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# ( ' ' ' ' ' I II - I > ;/i .; THE CAMDEN WEEKLY CONFEDERATE. " knowledge IS power, and THE PRESS IS THE ROYAL THRONE TJPON WHICH SHE SITS, AN ENTHRONED MONARCH." j A'Arol.ln]^ CAYFDEN, S. C., WEDNESDAY MORI^INCt, JULY 13, 1864, [TSTo. 15 \ ?LMJ?? ! ? lie CiifdMnrtt'j| IS PUBLISHED AT CAMDEN. EVERY WEDNESDAY MORNINR, I BV J. T. HERSHMAN. Terms of subscription?JFive Dol- : lars per nnnum. fissjC" Kates of Advertising?Two Dol-| ars, per square <?f twelve lines, for first i nsertion, and One Dollar and Fifty | Cents f<>r each subsequent one. graj"* Communications catctunicu to auvanv i the interest of our District ami State, published free of charge. Yankee and Confederate Generals i ? ?A Play upon Names. Celerity is considered a big tiling iu j war. So is premtness. We believej there is only one General in the South- ' cm army who always gets up Early, j albeit -there was one, who resigned, why ' was habitually Pryor in rising. Though the rebel officers are rather noted for rapid movements, theie are two decided Polk's*among them, am? one who is J -continually Cumming, yet does not come ! aloug. Put we have a Slocuni ourselves, j and though we may have a General ! Hunt after the rebels, sume of our j commanders, including that of Iluntcr' himself, occasionally fail to bag tbe ras- ] cals, seeing which General Ketcher! ought to resign unless lie can prove 1 that he knows Howe. P?y hanging to the enemy's rear, it seems to us that General llinduiau, at least, ought to be caught. This war lias brought forward, more 1 -' ? fovnt-ol n?ilif:irv or less couspieiuusij, names. There are l'ickett, of Yirgiuin; Battle, of Tennessee; ami Slaughter, of Alabama, on the* the rebel side? : Phifer would do to put in the band, j aud Fields isn't inappropriate for the sceue of operations.?Steele is not so j Lad either, and Steele we find common i to both armies. There* is no use for Shields in our modern warfare, at any ? rate since the Shenandoah Valley j campaign of 1S62, though the rebels i continue to employ Archers. Mountainous as same parts of the South are, there arc two Hiils down j there that seem to l>c particularly hard j to get over, and a Breckinridge. Reuse j Forrests, heavy Woods, and difficult : Khodcs are occasionally to be seen. Boggs and Brooks diversify the pros- j j>cct though it must be stated that the : latter are not produced by llains of! Ifforth Carolina, and of coarse not by the Rains that fell at Stone River. : Wo don't know much about the rebel Line, but are advised that this is differ- ; entfrom .the somewhat famous Long- ' street. IIow long that is we are not apprised, though we have secu the uicu- ' tion of Miles. In our army we have no ' General Hills. We have a Mead, a : Parke, a Woods, a Brook, and a Tower; j f the latter, however, not remarkably j tall. | . . There is no whiskey iu the Southern i army, owing, we suppose, to the difficulty ' of. procuring that article. There is, i however, or lately was, Kitnmel, and whatever ale can be got out of Adauis. j As to our own army, though we keep a .Butler, we don't indulge in anything! stronger than Meade. There is-a Porter | on the list, though lie is out .at present. ; This refers to the Audrew brand. Pitz 1 John (not demi john) Porter, the Administration swore off from in November, 13<i"A "What with the laws of Congress in regard to the abolition of sailors grog uud Gou. Grunt's temperance order in r the army of the Potomac, we may perhaps look for total abstinence some of tbesc : clays. George Washington M or re 11 is one of our brigadier generals we wish all brigadier generals?and ' major generals too, for that matter?were as moral as ! George Washington. As the rebels seem to have thrown the Lees of their society into the war, the mechanics and trade people arc rcmaku bly well represented. There are two Coopers, a Gardner, a Lcadbeatcr and a Taylor or two. The rebels have their 1 Parsons and we bare onr Pope. The ouly working men represented among"; our generals are the Potters aud Taylors, | always excepting the Smiths, and the Confederates, by the way, J have them, too. i We don't see how the enemy can want food as long as they have Hogg, Mouton . and Greens. On the other hand, it we should ever get out of beef wc cap fall back on our Vielc. Wc hear that General Pike, who resigned the Confederate service some time ago, is making over-1 turcs for pardon-. His ease will probably be turned over to Provost Marshal Gen- j ' oral Fry. There has been a great deal of talk ' about National Hanks carried on through the Treasury Department. It will not, j however, escape uoticc, that the War De- I partment also has its National Hanks located in Louisiana and Texas. If the Administration fails to put down, | cut to pieces, aud bore out this infernal J rebellion, it will not be for want of tools. 1 "We hav Sickles and we have Shears, nor I must we forget the old Barlow. We j don't just now remember whether much lias been done by our Augur, bufcwehave I had several that would not bore. We might make some sharp remarks about General Blunt, but puuning disagrees ! with us. * The rebels have a general named Tremble.? He must be a relative of our Gen. Kiekets. They also have a Gen.'Wither? ; we hope he will be wrung. '-jLet ? * v - : ' ' . . tlic galled jade wince." General Wise is a well known Confederate. We cau beat that; we have Gen. Solinon. There is, we believe, only one Gen. j Chcathaui in the enemy's forces by name, ! though a 'large number in poiut (if fact. ! We are afraid that there is more than : one Gen. Hooker in the Federal raoks. The Confederates say they are fighting for their homes. Until reccutly lloluies was fighting for ttiem, Due none i to hurt. Jeff Davis lias just put a Price ; on Arkansas land, hut we reckon Red lliver tvill run redder yet if he stays in vicinity. They say the stream is coining up, but it is Rank, and the latest quotations reported Steele going down. They have a general in the South , named Cross. lie had better go to Toombs. The secefih 'have buried two Garnetts. The Federals have a brilliant Stone yet above grouud. To us it has always seemed siugular that Rriggs aud Weasels should not be iu the navy. Well, let that pass. It is a mattef for Welles. The rebel army ns bud off for shoes. Part of it was at one time Frost-bitten. Our army might be able to get along without Schnr'z. We have a Couch and the enemy a 1 Pillow. If they were together we rekcon the former would be on top. Ch, pshaw ! This is all nonsense, Let's quit.?Missouri Republican. The Xew Yonk papers furnish the ftiilmciii.t r.-cont correspondence between ,.v ..... jj ? , Generals Foster and Jones: letter trom gen. jones to gen. , foster. IId'qrs Pep't South Carolina ! Georgia, and Florida, Charleston., j June Ui, 1SG4.?GeneralFive geueral | and forty live field officers of the United States army?all of them prisoners of war?have been sent to this city for safe i keeping. They have been turned over to JJri?r. Gen. liipley commandding the firstmilitary district of this department, who will see that they are provided with ' commodious quarters in a part of the city occupied by non-combatants, the majority of whom are women and ?hildren. It is proper,however, that I should inform you that it is a part of the city which h is for many months been exposed, dayand night, to the fire of your guns. Very resnectly, your obedient servant, Sam. Jonbr, Major Gen. Commandim:. j Major Gcu. J. G'. Foster, commanding United States forces on the coast of South Carolina, Confederate States. general foster's eei'lv: - - - o a llD'QRS DEPARTMENT OF THKOOl in, ^ IIilton Heap, 8. June 10. J Major General Sam. Jones, Commanding j Confederate Forces, Department of Son til Carolhia, Georgia and Florida : General: 1 liave to acknowledge the receipt this day of your eommuuieation of the loth iust, informing nie that five Generals aud forty-live field officers of the I nited States army, pris- I owere of war, have been turned over by you t-> DrigG-eucral Iiiplcy, with instructions to see that they arc provided with quarters in a pait of tlie city occupied by non-combatants?thetnajori- , ty of which latter, you state, are woman and children. Vou add that you deem it proper to inform mc that it is a part of the city which has been for many months exposed "to the fire of our guns. Many months since Major General Gillmore, United States army, notified General Dcauegard, then commanding in Charleston, that the city would be bombirded. This notice was giren that non-comabtaDts might be moved, and tlius woiuan and children spared from harm. General Beauregard, in communication to Gen. ^Gillmore dated August *22, I860, iuformcd him that the uon:c(?mbatant population of Charleston would be removed with all possible celerity- That women and chilli re u have been since retained by you in apart of the city which has been for many mouths exposed to fire is a matter decided by your own sense of butnanity. I must, however, protest against your action in thus placing defenceless prisoners of war in a position to constant bombardment, it is an indefensible j act of cruelty, and can be designed only j to prevent a continuance of our tire upon . Charleston. That city is a depot for j military supplies. Jt contains not J merely arsenals, but also foundries and 1 factories for the manufacture of muni- i tions of war. In its shipyards several ) armed ironclads have already been j completed, while others are still upon | the stocks in .course of construction* j Its wharves and the banks of the river ' on both sides of the city are lined with , batteries. To destroy tbose means of continuing the war is, therefore, our object and duty.?You seek to defeat this effort and by means not known to j honorable warfare, but by placing un* ! armed and helpless prisoners under their fire.?1 have forwarded your communication to the Presidcut, with a request that, lie place in my custody an equal j number of prisoners of like grade to be j kept by me in positions exposed to the i fil-p (if uniir (riilJS. SO lo|J2 as YOU COO- I v v. JV? p / W tinue the course stated in jour communication. T have the honor to be, very respectfully, Jyour obedient servant., J. Foster, Major * General Commanding. D. C. Wager, A. A- G. J. T. HERSHMAN-Editor. I I'amdcn, Wjgdjacsdgr, July IB. tl . The Yankees have destroyed ncariy a every house at Decatur, Ala. Not moi;c than half a dozen are left standing. ^ The Louisville Journal learns tb^t Gen. Butler has been severely wounuea ?in his military reputation. ^ Agents in Alabama are offering fqr e sale the Gve hundred million loan bonds ti at 1 35, the price said to be fixed by the c auction sale at Columbia. c 1< The First Lieutenant General from u South Carolina." The Mis$issippiun, of the 20th ultimo, says Gen. Stephen I). Lee has been a{T- 0 pointed Lieutenant General, and will be P retained in command of that Department. ^ The Front, b The positions of the two armies are h such, at present, as to make it impru- a dent and impolitic to define them. When the proper occasion arrives, our., readers will receive a satisfactory explanation for the present sileuce in regard 11 to'army movements. Secret Criminal Combination. ^ r -i v--..l. n Dome oi sue norm uaruimu puptio j coiif mi accounts which expose the distance f a secret criminal combination of e tra in that State and extending into a ' Georgia, Alabama, and perhaps Virgin- -j ia and the army;" r Acknowledgements The President of soldiers llcst grate- ^ fully acknowledge the receipt of the fol- ^ lowing articles through Mrs ?J. Jones of CI Camden: from Mrs Perry and Miss Lizzie j Grown of Liberty Hill 2 hams, 1 peck ^ of rice, 21 eggs, 1 gal syrup, 1 peck of' wheat, for coffee, and counniea.!. y It We hope our country friends "will corf- j linue-fo remember us. Any article of \ ^ food will be acceptable, as we have sol-1 dicrsat our It est all the time. . ' *i r Ifcortlioru News- 1 PicilMoND, Juy 9.?Hansom is repot- ; 1 ted to command the rebel cavalry and ; r Early the infantry. The rebels are be- 1 I * lieved to have reached llagcrstown by j 1 1.^ Clfli. t^winnvinCf fnv ?*n nvti>(isivA rtilil 1 / llir- JM?.| fc ..w v in Pennsylvania* Gov. Curtin has issued | a proclauiati"Ti saying, (he enemies of! I the c?untrv, in desperation, arc threat- | " i & niug Pennsylvania, with an aruind force, . t \vi-h the hope that Get). Grant may be ' j withdrawn from before Richmond. The : t number of the rebel forces, not known. ' Seized is safe by timely flight. Jo | t A great naval engagement between ( the Alabama and the Kearsagt is r-epor ted in Northern papers, which represent \ that the Alabama was sunk?the cu- 1 gagement lasting one hour and forty* ; f minutes. The fight took place ten miles ( from Cherbourg, on Sunday, 19th June i The Kcarsage was commanded by Capt. t James A. Winston, who sent a ehal- 1 lenge to the Alabama, which was accept- * ed, and the Alabama was crippled by a i t ; shell through he* boiler, while attempt- j j iug to board the Kcarsage. Captain i s I Semjiies and a portion of his crew were ' 1 saved by tbaKnglish Yacht Greyhound, j ' Capt. Semines was slightly wounded in | j the hand. j' The Yankee Congress adjourned sine j ,i:? ?i>.? r,?i. i ( Ex-Goveroer llecder of Kansas, is dead i j The llaltiraore Gazette of the 7th says ' t Martinsburg, Harpers Ferry, Point of t Rocks, have fallen into the hands of the ' Confederates. They captured a large * j quantity of booty in tli-e&e places. r Gov. Curtin has issued a proclatiiation, t calling for '20,000 men for 100 days. ' Lincoln has made a requisition on J New York for a similer number. Ilagerstown was occupied by the Con- ( federates on Wednesday The Federal t . A S iro'.ijts ruireaieu iu irrtwu vmuu. i Gold in New York 259. !e Lincoln- bus issued a proclamation, j f declaring Marshall law and the suspcu- v sion of the Habeas Corpus in Kentucky, s From the Trans-Mississippi ^ Clinton, July 8 via iMobilc, July " 9.?A gentleman of this town just ar- 1 rived from the otbe,r s.idc of the river i 1 says, that Little Rock has been captur- I > -ii -x' ii.! t cd Dj' rnce, wun an ui tucu anuico i and supples, ammunition and axius. | 1 The Yankees have been .entirely driven ; '' from Arkansas except 4,000. Our army ' c is under Kirby Smith. The Yankees ' h occuppy Helena.?This news was re-' h ccived official by Gen. Kirby Smith, has 1' ordered the impressment of half the cot- * ton iu the Trans-Mississippi dopartment, c for the purpose of bringiug military sup- a plie?. e From Charleston Charleston, July 9.?We c-tfaeked be enfc ny on Johns Island at day-light nd drove them from their line of enrenehments of yesterday. Loss not et .made public. From Petersburg. Petersburg, July 10.?About 5 'clock on Friday evcuing our artillery long the whole line opened on the UCIII^i illiu UI. V.IIV tnnv; uui uiou iuvww 2d the breastworks and defied the nemy, who nought the cover of their ntrenehments, and replied with artil2ry. The firing lasted about 30 niintes. ' The enemy has made no assult on ur lines for a week past, and the imircssion is that he has drawn off his orce from our front. For several nights he rumbling of artillery and wagons ias been beard all night. The enemy, lowever, still keep up ajshow of force long our lines. JProm Hichmoiid Richmond, July 9.?Intense excitesent prevails at Washington, from an nounccment that 40,000 rebels were o t ' pproaching the city. Lincoln had called out the militia of he adjoining States. A telegram from ITarrisburg says the xoiteincnt there was intense, in view of . rumor that Rreckenridge was moving n the direction of Obambersburg. One cport says be has 20,000 men, and has chipped Seigel. Pi-tersburg, July 9.?The Washingon Chronicle of the 9lh says great exiteuient exists at the North, in .conse|uenee of the rebel raid. Mirtiusburg lad been captured with large quantities if supplies. The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad had >een" "badly injured. A Hue of couriers has just, been cstabished beeweeu Danville and Dublin Dc- j >ot, on the Virginia and Tennessee K, iiD j oad. This line was established for the j mrpose of opening, couuuunication be-1 ween Qur forces in South western Vir-j ;inia and the authorities at Richmond. I Jy havitfg relays of horses the distance J s made in twenty-four hours. Cavalrymen in Johnston's Army. ! A correspondent of the Su'-'uonah ' Sews witcs as follows: The cavalry of his army, as it is with ill our cavalry, is composed of t.be better j dassis of our people. As men, they are J iravcand patriotic, hut their horses, in I he servic , afford wondrous facility for i jtiick movement to the rear, ami their ! cailer car ; for safety of their horses of i entiuie induces brave men too speedily i o clad their vulnerability with that iafest of all armors, distance, which, in var, most emphatically "lends enchant licut to the view." This accounts for lie cavalryman's silence "when t4e rfardy footman jeers him for this iunotent trick of skedaddling. l?ut the cavil iy is uot in every ease obnoxious to bis charge. Unhorse him and give him 10 care but. for his own personal safety, lud as bard avd stubborn fighting as has iver been done in this army, be lias1 lone and will do again. Que i113tan.ee in larticular came uuder the immediate obicrvatiou of your correspondent. On he 2Stb of May, Col. luge, of a Mississippi mounted regiment, was ordered to lie support of the line o' infantry skirmshers on the right ef J>a*es' division* L'he Yankee sharp-shooters were bccotnitg unsually bold, and were pressing mr lines, wiiu impuaeui persistence. | Mo sooner had Col- Inge taken his postion in line tliun lie called to his A ljuant for four of his best niarkstneu to eport for duty at once to him. l'rompty responding and with a manly expression of fixed determination in the iountenance of each one, they were cady for the dangerous task before hem. Said the Colonel with a smile 'Boys, these Yankees are getting to be ust a little too saucy. This piace ie jetting too hot for comfortable sleeping o night. Go out and make their ac[uaiutance. Let em know, in short order hat we are from Mississippi, where Stephen C. Lee taugt us to figbt. Show !tn that this is none of Johnston's sked,ddlin?r cavalry. Go! and bring in a ew of the rascals." The undergrowth vas very dense, and the whole woods cciritd alive with Yankees. But nothing lumped, these brave Mississippians aoved forward with defiant, but cauious tread, and were soon hidden from he view of their anxious comrades beiind. The firing increases in rapidity, he whizzing bullets fill the air with heir deadly sound?loud groans are card as of a dying man. The firing be* otnes more and more distant, and in jss than ten minutes," silence regains cr ancient sway where the leaden raiq itely dealt death in accents so loud and urious. And this was the work of four zpcrt and determined men?cavah-ymcn t that. They brought in three prisonfa, and killed twice aB many mojro. Conscription Before the (Flood witm j Incidental Reference to Bating ! and drinking. Methuselah livefi'to wha't would now | be considered a good old age. 'Few people in these latter days can reasonably ! hope to attain their nine hundred and sixty-ninth year, though at the rate some have grown old under the operation of the conscription, law, it has been slily biutcd that they will soon approximate tbe intediluvian standard. But that is not the thing which we had in miT mind when we wrote the cap- ! tion of this brief article. The fact is, that something suggested to us yesterday the idea cf a militia muster in thosc'cafly 1 days when counted the stages of their lives by centuries. We seemed to see some of the cotemporaries of Tobad Cain, or some colonel or euroltiug officer tff rhe I Land of Nod, calling upon the able-bodied men, between one hundred and'eighty and four hundred and fifty, to be and appear, armed and equipped, as the law directs, at .the usual muster ground near Tubal Cain's blacksmith shop. And we could fancy the subsequent call for the reserve, including all theyouth^, between one hundred and fifty, one huudrcd and eighty, and all the men, between four huudrcd and fifty and five hundred. If they had substitutes over the conscription age, they probably came' from the class between five and six huudrcd?hale, hearty men, a little over their prime, but still equal to good military service. And the antediluvians were a pretty hard set?that much is evident?aud it j r~11 mow nfit KnvA i IMIIwwjs mat iJiiHwu^u tuvgr u<>v mu.v . had "Colt's revolvers or nrirrnie muskets or rifled cannon, they were not without j means for doing each other harm, nor wanting in the disposition to use them. They also got drunk at militia gatherings, no doubt, for about the first thing O ' # O Noah did after the flood subsided was to plajit a vineyard, mate wine and get overcome. He had learned that before, he had seen so much water, and his long j swim around in the ark does not seem to j have made him a convert to the Maine | liquor law. We can fancy the light-headed boys j from one hundred, upwards, and syinpa- j thise with the fears -of their discreet par-^ cuts when th?*y found these wnocent and | unsuspecting juveniles exposed to the ; temptations of the camp, and acquiring a j taste for cijcr-royal and other potent bev- j earges dealt out by the sutlers, for of. course they had sutlers; and of course the sutlers had something to sell that would make drunk come, although distilled spirits for that pu. pose is a modern invention. That opens up a new field of reflection. Just to think of our supe-. riority over the Greeks, lloinans and Phrvntinns. antediluvians and nstiicr j ancient peoples. Solomon in all bisgio- j ry never bad a mint julep. The graude.-t j feats of the U-ouan Emperors could not J boast a turkey?the most meditative philosopher never soothed himself with ! tobacco. Fancy Plato va&eng through \ (be groves of the Academy *ritb a piipe : in bis mouth. Imagine Achilles, who1 was no philosopher, getting "high" on Puryear's Lot, while Thcrsites stole his cock tail, and railed at it for no being stronger. How that jolly "wanderiug minstrel," Homer, would ; i have relished a good Irish whiskey punch after a day's Tvaudering during a spell of that, inclement weather froqj which "the Isles of Greece" are not exempt. liy ilie way, during the prevalence of this warm weather, such things must give j place to thinner potations. We would, therefore, 6Uggest the following as o-ot hard to swallow : Take a sufficient quantity of ice?(if you can get it;) put it in the bottom of a glass?the largest size of glass is preferable; fill the glass abouU three-fourth 6 full of cbampaigne, (if you can get it,) tbea let tbe balance &e -cJaret, (if; you can get it.)?tben?wby then, try it, that's all. There are worse things, and the only serious objection consists in the difficulty of obtaining the materials. Rut we have nearly consumed what j the parliamentarians call the "morning hour," and have no time for waudering. 1V ilm Ijtylon Journ u I. "Roantv nf Wnm&n. Beauty has been "called "the power and aim of woman. Diogenes called it "woman's most forcible letter of recommendation." Carneades represented it as a "rjueea without soldiers," and Theocritus says it is "a serpent covered with flowers;" while a modern author defines it as "a bait that as often catches the fisher as fish." Nearly all the old philosophers (ien<rtiuced aiad ridiculed beauty as evanesceut, worthless and mischievous; but alas! while they preached against it, they were noue the less its slaves.? None of them were able to withstand j - -1? ft f\ f O foir ! *ljye Sly, SlllUUbU ?T uuuv/ium VI young face." A really beautiful woman is a natural queen in the universe of love, where all hearts pay a glad tribute to her reign. Gen. Stephen D- Lee has been appointed Lieutenant General aad will be re.- | tained in command of this department. Gen- Lee's promotion has been deserved and his assignment to duty here, where j lie is so well and favorably known, will j be gratifying to the people and a guar- j antee that the military affairs of the department will be conducted with ability and vigor.?Clarion. ! * JttlUJJ. IFCVOlUpUlCUKI The roport of the Yankee Military. Commission, presided over by Majof General Irwin McDowell, and charged 'M with the examination iuto the alleged frauds in the Western Department, makes some rich developments. A Washington letter in the New York Herald sajs: - \ Gen. S. K. Curtis, in the case of the cotton of the rebel General Pillow, w*a found to have used the proceeds in supplies to contrabands,'thotrgh it was wet shown specifically how all the money ' 4| was applied. In the case of Sanders' aud Woodson's cotton, all was accoun- -"^j >4 ' ted for except two hundred and sevefity- V ? five dollars. The whole cotton was fur- .*' 1 ly accounted for, excepting that gold was received for it, while at seventeen per ceotum, and cmrrency .paid over in its stead. One" hundred and eight bales, seized from Matt. Ward, in Arkansas, and sent to Helena, was afterwards purchased at twelve aud a half cents, and the proceeds paid Mrs. Ward. Major II S. Curtis, Major McKigney, nod Lieutenant Gujlee, of Gen. Curtis's staff, it whs ascertained, were interested in the purchase of one hundred and eightj-one * . . bales of cotton. Brigadier General TIoTey was exonerated from the charge of forcibly returning fifteen negroes to slavery, 'but /was found to be connected with the traffic in cotton. Col. Slack, of rhc 47th Indiana, was found to have traded ru >cotton and to have captured silver ware from Mrs. Cogswell, on the Missisippi, who complained that it was not all returned. Lieut en writ Kimball, of the 2d Wisconsin cavalry,stole a diamond pin, which was subsequently returned. Major Western, 24th Missouri, received five hundred and sixty dollars for furni.-hirig a guard for protecting cotton. Captain Fred. S. Winston, acting quartermaster, was found interested in uotton in a manner not contemplated by the army regulations, ami of depositing the proceeds in a private banking institution, instead of iho treasury of flio United States. Captain Ilowlnnd, of one hundred and thirty-live bales shipped to Chicago by one Ilagan, was authorized* to receive half the mitt proceeds and $2000. Among others interested in cotton speculations, are named Col. C. C. Marsh and Captain Uradley, "2?th Illinois , Lieutenant Col. S N. Wood, 4th JJissouti . cavalry (who admitted having made ?20 .000); Pr* Rexsurg 33d 111.; Cipt. Jerome ^ Hradu^-s.-istant quartermaster general; ; , \ Capt. ftobert Gorman (half profiEPoa ~ **" one hundred and two bales $2f)00) ; Captain Ilayden and Lieut. Wright, 3d Iowa battery ; Lieut, linker/ 33d Illinois; Lieut, i'iiu., 10th Missouri cavalry, and Lieutenant Mm dock, 15th Ohio battery. Permits were shown to have been granted for cotton trading by Generals Grant, Curtis, Steele, Gorman, and Washburne; and in the third place that transportation had been furnished to some extent f??r private purposes, fur which remuneration was not always received. Plain Talk- . The New York Daily News speaks . out in vcrv plain terni3 in regard to the ? nr..: ? V ? existing stale 01 a nans m * au?cfc?j".u % Here is an extract taken from a late number of that paper. The mask of Mcphistophiles is off.? Kvery pretense Jhat brought our sons and brothers by fJie hundred Jbousand to be slaughtered in the shambles of the South is now acknowledged by the Abolition ruiuist, to have been false. Wo have been mocked, delude], hoodwiuked. This is not a war for the Union aud the Constitution. They are "abrogated." It ia not a lawful wnr for the establishment of Constitutional authority. It is professedly an unconstitutional, and unjust war |for the conquest of * free and independent nation of our own speech and our own blood. Once, then, again, I speak: "What is all this conquest for? What* base ?? made, what can we make at best, but more bloodshed and more debt ?.?Sif ur.i?i_ 0?.? ,i,?f * i lvuuert 11 uipuic uatw i>\j o%*j tuuv u? 4 j never rend history, for that he knew it # was false; and when we ask the question what all this is for, we seek no answer * *. * from the Abolition Mephistophilcs.? * That would certainly be false.. But A . from the honest, conscientious masses who have been deluded by the pretence* and bliuded by the madness of tbe half ?the men who are always more ready to oorrcct than commit a wrung?the men who do not yet believe in the "An. ti-Slaverv Bible and Anti Slavery God." ^ The men who do believe in a God who - Q9H is "the Author of Peace and lover of Concord," a God that "verily judgeth ta the earth"?the men who feel that we * shall have yet to answer for this great *' ' "blood guiltiness"?from these men wa do ask that, before tbey shall again be Winded with the red glow of. the lurid war light, they demand of their own eonscieooea, as in the sight of God.? What this for? And, if there be no jj| better reason than the pleasure of blood* thirsty parasites and tbe amusement of a jocular Chief Magistrate, then let them join with all good men in hurliog from their seat the foul conspirators at Washington, who plotted for a nation's folly and havc played. upon our noblest imnulsfta and nrinoinlos to make US tools and playthings of a bloody Abolition Moloch, . j ? u rt' ? ?. ' A