STAR OP TUB-NORTH ... v . - rr i- - sr rr.11 H.JACOBY, EDITOR. BLCQIJSECEGV. TVEDSESDIT, FEB. 18, 1862. rxjcTsica of Senator Bright. ; As will be eeu by the proceedings pub lished in (a!! in another column, the Senate cf the United Stales, by a two-tbirds Tote, ia.ot week expelled Jesse D Bhicht, of In diana, as one of the members of that body. It may be that the majority acted wisely: fcnt we confess, from a careful reading of all the testimony bronght against him, we could not Fee the treasonable act of his, which would justify each course. Mr. Cowan. of this State, and Mr. Harris, of New York two Republican Senators from the two greatest States In the Union to their honor be it paid, voted againct th$ act of harshness The reason assigned, and the only one that we have seen is that Mr. Bright wrote the following letter, the bearer of which (who is said to be a cousin of the President) was arrested some time ago upon the charge of treason : Washington, March 1. 186!. "My Dtin Sib : Allow me to introduce to your acquaintance, my friend Thomas B Lincoln, of Texas He visits your capi iii tnaimy to dispose oi wnat be regard a great improvement in fire-arms. I rrcom med him to your favorable consideration as a gentleman of the first respectability, and reliable iu every repct. Wry truly yours. 'JESSE D. BRIGHT. 'To his Excellency, JefTer'on Davis, Presi dent of the Confederate States.'7 The chief offence charged against Mr. B. is that be addressed Jefl. Davis as kis Ex cellency, in an ordinary letter of introduction We will not enter into a discussion as to the propriety of this act. But we cannot repress the remark, that a singular specta. cle is presented of a grave body passing sentence of expulsion upon a Senator upon a charge of treason founded on such a ba sis! Aye, and a body which permits such men at Charles Scmkkr to occupy . high places in Us councils. Charles Sumner has spent his official lifetime in fanning the flames of sectional discord, which has left our country in its present pitiable condition aye, and Chas. Sumner votes for the ex pulsion of Jesse D. Bright, who has been one of the most powerful foes of all the dangerous dogmas of this leading Abolition ist. It may be that Mr. Bright made a pnerons mistake in writing to a traitor, ana hat received a just punishment but even banded jastice will not rest satisfied while the men who have made the traitors viz : such Abolitionists as Sumner -are allowed to bit in judgment upon h'rn. Lnzerne Union. A SiartHs; riclcrt of GoTtrcmental Corrup tion. No lover of his country or friend of public i-tte can run his eye over the revelations contained in the speech of Mr. Dawes, ol Mass. in the House of Representatives with out feeling the intensest indignation and alarm. : Mr. Dawes deals with unblemish ed facts, reliably ascertained through a committee of Congress ; but the flights of the boldest fancy are tame beside the start ling record of crime which he drags to the Kihi. The facta stated will arrest the attention of the tnoit indifferent, while they will fill the public spirtited and truly loyal citizen withthe deepest apprehension. An army of traitors, viler and more dangerous than all the legions ia armed rebellion, are suck lag the heart' blood of the republic, end are secretly but surely and rapidly devour in thexmrceaof its strength. The shame ful revelation cannot be doubted ; it is not the offspring of partizan malice, but owes its being to men who are in sympathy with, and aoppor'.erdoftbe present administration. Mr. Dawes is a republican member and the discoveries he has made have been extract ed from unwilling witnesses, under the penalties of imprisonment and the obliga tion cf an oath. The very first war con tract into which the fJovernment entered was a swindle ; and whether it buys beef, border, arms, or clothing for its soldiers, it allows every purchase to be tolled, by a band of barpies as ravenous as the horse leech No wonder Mr. Cameron has re signed. The whole Administration should follow his example, while every robber of the treasury should be seized and made to di-ore the proceeds of his knavery. Ntu 1'oik Argus. Snmjor. General. We observe the name of the Member from this county, among the Democratic Candidates for Surveyor General. It ema nated from a Harrisburg correspondent of Ust week in the PhiLidefphia Evening Jour nal. Here is the paragraph ; I have heard it said, that cor mutual friend, Col Tate, the able and industrious member from Columbia, is spoken of as a suitable candidate for the office ot Surveyor General. . Col. Tate would make a. most faithful and vigilent officer, and he hails from that Democratic district, which has rever yet flinched, and which has always proved itself true to Democratic instincts. Vonr correspondent wooldbe much pleased to see the Colonel as one of the standard bearers of the Democracy in the coming contest. His character for probity and hon esty woclJ make him a formidable compel i?or. It is rumoreJ that a proposition ia soon to be made in the U. S. Senate to lay a tax cf ten percent, on the pay of the officers and o!disrs ia the army. We do not object to th3 tax being levied upon the pay of the officers, bat wa protest against any tax rsi'setoj the poor pittance paid by the Gov erat;ent to the eoIJier. This would be an act of injustice which would he indefensi Ra.her let us safest that the mem bers el Congress ti? off their mileage and tax their owa pay fifty per cent. Thsy vrci'J than receive much more than they earn. V.'e will see if Sfiey are patriotic encu-:'3 to do Dsn. t'tm. Let cs be Consistent. The worship of the Goddess of Reason i r. 1. . ' r I I isas ouea oeen penormea oy ceremonies the most unreasonable and ridiculous. Un der the banner of liberty tyranny has achieved many a .triumph. The watrior with glory as his guide has led hi follow ers into battles as disgraceful in their exe cution, as inglorious in iheir results. The patriot under the ptaa of loyalty has com mitted treason against his country of the blackest dye. The politician while pro fessing to serve his country has robbed its treasury of its last dollar. The name tinder which crime is now-a-days committed is everything. These are some of the incon sistencies we meet with on every hand, but so perverted bas the moral sense of our peo pie become, that they "pass over us like a summirr cloud without exciting oar special wonder." It is a homely but true saying "pm a beggar on horse back and be will ride to tne devil." This need not excite surprise ; but thi.t an American citizen who has rea son to glory in the recorded annals of his country is bleeding at every pore, ignobly lower bis mind to schemes of profligacy and plunder, is a solecism we would hardly expect in a civilized man. The firet Ml ever given in the White House came off on Thursday evening last. This is an incon sistency and an impropriety we would hardly have expected in "Honest Old Abe, the rail-splitter," It must, indeed, have been a depraved taste that could have pro jected such a revel at such a time. Every viituons citizen must leel that the day i not far remote when he will be compelled to rally, around the altar of his liberties and drive away the reckless crew who have so shamefully defaced and disgraced it. The dle administration was overthrown by the cry of "extravagance and corruption." It was accused of spending some eighty millions of dollars a year and the people were horrified ! The present Administra tion is squandering at the rale of ten hun dred millions a year and the pocket-patri ois are in high glee. The Hon. Thad Ste vens, in his great speech delivered at the Cooper Institute, New York, previous to the election of Mr. Lincoln said. "I think we are able, from the character of the next President, to tell some things that will Lap pen ''Ist. trill drive the plunderers from, their prey." We need only take from the running de bates in Congress a few extracts to show bow consistent these honest Republicans are in the extensive promises of -reform they throw out so profusely previous to an elec tion. This parly hts been ir. power a lijtle less than a year, and it all the peculations and corruptions, that have taken place in ' the Government since its establishment, ! were combined they would not amount to! as much as have been crowded into this one short year. We make a couple of extracts from the proceedings in the Senate, but a few days ago, to show we are right in what we say ; and we have been careful to take the re marks of Republicans lest we be accused of hostility to the Administration which now is very freely construed to mean treason to the Government 1 Mr. Wilson said the people might have resources, but the Government had none The Government was in debt 540,000,000 to day, and without a dollar to pay it. We are hers to day to complain of the want of progress in the army ; but if we made any mure progress than the army, he would like somebody to point it out. The Gov ernment was reduced, to the condition of issuing paper money and making it a lesal tender hy, the view the world has or. us, is that we are a nation of he almost said thieves ; but be would say plunder ers in the midst of a war for the life of the country. Mr. Hale believed the liberties of the country were in greater danger to day from frauds and profligacy than from the Rebels He would say, oh, Christ! who, with small cords drove out the money changers from the Temple of Jerusalem, is there no scourge of laceration for these who turn the temple of our liberties into a den of thieves. History will not trace upon its record partisan bigotry will not ever dare to lay the gnilty responsibility for all this disgrace and disasters, brought upon the country, to the Democracy. When the Republican party came into power the country was prosperous and at peace. Now one half in the fnll blaze of rebellion, while the oth er half is in a fair way to become bank rupted in putting it down, and the party that has the management of the affair of the country in its hands is stigmatized by its own friends a gang of thieves. For con sistency sake the Republicans had better, hereafter, extract the beam from their own eyes before they profess to see the mote in the eyes of the Democracy. We have still another sample of the in consistency of the party in poer at the bead of the Government. It shows a per fectly willing disposition to make every concession, no matter how humiliating, that England may demand, to prevent a war with that country, bnt it will not allow one word of compromise to stop the horried war that i deluging our own land with fra ternal blood. If the Republicans bad ben half as willing to ''compromise" with the South as ihey have been to comproraice with England, to avoid a fight, there would be no civil war in the country. How much more it would have contributed to the hap piness, prosperity and glory of our country to have adopted the Crittenden Com pro mise," and satisfied por own countrymen, than fo degrade ourselves in the estimation of the world by exhibiting such a readnes to reconcile our deadly enemy England. We might go on showing up the incon sistency of the Republican party ad infini tum, but what we have already said muM convince every rational mind that if con sistency is a jewel the Republican party does not possess it. Valley Spirit. Mr. Jerry Oberdorf, a teacher in one of our borough schools, died suddenly of apo plexy on last Saturday evening, ori his re turn home Irom a singing school. He was a promising, well behaved and exemplary yoang taan. EanvtiU Democrat. Oar Kero Fiddlinj. - .. - - - We are informed by correspondents front Washington that a grand dance came off a the White Honse on the night ofthe tl inst. It is said to have been a grand adTaiit and was participated in bj a very largo' number. The dance began at precisel." eleven o'clock, the President leading off with Mis Browning, and Mrs. Lincoln with Senator Browning. There seems to be n strange contrast between the fiddling anl dancing in the Nation's White House anl the sanguinary scenes of war. But n) doubt Mr Lincoln has read in history i f Nero amusing himself with a fiddle while Rome was in flames, and why should not the Neros of this country be equally meny and unconcerned , now that our Union s devastated with intestine war, and the peo ple are in mourning from one end of the lar d to the other? Aye, why should not "od Abe" be mer.y? He and his partizans have been working for a dissolution of the Fe 1 eral Union for the last qiarter of a centurf, anl why should they not, we repeat "dam e and bb merry," now that the object fr which they have worked so long is up n us with all its fearful realities? True it is, his sabjerts the people of the United Statss are bowed down with sorrow ; true it . is that hundreds of volunteer troops are swept into their graves daily, and rivers of tears are beius 6hed for the lost ones; trite it is, that destitution, if not starvation, threatens thousands of onr ciiizens ; true it is, that I n ormcos taxes are to be imposed upon tnr people; true it is, that our insolent assail antsthe rebels of the Sonth are within siht of the Capitol, flauntina their traitor flags in our very faces; true it i, the Rach els of the North weep for their children. snd will not be comforted, " became they ire not." But what difference to the Presid jnt t and the horde of abolitionists whocompoed ! his dancing party ? The war is their trium ph j it is what they prayed for and worked; for and now they dance within hearing j distance of the dying groans of their con n tr5men! As well might the Imperial City have celebrated, with triumphal proeessi jns the entrance of the hordes of Goths ind Vandals, that ravaged her fields and eac'ced her temples, as the President of the Un ted States to "dance and be merry" at this time of anguish and dis're3. But, bo it is" old Abe" and his friends j will dance, and the people will weep: the j same reople who lifted this party into j power, who ravages upon the principles of our institutions have desolated our land and can be compared to the blighting march of the Tartars of Tamerlane and the Hur s of Atilla The people deceived, betrayed and lied to have warmed th Abolition serjeit j into lite. It wilt stini them to death Let those who have brought our troubles t pon us shout and sinz. dance and fiddle li is well that the check of the progress of I'em j ocratic principles should be celebrated with j pomp and show. H if beM that the people should not see how the Genius of the Con stitution shudders and shrinks from the rude ' arms of her violator, reeling and staagering, 1 and insolent with ill gotten power. It is j best that the shouts of laughter and the clat- ! ter of feet, Fould be loud and long, to drawn if possible, the dying words of the soldier and the Mifled sobs of the people. It is j bet ! Let, then, the enemies of our laws ( and our Constitution dance nd fiddle, and I thus hush the voice of distress now heard throughout the land. Let them dance let them fiddle Car lisle Volunteer. A Truth well Told. Hon. A Harding, Union member of Con gress from Kentueky, in a recent able and patriotic speech, made the following em phatic statement : The ultra abolitionists, whether they know it or not, have been and now ate giv ing the most successful aid to the disunion isis of the South, and making the most suc cessful war upon the Union The great ar.d prevailing argument of the leading dis nnionisls, in the South and in the aorder States, has been, and still is that the Vorth, in violation of the Constitution, intmJed, and was about to turn the struggle inio a war for emancipation, and thus "plui ge the whole population, white and black," into a remorseless and bloody struggle. v this argument alone he has succeeded in sedu cing and drawing into the rebellion thous-" and. of misguided men. Without it, he would have been powerless, and this ' argu ment has been furnished and pot into his month by the Northern abolitionists This has been the great question of deba!e that loyal men have met and battled agitiut a thousand-times all over Kentucky. ' This is the view we have always held. ' The handful of dinnionists ppr se in the Southern States, were furnished bj aboli tionists of the North, with the very argu ments they most needed and de-ired to make use of in consummating thi ir dark purpose to establish a separate confederacy Every intelligent mind in the Nortli ought to have been able to have grasped at once Ibis now undoubt ed iruth. But tho igh the Democracy labored hard and long to im press it npon the popular intelligent e of the North, though the most solemn anc earnest warnings came to ua from the Un on men of South, the people would not heaiken and the dreadful penalty is now upon: them And now whilst that penalty must je paid, let us learn from the past and be v -a re lest the fanatics and fools who have aliaady ru ined us half, will not finish the job thror.uh our patient and supine sufferance.- Bedford Gaxttte. Fatal Accident, Leonard Miller, who re sided on Mr. Peter Baldyrs farm, below town, was killed on the Lackawanna railroad on Tuesday afternoon last, by being run over by locomotive. Miller wai walking on the track, and when eea by t the engi neer wai warned of hi danger by the steam whistle, but he took no heed, and :ontinued to advance, when the engineer down brakes and reversed his engine, Jut could not prevent it running over Miller, and crushing him 10 death. J. R. Phillips Esq., Summoned an inqaest on the tody, who rendered a verdict in accordance ' with the facts as we have stated- Danv J!e Intelli gencer. .. .; ! Pennsylyania legislature. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES- Thursday, Feb. 13, 1862. The SPEAKER called the House to order at ten o'clock, a m. Prayer by the Rev. ilt. Johnston. The Journal of yesterday was partly read. JOINT CONVENTION .IN COMMEMORATION : OT ANDREW JACKSON. Mr. TATE, (having obtained leave to of fer a resolution) aid : In a t'me like this, when our country is involved in so great a peril, resulting from the disloyalty of a portion of her citizens, it is fitting that we should recur to the example of our patriotic ancestors, and recall such utterances of theirs as may be appropriate to the crisis in which we are involved. In this view I trust that the House will concur in the propriety of the resolution which I offer. The resolution was twice read asfollows:- Reclved, That both Houses will meet in joint session in this hall, on the 15th day of March at twelve o'clock m., the anniver sary of the birth of Andrew Jackson, and that the proclamation of that sterling patri ot to the people of South Carolina be read by the Clerk, and that the Governor and heads of departments be invited to attend. At the suggestion of Mr. Crane, Mr. Tate modified his resolution so as to read, "That the Houce will meet in this hall," etc , "and that the Senate, Governor," etc., "be invi ted to auend." . The question being on the adoption of the reso'ution : Mr. WILLIAMS. I merely desire to in quire cujfcoHO what is the use ? Why should we met here for the purpose indicated in joint convention ? I know that these things are sometim es considered a little useful at home to make political capital. I am not dissatisfied at any reasonable demonstration of patriotism, particularly in times like these; but if gentlemen wish to indulge their patriotism, ahey can very well read ihia pioclamnUon. at home. Isidore any occasion for a solemn exhibition of this sort here? Can it do any good? I believe that on former occasions it has been the practice to meet on the 22sd of February to hear read the Farewell Address ofthe Father of the Conntry. Well, I suppose that even that might be dispeueedjWith, and the man who objected to ii not legitimately complained of. Whj ii it that we should be called upon to hear this particular proclamation and In held a special meeting lor the purpose? It genlleir.ett desire to have that document brought before thir mind they can gel it . .. , . . . . and read it for ihetnsel vea. I soppov that every man here has red it perhaps more than once. I should like to' know what is the object of the proceeding now proposed. ! Mr. DENNIS. The object of the resolo- . lion, as I conceive, is one which addresses itsell very forcibly at a time like this to the intellisence and patriotism of evry man I rsow, sir, it is very irue mi WB c.in rea u ; at our homes.ihe address of Gen. Jackson j to the people ol South Carolina ; ar.d very i true thai most of us have read it a-id found i . . . r i u i i.- it in these seasons of drouth peculiarly re- j freshing. But we wi-h that it shall be read : here, and we wish to have it read for the j AT . " . .f. .J same purpose that we wish to hear the farewell address of Washington Washing ion beins the first and Andrew Jackf-on the second saviour of hi country ; for Jackson ; by his stirring patrioiism.by his unflinching ui uuiiiu mi ..as wcu .cvc.i.ij j ing over our lair land, i was never a po litical admirer of Andrew Jackson nntil by bis course he compelled my admiration, and then I bowed, as I will ever bow, to the name and 6hriue of a gteat and good man. Andrew Jackson's name deserves to stand second of Washington, as the second sav ior of his country, and had a gracious prov idence preserved him till this time in his place, we had now been a happy and uni ted people. That is. reason enough why this houe should take that respectful notice of his addiess which is suggested by the resolution. The resolution of Mr; Tate was lheti ad opted. Republican Disloyalty. So it seemes the Senator Irom this Mate i who voted against Briahl's expulsion from i the Senate wa not a "Breckinridge Dmo- .., t..,t roil nimn.i nnrp. Rponblican . i not - i What a stale of things there U here. The Abolitionists in the Senate, expel Bright as a "traitor."' The spread;eagle Republican orators at Harrisburg call him a traitor, and the spread eacle editor here calls him an arch traitor, still this Republican Senator gays that he "would sooner be torn limb from limb.than vo:e for Bright' expul.-ion." II Bright i gnilty of treason then is not this Republican Senator, aiding and abetting treason, by voting to retain him in his seat Ar.d are not the spread eagle Republican majority in the Legislature, sanctioning bis course by not requesting him to resign. So it seems that after all the "blowing'- of the Republicans about their loyalty they have Pent a man to represent the great State of Pennsylvania in the Senate of the U. S. who according to their own showins has voted to 'shield a traiior" rrom punish ment. Danville Intelligencer. To D.linqcknts We have placed a few subscription accounts of our delinquent sub scribers in the hands of a Justice f the Peace who' has collected them by due process of law. A few of thoe individuals hnve be come as mad as "bears with sore heads." Think of it, reaJer, a bill lo ronte years, and then to have your angry passions rise, when yon are requested to pay it. We shall proceed against those who do not heed the circulars, from this time forward. Those who live far distant we shall prose cute for fraud a privilege which iht news paper lw gives to publishers. We have appe aled to them in kind and honied words "often and a&ain." but they have not heed ed the appeal, and now we intend to ap ply the law. Those of our subscribers who are prompt in paying, will please excuse as (or boring them with dans, we dislike it ourselves. ' The above ip taken from the Miltonian and will apply to our case with alight def erence. . OUR A 11 31 Y CORRESPONDENCE. Paw Paw Tunnel on tbeB. &0 R. R Virginia, February lltb, 1862. Friend IFi; 1 suppose you and your pa trons begin to think thut "Toodleb" has eith er gone to render up his fiinal account, or been taken by the "eeceh" and enronte for the city of his 6elf esteemed majesty, the mighty Jeff, thereto undergo the ' process of punishment lately instituted by that big oted traitor, Viz: the thumb screw. But I can assure you that neither is the case, for here I am ruralizing among the green hills, the muddy valleys and the everlasting craggy headed mountains of Western Virginia. We left Camp Vielly on the 6th inst , and took the cars on the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad for this point, distant 24 miles We came as far as Green Spring Run, where the machinery of the engine gave out, and we were obliged to take it on foot for the next 12 miles. Two miles below Green Springs is South Branch Bridge, which the rebels burned last summer, but which the government has replaced by a splendid iron structure. It is now guarded by the llOth P. V. and Capt. Dyke's Co. ol Independent Hangers. In tpeakingof Capt. Dyke, his services deserve more than a passing notice. He ia a Virginian by birth, and resided in Berkley countv until ih j breaking out ol the rebellion, when he be came obnoxious to his neighbors on account ol his strong Union sentiments, and which he at all limes and places fearlessly flung into their teeth. They attacked his houe and bnrtie! it to the ground, but the intre pid Dyke, made good his escape to the Maryland hore and soon raised an inde pendent company ol sharp shooters, with which he returned and has ever since been a terror and a dread to the rebels in West ern Virginia. They cannot move but some of his men dog them and give notice of their approach. Many are the traps and Eiiares laid for him and his men by the reb els, but so far, he has successfully eluded them; the pra)ers ot the Unionists in this feciion, are thai he may long continue to shine The rebels hat him worfe than ever the devil hated George Whitefield.and owinj: to his knowledge ol the country, he is able to ghe more information 10 our Of ficers, than any tcore ot others. He says that he dares not go back home, and t-ince he iit in tor it, he will tight it out. he ha thrown up breast works on a slight rise o! grour.d. in Iront and about two hundred yarda Irom the Bridge, which he says he ran hold with his company against any two regiments that old Jefl". can end against him, and he is just the man to do it We crossed the Bridge and bivouaced tor iSm niuht on a low level flat in mud shoe top ; deep The boys got brush and laid down i lor the night The next morning we got i oder to Mop there until further orders; lor j Hiiii g paries were now ttsnt out in all di- ; reciion-, and the wy the bo, made 'he hay and irain cUi k at.fer whs iiriyihir g J l,ul pheasant to the old cecech 'artnem in tout v'cn,"y- lr' passing tlnoagh tin- va:un the rests upon scenes ot devastation anJ j j(m.ciinn to property, that may well tau.se j any one to pray that the caue of war may never visit nur own native homes, and God j " " nii u", '!9 """"' ;f,e ! Uu,.k , , , Un Monday we got our lent and soon had them pitched and now begin to teei at home aain- 'ber ,low aboo 25,000 troop here. We have one hundred and , we1y p,cce . of arli,jeryj now at)uUl mi3 , ball o) ttitm are Parol and I can asure ou that wher. they t-peak they make the welkin , 1,ut. 1 tlHVe llo 've you a much in- j formation in regard to our lorces, iheir dis- posmon or lfC desIilalion , ;hon( (ke j or as 1 could were it not for an order of j General Landers, forbidding reporters ol pa- j l"" s,T1 -' a'ljf neiaiis uiai is calculates in any way to give the enemy any inlormaiion , whatever, under pain of arrest and trial by ! FA .. r . . i at . ...... . I - .... I .1 . i . . court martial. So you see our mouths aro : almost seated on this. But look out in a : " will hear of some bloody work j .or ineir moM welcome present of a pair of wooten mittens a piece lor the bovs. I !ell i you that three hearty cheers went up for the ladies who still think of the soldier on the field of battle. God cless them for their kindness. The health ot our reaiment is j improving, yet we still have about two uuuureu men on me sick lisl. We are in Landers Division, 1st. Brigade 4;h Regiment. 1 almost forgot to state that our paymaster has at last made his appearance and oar eyes have been blest with a sight of -ome ol Uncle Sams Treasury Notes" and some of his hard coin. tell you the boys felt joyous. Our company sent about $2,000 dollars home. This is doing pretty well ; and 1 am glad that our Commissioners will not have another opjortuniiy of insulting women when they present a petition for re liel, ty cactina; rerk-ctions upon the charac ter of their husbands, who are now absent and cannot defend themselves aiiti.ii their villainous attacks. I shah have a word to i . j j , , . Judges in resarii to the reliel matter, t ui jlitva ll( tlie lime llow q0 aj,jre?8 j Cumberland City Md To be forwarded to ltl" oiih Kegt. 1 V . ours&c TeCDLES "CRELX BACKS." This is the name pretty generally given "on change" to the recent isue of Govern ment Treasury notes. Hitherto they have met with a very shy reception Irom the Banks. A sensible change, however, ha taken place, and disposilioti to concili ate is manifested by the city banks ; ihe lower denominations ar now taken on de posit and in payment of liabilities from regular cu-lorners. This may be an indi cation that the war between the Batiks and the Government is drawing to a close. The banks have siood out manlnlly in self-defence agains. the proposed further is-ne of government paper, and give way, evidently at the clear indication from Washington that the entire influence of the President and his Cabinet will be exerted to put the cur rency bill, legal tender and all, through the Senate, just as it pased the House, without the specie clause for the payment of interest. If the time is passed for he further discussion of these ito features of the bill, and Congress in its wisdom shall declare such a currency the wisest anil best thing in the present emergency, it will be come cood ciiizens to give the measure welcome, and as far as possible aid the Government, the banks, and the public, in giving the ' money" authorized as free cir culation as possible The Albany Argus truly remark lhat "the treason of Abolitionism is daily be coming more and more rampant, a Presi dent Lincoln shows a disposition to prose cute this war on the platform of the Consti tution. The issue is becoming daily more clearly defined between the President and the friends of the Constitution ; on the one side, and those who desire to revolutionize the government of our fathers on the oiher. Let Democrats and conservative men stand by the President, so long and so lar as he lands upon the Constitution." ; THE WAR NEWS. The Battle at Fort Donelson. . Three Day's Fighting. Capture cf the Righ' Wing of the Fort Com Foates Report. U. S. Flag Ship, near Ft. Donelson. 1 Via Padocah, Feb 15. 1862 J To Gideon Welles, Sec. ol the Navy: I made an attack on Fort Done'son yes day at 3 o'clock p m., wilh 4 iron clad gun boats and 2 wooden ones, and alter one hour and a quarter severe fighting, the latter part of the day within less than four hundred yards of the Fort, the wheel of one vessel and the tiller of the Louisville were shot away, rendering the two boats unman ageable. They then drifted down the river. The two remaining boats were also greatly daniagad between wind and water. This vessel alone received 59 shots, and the oth- !?,?.on,t h " ,he num.b.era.cn- There were . . " ii'w uiu- 54 killed and wounded in this attack, which we nave reason to suppose would, in hi teen minutes more, could the action have con tinued, have resulted in the capture of the for bearing npon ns, as the enemy was running from his batteries when the two gun boats helplessly drifted down the river from disabled steering apparatus, as the relieving tackles could not steer the vessels ia the strong curretit. The fleeing ensmy returned to the river battery guns, Irom which they had been driven, and again hotly pour ed fire upon us. The enemy must have brought over 20 guns to bear upon out gun boats Irom the water battery and the main fort on the hill, while we could only return the fire with twelve boat guns trom the four bo;its. One rifled guu aboard the Caronde let burst during the action. The officers and men in this hotly contes ted but unequal fight behaved with the greatest gallantry and determination, all de ploring the accident which rendered two ol our gunboats helpless in the narrow river and swift current. On consultation with Gen. Grant and my own officers as my services here, until we can repair damages by bringing up a competent force from Cai ro to attack the fort are much less required than they are at Cairo I shall proceed to that place. I have sent the Tyler to the Tennessee river to render the railroad bridge impassa ble. H A. FOOTE, Flag' Officer Commanding Naval Force Western Division. It affor Is us plessnre this morning to an nounce the most important victory achieved since the war began. It is true, th news comes through rebel sources, but there can be little doubt of its substantial correctness They acknowledge the following facts : The capture by the Burtiside Expedition of Roanoke Island, with its three thousand deciders, together with all their ariHery and munitions of war ; the complete de struction of Commodore f.ynch'a flee! of rebel gunhoats The rebel. estimate their los at 300 killed and 1,000 wounded, while hev report the Federal los. to be 1.000 kiile''. This is probably incorrect, as they have no mans of knowing the extent of our disasters In all the late battles the Unirn armies have triumphed By sea and land, in fnnt and rar, in Kentucky, in Tennessee, in Alabama, in Virginia, in South Carolina, anil now in Nortli Carolina, the fos of the nation have been defeated. Our armies are preparing for still Inriher movements, too. in almost every direction, and let the conspirators beware of the "ideas of March " Tub war news has come thick and fast this week, so far, and just as cheering as if is plenty Our troops, have gained vic tory npon victory. The Donelson capture is a'i affair of considerable interest as we'l as much importance to the Union cause -In it capture Generals Johnson Bickner nd Buvhrod and fifteen thousand prisoners of lester rank w ere taken Floyd and P.I low with ome five thousand men made their escape. So -ays report. The loss on our side in the Fort Donelson affair is re portet! to have teen four hi idred killed and eight hundred wounded, Three of our Colonels were killed. Firk. On Tuesday morning Iat, a fire broke out in the Union Hotel, kept by Mr. Henrie, which was not quenched nntil it had destroyed the upper dories of the back buildings of the hotel and burnt the roof off the ma;n building, and senc y dam aged the re-t of the house with water. The fire appears to have originated from a stove pipe leading from the third story throagh an attic to the roof. The Fire Engit.es were promptly on the ground, but owing to the valves of some of the engines being frozen they could not be brought into immediate use, consequently ihe fire gain ed considerably headway before water otsld be applied. It was not long though before the "Friendly" led off followed by the Washington and Continental, and the three together soon quenched the flames, and saved the main portion of the Hole' property. The engines were all well work ed on the ice in the river, at the close of the fire the ice collapsed beneath the Wash ington and let her through lo the bed of the river, but through the active exertions of her 's'alwart boys" she was soon brought ont h gh and dry. Mr. Henrie. we understand, is fully in sured in the York Insurance Company. Danville luletliieacer. Henrt L. Acker, Esq., retires from the editorial of the Poitsvillj Star.dard, a paper he has conducted with ability. Mr Thom as J. McCamant takes charge. We wish them both success. "The Mission of the Republican patty is not yet finished," says one of the papers in that interest. No, it will not be finished as long as there is a cent to steal ' out of the public Treasury. Pictkrson lor March is hard to beat. This publication has always something new Its embelishments are splendid and its literature ofthe very first water. There i9 no decep tion in this work; and a person patronizing it is always sure to get the worth of his money. Peterson is me of the live institu tions of the day. Every body knows where, and at what price, Peterson is published; and if not let them come to us and we will ell thm. REVIEW OF THE MARKET. CARKFULLV CORRECTED WCSKLT WHEAT, SI 20 RYE. 70 CORN, 50 OATS, 3S BUCKWHEAT, 50 FLOUR pr.bbl. 6 00 CLOVERSEEDjS 00 BUTTER, 14 EGGS, IQ TALLOW, 10 LARD, 10 POTATOES, DR?D APPLES,! 00 HAJVIS, 2 FOR SALE f R nnXT THE nndprsia-ied ofW fr ' or rent the lollowin property, to wit : 0 good siz-d Brick DwolMnir- H"w. oH ltoiie, well of water at th d ir. and one cr o around situa'e on the nor'h eat CWT r Market and First Mreet;.ALSO, a " ai d Ll on First S ret; hon-e 30 x 20, tn.me; and a frame stable : fruit tree-, &. &c. Term reasonable . F r rmrcnt inquire of GEORfiE WEAVER. Bloomsburj, Feb. 19 1862. . K0TICE TO LAXD OWNERS. THE underi2ned, Trasnrr of Columbia County, woul 1 give notice to all those ow- ing him their tnxes on nnea'ed lands, lor the years 1860 and 1861. that they most come forward and pay the same, between this and the first of April, otherwine the iana win ue auveniei ana poiu. tx wuru na i t 1 A sold. A to lhe wie is sufficient &R. JAS. S. MrNINCH Treasurer's Officr, Treasurer. Btoomsburg, Feb. 19, 1S62., BEAUTIFU L COMPLEXION. riOCTOR THOMAS F. CHAPMAN will send toall who wish it (free of charge) the Recipe and full direction for making and using a beautiful vegetable Blm,lhat will effectually remove Pimple, Blotches, Tan, Freckles, &c, &c, leaving the skin smooth, clean, and beautiful; aUo full di rections for using Pelatrean's celebrated Stimulant, war-anied to start a full growth ot Whiskers, or a Mus'ache, in less than thirt)' days. Either of tht above can be obtained by return nail, by addrest-in fw'nh damp for retnrn postage) DU. THOMAS F. CHAPMAN, Practical Chern ist,85l Broadway New YorK. January 15, 1862. 2n. rI THE CON PENSIONS and EXPERIENCE of a SUFFERER, Published as a warn ing, and tor the especial benefit of Young Men and those who Buffer wilh Nervous Debility, I,nfi of Memory, Premature De cay, Sic., &c, &c, by one who ha cured himself by simple means, afer being put lo great exer.tt and inconvenience, through the nse of wor'hlesg medicines prescribed by learned Doctors. Single copte may be bad of the author, C. A. LAMBERT, Esq , (Jr'eenpoint, Long Island, by enclosing a r ns'-pant addressed envelop. Ad lre8 CHARLES A. LAM BERT. Esq, Greetipomt, Long Island, New York. Jinuary 15, 1862 2m. AYEH'S CATHARTIC PILLS. Am yrm tick, freblc. and COTMilaiiiing? Are jrouontof order, with your ytem d raiiiroJ, and ocr 6-lingi un comfui tablet These ijmp- :,l'J tmin ar often toe prelnda to . C$l serious illness, tome lit of 'i--' j sR-knt- is cwplng upon yoa. v,s '(i'f4-! and nhould ! averted by Zl timely use of the right run- cleanse out the disordered hu mors purify the blood, and let the lluid mere on nnob- v etruciea in ucanu again. 3 Tbey stimulate the functions - of wie boo. into vigorous ae- --J-3 tivitr. purify the system from the obstructions wnicn nut disenss. A coM sttls somewiKsre in the body, and ob structs Its natural functions. These, if not relieved, react upon themselves and the .urrounliDg organs, pt riuring; general aggravation, suffering, and disease. White in this condition, oppressed by the derangement, Uke AVer's I'ilN, and see how directly they restore the natural' action of the system, and with it Uie buoyant feeling of health again. What Is true and ao apparent la thi trivial and common compliant. Is also true in many of the deep-Atated and dangerous distempers. The same purgaUve effect expels them. Caused by similar obstruo linns and derangements of the natural functions of the IkxIv, they are rapidly, and many of them surely, eured by the samo means. None who kuovr the virtues of these I, will neglect to employ them when suffering from the disorders they cure. Statement from leading physicians In some of the principal cities, and from other weU known public per sons. From a Forwarding JltrcJtanl rfSL Louis, Feb. 4, 1951 Dn. Ateb: Your Pills are the paragon of all that U great in medicine. They have cured my little daughter of ulcerous sores upon ber hands and feet that had proved inenratde for years. Her mother has been long griev ouh'.v afflicted with blotches and ptmpleeon her euin aud in hVr hair. After our chUd was cured, she also tried your fills, and they have cured ber. ASA MORaMDO. As m. Family Physic. From Jr. E. TV. Ozrtwriglit, Acta Orleans. Yoar Pills are the prince of purges. Their excellent qrmlitiua surpass any cathartic we possess. They are mild, but very certain and effectual in their action on the lowola, which makes them invaluable to ns in the daily treatment of disease. Headache, Slcklleadacrte, Font Stomach. From Dr. Fdioari Boyd, Baltimor. Pmallno. Arm: I can not answer too tnhot complaints I have cured with your Pills better than to say all that os fntr treat with a purgative metlieint. I place great depen dence on an effectnal ratliartio lo my daily cant wlttj disease, and believing as 1 do that yonr Pilis afford us the best we have, I of course value them highly. PimmiHO. Fa-, May 1. 1555. Dr. J. C Attjl fir: I have been repeatedly cured of the worst headache any body can have by a doee or tw of yonr Till. It seems to arise from a fbul stomach, which they cleanse at once. Yours with great respect, ET. TV. ritRBLR. Cirri of Steamer Clario. Billons Disorder Llrer Complaint. From Dr. Theodore of Xno York C.ty. Not only are yonr Pills admirably adnpted to thetr pnr poae as an aperient, but I find their lieneticial effects opoo the Liver very marked indeed. They hare in my prac tice proved more effectual for the cure of bilious cam-j-trtints than any one remedy I can mention. 1 sincerely rejoice that we have at length a purgative which ia wor thy the confidence of the profession and the people. DrriRTsiST or thz Iirrimon, Washington, D. C, Ui Feb., lSSd. ) gtn : I have used your fills in my general and hospital practice ever since you made them, and cannot heMtate to , ey tliy are the best cathartic we employ. Their regu-' lating action on the liver Is quick aud decided, conse quently they are an admirable remedy for derangementa of that organ. Iudeed, I bave seldom found a case of bilious dueate so obstinate that it did not readily yield to them. - fraternally yours, ALO.W.O BALL, M. I, lliytician of the Marine JIospUaL Dysentery, Diarrhoea, Relax, Worms. V-om Or. J. G. Or ten, of Chicago. Tour Pill have bad a long trial in my practice, and X liold them iu e.'teem as one of the best aperients 1 bave ever found. Their alterative effect upon the liver mak them an excellent remedy, when given in small c'oses fix bilious dysentery and diarrhea. Their sngar-cnatins; mukes them very acceptable and convenient lor tho nae of women and children. Dyspepsia, Impurity of tha Blood. From lUv. J. V. llimes, Fastor of Advent Chursh, Bostem. Dr. ATr.rt: I have used your Tills wilh extra-rd-nary success in my f iniily and among those I am called to vii.lt in diotreas. To regulate the organs of digestion and purify the blood, they are the very best remedy I have ever known, aud 1 can confidently recommend them to my friends. Yours, J. V. Ill ME A. Warsaw, Wyoming Co, X. Y., Oct. 24, 1S55. Deab Frit : I am using yotir Cathartic tills in my prno lice, and find them an excellent pnrpitive :.i cleauio the aystem and niiriv lie frntntninsof thrUond. JOUS O. MEACHAM,M.1. Constipation, Cost I veness, Suppression, Kheninatisna, tiont, Neuralgia, Drop ay, Paralysis, Fits, etc. From Dr. J. F. Vaughn, SJonlrtnl, Canada. Too much cannot be said of yonr Pills for tho cure of enstireness. If others of our fraternity havo found tirem as efnencious as I bare, they should join me in proclaim ing it fur the benefit of the multitudes who suffer from " that complaint, which, although bad enough !a itself, ia the progenitor of fibers that are worse. I believe err. timtrss to originate in the liver, but your Pills affect that . organ and cure the disease. From ilrs. E Snort, rhysieian and XuJirife, Dostm. I find one or two large doses of yonr PUU. taken at the proper time, are excellent promotives of tuc natural serrc turn when wholly or partially suppressed, and also very effectual to deans the stomach and expel worms, Tbey are so mnch the best physio we bve tliat I recommond no other to my patients. From the i?ct. Dr. ITawX-ts, of Pit Vffhtdisl Fpis. Cfture. Fn.Arj Ilorsr, Savannah, Ga Jan. 9. 151. noitoRFD Pta : I should he ungrateful for the relief yonr skill has brought me if 1 did not report my ease to . yon. A cold settled In my hails and brought on excru ciating nrnrahjic paint, which ended in cAraate rfceimo. firm. Notwithstanding I had the heot of physicians, the disease grew worse and worse, until by the advice of yonr excellent a rent In Baltimore, Ir. Mackenxie, I tried yonr Pilis. Iheir effcts were slow, but snre. By perteve'tiug " In the use of thorn, I ant now entirely wU. ErxiTE CRAKFxm, Eaton Rouge, La S Pec. 1355. T. Ate.: I have been entirely cured, by your Pin,rif Jiheumotie Gout- a painful disease that had afflicted me for years. YISCENT SIJDLLU STg Moot of the Pflls In market contain Met cut v. whk b, although a valuable remedy in skilful hands, la dangerous In a public pflt, from the dreadful tow. qnenres that frequently follow it rnrantkm nse. Tbeea contain no mercury or mineral substance whatever. Price, 25 ce?nt per Box, or 5 Eoxea for 41. . Prepare! by Ir. J. C. AYES & CO.. Lovell, Hiss.