THE PRESS PUBLISHED, DAILY (SUNDA'S NX0BPIIID,) BY` S W. FORNEY. OFFICE, No_ 111 SOUTH FOURTH. STREET. THE DAILY PRESS, TWELVE OEM'S PER WERE, payable to the [farrier. Mailed to Subscribere out O the CRT at Six Do',taut PRR ANNUM., FOUR DOLLARS FOR EIGHT MONTHS, THREE 'DOLLARS FOR SIX MONTHS—invariably in ad 'ranee for the time ordered. THE TRI-WEEKLY TRESS, Nailed to Subscribers out of the City at Taunt Dot, _FARO PEN ANNUM, in naval:me COMMISSION HOUSES. 'ELLIIvC}, CUi~FI~V , b~ CO, *2O CHESTNUT STREET, ig,genh, for the following nudges of pole PRINTS. FPOISITZLL MFG. 00..... GRZZNE MFG• OG. LAWNS_ DUNNELL MFG. CO BLEACHED COTTONS. Xt medals, Ferestdale, Auburn, Statersrille, Oentredele, Jaseeetown, 'Blackstone, Hope, Red Bank, Dorchester, liewburyport, liaumeag, Zellers, Burton, Greene tto..e A. A., B. A., C. A., and otikor styles. BROWN COTTONS. Zinresida, Tract, Crown, Ashland, Chestnut. ERMAIeo Mechanics' and Tanners'. CORSET JEANS.--Giasgow, Manometer. TIBNIMB AND 15TRIPNB.—Orata)n, Jewett Oity, TlatoreviHS, Amiwita, Kaystone, Choctaw. OANTON FLANNELS.-81atersvilita Agawam. Social 00., Lousaaie Co. WOOLENS. ABAFT BLUE , OLOTIES, RIRSRIS, and IRAN- I INTlld§t BROAD OLOTHEL—Tlnnitetta', thermals 00., do. tIASSINRIIIIB.—Day a Bon. Saxton'', ltlvur, SATINEIII.—Base River, Cooveraville, Lower Vel fey, Hone, gtatiordvins, Converse and Hyde, Oonveras Brae. d show Mfg. Go. HINTUOILY JRANR.—Badman, Mystic, Gold Medal. DODIST FLANNELS.—WILLIAMS'S Angola, Sex llierlao, and other agree: LONsDALE. ead Colored Otteebriee. PLAID LINSSYS, 00riONADE13, Ao. (Le26-11m SHIPLEY. HAZ A ktD. & HUTCHINS ON, No. 112 CHESTNUT STREET, cletittilo9l4lll NiNHOHANTE FOR Tl4ll RAID OF FattaDELPHIA-MADE GOODS. mh:att. tkn iwtry,Ts AND OIL 1.LO:11-1S. CAN TON MATTIN as. J. F. E. B. ORNE, NO. 619 CHESTNUT STREET, (OPPOSITN STATE HOUSE,) Have now open FE ESH IMPORTATIONS WRITE, RED 01TV.OICRD, And FANCY COLORED CANTON MATTINGS. 500 M. J. CROSSLEY % BOWS ENGLISH TAPESTRY BRUSSELS; PROM 874 TO 81 PR 1E1).„ J_ F. & E. B. ORNE. m74-tieS NEW CARPETING. JAMES H. ORNE, 626 CHESTNUT STREET, BELOW 8E3711011Z We have it'd received, by late arrive/is from Europe, some new and choice Toilette' of CARPETING, eem seining VeItENCH AUDUBON Square .Carpets. ENGLISH AxMINSTERS, by the Yard and in entire Carpets. BBOWLBIE - 0 6 4 and 3-4 wide Velvets. LE Tapestry Brussoht. Brussels Carpeting. Also, a lima variety of 0804151NY1 and other makes. TAPESTRY BRUSSELS, From grie. to $1 Per Yd.. Our assortment comprises all the bon nukes of Three sty and Ingrain Carpeting, which, together with a gene ral variety of goods in our line, will be offered at the low est possible prices. OIL CLOTH FOR FLOORS, From one to eight yards wide, cut to any Size. FRESH MATTING by late &Male pm tuns Ire beTe • 114 OD WHITE AND COLD - MATTIN S OF ALL WEDIIO. JAMES H. ORNE, Oa CIiESTLGT, N ECHO MILLS, MoOALLUM Se Go., °TITRES% IMPORTER% AND DS& bOV OHIEBTIIIIT LITILNEW (OPPoeite independence Hall,) CARPETINGS. OIL CLOTHS, &o. We have now on hand an extendve stook of our own - sod other makes, to which of cosh iind shorf,Hmi BTH-STREET CARPET BTORE, ABOVIC 1313Z8TNTIT, No. J. T. DELACROIX iks attention to hie Spring Ixoportation of CARPETINGS. every style, of the Newest Patter. _ vELVET,REVSSELS, TAP/MUST IL IMPERIAL Tinac-s-nor, and INQBn 'ETINGS. NETIAN sad DAMASK STAIR theEPETINGE. SCOTCH RAG and LIST OARPETINGEL *LOOT! OIL OLOTIIki, to ~vary width* COCOA end CAN lON MATTING% 1-MATS, RUGS, SHEEP SHINS, DRUGGETS, and CRUMB CLOTH. AT WHOLESALE AND RETAIL, LOW FOR OASH. J. T. DELraTBOES, 47 South riTTETH Street. MILLINERY COODIL SPRING 1 -WOOD & CARY, <Successors to Lincoln, Wood, di Nichols') '735 CHESTffig ISTIVEET, Have now in Store a complete etock AND MILLINERY GO BILK BONNETS, !RAW AND PALM-LEAF HATS, Ac ich they reermtfully invite the attention of strolls of the house and the trade generally. .2tn SPRING. M. BERNHEIM. AO. 7.116 CHESTNUT STREET, now to atom •nd le dlll7 receiving, ID 13, TRENCH Fl \THI3, BILKS, GRAPES, LACES, AND ()THIN be reepeettully WIND the attention or TRAMS. .2. PRICES LOW. IiNDI ONZSTILIT Street, below la MILLINERY GOODE, AT LOW PRIUZS. CL ARK'S ONE DOLLAR STORE, 602 CHESTNUT STREET. NEW GOODS, NEW STYLES, AND NEW PRICES. For ONE DOLLAR you can buy any one of the fol- Irloir articles: "no of Oliver Plated Tea Spoon. It 64 66 Deeert 44 ff 4, " Table •41 ft Si t. aForte. 0 Deeert it Pair 0 " Knife and Fort. " " " Napkin Rings. Butter KniYOF Silver Plated Sugar Bowl. " Butter Dish. 44 ,4 Molasses Pitcher. ff ° Cream 41 ig u Castor. is Waiter. " SigNO, Drinuing Ott). " Sugar Sifter. Gold Plated Vest Chain, all gq8,4,4 SI it f t fi s Reek a if if If if Chatelaine. if 44 Imi it 0 Bracelet, it 4 4 " " " Armlets, " ii if " Breast An. it '6 64 44 Ear Binge, ' 6 " " " Pin and Drops. all styles. " " Studs and Buttons, " Ladies' or Gentlemen's Port Illonnaie, Gabes, BRA Parses, Sm., de., &e. All Goods warranted as repro mad— Wa hen on hand n lama a.s.optesaat.Bt Phata graph Albums, Mantel Blocks, Travelling Bags, and Gold Jewelry, which we are closing off at cost. The at tention of the trade respectfully solicited. PAPER HANGINGS. PHILADELPHIA PAPER HANGINGS• PAPER HANGINGS AND WINDOW CURTAIN PAPERS, offer to the Tr€ 49 qt ItAIWE MTV ELBOANT BOBIZFIBT OF 600D84 from the Cleaned Brown Stock to the newt Decorations. IL B. COR. FOURTH AND JHARKET STREETS sa. B.—Solid Green, Blue, sind Buff WINDOW PAPERS of every grade. sietS-2m ARMY GOODS DARK AND LIGHT BLUR KERMIT& STANDARD 6.4 AND &-4 INDIGO WOOL-DYED Bun FLANNELS. INDIGO BLUE MIXTURES. COTTON DUCK, 10, 12, AND 15-OUNCE. FARNHAM, KIRKHAM, it CO., BLINDS AND SHADES. B. 3. WILLIAMS, No. 36 NORTH SIXTH STREET, NANOTACTIIRER OP VENETIAN BLINDS • AND WINDOW SHADES. The largest and tined assortment In the Day at the LOWEST PRIDES. STORE SHADES LETTERED. Repairing promptly attended to. sp3-3m JAMES 8. EARLE & SON, MANUFACTURERS AND IMPORTERS P LO ()KING - CA - LASSES,. GM PAINTINGS, PINE ENGRAVINGS, PICTURE AND PORTRAIT mask PHOTOOPAPE FRAMES, PHOTOGRAPH ALBUMS, OARTI-DE•VISITE PORTRAITS, EARLE'S iIaMiLERIES. CHESTNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA_ GEIDIANTOWN, PA. AFRESH ASSORTMENT, at LESS THAN FOILMNB FILMS. CABINET FURNITURE AND BIL LIARD TABLES. MOORE & CAMPION. No. Se/ Bonth BZUOND dims, oonneotioa with their extensive Cabinet Blaine= my sow maaufaatnring a eneetiot &Maim of BTLLTARD TABLES, And have now on hand a tail supply, finished with the 11[001113 di CAMPION'S INPUOVED CUSHIONS, which are pronounced, by all who have Hied them, to be superior to all others. For am quality and llnian of Shen tables the mann botorers refer to their numerous patrons throughout the Union, who are familiar with the character of their work. - To2B-411m OIL OIL!! OIL!!! HULBURT & BRODHEAD, No. 240 ARCH STREET, • • Having opened a General Depot for the Sae of Extra Refined and Lubricating COAL OILS, would call the special attention of dealers and consumers to their refined ILLUMINATING OIL, as it possesses merit beyond anything heretofore offered in this market, being entirely free from that gluey substance and bad odor which characterize that commonly sold in this market, produces no smoke, and is free from all explosive properties. WIT Order. from City or Country. promptly at tended to- myls-lm A CAR IL 1_51.18 A. I IE, in it g E cxxi L b 5 a Einits li or ° Nbippin F g 9 a lt to the trade. in mall lota, at 415 COMMERCE Stroet. nd msll.l3t* if LUCIFER" OIL WORKS. J1.:6 100 Bbis... Lucifer" Burning Oil on hash. We guarantee this oil to be non-exploeive, to burn all the oil in the lamp with a steady, brilliant Hama, wittold orusting the wick, and bat 'Jowly. Bbla. lined with &am enamel. WEIGHT, Myra, t ra&BSALL. fe2l-tr Mee 116 WARICZT Btreet. CARBON OIL.-100 bble. Natrona Oil In Non and for tale by WILLIAM W WILSON, WS MARKET Street. GOODS. STATIONEWV AND FANCY GOODS• MARTIN & QUAYLE'S STATIONSBY, TOY, AND PANOT GOODS BRUS.I4.F. BLACKSMITHS , BELLOWS, KEMBLE & VAN HORN. . • s . • _.i ••,.... V,.:\ \ 1 ! 14/ /... r ;. 1 2: ..- ..... . i ...„...... ../ t (:.? • ,.erk ,_1 ;/:::____-_,„ii i -ir =-4.,,, -- - . 1 _.--.-,,ii ... • :4WD . -,---- jd pi I - ----- '-, .: , • . -, , ~' it ,ll4' :------ . ~., - - - ' - -1,.1%:!.:'.,h,!‘ . - . -- V .' -. ti -.l' it 1 1 . ir-r4 , ~.._..., _ _...._ L.l - a IN. . . , - 7-- - =------ --- - .N., , - - rdk----- ---"'"Ir. \-.. ____ "--- _:._--,.:---- --, -. -11" --- ----- --Tz ----------• - -. 1 . - ---- - -----.., .. ~.,._ --..___,- _ -......... _ __, ...'"•--, --__ _ n VOL. 5.-NO. 4245. JEWELRY, &c. " a Solitary Sloava Button, all styled Bo s om Studs, 64 66 Finger Hinge, if 56 6 6. Pendia, 61 4 . Pon with Pencil ease. D. W. CLARK'S ONE DOLLAR STOIIII6, 604 CIIII7 4 TNUT *treat.. HOWELL & BOURKE, CORNER OF FOURTH AND MARKET STREETS, MANUFACTURERS OF MILITARY 600135. 225 OFIESTNIIT STRPACT BLINDS AND SHADES LOOKING GLASSES SEWING MACJIIIV EN WHEELER & WILSON SEWING MACHINES, 628 CHESTNUT STREET, mbll.am WATCHES, JEWELRY, dm. RAAB .4 BROTMIT4 batiorterr, 821 CHESTNUT Street, below Vaud& m 420-1 CABINET FURNITURE. ILLVIIIIPIATINt* ULLA EMPORIUM, . NO. 1Q WALNUT EITEIGET, BLOW NUMMI, myls-120 fp PHILADELPHIA 321 KILBINT Brest, Pldlads ath2o-3m NEW SPRING AND SUMMER .1.1 GOODS. M. L. HALLOWELL & 333 MARKET and 27 NORTH FOURTH WO, Wholesale Dealers in Ft AND FANCY DICY GOODS, DeetrOne of !Wiling , off their clock of goods, provioon to removing to their New Store, in gt JAYNE'S MARBLE BUILDING," CHESTNUT STREET% Offer for the remainder of the reason, at Wholesale only, their ATTRACTIVE STOCK of recently-purchased DRESS GOODS. At prices generally much under COST OF IMPORTATION. They will aiso offers tit LOW PRICES. A well•selected assortment of other goods in their line, man➢ of which will be wild at a GREAT SACRIFICE. splo-mwf-tJef, NEW IMIOUTATIONS. HOSIERY, GLOVES, GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS, LINENS, SHIRT FRONTS, WHITE GOODS, AND EMBROIDERIES. THOS. MELLOR & Co.. mhl9-5m 40 sad 42 North THIRD Street,. 1862. aPIII N ° • 1862. ABBOTT.,TOHNES.da 4E7 MARKET STREET, Have now open an entirely new and attractive stock in ENGLISH, FRENCH, GERMAN, AND AMERICAN DRESS GOODS. ,„ Also, a fall woortment in WHITE GOODS, RIBBONS, GLOVES, SHAWLS, &0., To which they !mite the attention of the bade_ total-tiel 1862. SPRING. 1862. Ear,G-EL, BAIRD, Jo 00., • IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS of DRY GOODS. NO. 47 NORTH THIRD BTRIIRT. 311LADIL1111/4 ••-•—• ileroluinto visiting this city to pnrolteee Dan SoODII Will And one stook large and admirably assorted, and at Low Frounne. In certain °lasses Of (foods we offer inducements to purahosers unequalled by any ether home In Philadelphia. mttlB-2m, JAMES. KENT, SANTEE. tra CO., IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS OF DRY GOODS. Nom 238 and 291 N. THIRD STREET, ABOVE BADE, PHILADELPHIA, Have now oven their usual LARGE AND COMPLETE STOCK OF YOREI:GN AND DOMESTIC DRY GOODS, Among which will he found a more than neuaSy Wm, live vartoty of LADIES' DRESS GOODS; Also, a full assortment of OLERRIIIIAGIi AND VINIENCO PRINTS, and PHILADELPHIA-MADE GOODS. To which they invite the special attention of Sayers. inti2l.2m 1862. SPRING. 1862. W. S. STEWART & IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS OF sTLICR AND FANCY DRESS 0 - 00 DO, AO. 30i MARKET STREET. WNW In 1 49 M POHLT DE SOD; Au Shades. BLACK AND warns CHECKS, In SILKS end OTHER FABRICS_ ALSO, A FULL LIMO OT CLOAKING CLOTHS, FLAWS, STRIPES, And dealrabLe PLAIN COLORS. kirr PHILADILP DIA_ SPRING. STOCK SILK AND FANCY DRE69I3 000D3. A_ W. LITTLE & Co.. mitls.ll No. 3QI MARKET WE ROBERT SHOEMAKER 12 Co.. Northeast Owner FOURTH and RAU Eltireililo WORMS AND MAIMS nt FOJANIeff AND DOMEBTIO WINDOW AND PLATE GLASS. ILAWOFAOTVRERO OP WHITE LEAD AND ZING PAINTS, PUTTY, Ao. toesdese •ad eeturemeore supplied al VERY LOW PRICES FOR CARL iip29 2m WHITE LEAD, DRY AND IN OlL.—Bed Lead, White Lead, Litherge, Sugar of Lead, Copperas, Oil of Vitriol, Calomel, Patent Tel low, Chrome Red, Chrome Yellow, Aqua Fortis, Nu riatiC Acid, Ewan Sane, Bachelle Sane, Tartaric Orange Mineral, Soluble Tart, Sub. Oarb. Soda. White Vitriol, Bed Precipitate, White Precipitate, Lunar Caustic, Nercotine, Sulph. Morphine, Morphine, Acetate Morphine, Lap. Sulph., Ether Sulphuric, Ether Nitric, Sulphate Quinine, Corr.. Sublim., Denarcolige4 Qom, Chlailde t Sod., liPetherld's Ext. Clucks, Tartar Ispefic, Chloride of Lime, Crude lima, Retinal Borax, Camphor, Resin Copavia. WETRERILL h BROTHER, Druggists and Manufacturing Chemist*, NOR. 47 and AO Noirat SSOOND Street, PHILADELPHIA. CAUTION• The well-earned reputation of • FAIRBANKS' SCALES Rae Induced the makers of Imperfect !mimeos to offer them as " FAIRBANKS' SCALES," and purchasers Ithwre kbereby, in ...MY dmbi.nua t 9 trend and imposition. FAIBBANIES' BOALEB are mantas• tared only by the original Inventors, B. fa T. FAIR BANKS & CO., and are adapted to every branch of the kneineM, where a correct and durable Bedlal Is recolred. FAIRBANKS & EWING, General Agents, aplo-11 NASQIIIO HALL, 7111 OHIBTNIFT BT. GAR DEN VASES. --Ornamental Terra Gotta Garden Teem, warranted to stand the weather in any climate. These vases are made in bean. MLA Aaisign, :al No to 4 reef too, with a variety of pedestal% round and isydsrsi from 1 foot to 4 feet high. No decorations add so much to the natural beantiee of a Garden, and at eo little cent, as a few Vasee titled with flowering plants. Illustrated Cata logues east by mall on amsllestion. B. A. 11&11111110N, NEW 1010 0111113TWIIT &rest. DRY-GOODS JOBBERS. DRUGS AND CHEMICALS. PHILADELPHIA, WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS, AGANTII POR fall 01.41117aERD FRENCH ZINC PAINTS. PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, MAY 19, 1862. Ei VtrsS. MONDAY, MAY 19, 1862 Au Irish Princess Twenty-six years ago, floating on the surface of fashionable society in London was a gay, dashing, and very Italian gentleman, who had thc Credit, at all events, of being well con nected, inasmuch as one of his sisters is the famous Duchess de Berri, (mother of the Count de Chambord, who expects to govern France, some day as King Henri the Fifth,) while another is Maria-Christina, widow of Ferdinand VII, of Spain, mother of Queen Isabdla the Second, and Queen-Regent Awe 1832 to 1840. The gay and popular gentle man, thus royally related, was the Prince of Capita, his father having been Francis I, King of the Two Sicilies and Jerusalem, (so ran the title,) his elder brother, the late Ferdinand of Naples, commonly called " King llomba," from his predilection, in 1848, for bombarding the principal cities and towns of the joint Kingdom aNaples and Sicily t and his nephew . , the ex-King Francis 11, who was driven from the throne by his own misconduct and the gal lantry of Garibaldi. The Prince of Galata had several other brothers and sisters, but there is no occasion to turn this column into a mere genealogical record. The frince - of Capua, suspected by his bro ther of the horrible crime of holding liberal opinions—of thinking that the Neapolitans and Sicilians were entitled to free institutions —of fancying that a little mercy might advan tageously be mingled with the remarkably stern justice which the King ? his brother, was too fond of administering—was sent out of his native country, for fear that Ids might be catching, like the small-pos or any other dangerous contagion. A handsome in come was secured to him, and he was sent on his travels for an indefinite period. After va rious wanderings, he settled down in London, living respectably, and very popular, because he never intruded his ra , k upon his friends and acquaintances. In short, he was what the ladies called cc a perfect jewel of a Prince." Some of our readers may be aware, per haps? that there is a family bearing the un cemmouname Of—SMITII. In Burke's General Armory, is to be found an heraldic catalogue of such of the Smiths as are entitled to armorial bearings_ In the Smiths, Sinytha, Smythes, and Smijthes, we find exactly two hundred and fifty varieties thus distinguished. There are araeng thorn seven knights, eight baronets, one baron, and one viscount; - but above them all, titled and untitled, the proudest always has been the representative of the Smiths of Ballinatray, in the county of Waterford, Ireland. Claiming to represent the great Yorkshire Smiths, the Ballinatray family consider theta/sub-ea at the top of the tree. Late in the reign of William IV., the ruler of Ballinatray was Grice Blakeney Smith, whose heir was named Richard, and whose daughters were respectively Penelope and Ger trude. The young ladies, then aged n_itteteen and seventeen, bad been highly educated, spoke French and Italian, and were regular Irish beauties—that is, neither too tall nor too shork, too plump or "WV angular, with oval faces, dark-brown hair, peach like complexion (" the side that's next the sun") ; foreheads rather broad than high; weltdefined brows, and violet eyes, defended by dark lashes. The real Irish eyes, in fact, not ,often met, but, VICO Wei), rarely to be forgotten. This Irish family of Smiths had wealth as well as birth, and their father visited London early in 1835, for the purpese of bringing his fair daughters " out." They met the Prince of Capua in society—became intimate—and in July, 1835, the fair Penelope became Princess of Capua, by marriage. In his pride, Grice Smith made a princely settlement on has daughter. At the time of his marriage the Prime. was 21, and the lady was 10 years old. They have lived happily together, chiefly in elegant retirement on the Continent, and a daughter, born in 1838, and a son born in 1857, (the Count de liascali, now Prince of Capua), are the surviving issue of their union. Gertrude Smith, the younger sister, was married in 1840 to Lord Dinorben, perhaps the richest man in Wales, except Colonel Pen nant and Sir Watkin Williams Wynn, of Wynnstay. He was far advanced in life when he contracted this second marriage, and died in 1851, when, leaving no son, the title became extinct. Two daughters by his first marriage are unfortunate lunatics. His third daughter, by Gertrude Smith, now Dowager Lady Di norben, is cc sweet seventeen" this year, and, as her fortune is immense, will probably marry into a family older, and poorer, than her Own. When the King of Naples was inforthed that the Prince of Capua bad married an Irish lady, although respectable in ancestry and a good Catholic in faith, he performed a very unfratertial uctich. lie deprived him of the income of his apanago, and threatened him with perpetual imprisonment if caught upon Neapolitan or Sieilig soil The family of Jisllinatray, with great liberality, supplied the Princess with a handsome annual allow ance, over and above the interest of the large dowry they had settled upon her. After resi ding for a few years in England, where they bad the good sense to eschew competition with the rich nobility, they spent their life in Del glum, France, ard Malta, respected and es teemed everywhere. When the revolution of '4B broke out, the Sicilians repeatedly express ed a desire to elect Charles Ferdinand, Prince of Capua, as their King, but their national independence fell before the union of treason and force. Francis 11., on succeeding to the Neapolitan sovereignty, in May, 1859, was said to have contemplated the recall of his neele, with restoration to his hereditary estates. The influence of his mother, an Austrian Princess, prevented this act of clemency and justiee. Ms next uncle ; the late Count of Syracuse, actually was as liberal as the Prince of Capua, but had not committed the unpardonable offence tat . marrying a hand some Irish lady without royal birth. After the conquest of Sicily and Naples by Garibaldi, application was made to Victor Emmanuel, by the Prince of Capua, for the restoration of the property out of which he -had been kept for quarter of a century—first by his brother and next by his now dethroned nephew. Victor Emmanuel invited him to Turin, and lodged him, as a royal guest, in a hunting-box of Stupinigi, near that city. Every thing was in fair progress towards his reinstatement in his estates, but the hand of death was on him. Ile had long suffered Under a lingering and - finally fatal ailment, beneath which he sank on the 22d April. Victor Emmanuel had visited him a few days before, and assured him that he would ask the Italian Parliament to place his young son,now only five years old, in the situation of a prince of the blood. No doubt this will be done. The Prince of Capra was 01 when no died. His widow,. now Dowager Princess, is only 44, and is said to look as blooming and beautiful AS if she still were on the sunny side of thirty_ At all events, this daughter of an untitled Irish country gentleman will take her place as a recognized PrillCeSo of the Blood•royal of Naples, and, in the chances and changes of worldly events, her daughter may marry a so vereign, and her son one day wear a crown and wield a sceptre. EN/max/ma AND Kronixos.—The fine (salsa tion of rare and valuable old and modem .sin kr ...- 'sings and etchings, now ratnitonely open to publio inspection, in Leypeldt's Foreign Reading ROOM, Chestnut street, next the Mint, is the finest and largest ever brought to this city, and will remain a few days longer. Among these printa are fine specimens, including their leading works, from the bursn of Raphael Morghen, Strange, Longhi, Bewiek, Deaeoyer, Mandel, rai sing, with the complete set of the original drawings by Kaulbach, for his great picture of the Tower of Babel. The exhibition, pro repeat, id free, and amateurs and connoisseurs will not neglect visiting it. GODEY'S LADY'S BooK.--The number for Juno, Completing a volume, is already out. A very good umber it is. FROM GEN. HALLECK'S ARMY. SUMS Of the Approaching Rattle—Reaure• gard Reinforced by Price, Van Dorn, Pemberton, and Lovell—Pope takes Mks setwiou of Farmington, but is Compelled to Relinquish it—Our Entire Loss not Over Tivo Hundred The Enemy's Drums heard in our Camp. [Epecial Correspoudenco of The Preis.] Two Mitug pieum CLIRLYTII, Mtgs., ) Mr) , 10,1.802. The Southern telegraphic reports, to the effect that Deauregard had evacuated Corinth, and the comments 'arm 1c by {ho Renville dlrbms, were won constructed canards; and, notwithstanding they may have deceived a large portion of the people and p:esa of the North, and produced n conflict in the minds of many of the military wen here, no doubts have been ontermined by thous chief in command us to the position and modus operandi of the Confederates. It is well known at headquarters that the large force at Corinth, under Clenoral lienuroBuril, hue been strongly reinforced by PriCL , and Tam Dorn, of the Missouri see• time of the rebel army ; by Pemberton, of the Savannah {Ga.) peetion, and by Lovell, from Now Orleans. it is ;deo a fact wet Corinth will prove to no it Schni• Moo], as the entrenchments extend, in a circular manner, within the precincts of the place, from ten to twelve miles, well covered by heavy batteries masked. The con met, I. apprehend, will approach it siege rattler than a battle, the protraction of which it would be folly to con jecture. No doubt exists, however, in official quarters, as to tile gioriamB You have been informed of the fact that Gen. Pope one week ago sent a reconnoissance to Farmington, a small town almost directly tact of Corinth five miles, where the enemy were foiind to he five thousand strong, with seve ral pieces of light . artillery. Our forces you will recollect routed the rebels, killing thirty and wounding probably a hundred, and taking nearly live lunntred prisoners. Oni• lees was four killed and fourteen wounded. 'ilmrs , lay afternoon, the Second hrigale, consisting of the Twenty-third and Forty-seventh Indiana, ant the Tenth and Sixteenth Illinois Regiments, tinder General Morgan, General raine's division (Pope's arniT), made a reconnoissance, nrctimpanied by the Third Michigan Cavalry, to within two miles of Corinth, when they were assaulted by a masked battery of two guns. Several un film:cell! charges were made, and finally the gnus goasod firing and _the gunners fled, The brigade bivouacked, resting rmon their arms until morning, and returned to camp I'm - their etinipage, etc. In the meantime, General - Palmer, comntanding the First brigade of Paine's division, consisting of the Twenty-second, Twenty-sixth, Forty-second, and Fifty first Illinois Regiments, came up and occupied the same ground. They had staciced arms and received the command to rest, when a cross-fire front light and heavy artillery was Opened upon them, which produced con sideraldu conster nation. The brigade formed. in line of battle, and made several ebargeo, with loss on our side, and were finally compelled to retire, the Twenty.sixth doing so hastily, and in disorder, leaving behind their knapsacks, cooking nlepsils, etc. The Michigan cavalry behaved with grcst siClat try, and only fled winin finding themselves between too batteries of 20.. pounder Parrott guns. Our sharpelicotei s killed several gunners and an officer, but ultimate) withdrew. Our forces were COMP 4i06 to Wirt beyond I:`orml= l 6 - kon, and the rebatenew bold MA position. • L.nr loss in ktiled, wounded, and missing, amounts to 811111111nd odd, Pope lost ono of hie rngineors aud a working party of twenty-four men, prisoners. This ditasier became known at Monterey, Gen. Etalleck's headquarters, ten miles distant, immediately, and last evening, about ten o'clock, Gen. Nelson's nr,4 Gen, Ctitienden'e divisions arrived to support Pope, and slept upon their arms. This morning Gen. Nelsen with lue forces crossed Nichols' creek, to plant a battery upon an eminence, lees than two tulles from dorinth, and Gen. drittenden•e divi sion held themselves in reserve. Since I commenced this letter sotne four or five guns have been fired, but no brikk cannonading as yet. If anything occurs today of a stirring fiaktita, I will setae Witt:Wit : we immediately. I do not anticipate a general engagement yet, as orders are to the contrary. The grand army has been nearly two weeks advancing ten 'miles, hut the iiilll6ll4 deth4ia6h66 Is pliend in Hellenic, and his movements are never criticised. The beating of drumlin the rebel army can be distinct ly beard from this point this morning, while the scream ing and m 2.31010 of leeowtetivta, and the role of ears all night and day, suggest energy and ania:ation within the .'el lines. H. C. T. GM Pope's Dislsles! Within Three Miles of Corinth! DISAFFECTION ::3F THE REBEL TROOPS INCREASING, Evacuation of Pensacola Confirmed. Thu EXCIMO fur " ASltiring " from Yorktown and Norfolk UNION SENTIMENT IN MEMPHIS DEVELOPING ITSELF Cacao, May M.—The steamer Meteor has arrived from "Pittsburg Landing, bringing the following advicea from the seat of war : et.heyttl Pivrith division has Akalll advanced, and now rests three miles from Corinth. Deserters report that a great deal of hard feeling exists between the Missouri and Tenneesee troops and - those from the Southern States, the former urging that they bare nothing to xecnra ter their own Staten, which MVO been restored to the Union, and can see no reason why they should be compelled to-fight for the independence of the Cotton States. !rho steamer Shanghae, with forty refugms from Mem phis..bee arrived, and they report that hundreds of others are making Met , way North as beet they can. tjAndh May 17.—The steamer Diligent, from Hickman, brought up a second load of refugee' trent Hataia.ls and other points &mill. AU tell the same story of the hard. ships endured iu travelling on foot through the woods, swamps, and subsisting on such provisions as could be aai+hd ih their gaskets. The party 15 almost entirely composed of men to the prime of life. They bring Memphis papers of the We learn from the telegraphic columns of these papers that Pensacola wee evacuated on the 121h_ O. tim morning of that day, the batteries on Santa Rosa Island, together with the fleet, commenced shelling the works, but no response was made. after a abort bat vigorous cannonade, a flag of truce was sent ashore to discover the came of the silence, when no enemy whatever was to be found. The United States troops were to take possession on the f e ll ow i n g day. No mention is made of the dieeefiou taXen by the rebels in their retreat, The Memphis papers contain accounts of the late naval engagement and deny the loss of any boats, though they confess that the fleet was badly cut up. Th..i-aetuttla& at Yesdtio:sh and Morf,dk aro pro nounced strategical movements. The battle of Wil liamsburg is claimed as a rebel victory. According to their accounts, tlm Yankees were repulsed with great t 0... The papers say that officers from Corinth, who are fre quently iu 31emphie, complain bitterly of the loss to the Southern cause sustained by the delay of General Hal leek iu nmkl'ie an attack upon thaa.t. llee...tregaed Lae been ready for a week. Every day that passes vreak ens him. lie has received all the reinforcements that it is possible for him to procure, excepting raw levies, while rickuess rages throughout his camp to an alarming extent. Ticsuregard has placed an imperative embargo on letter-writing from Lis camp. No soldier is permitted to send any written communication to hie friend'. The Union people of Memphis are reported to be sorely dispirited at the delay of our fleets. Many, in antici pation of their arrival, have been emboldened to the utterance of Union sentiments, which hare got them into serious trouble. It is asserted that the fleet will have no difficulty after passing Fort Wright and the rebel fleet. The whole country for ono hundred miles below Corinth has been moot to obtain supplies for the rebel army, and io new nearly exhausted. Sorious embarrass merits from this cause are anticipated. Rebel Ilerountm of the Naval Battle att the Misfilesippl. THEY CLAIM A VICTORY The Yellow Fever Reported to Have Broken Out in New Orleans. BISFORE CORINTH, May 16.—The Memphis Avalanche, of the 13th, contains the following; " FORT PILLOW, May 12 —We fought the enemy with four of our lightest boats for one hour and a half. We sunk one gun and two mortar-boats. Our lose was two killed and tight wounded, and that of the enemy was very heavy, as our sharpshooters literally mowed them down. ttWe fought aide by side with the enemy. Not o n e shot passed through our breastworks. Our upper works are riddled, but we are ready to a butt , again. We will be able to hold the river." Open - Ingot the ran or rrorrodr, the Avalanche me: 4 4.113ut, worse than all, the Virginia, on which we so confidently rested, was burnt at Craney Island on Setae. day night. Such is the tenor of the painful intelligence over ame wires !t The Avalanche reports three cases of yellow fever at New Orleans at the last accounts—two at the Charity Hospital and one at the French Hospital. It nigh says that it has IteM, fo.aally d 001.1.4 that g:.- 'Mullah is never to be surrendered. The Provost Marshal at Memphis had received instruc tions from the military authorities to require the banks at Mkhlo-111 to take elVaZdkikate noics currencr, sac arrest, as disloyal, all persons who refuse to recotvo them in ordinary business transactions. The gunboats engaged in the late attack on Commodore F oote , s fleet were commanded by Montgomery, assisted by Jeff Thompson. Flour is quoted at Memphis $2l to $22 per barrel, bacon at et.3o to 02 for sides and hams, sugar at five to raven and a half cents, nalnasca at twunty.firo coda In cotton and tobacco there were no sales, receipts, or shipments reported. Corn sold at one dollar and forty cents, oats one dollar and twenty-five mots. " Notwithstanding the Federal progress," ears the AtatfanuArs •• we feel all cord - Welled that lifillTrader will get to Riclunond some time before McClellan advances." It thinks real estate is the beet security, and advises money-holders to invest in lt. Arrangements have been effectA between Cleneesde Mantel{ and Beauregard to exchange the surgeons of the 'two armies. One hundred and fourteen prisoners were sent on by Beauregard to-day, under a flag of truce borne by Colonel regrew, of the army of Western Vit , hes.L.tol.eibeire Len Coteout,ea, Wes. Bome of them were taken to Militiuuri hug am trier. Before leaving Corinth one or their number was reoog lazed by one of Priee's men sea member of the Twontrr parolled et Lexington, whereupon Beanregard or dered him to he heavily ironed. Governor Morton and Adj..tant 2enerel Noble arrived here to•dey. LETTER FROM FORTRESS MONROE. The Citizens of N orfolk 'Proubl esome— An linpoittint Official Order—A New At•sim tent Adjutant General Appointed—Sick and Wounded strutters Going to Phila. delphia—Proin our Army in Front of Richmond—Affairs in Norfolk—A New Provost Marshal Appointed—A Sad la ther—The Weather. [SpvciN VorreupopOunco of The Preen.] FORTEKS:i /510216011, May 16, P. M Wo understand that the citizens of Norfolk, laboring under llie irnpreeeion that the rchel troop., will return awl repossess that city within thirty days, according to Gen. liuger's promise, made before he evacuated the town, have refused to recognize the Federal authority in any way, except in ita temporary power. There in now no doubt but what the most stringent martial law will have to be exercised over them, and they must necessarily be deprived of receiving any eapp les from the North what ever. Whoa WS take Richmond, which will he dorios the coming week, no doubt, their obstinacy will probably give way to discretion. In view of the above state of af fairs the following orders have been promulgated : gsternsßAt. ORDERS Ito. 41. HEADqUARTERS I)ISPAIMIINNT }bur MONROE', May 14, 181;2.5 Pormissio,n wilt not be granted to officers, sohlierd or citizenn, to ribit Norfolk or Fort Munro°, 'mho' on bn. einem connected With the troops belonging to tho depart ment of Virginia, and then only under the writton orders of the general commanding at either Fort Monroe, Nor folk, or liewDort _Timm (minim 11111 ployed in either the anartereanstern, Huh sihtenee, medical, engineer, and ordnance departments, will he allowed to pass, by Dertnimion of their eltialir on bush,. connected with their reqw.etird departments. Newspapers pro probildted from being mild or bite(' at 'Norfolk, or the surrounding country, by nowd boyri, reporters, pollers, or other persons. By conanund of Major General Wow., WItI. D. WHIPPLE, Assistant Adjutant General.. GENERAL ORDERS-NO. 43 HBADQUARTFIRS DEPARTMENT OF. VIRGINIA, FORT ItiONRoR, VA., May 15, 18152. Al] military supplies for tho army, including clothing, rations, mid ammunition, ars pitmial to Norfolk throngli lb goortorooostor% bepartaloot, omit no ouppliet or merehataliro of any kind whateyer, whether owned by Bullets or others, will be allowed to gong through any other ebonnoi, nnr by this, except by tho written per mission of the commanding general, 115 corm/mud of Major tionefi;t WOOL, WM U. wayerhz, Assistant adjutant general. In TIM of tba inorentia of labor in no oilloa of the nagietant adjutant general, a Position go long and ably filled by Colonel William D. Whipple, of Phila datpdpopl:luat,eaMialjn ti Major acting si a a l s W: t o a l 4 t ; 1 j has, s t v li fol l owing viior4for o b rd t er i; do partment GENERAL ORDERS-NO. 42 iIEADQUARTHRS DEPSETNIFLIT OF VIRGINIA, / FORT M0:71140R 2 VA., any ]4, 188.. Firet.Liontenant Soplimns Cal%lef OUP, 'nab 1:41,110,,E New York Volunteers, A. D. CI to Major Getter*, Wool, is hereby appointed acting assistant adjutant general, at theca headquarters, and will bo obey ol and ruspnete,l accerdiugly. Ity command cf Major General Wool,. µiii. 11. WRIPI`I., Assistant Adjutaut Cioneral. P. W. CLINTON, Aid-de-Camp. The Mammoth steamer John Brooks, Captain Lay&td, sails for pninatelphia to-night with forty. fad rebel prieo; ern on board, and several lulu/eel wounded and sick Union soldiers. Take good care of our poor boys. 'e learn that, after a march which pats that of the French alter the battle at Vittorio. Mt.> the stoolo, our troops in Ceneral hl sebdlaws army are in the best of spirits—laugh at their hardships , and mishaps, and are fully prepared and determined to take Richmond Tory FOWL Otir troops aro already in flat rear, and flanks the Confederate position, and success for our arms there seems to he a foregone conclusion. Ton may positively expect to hear of the capture of Richmond early next week. Our iron-clad fleet is in position to assist, and the carnage will, no doubt, be bums - Suns; but the re bellion roust be crushed, and that quickly, and let the sin fall where it belongs, upon the heads of the leading Southern traitors. tverytbing remains quiet in 1 otlolk, rortsmouth, Ana Suffolk, and thero is nothing net► to report front those places. Ciwtain Nixon, of the Union Coast guard, (Nine-' ty-ninth New York S. 17.,) has beon appointed Provost I!aurelni of Rori s oil. 7 pro tcnspore. Major 'Joyner, of eon. Wool's staff, tut officer of dis tinguished ability, goce north to-night, with the embalm ed body of his son, the gallant Lieut. Ilayner, of Gen, 51611.160 IlYlkiadc, who fell e.t the Lade of Witiaameburs, ehot through the heart, whilu urging Lis tarn on to tight after his captain was killed. Major Ifayner has just arisen from a bed of sickness Rua his affliction falls heaT7 upon li!YA. We than Lail hi, return to the deparimapi Kith much pleasure. It taus been raining during yecitertiny nmi leBt :tight, and to-day We have had alternating drizzle and onaittitti f The roals use again in a very baa wndinun. It, W. W. From Fortress monroe—General Wool's Headquarters about to be Removed to Norfolk. FORTIIRS'A 1110.Vlson, May 1.4.—A. recent order appoints Major Diehard Nesson, of the Ninety-ninth New York Volunteers, Assistant Provost Marshes! of the District of Virginia, for the city of Morrolk and tizo surrounding country. Captain Talmadge, until recently Chief Quartermaster of this Department, has beets ordered to relieve Captain Stoat Ile, who hat been y.t.rforhrliz; iho doties or she office for some weeks past. Captain Sawtelle, being a member of the staff of General McClellan, at the request of the Chief Quartermaster of the Arm) of the Petourto te3 re lieved and will report to General Vast Vliet. Thirty-five rank. end file xnea three alms, taken Pri• souere by General McClellan, aro on board the steamer John Brooks, and will leave for Fort Delaware to-morrow morning. The sumo steamer also taken North a number of sick and wounded. Gen. Wool visited Norfolk :brain to-day. It is in contemplation to romoyo tho General's head- Quarters of this department to Norfolk. There is no iiews from Goo. MeOlt.lk&o army fo-da r this pushing on as fast as practicable. NEWS FROM PORT (MAL. GEN. RUETER'S PROCLAMATION AND ITS EFFECrS Late News Item Charleston By the arrival of the steamer Atlantic at New York, on Saturday, wo have late news from Port nOrill. Thu correspondent of the NOW York Herald thus degerilmut the effect on the blacks of Gen. __int_ ll t er 7 ,4 proclamation: roar RevAL, May 14, IStr2. On Saturday, the 10th, Major General Hunter's order Of emancipation (dated nth) fell like a bombshell upon the community, black and white. of Pert Royal_ Su,,- day; impatient, as it would ma, with the delay in re cruiting his , 6 Mimes d'Afriaue,” the General ordertel a collection of all the able-bodied negrues on the planta tions held by us to be made at Hilton Head, Tine WILS done on Monday, without any explanation tot nriit to the I.4wek- 7 suLmittea in coneideroldo alarm s hating the fear or Cuba and of a forced conscription held up to them. It soon Caine out, however, that the General's intentions were eminently human° and judicious. The crowd of dark citiFtllll Wil - O put iuto a comfortable cfarp, rcll, and informed Simi tbey were to be regis tered and bare free papere for them and their families; and after proper explanation of the term end object of erhstruene, were to have their free choice to enlist Or re. turn to the plantation. How the Negroes take their Freedom_ I was one of a party who visited their camp this morn ing, at General Drayton'a plantation, about two miles from the Head, and I never ea w a happier looking crowd. They were busy at clearing more camp ground. cooking food, and other necessary work, and all seemed activity and cheerfulness. Colonel Kenzie, late.y of General Hunter's staff, commands the regiment. The company officers are taken from the non-commissioned O&M, and privates of our army, and those I saw there, beaded by Captain Trowbridge, of Company A, seemed well chosen, and full of the right spirit, and very Ban guise of success, both in recruiting and in malting a good regiment. The Military View. Among military men great differences of opinion pre vail, but it is believed that, both with soldiers and officers, the movement will be popular. when it is seen how com pletely it is in the interest of the white soldier as well as the black—by furnishing a force for the., klada of ‘lny, and those location in which the bleak is safe, while the white Soldier can only nerve at great hazard. Climatic Influences. The 15 th May le the witicule dote when it is safe for wbitue to be ci posed in certain localities, and even on Hilton Head the ordinary duties (lessened as they have been by General Hunter's sanitary precautions) have caused a great deal of sickness. It is clear chat, if the war lasts, we must profit by the example of England in the East and West indite, and In the Inn seatOn keep MN white troops only for an emergency, and put as much of the needful work and exposure as possible upon our black fellow•citizens, now made free. as a military ne cessity The Free Papers The following is on official copy of Cite free papers is sued to the blacks by General Hunter, under the terms of his proclamation. The deed of emancipation reads thus 4, It having been proven to,tho entire Sati4factioll of lho general 6,Autintaltiii4 the "ipeportutent or MO South, that the bearer, named--, heretofore held in involunta ry servitude, has been directly employed to aid and as sist those in rebellion against the United States of Ame rica : "Now, bo ft known to all that, agreeably to she lam, .ideciare the said person free anti forever absolvedfrons all claims to his services. Both he and his wife and his children harefull right to go north, south, east, or west, as they may decide. H Given under my hand, at the boadauletere of the De— partment of the South, this nineteenth d of April, A. D. 1862 D. HUNTER, Maj(r General Commanding." What is Doing in Charleston Tia 01.6.ileekon:,0osol-ien which re.C6OO Ai. by this ar rival, presents a sorry appearance. It is printed on rough and yellowish paper, reduced to one-half lte origi nal size, and almost barren of advertisements in fact, the concern is seedy and forlorn. Ito editor seems to be among the eankni. for we find " editorial oarroraorl.a., ll dated on the 11th May at " Seceadouville," (wherever that may he,) and describing the scenes witnessed from what tte editor calls a the back of his war-steed." Here is a single pabeage from the letter, which is ingenious in IN condom/Mimi of many lion in fate lineal . . . . . . tL I wag received and welcomed on Wappoo creek by Captain J. 1). Jaliation and Lieutenants Lee, Culpepper, and Itodgere, of the light artillery. * * * In the course of my remarks I took care to cheer them with the news of our fourfold victory, under Beanyenard, the Washington of the aiding revolution; stonewall Jack son, the Christian warrior; Bragg and Van Dorm and the commander at Btwell'a Point, with which 1 came charged, not omitting to state that toe Virginia the old Merrimac) had pot the Youkoe fleet to a Budd Run on the water. and that It aurrgarn had put the Yankee solo Mere to a sheep run on the rand." [The italics in this choice passage are the editor's own. The speech, be sap., was delivered on Saturday, May 10; co that he either falsified wilfully, or bail cot hoard the latest news, rho letter supposition is improbable.] In obedience to the proclamation of Jeff Davis, Oen. Pemberton proclaimed martial law in Charleston and the whole district between the Santee and South Edisto rivers, on the 9th of May. On the Ist of May Governor Mekong. Lae" 1 c.l a Amilar rroclanlaiion. On the rah Provost Marshal liagood warned the people of Charleston that all the salt owned in the city should at once he delivered to the military authorities. The removal of salt from the city is strictly forbidden, mkr pign3 and retriativv, A tree market is in operation in Charleston. The no torious Richard Ycadon is chairman of the lfixecutive Committee which has it In charge. Eleven blockading vessels of the Federal fleet were off Charleston on tha - 11th of MAy. Volunteers for the fiempton Legion are exited for by an aartrtirement in the Courier. Fifty dollars bounty is offered. TWO CENTS. The Opening of the Great International Exhibition. The Ecenes and Incidents on the Occasion The xpoto paters ky tba Incoanr liingant are 111104 with accounts of ho successful crooning of the Groat Io• teruational Exhibition, on theist instant. Front the dif ferent versions of the opening we gather the following Intel - Wing extracts: May 1.1. y ilaseueet brightly rail rrslfinntivt toy lunch PP to lint. At eight o'clock, intending en:Rol - it looked out upon a eullen Ay and rain tailing in torreute. Painful thoughte of muslin tains and white chip bonneta occupied raptly Wails. llut prowls , tilt nib Oonoal and the chluda cleated away. Powerful interne nsione mutt h rye been nimbi with Si. Swittio, or whatever other patron taint tresides over end 'bream the tinkle weather of thie reran', for the run chow nut and made hit power felt all day long. Thu iwportunt operation of gettlek to the building wee commenced betiding. Do.ftehmonta of police began to mak., their appearance iu the elreete near the 110[10bitiou about nine ; but before the hour, In fact before 8 o'clock, filen of carriages lined both aides of tilt 1 1 013111g' GA Wattled far away to litifgata.l444la cam dirrctiou apd Ulnae the Park in 'Mabee Gaily attired flecks of season-ticket holders began to assemble shout the various doors of entrance, hoping ap parently fur some relaxation of the rule as to the hour of entraecte of .',ieh they nitabt he enaill, /1 6 616 Cage. Far nearly en hour the ellallteted• of the gathering remained unchanged, though the lines of carriages dou bled and lengthened, and the crowd at the doors de.men ed q but as time advanced, foreigners, and ospemally Frenchman.—whore expected invasion mot aattiidly have taken place at lttet--ewarmed in every avenue, seeking their proper door of entrance. Between 71 and 12 o'clock the great mats vitittors began to reach Month KalMlioti,h. the earlier arrivehi, the majority had Mien tud,mtiu not in any official position, and tim ladies by whom they were accompanied, having by some imaa - utable but nearly uni versal instinct selected white dreasem, Bonnets, or ,thawn, the cortege: wore greatly the aspect of a lontmlritwo wed- ding prneeseion. net the character of the scene was changed when bright and showy uniform?, and liverte4 hardly Iret gaudy, came glittering dawn the line. In all the varied ;Led gorgeous coloring. of French, Austri 11l ltut , sian, Bavarian, Saxon, and other lluropean emituFsjoe, in tic Iv,: dazzling, bat' still rich and diversified garb of private heusettolits,tt rapid and bewildering toter:el:don of w,nilcu •s etVitTlfled llp, to ti,e WeSterll 110111(1 chiefly, and deposited their occupants. The Haitian embassy and the paneee antlneiriadorii Were the objects of greatest inter- PA to the spectators. The latter, paned:lllv, all their brethren of the corny diplontaltott In hringing with tllOlll au elaborate armament, Which sewing' rather out of place in a temple or Peace, though, de rigueur, ac cording to Japanese etiquette. At the western door Rho pithead the ribs t&oe'Ssstee, bead , d by flip Lord Mayor. The Royal Commissioners, especially hit Royal Highness the flake of Cambridge and Lord Palmerston, Were cheered on approaching the lutnedistoly tedlawibit tee Royal ern wash cortege, the mournful aspect of whist, the spectator, inure deeply by its contract with ail th it bad gene before, It was merely a filo of carriages, dri 'wog at the same pace MY all the rest ibut the deep-black livqieß Of the eer Mtn, last, still more: the amoeintionn connected with the milt that woo being celebrated, struck the 'lends of those who looked upon them as forci bly se ever did the slave's wariiiitgiu the classic triumphs, the memento mori of later times, In the Royal car- Hages were the Crown Prince of Prussia and PriElgO ON4.:ir of Sweden, with their respectiv• s m ite s , lip half past Id the doors were closed against any tint privileged persons, and when the Royal party also had disappeared within the building the crowd outside were driven to their ecd for amusement. It was pearl/ U lad Ore the MtlChi , fiOught for inanector. the keys of the dome, was at last found, and they were opened, and then, indeed, the building filled with a real rcibms rapidity and ruhh of feet, above all the noise cf which could be distinctly heard the soft reiterated words of is Ladies must have their seasons tickets ready'" a , W u It's no so, trak i ana, sou pars nine yytt ;Mitt it,' ,d c. eli indicating that, in spite of every preatoni. tory warning, people would come with their tickets in the unfamiliar pockets of a new dress, and after much retuning and flurried search; ohne atill in the nP441% of the turnstile, produced them—musigned, of comae. Theta was some confusion and much inconvenience to many while the buildjng filled. Ladies would get into block fs with tickets for block B, and into block C without any tickets at all, and before thee' triorgreseora the police -were powerless. Whatcould all the force do against the staid hautuer and passive insonciance of a group of fash ionable women, who recei red the information that they bad ono business there" with such slight evidences of satisfaction as seemed to prove that the mere fact of its belag fmkirlde-n ground added zest to its rossessiou With gentlemen. in or out of uniform ' the police could and did deal, but the ladies overstepped rules and regu lations with a coolness that wee positively refreshing, and with a meek urbanity and confidence that they were doing what was quite right. talon which arch it!, AM:L- C/emu stewards at last gave way, and fora time were evicted from their vests of office. ein the whole all went on very well, and the whole building swarmed with thou sands in the course of an hour after its opening. Gradjaelly the building filled In every nook and darf6r, ard...le huge orchestra bonded forth in colors as the fair me Lore of the choir took their seats, till at last the whole the great amphitheatre was as beautiful as a prise bas,:anf, azeleas at a Hower show. Al the Calltarn, end, all the real attractions were iris], Mere mime the invited visitors to the reserved seats, some, though a email tuinority, in uniform; sari here, also, assembled the ambassadors and foreign visitors of distinction before proceeding to their starting pmt 40U PrOceFelen Ociurt," as it was coiled. None were admitted within the area, on the dais w•itforiu itself, ex= rept in uniform of some Wind, and, se the latitude • Wall very greet: the Variety in fashion and color was almost le finite.. The Japanese ambassadors, who arrived just nbutit noon; were, of course, the alit.-eta of una.e.,..,:,e0,1 curiosity. Their dresses were plain and almoA sombre in color, but rich io material. They wore the two evrorde which, in their land, are the highest insignia of ari,to cracy. tinder the western dome also. were mayors at d corporate dignitaries. refulgent In earmy-e..1..i.1 robe.. There were Greeks, Turks, Albanians, Parsoes, and Persians, all more or lees embroidered and enriched, Hungarians and Highlander% Swedes and Ortentals— great men of almost every clime and creed and costume, Coroaftettl "aye the Igrnes, Ibe mere spectacle was as much more gorgeous at the Exhibition itteir is better. At half past 12 o'clock all reeerved seats left till then unoccupied were thrown open to the visitors. and in the midst of the hurtle a was discovered that there was an unpleasant congregation of workmen upon the roof, who were busily engaged in taking out the panes of gloss from the Hashes and inserting their heads in lieu of them, in order to get a better view into the interior. So "authorities" were despatched forth with to diatePee he much as posßible the unnecessary crowds of lookers-on from such a dangerous point of view. Jud before 1 o'clock the Duchess of Cambridge and the Princess Mary arrived at the Cromwell-road ant. ante and were receinil with all the tributes due to Royalty by the guard or honor 0111 M Ifouselinld tl OiDS OUtsido tho building, and the almost equally line body of men fur- Eland by the Hon. Artillery Co npenr, who were sta. tiontd within the great porch. This arrival caused a momentary mg/Irma at vivid as it wee short lived: for the MlCC,Ptsmive cheers from the crowd outside proclahned the arrival of the Duke of Cambridge and Lord Palmers ton, with the other rpecial commissioners, and almost as they entered the building the word was given for the procepaiou to fall in, At n quarter past One exactly, a shrill blast front the trumpets of the Life Guards, which pealed through the whole building- announced that the procession hail begun to move_ On each side of the nave, north and aont'v. a wide space had been tailed W. which seryrd ill a path 0., dense crowd, and, turning to the left, the pageant moved along this guarded way towards Cie western dome, where the opening part of the ceremonial was to take Place. Cu a raised dais under the—wegern dome bat been orovicil atitant+ificrett and underneath were ranged chairs of state fur the Quern's Commhsionet s—the Duke of Cambridge taking the centre, will, the Prince of Pt ussia un his right, and Prince Oscar of Sixt den on his left. The wi,doin of tics daCitir n which mania the aDafiona area midst ilia &toe the scene of this portion of the Mahlon V, instead of the centre of the budding, as was originally intended, was fully justified by the magnificent scene whi h was pre sented ;then the procession had grouped round the raised dais on which the Queen's Commissioners w o re pl ic a At a epeciacie, bur; the ./rlCf, ti,i. 114 , 0 the most - tutors& lOW point in the day's ceremonial, In the glittering crowd beneath were grouped together is a glowing mass every variety of uniform, from tile modest bliVi and gold of the Windsor to the , lsxgliog oploodur of the Grrek Stretching away behind was the rich perspective of the nave, with the vast expanse of the densely-packed oretwstra as a background, bidden at Rotate by the ob structive trophies, but still visible and effective AS g &Sokol whole. &he brtillaaol or the scene was 001 ifs alai interest. In that throng were gathered to gether some of the greatest names in the arts, sciences, and manufactures of the country. The various colonies and dependencies which carry England's empire as a girdle round the earth were represented; and there, too, were the delegates of all the great hatless of the earth. In the persons of the commissioners of 1851 the great exemplar of these peaceful contents was commemorated, and additional weight and solemnity were added to the Occasion by the presence of the chid leaders of the gte.te. When his Royal Highness and the other commi.lon- ere had taken their seats, Earl Granville, who, and hie colleagues, a ere propped immediately in trout of the dais, advanced, and, in the name of the commissioners, present ed the tie:dress to MT Alajestys offering eandnianeea en the irreparable loos which her Majesty and the nation had snetaiLed. Lord Granville then handed to the Duke of Cambridge the address. It was at this point that the Only contretemps—ard it was but a slight one—occurred. Just at Lord Granville commenced his short speech, the ()Mesita at the other end began to sing 41 God Save the Queen." The Duke of Cambridge, however, waited pa- Cooly until the music bad ceased, and when the last notes di, d away, read his reply. The procession then begun its course Wong tho north side of the flare towards the eastern dome, eliciting, as if swept along, many and many - a burst of enthusiastic cheer hog, as personages, either distinguished by their popularity or their high rank, were recognized. When this gorgeous cortege had at length reached the eastern dome, an t i the had Taken hie seat on the chair or sum!, with the Foreign Princes and the Queen's Commissioners on either side, the scene, as described in the London Te legraph. was almost indescribably magnificent. The sun shone with redoubled lustre, almost dazzling the spectator who looked long on all thin gold mid entbk,..l.l.ry, on all these jeteels and decorations. The lofty pillows of the nave made a framework to the tableau; the orchestra, with its myriad occupants, formed the Image° I the awning celled it in; the dais NILS the stage : we seemed to he gazing at some vald proneeniunt within wld:1. being enacted al Inquipiiil drama, one of the most Stir ring, the most gorgeous, the most glorious that the world has ever seen. The 'next thing In the programme was the ' , Special Murical Performances," -winch began atTerucer's grand marpt, and was followed by a cantata composed by Dr. Bennett. Fortunately for Dr. Sterndale Betmett, says the Telegraph, the Exhibition building is better adapted for choral than for instrumental diaplay, and his Mlikilk& produced much more effect than either of We fellow-ta borer& works. Tennyson's noble hymn, which has al ready appeared in print, was set to a -ehorah:), impressive in its massive PUti the broad lllalOilr of Which was 5111 sustained throughout by trumnels. The applauee that followed the perfotuuture of Dr. Ben nett's cantata, in which the two thousand chorus sing ern greatly dititimmished them:olw, proved the public e..aytetioa that Eagiand Mat been moot wortany rem seated at this musical congress. M. Antlers march concluded the " special music," tut it is elegantly termed in the official programme, In the moot oxiiittl r=wiru-roonner. The Bishop of London then delivered a prayer, and was followed by BandePs mighty choral hymns—the "Halleluiah" and " Amen" for the Messiah. That they were superbly deliveeed will be at oats Lettered, WITh BD orchestra and chorus of such unusual magnitude and unprecedented efficiency, this could hardly fail to be the case. Att.'. the "Amen" the National Anthem was twain sang; with title the satiate to the rsligloA4 iigetef the CPreinenP lame to a conclusion. The London Telegrapi says at this point; " Will it be believed by musicians on the Continent that at our English Exhibition the noblest chortle of the composer who Is rued ieirerezkeed hero sva. ~,oat muti lated Will it be believed that the climax of tire I. lujah Chorus was actually left out, in order th it the Amen (Morns' might be tacked on to it 2 And yet this barbarous and stupid act of vandalism was actually committed yest.ttlaY. MU°l9lil rimiers will be enfli. MOW fa, rifled at the bare mention of the oeentrente. To non-musical people we can parallel the act by comparing it to the cutting up of two of ItaphaePa pictures, sad pasting the bead of a Madonna to the body of Bt. John the DROOL." Tim Dole of Cambridge nen rose, llfid• in it lend veleti said : i.By command of the Queen, I new declare the Exhibition open." Thu trumpet, of the Life• Guards saluted the announce ment with a polongedleaftwa t toad the crowd echoed it Leek with a cheer, nbiob was taken up and speedily epreed from one end of the building to the other. Tide ended the official ceremonial. Part of the procession made lie way to the picture walleriea, and the barriers THE WAR PRESS. TICS WAS PRESS will hellcat to aubscribera by mall (per annum in adpincv) Mlt 82101 MITI) Copioe `. H 5.00 }lye " " it 13.00 Tea " 12.00 Larger Clubs will be charged at tile game rain, zo coop', will con 124 50 copies will coat VW; and 10 copies $l2O. For a Club of Twenty-one or over, we will send aa Extra Copy to the getter•up crr thp oub, Sir Paatmastera are requested. to Ad as Agnate fir THE WAR PRES& 119 — Advertistinenta husOrted of the usual rates. Sit klieg /Btihiltuit6 a luman. having been removed, which confined them to their so prcpriato outwore, the visitors rapidly diaper/led all over the blinding. Thert must have lawn at this Mils Mai Moen (amity-the thou.:and oeehle in the Exhibition. The ceremonial within the building. sale the Tides, wall emphatically the grandest. best managed, ant most 1111pCSIlig i,ai lie vagrant wlalch i.en boon teen in this country for Yellft bong and anziougly had boom la charge of its details taeon lahoring to make it 89 perleat al care and forethought could dories, and no ably were all their arrangement' fin i shed, with ouch entice smoothness did all pass off, that there is scarcely atilucid ant to record beyond the entire success of the whole. The Twigs sign 1,11. W. UAL., e,, i..d si t WO ono darn shadow. Of the hoedrcils of thousands who lirosi streets and thronged the bulking, few forget the Prince by whom the greet work of the day was encouraged and helped on=who gored. ha retied uut and many weee the kindly and regretrul words SWIM of the ro: al lady who would have been so gladly welcomed, and who ytis terday, was so sorely missed. ?he absence of the (Innen, and I he cause of that absence, marred the State pageant' and prctioctil a partial gloom which no impressive and imposing ceremonial could not wholly dispel." Narrow Escape of General McClellan from Capturg An attempt wee recently made. by the rebole on oar left, to capture some of our wagons, hundreds of which line the reeds between here and Buck-llouse Niel but up to tide writing (half peg eleven o'clock P. N.) I CalibUt. Mtn that they have Interceded lit Wahl) although there are a Iltitithor of woolen gill oh the reed, and P.Olllll withie two or tine*, pules of the enemy , * pickets. Two men of the Second United States Cavalry were shot in the .kirrni.b. The men rest out their arias, bleeping on n field of recinitly,plidigluil neene,t, nt every little puff of wind, the duet goes whirling through the air in clouds, renderit,g everything about es miserable as cull be well imagined. Dutimit the tinta that the pabata 'nada tha aktaek our wagon train General blei;lollan. toomicamed by hi. staff, was making a reconnoissance, and COMM in sight of the rebel cavalry b. tore he was aware of his proximity. By dint at bard tiding be eteaped and took coininsni of what torch there WWI a; hand and Mamma Um rebels. tied they known what a pi ize they had no neer them, in ail probability they would have worked harder to have obtained posoteeton of it. Ac it was, the attuation was rather a plecarious one for the Genets] at hest. While the skirinieb wow going,oti the was mile avow u io the general of the wcond Brigade, whom, than• mond had just pone through a long and tedious march ; yet, with hi,. mosl promptitude, the general brought Ida wearitd men out in line of battle. and stood anabm.ll awaiting the foe who could not eland the pretence, and ttakedaddled." LETTER FROM NEW YORK, The New York New Directory—More Woos(ly4 Polciivra—Thi- Negro firifiadr—Orneral thine ter's Order No. 11—Edwin James' Ctn.& among the Lawyers—Arrival of the Great 11M.e.14rt—NCNV 'Work Uueieme, &c. [Oorreepoadence of The Preee.:l New Toss, 'May IT, ]BO. The canvasiera for the New York Ditect,ry for 186Z , 'S &Fed their limit on Saturday sunning, after boring gatheied by day, and arranged alphlhetically at night, mote than one hundred and fifty thouslind names. Thug is the work of one hundred and fifty men. who began the cauvaig on the 51 instant, The "copy" hi t i he complete on Monday, and on Tn,,, R lay a hundred and twenty-fire conteo.itors and a dozen proof-readers Sr. to commence their part of the labor. It is thought that the b•pe-Eptling and pre , t4-work can be done in ten days, and the binchno..whieh mill re/inlet Ebb entire I ° , oo o f three of our largeht hinde lee—can be finished in three days. Mr. Trow hopes to send the now Directory out by the close of the first week in June. The Sanitary Commisßi9p ristthhcr &pfaiding i 6 ex. yoctrtl hero to,Dighti with some two totadtell gidt ithd wourded eoldkre from Yorktown. The rumor started by one of our afternoon palm% that them ia in thin city a mart) brinada in Ithnham of tl.at n crftuili tailor in Broadway Lau II yn di all the uniforms for four thousand men (tegrets); that the whole thing is being Carded on ttecretlV, &C a is dint ply ridiculous. No secret one•ations of the kind could possibly go on in ti-c citr, tl' h whniti tic don° if the effort war, notWl° 010 . 11/7 may ta, inferrer) from the fact that the Superintendent of Police has once br don lip art organization of blacks 'Man drilling with a view to giv ing their services to the State. Copies of Oen. Hunter's order No. 11 were , In Mr Oil/ itt6,6i daYli ia - eviteun Thoraday, the day n given to the public. Mr Hiram Barney, the collec.or of the putt, had it in his possession, and it was be who sent it to the nev etagere fur publication. It is understood to have reached him via Washington, and it is deemed by those who =eider themtilsos panted, that th:Fou-elloi,, of its propriety will be under consideration by the powers that be a sufficient length of time to secure to the flatlets the consummation of an object of the highest importance, although having no immediate connection with the ques tion of abolition. If my information is 66PPabk, the oF der will be talked about, but not revoked, nor General Hunter recalled. A largely-attended meting of members of the bar wait held at the Astor House to bear a statement by Mr. Ed win Jammu late of the Templei Loudon. After haarlaa the etetement, the gentlemen present adopted the follow g rceelutions! • Resolved, That Mr. Edwin James baring been deip' s"mitteo to practice, at the opening of the November nigh 36611 of the Supreme Courts and having sleet that time tin us active praciitioner in our !Iowa! Ittilobit tribunals, has conduchd himself as a high-minded and honorable tnenthet or the plotenstou, and tree earned our respect and esteem for his dietinguithed learning, fair. note. and cottSh.SP to a l,t iyer nod e Refaced, That elthouel, no eaplanatione from air. James were necessary, still the explanations having bees given are eminently satisfactory, aid need no farther in quiry at the betide of the Court or bar. The Great I:WM U-ft 11.11f.std Fls,ve n at 3 oleioca on the attethoOli of the 7th, and arrived outside Bandy gook at 9 o'cic ck this morning, making one of the finest tripe on record. From the time the Great Eastern left Milford bbe has bad a succession of flue woßtber for sly met with on a 111 p across tbo ittiantic, The vessel tluha►ed nehlls and all on board were surprised at the manner in which this trip was perf 'med. Nut a stogie paSi•elig'Or was Fo‘a nick 'luring the entire voyage, although many 00 hoard were it used to lea Tar. age.. During most et the time tine motion of the was BO slightand II ifi irw that One passengers ati used them !selves Iny dancing, playing tdue-pins., and other kindred amusements. Foot races were also Instituted among the passengers, and the greatest jollity and gone! feeling pre• railed throughout tine ship. Tine orgy drandigali was Una P." , eligi'r in I , llt , 'fennel, The Ito - Haunt all speak in One highest terms of Capt. Paton and the eel's of the vessel for their uniform courtesy and landau* during the passage. Thu rcceilad at the New York custom liom6 to-day (Saturday) were; importm4 55ti.092..10 withdvawaLA Nati Win Molise, :5411,411. , 1;i. Told. S1:311,110-1.34. All the pay ments were !mule io Thu 'whole 11111011 M received during the week ending to day NVl‘g t31.03 - 1,01 1 (t, $1:15,000 during the corn,- fil)Oliding icrioll iu 1 01i EIVOI:Tg OP YORK TO FORNIGN roars visit rue WEEK ET DING .u.ty 17 May 10—Stearnebip Bremen, Southampton and Bremen— NIX" 4 &MO SUMO) ]2-Bari /Mit OF Thomas— Patriot doubloons 16—Brig Nobant, Ponce, I'. B Doubloons 17—Steamship Hammon's, 11 smburg— Hold aud exicau Cold coin .... 97.900 PpLcin „ „ 128,70 e 17—Steamship Etna, Liverpool— Gold bars American coin Dibrell specie. Sovereigns. Total The following were the eel uoard to.any! 0000 U S 6s 'Bl Retr..1037„; 10000 do 104 4000 ti S Os , 81 Cp_ .1013 25001: S Os 'Bl 011. q 364 1000 .31i,,qmri 05..., , 3000 lnd War Ln— 94 9000 111 War Ln 00y, 60(0 d 0 . „ 06A 3000 es.lll , i - idif Tr, , 1 4 0 6060 N Y Cen 0a.... 100 16010 Tol A NY 2d 5000 And R 8 rd.... 105 10(0 And Bilt 3d go woo eh: 6 1 W 1000 Hitch 1,t..... 99x, 64100 Mich - So 2d m... 83 5000 T A .4 A 132,5 i 4000 Tol W 15t.... 00 2000 do_ 1)0K 48000 American Ciold.lo3,l„‘ THE MARKETS Asnes.—The market is steady for Pots; sales of 45 WAS, lit i5b62.X. Pontim aro south, M FLOCH AND I:Am—The market for the low graders of Western and Slate Flour is again lower the demand mainly forexport, but in part for the East and Britists Provinces. The better grade' are firm and hi fair demand for the Went Indies and =MCA; these are not !dinar, and are steady. The sales arel7,loo Has. at 84.4004.45 for superior stale and Western ; for the low graded of Weiiteell Mtn} i $11.444,15 for extra State l ICl_Boes fur fancy do.i d , ),ltaira , Zo for shipping brands of rand hoop extra Ohio, and ;35.30e.6.25 for trade brands do. Canadian Flour is lower; the supply large; too hoari ness confined to the low grades; sales of 1.200 bbls, at $4 65d4.90 Mr shipping extras, and VePOT? fin Inch, tktaiAa do. g0,i11...i-n nom' in . nosnemaed, the demand light; 'ohs of SSO bbl,, at $505.60 for mixed to good superfine Baltimore, &e., and 85.70013.78 for trade brands do. Rye Flour is in fair rcnuest, and is eteady palapar fro bbl, i t an,a4.10. Corn Meal is iirm, and in fair re meet i sales of 400 1..h1s at 82.80 for Jersey :mil 53.20 for :Milwaukee choice, ',art afloat. GRAIN.—The IVlwat market in lower the receipts uhont belt that sprit% to is out a (Nat), which depPeddell the market. The tlemalmi is ebiutly fares part. Priced are 20s3e hower. The sales are 148,700 bus. at ititl.o3el.o3 for soft Ca nada chili; $1.02e1.07 for go6d Chicago spring; 81 .03 01 ,10 for soft and Khan Milwittikett club far very linialsonie amber lowa Not , In thti flay t 81.1061.15 fug red Western ; SU:3/13.m for red Western ; $1.1301.16 for red State ; and SI f2O for amber Michigan. Rye is brisk and in in tine demand ; sates of 5,000 bias nt 704 770. Miley is in limited supply j and is anininal. Barley Malt in lit fine request i• sales of 600 bits mixed, at SI. . . Oafs are firm and in lino denuttal : salea 'Western and Canadian at 384840;4e, and. State 41842 e. IA 1tAA1.4.11 , ..ti quiet ? Axe .Nenttmo mo l ly fo r pert ado. of 27.066 bus at 47a57..tic for uew mixed Western, 52X et 52e for old do deli vered, 53e for Northern abd 554256 c for Arser do. PRovistons.—The Pork market is heavy, the demand ihnitfd t Pelee of MO Mile et SO_TA,O Or far D 144114, gl2 Of) for 'MM. Plank 1 ravy do 41q.1t . . Beef fs (11111 and /lONTY i tliesales;m .1701.1,1 s at e 7.4160 013.7:1 tor phtiti mem, and z 2 l 4.Zaha 1437 for extra. Bacon and Beef limns quiet. • Cll4lleete arc plenty end liutttr t artier of riTO ltlula. tea, anti boxes at 4114%0 for shoulders. and atirn,l6 for Minim. Lard is steady, and not plenty ; sales of 1.137 bbls and ten at 734 isBNe; choice at SMe. Wills 111111iit'i is lower nail the demand is fair Fairs of 1,200 or 1f234 eve for State and tle fur Ohio. Ogg Simeon dazen, now living in thelowa of Some% Conn , at the age of 93 leave, hes lived to three different town!, without removing from his home, Sprague baring f,t Rielly boon ittl/iWn as Norwich end Prentilini a , he has also lived *alder three aovertmieote—the monarchy of George the Third, then under the Conkiteracy, and under the Government of the United Statue. Ho Mutation four wars, and was drafted at New London in the war of )812, and had a son In the lama &unstop, and ens In the Mexican war, abd the orssobt one. Tux PICK AND WOVNDID PITILOIt lIRROSS.—The dok ad wounded soldiers In the Wee ere fact recovering, eta already they begin to return to their reginamat at Pittaditn Landing The Evat.m , M. Jrn it t says crowds of them aro daily paroling through that city for the battlo field. Tar: FeLLN ie WADER tho alleged mur derer of Sigismund Fenner, arrived in New York oa Thursday erering from Elh Louts, where he WAS arrested shout tWO weeYs SWIM Ho WU eAtivoyod to New Jersey, here he will be tried at the next term of the court in Monmouth county. THE C1:13111,KRI.•241 , BATDOB.—The railroad tint's, pppr tba Oilw , WlMici 0414 4 " the rebel ear:y destroyed wben they evacuated that city. is being repaired. It was one of the finest bridges in the country. IDICATH OP COL. BROWN..—Liellt. COL Joe. R. Brown, t t i lho on iro p n ri r a te m a i th o ß ru e i n u rk o f liZi r ra t e nio nt ii tr. , T ot ir e zhlntr e r s t ington. THII IRISH GlANT.—Murphy, the Irish giant, remelt/ died of emell.pom et it sreelllee, 5L003,031 es of otoolto at fhe sktand. 330 retina Coal 80V 150 l'adlic Mail 116 100 tlu x3OllO 0 Y .. 8”; 6, I I ,ndu 550 Erie Railway 39% 10 l 0 39% 1100 Erie R 149 Uttdaun It IL 12.41 rei 43 50 00 42% 425 Mich COIL 61 100 ,1130 Si 160 31icli S Pi T, 120 3au Mirti 50 00111 Cell It ocrip.l43o 61% 8(10 Cleve . 23 AO Gal 72 100 tI ct Tut. .. ... .bao 44314" 100 Clii k 401 50 0 13 Se Quin B•• •
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers