AMERICAN VOLI.NTEKIt, JM!I B. BMTTOS, Editor & Proprietor. : CARLISLE, PA., DEC. 3. 1857. ThakKsoiviso.—Thursday Inst was- (he day get apart.by Uib Governor of this Common wealth, for. general Thanksgiving. Thc.day was appropriately observed by our order-loving people, greatly to their credit and the honor of •or town, by abstaining from business and at tending upon Divine service. Tbe New. Codntt Opfiokbs.—Messrs. Quia let, Caorr, and Eminoer, our newly elected County officers, were sworn into office on Tues day last. They are fully competent to dis charge the duties of their respective stations, and we feel quit^certain they wilt give general satisfaction to the public. We wish tlieni suc ccs*. Moses Bmckeh, Esq-, the new County Trea surer does not take possession of in’s office ualil the first of January. THEConEEKcr— Coi..Be.nto.n’s Letter. —Wo call attention to tlio letter from Tiuuias IT. Be.n iojr on Banks and currency, addressed to the editors of the National Intelligencer. It is.tin able exposition of the evils of our present bank, ing system, conducted without a responsible specie basis and of the vicious intliienccs exert ed by the unrestricted issue of a small- paper currency. No man in the country is more com petent to handle the subject (ban Col. Bentok, who years ago led the memorable assault upon the United States Bank in tlio Senate.of the United States, and bo has placed the question in so clear a light that the evils of our banking system and the, remedies that should bo applied are put with tlio force of absolute demonstra tion'. Podithy Thieves.— There have lately been a great many depredations committed .upon our farmers and .others by certain lawless scoundrels who appear to have a hankering after line, tat poultry. We learn that on one night last week Mr. Jons StoXrt, Jr., of South Middleton township, had,stolen .froia him no leas, than ieventeen splendid turkeys. All wore taken at one fell swoop. No cine has been discovered which might lead to ihddetection of the perpe- Matora of this “ fowl ” robbery; On Thursday night Inst, the poultry yard of but old friend; Major Micuael Sanno, at the Carlisle Barracks, was invaded by some of the soldiers attached to the post, and m number of turkeys slaughtered. In this case, however, the thieves were discovered and identified be fore they could make off with th°ir booty, and bn Friday last some of them were severely pud ished by the authorities at the Barracks for their unsoldier-like conduct. ■We have heard of many more of such petty thefts having been committed recently in this vicinity, but ■ as-we have-not.learned tho full particulars ive forbear to mention them. • [£7* Left his home in' Hampden township, ou tlie 22d of November last, Edward Seiueu, a' boy about 15 years of age, and has. not been heard of since. Any information of his where abouts, will be thankfully received by his fath er, John. Setter, at Good Hope, this county, or at this office. DnrAtiTuaE of - U • S, Tuobr.s.— On Monday list, a detachment of United States troops, num bering’ 219 men, left Carlisle Barracks, under the command of Lieut.- Lee, They were a which it undoubtedly soon, will, will do yeoman service in tlie cause of their country. Their present destination, wo believe, is California, but eventually they will join tho army under, Gen. Habhey, and aid in subduing the rebel-. Uous Mormons. [C? Congress .assembles on Monday next. Hon. John A. Ann, the member from this dis trict, passed through Carlisle on Mqndaay last, on his way to Washington. In speaking of. the Presidents Message, a Washington cor respondent says—The President has determin ed to keep Vis message open until the last mo menta and it is extremely doubtful whether it is sent even its far as Philadelphia ip advance of its delivery to Congress. The President has alsoadojitcd the utmost caution with reference to the contents of the Message, and you may rely upon it that all reports that may bo pub . lishcd.with regard (o the topics upon which, it treats are purely guess-work, and nothing more. Re-Elected U. S. ' Senator. —The two Branches of the Legislature of Alabama met in Convention, on Saturday last, and on the first 'ballot elected, lion. C. C. Clay, Jr., to the United Slates Senate for six years, from the 4th of March, 1859, when his present term of office expires. Gov. Walker. —The Union aufhoratively contradicts the report, that Gov. Walker .has purchased lands in Kansas or elsewhere, and adds that no part of the reservation- at Fort Leavenworth,has been sold. ... ICf* t)b Vall’s Galvanic Oil will remove all pain from Burns and Scalds, in from 10 to 20 minutes, by making a free application to the .parts effected. Painful Sores’ and Swellings will be relieved in a short lime by the use of this Oil. Tub McKeesport Murderers. —The Su preme Court, has affirmed the aclion of the Criminal Court in the case of Charlotte Jones. Henry Fife, and Monroe Stewart, who were sentenced to be hung for the murder of an old man and his sister, at McKeesport. . tTT* The Easton Argus mentions an incident of an did gentleman recently deceased in Lehigh , county, who had been suspected of having con siderable money in his house, although no one knew the amount. lOn examining the premises after bis death, no less than eleven thousand dollars were found in specie, which he had doubtless been, saving arid concealing for many yean. News, from California.—The Northern Light, from Aspinwall, arrived in New York yesterday morning. She brings upwards of $2,000,000 in gold dust. The news is unim portant , .The Mormons were preparing for a contest with the United States troops. The news of the, massacre Of the Plains is fully confirmed.’ O’ Accordipg to scientific gentlemen we arc likely t 6 have a mild winter this time. The more unseasonable the weather is the more sea sonable it will bo for-the poor. Let us offer up a propiliary sacrifice to the clerk of the wcath e{. . , THE POOR. “ Let not ambition mock their useful toil, Their homely joys and destiny obscure; Nor grandeur bear with a disdainful smile, Tlie short but simple annals oftlio poor.” When the Chilly blasts of bleak November howl around our comfortable-dwellings ; when wo are seated around our firesides enjoyirfg iho comforts of ii happy'home : when we feel that Gyd in his bcnifieciicc has vouchsafed to us all* the comforts that the heart can -wish for, it is fit siteli times, .wc, siioutd ask ourselves the question—is it thus with our neighbors ? Our duty as Christians does not cense, with merely contributing a few pennies or a few dollars to this, or dial committee, for the.poor. .In stead of being satisfied with ourselves when wc merely contribute our mite, wc should remem ber that, it is pur duty to go seek the modest objects.of charity who arc pining in want and snfll-ring because they cannot summon sufficient courage loajje, although they need the help.— Go seek the objects of charily we say, and let their wants be known to those who have the means to relieve them. . It is only necessary to appeal to the big heart of. the American people," when an object is presented worthy of its sym pathies, tq insure relief. The wisest of nil teachers has told us that charity is the best of Christian virtues ; that it covereth a multitude of Sins, and that he who “giveth to the poor, iendelh to the Lord.” Let this duty, be tended to by one and all. . ■ Bad Advice.— The .newspapers of the princi pal eastern cities,are urging upon the poor, and those out ol employment; to leave the city, for the country'. ,It is not-jhst,-that our city friends should give this kind of adviep. The people in the rural districts, at, this season of the y'enr, have hands enough to do all the labor required. We have onr own poor ariiong us, and onr duty' is to see that they' do not suffer. There is ,a much more, extensive field for.em ployment in the city'than in the country tit the present time, and the means of providing for those ini,straightened circumstances is more nipple in the former than, in Hie latter. We advise persons out of employment, to remain just where they arc, and hot go where they are not known. Already are the poor houses of . the different counties of Pennsylvania, on the route of Phil adelphia to Pittsburg, tilled to’overflowing wiili the poor of Hie Eastern cities, and our publi cans are nightly solicited fqrTrce quarters'-by destitute strangers. Let the cities take care of their Own poor and the country will provide for such of il.s own citizens as arc in indigent eir cumstaiiccs. [£7” The vanity'.of riches is seldom illustrated so strikingly as in the case of the great English -millionaire,-Morrison, who died worth $20,000,- 000. It seems to. be one of thoconditionsof. the accumulation of enormous wealth in n. single generation that the possessor'shall first dis qualify himself from enjoying it, and in some cases, even from appreciating the, fact that he holds it. Mr. Morrison accumulated this al most fabulous amount himself, and in the reg ular course of his business, wlthbut'any extra ,ordinary, turn oflortmic ; yet tile following ex-, tract from a,letter in the Boston Post'shows how lilllc.benefit be pcl-mitlcd himself lb receive from all his wealth. What a satire it is upon the exclusive devotion of all the faculties to the J’w , ’.'.\ii|',' , i\i(HTl^Cfri , eu7ed from active UusmosCi several years since, without withdrawing his capital from the -mercantile', house, and though managing his vast funds himself up to the nine of hisdcalli with all the sagacityof.earliordays, he has for the .last three years, been possessed with (he idea that' ho ’should come to want.—' More than two years ago. he commenced doing day. labor upon a farm held by one of bis ten ants, for which be received twelve shillings a week, and this he continued Up to the lime of his illness. For the last eighteen months he lms been a regular applicant for relief to the parish, assembling twice a week with the town paupers at the door of the .‘Union - ,’ and rcceiv.j ing with each one of.them his two shillings and aquarlern loaf.' His friends have indulged him in these fancies on the ground that it was the host choice of two evils. The truth is, money was his god, and the idea became at last too great for him and broke him down. And yet tie is said lo have made h most judicious will, and his investments up to the hialar'e iilnrac terised by great good'sense. The probate-du ty on his will exceeds X100,000.”' CCT'An entertainment- coniplimonlary to Chief Justice Lewis, of the Supreme Court of this State, by the members of the Pittsburg Bar, on his retiring from the Judiciary, came off recently at tbs Monongahcla House, in that city. The Bar was fully represented, and ex hibited the good sense -and taste to Select the venerable Wilkins for the presiding officer, who delivered a very touching and eloquent, but short address upon introducing the common object of respect, Chief Justice Lewis, whoso remarks exhibited a proper appreciation of the genuine esteem bestowed Upon him by the members of ihe Pittsburg Bar. Tjje regular tpasls brought out the other Supremo Judges present, Messrs. Armstrong, Woodward and Knox. Judge Slialer, ‘who was the master' spirit of the evening: made some happy re marks, followed by A. W. Loomis, Judge Wil liams, Judge McClure, K. Biddle Roberts, G. P, Hamilton, and others. Chief Justice Lewis ja undoubtedly one of the leading lights of the legal profession in-this country, and Ids retire ment from the' position which he filled with such manifest benefit to the community is a cause of general regret. Worthy of all Praise.—We ask the at tention of our readers to the following item : A New .Movement.—A correspondent of the Providence Journal, writing from Dixon, Illinois, says: “A move has been made by the ladies of Dixon. Illinois. Some twenty of .the daughters of Rhode Island, now residing here, have resolved ll\at until every factory and cali co establishnienniLdJißiymlivc State is again m successful operation, they,will neither pur chase nor consume any fabric, rinless of Amer ican manufacture, and will give preference to la bor of their native Slate. The sons of Rhode Island, also residing hero, have adopted a simi lar resolution, and ten of them (till appear next week in new suits of broadcloth, the materials of which were furnished by the Rhode Island factories.” , Here is an example worthy of universal hni lalion. If American ladies possessed indepen dence and patriotism enough not only to re solve but carry into effect a; similar resolution everywhere, we should not export millions of spepie evtVy year for ridiculous gew-gaws.— VVe should like to hear once in a whole life [time that there was good sense and good taste enough in the United States to invent an Amcr ican fashion, without servilely copyingcvery one of them from Europe as wo now'do. Gov. Packer's Cabinet^-. Tire papers , are amusing themselves' with guessing who will compose Gov. Packer’s Cab inet. For Secretary of the Commonwealth, 1 Hon. John Cessna, of Bedford,TlOn. Win. M. HiesieT, of Berks, and linn.' John L. Dawson, of Fayette, are mpst prominently named. For Attorney General, A. B. McCalmont, Esq-, of Pittsburg, Judge Church, of Erie, lion. N. B. Browne, and W. A. Porter, Esq., of Philadel phia, arc mostly spoken of, and \ve lake occa sion to add the name of lion. F. TV. Hughes, of Schuylkill, one of the most brilliant minds m the Commonwealth. That cither of thes gentlemen are fully competent to discharge the dunes of the distinguished positions for "which they aic named, no one will doubt, but wheth er Gov. Packer will ,confine himself to the list made for him by the nespapers may bo ques.- tionablo. lie has had abundant experience in State politics, lo be able to, choose; a very re spectable Cabinet without much advice oh the subject,and we suspect will make his, selections to suit his own views of propriety, yet of course having full regard to the judgment of the parly in regard Ip the ultimate merits of the appoin tees. He is, however, a pretty good listener, and no doubt will feel duly grateful fol the nu merous suggestions made by his two hundred thousand friends. . .... Black-Republican Hypocrisy; The Washington Union says with truth that the most arrant .hypocritic to bo found is the Black Republican, who pretends to bo horri fied because the whole of the Kansas constitu tion 'is not submitted ro the people of the Ter ritory' for ratification or rejection. This same Black-Republican, was, and is, the advocate of the Topeka constitution, that was made by a body of irresponsible fanatics, who assembled in open defiance ot the laws of-the Territory, usurped tho power to .sit as a .constitutional convention, made a constitution in open hostdi ty to the legal authorities of the Territory', re fused to submit any -portion to the people for gratification or rejection, blit sent it to Con gress, and there insisted that it was’ the true arid legitimate constitution of Kansas. The hypocrite now. pretends to be schocked that tho legally constituted convention of Kansas has (ailed,to submit any other than the sla very clause for the judgment of the people.— Such brazen-faced effrontery and shanieless hy pocrisy desei ve Ip be scouted and despised by all.'true national men. The Kansas .C.oxbtitiitipn;— The Philadelphia Ledger contains the following pointed remarks concerning tho Kansas Constitution. Wo agree with our city contemporary that it appears like foolishness to engage in a discussion about the Constitution’ of Kansas before ive know its pro visions..; Tho paramount issue in Kansas'.is very or np slavery, and that is to bp put to rest by a direct vote of the people. If a majority, are opposed to slavery, they have only to go to Hie polls and say so, and it is prohibited. But, to the article fibradh e Ledger ; ■ Making ax Anxioipatoiiy- Fuss.'—Some of the newspapers are making a great pother over tho Kansas constitution and the groat wrong done to the inhabitants of that- Territory, by submitting only the slavery cllhisp to the vote ol the people. What this constitution is nobo dy knows; even. Gov. Walker, it-is said, has not seen. it. Then why pH this denunciation by the newspapers? Would it not bo ns well to wait and see ivlint the constitution contains, be fore so many words arc expended upon it f Perlitips the inhabitants of Kansas arc not to prevent the wrong being douo. Kaiisns will be a froo and independent Slate, in spite of (ho (ricks of partitians; and (hose \vlio t Ijink fo rc revive the Kansas troubles for flic purposo of •trading in them, will lin'd that the game is played out. The country is sick of this continual tur moil about Kansas, and will readily acquiesce in and support any measure which will establish a proper government whore nothing but anarchy prevaiis,-and which will leave the people to.do-' cldc .whether they want slavery or not. The Career or a Foroer. —A criminal trial of unusual interest has just terminated in Cleve land, Ohid,' in which the defendant is one Ed. ward T. Nichols, cousin of-Phinoas T. Bainnm, the distinguished showman. Nichols, who wa> tormeily a, tradesman and a communicant of the Baptist church; in the spring of 1855 became manager of the Athcnicnni theatre, in Cleve land, and also interested.himself in gift lotter ies." While engaged in these enterprises, be sides borrowing at different times largo sums o( Bainnm, ho forged-hia acceptances to the amount 0f540,000, upon the discovery o( wbicli'hc fled to New York, where ho was- secreted for seve ral months. He was apprehended and taken back to Cleveland; managed to- escape again to New York, was-again-taken bade, and after va rious attempts to break jail;-was persuaded by bis counsel in view of the overwhelming evi dence against him; to plead guilty and to sub mit to the sentence of the Court. In Ohio, we believe twenty years is the shortest term allow ed by law-for forgery. Government Patronage.— The State De partment has recently published a list of our Consuls and Ministers abroad, their compensa tion, tho States from which- they were appoint ed, &c. This list affords some curious statis tics of the rank-held l by theseveral members,of tho Union in the government patronage. New York, of course, carried off the lion’s share.— Pennsylvania is very little behind her, however, tho aggregato-of the former being $79,250, and of. tho laltors74iB2s.- Virginia comcsnext with $55,800; tbOmlndiana $23,500; Massachusetts $20,760; and so on down tljo list. Ohio, tho third Sttito in tho Union in almost otery re spect, ranks ninth, with $15,5001 Missouri, Tennessee, Nortli Carolina. Arkansas and Ver mont do not appear in tho table at all. . Unanimously Democratic. —Tho San Diego (Cal.) Herald says: “Every vote polled in tills co. was cast for John B. Weller for Governor. Wo heard of one Black Republican vote being cast.in the precinct o( Temecula, but as" it is not mentioned in tho returns, wo presume that tho inspectors threw it out ah being a mistake on the part ol some greaser.” Eytrume Sensiuiliiy. —The Cinoinatti (Ohio) Gazelle says : “A young lady from Kentucky, who was visiting hear Columbus, Ohio, became much attached to a mocking bird in the house of her relatives. Tho bird sickened and died. The lady bewailed tho loss most piteously, and soon after became insane. On being-sent home in charge of an attendant, she attempted suicide bv stabbing herself with her scissors, but is now recovorihg. , . D3f lion. John C. Breokonridgo, Vico Pres ident of tho United States, his resi dence in ,Lexington, Ky., toKov. W. C. Dandy, of the Methodist Episcopal Church. “Have you ‘Blasted Hopes f asked a lady o( a green librarian, whose face was much swollen by the toothache, “No, raii’am j but I havo'a blastud togthacho.” ’ Economy on Railroads. Tbo recent financial crisis lias led to.marked rcircnch'tnciifs in the management of the prin cipal railroads of the country. Salaries liavc been reduced, wages cut down, snpernumories disaliarged, and all work not of pressing im portance temporarily suspended. This course has greatly restored public confidence in rail road securities; for it is an evidence that the days of reckless "waste and ..improvidence in railroad management are over. *> In.speaking of these railroad .retrenchments, the Philadelphia Ledger remarks, that, there is danger that they may be carried too far. “ A penny wise and pound foolish ” economy js ns perilous to lasting prosperity ns extravagance itself. On soinc railroads, for example, salaries haye been reduced to such a point that first rate ability can only be commanded on suffer ance ; that- is,, competent employees only re main till they can find other avenues of support, so that! sooner or later, all such will be lost. As a general rule, conductors, engineers, and ■others filling the highcr-olliccs on railways, have never been paid excessively t and, ns a consequence, inferior men have generally filled these posts, often t 5 the peril of passengers’ lives, always to the pecuniary loss of the com pany. We cannot "hut think, therefore, that retrenchment in this direction is unwise. It may .save a few dollars temporarily, but it will be, ire fear, at the ultimate expense of thou sands. On some roads, also, a practice lias prevailed op rewarding engineers on freight trains, and other responsible Ompldj’ces of this class, for long continued good behaviour. •' The persons occupying these stations generally require some s a (ill incentive to prudence aiid watchfulness., 'To'reward the engineer of a freight train', who has had no accidents for six months or a year, is, perhaps, the cheapest method of insuring.a company against collisions and the consequent loss of engines, cars and freight. On many lines, these rewards have been abolished, or fet tered'.,with such liniitations. in regard to.'the mode of bestowing them, as practically to ren der them nugatory. No one denies that there has been great wasicfnliicSs in railway management, or. that a reform is indispensable: but the question is, what is reform ? . IE is assuredly not reform to drive away shilled, careful and generally capa ble upper servants. It is hot reform to with draw almost the only practical inducement which the more ordinary engineers have to .be prudent and 'thoughtful of the company’s good. The cheapest way to manage a railroad is .to have the work well done. To save a few thousands to-day in salaries and '.rewards,, hi the expenco of! efficient service, is to involve to morrow tens of thousands in damaged trains, and a reputation for being unsafe. Increase of the Army. . .The .s7. Louis Republican advocates strenu ously .the immediate increase of our army; as a measure demanded by the-hostilities in'Utah, and the Indian wars in Texas, New Mexico, aid •other western regions. It is, indued, very true . that the Government forces seem to be inade quate to almost all the services upon which they are ordered; hut it. is equally true that the army is not how filled up to the, strength authorized by.law, nor has it been fur a number of years. A considerable additional force whs authorized .quite recently, and jnducemcnls to enlist also. gd.itpou insane expeditions to Nicaragua,'Ciilm,- Sonora, Lower California, &c., tho recruiting service for the regular army goes on very slow-1 •And the reason is plain. Those expeditions, “insane” tliougli they may be, minister to that love of adventure which pre-eminently charac terizes the American : people, and hold out a hope—seldom realized, it is true—of ultimate and handsome reward. But, oh the other hand, thoarmy offers to those whom it would enlist in its service, a mphitbndus routine of.severe discipline, little or no adventure, the merest pittance for pay, andno-prospoct for distinct ion. Thp fact that so few American citizens enter the army of their Own Goviirnmant, proves at once that neither in its organization or its re wards, does it offer inducements worth the ac ceptance of the poorest. Generally speaking, in this country, the army is only chosen- when the, desperate presents itself to the recruit of en listment or starvation.' Wo might follow tho example of Franco under tho first .Napoleon,.in this respect, with.jnstice and profit. Lot pay, approaching.to something like an equivalent to the service to bo performed, bo,offered j and let tho way buopeiuui to promotion fromtlio ranks, for faithful service aqd gallant deeds j and, our word for it, the Would never want for good and willing men. Heavy. Defalcation. - Tho “solid men” of, Boston arc in a fever of excitement, concerning tho reported defalcation in that city of Mr. Samuel' Lawrence, the sen ior member of the lir.m of Lawrence. Stone & Go.,.agents of, the State Mills- and other manufacturing corpora'ions. From 1 the ac counts which arc published of the affair; it ap pears that Mr. Lawrence .was Treasurer of the Bay Stale Mills, and employed the credit of the Company in his speculations-to- the amount of hall a million dollars,' or thereabouts. It fur thermore appears that the functions of treasur er and agent have in'this instance become so mingled, as to make it somewhat uncertain upon which'office the alleged deficit should fall. It is certain, hqwever, that the stock of tho Company .was offered on Saturday nt 12i per cent, on the par ($1000) without finding a purchaser, and iliat manufuciuring stocks in Massachusetts have received a blow from which they will not soon recover. , lloruible Statement. — Tbo Marengo (Iowa) Visiser says.that a yonng child, but six yrs. old, died with delirium trqmons at -Brush Run, . The father, a short time since, was sent to jail lor selling whiskey, and during his incarnation his wile made whiskey “ meat and drink ” for her self and child. The wife finally fell down stairs and killed herselfj and the child was shortly af ter attacked with all the symptoms of, delirium tremens, with which it died. D3 5 " Miss Lane, the President’s niece, who does the honors of the White House, is compli mented by having her name given to the steam re,venue cutler just launched Irom Webb’s yard, in N. Y. city. Gen. W. S. Haskell, of Tennessee, wlio. was placed In the Kentucky Insane' Asylhhr n few weeks ago, has been restored, and was aiw nounced to lecture in the Odd-Fellows’ Hull, at Lexington, Ky. Correspondence of the Volunteer LETTER FliU.il WASHINGTON. •; \ Washington, Nov. 30, 1857 Dear Bratton —“ The cry is still they como” 1 strangers, members, and oflico-soekcrs—and our hotels and boarding houses are now doing a thriving business. The weather for the past week has been delightful', and yesterday (Sun day) wo enjoyed one of the brightest of. Indian summer • days. ‘Our 1 side-walks wove ci on ded all day long with pedestrians wlio all seemed to enjoy and appreciate the treat ofierod by nature. Since my last communication Kansas a flairs have assumed a more threatening aspect. Gov. Walker has arrived and lias been in consultation with the President. The former is opposed to the action of the convention which Iramcd the constitution allowing only tho slavery section to be voted upon’ b}’ the people, white the admin istration, it. is supposed, is in favor of the ac ceptance of the constitution in its present shape by Congress. ,A great division of sentiment .pruvaite, and a tierce conflict is anticipated when tho subject conics up for action. Wcnrc inclined to the belief that a majority of the De mocratic portion of the Congressional delega tion from your State will vote to reject a con stitution for Kansas which is,hot.endorsed en tire by its citizens. May tho Goddess of •Lib erty nerve the arm of the patriotic upon whom our national safely now depends. , • Central America and the Clayton-Bnhvcr treaty will again bo dragged up lor action* Sir GoroOtisuiy’s mission lias been rather scvereljv commented upon by the press generally, hut wo believe his instructions from -the English government are much more moderate than is 'supposed by most of those who have showered their censure so freely upon him and tho. gov ernment he represents. Mr. .Clayton, certain-, ly, committed'a Very .great blunder when lie framed that treaty, and acting on the principle of ‘“every one for himself,” Mr. Bulwer did right to get tliq advantage of ft doubtful con struction for the benefit of his own government. While, the National Intelligencer \9 endeavor ing to excite dissension »n the ranks of Dcmpc racywith a view to re-build the old Whig par ty* tho.S/n/M'is tiring ftt all the big game, for eign and local, that presents itself, hoping thus to establish character. It assails unmercifully Gore Ousely, ami,a recent'leadef in fho London Times viewing'Central American affairs and fil llbustei expeditions. The Time* rightly attrib utes fillibusterism to. the want of an outlet for the' military.spirit of tho population. While some charge the administration with conniving at tho success of Walker in Nicaragua, the Lon don" Times pro'clamics tho truth that “ Amori'- cans'nre convinced that the possession of these equatorial regions would lie a curse rather than a blessing.” Wo shall'seo' whnt we shall see., While" we do not want them ourselves we must not let the British lion get them W.ithin his'gi gantic grasp. - Most of the'members will -be' - present-before the week is" ended, ready to.tnke their positions on Monday nex-t. The Democratic caucus for the nomination of candidates for Speaker, Clerk, .Doorkeeper, and" Postmaster of 'the House, will meet.on Saturday evening., .The friends of the respective'candidates wijl cner-. geticallv press their claims. ■ ’ ' - : Thanksgiving day passed off quietly, and was well, observed by our citizens. The places'of business were.all closed,-and the churches w.erc -open for divine service.' The precautionary measures of the Mayor and police had the effect of keeping vowdj.sm in restraint, and allowing llio more peaceable to enjoy the holiday without alarm or disturbance.of any kind. - Young,Liinahan bids fair .to 1 recover, though the. ball cannot be extracted. Birch has bycn admitted, to. hail in the sum of five thousand dollars. . Yesterday, young Murphy, who died on Friday of, wounds received on Saturday night week, at. the. hotel of Mrs. Hughes, was buried in Glemvood Cemetoc3V llisfuneral was largely attended, his remains .being followed 1 -to their last resting place by about' two hundred and fifty members of .the Stone-Cutters Assoch atidn. (of which lie was a member)' preceded, by a band of music. ■ To Whom it tuny Concern. '. Tbefollowing from the National.//ite//:£cnccf* we beg our.readers to consider-as adopted bj the Volunteer, . i-.—, H,T,l»'ftfl-ifl_na»tv>.r>U-.aA.. nT,, (iin Imuinan.w community wfiictT feels more scnsihlv'Uian the Proprio.pis of the many public journals tile ef fects of the-derangement of the currency, mid other consequences of the. present motley pan ic, which has perniciously embarnssed ilie whole Country for several' weeks gone by, and which still continues. Under , a certainly of this fact, wo feel , that no one - of onr readers will take exception to the general request wh ch we address to all of them, that every one who knows himself to be indebted to this. Establish • merit, aiid is in circumstances to allord it, will forthwith remit to us, hi notes or draffs on sol vent banks the amount of his indebtedness, or so much of it as lie can conveniently spare. ' Good anil Bail News.- Bad nows weakens (lid action; of the heart, oppresses the lungs, destroys the appetite, stops' the. digestion, ami ..partially suspends all the functions ol the system. An emotion of shame' flushes the face; fear blanches, jov illuminates it i and an instant thrill electrifies a million of nerves; Surprise spurs the pulse into a gallop Delirium;i-inluscsgreat energy.' Volhion 'coim mands, and hundreds of muscles spring to ex cite. Powerful emotions often kill the body at a stroke. Chile,. Diagoras, and Sophocles (Vied of .joy at-the Grecian games. Thu nows'of de teat killed-Philip V. One of the popes died of an omofjon ot the ludicrous on seeing bis.pet monkey robed, in-pontificals occupying the chair of state. Muley illolocbwas carried upon the field of battle hi the first stages of an incurable disease!',nppn seeing Ins army give way, lie ral lied' his panic-stricken troops, rolled back the tide'of battle,- shouted victory, .and died. The doorkeeper of Congress expired oh- hearing of the surrender of Cornwallis. Eminent public speakers.have often died.in the midst ofan im passioned burst of eloquence, or when the deep emotion Unit produced it lias suddenly subsided. _ Guns.— Guns .were invented— by. Swarlz, a German, about 1378, and were brought into use by Ibe Venetians in 1532. C CannoiMvere inven ted at an anferior date. They wore first at the battle of'dressy, in 1310,\JnJing|and, they were first ii-.etl at the siege ofßerwiel:, in 1405: it was not until 1-514, however, that they were cast in England. They were used on board of ships in 1529, and were in nso among the Turks ahont tho same time. An artillery company was instituted in England, tor weekly military exercise, in 1010, The best iron plates for gun barrels.ar.e those made of stnb-iron-t-that is, of old horse-shod-nails' welded together, and forg ed into thin bars,,or rather narrow-ribbons. At ono time Damascus barrels were much in vogue they were fashioned from plates made cither of iron or stool, parallel and welded together, or Irom ribbons of the same Damascus stuff’ colled mte a cylinder.at a red beat, and then welded together in the seams. Under Louis XIV., the French cannon are said to have been of abetter quality than those of the present time : zinc was mixed with tlio metal in the condition of brass, 1 lie trials made in latur'lhues have failed lx*- cause tlio zinc was introduced directly into tlio alloy while in fusion, in which case the zinc is burned oft, and forma no combination with tho fused metal. ‘ The New Senators from Texas.— Hon. J. ' Hemphill, not Campbell, ns has been sta ted, is one of the new United States-Senators from Texas. The Union says : „ Judge Hemphill is a nptive of. South Caroli na, who emigrated at an early period from his native Slate and setlled in San Antonio, and became, a citizen of Texas; From the era of her independence he has been idcniifled with the history of Texas ns a republic and a Stale, and at one time lie was prominent among those who were regarded ns suitable candidates for' the presidency of that republic; Hu is an,emi nent lawyer and advocate, and has participated, as an able actor in the progress of Texas, from small beginnings to a sovereign State of this Union. For several years past he has been chief justice of tile State. He. will silenced General Houston, whose expires on the 3d of March, 1859. Ex-Gov He iderso i has been chosen to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Gen. Rusk. To the. Editors of the Notional Intelligencer : Gentlemen: —Many papers, desirous of the establishment of a National. Bank, are.quoting what Gen. Jackson said in favor of such an hi- Slitutioh at the beginning 6T his Presidency.— I have to remind all such papers that what was said was said before Gen. Jackson saw. a pros-. pect of festering the currency of lhi*Constitu tion."and that, after he saw that prospect, ho said nothing more in favor of banks. National or Stale, bin the contrary, and labored during the remainder of his public life to ns'oro and preserve the hard money currency which the founders of our Government' had secured (as they believed) for us. ;■ The plan of that resto ration arid preservation consisted of five parts, namely: 1. To revive the gold currency by correcting the erroneous standard of 1791. .2, To create a demand for hard money by. making it the exclusive currency oP tho Federal Treas ury. a.. To make sure of this’hard'money,by keeping it in its own treasuries. 4. To sup press all paper currency under twenty dollars by a stamp duty. 5- To wind up all defaul ting banks by a bankrupt law against delin epinitfi. TheVirst 9 of these 5 pads were accomplish ed, andjlo these we are indtb'ed, for 20 yda-s exeinption —from 1887 to 1807—from bank suspensions, and depreciated currency! also for carrying, the country through 0 foreign war. the Mexican—without paper money, and with, the public securities above par : also, for having in the country at this time full fifteen limesas much hard money as we had in the lime.of the late Hank of the United States : and we are in dlbted.to the want of the two latter pans of the.plan, for what we now see;. nearly two thousand banks in the country, a great part of them frauds from the beginning, and lire bad governing the' good, a general suspension in a season of peace' and prosperily t people forced to nse depreciated paper when there is more hard money hi the cofmlry than its business crtnld, employ inni and women begging for work, and unable tO'obtain it, when the coun try, needs all the work. they,, can do, and has, the means to pay for it; faniilies crying for bread when a bountiful Providence has. given flic most exuberant crops that ever Wel'c seen, the business of twenty-five millions of people deranged, disordered, and thi qtvn but of joint: and all this the work Of the base 'part of the banks, falling down of , theiiiseh'es fur. want of foundations, and dragging (he solid Onesafter thein. tor it is in lliis case of bank suspen sions, as it is with a ship sinking at sea,' it here tliosc who ca'miot swim drag down those who can. A stamp duly on their notes, and a bankrupt process against themselves, would have saved the country from the, calamities it now endures : for many of (tie base ordey of banks would .have been unable Id “-miik'e cur rency" for bant of money (o pay for. stamps on their notes, and others would have been proper subjects for the bankrupt’(irOßess hr the filrat few days of thcir eXistencS' .'The restoration of the gohl' citrrciVcy. was ef fected under Gen.-. Jackson's administration : ■ the establishment of the hard niohey currency, forthel/ederal/jov’ernmbni arid thek toping of its own moncy-in its own treasuries-, das''-accom plished under Mi-.’ Win Bureri, both of which Presidents look-lhe full respotisihilijy -of rec ommending these three measures. and -also the .two Olliers, the two-for the imposition of-a stamp duty on all paper money under 20 dol lars. and for a bankrupt act against.defaulting banks..’ Bills were repeatedly brought into Congress for both purposes-; but were always' def attd by the defection of the paper money wjng of the Democratic party. ■ The most plausible of the open objections made against- the stamp duly was in. the ex pense-, and the extensive machinery-for its coll lection, That was answered by providing a cheap amt simple process for both pnrposes-r a clerk in the Treasury Department for a su perintendent of the business, and the’ Clerks of the Federal Courts to’ deliver but the stamps Yours truly, ■ Mac I which ilicy received from-. the 'Treasury. The - ... .>iv; mu ~ 11*1,1 « uccnei irsn’muuap '■ ply lo all notesor ohly to those intended to be ,suppressed, wcrr-quesiions on which there was room for some diversity of opinion. The ore dominant.opinion was,that there should be du ly.upon all notes issued as a currency, (for what- more lit to he taxed than the-uionjyd power?) the duly being the Same on all'notes, and such as the large ones could easily carry and the small ones not. The amount of the duty-.was .held necessary to be largo—far great er than in Great Britain; for theic no note is re issued ; no one goes Out of the bank a sec ond tune, so that the duty in England is-pai'd every lime the. Bank puls out a nolo. Not so m the United States. Here a note is re issued until it is worn out—until it has become too ragged: to hold together, or too filthy to be , linndU'd, or too dcluccd lo be deciphered. ■ A small duty is, therefore, sufficient in Great , Britain ; it would require a very heavy one to be its equivalent in the United Slates. .Among the penalties for violating-, the act -either.by is suing, receiving, or passing the unstamped, pa pci should be a disqualification to retain re ce’ve a lederal appointment: fir the pur s'll,l °1 ofhcc is so general at this time in our country and so ardent, .that, in'arriving a . class so large, so. inlhiential, and active against 1 the unstamped notes, their circulation would be effectually checkmated. .The paper money wing of life Democracy was snll more against The baiikraipt act against bankrupt hanks than against the 'stump tax 1 on notes; iind. acting with the habitual.oppo -1 nents of the party to which (hejy professed to belong, easily defeated all the.bills. The open objection' came from the lawyers, with’their professional idea, drawn chiefly from British statutes, that merchants mid traders were the proper sn.Dj-cts of the tiankuii t lair, alfhoimh every late British statute on the' subject in cludes banks, (the Batik of England excepted :) and in a single season of suspension /that ol 1813-T4-T5) .92 of these banks had been .sub jected to commissions of hankmptcy. But ihis.rettwdy-was not of English,-but of Roman origin, as its name would .-linw, (‘■banens” nm\ “ruptus ;’*) and hankers were the original ob jeots of the law. as the same name also shows. ‘ Broken Bench” is the English of the Latin name, mid was so called because the bankers fmoney changers, of Ihaftime. as now in the East,) had their benches in. public places, on which they sat and did business : mid when any one became delinquent.'or criminal, he was driven away and his bench was broken. And thus in its origin, bankruptcy was a process ■ against banks and bankers, mid still is in Great Britain ;. and hence retains its original i name of Broken Benoit—the bench so broken. < being the sign and warning to the public that the banker himself was insolvent, and deprived :of Ins place of doing business. - Banking in the United States is the most .un restrained mid unsafe that there is in ike world : and unsafe even lor solid and well con ducted hanks, ihore being enough of the nnsol id and badly conducted to fall down, ot them selves every few years and' to drag down the rest witlnhem. The laws put few restraints and penalities upon them : aind these restraints and penalties are regularly repealed just as of ten as the'community needs the benefit of them. It is by name in some places, and by.- fact iny-oLlicrs, a system of “free bunking” which the hard money Democracy was, accus tomed lo : call l ‘ : ‘freo.js>y,i!vliijig.’’ , banker? tliat plcascsGanil issjlcspipallno.fe&and.sendsithein of! to a djs- Imioe.do'be dirqulatcd, and lost, and to sink .upmi the hands of tbe laboring people. A fu- Wite plan is to issue notes at one - place paya ble at another far off. out of the way, and diffi cult to be got at, so as to compel the holder to submit to a shave. That mode of doing busi ness was invented by a Scotchman of Aberdeen in 1806 ; but be was in Great Britain, i ot in the United States ; and the British Ministry aiid the British Parliament immediately took cognizance of the inventor and his imitators, and placed them all in the category of swin dlers, and so-put an end to their operations,— LETTER FROM THOMAS IF. HESTON. ' ON BANKS AND CURRENCY. Washington, C Street, Nov.\K, 1857- I No stamp' tlnCy, no .bankrupt net, and no rctpii . j sitidn 10 keep any proportionate amount of bard money on hand completes the license and unbounded freedom, and the perfect title tope riodical’explosions, which belong to American ' banking. • • This last requisition, that of keeping qn hand an amount, of hard money .proportionate to their liabilities, seenis *o be unknown) (even m name.) in the United States : yet that requisite is h legal and fiindffmqnlal condition: of the Bank of England - and the proportion of one third in gold of the total amount of its,habili ties in circulation and deprsites is the rate cn- ' forced ; and.below that proportion, the Bank of England docs hot deem itself safe. : Thnjj . swore Mr. Horsley Palmer, Guven or of il 1(! Bank of-Enjrlahd before Lord Allhorpe’s com. niittee, in 1832. “The average proportion. ii s already observed, of coin and bullion Which (ho bank deems it prudent to k- op onhandfs nt ? a rale of the third of ilo Intel -amount Of all h cr liabilities, including -dgp^ilet’as weir as. Ise sues:” . And thus swore Mr. George Ward Norman, a director of the l ank.—“For a full slate of the circulation and deposites say 21 million of notes and C .millions, of deposites making in the whole, 27millions of liabilities' the proper sum in coin and bullion for the bank' to retain is 9 millions.” And to the same ef. feet swore other directors. But in Great Brit ain it is not sufficient that this proportion of one third is required to be oh hand, but.it must bo shown, -and that,.'continually, that jt j s there. This is accomplished by the publico, lion of the quarterly weekly average of the lia bililies and assets'of- the bank, from whifeh the' public can always see- when the bank has-'- crossed the lino of safely. How different this' is from banking in the United States, where no proportionate rale of specie to the liabilities is even proscribed: mid where five, ten. fifty, an hundred paper dollars Coi-. one .hard .one-in tbo vault is frequently issued. But one tiling whs wanting |o complc.tlio ti tles of our hanking system to utter uinvortbi ness.aml that one tiling lias 1 ecu discovered-- it.is dispensation of the specie basis ! ..through* out llie world, so far ns paper money is known, n specie basis is deemed necessary tp an insti tution, whioli issue promises to pay. specie Not so in the United Stales. Taper upon pa per has become the vogue with us., ■ Slocks, and the notes of other hanks, are the “smidi/” foundation upon which a large proportion of our banks are built. : f do not Cxpnciaic upon-tbo evils of small paper money ; they are palpable to every ob server, and only ri quire enumeration. 1. It drives away all-hard money of equal denomina tions.; for,;in. a cbirpe ilmn, between tjjo eur rcncies, the meanest is ahvays the conqneier .-' an.d chases the other out of, the field. 2. .It is. the great source of the crime of counterfeiting; - for the mass of'the counterfeits consist,of small notes. 3. It detnbraliz'S the community ■ for neoplc not being willing. I o lose a note for which they' have given value, instead.of burning it when rejected by a knowing or.e as counlerfeit, put it back in tiic pocket arid oiler it again to an ignorant person, who receives it, am! who goes lhrongh:lbe samp process' when, rejected in. bis'hands; 4 Small notes make the panics and bring on the ru'nd which break down'good banks : fur tlirSP small notes being'iti lbe hands of the masses/'when they gef alarmed, they nf semble by ll (iusands at the dnofsof the Insliui tion which 'isst Cl the notes, demand the money, break’.the banks, and propagate thealai-m wl«A\ themselves feel until it - Itecomes general; for nothing is imue ooniagcdns than a moneyed panic, nor anythin; more unmanageable; 5. It pillages die poor,and.tbo ignorant; for every base note, .every one that.is counterfeit, of on a broken ibank. or on a bank that never existed, although itwill run for awhile, must slop some- When*;: nAd. whien it dots', is’ sure td' ftqgin the hands, of the poor aild‘ nTiiiifonncd; upfavc. that class least able to bear the loss, who have . no advantage from in operation., and who hear the h. f ss when , they stop. 6. It excites to swindling for .knaves, with -nothing . hut brass for their, capital, arid that ip their faces in's; cad of their cOlhfs, are induced'to„ set . up manufactories. of sinall’ paperb to\§c s^fnt’, • abroad ap'd sunk upon the hands'of those among wluinit is scattered : nil that is sovpunk • "uemg ciunrga;ns-‘ur-lhc iimrionfcturcr. 7. It; . induces and even compels people lo be jvtfs.'eful of their money : for sneh is the natural: hondst, and Just contcinot.nn<| distr.ist of small notes that lie of she that receives One hurries ofl fo lay it out for something not. needed ; while a piece of gold, ol i lie same amount would be Val in d and 'cherished, and laid by niid kept niid added to; until cm ugh accumulated to make ii purchase of something needed and useful.' 8.; Ft subjects ihe payer to be chenttd or worsted in change-; for, giving paper in payment. lie must receive the change in other, paper ; and for that purpose dhe meanest’,_most rnggtd, dirty, .and wort bless will always be picked out and .shoved upon him. In short, such are (be evils the crimes, tbedemoralization, and.cl eat*- ingof small papermoney that all nations'? except', ibe United Stales, place it in the category* of a criminal agent and suppress it according//* i wen I ,y-ocld, years ago. when we’were labor*- ing,tb*rcslorc tho consiimtiqnnl currcncy ldthe’ Government and'people, the ready .objection^ repealed by all i he friends of paper money was,; that there was not gold and silver-in the world lo carry oh the business of the - United States: and the ready answer to that objection was;' that there was precisely enough ! and acily. enough would come ?o the United, States’ if we would only create a demand for it by cor reeling the gold standard, make it the Govern*' ment and suppressing -small paper.. ‘ Guly a pan of these things have been there have llowed into’ihe United Sta esorbeeh-' * obtained from our o\vn mines, about four or five" as-much gold ns*the business of the Uni-* ted States could employ; The supply has been nearly a thousand .millions of dollars, and the business of the United States would only cm* Iplo}' about two hundred millions." This is hot guess work,, but bottomed upon authenticdrilft': for the siaiislics of political! economy" show that nations can only use certain amounts of money, sonu* more, some dess, according to. their par suiis. Thus, a highly' manufacturing country, where the employ’d' needs money incessantly ip cany on "llis business in the purchase .of raw materials, and the’ paymicnt of-operatives; and in i he construction and repair of buildings hud machinery, and where thcoperhtiVcs themselves need money daily for the support of their famU lies, (he quantity of money required isfnrgreat er thhn in an agricultural andplanting country, where the 'fanner raises his own supplies and has his crops and produce lo pay large demands. And therefore England, the foremost manufac turing country, requires the .greatest amount of money ; and has it, to ivit , about eleven dol lars a head; and Russia, so largely agricultur ul. requires the least amount of money? and can employ but about four dollars a head. So tho United States, in small part manufacturing anal largely agricultural and planting, would findi her maximum demand for money somewhere* half way between the two —say, eight dollars ft hend-which, at the present amount of the* white 1 population, (say twenty-five millions;)' would.give two hundred millions-ns the nation? al demand—always remembering that thp great payments arc made with crops and bills of ex-* change founded on the proceeds of industry".--' And thus it becomes a proposition demonstrated that the United States, since the correction of «the gold standard twenty r -three years ago, have received a supply of gold to four or fivc'lmies. the amount which the business operations ot the.pcoplc could employ. Of thatambunt tha-i leading ~ v ' two hundred and ninety millions to bo Remaining in the country commencement of the present panic ; and since that time more than twelve mmionahavo arrived, and very-little gone out; so that three hundred millions could be the present estimate of the amount of gold and silver in'the country —being one_ hundred millions-more than tho business of the country would-cmploy. "h rc ° hundred millions is exactly fifteen as . much as the United States posscsscdnn the time of the late Bank of the United States. Iwen: ty millions was the whole amount at. that time, and all that in silver—not a particle of gej being then in circulation. And it is exactly thirty times as much, as the whole Union P oS '