141 . 2 t. , t tif dit t i ' l4 7 A - 01111111 1 7, _IIII4 N, %IP .eL tVAIM II TINS INAVOINUOAPP• L. I. 51121. T AND J. A. FDITORS BELLEFogTE. PENN'A THI7REDAY, JANUARY 17, ISO FOR BALE undersigned belt* desirous of Khan doping tlut Printine,busineas, offers for sale his interest in the DonocrgticlValchtnan,—' lleestalilishinent is a paying OM having about 1,000 subscribers and a (lac share of Job - Work Indikdvertising Any person wishing to einbaAk in the I.lusinesr6, would not find a mire etessant location : lL . An Eventful Week The present week has been ene of stirring events, which will form an important theme for the future historian. The news crowds so heavily up — On us that we have no room for 'editorial comments, even had we the incli• nation to make them, at this terrible crisis. when the heart of every true lover of his country is appelleil at the prospect of the dark domestic tragedy that now seems The:correspondence with the earOlina CORMINNIMICri, and the President's Rtwcinl message to Congo as. completely vmdicete his position For inlet.. his as. sitlants are silent They date not praise hum, but the miserable pretexts upon winch they founded their Jeers and denunciations. have utterly failed them The oilbual records now disclosed. prove that in the exercise of his humane forbearabee toward the people of SouthUarolisia, who are rushing madly to their own destruction he has done no act. and Made no philges, inconsistent with his sworn duty to milldam the rightful au thority of the Federal Government. and en- I force the laws of the land. • The intelligenoe ce h►vc rro , l Charleston Or the attack upon the I . S Steamer Star of the West, by the forcer; off' the seee,iion seems to preclude all hope of a peaceful adjustment 4 the in elioliat feud The first blow has been struck, and nothing short of Divine interposition, mellow avert the hor rors of civil war The bloody drama opens Mr. Seward's Speech Mr Seward, the oracle of the Mad( Re named Fort is one mile from the town, 1101 publican party, has spoken. Ail the ac- Pert Johnston is two and a quarter miles keowledgeal premer of the incoming admin k from the town These measurements are titration, this spe‘ch ha, been moat one ororrect, being taken from the latest surveys ioualy looked for, and has been the aid ject made by the United Stitt s coast survey of much speculation Inirense it is as - to be expected that R vrotililiorealiadow tliti policy of Mr Lincoln and the party which elected him. In that party there is a strong body that claims a certain degree of conservatism,' and are, consequent') , to • gri ater or less extent. the advocates of compromise This speech of Nis Sewerti h.is demolish , . d t heir last hope , and will, if anything can so convince the inch who, iii the lAte contest were induced to lend their aid to his elec tion upon the argument that his cours., would be coneerva 13 ye. that they hove been titeetv - ed, and that the Abolition element of the party is in the ascetoiancf, and a ill remain This speech is reinarsable as tienw a calm, dispassionate and philo.ophicil dis 9ut•ttion on the effects of disunion upon the eafety of the American people In thin re spect it present', utritlitng beyond that which the public press has lung since presented to the people , nothing he) liii that which the National Democratic press pointed out he fors the Presidential diction, as the !remit of —the-wiemphs of 11.4p4licaniain 711 ASM A C lat - SETTS GOY V IMMO Is FAS -SU Lab Carolina has exactly copied Masitiketetts in sending ConiMissioners to 'Westin% n to treat with the President and Congress. The 'Governor of Nlassachtp.etts wpm the pro -44 •ceinilinge of the llartford l'onvention in ISt 4 appointed three Guininiseionere to proceed to 'Washington and negotiate with the Pie.l - and Congress lor the formation of a New England Confederacy l'ommis aionera were Harrison ti Otis, Thomas II Perkins, and William Sullivan . but they were met at %Washington with the news of peace. 'rug sam CAILOLIN• Pl/9111ASTRILA Alfred Huger " , 'P.st master of Char lesion, has written a setter to the Postmaster lieneral, In reply to the circular sent to the several iPostun.sters of South Carolina, by Mr. Holt, that he will continue in the service of the United States, and Will pit form his ditties Ana Tender NS Recount,' faithfully Ili the do. partasent. at IVahhington Other postmas ters in 'South Carolina have rrsponded in the 8/460 way. While an the Shoemaker shop of Air. Ed ward Graham, the other day. our attention llTdirected 11 a side of Spanish Sole Lea r tanntd at the Unanwrille Ti.nnery by r. W. H Hosenateel, that is, in our judg. went. the best specimen of good tanning that we hare seen for many da)g. Mr Graham, a competent judge, pronounces it a very au perior article. We learn that it is only a lair sample of tile leather furnished'by that establishment. A Itagnificedt Trick. I*"Evening Journal,Bell Everett, says The ':iptihint Anderson" is now the crY of "Abolitionists," who, having brought the Union to the fearful bripk of dissolution, start in aright, and call upon Anderson to save them. They were - implored, before the election,to stop this 4ai upon fifteen Statei we besought thenf not strike down the Union : and now, Illsy make Major Ander. sou r s simple - act of self preservation and precaution en occasion to clamor and shout for that union which tpey have disturbed.— Major Anderson, like a discreet man, went from a ireqk fort to a 3.!/0,14 , e, one. This the Abolitionists call ••vrontlerful heroism." and see shouting praise and glorification, which the Najur understands and despises. lie is not an Abolitionist, but scorns the whole brood, as enernie*of the Union, open or disguised. ilk wife, 111 New York, re• fused to receive the calls of the "A,hafitton ists " on New Yearb day, seeing through the nefarious purposes of those wbo pre ten ded to glorify her husband for what Major Anderson himself says, was but a simple act of duty. The.object of the • •Abolition fiats'' is seen through, They must seek some other means of saving their party from the growing indignation of the people. OM= , The Alabama Umhention has passed the Ordinance of Secession The reason led for the secession of the State is the elec tion of Lincoln anikllamlin by a sectional party avowedly hostile to the domestic in stitutions and price and security of the peo ple of Alabama, following upon the heels of many and dangerous infractions of the Con solution of the l'intedNiakM by many of the States and people of the northern section of the Confederacy ' Mr l'owaN. the 1 - nittd States Senator elect from tins State, has never been in pub lic life. Ile is a distinguished lawyer of Wenterb Pennsylvania. and a gentleman of high literary and sen.tititic attainments. Ile was a member of the old Whig party. , thd is classed as • tunderAte Republican. fits election over that sank abolitionist indicates that the conservative sentiment predonimates in the I.egi.lature, notwith standing it IS So strongly Republican. PINTA %CR Or TIT f; FORTY FROM ell 1111./C9 TON - Fort S imtiter is three tighths wiles from Charle,ton, one and one.eightli miles from Fort Nfoultrue, three quarters of a mile to the nearest land, one and three eighths miles to )'ort Johnson, and two and live eighths miles to Castle Pinckney ---The last At Rochester, N Y ,on Friday last. an abolition demonstration was forcibly pre vented by the people, and a union 'neon% held in its stead. 9 A Bag beariug the in menption, " No compromise with Slavery... Man not allowed to be suspended across lindflo street. The authonties had to in terfere, to prevent a general riot. A dispatch from Norfolk, nays, that the steamer Express, of 13altimore, steamed up to loort Norfolk on Finlay night, ■od took on board a quantity of amtnunition. She steamed away at 8 n'etock Saturday morn tug Rumor Says She wont to Furt Munroe Gen Scott has made lull preparations to quell or rather prevent any outbreak ■t Washington. he having stationed troops in differi,nt parts of the city, though the Hi morn that all the public buildings are close ly guarded is greatly exaggerated A dispatch from St Louis says thst by order or Lieutenant Genera/ Scott, ■ detach Intuit of Ended States troops yesterday took pof.session of the sub -treasury, post office and custom house at that city. We direct the attention of our readers to the letter of Our fellow townsman. la♦ C. Mornei.t. Esq , which will h found on our first page Mr M is an able writer, arid anything from his pen is read with interest. At Newark. N J , oA Friday evening, a It. publican 71 eeting adopted resolutions a garnet compromise, and in favor of Oustatn rug the Constitution and enforcing the laws, In the l'ennsylvtinia. St nate Mr. IV4 Resolution's propovulg to ro peal ilie,ohnoix loos prOVIbIOIIF of the :let of I Sl7, and the penal code, were voted down : all the Re• publicans voting agamw 111C111 Advires from Galveston say that at the election on the Bth instant, the candidate', laving the organization of a southern con federacy obtained a majortiy. Washington, Jan 15 The Republican Senators have refused by 7 majority to con sider Mr Cnttenden's Resolutions. There is great excitement and disappointment over the fact. It is reported (lint in [Amman". the Dela gatem to the Convention has revolted in a n.ajority agai not secession The U S. Sloop of WVar Macedonia, from Portsmouth, N. U , passed tho Highland Light Una morning, bound South, with seal ed orders. ATER'S AMaRI4AN ALMANAC Nut now a rived slid is now ready (or del the Rh na:mmi MEM Lltest News EIMEI it.— that =CI the orid, many !A- II The National Cries,* I==3 =I The siihjohied %article, from the Boston Post. is'imssfithig fur the historical facts it recalls, and the forcible manner in which it sets fifth the duties sod powers of the Pres Weill, under the constitution, is applicable to the present threattning condition of V e country: Certain people at the North will insintriat the United States government is a Military despotism, and that President Buchanan has all the powers of the Shah of Persia to seize and imprison and hang melt at his pleasure, Thus the Republican preset; are demanding of the President that he shall seize the coo missioners from South Carolina, and try them for treason If you ask them what is treason, they ca'n't tell, hut they innint that lire President ought.to hang_somebreli, be cause Patton, nn what ho calls his "Life of Andrew Jackson," (eonipiled too much from street talk and newspaper slander) sets it down that Gen. Jackson proposed to hang Mr. Calhoun for nullification, s Inch is false. No citizen can be punished or deprived of life or libertyetn this cMmtry without due process of law. Massachusetts contrived the Hartford con vention in the war of 1814, to set up vorth ern confederation, and South 'Carolina has I got up a secession convention to precipitate the slaveholding States into a southern con federation. - Massachusetts, in lsl4. sent two ambas. sadora of the It. r.r..r,t zoItIORCIORO Waah ington to demand of PreSident Madison the sepailltion of New England from the Union, in carrying on. ttkL3 , war. William Sullivan and Harrison Gray (his, were the commis stone. s. Mr Madison did list propose to hang theni Hut, as Mr John Quincy Ad ani, says of the peace of Ghent the news of which c►mew hole the coninniononers were at Washington. ••the interposition of a kind ' Pro•idence averted the moot deplorable of catastrophes" the establishment oft North ern confederacy South Carolina now follows the example of Massachusetts by A:eliding her commix sitiners to President *Buchanan. and Preto dent Buchanan is abused by Massachumitta in particular, because he won't hang them for treason without judge or jury ! Now let us "intiulre what tree-ion is. and what the Constitution says about seizing and hanging pewle in this country The Cori slitution of Pie Ui.ited States save ' ' Trea son against the United States shall consist only in levying war against them, or nt ad honey to their enemies, giving them aid and cumfurL" This last applies . only to ailing a foreign enemy and giving them comfort, as the Hartford convention did in ISI4 l'he United Stater; not Ming at war. trea 4011 flow can consist tinily in keying war up on the United States, and the Comuttit ion Nays there mid be sortie overt act preyed by two witnesses And . what is kV) 1114 war is thus defined by the Supreme Court in the United States vs. Asmn Burr - ••To levy war is 10 raise, create. make or carry on war War can he levied only by the employment of actual force —troops must he embodied. men 111181 be openly raised ' &c And the purpose [omit be to make war on the United States Thus to march in arias With a force marshalled and arrayed ,rom mating arts of amtettee and devasi atm.+ in order to compel the resignation of a piddle Offi•er, or IA) render no IfeeliVe an art Of Coll grist is high treason,'' se) a Chid Juat me liirshall Th it was the nature of the ofienee vt hich Theodore Parker, Wendell Phillipe,enit their intensely interesting seasoctitein were charged with when they lb : ON air two 'Sr STAR or Tina Waal', I cited the mob in reneuiribli to go to the , S.torday January 5 li 1861, Court house to rescue Minns the fugitive The si.antehip Star of the West mailed glare, in which unlawful enlet prise Batch f the fon of Warren slier' New York, elder one of this marshal's deputies %RS L 1•1.14 afternoon, at 116011 t ri 0 . lock, limier Murdered .and btre again South Carolin• cui „,„„„a o f Capta in Mel hot a,. an expel' IS Will folli)Wing (lila example of Mssstehii ~,„.„,1 „ Il i ~,. who for in lily I. ~,, was iii tht , setts in the allaek Ilion the fort a if she hiss ri i ,filltn,zwes revenue SurVic. really used military force to take them The ve-,sel cleared fir Neu 1 /deans and That is lreaSon in the in,.„ wilt „o„,„,,tred Havana but thus wait only a i cautionary and incited the act unless Sin o l Car !'"a ma••iire as the real object of 'he expedite., has a right to s e cede trim on. (loom Illt lass hi convey proviNloll.l Sad ii 101)S to Ma it is not treason in the State for a Slate canjor .11 I •at FortStmiter The plan of 0 lr.01) hut Cullilllo treason It is only treagon in to t l 111010 meal seem' to be to , oases theme ti.e individuals who rommit the overt act [nowt 110 stores as they won 4lw coriveyeet And nit be treason or misdemeanor. where in time of profound peace. except that it is is the authority of the President to Selte Or intended to go in early in the morning, if hang anybody as the IL.hilblicalts are in possible, without the knowledge of the South awing he ougot to do awl Charge AIM V , lth Carolinians In accordiance with this plan, being a (moor for no( illsog it 1 The the greatest dreelUtlons posatfile !lace broil constitution is very plain on this point It employed to keep the ruoveMent wholy be reads thus cat t/ . The trial of all crimes shall he by jury., The ream! left her wharf before dark, an mid suet) tonal s'on.li be hi I'l in the Store it it as thought her Hailing would attract lens where the said crime shall have been corn at ten t ing , an d b e less liable to create lingo. Inal. d " . ' mon by following such a course It was as wkiNie person-shall he held to answer for a !retch as to say, we have nothing to conceal crime unless on a presentment or indictment W. sailed out leisurely, until dark. when of • grand jury, nor deprived of lit.. liberty , 5 .,. ~„„ a , mo , 4t to a dead stop, and finally Or prirrivlty a shout due prOCel49 of kik," .off the it,,l ii ,C, it ~./ lighthouse ale was ...• And -41 , accused shall empy the right to lovi•eil to firth ; and here we waited the sr a politic trial 1 1 au imp ar t ia l ju r y of the rival of twe hundred troops from tiovernor'n ' Stoic where the crime has been comm.tted " , Island ,They did riot come quite as soon as, These arc the limitations of that ilespotram se as expected The delay, however, was which certain people sii Inconsiderately chum only temporary, and at fine minutes before now a days for the President ' eel* o'clock we detected the approach of, II any citizen or body of men iii South the steamship Lockwood .At seven o'clock , Canilina have levied war spinet the United piecisely that boat was alongside our vetted i S iii a they calmer be arraign, il or tried for the night wall clear and beautiful, though it anywhere but in South Carolina Ther' i moonless, and I watched the approach of the ,I !mist that he an indictment tiered by a gra Lockwood from the upper deck She dm jury in South Carolina There titivicb a played no lights, and I could nee no one, as de tort attorner to prepare and attest jhe the 111C11 had been purposely kept out of in lictment There must be a courOn re- amid. riot as the boat came near the deck Velire 11 and arraign the ',moiler, at a Joeysoddenly became alive with soldiers. I to try him ... The transfer of the men and baggage from This last was the protection wflidlit.Farker i the Incksrood to the Star of the West (nom- • nd Philips amid them ilomemle forMillilen ' minced immpdiately, and was conducted they were indicted fur wt) they called' with as ntucfi expedition and silence as pos. ''free speech." in connectio with the mor - _,' , amble Iplaced myself et the head of the der of Batchelder, and the attruetion of th e' gangway, "eel although our lights were dun, lave of the United SLA for the rendition I c o uld sec the soldiers distinctly is they of fugitive slaves. Th President could not' s.ame up, in their gray overcoats and dark i "'le them , nor coill they be tried soli 1 , cat.s Officers and privates were as fine' where but in ; l ase* ileette : Ind though looking fellows AS one could wish to see —1 there were all e •re of law hero rind a I leave• however, that about one hundred', graudjury indict thorn, they escaped a and fifty of the men are rem-Mtg. trial and got of! pon a very small techni• 1 Such secrecy bad been observed in start cality, which 4raen, that the commissioner mg on the expedition that the officers in who issued s warrant of arrest had signed command sere wholly ignorant of their dee d only eom ismorrerwithodt saying what titration until a few hours previous to their committer ' er ; and the court held that the departure After they were informed of it indictdi t, however drawn. could not sup• they were not permitted to leave the Wand ply thi deficiency. because it could not go until they 'let foot upon the Lockwood. All beyo the description in the warned. the communmStion, in, fact, between the k- J et so President Buchanan has no power. land and the coy was cut of. One of them hi v i/teize or arraign or try anybody in Wash- showed me an order issued but a few days 1 gton or anywhere elle. if there have beensince, directing him to proceed to Cslifornin, eta of treason. they 'have been committed I and he had been horneird made %lithe pre ' only in Seidl Cerullo'. The parties charge petitions for his journey. Now his bagged ed mulct be tried in that State by a jury of is in New England, and he is on the Star of the State, There is no United States mar the West, hound fur Fort Sumter. libel to arrest' them, no district attorney to But shall we get to Fort Sumter I That iddiet them• no grand jury to find a bill, no hi the gnestion which has been freely discus court to arraign and no jury to try them.— sed this peening. Here we are, with two How then are the steps to he Oaken which hundreedohliers, good men and 'rug tt may the coestitutipn demands in every Clara of be., led by experienced officers, with plenty alleged crime I And if there were all the of muskets and &munition. But whet of °Were of the court and inner', enesepaiadv that should they open fire upon us from the knows that a court in South Carolina would batteries of Fort Moultrie, or should send A hold that the right of secession absolved the vessel or two outside to capture us 1 What party accused from his liability to the laws would our muskets avail against a twelve eif the United States, and no jury would pounder 1 A hole in our machinery. and we convict. are probably at the mercy of the Palmetto It would be the same in Massachusetts, if chivalry. We have, of course. absolutely under the personal liberty bill, a fugitive no means of resistance out of musket range, from labor should be taken before a jury to hut must runt in under a full head of steam he tried. No Maesachusette jury could be if possible. There is • email brass on our found to agree that he was a fugitive Wave deck, but we have no balls for it. and the Thus it in pblivious teat Massachusetts and captain mays if a ball were to but fired (rein South Carollea #tand in the same category it it would kick clean (leer, and be more of-disunion and secession, so long as these likely to kill the man who'should stand be. laws remain on ber 'statute book, and so hind it than the enemy. ... • long as ha people resist and refuse to exc. Our principal hope is in (ha ignorance of cute the laws of tha.ifluited- Stitek within I tho Charlestonians: and if they get no whir her n o rders, i per of our plan. we hope to slip into Fort ' Bid it is aatil...eulipose the di - lige and all ..-.14 Sumter without opposition or hindrance, tiii Wedueaday morning next at daybreak.— the lliiiliortriatdpfli , :ers have resigned in I South t;tiroliiin. why don't President n u . ; But the belief is pre% olent hero that the rhanan :molt t.feri., V11110 . 1101(01 ? But what Charlestimians are itat ignorant of our more tlitio ? Ile Solid find no , Nnin South Cat. ; mint There aas *inner; on the deck, in ohne to Itocoilt,itto olltor4. and the law re fact. hefire we atartml, that our destination was yi i , h...t..., and that we were to convey quires that they shall be appointed ark the ! I troops. Inim Governor's Island. It is not to dial net: Frei a. hi, sent Northern men there they would nit lie allowed to act, and be presumed that no good friend of the Pal if they were resisted, then it comeeback to ! metto State will immedintsly , elegraph this just where we started from :' those who re rumor to Uharleiton ; nor is it ibe presum ed that. a ith much an intimation the author Mated must be indicted hod trifel 'by a court and pry in the State. .itie4 there will not be on the look out for I ' If men of Meuse would look at the facts ' the Star iti the Nest. and law, and re/111 the Constiiiition, they I But if they to heir of our approach ~ ,if would see the praNlcal dab:lilting in the tinny do actually learn, beyond doubt. that way of the summary with which thav re- i we have reinforcements and ,provimons for Major Anderson. aii I are actually under quire the President to deal with existing difficulties. Ile can only move the conati- : weigh, will they n.ist our passage to Fort tutionaj machineryof government in °semi. , Sumter either by Nulling fire upon us from ting the laws. If the inschowry i s s o A ter i Hart,Niop u , 10", or hy -. lll • MtMg one nr trinta Itql• ken up in a State, he cannot invade a State, , ails (AIL 10 capture 11M1 f IN' echo the trend or send 411 army there, to enforce martial tnent of every mall on this vessel who has expressed an opinion on the, subject in my law, unless the Governor or Legislature call - upon bon to suppress the insurrection o r lotrUlg. I shall answer • Yea.' Fhe belief domestic violence Ile can send troops to Moe seems to be unanimous that if our otp the forts, and if the e9nnnitoinnierH of South jeet is known we shall he fired upon. Carolina require-him to order troops to one' Sunday January 6.. or another fort, they assume what do-s not , We have had it most delightful dzy ; the belong to them. The President. PH C o m s, water is smooth as a lake, and this evening mender in-chief, is to j u dge for himself of' we Caught the warm breezem of the South the expediency ; and on this point he should 1 You will easily guess that the chief sub insist, and yield to no threats from South ject of our conversation has been our chance It of getting into Fort Sumter : and the more Carolina. or arty body, if they are 111311.- Is this questim of expediency its to.reinform , th'e sttlYeet is discussed the more probable ing.khe forts a Charleston winch the Pion. it slums that we shall have Jo lake our dent has grow y coosidered • i charters against the'S•mtli "Candina hatter• fro ..I wo o„ 11........1-.4 ii....111(11.u1i ,1 is . 1 1 1 .... 11... u 1 0t,.......a.n d tt• 1,... us, WwithoutWPM Jed, No much the better Of vire Bloch can be sent out to disable ax. — what avail 4 - old United States troops have' Tlll.lll, will the lights On horning in the light.- born there if sent, as they mutt have been, ' house and it ill the bii-iy 5 b e iiimmi eh i e d 7 whin their presence would have brought on , 15 it riot tooleibli• it is asked that the a bloody couflict f if any "ere sent ill S11(.11 GOVl`rlllllrllt has mder...l the Brooklyn to /1 crisis, an army should hay,- been sent sof Charle.ton, and that we shall ind her there ,flownt to conquer South l'arohnn aided as in cover MU l'ilt ran , - in case of am attack ? .he would be. the moment blood aam slirli. I Thr th"'"Y his 1 11 . 1 . 11 rl - 11.1' 111•1 . 1111.11.11 but by the sympathizing Stamm •••• That would as w e buve "" 'net" "f,ll' li"°""t".z airy thing have been dint V! a 1 . T lit! 11 1 , 4 1,1,,, t (1,1 nisi , 111 ,1, 11 t 11 1 1 , 1 .1. 11. ,,, y1 1 1 , 1 a 1 vll,lll snivelll/1 r/Lll . 11 1. 01. , 1 , 1 0 14 , 1 , 1 / I l i s l f ll 2, i . l t /r in llo ry bring on this •• irrepressible conflict. - and will endeavor to avoid staining hot hands cotudiemin with the blood of his fellow citizens 111 a If we are attaoh,il %will Kiri 'info!, r pro. fratricidal war. It us his purpose land lie feet its I It is soot it e,p silence the Flute will prove the true patriot Nod Clinton') if of M.mltrie in a few hours. rind if it shall do ' , lir stircreit4 in doing it) to leave his_Jogh of- l ' Ro• we Call 11, ~fr wild nit. j obus ac,.,,,,,ph.h. t i er . ~,uh,sul. a drop of blood having bean ed, and then perfoatti our work We fully expect the protection of Fort S linter. The needlessly shed in this &wittily unpend,ng , battle of the States " 1- • , cam ain 11114 an inninriow American flag ' Mr Lincoln whl that take the response tvemity feet by forty-fret-anti has been in I strutted to raise this at the` masthead the Inlay. and he has four years in which tut strutted the first shut Di fired There mal carry out his policy If lie means prime arid , union he will recommend cmwession and ready an ordinary United Slaw , II ig aft, and compromise, and a Vidorattoll of the fr.iter raising, this large one forward rail hardly nal rrlatiiiiiii of all (We S(A Leti , • 1111 tool...ninon! Ind to inform Major Aodc7son that ae con to shed lid blood to madden the whole coon aid'''. oursel VI'S UlOllll his protection try. ! At a few minutes past eleven o'clock this In the meantime, •Alr. Buchanan must bear al the unressohing assaults made upon !JIM, until reason shall resume her sway and Jos tity the only pear policy that co.dd save a civil war. it indeed policy can do it. But really it is not so small a thing as some peo ple thuuk to sacrifice mill of lives in the attempt o f o n e s e ction of the country to coo quer another section of the country and pre serve the as they call it, by bathing it in seas of blood and cariage Let us a little while, study the Constitution, and reflect. The Star of the West The New York Evening Post of last fright contitios a (till journal of the events cunnr•et tvch the recent trip of the •• Star of the West ' to Charleston by one who MIN on board We give it below It will he tumid evening we met the steamer Colombts from Clkarleston, bnnel fir New York Unptam berry, who is a zealous sere4sionist let ofl nine rockets. hut our captain,Aid not re spend. 14e ilimiay but few lights. land the soldiers are.not permitted to remain on deck while a vessel 14 in sight We took an exi.erienerd pilot from New York. as a Charleston pilot was not to be thought of: hot he is not familiar with the Charleston lutOlior. and this adds much to the einharrnsiment of our captain Monday. January 7 We made Gape Hatteras at ton o'clock thia morning. W,• had a derided "ssiolataii,n" on board e. One of the officers was reading aloud from Saturday's evening edition or one of the New I%irk morning parsers. when he stumbled upon a paragraph announcing that there war, reason to believe that the steam ship Star of she W. at would sail that idler noon with (rooms and provisions Pie Fort lull er. Of comae there is 00 koiger any &obt but the ehivalrio Palmetto soldiers will be alter or,, and that we shall have tel ruin their grille or he so ilk Our captain who has Neel, much service. assures that it Isa very unpleasant business to he shot at it great while, Without any chance to shoot. hn •k In confirmation of this upimoo he re- Into. )1011/ A vessel wh u •h he .was on c e o n Bred Mtn from a fe=lean batt e ry for shoot half in hone before the ship had ■ny opiii.rtunity of returning the compliment.-- Ito says It was viry enpleast nt. I am not a military man, but tho assertion appears wi , tc rtamorlile lo me. Tmotiday January 8 W e made Cape Fear about 8 o'clock thin !wrung We have moved slowly. as the capiain:s in- , tructions are to cross the hic , early iii the Morning' arid ru i to Fort 'loin ter at dal hr. ak and we w nth to approash the harbor by night Tnis afternoon we stopped about seven miles from the bar for three boors Or more, and had some ii.hing The diy has been delightful, and our success in catching unsuspecting beau was Title sat isfactory Toward night we put on steam, anxious for (he te.illt of 1.411 morrow exile ri went. In the Recollect WWI of a Zou•ve." I have resd that on the morning of 1 battle the bravest moldier, while nothing would tempt him to be elsewhere, awriously wishes 'himself eighteen hours older, and I doubt not that in now the prevailing sentiment on board the Star of the Went At illy rate, we wish ourselves safely within the walls of Fort Sumter where all hands may we are bound to be in a few hours, unless we are in the bottom of Charleston harbor, or prisoners of war Every arrangement with in the power of those in charge has been made to secure the success of the enterprise, anti anxious interest increases every lipur..c Every light hag been extinguished ; even our state rooms are ip utter darkness, and is the cabin we have only one lantern, by the dim light of *Mob one of the officers has this evening been reading the Adventures of Captain Simon Suggs, for the entertainment of his companions. The provisions have been brought wp from below, and placed in the cabin and on deck. [(Moultrie disables us, the captain is determined to run the vessel agrpund as near Fort Sumter as possible ; then the bmits which are all in readiness, will be instantly lowered, and the men conveyed to Fort Sum. ter as rapidly es possible It is hoped also.; that by bringing the plovisidns up. much of them may be conveyed to Major Anderson. We have six boats, capable of holding nine ty men. They have all- been overhauled since we left New York, and aro in perfect order. Arrangements have been made fur steering the boat from the lower deck. in case the wheel house should be abet away Men will he stationed below with mattresses to till up shot holes. In short everything has bgen done to Noce" the accomplishment of our mission. =ES . . . . . f We nesday, January 9. I awoke at three 'clock this morning, 1 and went immediate! lite ,the upper deck, ' where I bond the captain, mate. pilot, and, two military °fibers. I learned that we had arrived in the vicinity of the Charleston bat about midnight : that all the coast lights d been extinguished and thus far it had n impossible to find the main channhl. It is evident by these indications that the f• table :South Oarolidtrfc9'do -- 119VIMIA Inn we should go in without a salute. A light wan seen off the coast, but we could not make out what it wan A little trier three o'clock we discovered the light on Fort sumter, end with those exceptions everything was dark. It was, of course. impossible-to get over Oil bar without the lighthouse, and so we aw ' the break of , day I hire never seen after morning than the one _which dawned upon us. —The --sky was clear, and the moon. a fainl crescent of silver, had just arisen. and the low coast looked like a dense forest of eer'rgeren. The spires of Charleston becitme visible in the approaching dayllght. an 1 on the walls of Sumter we desentted the American flag floating in the breeze. Now, about G o'clock, we see the light house ; and now, too t we discover that-the mysterious light Just mentioned was that of a steamer at nur right. Nowasfhe situation of the channel is ascertained, and we are under weigh : and now the steamer at our right is burning rzd and blue lights : and now she muds up rockets. Them If no mis taking her ',interment , elm is-giving the a larm signal to Fort Moultrie. On we go; the soldiers are below with loaded mualtets, and , the (Accra arc ready to give the word if there is anything to do. Now it is broad daylight and we ■rc mak ing directly into the guns of Fort Moultrie, whose black walla are distinctly visible The„littir grtilnifl - *Prate right is burning a signal light aft, and is making all possible headway up the harbor. Now we discover a red Palmetto Nag at our left on Morin Ia• land; at a little village called ~l'ounings' Point, and apparently biit little more than a mile from Fort Sumter •• fa it potasible that "those fellows him got ■ bawl" , of here f'• asks one. " No,^.•newere another battery there•" - But there i 9 ft is now quarter past Rel , 0 1 , and we are about two main from Fort Sumter and Moultrie. which aru goal dot. timer from Os. •tol, suddenly. a hitz. ! comes • rirothrt Owl-from Morn...lslam, It 'dosag es into the water, and idops along. hut falls far short Of oor Ito,. was for ward of our bow, and Was. of ,-out*.' an 11)- I,ollllOn to 'Any 11,1 we are lout ready to areept the proff, red - lomio tty, and the ea plain pays IW lei It. swept in run lip the stars and %trots, at the 'mast head -the garrison flag mem toned In fore - A moment of anxious suspense. tool bang ! goes a heavy C Iron the +am,. twittery. The (ills short of ils a lino (Ins! yards or more and hounds rlran over our v. asel eft, nearly on a line with the head ol a sailor, hot. lorkily • little above I . l ‘.ha and - wfire4' - to, 110 grfl". 1110 ,malb•r gum first tin il snu'h. r shot skips along th,• sir it. r and falls short of or •• Boob !" aiclumrd the capiam ; • you must give 11171 huggl•r gun% than that. 614, or-you cannot hurt tot " On we go. without It ediria tle compli ments of oar l'harleston friends. Ann , her moment and ban, ! again goes the lienvy gun. The hall row ttrikes our ship in the fore chains. about t wo . fert shove the water A „seaman was holding the !cid to hike the 11101111111/Nri, and the twill struck ihreetly on tier his fret not Hoirpri.img thst. under the cocuns-tri+!e.. Jsck wit strongly in dined to take to his he, Is, and begins to scramble up with might and main, when the captain assures him that there is no danger. one ball having struck so near him : on( the principle, I suppose. that lightning never strikes twice in the same place. Jack, re immured, patiently taken his place and drops the lead again. The ball, itorimpstely wll.l too far spent to go through the sir of our* •..•1 alth I it left an honorable Near The battery continues to play upon us. and another hall melee than over us near the wheel hotrie. We an, not yet within range of the guns of FortMoultrie, and yon der is • cutter in tow of a steamboat, pre paring to open fire upon u‘ A moment longer and we Atilt he to range of these three batter'''. The canners on Moira Is land are snowing confident : it they get the right range they will send • shot through our side, sc alleging dech and destruotion Moultrie, directly in front, will bring her 111%V! gnus to hear and will Inve their dead ly 11111111 . 011 IWO our low, while tie cutter will 00ell en our nght. Why does not Major Anderson open fire upon tbat battery and ..are 111 I We look in vain for help Aihr, American Mae flies from Yort Sumter, and the Ainer.ean flag at oar b w and mi l to 41 fired upon : yet there Is tat the slighted{ recognit ~,,, of our pre,- vies frogs the foil to which we look for pro tection The unexpected battery on Morris Island has rut null hope of escape by run fling the vassal *mind near Sumter and taking to the boat+. pOl4ll/4 , ,thlt Fort Sumter liac teen taken by the-'oiwith Caridinians ? If it h.a not, why fines not Major Andersen, show that he will protect us, or at lent r1011))(1104C UR m /WOW II ay f - • go within raw of Pie going of Port klOlll. rto to eX1101C4:41111. IMO at0r,.4..t0 almottt mutant /ClllOll. jr ellipt tire by th enemy " Helm out 01 port '" shoos the caption, and the Star of Vie West turned ataiultwith out any great loss of time. an . 011 * Nay well imaging.. We tom without aocttlent andh ntearn away, with the stars and stripes still float INC. and the battery playing upon us by way of a par nig .shoe its we steam • w•y the s'iliner near Moultrie h lying the hnshle rioter In tow steams away into Swish eh one). ender ly with the intention of cu.t tog our retreat, but OW WOll •bil/1.10514 t h e chase, and w e sai l out, with o ut a Man or wounded. with our stores unharmed and proceed un molested, probably on our homeward Jour ney After the brief, ibiit exciting i xperience of the morning. I am Piteliared, without hesita tion. to concur with the captain in the opin ion that it is very unpleasant to be Ored at with hard cannon balla;without any chance to fire back. I wish t say, however. that no one on board &vie ed any symptoms of fear Captain Mellow Nand the pilot. 4r. Brewer, were probably cal marksfor the Mocris Island battery a good shot throuih the wheelhou br•en moat disastrous. The e Ihfough two thirds of them arc re runts. appeared to be quite indifferent to the music. while the officers agreed that It was scandalous that they could not fight back• The ritilitity . men on board highly com• plimented the South Carolinians on their shooting, in this first attempt. They say it was well done i that all which was needed was a little better range, which they proba bly could have obtained in a few minutes. Their line was perfect; and the opinion is exprested that some one had charge of the guns who understood his business. "It was very good aporlfarihern," re marked one of our offi , :ers, "to shoot at lir, and there was nothing to trouble them.— They had it all their own way. But when Uncle Sam gets a man-of war in the chan nel, throwing shells into that sand bill, they will learn the dififerenoe." Two guns were employed ; the smaller, it is believed, a twelve pounder, and the larger a thirty-two pounder. This, however, is only conjecture. Whatever their size, they were well manned. They were fired rapidly, and with a will. One of the officers hazarded a joke soon after we left Charleston harbor. "The peo of Charleston." Re remarked. •' pride selvesisipson their luispimlity ; but it sleeede my expectations. They Nee us vent balls before we landed." ant believed that, if the South Carolini ans had not made a mistake, we should have partaken of dietr hospitality, whatever it may be, as prisoners._ If the battery on Morris Island had waited ttrn minutes long er before firing, we should Imre been com pletely at their mercy. It RIM only necee sary for them to wait until we .were within mugs of tint guns of Yort Moultrie and es cape would have been impossible. So that, had it not been for this new and unespeeted battery on Morris island, slid the premature flrin , we should inevitably. have fallen into the, a of the enemy, if we had escaped shi ihjg I nd drowning. Although we had a nurgeon on board, he hail no instraMento or medical stores. It is bollixed that the cutter which waa tow of steamboat wam the Willign Aiken, which was treacherously surrendered to the South Carolinians by its cotninsfuler. Any one vilio is familiar with tho Chu, leston hailtior j eannot fail to appreciate the impOrtance of Fort Sumter. from the deck of onr vessel it had the appearihde of 4 new red brick building. It completely command• the channel. Fort Moultrie and Morris Is. land. Our Akers, however. are in doubt • whether it commends the masked battery on that island which Bred on us, The hatw try i 4, apparently, simply an earth work, constructed among sand hills. The port holes of Vert &miter .overlooking Morris Is land were closed, and it is pocuble that tl t , guns nn that side of the forum have not been Mounted. =MB We crossed the Charleston bar, outward .1011w1, about nine o'clock. There was then a consultation as to oot trt‘urs,:movementi The imposSibility of entering the harbor and Intolmg at Von Sumter was muttlatently parent - r Wil„ bad no instruetions except to pwr II Sumter. and it mins decided that lie only thing to be done wee to put back to New York as soon as possible. Om e is no j 'lll.. iveonher • WAN delightful thr, dayi - Tuesday. Wednesday, and l'lnirsda I we bad no lireg, and,felt no need of ov.r MEI On Thur.:day afternoon however. we be gan to feel the northern climate. Du n% the ntglo. we had'a very heavy hem] 41,1 On Friday et I. had A gmoot SIA Aga in and Ow+ (Smut day) 4torning we tulde Saab . 11.3, nt (in) break VVe •rtiv, ~ f r Warren , dret t a little nth r ClgiOt o'clock „gild ancboi.apd m.the mr, a n, until benienatit 11'wda enidarrport and re ceter relative lo theAtatittstUgo of the TreWrA Tt6itrted'eiieitidetl a sea royaite of neatly a wv.k'y ilnraf inn : and although the 11 it of the West failed to fulfil the mis4t,,,, 1,111 a hleil vas dry:Wit, d every one r ho wilix on board (cola that est•sything wag dune, that could be done PIST 1s171: or 11117. WRIVIRS. room Taviroriv .1 he Star of the West was about lire eights of a mile from the battery on 31orn. lend When she turned ate were shoot a mite and a half from itirt Solder. and the Name don:tore from Moultrie. The M ,ryes Wend lfrry tell apparently about a mile and a (planer from Fort Sumter lied we not turned about we el Id hire soot twee within lest than three tutu ths of 4 tulle Moultrie. Since our return. it has been nwertate• ' that two idiots took elect on the xt , anne, one. as already stated. on her port how sod a seegnd, as Abe was turning. on her oar board quarter Otte, ft bot i passed between the smokestack •nd the engine het In j It is not true an I learn ha■ been .tares in Ann) Of the morning papers. that the 's ar of the ►Feat struck tier colors. We (:in. out of Charleston with the NW s and stripe, I strn vying t• II i ft 'rim l'itowisitp (700 Ti ew..i During ibe whole of al,. 1a.1 . t New ential canva.“. lb, Blank Kq)u , ,lleari n apapera an I htump mpeaker4 manure(' the oplr dell the election of Linean would be immedi.glely followed by •• good tunen and great pr"wperity - I/coo-weals predicted plat the irreire, an4l loratried the people agn jolt mou t he for IA:1.01n, an.orniethem !Nit hot election tvottitt p. duce great digtreen, and might result in r. dtnsoltitioi. of the Union Well the peopla trusted the R.epublicang, awl beholrl the end' ?Janke tuspended ! liusiness prostrate' Hundreels bankrupt' Thousands slot rtng Cu.ll ronitnotian at our Ind 81 "lay Ae rats of 11 ' M —of Irv, of Mood! - ea-ea-a The !lurid* Unio nance of neceimon oat Thu4r.lAy THE pEciiii NltiTi Ks or the ft ititutibn and the %anon , ' trials to • h li the 8..1 ht subjected, demand •n fteettmoteil room( Lo stimulants It fa hiipotte..l, how ever, Coot these shall be of a harmless 111111 n and at the same time accomplish the ile•or , . l tint Hostetter . * Celebrated y mulch flit tt ra is the very article. Its t ir,t4 in all c i• es of debility are 0111011 t magma' It rt-itomi the toot. of the digestive organs, fresh vitality into the whole system. and gives that eheerfulneas to the temperamen t, which is moat valuable of feminine IlittriC Woof ' flie propriellire feel 'Uttered (win the fact that many of the iriomt urmuwint medical gentltlineti tit the I ' lllllll hm• la Mowed enltol7lllll7lB upon the Bitters, the ru t or% of %loch they have fr , r+ l,4 and aeknowletigod. There rue nu ro~r on ' counterfeits offered for sale, all of whieli destitute of merit, and positively injurious to the system ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE FITTERS of adwoustrat too on the e%tio ..Ls of Casper Peters, late of finnan township *ceased, hare been granted to the arolerentss 4, cult° request all persons indebted to sand estate is JOUe forward soil make luttnodiate payment, sot those baring claims again,' the antes to Wu"' (bent duly anthentlcated for settlement I,ICW IR C PETPRP JESSE PARSONS, Jun 17, 1860 sdrainsattesert - - THE GREAT ENIILISII REM EDI SIR JAMES CLARKE'S OBLIORATED FEMALE FILLS. Prepared from **prescription of S,r Jame) Glarke, M. D.. Physician Extract-• denary to the Queen. Thus invaluable medicine hi unfailing in thongs , of all those painful and dangerous diseimeistOodic t the female oonstitution is subject It moderate all .seer Mod remOvas all obstructions, sod & speedy' Mlle may be celled on TO MARRIED LADIES it le peculiarly suited It will, In • short Iwo bring on the monthly r t with regularity Each bottle, pride ONE ' ) OLL•R, heir. the Uol, ernment Stamp of Great Dr,Tain Ilew•re o r cot, terfelts. - - - These pills should mot be taken by froishosd. ring the FIRST THR E MO N Vas PY mousy, as they are sure to bring on llfiscarrirg s but at any other !lam they ant safe. 10)1111 °asap( Nervous antl Spinal Affection° Pain in the, Balk and Limps Fatigue on slight exertion, PaNtation orttielleart, liysteriosland Whites, these Fills will effeela — ottretthen.all other, s means have failed, and although a powerful, t oo ' edy, do not contain Iron, oalomel, antimony; 0 ! anything Imitate the constitution...! I Pull directions in the pamphlet around each package r which ihduld be carefully p rrrrr ved. Sole Agent tot the United States and Canada, JOB MOSES, (Late I. 0 Baldwin Co 1 Rosheite r, N. Y. 1 N. 8.—51.0 0 and 6 postage stamps anolovod to soy autborlsedlAient will jaarvro a bottle, ono log 60 Pills, bY return mall For sale by F. p: tl REIM. July 15-'6O. - *gent for lielltroltioN V4RT CAUTION