, ,., f--. .. 1 1 iir-i. i t r -- ,fl" 1 " n " Tl" "n 1 rtl"ni " 111 ,r -,- - -- irr" r" "'" " """ ' i ' Vu U. JACOST, I'uMisfcerO VOLUME 16. THE STAR O F THE' NORTH ' IS ' PUBLISHED ETERT Wr.DNrfDAT BT ' JVM. IT. J J COB V, Witi cv !Bain St., rd Square below Karkcl. TERMS : Two -Dollar, ml Fifty Cenn " in advance; 1 1f not paid till the end of the J'ear, Three Dollar will be charged. " No subscriptions taken for a period less laansi montns ; no discontinuance prrm. - . . - dele-ate was stand- " hi'AZTnoV"6 P,d,BB,eM 8tfnfanlfeadVra sham'p.gne tumbler, ! , Ihe option of the editor. i rr , h.i. hi. n,ter iwj KATES OF ADVERTISING : TfV n'LvrnvsTtTIM'P'i S.MTTAHP . - . V .w. : vi - Kvery subsequent insert.on.le. tbao 13, ? Oa.coloronloneye.r, - - 50 Admioisaators' and Executors' notices.3 Transient adrer:isin f a ab'e in advance, all other du a'ter the fir-t insertion. - BRtCK" fOMEROF ON BPSQ.riTOS.- ; "Brick" Pomeroy.ot the La Crosse(Wis ) " Democrat, gives the ,'bllowing' as his expe ' rience in gettin? mosquitos intoxicated . "Jarsh BUlinss" can't teat it:' MOFQCITOS ON A RENDER. Nipht before last, in order to alcep. e placed a piece of raw bee! steak on a plate . at th bead of onr bed. In the rooming it ; was by the mosqoitos sucked as dry of , blood aa an old sponae, and our skin saved . at least ;wo thousand perforations. .. All . about the room in the morning were mos - qu'r.os", plethoric with blood, loaded till they . coold no', fly. . -We killed a lew but the job was too eacgo inary , o we left them to their ieasL Last night in order to get even with the , aerenadiug dvila. we steeped half a pound v. of fresh beel steak in some old rye whisky, ,- end left-it on a plate near ihe bed. Nothing . like beins hosoitablv inclir.d. In Hsu mm vtesafter thelicht was extingui-hedaswarm of these back bninji bill pn-tert made an ad . vance movement. (Joe l ttiem careseu n j , sweetly on the nose he sent in his bill p . there wa a slap a dilmed damn a dead f , x .. mosquito 1 v Sooo we heard a tremendous - bozzmg about the whiky-soaked beef. The entire moqui:o family came singing in, and ) such" an rpera good Lord deliver u! But hey did not disturb us with hii(. we fell ' asleep to be awakened in ten minute by the xrotrt mosquito concert ever editor, mor al, j ' ' devil, ansrel. divine. Dutchrnati'or any other - man listened to. W raised a light, and the greatest show of the season was there to be feen. Every mosquito was dranltas a blind " fiddler, and such an nproarons night as th-s Ions-billed whelps had, never was sen be " fore thia side of tetuft! "The worst an'ic! L'W Fome were pla)tng circus on the plate. One JIg fellow, wi:h a belly like FaMafT, full of blood and whisky, was d.ucing jnha en the Bible, whiTe a tat frienud o his tribe lay on her back beating the devil's dream J ' on an invisible tarn borine with one hind l leg! Two more wer wrestling on the fooi I tosrd of the bed, eac . with bi bill stuck '.' v fast in the timber. " Another was tying the lens of oor pants .into a bow knot o ti about the ntck. of. Anna Dickinson, which hangs against the wash stand, while another red-stomached customer was trying to stand on hie head in the wash bowl. , .AH over the room were dronken mosqui i loes! Oneflong bill, gauol representative ; tvas trying to ram the mucilage bottle full I of newspaper chipptngs. Another chap mti drilling a hole through a revolver han- U. , die and singinj "My Mary Ann," while .. another was limping across the.window still . in search of fresh air, to the agonizing tune of tram p tramp tramp! One l;itle ram of a ikeet was trying lo jam the cock out of Ben. Butler's eye with a too'.h grosh, a bis ' r picture hung in ihe room beside that of ; " Kidd the pirate anTa few other thieve. - Another drunken statesman of the Morqui o . family, reminding a o.' Z-ch Chandler, was . talking Russian to a lot ot drnnken coropan- ! , ion as they lay in a heap on a plate, wh ile another one sat on the handle of our bowie knife, doubled np with cramp in the stom ach, and trying. to untie his tail witfi his bill, i which teemed --lik Lincoln's back-done f N when Anna Dickinson said - it wauled stiff 1 ening. He was a sick looking skeeter, ami 1 ' , died in three mion'es afifcr we sa jt him, her, or it. as the cae may te. Two others look a bath in the inkstand. - A no. Her one with a I bill like the devil's' narrative was fry ing to ? t wind our wa'ch with the pen-wiper while -. ' anoiher had just died a hn was sitting on j the rim of a dish in the room, irytnn to ! chant "Mother, t:e come home to die!'' Toor skeeter. - A nice skeeter, but "'twas a ' pfty tie th-ank.'' An old veteran with a pioncb foil of alf and 'alf hlood. and wbis. ) ky sat on ihe table reading Lea Miserables, .while his wife was under the Move trying to ttend her broken wing with a timpsey tooth i pick. She looked disgnsfed I Ano:her One . .rombed his hair with a paper of pins, tied a lpiece of whire paper about his neck, pasted a five cent infernal revenue Mamp on his ; tamp, and died like a loyal oitizeo. His 'last wrrds were "; '"Tell ihe traitors all aroorrd yoo,'"&c. r ' Another druuken scamp r has jnst started KHix tfre window for John B. Gpuah, or a stomach pomp. A worse behaved set of - cummers we never, saw. They ' have acted rsarfol. AbogMwo thousand lie about dead bat sadness seemed not to break in upon - iheir hilarious Tiotiog opon blood and whis ky. Half a dozen ot thera set on our new bat pjayinj draw polkrusing worm lozert - . . ges tor checks, while .one of the par.y got 4 clean busred by making a fifty dollar blind good on a four flush, which didn't fill : He will be apt to wear cotton socks next winter' ' and keep away Irom church collection days. Aother one sat on top of a brandy bottle, reading Baxter's Call to the Uucoa verted, while his partner lies dead at. his feet, evi dently forced to close doors by the failore of ð3ra .& Son, of New! York! ? Six others wer,e trying P bang one that' looks like a Copperhead to th3 corner of a rqaich eafe, at as they jere d;unk and he sober it's not safa to bet on fcis being darjgled They ' pare eatsn the beef rdrank the blood and whisky dril'aJ the plate loll of holes and 4 fia the center (able organized a son of Malta ode, csing a fj vt cent shinplaitar for Llaiiiat in the act eoliUsd "The Elevation of - lan." ' v- : ' ' --Another red bslliei leader of the Miss ira:er family tad a battalion of drunken - bummer cn the edge of a spittoon watching Ma Jim a far overcoat into his left ear. :' ll ra foolish foolish enough for . Briga - dif-rGenera! or a member of congras. A IItl!a cess with black legs, crimson stomach .f b.z J dosbla jointed bill, was vomiting in a i satia Upf sr, wbila his wife, a sickly look- ir Uly cf her tribe, was jjnawmg at the - t roe iSm!n.i it a bo o"na A no-hsr ar; :d3-.'.y an old maid, eat under the la rr.i::,-tr:tr tha cat, whila her sis er wai r;c;;--e pair Ol WCQln Growers IDIO cer ' -C ; -"-'m a gVj-Jaed strain : : . ... . ; - . - - . - Trnio ana liigui mu 41 "u v " j . . . - - 3Trr - - "Come re! in this bosom'.'' " We have applied for a season ticket front ea.- - v . -r ' ' ' ; Another one with a certificate of rriarriage ' over his head -in ihe shape of a welt the . ot a canoe mom, was uancmg ,.,.- 11 1 . .. 1 . 7.. n danao with two in own u no virgins on a ' - J : n n gy f . I f churches sat playing old sledge with a cork- screw, lo see which should ho foe a gin chiU taith his other he was Dointins ouH in the road to Richmond to- a lot of fkeets-st 50 dmnker than bim.el , wh.ch w ere a, Uw.g 00 f'" ,he P'".ow- We.bould I say 00 ' gr prty-qu,tely a! amputations, circose , nesro lanerais, arw poker sparking, or other amueement, there is nothing to be compared to a flsck of mosquitoes on a bender. If you don't be lieve it, fix them up with a piece of beef eiealc soaked in tvhisky, and laogh jour sides sore at (he antiqs the drur.ken war blers cut. S P E EC H or COL. JOHN G. FREEZE, At the Nob Mountain Mrfling; Wednesday MornlDj, August SfJtb, Repotted by D. F. .&lurpky, E;q - Sir Fcrxow Citizens : This morning ha ben devoted to tli review of an epi-oile of the late war, popularly known as "the Columbia County Invasion,?' and U has ben assigned io me, lo perform that duly. I he f:iUe and malicious representations made ad puMtfhed broa I cn over trie land, ; ...i,! .k' 'nkt, m;,i 9nii ,hn. mak - f . author of 'hi fool wrona and deep outrage, from the jus' indignation ol all honest and riht minded men. The time haa already come when a thorough ex4orition is require, and there cn be no n;or fining occasion than thi, when ihe ritizpiis of the county interested in the thoronah ventilation of this enormity, are here to cnr.'iNiratu the farts adduced ; and many people from a distance, for the firM time fchall become lull? acquainted with the cross inMilt and deep wrong to our population whn in a peaceful and quiet community, the evil pasions of bad men, s'irred up to a feeling of intense hatreil by disappointed political ambition, railed op on the military to avenge their private wrong, and in direct violation oTihe law and the Constiiution, made the civil power r.urordinate to the miliia'y The us;enMon of the writ of Wti Cor pi $ wa a fi'tinz ant ne earjr prelude to ihis'crnsade. -Without that not one ol thi men who were subsequently arrested on fal-e and frivolous rha'ges. which it is pro poed now io investigate. cooll have been laket; beyond the county, conl J tiavs been docied trial in the civil Conns, or could have bren convicted therein ; because the rul4 of legl evutenr?, and tne cntitu-J tional right to a trial by jury wnl I have ; proiected-innocrnce, and exposed the mal- I ice and rancor of political jrarti'Tanshi;. I say therefore. Fellow Crizens. and I( hope to eatify jou before I c!oe. that ihi Invasion of Colombia County wa a purely political rail, and the local leaders of ihe . Republican abolition partv are guilty of an outrage, which will make such a record . against them, as many of our citizens re member against their fathers during the Revolution. They have made a history whirh they shall not erape they have made a record, during their. phurt leae of pl.tre and power, whicf)wi!l remain fnruv er aaint them, and which their on will blush to read, if pnbli virtue and private rtfctiiude (-hail ever find a lodgment in their breafcts. j On Saturday evening, August 13 h, J864. , the quiet village of Bioomburj, t'le County eat of Colombia County, va suddenly di-turVd by the appearance, on its gtreets, : of eighty cavalry and forty infjnsry and two '. pieces of ar'i llery. ThfTlown was ir.pta.'tily i in an excitement ! The exultation of ihe Abolitioni-ie was ' most iiitenne, their eyes ' sparkled with delmht, iheir (oval tongue were loosed, and threat against the Demo - crats and Democratic printing office, and statements that the troop- were to 'cour the roonty" were in the mouth of Loyal Leagusrs and their followers. Very many expressions, showing the animus of the op position, have been taken down and are remembered ; and the fierce desire on the part of some of them to inaugurate a reign of riot and bloodshed, was painfully appa- rerrt. ' f for bloqd and lustily cheering on the sol- On Tuesday morning following, Major ! dier in ,his detestable business. The po General Couch, commanding the Depjn llti, JtI aspect of the invasion was still more mont of iha S,i sorief.a nna. whieh mi-1 n.l-H , lolly developed upon- this oc aion. At Columbia County, with two hundred and fifty more troop, made hi headquarter iu Bloottifcbcrg. Reinforcements rontiened to arrive, and within a few ifays "The Army of the Fihingcreek" numbered one thousand menl And you will obervp, my Fellow Citi zens, that it was not . Until after ihe Stat and Presidential elenion in the Fall fol lowing were . over, that it was found that the "Fishingcreek Rebellion" was at an end Then the political object having been fulTj" accomplished, those one thousand j armed men were all withdrawn from your must. . - ,, .ln order lo show yoa mre fully the dead ly malice which actuated the?e men, I shall refer you to a letter published in that general receptacle of falsehood, folly and sensation stories, the Philadelphia Inquirer, dated "Carnp C.adwalader, Columbia coun ty, Peuna., September 6;h, 1864.'' But un doubtedly written in Bloomsburg, and but one man there, ia my opinion, could have had the hardihood lo write such a ma of deliberate, wilful and malicious falsehoods. The letter was promptly contradicted ; but the editors of the Inquirer, (rue to their poli tical instincts, took no notice of the contradiction- the lie once started could go on its way thus eudorsedand effcl the desired results.. 1 will read parts of the letter and comment as I proceed. It opens as follows: i .Correspondence of the Inquirer. - t "Camp Cadwalapkr, Col. Co., Pa. September 6, 1864. We of . the army of the "Fishing Creek" feel surprised and exceedingly disappointed that your valuable paper his not pursued yonr usual course of enterprise, antf bad a reliable correspondent with this army. Oar ' deeds ot valor and nardshiDs have been al j (owea 10 pass oncnroniciea, ana oor praiees I may j-o .unsung ' : it i-- 1 r - .1 ( - 1 1 I louwm utm, ueiiuemen, oeioreigjava I fiaijhed, that ihera was a tery reteable cor- ' : TTT nT. respondent somewhere. Rat ha goes on : 'Ii is not generally known that certain drafted raea from ibis and other connties ; of this State, and some pf the lower ones ol New York, hare been in the mountains in lhenorhern part" of Colombia Connty, on. the head waiers of Fishinsi Creek, where they have openly defied both the civil and ."" i Now, Gentlemen. I fay here that there is not one single syllable ot truth in that sen- sdc There never wa in the northern Part of Columbia county . amoni! the moon- tains, or anywhere else in his section of ill.' counirv. a uanu 01 men. Miner citizens 01 countrr, a Dand ot men, either citizens the cocnty, of other counties in the State or of portions of the State of New York, associated together for any soch purpose, for any illegal p nrpose, or indeed for any purpose at all thai neither the civil nor military authorities of ourcoontry were de- i fied, openly or secretly and that in fact there never was any such body of drafted men in the locality .specified by this corres pondent. The assertion is absolutely and unqualifiedly false. . - ''Matters had reached stich a point that a few weeks ago a party of dralted men fired upon and severely wounded Lieut. Robison, upon his attempting to arrest them." Now a word on that point. It has never been shown anywhere, by any sworn testi mony, by any evidence whatever, that the man who is here called Lieut. Rooion had authority from any person or power, mili tary or civil to make special or general ar rests. The lacts are, that this Robison, a Luzerne county man, and ihree or four other persons raiding around the oonn'y of Colom bia after midnight came across several citi zens ol the county traveling upon their own bu.-iness, not drafted men, so far as- is known, nor men liable to arrest for any known cause, who upon being challenged by Robison's party and ordered to s'op or else they would be fired upon, seem to have fired themselves, in reply to the chal lenge. The act is neither to be defeii'ded nor excused ; but it was a night affray be tween those persons and citizens of Lu zerne who had neither right nor authority here, no lawful power over ODr people and no legal riuht to arrest them. The mee'ing was accidental, the parties unknown, the numbers insignificant ; and it i sheer non sense lo ta'k aboul an army of 1,000 men or any other number being requirJ lo ar rest '.hem. And yet, that i given as one of the causes for this Invasion. . :tThe. force of ihe insurgents provinsr to be much larger than supposed, we were reinforced by a battalion of infantry under command of Lieut. Col. Stewart. We re mained in camp at Bioonsburg for several days, when all things being in readiness, we' advanced io Benton, a distance of eighteen miles. There we asain encamneJ and were further reinforced by a battalion of the eteran Reserve Coips, making a command , of atuut one thousand met." Yes, my S"1 Citizen, this valiant J "army of ihe &hnz Creek" rested in Bloomsburg from tye 1 3t h to the 21t of Au- t gust ; and on Sunday morning broke np its j camp and took np its line ol march. With- ! out any nece-sity, against all proprieiy and all decency, the holy hours of the christian Sabbath were desecrated by the sounds of martial music and the measured tramp of I soldiers who, themselves mostly-innocent, j were made the instruments of designing '. men, and sent on a political mission against ' peacelul citizens, whose only crime was a devotion to the principles of the Constito i tion, and an nnforlunate propensity to vote the Dercocratic ticket. (Applause). For; mark you Fellow Citizens, the facts make , it perfectly clear that it was not against de- serters that this immense force was sent, j The best information I caa procure makes ! it probable that in that entire region there ; wre le?s than 100 non reporting dratted j men. when the "army of the Fishirtg Creek" .' arrived in Bloomsburg ; beini a les p.r- I centage than almor-t any connty in the Slaie, or the eiitire North could sho w. And ! very few it anv men charged and showi to be desenersunder the act ol Congress, were j rent to the front by the 1,000 men who com posed the "army ot the FUhing Creek. i." So far the military results were not very brilliant. Hut I call public attention to the fact, that not one of the one hundred men fire was ut-elnl also, to some extent, in atd who were arrested on the 31st of AnjustJ ing the ventilation, attd from the chilliness 1S64, was a deserter, not one of them was j ever charged wuh desertion, nor was one 01 inem ever tried ror mat onense. it is an important tact also; that not one of them had had anything to do, or any connection with the Robison shooting affair previously noticed, nor was any one of them ever charged with any participation therein. Ah! Ladies and Gentleman this was a remarkable march the streets were full of ' exultant and jubilant abolitionists, thirsting feat a dozen carriages and hrggies filled with aboliuo'iists, whose joyful faces will long Le remembered, followed this army of Invasion and Occupation ; like the famous aooliiioo congressmen whose splendid turn outs followed McDowell to the firi battle of Bull Run. (Laughter and applause ) Bu'-.le' us l iliiw the Inquirer correspon dent a liule further. On the 23:h of August General Cadwal a ler ar'tved and assumed command. Mat lers remained quiet until ihe morning ot the 31st. The last day of Summer, 1864. will be long remembered in the annals of Co lombia County. During the nt2hi of the 30:h the forces were posted in different por tions of the county, and upon the breaking of day. which was. the lime appointed, about one hundied of the citizens who were im plicated in the troubles were quietly arrest ed and brought into camp." A memorable day truly ! never to be for gotten "in the annals of Columbia Count)'"! One hnndreu ot her citizen arreted w;',n out due process of law, in defnnce of their constitutional rights, without au'ltori'y from the legal and constituted magistrate, but by virtue o.' the bru e force ot K'OO armed men. One hundred citizens ."quietly arretted J Why Gentlemen, it had been given oui that there was a aegular rebellion in the Fishing Creek Country that men worain and chil dren were under arms that there was not a house that was not fortified that ihera was not a gun which was not loaded to ihe muz zle 1 (laughter) and yet this Philadelphia Inquirer man says that on he morning of August 31st r 100 ciuzens were quietly ar rested !" Where ? Each nt hit own home f opon rising from his bed at the "breaking of J day" dragged from bis family fasting, and ; in some cases only partially dressed." Where , then was khe reba lion i here were lne (rmej jnen . .mere was no opposition of either individuals or numbers, even to that Til 1 . 1 : I t ... -. . j ' iubw suu lumruai uunu xuinanueu vj 'thee men upon lb at ci9roio. Tb citizeos . . n i i.J am) nn f'nniifrr. nhiT ximv -n a wT?nQn Ay SEPTEMBER. 20, 1865. of Columbia County "quietly" submitted. They were marched off to a church one of those political clnb rooms where treason had teen preached for years before the South seceded, where the blood hounds of Zon had stirred op political strife and ani mosity, instead of le irh rig 1ovj, prace arid good will 1 such a place were thjy tan the 100 were separated and set apart, the sheep from the goats, probably, (i;iua:li;er) and the sheep earned oil 'o Fort Mifllin. The military authorities confined them in the meeting house without their breakfast, and marched, tbetn to Bloomsborg afier wards without providing them anything . to eat, and on lo Philadelphia, before they led ihem. Then these men who had com mit:ed no crime, who had made no rebellion, who had done nothing wrong, who aid not even resist an illegal arrest, were taken to Fort Mifflin below Philadelphia, and locked up in bomb proofs under the eanh, denied air, exercie,-Wrd the blessed light of Heaven. They had boards on the damp earth for beds. They were subjected to loul air, and measre and sometimes unhealthy food, un til sickness took hold on the strong frames, the wasting sirer.gth and lack luster eyes told of fast coming death, and whence the Iriends of William E. Roberts bore his body, late so full of life, through the length of our county to its last resting place. There at least wa one Democratic vote forever extinguished ! So far at least this army of 1,000 men had success. (Emo tion.) That I may not be supposed lo be siatins any thing more than the fact9 of the cae, I refer :o the sworn statement of William Ap plernan, one ol the Fort M'filin victims, as to the treatment they experienced. Appleman's Statkmknt. We arrived at Philadelphia at eight or nine o'ctock in the morning, (Sopt. 1st,) and were . taken to Barracks 5ih & Button wood. There at noon we obtained some thing to eat tin-cupa of soup and some bread and meat, which was the first food furnished u Irom the time we had been ar rested. At the Uenton Church some eata bles were sent to us from the house ol John J. Stiles, by his-direction, he being one of the atrested men, w hich was all we had hd. I ami iny sous wer taken !rorn home be fore breakfa'. The alternoon of fame diy lst; we were taken on to rv M fii.:i aid put in Bomb-proof No. 3. Gamu through a Ions, dark, arched paaae or gangway ol about P0 leet in length Iro.-n the iron grated doors f .av fi feet hiiih in the centre and 5 or 6 leet wide") we pass lh'oush a heavy douole ' . . . . i r i- i nlanked and riviied ooor into me i.mi. prool. Thi bomb-proof is partly be(ow the level of the river, is archet overhead and j has thick walls of stone and brick. By i nemon it I and other made its width to be 19 feel and its length 54 feet. This was the space allotted to the prisoners, 44 in nomber. One of the original prisoners had been discharged when we arrived at the Fort on ihe ground thai be had been arrest ed by mistake. ... Air and light were imperfectly admit'ed on one side and at one end of Ihe bomb proof through openings in the wall, per haps a dozen in nuynber. The main ones may have been four inches wide by a foot in height on ihe ootside, widening t-swards the interior. The floor was-of hard earth or gravel and 6rm. On the sides scantlina were laid on the ground lena'h-wise of the room and across these board were plar-ed. Again at ihe ends of the bords next the wall, short pieces of scantling or blocks were placed at interval end wise to Ihe walls, acios which boards were laid, form ing a narrow platform next the walls a lew inche high. This constituted a subs-timte for pillows, the lower and wider platlorm ol branls ar,werii.g the pnrpise of a bed. A singte soldier blanket was furnished to each man, out no oenumg or e-raw The room -jra very dur.p, ar 1 a' wet time the wa'er cams through arcii om head from the earth npon it, dm;p:i)2 dawn in the part farther Irom the fir. There was also sweating ol the vide walls. To fherk the damDnos it . wa recessary to ! keep np a fire cotitant! in the grate at one j end ol ihe room, but this was not sufficient, Alihoii"h attended lo rush! and day. The o! ihe room wa required for comfortable warmth even in September. Our prison fare was as follows ; To each a loaf ol baker's bread for ti e day. One slice of boiled pork or beef and a tin of coffee in the morning; one tin of bean or pea soup ai dinner, and a titi ot cnflVe at night. On three or lour occasions we tirew ; potatoes boiled in the skin instead of soup i at dinner. Several times the meal was not ', good, and five or six times there was none furnished. The prisoners, however. pcrchae.l pro visions for themselves, to some extern, at enormous rates. The expense incurred in ihis way was very considerable during .the time I remained in confinement. One half a single candle was fornished at nights lor" th whole room, and we were obliaed to procure lights at our own ex pense. A fi'th trrb was furnished tis made by sawing a barrel acroshe middle. Stand- ins upright on the closed end, a stick was run across it through holes-bored a little way below the top. Thus provision wa made for its beinc carried by two men. It had no cover. For about three weeks it stood in the gangway or entrance pa-sage outide the door of oor prison room, during the day time. Afterwards, upon my appli cation, we were permitted to keep ii duru g the day, in an empty room .adjoining the gangway. Two of the prisoner went out with it occasionally, under guard. Alwav at iiiht it was necessarily kept in our 100m. the dcor being locked, fhis wh?le mader 'l bo prjionf" wer rffft-v iror 40 year of ae.'all accusMrnid to hc ttve em ploy -rnttM, n pun wionri imp-i-onm-." t bore se verely. About ,iie e !i.t 1,1" Septt'Tiber. Win E. RoJert and Jr-hn York were taken sick with bowel com plaiV. and were r moved to the hospital near the Fort. Roberts died about :en days afterwards. Fellow Citizens, before these arrests were made. General Cadwalader had been up I ' r . . . a -1 . I Fishing .Creek, and came back iq biooms- bur, and there had long secret conierences with leading abolitionists of thai place. Af ter these conferences were over, the arrests were made, and when my friends who now sit on the platform behind me, were being marched downlo Bloomsburg towards eve ning, withont anything to ear having been furnished them, they met my lord General Cadwalader, joorneyiog.at bis leisure up the creek, in all the glory of shoulder-slraps and all the insolence of Federal place and power. Ha passed thera without speakicg to lliern. : . Let us return once more to the letter of ;he Philadelphia lnquirtr. "I should state that previous to the march from Bloomsburg,. Major General Couch had issued a proclamation to the Insurgents sivina ibem several days to lay down their arms and return to their al!egian;e " Now, Gentlemen, I wan? to read you what Maj Gain. Conch did any in order that yon may undersiand exactly how malicious ly false that Inquirer statement was, and bow thoroughly the record convicts him ol wilful lying : HD QU DEPMT OF THE SrQ' KHaNNA B'oombiirg Pa August 16th 64 , Col J. G. Freeze Bloomsburg Pa Sir Yon are authorized by me to inform thoe persons in Columbia Co who have not reported as required under the previous "drafts, "' and are known as de serters, that the charge f desertion skull be re milled by me provided, they duly report therm-elves on or before 12 P. M Saturday Aug 20th current. Thi doe not apply to those charged with fhe crime of murder. I am very respt D N Couch Maj Gen Corndg Dept" Now, mark yon, Fellow Citizens, the 2a quirer went, broad cast over the country. It need to have fianding at ihe head ol its columnsa statement, that its circulation was over 60 000 copies dailj, until some other abolition paper, knowing its propensity lo lie, contradicted the assertion and forced Ihe L.q'iiref lo lake it out. Bui the state ment ol this letter which I am reviewing circulated over this em ire common wealth, and were copied into all the abolition pa- f pers of the country, "That the insurgents were to lay down meir arms ana return lo their allegiance." Gentlemen, there never were any insurgents in Columbia county there were no arms to lay down and Gen. Conch never issued ' a proc'amation " to any "insurgents." He -imply wrote a teller asking the draft ed men who had not reported, to present themselves within a certain time, promis ing if they did so, they should not be charg ed with desertion. L)o you fully appreciate the malice of this writer, his determination io manufac ture public sentiment. against you, his abso lute invention of falsehond to serve hi- pur- poe ? Bnt here, fortuna ely, the record so i i . . : . . i i . l utterly refutes him, as lo ren.ier what he may say on any other point, entirely unreli able. Let us, nevertheless con'inne our exami nation of this most surprising letter. It pro ceed I "It is almost to be regretted that we wra ' not allowed to march 2inst these northern traitors immediately upo i our arrival, for at this time they -ere located near Ronton, at a plap called Still-water, and were throw ing np rifle pits to resi-l our advance u;i j the valley. Had we advanced at this time we might have hd a rhance lo aJm nister some ot the same kind of union arguments lo these scoundrels as their friend in the Sonth have been recajving at the hands of, our soldiers. But disloyalists are cowards, and so soon ss ihe excitement of bad whis key has passed away the mas of iheir forces lost heait, and tho.-e men who had property to lose, who were in the ranks, t-uddenly became intensely loyal. At a . preliminary examination he'd upon the prisoners, about One half were allowed to return to their homes, some giving security for their future good behavior. Thi left about fifty, care being taken to retain none against whom there was not sufficient evidence to convict, as wilfappear on their trial.'-' Now, my Fellow Citizen, the man who wrote thi hitory in the Philadelphia a qirer iol I a wiilul, ma'icious and deliher- e lal-eiiond. (Col Pmllkt, "Who-n dj 30U suppose it was 1'') Coi. Fkf.ze I tt-it.k it was the Editor of the Atmlinon Newspaper at Blocmsbnrs. If he Jid not d0 jt he can deny it. but whether I shall be lieve his denial or not is ano'her qr.estioji. ' N rt mn ever s.'tw a rifle nt in lntumlna sn : and no man hre, except one who has ' been in the army, knows what a rifle pit is i I do not believe thai any m. n who was in j that army ol 1 000 men was such a liar, ! scoundrel and fool as to write, that rifle pits i had teen thrown op at tiii-water by ciii ! zns, to impede the advance of 1 GvO men, I who had brer, trained for three year in the j war. in their march op the valley of the ; Fihing Creek. Besides, the army had now passed over the ground where these ride pits were said to be. B.it no man ever saw them, every one of those thousand men knew thai no such thing ever existed; and it does i not seem possioie inai any omcer or soldier j would invent such wholesale and malicio'is (a!-ehoods. The Inquirer correspondent , calls you "traitor," "scoundrels," "dUloy j alists," 'cowards' and drunkards -j -The whole country was to believ ihat ihe ; very people who stand before me lo day, j ami who have been attenJiiig this, ihe most . quiet and orderly and magnificent meeting , 1 over saw; were among the most abandon I I ed wreterms in me universe, ana laise lo J every ining sacred and honorable. And why f B-'canse a political contest wa go ing on in Pennsylvania, and thoe opposed lo the policy ol the administration had 10 be denounced and'derided arid abned The State must be carried, and Columbia coun ty with herfifepri hundred Democra ic rrja j iritr must be crushed out; and in ordr to do it effectually this man wants Mov, he bot es for a fiht, the groans of widows and ihe shrieks of orphans are mu-ic to hi abolition ear- ; atid the tinge of blood is ihe color, next to black, which most delights his eyes. "O i Friday we once more took up our line ol march arid are now in the monn tiins Our camp is located in a valley on ihe east branch of Fih:nsr Creek. Mountains-are all around us. The valley is bare ly wde enough for our cam p, the mountains on each 'sine rising up almost perpendicular for over seven hundred leet. Of coure I am not aware of the informa tion poiessed at head-quarters, tun from all 1 can "earn, the iosurzenis are encamped in a gorge in the mountains, where they have intrenchments mounting two field piece. They are said to be from three to fie hun dred strong and from their location it will be extremely difficult to approach them with 6-jfIicient numbers to overcome their extremely sarong-position., It is the prayer of evrey soldier in the command that they remain and give us a fight. We hardly have hopes ot this, from the cowardly course they have pursued up 10 this time. Still Italics marked. in' the original by Gen Couch. : - they are hemmed in and may be brought to bay." Cadwalader and bis thousand men are spoiling for a fiht (laughter) but it they were really as anxious as they seem to be, ihey would be down at the front, where Grant arid his brave fellows, begrimmej by the smoke and Ftunred by the roar of bat lle, are doins service against the enemi; instead of listening to ihe quiet murmur ol the Fihins Creek, the crowina of Ihe cocks (which were speedily captured,) the grunt ina ol the pig (which were quickly slaugh tered.) and the reveilleotthe thousand men. But ihe- General and his men doubtless pre lerred Colombia County as the -cene of iheir exploits. It was a safe place there was no danger (laughter) anJ he marched his men up to the head watprs of iIih Creek and encamred them there in ihe beaatiltil a valley, with magnificent mountains all around, and quiet and peace reigning su preme. Gen'l Cadwalader is a man ofcon?S?r able military experience. He made him self a very excellent reputation as an officer in the war with Mexico; but that was before he permitted himself to be used by men who had no respect lor constitutions or for laws. I wish I could , fairly describe to you GenM Cadwalader' hunt after that fori mounting two field pieces' what trouble he had to el snides and scours (there were np intelligent contrabands in that country) how he sent a squad of men af ter my old friend James Hess how after a midnight ride he captured a boy who knew some other boy who knew where the Fori was how that boy did'nt know but mold lell them where there wa a boy who did and how at last somebody was found who undertook In fix the spot. Then Ihe Major General's scientific knowledge of military matter came into full exerci-e.his 8tra2tic ability hud a foeman worthy of hi lame; and his thousand men were divided and located aud limed with Ihe utmost military skill and precision. The grand "army of the Fishing Creek," in three divisions, ad vanced against the lonely Fort. (Laughter ) After clambering for half a day over ro-ks and stone, through briars and hnrkleberry bn-hes, finding ihree or four old bear Iraps which my Iriend John Mcllenry had set up there to caudi bears, itiey began to find sign of a p!a'e where somebody had been: and then, "Look to your arm bo v.," and keep your powder drv." Laugh'er And so this valiant army progressed eattli divi sion coining in otder and al prop-r time, suddenly e unou'ining the top of the moun tain, and raptured a p!nre inhere some of yonr biys and kith hit leen hiving; a huckle Lerry pic-nic and that wa all liieyevr did find. Great laughter. No Foit no e'n'renchment, no rifle pits, no fi-ld pieces, 110 five hundred men, 110 rebellion, no nothing. That wa- the end of the expedi tion, and Cadwalader, like that ancient be ing of Spain, With twenly ihonaan I men, again. Marched up the hill, and then marched down Laughter He was thoroughly disgusted He came to Biorn-bt;rg and upon his military knowledge and experience as a military oflicer, he pronounced, I use his own word, "Ihe whole thing a farce." What then should he have done? He had arre-ted abont one hundrad of our citizen, had incarcerated Forty four of them in lh bomb-prools of Fort Mifflin, he had satisfi ed himself after a thorough search in all direction ihatt he Fort was moonshine and tne rebellion a "farce;" and as an honest man, as au otlirer, deserving the name, he should have made it a personal rnat er to procure their release; bui he had not the manliness to risk hi rommi-sion . So the original excuse lor putting thee rr.en into Fo't MitUiti had utterly atid ahMi lute'y failed, it was brok-n tlown beyond any re-iurert iori. and a tie v exctte miit be invented for keeping 1 .000 arm ed mt-n in Columbia County. Tni 1 olm-ral raid in 11 -t l!l be kept up, and 'he Ramz meet ing, a it i railed, in i:-e:f entirety hi;,o pi-m was the next exri:-e far b.-igiig ae soldier. But the Rantz mealing wa i.ot field until alter the solJier-- rame to Bl jum burg, would never hue been hell, but lor their romT.ing; and could not, therefore, be the caue of the Invasion But the catie and reason of thai Ritz meeting having been held, was given by the witnes-e for Ihe administration before the 'Mdi'arv L'oinmiMOn that tried our citizen. 1 read from trie testimony of Nathan J. He-. It was reported arcinJ by d':fTjr:nt persocli tiiat noldicrs were coming; up to h' lp scrue ritis'ns who had been trying- to lak drafted men, and that they would burn the buildtDg of tbm th t were drafted arid them that resisted no oppo sition was made or resistance offered to the soidiera when they came up Hoard the report as to the objects of the soldiers a day or three or four be fore this Ilantzj meeting I heard after- .s..i 1 . v . warJs ttitit tne oitj.ct was Decaue tney heard the soldiers were foiu.i to burn and ! . t .1 destroy ana tn:s was alter tne soldiers Came Up. I . . hdward McIIcsrv, al-o a witness for the administration 6wcars : 4kI heard soju talking at the Iautz meeting that the olJiers were going to burn building, destroying wouvmi and children." That is the testimony of tha adminis tration, and it explains why the ltantz meeting was held. And when the soldiers came up, 110 citiren of the county harmed or threatened to harm one of them. To resistance was offered to them, nor to ony person in the discharge of his proper du ties. The people fed them with cakes and pies, and gave thfm good whiskey to drink ; and yet thee same men tore down their fence., burned aod used up their boards and lumber, cut down their sugar trees, dug" up their potatoes, stripped off their roabting ears, led up their hay, eat up their chickens, and killed their sheep, and refused to pay Ihey did Thev caught a young lad in tnore. ! JacksoD township, took him to a barn, and hung. Board in Benton (a cripple) was arrested, him by the neck several times, became hc j so a to delay or prevent the opening of could not or would not tell where Lis fa-' tbo polls several persons in Sogarloal ther was. I honor the young man for it. wero arrested and detained until theeleo Ile would have been recreant to his duty tion was over along the rod leading to as a ton if he had consented to bptray j the places of holding ihe elections, squad his father- He was finally let off before ! of soldiers were stationed many ettirena life was extinot; but is since dead, as is' crossed the fields to avoid them, others believed, from the effects of that hanging ; remained away altogether, rather than be by the soldiers of the "army of the iuh- i $2 00 in Advance, per A nnnn. NUMBER 48. Such was the treatment the people of Columbia County received , and the pigs chickens and sheep were about the only . deserters the eoldiers caught. .; But there was another reason which the abolitionists subsequently hunted up to account for the presence of those one thous and soldiers. It was, that there had beeu a lot of Democratic meetings in tho county some time before. It was pretended that tbey were secret and therefore objection able ; and that in the ftce of ..'Know Nothing Lodges,", .and ' Loyal L'eague Rooms" which the opposition had bcru constantly running lor years. - : - On the point of secresy,Nathan J. lies, a wifnes3 for the administration, swears that he attended one that was secret, but lhat he was not a member. Of course it must have been vtry secret, when a nj;m cot a" member could attend ; and that h attended. but one. and that at the house of Pc-ter Kase. He also r swears that it was 10 June 1803 ; and all the evidence giveu, proves the meetings to hare., reased :i year cr sixteen months before the arrests of August 31, 18Gf. And yet every thing else failing,thoe little meetings of twenty -fivd or thirty persons, assembled in School Houses and which,' for more than a year had ceased to be h ld and which a large mass ol testimony shows to have been en tirely innocent io character, are given as a reason why a thousand, armed men should iBvade Columbia County. Fellow Citizens, no amount of special pleading can weaken the force of these facts. The statements I have made to you ' are substantiated by sworn testimony And the conclusion is irresistable, that tho military raid into Columbia County was for a political purpose, aud had no other object whatever. Let us examine the facts bearing upon this point a little more fully. The State election was rapidly drawing -near True, Forty-four Democratic voters were securely locked up in Fort Miffitn Gen. Cadwalader had ret'red from the field after his campaign on the Fish i eg Creek to his quarters in Philadelphia, with ail his blushing honors thick, upon him, and some still more pliant tool mu3t, be found to finish up the work. A Colo nel (now General) A'brigbt was detailed to hunt up something that would be a good enough Morgan till after the election. And thou came hard swearing, aud se cret meeting, and midnight conferences, and btarchamher examination then disappointed political aspirants could safe ly wreak their vengeance. agiot Demo cratic vuters, and iudulge in those person al grudges which political partisanship bad engendered or embittered. Many days were spent io this unhallowsd work. all the willing testimony that offered itself was taken io secret cit leni were arrested aud brought into camp, and de tained under guard, until something was extorted Irom their fcar.s or their puimh meol,and thosa who knowing; nothing re fused to fabricate, were suVjected repeated ly, to this military mode of taking testi mony. Finally when every thing was supposed to be ready, tho gallant Colonel returned to Cloomsburg, carpet bag fluffed, and to ' a little meeting ot abolitionist, got up for the occasion, and wrth that testimony as his text, he opened the political campaign in Columbia County. Thereupon that plat form, in a loud and pompous voice, he de tailed and descanted upon the statements moit i'f them filsc, taken down after an 11 responsible oath, to secret, exparte, and without a crosti examination, and that . speech bccaae the key-not ol the politi cal contest. The campaign which had hope cgdy broken down under Cadwalader, wa resurrected by Albright, and was now purely political. Iut the county of Columbia was not yet considered safe. Two years br f ore it had iroominiously defeated the straight je pubiican candidate for congress; and it wa feared that now it ruiEht elect my friend Col. Pio let. a straight Democratic . candi late. It would never do to let htm get ioto congress be would make the fur Sy eff of the shoddy contractors and the robbers of the puhlio mouey. That at all hazard? must be prevented. The connty was put under strict mili tary survcilliance tiight alter ntght citt ien were arretted, detained under guard, locked up in j-iil, or hurried to some point beyond the county reports were circula- lJ I, . a OT Ast tl Vk t A PVAtlf A1 i u mucin wciu w - " Ijr '"e purpose uouuuess wi muuviug "icui . r .1 . - 1 . f r . .1 1 ...!.. 1-... ..t !.,. to leave home for the time being lists of prominent Democrats were made and handed about with mock secrecy, and in- ; timation of their arrest given out The ' Loyal League" held it stent nightly meetings the abolition newspaper at Hloonisburg gave noftee that every draft ed man who approached the polls to de posite his vote, would be arrested as a deserter an I every other device known to political rascality, was made use of to in- timate and disfranchise voters. But the grand climax of this never-to-be-forgotten Political raid was reached on the niglit before the October election. ln defiance of the statutory prohibition against f tationing troops near the plaoe of holding elections, this ''Army of the Fish ing; Creek" was once more ''posted in diff. , erent portions of the connty, and upon the breaking of day," several prominent ctti- reus in different parts of it were arrested. The only remaining member of the election Concluded on Fourth-Page a: a ai