lit et :— 4-t MEM :.• , • • -.I:T ' ~440***** 4 411"tiltb*Oltik: 4 14; ' • ' •••• - NUE '.i.::•)‘..:.: , :.iii: . :'!; . ',4 . r . _",f; :;-::...i.1.;:: , ..;,:i;;....,!;;::. :t;i4',..:if.:7,t,'::!'t.1,,.:•,:.• ESE 1;: - - - , ,- ,:•Ji - •..,:ir - c:i; , :4 . .1 , ....• ., ;.!;. ,, i.;:i_ . .::'.: ,- .',:i..:e.::' ,- '.ii ' ::ii..),;,. ; •....,.,..:ii,4„,...':i...-::.. , y, -- -- ~....,:__ ..... .:.4, lIM 's;: . ." MEM : •;,; • ULM liff2lllll MMME :•;.. ."•-•.•. •: ; ; ;:: • .:;;; ;.:!‘" MUSEUM NOME MEI =EN BEM It T ~,, , ..,,,,.4.,NF . ,.• v t; .. ••:-!-•1'-....':.-.:-:1-- THE „. EST caws— zsarear, lfa uroanw trentamrs.—...:.....--;..wrixtes immure . MACKEOWITt MINILAJIT, :nova k. ix , OnAllt 'AMU, PIODIYCZ A D 001111111111011 Yaanaarts, for the male of Flour, Grain. Pork, B. o.4l.wZatmEil:Pt - 0b5.04,20401-141°T' gray /Wien, Potannee, Pot ateiP.earl iteltetoi Llnseerarld Lard Oils, Dried and Green butte, Timothy, Clover, flax sad Orme Deeds. Oialt ammo made oriGongigninente, vkly *.:N0..927 Liberty eth•Pittsburgh. I JRN E. CANFIELD, Comma- MI AID FOSIILIZIIIO Riaosser ead ale dealer WPATERN— RIiARKVA., CHSESK BUTTZR, LARD, PORK, BACON, FLOUR, TIM POT AND PILARL ASKO, BALTRATUB, BLED ANA!DOW • 0118,-DRIER - 1111/12 aad • Produce, nerally;lrar_l4l and ill Vroisfßtroet. PI • 11111. ULP . 113 SiCKPARD, - Cowasalos M aw C MAIM and &Were In FLOUR, GRAIN AND .PRODUCT, No. 443 Lthirty etieet,T/ttebengh, Fa. - Choke Wanda of Flour for %ken aeld Fendly nee oonstantlyrote Pardon*, attention- palA, to: ordei Deliftretrindlee generally.' ocdolly , •;. GI • . ' L K YZODINXBAND J: 0011X1181011XSaniarr, desleriN - 7LOUR, BUT TSB, BROOMS, erspa, • LAND, CHEESE, PORN, DRIAD , IIIIII GBEEN lritiilTid Ind l'ludoce gen, erall7.' , Llbersleishudeunoes toad* do tocalgowesta. Warehouse, No. 11 : d street, Pittstuttatt.,_., U TEK, AND DZAT..D IN . pAITDD . , ' Corwin , Dixid 'Dept and Daquezas Way. . . TA.111U.V;..146V,AY, P4RIAEDREG:AND Et Qiiumat..c.iisace.43rr, FLOUR, USSIIIOBADOE, ,LABD, .BUTTER, EGGS, and Western FrodulD" generally, No. 10 SMITHFIELD STUREfors`ner Fa. • 116 F -Orders and cotudoments sidlelted. jaTElyd. FirrZEIVOICWiIiDENG AND i iale of MOUS,- GRAIN, IpitY.M,LAID,BUTIEB;SENDS,D.BLUD' ILEUM sad . Prodace' generally; 1i0,. 4 15 - Hellcat et, comer or ilret l'lttiburet: 4 " . ' oca:dir • We 50UR1LL51LLieweeeeee.e.—.................. e ...WW. 141111. QCIIOI6LIEFIR , Az, -.1...013, ,Comimxisiox : P.J Maiektiete:ated ' , whaled* detJerp.in CROCE , BIER, FLOUR, •-GRAIN,•• PRODUCE, l'„ Liberty. street. Pittabargl4 oe13:d1 LI 0 lUD 'successor toJiao. ..1.111 . 68141•500,•N0.•183 , 1.kbert, strati,. kitts 110CF.R.Y. AN I Oooalgomenta reopectfully•Oucitta. foMal WM. erstrra,..r.u.—,..essr. wane, larifiTlit EROIII -- Toßvriatore- T V asp - Oqarguitos Nutiuungrmed dealers to PBOVIBLOYiII.d.ND PAODUCEITESTALILLT:Nr" Ldbert streat.,Pittsburgh. , , mrzr . A Qakt, VommuutioN Ilitl80114T; .114.welealei In CRUDE, AHD liillaNN.D CAUBOII, 01.14 , 1114418,,11101L NA/LB, Let, Nu. Liberty d , WAILIVnia"di n Nyp.ir.c.PNIVID.IIOI.I.2IDISII, A. SAS. ', corrraij —r - - • Special Pattner. L.P& - COFFIN; 'successors • -to maiiwoo., - wrtorzsmas ciao— crrot.vivolqx94and Water ilq.ree!a, NOWT CO animeahorto L. G: u gicwhicse JOICH L'JK0H 11 1....,....................D1NAZD House. TOHN.LIIOIJSE it. CO., WitoinWr, ItIF astiatialiro Commas Micamixraotornar of tbisidiuld Wataritzema, Plttsbarwb..P... if/ Bp i PAW_ VN:: - Ite. S.I`.EAVART, Wawa , a+46sacias /46 ocaminis umacagEns, — No i f a : W 7 WoPistrice‘kittslintigh. . . - di • a. ILIMIILIIIML.4.II., 11.1.1111M81C1. REOWINT&•KUUWATRICIES, Wawa &Fait' !Monks 'sad 'dads?* In FLOUR AND SLIM' i3ii.'Drrantl,l,(l3•Liberty street, PlitetAugh. . WA. .1. bON,..Clcums sloaralLiacaurrs fur the We of ORUDX .LND LT, YINILDO•11110NOLLS, and 70 Water meet, PittelliffiAtTddiatireThe pads ocoaelsztarta. - DR rs; . QAMON 'JOHNSTON, DIAL nu Puss - AND OHISMIOA LS. pitsrumsex, reser , GOODS. BUMMING FLUID, OILS, FAM ILY .11.19101111 M, of .tried y prime qual ity, with* he afaut at lowan peke*, (bro., Smith-. bald and Fourth streets; Plttaborigh, Pa. .• Ptiathiptking entatally *unpin:vied at ail boon. • it IM. RAILNWAVVii lX)„ WrsOus• .1./. aasnameasunrattal abausketruma WI/ITS ,LMAD AMD•LLYEIA.BOIL conornl %rood and front stmt.. Mitnharel.. I . • mill . : li 6llXYrJ.'i Wnouts.aut 'NA's* "tame, oir,s, vmuusgss AND' S.'o.litt• Liberty street, Pitt -- aborsh. AU . irfil teeth* p - ro attention. InSl4 MUTER; WEOLCIALIi Ain is i tia , Daireanny m.ner ot-Llb.rtJ and Bt. 11 1, VGACK; 11 ...://08.84 - XLITIMSV. LWP44 11 9:46:aillwa. Woad ; .. fiat. 4e# Aut lirgba rik ~_;, _ a~rolrvrsre: TORIVII.` 11.03CINNELL, - Avroaffirr ..."9 0 11 1 = 1 00 ;1 44 C 47, /o_lo X" Nunn ; .ftiltlooll to fie' aottleitent, •thini - and admit tton ofdottnot /.4 1 4.t tot, an. in Wtn,, D4triF of • - nonlftenuot tort -- • • a • Incisau • - W,P„Eq.MLICKA MELLON •Arrost Poor9l . Olve doors lOW* iuithfield; Pittsburgh Pa. styltdlr , roam; El, ING, ATTORNEY- AND rvisitim m LAT. • Omca, IEO Fourth Emil, mom of Merry rairpPittabirtgb„ , Pi.•t • • STAAtii - hiriE7P_PßViAkti r ify- ATTORNIIi Oman, Tifth-stmelosdjaltdig-IMhiloh it Mar, ohaD k Bram,'Elttab Par-. 1. ; JeEktil .11 41. Tlll Arrosamy • 7 Ad. comanio: ai LAW; bait iatadredlio KUHN'S 1LAW,1 1 13.1.1115013,.1ti0. 12 - Diamond , area. next door t•littlitevehtirch.' 'TaTI64/ • AgrALLUILVIA =ha., Arrosarn AT ,LAkw, No: LIM Fourß, lancet, Lowrie'. Law Bulidlag, PittißiALP mka PRODIPC A. A6TA1111100A.... ' . - ... . . ... LI:C.I. [AWN. . . At A MinliniSOß, Ccounasios ••-• =, illiairiii, derlirato\VZST; • • '. 'AISICIEntIOI3III L .'lrLol.lll.' 1168. BA ' OM - Burnww-vial it 'on., , POTIY-. 7 AND ---.',lll44MillillaSi. c4 46 ,14.1 4 ,1Wk ritITIT ow e : • - .'.sekitiLL,,,i, %M a 1 l'ex i t A it , .. . , 40,7P,...4.4".." ''.. 44_ ,24 .0 4 4 ...,Pmuri stitch:- liaii::. - 116 • 1 - llsamdasit:os7442.l4lV6oolll4:l3aith ' Ik4S;Pitti • tigh'ii' 4 "...''' '''' S ' --' 4 2 .nY . . --- ...; -, WAAWOUSE..`,4I.6.tiIt II A.;corivinixonnkall icc _v.k 0.. mer. Ct chum AiWildilei' In (iasegh.. - - tT 11 ; LAME ... mina& litaiii pualiwosy. ‘... Wq. l •tmet__ , atoo*Wptee Pittsburgh:7,-. -..: '.........,...-,-- ' . .'"W . "iloiat.Es 4, vo;,, . OZ.S._,. rtet• J am- lelds44iitirpitovigotikioenerow Lku.i kit 'sill ifoo4 ignite r, • ; ~.:.,,• 13 .. ' ' - ..„114 , ;:Y... , ... • • -. • • .. . - 1 4 1.4 WEIWITE COFFll4, , Amafx. vox. o..."l=7 , llllionligULC A VD_lt r y wi ci ll 13- lOW= mkt ...t f e,S I MnbF"IV 4x/tog' WoOd sad Atiltgr-Isiorrn 'Waiftl . l ... 2 l ll; An L oiyioso* 'odd n an ta r a 047111C0V0 OTWidototrOtt. zpvtito_ t isvtwoßaTA .7 is urnziotill NitumnalST ,. . ooo , 4l 7. : venni' X.rkat sad WU". ' f r ia9r* `,lsEassrAinr 'am= troyinur.lavg* strait:: jy r usy oai,stmfrJUmurzazi• Asugamiarpr • wo.. strOOL GOODS. waseir....nolini ams....:beirar is'a•routia. g W 1138( q .1 ) , W 8 it ( 41; • .. -- iii - witorop-Do3rßrocrps3-,606 2 ,4i t t A : Vo. 94 lotbar street. .thlrd bonie 'fibbre . - ; Plage', h. r Ui • •LifilaD,. isoioesaor -CPA toadataiddit Co.; WhOltailo atd Sidadrpaidans. Ur wrists ;.Ait lamer DBY GOODSviorth- . Ma army a 'Fourth ond Makaarsea - , .:,..sta- p.eF14414" & " PIAXUSINVar, • o.jiii*O•tAgspetrialtitedsod, WDOES,VS; URALS,. LS ISTAI * GOODS, alga awe Qtly' '74 . 114et shset. PittthorSh. 211trOVITJraft,'.:10::::';'; • 1- - 1- :- .- 110.11103;''Ihrizis ,Tjus• Er sum, Muniatoutis - AxtV Vooas - ,11"0.'77 ... 141051 840 , 14, Fitt/bunch : . • ^BAZ_NarAVRIIIit . &AU; _llickurgs tT..fl'lcit ; • ra , .15 stir Of ~uioaspatt ,s • an', , ••••••,,- - • SHED' 'IN 1786. A4RIVAL OF NEWM" OHICIERING. PIANOS, ; - 'Taro ow 7 octave Rosewood CIIICHERING PI ANOS. mart beautlfel Instruments, Just morived and fur mkt by ` Q 8l SI Woad now 111114011, apl7 't. A NNUAL OF SCIENTIFIC DISCOV -CM. BUY FOB 1862. • last Poems of Blizabrath Barrett Browning; I rel. SIBMIZII with her other works. The True Story of the Barone of the South ; or tht Rationale_ of /be Aztec/can Cbtatilpt. Prison lath Ia a Warettoriae It ilibluttOnk by a Ball'. Bluff Prisoner. Poi eels by- . •vt apBl nR. JAMES W. • ALKIKANpER'S NEW VOLUME—FAITHe' 'eerie& of Dle icourers, by Jana W. Alexander, D. D. THE WAY 10 LIFE, by Thomas Guthrie, D. author of "Golfed io Iseklel,' it.. AIDS TU 'AI H, an answer to Amyl and Re. view*, by Thompeen, Meneel, Rawlinsou, Ellicott, and others. Pcr seek* ' ;! apt% IL. 8. DAVIS, 93 Wood street. V - BW BOOKS, NEW. BOOKS. Jefferson at Monticello; Ondet Life at West Point: Mural - Hours, by 'Johultravirni • : : • LWstas Hours in Town. &Mentions of Countr y Parson. 2 vols.; Lillealmf, by the author of Mariam; Maitland; ¢ Xnquiries in Theology; Tricts for Priev4 and yeople, by Thomas Hegbt • Aids to faith; •• . ' • „ • The Young Stepmother, by Miss Tongs; The Sntherlands; Browning'i Lent. Seabee" blue and gold: " apla BaY k co.,as Wood street. .COMMLSSION 1111310. HAN'S I_l °OD'S W ORKS — ALDINE EDITION.— The Works of Thorned Rood, in pn.m and verse. Edited by Epee Sargent, illustrated with steel , andNittstal entravinga elegantly' printed on tinted Inner, in small octavo. To. ba completed in six monthly volumes. Throb non ready. BXYARD TAYLOE'd WORE.B—Caxvosa Murton. —The Prom ,Beynet llnyhtr„ MI6 small Vtavolumse. THE SPIRIT 91T HEBREW POETRY, by haw Taylor. ( • LEISURE HOURS IN TOWN, by The Country Prt nu. WEDGWOOD'S DICTIONARY Olt ETTECOLO7 GY 4 a am edition. Edited by °entre P . /didah. Pin Rile by • R. S. DAVIS, 93 Wood nt-= UUKS t 800 • ' 1 Medical ISleibtliJettricitr4!-Clerrstt; Recreations • Country Patios; !Queens of Sockry; Spare Hours, by J. Brown, M. D ; Men, Women and Books, by L. Hunt; Titoomb's Books; A Good Fled, by C. Heade; Personal History of Lord Bacon; &Uot Sir Mbitipfiditintyi r • • r ; otel Ilitrflityif—u.' W.' 11611.4 • ! Poems, by Bowe Terry; t Liberty and Sla po TiJ , z_leeleos; Lectures on A Butler; Life and Speeches . Douala ' Histo y of all Itellipons, eta, etc. robt; J. L, HBAD, 7S Fourth street. J115CELL.1.47E1,1713 , CaRD,.4' • OSS FORWARD,. k rronarzx Am) k uovaicciaa AT /all; tiMito otiihilitotalt.weat coiner of Diamond and Grata, streets.- Will..attend WWI Inatome usually intrneted to Malaita - prated. , atom Particular attention even to lb.preparation, and trial of cues in the several Coen:. Colleithmis -romptiv made Ana resettle& A. VEBB it C.noer Pratt avid Cosmerat _Baltimore. General Conuniuton Merchants k Agents DITONT'S GUNPOiinEi *ND SAVITT FUSE %emirs oi3 co=nmeni all kinds' of WISTERN ' 'ARCMS, and eadrapcoa tbanon,„ .. P. B.—ltallroad track to Net oflllaretiOnire. IWllllszo 11. Smlll At Cal " ' ;aiOr a Rickamm. • • ,-; • Marge W.Batith & Co:, 'Pltultrgh, idpeacer a Garrard. 'Culp a Shepard, Agsr.ludits' Bank. ,13,D.1 Fonda boas, UALYLL I it &IA) Si ttw e i rlLYAlON lessasorrs,Surd Wholesale' - Ili MACK NALL, SALMON, rillAD, 1111211,110,C0D2/1311, 4 2.., No. 145 North Whareraamittiesir Ersieand Arch streets. Psuutostrais. ISlutu_basiets Naas Mackorel.4eogsvAnd medium also Noe. 1, 2 and 3, to assorted ;ranger. 50 barrels prime No. LElallficEhlidon, 1N) do Xdoononly Kam &bad. 1400 u do superior No 1 Haring, Ocourfeting of differrad bran.* Labrador, Naha, .114 of Wand and Tantpart, Ac. boxes Scaled and No.l Smoked Herrtugs, IEO3 gob:Walk Goortei 014 Grand/rank Codfish, Which we non offer at the lowest cash pricer, and ibilelt • cal before bluing. MURPHY A KOONS, de4.6rod No. 145 Moth Iritarrns,Phlra. IMIIIN ELLIN° 077 'Ropra4u . k OR RETAIL.:. . W. WOODWELL, ft 97 sad 99 Third street, oppoalt• R Edmondmou d Ca. and lir rourthmen.- zahlo HE UNDERSIGNED have this dok . .111nlant a onsrtnetalhiP ItteutratisElion •of he neer; Produce and tanandinion nualneo, ln.the tend lately occupied by, alackeown s Gregg, No. .7 Liberty Woes, The style of the Arm to be Mc , murorßlL.KPAillExClarmrr. Pittebn A cm_. .. • --- • MAIM %I. ilkl:ALV1104:1T18 'aiul AMMO WAGONS GARDS,NEE'S CA/T8 AND DUAL pifrtr m, , X.I3%,"B,IWICIMitrp, e 111111a40 71 , /VM/111/1.1.:.; •- lit:A=OW4All la " datithabiklilsoall. ***kr."ttPir lb' , '' • ' nick a rederytkiitrees K . tickgi Apeskrakii,, v' i itJ; • • q`Ji • 1 Aipagra.- AND. • atAtitietel hslionst select prams of GUMMI /LAMM:.OIILOW, And kinditrof , LUKUIIING AND, CILICWING.b7I3III.OOOO,IINpfi..i itg&IISCLIAUM RUMS, TUBES, In &ciao great Th-rfin/i I A I - 1 4001 , =MAT, 'AULLEuaiIi .11011 a. c i I.TUGCO • Willt.lattk-i-J.trtg ' VW/US /...7 STIKX.XI AND, liAn . lp , WOBNEII, RAMS DANNER AND "PLASTNNW ,'• -- ,IWONNTI I / 2 3 AND. NANA/WU of aft kinds forniebed on sheet Abliii: " ' • --.-, • All orlon! left at No. 23. Comma street, aix,door• 6:Nit WYllei or at .Piltheira Wall Piper Vlore; No. OIL Wetl "Ira. -wilt b.! prooptlitAtendoel to. t0b221 .. ; .- A .,.,et.0r au..-..-..--,..:.....N.AN. Atiow ' .ta., e L AyELL & ißßo4 . _itztelia ' - i t „„,, , spLuis4s 11 V ILLA, HE.NP-Aflb COTTON OWLS OAIOII4TAR, PITCH, 1108- • IN AND:TARPAULINS. DIJON, LIGET! Apruntairr iiigfALlNG3l,ll64l2o:llllWaterroad tbllroot et ta, MUNI* , - apkdly . l . 1 4,, illik.) 11 ; 1 0; . ellitei • ' .lii , witAg&ToudgaraL 97 Wald streeti corner ! t 4-11 771iti,T. AMY:Ital . 10.4110,11411 - 01.1VOIDST.: maim, =n u, RivoLVERWICITtIiss; EIDIA•• I NOM: 09114 td; so. A lam amortment calltle; above-goods caantantly =band. TAU • - & " - W Po><= - PAczna r kito siut.sss-tir 11.5.00N,-DBLED BUT, LARD, BINNt AND,ROMP PORK e. , No. Ls Fourth stmt. noir ,Pi Nalnal Dadaism _WAIL . PATiss, 'AMU, litia.( Wacitintigt pituburgh. ter D , ;5 7 .,'-EANLitia.;No.• Woozy tem; ..i.b.).(4itivotrarocanci,lrriteloiranc l misGs..44:4l4 l 4wigoorifiat: • AQPI * 4 I /WitiFfiSi I • • 11 1. - -1 444 1 0#4. 407 T105T.11.16 No. 68 Wood amt, door to' pm conker of, Mardi nets • • • / 41,- . 80 /WV " 4 - Q : 10 -INAN PI, , STATIox. liooettisktruptinau,:um Jai Paurrzu, 240. itit : Woolistreet, Pitts • ee3o MM=53=M lt - PA6w J~i4tT qua, Bonus, Kozniiiisi:44itO* kign 143014144 beinfertoutila taiga, 4 Those wishing totornettbott shaway•ito.7roodii, •• • 'OW Wink Oxidibtat sadailoolid olase•par _ ciammikatieskialstarylris st 1147411140; &mad. o6s...firsa.strooorsolo/4.,bila's filithedataM ' WOE .11_4 . cc, • 4. D •LA LA lAL JOURNAL. irif.airos ~11100 KR. . 11. - DAV/3, No it 93 Wood st eat. for tb. od• of Balttutor. CANE AND WOOD °Limas REDUCED PEW Vittstrurgh 6aztftit. S. RIDDLE Be . CO., EDITORS AND PROPRIETORS Publication Office No. 84 Fifth Street MORNING AND EVENING EDITIONS, DAILY, OONTAININO THE LATEST NEWS UP TO THE HOUR OF PUBLICATION. TUESDAY MORNING, ' APRIL 22 The Great Tax BIM . . Tbe Finance Committee of the Senate have finished reading the Tax bill, and will imme diately take up and eonsider. the amendments suggested by. interested parties. A special .dispatch to the New rock Tribune says that no action whatever has been taken. Whether any radical change.wili be Inside is, therefore, of ()bursa purely'• matter of speculation ; bitt the better opinion, in. both the Finance and Ways and Means Committees, seems to be that the bill will be reported substantially in the form in which it passed the House. A leading member of the Ways and Means Com mittee said, to-clay, that he felt confident that the general principles of the House bill would remain unaltered. On the same authority we are assuredrthat the new Tariff bill will not be reported to the House until the Senate has acted finally on the Tax bill. Consternation in Savannah. The Savannah (Ga.) correspondent of the Richmond Dispatch, under date of April 12th, says: The telegraph has informed you of the surrender of Fort Pulaski, and the cone- quent state of excitement you can well im agine. The evening of •Fridaypaa in suspense, but no fear'iaifelt that th Ted e' gal lantry ofthe garrison had bawled the silence of the enemy's guns, which had not'been heard since 2 p.m. yesterday, 'I cannot de vote much. tirakto Abe bombardment, as lit- tliiefinown,,olxmt it itere--mere . hearsay rumors from one who left the fort immedi ately previous to the surrender--withont a word'fraitol.-Oltasteed, commanding the post, and no informatiorta the conditions of capitulation. There is no question that the fire to'which the fort was subjected watt intensely severe. The wild report of steel pointed shot is the merest nonsense, .ana • Parrott grins that pierced a solid wall (well. constructed and firm, of near sixteen feet in thicktiess,) it one shot, is a Manchau- Senism too glaring to Impose upoa any one. •:: I can give you but a faint ides of the consternation gni capture produced: Since the abandonment of the design by the imamy to firing in gunboats from Wall's %,t, the confidenoe of the citizens became . 'rae assured, and the wisest hope! that the . fort, which thereupon -became the key and safety of Savannah, would . be enabled to ' detain the enemy for an indefinite time. The blow has been sudden' and totally un looked for, and equally unprovided for. The enemy will not wait Fong to ittick the batteries about Fort Jackson. Theirlutavy ships hive entered the river itiove - Praiski, ' out high as Venus Point, only seven miles below, and are in plain view of the city of Savannah. How bong they will be able ' to withstand attack, lot Pulaski be your teacher. We will be driven from then, at surely as we now accept the feet of the loss of Pulaski. The city has been in intense excitement between the bold and_rapid advances of the federals and the terribly unnerving taps upon the shoulder which the Brown satellites, under Gem IL P.. Jackson, with out form of law sad authority, inflict: Our citizens (the few who remain) have been arrested on the street, dragged to camp, shown a tent, and informed that theretheir habitation should be. , And this-has-been . done by a parcel of beardless boys, who have been mustered into the State service. Cotton has been removed, Bushes remain ed in store; to the railroad. Ordnance : stores and every variety of equipMent - itai been threwn out and carted to , the Sonia receptecle for garernment stores. Schooners have , been seized.- and . il, seine already' fi lled with earth re ready to be sunlebelliw, in common' 'wi .. the hulls of Com a Tatnalf a fleet,- which- will never, more ,venture Beyond Bev eh river. 13. a The , Fingal, which itrin 11 near Fort Jackson, is also to be sunk, d the 'gun boats,' one of . which is • nes ly reedy for launching-will, if the erie y sooner ad vances, be given to the devouring. flames. Women are leaving, and p li toperty of an kinds is being sent or, and ili' soon, line the Central road from &weenies, tollainm, rendering eyerx log house , s •ahseeiifrose4 wood and satin dematek can , o it. - ' ' ' Iron-Clad Boats On lathe: aria Auprid It is rumored that therebels are building ;two shallow iron-clad. boate At Norfolk, to :send through the Distuil.Swatrip Canal and 'clown the Pasquatink river into Albemarle and Pamlico Sounds' to destroy. the fleet and bombard the canips *et - Genet* :Burn aide. The suggestion is anf alarming one, and we cannot say Oaf it is improbable. The Nary Yard at 'Norfolk ',is, .furnished of the largest and most completely furnished in the United States; the fotmdries and , ma chine.shops which turned out Petal and bars' for the Merrimac's sides . have hail time, since she_was .completed, . .to prepare other bars an.! plates small. vessels mentioned. The Dismal Swamp Canal is navigable for schooneri drawing from four to six feet wbter, and an armed,vessel of •suffieient size could piss ihrough to Elisa beth, take her'imns in there, and then hunt down our heat ip ; ..t4o :Sounds, for. whom, indeed, there would be no escape; ail ~the passage out to sea is not always praclicable. No doubt the gallant Burnside,would'in some way capture ar *argot any ,armbred craft the endm,y,mighf iikainst. him; but it would be better 'Mho !were. not; ex.. posed logic risk;' and the best way to - save ' troirble*oaltllst Olipturof the place where+ alone' therebels lutiertiurneeded. Autchine-1 ry and facilitiss i construct Prinidalka armored 'Oa the coast of Borneo, ' English iirnitOrtritried it vain ftir *Many; years to stop thaptiscif Cf . the Xilays by' capturing and "destroying their 'cruisers. At last they bethottgbt, them - to take. Ipos-1 . session VI -anti intrbnfl where theryirate' Cruisers were fitted out, aid .whero Utiyeoughl jrefuge from in -1 ;1 1 0.r. and since then Mittman are no longer Ma 105ted...;444 Y. Amnia, ?est. The _Taii4eir:ilf The hill introd u ced into the -841 , 6 1 `oril Thifiay, hY Senator Poore oj , of Kansas,l to create • new euerttozy..for the, forag Indian its char - ..i setter, and it excites moll 'attention. Hd prupoile to call thsterritorylannid tihawnett.forliidien.. It lies between Rand sea,and ;Timite Arkansas botindarieitorminliteliaslerg-1 ;. `Mid Uzi western boundary the 2ilihr t ato* ilan of west longitude down, to the punning 24,31 8(1- - and to the Tiflis* annuli ',lontlitel. the Rod - iliei,!nnd by its course to the 'Arkailies' Mr . Pomeroy - poppies to allow the Indians in this. territory 411 ilin;Ofyiliiins,-,of_imhild men In any: other :territory—the right kof , seli'-gliteimenent; at:least to _ theattent of:a local legislature.; -Thi tho klomninir_.:orthe tifititoz7 with thcliower of man ~If the-wandering.and aptimTint'lndia• slatbeitan be:gathered in this_waY, - thelnettitatent, will save R 1,75,4 tad annually; TUE tnlttitu • ' PITTSBURGH LETTER FROM PITTSBURGH LANDING. Correspondence of the PitUborg(i Gazette. ' ON rag BATTLI-FIDLD, PITTSBURGH LANDING, TENN" Friday,April 11th, 1882. Knowing that you and yaur readers crave all the details of the late battle, I propose .re suming a correspondence : w hich was broken ' off somewhat abruptly about the latter part of _December; but I will not pretend to describe the battle—l am not so vain as to attempt that which requires a thorongh.knowledge of military affairs, and a conception of the de signs of the great Generals on both sides to convey, with any degree of correctness, one of the most extraordinary battles of the present war; for such it will be written down. I simply.intend to relate" what I saw on the morning of the Bth, first informing you , that we were hurried on to Savannah on Sunday ) by the incessant booming of the cannon, which we heard plainly at a distance of sixteen .. . Miles. Generals Nelson's and Crittenden's Divisions blocked up the way—the roads were horrible,the • worst -we 'have. traveled over; however, the trains were hauled to ono side of the • road;;the Divisions swept past the trains, halted, inspected the firms, and after issuing sixty rounds of, cartridges to each man, resumed the march with Increased vigor. Gen.. Nelsen managed to .reach the battle field on Sunday evening, -where be 'rendered most efficient : . aid.. Venerate ,Ctittenden and McCook began to embark their commands abort I.o'cluek A. in., on Monday, the last of the tatter's Division arriving upon the smote of action at sunrise. The battle 6f:the 7th. began at the tame time, and continued...with outintermission until .4i o'clock bathe even ing, when the rebel' were totally rented:: All this I presume you have laird. And now to desCribe the carnage as It presented it self to me en the morning of the Bth. • The line of battle extended over eight miles, par allel with the river, and: theground really oc cupied, and contested . jack by Ace, from the ricer to the extreme front,varies Iromfive to six wiles. On the sixth the rebels began where -I sacrum encamped, five mites' from the river; and drove Grant's men io thsedge Optiorieir. The next day the rebate ; wore driven .- back over the same ground. -, . . TOO' DaitLl-Piii.liUtt TUN STN. i I began at the. edge ,Of. the, river, on the marling of the Bth, where our men fell thick-' est. They lay in heaps, in ail the attitudes described a thousand times. by the pens of ready writers. Even then great number*" had bein buried , ; still the bodies of the - dead were lying over the ground everywhere oisfettincod to look. As a general thing, our. men were killed by musket-balls and buck-shot. Very few rebels were to be seen within a mile ef the river; occasionally ther were tO brseen lying side by side with our .men, as if they hs,ld fought it out hand to hand. • I looked at our poor fellows a little while, and then hur ried over to 'the middle of .the battle ground. Here the rebels lay thickest, as they fell. In the open fields, in the - ahappausi and in the heavy timber--eierywhere they lay ' thickest'. I tried to make* ealextlation at this point, add I am safe is saying the proportion of our. men to the rebelsmaa five to eight. To the left of the main road,' litter: about one hun dred and thirty rebels ising'ia a Sow; with net. • 'single Union man near them ' .aillaid out is if ; struck by is 'tingle volley of musketry, for. they were all laid low by the unerring Minis bsll, and scarcely tirle feetapart. There they lay, their feet towards each other, some an their faces,ethers upon theitibeeki; iihorribte illustration of the method of Fining men is raj r4nks: The distance from the first body in line to the last was• very little more than a hundred and ten yards. Beyond the amend field from the river, and in a narrow spies jest sue:lent to enable the men to work their ' guns, cleared by the axes' of 'thi relentless; rebels, I enmsbkd upon,,theirreck of the Ten -ssee 'bottom frnm - Valatitia. :Our men Eld: e already taken the gen away, but • tlterfeley tirenty-seven men and twenty 7 sl o o horses, in al circle less than one hundred feet; the horses: abet down-in their , harneer—the.. men (and, brave men they were) lying amongst and around them, all riotims to the Musket ball. t exiuninci 'ilia laidifiS of all of ' these, and I did not find one with a biallet:tocaow the India. AU the wands mere its the Dreamt, dead and deck.. The homes, in - many instances, were /hot square in the forehead, and; in foot, two+ :hills, if not three-feurths, of the dead rebels were shot through the heed. ,you will say hit 'this Mould be sdilleiMit tcl Satisfy . a* en's curiosity ; but I don't know that 'Ciao' ere curiosity that urged Mr. en, arer this orribla same of carnage, from-morning till night. In 'through the &apparel, or under- Eowth, and throughthe heavy . timber, everi here, I stumbled upon thrdeiol rebels. '.Oa atonally I would *stop,to count the Dumber be seen around ore Iroin one spot. - un Soria-, fgi I would ' count eleven, nineteen, tirtoutyt' e, and in one place leounted twenty-nine, nd this, remember in theleavy timber; the last number I oouuted in the °hoppers!, where t woe impossible to seta man . standing up at. he dilemmas of 000 hundred yards.- :Bat' you ihould ser this chapparel ; growing up - like a F re canobreak; it is-Uterally mown down at about !three feet from the - gronad, just where'- the shot would prove most effective' 'upon a body lof troops:, _,., • ' , • 1 And Ahem the rebels, lie now, sa - I write, Iliteraly_torn to pieces with. grape and ennuis = .i [ter. many of-them half scorched, some barna, Itd a ;lisp where the deed leaves ignited, thus 1 'reediting * the 'poetic% ' ',tip' Mine moral. .i Every here and there .enciantered our. men burying the dead bodies - of the snit trenches from twenty, to slxtYllet in fen Some of these trenehei are numbere d it 138 ; but they willaverage abeat.4o; u About a mile from the extreme. loft of ...the line of battle, and in the edgi or the choppers', I etmidestly.eante upon seinn:; deed robots iying„ in a send.cirele. One gl a nce at their hostel& bodies told me the whole story., Whit! grotiPing together, a - shell" eiplOded,ln' their midst.. *Char, tostroUlstiungd the number ,Of horses lying dead .over the, gronnd, At - the very lowestita borer fell for every, man, and rkey..fell by 'ammo& 'l. know nothing about the i esti:nate—earn :hest i It mill snorer ,he known •jilts' how many rebels were slaughter, 1 ed. ' I think it would pulite anyone to count the bodies yet lying between • our 'II , II.IiOUS camps. I only know that the- most extrava- gantideseription - 1 - ever heard - or Ike:mai° fade to.'dine 0 U. th - e'imetilM thaViwitats4a arom a ' , ocio.-,_1i,0 4 „, and ridiP,iiiiii by . add - , both drag in the barna*. 1 Dirie t aal ibex oossiaf their Ittoliiit , here testify to great, Mimicry: 1 . Th. - up ' all, hereto' and men lay like fallen timber.. It would: tartars &Anne and exhaust the p tante of hitt - Ades to.pidde n . . , ; TOW= OP TAIS1111311.5:' ::'llllbilila Ulf/ Hooted at, I seldom found a mart: elder , ttuta Anyeelfk . ll would set their &rarer Top down. oftlienty two.- :-- Briny, 'too 111.11Mr_wers_mers Ws of eighteen' and Itinitass.... ant, they , weretre. ntarkahly , welt ..develeped. r dne, Limbed, end featured, and anything.bat 'slovenly in their habits.- -I-bared-the breast& of: many tti- ace 'tbeizeik 'Of. the' hail. Such Ile thadi Ouse under °tithing were as clout:6i the inii 'eh* foughti thole :who *ore -silk - tinder ehirte /eery' lbw- Indeed; and Letdelaniaasi the Fide of their State,) were perfeitieodels orneatnees end With the exemption of a 'yeti few Alabhire. inns and Louisianians, the rebels dntised •In blattipmateolored psalmist& coat Oilaelet; a grefai wore': coarse 'black cloth edit" - , and nearly atl wore the slonckfalt 711 *105E3 4 FottlArfill Of the ;retitle'timed -at pserpfs; black the' face, befort - ,Tnisday momint.' The story goes that they. wen' given. a vast! of:whiskey an -the morning 'of the 7th X doubt the_mixing StillartiOar .:bne I satisfied myself that they. had_whiskeyibr their elitteeni ' or'saniething that smelled like( it Many of their • canteens; ars Wl4 Very few of , our men have taraerd bleeinaT hare ; nte t zlozen; while it is cults cowl =On' 'that: suchil carpal* that of . a twee, at the riesetrabelC beforq the, straight : hair or the whits limbs Is oirl seried:►! Many: oritlie prisoners confused toj that Aievrimissd a 'qiatt... of . whiskey; on the mishit `-of ;:ths;..seventh. . it possible that •; WIN drunken ; • may would .. i tarn i blaok sight ; bolus aftury". 4 4,l,4 fkisithWarniatf :Thep Atwteiffirduldismhmt - spoil -saidem. "-Xs 9w 4 ,904. WiL,,WO94 4 1 rain se something to do with it. Still, how does , it the overcoats were taken out of Grant's troops happen that our dead differed from the rebels tents on Sunday. in appearance? - The rebels were so sure of thrashing us that they slept in the camps they drove Grant's "men out of—ate their rations, end were care ful not to burn the °good tents" they had captured. Those same tents are pretty *ell riddled now ; they begin to look like the flag of the 34th Illinois, and it is as liinp as a dish-cloth. II A private teed s famous shot) in C0.8,',7,th Penasylvania, while skiriniehing; by direction Of the Captain, devoted his! attention. exch . . sively. to amen who had fired tines times at . the Captain, who had too - many things to at tend to'at that Particular juncture. The Cep.' Min had ventured to try is hand on the man; 'but the cap.maapped. "D.," said he, "do you , see,that, scoundrel shooting at me?" "Yes, I I've been watching him'sometime." " Well, take him down, then," replied the Captain. Private D. waited and "took the man down" suddenlY, the secesh falling heavily after throwing up his , hands. When -Co. B beat them back, private D. picked the man up, 'enquired how he felt, propped bim against a tree; and'taking.a button off his jacket as a sounsair; proceeded In search of other game. Shatp shooting is nothing but a sortof a game after all: Thu whole lino saw private D.. do this'and another thing similar to it in a very feW 'minutes atterwardS. - - . HOW OMB ltistaTiVE POUND, ANOTRIW. ' Passing the 26th Ohio, and enquiring of the Colonel (Fite) . where McCook's Division"wat, he directed my attention to his adjutant, a remarkable preposessing officer, and as fine's specimen of a man &Sone wouldmeet in a bri gade.' As the various brigades go into camp; :they are coatis/fed to bury the dead rebels off their own camping ground—in some cases . sift, an undertaking. Passing the.regiment a few minutes, before, I observed, the 26th at Chia business, and also noticed a man half env erect, withhis, name in; Indian. ink upon, his arm., ,Ile . was above sir other's, and ` the Men were tiring :of therr'.aboveling„" when'. one 'of 'them observing the •nan,' on the .arixi; Called •to theAdjiatant 'to "Caine to . lie eome of his relatives. ^' • 'The Adjutant hastened to' the' spot. - • He bad paesed that Particular corpse perhaps fifty times on that day ; 'now he ap peared disturbed.. He looked at the bared arm, saw the, old soarer and turniug to the .mele Oro and said, " yes , it my brother." .Doaens who knew the dead man crowded around at that moment alio: They ill, reoognized him' '-, 411. this Omar:rid after I pleased them,' and in in' ifittirial of - coarsely ten Minute!: r for . Col. Fife - related it tome when I spoke to him. '1 I did. , look- et the Adjutant; and , like the I Colonel, I /,k for him ; the first soft-feeling: I experienced that day. Who would siotZt I. wanted to, see the end. The Adjutant ,exhi titled no Softness . ' hit his Mariner' betrayed ,bin menial suffering . .Themezelifteitthedend ' rebel very reaps:Unity - indeed: .The,y, dttg a . grave, a deep one, , and a ft er laylug the,corpse out regularly On a tent an the - ground . ; they buliedit alone, hewed out an immense pp in, the tree at the head of the gre , re aid wrote ina plain inscription therein, 'To' the mein: ory of--: --)—.." The rebel brother started for California two years ago ;. stopped in Mis souri,, and this lathe first news . the, living brother has heard ortini shred: -. '' ' - put I have made this. longer than I 'intend_ tAe ,in beginning. In conclusion . I will add t, notwithstandingour great advantage on 7th, we • aro - Making' preparations ..for another fight ea a larger scale. I have said nothing about numbers eitliiritaintay - or the otheil.' - Whether the rebeli - nriMbered '60;000 -or 75,000 on'Sunday ; whether, as the prhon eis say; they - received a reinforcement of ..25,.i. 660 on Sunday night; whether we outnUmber ea them ' or they , outnumbered . air; I will not pretend to say. 'We all - - .say here that you know, all about' it at home, and , in any. case I ventere to say nothing. I may inform you' that;a good Philadelphia or New York paper; °reran the best Pittsburgh paper, would be.worth a dollar to any of us—perhaps ,fits. W e want 'the news more thin you de. I P. S'..i. forgot to mention' that- 1 -Liesten- Mit (?) mime:to.•cis time yesterday, with a Sag ;or truce, requesting information concerning llens. Johnson and Bragg.. I hope be got' it. e think they are used up.• And, by the Way, e report heat night was that the bogus Gov , ' wilier of Kentucky, .another of that ,good, dame, died Qf his wounds. :It has rained er elry.ttight alma the battle. Our Men are ,liiv4 wanking—eorneoflhem lefttheir blanket ba7 Hind. Without .tents aid, blankets I. .64 . tight is enough tekire iome people I-cane:4l'w ion.. The rivers' and creeks 'are eternally, in ith way. A whole week bathe rain. 'When 'my bring bring np the trainer they should tiring at set One train loaded with 'cough' candy:- -L.! The prisoners confess that this was a test fight ; that they had their best Generals here,, and that they were completely whipped: They way. they had Beauregard, A. S. Johnson, Smith-, from the Potomac, Gen.. Van Dorn, and Gen. Bragg They state, furthermore, that the first named, assisted by the others; . made flaming speeches to them, representing that unless they fought their best the cause was lost; that a fight of two hour., on Monday,' would drive us from the field, and more in the Same strain. Many of the prisoners taken belong to Savannah, where they are now in "pasture," under ohargo of a Captain of Cav alry. now rue PENNBYLVANIANS 11611AVED As there wan but, one Regiment of Pennsyl vanians in the engagement, ('ho 77th,, Col. Stambaugh,) and but one company in that regiment from Pittsburgh your readers may desire to learn how they !conducted them selves in the fight. I mubjoin the following statement, as I received it from COL Stem-• beugh,,almost word for word. • : "We arrived on the ba . ttleleld About sun rise. The battle connitinced ( pn our left Wing directly after_We Cilllo on the grrOiiiid, withJa" stunning roar of irtillery andlniteketry. • We went under fire at ninett' thit time the fire raged elcinr . the Whole' line,..tirith :the most astounding racket ima ginable — shot and shell flying in. every dirsetion; 'bursting, , tearing _ , off branches - and twit*, amilniome hunt:ices . 'large trees - in every .direetion All around us,, We came to :a charge, within ,lit volleys of musketry at 19 o'oloclr,`from both, sides ,with" tremendous carnage. The 3fith 'lndiana was on our right; 29th Indians and 77th Pennsyl j -` yea . * in the centre ;' . while , the 34th'Illintrier was, op our tiftl,'-'4nt • brigade fOrmlzig thnex trereeileft of din - line; of battle. Oar men eto,ld right tip , to. the work until , . they wore eho down; neither side - yielding .JanlaulLJ At halt pact the rebels gave ground rt very, little. leohly inch:they gave back, °vulva ; steadily, altheinghtmpereeptibly,,adVanoing, until about aletap n'clook, at, which time we b et gairradJpertispit a quarter of a mile:. he, enemy ; .than attempted 4"enifisink US,' which . _ lief ' nn,to' maneuvering, and as ''We chs'eigid'Onr iiiftlrde we concealed' our:raver In it manner that enalided is' to 'meet ' the en emy ' unexpeolikllY,.arid. - jast at he- wan con grattlatlnn hit:itself sztiontheaohieviiment of. hisobjectiene of our reginientamould rise up and confront him like Hamtat'a Ghost-pour k ing inenoh tremendops volleys that he would invariably fall - back in every entounter....l/y twit o'clock in. the afternoon 111$ • hid. driien the enemy beak,. fontrilles; Here ive rineOttn tired itvet7t.ii‘ge forte with several batteries; of 'artillery: ;At the same time the Sixth Brigade 'eerie ;np, driving the rebels J before' them' at a furibua .rate; the ~ rebel. rallied ho ever, • and joined ' the J force In - front of no. Hthey made their final charge after ~lull of 'few seconds. JAt thetime the charge was, to de, our hrigade, ( the 6th, tinder command of o!. Silk of , tha. 3o / l inbirr) was ReatiliallY • i i situated... The 39th had ., was on the right, " this 30th ' next, then' Hui' 34th';; tietween Which ki"the 77th 'Penn.,' Wari a 'battery 'Of ; Parrot ng..The 77th way ordered 'kill faitherit.,. the left, arid tent vpripoeftlonfortalog a line: pMpendiculer to the linnet the trigridn Mere; Cd B, (Capt. Rose,), was =ordered out' as 'kir, • mish.tre and &dreamt-to:within. one hundred yenie of • the enemy% .reserve, Jeledvieerly to. tlYsseat of , thet.etilin ealittilit of Via, erlerity• . "At. thiejunplars, one of OiOxobef.fiatteries opened on AS; ,1111 t. the greater . porti on of the shrills buricimmedietely over our heeds', doing little demerits; the regiment. - I'ho rebel in jifiltry in front r doithled Jeolumn, 'chiliad in s, and made a most fearful charge 'on the ntre Of ear- brigade. Company; "II" was then elope on the flank of the enemy's column. e Captain. as apparently an anxious spec-. Tire of the whole. movement; for, at this juno tare, our .brigede,harloti reserve, and it, wag evident that, the:enemy, intended breakingour lines to get to the, rear. :Ittihad tiled il day . ,to outflank 'sr, : and' kid 'foiled) ;this "w his last disparate 'reaOrt.: Thei.einte 'deem \ like * t hese, resistieke mane—the centre began ', to , give way, but with great regularity. J Company "B" was then'lying right in the teeth of firs regiments of the rebels, who were held inie-. serve; and who also were Watching the name. Movement, ready to pounce .doin upon . My , skirmishers like panthers as soon as, the id, Venting colunkliad. effected its Oilft, . At that moment, Capt. Perriribettery came up, and opened in the . finest stile 'I ever" east ' , laying right through the enemy ' s advancing asi;' the batter y In our rear also -began' to l l play ever my ekirmiSher's heads - on the , elm y's reserve. ..Capt.' Rise, Isithe satite,time, are the signal (with the bugle)lto ZOMMOIIOII riot, and owing to his aloes proximity to the tnemy, he did: great execution.; Copt. R.,. at hat moment,'Srae peel/Harty the mark Of the lhirp-shoo taroon the other side,. hin si gnals drawing their attention to line at once. Bal let after billet: arifstled pest' his bead; one panty one etruok the bark of the tree where he was leaning within a few (Lichee of his eye t—he got his cheek skinned; that time—notice It when'you eel him. One bullet went through Pie blouse,pookethis breast pocket, cutting , fhrough's couple of letters he received from his Wife.' My attention' was Called tiothoir matters for the fight now raged with tremendous 'fury, ri all aides, hut the rebels spon tle's to, give way, and the final ' charge Wait made j by the' i77th Penn., with the ekirmieheri in advet*. I ,who took a great many prisoners among iothers Col. Battles, a resident of dashv ilk, Tenn., and commanding.the 20th;Tennessee ans ; also a rebel Captain,• a; cavalry officer,. who gave his 'Word' te Capt. - Rom. ;"Bettles got on his dignity—wouldn't surrender' to' Capt. It., so thitCaptain. brought him to me. Finally • cavalry-regiment made .'s dash at us; but one orlt4ro motive: sentitheretlying in all direethoe suit thereat or the reboil was complete.'' j j - Ton Mei' he lintel hurried; to' see the boys. 1 I hive' libard'iltd."Stambangif• praised by sev eral.; long before L found the - regiment I was told by normal cinema his'equaL in:rank/that he and. hid men :were :very eopLancrop, the mark; that he ter/led-the ra.Vallf.ifiatik at,PW Anal. eharge as eoollysts if .neiwerion parade ground,„.,col:Kii,lotad.,hinlio . reiii shot under ham, mounted another„andat that instant re- °lived *lnitial! In hie irgia'. sheuldoiji which puled ''ltiroii . hie 'right tirisagrti 'acid lift' in ugly tear there .' He Is not"odetliderted- din. , german' His Major; Le,anaway, every/gil -1 lent offieer,had his heed ehot off while leading a:charge, Jand.juin as rim- was crying i"Por- Wert 1',....: , ;: J - J. r., ;, J - i ! /;4;:: _ L ,have mot linireed,--the,l Mal amount Jot kills ; 142A,Ir.quwivi, in the;b4.;,l3itgadiekr have an Adsa,of..tho lime in deo:..litoCobiei Division. , In the . Bili'Brigede; the 34th ' HlT nobs ' sailed 'the ,mOstj the - 34th and thetilti Indiana had the hardest' tiliting '. ' The' 34th I kit istiontlweittylifen,lllld 1000/ Wittily were wounded "''The rttle enlyieer throe men-;: the meant of wounded is about twenty, ;J: = , l ' Sikh:rawor ?tut - wountin outennernamtream , 4' larie 'percentage of our ofectii were 1 wounded, but. itla remarkable that very i of the *Guide .iire Sviriene. bitho stentiere,; in.thii strietiretElavainah;• in emr- hespitals, ' everywhere - you meat our men witikaerriet" 'matched; st.nect.tir ,lou_sertarik n putter or; thumb . Ant 9E 4 :4 1 ,01ns ont,iLette, hundred wounded men you wild net And - itx who will: be usiablistelperfitra datYmalarinside of a month. •Every , one rentarke: thin, .. On:J . :the; other hand the Wounded reboil' (and airhavel plenty it ttea).th'Aitit:Poso*N4**4,4ger-: onsly wounded:), ~ I j- ,,,, r,"..J.j; , i' ... 1 sartnitiniaJor vtot - Mail:- - Rotusesn'i brigade in irdlook's ! loughtlike :41enteral kf 4t., provionrit:. sending his men forward, took dis,regithildan hat off kis head, put it on the point of his sword, and vravingit aloft, rode op and down the line u he rho u tad, :!!go right ahead boys era It to-them 'them 117 and they did goes it i eo,•itaU iota the world knows. • '. . ' feet that ia:Met i f.dhit.r!awiptiried Gen. Crittenden of a itlitiireddeee arbir•wile it his side. Offleer takes entitie eau, itirbn, .araTles tind replier. No sir.' That's iiirtenr 11 ,0 ie_fe white spot tittliroentrei y o a obeerro." - Tha dag was t"warklng" tirtber4 middlo of a mai of Lien Who approached the General aid nie informant. Illtelinal Amor looked again. Certainly it waa :all right-Za k ,: men wore 61escreer000te, When the men /It "blue aoate! , Leastio within idiont4Wyardi of 2 Gen. Oritundoa, theysuddinly via lid draft theta:: Of amuse the General, semen se the n a te :L ie avian. boudnou ertlitirdttierr side otthi lad that tegelled theUl 'inbetboty at; tantletlir: , The "black' nag. purred • tdu imp s • =IEEE GAZETTE Important. from Cairo. 1 The following iv a special !dispatch to the Pins-M . IMA Oiesivereial: ! • ! , . . , . CiMa,„, April 113.—The. eteamer City of m 1,.. • . . emphis.reaehed Paducah last evening, from Pittobargh, with 700 wounded. She was sent to ._ Louisville. ' Among the wounded was Capt. ... . . : . 11. Polk, nephew of Ea-President Polk,: who participated in the battle and was severe ly 'wounded in the leg.' . The - surgeons held a Consultation on the passage down, and decided to amputate it.. . . : •. ' ' .. __: dust as we passed the Mouth of .Duck river, at -noon yesterday, we discovered a , row of burning building,, and a large number of . Confederate 'troops, uperihighiand in the rear: - A ' abort Abate:lee; below ' we ,diseeYered: the ' 'teameildinntiliihii!rounded to and lying on steamer bank; with white handkeichieftindlltige!. laying from the hurricane deck.' '" '.-- , ': ": • .' "-1 ' Upon ehquii7 we learned' that abs had taw fired dfito' by rebel - esialryi mile *here the, building' were burning, and ono man wee se- - rarely' wounded. Soldiers on the steamer landed, /Lad fat fire to the bowies *amok the volley was sent, but out/1d not reachthe . mis- . , ; ails, , The, Pettip,'. eras - .also :llreil. into shoal i daylight...tri-day.' No one hurt. The retell i very eingularly"respected . our hospital ! Sag; 1 - and allopredueta 'rimmed Unmolested; '',"-- • t , General Mitchel, a few days after leaving I Huntsville, made a:descent upon Decatur, and burned .the ' bridge .of the Memphis:. and - Charleston railroad which spans the .river at that point.: Ile tore up the track for a mile or more on either ei4e, of, theFeneessee, and then marched his.forces.to ; Florence, where he do strayed another bridge. The dialers of both structures, hist...ltalie!' ! aid charred by 'nisi are continually floating :Pest Pittsburgh. r bejdveic le the Intention of"Gea. Hai+ leek to advance slowly : and surely,'Attd-- par tietilatly to guard agaillit surprises. i 'Me each disgraceful and inizoniable -blunders as these perpetrated.' on :Suridayl - will :again: happen whilebe Lein command. :, • . ..., ;.: „; ' ~, ~. , The _exditaideatigaisurt, certain" ofrumr4 is intentick arid , charges ,Isive. been. preferred Which ; will saildlia t 49 riArdiao4l4'...,*f the islabghter where it rightly lielidge;, - , The riedi,Siest of Pittsburgb'are eredrablii,' Satire rapidly diyint , Mider She influence ' of the "hot southern mai.' ' '' •" '• '-- - 7 - , '-, :' A battle la imminent, and oentqA 411 311 be . delansd: • • ......Leforseddiertfrows Corinth to the 15th, **nisi) sesetted:Bayannah, und is deemed re-. /fable.., The person . tete rred says, that the xebels.ennalder the affair of Banday sud *Oa-. day a, of Unequalled brilliancy, and it.is 'skeins u wonderful effect upon the people. rThe movement furnishes (Drente/table evidence , that the rankeet are not irrealnemble: The Bentham heart: te.• Area; iefiforee 'manta are pouring upon Beanregard at an Un-' exampled rate:. .11e hue onehendrad tkoniatid men at his e•mmand, and is fortifying. , Co-: Muth., building Letrenehments, rids pita, and .tionstsnoting abuttle,of trees, , ' .•. The rebels entertained no doubt of i znimMe the next time., man encounter be pieyoked. . We , lostthirteennieeet of 'isiSllSY4faithe t late battle, end captured fifteen.: • • Smith le dangeirottely iii stabil reetererY•ix doubtinl2,..•-• • The Wonededln'bospital at' IMMMISSO• are ,dying it thirata.of eight or .t.im deify." Mr. Paddock, of Willartra baste:Tile dead. There in no fanndation ler the 'report of .fien. .Rreettas . setae°. . • • The greater part of she': tign Witioy:`,l , a nd -Fourteenth . _ Fifth, end ynaty,thlia:lll4isoini (Ai:lima 'with "A - rribet Kilo:ter . who •socampanfist olia:Pnna: the 'Dlriiion to Corinth; at onir thilluards; tens me - - The 'steamer Planet strived iiPadttesh; wertalog, With thl fls t Ohio, on rot le - for/OM *onelsera.; nista one of the nes:mats that tiiiirsosd rho Stata CO the Their colon! have been Lapp .frgia ,tthem,, : • Ferris, Cch:4: ,T, t'alr/Ilionli, shot ilLtitithe lungs, , • .at t o Pas Tiikhent Sato ,P =EI morning, ten rebel sympathizers, WhO hare' been nuking secession, speeches nrSoithern Illinois, and advising rebeldom. en the.pari of.- the Egyptians. The prisonerir roasting, one - - of them was shot. They- will " tried punished speedily. • , Capt. Hudson, belonging to tla 17th Nen tacky, fell overboard from the Pattin, on hew downward trip, and was drowned :''.-.' The 77th 01/halite laeffithibUidtland mu tated Out of the service. ' - •'' - ' canto into .deserter from Deauregard's army canto into Sawannah on-Wedneeday, and says that Gen. ?tic* reached, Corinth on Satarday, instant, with what he calls, 30.00 a men „and' that ; the .rebels were wary ' much rejoiced itv consequence: " Hreports' the rebels'' badly whipped on Monday night, and says they. were nearly demoralised,-.ltualirod-Johnson died, from the wounds received at Pittsburgh, on Sunday night, bottle tent at Corinth; cur informant sage that the 'people' ho Siresela' looked upon him as no better - thaw tke ; Yal - • :keel, and rejoice at his death.. Wm. Nelson, of Taylor'statter7, died last night, at Mound City. • " '-• There is a marked difference, -in the `treat-z went of rebel,and Union TourAed claque.: - Capt. Polk, of the relate; by sPeidal " nation of. Dr: - Sinitinii.ef- thellniteCtatitell' Army, taken into: the - tidiest, cabin, - .olthe: steamer City of Memphis hadireated.WkiN4he utmint attention' being:Ted upon winea..sn d deliituies, and 'Wads' the receiver tifattehdtion, - - froM nurses, while our own.Offlokrir .efAiwa rank, were compelled to liean:theguatils and, subsiet pilot bread. Dr. Simone hi directly responsible for this state of affairs:- Ha 13 'l6 native of-,South Carolina, and his : cotirse,le meeting 'With the "severest; oondenination on . , the. part wif army ORiteollll , and Others. , - ID I IRE , DISIXA.N.CA•Iirr T}l Akatt,„'. ANON MUTUAL INSURANOI • COMPANY; ; Or ;PHIL ADZLPHOuiIa-BUILDENGE, perpetual,. 14 . 11 /CHANDISI,IUNNITUBB, Att, ht.,... towDOT 'country: - 0111ne 'W6 Blelnutoteset. - Iltirriazi.s229,6lof 1302,506 91 , 4nrestad d - f Finn ' • • ty. wor abli tho 000 ' , • Ground th. rent, first . . 2,41 f 6 Patina: 12:a. Co.'s per %F.! f, Loan, VOA% wet. 27,900 00„, Citi of PlillaWALy- 6 'per - nerit.'ll.n.:.: 69,000 ; 00 -Allastpny, cenintp 0 per ; ct.. ; P. AL " Coliateral betub,,well secured— • 00 " limdlulPlOn and; :11znad:Ttp. Mimatalc, r . Baflrwd c4thAny, mortgage VOO.OO • Patinsylvaida , BOroini-Qt.'s Stank.' • 000 txj Stack of Bahama Kan* InnoszteA9o„, ALAN; pu:. Stock of Countyyl.. Inenkanes : 1,060 • Stock of Delman M-11. Insulanos.thiat,-- - TIM 00q!tt • Oonunercial Bank do 6,816 at*.b.ithir togs 154k.7. .llnfon N. Insarane• 004 a 160 00 BWsßesetrib* bnilneiipapsr... • 16,297 . 800,k41/. coquits.aourand.intoreat; 5ta..„„.. ,, 6,211 723.: - Car on hand and In hands.ofaenta„.. - ii,ass 16 I ' • qtact - '7irsratsir, =M. • •' i lan Clem Tingley, . B. L. Channel' IllephriacZ •••• 1 •• .. ,, Z. Canon Wm. Tha . Lottfinp, ,' • . i. '..,.• •.:..-,. „. :•,;. Yobert • illr,. : ; .••,....., frederick.alfr r hr ;.• : i.. :Irma*. uunigi ,-.. !: •.:,1,, Wm. Moaner, Jacob T. Bunting, . . C. Brarisia6o,• •• k , I • O. B. Word:. r • ~ •-.), •.1,71, &W. W,..TiNgley, .dridth Bow ers,. , _. r 7 ,„ John Er: Worrell,' '' ' — Jas. 8: Wbedwad; ". • ' Bareball lIM, John Blue% 88U1.b.!iit,.;, ; 7 B. MINCILEShii, Secretary. , .! J. O. 001111/EjAgenh.i.= Third and Wood etiven,„ • asy. 6. Northeast comer utu moutusi AND . L • ..- susamc--tNtimeawaß , 00mPA'sy (MT! N RTLI NAIN4O4, , PII.ILANNLYILLI.: Incorporated 1784L-Capitall, NW, „OM • - .4sets, ciravi m em i ip LA W /113 •0 c .rtflaNC ' ct l 74:6' THE' eriTic'l" OrNNNNBILVANIA, PHILADELPHIA: `.• I t.errirohd, l7o .4.744lNNas $ 200 • 00 9 1 .1 Nimanted,Y ebratz7 1,1855. wog% liiiiiird ~. in. , P.Akm,4l , I WIELLIAILHARPx4sia*v, - ' /_TARTFOR:EiFIRILINSITRANOIOI)O 4 4.1.11433V0/11). - • ••• • ' - ;•17 Incorpoksteal4o-04ital, SE•60;00K - AasetiONAT 1, • ; 11. derk/NappN,Prraidtfew r T13145.'0. Auxm, • -- I = 4 , •• , . • • • - alairlnstdance la the atsii - Ol aria reliabli OSte• Pinata assilai obtained 67,116191 m to .1; E s . "87 Water itriet,Rogaters WEIST.EILN 4.NSUICAN tare ,AXIMPI6Te .• 1 9 1 r Rr PATIPErktGIi•-• ••• 1 G R 1 GORD ::• •:•••• . m ON • a. utra.' . . , Seartiors,...,,, ' Mot, 24a. 92 Water street, Biaag GeSi *wore teat; ay: kis* et atire sa4lXeriews.,. 114 as. A M. l aehYalioy ....wed by ebb. 4r* Mil laeis 7a4AceotimuageNosi seLelsre' sabest,. by -promotes.= cad IslstreMjs,. 1 ssessesals eaaraeurjeiGhttuil law 'istouo4 as' Yk : tioo Eels.** ss 'eh* re aeO, • APISZTB,OOI%IBrit 0 30,1055 ts ' tedr. 63,019906.:' Monona —• . moo. 00• orom• • oso oo Open Accounts, Ouh. .12,351 49 heath= Nato. 27,606-141 bieteaaa4174,075,12 Dworoas : '1 Andrew 7 A . ckley„7c ,- .. lAlexanda w, David-M. LSpe ong ' • ...,, ' Rea 'J. Thom4.---'-- . BIN. P. Bakewell,.' John IL W0112'416 , 4 , . 7 v. . GOIIDONdie, .• : • Nei, Jr, , • • •jautee McAuley. ~ Nathaniel Holmes, WW H . 6mich :0. W. ittchatatur.. • firriZiiN'S DI - U ktAIIOIS (X)I4PAN Y ' vOP PITTSBURGH. Nth" toms Maxim ea& iVist.e.r street", second door. . , .• WIL HAMMY, tresidena, aorosi Bat. &m.ktran.i. 1 “ . .. , 1..... Steamboats andi Insures maims Ikea and ilamarsla tklulllAPAiour g otai:neleane and. Western 11.1 rent,. Lakes lead Bs , and UP Autpilion it tbs Sees. , 11. , .2 i . , pdakertsoll.446lol4*P/Aist ~ - ^li • u 1 wx 6,... minin . , .. P r nu f7 IV 4 11 :1: 1 1 4 ,,j'aii . ~ ~ , tr im B. T. Joao% 4. 1. Is li S. Hair , Remo oleens, J. Oektend r., Han. T. AL Howe, John S. Dillneth, .c, Buda/ Pe9"...D.^ .. r ' ; (241 1 0 I L 6Zifk,, DIiMAD - *IL& Titilt t AND' I:1Ni : .L. HouIIISUP4.IIOI4.OOWPANT',./(9.l*chouldi it.: a rose. ° P., P T Ih th• austo o„pftg. , s2,maip.ooix.ll:, _.., ; •1 a Will swam ali Pipq, ~.9t I nn% dtheriMrPetWU or limited, oh Prior, - amonpuon el PrporPro!!Cort„ • chadli et Asomegio Wed atrium ( ~" ~80BICAT P. a, Arad d o„, ~.., , - - - -.- i -, :: lt.:W. BALD N, , noel • PoiddiiiC , - ,r- BLAUCE R : T 4 X' S "*.T.• , ti-t'. , : ,-.:.• i .1/ • ChalakPidr.' AoddO. B .;IND44 , ,:*-'.:: E. B. (q ui .. - . 0 . riod.. f• , ILL i''‘". ",- 4 , Johd-alaytoo, -.. „, ~ „: am W. Mr!. -- - : 441-1/41.Fgr.::-,fil/2; 1 p; g; &Teri, - .- • - 1" k.'.Wiler. - ' - .. • J. a. coring, Appftg,,a corner Third and Wood arra& - - - - -- - - - - tNDSMINITY A (I ALNST LOSS 'BY ', - Fuut..-sammougnatrisetimume owl.:. . gA/4 Y , OP, ZiIIZADDLPIII4 I. oAlci, AA) mut AD, • Mui• strairiblAr 'Mk. • • - • Illstamma ixf Leif; jria t u r ; 'lit, 'it,M ola(4 ) r ; 1 .,b 4 .6 1 , icramblyloAA in of Amicably, . 1 .. Ilist Noriogis, amply second ,. 1,1D6033 • ....- Rid MA; auct'vaLllloB,3l4 il) can 192148 O 9) D ~4 TomPc 2 o7.looMislm, toll* PAIIiAMO ' ; .. - • 7• 6 :. nuts 404.4.06 .. • Stocks, (mmintchlciliCAlD y 3) cost. 4911111 CO .. •••• Kilin =A DOI' Y1e5iinb1e...„,„................ 1,11210); Omb ..7....._;‘,;,' , :;; 1:1...........--.....-... *UN 00‘ ~ ~.• L4i ....: IA; ; . la - • I • I • .' sikice,d4r. sa-1y •Aii progitilim pmet... widdreas 002 1==1h1 .1. a. by x.. an fro. risi c soo, laT• Imiaticimmad• on eau" cleactl ptlan ,of . 8 In taint and country, at role as {onto aro with security. - - - 131nc• thair Incorporaition i a polio& of tblrty yaw, tin ls2r,l9llmi by In tocm„amount ezmodlas limp If ql D•ar, tituity ...tinting avaionor gt • th . 4l = / nadliaolo lit .11 atm Wit 10111. 4•4 0. 18 .818 881 , 8 81 8 )83~We 41 / , . . . • ~ .k.' . ' indalie - Tr TIM) " '''' 4, telliNebtuwisar tisiaolo.l7 i , . et az : .aiii_ o mpisem i N ii ... .., _ Doisieclll7= ''' • % . Imoir IA Illailbe • '''' Yobbo" Wigymc, it. j;latikr:&) Duni &Surma, . : , lirc.X. SlD9lha re, Flamedtif a as. " 7 M o t icrimail cuesutir ' • ' .: • • lIDWASD wriamsinsaisk .: irwArsuss., s.mage., I •••••/--., mi, _.-4 - 0 ~.... , A. D DO . . - Ilitairc Sortlimittcr: Wiwi At I : A . Lilfa IC 41 4 01Ver" 90 # ..avax•r or•prergmluzJ• '?0: 1 , im”,.c, 'Bata , 13k.altt '...._. ."1 . . ,, t5 . .......: ^". V/..• • lacuna arida* dtainantaunlaaaPP-,,,,.tc7n • JODNat Ilia , D. pt. 8044' ; !(kW ilifili -1 .: -ii~A i schzs - 0 Olialalliellai.....; I ni..ily, Maary, , 'i. It Orsy 0M3,2 1 ' " ' IL" 1,1 6 1 ........'t• pot,ll. CL Ornyo '- . : ,08 1081. 11 ;*.Welr B nPay lc. - -- Iw ZtA ir . ..t .„ , : g q?. 4 l• 44 Vi, 0 - _ L,•14...17e., ~:.r 3~9iiil9i:,
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