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BRIGADE SURGEON.

J. H. Boucher, of Iowa, April 4, 1862.

ADDITIONAL PAYMASTERS.

D. Colden Ruggles, of New York, June 30, 1862.
Edward C. Kemble, of California, June 30, 1862.
William S. Pope, of Illinois, June 30, 1862.
Edmund J. Porter, of New York, June 30, 1862.
Horace A. Tenney, of Wisconsin, July 14, 1862.
Edward H. C. Hooper, of Maine, July 14, 1862.
William M. Caldwell, of New York, July 16, 1862.
Charles J. F. Allen, of Kentucky, July 16, 1862.
Wesley S. Mann, of Pennsylvania, July 16, 1862.
Henry L. Bevans, of Minnesota, July 17, 1862.
Orloff M. Dorman, of Florida, July 17, 1862.

IV.-CASUALTIES.
Died, (3.)

First Lieutenant John J. Sweet, Fifth Cavalry, killed at the battle of Gaines' Mill, Virginia, June 27, 1862.

First Lieutenant Edward Ross, Seventh Infantry, at Washington, D. C., July 23, 1862.

Second Lieutenant George W. Hoover, Fourteenth Infantry, at Savage Station, Virginia, of wounds received at the battle of Gaines' Mill, Virginia, July 1, 1862.

Cashiered, (5.)

Captain Carbery Lay, Twelfth Infantry, July 21, 1862.

First Lieutenant Frank C. Goodrich, Second Infantry, July 21, 1862. Second Lieutenant Charles L. Noggle, Second Infantry, July 21, 1862. Second Lieutenant George A. Rowley, Second Infantry, July 21, 1862. Second Lieutenant Thomas S. Wright, Fourteenth Infantry, July 21, 1862. V.-CASUALTIES IN THE VOLUNTEER FORCE RAISED UNDER THE ACTS APPROVED JULY 22 AND 25, 1861, AND JULY 5, 1838.

Declined, (1.)

By Benjamin F. Hawkes, of Ohio, the appointment of Assistant Adjutant General of Volunteers, February 19, 1862.

Resigned, (5.)

Captain Leonard D. H. Currie, Assistant Adjutant General, July 22, 1862.
Captain Joseph S. McCoy, Assistant Adjutant General, July 25, 1862.
Captain Frederick F. Cavada, Assistant Adjutant General, July 25, 1862.
Additional Paymaster Thomas McKibben, July 31, 1862.
Additional Paymaster John M. Wallace, July 22, 1862.

Dropped, (1.)

Additional Paymaster William F. Camp, July 24, 1862.

VI.-Acceptance or non-acceptance of appointments, and, in case of acceptance, the birth-place of the officer appointed, his age and residence when appointed, and his full name, correctly written, will in every case be promptly reported to the Adjutant General.

VII.-The officers recently appointed, who fail to report for duty within a reasonable time, will be considered as having declined their appointments.

BY ORDER OF THE SECRETARY OF WAR:

E. D. TOWNSEND, Assistant Adjutant General.

General Orders,

No. 94.

WAR DEP'T, ADJUTANT GENERAL'S OFFICE,

Washington, August 4, 1862.

The following order is published for the information of all concerned:

Ordered:

WAR DEPARTMENT, Washington City, D. C. August 4, 1869.

I. That a draft of three hundred thousand militia be immediately called into the service of the United States, to serve for nine months unless sooner discharged. The Secretary of War will assign the quotas to the States, and establish regulations for the draft.

II.—That if any State shall not, by the fifteenth of August, furnish its quota of the additional three hundred thousand volunteers authorized by law, the deficiency of volunteers in that State will also be made up by special draft from the militia. The Secretary of War will establish regulations for this purpose.

III.-Regulations will be prepared by the War Department, and presented to the President, with the object of securing the promotion of officers of the Army and Volunteers for meritorious and distinguished services, and of preventing the nomination or appointment in the military service of incompetent or unworthy officers. The regulations will also provide for ridding the service of such incompetent persons as now hold commissions in it.

BY ORDER OF THE PRESIDENT:

EDWIN M. STANTON, Secretary of War.

BY ORDER OF THE SECRETARY OF WAR:

E. D. TOWNSEND, Assistant Adjutant General.

General Orders,

No. 95.

WAR DEP'T, ADJUTANT GENERAL'S OFFICE,
Washington, August 5, 1862.

The following orders are promulgated for the information of all concerned:

WAR DEPARTMENT, Washington City, D. C., July 31, 1862.

I.-Ordered, That the Hon. L. C. TURNER, of New York, be, and he is hereby, appointed Associate Judge Advocate for the Army around Washington. That all cases of State prisoners, and also cases of military arrests in the District of Columbia and the adjacent counties of Virginia, are specially assigned to him for investigation and determination. The Military Governor of the District of Columbia, and the Provost Marshal of Washington, will make report to him of cases wherein the action of a Judge Advocate may be required.

II.-Ordered, That SIMEON DRAPER, Esquire, of New York, be, and he is hereby, appointed a Commissioner of this Department, to superintend the execution of the order of this date [General Orders, No. 92,] respecting absentee officers and privates. He will have an office assigned to him in the War Department, and will communicate with the Marshals, Mayors, Chiefs of Police, and other special Provost Marshals designated in said order. All communications touching the execution of said order, will be addressed to him. Quartermasters and Commissaries will furnish transportation and subsistence on his requisition, and all officers in the service will aid him in the duties of his commission.

EDWIN M. STANTON, Secretary of War.

BY ORDER OF THE SECRETARY OF WAR:

E. D. TOWNSEND, Assistant Adjutant General

General Orders, }

No. 96.

WAR DEP'T, ADJUTANT GENERAL'S OFFICE,
Washington, August 6, 1862.

I- Lieutenant Colonel R. C. Schriber, Additional Aide-de-camp, having drawn his pay twice for the same period of time, and having failed to make restitution when notified of the fact, is, by direction of the President, dismissed the service of the United States, to take effect August 4, 1862.

II.--Major R. Morris Copeland, Assistant Adjutant General United States Volunteers, having violated an important trust committed to him while serving on the staff of the General commanding the Department of the Shenandoah, is, by direction of the President, dismissed the service of the United States, to take effect August 1, 1862.

BY ORDER OF THE SECRETARY OF WAR:

E. D. TOWNSEND, Assistant Adjutant General.

General Orders, }

No. 97.

WAR DEP'T, ADJUTANT GENERAL'S OFFICE, Washington, August 7, 1862. I.-Commanders of Volunteer Regiments are reminded that the clothing accounts of their men must be settled after they have been one year in service, and the balance stated on the first subsequent muster roll. Where this has not already been done at the June muster, the omission must be supplied on the next rolls for pay, or they cannot be recognized as valid.

II. Parcels directed to the Adjutant General of the Army will hereafter be marked on the right hand upper corner in a way to indicate their contents. Those pertaining to the Volunteer Recruiting Service will be so marked, to distinguish them from those relating to the Regular Service, which are examined in a different office. Packages containing certificates of disability, Regular and Volunteer muster rolls, returns, &c., will all be marked in like

manner.

III. The attention of Sutlers, and all others concerned, is directed to the second section of the act of March 3, 1855, which provides that it shall not be lawful for any postmaster or other person to sell any postage stamp or stamped envelope for any larger sum than that indicated upon the face of such postage stamp, or for any larger sum than that charged therefor by the Post Office Department; and that any person who shall violate this provision shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and, on conviction thereof, shall be fined in any sum not less than ten nor more than five hundred dollars.

BY ORDER OF THE SECRETARY OF WAR:

E. D. TOWNSEND, Assistant Adjutant General.

General Orders,

No. 98.

WAR DEP'T, ADJUTANT GENERAL'S OFFICE,
Washington, August 8, 1862.

West Florida is detached from the Department of the South and annexed to the Department of the Gulf. Brigadier General L. G. Arnold will report to Major General Butler accordingly.

BY ORDER OF THE SECRETARY OF WAR:

E. D. TOWNSEND, Assistant Adjutant General.

General Orders,

War Dep't, Adjutant General's Office,
Washington, August 9, 1862.

No. 99.
REGULATIONS FOR THE ENROLMENT AND DRAFT OF THREE HUNDRED
THOUSAND MILITIA.

In pursuance of an Order by the President of the United States, bearing date August 4, 1862, whereby it is provided that a draft of three hundred thousand militia be immediately called into the service of the United States to serve for nine months, unless sooner discharged, and that the Secretary of War shall assign the quotas to the States, and establish regulations for the draft; also, that if any State shall not by the 15th of August, furnish its quota of the additional three hundred thousand volunteers authorized by law, the deficiency of volunteers in that State shall also be made up by special draft from the militia, and that the Secretary of War shall establish regulations for this purposeIT IS ORDERED:

First. The Governors of the respective States will proceed forthwith to furnish their respective quotas of three hundred thousand militia, called for by the Order of the President, dated the fourth day of August, 1862, which quotas have been furnished to the Governors respectively by communication from this Department of this date, according to the regulations hereinafter set forth.

Second. The Governors of the several States are hereby requested forthwith to designate rendezvous for the drafted militia of said States, and to appoint commandants therefor, and to notify the Secretary of War of the location of such rendezvous and the names of the commandants.

It is important that the rendezvous should be few in number, and located with a view to convenience of transportation.

Third. The Governors of the respective States will cause an enrolment to be made forthwith by the assessors of the several counties, or by any other officers to be appointed by such Governors, of all able-bodied male citizens between the ages of eighteen and forty-five, within the respective counties, giving the name, age, and occupation of each, together with remarks showing whether he is in the service of the United States, and in what capacity, and any other facts which may determine his exemption from military duty.

All reasonable and proper expenses of such enrolment, and of the draft hereinafter provided, will be reimbursed by the United States, upon vouchers showing the detailed statement of service performed, and expenses incurred, to be approved by such Governors.

Fourth. Where no provision is made by law in any State for carrying into effect the draft hereby ordered, or where such provisions are in any manner defective, such draft shall be conducted as follows:

1. Immediately upon completion of the enrolment, the lists of enrolled persons shall be filed in the offices of the sheriffs of the counties in which such enrolled persons reside.

2. The Governors of the several States shall appoint a commissioner for each county of their respective States, whose duty it shall be to superintend the drafting, and hear and determine the excuses of persons claiming to be exempt from military duty. Such commissioner shall receive a compensation of four dollars per diem for each day he may be actually employed in the discharge of his duties as such commissioner.

3. The enrolling officer shall immediately, upon the filing of the enrolment lists, notify said commissioner that said lists have been so filed, and the commissioner shall thereupon give notice, by handbills posted in each township of his county, of the time and place at which claims of exemption will be received and determined by him, and shall fix the time to be specified in the order aforesaid within ten days of the filing of the enrolment at which the draft shall be made, and all persons claiming to be exempt from military duty shall, before the day fixel for the draft, make proof of such exemption before said commis

sioner, and if found sufficient, his name shall be stricken from the list by a red line drawn through it, leaving it still legible.

The commissioner shall, in like manner, strike from the list the names of all persons now in the military service of the United States, all telegraph operators and constructors actually engaged on the fifth day of August, 1862, all engineers of locomotives on 1ailroads, all artificers and workmen employed in any public arsenal or armory, the Vice President of the United States, the officers, judicial and executive, of the Government of the United States, the members of both houses of Congress, and their respective officers, all custom-house officers and their clerks, all post officers and stage drivers who are employed in the care and conveyance of the mail of the Post Office of the United States, all ferrymen who are employed at any ferry on the post road, all pilots, all mariners actually employed in the sea service of any citizen or merchant within the United States, all engineers and pilots of registered or licensed steamboats and steamships, and all persons exempted by the laws of the respective States from military duty, on sufficient evidence, or on his personal knowledge that said persons belong to any of the aforesaid classes, whether the exemption is claimed by them or not.

Exemption will not be made for disability, unless it be of such permanent character as to render the person unfit for service for a period of more than thirty days, to be certified by a surgeon appointed by the Governor, in each county for that purpose.

5. At the time fixed as before provided by the commissioner for making the draft, the sheriff of the county, or, in his absence, such person as the commissioner may appoint, shall, in the presence of said commissioner, publicly place in a wheel or box of a like character to such as are used for drawing jurors, separate folded ballots, containing the names of all persons remaining on said enrolment lists not stricken off as before provided, and a proper person, appointed by the commissioner, and blindfolded, shall thereupon draw from said box or wheel a number of ballots, equal to the number of drafted men fixed by the Governor of such State as the proper quota of such county.

6. A printed or written notice of his enrolment and draft, and of the place of rendezvous of the drafted military force, shall thereupon be served by a person to be appointed by the commissioner, upon each person so drafted, either by delivering the same in person or by leaving it at his last known place of resi

dence.

7. Any person so drafted may offer a substitute at the time of the rendezvous of the drafted militia force, and such substitute, if he shall be an able-bodied man, between the ages of eighteen and forty-five years, and shall consent in writing (with the consent of his parent or guardian, if a minor) to subject himself to all the duties and obligations to which his principal would have been subject, had he personally served, shall be accepted in lieu of such principal. 8. The persons thus drafted shall assemble at the county seat of their respective counties, within five days after the time of drafting, whence transportation will be furnished them by the Governors of the several States to the place of rendezvous.

9. As soon as the draft has been made and the names marked on the enrolment lists, the commissioner will send a copy of the draft to the commandant of rendezvous, and another of the same to the Adjutant General of the State, who will immediately organize the drafted men into companies and regiments of infantry, by assigning one hundred and one men to each company, and ten companies to each regiment, and send a copy of the organization to the commandant of the rendezvous.

10. At the expiration of the time allowed for the drafted men to reach the rendezvous, the commandant shall proceed to complete the organization of the companies and regiments by proclaiming the names of the regimental commissioned officers, which shall be designated in accordance with the laws of the

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