IR iwinr nr Oil 'it i y G. B GOODLAKDER, Editor and Proprietor. - VOL. XXXVIII. WHOLE NO 1331. TKSIsi OF Tim RCPL'RI.ICAN. TbtBspciLicm U pnbHtfacd every WtdneiJay, BY GEO. W. SNYDElt, A Co., tS2.f0rrmiumiadraoeo. if puid within ix Mi,in,-,.r4.0-.,".d if.ro,ifAnDult!lf,e.r th',"' i intion of sa mornlm. JJ,( 0 will be cbarjrtd. oppd;onuLued,uuiUrrcragfiirepid. f 1 j.. SPEECH or EDGAR COWAN. HON. Selivcred in the United States Senate, " ? the 2st of December 180.), 11 re- plytotke'-negro speech of Senator Suinnrr Mr. CO WAX Mr. President, I am not disposed to allow the neech of the honorable Senator from Massa chusetts Mr. Si mm:k, to go to the country without a very brief reply. If that speech be true, and if it be f folly; then all the blood and treasure; I which we have expended in that war - in order to restore ourselves to com-! panionship with the people of the i South have been equally fellies. But, Mr. President, is it true Or is not s this a series of ex )arte statements , mude up by anonymous letter-writers, Topl15 are down there morolike I ly stealing cotton, people who are down there in the enjoyment of place J and power, people who are interested I that the disturbed condition of things I wLich exists there now shall always continue, because they make profit ol it? Is there any man who has had -any experience m the trial of causes, any man who knows anything about the nature of evidence, who does not know that the honorchlo Senator could have sent his emissaries into ny cue county in the lately rebellious ftalc6 and gathered up from the ex pressions ol knaves and fools and dis contented, single-idead people, far 7iiore than he has given us in this f peech ? We arc told here of the exceptional Instances of bad conduct on the part if the people of the South. Wh-, what a large volume it would take to Jiold all that ! If .a mail were to go Jibout anywhere in the loval Hales and hunt cp what he might "appose to le treasonable expressions, hereti cal expressions, how many could be tind? Audyut we are treated to all this here as if it was the whole of the evidence in the case. Ono man out of ten thousand is brutal to a negro, nd that is paraded here as a tyj; cl the whole people of the South, whereas nothing is said of tho other nine thou and nine hundred and ninety-nine men who treat the negro well. One man expresses a great deal of dissat isfaction at the present state of afi'airs. and that is paraded here, while noth ing is said of tho other ten thousand men who are contented to accept it jind make the most of it. What, then, are we to do We are to suppose that the peojJe of the Bouthern States lately in rebellion have common sense; and when their utter ances are in accordance with what is common sense and thc dictate of their own interest, we have a right to pre sume it to be truo But according to what we have just heard, everything that has come from thc people of these (States and from their public-bodies, from thc representatives of these pco- 1le, is to be taken as falne ; and why ? Jccause somecotUm agent, some cor respondent of a radical newspajter in the 2Corth, some office-holder who has been making profit of the state of things there, chooses to say it is all false! The here.oy of State rights is not destroyed there, the honorable , ii mat epeecn ue xrue, aim n u vc tneir own interest will compel them when everybody else faltered, a correct picture oi the South, then ; to allow all people to testily unless mau who stood almost alone in tl ; uoa nop us; men tnis i.epuor.c, tins tliey a.re excluded by those disabilities midst of an enraged population, ; L nion is at f.u end ; then the great war timthave heretofore excluded witness- in the vcrv storm and strifo of. tl rw!ne!i wo waged lor toe L nion was a es from tcstil vinL'." If tho honorable worst civil war uiur mi?: - jiae we noi nearujirom tuo public, l-ecanse 1 Jiavo no 'roui a'mott n!I the public men of the j doubt that if their names were known tuth that that ing of all others which was the last,: . oi t e r iMHj , iiii, 1 1 ney j N:.a funmittoj i?ut still further .luiies juo vauieo; ne are not , ! what they are. What are they ?j tiswantcd; LvervboJy admits the negro ou igbt to have bis naU; rights secured to him. J believe ,!e raolerate conservative men of cnamoer are tully agree! that; . t . , . , man MiOuU nave log natural s secured the right to life, lib-' -me i.guug i.ie, i.o- ptrvtaits of bapi.iness; of property, limbs, and at be shouid have the and the ..'tection .ion; thai be shouel have the 3 sue and be sued, and to testify , tsof justice. Ihe negro has -crtoben allowed intlie south- to testify in conru of jas- j?7l r!cQSe be Tr"8 uana .aa oeen a cuizca , ..cm States when sJavrcy pre - here, I would have resisted i to testify in courts. A wit - 3 a voter cuirbt to Lc a free 3 a rottr ought to Lc a in ... "i . . , . fhtcld not belong to tooth- orieMiou was imt io,tnevwould not rc considered ol muc 1 ! .lot-tun tJ Wiinii an. !.. o.f he arbitrament of the sword, that j importance. I vcrvmuchdoubt wheth-J to break tho Union ; ho wvh, Au bey submit? Have they not acqui- cr there is a singlo man among them J abiding faith is entertained "that tbir cti in the abolition of slavery that , who has ever wielded anything more' actions will conform to tLi. i,r,r cr man. What chnneo would a liti- gant have against tho master of slaves if the slaves could testify It seems to me that the slave ought not to tea- tti' fir the reason that the wife ... .1 . . . .... ... oucTllt not to testify either for or .against tic husband. Would you ask j a negro to testify against his master, I to go back to that master and be sub- jjected to his ill-will because of his tes- Itiniony? "Would you allow him to IteRttrV fnr thn mntitnr at. .1 t r r par- I, - i. ?.'- Certainly irot. jIJut now thi9 state of thing8 llQ8 ia9. )cd away Now thc ,e oi4 tl,e I . . t .... . . 1 4 - - southern States themselves, so f.irnsl uhdert-tand them, aro in favor ofonfM.- ling the courts to all these classes of people. And, sic, they mint open them for their own security. 1 am willing to leave that to themselves;' Senator from'MassachusettsaiMj those v. ho think with him desire that these peoido ; peupio should have the right of tut frri.ge. whv not sav so broadly? Mr. SUM.Ni:il." I do sav so. Mr. COWAN. Very w'ell ; that is so much that is clear; make it broad ly ; we may di;Ter from him. but the people win decide. I am perfectly willing to acquiesce ia their decision ; I do not care whieli way it is ; but tho poop'e will decide that qnetwn, and they will decide it promptly. If the honorable Senator from Massachu setts wants to hold tho doctrine that these States are not States; that they aro not constituent members of this Union, let Liru fay so; there is a tri bunal to which that can be referred. If he wishes to take iosne with thc President on thce points, let the is sue be made fair'- and squ.nrelv, and it will be met. Thank (Jod. in this Government, not like that wf Ilussiai is their disjsition and tendency, not which he has eulogized, there is a pow- to love the North, not tolovethe holi er above ns all; there is a power to jorable Senator from Mastachussctta whoe arbitraniout and award we can appeal, and who will settle tlds thing conclusively Now, Mr. President, I am for recon filiation. I wani to havo this Union restored ; and a Union means a Union ty consent, t.ft ly furcc. I world like to make friends of all the pcoplo with whom we havo been at enmity here toforo. I tlo not want the coutcst to go on any longer. Put are we to make friends with them, awd are they to be reconciled ts, and are they to behave beitcr by such f-peecLes us have been made b- the honorable Sen ator here to-day ? I very ju ucb doubt it. 1 do not think that he will im prove the condition of the southern heart, or thc condition of the southern mind, by thus parading these cxcej tional cases to the people of this coun try, and stimulating and exciting their angry passions moro than tbcj are now aguinst this unfortunato people unfortunate in every respect; un fortunate on account of their errors ; unfortunate on account of the penalty which has followed those errors, and which they have suffered. Mr. President, let us look at this testimony. The honorable Senator, as I said loforo. reads irom annony ntous letter-writers, from cotton agents and people of that kind. Now, it docs so hapjon that we have eomo testi mony upon this subject ; we have some tcstiinouj of the President of the Uni ted States, not a sammcr soldier or sunshine j.ntriot Mr. fcL'MXER. I havo not read anonymous letters. Mr. COWAN. They are anony mous so far as we are concerned ; and 1 commend the Senator's prudence in keening l!e names of their writer than a pen during this rebellion. Put i say inat we nave tnc testimony oi , men of unexceptionable veracity; wejthelawa oftho United States, their nave me testimony oi tr.e iTesident ol , tho United States, who was a Union man. and vhj was in fivor of the 1 L nion at a time and in a rlace where there was some merit in it. I do notUn a ramlinnn nf nrrMnnp;tr ;n of suppoM? there was any crcat merit in thatlbema Union man in Massachusetts.'!!,; surroe there was anv rrcat merit in! 44 J I being a Union man in Massachusetts. 1 snsnect a man wunl.i h.ir hvn ' very linciy to get a lamp post U lie had been anything else there ; but tho President of the United States was a' Union man in the verv thuk ami very likely to get a lamp-post if ho L nion man in the very thick and storm of the battlo. He was driven from his home; ho wns waylaid hither. in order to attend to his otlkial doties in this body. He has stood by the Cn'tpn, by the Union, all the ' way mrougn, steadily an1 brmly, and jas compliment to him the great par- . ty to which I belong, and to which ' , Le did not belong, and never pretend- 'ed to bclonr. coufcrre.1 nmn hi nf. ' rretend- ed to bclonc, coutcrred nnon him of- - . . fim hich. in the prov.deuco of God, PRINCIPLES, CLEARFIELD, PA., WEDNESDAY JAN. JO, 186G. lias made him President of the Unitod States. Now, air, you sire t1d hero that this man m his official communication to the Senate of the United .States , . , , ... ,. , , . whitewashes the condition of things down below. Yes. sir. "whitewash" is tlio word. The honorable Senator Bays that ho will not accept the defini- tion of "whitewash" given by the Sen- ntor from Connecticut or the Senator from Wisconsin, but ho has not told .us what ho means by tho word "white- I It T . ... . ' h It h not neccssary ! phouIJ k.iv what ho meaus -.r . . mat ne by thai word. Lvervbodv understands it. I sumioso pvimi I.m colored friends iii ! whom he takes ro much intcrest.would kimw what tho meaning of the word ! "whitewash" was. rLau"hter.1 Ho fays that this man, who stood firm this 10 and 10 perhaps as ever seen, comes here to "whitewash." What does he -menu except that thc President of the United States In an official communication to this body comes here to he; that is tho plain English of it; comes here either to suppress the truth or to suggest a falsehood. What does tho Prcsidont say ? I Willi read what ho says as a 6ufi;cient answer to what all theno jeoplo down South report of tho state of affairs theie, and 1 donot find it necessary to deny thousands of instances cf exceed ingly lieifti'-al talk mnj' have taken place there, and of treasonable talk if you please; and I have no doubt that inastateofthingsunparalled in the his tory of the world heretofore wrongs and outrages innumerable happen there; but that is not the question. The qnextwn i what is the condition of thc 1 mas of thc i eon'o in the South, v.hsit because I very much tear that that will be Irtught about soon unless there is a change in tho temper of both parties not to have Jicarts overflow ing with love and gatitude to those who they think persecute and hunt them in their subpiivion, who kick and strike at Uictn after they are down, after they havo cried "enough"-bul tho jueUoii is what is their dispos ition to bey the laws ? What do we care about their heart or their dispos itions if they are oJe!icwttothelawB, and submit to tho laws? Now they have submitted to laws Mhieh iiupoe tho heaviest penalty for il tliey nre traitors the law imposes the penalty of death and conf.S'ulion of estates by means of fine. I will read what the President says now of the condition of that people from tho information he has received: '-In that portion of the Union lately in rebellion, the aspect of affairs is more promising than in view of all tho ciicunislauccs could well have been xjected." I think there is no candid man who !t endorse that senti ment. "Tho people throughout the entire South evince a laudable desire to renew their allegiance to tho gov erntuent.and to repair the devastations of war by a prompt and cheerful re turn to poaecful pursuits " V hy should they not ? To suppose anything else is to suppose that theV are demented, that they have no kind of common sense U-l't, that four years of the most torriblo war and the mot terrible punishments ever in flicted upon a people hkro len withou', their lessens It cannot be, Mr. President; it is not in the nature of tht that it should be. '.in abiding laith on the part of this man w ho suffered from theso people, who suffered irom this war and the nrnfe sinus, and that in ockitow (edging the supremacy- ci Uie Constitution and Joyaity willtto unreservedlv given to trie government, whose leniency tkey iciK-y tkfy runnel t .il in nnm,:nii n...t ... i fostering cam will soon tvinm hf,m A i,. II. pro Vr lv,;,i,.i n,.,.. . v . a . a. v nuv aj la O'll'll I Lpj I KM ask when in the history of this world I r,r il... Ln.r.,.., f....i,. i. :. i i that cvcrity, cruelty," persecution 1 that cvcritj', cruelty, persei retusal to recofnir.n "common has reconciled a people and pm-if trno.l ....m-. i. k.- rights e.n..w i traded country; and when has it hat)-' pened that clemency, leniency, ns the ' President expresses it,has failed to produeo bencticial resuits his not' necessarv to go very far back for in. stances to show this. Iook at the1 iit. tt uirr- treatment of England toward Ireland. I What has been the result tl holding that people in a vassalage ? A Fenian in i,- v..i. .. icre of her snecies of rmiuliTo ' A l'..niun iai..i:,. I ?min lr nnH nmt- o- knn.-iM.i. r "I1"" c' .......a nun ancr IIHIIUITUSOI yehrs of attempt to dominate over not HE!. that people. Look at Poland; look everywhere. And it it be necessary to see what clemency, what leniency and justice and trust mid confidence ; crin do to restore a peopla oncein rev- oiution.iAKo ino conauct ot uocko j hi au wt. iuum Hie genius of one man, high enough to bo ubove .vulgar r.Vitiion, statesman enough to l.uiMuy,u.lj icuul-o wusrc - stored to 1-raneoand isthcro now part and parrel ot it, with every rocolloc- j lion of U-. Revolution, efluced..,., Says the 1 resident, j true hi mma oi me Mates the i demoralizing flpc' of nor are lobe s?en I in fccasHioiml Unorder" These effects ar to be seen in tho : North ns well as ic thc South j"tutthee re Joed ia character, not ' frquenl in ocouriente, and r rapidly dirappenring as (lie authority of civil law I ia extended And ui(air.ed IVrnlexin' 1 I quet'um were Daturd'y to he expected jfrom the (trenlotid sidden clmoge in tho irtdations l etwen l!two rucfs : W .4ciii8.no srdoaUy .levplopii)gU1pmfcelves;,1,isicdl!,cn.1 il)to thc pjoorey rel(m of ,, i i ., .. of secession and disunion; and that the protection to wnch li m justly enti-1 , ... ., . '., , tied, and by meanorhii labor make him-jwo "tend, after tho great uuhtary vic- flfa twefuland inafjeiideotmpmber of jtory which wo have achieved, to the community in vhich he has his bom, achieve another by magnanimity and from all the information in ruy posea- J clemency in our conduct toward thorn ; ion, and from th which I l:rve renent- that wo will win them back to bo as ly dfrifwl from tic mot relmblo authori- thev wcro Lcf(jPe (iur jviends and our !:ir.'ntrdr.C,,M'tl'e,:1'rilot! brothers, ol tho same race and of tho DitiUMiai HiiniiwrMJ l nmrij II J li Ifl'ltllJ mprcinc itielf into a ffirit of nntionulitv. and (bat representation, connected with a projierly m'Jutted fyi'.eni of taxation, will rpault in a barmouioua restoration of the relatione of U.e State to the national lJiIn" r . ! J. UCI U 13 U IIUIU IllOI U testimony yet, Mr. PresiJent ; and it is wrth II 1 10 VC KTC IlOrC whilo to consider, whilo to take counsel nud to know what we ought to do in the extraordinary situ ation in which wo find ourselves, from whom will we take that counsel. Are wo to tako it from men, the purpose of whose whole lileoems to be to wage wartipon these people and their insti tutions? Shall we take it from men whom they hato personally and by name, and to whom it is almost im possible to suppose they will everbc rec- Z " i Y ,T: ' . ? ' :.. ... ..!.:.. i, thomenwhohavenotmadethisaper.1 V- "f' pt 1Ioufe . . . , , ., ;inctin thc afternoon and nominated sonal war: wholinvetrcated it as a na- c c..,..t -u- n t . n. tionaJ war, wkI wlio, m their con ibict . r : . .i i ,. of it, have won the applause ol lota aections? l ie President says , , . p . . ,. that part of his information i i - ,f n ... . Who is General Giunt? Who is to be pnt in the scale with that fcf.I.linr mwl t-lmaa tnat iiiinntr ii. ,1 i : . r.. t... .....i -. i ,'i i , tt i r .i iiilt iiero ioo ; iias ur loriroiien ine position he occupies before tho Amor ic.m neonle ? Wilh tho hi"hoit lnili. ,ar vuaniei oi a. man w-uay upon the earth, has heeondecended to come hero to dcrrcivo the Senate of his coua try, and to lie about tho condition of affairs in the South, which he has re cently visited ? Let as lure what ho says, and listen w ith patient reverence to the utterance of a man of sense, a patriot, and a prudent man, who de sires not to embroil, not to embitter, not to widen the gap that already ex- '. a 1.... ......ii. r, .i 1 ...In I. . ,, .-. .i i ... . . .. i . . J . i .. i . . r . desires to heal and to liaejfv ; a man i,,..:,, . ..' rII , iiiiuucu nun iuo n'.ru vj ii.nne lien ..Ti-. i i.. i .. i i. v n viib iv vimer, nnu uere no succeeded when others hail failed.! v:.n, Ar. i i, ,i. 1 r.i i . ,i , . r . i ii- in the inaaner of a man aiHi asoldier. ' 1 am satisfied" ; says ; m.d when bets satined who dares say he is not satisfied upon the! scorc of honesty and good lutent to- wara tkiu uepubhc? "1 am aalUhed thai the mas nf think ing tnn in Ilia Sioutb tmil lh trnnnt aiiuation of elfnir in good UiLtc !" 'i'katiswhat General Grant ty. Is that "whitewashing?" flie quostions which have heretofore divided the sentiment of Itin peojt of ihejven. and was organized by calliiv rri l n:.. .i . -.i L:i ir luti uirv i i-viti! h imv ntL' ir"rii i" rr l tlo f.evcr by tlie hiheat tribunal, arm, thai man can reorl to. It is now said that they do not think ui ; thai they aro only p:elending, and have a covert purpose of doing some thing hereafter nlxuit this thing, rrs body can tell exactly what. Perhaps wo will bo told they will not abide the result. 'I waa leii.l to learn frnas) the lead ing men whom I mel, thai they not only accepted the riitrision armed at aa final. Iut that now, when the amnke of Wile has cleared away and lime has been given foi reflection, Ihia cliciiiin has neon a fortunate one for the whole country, Ihey receiving like benefit from It wilh lhre in thc east library room, nt half past who opposed ibem in the filJ and in seven, and nominated for ;.-'k" Speaker James II. Kelly, of Wnh- W hy, Mr. President, the common in"t"n county, sense of that last utterance is worth '(7(o Clerk A. W. Penedict, Hun more as testimony than that fcf a tingdo'n county ; Assistant Cierk W. thousand scribblers who merely look H.'Ponnison. Allegheny count v. nt detached points of this great field.! Transcribing Clerks 1st, C. W. They have resolved to accept the di. Walker, Philadelphia ; 2d. A. I). Ilnr osion as final; and, what wo ought alljlan, Chester county ; 8d, J. P. Willis to be glad to know, they have found ton, Allegheny county; 4th, M. Pdg.ir TERMS : - NEW that it is for their benefit They have found, ton nfi. c.i.- u. ed away, that they aro really in a better condition than thev were ha. fore, that they have been relieved from t!,0 incubus which has oppressed them for 60 long a time, and they are ready now to tako their places in tho Union, and along side of tho northern States iwho have made liberty their great jprincinlo rather then slavery. Why Uljoiild they not ? If any man can giro a reason why they should desire i to keep tip this strito longer, with their devastated fields, with their treasuries empty, with their society disorganized, I should liko to hear it. 1 therefore hope, Mr. President, that we ma' meet them in" a different spirit; that wo nnvy show them that wo mado this war, not to make them eternal enciuiesofours,notto humiliate j them, but to rescue them; that wo made this Avar to go and get them out of aya-'il.o cbrtches iS ilu bud men who hud BaLuc lineage. I liotie too that thisancrry,irritatin'. and exciting mode of treating this fiubject, which is calculated to make .Us anything else than friends, will bo discarded hereaftet, and we shall cool- n - ,.,,iir,,. r,,i ; i. Knrt. nf tho ; nul:OU( (boe.usothati thc spirit of the ; nnlin UvaiTiMii 4 1.1a nnott w. iiw? ! r I v.-ith it that which will bo calculated to restore tho old harmony and peace la-tid tho old Uuion again. Con. Globe. PENNSYLVANIA LEGISLATURE. Party Ctitu'vsrr Organization cf the House, tic. llAt.ms-nruo, January 1, ISf.G; Nearly all the members of tho Leg - .'"" islature ot voth Houses had arrived bv an early hour last night. e m -i i t .i . of Pluladoliihia, tho prevent lncum- f 11 1 ,N t. c I ho Pemocratic Senate caucus met 1 . . , ,m thc library room, thisTmorning, and nominated for II .. . it latu AjLV l ..nun, .1 tiu- 1 ' . ... Cirri: K. M. Hutchinson; Assist- ant Clal; illiam Jf. Gallagher. St'rueir.i-at-anns Michael M ullin Assiuant Sc'tcant-at-arms-Jiwob Wil- nnnrl.r,;,,rl.,hn S Tvi.-hnr A s$ita nt Poor icrpert Si las Css!ji Isaac Ilaker, P. tl. Norton I JUexsenqer Heorge V.. Long; Aasitt- ant Messenger John Cox, j Librarian Jacob St rer. i Transcribing CtTAs-Kicl'ird Kuhns, Preeman lirady, Jr., Thomas llanna, Philip Shoemaker, L. J. Small. I The PepublicunSenatecaucusmetin the Sonato Chamber nt seven o'clock in the evening, and nouui-iated for Cinrf Cterk George . Hammers , ,rr, . ley, o Germantown. - . . . , ,m t t r ' Assistant Carl; Lucius Pogers, ol -.r i- (,vcaB' , . , , T- n Jrnntrnh O'erhh. K. Haines, Somerset; James (.. Graham. Alle- gheny ; John i. Johnson, Centre; v, J '..,, ' ., , Henry MUratz, Montgomery; Col. (-y C. Pogers. lhm. Srgrant.itrmJovh Pehlett. vi a iiiitiueij'iiui. Ihor Keeper John Martin, Lancas ter. ,lfi.rM7iT---WilliiitM Duffy, Phila delphia. J.ihrnrinn Jacob Styers, Pauphin. J ho Jicmncratic House caucus met , in the west library room, nt half iuist -unty, tolthe House adjourned until to-morrow ituc rhair, nnd Nc'sui U eiser, ot Le- . liigh county, and A, I. Markly, of ilontg'iiuery . countj-, as Secretaries, and nominated for S)teal.er Hon. William M. Nelson, of Way no county. Cki'rf Clerk Cyr T. Alexander, of Centre county; Amxtant Clerk Datiiel II. Neiman, of Northampton county. Sergeitnt-at-arinx ( 'oleman Ieck. finnrktever John Tettcrmore. Messenger John ( 'ox. J'ostma'ster John P. Smith, of Pay ette count. J he J.epuhliean House caucus met $2 00 Per Annum, if paid ia advanco SERIES-VOL. VL NO. 25. King, Fulton county; 5th, Robert 15rown, Lycoming county. Pustraastcr J. 1). Kirkpatiick, Mer cer count'; Assi-stant l'oatmaster W. ! A. Kunert, Crawford county. Scraeant-at-arnus- Charles E. Idll, Philadelphia, Assistant Sergeants-at-arms 1st, G. 'Strain, Allegheny county ; 2d, James li. ork, Indiana county ; .id, Samuel Christ, Lancaster county ; 4th, Hugh M'Mullon, Delaware county. Doorkeeper James M'Gowan, Law. renco county. Assistant Doorkeepers 1st, J. H. Hall, Susquehanna county; 2d, Chas. II. Kurtz, Philadelphia ; 3d, John Moore, Westmoreland county ; 4th, S. Y. Poyw, Dauphin county. Messenger James M'Cauley, Phil adelphia. Assistant Messengers lit, William F. "drool; way, Lno county, 2d, J. J. Nofsker, IJluir county ; 3d, J. W. Pow ell, Lancaster county; 4th, Samuol Naee, Philadelphia. Senate. Tlfsdkv, Jan. 2, 18C0. The Senate was called to order at three o'clock p. m., by Speaker Plem ing. f'rayer was offered by Ilev. J. Walk er Jackson, of Harrisburg. Tho Secretary of the Common wealth, then presented the credentials of tho new Senators, which were read Mr. Fleming then ordered tho roll of Senators to bo called, that the)" might take thc prescribed oatili. Mr. Wallace Fubmittel uprotst,sign ed by the newly elected Sc'iiat Jrs Dun can, Glatz and AVallace, against ad ministering the oath to Senators until tho Senate thould havo e'ctod. o Sjx-aker for this session. , Tho Chair ruled out tho protest as a. point of order, and it was cntived. on. the Journal. Thc oath was then administered to the now Senators. Mr. Connoll moved that thc-Senate-proceed to tho election of Sijcakor, which was agreed to. Mr. Fleming, Abolitionist cC Dau phin, had 20 votes. Mr. Hopkins, Democrat of Wash ington, hud 1 1 votes. Mr. Hopkius then administered the onth of otliee to Speaker Fleming, Tho Senate then proeee.lod to tho election of oliicers of tho Seuato,. when the gentlemen nominaU'd at tho Republican caucus last nil.t elected by a vote of 20 to 11. Messrs. Bigham and Wallace were appointed a committee to inform tho House of L'cpresentativcs that tho Senate was now organized and ready to proceed to business. Mr. Council introduced a resolution that the Senate adjourn on Wcdtiesdaj the lid iiifl., until Tuesday the frth, at i y'cbielc P. M. AgK-ed to. Tho Sen ate then bv a vote of 27 to 4, ngreedS to invite the Clergy of Harrisburg to pray for them every mcming. That tho majority need praying for thero is no doubt, utter which they Adjourned until to morrow. ' HoL'sr.. II AttHisnt no, Jan. ?.. ISC'i. The House was called to order by the Clerk of tho last House, Mr. Pen edict, at 12 m. On motion of M r. Negley, of Ihitler, thc House proceeded to elect n Speak er Mr. Negley nominated Hon. James It. K el ley. Mr. iMissimer nominated Hon. Win. M . Nelson. Mr. K el ley had (." vo'.es. . Mr. Nelson had "1 votes. Mr. Kclb') wns conducted to tho Chair by Messrs. ;iass and Nelson. Mr. Nelson, of Wayne, administered the oath of office to the Speaker. The members wero then eworn in by the Speaker. After the adoption of a resolution fixing the hour of in feting at eleven a. m. .and ol t.(liourn:oient at one r. m.. moruiug at eleven oYlock Sevatk Wednesday. Jan. 8,lMif. 'i'htf Senate met tit 10 o'clock a. m., the Speaker in tho chair. The hour of 11 o'clock having ar rived, the Senate p; "weeded t ) draw a committee in the con tested election csi of Duncan vs. M'l'onaughv. Hon. John C. Kimkcl. of ilarris- burg, was admitted ns counsel for the. contestant, mid J. jU'Powoll Shnrro. I IN.)., of Chambcrsl mrg, lor the sittin g Senator. The following Senators were an nounced by the S peaker as tho com nut tee. The Spcab cr de rided that he could not be excii cd fnMii serving on Raid committee in iihsejieo of an a Hi davit on the part of the Senator that he wni unable t -stttend to tho duties of said position. Sabaeijjiently thr Sonator was ex. cused. Mr. W hite, mod to mibMitntut Senalrc M'outgorncrj- in place cf Sen.