Cl2t Vrtss. SATURDAY, MAY 17, 1862. THE LATEST WAR NEWS It will cause a thrill of joy throughout the loyal portion of the land to know that the Union cause has sustained a now triumph, and that the stars and stripes float over another EL Gibraltar" of the rebels. Pensacola, the boasted stronghold of the rebellion on the Southern coast, has been taken from the hands of its despoilers and restored into the Lands of its ri,shi ful owners. The intelligence to this effect comes to us from Southern sources, Jacob Thompson, Secretary of the Interior under Air. Buchanan, and nevi on the staff of Beauregard, being the bearer of the joyful news. This will' be another stunning blow to the rebel cause, and from the effects of which it will not seen recover. Ever since the day Pensacola was evacuated by the little band of United States soldiers, and subsequently occupied by the rebels, it was the common vaunt of the latter that they would make it impregnable against any force that could be sent against i , and would ultimately take Fort Pickens from the bands of the Union soldiers; but by the vigilance and bravery of our officers, soldiers, and sailors in those parts--1 or the army and Wiry Worked en unison—the latter boast was prevented from being carried out, and the former has at last been thrown back like a lie into the face of its uttorors. No doubt a large amount of cannon and ammunition have fallen into the hands of our troops, but we hope that the loss of life has been sli"ht. eeemat nerd order acminel I]e»--' stating that no effie.er or soldier will be permitted to pass to the rear of the army, and no citizen, in cluding correspondents of the newspapers, to the front. Deserters are constantly coming into our lines, who agree that the rebels are still at Corinth strongly fortifying themselves. From Fortress Monroe we learn that Secretaries Seward and Welles, and Attorney General Bates, have gore to iN'urfolk. Stringent orders have boon issued by General Wool prohibiting the sale of newspapers, the transportation of supplies and mer chandise, and the visit of citizens or soldiers to Nor folk. It is stated that the embargo on travel to Fortress Monroe will soon be removed. General McClellan has sent a despatch to Secre tary Stanton, complimenting Generals Hooker's and Kearney's divisions of I.leintzleman's corps, for their gallants) , in the battle of Williamsburg. The gourd protni , ee to notice other comauccd.- for their brave conduct in the same battle, when all the fuels about said battle are known to him. Gen. Mitchell' little army has made anotb.or of those exploits for which it is everywhere famous. Ile despatched an expedition on the 13th, under command of Gen. Negley, a Pennsylvanian, against Itigeravillm but before Gen. Kegley reached there the rebels fled. teen. M. sent an expedition against "Shedd creek which was more successful, destroying the forrybent and She bridge at that blare. Thera are some rebel cavalry in that vicinity which Gen. Mitchell promises to destroy or capture.. Frem Gen. Banks' headquarters at Strasburg, we learn that the Union people of that region are pour ing into town, under the belief that Gen. Banks' army is retreating. Three hundred rebel guerillas made n dash upon a number of the Twenty-eighth Pennsylvania regiment, and killed or took fourteen prisoners. It is rumored that Gen. Fremont's com mand have o-eupl. J. Staunton, Congress Yesterday. SENATE.—The Indian appropriation bill was paned, after an amendment to it was adopted, au thorizing the President to give the apdropriations only to loyal Indians. The confiscation bill was then discussed to the hour of adjournment. 11011 Sn . -8 message from the Secretary of War, enclosing a report from Gen. Geary, in relation to the murder of Ron. Robert E. Scott, was presented. The Rouse gave Mr. Wood, of New York, permis sion to print a speech on the present condition of the country, which that gentleman did not wish to deliver orally. IN REPRINTING the letter of Mr. BORDA, we desire to recall some of the facts connected with the reeent outbreak at Pottsville. Mr. BORDA is so very general in his letter that we really do not know what to say to him. He has evidently lost his temper. He forgets that newspapers are very human in their feel ings; that they do not care to be assailed and insulted any more than lir. BORDA himself. Mr. BORD. , ell:: us that he nee a reputation for fair dealing. We do nut doubt it. We may say it as a question that causes us little concern. We do not atk Mr. BORDA for any cord_ ficates of good character; we are glad to think that he is a good citizen, pays his debts. possesses the respect of his fellosr•ci tizens, and manages the Forest Improvement Colliery. But this does not give Mr. BOILDI any pretext for flying into a passion, and shak ing his fists at THE PRESS. It does not per mit him to call the gentlemen connected with this paper cc designing individuals," to cha racterize their statements as possessing "not one word of truth," and to speak of their "im posing upon the community." With all due respect to Mr. Bonne, and even remembering his ten years' connection with the collieries, he must permit us to say that we have as much confidence in the gentlemen associated with Ds on this paper as we hare in his own an gry and impertinent letter. It is too much the custom forgentlemen like Mr. BORDA, who have newspaper grievances, to appease their wound ed feelings by indiscriminate abuse of inde pendent and unoffending journalists. Our re porter had no possible =Mine for misrepre senting the condition of affairs at Pottsville. He went there to see, and tell us what he saw. He went into anticipated danger, followed by armed men and companies of drilled soldiery ; came back with certain convictions, and im pressed with the truth of certain statements. And havitg accepted and printed them in good faith, we are indignantly warned by Mr. l3oanA to beware of an associate and a friend whew. he accuses of a design to impose upon the community. If Mr. BORDA had quietly sat down and told us his story, without excitement or anger; we should have accepted it with plea sure, and read it with attention. We should, perhaps, have reversed our. own judg ment, and, had we found it necessary, ad mitted the justice oleferr: BORDA.'S position. But he must ensure if we Are unable to Cl? an? now. He talks about his character and a con temptible plotters," and wages being a " pre text," but this is very indefinite and unsatis factory. We are compelled, therefore, to fall back upon the " designing individual" who furnished the article which excites Mr_ BORDA_ Our reporter tells us that, about two weeks ago, some twelve or fifteen hundred miners quietly stopped work and took possession of the Forest Improvement Mines, near the town of Minersville, in Schuylkill county, and the dif ferent mines in various parts of the country. The disaffection extended over miles of terri tory; it was managed with caution and pru dence ; there was no blood shed, no tumult, but a quiet and earnest determination to assert what the miners believed to be certain threat ened rights. The sheriff came out with his posse, but he found it the part of discretion to go home again. Then the military were summoned, and Philadelphia sent two or three companies of her local militia. These troops succeeded in quelling the disturbance,—quiet reigns iu mi ill .....nersv...e, and Mr. BORDA is vent ing his rage in epistles to the newspapers. The miners had certain objects in making their strike. Mr. BORDA says that the dis satisfaction arose from other causes—the wages were a pretext." Our reporter says they insisted on an advance, as follows : tg Miners ten cents per wagon ; laborers twenty-five cents per day." Our reporter's statement is Certain ly very definite, and he supports it with other statements, which we print at the risk of ex citing another display of indignatiOn on the part of Mr. BORBA. "No class of men,". be said, delve so laboriously, live so wretched ly, and are paid so pitifully as the coal miners and laborers of this State. They are not only paid scantily, but paid in a mannerthat reduces their wages to the bare price of bread and fire. The mining cOrporations carry on mercantile establishments, adjunct to the mines, and the ruiners are partially paid in "orders" upon these stores. Here they are charged exces sively, in many cases twice the current value of groceries and dry goods but as there is no alternative between such pay and no pay, they usually submit. They are not paid definite sums for definite work. In the spring, when navigation opens upon the canals, their wages Ante comparatively high. Toward the fall and through the winter wages are reduced, and as the capitalists seldom make voluntary offers of advanced pay, the men 'strike' every spring, and thus compel compliance." This is a sad state of things, if it is true, and we faithfully - believe it. Mr. Basins, it will be seen, is silent on the subject. His ten years' experience in the colliery business would have enabled him to speak with an air of authority. He might have given us an idea of how he ma naged affairs in his own particular colliery. We should be very glad, indeed, to know that such things do not exist where he is in com mand. He passes over all this, however, by say ing that our reporter is c; imposing on the com munity!" This will never do, Mr. BORON Here are certain facts printed by a responsible man in a responsible newspaper. Are they true or false? How is it in the colliery over which you have control ? Do your minerslivo wretch edly ? Are they paid scantily? Do you pay them the bare price of bread and fire? Do you give them orders on grocery stores con trolled by the company ? Do you pay definite sums for definite work, or are you arbitrary and unreasonable? Do you reduce the la borer's pay in the winter and refuse to advance it in the spring? These questions may be impertinent, but the fault is Mr. Bonna's, and none of ours. He might have told us all about it in the beginning and thus saved us the ne cessity of making unpleasant inquiries. We are glad to see that he voluntarily tendered his men 4‘ a big advance" on the• first of April, but whether the advance was accepted or re jected he.does not say. We are no advocates of mob law 1 we do not defend the system of striking, especially when it is carried to excesses as violent as the excesses of the miners at Pottsville. If a hundred of them had been slain by our soldiers, we should have felt that they died a just death. But the very fact that we do not ante, compels us to take measures to remove any cause for resistance. These miners must not be unjustly treated merely because we have regiments of Home Guards, with loaded muskets within a clay's ride, to restore them to order. If we would maintain the peace, we must remove any incentive to break the peace, and we must admit there are strong incentives for disorder in the statement of our reporter. This reasoning may not please Mr. BORDA, but we are in hopes that when that gentlemen has recovered his usual ami ability, and looks at this thing as calmly as we are looking at it now, he will admit the justice of the position we have taken, and do what lies in his power to ameliorate the condition of the pour and unhappy people around him. Tim DECLARATION of President LINCOLN in his first call for troops, that the forts, arsenals, and doeliyards of the United States GOWAN], ment seized by the rebels should be re possessed. is being carried out to the very letter. With each new triumph of our arms we have especial cause for congratulation, not so much in the tribute to our superior prowess or skill, but in the consciousness that the GovernMent is gradually reasserting its su premacy over all its territory, and possesses the requisite strength to make itself feared and respected by its enemies. The property of the United States, day after day, is being wrested from the grasp of the rebellion and decked with the flag of the Union. Ere we had fully_ chronicled the capture of Gosport navy yard, intelligence reaches us that an other naval station has been restored to the national custody. The fall of Pensacola is admitted by Colonel JACOB TITO:UPSON, former ly Secretary of the Interior under JAMES Be- CUANAX, but now an officer of BEAUREGARD'S staff, who lately accompanied a flag of truce to our camp near Corinth. If this intelli gence is true, as we hope and believe it is, we have cause for joyful gratitude. The fall of Pensacola is not less disastrous to the South than was the fall of Norfolk. Its pos session was always deemed of vital importance, and to be maintained, if possible, at any cost. It is, perhaps, the best harbor on the Southern coast. Its navy yard and marine hospital were among the finest in the Union. It was environed by miles of earthworks, and made capable of obstinate defence by contiguity to Forts Barrancas and tie, which mounted heavy guns. An army of fifteen thousand rebels, under the redoubta ble BRAXTON BRAGG, was stationed here for many months, and only withdrawn for the ne cessary purpose of strengthening BEAUREGARD at Corinth. The battle of Shiloh, therefore, which some affect to regard as a dettbtful tory, has given us at least a victory at Pen sacola—a victory not merely to be exulted over, and to swell the list of promotions in the service, but to be followed by speedy and startling results. Pensacola has direct rail road communication with Montgomery, Ala bama, the former capital of the Confederacy, from which it is less than one- hund-ed and fifty miles distant—the route being shorter by one-half than that (1, 3 " water) from Mobilo. It is, in fact, a key to the'Alabama territory, and its occupation augurs as brief a campaign on the Southern coast as the most apprehen sive among us could anticipate. In A FEW nays the column of General _MC CLELLAN will rest upon the hills that surround 1 Richmond, and that proud city, for twelve months the scene of treason and oppressitne, will be gradually restored to its ancient pros perity and peace. It is extraordinary how the Southern people have permitted them selves to be misled and Cheated by revengeful and ambitious leaders. No page in history will be read with more surprise than that which records the apparent rapidity and l'Oadi lICEs with which the most sacred tradition& of our own past have been discarded, the most cherished memories blotted out, and all the ensigns and emblems of national renown trampled tinder foot. Happily, howe.Ver, WC are daily reminded that this strange hallucina tion has resuLed more from force than con viction. Thousands of men in the Seceded States have seemed to yield to isecessien to .are their property and their lilies; and when they are convinced that the authority of the Federal Government .is wholly re stored, the ennobling recollections of other days will revive, in all their strength. Above all, when they are able to contemplate the fact that the policy of the loyal States. as embodied in the action of the Administra tion, and illustrated in the forward movements of our armies, is not the policy of spoliation, ritine, and tyranny, but is intended only to restore order to a dissentiently and anarchical region--to repossess that which belongs to the General Government, and to punish those ho have lifted their bloody hands against free institutions, they will signalize their dis eneharitment by a willing anti grateful ae• quiescence in the establishment of the old and wholesome rule. The system of detraction pursued by the rebel armies in regard to the people of the free States, and the objects of the war, has not been confined to newspapers, and to the proelainations of military chiefs, but has even disgraced the pulpit. The following article copied from the New York Otserver, a religious paper representing the Presbyterian Church, published as long ago as the 16th of January last, discloses an evidence of the truth of this assertion. With - what a humiliating sense of his own falsehood this lying divine will behold the benign and humane conduct of the soldiers of the Repub- Ho as they encamp in and around the capital of the Old Dominion " One of the most prominent preachers in Vir ginia is the pastor of the Fires Presbyterian Church in Richmond, the Rev. T. V. Moore, D. D. No believe that he is a Northern man by birth; he certainly was called from the North to his present pastoral charge, and he is candid, truthful, and dispassionate as any of the clergy around him. Raving known him as a friend and brother in the ministry for many years, we are disposed to re ceive, with confidence in his sincerity, whatever statements ern:make h.., hie lips or pen• La reading from a Richmond paper, of January 2, the following extract from a late fast-day sermon by Dr. Moore, we are compelled to believe that he believes what he says, and we copy his statements for at least three reasons that will follow the pas sage. The Dr. declares: "Never, since the terrible scenes of La Vendee, under the ravaging hordes of Republican France. has the old heathen war cry Pe to the conquered) been more unmistakably sounded by an army of invaders. Let this tremendous crusade become successful, either by mismanage knent ih tita army, or cowardice and greedinese at home, and history furnishes no page so dark and bloody as that which would record the result. Our best and bravest men would be slaughtered like bullocks in the shambles; our wives and daughters dishonored before our oyes our elate smoked, our fields laid waste, our homes pillaged and burned, our property, which we are, perhaps,_selfishly hoarding, wrested from me by fines and confirm. lions, our grand old Commonwealth degraded from her proud historic peace of ancient dominion to be the vassal province of a huge central despotism, which, having wasted her with fire and sword, would compel her by military force to pay the enormous expense of her own subjugation, or, in default of this, parcel out her broad lands to in sulting emigrants as a feudal reward for the rapine and murder of this now - Norman conquest, whilst the owners of these lands must either remain as cowering factors for insolent conquerors and op pressive lords, or wander as penniless and hopeless fugitives in a hied of strangers." Mr. and Mrs. J. Allen and Mrs. Barren are playing I the principal characters in Laura Keene's version of the 11 - • •Mecarttin or the reep-e bay. LETTER FROM 46 M'CAS/ONAL." WASIIINI;ITON, May 16, 1862. Major General Hunter has awfully outraged the Southern aristocracy by organizing co lored brigades, and by declaring the slaves in Florida, Georgia, and South Carolina, "for ever free." This is neither more nor less than a deliberate affront to our humane and honor able adversaries in these States. The cc sus ceptibilities" of these gentlemen are very deli cate. After Monroe, the relined Mayor of New Orleans, bad permitted a rebel mob to fire upon the women and children of that city for cheering at the first sight of the American flag in their harbor, he assured Commodore Farragut that the people of New Orleans were peculiarly sensitive and "susceptible," and that that gallant officer must take care not to outrage their feelings. It was a graceless comment upon this complacent appeal to ar rest the chief magistrate of that municipality, and to allow him to debate with himself, in solitary confinement, the issues of the hour. But Major General Hunter is located in a region even more susceptible, and I can not refrain the expression of my amazement that he should have allowed himself to be ig norant of the fact. What ! arm and free the negroes of South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida in defence of the Union ! Who ever 'lewd of such sacracse and irreverence ; Did not General Hunter know that the negroes are to be employed only against the Union, and that any soldier, or sailor, or statesman who dares to say that they shall be enlisted to do the hard work of our army, to relieve our troops from the deadly malaria, al. avaa nit us messengers for the conveyance of news from camp to camp, is to be set' down, not merely as an Abolitionist, but as a traitor ? It is quite true that the Secessionists employ savages to take the scalps and cut the throats of our white men on the frontiers ; that they poison wells ; bury torpedoes to testroy unarmed men; insult prisoners; mutilate the wounded; hack the bodies of the dead ; and burn the last re mains of the defenders of the Constitution; but, then, General Hunter ought never to lose sight of the fact that these Septic Gourteales fail to stir the hearts of the sympathizers with Secession in the free States, who accept them as among the prerogatives of the enemies of our common country. It is full time that ho should also know that it is only when an offi cer of the United States army or navy acts upon the instinct of self-preservation, and re sorts to every Means for the purpose of pro tecting hie troops and making 'his campaign effective, that these patriotic citizens give ut terance to their pious indignation. "Did we not tell you," they will now say, that this is a war for the abolition of slavery in tire seceded States." Here is Hunter insulting our sol diers by employing negroes in the army. What white man will remain in our ranks when lie discovers that he is to fight side by side with the colored man, the . former slave (possibly the son) of some aristocratic Manning or Orr, Keitt, Cobb, Toombs, Yulee, Mallory, Boyce or libett. Poor Hunter! what answer can you make to such irresistible and indignant logic ? I know what you will say. You will aplead that in the South white and black men have worked together for years; that it has been a common thing to employ negroes in the navy yards, factories, on the wharves, and in the fields ; and I presume you will be infidel enough to in sinuate that this admixture of the races has not been confined to the males alone. You will also allege, in your desperation, that if your example is notfollowed, the prediction of James Buchanan will be realized ; and that the brave soldiers from the free States will be as swept off like rotten sheep in the sickly Southern season." Perhaps you will dare to continue this argument, aid claim that yen are justified by the usages of other nations in employing blacks in our army; that France em ploys Algerines, and that the Sepoys of India are enrolled in common with white men to maintain the British authority. General Hun ter, all these excuses won't save you. Yon are incontinently damned. Badinage apart : Hunter has done the right thing, at the right moment, in the right place, and in the right way. Instead of insulting his own troops, he is saving them. Experience has taught that ripe and accomplished soldier that the aristocratic traitors of the South have determined to conduct this war outside of civilized customs 'and practices ; that as they have trampled upon their own laws, violated their own Constitution, and flown into the face of all the examples of other nations, so they have resolved to assail the Government of the United States, without respect to age, sex, or condition. He will, I predict, find his least obstacle in the opposition of his own soldiers. When they understand that the Degrees are to work in the trenches, build fortifications, construct bridges, mend roads, act as spies, and penetrate unknown regions ; that they are to be relieved from these perilous duties by the colored men of the South, who will fight under the double inspiration that success makes them free, and that they can exhibit their courage without running the risk of the diseases of the climate, his troops will hail Ills action with joyful gratitude. It is true, the sympathizers with Secession in the free States, who are so anxious to awa ken the prejudices of the white population against the blacks, will agonize over the policy of Gen. Hunter ; but can the Secessionists of the South complain ? Have they not set the example ? Have they not shown, by their every act, not merely their readiness to enrol their ,51.aveS in their own ranks, but their insa: tiate hatred of their former white fellow citi zens? At any rate, let the experiment be tried in Florida; Georgia, and South Carolina, Amos Kendall, in his letter, published in the Mammal Intelligencer on the 25th of' Fe bruary last, while pleading for the constitu tional rights of the south, laid the axe to the root of all our troubles, and gave a warning to the men who have insisted that the Govern ment could not sustain Itself in any war upon slavery. Mr. Kendall was warmly applauded for some of his letters by this class of reason ers ; and to them I commend the following statesmanlike suggestions of Mr. Kendall, in the letter referred to : The leaders of the rebellion," he says, "announced their determinition to 'conquer or die,' and the principal slaveholders in the Scolltil act as if they were in earnest. Look at South Carolina. In the violent portion of the State, the planters, to a man, fly on the approach of the Union army, burning their cotton, and, in many cases, their buildings, and abandoning their slaves. There are said to be now about eight thousand slaves thus aban doned in the vicinity of fort Royal, in South Carolina, every one of whom may be constitu tionally set free by confiscation, as a punish ment of their masters treason. As the Union armies advance into the interior, other thou sands will be added to the number by the de sertion of their masters, and finally, there will be no resident population, in a large portion of the State, but deserted slaves. "In short, if the masters persist in their mad and causeless rebellion against the Constitu tion, the end will be a negro community along a portion of the Southern coast under the protec tion of the United States. g 4 If the war is to be protracted by the ob stinacy of the cotton planters, this is a result which the United Otates could not avert if they would. rr By confiscation the slaves will be set free, and, through the same process, the lauds of their masters will be surrendered to them for cultivation, all without infringing on the Con stitution. Even now there is a negro eolony around Port Royal, under the protection of the national forces, and its future expansion into an organized community depends on the ob. stinacy of the planters and the events of the war. "But this is not all, Probably four-fiftha of all the slaves in the United States are now lawfully subject to confiscation on account of the treason of their masters. How far the for feiture of their slaves, their other property, or their lives, shall be carried, is a question of ex pediency only, and involves no constitutional question of power. Four-fifthe of all the alaTeg may be thus lawfully set free, and the emanci pation of the other fifth would soon follow." Thus it will be Ile6ti that even the veteran Democrat, Amos Kendall, while objecting to the course of the Abolitionists, is entitled to the credit of having made the proposition which G en. Hunter has thus practically carried out. Thia is a war for the very existenoe of li berty. It it; a conflict for the life of the Re public. We must defend ourselves with all the means that are placed at our disposal, and with all the energies and resources of our Go vernment. OCOASIONAL. 60T, If, n. 6rA3IDLE, of Missouri ) has cssNeutea t 9 b e . ISOM conOLOMe for ro-olociloo• THE .PRESS.-PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, MAY 17, 1862. FROM WASHINGTON. The Prohibition of Sensation Dwpatebes THE WAR DEPARTMENT'S EXPLANATION An Exchange Secured for Colonel Corcoran GEN. SICKLES RESTORED TO HIS COMMAND The Fugitive.alave Law Being Enforced in the District. GEN. WOOL CONFIRMED AS MAJOR GENERAL TIIE NEW CONFISCATION BILL The Vote on the Emancipation of Sabha' Slaves. A COMMISSIONER ON AGRICULTURE APPOINTED OPENING OF THE SOUTHERN PORTS. Important Instructions of the Becretaty of the Treasury. Special Despatches to “The Press." WA:IIII.'4;TM', Of ayl43, 1862. The Sensational Despatches from Cairo. On inquiry at the War Department, it is tooortained that the order of the assistant supervisor of tespatches, at Cincinnati. to the operator at Cairo, was not issued by the military supervisor at 'Washington, It Wositlllllll/ Dy the assistant supervisor, at Cincinnati, under a misap prehension of instructions received from the military su pervisor, which werointended to stop the forwantingfrem Cairo to the newspapers of false and improper military in telligence and seneational despatches relating to military matters, such as had on several pees:Aerie created public anxiety and alarm ,virbout canoe, and of which great complaint bad justly been niade. There ha 3 been no change in the orders of the Department, and - there is no intention to withhold any authentic information from the public, except such as could not be published with out embarrassment to military operations and danger to our armies. An Exchange Secured for Col. Corcoran. The Secretary of War, upon the application of Repre sentative ELY. has ordered the release of Cul. W. F. )3.O..DwiN, of Virglna, to exchange for Col. Cosoossu. Captain FARRELL and Lieut. DEMPSEY, lately teleased as prisoners of war from Richmond, acd who ham been a week iu Washington, had represented to the President and Secretary of War the necessity and justice of this ElrYtitlealYint, it6EAtifit of CA. ConCIVRAZi i .j tesith. Aided by Mr. ELY they Lava succeeded. Representative KuItRIGAN to-day received throwli ono of the lately returned Union priSoners, a lettei from Richmond, dated May 32th, which was hid in a piece of soap, urging him to use his political influence to effect the release of Gapts, POWNIIT and GRIFFIN, and LiIML4. and FAY, of the New York regiments. Ito also received two photographs of Union hostages, as they appeared in Castle Pinckney. • Order Thanking Gen, Wool for the Cap. The skilful and gallant movements of Major General Joss E. Wool., and the forces under his command, which resulted in the surrender of Norfolk, and the evacua tion of the strong batteries" erected by the rebels on SewelPs Point and Craney Island, and the destruc tion of the rebel ironclad steamer Merv/MSC, are re garded by the President as among the most important successes of the present war. Re, therefore, orderoLlioL his thanks, as Commander-in. Chief of the Army sad Navy, be communicated by the War Department to Ma jor General Jon!? E. Wool., and the officers and soldiers of his commend, for their gallantry and good conduct in the brilliant operation mentioned. By older of the President. Made at the city of Norfolk, on the eleventh day of May, 1562. ED WIN M. STANTON, Secretary of War. Sergeant Cit.voLts TUTU( ' Co hour,- C. Fifty-filth New York Eegiment, died this afternoon, at the National Hos £3,,nt Wirlitintrirurg ; The New Governor of North Carolina. EDWARD M. STANLEY, the new Gown:tor of North Carolina, arrived here to-night. As ecoa an he 113001130 Lie illbtlUCiiol3l3 be will depart for the seeIVIS of hle duty. We regret to announce that Senator H. AI. Itrcfl - bliones4u, la quite ilt from inflammation or tilt bowels. Three phrsicians were in consultation on his case this morning. the secretpry of WWI" OVIR a communisation to the fenale to•day, relative to the drafts of Majors Russact. and WADDELL, endorsed by Ex-Secretary of War Jolts Rit appeared that 8676,000 wee in D . r A ril L o ° l - Ylb' by Which astyearthe amount of those drafts outstanding in private halide, while the amount dna to tdeasra. RATS. SELL and WADDELL WBB $80 . 50. Tax on Coal. A petition was presented to the Senate to-day from citizens of Pennsylvania, remonstrating against a tax oa cod. The Employment of the Contrabands. I hear that a hundrei or two of contrabands are em ployed upon the Arlington Estate, in setting things to rights. It would lake a great number of these for a long period to rt pair the damages that have arisen in all the region around about here by reason of the establishment of camps. They could also be profitably employed in repairing the streets and roads that bare boon ploughel up Ui the artillery and wagon trains. The Opening of Southern Ports The Secretary of the Treasury has issued full instrue tiant: to iho eothietoni lecri-.ice.= to y.orti opened by proclaim:A-ion of the President. Them) instructions authorize clearances at any time before th e Ist of June, but vessels on cleared are not to outer Stich vorte. man Adler the 14 of Tu., Eta : I transmit herewith for your information copy of the proclamation of the President or the Cat tcd States, of the 12th of May, 105 opening the ports of Beaufort, N. C.; Port Royal, S. C., and New Orleans, La., with the regulations of the Secretary of the Treasury governing the trade with the said ports. In -view of said proclamation, and In parsui.3.o Of this regulations referred to, you are hereby authorized to grant clearances and licenses to vessels to proceed to any of the said ports under the following restrictions: Before crediting any such Clearance and licoasy yea shall require the master of each vessel to exhibit to you a manifest or descriptive statement of his cargo, and a list of the passengers and crew, and to verify the same by his oath (or solsam affirmation) ; and you will fully am: tidy yourself that Bahl vessel is intended in good faithfor a lawful trade, and will in nowise, directly or indirectly, violate the provisions of the aforesaid proclamation, and the regulation referred to. Yon will insert in such cleae_ antes the following: The master of the --, of —, laving, exhibited to me a manifest, or descriptive statement of his cargo, and a list Of the passengers and crew, mum haying yeti th 2 ,l the runty hint oath (or solemn ailirmution),ml I har ing satisfied myself that the said vessel it intended in good faith for a lawful trade, and only for a lawful trade, now, therefore, by authority of the Secre tory of the Treasury, mid in pursuance of the pro el- tie. Of ' the .I..rs-shicat of the United ZiiitteN tool the regulations of the Secretary of the Trea sury, issued May 12, 15112. Pl'l'llli6Aoll is hereby granted for the said vessel to proceed to the port of —, in the State of —, and to leave said port for any law ful acctination on the conditions hereinafter mentioned. to wit: that the said vessel will convey no persons, pro perty, or information contraband of war, either to or from the said port, and that the clearance or license shall be caldhitcd to the collector of customs at the said port immeniattly on arrival, and, if required, to any official in charge of the blockade, and that the master and all persons concerned in tie n anagement and control of the vessel shall faithfully comply with the revenuelawitat.d regulations of the United States, and with the conditions of this clearance and li cense. The violation of any of the conditions of this clear ance will Involve the condemnation and forfeiture of the vessel and cargo, and the exclusion of all parties con cerned from any further privileges of participating in the trade thus opened by the proclamation ol the Presi dent of the United States. The onicers of vessels-of iwar and all other persons will respect this clear and& and licence, and permit the said vessel to pro ceed on the lawful voyage unmelanted, while V 464.4- entifte the tame in etdifdrtkiltY with Its conditions, and in all clearances given prior to the Ist of June you will insert the further proviso, that the vessels so cleared ehall not enter any of the said ports previous to the let of June, on penalty of forfeiture of the VAillid and cargo. I am, very respectfully, your obedient servant, B. P. CHASE, Secretary of pie Treasury. The Navy Department has received information that on the let inst., Acting Volunteer Lieutenant J. NICKELS, of the a. Onward," despatched Acting Master eLEEPER, in the Tessera launch in chase of the schooner Sarah, about one hundred tons burden, endeavoring to run the blockade of. Bull's Bay, coast of South Carolina. Iler crew thereupon run her ushers and burned her, them selves escaping. On the 6th Inst. the United States gunboat Ottawa captured the rebel schooner G. O. Pinckney, from Charles ton for Nassau, with 94 balsa of cotton, rosin, &a. On the night of the Bth the Alabama saw a schooner on shore at the Light-house inlet. The next day the Pocahontas endeavored to get to her, but could not, as the was under the laroteetion of the me of a ehete battery. Among Other minor military nominations the follow inp wire teamed First Lieutenants WILLIAM LasLur, formerly a page in the Senate, and Onani.Ks H. Dusr.sw, New York P. T. Scuorr, Pennsylvania; Lieutenant lloolnieder OngON 11. HAM 3/11112 0. CLAMII, Massachusetts; all as aseistant adjutant generals. PEY.l.tri IN F. LOSIIISAANIII, of Nebraska, well appointed es vge et :or the Pawnee Indians In that Territory. Cwun,r•,a CoeSe was confirmed as postmaster at Win- General Wool Confirmed. The Senate to-day confirmed the nomination of Brevet Stedor aenerul Woor, tote Major General of the army for gallant conduct on the 10th of May, in taking the city of Norfolk, and for other gallant service& The mails for New Orleans will be made up at New York, to be forwarded by sea on friary steamer which may leave for that port, therefore the communication brtwoan thoaa titian will ba fraortrint.. requeated to forward all mail matter for New Orleans to the New York Poet Office. Who Raised the Flag at Yorktown? The Hon Henry Wilson Las received a leital , froth • ileld.cflicer of his old regiment. the Twenty-second Has sachueetts, claiming for it the honor of raising the first national Hag over the rebelivorks at Yorktown. At sig (Meek of the morning of that day, Col. Gore and the Twenty second relieved Colonel Black and the advance guard. Soon after, the rebel works wore occupied by Col. Gore, who Anted the national flag belong.hur to his regi ment upon the ramparts, where it remained daring the day, being the only national flag raised upon the worka or in the town until the Forty-fourth New York came ap In the 'Mumma. The oinvore of 11w regiment claim that tto official record will pave this fact. The lii tive.elave law le being quietly enyoyesd in thi s District to-day, the military authorities not interfering with the judicial yroceas. There aro at least 400 065011 per ding. It is said that some of the nogroes, whose owners or agents from Maryland are here seeking their coctrfuri mintorievgly dieagyearlid this =mini from Caro. tlllO Of NOIIOIII Death of Sergeant Irvin Illness of Senator Rice. The Old Indian Bonds. Tn3Asußr DEPARTMENT, May 16, 1862 Prizes Captured. Military Confirmations. The New Orleans Inuits. The Fugnive-Slave Lew. The New Homestead Bill It is generally supposed that while the passage of the Henmstend bill will reduce the revenues heretofore de rived from Hulas of public lands, the expenditures of the Government ou.that head will also be materielly diminish ed. This is en error; for not only must the lands be sur veyed as before, but new books must he opened at the General Land Office and the District offices, showing the namesof every heed of family, or persons over twenty one, or soldier of the million or so of our army, who pro pos° to avail themselves of the benefits of the act. Mach must chow that he is qualified by law to make the entry upon public land, and at the end of five years he must again 'novo thin his occapanor has hay - at continuous, This will make a great business indeed, and require the employment by next spring of a very large number of ad ditional clerks in the General Land Office, and also in tho District offices. New Confiscation Bill—Slaves to be Freed. The Senate to-day proceeded to the consideration of the confiscation bill reported by the special committee on that subject, and published in the Press of Thurs day. There seems to be an evident determination to adhere to the bill as reported by the committee, and it Is not, therefore, probable that very many radical amend ments will be made. An important vote was bad on the first section of the bill to-day, Mr. DAvis, of Kentucky, moving to strike out the provision declaring that all Ike slaves of any convicted traitor shalt be declared and made free. This was negatived by the following Important Vote. Tho yeas were Senatore Davis, McDougall, Pearce, Powell, Saulsbury, Stark, and Wilson, of Miasouri ; and the nays were Senators Anthony, Browning, Chandler, Clark, Collamer, Cowan, Dixon, Doolittle, Feasenden, Foot, Folder, Grimes, Harris, Henderson, Howard, Howe, King, Lane oP Indione4 7.041 - 40 or nomad ) ,Pomeroy, Sherman, Simmons, Sumner, Ton Eyck, Trumbull, Wade, Willey, Wilmot, Wilson of Massactometts, and Wright. The absentees and not voting wore—Sonators Bayard, Carlile, Hale, Harlan, JOllllllOll, Kennedy, La than), Nesmith, Itico, Thomson, and Wilkinson. Commissioner of Agriculture. ISAAC NEWTON, at present connected with the agri cultidol branch of the - Patent Office, has been nominated by the President as Commissioner of Agriculture under the law recently pawed establishing a - Department of Agriculture. Order Revoked Paragraph to o of General Orders No. 102, dated in No vember last, having been revoked, the officers and men transferred to ekeleton regiments under its operation, will be reassigned to their original regiments utast as vacan cies occur. General Sickles Ordered to Resume his Command General OIGKLES woe today ordered to MAIM, Mg command of the Exceleior Brigade, attached to Ihe army of the Potomac. FROM GEN. BANKS' ARMY. An Attach by Oucrillaa on the Twenty. Eighth Pennsylvania. FOURTEEN KILLED OR TAKEN PRISONEM, REPORTED OCCUPATION OF STAUNTON. STn.t surto:, May 16.—i continuot stream of Union re4l.-au, of the Talley i 1 roaring into town tho mi,itaken Relief that our army is retreating, and tho knowledge that detaeluneob , of rebel cavalry are vi sitiie enTy faun-house, impressing all tho males between 15 and Q. TIM SiitM.cdintistg 11101Ig the Node to Traerisonlnu•g say that the rebel Jackson gill not ationirt to follow STRASBritG, itlay 7C.—Yesterday :cfh•ruovt a band of about 300 ;moulted guerillas made a klaAt Ott the railroad gaol In-yond Front Royal, and ur took roartvon prisoners, all helotiging to the Twenty-eiglith sy]nt nia nia Regiment. The ntilroad Midge . , 50 feet high and 350 feet long, over iforth fvrlc 4 tht: HM111110(711111 TOO jU•nigilt, and the track will be laid rood trains pass to-morrow fore noon. The work was completed_ in 40 hours, under the snperintendence of 0. 11% Nagle, Government bridge builder. AU quiet in front to-night. It is currently reported that (lens. "Milroy and Schenck aro now in occupation of tfluatuton. From Gen. HaHeck's Army. The Rebels Still Fortifying Corinth. CrA ON THE CORINTH ROAD (MISS.), May 15.—The following is a paragraph of a special field order, just is sued : 4, Guards will be placed immediately along the line of Chambers' creek. No officers or soldiers will be per mitted to pass to the rear, and no citizens to the front of the line, without special authority. The commanders of the army corps and dirieions will see that their camps are Memo of all unauthorized hangers-oh, sad any one attempting to evade this will be compelled to work on the entrenchments, batteries, or the construction of roads." This is understood to apply to all persons, correspond ents included. Flfty•ecyrn priratee, three corporate, and ono ser geant, captured at Dresden, Tenn., are coming In the morning, under a flag of truce. An equal number will be tent to-morrow in exchange. Dpurtars are coming in bs• squads, daily. They all agree that the rebels are still at Corinth, fortifying. There are picket Wu:althea all day. Half a dozeu were wounded oil Our side. Latest from Corinth BEIEREGARD PROPOSES AN ARMISTICE. Ix CA3II , NE:lit CORINTir, May 16.—A Frenchman, who is a member of the Thirteenth Louisiana regiment, has arrived here. He states that three coutpanies of that r - Foment, cvmposed or Frenchmen, mired itt the rebel camp lately. They were unable to obtain mirk, food oral money, and obliged to enlist for thirty days, and the conscript law compels' them to enlist for the war: lie uh:o reports that the lrhnit truly is without coffee, and at one time for more than three days without rations. lie says that (lens. Van Porn and Pt-ice kit Corinth eight dal S age, but it it not hneWit Ithere they had TllO weather is eliot and hot. The roads ar. very dusty before Corinth. It haying been satisfactorily shown that spies hive visited our estop, crossed the Teatime° riYer, and pro• crcOtd at nightly dug• outs to - Florence, Aln.,where they held easy communication with the enemy, It was deemed necessary to exclude all civilians from the camps, in or• der to expel the spies. Hence the general oriAtlr tivocd in yesterday's despatch was issued. An intelligent Federal sergeant, who wag captured at Sidloll : was exchanged yesterday. He :lays he was taken front Corinth to Jacksonville, Mississippi, and thence to TeAthe,,,,, an.l h ac k U.,r6.{h. lie tltvti that front the time Ito left Corinth until his return, ho was miarded by unarmed men, A contraband who was the intimate friend of Gen. ;111 - il - 01 Jtc reports that jerk had told him that Gen. Hardee was very sick of the war and would leave ; but lleauroga•d wouldn't let him. CAIRO, May 16---[zipeCial to Tribmne.]—Tho - steamer lwrc, There )11P , a rumor at the Landing that Beane and Lad snit a thig of truce to Con. Wlllork, a,:kiDg an armis tice of ten days. This report Waii allbStsittelltly corroho raLad a/42.44.w, kequa•A wag sail to Lo mt4cr ColiridcratiOli when the (lladiator left. Military. affairs at Pittsburg Lauding, remain un chaligeti The Bombardment at Fort Wright Cm an, May 16.—The steamer De Soto has arrived from the fleet. She brought no news. Not a gnu or oioike bn. been 16,41 7 .4ther Ohio for tWv dayd. The rederals and Confederates were busily engaged in re pairing damages, and getting ready for the nest en counter. The %Var in Alabama—Despatch from General Mitchell WAtililiGTONi May 16.—The following despatch has been received at the War Department: HEADQUARTERS 01 THE THIRD DIVISION, BUNTSvILLE, Ala., Camp Taylor, Mayls. theTa ilex. l'ArdiliE IL At 0 P. M. on the 13th Inst, Gen. Pitgley's expedition front Pulaski, supported by Col. Little's expedition from Athens, entered Rogersville, driving the enemy across tbt 7 entestlet, and defitiC,Pleg a portion of their ferry boats. Having learned of the approach of Col. Little's forces, the enemy succeeded in removing their artillery, baggage, and stores before the arrival of Goa, Ziegler's, I t aptctcd an obstinate defolloo at the map of the Elk river, and accompanied in person Col. Little's expedition, hot without crossing. The enemy, Be usual, fled at our apProach. I ordered, on yesterday, an expedition to move promptly front Rogersville to seize the bridge across Shad creek and the terry below the mouth of the same stream. This duty has been promptly executed, and the ferry and bridge are ours. No more troops will enter from that region, and we have now upon this side of the river twelve or fifteen hundred cavalry of the enemy in bands of three or four hundred, whom we will endeavor to hunt down and destroy or capture. The gunboat which I have extemporized will be ready for service to-dey, and I will Coon be able to pay my re• spects to the enemy, in the eastern Bide of this region under my command. 0. M. tnTornr.t., 'Alnjvr qvuortd, The Battle of Williamsburg. DkgPATCH FROM ORNIRAL meoLmLLAR amor, Nixer Ens Mii.os room WILLTAAssonaG, Kay 11.-7 o //on. E. M. Strinftn, Secretary of War: With- out waiting further for the official reports, which have not yet reached to boor testimony to the splen did conduct of Hooker's and Kearney's divisions, uudea command of General Ileiotzlemare, in the battle of nil. lianisbUrg. Their hearing was worthy of veterans. Booket's division. foe houir. gollocitlr withstood the at tack of greatly euperior numbers, with very heavy loss. Kearney's arrived in time to restore the fortunes of the day, and came most gallantly Into action. I ahall probably have °neaten to call attention to other commands, and do not wish to do injustice to them by n;entioning• them now. If I had bad thefull informa tion I now have in regard to the troops above named wiJou I fleet felegrailked, the, would bovo boot. epeolollr mentioned and commended. I speak only of what I know at the time, and shall rejoice to do full justice to all engaged. GEO. B ItIcOLBLLAN, Major General Commanding. From Fortress Monroe and Norfolk Fowrnacs 311oNnoa, May 15.—1 n consequence of a northeast storm and cold rain, there was no deapatok boat to Cherrystone this afternoon. Secretaries &wird and Welles, and Attorney General Bates, arrived tine morning. and proceeded to Norfolk vatit commodore c01c1.1.,m-o. B lk. General- Wool oho visited Norfolk 0. day. All was quiet there. • Orders have been leaned by General Wool, prohibiting the rale or distribution of newspapere in Norfolk or the nurrounding country - , prohibiting the trannpartatton there of sumdles or merchandise of any kind, whether by sutlers or otherwise, and prohibiting officers. soldiers, and chime from vieiting the CIO , except on button connected with the troop, belonging to the Department of Virginia. We understand that the embargo upon travel to Bortreee Monroe, from Baltimore, will soon be removed, and free traneit to and fro Ls resumed. The Adams Zaprers Company haying secured a loca. tion in Norfolk, will open an office to-day in that city- Lieutenant Carncroee, of General Wool'e staff, tvus teen OPP) MUM stung aaalanantialluteut vacant, CONORESS4IIIST SESSION: The Indian Appropriation Ell Passed by the Senate. THE MURDER OF HON. ROBERT E. SiVTT Secretary of Wax's Explanation of that Afar: View of Mr. Wood, of New York, on the Condition of the Country. W.MiIIINGTON, May Ili SENATE. Personal Explanation. Mr. SHERMAN (Rep ), of Ohio, made a statement in reference to a remelt made by Mr. Holman, of Indiana, in the Home ' who said, speaking of investigating com mittees, that Mr. Sherman's committee received On per day. Mr. Sherman Bald that he had been on two com mltteee ; ono the Kansas committee and the other called the Naval.lnvestigating Oetrimittee; but neither com mittee ever charged or received a cent of compensation or mileage. Memorial from the New York Merchants. Mr. KING (Rep.), of New York, presented a memorial of merchants of New York, asking the spryly passage of the Pacific Railroad bill. The Enrolment of Bills. The resolution offered by Mr. Sumner (Mass.), that the a hills of the Senate and House be enrolled on papor in stead of parehnient, was taken up, and Mr. Sunnier spOko in favor of the adoption of the resolution. The resohition WaS 41110014. The Indian Appropriation Bill. The Indian appropriation bill was taken up. " Dlr. 1/001,11"11,1.3 (ltep.) offared an atoalmr.»t an thorizipg the President to apply the appropriations to certain tribes when a part was disloyal, to the loyal por tion, and where a tribal nroulitnition nac 1 tk 3c rip against the tinvernnient, iiiithamtino Ilia Progl,l‘.llk. Io abrogate all treaties with tlmo. Adopted. Thn bill V11:4 then passed. -"The Tax and Confiscation Bills. Mr. CLARK (Rep.) of Now Hamm:hire, moved to take up the confiscation bill, 08 reported from the spe cial committee. Mr. FESSENDRN (Rop.). of Maine, said he was go ing to ask the Senate to take up the titx bill. Ho was in favor of both bills. but his position on the Committee on Finance made it his duty to urge the passage of the tax bill. It Vas for the Senate to decide. Mr. WADE (Rep.), of Ohio, was in favor of trying to make the rebels pay a part of the cost of the war before we proceed to tax loyal men. The Confiscation Bill Taken lip. Mr. It ENIttItS(IN (Union), of 'Missouri, thought there would he nn very great reventio derived from 1110 bill 116 reported. Ile taipixived the burdens of the tax bill would be imposed on 51,1110 of the I . ol,olSillioS, well 11H the loyal. lie should, therethre, vote to take up tho tux bill. =MEI=M== Mr. CLARK Raid the bill bed been carefully prepared by the committee, who had tried to harmonize the differ ent prapnitions, and lie hoped the hill would meet' with the approbation of 'be Senate. dlr. TRUMBULL (Rep.). of TIMMS, meekil. 16 grate out the furet section, which, he mid, was merely intended to lighten the punishnunt of treason, and wee uncon attritional if any bill bad been unconstitutional. He contended that this was not a confiscation bill at all. He claimed that Congress had the power to take the property of a rebel during life in war, but could not bring him into court and take his property longer than life nailer the Conetitution, which providog against a_ tuirsder and the Taking of the property of a traitor from Lie heirs. Yet the first section proposes, as a punish ment for treason, to take the property of rebels forever. A Running Del:ate. After further diSolletiOth lllr. DAYIS (1.1.)t of Km, moved to amend the WM mention by cltiking, otit all the clauses freeing [laves, and add a provision for iro prisornent for hard lab( r of not less than five or moro than twenty years. Mr. Davie said he had no (injection to the confiscation of the elavee, if they were trente4 hko other pr.perty and the yroceello placed in um treasury. Mr. CLARK asked it •s'pngresa could not allow the slaves to go, free if confiscaTed. Mr. DAViS (U.). of Kentucky, thought not lie thought it was the duly of Congress to appropriate pro perty and use it. Mr. CLAIM nupposo Congress thought it He duty fo let them go free, who is to lie the judge of ite duty Mr. DAVIS said the legal definition of forfeiture ho plied the taking of property and using it. After further ditout.eice, Sin Davi.' amendment wr” rejected. Yeas--Messrs. Darfs, illcDougsfi, Pearce, Powell, Saulsbury, Stark, and Wilson (Alo.)-7. Nays 31. Mr. Trumbull's Amendment ELPj c 'Led . The illiOntittl then re . b.rreaonMr.Tusmtmll'a amend,. merit to etrike out the first section. Mr. LANE (Rep.), of .Kansas, thought if we wanted to make a test be had better o ff er the original bill as a enbstitute, and not try to mutilate this bill. Ite was in favor of the original bilk but if the Senate Irell roma to bare this bill, be wanted to take it as it was. Dlr. Trumbull'a amendment wee rejected. EAs-111eBErs. Doris, Howard, Pearce, Powell, Sauls bury, Trumbull, Wade, Wilkinson, Wilmot, and Wilson (Ilfo.)-10. Nays 29. Mr. HOWARD (Hopi, of NlichlOols. moved to Arils. OM the stcond section, which providte fur the forfeiture of the property and freedom of the slaves of those who incite, engage in or aid insurrection against the United States. He spoke at some length against this section of (be bill, as simply reltlgathit the anid.t.....nt of tre.soo, Mr. (MOM (Rep.), of New Hampshire, moved to amend the second section by inserting "by imprison ment not exceeding ten years or"—so as to make it for feiture or imprisonment, or both, at the discretion of the court. Adopted. Ilowern's eincudinent Was then rejected—yeas, Messrs. Davie, Howard, Powell, Saulsbury, and Wilsoa (ato.), s—nays 33. Mr. SUMNER (Rep.), of Massachusetts, offered a sehotilute for the bill Ordered to be printed. On motion Of 31r. GRIMES (Rep.), of lowa, the Se nate went into executive session, and subsequently ad lourned till Monday. HOUSE RE REPRESENTATIVES. Tile Murder of Hon. Hobert E. Scott. Flte SPRSRIER laid before the Rouse a communica tion from the Secretary of War enclosing a report from Gen. Geary - concerning thu homicide of Robert t, NMI eml Mar mmltld Ittmttimrts, reer.ritly, n. wain - A mor conmy, Virginia, from V 1 Lief, it appears that they were killed by two privates of a Wisconsin regiment, as they, with aims in their hands, mere entering a house where the soldiers bad taken shelter, to capture them. One of the latter was shot, and the atitr ..caped. It is ullest that they had Lien guilty of marauding in the section through which they passcd 'while seeking to join their regiment. Representative Wood's views on the Rebellion_ DkNJAMIN WOOD (Dem ), of NOW York, not wish ing to consume tbo tinio of tbe Monte in tho delivery of a speech On the condition of the Union, obtained permis sion to print it. He ems it has been left to him to speak the DOA conciliatory word in behalf of Ll 4 kta4=l, s countrymen. There were gentlemen within his vision whose sworn purpose and greatest desire, paramount even to the preservation of the Repuilic, is emancipation. They first applied the torch, and are now mote bury than ever with threnung fetch furl the Meese. . _ t &add history ever {race, which trod forbid, the record of this country's ruin, that page will seem the strangest, to those that read, which tensed' the madness and wicked ness of the arch fanatics of abolition. In the dark roccsool of 11,4 temple o f In/Droy illegiorrniebt niches will boar the inscription of their names. In - place of making the negro question the subject matter of debate, Congress should take into earnest and solemn consideration some expedient for securing peace. lie believed that success would crown their efforts. An honorable beace mac wlthln their and when the people shall realize that it is only the in famous design to .trengthen the sod- slavery movement which tilt,t•lftS an short to obtain peso , , woe to the chiefs of the Abolition party. But words aro thrown away on stol thorn fonotivimn_ lit nubouted to the leXtier feelings Whi eL should Dorviale htitonnity—to the lovers of mu' COIIIIIIOII COlllitry. We want a Union of sovereigns, not of Subjects. In conclusion he orgoa and ontrcats Congress to adopt ''oll/e nica,etre which may bring about a cessation of lawl ili ties, with is livlT In mediation. Alter the co/whirl - orlon of private hills the House journed till 'Monday. From Newbern, N C NEW YORK, MaY DI —The steamer Oriel°, from New ham, North Carolina, with elates to the 12th, arrived to night. She had sixty three discharged soldiers from the One Bundled and Third New York Regiment, several soldiers on furlough' and the bodies of Lieutenant South worthand OlterlFe 'Bataan, of Connecticut. The health of the troops at liewhern is good, and that place is being fortified. From Harrisburg Ittunignuna, Nay 16.—Covermr Curtin left this sno,ning for New Ycrk, to undtrgo medical treatment, and will be absent until Thuteday night. Springer flarbaugh, Esq., of Pittsburg, has been commissioned by the Governor as agent of Pennsylvania, to proceed without delay to look after the wounded Pennsylvanians on the battle fields in the Southwest. lie will be accompanied by two skilful surgeons, with all the appliances the emergency will require. This is lu addition to other provisionimade some time ago. Sur geon General Smith has been instructed to Wee the steamer Whilldiu to Richmond, the United States per mitting, or to any other point where he can take our disabled volunteers on board, prepared, in all respects, to continue the good work. The America Outward Bound BALIFAX, MaIF 16.—The Americo., from Boston, ar rived at this evening, and sailed for LiTerP99i lit OX Movements of Parson Brownlow NEW YOREMay 16.—Parion Brownlow, by invite tiOna will speak at the Brooklyn Atheneum to-marrow. The Niagara at Boston. BeeTON, May 18 —The Niagara, from Liverpool via Halifax, has arrived. Her news has been published_ Steamer Parkersburg Ashore haw rOia:, Nay 16.—The steamer Parkersburg ie asbore on He ll B l4 l.e, Ant/tot/0 bee Won dent to ter, and the kill probably get off at high water. Death of a Jayhawker Er. Louis, May 16.—Tho notorious Jayhawker, Chva- PlTcbted at Oarawatomie, ou the 11th iustautt Wile Wiled wbile attempting to escape, One of Ids gang. Named Barbarous, was also arrested and taken to Fort Leaven worth, A Mail fur New Orleans, NEW YORE. Nay 111.—The p.tonifier OC(q1,11 QllC`Ch will nail for Now Orleans direct on Sunday next. She will carry a mail. (We learn front the rhundopi4ia no office thot let ters deposited in the office up to this (Saturday) nToning, addressed to NOS' 014 e 1111 S, lw in time for the Ocean Quern.] reusavolu 'taken fty the IT. 0, Forces. CAMP NEAR COMINTII, Nay 15.—Colonel Jacob 'llloThas,m, of Bouti . eg:l7 I Stair, 101111011 Y Secretary of the Interior und‘...r Buchanan, nocomPanied the late flag of truce. Ho adutita the fall of Ziorfollt, Nov °Omit's, and l'entacola. but denies the fall of Richmond. The Ship Kate _Hooper obip linte iTooper, .taba eon, corenistaler, has arrivtd at San Francisco in safety. She cleared front thin port on the 18th el IR+comber, and some anxiety has bern felt at her long passage, which thin awn Bucement happily dissipates. A Catastrophe at Calasauqua, Pa eITASAUQUA. May 16 —At 12 o'clock to•dey, so en git e attached to the coal train buret while standing at the depot here, killing three men. STOCKS AND REAL ESTATE, TUESDAY NEXT.— Thomas & Sons: sale at the Exchange, 20th inst., will comprise upwards of twenty pralipt , Pi la 9, in cluding business stands, city dwellings, country seats, building lots, &0.. by order of Orphans' Court executors, and others. See adrertisenzents and ranryidei fffifffiV,PfN, 3 . JilifTll? N'dwy, AUCTION NOTICM—SALE OF BOOTS AND SIIOF.S. WO Would vslltho ;Malin of bora W thy tarp and attraolive sale of 1,000 cam boots, shoes, bro gans, &0., to be sold on Monday morning, May 19, at 10 o'clook precisely, by eatalogue, by Philip Ford A Co., auctioneere, at their store, Nos. 525 Market and 522 Commerce street. ENGLISH PicTortua.s , ---Frota S. C. Upham, 403 Chestnut street, we have the English pictorials or the 28th April. The Illustrated London Nem:. has one illustration of the war in America, with a largo number of other engravings. The Illustrated News of the World is rather poor in its wood•outs, but its portrait of Lady Malmesbury (as she was a soore years ago) is a fine opeoimon of cograving Public Amusements. Ira Liza OPSMA.—The second and last performance, this season, at the Academy of Music, will take place this evening, when La Favorite," by Donizetti, will be very attractive, we doubt not. Madame D'Angel, we bear, considers Leonora to be one of her best characters. It has some splendid solos and duets. In the first act, when Leonora first meets Ferdinand, there are a couple of charming duets. Again, in the third scene or Act IL, she has a fine duet with the King—which has been encored each time we heard it. The closing scene of this Act, in which all the leading singers are engaged, Is las preftelve, grand, end deeply tragic. Then, la Act 111., Leonora singe that touchier! and Milder solo, breathing the deepest passion, yet tinged with eadnese—we mean the aO, mle Fernando." The whole of this Act is thoroughly dramatic, and, is Be bustle and action, much In contrast with the last Act, in which the lovers meet at the Convent. Here, Leenora's , tender 1, Fer nando, ah! doe' egli," and her mournful “Clemente al par di Die," contrast with Feedimand's bitter re proaches in i.Ah va, t'invola," and the exalting Yienl, 2,1101-Wm," which they ring together, near the finale. The cast, bee:des D'Angri's Leonora, includes Brigiuoli, as Pernanefiet Manwasi as The King, and On- WM as Balthazar. As D'Augri is the best operatic con tralto in this country piece Alboni, ( who also was fend of ti La Favorite,") and as Brignoli has repeatedly sip peered in the character of Fernando, beelike the ad vantage of such voices as Nancust's and SUSiSi . O3-Werkto reasonably promise our maeical friends a great pleasure this evening. There is every prospect of the house being crowded, which, next to gcod singing, is one of the plea santett incidents In a visit to the Academy of Music: This is the last evening of Mr. Gran's company appearing here, On next Thursday evening Mr. Mark Hassler's fare. will concert is to take place, at the Academy of Music. The novel feature of a promenade lit,tl.lMbik tLa Iteel aad sensed partielnipteeaca its with the great relief that will be produced by having a chance to walk about in the spacious rooms of the Academy, listen to good music, and tee old acquaintances. Mr. Hassler has just hit the very thing that the public wants in this weather. By reference to our amusement column it will be seen that Van Amburghbi mammoth menagerie intends giving a series of their exhibitions in this city during the coining week. Their collection of living animals will be exhibited under a large tent, pitched on the lot on Arch street, above Nineteenth. The exhibition will !teemed on Monday, and continue six days, giviug three perform ances per day. No doubt Mr. Van anduirgh will be well patronized by the public. The lovers of music are promised a rich treat tomor row n'ght at St. Mary's Catholic Church, Fourth street, above Spruce. The exercises will consiet of a Grand Oratorio with organ and orchestral accompaniments, which will be performed by the members of the Choir of St. Mary's Church, assisted by meridiem of all the Catho lic Choirs in the city. The whole will be under the lead ership of A. F. Dos Santos. As the entertainment has been gotten up for the purpose of itapliteleg the orsae of the church it thould be well patronized. The Strike in Schuylkill County. (For The Press.] EDITOR rsaae: In your edition of the 9th Mat , you gave an article howled "The Coal Idinorh' pretoLding to narrate the aura of tlin strike In this .dis trict. As manager of the works alluded to (excepting the Swatara Colliery, where the strike began,) for over ten years past, I must say, without hesitation, that I far Prt-fev• lb hr.vo verri.ilon for ctealing fairly with men rest on the shitetneiut of those who, a few clays ago, were attempting, by destroying property, to force their ex actions on their employers, than on the narration of re- Militia or such designing individuals as wrote the astit,la in your pacer. The wages paid to the men were, in proportion to the price of coal, higher than I have ever known thein to Lo. A big advance had been tendered voluntarily by me on the lee of April. The dissatisfaction arms from other cuuses-,-the wages were a pretext. Contemptible plotters were at the bottom of it, using the workmen as tools but, as could be expected, not to be found among those Wbo aeied In broad dal light. Theca he not one rse, , / of truth in the statement made by your correspondent, who is either imposing on the community by explaining what he knows nothing about or stating what he knows to be FONC4 Witt bedded to uphold the law. It was not to make non work who do no , t wick to work, and who can choose anion est the numerous operations to get employ ment if the treatment they receive* ar t y IrdfiriCUillf 0110 deem not cult them. It was to prevent theta to deStroy rrorerty with a view to enforce their demands. I left it to disinterested parties to compromise with the teen, on account of the total inability, to use an extremely mild enTelibi(M, of the sheriff of Schuylkill counts , to eetehltAh the atinreinacy of the law, and with the conviction that no advance was deserved. Respectfully, - FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL. THE MONEY MARKET. nln...vDeLil44, nfly ]01 1662 The stock market was ;Inlet to , day, with firmneell in prices generally. Government certificates of indebt edness command % per cent. premium ; the seven and three-tenths Per cent, loan sells at 104.}i. City sixes of the old issue advanced K, abd the new issue, ,t‘ Pennsylvania Railroad. stock rose %. Reading Railroad shares sold freely at 24% and 24k. Batawlsaa preferred advanced ;I' and the coalmen Mak %, A considerable busincse was done In Spruce and Pine streets railway shares, at 12)1 and 1.2!.; Second and Third streets sold at 63 and 623, a gain of 3 ; and Girard College railway at 20X. Little Solnitaill ailroad stock, Which hiss bean selling at 9 end 10 dollars a share, suddenly advanced to 15. The frivolous and vexatious suit in chancery, insti tuted by those who would have had this company repu diate its obligations, hag been opposed by so many of the stockholders as to cause its settlement, and the near approach to completion of the new feeder from the great middle coal Held,' the East Malianoy railroad, which tunnels the Broad Mountain at the most foyers:We point, promises a great accession of business to the Little Schuylkill company during the present year. Bank shares are advancing. Consolidation Bank stock sold at 26, and tbo bids were for Philadelphia 105, North Ai...sic& 111, 1 1 51, Libertine 60, Southwark 73, Kensington 60, Western 611 Mr - clanks' 26, Manufacture's' and Mechanics', 24k. Girard 40, Penn Township 30, Commonwealth 35, and der. Excbnnge 60. Pilvssrs Drexel & Co. furnish us with the following nuOlations: New York exchange pat al-10 prom. B.Flkork hangs. D arnel - 16 pram. _Baltimore exchange parer die Country funds 36' esti-10 dbl. Golf 034 pram One year certificates .! 2-10 TressnrY note. A meeting of the board of directors of the Cape May and Atlantic Railroad Company ;vas held on Thursday, 15th inst., at the hotel of Meesre. Parsons A Smith, Cam. den, N. J. Mr. Jahn Dougherty, of Cepa RUM, ut.t, elected president, and Mr.lhomas I. Cooke, - of phis, was elected treasurer. After an interchange of opinion, it was resolved that measures be at once adopted t 9 frailw the murlvtio of thy road, Shipment); of coal over the Huntingdon and Broad Top Mountain Railroad during the week ending Wednesday, May 14,1862. and since January 1, 1862. Week, Previously. _ TOOB. Tone. Tone. 1882 0,264 113,405 110,609 1861 3 645 54,304. 68,239 Increase 2 419 Tlio anthracite and bitutilhaiiii boat brought down on the Reading Railroad and Schuylkill Canal this week was we follows: ilotiroad, tide week in 1860 35,530 tone •• 1861..."...... -.- _38.707 ~ .• .. 1802 30,401 k Canal, this week in 1860 31.612 • • •• • • 1861 .80,228 • • •- -- 1862 27,771 •• The earnings of the Krie Railroad, for the MOSLII of April, 1862, were . (606,755 48 Earnings, April, 1861 547,174 OS Increase Oar remit.. wilt Ac. cu IMS thy CoNowlin( oom• marl of Federal currency and Federal securities for re ference. It hi compiled by Thomeon'sßank Note Re rorter : The demand Treasury notes which aro dated Ai2.10, 1561, are Ind fundable into stock, but are receivable for all public dues." This fact appearg on the margin of the note. The demand Treasury notes whirl; are (tate4 'March 90, too2are not reeettabb, fur Vustosu-hotalu damn but are ft-111,1%1,1e into a twenty-year 6 per rent, stock but the stock is redeemable at the pleasure of the GOTVIII - our time after lire _ years. This fact appears tut the WWI; Qf noe, Thv T 0,10 treasury note bonds are fundable at the pleasure of the holder, at any time up to the day they mature, into an absolute 20-year 6 cent. stock; or, if the bolder elect, be can take the Laney at maturity. TbC_ . ab.a.OlN go-ye a r SW4 United awn oix9l O/ of A The stock into which the demand notes dated March 10, 1.665, are fundable. Is named, by Mr. Secretary Chase" the United States 5-20 sixes. The meaning he, that they have five soars to 'run. and they may Me fee acme irdeftnite lima not exceeding twenty years. The demand treasury notes dated August 10, 1861, will continue to bear a premium, being the only money, 01 cept gold, that is usable at the custom house; and next tall or winter the premium on them will be about equal to the premium ou gold, whatever that mat , be. From these data it is easy for any person to make up their mind what the various classes of Federal securities are worth, when paid for in legal-tender treasury note ett7f9l.9)) Pr In hardi CII77OOCYr which is convertible into nothing hut legal- tender currency. We will elucidate by saying that the legal tender' money is par. The . 6 5.20 sixes" being obtainahle at par with the legal tender currency. cetnot rise but a brokerage above par and accrued interest added, Then the question is, how moult to an absolute twenty? year eta per cent !dock worth niers than a six per cent. stock that may be called in at any time after five years 7 The 7 X.lO Treasury note bonds will earn during the too and a half years they have to RR thict mit, lucre talercet thou the 0 eer coat, atongi They are then win ih that three per cent. more than the sixes or 1.1351; and the privilege of taking the money or an absolute twenty-year stock is certainly worth something in ad dition. (line-doll:u• ' billS On VW 011010 o? Iltftsfoirg have been extensively altered to 5. and 10s, and put into circulation in Ckveland and Cincinnati. Sante of theist inny goon hw offs rod hero, mid enutinn will ha rte attiredin taking guuh. The %igle tte of thu guanine alter:, altered as above, is : Females seated oaelt- situ of an anvil: "Citizen's Dunk" in a mitheireln The New York Evening Pert of to-day BMW The stock market is a shade lower than at yesterday's Second Board, but there is no pressure to sell. The bears are selling freely on sellers' option, supposed on ac count of General Bunter's proclamation declaring the it slam of Florida, South Carolina, and Georgia forever free." The seeculative shares do not show ,s bunch weakness as Governments, these having fallen back X)..; per cent. The coupon sixes sold down to 101 N, the re gistered to 104 X. Tle rearicei. after Ito Doer& was firmer. Mew Vork Central, .59„v ; Erie, 59% ; Toledo, 46% i Michigan Guarantied, 53. Pacific Mail is very firm, and closes 111 X bid, 112 asked. Sales have been made since the Board at 111 x. In railroad bonds !bore la a large advance Ismaili, Ail the first.class mortgages are /02 per cent. higher. The Border State stoci.s close X per cent, higher— Tennessee SP, Missouris 52%. Money is extremely abundant to-day at 4 por cent on call_ The extremes are S and 5 per cent. The bulk of the business is at 404,14 per cent. on prime colia.erals. Odd closes dull, with sellers at 103 X. At 103 there is a good demand. Philadelphia stock Mewing. Salm Ma" iii [Reporied by S. E. St.,/ TM.% WEIL, rhita, Exchluge.] FIRST BOARD. 750 Reziaime R. 2-I , N 50 Catawissn pa.. 9 110 do 2.1% 15 2tl & 3d-st ll 63 IRO do 3,5 9-0.4 do 0A 30 Lel,lgh Scrip 40 10 (!oosolidatiou ltk. .25 99 sy‘ruce & line It 12% 2000 City Os RI csb. 08% 100 do encb. 10% 100 do ..New.lo2;=4 , 100 do ~.851rns 12±4 1000 Chun ,t AMU !Sp. 05 00 12 40 Lohigh Nov. 55}4 1 00 Girard I 011. sv 11. . 20.4' 250 Long Island Rbs 15 46 roma ... . . 80 entawisga 21 do 47x woo Selloyl Nov 6s 'B2 69 121 Cotavigm R W... 9 tO) Litho Stdatyllt.... 15 50 do L 5. 9 100 elouter Vol 7 31 BETWEEN BOAR'S. 10 'Nunn P 47'-; 100 &lima Wm , prf... 15,4 1000 SylluYl liar Os 'B2 09 18 Little Schuyt U..... 15 249 1 ) City Os 98% 00 sc l / 1 111Dit11....“. 0% 1000 - ;:r19111.192X fIECOND 4 llazIolon:Conl.... 4514 10 do. ..... 4EX 2000 Ma & 111:1 . o 04.. 91% 13 Ilk of N Libortion 00 MOO Mending 68'80... 85 1000 do '7O CAL. 93 360 Spr Pine It lOW 13 MEEZI _ • . 35 North Pinata It„ 8% 24 do . 0% 20 PCIIIIR B 47%1 1 CLOSING 1.11 Did. Asked. 11 9 fIR 1 81 101% U ti Tr 7 3.10 /1,104 X 105 Philnda 06 883 H 3 Plithula Os new..1023i 103 Penna bO. 89 AO Rending R . 24X 24,1 Read na 6s 'BO '43 90% 100 Rend Nis '70.... 63 93,t4 R e.ad nit 6,'86,. 84% 86 l'prana It 47 41 Penna It 1 na 6at..103N PeZAWR 2n, 6a1.. 06g 0(1% 111°,71 , 3 enf f!am.. 45 46 Itt (mil (5111. Frail X 117 Bela rtt noels , 5% Seh Na 7 . 1 0 r4... 15!. 15% Sett Nay 94 , 82.. 68 69 Elmira 11 • • • 10g 10)1 CITY ITEMS. It is no numeceling compliment to the' hiteineell Vitality and enterprise or our city to find that,motertthstandlng He unparalleled yrbstration in mercantile circles caused by the war in neoetY alt the ordinary channels of trade, there have not a few young houses sprung hate being, with dlatingurehed seweersie, almost within the period covered by the rebellion. Peweelhsat vra would name the (now ?oputoriy and favorably known) "Oak Hall" Clothing Harmer, located on tlgrsouthoteat corner of Market and fluith streets. The proprietors of this establiehment, Mermen Wanamaker k Brown s who are both thoroughly convoreant with the clothing9trade, conceived the idea of creating in Philadelphia a• clothing emporilm. after the plan of the celebrated ,‘ Oak. Han" clothing house of Boston. '2lley made the attempt, and the occult, we are pleased to. chronicle, 19 a deeded succeas. Everything that tact, talent, industry, and , the requisite capital could do to nectunplish this and'evars done, and to-day we doubt If there is In this city a stogie business home that has in the canto period Bemired a. larger at tuber of permanent pe.trcrie than that of Meesre. Wanetuaker te Brown. From oar own obaervations and the rentarka of others, we are not mistaken in at tributing this success, In a large =aware, to the fol lowing causes *'They have uniformly brought the very beet taste and judgment to hear in selecting their goods, a fact which has rendered their, customer. work (gar-- mints made to order), an immense item in their bust Pen; they employ only the best talent in their culling de pirtatint t they bay anti till Ail ask, wt,s4 being a young Louse, their ambition hes been rather to build up a firet. class trade than to make large profits ' r heum§ their prices are yuneually low, by which we mean that the most stylish and beet made garments—and• their clothing hr unimpuesed in these particulars by any other in the Union—are told dot/0./11)(49yr Mr, priG9o latiagy charged for the same classed gentle. We confiralnlate this enterprising young firm upon their success, and are more that we expreoa tiro sentiments of very many of our readers in sat ing that It 19 richly deserved_ Thole tWAI4SIIt. re f -nn.da by the way, and their material for making suits to orders are we I worthy the attention of all gentlemen of taste. A FEW WORDS ATIOUT ITEL3IIIOI,D's Is 711 A ~t,., ' , OM; 1 , " IV , ("WWI! 1;1)11 to give eclat to a patent medicine,!' Intl the fact that EVCI;M: cc I I 1.; It, the Pee flout the columns of nearly every leading journal. throllghlout the eanntry entitles it In a hearing; Ural irvptiriueuf n rnuttbrr of ollf tram respectable eitittehe nit i physician.; who de.91.19e anything like quackery, we and that lielmithid's E.etract Ihtek9 Is telling it, owl, story to lion aiels in every acce9sihie part vi UV' )Lien, nml `I : ,l Irbe cri.lenG , " iiiP , lllCl IL' that it IS not i t nostrum, hot an invaluable Inedieltio, entapoitiol ed been vegetable atibstance9 purply, upon the highest pr i nc ipl e , of ,j,•.li.ical and medical :ONION first drew our ;U.4;tho , 10 it, liy gentlemen in thhi city and eisoniiitrt., wile- , t tea tiniraly 19 of the higheat character, we are it to admit that itr.t.sopom's Exeneer 11001117 Is Watil7 of all the 'imminency it lit recelniM Murniivor, tvo are 011111i110.1, that Its (WV:1,1131111i d WOlll.l be of Insolimlile i.ervice to. the hetdth of every lionsehidd, as it only the [Cost effectual specific known ill materiei medicd. in the di seases of the kif neys, timid ere, and other intmmal or aa.l 4.1 of Mob neas-i art . .* name, but itri effect upon the general health of oil who try it, it apparent, and, in many case , , surprising. It increases the power of digestion, and Petite; the absorbents into OeTehr reducing MI 111111ilth1li eulitriM• melds, and removing local pains and lollannuation. Wer believe, upon the whole, that a TWAT health-promoting nod maser:Al y-flesimi de mobil'''. lute never been g!veis to the Piddle than Ilelmbold's Extract Ruche. nth! it: by the Pti.Oillt terms of rotinnewlation lwre beetowest upon it, vre shall have promoted its Inure general tic'', as they foremost family medicine of the it4o, it wilt by a real genital to the VaillllllllßV. mkorei,thsbe of this' article, which will be found in another c damn, ere advise all our readers to rend, and believe, practi cally, if they ere of with any of the symptortur itich the Huhn nrufessc, to E. BORD.I GREAT IMPROVEMENT IN HA Warburton, the Hatter of. Chestnut street, No. 430, undoubtedly b.1,,,,w1 tho 1,9.19 F 9; Raying ci t utrltnitoi Boyers' of the moat important improvematlA in tha ulabufaeture of Rats—la the matter of comfot t, darabllity, and cbeapticsa—that the prveent inventive age has yea developed. His Flexible-Band, Ventilating Hat, patamod by fir, Warburton in 31100 1 has given to the public 1)1 all odds 'the most comfortable and healthful hot out, atrl the recent wonderful Improvements effected by him to what is now popularly known as the " Warburton In ireitette Pat Hat," are tea-teeing to liPo 144/ITVTAIity oreciated, They certainly are the most admiral:de un theta hats for spring awl Ellillninr that this or any other market affords. CHOMP COVRECTILM At E. G. Wiii - r?t'irt Co'o.—Messrs. E. G. Whitman & Second qtreat. below Chestnut, have just brought out a variety of choice confections, expressly adapted to the season. Thl sFeeq sarnotogv vi k , a)ing from this tom is that their gouda are alwav fresh. Being among the hugest wholesale deeera in lisle branch of inandacterteg. their stock is conelantly moving, in contteguence Qj which ;heir ro(uff pououns are ircohly supplied [miry day. DELICIOUS BEVER AOE3 Fr)11 THE TABLE,— C. 11. olealvr in tint, tirocnrie4, Arch Toatni ha....,•.a,taat17 • •1L l t :.,111/111. 14 41t . brat 1:131,4 1111. i Cllfft . vs, linnttla Le Ili s eelolratol f.).)1.1114 root oflwr Tenn, and Iris pure Ina (I.)rupluntnit Jay.k fir., aro Justly reputed to he ar O 111 1• Nnoton, asta.t Itro?: prom 10 ha.teo BEAUTIFUL NEW iIATS FOR CHILDREN AND AND CAI'S AT CliarleH Oahfur4 ! Son. nn.b.t• Itottd. Mow thig w/.lt ii,Llod 4‘...k v..-1,1. 7 the most exquisite noveltie-t. in the Way of Ohildreit's i t o tt d d . Their flats and Cate , in this delta' tment are un riralltal, and their shire all lily yesterday %vat thr;mgett .. .. 1 .1'..-.l“ r rq,ll - 11, iin'iT warertatitt- , for the t• tam — Spring lints thy Which lid: firm mot, exhibit in tiedr tt.ttal eKeelltutt ta-tte. STMT. Ixtrzi9l - I:ll.l,—Tile A No. I meals served by Ni. .1. W. _Prim et lib p..pular I.o4tsm•stit, have long issm regsill.st 1. 1.1.k111,,11, tie - to he IVA iu tin. elty. lint since making fit splotull.l impr,renbuit lis 1 1 1, 4 ,09. u, 1 1 10 1 lie IS, I.y ruilimuil excelling himself. EVery day HMIs 1.10:0:3ht, tllll5l - to ml.l teli-11 1., Ow nor,. +ul,- etuniinl on Lis 1411 of fare, fly the Way, It byi,t towuotrcu Qantas utuemgg.vgculrnn9iniiinedoinlwire to speck of ‘. Prison lamb nod salad - iu the crack dish of the see-en, The rolinery eleiartmehe of this n.stourem is. b.:yond doubt, the brsbeonduried ..1 I:1 thin OW' TILE AVA NT COURIERS OP CONSVMPrioir, Coughs and Colds, are extremely prevalent, and the foundation of many a fatal case of inflammation of the lungs, bronchitis, District'. be., is ildW W 1 ,114 116 1. Wfs giouict them desitiletlYo elements be allowed to gather beef when they call be subdued in their incipiency, by Dr. P. Jains'a Expectorant 1 This standeed remedy la prepared only at No. 242 Chestnut street. inylT.at WINDOW SIUDES, all styles, $1 to $5 each, with durable fixtures, 719 Chestnut street, Philadelphia. W. H OSnlit'L d Bti? $58,591. 45 Lncl, l liicolair, nil ;49'41 1 14PP CußTAtifSs now in store, price 81 ZO to 820 a piece, 719 Chestnut street, Philadelphia. W. H. CARRYL A Buo. apl24t HELMBOLD'S UNIVERSALLY APPROVED ice- Wani,..4iumpountl Extract Blinn Cures DISMISS Or Os bladder, Kidneys, Gravel, Dropsy, Weakness, Ste. Bead the advertisement In another column. null. salOt A llivisTnttV.—A etrarle dery is geill the rounds of the English press. An Irish earl, wishing to improve his old mansion, Bet carpenters at work, who discovered a Sown hermetically bricked up. It was titt.l op In the richeet ayle of one hundred and 34 era ago, sad en a couch lay the skeleton of a female, while on the floor was the skeleton of a man, presenting evident traces of violence. Jewels ani dresses lay scat tered about the room. Ito garments were quaintly out end finished, and none of thttn resehibled in the least the elegant modern suits made at the Brown•stone Cloth ing Ifall of Bockhill & Wilson, 2102. 808 and DOS Chest. nut street. above Sixth, Ax AMIS . 00 Silt Ileithitth Titottakta aline.—Ths Journal of Commerce thus undertakes to give an idea of what en army of 600,000 men is: " As moullip the liters to fall Into line. circle auk, they will show a front of twenty-three miles, Should the gene. rails/free wi Ii to review his army, hie charger must go on a smart trot, and it would require over half a day. Tlua itspectieble army, formed in hollow Mare, would rresent a field of bayonets three miles on each side, en• closing five thousand seven hundred and sixty acres. Allowing two pounds of provisions per diem for each mem they commute six hondred tons a day, and drink one hundred and fifty thousand gallons of water." And to keen an army like this in clothes—well—Charles Stokes' extensive Non's and Boys' Clothing &ONO- Event, under the "continental(" would only MY mai to the task. MAICE A lincrs;Nnin.—lf you do not begin, you will never come to the 91)4r Thp Aro; v 094 uP in the gaiden, the tint seed sot in the ground, the 1414 shilling put to the savings bank, and the first mile travelled on a journey, are all important things; they make a beginning, and thereby give a hope, a woolly% a pledge, Ah asstitnnos, that you are In same with what , on have undertaken. Bence, we advise all who era ext avagant to he economical; to make a beginning at ones by tatronizing the Itheorlce Mammoth Clothing Come of Granville Stokes, No. 809 Chestnut street. where prices aro 25 per cent. tower then any other establishment in the city. WILLIAM PATTEN'S Shade, Curtain, V6rantiah, Awning, and Upholstery More, Intl Chestook street. myl7-9tts CligAD AND STYLISH CLOTHING, at Grigg 84 Tee Giontstra, ;09 Market earaid. - ti beautiful light GM. simere suit entire for 88. Come and see, SUPERINTENDENTS AND TEACHERS of Sunday Oclivele will eet, Iv the illnurtloommt Ilt to proper, the notice to aroma for the grand gathering of the schools In dm Academy of Music, on the 30th hist., to en scone the Rate Convection. HOSPITAL LA SE.—V incent Smith, co. lored, was admitted to the hospital, yesterday, with au ugly shot-wound in hie side, received, by hie own state ment, in a tight near Seventh and Lombard streaks. AeonANT .--John Rourke, svv o ed 30 years, was admitted .0 11w hospital, yesterday afternoon. haying sustained a fracture of the lip by a hogshead or tobacco rolling on him, at the Pennsylvania Railroad depot, st•the 100 i of Washington street. 1000 Sum Canal 64.0. 311( 3000 do . 31 2000 do 10 Naiads Tfank.... .100 50 Long Island 11 1)5 1000 U 8 Os res '5l rsh.l.o4li 2000 U S Os c00'8185w0101,4 10 Bliuoldll It 4T 3000 My Os New•"_••. lo.2 K 200 U 147.30 Trs(cleanlos 100 Schoyl NAT Pit. 14/C Bid. Asked. V.holm It Pe... 10 to It'lnttrit Is 7 71.. 85 SO Ittlattil It 814 147;it Lethal CI tik Nay,. 66,ti 55g Le CI & Nei:feu. 419% 40 N Penult U. 8% 8% N Ponta It it.. TS TOW N Penua It 3(ko. 93 94 entaw It C 011..• 2% • . Catalvissa Prf.. 8y 0 Fmk & Southli 44 .. Sec & TII-xt It. Btl% 641 Race& Vitie-fit It W YhOR 6 .. • Id So'nee & Piun.. 12% 13 I iy.t.n h ;Dat es.. 23 211 Clr3 .11 Walnut. 34 36 I Artir 24) % 24./4 A Zurecessful Enterprme.