THE PRESS , 6.4000 DAILY, (SUNDAYS iramirnum By JOHN W. VORNNY. 11410 NO. 417 CHESTNUT ATRIUM 0,31.1..1: PRESS, r4111:/lie WNEY., payable to the carrier. oiled so Subscribers ont (Atha City at Dou.siss 4.001, Fora Dou.sara SOH Maim Morass, 1: 111 , vaults won Sts MoNyiui—invariably in ad' for tse time ordered. Tits-WEEKLY PLUMS, mo d to Subsoribers out of' the City at Vilna Dm of FIR ANNT.V.,IIM advance. itrILLINERY GOODS. a„--liilAW AND MILLINNEY GOODS. 0-(JR ENTIRE STOCK —,„ortable and Fashionable goods. ar *‘" PRICES TO SUIT THE TIMM. LINCOLN, WOOD, & NICHOLS. HATS—SPEOL&L NOTIOE.— cot , tr a wl of BTRAVP' . and PALM - LEAF. RATS, fizil GREAT TILEGAINS, ru desirable goods,st NICHOLS LINCOLN., WOOD, & I 0. 925 CHESTNUT Street. - - P. " L eh ri r FRAMES. rit ENTC,}-1 FLOWERS. STRAW GOODS. IBS " • • , I•vel• STYLE'S CONSTANTLY itS- °LIVING. 4110 S. KENNEDY & BRO. NO. 729 cGESTNUT Street.beinv EIGHTH. MERCHANT TAILOR'. 0. TI-TOMPSON, MERCHANT TAILOR. F, CORNER WALNUT AND SEVENTH Announces a. New Stook of ENUNG AND SUMMER MATERIALS, FOR GENTLEMEN'S WEAR, j x ,sigung in part or very desirable styles of super fti vs and English Melton CLOTHS, COATINGS, :Ass; ERES, Ac.. selected with especial care and oaten to the 7/611t5 of a DISCRIMINATING AND f4sTIDIOUS CUSTOM. He offers the following inducements for your pa vase Good Material, a Perfect Garment, and e:veniality and Precision in the execution of el IrlarEcTiori IS RESPECTFULLY INVITED. LOOKING GLASSES. OOKING - GLASSES. vow god, gad complains r cow ar.d.aleaent mioo of LOOKING-GL.4SSES , o m binmg en the latest Improvements and futilities Ut SifilaCtUr e OM! norelneg in Walnut. and Gold and litconnoad and Gold Frames for MIRRORS. its most extensive and varied asoortmont u tAI onor- JAMS S. SABLE & BON, .4 L_E ' GALLE2III3 i ct-tt sin CELEXTII ST STILMET. C.ARIPETINGS. FRESH CANTON MATTING. 11. F. & E. B. ORNE, UPPOIIITY. EVATA iiOl72lE. gave now oven their SYcl IMPORTATIONS OF DOUBLE EX'TBA. .111PERIAL PURPLIL and KED ONECKNIP OA. N 0 MATTING IN •I.L THE DIFFEILESIT WIDTHS. All MODERATE PRICES J. F. & E. B. ORNE, OPPOSITE STATE HOUSE. I;rROCERIES. FAMILIES RESIDINO IN TUT RURAL DLSTRIGTB are urenared, as heretofore, to sus nly at air Country RUmulenoo B with every deeeritibolvof FMB lIROCESIES, TEAS, &c., kc. ALBERT CI. ROBERTS. RIONNEN NLEIVITIVE AND VINE STREETS myl EXCELSIOR HAMS. J. R. MICHENER & •ENEEAL PROVISION REALES& LID OURAUS or ram CEIABBRATED 'EXC3ELSIOR" IlUakß-CURED ii+!ASI SOL 1411 AND 144 NORTH. FRO= WIRER? {Between Arch and Ram Streets') PHILADELPHIA , moinstlf4selebrated Eximlmor Berne are ovum by & CO. (in &Style peculiar to themselves), an omaly . forfemay ass ore of delicious flaver,free from ajm icammt, tuts or salt, and are pronounced by W ines sepe.rior to any nos offered for sale. siol34lm BANKING. ICHENER & Co., BANKERS, No. 50 SOUTH THIRD STREET. TIME TAPER NEGOTIATED. :00.,ECTIONS MADE ON ALL ACCESSIBLE POINTS IN TELE UNION. ITOCIS AVM lugme BOIIGHT AND SOLD OD CONNEDISIODI Unonmait Butt Nolen bought at the lowest non of DIBOOnnt. Dodo rot age on England and Ireland. [In7B-aatuthlin AUGUST BIEMONT & 00., BAN XIZICS, 80 WALL STREET, NEW YORE., Wee °stirs of credit to travellers. email/ibis in carts of Europe, through the Mews. lothroluld of Pi* 11 . bantam. IrmaEltaTh thiplak Mans, and their ear ==3 JEWELBN, Ar.c. PATENT STUDS PATENT STUDS! jealurgroved Patent Lamer Spiral Nering _SAFETY tzlls. and the - Patent FRAKIi CENTRE. limier b thoronably unomi, and pperveteag adveotages over t,aeintherinvention, are being vernenerallY adopted G wiemen of taste. Sold Witolesale and Retail ONLY by ELI EEC:Yr:DEN, 708 MARKET STREET. 1.1 of Clocks, Watches, and aviary. _seleeteu4el. ' Mg: WATCH REPAIRING DERSONS HAVING FINE WATOIJES that have hitherto Oren no ootiltwW° to the setters. ere iwrited to brie ar them to our atoselar,bere, defeote can be remedied by thoronahly s esna eltenOlo workmen, and the watort warranted to give tnttris satisfaction. motel Clocks, Idrutioal Oozes, ice., carefully - Put Yu ,02 1Pliste order. PAita,-& JOLOTH-EX, teironere °Malebo:, MosieelpOiee, Ciooke,_&o.. rolu mkt cimarstairP.atrces. beUrsr YOUrtA. CABINET FURNITURE. Is prepared by Dr. C. P. BELLINGHAM, an eminent phyandea tif London. and is warranted to bnng out s Music set of - . IArtHIMOUR. OR A MOURTACTILE In from three to ax weeks. This article is the WY one of the kind used by the Fretegb and in Loudon and Pans it is in immortal ore. ' It at a; beautiful; economical. soothing. Yet merman - brig pompound, acting as if by MOO upon the roots, c o,wrieg a Malaita] growth of luxuriant hair. if ap plied to the scalp it will owe baldness, and canes to spnng ttp in the place of the bald spots,. firm growth of new hair. Applied according to, directions, It will turn SIM OF liimy . hair DLES.• and restore grey hair t o it, original [anoint it eon. smooth. a u d fiexibie. 'The " OSHA/ torrt is an indolent's:mil amino in ever! gentleman's todet, ant o tig e or t rig i thae they Would 1 49 egtil li xi v orbeni 'd are the only Agent, for the artiole .....---• in . united states, to whom all orders must be ad- (3 : II UE TO SHIPPERS or ..FREIGh... ' one 44F &Pox i for salel4„all„Drussiatx and the ~ ONGIIEreP, warranted to u ai Cit i zt ecurtaance of notice from the reviler author- : " -- : s l 4 Le ft o ±... v ni he gent to any who denim pot. Cowie forwarded by way of the PH.I.LADILL- De. . ... :o n•- .1.00 - neoked. on receipt of prime ''''''.../kliD it.EADtCIe RAILROAD to the Staten of have t•-• . - t a x -go to. or Wren,. •.laisou a 1, it Era 'PUCK r . it,by man, t•--TEriNEBB.E . g, LID VIRGINIA. and postage.. ' _____ ~,„ ._ ~_ ;;;;: tbe aiduiev, marked Not Contraband," and.fixtrgdo-a„ a•s.,„ ab,...._nleath these worth!. the name of the - ehinpar. The NOItAt , .. • . -smug Nev to ;'-'", ' of int must aLto anna en above, And -"V Street, w York. hoiti'd ol SIG description wi l le ioorardad ID States 114 IVILLAL- •-Nviiip Street. Phi the a 15 Agin. VVIII Y . pre s id enti mi . ipm . kci ,„'". ota. .."7 -- "' .... 5i , ~.m j 3174-1 above pain "' Trany DYOTT & CO., Ito. an Nort&a... •-- IabIIS4TO OPAL DENTALLINA.-We speak: e' pAi. .. practical experienoewhen spiv rAitla ik j) and tENTAIVA motile by Mr. Ole d ceigt , somrstion KUCK tr acts dec id edly e i s __ --.. r.the month an Meth that we ye wer , .' Revs it ROMs that is claim ed for it, _ , aourtneided wr Inalikemamit dentists wilmv t i o r to ex. tt n tri 03. ON. gum.. --............---. Cii - BIRFT FURNITURE AND BIL LIARD TABLEE. ',Nor e glare KOORE CATVIPI ;In B owl/ IsEcorin sritEsT. Cabinet Seethes". immeeion. Witt their exteheive artioi „ f i re .4or ntateraeortlyZkvinzvi, ed with 4141 t.i. T. fl 4 115n li f el ff i ti l iArepin 1014 t t AUG__ .. ' 4 •4*a. oy all who have um" them, aro prOir:: l.l ' the mane sewer to ell oti. • Woo the .. r o.ke quaaty . ~PaAl.7.- " ,..„0 .ei r o f their ue re:Or te MU- fear eta u'aleD,wm; arc familiar work. cgrw!" FREIGHT NOTICES. SP,g(JiAr, 1... 1 YR a L t o .btpElaalr.o . aortae Vita th.l...lnA ti l . 4 ; 3 h t— fre l ight it4 slir ""r ic. U t l ieN r et r zTated to them m r t "w , s paamoo to a otty agonaT.-r. t 07-ont G BUDD W l °' - TA ." addroix.. AME N. Is ;torah 'Araz, VrILM-STONES AigIaReSKONNS._ OreKY Moo.. of Grave-4mpg saelliiiirto to bik n r0a...10t em oat to 361 . 64 1b/111114 ottoorkero, at liladde oda o A. aTISII• 1414611 tinli AMAPA Wiry FAIRTYAMINI. . . . * 1 . ~" , , \V‘ \ { ; i .. , - - , -,,, .‘.,\ \1 ! r ',./ - i;;;"" ' '': '.: ' ' frtt ' D i ' ) ':•_l4 . :i , .--.. . . . . ... ....%,,,... ...„ 1 I INi . ~ .... _. . . ‘„ , !.7 v, _..... ,:._ ..„, , i_.....,„, ~ so ~,.r Ac ~_ . a•:.:_,:cl'•::: , . , --,------,----,•. i. - --- .A.,' .., E___ I- 1 ' 52 : -- .,•: •- •'‘ 4° ,„, , '-•%-:..::• ' :.„.-- i..-7-.. ' ..--. :1,11 . :, 0,,-- • --,-; -rfe • - ,11PT1.,, ' '.. . - ..,..:7,:i' ,--- --- - -;:.--;! W-21 .9."....> , --:, . -- :2 - 4 --- -- •, C ,iii . , :....„.-..---,-,,,---,.-0r,...v.„,-......,..„...-- -. - 47 - te- - "!'".:-.; I'.- -4, - - , rii w ? 7 -, ._ -- , - 4 ,- -"14,-7,-; . ':—:: ' ....--- • 77 .- -.. - ' 1 •-:z,7 ''':,'.krl;7l-7:•;'::.P,,.-- ':1:"-:-' ; 4 41 17 lf : 119-1 : 7 171 ----:!s . --1- iiii. "''''1. --1.:.`-'1- - ?. - - 7 " --:: ----'-- .4, ~.Is-'e,-4.1.-:-k----7..:-Zi--.."'f-,7-sit7;,;,,r- ~ - • -;_ L . : - --t, .• ~ , .--.;',,trlA-P II ~;.....f . ...1,,, , ,,,A;:•,... . - ..., , f: . ,._ . .- - . . . . ~• t . c a 1 . 7./ 1 7 - 1 ' ,-,. 1.: •.:?.,.' : , ..70 , ..., - , VOL. 4.-NO. 257. DRIe.6OODS JOBBERS• SPRING OPENING or CLOTHS, CASCIRERES, VESTINGS, LADTIRS ' CLOAKINGS, Attd all roods suited to MEN /LEH BOYS' WEAR, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. C. SOMERS & SON'S, 5516 altraiTNlT7 !treat. Fedor JAYNE'S RALE. mho--am .11411PRIEM. . 1 86] ri. W A Y 00_ No. AS Aolittle. 'Alia &MX 4Ellt• I.M . POUTICitS A." 01) .!c 1 .8.8.a1t• . . LIR Y a 14 _ . a -go‘[ fa Irstiozwla bassi APP ten Mu • tIOKI'LIt-11.16. 1861. I - DALE, ROSS, ife CO., DALE, ROSS. & WITHERS, HO. 521 MARKET STREET, Rave neer oven their fall. SPRING IMPORTATIONS or SILKS AIM FANCY DRESS GOODS. The attention of CASH BUYERS in espeotaliv in ,nted. rante-tm COMMISSION HOUSES. GRAY FLANNELS.II BLUE-GRAY FLANNELS. GRAY FLANNELS. BLUE-MIXED FLANNELS. THE CHEAPEST IN THE MARKET GRAY FLANNELS. FOR SALE BY TEE PIECE OR BALE, FOR CASH, BY JOSHUA L. B A TT ,Y„ . my23-tf NO. 913 MARKET STREET A . & w. SPRAGUES' PRINTS. UNION PRINTS. HOYT, SPRAG-IJES & C 0.., NO. 236 CHESTNUT STREET. 6619-2 WV:LLANO. 4210F7114. ie. 116 CRESTEUT STREET, AGIENII3 FOIL THE BALM Or DIMOBbIo MFO. 00.15 Parars AOD eIEENK MFG. COAUXIBLIcxF mplanntrlitirkrb MUM fine Bleached Cottons. SAIREDILE HOPE. BLACKSTONE, 4LAVERJS - JAIMSTOWII. REM RANK- SWEENY,. 'WHIM% AND BELVIDERE. Brown Cottons. STRAN ALLEN. MT. HOFE, FREDONIAH, IrT TANK, OHIO, OTOTON, VItIGINIA FAMILY AND MECHANICS' AND FARMERS'. TRAFTON,SLATEREDi'IIaLE , AND TEWETT CITY DENIMb AND STRIPES. LONSDALE CO.'S NANKEENS AM) EILSOIAS. 6LAJ3GrOW GOBBET JEANS. BOTTOKLEY'S BLACK AND SLENHAM CONS FANCY MIXED CLOTHS. STEARNS AND SAXTON'S RIVER CASSISLEBES. OREENFIFsLD CO.'S BLACK DOESKINS. JILOPMANT FINE JEANS, DOUBLE AND TW ISTED CAMISINERES, NEGRO CLOTHS. Ac. MINOT BASS RIVER, CRYSTAL SPRING.S.VRE SHIRE, BRIDGEWATER. AN D BRISTOL SATINETS. felg-tf Sul T, HAZARD, &, HUTOHINdow 110. 1131 EILEEITEUT err., COMMISSION MERCHANTS, FOR THE &ALE OF p - RTT , A DET,PIIIA-MADE GOODS. NNW PUBLICATIONS. T JIB DOOTRINK AND POLICY ow PROTECTION, :an HISTORY OF OUR TARIFFS, 711.051 Zlrg ORGANIZATION OF THE FEDERAL GOVERN . MENT TO THE PRE.SEI'IT TIME. BY DR. WILLIAM ELDER. Now that desperate assault is being made upon the new Twin° prefudice the public in advance against it, and. if possible, to have it repealed, it is important that its friends should be prepared to combat the specious arguments of its antagonists. Nothing will better serve this purpose than the alveulation of the pamphlet whose title is quoted above, whiohns one of the ablest end most Manning documents that have ever appeared m support Of the true American policy of fostering the malt industrial interests of our country. It will be forwarded by mail or express for 10 cents Per smite ;ropy ; To ocuts per deport.; dig per hundred. Address liIICG - WALT So BROWN. apl-tf Ito. 84 'SOUTH THIRD 'Street. Philadelphia. BOOKS, LAW AND fAISONLLANEOUS, neir and ojel, boaghe, sold. and exchanged, at the PHILADELPHIA-BANK BOOK STORE, 80. 419 CHESTNUT Street. Libraries at a distance purchased. ?hose haying Books to sell, if at a distance, will state their names. loam bineknxidates, editions, geioes, and onentiona. -wi s bativ--Boosassissesi BellJa- MUI IrialAUD:4sll/11Nreg early Books Diluted in and iirje l Zra l uild e &eon eviam, , vv.r; press. sent free. Janne, apsraired —feas-of JOHN. aBELL. TOILET AND FANCY ARTICLES. DO YOU WANT WHIBENRI3I DO YOU WANT WHISKERS DO YO WANT A MOVEITACEIE? DO YOU WANT A MOUSTACHE BET .T.TiaIIaITAM'S ONLEBRATED STIMULATING ONGUENT, FOX 111 E WEISS-ENS AND HAIN The sabsOribent take nleastue -in annumnoint to the citizens artholtnitad linataa that ther , have obtained the Arentrr far. and are now enabled to offer to the Amara= publio the above ituttlV-oolobtated and world-renowned article. THE aTIMUL&TING .014151.1ENT COL akrAM4X.4Ve. Oliquot Lalletemul , Dnasfasi souittwv iii;--tor Rani e dee s C M * end '204 , 341 PAONT Street. _ Mr U.—Orden r the divot unsortationef srty the &PM ashes, be jereetelay atito.; to, RSTAIL DRY GOODP. LADIES! DO NOT FORGET LADIES! DO NOT FORGET LADIES! DO NOT FORGET. LADIES! DO NOT FORGET That toe IMMENSE WHOLEIAIJE ISTOCK PRICE, FERRIS. & CO. is still offered for *ate AT "`RETAIL, No.. 807 CHESTNUT ST.,. FROItI 26 to 60 PER CET. BELOW TIM. MUM. RETAIL PRICES. DO NOT FORGET That you on buy ,T4CONETS, CAM BRIM MULLS. SWIStikAL NAB nOOllB. BRILLIANTEti, and all other desonetiorus of w WOOS. at the above LOW HATES. DO NOT FORGET That yen a= has AGRI:TING.. PILLOW,.And PLAIN and P RiPurED SHIRTING LINENS. HUCKABACK 4 , TOWELS of all KINDS. TABLE DAM ASKS, NAP KINS. every .kind of HANDKERCHIEFS. - and ail other descriptions ofLINEN GOODS, at the above - LOW RATIO& LADIES! REMEMBER LACE GOOD S, gy all kinds of EMBROIDERIES and COLLA RS, SLERVEa. SSTs, Walk!. 241'1"113. MAGNIFIC.ENT EMBROIDERED SKIRTS, QUILTS, &0., at v 0 CENTS ON THE DOLLAR. MORE ESPECIALLY REMEMBER That the above statements are FACTS, NOT FICTIONS And we reepe_etfullr solicit alPorho 'wish" to minim of the troth Vate A s i a t io l grinVaall, Mock. PRICE, FERRIS. & CO, Nb. SO7 CHESTNUT STREET. N.8.---NEW ARTICLES. sop places nhear - Printed Linen Canforias, neat styles, for lather.' and obildreife summer wear. 20 vanes at the " New atyle Nets," embroidered in colors. for Undereleeves, and covering bonnets. CONTINUATION OF IHE GREAT S ATE, OF CLOAKS, LACES, TRIMMINGS, Ara., In liquidation of the Estate of J. W. PROCTOR & Co.. NO. 708 CHESTNUT STREET. -The Stock °outlets of SPRING CLOAKS. ENGLISH TWEED CLOAKS. SILK CLOAKS AND SACQUES, SIDK.MANTILLAB, MANTILLAS, LACE FLOUNCINGS. FRENCH LACE MANTILLAS, FRENCH LACE POINTS, FRENCH LACE BOURNOUX, TRAVELLING SUITS, FLOUNCING LACES, DRESS AND CLOAK TRIMMINGS, tire., All in immense variety, and.to be sold at about eas half the tuna prices, fot the benefit of °reclaims. FARIS NLAN'EILLA ShIPOBIUM. mye-lm 708 CELESTrt UT Street. SHEPPARD, VAN HARLINGEN, & AR RD3ON, ' 1008 CHESTNUT ST.. Invite the attention of nurohagers to their mamas* large and well-seleotad stook of LINEN AND HOUSE-FURNISHING DRY GOODS • --- r• - • • OTIRMAINS AND OITETAIN -MATERIALS, HOSIERY, EMBROIDERIES, ' - CAMBRIC HANDKERCHIEFS, ETO., .ETC., which, having been imported under the old 4rir, can be sold much below the present market rate. They beg leave also to inform their onstomere and the rift Vila T. that d;ir they-rill date itiflugid paid for on delivery. varl-Sn NEW OLOAK AND MANTILLA STORE, No. $9 SOUTH NINTEL STREET, FIRST DOOR ABOVE CHESTNUT. The finest qualities, the newest designs, the very best work. and reasonable pruies. Sir THE LARGEST AND BEST STOCK IN THE CITY. mild-2m OPENING OF THE" ARCH -STRkET MANTILLA. STORE, N. W. corner TENTH and ARCH. ALL NEW GOODS. Rich Lyone Bilk Circulate. Rich Lyons Bilk Bacquce. Cambria and Pusher Lace Points. Do. do. do. Mantillas. Cloth and Tweed Circulars. Rummer Cloaks, &o. - - Purchased under the influence of the War. model and to be sold at lees than the coat of importation and manufacture. Ladies are invited to inspect this stook, without re serve- before purchasin elsewhere. mrl7 lan JACOB LIONSPALL. ProVr; RAILGAINS! CLOSING OUT STOCK m in order to oirer INDUCEMENTS TO CASH BUYERS. We will sell the BALANCE OF' OUR STOCK t a still greater ?Adoption in prices than We have before made, and are determined NOT TO DE UNDERSOLD By any Retail or Wholssais House. Great Bargains in Fancy Silks. Great Bargains in F •ulard Silks. Great Bargains In Black Si kg. Best brands of Stook &Ike from 680. to OM. Gnat Barßasas in Brew Goods. kg yd. Daroge Robes at U. i 54. $I- and wif. Mob Printed Barging at itlX, W. $l, IsTiio. Organity Lawns from ThD. upwards. FINE 250. aW NS FOB 32g d. Gray Pilisturis of every variety- _ Fine .htozambhtues- two yards wide. Breech embroideries, m great oariotr.' nal French sets Collars and Sleeves at el. MEN AND DOW WEAN At leas than insantracturers: cries'. Persons will find it to their advantage to examine onr stook of NEW AND CHOICE GOODS. Which we gamut! to sell as low as any of the Wholesale Rouses who are now moving out their stook at /atoll. tt, sT.EoL BON, No, 713 North TN tan Street, above Coates- ,A OE MANTLES, BOUNNOUS, 11 - 4 POINTAS, &c.—We intend from this date to sell our enure stook of LACE tdANTLES, BOURNOU ,5 LACE POINTER,AN 1311AWLR SO PER CENT. UNDER. COST OF TM ponT STION. aux AND CLOVE COATS, ACQUES, MANTLES, AND CIRCO!, ARS At less than the eon at the Material. ergot Bargains in Stella Shawls. H. SIX.EL & SON. 714 AOrth Tsruit Street. above Goatee, •••'.. OMT OABSTMERES,. • • • at .good quality; and an w001...' eassanerds , food and cheap. Neat Mixtures, AMU and btaelc Bore Coatings, rant m ßutt% and Vottiopt, oms & Wiene, B. B, Corner ?Werra and MARIE.t.T. drigiEAP DRESS GOODS. • , a./ omandy Lawns. MX aonts— worth ltd. Efay-ndaded tsar es 20 oema---worsh 50. P001i052185 and Mania, Mt to 31 Gents. Bargains in Mon loots EtKods. COOPER. & CONARD, 8. E. Corner NINTH and aIARK 'E. 11 - IIMITY QUILTS. Honeyoomb Qui/ut. Mame Ales Quuts. Sheettngs; Naikirs. L Covels ties Tablecloths and Covers. COOPER, & CONARD_ B. E. oor. NINTH and MARKET. HE A P DRY GOODS.-WILIA AS. IL" PORTS D EITOM to be sold Low. BIRO gilt., Fancy tints, and Fonlarda. eituoes. Monambiaues. and Gray Soods. Anchor Pon ins and Swage Anglaaa. arrages. Lawns. and Organdies, Man and toys ' Wear, Moves and Hosiery. • ShottandShawln. GREAT HA MUSICS. JO dal N. STOKES. No. 704 AEON Street. ,I3ARPLISS BROTHERS N- 7 Offer the remainder Of tionr Spring Dress Goods. And all Miramar Raney_ Goods, At a rednotton Of 74 to 33 nes MM. The stook is still well assorted. Barege Robes formerly 812. now $5. Fancy Silks from $125 told cents. Foulards. Plain Silks, Slack Silks, Organdies. Lawns. Chintzes, Silk and Wool Gray Travellaries. Redeeed from .911030 and 62ets. Zoplins and Silk Grenadines. CIIESTII U 'll and EIGHTH. Streets. IMPORTANT VOTI.CE TO DRY-GOODS CONETIMERS.—Owing to the =mottled state of the countrY. and the Claire tileirraligement of the commer cial world. we have determined to close but our stock. and will offer EXTRA INDUCEMENTS TO FIJKOHASPRIS to effect rapid sales. Our goods have all been reduced much lower than if a MISCOUNT WERE TAKEN OFF AFTER 'TEE SALT WAS SLADE. It embraces a variety of Dil Goods gaited zuv wants of Families. and, being purchased principally for °anti, rare opportunities are offered. m 716 .EIGHTH ADAMS & SON, EIGHTH and ARCH Streets. QPECIALs NOTIRJE d i On and lifted , thin dab VH0 1 11.141.13 & CRAM will offer EVERY POSSIBLE utoucEmstrz TO CASH PURCHASERS OP DRY GOODS! Being_detetrAirpt r d to reduce their Stock they ertilgtei Gard trorFatos linatiV i rilaol eat for fa cents, worth SIAS moor eh paroir Silkn for $l, worth grooseiso:stl Enrage Wong, about one Leif their vers . We e i Etbted Goode. in every variety, from 8 Gents per to ao oenta. . 1 1C. SILK& RIOEI Arco W , LUSTROUS. VERY m. , - • OH Rest Slack itrOSSlOiettior,OEAYKlnhls._!2l!.o,,,f,_,,,, De Leiner COUUDOC • metes Cloths , "mu l. p B in P naii " f l riri s r4' 4.- style, > - A t woo &ar • 1.. P.P.! SW ' X X. GIG/ING • Wig PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY, MAY 28, 1861. Ellt .t.rtss. TUESDAY, MAY 28, 1861 The Late Colonel Ellsworth. - - The best likeness of Colonel Ellsworth that we have seen , is a fall-length in a Corte de Visite, executed by Mr. Walter Dintnore, of Chestnut street,,and sent to us by McAllister & Brother. It was taken last year. We have received . many- poetical. tributes to the memory of the lamented young soldier, so early removed—so worthy of being held id honor and remembrance. The following, which has reached us with the signatnre M. D. 0., possesses considerable merit: immortal be the Memory of El:worth." D ovoaserr. Immortal?-Yes! thy name shall stand Enrolled among a Hero-band; • And rn each Freeman's heart shall be A deathless memory of thee. Immortal !—Does &Patriot die When stops his breath—when dints his eye— When Fame begins—when Glory star Shines brightly o'er the field et ear? Immortal !--William Jasper's name Shall be less deathless than thy fame. On htoultrle's walls he placed our Flag— Thou past torn down Disunton's Rag. Immortal'.-Though God , atop his breath, A Patnot is exempt from death. He cannot die—death has no claim Oa him who beam a Patriot'e name. Immortal !—When this strife is o'er, And Treason braves the field no more Thy name shall be in sadness sung, From every lip, from every tongue. Immortal!-Though tby voice no more Shall oheer tby soldiers as of yore— Though thy brave band shall mourn their deer Lost, murdered Chief with soapy a tear— Immortal thou—like him of old, Whose glorious fail our Halleok told In words whioh moisten many an eye— Like him—" thow wart not born to die." M. D. 0 Encouragement at this Time for the United States. [For The Press.] The way that God sometimes brings about unanimity amongst a people is remarkable The way I now mean is by rebellion or rove Raton, during which a nation or State becomes so disordered that everything, apparently, is, about to be ruined. The history of that singular people, the Jews, furnishes many striking instances of this. Under the free enjoyment of their tem ple worship, and national blessings at home, how prone they showed themselves_ to be to all manner of idolatry ! Bow factious among them selves ! How sectionally .divided! Judah against Ephraim, and Ephraim against Judah !" They knew not the value of the blessings, as a nation, they enjoyed! But when 'dispersed, carried captive, and, to all" appeerance, beige lessly lost as a nation, just view their zeal, their unanimity, their patriotism Under such calamities, what a sincere true spirit of na tional piety, national union, •brotherly love, and exalted patriotism we see amongst them, stirring in them, and hear from them! ' Listen . to one burst of patriotism breaking out, and sounding from Babylon to. Jerusalem, the su perior of which never escaped from the month of man—" If I forget thee, 0 Jerusalem, let my right hand forget her cunning; let my tongue cleave to the roof of my mouth, if I prefer not Jerusalem above my chief. joy !" Psal. 137, 5, 6. This feeling of pure united devotion to their country and its best interests they were generally strangers to while secure in their own national domain ; but being broken up and scattered, and subjected to the creel yoke of their enemies, they became united and -enthusiastic -. in - their loyalty to, their owiLloveo; fruitthl" Holfleind - ••••• Apply this.. Now,,,when our Constitution is attacked, when thenatlen stalseas-wiemincres Minds are all excitement, when the loss of na tional privileges is threatened; when the very foundations of civil government are menaced with destruction; how ought ail trim Chris-, thins and patriots to act? Now is the time' 4 to express our -public dependence on God; to manifest our devotion to pure Christianity to exhibit the most unmistakable patriotism; to publicly cheer the hearts of the administra-z tom of our Government ; to deeply repent of our national sins ; to evince the closest ima-_ Dimity in aims and efforts ; to cultivate seri ous, earnest, unfeigned love one to another; to abandon all sin, and prayerfully totem holy and strong resolutions to prize and guard our national blessings with keener vigilance, and loftier courage than ever before! Ought we not to manifest to Abraham Lin coln, President of the United States, and the heads of departments, our warmest devotion irrespective of all differences in religious or political creeds 7 Ought not this to be done in the most direct, plain, public manner? Have-we not now at the head of our army, our navy, our national councils, a President who combines in himself, legal;martial, political and Ohristian . virtues sufficient secure our confidente;that he khovitiiiew to' govern' a ire e people? One who can act either in cabinet or field, and who is indifferent either as to-war or peace, only no far an eitber - shall conduce best to the good of the nation aid mankind. Have we not a military chieftain, gc whose very name makes cowards brave ?" and do not our Se cretary of State and Secretary of Wax, as well as the other great officers of the Government; combine in the aggregate, prudence and skill, and firmness, to warrant the confidence of the States loyal to the Constitution? Above ail, we have "the God of the armies of Israel" to depend upon! Let us then, with heart and soul, ati4 mind - and might, with prayer and faith, with dauntless courage and eagle-eyed vigilance, stand by the Constitution of these United States. N. W. The %Indiins and Negroes .in the vamp of Our Enemies. (For Tee Prsts.l The Rebels proclaim that they expect thou sands of Indians from the Choctaw and Chero kee territories ; that an agent is engaged In raising them; that they have actually in their service a force. of Indians at or near Rich mond, and a large body of negroes enlisted at New Orleans. Therefore, there is no reason why the Government shoed& not employ the same races. If the tomahawk and scalping knife, and the firebrand, are to be their arms, if the negroes are to be set at us, let them beware; such a course provoke even those of ad who think with General' Wilson, swim° reluctant to inflict - ripen them the fear- Ira war, which is not visited on them because we restrain those who owe them deep debts I,of vengeance: the Indian ' for ill-treatment, injury, robbery, stealing the securities for debts belonging to the nations; the negro, for all manner of wrongs. We restrain those who are panting for vengeance became we respect rights of property recognized by the glorious Constitution, and because their blows would not fall alone upon those who deserve it, who, out of lust of place and money, have worked the lamentable disorders' with which the country is afflicted, but would involve in mirk and devastation our brethren, the good, faith ful citizens, deceived, imposed,upow, and des potically overawed by the unscrupulous, pil laging adventurers, to whose returning good . sense, courage, and love of country we look for a rising in their might, and at the polls to overthrow the traitors. - 27th Kay, 'Rip. C. Warrants for the arrest of the Leading Conspirators. [For Tbe Press.] The overt act of treason has been committed by the leaders in the rebellion—waging war against the United States and the sovereign people. In the few antecedent instances of revolt in this country, warrants have been issued against the perpetrators, and in almost every instance they have been arrested by the people of the country. Let warrants be now issued and published by the Bench, or by the Executive, for arrest of Jeff Davis, Beauregard, Lee, Browne, of Georgia, Bragg, Pieter's, Pillow, Twiggs, and each of the Governors who have declared war or led forces against the country, enjoin ing all citizens to seize and deliver them to a faithful, safe authority, civil or military, of the United States, to be dealt-with according to law. There are yet numbers of bold 11 1 4 patriotic citizens in the.intected districts to enforce the warrants. C. COL. - A2IDEIBON'S 'VISIT TO KENTUCKY.* Speaking of the contemplated That of tho hero of Fort Sumptor to his native State, the Louisville Journal of a late date say!: o many contra• dietory reports have been in oiroulation as to the object of Col. Anderson'a visit to Kentucky, that It &Horde tot great pleadrire to be able, on the bad_ authority, to announce that he comes to his native State in no milltarseanacity whatever, but returns to the home of his childhood merely as e.privat 3 citizen, desiring to see hie friends of former years and his relatives, His Main object is, by rot and quiet, to recover Ma health, which has been much Impaired by his - recent hard service, and, not be lag attached to-any eatimand, efpooto Soon to take advantage :of rellAst from duty to spoke ttkil VIAL He will probably, vim eutdotently fo• stored to health, take' the: command at-Newport' Barracks, to-'which he was aligned ;some Usti , since, or be placed on some other duty." Letters from "Asa Trenehard.” reforreivondence of The Frew] WANHINGTON, May 26, 1861. As L write there is borne through the soft May air bell-note upon bell-note in a sweet, mellow cadence from the city far Delow,rife, for I am quartered on the Collegelleight. ,They come floating up, like the sad, uncer tain, half-hid sunshine. In their volici trembles the solemn dirge of death. N!ly, not alone. Within those deep, unutterable note* there is a tongue, numbed and chilled with sorrow now, which shall be touched into life and light hereafter, • as it flames and flashes with the tune of a hero. The bells are pealing to requiem of Ells worth. They chime ♦ amid the tremulous nestings and breathings of thousands ofhwts., Their mournlul tones echo the uniiersal spirit. every face wears an aspect of sorrow. 1! very pulse", every hand and heart, every cheek, every eye, every foot-step, every voice, _all things around us and about us re flect the inward feeling. young, so brave, and so promising. •-Can there be anything 'mere fervent in the appeal to Our sympathy, than the spectacle of a bright; bolt - life--blazing with the fires of honor, of eouraga,ol ardor, and ,troth—impelled• by,the bweyaney-tof pataiotism arid animated-by the eleatipity of hope—guided by duty„egad list. y ixtre Awl _hely ,prinelple, :burning. fax, OW alfeactiti-Starit'driwri by the' stern Scythe of war, just as the'realization of a long- CherLihed ambition seemed at hand? Thus hat it been with Ellaworth. He seemed marked beortune for a favorite and favored son; how "soein has death robbed the goddess of her prize . ! /*lent, enterprising, and energetic, valiant, inel.taleinted, enthusiastic, discreet, and la borious, 110 bid fair to become one of the most difitinguished heroes of the war. Rd his fallen first. Like Warren, of old, his memory VII be canonized. Henceforward the namej,spf -Ellsworth will be assigned's place by thefr,a e of —" Thome who fell. . , Fighting their country's biotic nobly well, years ana years ago, when as now, our fore feHters pledged their cc lives, forttiles, and !m -ead honors," to the perPetuation•ot liberty and law. There shall be treat heneefinivard a eepnlchre for him in the hearts of the American people. Ills untimely end will be the:theme of story and ballad in the days to come, as in the days gone by our. poets and tale-tellers have recited and sung the glories of similarly sad-fated soldiers and martyte to patrititlem. Asa TRENCH/LED. WASHIKOTON, May 26, 1861. 1 am persuaded that some account of the Ralorama—sa estate-lying to the northwest from the Capitol—among whose pleasant -groives your own Quaker ,Cityzegialent is mi aamped,.will be worth itelliug yon. It is as full of historic associations as it is with ,pic turesque hills and dalei,'grots and glens, and • . ",pleiwant rambles, Whets the fragrant hawthorn-brambles, 'With , the woodbine alternating," among fairy-haunted ibriattegions, or ghont iniAted rocks and • ridges, wanting • only a ;poet's pen to be touched into the classic life ;ofithns orArdennea. The Brandywine is not more traditional than .the - , rock-ribbe d :crek which flows through these ancient acres, nor r the ,Wissahickon more wildly -beautiful. Putit owned and tilled and trod by Joefflar ilowi—that grand old Covenanter of our Beirtilit "tion,' who took heed of that scriptuirallejunc ; timiconcerning a time to do all things, and_by for the cause, preached - to its - followers, fought with its enemies, and - Male itsi'songs, and after all proved himself equal in diplomacy befote the French Court'td his" prinimency in these other has de =Wed through a long line of Illustrious tenants or proprietors to its present gallant occupants, your own cherished men-M -anna: It was:: a. favorite summer-resort of. Jefferson, who composed some of the finest , portiotinpf his political philosophy beneath its broad-epreading oak trees. It was the; reef den*of _Stephen Decatur, who practised for ! 1t ivilteltin,lhe-ridget'.abrregetteemtil,-and went ! toot ftom - it to meetilarron. Ile was brought eacknieeding and -dying, and here buried the following day. Quincy Adams and Monroe used to make it a favorite -place of resort _ ; whilst that strange old genius, Chancellor Bibb, fox forty years heforohia death, during the season would ;stroll up and down the I creek with his rod and tackle, sometimes.ic companied by ; Henry'Clay, or Rink Melifee, or latterly, by Breckiiiridge. 20f these, the Chancellor, and ez-Vice President, a word. One sweet summer afternoon I was wander ing along the road which leads over the fields and heath to the Kalorama. suddenly I was startled by a load noise aheadrand quickly looking up I perceived a wagon coming at a furious rate directly in my pathway, and filled, as - 1 thought, with a party of irresponsibilities on a ;clerk." As they approached I saw a long pair of legs go up into the air, as though turning a somersault from the driver's seat. , A. ringing burst of laughter followed, and I had but just time to get out of the way before the vehicle dashed by me. It was a light Jer sey wagon, with its bottom filled with straw. Old, venerable Judge Bibb was driving, crack ing bis whip and cheering his horses in a fine style of jollity, whilst John C. Breckinridge, just inaugurated Vice President, was frolicking forthe cbildren—his own and the. Judge's grandchildren—in the straw, the noise equally shared by the lungs of old and young. The tears almolit start to my eyes when I recall the change front that peaceflil republican scene of innocence to the present , state of reality, in whose horrors the hero of my little story has played such a prominent part. I But I digress. was speaking more par. ticularly of the traditionary associations of the Kalerame. Not least among its suggestive fear tures is a spot overlooking the Georgetown 1 1 road, within sound of the drowsy murmur of the mill. The dwelling is plainly Grecian, sur rounded by pretty grounds and groves. You leave it and proceed to your lett over uudulti ting'fields, with a few trees, until you reach the comb of a grass-covered hillock, where you are arrested at once by a little old brick vault, time-worn, moss-grown, and ivy-clad, in a spreading otrole of pearl-colored gorse, penetrated by blue violet. It contains the In scriptions of Joel Barlow, Colonel Bamford, of-the army, Judge Baldwin, of the Supreme Court, and others of eminence. To come sud. denly upon so. plain. a tomb, sacred to , the memory of so many men of distinction, in such an obscure place, rather startles the. tranger. Below the tomb, in the dell threngh which the creek winds its dreamy way among mossy banks and under quaint old,bridges, the rural beauty of the plate is perhaps meet pic turesquely apparent. You reach it, after looking over the dwelling, the grounds about it, and the various objects of note by the way, at dusk, perhaps. = - It isruneh sweeter at dusk. The last sun-rays glimmer above the root and gables, and walls and stacks, dark. and desolate to the eye ; es it wanders towards the hill, front whose tops they riee in castellated masses against the blue sky, slowly fading, into twi light. Beyond those blicktlooking Ironies is the dreary, antiquated burg—Georgetown. You heed. that ' but little, - however, for the creek and the hill, and the deserted buildings going to rot !lad ruin, ceparate yew- even front the thought. of an ad, jacent-town , whilst the wood in your , rear, from whoae shadowy depths you have °meta, envelope yonrLmnind in a mut of its ,own mystic witchery. You staid one grassy amid a sward of blue , grass, sprinkled , with elover blooms and ar butus blossoms, which- stretches~ along the water's edge from the old ruin, near the bridge, to the mill, half a mile up, hid off in a hase of fantastic light-reflected partly from the flashing of the clear surface of the pond, I partly from.the glittering of' the spray at the ' falls, and partly from the bright green of the young apple trees, the whole against the dark rend of a high declivity, capped by the clustering cedars of the cemetery. Up and down the , margin of the creek are growing I troops of water-lilies and daisies, of varie gated hue, white and blue and pink, opening their tiny, eyes, and winking at the stars as the dew falls on them. There are queer eddies playing about their roots and branches, which sometimes venture far ontin the current. Now ' , 1 and then a mercenary cauliflower, or a brave little cowslip, raises up its head ; and then you may spy how the willows are beginning to grow into long switches to whip such unaris tocratic intruders from the realms of their more fashionable neighbors. But sometimes, just as in the life of real people, the go-a-head propensities of the flowers of. inferior caste by the bold strength of muscle proclaim their right to remain, and bave thus, in certain ' places, established independent colonies •of their Jiwn, despite the pinks and lilies and daisies and nuttereups; with their silly noses turned up, and their foolish lips pouting. Ab, ye wicked flowers ! How easy for a wisp of the wind, or a wave from the water, to carry you and all your tricksy splendor of to the whirling cataract of the mill i Do you sup pose these idle sprites would hood, or eyen hear, such an admonition Z lam half a mind to believe they would. As • you look at them sprinkled all over with dew they seem so much alive, so thoughtful, so full of the fire of poetry and eloquence, and- as cute as the' weasel, whom nobody ever catches a-aleep, for nobody ever was so fortunate as to come upon a bud just , opening its eye ! At least as I have been told, and certes I never was so alert myself. ' The legends which hang, like the cob-webs around the eves of the mill; the traditions :which lurkin the ihadows, thielt with sprite. whose long vistas are at length lost in the depths of the grove; the stories which old white-heads and gray-beards will tell you on any sunshiny noonday along the coves of the creek; .the antique songs you may now and then hear from the old churchyard sexton in the ravine; the buzzing of the active bees among the wild flowers the listless humming of the idle water-wheel, going to decay ; the monotonous ditty of the frog, the chirping lay of the kildeer, the remote falls, and, in these warlike times, the distant " Reaming wagon weeeis o'er the rugged road"— In short, as you stand, in the dusky twilight, just:.on-the skirt of the thorny boscage, near the race; and are soothed into a half-conscious dreant—a dream, perchance, of peace, of the good old days of the Union and its, lories— „your heart can not but fill up to the brim, and this is why 1 maintain that, surrounded by such scenes, these troops of yours, quartered only Just over the hill, in the 'green grove, can not help proving heroes, every one of them, for the ghosts which haunt the place are, good and Patriotic ghosts, which' need not fright the peeing sentinel as he 'stalks his midnight round. if ever the dead come back to life, and the dieentombed souls of buried greatness arisel - from the graves wherein their bones lie whitening, there shalt steal *forth; from their cerentents the spirits of that grand old preach er-poet of the Itevolution,And,thaibary, urv. .titmed iien-linnoilif - otime after him—Barlow and Decatur. ,Their mission on earth again would be one of war, Clothed as in days gone by, when they encouraged the legions of Liberty on to the strife, they would deliver to the soldiers of our day such a message from the sages of the past, sleeping _beneath the willows that sing peace over Vernon and M'on ticello, as would waken in each fellower of the Stare and Stripes a heart as dauntless as the .oi - enders of old. Asa TIVENCHARD. John Forsyth Clamoring'for War. line = Sohn Forsyth, the recent commissioner to Washington, olamors fiercely for an invasion of the North .- Ills paper, the Mobile Register, says: The cry of the North hi for war ! War to cave the Union, to defend the United States flag, 4 6 to show that we have a Government." These are the pretences of a sheer bypeorisy. They are the patriotic gloss given to a false cause. The cement that unites the North- is rage at the inevitable miaobief that bas been•done to northern property by the lota of.the trade and tribute of ten, per. haps twelie, of.the richest and most productive States of the late Union. - - If they is'ettt war, give it to them. to their heart's! content--t o . the knife and the hilt. Give them battle every morning and every evening whenever we can marshal a force for the fight Nor should we stop to receive it. It ought to be sought for and invited. Nor wait to drive them from Con federate soil, but force the war to their own hoe dere. We hold that the enemy should be driven from Washington—not because we want Washing ton, but because it Is in a slave State, and be cense our brethren inMaryland should be released from the iron heel of military power that is upon their necks Whose blood does not boil to read of the proud men of Maryland overran and sob dtatid - by the outoaete of Massachusetts, under the lead of that scoundrel, General Butler, who played his part In the political disturbances that were the immediate cause of this revolution? Maryland should be -freed at all hazards, and the enemy driven beyond the Curquehanne Defensive aggressions is the Southern policy in this war. The surest and the safest way to defend our homes is to meet the enemy at a distance from them—to keep away the havoc and devastation of conflict from our women and ohildron as far as possible The North has undertaken to conquer the South. We must make up our minds to ocn• quer the North, at least so far as to dictate the terms of peace. To this end, every man must de vote himself to arms. Nothing else is of value, nothing worthy to be thought of in comparison to the sacred duty of defending the liberties of our country in this atrocious war. We must become a Oettorrof &tiding and every man ready to take the field when called upon. An active and a despe- rate war la always a short one We osnunt make this-war too bloody or desperate. The Church and -Sete. The General Assembly of the. Presbyterian Church (New School) now in aession.at Syraouse taw, Cork, _have adopted the following resolu tion* • 1,, Sere/4644:MA . , mainisretr , aithe Preabyle 'rian 'Church, in her past history, has frequently lifted up her voice against oppression, has shown herself a champion of constitutional liberty. as against - both despotism and anarchy, throughout the . Mantled 'world, we should be recreant to our high trust were we to withhold our earnest protest naiad all such Unlawful and treasonable acts. 2. Resolved, That this Assembly, and the °hutches whihh- it represents, cherish an undi miniehed attachment to the great principles of ;civil and religious freedom on which our National Government DI based; under the influence of which our fathers prayed and fought and bled; which issued in the establishment of our independence, and by the preservation of which we believe that the common interests of evangelical religion and doll liberty will be most effectively sustained. 3. Resolved, That, inasinuch s as we believe, ac cording to cur forts of Government, that God, the Supreme Lord and .King of all the world, bath ordained civil magistrates to be under him, over the people, for his own glory and the public good, and to this end bath armed them with the power of the sword for the defence and encouragement of them that are good, and for the punishment of evil doert,"—there is, in the judgment of the Assem bly, no blood or treasure too precious to be devoted to the defence and perpetuity of the Government in all its constitutional authority. 4 Resolved, That all those who are endeavoring to uphold the Constitution, and maintain the Go vernment of these United States in the exercise of its lawful prerogatives, are entitled to the sympa thy and support of all Christians and law-abiding citizens. b Resolved, That it be recommended to all our pastors and churches to be instant and fervent in prayer for the President of the United States, and all in authority under him, that wisdom and strength may be given them in the discharge of their arduous duties; for the Congress of the United States; for the Lieutenant General com manding the Army-in-Chief, and all our soldiers, that God may shield them from danger in the hour Of pedl, and; by the outpeuringof the Holy Spirit I upon the army and navy, renew and sanctify them, eo that, whether living or dying, they may be 'eremite of the Most 1116 h. 6. Resolved, That, in the countenance which many ministers of the Gospel, and other professing Chrigliane, are now giving to treason and rebellion against the Government, we have great occasion to mourn for the lejary thus done to the Kingdom of the Redeemer; and that, though we have nothing to add to our former significant and ex pHs& testimonies on the subject of slavery, we yet recommend our people to pray more fervently than' ever for the removal of -this and all others, both serial and political, which lie at the foundation of our present national difficulties. T. Resolved, That a copy of these resolutions, signed by the officers of the General Assembly, be forwarded to his Bxcellenoy Abraham Lincoln, -President of the United States. The hour for adjournment had arrived, and the assembly was Weed with prayer by the Modera tor, and adjourned to 0 A. M. PARMIIaPHS or rEICETIOE.—The camp of the .-600e$81oniete, near Nashville, is called ©amp; Cheatham. Ae John Bell professes a desire to . jots - the, ranks, we think he had better at once re pair to that camp. After having deceived the people in'the Presidential canvass by pretending to be a ettampion of the Constitution, the Union, and the Enfolemnent of the Laws, he ought by all means to go into Camp Chsat'em. We learn that our friend Governor Magoffin; finding that the whole State in in-doubt as to what his proclamation means, intends to issue another very won, - explaining what it does mean. He will probably do'this as WM at he can see Mr. Break and =Om sure se to the meaning himself. —Lout:vale Journal of May 23. PERSONAL. —Mr. Cameron, Secretary of War, expect soon to go to New York foi ;Important busi ness for the Government, within is not safe to trust to other parties. It is understood that" it relates to heavy equipments for the regular army, and ar4 rangaments fin the - finiebbig,ota - ,lergif amount of artillery. _ _ —Mt (Ilford, the artist, who le attached to the Seventh Now York Regiment, has thrown away the panell for the spade for the past two days. Be has worked vigorously with the rest in the Vir ginia trenches. • —One of General Butler's shrewd professional freaks is told by a young factory girl, formerly ,employed in one of the Lowell mills. She had been discharged, and the corporation refusing to pay her, she sought legal redress and retained Mr. Bader for her ennui. He listened to her case with much interest, and: afterwards consulted the representatives of the corporation, who still refused to pay the girl her wages. liatler then issued a writ, and attached the main water wheel of the establishment, and by bringing the whole menu* factory to a stop, the corporation, rather than alio* their mills to remain idle and await the law's delay, paidthe girl her wages and resumed opera- Hons. —Mr. Douglas, we regret to say, still continues in a most critical condition. His physicians do not despair of his recovery, but they aro, by no means sanguine that hie Illness Will have a fivor , able Issue.—Ohicago Tfmas. • --Hon. John J. Crittenden, says the Frankfort Cammonwsalth,, on the 20th of June next, "will be chosen the Representative of the Ashland din- Wet to the Congress of the United States, by a majority that will bo as gratifying to him as it, will be to the friends of pence and Union through out the entire length and breadth of the land." —Oen. Pierce, of Massaohusetts, is appointed Brigadier General, in place of Gen. Butler, pro moted. He is ordered to report at Washington, and will be sent to Fortress Monroe. —The name dew-Governor Banks is prominent* I; mentioned as Commissary General. Els ac knowledged executive ability well its him for such an important poiition. „ . --The favorite aster, John b. Clarke, is now engaged at the Holliday . Theatre, Baltimore, and is drawing full houses. r, Two CENTS. • The Death of,Eihrtvorth. [For, The Press.) A star has gone from the firmament, A sword from the altar ruddy ; There-is silence of death in his fleecy tent, And the banner is ()raped and Wady. lie fell alone, when the •town was won Aid the squadrons that breathless found him, While over the bills broke the early son, flaw the flag of the rebels around lihn. In the flash of pride, 'when the blood was high, And the glory of .youth; upon him, Still lingered a light in his glassY eye, And a Fmile.when the deathbed won him. Flow dabbled the skeins of hie raven hair ! The broad, high brow, how pallid ! How hushed the bugle of voles; how fair The lips and the obeeke so °slid! • And tar away where the downs are white And the dew on the•prallie gleaming, While the abinsmerof dawn tweaks over the night, _ A plighted woman is dreaming. She thinks, of a day when the war is still, And peace, like a river, fleeing, And the harvest golden upon the hill, • And the reapers away ammwing • • How a glositypinme nit th e lane shall Oome, And a opium the parch shall rattle, And a voicieakuit ligaremixithe bugle and drum And ran down . the ranks tithettle, Shalt tell.of.perils that lead to fame, • . Antra kids crushed out in, the*grapple.• And of soldiers returning, in pesos, to claim Their loves inthefillage chapel, Alas ! for the love that cannot die; Alas for the forms that vanish; Alas! for the hopes that are flushing high, And the dreams that the-morning banish! . Where the Father of Nationsaleeps entombed, • In the willows, gray and grouping, The eagle of battles le reven.plumed, And the flag of the Union drooping. But the West is pouring her hardy Hun, Where the bayonets flash and glitter. And the boom of the funeral minute guns Stir the North-clans hot and-bitter. __The crape and the dusky plumes are doffed, The spear and the sabre gleaming, The trampled banner is raised aloft, And the eagle is hoarsely screaming, Iler flight is strong as the"dash of serge, And dark as the night her pinion •, The bat and the raven shall make their dirge In the homes of the Old Deininion. • The young are the brave and dutif ul . The slain are the great in story ; But ghastly the lips of the beautifid. And the. worm lathe bride of glory. Ozo. : Anntem WOWNEINTID. COL. ELLSWORTII, As his Friends' Knewltim. BY JOBA • M. BAY. Thera has not been an evening since nuarptsr fell so full of life and hive, so redolent of the eager whispers of the waiting crowd, as was last Thursday evening. The town was murmurous with flying rumors, all hopeful and promising: General Scott was going to show Ids hand, and. the dandies of the Seventh and the lambs of the Vire Department were to have an opportunity to wear or the duet of a month's idleness. " People talked cheerfully of Alexandria and Arlington, and invented model campaigns for the departing regiments, with all the !mind ignorance and illogical enterprice with which ()Wilians may war like vatioination. Bat on Friday morning the tone of feeling and conversation was strangely. changed With the earliest dawn a ghostly horror of floating surmise clouded the town The rumor ran rapidly through the usual gamut of shocked assertion, andreok less contradiction, until dottbtwae hinted out from every resting place, and we ell kenw that t• 'Ellsworth was dead. - When that was ascertained no one dared to ask further qtteelions. The details of the aseaseina tion, the projected defences, the march of the regiments—which, at any other time, would have furnished the most palatable food to the jaded news-bunters at Willards'—were unnoted and die- regarded. It seemed enough for one day that we had coat the cheering presence of the brave young colonel. It seamed impertinent to speak of other things. A sudden gloom fell on the city. A hundred banners slipped sadly to half-mast. Men walked quietly through the streets, forgetting their bust- _ pets. - Soldiers talked low and earsaatly, with• crefailied hands. Why wee this so? This public grief seemed to scorn preoedense. He was not an old and honored warrior, but a boy of twenty-four, who had never soon a battle. The praise of the people naturally follows wealth •, but Ellsworth had no fortune but his sword, and his aged parents live in the quiet seclusion of a country village in New York. It was not the murmur that rises when a giant dies. This young hero was only five feet six from spur to fa lame. Why should the people mourn for him? No man ever possessed, in s more eminent degree, •he power of personal fascination. That faculty 1 which, when exercised upon masses of men, ilal leek styles " the Art Napoleon—of winning, fet tering, moving, and commanding the souliof thou sands till they move as one,", he enjoyed, in a measure, of whioh the world will forever remain e i igoo nt. lie exercised an influence almost mes m , upon bodies of organised individuals with w he was brought in contest. I have seen him enter an armory where a scare of awkward youths were going sleepily through their manual, and his first order, sharply and crisply given, would open every aye and straighten every spine. No matter how severe the drill, his men never thought of fatigue. His own indomitable spirit sustained them all. lileeldes that, his personale was very prepossessing. There was something cheery and hopeful about the flash of his white teeth when he emiled, his face was always alert and intelligent, and the ha. neat and sincere good fellow looked serenely out of his handsome eyes. His heavy black Curls never looked affected or vain, They set off admirably the firm and statuesque pose of the head. And bis dress was always to keeping with the man we knew. Add to this his youth and fame. his patriotism, which no rebuffs could daunt, hie energy. whiuh people began to recognize, the work he had done, and the work he was expected to do, and you have some idea of the reasons that made people deplore a victory that his sacrifice made a thousand times worse than a defeat. • And the people for once are right. You shall not find between the seas a man who can in all things take hie pleas. In the hearts of his friends, and in the ranks of his country's defenders, he has left a void which is not to be filled. Hie lite presents few salient points of renaike or interest. Re was at. a very early age thrown upon his own resoutces by the financial reverses of his father (of whom in his stricken ago let a generousi Republic be - not unmindful), and - his whole career from _boyhood to his deeth . is a touch ing drama of struggle with eironmstancee, always strenuous and severe, but always self-reliant - and stout-hearted. Very dark would have been the passage through some sconce of his life in Chicago, had_it not been lit with , a healthy good humor that nothing could repress, an energy that mis fortune was powerless to daunt, And a dentine honor that freed 'him from even the temptation to wrong. In write of mean lodgings and-Want, WO the great soul kept a firm foot-hold in the muscu lar body, and outside of the daily toil and priva tion, the young student revelled in snidest realm, not of selfish indulgence or sordid fame, but of nee and beneficence to his fellow-men. - This aim and purpose did not exhamt itself in dreams. He worked steadily towards its realization, The first fruit of his efforts was the perfection training of the Chicago Zonings. The vast flatter of interest and gale of applause that their 'chal lenge trip ocoasioned, though - the great military sensation of the age, wan utterly-unworthy- of the 'subject, as it failed to distinguieh the-real spirit of, Ellsworth's work. While it dwelt on, the afitility' and unerring preolaion with Which - theta scarlet performed choir gimnastio lesson, they. left out of view the entire diseiplise-L-the identif cation of spirit of commander and mort—tb• ens mu& that, derived from their idolized leader, in. spired these slight young men and annihilated their susaeptibility to hunger . and fatigue:: Was it not also a great triumph for this water-drinking ' Colonel to abolish, by the force of his own iron will, a practice against which the anti-alcoholic forces, under. a thousand aliases, have waned for jean in vain? I know the trial excursion of the Zonave Cadets was not undertaken from any motives of display, , but, by the force of contrast, to demonstrate the fact, in a way that pe . onle could - andantes/d e that our ordinary militia is a very unwieldy end•nate.; less affair, and cannot be made serviceable except, by a vast expeaditure, and endless announce and delay. And although in the last six weeks the people lie's wonderfully seconded the efforts of the Government, a candid review of 'their operationa l from the proclamation until - to. day, _lfni convince any one of the.necesaity of a thorough reoonetrao tion of the militia laws of most of the States, and such a reorganisation of the esitisen soldiery as will nourish a more decided military spirit, and eats,- blish a higher standard of discipline. To a great extent, that trip was a great stemmas. In its wake sprang up hundreds of new military companies, like phosphorescent sparks in the track of a ship. Several States reconstructed their ljtia laws, end a general military revival was per ceptible throughout the land. ft had an afoot, also, in disseminating some sensible ideas In regard to uniform. Inside of oho --flashy • aburdities of crimson and gold, for which it was responsible, there was a;germ of ;sound judgment in the easy, careless flow of the Zoliave castunie, which hardly touches the wearer. - Elieworth went back to Chicago, for his brief hour, the moat talked-of man in the country. H. quietly organised a skeleton:regiment of his own, and made his best men the Myers of it, $9 offered this to the Governor of and to the President, " for any servioe consistent with honor." This was the first offer of an &ganised force to sustain the Constitution and the -- laws. With soldierly instinct he foruaw the inevitable strug gle, and predicted: the very manner of is begin . rung. Leaving Chicago, he came to Springfield in the midst of the most exciting oampsign known to political history. It was not passible for .11llsworth to be neutral in anything, or idle while others wore workiog. With -the whole anew. of Ma nature he entered into the struggle. 8., bseame one of the most popular speaktre known to the sohool-houses and barns of Central Illinois: • The magnificent volume of his voles, which I never heard surpassed, the unfailing flow of-his hearty humor, and the deep earnestness of oonilotion that lived in his looks and his tones, were the ottalitles that struck the faney of the Western crowd. Besides, it was very novel and .delightful to imp a soldier_who could talk. , • An a dministration in harmony with him was I gleoted, and illisworth hoped to be able to put into ' practical operation these plans which had formed the goat of all his former efforts. My space will not permit an analyils - of these" plans. They leek to an entire reopulaition cR tbecmilida of Vtalfsd States. They had the approval of some TIM WEEKLY PRESS. Wits Mum Pens will be sent to embeeribers hi mail (per annum in atrium.) at— --- 14.00 Three Copes. " " LOO Five •! " " 8,00 (to one address) 20.04 (to address of Twenty " Twenty Copies, or over each subioribera mama. warm. warm. moon LSO Fore Club of Twentr-one or over, we will MIA to extra copy to the getter-up of the Otub. ler Poutmeaters are revnested to set as Agents fey Tea Wong Faso. CALIFORNIA PSS6s, famed three time' a Month s in time for the California Steamers. of the beet military mind. of the continent. With the hope of being planed in a position where he could be of service in this way, he accepted Mr. Lincoln's invitation and joined the Presidential travelling party. He soon became indispensable. NO one could manage like him the assemblages of turbulent loyalty that crowded and jostled at ,very station. .t Washington, he was '"placed in a false posi tion. He never wished office for its honor or its prolit, - but you never oan get oinoe-seekers or office dispensers_to believe any such story. His delicate MN of honor felt a stain like a wound, and the amiable gentlemen of the press never can with hold the sly stab when they think a man is failing. These weeks were the least pleasant of Ells worth's life. They were _brightened only by the society of those he trusted most, end by the unvary ing frtendship and conlldence of the President sad his family. But Sumpter fell, and the gale of. aroused patriotism, sweeping down from the North, scattered away the cobwebs of political "chicane, arid educed the true men of the time. When war RIM in land, there was no more dancing attend ance for a man who knew that Ood had made him a soldier. There was only a moment of hesitation— it was whether Chicago or New York should have the glory of his regiment. Bic Mende remembered •that malignant jealousy that hampered what he and they would have done for the State of Illinois last winter, and feared s repatitlon of the scene. New York was • catholic and metropolitan. He we nt . to, NewTork. • :• • trentalatintettioir and rpailmicinto the • sphere of idabga...., ' • Now he conceived the. novel ides of the fire brigade' how he formed the most muscular regi ment- that the annals of warfare have mentioned ; how„hy the mere force of intellect, he controlled the flerci-turbulazot of these untameable man; -how he ended them and brought them to the capi tat;= hewsSi made. isoldierd of them, turning the stern Gothic spirit of fight into well-ordered °bon nets ; how he captured the first rebel town, and how - he made that stilindid morning inionorablo to alltime by his death---shall all be told when some future historian writes the story of this new crusade Of freedom.' • Elia loss at this time' cannot be - too deeply de piored. lie had every requisite for great military success. He had a wonderful memory and com mand-of detalls'; immense indcrt7 and ty "of 'enormous mental and bodily labor; -great coolnessof mind ; an original and inventive brain, and, more than all, the power of grappling to his heart with hooks of steel the aflutter:a of' every man with whom he came in °outset. • • - Thew there is a smaller circle who mourn Itim in tears, Mt the.trueat; tenderest, most loyal hearted • matt that everdied. This is the•head roll of his virtues. Ido not re , member but two faults that he had, and they were magnificent ones- r ife was too generous and too breve. , • , . The one salsjeettd him to the most Gruel slanders from sordid' men, and the other caused the dictates which has plant edirpoople into mourning. All chilliness'= 'to regard his death sea personal. affliction. The family of the President went down to the Navy Yard on Friday and glazed long and tearfully on the still face which had so often brought sunshine with it into the Executive Man 'don. Five minutes afterwards tied Buntline came in; and'quietly laid a dewy wreath of 'laurel over •the brave dead' heart. A tear came to hie hard evil .as he -passed out and said to a Zonave stizifling 41 - obinily by the door : Well "mourn hint' totality, boys, arid avenge him:to-morrow-" As for he Zenarek all other emotions are swal lowed.-up in the manly , grief that hallows revenge into religion. They have sarpriied every one by theirsilitnee.• Bitter as le their rage and 'despair, they remember that they are Ellawettit's men, and . are too soldierly to be lawless.. But theY have sworn, With the grim earnestness that never trifles, • to have a life for every hair of the dead Colonel's head.. _Bat even that will not repay. ' The ripples of private grief are never taken into the` scommit Of the-grand source of s public sorrow, but it- is eertedn - that no man could have died more deeply lamented than the young hero who is mow in to-day in solemn grandeur toward the crushed hearts that sadly wait him in the North. Seat- Wired over the land, _severed by wide leagues of mountain andprairie, the few who knew him well' are mourning in the utter abandon of irremediable anguish, Ail if all the earth - hed for them of bright or-beautiful or brave, want oat with his last breath. Yet they are giving thanks to Hod that they were permitted to know him, and are• vowing to keep ever grun in their souls the memory of him who always .seemed to his friends not like • the people one meets every day, but like a splen did type'of the courtesy and valor that dignified the leal-hearted cavaliers of the great days that are gone. One 'last Word. May he rest forever in pease,' ' tinder the Northern violet and the Northern snows. May his example sink into the heart of Northern youth, and blossom tato deeds of valor and honor. His dauntless and stainless life has renewed - the bright possibilities of the antique chivalry, and. in hie death we may give him aublamed the grand Goof:aim. of which the world has long been rut worthy : • " Le chevalier 'sae peer et sans recroche." The Last Night of Colonel Ellswoirth. (From the Washingt o orkW n Cororld.)respondense the New He was everywhere. Full of life and animation, moving like a hero in the oamp. Now in his tent conversing with hie officers; now dashing across the vamp to oommunicate with some of the lower officers of the companies ; now ordering a company into line and inspecting them; tow out upon the bluff; looking earnestly torus the waters to the navy yard, or down toward Alexandria, to catch a glimpse of aty signal which might be made, or any indication of movement; then back to his tent, to confer again with his staff. From the hour when 1 entered the camp I did not see him at rut but once. He then sat in his tent, surrounded by his officers, fall of humor and wit, and in most ex ultant spirits I have not time, though I should delight to do it, to record many little interesting incidents of the night. Someone inquired, after a pause, 4, Colonel, are we to be quartered in Alexandria to morrow ?" " No," was the prompt reply. t. Quartered? no ; you wouldn't think of being quartered, I hope, while you had a thing like that atyonr command," (pointing to his sword, by his side.) The catch upon the word was quickly observed, and occa sioned considerable merriment. In all he said, his language was choice, his voice full and deep, and his manner open and manly. I little dreamed then that before sunrise I should stand beside his corpse, or that that proud and noble soldier would be murdered in cold blood by one of the secession bloodhounds. I have oer• tainly never seen him in better spirits than last night 0, how the fairest and the bravest are the , Itrat to fall ! We publish the following communication, whiela appeared in the Evening Journal of yesterday, in justice to the parties interested: EDITORS EVENING JounNAL—GUNTLIDIZEI : Oar attention has been called to an ankle in one of the Sunday papers, in which a copy of vat bill of goods told to this State is printed. The error in the bill is simply the error of the reporter, wbo put the price of 6.4 twilled Indigo blue blouse flannels at 91 cents, instead of 93 cents. Had the ieliecin known anything of the value of merchand ise, •he would not have confounded ibis article with a Canton flannel, worth but one•tenth the photo. The article we sold the State was manufaehired by Samuel Bancroft, to fi ll a contract with Colonel Thomas, Assistant Quartermaster, 'United States Army, and the price paid under that contract was 93 cents We charged the State precisely the same prise the General Government paid, and we have cold the same article for no more or no less for the past two years. No agent of the State, or any other person, has received, or will receive, from us any commission, and we are not even acquainted with the Governor or Quartermaster Hale._ Mr. Bancroft has received from us the amount of the bill, less our commission of five percent. Yours truly, ALPRED BLADE d CO., 40 South Front street. Philadelphia, May 27 1861 GENERAL NEWS. 11.0 n GilltßOArs.—A. prominent iron-worker of Cincinnati has commenced the'manafmture of iron plates, eight by three and a half feet surface, and one and three-fourthe inches thick, for•thie purpose of 'being need in the sonstruction of ; gun boats. These, when completed, will, it is thought, be impervious to balls, except such as are projected from heavy cobimbiads, Dahlgren, or rifled Gamma. The boats are to be built. of a, broad beam, and to draw but little water, the armament to be - one or "two-heavy oolombiada. They are - being -built as secretly as posaible, cash part tieing 'made sopa rawly ; and it is intended, when_everything is ready, to put on a eufficient force to 'template - them ins my days. Oar forces should not dela-imps, rations to receive these oustomerserlllemphu • Appeal. • . , How would an advertisement of cc Rewards for Deserters," describing them by mores, leek in the Union? Yet the Confederate rebel journals are fall of them ! Their armies are largely re , crafted by drafts, .00nsoription, and impressment, and even contain many who hate the tyrants whit all their souls, but had no alternative but to enliet or be hanged ! No wonder the poor fellorre ran away,'and anosiss to them'. The AngustaWa ) COMltitfltionrdist, of May 19th, Contaiee an wirer thement of thirty dollars reward apiece for twenty deserters, who had stampeded since stindoita the day before. CONE RIVER OnsTRUCTID.--The Virginians are said to have obstructed the mouth of Cone river, by _sinking vessels in the channel, to pre vent ingress of. Federal vessels. Cone. river flows into the Potomac about fifty miles from its mouth, and affords access to Northumberland county and a large district of country in that sec tion of the State. Three of .the 'semis seek were plainly visible, and it is said reach entirely across the *benne'. THE ATTACK on RICHMOND.—The country need not. be surprised if, in the course of three a weeks, forward movement be made en Rich mond, from resources entirely separate from the reserves at or near Washington, and which will be so overwhelming in force as to render success certain The possession of Harper's Ferry may be assured by stank movement. - The Piret New Jersey regiment has crossed Into Virginia. Wagons. with oama voeleoge and stores, have been crossing the bridge all day. Yams Wausau/G.—A Igentleman who left Wheeling on fiaturday afternoon states that a good doe of onfteme ni was prevailing there, and that some strong wpportere of secession had been cont. plied to leave the.ity. The feeling on this sub ject was running vry high. The same gentleman passed through - Harper s :Ferry on Monday, and f o und all quiet there. - • • • NalionAa* ear:OITA= 00141VENTion.'-- The “National 'Quarantine and Sanitary, Convention" will he held in Cincinnati in Jane next. Tao Ba nner,' Convention originated in au association firmed several years sinee, and the ensuing wlllbe the lift since its trganisation. - 19.00