icor,lbstmaizizi PUBLISUZD DAI LY . (SUNDAYS UNORPTI ) ,) BY JOHN W. FORNEY. OFFICE, No. 111 SOUTH FOURTH STREET. THE DAILY PRESS, •Twntry OEM PER WEER, payable to the Carrier. Mailed to Subscribers out of the (Sty at SLR DOLLARS Pea AnnuM, rOUR DoLLEns roe Amur hiOrtitS, TRRRR DoLLARa roe SIX Merrila—invariably in ad vance for the time ordered. THE TRI-WEEKLY PRESS, Mailodto Subscribers out of the City at Tumor Dot, Lius Pia Annuli, In adTance, -)tl),,C V 1155. THURSDAY. MAY 29, 1862. 0 R VAR CORREPOINDENCE, OUR ARMY NEAR RICHMOND. A SLAVER ESCAPES PROM HAMPTON ROADS The Inhabitants Ireand 11,9hmond. ?MOW THEY LIVE IN OLD VIRGINIA. A High Premium on Whisky. 'THE REBELS TEARING U • RAILROADS HeCILELLIN INVESTING RICHMOND. FROM GEN. McCLELLAN'S DIVISION. [Special Correspondence of The Prem..] e n Cane PIVIS MILES Wigs. Or TUNSTALL'S RSATIO*I May SO, 1882. I Te.day, at three o'clock, we left our map at Tuustall's :elation and marched until six o'clock, pitching one tents in a field belonging to a Secemioniet wholes sous in the rebel army. Wo came some the miles, and, le near ea I I can say, aro between thirteen and seventeen miles from Richmond. General Smith's troops mid General Stone rran's force are in advance of no. Alt day heavy thing lies been heard on au• left, dietent some ten sauce, which etild not appear to be answered by the enemy. A remn et:distance) in force, to shell out ride-pit., was giant not Oa loft aisle morning, and no doubt the aboto came from their artillery. General McClellar; {hefted tho right t and rode to the outposts, retuning to headquarters ,at five o'clock. Ifeadquarters *lll nut be moved from - their position at Tunstall's steam.. OUR IRON-CLADS. It is reporied hero the gut boat Galena has been terri bly need up on James river, but that the Monitor sus tained the fire beautifully, rooming out of the fight un scattml, If ruiner is to be believed the gunboats have .heeu driven back. General Keys to reported as having meession of Bottom's Brldoo. A half gill of whisky wilt be served out to all the troops morning and evening to. morrow. An order het hecit heaved from hoeulquartere requesting officers and omen to be very careful in their corrotipondeuce, and not eves in private lettere, inform/non which may be , useful to the e nemy. We are marching with groat precaution. Skint died pline is ant reed, and no private property, oven of Se ceesionlme, to allowed to be oohed. At ovary home and fence there is a guard. This system of guarding the fences of avowed Seceestonista, when the men have to go , miles for firewood, meets with universal condemnation. Negroes become thicker and thicker as wo advance, and every one of them declares for the Uoion. A 11550185. As we passed the house of Dr. Webb, !shoat two miles Lack on our much, there appeared, by the roadside, founts dressed in ooidior•alotbee, who, with tears running down her cheap, piteously begged for perzuleilon to go .on the beggazo-train and go with the hoops. She was a most melancholy eight; and, on inquiry, I learned her 'Mudge story. Sho came from doweling° county, New York, and her hitebond was an armorer in the Slat New Turk Begiment. Ever since lei tenllettmout she had gone with him, aolieg as LIMO for tbo tick eoldiors. At Alex andria she became separated from the regiment, and lost all her baggage. Without money, friends, or advice, she knew not what to do, but finally concluded to milex her self, and did so. She joined a Pennsylvania dragoon .rps, but was soon discovered. An officer promised to take charge of her. Ho cared for her for a few days, end, when he thought iii time had arrived, made infamous grope sale to her, which she resisted. -This angered him, and he turned her out in a etraege land, among an unfriendly people, and &dangerous, anti, in many case e, brutal army. At the doctor's bowie they roughly told she meet move on, and she ivied come to the roadside to bo3 permission to go And find her trthand, no matter in what capacity, so : that it be an honorable one. lam rejoiced to state that • she at last found shelter. •Tbo kind hearts of tho team sters of Geceral Sloctum's behind° were soon touched; she - wee monnted on a wagon and went on her way happy. The notnan'e lax could easily Lave been discovered. Voice, looks, actions, and shape wore all tell-tales, yet she load successfully passed gnarde and broke through orders, until the•brutality of a men who druid be in. eteustly.emehlered turned her out by the roadside s home leas and friendless. Alter this. let no ono think that American women have degenerated in those days of cola -fortune and tremble. J. 0. FROM THE ADVANCE I:Spcclal Correopondenoe of The Proem] • WITII TUB ADVANCE GUARD, CAur NIILN MA) , al, 186/. A +PunTultn ADVANCE. At 4 o'clock this morning we were ad turned out of our meets In the midet•of n den , e fog, and fold to be pro pared !Ur marching of once. A cation of (reel) meet woo SOMA out and cooked in the camp kettlee, and a half gill of .bittly given to each man. Ilyerything was picked in and at precteely the whole cores of forty immand men started on their march. - All the preview Iglu not l early morning cavalry, infantry; and artillery ad been tramping along the road to Richmond, mid cury one-of them, eager for the fray, was pressing onward •amo peat end of ltte ambition. We marched throe lee in a northwesterly direction, acd font southwesterly, whole bringing us within three mile' of the Chicks- Airy, mind within ten and a half of Richmond. The Mel is weat•touthwest from us. All the morning merle from nitst and shell could be , ird from Itbe•dietat i t southwest, no doubt either on the oesriver or nom Bottom's bridge. 'Our advance is on Chickaboreloy, and the troops had a ekirmish with ml pickets, who are represented .aa beiug very thick ong the swamps In that region. The bridge over that sr wee burning and Impassable when the Union sid les reached it, and its repair zany tame some slight ay. 'Our advance on the river is within eight miles of almond. We are evidently rapidly outflanking the bet left, and bringing him to close quarters. We travelled to.day through a beautiful country—... wily woodland, and but little coltirated. But few ',Rants were to be even, and, with two or three tiznesp.. to, they were very DOCOMIPIUDICPUTe. An sinigrsitt. ?Jaime, and a polite miller, were the only Moult?! pie on the whole road We panted another church Jay, of the came character as that described In my ter of yesterday. It bind about two spittoons for °Sob ion It could accommodate. A VIRGINIA STORE. On the left-land side of the road, we passed a store Lich had been deserted by its proprietors. It was a building, a story and a half high, with two rooms on - sound floor and uo cellar. The building, which was td dilapidated, wee set upon four - piles, one at each sr. Inside, a pail fence ran across one of the rooms is what in the style of a Northern counter, Some lves were fastened to tho walls, and boxes and barrels around, belt no merchandise could be emu The ter room seemed to have been a stable, rte it was taped upon and divided into atolls. inside the store about the door lay scattered the account books and .r papers of the concern, and also parts of a OM of statutes of Virginia. Being booed on a voyage of overy, I, of 'course, ponoced upon those as trophies, amid on some of the more curious. This store, from poicre I saw, seemed to be engaged in a pa ir kind of bueiness—a business which is entirely and in Northern States. Nino-tenths of the men , Wise bold woe whisky, and from the prices, . Lid judge the article generally furnished was the most villainous character. If other Virginia •a are anything like tide one, Nee can be at no lose to tad fer the cause of that manta which seized on its le In the spring of 1361, and finally took the State of the Vision. I picked up a page of the day-book, , dated June 3, but of what year I could not There wore thirty-seven entries upon it, and of a thirty-one were for rem and whisky. Credit was cols Pen given, oven for a shirk. Ono man gave a at four months fur one dollar and seventeen cents. sky was ao•d at seventy cents a gallon and ram at ler. A think coat four canto (cheap:r than in the 1.) Liquor wart, in ninny eases, sold upon orders— :, there was not a single order to be found which tot, in some way, refer to the article. I picked up Ail and six. orders one after the other, and they all -od to whisky. I cannot do bettor than send them. illwnM: letters. Frailty and Brown bought of Wilson Wil- January 8. 11303, one barrel rectified whisky, 43 le, at 24c., $10.32) , • I stuff, bought at 24 cents, woe retailed at TO cents ,en then, if good whisky', sold at a low price. The • will observe that the above bill is not receipted, ippoao the firm, whose ptentiees I walked over this 2g, are some of the defaulting Southern debtors "Southern trade" was made of an much import 'ln the Lincoln campaign. The six orders, which I without comment, are these: "Mena 8, 1857. Brown you will Pleas" rue 1 gallon of Respectfully yours(' ..ELLIAII KELLEY." .r. lirown &Palely you will 'mod mo ono lb of coffee ./ of Auger S; Aye Ibis of elx. penny nails a quoit of whisky and much oblige larch 12, 1857 Ir. Drown you will pleas send me half gallon of 'Course Respectfully ELIJAfi KELLEY!, ' , Jape the 5,1856. Brown you - will please aural ma a half pound of and a quart of common whiskey and a halt gal "lanes. I have Brat you 25 coats to pal for the and whiskey—tile unlasee you wtll please charge. ALARGRE r K. 11.1.12,5.TT." .. Pirate) , end Brown will please send by the bear- Its of Dow 2 lbs of coffee I lb of candles 1 (mart st whiskey 1 pair of lines and one plug of tobaco. "W. F. ROBLNE&U." tiy the 27, 1860.” Brown pleat) send me lot 'pounds of brown elm 'undo of wrieo 1 pound of crackers for which I )11 the money. u will Vaasa send 3 ponds of lard ,2 yards of your low cotton, 1 bottle of whiskey that )ou sell at 60 gallon piers send a bill I wi ARE II set!S.tle In a coree EY.'I or a t. t h e In 19th, 1860." Ihor quotation and lam done. Foy people ont of re States know of tho reqniroments of tbo slave In Virginia, a slave found wandering or engaged business at a distance from hie home without a permission, is liable to be Reined as a fugitive, ton who intercepts him getting a spoiled roward 'portant survicos. My quotation in one of then sees, found on the door of that deserted etore. It toe: bearer of this, Joe, belonging to Mr. Joseph of this county, has permintton to sell, for my VOL. 5.-NO. 251., woman Betaey,lwo and it half dozen chickens in the city of Richmond, mid in tho county of Hanover and fran tic°, as he may dtem beat. WIC 0. SMITH. RASTXIOI Yicw, Remover, Aug. 24, 1855." Tbie store, exhibiting the vice and ignorance of Vir- Biplane, Is Viitbin twelve miles of the rebel capital, the boasted centre of Southern virtue, education, mid art. If a community is judged by IM mode of domestic life, Hanover county, Virginia," meat be a most wretched place. e expect in go to church hi Richmond on Sandal', and that, too, without much of a battle. We have coma ao near time capitol, and found soca little opposition, that it Rem almost foolish to anticipate any. The army has advanced very rapidly, overcoming every kind of ob stacit 0, both human and natural. BAGGAGE TRAIN CAPTURED. Lest night, a regiment of cavalry in Gen. Stoneman's corps brooght in a largo towage train, with forty pullers and eighty mien, which land been captnr.•d from the annoy. The wagons are parked eix mtlaa from 113, and I can give no particulars. The good nows from North Carolina gives universa' joy. J. G.' CAMP 103 MILKS FROM RIOTIIIOND, MIL 7 23, 1862 [Special 'Correspondence of The Pros.] Yesterday was a busy day in all parts of the army. Our advances, delayed by burned bridges and swamps, baited the day before on the ridges skirting the °bloke hominy river, and, early yesterday morning, strong parties were sent out to protect bridge-builders find road_ makers,. and to scour the woods, clearing them of prowl- log rebels., - The morning was very warm, and fiord noon until night thunder ohowers peered over She country, deluging us with rein, and tilling up all the streams and gullios. The remit, however, even after the storm, coutinned good, and heavy wagons and artillery could pees over them without difficulty. s lily ;coition in the acivauce of the main body, whilst T am out of danger, (very Important yon knows) is one of the beet for observation in the whole army. Except in groat battles, the advance corps are the only ones who over ere the enemy. They aro en rotted in ell the skirmishes; they capture all the prison ers; recrire all the contrabands; do all the picket dusty. They see the war to all its romance, and counteract every move the enemy may make. ' Yesterday afternoon your correspondent WU within eta miles of Richmond, and whtlat looking on at a skirmish, whirl was being fought between the enemy's cavalry and a detachment of the 16th New York Infan try, enjnred a plate of fine strawberries. raided on the farm of Captain Hudson, of the rebel army. Thu Mackie hominy river ran along, diagonally, about half a mile in front of my position, there being between it and me two ridges, running parallel with the river, the one nearest the strinun being skirted by 'woods. A party et rebel. cavalry came out of the woods in front or me galloped about a mile along the ridge, and took to the wools again. Our men followed closely, upon thong, firing volleys into the woody, and then entering it. Previously to this, a cavalry vldette was killed, and another wounded and Mkt n prieoner, at a place a few hundred yards In the rear of Captain Bruison'e farm, our forces having ofterwaida advanced and driven the enemy beck. The farthest point to which the Union (mope marched was about five miles northeast of Richmond. Our scouts may have been further. The enemy were supposed to be in great force in front of our men, bet, as General McClellan was too far off to bo able to be present for two er three hours to take .command, an oegagautent was thought to be Imprudent, and our troops amel htrictly on the . deformities,. We did not bold this advance peti tion after sundown, the troops retreating ataboutS P. At. I could distinctly hear the whistles and humming of constantly running trains during the half hour I was at Capt. Rutidon'e residence. The land, ae wo near lticlemond, secme better cultivated and mere clear of woods. Market gardens, to reapply the capital, become very plenty, and vegetables and fruita for the 'chat tables, which when sold for Confederate p‘per being extravagant prices, are extensively grown. The appearance of the country is beautifuL A gently rolling land, with patches of timber here and there, and varie gated with alt the hues of an opening spring, gro4sta the aye. The houses aro of a better style, and the people evidently of a higher class than those to Efatover and New Rest counties. CONTIIABAND STOIIIES-11ICIIIIOND TO DH DEFENDED Several contrabands were captured yesterday, and they all tell the same 'dory an to the great preparations made for the defence of Richmond—plenty of artillery, ammunition, and men. One of Oapt. Hudson's negroes, Of. which I new three, had a team hitched up to go to his ;neater in Richmond, but our sudden advance stopped his calculations, and, before he was three hours older, he was seized, taken to headquartere, and made to tell all he knew of the enemy. I cannot avoid saying, in this Connection, that the nearer we get to Itiomond the less confidence is to be placed in either negroei or lull:slit buts. Tile former are evidently Secessionists at heart— the latter, principally women and children, knowing no thing which can be useful to mi. Our owu scouts can Ming us information enough to keep us posted as to the enemy's movements, and frounent recoanoiasences will no; fail to discover the strength of their positions. (Special Correspondence cf The Press.] CAMP !ISAR CMICABOMINT RITXR, Dllll 21,1862. ON TUN MARCH. Our march to this y leco Wes one of the moat fatigniag ewhich our army has • experienced for about two weeks. The tun was intensely but, and at noon the men were halted for rest. No shade could be found by the larger portion of the division, but the men experienced much relief by the rest, althOugh it wee not a very coil ono. The sun was so warm that I wrapped my blanket amnad me, raid found much more comfort than without it, After a couple of boors the march was resumed. A strong corps of pioneers was In advance of Gen. Smith's division, but by the time his troops and baggage train lied passed it wee neceseary to repair the road for the Mennen of the other divisions. The advance of this division is by this time (night) at the Ohickahominy, and the road from there to. Tunetall's Station is filled with troops and baggage trains. The trains of gill division did not all arrive until after midnight, though the distance was . i I only coven miles, and they started at flee o'clock this morning. After the first four miles had been accom plished, the men began to fall out of line, and to sock rest in the woods.' When the column reached the camp ! ing place many of the companies had been reduced to twelve or foutteen men each. Not only the privates 1 were overcome, by the heat, but the officere also experi enced Its effects. Atter nightfall the stragglers 08111111 Int in squads, until nearly all were in before midnight. The men carried their ration's in their haversacks, and they darted small fires and boiled their eaten in their l' cope. Au they did not always extinguish the Ore, the Iflames spread to the underbrush, which, being deny, burned but slowly, and the trains were aided in their march by the light of the burnme brush, which could be seen blazing in:the dietanco like some huge beacon. No other effect than the destruction of the underbrush wig be caused by the fires. Themen soon had their tents tm i their coffee boiled, and !nipper over, and were nearly all asleep by eleven o'clock. i The section of country over which the men Marched to.day was poorly' eupplied with water, and nearly all that was found was of a very Meteor quality. This in ' fluted the men to go to the neighboring houses and en deavor to purchsee milk, eggs, etc., neither of which could lie had. 'I he bridge across a millpond had boon ' weakened by the passage of the advanced portions of the divisions, and the trains were stopped to allow it to los repaired. The baggage guard then earead themselves through the neighborhood after eatables. , Many of the men went about smile into the woods and gathered quan tities of excellent strawberries, which were eagerly Bought after by the officers, at fifty cents a quart. per- sons residing on the road were compelled to sell their chickens, geese, guinea fowls, etc., or else the men would have taken them by foree. If the farmers would sell, the men would pay; if the farmers refused to sell, the men helped themselves. The men bare a liking for mutton, and nearly all the sheep on the road are bought or stolen. They are but few, however, as most of them are bidden in the woods. smcgsstofersx. There are but fow of the planters along the route who were not Secessioniste, and who have not eons in the rebel army. One old man on the route pretended to be a Union man, and, when asked if ho had no family, said that Ids wife was dead, (which wee true,) and than men tioned his daughters, and gave us to understand that he had no eons. We ascertained, on arriving at the neat house, that he had three sons in the rebel army, and had been one of the most violent Socestionints in the country. The man who told no this factwaa not so cOmmUrdentiTh but freely nnawered all questions. Be told several un truths, however. His name wee Parsley. One of Gen. Smith's facers naked him whaled become of the cattle on his Place, to which Parsley replied that he had had none. His darkey told us that the cattle had been soot into the woods along with a parcel of the Degrees, whom he had frightened into going by telling them stories of the cruelties perpetrated by our troops. This man Parsley sold a cart to the °Mears for forty dollars in gold, while they offered him fifty dollars in Treasury notes, but he chose the forty in gold. Ho af terwards told ue he was sorry that he lied not taken the notes. He sold about twenty-five chickens at thirty cents each, and he received silver. A quantity of corn and flour was receipted for by the proper officers. It will, therefore, be seen that nothing was taken from him *without hie receiving an equitable return. Yet the next morning Parsley sent word to his daughter-in-law that the men bad taken nearly everything from his place, and ruined what they had not taken, Hie daughter-in-law resided further along the route, and her husband was in the rebel service, acting es lieutenant. She said he had belonged to the militia, and had been taken with them, but ebe would not say that he went unwillingly. She said ebe wished wo would capture him and sand him Immo. - She did not appear to care which aide wee trumps, so that the war came to an early end. • D. GOODLY." It may be . safely granted that there Is not A Onion man in this district who resides on hie property. Appear ances all go to prove this. Plantations requiring about a hundred slaves to properly cultivate the soil, now have leer than a dozen. No cattle are seen on the route, though there is every sign that they wore there only a few days ago. The planters have plenty of provisions on hand, and yet rerun to sell, lmlose at the most exorbi tant vices. Who would pay twenty.five cents for a drink of buttermilk in Philadelphia, aeventy.live cents for a dozen of eggs, fifteen cents for a, biscuit smeller than a baker's roll, which sells fora cent? And yet, the farmers any that these prices are very moderate. The slaves say_ that lost week a regiment of rebel cavalry went along this road, and that the officers trac e taken into the table and fed with the beet of food, and that their mantel e did Ibis willingly, and refused pay when offered. Such Is the character of their assumed Union principles. Great diversity of opinion exists among the officer.] as to the manner in which the planters still remaining on their properties should be treated. Xany think that the officers should take seirything Off the places needed by the army, leaving the owners enough subsistence to last for the next three months. Acting on this opinion, these Officers do not restrain their men unless they go to excesses. Other officers think that men'are sufficiently • • „sat , • 4 ` 1 " 4, • • • ti I I - • ••• *tr .. t r .' v as . t• _ _ • ‘.. 01- f•CT,i' t Ole- -'" . -121 M • • ,• 5r..... - `! •- • . • . • • yz 1 oun HOPES I=2 TERN INHABITANTS provided for by Uncle Sam, and that they need nothing which that benevolent person does not provide. Thai, however; do not go to any trouble in restraining their men, en that on the latter depends the character of the treatment received by the residents ou the route. All the mollusk for le s.mothing to oat, nothing else is dis turbed. When the roads aro had, indeed of taking the fume rails, the men go to the trouble of cutting down the trete in the woods for the purpose of obtaining the ma terial for the construction of the corduroy roads. In. vicinities where some regiments encamp, not a fence rail is taken for firewood or tent poles, nor a fence thrown down, mama to allow entrance and exit for the teems. MOVING ON The operations of the army are being energetically carried on. Not a day is allowed to pam in any division, without MIT othing being accomplished towards that end. The divitions aro marching rapidly nt present. eo ne to throw them into the roads leading to Richmond, and to place them in order for the final advance. Nothing do Mao has yet been ascertained as to the condition of the defenCes around Richmond, but may bo in a couple of day r, as the balloon is coming into use once more. It cannot be raid that we will certainly have a fight; the probabilities are the same for a tight or for another eva cuation, and then another long charo after the rebel army further into the Euittli. Lee and Magruder wore both in Richmond at last accounts. Whether Richmond. will txporionce the fate of Hampton, through the influ ence of Magruder, N greatly to be doubled. It will =- Willi not be the case if the Virginians hove the power to prcvont it. W ETKohtl Conorrondenco of Tho Press.) • NEd B TEM 011101[6110MINT, Mar 22,1884 Our advance in close on the heels of the retreating - re. bele. They aro continually firing at each other, but with little effect. One of the members of the Lincoln (lo yalty was wounded this morning by a rebel picket: The distance between the advance and Richmond is only about seven ranee, which is the same distance as that made by the troops yesterday. Ournsen are anxious lest the rebels should not make a stand but evacuate, and tins render it necessary to follow lheni into the South during the rearm° warmth of the summer. There will be no further advance of this body of troops t,-day. The men do not regret it, as the day will ho much warm er Oven ycsierdity, and they will thus have a ammo of recruititg themselves after the fatigues of yesterday. The divisions In the rear are closing up as fast as possible. &rim. Laren, ION A. IL—The rebels have just ap reared on the Oblelatominy, and a strong force from this divit.ien is now forming ranke, for the purpose of march ing there at d driving them back. I will not be able to send soy particulate in this letter, es the mail is retriy to start W. K. [Special Correepondence of The Press.] Naw COAL. lIARnon, VA., May 24, 1802. VIE ROADS. Last night a steady, call ruin eat Ire, which continued till late tide 'talent:oil, greatly to the, discomfort of the • soldiers. The' soil in this part of the country is very light and sandy, so that the ground underneath the tents woe soon almost as wet as that withotit. The weather is still cloudy, but [hero is a slight prospect of Menage from stormy to fair. The weather has bean so warm that the tiddlers have generally alma away their overcoats, and even their freekcoals when biomes could be had. Insulters Were, therefore, greatly in demand, and the men re roaMed in lheir tents, so that from a distance the aaraps seemed quite deserted. The roads are now in a terrible condition; in many pieces they are completely blocked up by heavily- laden huggagoteame, which are sunk almost to the body to mud. The artillery can, with the greatest dlliMulty, bo broaglitup and soot to the advance. 7n many cases the gun•cartiagea are se deep in the mud that the breeches are imbedded, and, in one or two cams, almost covered in bind and water. To-morrow is Sun day; however, and, as . the army does not march on the Sabbath, the roads will leave ii - chance to dry, and be In condition to allow the march to be resumed, perhaps, ou Monday morning. An advence would have been made this morning if it had not been for the severe storm. A SielestiSff. Time affair of the afternoon of the `221, near Idochanica elite, in which ono sergeant was killed and a corpora taken prisoner, was en act of the greatest barbarity, Sergeant George Cummings, of Company X, Lincoln Ca valry, with a corporal and six men, was some diatanco in advance of two companies of infantry, commanded by lieutenant of the 16th New York, and, with his smal party, was marching along a road, oa each side of which was a high kill, when they were suddenly fired down upon by a large party of the rebels, who at the sometime appeared on the edge of the hill. Cummings was shot through the heart, and his horse instantly killed, both failing to the ground at the same time. The corporal, William Anderson, alms fell, and was left on the ground, our whole party immediately falling 'back. After some time a strong, r force was cent forward, the rebels falling beck, and the body of the aergeant was found, but not that of the corporal, who is, therefore, supposed to ho a prier. n, r. The frequent occurrence of these barber. us attacks on smell parties of our men, by strong parties of the ecemy, has induced the sending out of stronger ekir• n eebieg parties, in the hope of avoiding their repetition. POSITION OF TEE ARMY. The main portion of the army is now within ten miles of Richmond, while the advance is to-day in force within six milts of the city. The rebels still appear in force on the other side of the Obickehomlay, and advance in fah sight of our pickets on this side of the river, as if to defy theni into opening fire. Oar pickets are out in every direction, strongly supported by infantry and. artillery; sod as our main force is not far off from them, any show of nu attack on our lines would be instantly roaisted by a sufficient force, and tho rebels turned hack. WILL TEE REDELS FIGHT? Our men still agitate the question as to whether or not the rebelawilifight at Richmond. The prevailing opinion seems to be that if they hed intended to defend that city they would not have suffered themselves to be so coin. ptetely outwitted at Yorktown, and would make a des perate resistance to so dote an approach to their lima. The capture of Richmond hy our forces is regarded by a great number of our officers as the virtual termination of the war, and many will resign their ignitions soon after the occupation. This will be the case more gene rally among the officers 'who have families thAn with these who are single, many of whom announce their set tled idea of remaining in Dials. stECRANICSVILiR TAKES. Notaithstambng that the storm prevented — a general advance of our forces, reoonnossances in considerable strewth hnvebeen made along the whole line. An ad moo had been determined : on in the direction of life chanicaville, a small town, about Ave and a belt miles from Richmond. A tarty of oar men having boon fired en from one of the houses, a piece of artillery was sent forward, and the house shelled, when the rebels evacu ated, and made a hasty retreat. The town itself tea one horse affair, consisting of not more than half a dozen houses, of unpretending dimensions sod appearance. Soon after the night of the rebel pickets, Gen. Stoneman determined to occupy the place, and a portion of General Davidson's command was ordered forward. The rebels • appeared in force, and disputed our advance. , A brilliant charge was made by our men urea four companies of the rebel,, tat 0 fled after a brief stand, and our force imme diately advanced and occupted the place. Goa. Stone man is therefore close en Richmond, as his pickets ex tend beyond the town. OUR LOSS IN THE FIGHT. Our loss In the engagement was three killed and eight wormiltd. Twenty-two of the rebels wore taken pri soners, but their loss to killed and wounded is not yet known. .Ambulances have been sent to remove the wounded from the mid. The prisoners say that they are the only ones net killed or wounded in thu four compa nies which they had in the fight. IMPRESSED SOLDIERS. Thice of the prisoners are Northern men, and say they • were impressed into the army. Two of them were re cognized by members of a Now York regiment. Ono ill from Courtland county, NOV York, another from New York city, and a third is from the interior of New Jersey. W. M. Special Correspondence of The Preee.) BITOND New 00AT, HARBOR, Va., May 26, 188 The order to march has not yet been glen, and the men are beginning to show impatience at the delay. They have been ready for an immediate istart since four o'clock this morning, but no orders to start bare yet been re. : celveri from the headquarters opposite. Thu morning is slowly passing away, and the sun le becoming inteneely 'worm, so that the march will probably not begin until lato in the afternoon. All is quiet around the encamp. wilt, which is now left solitary and alone, instead of being the centre of a vast army. The greater portion of the men are a considerable dietance ahead, but this day's march will bring tie up to them, after which we will follow Close on their heels, and be among the first to outer Rich mond. A PIICEIIAL The funeral of Sergeant George .oammings, late of Company K, of the Lincoln Cnvalry,..took place on Satur day afternoon, and was a solemn and impressive scene. Ihe chaplain paid a touching tribute to the bravery of the deceased, and his worth as a soldier. Ihe body was interred in the woods, about half a mile distant, and wee followed to its last resting. place by hie comrades of the regiment. 01111 lIAILS 'We may hereafter expect more regularity in the mails, as after to-day they will be brought here from West Point by railroad. The lint mall by this route will ar rive here to-night at 9 o'clock. When I say here, I mean wherever the poet office may be. A largo namber of care and locomotives hero been placed on the York River railroad, and the trains will run as far as Dispatch, a station about nine paths from Richmond. Hitherto the mails were brought from Fortress Monroe, via the Pa monkey river, to the White House, and were then car ried in a wagon to the poet office at headquarters. Con: siderable time was consumed by this arrangement. TRD RAILROADS. That portion of the railroad within the rebel linen will no doubt be destroyed before we occupy the town, if it ben not been torn up before this ; and each has been the case if the ryporte of the contrabands are relia ble. The delay will be but trifling, however, and within a few days there will be a complete railroad connnaaica lion between West Point and Richmond, via White House. The 4th Connocticat Rigirnent, which hae been doing such efficient eery - Ice as an artillery organization, hoe been supplied with muskets, and are again acting as In fantry. This is one of the etrongest regiments fu ser vice WILL THERE BE A BATTLE ? A heavy trnin of artillery is being brought up and wan- Plied to the army, so that if the rebels make a firm stand at Richmond, there will be no lees of time in making an immediate and force attack along the whole line. The Probabilities of a great light are growing more doubtful every day, for it is reasonable to suppose that if therebels detigt.ed making a desperate stand, they would. not have allowed our army to approach eo near without contesting every incitef ground. But, as there will elapse such a abort lime before the question will bo mottled practically, there is no use of indulging in random auPtamitione This morning our usually small supply of newspapers wan even smaller, and consequently they sold at very exothttent prices. The price of apy paper wet fifteen PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, MAY 29, 1862. ceuts at find, but ae the euprly fell the price rose fu corresponding ratio. No Philadelphia paper has been hero for four days, and we arc se ignorant of affairs at home ns if we were priFoners at Richmond. Con. S)lies` divfoion of regulat troops has gone for ward, and at fart the order has been given to our mon, and they are row :arming, and iu a few minutes will be on (Le road. W. M. FROM GEN. WOOL'S DIVISION. Spec Sal Correepordence of lho Props.) FORTRESS MONROE, Itlhy Tho news from the Valley of the Shennndoah is the all absorbing topic hero to-day. Nothing abort of the cap ture of 'Richmond would be considered a ett-oIY to the poor success of Ger.eral Berate, in holding hie position at Winchester. The following stat Ging intelligence, which we obtain from I% gintialllell Cupposed to be in the confidence of the military antheritiee here, we publish for the benefit of the Government: For some weeks past, a Tend (bark) has been quietly lying at anchor homed the fortress, ostensibly for the purpose of communicating with her consignees in Now York, and in the meantime sending to thorn daily for" a number cf contra's:noir to work in her hold, but, on no condition, were these men allowed to return to this point. This game was played on until, It is Bahl, twohun dred and ee'eniytwro contrabands were ferried out to the ship. Deeming this about as far as he could safely gci, the "tattooer" "skipped ''' out to sea last night, under the cover of darkness. "Brother" Wilder; su perintendent of ountrabands hem, has thus been foiled in his charitable intentions of reforming the blacks, at least as regards this lot of " culled paSsona," who are, by this, time, far on their way to Cuba or, the West Indies. We learn that the fleet gunboat Warnautta has been sent after the slaver, end it is hoped that she may be overtaken, and these poor contraband, returned. The cargo is made lied sprightly lade, worth, in Cuba, from $1,900 to $1,600 each. IVe am sorry to observe that, owing to the embargo recently ;laced non naval °dicers, who t• say their mouths are sealed," we are not able to present the facts of the case well authenticated. TUE NAUG&TIICK. It fis understood that the E. A. Storm (Naugatuck) pill be sent Not tit for repaire. Tito publioation of a private letter written by her captain. Lieutenant D. 0. Constable, to Captain rannce, in the New York Tri bune, a few days since, is a breach of confidence on the part of somebody which cemprotnisee the exalted charac ter of a worthy officer. It is due to Captain Constable to say that the later was not* intended for publication under any circumstances. The boat from White House Point he arrived, bring ing &variety of rumors, among the most important of which is one to the effect that our advance are within .the .enenn'll entrenchments before Richmond. The a ebele In h.furfulk had the news of our reverse In the valley of the Shenandoah by noon to-day, and are the teller pleased because it is what they predicted would happen ten dire ago. L. W. W. AFFAIRS AT NEW ORLEANS. Another Proclamation from Gen. Butler. The Now Orleans Delta of May 13th announces the death of Captain T. B. Huger, Confederate' Slates navy. lie was commander of the steamer Mcßae, and was wounded in the battle at Fort Jackson. The Delta alto continua the following news items : fix large mare-rigged vossole errived yesterday team sea leaded with United States tr: ord. The flag of the consulate of me Netherlands is not flying to•dap. Va learn that the residences of General Twinge and. Colonel Arms, in restanie street, have both been taken for cccupency by the Federal forces. We learn that W. B. Mulford, who is charged with being ounplcuous as the leader of the party that, before the arrival of Gen. Butler, tore down the Federal flag which wee hoisted on the MM by the forces under Capt . Fetragu", wee yeeteyday arrested by the United States tautberttite. We understand that the authorities of the United States On Sunday arrested Mr. Esnard, who was formerly a clerk of Mr. A.. 1. Guirot, an officer of the mint, togothor With the books of Mr. G , and on yesterday they arrested Mr. Bernard Avegno, ono of Mr. GuiroVe securities on his bond to tho United States. The presidents cf the banks were requested to meet Gen. Briefer yesterday, and Ito learn he Invited them to return the specie, which they bad cent out of the city, to their vaults, assuring them be would not seize or inter fere with it. We did nut ascertain tho determination of the pre sideuts, but suppose the specie to bebeyond their reach. Aasing Brig. Gen. George T. Shepley, colonel of the 12th Regiment of Bahia volunteers, has been appointed by Gen. Butler military commandant of New Orleans. rroelanattiun of General Batter. • GENERAL OIDERS—NO. 25. MaDOVAILTians DEFARTWINT OF Tag GULF, OHLBe ?fa; May 0, 1804; The deplorable state of destitution and banger of the mechanics and winking cleats in this city, hat bees brought to the knowledge o. the commanding general, ire has yielded to every suggestion mode by the city government, and ordered every method of famishing food to the people of Now Orleans 'that thee government. desired. No relief by those officials has yet been afford ed. This hunger does not pinch the wealthy and influ ential, the lenders of the rebellion, who have gotten up this war, and are now endenvotiug to prosecute it, with out regard to the starring poor, the working man, his wife and children. Unmindful of slier suffering fellow citizens at home, they have caused, or suffered provi sions to be carried out of the city for Confederate ser vice since the occupation by the United States forces. Lafayette Square, their home of affluence, was made the depot of stores nud munition' of war for the rebel armies, and not of provisions for their poor neighbors. Striking bands with the Tile, the gambler, the idler, and the ruffian, they base destroyed the sugar and cotton which might have been exchanged for food for tho indus trious and sped, sod regrated the price of that which is left by discrediting the very currency they had fur nished, while they eloped with the specie, as well that stolen from the United States as the banks, the property of the good people of New Orleans, thns lasving them to ruin and starvation. Fugitives from justice, many of them, and others, their associatee, staying because tto puerile and infitg_ nifiCent to be efijec'e of punishment by the clement lo verhment of the United Steles. They have betrayed their country. They leave been false to every treat. They have shown themselves incapable of defend the State they have seized upon, although they'''. .-;;;. forced story poor man's child into their se soldiers for that purpose, while they made their eon. ''yot; norhewstiicent They marmot protect those whom they havarniMed:brit have left them to the mercies and assamivations of a chronic mob. They will not feed those trborn they are starving. Mostly without property themselves, they have plun— dered, stolen, aad destroyed the moans of those 11/110 Lad property, leaving children penniless and old age hopelese.! hien of Louisiana, Working men, Property holders, merchants, and citizens of the United Slates, of what ever nation you may have had birth, how long will you uphold these flagrant wrongs, and, by inaction, suffer yourselves to be made the serfs of these lenders? The United States have sent land sod naval forces here to Bert and eubdne - rebellions armies in array ageing her authority. We And, substantially, only fugitive masses, runaway property-owners, a - whisky-drinking mob, and starving citizens with their wives and chil dren. Itis our duty to . eall back the first, to punish the second, root out the third, feed and protect the last. 'Ready only for what we had not prepared ourselves ; to feed the hungry end relieve the distressed with provi sions; but, to the extent possible within the power of the commanding general, it shall be done. He hes cultured a Quantity of beef and sugar intended for the rebels in the field. A thousand barrels of these stores will be distributed among the deserving poor of this city, from whom the rebels had plundered it; even although some of the food will go to supply tbo craving wants of the wives and children of those now herding at "Camp Moore' , and elsewhere, in arms against the United States. Captain John Clark, acting older commissary of sub- . eistence, will be charged with the execution of this or der, and will glee public notice of the place and manner of distribution, which will be arranged, as fir as possi ble, so that the unworthy and dissolute will not share its benefite. Dy command of Major General Ruder, ' GEO. 0. STRONG, • A. A. 0., Chief of Bta Secessionists in the North [For The Press.) If the loyal citizens of the North had, from the first, treated the Secessionists then as they ehould have done— that is, have condemned, despieedupd . avoided them as they would the very lowest andWveiry,worit clam o malefactors, for there is no thief, ofr . m . unleier so utterly despicable, or so justly amenahlt4“.ltterhistred and con tempt of all loyal citizens, as the4entarmitralterouscow arde--the war would have bott;ti'llitied,lntlitre this; but the mere fact of allowing theen'tviiiilisale alders and &Lettere of greatest crime that ever was committed those vivre, mhos° very breath is a taint upon the com munity ; these cowardly, 'meeting, wretched villain'', to Break to, or antedate with, gentlemen, has rendered them so bravo in their hellish iniquities, that they are becoming 130 w even bolder in their efforts to hamper the-Govern ment and create distrust in our generals than they were at the commencement of hostilities. For God's sake, let Northern men trent these wretches as they deserve; kick them out of your clubs ; drive them from your doors as you would vipers; cut them everywhere; never opan your mouths in their preeence, except to spurn ttem, and let the cowardly, sneaking wretches herd only together, until they become so mutually disgue ed that they will, one by one, crawl away from tho society they have tried to contaminate and disgrace—to slink out of existence in some hole filthy enough to receive them. You cannot by any possibility induce them to go South, for there hap pens B e be some, a little, fighting going ou there, and than; a pert of the game they don't play at. A YOUTHFUL CONVIC f.—Jamee Brady, only nineteen years of Age, wbo wee arrested in Honeybro Cheater county, some time ego, for robbing the plead guilty in the United States Court on 4f last. Brady was a etage driver, and the letter bag for the town which be droro to was entrusted to hie keeping. Be robbed it of its contents, and took the package of letters to hie boarding house, where it wee found. The shortest yeried to which be can be senunced, under the law, le ten )ears. AIVETER4N.—Captain Bailey, who lead the advance of. Tarrant 's fleet, ban- been forty years in the service, .snd ta said to have never been in action before. Ile so licited and obtained permission to lead in ono of our gun boats. One would have thought, from his conduct, that he had lived under Ere. INTERESTING SOUTHERN NEWS. BUCHANAN :ON THE WAR THE SOUTHERN PROSPECT. THE DEFENCE OF MOBILE THE FEDERAL FLEET AT NATCHEZ-THE SURRENIIER OF THE'CITY DEMANDED The Union Priiopere at Richmond. is. 11614 tw S=lll SHOCKING REVELATIONS. AN OLD REBEL ACCOONT OF THE BAT- • TLE OF SHILOH. Destruction of the Merrimac. &c., &c., &c. Bochiinan on the War [From the Norfolk Bey Book, Mstr 24.] Mr. Buchanan, from his retirement lit Wheatland, has ventilated his onntion that the rebellion cannot be put down." lie argues that " hot weather is approachlog, at d with it its concomitants of chow fever, ac., and that the Federal soldiers will die like rotten sheep." Re oleo entertains tho opinion that "the slayslieldere of the eolith will never 3 told," eco. Time will reveal the truth of M r. Buchatian's remarks, and will prove the truth of the old saying, tbst ' 4 a prophet is not without honor ense in bin own country." The Lots of the Merrimac [From the Ideruphis Argue.] But why, in the mime of all that is infamon!, was the filet rimar--the pride of the South and the terror of the North, eta the wonder and admiration. of the world— deitroyed at Crane, Island, when, if nothing more, she colihl love run up either the James or York river, and vaitrd the approach of the Union gunboatsl It is cer tainly strange that this reusel, iinpervions tolihst and . N%IIS racrificed by her commander, without having her brought within range of . an ouorayle gunboat or mac-of-war. Perhaps subsequent intelligence may divest the matter of iti'meneut inexplicability, but just now the• di etrucilon 'of the hlersiniao looks like a terrible blonder. _ _ . The Norfolk Examiner For Sale. The following. advertisement appears in the Norfolk Day Book of May 24 : TBE EXAMINER NEWSPAPER FOR SALE. TDE PRESSES, TYPE, FIXTURES. AND GOODWILL OF TUE NORFOLK EXARINER are tarred for tale. his payer cleand for Ha proprietor the ehm of $5,000 duripg the lett. year of its publication, as" the books, alticb a ese faithfully-kept, wiU attest. It will, be sold cLeap. It has a complete Job Printing Office attached. For further particulars and terms of sale apply at • EWING'S Drug Store, Churca Street. The Southern Prospect—Xerxes afsd'Pa trick. 'Henry. [From the Petersburg Express, May 23 ] As the fallklm JD rapidly drawing to a close in which the enemy's gunboats can be used en the Western rivers, we may LOW confidently expect a favorable turn in the straits in that quarter. The army at Corinth, reluforced by the division of Price and 'Van Porn from Arkansas, and by the column of General Lovell from New Orleans, beside numerous other ac semitone from various directions, la now in a condition to take advantage of the low stage of water in the river, and strike a heavy and decisive blow, which mill clear Tennessee and Kentucky of the invaders who have temporarily'oecupied portions of the tot mer State and nearly the whalt s of the latter. A vic tory at Corinth, properly followed up; as it doubtless will be, will open the way for. the recovery of all that we have lo,t in the Valley of t'bo ; and alto, wo trust, for agm cb across Me Ohio. We have genera's in the West who can be relied on for a vigorous and ef fectual execution of tho movement,' necessary to accom plieh the grand results wit'ch will eecore tbo expulsion of the Union forces tram the Confederate territory south of the Ohio and Missouri rivers, which has been overrun by ih,m. In this prospective view of affairs that import net smarter we find everything to cheer us with the con fident expectation that the Western campaign will close brilliantly. in Virginia, by evacuating Manassas, Yorktown, 'and Norfolk, we haveconcentrated en army at Richmond suf ficiently powerful to assail the enemy, and then drive Lim from our soil, and follow him upon his. The dis comfiture of his gunboats at Drury'eßluS, noel the Spar tan spirit dieplayed by the Confederate and State gene- Ws; le the publicly-declared determination to defend the capital at all hazards, and never to surrender it, presage the happiest results. What if Homo of our coast towns and many of our interior. counties are in possession of the invaders'! Xerxes at ono time had all Attica in his poseeseion, ezcept the iUtk him/ of Salamis, to which the Athenians retreated, after evacuating their beautiful city, and here they resolved to make a final and despe rate eland, knowirg that one defeat of the Persians in a pitched battle would be their utter ruin, and that they would time, by a single blow, recover every inch of their territory. So it will be in the present case. By drawing the war in Virginia to a focus, and by compelling the Unionists to fight a great battle at or in the vicinity of Richmond, Which will decide the fate of • their grand army, our Government has followed, in effect, the strategy of the Athenian general, Theinistocies ; and our brave cormaandor 'and army have ontr to fight as only the Greeks did at Salamis to 'achieve a similar "Baez co-e, and mop the fruits of it. However much wo may have regretted the abandonment of Norfolk and the- de struction of its navy yard, together with the peerless Merrimac, WO are consoled with the thought that a vic tory at Richmond will be far more than en equivalent for their sacrifices. We have disemberreesed ourselves of the era tared defences which so -long divided awl weakened our forces, and now we are in a condition to present a front to the foe atihethreatenrd point which mantes to Pis deep mortification, of an infinitely more dangerous- and terrible . eccounter than he has yet dreamed of. Be has &trendy quailed under the new and more formidable preparations for his reception, which bare been made, and are still making, in and around Richmond. Drury'. Bluff has given hint a pre liminary taste of the castigation which IN In reserve for him. His boasted gunboats have been taught a lemon which will make them exceedingly careful how they again' get within range of the elevated and a ell-served batteries stitch played such havoc with them in their first attempt to pass them McClellan, with his 'famous army, now finds a general battle a considerably different sort of arair from what ho deemed it when he 'first started op the Peninsula. He has now to meet in a single sharp and decisive coottict a compact Confederate farce fully competent to crush him In Manassas style. A _light with him is what they want, and it e should suppose that a fight *Rh them was all that he wanted, for surely when he began his march upon Richmond he mast have intended and expected to engage our army inst as soon as be could get it within range of his guns. • 'llia war is to be terminated only by fighting. "To this complexion it has come at Wt." Not only must thus be fighting, but the hardest kind of fighting, and we hope that our generale, after waiting a reasonable lime for Maclellan and lialleck to load an attack, will at tack them at all points, and in the most vigorous man ner, and that when they begin this game they will keep on with it. We ere not at nil afraid of our troops when fighting is the order of the day. It is only when they are cooped up in camps and languishing in inaction that they tease to be a terror to the enemy. We are sick and tired of spades and thovels, of marching np the hill and then marching down again. of entrenched camps, and all the paraphernalia of actidemic warfare—we must fight. Yes, as Patrick Henry exclaimed on a memorable occa elan, " (we) RkI'ILIT IT, WR MOST FIGUR." If the ene my won t in a manly way give us battle, we must give it 1. to bim. The Defence of ,Mo bile. tale brobile 'Uprise.) • pleased to learn that Mobile city, Savannah, taluuond are to be defended to the last extremity 1 , I lint the Union army. Gen-John T. Forney hal pub cly declared each to bo hie purpose. and the Mayor, aldermen, and Common Council have resolved to second him In any way they can. Confederate Disloyalty. no Express also blows np " various parties" for re fining to receive postage stamps in change, but eager to spend the supplies they had on hand ; and denounces "these attempts to bring Oottfellerate issues into disre pute, as seprehenstble" and " evidence of dialOYalt/." Markets in Norfolk. [From the Norfolk Day Book, May 24.] Saturday'e market, usually so replete with all the sub tantials and delicacies of the season, bee "fallen front its high estate," and this morning presented a rather sad speotacle to the epicure. Irish, green pawl; strawberries, and come few other articles of the season wore to be found ou sale, but that profusion which formerly charac terized Saturday's market was the more painfully re membered by the contrast with the present scarcity. Ideate of all kinds wire scarce; and co high that many were forced to buy sparingly, while some few, like Mo ther Hubbard's canine friend, went home without oven 1,0 much as a bone. The Movements of General Jackson. From the Richmond Dispatch.] • We expect to receive stirring news from the valley, Where Generals Jackson and Ewell command, bolero the expiration of another week.. Provision Boats at New Orleans. [Thom the Delta, Kay 4 We learn that there are several steamers up the river loiuled with Urovlsions for this city, which will not come into our port unless assurances are given by the com mander of the United States equadron that they will not be pelted or interrupted in their business. Such mien rexces- have become necessary, since it is elated that several steamers—the private property of citizens—have already been, detained by the United States vessels in port. 'We do not understand upon what grounds these seizures wire made, especially as Commodore Forragut, in his first meltinge to the mayor, plidited himself to pro tect private property. The Dee Passage of steamer.' to the city from the up-river is absolutely necessary to the sustenance. of this population, and we hope that Com modore nonrigid does not intend to add the threat of starvation to the other menaces which he has launched against the city. Federal Fleet at Natchez—The Surrender of the City Demanded. ['From the Natchez Courier of the 11th.) OFFICIAL CORRESI.O3DENCE CITY BALL, May 13.—The Mayor and select mon of the city of Natchez assembled in special meeting at O'clock A. M. Present—John Banter, Req., Mayor; Messrs. Bald- Itim Curry, Dix, Walworth, and Walker. The Mayor stated that he had called the meeting for the purpoto of taking Into emsideration the following communication, viz : UNITED STATES STEAMER IROQUOIS, - AT ANCHOR OFT tIATEIIGZ. Miss May 12th, 1802. Sin: In advance of the squadron now cowing up the Mississippi, I am Instructed by the flag-officer to demand the surrender of the city of Natchez to the naval forces of the United- States. Th e same terms will be accorded ne those granted to New ()neaps anil.Biton Rouge. The rights and proper ty of all peaceable , citizens shall be .respeeted ; but all property In this city, belonging to the so-called Confede rate States most be delivered up, and the Rag of the United States must wave unmolested and respected over your town. 'Very respectfully, your obedient servant, JAS. S. PALMER, Commander. To bie Donor the Mayor of Natchez. To which communication the mayor was directed to make the following reply, viz : IdAvon's °Price, Z NATCITEE, Sties., may 13,111 i. $ SIC : Your communication of tine .12(11 instant has been received by me and laid before the Board of Select men of this city, and I am directed to return the follow ing reply . Coming as a conqueror, you need not the interposition of the eity awhoritles to possess this place. An uuforti tied city, an entirely defenceless people. have no alterna tive but to yield to an irresistible force, or uselessly to im peril innocent blood. Formalities are absurd in the face of such realities. So far as the city authorities can prevent there will be no opposition to your 'possession of the city ; they cannot, however, guargntee that your Rag shall wave unmolested in tbo eight of an excited' people •; but such authority as thiy possess shell be exercised for the preservation of good order in the City. As to property belonging td the Confederate Strata, they are not aware of any such within the limits of the city. Very respectfully, TOUT obedient servant, JOHN BUNTED, Meyer. To JAMES 13 . :TALstsn, Commander U. S. S. Irequels, at anchor off Natchez, Miss. The board then, adjourned. 0. If, M.EIIRIORi City Clerk.. The Union Prisoners at Richmond. We copy fr• m tee Harlfor I Evening Press Um follow ing extracts from a private letter, written by an officer now in litchmeed. Its genuineness in voucher' for: * * * Onr condition is most dark and dreary. nitro are only three windows to the room, and those on One end. The floor is alwaya in a filthy coodition. It having been used for a pork warehouse (immediately he fore we were removed to It, however, for a alavo• pen), the floor is perfectly saturated with grease. This makes it impossible to got it char, * and canoes it to be coated with an anoslgnin of pork -rat and nil kinds or dlr... . • wilting, Ole vile Muff adheres to tho phone, and we neod a scram' more to walking hero than you do in walking in the Mreot. Then add to thin the filth that comes from shore. Almost 900 men are on the two Hoort above us, ami frequently, as it has row been the case for two days, their water-cloetts overflow, and di.charge their awful contoots upon us This comes down mistimes In torreuts. Yesterday it poured . down where P esp. tarn was 13 tug with es broken leg. Ile had to be moved as quickly as posalblo, and has not been able to occupy his vacs .since, on acconot of this stream of pollution flowing from shove. Aif holler stream, with scarmly an inteindmion, has been now for two days pouting down into the cook. room, wbich is a room parti. tionect off In one corner of the one which we occupy. AII our cooking is donu In this room.. Von will say, Bow can tou eat ?" I answer, I have tcarcely thought of the matter in relation to taiing. Our achuoling has prepared ne tor it. You will wish to know what my food This I csa soon tell you, though I might give you dietetic history which would painfully inleieat you food, as fetnlehed by the Eouthern Oonfederscy, consists in the looming of breed and meat; for dinner. meat and bread; for toe, meat and broad, and bread and meat. This ie all ; and this is all wo gtt. unless we hare money to tend out for articles. Many times we cannot do' this when we have the money, as we have not bee» able to do EC) now for three days. Therefore, we Lave had no supar, no coffee, no potatoec, no money. - All thee° erildes are rarities, c.stfog Immsnsely. We base mule out to supply out - raves comfortably well. by the blessing of a hind Providence. MAT itl Moy-day, but what a droary oue ! dark aud lowering without, and the goods which have con tinued all night still pour down upon ustromthe sinks and pixy- bake above. We are the newer tar near 400 men. There la not a foot in the cook-room, excepting under the stove, which 14 not eovered with water. A.beie hes been out in the ceiling, which lets most of the water down in ono place, instead of sifting it down all over. Sever At Lch e in the plank of this floor have boon cat thin morn- to allow the water etanding on It to pan through into the hatement, which bee long since become en isw. fol muck-bele. Ilaus overything is being prepare). for Imago xhen the warm weather flail cane. Tho maiska have already broken out f mono us On the whole, we aro lo a most deplorable condition; and what very much aggravates this unbearable state, la the sending home of the men and nou•commiseioued ofll ct-Tak while the Meets era still held in custody. All the c films weer the most gloomy Como. Our tato is tumor- tain. Eo far as we can judge (being denied the papers entirely, cue man being it itlY days ago gagged, and then made to keep time half a day at a time, in order to coin prl him to ttll bow a paper was got iu) our army from the Rappahannock teeran to be moving on this place. In this cAu we shall by no moans be suffered to remain in Itlchmood, but will undoubtedly be sent South. You can Imagine the undmirableuess antis. NAT 2.—The rumor le that the carmen] are Who taken &nth. S his is Very probable. Report says NVO are to be taken to Sal/thou, North Carolina. It may be interost leg to you and others to know something about what are bete called 'citzeu prisoners. They are Union moo, citi zens ot the Southern States. Ido not know whether thls is the only dna for this kind of prutomrs. But there are hundreds in this place. I know but few of them. Scmo act as cooks in the lower kitchen, and bring our meat end bread in to us. All then men are, in every respect, very worthy. There were three ministers among them. One boa died. The cause of his sickness and death revi ale the barbarian' of the rebels, and at the same time what the Unicri men suffer. This Mr. Webster, for such was his name, was a citizen of Fairfax county, ten prisoner about a month before his death. Ho was take:n*lth the following men who were engaged in the ;anoint oemations of life: William S. Spur, aged filly-two years i Isaac Wibirt, sixty-five yeara3 of ape; O. White, William Showers, seventy years old. These .men were not, in one instance, per mitted to go into their houses for money or clothing, or to bid their friends good-bye. They were marched with the army eight days, during which time they slept oat decrs—it being hr the month of January—and had but one meal per day. When the age of these area is con =lend, the barbarism is unparalleled. But something worse than this follows. On the second day's march, Mr. Showers, who had reached his three score years and ten, dropped dead on the road. The battalion halted not for a moment, and the officer in command forbade any attention whatever to be paid to the dead man, Bev° to carry the body and place it by the wayside. There it was lest. On the third day's march a negro dropped down dead, and his remains were eervsd in the BOOM way. The desdation wrought by these headless resiets Is actually beyond description. I have seep men by scores taken to the prison, frequently fellowe by their wises and children until they were repulsed by the Imelda; and, in one case, the husband and wife hissed. over the bayonet, the husband disappearing within the prison, while the wife went weeping away. I could write much more on this painful subject, but this will suffice to give you some idea of the slate of things. Ev Fmk°, Max 2.—We have bad a most terrible day. The floods iron' above continue. At ono time, while writing this letter, the pipe from the upper closets buret and discharged the excrement of 400 men upon us, filling the room with the villainous odor. t fell within a few feet of our dining table. Every man lit his pipe and smoked for his life. The awful stench is still in the reom. Ido not mite this to add to your affliction, but I have'concluded you would like to know just how we are situated, and lam convinced also that the people of the North ought to know bowl their oill.:ers are treated. litany who have gone home have not given the true view. I have told the truth in this letter. You ere at liberty to publish extsacta from it. You must not permit my name to appear. for one man, for gettivg a letter through, tell ing Mete, was put into a criminal call, and fetl on bread sad water h.r ten days. Many of the haute of the gni sonera published at the North appear lathe Southern pa pere. An Old Rebel Account of the Battle of Shiloh. In a number of the Weekly Picayune of the 28th of April, which has been banded to us by a friend, we find a letter dated Corinth, April 9th, written by a private in the Washington • Artillery, from whiot we make the following extract, which Eheas that there was terrific fighting in Wet tor rible two•days battle : We got orders to fly to another part of the field and Resist a regiment to take another battery. Away we went, and after ten minutes' firing, that wag hushed op. We then went back to our old position to stop a column that was advancing. They charged on us three times, and each time were repulsed. During this whole time there was ono continual storm of shot, shell, and /ante belle. Onr men were ell as vale as death, but stood man fully at their guns. I thought every moment would be laet. Alter a rest of about twenty miontee we had orders to go to another part of the geld, where wo wore in one of the most murderous fires ever seen. There was a c o lumn of Infantry advancing to charge a lilissiadippi battery, pouring in a tremendous volley, a battery trying to &Ilene° the Mississippi battery at not =re than throe bunched ' , swell,' distance.. We went into position and opened fire on both bat teries lied infantry, when a regiment of sharpshooters, conceeled in a wood not more than one hundred and filly 3 arde.off, firing with a kind of white powder which wake no report, began pickfrg off our mon. The Miasts- Wept battery had their horses killed, and their mon all lolled or wounded, to we were left to fight the whole, and it is miraculous that three-fourths of us were not killed. Men who bare been in several battles any they never sew anything that could begin to ermal it. Heretofore. artil lery envoy's fought at a distance of a mile and a half to two miles, but we were at speaking distance, point-blank range, end In the fiercest part of the fight. It is impos sible for me to convey an idea of the terrible storm that fell swung us. I don't exaggerate when I say that the !hot fell like bail. I verily believe that a thousand balls pseetil within a foot of we; the air seemed full of thorn in every beatable place except where I stood. In lees than fifteen minutes we had three men killed and twelve wounded. Gen. Beauregard was standing within fifty paces of tie, with a mile upon his face, seemingly un conscious of any danger. Near him stood General Polk, calmly !coking on ; and with our battery elood General Hardee, directing us where to fire, which we did in such a rapid and precise manner that in twenty minutes the sharpsbooters took to their heels in regular Bell Run style. The battery was silenced and the infantry thrown into confusion. This twenty minutes seemed to me fully as many years. It appeared to me I w•as one minute for this world and the lest for eternity. We bad been fighting for seven hones; I thought I should faint at my gun for want of water, my throat woo welted, my face as black as gun powder could make it, my clothes ton in ribbons, covered in mud—indeed, we were all a eight to behold At this place our captain had bis horse killed under him and was bit five times by anent balls. When the enemy gave way tinder our fire a Kentucky regiment followed them up at a beautiful charge for a mile, when a Yankee battery opened upon them, end we were called again to support them, and after a tremendous cannomule of twenty minutes we silenced that also, making four batteries we bad silenced besides several minor duties we had per formed. We next took up a line of march for another part of the field where see were met with a astute of a shower of ehellefrom those enormous mortars of the Yankee gunboats; it had now Lemma dark, so it was useless to ad vance further, and we got orders to bivouac in an old corn field in close proximity to the enemy. Thus ended our first day's, fight, which was Bald by one generale to be the bordeat fought battle that ever took place on this coutt vent. The enemy had been driven entirely front their , encampnwrite, losing everything they had. - It was astonishing to see the amount of cannon, small slue, commissary and quartermanters' stores and tents we took; there were seventy-five pieces of cannon of the very finest kind, and all of heavy calibre. We were so much exhausted that in fiveminntes after lying down eve were asleep, but were awakened at 12 o'clock by a heavy rain, which continued all night, so there was no deep after for us, es moat of us lost our only blanket in the action, and were compelled to stand by the fire to keep warm. At 5 o'clock next morning, WO again received ordure to proceed to a point whore the enemy wore ap proaching, they having been heavily reinforced - during tbe night. Never did 1 hear such an unwelcome order; the thought of witnessing such scenes as I saw the day before was perfectly awful to think of—our brave and noble ones dead and maimed, but missing before the boepitel was worse to me than the battle itself. At 7 o'clock we were again in action, in a regular at tillery duel, which lasted half an hour, when the Yankees, of course, withdrew. At about 10 o'clock we got orders to march to the support of Breckineidee's brigade, which was then marching teetop an advance of a derision of the enemy against our centre, we following at a distance of fifty yards, only in our van by the Oreemmt Regiment ; we advanced but a short distance when there was a tremendous fire opened on us, the Kentucky bri gade standing fire for about ten minutes., when they ran, leaving us exposed to a fire five times more terrible than that of the day before. There was no whizzing of belle this time, but one . continued whtzzing sound. We got orders to give them grape, canister, shells. and spherical case as rapidly as possible, but there was no nee, they were toe strong. # * * Wegot orders to limber up and'get away, when the horses to our gun got unmet:loge • able, and the fire was so terrific, that the boys, loving all hope of saving their piece, ran off the field, leaving only - Joe Duggan and myself tit the gun, who, seeing the folly of remaining longer, with our horses killed, the enemy within fifty yards of us at a full charge, and our own snptort firing into us, were compelled also to quit our piece. flow under heaven we escaped the balls of the en. my and of our own men, is more than I can con ceive, vre baying to make our way through their linos while firing. Wo found the rest of out battery on a entail bill, about three hundred yards in the rear. * W * The enemy continued charging, mid onr borece being nearly all dead, we had to leave •our battery, which the boys did with team in their eyes. However, a Louisiana and Tennessee regiment came up, repulsed the enemy, and retook our guns, when we Jumped to them, and gave their retreating cohnen a parting salute. Harriet) himself says this was the most ninrilerous fire he ever saw. This was the last pert we played in the tight. Our battery was hors de combat, two men killed, eight wounded, thirty horses killed, and our anuunnition exhausted; we re ceived orders to leave the field, and while doing so, we halted a moment. Gen. Beauregard passed, raised hie cap, end said, .. Young eentlemen, you havedone nobly; yon have done nobly; yon have fought as mon never fought before !" I really think this was one of the hap piest minutes of my life. Tbeso word. can never be for gotten. Deanregard's aid passed no and said: "Bore, you may tell your comrades In Virginia 'hat they have seen it whine." You will ho - sorry to hear that the brave and gallant Johnsen was killed while leading a charge. enemies can say nothing more against him ; he has died nobly. * * * On our way back we beard nothing but praise of the Louletene troops, who fought like Ilona. The slissiesippi troops also fought Ulm heroes. I tear you may think that I boast on our company too much. but I nmet tell you one thing more. General Rodeo nays we did more in that battle than any company over did before. All elong the route, we heard such ex- Prebtielle as these: " There goes 3110 Washington Ar tillery. G•r-i -a t God! can't they fight!" "Good heavens! didn't those fellows go into It!" rec. We achieved a glorious reputation, but paid dearly for it, toeing six men, with twenty wounded, while nearly thirty horses were kilted. Love to all. Your affectionate nephew, WILLIAM. TWO CENTS. The Destruction of the Merrimac—Letter from Commodore Taman. ThOfollowirg in a copF of a letter addreaaed by Com modore Talus!' to Mr. Mallory, tho Coofoderate Secreta ry of the Nary : RICIMOND. May 14, 180 Sin: In detailing to yon the circumstances which context the destruction of the Confederate States steamer Virginia, nud bee movetuouts afow days previous to that event, I begin with tour telegraphic despatches to me of the 4th and Sth instant, directing me to take such a pe tition in the Jewell river as would entirely prevent tho enemy's ascending it. General linger, commanding at Norfolk, on learning thnt I bed received hie order, called on me and declared that its execution would oblige him to abhudon immedi atety bin forte on Cranes Island and SowelPe Point and their gene to the enemy. I informed him that, 89 the older tine impel ative, I must execute it, but euggeetad thin he ebould telegraph you and state the consequences. Tie old so, and 013 the 6th instant you telegraphed me to endeavor to effold peotection to Norfolk as wall oa the James river, which replaced me in our original position. I then arranged with the general that he should notify me when hie pre paratioos tor the evacutirion of Norfolk were sufficiently advanced to enable me to act independ- 'Cr the 7th inst , Commodore trolling reached Norfolk, with orders from you to ecnsolt with me and such officers os I :night &feet in r--•gard to the brat disposition to b made of tho Virginia, under the present nowt of things. Wo bad arranged the conference for the next day, the litb, bet on that day, before the hour appointed, the eiteiny attacked the Sewell's Point battery, and I left immediately with the yirginia to defend it. Wo fooud six of the enemy's vessels, including the !row., clod steamers Monitor and Naugatuck, shelling the battery. Wo pasted the battery and stood directly ter the enemy, fur the pnrpoee of engaging him, and I thought an action certain, particularly as the Minnesota and Vanderbilt; which were anchored below Fortress Monroe, got under way and stood up to that point apparently with the'intentiou of yoinitig their squadron In the Medi. fore, however, we got within gusehot, the enemy ceased Bring and retired with all speed, under the protection of the guns of the fortress, followed bl the Virginia, until the shells from the Itip Baps passed over her. The Virginia was then placed at her.moorings near Seven's Point, abd I returned to Norfolk to hold the conference referred to. It was held on the 9th, end the officers present were Colonel Ar.doraon and Captain—, of the army, selected by General Huger, who was too unwell to attend himself, and of the nary, myself, Commodore llollins. and Cap tains fterrett and Lee, Commander Richard L. Jonee, and Lieutenants Ap Cateeby Joins, and J. Pembroke JOllO3. The opinion was unanimous that the Virginia was then t mployed to the best advantage, and that oho should continue. for the peseta, to protect Norfolk, and thus afford time to remove the public, property, en the nest day, at 10 o'clock A. DE., we observed front the Virginia that the flag was not flying on the Sex c Point battery, and that it appeared to have been abandoned. I despatched Lieut. J.P. Jones, the flag lieutenant, to Craney Island, where the Confederate flag wee still tit ing, and he there learned that a large force of the enemy bed landed on the bay shore, and were march ing rapidly on Norfolk ; that Sewell ' s. Point battery mu abandoned, and our troops were retreating. • I then despatched the same officer to Norfolk to confer with Gen - Huger and Captain Lee. Mir found the navy yard in timer, and that all its officers bad loft by railroad. On reaching Norfolk he Mond that Gen. Huger and all de other officers of the army bad also left; that the ene my acre within a half mile of the city, and that the mayor wee taeatii g for its surrender. On returning to the ship he found that Cransy Island and all the other batteries on the -river had been abau dosed. It wee now seven o'clock in the evening, and tbik, =expected confirmation rendered prompt measures noccsitiry for the safety of the Virginia. The pilots bad assured methattbey could tako the ship, with a draught of eighteen feet, to within forty miles of Richmond. This the chief pilot, Mr. Parrish, and his chief assistant, Mr. Wright, bad assorted again and again; on the afternoon of the 7th, in my cabin, in the profanes of Commodore , Bottles and Captain Sterrett, in reply to a Question of mine, they both emphatically deelarel their ability to do so. Confiding these asenrances, and after consulting whit the Met end flag lieuteuantz, and learning that the cficers genern4ly thought it the most judictone coarse, I detetniincii to lighten the ship at once, and run up the river for the protection of Rlchmord. All hands baying been cdllcd on deck, I gated to them the condition of things, and my hope that by getting rip the river before the enemy could be made aware of our designs, we might capture his vessels, which hal as cended it, and render efficient aid in the defence of Rich. mond i but that to effect this would require all their en ergy in lightening the ship. They replied with thros cheers, and went to work at once. The pilots were on deck and heard this address to tho crew Being quite unwell, I had retired to bed. Between one and two o'clock in the morning the first lieutenant re ported to me that, after the crow bad worked for five or six hours, and lifted the ship so as to render her unfit for action, the pilots bed declared their inability to carry eighteen fie; above the Jamestown Flats, up to which point the shore on each side was occupied by the enemy. On demanding from the chief pilot. air. Parrish, en ex hinallon of this palpable deception, he replied that eighteen feet amid be carried all er the prevalence of easterly winds, and that the wind for the last two days had been westerly. I had no time to lose. The ship was not in a condition for battle, even with an enemy of canal force, and their fines was overwhelming. I therefore determine', with the ccncurrenco of the first and flag lieutenants, to save the crew for future atreice by landing them at Craney Island, the only mad for retreat open to its, and to de ',troy the ship to prevent her falling into the hands of the ovemy. may add, that although not formally con sulted, the conrsa was approved or every commissioned officer in the ship. There is no di-venting opinion. The ship was accord irgly pat on shore as near the mainland, in the vicinity of CitareY Island, as possible, and the crow lauded. She wee then fired, and alter burning fiercely fore and aft for newer de of en hour, blew up a little before five on the morning of the 11th. We marched for Suffolk, twenty two milieu and reached it in the evening, and from thence wine by railroad to this city. It whi be asked what motives the pilots could have bad to deceive me The only imaginable one's that they wished to avoid going into battle lied the ship not been lighted, FO as to render her unfit for action, n desperate contest must have ensued with a ferco against us too great to justify much hope of success, aud, as battle is not their occupation, they adopted this deceitful course to avoid it. I cannot imagine another motive, for I had seen no reason to distrust their gehed faith to the Confederacy-. My anknowlt dgenunte nro das to the first lieutenant, Ap. Cuttntly JELOIN for his untiring exertions, and for the aid he rendered me in all things. The details for cuing the chip and landing the crew wore loft to him, and everything was conducted with the most perfect order. 'Po the other officers of the ship, generally, I am also thangful for the great zeal they Menlo) cd throughout. •r lie Virgil is no longer exists. but 800 brave and skil ful officers and seamen are saved to the Confederacy. I presume that a court of inquiry will he ordered to ex amine lobo all the circemstitnces I have narrated, and I earnestly solicit it. 'Public opinion will never be put right without it. I am, sir, sitb greet respect, your obedient eervaleo JOSIAH. T&TNALL, • Flag Officer Commanding. Bon. B. B. ArALLor.T, Secretary of Navy. Rebel Trenchers-Letter from Captain Porter In a letter from Captain D. D. Porter, United States navy, to Senator Grimes, of lowa, dated Ship Island, Alas ath, he says: „ Four rams and floating batteries, such ns tho world never before taw, have been destroyed in the late attack. The Louisiana, an invincible esteem battery, was set on Ore and sent down on the vessels while I was engaged in drawing up a capitulation for the surrender of the forte —a flag of truce was flying at the time. Sho exploded within three hundred yards of us, at d sunk in ono mi nute, her eplendid battery of rifled gang being lost to TM Her fragments fairly covered Bort Bt. Philip, and killed a man of theirs in the fort. There was Southern honor for ; ou! That vessel was four thousand tuna, two hundred and seventy feet long, and bad sixteen heavy rifle grins, all made in Secessia.' she intended to take position that sight, when she would have driven off ail our fleet, for, as proof of her invulnerability, one of our heaviest ships laid within ten feet of her, and delivered her whole broadside, making no more impression on her than if the was firing peas. The Louisiana's shot, on the contrary, c ent through and through the above-men. tinned sloop.of-war, as if she was glass. .g The iron ralllllanneeses hit three vessels before her commander ran her ashore and abandoned her. she has been a troublesome customer all through. In Now Orleans, our enaval [Mears found the moat splendid ape charm of a floating battery the world has ever seen, (a sea-going affair,) and bad the been finished and succeeded in getting to sea, the whole Aznericen navy would have been destroyed. She was six thousand tone, two hundred and seventy feet long, sixty feet beam; had four engines, three , propellors. four inches (and in some places more) of iron, and would steam eleven knots an hour. She coat ..M2. gallery k 00.' two millions of dollars. The beet ono I saw floating by one was a dry-dock turn d into a floating battery, mounting sixteen guns, and the entire engine, which was to propel it, hennotl cally sealed by a thick iron turret against shot. bhp was emits, but floated down to Southwest Pass,' and is now aground on the bar and can be easily raised. "Besides thew monsters, the naval part of the enemy's defences at the forts consisted of six or seven iron-clad gunboats ; almost impervionslo ehot, and certainly so against vessel* coming bow on We bad nothing there on our aide but twontyfrail mortar boats, five stooge-of war, nine or ten poor gunboats (in all a little over one hundred and fot ty guns), to contend against two of the most impregnable forte in this or any . other country, mounting one hundred and twenty-seven heavy guns (many of • them •ritled), three iron-plated batteries, mountlt g thhty-one guns, six or seven iron plated gun boats, and nine or ten things got up for the occasion, corn destroyed, and their power never to bo known. * * "Allow me to sond you a perfectly correct tracing of Fort Jackson, nade by the coast survey party attached to the mortar fleet. They acted in the same capacity as the topographical party hold in the army. Without thorn one work would have been tedious. They triongu lett d every potation occupied by the mortar vessels, and it is safe to say that we knew to a yard the exact dis tance of the month of the mortars from the centre of the fart. The enemy never saw us except for one day, when ono of the divisions of Mx vessels was rasced in eight, getting pretty roughly bandied. I moved them under a point of woods, where, with their masts covered with gr; en hushes, and their rigging with 'clues, they were Inviaible. to the best glasses. Oar Bring was a matter of calculation, and you may judge how accurate it was when I tell 7ou that 1,813 bombs struck la the centre and solid parts of the wort a; 2,880 struck in the moat near the foundation, shaking the whole fort to its base• nearly 1,500 exploded in and over the works, and 1,951 airuch about the 1e78..5, in the marsh close around, and in tho Dante and near the water's edge, where the steamers attempted to come. All email boats, scows, and armed bargee, were sunk ; and if the garrison had desired to get away, they could not have done so easily. I never saw so perfect a scene of desolation and ruin, nor do I believe there wee ever such perfect mortar practice. We could clear the batteries whenever the soldiers appeared on the ramparts. ' In fact, no guns there could be worked. This sketch may interest your friends in the far West. It will remind them that the ionuenee of the navy in felt everywhere over this great country, stud *lon the vast riches of the Weetotee States are floating et moldy and peacefully 'to the seaboard on the swift water sof the Id ississippi, let them remember that it was the Levy which opened the doom to a commerce that might have been abut uplor a wearier of a century, and that they can dictate free trade now where they night have been obliged to pay tribute.. "With coy best wishes, I remain, dear sir, yours very truly, DAVID D. PORTER, Commanding Flotilla. ff Hon. JAMBS W. Galars, U. S. Senator." A REBEL LADY.—A. letter from Winchester, Ta, Oates that among the remittent of the rank Seceeston la dies there , le Bire. Dandridge, better known as" Dotty Bliss," the daughter of the late President, Zachary Tatt ler. The lady recently paid a visit, to the prison there, to see some of the rebel inmates, and during her stet had the bed taste to express the benevolent wig) that our iIOODIS might be destroyed by the yellow fever, If not by rowder and lead. ANOMIE, Iio.NITOR --The prepsiittions for build ing en iron-clad shot-proof Boating battery, of the ;♦Monitor model, in Jersey City, are nearly completed, and the vessel 'silt tw canmenced during the present WI elf. The vessel is to he 200 feet in length, 40 feet breadth of beam. and 11 feet 10 inches depth of hold, She it to be built of the exact model of the United States gunboat Monitor, with a few alight 'codifications In ro• gard to machinery end the location of the pilot-house. ENGLISH. 1110E1:Y.—Recent facts have come to light, which shoe that English money Ards Its way South. scarcely a dead body of the rebel soldiery on the tields of the Peninsula but their pockets contained Eoglish A friend and officer of the error, just trent the deld of (4:orations, had an 'English shilling from the Carly of One of the dead rebels, and be secures me tide is e.te cue with ehnoet ell of their dead. Last fall English Bank of Eng. land notes vete very coroutou in lliclar o nnt amongst the rebel niegneree, THE WAR PRESS. THE Wan Pesos will be sent to imbecribere by mail low annum In &titmice) at 82.00 Three Coning " CI 6. 00 FiVO " " II 8.00 Ten 64 " is 12.00 Larger Clubs will be charged at the same rate, Una t 20 copies will oast $24; 50 copies will coat 869; and 109 copies 8120. For a Club of Twenty-one or over, we will send aw „Extra Copy to the getter-up of tho Club. 11/7"Poetmastere are rcaueeted to act se Agents for THR WAR PRXSS. Jalr Advertiaernents inflected at the anal rates. WE lines conaNtote a *lmmo. FROM GE.N, BANKS' DIVISION. DETAILS OF THE FIGHT AT FRONT ROYAL GALLANT CONDUCT OF THE MARYLAND REGIMENT, COLOIVEL MURPHY'S REGIMENT IN THU RETREIT. COLONEL KNIPE A PRISONER COL: MURPHY REPORTED KILLED Tho =respondent of the Now York World, writing from Ilegeratoan, 111 d., on the 25th of May, Gaye; Colonel Healy; the lamented officer of the Maryland let, fereiVod notice of the aPPreatit of the enemy only by the surprise and capture of some of hie picket•. No Intimation of their coming bed been received, and it win, therefore, imponaible to have eupport.d him in etasimn to have provenud the sad havoc which succeeded. But he defended himself through the entire day with an ability and energy which speak loud praima for Mat to the beads of all his loyal countm men. With aclr:ely a thousand men in his command be was comp )led tto sus tain himself against the three full brigades of General Ewell, who bud abandoued his camp, fifty mdea abwo ip the valley, for the purpose of making tufa descent upon a regiment of loyal km ylandere. The peculiar malignity which Southerners bear toward those whom they fancy should be of Southern entipa thies in the Corder States, wad, I think, the Peculiar cause of the unecrumihme disregard of the ordinary humanities of war, which was exhibited during the at tack of Friday. A Boothe:liter fighting against tie independence of the South seems to excite alt the ceurot pedaious of a human being in them. I can scarcely credit the etetemeuts made to me by trustworthy men, and cob firmed by many where of times who experienced and witnessed them, in regard to the abandoetneut of all mercy and pity for a van quished foe. Daring the whole forenoon, and until 8 o'clock P. M., the fighting wee a blow intermittent struggle between the enemy, who wets moving on gradually and cautiously, end Col. Reelyet command, which he endeavored to manage es carefully as possible, saving them from injury, and retreating the advance until reinforcements should come up to his a9ilstance. 9ltnea continnal tight, inure of the nature of a skirmish than a battle, was kept up con ttuttouely during the forenoon, and until the nildele of the afiernoeu Three o'clock, and a detachment of cavalry, one hun dred men, Companies B and D, of the Ira Barrie Gutted, commended by Major Vought, arrived from Stretburg e and reported iudneelately to Col. Reidy, who ordered bias at once to charge the enemy. The cavalry obeyed the order, charging upon them with great force, though gre ally inferior in numbers .but the power of the enemy's Superior force soon sent them backwards, and compelled them to retreat from too charge, ecverely repulsed. The superiority of their numbers could not be withstood by the excellent bravery which wee ebown by the Ira Ranee Guard. 'lwo o'clock Wm. B. Mapes, commanding pioneer corps, arrived and reported to Colonel Ready, who gave coders immediately where they should be stationed, and they continued with the remainder of the little force, doing noble service, and holding in check enocedefnity not lets than six times their number. Seeing the danger of their position, this commander of the brigade gave the order to retreat, which they did in excellent older acres. the bridge of the south branch of the Ehenandoah. Mapes was then ordered to burn the bridge, which wet accordingly Bred by placing upon it piles of fence rails, but was not destroyed, for the rebels came on sa closely and hotly that they wore driven away, and did not suc ceed in the attempt. They soon arrived at and crossed the bridge on the meth branch of the elienandocch, which they succeeded in firing and destroying, but nut, however, in dotalnieg the rebels,-who, cavalry and truantry, plunged in and forded it, and were soon upon the other aide. Soon was received the unweicoute news that the enemy Lad surrounded them, Ilaeiting them with tatty superior numbers both by right said lett. She loyal Marylanders encountered them hoed to hand, fighting when a crowd of rebels were upon a dingle opponent, and instances of individual bravery have been mentioned to me which seem almost fabulous. Ito man upon the field of battle ever managed his eel. diens with more coolness, judgment, and bravery, then dic Colonel Reply. Bid cry to Ids men wad not c • go," but "come with ma," and they did so, every man of them. When ordered to surrender, be shot the one who de- mended it, aid when overpowered and summoned to give up the sword he broke the blade iu halves, was shot womaed, placed in an ambulance, and afterwards—l tell it not on the testimony of one, but of many—while being castled ewer was killed by a pistol shot, fixed at him as he lay wounded in the vehicle. The forces engaged upon our side comprised eight com panies of, the Man lend Ist, two comtantea of the 29th Petineylvanin, two companies Ira Harris Guard, two Pieces artillery of Captain linap`e battery, and Captain Mapes' pioneer corps of fifty. tdarnen. Ore o'clock Saturday morning I wag awaked to make preparation for immediate retreat—informed, too, of the principal facts - in the account given above. The remnant caved iron the battle nt Front Boyal had retreated, and the enemy were known to he in close pursuit. Their movement, too, seemed evidently intended to cut off our connection with Winchester, end we saw, very naturally, before us, the prospect of an enemy (Ewell) in our front, while Jackson, whom we had known to be be hind us near Harrisonburg, seemed more than probably iutendiug to push upon us in cur roar, placing us be tween two tires, each, doubtless, larger than the little command which remained to Gen. Banks after the with dowel of eo large a portion of it to reinforce other lett Expos, d divisions of the army. We soon hearted that the forces of Ewell were on the road upon which we were retreating, cud In front of us. The coldiers received the. intelligence with a shout, and with aulmate 4 faces. Orders to belt, right TRW, were immediately shouted front the head of the column, and repeated all the war down to the other end. In a mo ment alt were ordered to take off their knapsacks, which were hunnolately stacked weby the roadside, and guards were appointed over them. All were ordered forward at once ' elud the men, though ordered to march, moved al mcstat the spied of doublesentek. The infantry were kept somewhat in the rear, until the general and Lin body-guard bad advanced to ascertain its position of the enemy, and the space between was filled with the baggage wagons, which ware soon being repossessed by their timorous potion:ore under the in spiring thltneoce of the wagonneaster's whip, who, en raged at their cowardly rout, was driving them back -with moat unmerciful babel to their deserted charges. Our early and meld march prevented the accomplish ment of their contemplated plan to crash to between the upper and nether millstone, and the disaster they would base accomplished was postponed until the following day, (Sunday.) This In the front. The other cud of oar column encountered the force which we. to have been sent to attack our rear. First the Believes d'Afrique, body guard of General Banks, had been Methanol in thereat to burn the bridge noose Cedar creek, three miles from Strasburg, after all had passed except the cavalry under Gen. Hatelt, who wore yet to come np, and would ford the river. While they were besmearing the bridge with tar, unsuspecting any dancer, the enemy charged down upon them from the mountain on the left, cutting them tip in a meet unmer ciful manner, and capturing all of them except five. Those are the names of those who escaped: W. J. Miller, Wm. B. Dab, Robert Gilchrist, Herman Cling manrßerdamln Reynolds, and Theodore Bard , arl. _All the rest are gone. The others, whether tilled, wounded, or prisoners, it is impossible for me to (too r tain. More information may, possiely, be received coon. The r apid flight of cavalry caused • groat panic among the teamsters, who Bed (tom their wagons, white south upset nein, and otters of them broke down, cattle got hose and mitred in the general stampede. and horses breaking loose joined their neighing and galloping to the great tee/es. The rebel cavalry came up, and more than a hundred wagons were taken posamalon of toy the ens my. Ibe cevalry which were behind have enlisted ranch mete than 1 am able now detiuttely to speak of. 'rhey were ordered at daylight, when the infantry and artillery and baggage had started toward Winchester, ty make a reconnoimance to Woodstock to ace if anything could be hearted of the anticipated attack la the rear. They wore cut off by tire cavalry of the enemy, and unable to re turn. More particidare in regard to this I will forward 50011. Company A, however, of the Vermont Cavalry, were all Jost, captured or killed, except Captain Platt, his lieu tenant, and half a dozen men, who made good their escape from the toile of the enemy moat creditably. Major Col lins is anions the captured. and Major Sawyer, whose horse fell under him and injured his foot, made good his escape with no further injury. The lose in the cavalry His impossible to state at pre gent with any accuracy. After wandering through the roads and forests they arrived in. Winchester by mid night, and the remnant of them were on hand next day. Sunday's Fighting. After a long asst anxious clay's march, preceded by a ball night's sleep, disturbed by uncertain rumors of the dieaster of ()Gimlet Henley, I retired to rest in the teens of Winchester, and dropped off into quiet slumbers, from which, by daybreak neon the following morning, the voices of cannon sad the rattle of musketry, corning in through my open window, brought me suddenly to the consciousness that another day must be broken of its peaceful quiet by the fierce and unnatural pursuits of war. I listened to the souuds and saw the smoke which rose from the bine, but three miles distant. The people with whom I zemained were gazing thither ward as upon en interesting spectacle, rejoicing that Jackson was again coming iota* them from the Northern yoke. During my breakfast I beard the tramping of horses upon the road, and the heavy rolling of artillery over the pavements. Certainly, I thought, there can be no baste; we shall not be compelled to learn Winchester. But I took to horse with all speed now, when the ene my were in the other end of the town, es the rattle and echo of the musketry up the streets and between the houses moat plainly indicated. The confusion and disorder were not of long duration. Gen. Banks, riding continually mane the men, end ecle dressing them kindly and firmly, shamed them to a min sideration of their unbefitting consternation. At length, stationing himself and staff, with several others, across a field through which the eoldiers were rapidly fleeing, the roan were ordered to stop their flight, were formed into line, and made to mach on more in a soldier-like man ner. - What occurred in the extremh rear of the column I am unable to etete with much confidence. Col. Donnelly, acting brigadier genes al—the fate of one of whose regi meets, the lst_Maryland, has been already stated—with two of his regbeente, the 28th New York and bib Oen necticht, is reported, and on good anther.ty, as cap- During the fight, which continued for two hours before the retreat from Winchester, the brigade behaved ad mtrabfy and repulsed the enemy, hut being outflanked by superior numbers, they were compelled to withdraw. Our forces, Donnelly's brigade ou the left, and Gor don's upon the right, were its position along a gorge between two hills. The 2d alaesachusetts eras firing u pon the enemy from behhel a atone wall, when, held . •peeed apon by an onfiladiug fire from the enemy, who had come upon our Bank, they Tad to escape from them, coming as they were in vastly superior numbers. - The enemy are said to have fought well. At one point they came up in a large hollow square, single file upon the front and hack, and double file upon either aide. Iderching up thus to withiu a certain distance, they were ordered to halt, to fix bayonets and charge, which they did in good Order. Col Gordon and staff are safe, also Gen. Williams and stall'. While retreating through Winchester, women from the houses opened fire of pistols upon our soldier° and kilted a great many of them. Lieu t. Col. Brown, 28th ew York, fe said to have been killed. Col. Knipe, 46th Pennsylvania, Wounded and taken prisoner. Col. Murphy, 29th Pennsylvania, killed, and many others. The column retreated, after the sliaht panic to which I have alluded, in good order, pursued by the enemy be ang. The bagage train proceeded al far the Potomac, and many of the teams have been con- Tel NJ across upon ferry boats this evening. The Budden descent of the enemy's forces, though re ally a surplice, was not by many altogether unexpected. Kwell bed been well known to have his camps still lo cated upon the Shenandoah, at Elk Rim. Jackson was also known to beim tbe" valley, upon a road. comonmies tit g directly with our own position, and Johnson was aim:lnm by, having but lately attacked the advance aimed of Genesil Ifr,mont. , A portion of Ira Harris , guard and Vermont cavalry supported the battery in the rear, and Majors Davidson er.d Gal deer, New York, and Capt. Preston, Vermont carelry, commutated them wills coolness and bravery. Ge n. Banks was in the rear of the retreat, and a shell pleded ouly font fest from him, fortunately. without itchy hug bite. Winchester is reported to be burned. Some aminnui tie u was seen to explode. While we were leaving a loud roved wag followed by the rising of a largo sphere MIL en.olie high into the Mr like a balloon. The enemy bad stationed a force at Berryville, to pre vent our retreating towards Harper's Perry, and we were eimialled to take the ,oad to Martinsburg. General Beaky, this morning, on the other side of the river, made a alert address to the soldiers, encouraging them to maintain themselves until reinforcomoote shall be received, which will, doubtless, arr.ve and we shall coon recross (ho river, and drive neck OA. enemy Pets' the ground we halal lost.