paii g Eritgr.apt o THE' PEOPLE'S CHOICE FOR PRESIDENT, ABJLAHAM LINCOLN. HARRISBURG, PA TUESDAY EVENING, 1 . GOCII - 46, 18G4. Notice to CitY„P.4kacribor,s. Those of our citriWisqiikem:=who intend mo - ring this spring, - arse' f!re. - spd to - notify our carriers of the fact: beforehand: in - order the papers may-be "served_propeily. Timely notice will prefient ninch'eoqusion. The COnr:UlEtirt of the Armtes—liintiportaiit Changes. We i,nbliah iriapdibint• military l order,•dated on .Saturdaylast, : gthe WarliepartMent. The Main provisioirtrfAhe order, and . the only one which is of national scope, and importance, is that whichrelieVes . Gen.-VAXJ.IE6K from the position . of General in. -Chief of the Army, and assigns Lieut.-Gen- GRANT to the ‘‘command of the 'Armies of the United States." We presunte this order'con_ fers - upon .the new Lieutenant-General ple nary powers as acting Chief of the National forces, subject .of Course, to the approval of . the President If so it be, we are confident that it will give great and general satisfaction throughout the country. As a corollary "suppoSe, to this order, changes in , the command of :;one, and in the , organization of the , other, of our.two greater mies have been made or are in progress. The Army of the Potomac, we learn unofficially, is being reorganized into three corps, which shall be commanded respectively by Gens. Warren, Sedgwick and Hancock. The late command of Lieut. Gen. Grant, designated as the "Military Division of the Mississippi and the armies therein," has been assigned to Gen. Sherman, (W. T.) and it has been en larg i a by the addition of Arkansas to . its for . mei .. limits, Still greaier unity of action would be seemed were it extended southward to the Gulf of Mexico. The country will look anxiously for speedy and happy results as the consequenee of these fundamental changes in command. Desertions from.the A day never passes that the telegraph does get inform us of desertions - from the rebel itkray, while not a word is said about deser tions from ` our own ranks. We doubt whether 'Se rebel desertions amount in the aggregate to half the number of those from the Federal army. According to the official reports, de sertions from our army, previous to April, 1862, amounted to 78,454, and the aggregate since the war broke out down to .the latest report, is 12'7,157, au average of .nearly 4,000 per nionth.—Tory 00gan. This is a specimen paragraph of copperhead meanness; lying, and sly sympathy for trea son. It is intended to assure the rebels, that the desertions from our armies far. exceed those from the traitor hordes; by which means the rebels are to be encouraged to fight on, as, eventually, if the hopes of those who control the Tory Organ are realized, there will be no soldiers left to defend the flag, the honor, or the authority of the Government.. If it is really true, that desertions are so numerous from the armies, the deserters are those who follow the teachings of the Tory Orgy, and hence must be copperheads. Those who•lus.e the Government and stand by the policy of , the Administration to crash rebellion, do not nor will not desert. - - • - ' —But the real fact is, that just such para graphs as the above are fabricated for effect only upon the rebel armies. We do not be lieve that desertions average Oar' thousand, per month—we do not,believe that the itg,gre-' gate is what is .stated, _simply because those who control the Tory Organ are so given to lying in eider to injure the Provernment, that no reliance caicbe placed in a single word which appears in its ecannnas *heie the au thorities are interested. • , "A NEW WAY TO PAY OLD DII.IITS."-.13y un act of the rebel Congress one-third of Mr. Memminger's promiseito pay will be "repudi ated" on the Ist of April. It is hoped by.this expedient that the reniainder of the' elm:6110y will depreciate in valnein the same 'ratio of that repudiated_ But it must_ be apparent that this is a desperate expedient, for what assurance will the. people have that another third will not be repudiated a few months hence ? The effect, therefore, will be to de preciate the value of-rebel currency .by still further Undermining confidence in either :the ability or disposition f of.t,he rebel Govern ment to redeem it at - last; rather-=than other wise. This act is another instance of the bad faith which has characterized the ,course of the rebel leaders towards their Own people no less than towards the Government. With this casebefore them . , the takers of the rebel cot ton loan in England, who were so buoyant a few months ago, are beginning to see their anticipated profits vanithing in'thin air, and but a few months wilLiranspire before "eon ,federate stocks" will be about as valuable as shares in the "South Sea Dibble." Yet in the face of this striking s instance of bad faith, the rebels have the sublime impudence to talk of "Northern Bankruptcy." Tan Copperheads, having discovered a cop pery female orator in the person of a third rate theatre girl, Emma Webb, have suddenly modified their views of petticoat speechmak ifig, The young woman was trotted out upon the stump in New York last week. with great eolat awl. enthusiasm, Sam. Cox having been imported from Washington to bow her to the stand. She said that her friendship was so evenly divided between the parties in :this War, that triumph eithei side would equal .ly grieve her. &elk . THESE woman of. the con t emplated ab -4444i0n of Qneeen Vietplia; . and 'that the -i-q:bine.of Wales is to ascend the_ throne of TaighinaiS King ' AwardVll GEN. Sarauster;