Itatietti4n. > l - 4 ' • p' 74 .lif 4.45-7.44 Oil ,✓testa, ATtIRDAY, APRIL 25, 1863. Messrs. MATH ER & ABBOTT, NO. 335 Broadway, New-Yett g are duly authorized to Bet for us in soliciting, advertisments, &c., and receipt for the same. gar A few days ago a sentry on duty at Major General Stanley's headquarters shot a rebel spy as he was endeavoring to escape through our lines near Frank lin, Tenn. The spy was first challenged, and, havivg twice disregarded the order to “halt," the sentinel took deliberate aim and killed the unhappy victim at ' the first shot. He was recognized as an individual who had been lurking around the camp for several weeks in •the vocation of a songster, reciting pa triotic 'airs for the soldiers, and re ceiving .small sums of money for hie trouble. He was detected, arrested, • and thrown into prison, whence he made 'his escape, and was going out of the lines when.he was shot. After his death 'his body was searched by the guards.— Inside his boots, .and 4etweea his feet and stockings, were 'found skilfall7;- -drawn plans of the Federal fortitica tions, the strength of their armament, • and correct details of the organization •of this army, number of lorries &c. H a d • this spy.succeeded in eluding our sen tries, the rebel commander would hays 'bees sin possession of invaluable informa tion, on which he could have based his , plan of operations. ow- The New York Commercial says, 'the sensation papers have got up a sto ry that Chas. Lewis, executed last Fri day, at Trenton, N. J., for murder, con fessed that, among other crimes of the deepest dye, he had been the assassin -of Dr. Burdell. Unfortunately for the sensationists and their eloquence in the weeklies, and Sundays, at the time Dr. Bardell met his doom in Bond street, Lewis was a convict in the State prison at Sing Sing, under a conviction from 'l4:lolumbia county, for burglary. Itis gen erally supposed that tho President will arrange all the machinery for the execution of the new law for calling out the national militia, but for the present will not put it in operation. It is considered that if the old regiments are filled up to their maximum quota by .recruiting, or, if necessary by draft, there will be no need for any farther addition -.of the military force of the Union. lir The Louisville Journal says there aare so many more women than men now In the South that it is thought a law es .tablishing polygamy will be enacted .There, each man to be allowed five -wives. The widows and maids are said to be rather in favor of it under the cir cumstances, each one seeming to think that a fifth of a husband is better than -Anna at all. Air The first snow of the season fell on the 7th of December, 1.862, and from that date to the 31st of March, 1863, snow fell thirty-four tunes, not including the March storm more than one, when it snowed several times a day ; and when a storm began in the evening and continued until the next day it is conn ,ted as one fall. gar The foreign news by the City of - Baltimore-and Tura is interesting. The British Government has at last been aroused to a sense of duty under the royal proclamation neutrality. A fine steamer, intended as a gunboat for the rebels, has been seized by the Govern ment officers at Liverpool, and was still held for examination when those steam mne sailed. er Prom Port Royal we -learn the 'decks of the Monitors are being extra plate with wrought iron. This is for the purpose of strengthening the decks against the effects of plunging shot.— Excepting in this particular, it seems that our iron-clad batteries have proved themselves almost invulnerable. eir Of Sir Tatter' Sykes, the sporting baronet just dead, it is said that he nev er Tode in a carriage but once in his life. -On his wedding he went home from :church with his wife by this (to him) unknown conveyance. lie said after wards that he ".did not find it so bad as he expected." lir John J. Crittenden is announced in the Lexington Observer and Repor ter as a candidate for Congress from the Ashiand district, Kentucky. lir It is said that General Grant's expenses before Vicksburg, for the sin gle item of chartering steamers, are $4O 400 .per day. ~''!'he St. Louis Democrat thinks the number of slaveholders in Missouri to be.nearer ten thousand than twenty thousand., Leatze-bas completed a full-length .portrait of .General Burnside and the portrait iy Snriceded to be one of the ar tist's happleSt efforts. A COLD BLOODED MURDER,.--A Wo man by the name of Phelan, just mar ried, was murdered at Ellenville, New York, on Thursday last, by one William Willis, who gave as the cause of his bloody act, the non-fulfilment of a mar riage engagement which bad for some time existed between his victim and himself. The murderer, confessing the murder, said that, incensed at her mar riage, he procured a knife and went to the residence of Mrs. Phelan, finding her with her bonnet on, prepared to go out. Ho changed salutations with her and said, "You have wronged me." Mrs. Phelan replied that she "had not in tended to wrong him in the least, and if she had done so she was sorry for it." He then said, "I have been badly used." She repeated that she had no intention to injure bias, and if she had she regret ed it, and asked him if he had anything farther to say. He said "No," and im mediately drew the knife from his pock et, when it fell upon the floor and hb stooped to pick' it up. Deceased, he thought, had not yet any an . rehensions about what was to take place; she sim ply stepped back a pace. Having recoy •ered the knife he mr.,ved towards her, when she threw Nap her hands before him; he held her hands down with his left hand, whi!ie with his right he drew the knife three times across her throat, after whith she fell to the floor, and he immediately left the house and went to the blacksmith shop. lie said that he had loved that woman with all his heart —were he the possessor of worlds he would give them to restore her life—he had murdered her—he was a base wretch, and richly deserved the fate awaiting him. The murderer, Willis, is not far from thirty years of age, a har ness maker by trade. He is by birth an Irishman ; a man of much more than ordinary intelligence, generous and _im pulsive by nature, easily excited,, and possessing an ungovernable temper.— Mrs. Phelan, the murdered woman, was a member of the Reformed Dutch Church, a faithful teacher in the Sunday school, and had n large number of ear nest and warm friends. 65- New York criminal news has its usual variety Mary Schmidt, aided by her mother, attempted to take the life of the wife of her lover, Captain Stoi ger, of the Burnside Rifles, by giving her wine in which laudanum was mixed, Mary Schmidt was betrothed to Charles F. Noll, who recently committed sui cide after having attempted her own life. Steiger paid attention to her dur ing her illness from the injuries inflicted by Noll, and from this grew a mutual infatuation. Mary Schmidt is sixteen years of age, and unattractive. eir It has been repeatedly stated that Gen. Shields had resigned his commission in the army and would retire to private life on his estate in California. His ar rival at San Francisco was also lately announced. But it is now stated in a dispatch from Washington that he was several weeks ago ordered to report to Gen. Wright, for service in the Depart ment of the Pacific. Ile cannot there fore have resigned. Gir John Minor Botts, of Virginia, so long incarcerated in the Libby prison and in Salisbury, N. C., has be en re leased through the interposition of 'a friend, an extensive purchaser of tobac co, and has permission to remain on his estate, near Gordonsville, under the pledge of not aiding or abetting the Union cause. fa- The Barnstable Patriot of the 14th, says that Henry H. Crocker, of New York—late of the firm of Crocker & Sturgis, of Boston, which failed in 1852, at the time owing the Barnstable Savings Institution the sum of 000— last week sent the treasurer of that in. stitution $llOO, being the full amount of the debt with interest. kir The Altoona (Pa.) Register tells of a female just returned to that city af ter a service of eighteen months in the army,:w about having her sex discove red She took part in three battles, and was wounded twice, first above the eye and then in the arm, the latter wound com pelling her to disclose her sex. ar One day last week a man attempt. ed to get outside of the Federal lines, beyond Murfreesborough, Tenu. He was hailed by the pickets, but endeavor ed to escape. He was fired at and killed. 'Upon his person was found a plan of the artiacalfr'lla of that place. lir The Secessionists in LfaingiOn: Mo., have been notified that .their prop- erty will be held responsible for any guerilla outrages on steamers within five miles of the city, east or west. ifir Governor Johnson, of Tennessee, has been authorized to raise Aventy-Sve thousand troops for special service in the eastern part of the State. , fir Over seventy applications to bank under the uniform national currency act have been made to the Treasury De partment. Gir Prince Taontre, of Ctabeite, colored prince, is the last novelty at the English Court. eir Truth, in the garment of polite ness, is often more comely tha# the`-na ked truth, - • - -r'y'c~THE MARJETTIAN...°-~-: THE NEW NATIONAL BANES.—The Treasury Department has for some days past been sending out the form cer pre liminary certificates in connection with National Banking Association under the Currency and Banking Law. This certificate requires applicants to state the name and title of the association, its location, and its operation of dis count and deposit, which are to be car ried on, the amount of capital stock, the name and residence of each of the slave holders, With the number of shares held by each, and the time the business of tho association is to commence. The certificate is made in order that subscribers may avail themselves of the advantages of the act to provide Nation al Currency, secured by a pledge of United States Stocks, and to prc,vid e , for the circulation and redero",Aion there at approved Feb, 25 ; 1.863. Blanks will be filled, so as to show the numerical order of organization, and the locality. TUE THOIINDIKE WILL CASE.---The Supreme CoUrt of Massachusetts has just decided the much-talked of Thorndike Will Case, in favor of the two children of Andrew Thorndike, who died in 1854, thus sustaining the legality of his mar riage with a German lady, with whom he entered into a civil contract of mar riage at Frankfort-on-the. Maine before the United States Consul, and with whom he lived as his wife, acknowledg ing the children as his up to the time of his death. Israel Thorndike, brother of the deceased, was the contestant for the property, amounting to about $30,- 000, on the gronnd of the illegitimacy of his brother's children. sir The Court Martial of Colonel D'Utassy, for alleged frauds in recruit ing, brings out the fact that nearly all, that description of enormous frauds has arisen in the city of New York, and in regiments that have been called "Ger man." The rolls for pay are made dif ferently from those lodged in the office of the Adjutant General, and the frauds generally perpetrated by collusions, whereby one person has managed to draw pay under simulated names, or in two capacities. It is said that fortunes have been made by such transactions. Cr Foreign immigration at New York is becoming quite large again, owing, probably to the impression abroad, that the war, by carrying off so many men, will create a demand for mechanical and agricultural labor. Agents from some of the Western States, or rather the land interests in those States, it is said, are in Europe facilitating this immigra tion. It is probable that this is what has given rise to the report . in the Brit ish journals, that our government has agents abroad, enlisting men for the war, contrary to the neutrality laws of Europeon governments. 11Er Gen. Grant has passed down the Mississippi ere this, with his entire fleet of gunboats and transports, and it is said that he will make an assault upon Vicksburg from below, after having cap tared the - rebel batteries at Warrenton. Admiral Farragut was at last accounts successfully blockading the mouth of Red river, which is deemed the most important, if not the only, channel by winch the rebels •receive food for. their large armies at Vinksburg and Port Hudson. riir There seem s to be a little move ment around Vicksburg again, as if some new plan was in progress for the reduction of that city. A Cincinnati despatch says the purpose now is to put a force of 70,000 men at Warrenton, which will srequire first the transports to pass the Vicksburg batteries. Gen. Grant's plans, so far, have been nothing but failures, and it is hard to predicate any success upon any of his intended movements. it& The Lynchburg (Va.) Republicans of the 6th says : "An Augusta, Geor gia, contemporary states, on the author ity of a gentleman just returned from the upper of North Carolina, that ten penny nails are passing current Ahem at five cents each. We have no such metallic basis for our circulating medi. urns are grains of corn representing five cents, and quids of tobacco representing the decimal." g A distinguished Greek cavalry officer, General Ypsilano, formerlY chief of cavalry in the military service of Greece, has arrived here for the purpose of tendering his services to the Govern ment. le brings a letter from Mr. Adams, our minister to England, to the g e iztary of War, stroagly recommend ing him to ttifi Aver of the (lover& meat. gir A large body of land and a quan tity of stock in the Jeffersonville and Indianapolis Railroad, the property of Col. Wm. Preston, of the rebel army, having been confiscated, was sold at auction on account of the Gni:amount at Charlestown, Clark county Indiana. fir The Copperhead papers are now beginning to call for a war platform— not that they are any more in favor of war than they ever were, but because, as they argue, the people won't go Cop perheadism, and the only way to get in to office is on a war platform. They Want e to swindle the people egaifi as they did last 'fall: ' THE MINNESOTA. INDIANS:•ThO remo val of the Winnebago and Sioux tribes of Indians from Minnesota will be com menced immediately by the Commission er of Indian Affairs. The Sioux will be removed from Fort Snelling, where they are now held under military surveil lance, to a tract of land in the vicinity of Fort Randall, on the Upper Missouri, several hundred miles distant from any considerable settle m ants of the whites. The Winnebagoes, who have generally been peaceful in their intercourse with the whites, will be removed lo an adjoining tract, To ;educe them to abandon thole toying habits, and to engarts:., in agricultural pursuits, the Uovernment has decided . to furnish them, in their new homes, with agricul. tural implements, cattle, and _other necessary articles. The Indians to be removed number about 4000. The Min nesota Indians under conviction are to be removed from the State. The Pres ident has decided to stay the futher exe cution of the poor wretches. ggir The main object of the recent vis it of Gov. Curtin to the army of the Po tomac, wo are informed, was for the pur pose of promoting the success of the re-enlistment of those whose terms will expire in a few weeks. In this, the in formation is, that he has been highly successful ; and it is believed that at least two-thirds of the nine months' men will re-enlist., after they have had a month's leisure and recreation at home. All who re-enlist will receive the full bounties, and their number will go to make up our quota of the new call that will - be made under the conscript ItEr On Friday evening last Thomas Ackley, Esq., Cashier of the State Bank at Camden, N. J., was discovered dead in his chie.r. He was in his usual good health, and had_appointed to go out at 84 o'clock. He sat himself down in his easy chair, in the midst of his family, to await the appointed time, and, as was supposed fell asleep. Shortly befora 9 o'clock a member of the family on at tempting to arouse him discovered that he was dead. He had passed from life to death without a pang. Mr. A. was a most respectable citizen of Camden. fgr At a recent. meeting of the British Institution of Naval Architects, Mr. Scott Russell, the eminent builder, sta ted explicitly that there . were in the whole British navy only two vessels that could pursue the Alabama with any hope of overtaking her. It was granted that England, after all her expensive experiments, has no iron feet on which she can rely either for offensive or de fensive warfare. Her Warrior and Black Princes and the rest have proved unsatisfactory. sWir Shortley after 7 o'clock one even ing, Charles Noll, a young man, was found dead in his room at No. 29 Bow ery. It appears he had committed su icide by taking laudanum and opium after having administered a dose of the same description to a young girl to whom he was engaged to be married., The girl was found in an insensible condition medical aid was at once procured for her, and at last accounts she was in a fair way for recovery. sir The country, almost in the com mencement of the rebellion, was electri fied by the order of Gamma). Dix : "if any man attempts to haul down the the American flag, shoot him on the spot I" The same spirit should animate the people now, and if any man attempt to desert the Union cause, or refuses to fling to the breeze the banner of that holy cause, let him be riddled by the batteries of public , indignation, thun dered from the ballot-boxes. t 3 There are but two parties in the country, one for 'the Union and the other for disunion. Where are we to place those Democratic papers which adhere to the treasonable school of John 0. Calhonn and ignore the loyal principles of Andrew Jackson ? ,: Or Humphrey Marshall said in a late speech to his men and other citizens : "They call us copper-heads ; let us cop per-fasten our. Confederacy." But Humphrey mustn't try to copper-bottom himself; it would require more copper than there is. gia - John Bull, in his sympathy for the rebels against the United States, supplies them with piratical ships, and when we send provisions to supply his starving operatives, he is base enough to get up a riot and cause their destruc tion. sir A revolting spectacle is already presented on the battle-field ofAntietam. The earth is washed away from the shal low trenches used for graves, and bod ies of the buried soldiers are appearing in various parts of that vast graved-yard. fir "A cavalier" has been adopted for the new seal of the Confederacy.— From-the facility exhibited by it in its early stages for stealing a "chevalier d'indastrie" would be a much more ap propriate device. Gr The Richmond Whig confessess that Cotton is no longer. King—"pork bay dethroned him." But-what must be the subjects where the King is a •°OI SLOW ndT SURE.—The Germantown Telegraph says on the night of the 25th of July, 1958, a colored man named Pe ter Miller, was murdered at the build ing of the Philadelphia Institute, in Lombard street, near Seventh, by an other colored man named Jeremiah Dicey. The parties had been engaged in a fight in the yard attached to the building, and during the progress of the struggle Dixoy entered a barber shop in the house s and procuring a razor, he testitned the fight armed with his weap on. Miller ran through the entry and attempted to get away, but he was fol lowed up by Dicey who butchered him in the moat horrible manner. The mur derer escaped, and some months since he was traced out and brought back to the city. On Friday last he was put upon trial, and late the same evening the jury rendered a verdict of guilty of murder in the first degree. Powse. of THE PAESS.-Mr. Kinglake the historian of the Crimean war, an observant statesman and member of Parliament, gives it as his conviction that the Times newspaper alone caused that war ; if so, it has made bankrupt one empire, caused the death of the greatest emperor of the age, establish ed another on his throne, broken- the power of the nobles in Russia, freed the serfs, redered thousands of women husbandless and childless, killed more than one general, made or ruined the reputation of other, and made hun,lreds of our best families mourners. It has first fed public opinion, impressed it with an idea, and then by constant iter tion, rendered this idea a reality. Cr Governer Curtin, in view of the exigency of the public service, has sug gested to the President a plan of gar risoning the defences of Washington with militia, that the veteran soldiers now in that department might lie spared for more important and pressing duties in the field. To this end, he offered to forward hero twenty thousand militia, and asked that about five thousand vol unteers:;vho have had the neiesaary ex perience be distributed among the mili tia, to render the latter force equival ent for all practical purposes, to the same number of volunteers sent to the field, it is not known whether this pa triotic• offer has bean accepted, but it meets with the favor of the President. r A coffin was lately sent from Cin cinnati to Louisville, by Adams' Ex press, addressed to a soldier of an Ohio regiment at Murfreesboro', the weight being marked "290." It was very unu sual to send corpsea to Murfreesboro', although many were shipped from thence, and one of the messengers opened the coffin. It did not contain a corpse, but was well stored with bun - dies, packages, letters, eatables, boots— in fact, a small-sized grocery and cloth ing establishment was inside the coffin. The freight being paid and the contents not being "contraband," it was closed up and forwarded according to direc tions—"handle with care." far The date of the end of the world is satisfactorily fixed for the year 1885. There is an ancient prediction, repeated by Nostradamus in his "Centuries," which says that when St. George shall crucify the Lord, when St. Merit shall raise him, and St. John shall assist at his assension, the end of the world shall come. In the year 1885 it wilt happen that Good Friday falls on St. George's dtiy, Easter Sunday on St. Mark's day, and. Holy Thursday of Assension day will be also the feast of St. John the Baptlat. Amongst the most important bills of the Legislature is one providing for the payment of the bold tuilitia.— The House very justly granted a month's pay to the men of September ; but the Senate hunkishly cut this down - one half, with rations. As the soldiers re ceived no clothing or equipments, and are not to be charged, we suppose this half month's pay will be at rate of full pay, and not at the rate of $l3 a month, which will bring it to about the same thing far the privates. WS - The extreme rigor of the law will not be meted out to deserters who vol untarily return to their duty whithin a few days, as many are doing, not fewer it is computed, than from a thousand to fifteen hundred a day on the average. Those from General Hooker's army, sentenced recently to be shot, have been pardoned. dir Brig. Gen. Busteed's commission in the army having expired he returns to New York to resume the practice of law. In his farewell address to his brigade he warms them against the in sinuation of those who desire peace with the rebels on any other terms than sub mission to the constitution and laws. our A young woman, wearing soldiers apparel and belonging to the 14th lowa Regiment, shot herself in Cairo on Sun day night because her sea was discover ed. Cr It is stated that PieColomianl is about to return to the stage , for a few nights. She is jealous of Patti. ar Gerrit Smith hos subscried one thousand dollar's • towards the Irish re . lief fund now ireing iaised. Short Scraps of News front our Exnauc Brigadier Generals George A. Mct: a l: and Louis Blanker have been musterec; out of the service of the United States Princess Louis of Hesse, and Prin cess A lice of England, have bean safely delivered of a princess. The Polish insurrection is reported to be increasing in various directions, sundry conflicts are reported with va rying success. A resident of Blairsville, Pa., fell 40 feet down an embarkment recently, and his foot caught in a fallen tree top, holding him head downward till the nest day. He died soon after his removal. An old man, sixty years of age, who but a few years ago was worth, in his own right, $50,000, has been reduced to poverty by the old-fashioned -method of endorsing for a friend, and is now work ing on the Louisville, New Albany, and Chicago Railroad at $1,50 per day. Gen. Neal Dow the Union officer, well known as the author of the Maine li quor law, was, according to a statement in the Pickayune, recently sued in court at New Orleans, by Bradish Johnson, for removing from his plantation a quan tity of sugar, silverware, &c., without the plea of "military necessity," Judgment was rendered against the General for $1454. Oen. Shields arrived in San Francis co on the 20th ultimo, and made an itn ,promptu speech at the Oriental Hotel the same evening. liu has resigned his commission in the United States army, and ha's no connection with the tnillitary department of the llocern moat. This is now denied. Gen. Burnside has cuused the arrest of two young ladies for giving aid and comfort to the enemy in Kentucky.— Their names, are Miss Panny Battles, daughter of rebel Brig. Gen. U. Battles, and Miss Hattie Brooker, both of Ten nessee, and both are now enjoying plain food at (lamp Chase, Coluinbus, Ohio. Ou Monday night 4 member of a Pennsylvania regiment on picket com plained of feeling ill. The surgeon of the regiment was called, when there was 80416 whispering instituted- Thu sick soldier was -a woman, enceinte, of course. The result of the surgeou's work was the delivery or a tine boy.-- Gen. Josh. Owee named the child Pick et Falmouth Ellsworth. Admiral Depoiat's iron clad squadron has arrived at Port Royal, and is being repaired and fitted for service again. The damage done to the monitors considerable, but not stalely.. It• k thought that a second assault will soon be made, in which we shall certainly LI successful. Tho Modical Doparttnont knatiAie3 show tho number of robotprisoners who have died in Union hopitals, since this commeucemont of tho war, to bo over _five thousand, instead of two thou and, as published a faw days since. The agent of Mr. A. T. Stowart, or New York, has chartered the brig Jes sie Bonfield, which he will load orttir4- ly at his own expense, with a full cargo of corn and provisions, for the benefit of the distressed people of Ireland. A squad of about sixty negro soldiers , mostly under thirty years of afe and able-bodied, passed through Now York city, on their way to Massachusetts, to join Governor Andrew's famous regi ment. The constitutionality of the Black laws of Illinois, tinder which colored people are excluded from the common wealth, is to be tested in the Supreme Court of that State. The Union meetingat Hamilton, But ler county, Ohio, on Saturday, was the largest ever held there. Over 20,000 people attended, and speeches wore made by Governors Ted and Morton,. Henry Winter Davis, and others. Gen._ Burnside was present. A party of Indians attacked an out post of eighteen soldiers on the 16th instant at Medulla, thirty miles from Mankato, Minnesota, One soldier was killed, two wounded. Of the settlers,. one boy was killed and two men wound ed. Cavalry has been sent in pursuit. The estate of the late Stephen A. Douglass, in Chicago, has been invento ried at seven hundred 'thousand dollars but there are encumbrances upon equal to its appraised value, The exe- Dntors report that there le no personal. prci:perty. ..nion clubs are being organized In all the principle towns in California.— Loyalty there is as enthusiastic as In any of the Northern States. Treason - , with all its bold attempts, finds no rest ing place in the gold commonwealth. - The President has issued a procla mation, declaring that the act for the admission of .West Virginia into the - Union shall take effect from and after sixty days, proof having been submitted to him that the conditiOns of admission, namely, certain emancipation changes in her constitution, have been complied with: ar, When a big bug gets a tumble, what sort of a bug is he •