-" ( ' Y ft D.W.MOORE, I VAittri PRINCIPLES, not MEN. TERMS $1 25 per Annum, if pnid in ndvnrre NKWSKHIIvS-VOL". II.-NO 23. VOL. XXXII.WllOLE, NO 1CCC CIsKAKFIKLI), I'A. WKDNKSIMY, DDC. 5f GX. mil. II I m r V V T V t '.r TO MY COAT. I ROM THE FRENCH OT ntRANGFR. 'Though hardly wurlh on paltry groat, Thou art dear to m, my poor old coat ; For full tea ynrt my friend thuu'st been, For full ten yean I've brushed thee clean And now, like me, thou'rt old and van, 'With both, the glow of yoajh la (one j But worn and lhabby as thou art, Tbou and the poet shall not part, l'oor coat. I've not forgot the birthday eve When Drat I donned thy glossy eleeve, M'heu jovial frieadi.iu mantling wine, Drank Joy and health to roe and mine. Our indtfrenre let enme dopie, NWre dar M over in their eyei ; And for thoirsakea, old as thou art. Thou and the poet ahull not par!, Poor coat. One evening, I remember yet, I, romping, feigned to By Liselte; bhe strove hor lover to retain, And thy frail skirt was rent in twain. Dear girl, ihe did her belt endeavor, And patched thee up as well as ever ; For hor sweet sake, old at thou art, Thou and the poet ahull not part, Poor coat. Never, my eoat, hast thou been found ' Heading thy shouldori to the ground From any upstart "Lord" or "Uraee," Tn beg a penaiou or a place. Wild forest flowers no monarch's dole Ailurn thy wodott buttun-bolo; If but for that old as thou art, Tbou and the poet should not part, l'oor coat. 1'onr though we be, my good old frionj, No gold thall bribe our backs to bend ; Honest amid temptations pant, We will be holiest to the last f Far more I priie thy virtuous rags Thui all the lace a courtier brngs; And, while I live and have a heart, Thou aud the poet shull nor part, Poor coat. Roads to Ruin, ft is the easiest thing in the world to find one of these roads, for thejr run in all directions over the social ,Uin. They present, as the advertisements have it, "a wide field for choice." They comprise highways and feye-wuys, round-about roads and cuts across lots, smooth paths und rough paths, ascents aud descents; nnd as they intersect each other at points innumerable, travelers to the common terminus can turn out of the road they tiave Btarteu on into a new one, at thir pleasure. The outfit for the iourr.ev. ha it long or short, is not of mueh conse- quenee, kinco destitution and despair await all who persist in pursuing it. Some set cut with pockets full of gold j others with their .pockets empty, hoping to fill them bv the way. To some" the Fiend Speculation plays the Cicerone, ni-irshall- iitg them to seeming Dorados in tiie dis tance, that melt into moonshine as they travel on. Tho Will-o'-the-wisp, Gam bling, with his pasteboard signals, be guiles others to the brinks of prcipices, whence they tumble headlong intoii rem ediable shame. 1 he Goblin Hum, heads caravan of sclf-deslruolioijisls whose name is legion. All "easily LesettinL' sins" null arte tcav. ' and betray their victims into oueor other , "8row" 8oI.e1,vl1' T V of the ninny roads to ruin. The only I 1 he President, in his message nt the ex trust woithy safe-guard against their en- "Ira session of Cjngress, gave us his rea ticements is resistance ut tl.o outset.- wn for l.w action in the niattpr. When morbid appetite or inclination , 1 "av" authorized that ll e writ of ktbeat pulls ruin-ward, bra e the moral system enriy upended. and before he did against it ; put manhood agabst tempt- eo 1,8 "''K6'1 considerably of his right and tion; ask lielp from Heaven. Christian he propriety of his doing so. lheprivi obstinacy is more than a match for Satan joge conferred l-v the Ar6u corpu, is to and all his agents. Misfortune is not ruin. tMM J command an inquiry as to In thut terrible word, in its true interpre- whether person n held by competent tation, is involved loss of character, of nulunnty under a charge of crime. If a self-resjt, of moral couraiw, of all that j'erBon "o held he is remanded, ami if renders life valuable. Beware of the first he is not he is discharged. 1 hat provision tep leading to such a consummation ! i or,,1,e, corl' not has never been in- - j vaded by the executive power till now: A Touou One. A correspondent of one Sir, tho object of this suspension and the of our cotemporarias, writing from Web cflectulso of ii is to prevent inquiries into titer, Western Virginia, tells the following the legitimateness of tho imprisonment rather touch varn; I under niiiitsrv power. The object of this "While out scouting." he says, "a cap- , viiiii uiiu eiAiyiour men were eurrounoeu by three thousand secessionists, so he stretched his men out in a long line, and as soon m they fired they would jump be- j hind a tree ; ut the same time t'.ie captain ' was bellowing out at tho fop of his voice for Col. so nnd so to bring up that bat- talion, toll Captain so and so to bring those cannon here, ami kept holloing at authority to seize, to hold and detain all such a fierce rale that the secessionists got 'persons not engeged in the land and na frightcned, and a general stampede took I val forces, not men engaged in enterprises piace. in their night they threw away blnnkets,knapsacks, revolvers and sworJs. The captain hadn't a man lurl, but kill ed seventy of them, found over one thous and blankets, about two hundrod and fif ty knapsacks, swords and revolvers. As InvestmationDkhandeu. It is said that General Patterson has, at length de manded a court of inquiry, and wnare in formed mat me neccessarv . . it-. 1 , J sent to Washington more than a month i v nauers were . since. It is said that no response lias as et been received. Ueeentlv the matter as ncain been agitated bv the General. I hut, as before, without any defin ite results. As a reason for this delay, a Washington correspondent stales thatar. investigation t miaht afl-jct the character of Gen. Scott. Yril friends of General Patterson, on the 4lhcr hand, allege that the demand for a court was preferred tefore Gen. Scott left the country, and doclared that an ollicial I report of the campaign musts be obtain- yd.-Ptuladefphia Press. I pHow quickly Democrats rally to Ihe .support of the President when he places ihirasolf upon the platform of the Consti . tution, is thoffn in the general aoclania ( of the Democratic press, sustaining "im 111 his controversy with rroniott. t.A. man who likes to hear a woman cold has Just hired a saw-filer to play hiui l8ler. THE WRIT OF HABEAS CORPUS. M'KKCH OF MR. I'F.XDLKTON. Tho following is a full report of the rech of Mr. Pendleton, delivered in the House of Representatives on Tuesday tho 10th inst., a brief abstract of which ap peared in the telegraphic summary of the proceeding : Mr. .Pendleton, of Ohio, moved that the memorial of Messrs. Howard, Gatchell and Davis be relerred back to the Committee Jn Judiciary, with instructions declaring that Congress alone has the power, under the Constitution, to suspend the writ of habeas ewjHi. Mr. Pendleton said : "Mr. Speaker: These memorialists nre members of tho Uoard of Folico of the City of Bal timore, On the 1st d iv of July lust, at the dead hcur of the night, they were ar rested and conveyed to Fort McHenry by a detachment of U. S. soldiers, under the command of Gen. Banks. They were in the performance of the duty assigned to them by the laws of their .State. The peace of the city was then un broken. The Federal courts were in full operation within her limits. Judges, Marshals and the District Attorney were in the exercise of their accustomed func tions. The process of the courts, if I am ruhtly informed, had not been interfered with, except ir. one memorable instance, and then by the authority of the Presi dent of the United States himself. These gentlemen were arrested without a war rant. They have been detained tithou'. nn indictment. , They nre deprived of their liberty without due process of law. They have tot been confronted with their accusers. Thpy ore not informed of the nature of the accusation against them. They have been denied the right to a fpeedy and public trial by nn impartial jury, t lie 1 resident or the United Males, in his message to this House, in response to a resolution ol it, lias declined to fur nitsh the grounds for their arrest. On the very same day when he did so, while their petition lor redress of a great grievance was pending before the house, the Presi dent had them conveyed out of the dis trict and Slate in which they had been or rested, and where, if ut all, they had com mitted the crime, fint to Fort Layfayette mnl then to tort Warren., 1 hey are arbi trarily held by military power. They have presented their memorial lo Con gress nuking that Congress may examine their case or that it may be remitted to a judicial tribunal, to be legally heard and determined, and my colleagues on the Judiciary Commitiee can find no more fit- t,nS response to a reasonable request like tuilt tl,u tl,ut this respectful pelition hn" lie unanswered on the table. 1'he ,Trit ol Rubens corpus was invented for the P"pose 01 meeting me exigencies or just such a case as this. It commands that the nody of a prisoner shall be produced, that the cause of his commitment may be in quired into, and that he may be discharg ed if he is illegally held, or rem muled if he is held by competent authority on a charge of crime. These gentlemen would hRV0 bent IS'11 lo vft'l themselves oJ this writ, which uie i. resident commamieu uw general to smpena niia to now iiiem at . , . , i . evasion of the great charter of liberty is' to cnaoio niiiiiaiy ouiuers or ouiers who have like power to arrest nnd imprison men though they have committed no crime against the laws of the land, and to punish them, not as the law prescribes, bat in whatever way those who have the power may ordain. If I rightly construe the mesnge of the President, he claims against the Government, but all persons to obey its prohibitions. Whea the Con whom he tniy suspect, nnd to imprison Utitution falls, (hen indeed the Govern- them without regard to the provisions or process or law. ilia President further, claims the authority of the Constitution, j of which it is n complete violation, to ar-. rest whoever in his judgment he may I think pioper. The President says his authority is derived by implication, .nd because, I suppose, he deems it inconve- "'T iV l" UHnw , . ...l. .. 1 .1 writ of habeas corpus vested in Congress alane. Now, I he only clause which refers to the subject is one which provides that the writ of habeas corpus shall never be sus- j ponded except in enses of rebellion or in-, vasion, or under circumstances when the publio safety demands it. This is un doubtedly the only implication that can ; bo derived authoriaing the suspension of ! the writ of habeas corpus. Who shall sus' pend it! That is the question. It is , not e"tedin tho executive exclusively.but , ... ...i nio uepartments ol uovernment. 1 tensely excited. Now what is the fact ? vvn ln,at"n',or the arbitrary ruU of Citizens are committed and imprisoned LliEabeth of England, and during the ear-'because in the publio newspapers they ly part or the reign of Charles the First, it' dare criticise the acts of the Government, was exercised by those monarchs, but Newspapers have been stisper.dod.and Ihe Charles was compelled at the price of his ' whole power of the Government despoti ttrone to assent to the Bill of Rights, by cally exercised without a public murmur, which be bound himself never to imprison I We are told that when this public dan a man without due process of law. Charles ' ger shall have passed away the Constitu. did not stand by his interpretation of the tin ll will In radium. 1 i tta iipiultna v'umr ancient coMtitntion, and after ten years of .t.Ma.lA with V ! hamwIa U a 1.!- A I 1 Birugfci n.m i'vvpm uu losvuia turone and his life as the penalty of hit infraction of it. Ilia successor ti ied all niean. and every kind of scheme to retain this arbi trary power, which was at last swept away forever bv the oreat charter. Wo are told llv tho eminent historian, Macaulny, that Charles II sought to rcpenl the habeas corpus act, for thut he hated it as only ty rants can hate whatever stands between them and their own despotic wills. And this habeas corpus act win the most string ent curb ever imposed by a legislature on tyranny. When William and Mary came- to the throne they declared that the crown Ji, DOt possess the power of suspending the writ, of habeas cornus. and from that hour to this, one hundred J eari Uf'oie the adoption of the Constitution of the United States, England had no monarch during all her foreign wars and intestine troubles, wayward and wicked enough, though some of them were, who dared to suspend the writ of tutbeai corpus, or whoever claimed that they had power to imprnon a citizen without due process of law. All history of which 1 have access confirms this view to the case Hume and Mncaulay claim this right as the principle in thegieat struc ture of the English constitution. But here, according to the novel theory of Government, the President may suspend the Constitution and the laws ol the Uni ted States made under it. He may, as it is claimed, do all this, supersede them ull, disregarding tho limitation enjoinod for the exerciso-of his perogatives. He may abolish all the laws of the hind, and sub stitute in their place, his nan will. He may abolish the whole system of govern ment built up and bequeathed to us by our revolutionary fathers, and he tuny build up for himself a new and entirely different system. All this he may do, it is claimed, rightfully legitimately, and without inter ference. I hold this assumed position is untenable and indefensible; that there ii no warrant for it in the Constitution, or in the principles which underlie the theory of our government, nor in the ge nius of the American people, nor in the spirit of liberty which is the boast of our institutions. Such a proposition will des tioy the law. it will reduce this nation, if deliberately adopted to the theory of government to the condition of slavery, und 1 say that any nation that will wil lingly idopt it is lost to ull sense of manly independence, is lost to the appreciation c f iti own dignity ami national rmliis4and for them tho yoke of tho slave i the only fitting emblem. We are told, in defence ol this theory, that it would not exut only in cases of rebellion against the Government. We are alo told that it was not intended that the Constitution of t'.ie United States should not be operative in limes of civil war. Our fathers hoped that civil war might never befall us, but they knew hu man nature too well to expect that wo should forever enjoy profound ropose. l'hey had freed themselves from the yoke of oppression, they had successfully con quered enemies without and tories within, and then they formed a constitutional government, recognizing in them thut hon esty ana good sense which marks Ihe pa triot. Is it to be supposed that they would adopt a constitutional government only in lime ot peace, and that that Constitution should be superseded whenever discord of .var would present an opportunity to 6Ct it aside und substitute for it the will of military power? The Cosstitu'.ion givss In I Iim kpv prill dfMinrl menla nl' t liu ( I.ir,r ,1. ' tnent all the power ever intended to bo us- ed fr any purpose. If the laws of the . Uuited States are too lenient, they may be before tho tribune of tho people, to sup made more stringent. If judges are im - poit and preserve the Constitution, nnd becile, let them be impeached. Let the in virtue of the position we hold here to whole machinery of government bo revis- support the framework of the Govern- ed nnd improved, if you will ; but whoever goes beyond that to support the govern ment, would destroy the Constitution un der the pretence of preserving them. The government has no right to break down the Constitution to uphold itself. It nev er was intended lor a moment that the Constitution under any circumstances should be superseded. The President holds office under the Constitution, you sit there under it, the judges sit and pass judgment in virtue of the provisions of that instrument alone, end if you su persede it, neither you, nor the judges, nor the President himself, possesses any more power than the humblest man in the land. Supersede the Constitution : You might as well try to repeal all the laws for tho guidance of society, and let the nation go adrift to ruin at once. Tho only way to preserve thp government is to preserve the Constitution, to observe its limitation and ment falls. This is not tho way to pre- serve Government. AcbUion makes its own opportunity, and under thin system of superseding the Constitution in times of public calutnity, tho public tuind will become degraded, tho people on every fresh occasion for the exercise of this now- er will yield still a little more'to theso en- ... "oaenmen s uii iiie pub .0 will w.d bo detroyed. the publio intellect warned the ' . national character tarnished, and the na. 1 tioiial life of liberty and independence I overthrown. They will became the play- thing of every tyrant, a.id each succesiive invasion of their rights and freedom is forever lost. 1 1 is in vaiD to say that this I is an idlo dream the realization of tho ' fact is beforo us. Six months ago, when I the habeas corpus act was first suspended in ' the case of Merriman, who was held on a I charge of treason, the public mind was in- and the people will bo allowed to resume . . ... . . . tneir accustoaicd liberty. When was this ever so r When were tho Invaded nnd re-, 11. id. vi a i,eoii is ever restored o their exac t tikifin vL. . 1 . . ineir exact position except by the sword r 11 1 . i'l 1 ' . "."..J" 'J V'00 "'roiiUeriMl, ever " ' ,wp,7 VI00.V hor iui BUMuuuur oi meir rights no nation cv- er resumeU them onlv i,r,,i, ti, rtf it rpvnlnt t,n ..n 1. . - . . J --.w..e V -Q n. lion sepVil iVnfti. 11 11 .URO , m 1 ' 'v ,""e danger possesses no rights. 1 ou cunnot incrnuso nnd strencthun irlue. and cour 1 1 a age, and patience, in a people by teaching them thai in times of great public calami ty and danger to the State, they must re ly for their safety, not on their own virtue, arid courage, and constnncy, but on the power and good will of their rulers. Ko tree nation ought ever to listen for a mo ment to the argument of State necessity. The history of those people who have been so deceived is written in the wreck of free institutions. It is .-narked with wrongs, with high hopes destroyed, ami noble as pirations violated and trampled upon. If we look over the pathway of desolation thus exposed ho view, we may easily imag ine that we see the spirit of American in dependence nnd American freedom hover ing over this duy, tearfully praying it, oo, ma) not be added to the long list of vic tims immoluted 011 tha altar ofBtate ne cessity. This argument of stale necessity always proceeds from the executive power. It is the voice which issues from the throne itself, and unless speedily anweied un less answered now ere iorg comes the m indute to surrender lo military power, An imperial throne rises on the ruins of an overthrown republic; oaths are viola ted ; liberties swept away ; rights trampled on, nnd a nation is prostrated in tho dust, This is but the fniuilinr picture which pre sents the dire effect of a people submitting to the pic of state necessity. We are further told that in times of great public danger the people ought to sustain the hands of their rulers by confiding in their integrity of motives nnd disinterestedness of action. Yes, sir, I tvouid sustain with the public confidence while they adhered to the provisions and principles of the Constitution ; bjt 1 would paralyze (hem, til, with distrust, whenever they com- mence the work ot usurpation. It was the work ot v told the Athenian that the surest defence ol a tree people rgninst tyrannv was dis- trust. The Athenians did not hoed his; mp!)t of error a,,d a RU.rentler of the I)ris wurning, and from that hour to this Gre- j on(.rs ,vii b rcceived with great jov, but Ciail independence aild Grecian llher V have been but a name. Will'am, Prince of Grange, wisely taught the same lesson to the 1 utch, when Philip cf Spain aked their confidence in his administration, and they wisely heeded the lesson, and the immortal glories which clustered for two hundred years around tho Dutch republic iesuiies 10 1 11c irutiiiuinn-s ot t lie axiom. I, sir, speak not 111 behalf of the memori alists upiiizbt und honest men as thev are, and unjustly deprived ol their liberty as 1 know them to be I speak in behalf of the Constitution, I speak in behalf of the liberties of the nation, I speak in be half of my constituents, I speak in behalf o: myselt and in behalf of you, my col leagues on this floor. And 1 say her - that the pioposition that the President has the power to suspend l lie writ of habeas corpus. aibiiran'y and witluut reason, without regard to the principles and provisions und process of h w to detain Ihe citizens of any portion of this country, is utterly kuu entirely inueiensit.ie. And 1 tuMher snv. that it becomes everv member of tin House, in virtue of his null, luko.i l,m nieni, ana as representatives 01 me peo- 1 ... rt . . pie, solemnly in the face of heaven nnd of our responsibilities to protest against it. W here are vou WouxnFi)? It had be come a mat'er of hfbit with the fair ones to open conversation with tho very natur al inquiry, "Where are you wounded?" anil accordingly when u party of three or four the other day approached our cell they hur.cheil out in the usual way. Tad dy made believe that he didn't hear ex actly, nnd leplied, "pretty well I thank yez." "Where are you wounded ?" again fired away one of the ladies. ''Faith, I'm not budlv hurt at all. I'll be thravrlmi Lto Kichmond in a wake," replied Pat with a peculiarly distressing look, as if ha was in a tight plaoo. Thinking that he was deaf, one of the old ladies in tho back ground put her mouth down close to his ear, ami shouted again, "Wo want to know where yon art hurt." Pat, evidently finding that if the bom bardment continued much longer he would have to strike his flag anyhow, con cluded to do so at once, and accordingly, with a face as rosy as a boiled lobster, ami with angry kind of energy, ho replied; "Sure, leddies, it's dufo that I am; but since you are t'eterinined to know where I have been wounded, it's on me sate. The bullet entered behind ov mo breech- Plato to excuse mo feelings and ax me no more ouestions." Comiiixation to Pkolonu the War Tho Cincinnati Cummercia tate that a conspiracy has been entered into by Govs eminent contractors, and others, who prosper from Hie present civil war, to uto all their power in making it a long one, and thus filling their own potkels at the extn nse of the people at. large. The im- mense power that can be iolded by heavy moneyed interest is notorious, and will bo felt by the Federal Government. Bg. A terrible accident occurred near Uonesdale, Pa., on lh& 14th inst., at the . p , a , ' ', 7 Canal Company. A car fell through .fly ffet, killing four persons and wounding six others severely. ifrarWhy ! life Ihe riddle of all riddles?' , i . i .. r , l T . i . i i , i . i Because we must all "give it up! ' IMPORTANT FROM ENGLAND. r t, ix t, Cats IUtr, Oec 15. 1 ho steamer ! . . i .11 nf uhIi ni'ton tnaid here nt 1 1 o r ... nirrni" iv;'.h ..,,.,,,. St h inst : "V , i From London to New York, put into Plymouth on the 3d inst. Sho took fire the same night und was. cuU extinguish the flames. Some t!..,u- .1 ; 1 ., iiuuiiiruivi'i mi 1 I'i'cu oiiiviili vu u t.1 vn uiv ipped among susripetecl of firinu her. The itearner Au.-trtlasian has been char- lered to convey troops ami a bnltery of artillery, and was to sail on the 12th. The San Jacinto affair monopolizes the attention of tho Mess, which denounce it in strong terms, and active naval prepar ations are making The latest by telegraph to (Jueenstown, to tho 6th instant, suys the excitoinont Is unabated. The Paris T'mps says that Xnpoleon has tendered his services as a mediator. At the banquet at Rockdale, Mr. Blight made an elaborate speech on American all'airs, but declined to give a decided opinion in the 1 rent all'air. He believed that if illegal, the United .States will make fittintr reimrntion. He stronidv condemn. ed Buy wailiko feeling, and scouted the :.i .1... 1 1. - a . : ..t.:.. t i idea that ths American Cabinet had re solved to pick a quarrel with Knglp.nd, nnd n-.adu a brilliant peroration in favor of the North. A letter from Gen. Scott, in favor of the maintenance of friendly relations between Er.cland and America, attracts much at tention. The export of urms, ammunition nnd lead to America is prohibited. The Paris l'a'.rie has an editorial fore shadowing the disposition of France to re- cognize the Southern Confederacy if Eng, When the Europa sailed there a more hopeful look and consols and cotton slight- ly improved, but after digesting the tone of tho American press, a reaction set in, and fears were entertained that the Wash ington Government would justify the seiz ure of Mason and Slidull. The Knidish iou-nals are verv bitter nnd ItnctaJn nrintinninit in trenf thn n fl'ti ir ft a n n ' intolerable insuU. TIip instructions to Lord Lyons.on which 1 u,e Cabinet wa ; nmi ...(.rmined unanimous, are explicit .pu. r . n uu.l,-,. if l,n Kurlonl imvermnnnl fV.L In m.nnlv no male in England will blind his eyes to the alternative that England must do her duty The London Tlmts continues to nssert that it has been Mr. Seward's policy to force a quarrel with England and calls for energetic military preparations in Canada. A serious decline is daily taking plueo in Lmadian secutities amounting lo 12 pel cent. Tho London Timer predicts throe things to follow an outbreak with the United States, namely, tho destruction of tho of the Northern n, ts. nod iL .eeo.rnit inn o!" the Southern Confederacy by France and England. The AnTy Xews that tho American Con gress meets before the English demands can gel out, nnd hopes that it will act with honor and dignity nnd that the golden opportunity will not bo lost. A large number of naval vessels are or dered to be. ready for immediate commie sion. Tho transport Melbourne was lo leave Woolwich Arsenal on tho 5th, for II.t;r.,v (iinno .i.,ir .. 1 quantities of ammunition nnd Armstrong ',"dy bought to the notice of Iho Sen guns She will be conveyed by theOrph- " e- I ho letter alluded to was 1 then read. eusoflguns ( It was addressed to Mr. lilch, his col- Thelron-plated steamer Warrior is to bo 1 1e;l!,' ' tlut he was opposed to tho ready ror.foreign service immediately, nnd Abulitionibts, but had always been for the her destination will depend upon the an- ' Perva ion and integrity of the Union. swer 1 mm Washington. Hie shipment of rifles from England for Now York contin. j UM 0 The English funds fell per cent. on tho 3d. The London 7W L-ives a rumor that. X. ' poleou had b?en proposed as tho arbiter ' of the fiuestion. I WHAT GENERA!. SCOTT IS REPORTED TO HAVE aid Tin: act contemplated in' ca 111 net AT WASHINGTON. l nan iniieciuaiiy ii'khh iur. uaruuig, who Itererring to the report that the seizure M''1 the Hn:,r. to yield it to him that he was the act of the American commander, n'nl ' on language nail the fftlse- not exnresslv directed bv the ''oveiiimenL I ,i. T '.. ......;, ,i.. ,i ..'i tho London A tfi' r.i o., a I ti means that the Federals had d liberatclv determined to seize the Southern commissionc. and it "s understood that Gen. Snott has declared, since Lis arrival nt Pans, that the seizure had been made the subject of Cabinet dis cussion at Washington long before he led. Tho American authorities might have warned :he English steamer at Havana that it they took on board the Southern er.voys they would subject tho vessel to seizure and forfeiture in a prize court. I They made no remonstrance against tRk I ing them on board, as they were bound to I do, but secretly planned the outrage for I which we r.ow seek reparation. Messrs. I Slidell and Mason were, at the most, civil servants to a hostilo power, and were trav elirg from one neutral port to another, in a neutral vessel. If the government at Washington declare them rebels, then the right of asylum has been clearly violated. The Times concludes by adjuring the government and northern peoplo to do juttiee in the matter The London 1'ost confirms the Times' statement, and Srtys : "Tho demand of Lord Lyons w'dl be I lain and brief, ard if not compliod with the diplomatic relations will bo at once suspended." A French virw or the Amtricav Dirn CL'LTT. Letters from France state that the of American difficulty caused imrnt.nPe ,ensation ln Taris. and the first rftl im ion Wfls that ample rcpar- munbo mR(,e ,0 prevcn, com . mmunications have taken place be- Rn(1 g00 understanding on the subject was boliuvcd lo exist, as alien dy ty uoesmo qucMinn 01 policy 10 tie enrruu .)c 'out with reference to tho Aiuuiican ques- lion generally. I Tho Paris I'atrit maintains that the Am erican government hnd no right to arrest I lie Soul hern commissioners while on nn English steamer, ami aserts (hat the Brit ish government should bo immediately prepared to send reinforcements to Cant- !da. The same journal nlso gives a report that Admiral Milne, commander of the British Kt India squadron, 011 hearing of the Sn Jacinto aOuir, detailed three vessels 1 1 etcort the steamers between Havana and Si. Thomas, for tho protection of Southerners travelling by that route. Tho Americans in Paris paid a compli mentary visit to Gen. Scott Mr. Dsytott tiding as chairman. Vikws or the German rEs3. The Ger man press generally takes the part of En gland. The Augsburg Gazette says that the Blockade of Charleston is ineffectual, otherwise the escape of the Theodora would have been impossible. The com missioners having reached a Spanish port ,nd embarked in uneHtral English steam er. co"lu ""t lawfully seized by the Ynt-lti PROCEEDINGS OF CONGRESS. In Senate, Dec. 16, Petitions far the abo lition of slavery, and for tho employment of Jewish Chaplains in the army, were presented by Messrs. Grimes of Iowa, and Sumner of Mas3. Mr. Ten Eyck of N. J. ollcred a resolu tion that the present war is for the Union LCCording to the Constitution, and theob. ')ect 'ns ,0 ttv; .Uie fom,cr anJ eoforoe j'l'o latter. It was so in the beginning and should be so to the end That extreme and ndical measures, and in themselves disruptive, involving in a common fate the loyal and the disloyal, should not be resorted to ; and that in suppressing treaJ son tho Government cannot prove a trait or to the organic law. Laid over. Mr. Wilkinson, of Minn., offered a pre amble and resolution, as follows: Whereas, Jesse D. Bright, Senator from Indiana, did, on the 1st diy of March last, write a letter to Jefferson Davis the letter was hern rend, introducing a Mr. Lincoln j0 Mr. Davis as having an improvement jn firearms. And whereas, Such letter is an evidence of disloyalty : therefore, Resolved, That the said Jesse D. Bright be expelled from the Senate of the United Slates. Mr. Cowan, of r., moved a reference of the subject to the committee on the Judi ciary. Mr. Bright, of Indiana, said thai per haps it was not improper for him to say a word as to the truth of the charges which 1 haJ .been mml3 ",n through a 1 centious press, it had been charged th it he had absented himself from the Scuute from fear of such a resolution of expulsion being ollured. It was not 60. 11 had been confined to his room. He had no objection to tii resolution. He believed that in a service ol seventeen years he had done nothing inconsistent with hij duty as an American Senator, citizen, or geii thin. He courted an investigation into all his actj, public and private, and aked to iiiives ie;ier reau 111 answer 10 uie one .. , V, ' ri . ...-ww.wtw P. 01 l,!e .'ovei-nu oni. i he resolution wis then referred to the nmitiee on the indtciary. In the House., Mr. Conway, of Kansas. "sing to a question of privilege, ulludod t0 a dialogue between himself and Mr. rouke. on i hurs lny. I he former liau iu ClUUeU 1 110 Ua'.llO Ol l.emOIH !l 111 Uie HO i' of defeats to onrarms. jJr. iouke 1.1? ' .....ll I..J II. IT ... I! . , hood to the counter. Air. Conway had explained that no obtained ins inlorma- ol ,,oin 1,10 newspapers, and, as ho did nut at that lime bear the ofrni-ive lan- guse, he now desired to know whether Mr. Fouko intended to mak the charge of falsehood personally applicable to him Mr. Fouke, of 111 , replied that he Lad never heard of any newspaper paragrxph to that effect, excepting in the Chicago Tribune, which was afterwards contradict ed, lie then made a brief statement of the battle of Pelinon I, to bhnw that it was unkind in Mr, Contiay lo insist on char acterising it as a defeat, llo would jer init the gentleman to make tho duplica tion of the h ngunge he had heretofore uttered, as he (Mr. C.) was the only judge in the matter. Mr. Oonway, in reply, said Mr. fuukc had refused to avail himself of his gener osity ; he submitted to the candid judg ment of the House whether such conduct did not clearly manifest, a deliberate pur pose to ti ing on a personal collision with out cnuse, and whether such conduct wus. not unbecoming a member of the House but raihet that of a b'.sckguard and scoun drel. (Srnation ) Mr. Richardson, of 111., immediately called the speake' lo order, saying this was not the place to settle such difficulties. Cries of ordr, order. Mr. Fouke wanted lo ssy one word in reply. Thi Speaker informed Mr. Fouke thut no debate was in order, Mr. Fouke, amid cries of order, was un derstood to say that Mr. Conwy waj a disgrace to the nation and to humanity. Here the tuallcr ended in the House.