A Visit to the Battle Field. A correspondent of the Chicago 7'imes, writing from Fort Donelson, Tenn., under date of Feb. 17th, says: 1 wasinvited on Sunday mo ning, by Gen McClernand, to tnke a ride over the battle field. It would be difficult to describe, in a few words, the scenes which have met my view. The battle ground was chiefly con- fined to the space outside the rebel fortifica- tions, extending up the river bank a distance of two miles, to the point where General Mec- Clernand’s force rallied from the retirement which they were at first forced into by the impetuous charge of the enemy. It must be remembered that it was here that the grand sortie was made by the rebels up the river bank, with the intention of turning our right flank and cutting their way out. Some ten or twelve thousand men composed the force sent out for this purpose, They ads vanced under cover of a deadly fire of artil lery, and steadily drove Gen, McClernand’s force before them a distance of fifty or sixty rods, Our troops here made a stand, and, being reinforced by one or two regiments, began the assault before which the enemy were forced to retreat. The ground was contested with desperation, and the slaugh- ter on both sides was immense. The whole space of two miles was strewed with the dead, who lay in every imaginable shape and form. Federals and rcbels wee promiscuously mingled, sometimes grappled in the fierce death throe, sometimes facing cach other as they gave and received the fatal thrust, sometimes ying across one another, and again heaped in piles which lay six or seven deep. Tcould imagine nothing more terri- ble than the silent indications of agony that marked the features of the pale corpses which lay at every step. Though dead, and rigid in every muscle, they still writhed and seemed to turn®o catch the passing breeze for a cooling breath. Staring eyes, gaping mouths, clenched hands, and strangely con- tracted limhg, secmingly drawn into the smallest compass, as if by a mighty effort to rend assunder some irresistible bond which held them down to the torture of which they died. One sat ageinst a tree, and, with mouth and eye wide open, looked up into the sky, as if to catch a glance at its fleeting gpint. Another clutched the branch of an overhanging tree, and hung himself suspend ed from the ground. The other hand grasp- cd his faithfal mustket, and the compression of the mouth told of the determination which would have been fatal to a ‘oe had life ebbed a minute later. A third cling with both hands to a bayonet which was buried in the eround, in the act of striking for the heart of a rebel foe. - Great numbers lay in heaps, just as the fire of the artillery mowed them down, mangling their forms into an almost undistinguishable mass. Many of our men had evidently fallen victuns to the rebel sharpshooters, for they were pierced through the head by the rifle bullets, some in the forchead, some in the eves, others on the bridge of the nose, in the checks, and in the mouth. This cire. mstance verified a state- ment made to me by a rebel officer among the prisoners, that their men were trained to shoot low and aim for the fuce, while ours as g general thing, fired at random, and shot over their hes le The enemy. .n their retreat, carried off their wounded, and a great many of their dead, so that ours tar outnumbered them on the field. The scene of action had been mostly in the woods, though there were two open places of an acre or two where the tight had raged furiously, and the ground was covered with dead. All the way up to their entrenchments the same scene of death was presented. There were two miles of dead strewn thickly, mingled with firearms, ar tillery, deaq horses, and the paraphernalia of the battle field. It was a scene never to be forgotten—never to be described. —l ea The Old Flag. The Philadelphia Sunday Transcript, of the 16th, says : The air is filled with exultation, and every heart thyobs with joy. The Old Flag—thrice consecrated by the mariyrdom of freemen, and hallowed by the blessings of the just and good of every clime—waves defiantly and trinmpbantly in the wind, over the trait- or soil of Southern Kentucky, Tennessee, and North Carolina. Burnside and Golds- borough on the seaboard, and Grant and Foote in the West, have inked their names to immortality, and a nation’s gratitude will descend, like a holy blessing, on their heads forever, Their trinmphs fill an ever glorious niche in our country’s history—but the grandest feature of them all was the heart warm greetipg which the Old Flag met, as it float. ed in the air far down the Tennessee to Tus- cumbia. On that winter day, there were old men tottering to the river’s bamk and weeping their welcome with a grateful joy — there were tender women and little children to waft their blessings as it passed along — and, on every side, *‘idolatrous love” for the Old Union and the Old Flag leapt wadly from myriads of hearts. All of these people, too, were martyrs as well as patriots. Their homes had been given to the flame, and the oppressor's hand had been firmly fixed upon their throats — Driven forth from their homes. hunted like wild beats, despoiled of their possessions, but true to the faith of their fathers and the country of their birth—the Old Flag came to them like a fulfilled hope, and their hearts grew strong once more, until the air and the heavens vibrates with their shouts. We can well picture the scene which the Old Flag inspired, and we thank God with earnest hearts that, after all that has been written and said to toe contrary, there is still a long. strong, warm and enthusiastic devotion still existing in the far South for the Union of these States. - Let us foster this love with a tender care, and, when the Gree- lys, the Sumners, the Cheevers, the Loves joys, the Gurleys. and the rest of that like preach to, and endeavor to pursuade us into the commission of acts of injustice towards these men—acts of violation and in abroga~ tion 0. the Old Constitution, let us all point them with patriotic pride to the privations and the wrongs, to the oppressions and bru @he Td atchman, C. T. ALEXANDER, : Sok W. FUREY, | | Editors. BELLEFONTE, March 6th, 1862. Dears of (ieN. Lanper.—The country will be pained to learn that Gen. Lander, one of the most gallant and impetuous offi- cers in the U. S. Army, died. on the 2d inst., at his camp, in Virginia, of congestion of the bra. Ilisloss will be severely felt, both by the country and in army circles. Dea in tae Winte House. —President Lincoln's son, WILLIE, aged 12 years, died on Friday afternoon the 21st ult. His dis- ease was an termittent fever, of a typhoid character. The people of the country will sympathize with Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln in their great bereavement. The President's third son, who has also been very ill is re- . covering. i eevee INAUGURATION OF JEFFERSON Davis.— Jefferson Davis was inaugurated permanent President of the Southern Confederacy, on Saturday, the 22d ult., at Richmond. Itis said that there was not the least enthusiasm; in fact, that the affair was of rather a gloomy nature. Mr. Davis, in his inaugural, speaks cheerfully of the affairs of the Con- federacy, and is firm in his belief that Southern independence will be, eventually, achieved. We shall endeavor to make room for his inaugural in our next issue. Mr. Davis has been sworn into office for six years. Whether he will be allowed to filll out his term, time alone will tell. From present appearances, it is highly probable that his presidency will not last six months. esses Tie News,—-There has been no news of much importance since our last issue. The Government bas assumed a military super- vision of all the lines of telegraph in the country and will allow no news of any an- ticipated movements to be published.—— Nashville is in undisputed possession of our troops, and the Confederates have evacuated Columbus and Murfresboro..——Hon. An- drew Johnson, of Tennessee, has been made a Brigadier General, and will be made pro visional military Governor of that State un- til a new State Government can be organized Gens, Buell and Grant have both been made Major Generals. ——It is said that the Union sentiment at the South is gaining ground, and that wherever our troops pen- etrate they are gladly welcomed. It 1s said to be clearly understood between the allied powers that a monarchy in Mexico will result frow the invasion of that country notwithstanding the assurances given to the United States that they would not seck any political object there. It is believed that they nave disposed of these assurances by saying that the monarchy will be established by the free choice of the Mexican people, just as the Empire was established in France by the free choice of the French people. A prem A New Phase of Abolitionism. Various as the ingenuity and the wiles of Satan himself, are the schemes of the Abs olitionists in Congress and out of it to effect the abolition of slavery. When we look back over the history of the last nine months, and trace through memory the changes of position upon the war of these enemies of our country, we can scarcely credit what we see and know to be true. . When the war was first inaugurated on the part of rebels and traitors in the South, by their assault upon Fort Sumpter, the po sition occupied by them was, that the war power of the government was amply suffi cient, and that 1t must be exercised to effect the abolition of slavery—thus ignoring for the time any power in the civil government to effect this object, and trusting it wholly to the military arm of the government. Bat. unfortunately for them, the rising star of General McClellan would not move at their bidding—he was a Democrat—a Constitu tional Union loving man—and conld be nei- ther led nor driven from his purpose to put down rebellion and still preserve the Union with the rights of the several States in the Union unimpaired. They indulged the hope of driving him into this extreme measure until a very late period ; but finding at last that their efforts were unavailing, they sought to sow dissat. isfaction among the loyal people of the North, by arraigning him before the tribunal of public opinion for tardiness in his move ments and incapacity to discharge the duties of bis command. They do not even hesitate to hurl their angry darts at President Lin coln—the President of their own choosing— because he defers to General McClellan, and declares that the war should be conducted for the purpose of preserving the Union and the Constitution, and none other. But the soldiery ani the mass of the peo- ple having unlimited confidence now ir both | the President and McClellan, their efforts in sowing dissatisfaction have utterly failed, to their great discomfiture. They at last have | given up all hope of accomplishing their { cherished perpose by either of these means, | ceiving flags of truce, in exchanging prison- ers, in protecting property, &c., have recog- Army Correspondence. E nized the Southern Confederacy as a bellig~ erent nation, und that thus having recog. Roanoke IsLanD, Dep'r N, U., Feb. 15th, 1862. nized them ag belligerents, by according to them the rights of belligerents in war— therefore the Union is broken. and that the Southern States are therefore out of the Un- ion, and nor entitled, after we shall have conquered them, to any of the rights enjoy- ed by them prior to the act of secession, but that we must hold them as conquered prov- inces or territories. Then holding the same doctrine advocated by them in the campaign of 1860 —that Con- gress has the power, when a territory ap- plies for admission into the Union asa State, to decide whether it shall be admitted or not as a slave State, they expect in course of time, as the people of the vast. territory of the South become tired and worried of terri- torial life, to admit them back into the Un- ion, with such Constitution as they, the rul- ing power, shall *hink meet. theory now adopted to get rid of the institu- A little calm reflection will be sufficient to convince any intelligent, unprejudiced mind of the fallacy of their argument, and the error of their position. the principle be true upon which they base their argument, then indeed is secession a possible thing, for if it be in the power of any portion of this people, by an act of their own, to dissolve their connexion with the rest of the people of this government, it must have been so from the beginning. and, therefore, sanctioned by the Constitution-- if it be sanctioned by the Constifution, then we have no right to compel those by force of arms to remain in the Union, who choose to avail themselves of that constitutional right, to leave the Union, and, therefore, the war would be an unconstitutional act of oppres- For instance, if They do not carry their argument quite this far ; hut it is the inevitable conclusion, logically drawn from the premises they lay down as the basis of their argument. conclusion at which they arrive 1s, that all the rebellious States, after the war shall be over and peace again restored, will not occu- py that position of equality as sister States of the Union heretofore occupied by them ; but that they have forfeited this right by tneir own act, and are now nothing bat a conquered province or territory, or anything else we please to call them. If this doctrine be true, what will have be- come of the glorious old Union of thirty- three sovereign States, which we shall have expended so much blood and treasure to two States, instead of thirty-three. One Epirors or WATCHMAN :—The pleasant privilege of writing you again has present- ed itself. My last was penned on steamer Cossack, on the waters of Pamlico Sound, but a few hours previous to our sailing for this point. What has transpired since then is, no doubt, familiar to your readers, and a repetition of the same would be uninterest- ing; sol will not note affairs peculiar to our glorious victory and our successful occupa tion of this highly important point, but at once proceed to other matters. We were agreeably surprised this morning on receiving orders to have prepared three days’ cooked rations, and to be in readiness tu again embark on board steamer Cossack, preparatory to another forward movement. The point to which our next operations are to be directed, will be, in all probability, within the Sound. The naval force, under Commodore Goldsborough, have stormed the batteries at Elizabeth city and Edenton. The former battery had 12 guns and the lat- ter four. Our suceess has been great, and its effect in bringing the State of North Car- olina back to her former allegiance to the Union, will soon be apparent. General Burn- side is pursuing the true course to bring about the desired effect. He is affording ev- ery protection to the inhabitants within hig power, and has issued an order guaranteeing to every loyal citizen due respect to his per- son and property, and giving to those who take the oath of allegiance, a safe-guard, punishing with death every one who dares to commit any depredation upon them what- soever. The result of this course will ~oon be apparent, for I assure yon many of the North Carolinians are heartily sick of seces- sion, and await, with throbbing hearts, the hour when they will be free from the powers that control the rebellion and desecrate their soil by its contaminating and blighting curse. If the old North State, with her fine har- bors,.abundance of lumber, and her great resources, was to hoist the Stars and Stripes upon her goil, she, to-day. would have the prospect of being the greatest commercial State of any of the Southern Common- wealths. Ier ports would be open to com merce, her products yield a large and in- creasing revenue, her mineral and agricul~ tural resources would be rapidly developed, and her soil and citizens freed from the yoke of tyranny. She has all the elewents ne: cessary to make her one of the brightest stars upon the proud escutcheon of our na- tionality. On the other hand if she persists in pursuing her present course, her ha bors will be closed. her commerce destroyed, her products yield nothing and her agriculrural and mineral interests amount to nothing : her citizens will be bound down by heavy taxation, her fair soil laid a desolate waste; her citizens will lose all protection for their homes and property. and her nationality will be forever destroyed. If her citizens are not blinded by fanaticism, they will spurn sceession and look to their interests, the protection of their homes, their firesides, their all—and come back ander the proces- tion of that flag, of which it has been sung, We will then have only twenty |‘ where breathes the foe but falls before it.” I have been in conversation with many of third of the States comprising nearly one the prisoners, and when away from their half of all this beautiful land. will have have accomplished a part of its purpose ag 1east, viz : the destruetion of the old Union. | X and the doctrine that a State can dissolve officers they say that they want to see the y dl Union preserved. As an example of the ceased to exist as such, and the rebellion will { \way the re forced 1 will give you an in \ rn News. The edi is become very un- oubl become more tance I 50, as the typoerapher has been drafted into s : : I the Union by self destruction, will be es. | the service. The foreman and hands all the tablished as a precedent for future cases ; if | same. 1 am compelled to drill three hours one State in this way can commit self mur- | ® day: and perform picket duty, and be edi- der, so can another, and another, and so on tor. foreman. compositor. mailer, and all the duties in detail of the office, The paper until we will not have one State left to con | must suspend..” [If such be the way the stitute a union with another. press is to be treated, way the cause for | But this doctrine is based.upon a delusion | Which they fight will soon fail to the ground. and misconceives the very fundamental The health of the Regiment is good. not~ a ; ; . | withstanding the changes which this climate principles upon which this government is |g subject to. Yesterday .oorning [ was based The Union was originally formed by awakened from my slumbers by the singing the will of the whole people, and nothing of the birds on the trees i~ the rear of our but that will can destroy it. No act of se- cession of any one State or any number of | States can destroy this Union. quarters. The air was pleasant and balmy as in June. The Regiment took a march down the road to the beach and returned at No act of 4 P. M. At 4:30, a chill North Easter com almost, already engaged, seemed unmindful of danger. General Burnside congratulates the troops on their bravery, and says he accepts it as an omen of future success and victory. All the regiments on the Island are to have + Roanoke Island, Feb. 8th, 1862.” inscrib« ed on their flags, Our flag gets it on. Our valued friend, respected and discip- lined officer, brave, true and tried soldier, Capt, A. B. Snyder, has been obliged to ten- der his resignation in consequence of ill health. The Colonel said to me this even- ing that ‘no one coald appreciate his servi~ ces and gallant conduct better than he could ; that he feared he had continued too long in the service consistent with the state of his health.” When I spoke to one of his men about the Captain having gone home, the stalwart soldier, who had met the enemy upon foreign soil, and was ready to brave any danger, flushed in the face, and a tear rolled down his chesk as he turned and walked away, unable to restrain his feelings. Though the Compan and Regiment have found worthy representative in Lieut. Blair, whose daring and courage are never doubt- ed. still, the tear of sorrow fills the eyes of many who knew Captain Snyder but to honor and love him. My letter has grown unusually long. [ close by returning to my couch at the still hour of midnight. Yours, ‘ROANOKE. A The Lamentations of the Duped. The Richmond Examiner, of a recent date which has heen forwarded to us by our For- tress Monroe correspondent, contains an « editorial leader ”’ which commences with the following words : ¢ From the valiant Senator down to the timid seamstress, the question on every tougue in ichmond is, whether the enemy are likely to penetrate with their gunboats to this quarter ?”’ It is very obvious that the very vigor of the recent military and naval demonstrations lof the Government has produced ** a panic terror’ throughout the ranks of those who in the seceeded States. have heretofore been most forward in promoting the project of disanion. The complaints of the press, at once loud and bitter, are visibly aimed, in many cases, at the anthors of the war, though uttered in the guise of criticism on the *“imbecility /’ of its conduct by the Con- federate, authorities. As in Richmond so also in Memphis, at the latest advices from that city. And if there were murmurs and lamentations bes fore the fall of Fort Henry and Bonelson, we may easily calculate the popular dissatis- faction likely to ensue in the presence of the mpending calamities brought on the people by the Secession agitators. The following extracts from the Memphis Argus of Janu- ary 5th is very significant under this head : ++ We spoke and speak of the ill conduct ing of this war, which has now taken from | our homes some three or four thousand of | our best and bravest, which has paralyzed all | business, save that which puts the money we can so illy spare into the pockets of the creatures of said President and Cabinet. — Of this war we spoke when we said so ! much might have been done in it that has | been left undone. Those at the head of af- | fairs were leaders 10 the war. We ask how [they are lsading THROUGH 7t ¥’ Or the following jeremiad from the same numberof the same paper: We have been made to stand still and take such coffs and kicks as the North- erner chooses to give, when and where he pleased. We have heard our Generals | bhued for not doing what it appears they | were not permitted to do. The smothered | report of Beauregard has made that truth | clear enough. We have for months and months been told that England would do our fighting for us on the seas.” And the Memphis Appeal is equally des- pondent with the Memphis Argus. The | former says: | «The blockade is unbreakable by us yet. In one word. we're hemmed in. We've al lowed the moment of victory to pass. We were sp anxiously watching the operations of England that we stand aghast on turning our eyes homeward again to find ourselves | i rebellion can put a*State outof the Union, | menced sounding a requiem through the : ten fold worse off than we were ere the com- and let Aholitionsts in Congress and out of | 1¢*VS of the pines and o1ks and around our | mencement of Price’s last forward march, it rant as they will, still the Union, when the war shall be over, will remain as of old, fiercely, sending the rain ag inst our win with the rights of the several States unime | dow glass with a force anything but agreea-: paired, otherwise the war is not waged upon our part to preserve the Union but to blot ble. To morrow is the Sabbath. Gereral Burnside has issued an order requiring its out at least cleven States and thus destroy | strict observance, with divine serv ce in all it. No, no, we are not fighting to destroy | the regiments which have chaplains. He the Union by dismembiring it, but to pre~ | SAYS that during his campaign, (unless a srve it in all its glory as a whale. Fhe archest traitor of the South never advocated necessity prevents), the day mat be obsery ed sacredly The Regiment formed this morning and a more heretical doctrine than ‘his, as this | went down the beach aud visited all the is only the doctrine of secession in another The leaders of the 1ebellion have not! changed their relation to the government. or annulled the law by their treason, but have made themselves amenable to the law and should be punished by it, and not by this new law of modern date, fitted up by Aboli- tionists to carry out their one idea. old law of treason is sufficient for the case in hand. as it will operate only upon the guilty, while this new law, if carried out, would fall equally upon the innocent and the guilty. et Os. Andrew Johnson, Forts. The first we came to, we marched through, and the Colonel ordered three cheers for the flag ; the second, three for the navy, the Expedition, the any and eve ry body. There was a general shouting. By the time we had plodded through the Sound to the last fort, a distance of six miles, but by the sand and back siips. about seven and a-half, we were satisfied to return and partake of something to satisfy the inner man. A more genial smile covered the face of the soidier as he looked at his bacon and hard crackers, than could be seen when looking at the forts we had stormed for five hours. The offlcers—prisoners—have all been sent North. The non-commissioned officers and privates are still here, awaiting the ac- tion of the General. I think an exchange Thatnoble old hero,the Honorable Ax-| Will be effected here, saving. as it will, much DREW JOHNSON, of Tennessee, in the course of his remarks in the United States Senate the other day, said : cost of transportation to the Government. I think special dispatches have been forward ed to the Goverament respecting it. This evening I visited the hospital, where Iam a Democrat now, I have been one sixty of the Union soldiers lay of wounds all my life ; I expect to live and die one ; received in the engagement of the 8th.—- and the cornor stone of my Democracy rests Some were shot in the Tungs, shoulders, upon theenduring basis of the union.” Dem- arms. hands, &c. I came up to one spright ocrats may come and go. but they shall nev ly looking fellow of the 10th Connecticut, er divert me from the polar star by which I | who was talking to a friend who had called have ever been guided from early life—the | to see him. I said, ** Well, my boy, what great principles of Democracy upon which | ails you?’ < [lave a buck-shotin my an quarters, sending the chills a creeping over ‘and that aecursedly used sensationism, the us. At the time of writing the wind blows arrest of Messrs. Mason and Slidell. Day follows day, and, in lieu of being weakened, we find the Federal armies at all points be ing strengthened, almost every article of manufacturing and domestic necessity quad rupled in price, and our money wili soon be exceeding scarce for lack of paper and pasteboard wherewith to make it.” If this was the condition of Tennessee before the recent disasters, what must it be to-day ¢ And the question recurs what has Tennessee or any single Southern State be gained by persistence in the infatuation which promted that suicidal policy 2 rs it Tre LATE Mr. PENNINGTON. —A Strange Story. —The death of Ex-Governor Penning- ton, of New Jersey. last week, is said to have been the result of his taking eight grains of morphine hy mistake. He had been complaining of typhmd fever, which at times affected him so severely as to cause temporary aberration of mind. Sunday morning he appeared to be no better, and a prescription was written for quinine, and sent to the drug store of Dr. C. W. Badger, on Broad street, Newark. The prescription, directing powders, was dis: i pensed and labelled “-quinme.” Shortly af- ter the powder was administered to the Gov- ernor In the course of a few minutes it was discovered that there was something wrong, and on examination the powders were found to be morphine, eight grains of which had been taken. The sad affair will be fully investigated, when the particulars will be made public. —— Pee A ReLic.—The Columbia Republican has still standing at its head, «* Free Speech = Free Press, Free Soil and Freedom’ This is the only freedom squeeching relic that we know of now in the State. Two years ago nearly every republican paper had such a motto, but it has of late become such a flaun- gained by the act of Secession? What can | War News, Death of General Lunder. WasaINGTON, March 2, 1862. General LANDER. who has been anwel! for some time, diedto day,at4 P. M., of congestion of the brain, at his camp in Northern Virginia. His wife, formerly Miss Davenport, an actress of celebrity, is here and learned the sad intelligence about 5 P M. He was not considered dangerously ill till 1 P. M to day, and his wife received the firs tidings at two o'clock, and of his death at five, by Secretary Stanton in person, who. with much feelng and delicacy, acquainted her with the facts. She is at the Nationa} Hotel, and is prostrated with grief. CC Secretary Chase and other distinguished friguds subsequently visited her in her.afflic- 100. $ a Gen. Shields succeeds Gan, Lander in command. gue Evacuation of Columbus. Commodore Foote telegraphs from Carro. that this morning hesent a party on a re< connoissance down to Colnmbus, and found that the Rebels have been several days evacuating the place. All the infantry have gone but the cavalry were still there, keep Ing up appearances. Their barracks, and a large number of stores, have been burnt.— The guns on the bluff have been taken, but those'on the water batteries still remain, On learning that the Rebels have been using flags of truce for several days, to cover their retreat, Commodere Foote orders. ed out his fleet, and sent them down to take, the place and whatever has been left, Evacuation of Murfreesboro’ Gen, Buell telegraphs that the Rebels are evacuating Murfreesboro’ and are fleeing across the Tennessee river into Northern Alabama. He has not had them surrounded. or sent them any such notice as the report er of the Chicago Tribune sent from Cairo. In a few days Middle Tenneesee will be elear of them. Gen. Buell cannot catch them. on account of their having railroads to run on, and they take all the rolling stock with them, destroying all the bridges, Mr. Seward’s Novelties. _ The spectacle of an army avowedly hostile: In 1t8 mission passing to its destination over: a soil it proposed to.invade at the first blast of war, would be something novel in the history of States. Imagine Russia asking permission of England to make Malta a depot forits navy during the Crimean war, or Franc transporting its troops for the Italian cam- paign by way of Salzburg, Vienna andi Trieste '— Evening Journal. Mr. Seward is the fruitful inventor of nov. elties. The ¢ irrepressible conflict,” which pro claimed that free and slave States could not - live together in the same Union, was a nov- elty of Mr. Seward’s. No statesman from ge days of Washington down, ever dreamed of it. His speech to the duke of New Castle, «we must insult you,” was a novelty. Lis threats against Canada were novelties. THis promise to the South €Caolina Com- missioners, that Fort Sumter should be peaceably evacuated, was a novelty ; and its. falsification was another. His prophecies that the war would be over 1n thirty days was a novelty ; as have been all his prophecies since. The fulfilment of ‘onc of thems would be an. agreeable novelty. His invention of the idea of blockading one’s own ports was a novelty in interna- tional law, and his treatment of rebels as foreign enemies, while denying the belliger ent rights was another. His letter to Gov. Hicks, sneering at the representatives of monarchies, was a novel - ty in deplomacy. His circulars to the governors of States om the subject of frontier defences was another novelty. His declaration, that the recogmtion ot. the South:by European powers would be re- sented by us by a general war upon all En rope, is & novelty in doctrine, and would be a greater one in practice. His arrest of loyal citizens, wn loyal States: by telegraph. is a novelty which it is tv be hoped may return to plague the inventor. His i=vention of a passport system. with- out law, which annoys loyal citizens and gives free scope to traitors, 1s another novel- ty His long reply to- a demand never made in, the Slidell and Mason case, and his dexter ous proving our right toseize and our duty to surrender those envoys, is a novelty also. His countenance of universal corruption: at a time of great national necessity. is a great novelty in the minds of all true patri- ols. His setection of such diplomatic represen- tatives as Giddings, Helper, Burlingame & Co., is another novelty. His proposed surrender of the right of: Divstesting: without an equivalant, is 2 noy- elty. : His abandonment of the Monroe doctrine is a novelty. bid His irritating despatches. to foreign courts. are novelties in manner and temper and sub- stance. His invitation to England to send her troops to Canada, through Maine, is mania- cal novelty. 4 § Finally, Mr. Seward, acting asa states: man and managing the affairs of a great na-. tion im a great crisis, is a novelty that the world has never yet seen the like of, and: probably never will again. Reviewing Mr. Sewards labor for the last vear, we doubt if Dumas or Walter Scott, or the inexhaustible Sylvanus Cobb was half as prolific a novelist as Wis. 1. Seward, — N.Y. Argus. The pay ofthe United States army ig mostly greater than any ether in the ‘world. The Russian soldier receives only thirty-six dollars a year as pay, and his rations consist. solely of black bread. The soldier in the French aymy receives fifty-six cents a month. The pay of our soldiers” is twenty times greater. 1t costs the United States nearly three times as much to maintain a soldier that it does the British Government—and it is to be-ren.embered that the British Govern talities endured for many long and weary this Government rests, and whi { * i notto. « 1 > : . 8 g S, ich cannot be | kle, sir, but as lame as I am” —pointing to | ting lie when compared with their tar and ment can get money at three per cent, inter- on bythe) Saiilin) gg and and have resorted now to a doctrine fraught | Garis} out without the preservation of the fo the prisoners were—¢I can whip. og ae An, and their attempt to | est, While it costs us six per cent or more. s S» YL) y with as much danger to p s | Union of these States. { a ti f v s i blessings on their lips, welcomed the Old : nar Pagans | j 3 : a three of them at a time, and soon will be at | dests oy the freedom of speech, of the press the doctrine advocated by the vasest rebels | Nee Flag in Tennessee and Alabama, as the har binger and the hope of a restoration of the Old Union and the Old Constitution, as they existed ere patricidal hands attempted their destruction, 7 It used to be the case that when men were convicted of stealing they were pun ished by imprisonment. Now we are more likely to send them abroad as foreign minis- ters- of South Carolina. They unhesitatingly as- | sert now both in and out of Congress, that | the government, have forfeited all their | rights under the Constitution as members of | the Union ; and in support of this monstrous theory, they advance the argument, that be- | cansc our government, in sending and re-! the Southern States, by their act of secession | of $1,500 to the widow Jenkins. They boast and their attitude of open rebellion against | Of it as a free will offering, and that it goes 177 We observe that the Abolition papers | wounds of the soldiers, the Doctor in charge are making much ado about the alleged fact | thinks they will all recover. that Jim Lane made a New Year's present | to show Lane's liberality. As we were coming up to the battle, the ! balls raining through the air above us, an {orderly sergeant of the 10th Connecticut regiment, came rushing back, having receiv- This he may. well do after shooting her | €d 8 wound in his head, taking off the skin. husband, and afterwards sheating her and He met the surgeon, who exammed it and said, ¢ Oh, it wont amount to anything !” em again.” Notwithstanding the serious and of the people, that they, to avoid the glaring inconsistency have, we believe the Republican excepted, taken down the motto. To maintain consistency they ought now to putup ‘ Free Mobs, Free Plunder. Free Despotism and Free Nigger.” —Sunbury Democrat. a ame T= It is supposed that the reason why Secretary Welles has not yet left the Cab- her children out. of all the real estate they | So. oft he goes on a ** double quick” to ‘en owned in Kansas, I gagein the scene of conflict. Every wan, inet 18 because there is no foreign mission to give him. GeN. Jim Lane. —A few words will dis- pose of him. His past history proves him to be nothing less than a nigger- stealing horse- stealing, house- burning, woman and children butchering vagabond ; and no causecan prosper which seeks him for an ally. His only friend and supporters and endorsers are the rabid abolitionists of the north, who do nothing but stay at home and gnash their - teeth at the south, and abuse the loyal wen of the uorth. The devil take Jim Lane and his sympathizers,—Cass County Union.