THE PRESS. • TIM M= DAILY (801 4 /DAYS SIOAPTID,) BY JOB.N W. FoRIVEY. OFFICE Rip. 111 SOUTH FOURTH STREET. TEE DA Iby PRESS, TWELVE VENTS PER WEEK, 'payable to the Carrier. Nailed to •übecribere mat sr the City at Nix DOLLARS FIR ANNUM, FOUR DOLLAIIB FOR ICIORT KORTIII4 'lams DununnB eon bin lll.ollln3—inverianly In an pence for the time ordered. THE TR - I-WEEKLY PRESS, Nailed to Subtsribere out of the City at Tuttle Don- Lau& Pill ARNIM, in advance MILLINERY GOODS bYEING 1862 1862. WOOD fig CARY. tenosoloon to Lincoln, Wood, di Nicholo,) 110. 12S VIIEBTIiIIT OTSBET. Have now in Store $ complete *took TEAW AND MILLINERY GOODS, 13/LIK BONNETS, STRAW AND PALM-LEAF HATS, Ao To which they respectfully mite Um attention o[ VA *Amer patrons of the house and the trade generally. SPRING. 1862. M. B ERN HEIM, No. 7!6 CHESTNUT STREET, Ras now In store llad in daily receiving, the latest Orlon la RIBBONS, FRENCH FLOWERS, WREATHS, WAS, CRAPES, LACES, AND OTHER MITT LIN ERY GOODS. V. which be respectfully invites the attention of the PRICES LOW. mhl4.3m SPRING-. 1862. RIBBONS, MILLINERY. AND STRAW GOODS. ROSENHEIM, BROOKS. & Co., • NO. 431 MARKET STREET, Rave now open—and to which daily additions &remode— l/keit USUAL HANDSOME VARIETY ar RIBBONS, BONNET MATERIALS, FLOWERS, :EIUOH.ES, OTRAW AND FANCY BONNETS, UMW AND OIIILDKEN'S HATS, • FLA.Tb, 61:1AKER HOODS, and &IX OTHER ARTICLES IN THE MILLINERY LINE, which 16411 be offered at the LOWEST 111.a1iKET ritIOES. The attention of the trade I. respectfully invited, 169 - Particular attention given to Kling onlers.. THOMAS KENNEDY 4t BRO., 729 CIRSSTNOT Street, below Eighth. AL OA.. Moak ot • SPRING MILLINERY GOODS, mbili-Bm] AT LOW PRIMO. YARNS, BATTS, di CARPET CHAINS. A. H. FRANOISOUS. WHOLESALE DEALER IN YARNS, 453 )lARXNT and § North FIFTH Street PHILADELPHIA. Myers will nun a Pan Stott of COTTON, LINEN, AND WOOLLEN CARPET 0041.1 i, COTTON YARN. 'TWIST, FILLING, WADDING, BATTING p COTTON LAPS, TIM YARNS, TWINES, CANDLE WICK, gOTNAMIT TARN, BROOM rvrrrran. mum rwaseive, Guam% AND SEINE TWINES, BED (30H DS, WASH AND PLOUGH LINES, COTTON, HEMP, AND MANILLA CORDAGE. Also. a full assortment of FLY NETS. Wbieh he am at Manufacturers .lIQWEST NET CASH PRICES. WOODEN AND WILLOW WARE. A H. FRANCISCUR. 433 MARKET and 5 North FIFTH Street. PHILADELPHIA, WHOLSOALS DIALER DR WOODEN AND WILLOW WARE. Always on hand, a full Stock of TIMM BIFORSTS, VIIIIHNS, razAsuzza, BROOMS, WHISKS, FANCY BASKETS, WALL, SCRUB, and SWEEPING BRUSHES, WISHING-GLASSES and WINDOW PARER, Mats, Rosters, Flour Brackets, Nest Boxes, 'WASH BOARDS, ROLLING and OLOTHRB PINS. FLOOR and TABLE OIL CLOTHS. SCHOOL, ELABRET I and DINNER B Maly Barrows, riorrisses, Hobby HO/110th 40. Al Goods sold at LOWEST NET CASH PRICES. tabl/4m BLINDS AND SHADES BLINDS AND SHADES, B. J. WILLIAMS, 10.10 NORTH SIXTH STRZET, MANUFACTURER OP VENETIAN BLINDS ADD WINDOW SHADES. The largest and finest assortment in the City at the LOWEST PRICES. MATS EHADSS 'LETTERED. Repairing promptly attendol to. apB-3m SEWING MAGTIIN ES WHEELER & WILSON SEWING MACHINES, 628 CHESTNUT STREET, mhU4ka SHUTTLE SEWING MAC EI I N ta The best and cheapest for Family or Manufte. taring - purposes. If tot as good, as represented, the money will be refunded. For Hale at 911 CHESTNUT Street, second story. J. T. JONES & CO. DRUGS AND 4:,`DEMICALS. ROBERT SHOEMAKER &CO.. Masthead Cosmos FOURTH and BLOM Streets, PHILADELPHIA, WHOLESALE DRUGOISTS, IMPORTERS AND DEALERS Dr POESION AND DOMESTIC WINDOW AND PLATE GLASS. NAPIITAVIVIRRO Oi WHITE LEAD AND ZINC PAINTS, PUTTY, U. LOW/ TOR TEM 071.11811.AU1D PEENCJH ZINO PAINTS. - Dealers and consumers supplied at VERY LOW PRX9B6 War opM. Ina WHITE LEAD, DRY AND IN OlL.—Bed Lead, White Lead, Litharge, Sugar .. D f Lead, Copperas, Oil of Vitriol, Colonel, Patent Yel 2ow, Chrome Bed, Chrome Yellow, Aqua Fortii, Ellt riatio Add Epsom Salts, Rochelle Salts, Tartaric Acid, ')mugs Anent. Soluble Tart, Sub. Oarb. Soda. White 'Vitriol, Bed Precipitate, White Precipitate, Lunar Caustic, Narootine, Stitch. Morphine, 11,,rphine, Acetate Mcorphluo, idle. Elher Sulphuric, Ether Nttrfa molphate quinines Corr.. Sublim., Donarcatized Opium, 'Chloride of Soda, Wetherilni Ext. Cincba, Tartar Emetic, Chloride of Lime, Crude Bong, Bellned Borax, Kr3amphor, Begin Coverts. WETHERILL & BROTHER, Druiredeie end !geoid:clueing Chemist., Nos. 47 and 40 North SECOND Street, PHILADELPHIA. STATIONERY AND FANCY GOODS. MARTIN & QUAYLE'S STATIONERY, TOY, AND FANCY GOODS EMPORIUM, No. 1035 WALNUT OTERET, o MOW PHILADELPHIA. m741-1m fp . , • .... ~.. "NRS , I- . . - '9 ,,, - 7 ' •'''''‘ ' t 11% '• I'7:- • Alf ...., -• ' ,p..• ift ,_ ,n. - , • zr: . • ~---,----- • _ , .1. r ~ Al , '' , ..a .,. .. , . :,..-",. . ' tett_ i lt '4,l7.llKt r ' .. .. - t;r,- -.1. 7,• I ln - - 1 7AIOIIII ' - - „ lam - ,- i .t,itt' ik. .... - ---- :14-4-_,i_-77r - ,7:,p _ ~...b & l.;.tiz INA„.- : ::.- '- : : 1 .•'!! -- ' - - ri - - Y 0. 11, *• r' 2': '4'4 \ ' l / 4 ' , -----/, r, ...,„:„...._,.....,,,.,..0„.,,.•,,,,,AfTT :-. - . Ni - ..11P" . " -- . w• 3 ' I: - , -. V P. ' - 411( '-,..,_,.13 - . . _ •. .., f . ' ...• li . : 7, , , , , , , ,L , , j .. _ N idi'r . L•- le „.i.....z....r...,,50311„::.::,1.,. ..,. .__ 4 L . , .. . L., , 04.. ~:,.„,_.., , . r. -,.. 1 ._-__„-.1!-_, -47; -.... •eraw \ VOL. 5.-NO. 236. JEWELRY, &c. CLARK'S ONE DOLLAR STORE. 602 CHESTNUT STREET NEW GOODS, NEW STYLES, AND NEW PRICES. Tor ONN DOLLAR you can buy any one of the fol lowing articles: Sete of Bayer Plated Tea /Spoons. It Deem I. as 44 " Table 6, • " " " Forks. Desert. Pak Si 1 1 Knife and Fork. IC " " Napkin Binge. • " 6, Butter Myer Plated sugar Bowl. 44 Butter Dish. Molasses Pircher. • 0 Cream 0 " Castor. 66 " Waiter. " " Goblet. " . 6 Drinking Cup. Bugar Sitter: Gold Plated Veal Chain, all styled. to G uar d a as 44 • is N e ck 44 " Chatelaine, " " • " Bracelet, 44 4, 14 " Medallion. 4, Clas Armlets, " " • " Breast Pin. " 66 " Bar Binge, " " to 0 Pin and Drops, all styled. " " Studs and Buttons, a as " Solitary Sleeve Button, all styles. • Etc..= gal., a a a a Finger Rings, 44 44 as " Pencils, Si 64 14 a s Pen witli Pencil Case. Ladiael or Cantlateen% Part Ilinaante, Club,* Ben., Purees, &a., ke., &e. All Goode wArranteff Av repre sented. We have on hand a large aworrnieut of Photo graph Albums, Mantel Clocks, Travelling Rage, and Gold Jewelry which we are doting oft at cost. The at tention of th e trade reapectfolly D. W. CLARK'S ONE DOLLAR STORK, aplan 602 CLIESTNUT Street. DRY-GOODS JOBBERS. NEW IMPORTATIONS. HOSIERY. GLOVES. GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS, LINENS, SHIRT FRONTS, WHITE GOODS, AND EMBROIDERIES. THOS. MELLOR & 00, rahl9-3m 40 and 40 North THIRD Street. 1862. BPItING. 1862 ABBOTT. JOHNES. & 00., 627 MARKET STREET, Have now open an entirely new an att r act yo .tack to ENGLISH, FRENCH, GERMAN, AND AMERICAN DRESS GOODS. WI amortanent 10 WHITE GOODS, RIBBONS, GLOVES, SHAWLS, &0., To which they Invite the attention of the trade. rnb.24-tjel SPRING - STOOK SILK AND FANCY DRESS GOODS. A.. W.. LITTLE & Co_ neas-e No. 3I HAMM ST. 1862. srßik i Et. 1862. RIEGEL. BAIRD, & imPORTZES AND .79ABBRa N DRY GOODS. 9 4 7 41447/1 TH/AD lITBSITz PHILADELPHIA. ilerohants visiting thie city to purl:Mass DRY (tOODE will And our stook large and admirably amorted, and at Low Protrans. In certain el/asses of Goode we offer Indneemente to purchasers unequalled by any other hones in Philadelphia. mhlB-2m JAMES. KENT, SANTEE,. & Dif.PONMS AND ..10111111118 Of DRY GOODS. Net 499 and ell N. THIRD STll2llt, ABOVE BADE, DHEDADELYDIA, Have now open their usual LARGE AND OQMPLVTE OTOOK op FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC DRY GOODS, Among which will be found a more than usually attrao. Him variety of LADIES ' DRESS GOODS; Also, a full assortment of MARRIMACK. AND 00CREO0 PRINTS, fad PHILADELPHIA•MADE GOODS. To which they invite the special attention of buyer. .nhf.l-2n, 5PRAN G . 1862.1862. w_ s. STEWART & 00., IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS OF BILKS AND FANCY DRESS GOODS, BO gni iikurraiT STREET_ Now In store, PODLT DE SOLE: All Shaw BLACK AND WHITE CHECKS, In SILKS and OTHER FABRICS. ALSO, A FULL Lill OP CLOAKING CLOTHS, PL.:U.I4, STRIPES, And desirable PLAIN COLORS. aol7 PAPER HANGINGS PHILADELPHIA PAPER HANGINGS - HOWELL & BOURKE ; OORNIa OF FOCrATH JIND MOUT STREETS, MANUFACTURERS OF PAPER HANGINGS AND WINDOW CURTAIN PAPERS, Offer to the. Trade • LARGE AND ELEGANT. AB BOURRET OF GOODS, here the theapest Drown Stock to the Finest Decoration.. N. E. COR. FOURTH AND MARKET STREETS. B___s o ud o r e. % Blue, and Deft WINDOW PAYE= of every grade. eiait.2m CABINET FURNITURE. UAELNET FURNITURE AND BIIr LUND TABLI43. MOORE & CAMPION, MN 261 PO sail SMOOZID Maw* in connection with their extensive cabinet Badman in aow manufactorius • superior article of BILLIARD TABLES, lima have now on liana • full supply, nulahed with the 81001111 A CASITION'fi IMPROVHD CUSHIONS, which are pronounced, by mil who have need them, to be toperfor to ail others. for the pointy and Sofa' of Owe tables Um mean. :Wane liter to their nnmerone Wrong thronehant ho Union, who are familiar with the character of their cork. fe2o-0n Vre(ss. THUR SPAY, MAY 8, 1862. Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. The Thirty. sixth Annual Exhibition of the Penn sylvania Academy of the Fine Arts is now open, and we draw public attention t o it on several grounds—some of which are, it is the best exhibi tion we have ever seen in this city ; it has more really fine and fewer feeble pictures than usual; it dielinedy and distinctively shows the present conditiun of the brie arts in Pennsylvania ; and it assures the world, by that best possible evidence, the productions of its own pupils, that ours really is an Academy, Wherein the Fine Arts are taught, to numerous and improving pupils. The Academy Of Fine Arts, which dues teach, stande in strong contrast with the Academy of Music, which does not. Mainly owing to the personal exertions of one of the Directors (Dr. J. M. Sommerville), the artists of New York have contributed largely to the pre sent Exhibition. No doubt, our painters and sculptors will reciprocate, at the earliest opportu thy. Independent of the social advantage of this excharge of courtesy, the respective works of New York and Philadelphia are thus seen and appre ciated by an extended number of persons, and it is an excellent thing for the artists of one great oily to see the productions of their brethren in another. Tbis year a judicious change has been made in the north gallery, where works of art, the property of the Academy, have hitherto been almost exctu sively exhibited. 'I he gallery has been narrowed, by a wainscot division, and in the space thus cre ated, while the stock pictures are put Put of View, pro teviporc, room has been nteated for the recep tion of a number of fine pictures. It strikes us, too, that the light is better here than elsewhere The rooms have been newly carpeted, and, in short, the Academy may be complimented on its appear ance, independent of the fine paintings which it now presents for public appreciation. Passing through the Rotondo, in Which, besides the " old familiar faces," may be seen many tine paintings and sketches contributed to the present exhibition, the reader will accompany us into the .2.,:nth-oest.Geltm.y, where, hramealtaeiyorpostte the entrance, ( . o. 41),) is Rothermel's " Christ and the Doctors," which some of the public have seen before, when it was at Mr. Earle's Gallery, for a short time, where it attracted much atten tion. It is a fine picture, in which the ma ture faces of the aged disputants finely eon treel, in their varied character, with the youth• ful aspect of Christ. The one thing wanting here, which it may be impossible for the pencil to give, is to throw sublimity into the face of the youthful Messiah without losing the juvenility which constitutes the exterior marvel of his intel lectual contest with the aged men. This picture belongs to Mrs. Yansycle. Another, and very pleasing painting by Mt. Hothermel, endued " Exhausted Cupid," (No. 4,) 'Moog to Mr. Joseph Harrison, and is rich in color and ex pression. Near this last, are three blaring pictures or great merit. «New York Harbor" (47,) by James Hamilton, who has several other first.. class works here, is truly a pictorial gem, The artist bas presented a view, accurate in all its main facts, yet poetized in the treatment of them. Over the watery element Hamilton has assured sovereignty, and he represents the 6d6415, or in tempest or in calm, as if (to use Byron's fine image,) he could lay his hand upon its mane, like a master capable of swaying it to his purpose. Over the ?Wm of Atmosphere, f 456, he has command. The queenly city raises her turreted head in the dis tance; and, looking down the Bsy, you see the Summer thunderstorm coming up. The coloring is fine, and even better still is the Flifpalflou of light and shade, which darkens and brightens the rolling waters. No. 37 a" Coast Scene near New Brunswick," by Edward Moran, ono Of a [aunty of rule artists, s boldly and freely drawn, and well-painted. How different is the sea here from the same element on the hot picture ; both are truthful ; situation and circumstance making and justifying the difference, for Hamilton could not paint, in a bay, disturbed and troublous waters, chafing against the rooks of de i,artca e g os, whiol. Moran Tree us in his spirited picture. Shipwreck off Elizabeth Castle, Isle of Jersey," (No. 41,) by T. 11. de Baas, a New Yerk artist, though scarcely equal to these flue pictures by Hamilton and E. Moran, will suffer little by com parison with them. It is a boldly conceived and powerfully executed painting, Te another New York artist, Mr. A. Hierstadt, we are indebted for another water piece, whioh fairly challenges admiration. It is No. 67 on the catalogue and is called " Mount Lafayette. It is not a marine piece, but the water here introduced, calm and quiet asin a summer lake, is wonderfully rendered. Of what you call scenery there is not much, but the eye rests upon, and the wand lingers over, the surprising fidelity of the water, which seems to stretch back, almost a reality. "A View of Bethlehem " (081, by D. W. C. Boutelle, one of the associate members of the Academy, and a resident in the place he paints so well, is worthy of notice, for its perspective and distances as well as its general acouracy. Very different in subjectand treatment is No. 15, " On the Schuylkill," by Thomas Moran, a gorgeous piece of coloring, in which numerous figures have been introduced, the whole really looking like a poet's dream embodied by the pencil. Wholly unique in some parts of its execution, is No. 25, ' , lndian Summer," by Jervis McEntee, a New Yorker, Rarely have we seen finer at mospheric effects than in this picture. The haze, which European artists can never understand until they come over and see it, as peculiar to our In dian summer—the only American HAMM in whldli we have felt inclined to throw pen and bookS aside, and revel in the luxurious dace far ntente—is here given with infinite effect. It envelopes every Wen comes between the apoctister and the EMI. But through it, in luminous beauty which nearly dazzles the eyes, the sun gleams out, full and concentrated, looking like a visible eye of the Creator, which, no one may gaze at with impunity. Next to this, also by a New York artist, Mr. A. "'Nast, is No. 24, "Sunset on Mount Desert," a work of great ;Ability and force. Opposite, by W, S. Ilustatine, New York, and very unlike it, though effective, is No. 3, The Willow Swamp," which the visitor ought not pass without notice, for it is tril4i4Cta in its simplicity, 7, " Bombardment of Port Royal," by George L. Brown, New York ; 5, " View near Cleve—Prussia," by J. N. T. Van Starkenborg ; and 6, "Cattle," by W. T. Van Star 'tethers., (the two last belonging to kr. Herman Earl,) are also worth notice. There is a pretty "Landscape and Cattle," (No. 8, by J. F. Louis,) belonging to Cu). Fitzgerald, who owns several of the pictures here, which holds not only good pro mite but shows able performance. , Numbers 16 and 17, by R. C. Bispham, are very dissimilar in subject. The first is a Study of Oak Trees," the latter, which indeed must strike the visitor at his first glance round the room, i. a f.."9r ble and grand "_ Study of b Horse's Heal" w.- V. Isenfield's (9) " The _Plowman Home ward Plods his Weary Way," la a charming cabi net picture. NV: 12, " The Abdication of Mary Queen of Scots," by W. F. Jones, it the worst pic ture in the room. Poor in drawing, raw in color ; and stagy ;n treatment. It is judiciously hung out Of the reach of close examination. Ed. D. Lewis, who has taken such rapid and sure stridts in the art, within a few Sears, for he is quite young, dames out in great force in this t ahibition. In this room, (we shall not pass out of the South-east Gallery in the pre. sent nutlet.) his ti Evening on Lake Wirialpite - - cgee," (26), though not abounding in the golden tints and blight hues of his Cuban views, is a work of remarkable merit. Flew Paul Weber, atill in Europe, We have se• veral pigmies. One is a " Morning View of Loch atrine," (31)—another is the " mouth of the Con way, North Wales," (77,) and a little gem in its way. A third is No. 52, a ",5104ing Scone." i n which the figures are painted by C. Shussele, and itis owned by Mr. E.. 1.1. Butler—to whom indeed, imlependent of its artistic work, it is endeared by many madly tender reminimeenees_ There is a curious subject bore, No. 66, by Hen rietta Bonner, whose name is not given in the alphabetical index at the end of the catalogue. We believe that the artist is European. The picture belongs to Mr. Bailey, the jeweller; it is entitled " The Moving," and it represents a wagon load of light furniture drawn by a team of power -tut doge. The subject is noYel, but appears emi nently truthful, and Landseer or Ansdell might be proud of the animals. In a different manner, but good, is (43) " Rest and Peace," by the same lady, also owned by Bailey fo Co.. The property of Ciene ral H. M. Naglee,—a brave officer, now serving with McClellan, and himself an amateur artist of considerable ability,—is No. 39, entitled "Pre parhs for the Bath," in whlch a covey of bright faced nymphs are untiring themselves, to plunge and play in the pleasant waters on a summer day. This picture, without running into his sensuous style, and especially more subdued in the flesh tints, (se if the lasses bad fed on something else than rosp buds,) reminds us much of Etty, and will have numerous admirers. It is painted by Baum] D. Waugh. By Mr. Van Logan, of New York, we have (34) ‘, The Blacksmith's Shop," a picture of merit, because of individuality, character, and truth. Mr. Boatman Johpeou, a New Yorker, has sent in ono of the beet pietures—the drawback of a PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, MAY 8, 1862. homely and femillar subject removed—in the pre sent exhibition. It is called " Corn Husking," and, without any deficiency or breadth, la NI of fine detail. No point of this has been neglected— nor over done. Near it is Russell Smith's " View at Edge (46,, a pretty landscape ; and in this room, well placed, to, is a wonderful Wan picture of fowls (with a touch of game in the breed,) by Miss Mary Smith, (No. 20), a very young and very clever artist. It belongs to J. S. Earle dc Son, and will soon End a purchaser. A. E. Macneir exhibits only a single picture— No. 70, "A Virtuoso," full of detail, but not crowded, and the face, which is quite a study, properly the striking part amid many. One of the young artists of whom this Aoademy may be proud is 11. B. Waugh, now completing his studies in Rome, nephew of Samuel B. Waugh, the eminent painter. It represents an " Italian Wayside," (74), and what we much admire is its moderate tone. Near it, belonging to Mr. Law- Tense Myers, is (74) a Ens, Ltuldechafe is south America," by F. E. Church—probably painted when he was preparing himself for his great work, " The Heart of the Andes," Next this is (75) a study of (I Fruit," by Mrs. Emma Seligman, which will bear comparison with any genre picture in the room, though the artist (tato took up the pencil for occupation during a painful illotas) is only an amateur, this being her first finished production. R. Clignonx, the painter of Niagara, has here (82) a «Study from Nature," Ali/swing the ARCA can Fall, with the Tower and Horseshoe fall in the back-ground. As a study, it merits commen dation. Greatly reminding us of the reai•lifo perforpl• RIMS of Leslie and Mulready, here is a ""The, Counlerleit Note," 010 by D. Iluntington,eAtte, dirtiognithed New York artist, to highly prised in Europe, where it was exhibited some time ago, that it was engraved in the Illustrated London News. If the merit of a picture be that it tells its own story, than besides his fine coloring, Mr. Hunting ton has greatly succeeded here. The naturalness of the whole must strike every one—the villainous look of the scamp who is trying to pass the counter feit—the ehopkeeper examining the note, while his wife whispers her suspicions—and the charming girl who is choosing a new dress, all are lifelike. g• Grimalkin's Dream" (2), by W. H. Beard, Now York, and " The Astronomer " (65), are animal studies of some merit. The portrait-painters are pretty strong in the aoutbeaet gallery, Moat prominent, but not best, it Thomas Hicks, of Now York, with a full-length portrait (No. 19) of Edwin Booth as lago. The time is when the villain calculates that, whether CeivAL 451. iitAderAgo Pall, every way makes bis own gain It is a well-painted portrait, but the de ficiency is in the character of the face—a fault, after all, perhaps more attributable to Nature than to the artist. Nr. Huntington has a striking portrait of Durand, the artist, representing him at his easel, with pal let on thumb, working away at a landscape, That part of the portrait is said to have been painted by Durand himself. A full-length of Schiller (23), by Mr. Schrader, 44 (ALARM artist, is of cabinet aim, and very like all authenticated resemblances to the greatest poet Germany has yet produced. The pin trait of General. Anthony Wayne, (p. 38,) by Rothermel, for the .thstorical Society of Philadelphia, is in the artist's best manner, aad carefully composed from a variety of authentic ma terials. There aro other portraits here by S, 13. Waugh. R. H. Reed, W. K. Hewitt, 11. Helmick, Mrs. Creagh Smith, Jeremy Wilson. (23, Governor Cur tin's youngest daughter, and a great num) and, last, but not least, by G. W. Conarroe. The whole number of paintings in the S. E. Gal lery, which we have just visited with the reader, is 85. We have glanced at all of the WM sinking ones—but, ore we conclude these notices, shall glean in it again. It will be perceived that the New York and foreign artists muster very strong in this room. They have all got capital places, and indeed, the hanging committee have performed their delicate and difficult duty with impartiality and success. To their good taste in locating the various works of art is undoubtedly due the general and pervading harmony, with gentle contrast intermingled, of the whole exhibition. THE BATTLE AT CAMDEN, N. C. The Part the Pennsylvanians took in it— The Starting for Newbern—Landing at Elizabeth City—Hunting the Rebels— A Rebel Battery Opens Fire—The Fight Commenced—splendid Charge of the Fifty- firbt The Re helm Retreat—Our Bien Unable to Pursue—Return of our Forces to Elizabeth City and Diewbern —The balled and Wounded in the Fifty - kitat. [Correspondence of The Prose.] CAMP FRANKLIN, &swagig, N. C., April 22 1862. As many of the, friends of the Pifty•first Pennsyl vania Regiment would like to have an account of the doings of that regiment at the battle of Cain dells I Send you the folloiving teu& Ve , iiilon of the battle : It was on last Tuesday noon, when all thoughts of an early march were abandoned, that the follow ing order came "MOs,'got ready for a moral ice that you have full forty rounds of cartridges in your boxes, and one day's rations in your haver sacks, and your overcoats roiled up and strapped on your Backe." " What can all this mean?" natu rally exclaims every one as he proceeds to his tent to execute the order. " Can it be the enemy are advancing upon us, or is another forward movement to be made?" Questions like these suggested them selves to one and all of us, but to none of them could satisfactory answer be made. At 3 o'clock we fell in, and to the music of our bard, marched through the city, got on board the Pilot Boy, and were conveyed to the steamer Ad miral. Early the next morning anchor wasraised, and we steamed away for—we - knew not whither. However, night foujid us off Roanoke Island, the scene of our first encounter with the enemy. We laid hero all night and until late the neat af ttrm94lll Here, oleo, tileneral Reno joined in, whose presence was hailed with great delight, as we have the utmost confidence in him. (letting , the vessels in position, we moved off before dusk, the plan being to land at Elizabeth City shortly after midnight, and effect our purpose early in the morning. Un fortunately, however, our steamer, as well as the Northerner, containing the Twenty-first Massachu setts; got aground, delaying us so /Ong that it was past five o'clock before we got to the place of land ing. Some time elapsed before this was effected, as the men had to wade throtigb the water in order to get ashore, the small boats being unable to reach the shore. Here Lieut. Col. Thomaa S. Bell took command of the Second brigade, consisting of our rCginient and the Twenty.first Massachusetts and Major Edwin Schallassumed command of the Fifty first. Sending forward Captain Bolton with his company as >an advance guard, the whole brigade moved off. The day was loutottrai, but extremely hot, and the 'multiuse duet was not calculated to make it comfortable for those of us in the rear. We marched along at a good pace, everttlieg depend ing upon doing quick our work. Some five mike, had been passed when a halt was ordered. Going into a little school-house, near the forks of two roads, where the rebel pickets bad boon stationed, we em ployed ourselves in examining the rude sketches of the Merrimac, and in reading the rebel effusions upon the walls. While thus engaged, we were aroused by the ery a Fall 10, a body of soldiers are corning down the other road." No little ex citement prevailed for awhile, but the soldiers coming down the other road " proved to be Haw kins' 2ouaves, Sixth New Hanipshire, and the Eighty-ninth New York. They had been landed near midnight, but bad taken the wrong road. The column again moved forward. Coming to a fine place for water, another halt tad§ order ed, to give the men an opportunity to quench their thirst. Sending forward Lieutenant Hart, with .his command, to support company A, we again moved off, much refreshed by the rest and water. On, on we go, at almost quick time, as if the salvation of our little army depended upon a rapid execution of our project. The haggard coutt- - tenaneee of many of the soldiers, however, tell dose the march, dust, and hot sun, are doing much to cripple us. Say the officers, "Be of good cheer, men; we have not much further to go." "The rebels are evidently falling beck to, orfolk, ing that Burnaide's whole army is on the march." " See yon smoke ; the rebels are destroyipg their camps, and falling back." Still, on we go, lump . . scions of danger near, when, like an electric flash, the sound of artillery falls upon the ear, and a solid shot falls to the left of the column. The regi n,ent files to the right into an open field, and forms in line of battle. The enemy's " dogs of war" howl fearfully, and their shots fall thick and fast around us, their gunners being unusually accurate in their range. We move forward into the woods, and are no longer under auoh heavy thing. DU ring all this time the Fifty-first was unsupported, the other regiments being yet back. Slowly the regiment wends its way through the woods and dense thicket. Our two howitzers briskly reply to the enemy's fire. The Twenty-first Mas. eachusetta is coming to our support as we are malting our way along to get on the enemy's loft. Meanwhile the other regiments are ooming on the field of battle. The Fifty-first emerges from the woods, and takes position behind the fence, and at once opens fire. The enemy reply with yiger, The Twenty-first Massachusetts gets in position on our right and rear, akd they, too, open fire. Now the 20uares, drawn up in battle line, proudly advance, presenting a beautiful sight, but the enemy open a heavy fire of grape and canister, they falter, they break, and come rushing into our lines. They suffered heavily. The battle still goes on. Impa tient at delay, a charge is ordered, and the Fifty first, with great cheering, advance upon the enemy, completely touting them Ala thing to us the-vic tory. Truly may it be said the Pennsylvania boys opened and closed the battle. Thus ended the bat tle of Camden. It lasted about three hours The men were too wearied to pursue the . enemy to any distance. Preparations were at once made to bivouac for the night. Pickets were thrown out, and one by one the men, after refreshiug theme selves with a curio!' coffee, laid down their weary limbs and found sweet repose in sleep. There were those, too, who had found repose in death, and as. rdgill , Was throwing its sable mantle o'er us, their comrades wrapped their cold forms within a blanket and placed it in the hastily-dug grave. No notes• of the funeral dirge were beard, nor the sound of the rotates's voice ) and the farewell shot echoed through these woods. Fur from home, in the midst of strangers, they found death while nobly battling for their colintry, It was nine o'clock in the evening when we were awakened with the caution to silently prepare to march. It seems our commanding officers had re eeired intelligence of the enemy being heavily re inforced from Norfolk, which is about twenty miles from the battle-field, and our force being too weak to contend against such odds, it was deemed best to retire. The night iv - it's a cheerless one. It was dark and rainy. At ten we moved off, compelled to leave six of our wounded behind, among whom was Lieut. Hallman, a very brave and efficient officer. Tee nature of their wounds was such that they could not, with safety, be moved. I VW not stop to detail this march; it is sufficient to fayi if ever hearts pulsated with joy it was when they reached the place of landing. It was the sign of rest—sweet rest. For two nights they had hardly had any sleep, walked nearly forty miles, and fought a battle. Yet, when we got back, and called the rolls, but few were missing, all of whom, excepting three, have returned- Long will this march and battle be impressed upon the memory of the Pifty-firel Regiment. Our loss was three killed, nineteen wounded, and three missing. To the names of Roanoke Island and Newbern will be added that of Camden, fought on the memorable Jay of the 19th of April. Our regiment returned to this city this afternoon, and all were glad to got home, as they call their camps. FIFT Y , MIST. LETTER FROM FORTRESS MONROE. Flag of Truce—Running. the Blockade—The ebels Going South—Front Yorktown—Fight. lug on the thickahominy—Distinguished Ar rivals—The Merrimac again, keg [Correspondence of The Pres , .] FORTRESS MONROE, May 6—P. M. • FLAG OF TRUCE. The steamboat New Raven, seta up {tie James river yesterday morning, has not yet succeeded in obtaining the prisoners supposed to have been re. leased at Richmond. The New Haven lies about, ton miles above Newport Diund ) off Hog Island shoals, and will probably return to this point to night. RUNNING THE mpg/CAM The rebel eloops•ofwar Jamestown and Patrick Henry passed Newport News about two-o'clock this morning, successfully running the blockade into Norfolk. These steamers were neeenipeoled by the rebel armed tugboat reazer. Our armed tugs on picket could not, of course, prevent the passage of vessels much swifter and with superior armament. The hail/thee Of dbi , forces towards Richmond has, no doubt, caused this sudden movement of the rebel vessels from their positions as a blockading squadron in the James river. .1114. .11.4.144.L8 Boiiiis s ocra Contrabande, arrived to-day at Newpert Nows, give additional intelligence concerning the where abouts of a main body of the rebel foreee, They °ay that large numbers of troops have been thrown across the James river, and sent to Petersburg and points along the railroad to Norfolk. Reinforce- Monts have also been sent to the latter pleats. FROM YORKTOWN The telegraph announces that severe skirmishing is going on between the Union troops and the rear guard of the rebel's to the region of the Chian hominy, beyond Williamsburg. Our troops are steadily advancing, making important captures, and General McClellan Wm no doubt oross the Cbickahominy river this week, and "pursue the enemy to the wall." The Chickahominy is a narrow river, running diagonally across the peninsula, and at the , pohot where the Richmond and York River Railroad crosser, it is but about twenty-two miles from Richmond. The prevailing opinion is, that the rebel capital wilt be evacuated. DISTINGUISHED ARRIVALS Nin Dix, the well-known philanthropist, arrived from Baltimore this morning, accompanied by a large number of volunteer nurses and surgeons, in cluding a number of members of the New York branch of the Sanitary Commission. The entire company left for Yorktown, this morning, on the Ocean chf visit the bating hospitals there: RETURN OP THE TRUCE BOAT The flag of truce steamer from the James river, has just arrived, (4 P. M.,) without having obtained !MY kitti§factory communication from the rebels_ This is another breaoh of good faith on the part of " Secesh." This morning the rebel steamer William Seldom came down from Norfolk, and anchored off Crauey Island. All eyes were at once turned in that di rection upon the supposition that the Merrimac was coming. Quite a number of rebels were seen on the beach at Sewell's Point, (named " Point•so weli'' by an early English navigator,) but after waiting until the tide is ebbing, I can see no signs of the iromelad monster. Mona Anom. From General Haneck's Army. The Situation of the Contending Forces. THE PROSPECTS CFA BATTLE. The correspondents of the Western papers give us the following interesting accounts of affairs in General Hal leek's army up to the 29th ult. The correspondents all agreo that a great battle at Corinth is imminent, and that General leek has BO arranged his troops and artillery that the defeat of our army is next to an impossibility : The Positions of the Union Divisions. Iltginning upon the extreme iteht, which reels upon the river, we have the advance divisions of the army placed as follows: Bherman's, McCook's, kfc&rthur's (late C. F. Smith's,) Crittenden's, and Nelson's. The fatter the extreme lett before the arrival of Gen. Pope's army. The army will now fefrie the extreme left, its centre resting on namburg, on the river, some four or live miles above lor south) of here. In the division, among others, are the brigades of Generals Payne, Pit:newer ' Palmer, and Morgan, (acting.) The reserve division of the arms, commencing at the right, are Wal lace's, inot:leinaud'e, Hurlburt'e, and McKean's. Gen. Grant commands the right and right centre of the army, Gen. Buell the left and left centre, and Gen. Pope now comes in on the extreme left. With the cavalry there cannot be far abort of 100,000 effective troops now here, making the mull allowance for tick and non- onninbOuto, aid eighty or ninety batteries of artillery. The Nebel Movements. This is a large army, but it no doubt has as large, if not a larger, eon in front of it. The rebelshave not been idle, and, I am ilifOrDlSfi, have been maling the briaib of their time since the late battle. They have even ad vanced to Pea Ridge or Monterey, nine miles from Co rinth, and ten miles from Pittsburg, on the road to the former place, it that can be called one which is merely a wagon track, or mire of such, through the woods. This mate they are fortifying, either for the purpose of nicking a stand, or t. what I am rather more Inclined to sudiect, with the object of covering their working par tier, cud thus strengthening their position at Corinth, or their retreat from that plum Ileauregard Is Denim, playing the game of Manassas mid its Quaker gone over again. By this, he accomplishes either of his ob- Jvcts—thys the bluff game on our general, to enable him [lll.] to retreat, or mve our army double work to do in driving him from two positiomi, F9yeritipion, it is raid here that Corinth is not ostensible. But WO cer tainly should have a euflicient amount or military skill sod talent sow in the army to eaable it to cope success • fully in strategy with the great general - of the Confe derates. General ilalleck Taking Precautionary Measures - I believe in one of my former letters I sPoke of the propriety of, to some extent, fortifying this position. I now find that this is being done. Passing out to the front yesterday t I obsetimi that on the tpurs of the ridges between the ravine* to the left Of the fluty road, field works were in process of construction. They con. 'listed of regular works, with _parapets, embrasures, thinking faces, traverses,&c. the whole flanked by abattis, and protecte in front by chevoux de Velih sool, works as these comtensding the various roads leading out of the place, no force could make a successful attack upon the camp The situation of the works I saw was commending, although in one instance I thought some ranges of hills or ridges in front overlooked it, but me unsailltaey sys is;ay hatoo been deceived. These evidences of care and forethought on the part of General Balleck, and the stir and bngtle in every portion of the camp.—regiments on the move, brigades under drill, &e , &c.—show that a commander 0401 and judgment it now at the helm. Regulations Instituted by Gen. Halleck. General HaHeck, I learn, is instituting some very stringent, but very necessary, regnlaions since the late battle. In the coming action there cannot be any very great ADSMgrt of running or skulking. li.valry are to be stationed in the rear, and all fugitives to be prevented from taking" French leave." This is the mode practise I in European armies, and by the rebels at the late battle. The isrge scale upon which battles are now being fought upon this continent., god the woody ebarecter of the coup, try, makes it absolutely necessary with tub In au im mense army like this individuality is necessarily lost.- Colutuanthrs of brigath s, and even regiments, cannot keep their eyes upon all their officers, much less men, and thus thousands will skulk in a large army to tens in a small one, in which almost every nutter• lout is humeri to hi i brother officers of the regiment generally. In this army I have said the third captain In a regiment the name of the captain of the company leading It, and he could not inform me. b e to regiments, some of the privates en csuiptd aide by lido could not tell me the number or BM° of their neighboring one ! A LARGE SHIPOWNER.—The largest shipowner in Great Britain, and in fast, in the world. is Ralph Broehkayak vies r.vosldoat of tho Royal4aranco Company, who has afloat nearly silt hundred a nil of vessels. FROM *YORKTOWN. irrsturin OF THE WORKS. A Military Governor Appointed rttrtiltliT OF tat ENEMY. k Skirmish at Worthrmitaa's WILL RICHMOND BE ABEINMONEDI Proposed Abe trusties of the 'Chawsrf • AgainstS otrr Crunbonts. The following it a general resume of the memmerenta at Yorktown and vicinity amen Bnnday morning: Enterinx the Works. May 4.—About 4 o'clock A. M., it was discover...ed. by our pickets and working party that the ene-_ny. was withdrawing from Yorktown, and notice to thaV Mifeot was sent to Gen. MoOle.lan. Iv two flows it was' day.- light. Lowe and OLMMESI ileint,lman made a balloon liNeklittiOL, and eastilinsd the report, Next Col, Sal) Black, Fisty-second Pennsylvania, Col. Gbirn, Twenty-secondussactituretts -and Captain Boughtim, Thirteenth Nov York. with their trench details, all :Wit by JIIM&110B, bEtimeal a ll- fr .-name, advanced . If, eltit withers. at their own risk, and olantnered the para pets of Yorktown. Col. bam Blaok and Gen. Jameson , were the first men in, and unfurled the at are and stripes upon the treat water angle, whose. huge gun, now ex ploded, gave 11l eo moth trouble &week ago. The news of the rebel departure spread like wildfire from one end of the camp to the other,. and about Bun rise numerous officers and a. half dozen correspondents were on the way to the hitherto much.tralked of York town. Explosions I bad coerce entered the fort mon?: from the river when a frightful oxiplosion took place, where a group of neat were standing in the quadrangle: One of tile New York Thirt).eight men had trodden on the eosins of en infernal machine. Two soldiers , were • killed. 1 Maw, anti others wounded. Just afterward thaecelellen Dra goons came on, leading the van of the- army. They preseed up toward the main entrance of the rebel rifle pit (across the Williamsburg roadj:wherer we had al r rely Imearthrd several ennton bombs; anti eumpeetAd otbere were concealed. I thought some castsalty would occur, and watched the progress of the long-column. The cavalry parsed in by fours, and the last' company bad n ached the gate when—another explosion, It deal horse, and badly mutilated rider t, Send fur an ambulance." Lay the man by the roadside." a Attention, compa ny I Forward by fours!" Another explosion inside the great tortresa, not five minutes since—and they are even DOW carrying a poor gr eening fellow in front .of the rebel tent iw which I Within the Works. Well, webave the works, the deserted town—a village of twenty houses—heaps of shot and shell, forty spiked eons in one work, and thirty -QUO MOM in the residual a gb re g ace. Writin g) as low INV, In haste to push On With the rest, I win this morning give you only the outline featuris of Yorktown. An immense earth aallti fifteen feet at the parapet and twenty at the bare, completely invests the Mud boundaries of the pmcp, mailing from the river bask below to the river Shore &OM, Thill well is eighteen feet iu height from the bottom of a ditch eleven feet high and twelve feet wide. It has transverses, bomb. proofs. , well distributed throughout. It is over a male In total length, and Yorktown is forever ringc fill lb A falni4, hacking oniy.caeematea to make it very secure. On the water eide are three batteries, mounting plenty of heavy guns, of which only a dozen or so re main. Five deserters came into camp at about the time the rObtio ant:doped the work& and reported that the rebel force amounu Uto about 125,000 men. The rear of-the retreating column left the fort a few minutes before our pichet force entered. The Captured Stores A large untialltr of ruedleal Flores were &end in the bei.pital buildings, and on and near the wharf were piled up bales of cuiton, barrels of tar, wood, wheelbarro'iva, tobacco, and carious other articles. None of their ship ping was to be seen. Our naval fleet came up at aboub 10 o'clock, and anchored off Yorktown. One store house tear the water batteries contained five hundred bags of beans and about three hundred barrels of flour. Other buildings, which I judged were met by commissaries, contained salt, candles, carpenters' tools, etc., in considerable quantiriee. in 'York;own there me about twenty houses, three or four of which are built of brick, and the remaining ones of wood. Some contrabands were discovered in quiet poeseesion of one house, who informed me that the ad jeining ti9liaei which had been partly demolished, was occupied by General Magruder, as his headquarters. They also said that Generals Magruder, Johnston, and Lee were in Yorktown yesterday. The searching after relive bag been uarsiniiisil. To commence with the oldest that has coma to my know itdge, I have seen a sword dug from near a rifle pit that mud have belonged to a British officer in the old siege. It is gold mounted and shows the British crown and other marks or antiquity and genuineness, %A i Efipl, likeWbed, of the Fooeieenti, flow York Telliatt Om had the good luck to forage the sleeping cot of Glen. Roberti der. The tick part is made of rich tapestry carpet, and on it is written his full name One of too ditty-second Pet.nolvania boys gut hold of the dressing 89,n2 91 . 4119 Pad 66155filithdek. eleo identilied by being marked with the full name of its recent owner. The Louisiana Tiger caps and bowie knives were abundant, as also cartridge boxes, bay omits, old pistols, and old swords. Niiiwy P9yerpor AppointedL General Fitz John Porter, as I just learn, has been appointed Military Governor of Yorktown, and the Forty-fourth Slew York Volunteers, Colonel Str, ker, old, rut here as presenti anent, and to put the place in a condition, if possible, bordering on regasetabilltr_ Phi place is certainly very filthy now, with the refuse of every imaginable character left bet hid by the rebels, and the multitudinous specimens of the porcine species, mho wallow about in a inauriontmeas of dirt and mire that to nit Fo ttl *culmination of eumptnous regality. For the pre_ sent ibis will Wile depot of Government stores, the army post-office and port from which daily steamboat COOltiltb• Ideation will be bad with Fortress Monroe ' Baltimore and Washington, and, in consequence, the town for a time will occupy an important position in the further robdract of do war. On this account General Porter may have hie battle full of important work, and it may be ne cese.ry such au important man as he should.be placed in charge. The brigades and regiments constituting his division, however, I hear, will complain sorely if they are kept in the background through his ilinl6lsifibbit. The 1 1 ursuit. The special correspondent of the World ' within three 1261011 of Williameburth wrote as follows on Sunday eye. 1 21 4 , 6" ; We have had an exalting and eagor pursuit of the fly ing enemy. In advance, on the right, the McClellan Dragcome, with the First and Sixth Regular Cavalry, all nyder Generale Stoneman and P. bt. G. Cooke This Cibrarde, oiler dying artillery. Then infantry, &c., but within six miles beyond Yorktown the various roads from our late army lines so converge that portions of different divisions found themselves in irregu lar sequence along the main road to Williamsburg. Leaving Yorktown, we Raw our gunboats taking Ties session of Gloucester Point; then pushed on with the cavalry and artillery through such a country ! Narrow roads and dark forest on either aide. Dry bottom, but tortuous and winding tracks. What a region for a ca valry pursuit! One gun planted anywhere eking ouch rnude cold° apparently mow doWn men and horses op the dcz,n, and infantry in ambush enfilade amounted column with impunity. So it seemed at a glance; but on, still OD ! The whole arm) is in motion, and never was a be arging army so quickly started before. p e must catch that rear guard. It is only five miles before us. The Skirmish. At 3 P. N. comes artillery firing from the front; then musketry volleys; and something is apparently going on. Getting lora ard as swiftly as pi risible, we begin to meet. SYluPtinla of hot Stotlt. Waiincled and bleeding men, be longingto the First and Sixth Cavalry, and to Major Barker's McClellan Dragoons, painfully ride or are borne to the rear. A stand has been made by the enemy's rear guard, at a little town in the woods known as Worthing; ton't Ring. Gibson's Battery has naiads , detenn It in, but only that our van may find It falling back on a large body, and holding the works, two miles thi, side of Wil liamsburg, of which we have heard so much. Here manes a hot and gallant artair. The skirmishers having. discovered the comy's defences on high ground abeasa, anti the rebel batteries opening ou Gibson's com pany of flying artillery—which has moved.iuto a field on the right to take possession of au apparently deserted outwork—four or five thousand rebel infantry, a regi ment of cavalry, and four batteries of field pieces appear rioldenly in freer of and }heir work°. r ine nesse,- ries move to the deserted redoubt, reach it before Gibson, and their pieces are speedily trained and in full play upon Lim. He promptly r esponds, firing with effect on the infantry and cavalry, and when the order is givento withdraw till reinfotermarits come up, liable elf hie ord nance piece by Piece. A Hand-to• Hand Fight Meantime, Capt. Sanudere, commanding the Sixth Ca valry, diatOVere three noix(Panies of the enemy's horse moving down a ravine, and orders a charge to meet them. Companies A, M, B, and B. gallop down the hill; an actual band•to•bend conflict ensues, the enemy tiring carbines, and our men their revolvers, besides Home cut ihdithrueling with labreiL Wheel about and withdraw, and a closing volley from both sides. The ravine Weiser of cavalry, but twenty or thirty dead and wounded men and hones lie in its hollow. The men are of the enemy, our boys have brought off their dying and dead. Sergeant Debereux has killed two rebels with his revolver, and twinge in their horses abd four pistols. Our gailaut Lieut. McClellan is wounded. Capt. Hays and a rebel of have bad a pistol duel, exchanging two shots, and Days, at the second, has winged and dropped his man. The Sixth Cavalry have lost in ell about Tony killed cud wounded this aiteruoom a large portion of whom were brat by ibe ortennybs -fierce tali/Ivry Oro. The First Cavalry also advance under General Cooke cud Colonel Grier; are ordered to support the artillery on the right. They have slight ions, but one shell kills aye horses and three men. Captain Gibsou'a.lose is reported at about the cease. Pthi,,,ll,ly. Mks- Lined, cud eeeedod in the usual proportions. 101 cover our list of casualties in this affair. The en, my have suffered as much, or more. Both sides halt. Our infantry have not corns up, and it would be absurd to even rec3nuoitre strong at.d elevated field-weeks with eavali-y fu snobs isect as UAL A Cessation of Hostilities By and by Generals Sumner and Heintzelman arrive at tbe Old Mansion—about one mile from the works In frthi—ltbaka °Shade gicheinda and Cooke are halting, as aforesaid. We are all trying to get supper for our selves and horses, while the cavalry and artillery are In battle order in the fields each side, General Sumner, with a brigade of infantry, avows he will go forward and. take the main work with cold steel. Prince de who has made a recohisoleeinee is front, report. the eremy in battle order behind their works, and thinks an attack so mar evening a very hazardous affair in such a terra incognita as this peninsula. General Sumner, however, advances, and news comes back that the skir. withers think the ow; olear—the "lapt ditch" de eerted. It is too dark to mote, however, awl the entire force, around us are preparing to sleep upon their arms. Wilirwe have a Gsand BMW! Queries now making: Will the rebels march all night and oat away I Will they seem illede6 irk-or ea so. escapeus7 Is anytling more then their rear guard now opposing our advance? If so, will Lee cud Johnson rat give as battle on the peninsula, on some Bull Run battle ground selected by themselves 7 They have bad from. 80,000 10100.000 men here within the vast week.. That. at mash is rendered almost certain by reports from many sources. In dogleg. I an idd say that the McClellan Dragoons had a share in to day's skirmish, and lost from, six to eight men. 'Moreover ' that other World cer rsspoodeutswill detail to yeti thsir jugermingexperioacea of to•d4y's events. A pent light le vielble in the direction of Williams. burg. The rebels either encamped in force or burning their cemmisearT etoree. Probably the latter. Will Itiehznond be Abantlased 1 The editorial correspondent of the New York Times rays: The main question of intermit now is. whether the main body of the rebel army will escape or not 4 I em inclined to think it will. It seems to have had nearly two days the start of McClellan, who is nevertheless pushing forward his foveae with all possible dispatch. But his main object will probably be to reach Richmond, which it seems mostlikely the rebel army has decided to. abandon. If they should fall back on Richmond Mc- Clellan can overtake them, or eau put hltuenit in position to etrike them in flank. Weal rOillh tWenlYrfilli miles strove Yorktown, is acceseible for our boats, and It is YU. derstood that Franklln'a Division, with Imo or six of oar gunboats, has already been pushed forward to that point. Ue ce there, a very short march will pntthem its command f the main road to Richmond, and ennple them So ebock (bertha advance tang enough for tee main body of our forces to overtake them in pursuit. If the rebels fall back upon Richmond, therefore, I see no way by which they can escape. They must be greatly demoralized, and cannot make any effective mistimes to a vigorous Tbe probability is that they will not take this line. They will be much more likely to strike from Williams -1 urg Norms the Ohickabominy river and other tributaries TWO CENTS. to the James, and by Matra) Ma the b, laced, retard th pursuit of our troops. 11 they take Ode route to Rich mond, McClellan can reaeh that city In advance of theme and at the ammo time be in the rear of any f o rce that may Inerage McPowell and 15sate, It Mrfa , to me much more probable that the rebel army will seek glumly few cape nontbwm d by croselng the Jarrow river, mid abandon Richmond and the rebel Government to its fare." rears of the Itebele at Richmond,. (Prom the niChintirmi Examiner, BO] Thu fate of Itiohannut deptnesf frr the present posture' of affairs, upon the army at Yorktotrl sari the ettfatncy of the Jllerrimac. 11 hfcDow, dl iwcoeeentratiog a farce of fifty thousand fors march from fth'l4llpgabitimack upon Richmond, there hr clanger also TO that threat= i bnt it fs a daugrr suntan which the Galbrnmeent, beim. fort:vatted, we have II right to believe wilt b 6 forearmed, Taking II lot granted that, a demonstration. Atom' the di- , rectiosi of the Rappahannock. being foretetioent prorttled for, wit Yhfitiii, le the prop - ninon, or rather iirract, that Ilse safety of 'Richmond depeithr upon our emir at York town, at u the obstruction wbitd, lies in the ctittindel'of the /limes river, in the form of therAftertmao, This vessel' may be bet upon tly not only one Mirtfteri L'tt by a Rest of them, lea very ahmi time. it av:i.y t' oaerentne in PP,Tokr combat, or is rmey, by a spark fettplt hit, ita Magatme, or by the accidenrof fire. be put ma of the way at any moment. retie, MMmond is at once cp. pros liable by gunboats, iinder'an aititok from which It perfectly uritthahlt, ate lodtroo.l6lo rp, Coma forces, Our trUmerous Batteries on the banks of the river, ex. , perience has sholvra are utterly incari , Wir of beating ill . the ene my's borsts_ it two veetele contd. run the gaunt let ci two tortuidabla forts on the lower Miegipoippi, and kidiie :oft,. of Lot,tori , oo 00 Its bt•nliO, errreiy ft welittf be madness : e iplbce antr reliance upon sir , ,r;ar and, we have no doxtd, in/trier defences on the Ja* , ' Happi ly, there le ouwexpediont practicable fur the defence of the channel of -the Jame 3 river, winch could' not wed! be provided in nit eacti - of nrun.leviguippi: Pbtoitts, of IL. streani in our river is alder and the depth orthmthanuel comparatively slight.' 1I admits 'of easy okintrectiert, wtereas the Vississippi' Old not adroit:of aucto a thing, except at the coat of iarremme labor, time; and'Aziosuse. YSTIOIIe modes bard Deep 111111 teated far obstrxeling the channel of the &AWL Some recommend tho plea of rafts constructed or ontlrtttees dog up by the rodehlind' thlown, roots and brntches, into the stream: Tle•routt miek to the bottom,tbe - tranchre pohrt down streasWood ao nbattin lblTh florattetillialuy studded treeedlor a dibtance op •na down the - cbannat of the stream.' Ttie enemy Z eve engines for remottats Deem ptly alnloW eery bort of obstructions in the channels! , of river** but , ther removal of a raft - of tree% mattettSogether by the - reoeL sure of the stream, and hOltiloillt MUM by SCOUrntliew t.d seed eed earth warbect agates* "Um. in mow to be a wank rationing the motHr pawerbal and expansive. macbiLerY. raLotber plan of obstruction - le thatrof filling the chart- Ed with fieheii Jorge oral eultathe tettelter the better, mg, the wark of removal le thus rendered. more ItdiOILDV The. °Mar uctiou of the channel for a few hundred yards by , this smarm would effectually vtapthe - aecest of gunboats;, and, if protected on each aide tip homh-lwoof Mat:ries,. they could be put beyond the poseibility of being removed! by the manly: Sketches of the Union Commoviders at the Fight at Willtatiiiwbarg, We present below sketches of the leacing 'Union COM. mantle", Get era Bencock and Hooker, Hen Hancock it a name end citizen of Fenneylvenia, arid a; one of the most eccatnplished officers in the service: - Gen. Hancock. Brigadier General Wintleltl SCOtt Hancock lan nati re Of Pennsyrrenia, fruit which beats tie woe *planted a cadet to Vi ,et I'.'int Military Academy in the year 1540, lie graduated on the 30th of June, 184, standing number eighteen in Ma class, in which was Bimou Bolivar LI aux.- ner, the notorious rebel general of 19r8 ponolgoo flog Ile was promoted to a brevet Benin:Kt lititgellaitiCy in the Fourth Uniteo States Infantry on the let of July, 1844, and on the 18th of June, 1146, received his COLOOMISiOn as full Khalif' lieutenant in the tame regnueut. lie served gallantly in the Mexican war. and in August, 1848, Was la tilted first lieutenant for gallant and rat - eiteri.,.... 0 .- duct in the battles of Contreree and Oburabueco, his bre vet dating front A ugust 20. 1847. During the yeat s 1848 and 1849 lie filled the position of regimental quarterams ter, alter eruct he became reginieutal adjutant of the sixth 'United Staten infantry, In January, 18113, ha wilt pi Quanta to a tun nret lieutenancy. and on the 7th of November, 1850, was appointed an Iletlittant quartermas ter in the Quartermaster General's Department, with the rank of captain. This position he held at the breaking out of the rebellion iu 1851, M.-lg. !Atli Iniste that rank in ihe rt-epoor array vi the tuttßU fitatea, theZdd of September, /861, he waft appointed a brigadier general of volunteers, ard ordered to repal to Gen. hictilellan. Lie. has been eine° his appointment entirely in the Army of the Potomac, and Lie brigade formed part of the forge. that occupied Lowfuelile on Gm ate of ticwber, /eel. Gen. Babcock is much liked by his command, and his acquaintances speak of 'Ain as being a perfect gentleman in his manner, and a pleasant companion. General Hooker. Brigadier General anti acting Major General Joseph Book. r, commanding one of the divhions under General. Malt-Ilan, in a native of klassachusetts, from which State he was appointee a cadet to \treat Pellet Military Academy in 1833. He graduated on the 30th ghee, 1837, Atimilsg No. 20 in a mass or fifty inanition. Om the let of July, 1687, he was promoted to the second lieutenancy of the Firm United States Artillery, and on the let of November, 1835, was further promoted to a first lieutenancy in the same regiment. From July Ito cetehvr 31 lfli/, he wee the adjutar t of the Military lea .1 , 14 et Wein moint, and from 1811 to 1848 wag the adjutant of his tegiment. He served with distinction in Mexico, and woe aid-de-camp to Bs igadler General Blamer. Be was, in May, .1147,- breveted captain for pliant MAIO in the several conflicts at Montero,, v. kick milt place on the Met, vaa, and 2311 digit of dep umMer, 1846 Hitt brevet bore the last-mentioned date. Ile Was appointed on the staff ac assistant afjutaut general, with the brevet rank of captain, on the 3d of March, /BP; Mil in MHO, /M I was further breveted shajor for gallant and meritolious conduct in the affair at the National Bridge, Mexico—hie brevet dating. from June 11, 1847. In the same mouth he received another brevet—viz: lieutenant coloutd—f sr gallant and marito !icon Witilliet in the Mlle of Chepultopea. This brevet bore date September +3, 1047, On the '2oth of October, 1845, he was appointed a captain of the First artillery, and on the same day vacated his regimental commission, retaining his position in the Adjutant General's Depart ment, with brevet of lied4einfil; COMM, On the '4lst of February, 1.503, he resigned from the army and 'gun, to California, where he retired into private life. The rebel lion, however, brought him from his privacy, and he was recalled to the East; and on the 17th of May, 1861, was commiesioned AS brigadier general of volunteere—his epiudntmait heihß arsir.l led to the diets of C . ailiornia, He at first acted under instructions from Gen. Dix, but af terwards was appointed tea separate command under Gen. McClellan. His division took military possession of the northern and eastern shores or left bark of the Potomac river, A portion dines() troops recsntly crossed the Po tomac, and toot( politOndoll of the batteries which had blockades the river for some time previous, and having eftectually removed these obstructions, and advanced a short distance into the interior, were finally withdrawn, and' transferred to the immediate cginmegti of Qom Ma• Claw., on the peninsula. FROM FORT PILLOW. Threatened Attack by the Rebel Fleet. Our edible - ate to Run Past ihe tort. 500 BALES OF COTTON BURNED BY THE REBELS Reporta of Demurs. from. the Fort. JEFF THOMPSON IN COMMAND. The following account of affairs at Port Pillow 16 pre pared from the correspondence of the Cincinnati, Cairo, and Chicago papers: Threatened Attack from the Rebel Fleet ARUM 2.0 —Elneas from the for* found she way to the flag-ship yesterday, and, although coming in parties of two or three at a time, and from both sides of the river, all agreed in reporting thirteen rebel gunboats below we, in command of Captain Ed. Montgomoz y, and easing that an attack upon the national Heenla had beer, determined upon last night. It wee to have been made, so the deserters said, on Sunday night, but, owing to the non-arrival of an important member of the fleet—perhate the new iron-clad ram from Memphis—in time to partici r'te in the , n(iarWSII was Pelltpehr4 1111 led night; when t he attack would certainly be made. I am unable to say bow much importance our Commo dore attached to these stories. I only know be thought it better to err on the right side, and so made every preparation to give the rebel flotilla, warm. reception In ease It made lea itgenfLi-Lazi, AB lb. iTransporte of dm Beet were ordered to keep up a fail head of steam and proceed up the river on the semi. of the first gun ; the watches were doubled on every vessel ; the sick were re moved from the scene of the contemplated action, and the gunboats, some of which have recentlyheen furnished with splendid Parrott guns, capable of throwing shot and atoll a distance of four miles, were all anchored with their bows down stream. If there be any thing in the science of phrenology, the Commodore's bump of caution mu't be largely developed. 'I he night was inky black, and admirably adapted to the enterprise. The clouds wept incessantly. The rain beat upon the decks of the vessel, and flashed in tho river, and the wind sighed through the forests in the Itteettifellllll mohoor, Tho Ilene from the transports on the opposite side gleamed through the darkness like Wale o'-the-wisps, and the mighty 'Mississippi went sweeping by with irresistible posver, boiling and seething, and surg ing, aft if disturbed by some unnatural cause. 4 , What if the rebels should come I" was in everybody's mouth, and every body wished they would. Many sat up all night to see what they supposed would be a sublime spectacle, at least as much of it as the Hash of. the gun. would reveal, but I know these Southern gaseous so well that I bad little faith in their coming, and ea turned in about eight belle. I slept se soundly as usual, and when 1 awoke this 111141116 g a le'se...Nl-looking transport wars moored beside the same overflowed cornfield that ebe LlOll been overlooking tor a. fortnight past, the remaining veg. eels for the fleet were occupying their former pdsitions, and no sign was apparent, that a prowling, rebel steamer bad even stuck her nose around the point,. No Attack Made. APRIL 30.—Another day has dawned, and "the rebel shell bottle," as our colored chamber nafd willorsisS in cullipg thaFo, 4)T nor y9l Wag their appearance Our molars eectoriooottr itOlficter geritioce to the eneiny4 but elicit no reeouse. Can it be that Fort 'Pillow is evacu ated'! Running the Blockade—All the Planter!, Ordered to Fort Pillow. MANI—AII the gunboats are headed bow down, and in pc milieu to meet the enemy at any moment, night or day. We should not be surprised, nowever, the drat dark or stormy night to find our flotilla below Port Pil low and en route for Memphis, surd making a "close ton hestionll uith the Molted :hetes feet weending the Mtn, siesippl from New Orleans. In the event that the enemy's gunboats retreating frets New Orleans do net dart up Rt d,. White, or Arkansas rivers,or some bayou,or chute, they may afford our gunboats. and mortars a degree of healthy Mercite kivivre madam Mapinhis. - - Deeerters continue to do*, to our side quite unitermiltr ly During the present week we have conversed with no. lees than twenty from sort Pillow. They tell many queer. nearvellowt, and. amusing yarns. They report a number of negroes engaged he strengthening one of the r,ba lboiter.re, white tho rikokio from our mortar, tntrea and drop too close around to ho healthy, and,that tmy en masse exhibited a strong desire, and did attempt to tall back and desert the fortification. Lt. was actually deemed necessary to station a regiment or Arkaneae in, !Wry some dietenesin the rear, In order to hold or ro ma the et ntrabaulit down to work. The infantry :zero in structed to shoot down the first negro thatattempted to std.)/ from labor, caieg to the fit e of our mortars: we karma ymterdoy, from a reliable worm that the tntip' at Fort Pillow, through their oxuissfirint, have notified or ordered all planters reeiding on both stoats, between the tort and %bore our fleet liesktot opair to the former point forthwith. We cannot conjecture what Ibis proceeding indicates, unless the. enemy are afraid of their own people—afraid that they &repot true to their iimentuble vorbspo, furobboon neteale maid and comfort" to the commandant of om &Aida. These are significant indications that something de. delve will transpire twre within a few Eta) a The bom bardment will be commenced in good earnest, and the fart 1311 have 4v Mena, In NA thir flotilla will t u et Pletophis. The peninsula, et the greater portion of it, bag beetk th.oded by the rebels, who cut the levee, hoping, in this manner, to prevent t he lauding of our land forces. They might have succeeded in effecting their purpose had there not been a second levee. which we; COZletille j ilill by the planter above-mentioned for the Letter protection of the land adjoining his residence. Our. Gunboats to Run the Ganntlet--Re- ports of Deserters—ctritfpn Hit4rited, mar '4.-15eme two or three hours anterior to her departure for Cairo, the De Soto lied received orders to proceed to Osceola, and there take on a merge of cotton captured from some of the rebels in that vicinity, but at the mat moment, these orders WM countermanded, and she was sent to Cairo with all neeelido deAeateh- !Ad , return' to-day loaded with ammunition and auppliea for the flotilla. A taro force of marines was engaged in clearing, a couple o coal bargee, which it wee re- THE wAn ESN. Tii WA. ?name will be sent to nthseriben by mall (per annum In advance) M. 62.041 Three Contee 11.011 , )led II II it toile Ten 4 4 .I 01 12.00 Larger Clubs will be ekerge4 et the +eine rata, thus : 20 CODIPH will coat $24; 60 melee will 40et eon 109 cavles 81%1. rer • Club or Twenty-one or 0,0/0 we Win mil MI 'Extra Copy to the getter-ny of the Club. Oir Poidosisters ore requested lo act * Agent' kg Tai Was knias. lllir Advertisements Inserted st the nenel rata. Mx Ones eousiftale s autism ported were to ho loaded with the cotton In quenlkorit and lashed one to each side of a gunboat, which it wee es petted would attempt to run the blodcade of rte enernro betttrlet after the manner of the Ott. , retetteke et Island pin 30. 'No have no positive Informa tion that ouch wan the intention of the Commodore, but the person who Rave me the information, an lota/pint officer of the Maine. thought It eittemely probable). There 'MOP} T 9 by a Iva! , grounded Imareasion that OM moOotd rdTter till semi a portion of tile fleet Bb the riser This he can cagily do In the Present stage of wader. With the node/tit Ceitteletodore below tho forte it to fifthly important that Commodore route establish communication, in oreer fo attain the Intel/fa:ant en opt ration of the tern neete in theteduelion of the: dr I Timm can Ste no doubt of the prettleatintty of the 'interstice, and It ail! , undoubtedly be nudertaken. c• The "original .raeohis," a deserter, arrirtd at this yeatetddy, and wee immediately 90%114 with mg Coriat.vli.re De eeilmatee the 4orooor or troupe at t op en ~,,, sand, awl RR'S' there are thirty MR% in pennies], ereluelVe of MOM of Oce water. hattnrfner, at clement over. Viewed aid dfielose. nese are Overtly tbiri,y , trrei and slily-tours. Gen. '6lllpatue la chief of artillery gt the' fey% Chd teak uhtll r.sully comnsosrpi yorrao too pas!week he has beer, emprreetled, mei the command' gives to Jell 1 hompente, the ee swamp lee' of Nevi lend rid, 41113Itty-tlrb colluder Oltsteril neartliehendorTirtervi. filthielles the redstibtable eiffsbt omooomoot, .rid kelmeelt kner gou t aria Sndt the re• markabie einete directed to oft notilla are the re Mk of this con - tiandet`e esterpriee ire) that dirocrAtin. (Jr. lerhfiry last a detactuteenle - of men from the rebel. meet 'lteamd duWb thP Mini) of Alfa fully, On. the ra• Seel soobeer Coe, Zierelii and bcrurcl . five httuired bales et cotton be:toging to rebeld thernabouttnin antiefirttiorr adt: its capture by 1 , efkr al troops: The °anima witnessed ,Cite destruction of their property wed endertvoied to pre- vet it. but no order from Jeff Dirk was prredereced* lattlic NAM. vo6all difficubit sad the' aboKity• gficri in it an a whlllitary necessity." Hc'thns Iletrs' itittnll . l'Alingutme-Vreuerat l'reratit§b. 211,17. 4 8... - Thorola still no !MM. Pliot,g is ailillsypt up at Danville IrtVilsorttitiroitid prepashatidne 'continue for a gneral !matt. Dikitir7Erd 'report' that Hollins is' yreparixy to attac) Cintmod,re Fiore, and proudly , boasting' that sink' :kW entire &et or . drive' tOt11) IQ t!fd1111111i, verve rtaiels are' rAtilinany ''ntrenlild'ehell 'into the' woods, bet - atoll the love and the Meet, and occasionally firs in the dlrection of the flotilla, but without' eff.lct; as the boats arn'all out of hinge. A gePtiellinnt whov'ltetnitelltri Ida& ttet!ed aeldff.! at Jeer, inlet loMilenipnis right daYeyoto, ease he ' woo at the Memphis esi Chatleetete Raiireudeeet; in that city, when Gen. Prelates and a riotiloh of hbe hrigailiti centered at rittsberg Lizsiting, arrived there eu route to Toshio'= billosnibbintiat vitro they 'la va bon tehl. IL/ ear. . large crowd colizired'ott tho ',erasion, sad that the pri tonrra were kliolry trealetl' They were liberally sup plied with tobact.,; cigars. crates. bread, end pies, which ' ti.e citizeus thrust tato the oar windows and passed to thrnu• A nbel tblzatel 4-!-§‘ 1.4 A to .ak ties Fronthw what the North was now ightin'g for"' • ", We are ligirtinc,W said the 'general,' 64 .1er lho'reato ration of the 'Union lett was." ou certainly Or not think a ssconstruction Upon the Oki DRIP possible," clad the Colossi.. II ir..01, &Lt. ner subjugate th e bort!), 'lc If our tom ahould faltat• fp the leak of driving you fro's). our eoilv our • deans°. women lOU take their places wad seem A:A the teen." ..Subjegating the tioleth" responded the General, 712191' terrii7 ll o OM. S Toll mean hv it that we can uS,- ler re-establish the Government in 1111 lie integrity, theh, sir, you are rawly at fault: Our -army awl navy are thundering at all your dons, and admittance cannot much longer be denied." PI AY 4 —The belief if cntertatned hwa that •the Wight Jeeertiog hiompuie ana•Goritain if, Wood, they have nee already done to, and tiredallitui back to Cobra:taus, thiaaiveippi, about one hundred nilleir-frdai the latter place, and near the Alabama state line. Kettichis is an indefensible point, and with aneueray above- and below Ili and General Haile& iti lta sal.;•, It meek soon fah tete OUP handl, Leland No.lo abandoned.and nuntsville and. Nicalphie in our poseeeelon, the position• of the rebels at Cotitith heroines untenable. They must adopt a new line of defence, and Columbus, a place at v.•hioh three here of railway maitre, seems to be the only net nieein which they can now fall back. [ fhe latest maps do not show Colnntinst Mississippi, to be the centre of three railroads. We find a branch laid down connecting Columbus with the .111obilis mg 'Ado 3§.16..a it is Ong Of the Mild 01 navigation on the Tombigbee river, The city It butiton an elevated bank, 120 feet above the river. It is the centre of a large trade, being the chief depot for the cotton of an extensive raglan of enmity. Pobtilatloa. 8,000. 1e located about one hundred miles south of Corinth, and is reached by the Mobile and Ohio Railroad ] A BEAUTIFUL POEM Lines Written for the Dedicatton•of lite• Ly. ceum Hall, in Dorchester, Mliss.,.lllrsrat4 10, 1640. BY SHY. JOHN PIERPON?: Temple of science! through thy door, - Now first thrown open, do we wog, A. 4 r9T.Tv.47 stand before Creation's God, with prayer and song. . Works of his hand, where'er ye lie, In earth or heaven, in light or stl§,ll, l These walla shall v 3 your Yl4OO reply ; : Here shall your wonders be displayed. Trees, that in field or forest stand ; Flowers, that spring up in every zug ; Winds, that, whit fragrance - tilt your hand; . Where trees have leafed, or flowers have blown,— Suns, in the depths of space that burn; . Planets, that walk around our pyryi ; t'otoete, that rash to Llt your urn With light out•gushing from his throne,— - Waters, from all the earth that rise, And back to all its oceans gc, Cooling in clouds the flawing skies, Cheering, in rains, the world below,— Torrents, that down the mountain rush ; Glaciers, that on its shoulders shine; Pawls, in ybut masa bad that blush Diamonds, yet sleeping in your mine,— - Lightnings, that from your cloud leap out; Thunders, thatin its bosom sleep Fires, that from Etna's crater spout, Books, that the earthquake's records keep,-,. - Rainbows, that overarch a storm,,. Or dance around a waterfall : Ternitilft, that earth's face deform s .. Teach us, 0 teach us, in this hall. Dramatic and other. Items. IGiaS Batemen IN Still ttle greatattrantion at tka.win_ ter Garden, Plea York. —Barney Williams has been offered s3o,ooo4tailhis expenses, to play 75 consecutive nights at the principal cities of Califoinia. Declined at present on Holum of the ill-bealth of Idre..Williem% -- Edwin Forrest entered on his fourth week at Ford's • Atheneum, Washington, last evening, as Brilliant Tell. RenTlollll is performing at Front-street Theatre, Pallimbes. The "Combination Company" ie foal M the Austen Academy of Music. Gottschalk, in conjunction witLarana?ltalian Opar► TIVTiFt ti9Yre cokcPrtli in Witabington thitweek,.. —'J. Wilkes Booth hi the attraction el the lit lonia Theatre.. —Mies Sallie. Sinclair is at the. Academy of Motto, Cleveland. Power's status, embiematio Conforgap h .; =ergot the a orbs to be exhibited at the London: Inter national Exhibition. THE.TURFi (Deported for The Press.) POINT BREEZI PAIVIL—With Spring return her plea sures, and. the sports of the turf are not the least at tractive of her many delight!, Marfa row the cruet. tulle into which its surroundings have plunged it, racing, lea delightful and exciting poetise, and the turf, in its - legitimate state, numbers among its patroue the dliathuste. as well, as-the jockey, and the sedate man of business. eceno no lade keenly, then too professional'' , who lives by it, Yesterday afternoon, at the . above- Park, occurred the first trot of the season. Awaking from her winter sleep this park promises to her patrons• ntother season of Was specie .ead pla..ureel of whicis shebas, more than any similar institution, been so Dre like. During the winter the use of its grounds with its. numerous sheds and stables, was generously tendered by the association to the sol diers, and its broad !better contributed not a little to the Comfort of the mailman Quartered there. The stables in which have stood the heroes of many triumphs in the trotting circle, gave grateful shelter to the warrior's steed, which, pictures to. the contrary notwithstanding, are not apt, at,Bloos. bead s to be no full of fiery blood and.olllSlikit stafit , to, bear unscathed the cold and storing of winter. They have gone, and the gallant steed that hears his rider. through many a battle, or dies an humble instrument in the country's cause, will. not be known or, peptised as much as another who, by an, accidental possessipn ,ef speed, pleases a few and fills hid owner's puree. ma. work. however, is scarcely less arduous than that of ble, military brother; his luxuries are but the preface to labor. His fine condition and his enceitent,spirits are but the mediums of hie utility. His endurance is eaten-. feted to a nicetrt au4 tae loogth Pt the race determined. b sa 7 e li.A die t!, cs- the ru6i d i aovts and his cbomingn preparationsub ate faro,defo°raday of labor. The contestants in this recu, of,which we. will now. apesk, were " Monitor " and "Jim." The first. horse, under the name of Fishertnan l " cot/testa! le VAPAI tease Ill! 11.14616, and Bove smornigo. of formidable trotter. The change of /lame seemed suggest., ive of great impeovement—from the power of .a men fo. that of the most formidable floating battery in existence. ' , Jim," in this, made his first appearance on .4 p 4,, 'r tf r, Flit first tiagloilfaliCis o n LI:L.3, omed 24470 was h ha. rlgg flu In a iditite-line in Jersey. li`tean that he made, the. equivocal advance to a butcher. weevil, where, having shown considerable speed, be was soon after removed from. that residua and the present match mado. At 33g. o'clock the burins were brounht onti. tied, before A 4 utc-i usually 'Misnumber of epeciatore, commenced Tur.,,RACE, After three fobs, starts,,cansed by, the bopping and breaking of "Monitor," they gut tho word, inenedieteli alter which Monitor" broke, which ‘i Jim , " paestJ IMO ledhim six lengths, which another break ton creased to twelve leestbx,pt ghe.tieartePilago- From the irregularity of , his gait it was now thought he naiad not win=an opinion that was confirmed, whoa two siesre breaks slava. ban a position twenty lengths in rear ttt the. beibrolio vole, In this tumbling gait ha. Peseta the tbremqueotter polo a dietance be hind hittotfiliO• neat, who Dad not one deviated from Xis legitimate gait. All the exertions of his di fiver availed bitaisolliina, and he was distanced by "Jim," without a skip or break, hit 3.47. The tines Mg vsTrolioxotee hie owner's marl-meet or his oft vusiiitiOnj - , 110 OSCISTIA Tait kir weeks he had bean unable to mirk Look, on account of ■ revere into threat, which woula, seriously Impair his wiud. Sunsieux,—.Trettiere, mile heats, beet three in nen to iIIIBtIII, fa a stoke ssoeo. Mr. neodih ±A.4.tut.e M. h. 4, ............ 1 Mr. Mceoraelltlßlllll6 a, b.. • —• • Ale}. V 47, . . After et. above race, fly" ifs& gotten up between Mr. Echvilard gnu harm WO Mr. Whitney bi bay harm The bolting was muck in favor of the bay. but the 0117 born won in tee ettoittbt. beats, the bay being nearly diatonic behind In twit boats. StlOAßT.—TToning, antis beets, beet two in throe to tylllBolnt. for WOO:. Mr. Valt&lei .Brews g. Mr Goodin naixes b. Tiro°. .. ... 2.54 g , 263 N HONOR. TA .tor An ran : cert.—The Bespesor of Rue sia hes conferred upon Col. John Vl. Gowan, a. former resident of Boston, the decoration of Knight. of the osder of St. Steriletaus., Tun MAN WlllO, SAT ON Tan AOWDZII.—EIeven bundred dollars have been collected in St. Louie and sent to Join:. Davie, " the walk Who Sot on the pywdes," on Monday. RELEASXD.—SamueI S. Mills and Thomas 8. Piggot, formerly editors of a rebel newspaper in BeMoose, sailed tha Sewik, have been release& emir' Fort Henry, on their good behavior. HATIXAED COLLEGE.—The fellows of Tfarvarci ITnivereity have nominated George B Emmy:ton, LL. D se gummy' to tho lace Prcfl49.o rtito, numNAL ...Boston papers 1111110U1100 the desalt of the wife of Charles Sprague, the banker-pout, Mrs. Sprague was severity-Our yeV4 1.164, ~... 2. i as