II II 4 4 t fOtigin 41gjoglitott). , Wednesday, January / 20, 1884. nr,..Rme--$2 per sun*, in advance; or tt.fa if not paid within the Yitr. All subscription seaman mat be settled annually. No paper will be Not out of the Syitonnlees paid for in advance. Goo. CURTIN was inaugurated yesterday and entered his second term with imposlng ceremony. All the United States officers; several - -ex-Governors; a number of mili tary', organizations, including many vetejan troops, under command of Major General Conch, and a large civic procession, partic ipated in the proceedings.' Never before in the history of our State; has man been charged with the honor and responsibilities awarded by a loyal people, to ANDREW G. 'CURTIN ; and that he may in the future have the same rich reward for his enlight ened and faithful devotion to his country's cause, as now chcers him fOr his noble rec oil of the-past, must be the - prayer of every' triond of an imperiled Nationality. rilotr. ELI SuFEß._Secretary of the Corn monwealtb, and ZON. WM. M. MER E DITH, Attorney General, tendered their resigna tions to Gov. Curtin last week; to relieve him of all embarrassment in the .selection of a cabinet for his new administration. Gov. Curtin promptly declined accepting them, and' they will continue in their res• peetive positions. We have heretofore spo ken of their eminent fitness, alike in point of character and ability, for their responsi ble duties; and the loyal men of the State be glad to learn that they are to remain. Itis no (disparagement to Gov CurtiO to say that, for the high measure of success iittained'by his administration, he is much,. indebted 'to - the enlarged experience; the untiring efforts and unfaltering fidelity of Eli Slifer and Win. M. Meredith. FILL VP THE ARMIES Congiftld has taken one step toward the increase of our armies bat 'it was tardrand *far short of the imperative necessities of the nation: The old bounties have been i 7 extended until the Ist of March, and- many veterans and new recruits will be thus se cured ; . but if- Congrels speedily perfects a just and effectual - conscription law, and makes it apparent to-the Country that what volunteering fails'to do by the Ist of March, 'ascription will certainly complete, the the work of filling .up the armies for the spring campaign will be no longer doubtful. . We beg Congress to - enderstau'd that tens of thousands of veterans and others will not volunteer until they are fully assu • • the armies will certainly be made strong enotigh,for every_eniergency. If now it was —clear that on the Ist' of March such a draft will be made, as cannot fail to fill every de ficient quota, there it scarcely a veteran in the service who would not re-ehlist, and there are other thousandswho would accept the liberal bounties offered to new recruits: and at once swell our _shattered rinks., 'lt is most natural that men should be slow; to Eater the service while Congress liesitatits; quibbles and fails to rise to the full measure of its great duty. Men want to be assured that thei will not have to cope with supe rior numbers and fight bloody battles with out decisive results; but let it be manifest that they. will beinvincible, as they certain I) , can and elcould be ; that the war is absut to be pressed to -a, speedy and - brilliant close,, and service Will be cheerfully given by ve terans and ether. volunteers, and accepted by conscripts with promptness and pride.. Congress has now been in session seven weeks.. Our armies have been necessarily idle,. and golden days and months for pre paration have been•lost by the unpardona bk hesitation of our national legislature. This must-stop. if we would avert disaster; and if disaster comes, upon whom must • the responsibility rest? Not upon the-peo ple, for they have given to Congress their sokinn verdict demanding the exercise of all necessary. powers to close the war spe dily. They, dematid equitable laws to reach allelasses of our citizens, and impose, the 'burdens of, the war upon all alike. Now - the lOyal fight ; the disloyal vote. The loyal volunteer ;: the disloyal embarrass tite the exication of the laws, discourage enlist ._ merits, and blot, our history with riots. • The people, therefore, want prompt, prae *6l, effectual laws for procuring. service, and Congress should not hesitate a day about enactingtbem. • We hope that : an the Ist of March volun ., • Leering will stop, and so Congress should declare by positive law. Let the conscrip tion act be soamerided as to embrace all , who should be subject to duty; and on that : day let the draft be imperative, and ample in point of nignbers for every possible want :of the - government. This and this alone will secure early ,and honorable peace, while failure on the part" of Congress may give us protracted and disastrous war for years to come. We have readied the culminating 'point of the rebellion. The spring cam. Reign must be the most decisive of the war. The very necessities of the rebels will make it so. If they are unequal to it, they must : abandon their capital and their, cause ;if they attain any substantial success, they will receive European sympathy and aid if lot positive recognition. If our armies are sot filled up to an invincible standard, Lee will strike with, the eneigy of despair before ..Ainety days have passed, and if successful fbeoill be master of the situation daring tbeißunmer campaign: If he is embold , awl& ibis by our failure to swell our num. a bers in the field, the bloodies battles of the war will be in the future -- w ile with resist leas/ armies e can close the war, by next autumn, a without a- single sanguinary conflict • 'Rh. such an issue— involving thousan of lives--involVini; war or peace, and it ay be the very exisence of the Re public, how can Congress i hesitate for a day ? I —Again we appeal to Coress to trust the people—to fill the ,lefr at every ha-. zard, and our Nationality will be speedily rescued from its fearful peOs. THE TIIUIBLE.RIOGERS EXPLAIN. Hopkins has explained',' and with him join the other fifteen thimble -riggers of the troupe. They have made " apparently a bad record" by voting against Grant;- against Meade; -- against prayers; againstin creasing pay of soldiers against reading Jackson's Proclamation and Farewell Ad dress on the Bth of January, and by the zeal that so far autstrippd discretion as to make them threaten to Tote down the in stitution of marriage and the bible. When the play opened they appeared tb enjoy it. It seetned' as if Sixteen en of infinite" jest and most excellent fancy ad been -selected to 'represent ttie Democrats in the Senate; but— " Things sweeyste prove in digestion sour" —and in a fit of politica dyspepsia, racked t i by terrible nansia• indu ed by various anti homeopathic doses of' pular reprobation, the venerable Hopkins ,honored the emetic by throwing upon the Oenate a sad mixture of water and bile. - Unskilled as the people may be in the diagnoses' of diseases general ly, they have a wonderful faculty—whether pea-nut and pit auditors., or the more culti vated of the dress eircl4—of understanding when the spirit of a clbwn is broken, and even his jokes fall like the . cold clay upon the coffin-lid. Thus with grim merryment came the once, jolly Hopkins before the Senate last week, and attempted a joke or ponderous solemni ty by an explanation ofl his confessedly "bad II ) record." He admits hat the' " contest has no.piecedent in the history of the Com monwealth ;" and foil ws-with the startling arithmetical conclusio s that " the - Senate is Composed' of thirty three members ;" to to which he might ha .endded—barring one just now held by a- s, therm thimble-rigger, who boasts the title o President Davis, and ' 1 1. performs his tricks vi th- ghastly skulls and fantastic emblems of. toe, and finger bones. The plea of " perpetual organization" in the Senate he denied,l and Mingled with his oath to support the Constitution oCthe State-and 'general governmenti, a prOtest againsttheconstituti Malty of the Catiiiitu lion itself. Because the Constitution de Glares . that " each House shall choose a Speaker and other° cers," he insists upon chosing a Speaker a d other officers' pretty much all the time, as his, humor seems to run in that particular way ; and if Mr. Penny should be chosen to=day by a major ity of the Senate, the same humor would I make Mt Hopkins nsist upon the Senate' -daily fulfilling the mpemtive - mandate of the 'Constitution a d ` choose a Speaker and other officers.'r As the -Constitution does not prohibit th e Senate from indulging the fancy of , selecti g officers ad infinitum, 1 it is of course 'no 'stitutiopal to do so, and we seriously donbt whether tlie,derriatids of Constitution will he fully met unless - Hop; kins elects Hopkins to the chair. He confesses "the Constitution does not say that each Ho4e shall ehooseits Spea ker annually,'' bt4, as it does not expressly forbid choosing one - every fifteen minutes, the erection of Speaker is of - course always in order, particularly if the Speaker don't ' .suit the performance. Then he appealsAo history. As notodi ever undertook to thimble-rig the Senate before, and as Jeff. Davis -never warted a Union Senator to 1 I help his " friend " until now, there is no precedent' for th is festive occasion. He says that "from794 --- io 1864 the chair was always vacant during ballots for Speaker," and "no late 4eaker ever attempted to qualify new Senaors." Wecredit so much to the side of truth, but the untold truth was too heavy fofrhis little joker and it had - to dodge it. Th i . Constitution was adopted in 1790, and for four years, under precisely the existing fundamental law, when some of the framers of ‘ the Constitution sat in the Senate, the Speakers did not vacatethe chair; but did preside ..,'ver the Senate without a re-election, and !did swear in new Senators, and no one questioned their right so to do.' And again in 1849, 'Gov. Johnston acted as Governor, wiihgutla question being rais ed, by virtue oft the very potver thtit makes Mr. Penny' Speaker !now, : This thimble rigging around the truth in what is claimed to be a statenient 4 facts, redeems the moral obliquity of the lamented Pepper, e and reduces fel hood to a standard science. The fact tha t 'the . Speaker-usually retires from the chair. when a- ballot is had for Speaker, is apparent to any ordinary joker, but as Hopkins ha.S.got into heavy draft merriment just now, we beg to enlighten him. For no other 'purpose than to amuse sixteen 'thimble-riggers could Speaker Pen ny be induced to keep the chair and declare to the Senate ashe will one of these days —" Mr. Penny having a majority of all the votes is duly elected Speaker." As a mat ter of mingled modesty and . courtesy, such duties have be en avoided; an d a s t h e ao . :oomplished flopldns don't seem to com prehend that tber,e may be a distitOetiou - with a difference between modesty and 'du= ty, he has thimhle-rigged the modesty ora ...franklin. ittepootto . . long line of Speakers into a fundamental law. For the same feason Hammertly will retire from his desk when is about to be re-elected, and assistant clerks will call the vote, keep the tally and declare the re sult to the Speaker; Mit has the uniformly modest action of a long line of clerks made ; their modesty part of the constitution?' If Mr. Hopkins should happen to die—which, for his own sake, we trust may not occur ! at least until he has reasonable time for re pentance—the thimble-rigging construction of the constitution would forbid his funeral; for he has often been in the legislature b fore—he has never died before—he ha never been buried before—and hiS unifo custom of living for over fifty years mak his life a part of the organic law; and b would probably miss funeral honofs- f want of a constitutional recognition of his death. We beg the jolly Hopkins to mo - ify his humors, and not peril his last rest ing place and the patrimony of his heirs by the refinement of such cruel constitutional nonsense. ' —Like the 'Yankee fiddler who always at ended on Yankee Poodle; no m,atter on w' key. or tune he started, so Hopkins ends as have all his associate thimble riggers e ed—with a proposition to concede organ tion for a few clerks and pesters. Give h i a man or two, to copy laws, carry wood fold papers, and the great , fundamental sue fadesaway, and the venerable clown • become a grave Senator again. Ha .I tranition I—but it 'isn't the cards ; " t i , bass's eyes is sot 1" THE DRAFT CONSMIITIONAL, It will be remembered - that the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, after the defeat oftwo of its members by the people, declaredi the: conscription act unconstitutional. Itiwas done in defiance of the uniform teachings of the framers of the constitution, and- in the face of the fact that the same qourt would reverse itself in a few weeks. But Judge Woodward must inflict his petty. impotent vengeance, and he hurled an epin; ion against the preservation of the go ern went that was characterized by all the ck lessness and bitterness of -a :stump s eech from ikdisappointed Politician. Recently Judge Agnew became-Judge in place of Lowery, and a motion was mide to dissolve the preliminary injunction rated g against the eagorcement of the conscription act. It was ably argued and the inju ction was dismissed, and the drift of the _ ilitia I#3' Congress declared constitutional. udges ,E, Woodward and Thompson of coursed ssent ed ; but the irrevocable decision f the court declares the 'conscription in II re spects lawfdl. Judge Agnew deliv red•an elaborate opinion, concluding as follows : -.. The constitutional authority 'to ise the national forces creates a corresponding duty to provide a number adequate to the neessity. The duty is vital and essential, falling back on the fundamental right of self-pies Ovation, 1) and the powers exp . ressed to dTla e war, raise armies, maintain navies, aidprovide for the common defence. Power a d duty now - go hand in hand with the e tremity until eyery available man in thi ation is called into, service; if the emergency require it, and of this, there can be to.) dge but Congress. "They may proceed tfierefort to r i the ex= haustion of the whole element 'son which the State draws its Militia, for the people under the two, powers are the acme; ,while the supremacy of the national iower r pro vided in section 2 of article 6, necessarily draws to itself the whole flambe; if required by the exigene t y, to the exclusionof the State power." , " And in reason wliy, should a na or power be restricted by a minor. The plar • r to•raise armies comprehends for its purposs he whole scope of the purposes of armies, vii le - the au thority to call out the militia isc ntined to the enumerated three." - , WE have some hope that Sago l r White may reach Harrisburg this weld and end a l the disgraceful revolutionary it ceedings of the Democratic Senators. Ina cordanee with an unofficial intimation fr the reb els that Major White would be xchanged for Gen. Trimble, of the rebel Lowy, an of ficial proposition from onr govenent has gone to the rebel authorities tenting to such an exchange.tlf accept, Major White will be parol d to comeiNorth, to be discharged from his parole soon - as General Trimble is sent withiti the rebel lines. 'lf the rebels insist up. retaining Major White, then his resigns on will be delivered, and;a new Senator e seat in twenty days. - —Gen. Trimble is a citizerr o and was one of the leading sp Baltimore riots whilh resulted traction of the railroad bridges i of 1861. When the ;Union 1 about to take possession of Ba skedaddled to, his rebel friendsi the rank of a Brigadier. He and captured at Gettysburg, one of the Eastern forts. He merits the halter, that Jeff. disposed even to disregard tl:t his Copperhe4ul " Mends " nia to get him back. A few (IF the problem, and whether Ma, exchanged or not, - the reign 01 anarchy in the Senate will be HON. HENRY D. MOORE Iglu tominated , It as the Union candidate for S to Treasurer by nearly a unanimous vote n first ballot, on Thursday evening last. Thi3 debisive expression in his favor was just tribute to his high integrity and em . Rent capacity for the responsible trust ; a d itwill bo-a inurce of gratification to th loyal men of the State that, whatever may be the finan cial issues to be met duriu: this coming year, the State will have a m.st faithful and ictutiarn r -20, 1864. 'competent officer to guard its credit and 'interests: , —Monday last was the day fixed by, law for the - election of State Treasurer; but not, joint convention was held in consequence of the revolutionary proceedings of the Dem °erotic Senators. No fears need be enter tained, howeier, of the result. , In a little time, the -Senate will stand 17 on the right side to 16 on the wrong side, and a joint 'resolution will then be passed to elect a Treasurer, and Mr. Moore will be chosen. Had he been elected on MondaY, although free from legal doubts, the present Treas urer would probably refuse to vacate on the Ist of May, and a tedious legal proceedings would be - come, neeBssaaY to displaCe him. It will end well, and all's - well that does! WS are indebted toCol. c Stetzal of the 11th Pa. Cay., noW on duty, on the Peninsula, for files of the Richmond and Petersburg papers. The last ',package gives us Richmond dates to the 13th inst.; and the Petersburg Daily Register of the 11th. The Register does not favor its readers with ffliirket reports ; but the Richmond. Examiner quotes gold at $22 fOr $1 ofgold ; flour tit $lO5 te $ll5 per bbl and very :scarce ; hay $l5 per hundred, and everything else in proportion. Tux Daily Telegraph is the title of a new _evening paper published in Philadelphia by J. Barclay Harding, Esq. Mr. Harding is an experienced newspaper publisher, and the Telegraph. gives abundant eviddnee that it will mainitfir a high rank in the list of Phil adelphia dailies. It is a fearless Union pa , - por, , nnd merits success, IN Harper's Weaty for this week we find: an excellent 'double page engraving of the return of veteran volunteers on furlough, from a design by our young friend Mr. D. R. Knight. It is designed and drawn in ex quisite taste and displays the highest order of artistic-skill. " lax Pennsylvania Farmer and Gardner .for January is out with new proprietors, new suit, and giving evidence of vigor and ability in all its departments. It is well worth the subscription price to any - farmer. Wm. S. Young Co., Philadelphia. Price $1 per annum. - . THE TRIBUNE ALMANAC for 1864 is the most valuabP political annual published. It has 11 : 4 ,3 usual . calculations, &c., neces sary to mplete i epitome of the political history of the year. Sent by mail for 15 cts. H 0 - reei r ey &Co., New York. ; 131LAT &BIcKNELL's' Bank Note Repor ter is the , oldest, publication of the kind in the country, and it.has steadily maintained a high character for its financial reports and early and fellable information of counterfeits. See advertisement in to-day's paper. Tax-advertiaament of the Mail Routes of Pennsylvania monopolizes our columns to a large extent to-day. Mail contractors will give the proposals proper attention. W. W. ,11 , ..vi5, Esq., hoe resumed the ed itorial chair as one of the editors of the Ju niali Sentinel. Succees to the new firm. Wz are indebted to Senator McSherry for a copy of the Auditor General's Report on Bangs. GOSSIP WITH OUR FRIENDS.—Among the many advantages possessed by a gossiper, pre eminent is that of gossiping about what is not (the ladies will please note and appreci ate,) as well as wh•tt is. Welove our native town with all her faults and want's ; and of ten plan in our mind what we would do were 15 , e elected Burgess or High Constable. We are_not fully aware how far the powers of the aboie mentioned officers extend, but would presume either could accomplish what we purpose should we ever have the , chance.- Chainbersburg needs a good Restaurant,With its accompanying bur, very much. Now we know are the ladies (God bless them) as a rule are opposed to such things, but we will for their benefit explain.. We have restaurants in town, but not a single FANCY' one. Let no Restaurateur take offence at what we say for each one may, if he will, -- open one When ever he pleases. Ladies, have any of you ever calculated how much, money is spent In this town' per month for ale and oysters and such like? We will whisper it to you, but you must not breathe it, for should your. lords (don't bridle) discover_ the source Of your information our life would not be worth a tinker's—hem! On second thoughts, how ever, we think we had better not tell it. You were never in a first-class restaurant ware you ? (We still address the ladies.) Some we dare say have not. ' Shadeof Mich; eel Angelo assist us! Ladies, imagine a spa cious room- hung round with handsome-pic tures, such as sou - never saw in your parlors, ,portraits of celebrated danseuses, race horses, Heenan, Morrissey, Kitig, Sayers ; Adam and Eve in the garden, Susannah surprised at het: Bath by the Elders (Biblical); Jupiter et Semele et Danes et Alite, Diana et En dymion, Cupid et Psyche, Venus et Adonis (classical); correct likenesses of Thais, As pasia, Sappho, etc., etc., One entire side of this spacious room is devoted to a handsome marble-topped - counter, upon which are sr -ranged at intervals Silver chafing dishes con taming fried oysters, pigs' - feet, fish, fowls, birds, scallops, slaw, pies, everything edible. Behind the same, on gorgeous shelving,are tastefully placed cut-glass decanters contain ing many colored liquids . ; stone bottles hold ing within their ample bellies many a kind of malt liquor ; pyramids of limes and le moni. Immediately '.underneath you will find casks and barrels. Cigars and tobacco too / are there, crackers and-bread and eheesq, take his Baltimore Ots in the n the des tithe spring mops were lirtore, he . aid rose to id l as wounded is now in tminently 1 La's seems payers. of Donsylva yivrill solve or White is Dmocrotie LOCA L ITEMS. spices and condiments ; what will make . you isungry, that which will induce thirst. Here and there are tittle apartments curtained off where your husbands and sons can eat and drink and be merry 'without annoyance from vulgar gaze. Some restaurants occupy the entire building, in which ease there are pri vate rooms to which your husbands can take other men's wives to what our Gallic neigh bors cal tun petit aouper.' (These houses have all private entrances.) Shut your eyes, if you are alone and yourbusband is onbusiness to the city (or even to Harriiburg), and if it be say 11 P.-M., and conceive the scene of .such a 'room as walleye faintly pictured, biilliantly lighted, adorned with huge mir rors and crowded with gentlemen---add to all this the clatter of knife and fork, popping of corks, exchange of jest, oaths and laughs, oigar smoke, tobacco spittle, and an occa sional fight. The picture can be made more complete by introducing the billiard table and card room which occasionally accompa ny the foregoing. - Now ladies, dear ladies, .let us hare such en establishment here, and my word for it, we (your male appendages) would not find so much necessary -business to take us to the cities. AsPatrick Henry once felicitously remarked upon a like occasion, if this be gossip, make then:Lost of it." A CQ,IIITT,VL OF FORNEY.—The trial of John Forney for the murder of Lieut. K._ N.Ford' in Fulton county, on the 21st of January 1863, took place in McConnellsburg last week. The commonwealth was reptesent4 by Hon. Alex. King, of Bedford, and Isaac H. McCauley, Esq., of Chambersburg, add Messrs. Kimmel! and Sharpe of Chambers burg, Cessna of Bedford, Rai-Smith of Fulton, conducted the defence. The fact that Forney killed Lieut. Ford was not denied but the defence was founded upon the allegation that Forney did. not inVe service and that Ford had no orders or atithority, to attempt his arrest. Forney was drafted in Todd township, Fulton county, in 1862. On the day of the appeals, prior to the draft, he had appeared and made affidavit that he was over forty five years - of age; and therefore claimed ex emption. The commissioner drew a redline - over his name, thus striking it from the roll subject to draft. Subsequently the Commis sioner was led to believe that he had been imposed upon, and he wrote opposite the name of Forney on the enrollment the words not exempt." He 'was drafted, and the word " drafted " - appears written on the, en rollment over the words "not exempt." During the week following the draft, Forney again appeared before the Commissioner and offered testimony to prove that he was 46 years of age. The Commissioner it seems was, satisfied ; declared to Forney that he ivas discharged, and wrote on the enrollthent after Forney's name, the Words " over age." Such was the record as presented to the Court. When the provost guard , went to Fulton comity to arrest deserters, by mistake of the Commissioner the Tune of Forney was hand ed-over on the list p: drafted men* who had not reported. He was arrested as a deserter but was discharged on a writ oNtabcas corpus by Judge Campbell, on the ground that he did not owe service. Lient. Ford went to arrest him again. He ran upstairs in his house with a loaded gun in his hand, and notified -the squad of men that ho vir,as not a drafted man and that he would resist his arreSt. Lieut. Ford started to go up stairs 'after him, when Forney shot him, wounding him mortally. He Surrendered himself to the civil authorities, but was taken in custody by the guard, brought to Chambersburg, and sent to the Old Capitol Prison in Washing- I ton. He was finally surrendered to the civil authorities and confined in the Fulton Jail. When the rebels were here last summer they released him and' he razkoff but returned in the fall and surrendered himself up for trial. We have not seen the charge of the Court, but from the high character of Judge Nill as a faithful and loyal Judge, _we doubt not that it presented the case properly to the Jury. They remained out several hourS and returned a verdict of not guilty, whereupon Forney was discharged. - —For obvious reasons we refrained from commenting on thiS case while it yias'pend ing in-the courts. That Forney was legally acquitted seems to be free from doubt; `but that he was an instrument in the hands of abler and worse Men, was painfully manifest from various- facts elicited in the history of the case ; and that the aim of his masters was to breed revolution, defeat the conscription, and prevent the increase of our armies, can not be truthfully - questioned. That they have in this case, been saved by the generous bearings of our criminal code in all cases of _reasonable doubt, is! their fortune - - not then just reward. - Perhaps the lesson may not-be unwholesome. TIME FOR VOLUNTEERS EXTENDED.—in aceordanci; with the recent act of 'Congress, Capt. Eyster, our Provost,Marshal, has issued hand-bills , giving notice that the liberal bounties of $4 2 - veterans and $BO2 for new recruits will paid to all who enlist before the Ist March , next. The net quota of each district is about' three fourths of the net quota assigned to each under the late draft. Recruits will be credited to the district in which they are paid local bounty, without regard to their residence, and . per sons .enlisting without local bounty will be credited where they are enroled. Col. Elias B. Troel, Capt. John Dcebler and • Lieut. Benjamin Zook, of this county, are assigned as recruiting agents, and will furnish any in ... . formation desired. We trnst,that an earnest effort will now ba made in every -rlistrictin the county to 811 our quota. Wei feel well assured ‘ that a draft will not be postponed longer than the Ist of March. Gov. CIIRTIN was in Chambersburg on Friday evening, the guest of A, K. MCClure. He returned to Harrisburg on Saturday af ternoon. 11Cliowsu.'s Ba.ritur—This Battery * commanded by Capt. Samuel McDowell,: of this place, has re-enlisted for three years. It comprises three . officers and eighty-two - . men„ and is the largest Battery in'the Army .•-• 1. • of the Cumberland, and the only one from ~, Pennsylvania. Formed in this place in 1861, -;.,._ it was originally attached to the 77th Regt.. 7' r tr s) commanded by Col. Stambaugh, bu was nr.- 4 terwards madeanindesndent or n . tron.''' Its first officer , was Cap• 111 - ouler who sub- sequeittly resigned and - was au eed by .. 1; Capt. Stevens. Upon bil death al4he attle of Chickamauga, Lieut. Samuel lApowell. ''''; the present commander, was appointed.— Durini, the- time it has been in service, it lost fifteen men killed or died from wounds. For honorable and courageous service at the battles, of Murfreesboro, Chattanooga and Chickamauga, favora4e notice was taken by the commander of the army in his regular reports. It is the first Battery repo t ried as Harrisburg for re-enlistment. The Captain, with a late ,numbei of the members from this 1 lace, are mot+ home on thirty days leave. They are all in excellent health and by speech and action enthusiasti cally in favor of a vigorous prosecution of the war. THE DISTRICT (ZIT, OTAS.--Wii have receit ed officially from the Provost Marshal the quota' of each district in this county, The nuniber given is the net quota, instead of fifty per cent added, and the whole number most be raised.; Greencastle and llercersbtog have already filled theirs, and Chlmbersburg is about full: An earnest effort would fill the number in every district in the county, and we trust thit i t it will be•doie. The seV eral quotas are as follows : Antrim , 48 Mentgomerr•-• Greencastle 21 Mereersburg -Chambersburg li. W... -41 Peters Chambersburg S. W.... 31 Quincy ... Fannett - - 20 St. Thomas 20 Green , ~ 35 Southampton -s. 21: Guilford • 38 Warren 9 - Ilamilpn 18 Washington...... N.... 31 LetterkezmY Lurgan' t Metal MILriARV I CLAIMB.—Through Jno. R. Orr, Esq., t — re is a probability at all .claims against this State, by those performing mili tary duty) at camp McAllen near this place, in the three months service, being paid. Mr. Orr has appeared before 'the Military Board of Claims at Harrisburg, and - every case presented by him" has_been decided upon; favorably. Those interested who have not ; as yet reporied to Mr. Orr, should db - so at once, as he has been selected by Otn.iiicAllen; the Commandant of the post at the time, too„ , _ collect these claims, antd the time*their presentation is limited. Some of the money has been already collected and paid to the_ parties entitled to it. LISI7T. M. W. Hotsza.=-This officer at tached to Vo. C, 's7th Regt. Penna. Vols., Gen. Campbell's old command, has arrived" at his home in this plaee and hus full power - to recruit for his regiment. He has opened a recruiting station in the office of: Thomas L. Fletcher, Esq., on East Marketi Street.— Those who desire to enter the In tr(Ty ser vice would do well tnenlist with I l iellenant Hower. - -The fact that the entire ''retiment has A-enlisted for three years indicates the popularity of the officers and_ the efficiency of the organiiatien. The regiment isvom manded by Col. Peter Sides, a most capable and brave officer.' COL. BOYD'S Cavalry, the 21st Pennsylva nia, has been ord.Ted here for re-organisa tion. The companies on duty with lifin on the border are now encamped' near town, and three other companies on duty in the coal legions, will be here In a few day!. This command has won 'unusual credit for new troops by its uniform gallantry and.ar duous service, and we are glad to learn that most of the men will re-enlist for thre4Cars: Col. Boyd is a superior officer, and will be held in. grateful remembrance by the people of the border for his services during the last six months. To Dnerrxn Mfm.—We invite attention to the card' of Jere Cook, Mgr, in our adver tising column's, tendering his services to men who have legal claims fin exemption froat military service. His official connection with the Prevost Marshal's office during this Late draft, makes him perfectly familiar with . the laws and the routine of business, and ap pliefult‘t can confide such cases to him •fully assured that they *ill not be wronged by extortion CLICAtt OPP TEE SNOW.—For the safety of life and limb our citizens should-be par ticular with each fall of snow to clear it from the pavements. A thaw is often succeeded , by a sudden freeze and the Sidewalks become 84 slippery that the use of them is dangerous. A number of persons have recently injured themselves severely by falls upon ' slipperi pavements, and for the future our suggestion should not be disregarded. . • AczNOWIZDOESIENT.—We are requested , by Mr.' Henry Williams, (colored,) to se!: knowledge-the receipt of forty-five dollars and twenty cents contributed by a number of our citizens for the purpose ofplaeing new4eats in:the Bethel (colored) Church of this place. PASTOR CROSZN.—/ter. P. W. Conrad, of Lancaster, has been unanimously elected pastor of thO4,utberan Congregation of this =I .‘-vlio. 3 1 IMII NEI i Waynesboro' Total.. ..... _.iTi ME