4 tranhlin 'Wednesday, April: 6 ;; T1215M.- - ... 521i0r annum in 'actO ace; or .s2.to not within the - year. ac .. littottliptust Le eeUted annually. if o paper will,be ,nett out of the State unless paid for in advance. ADVERTISEMENTS are iiiierted at raN ,cents .per litte s tor first insertion, and Prs4: cents per line for each - subsequent insertion. AlrertiFenielats of "Aye lines or less are charged 50 cents for firk inser tion and 25 cents for each subsequent insertion; and 'Advirttliernents exceeding five fines and not ex sceeding ten lines, are charged $1 for first insertion ?and 50 cents for each insertion thereafter. All Obituary and Marriage notices exceeding five filet, and all communications. resglutiona tmd other 'notices of limited or individual inthrest, a 7 charged ten cents por 1' - r Advertisements or subscriptions may be sent di , reedy; to the Publishers, or through any reSponsible City Agency. M'CLURE & STONP,R,' • . . i Prop' "etors.. Jai K. SURYOCKis authorized td receive Subseriptions and' contract for Advertise ',lents for the REposirciir in the Eastern . , . - •SINGLE COpieS Of the Rt.TOSIT4I2I- can be had at the counter, with or licit/mat wrappers. - Price'live cents: Perons or doling single copies, to be mailed:must enclose a two cent postage stainpi WE give on the second page of to-day's papei. the Bounty Bill recently pa6ed by the legisiatUre. • Ibis now: a_la,w, hand the people Of: the various diatricts can ar rang* their. bounty subscriptions' under its provisions 'without difficulty. It is very latitudinons in its scope, and cpyers alnrst every conceivable ease. - Gux. 11PCLELLAN's Official Report, as Made to the War Department, v9lntani ous as it is, omits quite a numbs •of his deOatchcs to , the President and S e6ret wry Of War. The entire correspondence has ru' been sent to Congress, and we shall at last hare the whole h'stor liVelellan's campaigns. Lritrr. GEN. GRANT left Baltinnire for Fortress Monroe, on Friday last to'confer, with Geri.. Butler. The fact- that Burn side is io•sall friSnr''...ktma.polis with some 50,000 men; alit' that Gen. Smith, one of Gen. Grant's most trusted - officerg, is or dered to7duty on the Peninsida. Ogether with Gen. Grant's visit there, point pretty conehisively to important and immediate operations in that quarter. Gen. Grant returned to Washington on Monday. MAsrLANn votes to-day to determine Whether a Coiivention shall be called to eradiev.te Slavery forever' from its soil, and also to elect Delegatea. We cannot doubt' that the issue will be a decisiire verdict in behalf of Freedom. Once dis mathralledfrom the blight of human bon dage, a new and bright future will open for our, sister Commonwealth, and'anothz or tribute will be 'added to the faith of the- fathers who founded 'the RepubNe upon the inalienable rights of Man. CoL. COLD, the rebel commissioner of exchange, came to visit Gen. Butler under tin of truce on 'Friday last, to confer about the exchange of prisoners. It is Confidently expectecLthat they will make arrangements for the speedy i'elease of all our prisoners. After all _.the blusfkr of the rebels about hoklingnointereoarse with Butler, they invited him to Rich mond finder flag of trace to arrange ex -chankes, and when he refused, they sent their, commissioner to his-head-quarters. Cot. QUAY, Military Secretary of Gov., Curtin, spent some Ahlys.in Washfnegthn last week to get•the quota of troops due from 'this§it;tte definitely ascertained. It haslioteen ' officialy ktermined; but, • ,ead of ,being in arrears some'74,ooo men as has beetcpublished, the record at Washiiigton wiltirTobably show an excess of some 10,000, exclusive of the last call. If this should be the official finding of.the, Provost Marshal General, Pethisylvania will have but 16,000 to furnish under the late call; and the yeterans now in ser vide would mosi•likely supply that nun).- berby re r enlistments... - Gov. CurEni has • been indefatigable - in.hiS efforts-to correct the 'credits justly diia to thiaState, and, weare glad to le4rn that he has been entirely successful. Tiir, Rebels and the 'Democracy sus tained: two disastrous defeats recently. Gen. Forrest advanced upon Paducah with some 5,000 men, And• it was manifestly part of the plan that he was to capture thatpoint and then inangurate revolution In the Southern portion of Illinois, where :they reject - free schools and vote the Detnecrat# ticket with a yell.= But Col. Hicks, tW nilon commander at Paducah, =fortunately Tor the "plan" and the alliP4l,- not only refused to - ,surrender the pod and his MCA; but actually repulsed thou and , compelled Forrest to retreat leaving his dead and wounded behind him. n the...meantime, his Democratic allies in S4therii Illinois, started their revolution in wyeral • counties, and finally were round or 'captured .and taught-the pro priety oforder and obedience to the laws,' by Union ; soldiers. Boit of the allied patties failed. The Illinois Democracy failed to aikForrest at Paducah, and For. rest failed to aid the :Democracy in their fevtdrttlext-180 the immegiate l partauship • is supposed to be dissolved until further awfice.. THE PITCSKIIMXIA4L,,STRUGGLE. Jlr + The c,arnpaign of ,186¢ opened-with the utter discomfiture, of. the' Democracy in New Hampshire, and there -must be a counter current of popularopinionXiiitin the next six months hitherto unknown in bur political history', lithe loyal States do not vote as a unit fora, Presitaitial can didate of unquestioned devoon to the Cause of our commoncountry. The close ofile63 left the DeMocracy without a single victory within the year. The Em pire State repudiated , Seynthur by nearly, 50,000; Ohio rejected Tallandigham -by over 100,000; - Pennsylvania defeated Woodward with. all his eleventh hour professions of loyalty, by over 15,000, ' although some 70;000. soldiers were dis frauChised ; and , Indiatia, Illinois, and every debatable State declared unequivo cally in favor of the policy of the National Administration. 1864. The new year which is to witness•the I most momentous National struggle ; in the 1 history of the government, clearly fore, shadows the result in November next, New Hampshire was contested with an energy amounting- to desperation, and ' both sides claimed the victory with equal confidence; but the , vote in support of the 'administration candidates astounded friend and foe. -Where the. Union men claimed but 1,000 majority, they received 1 ._. over 5,000, and scarcely a Democratic candidate survived the struggle to tell that his party had organize& existence. Con; necticut followed on Monday last, with the decisive repudiation 'of the Deineer . my , and Rhode Island will.certainly follow in the same patriotic deVotion to our imperil- ~ ed Nationality. . Admonished as the . Democracy - have been by universal defeat in 1863, and the foreshadowing 'of like disaster in 1864. they have ceased to claim distinctiVeprin-, ciples, and have resolved themselves into mere political camp-followers. The late Democratic.. State Convention, , held in Philadelphia, on the p4th ult., furnished the most striking and humiliating evi dence of the utter demoralization 'of that once great and dangerous political organ ization... It had in it \ the same leading spirits' who drove it 'to the very verge of open treason in 1863 , ; 'who endorsed Val landigham, and denounced only the loyal government, while the bloody usurpation of Davis passed without a word - of con demnation; but they feared to avow their principles again, and with unblushing treachery declared themselves willing to adopt any platform that promised success. It• l n4 be made to suit South Carolina, or it may be made to harmonize with Massaihusetts,--either will be acceptable if it can only promise success. And what is Democratic success accord ing to the policy of the leaders? They do not hope to elect the next President; they well know that under the most fa vorable condition of things they cannot poisibly,give to any Democratic condi -date a majority of the electoral vote.— \That, therOs their aim? .. The deliberate _purpose of the_Denwer atie leaderg is to de feat the election - of a President in Novem ber next! They are not fools; they do not hope to carry New Hampshire in No vember when it gatve 5,500 against them in March; they do not calculate on sac sess in Connecticut iu the sumac year that' it gave 5,500 , majority in condenination !of them and their policy - in April; they cannot reverse, Neiv York with_ 50,000 ' agninat them in 184 mid_ the soldier ate, to'be added in 1864; they are not weak enough to vomit ou; Pennsylvania when 70,000 soldier's are to. swell tlye loyal side. in the next struggle 2 ;. 'and if. these States , are beyond their control, they are hope less in the intense Republican Suites, such as *assachusetts, Vermont, Maine, Ohio, Michigan,' Wisconsin,. Minnesota, lowa &c., while the regenerated Southern States are, of, all others,' the most implacable in their hostiffty to Northern sympathisers with the rebel cause. But in the face of theSe tviwouraging facts, which they comprehend an(t Nl p re elate fully, they are hopeful thit may deceive the people into dereiithig the election of • the Union •,, t,=4; and if 111 . so, they will have att - :. .7eir.CiONVii ing purpose, by pin 47iiinment into anarchy/ This ' drily can they proMise the Nation. k'':ethein the strongest possible political curent in their ?favor in November next, • and the very most they can accomplish is the defeat . ' of a choice in the electoral college; and that once affected, there can he no elec tion of President, and anarchy is as hies-. /table as the rising sun.. They can carry ItentnCky, probably Missouri, Oregon and New Jersey, and they hope to divide the Union strength of the West, by a divers -1 ion of the radical German element, so as to give them Indiana, Illinois and several `other States. This done, they have achieved their victory, for the nominaot the Baltimore Convention would fail Of ; an election. They expect nothing more— indeed most of them want nothing more. They would prefer losing their own can= didate by a failure, to elect any, to the success of their candidate if he is suspect ed of any degree offidelity to the Union; and to defeat a choice, therefore. would be •then .complete victory. The House could not ,elect, for it would require a majority of all'the States 9f the ;Union to e pwly witt.the provisions .of the -Con - t X 0 .7 tipos stitution;. and Pennsylvania, Ohio, 'Mis- Indiatt,. Nei Illinois and ; New Jersey, have now Dem ocratic delegations and would vote Dem (i.cratic,' while "Maryland, West Virginia, Delaware - and the ReOublican States would vote.for the Union candidate;buta majority of - the States could not possibly be concentrated on either candidate, and the government would be brought to in extricable chaos, This ,would be the triumith of the Hughes, i the Woods, the Vallandighams, and their coadjutors, and the Nationality of Our fatherti would cease to exist save in history. Prom anarchy and the revolution it wOnld inaugurate, We should in the end find refuge either in a new Despotism or in the Despotism of I Treason. —Such is the aim, thei settled purpose of the Democratic leaders in the coming Presidential struggle. Failing to over throw the government by,their treacher ous sympathy with traitors thus far; their last hop is . t 6 . destroy the Republic by defeating the election of a President in November nest, and hurlingtwenty'mil , lion. , of people into hopeless anarchy. Let oyal Men •ponder well as to the en tertainment to which they are.iinvited.' OUR STATU. REENVES. A thorough revision of our:Staterev enue laws, long demanded , by equity, is now demanded by imperious 'necessity. The revolutionists of the 'Senate 'resolutely refused to allow any; legislation for the relief of the Treasiny the interest on'the State debt matured,; . anq the enor mous suns of half a Million. was literally plundered from the *payers:to gratify the studied purpose of the Democracy to embarass our finances , and .strike a blow at our National credit. Sucka , depletion of the treasury, with the Heavy demands made upon it in "the nulitatry deparment, 'must render the / ordinary • reV.ennei un equal to the expenses of the 'gevernment; and unless our tax system is '.searching-' ly and sensibly revised, we Shall hav44 a. sadly enibarassed treasury i before the close,of the fiscal year. Adincrease in taxes' is. notnecessa and if it be done, it will simply show that, the legislature is wanting in tut intelligent comprehension of - our vast reSourceS. our present rate, of taxes .was imposed equitably, we would nearly if not quite! double our revennes; audit is confessedlyl true that the property and capital which! escape taxation most, are thoSe.whicharei least deserving of exemption. Not one-! tenth the money actually at interest is! taxed for State purposes; and there are thousand'avenneS of profitable business; which manage to evade our presentloose and incongruous tax laws. Our system, Of valuation is perfectly farcical, and will `so remain until we pave such enactment as will enforce fair valuatiOn in'eVeryi, section of the Commonwealth. Ottrl Board of Revenue (onamissioners hasi .1 bcconie a mere aggregation of joekeyl shift taxation from point to point, -as the more skilful mebibers Can best suceeed; and the whole system,i fromi beginning to end. -is behind the age invites dishonesty and at last fails to nic•et the wants of the treasury. _ , , . Naturally enough the Rcipresentativei from the Agricultural 'dis i tricts 'pounce upon corporations, and if they can only save lands from taxation, their missionAS accomplished whether the necessities of the treasury are met jor net.. It is but right that corporate "Wealth should pay a much larger share of the taxes than oat lands, for the reason farming does not afford iramense profitS,, On the conl-, tory, it requires iudnstry mid frugality to pay a_moderate interest, on the investr: ment„ While many Corporations divide large gains to their stockholders. But: corporate wealth should be - taxed unit formly, and actual profits, not Unreinuner ative capital, should be the basis; and it ~ ,slienid be so imposed as to reach all and operate justi3= in its bardens. To tax the gross earnings of Ilailrtads and other -transportation compailies,,Without regard, to te r nett revenues, would be a great . wrone'r-he Quinberland Valley could afford td pay ttr*,ax upon its gross receipti; but hoer' would l - bsieratel, on the Prank : - lin, that-does not PO' the interest on its bonds, nincli less dividends mton its stocky So the Pennsylvania i_lentral could afford it;' but ihow with the Philadelphia and Erie ; tie Allegheny ValleV; the .Coli f . nellsvil e and similat - roads. whiCh - have never d dared a dividend, and probably won't d dare one for ten, years to come 1' Such a system of taxation, would be most, unjust and should not be entertained. Actual capital, dividends and surplus funds corporatiOns i are l eg iti m ate sources of revenue by is cation, and *t r a judicious and uniform system reaching them, our laws would be entirely just , and vastly increase the revenues of the I Valuations should.e honest; and Until they are made so, we shall have every conceivable frauds practiced. Everyidol ler, tit interest should be' reacted by some prup li er and effectual prOcess, and lands shOuld be rated at their actualcash value. The uniform custom now is th value real estate at about one-third the trice it could be bought for,:and in many tections, the Yaluition is not more than one-fourth. The people elect their Assetsors, and as xii,: - I,tiii,i! - - 6 - ; ; : 1864-: the general effort is to reduce. the valua tion Of 1404, all feel justifiable in labor.' ing and voting to:bring their own to the loWeSt possible Point.: This ,system is vicious andunfortunate for both the peo ple and the State ; and it cannot too soon , he broken up. If our lands were valued justly, "a tat of tivo mills upon real estate. with; a - judicious'. tax systerri reaching all other sources - , of wealth, would be more thaaa enough to Meet all the Wants of the government andinsure the gradual liqui dation of the debts - If-for no, other rea son, the necessityforniutual integrity be,. tween the •tax,payers- and the! State de mands thoronglOmd honest. valuation. - —Ne beg tcy:, remind the legislature that' thereis a vast amount of 4 money due the :Stat&for ,Unpatented lands which should be promptly collected. There is no consideration of justice or public pol icy that can require ionger indulgence to • - - tbose Who have: held possession Of`lands 'for Years, :withOut pretendin'g:to pay the ' clabn of the State. It is estimated that tive,nallliont are_ due the common , ,wealth fo - t . lands ; , aad the time has came when the. State greatly needs it, and the people are abundantly lible to pay. 7 It is unjUsfte thoge , haVe honestly paid for their lands to allow others to hold and enjoy, the Use, of theirs without- paying a farthing for them; and the times are most propicious for calling in this vast reve nue. Let it be demanded promptly and collected,rand if net needed for theordi - nary expenses of the government, let it be devoted to the various military expen ses incurred in preserving our National imd to tempering the 'sorrow of the many .who have been bereaved by the murderous arm'' of Treason. 01:Tit atrDICIAL The'l4slature 'erred grievonsly in .1551. by its failure to reduce thOttunber of Ju dicidl districts in this State before any of the Judges were chosen by tbe,people: OnCe chOsen for ten years;it :was.next ? impossible to consolidate diSt-:tiets, where it involved the, legislation of Judges out: of office. Very many of the districts were confessedly too small—not requiring more than from twelve to sixteen 'week's labor out of the fifty-two on thei part of the tPresident Judges and instead of correct ng this evil, the legislature every once. in a while erects a new district and di minishes the labors of else 'Judges and Wantonly increases the cost of our - courts. We: have-been led to' refer to this sub= ject by tle passage of a bill in the Sen ate-to erect a new Judicinl4istrict out of Union and LyComing eounties: There is •• - neither local necessity or public policy to 'favor sucWa Measure. Judge WOod, off LeWistown, has Union,,! Snyder and Mifflin for his; district, and lie, is not•em plOyed over twelve weeks in the . year. Tike Union fiinu his (lisp:let; and he will have Seareelyeight w4k4 of court—leaV ing him idle five-sixths of his time ; and the, Jadge in the new district, would have einplOyment not over' ten, or at the mit 'side, !twelve Weeks. Nor are 'any of the distriell contiguenglo the new one at all laboijous. JUdge Gfraham not employ ed over fourteen =weeks the Cumber land; Perry and Juniata diStriet . ; Judge JOrdan is not employed half—probably not one-third' his._ time in the Northain berlatuldishici; Judge Liun could much better take Weounty to hiS district than sPare one; so with Judge Taylor, and so with two-thirds of the Judgo of the State. Why, then, erect;new districts which are not called for by any public necessity, and Which Public policy so clearly fOr bids I Why impose needless bOrdens upon the treasury when eyery dictate Of jiistice and economy -a demands that our Judicial districts be diminished in mitn bet rather than increased`? If any aspir ing wants to• _beconie a Judge,• let lain bide his time; and not demand to be pensioned needlessly on the treasury, to dO little or nOthing, and to diminish the labors of these who are . already cursed With idleness'. WOutbnut to the legisla ture thatthere' eanbe no rational justifi cation of 'such. a measure; _audit should be promptly- defeated by the House. Our Judicial districts should be care fully revised.,' but the tithe' is not - yet at h'''and when it con ,be done with entire justice.. In 1871 when-moat of the Judges, ,are to b choseu'again, the dititricts should 'he diminished fully one-fourth, and tie Awl lIPAL d:could' ford to coirtiensate them Properly - With . .. out increasing' the cost of our courts. Irntil then they certainly should not be increased' iv number. " lii case , of -the death or resiinaiiannf any..Tudgc, if at all practicable, his,' district should be, parti tioned to others where there is not cm.' ployinent for the Judges' half the cline. AboVe all things the legislatiire should Ovoid such. legislation looking, to the' benefit of individuals at ; the Cost of the: , . people. , • 5 Pawl rtiallaniligham. I. One year, ago he vcias the martyr of the, Democracy-- was nionthtated for Governor amidst, the ivildest enthusiasm and deafening cheers ---was greeted by the Democracy' of Penn- Eiyiv4rtia as one,. whose Cause was made their. cause; and every Democratic press and prator was eloquent in Portraying the kratentipn of a traitor. But now the people Itave C.Ondemned him in their de • votim to their government, and he is per mitted.to fall in the house of his friends as a mill-stone no longer - to be borne. , In the late Ohio . Convention he was beaten for Delegate at large the National ICon vention—the vote a ndin for Itanney, 216; for Val. 212; an 4 the ennsylvaidal Donocracy seemed forgetft tli,at such a man as - Val. over live l. Stich is the tate - , . of a traitor! . .............1 ....;,... , . TOE steamship city. oilCork4with European dates to the 21st. instant, ,arrived at New York on,Stituoday.. Prince' Frederick, of Augusten burgis reported to have been 'found dead in his bed ut Kiel on the morning of the 18th. On, the 18th 'three Prussian men-of-war attacked the Danish blockading squadron off Griefs Uvalde, Ponterania, bat after an engagement of two hem* thC Prussian vessels returned to:the har bor. !On the 17th there" was fighting all along the line of Thippel village, and the Tonjeberg position was taken - by the Prussians. after a heroic resistance bythe Danes. The position of Duppel. was unharmed,but-the bombardment of the intrenchinents, according, to a Flensburg dispatch, was - renewed the' next • day,- and n terrific dannondade was going. cm, AtiTiel."3 front:StoCkholin to the Isth - state that fresh disturbanees have taken place. The "police office was attacked, andthewindowsin the resi dence of the chief.of the-police wore smashed. AliKANAS.—Althougli Arkansas is the sec ond , hf the secorleti States to hold an 'election in renewed allegianee to .-the Constitution, she. will be the 'first to resume her place in the Union. On the 14th of March she adopted her new free constitution by a popular vote of over ten thousand; in }spite of the threats,' and, in many plaes, the actual interference of rebel guerillas. • Three members are elected 4 - o the }lonic , of Representatives from the several districts. The Legislature, which meets next mouth, will proceed 'to fill the vacant seats in the United States Senate. The Governor elect is Isaac Murphy, who was " faithful among the faithless found" in the conveittihn that voted. Arkansas out. of the Union. ' "The last shall be first" in this case, for the State that closed the file 'of the sePeders,,now heads the column of regenerated States which have already be gun seeking, repentant but glad, the fold of the Union. , J,E4E. CLEMENS, fiqueity U. S. Sep- - ator from' Alabama,: in a late Union speech de livered at Huntsville, gave the - following secret of the bombardment of Fort Sumter: "In 1861," said Mr. C, "shortly after the Confederate Government-was put in operation, • I was in the city of Montgomery. One day, I' stepped into the•Foffiee of the,Seeretary of War, Gen. Walker, and found 'there, engaged in a very excited discussion, Mr. Jefferson DaVis,, Mr. Menannager, Mr. Benjamin, Mr. Gilchrist, a member of our Legislature from Lowndes county, and - a number of other prominent,gen tledaen. They were discussing the propriety of immediately opening fire on Fort Sumter, to which Gen. Walker, the Secretary of War, ap peared to -be opposed. Mr. Gilchrist said to him: 'Sir, unless you sprinkle bleed iirthe face of the people of Alabama, they will be back in the old Union in less than ten days !' The neat day; Gen. Beauregard opened his batteries on Sumter, and Alabama was saved to the Con federaey." . BILL, completely reorganizing the militia of the Commonwealth, making• theta more ser viceable for resisting raids from the enemy, has been prepared •by the Chairman' of the Coni- Enittege on the Militia system, and read in place in the House. It is built mainly 'upon the Mas sachusetts system, and meets the approval of the'. Adjutant General. Under • this bill, the State is divided into Regiments •and Brigades, and it preSeribes the manner of.choosing all the , Offleeri of the minor organizatiens, elective. it gites Philadelphia four brigades, Allegheny one. The pay Of each officer,-non-commission ed officer and private is - thO same as that of the regalter service, allowing, however, thirty cents for rations to each man. Pr fine of seventy-live doliars,is impoied for non-attendance. - CAPT. Wm. P. IluADv, long an-officer of the Pennsylvania , Senate, died on 'l.Monday last, aged over 60 years. He Was with Commodore Perry at his victory on " take Erie 4ariii g the war`, of 1812, for which he received a silver medal from . Cotigress. He was the Whig can didate for Assembly in the Clinton, Lycomin g and Sullivan district in 1846, but,was defeated. In 1847 he was 'chosen Assistant Sergeant-at tains in the Senate, and has remained hi that position ever sin en the face of all the political mutations that body has experienced. He was invaluablEtis ail ofileer and his fintiliar face and kind attentions to Senators will be sadly missed iu the first legislative tribunal of the State.- - Peach to the - ashes of Capt. Brady. - As THE mountain would not go to Mahomet, Mabomethas come to the mountain. Thereby' Commissioner, Col Ouhi, who some time since deClined to hold any, communication with. " - Beust"Butler, with reference to exchange of prisoners; arrived at Fortress Monroe on Wed neSdity, on a flag of truce boat, and bad a very cordial interviEw with the General, the result of whien is not yet promulgated, as their inter course will probably continue for two or three dap. A proposition was made to Gen. Butler j•aper, .to Richmond,, with prtimises _ urephi proteetion ; but he decline &iwa the'rebyl Corn. misasioner has:, therefore, paid a visit to hi ifexteils news to the 19th ult. have been re ceived. Juarez has ,published a decree separa= . ting the State of Coahuila from New Leon. The repiart of the Papture - of Guadalajara bYTTraga and the shooting of Aliramon is , pronounced an fonnded. Uraga is said to be •marching to the south - of Morelia. Ortega is reported to lave been routed in 'Jalisco by the, French, and'to hare disbanded his troops. The French have abandoned• Tobaseo and Xinatitian. The French cruisers are soon to 14cluideMazatian, hlanzanilla and Guayamas. THECincinnatt Gazette remarks that "the protracted and heated struggle in - - the (Ohio) State Democratic Convention; seems tohave been over a difference of opinion, whether Mr. Vallandigham or Gen. McClellan is the best representative of the peace and surrender De mocracy. WW 441 qbliged to declare ouraston,, ishtirat •thitt may , one-half the Convention 4 i9nted get). McClellan's pre-eminent claims to this cintranter• THE Cincinnati Enquirer Lays down the "prirteipla of the Ohio "DeuMeritei! , 'ficthi s wise: "Thee can be no war under the 'Ceasti tution for the coercion of a arriorei ga R ide. The Democracy stand by the Constitution, and insist that such a war cannot be Kosecutediter - any le,gitirnate or just purpose, or in any Nit Manner." On this platform the Ohio " Deihne racy" run Geo. B. McClellan. • JuDGE Itanses, hf North Caroßatt, in a xc cent habeas corpus case tried before Nei; decid ed Mat the act passed by the Raid Congress for, the conscription of persons who jiate Sure isea substitutes for the war was unconstitii tioid. • ' niNiNta ow LIMIT PRISON. A long and interestieg speech Waitnade by Gen. Nat Dow, at Portland, Maine, on Friday last;-at the public reception . given himby the citizens', and in the course of his remarks, he' confirmed the report that the rebels in Rich: mond mined the Libby Prison, at the approich Ofßilpiitrick's forces. The General gave.the following account of the barbarousitet: - 0 They told us of- .I(dlpatrick's raid. On the firstof March arrangements had been made tit receive him.' And what do you suppose the ar rangements were? :To defend Richmond? Was that it? No. They mined Libby Prison, mirk the intention of blOwing it and-us; to use their own, Phrase, - 4 to blow ito bell!' there.proof of that?) That is capable of proof. - I cannot tell you how the fact was intimated to us the next day, without betraying those from whom the information came. On the morning of Wednesday, March 2d,'after we had.been-in formed of the gunpowder plot, Dick Turner, the Inspector of Military Prison; was asked. by, many-officers at different times if we were cor rectly informed, and he assured us Hue; true ; that a large quantity of povvderThadheen placed under. the prison, to blow us up, if Kilpatrick had come in, and that it Would be done yet if attempts were made to rescue us. ' "Rev. Dr. Smith. President ofßandolph Ma con College, well known down South, .and known in the North too as au able : and influen tial man, came into the prison to visit Lieuten ant Colonel Nichols, of the Eighteenth Conn - Beet regiment, with whom he wits acquainted. He stated that powder had been placed in the basement 'for the purpose of "blowing us into atoms." Col. Niehola did not believe it. Dr. Smith assured him it was so. He had then come from the office of Judge Ould, Commis sioner of Exchanges, who told him that it was so. Rev. Dr. McCabe said' the same-thing to Colonel Cesnol4 of the Fourth New York (till . - - airy, and others. Some 'pricers' were in the hack kitchen at the window, directly over the door leading into the cellar. Major Turner. the commandant of the prison—Dick Turner---: and four or five rebel officers went into the cel lar, and on coming 'out they remainefla few minutes at the door, and one of the officers said, "By,G—, if you tench that off it will blew them to it—, sure enough? On'the morning We came away, Major Turner assured Captain Sawyer and Capt. Flynn, who wero . exchanged in connection with myself, that powder w•aa there. and he said, "rather than have you res cued I would have bloWn you to even if we bad gone there, ourselves." At- first we could not believe it, not that we did not sup-. pose them capable of it. We - did mot suppose' them to be fools enough to be guilty of an act like that. The destruction of nine hundred Federal. idiom in that way would not have been a fatal blow to the Union' cause, but it would have drawn down upon them the execra tions of all mankind.; :it wonld have united the Northern people as one Ilion, and would have filled the Northern heart with an -intense indig,- natioti, and when Richmond should be captur ed, it would have been , utterly destroyed and blotted out forever from the earth. A first we could not believe,that such an act could have been contemplated, but we now regard it as es tablished by satialaethry proof. Such is the temper of• the leaders of the rebellion! Such their character. DIFFICULTIES OF A CAMPAIGN IA VIRGINIA. If Gee. Grant does not defeat Lee and drive the rebels out of Virginia in' three months, or if he does not Win` in every move and every hat- - tle, he will not be hooted ,down and disgraced. We know now by sad experience what war is and what are the- obstacles to be overcome in. Virginia. From a calm and Soldierly article on the Army of the Potomac, in the Army and iVaey Journal; we take some instructive hints as to the difficulties'of a campaign in Virginia: On the Tight of our,army are chains Of mon.. tains which enable the rebels to conceal any flanking movement they may undertake, while the valleys afford to them the means for no easy and uninterrupted passage to the Potomac above Washington, and one almost entirely secure from attacks in their rear. On our front is lt succession of rivers, presenting great natu ral obstacles to our advance, and at the same time easily defensible; to make flanking move ments by ascending them is to open current attacks from Fredericksburg, and to cross below the rebel army, leaves the railroad a prey t 4 guerrillas. The country is,.inoreover, masked in every direction by dense forests, rendering anything like' a surprise in force impractieabi,..... • . A few rebel scouts may at all times easily detect and thwart such a movement. Such are the, natural features of the eountry. It is a well known rule of military operations that a "base" should neither be too extended nor too limited; and that it should be`accessible by several routes. The base of the Army of the Potomac is just the width of a railroad track, and that railroad furnishes really the onlyprat ticable route- of communication. -For every; mile of advance beyond Fairfax Court House, MO men arc requiredto protect:the rear. The:, leaders of the rebels of course , understand all these circumstances, and are always ready ;to take advantage of them. They are folly aware, thht they can hold in check, with three-fourths of its force, the Army of the Potomac. Mean time, they pursue the Fabian policy--:the policy of Washington on the mountains of the Hudson river. They Are not foolish enough to stake everything on the risk of a battle f exCept where invulnerably fortified. They -will not- attack, nor will they accept a battle in the own rear 'needs no protection theyhavetWo - , railroad routes besides all the ordinary roadi. Thus they have all the advantage of lioaitioa on their, side.- But are we in view of these difficulties to ex pect nothing from the Army of the Potomac ?. No,.it may overcome them in two - or three ways. First, with a sufficient force to cover its Banks, it may compel the enemy to retreat asilitick mond tabe abandoned. Second, it maybe able' to bring on an - engagement; whieb,will -prove decisive. Third, by cutting if To'4?se fioniWasir ington, and making it a raovoitble eirlattea; it may go at any time to the rear of the rebel ar my and open a new base for itself' on the Pa;-; mnnky or York rivers, or by the railroad.from - Fredericksburg. We risk nothing in -saying: that the army can at any time go to Riehmoa; if relieved 'from the necessity of protecting its"-, rear. ;This could have been done last fall, when General. Meade crossed the Rapidan and was, stepped by the rebel works on Mme gun. armycaii transport' fifteen days, subsistence and foragv t - . Aid . with this it can be movedlo Bane-' yer e*to House, where it can operate on A . neittteee - ; or, if succeisill inTercmg tbe rebel lines, can even enter Richmond at once.