yes, trueas the Joadstone. I refer to the mass of the popula- " ‘omission and negligence, which have contributed to the THE NEW YORK HERALD AND MR. SEWARD. | ‘Gomoralisetion Sie tray tight laveteen proideds {From the Richmond Dispatch, Jan. 3. It fa not two late to repair them. ‘Tho Naw You HikaLp owes Ke great success 68 sjour- | “We are firmly convinced that the reform of the con- nal to ite systematic * sensations.” When there afen0 | dition of our army, with @ wise and firm hand, and the facts to produce # sensation it resoria to iiction, And 68 | holding out of rewards, not to avarioe or idleness, but imagination ie infinitely more active in inventing then tts | 19 (he true patriotic enthusiasm of our country in the industry in discovering this electrifying food for the prospect of an active mil policy and of a share of morbid appetite of Gotham. What the Naw 1 eg military glory, will provide the best security for re-en- is is journalism Mr. Seward is in his his high wice of | listmont and the most successful. stimulant to voluntecr- Premier, Hale constantly airiving after sensstious. ing. Woare as firmly convinced thet no other monsirea abmition delights more in s sugovssiul sensation in | will restore the spirit of the volunteer and the enthusi- amasierly-feat of diplomacy. It matters net to him asm of the country. what may be the character seaeey x nly produces @profourd surprisesupon t) \. start - ‘hole North to its feet, oue fine, quiet morning, bywcir- | A YEAR CLOSING UNDER GLOOMY AUS cular calling pou its Governors to fortity their lake and | PICES AND OPENING WITH EVIL TIDINGS. coasts. release, Nol to the wooden walls of England choult we | Baltimore Sen of December 30 publishes Seward’s com- look for the liberation of Mason and Slidell, but tothe | munication to Lord Lyons releasing Messrs. Mason and bayonets of Beauregard. When Beauregard roaches | siidell. ‘The wily abolition Sccretary says they are yielded Washington, and Johnston Covington, Mason and Slidell | to claims intrinsically just and in conformity with “Ameri- will be nearer the Court of St. James than they ever | oan doctrines. Were on board the Trent. THE GEORGIA TROOPS. ae # it is, if our independence is to be won us bythe ‘The General Assembly of Georgia has an srength of England, our revolution will peat ped the pages | authorizing all volunteers and other troops @f history in any but an enviable light; and when the pas- | from that State to vote at all elections, without reference sions and privations of tho present are past, ey an ey® | to tho place where they may be in service at the time of that now sparkles with exultation at the hope of foreign | such tions. 4 aid, will droop in shame at the unneeded confession of ‘RE-ENLISTMENT OF TROOPS. weak patriotism and unenduring bravery its seeking ‘We fee) perfectly justified in saying, from information + wroveds in our that fully seven-cights of the Virginia. If there be a proud spectacle on earth, a bright page in | troops now in service will re-cnlist when their history, it is the spectacle or the narration of aself- | torme expire. making natien, be a humiliating position, it is the | ,privaL OF A VESSEL FROM HAVANA AT MOBILE. T" @ Southern Press on the Surrender of Mason ‘and Slidell. Demoralized Condition of the Bebel Army. "BLODMY PROSPECTS FOR THE REBELS; i tion; but the administration seems about to put their ocean next electrified them by causi be {From the Richmond Examiner of January 2.} r > : unexpected'y brought im from the Cubay seas The year closed under gloomy auspices; witha check at | patriotism on the rack, ‘The Porty-Arth Virginia reci- | yrty.! “im i# due to @ prolatevate de facto, halgh net ae | 4 gchooner atrived [at sfobie, Alabama, one orth Burning of the Richmond |‘: nero gre Chee Seyi eters janet | Tae aiitt wetertas teurrien cd'with crit tidiage:’| Inte Geeoe aa ee in ean ete’ Buk are tore | {hZ,tlimale com FA her favors. Bub be tiatas it may, | Wedtroms ee! Ate piotkaiog feet saw her a9 she Game ‘ in ' ei oD colum- _ 5 + "1 | . : Po ae sree chet of the yankees by s | We fear that there is-no doubt of the fart that the North; | ordered away, Tassure you one of the nest sections of | nélaud’s busincss ts not ours and God forbid that it eee | into port, but couldn't catch Ler. Good seamanship and should be. Look we to at home, and ecase this ‘. shameful avidily for tha aid of the forelguer, an avisity S08 cilatame bea Dae PCR Recerieg meen en | a mumameae papeereg trace tin, Charters une, © Thiaaid is uct nected. With quickor action, we never ; ‘would have caret a rnsh for it. Southern valor, Southern | Be pe Ae tag cue, uote atone. Tee Wealth, and Southern patriotism were adequate to a task | RelgNberihg cnet. Thee oe te ods & fom daya.ago, 1 Theatre. Virginia is gone. For, when a people are overrun, chaiued, stripped of their property and demoralized by faniliarity with their captors, thoy are gone from their former allegiauoe. ‘The writer once lived here a number of years, and is muclt acquainted with this Kanawha Valley; and there must be something done for this people. Let the enemy six column despaich, consenting to deliver up the cap- | ern Union has consented to the surrender of Mason and tured commissicners under a demand from Great Britain, | Slidell; and’with that event all hope of an immediate al- which he pronounces “ intrinsically just’? and in | liance between the Southern confederacy and Great Bri- “ conformity with American doctrines.” tain must cease. ‘The cravenly cowardice of the act is really much re Under other circumstances we might ‘erive a consola- lieved by the brazen audacity with which the consum- | tion for tho loss by considering the ineflaceable disgrace mate knave faces a jecring and disgusted world. He has | that fallson the exemy. Nover, since the humiliation of INTERESTING REBEL CORRESPONDENCE, tenfold’ more dificult, if properly led; and if they ure, or goatee statr been playing a deep game of duplicity and audacity, from | the Doge and Senate of Genoa before the footstool of | ouce cross Pock’s ferry, ouly twelve miles west a exist. Ontatwday Major Genera v &e., &e.. &e. ee eee sis goeernizent nothing Bat dis, | Lovis XIV.. has auy pation consented to a decradation 80 | of here, in the absence of a fores here om our part, | {inv Matte itonein wii deca anereh for foreign help» | Brigadier General Evans? military niet, and spent grace; althongh succeeding in achieving for himself a | deep. If Lincoln and Seward intended to give them up | and I ‘warn you it will cost us blood and em . the wutire day with the hero of the ‘Stone Bridge”> and of ‘Wé have received copies of the Teputation, which he mach covets, of being the clevercet | at a menace, why, their people will. ask, did they ever | tears as a government. A suicidal Legislature ——- Leesburg, making observations in that tert bn knave that ever reached a high place in diplomacy. capture the ambassadors? Why the exultant hurrah | may appropriate the paltry sum of $30,000 to euemy’s gunboats are still in sight of White Point, but TEXAS.) {tis belicyed that this point of the inland communieation. [Correspondence of the Richmond Dispatch.) has been.ocoupied by the enciny fur the Parvose ‘of more i os ._Galwesten, Dec. 7.1861. | affectually blockading us. The Yaxkees mit Mail | Facititice Abundant Crope—Piewsont | Conmaissioncrs and many yzluabie cargoes have found z Been vt. fartial Spirit—The Pesition of our Forces | exit in this direction. One of their amusements consists. City of Galveston, dc. in shelling the residences of the planters on both sides of Having but a moment of leisure, I have thought a fow | the stream, and if thelr practice was even tolerable much items of news might not be uninteresting to you, though, | property would thus be destroyed. But, fortunately,... Imust confess, the thermometer at am almost unvarying | their gunnery is so bad that us many as twenty shells are bright since September excites some fear of reaching ® | somotimes fired at a large house before “a hit” is made. ac ee length of epistie. ‘Another Jess expensive game ‘a the killing of cattle with ‘ou soarcely find out many occurrences from a point 88 | ione range rifles, and then sendi:g the barge ashore with distant cs this, especially go isolated by the craziest mail | gr seme party to recover the poi clean out New river for batteaux, but let the govern- ment strip this soction of ail protection, and allow scout- ing parties of the enemy to come and search their homes, as they did for Gencral Beckley the other day, and follow up such recognizances with armed occupation, and then they will improve the sluice navigation of New river. ‘The army of the Peninsula could not more than remove them from here then. Mock not, decetve not yourselves, ye men of Richmond, ye deaf men of tide water Virginia, e officers of our associated government, with the de-_ jusive dream that Floyd’s retreat means Rosecrans in winter quarters. The wet weather is gone. ‘Ths mud ton Recent facts haye shed a flood of light upon transee- q tions that heretofore seemed inexplicable. The cirevlar y the of Soward issued to the Northern Governors now turas | coward insults lo two unarmed gentlemen, their close out to‘have bad some other object than the sudden ron- nment ad the bloodthirsty movements of Con- ping down of atocks in Wa!l street, to the great gain of their regard? But, most of all, why did the go- the few friends he let timely into the secret , and who hat nt of Lincoln indulge a full Cabinet with an unanl- ‘gold short.’ It was issued about the timeshosent in- | mous resolution that, under no circumstances, shouldthe structions down to the federal naval officers im the Guif | United States surrender Messrs. Mason and Slidell? Why to capture Mason and Slidell on any vessel in which they | di: they encourage the popular sentiment to asimilar po- should leave Havana. He knew that he was preparing a ew ? The United States oa. and people swore quarre) with England, and took the precaution to give | the great oath to siand on the ground they had taken; the timely warning for detence in the seaboard and lake | American eagle was brought out; he soreeched his loud- ‘From these papers we are enabled to collate quite an ‘Wteresting collection of editorials and news bearing upon ‘the present crisis and the condition of things at the Seuth. The news is uncommonly interesting. ames DORs ON THE COAST. er Gaieren “Eaeat tt dina) seawnt are t screech of debiauce—then hat locked the wheels of Hill, and earnest of t! ture. no accounts have a est scree co—t u ei je whee! our cannon on an: Deon received, yet we think it true news. The Northern | On the arrival of the arresiod ministers he sent out “Dropt like a craven cock his conquered wing”’ threw it into the hands of the enemy, has dried, and the | M©fangements thal the world ever saw. 1 hesitate to | Gp morning two of the euemy’s gunboats ap- reops, after long besitancy, bavemade thoirfirstatiempt | despatches to Mr. Adams, declaring that the arrest had | at the Grst growl of the lion. ‘This is the attitude of the | road fom Cotton Hill to Dublin depot was never finer. | Tougnt, victories wou, and’ our own ariaies suugly ac proached White Point, and after firiug soveral shells at ‘8 a march from the the interior of the | becn made without “specific” instructions from the go- | cnemy. It would greatly consolo us to contemplate him, | The gilded coaches of your Main street can go almost un- | forea ih New York and Boston ere this renches tog. | General Evans? pickets retired. Stats, and have received their first rebuke. Whenever | vernment, and that the Commissioners would be given | did we not know that no new exhibition of ingolenco | tarnished over its entire length. There are passeB in | “Texas, you know, is now, in territor: Mag Mt ‘The steamor Fianter ran out to sea a short distance on ‘end wherever they repeat tho experiment, it may safely | up if demanded, and suitable amende made. He had thus | and cowardice could sink him lower in the world’s esii- | nis section that the enemy can hold, with a moderate | or ing pt do bepital ad dal de ia herd ee ithe Sunday afternoon to reconnoitre, and encountered one of » ‘be predicted that they will arrive at »’similar result, | “prepared the means of avoiding collision by dissyowing | mation. The United States has lost no character by {| forco, agaiust the heavy forces you will send here next | the last few da: oy pemchiiod 10 law by abioh she granted | (he blockading steamers. A number of shote wore ex- he! Northern people and government anticipate greai | an act authorized and directed in advance. To the de- | an exhibition of poltroonery as yet unknown in the di--| spring, and (hoy will seize them soon. Ono or twore- | So much of her worth and northecet te the oid Catan ane | changed. ‘Those of the enemy fell short, bat ane of the - ‘effects from the naval operations on the ‘because a | mand of the English Ministry presented by Lord Lycns, | plomacy of other naticns. That country had already | giments at Peterstown will do more service now than | Viti soon assume the Soe at salad the diviai © | ghots from the Planter is believed to have taken effect. art of the plan was a multiplied series of successful | he had but to reply Cranikiy oad Promptly that ‘‘certainly th the reach of infamy. ‘the ouly charge | another trip of the gallant and fous Floyd toCotton | of the earth. pepo ee ons | “This probably accounts for the heavy firing which was @ Barches and subjugations Seay, the Atlantic States. | ho would give them up, with the greatest pleasure; the | of bayonets made during the war Lincoln's soldiers | Hill next year, with forces drawn from his flank and rear, From the Sabine to the Rio G: the heard yesterday afternoon. They supposed that, having ports, they would | demand was intrinsically just, made in conformity with | was that of Fairfaxs’ marines on Miss Slidell; and the ‘ou may hear from me again. aneutanisiaat aimaa ko —* oh por ive sexes | _ It was mentioned on the street sepbertas snk haane: goon and ‘easily heve also the country commanded | doctrines long coatended for by his government on this | surrender of her father at the first meuace’ of Great ——— Past (Be corn has been elmcet a failure, this year itis al, | my's eunboate had been sounding Stone and placing by the ports, To take possession of a harbor | subject; indeed, he had instructed Mr. Adams two weeks | Britain willcreate neither more disgust or further | THE SITUATION ON THE EASTERN SHORE | jnost toolargo, ‘and if abe hed tri wale feats Tax! | buoys in the channel. and as strip of wave-washed was before that he held the prisoners subject to the orders of | surprise. OF VIRGINIA. nua Coal’ pamaiiag eon? pom iyh o perp iar, | At Station No. 2, as elsewhere on the Charleston and » the design of their armada. Yet it will be her Majesty's government” Nor can wo hope for a popular revulsion in theNorth- | 4 tetter dated Drummondtown, December 26, says:— | good one—net from the luxuriance of the plant as it | sevannab Railroad, avery thing wearke Tey. eee ae puctemnnraest the prises they so = can ae — epee 4 Mr. Seward. What es le ang ps ly and ns ot es The camp of the Second Delaware regiment is pleasautly | shows the ravagesof the but Pl have soldiers are very anxious fora brush with the Yan- ‘an enor mons ture. Wherever water North at will say to remaips to Tulers. People and rulers are alike. Jt is on! ituated about hall le from ra. — because they Kees. eee ae me einige teak Ni, Tenn ot | nous the Hotsa ct Uasrumsatines bel pesned a resota, | sentinant of Rigiond thes, wo.cem Goda tay cr encour- | crime thes erlive ess tieaeville: wens the a | Teneas' che floskade coetinien it’ yields ‘the ‘phates | This Port was blockaded yestordey by, s steamer, + the and inse‘ficient seacoast defences of tho South | tion of thanks toCommander Wilkes. The goverumentbad | ment. J? is certain that the British wanted war; that they | of land is encamped. ‘There are now But nine com- | not} ; and though it is thelr chief wealth th ald bark and a schooner, the last supposed to be amerchant- ‘hey can certainly batter them down and land their | made themselves accessories after the fact to his act by | were of geting it, and that they will be biderly | panies of the Second Delaware here—one being stationed pataing: and shoegh =o eis ie Grautor ite | maa Groops. But thea will end their barren glory. When- | receiving the arrested commisstmers and throwing them | disappointed at the wnsaligfactory vemlt, Now, this | at jeague, one at Onancock, and one leaves to-day | fall into Yankee hands. A Posty dle ‘nex theca ever ‘attempt to march a column into the land it will | into e dungeon. ‘The Nava! Secretary bad fully and cer- result, though apparently due to the lilly vers elim, tery a General Lockwood hae deemed it ne- | anxious to send some’ overland t> Mexice, and -AMORAS. poh cpm dialty approved the proceeding of Wilkes. The City | of the Yaikees, is partially attributable to the | cecsary to station guards at all the creeks, rivers andin- | ship from Tanpico to England, profeasedly; but ‘ound THE SIEGE OF MAT. eo - ‘The causes are Cw es The seacoast can never | Council had voted him the freedom of New York, and the | management of the Palmerston Ministry. That Cabinet | leisen the Atlantic side of the peninsula, on account of | and almost universal seotiment ie inst it, for it ie well —— * ‘Curnish a sufficient of operatious for an efficient at- | Governor's room at the City Hall had been ‘athis | gave =eward and Lincoln the chance ef humiliation, | numerous vessels having lately run the blockade, and jnown there are come Yankees here 9 ‘whe will Fallure ef Negotiations for Veaco—Mevt~ - tack on a State in arms, unless the whole power and force | disposal, where he held a grand levee. The whole press | when it could have taken redregs with the high hand | given ald to theenemy, in the shape of provisions, &c. at any hazard to enrich thomsel f ows re willing . @f the nation that makes it is in the adventure. | of the sanctioned the act and extolted its | and shut the door to a) by recalling Lyons, send- ‘Surcamp bas now the appearance cf a small village, our North. ver, advantage the ing of Caravajal and Garcia--Ulima~ “W. the North cou 4 give up its wi ime of land opera- | hero. After thts universal ovation to Commander Wilkes, | ing home Adams, and setting the British fleet at once | wooden huts being mostly all built, which, of course, "Within afow days the Gover has ited the | ° tums of the Rival Chicftains—The - Se ec eae Reem em | seceemen en ese pee ot Harm ne | a onl ee on, Soci ee Lan | Tima omen comirahle wl ince sara | uring of coum enna tem im tao Arbitration of Sword and Pire—Barn- cow: } Mini an- | of 4 " Carolina, they might make with success the | ardice that Yankee annals afford. It will be curious to tagonistical to the majority of the British ie or shaves berpaariig wasn case vnuiiome he doorsand | ing of a Portion of the Doomed City, - faroads’ they have planned. But we need | observe the reception which will be given the news.of it | these data we venture the prophecy that in less than’ SOUTH CAROLINA. best law' Arad sand there | ge,, dics, dace Year “nothing from columns of ten, fifteen, | by the public at the North and in Karope. i three months this Mimistry will fall from power. 2 3 respectable norther to necessitate the 2 Fig Of the Sth tast. farniahen ‘ae twenty thousand Bell runzers when they leave their eer ‘Whenever it does 20 we anticipate immediate inter- {Special Correspondence of the Richmond Examiner. ‘building of a fire. . \ ‘The Brownsville (Texas) Flag }. furs ° * “egasels oven for a distance of two miles. In no part of | xo FRIENDS ‘ON THE FACE OF THE EARTH. | tention by Great Brivain in the nffuirs of Unis continent. The Pe ney 3 ‘The Governor has within the last | week | tho following ‘additional particulars relative to the siege ‘the Southern country, oven if they could make such de. Bae Rw Bf tends DM | snclnattons ad tern of that popie are ro. cody waited Christmas Werk Activity of the Union he State Con- | called ont the militia. The State, thougd | orn von Pen lryere oo pices Reet ine ee <eyead wi ne vale Bie have got _no friends Cail tace _ po So Dat for oon. iessie, Map Ba ee rood Their ale heehee Vessel Tuna the Blockade atti Brey ry Str) or chy hier afashica, "Tho | Tho firing of the night of Wednesday, the 27th ef No- 9 z, been running round the universe, : 4 Coast do. very children hay ta martial h ber, was ‘unproductive of serious results, further westeat and when we hear of similar iat nad, beoging this aud that nation to take their | (2 this quarrel. Let us not repine, though the task be |< {9% Drafted for Sea tae og ve canght 2 spirit, and dash over | vember, P B tom assurance that arrive : q Christmas week has glided early by, the New Year | the prairies most wildly on their mustangs. Companies, | than the destruction of more pro} . On Thursday poe ee ly they will at per: | part against the Southern Tebels, whom they ony out- pone la nlp da Bi Eryn oe is upon us, and stillno battle nor prospect-of a battle | battalions and regiments of cavalry, arlillery and in- | morning, the 28th, a truce was establisiied on account of“ Toe fear that some minds entertain of the Northern Pree page eee ag Maeno lr tnd ionaaeae & boner ae ‘to rity, we must sae Nee er Riscmdeg gy ee — prnctd ae eee Cgocy oe Es ee ag = ews of a war between Spain and Mexico. Tne Plag . Geet, consequences of its operations in the South, ‘i ‘i reel are Lg laily, steaming up every navi- hese forces I mest ment a | says:— ‘ct lens without foundation than the security or in’ | Kingdom of Italy, which, being just, admitted into good Prove to ourselren find to allothers that our own unaited | fablecreck and Inlet betwcen kdisto and Tybee, Fetreat. | mounted regiment of Toxas Lancors, the only one in tho | Hoth forces involuntarily thought and suggested « ire wh i rennin aon revive: | war iguanas othr outstaean | (ere umnan om renin voc avery en tat | WELTate Gay Sad odes” We tat tagiol's | forum ont Sate bat now Pregact Sara | Patent anveey ad thug toy adie, 0 Seer ~ were ya can do mischief to 7 ve . . Soule Uni- Sie villages of the const, but te without power to ntict « | wlerelby any European governinent. Except the rif. poner nt Sica soomaetentoate cies its extinction | fow days ago, when quite a littie fleet of gunboats p- | versity, of this State. ‘It ts a most formidable body of | Fairfax Gray, U.'S. A.. acting under instructions from Vital or even disebling wound upon the confederacy | ‘Of Kuropean red republicanism and the Dugald Dal- | Ste i'ce tyr nth peared off White Point, at the head of Faisto inlet, that | inen,armed with lances, shot-guns and revolvers, and | Licutenant Colonel Buchel, of Fort Browa, an interview Steeif. Ts will cont the Northern Union many millions of | Setty S4venturers who serve under any banner for pro- . the Yankees liad mustered courage to disembark on the | wnany of them ineredibly expert in their use. was arranged between the contending chicts. vant pay, the United States has no more friends among the ea peopie than ainong their govern- | THE LATE RICHMOND THEATRE—ITS EARLY ments. This ia the testimony of their own jeiter writers HISTORY, from Paris and London. They are perpetually complain- {From the Richmond Dispatch, Jan. 3.} ing of the unfriondlmess to the North of foreign govern Our readers .are already aware that the theatre was ments, and that the foreign press, which expresses the | purned to the ground on New Year's night. Its prede- public sentiment of Europe, almost universally sympa- | ¢ sor, which stood where the Monumantal-church now thizes with the Southern rebels. On their own showing | stands, was burned also, with great loss of life, on the Much excitomont prevails at this particular However, afier sundry notes back and forth, int as to what the Lincolnites purpose | the conference came to » dead halt under the following cre. The Santeo, the blockading vessel, is lying off | ultimatums, which were respectfuliy submitted: about five miles, and there are reports of transports in ‘BY CARAVA/ AL. the vicinity. Thad a distinct view of three othgr vessels 1. That a general amnes.y should be proclaimed by last evening in my ride along the beach, but thought one | Governor Serna to all but the chio:s of the opposite party, at least was a small schooner captured some time since. | who wore to be subject to such # prosecution as the law General Heberat,a moat accomplished officer, is inde- | officers mi; i main. White Point is but nine miles from the line of the Charleston and Savannah Railroad, the command of which is 80 much coveted by tho enemy. The roads in that neighborhood are excellent, and had the invaders been so disposed, after ‘scattering’ General Evans and “afew” of bis revels, they could have penetrated into the heart of secessia and gained the railroad ina three hour's march. Our boys fully expected them; the ‘The troops sent om this expedition, and borne by the “ 9 wage. transports attached to aantne ‘all the BY the | they bave no friends outside their own limits; but in--| nightof the 26th December, 111, fifty years ani one | news of their proxiinity spread rapidly on allsides, and | fatiyable in having everything prepared for their recep- | 2. That the city of Matamoras was to be uneonditiona)- eld, raw and undisciplined. Now, here, as elsewhere, | Sted of whining and howling over the self-evidentfact | week ago. Charleston was on the gui vive fur a battle. Whether | tion. The citizens are leaving and shipping everything | ly surrendered. Se ee South mest | they ought to sit down aud candidly and solemnly iv- | "We looked into Mr. Mordecai’s book to find out when | they discerned the terrible white horse’ of Leesburg | of value into the iuterior. WY GARCIA. untrained volunteers of the North, with an equality | Vestigate ite causes and consequences. the late theatre wax built, ‘but there is no record of it | fanie prancing upon tho shore, or whether their chronic | Our forces are occupying itions at each end | 1. That Caravajal should withdraw hie forces to @f numbers and commanders, the defeat of the latter | _ When an individual man bas no trieads, it is safe, a8 @ | thore. Our impression is t was.completed, at least, | dread of masked batteries suddenly came over thea, itis | of the railroad bridge feeding from the {sland | nosa, aud that a truce should be concluded-until general rule, toassnme that ht in the year 1918, and that it was od during the win. means of getting any, and the - | ter of 1818-"19 for the first time. The first play we over vate his acquaintance. He may be as pure as the driven | saw was in that boase, in November, 1820. We recellect show ,as just ag Aristides, as honorabit Bayard, but | tothis hour the effect it produced upon us, certain that the Yankee gunboats, after pitching afew shells on the plantations, in the wildest and most pro- miscuous style, quietly turned back and valiantly passed d trials and bt of the individual man ever the Northern man ! 5 i i 3? 3 to the Virginia point on the main land, | dispute could be referred to the government at the city and can boast of fortifications as beautiful and formidable | of Mexico, both parties agreeing to abide by the decision as any of the same extent in the confederacy. If the | of the national government. ip a personal combat: and this superiority is still down to the sea. Since then we have no news of an: «gemy attempts to land on the island they wil! be met b; 2. Or, that Garcia would surrender the city, idea dhe cig Geseea ih thy Gillie SnanA between the society, av at present conssituted, does nocyarceise muct | simple anovch to regrot that we are ao longer capabie of | movement, of shadow of « movement, on elthe: side. | our (orees, aud Galveston Island will tale rank in history. | that be’ as « national ‘ofllcer, should bo allowed to mareb- wo nations. This isour security against the fleet and | j4vantage in bis friondship nor apy great calamity in | feeling as we thenfelt. The play was ¥ General sherman’s dyspepsia must indeed be a hopeless | with Manassus and other ficlds for flerce and snoceasfal | out with all his Scoops eee eretvensnat army whieh operates this winter on the Southern coast. | Ris displeasure. Now ihe North, in the eyes of universal | cipal character was sustained by Finn fighting. If they attempt to bring their vorsels into the | 8. That both parties should sot aside the late election, It is also our perfect ana absolute defence for the present | “ariaiendom, is at preseut a krupt. with this sigoul | wards famous comedian and punater,who was lost at soa,we ate Convention, which reassembied in Columbia | bay they will meet with diMiculties they little expect. | and bind themselves to abide by the result of another. m spat te ‘great force collected along our Nerthorn fron: | ‘ili#rence trom the case of a virtuous individual, that it | donot know. Mrs. Waring—one of the Placides—uow | last week, holds its sessions like the Confederate Congress, Galveston Island is thirty miles long. The city bas The diplomats having thus come {ace to face with plain - . Bolong as the arinies of the Union and of the con. | 24s become a bankrupt by its own orimes and excesses; | sire, W. R. Blake, played Virginia, amd an actor named | with closed doors, The Convention would before thishave | about 10,000 inbabitants, and is the handsomest town in | and sensible propositions, the negotiation only required federacy are both composed of recruits we stand in no that its wealth made tt licentious, vicious aud cruel, atal | Nichols played Ieiliua. It is difficult for us to realize, at | ceased to exist by limitation bad :t not, by ilsown action, ] Texas. There are six newspapers published here, ton | the yeas and nays, and theroupen neither party would danger, and need ent ‘BO . The dark | tat iis character has become so corrupt and cowardly | this distance of time, the emotions of that evening. ‘To | prolonged its sovercign power. This prolongation is ai churches and several large hote's. The private houresare | yield his ground, for™in deing .6o he was bound to hour vial has that even iis wealth could scarcely neutralize its patrity- | ys the theatre was a gorgeous palace, the scenery supers | chiefly to the fact of the iuvasion and the extraordinary | mostly of wood and painted white. The streets are wide, | give up everything. The conference ended ‘ever ing offepsiveness in the nostrils b Slogan vm But with | homan, its movements the effect of ie. The actor | exigencics which have arisen therefrom. The poopte have | straight and rectangular, bordered by flower gardens. | then and there, just as we thought it would; for the dis- ‘mo neither ‘realth nor character, nell gain nor goal | not full confidence in the ability and competency of the | If we except the Strand, on many of the streets the | pute between Garcia and Caravaal seems to us to be one ecience ss eee ee ee ee c ordinary State government to cope successfully with | outer edges of the sidewalks are bordered by beautiful | of life aud death, politically speakiug, and cannot be com--- fe the end he to bimsel. This is gh: hg. for @ ote or the next. The ‘The farce was “ High Life Below *and | those exigencies, many of which are of an exceedingly | hedges of oleandor. proinised. the secret of his long delay. This is the work poor have at —_ is ggg that ma played the part of the master who bas been | delicate and unusual nature. The Convention, however, ‘There 15 @ railroad from this place to Houston, and During the conference Generals Garcia and, Caravajal of his bands and his head at this moment. bre ge’ f For ws , yd Fe sag) of -hv- | cheated by his servants, and disguises himself as acoun- | is composed of the oldest and wisest mon of South Caro- | steamboats making regular trips tothe interior, There | met, Major Gray and Lieatouant Neale being present. = succeed in completely. they wii admit weafler to try boy Beeking service, in order to detect them. Harry | lina. have the ability and the energy to gri is no danger of invasion here. The enemy can’t make | Both discussed the dispute with earnestness and wir man.t, ie better companionship than the Fifth avenue or | piacide was inthe piece, and several other actors who the West End: but vicious poverty has uo frieuds | haye since been widely known. To us the whole was a ‘sud no comfort i heaven or earth. This is the reason | reality. We beliove wo baif exhausted our power of the North is so unpopolar, It a nothing that | jauguing that might; for we never have been able anybody wants; it can no longer {ui Europe with | to laugh as we did then from that. time to this. , tobacco and rice; it is looked upom as an impostor | We roared, we shouted, we screamed, we fairly has been gprs danced in the. box until we stiracted the’ attention of everybody in the house. We leaned over as though we Principal to weil his | wercready tojump into the pit. Gilfer yy which be has grown rich, and | that time, and we believe he the house. he is pow repaying by trying to break intothe | wayno such thing as starring then, and wi house of his ind: it patron, cut his throat, excite in- ete company it ly staid wite bi Kiderabio time, Gilfert with any condition of aflaira that may arise. By united voice this State, and indirectly the whole South, was wrested from Yankee dominion, add the people trust them,and wil stand by every measuro that they may see fit to inaugurate. It was probably the high con-cious- ness of the possession of this confidence that led the Con- vention (0 retain the reins of government which was about to slip from its hands. None of the acts of the pre- sent session of the Convention have yet been made public; but it is generally believed that an advisory council wiil be constituted, to whom, in conjunction with the Governor, powers of a very [a i. character will be entrusted. wi the trip by land or water. One company of rang: report, ag their peculiar mode of ing, could demolish a r the Major and Lieutenant kept away fromthe hearing of ment of Yankees in a march of one hundrea miles, 1 | the parties, lost they shovid be culled upon todecide many” have no doubt they attempted to come, five or | delicate little points, whore théy might have offended one six hundred cow boys, with an aptness liar | party or the other. Major mad is a lawyerand @ man of to their profession, could stampede a thousand Bead of | tho world, therefore particularly discreet in such matters, cattle over them. I regard the cattle alone as a natural ‘When the conference. came near its termination, with- defence of the State. * out any Tavorabte result, Gen. Venetia whee J earpestly i Sage ght hap pe Plager rong Be remarked that he had two peace m: who would vegetables, cabbage, , tomatoes and potatoes. It is | differ, and that he should prove. to argue the 190 warm to write. with cannon balls and torches, and that he woald kill and Ma scoming honesty; but what was said we cannot ‘eg! ‘eroken like the wave on # mass of stone. Hore lies the true danger of the While the North relies on | surrection among his sorvania, and give over bis dwel- had an excellent company rasto of h mark the path broke - Gisciptine, wetrust etill- to individual superiority; aad, Le pe pages If the North does not see the turpi- may ve jadged from the names we have already record. teens presente an aspect of aaitapon Soe cad oa fhowever brillient the results that the last has hitherto ‘of suck conduct, it is the only part of the world | 94. In 1421 Booth came over, and played in that theatre | ation. The vast stones, ashes and | —(Specia! Correspondence of tho Richmond Dis; ‘the tent gained, aod may still secure, 1t will be found im the end | Which is blind to the glaring iniquity. The conemjuences | qhe first time he ever played in avy theatre in Americs. | rubbish encumber our stil, and to pass guns . ‘Ss ineflicient oa:ibe American continent and is the nine. | &'@ evvally palpable with the causes of the universal | uoid ” has minay vicissitudes since ¢ most vateable Of the city one has | The Actioity of the wore tecnth century ea it has ever been in all other ages and | dium in which the North is held. When a nation excites | dat time. it hag had and we areafraid | to his way in the migdieof the street atid Confederates—Cenera! ‘eli other lands. the detestation of mankind by its vices, and is so weak sage ge Mor Corckony ‘Some of the dest players and | of cinders and dust. “Some are agitating the hart cay partics —_—_—- ‘and devoid of spirit that it can be insulted with impunity, | the best vocalists ever known in the werld played of establishing @ central park on the The activity di aan, , THE CON A QUERY FOR | 1," Bet be long before theeivilized world chastives ii | and qung upon its boards. Its history might be made | site to Institute Hall, and whieh is now eps” | near Greea river, they ‘ANCIERS. eee vy in petite agen Sone. pi harsher A pm gets Sid pA ron Natacagh aught es for a ee Soe, Caravafal wan terribiy * moral mens community, | meiancholy pleasure to 1Y agreeable associat { ground in these imes, although it might be a more, make te. ee bere agen omer mag wth) ™ the Maw Emianewesiee ee ee which sy at ani comparatively cheap price, owing to the ‘ion of He Bees wy Taltaiags “a a or Sfty per cent Puss ocms mente the whee tne theatre was first erected, in 1 ‘Another vossel ran the blockade yeatorday—not bere— peppery ime Gi ‘smoke futyjock of rulicole by Mr, Seward sad has extrtal a horse | __ CONDITION OF THE REBEL ARMY. | opmet under the management of the celebr and has rejoiced the hearts of her owners with a rich and | 88 a large, colin of it bev! aad ea we Kauoh from Lord Lyons. Toe ingularity of the proceed. | DRUNEEXNESS OF TRE OPYICERS AXD DewoRariza- | (fer with a powerfulcwzedranatiqus.and be cytinued ee cent Tale wil ae be | Crorel Jelinanen, wae lnsoriog sunnsora, oovid vain tas | amas exten nuns oe Danas aes heightened : it AMONG ‘MAN. oven several ra. ir ‘oceu- » a yy smear! sw rs cwsyapers Nex! tons. Memusagers etteaipl to. er, [Prom the Richmond Eeamsioer' of Thureday, Jan, 2.) ig as ee els oy Gees wogal egret tn the Cintiots wear tae ton econ te Soa thneowe of. wer neren Rv enn and wealth, ar ees tryst ‘n'sorrow that man- tract revenues from importations. a when George Jones, nes Count Johannes, . army shou! us Ct ¥ tive. Utnoors omnes taopetiemese ro Ne rag =} ‘THE CONDINON OF OUR ARMIES. dR rama sed’continosd t0 perform in the Mariuan | make up & powerful State military force, enlisted’ for a trying oF critical situation. No one doubted that | * From ¥riday night up to Thursday night, the time "pF cont interant with epecie: chandred ana ‘Ay theatre,as be it, until some time in 1830, | twelve months for const defence, Two-thirds of the | © battle, under such givcumstences, would be most | when the #lag te report, no change dccurred im. ~ “oa uts, reflects much homer en Mr. ‘s finaacial when be suddenly lett in disgust,aud it was conducted, | &Fms bearing men are to be placed in the field. But in | fesheale aus + We might have lost thousands of | the relative positions of the combatants, except that on ‘ae iW and eagacny. If halders of ‘bonds were on behalf of Jonen’ company, by J. G. Lambert, a comic | Vory many of the districts @ far greater propor 6 Dest And bravest men without producing auy other | Sunday it wan reported that Caravajal had beso rein- Sol ba found sageriere oan ham within the Unite of the Of the Zoreruunout te | aotor of great celebrity, afterwards of the Haymarket | thié are already in service; in others voluatesring is 4 {reue tiny thee t gucorastoily defending ourselves. But | forced by deneral Martin Sayas, who algo brought Cara- <OoA oder: sustain and to cultivate the spirit of eur soldiery Garden ‘The theatre next fell into the of | Going om very rapidly, and it ie quite forcible that the | te enemy Bat rate advance beyond | Yajal « considerable amount of money. General Bene- tog, the ‘There is 000 moch drunkenness the ctivor on | JobnS. Potter, William R. Biake euscooded him,and ho | Becessity for a drats my be avoided altogether—certain. | treet Hust, 1a large porsicn of the farce that crossed to | vides was also reported to bo on the way to reinforce b the Potomac, and too much vacant idling emong the | Was tuccesded by Mr. William L. Maule. Mr. John Get. | ly ® very desirable cons .1mmation, — bape egped (some poe boven is making himself | Garcia. Of the truth of these reports, however, nothing. the , confines inen, We are informed a8 & positive fart thet fn the | toll, We bolleve, Doxt had a tour of management, and re ge tammone by ie marches and counter marches asthe | is certainly Known, except that Caravajal did use" the sajortiy of the are an the, Petmmes. the proctie of | tired, as did the others, in disgust. The last managers, TEXNESSEE. Foyt id aad then marched | some money, On the night of Thursday, the dh, « ter. banks fr drilis has fallen into dims. Thig | George Kunkel & Co., were the until superseded by | LETTER FROM PARSON BROWNLOW TO THE NASHVILLE rible fureiiade was hoard, but the result of it had not completa All itemont that existed ie, ¥ didi nis | professor Hewitt, who has heen turned out by the Fi ra existed afew days since, in | transpired. pan q alone would be to demoralize any artoy in cir ; y ire PATRIOT—HIS TREATMENT, anticipation of a battle, has died away. It wi Saonligan,’ Cumstances auch-aa oura-s‘Tha drills ot only svwniai | KIDR, whose energetic performances have caused an en- | we oopy from the Nashville Pairil the following char- | opinion, as expressed in the Dispalchy” that Tilde Oak | heen ee ere tir oy ever ne Pc fe pobocling the soldier, it fulfils o:her vastly important pe eres lye winter amusements as | acteristic letter from Parson Brownlow:— not be any great battle on that field, notwithstanding the ayn of Don Jesus Libra; the house of Mons. . Tt developer und educates the | coBm ‘a Ksoxvitts Jat, Dec. 20, 1961. phisiqne, fortibes the soldier against disease; and, har |, The author of “Recollections of Richmoud”’ states that | tn your issue of the 17th inst., you ayn We learn ie the portant moral considerat iin of tho very first dramatic performance im the city occurred | that W. G. Brownlow, imprisoned at Knoxville, refuses to gives for a portion of his time each day’ | i the Bouse formerly ocoupied by old Simon Ab; eat anything, desiring to starve himself to death.” and provects him, at least measurably, against the | ia the rear of the old vounty Ja\!, then called Rose's Br Lhave no doubt, Mr. Editor, that you have learned such canker worm of the army—nnui. can bo Jo 1802 theatrical performances were held’ in the upper | w thing, but it is wonderful intelligence. And but for the dicted but utter demoralization for anarmy whore cond). | Patt of the old market house, corner of Main and Seven | fact that Ido not wish to be understood as trying to tion is that of tens of thousands of men, living in uttor | teenth streets. Temporary pincer were oecupied till | commit suicide, I would not care to correct the orroneous idleness, grovelling im their tents, with no other oecupa. | 1811, when the burving of the edifice then used gave ® | statement. ruth in my caso is that | have now beon tion than what is afforded by the greasy pack of cards | d#mper to theairicalsfrom which it took many years to | in jail two weeks, and I have eaten too much every day, that is the inevitable inmate of every tont, or the | Teveveit. The prement thoatré succeeded that one. it | my family, with the permission of Brigadier General lar Yellow-covered hovel, whose wretched and perhaps hithy | as gone the same way. roli, furnishing me with three meals each day. But-for entertainment has more than once gone the rounds of the | _ 10 closing our desultory remarks we may remark that | taking cold, and suffering from a sore throat, { could boast company. some of the greatest modern actors and singers Lu a of fusual health, As it is,i claim to be the most cheer. We cansot shut our eyes to the fast that the army ix | Ported themselves on its boards... When dying—i ful of more than one hundred prisoners I found hore on demonstrat! made by (he enemy and bluster by the | Ftienne Bros., with its stock of merchandise; the res- Northern a. need not repeat the argoment T | taurant of Jolin Mount; the house of Madame Kidder, Facts show my reasons were well founded. | with all the farniture and goods; two other houses be- General Buell would have accepted battle had General | jon, ‘ing to Mrs, Kidder, opposite to her residence; the Johasion been foolish onough to haye offered it, with half fenttonce of Col. Macedonia Capistran; the rewidence of hip pH redo Fon breel poop a Aceepeagog Col, Jowe Quintana; and one other, whose owner we did i a oO our wa, Ht] ul Lexington, Frankfort. and the Oblo. ‘The time oo Poh semen, together with eomo small sheds in the passed for such a Rovemest, unless we can draw off POLICY OF Tit MRSTRGRNS. 1a immense federal army there to some other point. future policy of the chiefs; the Flag Aluhongh [have no idea the fedorals will prosumhe to po Ae ry Caravajal ‘hes relinquished the Praises ef march on Bowling Green, still we aro much better pre- | taking the town by assault, and has decided to atren Pared to receive them now, and there is less cause for | hig lincs around the plaza, and, having his enemies hem. uneasiness than there was when they threatened todo | med in, he intends to cstablish a government all around . 80 a fow days Rgo. them aud then wait for time (o win the fight. He will ton in which heexpe cls to oxtract eevenue from his Serif, diood fram bis surniye, wud supbeave from his encumbers. taoming a nam of terror and dread to the mind: but afew montha since—the comedian, Burton , pi at ” The ‘ my arrival. Goueral Floyd's brigade is expected in Nashville to- that part of citizens. Tho newspapers are still Med with advertiag. | frewoll engagement in it, which proved his farewells Dut, sir, 1 will now give you an additional tt C ipaugurate munivipal aud State authority in par A HUMILIATED NATION. Cee onsaes era ets rth wilvorting. | ncugh, for in two weeks after loaviog this city Toodics | whieh’ many of your” Sewlorn will peruse with nave any. ourane to Kentocky The’ poop ae Propaggd to | tho town over which he has control, and, with his own I left No troops | police, carry on tho government jast as though there was th: wd Dispateh, Jan. 3. (Fream the Richen patch, Jan, jone better or suffered more in the war than Gon. fete surrender of Mas." nd Slidell the British go- ‘vernanent wiliascertain the ¢ ‘4et capacity of the Yankee Jn sucoumnbing to the P,.#)i#sh demand the Yankees onatrate that they have ao S€Bse of ta\ional honor, Dopariment hag adopted a rule restricting the number | 7a# wader ground in Greenwood Cemetery, Fanny | you are nilowed to publish thom, about 1 of substitutions to one in each company, The rates paid | Eisler, Sane eee; Jenny Lind, Colson, Brin ti, | Zin of November, with @ view to collect couse Catton dod for wubatitntes are enormons. We are informed that they | Charles Kean, Killen Tree, omega Booth, Cooke, Bvt! my office for advertising, and to relieve the foars of my avorage (rom two tundred to two hundred and fifty dol. | Fest, Anderson, et id omne genus, have gathered in the dol- | fainily, who were daily aunoyed with the cails of drunken lars: and we have boon told of m recomt instance where | \ars in the house that the “Log Fort” saw tht last of on | goidier®, bawling bofore my house and flourishing thete Afvoen ‘hundred d dollars wae aid for the Procure. | Wednesday night. ssieniaisolit side knives “sud platole, ond making threats of viotonce, abatitute to ie piace of @ private . On the 5th of Decem! received @ brief letter (; suddenly constrained to leave the army. Bvidences WESTERN VIRGINIA. ° Genoral Crittexden, inviting me to hin carters sare us in the face of the umwillingn ** of men to accept |Special Correapondence of the Richmond be in Knoxville, promising me passports into and the life of famine, dirt and cacant vais nets in the army. irae on trou, omnom County, Va., Dec. 29, 1961. | a military escort to conduct me safe, At the same time T Richmond ia filled with soldiers who .ave come out be the Yonkee a Loyal An Ob- | was furuished with she copy of a letter to the Major Of the hospitals,or who have got her@ 00 some pro. Oath Hrartet—The Familia of Refugees Only | General from J. P. Benjamin, Secretary of War, advising tence or other, ‘applying for dincharges, aut airiving | AVlowe Half Rawions— Proposition of Reveorans Indig- | bin to give me passport and @ safe conduct beyond tie wrriapliog vy norte of ways t t out of the nantly by a Southern Womat-—Government Pro- | Confederate lines. army. At was but s fow days ago that w sx, “ler, dis | fecthon Necessary Supposing the head of the War Depertment and the rer from one of the hospitals here, comin tes wul- | | Having recelved very tate advices from the Kanawha Major Goueral commanding Leré to be seting in good — ir than Ly yntompey to return to the ancy. border, and knowing to be the most reliable to be | faith, reported myself in porson and accepted tho offer is no unwillingness among onr young ma," to | o , 1 desire to place the public and the government | of passports. I agreed to start on Saturday, and the serve ad country. ¢ are thoasands who wo. ld | in of them. A from ihe vicinity of | Genera nated Captain Gitespic’s company of cavalry Willingly go with their lives on their sleeves to batt’ | Fayetteville has just arrived here, havidg #uflered the } for an exe with ng fo altort @ devoted and courageous ,| loss of hie entire property by the infernal vandals, But on Friday evening, ju before sundown, I was ar- Se he bey dread to botake to the |. now two thousand strong at that place. They | résted for treason, founded on certain editorials in the fy atohed, i Jife of dirt, vacancy and idleness in | ia,"* fortified themselves and have four pieces of ord. | Kroes tile Whig wines June last, the war ing #igued ‘pe verement wil ey renee tn oo nel vey bo yd 4 fo ll py the loyal | by Com.iesioner pie ae Attorney » lam, i y & | citizens some of (hem wi it r fasnill ‘fo in jailk—io ol ovnfinement—perfoctiy con- dounty in. for reenlistmente—the provisions of which, | property. The demoralizing and corropting oath of alle, Sentea ans poking no complaints against any one. ” am by the way for iiiaens hae alread; giance in inexorably adminiatered to ho .¥ to ree whieh is the highest —the we undersea, Proved & ‘souree of intrigue and and absoniese .?* notified by every means ie the —] by Papas AC Richmaped, sagoctatet ‘with the Major no such spot a9 the plaza. ‘To do this he intends to build ry treets leading from fa not made public. Whorevor. it goes it wil do good | aust Bait j¥ale erate te ont ‘i fervico it might bo rendered most eMicient in co-opera- | chock ihe enomy from getting out, dono he invenda tion with Zollionffor and Marshall in a movement towards’ | to ostabiish « ceetom , ag usnal, at the river, and Lexington and Frankfort. “The ine of communication to | then op¢n a road go that travel can pursue ite legitimate Nashvilio by way of Bowling Groen is well defended. The | channels between Matamoras and thevouritry. It will active csmpaign should be in the Blue Grass region and | thon bo a matter of delay only how long he will be left most part tucky. out of the plaza, for time will wear out the garrison. The orts continue to come in, which appear well found. | insiders say that they are willing to this Procosding, for - Genoral Crittenden, with twelve thousand folo- they have nothing to loge but everything to gain by delay. Fala, is threatening HopkiosviNe. It is statod that this | ‘rejp friends aro rallying men aud means in the interior, force is divided into three columns, to march from Clin- and that by the time their repforcoments come ton, Greenville and Madisonville at the same time. Colo. | Gy. "e troops will have become dissatisfied hel Jackson's command is united with that af Critten- | wii . Chango is the groat facnity of the Mexican, de. Genet Clark ia on py ying three | and many revolations have been 5) ‘among them ugand four thousan, 5 re is great excite- pertinac! party. ment in that section of the State. Great ‘iumbers of | Lond ai 2 a bien Kentuckians were flocking to the Confederate dag with whatever arms they had or could find, while others were moving thoir stock and other property farther South. ‘We shall hoar soon, probably, of desperate fighting in the neighborhood of Hopkins vilie, ne! recent fre here in the ordnance stores of the Gon. | inatism, Headache, Toothache, Croup, Sore i federate go rnment is lees disastrove than it wae sup- | Si! PAB Ol A A itee ciniment will do, and pored to beat first. It will not bo of so much inounve- | grier purchasing @ dotile, ond inding ino rellef theletrom, Bience 10 jhe pervice. No ie entertained of will have their mone) => .cttrme =}, 1) Oger Be Deing the work of an , |) ber droggiets. EI ~ and that dollars and cents are the ‘T Supreme law of action in matiors publioas'weibas perem ‘They boarded the ar with every circumatance of b, #Vado and indignity; government made the aot ite on’? by receiving the Cominiaeiwnere into its possession, and CODfining them as