; and •ru |»!«» f the upon lt;both* con-ontra*party ncon-atid •1 the ini an ctionsflPHSl'C■n it in perity, and hanlly sed by• A •I It INrr NpirHt-nti-b and0 the tropic, idence i»t new eeived renew uliject,1 cat.-in. 10 fifti i, at no iuientsliich, ifin withvc anyt, that an und, andlant night, there are, thia morning, not less than from 10.0(10 to 15,000 visitors in our City. Memphis i.s distended to moat alder-manic proportions; hut in the scoop of her heart, there is still room and to spare. The number of strangers will be still further increased to-day by thousands—fiorn the Railroads, the River, and the surrounding country—and we may safely calculate, if we have fair weather, and not a continuation of tlio drenching rain which fell all day yesterday, that the Celebration will be attended by not less tlian 25,( 00 persons.I'ATFr From Utah Territory.—Files of the Deseret News, published at Salt LakeCity, to February 4lh have been received._They contain nothing of startling importance. The population of the territory is said to be seventy-seven thousand. Military matters hcoui to be receiving a good deal of attention. Brother Joseph Young, President of the Quorum ot Seventies,calls upon all the quorums to report the number and names of their members at a central point. The Deseret News ridicules the idea of the general government sending officers out there to rule them.1 he Crops.—The New Orleans Prices Current of Saturday, April 25th says: “The weather has continued remarkably for its cold changes and unfavorable character for bringing forward vegetation, and the hopes of an early cotton crop, which at the opening of this month were usually flattering, are wholly blasted. As we have stated in a previous