is m .r- 4-, m v?VrV' - 1 -- 1 - 3 iff 8 iff if IS Si 1 2 1-3 i3 i2.C '8 tvl' BLESSINGS OF COVER N31ENT, LIKE THE DEWS OF HEAVEN, SHOULD BE DISTRIBUTED ALIKE, UPON THE HIGH AND THE LOW, THE RICH AND THE POOR. ill ;g 1 A S NEW SERIES. Bm.E MOCHA T A SENTINEL" -M j.-i published every Wednesday Morning, at Two Doi.laus icr annum, i.:iy;ilI(Tin advance; Tw.i 1)oi.i,ai;s and iVkntv Fivk Cknts, if not i:iid within vi uii.iiths ; and Two Doli.aus axu Fif ty Cents if not paid until the termination .f tlio year. No subscription will be received tur a wi. rter period than si. lucntli, and no subscriber will bo at liberty to discontinue his paper until ail arrearages are iaid, ex cept at the option of the editor. Any per m,u suWiibin- f .r six m-n'.'ns wii l e char ged One Dollau Twknty l'yi-: C!..nts, unles.a tlso. nionv is paid in advance. One inxLi C a. T: !. Three 1 Muar-, 12 1iru-s! J 50 $ 75 l0 - Linares. I '2 i line- I 1 '0 1 ;" - v s'jUaI"e&' l0 liinS 1 iO 00 3 of. :j months. f. do. '4 ro 7 (':" it 00 12 do Jo t'O tn -2 CO 14 00 5-1 .'0 s li.leS or u s-. 1 sou :vc, 1 1-2 lines I 3 50 2 squares. 121 Imosj '1 00 f sipiart : bait" a c- I ;i l:ee i oo ;;::.n. 10 00 15 CO 1-2 00 1M 00 One coiun.n 00 BM'LAUUllId: . J,.:.nstowa. la M'LAUGMblX. Att. -,!i.-y at n t' tiail.'.ia-. on the O-n.-r-l V ... r.id Loeti.st streets m st..ir-. vVill X . ,ii bi!-i:ns. c'"::eeted Slili : !.- '-olv-sio:;. i '.I. Im'iJ.-I!'. Will! AM KSTTELL tforntn at Cab, tfbfnsburj, Cambria County Pens. a. CJMtc t '! u;tclc rtv. i). .;. 1. 1" 1VI:I"S b. I'l'.ilSliiNti. l'.s... ATT:.!:n:-:v V at .-. .I..l,nst.-wn, Cand-ri-i Co. I'.i. t ! ,.n M.-iiti stnet, seend t! r ; r ilink. ix'J .. T. t". S. tiit:ser, illicit I A .N - . 1 ' -- io i . ' . Ti-'i.ba.s his j-;!'. slon.d sm. e 1 i ' . f l '.'.'.'. s of e v. v. x s r. u c , :ei i .-urre.U!i'ii,v: vi iio: v. uLTKT. IN C; ON VV. i -'.V. Jnno : ;-n .?. fij. yca;sl::i!, T T () il X !: V -v T L A W . r.iiEXSiu :; ;. oriTCK nx MAIN sTiU-b'.T. IWV: ! x )( :RS ! A--T oF t::.. I. '. t A N 1U l : ii. 1 ereii!.er K', 1 '. ).-'. . il. b. doi.NsT-.N. Ul '. W. t ' .TM A N. ATTO.visiEYS AT LAW. bbei. -'..urg C.u.d'r'i i Coie.e.y !'.;!, i. itiit: ur.Miovia) tu i. :.oy; sr.. I'll" d...r West of lb b. J l::-t nV Its i.knee. IVe. i. b-'il. b'-' rd!N IT.NheiX, K.-Q Attmun-kv at ? Law, Eb.-nst.tirg, Cimbria - amy I'a. t ifiiee on il.iiu stieet :;..j 'ining his dwel ling, ix 2 s. xoox, . ATToUVEV AT LAW, l-'d'.ENSI'.UKti, CAMI'd'.IA CO.. I'A. Onice e.ae door Li: t of the Post Oi':iee. Feb. 18, ls....:b-tf. ATTOKNKY AT LAW, EP.KX.SUUiiG, Cambria Co'inhf, Pa. OlTTCi: IX CObOXAbE il(;V. M u-cii 13. 1st; I. ICIIAEL 1IASM)X, Ksq. Attorxi-v AT Law , Eoeat are;, Cainb; ia C'i . 'e.. Oiliice on Main street, throe d. ..as bust d Julian. ix 2 ii. W. lUl'K.M YN v.. r. llol.l.. G. W. HICKMAN a CO., VThoU-.s.de D.- dcrs in M A X U V A C T I It r. 1) T -V, A C CO . Foi:::iGX and noMb.--.Tic sfcars. SNTFFS. -e. X. E. CO.b Till 111) - M AUKET STKEET. PlllbADKbl'llIA. Atigu.-t 13. lS03.-ly. W. W. MA1K. JOHN' S. 1KWISOX. M A 1 11 & D A V I C) N , lMl-oUIKKS .AM) m.ALi:i:s IN SADDLKKY, CAKUIACH AND TCXT1K HARDWARE & TRIMMINGS, SADDLES & HARNESS, No. 12T, V o o 1 Street, I'lTTSlJUKGII, FA. PAD SKINS, I5EST OAK TANNED IIAKNLSS. SKIRTING AND BRI- . DLL LEATHERS. June 17, 1803 ly. l7or Kent. L An oftlce on Centre Street, next door north of Esp Kinkcad's office. Pos-esidon given immediately. JOSEPH M'DONALD. j.iil IS, 1861. Iipoitnt iSn!oa. The Northern Elation lo.ce and Ar mistice ('I'tention Discussed The llich iioid J't cts on the Situation Lincoln the led Friend of the South The 1'ropoial lor an Arniitdce. From the Pdchn-ond Kxuminer, litb.J Whatever may turn cut to be the nianir. of the fact, the fact itself Vji'uis to -'nine out clear that Abraham Lincoln is lost : that ho will never be 1 'resident a..a;n not en rre-idewi of the YaaLee r-iniKU.t of States, to say lioliniij; ot hie wh"!e six and thirty or, how many are there, counting ;Jo, ml jkl'lUO. ami oliser 1 aiioo ctemaonvveao es laieiy inv nted .' The o' seute ape of Illinois; 6 . .i ' i 1.! .. 1.1. about to be dv posid from the Wasl.;:iio:i Ilii;-':: ! the White 11-iMse will echo to his little i k-s no more. It is in no : i;it of exultation we conteTnplat.'' tb: - c urn eu:!, ! r Abrahatn has been a jood ein- pefof t - US : 1 1 P' :i y has s, t; - r' era; bis :v! m:i :e d, cstabh-he. I irrevi eaoie ii.e j nion i-ito f.aib ! we mav be j him. il' v.a I an unauswera'.. ! sion. i.,r he stv s.-pari.tioa of T; ;i .5 is .-seutial'.y ".; i ;u. : - t f-orry to part w ; o e.ruuieiit k.r o-ir s.-e; . there a living ju-tinca- ' i! U, .-e't'ii 10 ! c biti :i of 1 1 b '..!. f the steadi'-.Pt res- se st-ites to uoio no jii re i ith a r ice c: p:d;'e net u; ii.sr such a lemir, but of 1 ' tieal 111 : n on'.v 1 i" makiii'.; it a ruler and king. Cri:.:u!y hi.- elevation to that p-ishion a-to;;I d the wcald, but ii am i-d v,u-b.-lv .-o much as the creature himself: he ki. w that he wa I v ..:. ; : -1 h .-. neith n r rr'.re, the d- il h- u i tlu-e , d it hiuise!' ti. et!i T ir, in d;iy, t : in th- w. x C:r. a ii an editor, '-t; s , :;.s to e;t 1. a boy hoi'!', :; :t v.-.-.-e, !-, rh. u'd" haw ! . en drif: cd .' ol One o:e this great ev.a.t. ; y m iy be (Viet 1 int an e'.il'a.i.s n a el:. da of t.-.n a s : nod t'l e.-e v. h : r a; :1 .. :.:e d U; 1 s . . e l-'.h's re. k did :.ctua!!v 'iiiir to a:; en i i! .:. on -d, wi-h f ery otli r !iis kind, a pair of baboon--. It i : ! i t an ap.-x, so ni:.v no. . r th'it n; iv be, he is e-: e out t-- : iv down, an I v-.i to b. ' or ka ; i down. Ti::- ; ;-o;i,or:i- n. ;: l-:- c"u-ii this V. t a: . erv ! s. s ; d. " . e.'l:i! Hi .i ii.l.1.:. m.i. e- - . i . i. 1 (iv: r it, or c : ! S :e ! :;p.-r I,1 cirri! -d on uu 1 -r -aar-r.t : let wh it migiit : :;n 1 the union, le- w-ai'd :::i. s to liie.g into the red war w. .! 1 no ' I ::!..!..' Co come i.r' liie v.-.: get i-.e) ;:;oie a: pitotYi.gh.e. r stau. ter. . tor tti-1 p-e-Yankee.-. f..n'i!v it t' ; ci wh ir eo::o erioi-ii! d 1 .. ,i v: io be ti pi : I.e. Is in the trausuiississ-p-a'.so the d.tad lock to which Sherman's army has been brought. w'nli all ivciiiucky, Tennessee, ana hall d Geoi'i.i hii'g letwcen him iind his own ( .e.n.liy, an l leok'ng only to this most col'assal invasion of Virjivvi with three large armies all hound for il'v. -Ima-n-l the lhi!iyr is over. Grant's army is rapioiy iug away lrom our trout at ton or elsewhere. Of course Grant will not put up a notice on the shore of ilr Appamattox thai he heieby abandons his enterprise ; neither will Siautoo ,-i;i-i di' notify that the armies of ahe linl.--i" are found who Uriah!-.; to a lvanee 0:1 d out of the 'protection of their ships and therefore they discountenance the cam paign with a loss of oil-' hundred -.ad fir' ;y thousand, killed, wounded and mis-lng. This would be unrcas eiable to exp. . ;. nevertheh-.'s the onit rprise is nhar.d. u. d : Pi'-hmorid is r.o mere to bear the roar of Yankee siegr-guns under that potentate's lvig'i One can. rot arrive tit tins cor.c'..;siot tro'n -evenil int!ication-: li'o;.i th- Lo-eat- ly ine.i-ea-ing exe'demoni. at the No;tii touchlnr the Chic:vi') convention, whie'i is to nouilnate a Democratic Presid nt ; lrom the daring viok-nce with which some new:-pa;crs ctiuisel resistance in arms against the draft of half a million of men, and i:au the singular movement of some of Lincoln's own black Republican sup porters in the Washington Congress. They waited fur the moment when thcir sovereign's fortunes were declining from their "ajicx" to give him a treacherous shove down the hill. Two of his most vehement and dTicient allies, Wade, of Ohio, and Winter Davis, of Maryland, give him the blow under the fifth rib. They present, in their otTicial capacity, what almost amounts to a legal impeach ment, save in matter of form, against their fond and too indulgent master, toi tcring to his fall ; charge him with ar gance, usurpation, knavery, in withhold ing his assent to a bill touching the future Fiutus of these Confederate States a mat- EBENSBURG, PA. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST t 'V whieli, though of small importance to us, is of the deepest moment, it seems, in that country; inasmuch as he has a plan of his own for remitting states to the U nion, on the. application of one-tenth of their population ; and this would, they say, give him the control of the presiden tial election. So they inform him that an election carried by this artifice must be resi.-icu, and that he is inaugurating a civil war for the Presidency. If Grant h i;l on'.v take 1 Ilichmon-!, would they have dan d to have set their name:- to such a d cumcnt as this? All the world. .sadde:.!v, within one week in short, since the b'ow-np c f the campaign at Peters burg, set ins to feel instinctively that Abra ham's crame is played ; and the. New York 'i lera'd' at once calls fbr a new National Convention at Dailalo to nomi Mit 1 some other man instead of the ba 1 o 'ii of Illinois and the tailor of Tcnnes-r-.v, and iie.ds out that "the ay winds have been whispering it for weeks" that is, fjr two weeks, since the lVterrbanr b!( w-up. Abe ! the Emperor, is a fal len tree-: r.o IiuhI of t!;e air will ever a C. Ati f .-ilher its nest under his branches ; a d ;n.e; go:u!a lest cur can lift against no its le. who:a the sinal The most interesting matter 10 us is mo Keen . . . .i i md active agitation in the two branches of the '-Democratic partv." The peace Democrats onenlv avow that they will labor in the Chicago Convention of this month to get a "platform of instant reel absolute peace. We learn that the War 13 moerats an armistice. Le: in' t! m i ! -. o ary lines oi c;k-.i party w re, the Covn-.h-rate St thev ttutv no.-- t a on. :-hou!d be invi meet iii ! Yon! !..t ed t sen a o aega o e Stab s in co:i on: there be not only an 4-ar- nu-tice, ,!! ri.I, but a foi-inal rea-mcia.tl !i and nretence to co-ive tlies, states ; and of course an entire with-lrava of all land and sea f erevs which -eeuny any portion ot our s-u!, or oJo.-k-!-!-of our ports; and then the N-e- Stat-, s will be in a po-iti-n to pr ; e .".IV :-liiern ose to 1 cou n - o ::e in 1 may men's to try . tliey i s reconstruction of the I molt. .-;.iioii i !' States for the pa-p-'S-. i.alie :r that. " ith Sin o i t!, exiti:: lvkitions, no dotd.t t!i- eonie also a urat f haag'e over minds. e do tu t old ' res:.'! of this p r. but L oerat- will find it worth that it 13 t!:- only c CScsieral &Iicra2jaa on Xegro r,e- if General Sherman ever run for Pres to receive ident, ho is tokrab'y ilie vote of ?,Ias.-nchtisi written a h tier to an a II just at of that State, ) who was runnin. within the lint s of a:; r negro recruits j us army, wnieh must make the cheek of cery son ol that once honored State redden with me. lie says to the agent : I do not see that the law restricts 3-011 to black, recruits, but you are at liberty to collect white recruits also. It is a waste of time and money to open rendez vous in Northwest Georgia, for I assure yon I have not seen an able-bodied man, black or white, tuc-re, ut tor a soldier, who was not in our army, or the one op posed to it. You soonk of the inipns.-ioniroir.ra-broa-.l that I am opposed to the organiza tion of colored regiment. My opinions are usually very positive, and there. 1 10 reason wuv tou suo ukl t. ;W them. T'hou ah entertaining pro.nund reverence ior our t onerc-s, 1 ioi.oi u: I 1..'. .1 wisdom in tno passage ct lii-s .a,. 1st. LeeaosG civi'.lian agents about an army are a nuisance. d. The duties of citizens to fight for t.M-ir country, is t 0 .; ve. a one to le v'i.e, o t'other .. T J ...-. . . . , J o It is unjust to the brave soldiers and volunteers who are i'ghthig as those who compo-o t:us army to. yl,ffe ,.;;. on a ; jittr with theclt ofia',iH- ijou are ej1 r. j -Ith. The uejro is ',lt (, transition state, nod is not the etct! o' '.e wlate nun. Zth. Us irf liber:. tod from bondage by act of war ; and the armies in the field are entitled to all his assistance in labor and fighting, in addition to the proper quotas of the states. Clh. This bidding and bantering for recruits, white and black, has delayed the re-inforccment of our armies at the limes when such reinforcements would have enabled us to make our successes perma nent. 7th. The law is an experiment, which, pending war, is unwise and unsafe, and has delayed the universal draft, which I firmly believe will become necessary, to overcome the wide-spread resistance of fered us; and I also believe the universal draft will be wise and beneficial ; for, under the providence of God, it will sepa rate the sheep from the goats, and demon strate what citizens will light fbr their country and what will talk. o one win inter lrom this that I am I not a friend of the negro as well as the j white race. I contend that the. treason i ana lvueiuoa 01 me master irecu the siave, and the armies I have comman ded have conducted to safe points mere negroes than those of any general ul.iecr in the army ; lut I j.reer hnjroes " ;;(:, Coo. fi, t, aui-hrs a. id s- rr-(.., ; 1 1 11 ..!.- . f t others gradually to experiment in i! art ? of ler, b-mnmnr Avitii I lie du! local pairisoas such as we i.ad at Mem i phis, Yicksburjr, Natchez, Na. Iiville an l j Cliatte.nnoga ; but I would not draw on 1 the poor race for too large a proportion of 1 its active, athletic young men, ibr some ! must remain to hoc!,- new hom -.s ::n 1 j .,--' vide for tlie old and younir the feeble ! and helpless. These are some of ray pee-ull.ir i:oil-:is, : hat I assu'v. jou tle-y are shared bv a large prop'.t iion of our lighti;;;: trn-n. I General Sherman was deposed i,m the control of a department, sonic two years 1 since, because he was supnosrd to be . !..,..,.., :.. ..i ,:...:ni -..-.. cia. , nu..i to-.- .-.oo- it i,w . r-j , that there is some method in h:s mu l ! ncss. Southern View tf tlje I?2rii;mg Freni the Il;chnv..nd Sentinel, Aug. The il-eling of magnanimous forbear ance is at length exhausted. Over wrought humanity has quitted the mercy sent and 'iivei! pl,;c- to the si irit :"' re- Ci.ristian i- (::-: 1 rl -eari Idealn i- n, wi O ' 1 . ! we a v. t -. ! .1 ; burg : t ortunit the ten n ;te i . n-yba inliu:. tr-j to rein: U1''11 re ml ma Kill thousand truol i atioeiiies oommittod by the i in the South. : On (.'.eh occasion, in pi I i'.i.-t retaliation and without I lavs f war, we mlrht hr.v ! ciiies an 1 lai 1 wasm with ii vi. i ;t e an 1 y of ti the h 1 beautiiietl va!!e , n id. In an: toiS . nseiy p L I iiil'i.'OVe: 1 t- -! ' 111:. ,e 1 and variied off n tv. burnt more bouses, pri of doors to starve, more women ana eml dren, and inflicted, in every 1 01 m, more human misery and wretchedness in a week than could the Federals in a month in any section of like extent in the South. We magnanimously iorbore to do so. as wo do not war upon women. e.e piteous appeals of the weak and defense less molt and unnerve the storm si and grimmest soldiers, and we yield to pity what we would not surrender to lorce. We are too proud to be cruel, too proud to Ucad upen the worm ; to break the bruised reed, to insult and opprc.-s the. weak and downfallen. On each of the former occasions we should, as an act ol even-handed justice, have retaliated on Pennsylvania the savage atrocities the has helped to inflict uon the South. We should then by have taught the North the salutary lesson that s.;age war fare is a game that two can 1 lay at. Had we done it is probable that she would have abstained ti-otn oeroetratin-r the -owtnmr:! 1.1 some meerui'e mnrd. r ! 1 ml robberies that still mark with rane infamv the march of her armies the South. We may operate or. ti far,. I but not on her humumiy or sense 01 ! ;. .p.. Wo no doubt l oped that the her ox c ample of our gen. reus and t linsuan i..,r -Te( nur chivalry and humanity our ---- - respect for the usuages of eivmzed war fare and national law, would not be lo.-i upon them, and that, in A-tme, Ihey w'onld imitate our example,, aadciiduet the invasion of the South more like ov; Ibod inen and Christions, and less like d-.-mons and savages but we hoped vain. Their subs -qiient eou.ise has been more un-Christian, more openly violative of the laws of war, the injunctions of Christi anity and the feelings of humanity than it was before we thus spared them. A - .1.,.. ..-. irsriT.-.i I. lt- lie- course OI UUiy UUIJ uu e.i.- . .. - , fr? erf ed or delayed accounts for, and will forever justify the burning of Chambers- ! bur". This is but the beginning of the end? We know that this burning will render you more cruel than ever- that you will try to lay waste the entire South, to subjugate it, to confiscate our lands ; to make your negro soldiers a police guard to insult, watch and rule the native whites. Nine out of ten of our men and all of our women, would prefer death to such subjugation. You have not made us des- 24, 1864. perate, for we are full of hope, and be come the more hopeful as you. become more cruel. Y'es, if the worst comes to the worst, we will leave the South as a field for you to devastate if you can find anvlhmjr to devastate fbr you to plunder and thieve in. where von have h-i'i nnvthinrr imstiih-n i with none to oppo.-e your onward march : but women and children and acted men : while our reglars, who wouk 1:1 sucsi ca- ses number almoM, or quite a million j say half a million at least divided into ! many separate commands, all breathinir and rotaliati-will me.reh into the North J and North w. .-.-t, where thf-ro is a rudi I town or villatre at cvrv five miles; wliero munition:1 of war and rovis.il: C"l ill kinds abound ; where more than Asiatic wealth imiiis .,. r.-i ; and plundorc r ; wi;e;e no L-ar-e 01 ('Oerata-as. no ns t! mcare' of jra:;-t aiion v.'i'l be ll'i-UO'l. t e il ieave the S u;h for vo.i to glean in, wane we L'ai.ier neii luirvests 1 li.e North. You cannot inade, suiju Sonth, and at the same N; ih. Our armies i gate a!ld bold ill defend tb ! time i ; v.'oiu' 'l.l'l o -et but little opposition unless up the South, and to give up all j your possessions in the South would end j the war, and: that is all we ask. There I arc severed other articles in these papers which I won'il like in scii.l von n I can- ' - -' . . . i m-i ire: leave 10 sen-i ine na rs. oui iuum j d -fer them till to-moivow. J have jn.-t r.,, Volunteers mav Ijc received wiio j ic.arned that by explosion oi the ammu- j .u.e lxtwCi,n lllc il?es Jf eighteen and for j mtivn boat at City Point to-lay, fd.ut ,v.five year? Youth between sixteen two ban h. d p.'.Ts.-:n? a:c su; poel t have ; t- ht,,cn ,vurs inav received with I h e i 'kII!-. d : at least that number are ' , .. . 1- -.. . . v. vn o h -n m -sil:2. I I i ;:ril;)r ilse 4 5:;:3 C:ijt :-.' I5;jn-;:i:;:i:c- i" C5ie iiiStsotic 85ii2- ; Fr -m the t in-i .nati rh.qu:rer.j i or. i: h below a portion of a pri . . utie: t: r written t'V a gLii; I to a tnenil in this city. men .-i It dls- ' -.fi s the : r.t--t thai the War Department ; is run : of th.. inr ot'ji-r churches South than that Ab th.MHst. The Catholic P.i-hop w; ired to iro .n i. ar- r-.-i at 'i-la!; era! i ' d was placed in the small town of 1. for refusing to prey i.s the Gen ::;: ao-iant .rden-d : x groate.-t e o item, m was on 3 0s .iv duly -') You are awr.ro that e time ago tin re was an i-rd.-r issued for all the c!ery to read prayers for i Yi sideni of the Cubed States in t. theii dae. res-oeetive churches, on evcrv Su::- if-.-i,.v t-.-M.-i ii i-iiiMtilii ! wii'o. ili.it otit-ri'ters wore o in-sen i oni 01 ineir lir.es, an i their churches closed and taken possessi ai of by the military. This or- di r caused some correspondence U tween the Pi.-hop and the Gen. Of course the Lishop could not comply with the order; the result was an order "issued yesterday, bani.-hiiv the Lishop from Natchez, and . 1 1 . . f - I-,.,,. dilii..- him to ivoort by 'l o cIock to the Provost Marshal at nialia, to re main until the maltor is heard from, from W.-'saln-ton. The lurl ol the order that elosi d the eln.n h 1: General, saspv n led. t ;y order oi me rite church is , f .1 openoii t-SUat. I wont to see the Hi -mm early in the ' r.vrniu". 1 never wiiues.-ed such a sight as w in. n t:ie ui onan rat hi r :o ! bv. came to imi ineir ni 1 1 o -lock, the Llsle p, Father ' irar a 1 Father and Mr. n into O-.-.-i a carriage. 1 O , i il el nivseti steppeu ...a .1- .dvwn to tie.' lorry. iiitO . ;: ' t " ...... WL.tr we t ached Mi was surprised to mo a. c::n:r, waiting f-r last threw,:'. We go the boat wa 1:0' over time, to g t to the -.itiiv red around the Grunt he hob s store, 1 os. old and r o laae a j to the ioivv, but ! the boat came thev all fell on 1 la.-t time the poor Ui-hop blessing. O. I wi-h y,ui a-e.-jod that ;v:i-. 1 can " We the;, got 01 I L-avo them bis oi.u'.d have, wii- i-t d . scribe ii. i boat, and ike 1 p.eri-e-l to the 1 Yovost assi -ii- d fjuarters at the .Marshal. hotel for the j resent, i n'.ii t'n r quarters were i. resided. The IMshon is to have the full ireedom of the city ot nialia, lut not . . ...... . not to fro out of the lines. lie is not to hold other than verbal nitorcourse wttli any one. lie was allowed to take any clothing he wanted, and also a servant. "The Lishop was the only person, du- rinu all the time, that seeme.l in ood .irits. He will have a very lonely time fit as there are no troops in Vidalia of but colored ones. C-yThc Alolitionits are mourning over tl-.c colored teoops killed in the asstiult on Petersburg. We advise, them not to go in black for the negr.n-s, as they can do it themselves Prcnv. in 1 ijism-i) : lie was VOL. J1--NO. 34 TEte C'oinins rirt Iiitportant luSoruiution. We find in one of our cotemporaries, the following full and comprehensive sy nopsis of the requirements of the conscrip tion law. It contains fuli and reliable information concerning volunteers, sub stitutes and drafted men : 1st. The exemptions of the original act, to fathers of motherless children un der twelve years of age, to some, members of families in which others are in service, to sons who are the support of aged and destitute parents, and for other similar causes, are no longer allowed. 2. The commutation clause, by which a person who is drafted might be released upon the payment of three hundred uol ! lars is repealed, with a single exception I in the case of persons conscientiously op- i -osc-.i 10 oeaiui'i arms, wno may commute . . . . i . . i . , i .. ii r. r .i i i .i! io'oii tiic i.tjiurin hi iiucc: muiuicju ticn- j lars, or otherwise be considered as non- comliatants, and if drafted, be held to serve for hospital duty, or in the care of recdmen. Persons' physically incapable of duty arc exempted upon surgictti e x amination. 3. The division of citizens into two classes, the second class not being liable to serve until the first class was exhausted is abolished, and all citizens liable are en rolled in the same class, and may be held i to similar service. 1th. The aie of liability to the draft is i. ...., :.,... . , The eniisimeat of boys under sixteen years of age, is a military oiiense in the ottleii- who recruits them, who maybe punished therefor. fiih. Volunteers, white or colored, re ccive the Government bounty, according to the time for which they agree to serve. For one. year, $1., for two years, SOO fvr three rears, .' M. These amounts are paid "m installments. To a one year's volume, r, when mustered in, t5.'3.ot ; to s two years recruit, c'bhf.o ; to a three iuO. I wo other mstal- ' lllellt ire to Ie paid to the voluntivr or , i . . r J his rep resentative anting ms lerm oi s.-r- lc 7th. The monthly pay of a private, eiti er volunteer, substitute, or drafted man, is sixteen dollars a month. Non commissioned and commissioned oilicers receive an increase, iwv bewond the rates 1 which wore allowed Ik for the last ses -.r.. 1 sion 01 v. cngn-sr-. i 8th. Drafted men receive no Itounty j from the Federal Goacrnment, and we j presume they will not receive any from j the town or county to which they belong. j !'th. Substitutes for drafted men, or j men liable to draft, furnished in advance j of the draft, receive no bounties from the crovcrnmcnt. 10th. Ilejuvscntalive substitutes Ibr persons nt liable to draft, are considered as volunteers, rod receive the Federal and - , t .- 1 ...v.. 1 ....... i..:. municipal uonnue:-, auu n.-ui.-u-: 1.1011 ! principal agrees to pay them. J I ill. 1 muuit-rij tin. 11 jiii -viiuun ; sub.-titnics may be mustered m tor one, two or three years, as they may c-iect. j iiu. . vinn uuo. s ji utnt.i m-w, ..1 ! men liable to draft, may be accepted for ' one, two or thn-e years, aecoming to th ! time that the principal would have to ! 1 . T serve, or as ne maj. engage mem. loth, l'opresenlative stuV-t times tot persons not liable to draft, any U- per sons who are liable t dieli. 11th. Substitutes for por-v.;,-, liable to draft, furnished before, drauiivr, must not : s ine. lames oau tiic-nsolves ik name. 1 m-y may eiuier i-ueiin j. Tliey- all ! Ik; aliens, vt:te. ans or sailors who have Li. hop, sm.l when ! p.-rved two years and been honorably dis tir tlio bell to Ie.-ie j charged, or the citizens of the States in knee?, and for th-' ! rebellion, or slaves of rebel owners. 1 LVth. The principal shall be exempt j from draft during the time thai the said t substitute is not liable, io draft, not c.x- reediutr the. titno for w Ich the sun. lilutes shail be ace-ntod. 1G. I lee I'aitod Slates no longer pays j premiums for the proeuiat ion of recruits. 17. Men furnished under tlio call of ....1 .osi 1 . ..t"i i r ... .j my 1 otn, rxu, wn.-inei- umimcm 101 one, two or tnree years, as well as an ex coss or de.tieioncv of throe years' nu n on calls heretofore, made, will count as man The coualizati' .n of the amount or man. of military service rendered by the. diiar ent States and parts of States willbe f- j footed hereafter. 1 ISr A substitute for an c-urollod num j 13 creuiicii, ani, uiufiun, ".,....... ..v... the. quota ot the locality -.nist in 11). An enrolled man lurniMimg an alien as a substitute, is exempt for the time of service of the ! ub.-iilute, unless the alien K-comes a ci'i.en, or declares Continual ' '""7 th F-"j .) i S K v