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red (he has been summoned before the Retiring Board,) a third vacancy will occur. Gen Heintzleman's chances for a regular Brigadier Generalship are considered good. The following regular army officers were dismissed from the service last year: Maj Gen Fitz John Porter, Colonel 15th; Maj Haller, 7th; Maj Davidson, 4th; and Capts Beall, 2d; Stivers, 7th; Mayer and Wilkinson, 12th; Woodson, 16th; Cady, 17th; Breslin and Kellogg, 18th; Goodwin, 10th. The act of July 17th, 1862, gave Lincoln discretionary power to retire all officers whose names have been borne on the army register 45 years, or who are 65 years of age, without submitting their cases to a Retiring Board. The recent retirement, under this act, of Gens Wool, Harney, and Brown; and Colonels Long, Thayer, Craig, Symington, Gates, Merchant, Dimick, Loomis, and Burke, together with the summoning of many field officers before the Retiring Board, is considered very strong evidence that the authorities intend to take fu
the opposition to the party in power would be signally defeated in the approaching elections. Lincoln sustaining himself by the enormous patronage and power which he wields may, assisted by the sucation will be very materially changed until the elections take place.--From present appearances Lincoln has the game in his hands. If he finds that there is any danger of the triumph of the oppositi to interference where it is unnecessary. But defeat must be the fate of all opposition now to Lincoln. Vallandigham will not get a majority in Ohio, and Kellogg will not have the opportunity, afteto swear him in with all the solemnities of the installation to the first office in the State. Lincoln will never allow that display, moral and physical, to come off! In this view there is no gd brutalities of the Northern Republicans and the Northern army, nor against the usurpations of Lincoln. The time is not yet. It is all the better that the corruptions and usurpations of the Governm