.. Ab " NeW B 6 tral,*, an .1 way ot Working it,. Thia'y bare loa'rrted to a. certainty, that it Is t narroir; CDnlttioaci buMbtig r ittadi to ran . cttly a *tritii-r.rd rotid•cUlled the telergrdtred road, .194:f0r this Mimed no Tt.ollirs'are used to run it cmployerhbout it seem blind as moles; andlFUrtber that they do not expect nor care to get the 'ether cars back, but have two grand 2deas; to rob the company and passengers •Of their property and. little effects, tolbeir owtt private advantage, and secondly, carry on the aid business of the Underground Company . on • gigaatic scale. But, Coppie, if many who have • gone out with patrietio motives, after the other *cars, should live to get back. and -find their plaoes taken tsp with these sts&oas that were servants en the run-cif CNN, g thitik 'itiflther big trouble • will commoner+. gat so merry hivabeen killed off, that they now say, these blacks will be need. Wd , in theta' stead. :Dear:mei ~C0pp1e,..4 never , thonght;wo would prefer blacks to whites!—Many pierilbifs who , baire beissixiinting toihis- true cause -of oar troublea,"andtelling only the truths about Ithiduliiiiletieldactiine. have hien gnggod, traitors and threatened with 4 ,thibilitiings of hemp. At first it was denied - . 'lldriefthe'fidachine would not fit the track. -But' Foibtit'fitd has became so plain that it is no long 4. or iSpited. And-now, Coppie, as it iti-nearly:: time, I will finish my story: in a feir: •Abrabam, 'the eagineer t and his men r "Wtill 'nit agree to diseard the Afackirte.—They iiilliiiitlickflowledge Mat it can never haul the c l.`itritin,'but contend that Whilst 'they will not a.. Itierito s alter the maeh'ine to fit the , old Cons tit.O. Lion track, your fathers Mado, that the old track be ALVdreED SUIT TIM ADCAINE; and ' 2 they'reust then - have ALL THE CARS LIKEWISE AG; ,D • • TEREDAue ; ENDS KNOCKED OUT; THE COUPLINGS iFELDEiI AND REVILED and ALL COMBINED , INTO' ONEIIIGi Can. . Then, the running gears,. toe,; nieet all be cut down to sett the Negro Equality En . gine, for some say those tertters are already' pttriti4on one side of it. 'This, Coppie, is what t tlieY,liirl now aiming at; • and this is what the "people differ about.—And de' who die in faVor tiff the etd COPPER 'BOILER . engine of Wasbing:! &fled 'CoPrEnneens." There is dn.' 1• I.9•Olkilitil::tiliboY, to bring about peace and har nioni. • IIUOIVASIDE 741E' YANKZE Monura, and DiSCUARO E the engineer: 'a all his hands' . /ad get back the old "Equal Nights Begin's," ten, tateia time, the other company when they • become satisfied that all is Safe; may come 'back and link with as.—This you must en deavor to do PEACEFULLY end aocoiding to the - Atlas of the Road, if they will let you. This is "...indispensible to harmony and safety, whether the other cars come back or not. •Becanse" this .. ..Lincoln Machine—no matter how far yea agree to the altering of the road, will never beAble to carry the rentabajnicars over the Elective Fran chise Trestle. Tor whilst God has decreed that , SPIRIYUALLY, 'all men are equal and in this sense He.is no resrector of persons, SOCIALLY I find Re acknowledges distinctions, as you willfrod by reading lstTimothy, 6 nhapter, and in many . other prirts of Ills Ward. Hoping, Coppie, that ;.,.you may ever remember this 'Wry of old Ben. Bannister, and that we may meet in a better 'World, where all will find Prosperity, I bid you .. good night." :And the old man with the aid of his two canes . tottered to his bed. Xtbanint ZOVtrii,str. *Osr *a*itylo,palgoirtiis oplui* iLtD, oeieß io•sormrif." Tic L latzunt Editept,4*.prolirietor. ANON I% WATTESDAR,. MAY .20 ;Ifiti4 014.gptl.,I,F4ip,nieteriti Views of the MIZM3 , -haWaritlished , on the outsido of .to: , viu r, 41 . 01. .L.-1,1...• worth . . .up,y4. , Tep-rierat are the at.; _ten ittg pitinsal , of every reader. " lt " • r . tiMtitt s ... 1 19 1 r toss ilhvtlVlP:vetittit i vaitte;4at—oveaor . eke -4111 si l Artar kited roOO .ur . , n ed, , f fib =1,284' , Missing —total - 9,100 . Ift'ihey.olaiiti . to have taken:B,ooQ of igitAlire:42lBth,r eg iueut o :nine -. -ilcialievditibteer B l4% l3 l. el:We:win! 7- -Ayi suffered eeverelk We: late foitt ;,,,tles on tho..R4tittAtAhriefo4l: i . 1;419' 961- `oirdi Lteittbifithtweoltniel;. five Tea . to tains, .ieveral eg enarifs ; and up Of one hundred prittitek are eithor wounded or missing Many nrei prisnnnrspl'RioliTond. itertObniiiier,isgec iiieite 'Tient was 1 9141,f0140 70siiii4t - Pfl , last; week ) . 13 31 •.':VelprAtti:ral4 . .er the .rebel General ;: : .s3iffard; 'They Made "a dash through . encl : up to the' Chain Bridge,. bittthe‘en4irp . i.ize..wmt a;tended with' Ad r iaritagea. Since thee .: Ihipplenhe - of she ErtigO 'hay° been up stationed at -. 9lsldbanbt Bridge. ft..* well. .that •.1 Snell Preoantlons Are. tetiie, some might pcinikeinto Wash= .Ing . toay swoop- up Linouhi and his - Cabiuet 'pod carry _them off, thus 'l , lhrifiginXthe war tb. .prearatnre •elose, Vlle shiver atthil ihought. A MifiThTo -I—The bridges destroy '. • Eitointniap's• OaTalry raid to r_ PttiM r n haPPeq to .'be • the zraprinad bridges, lar-they-Abonght, Ihey: Mork only sit* 01.-tuFiTik, bridges. Hem:et-the :eontielstiestione• between Richmond undlhe r ober . ar . nikiire - re_rnt(ifrrqptid but- The trnoks, however, mere -torn up. eonre,phioes, but they were speedi.' • ' In Gallipolie, Ohio, the Board 'of Education , require the teachers of the public schOole to take the "oath -of allogianco to the Governraent;" and it is soriously suggostod by one of the public journals of the place, • that power bo given tho Superinten . dent to '' . 'swear" all the children who 'attend the schools. What next? 4 The Courier wants somebody "to suggest any other mode of an honorable 'mice than by compolling rebels and traitors to lay down their arms." Can the Cowrie? ''suggest a mode for Compelling rebels and traitors to I:py down their arms by force ? - •• • • " I s it irstated that; •Geo. Aalleok . is take-the oouimand ; of the : ,Army ofAlik:l!°‘#lllaa in the fie l d ; otheri4 piropOSe'. pen. i'lintinkt. Yes, give the,r titarkiiipet,iieotper etu!nee; her g0e5 , 11,43- whole nigger: policy, and, of Apuise, must he a Mittaineral. Try -him. We can itabil any amount of nonsense now. New Wrinkle: the payment of 8300 b.# Drafte44.,An to be igtabreet. vivpoi l souipTlON law • - WASHINOTON, Nay 46.—The. thir teenth- secbi6r. the' Uoascription I Law has received an interpretation; and substantially a warlike adjuttition. On the representation of ,oitiaeus of Illinois ' th i at I ,be s accept- + -1' off • 3 t-• • em 300 kfrOni-arafted men, in Jiou r ptservAe.,,..throudoot the wo s nld • degenerat,p,,. the enrollment .aptisifre l in tent. raise an aturyl : -Sety Stanton ie, understood to.have. l deeideci that the: (.section was permissEte, and not man.' datbry ; thkiyit is optional with him the mon.ey or reject it; , that - beJis not a national treasurer; thdt he gifs4no ,'tiotid for the safe. keeping of mcineiS he hai no Anan-* cial officers undet,him ; has no means 'folf sCOniity for the im mense sums his atihOrclinates would receive on - this:commutation of mill- . Vary nervito, .no' time to go' into, the bushiesiiiit hinting. up Sub . • •-* • • • . Solicitor Whititig of. the 'Pita* De." partinent, is ughierstoOd to ,cooojik in these views. -be ll4eicient int:deb' understood , to c n floes. and pOtioy.:'.'t fie ,C)imise _of the act selling exemptions at ..$4OO, tirere-: fore;mill practical:. 14 igilorbfj, . Cob scripts will eitherbe lift to 'ant up substitutes at fhbir owii.price,% or the plan will adopted'of callingfor equal number, of volunteers at the time the draft is ordered ; to be accept ed only as Su bstituden for•drafted )pen, and receive a 4overnment bounty of $lOO, and the conscript's price of ex.' emption besides. Ally way, the.: en rollment law will 'not be a re T eooti measure, but a war measure... •• . . The draft will take placedbodt the first . of July. • Mir The rebels ,contand;'. 2 iliat wee • lost 25,000 mon in the , receio battles' on the Rappahannock...4nd :assert that they have tekeo.B;oofi.prisoneFS. °pep!' their papefa.sayethatlat Ram ilton!e Crossing theie aro: Imre Tina kills-011k on either side 'of the pied than haveever been seen: tpgether since the war ; They ifecielifOn the battle fields . by Oil tankees,..,and 'ny . thousands nioro there.aii,which have not .yet been collected The -nuinlier• of cannon. captured.by mut: army' is not Yet known, bat: it is Aid, to he - over fifty Their - . troops are jubilant over what fr.hey consider as :beyond all comparison the greatest; 'victory of the war: The Richmond' Whig in speaking of the spoils 141i0n.. sass : , . . , , Prom every side wtihear that ther spoilagleft by General frodkerl= army: eaceed.those -on any . tetiddir,:liaktle; field, not excepting, i engageMents around- Richmond. -, .ot- on ly an im fifeii4l,?,aninber• df sinall arms, variz- 1 .OaelYteati t mated . at frPtra 30,000 1 9 50 , .000 1 gbliban almost infinite , quantity of' Mierbokts; kiiatfifackic 'o,faiitti,!• Od 'blankets., _ . , ke gidea:e r t , o# l frgliP..ild.:AlY :begatlrerea frorn , t . beAtatement made 11. as by an, arip teal L Of4Cilf Xili i I): tfireiril ifie men Of his"hatterA, say -is w. fitry is so strea...*lth: ; branlc=•; skiltiifr.4, die:, :that -hiii lean in - march: ing• from.one field, to 'another' since the' late battles, have,never cumbered. 4lill ll aetYce, it ith:a n 3 thing, being 'eat" leireitifiatg W‘leret.ver they may camp .forthe night, a -plenty -of blankets and OVs:tigebati; will be kiifild. . *sr I t3 r. Zl;lPiWiasit JACKSON, " : 'led rebel Genteral i was wounded:la e arm iit: / t4e - I 61'1,edr aricksbari: . 'The arta *at ,:airifsb" .ampulated ) anxl after he died. He yy4, tba ablest and mastsuccestfai el d•eaßiais and W's iita;4oo'..., toke'roltem• ..‘. . 1 ' "4 • , • ifittr - • It is fti,niOicerthat C n. Kii 4 l4 .. Smith has badiy.beaten Gen.: Baikk in the South . West, and d'riTeci„ liiit t y back tb:Wrltthington, La. • -• , . Sak : A large. inilrand longing, to. Adam ilow.er, -Sheriff of: Northampton cOtrnty; ..in township, were t,otal!yilAitgegjriil.,by fire a. week or two ago., ,Thefloss 14 Stated at about $20,00 . 0, upon there was not a cent of Ineuranet-- :We bars not learned bow thVfire ori gin.,stect -TEN VALLANDIGHAN FZELatfe.-T-The • 'Aiitlabolitione. State Rights Alsocii4 , tion; 'Theodoreltfartie, .Eipa., in'the chair, in their monthly- meeting,: in. *NairToik;passed some strong tesoi lfitions a,nd remonstrances' against this wicked arrest. They rironou,nc ed the arrest an open defiance or tfii. ConstittiLion and the . lar!is: of Op Ifni. ted States : • "It i the right (says one of the rest olutions) of. the citizen to protect -himself against. the .vicklence of law less power; where legal remedies are denied, with whatever force God and nature may .have prov i ded him with remembering always that , grabiSibee to tyrants is obedienoCto Godr,-- : itbat the. price of liberty is eternal ...vigi lance., " .Destructipe Are at .I4ading Pa READING, May 16.--Ahout.4 o'clock this afternoon a fire brOlie Out in the foundry and scale •works.of Moore it De hart, situated in Cherry alley, beloaf. Fourth street, the frames pxtending . to•and. consuming four smail7ctwellings and eral frame stables. the spark's from the• latter fell on the rcfdff of dwellings- on Washington street, and set fire tO. and' tol tally burnt out five more dwellings, with a great part of their content's: It was feared at one timethat die city - Would . au fer to a •great extepti.o.watng:toithe. high wind that was prevaiificat.the The loss amounted to about $50,000. lite- The Court Martial for 'the tri al of Mr. Vallandigham, it is said, found him guilty, and sentenced him f i ctthe Dry . Toytugsts for two plats.— This.sentenee, .which was approved by 11nrnaide, was chinged by the Pi‘Uidelct . . 'to two: yoara'•..banishmoot from the Northern States. The ""Dry Tortugas," is a largo for .tification. now in oearse of construc tion by the gcrtrernment on Tortugas Islands, off the coast near. Key West, and all ptrsons' thus son= .teaced-,are ...forced to laboxon tho works, without. discrimination .as to 'fbriner rank or statkon.. A nuirkbei• Orsoldiers are now theta inifer son'- tenon of one andtwoary ye,for vari ons.acts 'of insubordination: ' :It is. Also re:not:edthat case of •••• . • .. . • Mk Vajlandigl4am.iexot•yetdeoideci ; that:Mr. Seward .favors "his release, ' and;that the Presidon . t is titidooided— ai3 • usual: )4'4 application for a 7.litAtf.4l•Aeas Pozwealiea dethagaiest. 10. the .min gii* 7 . 'indignation is. expressed All near tbe~no ' r'tb at , dA'sfio tie pro ceedings. 0 4. a immense indignation ;14.Aibe9N, oa••Sattisday, w.here•:neeolationa weii3. ...itilolitolid l .diadeeejet the Oreet'Of . !FitheodigtiAlrri as fkit !.,eiiwarranSio . asseqfp,t,foo of militarymilitary•• . ter w . ae;'aleo . read •from Governer Sex. Moon! eluiractesitifir arrest4ol 1, • i.trAlkandigb -As• ccen soft !ipliteh "thishrbegli4-04ihdiroi 4prie .4 detiOr . • . .td•Oitr 0i59 6 § , 4•94 our 4.0401: bears ;upon. its 'front, tbotilciouilviols.. tion of flifW andjastida.q. "•: "••'' • war: Our Gerinan , -uitisens: tiVe litked Abair liven • freely for their - adopted country; itnit-lnalit !of . 'then, it is only too - • true, belpecf i to . place .into power,the t present admln istratinn•. Now for tbq thankl... The. Lancaster Exun . zincri an abolition pa niffisk, ' says - :-;—"SO far as. Tnalfing - anything deoent or loyal tint of the urn wd.[Qui: GsrdAn.fellovir sen,s3 to . w,hieb we ,rft.grE94 139 1311 , Ive, have:no dcuibt we -gnirsr. at the:opiniun*; that the large tiOdyof . Geiniai• ditiZelm are just as "decent andloyal"-as the largo body of . abolitionintah:und,,what is evidence . in ,thnicass, tbuy..bpe proved their "OecoPPY 9:13):09YOV" which AP:Oz. olitionists 14,9 n0t.... #l/97greri,1%139411, "O(lncliapl,iiiiins* . the:.pul . gieners: A); EilsiPeet434:cpeppi. :orAtie 6.lOeiffkil!aP.o42killifta-thvy Mat make an apolOgr for,redena-ta4tiolor, l ii liislii - illAndqibiiiiiii,:, :oit; til ligtifested aO 4; :gg sse lll,l l l l 'rs" "ci w' 40: , 'At *r varry _ tirdtligal to-:Artioki3 7of tne,prqw: York Exprese,.threateninizhint: :that.- i!itlfelerlVlS'aietfiiilni it#lftititi paw P? r •i l ire . .A'A i b lol l lll . l4 .l:# nii ro l lct." .;47-154:11.1N:11.1iritibl iii..i..A‘kiY.:-..:::: famtian Ate: fe i c33to% Abis, fib reat-isib4t , eult*teit i t .MX173 1 14 1 1 ,1 *.i9t, - ; ifottifitt ixOtd,:thIOTIID4 I.l4krzY siV.94ld, indict you for thteateoirrg; Alie4u.rb btliOapostoeVisind t Ito east, j pg Ri§j)in sot y.firilettuld Abp.elor .4.b bound :over, !Mr it ttle;44iketirt q p.?4c e l It may be very. safe,to, jehor , under t'.d el igloo IthAt .tbe. nj tra tio u is-the..aoyernnAeoi,.])W, IndiAn juet now, b_nteitt,Woutatpot btk 7 safe ,to., be _deluded •§y 111:New ~ If ton elionbifo4dbi4r td`rfero 4 Ipth e_ 'pkt blicatiod-Ofitb,4l N:stw X9rlc. unifilketift-oXilirggszlPlAMP. l l4io t.).yvp ii•reat,y.op ' id mig,Xesplet , biongolpftbAp.osSe„comitOtuktsvi2lltd :hi (n,fl on, i6lll/WAer_eyre.ejste4,the rpil ,itanyppArcl of thee Stl4e.nt-. Arldfn: .- 1 ;1 0 Soyibourl. as : .Gctm man cler: n lobiefi,wouldirgeOre -Tombs for' Iltitodilir General tfasballi - ..lleadqi4t,tArs ti.Jaietrjet. •of, 1411idiana.".--; , , : • 0 go. •, .M14016:Vat9, - .#9:)fie. eiilriop a. - • Cy oft" 011 1 W " CiNcxrikr#Tx, 4 1 : ar 04 136 0"; . . ,To 15 0 10 ,cr, 11 0,'0f 0 4i9. -1,1 . 1 . 1 4 in -A * 4114147 ..haatAs for no other j offence - 41 111 P - Px. .00.1;engq Pfttiti,l9), tv;c l , -Aue xiimf. of tis people , ankh p . cosateitatipo: :gl l :l l 6 4l rtYMieeeke# , 0.0.0 1 .,.tb 6 , n.g4 l / 1 9.4 11 3 1. 9 4P i94,3'ROA n i...attn, P101C:3 3 :ri94 ,1143 1 8 1'esilvel ci,R9rer , in - fractions -9f: ti#l tiolip s timpoo:.ind 'Ars, 1. 1 94 4 : 4 .!nilits4i : YAgePPtlsq4, , were itbir Sole . ..panse . lny, !wrest and im. I .prisonmen7l.=l.lkiin Democrat= for. QoPstitution, • o3p,,law, for the Union, jiberty-tb my pply "crime." For. po disbbedienco.tP tbe Constitu .tion,;. for no t y,lokation , law ; for .no word, ss i n, or gesture of Sympathy' -wiONtlle men of the South, .who are .for,din-nnion and Southern indepon •flimpe, :but in obedience to their ;de mand, as well as thi3 demand . of North,ru Abolition disunkinists to day,; tut . litna, at last, sets all things even I " eanWhile, Democrats 9f Ohio, of the Northwest, of the United States, be firm, be true to your piinciples E to the 06nstituticio, to the - Uinen;and. ail will ' yet he wolf.' As fcienfyself,l :adhere to every principle, and Will 'make good, through imprisonment and life itself, every pledge and . 'dec laration which I have over Mad", ut tiired Of maintained Jrcim. the begin. bink., :To you, to' tbe whole,rople, to TIM°, I agitinipii . ifalf.: ' Stand- firm ! Farter not' an instant I C.. •L: Ve ' ANpiianAM Income 27.ax:-;;This, tax, it has been. settled, istlevied on the net income. The gains or profit .of . business, intended by • the law, are ,only such as remain,a(terlde ducting all the costs and . charges pf car; ryipg_on tiat busjpesst. After- the . ‘ resi due, the taxpayer has n,• credit of B.6oiii, and allowance for taxes, 'grate, Ocittity, and municipal. Eistbrcemont of the Con- scriplion Law. RULES AND REGULATIONS OF TDB WAR DEPARTMENT. OFFICERS AND. SALARIES Full and Official tig of Exemptions 31 ode - of-Drat n The instruction of Provost Marshals and oth er officers under the Conscription Law aro about. to be issued by the War Department. They hare • been prepared hy,Colcinerty, the ,Prox,ost Mar shal ,Gener'i ;.and:wlitmthitt i filet- j * B‘liiited,icis . noodle's to add that they are cleir, concise and compreheneivc, They cover the whole . ground of the duties of Asaistan t Provost Marshals Geserat; of District Provost Widitilitele,' iv itlOdierr o itejnifies and agents; of the ipprehebithiettild' , delirtirY 4 :o deserte.rs ; of the arras t,ofspies ;, of Autirds of Harolltaent ; of exempt ions, and the rules of evidence by whioli'thef-arii:to be ileteruiPid'; -of tlisrPhysi ertrOiniriifiition of drafted en and subetitetes; . and-otthe accounts,, reports And.-returns of. ofli• cent Under the `law. • ; ° ` .Secretary Stanton prefaces the pansphlet(wh ioh makes, including an elaboraie index, abMit'sixty octavo pagasj with ttie anuounceinerit that "those regulations have bees approved. by the President, who commands that they be published fur the government of all and that they be Strictly obeeivedi" . . . .. From 0 4v. 00 . 0 , kilgOets 0 / the work {7oka,inKt. a • x.ely,poipte, s w4icb, nowt at this.!)-,,taske.raping layi 39 en the eve'of bail putlariirisPed,,,lirlit -be of sibiforbiiig in teres . t.tt ' it ' • s:: ... . .. /inletANT rltoyoSrlra,psigat • dallitliaLs- When the Clii ! ript,Bilhwie under duet isCengresin 'the queition dr having 'Assists:Jot Provost •liiiirikil'Eliiiiiilli fly;;eacir , iiitetti . %W es '.raised but ihere walla' dearlectlY ri4varse plijdr ity.. The Denartmenglegantlng such ciffieeriris cgr tp :clean tie Uta ibet.iirog: on„of the lifw;Obvi ate the difficaly bytg t : r oecers 'from :: the ' army to iterve'as hefittro,„, i.vAaa t..Proreet, Mar shal Generals." They a e diriseted to "exercise lupery isiop , over tbe.PrOyost Marshals end. their uliordinates'in their respeetive States ; to cout:. •Ifunicate to them the s *,instructions of. the Provost gerskai 9enerals, and see that they are prompt . ly and etfmiently . exenatA; to give from time to 'time such instructions, isi 'accordance with these :fegulations,. as may he. regnired, and en force itbed keine to them.; to. c0n1'33110,3m0 freely.with . ..the,Governor. and' ,etbartate, town or county &tears ; add Shall Mabel. full t an'd. •frequent . re pails .to the Provost Marshal-General an.' ihe condition and !van ta . of.lbe service of • his State. 24.4AE5. The ,9a leg 'of the Aft iatant 'Provost Marshal trineial ii; of cioilipe, -that of his rank 111' the Sir.' way:. •lie . w ill 4eno t ally tir.: a, F g tor i el or-Leuten• eat Colonel.. ' .. , . . . . . The District' . Proktket' arshal. has the rank, 'day; and - ernbltiinenis of d .Captain of Cavalry (atnountingrl be HaVe, to about $l6O per month. The - exaht 6gtires Were recently forwarded.) . Two . Doputi.Provost rehale inttY bapppoint ed'in 'each diiitrint,lcoroPnaiid.WinpFe than one atinniy. with thiapProvil of the Provost Maiebal General. Their pay shall.not be over a hundred dollars per man tli . , • • Special'efficers And .agsurts' .rnay employed for detecting and arresting deperteri and spies, bit 4 not more than four in a district, Without spaniel authority. They may be paid forty' to slaty five dollars Per Mouth, . ideording • to 'ustfulness.- . .•. The Surgeon. and Comm*linter (who, with the Provost Morelia I,ficitit the'Board' of etrollosent,) receive the compensation of fin Aslistint Surgeon, (rank .of Cojitain,) exaluding commutation for Mel and quarters. Their pay lasts only during lbe timo actually emploiea.. Enrolling officers, selected by the Board, are to be paid three dol lars a day. ' . : • - • . DISTRICT - HEADQUARTERS are fi xed by..the Prpriest - llfursli,il General. If there is no Governmen thu•ilding =there suitable • Sr the purpose; arydttike i conaistiog.o f not more Alan three rooms may, .be Tented. Eaoh Provost Marshal may employ el, these headquarters' iwo clerks, 'subje'tie•to the approval of the • Provost. Maribel Efebeialoind' in anch'rate of .compensa. tion as be.may , fix, '.,' • SOLDIERS' RESTS—QUARTERS - AND euestenecu. I. ‘ittoit;t4 . P-are to ' be repred by the 'Prorbst • Mar tizi bef .16;previding.for deserteis, Wag glersokr. Ile is 'also to Contract for their sub, "ellolrde7iit not,more thin . thi . rtros 'trtya day, or i'etiottaiit: Made their.bosrd and 14dging at 'icsfele neVpr (Wet" Tertf Avail a day, and which, • hugenerral, is .exPen.tedlto brosucti less; Where. .npither these: arrangements can hejnade, Pris ineis .in,charge ;PrOvot tMarsh al's parties may be'lod Wheti•only the ordinary jail feet. *lll be paid. • t INTERFERENCE EITH THE DRAFT. . • The Prp v optMarshalihre enjoined; in aocord 'ilte•With the. fermi of t e not, to aitest. a n do- . :liksitie the prdpee,bbil latittleltlepi? to:-:wjt; , The elllnited...States rldershal,..with• written. „charges, tiny..person heittiOi.thisrdraft.' counseling - dr iding i resistehee;iii the pial,or , ioenselitig any !drifted pitieohlto7cOnces t lih oj• in j •tkny laohey or dieupdaifrom, obedience to the .o 6 conviction, peisens 'BO arrested , hie' to inn - fined vetutidred dcklars,•or • nel exceeding t wo years; ',or. both. ,tieri;.is added 'that icy All eases the Provost "Nisi.' !shaleitha II exeCute this die& .With &mous, but . 'o.lse with prudence and; good judgment, and.. ;Without unnecessary harshness. To enable them It.kperform* lb I. and eiol ihir duties, they. are. au- • .thoriscd to call on, the nearest available artery - fpifie r • Or on eitisena; as a posse cozniiiiiits; or on ' United- Deputy Marshals. sek'Ptigisititlf.lo,l l 4NlV.pft:EßY OF DESERTERS. ..Etrarypostible effort.mlit he made by the Pro - voit , Merehal - itrieit >slj„VeSer tore - within his ;disiriit.,-aniChsi.riluit receive and hold ill diiser. ters - presented to hirp . hy ethe; parties ; The five . do Hap yewttrd for the dellyery ‘ of deserter Is to 'be paid j ust . sio'od'a's is s atisfied 'the person presented is a ,darter, so thgt :those (blin'ginrdstiterter's iskajt.reselte their rewards as su . rety,and..pypmptly . se, poseibje. Where, there IS kli(itry,Stetibis id the itothcciiiie deserters l Wilrhei siiit'iorit:tit once. If atlehlitit. :tions, are :remote; they *llthelenti ; or, efteper,if thetalbp.mortuthau five on band at, ,eny,intermedfay kerlod. 'gdard muy s bcreinplOyed, f ithisn'i . ii•ilitary one is not pi-I:miff te...tieponspaltY..the:PSisoners, for which they. kti 1 1 bglpsigitlloNur . s,dayand ezpentes , if,they dsj . iyar , file pritonve safely—otherWiSis Perißnvklite dra'fiee and• ituly , :rititified„ - but s fail Cd'rfitifirt sit:futittahSt'substituie, or• pay for .0 1 € 0 , - .ate te4eMeeted.er)3elerters. inally, Pro. r y,ost. Marallpla are olislrued against improper or inw arr'Sti ariestiolind urged to special chro ; , . . • _Are to be , arrestOd.,aa sad' .fiiiribir i ith ,turned oleos to the Gotierlirsoitiasiiiinktlie"•'de. • . Es.ladlMlEFt • •• ' to be begun, under the . ..orae9Northei hoard, as. _ B ll9ap,altp,plaikle• i ffilkdratw-taliti.gener - , referred feeder isig• mirk Onctis to be appointedifrom each sttb-distriet,ind tho .Board may' take ea, many of these as it deceits pacelisary, haying.generallY but one furl each eparsely 'set itfed.caudty, and'one in oar& ward of a city, or • townahip.of a populous County. Enrolling officers are to carol all persond eels ject to military duty, 'whether lihite or • block, and to boto their 'ages, resi . d e n ces , color, and occupations. They. must include, first, all able bodied males between the ages of twenty and ' forty •fire, not exempt by 'law ; and second,' all persons of foreign birth who shall hare declared their intentions:tosbeceree The enrollment of the, two. dirges (between twenty and thirty-fireoritli'uninarried persons, and second all others) must be kept on separate sheets, but wade at the Caine time. Students in :oulteges or sohools, teachers or npprept ices, sail ors, travelers, tiaveline.inerchants and tho aro to be ea/plied at their..ter/al residebcci • their tomporary.dbeence from which forms no cut:safer 'exemption. Enrolling officers are to judge of age by the beet ,evidence they dtn , obtain, but I `appeals for exemption , on. Recount of ago, may alweys bo made to lie board. DRAFTS. Whenever any part of the forces thus enrolled are to ho called Cut, the Provost Marshal Gener al shall notify each District Provost Marshal of his proportion, with specific instructions as to the Subdivisions. •The -BoaN shall then make the add to' the ittb.districts, and shall add fifty per con t.:thereto. ;What follows is embraced in the following reg.. ulations : • . , • . . . . ".73. The Board shall make an exact'and mm -000 roll of the names of the persons drafted, and' of the orderi¢ whit& they were drawn, so that the first drawn may stand first on the said roll, and • the second may stand second, and so on. The draft shalt talie place at the headquar ters ot the district. It shall be public, and un der the direction 94 the Board of Enrollment.— The name of each parson enrolled shall be phiced` in a box to be provided for the purpose,- and the Provost Marshal/or some person designated by . him, (the drawer to be ; blindfolded,) shall draw therefrom one nerho'it a tie ttntil the required number is obtained. "74. The area and complete 'roll of the names , of persons drawn in the draft shell be entered by i the Board in a book to by kept fur that purpose, ruled and beaded to correspond with the descrip- I tire roll of drafted moo.--[Form, 34.] I "75. The number required to fill the call W ill be taken from this roll, by commencing at We ! first name, and taking in order, until the requir j ed number is obtained, all who are not, by the ' Board, decided to be excepted and exempt un der the provisiens of the Enrollment Act. "70. The names of the men thus called into service will be entered on 'descriptive rolls, (in triplicate,) signed by the Board. One copy of this roll will be sent to the Provost Marshal Gen ' eral direct ono copy to the Acting Assistant Pro— vest Marshal General of the State, and one will be retained by the'Provost Marshal. ... "77: Cert,ified eXtraitel from this descriptive I roll shall bo made in du plicate - by the Provost Marshal for every-perty. of, drafted men sent off, and sent with the party to the officer to whom the party irto be delivered; r . ,tinw4oity is to be retained by this officer, and the other is. to be returned, with a receipt for the party as denier. 'ad to him, on the back. The returned copy will accompany the Provestitarishil's monthly report to: the Provost Marshal ()Sacral. "79, Tho Board .shall note on tbo roll book of drafted men, in the column of remarks, oppo site each man's name, the disposition made - of 'hiM—whether called into :service and segt to tbo rendezvous, exempted by the-Board, reiflaced by a substitute; commuted for, deserted, or dis charged as not being required.' • "79. -The iribstitute whom any drafted per eon is authorized, layeectiori 13thof the Enroll -Mint Aot, to furnish, must be -..preeented.to the Board of Enrollment; and it shall be the duty of.the.Besird.to execs ine Aim , and, if accepted, • to placichis name on the 'IMO of Persen• drafted, with explanatory remarks. Hie name will then be' transcribed op the descriptive BO of men Ladled. r 4 to &Ai ce. : _ , . :"80..Certificates circuit:apt:on from the draft, by reason of haviqg provided a substitute, or taming:paid commutation, money, sliall.be.furn i4ed by:the Board of Enrollment according to term 31i. A discharge from one • draft furnishes -itb e xemption from any subsequent draft,;exeept jhpf, When the person 01160 has. ferniiehity 'ow acceptable substitute, and has received a , celrtifi este of discharge from a preceding draft; be shall 'fie held exempt from military duty during' the time for which be had been drafted and for which such substitute was furnished. "81. The Board shall furnish ft discharge (form 31) from further liabilities wider the par ticular draft, to any drafted person•who presents a bonalide receipt for the sum announced in or der for. procuring substitutes, from the peisons authorised by. the Secretary of War to receive it. =! On this subject I append all that the tegula lions say. 1111ZEZ! Eight.diffeVent kinds . of different report's must be made by the. Provost Marshal, most of them tri•hiontbly.. No less than thirty-nine different forms aro farisished, promise that the mere clerical labor of the office will pireie'ite sinecure. • EX E3IPTIONS AND UTILES Or • EVIDENCE BY MIMI THEY ARE TO DE DETERMINED "84„Section 2, Act for Enrolling and calling ou.l the National Forces. Ike. approved March 3, 1883, , provides as follows : "That the following Pei-sons be; and they are hereby excepted anti ex empt from the provisions of this act, and Shall net be liable to military duty under the same, to wit : such ae are rejected as physically or tocntally.onfit for the service; also, first, the Vice President of the. United States, the Judges of 'the various Courts of the United States, the heads of the various Executive Departments of the Government, and the Governors of the sev eral States. • Second, the only son, liable to mil- • itary duty, of a widow dependent upon his labor. for snpport. Third, the only son of aged or in firm parents or parents dependent upon his la bor for support. Fourth, parents subject to draft, tho father, or, if he be dead, the 'mother may elect which son shall be exempt. Fifth, the only brat her of children. not twelve yenrs old, having neither father nor mother dependent upon his labor for support. Sixth, the father of motherless ch ildren under twelve years of age, dependent upon his labor for support. Seventh, where there are a father and eons in the-same family and househoW, and two of them are in 'the military service of the United States as non commiselonad officers, musicians or privatep,_the residtteef euph family and - honeehold, not exceed. tiro, be exempt: 'And no person - but. such as are herein excepted shall be'venspt : :— Providetlihowever, That no•person.wholas... oonyieted °Cony felpny shall be carolled or per. witted to- serve in said forces.' "SS. The following disetises and infirmities are these which disqualify formilitnry service, and for wh 'ch . on ly drafted men are to be 're jeiited as physically or mental!, nofit for the service,' viz : "1. Manifest imbecility or insanity. "2. Epilepsy. Fur this . disability the tnte unlit of the drafted wen ja: . jn'satheient, and the fact must be estatslished by the duly attested at fidav it of a physician of good standing, who has attended him in a convulsion. "3. Paralysis,- ieneral - or of one.limb, or, ,elm rea.,; their existence, to be adequately - deteiinin . kcirte or or d liens°, of the brain or ap inal;cordl..ofithe heart-orlangs3 of. the at om ach.niWteitines of the .:liver Or spleen.; of the kidneys or bladder;_ sufficient -toa. h ve impaired die,gerternl,health, or.,sp well marko ; 44 41eitve no reasonable.doubt of the man's incapacity. for military- service. , • , ,"5.r Confirmed consumption ; Cancer; anon. sista of the large arteries. 'lnveterate and extensive 'disease of the skin; which %Oil necessarily impair his efficien cy as a soldier. 4 .7. Decided feebleness of constitution, whether or acquired. • . . "S. 'Scrofula or cons titutienal syphilis, which hsmrtiaisted- treatment-and geiinaily impaired his 'grineral health. J*o. Habitual .and confirmed. intemperance or solitary yip, in degree sufficient to have muted enfeebled the 'eon . "10, dbron ifv%rhetlinatisin, tinlisis , Manifested by licialtiVetlitinge of 'itructure.; - Wasting of the, affected 'limb; puffs 'MI distortilin of the joints - 4.14 s riot expmpt. Impaired motion' of j ? iii taltind. contraction of thelitribs alleged to arise nein rheumatism, and in which' the nutrition of the' limb Is not manifestly impaired, are to be pyov ed-by examination while in a state of 'anmsthe • sea indimbdl4 ether only. ..."11.' Pain, whether imulating headache; nem, ralgia in any of its forms, rheumatism, lumbago, Or affections of the muscles, bones or joints, is a symptom of disease so easily pretended that it is not to be , admitted 'as a, cause for exemption, unleas accompanied with manifest derangement of the general disqualifying local disease. "12, Great injuries or disease of the-skull oc. Maine log impairment of the intellectual lama , ties', epilepsy, or other • manifest nervous or spasinocliC symptottis. "13. Total loss of sight ; lois of sight of right eye; cataract; -loss of , crystaline lens of right - ' "ft; Diher serious diseases of the . eye fficting iteibtagrity and use; e. g..': chronic Mphthaltnia, hichrymnlis, ptosi, [if real,] ectropiod, en tropfon, &e. Myopia, unless very decided or depending upon seine structural change in the eye; isnot a cause fur exemption. . ° "15. Loss. of nose ; deformity of nose_so great as seriously to obstruct respiration Oniona, de pendent upon caries in progress. "16. Complete deafness. 'This disability ; must' not be adintUed on the mere statement. of the drafted men, but must be proved by the existence. of positive disease, or by other satisfactory dVi donee of Purulent Otorrlitca. ‘" Dumbness ; riermaneni loss of void% ;not to be admitted without clear mid satisfactory proof. 'll. Stammering, if excessive and ,confirmed" to be established by satisfactory evidence; under oath. "22. Loss of a sufficient number Of.teeth to prevent proper mastication of food, and tearing the cartridge. "IL Incurable deformity - or lose. ofpart of either jaw, hindering biting of the cartridge or proper mastication, 'or greatly injuring speech; anchylosis of lower jaw. "24. Tumors of the neck, impeding respiration or deglutition ; fistula of larynx of trachea ; tor teeplis of longstanding and well, marked. • • "25.-Deformity of the chest sufficient: to im pada respiration' or to prevent the carrying of arms and. military equipments; caries of the ribs. ! 4 2fi. Defmient amplitude and power of ex. paiasion of °host. OHM five feet three inches (minimum standard height for the regular army) slum id.not . measure less , than thirty inches in circumference immediately above the nipples, and have an expansive mobility'of not less than two inches. .27- Abdomen grossly ,portaberent ;'.exoess lye obesity; hernia, either inguinal or femo- "28. Artificial anus ; stricture of the rectum; prelapOi ani Fistula in ano' is not a positive disnualification, bat may be so if sitensive or reomplioatod with visceral diseme. "29. ,Old and ulcerated internal bannorrhoids, if in degree zufficion t to impair the man's cfficien: cy. External limmorrhoids ate no cause fur ex emp tion. "30. Total loss, or nearly total loss of penis; epispad is or typospadia at- the middle or near the root pf the penis. "Si. Incurable Permanent organic stricture of the urethra, in which 'the swine is passed drop by drop, or which is complicated with disease of the bladder; urinary fistula. Recent or spas mod io stricture of the urethra does not exempt. "32. Incontinnence of urina,,being a disease frequently feigned and of rare occurrence, is not of itself, a cause for exemption. Stone in the bladder, ascertained by the introduction of the' metal ic catheter, is a positive disqualification. "33. Loss.or complete atrophy of both testi cles from any cause ; permanent retention of one or both testicles wit tin-the inguinal canal; b e nt voluntary retractioNdons notexempt. "34. Confirmed or malignanisarcooeele ; hy rodrocele, if complicated with organic disease of the testicle. Varicocele and crisucele are no t, in disqualifying. — "35. Excessive anterior or posterior curve tare of the spine ; caries of the spine. "37. 'Wounds, fractures, tumors, atrophy of a limb, or chrOnic disease of the jOinfibflkinii; that would impeach marching or .prevent an tin - nous muscular exertion. • "33: .Anchylosis or irreducible dislocation of the shoulder, elbow, wrist, hip, knee or ankle joint. "39. Masanlar or cutaneous contraction from wounds or barns,.in.a.degree sufficent to prevent Useful motion of a "40. Total. loss of a thumb ; loss of unpin!. phalanx of right thgrnb. "41. Total loss of any two angers of samo hand. "42. Total loss of index finger of right hand. i'43;—Lops of the first and second, ,phalanges of the.fingors of the hand . !`44. ' Permanent extension or permayminb.eon traction of any finger except the little finger ; all -the fingers adherent or united. ' • : 7 "45. Total loss of either great knit ; 1'8144f any three toes on ate lama foot 4 all 'tlie toed joined together.. ' • "46. The great toe _arming the Other toed with great pronikenettAthe 'articulation of the metal tarsal bone and - the first phalanx of the great toe. "47. Overriding' or superposition •o f all tbe toes. . . "48. Permanent setractionof the last phalanx of one of the toes, so that the free border of the naillears upon the ground ; or flexion at right angle of the first phalanx of n toe upon a second, with anebylos is of this articulatiop. ."49. Club feet ; splay /eat," where the nreh. is 80 tar effne - ed that the tiztielosity o f tbe scsiplirNd boys touches the ground; and the line of station tuns along the whole internal border of the foot, with gieatprominence of the inner ankle; but ordinary, largo, ill shaped or flat feet do not ex . • .•• . I . "bO. 'Varicose veins of Wirier, e.ttransities. ' !Vargo and numerous. having blusters of knOir, - wad ahoonipanying with chronic swelling or ul cerations. ,- : "51. Chronic ulcers; extensive, deep and ad heront cicatrices of lowir extremities. g : 811. No certificate of a physician or surgeon is to - birisceived in support of any point in the olaim of drafted men for exemption from military servioe, sinless the facts 'and statements therein act forth are sworn or affirmed. to before a civil magistrate competent to .adMiniSter oaths. "87. .The exempts. under the .first provision of section( two of the aatlor enrolling and calling out the National forFes, will generally be stifficiently well known to the Board to obviate the necessity of evidence with regard to them.— Should - however, the Board consider it neces sary, in- any case, the oomm ission or certifi sate of office of any person' claiming exemption under the provision mentioned may be required to bo shown. "88. To establish exemption under the secoo d, third, fourth, fifth, and -sixth prov isions of see- Mon 2 of the act for enrolling and calling out the National forces, , the Board shall require the affidavits of the persons socking to be exempt, and of two respectable men, (heads of families,) residing in the dietriet, that the man in goes lion is the only . son ' liable to military duty of a widow dependent on his labor for support,' 'the only son of aged or infirm parents, or parents dependent on his.lubor for 'Lippert,' or otherwise, according to the particular provision -of the sec tion under which the exemption is claimed.— Tbese affidavits will Le made according to the firms hereinafter prescribed, and must in all pit/ma bp- made before civil magistrate do ly author :ivied to administer oaths.. These forms of bifida:- A-itsuil•all-be.pubdiabed ly.the _Board ro 3Metit in the ttewsilepillsb of the .district, 'for the Jpformation of the public, when a draft is or dered. When_a claim for exemption is made un der the seventh provision of section two of the act enrolling and calling out the National forces, 4te., the Board shall apply to the Provost Mar shal General for the necessary extracts from the official voile in the War Department,upon which_ it shall decide the ease. . "90. Persons. claiming - exemption from en rollment must furnish clear proof of their right to suoh.exemption . They will he on rolled where the proof.° f their exemption ix not clear and con- Blown up by a Shell.—Mr. Jacob Hill; residing in the lower part of this county, when in Hancock a few dayssince saw one of the shells, which the rAbelS threw into that town; lying in the yard of the hotel where he was stopping, and begged the proprietor to give it to him, that he. miAht take it houne and'-slibwie4o, his --On last Sunday morning rte dx hibited it to Ode of his . neighbors,-Mr. John H. Traux, arid after looking_ at the shell for awhile the concluded teuives tigate they internal arrangements °title machine.—Mr. Hill took it to the wood pile and - tried to break it by hitting-it with an ex. Pailing in this he took it into the house and Undertook I tof drivel I nail through the lead on the plSint„orttitAh t ell i to see how thick it was. While doing this it exploded, knocking out one °lbis eyes, and it is,feared mortally Wounding_ him. After being struck- he ran out of the, door, and, as was afterwards - ascer tained by , following the trail Of the blood, Iran completely around-the house. When discovered he was lying in one of the in ner rooms. Mr. Traiux had a hole blown through the rim of his hat and het, escaped without any serious injury. A child of Mr. Traux had one half of the hair burnt - offits head and its faced black ened-with„pqwderi Itrovas not_ other ' Wiielnjured. -- the shell was full of balls, which' were blown _through the ceiling, and imbeded in other parts of the build ing. The wonder is that all who were in the room were not killed.—Fulton Demoerat. Democratic Victories in Fort. Wayne and Lafayette,. Indiana.—The elec tion yesterday resulted in the success of the entire Democratic ticket—from May or to Street Commissioner, including all the aldermen. The vote polled was not unusually large, but heavy enough to give the Democratic ticket thp neat ma jority of 623. It wasn't a good day for 'voting, either. The Union Leaguers certainly could have entertained no hope of electing their ticket, but to be defeated in , every ward by the election bf a Demo- Uratic Alderman was probably unexpect ed by them. They may as well abondoo their 'secret 'associations now, asTis dem onstrated to be powerlets for either good or evil. They would have succeeded. quite as welt in a fair, open canvass. At the_city election yesterday, in La fayette;- the entire Del:flee:retie ticket (with one exception) was elected by a respectable majority.—:.From the Fort Wayne Sentinel, May 6. er4r We learn from the Cadiz (Ohio.) Sentinel, that during a recent absence of Mr. Alien, its editor, to attend the tuner ' al of his father, an attempt• was.made by, the Abolitionists to mob , his printing - of= lice. The Democrats, however, rallied' and castrated - the dastardly objeet: of the tnobites: - 4CKY7 Who Cali ttll , theitgon4 df k.eling which. his Wilted for the- last-wek an the -breasts of wive% Inothers.and , fEiertda, • or those who particiatedla gieflate : stlattie,-: , near Fredericksburg. The torture of nn certainty attending the -absence of art.erin f mcration of the casualides occurring In action in which they were engaged I has • been dreadful. - -What sad tlncertibitf what a hard lesson--some hoYie, but min gled with anxlonsfear. if the name of a dear orie,aliusbarid, a father, a son, or a brother be tonna 'among those reported dead, crushing- as-ihe -blow may. be, its force can 4.4 4nei,sireti; theworst is known. :Btit wide -of the woman who!iiittailitti,;tilree c ilf s a loiredone-ineithersoFtheeother ists:-. , 4f wounded howletlieraked, and the heart tornired. And tber4l364.llriiiiir is, if anything, more terrible still :fie may be prisoner, an& may Atutti. Re may have been so mutilated' it not4o be recognized—he may titv_ei-Ajii.just strength enough to crawl out of the way and die. in .schne.obscure spot, where only Ifie `lilt ty bird that scents the battle s from•afir,`ihni I, by the stoppage of. its lazy Ai g ht, 4 . gi s it out his resting place. Many a one report ed "missing," meets: such-a Late- as this. Wide spread will be the desolation;'- in itientityrvicnia-lromei, be fore'herorte-.llpn dred thousand sons corm• back "Wm - this vicar. ; Colonel Robert .0 nid ~pfit)fedeNe commissioner for the exchange of prison ers; has given notice to Colonel in reply to requests to send irithitt - Aiie Confederate lines to disinter and -retri r eae the bodies_of Union soldieri, that snch•re , - quests cannot be allowed, but - Ihatonalrere the death_ of 4 Union prisone r s ell es tablished, and the place where his re mains are interred can be certainly i441)- tified, an application such bodies taken up and forwarded to the "friends of the deceased, provided that with strch application sufficient funds are sent, to 'de fray the expenses of exhuming and -for warding the remains to City Point, 'Vir ginia, to be delivered to our flag of truce boats.. In this connection it ought .tolle stated that it is semi officially announced that the Secretary of War has neceisari ly directed tbpt while the Army oe_the Potomac remains in its present posititin no passes shall be granted to pers•3ns to visit it with a view of obtaining thiAbod ies of deceased friends. , • . . Insubordination at lorecleric4biteg— It is stated from Falmouth that about one hundred of the 20th New . Yq . risto years' regiment refused to cross thiltop pahannock to the late attack on. FVkider icksburg, on the plea that their:, ter of enlistment had expired. Ttl*...;llien have since been court-ma.rtialed, and-sen tenced by their division commander, Gen. Hoitr,"to hard labor _during the-, war, with forfeiture of all money due-thetwby the Government. Anniversary of the Anti-Slavery So ciety.--Robert Purvis, a Colored delegate from this State to the American Anti-Sla very Society, which met in New York on Tuesday last, made a speech:before the - Society in which he said that !The-Loy al Leagues were all anti-Slavery Socie tieii." • (Cheers) Rev. Dr.; eheever, Wendell PhiJips, Lloyd Garriiso4; . 'Frrd., Dcrififasg, - ; and A _host.; of (!) persons Were present and perticipatut in the;eiercises. A series 'of 'regOintions wire read by Garrison and endorsed u. nanimously by the assemblage, setting forth that the Constitution .of the United States is "a covenant with death and an agreenlent with hell;" that 'the Federal Government must for the future be.para mount to State Constitutions; endorses the President's Emancipation "'Proclama tion, defines copperheads to be any qvhe object to the radical abolition policy ;eu logizes Fremont, Hunteile:- Co.; glories in the recognition ofthe . itnytien Govei-n -ment, &c. • In the evening Theodore Tilton, of the New York Independent, made a speech in favor ofamalgamation, in which he re marked that, "The history ofthe "progress, the history of the civiiization - of all empires, is writen -one word, which many meif:are afraid to speak and many others afraid to hear, and , that wordri f — AMALGABIATION." Ffe predicted 'that ere long We shotild be a nitiotrof negroes with White skins, and exiresied . a pffer , ence for Fred. Douglass for the next Presi dency. , - ay ipiteuncroTox ,' re ported to r -day that every available soldier now on detailed sertideittrand around Washington, Baltimora, ;slid on all railroads in Virginia and Ma= iThirid, will be 'forwarded to Hook er's eornmarid, and their iiiaoSratip , ; plied by PenneylvAnia, it is seal d -have- been tendered aqr .oov - Curtin. ttEir:ln qrder to see with certainty • what are the prospects °fan ab . olitiOn policy; a:nd how lunch wispr,sie well -as more just and 'patch:4o,ft twatandprtn ly by the Conslitution in trying:L[6o4ore the Union,We gipe the folloWitiefitl tive table : DE3I4iCRAT StiT4. Poptqation, . New. York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana,` Kentucky, New 3,ersei, Mary la n Delaware, Wisconsin, AROLITI.tIS STO.I%S . P, op 1.1 c A, eno New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts,' Rhode I:sland, -• Connactiani, ' - Michigan, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, • - , • 6,022,417 In the first classlot Stiles the aenseiva- - tives have the - ninforitx. In : some of the others the Republican majority` is a'fic tinn, as for instance in IVlisiouri whilein' such states as New Ylati3 and ps ire necticut the .. ,parties . are ..nearbi - eqUallY divided, and in only two .or thtee haie the Abolitionist's any decided preponder ance. "At the next elebtion for Piesident, there is a *nod reason to - befifive that all but-two of the States-will be f&ind - on the conservative side. What st piece of folly then it is' to attempt to *duct the war on an abolition policy r—ilosan, rtsr. 3.330,135 --2,906,115 2,349,502 • 1414 4 95 C .•1 4 •344458 1,116;684 02;030 ',§3„7,049 71/,216; 715,881 111151 - -1 V0 96 !".0/0 020;073 MAWS 1 ) 201 066 12020' AtikV4Y ;41.74,1043 . ,!149;;113 - 113,655 W1;162,012