BY DAVIT) OVER. InierestiQg and Important Disclosures' OLl) UR BUCIIAMtIV 4\> HIS *- IIIXISTHiTIOSi U\JI4SKfcD! Abstract of the Testimony taken before the Committee on Public Expenditures [John B. Hnskin, Chairman,) to investigate Corrup tions inregnrd to the Disburs merits oj the. Public Printing Fund. Forney's Washingtou correspondent, "Occa sional," furnishes his paper, ,; Tbe Press,'' with the following, which, owing to the iiuporiaut character of tho matter, we give in detail. — Let the People read it, and jiiga ct the cor ruption :>f old Mr. Buchanan's Administration. If such shameful wa9te of the People s uioney is winked at and encouraged in the business ot Public Priuting, what is the state of affairs iu o'her, more important, departments of the Gov ernment? This, however, oat) never bo learned unless we have a change cf Administration, or through Investigating Committees. The Way in which the Public Printing is Farmed Out. Cornelius Wendell sworn— by the Chairman: Question. Were you the printer de f'tclo of the last Congress? Answer. I was. Q. Who was elected printer of that House? A. J. B. SteaJruan. Q. You are the printer of tho House until you are supers- ded? A. That is the custom. I hold over uu*-l another priuter is elected. Q He was eieeted printer of the Thirty-fifth Congress? A. Yes, Sir. Q. Did he ever perform the duties of that office? A. No, sir. Q. When did you commenco performing 'he duties of printer to the House* A. immediate ly ou his electioo. Q Will you be kind enough to state, ,n s coucise a manner as jiossible, the terms upon which you became the printer de. 'facta, as be tween you and Mr. Stead man, the priuter elect of the Thirty-fifth Congress? A. I stipulated with biui to do tho work for nixiy four ccuts in the dollar. Q. Sixty four cents on tbedollar 7 A. Yes, sir. Q. That is, where you received one dollar for j certain printing, you got sixty-four cents out of : it fot doing the work? A. Yes, sir. Q. by Mr. Fouke. He g>t thirty-six cents out of the dollar and you the balance 7 A. Yes, sir. Afterwards that arraignment was set aside and i gave him a stipulated sum and took tho chances. He was very anxious for money and 1 bought him out entirely. Q, by the Chairman. Your first agreement with him wh-* to do the work for sixty-four cents on the dollar paid him by tho lloust? A. Yes, sir. Q. And subsequently, be kind enough to state about what time, you bought him out entirely for a stipulated sum. A. lie was elected in De cember, and in May following, I think, 1 gave bim a stipulated sum. Q. How much was that? A. Thirty-four thousand dollars. Q That was the whole bonus you paid bim for selling out to you tho tight of Printer to the House? A. No, sir; subsequently to that about a year, raloet thai, have a row in the ii -use about the matter, I p-n-i him §l,B'-0. — It was a black-mtii operation with him; he threatened to resign, and make a tous gene rally. Q. Were any other parties interested with him in the profits of the printing on his elec tion. A. Yes, sir; Mr. A. D. Brnks, 31 r. Washington .McLean, Judge Walker, and some two or three others, who Leld minor interests. The Profits of ih<> Public Printing, and who G- ta T/um. Q. Were you the printer of the 34 h Con gress? A. I was elected priater of the 34th Congress. Q. Can you state from recollection the amount of money paid during the 34th Congress for the printing done for the House of Represen tatives? A. I think it was about §230,000: 1 am not positive; it was some considerable sum over two hundred thousand dollars. Q. Can you state from recollection the profit? A. Well, i could no*, come very near it from the fact 1 was doing the Senate at-d txecufive work, binding and ail together, and kept uo distinct account of the profit. I should imagine the profit ran near forty-five cents. Q. Forty-five cents on the dollar? A. Yes, sir. Q. Can you state the aggregate amount paid ■for the priutiug of tho House during the 35th CoDgress? A. It was a trifle, over §200,000; I think about §212.000, if my memory serves me. I have ail tbese figures to a cent. Q. Can joa tell wbat was the net profit on ♦he work done for the 35th Congress? A. 1 think it ran in the neighborhood of foriy cent 9; some of the work is not so heavy as some other, because it is not the same style. The price de peuds upon the style. Therefore we may do one handred thousand dollars worth of a par ticular kiud of work and make forty cents profit on the dollar, an-J we may do another kiud aDd make sixty or sevcuty cents profit on the dollar. The prices are fixed by law, and the established scale is varying. Q. are you doing the printing for the present House of Representatives? A. Messrs. En glish & Larootnbo are doing the work at my office. _ Q. Who is doing the printing for the Senate? A. Mr. Rives. Q Who ie the printer of the Senate? A. G. W. Bowman. Q. l-i <> y. u kn w the profits r oeived by Mr. Botroun t:p printing lone f<>r the Scunu ? Do yon k ?'■* j iofita of tue Senate printer? A Weekly Paper, Devoted to Literature, Politics, the Arts. Sciences, Agriculture, &c., &c-~Terras: One Dollar and Fifty Cents in Advance. A. I understand Mr. Hives gives him thirty-three aud a third per cent. Q. He gives that amount to Mr. Bowman*— A. Yes, sir. Q. Do you know the aggregate cost of the Senate printing during the 34;h Congress? A. It was about. § 100,000; I think one hundred and four or one hundred and five thousaud dollars; it was a trifle over one hundred thou s *nd. Q , by Mr. Somes. I waist to know what the net profits now are. A. lam informed that Mr. Hives testified before a committee ot the Senate that he gave Bowmen thirly-threo and a third per cent, of tho gross amount, but that he could not make it, and that his object in doing that wis to break Wendell down. So I have been told by the reporter of the Senate committee. In speaking of profits gentlemen must bear iu mind that !t ought to be calculated upon the aggregate amount of work done. For instance, give me the Semite, House, and executive print ing sad binding, and, with the faciltiea 1 have for doing the work, I should say the profits would range about fifty couts ou the dollar, ail arouues—le9s interest on investment, per haps. Q. Do you recollect the aggregate amount paid tor printing past office blauks during the 3">th Congress? A. I think it averaged about $40,000 per year. Q. D> you kuow the profit on that to the per son who was paid by. the Government for doing the work? A. One half, sir. Q. Do you know what their several interests were? A. I understood that Mr. liauks inter est was one half, 31 r. McLean's one-third, and Judge Walker, 1 think, iuformed uie that he had a quarter interest. Q. ilad Mr. Sieaduiau, at the time of Uis vlcetion, any faciities here in Washington for doing the work which the-public priuier wouW be compelled to do? A. None whatever. Mr. Cloptoo. I weuld like to ask Mr. Wen dell what per ceut would bo a reasonable profit on the cost of tire House priutiug. i take it at, what you hive said about the House printing is applicable to the Senate priutiug? A. Yes, sir. Take tho average all through—Senate, House and executive—and the work costs about fifty cents on the dollar. As arr evidence of that, I did the work, I think for two years, tor fifty cents on the dollar, and made uroeey by it. I look it, i thick, from the estate of General Armstrong, died while be was printer.— That was the House printing alouc. I had fac iities"then, for I wis d'bug the Senate printing as manager for Tucker, and took the work from the Armstrong estate and from Judge Nichol son, who succeeded Gen. Armstrong. The President, the Printing Plunder, and his Organ. Q., by the chairman. Was there any con dition affixed to your doing the work of the 85th Congress, by which you were to own aud con duct the Government organ, The Constitution ? A. No, sir. Q. That wis a voluntary enterprise? A. Yes, sir. The editor of the organ is generally sup posed to command the patronage of the Presi dent. There is a good deal of this work at the disposal of the President —say an aggregate of one hundred thousand dollars per year, more or less. Q. At the disposal of the President ? A. Yes, sir. That patronage the organ has com manded for years, it being impossible to keep a paper up here without Government support. Q. Is this one hundred thousand dollars worth of patronage you speak of at the disposal of the President personally ? A. The law provi des that it shall be under the coutrol of the heads of the departments ; but if the President signifies to his Cabinet that he would be pleased to see A, B, or C get it, as a matter of cour>e they will obey his wishes. It has been a mat ter of custom for the President to dispose of it. Mr. Buchanan has done it and his predecessor, Mr. Pierce, did it. I never had any inter course with the Cabinet in the matter ; my in tercourse Las beeu direct with Mr. Buchanan, and was so with Mr. Pierce. Q. You say the aggregate amount paid for the executive printing per year is $100,000? A. from $85,000 to 110,000. i think it will average sioo,ooo. Q. Do tbe profits on that printing average fifty cents on the dollar? A. A portion of it averages much more ; but the average on tbe whole of it is about sixty five cents on the dol lar. Q. Was there ever any understanding with you while you had that printing that a portion of the profits should be ÜBsd towards sustain ing tbe organ ? A. Yes, sir ;It was given for the purpose of sustaining tbe organ. Q. Was there ever any understanding be tween you and the president as to what portiou of the profits should go towards sustaining the Government organ ? A. No, sir; 1 cannot say there was a direct understanding 1 understood it, and 1 suppose he did. Q. There was no distinct sum fixed upon out of the profits? A. No, sir. The understand ing was that the papier should go on. Q. And that that patronage should support it ? A. Yes, sir. 1 never had anythiug to say about editing it. The President Changes His Editors Often. (J. Who was your editor? A. Mr. Apple ton, Mr. Win. A. Harris, Mr. Simeon Johnson, aud Mr. R. W. Hughes. They wero changed ofteu. Judge Black and Assistant Secretary off State, Appleton; write for the "Organ." Q. 1 ask whether you can state, from your owu kuowle-ige, that any of the heads of tho executive departments wrco editorials that wne published in the Urnon t A. My impression is, 1 may say, Judge Blck wrote for it. I thiuk he wrote several artolss, but 1 do not know positively that any BEDFORD. PA., FRIDAY. APRIL 20, 1800. other member of the Cabinet did. That's my impression. I could not swear positively, nev er having taken mnnuseript from them. Mr. Appleton contributed as editor after he went into the State Department. Q. Were bis articles on general politics?— A. Ou general politics. General George Washington Bowman on the Stand—He draws a fine distinction between a Sub-Contractor and a Foreman. George W. Bowmiu, sworu. Examined by the Chairman. • 11. Where do you ro.-ide, and what is your occupation? A. I reside in this city, on II street, between Tenth and Eleventh. lam ed itor and proprietor of the Conotitutiou, and printer to tho Senate. Q. How long have you been printer fo the Senate? A. Since the 17th o? January. I think that was the day on which I was elected. The 17th of Jauuaryof the present year. Q. How long have you been the editor and proprietor of the "Constitution 1" A. Since the 11th of April last. Q. Do you perform the public'printing your self, or have you contracted it out. A. 1 per form the public printing just in the way a man would who was a printer, and undertook to discharge or oversee everything pettiining to the public printing. 1 employ Mr. Hives to execute the work for uic, for which I pay hiur at the rato of (>G§ cents on the dollar of all printing that shall be executed and passed by tue Superintendent of Public Printing. Q. tlow much uiouey Lave you invested as Senate printer to execute the work required of you ? A. what money havo I invested ? I have Mr. Rives; as I stated iu the beginning, employed to execute the work for me mechan ically. Q. Have you invested aDy money ? Docs he not do all the work. Has he not all the materials? A. Yes sir; he does the whole work. (j. He owns the presses, materials, and everything with which the work is done? A. Yes, sir. Q. Have you made any investment for the purchase of presses? A. No, sir. Q., by Mr. Hindmao. The presses are your investment for tho preeenf, being in your em ploy ? A. \ T es, sir; aud I have the control of the office just as much as if it belonged to uie, for the execution of the work 1 have to do. Q , by Mr. ijomea, Mr. Rives is a sub-oon tracior under you? A. No, sir ; he is siißpty employed as a foreman by uie. Q. 1 understand you to say that he did the work for you for sixty.six aud two third cents on toe dollar? A. He is employed by me as my foreman, just as 1 employ a foreman in the Constitution office, to superintend the compo sition, read the proofs, make up the forms and a'tend to the busiuos of the office. I give it all the personal attention required. Q., by the Chairman. Where is this public priming done, which you were elected to do ? A. In Mr, Rives, office, the Globe office, on Pennsylvania A venue. Q. Who owns the building in which it is done ? A. 1 presume Mr. Rives does, 1 Lave never inquired. Q. Who owns the type used id ibe compo sition, and the presses ? A. Mr. llives. (J. Who purchases the paper] A. The Gov ernment, the printer has nothing whatever to do with the purchase of the paper. (j. WfTo employs the hands who set the type and work the presses ? A. Mr. Rives, as uiy foreman, simply as uiy foreman. Q. Have you invested a dollar in this con cern of Mr. llives, where the printing is doue, which you were elected by the Senate to do ? A. I have employed Mr. ltives as my foreman, aud he furnished the office and the material. General Bowman Dodges. Q. are the profits of the Senate printing, or any part of tho*e profits, appropriated toward sustaining the newspaper kuown as The Consti tution, or any other newspaper ? Mr. HiDdmar;, 1 object— The witness interiupting. By my election as Seuate printer, there was no appropriation made in any way to the support of any news paper out of the profits thereof. Ilisiorg of the Post Office Blank Printing. Q. You have said that you priuted the post office blanks tor a number of years ? A. Yes, sir ; for about fiftceu years. Q. Did you derive your contract from the public printer ? A. No sir ; for eight yeara I wis a contractor with the Department. Q. You say that you were for eight years a contractor with the Post Office Department f A. Yes, sir , as the lowest bidder un ler the contraot system. Q. When did those eight years expire ? A. i think in 135:1 or 1853. Q. Ftom that time did you do the work as a sub-contractor ? A. Yes, sir. Q. Under whom ? A. I executed the work for the publio printer under a sob-contract. Q. For for the public printer ? A. Yes sir; and also as a aub-oontractor under Mr. Wen dell. Q. You did the work under Mr. WeudelJ? A. Yes, sir; 1 was sub-contractor under Mr. Wendell. Q. at what rates ? A. My first acquaintance was at the rate of fifty-five cents and executed the work for forty-five oents on the dollar, paid by tho Government. Q. Do you remember what is the aggregate annual cost to the Government for the printing of the post office blanks ? A. From SIO,OOO to $45,000. Q. A year ? A. Yes, sir. The President and the Printing Plunder. Cornelius Wendail recalled: Q. Has the President been in the habit of dispensing tbis Post Office printing? A. It was done by contract until 1856. I tbink then the contraot expired, and it reverted to tbo printer of Congress. Judge Nicholson was then printer aud editor of the organ, and it rcvtmd to him. Q That was iu 1856 ? A. I think it was in 1556. Q. From 1850 who exercised the control over the giving out of the Post Office blank printing? A. The President aud Postmaster General. In December succeeding Mr. Bu chanan'* coming into power, he gave it to Mr. Rico for a time. Q. Did jrou sub-contract it for Mr. Rice?— A. Yes, est-; that was the understanding that 1 should continue to do the work as hereto fore, aofrffave the control of it, Rice receiv ing. 1 thin]:, forty-three cents in the dollar. Q. \\ is there any understanding when this work w*i| given to llice that any newspaper was to htf supported out of it? A. It was un derstood *bat it was for the support of the Perter Qeoerai. Q., by Mr. llindman. flow did you know thai? A. From conversation I held with them. I insisted upon having more of the profits of the printing to support Th Union, as it was one of those rather unprofitable pe cuniary organs, and Mr. Rice WJS very clam orous to fcawe a share for the Pennsylvunian, and we finally settled on forty three cents on the dollar. I theu made a coutract with Mr. Crowell, wijo did the work for me for forty five or fifty cents on tho dollar. He did it a portion of the time for forty fivo cents, and a portion of the time for fifty oents. i had also the executt ve binding, which ltice thought ougb* to satrsfy me, but the profits on that were not so great, and the expenses of "The Union" being very large, I iuereted that I should bach all the profits of the post office blank printing. 1 eould not keep it, how ever. "W Q. by the Chairman. You stated that §2O, 000 Were to be allowed out of the profits of the executive printing towards supporting the organ under General Bowman? A. When I parted with it in March last 1 found that, pay tog Rice and Severn*, I could not su.-taiu "The Uu? from the profits ol the executive work, and i thercfote proposed to give it to uuy party that might be designated by the President. Q Who-Md you make this proposition to?— A. To the president; and to pay §ko.ooo per afcmtm:- 'pwyoaitiow. " Peouin that proposition Mr. Baker, the collector of Phila delphia, came down to procure sid for the "Penosylvanian," and anally I b.ul to acceed to giving §20,000 per annum. §IO,OOO per annum of which Mr. Baker obtained for the "Pennsylvania!!." 1 have beet) informed that §IO,OOO of the §50,000 was for the '-Penn sjlvanian," but my obligation is with Mr. Bowman fur §20,000. That obligation exist ed, and still exists, and there has been DO ac tion had iu relation to it, owing to Mr. Bow man's refusal to carry out his part of the en gagement, which was that 1 was to do the Sen ate printiug iu case he wis eleoted printer to the Senate. 1 paid Mr. Bowman §5,000 in advance when he took "The Union," and the balauce 1 secured to biin by giving him orders on tlic po*t office work, which he couid not draw, having no orders on it. Q. You paid him §5,000 when he took the paper? A. when he took "The Union," I gave him that amount as a capital to start with. Q. Did you pay him any more on account of the §20,000? A 1 gave him orders ou the Post Uifice Department m pursuance of an uc ccund he reudi red me of what was due him, which orders I subsequently countermanded, on account of bis not carrying out his engage ment. Q. What did those orders amount to? A. If my memory serves me, I gave him orders to the amount ot SB,OOO or SIO,OOO. Q. lias he not received payuieDt at the Post Office Department of those orders? A. I be tievo not, yet I do uot know. Q. Ws it understood when you transferred "The Union" to Mr. Bowman that $20,000 should he diverted out of the proceeds oi the post offioe printing by you to iis support? A. Yes, sir; that was the understanding. Q. Between whom* A. The paper was drawn up by Judge Black. It waa between Mr. Bowman and myself, wo being put for ward as the active men. Q. Was the President consulted in relation to it at any time? A. 1 first addressed a note to the President—to Judge Nicholson who was uiy friend io the case, for the President, and he took it up to him. Jn that note 1 stated that it was rather onerous to me to be obliged to support "The Uuion," and what I desired to do. 1 suggested that Mr. Macdcu ald, formerly a member of Congress from Maine, should take the paper and become its editor. He was a oompeteufc man, I supposed; but in the course of two or three weeks Bow man's name was mentioned, and 1 assented to it. Wo met at the Attorney General's office, and Judge Black drew up the papers between us, which ooosisted in my conveying "The Union" to him. , Q. To Mr. Bowman? A. Yes, sir, to Bow man: with a stipulation to pay the money al so. There was a letter addressed in the du plicate to Judge Black and Judge Nicholson, selecting them a (he umpires in case any dit ficultj should arise between us. iiie difficul ty baring arisen, I bare tried to have it set tled by the umpires, but Bowman tuvariably declines. lie found be could make a better thing cf it, 1 suppoae, by engaging Mr. Hives; and wleo he was fleeted Seuate printer be re pudiated all our agreements, for which I have commenced a lawsuit, it hemg, as 1 am advised by my counsel, the only remedy 1 have in the preuiies. Q.ilow much of a losing concern is this Government organ per annum, in your judg meut? A. If my memory servos me, it cost me, when it was under my management, $19,- 000 over and above i-ts receipts. Q., by Mr. Paluier. Did it cost you that amount per aouum? A. Yes, sir; I thiuk it cost uie about that last year. Bowman told toe that he thought it would cost him shout $1*2,000 with his management. He neing a close manager, cut uowu where I was disposed to be liberal. I paid pretty well for the ser vices of those employed about the paper. I did not quarrel with the editors about the •mount they should receive, but paid thorn a liberal salary. The editors were generally designated by the President. Q. The editors of "The Union" were desig nated by the Presidcut whilst you had the management of the paper? A. Yes, sir; whilst 1 was the owuer of it. Q. Were any oNtbose editors in the employ of the Government? A. Not when they were appointed editors; Mr. Appletoo was after wards appointed Assistant Secretary of" State, and Mr. Harris elected State primer. Q. You have spoken of your liberality; be kind enough to state whether, out of the prof its of the public pnutiug, you contributed, iu 185S, certain sums to secure tbe election of members of Congress in different districts in Pennsylvania. If so, in what district el A. I -.(.ent a good deal of money in politics, but with ail deference to too committee, 1 must decline to answer iu what districts. Jehu Glancy Jonis gets a share of the Plun der. Q. Did you make any contriouiions towards the election to Congress of J. Glancy Jones iu 1858* A. A similar question was pro pounded to me by the Senate Committee, which I respectfully begged leave to decline n-,wer ing. I auswered that 1 bad for years coutiib uted to the sustenance of tbe party; that I bad always been au enthusiastic party utan, aud still was, and that probably 1 snould con tribute more iu the coming campaign if I had it. 1 stated that i had expended money in Pennsylvania, New York, New Jersey, Ohio, and divers other States, ana 1 had given to disiricts represented at that time on the floor by personal and political friends. I now state that 1 did contribute iu eight or ten districts, 1 cannot call to mind tbe exact number, in Peousylvania, duriug the last campaign, in sums varying from $250 to $2,500 in tbe dif ferent districts which it was supposed a little w'terial aid would carry for us. I did, among contribute to the Berks deunty dis trict, represented then by the Hon. J. Glanoy Jones, and to divers aud sundry others. 1 thiuk iu uiy other testimony 1 mentioned the names of tt.e gentlemen who represented those districts then, but who, unfortunately, da not represent tbem now. Q. DM you contribute io Landy's district"? A. 1 contributed iu bis district ainoug others. The specific ground upon which 1 refused to answer this questiou before was, that I pro tested against an inquiry into what I had dono with funds of uiy own, and with tq>tcified places, i hare no objection to say that I con tributed more or less in the different districts, as my check book shows, in sums varying from 1 $250 to $2,250. I know there was one dis trict very hard to carry, but we did save it. Q whose district was that? A. We saved the Fiorenoe district from the wreck. I beg the committee will excuse nu from going into details. Ttns mouey was contributed for strictly party purposes. Q. by Mr. iiinduian. Did you use any money to aid iD securing the election of any member of Coogress in any Southern State?— A. Never. 1 beiieve you do not indulge in the expensive luxury. I have offered to do it, but my offers have been indignantly refused. Q. by the chairman. If yuu had not been in the receipt of the proceeds of the public printing, would you have contributed money as you say you have doue iu the various Cou gressioDal districts? A. I would not have been able to contribute so orach. It was the profit I made out of the public printing tbut enabled me to contribute these amounts of monev. The fact th u I was in a public posi tion £oown to be remunerative, induced fre quent calls upon me, to which I responded. Q. by Mr. Somes. I wish to know whether or not there was an implied or expressed un derstanding between you and auy executve of ficer of the Government that you should make these contributions out of the proceeds of the prioting for political purpose? A. No, sir; none, except as to the contributions I made towards the support of certain newspapers which the President saw fit to assign to me to support. Q., by the chairman. Did any of these Con gressional candidates make demands upon you? A. Not demands; they made humble requests. Q. Did J. Glancy Jones request you to as sist towards his election? A. Well, yes, sir In the course of a conversation he asked uie to ooutribute something to it, and I remember telling him there was no necessity of spending money in his distriot, as it was safe anyhow.— We found, however, that it was rather unsafe when the votes came to. Examined by Mr. Hindman: Q. Was there, or was there uot, propounded to you bef'orß the Senate investigating com mittee, inquiring into this subject, a question of this purport : "Whether the President of the United States and yourself had any cor. respondeuce in regard to the use of uiouey in the electious in any State .**' aud if so, what was your response upon the subject? A. There was a question of that kiud. Q. State what your ouswer was. A. The answer I intended to convey was this, that pending the Congressional election of 1858, 1 suggested to him the suspension of the pay ment of this mouthly stipend to the Peniisylva nian aud Jlrgus, ami tho appropriation of that money to party purposes, to bo used in differ- VOL. 33, NO. 16. era localities. 1 was my own suggestion to him that, iu my judgement, the money was uselessly expended in keeping up effete papers, and that it eould be to better advantage iu getting out voters, circulating documents, &o. I told biui that I thought it would be better tor the party to apply it in that way,and that 1 would take the responsibility of doing it. 1 assumed the responsibility and did it, Ire not dissenting from that course ; but there was HO specific direction from the President to me to do it. It is justice to him to state that be bad authorized the payment of certain mon eys, at certain rates per antrum, out of the profits of the printing, to the Pennsylvania aud to the Argus, and that when this election occurred, 1, acting upon the belief I have al ready stated took the responsibility of making this suggestion and carrying it cut. So that the sin or blame of stopping what I always deemed an unjust tax upon rne, as the meobauio performing the work, and of directiug ttre mouey to other purposes, if it was a sin, rests upon mc alone. Q, by the chairman. Dii the President agree to your suggestion? A. He did not dissent from it. H. You made the statement you nave just given us to? A. 1 did. Q. Were your relations with him of a very intimate character duriug your counectioa kith the Government organ as its owner? A. Yes, sir. 11. \V ere you in the habit of seeiog him fre quently? A. Very frequently. Q. How frequently? A. Really I cannot say. Q How many times a week? A. 1 averaged two or three times a week—some weeks more, and some weeks less. THE DIVISION OF PARTIES.—In 1790. at the Presidential election between the Democ racy wh>> supported Thomas and the Federalists who voted for John Adams, the latter got every electoral vote in New Eng land. Agaio, in 1800, at the Presidential election—the same candidates in the field- Mr. Adams recoived the unanimous electoral vote of New England. The whole North vo ied for Adams on botli occasions, save parts of Pennsylvania and New lork. The South was nearly or quite unanimous for Jefferson. • In 1808 and 1812, when James Madison was ruuuing for President on the Democratic ticket, every New England State voted against him, save Vermont. Ail the Southern Estates voted for him, save Delaware. In 1828 all New England went for John Quirtcy Adams, except one electoral vote in Maine. Geoeral Andrew Jackson was beaten in every Eastern State. The South went al most unanimously for Jackson. After all the mutilations of politics and of time, the divisions of party are, geographically, about a* they were in 1790 and 1800. THE SPEAKER'S PAGE. —At present the main stay of Speaker Peuniugton is the young page who stands upon his right, a youth of fine appearance and something near eighteen vears of age. This Page was first appointed lo of fice by Speaker .Boyd, and bus ever siace con tinued to discharge the duties of "Page to the Speaker,' among which is now reckoned the duty of prompting the Speaker in the discharge of ni3 official duties. He stands near the Speak* er, and directs hiin in an uudnr tone how to put every motion,and how to decide points of order as they arise. "lu..niueus" is known to ail the politicians of the country as the uiost re markable parliamentarian ot his age, living.— With the constructions of the rules of order he is perfectly familiar, and every precedent ho has at his finger's ends. COST OF TUE CHARLESTON CONVENTION.— It is proposed to carry porsous from Boston to the Charleston Convention, by sea, for §IOO each, for the round trip, including board. If we take this as the average expense of those who will go to Charleston OD this occasion, and estimate the number at ten thousand; which is much below the estimates of most of our co temporaries, it will be seen that this gathering of the unclean Democracy will costs a million of dollars. It is probable, however, that -he money will go into more honest and more pru dent bands, even supposing the; a portiou of it does come out of the Treasury cf the United States. "AND STILL THEV COME." —Nebraska Ter ritory has elected 40 Republicans to 12 Demo cratic members of her constitutional convene tiou. This is the most extraordinary victory which the Republican party have ever yet achieved. The Natioual Administration have always heretofore been able to control tne politics of the Territories, through the land offices, but Nebraska is stoutiy iu rebellion.— She prefers free labor, and loudly protests against degrading white laborers to the level of stoves. She asks, and will have, "free men" for her "free soil." NOT AFRAIO OF AN "IRREPRESSIBLE UON ! v Lrcx.*'—A friend, who W39 present, informs us that, at Louisville, Georgia, lust Tuesday, negroes brought higher prices than ever before known. Old men brought SI,OOO, young men and boys $1,500 to $1,600, aud .young women without children $1,900 to $2,000 and up i wards— all field hands. The terms were notes with interest fiorn date—equivalent to oasb.**- The people in Jefferson, we judge, have eery little dread of John Browu.— tiugusta CAroitt' cle. Tbo "glorious uncertainty of the law" was hardly ever bettor illustrated than by the t'ar stang-Shaw case. The first jury gave ber SIOO, 000 damages, and the next jury gives her non< 1