forfeit all pay or &Kewanee during gush ab sence. SEC. 32. And beet further enacted, That the commanders of fregimenta and batteries in the field are hereby authorized and empowered to grant furloughs for a period not exe,emlio g thirty days acuity one time to five per eetituts a the nonicommiesioned offisess and 'privates.; for good condom in the line of duty, &a., e l'd subjectio theaPproval of the commander of the forces of which such not - conludisietted -officers and privates form a part. Sac. 33. And be it further enacted, That the Presidatit •of the United Stato la hereby au thorized and empowered,, during the present rebellion, to call forth the national forces, by draft, in the manner provided for in this act. Sec. 34 And be it furtiker enacted, That all persons drafted under the provisions of this act-shall be assigned by the President to mili tary duty in such - Ater" regiments, or -ether branches of ths Berries ft 9 the rvigectoioo of the service may require. Sac. 35. And be further enacted, That here after details to special service shall only he made with the consent of the commandi,-g offi cer of forces in the field ; and enlisted men, now or hereafter detailed to special service, • shall not receive any extra pay fdr ouch ser "vices beyond that allowed to other enlisted . men. . Sze. 86. And be it further enacted, That gen eral orders of the War Department, numbered one hundred and fifty-four and one hundred and sixty-two, in reference to malt nrents from the volunteers into the regular service, be, and the same are hereby rescinded; and hereafter no such enlistments shall be allowed. SEo. 37. And be it further enacted, That the grades created in the cavalry forces of the Uni ted States by section eleven of the net approved seventeenth July, eighteen hundred and sixty two, and for which no rate of compensation has been provided, shall be paid -as follows, to wit a Regimental eammisaary thesame as regi mentar quartermaster; chief trumpeter the same as chief bugler; Lke saddle sergeant the same as•regireental commissary sergeant ; com pany commissary sergsaatthe same as company • quartermaster's sergeant.: Presided, That the grade of supenumerary second lieutenant, and two teamsters for each company, and one,ohief farrier said blacksmith for-each roginewit . allowed by said section of that act, be, and Ley are hereby abolished; and each cavalry -com pany may have two trumpeters, to be paid as buglers; and each regiment shall have one veterinary surgeon, with the rank of a regi mental sergeant-major, whose compensation shall be.seventy-five dollars per month. SEC. 38. And be it farther 'punted, That ell persons who, in time of- war or of rebellion against the supreme authority. of the =United States, shall be found lurking or acting as spies in or about any of the fortifications, posts, quarters, or encampments of any of the armies of the United States, er elsewhere,-shall be triable ky a general catrtomartial or Lary oommieeio4, andshall, upon enuaintion ) suffer death. ttt Vatrizt it anion. MONDAY MORNING, JULY 20, 1848 0. BARRETT &-00,, 'PROPRIETORS. CoNurituDIMMED! will not Dikpablishedin,e PALTDEOT AND 'MON Unlade ateinnlisniel with the Weme of the author_ S. DL PETTENOILL k CO., No. 31 Park Row, N. Y., and 6 State St., Boston, Are our Agents for the Pr:WOTAN Union in those *Mee, and are authorized to take Advertisements - and Subscription' for us at our Lowest Rates. DEMOCRATIC STATE NOMINATIONS. FOR GOVERNOR, HON. GEO. W. WOODWA.RD, Or rifILADELPHIL. FOR JUDGE OF THE SUPREME COURT, WALTER EL LOWRIE, OH ALLEGHENY COUNTY. THE WEEKLY PATRIOT AID MON FOR THE CAMPAIGN. The Weekly PATRIOV AND UNION will be furnishel to clubs of ten or more, for the campaign, with an extra, number giv ing full returns of the October election, at 50 cents TO THE PUBLIC. TIM PATRIOT AND UNION and all its lousiness operations will hereafter be conducted exclu sively by 0. BARRILIT.and T. G_ PONAROIE, Mil der the tun of 0. BARRETT & Co., the connec tion of Wlteynolds with said establish ment having ceased on the 20th November, inst. NOVNNBER. 21, 1862. . THE NATIONAL PLATFORM. PURPOSES OF THE' WAR. Congress, by a vote nearly unanimous, passed the following resolution, which expresses the voice of the Nation and is the true standard of Loyalty: . t , That the present deplorable civil war has been Zoned Upon the country by the disanionists of the Zenthern States, now *arms egoist the Constitutional .4etevernment, and in arils around the Capital; that in this National emergency, Cougreas, banishing all feel ing of mere- passion or resentment, will recollect only its duty to the , whole country; that this war is not waged on their part in any spirit of oppression, or fer any purpose of conquest or subjugation, or purpose of overthrowing or interfering with the rights or established institutions of those States, but to defend and maintain the supremacy of the Constettion, and to preserve the Union with all the dignity, equality and .rights of the senerai States unimpaired; and that as soon as these ob jects are accomplished the war ought to cense. ll ' The Huntingdon 66 Monitor" We received on Saturday, for the first time since its re-establishment, a copy of the Hun ting lon Monitor. : It is much improved in ap pearance by its new dress, which mob violence procured for it, and is ably edited by J. Lavin STEEL. We congratulate the Democracy of Huntingdon upon its resuscitation, and trust they will give it not only a living, bat a liberal support. The Draft will be Enforced_ Provost Marshal General Fry issued a cir cular on the 17th, declaring that "no orders have been issued countermanding the draft," and that " provost marshals will be sustained by the military forces of the country in enfor cing" it, " in - accordance with the laws of the United Stites." They are directed to "proceed to execute the orders heretofore given for draft as rapidly as shall be practicable, by aid of the military 'forces ordered to co-operate' with and protect them." This Circular, without doubt, has special reference to . New York, the only place where serious resistance *as been made. The inten tion evidently' is - to' proceed with and complete the draft, and enforce the conscription by mili tary power, in utter disregard and defiance of any decision of the courts pronouncing it tm eonstitntional. If we are correct in this conjecture, it will bring the Feckral in conflict with the State authorities of New York. We do not venture to predict the result. "- • ' "1B inlltUtOS. The Telegraph announces that the Provost Marshal General of Penasylv.4.nia has , ,,decided that under existing laws a negro is gilA consi dered a mince!" equivalent for. a w ' man.. h o We are at aVes;*e knit* Aare t Pro -,, t Marshal Gene fish hiii.lalo It *lett not in (he ! Coneettiffon twit* 111 th at , off_ . Ail colors, and shades of color, are placed pre cisely on a level. They are enrolled by the same office,r, their names mingled together on the 89,113, Het, pdt- Into tie Seine -boa, drawn out at the Seine iiiiri,ikrid etitsi;it in the same" rules and regulations. ' Besides, ty :referring tnthe slehates in Oongre6 on the passage of the bill, it will.be clearly evident that.the de sign of its framers was tevlaoe the negro and the white elan on GA abilOihit4 'equality. it.cannotle found ist the ' l ' higher law"— unless anew chapter has beenvecently added— for under that, the radicals have alweas claimed that the-t egre was at least equal to a white 'man, and some of them even go 80 far as to Desert that, having the same advantages, they would be &atelier. aver since this war began they have Asserted, ever and over again, that the negro, ion %account' of his greater pow ers of endurance, and .the greater entkuslasm which would ultimate hiw, . because fighting for the freedom ef 4/ie lace ; would make 8 better giddier than the white luau, and that •our.ottly hope of subduing the 'rebellion waste •put arms into his hands. Recently Gen. 'Banks, with some '2s;oooonen, 'made an *tack upon Port Hudson, and we were told in 'verso, my ,the Laureate •of the League, and in .prose by all the radical presses in the cormttrjr, how 'nobly and with 'what de termined courage .a block regionent Aught, how impetuously they rushed into 'the fight., and that • when- -they were finally 'obliged to retire from the contest they left upon. the enz' partguinedlteldAlloo of their heroin dead- In Genteral , Bnisits'A subsequent , report of the battle he gives kin entire loss at 1800, from which it 'would -seem that ainge