U trituldiu Nqtroitorg. Wednesday, Jane 8, 1884. TERMS.—S 2 per annum in advance; or $2.50 if not paid within the year. AU subscription ac 'tetints must be settled annually. No paper will be sent out of the State unless paid for in advance. ADVERTISEMENTS are inserted at TEN cents - per bliefoy first insertion, and PM? cents per line for each subsequent insertion. - Advertisements of Ave lines or less are charged 50 cents for first inser tion and 25 cents for each subsequent insertion; and Advertisements 'elm are 'five lines and not seeding ton lines, Charged $1 for first insertion and 50 cents for each insertion thereafter. ' An Legal Notices, of every kind, and all Or:- 44 - ans' Court and other Judicial Sales, are required by law to be ativei Need in the REPOSITORT—i! having the largest circulation of any i paper published in the county of Franklin. All Obituary and Marriagvi notices exceeding five Ines, and all communications; resolutions and other notices of limited orindividual interest, are charged .ten cents-per line. Advertisements or subscriptions may be sent di -reetly to the Publishers, or through any rosp - onsible City Agency. • 31'CLUILE egTONER, SINGLE copies of the REPOSITORY can 'be had at the Counter, with or without wrappers. Price five cents. Persons or dering single copies to be mailed must enclose a two cent postage stamp. PARTISANSHIP AND THE LENIENCY OF THE GOVERNMENT. FroM the very •nature of our govern ment, political partisanship is inevitable, and so far from being= pernicious, it con stitutes our chief safe=guard. Its sleep less vigilance, its eager scrutiny into the policy and character of tl men in power, prevent the outrage of pub N ic rights, pre serve comparative purity in the adminis tration of affitirs, and promote the best interests of the people. At all times it has it abaSes, but its general - tendency is toward'' permanent good. Remove its guardianship for a lengthened period, and unrestrained officials might drive the na tion to the very brink, if not into the very abyss, of ruin. •But partisanship should always be subservient to patriotism.— hen its self-love and aggrandizing spir it-seek its ends outside of patriotism, it becomes treason, and is none the less des picable or dangerous that it does not openly bear arms against the republic. When our common country is threatened, the test Of patriotism is simple. They whose hands are • not • - with it are against it, andtheleart that finds sympathy-with its foes is of them. -The administration represents the government, is the agent selected by the people botany it forward. Factious opposition to •the civil authori ties is disloyalty. All opposition is not necessarily so. - Our rulers may be un wise, nay even unfaithful, and their mea- Sures 'are then legitimate subjects of con demnation. We should endeavor to cor rect unwise or wicked measures; and re move, in the proper manner, their with _ors. This is not factious opposition; this is a different-thing from Maligning public functionaries, for the sake of selfish ad- - vuncethent; from crippling their efforts so as to make a popular sentiment against them from an ill - success which is the con se qaence of this very antagonism; from - apologizing for treason ; from magnifying the power and abilities, and Purity of traitors ; and from underrating the state manship and the generalship of the faith ful. In the present hour of our country's agony, partisanship is guilty of these high crimes, and from the mean motive of grasping the power of the Republic it is paisuing just such a course as will-make her powerless, and degrade the imperial protectress of -the people into au:imbe cile, drivelling; guardian of Slavery. The President of the United States has ceased to be the standard bearer of a mere party, and holds aloft - before the eyes of mankind the blessed banner that symbolizes freedom to the whole, world. Around him cluster the loyal citizens of all parties—at his call, hundreds of thou ' sands of brave men of all political creeds have gone ft,),r, th with their lives in their •hands to suffer privations, exposures, toils, cruel; wounds and death, to pre serve our 3Mtiye land from destruction. The partizan aiders iMd abettors of trea son in their comfortable homes in the North,. have mocked the valor of the brave, have dishonored their graves, and jeered at their honorable wounds. They have refused them succor, as well as de nied them sympathy, when struggling "against fearful odds , --have discouraged their friends who were willing to go to their support:by enlisting—have bitterly cried out against the draft that is meant to re-fill the thinned rankiof the army— have connived at desertion, and sheltered deserters who have turned their backs from the very faces of the foe—have es tablished mercenary newspapers to vilify and traduce the government, and have been diligent on all occasions in attempt ing to prejudice the poptdar mind in fa vor of a dishonorable pealee. The favor ite topic of their declamations is the:des potism of the administration. The exile of ai scurrilous traitor lending open com fort' to the enemy is more horribleto their minds than rebel barbarities to fi.outherniloyAlists, their exquisite cruel ties to „patriot soldiers starving in loath-, Lome prisons, or .tbe fiendish butcheries at; Fort Pillaw. The restrictions upon DOwspapera, which, give their aid to the denioniao spirit of . mobs, to the creation . panics; and the feeterlillg.of au influence agni 'onr cause iliroad, are more to*lxs lamented than Lee's invasion of our State and his merciless imprisonment of our cid tens. And the arrest and confinement of plotters against the goVernment in our very midst, is more alarming to theirsensi • tive conceptions of liberty than the giant despotism that threatened to bow the North at its feet,. and plant the ensign of slavery on the dome of the capital and call the roll of its slaves at the base of Bunker Hill Monument. And this howl against the tyranny of the government is raised and repeated by the class of men, who enjoy all . the licentiousness of tongue and pen—from men in the councils of the Na tion down to pot-house brawleti whose', only limitation of speech is the thickened articulation of besotment. Well these treacherous partizans know that never was a governinent more leni ent, more tolerant-Llenient and tolera3at , althost to afatal degree. Well they know. that the North' is overrun with spies— that rebel emissaries thread our roads, sit with us at our tables, swarm about oar armies, and hold positions in our employment They traffic in our large cities—obtain supplies, there for the use of their rebellion, plot the capture: of our vessels, and incite the rabble to re volt and murder. , These inveighers against the tyranny of the.government, are not only weakening its power, but are smoothing the pathway of spies. They are creating an atmosphere in which - a spy may breathe safTy, and affording him facilities to further his mission. They are doing still more, they constitute eVen a rebel army of occupation in the North. Without their co-operationithiswar would have keen over--,the blood of thousands saved—the nation rest:led and far ad vanced on its career of prosperity and glory. But, - thank God, the hour and power of these wickeltreatures are draw ing to'an end—they cannot prevent the final suppression of the rebellion, and the day is not now far distant when they will wish that the swamps of the Chickahoni ./ my, the hills of Gettysbut, or the thick -ets of the Wilderness could. conceal them from the indignation of their countrymen and the contempt of mankind. Proprietors The terms loyal and disloyal are of late usage among us. Hitherto we have look ed upon them as old world phrahes, bet ter adapted to a state of society ruled by a hereditary magistracy than to republi can America. But now a newly awak ened and profound sentiment in the breast of the pefle has appropriated them, and they are in as frequent use among us as in old England itself. We evidently mean something by them, but what is meant is not always clear. With some, loyalty is more a word to -conceal than to express Itheir true senti ments; with .others it is 4mly a name for their own opinions as to the duty of the government it the present crisis. All are disloyal who* not agree with them.. There are others again, and they are gen erally found among those who are sym pathetic with treason and rebellion, who speak of loyalty'ks if it was a legal mat ter; and a man's - disloyalty was to be de termined by.the letter of the law. This is the most dangerous, because the most plausible error on this subject; and• through it thousands of goixt men have become unconsciously disk The fa natic, who measures a great sentiment he has not heart to comprehend, by his own contracted opinions, soon meets with de seried Contempt. Bat it seems like wis dom to say that „ " the Constitution and the supreme law of the land.are the Only measures of loyalty." The mistake of such is that they . make loyalty a legal virtue; they degrade this noble senti ment, placing it on a level with allegiance. 'lt is in no sense a legal subject. The sa preme law of the land no more tells us what it is; than it defines what a virtuous, an honest, or a brave man is. Loyalty ~stands on same footing with honesty, patriotismand bravery; it is a moral subject and lies in the field of right sentiment. Law technically divides obligations into two , classes', the im perfelt and the perfect. -By the " im perfect" it means most curiously those, that are so spiritual and far-reaching, or in other words so perfect that the clumsy machinery of Law cannot reach 'them. The "perfeet" -are those supeficial rela tions that can, be reached by human testi mony. Now .the deepest and strongest sentiments of human nature and among them we class fo - yaltyare those which the law calls "imperfect." In-their source and flow they are beyond legal control; and the law can toneh them only when their violation passes into some wrong that can be reached by testimony. 'Thus a man)nay be dishonest, bat the eivillaW cannot .punish him until his dishonesty passes ,into fraud,. and then, it condemns only for the fraud; he - may be untruthful, bat it is only when untruth passes into slander or perjury that the law attempts redress, and then for these , crimes, not , for his untruthfulness. So it is with loy alty. Civil laW can s •ede nothing with it until it matures into treasonable practices, and then, it is punished as treason, not as disloyalty. When then a man, annoyed with the suspicion that he is disloyal, de fends himself by saying he is a true friend LOYALTY. hg _Oat** 4.4P.Ofmi, 444 e _B, 156.4 of the Constitution, and challenges the law'-to lay' hold on him, he no, - more establishes his innocence than does the dishonest man. who points to the law, and triumphantly asks where it condemns him as a liar. Both of these things belong to the moral department of life, and are to be judged not-as the law tries deeds, but as we all judge sentiments and feelings. Loyalty is not born of the letter of the law. It is what a man feels and does, for his country and its honor, not as compell ed, but of his own free. It is true heart-felt devotion' to its , government and to its cause. It does not measure itself by the constitution or rend the limit of its exertions in the laws. It is not skilled in hiding from _duty under pre tence of saving the constitution. It in deed loves that document and would Sa credly maintain it, but knows of some thing better. Its noblest duties ; are not written in the statute book. To tear one's self from the embrace of Wife or mother that we may stand for our gov ernment amid the horrors of the battle field, to bear wounds without complaint, to be constant in disaster, to be nit dmmt ed when armies reel bleeding from the field, to give money, to minister in the hospital, to encourage the soldier, to pray, to hope, to wait for victory, to- die in the cause— these are not constitutional duties; but they are the natural unconstrained works of true loyalty. A man maybe "consti tutionally loyal," in other words keep his allegiance, and yet ' be as disloyaras the arch traitor himself. linnfortunately there are many such to be found in the North. With mean spirits unable to rise above the trammels of party, they pro -fess to see in the life and death struggle of our country, nothing- more than the policy of an administration. They have no heart to rejoice in the victories of our armies, no tears to lament their defeats. Professing to deplore the mistakes of those in power, they really feed upon them. While the true heart of loyalty is slaw to blame, full of forbearance and patient an der miscarriages, these creatures are in haste to accuse. They- condemn before they know the truth and denounce what they do not understand. They are full of ini;ectives against' the mistake's of government, but they have none to de nounce the treason of our counctry's foes. There is. no law to condemn such, but there is a great and true sentiment in the heart of the people which does brand them as disloyal. Let this be their pun ishment. Let them, like the liar and the coward, live to be despised. Covered with the infamy of having been 'false at its peril, to their country in the hour of peril, it will be punishment enough for them to live and face the looks of those who have suffered and foughkfor our de liverance. THE PNION PARTY -MI ',SKIVES. This interesting to observe how mast of the leadhig Politicians of our country have failed in their prophecies relative to the position and principles of the Union Party during the terrible ordeal now pending. That many prophesies should have been made is not at all singular. In the midst of the life and death struggles, bfwbich, during the last three years densely popu lated States have confronted each other' in bloody battle, and .the most peace ful of our citens have been distracte . tl;lt would indeed have been remarkable, if the spirit of prophecy had not beco,Me general, and if the signs 'Of the times had not prompted a - general prediction of un exampled confusion in our national • poli tics, The leading statesmen of the old Whig and Deniocratic parties despaired of the permanency of the Union, and feared the collision of arms between the North and South.. In order to avert so sad a calam ity, they were on several occasions indu ced to yield to compromise when the' measures then agitating the' public mind should have - been fearlessly Met and set-' tied according to the spirit, if not the let ter of the constitution. These acts of timidity instead of settling' dangerous questions, produced political disorder iu all parties, from which we believe have grown up the different factious of fanatics - , whose extreme views have hurried on the fearful bloody conflict that has , deluged our land. When the gates of Janus were unlocked and thrown open, and three years of fratricidal war like a besom of destruc tion, have swept their way across : the South, desolating tho r mhole Nland, he was a , bold man who ventured to predict a harmonious,order of things to be restored from this tempestuous confusion. How often has'e our ears been greeted with the intelligence that party lines ha:ve been broken up, and that no party organ izations were in existence, save and alone for the purpose of vindicating the integ rity of the Government and restoring the Union. How often have we been told that the Democratic party was national in its doctrines, conservative in its ten dencies, and loyal in its principles, and that whilst the dark cloud of war hung over our Mitional horiz on, its poWer should be exercised for the preservation of Na tional life; and yet in the face of all this, influential' journals, the oracles of this party, have been found advocating a dis ruption of the Union, as the only practi cable method of extricating ourselves from the political entanglementsby which we have been overcome, In the nil,* of our troubles the ultra orptis of all parties have : been busily en , gaged in exerting their influences and dis seminating their pernicious doctrines. It was an easy matter ror them to assert their claims to attention and to- Wield an influence in . public, opinion for a time. Thiswe have all seen, and all are equally glad that their existence, was brief, and dieirdeath as sudden as their birth. -Ile decay of factions is the greatest proof of the stability of our government. and its institutions. And now since the rebel) lion has beemstripped of. its terrnrs, and the supremacy of the government has been fully vindicated, the landmarks 'of duty and principle 'have. become more' distinct to the minds of all, , except those who are constitutionally incapable of seeing. Universal freedom, the light of the Con stitution, that,beacon of all true Ameri can Statesmen, is now more than ever recognized as the guide throulibour great national difficulties. The eye of the na tion is:directed to it, and with one voice does the Union party, the party in pow er, proclaim its advent. It should be a source of gratifiifation every Republi can, every well wisher of the nation,that the doctrines of our party have triumphed through this terrible struggle ; that fac tions have ceased their blatant uproar, and that the Union party has again the opportunity,during the approachingYres idential struggle, of confronting the dis loyal elementg Of the nation, upon the issues of social, political and •national ag grandizement., In the 'merits of our po litical Creed we have full confidence, re lying as we 110- on the amount of truth we can bring to sustain our cause. Let no Union man be persuaded that the f Principles for which lie haS all along contended are. about to be abandoned by the party during the :coming , campaign. The' destiny of these principles has not yet been completed, and to sacrifice . any lof them at this time, would but ben, step backwards and against the interests of our country. The doctrineS of the Union party are those of equitable and, Peaceful • progress, Neither by vidleuce nor by stagnation will they ever:propose to sue-' teed ;, but by a firm decided and steady' course, amid every variety of political and social 'circumstances. , The institution of slavery must be abolished, and - the States in rebellion Sttbdued and brought back to Weir allegiance, upon the basis of thefree States 'of the North. A good and sub stantial 'cireuhiting paper medium Must be established.. A tariff sufficient to en courage and protect the free labor of the country must be enacted- These are the doctrines of our party, and:When we are 'found untrne to these, untrue to American interests, we shall admit the claims of others to the possession of a purer patri otism. Until then we shall not cease, with all honesty of purpose, 'to propose for popular acceptance those greatmeas urea in defense of which We; are now ar rayed, and :with reference to which we are not divided. • Commissrox. 2 --Surg.' Gen. King, inliis_report to G 4. Curtin on the . condition and coniforts 4 4thli Pennsyl vania sick and wounded sliadiers in the hospitals of the Arm: of!. the Potomac, which he has recently kited, speaks thus of the Christian Commission • "Besides the seventeen'members of the Vol unteer Aid Corps furnished from Pennsylvania, the State was represented at Fredericksburg by several medic4l gentlemen; vho went there and rendered important' surgical aid under the auspiCes of tIW Christian Commission, wilose labor of love periormed by over two hundred devoted and active delegates was justly regard ed of inappreciable value," This is very high testimony, coming from an observer of, the official position ofDr. Kings and especially, as : he is emi nentiS, , conscientious, and careful in his ,expressions. Whatever he endorses, and whenever he thanks, are worthy of the Confidence and support of the public. FROM THE ANDFRSON 'CAVALRY. Frain a private letter addreSsed to this office, from W. II! H. Newman, of this county, .a member of the Ap,derson Cavalry, at present detailed iti the Provost Marshal's Office at Chat tanooga, we take the following "All goes at the front, as you have al ready learned ,by telegraph. .Joe Johnston in full retreat, and Sherman close behind him. But Johnston is rather inferior to Bragg in rear ward movements, leaving considerable, C. S. A. property, behind hini. The sutlers are making bit few sales' of tobacco, now,. as - the " boys." are enibreing the " confiscation act" during their onward movement through Georgia ; finding large 'quantities of the "weed" which "Joe" could not take along. "Our adVance however, has been stubbornly resisted, particularly at Rocky-faced Bridge and Resaca; the former an exceeding strong natural position, and the latter artificially un proved.s Our loss has been heavy ; especially among the officer, as they appear to have been a special mark for the rebel sharpshooters and singled out in every engagement. I presume the casualties among field offteersosceeds any other previous engagement in this army. • ' Though no, deaths have ocoured among the leading commanders, Brig. GeneritlaVillich, Manson and Kilpatrick badly wounded, Maj. Gene. Hooker and Howard slightly, and still in the field. The hospitals here are filled with wounded; bat they receive every attention from, members of that noble Christian Commission. Among those wounded are several members of Independent Battery R(WDowell's,) though only one from Franklin county, whose name I could not - learn.- Capt. S. M'Dowell is unin jured. I have learned =thing of the 77th Regt. Fa. Vols. - About 1006 prisoners of war been brought to this, offre since the campaign opened, No fears need be• entertained for the final triumph of the ever victorious Army of the Cumberland. The army mdved forward from Kingston, Ga., on Monday morning, May 23d, with ten days full rations, Ault to last twenty if necessary. So perhaps ere this, they_ IN , II be confronting Atlanta, as lhoyl are determined to keep time With Grant and his gallant host. . . SIIMMAET OF WA D E NE S. . Maj. Gen. Carl Schurz ias be n placed in \ command of.the eonvaleseent barr cks at Nash villa. . ) . .. . . 1 , . —Gen. Crooks, acconilngl,to a special dis; patebto the Cirieinnati 4izette, as stilted on *iodic.; r expedition. ~ despatch from Miisonri reports another guerrilla .outrage. A'number ofUnion refugees were captured and eighty men'and some women killed. —Roddy's Cavalry, commanded by CorJohri.' son, was recently encountered by Col. Long, of the S,eventeenth Army Corps, ilear,Holden,Ala." -Johnson was killed and many prisoners taken. —Secessionville, South Carolina, it is repor ted by a rebel major - who came into Gen. But ler's lines on- Saturday; has been captured by our forces. Charleston is threatened, and the rebel commander is said• to hare telegraphed, for reihforcements. —An Important announcement is made that French Minister of Foreign Affairs has assured Mr. Dayton that the iron-clads which were be- ing built in Fiance for the - Rebels hive been sold to,a neutral Poiver, and that the four Rebel, clipper ships at Bordeaux, would not be deliver ed to therm . —The One.-hundred-and-thirty-second • Ohio Militia Regithent, which arrived in Washington a short time - since, voted, a •feW days ago, to offer their services to go to the front and aid Grant . in taking Richmond. Not a dissenting vote was given.. Their offer was accepted, and they left for the front. is known by the Navy Department that the - Rebels have ironelads, torpedo rafts, and other infernal machines, which they intend to 'send down the James River againit our gun boats. But our naval officers are well pre : - pared for them, and there is no fear of the re sult. - —A heavy force of Rebels is reported to be within 55 miles of Duvall's Bluff, marching on that place. They are supposed to number 15, 000. The Rebel Gen. Shelby captUred Darde mile last Monday. - taking 200 prisoners- , After the capture, he crossed, the Arkanifis River, and it was supposed that lie intended to strike the Little Rock Railroad. Jacksonport and Batesville have beeniwacuated by. our forces. :—The,garmora, Juliet and Prairie Bird re cently engaged the Rebel batteries at Gaines's Landing, and Succeeded in driving them away. Marmaduke,' who is reported to be in command of the Rebels, had taken twelve pieces of ar tillery. He captured and bunted the steamer Lebanon, and carried - the crew and passengers off as prisoners.: The boats from the White River report the Rebels to be thick, but jhe boats t are not molested. • POLITICAL INTELLIGENCE. —Henry B. Anthony- was on Thursday re elected U. S. Senatbr ffoki 'Rhode Island. —The Union men of Cambria county have . nominated. A. A. Barker for Congress, Hon. F,vfn Roberts for Assembly, and F. M. Flana gan for Sheriff —Messrs. Crave . = and Voorhees, copperhead C'S. from India'nu, have declined to be can-, didates for re-election. - Indiana don't seem to be very healthy for copperheads as fbrmerly. —Ail election was, held in the City and coun ty of San Francisco, Cal., on the 17th ult., for municipel officers, which resulted in amajority of 4540 ter the People's - Union party, in a total vote of 11,110. , —The : Democrats of Kentucky have elected Delegates . for Chicago instructed for M'Clellan for - President and Gov. Bramlette for Vice President. They passed resolutions in favor of the war, but opposed to hurting the rebels. —The War Democrafs helda Convention at Syracuse, New York, last week, at which Hon. James T. Brady, Senator Conness, and Many other Democrats , of National fame were pres ent. hey declared in Favor of the re-election of President Lincoln. Butler county Col. JOhn M. Thompson, tuba received the vote of that county for Con gres's' in 1862, is again before the people for the sane position. In• Armstrong co., Col. J, B. Finlay; of Kittanning, who was an unsuccessful candidate for nomination for Congress in that county in 1862, is again before the, people. Hon'. Thomas Williams has been recommended by part of Alleghany in the same district. the LOuisiana Convention, on the 11th,' Mr, Thomas W. Wells, son of one of the great est cotton and slaveowners. of Louisiana, rose and• eloquently declared himself' in favor of immediate and unconditional emancipation.— He was. followed by Robert Taliaferro, son of another noted planter, 'related to the aristocratic Taliaferros of South Carolina andNirginia.— This gentleman said: " am in favor of imme diate emancipation, and of the education of the negro. I was born in the interior of Louisiana, and was never beyond the boundary of the State. lam with Mr. Wells:" We find great encou ragement and hope in instances like these.— They show us the true spirit of the young and new South advanced upon the ruins of the Old. PERSONAL. —Gen. Todd has been declared by the Con gressional Committee on Elections entitled to the seat of delegate from Daeotah. —Brig. Gen. Andrew Porter, recently mue tered out of service as 'Brig. General, has re sigiied his position as Colonel in the regular army. 4 -A letter from Covington, Ky., says " the proudest and happiest man in the Union at present is the father of Gen. Grant, who resides in our city." --den. Sigel has been appointed by Gen. Hunter to the command of the Reserve Divi sion, which will comprise all of the tr . oops on theßaltimore and Ohie Railroad. ' LATEST IMP. BY MAGNETIC TELEGBAPH, EXCLUSIVELY FOR THE FRANKLIN REPOSITORY. 3y the Atlantic and Ohio Telegraph tine.--Otßos at ShrYock's Book Store and R. R. Depot. , • The Natiapal rnion Convention.' - • • BAurntotg,June 7. The National -Union Convention assegibleil this morning at the. Front Btreet - ..Theatre,-in the same building where four years ago the Democratic - Convention hopelessly split upon the rock of discord. The - building has been tastefully decorated„ and fitted. nifor the occasion by the Oh coup. nil of Baltimore. The galleries are festooned with flags, and the entire stags thrown open, There are nearly six hundred . delegates pres ent, including many from remote territories: Hon.E. D. Morgan, Chairman of the 11-titlark al Committee, called. the convention:to order atnoon, making ps brief address. He proposed Rev. Dr. J. of ,Kentucky, aa tem porary Chairman. The announcemenesos re ceived with great -applause. - Mr. King, and Randall, IVis., were appointed to .'ciniduct the venerable divine to the chair, whose appearance was greeted. with long and continued applause. Three cheertii& the old war horse of Reutncky were propo* and given,- • . • , - • As soon as silence was restored„Mr. Brook inridge returned his thanks for the honor con ferred upon him in a brief but eloquent speech, explaining the considerations which had.induo ed him to attend the Convention. Mr. Stevens,Pa., movedithat if there were any delegates here from States in seeession,the names of the delegates be, sent in to be submit ted to the':conmottp,e on credeutials;Withont such states be not called. - After considerable debate the motion to'call the names of all the States prevailed, including the Territories of Colorada, Neveda and Ne• Fraika, as these were now forming- State .gui erninents, and would cast their votes at the next Presidential election. On motion of - Mr. Lane, Kansas, an the States except Missouri, which has sent two sets of delegates, were called upon to name one member for the committee on credentials. On motion S. A. Slim, of Mass . P. H. Ditrr; of N. Y.. and E. N. Briggs, of Cal., were ap pointed. Seeretaritis to complete-the temporary organization: The States were again called to, name a coin,- mittee to select permanent officers for the Con cention. On motion the Convention net appointed in the same manner, a. committee on regulations. Rev. J. 31.'K. Riley was introduced by the chairman, rind invoked the Divine blessing on the proceedings of the 'Convention. Attack on Saturday night bythenebets on Ilancoch , Wright and Smith—ite pulsed Eyerwhere—Aloyemeutsi of Gen. Sherman. WASHINGTON', June 6, 7 A.M. To .ifaj. Gen. Dix, Neu; York :—We have despatches' from Gen. Grant's headquarters down to 6 o'clock last evening, which states that there had been ao fighting during the day.— The' enemy made an attack on Saturday night upon Hancock, Wright, and Smith. but were eve rw here repulsed. Hancock lines are brought within forty yards of rebel works. The rebels were very busy on Saturday, constructing ea..' trenchinents on tha West side of the Chicko hominy at Bottom's Bridge, and toward evening threw a party across to the East side. - Despatch from Gen. Sherman dated yester day afternoon June sth, 3.30 at Alato on a Creek, states that . the enemy discovering us moving round his right flank, abandoned his position last night, and niarched.off. , McPherson is moving to-day fOr Aolivrorth-; Thomas is on the direct Marietta road, and Schofield on his right. It has been raining hard 'for three days, and the -roads are heavy. An examinatiod , of the enemy's abandoned line of works here, sham. an immense line of works, which I have turned with less loss to ourselves, than we have inflicted upon:them. Army supplies, forage, and provi sions, are ample. . . , E. M. STANToN, Sec'y - of War. Arrival of the Penna. Reservtni at liar risburg—Grand Reception. - HARRISBLIIO, June 8. The reception of the Pennsylvania Reserves to-day, by the people of Harrisburg, will here.; after constitute a pceasing-event in their history. The corps arrived at nine o'clock this morning; and were entertained by thc, military-authort ties of the post, at , the soldier's rest, with a splendid collation: The city authorities of Hay risburg then ttinh.possession of the veterans,aud in a formal manner conducted them through the principal streets of the city to the front of the State Capitol where they were formally receiv ed by Gov. Curtin. During the progress of the procession a-salute of 100 - guns was fired.from Capitol Hill. The Governor and heads of de partment, the city authorities, the First New York Artillery, the lire department and civic societies of Harrisburg, the U. S. officers on duty at this post, the Judges of-the Court, with an hnmetise concourse of citizens and strangers joined in the procession. After the arrival of the procession in front of the State Capitol, and when the gallant Regerves were drawn up in line, Gov. Curtin - addressed- them. Several other speeches were made, after which the Re serves were marchad to their quarters at Camp Curtin. They will be paid off in a few days. Movements of Grant as n d, Sherman,-.1.90 Engagements. June& To Maj. Gen. Dix :—Dispaches have been received from Gen. Grant'sleadquarters to-day,. but they report only certain changes in the po sition of corps and contemplated operations. They state everything is - going on well. The chief Quartermaster of the army reports a per sonal inspection of the Depot ta White House, and that it is in - a • most efficient state. All needful supplies on hand and wagons•transporx them easily to the army. The wounded are being brought in and trans-. ports are : not delayed a moment. A dispntch from Gen. Sherman dated at 11 noon to-day, at Ackworth, Georgia., says, "I am now on therailroad to Ackworth Station, and have full possession forward to within one mile of Marietta. All well. No other military . intelligence to-day. • , EDION M. STANTON, Secretary of War. —Hon. Joshua R. Giddings, for thelastthree years the American Consul General at Montreal, dropped dead at that place. on the 27th. On two or three.former occasions, he suddenly fell from similar attacks—an affection of the nervous sys tem acting on the heart. Mr. Giddings was a prominent Member of Congress, for manyyears from the 'Western Reserve District, Ohio, and: • wasene of the most determined enemies of the aggressions of slavery. When there , were but few who had the courage to, queston the de mands of the slave power, Mr. Giddings boldly met its every advance on freedom, and offer; stood; altnost alone, like a lion in its way. He was an honest man, and his integrity wasneves questioned throughout his long official life. —Maj. Gen. Freniont, according to the Wash ington correspondent of the Neiv :York Herald s has resigned his position in the army, and_ resignation has been accepted.