THE PRE:tih. DAILY (1111TADATO ZAWITTRIN BY JOHN W. FORNEY. OTTICE lla. 111 SOUTH FOURTH •STREIi'R: THE DAILY PRESS, TwEETE Osirre PER WEAL. payable to the gamier. aded to Imbeeribera out of the at SIX DOLLARS al Annum. TOPS DOLLARD roe elleeirr tlearrlng SR DOLLARS MR Six Monens—invariably In ad• for the time ordered. THE. 'MI-WEEKLY PRESS, Mailed to anbocritera on; of the OW at Tatum Hob- AlB PIS Al Mild, in advance. comalissiori lin USES. WELLING, COFFIN, & CO., 1120 CHESTNUT STREET, -Amu for the following makes of goody: PRINTS. 10111010.1.1 M . G. W.—. Q 8.111.1141 Ilia 00. LAWNS. DII2II4IILL M . G. 00 BLEACHED COTTONS. emosidabr, s lrorootdale, Auburn. glateravtlle, ClentretWe, Jamestown, Blackstone, Hoyt,. Bed Bank, Dorchester. Ifewburyport, Noumea& Zonave, Burton, Greene MB, Co.'s A. A., B. A., 4 .7. A., mad Mar nyigh BROWN COTTONS. idurtdde, Trent, Groton, Ashland. Chestnut, Glenville, Mechanic' and Farmers'. 06)1113KT JMAMS.—Glasgow, Manchester. DENIM AND ATRIPTS.—Grafton. Jewett Olty, IMadison, Slatersville, Agawam, lioyotoue, Choctaw. CANTON MLAIIMMLB--dlabauville. AgaWSEL 9ocisi Co., Looodale Co. WOOLENS. ARMY BUB OLOTHB, EIGROWYDI =A inGAB. =LB. BROAD OLOTRS.—Plunkette, Gleams Uo., &o. OASODUREI3.—Geiy & Bon, tilartou'e River, &a. HATOMS.—Dew Diver, tienvorardie. tower Oal -Isy, Hope, Staffordvllle, Converse and Hyde, Converse "Bros. & Co., Shaw Mfg. Co. KINTUCHY INANS.—Rodinan, Mystic, GoldWLedid. DOBIBT drugolay Box ony, Mertao, and other - styles: LONSDALE Nankeens and Colored (lambda. PLAID LINSEY& OOTTONODES, ato. [146441 SHIPLEY, HAZ AHD. Id HUTCHIN SON, No. 112 OIFEBTI%I arbliNT, OOMMISSION MNBOHANTI FOR TRI BALI OF PHILADELPHIA-MADE GOODS. wh2ll. em CARPETS AN!) OIL CLOTHS. CANTON MATTINGS. T. F. Es E. B. ORNE, NO. 519 CHESTNUT STREET, (orroerri *MATE HOUSE,) BATA now open FRESH IMPORTATIONS 'WHITE, RED CHECK -RD, And FANCY COLORED CANTON M 3TTINGS 500 PS. J CROSSLEY 45; SON'S _ENGLISH TAPESTRY BRUSSELS] FROM 871 TO $1 PR YD., a. F. & E. B. ORNE. pus-tees NEW CARPETING. JAMES H. ORNE, -826 CHESTNUT STREET, BELOW SEVENTH. We have just received, by late arrivals from Enrol*, risme new and choice venetian of 0/atrial/ill, mu- FRENCH. AIJBUSON Square Carpets. AXMINSTERS, by the Yard and In entire Carnets, -CROSSLEY'S 84 end 3-4 wide Velvets. ci Tapeetry Brussels. as Brussels Carpeting. Also, slam variety of CROSSLEY'S and other makes. TAPESTRY BRUSSELS, From 874 e. to 4E151 Per Yd. Our emeortinent comprises all the beet makes of Throe and Ingrain Carpeting, which, together with a gene ral variety of goods in our line, will be offered at the low. , set possible prices. OIL CLOTH FOR FLOORS, From one to eight yards wide, cat to any dize. :FRESH MATTINGS. By late arrivals from China we have a full assortment WHITE AND COLORED MATTIN as . OF ALL WIDTHS. JAMES H. °ENE, aple 525 C HESTNUT. GLEN ECHO MILLS, GERMANTOWN, PA. McCALLUM & Co.. .6IANIIIIPAt3iIirDZIOI, ORTEES. AND MOLLIES SOW CHESTNUT STUB/Cr. (Opposite Independence Rall,) CARPETIN as. OIL CLOTHS, Am. We have now on hand an extensive stock of ()mistime, of oar own and other makes, to which we call the often- Kim of comb and short-thne buyers. roh7-ant FOURTH -STREET CARPET STORE, go. 47 .3,80VZ 491MSTNITT, No. 47. J. T. DELA CROIX Invitee otteation Whin Spring Lzuportanon of CARFETINI *6. Oompdains ovary style. of Chi Noweta Pattering Rod Dealgas, in VELVET, BRUSSELS, TAPESTRY BRUS CELS, IMPERIAL TH KIM- PLY, and INGRAIN 'OARPETIN 08. VENETIAN and DAMASK STAIR. OA RPEITIDIOB. SCOTCH BAG and LIST tieD.PKT /NOS. FLOOR OIL CLOTHS, in ecury width. COCOA and :MN 4ON rinTTU QS, DOOR-MATS, RUGS, SHEEP SKINS, BRUGGE PS, Aug CRUMB CLOTHS. AT WHOLESALE AND RETAIL, LOW FOR CASH. J. T. DE LAG'ROIX, 4V STATIONERY AND FANCY GOODS. MARTIN & QUAYLE'S RTATIONERY, TOT, !M) FANOY GOODS EMPORION., N 0.1035 WALNUT STREET, BBLOW BLIPT6NTII % PHILADELPHIA. my6-1m fp DRUGS ANL t;ii EMIR ;ALL ROBERT SHOEMAKER & CO.. Northsest Dormer ram= and RAGA Street., PHILADELPHIA, WHOLESALE DRUGGIST; IMPORTERS AND DEALERS IN FOREIGN AND DORE - JEST/0 WINDOW AND PLATE 'GLASS. NA urAcinneaßs or WHITE LEAD AND ZINC PAINTS, pIITTy, 701 Till OBLIBRATID FRENCH ZINC PAINTS. Dealers and aananmers supplied at VERY LOW PRICES FOR CASH. ap29-21n HITE LEAD, DRY IN AND On..—Red Lead, White Lead, Litharge, Sugar • c Lead , Copperae, Oil of Vitriol, Vain nel, Patent Yel low, Chrome Red, Chrome Tallow, Aqua Fortis, Mu riatic Acid, Epeom Salts, Rochelle Suit% Tartaric Acid, Or.n g e 1111..sral. Soluble Tart, dub_ Cart). Soda_ Whits Vitriol, Bed Precipitate, White Precipitate, Lunar Caustic, Marceline, Suiph. Morphlee. itvrohine, Acetate !aerobic°, Lac. Sabah., Ether Sulphuric, Ether Nitric, Sulphate Quinine, 001741. Buhlim., Denarcenzed Opium, Chloride of Soda, WetheriiPs Ext. Cincha, Tartar Emetic, Chloride of Lime, Crude flotax, Itenned Borax, Camphor. RlAllill Copavie. WRTRERILL A BROTHER, Druggists and Manufacturing °herniate, Nos. 4T and 49 North stworm Street, lalli-tf 0r,m,4 WELPHIA. MEDALS AND COINS . —A large quantity of Medals and Coins for sale; also, one Bet of Napoleon's Medals, one set of Dassier'i Medals of the Inetinh Hinge, and one set of !Sedate of the Homo Empire. Apply to WM. R. 0W11001413, WS WILLIAM Street, New York, Dealer in Medals, 00i3111,, end Paint- Ines. so2l-1m ... 7 ik, • V • .6-0; 4 ,„ -, \% t t r t ~/,/,+•, ~_....-•,.,. *4O I \ \ ~..._,Jr \ ...1 .....4fri. ~.. , ..,....N.\ / ---- _ ~. ..... • ~,,,,,..,,,,. ~,, _.,„pt,,,,,,„ ~„... „_,.....„..,.____...._ 7 s " , " Nki 1,/ ,.. : r. .:.;,.....: .f ' .;;77.i . '-'',..• '' II . -4.. , ~ . . , .... _.... • . , I;; . .'" - ---.4„... ,. .,0.! , ::: 0 01 •-.-- - - - -7 44: ,- *I - L - ~ ... . I tr ier Ift . , i„. ~ , -,• --„,„„..„ - , -- , 4"-- , kip li mi ... ! , . , • ----- i i- ' ' - • . - • •; ,•,7-- ' . 1 . 47' -, ,•., -•;,. '., . . 4 6 - V ~ 1!1k... ; 7. 1. •...,,, :._ 'WAR , '''”/IIL:, c._ r - .;4 - 00,1 , 1 1 .,: , :i. .. . .. ... .. __. -_ , _ dor 11 1 -:-.".....-- ,„,,,- 4. • _ • __-_. ----___ : --•-,:-. „. or • ..-,-,•„,, ii , 1 ,,, 15,..„...D -- -- - .- -.--: ' --.- -". - 'iv' z . - . ' 4 4 ,.. - r .. -• _ _.. ate/ - -t•,•, -•:-,--.-, • ••..,' -•'.: •• , -: - - ). tilt: ,!-- ' - V ••(<3 , VH , `,f , -- .' 1 , '''' : ' Ol 7 ' •4 -'.., - - '4 4% , : 0••----. "•' -: • . 1 '' ' • -Morn .' - .)„- ... ----.;, '• i --R; - :.• - _ _... .—,...__ . ;• .._,.L----."—_ "".••••... - / r.' • _ 4-..." .....i....- ... 1 ----.......--.4_, VOL. 5.-NO. 242. JEWElatir. acc. CLARK'S ONE DOLLAR STORE, 6O CHESTNUT STREET. ffEW GOODS, NEW STYLES, AND NEW PRICES. For BNB DOLLAR you can buy any 0110 of the tot wino ereleleet a nel 44 Sliver Plated Tea Spoons. 41 66 •' Deeert 46 " Table " It U 44 44 iforkk, 44 44 14 m eeer t Pair " " Knife and Fork. it " Napkin Bing& • " " Butter Stint, Silver Plated Sugar Bowl. " Butter Dinh. 14 Kolassee Pitcher. 44 sa Cream " 41 " Castor. as " Waiter. Goblet. 44 " 'Drinking Cup. " " Bnlcat diner. Gold Plated Vest Chain, all 114 44 (Rued as 11 if C 4 1.1 N e ck it 16 64. 436eteleltie, " " if " Braoeiet, • " Medallion, " " " " Armlet!, u • it Breast Pin. ii ii " a. B ar Sin g, 44 41 44 " Pin and Drops, all stilim 44 " Studs and Buttons, l Solitary Slaws Button, a lAMB. 44 4, Bosom Studs, It /I t. ringer Binge, S 4 64 Pencils, at 114 it " Pen with Pencil Ow, Ladles , or 0(okt/omen's Port Mount+le, Utthas, Bags, Purees, &c., &c., &c. All Goode warranted as repre sented. We have on hand a large assortment of Photo graph Albums, Mantel Olocka, Travelling Gaga, and Gold Jewelry, which we are closing off at coot. The at evoiloo a. Una trado reapeatall, *Donated_ D. W. CLARK'S ONE DOLLAR STORM, _ 609 013ESTN GT Street. PAPER. HANGINGS PHILADELPHIA PAPER HANGINGS: HOWELL & BOURKE, OORNER OF FOURTH ..2ND MARKET STREETS, MANUFACTURERS OF PAPER HANGINGS AND WINDOW CURTAIN PAPERS, Offer to the Trade a LARGE AND ELEGANT AS SORTMENT OF GOODS, from the cheapest Brown Stock to the Finest Decorations. " N. E. COR. FOURTH AND MARKET STREETS. N. B.—Solid Green, Blue, and Buff WINDOW PAPERS of every grade. ar23-2m MILITARY GOODS. ARMY GOODS ON HAND. DARH AND LIGHT BLUE KERSEY& STANDARD 6.4 AND 34 INDIGO WOOL-DYED BLUE FLANNELS. INDIGO BLUE MIXTURES. (=TON DUCE,IO, /3, AND 15-OUNCE. FARNHAM, KIRKHAM, & CO., ay26-2m 225 CHESTNUT STREET. BLINDS AND SHA OES. BLINDS AND SEIADES. B. J. WILLIAMS, No. 16 NORTH SIXTH STREET, ILLNIIPAOTIIKEIR OP VENETIAN BLINDS WINDOW SHADES. The largest and finest assortment in the City at the LOWEST PBIOES. STORE BB&DES LETTERED. Repairing promptly attended to. sm3-Stri LOOKIN I 1 GLASSES JAMES 8. EARLS & SON, MANIMAUTURERS AND IMPORTERS 0 P LOOKING GLASSES. OIL PAINTINGS, FINN KNGRAVINGS, PICTURE AND. PORTRAIT TBAMMIA PHOTOGRAPH FRAMES, PHOTOGRAPH ALBUMS, OARTZ-DE-VLIITZ PORTRAITS, EARLE'S GALLERIES. 818 CHESTNUT STREET, I II P grLATICIIP H lA. SEWING MACHINES IEET iFiR WILSON VP SEWING MACHINES, 628 CHESTNUT STREET, inbli-8m PHIL &DELP MA. WATCHES, JEWELRY, &o. A FRESH ASSOliffitiENT, atE'Skii THAN FORMER PENES. PSBR & BROTHER, Importers, 824 OHESTNIFT Ehreet. below Fourth mh2o-11 CABINET FURNIT URE CABINET . FURNITURE AND Eli- LIA)11) TABLES. MOORE & CAMPION. No. 281 South SECOND Street, in connection with their extensive Cabinet Bubble:le are rem manufacturing a superior article of BILLIARD TABLES, And hare now on hand full supply, finished with the MOORE di CAMPION'S IMPROVED CUSHIONS, which are pronounced, by all who have need them, to be gaperior to all other& For the Quality and finial], of these tables the menu- Manners offer to their numerone patrons throughout ths Buten, who on familiar p 44.16 the ammeter of their work. CAUTION. The well-earned reputation of FAIRBANKS' SOALES Ras induced the makers of Imperfect balances to offer them OR FAIRBANKS' SCALES," and purchaser' have thereby, in many instances, been subjected to fraud and imposition. FAIRBANKS' SCALES are manufac tured only by the original inventors, B. k T. FAIR BANKS & CO., and are adapted to every branch of the bnainess, where a correct and durable Scales is required. FAIRBANKS & EWING, General Agent& arlo-11 MASONIC BALL, ?la CIFIIDEATNUT ale BRUSHES J_JP AND BLACKSMITHS' BELLOWS, 11.-EMBL.F., & VAN HORN. mh.2o-3m No. 321 MARKET FIONA. Philado B IOTINA ROOFING, MAVVFACTVaIb lir. VW* UNITED STATES BIOTINA ROOFING COMPANY, No. 9 GORE BLOCK, Corner GREEN and PITTS Streets, Boston, Maas. This Portable Roofing Ii the only article ever offered to the v ebde - e biet, ie ready pr.paned to ge. on the eaof without any finishing operation. It is iiyht, handsonse, and easily applied, and can be eddy and cheaply trans ported to any part of the world. It will not taint or disco/or water running over, or lying on it, and is, in all reenccte, a very desirable article. Its non.condacting properties adapt it especially to covering. manufactories of various kinds; and it Is confidently offered to the public after a test of four years in all varieties of climate and temperature, for covering all kinds of roofs, flat or pitched, together with cars, steamboats, /to. It to Lott. cheap mood daprob2o. A g ooks lotrotoll, to whom liberal inducements are offered. Send for sample, circular, &c., with particulars, to nra B. noop CO.. No. 9 GORN BLOCH. Boston." au24-3m LABOR-SAVING MAOHINE. -11-11 CLOTHES•SAVING MAOHINE. TIME-SAVING MArNIINE Haley, Morse, & Boyden's Clothes Wringer eaves labor, time, and clothes, and is an improvement which will meet certainly be generally adopted. It is self-adjusting, simple, and durable, and is far superior to every other device for the purpotie intended. Over five hundred have been sold within the last thirty days in this city. No family should be without one. They are warranted to give perfect satisfaction. For able br L. E. MOW, M the Oftlee of JOY, COS, H GO , northeast corner of FIFTH and UftE3TNIIT streets. Orders froth the °wintry prcmatly attended to. nlOO lm OOlL.—Alreeh lot of Olive v Oil, lniargto end amid] bottles, tor gale, to Emit% per FLIP Ocean Skirt:ter, by CHAS. S CARS PAIRS, mrl4 No. 12d WALNUT St. and 21. OItANIIE St. DRY-GOODR JOMBEIRO. NEW IMPORTATIONS. HOSIERY, GLOVES. GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS, LINENS, SHIRT FRONTS, WHITE GOODS, AND EMBROIDERIES. THOS. MELLOR & Co.„ MM.= 40 OM 40 - Nora THIRD otrent. 1862. BPRING. 1862 . ABBOTT. ETOI-INES. & CO„ 427 MARKET STREET, Have now open an entirely new and attractive Mot in ENGLISH, FRENCH, GERMAN, AND AMERICAN DRESS GOODS. Ala% a full anotxtmaS WRITE GOODS, RIBBONS, GLOVES, SHAWLS, &0., &0., To which they Invite the attendee of the trade. mh24-tie/ 1862. SPRING. 1862. • RIEGEL. BAIRD. & 00.. UIIZQRTERS AND JOBBERS or DRY GOODS, 151 0. 47 NORTH THIRD STREET. PHILADELPHIA. Merchants visiting this city to purchase Dni Goons will lied our Stook large and admirably assorted, and at LOW FIOURNE. In certain classes of Goods we offer inducements to purchasers unequalled by any other house in mhlS-2m JAMES. KENT. SANTEE, & IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS OF DRYGOODS. Noe. 259 and 241 N. THIRD STREET, ABOVE RACE, PHILADELPHIA, Have now open their nand LARGE AND COMPLETE STOCK Of FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC DRY GOODS, Among which will be found a more than usually attrao- Dye Tallety or LADIES' DRESS GOODS; Also, a full aaaortment of MERRINLACR AND MORRO° PRINTS, and PHILADELPHIA-MADE GOODS. TO which they tpyite the special eatontiora of buyera. Wino= 1862. SPRING. 1862. W. S. STEWART & 00., IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS OF SILKS AND FANCY DRESS GOODS, 130. 306 MARKET STREET. Row In store, POULT DE BOPS, AU Shades. BLACK AND WHITE CHECKS, In SILKS and OTHER FABRICS. ALSO, A PULL LIMB OP CLOAKING CLOTHS, PLAIDS, STRIPES, And desirable PLAIN COLORS. SPRING. STOCK SILK AND FANCY DRESS GOODS. A. W. LITTLE & Co.. mhlls-tt No. 321 MARHZT ST. MILLINERY GOODS SPRING. 1862 . M. BERNIIEIM. No. 720 CHESTNUT STREET, Iles now in store, and is daily receiving, the latest styles in RIBBONS, FRENCH FLOWERS, WREATHS, SILKS, CRAPES, LACES, AND OTHER MILLINERY GOODS. f. which he respectfully invitee the attention of the TRADE. PRICES LOW. vitae-1m THOMAS KENNEDY & BRO., T 29 CHESTNUT Street, below lightb. & CRiolce Stock a/ SPRING MILLINERY GOODS, iiihis-sm] AT LOW PRICER. SPRING MILLINERY 4±\ D. FERRIS, 1037 Cif ESTNUT Street, has just received a choice asaortment of GOODS, comprising all the latest and most fastionable styles of Bonnets, Illieses' Walking and Biding Hate, Bore' Hata and Capa,- together with a full line of Goods suitable for Friends' Weau mvlo-121 IiBMOVAL, ..pk , MISSES O'BRYAN, 924 OHESTNIIT Street, have removed to 1107 WALNUT Street, three doors above Kle veutb, north aide, and will open PARIS MILLINERY, for the Spring, OD THURSDAY, April 17. apl2.2m* DUX NIB AT.114 6- OILS " UC IFE R" OIL WOILKS. ..L.J 100 Bbls. " Lucifer" Burning Oil on hand. We guarantee this oil to be non-explosive, to burn all the oil in the lamp with a steady, brilliant Came, without crusting the wick, and but slowly. Bble. lined with glass enamel. WEIGHT, SMITH, & PEARSALL. Office 616 MARKET Street. CARBON OIL.-100 bbls. Natrona au in aeon ana or .ale WILLIAM M. WILSON, 208 MASKICT Wrest. "EXCELSIOR" HAMS ARE THE BEST IN THE WORLD. J. H. MICIIENER. Co., GENERAL PROVISION DEALERS, And curers of the celebrated 46 EXCELSIOR" SUGAR-CURED HAMS, Nos. 142 and 144 North FRONT Street, Between Arch and Race streets, Philadelphia. no twill , - celebrated 66 EXCELSIOR" HAMS aro cared by J. N. hl. & 00., (in • etyle peculiar to them selves') expressly for FAMILY UDR ; are of delicious flavor ; tree from the usiplealeAt tads and are Pronounced by epieurer superior . to $ll7 DOW offend for sale. . asl-8m GARDEN VASES. —Ornamental Terra Ootta Garden Vases, warranted to stand the weatherin any climate. Theto VMS are made in beau tiful deeigue, and all 4..4., from 1 foot to 11 feet high, with a variety of pedestals, round and square, from 1 foot to 4 feet high. No decorations add so much to the natural beauties of a Garden, and at au little cost, se • few Vann Mod with flowering Aintfir Alti•trated Cata logues Rant Dy mall on spigication, S. A. HARBISON, ••184r 1010 0111CRTNITT Fitreet.. fILLAMPAU - N - A----Au invoice for sale, N.J to arrive per Alp Wm. FrotLlnahom, CHAS. B. OkRSTAIRS, myl4 ye. 126 WALNUT St. and 21 GRANITE Bt. PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, MAY 15, 1862. 6ljt rtss. THURSDAY, MAY 15, 1862. OUR FOREIGN CORRESPONDENCE. LETTER FIWS LON DOS. Recognition of the South—Liverpool Cotton Brokers and Manch Cotton Spinners— Distress of the Laborers—Enormous Poor rotes—Credibility of Loudon Journals—Re. cognition a Canard : Re: sons for this Belief— Relations of Palmerston and Napoleon— LOOM of Hiteltill—O'N l Ps , gbert P4riv Cor respondent of it The Thues:" His Position, Salary. Resources, and Facilities for Ob taining Information—Russell's Anti-Stanton Diatril.es ; Their Hostile Influence on the English Public—Victor Emmanuel to Visit Paris—New Italian Treaty with France— Sardinia to be Ceded ?—The Ex-King of Na. pies—Marshal Pelissier—lnternational Ez -I,;Asifon = Aa2. Arch:it...Aural Vuilnre = Ameri can Sculpture Again Wins the Palm—Dis. tinguislied Visitors: Prince of Prussia: Queen Christina, of Spain, and her Hus band, 31111102—TheJapaness Emlinsay. [Correspondence of Tho pre..] It would not surprise me to learn that some ap prehension wilt arise, on your side of the water, from rumored plane of foreign intervention in Ame rican affairs. No doubt, the ootton-lords would do, aey and every thing, short of risking their precious lives or opening their purses, to obtain cotton. Lan cashire is is a miserable condition. The Liverpool cotton-brokers, who used to be so flush with their mane;, alto itkObi'4 4 pehEliefiA—faw earning any thing, many living on the savings of former years, many compelled to reduce their establishments, and raise the wind by pawning their watches, furni ture, and other valuables_ The commercial inte rest of Liverpool is almost as much depressed, for a considerable portion of its foreign trade was with the United States. No cotton from America, no trade with An:erica—Liverpool suffers greatly. Still more do and will suffer the cotton-spinners, and calico-weavers, and calico-printers of Man chester, and the towns of which it is the centre. These people were terribly purse-proud—ostenta tions, expensive, demonstrative, but most frequently very ignorant. They patronized literature by orderieg so many feet of bookshelves crowded with volumes in gay bindings, and they showed their bate for the fine arts by purchasing pictures at so much a square foot. They took the library OR the judgment of the bookseller, and the painted canvas On the apse dini of blr. Agnew, the picture-dealer in St. Ann's Eque,re. Their country-seats vied in magnificence with the ancestral mansions of the old nobility—save for the air of newness about every thing, which gate a Brummagem aspect to the whole. The cotton-lord's equipages and horset were superb—his harness Vt - ering with his crest, in silver, stuck on wherever there was room for it, and as he took his books and his pictures on the taste of those who sold them, so did he trust to his coachmaker to supply him with armorial bearings. I have known one of them change his crest thrice, before he finally settled down to it. There is no use in mentioning names, as the man is alive, but the case ran thus : Say that his name was Smith. His first crest, assumed acci dentally, might be that of the old Derbyshire family ; his second, that of Smyth, the Shropshire baronet ; his last, and most ambitious, the elephant's head of Lord Carrington, the only Smith in the peerage. The cotton• spinners, despite their great ostentation and expense, live very much from hand to mouth. The eons, setting up for gentlemen, go to Oxford or Cambridge, to become lawyers or clergymen, and eclipse the young nobility in expensive living, or enter the army, by purchasing their commissions. One or two, perhaps, may remain at home, to carry on the business. The daughters spend little for tunes on costly dress and jewels, ere they satiside into matrimony. When the mills stop working, which means when the money ceases to roll ia, these families are sometimes put to very serious in convenienCe. No cotton, no work,—and armies of laborers are thrown into idleness and poverty, When their employers send them to the wall, they fall back on the pariah. The poor-law then steps in and those who hare means are heavily , totod to maintain those who have not. So, the cotton lords not only lose all profits, by the stoppage of their mills, from want of cotton, but have to pay heavily for the support of men, women, and child ren whom they are unable to employ. Cotton. workers these people have been, almost front the time they could walk alone, and cotton-workers, or idlers, they will be to the end. Their maintenance is a heavy tax on the cotton•lorde, who blame the Northern States of America for wholly keeping back the accustomed supply of cotton. At this nosment, in the various towns of Lancashire, one third of the population live wholly on the compul sory charity exacted by the Peor Law. Let this continue, and the poor rate will soon draw fifty per cent. from the income of every one who is not him self a pauper. I have stated these facts thus Mi nutely, to show the vital importance of Cotton to the county of Lancaster, densely crowded as it is with a population of about two millions in its manufacturing district. The report of intervention in American affairs, by France and England, came, a week ago, in the Paris correspondence of the Morning Herald, a daily paper which, among its London contem poraries, ranks lower, for ability and influence, than any other, except the Morning Advertiser. The gist of the statement from Paris was—that Lord Palmerston had communicated to the Em peror Napoleon a proposal for putting an end to the civil war in America, by recognizing the Con federate States ; which would be followed, at once, by the breaittes et the tioeiterba 2 fa ordor to enter the clesed Southern ports for cotton, tobacco. and other produce. The Morning Herald, from the commencement of Mr. Lincoln's rule, has been violently in favor of the Confederate States; has been the organ of the rebel leaders in Europe, and the comistent and persistent slanderer of the Union cause and people. That previous "special correspondent," Samuel Phillips Day, who was Mr. Jefferson Davis' guest, at Richmond, all last summer and autumn, and has lately collected his lying letters into two volumes, was an employe of the Morning Herald, which endeavors to be con sidered as Lord Derby's particular organ, but is not acknowledged by bim in any way : The Daily News, however, is a paper of charm ter, ability, and standing, and, except in the Trent affair, when it went in, with the crowd, for "the honor of the British flag," has generally been re markably fair, and even friendly, to the Unionists. I have no doubt that the intervention announce ment in the Morning Herald had been supplied or suggested by Mr. Slidell, who devotes some of his leisure in Paris in. writing for the newspapers. when the same intimation appeared, a couple of days later, in the Daily News —assent on by its own correspondent—the general impression in London was that there was something in it. There is a great difference in the form - 'of the news, The Herald's version was that Palmerston had made the propo.sel to Napoleon, whereas the News' cor respondent says that it was Napoleon who put the natter to Palmerston, and that the thing has been negotiating between them aii through this month' of April. The Brussels paper (L'lndepen,alance Beige), still later than the two London papers, repeats this intervention news. But the Brussels paper is fa mous fOr the bold inaccuracy of its particular news. That any such negotiation has been on foot I our unable to believe. My reasons are few and plain. England and France, in other words Palmerston and Napoleon, are not upon good terms. So little so , that not only has Napoleon refused to visit London, as a guest at Buckingham Palace, during the International Exhibition, but has actually prevented Prince Napoleon's attending its open- Mg, though he is chairman of the French exhibi tors, and had arranged to be present. Prince Na poleon, instead of now being in London, is in Na ples, on a sudden visit to his father-in-law, the King of Italy. Napoleon has a grudge, also, for Pulusenston'e recent speech condemning the Italian policy of France, and predicting the downfall of the Pope's temporal power. Finally, Napoleon is angry because, in the Mexican affair, England, unwilling to be his cat's-paw, suddenly baoked out, and recalled her troops. It is worthy of note, also, that the reported agree ment to recognise the South, put ferwurd by the two Englith papers, and echeed back by some of the Paris journals, is strongly denied in the official paper of St. Petersburg. The Czar has been very firm in his friendship for the United States ever since the rebellion broke'out, and this denial in his own newspaper is important. There is yet another reason, stronger than any of the foregoing. Not a syllable about the rumored recognition of the Smith has appeared in the Paris correspondence of the Times. This is almost suf ficient to ignore the whole, and place it as a mere eassard. Mr. Ol Meagher, who eupplieti that cola brated correspondence, the spirit, boldness and ac curacy of which are worthy of all praise, has modes of obtaining earlier and more reliable information than any other representative of the London press in Paris. His instructions are not to spare any cost to get such information, and, for this purpose, a large sum stands to his credit at Ilottinguer's, the banker. Money, though it does more anions official Underlings in Faris than elsewhere—it eau do nothing with them in England—is not always effective. The information which filters down through mime channels until it recedes' under lings, is not what the Times values—except &soon famatory. LONDON, April 30, 1862 le,D.poetient of& vary handsome salary... Haunted at .t 1.200 a year—the Times allows Mr. O'Meagher a fine house Rue Lepelletier, the corner of the del P011en?! vghere his bureau and library are, where be lives, and where be enter tains, with liberal hospitality—Ministers of State, Senators, Deputies, peers, bankers, foreign Ambas sadors, and many persons in the highest haillionable circles attending his banquets and reeeptioas. Speaking French, Spanish, Italian, and German, O'bleagher has singular advantages, and besides be ing a men of lettere, is certainly a mem of the world. More political secrets ooze out, in his sa loons, than any where else, and if he get hold of a clue, however slight the thread, be sure that he fol lows it up.. I repeat that the fact of the recog nition rumor not having appeared in Paris corres pondence of the Times makes me wholly discredit it. England and France, all the world knowsiwould wish to renew their interrupted dealings w.th the South, but I doubt whether they dare so much break faith as to interfere, especially now that the Unionists are getting victories. If Now Orleans, or any other cotton port, were once reopened to general commerce, all would be right. Though where the cotton is to come from is a question. The Times is making a groat point of Mr. Rus sell's return, and is out, this morning, with an im pudent, able, and amusing article on " The at tempt to make intelligence throughout the Federal States a close Government monopoly." It accuses the American Government of- "creating a tre mendous victory out of the escape at Pittsburg Landing,” and eimeklea over the killing off of General Beauregard in the fight. It says, " happy is the country which can thus create its own vic tories by a line of type; and stilt happier the belligerent who can deetroy the most formidable of his enemies' generals by a stroke of the pen. While a salute of 100 guns, a Thanksgiving in all the (turtles!, and a Win ditteinninated threttgh all the newspapers can work the effect of a real vic tory, what need of ruinous loans and exhaustive levies?" There can scarcely be any mistake in attributing this article to Mr. Russell, as that gen tleman fancies that he has particular reasons for being discontented. Bence, an undercurrent of abuse glides through the article "Mr. Stan ton now ►its, like the author of a three-volume novel, with life and death, fortune and rain, hap piness and misery, all at his own pen's point." Next, "Mr. Stanton has Um his own breast what we Shall believe, Whatever happens, of course he will fire a hundred guns, and Mr. Lincoln will order a Thanksgiving, and, as it would be a work of supere rogation to kill General Beauregard over again, he perhaps take Mr_ Jefferson Davis prisener_u Again, " The heroes who lived before Agamemnon are as if they had not lived, because they had no bard to sing their deeds. The happier heroes of these later days have a double advantage over their nameless predecessors, for, tivieg under a strict monopoly of hardship, Mr. Stanton can not only have their triumphs loudly sung, but can also have their victories invented." All this may seer very .petty on the part of "the leading journal of &- rope," (as The Tsmes modestly calls itself,) but ridicule goes farther with average minds than logi cal argument, and the English mind is becoming impressed, by these articles, with the idea that, since Russell's return, not the slightest reliance is to be placed upon the intelligence of Federal victo ries communicated by Northern papers. Were New Orleans and Savannah, Charleston and Rich mond to fall before the Federal troops and vessels, without a blow, it would not be believed in Eng land, without strong confirmation. This is a long letter about politics, but there is no other news of moment. Victor Emmanuel is expected in Paris next month, and the object of his visit, it is whispered, is to sign a new secret treaty with Napoleon. It is added that if he would give up Sardinia to France, the question of the Pope's temporal power would soon be settled with a strong band. There are symptoms that Napoleon is less disposed than he has been, to make a reality of his promise to set Italy free. One of these is an instruction to General de Goyon, the French commander at Rome, to induce the ex-King of Naples to quit Italy, and accept an asylum in France, Napoleon, carrying into the Empire the traditions of the old monarchy, is represented as about creating, in favor of old Marshal Pelissier ? the ancient °thee of Marshal General of France. There have been only four titulars of this office—Tarenae, Viliars, Maurice de Saxe, and Soult. To-morrow, the Great Exhibition will be formally opened, and with even more pomp, minus the pre sence of Queen Victoria and her family, than in 1851. The Queen goes to Scotland, this evening, to get out of the way. At present, the Exhibition building is in a terrible state of confusion, with shavings, straw, boxes, packages, (opened and un opened), but all is expected to be in ship-shape by noon to-morrow. It was recommended that, after the formal opening, it should be closed fur a fort night, to allow the exhibitors to arrange their goods, but this was negatived, and it will continue open, without interruption, until next October. The value of the articles exhibited, not including the pictures, which cannot be priced, is estimated at Twenty Million dollars. The show itself will be very good, but the exhi bition building is inferior to, but larger than Pax ton's Crystal Pttillop of 1851. It is an immense building, plain to ugliness, badly lighted, and with two pepper-castor domes, looking like a barn crowned at each end with an immense semicircle. It wants the light, novelty and elegance of Pax ton's wondrous Art Palace. The principal show cases (particularly the British) are painted black, sometimes with light gilded headings. In these, light goods will be well shown—but the general effect is heavy and funereal. Russia and Rome, to every one's surprise, show some very fine things. Of Russia, the Times says : "Tier show of Bohemian glass, carved furniture, &e., will be exceedingly good. Especially worthy of notice, both for their beauty and cheapness, are vases and tazzas made of d.,n6la glass, engraved and coated with quick silver between, so as to resemble chased silver- f work. It has also the advantage of never tarnish ing." Of the Roman Court, the same authority says: 6, Cardinal Antonelli has sent a most superb casket, in which the rarest of his fine collection of minerals and precious stones are kept .when at Rome, and the Pope sends some noble mosaics from the Vatican. The Court also is filled with vases and columns in rosso•antico, Egyptian ala baster, lapis lazuli, pictures, carved woodwork, and inlaid mosaic tables of the richest, most artis tic, and most costly description. For pure works of art, no main portion of the building of the same size can at all compete with the contents of the Ro man Court." France will make a splendid appearance in this great show. lam told that the French Govern ment has allowed a sum of 250,0001 to the French exhibitors to meet their expenses. The principal pictures of French artists admitted to the exhibi tion are the "Battle of the Alma," by Pils, which was much noticed at the Paris exhibition held last year ; "My Sister is not here," by Liamon ; " The Arrival of the Queen of England at Cherbourg," by Cludin ; " The Source," a new picture by In gres ; "Ploughing in the Nivernais," by Rosa Ben heur ; The Blessings of the Cornfields," and "young Girls Weeding," by Breton; " Rem brandt," and "The Gladiator," by Gartime " The Wheel," by Weise ; Gustave Dore's original draeings illustrating Dante's "Inferno;" "A Forest," by Diaz ; three pictures by Mdme. Hen riot", Brown; several Decamps; Camille Rocre plan's "Antiquary;" Paul Deraroche's last rest glom compositions ; Ary Scheffer's " Saint Angus tine and Saint Monica ;" and, finally, a considera ble number of Chariot's works. People also speak of a fall•eized portrait of tho Emperor, by Flan drin, upon which the celebrated artist is still occu pied. What can have induced the pious and ultra montane M. Flandrin to devote his pencil to repro duce the features of him whom the clerical party regard as the author of all their misery, is not stated. In 1562, as in 1551, the finest statue is by an Aroeridiai /wild_ In 1151, Powers' Greek Slave bad the place of honor and the praise of superiority. This year Mr. Story, an American sculptor, sends two noble groups from his studio in Rome: 'one figure is that of Cleopatra, the other a Sybil. As yet nothing has come into the building which ap proaches them in originality of conception or power of execution. There is none of the conventional and voluptuous beauty about the Cleopatra. l The forte and features, though handsome, are of purely Egyptian type, and the expression of the face is one of thought and intellectual power. Both the face and figure of the Sybil are grandly suggestive Of the moody abstractlea or cue rosily p ossessed of the powers of divination, looking gloomily forward in the long chapter of human woes." The Exhibition building, on a rough guess, is about as long as from the City Ball, in Now York, to Barnum's Museum or the Astor House. It is to cost £200,000 for rent and use; if the receipts ex ceed 1:400.000, the contractors get all above that up to £500,000, (via, ; £lOO,OOO more ) ) in which vase the central aisle is to be delivered over to the So. ciety of Arts ; and, on their receiving £30,000 more, the whole building becomes the, property of the Commission. Judging from the susses of the former undertaking, by which £230,000 profit was netted by the commission, and taking into account the probably great increase in the number of visi tors to this one, it may be expected *hat the build ing will thus become permanent; then there will be but one regret—that its architectural construc tion is so far from being worthy of perennial exist oncm The erumber et Ashore to the*.sl E.l.llltion was about 6 000 ; 000 ; at that period there were only 6,700 mites of railway in Great Britain, and it was 0101ftted that the lines could bring to and take from London 40,000 persons daily Now there are, throughout the Kthgdom, 11,000 milee of rail- way, capable of bri n ing to L 011444 WI taking therefrom 180.00 people every day. Among the oelebritfea who will attend the open ing to-morrow, will be Lord Canning, ex-Viceroy of Lao, who roturr.oci 1.,t gstarafty, quite nneZ peotedly, without show or fuss. In any Ministerial changes, (and some seem inevitable,) Canning will prphably be included, for he has shown Feat ad ministrative ability in India The Prince of ?rues sia arrived yesterday, at the . special request of his mother-in-law, Queen Victoria. Queen Christina, of Spain. (mother of the reigning Queen.) also ars rived yesterday, with her morganatic husband, and several of their children, and proceeded at once from Folkston° to Kensington, near the Great Ex hibition, where a furnished meeelee Led been hired for them. She lea very portly dame, who has been handsome. 'She by no means looks her age, which is sd, ~ thr husband, the Due de Riansares, was formerly a private Soldier named Munoz, whom she fancied, married, ennobled, and educated. He is a strapping fellow, with a handsome but unmeaning face. The Japanese Ambaesadors are expected, from France, this afternoon. Claridge's Hotel, Brook street, Hanover Square, will receive them during their stay in London. They will assist in opening the Exhibition to-morrow. That ingenious youth, known to Pone as Tommy, the lady:killer, is not in the suite of the present embassy. Perhaps he was toe valuable to be spared I hare said littlo about the Exhibition, as another correspondent, I understand, will write you several lettere doeorikiPg its opening, appearance, and se on. No doubt, It.will be a splendid show. 10" LETTER FROM ST, LOUIS. The Dearth of News—The Sanitary Com mission—A Union Soldier's Heroism— A Faithful Minister—Female Secession- Ms, etc., etc. reorreepoodence of The Prose.] Since the departure of Oen liallook front thin city, there had been NO antenal dearth einem and item Of interest in our midst. Prom the time that Gen. H. went away to the present moment, nothing new or interesting hap occurred here scarcely worth the mentioning. Now and then there is an occasional item noshing across the firmament of newepaperdom, which to a hungry correspondent searching for news astir, is exceedingly re freahing. This has not been often the case of late. The great centre of interest awl attraction went away with the general commanding, spa the lesser one—and yet in one sense quite as impertant—that of caring for the Fick and wounded from Pittsburg, occupies the time aid attention of the efficient " BellitarY Collituitsilou" here at home. The gentlemen who comprise the commission are ex ceedingly busy, both night ant day. Their office is at No. 10, P ifth street. Near by is the best hospital in the city, and capable of ibeeetricnotiaitoff one thou-mud patients. As many aa 6,000 sick and wounded soldier■ have been distributed in the various hospitals throughout the city ; of course the labor and care necessary for so large IA number of plek i@ very great. pollution!! of ar 'ache useful for hospital purposes come in liberally front all parts of the land where the good cause is honored, and Philadelphia has never been behind in acts of mercy and charity towards the soldiers of the West. A few days since the Rev. Dr. Post the Congrega- Genet clergyman of this city, who makes it a duty to visit the rebel as well as the loyal sick in the hospital, came across a young man, a Union soldier hardly nineteen years of age, who had been terribly wounded in the Shiloh fight, and who was convinced that he could live brit a little while. Be related his experience during the clash of arms on that dreadful day. He had been terri bly wounded in the early pert of the action to two places, and left on the field almost helpless, yet able as the night closed in to drag his bleeding body to his tent. On the way be stumbled over the form of a rebel sol dier, apparently dying, who begged that he would help him from the ground. Our Union soldier, all honor to his memory, with considerable difficulty, aaelated the almost helpless form to his own tent, and although faint from the loss of blood, he watched over the wounded man tee tenderly all through that terrible night as if his enemy in arms had been a brother. When the steamer January and Woodford arrived at the levee, theone having on be art our sick and wounded, the other the prisoners from Pdt,burg, there came on them the two participants in the great struggle. They were carried to the same hospital, and when Dr. Past vi sited them, in one -ward ler tfnion setaire 41. A , end to another the rebel soldiers recovering. Both received the same attention from the minister, and often the rebel in quired after the poor young man who had befriended whose life was fast ebbing away. Daring the night this youthful martyr to freedom often expressed a desire that he might see his mother again, but was content, feeling that be had done hie duty, to await the dual sum mon!. which came long before the light, The sympathy of Secesh women with the rebel sick here is remarkable. They hang about the hospitals, of fering their services and endeavoring in every way pos sible to assist the wounded rebels either by words of comfort or by little delicate kindneenes in the way acres ture comforts, such as jellies, brandy, and other luxu ries; and when a rebel dies he is mourned over, and Se cession tears flow plentifully. The other day a party of female Secessionists visited the burial place of their de parted friends, and over one of the graves where the early flowers are blooming in all their purity. an inscrip• tion like the following tells the mournful story : Here lies the body of --. Blest spirit, rest in heaven ; No Yankees enter there," This may be a piece of news to some one who had hoped to reach that blissful abode! The details at the priucipal hospital after the battle of Shiloh were fearful—as many as . 00 died during one month. Few recovered from their wounds, while those suffering from fevers scent to get along. In a future letter I shall refer to the capers of sundry female Secessionists here, who are the plague and torment of lo) al people, and who rennet be silenced either from a want of energy and courage on the part of the powers that be, or from fear that an undue restraint placed upon petticoat ee Seceteioniets " will require au additional ex pense from Government, which will be considerable, to hold their tongues. s'ecessionists in Canada The following extraots from a letter, written from Quebec, by a Canadian gentleman, show, to some extent, the feeling amongst the Secession's s there : AL" We 13 -rye ju4, bawd Liao of Yorktown and believe that your j- ,y no. be gr4at in knowing that in the fall of thie etrongly-furtitled and entrenched place the fate of this wicked rebellion is staled. With but one or two exceptions, every gentleman, members of Parliament, dm., Stu move about with long facts, as if they had lost their grandmothere; the excep tions are the Hen. Mr. Moore, menib,r of the Canadian Senate, and brother-in , :aw of the Hon. Jacob Col'aruer, of Vernon 1, and as Met and upright a man. and Mr. Kinnear, the tditor of the Montreal Herold. Thee° gentlemen are high-spiritix', and inuLti merriment Is occasienally created by them at the expense of poor deluded eecemh. It is very amusing to see the different manner in which this news and the fall of New Orleans eau fallen upon some who have been ea loud in the praise of reoel docu, fully satiathd that they would never be conquered, that they were fighting lot their rights, die.' The native Canadiana seem to foci it more than the so journing Englishmen, the truth being many of them are terribly afraid that you meditate an attack upon their soil for the uncivil conduct of Great Britain in her bearing towards us in the early part of the rebellion, or rather that hostilities will be provoked withthe mother country, and that Canada will be made the battle-ground. The aristocratic Canadian, with the intensity of John ho almost considered the disruption of the great tie public certain, seems it. rrlbly chop-fallen, beginning to see, and lull well knowing that you will come out of this fiery ordeal a greater people, a stronger people, and, I Sill mid, a people unconquerable by any tuition now in existence upon the earths surface. The moral sublimity of your grandeur, in the eyes of the civilized world, will Boon be shown to the enthralled of all tongues and peo ple. when they shall in triumph point to the United States of America as the Ireest, happiest, and most prosperous Wilier, living under nod being guided by a Constitution the best over given by governmental fathers to their children." Affairs at Norfolk and Richmond The returned prieone re, who reached Fortress Mon roe, on the 12th instant, from Richmond, report that the kiiattlil4sl+ In that city wac becoming in tense, and that its evacuation was inevitable, as the correspondent of the Baltimore American In forms us. Some of the wealthy Secessionists were re moving their plate and property out of the city, whilst the Union men were concealing theirs in the city. The gamblers and pickpockets, and worthless portion of the community, were urging the destruction of the city by dre, which was favored by the foreign troops, but the .Virginia troops and the old citizens were strongly opposed to this vandalism. Jeff Davis and the Government offi cials declared that they wou'd rested to the hurt, but it was believed that they were secretly preparing for an evacuation. Some troops had been sent northward to check the ad- Vance of McDowell, and 40 133014 T 40101,4 a.cl.-4 *bete Intention of throwing their whole army into Washington, but the Union men believed this to be a mere ruse to de ceive the people. The terror of the gunboats was most intense, and they anticipated great consternation when the heavy guns of the Monitor and the Naugatuck sound ed in the vicinity of Richmond. The rebel steamers Jamestown and Yorktown were at Rocketts, near Rich mond, when the Sag steamer left. 1 learn from a gentleman just from Norfolk, says the same ocriesieudent, that the city is very if Met, and the Union men are commencing to speak out and gain con— fidence. The Beeeesionlete will not believe that the Merrimac has been blown Op, although pieces of the wreok have been brought to the city, and have teen freely handed around. They say that it is some deception, and that tee M ere loose was to have sailed up the JA1141413 river on Sa tut day night, and undoubtedly did sail The explosion, they say, wee the blowing up of the Oraney Island mtge. Ili es 101 l when armored that these magazines are an in good order and baled with ammuuitiou, they refuse to be• hove it. The Merrimac was the great back-bone of re bellion, sad the) taus° to believe that echo has committed suicide at the tuonieut of ber great trial. They aro in momentary expecriliou of hearinu that she has destroy. ed our gunboats up the ittiees river, al d is pitying the mischief generally. Ou being told that deserters from her crew bats arrived at New.p..rt News, they pronounce them impostors. In fact, they are determine I not to believe that the gantlet Tatuall could hire acted so ens. until, Sc to have destroyed hie vessel. The Secession women are yen y noisy, and take every occasion to 11 suit the soldiers, who think they can afford to laugh at them. Some of their hit mend:, and brothel a would probably soon be ltroutit to per-nital :nicoust us a menus of bridling the tougue , s of the fair rebAs. A FEKALm.—On Friday last AI - Federal :oldie'. was nr rrttetl in Detroit for intoxication, who, it was afterwarith4 B:Wert:tined, was tt, Woman ! She is a native or Scotland, linChlie IWWI , YVON HMI with lair family at London, O. W., where they how reeide. About five yeat aim alto bit h.q.., and went to Kentucky, whom, on tho breaking out or Atte war. she became enamored with the military ilierlay, and enlisted in a Kentucky rogiment. She iv,rved in li o n army three mouths i she was proitait and took part la the - battle of Somerset, and paw Qenoral Zomeoffor THE MARCH TO RICHMOND_ From General McClellan's Army. The Rebell to Make a Steed thh Side of Richmond. A eery-ee l ...lent of the Neer York Traasete, from Burnt Ordimery (:), Vs (which, we should state, le a locality eleven DABS from Williamsburg, and about twenty milts from where the Dichmond road crosses the Ohiskrhesolay,) sass. his lams at May OM We struck camp at 4 o'clock this morning, and half ma hour after were tiling past Wilhamsbnrg. The post In. advance having been assigned to Gonersl dmith's division, we moved off to that position by a chrontou s routs to the estriktr q g she main Ihictamona read some tour b.youtl Williamsburg, thereby travelling txrtnewhat fur ther, but eroding a piece of very bad road. ST. LOMB. May 9,1862. We have received from our correspondents files of Southern papers up to the 12ch instant, extracts from which will be found below. The Richmond Ezaintner of May Bth has the following editorial on the position of the contend ing armies in the peninsula. Tho Examine, says: The battles in the - peninsula, which may be now con sidered asinine& are the inoq Miscount etrentstilathAvis trenenind since the tettlentet,t of etnariea. All depends on the preservation of this city, which depends in turn on the r bstinacy and persistence of the fighting in the peninsula. Nothing should be allowed to .justify the evacuation of Ilichmon t. If beaten in one battle, another should be begun, despite all the rides of West Point and practice of the present war. No expense of life, no danger of destruction, should enter into this calculation. Nu effort should be spared to in spirit the troops, to encourage and hold them up, to rivet their determination nut to quit the ground between York river and Richmond. Let us hope that President Doyle and the generals will be equal to this great crisis. Let them show themselves in person to the troops, share their toil, fire their hearts, and lead them to victory. The Bombardment of the Forts and At. taus in the City of New Orleans —A Charleston Account of the Occurrence. The defence of New Orleans reefed upon two forts, Jackson and ht. Philip. a few interior batteries above the forte, and a fleet of twenty boats, the strongest of which were the Mcßae (carrying seven thirty-two pounders and one nine-inch gun) and the Manassas ram. The Lonidena. carrying eight large gnus, was a complete jaiture. She had to be towed ~lown the river and user as a battery, for the two large wheels working in the middle of the boat interfered with each other, and rendered her unmanageable. SI evias an oak hulk, roofed with iron. Three of the fllel7l} 'a heats were said to have vowed without the knowledge of the forts. The river le about a mile wide, and covered with heavy fog at Night. The n.vsl engagement extended for some miles up the river. Exchanges of broadsides and Gonfalons were continuous, until hut one of the Confederate boats, a steam hulk, with but one gun, returned to the city, and was burned and turned adrift. A Galveston steamer sunk ono of the best of the Yan kee gunboats after running into her three times. Sits WWI soon sunk herself. The 3leßae was seen gallantly exchanging broadside for broadside with two double-bunk frigates. She was commanded by Capt. Tina Huger. of Charleston, and was sunk. Tier commander is said to be in New Orleans, wounded, having saved his life in one of the swell boats, it is supposed. The 3fattassits COMM/111d ed by Lieut. Worley, of South Carolina. disappeared, but it was not known whether shin, betook herself to ono of the bayous, was captured, or sunk. The conduct of tbe Confederate navy was desperate in the gallantry and &yet'. 11.,plzkyed. bul the, iltdd was Lopelessfrom. the beginning. The great 141ississippi steam rant bad just been latinelied a few ilit)s, and would not have been ready to operate for forty days mere. She was a ler, with three screws mid sixteen engines, to carry twenty guns of the largest calibre. tier projection. or rani, was twenty feet of solid timber, to lie shed with an additional steel point. She was three times aA large and powerful as the Virginia, floated beautifully, end was sea-going. All the naval officers who saw lier that she wits the finest ship in the world, and that it is eonfl dently asserted, by officers of high rank, that. without grin, she could have destroyed the Yankee hest. She was to have 'men ready by the lot of February. Th e eo n. triirltir was a Mr. Miff, it lindlicr-in-law Mr, Mallory. The woodteitik. Was linishcrl hind ago, awl there ha liven great anxiety and impatience about the ililittory. 111311110 V of completing the iron work and machinery. The people oh New (Weans and the surrounding coun try offered the Government and its agents all their mechanical mangoes and workmen: They were declined until three days before the attack. Up to that time nightwork had not been put upon the boat. 8100000 tummy was acme time since offered to the contractor to get it ready in time. Rewards were offered to others. Lovell said, to the remon s trances of citizens, that his hands were tied, and he could do no more than ha was doing. Governor Moore said that matters were going on well, and that the city was soft He cool!' do nothing. The citizens offered money and labor to fortify the levee between the city and the fort., but their offers were declined as unnecessary. Three days before the ap pearance of the Yankee ships at New Orleans, Go vernor Afoore Tnietiy departed with Mg (Ake corm sellers, by way of the Carrolton Railroad about dark, leaving a steamboat and picket of soldiers at that point. Anonymous tellers probably caused it. Two days before the sutrei.der of the city, as excited crowd, prepared with a rope, appeared at the ship yard in search of the contractor of the Alississinol. lie wan gone i the RNA's pyi wee tanned and gunk kir the untie/Hike, Our informant elates that therein a feeling of profound exasperation against the _Administration and its agents. The people feel that they have been systematically trifled with end sacrificed. When the. Yankee o f ficers londeddice Sicilians who cheered them were shot down by the crowd. All who showed any signs orfaver were knocked down as traitors. The feeling was intense. All the cotton was burned, and all the tobaceo, except that claimed by the French Government. The sugar and molasses remain in the city. at private property, off immense quantities. Much, however, Is on the plants. !ions, the crop being very large. General Lovell carried on by railroad the machinery of the workshops and iron— mills, and all the rolling stock of the railroad. The ma chinery is important and entitles him to credit. His Terfte me at a camp of lastroctlen ak JAC6.OIIII, Mlae peon cling the railroad where it crosses Pearl river. Ha is not expected to reinforce Beauregard, except as a 1110 rye mope. His forces are said to be twenty thousand if cog. Twelve thousand foreign denizens in New Or• Inset heti oraanized to tight in defence of New Orleane• but declined going out to fight in the Confederate atise. Cowardice Charged on the Rebel Mill. Laniard qt. Diew Orleans. [Front the Mobile Evening News, April 30.1 Among the several proteinent acts offoliy, inefficiency, mad mismanoprmeni which have at different times and places disgraced the conduct of this war, the destruction of the Confederate feet of gunboats in Lake Pouchartrain -holds stupendously pre-eminent—miapproached and un approachable by whatever has been done, or whatever may Or can be done. Frittering for the prosciutto charge this act to the account of fol ly and panic, rather than of treachery—and ul pruseut popular charge to be left to the (roper tribunal to investigate—we account it the most mortifit l ing hllalliiatital, amid lattentabla as, ottYVvveit is contiettlitat With the WS of New Mims. Were treason palpably hi the case, it would only excite bet and in-pirating indignation. and we trust that it may be proved that our cause has been so slabbed by a knave or &Tares rather than by a find or foPIP, Tim verdict of a artnalwall snarl-nuittiiil should award the rope tette, b miler or the bullet to the latter. Folly may ben man's TWO CENTS. SHOCKING CONDITION OF THE REBEL ADAM The match was devoid of 'mild intermit. The roads were gold, and thirteen rodeo made by about 1 P. M. On the route were abundant evidences of the precipita tion of the retreat by the rebels, especially from Fort Magruder, commencing M:mday evening. Caissons, limber., battery WIIRODS. forges, baggage written& and almost every conceivable kind of transportation were erattered along the route, stuck font in the mud, broken down, and abandoned in every variety of mituation. •1 have been secured that the demoralization of Johnson's army wee complete, officer. and men fleeing in disorder end et will. littortera concur in ening abet 4.4 030 advantage gained by Hancock, on the evening of Mort day, been vigorously followed up in force, Johnson, Ma gruder, and the rent would have been captured with all their force. Bad the retreat been followed up, a result BO icon dumetroon eo the enemy woohl hove eneo,cl. Th. r were nearly deetitnte of provision, and scoured the country for the lent pound of bacon and peck of forage. Every where we wet the complaint that had greeted us helm e—utter destitution and immediate distress. Horses, w *sone, s late. he.,o been ewept THE NEGRO'S IDEA OF FREEDOM' A new dillicnlty has arisen, as real as new. The ne. , groev have, as a general thing, refused longer to work, definite that they are free, and no longer subject to their owners. So far at I have teen, there is little or no attempt to compel them to work, and they appear to be having their own way. But the demitute condition of the country will inflict on them hnt distress, and it would teem that they will be mugs -lied to return to their owners on that mount. One farmer told me, tu , day, that thirty field• hands bad just gone away. Theme self-emancipated men were to be seen in companies of Oren and tens, and frequently even in larger numbers, in holiday dress, awaiting the approach ot the army, or watching it while passts.k. There WAX no mistaking the meaning of their looks or actions. It seems inevitable that mast of them will be disappointed in their expectations. Some of them told that they were willing to work, but for pay, like other men. This, probably, is the feeling with most o r aim. On applying for dinner at a fine farm house Ms day, 1 VlllB met with a &Mal, on the ground that sit the negrces had pone away, and there was nobody to cook or do au'thing about the house. At the same time, much concern pas expressed lest the family would starve on the name account, notwithstanding there were three or four white women at the doors and windows, who, it teemed to me. would not be particularly disgraced by doing a little housework. A STAND TO BR RADS THIS SIDE OF RICHMOND Deserters and prisoners continue to Conte in, The most trustworthy intelligence concerning the enemy is, that they intend to make a stand ten miles this side of Richmond, to which place they have fled, and where they are engaged in throwing up entrnimbinants. It would take 13a three days nearly to reach that place were which WA Nth hardly ayaNet will be the care. Geta. *onetime and Franklin having formed a junction, WO now have a solid front ; and the whole army will crowd up as soon as comports with the plans of Gen. McClellan. I have no knowledge of the trisition which the rebels are said to be fortifying. 5a they ye, treated they t4>ok with them th great Many negre , is io work on the entrenchments, and seemed particularly anxious, as I am informed, to imprem free ne=rves into that service. Many escaped by hiding away until the last of the enemy had aerie by. General Smith's division camps to-night in the ad vance, and will move first at an early hour in the morn ing. General McClellan is three miles to the rear, and will keep up with his army in the future. General Sum ner is at the head of his corps, which, it is understood, will bring up the rear. Though nothing is absolutely known, it is conjectured that the rebels will gather their forces in Virginia, while they assist Beauregard at his present position, for a grand battle. LATE SOUTHERN NEWS, EXTRACTS FROM REBEL PAPERS. The Success of the Rebellion Depends on Retaining Richmond. If we are succestful, and retain Richmond, there will be fnrei9ra intertnatton and peace, withnnt the p.issi hill ty of ditappointment, hernre tne month of Jaw.. if we arc defeated and log Richmond. the Confederacy id Munched on a wide, troutaed, anti uncertain sea of ac. eldest. Foteign Governments can delay action now °Myna the gicnne of a great Federal EIIICEWS. Seward is at the and of Ms pretaiE•es. if the United States fails to take the coyltel of add country on the present trial, and hum:- diet - oy, the game is up Already it in denial - el in Now York that the Southern Confederacy has been recog nized by France. This new a may not be tine, hut It is the shadow of the coming event—the trent tkat stands at the &or_ lint if Richmond is tares the United States can again plead for, and again get delay. The full 1 the elpital, and the flight of the Government, wn(11.1 be a striking eridenre rf power. They would declare that before nUdsununer they would subdue the remnant of the South •, they would be believed. All the werld would turn a deaf ear to our arguments, and shut their eyes on a painful struggle, Which they would regard as certain to arrive at a tragical conclusion. The success of the South would then be dithcult, and to bo attained by desperate means only. The Charleston Mercury, of May sth, bas the follow ing in its colunms. It will be seen that Governor Moore, of Louisiana, and a number of other prominent citizens of the same State, did not have any confidence in their ability to beat off the Federal forces, for they took good care to leave the city a day or two before the forts had surrendered, and when the Federal forces reached the city the runaways were hundreds of miles away from it. The dicrwry nays ; " THE WAR PRESS. Tam Wria Pans will to spot to intbseelbses (p swam la mammy) ols 644 4 0 Throe Ompisi live " " Tea .1 .., Larger Oahe will be (tamed at the same rate, thus! 10 woke will cost $24 60 copied, will cost VW; sad 101 copies OM. Ter c of Tweaterone Of OTITI wo will Nil Beira Copy to the getter-op of the Club. Stir Postmasters ars requested to mot as Arab fat UM WAS Passe, sir Advertiattmeab Insertad at the UMW Wee. al linen aosstitais • intim Jilt it ehnuid not he Aligned to ho his situ. !ITN misfortune. Tim lawn do nut rocugnizo folly mid stO/pidity as legal exemptions from responsibility for of felnul ; it in necessary for the good of society that folly ns w 441 no rascality:should be responsible for their conso unommit. Nu it islisseetwary that far the gtlitil of au try the initoatalthhA of fully alinttld be accounted 61 4 6 military alma,. Fools Woe oft pulled down empires that Solent and etrsars hose reared; wisdom can do great things, yet cm nods them More But thole. ae espectaffo comarelfoolo, rani he contrniled, Ilif.otigh but one agency—that of tear. Let the sitintriary punish ment of the guilty in this caws he an acute warning to other fools and Ci/Yrnidil vrin may be iu the , military ens ploy of the Confederacy, in Tiny, r i inchArmtin mrre - wan a Mat of half a dories, more or egertive gunboats, and not an she my's vesegl nit that inland sea, lts "titration were guarded by strong fortifications. and on its waters flatted a Void value of shipping. Across the lake the oily of New eon now be oprroe , heri by at,' tramo Tort Iliad, and an iirlily 4,111 lin la nand at tins city, or above tin' city at raFti Manchan, in the vicinity where Ilia ft/pita/Mg Lovell, has 64 Ilia& ca 001.111]." Of what avail in it that the brave Duncan and his herolccommand Lad Dia rotLi n ths nil 41,1 amid the ruins to 1:pop Lincoln's expeditionary land forces at Lay? Fort Pike :nal the batteries which guard the en trances and the gindsods ilmaroyvol, and merchant Yarial•lii Can sail into the lake up to the oily freiplite,l with 1,4,0 of pre fiat fhis is airrady Leiria; ionehy tiro active enernYi and WI• may resign the last faint !loess that have been laiggi-ted on the bash; of the enntinni,l dernnrn of the dl lahiSSippi forts keeping the troop transports at bay until siren could be made in regain lira °doom_ We miestion very MO if, slier their exhausting , drag gin with the InistivAippi forte, which so ninth redneel their munition., arid in which they suffered so much loss, one with en much mill to do In that river, the naval forces , of the i n , P,IY cedild bare tent a competent flotilla to trance th e ronchartrein aurae and fleet for Week.. Meanwhile something might have been done to ii plink the flower Parpty out of the nettle danger," could theMie sissipf i forts have held out. .Ltdt the, matter mat be •lewed in another gni psite Ot ibegrocefed ttepect, 'runt gontroot Dent might larva bees Barred and made trlsiluble elsewhere. There we, a meta to Mobile. and with it invitingly open the yesnela were batmen. Merchant 'replete and steamers showed the way cod case through safely ; why did not these w! . .1. remelt, of st.e. Veofe.L.reey 'eot..l bed . , 014 camp is coo diegusiingfor discussion. Let It never be brought up after it Is urcepaarily BO in order to the execution of hits or those responsible for it. With that fleet added to oar light-draught equedron in Mobile bay, we could make of eleteeee - g aleet the. best ClTOriff c' 414, veeetr, Bri t well—cheu,jant sutis. A Ilit at the Rebel Administration. Ihe Norfolk Day Rook, of a late date, has the follow ing bit at the rebel Government: We undoubtrOly exploted from the Queen City of the South some greater display of resistance than has reached our care. The abandonment and 41 arrendor of the moat approved forennlas of military acienee, but the people of the Pouth would have p r g ffr o ming m u more renetute demonstrations, In the meantime, however, an it may have been an is. evituble event, we deter any strictures until there shall have been some established charges of cowardice or treachery on the part of those to whom ,the defence was totrunittf d That the Navy Department did not know initiate witi non nahle, ntd that it completed the great gunboale. exactly in time to be destroyed by the enemy, raieee ere t•uuiption of gross incompetency on the part of the sporee tern, and then Weibull the lubJecte hut ben ocun. The pride of office and the arrogance of professional knowledge must have received many humitiating lessons lately, and vie I nee those who have been thus deceived, Ke n h a ve co greatly deceived others by asserting New Oilcans to be impregnable_ will acknou Wine their Lilt hnity, and llama with reapect In future to suggestions ct others. The Protest of the French Naval Com mandant at New Orleans. It will be recollected that the Bret rebel account of this capture of New Orleans stated that the commandant of ri Trench man-of-war protested against a shelling of the city within a specified time, The New Orleans Delhi of May let contains the proclamation in full, which we transfer to our columns, Commander nf the Uil ited States Squadron, now in ate Fort of New Orleans: SIR: Sent by my Government to protect the persona and property of its citizens, who are here to the number of thirty thousand, I regret to learn at this moment that you have accorded a delay of forty•eight hours for the evacuation of the city by the women and ohildren. I venture to observe to you that this short delay is ridicet. lone; ard, in the name of my Gt.vernmeut, I oppose it. If it is your retolution to bombard the city, do it; but I wish to state that you aid have to account for this barb.- UP act ro the Power which I represent, In any event, I &mead sixty days for the evacuation. Da Ototrar, Commandant of the steamer Milan, opposite the city et New Orleans. THE FIRES ON LONG ISLAND Immense Destruction of Property, Over 100,000 Acres of Woodland Devastated. The disastrous fires in the Pine woods of Suffolk county, Long Island, last week, have been briefly alluded t 9 in our telegraphic columns. The first fire broke oat near the southwestern line or Brookhaven, at a place called Bock Hill, about noon of Wednesday, May 7. It was caused by a man burning brush in clearing up EOM new land; and the high, cold, dry winds which have prevailed over the !shoed for a fortnight Pact, to a degree seldom known, having rendered the combustible material with which the wood. were littered as Italara mable as tinder, it swept down upon the village of Speonk, In 0 6kitbasept.se, thstatatllng Its shill% destettettan, which was only averted by energetic efforts on the part of the residents. In its way it consumed a barn and ontbuile ings, w itb some cattle, belonging to tir. Ebenezer Jayne. The fire wee bail/ goi under on the same W e but not until it bed extended over some 8,000 to 10,000 acres. and done damage to the estimated amount of $40,000. TILE FIRES ON FRIDAY AND SATURDAY The same dry and high winds continned during the re mainder of the week, and the danger of Unita n from ac cident or carelessness increased. On Friday forenoon at su early lonr, Mr. J, L. G residing at St James, near the eastern line of Olvisiou between acialthtown and Brookhaven, and about twentyseigbt twee west of RI: vet head. in burning some brush on a field he was clear ing lost control of the fire, which communicated to the adjoining woods, An alarm was raised and men prompt ly collected to stop its advance; but, aided by a fresh wind from west-northwest, it repiely spread in an east erly direction, taking in its course the tract of timbered land, rumtly pine, wh ch stretches along between the vorth and middle country roads, and known ae the st North Plains," being from three to five tulles in width and covered with a vsrving growth of nine, mixed with some oak. Along this plain the tire extended. before It was &utilized on Saturday night, to the extreme eastern limit of Brookhaven ' or to near Wading river in Risertietul tows, a distance of twenty-three to twenty-five miles. Over this entire space it raged and revelled in unabated fury. Ntu.~ was tins tell. When towards nightfall of Friday, aftet some hours of strenuous but unavailing exertions to ar rest the headway of the flames, the people of the region round about found that a fork of fire had shot ahead of them to the northeast sonic one and a half miles, and was menacing New Village, Schierl, d:c. they despaired of checking the onward movement of the tire, and turned their attention to confining it, as far as they could, to the synods, finis saving their Middlings, enclosures, ,tc. In this they were pm tinily successful. and by constant watch fulness and untiring assiduity nit that night, it was kept petty near in line of the d , Plains." At five A. M. of Saturday it passed hack or Comm to tlio north' Mid Hera it destroyed 1110 first building, n barn belonging to Gluts, Bider. }rem this time the wind, which ford been fresh from west-northwest, began to iterrelei , in violence, and blew n. gale, coming the ere berme it to the nest with terrible fury. It hied reached opposite }last Middle Island by eight A. M.,' and still kept un east, crossing the valley of the picturesque little stream called, on the old Long lased records, East Connecticut river. and reach ing ti '1 he Ridge" on the middle country road, opposite Taphauk, at about twelve M. Its broad columns of lurid red light, wreathed with dense volumes of odorous bat ruftocating smoke from the resinous pine wool, still drove on before the wind; and now, say at three. P. when its bead bad penetrated beyond a line drawn north from Manor station, a new and yet more formidable aspect of the already frightful calamity arose. The wind. which had be e n veering more to the north, came round to the northeast. and bore down upon the southern edge of this long de lance of light." then fringed with its expiring, blaze from the Ridge to the Manor, and at once wide tongues of fire began careering southward iuto the centre of the island. With resistless and insatiable power, these fiery spurs, widening as they went, rushed d roared on their way, till one common destruction seemed about to sweep over Yaphatik and the settle ments east to Manor. tromp of the finest tracts of tim ber lend on the island were burned over, tend large quantities of cord wood, cut and piled ready for market or use, were consumed. Among others, Hon. Wm, Sid ney Smith, who has represented this district in the State Legislature, and who lives near YapleanS, had a tract of I,eto cress, rr.oAlly 0.1 Lure. over, an otl Cuno or rovrly did his hnildhigd breaPe ilestruelion that the straw in his yards ' pigpen, d) , caught fire, and were extin guishe withdi fliculty. It ia said that out of all hie large domain be has not ten acre on which the wood was not more or less burned. James U. Weeker, Rid , formerly Pleteklent of the Long island Railroad. who resides' at Taphenk, was also a large sufferer. Freon Yttpliank on sect. re Manor, the fire crossed the track of the railroad at eneletis re ibis. travelling 5011111 with dal iie:a: bathed velocity of tot lees than eight or Moo miles eeu hour. Ale.tlfl the track, and in the woods adjscent thereto, Beyo nd thousand emilds of wood were burned. One pile of Iwo hundred cords, on the side of the road, emitted truce a heat that rho rails Pero curled null twisted out of sham and the expreas train from Now York had to atop for the tire to subside, PO tea to allow of relaying tl a rail before it or uld proceed, being detained in this way for severe' liners. t- The freight train bud provionaly attempted to pans donu t but had been lain cdutoly driven, after entering the furnace as f.r at it dared. to retreat anal hack down to Ye phank, feat tug momently that It would he surrounded end rut off. The np mail train, too, had to ran a fiery gauntlet for rode, and persons on it were ahnOet sungtaer cd by the smoke. Baring pawed south of the middle country road and the railroad puck, the fire swept to the west of smith with amazing rapidity, through a lattivily.tinitrured district. The smith country road proved an insufficient barrier to itt• headlong rev. and down the nonka which jut Into the hay it poured its full tide of wrath till it reached the •rmy water's edge. 8o thiek and suffocating wee the rrii4v width relied i•rfory it that men hod tett - atm Own,. rely. s upon the earth to get breath, and some distracted vr,.men aid children put off in boats spot the bay for eaters All of Mamie Neck, a large and valu - ails tract, of eoine't had or nine thousand acres, much of it in heavy timber, wan burned over, and the fire extended south west flow lielphank tilt It met the track of another tire a nbich erigleat4 from the stovepipe ot a shanty halt mile mailmen, of Bellport station, at about 11 o'clock A. and spread along eastuard on the south side of the railroad track, in aline nearly parallel to the north fire, till the wind II iced, when it alto turned and went sonth ert, taking in Fireplace Neck. and moaning on in a tend-circular form. Of course, over a district FO extensive that the cope. isle ittwt curnot tit+ collPeted for anti with the pp Otruirot or a groat calamity Mid enlivening the Imagine. lien and clouding the region of Own, it in impracticable to condense the floating !morn and conjectures of lessen into any well-defined LOUT ; hut, after peeking to weigh dbraisienately all the various statements we have heard, Mai guiding our Judgment by all the known Stu awe eau rusher, we are disposed to think that the entire lees,, immediate and remote, actual and possible, which Suffolk County (and it le safe to affirm that nine tenths of it fills on Brookhaven town) ham sustained by the several fires lart , Week will moo from one to one and El gllfirtg Mil" 110118 or mars. SHOCKING WI:1m —An Irishmsn named floury Wat sen was murdered in Paxton, Mete.. on Sunday night by K Abl/SKP natural Jeremiah Doyle, with whom he had Leen on a carousal during the day. The two .116 Q quarreled, but parted apparently fn Imam Durino the night knocking woo heard at the door of the house where Doyle lodged, and be arose and went out. Ills room. mate soon followed, and maw him chasing a man whi- f terwarde proved to be Watson. Doyle returned, and raid he had killed Watt!On, and then !darted for Worm,lt ter. Watson's body was round to inn morning, terribly Leiden, and the skull broken, Doyle has been arrested. A FHA BFDI, PIPEASIS.—The Jonesboro (Tenn.) Sopreuu learns trait n fearful (Huron TIM 1111141 ISO uppcittunoc iq Carter county, Tenn. The symptoms of the disease are similar to these of congestive fever or cold plague. In few hours its victim is dead. Last Monday morning there Nero four corpses in Duo La use. In the lust ton dam twenty ur Inlay barn fungi twforo it, and fy nita Still aq gig or . crease.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers