1.)T155. THURSDAY. MAX 18. 1861 Forever Moat that standard sheet! Where breathes the foe bat falls before nst With Freedom's soil beneath onr feet, And Freedom"s banner streaming o'er us! FIRST PASS —Mr. Itathermers New Picture • Egyptian or Military Opthaimia ; Pennsylvania Military Movements; The Affray at St. Louth; From Baltimore; Northern and Southern Soldiery; Letter from S. M. Felton; The Volunteer's Wife; Dry Goods Credits. FOlTaTix recta—War Items ; From Harper's Ferry; Important Masonic Move. meet; Marine Intelligent- TUE THREE regiments 4 PhiladelphiEt troops which left this city on T • aday night. are now in Baltimore. Brigairer General Genwar.a- DER and staff have Ao arrived in that city. It is thought they wgl be encamped in the rear of Fort McHenry tr., ieneral BUTLER had re turned to Annaponi. ThelmpressiOn is that the Philadelphia regiments will remain in Bal timore, the Massachusetts troops now there going to Fortress Monroe. Wa Loos upon the proelamation of Gov. Riess as one of the most gratifying remits of the military occupation of Baltimore. We are disposed to give the Governor credit for the best intentions. We think, if the rebel lion had not overmastered him, he would have called out his contingent of troops at as early a day and with as much alacrity as Go- VernOr COWIN or Governor Annanws. We are sorry that he has clogged his proclamation with conditions, but perhaps it is all for the beat. When we cannot get all we want, we must take as much as we can get. The Go vernor has been fearfully tried, but has con tributed greatly towards maintaining the Union feeling in Maryland, and deserves the support and sympathy of the Union men throughout the country. •• Government or no Government 9 ' Colonel ANDERSON made to the New York Board of Brokers, on Monday, one of his neat little speeches, so remarkable for their brevity and common sense. He spoke, as be always speaks, with the frankness of the soldier. as He bad never," the report tells ns, ce written or said anything to indicate that he would unite his destinieiN - ith those of the South. At the outset of tkeilavery troubles he did sympathize with Ide Southern friends, thinking that there was much Northern inter ference with the subject; that it slavery was an evil, it attached to the South alone. At the present crisis, neither slavery nor party politics bad anything to do with the subject. The question ts, government or no government, and he felt satssfied that when the present or deal is past we shall be again a happy and united people." We print this brief speech of Col. Amas ses, not because we want any assurance from his own lips of his fidelity to the Union or to those who hold his oath of allegiance and military obedience, but as a plain and practi cal statement of the issues which are involved in this Revolution. It would be difficult for language to be more concise than that used by the Colonel. He speaks with the prejedices of hie section and education on the slavery question, but he arises above those prejudices when he says that neither slavery nor party po- Utica have anything to do with the subject, that the question is, 4 . Government or no Government." In these words we have the whole story of the contest. We do not fight Ibr subordinate issues, but for the grand sys tem from which all issues spring. It is not a question of policy or convenience, of happi ness or misery, but one , of existence. The life of the nation is in danger, and we must insure vitality to the body before we look to the ne cessities or diseases of the system. It is not howlaws are to be administered,but whether we shall have laws to administer. It is not hovr.our freedom may be best enjoyed, but whether we shall have freedom to enjoy. It is not how our industrial interests may be protected, or revenue secured, but whether we shall have interests to protect or revenue to secure. It is tg Government or no Government." Into such a contest we are entering, and to it we must give everything that the patriot can give , to his country. The ordeal is terrible, but we must pass through it before we can ever again be come a free and happy people. Deposits an Savaug Funds. Not the least of the troubles which the present state of our national affairs has pre cipitated upon us is the anxiety of a large class of our citizens about the safety of their deposits in Saving Funds, and other institu tions. In some instances these deposits con atitute the fruits of many years' industry, and, in certain contingencies, represent the sole dependence of parties. It is, therefore, not unreasonable that, in these perilous times, deposit ors, especially of this class, should feel somewhat solicitous about the security of their money. This solicitude has been in tensified by the misfortunes entailed by recent failures of certain institutions in this city. In consequence of these, a large number, from fear of incurring a similar loss, are rushing for their money, preferring the risk of its safe-keeping themselves to taking the chances of its safety elsewhere. What we desire here to impress upon such is, to dzseriminate. That there are institutions in whose keeping funds are now extremely hazardous, we do not doubt ; yet that there are others perfectly secure is equally true. It is not to be expected, of course, that these institutions should have their capital at all times in ready cash; nor need the depositor be anxious abont this, provided he knows that it has a bona fide exhcones and is wifely invested. It is a well known fact, for example, that one of sour Saving Funds in this city has a surplus capi tal of four millions investea in mortgages and real estate. In such an institution deposits are unquestionably more secure than in pri vate hands. Besides this, to draw them out Involves the necessity, on the part of the in stitution, of realizing, by force or otherwise, upon their investments, the tendency of which is to engender panic, and create a greater and false stringency in the money market, which should, if possible, be avoided. While, there fore, persons who have moneys deposited where their safety is doubtful are fully justl gad In withdrawing them, those who bare en trusted their funds in the bawls of a, perfectly reliable institution—which may be ascertained by making proper inquiry—will certainly do themselves and the community a service by allowing them to remain, as usual. Oor.onnit, PEULADELPHLA. ART/WARY Batancanr will form this afternoon at 3 o'clook, on Old York road, for the purpose of attending the faunal of Ferdinand Holt, who was murdered en Tuesday night last by a gang of rowdies. Rob wawa member of company B, attached to the regi ment, and a man of steady and &ober habits- AMMON flux or Boors AND Suomi —We would °all tlia-~ton of buyers to the large sale Of / 1 000 oases boots, oboes, brogans, do., to be sold al/ morning at 10 o'clock precisely, by Philip Ford L 00., auctioneers, at their sales room, No. 530 blarket and 52t Minor street. Lazes Sum or Day-Goons, Marmon, ac., roa Caen —The yardmanr attention of pi! ehmera is requested to the large and valuable m ovement of fanny and staple artioles in sillu• linens, cottons, worsteds, and woollens, embracing 650 lots of choice articles, Canton matting., and mos eunbrallas, to be peremptorily cold by cats hp. for cash, commencing this morning at ten e tokok, to be continued the greater part of the day without intermission, by Myers , Ch l o orn, co., wetioneers, Nos. 232 and 234 Market street. The Cubans on Secession, Whirr OALSAAJI, May 15.--It is saidorstood that sommhodonera from Havana have gone to Mont pinery to senior with the Confederate qovern meet eonouning the Southern shipping at Cuban ports, against widoh+tha United States Comma Gaeta at Harass had bees sating is what they consider an unjustiliable manner. The Massachnseits Banks and the New Government Loan. &SM. May I 5 —'Tho banks of Maamotozootto hava aired to taka Ire millions of the new Go- VarnMant kon at par. Si oo p.ot.War Vaadatia at New York. Now TOM May 15.—The aloop•ofmar Van dalic. antrod Ofe orealog from the Cape of Good British Relations with this Country. At a cost of 200 millions sterling ($1,000,- 000,000) England learned the lesson, from 1793 to 1510, that her proper policy, is not to inter fere with the domestic relations Of other-coun tries. She waged a twenty years' war to re place a fat Bourbon glutton on the throne of France, and in less than a year he had tied from Paris, and Natenzost resumed his place in the Tuileries without the shedding of one drop of human blood. England, still bent on interference, renewed the war, and after a brief but wonderful reign during the Hundred Days, NAPOLEON was a second time defeated, and the Bourbons a again forced upon France by English bayonets. Exactly fifteen years later, Franco drove the hated Bourbons into exile, and England, which had already con sented to acknowledge the Independence of Greece, frankly admitted the right of every nation to choose its own ruler and its own form of government, and recognized Louis Fawn% as Mug of the French. Next came the acknowledgment of Belgium as a sove reign State. Then, NAPOLEON 111. was frankly received as the choice of France. Lastly, Viceon Eioraerier. has been treated, by Queen Vicronrals Government, as King of Italy. With each precedents before us, it was not to be expected that England wo-ld interfere in the present unhappy divisioe in the United States. Moreover, Mr. SEWARD had firmly intimated that he would not permit any foreign Power to interfere with the domestic rela tions of the United States. On the 29th of April the official determination of the British Government on this head was intimated, in the Upper House of Parliament, by Lord Wm:frame, Under-Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs. He was asked by Lord io - iTatesernar, who was Foreign Minister in the Derby-Disraeli Cabinets of ISO and 1858, er What steps the Government have taken with that object;• whether they have made any attempt to prevent the quarrel between the different States of the American Union from coming to a bloody issue; what hopes they entertain of succeeding in so laudable an endeavor, and whether they have invited, or are in correspondence with, any other European Government, with the view of ob taining their assistance in seeking to put a stop at the outset to a civil war, of which, if once fairly commenced, it will be impossible to foresee the end." The official reply was brief and plain, in the following words; ‘, In answer to the question, what steps have been taken by her Majesty's ministers to avert this great ca lamity—for such a great calamity it undoubted ly must prove to be, not only to the Americans themselves, but to England, which is so closely connected to them by the ties of kindred—l have to state that, after the most mature deli beration, the Government came to the con clusion that it was not desirable that this country [England] should intrude her advice or counsel on the Government of the United States." Lord Wei:isnot/se added, that the Palmerston Ministry thought that a great and independent nation might not welcome advice given with 'respect to her internal affairs, if that advice were proffered without being soli cited, and that the instructions to Lord MONS, British Minister at Washington, were simply that he should, on every fitting occasion, ex press the earnest desire entertained by her Majesty's Government that the differences which prevail between the Northern and Southern States of America should be ar ranged, but that, neither officially nor offi ciously, should he presume to give any coon eel or advice to the American Government, -unless such counsel or advice had been asked for by the contending parties themselves. Mr. SEWARD'S decided declaration, already re ferred to, put the negative, by anticipation, upon any offer or attempt, on the part of a foreign country, to intermeddle in the do mestic affairs, peaceful or waxlike, of the United States. In all cases where mediation Is proffered, it is where two nations have a misunderstanding, and not, as in our case, where civil war arises out of rebellion. That England should acknowledge the Sou thern Confederation, at the earliest, until it really bad effectually broken from the United States, and actually established separate and independent nationality, is wholly out of the question. Lord JOHN RUSSELL, a week after Lord WODEHOUSE'S declaration, distinctly stated what would be the action of the British Government. Mr. EVART asked eg whether, seeing the possibility of privateering being, permitted and encouraged by the Southern Confederacy, the American Goveriveittt had placed a sufficient naval force in the Gulf of Mexico for the Protection of British property in American ships, and if privateers, sailing under the flag of an unrecognized Power, would be dealt with as pirates ?" Lord Jose Russztt, the Foreign Secretary, replied that a British naval force had been sent to the coast of America for the protection of British shipping—that the United States had decided on a blockade of all the Southern forts, which, the law officers of the Crown had declared, could only be recognized when effective— that the Son. them Confederacy had issued letters ofmarque, and that, as regarded them, the Government were legally advised that the Southern Confe deration must be considered belligerent; and that "the British Government has felt that it was its duty to use every possible means to avoid taking part in this lamentable contest. Nothing but the imperative duty of protecting British interests in case they are attacked justifies the Government in interfering at all. We have not been involved in any way in that contest by any act, or by giving advice in the matter, and for God's sake let us, if possible, keep out of it." As there is some difference of opinion re specting the meaning of the words that as re gards letters of marque, the Southern Confede racy must be considered belligerent, we desire to state Lord Jona intended the declaration as a reply to the last part of Mr. EWANT'S question—whether privateers, sailing under the flag of an unacknowledged Power, would be dealt with as pirates ? Lord Joan virtually says cc the Southern Confederacy, although an unacknowledged is yet a belligerent Power, and, being so, England will not deal with her privateers as if they were pirates." This la the obvious meaning of the words, which are ob scarely expressed, in Lord JOHN'S usual mud dled manner. Correspondence. "F. 1.." wishes that some one would state "how to address letters that they may be received by members of the Sixth Regiment Pennsylvania vo lunteers. They are continually moving from place to place, which prevents parents, who have eons in the regiment, and others, who are anxious occasionally to forward money to them, by letter, from doing so." • 4 1.testattrattrar" complaint; of the advance in the price of ice. He says " a few years ago I paid 25 cents for 100 pounds of roe. Last season, it was 25 cents for 80 pounds. This year the charge is 40 cents for the basheL of 80 pounds. There was plenty of sound ice laid in during the past winter, which set in strongly, with a great freeze, in De cember, There *en be no saying, with troth, that the demand from the South exhausts the supply and keeps up the price, for the South will get its ice, this year, not from Philadelphia, New York, and Boston, but from Nova Scotts. Why, then, raise the price upon us, the prinsipal enamors?" "Jesse F.," dating from Camp Wayne, West Chester, writes " Will you please answer the fol lowing questions, through the columns of your paper, for the benefit of the enlisted soldiers in this war 1. Does the pay of the soldier commence at the date of his enrolment, or at the time he wee sworn in? 2. What amount does the soldier receive per month, and what amount, if any, is de dusted therefrom for rations, and by whom, and when are the payments made? 3. What are the relative duties and liabilides of commissioned and non commissioned °Ewers and privates? 4. Are non-couunismioned , officers, sergeants, and corporal exempt from guard duty ?" Joseph Wilson, Glen Mills, Delaware county, suggests : As there are many companies of Home Guards forming throughout the country, would it not be well to publish the rules and regulations whin should govern them—the officers which are required, and their respective duties, act. ? I have men several military books, but none of them state the duties of the different officers. Nu. 1609 CUMBTRUT PRILADdLPHLd, May 15. EDITOR or THE Pains : The letter in The Press of this day, signed "B. Prank Palmer, No. 1525 Chestnut street," is a gross forgery, if it prtrports to have emanated from my stadia. An effort will be made to apprehend the author of it. Myself, and my small means, are at my cotintry's service; but, at the same time, I protest against WI abuse of my name. Yea% very respeatfoilh B. Esters PALUVR. General Beauregard. Boarom, May 15.—A letter received here nom a My in Charlotion, says that General Beauregard had died from the Whets of the wounds he received darlog the attaok art Fort Sumpter. Belo/elan at Reading. naironie, May 18.—Wa are &Inc one bandied innsninenor4fthe arrest of Ram WMana, English Antagonism to Mormonism. The English press exhibits great alarm at the progress of Mormonism in Great Britain, but particularly in Wales. The last•received number of the Morning Star (one of the ablest of the London cheap newspapers) takes the subject np very seriously, and expresses its horror at finding that et so hideous a delusion as Mormonism" is not dying out for want of material. It adds "But it seems it is not so. A paragraph we printed the other day tells us that the emigration of Mormonitea from Great Britain, particularly from the Southern districts of Wales, has, during the last ten weeks, been on a large male. From this metropolis itself a party of upwards of fifty has jest left for the Salt Lake, and many salt tears some of them are fated to shed before and after they get there What seems more astonishing is, that these devotees of Joe Smith are said to em brace all claret's. One gentleman. a Welshman, is stated to have eontribmted a thougoApd pounds to the emigration ,fand. Silly-minded people are to be met with in all ranks of life, and delusions are not confined to the ig norant alone; but for so gross and ernel a debt. lion as this to be received by any person with the least tincture of secular knowledge one could scarcely believe possible. Yet so it is. The bulk of the victims, however, are undoubtedly the igno rant—we do not mean those ignorant merely of the Christian religion, but people who have grown up without having had en opportunity of learning more than is to be seen within their own horizon, and not always that The audacious theocracy on the borders rof the Salt Lake finds its reunite *hien, in the most benighted agricultural districts, and in the dismal nooks and crannies of great cities, into whioh the light of intelligence no more penetrates than it illumines the moral mind in the southwest of England and in South Wales " The Star declares that this fact is a re proach to England as a nation, not that ample means for educating the whole popu lation have not been provided, but that there ig some obstructive and perverting influence in our political and social institutions which arrests the flow of light, into those places where it is most needed." In fact, the agri cultural classes in England and Wales are re markably ignorant. It is different in Scc)t land, where every peasant receives a good plain education, and though the Irish pea santry are indifferently educated, not one of them has been induced to join the Mormons. It is probable that their religious belief has kept them back from such mingled wicked ness and folly. Putting aside any discussion, as utterly use upon the imposture of Mormonienl fabri cated by Elmira and cunningly kept up by BRIGHAM YOUNG, it is singular that compara tively few rehable revelations concerning life at Salt Lake City have appeared, to put the weak-minded and credulous upon their guard. It, is generally believed that the emigrants to Utah are robbed, cheated, and ill-used by SatotrAm 'rouse and his leading associates, but few have been willing to confess how mi serably duped they were. Life in Utah is not the most pleasant. The journey to Salt Lake City is of itself a terrible affair. Utah is not exactly a land Sowing with milk and honey. The Star Bays Milk, it seems, is not sold, and is only to be had by families who keep cows. such a thing as honey was never seen in the place. Wine is at an enormous price. There are no apples, pears. plume, cherries, strawberries, nuts, gooseberries —no oranges, lemons, or citrons. Sugar is at twenty pence per lb , and frequently within a couple of months after the arrival of the goods' tea,me, neither tea nor sugar, coffee nor pepper, nor rice is to be had. Articles which are not ab• salutely necessary, but which nevertheless contri bute to the comfort of homes, cannot be had at any pries at the Balt Lake. With respect to the pur veying department in short, the exoter i c sain is must rind the New Jerusalem an extremely undesirable place to live in; whatever fat there is in the land Is mostiv swallowed by Brigham Young and his bishop-elders. The poor are worse off than in Nfigland, and that surely Is saying a great deal. Workmen are paid in instalments of flour, pota toes• and meat, doled out to them in petty quEnti ties." In winter the condition, of the poor is wretched in the extreme, for the cold. is in tense. The condition of woman in such a place is shockingly degraded ; she is in the position of a slave, bumbled, dispirited, filling the office neither of wife nor servant. Tho General Government of the community is thoroughly despotic, and the rulers have no compunction in executing the sentence of death for trifling offences. The saints in the country are continually singing a song, the burden of which is, " In Deseret we're free!" A part of the freedom consists in every ono paying a tithe of his whole income to the priest-rulers. co And that isn't enough," said BRIGHAM YonNo, on ono occasion ; c , if you have a lot, or a share of a lot, upon which you raise anything, you must pay a tithing for that. But if I pay you a salary you have no right to work on the lot, not even after hours ; for yen are mine—my slave as much as a nig ger in the South is the property of his mas. -ter." People who read newspapers learn some. thing about Utah and Mormonism. Bat such people are not at all disposed to go to Salt Lake City. The poor and the ignorant be come the prey, of the half.enthuslasts and whole-knaves, sent out from Utah to persuade them to emigrate thither. The British Go vernment, with all its power, cannot prevent such emigration. Is it not possible, however, to send proper agents among the people most easily deluded, whe would show them how the case actually stands ? As for this country, the continued toleration of Mormonism in Utah is far from creditable to us as a nation. WASHINGTON CORRESPONDENCE. Letter from 4, oecasional.” [Correspondenoe of The Preis) WASIIINGTON, May 15, 1861 Among the moot interesting pointsl in this revo lutionary period, St Louis deserves to be classed. Yon hive pima the telegraphic despatobes, demi- Meg the collisions between the mob of St: Louie and the troops under commend of Captain Lyon. The troops, loyal, faithful, and courageous, were Germans, and the Bacesolonists have contrived to awaken against these gallant men the prejudices Of people of other nationalities. The Colonels of the volutesr brigade are all Republicans, chief among whom is Frank Blair, the son of Francis P. Blair, of Silver Springs, well known as the editor of the Globe during the Jackson Administration. St. Louis is probably the only place in which the friends of the Union may be said to be composed almost entirely of Republicans, which is unfortn nis, but is the result of the acrimonious party strife that has existed between the Republioans of St. Louis and other organisations In Mis court a different state of parties Wets. There the Union men are composed of the straight Douglas and Boil-and-Everett parties, while the Diounionists, beaded by Governor Jaokeon, are made up of the Breekinridge faction. Bat it can nit be denied that a strong Secession sentiment 15 growing in Missouri, and that, for same canoe, there is imminent peril of that State being carried out of the Union. Letters that I have read ard r eceived from gentleman resident in the interior of the State give a mist gloomy account. In some quarters, whore the Pennsylvanians and other Northern men reside, there is every prospect of the Union men being driven out, and compelled to seek shelter in lowa and Illinois. The secession of Missouri would be the destruction of St. Louis —sudden, inevitable, and irreparable. The policy of the Government in keeping open the Mississippi, and in preventing all trade between Bt. Louis and New Orleans, and its determination to avoid every State controlled by the Secessionists, and thus to cut off St. Louis from that vast overland trade connecting the Mississippi with the Pacific and tar intermediate territories, will soon convert the beautiful commercial capital of Mieeouri Into a &Sedation and a waste. Missouri was destined to a long career of pros perity. Her finances bad been managed Skilfully, though Somewhat boldly; but 311300 the death of Colonel Benton, who apprehended and anticipated, with prophetio eye, the design which has now been so fearfully and formidably unveiled, the doctrines of Calhoun, preached by such men as Green and Polk, and a host of similar politicians, have taken deep root, and all that Colonel Benton feared. and fought against is probably about to take place. It is impossible to overestimate the powerful impression created by Stephen A. Douglas 'in his wonderful speeches throughout the State of Illinois. Yon are, of course, aware that South's= Illinois, or what is known as ct Egypt," is the most Demo cratic part of the State, and gave Lae large majo rities that saved Illinois to Mr. Buchanan, in IBM. It is, however, so near the Kentucky border that a good deal of strong Southern sympathy has al ways existed among its people, who are almost entirely descendants of Virginians and Kentuck ians, and if Judge Douglas had remained neutral in this mighty struggle, or had taken the course of Breokinridge and his gang, an incurable division would have taken place in this important section. Bat, owing to his heroic and herculean exertions, the whole State of Illinois may be called, in the words of Kossuth, a solidarity. lion. Andrew IL Reeder was yesterday ap pointed a brigadier general under the new call for troops to`serve for three years. lie will make a splendid officer, and will do honor to the dis triet and btate from which ha is chosen. What a time, by the way, for distinction this campaign opens to young and ambitious men! Oar cause is eo right, our Government so nobly sustained, our people so ardent and se generous, and the abettor experiment of the Disunioniata so wrong, so cor rupt, so dishonest, so despised of God and man, and the stake at issue so beyond price, that / not astonished to see the most gifte.d. of - my coun trymen gathering here and offering themselves as willing sacrifices. Nen who have grown gray with years, too—men of fifty and sixty—are on the ground, ready to take any position that may he conferred upon them, and willing to face death MN for Gasped cause.; I learn to-day that the THE PRESS. -PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, MAY 16, 1861. offers from Americium in Europe are numerous, and that thousands who have not seen the United States for years are