gvnuktin :,tpositorgt. Wednesday, January 25, 1865. B. WTEVENS AND THE CABINET. It was but a just tribute to one of our ablest and most upright and consistent "statesmen, for the Union members of Con gress to urge the appointment of Thtul dens Stevens to the important position of 'Secretary of the Treasury; and he could do no less, in justice to himself, than de cline it. It is, well known that Mr. Ste . Vens has not approved the financial policy of the government, although as Chairman of Ways and Means in the House he has for four years •past been the organ of the popular branch of the government on fi nancial matters, and the man most brought into consultation with the management of the Treasury. From the outset he has been earnest in his opposition to the stat ute distinction between specie and gov ernment currency, and now when it is too — late to'retrace, the wisdom of his policy is - confessed -on every hand. Gold has been made a necessity= by the acts.of, Con gress and the policy of the Treasury, which adopted' and adhered to specie paying bonds and thus necessitated the collection of customs in coin ; and with the necessity thus created, there has been no power in —the government to- regulate the price of gold. Vainly las it been attempted; but every effort has but enhanced its price, until at last, after exhausting all efforts to control its market value, the government withdraws its specie loan and now propo ses to rely upon bonds with principal and interest payable in currency. True the right of conversion remains ; but that too will soon fade away; and after hai - ing is sued one thousand millions of speciebonds, currency will become the standard of go- vernment financial operations. Had this - polleY been'adopted, in accordance with Mr. Stevens' earnest suggestions when the • war commenced, we should rliave saved Millions of money, and the credit of the government would be infinitely better to day. —Mr. Stevens might have enjoyed cab inet honors before this iad lie - been as ambitiois as other Men *hose qualiflca , tions are measured only by their ability to climb to positions of prominence. In 1861, after a family `broil of some weeks _in -this State, the Union members of Con gress united • in reconnnending Mr. Stevens for the position of Secretary of the Treas ury, and had he maintained the vantage ground thus proffered him, he would - doubtleashavebeen appointed.. But great as he is in a struggle for a great principle, he is not conspicuous for pressing his own claims to personal preferment, nor does he appeal to the cupidity or ambition of small men to promote himself. He there failed in 7861, and whether he regret ted it personally, perhaps no one knows but himself—He has given a most cordial gni : Tort to the measures of the 941minia. eon .necessary for the suppression of the rebi3llion, but baa never lost his charaetei lade manhood in criticising the acts of the • government. Few such men now reach positions,' save as the people confer them,. and we s look for Mr. Stevens to remain where he is, 'asthe great Commoner of his age Mr. Stevens narrowly escaped cabinet honors a quarter of a century ago. He was perhaps the only man who hold the - voluntary written tender of a place in the ministry of Gen. Harrison before the elec tion of 1840, and why hel was not of that cabinet when it was formed, we are not advised. That it was tendered and with out solicitation on his part, we feel assur ed, but without having signified his ac ceptance or declination, we believe, his • name and S tatewere omitted in the ministry of 1841. The real author of this violated faith probaly sleeps in the quiet shades of Ashland, and the chief actor in the fruition of the triumph of 1840, was strick 'en on the threshhold of his high honors. -Mr. Stevens and President Harrison never ' met after the election, and.no conununi- cations ever pissed between them. Un -' like modem 'politicians, he , did not exact conditions and then demand that it was . so. denominated in the bond. , • • --It is perhaps well for Mr. Stevens that he has never 'been ailed beyond the pro ' , per theatre for a great popular leader. Had be gone into - the Harrison cabinet, he might have shamed Webster into an earlier withdrawal from the treachery of Tyler; but he could have accomplished nothing for the country. Had he been appointed to the cabinet of Mr. Lincoln in 1861, the Nation would have lost its ablest leader in the popular branch of the gov ernment, and at a time when of all others, his consummate ability and unfaltering devotion to Liberty and Law were most needed. His views as to oar proper finan cial policy would have been condemned at the time in the great monied centres of the country, and he would doubtless have encountered embarrassments of the most perplexing if not fatal character. Time and experience have fully vindicated the wisdom of his counsels, but he could not conform the finances now to his views, • and he does well to remain the mighty leader of the House in the severest ordeal in onr history. until his ceaseless labors for Freedom are crowned with triumph. Then will a regederated Nation and its faithful historians justly class him among our great Representative leaders in this fearful struggle for the Right as the " no • blest Roman - of them all." THE PROSPECT OF PEACE. Again the National heart beats with tremulous anxiety because of the ray of hope that breaks upon the dark horizon - of bloody war.' There is hope of PEACE! It may be a delusion. It may have been but a snare on one side or the other, and end in disappointment; but we believe that never before, since "the coinmence ' meat of this fearful, desOating struggle, has thei:questiou of Peace been so favora bly entertained by.the insurgents as now. Their army of the South•west.is shattered, . and confessedly unable for an offensive spring campaign• Charleston is menaced the port of Wilmington is closed, by the • capture of Fort Fisher, thus cutting off the lastuvenno for foreign supplies: Lee's nr, my is wasting under the gloom With which multiplied - disasteta have abadowed it ; Richmond cannot long beheld . with the powerful armies of Grant, Sherman and Sheridan gathering around it, and with it surrendered, the leaders of the rebellion would be without a resting place. It is most natural therefore that the question of Peace should distract their councils and. array their victims against the colossed crime that has wantonly deluged our land with fraternal blood. Mr. F. P. Blair, Sr., went to Richmond a few weeks age, ostensibly to recover some valuable papers, said to have been stolen by the rebels when they occupied his premises in July of last year ; but it was clear to most persons who knew the character of Mr. 31air that he did not go to Richmond solely for the recovery of his private papers. If they wei taken, and could be procured ag ain, a brief corres pondence within the irules prescribed by the government would have - answered the purpose. Mr. Blair evidently had a higher purpose for his mission. He went with the hopithat he could bring about an ad justment. What assurairces he bad we do not pretend to know. : He may have been invited there; be may have been sent there by Mr. Lincoln, or he may have gone on his Tim conviction that the time has come fdi friendly intervention. At all events 110 went to Richmond; and re turned; Viand=after a'pro_tmeted and strict ly cora:WA ial interview with Mr. 'Lin coln he steps on board of a steamer that had been kept in readiness for him, and he is now in Richmond He is no fool, nor does he seek notoriety. He is past the . .years when he would thrust him self into the rebel capital in order to find his name in every newspaper. Anti he is as sagacious as .be is earnest. He well knows the rebel readers. The time was when he was the great leader of many of than. When he spoke they trembled; when hecounseled they obeyed, for Jack son was at his back apd he well deserved the confidence the Old Hero awarded him as the editor of his organ. He therefore knew when to go and what to . say ; and he has gone and said it—then returned and reported to NlLLincoln, and gone back to say more. All this may fail to close the war; but we are . greatly mistaken if there are not reasonably fair prospects that the South will, in some way, propose to end the conflict before the spring cam paign oPens. The question of Slavery has ceased e to be an issue- North and South. By com mon consent it must die. The North tle reands it ; the world demands it ; the des olated South demands it; the graves of our hundreds of thousands of martyred dead demand it, and it must bow to the retri butive stroke it has so wickedly, wanton ly invited. It may die to-morrow, or may linger for a term of years ; but the seal of death must be indellibly planted upon its mutilated form. There is there fore little to impede adjustment. The rebel currency and debt have long since been given, over as worthless, and no pre tense of galvanizing it into valuewill be offered. Confiscation has been a practi cal nullity, and the amnesty proclama tions of the President quiet(nla apptvlit•u- SIOW3 of vindictiveness on the part of the government. There is therefore nothing for the South to do, but §ubmit---to de throne their leadersi who have given them war for peace ; desolation for prosperity ; bereavement for happiness, and the work of reconstruction, as it is called, is effec ted. The• Davis's the Toombs; the Wig falls; the Masons; the Slidells, &c., will not trouble the government. They cannot live in any part of the Union when it is again Imited: . Every man's hind will be against them, and especially will the vic tims of their intrigues and ambition in the South demand their expulsion from the laud they have shrouded in morning. We have abiding faith that President Lincoln will assent to no negotiation or adjustment that is not entirely consistent ,with the honor, .the - dignity and the su premacy of the government; and we therefore welcome every ray of light that dawns upon us, came whence it may, and hope soon to greet the noontide of victory bearing with it a restored and regenerated Union and an honored and ending Nation ality. . THE Spirit devotestwo columns to Show that this journal has treated the prosecu tion in the case of the Coin. vs. Rev. W. V. Gotwalt most unfaiily by the publica tion of the letter of our Harrisburg cor respondent. If the Spirit will be kind enough to inform its readers that Mr. Mc- Clure moved to amend the bill on third reading, and inserted Dauphin county in stead of Franklin, giving as a reason for the motion. that an impartial bearing of the case could not be had in Franklin in consequence of the publication of our cor respondent's letter, its two columns of malignant misrepresentation would be disposed of. We do not now, and M. McClure never did, assume that Mr. Got wait was innocent. Whether he is*guilty of lewd conduct, or Miss Walter of per jtvy, are questions which did not eider into the struggle for , a change of venue. Whether guilty or innocent, Mr. Gotwalt is entitled to a fair, impartial trial, and that he could not have in Mimi county. Why the case was involved in the bois fermis strife and deep-seated prejudice of party politics, w - e neither know nor care. It is enough to blow that such is the - fact, and being so, the propriety of changing the venue was apparent. The pound from which a jury must have been selec. ted to•try Mr. Gotwalt had but two lie publicans on it out of forty-eight. It may have been a very strange. accident, or it may have been design considering that the brother of the prosecutrix has been for some years clerk to the commission ers. We do not charge that the jury was deliberately packed to see ure Mr Gotwait's conviction ; but we do say, that : if that bad been the purpose of the parties draw ing the jury they could not have more suc cessfully carried out their purpose. The case now goes to Dauphin where both par-, flee are unknown, and where the athriin istration of_ justice will not be impeded by prejudices Of any sort, and we only hope thatthe guilty will meet due punishment. Does the Spirit want more or less • Mn. KELLY, of Washington, has taken a step in the right: direction in the legis lative, by offering a resolution'for 'the ap pointment of a committee to inquire into alleged frauds relating to the army vote practised by return judges and Prothon otaries in various localities. In several districts Democratic return judges and Prothonotaries deliberately attempted. to . set aside the army vote, or so much of it as would enable them to certify, Demo cratic candidates elected. This was the case in Adams, Fulton, and Bedford, and it is alleged that the same fraud was at tempted in the Union, Snyder and Ly coming district. The design of Mr. Kel ly's resolution is to get the facts fully be fore' the House, and then remedy the wrongs by such laws as may be nlcessary to preserve the integrity of our fictions. We did hope that Messrs. Meyers and Tindlay would contest the seats of Arm strong and Ross, and thus enable the House to get at the bottom of the intri gues and frauds practiced in this Congres sionarand Judicial distaict. and in the Legislative district west of us ; but Mr. Meyers considers discretion the better part of valor, and he abandoned the field to avoid an exposition of his attempt to get into the House in defiance of the voters of his district. Mr. Kelly will likely supply this chapter in the history of Democratic management in the border counties, and every honest man will congratulate him when he has accomplished it. WE give in anotiter column of to-day's paper the new board of Directors of the Southern Pennsylvania and Coianellsville Railroad Company. We learn that the work is being pushed as rapidly as possi ble, considering the great scarcity of labor and exorbitant prices of everything per taining to the construction of Railroadi. The apprehension of some of our people that this important work will be stopped when the connection with the Huntingdon and Broad Top Road is made, is, we are well assured, entirely groundless. That connection Will first be Wade for obvious reasons, as it (ince makes the' part of the road already made productive; but it is not contemplated by any one connected with the management to abandon the con nection with the CuMberland Valley.— There is some doubt , as to just where the new road will intersect the railroad line of this Valley; but we hazard little in saying that it will be at this point or south of it. It would i*w be impossible to complete the entire road in the time prescribed by the act ©f incorporation, and an extension will be asked for: but the company will not seek to he relieved from completing the Eastern line of the toad. Au effort is now being made to locate it in Maryland, and bring it from Cumkerland td }lagers _ ; but we hope to see it pass through our 'county. - If located in Maryland, we _should lose direct communication With the Broad Top coal fields, and receive exchange direct communication with the Cumberland Coal beds. THE Harrisburg Telrgraph thinks some idea of the Immense magnitude and labor of the execu tive dUties since the rebellion has engaged the at te_oviott of thmo.l.pal Gtnernons, nmy Le infert,tl front the fact that in threes• yeari, or sincertlMwdr" began, Gov. Curtin has signed thirty-five thousand commissions for officers in the volunteer service. It must be remembered that it is not the mere signing of these documents in which the labor is involvitd, but the examination of facts in each case, the claim to on appointment and the right to prothotion, which requires the utmost executive care and discrimination. Front all this it can easily be interred, that to be Governor of a Commonwealth like Pennsylvania. is to assume aid discharge a labor at once herculean and im pn•tant. THE Tribune Almanac for . 1E46.5 is the moat valuable political work for reference to be found. It is cheap, admirably arranged, concise in state ments, and generally most reliable. The only er ror w•e notice in it is the name of A. H. Coffroth as the Congressmen elect .from this district, al though in the election tables Gen. Koontz is given his proper majority. Price 20 cents per copy. It can be had at Shryock'a. THE Grand Lodge of Odd Fellows have secur ed an eligible sig't in Baltimore on which to erect a suitable monument to the memory of the late Pui , t Grand. Sire, Thomas Wildey, who was tc garded as one of the founders of the order. The monument is designed to be of imposing grandeur. WE are indebted to Hon. G. W. Scofield for valuable public documents. , WASHINGTON Rejoicing over the Fall of Fort Fisher— Departure of Mr.Rlair for Richmond— Preliminaries for the Inauguration of Mr. Lincoln—Success of the Union Arms —Despondency in Rebeidom—The Char. lesion Mercury on President Lincoln —Places - of Amusement—The New Rail road Project—Hon. John W. Forney and the Secretaryship of the Interior. Correspondence of the Franklin Repository. WAiIIiNGTON CITY; Jan. 20, 1065. We have been blessed with a few days of pleas ant, cool and dry winter weather, just such as would make one feel contented, were it not for the cor4inual state of excitement to which we are daily subject. Since Monday last a continual rejoicing over the fall of Fort Fisher, has been kept up. Last night when the excitement had quieted down, rumors of peace took its place, and to heighten the fever old Mr. Blair to-day took his servant and again started for Richmond. The steamer Don, on which ves,el he made his last trip, has been lyiug at the Navy Yard ever since with steam up, and to-day at 11:15 Mr. Blair got aboard and she steamed away for City Point. This of course caused a tremendous hubbub,, even among our - bulls and bears, for we have some here, and gold tumbled down to 201. If old Abe don't pistil tell some people what kind of business old Mr., Blair .) is traveling back and forth to Rich mond about, some people will die of wonder.— But the return of Mr. Blair to Richmond, does look as if sometlip&Aiore than the recovery of' papers was in the — MML Let us have patience and Abraham will tell us all about it, for he said so. Since the commencement of the present session 9f Congress very little 'MB been done, Have deba ting the queationa of amendment to the constitu tion and recomitructior.. They bid fair to have a Much longer nu. _ If the arrangements which are now making be earrird out, the inauguration of Abraham Lincoln -next 4th of March, will surpass anything of the kind ever held on this continent, both as to the number of people in attendance and the imposing grandeur of the ceremony The Union League, the Lincoln and Johnson club, and the Loyal As sociation of Pennsylvania have made the prelim inary movement in the matter, and invited other State associations to join them. The inaugural will take plaetn on the steps of the main entranee the itanklin Repositorp, 41,Iptabers4tig, pa. of the east aide of the capital, whore the last took. place. In the evening a grant ball will be given in the North unfinished wing of the Patent Of fice, where there is a ball some 300 feet long by 16 in breadth, Cards of admission Will be ,$4O, and at that price, the demand will be greater than the supply. From all sections of Rebeldom where our ar mies are operating, every breath of wind wadi to us news of success and victories beyond our most sanguine expectationi. The beginning of the end is fast approaching. This gigantic rebel bubble must.soon burst, and every individual in Rebel dom, from the highest official to the beggar is aware of it. Every issue of their papers 'show weeping, wailing and gnashing of teeth. The rank and file of the people of the Confederacy are heap ing curses deep and loud upon their old leaders— the betrayers that lead them on from happy homes to misery and death. Even Jeff. Davis himself, so lately set up by them as an omnipotent power, or rather God, is deemed by them an impmeti. cable imbecile, who knows neither how to act or plan, nor jndgemeut to select an executive officer who caa. To show the wonderful change of opin ion in comparing the Administration of %Jeff. Davis to that of Abraham Lincoln, we - quote the fol lowing from the Charleston MerrurN of January . - 10th, 1807 i; ' "When Abraham Lincoln took the chair of the Presidency of the United States, he promised 'in his flat-boat lingo to ' run the machine as he found it.' Whether he has strictly kept his promise, those may doubt who choose to consider the hub jeCtt It is enough for us to know that, whether 'running his machine' in the pathway of his pre decessors or not, he has run it with a stern, inflex ible purpose, a bold, steady hand, a vigilant, ac tive. eye, a sleepless energy, a frantic spirit ; and an •eye single to his end—conquest—emancipa tion. • He has called around him, in counsel, The ablest and most earnest men of his country. Where he has lacked in individual ability, learn. ing, experience and stutesinanghip, he has sought it, and found it in the able men about bite; whose assistance he unhesitatingly accepts, whose pow ers he applies to the ads aucenieut of the cause he has undertaken._ In the Cabinet and in the field be has consistently and fearlessly pressed on the search for mini svho could advance hiscause, and has unhesitatingly cut 'dull those who clogged -it with weakness, timidity, imbecility or failure. Force, energy, brains, earnestness, he has collec ted around him in every department. Black guard and buffoon as he is, he has pursued his end with an energy as untirir"e , as it is Indian, and a singleness of purpose that might almost, be called patriotic, If he were not an unscrupulous knave his end, and a fanatic iu his pliti l viewit, he would undoubtedly s coniumud our. respect as a ruler, so fist as we are concerned. Abroad nisi at home, he has exercised alike the saute cease less enereand eicurnspection. "Tie turn our eyes to Richmond, and thp contrast is appalling, shocking to the heart.', Yesterday I.fas the first day, since eatlY . 1111861, that there was tie "death of a soldier to report-from the Hospitals of this District. Owing to the high state of perfection to which our hospitals have arrived, very few deaths occur. Our Theatres and places of amusement aro nightly crowded. Forrest is pley - ing at Ford's and Miss Annie Jones at Grover's. Besides we have had three nights of ItalionOpera.—tit V. 50 per ticket, and at that price _there was scarcely room left to inure your elbow. Yesterday the subject of a new Rail Road be teen Washington and New York was debated in the Senate, and quite a number of Railroad men are in the city. The old Monopoly will as usual come off victorious and no new road will be built, which is notch to be regretted. The mune ofJohn W. Forney is daily used and his chances every day growing bright, for &ere .tary of the Interior in the re-construction of thO cabinet. Thaddeus Stevens declined, on account of ill health, the use of his name for Secretary of the Treasury, for which position he was urged by every Union member from Pennsylvania. His declination makes the ehancesof Mr. Forney bet ter. • The Adams Vertutty Venue case , --roWitsti Jurietieneral Law to Insure Inapar• Bid Juries—The Local Bounty question The State Guard—The Violation of the Election Laws—The De Haven Con. tested Seat. Curresporalonee of the Franklin Repository. There was little business of importance trans acted in the legislature this week. The bill to change the venue in the case of the Common wealth vs. Gotwalt, from Adams to Dauphin, ex cited some debate, and passed finally on Thursday —the day the cal.e,was called up for trial in Get tysburg. Mr. M'clure moved to amend tin', bill ou third reading in the House to change it to Dauphin instead of Franklin, giiing as a reason the publication of my letter in that county, which . ; might forestal public opinion in the case: The main reason for the change of venue in the case was the fact that the pannel of jurors for the present term of the Adams county court was composed almost entirely of Democrats. The commissioners of that county seem to have acted upon the idea that the position of Juror is a purely political one, and must be used to reward small friends in a small way, and to punish political en emies in courts: of justice. The Union men of Montgomery and other counties complain bitterly that their juries are packed in the Same way, and a general law will probably be passed prescribing some more equitable mode of selecting jurors, so as to break up the intrigues of petty potations designed to control trials in the courts of justice. Messis. Sharpe and McClure heve both pre-. sented petitions for and remonstrances against collecting the additional bounty of $2OO to each' recruit by tax. Franklin is in the same situation on this question With most of the other counties of the State, and there is scarcely any dhision,of sentiment among the members ali to the necessity of a law providing for the collection of the addi do al s'2oo; but there is much diversity of opinion as to its details. ; There will doubtless be a gene. ml law on the subject designed to cover all cases.. An amendment to the militia law was passed to third reading in the House. yesterday, giving all the necessary power to the Governor to make a draft for the State Guard with promptness at any time it may be necessary. It will pass both branches in a short time, and unless the war is brnught to a speedy close, we shall have a State force to protect the border by the time spring op erations commence. A special committee - has been raised in the House, on motion of Mr. Kelly, of Washington, to inquire into the violations of the election laws by return judges and Prothonotaries, with power to send for persons and papers. These officers 'have assumed in several instances to disregard the army vote in order to give certificates of elec tion to defeated candidates but the most notice able. case was in your congressional and •judicial districts, and the Bedford, Fulton and Somerset Representative district. The object of the com mittee is to ascertain the facts and report to the legislature what I enactments are' necemary to guard against future frauds :and. punish those who attempt to perpetrate them. As Meyers and Findley skulked away from a contest, after hav ing insisted that they were honestly and legally elected, the House hall no opportunity to get the facts of that case before it but by a special com mittee. Messrs. Kelly and Waddell, tws mem bers of the committee,are young lawyers : 4 more than ordinary ability end energy, and they will preisecute the investigation thoroughly. I have not learned the 114111 CS of the other members of the committee. The contested electlon CARO of,Scoaeld vs. De- Haven is understood VA be deciaed, although re port has not been made. De Haven will retain his seat. The question as to residence for a year iu'the district was a new one, and perhaps the strong equity of Do Haven's case gave him the benefit of ell doubts It is not denied that he was I,LtRRISBURG January 21, INSS elected by nearly 500 , majority, and lender eueb . circumstances it would require a clean demand of the constitution to qualify Mr. Scofield. 1142Raer- ' aimidommmirdmmit SUMMARY OF WAR NIEWIi. —A band of mounted rebels attempted to in vade Illinois at Metropolitan, but only a few sue needed in crossing the • river, the others having been dispersed by shells from a gunboat. —General Canby has ordered a draft of one in seven Within the Departments of ..rhansas and Mississippi and the Gulf on the 15th of February•, unless the quotas are preciously filled by volfin. teen. —Rear Admiral S. P. Lee, under date of 9th of January, informs the• Navy Department that' he has learned that &resolution will soon be introdu ced into the Alabama Legislature recommending a return of the State into the Union. —The monitor Patapsco was destroyed o ifl Charleston at 2 o'clock on the morning of the 17th, while doing picket duty, by a rebel torpedo., Forty or' fifty of tile crew went down with hi.r. Their names were not ascertained at the time of the sailing of the Fulton. ,—Lieutenant Dar* late keepoi of the Ander• somille.(Ga.) jail, who was recognized by one' of our soldiers While in transit to Canada, has be;en brought to Cintinnati,*and will be tried as a spy. He defends his treatment of Federal prisoners:, as being in obedience to orders. —Admiral Porter has made a report to.the Navy Department relative to the iron-dada and monitors, speaking very favorably of them. He also refers to the New Ironsides in high terni, saying that no other ship' has so come up to,his ideb of a vessel for offensive operations. —Secretary Stanton, is a letter to the Preei dent, dated Fortress Monroe, January 17, stites that the rebel flag or, Fort Fisher was delivered to him on the previous day, on the steamer Spaul ding, off that place, by, Gen. Terry. Mr. Stanton then gives the particulars of the capture , of :the fort, as. obtained Irom Admiral Porter,and Gen. Terry. —The Richnibud papers, in discussing the . iisit of Mr. Blair, to . that city, guy that his ostensibly object was to have au interview with Jeff Darla about the return of seine papers, but in the mince of conversation he touched upon peace. The re bel "President" is said to have replied that be is always readyto receive regularly accredited Com- Inisbione . rson the subject, or, to send such coin- —Admiral Porter in his (retailed report, of the attr.ek ou Fort Fisher, gives the total number of naval officers kilted and wounded at twenty-one, and of others killed, wounded and missing, inclu ding the eipkndon of the magazine at three hun dred and nine. He states that the rebels have blown up Fort Caswell and the steamers 'Talla hassee and Chickamauga, and that we will be in Wilmington before long. —A son of Herschel V: Johnson; who hien of in Hood's army, writes from that band of de moralized scamps to his father, that the people of Atlanta, instead of looking upon the ..Confeder ate government as n protection, see in it nothing , but a great tyrant crushing them. to death.; He expremes the opinion that the war will stop with in thirty days after the 4th of .*arch, for the Southern People will come beckon any terns. • —Deserters from the Rebel army arrived with in Grant's lines say that the Danville Railroad. between Danville and Greenaborough, a distance of forty-five miles, bas been destroyed by the re cent heavy rains—that every culvert and bridge has been carried away, and that Lee's army is likely.to be out of rations altogether very soon. Every effort is making- to reconstruet the road, and large gangs of men are detailed for that pur pose, but even at that it will take sonic time to repair It. the deatructiou of the road being so ex tensive. —A despatch from Cairo to the Comm*iitA, says: Lieutenant Nesly, in command of &coni.. pany of Tennessee cavalry, left Columbus; Ky., on the .18th, au& when ten miles out, encounter ed a fume of two hundred rebels. " A fierce figlit ensued, latum4 half au hour. The rebels had tie() killed, one uunded, and fire taketipris. _There were Rio casualties, on the Union side." It . is reported that from fivelo ten of For rest's command come into our lines and take the oath daily. —Charleston dispatches of the lath contain ac counts of the attack on Pocotaligo bridge the Federal forces, and the evacuation of the place by the rebels.' The rebel forces took a position be hind the Combahee river. The frame dispatches Say that Hotid's losses during his campaign were 8000, and that he has plenty of artillery. It is ru mored in Richmond that Hood has been - smx.rse 7 ded by Gen. Dick Taylor.* The rebel Senate has passed a bill creating the officer of commander in -chief, and recommending that General' Joe Johnston be reinstated. Sherman renewed the movement °This% forces from Savannah last week: Secretary Stan— ton, in a letter to the President, states that the Fifteenth and Seventeenth Corps went in trans ports to Beaufort on Saturday, Jan. 14th. 'The. Seventeenth Corps crossed Port Royal Ferry, and with a portion of General Foster's command moved on RPcotaligo. The enemy abandohed his strong works in our front during Saturday night. General Blair'S Chrps now occupies a strong pdsi : . tion across the railroad and covering all the. ap proaches eastwardlo Pocotaligo, —Forty guerillas ..nder command of Pratt and 31eGregor,a consolidation of several bands on Wed nesday last iniule a dash into Bardstown, Ky., for the purpoie of recovering one of their men, John Robinson, confined in the jail of that place. Bardstown is garrisoned by a detachment ofFed eral soldiers utider .Capt. G. W. Nichols. The .guerillas set the depot on fire and tt was burned to the ground, and the body of Mr. Sunberry,was consumed in it. The guerrillas and our troops had a heavy fight. Captain Pratt and Pat Bull= were killed and Lieutenants 3lunday and SlaSon and several others wounded. The guerrillas were routed and driven from the town. The "pursuit was continued till-darkness put a stop to further proceedings., —An expedition Consisting of details from the Brigade of Gen. Gregory of theilfth Corps, Army of, the Potunine, sent out on Wednesday last in the direction .of Stony Creek for the purpose, of obtaining forage for the use of the Brigade, was fired - upon by en unknown *force, of the enemy secreted in ambush, killing- and wounding seven of our men. Among the kilied, was Capt. Rice, Inspector-General.on the staff of Geo. Gregory, whose body was fora time lett, in possession of the enemy. A stronger fordo was afterwards sent out to recover the body of Capt. R., web bad com manded the foraging party, and on returning found it denuded of its clothing, and tnuilateci by several shuts in the head which' had been fired by his merciless enemies after the retirement of our men. Capt. Rico was an officer of great promise, and his sad fide is deplored by all who bad the pleasure of his acquaintance. —A., D. Richardson, the Tribune correspon den who has escaped from Salisbury, North Car olina, speaks of the sufferings of our men there as most 'distressing, and asserts that the rebels are deliberately, remorselessly, starving and freezing them death. - His information and statements are explicit, and go to establish the necessity of making a complete exchange of prisoners, or im mediate retaliation on the rebels in our hands. It is the opionion of Dlr. ,Richardson, that the rebels can not increase largely'the force of white men in their arrny. Western North Carolina is full of faithful Union pecritle;ilid the Itegroes are everywhere and all the time, the friends and help, ers dour soldiers; The rnionis' 111 . in North Car olina are, latterly, doings good work is the, way, of bushwhaching the rebel home girds, devoting' themselves especially to the shooting of officers.: The Richmond paper that has much the largest'. circulation is the Examiner, the sheet that so bit-, ter], assails Jeff. ]?aria, PIEASIINAL. —Gov. Hahn bas betin elected U. S. Senator from Louisiana, for Pa yearn. —General Sherman is to be presented - with! $lOO,OOO by the citizens of Ohio. , —Hod. HenryjWilsoa vras on Wednesday last, re-elected United States Senator from Massachu setts., • —Win. H. Fry, the composer, and long COD= netted with the Tribune, died At Santa Ortiz on' December 21st. —CoL Lamb, taken at Fort Fisher, was, we think, captured at Fort Hatteras in 180. He is a North Carolinian. —Burleigh, the Canadian raider, has been rec ommitted to priion to await extradition by the Governor General. ' —Lieut, Col. Harry White, Of the ti7tb Penna. Vols., has been commissioned by Gov. Curtin as Colonel of his. regiment. --Gen. IVhitting, captured at Fort Fisher, Thai native of Hartford, Conn., and an old friend of his captor, Gen. Terry. —General antler's friends at Lowell have'ap-' pointed a committee to make arrangements for. giving him a panic reception, upon his return to that city. —During hisstay in Savannah, Secretary Stan, ton promoted a number of dfficers who have dis tinguished themselves, including dvu. who was brevetted a major general. —Parson Brownlow has been recommended to the President for the appointment of Brigadier General, in order that he may succeed Gov John sun as Military Governor of Teunesse. Prentice, having been cluirged with comi. plicity with the rebelhon, during his recent visit to Richmond, is out in a lengthy vindication o his conduct, in the Journal of the l lAth Met. Col. Jacobs, of Kentucky, who was sent South .some time since, has been pardoned by the President and has returned to his•hom©. He represents the feeling in favor of-peace to Le strong among not only the lower classes but among officers of high grade. - - —Major General - Winfield S. Hancock waipre seated on Saturday morning, at the La Pierre House, with the handsome saddle and accoutre ments voted him by the citizen of Philadelphia at the Sanitary Fair, during last sum her. Wm. H.•&shhurst, Esq., made the presentation. —Hon. Myer Strouse, Alexander Bailey and Archibald VAllister, of -Pa., Democrats—with - two members from each of the States of NeW York aid Missouri, one from Kentucky, and one from WinctMsin, of the smite party, voted for the constitutional amendment to abolish slavery. , —General A. J. Smith, the dashing cavalry lea der of the went, is a man nearly fifty years old; he- ean glasses, his hair is white or rather grii zly ; he speaks quickly, moves briskly, is nervous and restless. He is a man of small stature, come ly of dress, and abrupt in his address, though kind of heart. the officers of his command say. —lt appears that the rebel authorities after ar resting rebel Senator Henry S. Foote, at _Ocen quan, conveyed him to Fredericksburg and parol-' ed him until Jeff. Davis could determine wh'at should be done with him. Late Richmond papers announce that he is released froth his parole and at liherty to go where he pleases. It remains to be seen whether they will permit him "to pass through the rebel lines to reach Washington, • where Mrs. Foote and her child are residing. —Lieut. Cal. Harry White, whose capture mid retention by the Rebels kept our Senate in het water for's() long last winter, until relief finally came in the shape of -a captain with the gallant Senator's resignation Sewed in his shoulder strap, was promoted, by Governor A. G. Curtin, to the fall command of his 'old regiment, the Sixty-sev enth Pennsylvania Volunteers. After a brilliant - reception at the State Capitol, the Colonel left for his regiment. . —Col. Pennypacker, who led one of, the charg ing columns in the assault on Fort Fisher, is a son of Chester county, and has won his way from the ranks to his present position by his own merits. He is every inch a soldier. Beloved by his men, they would follow him to the cannon's mouth. Born on the storied ground of Vallley Forge twen ty-five years ago, he has caught the heroic, blood of '76. We pray he may survive his danger Ons wound, and live to serve his' country among the long list of Pennsylvania's patriot sons. —Brevet Major General' Alfred EL Terry, com manding the expedition against Fort Fisher,' is one of the enceessful officers taken from civil life. He was born in Hartford, Conn., Nov. 10th, 1827, and was educated at New Haien, where he was admitted to the bar in 1848. Ho became clerk of the county courts, but resigned in 1860, and made a short visit to Europe. He had long in clined to military studies, and took an active part in the militia of his State. He was colonel of the 2d or New Haven County Regiment when Fort Sumpter was fired on, and immediately offered his servives to the Governor, and was commis sioned to command the 2d Connecticut Regiment of thregelentbs men, which was one of the few that behaved welt at Bull Run. He afterwards raised another regiment, the 71h Connecticut, which did excellent service in General T. W. Sherman's (aftepwarde Gilmore's) command, 'at Hilton Head, and at the capture of Fort Pulaski, for which it had the honor of being selected the garrison. In March, 1862, Terry was pro moted to be a brigadier general of volunteers, - and the splendid service of capturing a fortwhiCh, twenty days nefore, Gen. Butler had declared im pregnable, he has, ?been made a brevet Major General. —Brig. Gen. Adelbert Amee, who commanded the assaulting ditision in the successful attack on 'Fort Fisher, was at the breaking out of the rebel lion.a cadet at West Point. He was graduated on the 6th of May, 1861, fifth in his class, and en tered the army on the same day as second lieu tenant in the Fifth Artillery. At the first battle. of Bull Run he served with distinction Griffin's celebrated battery: and was wounded in the thigh. He was engaged- with Ids battery at Yorktown, Golding's Farm and Malvern Hill. In August, 186'2, he was appointed Colonel of tilt! , Twentieth Maine, and commanded that regiment at Antie tam, ShePpardstown and Fredericksburg. At Chancellorsille ho sercoil on Gen. Hooker's staff. Ou the 20th of fay. 1863, Ames w4s made a Brigadier General and placed in command of a picked brigade, which he led at Beverly Ford on the 9th of June, in that year.. At Gettysburg he commanded a division in the Eleventh Coips dn. ring the second and third days of that memorable battle, and for his good conduct was highly com _mended by General Howard. In August, 1863, Gen. Ames was ordered to report-to General Gil more; and he With his brigade participated in the operations against Forts Wagner and Gregg, arid ako.in the bombardment- of Fort Sumter. Get]. Ames remained in the Department of the South until April 22d,1864, when he proceeded to the Peninsula with the Tenth Army Corps, in all the operations of which against Petersburg and Rich mond he acted a distinguished parts General Ames was born in East Thomaston, (now Rook. land,) Maine; on the 31st day of Oetiltheroaral January 125, 1865, '' s Inxilevar» ON THE SITICATiON. THE The following significant article appeared• in the Charleston Manny of January 12: The condition of this military department, u Embraced within the limits of Georgia and South Carolina, is anything but satisfactory to any - man who is aware of facts, and has capacity to under- stand their bearing. We presume there ism one in the department to whom the condition of our present military organization is less aitisfactory than - to the General commanding: Probably there is no one so thoroughly aware of , the lamentable disorganization that prevails certain corps nnd sections of his command. Yet it would scarcely be fair to hold him responsible for this condition of things. His department has been newly turned into bia hands; and many of the troops are new to him and to This department They came to Lim un; der the command of imbeciles; he has received them, a herd of _stragglers and outlaws. What has been done to eradicate this fatal evil weshall not stop to inquire. The time has been short to do much, and the forces hive been much scat tered. Bat the very hut moments bye arriving, when all must be done that can be done. The enemy does not intend to wait upon our leisure. And there is much to do. a I Before bringing ourselves to face Met-only, it is absolutely essential that those in command bring themselves to face the vital evils existent within our own lines. The path ?cc now are traveling is straight to destruction. The crisis of the Confed eracy has arrived in fatal earnest. The remit of the next six months will bring the Confederacy to the ground, or will re-instate its power. Without reform we are doomed. There is more- than one department of the Government in which reform is important But reform in oar armies is essential —is vital Without it the death of the Confederacy is already tolled. With the proper reform made,..- he is a coward who carries his heart in his boots: There are men in the land—there is fight in' the land! It is the imbecile that is sick at heart —it isthe coward whose stomach is weak. There, is nothing before us that cannot be overcome:, but to do it, there must be a new state of things' . instituted. We say again, there must be nerve. Men in command must not be afraid to die—they must not be afraid to kill Officers must be killed —not mere privates. Reform must begin at the top, not at the bottom of the service. 'Ro reach the . private, captains must be shot. We want no child's play—we want an army. What is a man's life to the institutions sand the, liberty of the country t Nothing. 'Let old things pass avilly—let us have a new condition of things. We want no more Jeff Davis' foolery; we want one atom of brains, one spark of nervewe Want no more of Buhainism—we want not mermaids with heads of monkeys and fishy attachments at the neither extremities—we want men, real men, earnest men—North Carolina, Georgitond South . Carolina are in no mood for trifling. They•have had enough of this sort of thing. They don't in tend to have much more: — South Carolina don't intend to be conquered. She intends to fight. She don't intend to be hampered or tamed over to the enemy. When she is thus dealt with, there will be reckonifig—a reckoningwheie there will be no,respecters of person. We want implic it order and calm forecast. South - Carolina is a Commonwealth of order; we expect order,'and we demand order. We are acoustomal to ordir. We are not used to lawless ruffianism ;we don't intend to suffer it. . A most onerous but imperative duty devolves upon.the commander of this department, whoever he ts. That duty—this first and most essential duty—is to cashier and shoot.• Without it noth ing can be done, and Sherman con us.— With it, he is a coward who sue - at heart - Everything is at stake; everything that is in the way must be faced and trampled upon. The man who commands hero must put his heat hi his pocket, and his sword in his band. He mad know nothing but the good of the Confederacy That be mast do regardless of official weakiliess. The end must be radical reform. - It is folly to talk of red tape now; we wait the thing, we must hive it—reform, sbootingorastis iering, order, subordination, soldiers—not, nip ways, ragamuffins, ,ruffians. We want, a u we must have, brains and pluck in commanders, pad implicit obedience and order in subordinates and soldiers. Six spaces and a steady arm will do the business, if repeated sufficiently often, especi ally among commissioned officers. If, however, commanding officers will not do their duty in this matter, let all men shut their books, for the end will hare well nigh collie. The time is short—will it be improved? A YANKEE STRIKES OIL IN gUROTE—The wonders of the petroleum oil discovery will never cease. Last year Colonel Govvarytof Boston, the gentleman who had the - contract for getting* the sunken Russian ships in the harbor of. 8et1111... topol, was coming - down from St. Petersburg through - Georgia and Cireassia; when, in theneigh borhood of the Sea of Azof, he stumnled upon some oil wells which the natives were working in a very indifferent way, and which the Colonel bought. He then came to Paris and London, - or— ganized a company, sent out men to work the • wells, and ships to carry to - London and Liferpool the products, and they are nouituiying handsome dividends. But what is more surprising still,the Colonel, in returning lately from the Black Sea to Paris, stopped on the way at the island of Samos, on the eastern shore of the Mediterranean, where he found and bought another oil well. • What is still more curious, this well was, spoken of by Herodottis, the great Greek historian, 450 years before Christ, and front that day to this no one has thought 'of turning to use this important dis covery. Even the English traders of.thillie later days, who have control of the comnipren of the island, have blindly walked over this important source of wealth without perceiving it: Colonel Gowan has bought fifteen acres of gronnd'at the ordinary price of land on the island. ATTACK ON JUDGE KELLY.—List Sunday evening as Judge Belly, Hon. Charles O'Neil, and Major Harper were sitting at thetmtable at Willard's, one Judge Field, who is claiming a seat in the House as a member from Lois' remarked in a loud voice to Jidge Kelly:— " Well, Judge, you were all/afraid to show - your hands on admitting ourdOgatio_ ,n " ing it with an oath, to which Judge Kelly made no reply, as he had no aeinaintance with Yield but on the continuance of his insults, Judge Ke lly replied that when his name was eallod,it would not take him long to decide upon his cue, to which Field continued his violent talk, Wilba "damn you, your people want US back bad enough, and you are afraid to face than you don't vote for us !" He finally le ft , threatening Kelly with personal violence, and on subsequently meeting Kelly in the corridor, he rushed at tun with a bowie knife, and being a more powerful man than Kelley, collared him, and as Kelley tried to disengage himself, he calls handopen to the bone with his knife. A number of persons rushed up and disei N iaged him before he could in flict any dangerous wounds upon him. Kelley was taken to his room, and Dr. Stone called in to dress his wound. Field was taken to the station house, and finally released, on bail of one thous and dollars fora further hearing. A VETERAN DOG.—Jack, the faithful - dog which accompanied the 102nd Pa. Vet, Regiment to the wars, has been lost, for whose recovery $5O have been offered. Jack has shared the dangers of the battle field with this regiment ever since the first out-break of the rebellion r he having been engaged in the Beige of Yorktown, the battles of Williamsburg, Fair Oaks, Savage Station, Mal vern Hill, Antietam, Fredericksbunt Marye's Heights, Salem, Heights, Mine Run, Wilderness, Spottsylvania, Cold Harbor, before Petersburg, Defence of Washington July 11, 1864; Winches ter, Flint Hill, Fisher's Hill, and Middletown. He was wounded at the battle of Malvern Hl, taken prisoner at the battle of SalemHei,ghts and remained six months on Belle Island with men of his regiment, was again raptured at 3Fuldletown and held a prisoner of war by the enemy for six hours when he made good his escape. A FEARFUL LEAP.--Gustas Adolph Vorgt. man, charged with forging a receipt of the Pros elan Government for sixteen thousand dollars, (and upon which he received that amount of money,) was recently arrested at Chicago, and taken to ,New York, via the Pennsylvania rail road, a day or two ago. As the .train was in the vicinity of Huntingdon, and running at the rate of twenty miles an hour, Vorgtman expressed a determination to kill himself, and jumped from the cam. He was very seriously injured, but not killed, and is now in the hands of the anthori tiea at New York IT is stated that the Secretary of War has is sued an order calculated to prevent the crime of bounty jumping. It is to the effect that all enlist ed teen, es soon as mustered into the service, shall deposit with the nearest paymaster all moneys received by them as bounties, reserving to. them selves a sum not to exceed twenty dollars. After the enlisted man is placed in the armyat the front, he can draw for the money in the paymaster's hands. --Senator Foote him been released by the pm. vest marshal at Fredericksburg, and has armed in Riehmnnd