mu @nmpiltr. OL'R FLAG! I. L Inn“, nu'oz AND norunol any BUBG. PA. xoxmi' uoai’ma. 3m“ 23, um O'Hon. A. H. Crux-now has our thank- Iql'l copy of the Congressional Directory for the fiat. Jessica of the Thirty-eighth Congress.’ ‘ ' A Draft/or One Yum—A joint "solution In introducod in the Uniu-d SmtasSennte on Friday to authorize ihe President {0 call out by dnfl, for one year. such number of men as the exigencies of the service may Wine. The resolution was referred to the éommitm on military a’fl'a‘iru,’ More Trooph—Sewralwonefn regiments \ have panned through Harrisburg within a \_ few'dnys, deit'med for the Army of the Po— !omic. Troops are being hurried to the from. from I“ quarte'ra.‘ ' ‘ 'fiT‘he militia of New Jersey and New Yul; hue been called 1'01: 100 ddys.‘ Gov. Brtnilette, of Kentucky, alsocalls upon the militit ofbis State. Piltsbnrg has tendered In independent bnuery [or 100 days. and the Government. lan nccgpled the proposi tion; ~ la.“ is stated (hit General Grant. has refused to accept the sword of . the New York Sanitary Fair, because \frnud was prtoticed in having it valet] to him. It is to be hoped‘j'onj thé sake of the fair fame of 'tbe Generii that in i 4 true: It would be a hall-dmerved rebuke to the thnatical Leaguers of New Yorlg, who would rslort to Inch despicabialp‘eann to dephive the people's choice of the power of wearing the award which belonged to him by the terms of ”as election» Gen. Grant is too much of a widier to accept a ,g‘m obtained di‘hnnnxt: Ibiy and in derogation of n brother ofiiceg. WSensibl/e and well timed are the fol lowing xemnrks from the New York Journal 0/ Commerce. of Wednesday. When the ship is tossed by the storm, officers, cxew 3nd passengers should'be steady : Phlierica—There was never more need of ~lpltlence than now. The American people are phasing through in. fearful trial, a trial of suffering and blood. It is by no means easy. to wait, doing meanwhile the calm routine duty of citizen life. Yet that duty is nll important. and has: its place in the grand ‘ sum of patriotic duty just‘ new. The strug gle that is before us in a. terrible one. We ‘ :do wrong to yield to the assurances of en thusiastic men that we are just at the end.l There is not enough reason to believe that we are so near the end. It ii a great mis take to teach that patriotism requires men . to receive and believe all the good newt, and reject; and dishelieve all the bad news. The constant and repeated error at thie witrl I"! been in encouraging the people to he,' lieve in the Weakmfs‘ of the enemy, and the‘ em with which he was to he disposedofi— The radical paperq have been very land 01'“ ntigmntizing bad nears a: copper-head news, i find thus conveying the. impression that to‘ doubt our complete suecess at any and alll times indicates the political character of the doubter. it ought not. to be necessary toi show the wrong of thin. and the vast injury it has done to the come. It. is infinitely better to fear bail-results and hear good newr, than to expect good results and hear] bad now's. We should always be taught to guard against the worst contingency. It is! enter to hesitate before receiving as true ei-l rther very good or veg bad news. Du- i I’in the put. two wee 5 they have been Wisest and the moat. true patriots who have: 'litnd in profound anxiety. neither uuduly' depressed or.elated. weighing carefully the"l intelligence as it‘enme. and sitting the small | amount of truth out of the large amount. of; words and falsehoods which have come to m. L -B‘The Albany Armsexplains whment wés diatrustfur, why the Administration ‘péfliltently deceive the peopieJand why Jhe people have lost all confidence in our mler‘i, in this way: The truth is, we have no Govexfnment. There has not been a Cabi ut Chum-i! inayear. The members of the Cebinefido not speak Loeaah ether. Chase mdSewaid are open and melignant ene mies. The revelations of the corruption and proflipcy in the Custom Houses and Tree-‘1” Department are made at the insti gltionof Seward. Chase commenced the vex-fete by procuring from the Republicans ofthe Senate a vole of want of confidence ’ in Sel'ndl The Postmaster General. Blair, openly denounces the Secretary of the Trouury ab “a villain!” Welles and Stan ton ridicule and thart each other. The fipitoful Halleck meddlys with all plans only to Giant-Inge them. The Senate hates the .Cahiuoti and the House set: itself up in opposition to the Senate. Both are torn by {whom and intrigues; and all depart - menu of thismarring Government are \un dermined by corroding corruption. ' ' The gratification of personal hate and of political iealousy, and the sordid Eunuit of ”inflate the sentiments whioh‘ goVern at Wuhiagton. We' have no Ether Govem mutt.- / ' ‘ Air Line Dismba.—The Wildarness,west of Chmoollonville. is on an aiib‘line fifty fivo mile from Richmond, and it is about the some dialwce’from‘Wuhingfon. Ger xmnio Ford is awtly sixty miles from Biohmond, and n is Orange Court Home. By I stnight lino, Harrison's Point, on the June: river, in tvyéniy mile: from Rich mond.nnd City Point seventeen. Hicks lud, for ihioh point 3 strong column of cudry muchod the other day, is sixty ,Eilel loath of Richmond. Fort Darling is m miles below Richmond. INFO“ For IL—Congreu is appropri ating gniljiona upon milliom of money with (or, little reflection as to where it is to you. from outside of Mr.Chue’s bank note priming rooms. What. will «.139 great. nine: of the people say, by and 3?)” when they con. to be used to denlh to ply, not the Mt itself, but the "at main] interest u'p oa in Look out for the day of retribufion. Ono oxtremo always begets mother, ro author. ‘umio Inuitviuo ”(1.) Journal truly mu: ‘ “It is the inc“ qwful pm of thk Int 11:“ the President of the United Bmg “hmrcdmmlhchidwpmhh .Wbyig’." ' W Gen. Muir 2-oer undo 3 speech pt 8%. Loui- oping: Radium-m. from which the N. Y. Tribune makes the following extnét in ordn- to prove that he in I cuppa-bud Ind traitor: “I am for mninnining this country for the benefit. of white rople. [Cheen] I am oppoaed, While 1 «as nem‘sojourn among us. to giving them right: over he white citizens of in‘ country. [Ghent] Inm oppnnml In nlnthinv‘z them with the privileges of suit-age. {A voice: “ Lot them fight.” blight" and chasm! I hnvn no objection to their fighting 1f the): willfight on our aide." : ' According to the Tribune this kind of talk isvnnk (reason, and only calculated to “ravish copperheads Ind the more manly open traitors cf that city." And wherefore uhOuld such pcntimentn plvue only traitor: and copperhmdsr Are thny the only por tion ofthe population who have nlprnper regard for thé right: and Wgll-boing of the white people of our country} Are they 'nlonein the effort to elevate the standard anmericsn nationality. and the only class that. have the good sense and patriotism to assert that. Americans—not Africans—shall rule America. 1’ Not very long ago the N. Y. Tribune was loud Against. allowing fog-eigm‘rs and Cnthoi lies the right of holding office and their rights of suffrage. Its watchword then was —“America ‘ tnr Amerimm.” Its éry is now changed and is heard far and WldB - for Americans ofAfrican descent}! By selecting the above sentiment from Mr: Blair's speech in order to nppone and de nounce it, that paper shows clearly and unmistakialilythat it isnntin favorof“main. training this country for the benefit of white men,” but. is bent lentirely on the ignoble purpose of vitiatilng the purity of the suf frage by allowing an inferior and degraded me to partake equally with the White}: in that. and also in all social rights and benefits. TIIE NINE MONT"!!! MEN The military committee in the U. S. San ate has reported ngninst paying the bounty of $25 to the nine months’ men. It takes so very. much money; they say, to pay them, and also that they were calledyout under 9. “mistake," and that 3.934 Verrnont men hml already received, by mistake of mastering officers and paymneters, the money belonging to the Penneylvania nine months' menf (H \cnurse, if they were a parcel of contractors or niggern, they would be paid, if it required ten times as much money. and iffihey had been called out without any authority whatever. The nine months’ 'men haul the bounty promiaed them. Fervetl out their time faithfully. enrned it. and should have it. If money is g ting scarce at. Walelngton. let thethcur- My; expense in a hundred thousand other ways, but do not violate the national faith. ‘ " le Cnlrjrc’d Trnnps.-—-We are enabled. af ter carefully reading all the war news from Virginia, to state one fact which we know will be gratifying to our Abolition fellow citizens. So fur in the progress of Mende’s column. their black friends in the nrmy have l'wen carefully kept out of harm’s way. While our White troops have fullm under the fatal fire of the rebels by tens of thousands, not. a single company of negroca in Burnside’s black brigade has bgen in action, not a single darkey in regi mentnls killod or wounded. ,Wq give this pleuing intelligence as an evidence (hat the Administratinn takes excellenz cue of it=i protpges. “Nobody hurl." among the colored gemmon. Cori/Fruiti—ln nur inst we stated that the 7th Regiment Pa. Reserve: was report ed captured by the rebels, in the conflict now progressing in Virginia. This report, we regret. to any, has since been cnnfirmed. Two ofl'icers belonging to this regimert, who had made their escape. recently arrived in “'ashington, and report, that. the regi ment. was on nmnrch whenthe enemy and denly appeared in the rear and cut off all arenue oi‘ escape. Of course it. had no oth er choice than to‘ surrender, and become prisoners of war. We understand, however, that, several of the boy subsequently 9:03- ped froiu their captors, five of whom belon ed to company A. of this borough. The remainder who were less fortunate were sent. to Dnnville. N. C., where they will re main until exchanged. We hope the gov. ernment will secure them a xpeedy release from captivity.—(,arlisle Valuntur. ' Suicide—Dr. D. R. Smith, a. physician of large practice residing in the village ofi Ne‘urg, Cumberland county. committed suicide by shooting himself through the' head in his owu stable, on Saturday morn-l ing, Hie 7th inst. The Nashville Star ofllle. Valley says that no reason is assigned forl the rash ncl. He was highly esteemed in' his profession, had an excellent practice, 8| pleasant, happy family around him, was in comfortable circumstances, always genial and social in his habits, not known to be predisposed to melancholy, sndindeed was one of the last men for whom any one could predict such a sad fate. His death 1 has cast a deep gloom over a large circle of friends. and he will be long and sadly miss ed‘in the sphere whici he adorned. Burned (a Death. r. Gebrge Wolf. of Lower 'Augusla township: Nortbumberland county, was burned to death last week, while engéged in consuming brush, on his timber land. His clothes caught fire and he was so badly injured that he expired be fore assistance could be rendered. WA man named Jacob Lav-miller. re aiding in Woodward‘ towiiship, Lyooming An. recently shot his sister twice in the bend with s gun. killing her insuntly. The pantie-w were both nnmnr‘ried sud livod together. The murderer decamped and i no tnce of him has yet. been discovered. Religious Okinawa—The tar-acute "yl convention of the Germpu Refo'rmed arch will ineat in Reading. PL. on the 2] t hum? The objecc of it is to close with app prick: services the jubilee which this branch of the ' church his kept during the pun. yeer, m commemorate the ndobtion of its symbol of flith, the Heidelberg Catechie‘m. on the: 19th of Januarygls63. The Rev. Dr. Zlch-l arias. of Frederick” Md.. will deliver the opening urmon. ' H'Dnriug the 'innltiguion into the Treuury sandals. the deposit-ion: of ten women euployed in the Department were red, Ind tune of them pronounced wholly unfit for publication. ‘ > ‘ wee’ufirp-m Wdismnwnd- :z'mg‘smxmmszn «Huh. kahuna-no.0» \ ‘l Gena! Grant, to .301 m... adjm The No - ifcbns. Tllli All! BIITING. The Philadelphil Age. of Wednosdnv.! My: there bu been no change]: Spoil-1L; v‘min. , Smca Thursdn’v there have been n 6 hos tilities. The Confederate: hnvo mlually ndjnsled their lines, moving ur- thoij‘ wings Ind encroaching upun the Federal canup., until now they nccupy very nearly tb‘e K same pmitiun u befom Hancock'l tum. Their works Ire covered with woods. mthnt the movement:- of the men are mnmled. ‘ It in very hard to my what Butler in do ing. No definite intelligence has been 19-' ceived from him, though it is eroHed that he has laid aio ve to F 6", Darling. Bum-e-I gnrd by forced‘mnrchen has rearlml Patnm‘l burg. lairge numbers of Ctmfmlemte trnops ‘ hue lately parsed north over the Ncrlh’ Carolina ruilmads. ' 1 GPnernl Johnatnn but retreatnd frog-11' RPSflca towards Atlanta. General Sherman ; is following lit rpar nnd has captured eight; guns and one thousand prisoners. , ' Fears are entvrlainod for the safety 0? Colonel Omaha. who was «ant match a mid'; in: expedflidn towards Lygchbnrg. some two week. ugh, by Génc-rnl . ”gel. A Rich-l mond paper Tim‘ces the cfipture nl' eight' hundred and 'fiy ~ Fedora! troops in that: quintet", hm} thi may be Crooka’ command. ‘ 'i - . A non cm. n‘urumu‘ connnn». } ‘ for mu. Bunny] 1 Lam from Gem-rat Burlrro-Succua of Generql Kant—Rink! on the Dmvil/e Hammad— Fun-e AMau/l of (he‘Ra/m’: rm Butler's L "163 ——G¢n. Sigel Meet: V'Llh a Repube m l/m' Val/(1]. Wnumcrov. May 17th, 9 P. M.— Tn Ma jur G'wmrat' Dix; 'Dvspntches lrom (Inner-u! Huth-rjlist t9é"ivod?‘rf'pl)r‘i!illp succeu nf hiq expedition under General Km”. in ml! the Ihn‘viilu ruiirna'l and destroy ihe iron bridge ncrosn the Appomattox river. . On Moiulny morning the enemy in force under cnver‘ of a ihick fog made an attack upon General Smith's line and forced it. buck in some (‘oniuuom and with considera ble losq. but as soon ma the fog lined Gen. Smith re-estahiished his lines and the eno my wzu driven back to his original lines. At the snme tune the enemy made an nt ta’clq from I’PiPerlllg on General Butler’s forces guarding the reunbut were handsome iylrepnlsed. The troops having been on incefeant duiy for five day-_, three of nhich new in hraln =torm,(iene~rnl Butler'retired lei‘urely within his own lines. We hoid the railroad between l’elersburg and Rich mond. , Prisoners state that, Bragg and D wis were ,preaent an the field. [ Dispatches. from Gen. Signl rncoivod this Icvening report that. on Sunday he fought. Jtlm forms nf Ei-lmls :mtl Imbodcn. under ißret‘kinridgp'. nt .\'(nv Market. that the ene fmy’s forces we're in superior numlmrn. and ;he gradually withdrew trom the battle fivld {and rt'crorsml the Shenandoah, lining lost [five pio-ces nfartillery, and about 600 killed land wounded and fifty pilsnnere, but bring ‘ing :1” his train: and the wounded that ‘cnnld be tranqunrted frum the battlefield. 1 He stntm that in c-inivquencn ofthn long jline. and the trains that had to he guarded, ihe could not bring more than six regiments inté the fight. besides the artillcrv and mv alry. and that, the enomv had about seven thousand infantry. beside: other armu. , llis‘retrnmlde movement was elli-cted in iporfect order, withnut any lo~.= of material inr men. Ilr- gives no listnf rnmultles, but I‘Lieut. Cal. Lincoln. at the 34th annchu setts. is reported to be wounded and cup ftured. No ”port ofnny opomtibnfi by the Armv of the Potomac have been flew to—duy. A (liapatch from fimwralShermu l‘t‘pln'ls his atlvunc‘e upon Johnson ‘ns progreiing to his satisfaction. . ”is <upphP.‘ are abundant; and our nui mula are imprnv‘mg on the gum: and grmn fields, which now ulfnrd good pnsturo. Envyn' M. Sunny. ,Scretnry of War WA di‘pnh‘h dated (‘mulvy Budge, Fonthwostprn Virginia, M..y 17. saw (In! General Crooks, commanding the Union forcm, fought flu” mm s on tho hne‘nf tho EML 'l‘vnnoasen ruilrnncf. near Newburn: Pulaski couvaVa" with the Cnnft-dgute forces under Gmernls Morgan. S\m Jonrs and A. Yenkim. and gained a complme vic tory. wi‘h the loss M 405) killed'nrfd’wnuml ed. The Confederates Inst 600 in killed and wounded and 300 prisgners, unmnu tham GPn. A. Jenkins, who was mornnliy wounded. A An official report dfflm mmulties on‘the Union side in the late battlrs s'ntns that, 4.000 man were killPd, about 25.000 \\ ouml ed, and 5,000 miwmg. ‘ ’ - . ‘ Gun's ll E‘E. ilzmqmnnns Anvi’. Mn! 17—9 A. .m—Thvre is hut. httie otmueh im portance to send you this morning. Bnth ermies remain in the. same position as at. thednte of my lust dispatch. 1 ; Lee’s right ntretchex to the [’o river. near Snell's bridge. The enemy seems to be. en denvmingto conceal the. position of his lines as much as possible, and it is only by pipk et‘firing and a few shots from our batteries that their location is developed. , Gen. Grant. though evidently 'snnpuine of ultimate success in his present operntiona, bntrnys very little of the impatience one would'suppose to he naturrd under the cir cumstancns. While many are dehnting the auliject of the full of Richmond. and fixmg the period ot'thut. happy event at. a few days hence. the Gonergl weighs all the disad‘vanr cages under which he lalmr=.~ A few days ago he was heaid tn say‘ that he would be quite ready to cnmprnmiw on the Fourth of July 93 thotimc for-the fallot’ Richmond. Lee’s tinny has not bePn beaten yet. and there is, pPl‘hflP‘. still hard»: ‘fighting in, 'store are L 99 is tinnllx crushed. Genpml Wudswnrttf‘llved three days nf tor he was wnundod and taken prisonvr, but was inaensihle to the In}! moment. Hen-as shot. in the. back part. of the head while Hooping tn ride undar the‘hmnchps ot a “'99. Patrick Gritfin. whom the General had befriended in Waghingfon mme yéuru ago, _upon hearing ofle (hath of his Dene tuctor. obtained perm'ision of General. Lee to bury his remains upondfis premises near the battle-field. The body will be recover ed and sent. within outlines, The Mallapuny Bzver is farmed oi four hwchea, named respectively Mat. Ta: Po, Ny. and in the forks ofthese tributaries nre lbeYscenenof the present éonfiict. Spott sylvaniu in upon the Po. which is smrceiy more thnh a creek ordinarily. and not more than hnifn. dozen yards wide. Now ibis swollen to a considerable size. The {<oth Anfin river is not now fordabie. I'll! 3.1 T‘I'LB BINB'BD. The Ayn. of Friday, ”yum—General , Grant. has withdrn'Wn his army behind the’ Ny nvor mud in now four miles from Spott-I sylvania. General Butler has been defeat-I ed um: Dulirg end he reheated w the protection of his gunbnm at. City Point. I On Tuesday morning last. by mean: of nrioua adjustments of their lines. end‘ gmdunl encroachmentsupon Genervd Grant. I the Confederatecin Virginie e(Pied nline‘ further north then my occupi by them; since the contests in the Wilderness. The: P 0 is no longer their line of defense. They. have Advanced lo the Ny. This “room! risen near Mine- Run, and flows southeut.’ pusing five miles north 01,3p0luylvnnil‘ Court. Home. and fullin into the Po six‘ miles southeast of n. fi‘he Confederates now present a northeulern front 110113 the loath of the Ny. They have brongln their' intern flaukjorward untxl i'. is nboifl. (our! miles north of Spotisylveniu and not! Pony 1 Bunch Church. which. stands on the south‘ hunk of the Ny. Their eastern flunk il About three mile: east of Spotuyivunim—' The Confederues have very throng earn»; menu. In; «won: his western finnk WIl until it inon the Nyrnhnnt four milessouth of Chnnoellnr-ville. Hie custom flank is southeast. of thia and out of Spottlylvnnia. Along, nearly all the line. the Ky runs be twoen the opposing armies. 0n Tue-day. I Gen. Grant. made vnrioul rocounoiulmcu. l which deteloped the great stren kth of the ; Confederate defences. On Wedneedsy morning a battle. it in reported, began our Piney Bram-h Church o the wettem flank: of the two nrmin. 0! lift: content. we hen received no definite intelligence. At tent o’clock on Wednesday morning no firing, mt: heard at Frederickeburg and the anticiw pated battle may not have occurred. One very incomprehensible thing is. whv Grant should have retreated _behind the Ny. 0! this we have not received l word by tele~ . graph. his only by letter that it hits beem lenrned. ' , ' - We hnvo at length received tome detail-t of Gen. Butler’s line movement on the Jnme‘ river. Our readers wiltl remember that llAme time since he constructed a linei tot' earthworks across the narrow neck be-j tween the lower Appomattcx and James: river. From this line he advanced nlougt the Janice to the siege of Fort Dnrling.—l ‘. The enemy'retirod v before him and he sp—‘ pl'flnt‘llt'tl. without mot-h opposition. ml loithin three mi!“ of the fort and ninei 'm'ilve of Richmond. Here he captured.l i without any struggle, the outer line of! ‘ works. and on last Sunday night was BH'l t camped near the fortwith his troops drawn 1 ‘up in line_ot‘ battle. Smith’s corp!l Was on I I the“ east. with tin-iv- right. composed of some negro troops and Heckman‘x brigade. reet~l ling on the Jameq river. Gillm’nre held the ‘ l‘weutorn part. ot‘ the line. with the left flank l l extending beyond the Petersburg and 1 , Richmond railroad. i 1' ,At daylight. on Monday the (konteflerntes ‘ bega'l n turinua cannonade. They themat- Qgckpd smith's corps. A column succeedéd in netting between lleckm:in and the Jflmos‘; riv'er. 'j‘hev attacked his rem- amldoubled ; t his brigade bu'lk u'pon the next one. He. i with one thousaglll prisoners and four or} ‘ five cannon. wt'rt‘ "“1"“de Smith’s corps wpre thrown into confusion and began to‘ retirc. General (fillmore. 0" the left. was“ ;then attacked, hut :PPUIP‘ed the “intuit.— ISoon he was sent an bl'det' W “""‘": 'o‘ laliantinn his,|ine and form in “‘l7 ofhnuth, lso us to protect him. NPm-ly ‘8” "l“ "511'? Jory Wm Rent to therenr, to he out oi NIH“ It lway, and Gillmure came to Smith’s aid. 1 l At this mmawnt B'ltler learned that}! Home of five Confmlemto rem'ments hnn‘ flt-i , Linked :1 rem-‘guurd of negro troope. whom l I he harl‘loft near Petersburg, and broke it; 1». lie at once ordered a retreat ol'hig] lghola -trmy,'anvl :te quicklv as postible they l liver» withdrnwn to the entronchmfimx near ! .[lprmuuln Hunnrerl. where thQuunhoatA in l fi'the Appomattox and James protected them lrom the enemy. Smith's carpet in yeryl ‘muoh broken up. The retreat gives the] onemv possesfinn ol' the railroad between Rmhmnnrl and Petersburg. and will place; Butler for some time on tho «léfanfiyeJ i ‘ 'l‘lmre an» lump numbers ofvguerl'xuag in Grant'< rear. Three hundred of them are rfipnrlpJ in {me lmnlv nea‘r Falls Church, fif» :tm'n mile: from Wnshinglnn. Many are rngugwl in sinking torpedo-‘5 in the lower ~31 upnhflnnflch and no bnnls yonluw up UHF! stream. ‘ ~ {E 'l‘hr'ere is nrofiog‘t. though not vary authen ntib, that (h-nnrnl Bunks’ army. being shut. [up in .Ah‘xnndrm, has been summoned to ‘surronrlPr. I! “an refuwdt "Hume in no Elongo‘r nnv.cummunfcution wilh what ro zmums nf the Rw-ll r ver expeditimi. The ;Con~foderatqs have entirely syrxouxldgd it: Wasme-‘tx'. .\lny 20, 6 20 P. .\l.—This ag len own “0 I .no ulnpnlths daled uv. hall-pun. fight 0 rlml Il.i< mmmng, llom (lon. (lrnnl. ' Lust PVQTIEM.’ nu (ITorL “u: made by Gen. Ewell: corp m turn nur right. TIM-y were prumplly r....u1uul by Gommla B may run] Tplur‘s dlvi<iuns nu-l some or“ Hen. \Vureu's "now that acne on the extreme right- About 300 primncrs fell into our ham“. 11041;»: l'nnuy lulled um! \vmmdvu. Our loss foam up n lmle over 1700 wounded and nhou‘. 150, killed unllmiuinz. (lu-nf 'nl Gram. ea}: thzu proba bly our kllll-d |null mi<<ing are overstated. ain't: Acltnnvr AT clunnlmni'rox. NLu‘ YunK. )Ll)’ lT.—'l‘ho summer Fulton repnru that on the 14th inst. win-n off (‘hurlwmn lmr, n m nnal engnuomen; was going! on lxotmeej) our fleet. uhdor Admiral Dal-lawn. nntl llm rubol forte and bnlt'erii-q on J Hues and Sullivan’s Islands. All the monnnr: appnarml to be ongnzod, as also I‘ne New lromnlva. Fort, Putnam. on‘ (irngg's Pninl. sopmnd to he directing whorl fire princrpnllv nn Sumlnr.whirh wan replied tn’liy Furl Mumlln-A. on Sullivan’s lslun'l, and lmilerv Sunplnna. on. Jame}; leland. The come-Lwnm-ul >llll‘lled, nud ns‘genernl m has transluhml sincelmt autumn. The Fulton I‘lmswl a blnrlmtle ruhllwr. bound out from \Vllnfiilflan. five hours, on tho mom in‘: of the 23m; Mid then gave up the pur sult. ' - ' »- P.l<€Pngrsr< M the Fulton stain that. the engagement at! L‘hmlenton was ofu terrific charm-fer. Thq batteries on Morris Island were directed against Fort Sumter, also the fire misc vprni Monitors. ‘ lSumtorlms been effectually repaired. and it' wm‘lhougln the strpngest fire came from it.“ The mim‘k is believed to have been made under orders from the Navy Deput ment. , The Fulton film brings the following, r'el alive to South Carolina and Florida af fulru : , 1 Gvn. Gordon hm: been ordered to Florida to relieve Gen. B'rnny. denoting that thia court-martial in his case has resulted in Gordon’s l‘n‘vor. -A man State Convention is called at Baa“- rnn. s. a, ‘on the 17m of May. toselect. del egates tn the Baltimore, Conventhn. A nimilnr movement. is reported on foot in Florida. \ ' . ' ‘ ‘ The armed steam transport Hnrrié'. A. Wood wns blown up by the expln‘sinn of two torpedoes at once. in St. John’s river, Flinn-id». [The second engineer, cnhin boy, and other: of the crew, were lost. The ves sel was a. total wreck. A large number of persons on than vessel were Eonndeu, some oi them spverely. ‘ , 'From the Red Myth—A correspondent sends the Chicago Tribune the follpmn from Natchez on the 4th ahd.sth: g News brought down by the steamer: Prin gle gpd Ohio Bellmis up 102 d. Their otfl cers report that, there has been no mtfire figh‘tin’g of any comequync? at or .near Alexandria. A force of, Con ederntes. not. vex-v large. has IppPll’ed on the north‘hspk of Red river-stud has fired into on! troops with not. muc efl'ect. , ... I hue mentioned that the Foder’dls Ind in contemplation the building of Is dam at the falls, to get. ofi‘ the unbonta now aground, me have since Ewen informed that the project ha's been decided to be im pt‘acticgble, and will be eventually lbnndon ed. The gunbonta will have to vuil. for I rise in the river. , A rolml'bnflerv..under e man.wi!h-the eognomgn of lmolny, the same who fired upon the steamer Von Phul lately. has locu led itself at Fort de Russo]; fired into the steamer Emu“. sunk her end used up one or two other transports. Admiral Pnrxer‘s bg-ahip, the Bleek Burk, is lying n. the mouth of‘the Red River. The Admin] is preparing’for what ever may :be in store for hi: fleet, portion; of which have been pretty severely used lutely. ‘ , é A Wain» with Horn.—Tha' New York Observer o! the 12th instant. contain. I. leo ter from its correspondent at Lunacy .in tho islmrl of Cyprus. (Turkish dominion.) describing I. most nmarklble (lulu nature. recently discovered there. It is nothing less thnn a woman with [mm growing out” her head! She has one large horn on the lid; of her head. of the lite and oonfi-toncy of on ordinary um'a horn, besides thr'eo or fair comicfi‘s on other pox-fl of the bend.— Th’e writer Ihtel that be his leen her,.nnd thu'fih: bu been 'ili‘d by nouly s" the con INLEIH‘OPOIDI in elm plm. III" ll.‘ I‘ll! ”UTE Richniond papers of Thursday. the 12m instant. received in New York, contain the following : flu ncnflxo pt tnomn.‘ [Frém the Richmond Dispuch, May 12.] ‘ 1:50 city was full of'oxcitoment yesterday. As the local fo‘rces were out. and the prim}- "liens called "m 159 from." we gro unn ble to give u vory'full account of Ifi‘ain us they transpired : but we think thn all the important. intelligence relative to the move ment upon Richmond is givan below: [ROI GIN. Lgl—TEI 23'!" AOll3 RIPULSID Thefollowing gratilying intelligenoelroln Genernl Leewu received at the‘Wsr Depart ment yesterday: Spotltvlvaruia Court Hausa. via Guinfy'l. fifoy 11. 1864.—Tbe Honorable Secretsrynl War ; i Gen. Grant’s Inn}! is entrenched near tliisl plsca on both sides of the Brook road.— Frequent skirmishimz occurred yesterday} nnd to—diy. esch army endeavoring to din-I cover the position of the other. Today the enemy shelled our lines. and made‘ sew-i ersl maul.“ with infantry 33mins! different‘ points, porticulnrly onour lel'tnheld by Gan. R. H. Andersml. The last. which occurred, after sunset. was the moat olminste, some of the enemy leaping over the hreastwnrks. They were easily repulaed, exec-fit in front of Gen. Dole's brigade, where they drove our men from their ponitinn.'snd from n four-gun battery there posted. The men fiere soon ralliedmml by (lnrk'our line was m-established shd the battery recoeered. A large body' of the enemy mnve'd around our left on the evening of the 911). and took possession of th‘md about. midwnv lie tween Shady Grove Church and the Court, House. General Early. with a part. of llill's‘ corps, drove them back this eveninmlnking one gun and a few prisoners. Thanks to a merciful Providence. oar casualties have been small. ‘ ‘ i Among the wounded are Brigadier Gene !ral‘ Hays and H. H. Walker. R. E. LEI-2. I Thefollowing privazediaputch, from May ‘or Shutgh '.er, oilFrmlericksßurg. was i-ecpiv ‘ecl iyestarday. . It refers tothe repulse men -Itioned in Gen. Leo’s tell-2mm : ’ I Guinq/a, May 11th, 1864.—1 came here to lobta'm some information from' the city of Frederickshnr‘g. I hear nothini: hut thea stutemnnt that. citizens have boon arrnsted n 5, hostages for prison?” we captured _thpr‘e -onfSund3:y. There was severe fightzng yes tel-day nem- Spnthylvnnin Court. Hamli— The:Yankee-, drunk vfitlr liquor, attacked ourenlire entrenl‘hments and we’re reivulst-d' with terrible Hlnllzhler. Muuknlry firmg was heard today in ll)» same direction.— The news is generally favorihlm ' ' "11. .\'x.u‘_nn’rzn. Some anxiety was felt in the public mind as to the sunnlies for Can. Look m'my. WhlPh rnav [,9 rein-DWI? by the fact that all the railroad damag‘g don fiby the raiders has been repaired. and Gen. Lee’fi “09 0f 00mm0m' cation is intact. - . . THICAULRY RAID—STREHGTII 0P Tm: nor-nuns -‘—l'Htm APPROACH TO THLCH Y—FluuTL-‘G SSM: Tux romlrlcnmss‘. » _ [From the Richmond Dispatc‘h. 12111.] The cavn’lry raid. number‘nz‘ flour 111nm and men. under (fienernls Cuswr auri'MPr- H”. which was first heard from at Bmvor ‘l’hm. arrived at Ashlanrl yesterday morn ing. where a fight. occurrnd. the rnzulf nf wh'irh is given in the. following ~lelegrum ‘ from Gon. Stuart : :Ifl'aviquarttrs. Ash/and. ‘Mny H. 6 30 A. M. —'l‘o General Brngg.--Genprnl: The. one my reached this pnintjmt before u<. but WPI'P promptly whippml out. after a sharp fight hy Col. Munfnnl. (Fitz lmn's mlvnnco.) killing and cppturing quite a number.— CGa-nerni Goédriu iu in the imrfodiatn roar ‘oF tho enemy. I intbrwct tlul rm"! '.‘le onomy id mun-hing nn at Yellnw Tm'mn. the hem] nt‘ thn turnpike. six miion from Richmond. . My mt-n am! hnr<es are tired. hungry and jaded, bu} nil» right. 'Abont nine o’clock Gnn.§ nun-t nrrivc-(l in the enemy's ran on the Bronk Wind, and Gen. (inrdon in their rem nn‘llm Mountain mud. Th:- hvo roads join ill I“)? Brook turnpike at the) Yellow Tnvvrn. ulmut 4i): mill“I frnm Richmond. and tho iulmninn of tho) onvmy was to nnma down llie hll‘nplkP. orusi thr- Brnok bridga. an m‘nnnil tn the Mnmlnw ‘B?er Mail. and (honor down the Piuninmla. 'l‘hiw plan was frnatrau-d by the binding nf the Moandow bridge by our (mpg-s. Thin {not beingdiscovermlhthp on ly mail“ of retreat '_el'z wns‘ to heat Gen. Slu nrt at Yellow Tnvérn, anal go up (11-a Brook or anntnin roads, or to mum-k (ho lu-«glm-y n! the Brow: turnpike, and cut their way {hr-«ugh: ‘ The fnfmbr maria wn triad. nndlnhout fonro’clm‘k yesterday affinoon they attack mt Gen. Stuart. who, with Inmax's nml Wickhamfs brigades. repnlwd thpm. The fight. wag n véry hot one. lastin'g over nn‘ hnnr. Among our casualties were. Limit. Cal. U. C. Pate nndand fivv captain! klllml. 0n Yheir route from Ashland, Gq'n. Gordon. who WM in thoirrear, nunniu-d them three timu, usmg thém up badly every timta. Thm'e had been no. more fiflmhz up In a late hour last nigm, nor had the, annv math nbothor effort to break out nt-‘YI-Hnw Tavern. Ml the'damage dorm by the ruigl u‘s on the Cl-ntral hmd has [won repaerd, nnd the_rnad wil} probably belin running ardento-dny. ‘ - , Tu: sou-11‘s")! or run nuns—Tm: mu? nun. BACK'TO BERIL'DA nrxnnans. . [From the Richmond Dispatch.] It would seem that the'enemy hive changed their plan of ’opemtions on the south side of the river. The fnllnmng du patch from Gen. Ransom was the flX'al int?- mnlion ofthe change: “Drtwr/fs B’ufi May 11. ”Ms—Tho on»: e y fell ba‘ck Int night irom their pnaition of -Psterrlay towaidfi Jinan river. apparently in some _imste. Their pickets haw appear edjn large numbers on Jama- river. in [he vicinity of Howleu's and Dutch Ghm. on Um «Juth side. R. Rwsou. rm“ Yesterday ewning there wpre no Ynn ken at Port. Walthnll. nor alohg the line oftho railroad or turn film from Peteriburg to thin city. Last nigllt an oficial dispatch from the commanding officer at Pexersburg an nounced the fact that. the enomy had fallen back to the river (Bermuda Hundreda)nnd were intrenching. " Intelligence through oursignal corps states the enemy were cutting down trees ind at ‘ tempting to block up the river with them. upon the apprehension, probably. thht the iron-clad: which they say u'e at Ric ond Irbuld go down the river, y] The movement on the south aid , as at first, projected, is thus abandoned. The enemy h‘nve fairly ‘rétreated. whether with' the purpose (if reinlprcing Grant or not is not known. I! the Gbfifederptegovern ment really had any iron-elude It Richmond now they would be useful. .- . nun; or Pusan” n m‘cunum. Sony-four ofi’cen‘ nnd eight hundred and hi fly one grivabec, uncured by Ben. Lee n Parker’s lore. on Thursday last, arrived in Lyncbbnrg Samrdny afternoon. Among the aficera no one colonel, two majors, fourteen captninl Ind twenty‘u‘ven lieute ntnu, representing twenty regimoncs. from Kline, Wincomin.Pennuylnnin, New Ydrk, Michigan, md Indinna. Two or three of them belong to the regula- army.-—Diqzéteh. . Q‘An hononble Sentim- (Lu-lei of Kansas) WIS assailed and beaten over Ethe head on Penmflvanie Avenue 1 few night: since by a. nymph of the pave. The ground of the hosule demonslntion was that the great. mun had reduced and afterwards abandoned hey—Albany Evening Journal, Why don’t the Jo‘m'wl folks make this the issue of I Presidential campaign. at in Sumner’l-eue; or in not thecwse of [fa-cc Love and Free Rationa. in which Gen. Dyna fell. aufioiently Advanced in popullmyj— Argu. ' , < ‘”Tho Supreme Court of Vermont in: doclued thaéwldian’ vofiug‘ bill of Glut. State uncoutitutionnl, io fu u it. ”lug-lo a» 010 cm of Sun m;, “ lohm 8: Gomfiyl CM6 KILLED “MD wouxoib.—'rhe ~fqllowi'ng i 9 in [he infurmnion we have tecoivod lince' wu- In: in tegnrd to tho killed find ionndéd ui Adam county : ‘ 1‘“ A hunt from ‘Cnpt. H.‘ N'. Minnigh, of Co- K, m Pu. nutmeg-dated May 13, Ind wimen in the rifle piu u. Spotuylunin, nyl: My company has lost 5 men, wounded. Rainer, (Very slightly,) uill‘with company ; tho, Buker, Murray" Miller, Rolenneel, and Gougcrmouh, lever‘eLv by! not dangerguuly. ’ ' A litter from Lieut. Geo. Elnuhlw. of Co. 8,139 m regiment, atn‘us um chmpauva bu lost 18 men in killod,iwounded 3nd mining, bu! gin-s no names. Another letter In}: thug Jacob ‘Kimniller of the lame compun'y wn§ wounded iii lbé Arm, rendering nmputniofl‘ necessary. Nothing in unit] Ibonl Capt. .\lc 'Crenry, who was reported Imong the woundgd by the papers. .‘ Ir Elias Redding, of the 87th, ia repor‘éd wounded.” ' . The following: n-list of killed,wounded and missing, in‘ Capt. NeCréuy'| comp-by, 13811: regiment: ' . . Killed—Chub: Dickson Wouniled.~Lieut. Grosam‘an. Sergt. Bieuc_k e', Lea. Hummelhnugh, Geo.)l_illbr. D. Dewult, A. Hersh, chob‘Kilzmiller. Daniel Kilzmiller, Peter Denrdorfl‘, Geo. Booth, Winfield Cover. Wm. Lynn. , ‘ ‘ Mining.—Wm. Sweeny, Kalle; Culp, 'Wm. I.Stultz‘, H. Gilbert. , ‘2 ' ' A prir'iue letter states that Sex-gt. Fiudlgy Biesecker, ofCo. B. 138 m rcgimehim'u wond ded and has since died. ' Dmi'li-l hhronister, of Hamptoxi, a member of Cnpi. Walter’s company, was wounded in the abdumen on the sth, and taken :0 Frederick burg,_whero he died an the 14th or .lfilh. THE EIGHTY-SEVENT l'L—A number of lloncrs from membefis‘hl the old Eighty-Ser §onlh Regimenlflmro bren rerrir’cd by their jfrjcnt: in this plat-e, during the‘pnst week, throu, lr which we learn that the‘ casualties Inmnng its membgn erg comparatively light Icompared tr; some oflhe other regiments. Al iliiuughfllicy were in the fnidsr. .I'lf tille'figll‘ fwhrre the battle raged the fierce“. li\s the ‘membcrs of this rc'gunenl. are principally from York vounty, om rilizens n ilurallgzirel n so l‘licitude to hear of their fi|lfl.: Hangman! } John F. Spnmzler, of compfiny A, wriies In his I fniher in this place, th‘nt‘they lmn- keen enmi 'ge<} with the enemy for nine dqs, a'nd although “my were under fire day and night there was 11-ut‘one, of their men in Hm regiment killed land twentyfillree wounded. The one Lilléd my In young man unmr‘d Henry Hn'sinzor, ol com pany A, furmorly in the employ of .\lr. .lmcph ‘l‘lrney, conic-:tioner in this plucm— Fork l‘rrn} THE PESNSYLVAXH RESERVES—ThO Eifficulty belwoen the Qomrnmom and the iumsgh'nniu Rgsen} Rogimonts, in relation to the time uftheirthu‘e _vcars' tom) arson-ice. inn: been amicably ndjnnod; the Government hayiné consented to allnwfihr limp th'oy were in théflale surice to thrir creafi on‘tlxcir three yearg‘ arm, averaging \hr time the diflirenz com'lnan of the regiments were mask in. tg‘ge Aer-vice and mustering ench‘regent out ro'me-h average data. In pursuant-1- of ibis nrrnfigcm‘ent..lhe 9th Ruorve Raging", which wns om- nf’thc curliest raised, was mm tered out on the 4th igifi. 5" r . WAR'S llPlS(ll4ATl()N.——Wlulrweinn-await ing the re’sult of them‘ighlycontest nnw going on in Vil‘gini‘n, the thought how (hos!l have fared in the struggle with Whom we are inti mate is ever present. Do thrf still live: or line thertallvn _npon thp field: or.nre thfiy Wounded. and if"), hoit'.’ There is many.i nn aching hmtrt in our ‘midnl, énger. ye! lufrnh‘i {a road the list of “kil‘lfid and \vonnlled!" Slay. the nwt‘ul sun-9p of the wing of the Declruying‘ Angil hwe touched Tout 61m" lightly l ~ WAn interestiu‘z Hitertninmcnt wan, fum ished by the “Franklin Liter-my Society of .\lummnshurg" on Saturday evening weetho {rum-d: to be contributgd to the Sanitary CummiSSio ). The prognrhnic on the occnsion was as follows: ' J: E. B. 9112 an Orntinn—The \liserie.‘ annr—EaG. Shaver. Lecture—Thv .\merimm Union—KW. Slnhlé. ()rnnon—Pnclures of the Wnr—C. H. Ful weilur. '. . Addrru—Ynnmz Amerim—P. D.W. Hankoy. E>sny—'Fn'n Hn‘pivnl—Jnm H. Stubln. Orn’ion—Thc Fathers'of the Beyunlic—A. E. Hartman. , Benediction. The literary exercises nerein‘ersp’engd will: excellent mu~ic. . ' —— By apecinl rvqnost. the exhibition «am to be repeated on In?! Saturday evening, And we doubt. not it was A thorough success. , flThe I,“ Young sFolks " of Gettysburg gave Concerts .ln Shanda & Buehlen'l llnll~on Saturday nnd :I'liurylny evenings, {in’ lhe benefit of tho ‘Christizm 'Commisnion. The Bull was filled on both eieninga, nnd‘glie re ceipts of=couue handmme—ubom $4O gbe first evening and 350‘ the second. :The per formamc- were very entertaining, and highly creditable to the "yon ng folks " and the {we or three indies who direcléd. . THE APPLE CROP —-Judging fmm fine up pengnnce of the orchards, a grind Apple crop may be expectéd this _ycar. The contiqned ruin may have injured the fruit saint-what, but. still a {air yield In looked for. _Tllxc nhu‘ry trees, gem-fully, 1180 appear'well filled with huh. ' . ”An Mien-mu ocrnrred betwoyn George Warner and . George WiZlnrd—two' you}hl of this place—oi: Monday hut, ddring .whiqh the latter drew n piuol and shot the fen-lime; in‘ the arm and breast. The waning inflicted, we believe, is no: serious. The pry-tie: have been bound ova for trial. y “C ' --——«—.—~ »—A --—A—"—- 3wThe Assessor of U. S. Revenue Taxe give: notice thst gha books 0! 1h: Alnihunlr Ana-son will be 9pm fur inspection'umfl the 28th of Mny. Those in Adlai-Lcounly who deg sire to bppul man do so In writing on or before thuJimc. ’ ‘1 , ‘ S'On Tuepdny morning the 1:3: Pi. Cav liry, which has been onenmped .3 Chamber... burg lince the re-orgnninuon of the régiment, pueed ‘braugh this place, en route for Wuh ingLon, from whence it is presumed they will be immedi-Lely moved to the front, to take pen in the gnu content new going an in Vir ginia. vg‘upt. Micqu’l compny‘. cém'poeed elmou entirely oi: Adeq- connty in'“, being: co this regiment: Robert Bell in Major. £0“). 8. Wiley Cnvford, the gull“! young copmsndor of dig Peunsylmin Re uryu, bu been .npomd killo‘i or' "paged ; but. we have To ,1 letter from him “ted Thundsy lat, hick maom :1! doubts 9: to his ufety. Bil buy: commlnd, udly thlhned by its nanny halal: conflicts with the chin], bu lglill been urribly decimlud. Tfigtml loan 0! the Reserve- it 110' oflcou sud 1,294 men killed, wounded Ind nininz—lndndiué 810 uptnrod in the early part of the luiggle. m 3 man be hurl: if not quit. I“, per eqitéoflu nut-3th ; and it Ihon how du pgni. sud «any luv. bie- iu «nun-. 3%: V . v. ' " , . _ Prni - er RAILROAD BLEOTIONL-The election for Pruidggt Ind Director: of ‘he Elnovgr Brunch Rnllrond um belddeversl wukl Rio, find the following unmed gentlemen were ahead, to nerve on; yetr : ‘ . PrelidepL—Ozfipl. A. W. Eichdborger. Mangers—.7l ob Formyflncub wm, Dnld X. My n, Slepfun Keefer, (febrgo Eiébeh bemrlflenry A. Young. ‘ Anus meeting of the board rhe Pruidem inbmmcd the Tm-mh Annun} Report. of my working of thb road. The gran elrning} but you: 564.7% lo and'the working upgnul Imam“ to £526,253 24,10"! I bslnnco of no: naming; of $18,132 3%,xhich Inn 41991: Ippropriucato thy pvamenl. of :59 flouting debt. ‘ BUGS.-Al Ihc leuon for bug: nppronhen, ll will be welMp bear in mind the Idvice of the Conny 03:11am: :—H6uaokeepen not ba lng desiroul'of belng curried out of the work} by bugs, will lac glad to learn thst lhey can not. stand hot alum water. 'l'ske lwo pc'mndu of alumr bruise it, and rgduce it to powder; disgolve‘ it. in tlxree quarts érwnter; let ii re main in a warm place till the slum ll dluolv 6d. ' The nldm water is in be Applled by menu. of; bx ush, to ever; joiutnnd crevjuiu the floor; whilewgs‘h the ceiling. pm‘ling in: plenty 'of Ildm, And there will he: an end to their drop ping thence. , ' ‘ FATAL ACCIDENT.—On Thnrsdpy week, A Imnll child 0! Mr. Rufus‘Krug, of Uono‘wlgo' township. this county, iccédeumtly fell into A tub of hot water, which wnsgmnding on ‘Lho flnor,sind was scaldmiau b_ndly that. it. died in nbodt \(1 ’hours finer. The child wan aged about "(tr GM QT: Rebel GencmlJ. E.'B (JeMStndrl, whomade a mid through this county “1:18:32, wn kn};- wcrk before last, in an Engage mift wfi. Gen b‘lnridnu’l Tureen, at mayd lo, Threw. ‘ Tm funeral 16d? [mica _i-mßich. mum! on the lath inst. _ "I 'r‘ --w . , .e_,._-.__ ...- :fir’l‘he Firs! Mums“: sink pf Genytburg hm‘ing .‘dML-rmintd to ‘increufl its Cnpimi Sloék Io $lOO9OO. there 3.; _vel an opportunity nfl'orded to those “1w wish; to mnke a K00}! And safe inwstmcnt lo’mnhqcrfl-o and thus scum some ofithe «tuck. The books are now npen )or sulnscriptién ht me Bunk. ‘ nnr.?‘igf '- ”Mr. CLIK'I‘ICHIIS Brenm, nf fluxntitt'itun to’wpship, muenllyauhl ll"hi|ll')$0fl)flhll:l‘k fur .\ _lundsnmc pripo—lnze weight of the animal 403} 11.5., find the mic-ego! $26 50. “ WK“: sub-miners ari- mmifiz in {gum all din-client Kurp the bu}! rolhngl wOrplmn': (‘o'nt lu-murrmf' win New York, m 1 “‘e'hii'ithy mornind, about gho lilnc lhp‘ncwqxnprn nrw [winm‘pnt to pro‘s, and win-w? Iho nfi‘tcns w-re Holt-livin the hand: nf tho fnvnnirn. Um Niv-rabuvinc: lcfl, ‘aquovhxn‘utinn mm": (Sr mmmfr'rpgg by (he Presidvutt‘nnd purpnrlix-gm mmo ‘hrmuh ‘ the Anon-Hm Telfizfnph, wagonfiir'd In (‘.Nil. of the offices, 1! “'“‘-i3"! in up" lgy H 1 whu rcreixevl it, hnl Imly’munll it! wnj to Ihr- pm:— lic through portions of the mlilfimn~ (’Mflfh’ nqd ,lnr'lrmll n'-' (Lmnujrq the NH IllWhfi‘Hl‘fi its hngu: charm tu-r i_l} 1 me. The furg'rry It“ “We?! .jnpvrziv-mly gullsu up, nnd w.“ mlrntnf £O6 to den-IW3 any um“? l'nrinz lht"!'nl't'noou, the edltnra m Ulv WWI/Land Jmmm! of (Wm. m'nn ofl'oredn ro'r ml or S'mrlj’ot 2M} lii-corny o! my gumv prmy, um) lfie flusmim’ Trla jzmph SHIIIO. '"“: this d‘d not sandy tho “leem! P 0“ or." ' In ll.€-n‘mn: =qsm~ls ,0! mm»; tank pou firssion of the (fix-:5 of vhe "hr/'1 um} Jnvrnul (if (‘l)m;l|l'rf'f'=h\‘lhln‘,s .zil oprrauimf, and Arr "ders were i“s‘n|?l_fll‘ the urn-u and unprimn 'mept ol'lhrrduom in \Fort [why-He. The lnttrr ordo-r wmuhmrer-rr, squmledlhefqm tneir arrest. As. wl‘ m 3 ugh 'n-rtvlvo'nu- "Wm/r! on Prjliny, we ’mfr-g tlml ‘lhg nfliu- vr.c~ NIH held by ll 0 mnilqy. TM: nrl-iixiuy .Ir: "pun 1h? 1i? my 0! the yrvswllgndrrdszof mll‘gl away How the Sfi'flk‘i of guitar! npl-ralimu, and wlu-re the laws n! the 1.1;}! nre in ml! May, 'i: pronounced by an high-pfiudml oilimn .ep nnug‘cesmry null lhrrolnr‘c lzrs'umiclfl, M? an des‘erving of the drnluxcmlin‘n's n! w" over uf genuine trevdmn. .Evcn _Gn’y éulnnot stomach the outrage. > ' ’ The inland Telegraph'linp w?“ nl‘m ttkm posseuinn of by military mnluornry.»m-I m ceveml installers the OPELAIOI’! wen- :uu lo (Yn'shiugton ci‘ALl‘. I'POV 'l‘llE .VIIIJTIA. rrcrivnnnlmu n,’ Ill! (1' ”yr-JIM nf I’mnwh-unhr —- I]! Gil/s for l'ulm-ftfl‘: lo [ln/10:11 In an Am ‘ltcipaled Dnnuud [muff/w l’,‘!3.fl-Iv‘rll. PInMDr-zwnu. May lßth.,—-Gnv. Curtin hatis‘suwl the [allowing yrm-lmnntinn: IVnPrenv. eirrumstaneeu renclrr it not im prohable that ”It President of the United States may my in a short tiinrr mll oh Pennsylvania lor vfolunleer militia l’ur‘n‘ brief term ‘0! servicu:_nvtl . , ’ ' Whereas the example of the hrnve nwn nofi'in the field front Pennsylvmnm. here toloreton every buttle-fieltluli-‘tintguiulu-Il for courage nnd efiitzienoy. but who in the !?Of‘llt hn'ttlen in Virginia have gained an enviable (listinetmn by their deals of valor and emlilrancv, should stimulate their brothers at hum.- to inCren-zetl etl'nrt to‘su-o tain their country's flag and terminate the rebellion; now. theremré. _' ~‘* _l. .Andrew G. Curtin“ Governor of the Commonwealth oti Pennsylvania. do make thin, my proclamation: earnestly requesting the people of the Commonwealtht willing to respond to xuuh call ot‘tthe President. to form military orgfii‘izfiions without dPifl)'. that they may not be found unprepared to 9 do .. , e . .l do further requnt that commanding oflicers of all military organimtiom which may he formed in compliance with this proclamation do forthwith report the oon~ dition ‘0! their respective, mfnmnndn, that prompt. measnign. nmy’ be taken for getting, them into service in case a requisition - should be mnde by the general government. If mule. it. Will be for a term of not lap-i then one hundred days. The troop- will ‘ be clothed, armed, sub-tinged. and p. 12? by the United sates, and mustered in —the service thereof. ‘ . ' G'm-n under my bend at Herrinburg. this 18“: day of May. .. By the Governor: Eu Suns, . Sec’y ol the Commonwealth. all is said the the reb4ln captured at Mansfield twojugons loaded with paper collars; and that Genenl quk T 1120- re» turned the collar: through I fix; oltruee, with a letter to General Banks. In which the focetioua rebel said : “1 have bailed, baked and slaved these things, and can do nothing with'them. We cannot eat th'em. They ore n luxury {pr which we have no use. and I would like, therefore, to exchange them] for: like qunnlily of hardltack.” ’l‘hejoko; ll 3 good one, and has cohvulted the west-‘ em boys. who have no great admirauon lor' the “ Liberator of Louisiana.” When the' western troops passed General Banka'l headquarters, coming into Alexandria, yel terday, they groanod, jéered. nnd culled Aloud, “How show. those paper collsrs l" ——--r--———. O 9—— ___...w _Tha Latest Hunt—we him from the highest authority that. the documents rO.- cantly published purporting to be letter! And dispatches from Earl Russellubord Lyon. and Jefferson Duvxs, through I!}!er vate lecreury. respecting the building or rebel rum, in British pom. were unmhiu pud forgeriu from beginning to and, no. such dmmepu hum; e‘ver been M£m_ ? the panic. whose names thy] bog..—
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers