,Wllliiilt6l4 Olobi. W,31..1.;E1V15, - Editor anti Proprietor , • TE Tan (lure 19 publi.hed Mice a week et £1.50 a year-7.5 colts for els: mouths-30 cents for three mouths—in at-Trance. HUNTINGDON, PA. '.'hi?r, , ,,cifiy,aSternoon, Sep. 12, IE6I -The Star-Spangled Banner Obi say - , can you see, by the dawn's early light, What no proudly no itail'd at the twilight's last gleam- Whose brtatastriiimrand bright stars through the perilous , fight, O'er the ramparts we it atch'il, were so gallantly stream ing!. And the rocket's red glare, the bombs busting to air, Gave pn oot through the night that our flag was still there! OhOnaN'.. does that star-fpaogltd banner yet leave, tier the land of the free, and the house of the brave! On the shore. dimly MCen ti” °ugh the mists of the deep, Where the foes haughty host In dread silence reposes, What io that tNioult the tweeze, o'er the towering stoop, As it fitfully blows, half concealk, half discloses` Now it catches the gleam of the morning's first beam; ln full glory reflcw.teil. now Phi OA Oil the St MIMI— 'II9 tine star-spangled banner! Ob. long may it mace, Ver the land of the free, and the home of the brave! And where is that band who vauntingly swore That the havoc of war, and the bottle's confusion, A home and a country shoold tent o ni no more t Their blood has mulled out their foal footstep's pollution No refuge could save the hireling and slave, Prom the tel tor of night or the gloom of tha gravel And the our-spangled banner in triumph doth wove, O'er the mila of the free, and the holm of the bravo I Oh! thit»lie it eem., when freemen stand Betueeri their lord hems nod ssar:s desolatlonl 411essed with slctorA nod peace, may the Heaven-rescued Praise the Power that bath rondo and ptesoryed its n na tion! Then conquer we must. when our reuse it in just, And this be our motto—" lit God Is our trust !" And the srar-,pn»gicil banner in ttiumpli shall wave, O'er the land of the free. and the home of the bravel Union Conference. The .- Democratic and Republican Committees .of Conference appointed by CoUiity . I)elegato Conventions of the parties, met in the Court House , on Tuesday ; afternoon August 27th, and pUt ' nomination the following Uni4 ASSEMBLY, JOHN SCOTT, of Huntingdon. ASSOCIATE JUDI:11, BENJ. F. PATTON, of Warriorsmark. COUNTY COMMISSIONER, JOHN S2ISETT, of. Franklin. COUNTY TREASURER, 'JOHN A. NASH; of Huntingdon. DIRkTOR OP THE POOR, ,TAI.I.ES HENDERSON, of Cassville. AUDITOR, lILTON SANGREE, of 'Walker. "% The following resolutions were rend and unanimously adopted by the Con ference: _ Resolved, That it behooves every true pat riot in this important crisis in our Country, to lay mile party trammels and sustain the No , and State Governments in supporting the Constitution end preserving the Union of the States. .„ Rao ThaLive should use every effort to foster and keep nlive the fire of patriotism now filling the breasts of all true and loyal American citizens. , Resolve - CI, That this Convention, represent ing both the political parties of the county, have the fullest confidence in the integrity nnd capacity of Hon. GEORGE TAYLOR, and ..-tappoitAinAki tbe s support of the pee trict, believing hini to be a pure and upright citizen and a learned and able Jurist. A Card. As it is circulated, I suppose by some disappopted, office-seeker, that I will root inippore the ticket put in nomina tion by the County Union Convention, all I haye to say-is-tbatif.spared to go to this election - r irin.vte for every man nominated at'said Convention.— If I did not I would prove disloyal. JOHN LOVE, A Delegate in Union Convention. MAzion HILL, Sept. 10, 1861. air Capt. .11(.:Cabe's company was in camp at• Point of Rocks, ltd., at the *beginning of this week, and we aro gratified to learn that the men are in good health and that the company promises very fair to be the " crack" company in the Regiment. Colonel Geary is in command of this regiment, and it is one of the best in the service. We also learn that some twenty men are to be transferred to another com pany, and then the Lawrence Rifles to be filled up with men all measuring 5 feet 10 inches or over. Success to no bravo boys. 'lionNtALS C.i.m . p.—On Tuesday, a coMpany from Blair county, Capt. S. M. Bell, and another from the lower end of thig county, Capt. Benner, went Into camp. Both companies want more men to Ell up. - On Wednesday, a companpfrom the upper end of this county, Capt. G. W. Patterson, went into camp. This com pany also wants men to fill up. Ca - The Post Office Department gives notice to all Postmasters who have not received the now stomps, to continue the sale of the old issue until the former can be supplied, and, of course, to mail' all letters brought to their offices prepaid by stamps of the old style. WESTERN Caop.—The Chicago Post, of the 3d inst., says the crops are more promising, and . fall prospects are gen erally: eneoui:aging. Country *mer chants are nearly out of goods, and a lively trade is expected with them. • REF DAVIS NOT DEAD.--A gentle. man who arrived in Baltimore on the 10th, direct from Richmond, says that he saw Jeff Davis alive and well, in that city, on the Wednesday previous. [For the Globe.] I see a .call for the male school teachers to volunteer in the service of their country. As for Barree I would respond that we have the offer of fe male teachers well qualified for all our schools. Go it boys or put on the Hoops. 13.111 REE, The Latest News. A Rebel Organ on the Hatteras Affairs, BALTIMORE, Sept. 10.—The Rich mond 'Whig, received here a most sar castic article on the capture of the Hatteras forts, censuring, by implicaZ tiou, the Confederate authorities. It commences in this style : Lot us intimate the Nutmeg Chi nese by all means. The forts have been taken, many hundred men have surrendered, valuable officers have be come prisoners, a large amount of pow der has been captured, and the most important part_of our coast for prim. teering purposes is in the hands of the enemy, and the gallant North State is now liable to invasion. Still it is a small matter. t will take thirty thousand men to rekain the forts, but that is nothing. IVhat, do we want with it Y It was buiWfor fun evident ly. Had we been in earnest, some no tice would have beeit3aken of the warning given by the NpAhern papers. It would be the heiglii:44' folly and treason to accuse any MeMber of the Cabinet of' neglige'nee in the:premises. We who live at the seat of Ginern merit know too well the super :mine:it energy, the sleepless vigilance and miraculous promptitude of every department, to entertain for a moment the shadow of a shady suspicion of any shortcomings on the part of any one nearly-or.: re motely connected with the AdMinis= tration. Picayune Butler eiti:_now leave as many men as he pleases m the forts of North Carolina. Of course, we will whip them, for have'nt we the greatest number of unarmed militia." Reybitota Ntiasisaippi Regimentlit Leesburg. BALTIMORE, Sept. 10.—A letter to the Baltimore American, from a`vitizen of Leesburg, says that an entire Mis sissippi regiment stationed there re volted on Saturday, broke • their nuts : . kots to pieces and started home. This: letter is from a responsible and relia ble correspondent, who has furnished the American regularly with correct information from that vicinity, and he adds to his note that this news is reli able. • Pennsylvania Volunteers—lmportant Order, WAR DEPA wrmENT, A onTrANT GEs»n.u.'s Or'rtc», WAsnixozoN, Sept. 7, 1861. SPECIAL ORDERS, NO. 211.—A1l per sons having received authority to raise volunteer regiments, batteries or cons panics in the State of Pennsylvania, will immediately report to 'his Excel lency, Gov. Curtin, at Harrisbnrg, the present state of their respective organ izations.. They and their commands are placed, under the orders of Gov. Curtin, who will reorganize them and prepare them for service in the man ner ho may judge most advantageous to the interests of the General Govern ment. All commissioned officers of regi ments, batteries or companies, now In service, raised in the State of Pennsyl vania, independent of the State author ities, can receive commissions front the Governor of that State, by report ing to the Adjutant General thereof, and filing in his office, a duplicate of their respective organizations. By order, L. TnomAs, General. Vast Military Movements, were pen t» opu at vats of troops and military movements now transpiring here the country would be electrified. But all is done quietly and without publicity. Even the ostenta tious displays of parades and music on the avenue are avoided, and troops march from the depot to Gen. McClel lan's office through direct avenues and without music. By the large arrivals to-day, not a citizen is disturbed, and few are aware of what is going on. THE LATEST WASHINGTON Sept. 11.—Aecording to the correspondence of the Republi can, the line of batteries at Acquia Creek extends about six miles. They appear to be in good condition. One of their rifled gnus, a few days ago threw a shell across e Potomac, which is about four miles wide. As near as can be ascertained, at least 15,000 rebel troops are in that vicinity._ A wounded rebel picket guard. taken by our men beyond the Chain Bridge, says that since the affair at Hatteras Inlet, thirteen regiments have left the rebel army of the Potomac and gone home. A regiment of the rebel army was distinctly seen this morning drilling on Munson's Hill. No guns were visible, but it is believed that they have some mounted below the high entrenchment that they have thrown up. So far as heard, up to noon, all has been quiet on the Virginia side of the Potomac. ROLLA, 310., Sept 9—Advices from Springfield to Friday are to the effect that no battle had been !ought between Montgomery and Rains up , to Tuesday last. , 33en McCulloch was reported to be at Fort Smith, and his troops werernn route for Forte Walker, in Ail:ails* Nothing definite was known of hik future movements, but it was suppo, sed that his force would remain near the line, ready to act in concert with, the Missouri troops as occasion might require. What Indiana is Doing. A gentleman from Indiana, who has made a careful investigation of the number of troops, batteries, &c., raised in that State, gives the following as the result of his inquiry: There are ten new regiments ready for marching orders. They are in camp at various points. Six three-months regiments have reorganize,d "for the war," and are ready for duty. There are six companies of cavalry,and four batteries of rifled cannon. With these in the field, Indiana will have 37,000 in the ranks, and by the first of October she will have 40,000, including one regi ment of cavalry, which is now organ izing. . There arc, also, brass field pieces at Lawrence, one at l, r evay, one at Jeff ersonville, two at New Albany, two at Madison, three at Evansville, and four at Rockport. There arc also twenty-five companies of Home Guards in the border counties, are be ing supplied with arms and accoutre ments. Indiana has thus nobly come to the rescue of the Union from the influence of traitors, and has set a worthy ex ample to her sister States. 1 A French View of the American War. [Translated for the Bulletin tom too Balla Jeurual Debata.] The fact no longer admits of doubt, War, cruel civil war now rages in the United States. Like all wars, civil war must have an end, but it will be either after one of the parties has over come the other, or having exhausted each other, the two parties agree upon grounds of mutual conciliation, or ac cept; the mediation of it neutral power. Th:s time has not yet arrived, and not withstanding the celerity of events ill the present age, years may elapse be fore such a time shall be reached.- - Hence the longer the war lasts, and the greater the chances for new com plications, the greater will be the ex panse of the field of possible conseqZien ces to the strife between the parties to the late Union. It is it curious study to deduce the results -which may conic front these great events. Among the possible con sequences, there are some which are probable, and others which are inevi table; let us say a few words of each class. Among the first class the most prominent is the destruction. - of the Union. In the struggle the forces arc not equally matched, and we say-it in spite;of the defeat at Manassas. The N,Orth, which not hear of dismem hehtierit;' 'Surpasses its opponent in, 'numbers as well as in wealth, which is now more than ever the sinews of war; for the North is_rich and the South poor: { ;It. has right on its side, and efintentls' for tho cherished principles ofOitiljzation: It is right, for the 1.134.0:41iii intended to be perpetual, 4 . 4*(0 has not happened) the ma .l abuse its puwer and vie e, AE zYi iiiet: ' Tha orth - stands upon the national pritii4As and the South only secedes to perpetuate the slavery of a race of men. But Union is impossible if not voluntary. It would be a subversion of the very axioms of the United States to attempt IL forcible Union of States, which desire separation. It is thus that the Union, be the chanOes of war what they may, is to be regarded broken ; for we can no longer doubt, that the South desires to secede. If the Union be destroyed how many fragments will there be ? The present - probability is that there n ill be two unequal parts. On the one side the mass of the States, and on the other, seven or eight States in the Southern part of the country, Florida, Georgia, the Carolinas, Alabama, the greater part of Louisiana, Mississippi, Arkan sas and Virginia, and some counties of Tennessee and Kentuckti•. The North and \Vest cannot leave the. South in the possession of tilt mouths of the Mississippi, nor of the course of this majestic and useful river. For this reason, the shores of Louisiana, Missis sippi and Arkansas, which are bathed by this liver, will be disputed with vigor by the North and West, and it seems to me they must retain posses sion of them, including even the city of New Orleans. Certainly such a division might he made, events becoming more compli cated, ;Ind the strife Ail, continuing, division alight be pushed farther. Let us cite a possible case. The old West, that is to say the States of Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Wis consin, Minnesota and Michigan, has had no reason up to this time to desire separation from Boston, :New York o:ren t and pros perous Metropolts ot the 7s - ortn - . people are of the same blood, have the same aims and interests, provided that the powerful cities of the North, and the States to whose prosperity they so materially contribute, should not of fend the agricultural States by too much protective legislation. But there is in the fill. 'West a region which spreads along the Pacific ocean, which will soon constitute three or four States, California Oregon and oth ers yet to be organized, without men tioning Senora, which will be taken, from Mexioo. This region has been able to exclude slavery. Its sympa thies arc with the North. But if Con gress, to defray expenses of the war, should crush it with imposts, it is evi dent that discontent will arise, and this region will be disposed to establish a separate government. It is separated from the rest of the Union by deserts and —inaccessible mountains, aml its people might justly 'consider themselves strangers to the existing strife. They are assured of ' the dominion of the great ocean that washes their shores. They took to the Union, it is true, for the boon of a railroad, which spanning the ecntinent shall connect them with the Atlantic States, and this hope has been up to this time a motive fbr remaining in the Union. But the Union be desolated by an interthinable civil war, the building of the railroad will be indefinitely post poned; and the politicians of those States will be violently exercised with the idea of independence, which every American has in his heart at birth. Another probable consequence t4_,.ciyll war will be the abolition of Alt:4:eryeer at least the of the lessening arda,:whbre it exists, as well as of the 'vigor, which characterizes it in the United States. Up to this time Con gress has prudently refused to adopt abolition principles; but if the war continue, it is certain that this senti ment, already powerl'ul in some parts of the North, will spread among the excited people, and willingly or other wise Congress must- follow the move ment, because public opinion cannot be resisted. The gibbet of the unfor tunate John Brown has made ardent proselytes to the cause of emancipa tion. These proselytes only wait for an occasion. Will not the civil war furnish it? Another probltble consequence of existing events is the formation of an other great maritime power. The North unites in a great degree all the elements for such a formation, It has many and excellent sailors, the best whale fishers in the world, and these sailors aro commanded by intrepid captains. The North is possessed of a great part of the mercantile navy of the world. What the mariners of Holland were in the 17th century, (the carriers of the sea,) Americans of the North are to-day. American ship builders excel in their art. It was they who invented the sharp clippers and fist sailors of 1810, and thocfollow ing years; and it was they who in late years constructed the modern clippers, which have the symmetry of frigates, but surpass them in speed. North America;.uP to this time upon a peace footing,-has bad but a nominal navy. She was content to show her self from time to time in the ports of Europe, with a small number of frig ates and corvettes, whose admirable condition excited universal commen dation. The - necessities of the exist ing war will determine •Congress to organize more formidable armaments, if it were only to blockade the ports of the South, and sweep off her priva teers. Foresight, in view of the uncer tainty of foreign intervention in the blockade, will decide Congress not to be niggardly in this particular. There are now but two navi&s in the world, those of England and Prance. There will be hereafter a third, and it will be a worthy rival of the older ones. Among the eventual results we must ' look for a grand chance in the political institutions of North America. • The political system of America implies that the nation has no wars to wage, no neighbor whose caprice or ambition can bring about one. Under this sys tem the governmental authority is not felt, and the liberty allowed to the cit izens is almost without limit. The United States is a country where centralization does not exist, where the obedience Of man to man. is un known; and under this policy the country has made unparallelled prog ress, which proves that the system was good. It was the best which could be chosen. But it was based upon the hypothesis of peace, and the absence of unquiet neighbors. These condi tions are not reversed. War exists, and must be carried on vigOrously.— The troops JMISt, submit to discipline, and though the words may be distaste ful td Americans, let nit say it: Absolute obedience is the law of alludes. Until this exists, in spite ofi . ersonal bra very, we may look for ich humilia ting events as that at Manassas. In the war of 1812 against. England, the spirit of individual independence engendered disorder. It brought upon the Americans on land shameful de feats. For'example, at the outset, Lhe capitulation of General Hull with his whole army, which was not in fact as numerous as that of Brock. The rout at Manassas may be ascribed to the same cause. The only American gen i oral who in the war of 1812 met with signal success, was Jackson, who had the temper of a dictator, and who vio lated law whenever the law interfered with his will. The North, having- undertaken against the South a war of invasion, has a difficult role to play, and cannot hope for success without abridging in dividual right, and establishing an ef fective centralization. Without this all its enterprises mast fail. But the reform and organization of which we . speak are not possible without 01- cm:telling upon the privileges guaran tied to the individual by the political system of the United States. Among the final consequences of this war, we may indicate one that is not very distant, viz ; a radical change in the political balance of the New World. Separated from each other, the North and the South will put into force a btate, of things now existing in Europe. Each division will have its army, and with its hrmy to extend its dominion in the direction in which there appears the best chance. The South harbors the idea, ill concealed. of acquiring Cuba, the greater part' of Mexico and Central America, it has only been restrained in its desire of conquest - or - mu-IN orum.---zr, I ib,s-1 7 . act at pleasure, the South will send new - Walkers, and new Lopezas into the Spanish American Republics, or into the Island of Cuba, and after hav ing sent them, they will be openly sustained. The North has always had a desire to annex Canada, which, by the St. Lawrence, command one of the grand est outlets of the continent. El e their independence was acquired, the Amer icans sent an army, ably commanded by an officer destined later in his career to disgrace his flag, General Arnold, who reached Quebec, but failed to take it. The attempt was renewed at the opening of hostilities in the war of 1812. In this direction success is less easy than against Mexico; they must rely upon the assistance of the Canadians. It must be observed that the moment the North is separated from the South, and has abjured all sympathy with sla very, the repugnance which the idea of annexation has always excited among the Canadians, will be much lessened. Among the efforts to be foreseen in the passing events of' America, there is one not only probable, hut absolute ly certain, viz : that one of the largest markets for the products of Europe, will be closed. The American nation consumed a large proportion of every 'kind of production of Europe ; 'now that their resources are swallowed up by the war, their consumption will be very materially diminished. It is a great misfortune for the workshops of Reims. of Paris, of Elbenf; of Limoges, for the vineyards of Champtigi'm and Borde lais, as for the factories of Manchester, Birmingham and Bradford, for those of Switzerland, Belgium and the Zoll verein. Another result of the war which it is not inopportune to mention is, that if to the horrors of civil war should bo added those of servile war, or if the North, as it might easily do, should blockade the ports of the Cotton States, the groat element of the manufacturing prosperity of Europe would be cut off. This would be a severe trial of every European State. To England, it would be a calamity. 'Nay we not believe that the British Government, in considera tion of the welfare of its manufacturing population, will make an energetic de monstration in regard to the blockade of the cotton ports ? If the labor of the blacks be not interfered with, the cot ton lutist be stored in the closed ports. In this view of the question, are there not terrible complications impending? Whoever undertakes to foretail the solution of these difficulties, assumes a task of Herculean dimensions. Those who essayed to sketch the probable consequencds of the revolution of 1759, painted very plausible pictures, but which were grossly erroneous. No one of them ever dreamed of the man whose extraordinary genius and powerful will changed tin. supposed course of history, and carved for himself a new cradle, from whence proceeded events as strange as unlooked for. It is very possible that these conjec tures may be false; there is one Ma, however, that wo assert without fear of contradiction, i. a., that the crisis in American affairs is no ephemeral ite,ci dent; it is a grand event, of which we shall soon know the dimensions. An immense force, formerly occupied in regular pursuits, has been thrown into byways, not only with imposing num bers, but with a great display- of polit ical paSsion. Front this condition of things some great event must - ensue. The mountain is in labor, and uncle); cir mstances in which we can expect the birth, of a mouse. Siolmeas in the Rebel Camp, [Cot I eapoildenco of the Memplil4 Appeal.] iticamoNn, Aug.-53 , .—1 regret to be compelled to give you a most unfavor able account of the health of our' roops now in the field. The inaction of the several large bodies of men in different portions of the Commonwealth, for three weeks past, must be attributed chiefly to the crowded state of their hospitals. In the peninsula the ty phoid fever has been prevalent, though happily not in a malignant Ibrin. At Manassas and Acquia Creek also, this malady has prostrated a consider able number. In Riehmond, or rather in the camps around it, fifty per cent. of the troops, at least, have been strick en down with incase's. Private hos pitals for the reception and better treatment of the invalids have teen opened from day to day, until every street, almost every square of the city, has its long sick list, and the ladies are worn out in their attentions to the sufferers. They do not wearyln the spirit of their good work ; but excessive watch ing Will exhaust the physical powers. As yet there has been no great tiitalit,y among the thousands of eases, but, just as soon as a dozen have been dis charged as well from an hospital, their beds have been filled, and there is no diminution in the number of new ca ses. Possibly the change of tempera ture of the thll months may cheek the spread of the disease, and but a few weeks remain to us before the frost. A REQUISITION PROM . GEN. MAO ICU DER There has been much speculation to day occasioned by a requisition on the ladies by Gen. Magruder for a large number of flannel hags for artillery charges. Almost all the common car tridges have been used daring the war in Virginia except the fixed ammuni tion, which were made by the delicate fingers of the Richmond ladies in base ments of our churches. Cromwell's recommendation to his Ironsides, " Trust in the Lord and keep your powder dry," would seem to be heeded by these matrons and maidens f the new Israel, for the lit tle sacks they make, though not im pervious to water, are the cunningest of all powder receptacles. What Gen. Magruder can want of so many, un less he is apprehensive of an immediate attack by old bandy-legged Wool, no body can tell. Woo to Wool, however, if he designs anything of that - sort. Though much thinned out by sickness, the troops in the peninsula are anxious above all things to have a chance at the Yankees. But a very small number of those who are now in Magruder's command wcl•e in the battle of Bethel, which has been the only opportunity of ,using their weapons the war has yet afforded them. GREAT mixt:Bs AMONO THE TROOPS. Anothereorrespondentof the Appeal, It 5. Abernathy, Captain of Company 19th Mississippi Regiment, _says trg: Since we pitched our camp here, gloom and sorrow have saddened the countenances of all, owing to the dis tressing fact that disease and death Lave prevailed among us. Our exposed condition during our camp on Bull Run, and the want of proper food and water, was a serious blow to this regiment and to all the troops that were likewise unfortunate. In proof of this I will mention that out of forty-seven bundled in the bri gade, only twenty-three hundred re ported for duty on the 20th inst., and companies that before ordinarily turned out on drill and parade from sixty-five to ninety men, do not now turn out more than eight and ten files per day. The hardships and sufferings conse quent upon the movement of General Johnston's division of the army, which resulted in such glorious success to our cause at Manassas, has, I dare say, prostrated fully one-third of his force. Nearly every day the sound of mus ketry proclaims the death of some Southern hero who has 'ellen a victim to disease in camp, and over whose grave blank cartridges are fired as the lust military honor paid to the dead. But I am happy to state that a timely improvement in the weather (which has been excessively cloudy and rainy,) has brought with it a marked change in our health. —,--------- --- Expenses of Recruiting. The following army order gives in formation respecting the expenses prop erly incurred in the business of recruit ing •volunteers GENERAL ORDER NO. 70 WAR Dtp.utplENT, ADJUTANT GENDI3AI:B'CitFIC4,"-:, Washington, Sept." 3, 186.1 It is announced that appropriations for collecting, drilling and organizing volunteers, under acts authorizing the President to accept the services of 500, 000 men, is intended for the payment of all expenses that may hereafter be incurred therefor, as well as for the reimbursement to individuals of such amounts as have been already justly and actually expended by them in rais ing troops that have been or may be mustered into the service of the United States. Reimbursement of expenses for organizations raised, or attempted to be raised, but not actually mustered into the United States service, will not be made. Claims of State s for expenditures heretofore made by them in raising vol unteers aro provided for by separate and distinct appropriations, and will not be paid from the one now referred to. Bills must, in all cases, specify the date of expenditure, particular items, and amount, and the company or regi ment for which the expense was incur red. They must be accompanied by the receipt of the party to whom the payment was made, and by the certt ficate of the officer incurring the ex pense that it was necessary for the public service, for troops raised for the United States, and that the amount charged was accurate and just. A mong the expenses praperly • chargeable against this appropriation may be enumerated. First: Rent of rendevous or office for recruiting. Second : Commutation of fuel and quarters for officers already mustered into service, when detached on recruit ing duty. Third : Subsistence of volunteers to their muster into service. After such muster, subsistence will be provided by the Subsistence Department. If pos sible, subsistence will be issued in kind as recognized in the regular service, or if other articles are subtituted, the cost of the whole must not exceed the regular supplies, and will. be paid for at rates not exceeding the current prices at the place of purchase. If sub sistence cannot be furnished in kind, and board be nec•essary,•it will be fur nished at a rate-not to exceed forty cents per diem. Fourth: Necessary tra nspok a tion of volunteers prior to completion of com pany organization and muster into. service as,a company. After comple tion of such organization and muster, transportation will be paid by the Quartermaster's Department. Trans portation will be paid at the rate of two cents per mile for railroad travel, and at the current rates for stage and steamboat fare. Fifth: Rent of grounds and build ings for camping purposes, or cost of erection of quarters ; of cooking stoves, when_ actually necessary ; of clerk and office hire, when authorized by the Ad jutant General, and all expenses inci dental to camps of rendezvous. Sixth: Knives and forks, tin cups , and tin plates for volunteers. Seventh: Necessary medicines and medical attendance prior to organiza tion of regiments, or the mustering in of regimental surgeons. Eighth: Actual, railroad, stage, or steamboat litre, necessarily- incurred by authorized agents in raising or re cruiting volunteers. 2Tinth : Advertising—Officers re cruiting will be authorized to adver tise for recruits in not to exceed two newspapers for each rendezvous under their charge. Tenth : Facl and straw, previous to company organization, according to the allowance fbr the regular Army. E leventh: All other expenses al lowed for recruiting in the regular service, not herein mentioned, and in curred for volunteers previoUs to their muster into the United States service. By order, L. THOMAS, Adj. Gen. Official, THOS. RUGGLES, Asst. Adj. Gen. . . The War--.lts Origination. [from the Baltimore Clipper.] Xo honest man will for one moment deny, that the civil war in which we arc engaged, was originated by the South; the excuse for the seizure of the forts, and arsenals and mints, was that the .election of Mr. Lincoln ren dered such a step necessary, as the pe culiar institutions of the South were endangered. That this was merely an excuse all concurrent history proves -the State of South Carolina origina ted trice plot and set the ball in motion, and carried out the execution of the plan last MI, contrary to the earnest entreaty of Ler neighbors, even of the Gulf States, who begged that she would wait and consult and act with her sis ters who were as much or more inter ested in the matter - than lterselt: But ).tone of their coun sel—she would ffciftir herself, wrid-vritib-! tha'. haughty and domineering pride in which she has been alwaysiudulged as a spoiled child, she declared that they would be dragved into the muss she was preparing for them whenever she took the tinarst4. Towards Vir ginia her conduct wassail more super 'cillious when she sent commissioners to beg her not to ba hasty or rash, and sent them back to the Old Dominion in the most contemptous manner, and afterwards, in connexion with her neighbors, to, force Virginia into their measures, it was decreed that no slaves should be brought into the Confederate States from any of the slave States in the old Union, without paying a tax of ;$lOO a head. Here, perhaps, was the secret, how the Virginia Convention slave-dealers, whose headquarters are at Richmond and whose business is to purchase the surplus ncgroes of Vir ginia for the cotton and rice plantations of the Gulf States, and who command great wealth and influence, by and in their trade, gathered an immense mob in the precincts of the 03pital where the Convention was in session, itnd lit erally threatened personal violence upon the members unless their demands were complied with. The deed was done, and the woful consequences to the mother of States is now beingex pe•ienced. That the plot was hatching for this dissolution of the Union, long before Mr. Lincoln was ever known outside of his own State, no reader of history, or observer of passing events in the political history of our country for the last forty years, can for ono moment doubt innuinerable evidences can be produced, mostly, it is true, front the ambitions and restless public men of South Carolina, but still, they have finally compelled, or coerced others to unite with them. Immediately after the ntdifieation drama in 1835, after the attempt had been made to acccom plish the same object by the tariff question but tidied by the stern con duct of Old Hickory, Mr. Calhoun, on his return from Congress, declared "that the South never could be united against the North on the tariff ques tion—the sugar - interest of Louisiana would keep her Out—and that the basis of Southen union must be shifted to the Slavery question." The tariff was then, as the negro question has since become, a mere pretext for the disso lution of the Union, which Washing tou in his farewell address, in the most solemn manner warned his countrymen to frown upon with indignation at its first dawning ' and which advice has been mainly kept in view, up to the last Presidential election, except in the rebellious State of South Carolina. Gen. Jackson, whose patriotism and true American feeling none doubted, however they may have differed about some of the leadinc , measures of his administration, understood the designs of Calhoun and his co-workers, and denounced them in no measured terms. On the first of May . 1833, whilst iu the Presidential chair, ho wrote a private letter to his friend, the Rev. A. 3. Craw ford, of Georgia, which letter is. in part, as follows : . "I have had n ; laborious task hero, but nullification is dead. and its actors and cour tiers will he'remembered by the people only to be execrated of th3ir wicked designs to sever and destroy the only good Government on the globe, and that happiness and prosper- ivy we enjoy over every other portion of the world. llanzau's gallows ought to be the fate of all such ambitious men, who would involve our country in a civil war and all the evils ire its train, ttnit they might reign and ride on ds whirlwind and direct the storm. Thefree people of these United States have spoken, and consigned these wicked demogogues to their proper doom. ,Take care, o of ;lour Nul lifiers—you have them amongst you. Let them meet the indignant frowns of every man who loves his country. "The tariff, it 'swell known, was 'a mere pretext." (lie then give" , the preof.of this, afforded by the recent course of Calhoun, and bis tools in Congress, on ,the new tariff bill, which they voted fur, although it gently in creased the duties on coarse woolens and other articles consumed by the South. arid closes whh these words :) Therefore the tariff; was only the pretext. and Disunion - sod it SuuTli- ERN CoNFEDERACT the real object. Tire NEXT PRETEXT IVIIMIETLIE NEGRO OR SLAVERY QtrE:r TION The old hero with a prophetic voice, warned his countrymen of the oli garchs of SOuth Carolina, and the elec tion of Lincoln was merely r thc instru mentality which they grasped, at, to bring upon the country the horrors Of cival war now upon us, which the Gen eral and all other of our distinguished men who have alluded to the possihli ity of an attemptat the dissolution of our - Union ' have not failed to predict would be the result: An lowa Girl discovered in Soldier's Costume, (From the St. i:ouis Republican.] The war now prevailing in this once great and glorious country has already given rise to many strange and roman tic adventures; but nothing more iii teresting than the following 1188138 yet made known to us. The facts are these: Early on Wednesday morning some of the police officers at the Central station discovered a young soldier pat4s ing on the-opposite side of - th . o street. The young soldier's step was very elas tic complexion fhir and hands 'small and rather delicate. These little cir cumstances excited the suspicions of the policemen, and followingthe yount . ,P soldier a square or two, they deemed it proper to take him into custody. He gave his name as Charles li. Williams, and seemed somewhat surprised and not a little indignant at being thus in terfered with. He exclaimed that he was merely on his way to the Repub- Urea office, to obtain a copy of that highly interesting newspaper. This fact the policemen' we're -ready to ad. mit was well calculated to show that the 3 oung soldier had excellent judg ment and discretion ; but nevertheless they were of the firm conviction that the fbir complexion, the delicate bands and various other peculiarities which they had observed about the young soldier, were not wholly of the masculine order. So they took the young soldier to the police station, and there blushingly and confusedly, he, she or it admitted that the suspicions' of the policemen were well fbunded— in short, the youngsoldier wasa young lady. __ln company with Captain Tar-• ner, we visited the romantic young creature d ri lig the forenoon. A finer looking soldier we have never seen. Her eyes were largo and lustrous, her fbatures regular ; hair jet black and cut in the most approved masculine style, nose aquiline and mouth perfectly de, lieious, so to speak. In addition to these intone Ling - particulars,-her de meanor was modest and graceful, and - extremely pleifsin - g. She seemed to he in.the enjoyment of excellent health, and looking ad though fist pork awl soldier life had been rather beneficial to her constitution. • She related the story of her adven tures frankly and modestly. She was born in the town of Davenport, lowa, where her mother at present resides. For several years she has resided in Lyons, Clinton county, lowa, and it was from there sho enlisted, not quite three months ago, in the Second lowa regiment, Col. Curtis. Her company was Company I, Capt. Cox. It was in this company she had a friend, who was a lieutenant. She loved the lieu tenant, and so she clipped her raven locks short off, obtained a suit of boy's clothing, packed her Crinoline, etc., is a trunk, and presented herself in male attire to Capt. Cox, stating her desire to "g o fora soger." The captain eyed her sharply, and sa4d, " You'ro nthet. young, ain't you ?" "I am - twenty," she replied, "and am anxious to serve my country." So the Captain accep ted the young volunteer, and she at once shouldered arms. _ She states, however, that Capt. Cox subsequently discovered her sex, but, at her urgent solicitations, permitted her-to remain with her company, and particularly advised her not to go about the streets of St. Louis alone. She followed ;the fortunes of her reg iment from lowa to this city, and from thence to Bird's Point, and became exceedingly proficient in the use of Ilardee's tactics. A few days ago the regiment returned- to this city, but the young volunteer was unable . to come along with it, having been detailed to attend to the silk in the hospital oil the steamboat City of Warsaw. Yes, terday evening (Tuesday) the Warsaw came up to this city, and brought along the young volunteer. She at once made inquiries concerning herregimont but ascertaining that it was stationed at the Barracks, she concluded to re, main for the night in the city, She proceeded to the residence of a family on Seventh street, with whom she was formerly • acquainted in Davenport, math: herself known, and was kindly cared for. Sho rose early, to obtain the latest and most rebeliable news, as already stated, and thus fell into the hands of the police. Captain Turner asked her ifshe would resume her proper dress if he would release her, and she faithfully promised she would do so, and she was thereupon set at liberty, and conducted to the residence of her friends on Seventh street. She regretted that she would be unable •to draw her three months' pay, (the term of. her enlistment hav ing nearly expired) affirming it as her belief that she had earned the $lO per month, and was as much entitled to it as any masculine soldier. CROPS.—The wheat crop ilk Southern Illinois was above an aver age, and of the best quality; the corn crop promises well; and the fruit is very abundant. Peaches are giveu away and fed to the hogs ; apples aro breaking down the trees,