(grit Obserber. SATURDAY, APRIL 25TH, 1863 ?as View ma no Cosamirnosp.nwir LID tor ens-011 MID ibtlltn*Alaje ' Tax city of Chicago, for - the first time in many years, we fielieve, has elected a Democratic Idayor. . • Gov . . ccrava has appointed awns, ri Coacasof Bradford county, State Super. 1 tendeat Schou In ' place of Roo. Tool. H. Bosthwta, whose term 'has expired. Mr. B. has made a reoficiab4 illielent officer:and his "reappointment was earnestly de;ired by the friends of education ; but being a Democrat, the no- party politicians were determined that he 'should not be retained. Gov. OTITIS having been kicked oat of the way, the Republican politicians are now directing their attention to the seen. ring of an available candidate for the Gu bernatorial nomination.' Our information from garrisbnrg leads 115 to believe that the individual most probable to be select ed is Hon. W.W. awn, of Wilkes bane, a reaegade_Democrat, who former ly represented Luierne county in the State Senate. Mr. understood to be the favorite cant Mate or Ocn. GAMMON', and if sich.iiC-the _case, his nomination . may be regsrded as certain. Osa Whist soldier's in the field, and Abair friends at home, should bear in mind that ave,ry,Democrat in the Senate of , Pennsylvania voted against Lowry's bill authorizing citizen 4 of this Common wealth engaged id, the military or naval service of the Uhiteo States to vote. Traitor aympathizeils everywhere deny the right of suffrage 41 the heroic men who are fighting to sustain the flag of our -country and the Union of the States-. Crawford journal. The third article of our State Constite• Lion, giving the' quiliflcations of voters. mays none but citizehs who have resided in the Commonwealth one year, and in the distrigt ten days preceding thealec-, tion, shall have the right to cast a ballot: This article is binding on every public of Beer in the State,—all election officers swear to support it, and until it is re pealed, any vote received by them cod trary to its _provisions would lay them ,open to indictment for perjury. Thr edi tor of UM Journal and Mr. Lower know this fact, and yet they would have our election of violate their with; in order, as they expect to gain a little poll .:. capital. Oar soldiers are ndt so stu pid as Republican politicians take them to.be, and when they find that the State Constitution contains the article we have quoted, they will not be likely to have a great deal of respect for Cdr. Lower and the other RepubliCan State Senators who by- their votes have shown their disres pect for the instrument they are sworn to protect. DANIEL S. DICKINSON. At a meeting of Ithe Radical League on Saturday last in New York, we, learn from the World, that the speakers wore put into One of the parlors of the Everett House, and as their names were called they came forward; a badge of gaudy ribbons was pinned on their breasts, and - they were marched, with "an escort of offloera of the society, to the stands designated for them. Among--these gentlemen was D4triat 8. Dtcturaos, who appeased as happy is his borrowed ribbons, al the Mock Duke did in his. To show haw a political trimmer can be his own prophet, the Work!. quotes the following passage from 'a speech made by this same DICLIXSON in /WO, when he was stumping in favor of his pet Bimini , Baid he i i "Do yoti knot*, 'y Democratic friends, how the Republic aerie the Democrats who go over to th m I I will tell you how. , They serve them as the New York butcher serves his &Lox. He puts gaily. colored ribbons on his horns and marches him through the streets as a spectacle to be stared at, and thah—last'scene of all— he drives him to thellaughter pen. This is . the way Republicans serve Democrats who are flattered and cajoled by them into ao abio4ooment of their principles." It is not every man that is so signally - privileged to be his own-prophet. DIME IT WllO DAMN,. We assert, and we challenge any tion paper or politician to prove the con trary, that no prominent 4mm:rat in the North haa ever proposed a separation of the Stately, or ilk. sweeties of the wax on the basis of diasolutiou; and that the only members of either party who leve urged the breaking -up , of • the Union, have been Republiassui,3--Imeh for iristaike as Kr. CONWAY, of KNEiglia i j who offered a residution In-Congreee teengnizing the in dependence of the Southl; or Iffr. • i i Lr, -who declared that at the expira tion of , thrte month; troth April WA, "a serious Impreulon bad wit been made on the rebebk" we should "bow to out des tiny and make the beat attainable peace," or Meson. &masa, Patture, and Snu*a, who announce plainly that, they " want, Tr Union, unless slavery is voted eut of it" Will any Royal Leaguer accept the challenge ? We offer the use of our own columns rh oar olu dertak( Ex, Busts) gating Committee of the Pennsylvania LeiiaWare in the Caineron name • have made i report, finding Gen. 'Ciarruos guilty on the charge of bribery preferred against him by Jar/as:sox Boris, a mem ber of the Legislature . : After airjpgag the case • strongly agains t the witnesses in Cameron's defence, they say.Bovlit's state ment is oettoboreted in nearly all the leading details by testlnumy of other-wit nesses, and it appears from the testimony that.other number' of the Legislature Wig* Born were offered money. To rot n friend of the Constitution-- the Constitution that. Washington and his compatriots or the'Rerroitttion bequeathed to the Arieriosit people as a legacy of in estimable worth, is 'to incur the suspicion and dila° 'ot AboliticnOsts. - They have se long terriedto l oo 4 **" e 'league with death aut.* tiovOlint with hell," that l they eiestirtinibtkonthe ocesaron of war to own itt'ocaltiee,nod undenoino its authority 11114-obligalions. - ? realend i Franeeeand Atistria iimultaueoussly to Emits, oik the 10th, ;dative to robust. The du. patchouli Menctly, bptiall or tlieixi ivyitOntaliiiifie warnlng. !rods exhll)- ' Bedatiltivt.oUttorprerattpus-: vie sass isHififernierticAND vets N . SIMITIMILM ' , - The - Republican organs are never'weary orilatinting id oar faces the scornfully re pellant tone in which tip Bieh c‘j pals comment onrepdit . raise and conciliat* dby e Democratic party. 1 / 4 ye they "when the Detlioiattitode ssi ne "lhetiebels. spurn them. These recreant. "oonserratires get no response 10 Jamb ! "kindly proffers but a storm of derisive "vituperation. Hew absurd; then, to cher- Nsh.-wereeniiisaus-eowertt-ebeser - • - 'invites but an unrelealiag disk* for "their exterminatioa 1" Bet thisielts*Se fury of the rebel:orgasm, rightly isierpre• ted. proves the very opposite pt we* 414 aholitionista maintain, . The hireettres forth by the ides that the Demo cr guarantee' them -their rights if ther will lay down their smuts and consent to the reconstruction of the Tinto% 'dem onstrates that the rebel leaders ccirieder nothing so damaging to - their causi'es for belief to take root *thong - thiir fellbirers that the North will Meet them halfway if they will cement to come Wick, It needy hut - a slight acqualatanOLWith' human nature to see that men will not • make a violent oppogition to what tip t ey . ! consider for their own "advantage,,,tht , Democrats advcieete coucllistion.; ~but they advocate it only as a condOea 're-union. The iehel goiernment,. which sees in reunion nothing, but Its oerade =Adieu ; the. *An; whose importaboe is staked on separation and '-thelnnitell which this gevernmeat and theme leaders control, burst into a chants of hot abuse of the Democrats, because they see ;that exhibitione of reason, -justice and Mode ration in the North tend to' shake their power to its foundations„ These leaders have been •plotting, disun ion for thirte years ;, but they dared not disoloss their purpose, and there was probably never a time, up to the actual outbreak of ,hostil idea, when a majority of the Southern people would not' have strongly profisired rentaieing in the Union if they could have been disabused of the idea that the North intended to deprive them of their Constitutional rights. It was bemuse the rebel leaders knew their preference for the Union, that they joined the Repabli-, cans in defeating the Crittenden resolu tions. The passage of those resolutions would haveretained the Border States, and rendered the rebellion abortive.—' Hence the southern members Of o:ingress withdrew or'refuse j il.to vote, to enable the Republicans to defeit the Compromise. Their recent abuse of the Democrats is in pursuance of the same tactics. They dare not allow the impression to peeve! that the Democrats will give the South \ ins rights, if it will repent of its follyand`re turn. Here, as throughout all the steps Which led to this fratricidal struggle, the secession leaders and abolition females have played into each others' hands. The northern and southern people, if they could get together in conventionqind derstand each. other's sentiment', could end this quarrel in three weeks. his only because the secession leaders make their followers believe that the abolitionists-are the North, and the abolition leaders make their followers believe that the con federate government with its officediold era and organs are the South, that the War has proved so long and so desolating : So long us the rebel leaders retain their ascondencf over. the 'southern people, the North cannot, in honer, relax in the slightest degree its military seignior's . . Peace, or any steps toward Pewee, while the rebel ascendency in the South remains. unshaken, merely paves the way for per manent disunion. But while DeMocrats give an unfaltering i support to' the wir, they will be equally ualoni in attempting' to upset the rebel , government, by letting it be seen that the &with can kayo all their rights fully guaranteet if they wilt, consent to resume the Old fraternal relit dons.. We will not, if we can help it, let them mimeo's they must persist in fight ing in Teter to ward off emancipation, itniversakconfiscation, subjugation to tar ritorialdepenclencei and /government, by military satrap. We, will• novae cease to Bee to them, 1 lay down your aims and, yoyf rights • shall bit, as ,eacre4 ,es purl. ,, dt the earliest moment, when they will consent to discuss , the terms of an ar• rangetueet vs i/44 bads et" reunion, we anal all Democrats will pronounce for at.' mistier tut till, thee the war mist go on ; and vigor .in its proseeution;-like anything else that tends. ,to shortie its duration, is mercy to the coushatants.,. N. Y. World. . 1 , • TUN.TIO , .ace PIAL. , An important decisioishm imently been nude hy ..liedge Van Trump, alb. Tale field county, Ohio, State court. - Vdaciap..; Olds, 'Who had been kidnepp4 by (a 11. S. Marshal, we bedlam ' ) sad other. in Ohio, abdicted ham the State lad imprid- 1 fumed in Fort letfay,i, sued Bliss ter the outrage.' He was brought into °Mut, where] be pleaded the Indemnity Act„and asked a eertificate to transfer the ease hem • the Ohio State Court to, abet U. EL Court, als provided in that act. -Jades Van Trump ruled the act of •Congrass, in•in .far as fa provided for, a transfer, to be miesoudea dosed, and refused the petition. Milli is the first decision under the sal, and Ilia case will undoubtedly be carried to higher court. -If the declaim aboald . be' sustained by the litslO Court of WU resort, it will bring the Stater and Federal authorities in direct aciallka—forfWe• can. not suppose other** than that the Pro. siding will andaavm tciptotbet hli sabot- dilutes. He is in the same - boat with them as violator of the Condituthin, and it be • cannot save 1 Mani from haini neither can he save himself.--froiriiisay Potrkt -OF VOW- "Where is Geo. X' t" —Bosoms General W.Clellan is at home, in ;?..hr . York. He haeitsked President to a score of times, "When am I to be ee. signed to a command 7 4 or, "When sr• vertices to be called for 7" • Tha l Emmet uniformly is, "By and - by. ." limit time ago, be mid toPresidi. sart. cola, "I must have siomiehlrig to do. of must ask your soovevao,ci my resairue :um." The President's reply-is •under 7 ' toad to have boon. "Wie Asia loos hied .you; we MAY Weed you now -bide your time ; I cannot wept. your resignatios." —Prondeacs An. 1111 r Lieut. I. W. Reed,' of di si!!, "mud, has 11141.* THE NEGRO POLICY OP TOR ADMIN ISTRATION. 1. Adjutant-General Thomas, of; the War Department, has commenced ei - re .. r b ta s y I ti ed' Aisket s the - .:. rat* n n inn r-; . • d i tisfi u p ea; ~,i •• .. -Lan idl_ln , La., • few days ago. dehiscing 'au •'-address to' the aoldiers, he which he stated that' he came there i'svith full authoritTlfrom the Presideit of the Unitedlltat4e)tilo , ail deliberation,,,hait beeirdeteueined -upon, ,by , Abe tviadoiss,.of I the/. itatkie,l l - Oen. Thomecooncludeeasifidlows:i 4 - , 1...1 • • "-• ' - , ~ T hey= (the isegrbbsyire to; ' encour aged to' come to us; • . They are to two r eamed with openanot : they are to be fed andelotateck;.-tivY al- gil,Acared • k _ ii ",This is the.. • .I‘v.impe: 4 *4 ; seik 'ileinrsidnedlt ''..' /Ai here :say that I inn autho Mi,,iiii,r 'raise as ninny ,regi liitht ol i blitiiic, ,os I, can. I ant author . to give outucuawiona, fivin.the,highest to 6 foilat; l and rhhaire tho 4, perzoas who rite etriteit Ittihievitirk to take hold of it. I- desire onlttihosWwhoie he ars e ' eveja Al. and to Ahem - alone u t-l - gtte ' com I miinionse„ slOott 4inie t w airy are 1 or Whitt their_preaent mdcAlay, ,LAC net' hesitate' to icy thiit - alTproper, ..m Will receive commiss ns. -- • '-'-' - - ~ Widhittifin a ' thus in the name.ofilapSocultaq et-Wet, I hive the fulled. . to disable:boo thstui4 l r 2 2,, b e Ji b '. te'failri 4 aik , who, it ft - maltreating the ' part of 'ear duty I - irflY l "tibia ' ' - ' y perform if- *meant, °dues -hetbitivmii:' I w9ls übibior do Abet-Asa givetottuttle. naps ! becausikauch steklife Ilinly , the name of ieddiere. I ' -' ' I ' did ' .-.• I hope to heat ' hat in ibi s i sp en division, as I knew It to be Veterans is Nip poison would call theim—for 'yogi ire Vet erans—l hope to bear before i leave, that I shall be able-to scrub it lautw regiment from among you. I.d,metwant to stop at one, nor at two. I mist have two at leuti It is possible that I 'tarn- procure lohr. ' I would like to raise on this river twenty regiments at least before I go back. I shall' take all the . Women and children and all 'the men unfit for our military or ganizations, and pike them On these plantations; - then take - these -regiments and, put them in the rear, They will guard the rearftfibotiVely. IGnoiring the country welt;--'and ' rattail* with all the roach' and • swamps, they will be able to track out the accursed verrillasland run them from the limit When - I et regi olet3ts raised,- 7ixi mfr. out, into the interior .with itopuzlity. . Recollect, for everyreg,onept of blacks I raise,,ll raise A ta regiment of whites face the fbe in the field. This, fellaw'stddlera is the deter , mined policy of the Administratban. You all know full well, when the Pretideot of the United States, though said tci, be slow, in coming to. a deteOzuzation, _When he, once puts his foot down it, is . there, and he is not goingto take It up. Ile has put his foot down: I am;' here to' astute yout that my official influence shall be given that he shall not raise it." 1 - WET TUE ABOLLTiONDSTiI DMtwc TO 4 _ • :AI - • RMS.. OONATIO ICAVINS• 'lCtie Newark' (O.) Advertiser, in cxenment in • upon the general favor shown! by, the A> on press to ants of -mob Violence upon (I , oaratio papers my : "These \ swts al mob violence are not more remerhOle for their skulking cow ardice than tursubstantial, coufeastions on the part of the nblicasti that ;the po sitions and . _ fa of the Democratic newspapers can not met and :contro verted in fair di. The !Repub lican politicians semi to nderstand that the confidence of the'pecip in Democrat ic newspapers is constantly creitistg.— It is to thufact, and to the sness that . Republican 'journals and kers are Unable tooverturn the facts • ar guments inesented,Democratil air papers, that we are toi attribute the d peration of reeling which induceit ißepub limns to resort to brute violenod, barglaif and • arson against those who refuse to think and smk as they do." ' The 4lcivcriiser lout ,bit the Dail .on Abe' head exact.' . . IC PP *gm pur litcobaitges. President Litman inteltnoeiced to. many UM into exited hes; sad too few Out .f thetit ,--Pkreistke -- Tim butternut's' are willing ( light for Vitale Blitn, but they • are' not' itieliiie4 to a° qitite so Dinah-for Unehi tiamt)o: , = The' Western Star very trAy t , that Ita‘ /egotty that nee is to ibe Volagre4 i►g and strengthened by frequent Asils 9 , c,thfii , ?atti „Of 1411?gifinhe ilia the 'Union. LeailuS;,tatts in eery feeble iipifgiOdi 0 13 4%11 9 4v 4 • - • r - "-4 1 415 liberty or . giro as : Oath ;7.1;14 foelisb . say: "iliseuts the ft:smAgaswgig o pt,Afritsa die= scent or give us ThitlopttilwAli.7 1 -• • 11xcii fc,4 1 elifeaul.--Atmgro., viiims tote! 8 4 14 9f PLlFle,AbOtsiima,.l as styled. them ' • ' if3,s9 p Alto Awoke. 1.1-* 1.. ol* oied Men." . • leT 1991, the"Titiffigehlt In 1862, " free Americans of 'ANSI!' 'de: - . • .141.7 ,, ' • ' • A writer in the Nollibi litithtilhit !Chris • don Advoeale uys:-:-"Otistns forty-sigh t Au -441 CosesseiliEekiltlil*-Isita r0:704 intents ringing from %1,73 ..7;1: - * .p q ual aggre g4e lase rai tiro4,',..utsildiallaiast the " t irk!!. 2, 0 0 7, roUticoksrWitthitighttwet the indoutitiiii eattee,ttbla 4seeky.:•_: • ;Tsui Comiscriotrellsaiet Diligent e4tOperitos of toe GorateetidOt *Lieu ties this you, with, tau, etile/it yeas WO la te'rento-- • blmipcgi rrteti 1:11 4 ..1"f_t — "" 7- + A Damien ula Desoastle Pin to last.... 1 41 1, itipablista vote la JfepaW cue fob 1!1. ihismatiansate la Int. • MIMI , .;• l I • - 1 •;-The Abolitioidita Of tie town o f Itipio,l 'OO4 Kato a- eltatootaiistie 'ilai l Oi 'Bll4liing 'thair tthilatetropy: . Lit 4 . .titay" 'ilidii .dea t•ersteofortai tad stic6tedod ii: tnioning s tiO negra - ehildratitiOm theh , , tontuolty 'Waal* . -sad a day. dr t a Windt* midi tato beiges" 'Cilia:orphan ehildrini, lihoie-' Wier ' i' now in lite tram to' the poin: kOlike. • To:the- Stant of thalami& if lieorgato!ia, Ohio, thee, } an: dila ware mat *lifted to antis the lifiraaryi . ay 'era proolded withlinssa firtlie Wallin, of two good Democrats erntie plaice: ~1 • _••• —, A 1.1. ~' arateralte Ti. : Ihrronnan s —oa Itaturty TO oylntesid an Ikeda' dintaagoi* bothatia 111 ALlnditionist and • tioraottiOn#e„tiOC-acily botori thi - tlgislatiiiiiii'ke*t WI t Piiiirt , do 4 ielieit,i.rito.o 4 . stoe ; , I% 4 1 ° 'PIM! of thadiaeitistia thi JOxilitionist: ,selaatkod: 1 1 lirOnld is *on: 11 :14i,, _ . 44tiloan .0 See tatotignint I hive seen .'' vs::Abol ? nist ! i i wires*. g - hir rekai,d fat ;al& Inta c t* 46 - foe Otira,sid,lrith, )!iilsetia, l •,- - tor! s iai Piri4-• .. ! • • :.•- ' i. ,, ,+A - ;it. ' rrfolitZlident . o t* ) . 1 44 11 / OP4ists lir a in it ol° )1404t fr , Nt T 1 - *,/& 1 « low: isi taitiail,;i of '! ari si"4-4T4.i. ", ) , 4 4 liat instead O n , tlit k .ana 6 i_h - 104 14 , - fir.#4 , 4 ' 4 oiidetipia. l o4,,,ititti4 YkaPOl O ...l4 l lW 4: poliispeiikki44,. vg,bAlkAi*.rielion ** o.o*aeiviulowi. Pit tot ths4olo' ire iiitilie;roi;.*Aiiai *ei . A.,sopi . , op. ecOllaiiiii old s 0;: J?kl°itti . ° 4 r4104 friaidni 111,0 Ta tkiter*RlA#lraf.l* 7„!:1 .:43E11 ::.11•1.1-1:7 .:. O.- - - i , EMI reward for - a patriotism 'that had made deso late his owst,imsrthsloae to defend the Gey er= , /10 r ' Cikiciona ti, CommereSit,..* . • blicen paper, has . firiwiteita .look tiegh •••••'• . ' "Our eseeihmt old General in Chief, the somnalcut Haßeek, is not In the most audible humor In the world, and the same thing is to . • laid of tbaJadkdous, agreeable and affee ltre Sta rti Ther i 4Pol Bo4 P? !dui tall - bitut o "titles and !Twin' hiss. minirele, ex cept Chao,,pin/les. Even the' ,Preaident occasionally indulge!' mild 11- 7 ts ! Biwoid swears doable and - twist oaths, and smokes:lllw the pit,' not to speak of the "emlie# he laltna." it is nevi sad. , A.‘frioad semprets so the Boston - Courier, that the name Onion lona „would be the most appropriate la these maw abolition is so Ciations,•aelar awe seggTolee'of the Aron.; Afrkzeses vittrwhlett they are 'lmbued then the honored sew Ir#kelk they nava lammed, and•wbiel belongs to persons' actu ated brfery'dliferent purposes from theirs. T,be New York Expren thinks that after Mie 4 - ascription we shalt see wen here, tut - on the coati/tent of 'Kempf. pMwiag,.,boeing. *Uing,i*hg, wood-eleopoing, raining, ,ke: A Michigan soldier who Mu accused of stealing a rebel's goon, 'said that be found the bird hissing at the Anteryaw i gsg, and sr: item.' it for tressed': SCENE IN VEIN LNOPI4ii TURN. • .31111. VINCOMP to 1110*111111111,11110.*1 Mass.—Tuesday Morning,' April 14. Mouse met sit WA. 11: 1 • the Mr. Benedict moved that h repoct of tharalnerity of the committee appointed to invadigate into the alleged attempts M corruption in the election for United States Senator, be printed with the major ity report. • Mr. Champlain contended that •it was nothing bat an' act ofjustioe that this re port should lie printed with the majoi sty. Mr. Sabre said that he wanted tiyia re port to appear with the majority report, that the people might compare the two with the testimony in each: The argu ments of the minority were unfounded by isny evidence of facts cited by themselves. By the argument of the minority, every Republican•mernber who voted for Simon Cameron way guilty of coniplicily with this attempt, at fraud. Mr. Vincent said that he did not believe one single .Republican in this House knew Qf any attempt at fraud by Gen. Cameron. - Mr. Koine.—l would like Wash the gen tian= &question. ' ' Mr. Vincent:—Yee, sir.. Mr. Seine.—well. I want to ask him if tray Republican did not kiwis, the feet that (led. Cameron could not be elected, eieept-by bribery I ' Mr. Vincent.—/ had then, and I have - yet a better opinion ef Gen. Cisneros than to op pose for a manses, that As *coat resort to any sucA means of obtaining votes ; std iilask 90 1- down on this side of the House think the" same way. Finally, it was resolved to print Eire thousand copies of ther minority's report. Mr. Ho pkins ,. of Wuhington,. offered the followang resolution Resoford, That the Governor be instruc ted to direct the Atr General to in stitute criminal proceedi ngs against Si mon Cameron , Jo hn J. Patterson, Wrn. Brobst. and Henry Thomas. • . Mr. Benedict moved to amend by strihm ing out the names of Gen. Cameron and the others in the resolution, and Insert, the named T. Jefferson Boyer, Disagreed to by a strict pezty. vote. ' - _. The vote was then taken Pu the resolu tion of Mr. Hoptirus, when Mr. Laporte, Republican, rued aye, and desired to en ter his moons for so.doing on the journal, which were asfollows :-- 48 As Sinsoin ei'Pe } wag Into informed, constant' as serted since. his defeat that. but, for his failure to' obtain - my vote, he would have, . • eleeted, ind as that assertion' can • ybe Westin my opinion, "on the' wand that he had purchased a Duty cratielrote, I vote are - The tirisinal resolution of Mr, ,Hopitins then passed, yeas 49, days . 44. ittunored Departnre of the • 'lron- Clads to the Minsiesippt:t • If it be true, rig Stated in Mei telegraph, yesterday, Sit the iron-dui fleet Is to be sent from Charleston to the lassisslppi," the reason is probably to be Wad in the fears entertained at present for the safe ty of New Orleans. A. ooramporidast of the New York %so gives an alarming rid venni of 'the situation Of 'the Crescent City. His letter is deted'Apfil sth "tha city,. fer ehride fritt tairMi:PcfoOmicte of by .theNations 3 / 4 troefie , seriodily thre a pi t itil ire en, new. with fhirty-Bie d , roahleit 'V a t P e i =i l thouset l elfriet . Hetet 7 11:1" the Deritteeet. The -,feet due the anew irt steadily courientrating his formai witlunrdziking distance - 6f . tes t and ai t ' though bann6t - cenoeiie it passible that heepoeklLaimdt at: pare • contalhfrig :ober hunched and Ally tbemiend people. thin bigfe# 149, 1 sea woomanotabillirkf r and pe24lnlit4lllll 4,44` at Ipeno,ine. -eninnes Monde, bitt ihne wtll daterralee. Ataiotrl itri f redierli that the (iffy of New lenowi•kenthelhet-thileshrici its depletrepAiwiesiett.. threstene4 I would , I tate 1 4 4 , 11 0: 6 ,IWecnolf at aide I/112111SW mead troopti At, tiechscek, Wig; - We're' thoirsitidf on, the Atoka, falityrkeNsen • thottsand; tad it' lircitile, ten thormasd—rtutking • * total of riiityz the Ammar& ass, wha maid, by. -- taiV 1 "0 0 4 ' klyeenosalletted.apot Polka in twelve home. ilia itsleri.by redone* recently • lifoirile t „ thei r great preptratiorts' are being 'hut& Were' , to take libip .lelead f awl obit ibetritui.v porta aadtenope eeeraer fee tbitrnipieer Are. no! . nreaciiiNloll;oll4,ooferturii tbs. toeulexd,to,leeve. Elo peat ja •cettanier-' ad the denier, the' liiht on the telend f , bE ibe United Stater hoe', been ill New Esaieno Etabome.—The New . England Eltotiolul we tudioato tho , orthe-parfy .1p por'. 'Per 'though they have allot enormous same and rent bonebrigades of picked abolition soldiers, whose furlough wee oily upon oondition, that they would vote the shoil tiOnAkkat, .have still lost _IA Sim H In Rhode they be , 10,104 In - ;000 - 7,000 In throe anulil States 19,104 1•: In all 04b. the demon* not. withstan they bad the whole treasury old cadatin tion•to fight, make a gun in the.eta about- to the abolition' loos. ,/ • . this,RMArross in?" ENOLAWIL—A ipa ohd "ii4ateil dated WashinOod qp Wed nbisisy, So•ths•Philidel hie Lao. skis: . 'Time is very grem sr °pin k* * to V* nqiure.a liho dispatches just feet pot upon We, nuked aAs Aispoor ore of Vseselo froMErieand for memos in. the htitihi of the rebels.' But; If I -am Wit otitiokoldOd, tbofitte of sash a efiiketer as will insoles the wilieheirsi of Kr. Atka, should they sot be complied with. This fersiso mail at New York, yertordtty, !Ought fareber dlapotehes from oar ism- Itterist Wand Land 'Fronts, bat Mk' (Wm. It;anknows." : + The' Znyrn jainial says Ijkak Abe 'thorn and Central Illino 100isiffitctlhecottiOn ja sanbut..;.Bin oar loads et ilea ifthi mai tram Jank e tip Alamos f NEWS PEON bispat • ;eel I 7 if ram, Q,u of the t : C Paid T 'P id t Pa . on :in h ' .io f t i : th days - from Tuesday ~.---- The CioCinnss item.from bfurrresh. Dodge, comtnandio fiblted.thi..epemy a ha 'Arad kHked,a ‘ nd Thernia 4./ilet4 fu Minnow:4a.! On , Indiana attach to M unlititti,Villet two ail four. - •Crrah.f7re Calla* kaslGuars Douse of -Repreeeti bill . authorizing t ch. marry by consent of --, Whin 'Genes Washington, he.win would probably diat, on the other side el His reply Wati; "Do 'llinve. 71; , have .b OD Ibex six 4 , Alsiyii." ' Mr. - A. T. Stews ehareeredthe brig " is •noiiii loftaini tier et pepsel' with-a full Vi skims Ifor the gutter!' fend.. . , Oa the night b gdriboets miff threci N'likeb4re blocked liineiportlienry Cis piveite • - die city sui OA. fleet .was a samboar Benton_ S and two wounded Early Rathirilay abent3,ooll stron, A Fayetteville, Ark., j ' than - 2,000. The ri with considerable ltm ties on our side were seventeen wounded,. According to th of the 11th ipst-, For day "as strong as wb Not a person. it say Sumter from any gaud issued an addre 10th inst., in which 1 on their bravery, ant success in repelling I We' receiVe . fr New Orleans, sews fi 27, which does not. s counts received two 00, via San .Franeis said to have suffer March 27, to have 000 men, aril to have, operations against The news from the effect that the spreading. Several are reported. Ths capital of one of the the Kingdom of Pol to 'confirm , and ih , Governmen , Kalish stied; the i stirgents within six :des of tip .-- The eabt of th : Confederate Grover? went is eight hues! • 1 millions of dollars, and the C4rleston . ercury estimates the yearly curtint expen es of the government