C o in VA u u I c*i t C o u V writer who SIGNS himself CLEM, semis U3 the following for publication, but as he persists in refusing to give his name, we cannot endorse for its originality : I HIVE LOVED. 1 have loved ! and in the ecstaey of that love Spiritual thoughts have wrap'd my soul, Whilst wing'ii messengers from above Dwelt in communion and control. I have loved, amidst smiles and tears. Though that love was all in vain; Through all the bitterness of years That time can ne'er recall again. 1 have loved—drank from its stream, With hopeful thirst pursuing— A dawning ray, or a transient gleam, Was bliss to the heart-consuming. 1 have loved, and fondly blended The vain illusions of the mind, That seraph joys would be extended To a heart to love inclin'd. i have loved ! life's sweetest flowers Will bloom on, tho' time, should flee, And jov.s may vanish with the hours. But love still dwells with memory. CLEM. JLEWISTOWV. February 1:2, 1850. For the Gazette. MR. I EDITOR : —I hope you and \ our readers will hear in? for a few moments, and lest i he troublesome 1 shall be brief. My pen is unused to write, and conse quently I must claim your indulgence lbr blunders it may make. In looking over your last two papers 1 was not a little gratified to find that the lovers of order have determined that they will be no longer silent—that they will no longer continue inactive, while a band of God-defying, law-defviitg desperadoes are turning your once peaceful borough into a modern Sodom. Friends of order in Milllin county, keep no longer silent.— Speak, and let your voice be heard. Let me assure you, the time is not far distant, tt anarchy and rowdy ism is winked at, as now and heretofore, when Mitllin countv will become a byword —will he spoken of in subsequent history as Jeroboam, the son of IVebat, who made Israel to sin, is spo ken of bv the sacred historians. Whv, win should this state of things exist ? An an swer is at hand, and, in the language of j "An Inquirer,'' be not startled, if I tell you that not only is Lewistown without i an officer, but '.he entire county, or, at least, apparently so.* This conclusion has not been arrived at hastily. A short residence and close observation have satisfied the writer that what he asserts is true. Let the work of reform commence in Lewistown. i Elect officers that will do their duty fear less of frowns and regardless of favors, and let the people see that they do it; have the haunts of the vicious, the profane, the drunkard, and the licentious broken up.— Then, and not till then, may female deli cacy pass along your streets uninsulted : but at present, sights revolting to the more hardened sensibilities of man are witnessed even in the broad glare of the noon-day t sun. Then what must night present 1— ' The stranger fears to tread your streets ! In vain does Lewistown boast, thatshe has , more churches than sister towns of her , dimensions, while she countenances the i grand rendezvous, whence issue a clan of regular disciplined desperadoes,armed with Bowie knives and pistols, having no other object in view than to annoy the peaceful citizens of the surrounding country, break up meetings for pleasure or religion, &e. The reason is obvious : the violators of law and order escape. The law is good if lawfully used. Citizens of Lewistown ! citizens of Mifflin county ! do your duty ! Then may you occupy that position among the counties of Pennsy Ivania to which your natural location entitles you. Begin now, and let success be your motto. OKDEIL [**' Order," we believe, is saving too much here. We are satisfied that some of the bor ough and county officers arc willing enough to do their duty, and were we to go to the root of the matter, it would perhaps be found that the 1 sovtreignpeojtle, too often found aiding and abet ting vault things, have been quite as much at fault as the ofheers. A considerable tree, however, having grown from the acorn, there will proba- < bly he less sympathy fur jail birds hereafter than has been the case, and of course a better admin istration of the laws.— ED. GAZETTE] Correspondence of the Gazette. BALTIMORE, Feb. 19 1850. MR. E OITOR :—No inconsiderable excitemert continues to prevail in rcgnru to the contempla ted repeal of the " Sunday-l,aw," referred to in rny last. The votaries of temperance are indefatigable in excrticns to prevent the 41 ca lamity," ae they term it; but their adversaries are equai'y arduous, and 1 learn from u reliable source, that their labor? among our legislators have not ! • en without effect, and the probability is the law will be abolished. Some thirty tavern keepers were arraigned before the City Court yesterday for selling liquor on Sundays, and fu el from S9O to SBO each. To-day some twenty additional cases were disposed of. ma king the amount cf fines levied on tavern keep ore for selling liquor on that day $9.2-0. one half ot which goe* to the informer*, tbc o'iici to tne put l-c*-hor.l fund. St. Valentine's Day was observed as nuu', by * fie Lc tux and belles of this citv. Eight thousand Valentines passed though the p< m office on that day, besides the in.meri-< number whtch were ItransrnitTr-d through the medium of the different despatch posts. Last year Oic number received at the p. st office amounted lo fourteen thousand, thus showing that the cus tom of 44 making love" in this manner .s rapidly becoming unpopular. The fact is, the custom has been of jure years sadly abused. Carica tures—falcely called Valentines—which are indelicate in design and gross in execution— alike disgraceful to those who send them and insulting to the recipients—are sold by thou earids. Quite H numbered the heads of families iti this city gave directions that no Valentines f-houid he left at their houses, lest their daugh ters he insulted. A murderous assault was perpetrated by some unknown persons on Saturday night last. A Hranger, whilst p.u-t-mg along Charles nieet, was suddenly fi-iled to the ground by two bricks, one striking him in the forehead and the other o-i the back of the neck, inflicting a deep gash, in-: f< bun nneuei'oU' lot ioine Uurc. — ' Outrages (T this character have become so fre- . quent of late that strangers dare scarcely ven ture into the streets after nightfall. A few j evenings ago, however, two villains, in making I an attack, found they had " waked up the wrong passenger." A gentleman from Allegheny , county, finding himself followed, prepared for I resistance, and when, on coming toa place more dark and lomly than the rest, two suspicions persons rushed on him, evidently with evil in tentions, hesuddenly turned around and knocked one of 'ltem half way across the street and kicked the other nearly into a horse stable. j Fr.mi the way they bawled cut it was suspected that they conceived themselves kicked by an i Allegheny county horse. A most daring burglary was committed last week, on the premises of Daniel Fossbrener. The robbers entered the bed-room of Mr. F. and took SSO from a pocket book in his panta loons pocket, and then proceeded to the room of 1 his son, and extracted $22 from his pockets.— They decamped without alarming any one in the house, and most singularly left a small amount of change in each pocket where they j sto'e the money from. The pocket books were j left in an adjoining room. Since the news of the great fire, which re cently occurred in San Francisco, reached us, : , measures have been taken to supply tiie Cali- < forniaD9 with ftre apparatus. The old suction | engine, recently in use by the Vigilant Fire j Company, was completely overhauled, put in i excellent order, and shipped for California.— ! | .Several hundred yards of hose were also for warded. On Thursday morning las', about daylight. ; the wagon of Mr. Shipley was stopped about three miles from the city, on the Washington road, by two villains, and a demand made ot the driver to deliver up all the money he had. The driver attempted to go on, but the horse was held by the head, and a threat made to " blow out the man's brains" if hedid not do as ; ordered. The driver still demurred, and fortu- I nately at tins moment footsteps were heard ap proaching, which proved to be a colored man j with an axe on his shoulder on his way to a I wood cutting, and the scoundrels deemed it prudent to make a hasty retreat. The rate at which that wagon travelled the remainder of the journey is said to have been by no means slow. The Baltimore Typographical Society lately ! revised their old Constitution, making several very material amendments, among which was | an increase of the rates of labor. The rates , hereafter to be paid to journeymen are 30 cents per 1000 ems, or I*9 per week to hands ein- ] pioved in Book or Job offices, and sll to those in Daily newspaper establishments. They j also adopted a resolution prohibiting employers from engaging more than tour apprentices in one < ffice. Quite a number of jours weredis- ! charged in consequence of the " strike," as several proprietors conce'ved they couid get along with less hands under the new system. At first serious threats of retaliation were made by some of the employers, but all has again subsided to a proper equilibrium. I observe by an official report that the num ber of houses erected in tins city during 1849 was 1.894, being 400 more than were built in New York during the same period, and proper- ; tionably more than in Philadelphia. The build ings, too, were mostly large and elegant edi fices, of Gothic architecture, some of which 1 think are unsurpassed, in point of beauty, in any city in the Union. Three vessels leave our port this morning for j California—one ship and two barques—iaden with house frames, lumber, provisions, &c.,and carrying several passengers, among whom is Mr. D. Burns and family, whose destination is Oregon. The weather has continued plea rant for a 1 week past, and our merchants are making ac tive preparations for tiier spring trade Several j of the lowa and Wisconsin merchants have al reodjgairived, to make their spring purchases. Fresh shad made their first appearance in our market last week. They sell at from 37 jto 50 cents each, and are rather of email size. j Very respectfully yours, 11. j At the beginning of this century the wil derness was in Ohio and Indiana. Twen ty-five years afterwards it was in Michigan, Wisconsin, and-so-forth. Last year it was in Minesota Territory. .Next year we j shall have to seek it in Nebraska and around the Lake of the Woods. Rejected Valentines, to the number of' 4,000, were returned by the letter carriers to the Boston J'ost Office, many of them apparently very costly, in elegant envel opes. They were refused on account of the too prevalent practice of sending in sulting, coarse and vulgar missives by post on Valentine's Day, and which thousands of persons have become offended at. PEPPERMINT Ct I.TVKE, —Within the j past season we have frequently rode by ! large fields of growing peppermint, on the ; openings and prairies of fSt. Joseph county. \Ve are aware that it was a somewhat large business with the farmers of that county, but j not to the extent returned by the assessors of the towns last year. The town of Flo- : retire has full ten per centum of the land cultivated in that town devoted to it. The returns give 962 acres of peppermint, from which was realised $16,775. White Pi geon sent to market 1,900 pounds of oil. In .New \ ork Slate it appears to lie a set tled opinion that low lands are the only ones for its culture. In ISt- Joseph county uplands do equally as well.— Detroit (Mich.) Tribune. FATAL Arnnnvr —The body of Mr. Benj. Shall' nbrrgrr. Sr., who resided about a mile and a half above this place, was found on Fridav morning last, on the bank of '.lie ('anal, between the warehouse of W in. Patterson and the bridge. He was undoubtedly passing the bridge during the 1 pre-.ious evening, and in the darkness ( stumbled over the stone wall, which is not high enough to afford sufficient protection r to passers by, and fell a distance of about twelve, feet, striking his head against some • stones at the bottom, and cutting a deep ; gasli in the front part of his head, which j probably killed him instantly, as he was ' found in that position in the morning. An , inquest was held on the body by f'aleh , Parker, Esq., and a verdict rendered ac - cording to the above facts, lie was con veyed to the house of his Mr. ' John Wright, in this borough. Hehadrc * cently sold out his personal property with the view of emigrating to the western j. .country, w here he had two sons, but an un t timely death has terminated his earthly career. tteyister. Feb. 11. THE GAZETTE. LEWISTOWN, PA. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1850 . TER M S : ONE DOLLAR PER ANNUM, IN ADVANCE. For six months, 75 cents. S3=AU NEW subscriptions must be paid in advance. If the paper is continued, and not pAid within the first month, $1.25 will be charg ed ; if not paid in three months, $1.50; if not paid in six months, $1.75; and if not paid in nine months, $2.00. REDUCTION OF FARE. —By reference to the advertisement ol tlie Pennsylvania Railroad Company, it will be seen that the fare from Lewistown to Philadelphia has been fixed at $5. We understand that an additional pas senger train will be put upon the road as soon as the Canal is in navigable order, thus offering unusual facilities to the trav elling public. - The following are the Stations on the Pennsylvania Railroad and the distances : FROM TO PHILADELPHIA. TO HARRISBURC. Dillerville 71 36 miles. Mount Joy 83 24 " Elizabethtown 89 18 " Middletown 5)8 9 " llighspire 101 6 " Ilarrisburg 107 U " Rockville 113 6 " Cove ild 11" Duncannon 122 15 " Aqueduct 125 18 " Bailey's 130 23 " Newport 134 27 " Millerslown 140 33 " Tusearora 147 40 " Perrysville 153 46 " Mitflintown 156 49 " Lewistown 168 61 " Anderson's 175 68 " M'Veytown 180 73 " Newton Hamilton 190 83 " Mount Union 193 8G " Mill Creek 199 92 " Huntingdon 204 97 " From Huntingdon to Pittsburgh by Stage is 119 miles. Way fare, 3 cents per mile. The road is at present in operation to M'Veytown, and will probably be completed through to Huntingdon sometime in the spring. We have Graham's and Sartain's Maga zines for March, both handsomely embel lished, and lilicd with a variety of excel lent literary matter. Christ Blessing Lit tle Children, in Sartain's, is a beautiful picture which will lie highly prized by subscribers. rt The Democrat calls the rejection of James Wattson Webb as Charge to Aus tria " a good beginning." As this rejec tion was mainly brought about by Mr. Cass, because Webb left just before the Senate met, we hope Gen. Taylor will second the " good beginning" by forthwith recalling the son of Lewis ('ass, who was appointed Charge to Rome at the eleventh hour of Mr. Polk's administration—drew his outfit, and left for parts unknown he fore old Rough and Ready could sav whether he approved it or nut. We care but little about Webb or his rejection, but what's sauce for him ought also to be sauce for the son of Lewis Cass. DEMOCRATIC PROGRESS. —The Georgia loeofocos have passed a bill re-organi/.ing the congressional districts of that State, although they have at the present time an equal number of representatives wtih the w lugs. Thus far, apportionment laws have been considered as binding, unless most flagrantly unjust, but the party of progress is annually making new discov eries which will soon make laws an empty name, if not a reproach. APPOHTHKYT OF M I> BOSSES, BV J. s. MIJ.LKR, Supervisor, fly nntl w ill) Uic. advice and content of thofe mot inter ested in the mud. John Strong, Upper Division Wm. ( hesnut, Lewistown 44 llenrv SulofT, Narrows " John Wyke, Milllin m " Isaac Wright, Millerstown " John Thornburg, Newport " Elmira, N. Y., was visited by a tire last week which destroyed property to the amount of $30,000. In New Orleans the Picayuneolliec and a number of other buildings were burnt down. Doss heavy, but mostly insured. The neighborhood of Waynesboro', Franklin county, is at present infested with incendiaries and thieves. A barn has been burnt, and some other buildings tired, doubt less with the intention of drawing the peo ple from their houses. The Planters' Cotton Factory, at Rich mond, V a., was destroyed by lire on Mon day last. Insured for SOO,OOO. An unoccupied log eabin was burnt at Hollidaysburg on Saturday last. Mr. McDuflic and Mr. Preston, of South Carolina, excepting John C. Calhoun, the most brilliant and commanding politicians of South Carolina since the days of Pirickney, we regret to learn, are now in utter and hopeless inbccility and idiocy, from softening of the brain—the disease which terminated the intellectual life of Southey so long before his physical decease. So we read in the New York Tribune, but we cannot but hope there is some mis take in thi-. How the People's Ittoncy Govs. Some time ago the Senate passed a reso lution, calling upon the Canal Commis sioners for information in regard to a sale which had been made of certain engines, to which a reply was returned, exhibiting the name of each engine sold, the name of the purchaser, and the amount for which it was sold, vi;: j Indiana—Wm. Dripta, Schuylkill—J. B. Moorchead, 810 i ; Montgomery—Thomas Jeffries, 570 ■ j Wisconsin—Dr. Rowan, < 590 j I Mississippi—Thomas Jeffries, 545 i $3,390 | Sixty day's notice of the time and place i of the sale was given. These engines j which were thus sold at the value of old ! iron, cost upwards of thirty thousand dot- : lars, and the Superintendent of the Co- : ! lumbia Kailroad representhd that they 1 could he " j>ut and kr?ft in good running order for light business at a trifling ex -5 o : pense !" ; The reply, says a correspondent of the I North American, was not considered sufli | ciently explicit, and more particular infor mation has been asked for by the Senate j ; in relation to the opinion of the Canal j | Board of the real value of the engines, j which appear to have been sacrificed by the Commissioners, probably to satisfy the ! ! particular private purposes of some gentle- i | man or gentlemen who are in their favor. , Some disclosures may be made on the sub- : jeet, if the question asked be distinctly ■ ■ answered by the Board ; and many other ; revelations would be made if a similar j course were pursued in regard to other ' transactions, the enormity of which is fully understood but by a few. The possession of the federal government is almost daily revealing the conduct of some defaulting 1 officer ; and were men to secure a majority in the Canal Board who would have no interest in keeping secret some of the inys- ; terious transactions of the officers on the , public works, many revelations would be made which would astonish the honest j J tax-payers of the JStnU- who do not imagine the unworthy and dishonest means used by selfish office-holders to enrich themselves at the expense of the State Treasury and ; the State's interest. Another l)lh of foflee. The recent rise in the price of Coffee gave us *un opportunity of turning some locofoco artillery on that party, and from the fluttering along the Juniata apparently with some effect. The Democrat, Stan dard, Ac., seem to have understood the ; drift of our remarks in using weapons heretofore employed by themselves, but the Juniata Register, being as yet uninitiated into the sublime ethics ol locofocodom, ! " out-llerods Herod" in his virtuous indig- j nation against this '• infamous attempt at deception !" Nay more—the man is so astonished that he can hardly believe such a thing would appear in the Lewistown Gazette, and therefore has to look a second time to see if it could be it) lie thinks we must have known better, and stoutly contends that the Tariff has " no more to t do with it than a tariff on boot jacks in New Orleans would with the price of but- ! ter in Lewistown." The editor then proceeds to make known the great respect he has for us, and shows it by calling us knave, fool, Ac. Well, we will not retort on our friend down the river bv calling him hard names, (because ; it is not only against our nature but against the resolution lately adopted in editorial convention,) but we must say that if Mr. ■ Cooper don't know that his party papers —the Register included—only a few years ago told the people that the tariff of 'lO had put up the price of wheat, Ac., when a famine existed in Europe, he must be decidedly "green" in polities, or awfully I deficient in memory. But is there any attempt at deception in the paragraphs referred to ■ The lirst ex pected a rise in the Juniata from the tears of our brethren, and the other laid it down as a simple fact that if the tariff of '46' had raised the price of wheat when a famine existed in Europe, the same tariff must have raised the price of coffee also. There is certainly nothing unreasonable in forming such a deduction, and we think the readers of the Register will not be quite so hot-headed as their champion of the British tariff has been in demolishing us, after reading the quotations and the sensi ble remarks thereunto attached. And be sides, what will they think of their editors who a few years ago taught them that this vaunted tariff had put up wheat to #2 T If they believe what the Register now says, i all the loeofoco oditors in the State, saving and excepting M r. ('ooper, must be KNAVES, FOOLS, and INFAMOUS DECEIVERS, or else they must possess the faculty in a wondci ful degree, of straining at a fence rail and swallowing a barn door. i The North Pennsylvania!! is the title of the new paper about to be established at Towanda, Bradford county, by Mr. Wien Forney, to oppose Wilmot, Reform in Sur York. .Messrs. Looniis, Graham ami Field, all lawyers of high standing, who had beer appointed by the Legislature of New York to revise the codes of Civil and Criminal Procedure, have submitted the result ol their labors. In their report thev say— " The purpose of the constitutional provision and of the statute under which this code is pre pared, was to make legal proceedings more in telligible, more certain, more speedy, and less expensive. I lerctofore the records of the courts have been sealed books to the mass of the people. Though concerned in them as suitors, and par ticipating in them as jurors, they were repulsed by strange forms and technical language, li the law could have been administered with ab solute certainty, without delay and without ex pense, yet if it had been unintelligible to them, it would not have been satisfactory. In a coun try where the people are sovereign, where they elect all officers, even the Judges themselves, where education is nearly universal, it was not long possible to keep the practice of the courts enveloped in mystery. "The commissioners have never lost sight of these considerations. In aiming at directness and efficiency, they have aimed also at diffusing a knowledge of legal proceedings; and there is, they trust, nothing in this code which any per son of ordinary intelligence and education can not understand. And although the law of rights is a vast science, the accumulation of numerous countries and ages, which it requires study and patience to learn, yet it is believed, that the practice of the courts is here set forth in such a manner, that no person need have occasion to witness a legal proceeding, read a pleading or render a verdict, the meaning of which he docs not comprehend."' That the Reform devised by the Com missioners is thorough and radical, will ap pear from the following paragraph of their reported Code under the title ol Civil Actions ; " The distinction between actions at law and suits in equity, and the forms of ali sucli actions and suits, heretofore existing, are abolished : and there shall be in this State, but one form of ac tion for the enforcement or protection of private rights, and the redress or prevention of private wrongs, which shall be denominated a civil ac tion." It is to be regretted that our Legislature does not take some steps to simplify the practice in this State, and bring it within the comprehension of the masses. At present suits are brought in one form , and after years of expensive litigation decided in the lower courts—they are then taken to the Supreme Court, which probably de cides that (mother form ought to have been adopted, and the whole farce has to be enacted over again with a mere change of words. In criminal cases, indictments are drawn up with ridiculous technicalities, and if any one is omitted, or a word wrong, tiie whole thing is '• quashed." All this, with the attending expense, might be easily remedied by adopting a practice similar to that recommended bv the New York Com missioners. I'ROl LEDIVt.S OF COYtiRESS. The subject of slavery is still the lead ing topic at Washington, and we suppose will continue to be until the dog-days, when perhaps hydrophobia may leave the bipeds now infected with it and attack the canine species. In the course of the de bate which took place in the I*. S. Senate when the subject of the admission of Cal. ifornia was under deliberation, Mr. FOOTE of Miss., who makes it a point to interrupt every Senator that attempts to make a speech, reminded Mr. Clay that he was from a slave State, whereupon the old Kentuckian responded as follows : It ii totally unnecessary for the gentleman to remind me of my coming from a slaveholding State. 1 know whence I cotne, and 1 know my duty, and 1 am ready to submit to any responsi bility which belongs to me as a Senator from a slaveholding State. Sir, 1 have heard some thing said on this and on a former occasion about allegiance to the South 1 know no South, no North, no East, no West, to which I owe any allegiance. I owe allegiance to two sovereigns, and only two ; one is to the sove reignty of this Fnion, and the other is to the sove reignty of the State of Kentucky. My allegi ance is to this Union and to my State; but if gentlemen suppose they can exact from me an acknowledgment of allegiance to any ideal or future contemplated confederacy of the South, I here declare that 1 owe no allegiance to it; nor will I, for one, come under any such allegi ance if 1 can avoid it. 1 know what my dutie* are, and gentlemen may cease to remind me of the fact that 1 come from a slaveholding State. Several Senators have made remarks upon Mr. Clay's resolutions, all of which are in the same strain as the following by Mr. Downs : He contended that slavery was not an evil— that the slaves ali through the South were hap py and rejoicing—the best fed and the best clothed people in the world. He drew a com parison between them and the. factory operatives referred to in a .speech made by Mr. Hale, some time since, asserting, that the condition of the slave is far the happiest and best. He al luded to the statistics of poverty in Nietv \ ork, and defied her iSenaturs to show that her poor population was even equal in their condition to the much pitied slaves of the South. In con clusion he summed up the history of the slave question, from the foundation of the gov ernment to the present time, contending that the whole course of the South had been that of con cession—while that of the North had been re peated demands and aggressions. The South had conceded everything which had been ac excused from voting, taking appeals, I ike., uniil fifteen minutes after midnight, when the House finally a'djourned without coming to a vote on the question. On Wednesday, the slavery ,que-ti< n was again the subject under discussion both-Houses of Congress. Amonsr the speakers in the House, was .Mr. Steven-, of this State, In the Senate, the dchat.: was more animated, and the more interest, ing from the fact that both Mr. Clav ami Mr. (.'ass were participants. Mr. Cass has suddenly found himself in a peculiar and certainly not an enviable position, the Southern members hitting him right and left. He however ably defended himself. In this storm of passion and feeling, said M . Cass, all reason seems to have been discarded : but he desired now to speak out plainly. JJ C had been misunderstood heretofore, but i{ would not be his fault if misunderstood hereafter. The storm had pas-cd over hiin and borne hint down, fie was here for the last time, and felt that un der all the circumstances he had the right to speak. Slavery was an exciting institution, for which this generation is not responsible, and he felt that Congress had no control over it. This he had always belie'ved and held. Hut if a man did not believe—as he never did and never should—that slavery v. as a blessed institution, wise, morally and politically, he was denounced bv certain Southern gentleman as a fanatic. On the other hand, if a Northern man is not ready to put the bayonet to the breast of every .South erner in order to free the negroes, he was de nounced a- a Northern dough face. It was thus that the storm passed over the N'oithern Repre sentatives, and thus that they were broken down. Could not gentlemen see that -uch * course as this was as ungenerous as it was im politic? In conclusion, .Mr. Cass said that when .Mr. Clemens suggested such a thing as a peaceable dissolution of the Union, fie talked of the wildest chimera ever imagined. He hoped God would give to the councils of the nation more of the spirit of justice, conciliation and compromise—that the Union migbr be bound together as with bars of Iron. Ma. Dodge, of lowa, defended himself, a- a Northern man, against the accusations of Mr. Kutler. He, as a Northern man, with -everai others, had voted continually, and until the last, in favor of the proposition which was intended to give law and protection to California. The gentleman from South Caroiinia whs then ready to give to the iTesident, who hailed from the South, the authority to spread over that country every class of officers—but now, when another President had honestly done what seemed just and proper—charges w ere made against him of usurpation ; such charges as should impel the Senator making them—if he believed them—to seek the impeachment of Zachary Taylor- He then alluded to the distribution of political hon ors in California, and showed most conclusively that the people of the South had not ouiv shared them, but that they had received nearly the whole ol' them. What, then had tlie South to fear from the admission of a State which had shown so strongly its partiality for them? Pennsylvania Legislature. In the Senate, on the. 15th .Mr. Malone presented a petition praying for the pas sage of a law authorizing hawkers and pedlars to peddle throughout the Com monwealth. Mr. C unuingham, six petitions praying for authority to erect a poor hdhse in tiie county of Mifflin. In the Senate, on the 16th, .Mr. Cun ningham presented four remonstrances against the erection of a poor house in the county of Mifflin. The bill providing for the election of Reporter of the Supreme Court was again called up. The question was upon the reconsideration of the vote which negatived the motion to transcribe for a third reading. The Senate refused to reconsider without a call for the yeas and nays. 80 this measure was killed, and we hope the Gov ernor will now go on to make the appoint ment, the place being vacant, and relieve our locofoco friends from the intense dis tress into which they were thrown by hi failure to make it so long as the Legisla ture threatened 10 deprive hiin of the right of doing so. The following resolutions, Cc., relative to tlu; Washington National Monument, passed final reading—yeas 28, nays 3 : Resolvtd by the Senate and House of Representa tives of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania fn (.<- cral Hsstmbhj met. That the Governor is hereby authorized and requested to cause an appropri ate block of the native marble of this Common wealth, to be conveyed to the National Cap itol, to take its place in the monument to the memory of Washington, and to have inscribe! thereon the State coat of arms, and these word " PENNSYLVANIA, FOUNDED 1681, BY DEEDS OF PEACE. M Resolved, That a sum not exceeding one tfio.;- sand dollars, is hereby appropriated lor the pur pose of carrying out the provisions of the f ra going resolution. In the House. 011 the 16th, the billstq plementarv to the art relating to and townships, and efflthtv and towns. up ollieers, came up in order for considera tion ; [The bill gives the Court of Quarter Sessions power to lix the place for hohiind elections, at the place a majority of hie qualified voters may designate, ami ex cepts the city and county of Philadelphia from its provisions. It also directs the manner of giving notice of application lor a change, by publication in newspapers printed 111 the county. ' and passed he. i reading—yeas 61, nays 15. In the House, on the 18th. the I erecting parts of Columbia eountv, into > new county to be called Montour, eanw upon a thin! reading ; the question pend ing being a motion to postpone its further consideration until to-morrow. Mr. I'nek moved to amend the motion, by postponing the subject until Tuesday week ; which was not agreed to —yea-11. nays 16. The question reeuyring on the ntotio i to postpone until to-morrow, it was mo - tived without a division. The bill then passed final reading h> the following vote :—yeas 15. nays IU tin leave given, Mr. M:\iv\lev read ' his place and presented to the chaw, a joitd resolution relating to the volunteers ol war of 1812, as follows : Resolved, That our Senators in Congress i" hereby instructed, and our Rcprerentith*" quested to use thair t>et elicit- lu pioeure i