Zile :111410tunger. It. W. JONES, ) mon. JAS. S. JENNINGS,c . 4 061,1Nmar y , One Constitut len, One Destiny."- StslliSobinSl4) WlllllllO, MR 0, 1864. FOR PRESIDENT IN 1864, SDI. GEORGE B. Iyk9CLELLAN, *Jed to the Decision of the Democratic Na tional Convention.) 'Wblk the army is lighting, you as cit izen* see. OW the war is prosecuted for =licrv.4l4o3) of the Union and Ike ow, and of your nationality and ?Air *ghat ap CINA).B. MicCLU.T.LAN. Pirrlie Conotitatke and the Union ohm Opilloastker. If they stand, they milt Aqui together; if they fall, they MN* iMll together"..Dattiet Webster. Mr CONVENTION. ,In conformity with the wonoz,es of the Dim loon* rio•rty, a Convention will be held in. the Court House, at Waynes inuig, on ZlP** evening, March 22, 1864, being *e first week of Court, for the iinipose of selecting a Chairman and Cents*Committee for the ensuing year, state esesider upon the propriety of - thprizbig Democratic Clubs in the yam townships of the County, and with a view to the transaction of such other Wines* as may be deemed of in *crest to the party. it is expected that thel4. S. B. Wa iles, -QS Beaver county, and several other •mbis spotters will address the conven tion. D. CRAWFORD, Chairman of the Central Cpmmittee CONVENTION‘ A Convention of the Democracy of * Chew* county, win beheld at the Court in Waynesburg, on SATUR DAY.= 12TH DAY OF MARCH kutir, for the purpose of selecting a delegatoto attend the State Convention forkisik will convene at thlddelphia, on hike Mho( March, at 12 o'clock, M., of that Mt, it is deemed necessary to call a ape eal for said purpose, prior to limb Court, in order to give the &haste maple time to attend the Con vention. And we respectfully urge a foil attoadmice from all parts of the soonty. a CRAWFORD, Mairerken of the Central Committee vie > 4l4Mined* and the Presidency. The Abolitionists are just now engaged in betuitiftA fight over their next candieste for the Pkiiiikcy. Lincoln is forestalling the settns oetheir convention by securing the entibisment df .Abolitio i Legislatures wher tger hem, end is evidently determined to tarifa* immense patronage of the govern ment to effect his re-nomination. Those facts ire iindering Chase and Fremont's triends'both indignant and desperate, and tlurformer have issued a' manifesto against "Old Abe," urging objections to him and p%*tinkliistiefeat if put on the track again. * nixitiMillidly in the latter notion, and are of the impression that it will be just as easy for dtitde Mac" to thrash either Chase or Fmarkij 1 114 fifisari radicals of Detroit at a late lielheringo passed the following Preamble nadcfasOldigme The Administration of Abra ham Lineal has neither shown sufficient ca pacity nor honest desire to guide the desti nies bf this republic in accordance with a dittindaind proper foreign or home policy, Con tub principles as are laid don in the ellemslatd pitOorm, therefore be it 'Biditked, sWisße we will support the prebestadrainistnitton in-tis efforts to over awe* !ha reboil*. with all the means at eeitollPßoaelMiit She ' MOO timetwe a, pm* the reznomination of brnb Un a:l7l,ol, k , etliditte for the Presidency..— .Mowed. ft*, choice is Fremont or Butler , ritelailiairiiveithelein inclined to unite upon ' nedibilfalhabiteXhase, Norton , &e., if it nestaeavy at the next convert mllroe#o-q, A. Lincoln. should receive aa in Olt . 2 lomillri m of the Bepublican party, apinsidirtin not to vote for him. The AyS State Committee of the AewiNiFogi MOP ,Aposintion hie also IN/SW/k 11014011 -111 zerialgikonek , Pret"ng dossesstltke somboation of Mr. Lincoln in , bitirer ' WOW = - 'lthetihese riteenshne among our oppo nents gill ripen into irreconcilable rtipturee the isle their Ceihrenties sisseibies at 1416 1 0111M I Tine; we ba little doe& hi the ~..; - let the Dernatiacy Preserve pierown upon 064'411W to 40 4 4 9 the .party, KO' !meow 410 111 /4 0 C - fiertatt, • MOP% waramaisodaranagi d . d,. Sew lierk, for pag ler grand . d, 047.tatnequoinghs old, by g i ving it vitr iol Another Amy* upon tie Roe. striation theory of President Lin, 1,3 coin (ki t fl . • • en. Werqiir 'Nis sign,. theirportions, 40 the Be Pan, *selflll'ewakflOit lip the deeirrellele corn* andiricked effort at JAB 111 ,idtglt to ttsslect himself by the Rotten Borough System of reconstructing the rebel States. Recent events show the gresmd work of this sudden earekeuing to danger. It is beginning to be found out by other aspirants for. the ,Presidency, in the opposition ranks, that Mr. Lincoln's sohrne looked beyond the mere perpetuation of Republican ascendancy, and that it has in its bowels a nice little scheme for his own re election, and hence their outbreaks. Mr. Wuirsu. D.tvis, the able but radical Representative from Maryland in Congress, a few days ago, let drive his shaft a this precious scheme of the President's, with a vigor unexpected alike to Democrats and Re publicans. The occasion which gave rise to the speech was the admission of a member of Congress from Arkansas, elected by some sort of hocns, pocus, inaugurated by the friends of the President in that unhappy State. Speaking of re-organization Mr. Davis said, "It must not be done under the procla mation of the President, which so far as it is anything more titan a State paper, is a grave usurpation upon the legislative authority of the people of the United States." , As to the practical working of this scheme he used the following language : "In the course of next February, the seat which you, sir, now occupy will be occupied by the Vice President., and we will be com pelled to count the electoral vote for Presi dent and Vice President of the United States. Suppose a state government be recognized by one branch of Congress and not recogniz ed by the other, or be recognized by the President and not recognized by Congress ; and suppose the electoral vote presented from that State should determine the Presidential election- ' who will decide that political ques tion ? Yet that question is involved here, as the mere incident to the right of a gentle man to a seat on this floor." And again : "I wish.the House to understand that they do not merely pass upon the question wheth er the gentleman who is the claimant had re ceived so many votes or whether somebody else had received so many votes ; but .they pass upon the question whether a small pro portion of the small population of Arkansas shall send here a representative to help control the residue of the nation ; whether they shall be entitled to send senators to the other house of Congress; whether they shall be en titled to send electors of President and Vice- President, possibly to turn the ,balance of the presidential electors. Those, are the questions invlived, and the discussion• has developed ahem to my satisfactlnn." 'He makes the following allusion to this scheme as being worked out in Gen. Banks' department : "Let me refer to the proclamation of Gen. Banks, I refer to it became dangerous doc trines are gaining a, hold upon the public mind, in my , judgment, touching the foundations of the republic. No man has a greater regard for Gen. Banks than I have ; but I shudder when I find his proclamation summoning the people Louisiana to an election under a declaration that martial law is the funda mental law of the State or Lousiana." He then returns to the case in band, with a force that should shame these wicked schemers and silence forever the brazen advocates of this most wicked usurpation upon the rights of the people of the other States of this Union And here in this case what do we find ? The provost-marshal at Fort Smith, Arkansas, issues this paper : "This is to certify that Volney V. Milor is a duly authorized commissioner of elections in and for Sebastian county, in the State of Arkansas, and is a duly authorized acting commissioner in and for the congressional district of Northwestern Arkansas, appointed as such agent by the Union Association of the State of Arkansas." A provost-marshal certifies that a political caucus, getting together in a corner, authoriz ed a man to erect a state in Arkansas If there were no other ground, Mr. Speaker, I would protest against referring this paper to any committee. Mr. Dawes—Letjne say to the gentleman from Maryland that the certificates of all the representatives from Virginia for the last fifty years have been signed by a commission er of elections, and the gentleman has never been shocked thereat till to-day! Mr. Davis, of Maryland—The gentleman from Massachusetts does not perceive the point. It is not whether the law of a state may prescribe one apecies of certificate or another, but it is that it appears on the face of the paper produced that the only authen tic certificate is that of a provost-marshal, the marshal of a camp, the executive officer of a military organization ! That is not the law of Arkansas. And he does not certify to the election, but he certifies to the fact that this man Milor was appointed "as such agent by the Union Association of the State of Arkansas." Is the Union Associction a state ? Is it, as a body of men,. known to the law ? Is it a government ? Is it any thing excepting a caucus collected together, sanctioned by the military authorities, to send members to this House ? Now, in reference to another point made by the gentleman from Massachusetts I respectfully say that a "military governor" is appointed under no liw or the United States ;- he has no assigned functions. It is a mere name created in an office in Wash ington, and given to a man who is not charg ed with any legal duties. A general is known to the law and has a right to exer cise all over the rebel country within the limits of his command the authority of a military commander ; that is, to remove Mors, to suppress violence, and to exer cise th• ordinary police powers in time of war. Beyond that he has no power." The New Pension List. Theexpeneesof tills war are not even guessed at. The estimates of the Treasury Department do not nearly represent it.— When they come to be added up, the ag gregate will astound the country. "A visit to the Pension Office reveals the consequences of this terrible war. The claims for pensions already filed by widows and mothers exceed one hundred and fifty thousand. It is anticipated that about half that actually exist have been presented. The claims already audited and allowed amount to about twelve millions of dollars per an num. Suppose, then, but half that exist at this thee have been presented, ft a fair in *rem* that it will require twenty-five mill ions of dollars per annum to pay our pension roll aiose ip the years that are to come." • Wit is alist, 644 — 01 e l! to be MINA eat kW * thielleribi 3 ia deid phew tend*d. sr No immim por t is tei Th e Abehudiels k 110. - held in the *per Y a few even ingebe* at libigh 100 1 45 1030 a deliver ed her, famous :Abolition Lecture, circulated a pamphlet through WI-crowd assembled de lineatielt and expounding their (dd iiloctrine of AMALGAMATION, under the more learned and less offensive name of."lfisosesNATloN," a combination of Greek words which means to MINGLE and GENERATE. This pamphlet seems to have met the ap probation of the learned doctrinaires of the Abolition School—male and female. Theo dore Tilton, the Editor of the "Independent," (which publishes the laws of the Milted States "by authority,") has long been a con vert to the doctrine that the white race would be improved by amalgamation—we beg pardon, by "miscegenation"—and has openly advocated it. Wendell Phillips, Mrs. Stone, the New York Tribune, the "Anti- Slavery Advocate" and the "Anglo-African" have each given in their approbation, more or less direct, to this abominable doctrine, to say nothing of numerous lights of the Aboli tion party, as Parker Pillsbury,lLueretia Mott, William Wells Brown and others, who are openly and directly engaged in its propagation. But to return to this curious pamphlet.— It has for its motto: "The elements So auxin in him that Nature may stand up And say to all the world, this is a man r It defines the word thus : "Miscegenation: The theory of the Blending of the Races, applied to the American White Man and Negro." It treats the subject under the fol hawing heads : 1. The Mixture of Caucasian and African Blood Essential to American Progress. 2. 'Row the American may become Come ly. 3. The Type Man a Miscegea—The Sphynx Riddle Solved. 4. The Irish and negro first to Commin gle. 5. Heart Histories of the Daughters of the South. 6. Miscegenetic Ideal of Beauty in Women 7. The future—No White—No Black. The following are the conclusions to which the pamphlet comes, as having been estab lished by its reasoning : 1. "Since the whole human race is of one family, there should be, in a republic, no distinction in political or social rights on ac count of color, race, or nativity. 2. The doctrine of human brotherhood implies the right of white and black to in termarry. S. The solution of the negro problem will not be reached in this country until public opinion sanctions a union of the two races. 4. As the negro is here and cannot be driven out, there should be no impediment to the absorption of one race in the other. 5. Legitimate unions between whites and blacks could not possibly have any worse effect than the illegitimate unions which have been going on for more than a century at the South. 6. The mingling of diverse races is proved by all history to have been a positive bene fit to the progeny. 7. The Southern rebellion is caused less by slavery than by the base prejudice resulting from distinction of color ; and perfect peace can only come by a cessation of that dis tinction through an absorption of the black race by the white. S. It is the duty. of anti-slavery men everywhere to advocate the mingling of the two races. 9. The next presidential election should secure to the blacks all their social and po litical rights; and the progressive party should not flinch from conclusions falsely deducible from their own principles. 10. In the millenial future the highest type of manhood will not be white or black, but brown ; and the union of black with white in marriaftwill help the human fatally the sooner to maze its great destiny." An apology is due our readers for intro ducing this disgusting subject to their notice. But "Miscegenation" is the legitimate result of the rnocinEssivs doctrines of Abolitionism. Cause and Effect. The late election in Spartz township, Crawford county, furnishes a useful lesson. A few days prior to the election the Aboli tionists held a meeting, and among other proceedings adopted the following resolu tions : • 1. Resolved, That we will vote for ao Democrat for any office. 2. Resolved, That we will support the ad ministration, MG' or WRONG. The effect of these resolutions, says the Democrat, was to drive quite a number of considerate and conservative Republicans away from their party, and the election re sulted in the success of the Democratic can didates by about seventy majority Last fall Woodward's majority in the same town was but . two. The proscriptive and fanat ical ideas of the charcoal radicals were emphatically repudiated, as they will be in every community made up of intelligent and patriotic men. Organization of the Senate. -On the 29th ultimo, the Senate—after a two months dead lock—was organized, Dr. St. Clair having taken his seat. Consider able excitement existed in Harrisburg, and it is said that fully four thousand people were in and around the capital. After reading the returns, the oath was adminis tered tosthe nets Senator, when that body proceeded to business. Mr. Johnston moved to take up the bill allowing soldiers to vote at the next October election. The yeas and nays were called by Mr. Clymer, and result in 17 ayes and 16 nays. On motion to pro ceed to the election of Chief Clerk, an amendment was offered that the Senate first elect a Speaker. The amendment was lost, and the following officers then elected : George W. Hammersely, Chief Clerk ; G. S. Berri, Assistant Clerk ; John S. Morton, Sergeant-at-Arms; Transcribing Clerks, Jonas R. Butterfield, George M. Semmer, Theo. Hill ; Doorkeeper, Joseph Riblett ; Messen ger, Philip H. Ohs& The Senate adjourn ed. Wanted. We beve a cottaidarable amount of white vnuthiu' g to de at this office*, which we would lite to lave done lennedletoty.:77lZeneedlle 114 trait .Cessier mika iftif ..0 0 ,44.,..4 4 , 4 „. tae anninlo aiasariatopasibarn a like am* far tie astir* abolition party in Ohio. Mee the Money Goes. • Never was money spent by any %van ment so laNiably andgecidlessiT as by ours to day. Fabiloon prices kfhve been paid for everything furnished to the army and navy, and still the prodigal waste goes on. "The War Committees at Washington had Mr. Knap, formerly of Pittsburgh, now of Newark, New Jersey, before them on Thurs day. He testified that he was in receipt of one cent per pound royalty on all heavy guns manufactured. Colonel Rodman, the in ventor of the Rodman gun and the process of casting cannon hollow, was before the Com mittee on Saturday, and testified that he re ceived oue cent per pound royalty on every gun manufactured for the use of the Gov eenmeot. As some of these guns weighs over 60,000 pounds, it needs no great knowl edge of arithmetic to discover that both Mr. Knap and Colonel Rodman are making a "big thing" out of the war. "Slavery is Dead." The Albany Argus, commenting upon the oft-repeated assertion of the administration that "slavery is dead," and the "backbone of the rebellion broken" very truly observes : "The Abolition leaders have proclaimed that the war should be prosecuted until sla very was destroyed. If that result has been accomplished, why is it prolonged ? In the same strain that the above announcement is made, we are told that the 'backbone of the rebellion is broken,' that 'thousands of the people of the rebel States are returning to the Union, and great numbers of their ar mies are ready to desert to our lines as soon as the opportunity occurs; and yet the President has just issued a proclamation for a draft for five hundred thousand more men ! If 'slavery is dead,' and the back bone of the rebellion is broken, as is asserted by 'all the Union papers in the loyal States,' where is the necessity for this extraorUinary demand for men ? Is it to pile up the na tional debt another thousand millions of dol lars to' enrich shoddy contractors and ac commodate place-hunters, or is it to per petuate the present imbecile and corrupt ad ministration ?" Gen. M'Clellan Among the Soldiers. Gen. relellan was present at the recep tion of the First New York cavalry on the 18th, and was received by his old comrades in-arms with the most lively demonstrations of respect and affection. After the shouts of welcome had somewhat subsided he ad dressed them as follows : "MY FIiIIINDS AND COMRADZO: I came here not to make a speech to you, but to welcome you home, and express to you the pride I have always felt in watching your ca reer, not only when you were with me, but since I left the Army of the Potomac, while you have been fighting battles under others, and your old commander. I can tell you, conscientiously and truly, I am proud of you in every respect. There is not one page of your record—not a line of it—of which you, your State and your country may not be proud. I congratulate you on the patriotism that so many of you have evinced in your desiLe to re-enter the service. I hope, I pra and I know that your future career will be as glorious as you past. I have one hope, and that is we may yet serve together some day again." At the conclusion of Gen. M'Clellan's speech, di.; enthusiasm of the military pres ent became very demonstrative. They crowded around him eagerly, endeavoring to grasp his bands, and to salute him, and only by the utmost exertions of himself and of some personal friends was he enabled to de part from the scene. The Report Garbled. The New York Journal of Commerce, in speaking of the Congressional edition of Gen. McClellan 's army report, says : "It contains not less than fifty errors and omissions, some of great importance. In one instance a page aad a half of the mania scriptreport is left out of the printed edition." Now, is this not sufficient to open the eyes of honest, conservative Republicans to the monstrous guilt of the present national ad ministration ? It was not enough to mani fest a willingness to sacrifice McClellan and his whole army, by withholding reinforce ments, when confronted by a vastly superior force ;it was not enough to keep back the report for more than year after it should have been published ; it was not enough, to appease pirty malignity, to displace the most skilful and successful General of the army ; but all this must be folbiwed by garbling his official report, and thereby suppressing the truth of history. We believe this is the first occurrence of the kind that has taken place since the formation of our Government.-- What do the people think of such work ? A Curious Coincidence. At the Presidential election of 1860 four teen thousand three hundred and forty-seven votes were cast in the State of Florida. Ac cording to Mr. Lincoln's proclamation, four teen hundred and thirty-four converts to Abolition would suffice to bring the State back to the Union ; but while he has failed to get that number as yet, and may there fore lose the electoral vote of that State, the killed and wounded in the last expedition just about amount to it—the Tribune's es timate being fifteen hundred. It will be singular if, when the accounts are corrected, the number should be exactly fourteen hundred and thirty-four. Mmlocratio Victory. At an election recently held in the borough of Northumberland, the Democrats • carried their entire ticket by a handsome majority. Both parties had tall tickets in the field, and the Abolitionists were more than usually ac tive. The result is, that the borough of Northumberland this day presents the proud spectacle of not beving one single individu al of nigger worshipping proclivities in a municipal office. Hew Hampshire Beetion. The New Hampshire adicer-holdera at ilfashiarto, n are Asking. hods to carry the iihrte for the Lineohiceracy in March.— Preparation are trade to send hicene all *We* OM's* harm es, etc., to Tote. 'he posoaragy st Ihtif atop ate groat eon/to aaW lbw ilitobilOotil, but t paioquitt troolooloot ozoloo he everoalM 10.111110111. Awl C0 M11 4 . 011110 4 0 resorted to by the Alibolitiosiott. Make Your Vaunting True, When General Gantt,--the "loyal Lin colatte who, "did" the '!whining Wilkes" so handsomely in Arkansas, for expressing "in cembuy"-sentiments—was in this city, he delivered a speech in which, as reported in the press, "he declared that he had in pos session the names of the Pennsylvania Dem ocratic leaders who had encouraged the South to rebel by offers of assistance as soon as a Southern army was put in the field to assault the government." If he made this assertion in earnest he is, or ought to be, able to substantiate it by producing names and the facts or circumstances going to establish the guilt of the parties. We now call upon him to do so. Nay more, we defy him or any of his-co-laborers in the field of treason, hypocrisy and calumny, o success fully implicate any leading Pennsylvunia Democrat in the crime he falsely attributes to them. The Abolition press and party having substantially endorsed his assertion, he or they must now produce the proof or stand before the public in the light of con fessed culumniators.—[llarrisbutg Union. Unfortunate affair at Lancaster Ohio. We learn that an unfortunate affair took place at Lancaster, on last Saturday, in which two men, and perhaps three, lost their lives. The particulars we have not learned, but the following is the general outline of the affair as reported to us. A young man, the son of a citizen residing near the city, had some high words with a couple of soldiers in a saloon, who both made a violent as sault upon him. The father of the young man was at the time on the opposite side of the street, not knowing that his son was in the saloon ; but hearing a noise he crossed the street to as certain the cause. Entering the saloon he discovered his son attempting to defend himself against unequal odds. On the im pulse of the moment, the father drew a re volver and fired at his son's assailants, killing one of them on the spot, and wounding the other so that he died shortly afterward. The father and son lett the city immedi ately. The son was overtaken by some soldiers, who tore him from his horse, threw him on the ground, and beat him and stamped on him till they left him for dead. Re was, however, living at the time our in formant left., though his recovery is ex tremely doubtful. The father escaped, and was not to be found. Great excitement prevailes, we understand, at Lancaster, and a sort of • "Reign of Terror" has been in augurated there.—[Ohio Statesman, 23d inst. The Two Rival Candidates. A Washington special says :—An interest ing correspondence has taken place between Chase and Lincoln on the subject of the Pomeroy circular. Chase sent a note to the President saying he had not seen the Pome roy circular until published, and that he was disappointed in it; but that, nevertheless, at the solicitation of his friends, he stood in the attitude of a candidate for the Presidency, and he submitted to Mr. Lincoln the ques tion whether such an attitude was incompat ible with his riations as a member of the Cabinet. The . President replied that he had not seen the Pomeroy circular, and as to whether Mr. Chase's candidacy was incom patible with his position as a member of the Cabinet, that was a question for him (Mr. Chase) to. decide. Passions, like wild horses, when pro perly trained and disciplined, are capable of being applied to the most noble purposes, but when allowed to have their own way, they become dangerous in the extreme. Nigion of pour. Receipts on Subscription since Jan. 6th, 1864. Ain't. Vol. No. Jacob Arnold,. 51 00 6 10 Wni. fleaton7Jr., 4 00 5 29 Sol. Gordon, 1 75 5 50 Isaac Taytor, 2 00 6 18 Thome@ Ritchey, • 5 00 6 03 G. W. Bell, 200 5 45 A J Mallet 2 00 1 50 Cyrus Billingsley 1 50 6 31 Al Gilbert 160 3 25 David H Johnson 2 00 6 50 Josephus Johnson 1 00 6 31 Jas Merdenall 1 00 6 09 Daniel Eaton 1 00 In full John A Patterson 2 00 1 50 El J Wilson 200 6 31 Andrew /Inglis' 4 00 6 26 J Carpenter 1 23 In full Th, man Scott 3 00 6 21 Jes/ is Mundell 2 00 6 32 Canis him 2 00 6 32 John Gsmbett 7 70 5 43 11 P Bayard 100 6 05 Wm Maud 100 6 05 8 Burk 60 5 45 Joel Harris 1 30 4 25 Jona Mlllumpby 4 00 5 50 W. J. (siseray I 00 6 32 ' Hiram Stephens 4 00 5 50 James Scott 2 09 6 31 John Fanner 50 5 40 A J boughuer 9 00 In lull Writ Penn 2 00 5 44 Israel Braes 2 00 6 26 John 4/ Patterson 3 27 5 06 Geo W Odenbaugh 5 40 5 42 J 4. !tufty 356 5 41 John R Bell 5 00 6 28 F A J Gray It 00 6 07 A. 1 Goodwin 200 6 36 Joe M'Neely 80 In full Abner hlerrie \ 100 5 49 E V Strawn . 2 00 5 16 H Maple 600 5 50 Win Black 2 10 In lull Tim Johns 5 00 6 25 Jas L Bridges 205 5 20 James Ill'Eeen $ 00 5 60 Hamilton Scott 5 00 5 30 Wm D. Kent $ 50 6 12 Mrs. BU/1111 Lindsey 1 00 5 27 1 John Mason 206 5 50 Gen B B Wilson 400 6 33 Milton '$ !Sonia $ 00 6 35 Wm Woodruff 1 00 6 03 Wm Hoge $ 00 6 27 1 James Eaton 200 6 33 Wm G Spragg 200 6 21 , Edward Cleavenger . 1 00 5 40 Hiram Bane 200 6 15 Mrs. 6 11 Gregory 200 6 35 Sam'l /look 1 25 6 24 Jame' M Sayers 200 '6 35 Ira 91 Condit 138 6 09 Lewis D Ryan .200 6 05 Enoch Maw) 2 50 lit fall A Wilson, rk., 3 .50 6 95 John Hoge I 00 5 50 Joseph Enisely 4 31 5 50 Was Throc.kmertma II 50 5 44 Hon Jas Gres 920 0 30 A L Today $ 50 6 14 61 C Keiser w / 00 5 30 Layton Steart 2 CO 6 35 11 L Ledwasb, Sig.. / 61 5 31 43 P Sosalloy S 00 6 50 IV . $ 00 5 47 Slosseftiee 1 00 $ 33 Feter 1 00 $ 25 Jaiimoirrindford 1 00 0 7 , Jsmoilipalb Fez . 11 OS 5 16 WiiiBsison 5 0 r n keibb• li 00 OP 5 41 8 1 1114111. CliMer 5 IS 42 rag, il l le • I I pia I at . J ik' ' r is . .‘ • or „ s 35 1 ' 4 ' 4 Ss -.6. fik- , iii Gen. Sherman, at Selma, Ala. Junction Formed with Logan's forces. The Object of the Movement. WAsnmozoN, March I.—Gen. Sher man is reported, at the War Depart ment, as having been at Selma in Ala. This is in accordance with his instruc tions. He left Vicksbnrg with twenty days' rations, in light marching order, and intended to march twenty miles a day, and make a lodgment on the Up per Alabama river. It was left to the option of Gen. Sherman, whether the depot should be established at Selma or Montgomery. He chose the former po sition on the Northeast bank of the riv er. It was agreed that Gen. Logan should move from Huntsville and form a junc tion with Sherman; in Alabama. Sher man moved promptly at the appointed time, and outgeneralling Polk, threw his forces between Mobile and Polk's army, and falling on the forces of the mitered General, scattered them and moved on to Selina. The War Department has trustworthy information that Logan's cavalry has made a junction with Sherman's forces at Selina. Gen. Johnston is being alarmed for the safety of Mobile, and has sent one division of his army to that city. As Sherman's orders are to destroy the Mobile, Montgomery and Atlanta Railroad, it is poatent that John ston will also be cut off from Mobile, and must, if pressed, fall back to the-Atlan tic coast or to Lee's army in Virginia. The army of Gen. Sherman is of suf ficient strength to warrant success in case of an attack by the combined forces of his present position, and reinforced by Logan's corps he may safely attack John ston's army. The movements of Thomas to Dalton i s adding strength to Sherman's position, and threatens the rebel position at At lanta. The expedition into Florida is in tended to attract the enemy in that di rection, while Sherman and Thomas moved into the heart of Alabama and Georgia. There is the utmost confidence here that the movement into Alabama will be a success. Disaster to Gen. Smith's Expediton ---Its Return to Memphis---Heavy Fighting and Forced Retreat. Advices from Memphis to Friday last, report the return .of Gen. Smith's ex pedition at 11 o'clock the previous night. An officer of the expedition furnishes the following summary of its operations, from which it is evident the expedition has returned very much cut up : On the 18th the expedition reached Okolua, on the Mobile and Ohio Rail road, seventy-five miles south of Cor inth and one hundred and thirty miles southeast of Memphis. Here they heard that Sherman had captured Meri dian, and was advancing east. On the 19th the expedition marched to Egypt, a station on the Mobile and Ohio railroad, where was captured and destroyed a vast quantity of confederate corn. One column went through Ab erdeen, the other went to the west of the railroad, concentrating at Prairie Station. The Aberdeen column, under Gen. Grierson, had considerable skir mishing near that place, and destroyed over 100,000 bushels of confederate corn at Prairie station, also a large lot of confederate cotton. On the 20th the expedition broke up camp. At .5:,,30 Forrest was reported in force at West Point. At 11 a. m., our advance skirmished heavily with the enemy. At 3 p. m., we halted within a. wile of West Point. We lost one lieutenant killed and five men wounded in the skirmish, and killed one rebel captain, capturing a rebel major and one private. On the 11st we moved on West Point and found Forrest, Lee, Chalmers and Roddy combined against us. They tried to cut our columns in two, but without success. Very heavy fighting occurred both in the rear and on the advance. The 2d lowa had a number killed and wounded in a gallant charge. From 200 to 300 rebels hovered on each flank, while all the heavy force in our rear was constantly charging. We here lost three field pieces (4 pounder steel gims,) which were spiked before captured, All their ammunition was saved. .Smith now fell back slowly, our troops ambushing the rebels as they ad vanced. The rebel loss was quite heavy. Smith burned every trestle on the Memphis and Ohio Uailroad, and destroyed miles of the track and large quantities of corn as we fell back. - On the 22d we broke camp at 1 a. tn., after resting only two hours. There has been severe fighting in the rear all day. As the roads were ambushed at every available point, volley after volley was poured into them at short range as they advanced; but having so much the largest force they continued to press our rear heavily ' • the rebel column mov ing on each flatilt with the evident de sign of reaching the Tallahatchie in ad vance of our force, and forming a jiinc r tion to prevent our crossing ; and cap ture the whole command ; but by forced marching Gen. Smith passsd both flanking columns, and marching all night, crossed safely at New Albany. 23d, noon.—The rear guard has been skirmishing all day. 24th.—Skirmish ing is continued. 25th.—We march ed fifty-two miles, arriving at Memphis at 11 p. in. The most of the expedi tion, however, stopped at Colliersville. The following is an estimate of the re sults : The expedition destroyed over a mil lion bushels of corn, tore up and de stroyed miles of the Memphis and Ohio Railroad track,. burned many bridges and trestles, captured and brought in over 1500 mules and horses, about 2,000 negroes, and over 300 rebd prisoners, It is impose% to give our toss, but it is awe kw then the enemy's. The evaiiissa . . was saaasisail at every ana In every pudeug ar ere et, importaat one of mak*, a ' l"uthsn .4161116 brdwitiv . viikek 14 our itpsa minty tif the inovensea* New Jersey s 4 Ptansylvania cavalry. regiments, which caused a week's delay in the starting of the expedition. The retreat was not at any time a rout, al-_ though there was son* straggling. General Smith's. Cavalry Ezpedition. Mencius, Feb. 32.—The diary of an officer attached to Gen. Grierson's col umn, Gen. Smith's Cavalry expedition, furnishes little of importance beyond what was previously reported. Out loss in the attack on the enemy at West Point was forty killed and waunded,—,. We drove the rebels out, and destroy ed a number of cars, culverts, the depot, several miles of Railroad track, and a large amount of corn and cotton. • In this fight our loss was about 100, mostly prisoners. Our total loss during the expedition was about 150. This column burned about 3,000 bales of con federate cotton, and over a million bushels of corn, and captured over 100 prisoners, over 1,000 mules, and a mul titude of negroes. Owing to so large a portion of our force being required to guard the trains, captured property and; negroes, we were greatly outnumbered , at Okalona by Forrest, whose effective force was over 5,000 strong. Cotton, dull and lower, good mid dling, at 61a63 ; Strict, do. at 60. Words of Wisdom. The subjoined extract from Daniel Webster's great oration on the comple tion of the Bunker Hill. monument, June 17th, 1843,,may be profitably read and consiered by all goodcitizensat the present time, especially if taken in con nexion with the flagrant outrages per petrated by the military in the recent elections in the States of Maryland and Delaware : •°A military republic, a government founded on mock elections, and sup ported only by the sword. is a move ment, indeed, but a retrograde and dis astrous movement, from the regular and old fashioned monarchical system. ' If men would enjoy the blessings of repub lican government, they can only hope to do so by reason, by mutual counsel and consultation, by a sense and feeling of general interest, and by the acquiescence of the minority in the will of the majori ty, properly expressed ; and above all, the military must be kept according to the language of our bill or rights, in the strict subordination to the civa authority.-- Wherever this lesson is not both learned and practiced there can be no political freedom. Absurd, perposterous it is, a scoff and a satire upon free forma of constitutional liberty, for forms of !gov ernment to be prescribed by military leaders, and the right of suffrage to be exercised at the point of the sword."-- Works, vol. 1, p. 98. Ififer. The Indians of Idaho are the Sulfites, Bannocks, Flatheads, Blackfeet, Nez Perces, and other segments of once great but now fading nationalities. The Government has coacluded a treaty with them by which for $200,000 they surrender a large portion of their rich lands. • stir The number of rebel prisoners of war now in our hands is upwards of forty-six thousand—about three thous and commissioned officers and between forty and forty-five thousand non-com missioned officers and enlisted men. ,:tte lzz i; Latest News. A Riot occured at Dayton, Ohio, the other day, commenced by a squad of soldiers attempting to destroy the Empire newspaper office. Some thirty shots were fired, and one man was killed, and two wounded. Gen. Sherman is back from his ex tended reconnoissance, and did not go near Selma, and never intended such a thing Gen. BRAGG has been appointed - Commander-in-Chiet of the Rebel armies. He is the most unpopular offi cer in the Confederacy, but a great pet of Jeff. Davis. Our loss in the late reconnoissence from Chattanooga toward Dalton, Ga., did not exceed two hundred in killed. wounded and missing. The enemy's loss was five hundred. GEN. KILPATRICK'S RAID.—New York, March 4.—A special dispatch to the Herald says that, on Wednesday, Gen.. Kilpatrick had reached Hanover Junc tion and got ten miles south of that point. He destroyed forty miles of the Virginia Central Railroad from Betty& Dam to the Junction,_ thus cutting off Lee's supplies from Richmond. Thp Richmond and Fredericksburg Railroad, from the Mattapony Bride to the Pamunky river, was also entirely destroyed. Gen. Kilpatrick evaded as far as pos sible in his raid, a, cohesion with wor large force of the enemy, but son* skir nishing with Gen. Hampton's caval ry was carried on upon his right flank, north of Spottsylvania Court House. WASHINGTON, March 4.—The Presi dent has received a dispatch from Gin. Butler, stating that General alpalnisk yesterday K arrived within our lines, with a loss of Something less than one hun dred 4.nd fifty men, having had skirmish es on the way. Among the missing are Cols. Dahlgreen, Cooke, and Litch field. Dalgreen and Cooke are supposed to be prisoners. Gen. Kilpatrick destroyed a large portion of the Virginia Central Railroad, and several mills along the James river, as well as other valuable property. He Pmitligkid to the suburbs and outer for tifications of Richmond. COLORED SOLDLERR Hmeo.—By order of Gen. Seymour, three colored solikars of the 55th Massachusetts regiment, named Lloyd, Cloak aisd Smith, were h!tall last we s *art VA* tr vio'ating the. woman : woman who lived int la V •-• ' 4l4*' eiNIP Mil ligan. The, _ ed to haft, 4 hours, as al to 'P'"U CI