i.i. i.1 i -r- " -.-.-Jn-ri it ( CLEARFIELD, PA. Wednesday Morning, March 8. 1861. THE EXODUS. Every fnrco rrust have il comedy, but the recent extraordinary exodus of "Uncle - .... Abe," the raiUspliiier, from Unrrisburg to Washington, i cartainly without a .ri..l! in tho hilorv of modern perform - l r il.. ....1 anres. tl R ;rciuKiiiiv ic vi iiuiiuiim. i o nun in i. I v. L i' . I,Jl, ;.rf fort, nnd nonebut true prompted by miro than mere, mentiil ap- i Hepublicnn and patriotic Abolitionists be parition. Joseph, of old, warned by afRll0rvcd to approach tho TresidentT If had better hsvo des- young child and its mother, and departed into Eypt by night;" aud Nicodemus, stung by a se.iie of tin, nought the Savior betweun two day.; 1 ut we ore really at loss to detcrininc vrhut thing Abraham and led him to give his fiiend. the cold shouU dcr, and sneuk iiiguis.d ut 'right into Washington. Scnio say that Scvurcl told -hiai to doit; and, ready to follow rather 1 than lead, Lincoln obeyed his instructor. This tony bo so, and yet it seems incon sistenl with tho representation, we have had of the President's ' back bono," "iron will," and unflinching firmness; others, till more charitable, think it ivasjbecnurte Uncle Abe having learned that something wus " wrong in tie country," got afraid of assassination in Baltimore, and therefore pnrsed Ihrough in a bag, without giving ! tho Tings, Ihugs, " Jawbones,' or Lip- Jtaps a peep at him. 1 Int. iiowsvcr, crems more difficult of reconciliation than the first hypothesis, for Baltimore is the city in which tho Opposition have for years held their bloody revels, and where all but Diuiocratf aro allowed to vole, with out being shot. It was at Baltimore, too, that the Jlepublican candidates got that 1arjs vote, uhicl. our little down town neighbor, directly afier tho election, pa raded before- the people with such pom posity, to aliow tho strength of Black Republicanism in Southern cities. B'Ay, then, did Abraham ileal putt the Edftimortans f TUo cue to this ridiculous stampede is very easily unwound, the cause is as natural as he act was unnecessary, so far ai the Pre sident's personal safety wm concerned. Tho Republicans have endeavored for month, Ly niiaroprajntc.tton mntX nlo.. 3iood, to Inflame the minds of Northern -men ngainst thoir Southern brethren'; for this purpose the columns cf the Neiv York Tribune, und other leading Republican papers, havo made utartling revelations ; "great armies,'' "bloody conspirator.," " .won: ass.wsins, " " cool murderers," Kniii'ils of the Golden Circle," with hundreds of o'.her ghastly things, sinco the Pre(idenii:d clcctio'n, have been plenty. Washington was to bo taken by "fire nnd brimstone," i.nd the President elect, and the Republican parly, were to suffer death by pi:en. This was made the excuse, or l ather tho justification, for the gathering of an-'nrmy nt the seat of Gov ernment. Every Abolition and Republi can Governor tendered men nnd money to avert the terriblo calamity; "tho streets of Washington wero to stream in fclood ;" that a dreadful battle wus there to be fought, was aforgone conclusion. No human sagacity, no pat.iotism, no act i,f man's, could avert it ; and tho only a'ternativo was, to send a Northern nrtny to tho national Capital to repel this mur derous invsaion coming up from the South, headed by awful "fire eatert." Lincoln 'wa to bo hot- at Springfield ;" ho was to "be stabbed at Indianapolis," ir Iho train in v. hi' l) he and his suite travelled, was to b "precipitated down on embiinkmeut and all crushed to pieces;" expert gar roters had been dispatched to strangle him at Pittsburgh, if by any possibility he bhould ever reach that point. His death by violence was beyond all -question i "infernal machines were at every r li'rohd station ;" and powder plots, ready j . imod, were waiting to blo- Old Abe into eternity. In tho face of tl.cso repre acinations, (t' every ono of which hun dreds of shivering Republicans were ready to Le qualified,) Mr. Lincoln had every where been received in tho kindest man ner, the greatest enthusiasm marked hL coune, all men of all parties everywhere met, and welcomed him ; lr.s journey whs a perfect orulian, bright faces wero all he saw, pleasant words were all he heard, kind act. wero all he received. So differ ent was the reception; of the President from the prediction, of Ihofanatict, tint, after getting to within a few mile, of Washington with the uiot-t perfect tafely, .ORie grand frriU must be performed, some terrible plct must be discovered, to givo at least the tmblanro of truth to those miserable mentions with which Northern conrcioo'iita, for their own base furposes, had fiofeixl tho country. And then the army staii oed at Washington, at an enormous exptase. Some necessity mmlseem to xist for this grand military display. So the " irrepressibles'' suddenly discover a "mare's rest" at Baltimore, and the President elect of a free people permit, himself, a. contraband good., to 1 emvgglad Into Waihlngton to the mer- 'rimcntor humiliation ot every American '. ciliien Such U the sequel of thi strong, and.beto.e u, anil we nave " " ' n .. l. . r..1 :i. innnr nnr'a ilpinnnd. ' In unnecessary net. That Lincoln was m ..K ... . ... t (...'..(.rmnmillinn It ! n fair Slato TO. rlnmrer of assassination or bou.iy nnnu uy .. i. . ;. not at all'i passing w.ruuBu - re. .i.nfcliw but if he wero in immincm. ... .....mr how doe it cotnport Willi uie t fuct r.gror a brave man, In a free country, to hide himself from tho 7nl Wb2e rrcsidcnl he is, and crawl clKiw - theseato, Oo,; jernment. This it indeed Jatkton lke. 1 tot , isanauul .VWrfld-m I'neU Abet "back, lont." Dut what did Mr. Lincoln expect t0 accomplish by rnnniug away and hiding himself from the people 7 Doer ne.menti to run away whenever he hears of danger, I. Ma l.;m.lf from or is H III inicniiuii iho citizens of the Southern States tha. ... , j l :., T, ..:! ! may want to can on nun uun..K idential term! I it to be presumed that 1 tho i oor.U have dete:mincd to take his - vi.. . :. U'..),!milnn I'llv to to turned ! potUm at once; declare tnaruai .u,nu.i hide the Executive in a cave. The people trusted Mr. Lincoln by choosing him as their President; why. frnid to ttuet the . . . ... i 11IVII. ....... w . I eople? He had every asmiancc that his at Bait imore, like his reception reception ! in other cilies. would have been courteous, uind,' and worthy of the Americ.n char-, 'tor; these assurances had cotco Irom .1 sui-li declarations as tnese, acattvicu hilufnir.ded, honorable m.-n ; men in ; ihrough hi speeches mean anything . 'I authority; whoso integrity repelled the j have always hated slavery, I think as'inuch i.lrn that Hi-saF.ifis would receive the.a any ntiolit io-.:ist : .' This Government TresWent. "and welcome him with bloody i i j t.Aci.iinL'n LM-ave " The faith Lnj lloi,0r of a '.overmen State, a con.erva- .lllAn .v . c- tive olaio in wn crisis, ju:Mgti. i,:. -...r,,( v ii ml lo nrevfnt tho l oen- tho j oen- bilit v of any lnun, disturbance, hundreds vote that it should. It ;s from surh ex of Mr. Lincoln' own ' tracts as these lound in Mr. Lincoln' 0f picked ... .-. i:..:.:n. 1...-I Kcnn nopi:.llv j political iirvcin . ' -i j deputed to be "on guard that night," and gathered their apprehensions and yet lie extend a hearty welcome to tho President 'asserts that they have never had any elect. - Why, then, did Abraham tntak ;wMauso to distruit him. Mr. Lincoln must Bahlnwret Was it to ttrengten the false have tn ide an untmo istatemcnt in hi. predictions of.tlie " irrcprefsiblcF," or Intgural, or he must be sadly unreported was it. because " the wicked tlec when no j in hi. written speeches, to which ho has man p.rfi 1" Mil BUCHANAN. James Buchanan is no longer President. Mi. official term exp'.rcd on Monday last t noon, and he retires to enjoy the peace and security of private lifo. However men may differ as to '.ho propriety of certain measures of his administration, we believe thero is cne thing to which all aiscnt, that a more thoroughly abuted man, never left the 1'rttidrntial e har (save, perhaps, tho iin- lum lt J.h.iiii.) I2very -ci of I.i- oi..,!..- Ut rut ion has beon subject to a succession of assaults, from open enemies and pro fessed friends, every senlei.ee he uttered has been tortured into treason. Standing: between the fanatics of tho North and tho South, he has patriotically latiore I to hold them apart ; to avert bl o lshed, un til some fr.ir adjustment of their conflicts ing claim could bo made. By strong, constitutional appeals, ho has called upon tho conervativo nien .Iho t:-uo men of tho notion to nsMti in allaying this fierce sectional controversy. Treating the American people as an intelligent people a oynl people ho has endoavorod to restore peace and good fcoling to different partions of the country, by an appeal to reason, and not a resort to arms. Ilanpy would it now bo for this nation, had the wise counsel and patriotic ruggestions ofj lliA rnfirinit VtimmiI'va Lnnn L..a.1 " " - ww-,.-.. nut, to our national snanie be it said, con - sei vausm is no longer Honorable, and the heroic concessions that u hundred times have staved the tide and si.i'cd tho countrv can now no longer be made , party must now live, tl.ot.gh patriotism should die , unheard, thes.ir.ing calls ofthe.ruomcn of .ho na.ion have died in the very breath that gave them utterance ; the irrepresM- ble cor diet was going on, and the people, frenzied with abolitionlexcitem.mt.facainst tho nrotesl of the P.-e.i.lont and ,!,,, in. .... uie men ti.ot nave sustained Dim,) by their voles were precipitating "civil war" or a very much like coercion, and coupled with dissolution of this blood bought Union.l n,c nibcquont declaration, tl.at there The goal has bee. won, the whirlwind has ,.ini on ll0 bloodshed, or violenco, unless swept the land. Seven States now out of 'r....,.,i v.. f .,..i. l... s. the Union, with eight more vainly asking niueircr-zea victors a recognition or ,is ruturo intentions, Me. Lincoln on this Gen. Fessenden, a day or two since, ap thur rights, spenk out too plainly of the quctltion dsdaratory at least, is mere! y fol-TPared before tho District Court and niov ruin tl.at is wroucht. Mn;,.,i it,. ri.ii,.fi!.. .1 . ed that a colored gentleman from Boston, These unhappy con.eoue,,ces Mr BtJ , m , 1 . "r',ho sva. then will, him, bo admitted to ... unnaj i y con equemes Mr. iui nnd while he doe this, ho cannot go far practice an attorney and counsellor at cl.annn has patriotically labored to avert. LP0Ilg. ir0j(,nies tho contitutional right 'w in theCourte of Maine. The motion Many have been his warnings-verified to of u State to secede. Iles.-ivs that seces-' wn' made under the new law, which makes .i... I...... i i i . . .? uiu ii-iirr iiiito neon ii is predictions, no forernw, as nil great men hnve foreseen, that the triumph of n geographical party must herald the dow nfall of the Republic. Ho regarded il ns a public calamity, nnd when forced upon the counlry, he, at the sacrifice of all, but honor, prin ciple nnd life, hat eagerly sought to peac- ably settle Hi. ho. been a triumph, though clouds around our country loer, nnd when the bitter parly spir t thnt rules the hour shall hnve passed away, and the unfounded charges of personal enemies ii ii luii Hutu tutu gro ui personal enemies .1..1H..V- L. rLn,,Ji. t...-s..- I ... , ... . ... ! j , should revoke its decisions ; this is evi- andhisadministrstion like Andrew Jack.1 , ,, , ... . , . . son and hi, adminutration-lik. James .T" lh8b.oh,,ionisU' K. Tolk and hi. adminia.ration-will UT ons,der,,n8 'Je.r services, ,t ha, been pointed toby hi, present persecutor, ni' "T L,nc,n lh "k. time .landerers a, a ma for the iim. i better and purer day, of the Republic. Twenty-two pick-pockots were arrested by the BufMo police during the occasion ftheviiitcf tho President elect. THE INAUQUEAL. The inaugural of President J.indoln i t .. Is, tl... ititva. yum . . - er.iwd. n, is right and proper, bears the ... - f .... hpj.tni-n I fi . - , :-...: 1. .tiffin a ........ - r .runs hi- cal nnd grammatical, and labor. with cv, dent ca.-nr.tnc. to c abhsh a fact that "one but membe.sof hi. own part have - " " " " y . intention tointerfero 'w ith the institution of slavery in the States where it exists,' and quotci tho following from oi.o ol his written Bpceches to provo his orthodoxy : ' I have no purposo to interlere, directly or indirectly, 'with the institution of. akr very in the Statef where it exUti) 1 bo liove 1 have no legal right to dj sn, and I have no inclination to do so.' Mr. Lin oln nay that such assurances as these, found 'in nearly all my published speeches, . ... . n . i ., Ar should have, ut.sf.ed the apprehension, of the Southern people; that, by the acces sion of a Republican Administration, their ir..perty aud their peace and. -.person al i.ircty are not to bo endangered.''.;! From nucli declarations as these, found ui nearly nil his p'u1)lihed spcecht-s,' the oUVh'erii neoi.le have never felt insecure, but a i a diilerenl class of expressions, -found in ; nearly all his Hpefrches havo givn the . Southern peoplo considerable uneasi- ne. As .Mr. Lincoln lias reierrcu us to those speeches, wo would simply ask jcannot permanently endure, half slave. uni half free ; ' if I were m Lon?rcav,anu - a vote should come up whelhcrj slavery r.w...o..v. ia a new territory. ji1 spite of tis Dred S'utt dectuon, I would b.i1.i-1i.. llin tho SoutIurn iinnl. linvr. .-j- , j more mane re.rence, u is on'y irom 'these, and many similar exprcisioi.i cou jpled with tho record of his' party, in voting for the 'Blake resolution,' in 'endorsing the Helper Book,' in 'excusing the John Brown raid,' and.like' acts, that the Southern people have at length been brought t feci insecure, in their pVoperty aid persons. U.'. 'Lincoln i ni! iiiiponiuiuil oi n difl'cr materially with na. 'he manufactures oi ii on. anion Is, ho thinks the "Fugrt'vCi1,"'-,,'-00 forll, lftH year and . ..;,. L to$4.458,000. Tho estimated incr ny of his friend SI are Law is h plain provision of the Con oiitutioti." Ha y "iha HK-Ulticri cf Congress who swear to support the: Con stitulion.' Swear to support the provis ion that 'persons held to labor in one Stati and (neaping into another, shall be do- livercd up on claim of the master to whom such labor is due.' Mr. Lincoln thinks they might, ii they only would pas such a law it would cnablo them to sfti port this provision. Why the man who knowingly violatosthc nrovisions of the Constitution, would h.. mn.-1ilrl, lnnl,, , , , , . ' . ' a law founded thereon, is we confess, to us, something of n ntvsterv. The member of Conirress. who' violates one provision of :n .. i ' i , ..it i i'iiniiiuiiuii in vioiaic nor law cai-i eulnted .to giro that provi-don efficiency. Mr. Lincoln, however suggests that a law might be passed to relieve the consciences of 'delicate members' of Congress on this question, by exempting them from pcrju..1 ... IT.. I ... . .. .. ... I J10 winrver ininas mo rui-ilive 'Slave law will have to bo obeyed, until sonic such a law i enacted. Thi IVotidout ih.rlnri.1 (l.r.l. n 1 I,,.... r... i.- ad(N. th(ll wIier0 I:08tiiily i ny bclllitv, lmlUc , x am, Jtfml t0 ,,ro;er.t CO!1)rolent ,,wk,ent dliu,n8 from holding ofli'e., there will bo no at- twnill lo forL obnoxious ..ranger, amon, L. ,e0ple for that object, wtile the let ..t ,;.s . , 5 ..... . ui,,,, uu,ln lu uvier, iur a nine, mo ; U9e of such offices." This does uol look ralhcr eonciliatory. Whatever maV be'lean f'the" Pond ZtriZtTluZ llIV.U Ul'VI. ..IV 4 ..WILPlllll ilUlllLiril.V.. 11 - is anarchy or revolution. He t dks considerably about parties, and .eems to .i.i.i. it . . . . 1.. i think that tho majority ought to rule,! without apparently realizing the fact that . . . i lieu a minority President. He speaks very nrudentlv of the dnn,.i.r. .ml B,.I venienre lo whl. disso'.ution would drive us, and expresses a willingness to bnvo Uie Con,titulion omended lyeon. ventionof the people, if they should de- sire it. He kind of crawls over the de cisions of the Supreme Court, by hinting .i,., i. j , lbRt rP1' under certain circumstance, .i,-i"n" uc uo rocn to anay .true, and counsel deliberation, closing in the following full and pretty sentence: 'The mystic chords of memory stretching from every1 ba'.tlb field and patriot erave toev ry lovio heart and heirtheton.e all over1 'this brond land, will yet swell the chorus of the, Union, when again touched, us surely as they will be by the bolter angel, of our nature.' . A Northern Drsuniomst on Record. : Tho fact that Senator Chandler and Bingham, of Michigan, hud telegraphed the proprietor of one-fifth of this valua and afterwards written to Governor Blair, y,, ni;nei 8d waa offered not long ago of that State, desiring him, if possible, to o.uOO.OOO for it provided tho Court should hare tho Legislature reconsider its refusal H favorarfle deciaion. That decision to appoint Commissioners to the leace Conference at Washington, ana suggest- ing theniselre. as proper candidates for the appointment, lias already uecn amioa- The Oovornor, it appears, has abused the ! confidence reposed in him by allowing' the morfest nnd patriotic correspondence of theso gontlemen to be made public. Bothlotters appear in the Detroit 7'rre Preu ; both nro to tho same c fleet. That of Senator Chandler being the briofest and most pointed Of the two, we publish it below ; WiiuixcToy, Feb. 11, 1861. "Jy Dear Governor ; Governor ' Iting ham and myself telegraphed you on SaU tird:iy, ut the requestor Massachusetts and New' York, to scud delegates to the Peace or' Compromise Congress. Tlisy admit that we were right, and they were wrong ; that no Kepul li-Jin Mate should havo sent delegates ; hut they are here and can't tret aivay. Ohio, Indiana and Hhode Is-1 land a.ie, caving in, and there is danger of Illinois, and noa1 they beg us, for God's sake, to come tn their rescue and save the Republican parly from rupture. 1' hope you will send stiff backed men or none. The whole thing was gotton up against my judgment and advice, und will end in thin smoke. Still, I hope, a a milter of cour tosy to some of our erring brethern, that you will send tho delegates. "Truly your friend, "Z. C.IANKI.KR. "His Excellency Austin Blair. "P. S. Porno of tho manufacturing States think tuit afiht wonld b awful, Without a little lloo'l is shed this Union ic:.!l not, in my estimation, be worth a rush." ' The New Tariff Bill. The new Tariff bill, which has paised Congress, is expected to yield an increas ed revomie of 510,92(1,850 on the principal imports. At least such is the estimate of Hon. Wm. Biglor, of Pennsylvania, who, in defending the bill in the Senate, re marked in substance a follows: ' For tho last year the importation of woolens amounted to $37,937,000, and the dulius to $8,155,000. The estimate is that tho bill pending a ill increase these duties $2,'J7o,000. Tho importation of silks for tho lait year amounted to $30, 767,000, and tho duly to 5,580.000. Tho estimated iucrenso under the pendinc bill is $2,312,000. Tho importations last 'year of nmnu factum of (lax and homp amounted to J 1,500,000, and the duty to $1,728,000. Tho importation of iron, nnd amountod to the duty increase un der tho pending bill U $1,123,500. The hnptii (u.iuiik of ines for the last year amounted to $4,775,000, and at tho pres ent rate of duty 30 per cent the reve nue was $1, LI 4,000. Wo have concluded to put it at 10 per cant, which, of course, gives an increase of $447,000. The im portation of brandies for the last year was $3,937,000, and tho duties amounted to $1,181,000. Tho increasf under the pres ent bill i.ould bo $1,317,000. The impor tations of cottons amounted to over $27, -4 UliU.Wtl last year, and the duties exceeded $6,500,000. Tho csliinated increase is $1,- rtt'' ." tl!" Vast variety of fabric of mixed gootls, clotlimg, Ac, the increase is estimated at $4f9,ti0O. Tho.se IcxIiiil' ar- tnies an.ou.it in about $200,000,000 of the dulmblo goods, leaving $79,000,000 of mix. td : vast vari lety on wlr.ch Ihavecstima- ted the increase at 4 per cent, makinp $3,160,000. The total gains, thereforo, on t'.i's esti mate are $13,764,840. Deduct fro n this $1020,840 rt7i, . n- -r i. iiw . ucu csaciiucu ui Ulaiue ? Senator Fvssenden, of Maine, has made himspl: eoniiiicuons durinc the nresont session of Congress for his rudeness, im- L ' ' "nlt ' J com prom i-i ng hostility "T V T"' T 7" '"? ,U,T T "n i 'ZrLT Zi!JX nr) l,"n,tJ character. ! ' 10 be, a. 0 suppose, tho Gell. Fei- senden whi sendon who figures in tho subjoined ex tract from an old file of tho Boston Post, thon his character is sufficiently explain ed, and his vulgar manners are readily accounted for, Says .he Pott , J'-.f. .1 y-I . ' . . , n ... A' Colored Gentleman at the liar.- n - eJ .n0rftl cl,,lrscler e,i?-' cnte was produced but Ihe Court rerus",l ',,ourolU8,.a tho motion on the ground thai the candi. ,,e was not n fact a citizen. Asuccess - fill flimliiif Inn u-ill siHAKn I.! ( Iva .1 . s ,T V', V " nv,,n nnc nt,olu no legislature Dave been Jct0Dr ,r,.,, th """ promoted by rewlution of that hodv. to Tie recent freshet in tho Susnuehannah ! 1 10 ""nt freahet in the Susquehanna!, has caused is caused much damage. In the North iwancn uie water was b.gl.er than it has been known for fifty years. Many bridge, were carried away, and much nronertv! iron. . c. iNiDinclc, il. U. rrom Indi ana, was on Saturday nominated by the Pre.ldet to be Chief Justice of the Tcr- nlory of Nebraska, vice Augustus Hall, deceased. it U .positive,, stated Greeley is to go into the Cabinet of the new Adrninisv tratipn. He i, to be Secretary of the bxtenor-his principal duty being to watch the IhorihAtnlsiAe s1 ii L- ifUeut.hr. Ti.ti.:t, ' " KEWS ITEMS. 1 Robert J. Walker hat suddonly become a millionaire by thedocWon made in the i Supremo Court involving the title to a quicksilver minoin California, estimated! id La worth 110.000.000. Mr. Walker is ;1BS Il0W been given, and Mr. Walker, who ,T. 0 use bis own words, "a bepgar in ,ll0 tnorningl" went home to hi dinner aj millionaire Tm JIohi Suauro.n at Fensacoi.a. At the mouth of Pensacola harbor, on theCth instant, appeared the Macedonian, Brook' lyn, Sabine, St. Loui and tho Powhaltan The Wyandotte went up to tho city On the Cth instant, tho Pioneer Guards, from Alabama, numbering 70 men, arrived. It ii said that Ave thor.snnd men could not take Fori Pickens. It is supposed that it .vas reinforced in tho night. Lieutenant Slemmer admits no strangers now. The legislature of New Mexico has pas sed an act for tho election of delegates to form a Slate Constitution, which is to be held in May next. The delegates are to meet is June u u.scnarge me uuues which will thus be imposed upon tliem, . . .... ...... and the Constitution they form is after ward to bo submitted to the people, for ratification or rejection, at n general eleo tion to bo held in September. It i said that ExSccretary Floyd is preparing a lengthy and elaborate defence of himself and his official act.. Ho will take the ground that his nets were justified by precedent and tho necessities of the Government; that tho business of the Department could not proceed without! some expedient to relieve the Treasury, and that the Treasury Dvpsrline.it nnd Congress are at fault i.fnot properly ro- viding for the fulfilment of tho contracts Hon. Horatio King, now Postmaster General, entered iho Department over which he now presidos, when twenty-Tire oi six years of age, w ith nn appointment as copying clerk, and n salary of $1,000 per annum. Ho was called to the First Aj sistaut Posmnstcr Generalship on the death of Gen. llobbio. He began his public career as conductor of a newgjiap. r at Pari,. Me,, having Hon. Hannibal Htmlin, now Vice President elect, as his partner in the business. Tekriiii.k Tragkdv. We have been in formed of the outlines of a terrible tragedy which occurred in Sumter county, near Adamsville, on the 13th inst. A man by the msmo of Andrews, who was, until re cently, a Methodist preacher, killed, on tl.at day, two persons, Messrs. KcClellnn and O. M. Condry, and wounded two others, Lang and Clj all, Ho wa immo arrested and hung on tho following dny Floridian . A largo number of influential citizen of Kansas havo published a card warning the people not to credit the storios of want and .starvation rocenily published by Thadditi Hyatt. They say about one fifth of the peojde of Kansas do need as sistance, but that none huve starved or are likely to starve. They also cay tha. tho contril otions coming in are quite equal to the demand. Mas. Douglas is a Fix. A newspapet cotemporary says that tho Loautiful aud accomplished wife of Judge Douglas made a wager of $100, prior to the late election that she would tleep with the next Presi dent of the United States I She has ei ther got to fork over, or have a homely and most uncouth bed follow. We think the Judge ill prefer to advance the mon ey nnd pay the wager. One of the largest cotton planters in the South lias written a letter to John Covode believing him to be in the confidence of the President e!ect, in rcferenco to our national troubles. John writes to him that the future of New Orleans is gloomy, and that he had better move up North. We are not advised of the intention of the gentleman in question. A Washington correspondent of the Baltimore Sun, says that the Administra tion is silisfied, from official channels of j information, that none of the foreign Governments sympathize with the seces sion movements in the South : but on the contrary, expres. the utmost solicitude for the preservation of the entire Uhion con non ! .... ,...nii.. .,.i.i "o vu.ici.nj iti-fucu Ilarrisburg, during the past week, that SEVENTEEN SFNATOIIS had formed aj "ring," and demanded the sum of i1"0'000 eRch to Tut lh Sunbury and Erie I . r. J V . """ufju the Senate. Is th s true? i mi. uer I The small army of posters nnd folders" ; I , . . 1 the rank of Assistant Doorkeener.. nnd the rank of Assi.tant Doorkeeper., snd ; 'heir wages increased accordingly. Great economizers, these Bepublicans - when they ain't in office! Tl. Via p...:.i-i x s. jrl'eril while journeying to Washington, tuan was Air. Lincoln. He ca.Tie near losing his life in New Haven. The ears started very .uddenly. and he was drawn upon the platform, and just escaped faU ling under the wheel. In gre.s, on Monday, the .Sonata passed the House bill authorising the dis- ' continuance of the postal service in the seceded States. .The bill now goes to the . Vttmidktii tor hi. .t-.,, tl. Ekort ro President Bicbivav fi., ' battalion or Haiti more L.ty Guard , t Atw 1 AfAil Bin Aannrl tn PrAaMant IK.t an, or. his route from Washington to Wheatland. On the day of hi leaving Washington, not yet determined upon .1.. i ...:n t... ..:. . . . 1UO vu.iuiivll ni.t ivn.o imj, Ullj jy tour o clock morning train tor Washing. i .. :u i s. .i . r . j ...v aiariii Band cf that city, A special train will b run over the Korthem Central railway on the oocasion, snd it i.expeeted lkt, iviia the btnd, the escort will number twohun. dred and twenty men. They r ill 8iW)rt hint to Wheatland. "Goou Evsmiko Bsrsr." The Mahon itig tientiuel wben the delegation from Cliicago and Milwaukie boirds of trade called on Seward, at Wa .hington, th other day, he said: " I will tell you my friends, the question of slavery will Bu be taken into account; we arc to itri the Union and then .nvo all the rest worth saving." that what the rremierof the in com. ing Administration .ays. Down goes tin Republican aleratus factory. " Since I am soon to bo done for, What the deuce was I begun for." , From Tixas, March I. Galveston advV conlaie l)iat cpt. Hill, in his roply to 1 tie Texill rommimionerf, refused to tmi. uate Fort Brown or to surrender the Gov ernment property. It w sho stnted that (.'apt. Hill has ordered reinforcements from Ringgold barracks to enable him to maintain hi post and to retake the prop. erty on Braza Island. A collision Is immU ncnt between tho Federal troops apd this State forces. A KistARK.'Ri.a Ci.n.n. There is an in fant; about one week old, birn in this place, with double head, one facing in front and tho other backward, tho latter one is the largest, but not perfect, snd leititute of the organ, of sense, Th child appeared healthy and takes refresh ments from its mother. SLvnotin i?i(. trr, th uh. Chicago Religion. A Chicago Innler, a member of the church, during the m cnl crisis, has been in the habit of porktt ing ten ppr cent, on the spr eie which lis collected in church on Sunday, by the veiy simple process of rendering back sn ! equal amount in Western fund. ' Tub Failvre or Bowrv, Holme .1 Co. We find ihe following in the Jwnnljjl Commerce, of last week : " We regret to leurn that Messrs. Bow. en, Holmes 1 Co., n Urup dry irond tab bing house, und well known a rliief pro prietors of the Neiv York Indepmdent; hart tell impelled to haIc the aMisUuce of their leading creditors. Their liabilities are about $1, 000,000 and the assets-, inclu-Une 3iWl,. 000 in the newspaper, show n lar;;e ur.ilui said to be upward of $1,000,000. Tbeir imposition i to pay all their obligation l maturity, they furnuh t0 per cent, in cash, and .50 per cent, in stock orthe M- pern en', where (lie emourits are hrce en tin ir Ii ti warrant it. the creditor funilth the latier nnmunt in cash, nnd Ink" tht sharer. It is said the uo of ay $.100, 0 of the newspaper slock in thin way will place Mm house in an independent posi tion. The. proposition meets with favur, but Homo ot the crcmlor ohioct to fsb- ming any ownership in a sheet sustair.ity such a violent partisan character." Murder in Lycoming County. a iiorri(:ie muruer was committed in W i Tamsport on the night of the Jltli. Tho pariiciilnis of the uifuirnre as follow: A man by tho name of Buriiey llindlrr, formerly of Philadelphia, residing or. lli corner of Front street and Pine alley, in Williamspcrt, wilh a wife and f.-ur inisll children, the youngest about sixUrn months old, killed hi wife, Mary Hind ley in the most chocking manner, and buried her. She was teen on the 1 III inst., suit e which time she has Lecn mis sing. Inquiries concerning iibsoi.ee wers made of him, by the neighbor, some Of whom ho to!d that alio had gor.e to Phila delphia, nnd to difiorent pertons he told difiure.H stories concerning-her where-. about. Suspicion wa s?on oxcited b Iho difference of stories, nnd secretly, 'tha ou.ccr went to svoric to ferret out the yet undisclosed tnytory. In a few days, one of the officer went to the house and tiisr a quantity of feathers tcattered about the floor, and some tied up in n cloth. In the course of conv crsai ion, he raqu ired of llin: dley why the fenthers were strewn over tht floor, to which he replied (bat his wifs uaa tanen tliem to I'inladelphia lo got new feathers for them. Similar inquire were made by dillereut persons, to some of w hom, he replied he had em plied iheai ii.mso.i, una to otners that lie lin'1 anoth er person empty them that they might bt nosnea. Uindlev n nrrai.n. 1 tha mn.,.;, .ml t. . .... . .,. . .v "Mo .. "fioiuuruay, me zid.and commflteil to awH the result of the investigation liunng tue forenoon of Sundny, II ind- ltV. Wh'.lft 111 I, ftt nail Bii.nnA.ln : .nln i " ; ""t "'t'" 6"s 1 rSUir iNlm llll.lli ml.iB.. .n.l ....Ii. ally cut his throat, nearly .eve: ing the ',D; v"'8 uauon w.s aimosnrn- mediately discovered, and a physic an wm oallod and the wound drewed. When he becntno able to sneak he suted that b i ... . , una Killed nnd buriod his wiU; that M Kcd her on Monday night, put her !nt. "Lrmt .barrel in th house, dug " ".r"Z " ' i ....L Z'J day nieht About the time that these confessions i era made to the physician, tho body of ; tie deceased wn. lound bur.ed, almost nv three reet under cro.ind. hnvini been coverea wuu T,h "bed in hTcut hRXX-V S murder, and during the time .he wt .buried. The body was exhumed and car iV.nq ery. . . On TuesJay morning, about half put n" 0 clock, liarnoy Hindley died in. im c.eIl fromthe effeets of the wound in h U.roat.iBfliet by hieelf.-, W