TAE PRESS, PUBLISHED DAILY, (SUNDAYS EXCEPTED Dlr J - 03127 W. PORtler. OFFICE NO 417 CHESTNUT STREET. DAILY PRESS, , r,,-,mva. atria Pia Wiwi, thothiller. ma il e d to sobooribers out of the Crifht"lx DOLLEss PER A:iNEN, Foos. DOLLAR VOR EIGHT koNTRI; Taxan DOLLAR! VoR Btx. adoßTlOl—invariablv in ad 4sono for the it Gm *Moto& TRI-WEEKLY PRESS. m wed to enbseribers out of the City at Tess DoL LAuf PEE AVlU24.lll.llidirancl,.. mikaarusiti . G 0 opB< SPRING OPENING 01.1REN'S GOODS. TiniRsDAY. APRIL U. ILINCOLN, WOOD, & NICHOLS, LI% 126 OirrNINV.P STROM at 1861. RosEN amm, BRooKs, SPRING. & co.. NO. 431 MARKET STREET, North *ids. Door Fifth. t'oo4to ottentiali 61 tottots to their WOWS it*D HAIIIDIBOKZ ViEteffllle Op ktLE4B 4 ONS, FLOWERS, .3TRAW AND FANCY BONNETS, moor AND CHILDREN'S RATES AND FLAT& SHAKER HOODS, JUJUBlifh AND OA. ARTICLES APPRRTAIIMNO TO TILE MILLINERY LINE. -0010-fro FRENCH i k FRAMES, _ VRENCH FLOWERS, STRAW GOODS. SSE LATEST STYLES CONSTANTLY StS. ONLYINO. TX-I(3S_ Trr.NNEDY & BRO. -NO. TSS CHESTNUT Street, below AIONTIL Ssit-Sat CABINET liIIRNITURIN., CABINET FITNNTEM • AND BM ‘..• UMW TABLISR. MOORE - & CAMPION. mu, 5161 ROUTH SECOND tfraRST, - in.:cane:shoe - with their siteatglirit Gfilitnot Badness, are now rusunfootazrzor artlele of BILLIARD TX, it hip ry a co , Ahlp4a un .4isho o d i n cei alrlueh Airil pronounced. by aft who have used the", to b e 0.98110 r tool! others. For the quality and finish of these Tables =ma ihoupreye voter to their ;tumorous patrons t the Union. who are filvnilusr with the chareeter o ir vett. LOOILLNG GLABISES. LOOFZEM:I--4aI‘.It!LSIi3ES. I:WOW eakibiting tad poulletiug now suull *Wont Mime . LOOSING-GLASSES, anedanw all the latest inuarovonnents and fealties In ameifsettirs. great novelties in Walnut and Gold and ltaanrial ANL Gold Frames for litlititOKlL The most extensive and varied asissresteat In the sestitti. JUKES S. EARLE & SON, EARLES' GALLERIES, Vtf - SILO CHESTNUT ariurgi.. sANGuips. CAPER HANGINGS. - :HOWELL AVVIHM4,IO4III6 M. t_ oanusr of POUWAX ma NAM? atrooto. JAPER Bolsoauk, inas saw* wat tgagAnafsamt- - ,a,••.7. 194 Loa. • lane amd gr:WIALICT STOOK titXMlLfrom : 460 Fin= eoLD 1 ,2 4 -45,11t0 ths LAWSZT MOM) AI2TiCLES, will uat itumu, DBEART 2.7, 414 " t 414424 'CHB NEW= irrvim SRAIWR ishf-1m HARDWARE- MOOREa3MNSZKY,, do ARE NOW OPENING - 1 REM SPRING STO - OK OP EIARDWARE. L2Y MARKET; Bad 418 COMMERCE 571115t3. mIII-!m GROCERIES. EXCELSIOR HAMS. 1 H. MICITENUR, & eiSPIEKAI4 Pfroviniort DEALUrrn, "AIM CUR O OP ?EE CELEBRATED "EXCELSIOR 51:GAR-oURED HAMS. Aim. 149 AND 144 NORTH FRONT STREET (Between Arch and Rem. Streets.) PHILADELPHIA. The justly-celebrated - Excelsior Hama are cured by J. M & Co . (in &style eeentlisr.to themaelves), ex amine R.r forfanssiy xaa ; are of nohow= Sirror. free from she unpleasant tea of seas, and are pronounced by epi 99Pai manor to any now offered for Wei seld-ffat VW BURLINGTON BIRRING. FLOM' OF TILE SEASON. ALBERT 0. ROBERTS. DEALER IR FIRE GROCERIED CORNEA ELEVENTH AND VINX JEWELRY, etc. BEST CRONE OFFERED. SEW GOODS. NEW STORE. NEW STYLES. GREAT TISTROrOL/TAN JEWELRY DEPOT. FOUR THIRTY-TWO CHESTNUT STREET. GEAR GACILIFICE. TO INSURE QUICK SALES . I hays opmed, at the above stone one of the finest and noaveasoded stoats of .fewelry,eutier-elated ware, and Amoy Goods; evor before offered to the weblio. i will stutrinity to give perfect satisfaction to every enroluieer. Call and examine mv stook and you will find a eau of moods equal to any in the nits*. OISSERYE Tag rierimsf ----- - • - Coral. Enameled- C0nie5.166 , 40 3 5 16- than sets, for—.. --M usual pried 413 d . le Enameled do.. Enamelled Banquet ii.o., do -el do. $3 '3lessio. Ist, Lava, Carbuncle, Tar" asoisa. Ettnaoan do—, $1 do. $ 6 Rtir, Cardinale, Bold Cluster: m u e l Twist de_ __si do. $6 Engraved and Chased Gold Band at 411 do. 44 Very Inch Engraved and Chased do-02 do. 416 Very Bach &ftsbanole end Gold Clus terl2 Wants' Armlets... - -* !I ;12* 3 Ramat lisoklaeosiroat n o tirt - i.-. A . 4 "" Dm do. with 16 . 1 . do. ' 3 Medallions, great variety. - 1 do $ O . with Double 816e5..--- 1 do. tats of. Studs and Sleeve Buttons Treat variety....._..._-. . 'll do. $4 Seta of Studs anigleeve Buttons. Car t bangle Humana', t o .-.. I do. 4 hi 461111611161411 . j 066601..... *WM. rt 2 do. 4 ore eet Csaine.--.--.......-. do. 6 1.48 da. do. _ __- ---- 1 do. 6 n... ' Earrings.--...---.—. 3 do. 6 do. _.„ • I de. r ,! 6 ;i:“ Hume Buttonssue to . 11 , .. urns pose SIM to 3 ' ,, Titr co. do. rue to 1, do. ' GLIM to I 4140, Gold P I MA end Panel . Tooth Picks, Wstoh lirs.Delt Knit 0 _kin Pig: MUMMA Rd.. RI - have a sift 101 of F B GIOL AreD IL • Viillk w.rercass.wbieh will sell at squalls 10W feele **in sent by Mail or Eirtelni to - all -an n plight of . the Baited States and (Winds free of oast. WM. 8. I.IUSTIN. ant. 312-dnif 3m fx. 432 CUIRITHOW Etteot. FINE WATCH REPAIRING. pERSONS HAVING - FM larivraHES The; have hitherto giyen eatiaraatioa to the wearers. an invited to bring them to our Mons milers 611 defects oan be remedied watchroughly An Beientifui workmen, and the vserranted t o pe ettire Benefaction. htentel Cleats. Musical Bones, &e., carefully nut in ve'mplets order. FARR & BROTHER, Itteortere of Warahee. Memos' Boggs, CI ete% &tut ate-gm 324 ainESTre street. below Fourth. CLOTHING. FASHIONABLY! TAILMING ESTA 30Paintrelitrelt. below Fouttli.iouthilib ISTWITJABON . . ablillectrallv 'arenas' niuneromfousteemiks .thunin.anetat that he has jut . rise et ved an' 1.1 . 1c0h wail) be *mod to g en* " th . " saasoushie teams tor matt, . !..matill-rantant. • IPME 10T0 ' ; jlr. l 4001% catztalaut air*, 's Odor thp " Continentallo 1 bat& ilAtlted VIVO "0 oporrior mike, smet 11Wiliits auto . . sotiat. , • ' VOL. 4.-NO. 236. -;DRY-MIODg JOI3IIiM9L JOSHUA L. 13AITAY, SW. St 11 liAlltUT teiltalkT, limits' the epeeist attention of CASH BUYERS TO CHOICE STOCK OP: FANCY AND STAPLE DRY GOODS, °minimum OBE OF TEE BEET ASSOORTMENTO OF • FRESH GOODS - IN TOX Plitt.AlitLPOLA. MARKET- aerti-tf RED, WHITE, ilk BLUE kidANNELS. GRAY FLANNELS, • • SY TIES PIECE OS BALK JOSHUA L. BATT;PIY, ares-tr 5.13 MARKET Street, lk6l SPRING. 1861 RIEG-El, BAIRD. & CO, orroaraas Josesso 07 DRY. GOODS. rte. 4 NOITIL IR111,1) SI/Xi:age. neweeireek. Meichants widthig thi s city to purelmse Rat Goon. will Ala our Stock - lame arid adftlassorted, and at Low PiCtiTILIII. In e..artatt Chums of Goode we offer inducements to purehasers unequalled by any other house in Philadelphia. mhlB.2m JAS. KENT. SANTEE, iXPOitTIERS AND JOBBIIie 07 NOS. USN AND 941. DORT' THIRD STINNTa ABM'S RACE. liesoitetfelle invite the attention of • GM3II AND SHORT TIME BUYERS, To theiriumal IJANN• AND fAMPLINTD 17001 AN.III 4 I:IOMESTIC 600 AS. frilor 47gstr - oompAscra OVAL AUK s • • -- • , . •r , or azw ' 6 rA.5e CHAFFEES;ST9UT& Co. tea f 93 P&A.RXET 112Ks_va DOKEBTIO DRY GOODS. VVe srAfirgiselad. to offer extra mammonist° wan ' . 011) kit.OMPT.PAYIPM siERCRANTI. iT aDaots si oo k 014 141 threnteut the sseistm. aud sttention 4144.111" lablig"fa sr,TaNa e? CLOTHS, EASSIEERES V 3611311481 LADIES' CLOARS:.. I"I4 : Q}S9 And ell awls suited to E N AND BOYS' WEAL WHOLESALE AND RETAIL, AT C_ SOME,RS & SON'S, MIS Street. under JAMBI, uddl-Sin - - sPßirio. clai T. WAY & 00.: 14% 48 noctirsi lamb snratzkra. IMPOKTICKS AND J0551E110 DRY GOODS. ova STOUX 15 11/41114114.1401 al/105 IMO 105 Sac cOMPIXIE. 1861: E 0 A T ;FL ROSS, & CO. LA =- DALE, KOH& & WITIFILRE, NO. SRI MARKET STREET, Have now open their full SPRING IMPORTATIONS Olr SILKS F.V4OY DRESS' GOODS. The attention of OAHU DUYEEB Se espeotenr utteElot SPRING 1861. wtrwrs, .&lISTIE, &. ILoVEIGB, INVORIBIA AND JOBBKOMI IN DRY 43.00138. No. SlAltiatila Abova i rk u . 21104: 1 01614, • ' n: Dura 'UN A. AUGUST' BELbiONT & 00., 50 WALL STREET, NEW YOWL, UMW attars ef enstbe so Stavelieses available fin al parts of Ntirope, through the Ideasts.itothsohild of Pap London. Frankfort. Masks, Vi 411111116, and their ow rawondeitt. WECEELEI3*.WELSO)I CHINFAS BEGIN© tirRISDIMED, • N 00113110871. 1810 1111410 0.04.1TA10 MeCli•s abd Yk4it; stexasitst, '.91:1.41); uult:110)&kse-44...it& LasidArti= • • • Sal•litliator lbw MtastiM ut b - SOW • • • • :I • 4.4 •-• • buss Is t" , **l .. • . ~,a, ,7 '. ' - 7.7.71 . , ....' n,„, ~.,,:. .. ..: ~, rk .,,.. : ‘,,.ii r L i .....„„...,,,, //y ",,;, : , ' ,,,i.,. : ~ , ,:,,,,,..: , • .2.., . ~ 11.1tiA . _. . . . .. • . . . . . • T' ".7 :' - '....,', ,\ \ %, II ! 4. 1 :*1 . ."...,.1' . r .. t . 7 .7 - :;I . ; ~ rx !t .' .:, r ~... • , - , . . .- ... . . . - .. - . . . . _...-- . ... '''''' - ••.. /•li ,_ .-..- . tv;-}, - .'- . ' . 11,),'""-,•,_...,:_ • ~ .t• .., *.,,,,,.- „-r,., .._ ‘ 1." -- A ..: , 0 , N,L0... -- , , r , f. , .. ..:: .: -"..-- • --- ~___--,' 1 r - .. ;_,, ,, , -_-_ , 1 . -:7 : ,' , - .. ..,', _ i = .....,.,... N - , - : 14 : ' ''' "..-.." ' ? 7 - • ",-".--..-- T. -- .. ' . .. „ . • 1 r . ' ... ' '-'. :'. , .'•-• ... f '' - • . . .: ~ , ,„:. • - , ~• ..,....et.A.,."-.,-..-5.,-.-. = ..,. ~-...- - .... - -4)...-.: ,, ---,...e. , -..--,-,,i---......,... :.-. :._.......,. -,.• --...., ...,...._. .-----;,_ . .. _ . 1 r: M ---- , - - • -...,.:„ :,.;,:. -....._.• ',..._- 2. - : --- ------- . , . . . • . . . ..... .., ---- ,_ • .....___,.....t.t.''' .. . , . ....., ____ ; • • . . . . . • - . • . . , . . CO., DRY GOODS, 7 incaF - 8 - 8 . : - ' 7 7D$;.--4 it If tolls/ raNali 41041) COMPLJLItis. ILIMM9 „ BAN ICERS. 13BNITINg4! aItACRTNES. . COMMISSION lumen. K_ERSEY CASSIMER IVITARLII NOR VOLUNTEER UOMPANI For sale by THR/LEY", ENGLISH, Uo.. we -ow-ft 2$ SOUTH FRONT EIT • 250 BALES BLANK I BUIE, GRAY, AND WHITE NAVY BLANKE FOR BBLB BY GEO B. REESE, SCbN, 400 P4AIRS. ALL WOOL, EIGHT POUNDS, WHITE NAVY BLANKS FOR SALE BY G. B. REESE, SON, & 11.074 t A, W. SPRAftaTJES' PRINTS. UNION PRINTS.. 110 YT, SPR4GUES Se Ai NO. 533 CHESTNUT STREET. wELrzw, 4 CIOMN. &Co 14. 114 CHESTNUT STRE Agran POP THE BALE OP DUN:LLaG. 00:15 PRIETS AND LAWN GREENS : (XVII TIMMY RED AND Flap Bleached Oa4ons. LONED&LE . 1144%; :BLAGIESTONE, SLATERS VILLIL.IAMENTOWN„ RED BANK, GREENE, vmon. AND BELVIDERE. - jiTtowT. Cottons. nuiporium, ET altacr.olitgAuurroN. 'VIRGINIA FAMILY AND NUONANiDEr AND FAllmEar. 112 AFTON, 87.ATKIUMLLN, AND INWNXT CITT nits AND .snurEs. _1111) , I014 - AMEEEMIS ARP s wmaea OLASCIOW ouIiteAVIBAJEV BEITMIIiEVR BLACK AND SLENRAN MS 411gettamacoL0128. • • • - STEARNS AND SAXTON'S RIVER OASSIERRES. GREBNIPIRLII MACK DOESKIN& ' - JIDDMANAN FINE JEANS, DOUBLIS AND TWINTND • BASSIMBREIL NEGRO CLOTHS. Rs. mom, BANN RIVER, CROW. OPNINGIVONE BEIDE, IBRIDGEWATNR. AHD BRISTOL SATIRBTIL fe r l9-tf • SHIPLEY, HAZARD, & 1111T0HttqSON, 1.12 CHESTNUT BT., COMMISSION MERCHANTS, FOR TRK SALE OF PST. A 11 - FIT:OHIA-m„zuDE GOODS. • ICARPETINGS. I -F611123E1 CANTON MATTING. • : . OPPOSITE WWII{ ROUSE. - Have now men their 3P_ RIN 0 IMPORTATIONS OF ...iyarda - - EattLe IREPERLard MUTE. • . - -- -._ . • ' PURPLE: and - - RED CHECKED . . . CANTON MATTING. Lti Aldo THE litittSRENT WIDT I IB. Mt . MODERATE; PRIC.F.M. . _ 3. F. 8a E.. -13. ON . tansm • OPIUM 13TATHITOVA4- A KOIT-13T RNXT CARPET WARS. Hones: • ' OLDEN it BICKNER, NO. elle ARCH serßpier, I Deeps. below NINTH Have now hi Store a splendid stook ENGLISH AND AMERICAN CARPETING& Of all desanptione, Bought at PANIC OW FO 01 CARRand .+-111.. be gold WAY L R lirGanattin:its 10 rar rant. &saner than an pw-un hods in rho trade. - : FLOOR om.eLonis. AUSTIN DROWN, WHOLESALE DEALER IN 01100140T1 - IS, FLOQ B The largest 0 :4 dr three tinier id Philadelphia F ZU:IES LOW. Melo. to: North TILZ-RD MEET , (US etaired stbet-est- TOILET AND EANO7L4FriC/1/681 DO YOU WANT WINSICM3I DO YOU WAVT WHISKERS po YOU WANT A MOUSTACILE? DO YOU WANT d MQUOTACEE? BELLINEk . H.A3A'S GELSBNATED STIMULATING ONGUENT, FOR 7HI WHISKERB AVD HAIR! The surtweribers take pleasure in announoing to the citizens of the United Statenthat they have obtained the Aeilleg :frac and are now enabled to offer to the American publio the" above justly-oelebrated and world-renowned steals. - - - • , Tar. STIMULATING ONG - VENT TS I. P . Is prepared by Dr. C. P. BELLINGHAM. an eminent PkYMOiall OffLOndon, and is warranted to bring oat a thick net of WRISKERS. OR A MOUSTA0111: In from Wee to az weeks. : This article is the ants one of the kind used by the Fniaolt, and in London and Permit is innniversat,use. , - . - It is yr amas s eergarialael. aaatitine. Yet Stoma timg oompoind. sang as. it. by memo taonthe mots* causing , a irsautiful srowth of hmunent hair. It -tap , plied to the seam pi t will awe baldness. and er =to spring es lathe place of the bald spates. fi n* of now hair. A:4lnd awarding to direction.% I will turn 1 1 1 . 1 4111 tlie l 7 - i ltt l Vll i t ft . Mt rall i i iir and li r tri btr, tali.; OK , uttritibi alter in one week ' s us art e WIZ u4 L f e c lot a - bell:lade:AU:4.4 brrniTithrgig. for the a rtio le in the lini States. to whom a orders must be ad lizMorte dollar a box ; for eale_by_ ell I/omelets and Dealers ; or a bon of the a ONGIMITY marlinted to have the desired effrot.will be seat to any who desire it,by mail, direct. securely packed, on receipt of price and postage. . LI& Apply to. or address . HORACE L. HEOEMAN & C . Hruggisto;&o.• - 64 1177 rx., AM Ntreet, Nay York. DYOTT & No, t/32 North SECOND Street, Phi adelphis Azionta.„ inki&-Sta OPAfrDzfiTALLiNA , L-we speak from igipeiienoe when" saying that the OPAL . periffA t Er' ICdtegiblrlitllitlid of BROAD and ?or the month- end teeth c airt d iie has ever cat need. believe it fulfils an that is claimed for it, and being re commended br the mood eminent dentists ir Moine ll to give it a trial.—Bitilsiiii. 1011-3 m• EPHRATA MOUNTAIN -SPRINGS, Laic 'lrma coubril. dtiltie. 1100...faeph Rademacher, the lat e Proenetor of this! Income summer resort, bowing " lately died. the suhseribers. gneoutors of Ins will, beta leased the tstaslasent for thwoomled eesion to Col. S. C. BLlv i t MAKER, who has -been. en ..6enstent at this Om* or the last am year', end. we believe, favorably kqawn to bathe SWOTS. Thanjcins the 'Karam of the plsee'ead tb• publics genettilly for tits literal pstrosais hetato tort extended to the late Proprietor; they issiteothally solicit a contintusnee or the same to tus worthy spy *moor. .0 DAM R 52 18442t3R, WM. CAM Exeltators. fell*-tris° Marius leseert the abocenme Plush awl anitagtei Mr, 13,11 L Ric Whe has been, an assastant at the ISTrinza foremen /sera. the inidermgßed lalLoWka for visitors the Ist of-June.,111414 anti no. pro - tjus own, ea? eii as ler. Reiphero sjeng operation with the 15priess; together With his determumnon to eon duet teem in ovary dapartmlint their... usual power Irci• and..as,neer as leen.* whit. UM. same meow intwatiss servants, wilt be a to th e itinThil of the plane. as welt az the nubile- generally. =St tllle Sing* willidefitthitertiontintrtitt patronage. w ir r e roubsra aat t yretre sive. calk on corner 9_ I 111111 INN me. Itra RA u, at the on XeteLAß4lltrest. till Jane Ist or. address L tibaiNLA itr„ 1410-tit Bplorate, • LAnoutair senate, realms ' - y tfig lUMMID, per "Annie giniballP 1 tozatso Lirripixa. Mandsr. Wilmer. .& 7dandsz's 11414 . ' ''' Acioniti OEI biT ar • bit Bona yoga ami.in I a. 110 5e..... EXUSO I . .iLI ism i o owe* inl a an. 1 = lia-PAr 41111bbatikt. 100 lbs. WU/ 4144.4110 / b !: 1 0 111111 . SOO lb." 1. in lb - beetle , : - MOM , rilirtetainissi., ` ".1P Wilh PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, MAY 3. 1861. RETAIL DRY GOODS. WHITE GOODS WIIITE GOODS WRITE GOODS WHITE GOODS WHITE GOODS AND A li AAN EMBROIDERIES. EMBROIDERIES. EMBROIDERIES. EMBROIDERIES; EMBROIDERIES. TEN THOUSAND rIECS WHITE GQQDS AND LINENS, HALF! THET-R USUAL, RETAIL I INASENSIC BARGAIN& IMMO - SIS BARGAINS. TEMENII.I3 ;DA RIVAINT. IMMENE. BARGAINS. IMMENSE BARGAIN& immitrumimochubra. INUABICRE - BARGAINS. INSP. NOB BARGAINS. IMMENSE BARGAINS. IMMENSE BARGAIN& On account of the interruption to, and al znost total,. suspension of the wnotaltann Tirana, consequent. upoU the .;icwar panic! , now raging; the Large and freshly imported Stock of WHITE GOODS, I f inass, Lsens, Erik BaOrDERIES, of Price, Ferris, .} Co., will be offered for sale at EMIL, REOARDLESS QF COST, The greater part of this int-. Amuse stock has been purchased very re cently, in the different European markets, by a member of the firm personally, and. *the inducements to those wishing to pur chase anything in this line will be unsur passed. To this end, we have taken the store 'ET A . 807 caggsTN . vr,ST., No. 807- CITESTNOT NO. 807 OfIESTNTYP.Sr:r, No. 807 CHESTNUT . SP:, No. 807 CHESTNUT lATE.Ly OCCUPIED BY 0/11WCERING & ROBB.) MONDAY, 29th INST., MONDAY; 29th INST., MONDAY, 29th INST., WILL OPEN FOR THE INSRHOTION OF THE PUBLIC AN ENTIRE NEW STOOK, CONSISTING OF WHITE GOops, LINENS, - LACS, ‘ EIVII3ROTPFMT-Ka, IN tENDLESS To those who purchase by the entire piece ! or dozen a liberal deduction will be made,: in addition, to the immense reduction made ie retailing. Retail e 4 merchants from all vsliby .turaiicyariagrah tS - call. We respectfully invite the special attention• of the ladies, and the public genera ,77 to the *bore. PRICE, PERRIb-,4 0 co., No. 826 MARXIST STREET;tna No. 807 - CHESTNUT stfT-tt TEARGAINS,— A l - 4 . Olen. Gingivae= at 72M eenet. raveling tan at 25 cents. Sheolwrira Plaaladilatialr Moab. Black atlas. 800, titirts. Collars, Baudkerohigs Seta: White Gocatr, . Linen nmrth 60 cents. 34""18"Wint CoOP.KR E. . CON AR' eor NINTH. and id4R.KET.. . PRIMAL NOTIOE —A RARE 'onimoic FOR BARGAINS 1 TR 8 ENTIRE 'STOOK TO B$ CL.OBbD OUT t On account of the unsettled state of the country. and depreseien in themereentile line, I am dennnunnn ohms out my stock much belor the cost et uneorinven. erect inducements win be etrerea in Dress Geed!, Shim's. Silks. ito. t and • 1- would invite those wishing Br; Goods to examine A. Sae hundred Shetland 14hawle tram *1 to 88 , net him thew value, at JODN spist-tf 700 ARCH Street. CiENTEI , AND BOYS' WEAR,-LARGE, aeleot. and eerpeoiany *heap stook of Mints and Boye seapgiable wear. Espeatal attention devoted to eldths.easiameres, Yeatinal, and to' good' fa/loge use. COOPER dr. CONA On "B. oar. NINTH end MA T. _ ("TABLES &WAS & SON—EIGHTH N.. 1 ARC A.ROA. STREETS-- Will eifet,_this _motning, a fine assortment of 8Ty,14 , 41. BA WL S. purchased at auction, and for .ggite* a very moll afloat:we, rum= m price from $4 li• idlitkiallerhUiria of papas 000 DR. E g raL4 .,,,,..u mt eviery varlet!, from 13)io, to 369, Moue Malan. At". Vet roxi n iM to, Mo. Ottoman, Trteitt. •-„ oydne. Bilk, reseroidered, eau 4 601ur0l area Diagonal Pop Newolitati Bilk Cheek Mohair, Ice: and OM. LAPTOP eLemalmea, in striven iteu, ;dein eolors. The latest abase of HOOP a META lot L-Nitri sad Misses, of the beat quality, both tied, and plod sod Tro. im irtajs. Aug AT HALF PRICE. A small hi 4 we will itovasiis to be sold at one -h al f the liesittOl e ATkoiferino andtrisNau :Z, including Yi.rtiethnttentionie retuested to our House Far . . VariMers. the best article for Mo. even offered. a li t ai b bt t r t i r r ift", Flannels, a full hne. 1 Mae 44 unbleached Joann, due, 40. 1 ease 4.4 anbisadied Mindin, heavy, No, 1 ease .54 bisaohedmwda,txo. I owe 4-4 bisoched Mucha. 90.--splendid. 1 ewe 4.4 g. Adams & Son, Mo. 1 ease 4-4 Adams & Fen, leKe. 1.4 Boort milli. amoakerm and Dodgeville. I ease 10.4 bleached ohestmg, me, usually _ 1 ono 124 bleached Bile Oleg, sine, usually 400 ; sp'l3-tf ISTRICL & BON; •• No. 113 North TENTH Street. above Coita l. NI even; TO-DAY. from-New Fait Elpred Silk Gonadinsii, Bleak Grounds. Fine BeLeine, Buses Babas.. 7soonst, and Organdie Lawn'. ad otner chino. desirable P reis Goods. Great chino. Fans. tike. French and India Qbeakiglits. G.at Bargains in Mitik ankle KEIL waITG, and BLUN BiLB2l, DILUAirI tind ono ofuhe WHITF. COBNK6I3. for niAkilig Flags. In'onrBRAWL and NAPITIOG Aiwa Will be found evert v ariet y and style of SILK AND cLOTIIi L OTH IN& SILK and CLOAKING& CHEAP BLACK EST LLA SHAW solt7-tf IFITUR NV AR !I ! GOVERNOR OURTIWIS NESSAGN : ** UOION CLOAK RTORE." No. 40 BOOTH semen° Street. Oldest Established Manufinei in the WS* DAILY ONINz A lam. assortment of Ladies%, ieleB 9 . aad Chit dretes u loth and oils Coati. Nast:nee. &o.; among widoh will be forted the Union cloak.?+ a, sew NZU beautiful article ; French Pies Mantles of mit styles. together. with a sooner line _of Dress - Materials. am :Ala: ata S great swine% ana will be sold nntisnallx,jsw,__ aeon st. V. R:iIIiNTEIC RD, WHITE, AND. BLUE HOODS FOR FLAGS. Red, White, tout Blue Detainee. Red, White. aad Rue Merino. Red, White, ens Blue Silk. Red, White, end Rine Flannel. EYRS LAIDELL, FOUNTU aud Artctf, Streets- ETEEIC LANDELL ARE . OPENING A-A Bargains frcim New . YOTir A =WM& I:011111We Wets Woods. Faxhionebte fAhawls. Neirestthape itiangea. PlAin Ghallin. ahem@ shades. UN PERFECT INDIA SILKS, 13111PEERD PLAIDB.—These goads are slather and extra glom. Black and Wane Flaida. Brown sitC'Pl? bite Plaids. : • Blue and White riazaf , Purple awl White tvada. oraltE do LANDELL. FOURTH and ARCH Streets. G RAY SUIRTING . FLANNZLEI. Twilled Gray Flannel& Striped and Plead Free i* Gray.. glee, Watts, mid Red ring4l.oll. Gisy BianketallittlarAptaftEßS: cwra MUT Wed.-}l.l flizeete. VOULARD BILK ROBES. A vomit, of Rood-& p 4 now dßiigr of Foloard. wino o goodorior Qu&ktl. TAN fo /ow triad. liso. our rotoonnog otoo lg of imy Oswalt IStUfg marked to. • Yel l UM ' r"TEkiniitizsaliaceramts; , .„ on - g3TNUT , OOd:BIefITIL IltroOto. BLAUK StLE, istiANTLES. 04130P0f 0 ' ..LAROISOArti timaC, GNUs.E. oar. lan. wad t)t,ess_. .„ .... _ . . , Wtarattor Paola:tee Lux OF Altaic% gonna.— Sire .have not 'et bean able to review thisbi ography ,as it sleservos. It .contains the finest mount yet written of the gallant and neforinnara AnArb, who died. equally mourned by friend and foe. The antligir, Winthrop Sargent, is at - ..Philam, delphien,lbotiOrtovi not resident among us, and he, heti iiireatigitod nil matters reintignetti_ the life and : death f. Andre with soh ability and,in-., &wiry s make it one. of . the most. interaiting books pit insiked.fora long time. Three - 041411s especially devolOpi::Andries life, before 94404 U. tide 000ittry i *Tfitiiitionan in Pennsylianti, and the oinctunstailss of ' hie onhOPPY fate. The tie. acription of Philadelphia, whife. occupied by the- British, 4urinit'Ahe liOrrointion, Is. very graphic, and epteeria to be atadiedly asoirate, aim. .Mr , Sargent says,(it his : 'Preface : watt romantic , ,) nature of til - i t ; , tupoarnspe which.. otatneat .the Oita, Of Major "'(_tit f titi.,hiatOry of oar ite iolition„ lad inn; . !tof ! te time ago, to inquire mor. 01 011;d4 , inio ttie4:irdis Of the eneraeter that - seems to have Ipepircal, aowaroct an interest:in the minds of,allVOlits have bed occasion to observe it., In this undertaking .I am frei'to confess that my 3110.0418 in yhhieing interrelation has been 1301 n. nienituratO neither with my labors nor desires. -No pains, indeeld",` reeve spared to prooure intelli gence concerning Antbh himself. Every 'lappet. 'tory that itcdid be heard -of 'Wan examined and the" Old World:tiles of those who mumble their wisdom o'er tint gossip's bow!' have been care• fully gathered arid sifted. Thus, much curious matter, mere or lose relevant to his story, has been brought . ttlgetheir from one quarter or an. •cither ; and byjoirting what has hitherto namely been known at all with what every one knows, something like a connected Sketch of his career has been et - implied. SeVIITAI 6f the manueeript authorities that .1 have made use of (such as the Notes of Sir henry pluton on a 001/ of Stedman's American War, and the original journals and papers of members of either party in our AnvOlii• tion).appearad to me to prateres no light value, and I thought it well to take advantage of an oppor tunity to set their contents before the world ere the documentsi themselves should perish; for, as honest old Aubrey inn 'tie pittle that they should fall into the merciless hands of women, and be . put_ umiak - The volume, published by Ticknor - ' rielde, IS embellbhed with a portrait 'of Major Andra, and illustrated with a map, showl ing the locality of Arnold's treacan. Cocput's Novena, fithirnararc ar Diner. —This edition ' constituting the best got-up series ever published in this country, draws rapidly to a close. Commeneed nearly twe years and a half ago, a volume each month has been issued with exemplary, regularity. :We have juit , recceived Afloat and Ashore," originally published 10 1844, 111111 , " Frets/anon," the - last of the series, though the first written, will appear on the fret of September. All through, the skill of the en gravers upon steel and wood hasfaithfully and spiritedly acted up the talent Of Mr. Dailey, the illustrator. ' The engravings upon steel are par ticularly good. In the present volume, the two vignettes were from - the burin of P. (Hoch and R ninghetwood. Upon the - literary cha meter of "Afloat and• Ashore" little need now be said. The work is not equal to ':The Pilot;" and some other of Cooper's best see-reepartoes, but it °woes a foremost pleas among his Islet prfi duetions. The story ends rather abneptly,:with a ducking, but in a succeeding volume, called Miles Wallingford," is properly concluded. Mr. S. McHenry, 406 Wainut street, is Cole agent for this series of Cooper, Le Philadelphia The publishers are - W. A. Townsend de Co.', New York. Immure' Via! , POCICAT Lextoort--tippincott Co.c have published a tiny volume of 563 pages, - poutatkipg eougderahly; over 20,000 words not keg- PRICE I ISE= n FLE.:II.-.1, two osa three words, and many of the names of elitism*/ mythology,, and the principal scientific and teohni cal tonna We do not estimate, although Its di= mint:dive doe wild permit it, that this Lesieen will her carried about in the vest pocket, but it will be found rueful to have it always at hand when reading, as natnerUnil words aeons,. the skeet Meaning of which it is pleasant to aseertain, at once, without groping through a age dictionary. The definitions are plain and accurate, as far as we have had time to test them, and the compiler, w. aro gled to notice, spelicaottording to W 02614- ter- , that ja, spells English as the English do. Dsa have . a i r :f p .. 11:0 0b 1Y R y f jwt.osfAl'Hth. e;:purnesirlige,najtanUttjtifill4Litu.taiW744Ahlehreye. — Oen . tue. . t .:4 a u d siiiver.eloua~_ The boundary lines of the ta mew mbialnd the Gold Region of Oi '-" :=l3 l llaVet istrodoced: - .MILOAULAY'S HISTORY' op ENGLAND...-. E. a. AnUer do 00., of this city, _have brought out the 'thole of this work in one Soo volume, with the asthor's last corrections, and a a full index. This lathe cheapest edition of Disiottiaay. Oar.nunn ADAMS' NEW NOvith...Mr. Doolady, New York,""has published 66 The Outcast," a tale of the present time, the scene principally in Charleston, but partially in New York. Mr. Adams is an able writer, we admit, bat we quasi ton the propriety of his presenting snob minute details of the actions of Vice as be lays before his readers. He is very satirical upon Charleston . society and Southern institutions. On the whole, the impression left on onr mind by the perusal af . "The Outcast" is far from agreeable, and we ear tab:ay should not like to see the book in the hands of any modest female. Arnix..--The Magni- LORTON Aar-Arovitata... ,l YO n lions upon steel outlet_ of Wilkie's Wounded Guerrilla, Turner's Death of Nelson, and .fitra . Thornyeroft's Statue, The Skipping Rope. There are several articles illustrated by beautiful wood engravings, and among these Mr. Benson 3. Los- , sing's pen-and-pencil description of The Hudson, - from the Wilderness to the Sea, is entitled to fore most praise. The Art-joupna, now in its twenty third year, is an Anterior= as well as ea ruttish institution, no great is its circulation in this court: ,;ry. WBSTMINSTKB ROVIIIIT, No. Cr iv.tu—From Mr. Zither, the agent here, we have received the New York reprint of this Review. Its best artiolei are upon Voltaire's Itomences and their Moral, hi which the French phi/asap& is attempted to be vindicated front the imputation of having been an Atheist, end en examination of Eton and the edu; oational system panned there, which is searching to such a degree that it must hasten the reform in the endowed schools of England which is.very muoh needed. -That a hoes education at Eton should cost 14„250 per annum, (at the very least,) and that the Read Mester's emolument, betides a fine residenoe, should reach $30,1300 a year, each of his assistants: averaging half as much, is -so outrageous that we wonder how ohs Hull could have submitted to wilt, alt imposition nntilottoir, The opening artiole in the pretenf !amber is an attack upon Mr. Ringeley i e inaugural teeter* on the Studs of History, delivered by_lint ae recently appointed Profeesor of History in the University Of Cambridge, and there seems no small personal spite in the herd sating whieh 'Mr. Kingsley here gets. There are papers upon the Sicilian Revolu tion, and upon the recent Reforms in Austria, 'which show oonidderable knowledge of Anr9ran politko. The Reviewer's opinion is, that Hunger ry, even should she take no active measures, will, probably, obtain all she demands from Austria, which Is bankrupt, and must press for a solution, in ease - the ultiqw. rcr,,ho. be invoked. "if the -Hungarians hold out," we are told, " as there can, beam doubt they will, Austria must either yield' and be content to rule Hungary as Norway is ruled by Sweden, or she must once more have recourse to armed fore* end try and rale as she has done, sines 1849." The notices . of contemporary Litera ture are generally written with ability, fairnecs, and discrimination, but we confess our surprise at finding the Westminster Review vehemently vie- . &sating Mr. Hepworth Dixon's Apology for, end 'Denial of, Lord Chancel/Or Bacon's corruption (bribe -taking) on the judicial bench, What Bacon himself was compelled to aordodo, no one can deny. The London Tunas, we &serve, has given a loos and obis, review of Mr. Dixon's one-sided and Ile• olamatory deface* of Bacon. It will be remain. bored, by those who have read the book, that Ba aim confessed his guilt, (st I do plainly and . Inge summit confess that 'I was guilty of corruption; and do renounce all defence, and put myself VIZ Cameron &Wizen, of ,Camerontoormly, pub upon the grace and mercy of your Loriships,") 'Mlles an account of the serfs being made by. 061. but Mr. Dixon oonteula that Bacon made this T. L Kane to raise a company of volunteers. The confession, which covered him with undying Citizen says : • &grace, In ardor to plisse King James, and on Na little excitement was created in this place on consideration of a promise of the Royal clemency. Monday h eO fie b ing lesulostestatewaerrill h v n al own of C w o u l. toT. L. The Times says 4 ' 6 the theory that this ,confeslion o K eor n e e, volunteers to defend the couutry...Thi Cola was a pure falsehood deprives Behan even, of the • arrived , shoat. six. o'clooltin disowning, and in little grace or credit , that was left to him.. Me less then three hours over twenty l nitt e rt re hr i eau Maturate this presentment of Bacon's osse . /.7 tiot/f r nero w : Wa te r: d are f o nal o sn uhe v i a somewhat familiar but Orlin** ineedota. 7.11. h arts o r thoonsty. This wirnadrafirr prisoner in Newfoundland, iteoutted of theft , " end - lash : or , men than wither of the counties' Of 'Pot who Pleaded POO', wits,moltortholoss , acquitted by ter, MoKese, or Elk; Col. Kane_left_Atr the jury. You may think youreelf: a , lucky fel- peer, on t rai n e i l an ul= , , _will !, hie re mat - lire Jeri,' said the •Older.leatkc who - triad Atint,`• but 13 latter rlimo o do not compel him to.start immediate: lir Your oill,_9 0 ilfoloho?la ,a thief, sad hr ty. for Harrisburg, be, ill reMrato title plias OR inapt Of thlkjilif:'you are `, a ina.' We may 8l ,TiMiodsy. was impacted that he wcaddtiddress • • , WO and** for aPplying ao'r,ra4 .parulls l ) but the MAY '3, 1861 New Publicatione. 1 .411 / le precisely the ease of Bacon as presented by i his advocate." - Nottrirdwantoen REVIRW, No. fixer —The new nembeV of this Quarterly has reached no through' -hfr. Ziebor, no contents are ituMniently varied, avoid point in such a periodical, end there is' marked ability . in a few of the artiolei: that upon. Slaret7,,ite Origin - and its Remedy, might hero beim adlantageologynnaitted at the present erislor It .ii ei , politioti.religions statement, all- upon one aide.: * The beef:nth% here Is called The Liters ,thre 'Of' Poirer. , It ii a , - review of , Mr. Mamon'a l8ii• -bi;4lr.' Upon "Deafen ligTolista and their files," the critic deieloping his own views, with' , ::e4tisidekible knowledge and'much eloqunoe, ripen r a ib. prose action , g rabs :11y " touching upon :,,i ginative, literature in general lie demribes ,:the romance ae belonging to an early age ; the' -nerd, to an advineed period of. society. True Seth:in; he jous t Can never be the direct oppoeite. , of Mt, The moat connunmats genius cannot hers oiettn titeriali. • These - Nature must furnish; : Art can only'oombine them. He adds, Impree- - 'direly, ".We need not dwell 'Amon - the , fact, 'that rear living history; slob as' glow"- in the pages of liticaulay; tiarlylei and Motley; gives alar more' impressive relatibehreverits than the most minute slid. , eittended 'angels.- Better the Awe of a Nie buiti:,,:spenning thefirmite.andnhaos of intervening centuries, than the eyes of a hundred chroniclers living amid the rush of passing eventa. Far bat ter than a bare and aeottreite likeness of our Wash. legton, the rendering of Mills, who, seising upon a critical monient, a maeter.oooasion, one among ten thousand" in the life of the hero, has wrought oat an exquisite idealizatlonof - th e passion that , then moved, of - the strength and skill that stemmed the tide and directed' the orieie." He deolares, " It is only in those works that ap proach, though at a great distenee, the modern noiel—the (comedies of Greece and Rome, and the Roman' satires—that we get any view what eier of the popular life And ao the most successful modern delineatiOns of " - ancient life are not found in essays and books of reference, but rather in ouch works as The Last Dayeed Pompeii, The Roman Traitor, and Hypatia." pinalir, while , .rendering puttee to U,nlwer; and Dickens; he has' a well - merited tribige,to the genius of Scott, who, "in all the varied characters he 'portrays, never fails to be true to fact and probability; yet never t'aila perfectly to identify himself with the Aurae .tera be delineate'," and doolares, with equal truth and discrimination, "A gallery of historical por traits, as brilliant. and as truthful aa those in Clitrendon or Maasulay, Inlets in the magic Pagel of Scott • Indeed, there is scarcely a single impertaat period in British - history which to not .reproduced in his novels better thin onywhere else. The character of the gallant but nnfortunate Prince Charles Hdward, in Waverley ; of Clam:- house, in Old Mortality; of the noted Highlander, hillith Roy ; of the Duke of Argyle and Queen Caroline, in The Heart of Mid-Lothian ; of the . personages'e and deeds of the stirring times of Richard the Lion-Hearted, in Ivanhoe; of the he roes of ohivith7;in The Crusaders ; of the unhappy Mary Eltrirt, in The Abbot ; of Sussex, Raleigh, Leicester, and Queen Elisabeth, in Fenilecorth 1 of the court and age of the weak and pedantio Jame" 1., In The Fortunes otNigel ; of society In the age of Charles hi., in Peveril of the Peak; of Oliver Cromwell, in - WOOdstoOk ; of the times of Lout; XI. of France and Burguedy, in Quentin Dur ward ; and of Byzantine life, in Count- Robert of Pans ;—these together afford beyond comparison the nubbin instance in ell literature of the power of genius to make the past its own, to evoke its personages and events, and make them seem real ' and living." There are portions of another article, upon Travel fn' Europe, which also deserves especial 'notice. These refer to the manner in which Arne rioen-travellers are received in Europe, and par. tionlarly. in England, and to the marked contrast' between the modes of life la London and Paris, and the difference between the appal:ease° of the two rival capitals. Here is the summing up : "In a word, comparing the three lending na tions of Europe—the Frenoh, the English, and the flerman-l- we should eharaeteriie them thnet....The French" Mee talent; rthe English common ~..._.,-.1 the_Gainianr: genitor. - - - French are vein, the Ralph proud; - stra-a5.... Germane self-centred. The French are theoreti cal; the English practical, and the Germane ideal. The French live' in a world of fumy, the English of Lot, and the Germans of thought.' The Branch- Min is gay, the Englishman comfortable, and the German happy. The Frenchman is an Epicurean in his philosophy, the Englishman a Baconian, and the German a Platoniet The Frenchman haa manners, the Englishman morality, and the Ger man religion. The Frenchman has taste, the . Englishman head, and the German heart. The Frenchman dashes like a liti mide of saltpetre, the Englishman buns andzsmokes like a Ire of his own bintmleatta.eoali while the German glows and heats, and will continue burning dike tv geed solid anthracite gra, hard to be kindled and hard t beim!, out." .. . And a comprelieaflhii.LA-naner_uppn the Docn.' vary labors of that veteran national antiquargam and historical collector and author, Peter Pores, of Washington, there is nothing else here which demands notice. A brief review of Mr. Dixon's apology for Lord Chancellor ri mon,while it declares that the book has "done not a little to remove from Baoon's memory the load of obloquy which as rested upon it for nearly two centuries and a half," (Cud which is not removable, until Hlatory be mute,) complains that Mr. Dixon "bee too often drawn a hasty oonolualan, or glossed aver some doubtful action, or ignored some disrepute-, hie proceeding, or confounded mantle dhitine gone, to permit us to regard him as altogether trustworthy. In - some other qualities of lesser importance, Mr. Dixon's voluMe ie also open to criticism. It is fragmentary in form, and instead of presenting an artistic portrait of the great . Chancellor, it is little more than an ill-compacted collection of materials, from which another hand must select the really,. characteristic portions. 'The style, too, is at once flippant and ungraceful, aiming at the praise of smartness at the expense or dignity , and elegance." PRISBYTIMAII QIYMITSIILT REVIEW, N 6. XXXVL—The articles here, not religious, which a scouter journal can properly notice, are, (we name them in order of merit,) those upon the Arrow•head Inscriptions, the titallicao Church, (translated from a German onbiloation,) City Churches, • and Motley's History of the United Netherlands. The first of these, on which the ac cordance of Motor,' with the scriptures is ably pointed out, may be said to exhaust the subject. ID the notice of Mr. Motley is an angry immolation of that author for hie comment upon German Oat vinbriu, when describing Barneveit's religions faith, es follows : "To believe it worth the while of a rational and intelligent Deity to create an nually several millions of thinking beings, who were to straggle for a brief period' on earth, and to consume in perpetual brimatone afterwards, while othetifWere predaatined to perpetnal enjoy. meet; seemed-to him an - indifferent exchange for the faith in the purgatory and paradise of Rome." We did not know that' the Presbyterian belief is this: - hat, if it be nor, we wonder why the Pre:- hymnals Review should attack Mr. Motley, and declaring Cromwell-and William 111. to be " tho rough Calvinists," intimate-Gist Calvinism was "the very element of their greatness, and the very hidings (?) of their power." As a poiat of verbal. criticism we question the grammatical accuracy of the:reviewer's next sentence, " Macaulay was more logical, if as inconsistent as Mr. Motley." More logical as Motley is surely incorrect. ______..------- (For The Prowl • M. EDITOS : In your paper of the Ist instant is inserted e copy of a letter to a mercantile house in' our. city, from A. C. and A. B. Beech, of Neatrille, promising to make an effort to pay their, Eistern ; indebtedness, when the war zs over, and the smoke of battle clears away ; until then nothing :can he done As an Whet to the above do la the favor to pub, lish, aide by side, the following patriotic letter of Morgan & Co., Nashville Nesuvratar, April 23, 18031. Glixtworm ; Elplosed find cheek of the Union Bank, on Manhattan Co, New Tork, for three thousand dollars. We would have remitted more to day, but could not procure the exchange. We intend to meet all our engagements promptly, war or no war! Repudiation is not the weapon we fight with, if fight we intuit, which God, in His in finite mercy, forbid, Your friondo, The Duty. . ot Southern Woolenat, the I,forth t and what we heliove to eon. ; statute tine Southern Patrigiiom. graven 's," Tile Pitt ii The gleetee tairloilein tat liar oharaeterl : ed the ooliitna of iotif fotirrial , d ring thellitoultles Chit have , surrounded those to whom the destinies of this nation have been sisigned, resulting at lonia liiti. , s4neral breaking n 4 tt of tillthe oid.eooleVand friendly relations here- I ,fere enistilig_betwiten residents of the North and South, has ; been noticed by me with a degree of Sittiffillotion - that cannot have bean unfcdt b *on- 1 sands of Your seeders, if they, Myself, are net eirountaaribufe in Vinton,. nor their poops of. hanoi, right,rand optiy, bounded geOgtaphioal lima, the Okitlial of self.ilggrandlsemant, pout interest..or that more , contemptible blind ness, produced by a fabie-bearted bigotry and self l i. ' o „4 llo .tilhootiotto rolliglon..% &native Of the moat sax gime - peint or, these ; our, United Statee r ttion l utuier r the ifere And strifes, even beTteith the ahn- ; the o'f "old Fort Angnatine, from *Mae saritiet they then - Waved—l, a dinettes. of Florida, beg to 'address myself , through your 0 00111413 1 le Southern' lodize, and - piitriiii to4hian - What I believe to be theklitt, of every patriotic tidy, wife, or mother , born in-the South, now resi nt in this city, or ,at. any ,othar:plan the korth. , , It would sot be strange er unnatural II there t were to be found lurking in the breaats of some , of these peculiarly situated;wives and mothers born in a Southern clime, and _educated in South- Sill Institutions, an inward uprising of patriotism and loyalty, that the "fate of ptaes" renders it difficult for their batter judgment to embody and give expression you, ladies of. the .Sontli, who by your own free wills hare united your deetiny by marriage trith that of your Northern husband, and, eons.- quently, contrigned the fate of -your offspring, be it either good or ill, to the result of the AMOCO Of these who are outlet i upon to stand up-for the Linton, we ask, would , you haveyour husband array *melt. in opposition to it, or assume that more distordly and Iy:tomb:lkons intormediate position of neutrality, which, in..timo of .war, stu manly, and altogether wanting in, that great prin. olple which constitutes the greatest and noblest 'stare, of a free man? No, newer ; it would be centre:7 to.all few, both human and Wino, for the great T4aw-tifiver has said, "Ye cannot letTe trio masters," and we believe it to be good legal Miriam*, that the itoppression of a truth is equal to the utteranoe of a falsehood, and that he who 'stands lettsile6 by and beholds a murder, is an lie.- Osamu to the crime. Our memory is going book to the eondition of society, the hutoeurity of property and life in Flo lido while a Territory, her mourns by savages, king tights of vigils and hours of torture and =o pens., growing out of the immediate presence Of ";Bacteola," " Bil ly Bowlegs," and Wild Oat ; the termination of the r iorida war ; the opening of the Everglades, and the Introduction of steamboats upon her waters, and looomotives through= her sivempe, where a single horseman could not wend his way through. All of these changes have platy followed in the history of Florida Since hes Odoption as one of a band of sister States. And all of then changes and Improvements were as complished by what? Naught but the generous liberality and fostering care of her paternal and adopted " Uncle Sam," and the advantages do ily= from being one of the Untred States of Animas. ; Gar later memories leads us book to the lend of flowers, and of Indians--the garden spot of the world—the Eureka of a Houston—the republic of a - day—the lone star that would have dimmed and gorge out bed it not boon for the glorious offolgenoe it was enabled to shed abroad by ite own absorp tion and reflection of the light of thi sister stars with whom she became united, and to, whose cm-, braces her noble father consigned her, end by the blaming of God, with whom rmallanated eve r t i t a t he will still live to see her again with. her sisters in the same household. Still later, in a foreign and still more sadism elites, in a land of oppression, of , civil war, of Weakness, and of crime, we Struggled bard to ha plant, nourish and support sleuths that we hoped weir& ene_aes, grow and ripenksto a It _prototy of the model eovernment - or the World. Traitors . _ there ruined our hobo , vanquished ens ultimo, and blotted out the footprints of progression that we had made. We came back to pass the remainder of our dayn in the quiet of civilized life, beneath the protecting folds of a flag that in many a land has yielded us protection, and secured us respect. We are now here—here or eisewhere—either with ens pen, our knowledge of binding up wounds aid nursing the sick upon the battle-field and in the camp, with our mix-shooter or rifle, if needs be— which God grant it may not be—that flag and that Union in which alone are safety, honor, and virtue. It is not for us now to revert back to wrongs, imaginary or otherwise, that the Beath may have entered—to the bitter feelings, engendered, and the heart-pains endured by brothers and sisters of the same family whose lots have been oast either north or south of Mason and Dixon's line. It is long" u or notice those hire. day, have brought upon and these soul (mallets. Thelawsa n diatthihr&-- toe die is vast. We are for or against that which has established us a people superior to any people God ever created, and a nation respected above any nation upon the lewd God's footstool. snail we women of Southern birth, with expansive minds, exalted thoughts, pure motives, religious sentiments and patriotic hearts, remain upon neu tral ground, or set as beeomes the women of America to aot—for our country first, and CM country-seats nfterwards ? "Idensana F. Lawst.vrx Yonne. (For The Prow.] The following is an extract of a letter, written by a gentleman in this city, in reply to one re ceived from Captain Alexander Montgomery, quartermaster at Fort Smith, Arkansas, dated the lath ult. The captain is a loyal eon of Pommy]- . yenta, and springs front an old and distinguished family. "Ile was compelled, on the 25th ult., to haul down the Union flag, and surrender this im portkut post to an overpowering Sarandon force. Re expe cted the attack for some time before it oc. ourred : GERMANTOWN, Philadelphia:Co., Pa., April 27,1861. Mr Dees Caramel YAWN of the 16th int. was gladly received last evening.. It was news to me that Vol. E--- was again in your neighborhood, I presume on a tour of inspection. * * * * * The telegram of yesterday brought the news of the surrender of Fort Smith, with valuable Agree; Zoo. It is a pity Major Gathin, the command ing officer, did not order the whole establishment to be blown ,np, or set and, so that the great warrior, doctor, lawyer,' quasi-statesman, &len Borland, could have illuatrated to the world a new vein of talent—the Selene* of military re construotion. " For shaving and tooth drawing, ectobarana and sawing. Dicky ains is the man." Since the secession of 'Virginia, I am of opinion that all the Slave States will eventually go out of the Union. I will, however, at the present mo ment except Delaware. St. Louis is no place for you. The position would be excel:dicey ha raasiug—bekweeti tape our DienniOn U end Union Washington would be y beatace pl ; it will be the grant field of the coming fight, and the depot for immense military-stores. Thore exists no government upon hiatorie record that bas ever boon disrupted on so flimsy a pretext as ours has been without a fight, and a long continued one. It will not odour, however, until each party has conoentreted large military forces —forty to fifty thousand men on each side. Davie and Beanregard have seen too much service to make the attack witbont HMO prOkbility of woo °ceding, and the Uovernment will be careful to have sufficient force successfully to defend itself Pennsylvania has her blood up,-and expeots all her eons to do their duty in FLU tainlng national au thority. The litselemissiets have pliteed themselves In the unenviable position, that after eommib do ting a heinous offence, they imPerativelY mand all good men to sanction and justify the act. They make the igeouilaions demand upon the parent Government to recognise the diabolical rhea* of destroying the whole some prosperity of thirty-one million of people, and threaten ample vengeance if the crime is not sanctioned. Now, sir, they will have a fine time in executing this terrific threat. Their cotton and earn fields will be covered with tares and thistles In theft effort to destroy the groat NOrthatill Mid dle, and Western power of trio magnifica t Con federacy. Divine writ doss not say slaves lave your masters but obey your musters. In the event of Anal separation of all the Southern States, it Is my firm belief that the Border States will not have the tenth part of their above population remaining after the lapse of three years ; therefore, they have nothing to lose, but everything to gate, by remaining loyal to the preponderating power. Since the enactment of the fugitive-slave law, lb great national conservative power of the North has been exerted to enforce and sustain its provi sions, and there are bet few instanoes where the master ham been refused his slave, eyed in the ul tra Abolition sections of the coontry. Seriession destroys this conservative power, and the men who have. heretofore ably and willina l .7, 6 " taillied the The re national law, will become apatiisite. P/7 will respond from every Northern heart—gentle men of the South, you have selected your own des tiny, you have destroyed "government, the like of which no eye has seen or heart ever before eon- . calved- We cremes a Union the admiration and astonishment of the world—Get your property the bessiosig go, E•ri• - 4'it Nacre have asked me, my dear Captain, to write My opinion relative to your future line of action ; s o regards the condition of our unhappy atd beloved oountry. I have dine so, with deference te your superior j adirunat and aroarlanet o • MORGAN AI CO TWO CENTS. THE 'WEEKLY PRESS. Tax R r nanTir PUPS will be met to enheeribere by mall (per annum In 'Weems.) at 92.00 I Three Cornea. " w &AO Flee "19.00 Ten 0, 110.00 Twenty " " " (to one addreee) 110.09 Twenty copies, or over (to edema or each solororibord eaoh 1.130 For a Cob of Twenty-one or over, we will mend as extmoopy to the eatter.ne of the Club. llar ; W P° L ar.L t om ir ßte r ro ax a n r . o - re , Ineet , „ ell so sot am Annie for 1 Tu c ALtiroailitillik . ESS. f Issued three times a inoniliiiiitintelor the California t Steemere. . - • • lAn Answer to “Setter." I [For The Frani PHIti.DELPEItet, May 1, 1861. The strictures upon " The 13ermOn of Mr. RI& ism," by " benoz," ThAiNss of thistnorning,. seein-to'deinand some notice:,-.ln the drat place,l wish, most'ieflpeoffully, but most :ehrnisily; tb re againit the /Woollen of publighing any such strictures at all in any other paper than the one in which the' sermon itselt apPeared, as +Wen lated to prejudice readers Who will not be likely to have an opporteuity to 'read the sermon andjadge of It for theutelvesi - BecOndly, i what to object to the whole burden of the, innuendo and assumption (for argtunent it is not) by which “fienint",at tempts to - faitan a oinstruction of his otql up i the eminently patriotic and eloquent dhutintree Blinded to. "Without attempting a critical initlyitht 'Of the die:eerie," says- tienea," 'bniety' riiniark that the gist of: the reverend gentleman's argument is bese(1:10 the assumption that the for.: *Able abolition.of t slavery in the Sositbere States is the Hole object of our Government in eoucentreting our, patriotic volunteers at' the capital I.think. it would have been Utter foi gg . bathe ate tempted a more " withal aneveir or the sermon than he seems . to have made before he realised upon hie ungenerous assa u lt upon - it, or, at leist, to have" Wiped hie , spectacles as he read it, If he read it at all. An one who both heard and rdad'it,' I mini say that I cannot see how any one could possibly have drawn this inference from it, unless, indeed, his.mental eyesight were perverted by the eaMit hind of Madness which rules the hour in the South. Does "Sanaa" pretend that Mr. Furness under. takes to speak for the Government—to become its organ ? Hoer prepottereue I take It that he mites no such asstunption, and does not premixes or intend in Any way or manner to indicate what are the policy ; and intentions of the Administration re•• speoting slavery or anything else, He is neither, its adviser, `l4/1 6019solenoe- keeper, or conicseo' r; and he knows no more of the in6ntsorm of the President than he is enabled to judge iron' the piblished words and the sets of 'cur Chief Exams- The sermon spoken so eloquently laotliunday morning.had reference tothe manner in whichlhe nation, a few weeks ago apparently drifting so helplessly, to destrgotien, was manifestly being guided by . the Unerring Wham which rules all dea- Gates ;• and in A:way which vie looked not for, hid. united the whole North as a band of blitherit..* " Neither prophet 'nor saint ever bad a MOM lui- Posing demonstration of an unearthly protract', than !relays here and now, in the great new heart which is sending its throbbing tides through our whole population, and widoh has been arbated an. instant,in: the twinkling of en eye—by ,the same Power that :said, ' Let light. be,".and B i ght wag." :*. 24 "We are ne longer what we seemed—a mere Mass of Individuals, dime:Met/it' and repellent, but ' ,mighty naticin, and miry man and women-every child, nosr feels the ireatilde of a nation's life coursing in him and through him, and this great - Northern Company a ninstaen Ststesis animated by one august, living The: sermon is intended to exemplify, Area foreible illustration which we are now having, the steady working of the pivinelaus towards truth, and pesfeetion ; and if, in the unalterable nature of Mina; wrong Must give. ay SO right. and slavery must fall before"" this &dank rotate reetion, this awakening of the Genies, of the' Ns% tion," shall he or we, or all the world, be Veined for seeing it ?—aye, and for proclaiming it? Saw ly not. Slavery's daye are numbered now,;us surely as is this mad, Insane death-struggle it hie sat up for its last hope. But nowhere in the sermon ic abolition mentioned ; the slave is hardly alluded to the theme it higher, giander, more far-fetiefi= . ing than either: . , Lastiy, I beg /cave to protest against the pro test of " Sonia" in regard to -the • publicatien;tof Mr. P-'s sermon: Whatr• Shell we, claming •tp be free, to be .the„expeoint chatnpimis ttue•liber ties oar fathers left ae, refuse the right of•lrtmt/M -cussioxi by.every and all channedc, to thole. eVen- • with. viliernwe disagree _ What t;ease!*.gpipt i bilit::: our HOlO, greater ,tlyin thin?' Nei might :gm_ suspects Otte friend" to hate imbibid a tionoof i quality of that'nidneas 'again! which the . tuition' is , iirming„when•his fevered imagination can find more terroi •in a priniod - seinzoir. - thsw lgo:csegy - thousand men on soorgetown beightsrarined Nip a-pie, with Beantegard at their head I", GENERAL NEWS. WE Imderstarid th a t General been advised by GoVerner Morgan not:to:sea any; . more realm, gift, of k regularly orpnistd militia out of the MILLS. The - regiments that have already- gone'forward will be quite sufficient* take Imre of tneespdtal until. the volunteer forces arrive ; when they shall arrive in *Silent foroe,•itia,the intention of the' Governor to_ order the :Minh* • home. , Many of •oiti• regiments, spelt aA thilitilisr -79111; and 55 itt, will be sadly disappointed at Mt nag an opportunity to prove their panto**. But the tau% cannot be helped; and the troops will havdtommtent themselves with home settles for a week or, two at least --N. Y. Son.. - • Tan WAR TO nn Oinninn INTO lem n itatmliton, sou of Alexander itemnton, war with the reb eis~ the and on .a male of such magnitude -as Mott dfivtr treason to cry for quarter. Is cannot be doubted that the Government at Washington will obey thr nepenthe demand of the country fora permanent settlement of the controversy with the South.: • A GELEXT AEB.OLI.VTIO FEAT.- - TheMein= • nazi Gazette aaya that Profetsor Lowe amended:is his balloon from that City on Saturday morning, April 20, and returned on Friday last, `liaVilig alighted near Columbia, S. 0 The Gazertsliirise • no particulars of Able wonderful feat In ballooning, exempt that Professor Lowe mates that, he landed at Columbia a Itttle biting one o'oloolii ortir evioceeding that on whiob he left Cinolniutd. distance travelled was over one thousgind miles„ making the rate of speed' at which :the . helix% moved about- one hundred-and ten atlas ?rig- Dv the arrival , of the brig T. B. Wataesi. Captain Munday, we have. advioes from Porto Cabello to - April 16. Produce arrivals were staid: ; Prima ride high. Anew ministry has been formed at Careens. General Pace accepted the, appoint- ; mantel gincial-ixt-otilef of the arniles and, will: soon start for the eastern provinces with the oblaat' of corning to• some understanding - with Gen. Le title, one of the moat important oniefs-of tint Revo lution party.-rd‘rew York. Herald. Arruat - su.—A, passage in 4 i givaet iv was greeted with applauSe at the ilowardAttiesamta on Monday evenbg, which ban never before .elicited such a demonstration. In the advice given-to Laertes by Potowites are the following words Risme of entrance to it quarrel hut, being In; Beset, that oppe — sed tea39saTsra of th,Bo. - *When Mr. Gilbert recited these ;i , nce lea .itik planes was general in all parts of the theatre,.ent the incident revealed what strall.eiclusitrio proud - SUMO in men's minds the state of, the country new occu oic Uri obeli*, the attest; the .pliuse of - business, "the theatre; and at home,- the- &anthem rebellion la the great theme of thought arid eon veraation.--Boston Transcript. A MATTML YO as LODKED ASTER.—.I. la stated on pretty good iiiiitherity that as old trader on the African coast, and who left tilde port a short time shims. in a Teasel , well fitted for. psli. vatetring purposes ;for Savannah , has visited Montgomery, it **may be for the purpotte of taking gut a commission as a privateer; It is a matter that should be looked to.—Boston Traveller. • FORT Iio3ROR SAYSC.WO have the gratify. tag information, derived from an otßeer of high rank in the army of the United States, ,that col. Dimiok, at Fort Monroe, hes tinder hie command two regiments of volauseere and seven &unmade' of regulate, and that with these he is Strang enough to bold the fort against any twenty thou sand men whom tbe rebels canesring against it. Re has aim been liberallyeupp with provisions from New York• — •N us- •.• Aft. nerrhxy"rt from, Cairo inform" the-Chi cago Tribune that among tbe prises seized aboard the enemy's - steamers, were about five hundred z eneme eaps, , which the•boys appropriated to:their own individual use - in:, double-quick- time, , the seedy tilos which provi4ily Ooniitinited Aids headgear going into the river la wilily: Vietnam gentleman says that the Clamp will prove nearly self-sugtaining institution, and would be entirety go, if provision' were counted 'contraband as well as arm' and ammunition • Tan Itietssextitteerrs Eiawrit.—Theit r aiitnial -Intsat,gtoncer, referring to the performanoeg Of:IIIP regiment at Aunepolis in repairing' the railer., and manning the frigate Constitution, remark': - "We doubt whether any other single•regheilet in the country Could furtilth nob a N l o7= gent to reconstruct a steam engine, ley a r track, and bend the sane ofaman-ot IT is avery general that at the North onoNorthamman Im pression canh ip three Southern tine" and an equally general impression at, the & Ki th that one oonthera men can whip ten Nord"- orr , on es. Both : sections are destined to be aston ish/4.-14-41.mi11/ founiett. SUNDAY LAIT Id ST.. LOUIS.—The • police eammteaioners. appointed •by the Legislature of teet,ori, ohs new have; aerosol of St. Unlit, crea ted much • eneitement In 'that city on Sunday lay aloelog all thealquor "hops, beer "'loons, mid Sun day theatres. , Ins new regulation was generally complied with. . - Tice - Boston Post Understands that a'corti mittens Of 'about a hundred persons has b eau Orpn lied to wait upon those who dealt:De to express `sentiments in the present state of the country, number of politicians who have not yet ociarnitled themselves are on their list, And will be vifiiidl- A. (Suer:tarn) .Lora ART. RECOYRILIrD.—It ' h as 1.. 0 found out wattle a tow wooki,tuac awe girl , o f 1861 are not behind the'glris of 1778 tothe as* of the necallia - • . Feok LIVIRIA:--Acettunts from I ) February Mb arincasitoe the teeth of 'hire limey Beason, wit, of Hon. Stephen Benson, Presidiet ee th e Republie She was ID her fortieth year. PATRIOT
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