BEDFORD INQUIRER. BEDFORD, Pa. - Friday Mrutag. JAM 28 1859. "FEARLESS AND FREE." D OVER-Editor and Proprietor. MONEY! MONEY! ! —The approaching Court will be a favorable opportunity for many who owe us for subscription, advertising and job work, to call and scttic. Those not coming to town can send the amounts with their neigh bors who do come. This is intended fot all who are indebted. If persons cannot pay all they owe us, (and none owe us very large bills, tbey can certainly pay us a pirt of the amount) We have payments to make, and must have money aome how or another. Jan. 29, 1859. MORE TAXES. The taxpayers have no doubt become aware of the fact, cro this, that the taxes for Red ford Connty have been increased to u consid erable amount for the next yosr. The Poor Tax was considerably lowered under tho con trol of the late opposition board of Directors, and sines the Loeofocos have got ioto power there again,.they have put them up. All our taxpayers know that the County taxes for Red ford County have been enormously high for many years, and yet the Loeofoco Cnmrnis ■iooers have increased them alarmingly for the next year. Whither are we tending? Is it not time the people of poor old tax-ridden Radford County should look to their own in terests, and place officers in power who are in favor of retrenchment and reform? People of Bedford County, fhiiik of these thiugs,and act upon them when the proper time comes. DEATHS. —We are sorry to record ihe death of Mr. SAMUEL BROWN, on Tuesday morning last, in tho 6itbyear Of his age. Mr. Brown was an old and much esteemed citizen, and bis demise is much regretted. Rut a few meu'hs since be enjoyed his usual remarkably good health. O. 0. HARTLEY, Esq., of Galveston, Texas, and formerly of Bedford, died very suddenly, of apoplexy, a few weeks since, aged, we pre sume, about He was a young man of taleut, and stootv nigh iu his adopted State.— ll was only a few weeks since he returned home from a visit to his fnends in this place, in per fect health. . He was Reporter for the State of Texas at the time of his death, the superintec duce of the publication of the law* of which he was attending iu Philadelphia last summer and fall. Truly, "in the midst of life wc are in death." Resolutions have pissed the Pennsylvania legislature instructing our Senator* iu Con gress, and requesting our members, to vote for u increase o" duty on article? of foreign im portation. They passed unanimously to the Senate, and only two voted against them in the House, Messrs. Goepp and Laird, both Locofo cs. Wc are sorry thnt on account of sickness, y, from a ypung friend who recently removed to Philadel phia, and we are happy to hear of his good prosptcts. Ho speaks encouragingly of the fu ture of Philadelphia. The good opinion be expresses of out friend, D. J. Chapman, Esq., is subscribed to by ail acquainted with that gentleman. Tbey have had quite a lively time iu the U. 18. Senate on Friday last, between Douglasi Fitcb, and Jeff. Davis. Very hard words pars ed. Davis apologised to Douglis. A duel was oxpeetcd between Douglas and Kitcb, and a long corrcspon ieuce between them has taken place. The Democratic cauldron is boiling.— Wc will publish 'he f*a'* nexv week. A hill has passed both branches of the Leg islature, abolishing the Canal Board. It will be signed by the Governor. This is right, and it would have been well fot the interest of the tax-payers, had the board been abolished years HgO. We publish on the outside of our paper, to day, the speeches of M-* B rs. Ciittendeu an! Rreckcnridge, delivered in the old Senate Cham bet, previous to the S-tnate'i vacating it for the new Hal). They arc i*ters , ing and will rermv perusal. The weather has again become mild and pleasant. The Juniata has hern frozen over in >nly a few places this winter, and we have not yet had any goo 1 Heighing. RIGHT.— ihe Kepubiicaus in Congress have held a caucus and decided to oppose the admit- MOO of Oregon, and insist npou the removal of the English restitution on Kansas to a to place tho two Territories on an equal footiDg. The L n comptor.itca wish to admit Oregon with 46,- 000 of a population and reject Kansas with y0.,000. What will l.ooofocoa not do? PURCHASE OF CUBA.— Mr. Siidell, chair man of the Committee on Foreign Relations, in the Senate, has introduced into that body a bill to authorize the President to renew nego tiations for the purchase of the island of Cuba, and placing in tbe hands of the Executive the sum of thirty, millions of dollars for that pur pose. Provision is made for raising tbc money by loan at five ptr cent., redeemable in not less than twenty years. The proposition is under stood to bo in accordance with the views of the President; and his adherents in Congress, it is said, intend to press its passage at an cnrly day It is doubtful whether is ready to part with Cuba, and there is, therefore, nothing in the project of Senatur Slidcll wor'hy ot con sideration. Tie regular Meeting of the "Young Men's Christian Association" will be held this (Fri day) Evening in the German Reformed Church. An essay will be read by O.E Shananon, Esq. PURGATORY NOT RECOGNIZED IN COURT. —The heirs of John Ilandly, of Senaea coun ty, Ohio, deceased, contested the validity of certain clauses in his will, which bequeathed sums of money to the Roman Catholic Church for the benefit of souls in purgatory. At the last term of the court a jury sustained the will, but the case having been continued, the couit held that the devise was not to any one iu bo ing. Also that tho prsvisions of the two claus es were uncertain and not susceptible of exe cution of their own provisions. Tbe clauses mast therefore be set aside aod the property decreed to the heirs. The Tariff— Our Legislature. The foliowiug resolutions were passed by both brunches of our Legislature on Wednesday week—in the Senate unanimously, in the House of Representatives, with but two dissenting votes —Goepp, of Northampton, and Laird, of Erie : Whereas, The expeiienes of tho p.ist and present most fully demonstrates that it is a wise beneficent policy of the General Govermueut, which dictates the impositions of duties on such products of foreign nations as come in such di rect contact with those ol our eouutry, as to interfere and prostrate >ho trade on our own soil and among out own citizens. And, whereas, for want of such aid, the country is filled with foreign products, the re sult of cheap labor ; the momentary affaire of tho nation disarranged by the exportataiiou of specie, to pay an indebtedness abroad, and the citizens and laborers in money departments of trade compelled to abandon their accustomed employment; especially do our own coal and iron interests suffer. Therefore, Resolved, By the Senate tud House of Rep resentatives of the Commonwealth of Penn sylvania, in General Assembly met, That our Senators iu Congress be instructed, and our Representatives requested, to labor for the passage (at the present tcssion) of such au act as will not only-tend to increase lite revenue by the imposition of duties, but afford adequate protection to all the interests of the eouutry, injured by the productions of the cheap labor of other countries, but more especially to urge an increase of duties on coal and iron— in which so large a portion of our own people are deeply interested. Resolved, That the views of the President,; expressed iu bis late annual message, in refer ence to the auvautage of specific over ad valo rem duties, as mote uniform, less liable to frands, and affording the most certain amount of revenue and protection, meets our most hearty approval. Resolved, Taat the Governor be requested to forward each of our Senatois and Represen tatives in Congress, a copy of the above pream ble and resolutions informing thein of their adoption. TUB MOST EFFECTIVE APPEAL FOR TUL MOUNT VERNON FUND. —John A. Washing ton, the occupant of Mour.t Vernon, advertises iu an A'cxaudm paper that he has five r.e gro women Dd girls and two boys that he wants to Lire out —"apply personally at Mount Vernon, where the negroes can be seen and ex amined." Let us by all means fill up the Mount Vernon fund without delay, and stop ; this profanation cf the last rcsiing place of t Washington. We cab conceive of no more i eloquent appeal to tbe patriotism of tho coun try than this advertisement of John A. Wash ington. "Negro men and women to let at tho grave of Washington !" By all means let us get this John A. Washington and his human i cattle from Mount Vernon in the quickest pos sible time. DEATH OF BAM JONJCB. —The Tampa I'enin sular, of the Ist inst. states that tbc celebrated Semiooio Indian Chief, Sam Jones, is dead, and tbnt Tiger Toil has been oppointed in his stead. So the old Chief has at last carried out his re solve, to desposit his bones iu the htid of his fathers, from which no bribe or persecution with fire and sword could swerve him. lie teli the government agent, when approached a few months sioce on the subject of removal, that "wagon loads of tn-ioey'' would be uo in ducement. Donovan, the Irish buily, was convicted in the Dauphin County court, last week, of as sault and buttery. Sentence i-> deferrod till Fab. Court, when wo hope he will get his dc ser's. An Kini to the Kansas Troubles. ST. Louis, Jan. '22. Leavenworth advices to the 20th state that Capt. Montgomery, of the "Jay-Hawkers," has voluntarily given himself up to the author ities to await a trial upon the charges of com plicity in the reocnt troubles iu southern Kan sas. It is roporled that Oapt. Brown, tbe chief of the opposition desperadoes, has left the Ter rilorv. No further uiffi-nltics are apprehen ded. Tbere was no exidterueut at Leavenworth. BEDFORD INOUIRBK. Bl'flM* CVBt. Immeasurable u are lite euormities of hu man folly, it would seem at first Llusb thai the follies enacted by our politicians who pro fess to be intent ou uccquiriug Cuba —("/-eatj nexing" it, will probably be tho term by wlticb the proposed robbery will be commended in the next National Democratic Platform) — would seem to out-Herod any former exhibi tions in this line. Cuba is the largest and most cherished external possession-of a nation which outlived, indeed, its palmiest days of power and graudour, but which is only rendered the more prouJ, sensitive and jeaions of its honor, by paiuful couscicnsness of its own decline and decay. Under any circumstances, to per suade this nation to sell us Cubs would be a very difficult and delicate operation, like ask ing an old noble, tho living bead of a family that won renown in the Crusades or tho War of the Hoses, to seli his daughter to a iuoky grogseilcr or pigdriver for tho means of eking out in relative comfort his few remaining years. A Frunklio or a Talleyrand, with carte blanche from au astute and close-mouthed Government, might well shrink from undertaking so critical, distasteful, unpromising a negotiation. Suc cess in it might well uike tho fortune of the shrewdest diplomatist ever "sent abroad to lie "for the good ol bis country/' Hut in the management of their Cubian di plomacy, our Democratic statesmen evince neither tact, adress, nor eveD simple common sense. They act precisely as the grogseiler or pigdriver would wore he to bolt into the pre scuoo of the dccayod aristocrat in muddy boots and with his hat on, and, shaking a bag of eagles iu bis face, blurt out, "There's §IO,OOO "in hard cash for your daughter—ail earned in "my regular course of trade—and if you don't "give her to me lor that oiaguificeot sum, I'll "take her away by force, and you can't help "yourself." A slimy, crawling wonu would bo ashamed to yield to such solicitation as that. The House has, very properly, aaked the President to inform it whether he knows, of ficially, that Frauce and England have agreed to prevent our getting possession of Cuba un der any circumstances. That he knows it un offi ially, we presume no one doub's, as i;n ex- M mister to London is not to be supposed ig norant i n such a point of a fact ?hieh is "reity well known to everybody oise. Tin/only que-' ;.,n in the premises is—Have France and .ongUnd formally apprised our Government that they will not let us do what we have for mally notified theui that we will rot let either of them do ? Since we have reportedly notified shem we will not allow any formidable .mar itime power to acquire Cuba from Spain, have they been equally frank ID revealing their in tentions and resolutions to us f Plainly, they ought to have doue so, and we presume they have, since Mr. Buchanan hesitate* to answer; and meantime a caucus of Democratic Senators is held at which it is ieolved to have Siidell's modest proposition to f put §'10,000,000 (of pro mises lor uui children to pay) into the hands of Mr. Huohanan, to be used in operation* look ing to the acquisition of Cuba. The Demo cratic side of the House is to follow suit, and we shall soon have thii Thirty Million job brought before Congre-s and 'be Country in all its monstrous proportions. The couooetors of this nefarious scheme are not idiots, as they would at first seem to be.— They know, just as well s vre do, trial .Spain will never yield to sue!, beastly Aolnitatimi*, and that, if her Oonrt and Cabinet could be bribed into yielding assent to such a National dishonor, her People, backed by France and England, would arrest the conspiracy far this side cf consummation. What is the real mean ing, then, of this seeming futility? Wo answer —itis a dodge of political gambler.—a bold stroke for triumph in 1860. It is not intend ed to acq lire Cuba, but to diffuse among the ignorant, greedy stid unprincipled portion of our people a notion that the acquisition cf Cu ba woali bo a capital thing if it could only be ! accomplished. That is enough for the present purposr. How Tyler tripped up Van' Buren in 1843-d by pressing the Annexation of Tex as— how Pierce swept State rf'er State in 1852 thrcttgh the secret organ;*;tion sad ouebins- i ti.ms of "The Order of the Lou? Star," or i whatever was the name of the filibuster organ ization at that time, our Siidolls and Jeff. Da vises understand right weli. Let them only, ! with the help e? sundry whiffling journals in this city and elsewhere, inflame the popular lust of acquisition, and direct it toward "the gem of tho Antilles," and their battle for 1860 is ' hsif won. We meet this juggle at the outset. We in sist that territorial ex eoaion is not now desira ble for our country, that wo Lavs more good iand already thau we can subdue and cultivate for a century, that the acquisition of a great, rich island iiko Cuba would involve an pnor inous increase of our Military aud Naval ex penditure, and a general misdirection of our National policy and aspirations at war with re publican purity and simplicity. The acquisi tion of Cuba would largely increase the annual cost of our already prodigal and needy govern ment, while it would scarcely add to so much as it subtracted from our annual revenue. It would thrust uy into the midst of the posses ions iu the West Indies of the great European btateti, would soon involve us io pro-slavery filibuster raids upon Ilayti, and expose us to dangerous complications and frequent wars. If Cuba were freely offered us to-morrow, with the hearty assent of ev-ry European power, we should urge its prompt and posi'ire refusal. But to dream of acquiring it iu defiance not only of every impulse, every instinct, of the haughty and sensitive Spanish nation, but of the stern determination which wo have justified by proclaiming that neither of them wouid be permitted under finy circumstances to acquire that iiland—is sheer madness. Far better strike for India at ouee, or propose to revolu tionise Irciaud by the aid of the plotters whose reoeut arrest has excited 60 muob good-natured surprise on both tides of the Atlantic. Had Commodore Vanderbilt, during his pleasure crui'e to Europe, stopped a week to bombard aud carry by assiult Gibraltar, he would not have acted more absurdly than do those who shali favor Mr. Siidell's proposition with any idea that it is to lead to the acquisition of Cu ba. lint look at just the project in its true light of a politician's dodge—a tub thrown to the greenest of whales—a shrewd device for keeping possession of the National Treasury, and enjoying ibe disbursement not merely of a beggarly thirty millions, but of eighty millions porwnnum, down to March 4, 1865- and the is easily understood. Viewed in that ' ''s'dj the inevitable defeat of the project in Congress is no obstacle to the realization of its ends, but rather a means of securing them. —.V. Y. Tribune. MEXICO. News from the City of Mexico to the 27th of December, and from Vera Cruz to the 30th, re ceived via Havana, furnish some additional in formation as to the late Mexican revolution. It appears that Eeheagaray, commander of the ar my knowu as the Eastern Division, pronounced at Ayutli on the 20th of December. After fruit less negotiations, Zuloaga was just on the point of marching against Echeagoray, ignorant that in the meantime that commander had been made a prisoner by the Governor of Puebla, wheu he was himself stopped by a pronunciamiento on the part of the garrison of .Mexico, beaded by Gen. RobLs, who, it seeuis, had been in cor respondence with Eeheagaray. This Dew pronunciamiento sot forth that, as neither the Government of Zuloaga nor that called constitutional had the moral or physical force to give peace to Mexico, it was necessary that both should cease to exist, end that a new Administration should be established, resting not upou the proclamation of tho aimy,but up on the consent and co-operation of the peacea ble, wealthy and industrious citizens of ail par lies, wlin suffered most from the present state of commotion. That to bring about this result, a junta should be formed (to whioii measure Eehe agaray had consented) of such respectable citi zens of the different ritates, of all classes and parties, as the war had driven to take refuge in the capitol, which junta, within five days, should proceed to establish a provisional Administra tion, nominating the person to exercise provi sionally the supreme power, fixing the limits of his authority, and prescribing also the mode and form in which he should call upon the Dation to frame a new Government; and that, until this provisional Government was established, Gen. lloblvs should be invited to the chief cotn mtmd. Thi Governor of Puebla gave in his adhe rence to this uew movement. Rohles soot off commissioners to Miramon, commanding the ar my of the north, and to Juarez, at Vera Cruz, ;>nd, p.s if to "pej, me way ro reconciliation uud union, ail the political prisoners in Mexico were released, ar.d the towns of Cordova and Orizaba, in the State cf Vera Cruz, which the Zuloaga ist had occupied, were abandoned to the Con stitutionalists, who are also reported to have occupied Jalapa. During the session of the junta assembled in accordance with this pronunciamiento, news ar rived ot Miramon's victory over Degollado— whether details of the occupation of Guadala jara, of which a telegraphic account had some time before been reeuived, or fresh viotorv, dees not distinctly appear. This news, howev er, whatever it was, decided the choice of the junta in favor of Miramou as Provisional Chief. What conditions for tbe exercise of this Provi sional authority were fixed upon, or what pro visions made for framing a new Constitution, we are not informed, nor is there yet #ny certain information whether Juarez, at Vera Cruz, and much less whether Vidwri and the. other north ern chief*, will bo disposed to conic iuto thia ar rangement. Miiauiou, thus raised to the bead of affaire, and who has tbe prestige of two bril liant victories to sustaiu biui, is qui'e a young man, not yet 3G, and brought into notice en tirely by the recent troubles. While Comonfort held tho supreme power and cndeavoied to steei a middle course between the Conservatives and Reformers, Miramon, who, in Santa Anna's ' time, bad been only a lieutenant, beaded, along with O-ollos, one of those bodies of guerillas which, in the uaius of "roligiou and privileges,'' j annoyed without essentially endangering the , aduiiuistralion of Comonfoit. When the ru*o- ; luiion beaded by Zuloaga broke out, Osoilos ! and Miramon joined in it, and by their skill j and daring contributed largely to its success. They were rewarded for their services by the i command of tbe Northern army, Osolfos re- : eeiviog the chief command, to which, on his death, Miramon succeeded. Whether he pos sesses civil as well as military talent, remains to be sees.— „V. Y. Tribune. THE PUQUESNE LETTER IN EN GLAND. I The celebrated epistle of our worthy Presi dent has at length r-aebcJ England, and the London Times takes Fold of it in sober earn est, commenting upou it with a gravity of man ner that wou'd be only suitablo to a more im portant paper. The British Journal thinks that this letter affords conclusive evidence that our institutions are fust going to decay. It cauuot separate James Buchanan, the Presi dent, from James Buchanan, the individual, but j seizes upon his ex-offirial platitudes, designed ; to tickle the ears of his personal adhereuts, as i if they were invested with all the importance that official seal* and government endorsements could confer upon them. There it a little se cret history connected with this demonstration of Presidential honesty which has not reached England, if it ever teaches that country, our j sensitive neighbors beyond the Atlantic rnsy ; find a text for a legion of sermons ou the po- ' litical corruption in our high places, as well as j the political duplicity among our great men. Tbe New York Times ridicules the earnest ness with which its Kngli-b namesake treats this letter, alleging that Mr. Baohanau no more represents this ccantiy, except in barely his ! official seta, than William Walker represents j the government of Nicaragua, and styles our 1 President tho "Great American Mistake of j the Nineteenth Centnrv." In this vein the i Times continues: "Anything, therefore, that Mr. Buchanau may write to Fort Duquesue, concerning "iba future of the United Siates," is of about as much consequence as anything that Fort Duqnesno might write to him would be. Mr. Buchanan's perceptions of the present are not particularly keen; but, when wo come to ' looking into the future, we t eat of that which { is an utter imposibility for a man of Mr. Bu- j obanan's calibre; and a very fortunate thing | it is for him, too. If be could look into the j future sufficiently to judge wbst posterity will j say of him, or even how his present parasites will talk of him after the first Tuesday of No- j vember, 1860, ho would be the most miserable j of tneu. What Mr. Buchanan wrote to Fort ' I Duquesne he wrote to gratify his spite at fiod j iug himself so entirely scouted in liisowu State, as he was in the October elections. His letter meant nothing more than bile, and no body ev er accepted it as meaning any more. "We gladly believe in the bright predictions iof still further greatness and prosperity for England, iu the future, which the Times and many of the public men in that country de light to indulge in. But we also believe in a brighter and a more glorious future for our own country thau Mr. Buchanan has sufficient capacity to anticipate The Mistake took s fit ot maudlin piety when he found, or imagined - for indeed the charge, so far, rests only on his assertion—that money had beeu used against his party. Money enough had been employed, i before the Duquesoe letter, for the purposes of the Democratic part*, aud had been used with success, without the voice of the Mistake being heard in the laud to denounce it. We regret, ; as much us anybody can, to see corruption per . vert the uses, and destroy the purity, of any of j our institutions, no matter who enjoys its re* l suits. But neither do we approve of the hy pocrisy which selects convenient eases for ob jection, and leavos all others to go unwhipt of Justice; nor can wo be content to see the fu ture of this country regarded through the spec tacles of the Great, if not the greatest, Amer ican Mistake of the Nineteenth Centurv." FROM KAN'S A3-MO HE FIGHTING IN PROSPECT. I Sr. LOUIS, Wednesday, Jan. 5, 1859. j ihe Osawatamie (Kansas) correspondent of The Democrat says that Oapt. Hamilton, the leader of the party who committed the atro cious murders at Chouteau's trading post last May, has taken the field in Southern Kansas, with a large body of desperate men, and has already committed various outrages. Mr. Bailey, a Free-Ststo man, was charged with stealingjnegroes frotnjVeruon Ccnntv, Mis souri, aud killed, and the house of Mr. Bloom field, a wealthy i'rco-State resident of Vernon County him Decn sacked and burned. It was reported that Moutgomery was raising party to repel the invasion by Hamilton, and that both parties are determined to fight. A dispatch from Kansas City says that a gang of "Jayhawkers" under Capt. Brown en tered Bates County. Mo., ou Thursday last, and stole four horses from Jesse Jackson and burn ed bis house. Meoary has ordered four companies of dra goons to that region ; Viso, that he bag ordered tour companies cf militia to be raised in Linn Hud Bourbon Counties, iho officers for which have already been commissioned ; and that bo has telegraphed to the Secretary of War to send uo arms aud ammunition from St. Louis, which has been done. It is expected that these counties wili be kept undr martial law for some time. A trustworthy person frcui the viciuity of I'on Scott represen's the actg committed there as similar to tho.-e of the time of the notorious Murrcll. The whole country is divided into "Jayhawkers" and 4 Anti-Jayhawkers." The former commit all sorts of crimes, and are openly upheld by some mcthodist preachers and many respectable people. The "Jayhawkers" justify their acts as a proper revenge for the same kind of depredations and worse atrocities committed upou them by the Pro-Slavery party when they were in a majority. The Pro- Slavery party still hold most cf the officos, aud are accused of oppressive acts. The old pro secution pending on account of the former troubles aie the great cause of dissatisfaction. A dispatch from Kansas City says that a 1 q jorutu of both Houses of the Kansas Legis lature met at L.wicnee on the 3d, and passed a resolution to meet and orgaoite at Lecompton on tbe next day. A caucus was also held for the purpose of fixing upon a place to hold the session, nearly all of those present being agreed to adjourn from Lieompton to soma other point in the Territory. At night, a general caucus of the Ultra* was held, and nominations fot officers made, em bracing Mr. Laisalere for Speaker, Mr. Delabsy for Clerk, and Mr. Thatcher for Printer. It was the general opiuion that this organisation wcnld carry everything, aud control the House. WASHINGTON, Jan. 16. A caucus of the democratic Serators was bell yesterday, on the President's recommendation, in reference to Cuba. A debate of some three or four hours ensued, involving the question whether any steps should be taken in relation to it, and if so, of what character. According to the best attainable iuforuiaticn, Mr. Mason made the opeuiug speech, and was followed by Mr. Hun ter and Mr. Shields. Though favorable to the acquisition of Cuba, they thought actiou at this time impolitic and calculated to impair rather than improve our prospects to that end. Mr. Doug'as regarded appearances as gloomy, but would snpport Mr. Slidell's bill placing in the hand* of the President $30,000,000 to be used iu negotiation. II expressed the belief that the President would endorse this measure with out sufficient data io justify him iu so doing. He (Mr. Douglas) had long desired the acqui .-ition of Cuba. Iu his judgraeut there was but one mode, and that was on the happening of another case similar to that of the Black War rior, to seise the Islaud byway of reclamation, and negotiate) afterwards. The determination of (he eauons was, with a few exceptions, to favor the reeommcudation of the President, although the precie mode io which it sbouid bo consummated was not so clearly indicated, but the probability is the Senate will pass Mr. Slidell's hill. The fallowing paragraph we clip from the Hagerstown "Herald and Torch:" "HON. E. MCPHM&ON.— This gentlemsn, member of Congress eloot from tbe adjoining District in Pennsylvania, has recently been spending a few days among his relations in this town, and looks remarkably well. Mr. Mc pherson is the youngest member of tbe Penn sylvania Delegation in the next Ooogrese. and when a candidate, waa ridiculed on account of his youth and obscurity, by the Locofoco press, but he vanquished their veteran war horse, and taught I hem a lesson which they will not soon forget. Being a gentleman of mnch good praotical seuee, fair oratorical powers, aud lib eral, conservative views apoo tbe politioal questions of tbe day, we have no doubt b will attain a position in tbo next#ooie,aud beoome a useful and creditable representative." See advertisement of Bsnfords' loiter luvig orator. __ Executive GurMchanifl, Judge Robertson, of Richmond, Va u, written an article for the Richmond Enquired to which he shows, in a forcible intoner, the mo ! narcbieal proclivities of Mr. Buchanan, as et hibited in the following passage of his late An ! uu&l Message: "The Executive Government of this couetn in us intercourse with foreign nations, it li J' ed o he employ went of diplomacy alone. Wbsa this fails it can proceed no further. I Mnnc , legitimately resort to force, without the direct | authority of Congress, except in resitting afi* repelling hostile attacks. It would have no an • thorny to enter the territories of Nicatavu, to ptevsnt the destruction of the transit' and protect the lives and property of our own eiti xeus ou their passage. It is true, that on atud den emergency of this character, the President would direct any armed force in the vicinity t 0 inarch to their relief, but io doiog this he would act upon his own responsibility." After commenting upon the term 'Executive Government,' a thing not recognixed by the Con stitution, the 'executive' being but a department of the Government, and the expression as used by Mr. B. is calculated to create ati improper impression, Judge It. continues : "Nothing iu the whole paragraph quoted s bovc, until we reach the concluding sentanoe couli be more unexceptionable than the Presi dent's views of the powers and duties of the ex ecutive iu conducting our intercourse with for e.-n nations. It is United, he tells us, to di plov toy aloae, and if that should fail, it Uu proceed no further; that it cannot report to force without the direct authority of Congress; o T he admits emphatically that it would hive no authority to entor the territories of Nicaragua eveu to prevent the destruction of the transit and protect the lives and property of our citi zens. Vet, in the very next breath he declares, that on a sudden emergency cf this character' he would direct an aruied force to march te their relief. Was ever a conclusion more at wr with the premises? Did any absolute potentate ever more boldly proclaim a meditated and pil psblo usurpation? Has Senator Seward himself ever affected a loftier power to dispenao the laws and Constitution of the Union? FOREIGN INTE LUGE NCE. Interesting Jidvtces from Europe —Threatens Difficulty between France and Austria— Panic in the .Money Markets. NEW I ORK, Jan 19. —The steamer City ef Washington, with Liverpool dates to the s'l ioat , arrived here thia morning. Italian affairs weie more threatening. At the New Year levee of the Emperor Na poleon, he made a menacing remark to (bt Austrian minister, which attracted great atten tion and produced considerable sensation. Tks Emperor's words cere as follows: "I regret that our relations with your gov ernment are not so good as thvj were; tut 1 request you to teli the Emperor my persona! feelings fur him have not changed." The emphatic tooe of tbt Emperor, and the animated gesture with which he accompanied hia remark, attracted the attention of the as sembled diplomatic corps. The Bourse was closed till the 3d, but ou tbe opening on Monday quite a panic prevailed —the decline in the funds beiug fully one per cent. On the 4th tbe Bourse continued de pressed, aud again the funds were rather lower. The London Exchange sympathised with lbs Paris Bourse, and the decline at one time was nearly i per cent. Tbe money market also closed flat at Vienna where, also, a panic prevailed, under a rumor that Austria would send troops to Belgrade. Italy is still in an unsettled state, particu larly Lomtardy. The news from all parts is pregnant with alarm, aud the steps which have been taken in Lotnbariy are almost tsntsmonot to a atate of siege. The Spauish Ministry have declared that Spain will never sell the island of Cuba, and have protested agnint the insulting hypothesis to the country implied in the President's mes sage. Count Olrsaga introduced a tuotiou support ing the ministerial declaration, and it was unan imously approved. (*oW of Pike's Peak. Specimens of gold from tbe Nebraska sod Kansas mines, from no particular locality hot from the diggings along Tlie PUtte River sod Cherry Creek, above tbe town of Auraria, in Arspaho eonnty,in Kansas, embracing the conn try for 10 or 15 miles around, have been anal yxed at the Philadelphia Mint. Tbe result of the assay is as follows : Fineness. 968 thousandths; value, for ounce troy, after melting, S2O 01. The loss in melt ing was very small; but in ordinary caaes • d<- duc'ion of two per cent from tbe above may be rusde in stating the value of native grains. A recent assay of a sample of gold from tbe same region gave a fineness of 964 thousandths; and a eous-'cpent value of sl9 92 por after melting. These results seem to confirm tbe character cf the Kansas and Nebraska gold, and ihow it to be of a very high fineness; moob above that of California, and eqnal to that of Australia. England, Fraoe and Ike P. SUieav By tha arrival at Halifax of tbe steamship ".Vtagsra," w* have a highly important piece of intelligence. It if that France has official ly informed the British government of its eoi* dial snpport, should the latter adopt meeanrrs to counteract tbe policy of President Buchanan, as anaounoed in his recent message. This me? prove bat an idle rumor, end yet it is quite pro bable that Lonie Napoleon has said something about tbe subject, aud iu a formal manner.— Mr. Bnchanan has been particularly unfortanate in tbe Message alluded to. He bas incensed Mexico and Spain, and BOW it would eppeer that be bas raised the ire cf tbe Emperor of tbe Freuoh, and induced hits to propose an An glo-French alliance, with reference to affairs in tbe New World- We ooofese, nevertheless, i that we doubt the story of its fall extent— However averse England aud Franoe may be to ' tbe dootriaea of Mr. Buchanan, (bey sro not likely to interfere, except in tbe way < (fnotli ' ly protest.— Penna laf.