g4Ye Vrtss. MONDAY, APRIL 18, 1864. Friends and Foes Abroad. It behoves us to know, as precisely as possible, what are our relations with the leading Powers of Europe. In one instance, the matter is wholly indubitable. The Em peror of Russia, from the commencement of the war into which the worst Treason has plunged this Union, has been frank and friendly. In November, 1862, when Nerorgornmade an insidious proposal that England and Russia should unite 'with France in an interference with the affairs of the United States, while England held back, yet with a doubtful expression, as if such procedure might be warranted at no distant day, _Russia firmly and at once gave a de cided negative, and thus prevented the bringing of European influences into the affairs of this great American Republic. Russia, therefore, may be relied upon as our true and loyal ally, not to be swayed by external circumstances against us, nor to be csjoled by the crafty plausibility of the very astute gentleman who governs France. It is clear that the policy of Russia is to continue on the best terms with the United -States. The relations between this country and England have never been over and above cordial Whether with or without cause, the young Republic has long held the belief that her Alma Mater—the old monarchy of Great Britaie--watched her growing great ness with no very favorable mind. England naturally felt sore at the loss of the North American provinces. - which established their independence as the United States, and may have faneied—probably, not entirely with out cause— that the young Empire of the West was too exultant over the triumph it bad gained and the prosperity which fol lowed. The War of 1812 did not assist' in lowering the tone of national feeling, wheth er of jealousy or exultation, in each coun try. After that, when the tide of immigra:- tion from the worst-governed portion of the British Empire added vast numbers of the dissatisftEd Irlsh upon our shores and into our population, the anti-British feeling was continually kept at fever. heat. There is no use denying that in the Crimean war American sympathies set in very strongly in favor of Russia, and soon after, when the Indian insurrection broke out, though the barbarism of the re volted 'Undoes excited the natural abhor rence of all humane minds, the general de sire in the United States was that British dominion in India, built up by a series of conquests, should . be very sensibly weak ened, if not wholly annihilated. All the time, whenever public men on either side of the Atlantic had to speak of England and the United States, there ever was the stereo typed sentence about being "sprung from the same race, governed by the same laws, speaking the same language, and enjoying the same literature." It was fancied here, when our troubles began, that England, though she had abo 3ished slavery in her own dominions, gave her sympathies to the Treason which was based upon the maintenance of the South ern States in their full but criminal integ rity as Slave States. Many things oc curred' which seemed to strengthen this opinion. But we shall not record them here. The good old ecottish proverb says " Let bygones be by-gones," and we will now only to remember that, however certain members of the Palmerston Go vernment may occasionally have publicly expressed opinions in favor of "the so called Confederate States," the present policy of that Government is unequivocally as neutral as can be expected ; that the per- sonal leaning of Queen Vic:roma herself is knoWn to be on the side of humanity and freedom ; and that, in taking her stand as the friend of our Union, she but follows up the gentic policy of her late husband, whose closing action, as her natural ad viser and counsellor, is said to have been such an alteration, with his own pen, of the Ministerial instructions to Lord LYONS, de manding the surrender of Messrs. Meson and Strom.n, as removed much of the sting of the communication. We have had, du ring nearly a year, and up to the present time, a lair neutrality from England, and this has „greatly tended to remove much of the feeling against that country. Considering the antiquity and the con- galley of cur alliance with France—for we bad French aid in the winning of Our inde pendence, and the name of LAFAYETTn is a household - word among us to this day—we certainly had full grounds for hoping, even for believire, that her sympathy would he with us, it < ever the hour of adverse vicissitude should arrive. We hoped so, be lieved so. and were mistaken. The astute ruler of France, (for we shall not attempt to deny hie remarkable ability,) declared, equally with Queen VICTORIA, when the war began, that the utmost neutrality should be rigidly observed. What has that pseudo neutrality been ? Now coquetting with Sr.roaLL, the mock-ambassador of the Rebel Confederation—now proposing that England and Russia -would unite with France to end the war by acknowledging the na tionality of Secessia—now opening the harbor of France to receive and the dock-yards to refit the pirate vessels which wander o'er the seas striking heavy bucca neering blows at American commerce. Nor is this all, or the worst. It is an established fact, against which the American Ambassa dor at Paris has officially retnonstrated in the strongest manner, that war vessels for the Rebels have been building for some months at Nantes and Bordeaux—that the Rebels have negotiated, through the traitor MAnny, for the construction of a fleet of such vessels—and that the French Govern ment, notwithstanding our Minister's re monstrances, permits, by not prohibiting, the building of such vessels. The pretext that they have been ordered by the Empe ror of China is just as plausible as that they were intended for the Man-in-the-Moon. Hem then, of the three great European Powers, Russia is warmly our friend, Eng land will remain legally neutral, and France is undeniably false and hostile. 'When news of the barbarism practised at Fort Pillow—of that horrible massacre, worse than the bloodiest of the Sepoy mur ders in 1857—shall reach Europe, the true character of ITA_POLIT,OII's friends in the South will be unequivocally established. Ruffians who have acted as the Rebels acted in that instance, with a brutality which has no parallel in the annals of civilization, fitly represent the whole congregation of those who would establish a Republic in the South with Slavery as the keystone of its arch. The public feeling of Europe will shudder at the murderous means adopted by the Rebels at Fort Pillow, and the reaction which those frightful enormities must create will there raise up many new friends to the cause of Humanity and Freedom, for which the - Union is now so anxiously contending. GOVFAMOR Cturrna can ask nothing of - the people of Pennsylvania that they will not give him with pleasure and pride. Since they have twice given him majorities which make him the representative of the State, and since he possesses their unreserved trust in his ability and loyalty, he can have nothing to ask for himself. In the noble address which we publish to-day he ap peals to them in behalf of our soldiers, and if the patriotism and generosity of Penn sylvania needed inspiration, in his earnest - words inspiration would be found. MB. ROBERT F. BTOCRTOIi'7E letter, pub lished on our first page, appears to be the formal defence of the Camden and Amboy Railroad Company ; it is certainly the best argument yct advanced in favor of that cor poration, and as such deserves to be read carefully. SAMITARY CAMILISSIOIf—AMATNUE 00AGIATe.— It would not-surprise us to end the musical depart' meat a very striking feature In the coming Fair. The first Amateur Concert, at Musical Hall, on Ela ..huday evening, was one of the very best ever given iII inia city. and the Ambhlon Amateur Band ewe toy weelegrdshed itself. Of comae, this Concert Will be repeated. It needs only to be known to win large amount of public favor. LETTER FROM "OCCASIONAL," WAsrrinaTorr, April 16, 1864. The news of the tragedy after the capture of Fort Pillow, -where Union troops, white and black, were indiscriminately slaughter ed, sou nds like the echo of a savage rebel' lion against humanity and civilization to the recent extraordinary apologies for trea son in the National House of Representa tives. The amazement inspired by the latter in every loyal heart is only excelled by the horror excited by the Fort Pillow massacre. If the soldiers in the army were surprised at the votes and voices of the Op position to the war in Congress if our citi zens in other lands will read these pro ceedings with shame and consternation— what will they both say—what will our peo ple everywhere say—as they ponder upon the details of the carnival of blood enacted by the savages under Forrest a few days ago ? Are these white men who have done this dreadful act? Can they have ever been American citizens ? What has transformed them into the shape of fiends ? There is only one answer—sl.A.VEßY ! In no other school could human beings have been trained to such readiness for cruelties like these. Accustomed to brutality or bestiality all their lives, in their treatment of their slaves, it was easy for them to perpetrate the atrocities which will startle the civilized foreign world, as. they have awakened the indignation of our own people. But this last example of rebel bar barity, while it must serve to increase and crystallize our patriotic determination, must not drive us to depart from the honorable and merciful spirit which animates the Go vernment in the prosecution of the war. For this same experience cannot fail to prove still more the value of colored troops, and also the bravery of that self sacrificing yet unfortunate people. May God help them They did not make this war. They bad no votes to give for or against the slavery under which most of them have so long groaned. They had no part even in the utterance of opinions. They were valuable simply as the contributors to the aristocracy, of the South; and when these latter resolved to plunge a nation into war only that the negl.o might be still more en.slaved, and the Government separated and torn into fragments, the blacks were called in to help to avert the catastrophe. It is unnecessary to reason upon the proposition that the slave-masters would not employ their own negroes in the army out of any regard for Northern lives, or the prejudices of caste in the North. Nowhere is there so much familiarity bevveen whites and blacks as in the South'; nowhere is the hooted idea of amalgamation so practically and profit ably illustrated. But the slaveholders feared that their own slaves would prove to be fonder of freedom than of slavery in the new relation they would thus be forced to bear to slavery. The Government, then, having to decide be tween leaving these slaves to aid in feeding • the rebellion or to aid in fighting it, chose the latter alternative. And now this poor, pursued, and persecuted people are put for war d to do their part of the great work. To the discharge of this duty they bring no re luctant service. They know the terrible risks they run. In the free States they are surrounded by a cloud of igno rant and most - unreasoning prejudices. First, they have political leaders Charging that the chances of war have put them on a level with the laboring whites, and that the friends of the Government contemplate a grand system of admixture of white and black. This shameful and shameless falsehood cannot be repelled by the colored people, for, as I have said, they have no votes, and are deprived of a fair chance to address any audience of their enemies. It is a common thing, even now, for a colored man or woman to be insulted on the streets by wretches, many of whom never knew prosperity until they came to live under the protection of the old flag. But what amazes me most is that any American should ever yield to this bigotry. That every colored man saves the life of a white man in the army never seems to have made any more im pression on such minds than the other fact that the only real amalgamation is that which takes place in the slave States. In the North it is exceptional ; in the South it is common. On this head I borrow a most suggestive paragraph from the Morning Chronicle, which is as follows STATISTICS ON MISCECSNATION. — There were 411,619 mulatto gloves in the South in 1860, of whom 69,970 were In Virginia, 43.281 in Kentucky, and 36,900 in Georgia. These numbers are considerably beyond ,the legitimate proportion of those States. There were sit° 176,739 free mulattoes in the United Statts in 1860, of Whom 106,770 belonged to the South, and 69,969 to the free States. Of die free mu lattoes Virginia contained 23485, which number, added to her slave Mulattoes, makes a total of MU ergevated population of 93,824. Her mulattO slaves alone exceeded the total number of mulattoes in the free States. The whole number of mulattoes, slave and free, in the Union, in 1860, was 588,352, of whom 69,969 belorged to the free Statee and 618,383 to the &lave States—a number greater than the combined white population of Arkansan, Delaware, and Flo fida—greater than the white population of aims , land—almost twice as great as that of South Caro. line, and twice as great as the combined populations of Delaware and Florida. The mulatto population of Virginia alone exceeds the number of whites in Delaware or Florida. In fact, there is not now, and never has been, a white ?Ilan, in the free States, fit to work, or to earn enough for his family, that ever lost a day's ieages tecaltBo of negro coin. petition. But all this is the very least part of the sufferings of the colored race. There is a darker side to this very dark picture. Look at them noW, when they go into the war ; when they go out to fight for and save the lives of many of those who forget while they slander them. The cAproug OF AND MASSACRE AT FORT PILLOW is TEM IF,XT FOR A VOLUME. The negro volunteer enters the army under three immediate and as yet insoluble difficulties : I. He gets less pay than the white man. 11. He knows if taken prisoner he will not be exchanged. 111. He, feels and may well fear that if captured his life may be sacrificed with as little mercy as if he were in the employ of the enemies of the best in stitutions in the world. Look at this black hero, 0 prejudiced partisan`' <Whether you be scholar or statesman, priest or pharisee, the laborer who lets the politician cheat you, or the layman who only repeats the nar row sophisms of his teacher, I demand of you to solve to me the question I put to you : Slavery having begun the war against liberty, having forced the North to employ black and white alike, to save our Government, what reason can an honest man, if he is loyal to his country, urge against the employment of the blacks, and how could this nation defend itself if the colored people were not enlisted in this war? In the light of the frightful fires of Port 111- low, and with the screams of our once living and wounded and now dead immortals, of that new sacrifice to freedom sounding in our ears, answer me ! OccAsiorter.. WASHINGTON. WASHINGTON. April 16. 1864. The Massacre at Fort, Despatch from Gen. Sherman. On Saturday afternoon, about five o'clock, de• snatches were received here from Gen. Slimmer( confirming the news of the surrender of Fort Pillow and the brutal conduct of the rebels immediately . at terwarthe, which bids fair to be amply retaliated in that quarter in due time. The Star nays : According to Gen. Summeres re- port, our loss was 50 white troops killed s and 100 wounded, and 300 black troops murdered in cold blood after the surrender. Fort Pillow is an isolated poet, of no value what. ever to the defence of Columbus, and utterly unto. nable by the rebels, who have, no doubt, left that vicinity ere this, having been disappointed, with considerable lose., in the object of their raid thither, which was the capture of Columbue, whence they were promptly and severely repulsed, with no loss to 1111. We are satisfied that due investigation will show that the /owe of Fort Pillow Was simply the result of a mistake of a local commander. who occupied it against direct orders—a contingency incident to all wars. The rebels, according to the official despatch re ceived here last evening, etrevied nothing at Patin cab, loathe a 'Minor killed end wounded for every h o rse they succeeded in stealing, and doing us no other damage than by a few thefts. It IN behoved that Fonicsevli raiders will next ap. peer in the vicinity of Memphis, where they eau effect no more than they did at Columbus and Ps. ducat, and stand a very fair chance, indeed, of flu& int themselves surrounded by overwhelmingly su. perior forces. The Speaker's Reception. The fifteenth and kat of Speaker COLIPAIOB raeep tione for the sewn took place on Saturday night. It was attended by an immenia number of person; the throng being unprecedented. For three hour.; log and going. Among them we re congressman of there was an uninterrupted crowd of visitors oom all partiel. Naval Ailitirs. on the Reining Of the 20th Of Mirth, whilst lying Off Elbow Light, tat. 26.30 north, long. 26 26 west, the United States steamer Tioga overhauled and captured the sloop Swallow, from Oombahee river, S. 0., bound to Nassau, N. P. One hundred and eighty bales of cotton, eighty barrels rosin, and twenty. Ave boner tobacco won found On board of the Swallow. The order's assigning Lieutenant Commander Joa ar 11. EyeßaLL to the Cimerone have been revoked, and be Is granted one month leave of absence. Lieutenant Commander JONATUAN YOUNG 1. Wired from ordnance duty at New York, and is ordered to the command of the Cimerone. History of the Rebel Rams. The history of the rebel rams building in France is contained in the public diplomatic correspondence more fully and more accurately than in recent news paper publications emanating from Paris. Since the President announced to Congress, in his annual message, that these rams were not allowed to come out, nothing has occurred to induce a belief' that tile French Government will permit them to go into the rebel hands for war against the United States. Subscriptions to the 10-40 Loan. The amount of eubaeriptions to the 10 40 loan, re ported to the Treasury Department for Saturday, is $1,050,000. The Baltimore Fair. Pgeaident LINCOLN and Speaker Cotvas will visit Baltimore to• morrow evening, by invitation, to Mitt at the opening of the Maryland Sanitary Fair. Army Appointment. Colonel MULLIGAN has been appointed to the command of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, from Back creek to the Ohio river. Colonel .7Aoon IYL CAlarmssa., of Retina, has command at Cumberland. The Bill against Gold Speculation. The following i■ the bill which passed the Senate en Saturday, aud awaits the action of the House : Be it snorted, That it shall be unlawful to make any contract for the- ',archaise, or sale. or delivery of any gold coin or bullion, or of any foreign exchange, to no delivered at any time subsequent to the making of each contract. or for the payment of any sum, either fixed or contingent. in default of the delivery of any gold coin or bullion, or of any foreign exchanae. or upon other term. than the immediate manual delivery of such gold coin or bullion. or foreign exchange. and the immediate payment in full of the agreed price thereof by the manu al deliver, of United States notes or national currency. and not otherwise, or to make any contract whatever for the sale, loan, or delivery of any gold coin or bai lie n. or foreign exchange, of which the person making such contract shall not at the time of making be the owt er in actual presestiOn. Sac. That it shall be farther unlawful for any banker. broker. or otter ;erten. to make any purcba,e or sale of any told coin or bullion. or of any foreign eachante. or at y contract for any such purchate or sale. at any other place than the ordinary place of be' eines* of eitbe, the seller or parcasser, owned or hired and occupied by him individually. or by a partnership of which lie is a member. Eye. 24 Ali ColliMein made in violation of this act shall be abtointsly veld. S'Eo 4. Any person who shall violate any provision'of this act shall be held guilty of a misdemeanor. and on conviction thereof be fined in the snot of one thousand dollars. and be impriconed for a p.riod note less than those month, nor longer than one year, or both. at the discretion of the court Egg. 6, The penalty imposed by the fourth section of this act may be recovered in an action at law in any court of record of the United States, or any court of ccmpetent Jurisdictionwhich action may be brought in the name of the linited Staten by any person reno wn! sue for the said penalty t • one• half for the use of the Unite* Sultes.and the other half for the nee of the parson bringing such tighten, And the recovery and satisfaction oft. judgment in any gnat action shall be a bar to the imposition of any tine for the same offence in any Prose cution Instituted subsequent to the recovery of such judgment, but. shall not be a bar to the infliction of Punisbnaent by imprisonment, as provided by the fourth section. I , F.C. 6 All acts and parts of acts inconsistent the Provisions of this get are rePealed. ARMY OF THE POTOMAC. A Rebel Attempt to Capture Lieut. Gcn. Grant Foiled. REVIEW OF GEN. GIBBON'S DiVI-SION General Ail.patrick: Relieved.. WASHINGTON, April 16.—Despatches from the headquarters of the Army of the Potomac state that yeateiday about noon a party of reb,cl cavalry made an attempt on the pickets at Bristow Station, but were driven off after a brisk skirmish. One man was killed and two were wounded, be longing to the 13th Pennsylvania. Several of the wounded were carried off by their comrades. The mail train, with Gen. Grant aboard, had just parsed a few minutes before the attack was made, and it is supposed the intention was to capture him. The body of Capt. McKee, of the 21st Infantry, WbO was killed by guerillas on Monday last, was for warded to Waahington to-day. The man who shot him was named W. Flanders, and he, with three others, made an attack on a picket pest, near Catlett's, on Wednesday, when he was shot dead by a moldier of the 2d Infantry. WASHINGTON, April 16.—A letter from the Army of the Potomac says that Gibbon's division of the 2d Army Corps were reviewed yesterday by General Hancock, Generals Meade, Sedgwick, and others, being present. The division is a large one, well disciplined, and was eulogized by alio General Kilpatrick Lae been relieved from the command of his cavalry division, and ordered to re port for duty to General Gregg. He will take com mand of a brigade under the latter. General Gregg's division was to have been re viewed tcaday by General Sheridan ; but, a storm having prevailed since last evening, it has been postponed till next week. Sutlers and citizens have all left the army, and will not be allowed to return to it before next autumn. NORTH CAROLINA. EM U~G3 :{ y r►],`( L!.l ItIVNAL. CAPE LOOKOUT LIGHTHOUSE REPAIRED. Eebel Conscription Suspended. N E WB E E T " C ), April 12.—The rebels have ap peared In large force upon the ChOwan river, ap• parcntly for the protection of the shad and herring tisheries. The ("ape Lookout lighthouse, which the rebels attempted to destroy recently with gunpowder, was but slightly injured, and the light now burns as usual. The attempt was exceedingly audaoious, as the locality le far within our lines. The Confederate eonscription has been 'impended in the Fast Congressional district of North Caro. line, and an amnesty is offered to all North Caro. MIME, who are or have been in the Federal service. FORTRESS MONROE. A Successful Expedition to Smithfield Rebels Captured—Arrival of Union. forissint- ex s from City Poi Mt FORTE:MS Moanos, April 15.—An expedition, under command-of General Graham, consisting of the army gunboats, the nth New Jersey, 23d and 26th Massachusetts, and 118th New York Regi ments, together with two sections of artillery, left here on on Wednesday night, and landed at different points. They concentrated at Smithfield, Va., on Monday evening, and succeeded in routing the rebels, cap turing one commissioned officer and five men. They also took several horses and carriage., to gather With the commissary stores. A rebel mail and apiece of artillery formerly taken from the gunboat Smith Briggs were captured. Fifty contrabands were also brought off. Our /On Wee one missing and five slightly Wounded. The steamers Winans and S. 0. Pierce returned from unsuccessful cruises in search of the disabled steamer Thomas A. Scott. [The Scott has slime arrived at New York.] A French armed transport, with a bark in tow, started up the James river this morning, intending to load with tobacco at Richmond, belonging to the French Government. Eight bushwhackers were captured on oobb 7 s bland, near the eastern shore, at 2 A.M. on the ibtb, by Captain Chambers, of the lit Loyal Yip. gin% and the men brought to the military prison at this place. The steamer New York sailed for City Point this afternoon, in charge of Major Mulford, flag.of-truce officer. The steamers New York and Express, from Olty Feint, have arrived here, with 563 sick and wounded men, includii:g the following officers Asuistant Surgeon Rennaut, 76th Illinois; Surgeon Devon dorf, 48th New York ; Captain Dotent, 14th Con neetient. Three men died on the boat, and were buried here. Their names were John Thompson, 33d Ohio; David Dodge, 100th Ohio, and E. Peilnier, 4th Kentucky. One ease of emall•pox was left here. The remains of Lira C. D. Forsyth, accidentally shot in the Libby Prison, were brought down. Capt. Shaw and two men, captured by the tug Fin, were brought down sick and taken to Balti more. Medical Inspectors Johnson leaves here on the &tumor New Yolk. Aft airs in Indiana—Military Movements. CINCINNATI, April 16.—An Indianapolis special despatch represents military matter' very active. A large number of reernita leave for the front daily. Governor. Brough, Yates. and Norton were in con• imitation with General Heintzelman yesterday. A colored regiment leaves on Monday to report to Burnside at Annapolis. The new Indiana regiments are being rapidly organized for the field. It is thought that General Mansfield will be a candidate for Lieutenant Governor, in place of Gen. Kimball, declined. Suppression of a Disloyal Paper. ST. LOMB, April le—Gen. Roseanne promptly lambed the attempt of the proprietOrs of The Metro. politan Record, published in New York, to supply its St. Louis subacriberr, with their traitorous sheet, under the title of The Vindicator. The General sent for a copy when The Vindicator arrived, and when he was satisfied that it was the same paper as The Record, he issued an order to suppress its circulation in this department. Though not so ostentatious as some others, Gen. Roseanne has a quick way of dealing with rebel sympathizers which seldom al lows any rebel to gain an advantage over him. The Gold Market. NEW Youx, April 16 —Ciold remains Arm at about 171. The sales of geld certificates, se far, are about $7,000,000, and it is said they are reaching their limit, and a resumption of gold duties must Won take plade, at least until July. Movement of Colored Troops. NEW Yonir, April 16.—The soth Connecticut (co lored) Regiment, With full raids', passed through this city toll/liter Annapolis. The Soldiers' Vote in Ohio. CLICV3LAND, April 16.—The Supreme Court of Obio has decided that the law allowing soldiers to vote is oonstitutioual. • Shipment of Specie. Nsw Yonn, April 16.—The Car of London, for Liverpool, to day, took $832.000, and the Teutonia, for *outhampton, stia,ooo. Gold Certificates. NEW YORE, Atoll fir.—The sale of gold sertitlaatifi has beetiatopped. THE PRESS:-PHILTADELPHM, MONDAY, APRIL IS, ISM: TEE WAR IN THE SOUTHWEST. REBELS OVERRUNNING WESTERN KENTUCKY. PORT PILLOW A MASS OF RUINS CHATTANOOGA ADVICES. HARM'S CORPS GOING TO VIRGINIA. EMANCIPATION MEETING AT KNOXVILLE CAPTURE OF THE GUERILLA REYNOLDS. Rebel Repulse in. A_ricameste. ETRE FORT PILLOW BUTCHERY The Union Soldiers Threaten Retaliation. Getter:Ma, A.ttacits on Steamers. FIGHT ON THE BIG BUCK RIVER. CRUCIFIXION OF A UNION SOLDIER The Rebels Defeated near Selbyville, 6T. Lours, April 16 —The steamer Esker, from Paducah last evening, reports that, at three o'clock yesterday afternoon, the rebels, 600 strong, appeared before that place, and sent a flag of truce and again demanded the surrender of the fort. Colonel Mitchell and the 54th Illinois and other troops were marching out of the fort to meet the enemy, as the Baker left, but no fighting had taken place. REBEL ISIOVEMENTS. Another feature of the rebel movement 15 set forth in the following extract from a paper published in Kentucky : [From ibe Louisville .iournal. AMP 1S 3 . . A distinguished officer in the Federal service, who is now in command of *division of the Army of the asiseippi in Gieorgia, hes written to us to say that our warnings of an intended rebel raid in this State have been moat proper. He feels confident that it will be made on the most gigantic scale, and require extraordinary exertions to repel it. He eerters, our secret service men, anti rebel papers, all concur in the one idea, that Longstreet ' aided by Breekioridge, Buckner, and Morgan, will buret into the state, while at the same time Johnston will threaten our advance before Chattanooga to keep our whole army employed there. John a Morgan is at this present time somewhere in the neighborhood of Abingdon, Virginia, fitting out and remounting his com• mind. This tact is almost indisputable, from cir cumstances which we will state : rHis men went nom the front in Georgia some time sauce by rail to Richmond, and he refused a donation keel the ladies of Columbus, S 0, of money to fit out his com mand, in a letter which was dated at Lynchburg, saying "the Government bad kindly undertaken to furnish all necesssry equipments for his intended expedi tion.ll Though we do not know tinselly where the blow will be struck, or in what numbers the rebels will be prepared to assail us, the "intended expedi tion" must be set down as a fixed fact ThM confirms the following statement, published yesterday by us, taken from a rebel paper : [From the Raleigh N. ) Confederate 1 General Morgan la about to undertake one o[ the boldest expeditions he has ever yet made, which, if successful, will be productive.of great good to our cause. It is, therefore, perfectly plain that three distinct rebel cavalry forces are already busily engaged is the rcilitaty division of the Bliedesippi i each meting independently of the other. PADUCAH. AND WESTERN KENTUCKY. CAIRO, April 16.—The steamer Swallow, from Pa ducah at 8 o'clock last night, reports all quiet, and that no lighting had occurred up to tlie time she left. The 3d, 'lth, and Bth Kentucky (rebel) Regiments are overrunning Western Kentucky with impunity. The inhabitants of Metropolis are in a constant state of suspense, not knowing at what hour they may be attacked. Everybody has slept in their clothes for the past two nights, ready to defend themselves or to decamp, as circumstances might re quire. Gunboats are constantly patrolling, taking every precaution to prevent the rebels from crossing, by sinking and destroying all skiffs and other craft that could be used for that purpose. OBA'rTANOOGA, April 16.—A1l is quiet at the front, and there 111 no change in the situation of the rebel lines. Several rebel lieutenants and fitty-two noncommissioned officers and privates came into our lines last night. They report that Hardee's corps is ordered away from Dalton, and that several trains left before they came away. It was believed in the rebel lines that they were going to Virginia. - A the broke out in the brick block adjoining the military prison here this afternoon, and three bulid. Inge, partly occupied by Quartermaster's and Pro. voat Marshal's Department. and the Sanitary Com mission, were destroyed before the fire was main guished. The jail in which the rebel prisoners were confined was saved with difibulty, and no prisoners escaped. No Government property was destroyed. The loss on the buildings is $20,000. Major General Newt('!igen to Cleveland tamer. row, and will have command of the 2(1 Division of the 4th Corps, formerly commandeds-by Gummi Sheridan. MEMPHIS AND FORT PILLOW. CAIRO, April la —The steamer Glendale, from Memphis, has arrived. She passed Port Pillow lest evening. There was no appearance of the enemy, and the river was all clear. Nothing remains of the fort but a mass of ruing'. The Glendale brought 965 bales of cotton for Cincinnati. She brings no paper. or news from below. A number of steamers are leaving for the South. Bless MEETING AT KNOXVILLE KNOXVILLE, April 16.—A large masa meeting was Yield today in front of the Court House, at which resolutions were offered by Parson Brownian, fa. vexing emancipation. and renommending a convere lion to effect it; also requesting Governor - Johnson to call the same at the earliest possible period, and endorsing the Administration and its war policy. Governor Sohneon made a powerful, telling speech, rebuking in severe terms the Copperheads of the late Convention. The celebrated guerilla Reynolds' command was surprised yesterday by a small force of our csvalry. Ten were killed, and fifteen, with Reynolds himself, were captured, with their horses, equipments, and fume. FORT PILLOW-GUERILLAS IN ARRAN- CAIRO, April 11.--The main body of the rebels left Fort Pillow on Friday morning, and the rear guard in the afternoon,tehing all the email arms, and having destroyed all the ammunition and every thing elle that could be destroyed. Late advises from Duvall's Bluff report the coun try infestcd with guerillas, who era constantly rob .bang people, and committing all manner of depreda• tins. Mr. Nixon, the State Representative from Franklin county, hat been murdered, and the Repro. tentative from Arkaniat county kidnapped. Nothing has been heard from them. On the 11th inst. 400 Texan cavalry attempted r to surprise a camp of 240 Federabs at Roseville, on the Arkansas river, but were repulsed, with the Lou of twelve killed and a large number wounded. Our loss was five killed. THE FORT PILLOW BUTCHERY. MEMPHIS, April 17 —There is not much amid, but there is a general gritting of teeth among the officers here when the massacre Of the brave garrison of Fort Pillow is alluded to. Several *Moen have been heard to say, that, unless the Government takes retributive steps, they will consider it their duty to shoot every man of Forrest's command that they meet, and to take no prisoners. The soldiers threaten to shoot Forrest's men now in the Irwin prison it they can get a chance. This 18 the general feeling. STEAMER MINA FIRED ON. Cain°, April 11.—the steamer Mina was fired into on Thursday night, near Port Pillow, by fifty rebels, in Federal uniform, supposed to have bean the rear guard of the enemy, who are withdrawing in a northern direction. It in believed that Forrest has not yet removed his headquarters from Jackson, Tennessee. The Memphis cotton market is inactive and settled. Good middlings, 6t@es ; middling fair, 61. The steamer Swan has arrived from New Orleans withlso bales of 'cotton for St. Louis. tier officers report that the rebel force under Oen. Wirt Adams drove our traops from the Big Black a week ago, and took several hundred prisoners. LARGE ARRIVALS OF COTTON REBEL CRUELTY. OMR°, April 17.—The steamer Hope passed here to-day, with a large cargo of groceries and 350 bales Of cotton fOr St. Louis. She Was flred.into by guerillas when fifteen miles above Memprts. - The fire was returned, dispersing the rebels. The steamer Liberty also passed here to-day, for Louisville, with 911 bales of cotton. The steamer Ike Hammett, from Alexandria, Red river, on the 2d inst., arrived here today, with four more guns from Fort De Hussey, and also two barges containing 800 bales of cotton, the prtre of the navy. Four thousand bales of cotton are re ported to be up the Black and Yazoo rivers. The gunboats Avenger, Ouachita, Ohaehitton, arid Lafayette have gone up these rivers to secure this cotton. Two other gunboats had been ordered to assist them, and ten gunboats are up the Red river. This accounts for there being , but one gun boat at Fort Pillow at the time the rebels attacked it. The Red river is rising. The steamer Golden Gate, from Memphis, laden with stores and private freight, was taken posses sion of by guerillas on the night of the 12th instant, at Bradley Landing, fifteen miles above Memphis. The boat and passenge' and crew were robbed of everything. The steamer Oalista was fired into near Augusta, on the White river, a few days ago, and ono man killed and three wounded. All the steamer. approaching the chore above Duvall's are !iced into. The fight at Roseville, referred to in a former de spatch, lasted four hours. Seven hundred bales of cotton were planed on board a schooner during the fight. An affidavit taken here dealers, that the quarter maeter of the lath Tennessee Cavalry was, while living, nailed to a board by the rebels and thrown into the flames of a burning building at Fort Pillow. Brigadier General Crocker and staff have arrived below. The 1313th Indiana Infantry, 4th WisoOnsin Cavalry, and a portion of the 7th Illinois Veterans have arrived, en route for home on furlough. A private letter, dated Greenville, Miss., April 12, states that the hompital steamer was recently sunk on the ihoate above Alexandria, on the Red river. It also castes that the navy were capturing large quantities of cotton in that region. LOUISVILLE. Loursvirme, April 17.—0 n Thursday, Colonel Gallup, while falling back to get an advantageoue position, attacked 1,000 rebels, killing and wounding twenty.flve, including a rebel colonel, and capturing fifty rebels, one hundred home, and two hundred Saddles. Near Selbyville the rebel advance ran into Colonel True's advance, which was going from West Liberty to Selbyville. lie captured six rebels, and then pressed forward to join Colonel True. Forty citizens of Boonesville whipped seventy five of Gray's guerillso. It is reported here that there were no rebel. in Parry or Bresthill Opuntia'. Whitesburg, lathe interior of the latter county, has been (wasted by the rebel forces there, Jack May, "their colonel, having ordered them to reinforce the rebel forces under Colonel Edwards, near Piketon. CHATTANOOGA DEPARTMENT OF THE MT& Capture of a Valuable Itlockade..Runner. BEHR OF UNION PRISONERS IN GEORGIA. FORTRICSS Mormon; April 17.—The Port Royal paper 4fthe 14th reports the capture of the side wheel blockade•runner Alliance, on the 12th indent, near Dawfuskie Island, Savannah river. She was aground. Her crew were all taken except six. She was from Nasasu, with a cargo of assorted stores for the -rebel Government valued at $85.000. She was built on the Clyde, and has three smoke•staohl. The Savannah Republican or the 4th inst. states that the Yankee prisoners at Andersonville, Georgia, are dying at, the rate of twenty to twenty five per day. The Nassau papers of the sth state that Mobile, Savannah, Charleston, and Wilmington. are less rigidly blockaded than ever, and advise fast steam ers to come on with supplies for the rebate, pro mining large profits, and twenty-five per cent. less loss. Paymasters Herrick and Lockwood arrived at Port Peyal en the Bth, with $1,000,009, to pay all the troops in the Department. CALIFORNIA Indian Depredations SAN FRANEdneo, April 16--It is ascertained that the schooner Potter, which sailed in ballast for the Colorado river on Sunday, clandestinely took a cargo, after clearing from the custom house, of SOO keg. of blasting powder. It Is believed that this powder is destined for Northern Neale°, for mining purposee. The authorities having prohibited such shipments, the mine■ of Sonora must be closed unites mean. are devised to introduce powder clan destinely. SAN FRANorsCO. April 16. -Sugars, teas, rine, and most articles of foreign importation are firmer, in anticipation of an increased duty on them before Congress adjourn'. A letter dated Im Paz, on the Colorado river, April Ist, saps that the Indians are killing the people, stealing stock, and preventing the miners from working in the Walker district. Unlesi energetic measure. are taken, but little work can be done this season. General Wright is urged to send down a hundred soldiers. Mott of the Indians along the tiolorado are peace ably disposed, and will remain so if he disturbances further east are quieted speedily. It is of the greatest importance that Irstabs should be speedily brought back from the Atlantic States, as be exercises great influence over all the Indians in this part of the country. The Funeral . - 02" Mr. A. A. Lovell. BLVEBLY, Mass., April 16.-The final funeral 'ser vices of the late Mr. A. A; Lovett, superintendent of tile People'. Line of telegraph, took place at his father , / residence, in this place, to-day. The at tendance was very large, including representatives of the telegraphic profession from all parts of the country. The services were conducted by the Rev. John 0. Kimball, who paid a touching tribute to the many virtues of the deceased. The.ffanitary Fair--An Appeal from Go- veruor Curtin. PianirSTZ.VAVIA EXECITTIVIS OUAMBER, HARRIS- Ituto, April 11, 1861.—T0 the People of Pennsylvania: I have been requested by the Committee of Cot• respondence to addresse you on the subjeot of the Fair to be held in Philadelphia, in June next, for the benefit of the Sanitary Cloramisdon., It gives me much pleasure to comply with this request, and to avail myself of the opportunity alio of calling your attention to the Fair to be held in the same week and for the same purpose at Pittsburg. I cannot, however, speak of the relief of the sick and wounded volunteers of the State without say ing a grateful word in their behalf to you. Charged by a joint resolution of the Legislature with the duty of caring for them, it hae been my privilege to provide for their comfort, and look after their Wel• fare. To this end the Slate Surgeon General hes at all times, subject to the regulations of the United Staten, visited with.corps of surgeons and nurses the battle-fields, and besides the General Agency maintained at Washington, special agents have con. stantly been sent to the camps, to the armies in the fteld, and to the hospitals ; and at all times, when the occasion required, or admitted of Such aid, the provisions made by the United States have been supplemented by abundant supplies of bandageo, clothing, delicate food—in fart, everything that could promote the comfort of our soldiers when suf fering from wounds or diebase. The compensation of the general agency and the general staff, and the expense of medicinea and sup_ plies of like ;character, were of course paid by the State. The special agents, men of standing and character performed all their duties with diligence, fidelity' and alacrity, and in no instance received any cam! pensation for their services. I have never had to seek for such agents. My only regret is that I have been unable to accept the offered services of too many men of the same kind, who, being disqualified for military services, and having freely contributed of their means to every patriotic purpose, were still not contented unless they could bestow their time, labor, and personal attendance on our disabled and suffering defenders. The bandages, the clothing, the food, the supplies of all sorts were furnished in kind by you individually. On every minion when it haa been made known through the State that a battle bad been fought, or was expected, or that from any other cause our sick and wounded vo lunteers were likely to suffer, the earliest trains from all quarters have brought the needed supplies inprofusion. Every hospital within the State has been beset by individuals of both sexes, but chiefly mcmen, eager to nurse, to watch, to aid the in mates. Throughout the cities, towns, villages, ham. lets, farm-bouses of the Commonwealth, are found the Reaven•directed benefaetors whole names are unrecorded ; for whose individual efforts no reward bas been sought ; but be who has witnessed the re sults, as I have, must have a heart of stone if it be not melted by their true, unpretending, gentle, per sistent, inexhaustible alacrity in this- best and holi est of good works. The object of the proposed Fair is to provide means for similar good works, and it is one that commends Melt' to every friend of his country—to all who admire the heroic devotion of the brave men who are bearing arms in its defence. It is un derstood that the managers of these Fairs solicit donations in goods, saleable articles of every de aoription of manufacture, American glass, produce, fruits, flowers), paintings, engravings, statuary, and the income of all the people of the State for one day. Several similar Fairs have been recently held, the proceeds of which are stated in the news papers to exceed one million of dollars. Another is now being held in New York, and others in Balti more and St. Louie are to be held in this and the next month, the proceeds of all which will no doubt be large. The spirit of emulation has been stimu lated, and Pennsylvania has been appealed to in the hope that she will rival her neighbors. I cheerfully bear my personal testimony to the prompt and beneficial efforts of the Sanitary Com mission immediately after several battles, and espe cially after the battles of Gettysburg, and to the abundance of supplies then furnished by it. Beyond this I have no knowledge of its actual operatione, nor of its internal structure or admin istrative arrangements. The oppression of public duties has been too great to allow me to acquire or seek such knowledge. It is well known, however, that gentlemen of the highest character participate in ifs management, and that its objects are patri otia, meritorious, and charitable. The proceeds of the Fairs are to pass into the bards of the Sanitary Commission, as declared by the committee, for the relief of sick and wounded soldiers, in anticipation of the opening campaign of our noble armies ; and the object commends itself to every friend of his country. A. G. CURTIN, Governor of Pennsylvania. Terrible Marine Disaster. A terrible disastex occurred in New York harbor on Friday afternoon. The U. S. war steamer Che mango, Commander Pillebrown, sailed from the navy yard for Hampton Roads. She was to have an chorea at the buoy at Sandy Hook until Saturday, when she would have been joined by the double tur reted iron clad Onondaga, which she was to have convoyed south. But her career was out short by a fearful disaster. . About four o'clock P. M., when off Fort Rich mond, and going ahead under easy steam, without the slightest suspicion of danger, her port boiler ex• ploded with a loud report, tearing up her decks and pia) ing havoc among the unfortunate engineers and nremen. One poor fellow was blown overboard, and picked up in a most deplorable condition, and thirty two others, including three of the engineers, were most horribly scalded. One of the men, whole name We 00t1141 not learn, was instantly killed. Aa soon as the disaster be came known the U. S. revenue cutter Broux has tened to the relief of the Onenango. After ascertain. lug from Oom.Flllebrown the nature of the accident, the commander - of the Bronx headed for Quarantine, and speedily brought off several physicians to take thaw of the sufferers. The United States steam transport Tilley, Captain Bourne, from Alexandria, coming up the bay, wit nessed the explosion, and also immediately went to her assistance, doing a great deal of good. The little tug Rose, which was near at hand, likewise rendered all the aid in her power. The Tilley and tug, and the cutter Bronx, took the disabled veitel in tow, and brought her to the navy yard. Among those severely imbued are : First Assistant Engineer Joseph N. Cahill (in charge). Second Ajoistant Engineer Albert S. Murry. Second Assistant Engineer Frank P. Boot. No sooner had the and news reached the navy yard than Commodore Radford, who in the absence of Admiral Paulding at Washington, on court mar tial duty, was in charge, called into requisition all the becks and wagons which he could command, and as fast as the scalded men were brought ashore they were tenderly 'ed into the vehickle . and conveyed to the United States Marine Hospital. Here Sur geon Smith, and his competent corps of assistants, aided by the surgeons of the Ail:relying- ship North Carolina, and all the other medical gentlemen on duty on the numerous vessels at the yard, received the sufferers and administered to their relief. Many of the poor fellows were literally flayed alive, some of them being quite blind from the effects of the stream. Their shriek. and groans were painful beyond expression ; great, stalwart men implored the surgeons to give them something to cane their pain. It was evident that several of them were beyond mere human aid, and would dud in death a speedy easement of their sufferings. The Chenango bad a crew of 130 men. Hoer so many escaped, on so small a vessel, is a marvel.—N. Y. Tribune. • LARGE POSITIVE SALE OP FRENOIS GOODS, SUN UMBRELLAS, STRAW Goons, ac.—The early attew lion of dealers is requested to the large and general assortment of French, Swigs, German, and British goods, embracing me lots of fancy and staple articles in silks, linen., cotton., and worsteds; also, sun um brellas, stray/ goods, &0., to be peremptorily sOld, by catalogue, on four months' credit, commencing this morning, at ten o'clock precisely, to be continued, without intermission, all day, by John B. Myers Sc Co., auctioneers, No. 232 and 234 Market street. PEREMPTORY SALE 01 . THREE LARGE AND 'VALU ABLE LOTS-Columbia avenue, 400 by 140 feet; Twenty-second and Montgomery.atreete,.236 by 140 feet; Twentieth and Montgomery etreet., 142 by 170 feat—all near Ridge avenue railroad depot, to be absolutely sold to the highest bidder, by Meuse. Thomas 4. Sons, on Monday next, of the Exaango. AUCTION NOTION .-.SALE OP BOOTS AND SSOBB.+ The attention of buyers is called to the large aule of 1,000 oases boots, shoes, brogans, balms** eanalry boots, &0., to be sold by catalogue, on Monday morning, April 18th, commencing at 10 o'clock pre cisely, by Philip Ford a. Co., auctioneers, at their gime Nos. 51c Mallet mit 522 Commerce 'Wool. THE GEnaren OPenet.—The delightful and al ways popular opera of /Maths" will begin the season of Opera, at the Chestnut. street Theatre, to-night. The wale of seats Will doubtlen, be extensive, and, as the Works to be produced are among the ablest and most attractive that we know, the season will be a brilliant sums& Madame Johannuen.hav won many triumph', and the public will be pleased to hear again Madame Fredericre rendering of bfar• puerile in "Faust," Herr Himinees Stradella, and Jlabeltuatln'a versatile and admirable tenor. Added to this, the intelligent baritone of Steineoke, and the fine base of Hermann, especially, will be wel come. 'Herr Ansehritz will take the baton again, and we shall have good opera ones more. Mr. Grover has made every arrangement for the success of the season, and the great works in the repertoire of the company will be more perfectly pro• duced than they were at the Academy. For" Faust," Which will be sung on Wednesday, new and splendid scenery has been painted. Mr. Grover , s Washing ton season of opera was all that could have been wished in merit and patronage, and now that Lent is over, we are assured that his enterprise in Phila delphia will be rewarded with as brilliant and fashionable audiences as those which crowded his theatre at the capital. Mr. Birgfeld remains the able Lupine" manages. Ray. Dn. If.. S. STOEBB' OBATION.—This eminent orator is to, give his oration, "The Nation After its• Ordeal of thistle," at Concert Hall, next Thursday evening, April Cie. Dr. Storrs seldom speaks in this city, and this rare opportunity to heir him should be improved. At the Sanitary Fair in Brooklyn he was the editor of the Drum Beat, and did as much as any man to make that fair success ful. This oration was lately given in Washington, where it was considered one of the finest oratorical efforts of the times. Its effect is to inspire the American people with the lotiest views of the power and glory of the cannily after its severe trial by the Ciecipluce of war. An able writer says of it: "It is an address that cannot be duplicated in the nation. There is no other living American possess ing such reach and readiness of historical know ledge, such familiarity with gepgraphy, and such a mass of industrial statistics, combined with such a thoroughly poet - oat nature, as Dr. Storrs." TEE ACADEMY or Music to-night will have no vacant seat, we trust, and we are sure that " Grace Greenwood" will have no inattentive listener. The " Lights of the War-Cloud" is a lecture new to bur city, though by the New York and Washington press it has been praised so highly that further compliment would be impossible. The fair lecturer bas only consented to deliver it for the benefit of the Ss niiary Fair, endow nearly every seatin the house bar already been sold, the American soldier wilt indeed profit by the eloquence and enthusiasm of one of his truest friends. RETAIL PRY•GOODS REAMERS AND THE " CZN TEAL Faze "—The committee in charge of the de partment of Retail Dry Goode in the Great Central Fair have issued a circular, published in another column of The Press this morning, calling upon this numerous and important elan of our merchants to systematize their contributions In the manner designated, in order that due credit may be given for their liberality in the great cause of humanity in which they are thus permitted to per form a part. From the liberal antecedents of this den of dealers we have no doubt that the depart ment they represent will be one of the most portant and interesting, pecuniarily and otherwlee, in the fair. CITY ITEMS. THE GERATENT INVENTION 011. TUE AGE.—NO matter how great have been the advantages to the race of other mechanical inventions, given to the world within the last half century, as a domestic blessing the ISewirg Machine occupies a pr&enit nent place, aed among these the Florence' (sold at 630 llhestnut street) is chief. This celebrated in strument performs a greater variety of work than any other, does it with more neatness, greater strength, and less labor, and is hence the best for family purposes. Every machine sold is guaranteed to give satisfaction or the money refunded. Tun "PRIZE Xenia ), Sat= invented by Mr. .Tolan E. Taggert, and sold by Pdr. George Grant, dto Chestnut greet, is, without exception, the beat shirt of the age, in fit, comfort, beauty, and durability. His stock of Gentlemen's Furnishing Goode, of his own exclusive manufacture and importation, in also the choicest in the city, and his prices are mo derate. PROSPECTIVE RISK IN THE PRICE OF COAL.—The indications now are that there will shortly be a heavy advance in the price of Coal. Many peraotia acting on this are already ordering their full supplies of coal for the coming year at the popular yard of W. W. Alter, 935 North Ninth street. They will save largely by doing so, as Air. Alter if always be• low the usual prices and sells the best coal. " BUTTER IS Riz."--This is tete doleful cry of half the old ladies in town when they meet each other in market and lament over the mutability of human markening generally, and the "upward tendency" of butter in particular. In the meantime Rockhili & Wilson, the proprietors of the Brown Stone Cloth ing Ball of Reckhill & 'Wilson, Nos. 603 and 605 Clisstout street, above Sixth, keep on the even tenor of their way, and afford entire satisfaction to their customeis by giving them the best possible goods for the least possible money. EARLY USE OF QUILLS IN Wnrinvo.—An anee• dote relates that Theodorio King of the Ostrogoth', being so illiterate that he could not write even the initials of his own name, was provided with a plate of gold through which letters were out, and this be ing placed on the paper when his signature was re quired, he traced the letters with a quill. Were plates of gold necessary to write the praises of the elegant spring etylei of clothing gotten up at the fashionable store Of Granville Stokes, No. GOD Chestnut street, one would needs; be proprietor of a gold mine. A fainnaymers, consoling a young widow upon the death of her husband, spoke in a very serious tone, remarking that "he WAS one of the few; you cannot find his equal, you know:" To which the sobbing fair one replied, with an almost broken heart, "I don't know, but I'll -try." The lady shortly afterwards, attracted by the fine appearance Of a gentleman who had purchased his spring clothes at Chas. Stokes H. Co's, under the Continental, doffed her widow's weeds for new bridal robes and a husband. CHINESE! FEATHER FANS-A choice lot reosived and for sale at Pdartin k Quayle's Stationery, Ton and Fancy Goods Emporium, No. 1035 Walnut street. Ilevn You A 100176111—Use Dr. Sayneis Expecto• rant at once. It may save you from Consumption. It will certainly cure the moat inveterate Coughs and Colds. FOR Baarforirris try Dr. Sayne'e Expectorant. It will subdue the inflammation, relieve tee cough, pain, and difficulty of breathing, and produce a speedy cure. Sava You ASTITMAl—.Ttlytte'S Expectorant will overcome the spasmodic contraction of the wind tuber, or air vessels, and cause the ejection of the mucus which clogs them. FOR FLRIIRTRY, take two .or three large doses of Jayne's Expectorant in quick succession, and, cover ing up warmly in bed, the disease will be subdued at the outset. HAW: YOu CONSUMPTION I—Jayne's Expectorant will give you immediate relief. It cleanses the lungs from all irritating matters, while it heals and invi goratea them. Thousands who have been given up by their physicians have been restored to health by its use. WROOniwo Conan, CnotrP, and all dispensed the Lunge or Breast, are effectually and speedily cured by Jayne's Expectorant. It is no new remedy. For thirty years it has been before the publio, the de mand for it constantly increasing, and the evidence of its great curative powers stootin2ulating in our handi. Why not give it a trial Prepared only by Dr. D. Texas & Sox, No. 242 Chestnut street.- upniimtwfat FOB THB SANITANT FAIB.—See the Advertise ment of Dir. Hansen, Fanoy Goode Emporium, No. 6 South Eighth street. The proceeds of the sales to•day will be given to the great Sanitary Fair. GILT, ROBBWOOD, Walnut, and Bronzed Cornices for Curtains, at Patten's West End Store, 1408 Chest nut street: aple insw4t GET YOUR CARPETS or Upholstery work done quiekly---no delay, at Pnttenls, 1408 Chestnut street. apl&smw4t • . . CARD FICTUBES OP THE LATE .lotOP4 OW= LOVEJOY, taken last fall, are for sale at H. 0. Phillips & Brother's Photograph Rooms, north west corner Ninth and Chestnut streets. aplantt. WINDOW SHADE% 1408. Window Shades for Store Windows, 1408. Windnw Shades for Steamboats, - 1408. Window Shades - for Churches, 1408. Window Shades for Hospitals, 1408. Window Shades for Hotels, 1408. Window Shades for Drawing Rooms, 1408. Window Shades for Parlors, 1408. Window Shades for Libraries, 1408. Window Shades for Sitting Rooms, 1408. Window Shades for Nurseries, 1408. Window Shades for Bad Rooms, 1408. Window Shades for all Rooms, 1408. , - Window Shades at W. Henry Patten's, 1408 Chestnut Street. um 1408. Espl*srawej A NEW PSICFIIIIN BOA TEE HANDICESOHIBT. "Night Blooming Germs." Phalon , s "Night Blooming Comma." Pbalon's “Night Blooming Cereux.” Phalan , ' "Night Blooming (Jerson." Phalonls “Night liloomiog Cereus.” PlAloaes "Night Blooming Census." Phalan's °Night Blooming Corona." Phaloses A most exquisite, delicate, and Fragrant Perfume, distilled from the rare and beautiful flower from which it takes its name. Manufactured only by PRALON lc, SON, New York. BEWAILS 03, 00IIRT9RMISIT9. MR FOR PNALOR'I3,--4.1E8 110 OTIIBR. JOHNSTON . , HALLOWAT,'ar. Co., Agent', Sixth and Maiket streets, Philadelphia. Sold by all Drug. giatm. Corms, Bridono, bilr/lIITED NAILS, ENLARAHO Jouvre, and ail diseases of the feet, cured without pain or ineonvenienoe to the patient, by Dr. Ziothie tie, surgeon Chiropodist, 921 Chestnut streea, Ba lets to pnvninnun Nad aUrgeono of the any. )024/ SPEC HOYT'S HIAWATHA HAIR BESTOHATITA. HOYT'S HIAWATHA HATS RBSTORATIVIL BOT'S HIAWATHA HAM RSSTORATITE. , HOYT'S HIAWATHA HAIR IiSSTORATITS _ HOYT'S HIAWATHA HAIR assToßamvis. In Longfollow's Poem Hiawatha WAS lajadged to hi" conferred the greatest Won on hie tribe because he brought to As notice sore. Every one will admit that our prewirattott le worthy of the name. for the benglif It confers when It Is known. WHAT TAX HIAWATHA DOSS. It restores faded and gray hair and whiskers to their original color. It brings TIP the natural shading of one hair with another. thus giving the hair a perf.et life an. pearanse. so that the most critical observer cannot do. teat it. use. It males harsh hail:soft and silky. stops its tailing out, cleanser it and the scalp from all impurities, is as readily applied and wiped from the skin as anyhab Ireseng, and entirely overcomes the bad effects of pre. ♦ions use of preparations containing sulphur, sugar of lead. Am. The proprietors of the Hiawatha published the follow• Mg challenge to test in the New York dailies three weeks, which WAS NEM ACCEPTED: Let some well known and disinterested persons at Point one to the proprietor of each preparation for the heir to bring UP the color. Seery proprietor to nee no. thing but his own preparation, and the person nothing aloe during the test. A certificate of the result to be widely published at the expense of theunsuccessful coin Miters. told everywhere. TOBBPH HOYT & 00. mh18•ly 10 University Place. New Yon. ONE PRICE CLOTHING, STYLES, made tz. the Beet Manner, ex BALES. LOWEST Belling Prleee Figures. All Goode made to Order tory. Our OBE-PRICE SYSTV.X is All are thereby treated Mike. dem.ly JONES & CO.. GO MASON HAMLIN'S . 4:4541:41 STECK & CO.'S CABINET ORUANS STECIK & 00. '8 SEVENTH THE POPI7LAR CLOTHING Hots OF PHILA., • • OAK HALL." sitet.lLM goods and moderate reset WANAMAKER d< BROWN. IL simmer 81. X 28. anti MARKET Streets. ()Nieto= Department (to make to order) No. 1 S. Sixth st. THE CHEAPEST, SIMPLEST, AND BEST Scriesrocm.s, 704 Chestnut Street above 71h. ZorEdI.RPZEI7D,. BLACKFAN — ELY. —On the 14th fast , at the house of Moeee g w ,r, t ern. by Friends' ceremony. Jobe Blackfan to Franco:lla 151 y. danahter of the late Hugh 13. Ary, alt of Solennry, Backs county. 3DIF.3J. . KNEEDLER. —At Norristown. on Sunday. April 17th, Mary, wife of Adam Kneedler, Eztt., In the 77d1 year of her age. Her friends and those of the family are affectionatety invited to attend the fttnerel. from tho ra,idenoe of her h natend to Vat rit•tata,,ol4 etiVaa atreet, n? edateeday moruing.at 10 o'clock. To proceed to Montgomery Cetus. terY. TAYLCR.—On Friday morning. 15th inst.. at his residence, in Germantown. Rev. Robert Taylor, pastor e''.ct of the North Presbyterian Charth. Padadelphia. His Trends and the Clergy generally are iny,ted to 4- tend his funeral from his late regidence, Ot rmantown,on Monday moonOnd. 38th met at lu o'el-ek. Sneeral ear vices in the Second Presbyterian Church in German• town. STERLItt - G.—At Trenton, N. J cm the 76th inst., Isabella W. , daughter of Hannah W. and tee late Jamss S. Stoning Übe relatives and frirnds of the family are invited to attend the funeral, en 3...c0nd.-Jay, a s o'oo6, itl:kort farther notice. -* PI AMIE. n Wednesday morning, the 13th Instant. in the city of Washington, C rorge W Bsq , editor of .The American I?epubliean and Cheater- County Democrat. The relatives and friends are respectfully invited to att,nd bin funeral. from the Church of the fitly in the Borough of West Chester. on Monday. the 18th instant, at 11 o'clock. TO proceed to Oakland Came. ten% 1,1361.ACH. —On Friday morning, Pith inmt.. gully, youngest daughter of chaxles B. anci.anna W. Anepach, a years and I month old. Funeral Monday morninc 10 o'clock, from 1031 Arch street.a. . • . WICKIELY.—On the liith last., Mrs Farah Wreck erly, relict of the late John Vi'eckerly, in the 93d year of her age. The relatives and friends of the famPy are respectfully invited to attend the funeral, from her late residence. 2tenthweei corner of Otter streotand Germantown road. on Monday afternoon, at 1 o'clock. To proceen to Odd Fellows' Cemetery. THOMAS —On the morning of -the 113th inst . at Me dia. Delaware county, Seth C. Thomas. in the 75th year of hie age. Funeral from his late residence. Media. Delaware coun ty. on Tuesday. April 19th. at 2 o'clock P. M. WARNER —On the ;Cth instant, Albert Warner. In the lath year of his age. His relatives and friends and' Mitts Lodge. No. 295, A. T M., also the "Sons of New England " are re needfully inv!ted to attend his funeral from the re9i-. dente of his brother-in-law. Artemas Partridge, 1616 Master street. on Wednesday, 19:h inst. ,at o'clock. " DRAM.—On the 16.1. in-t , Inns Dean, reilci of the lite Jona Dean. of Newark. Del., aged Si ware Her relatives and frier de and those of the fam 4 iy are respectfully invited to at'end her funeral. from the resi dence of her son in.law. George T. Jones. near HeWoa - on Tuesday, 11th inst., at 12 o'clock. without further notice. Interment at Newark. Del. Cars leave Proad and Trims streets at 234 P- M. Conveyance pro vided to and frim Newark returning the tame day. a' Weekly Report of Interments Hzi.vrg OFFICE. •nrll 16 Deaths and Interments in the City of Ph ilatielph Me 9Lh to the 161 h of Apr.; 1 : .8; i r 1 ,d .!:= carers OY DEATH. 1 1 is ~.-... 1 ! , carsza or' DEATH_ !z i 2. -..,...,701 11 . • -5 , ....1 i -AI Asthma . .... .... .. . 1 1 , I!lFsver. Typhus Ifaligl 2 3 Apoplexy • 8 1 " TYPhoid.. ! 4 5 Barna And Scalds 2 '' Pernicious 1 Cancer- ; Hsrnia 2 Breast 1 IR coping Cough..... 9 " Maros 1 - ammorrhage Lungs. 2 " Rectum 1 ! 1 • • Bowers 1 Casualties 6; 2, ;In . flammation Brain. 2 It Croup I'7 • Bronchi f i 1 Covestion of Brain., 61 71! " Heart 1 1 Lungs 11 81 11 " Larynx Caries of the Spine.. ' 1 " Liver .... I Cholera In - fart:am .-. 111 " Lungs 113 le Cerebro•Spinal Ale- i , " Peritoneum.— I 8 2 nin gills l ol " Pleura- I 1 consumption.Lithga 51 8 , " Ito & Botr _4 3 Concussion of Brain • I 1 1 , insanity.- I 00tfrealitone 1:13. :Intoasuseeption_ .... I Puerperal....... I ''lnanition 1 Cyanosis il 1 Intemperance 1 Diphtheria 4 illfsnia- a•p0tn.....-.. 3 Dyspepsia I I . Malformation........ 9 Diarrheas 2 31131arasmeui 7 Dropsy 9 . 1 siees.e, 3 Brain I ID Old Age 2 Disease of Heart Si IjPalay..... ... I ..,!. .. ... 3 " .131!ri j 1 1 :. - yeinis ..... - i I Debauch 11 !Sogening of Brain... 1. Drowned 1! , i ' Lung 1 1 Dysentery • . ..... „.. 111 , Small-Pox 1. 4 Debility Si SJ !Syncope 1' Rfftlaton on Brain.. 121 I btill-born .... 32 )3 pilevy ...—,, ....... 1, 1 ,Suffocation 1 Erysipetas..... . -..... 1 11;Strictare Pharynx... 1 Fever. Catarrhal .... 1 11!Tomors Cong.stive 1 2 'lTetanns ....... .. . ..... 21 1 " Illatignant ! 1 I Tinknown 51 Petechial I ! lWorinds, gunshot... 1! 2 : " Puerperal -- -- Spotted 3: 6' 1 Total 173 197 " Scarlet 141 l 1 I - OH THE ABOVE TIMMS Wail— Under 1 year. 82 From 40 to 50............. 23 From 1 to 2 261 60 to 60............. 27 2to 6 411 " 80 to 70 ....... 23 " sto 13 16 j " 70 to 80 18 " 10 SO L 3 121 " 90 te " 16 to 2f) 20 " 50 to KU 2 " 20 to 30 32 80 to 40..• ~.. • ••••••••• .373 —. . 19! Total... ..... ...... WARDS.I WARDS. I WARDS. First 171 Tenth... ... ...... 18 Nineteenth.. —25 Second -...16j Eleventh S Twentieth. .......17 rhird .. AIA 1* si-...lllTwelith. ....... G l Twenty-164. •• • .12 Fourth 17, Thirteenth 101Twenty-second....6 Fifth 161Fonrteenth 101 Twenty-third.... 7 Sixth 121 Fifteenth 201Twenty-fonrth —l5 Seventh. 26 'Sixteenth. 14 } Twenty-Ifth .... 6 Nightb 11 i Seventeenth - 9 4Ernkn0wn....»...113 Ninth ..... ...... .11 ,F.lghteenth. Is. Total. ' 375 Deduct deaths from the country.. ....... ... • ...4 •••••-•••• 17 Net deaths in the city Nativity—United States, 271: Foreign, 87; Unknown. 17. From the Almshouse, 8; People of Color, 43; from the cquntry, 71. The number of deaths, compared with the correspond. log week 0f1863 and lest week,.was as follows! . week ending April 13,1563. was 310. Week ending April 9,1861. was Slalom. 212; Females. 163; Boys. 115: Girls. 82 Deaths and interments of soldiers. 21. By order of the Board of Health. 0. RUSH. SMITH, Health Officer. - nLACK ALPACAS.—Jr ST OPENED, alarge stock of aipacae and GloasyMohair Lustre% 3736 cents to $1.60 a yard. Lupin's Bombazines. Summer Bombazines. eb Wye. Tamibea Nousseltuen Barege Hamra. ,• Crape Maretz, and other Summer Goode. BEASON dt•SON, MOURNING STORE. spl3 91S CHESTNUT Street. on PER YARD, BEST BLACK tiPA." I -f SILK IN THE CITY. Wide enough for a Drees with two seams. Best Brown Silks in the City. Shim of Nxclnsive Styles. Pall Stock of Ordinary Silks. Black Silks. from SI to Ski. Colored Silks. from Sl to SS. mg BIBS de LANDULL. Mum.BIBDIDTINGS FOlii 'UNITED Pit oaYEDIE. DAILY. d o'clock P. M. —Church of the linildlark3r (Episcopal). Moo ay and Thursday; Presbyterian Church. Penn Square- Tuesday and Fridas , , Baptist Church. Broad and Arch, Wadneoday and liat , nrdan ardB-70 OrOFFICE CITY BOUNTY FUND, No. 4121 PRUNE Street, Apr 1115,1961. In consequence of a despatch received. from Washing ton this day. the Commission have determined to CON TINUE THE CITY BOUNTY of $2lO until further notice. apISSt K. P. KING, Chairman, MNINTH. WARD LINCOLN ASSOC'. ATH/A. — at a special meeting of the above.Asso. elation. held on Friday evening. April 16th, itt Pursuance of a call of the City Egestitive Committee, the 101101 ring reeolution was unanimously adopted: Rawitscl, That Delegates elected from thle Ward to the several Conventions be Distracted that, before mist ing their votes for Delegates to the !Rational Convention. ttey must receive a written pledge to the support of Abraham Lincoln for President of the 'United States. The lollowing general nominations for Congressional Delegates from Second district of Pennsylvania were made: Sheriff Thompson, Geo T. Biotite. Wm N. Hull, James A. Freeman. P. C. &Hawker. Morton McMichael. George H. Bolter. Daniel mehansta. JOH. le HILL. BecretarY. m a. viums. ASSOCIA.TION FOR EAST CARE RECEIPTS. Chnrebee of Reeky Spring and tl6:'t'homae, Franklin county. Fa, per A. K. Nelson, pastor 311 00 Tease Lea 23 00 Pt= W ..... St James' Church. Perkionren. per Rev. George B. /Memo pastor. (adeittonali .... 100 N. 8 Whelan ..... ~.—., ...,....... ................ 25 00 Mllllllls6 fee 01 4 - Presbyterian pastor, Bellefonte, Penns_ 260 ___ Previously reported $4,778 77 CLUB COPE,Troasitrar. EarSECOND WARD AND THE DRAFT. —A in (Jung of the citizens will be held THIS HonIPIG. at o'clock. at wardßoert Rollos School es. Bvery chicon of the ls Invited. lOP MTwitarmardru WARD.—.IIII ourned zneetiug of the etiloano of the ward will be held THIS SPANNfi to the Church SIGHTEI Street above MASTRI, at 8 o'clock. We want about Se 000 yel for the Ward Bounty Fund. B. HAUPER. Secretary. ORNAT CZNTELAL FAIR. CIABR RECEIPTS. Proceeds of Tableaux - Vivant% at Mrs. Percival Itoberbe 1930 oheetrnst street 10300 oe Previous/1 eeknowledied :1,684 31 QALBB cora 11 ' Treasarer. gar THE GR IN PH EAT I CENTRAL BIS HELD LAURA_ 113'qt .IkiEl A I L.DRI GOODE DEALEtts.—T h . 4 rl'. t in charge of your Drpartment in the Gm it f..,4 4, is very desirous that the contributions to th e W (roods Branchettaai exceed those from spy 0 ,... 1 ildfires. To accomplish ads detirable end, the Co vites Your hearty co operation and sm og byte in money. or in goods. 6Canrdint to your . tr 'cis It is hoped that you will reserve your your own branch of business, in order thait'z',ltht, 'Debt my get 101 l credit for your done los e . -4 In a few days, ou will be called num Ole Committee. properly ameradited. tributione may be given Contributrs w h ich . oo c a rried.lease obmsve the directions, if out. will w oo.. of tee Committee: _ _ B ec h piece of goods should be ticketed, 44l4 that \VII ' 1 ' City and value, and eo divide d hi : W o a n n i 7b: r e ti e t t l i m e t t e r: ~u r r A i t n n i ig e t njo mi o ' i ien : r s t t oe . n ‘ , 7l r d i numbered or marked to correspond with th syliti.h it represents. A register con thee ne name and residence of every contributor, w hl;'!';'' l, shown at the Fair. Packages should be addressed GREAT GIMBAL Rea Retail Dry G oo Pht c h; i!),1 and tent to the Great Central Fair Depot. cure; `i teenth and Market streets, or they will b, the request is made upon the invoice. ag,/ In came of accidental omission in calling even , herol error will be con.eted by informing eii the Com mince. kil,B. JO6BIJA ThVIS, Chairman lildiso 1-1(1:1 Mae. DexlD PAUL BROWN, SeenStary.lina,"'het MRS. LUCIAN Moen. Trourixre MM r. DM 8. Elirbt44 l ii cOITTBE Mre dummetns Edwards 1.819 grimes • XII& Joshua Farman. Mrs Chesebrongh, 1610 Chestnut street, Mrs. J 01.15 Lloyd. RDA Vine street, Mrs, 8. - B. Ramat,. 160337111 e street. Mrs. John 'l'. Bell. 1113 Girard street. Mrs. Alex. Whilldin. litrord and Joffersui Mrs .1 R. Belding. 126 South DitneteeLLll,,,,,,,-,akl. Mrs. W. I. Bluish, R. W. con Sixth tnd Mrs. David Wetherly, 130 ;forth Mrs. Atwood Smith. 1944 rspruce street M a. flamers, 1711 opruce street. Mies Caldwell. 1517 Locn.t street. Miss 7 ram wine. 530 North Sixth street Mies Elizabeth Potts, 1023 Cherry ',treat. Dille M. B. Andrews, Darby, Pa. Mire O'callnaban, 1621 Sornee Mies B. orcanaii ban. 1521 Syr: ea scree'. la w Fanny J. Darn". Fifteenth and Rdcq4tr'''i (tENTLEMEN's O,I3IrIIITIES G. SH sit etiCsB, `2B iiinith 'Maseru EDWARD B. ETRE, Secretarv. 41"0 Arcb nird4 11 , STIN Elni.T“ Treasurer 26 South &cowl jo s h o nW Pa t 413 Second N o rth re'etredrPegfS°ddag.oorl Tg:l,ndstrVonifytle,6pogGakitseve. th strnati .iAg a ß riz n . D. s i, 2 6 o tt , r , t,4t c r o e j s d r. wtufam trcet. Waintsek, 'Rome. William LS' hch At Market ''rest. Edwin Knag• 1120 bomb 'second street. E. A. rue, 1624 .itarket ICES F TEN LATEST randy for ItSTAIL marked in Plain • arranted eatterao rietly adhered to. MARKET Street. PIANOS PIANOS. I. it Goma., and-CHEST2II3T UNITED STATES SANITARY COMINSION. PHILADELPHIA 1%-; eNr 7. No. 1,X5 ent,THUT hr Match 1. Did Tbo tedereinntd , members of the Executive e Con mission. the GREAT <ANTRAL FAIR I'm i ts B,, sit 'lw• Con mission. beg to invite the co operatio n or , t ij fellow-citizens, especially of thotie reeident is Penai. nt yea, Delaware. and Dew Jersey , io this hupoe' e :. enterprise. It Is prepared to hold the Fair in es phis, lathe fret ice. 4; in June neat. and it Is cvntidng. expected that the contribntione, coining front a Penh! Lion so benevolent and patriotic an that which iehstiii the Central Stater., and representing the most inotatu and varied branch fundsndust and art. will :snare result in aid of the of the 13 mmissinu. and for p• beneth or the Soldier. at least equal. to that wiiieh attended similar undertakings in other Cities tt • necest•ery to say is won) to stimulate eYril Path y soldiers We teel for them all as breth con, cat i i popular heart sei ke only the hest mode of niatafe.ta that sympathy in the mold efficient and Nastiest wet There Falls in other places have been productive of r?, results, By tbia means Chicago has recently raisel this object sixty thousand dollars Boston one huudru and fifty thousand. end Cincinnati more than two tale, tired thouraud. We appeal, then, with the greatut fidence to the inhabitants of the Central mate.. Stem!. alit: to those who conetitate the great industrial C•a•e•it to send as contribu ion. the productions of their sill{ and workma.nehip. We appeal to them in the interest ,f ho party, radical or conservative, Republican or Pew. crat. Administration or anti-Administration. We knots only tills. that to send oar national soldtere is the hall stipples le supplement thorn Government undermk.,:, give them. but which tasty sometimes fall to receirs, and !hue to relieve them when sick and in misery, ia work of Christian charity. and that it is a work of It. telligent patriotism also, as economizing their health, anti efficiency, on which. under . God, the Natio deism de in mate its time of trouble. . . . . • • • - We. therefore. ask altar, de , g,man to annonage this humane undertaking to hts people, and to advise thorn to oo What they can to further it. We ask tne press to else' the widest publicity and the most .ararbt eq. couragement. We call on every workshop. factory, and mill. for a specimen of the best thing it can turn oat: on every artist, great and small, for one of his crealtoes t on nil loyal women, for the exercise of their !AA:, aaa ladnety; on farmers, for the products of their field.. and dames The miner. the na•nraliat. the man of acleacs, the traveller, can each bean something that can. at the vet y least, be converted into a blanket that will warm, and may save loom death. some one soldier whom Us. ver rn. nt supplies have failed to reach. Everyone wit ea. produce a ravhing I.t at has money value is invited t) give a sample of his beat work as en 0 &Tin g to the cents of national unity., Ivory Workingman. mechanic ar fanner, who can umse a pair of shoes, or raise a turn: of apples, is called on to contribute something oh tt est be tinned into money. and again from money tam ;es means of economizing the health and the life of oar na. tional %oldie s Committees have been appointed in each depart meet Of industry and art, WhOte business it 1/111 be to ....Ir. contributions for the Fair, each in its own Fp,, , Ai branch. These Committees wilt place themeelee, is communication with those persons who may wish n t aid us. In the meantime, it is recommended teat beZll Committees or Associations should be formed is everY portion of Pennsylvania, Dela wale, and New Jeney, tri h a v 'etc of organising the indnetry of their reepecois neighborhoods, so as to secure contributions for ohs Fair • Committees of Ladies have also been organized to c,. operate with those of the gentlemen in soliciting cocci. buttons. A list of these Committees will be shortly pabliehei and dietributed. in the meantime, those who are die• Poled to aid rm. or who may desire any further in form- Hon on the subject are requested to address the ien espon ding Secretary of the Executive Committee of the Great Central Fair, 1323 CHESTNUT Street. JOHN WELSH, Chairman. CeLEB COPS, Treaeurer. CHARLES J. STILI.R. Gorreeoondleg 'secretary HORACE HOWARD VINOUS. Recording Secretary. GEORGE W. Guist rE Assistant Secretary. EXECEiTIVE COMMITTEE. Win V. Keating, M. D., Robert N. Lewis. Change Macula. toe, Samuel V. Merrick, Bloomfield H. Moore, James 11. Orne, Jonn Bice. Joan Robbine. Strothers, William M, alleturien, George Trott, Thomas Webster, George Whitney. George A. Wood. apiS in wet A. J. Anteie. Wm, H. Aahhurst, Leon Berg. Romeo Binney, Jr., A E Boyle. N. B. Browne. George W. Childe, John C Cresson, Parisi. B. Cnmmins, Theodore Cnyler, Je•bn Devereox. Frederick Fraley. Frederick Graff. .1 C. Grnbb. Jof , eph Harrieen. Jr.. Mim. STATE Or DE,LAWAUE, THE CENTRAL FAIR. At a meeting of the Gentlemen's Committee of the Delaware Executive Committee or the °REA CEJ- Oh AL FAIR, held at the Wilmington Institute, on Wee meedey morning, the 13 h that hie 1101101' tftYor Turner wee tailed to the Chair. and the Rev. Leightae colown Was appointed Secretary. The. Hon S. 1( Harrington, Jr. stated the object et the meeting to be the perfecting of organization and the sntelivieion 01 the work belonging to the Delaware Department. On motion. It was-resolved that a committee of three be appointed to nominate to the meeting permanent offi cers fur the Association The hair appointed as, this committee Colonel H. S. McComb the Rev Wm J. Stevenson, and Dr Whiten Cummins, who afterwarde reported the following-named cartons as permanent officers: Honorary Chairman, his Excellency Governor WM. CANNON ca. g Chairman. Rear Admiral S.F. DUPONT. lerording &ureter!). Mr. JAMBS WOOLLEY. Corresponding Secretary, Rev. LEIGHI'OR COLE MAN. Treasurer. Mr SAMUEL FLOYD. On motion. the 'nominations were approved. On maion. It was Resolved. That a committee V at least ore from each district, hundred, Ac.. rePreseuled at this meeting be appointed to nominate snitatde persons ac members of the e-veral eutecomuilltees, The Chairmen appointed on this committee S. M. Harrington, Jr.. Wilmington: the Rev. Dr. Clemson, Clement the Rev Mr. Riley. Middleton; the Rey. Mr. Alithian. Wil mington; Dr. Cummtne. Smyrna; C H. B. Day, Dover; D. Jenkins, Camden; Mr. Coursev, Frederica: 1. EL Dixon. Ventre:rine; H. C. Biddle. Wilmington: Jobe C. Clark. Jr., lied Lion: John Quillen. Milford: the Rev. Mr. Dickerson. Wilmington; John Woodall, Little Creek; J P. !Scheer. Wrmington: Wm. Townsend. Frederica; John F. Williamson. Newark; R. D. Hot tacker. Smyrna. The foliose ing are the names of the Chairmen of the vatic us sub committees thus appointed: Agriculture and Agricultural Implements—Samuel Canby. arms, Trophies. Relics. Autographs. dm—Rear Ad miral D upont. Donations of Money—Wm. Canby. Internal Arrangements and Decoratione—D. Lammel, Jr. Me Arts—Felix 0. C. Darter% La' or, lncome and Renentui—S,llll. Marring - ton, Jr, Manufactures and Mechanic Arte—D. Robinson. Transportation—B Q bewail. Jr. Orations. Lectures, Exhibitions. and Entertainments— Wm Canby. It was resolved that the Executive Committee should meet every Thursday. a: the Wilmington Institute. at la o'clock. A. M.. and that those pre..eat shoeld conetitako a oritlOrtlll. It was ordered that the Wilmington Institute be the headquarters of the Committee. and that all articles in tended for their be directed to S. M. Harrington. Jr.. Wilmington. On motion. adieux-nod until 2 o'clock. On reassembling in the afternoon, the names of lice members of Ole various subcommittees were reported end approved. The He n. Mr. Harrington read a sketch of the general pie it of eons/intim g the business of the association, which. en motion: was adopted. It was ordered that she primeedings of this meeting ba published in all ti e loyal papers of the State- On motion, the Committee adjourned until Thursday. the 01st lust., at 10 o 'clock A. M. Att. et, LEIGHTON . COLEMAN. SeerstarY pro tem. The officers of the Ladies' Committee are as follows: Chairman—Mrs. Alfred Lee. _Recording Secretary—Miss E. Newlin. Corresponding Secretary—Mrs. H. L. Tatuall. Treasurer—Mrs Wm. Atkman Le dine and gentlemen who have been named to serve en the several sub-committees, will be at ones notified or their appointment by the chairmen of the several euni mitt( es. aplSonwen FIFTH WARD. —WS A DIFIETINGE Of the citizen!' of the rational Linton Party, held at the Good Intent Hall on Friday evening. 16th inst.. on motion, the following places were designated to hold the election for Delegates on TUESDAY EVENING next. 19th inst. Foils open at 6 o'clock. and close at 8 o'clock. First Division, Balm's, Third and Gaeltill streets. Second Division, Schnell's. No 210 Flue street. Third Division, Greuser'e. No. 50.3 South Fifth street. Fourth Division. N. W corner Front and Union eta. Fifth Division, Kohler's. No 231 Spruce street Sixth Division. Burns'. No. 438 Spruce street. Seventh Division, Weygand'e, Nn. 436 Spruce street. Eighth Division, Berry s. No 106 South Sixth street. HOBERT P. KING, President. B BrOltEL. Secretary. ap',B.2t Mess THE COMMITTEE ON VINE ARTS OF THE GREAT ORNTRAL FAIN FOR TUN SANITARY COMBiIeSION respectfully and eareeitlY recinest all onr citizens and patriotic persons elsewhere. having line worts of art in their poseession. to forward. without delay. a memorandum of their intended contri• buttons to JOHN SARTAIN. Yea . the Secretary of the Committee. 72.8 SADISOM Street. . - ; fie works of art thus solicited categorise oil paintiutd. water-color drawings, marbles. bronzes, and original models, in clay or plaster, or other material. In the col lection of water color drawings alone it is the hare of the Committee top resent a vs rY fall and brilliant exhi- , Milan. as we are known to have in our city a very large number of such drawings. which it is hoped will he generously placed at the disposal of the Committee kV the owners. A Gallery will be erected on Logan Square of such ma terial as will insure the safety of the pictures placed to it In order to make proper arrangements for the recep tion and disposition of the various works of WI - hnted. the Committee must have early knowledge of their approximate number and character. It is the desire of the Committee to mobs the 0'41017 of the bine Arts one et the most marked features of the Great Central Fair, and the public is,thereforneartnistlY appealed to to All: by their generous contributions of pictures and other works of art, a Gallery of larger dimensions. it is believed. than any ever erected in CMS coumry. The Committee hope to make our exhibition in every respect one oi great rt.-traction and. interest. Although circulars have been largely sent to persons known to possess works of art. and many responses have peen received. this method of attracting public attention is used as a reminder to all, and particularly' to the se who msy not have received etronlars, of the seeds, hopes, and desires of the Committee, and of the short time remaining in which to mutest and properly arrange the oontrlbutious JOCIPTI HAEHISOif, In., Chairman. Committee on Fine Arta Great Central PHILADOILPITIA, April la. MA HPI6-3t M'GREAT CIeNTRAL FAIR.—T HEX Cotomittee on Finance and Donations Aoki:Wilt /001M the rtatOW/Og OtallOttpttollll, to this date. viz! A I Boris. ilk VI " H. P. McKean 2,01 S. Sr. W. Welsh lOW John Gibson. Bons. is Co 2. 600 1 homes Bparks I.ND Thomas Limber, Jr 1. corl John A. 81011]01111 , 0 OOD .A I, Dienwl di Co .. 1. OW B W. Clark di Co ..... I,COCI s C. & H. I‘ol le 1. tO3 S 1 J. II 'Flanagan 1,0.13 Philadelphia Saviagg ViandMO Philadelphia Copt butionship Insurance C o. C...... ?. rn i °Xl Pennsylvania Life and Annuity COULPany•• •.. •• " ". J. P. Hutchinson 7A3 703 Allentown Iron Company gorbia Donaldson SCO M. L Daweon SOO W..D. LtWbs— 0001 North American Insurance Company.p.....— ...... N o Penn Mutual IneuranCe Company Sill tionthipmk Hank 00 lick. John It Read ._.,.-- $lO4 00 9467277 .21,111 fa l tw il ar .e irta rnm li l b k e t rat a g iti a or a tile k o ir lblifo l g w a;3 4 tv il . l'eas t° eau" A. 11,11941 if lgirm+>i• PlTTLADur.lbute.,l4th_Aprti, 11344, ma; tit
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