Truth and Rigbt -God and our Country Two Dollars per Annnia. VOLUME 13. BLOOMSBURG. COLUMBIA COUNTY, PA., WEDNESDAY JULY 3, 1861. NUMBER 26. IF, ii. JACOBF, Proprietor.; OP TIT r? Mnf?TFT I s . i W. fl. JiUOBY, emceon EttiIIM.,lfa&qnar8 oelOW m arset, - v TERMS: Two Dollars per annum it paid their masters. lathers found in thio area within si months from the time of siibscri- BOn for di88oIuiion of the Union'? bine: two dollars, and fifty cents ii not paid ,. . , - ,- . . , within the year. No subscription taken for I a1 lh slaTe S,ate ar.9 nt)l "cognized "a less period than, six months; no discon- J as equal in the Confederacy, has, for sever 'tinuaoces permitted until all arrearages are al years, been the cry' of demagogues and paid, unless at "the option of the editor. ' ' j conspirators. But what is the truth Not Ike terms of advertising tout be as follows:' '. , ... .. u ... . i 'One square; twelve line!, three times, $1 00 ' 0lil' "cording to the theory, but the actual "C .. I '. . . : nrufiir nf thn fin worn mnul . lhrt jilaVA State liiciy buuscuciu luseitiuu, . ...... i9 . tOne square, three mouths, 3 00 One year, . .' . ..... 8 Oo t . i UFCRt THE GLORIOUS BiXXEB. , . ... - ' Unfurl the slorioos banner, ; Let it sway upon the breeze, .. The emblem of onr country's pride, On land and on seas The emblem of our liberty, . Borne proudly in the war, The hope of everr freeman The gleaming Stripes and Stars. The glorious band of patriots, - Who eave the Flag, it's birth; Have writ with steel in history, ' The record nl it; worth ; From East to West, from sea to sea, . From pole to tropic sun. , Will eye crow breh,t. and hearty throb high. At the name of WXSFUNGTON. Ah, proudly shou'd we beat if, , And euard thi flasr.rd onrs, Borne bravely in its infancy, Amid the darker hours ! Only the brave may beat it, , A guardian it shall be. For those wbo well have won, , The right to boast of liberty. . Ex-Seerelarj Dolt on Secession Conspiracy. DUTY OP'kFJtTlirKY.TO SUPPORT 'I UEGOVF.ltNMENT. xektu'KY's nkctralttt. . I The Legislature, ' seems, has determined ty resolution that the Mate. pending the pre ent unhappy war, shall occupy neutral ground I must say. in all ' frankness, and without desiring to reflect upon t the course 'or sentiments of any, that, in this straggle for the existence of our Government, f can 'neither practice nor profess, nor feel neu trality.' I would as soon think of being neutral in a contest between an officer of i justice and an incendiary arrested: in the attempt to fire the dwelling over my head; for the Government whose overthrow is nought, is for me the f-helter not only , of home, kindrec and friends, but ot every i,;k i , i om i on this side of the era ve. If, however, , CJ th new Republic, that is all. Alas, 'rroro a natural horror of fratricidal strife, or ! forjlhat dream of the- Presidency of from intimate, social and business reUtions Soitthern Republic which has disturbed With the Soutb, Kentucky shall determine manT P':low in tn South, aud perhaps, to maintain the neutral attitude assumed ' 'e ia tLe w8t ,?0 and whoe lurid Ior her by her LejfisUture, ber position will , ght like a demon 's torch, is leading a na 'Mill be an honorable one, ihonah falling , 'n to perdition I The 'clamor that is in- hort of that full meagre of lovalty which her history has so constantly illustrated.- Iler F.xecmive ignoring as l am happy to ' believe alike the popular and legislative violated, should not receive a mo sentiments of ih State, has, by ' proclama- ment's -consideration. Popular government lion, forbidden the Government of the Uni-1 do8 indeed, rest upon the consent of the ted States from marching troops across her ! territory. This is in no sense a nentral step ! bot one of aggressive hostility. The troops of the Federal Government hare as clear a j constitutional right to pass over the soil of ! Kentnckv as ther have to march along the i j j , meet of Washington and could ibis pro-J hibition be effective, it would not only be a j violation of the fundamental law", but would in all its tendencies, be directly in advance ment of the revolution, and. might, in an 'emergency easily imagined compromise the highest national interests. I was re joiced that the Legislature 60 promptly re fused to endorse this proclamation as ex pressive ot the true policy of .-.the State Bat I torn away from even this to the bal lot box, and find an abundant consolation in the conviction it inspires, that the popu lar heart of Kentucky, in its devotion to the Unino is far in advance alike of legislative resolve and Executive proclamation. '" 1HC CPJtCT Or THS B VOLUTION. 'The object of the revolution as avowed by all who are pressing it forward, is the' permanent dismemberment of the Confed eracy. The dream of reconstruction used 'during the last winter as a lure to draw the ; hesUatingof the hopeful into the movement has been formally abandoned. If Ken tucky separate herself from .the .Union, it Vnnst be upon the basis that the separation, is to be final and eternal. Is there aught in the organization or administration ot the United States to justify, on; her part, an ict fco solerrn and so perilous? Could' the wisest of her layer if called upon,' find inaierial for her indictment in any or in' all the pages of the history of the Republic? Coa'd the most leprous lipped of its calum niators point to a single State or Terriory bV community or citizen that it has wrong ed cr oppressed J It would be impossible. TB (LAVS STATES ALWAYS PROTECTED BTTHK ' . COKSTITOTIOK, ' ' ' So far as the Slave States are concerned their protection has been complete; and if it has not-been, it haa tfe'eji the fault of thVir statesmen, who have had the 'control 'cf tha Government "since its foundation. TLs' ceases returns show, that during the year iSiO the Fo&itive Slave law was eie cnteJ more faithfully aod successfully than it had lean during tha preceding ten years. lnca tie installation 'of President Lincoln, jouaii has arisen in which the fcgitive een returned, and that, too, ws'.a- cut : iy opposition freni the people. In-' li.3 fidelity wi:h which it warcnJe'r - mini8lratl0n lo enforce the provisions of this law has caused a perfect panic among the runaway slaves in the free States, and they have been 'escaping in multitudes to Canada unpursued and , unreclaimed by - , have ever been and still are, in all respects, the peers of the free. ' ' Of"the 'fourteen" Presidents who have been elected, seven were citizens of the slave States, and of the seven remaining, three represented Southern principles, and received the votes of 'tlTe Southern people ; so that, in our whole history, but four Presi dents have been chosen who can be claim ed as trie special champions of the policy and principles of ' the free States, and even these so only in a modified sense. Does this look as if the South had ever been de- ' prived of her equal share of the honors and powers of the Government ? The Supreme Court Las decided that the citizens oi the Slave States can, at will, take their slaves into all the territories of the United States ; and this decision, .which has 'never been resisted or interfered with in a single case, is the law of the land, and the whole pow er of the Government is pledged to enforce it. That it will be loyally 'enforced tiy the present Administration, 1 entertain . no doubt. A Republican Congress, at the late session, organized three new territories and in the crganic law of neither Was theFs in troduced or attempted to be introduced, the slightest restriction of the Southern emi grant to bring hi slaves with him. At this mbment, "therefore and 1 state it without qualification there is not a territory be- longing to the United States, banks robbed f large amounts of money .States into which the Southern people may not introduce their staves at pleasure, and enloy their com plete protection. . Kentucky should consid- I er this great and undeniable fact before which all the frothy rant of demagogues and disunionfsts must disappear as a bauk of fog before the wind. . WHAT WILL tCNTCCKV GAIN ? For this catalogue of w hat Kentucky most su9er in abandoning her present honor and secare position and becoming a member of the Southern Confederacy, what will be her indemnity 1 Nothing, absolutely noth ing. The ill-woven ambition of some of ber sons may possibly reach the Presiden- ing upon tne s-ootn ooey ing' tne laws, the great principle that all popular govern- ment rests upon the consent of the govern- governed, but it is the consent not tf all, but mjr,ity of Iht governed. -Criminals are every day punished and made to obey the laws, certainly against their will, and no mansupposes that the principle referred to thereby invaded. A bill passes by Leg- islaturej the majority of a single vote only, though the 'constituents of all who voted against it should b'e in fact as they are held j to be in theory,- opposed to its provisions, still is not less operative as a law, and no right of self-government is thereby trampled on. The clamor alluded to assumes that the States are separate and independent governments, and thai Taws enacted under the authority of all may be resisted and re pealed at the pleasure of each. The peo ple of the United Stales, so far as the pow ers of the General Government are concern ed, are a unit, and laws passed by a major- ily of all are binding upon all. The laws and Constitution, however, which the South now resists, have been adopted by her eanction, and the right she now claims is that of a feeble minority to repeal what a majority has adopted. Nothing could be more fallacious. Civil war, under ail cir cumstances, is a terrible calamity; and yet, from the selfish ambition and wickeJ nes of men, the best governments have not been able to etcpd it. In regarding that which has been forced apon the Gov erumeut of the United Stales, Kentucky bhbuld not look - so much at the means which may be necessarily employed la its prosecution as iL'e machitiations'by which this national tragedy has been brought tipi on us. Vheii I Iook'cpon this bright land, a few months since to prosperous, so tran qoifr and ea free, had now behold it deso lated by war, and the firesides of its' thirty millions of people darkened, and their bo som wrung with .anguish, and know, as I do, that all this is the work of a score or two of men who over ail this national ruin acd despair are prepairing to carve with the sword their way to seats of permanent pow er, I cannot bat feel that th'ej are accdma lating epbri their souls tin amount of gniit hardly equalled in all the atrocities of rea son and of homicide that have disgraced the aonals ot our race froth the foundations of the world. ; Kentucky ma rest well as sured that thin conflict, which is one of self defence, will be pursued on the part of the I Gdvernrheat la the paternal spirit in which a father seeks to reclaim h:4 erring oilsprmg ho conqest, in ellusion of blood . is 6O0hl ' In sorrow, net in anger tha prayer of all 151 of "life or waste of 'property. Among the most powerful instrumentalities relied on for establishing the authority of the Govern ment is that Union sentiment of the South( sustained by a liberated press. It is now' trodden to the' earth under a reign ot terror ism which has no parallel but in the worst days of the French Revolution. The pres ence of the Government will enable it to rebound, and look its oppressors in the lace. At present we are assured that in the seceded States no man expresses an opinion opposed to the revolution but at the hazard of his lite and property. The only light which is admitted in political discussion is that which flashes from the sword or rom giiterir.fr. bayonets A few days since one of the United State Senators from "Virginia published a manifesto in which he announces, with oracular solem nity and severity, that all ''citizens who Xvould not vote lor secession, but were in favor cf the Union should or ought to must leave the State" These words have in them decidedly the crack of the overseer's whip. The Senator 'evidently treats Virginia as a great negro quarter, in which the Iaoh is the appropriate emblem cf authority, and the only argument he will condescend to nse. However the freemen of other parts of the State may abase them selves under the exercise of his insolent and-proscriptive tyranny, should the Sena tor, with the scourge of slaves, endeavor to drive the people of Western Virginia from their homes I would only saj, in the lan guage of the narrative of Gilpin's ride : "May I be there to see." It would certainly piove a deeply inter esling spectacle. THE CONTEST A MOMENTUOL'S ODE. Said 2 Fould, the great French states man, to an American citizen, a few weeks since: "Your republic is dead, and it is probably the last the'world will ever see. You will have a reign of terrorism, and after that two or three monarchies." All this may be verified, should this revolution succeed. Let ua then twine each thread on lLe glorious tissue of our country's flag about our heart-strings, and looking upon our homes and catchinz the spirit that breathes upon us from the battle-fields of our fathers, let ub resolve that, come weal or woe, we will in life and in death, now and forever, 6tand by the Stars and Stripes. They have floated over our cradles, let it be our prayer and our struggle that they 6hall. float over our graver. 1 hey have been unfurled from ihe snows of Canada to J anc dodging in and out of the burning buil the plains of New Orleans, and lb the Halls j dings, their British associates as busily en of the Alontezumas and arnid the solitudes gaged in tha work of plunder as the sava of every bea, and everywhere, as the lumi- ees,whi!e obscene oaths tad drunken songs nous symbol refisdessand beneficient pow- ates;ed their eternal ioy. 'er, Ihey have led the brave and the free to victory and to glory. It has been my for tune to look upon this flag in foreign lands and amid the gloom of an Oriental despot ism, and right well do I know by contrast, how bright are its stars and how sublime are its inspirations ! If the banner, the em- biem for use of all that is grand in human i nistory, and of all that is transporting in hope, is to be sacrificed on the altars of a Satanic ambition, and thus disappear for ever amid the night and tempest of revolu tion, then will I feel and who shall esti mate the desolation of that feeling ? that the eun has indeed been stricken from the ky ot our lives, and that henceforth we shall be but wanderers and outcast with nought but the bread of sorrow and penury for our lips, and with hands ever out stretched in feebleness and supplication, on which, in any hour, a millitary tyrant may rivet the fetters of despairing bondage. May God in his infinite mercy save you and me, and the land we so much love, from the doom of such a degradation. No contest eo momentuons as this has arisen in human history, for, and amid all the conflicts of men and of nations, the life of no such Government as ours has ever been at stake. Our fathers won the inde pendence by the blood and sacrifice of a I Beven 'ear war anu we nave wainiainea i it against the assaults of the greatest power uPo eatln and tne question now is, whether we are to perish by our hands and have the epitaph of suicide written upon onr tomb. The ordeal through which we are passing must involve immense suffer ing and losses for us all, but the expendi ture of not merely hundreds of millions, but of billions of treasures will be well made, if the result shall be the preservation of our institutions. ' Closing Up The close of the week , . . . , . how gratefully it comes to toiling and wea ry milliotis ! Fven those wbo reject reli gion and its institutions, acknowledge the wise, if not divine, ordination of the Sab batha day of rest, and peace wise, be cause it answers one of the greatest wants, as no other devise conld. As the shadows of evening fall on Saturday night, the me chanic and artizan will lay down their toil armor, and the finger-worn needle woman will fold up ber work that brings, alas too scanty a pittance and homeward from ev ery busy haunt will go the host whose hands supply os with the comforts and lux uries of lite. .And how quiet will become the great city, just so foil of the music of diverse yet mingling labor ! The sound of the hammer and trowel cease, aud the an thems of wheels die away over the deser ted streets, and solitude comes so welcome to every batter sense. Repose, so sweet after the week's toil, to be unbroken for a day repose, which brings reflection ihd meditation, culturing the mind by a review of the experience through which it has pass ed. May they ever strengthen us all, to re- new the basils of life with prff Incident of the War cf 1812. About the middle of December, 1812 the garrison in charge of Fort Niagara, at the moutn ot tne Niagara river, was sarpnsea baUerie8 on the geU1 of baie) in COnnec by a large party of British and Indians, ..on whh lroops of infantry or cavalry, whereby the American frontiers, from j A baUery con(i8ts of six or eight pieces, Youngstown to Buffalo, was laid open to four Qf gx o which ;re gun8 anj lV70 are the depredations of the savages. ; i howitzers. , One of the most flourishing American j Sjx pouni1er batteries are composed of viilages'on'ihe Niagara was Lewistown, sit- ( Bjx pount,er guns and ,welve pounder how- nnied onnnsito to the Canadian village Ot , Queeriistown, and as the inhabitants of Lew istown had been active in the defence of ihe frontier, the enemy doomed the place to speedy destruction. When the flames and snioke were ascen ding from the wanton . conflagration of Youngstown, and the parlies of villagers flying from the murderous savages notified the people of Lewistown of what would soon be the fate of their own homes and families, every one was thrown into the most confusion and alarm, and sought safe ty in flight. Among the last to escape were two broth ers, named Lothrop and Bates Cook, the former of whom, a few days previous, had had his right leg amputated above the knee and was now a helpless invalid. 'Lothrop, who in his crippled condition, had no hope of escaping the scalping knife of the eavaaes, begged his brother to leave him and fly for his lile. But the generous man had no such intention. With all the haste possible, Bates, after getting the team and bleigh to the door; managed to "drag the bed on which his brother lay, upon ihe vehicle, and throwing in clothing and "such other necessaries as came nearest to hand, started of! in the rear of the flying fugitives. But so rough was the grout.d '.he youth could endure no other than the slowpst motion. Bates, therefore, found it necessary for him to restrain his team to the slowest walk while he coulJ see in his rear the flames bursting out of the doors and windows of the house they bad just quitted, and the yells and war hoops of the drunken Indians rang with startling effect in his ears. House after house was fired, and before the young men had reached the top of the hill on their way out of the place, the entire village was wrapped in flames. They could see the painted warriors, wild with drink and bedecked with the plunder of ihe stores, dancing and howling in the streets, like &o many incarnate demons; and mingling here and there among them, On the other hand, a t they moved slowly along, they could see teams and groups of their neighbors and friends disappearing rapidly in the distance, while they were forced to move along slowly and exposed to th0 first party of drunken and infuriated , ravages vrho might espy them. Moving! thu8 along, they had proceeded something like half a mile from the smoking village, when on ascending an eminence, Bates was rnents; and then commences the almost ganize immense armies, there is one other startled by a fierce war hoop ir. the rear, continuous explosion, the cannon vomitinj ! . The Corps is composed of two or more and to his horror discovered a band of sav- ; forth incessant charges of shot and shell, or ; Divisions, frequently of four or five. The sges in pursuit of them, and wildly gestic- canister and grape, till the proud lines of i corps is, in the French service, properly ulating for them to stop. j ihe adversary are riddled and shivered, and i commanded by a field marshal an officer In the excitement of the moment he urg-i hurled back on themselves in dismay ;, unknown to our country and the corps is ed his team to a faster gait; but a cry of ! while the ground is 6lrewed with human ; properlj a complete army in itself, pain from Lothrop caused him lo slacken flesh, quivering in the agonies of death. In Napoleon's march on Russia, he had his speed again ; ar.d catching up a gun he j At this moment it only remains for the eight or ten of these corps in active service had forclhousht to throw into the 6leigh, he infantry to charge and sweep the field with ' making a field army of from 250:0o0 to prepared to defend his helpless brother to ' the bayonet, and the day is gained j 300,000 men. From the elements we have the last. It is the suddeness of the attack, tne ra- given, it will be seen that however large Lothrop now perceived the danger they j p;j;ly 0f the movements and the terrible ef- j an arrny may be, it is so organized as to be were in, and knowing in his feeble condi- j jeCl w h ic fi the shot tell upon the ranks ; perfect in all its parts and moves with an lion, that escape was hopeless unless pwift- I of lhe enemyt lrial render this kind of ser j exact order and dicipline. In the field all er progress could be made, begred h:s I 'v;ce fe0 atlract;ng to Dj gunners; hence, ' orders and operations are carried on through brother to drive on. At least it could only , tney wiHhever enlist in any other branch j the siaff of the army, and when we come could be death to him ; and if the motion of ( Df tjje ser,iCQ j there is a possible opporv to active service, the staff is the most im the sleigh over the rough ground should kill ; tunj,y for them to get into the artillery. i portattt pan of the army ; for, thi being a him. he thought it woulJ certainly be belter j The amounl Df labor to be performed by i vast machine. of which each part is perfectly than to fall into the hands of their merciless pursuers. The Indians dashing on, were soon in hailing distance, and in broken English, threatened Bates, with the most cruel tor- ........ If V. A . mlnr Kut Via rafneorl in I obey. Soon coming up with the sleigh, the sav ages began to chase Bates round and round it, but from some oversight paid no atten tion to his helpless brother. At last Bates snatched up the gun from the sleigh and ran off to one side of the road, to draw the Indians, if possible, away from Lothrop The ruse partially succeeded ; but as a tierce looking Indfan pursued Bates more closely than was consistent with his safety, he turned saddenly, and leveling his gun at the savage, fired. The Indian gave a terrific yell, leaped into the air, ran a few paces, and fell dead. The death of their leader exasperated the savages to the last degree, and they were about to wreak their vengeance on the brothers, when upon their right, on the mountain, they heard a wild, ringing war hoop, and the next min ute a volley of rifle" shots whistled towards them, and several of the pursuers fell killed and wounded to the ground. The new party proved to be a band of friendiy Tuscaroras, ljnder Little Chief , who bearing the firing along the road, hastened to reconnoitre, and seeing the two brothers, whom they immediately recognized, thus beset, ran down the hill to their relief, and of the fifteen or twenty savages who pur sued the villagers, scarcely one-third re turned to tell the fate of their companions. Bates Cook alterward became Controller j of the Slate .Lrr;"l" of New York", and Lothrop oc- Light Artillery. Light, or Field Artillery, is that branch of wf perv;ce ,nat maiiceuvers with the j ilzers, and twelve pounder batteries are composed of twelve pounder guns, and thenty-four or thirty-two pounder howitzers Six or eight hores are assigned to each piece, with its ammunition carriage or cais soon. The number of men in a company of ar tillery varies from eighty to one hundred and fifty, including one Capjain, three or four Lieutenants, four to eight Sergeants, eight to twelve Corporals, two to six Artifi ce rs. two Buglers, twenty-lour to fifty-two drivers, and thirty four to seventy can noneers. Cannon are cast from iron or from bronze commonly called brass. Bronze pieces are preferable to iron, because they are less liable to burst. ... Projectiles for field artillery are round shot (solid,) shell (hollow,) canister, grape and spherical case shot. The shell is filled with powder which is fired by means of a fuze, and the fuze is ignited by the dis charge, the length of ih9 fuze is graduated to the distance to be traversed. The canister consists cf a tin cylinder fill ed with cast iron 6hot which vary in size with the calibre of the pieces; canisters for guns contain 27 phots, for howitzers, 48. Grape consists of large shot, usually nine, sewed into cylindrical bags The spherical case shot differs from the shell in having a thinner shell or case, and in being filled mos;ly with musket balls, only sufficient powder being inserted to burst the shot, and scatter its contents ; this is intened to take place fifty or seventy five yards short of the object aimed at. In a six pounder case shot, there, are ?7 musket balls ; in a twelve pounder 76 ; in a twenty four pounder, 175; and in a thirty two pounder, 245. Each .battery is attended by one travelling forge and one battery wagon, containing tools and materials for shoeing horses, re pairing harness, saddle, &c. A battery thus folly equipped, and served by active, strong and intelligent men, be comes the most formidable implement of modern warfare. Called into an engagement usually at the most critical moment, at a time when the lines of the enemy are advancing exulting Iy, perhaps, in the hope of an easy victory, i J at a moment when the destiny of empires j ; ;s quivering in the, balance, the light artill- ; ery sweeps forward to its position at the j , buIe call for the "advance,'' the earfh sha- j king beneath the tramp of the horses and , the heavy rumble of the guns In a moment the pieces are nnlimbered, ' loaded and pointed, with a rapidity too great for the eye to analyze the different move- I ,jie arii;ieryman differs very materially from J lDat required of the inlantry soldier hav- jg no musket, he is not required to do gen- . eraj gxMttd service, so while detachments of the infantry are pacing back and forth, at their posts, through the long weary night, the artillerymen are sleeping quietly iu their quarters. The mariuel of the piece is much more simple than that of the musket, and there- ! Adjutant General ail orders are conveyed to fore more easily learned. each particular part. By the Quarter mas- Again, the gunner has but his side arms ter General all transportations, and vehicles to carrjr, while the soldier of the Sine must I and horses are furnished ; by the Commis always carry his musket, knapsack, car-1 sary all supplies ; by ihe engineer the to- tndge box, kc , and this on foot, while the cannoneer is mounted either on horseback, or on his gun-carriage. It is for this kind of service that recruits are now enlisting in Danville and Blooms burg. . . ' . None but strong, active and intelligent men are accepted, and none are desired to enlist unless they are perfectly willing to undertake the duties and endure the hard ships that may be incident to the service Men who enlist simply because . others do, or from any other than patriotic motives are apt to become disaffected or dissatisfied, as soon as they are required to perform any duties of an unpleasant nature ; hence, we would rather represent the worst features of the service and let the men be agreeably disappointed than lo hear any complaint afterwards. . The uniforms for these recruits are ready now, or will be by the time they can reach camp; two or three months time will be given for learning the drill; arms of the most approved patern wilt be furnished ; and every facility offered for making this regiment of artillery, for which we are re cruiting, an honor to our npble old com monwealth, and a necessary part of the Organization of the 'Army. Below we lay before our readers an arti- cle upon array matters, that, in the present i warlike state of affairs will be read with ; general interest, and be found of great val ue. Our army is essentially formed after the French school, which is in its general plan probably the best in the world : The number in companies, regiments, &c , varies at different times and varies by law. In time of peace the rank and file are reduced to a skeleton, and the officers re- tained, (we speak of regulars,) so that in j kinds of manufactures were greatly increas. time of waMhey can soon be filled up j ed. It was soon discovered that.the manu The outline elements of an army are these: i facturers of the Eastero States, those e.n A company is the unit of an army, and is j gaged in the iron trade in Pennsylvania, supposed to average on the war basis .one and ihe producers of wool and hemp in hundred men, officers included. The gen- j the Northern arid Western Slates, who con eral rule for the organization of such com- stiluted the roost important porions of the pany gives one captain;two liectenants,five , mercantile community in the nation, were sergeants anil four corporals and eighty-five j not sufficiently protected by this tariff men. Former!) each company had an ec- Accordingly, in the session of Congress of sign who carried the flag ; but his place is 1827-'8, after a long and desperate conflict now sopplied by the color sergeant. There ; is one more sergeant than corporals, tha ; first lieutenant being called the orderly ser geant, and is, next to the captain, ihe mo.t important man in the company carrying the bocks of the. company, and calling, the roll, morning and evening. The company is formed, when in column, into two pla toons and four flections, each platoon com manded by a lieutenant, aud each sectim by a sergeant. A regiment is regu'arly composed of ten companies or two balalions; a battal.oi being half a regiment, composed of five companies one of thera.called a light or route company, intended regular for service to operate outside of the heavy columns, as flankinz parties, guards, etc. The officers, of a regiment, independent of company officers, are a colonel, lieutenant col. two major, adjutant,quartermaster and commissary. Each separate body of troops mut have a commissary and quartermas ter, but in a large army they are apportion ed to reeiments or brigades. A regiment, when constituted will be formed thus: one colonel, one lieutenant colonel, one adju. tant, one quartermaster, one commissary, two majors, ten captains, twenty lieuten ants, fifty sergeant?, forty corporals, and eiht hundred and fifty private men ma king nine hnndred and seventy-five, but in realty there are some others ; each com pany has regularly a drummer and fifer, which make a regimemal band of twenty, besides the drum major. Then the regi ment, when full, is mad9 up regularly to one thousand men. A brigade should be composed of two regiments, a squadron of cavalry, and a corps of field artillery. If these were all full, a complete brigade operating aione, would in our service, or in the Erench,make 5,400 men. . A Division is composed r,f two brigades, ; with additional corps of cavalry and artill erv, making in our army, including the ! whole staff and music, abon 5,000. men f This is the highest element of organization ' in our service ; but in France, as they or ' obedient to, and directed by the head, it is ! evident that all must depend on the skill, , ability ; ar.d discernment of ihe staff through j which it act. It is in vain that Scott, or I any great Gen eral ccrrirnands, if the etatf ; officers are incompetent. ! The staff consists of the aids, the adjutant ! General, the engineer, the Quarter master, I and Commissary Generals. Through the pography of the country is thoroughly ex amined, the practicability of passes deter mined, fortifications built or attached. Then the staff of an army becomes its eyes and its facilities, the General simply deci ding the movements of the army on the facts and elements thus furnished. In the prand French armies there was a chief of ! the staff, or head of th active Military Bu reau. In Napolearvs time, the chief of the staff was Marshal Berthier, deemed one of the ablest officers of the French army.. Na poleon knew the value of a good staff and had abler men in it than were at the head of the divisions. If any extensive army shonld be lormedjthis should always be the case. In the statements we have msde, it will be seen there is a s'rong similarity between a modern army, well organized, and that of Romans. Onr company corresponds with the Roman Century, and onr division to the, Roman Legion. The Roman Legion, when full, contained 6.000 men, which compre, hended a portion of auxiliaries and .were divided So as toinclnde all kinds of service. A Roman Legion was a complete army in itself, and the experience then snd now. that a compact body or force of six thon sand men is as urge n can ne org nrrrqTt7, The Free Trade Policy of Sonth Carolina. In the year 1816 an Act was passed by Congress, by which a reduction per cejrit.w.ss made on imported woollen and cotton goods. The people and the states men of the country, who . were in favor of j, the. policy, ot protection were opposed to this reduction, and determined as soon as pos sible to secure the adoption of a higer tariff. Accordingly, in 21, Henry Clay and Mr. Adams succeeded in obtaining the passage .of ajaw by which the .profits of certain with the advocates of the one single staple of the South namely, cotton a bill was passed imposing a tariff of duties the aver age rate of which was nearly fifty per cent, on imports. This Act received the votes of all the representatives of the nation except these of the more prominent Southern States. The latter, condemned it in the most violent terms, stigmatized it as a 'bill of abonvnations," and began to mutter threats ofresistar.ee and vengeance. POSITION Of JOHN C CALHOCN. t.At: that period the most distinguished member of Congress from the South, with the single exception of the patriotic Henry viay, was Jonn Caldwell Calhoun, of South Carolina. No .man .excel (.ed him, among that high and brilliant galaxy of genius, in logical acuteness, in close, clear, demon strative reasoning, in his general knowl edge of the principles of international and municipal law, and in the boldness and fearlessness of his tempter. He was even then the Ma.u$ Apollo of sectionalism.; and asFOon as the tariff of 1828 was passed in spite of his opposition and that of bis confederates, by which the intereste of the Cotton States were made secondary to the welfare of the whole nation, he commenced to revolve.in his mind the great and des perate scheme or Nullification If the Na tional Government would not become sub servient to the promotion of the interests oi the South, could it not be possible to resist and overpower that Government within the limits of the offended States ? Calhoun's answer was an affirmative one. Immediately after the adoption of this high tariff, meeiings were held in several por tions of South Carolina, in which the policy of Nullification was broached, discussed and finally commended. ., At the request of some of his constituents. Mr. Calhoun pre pared a documr.t, in July, 1R31, which defended this policy under the existing state of affairs. This production he styled "The South Carolina Exposition and Pro test on the Sut ject of the Tariff," and was addressed to the Legislature of the State That body ordered a large number of copies to be printed and distributed and afterward passed a resolation which declared the Tar. :ff Acts of Congress for the protection of the manufacturers of the North and East uncon stitutional; asserted that they ought to bm resisted ; and invited other States of the Sooth to unite with South Carolina in resist ing the execution of those Acts within their respective limits. At that period Andrew Jackson and Mr. Calhoun were personal and political friends. But anon the latter became dissatisfied with, the administration of the former, and wu gradually alienated from him. The Presi dent did not condemn the high tariff, as Mr. Calhoun believed it his duty to do; and fron the year 1831 Mr. Calhoun took the position of an open enemy to his policy and his person. One caue of the hostility which henceforth existed between these remarkable men was the fact that at that period Gen. Jackson discovered that Mr, Calhoun had, while a member of Monroe's Cabinet, advised that he should be repri manded for his . conduct during the Semi nole war in putting Arbuthqot and Arm bruster to death. Thenceforth there was a bitter and implacable hostility between them, which ended only w'uh their lives. A correspondent of the Mobile ASveriiner exhorts hisj fellow citizen to send their watches, chai.ns, jewelry and silver plate to : be coined. He even suggests with. a re freshing neglect of the assumed rights of the confederate government, that they could, extemporize a mint in Mobile in a few days. . . . ... Hatwt i mimtidi rtnpiitTho n tim ber of troops tendered by responsible par ties to the President is 575,(0&. It is be lieved that it would be no difficult matter for the War Department to pot an addition al force of ore hnndred thousand men in. the field, in thirty days from the dele of the order. ... - When is iron like a bank note ? When it is forged. When is.it like a public bouse? When it is a bar. When is it like a stone thrown in the air ? When it's cast. When would it do to make sausages ofl When it's pig iron. .... A lazy fellow begged alms, saying thai he could not find bread for his family. is; "Nor I," replied an industrious mechanic; - 1 ,4I am obliged to work for it." ,!- . t"