TERMS OF THE GLOBE Per annum In advance 3[x months Three months 60 A failure to notify a discontinuance at the expiration at the term eubDcribed fur will be considered a now engage. went. TERMS OF ADVERTISING 1 insertion. 2 do. $ 25... ...... $ 37 ..... ...... Four lines or less, Ono square, (12 buts,) ==l Three square, 1 60 2 25 3 00 Orer three week and lets titan three tnouthe, 25 Cents per square for each Insertion. 3 months. 0 months. 12 months. ....$1 $3 00 $5 00 3 00 6 00 7 00 Six lines or lees, Ono square, - .. . . Two squares, 6 00 8 00 10 00 Three equates, 7 00 10 00 15 00 Your squares, 000 ' 13 00 20 00 !Calf a column, 12 00 16 00.. .... ....24 00 Ono column, "0 00 30 00.... 50 00 Professional and Business Cards not exceeding four lines, one year, $3 00 Administrators' and Executers' Notices, $1 75 Advertisements not marked with the number of 'neer lons desired, will be, continued till forbid and charged at' ording to these terms. Ely HUNTINGDON, PA. Thursday, July 17, 1862. NOTICE, We have not the time nor the incli ,nati on, to dun personally, a large num- Iber of persons who have unsettled ac 'counts upon our books of several years , standing. We shall, therefore, from 'day to day, without respect to persons, place into the hands of a Justice for 'collection, all accounts of over two ;years standing. All those who wish Ito save expense, wilt do well to give vi 3 IN, eall, "A Revelation from the Chivalry." The Baltimore American says as the chances of maintaining the great strug gle become more and more uncertain in the South, then men who have done so much to bring it on upon false pretexts become more and more fierce in their bitter animosity, and desire to make the people of the two sections utterly irreconcilable. Every taunt that can be uttered, every provocation and in sult that can be hit upon, is devised to widen the breach, and make that strog- Ale fiendish and malignant, which be gan measurably with moderation and :a lingering regard for members of the :same nationality. In this work the ! press there has always played a dis tinguished part, beginning with the Charleston Mercury, and that paper !having given the key-note in its fierce hatred and contempt for all not up to its standard of what was aristocratic ; the others have gradually chimed in, Outdoing their preceptor in this mat ter at last. Indeed, whilst the Mercury has to some extent accepted the whole some lessons forced upon it of late, and toiled dawn its savage utterances in the preseace of a - foe who has com pelled respect, its co-laborers get worse iu their angry demonstrations, as per haps the best method, in their estima tion, of making their dupes fight to the death in a bad and failing cause. The American has been struck with this condition of things by the sight of a veritable copy of the Richmond Whig, of as late a date as Sane 25th, dealing with these matters. It has an article which, in its way, is a curiosity, and yet so in harmony with other senti ments of the leaders of the rebellion, and especially with the current senti ment hitherto in the Cotton Statcs,that, queer as it is, it will not at this time, we imagine, greatly surprise any here. We propose to quote it entire : The Master Race.—Since the great tattle of Shiloh, and including it, we have had an almost uninterrupted series of victories. We have encountered the enemy generally with heavy odds against us, and frequently behind in trenchments, but in no single instance, unless it be the unexplained affair at Lewisham have Southern troops failed to exhibit superior manhood to the mon grel and many tongued enemy. Indeed the whole experience of the war is an attestation of the truth long since discovered by impartial observers that the master race of this continent is found in the Southern States. Of a better stock, originally, and habitua ted to manlier pursuits and exercises, they have ruled in affairs of State by force of the stronger will and large• wisdom that pertain to and distinguish superior races of men, while on the field of battle they have in (wry con test held a priority of place, conceded to them by their present adversaries. ty, if that is not sublimated impu dence axl self-complacency combined, F 9 .krk97i nothing about it. On the ,run Ibr the last half year nearly, it would only be a tedious matter to enu merate all the races in which they have ,distinguished themselves in a hot chase after that "last ditch." A glance at the vacated region tells the story at once, since they have been made to trot across Missouri, Kentucky, Ten fICSSCO, and from other localities innu merable. If we take one memorable instance alone in which these very Richmond gentlemen made the most remarkable time in rebel annals, it sot tAes the case ferever against them, they themselves being compelled to con demn the " Richmond Blues," pi* crack ems, for their lack of every thing which constitutes a " master race." If we take the other or fellow pink in this claim. to what is '! chival rous" and dominant, all must remem ber the flight front Hilton Head en counter, in which the Charlestonians just as highly distinguished themselves in the same line as their Richmond friends did at Roanoke. What makes this claim more comical as coming from Richmond is that no one can associate . , . . ~ •••••:::-/,_ _, ~.., . ~....„.,:,:.: :;:„.„..., ....., 0 ,...,: r4 s , ~.,..,..„4 , ..„:;,...,,„,„,„,,,, , . ... , _, .. ~. „: ..„,, ~ \ ~ . ..., ._.„ _,,...„..,,..„..:,„:......,....z,t..„.:......:„.„-,.:'IQ?. , -:-:.:,.,,:z,.:,....,:.1.:.1„....*___..„,.....:,,,.: ' / ".............„../z e- ' ' '.". ~ . . . • _ .. . ~ Ell ado. .$ 50 . 1 00 WILLIAM LEWIS, Editor and Proprietor. VOL. XVIIL in the past Henry A. Wise with other than most valorous utterances, whilst his real exploits have only made more remarkable and shameful his whole sale and defiant brags and running. If we turn to the West, continues our Baltimore contemporary, all must remember the persistent uproar kept up in the Southern papers over the Texas regiment that passed through Nashville on their way to Kentucky. Every one of thorn was a prodigy of strength and valor and horsemanship ; could beat Pawnees in their ability to pick up their weapons from the ground whilst at full speed—their bowie-knives were to slash men in two as a house wife might a parsnip, and their rifles were treble death. But, alas ! on an unfortunate occasion for them, they encountered "Willich's Germans" at the Green river bridge; the Texan colonel was slain, and they were so completely wiped out at close quarters that they have never been heard of since, except as the remains of a dis organized and rabble set of bacon and horse stealers, as they fled through Nashville. But why multiply cases when the object of all this reckless gas conade is merely to keep the breath of life in the nostrils of a doomed rebel lion ? We quote again : This natural domivancy of the South ern people has had much to do in bringing on the -war. The inferior race, grown strong in numbers and ambitious from prosperity, have re volted against and now seek to over throw and destroy those whose supe riority was a constant source of envy and self-reproach. There is no fiercer malevolence than that of caste, and it is this which has so long stirred the Yankee bile. Always, iu the presence of the Southern gentleman, he has felt a strong and painfully repressed im pulse to take of his bat, This con scious inferiority has galled the jeal ous and malignant creature until ho has broken out in servile insurrection. He has vainly concluded that his num bers can overwhelm and exterminate the subjects of his envy, and that be, succeeding to the broad acres and lib eral habitudes of the Southern gentry, will come to be looked upon as a gen tleman too ! If this is not " piling up the agony," what, in the name of all that is repub lican and Jeffersouian, is ? It is worth something to find the chivalry trying in this manner to put themselves " right upon the record." Twenty millions of people in revolt against three hundred and fifty thousand slaveholders I Day is breaking, full surely, when such rev elations as these come up from Old Virginia. We quote once more : With us the contest is one for here ditary rights, for the sacred things of home, for the old repute of the bettor blood—with the Yankee it is a rebel lious and infatuated struggle for a place he is unworthy of, for privileges he would degrade, for property he would barter, and for institutions he could neither comprehend nor enjoy. It is the old and never-ending strife between patrician and proletarian, be tween gentle and vile. It is the offer of battle on a new field of muscle against spirit—numbers against cour age. It is not upon Southern soil and among the descendants of Cavaliers and, Huguenots that this battle will go in'favor of brute force. It may be that the armies in front of this city are about to rush into mor tal wrestle. When they meet it will not, perhaps, be upon such unequal terms as we have generally encounter ed. But should there be as great ine quality of numbers as on other fields, it may and will be neutralized here, As it ever has been, by the superior courage and constancy of our troops. True to their lineage, their fame, their pled ges, their principles—true to the ex pectations and prayers of all who love them—true to the immeasurable in terests that hang on the issue—the soh diers who fight for liberty and native land will never give back, never weary, never cease to strike till certain and glorious victory perches on their ban ners. If any one, comments the American, can read this long rigmarole, dictated by the seemingly impracticable folly and presumption of tho " chivalry," the " descendents of the Cavaliers and Huguenots," and not feel that only a good whipping will ever enable them to be tolerated on this Continent, ho is behind the spirit of the times—he is not posted up with the causes which I bave dictated this conflict. Taking the issues they tender as those of fact, the question at oppp arises whether this little knot of pretendnrs, these " Don Quixotes of the Southern plan tations" as the Cologne Gazette hap pily termed them, aro to dominate all that was once reverenced here by those who founded tho Republic? What a homily for the Democracy of the land r7_-what a creed for those Iglu? have, in the past, built all their triumphs on the teachings of Jefferson, Madison, and the other worthies of the Revolu tion. It is something to get into the merits of the paso, it is much to learn what Jefferson Davis is fighting for, what Barnwell Rhett fell for the other day. Let the people take heed to all this. Let them make up their minds HUNTINGDON, PA., WEDNESDAY, JULY 23, 1862. as to whether the teachings and the practices of two-thirds of a century here have all been based on a stupen dous mistake; whether, in short, re publican government is a dream and a farce, or a living, breathing benefi cence, calculated to elevate and bene fit the masses of the human race. If satisfied that they are on the .right quest, let the masses fight for their old principles, die for them, if need be, but never talk of surrender to a set of pretentious starvelings whose ama zing folly and assumptions are the dis grace of this continent and of the age in which they live. Now Reoruiting Regulations. WASHINGTON, July 16.—The follow ing is the substance of a general order that has just been ihupd from the War Department : In organizing new regiments of vol unteers, the Governors of States are authorized to appoint, in addition to the staff officers heretofore authorized, one Second Lieutenant for each com pany, who shall be mustered into the service at the commencement of the organization, with authority to muster in recruits as they are enlisted. If any recruits shall be enlisted who shall afterwards, on medical inspec tion, prove to have been obviously un fit for the service at the time of 14 enlistment, all the expenses caused thereby shall be paid to such officer, to be stopped against him from any payment that may be coming to him from the Government, thereafter. Any officer thus appointed and mustered shall only be entitled to be paid on the muster and pay roll of his Company, and should he fail to secure an organ ized Company within such reasonable time as the Government may desig nate, his men may be transferred to some other Company, his appointment be revoked, and he be discharged with out pay, unless the Governor shall think it proper to give him a position in the consolidated company to which his men have been transferred. Recruits will be sent to the regi mental rcndeiVous at least as often as once a week; when they will be im mediately examined by the surgeon of the regiment, and if found unfit for duty by reason of permanent disabil ity, will be discharged from the service forthwith by the Surgeon, who will re port such discharges to the Adjutant General of the State, and also to the Adjutant of the Regiment, noting par ticularly those cases whore the disa bility was obvious at the time of en listment. As soon as the organization of a re giment is completed, it will be careful ly inspected by the mustering officer for the State, who will see that at least the minimum number of each compa ny is present. No absentees except the sick in the hospital will be count ed. Ile will also compare the muster in the rolls, and if found correct, will sign the roll, certifying to the muster of each man at the date of his enlist ment. Officers will be mustered into the service only on the authotTty of the Governor of the State to which their regiments belong, Until regiments are organised and their muster roll completed, they will be under the ax elusive control of the Governors of the States, and all the requisitions for Quartermaster's, lfedical and Ord nance stores, and contracts for subsis tence. will, if approved by them, be al lowed and not otherwise. Where it is desired by the Govern ors of the States, the United States Of ficers of the Quartermaster's, Medical and Ordnance Departments may turn over stores to the State authorities, to be issued by them in accordance with the Regulations and accounted for to the proper bureau of the War Depart ment, Persons travelling under the order of the Governor of any State, on busi ness connected with the recruiting ser vice, will be allowed the actual cost of transportation, to be paid by the mus tering and disbursing officer on the presentation of the account, accompa nied by proper vouchers, and the or der tinder which the journey was per formed. Our Army Correspondence. CAMP NEAR HARRISON'S IiANDING,} James River, July 6, 1862. DEAB GLOBE :—lt is so long since I have written to you that I am almost ashamed to begin again, but the rea- Km was, that I had nothing to write that T. thought would be interesting. Nr) have been in ',lgoe fights, and per gn aceptplt of them would be of interest, at least to some of your nu merous readers. On Thursday, Juno 26th, wo wore ordered to harness up and bo ready to move, and at two o'clock we started for:the scene of action, at, Mechanics ville, which had already commenced. -PERSEVERE.- We arrived on the field at half-past 3, and immediately commenced firing with shell and canister, and it was not long before the secesh skedaddled— We then fired shell with five-second' fuse, at a secesh battery, till a brigade of rebels undertook to flank our bat tery. In one minute the battery was faced in that direction pouring canister into them at the rate of twelve dis charges to the minute; as usual, they skedaddled. It was getting dark then, and the firing soon ceased on both sides, and we slept on the battle-field. The next morning wo fell back to Gaines' 11111, where we had one of the hardest fights of the war. Our batte ry was not engaged until evening.— The infantry was driven back, and did not rally to the support of our battery as they should have done, and conse quently we had no support. I could not blame the infantry for they had been fighting all day against superior numbers, and were out of ammunition. We fired spherical case shell and can ister until the rebels were within five yards of the muzzles of our guns; we then limbered up, and left the field.— We had to leave two guns and seven dead comrades on the field. We would have brought all our guns along, but the men were killed or wounded at them. I was acting gunner and all the boys were wounded at our gun ex cept myself. Two of us limbered up our gun, and it generally takes six men to do it. We crossed the Chick ahominy and rested till Saturday night, when we took up the line of march for the left of our lines, which we reached Sunday night, and on Monday after noon we had our third fight. It began about two o'clock. Our caissons were ordered to leave the field before the battle commenced, and when we were nearly out of ammunition, they could not be found. We soon run out of am munition and Gen. McCall ordered us to leave the field. flour ammunition had lasted ten minuteslonn-er we would all have been captured, for the rebels came in front with a large force and at the same time flanked us with a larger force than we had on the field. Reinforcements soon came up for our men and the rebels were driven from the field with the bayonet. Our troops fell back about six miles that night, and when the rebels came up, we whipped them again. The Reserves were not in that fight, for they are very much cut up. In Monday's fight the Fifth Regiment, P. R. V. C., made three successive bayonet charges. I only saw the first one, and they brought in about one hundred prisoners that time. I only speak. of what I saw.-- McClellan says the Penna. R. C. cov ered themselves with immortal glory. More anon. RANGER, Battery G, Ist Pa. Art The Pennsylvania Reserves in the Late Battles. Special Correepondenco of thu Prom) SEVENTU PENNA. RESERVES CAMP, Harriaon'a Landing, July 9, 1862. On Thursday, Juno 20, we were or clered to get ready for review by Genl. McClellan. The boys accordingly brightened up, and got everything in order, when the sharp report of a Par rott gun told us there was work at hand. Soon the rattle of musketry was heard about a mile from our camp, and we were ordered to get ready to support the Ist and 3d Brigades. We immediately started out, the rebels meanwhile amusing themselves by shelling us from the other side of the river, as we marched along. No went into the fight about four o'clock, and kept it up until nine, when firing ceased on both sides, as if by mutual consent. We slept on the ground where we bad fought, with nothing to disturb us but an occasional shot from the outer guards. During this engage ment we were about seventy-five yds. apart. The bullets came in a perfect hurricane, and the shelling was the most severe we experienced during our trying time. We had been contending against 45,000 men, according to the statement of a prisoner, since con firmed by scores of the " gray-backs " we captured. At three o'clock next morning (27th) we opened on them again, and then slowly retreated to the position at Gaines' Hill, a distance of six miles, whore we were joined by the balance of Porter's corps d'armee. Up to this time we had about 8,000 men, of which about 300 had been kill ed, wounded, and missing. The enemy pressed us closely, and we had barely got into position when they made one of their impetuous charges on our right, but they were repulsed in gallant style. The fight was kept up for about two hours, when the armies commenced manoeuvring, the " robs " finding it impossible to successfully attack us. They still out numbered us two to one. About this time the Reserves were ordered to a position, as a body of reserve, to at tack at the decisive moment. At four o'clock the order was given, "M'Call's division on the line," and, amid the howling of shells and the whistling of bullets, we marched to the front. Our regiment was on the left, then on the right, then on the right centre, and fi nally was placed on the left centre.— Here we were ordered to lie down, our company being placed between three pieces of artillery. Here is whore we suffered so terribly. We were barely twenty yards from the enemy, and the grape and canister was howling terri bly. We drove them until about six o'clock, when " Stonewall" made his first appearance, and fell on our left wing. He succeeded in flanking us, and planted a battery so as tD enfi lade our entire line. This battery he lost; but the ail Maine and 4th Michi gan broke, and broke our line. We could not stand it ; they outnumbered us now four to one, and they were fresh, whilst we were worn out by our day-and-a-halls fighting,- and hardly any sleep. ;We fell back, and wore met by the Irihli Brigade, when we turned and drove the rebels off the field; at the point of the bayonet. They received further reinforcements, but we • held the field until next morning, when we crossed the Chickahominy and blow up the bridges. We then took a rest, and next morning started for White Oak Swamp. Everything was docent and in order; we saved our baggage train, which was nearly twenty miles long ! After we had placed the snamp between us and our pursuers we halt ed, and a short halt it was. The reb els now bad another column, directly from Richmond of about 100,000 men, bearing on our left. Add to this that our entire army was not yet united, and you may imagine how " blue " it looked. We had, however, succeeded in making the river, where the gun boats could co-operate with us. We fell baea about one and a half miles, and chose our position--our division on the fourth line of battle ; our gen erals telling us that we would not be "pmt in" unless absolutely necessary. IVe did not wait long before the rebel column advanced on the first line, and almost the first command issued was, " McCall to the front," and double quick it went. We charged them, and at the point of the bayonet drove them from the ground three times, when we fell back, and fresh troops took our place. The enemy finally withdrew about dark, and next morning we again fell buck, and united our whole army near the river, at City Point. Here, with great pomposity, they again at tacked us, on the Ist of July. "Little Mac" himself commanded, and it would have done your heart good to see them skedaddle. This engagement ended in a total rout. Here we took a bri gade of robs, and a motley crew they were—all drunk.. Major Lyman, our provost marshall, tells me that all the rebel prisoners turned into his hands are drunk. This accounts for their fighting so recklessly, I presume. We again took the line of march next day, and came to this place. The Confed erates planted a battery on a hill and commenced throwing shells into our camp. Our guns did not reply, but a division took a little walk of about five minutes, and, without firing a gun, quietly relieved them of their pieces, and took the soldiers in charge for safe keeping. They had seven small pie ces, and a good stock of ammunition. Our lines have been advanced, and we are now entrenching ourselves. Our communication is now uninterrupted and much cheaper. The papers will have it that Jackson was ,fighting us on Thursday - and Friday; which- is a mistake. He Only came on Friday evening near dusk. The papers publish very little of a reliable nature, so far as that great, masterly and strategical movement is concerned. I asked ono of the rebels whether they had seen any 'big shells" come into their ranks, meaning from the gunboats. He re plied, " Yes, about the size of an ordin ary knapsack." They do throw heavy Of our losses, I would fain not speak, but so it must be to complete the sto ry. Out of 8,000 men the Reserves took in, we can barely muster 3,500. Among Our missing are Generals Mc- Call, Reynolds, and Meade; Colonels Simmons, Hayes, Gallagher and Jack son, with field and line officers in pro portion. LEBANON. A Voice from Illinois. Letter. rom Governor Yates to President Lincoln—The home State of the-pres ident again Aroused—A Bolder and Stronger Policy Urged—Every Loyal Arm to be Employed to Suppress the Br:Union, if,D. Governor Yates, of Illinois, has ad dressed the following letter to Presi dent Lincoln, under date of July 11: E,XECUTIVE DEPARTMENT, 1 Springfield, 111., July 11, 1862. President Lincoln, Washington, D. C.: Tho crisis of the war and of our na tional existence is upon us. The time has come for the adoption of more de cisive measures. Greater animus and earnestness must be infused into our military movements. BlOws must be struck at the vital parts of the rebel lion. The Governme,pt should employ all available means compatiblewith the rules of warfare to subjugate the trai tors. Summon to the standard of the Republic all men willing to fight for the Union. Let loyalty, and that alone, be the dividing line between the nation and its foes. Generals should not be permitted to fritter away the services of our bravo men in guarding the property of traitors, and in driving back into their hands loyal blacks, who offer us their labor, and who seek shel ter beneath the Federal flag. Shall we sit supinely by and see the war sweep off the youth and strength of the land, and refuse aid from that class of mon who are at least worthy foes of traitors and the murderers of our government and of our children ? Our armies should be directed to forage and quarter on the enemy, and to cease paying traitors and their abettors exorbitant exactions for food needed by the sick or hungry soldier. Mild and conciliatory means have been tried in vain to recall the rebels to their allegiance. The conservative policy has utterly failed to reduce them to obedience and restore the suprema cy of the laws. They have by means of sweeping conscriptions gathered in countlegs hordes, and threaten to beat back and overwhelm the armies of the Union. With blood and treason in their hearts, they flaunt the black flag of rebellion in the face of the Govern ment, and threaten to butcher our brave find loyal armies with foreign TERMS, $1,50 a year in advance. . bayonets. They arm negroes and merciless savages in their behalf. ' Mr. Lincoln, the crisis -,.demands greater efforts and sterner measures. Proclaim - anew the good old motto of 'the Republic, "Liberty and . Union, now and forever, one and inseparable," and accept the services of all loyal nseu,. and it will be in your power to stamp armies out of the earth—irresistible armies, that will boar our banners to certain victory. Illinois, already alive with the beat of the drum, an‘l resounding with the tread of new recruits, will respond to your call. Adopt this policy, and she will leap like a flaminff b giant into the fight. This polieylorthe conduct of the war, will render foreign interven tion impossible, and the arms of the Republic invincible. It will bring the *conflict to a speedy close, and secure peace on a permanent basis. RICHARD ,YATES, ,Governor of Illinois. How General Butler Treats Criminals and Traitors, We make the following extracts from N. 0. papers: Death of Lieut. De Kay Lieut. George C. De Kay, aide-do camp to Gen. Williams, who was woun ded at Grand Gulf on the 26th ult, died at the St. James Hospital, at half-past three o'clock, A. M., June 27th.' He was a native of New York, and aged about 22 years. General Shipley is sued the proper orders, and the funer al took place with all the bonor. .A Female Rebel Disposed of. While Lieut. Do Kay's funeral was passing through• the streets of .Now Orleans, a rebel woman insulted the corpse. The woman was the Mrs. Philips, 'released from a Washington prison not long since by the .Pederal authorities. She was arrested and dis posed of in accordance with the follow ing order: • HEADQUARTERS DEPARTMENT OP TUE Guar. NEW ORLEANS, Juno 30, '62. Special Order No. 150 Mrs. Philips, wifo of Philip Philips, having been once imprisoned, for her traitorous proclivities and acts at Washington, and released by the cle mency of the Government, and having been found training her children to spit upon officers of the United States, for which act of one of those children both her husband and herself apolo gized, and were again forgiven, is now found on the balcony of her house du ring the passage of the funeral pro cession of Lieutenant De Kay, laugh ing and mocking at his remains, and upon being,:-inquired. of by "the! Com manding General if this fact were so, contemptuously replies," 1. was in good spirits that day." It iS therefore ordered that she be not " regarded and treated' as a com mon, woman,",of whom no officer or soldier is bound to take notice, but as an uncommon, bad and dangerous wo man, stirring up strife and inciting to riot. And that, therefore, she be confined at Ship Island, in the State of Missis sippi; within proper limits there, till further orders, and that she be allowed one female servant and no more; if she so choose. That one of tho houses for hospital purposes be assigned her as quarters, and a soldier's ration each day be served out to her, with the means of cooking the same, and that no verbal or written communication be allowed with her, except through this office, and that she be kept in close confinement until removed to Ship Island. By order of ' MAJOR-GENERAL BUTLER. R S. Davis, Captain and Act'g A. A. G. Punishment of Yankee Bone Ornament Immediately following this is order 151: Fidel Keller has been found exhibi ting a human skeleton in his book store window, in a public place in this city, labeled " Chickahominy," in large letters, meaning and intending that the bones should be taken by the pop ulace to be the bones of a United States soldier slain in that battle, in or der to bring the authority of the Uni ted States and our armies into con tempt, and for that purpose had stated to the passers by that the bones were 'those of a Yankee soldier, Whereas in truth and feet, they wore the bones purchased some weeks before of Mexican Consul, to whom they were pledged by a medical student. It is therefore ordered that for this desecration of the dead, he be confined at Ship Island for two years at hard labor, and that he be allowed to corn munieate with no one on the island except Mrs. Philips, who has been sent there fora like offence. Upon this order being road to him, Keller requested that so much of it as associated with him "that woman" might be recalled, which request, seeming to the Commanding General to be reasonable, so much of said order was revoked, and the remainder execu ted. Another order• is to the following ef fect: John W. Andrews exhibited a cross, the emblem of the suffering of our blessed Savior, fashioned for a person al ornament, which ho said was made from the bones• of a Yankee soldier; and having shown this, too, without rebuke, in the Louisiana Club, which claims to bp composed of clqvidric gentlemen, it is therefore ordered that for this desecration of the dead, Ile be confined at hard labor for two years on the fortiAcatioas at Ship Island, and that he bp allowed po verbal or writ ten communication to or with any cm except through these headquarters. Tile Twiggs Property General Butler also issued the sub joined order NO, 7, Sellers. RRINTIgq , Qn'TQN; GLOIII I I j,04. CIEPICE." . ,po most cecpp oto, Q t mi x to, tho oftontlyoknelpon. flth9Ol3 410 most mnplo footiltiss promptly'pxocut4 tho hOf style, oiseyF YftriPtY, of Jolt 441 1 i 4 g.! In tCh"- H4ND BILLS, .I).Rqq.B4m-mEs, I3TANKk ROSTERS;. CARDS] BALL TICKETS, Taiti• tkEATPSi, LABELS, &C., kO., &C. reXAxdßytiVikneil.4oo KORN> AT LEWIS , BOOK, STATIONERY 4 1 , 41/8!O 6T08117. INADQUARTF.RS D.EI'.MOMINV OF THE I GULF, NEW'ORLEANQ, Juno 20,•1862. . ' GENERAL ORDER, No. 46. All the fooporty in. New Orleans belonging. to 'General D. E. Twiggs, and of- has miner son, the income of which he has received, pad nuclei. ;the 'charge of his:agent, H. W. Palfrey, Esq. s consisting, tof real estate, bonds, notes of hand, Treasury Notes o the United States, slaves, household farni, ture, &e., is hereby sequestered to,:bo held to await the action of the V.nitJed States Government. By order of Major General Butler. R. S. Davis, Captain and A. A. A. G. The Suppressicin of the Common Connell, and the formation of new muniejpal bureaux also forms the subject, of an other order by Gen. Antler, It appears that the seats of .41„Iclermen and Assistant Aldermen haw all been vacated : ,one class Of, there by .the expiration of their term Af cAce, and the remainder by their nogleet to talc& the oath of allegiance to the ThEittA States, as required by General 'Order, No. 41 of. the Commanding General of the Department. General Butler and his Famous To• man Order. The following is a , private letter from General Butlop to a friend in Bos ton, explaining the motives which in duced hint tq issUe 4is %minks man's " order iIEADQUARTERS •DEPARTMENT OF TUR } Gimr, Nzw Outzkus, July, 2, 1862. My _Deqr4Sir; , I am napalms of the good opinion of my friends as I :ann careless of the slanders of my enemies, and your kind expressions in, regatil. to order' No, 88, leads mo to saga word On the subject, . That it over eould• have boon. so mis conceived as it; his been;by some por tions of the Ntu'thorn press is wonder ful, and would lead one te•exclaira with the Sew, 0, Fathcr‘ -Abraham, what these . Christians are, whose ,own har'. dealings teach they i suspect the very thoughtSof others!' . • • ; ,•• What was the state 01'1 things tG • which the woman order applied / 'We wore two thousand five hundred Men in a city seven miles leng by two, to four wide, of a hundred and fifty thousand inhabitants, all hostile, bitter s defiant, explosive, standing literally on a magazine; a' spark only needed fort destruction. The devil bad onto red the hearts of the women . of this town, (you know seven - of them chese:Mary Magdalen for a residence,.): teildir,up striTe in everyway possible. , Every opprobrious epithet, every insulting jesture was Made by. these - bejeiveled, becrinolined and +teed creatures, cal, ling themselves ladies, towards my sol diers and officer's, from the windows Df houses and in the streets. • Row „long do you suppose our flesh and ,'blood. could have stood this withbut retort.? That would lead to disturbances and riot, from which we must clear the streets with artillery—and then l a howl that we murdered these fine wo.. men.' I had arrested the ;men whcP hurrahed for Beauregard. Could I ar. rest the women ? No. What. was to be done'? No order.could be made save ono that would execute itself. With• aux.ious, careful thought I hit upon this: "Women who insult my SQli.lipTS aro to be regarded and treated as com mon women plyingtheir vocation.", • Pray how do you treat a common woman plying hor *cation in tho streets? You pass hor by unheeded, She cannot insult you!, As a gentlo.- man you can and will take no -notice• of her. if she speaks, her words are not opprobrious. It is only when she becomes a continuous and positive , nuisance that you call a watchman, and give her in charge to him. But some of the Northern editors. seem to think that whenever one meets. such a woman one must stop tier, tall; with her, insult her, or hold" dallianoo with her, and so from their own con , duct they construed my order. The editor of the Boston Courier may so deal with common women, nad. out of the abundance of the heart ide. mouth may speak—but so do not I. : Why, these :she adders of New Or-. leans themselves wero at onto shamed' into propriety of conduct by the order, and from that day no woman has eith er insulted or annoyed any living sol',-- dier or officer, and of a cox tainty no. soldier has insulted any woman. ; When I passed through Bald Moro• on the 23d of Fehruary last, members. of my staff wore inenited lay the gos-- tures of theladies (?) them Nat so 104 Now Orleans. . One of the ' worst possible of alli these women showed disrespect to, the. remains of gallant young Do Kay, and! you will see her punishment, in a copy of the order which I enclose, is • at• once a vindication and a Construction. of my order. I can only say that I would issue it again under like circumstances. Again, thanking you for your kind iuterest, am, truly, your friend, • BENJAMIN F. BUTLER, • •_ llajor-General Commanding, THE PRESIDENT COMPIOIENTS CON ortEss.—A Washington letter to the Now York Commercial says : ThOIV reason to believe that the liyosident re ceives no small amount of n4vioe from. politicians, who intrude upon him With their opinious ? p,nd who are'sometimes rather more emphatic than courteous. " Oil you, Mr. President," said a sen ator ono day, " unless a proposition for emancipation is adopted by the Government, we will go to the d—l, At this very moment we are not , 1:117 0 P one mile from h-1." " Perhaps net," replied the President, "as I be- Hove that is just about the distance from here• to the Capital, where you gentlemen are in session,"