II its” manila. OUR FLA 0K m.:—:7:-:;TM_~ I. 1. null), Inn-nu um rnbnin‘ron. 21:21,:73 .‘va‘"- '2:‘7_:’_ 72:43.;é ' GETTYBBURG. PA. mason: xoumm, 4mm. 10. man, A 5 How I'o3 PEACE. . 1 Thd tell of the capital of the Southern Confedetecy render: this, of all othen, the time for those in power to set in “steamer; and patriots. If. éven now. the one main: 'cexitrnl, controlling idea afia restoration of the Unign nodal-lite Constitution be made ,_ the liliof I" negotiation}, and the meant! employed be open: plain truth, the peofile will listen in both sections end a new era will common . ,Tbe 4Tiuistration can 113' ofi‘er sucfteims n' l‘diearm all ani . >monity and begin .5 illoration of old tipze concord. peace and prosperity. Will this be done 7 For the sake of humanity fiend the welfihe of our common country, we devoutly hope so. . Let us hate prlcti ‘ ml 'efl'oru in’ thisj hour of triumph, if we really wish‘for pence arid the restoration of tho Uliion.‘J The people are in eqrneal ; let \ per rulers bo ho’p‘agt. ‘ i. ._—‘l.——---‘-«.I~ ‘ 'Aw— —» . "W 0 OPPOSE PEACE? . There a two classes olj men who stand to the w ‘of peaceé-nnd both how: in 'fluenco wi ‘President Lincoln. ’l‘li'e first no the fa nice-the political mudmen— who, for tie sake 'ol' having their negro equality til Aesjully tested. are willing to have the' r eontinued in the most bloody form.’ These areJidegl end abetted to a certain extent by‘another wing 01' the Re publican phrty. Mun‘y of the lehding‘men of thlt organizgtion, while not willing‘w gnnt tho negroea-‘enfire social equality, no anxious that. he should be: allowedutu vota. ‘ They are perfectly sure that. nolli'mg cap prevent them from being hurled from ofiice’so soon as the _war is over, unleu in rh'o meantgmp théy can con’fer the right. of Vycting upop the negro. 'Bnt Chefs is another v'ery large and influ '.. antinl clmsh thosé who are making money out of the Cur. eithar dimcfly or indirectly. _ In number} they embrace :1 large portion of that. party ; and by theiy yilcctive exer tions create the: atmospharg in which Mr. Lincql‘n lives, and moves, and has his being. Ninet§-nine out 'of every:’hundred men~ with fwhom the President. convenes from month’s endto month‘s and, are per aool amnifig or already grown wealthy from ptqfit ads out of business crenwd‘or fos tered‘d cherished by ,the war; or they me such as are living out of the federal taxes and! lowa. They are ninnufncturere. contracto'rs, eboddyitea of all GlflSoeSflHd descriptions, and Govexnment‘ official”- Combined .they constitute a vast and pog erful body. -Of course they are all devoted }y loyal. after thé fashion at these days, and utterly oppoaed to offering any tern; of peaceiho the South. ' " 'J‘he fanatics who constitute the that. class precipitated th‘e war upon the country ; both aliases desire its continuance. JWlmt. does it matter t 9 them how much lb peo ple :ufl'er. Neither fanaticism nor Janice kno‘w what mercy means. The one would help to crush the lives of‘millions beneath the Juggernaut of war‘co grn‘lify its malig innt. hate ; the other would gladly continue to diltill the blood of the people into gold, with Which to fill its 'cravingzcofl‘era. In the one or the" other of these two clones are to be found all those who op poee the offering of lair terms of adjust hent to the South. How' long will Elie people consent to leufi'er and bleed. that , (“dining and avnlrio'e may be gratified f , II i 3 not the varies! mockery in \ the world ' for Any people t 6 call themselves free, while [ll they hold most dear is made to depend ,upon the chpricea of a pet of fanat ics.“ the nviriciods desirles of those who mobbing money out of their cannt‘ry', -mi§fortunea‘ emf growing rich up‘on th Lumen»: of the po23}? '2'-.‘__,__l ‘ fin is an outrage upon the white Union relax-Im, who did all the hard fight.- in‘ in ,front of Peténburg. and compelled .tho "motion of that place and the aban donment of Richmond by the re’bbls, to sa'y that the rebel capital was captured by the negro hoops—~3s a number of Abolition. newspapers were saying on Tuesday.— What. makes the matterpore- of an insult to tie shite tgoops, is the fsct that it is not knot): whet twops Gen. Weilzel had with him. They only auppole that he took the “41mm of the 25th Corpsr-‘Gen. Wild’s negro didiaion. It afl'ordl may Abolition pdflloiun immune sotinfactibn when they on Ital the laurels' from I the brown of have Northerowhite toldien to decorate the grislod occiputa of their colored pets. “be great college of 1857 was mue snd by In infletegit currency. which‘ at that time mounted 16 two hundred‘end fifteen million. At. Ibo pieeenz we be" e circu lek'ng median: of seven hundred and fifty mi‘ilions; more than three time. the circu hlion in 1857. when ell the States were in ehaed. If we include the Stile Bank cit culeuon,‘ the paper im of the country ‘ would wake 1 grand aggregzne of over nine ‘ hundred milliOns. 'What then me, ire ex: 5"“ when thin immense bubble bursts? We ue fut nearing a lee shore with breek m she-d, nation!- advice ii to take {mini}. There in‘ entirely too much cenvm tpi‘ud to die breeze, .In_d the norm :- surely coming. ' . ‘ ‘uThe jolly Senators and favored citi rnu Illa wens down to Savannah, Clark:- Oon. Forbes Monroe, and all ground, in tho flamed Slam steamer Fulmn,.Captain Wanna. M the government’s expem, buy W thci: thunk: to the «pun: for gagging than luck. The Boston Put an Obi- h more thin the people will do who an audio pt] for their frolia. “The Louiuilh Dancer-at «17:: Tip China-u 0m bulb out in vmth W Andy Johonon. Ind dun-ad: ch,“ to align. oh, no!‘.d9n't let him reign. .Wo ’hln tried “up“: when lot’: by it M,udmflitnifi§obvmr. ‘ m GREAT COST OF TRAVELLING. ‘ {lncemqthnt unveiling hu becom- 11e- ; ry ‘émtEy barium thmJimu-upecinlly f forjnemben ofCongreu, who nre'innrin bl} provided with, free roihaad p39“.-’ Notwithsunding their 'ree woes. it cos". the Government” on immemagum to get; our "loyal” hwmnken Lo Wuhington sad I: backbone Agnin. The “loyal" mpon-‘ dent of the “103 ml” Cincinnati Gm hug been looking over the books at. Washington. ' from. which he gather: some interestingt "items. For inalsnce, Senator Sherman,! ibo lives nt Mansfield, Ohio, has drawn I from the Treasury $530.40 to pay hil fare ; ‘ to Wuhingum, when on ordinary traveller 1 —who pay- his way—could get. ngfir/for lalbum $25. EWillinm Johnston, n member: _of the House, who lives in the uma’hwnJ lmannges to 'get there for 84401—ninety‘ dolhn imd forty canto len than the; pure and honest. Sherman! ' ‘ V The immapulate Jim Lane sva a! Law :xenco, Kama—4f he can bejnid to live ‘nnywhere. Hé'bomeu to Washington by. thanunstiraveled route, and swear: it coats'him two thnunafd mic hundred and titty dollars=(s2,lBo) to make the trip! The Represénutive from the ume town hu duly cheek enough to sweat 1Q twelve lum drcd and seventy-{lids dollars and :lin cents, (1273,69,) go that' Jim outlies him eigiat hundred Ind eighty-six. dqilan and forty "cent? (886.40,) which is a mere peccadillo for the Kansas ruflinn. a A Booster Pomcroy, of Kansas, lives at. Aiclgjsor'i, aboutfifty miles nearer Washin’g- ‘ ton than Jim Lan‘e,but it. costs him precise ly $ll6O to get to the Capiwl. The Rep re'nentatire who lives at Lawrence get: over those fifty miloé nnd makes the whole dis-‘ lzmce fox: little more {hon half that slim. How long would ii. takeiopopulate-Kansas. by emigration ifit should cost as heavily to get (here as it does tooome to Washington by the nearest traveled route? ‘ Racine, Wisconsin. is only aboui sixtyi mile! from Chicago, and the wholedismnce' tb Wishington can be traversed by 3 tr": ellor—witbout free railroad passes—fox about fifty or sixty dollars, r‘efreahmenta‘ and bibsbles, of the beat {:lns'e, thrown in. ‘ ltseems, howevfr. tlmt_Senator Doolittle‘ requires as much" as Jim Lane, viz: $2,160! If meoring twenty-one hundred dollars into one’a pockmt is not,stenling—what is it? The, coat of getting Seminars Grimes and llar’mfi from lowa has been hoiicéd'in a preylous srticlg. Their bills were also, enor mous. ‘ 5 ' These tire sage. of the facts gathered from the record by the correspondent allu ded to. He called at‘the‘proper otliee for more, but was told 'thht "they were con strained'to regard the hccounts of the Sen ators with the Govennment, left in the hands of Qlfiicers of the Senate, as private ."’ and no more. forthe t e being. were to be hndgl It is thus (”683; evident, remarks the Patriot «b Union, thin, not only have ms ny—perhaps all—of the self-styled loyal Senators unlawfully; sworn public money into their pockets;'but other ofiicers in the» public service here conspired to conceal the fact flora the knowledge Qf'the people. Should the people,or their representatives, chosen lrom a. party adverse to the one uowfldon‘iinaut, ever succeed in gaining ac-t cans to the public records. such a history of frdud,‘ corruption, ahd public plundering will be disclosed as has h‘urdlbeeen dream ed of in the wildest fancy. In View of this fact, it wouldmot be wonderful that, in such in ooh'tingenc'y, the mass of such recorded evidenee'wbuld be found mutilated or de stroyed, It‘ not destroyed, there are thous ands of pluhderers who would find it n‘eces sary to niake a ,sldder‘rnnd unannounced trip to foreign parts, to escape popular in dignatiou, and condigu punishment. ”It appears—from the statement made to the Senate o'n thq 6th of February, by Hanson A. Riéby, agent to purchase pro ducts of inqurrectihhfiy States. that-gight «zen-favorites oi the-‘Administmtion have received exclusive privilegq fi'om thy Trea- Aéuryi Department to purchase an Trnni the Sbuth seven huhdred thpgsand bales of cotton. forty baits of tob‘coo, nineteen thoun of rosin. thirtyfive thousand barn pencine, twenty-three _thousand tar‘ and pitch, and‘gv‘vo millions fe her. The Azbapy” max-aback; know whet these friend: and relatives of" ! Mr. Lincoln—lLamon, Sweet, Heskill,Camp, (Gneeley’s friend.) and ethere—hnve done for the country. thit they should have such lepecial privileges granted them 7‘ None of the apeeial’ privileged class have risked ei ther life or limb.~nor have they in any way “euppotte'd the Government” except u l bowlers-for “vigorous war end no compro mise." The Boston Advertiser knows of 1 “one cotton eo'fitraot of one hundred and 1 fifty_ thousand bales, givento a prominent Enid 'reefdgnt in Washington, and sold ‘ out to partie‘ll in New York“ at one dollar ‘ and a qnaxtEr per bale. Kno'ckbfi‘the odd qnnrter for expenses in'mne way and anoth ef, and it given the ofliciel and his partnersl one hundred Ind fifty thousand dollars for the profits of the opention !" And this is, "loyalty,” of the modern Abolition school! The Lord deliver”, the country speedily} from such “loyalists.” 71%: BeccatNao York Election—The vote upon the Constitutional A'mendment. just rejected by the people; about an ,ulverse 'mljority by ‘tena‘of thoianndl, dthough extrgf méann were taken to secure it: pu mgo'. ‘Tho Town Meeting: held in Nut ”State show n‘Degnocntio gain of seventeen towus over last Spring. und u much larger gnin 'over Int Fall. Thar show, says tho Albany Argus, the popular majority today to be with the Samoa-me putty. by ,over @3OO- The indications are suspicion: for tho futur‘e. . ”Th 9 Denioéuts of Synél'xu. New York; In feeling very well, hning elected Capt. Steward, Mayor, and the whole Dem ocratic city ticket. Last you ‘thq‘Republi cans carried the city by nearly 3: pelt ml.- jority u the Democrat's vow hue. ‘Tho Democuts have carried Nah villa and the ndicals St. Louis. , ”A pobr boy not yet sixteen. was shot to death, last week, in the Army of the Po. low, for desertioq. He had been the vio tim of a substitute broker, in New York; and was 31!: child physioalEy and men. ally. We do not am the conscience of those-who putlciglledy in his-cumin. or granted it to boo-tried into ofi‘ect._ha_v -3‘89 pore;- todiupprou ofonguley is. #Emfli next 51:19. 11331313! GALLERY. Burning of a UL S. Tramport—Over Fm HJndral Lim Lou—The United States trwsPort Gm. Lyon, with nearly 600 souls on board. was burned oi! Cape Hutu“, on the 31:4. nIL. involving a loss of over 500 liven-come 35 01-40 pen-tons oniy escaping. One»! the survivors fumiahea the follow ing parlimlm w I New York piper: , ‘ There were on board the steamer Genergl‘ Lyon. besides the officers and crew. ma hundred and {our men and eleveqpfiicers of the 56th Illinois regilhent, who had been mustered out of service end were on their way home, their time of enlistment having expirednixteen men of the 3d Pennsylva pia artillery ; one hundred and fifty~seven escaped and paroled Union prisonera; sixty eeven‘male refugees. and fully one hundred refugee women and children, on their way North. Besides these were two commis sioned omen-s and eighteen enlisted men of the 99th New York, acting as a 'guard. making in all risin‘g six hundred persons on board. of whom the small number men tioned above is probably all that were sued. the aea rolling so high and the steamer be in; so near the line of breakers that it was impossible for the un‘knowmachooner men timed to render any assistance. Our in ‘formam thinks that in spite of all her el forts she was umbletao rescue a soul. The fire broke out at. about ten o’clock on Friday morning from rlxght coming in contact. with a barrel of kerosene in the porter's room. and, spreading with great rapidity, within half an hour the (véssel was completely in flames. "l‘he son was rolling mountahu high. And a scene of the greatest excitement and confusion ensued immediately after it was discovered that the vessel was on fire. Women and chil (pen ran phrieking about, imploring to be saved—on one side the fire and on the other ‘ “The sea arming like u he‘d.” Scores sprang iron} lhe bprning vessel only to he swallowed up by the muddened waves, which still here the burning mass nearer nml nearer to the roaring ‘a‘nd wrg ing breaker; | V - --~4 . roaAv—-—~— - 1 $BO anxious are’the people of Charles ton, South Carolina—the “hot-bed of tren l_soh"—to return to the Union that one pro ivost marshal’s ofiice has been insufficient to accommodate them with the oath of BF i legiauce, and five otfices have accordingly i been .put in running order. One would naturally suppose that the fact of these ! misguided people returning to their allegi ; nnce would be pleuiug to the Aboliticnists. ‘bu‘t it seems such is not the case—e num~ iber of “loyal” editors having commenced , already to denounce their return to loyalty rnix vigorously and bitterly as they cori gdeuined their acts of rebellion. 13‘ there Tony way of gaining thé approval of un Abo ilition politician except by helping him to ‘rob theflovernmcnt and to keep clear of ‘ helping to tight for the Union ?—.l’atriot (1: Union. ”The Sand! Hill; N. Y., Herald has the following, showing how—partizuns of the Administration are allowed to swindle the Government with impunity: : “Something like a year ugh, 3 mm for merly a resident (if this county. wxiu'arrest ed and charged with having swindled .thn Government. and the soldiers out. ol some thing like $200,000; He was imprinoned a few we ks, when he was set at, liberty, withnnt. the formalityof it trial, upon the promise that he would make good the par ties that he had robbed, a thing tbnt he could not. do if he wodld, for his victims were mostly soldiers in the field or in their graves. This man was very loyal, and was a candidate. for State Senator on the lie publican ticket. Likecases are so common that‘ they hardly call forth a remark. Crime ceases to be crime. when committed byafriendofthe Administration.” ‘ . le-Bet‘ore Mr. Hale left the Senate, in a set speech. in 'opposition (b the policy of the Adminiatmtion¥ and the yelping curs who are crying out. for the suppression \of we reserved rights of the States, in replyto Mr. Sumner, he used these words, which should‘ be printed in every paper; “ We be lieve that the prapcrrprescrvqtion qf State Sover eignty, Slate Righla, Stale Power, is a: "csscntl'al to the succcuful operation, of Me eyed)" qf our Government, as the Union—and {fang or (he oth cr is to be dcqtroyod, it flat! bed” be the' Union than the States.” i A i I=l S‘ThevFrehch Onm'er dc: Eats Unit, in reviewing Mr. Lincohi’s inaugural, thinks :we are living in a queer' world. “While 1 Mr. Beecher (says the editor) rinks): speech- I as, Mr. Lincoln delivers {religious sermon.” JThe Courier further thinks that. Napoleon I in his late speech was right when hestated that “the sword often cuts questions with lout settling them,” considering the engire lebeence of practical suggestions in Mr. \Linooln’s speech. ' \ _.‘,_._..__......_.,_~_ \ fiThe lilowing evening after the arri v\al of the Presidential party at General Grant’s headquarters. a ball was tendered tllgm a: board the General's private boat, th Mary Martin. Acéording to the Phila del his Prm, it was a. gay effigy Ind not iri'tvhe least marred by the\ bl 'y scenes close by. \\ ' \\ »HI \ Peace Wegolialiou— Pr (e Extra Sada qf Omgrw.——A special dis ‘tch from Wa‘shington toihe New York hrld says: “lt is_ stated by an ofioiel, whq lbould be well inflorméd. that peace negotiations have beengoing on for some time, in the face of the_ retire military movements. It is also said thatmn extra session of Congress is to be called immediately, with the view of ef fecting su‘ch a modification of the donfisca tion law, and perhaps the law disqualify ing rebel oficers from holding Federal ofii— ces, as will remove ally obstac.e which they any pleeent'to the resemrsnce and pacifica tion of Southern people. Secretary Seward is said to strongly urge such preceedings.” #305,011: from nearly A" part: of the country concur in‘lhoiuing that file proo poot for I heavy yield of water yheat has seldom looked Ame favorable than It the present time. k News Barnum, Esq” s ngtivu of Pennaylnnin, _‘out for many year: a oititen of Baltimore, died in that city on Wednes dng morning, aged 55 years. He contracb ed for anti built. (he railroad {ram York to Harrisburg. He took much intgrest. in the Northern Central Railway, and succee ded Hon. John P. Kennedy as President of the company, hning for some years ser ml :5 1 Director. An attack of erysipelns nu the immedilte cause of his death. " -————-—-«o»—-——-——— . [O‘The Bnfl‘alo Express letrm thnt the First. Nltional Bank of Alum, Wyoming . county, N. Y., closed its doors but week. It is though! to be a aomewhn disastrous (saute. ‘ t / ”Secretary Seward was thrown from his carriage, at Wuhington, on Wednes day, and broke his arm. ”It in Mid that the low:- by the late flood yill amount to $10,000,000 in Penn, sylnnu done. ”The rebel . P. H'll ' l grpold 148, ,the five forks near Sutherland Station,l the the South Side Railroad, twelvel lea from Petersburg, and at dark all the 1 or had arrived at and were in posession t to t e railroad at Sutherland Station. Leer nlmyom HAS FALLEN! it ”"lg’" most of his tronps nmth of the't —‘-‘ ' .A po attox., . PETaws‘BURC £VACUAT:D ! he whole Fedemfiline attached on Sun-' 11l "" . , ymoruing. from step Bottom to about 15,000 3 en “ti 5‘9!!! Clpllll‘ttll it‘d“ miles west of Petersliurg—making‘ * _ LG —“ . a continuous line of battle of nearly forty _ L eneral rant 11” gradually closed hi! miles. The Federal lines gradually closed lines around Petersburg. The Confederates around Peterstmrg, so that by the afternoon have abandoned their works defending tlv Leo's forces were all north of the rivet; SouthsirdeP railroad, and all those east and ejcepttllose holding the city. ltis evident; ziidrtlin sfirshdurg.th'llieyv still hold the that the abandonment of _l’etersburg and! h be ‘P t?" "‘3 .ecny. 111858111"? Richmond had been determined upon. and itsh 17'" continuous Since Weduesday, an I that during the day ghe evacuation of Rich at.” a -_paat four yesterday afternoon was mond was going on. During the night ,stiTlraéing. l . . , l Petersburg was abandoned. and simultane ’d ‘9 19319?" expedition against ”’9 3°11“? ‘ ously the various columns at the rebel army 3" ed?“ ’70:“ “9 commanded by Gederals . took up their line of retreat towards Burkw 952 d” :1?! Grant. ‘1“ person. n 15 com: ville. on the route southward tojoin Johns-‘ go , ° ‘ umphrey 3 Second corp-y num- ton’s army in North Ca‘rolina. 13;“?! wemyflflbfi thousandnwarren’a: [it three o’clock on Monday morning. ‘ td co 1"”' 'nurnberi’ng tWQnty-threo “‘9‘? ; the 3d. the 9th corps marched into Peters-I sari , “an falllt‘nd’fln s cavnlt'y. numbering . burg. and at 8.15 a portion of the 25th Corps 32:... it:s‘.".:;':.i£.::.‘:::;:;"°ir::;srug-"9Bw 3:sz aver-"hm“! “I 'pedition is sixty thousand atron and was' RE lung ata lun er 9117.9..m81'c e ”“3‘ iorilered ’lO start on Wednesday fist Two 3 2 'cilmond"; 10- t 2: latte; c", WEN}: foun litgzizig‘nshcgthi Ttyflptyifourth corpsdirffin} (:rsfcl‘ggofil-Zght cfifaznfiflaiinme “535‘ ' . . 3" 0 0 smelt cm!“ 9 guns of the fortifications intact. .' I:l":ignotgs‘dalybtngngals‘2ll3rligmgzgsl The latest intelligence from Gen. Grant, ( len Tuedllh ”in ht these troo s‘h iii th. ”day (4”?) "11° “- w “W mam/m" ; ks 5‘ d’lh g d j F'fth e le. the retreating and disordered rebelcolunins' llholhe "1‘“ ofet h :3ng ”litre“ :2” tggfg'ovfle‘y l —.states that the line of retreat is’ strewn ' ' t ‘ t ..p‘ P lmth arms, wagons, baggage. and the charred Im}? tug: 'morninflg. ' remains of all kinds of munitions and stores l ‘Sout’liifider 5 .run d owls southeasdt {mm 11“; {that had been burned to prevent impeding . . "Him“ - . ll“ 0’05” ysevera ‘their retreat. Sheridan 'has captured 1.200' laogflogroilisgumnfigngfzgthzrgrsng:i more prisoners, and other divésiogis of the’ irailroad is the Boydton plank road. running ; fig’tzm‘lgfhfisfigfy rgnto'ethg'mti; ito Dinwiddie Court House, thirteen miles‘ amounts ‘9“ least fittee‘n thousand ——Pa-l 1 from P;tersburg. ’l‘liis‘road gradually Bep-‘l triot (g- Union of Tuesday afternoon. ' | I-”firsgdJgflstzfififisilgefi?£2?dkmd Lari .' At half-past thi’ee o'clock on Monday af linile so‘ th HIE! h , h IIV . u 1:; ternoon the Federal advance under General lroad m“ er °Ps {:o2} "tljenllnot'dl’on 11-"fdol‘ ,Gnnt was at Sutherland station, ten miles J wards tl‘le. Esilroud and runsyfur dorsn int: i“??? iiievtfigbufirxg (o:3;ng ligiffiwefil .i...~ 1 u ' - B . tio’uigzzfl leltfili‘rlimévellugfi “fligmxll’mgt. the e'onfederate rear. but_it is supposed! lAltgng t ie Boydtoii and :Vllite 0:121:33; l :2! this .331]? Latin” saintltr2o 8310:1381 start ‘ l ' _ , '. n o i mnegom ll re ea. . ’3“) Sonia???“ lime a formidable line or: The Confederate iron clads on the James l legal: dam“? Vzi‘m and defending the‘were blown upat thetime oftheevacuation.| It a bi e rii_i roa . Some storehouses in Richmond and Peters- Grant/ls ohJect was to capture these works. l burg was burned During the battle of l .()ii'l‘uestlay nightliis troopii lay along llatoh- l Fridav lug. General Warren was removed‘ this; “itih‘g‘éfioi’i 2'3? f°s3§°3§2§2flrvm m... or mcm undue: . , ; _ P ;ceeded by Generzil'Uihbon. 'l hiswas done, i W iiuglia road. 'lhe Filth corps further, it is reported for disobedience of orders ldown. nd the cavalry still farther downi 80 gm.“ is .known General Sherman’s I“. .- [:9 streiun. The line faced southwest and ‘my is quiet at Goldsboro’ It is reported 't e.ne.t mornin was to swin around, v. ‘ ' - lwitli tli Second cfirps for a'pirogt, sons to i that 11thwa stonfedeLate cavalry ’3 Prle.l face no tliwest Sheridan bavin the (“biparmg or anti upon ...i‘erman s supp y‘ Ithest to go started at two o’clockgon Wed. ? Jnayzzgl‘l’; hum)“ “"21 Wld°b°r°"_A 1" ‘I . . _ _ t . ' ‘ lest-v .S'Zii‘i'if'll’;”SSSEsSZ'ii‘h‘é’Jli‘il,Xfigfg’:h:*;s'gm p-herereenmidem; . . ' . . . .. cera armyon ues aya l Egggdtlgsgllmrtailigxde’ $52: Eggs 3:; . Eernoonais twenty-six niiles west pf Petifrs : ‘ ‘ _ . .- ‘ . urg an twenty-six mi es easto Bur es illirttcetllerl’r r‘hrlfienligrghidmgdfihgves‘trzzfi l ville. The Federal advance had not. at that ]distance and chmo to the Quaker roa'd tttme‘cometip to the _Contederats rear.— .1 which m northwest towurds the South: i Grant's entire arniy. With the exception of ‘side railroad. The corps turned into this”he mn'th and lwenty-fifth (negro) corps, i road an marched northwest. and at noon i‘s fo’llowrug “3% The caprures by General lt'oiind the Confederates in force about a'Wmm’l m Richmond me reported to be lhalf m e from the Bo'dton road The" one thousand prisoners, five hundred can‘ I Second Eorps started 8‘ Bl)! m the “whim" . i ngii. nndlhve tliousand‘etand ofarms. Fire ”missed Etheflrun on the Vaughan road. mid, ; £02332 infifizuclllgggngonfedera‘ were tn .tuiiiei vno hwest marching towards the' K ‘ I , ' - - - I v I General Sherman e army is still met at 13335:? road, along the wulhem'bmk 0" Glzildsbogo’u (an Much 30 there "kitsch slight . . ' . ' ' "t the (onfedera'te cavalr l‘lie hecond corps did no fizlitmg. It 3 If”)? . m ‘9 . . y loncainpcd in line of battle on Wednésday northnest 0f Gold-bow. “Idem recon ’night. one mile from the I’mydton road—"ilmssfizlc? are continually sent out, and l’l‘lie'h‘ifl‘li corps had a severe contest on the 1 rllhds t: Ingeglfirfll? (skating: guarding the leltl-{K‘l‘ road and lot-t four hundred men.‘ A ' °. . l ' I it sticoeeded' in boating back the Confede-l Chiefaala rizmgd “‘hntrphe fonfedegatea on 'rate advance liowevei ; crossed the Bovtl-jmredpffie “.351'011“ “(a-E‘s?) ntg. t' cap : tori road south of the intersection of White’ ( er- arrie eford, which . . . _ , .runs between Baltimore and Annapolis.— tOil: road, and at night encumped in lineiAjeo/ Thursday. éfimif‘“3i‘i.§"r2d2‘lli 1322113323553;??? 6...... .. 1.. from m... it‘rom the Southside railroad ‘llld one mile ixmond. followed the. mm of the Richmond ifrom the Confederate worlts alon theia‘nd Dnnville railroad, towards Burkesville. , Bovdton and White 01k roads . fi‘hese Etieneral brunt. in his pursuit, followed the l movements were but preliminary Inn'd eve- ' rnlilroad fr("r?r~§;t°rsbux? towards Burkes— rvthing was yet. to be done. On. Wednes- | ‘AI lei. On ‘h” esday‘Generul 17” was 3" .' . . . _ .. ,me is Court House, thirty-live miles south d.iy night rain fell in torrents, and the Con- ! west of Pichmnnd and . t 1 ,l‘edera-tes availed themselves ofthe storm) northeaatlot fiirkdcv ll , seéen een m)- M :to get their troops into position. and to feel“ iilonrv the 10“.; ..'-i .x. (l-f ragt, mowing the Federal lines in front of Petnrab irg. lavas Ben the Mr L'u‘lmm t'Q‘m etershurg, l On Thursday