c ficattltlin (3gportitrag., P.R.IEFATAR. tra:HS. ,- , „ Glene 'Doubled iv has' been relievedlol lii§command in the Army 'pf. the Potoin s pc,: att4;orriered to mite eoritoe.n.d . ol7 tetiot, AM !hated MCIT to 3ie,esta.l)lls,hed at 1111.trAl e „ New. York; 'the'Latfi 2Sassachui'etts; ce . teret regirrielet; emb irked 'de:board.' the: , steamer' = C ihacuba, .I'ol , -..Nextbarre. N. C., an Tuesday', • - the reg-- intent excited the greatest- 91411e5/9ga ori!ice racych - throrigh.the city i• . • Ac goad example ha.B setiky Ote go7lernuiept . of Cape :Flizaketh,, Ter,,en.tly resolved to iiay.s33o to eyery . , dratted . inn who goes to war hinisOf, "bat 4.oihir 'to a. 'Juan who stays at' home. j ' Aft eks'burg correspondent says that tirigiiimeampaign of silty-four days;jeilding with of Vicksburg, the rebels tat ite tilted; wouncl.eil and prisioners 4,3,706*n, About -71,000 stand of arras, including llntleld'tifies in their original packages, which - were intended for the' rebel array aernssithe . I.issfssipPi, and '2:30 pieces of artillery. ' Very late intelligence; from Gen. lo se- clans' array .o;oves all the reports •of Unidiitroops uponehattandogaand Minn to be unfounded. The' main 1)04: of the Arniy of the CumYerland; inclu.six6 of all the,cavalry,. is still resting and preparing for smother carnpaigri'. along "the noriliern slope Z",f the CuMberland '3l..outimins. I torrpOndent front Leavenworth 6ays tliat'the'ht Kansas Colored "in the best di'6elpliried and most'perfeetly drpled regiment in the 'Union service." They :were drilling for nine, 'mouths before the Govern-.. treat would receive : them as soldier.s.. The writer proposes, after: the war," a standing artni nf /0(5,000 colored soldiers. If is-stated that -the returns hi the Medi cal Director's' offiee Sl()xi that since the van; t eonitneneeil V 15,660 soldiers had been, charge4 7 from the . arniy•oh a surgeon:s, • Cer- titleate. This does , not, of course, include . any. one whose time wa.s out, but corn:prise thoie fihase health and physi6al inqini;ty to beoidier prevented them from being of erviee in the army. • ' Governor Smith, of Rhode Island :has iss4ted — a proclaudion recommending; that altar° cities and towns of the State make :anal imniediate:provision for the relief of driifted men, orlhose dependent upon them; :is Witt relieve. them from apprehension that their families will i).ot be provided forhile thq -*e Balled to the - held to battle for the iife of Our Government. - An old woman ventured out iri the inidst f lkfo4au and his men in i little town in indiana.; and inquired 'of a rebel whi4 sitting= backward upon his " frame," "Whar is the gayriller ? " " D'ye mean John Afor ttait ?"!, "Maas, just so." "There lib is,' said. 'the Reb, pointing to John. ",Wall," said the old lady, eyeing him from had,tst foot,' "we've better lookin' horse thiev'es not' hint in'Hoosier; 1 - 6ss' said about 'efri too!' The Hon. Bradfor4Brown, State, Snator from Caswell county, N. C : ,bas taken open grounds for the reconstruction of the Itnion. The ; Hon. John A. Gilmer, and OtherNexten -siye siaveholders , in this State, are:said to be iiitaviir of the gradual emancipation system. Many .inembers - of the Legislature now in session,-at Raleigh; have come out fOr, the immeeiate repeal of the act of Secession, and for` the recall home by Gov. Vance Of the troops. . . - The -glorious news of .the success 0* the 'Union 'arms come fitst and thick. The great 'll 1. , .pr a otted to the Army of the Smith-west -hasnearly been completed, and the dag 'of: -Washington, Jackson and our beloved' el.:m -try Heats in triumph over many rebel-strong more such victories will late ,the :rebels, rebellion_ and copp4heaei smoStntanpletely.` Allhonor to our pi triotic soldiers fortthese additional evidencesiof, the Union arms: . May the Memory of the hero ic dead never be . foriotten: • New Orleans date's to - the 17th represent the city in a,-state-of great. jubilation over ~the:falii p f Port Hudson. One hundred, guns. _were,fixeil - hy order of Gen.,,,Enory, and the .loyal citizens designed having a tor4light. •Pibeci„sgiOn, 'and general.joilifi- I Caiio'n on the 'night of the 11. th. The Sece's-, ,sionisq.were very ratich down in the inoutli,' .and depressed. 1,11 spirits. None - of ,Grant's ,troops reached 'Port Hudson !before itc fail;'so that the honor of its captUre ,be-. longs'entirely to Gen. Banks and-his j.)wif gulluie little ni•my. ' • • I • • • Vie-Invalid Corps is-rapidly reabliing-its lirese4b - ed• dimensions. .Twqray corPpanicg -of-the first :battalion have aireadyiliren or also seven companies, of the. second hfAtaliOn. Recruits are gatheied in 'Bt:lfOlil,'Washington, 'Ma - 1104n, . 'cuts Small Carolina and Fortress Monroe, - "and all'seort!be broUght into the nrgani f:Tztittari. At'reast twenty-fir:a hunched-men hive -,theady enlisted. • Some of them,* Aferferming - gurirtlduty at the War pepart. xrkcV..f p,,nd At other ,places. The men are de r ...liiitte4 with the Corps, which thef regard one'of t eiPecial . ! correspondent. of a New York paper" re; ceny.ly . (finied that, there'wag any feCling North' Carolina:favorable' to 3 'a reeOnstrifer qibi.' - of 'the ITnion," but our • advic'es froirt '.)-Sreii , b4n; since, reatiirm.the statement •which we made the other day, that there are, influ ential men in the Legislature who aiie bendy ,their : energies to the, task of r'estoiing 14erth siate" to the The &arictake is Openly the. 1 -'ilie'it3ifre, l and the tyranny'• which Jeft_Davis' ,15kfx'.elleisind Over tho. people at pt,eSeut ie 2..t.nl tending . to hasten matters arkd. I?rlria. on • : when the 1 pith Car= 4 - titare ,speedily. the•hour_ . olirdans, shall throw' off his accursed . yoke and Oiiee"agairi be free. • " • • 1. ■ -:Tholtichritand,authorities; itissaidJlave -ITl.'htf44#!l:4,lliel;rutal*Ogn, cf. ,Ixeeirt?ngt two Union officers: chosen by lot frtrin . among tho..e in the Libb.3. 4 ,,prison..in-,retalla - tiOn - for therebel-Rie•condernnedehy courtkruor,tird ntpleveland, will not hes,arriedliont. . All .occourits agree that the - Federal tiui b'el'forcs upOn' our occittpntiiSii of the place, fraternized' 110 the kind - est pomible • mariner, apparentlrfor-, getting entircly that thei,ha4 heen 'rued in ylnstile columns. It lya precisely thus; als4; at'lrieb.invg, at Gettysbitig, rind , oti Othei' 'where the riten filWe bbon Frollght icigethei in - the hush or,at thri Close of conflict. ~These p&scris Who are fond of -insisting that the -peopJe ;of Alio, fSouthilintl those of .the „North . cart.mexer t he recOnciled orlive : : together in, peace When the, war is dOrie and the spirit of reliellion; is , destioyed; will liardly'filia in facts like these We 'hive cited a confirnihtion of their argument. ; Brig; !GtiTi : A: Gilmore; who is, , in-cone-; mand.of Ouffottes operating against Charles ton, a native of Ohio, and was , appointed from that State to the 3tilithry Academy at Long Point, from which he gradUated, in 'He Was FirstLientietiant of thgincer'S' when the,war broke out :Under his coin inand, Port Pulaski, 'near Savannah, - Ga m was captured, over a year ago. was = terwards transferred to Kentucky, , where he whipped the rebels , under Pegram several' times; capturing many prisoners.. He' was' taken out of Kentucky; When he was assign ed to the'c6mTnand• in South' Carolina,:le lieving Gen. Hunter. Hels-eViclentlya live go-ahead officer- _ His name is Quincy Addi, son Gillmore._ T,he rebels,in North Caolina seem to be in sere distress. • The • reactionary.,Movement, as it may he called, is passing 'beyond the contiOl iitds'e'Wh*o are 'charged' with'` the management of"'-the Confederate' affairs. , Gtivernor Vance, who seems to be a peculiar being 7 :,--a kind of -3losaic Governor—talking, for secession and labori4g against it, has. called a meeting of the • Lecrislatnre to dis ctiss some local matter, lint_ virtually with the :2ea of reopening negotiations with the view of returning North Carolina 'to the Union, State has' bean one of 3.1 r. Davis', most ,deplorable failures. . Heart and soul for the Union, if was whirled into seces sion by, treason and - crime...„ We shall gladly Welcome, the old North State into tire .faroily of lbyal States. The 'sudden - 'conversion' Of Hon. Albert Gallatin frown to 'Unionism is regak4ed as One 'of the'rnarvels of' a better 'change in the rebellion. • , Mr.".l3rown was once _United States. Senator from .Mississippi, but'.more recently -a.member.,of the, rebel Congress.— This Mississippi politician, under the old r