Bradford Reporter. Towanda, Thursday, January 12, 1865. MR. WARD'S ADDRESS. If that part of Mr. WARD'S Address which we noticed in our last, is objectionable,that portion of it which we propose to review now, is doubly so ; and if we regretted the awkward position which our examination of his charge against the republicans of fraud ulent voting, places him in, we can truly say that we are pained at being obliged to follow up the more reprehensible part of this extravagant folly ; and it would be less grievous to him, if Mr. WARD had not " traveled out of the sphere of his appoint ment "to earn condemnation. But to our subject. Mr. WARD substantially declares, that! forty-lour innocent, and reputable, citizens of j Luzerne and Columbia counties, were im- j prisoned by military authority, and tried j before a tribunal unknown to the constitution —called a Court Martial. An abundance of expletives are called into requisition to j give this act of the administration a horrify ing aspect. The truth of the matter is,that these forty-four citizens combined to resist the draft, and the government was obTiged j to send a militaiy force to arrest the law-1 breakers. Mr. WARD says three of them were sentenced to heavy fines, and impris onment ; so that these conspirators were guilty of the charges preferred against them; and it is these criminals before the law, over which our neighbor makes his piteous ; lamentation. We doubt not but that every criminal in the penitentiary could give an ! equally distressing account of his suffer ings, if he had Mr. WARD'S power of deliue-, ation. But who is to blame for this suffer-i ing ? Mr. WARD says the government. We 1 say tlie traitors themselves. For if they had not resisted the law, they would not! have been punished. This is clear. Why i are not peaceable citizens punished? Be-j cause they are peaceable. Mr. \\ ARI> pleads I f..r these violators of the law, and tries to cover up their heinous offense, for the rea son that they are democrats, and it they | were cut-throats, and belonged to his party, it would be the same thing. Such is the perverse tendency of blind partizan zea'. 1 What is it to the loyal citizen that there ! are no stoves, benches, beds, knives, forks, j j dates, or any other conveniences, in the j cells of Fort Mifflin? What is it to them that this is a damp Island fort, constructed : more with a view of resisting a bombard-' lnent, than anything else ? What is it to I them that the government is obliged to des ecrate it by the incarceration of Copper head rebels ? Loyal men respect the laws, and have no fears of Bastiles, and because they respect the laws, they see no modern tyranny. It is only traitors who feel the damps of noisome cells, and see the tyran n>" The Chairman id the State Democratic Committee says, these Columbia rioters "are ' being' drawn out, one by one, to be tried before a tribunal unknown to the con stitution—called a Court Martial —in which they are denied the privilege—priceless in a freeman's estimate—of a trial by a jury of their peers, and of the vicinage." Mr. WARD is a lawyer, and asserts that a Court Martial is unknown to the constitu tion. That instrument says, "Congress shall have power to raise and support ar mies. 'l'o make rules for the government, and regulation,of the laud anil naval forces." Ami pray, who ever heard of armies with out Court Martials ? So the power to cre ate Court Martials, comes directly from the constitution : and we have had them under the government,over since its organization. Every bright school boy knows these facts; and yet, our legal neighbor says, these courts are unknown to the constitution.— Wise, and learned man ! What a luminous production it would be, how suddenly all that has ever been written on the sacred right of trial by jury, would fall into the shade, if we had an "elaborate discussion" on (his subject, from this writer ! The question, however, of the legality of the trial of the Columbia county rioters, lias been clearly settled, in the case of Vallan dighnir.. The Supreme Court of the United Slates, under its old regime, after a full ar gument, decided thai the art est of Yalian iligham, by military authority, was legal, that the military commission which tried him for a military offense, was constitution ally constituted, and that there was no leg al authority in our civil courts to reverse, or to revise its judgment. Yet Mr. WARD pronounces these courts unconstitutional, monstrous and unbearable. But the de nial of a trial bv jury in the vicinage, to to these Columbia lqw-breakers,is the point over which we have the full burst of lachry mose winnings of a surcharged partizan prejudice. A trial by jury in the vicinage, to these rioters, would have been a mock ery. No witnesses could have been found,no matter what the criminality of the party tried, to testify against them; and the jury men, like the witnesses, would have syi t pathiseil with the rioters, and therefore, it would only have been a farce, to trv them in this manner. After the army that went out to suppress the Mormon rebellion, had taken possession of Salt Lake city, and courts of law had been established, an at tempt was made to bring to punishment the ) leaders of the rebellion ; but the witnesses and jurymen, were all Mormons, and they thought that Mormons in rebellion against ( the government, was a religous, and a po- j litical duty, and the sequence was. that the ! trials were a farce, and had to be abandon-! ed. It would be just so with trials in the! disaffected districts of Columbia county.— ! Democrats turned rioters, and democrats j over the State, as Mr. WARD'S sympathies prove, as well as democrats of the vicinage, believe it is right to rebel against the abo lition government, as they choose to call it, uud how wortU a trial in the vicinage, un der such circumstances, result? It would have been a muckerj, truly. We have shown tiiat'Lhft trial of the (Jul-! umbia county conspirators, was lawful, be-! yond all cavil, and proper ; and in view of this, how does Mr. W ARK'S appeal to the two hundred and seventy-six thousand dem ocrats to revolt against the government, appear? For such in reality it is. The; spleen consequent upon political defeat,has so distorted the vision of our neighbor, that i he can no longer see the plain outlines of! the Constitution, and under his hallu- j cination, the necessary, and the proper' acts of the administration, are pro- j nounced " alarming violations of great | principles of freeman's rights, which even no monarch on the throne of our English ancestors, since the days of Magna eharta, . ever yet invaded with impunity ; and no administration of our government, ever be fore dared to infringe," declaring the acts of the government to be *' monsdrou* and unbearable." The plain English of this is, that if Mr. WARD'S democratic cohorts are not poltroons, they will revolt, en manse, ! against these imagined wrongs. It is tell-1 ing them that if they do not resist these ! supposed infringements of their rights,that they are not freemen—that no freemen ever did put up with such things. So that we understand this to be a call on the demo crats to resist the acts of the government ; and if they do not resist them, it will not be the fault of this appeal. In its spirit, and intended effect, this language is simi lar to that used by Henry 11, when exasper ated at the recusant conduct of Thomas Beeket. In the presence of his courtiers, this king exclaimed, " What an unhappy prince am I, who, have not about me one man of spirit enough to rid me of a single insolent prelate and forthwith the Bishop of Canterbury was murdered before the al tar by four of the king's partisans ; and if there is not an immediate up-rising of the democrats to resist the acts of the govern- j meut, Mr. W AIUI'S words are less potent fur evil, than were those of an English King. That is all the difference. We have already said that we are sorry our neighbor perpetrated the folly of issu ing this address. It will be a badge of dis grace to him for the rest of his days, and it is a little singular he did not see this. In every war in which this country has been engaged, there have been among us those who opposed the government In the revolution we had the tories, and in his letters written against the efforts of the United States to secure their freedom, Ben edict Arnold used language similar to that now used by Mr. WARD. The tories have ever been a by-word of reproach. In our sec ond war with England, the federalists op posed the govei nment; and its leaders were ever afterwards in disgrace. And even in the Mexican war, which was pro jected for the acquisition of slave territo ries, and on this ground was opposed bo wlegs, and this opposition resulted in the ruin of that party. Can Mr. WARD not see the fate of his party, and of himself, in this past experience of the country? THE MILITARY SITUATION'. Since our last issue, the most notable military occurrence has been the failure of the immense cxp dition undertaken against Wilmington, under the command of Gen. BUTI.F.R and Commodore PORTER. The fleet bombarded Fort Fisher for some days with out any perceptible result, and finally with drew. The operations of the army, ai>- pear to have been confined to landing a few troops and re-embarking them. Want of co-operation between the two arms of the service seems to have been the cause of this disgraceful failure. From Thomas' army the news is, that Hood has escaped with the fragment of his routed army, so cut up and disorganized that he is impotent for mischief. There are indications that Thomas has concentrated his army, and is preparing to move in some direction for the purpose of striking an ef fective blow. The latest from Sherman are Charleston dispatches dated last Thursday, published in the Richmond newspapers, represent Gen. Sherman.'# forces are still concentra ting in South Carolina, between the Savan nah River and tlardeeville. Gen. Kilpat | rick was reported to be still in South Car olina. The Union troops were said to be building a new pontoon bridge across the Savannah, and steamers were removing the obstructions placed in the stream by the Rebels. Gen. Sherman had, it is stated, given notice to the citizens of Savannah to settle up their bank and other accounts within fifteen days. Gen. Grierson's raid on the Mobile and Ohio Railroad lias been successful, so far as heard from, without the loss of a man.— j He started from Memphis on the 21st of! December, and struck the road just below Corinth, Mississippi, and on the 27th had completely destroyed it to beyond Okaloua, a distance of over seventy miles, together with twenty-nine brigdes, a great deal of trestle work, a number of ears, three hundred army wagons, four thousand Rebel carbines, and much other property. He j had dispersed Forrest's dismounted camp, and was pushing on with the intention of rendering the line utterly useless as far as Meridian, one hundred miles further, and, if, possible, releasing the Union prisoners at Catawba, Miss. The ijuiet continues before Richmond and Petersburg. Considerable damage was done to buildings in the latter town on Tuesday by the opening of our artillery i upon it. Rut a feeble reply was made by the Rebel guns. Operations on the Dutch Gap Canal have been suspended for the present, and the Rebels have ceased firing j upon it. Gen. Sheridan has recently sent portions ! of his cavalry and artillery into Loudon and Fairfax counties, Virginia, who are j making all that region a very uneomforta- i ble place for Rebel guerrillas and sympa thizing secession residents. A number of i the latter have beep arrested, and their I ! ] property, which was made to subserve the ; purposes of Moseby's and White's outlaws, i , lias been seized. Secretary Stanton is conferring with Gen, j Sherman as to future movements. FROM IIARRISBURG. HAKRIHBUBG, Jan. 6, 1860. MR. EDITOR :—ln accordance with the constitu tional provision, the Legislature convened at the capitol on the first Tuesday of January, and organ ized. Hon. A. G. Olinsteftd, of Potter, was elected Speaker of the house, and Hon. W. J. Turrell, of Susquehanna, of the Senate. Mr. Benedict, of Huntingdon, was elected clerk of the house, and Mr. Humniersley, of Philadelphia, of the Senate.— Messrs. Turrell and Olinstead are both from the northern tier of counties, and both of their talants, industry, moral rectitude and unremitting attention to their duties as legislators eminently deserved, and fairly secured the honorable positions which they now occupy. They are both emphatically self-made men, having l>een reared in the counties which they now represent, when advantages afford ed to young men were not as favorable as the}' now are. The northern counties should feel honored hv the election of both speakers from their section of the State. Immediately after the organization and the read- j ing of the message, both branches adjourned over | till Tuesday the Oth, in order to ennble the Speak- | ers to appoint the Standing Committees. There j are to be several contested seats. Two sets of mem- I hers are on hand from the district composed of; Somerset, Fulton and Bedford counties. The re publicans are Ross and Armstrong, and the demo- 1 crats are'Myers and Findley. There is one of the | Lycoming members who is not yet safely in his seat. I observe among the members of the house many j familiar countanees. Still many of the members are new men, and several quite young men. Among ! thehuissiug are Bigham, of Allegheny, who is trans- j ferred to the Senate, Smith of Chester, McMurtrie of Blair, Lilley of Bradford, Watson of Philndel- : phis, and Johnson, the former Sjienker, of Craw- ; ford. 111 the Senate there are fewer changes, Ken sey of Bucks, Johnson, of Lycoming, and Penney of 1 Allegheny are not in their accustomed seats, they : will lie much missed. The workmen have commenced excavating upon I the east side of the capitol preparatory to the erect- ! ion of a wing to the building. This addition is | needed for the use of the library aud for commit- | tee rooms. The following is a full list of officers of the Leg islature : (fficers of ihe House. —Speaker—A. G. Olnistead, ! of Potter. Clerk—A. W. Benedict, of Huntingdon. Assistant Clerk—Wm. H. Denniston, of Alle- j gbeny. Transcribing Clerks—Caleb Walker, of Philadel phia ; A. D. Harlan, of Chester ; Jos. Willison, of Allegheny ; Thomas J. Kerr, of Washington. Postmaster—Alex. Adair, of Philadelphia. Sergeant-at-Arms—Charles E. Idell, of Philadel- : phia. Doorkeeper—Jas. T. MeJunkin, of Butler. Messenger-—Asa Nichols, of Bradford. In addition to the above are four Assistant Ser- j geant-at-Arms. four Assistant Doorkeepers, four i Messengers, and one Assistant Postmaster. Officers of the (senate. —Speaker—Wm. J. Turrell, j of Susquehanna. Clerk—Geo. W. Hauimersley. . Assistant Clerk—Lucius Rogers. Transcribing Clerks—Ebeuezer Williams, Mar- j tin Orladay, E. K. Haines, Henry Catlin, E. De ! Wolf. Sergeant-at-Arms—John G. Martin. Assistants—James S. Johnson and (diaries Wil- | liams. Doorkeeper—Joseph Itiblet. Assistants—J. B. Hinds, M. L. Novinger, Frank H. Acutf, Jacob H. Kline, Joseph T. Thompson, ! John A. Arnold. Messenger—Wm. Duffey. Assistant —Wm. Shields. PERSONAL. —Hon. Reuben E. Fen ton, Governor elect of tile State of New York, was inaugurated on Monday, '2d inst. His inaugural is published in the New York papers. —Thomas 0. Fletcher, the newlv-eleeted radical Governor of Missouri, was inaugurated in Jefferson City on Monday, and his inaugural mes sage was read. He takes hold ground for ridding the State of the curse of Slavery at the earliest mo ment. --Ex-Gov. Richard Yates, Union, of Illi nois, was 011 Thursday chosen United States Sen ator to succeed William A. Richardson, Democrat, whose term expires with this Congress. Mr Yates I was a member of the House of Representatives from 1851 to 1855, elected by the Whig party. For : the past four years he has been Governor of the ■ State. —.Secretary Fessenden has been nom inated for re-election to the Senate, by the caucus of Union members of the Maine Legislature. Gf course this foreshadows his resignation of the See j retaryship of the Treasury. He will, without dont 1 he elected. —Hon. Jacob M. Howard lias been re elected by the Legislature of Michigan to the U. S. Senate. He has faithfully and ahlv represented that State in the Senate. —The prominent candidates for the va cant Mission to France are John C. Fremont, Hen ry Winter Davis, Charles Sumner, Montgomery Blair, John P. Hale and W. P. Fessenden. —Hon. J. 8. Haldemen has been elected unanimously, President of the Harrishurg National Bank, in place of Wm. M. Kerr, Esq., deceased. —Gen. \Y ayne, who commands one of the bodies of rebels in Georgia, is said to be the son ! of Judge Wayne, of the United States Supreme Court. —The College of New Jersey has con ferred the degree of L. L. D. upon Mr. Lincoln.— This from a New Jersey institution may he consid ered rather generous. —Hon. F. P. Blair, accompanied by his son, Montgomery, recently visited the army, with the purpose of procuring permission to go to Rich mond. Gen. Grant refused to pass them, and they : returned. Considerable speculation has been in dulged in, as to the probable motive of their pro jected visit to the rebel capitol, and much undue importance attached to it. The most reasonable solution is, that it was upon private business, and wholly unauthorized by the President. —Hon. George Mifllin Dallas died at his residence in Philadelphia, on Saturday, Dec. Hist, in the 72d year of his age. Mr. D. has filled many important public stations, displaying much ability, and commanding the respect of the nation. —O. X. Worden, for seventeen years publisher of the Lnn.il/nrj f'hronirlr, has retired from that paper, which is now under the charge of J. It. CORN EI.II"s. Mr. W. formerly published a newspaper at Athens, in this county, removing thence to Lewisburg. He ha* been an able and in dustrious. journalist, and has done good service in the Union ranks. We wish him abundant success in life. —William Curtis Xoyes, a distinguished lawyer ; James William Wallack, the actor and manager, and Col. Charles A. May who made his name famous by his exploits during the Mexican war, particularly at Resaca de hi Palma and Mon terey, died in New York during the past week. —Hon, D. S. Dickinson has arrived in New York city, and entered upon the active dis charge of his duties as President of the New York and Liverpool Petroleum Company. —James W. Xye and William Stewart I have been elected United States Senators from the j new state of Navada. Nye is the well-known New York politician, who has lately been governor of the j territory. Stewart is a son-in-law of " Hangman " i Poots. of the rebel Congress. —Hon. G. A. Grow will address his fel-; low citizens at the Court House in Montrose, on Monday evening, January 16th 1865, on questions relative to a Restored Union. —The funeral of Hon. WM. L. DAYTON took place at Trenton on Tuesday last, and wag an iai- j [losing display. GOVERNORS MESSAGE. ! To the Senate and Ho use of Representative*. During the past year the people of this j Commonwealth have had reason to be grate ful to Almighty G probably be made heavier, and the local tax | authorized by unwise legislation and paid !by our people are excessive. In view of these circumstances, we should endeavor to | avoid increasing their burdens by making undue appropriations for any purpose. DONATION TO I.OCAL CHARITIES. In rny opinion this matter of donations to charities is fast running into a great abuse. Houses of refuge, and insane, blind, and deaf and dumb asylums appear to bo : ; proper subjects of State bounty, because ; their objects are of public importance ; and to be useful, as well as economically man-, aged, it seems to be necessary that they should be more extensive than would be required for the wants of a particular coun ty. But in our system ordinary local char- i ities are left to the care of the respective ; j localities, and to give the public money for their support is really to tax the inhabi- j tants of all the counties for the benefit of j one. RAILROAD MATTERS. i It being alleged that the Atlantic and i Great Western Railroad Company has not, ; in various particulars, obeyed the law by < j which it was incorporated, the Attorney General, on the suggestion of parties claim ing to be thereby injured, lias filed aq in? formation in equity against that company, seeking an injunction to prevent a contin uance of its past and the persistence of its intended illegal course. Since my last annual message, on the re- j port of John A. Wright, Esq., that the Sun bury and Erie Railroad was finished, I or dered the bcfpds remaining in the treasury to be delivered to t)ie cojnpany, It is a subject of just pride to the people of this Commonwealth that this great work i§ com pleted, whilst it opens a large and wealthy 1 part of the State.' t<> the commerce of the seaboard, and unites capital and enterprise within our horde s, it secures to the Com monwealth the payment of sums due her from the company. THE PAYMENT OK THE MILITIA. In my special message of 510 th April last, to which I refer, I communicated to the Legislature, in some detail, the circumstan ces connected with the advance by banks and other corporations of the funds to pay ! the volunteer militia of 18651. It is not necessary here to recapitulate them at length. The case was peculiar, and it is believed none quite like it has oc curred. The call for volunteers was made by the authorities of the United States, but it being found that men c mid not be got | under that call, the form of a call by the i State authorities for the defence of the State was, with the assent of the President, substituted. The United States agreed to furnish the arms, subsistence, and supplies, but it was alleged that Congress had made no appropriation covering the pay. In this state of things, the emergency being great the Secretary of War telegraphed to me thus : Wrshinoton, July 22, 1863. To ITis Excellency Gov. A'. G. Curtin: Your telegrams respecting the pay of militia called out under your proclamation of the the 27tli of June, have been referred to the President for in structions, and have been under his consideration. He directs me to say, that while no law or appro priation authorizes the payment, by the General Government, of troops that have not been mustered into the service of the United States, he will rec ommend to Congress to make an appropriation for the payment of troops called into State service to repel an actual invasion, including those of the State of Pennsylvania. If, in the meantime, you can raise the necessary amount, as has been done in other States, the ap propriation will be applied to refund the advance to those who made it. Measures have been taken for the payment of troops mustered into the United States service as soon as the muster and pay rolls are made out. The answer of this Department, to you as Governor of the State, will be given directly to yourself, whenever the Department is prepared to make answer. EDWIN M. STANTON, Secretary of War. The banks and other corporations refused to advance the money unless I would pledged myself to ask an appropriation from the Legislature to refund it. It will be noticed that the pledge of die President is clear and distinct, but, notwithstanding tho money was paid and the accounts settled and placed in the hands of the President before the meeting of Congress, no such recommendation as promised me was made, and for that reason the bill introduced for that purpose failed. The men were raised and placed under the command of Major General Couch and the United .States nffi ; cers in this Department. The troops were held in service longer than the emergency for which they called out required. Several | of the regiments were marched immediately I into distant parts of the State, by order of the officers of the army stationed in Penn : sylvania, against my repeated remonstran ces. They were retained, as was alleged, : to preserve the peace and enforce the draft. Nearly, if not quite, one-half the iyoney ; was paid to troops thus held, and after the | emergency had expired. Finding that the appropriation was likely to fail in Congress, I laid the matter before the Legislature, just prior to their adjournment, in May last, and an act of Assembly was immediately passed to refund the money out of the State treasury, which, as above stated, has been done. I ought to say that the appropriation by Congress was vigorously supported by all the members from this State in both branches. Having done everything in my ! power to procure the payment of this just ! claim of the State, I now recommend that the Legislature take the subject into con ■ sideration, with a view to induce proper ac tion by the President and Congress. THF. ENROLMENT OF THE MILITIA. By the act of 22d of August, 1864, 1 was authorized to cause an immediate enrol ment of the militia to be made, unless that recently made by the United States should be found sufficient, and to raise by volun teering or draft a corps of fifteen thousand men for the defence of our Southern border. The United States enrolment being found very defective, I directed an enrollment to be made, which is now in progress under the charge of Colonel Lemuel Todd, whom I appointed inspector general. A draft by ! the United States was then in progress, ! and it was not thought advisable to harass J our people by a contemporaneous State draft, even if a draft had been practicable under the present law. Volunteers could ; not be obtained, there being no bounties, and the men not being exempted by their ! enlistment in that corps from draft by the United States. Fortunately the United States placed an army, under General Sher idan, between us and the enemy, and thus provided effectually for our defence. With ; such adequate protection, as proved by the i brilliant campaign of that army, I did not think it right to incur the expense to the State of an independent army, and the : withdravvl of so many of our people from their homes and pursuits. Meanwhile ar ] rangements have been made with the au j thorities at Washington for arming,clothing, subsisting, and supplying the corps at the expencc of the United States, and an order : has been given by the authorities of the ; United States to furlough such volunteers in the corps as may be drafted by the Uui- I ted States, the corps so privileged not to | exceed 5,000 men. It is my intention to I raise 5,000 men during the winter, and 1 i have already adopted measures to that end. I There may occur irruptions of irregular bodies of the rebels, and it is well to be provided against them. The number pro posed to be so raised and put into actual | service will, in my judgement,be sufficient, and a regard t® due economy requires that no more than are sufficient should be placed on pay. The remaining 10,000 will be or ganized and ready for service in case of necessity. I invite your immediate atten i tion to the very able report of the Inspec tor General, which sets forth the defects in the law which he has discovered tn his pre | paration for carrying it into practical effect. OCR STATE AGENCIES The State agencies at .Washington and in the Southwest are in active aud success ful operation. I communicate herewith the reports of Colonel Jordan, at Washington, and Colonel Chainberlin, Agent for the Southwest. The provisions of th* law re quiring the agents.to collect nu.nc/s due by the United States to soldiers have been beneficient. A reference to their reports . will show the magnitude and usefulnes of this branch of their service. I desire to I | invite the attention of all our volunteers, ' officers, soldiers, and their families to the fact that the State agents will collect all their claims on the Government gratuitous-. ly, as 1 have reason to believe that many i are still ignorant of that fact,and are great ly imposed upon by the exorbitant com missions charged by private claim agents. EDUCATION OV SOLDIERS ORPHAN'S. Under the. aet of the tth of May, 18