■■■■m " - lv::: ••-- --• &S3W) re* "'_, ZT ~- ■' - === — —— - ■- ieil ik£W2!§'ii 3 ©wss'9 i?i\,o "" - Whole No, 2555. PATENT COAL OIL GREASE. nMIIS Grease is made from COAL OIL J- and has been found by repeated tests t 0 be the most economical, and at the same time the best lubricator for Mill bearing, Stages, Wagons, Carts, Carriages, wVhides of aM kLids, and all heavy bearings' keeping the axles always cool, and not requir ing them to be looked after for weeks. It has been tested on railroad cars, and with one ioakiug of tiie waste it has run, with the cars 20,000 miles ! All railroad, omnibus, livery stable and Express companies that have tried it pronounce it the neplus ultra. It combines the body and fluidity of tallww beeswax and tar, and unlike general lubrica tors,. will not run off, it being warranted to tiand any temperature. 1 have it in boxes 2f to iO lbs. Also kec 9 and barrels from 30 to -100 lbs, for general psc and sale. The boxes are more prefera ble: they are G inches in diameter by 2} inches jeep, and hold 2j lbs net; the bores are clean (ind hardly q, carman, teamster, expressman pjjNep ar farmer, that would not purchase y ne box for trial. F. (i. FKANCISCUS. Lewistown, February 12, f862. AMBROTYPES AND The Gems of the Season. fPHIS is no humbug, but a practical truth. J. The pictures taken hv Mr. Burkholder are unsurpassed for BOLDNESS TRUTH FULNESS, BEAUTY OF FINISH, and DISABILITY. Prices varying according {o size and quality of frames and Cases. " Room over the Express Office, Lewistown, August 23, 1860. New Fall and Winter Goods, RF. ELLIS, of the late firm of McCoy • & Ellis, has just returned from the city arfth a choice assortment of Dry Goods and Groceries, eeleuted with care and purchased for cash, which are offered to the public at a small ad vance on cost. The stock of Dry Goods em braces all descriptions of Fall and Winter Goods .suitable for Ladies, Gentlemen and Children, with many new patterns. His (Groceries ei mprise Choice Sugars, Molasses, Java, Rio -nd Laguvra Coffee, superior Teas, kc. Also. Boots and Shoes, Queensware, and all other articles usually found in stores—all which tiie customers of the late firm and the public ;n general are invited to ejmmine. R. F. ELLIS. Country Produce received as usual and the ■ full market price allowed therefor. Lewistown, November .6, 18,01. j Carpets, Groceries, &c. \\TOOLFjS, Linen and Cotton Carpets— * cheap— Hardware, Xy la^s- Earthenware, with a good stock of 1 Toceries, as cheap .££ upr neighbors. Please call and see for yourselves. /*plß JAMES PARKER. vOOAL Oily. D)W I X again ! Best Xo. t at 9 cts. per quart, at HOFFMAN'S. RIO Coffee, extra, at 20 cts per lb, at feb26 HOFFMAN'S. LADIES' DRESS GOODS. description—Prints, Ginghamc, i-'eiaines, Black and Colored, Black and A !ite. and Second Mourning Calicos, Bro- Osmanle and Paris Lustres, Orinbra ahiiuercs, Cray Plaids, China Madonas, Alpaca Plaids, Black and Colored Dress Silks, and all kinds of Dress Goods. Flan ttds, licking, Nankeens, Crapes, Linens, brilliants, and Bleached and Unbleached rousliny. Shawls, Balmonel Skirts, Hooped Skirts, all prices. Shaker Bonnets, Cloth new stylo, Bonnet Ribbons, Dress I rimmings, ic. Cash buyers will find it to their advantage to call and examine the ?toek. (sepiS) JAMES PARKER. NEW FALL GOODS. A T y assortment of Goods are of the best quality and the newest styles, and by attention to customers f hope to be able to supply the wants of the community at large. Fall and see and examine for yourselves. 6e PlB JAMES PARKER. to the man wrrn tiie brjn new wife That your bride may not think J slight her, I thought 1 would send'yop' a line. Ann snfurm you of things .to delight her, 1 v be found at thi? Coffee Pot Sign ! i d be pleased to make her a eali, An'! wish her bright [honey] moonshine; out I could not there make mention of ull ' keep at the Big Coffee Pot Sign I s ''T" her, for rue, ere 'tis too late, 1 nat all she may want she will find— [P'n rattle to an A B € plate— •supplied at the Bife Coffee Pot Sign! ! have just received a fresh supply if useful thing# it household line, -'hen tell her, when she starts out to buy, - * to foVget tfie Cijffee Pot Sign! A WBISPEK TO TUB WIFE. ■*tobacco and euyff box-s, too, Al ide oval—they silver-like shine— • inch for your husband I'll present to you, if you call at the Coffee Pot Sign I Fewistown, March 26,1862-lm Hames and Traces. V\ AGON' Hames at 50 cts. per pair, f ra . ces, Chains, Ac., at 75 cents per pair. " kinds of Chains usually sold in hardware ores, sold at low rates, by F. G. FRANCISCUS. Cultivator Teeth and A ointe, at reduced prices from past seas- J -s. tor sale by F. G. FRANCISCUS. IfHS BIHSTBEi. TO THE SECESSION SYMPA THIZER. NO THANKS TO YOU, T a\JiH tll!, , nk 1 to y° u > KOod sir! ....7 ft l " >'' "" thanks to voi;, Thu ttia t VhL P ,-i°l l,e .u' : A c . hin S from war, <• 11 n • ,he NV hlte - the blue- I am'floating o'er them like a eloud m-l " '- v as the >" come: shifii i Vh ,tl ? n i s V'cssing?, long and loud, •-hall shout their welcome home! Oh! then, 'twill be no thanks to von! 4 , 1 ,r . owne d upon their toil : " At best, tvvas folly in vour view— | _ Prjtil you .-,ay the spoil. ! 1 ou sighed, and looked amazing wise At Justice's long delay ; ','A talked a'xuit a " compromise" 1 o keep the hounds at bay. Oh! yes, 'twill be no thanks to vou! • uU "ever spoke one word W here heart and band and all were due, 1 Jiat I have over he 3rd — , l>ii<- cheering word of svrupathv. One patriotic prayer- One word ot faith and hope, to be A charm against despair. j Yet you shall reap what ik-y have sowed. A country shall he yours; For heroes blood in streams that flowed, A richness thai endures, Co. eat the fat. and drink the swret Bought by the brave and true— And yet remember as vou eat, It is no thanks to you! Boston Recorder. M A. SMITH. County Superintendent. hor tho kduc&tionai Column. A Flea for no Shortening of School Terms. j To those who are intelligently and truly , patriotic, even in times of great national ' trial and just solicitude, the condition of Education in the Country cannot be with out interest. The situation of the country must excite tlqe most earnest patriotism and the deepest concern in every true heart; but we should remember that the struggle now progressing is for civilization against barbarism, fur freedom against the spirit of despotism, for the inaftenable rights of all | against the asserted privileges of the few, —in short, for tho highest good of mankind. ! Education is one of the most powerful agencies by which civilization, freedom and right are secured; consequently, while we would give special vigor tp th.e sword-arm | of the nation, we ought not let the other arm grow weak from unwise neglect. It is to be hoped that School Directors j will take this view of the subject, and will > not suffer the educational interests of the 1 country to decline, even though there be a j seeming propriety in diminishing the taxes at this time. It ought to be borne in mind that hitherto the annual term of our free schools Las not b.eeu so long as the wealth of Miftlin County would have justified, nor so long as the interests of the children of : | the County have required. Had the peace | J and pro.-.pgii t.y qf tiie country Gonti.,ued | uninterrupted, we ought to have lengthen ed the school term a month or two, at the t least; in the present condition of national afLirs, if it &een 1 impossible to lengthen the term, it also seems unnecessary and most injudicious to shorten it. The people ol j this county do indeed feel the pressure of ! the war new, an,d will feel it more by and by, but very lightly compared with the ' people Qf many other localities, —as the j poor in cities, employees in factories which the war has shut, dwellers in newer States which must pay taxes in proportion to their population instead of their property. It may be found expedient to repair some old school houses for the present, and post pone to a more favoring season the erection of such elegant and durable buildings as the Directors of Menno have had the ad mirable sense to rear as monuments of their intelligent interest in Education. If necessary, let the old house stand for a year or two, rendered comfortable and convenient as may be; but let not the chil dren be depriyed of their rightful heritage and best possession, a good common-school education. We do well to remember that the interests of our country will soon pass into the hands of those whose intellectual and moral character is now being shaped by us; that.thn destiny of the country greatly depends upon the discipline, the habits of thought and action, the breadth of character, which the schools shall impart to the present generation of pupils; that no other legacy is so valuable to a child as a true education, which gives him the con trol of his own powers and passions, which enlarges bis mind to embrace the interests of his country and of mankind, which fits him for the lowliest dußcs as well as the highest offices, >vlyich develops love for his country, for his race, for all that is heaven ly jn .character, and for Him who perfects all. jbave a fine to prove that we are worthy of the freedom and high civ ilization which we" proudly claim for our selves, by showing that we value vvealth for the excellent uses it serves, and not for its own poor sake, —by upholding, even in this hour of pressure, the cause of Education as the clear-sighted ally of Freedom, as the security of pure democratic institutions, as the co worker with Religion in the task of redeeming and exalting mankind. S. Ha?" The road ambition travels is too narrow for friendship, too crooked for love, too rugged for honesty, and too dark for science WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 1862, WAR NEW I. THE ADV ANCE of GEN McCLELI.AN to YOHKTOWN. The correspondent of the Philadelphia Inquirer gives the fallowing additional j items of intelligence in regard to the ad vance of (Jen. JlcClcllan from Fortress Monroe : The Advance. Ihe inarch was continued tiirough tiie dilapidated villages of the Half way House and Rosedown, at which latter place the .command halted. Infonpatim beitjg received that a Rebel fort occupied the hank of Howard's creek, boyond the mill hearing the same name' and to the right of the road leading opt from Rosedown, a line ol battle was imme diately formed, and the shelling of the fort commenced. J'he Rebels replied to oqr tiring at intervals, but after about a half hour had elapsed the firing 011 their side ce-sed, when they immediately abandoned the fort. '1 hey effected their escape with difficulty, with loss of one of their horses who was killed by a fragment of shell. The fort, we have forgotten to state, was occupied by cavalry. In the confusion incident to the evacua tion of the fort many of tlje soldiers made their escape on foot, they taking one direc tion and their horses another. After the abandonment of the fort, two soldiers—one of them a mere youth, a native ql Boston —both of them belonging to a Mississippi regiment, came within our lines and vol untarily surrendered themselves. Fifteen rounds of shell were thiown during the bombardment ol the fort. Some of the soldiers hoisted the Stars and Stripes upon the fort as soon as the rebels abandoned it. A portion ol the advance was continued on the same day as far as C'ockletown, sev en miles distant from Vorktown, where they rested for the night. From Hampton to Big Bethel the roads were in fair marching coudition, but be yond that point the troops and the batter ies experienced considerable difficulty in moving over the roads, and the march was, therefore, necessarily slow and tedious. Operations on. Saturday. At nine o'clock this morning the troops at Cockletown were joined by thqse who had remained in the rear during the night, and the march continued towards York- j town. Scarcely had the movement com menced before a heavy fall of rain took place, which lasted until nearly noon 10 day. Ihe route lor a considerable part ot ! the way lay through a dense woods, abound- ! ing in the deepest and worst species of , foad-fVft- L" to fhe,sp the wagons ar;d the carriages bearing the artillery plunged ev- ; erv moment, but, wfth slow movements and ihilk'l iyq breakage qf any kind occurred. When within three miles of York town the command was again halted, heavy forts having been discovered within a mile of the main road to the right. The troops were immediately ranged at the most com manding points, and the batteries wheeled into position in advance of the infantry, by whom they were supported. The fire was opened from the forts to the north (two | heavy guns), the first shell burying itself in the ground to the left of the road, about 1 a mile and a half from the fort. A Union I battery was posted a little to the right of the lower fort, and then replied to the reb ' el invitation with great precision and accu racy. Doth batteries then being opened upon each other, the firing on either side for a time was heavy and rapid. After an hour had elapsed, the rebels forces at the forts was considerably diminished by many of them withdrawing to a less exposed po sition, but the firing was still kept up at in tervals of every three minutes. So soon as the forts alluded to had open ed their fire another Union battery was posted in the woods on the west, and coin- , menced to thrown soell into the forts at that point, from which shell had been 1 thrown among our troops by the rebels.— The firing on these forts, as also those on the north, was continued all day long, and j occasionally after night shell fell among our troops. Skirmishers were also deploy- | ed in the woods to the right and left, and an incessant change of shots took place between the contending foe. All day long the skirmishing has been kept up. The shells from the rebel forts have been whizzing over our heads. We hftvc been operating in the dark. Neither i the force or the position of the enemy have we beep able to ascertain, further than what wc have see with the naked eye. — We have bea?d their wild .cheers, when a shell exploded in our cpidst, have seen their soldiers riding across the country, and moving from fort to fort. They have heavy guns mounted there; 42-pound how itzers the heaviest. There ig no doubt of that, however, for several of them are in 1 possession of our troops. Shells have been thrown by the rebels j in all directions; most of them with a view ; of feeling our position. Our batteries have been changed from one position to the other, as the case may require, and our ! men working like soldiers and patriots. To-night the barracks of the rebels on the west were fired by them, it is suppos- j ed. So great was the conflagration that al-1 most the eutire horizon was illuminated. ' ! Ihe balloon corps, as we have already given you to understand, accompanies the expedition. Notwithstanding "the many obstacles in the way of inflating a balloon at so short a notice, in consequence of an available position having to be secured, tathui two hours alter the first stream of gas passed into the balloon it teas floating in the air at a:i altitude of right hundred feet, with the Professor in the basket In j consequence of the lateness of the hour but a general outline of the enemy's forti fications could be ascertained, but sufficient j pq show that the enemy was strongly en trenched. * or Sunday lief,re Vorktown. iu day lias been one of rest with the sol diers. i here has been little or no firing from ; rebel ,orts, although during the afternoon some twenty or twenty five shell were thrown at and into the forts on the north by a Union I battery. Upon the forts named two rebel flags were seen floating tq day for the first ■ tune. The most important feature of the day has been the balloon ascension, which, in point of importance to the Government, has been one qf the grandest balloon reconnoisancea ever iqace. the first ascension was made at five o'clock in the morning, and then and there the position and strength of the enemy were Ascertained for the first t;nje. Subsequently reconnoisanees of from one to two hours were made and important information gained. Ihe fortifications of tire rebels arc of tho strongest possiblo character, and sweep an extent of country of seven miles, extending across tle Peninsula from the York tq the denies river. Behind these fortifications tliey have a large reserve force, so that the entire strength of tho rebel;* at this pointy rated from twenty five to thirty thousand men.— lheir forts are mounted with guns of the heaviest calibre, and some of them are of a c mtinuous character for miles, being connec ted by earthworks. The heaviest chain of forts are on the west, although those on the norm the point from which the firing was first commenced on Saturday—aro sufficient ly formidable to re. c ist a powerful attack.— lliere are other niinutiue of these forts in our possession, which it is not proper to ipake known at present. Suffice it pu gsy through the maims of the balloon ascensions, made all day yesterday, every information is in our possession of tl;o desigu and intention of the rebels. lien. Magrudcr issued a proclamation to the soldiers of the rebel army on the 28th tilt, lie states that the enemy is upon them and that his numbers is far superior to theirs, lie advises them to fortify themselves in ev ery possible place, and control every inch of ground, 'lhree day's rations ?re to be cook ed, and baked biscuits are to bo carried in stead of Hour. The light, I-e anticipates, will take place on the river. In conclusion, he adv-jscs them to fire low. Jyhni T. Quigg, correspondent uf the New ioik \\ orlu, captured a rebel, supposing him to be the one who shot the Lieutenant from Maine. lie was taken to headquarters. Gen. Hamilton had his horse knocked from tinder him on Siiturdcij. Iho horso was kill ed, and the General escaped j;,yory. A circular, issued by the rebels, was found by one of Gen. Hamilton's aids. The pur port ot it was a full description of the present onward movement, with all the details ; also Gen. Magruder's plan of defeating tlio I'nion programme. 1 wo men of Martin's Battery were buried on Sunday morning, about it o'clock. The Chaplain spoke in a very appropriate and feeling manner. Ihe bodies wer& interred under a large tree. Condition of the Roads. 1 he roads, on account of the severe rain on Saturday, are almost impassable, and the transportation of goods is very difficult - the consequence is the troops and horses' are placed on short allowance. At 12 o clock there was nothing of any con sequence occurred except an occasional dis charge of heavy pieces by the Union gun boats. Affairs on Monday. NEAR YORKTOW.V, YA., ) Monday, ApriT 7, —9 o'clock, j All ig quiet along the lines with the excep tion of now and then an occasional shot from sharpshooters. The enemy appeared or. their ramparts this morning as though going through a dress parade. 0 P 8 _ Beem anxious for an attack, and speak of it with great enthusiasm. About dusk the enemy appeared on their earthworks, as if desiring an attack. A shot from the pickets sent them helter-skelter to their covers. Irevious to the going down of the sun, -pf Lowe made an ascension in his balloon, the enemy's works are very extensive—the centre forming a curve or horseshoe shape. Iwo guns were fired by the enemy about a quarter to eleven o'clock on Sunday night. Ihe sound came booniiDg through the night air with a dull and heavy sound. The Advance from Newport News. division took tho Newport News road, along the James river, and when sixteen miles beyond their camp came to Young's Mills, at eep Creek. Some lebel cavalry and infant ry were here encamped, wbo dispersed upon the arrival of the forces. They fired a volley before leaving,' shooting one of the Lnion soldiers in shoulder. They left a camp in perfect ordef—fires burning and ra* tions being cooked. The division rested here on Friday night, and then advanced, intending to form a junc tion with the othor portion of the army before Yorktown. ' At half past four o'clock cn Sunday after noon no shots had been fired for near an hour, Previous to three o'clock the enemy attempted to strengthen their works, but the Union batteries soon stopped them with a few shells. • 7^ r ' D K Sunday the sharpshooters were withdrawn, with the exception of a few as pickets. During the afternoon one gun was depressed by the rebels, and about dark one 6hot was fired at a squad of men who were viewing the enemy with a glass. It was a sp.eudid line shot, but did no damage. The enemy seem to have the range of the whole field of battle. 1 ery few casualties occurred during Sundav as the firing was only intervals, ft seemed evident that the Union forces did not want to bring on a general cngagementon the Sabbath. I he sharpshooters have covered themselves with glory; so have the artillerists. Up to Sunday evening the infantry regiments have been in the background—the artillerists and sharpshooters doing nearly all the work. Cri r r [Correspou.it-nc of the New Yo.ik World.] From General Banks' Corps. I' pjXßi n;, } April 2.—Our viptor iqqs colutifii has again advanced seventeen miles into the territory of the enemy, and is still advancing upon a turnpike which could hardly lie excelled in the facility which it affords for tl;q transportation of a large army, and the immense amount of baggage which it required for its comfort and subsistence. Colonel Gordon's Brigade led the ad vance, deploying the Second Massachusetts Regiment as skirmishers, and Company M, Captain Denison, of tho First Michigan Cavalry, acting as an advance guard, and charging the enemy treating through the town ol Woodstock, and again through Ed inburg and across the bridge over the Shenandoah, which was burned to prevent the pursuit. lliis town, which we now occupy, is a small village of 500 inhabitants, possibly, and 00 miles distant from Staunton on the line of the railroad from Richmond. The turnpike, which we are now upon, contin ues to Staunton, passing through Mount Jackson and Harrisonburg, two towns of some importance. Staunton is 103 miles Irorn Iticjiiftond. have already in our progress from the Potomac, pushed on six ty-live miles, more than hall the distance towards Staunton. M opdstock, the town occupied yesterday by Colonel Gordon, with Company M, of Colouel Broadhcad's Cavalry, is twelve miles from Strasburg, principally situated on the turnpike, and of about 1,000 inhab itants. General Banks, with his iStaff, rode on to the advance, and was inEdin burg last evening, when the enemy ceased their firing. No hindrance tq its progress is made, ex cept the occasional and sudden appearance cf Ashby, with his 500 horsrnen and his three cannon, who, at some convenient point, as we approach, throws at us a half dozen shells, only two or three of which ex plode, and dashes away again as rapidly as he approached. This ho doing continually yesterday, but without much harm to our troops. — One man, however, was killed, -Jas. Martin, of Company G, Twenty ninth Pennsylva nia Volunteers. Capt. Richardson, who stood by bin), received a slight wound in his hand. This occurred a short distance from town, and had not 001. Gordon, Ac ting brigadier General, ordered his men into a double ouick, so accurately had the Rebel Colonel obtained the range, that many of our men would doubtless have been killed by their shells. Fortunately, there was no other accident than those above mentioned. Had the liebei General been disposed to make a stand the many defensible positions on the road over which we have passed would have enablcJ him to have met us with the greatest advantage of position. At one point we were .compelled to rise a steep hill, cross a high but narrow bridge of stone, ascend still farther by a road, en the left of which ther oeks rose steep above us, and on tbe right of which they fell precipitately below us to the bed of the deep and narrow stream which we had just crossed. Such a place would have made an excel lent Thermopylae, had the valiant Jackson chosen to verify the long vaunted deter mination to resist inch by inch the advance of the invader's foot, and welcome to in hospitable graves the insolent Yankees. Warned by the recent defeat, which his men iull ackowledged to the citizens in the neighborhood through which they passed, he prefers to run, and as it was necessary t° giy.s him so long a space for his flight, it hardly seems likely that we can catch him now. His main force is several days in advance, and he burns the bridges be hind him and seriously impedes the progress Qf our pursuit. The cause of the short de lay now is the burning of the bridge across the Shenandoah at this place, and there is another bridge between this and Mount Jackson, nine miles distant, which is, no doubt, likewis burned, and the depth and rapidity of the river prevent the possibili ty of fording it. This will be a hindrance to our progress, but the span is not wide, aad they will soon be connected by tem porary bridges. Several fine structures upon tbe Manassas Gap Railroad, which connects Mount Jackson and Washington, have been utterly destroyed. Ravines spanned by difficult engineering, and long and high bridges across rivers and creeks, have been destroyed beyond the possibility pf being early reconstructed. The Rebels have pretty effectually preven ted the use of this railraoad for our present military purposes. Several small streams have been forded on account of the destruc tion of the bridges by the retreating forces. Une which we have lately passed had been built only a month before. We have passed into another belt of country The tine residences, and wealthy, New Series—Vol, XVI, No. 24. elegant establishments which wc met be tween Harper's Ferry and Winchester, and even beyoud, in some degree- kave giygu j way to the true Southern style. I mean i the (Wi-apjrfiated, unthrifty, slovenly appear ance which a Northerner al ways sees in tho villages and farms of the South, occasional j exceptions only. Houses that ought to havp bfcon torn down fifty years ago, with the shingles on the roof curled up, till they will bear a comparison to the hair on the jraniuui ot the negroes about them, who ; arc so exceedingly gratified and exuberant to our advance. At one house on tho road,, in which sev eral officers had engaged quarters for the night, I saw a family where one child was in its mother's arms with scarlet fever, coughing at every breath ; aqd the mother, overcome with her trouble, was complaiq ing sadly and despondingiy, while another child lay upon a sofa, and its parched lips j and emaciated countenance showed how much cause the mother had for ksr sorrow, and an old man lay half-reclined near by, upon a couch from which I was told he had scarcely moved these lour months. The I family was very poor, and seemed reduced 1 to the last extremity ol .suffering and sor row. \\ hat little of theirs had remained, after the retreat of Jackson's army, was hardly enough to last them for a few weeks, and with nothing to purchase with, they j were in actual fear of starvation. J he wheat fields by the road are looking Ircsh and green, but uuless the war should close I fear that when the grain becomes ripe there will be few reapers to gather it. 1 here are few men through the country, unless they hide themselves, as s ( qme aro known to have done. Not long sipce I spent (he night at a fine residence at which only two small boys appeared to be at hoinp. 1 heir report might havp ied some to goon and find another stopping place. i here had been uickqpsa in the family ; three had died, and the had ad | vis.ed the remainder of the family to avoid the contagion of the house and go to llich ; inond. 4*o all had gone, said the boys, cx | copt two, who had been left in charge.— e half a dozen of us —were well enter tained, hut noticed that most of the house was closely locked. j Being on the road mvaclfaftervyard, vyhen toe arihj had passed through, I called and found the gentleman who had gone tq Richmond sitting comfortably before bis fire, smoking his pipe to his fortunate es cape from the Yankees 1 here is u general fear of our army by those who have been actively interested in the rebellion, and J doubt 11 iu some cases the scarcity ol men is to be accounted for in that way. lISLELUIEOO& Cotton and its Worshipers. The Richmond Congress L ptuz,!ed what jto do about cotton. Mr. Brown, of Missis- I sippi, proposes to make it a criminal of fence for a planter to grow more than three bales for his family and one bale for each of his field hands. Ffe thought that with out souic strict prohibitions, 44 a large class ol graspiug Shylocks" (southern planters and gentlemen called Shylocks!_) would certainly go on planting cotton in hope to make a great profit by selling' it. It is a curious comment on the loud prq fessions in favor of free trade and State rights, that Mr. Brown's resolution, levy ing a tax of forty dollars per bale on all cotton grown beyond a certain amount—a flagrant interference with the course of trade, and, as Mr. Hunter remarked, an unconstitutional interference with tfrp States—received in the confederate Senate uiue votes out of twenty; counting the mov er, who did not vote. Mr. Seiumes, of Louisiana, said in tfaQ course of debate, that he " had long since abandoned the idea that cqttqn ic hing.— We have tested the powers, pf jdng cotton and found him wanting." Mr. of South Carolina, seemed of a similar opinion. lie said: "We must have a mon opoly of the market. We begin to find out that we have not a monopoly ; that cot ton can bp produced elsewhere." The planters are evidently awakening tq the fact that are not yet masters of the civilized world." Large Stocks of Grain. There never was a tiqie in history of the grain trade when such large amounts of produce were stored, waiting the open ing of navigation to move eastward. We find by reference to the proper authorities that there was in store at Chicago, March "4, 1862, 3,660,000 bushels wheat. Tojetfo; March 15, 293,561 do Buffalo, March 20, 768,208 do Milwaukee, March 21. 3,800,000 do Detroit. March 21, 402,300 do Of corn in store the following is the estimate. Chieago, 2,356,784 Toledo,' 523,175 Buffalo, 233,917 Detroit, 104,000 The Illinois Central Kailroad has in store over 1,000,000 bushels. In the city of New York there are already stored 1,- 250,000 bushels of corn. Millions of bush els of wheat and corn are stored at differ ent points cn the lakes awaiting the open ing of navigation, which would swell the above aggregate to an almost fabulous amount. Present indications are that the grain movement of 1862 will far exceed that of any previous year