POLICY of tag DEMOCRATIC PARTY. DESIOCR tTIC STATE CENTRAL COM, STATEIH E lENT OF TH; DEPaiuVRATIC MITTEN. SENATORS. The platform laid down 'at the formation of 1 PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 1..;,, 1864 . The following statement was presented to the . the Democratic party as its rule of action, 7 T he C ommittee met pursuant to the call ' Senate yesterday by the Democratic members who 18 1 to oar mind, sufficient for its guidance et all lof the Chairman. Hon. C. J. BIDDLE, in the 1 asked that it might be entered on the Journal, and times. Devotion to the Union of the States, Chair. A. Committee from Chester county a , become a part of the proceedings. This privilege, was admitted to confer with the State Cen- always accorded in parliamentary bodies, was re• a strict adherence to the Constitution, and tral Committee. I fused by the Jacobins of the Senate, for the reason, obedience to the laws and compromises, enact- i On motion of Col. T. B. SEARIGEIT, of Fay- we presume, that it clearly establishes the falsity of ed under it, together with a liberal, concilia- ette county, a Committee on Resolutions was i the position they have assumed. We commend it tory spirit towards their fellow citizens in all appointed to report to an adjourned meeting. l to our readers as a clear and unanswerable vindiaa. don of the course of the Democratic Senators. Bating Messrs. BIGLER, CASS, SANDERSON, PACKER sections of the country, comprises in a few and EVAffie were appointed on this Committee. sworn to support the Constitution, they cannot yield words the policy under which the Democratic to which, on motion, Hon. C. J. BIDDLE, to a revolutionary proceeding which sets at defiance party has achieved its success and greatness. Chairman, was added. both law and precedent f—fHarrisbarg Patriot of This platform is equally applicable to the On motion, Thursday, the twenty-fourth Thursday. ned Senators beg e ta ni te g ment, in i u ng nd ,. times of war or peace. The present rebellion day of March next, e at s l a 2 te M leave to submit the folto n w e is no exception to the rule. The principles of the meeting of The th Committee, t after thet vindication of their action downaventfiixoend fora during the present contest for Speakership of the the party are those upon which a republican transaction of further business. adjourned to government is founded, and their defeat and meet on Thursday, January 14th, at V' - M . ❑Senate: In many respects this contest has no precedent in destruction will chronicle the overthrow of a the history at sue Commonwealth. Its importance TEICRSDAY, Jan. 14. to those parties anXieni tor legislation, as well as to free government. • , The Committte met. The Sub-Committee those engaged in toe struggle, seems to justify, if it A united government, says the Burlington on Resolutions reported the following: does nut demand, a lair statement of the case for Argos, is the great desideratum laid down by I Resolved, That notwithstanding the ap the consideration n: e te a r t a Q t Le n eb t the orobfli thirty-three b • arent result of the late election in this • Iturty•two were present P at the time fixemdern members. our political opponents, as sought by them to State, the consequence, as we believe, of an I Constitution fur their meeting, and sue a prisoner be attained. The progress of the war has I unfair use of the military power and the of war in the rebel states. CI those present' at the shown that one-third of our population are , practice of gross frauds on the ballot by our previous u balloting fur speaker, sixteen are Demo disaffected towards the old Union. The Union i opponents, we are still firm in the belief of Senater t i n e d , 06.11. , t h ee . 11 5 „L ay t e .... R s Republicans . 1 ° p a: r e v h ß w e z to a r e ° t a te . must be restored, either by removing the dis- the ultimate triumph of Democratic priori- cue and nominated a candidate tor Speaker and pies and policy, and that their ascendency is Clerk. A. number of ballots were had up to the affection, or in spite of it. The former is the the surest means of redeemini , our country adjournment on Friday last, ler Speaker, which re- Democratic, the latter, the opposition course from its present afflictions ; an d' to that end sail . e h d B ina tie vote eaen time. Republicans anticipating, before the Senate of procedure. In framing this government, we earnestly invite and entreat Democrats Met, this result, conceived tne idea of retaining our forefathers sacrificed their individual I and all conservative citizens, in the several their friends in office by adhering to the party counties, wards, townships and districts of the , tazation of the r urga preceding session, ouster the plea preferences for the general good ; in recon- that the Senate has a •• perpetual urganization ;" State, to unite themselves together in more struoting it, we must exercise the same liber- perfect and complete organization, as the Lest a tu n e d c ur ha c ir arr d v il o le u a t thin scheme, e o th: late speaker took ality. The Union, to be republican in fact, means to re establish the purity of the ballot,. toe election of senatorenawteeret readrdcr,,btehecireertku:nws..o! must be acceptable to the people of the differ- maintain personal and public liberty, and to uueete h u tci call the toll, and the speaker announced provide . for a final effort, at the next election, that t ii e e d Senators tlieiu e u t r ec li t would come forward and be ent States which it binds together. A united ew Democratic B right spr to displace the men now in authority at Wash. I nn ❑ L 1 . government without the consent of the ington, whose policy and measures have proved p u eii e iter a of w t r t i t e te p l , iLe , t , el a L g u ainst qualify the them before ola governed, would be no better than a despotism. so prejudicial to the cause of the Union, sub- he le re-elected and duly qualified himself. Still, The allegiance to it would be forced—not versive of the rights of the citizens and op- by taking the oath of office in that manner, their pressive to the people. names were placed upon the roll, and their right to spontaneous, and the people would not be vole unquestioned, which would nut Lave been the Resolved, That we deplore the enunciation satisfied with its results. The Democratic of the schemes and purposes embodied in the e i te i u t L a , u o . the w y a, dec t l h in e e n tt e t i c ie iLu d ality ab a d t that time. party wish to establish a Union of the hearts late Proclamation of the President, appended adapted, to proceed to an election for Speaker, and as well as the hands of the people of the to his Message, the inevitable effect of which a t number et uusuccessful ballots were taken, under heresolution.. must be to prolong and extend the bloody several States. ille itepuniman Senators, finding it impossible to TIM NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC CON- strife now raging among the people of the re-eiect limit' late Speake r,pro cee ded • un ae . VENTION• All other attempts at union will result in United States ; and to furnish an addition 1 k 1 l"" a ewer edgmem et their •• perpetual orgauizatiou," At a meeting of the NationalDemocratio Commit- a united consolidated government. With verification of the worst apprehensions enter- by introducing many matters of legislation diatinot mites, held at New York this day, it was unani- twined as to the purpose of his a.dministra- trout that pertaining to the required annual organf the Democratic party have nothing to =musty voted that the next National Democratic, s l a very. tion, to wit: the intention to subordinate Senn ors of um satiate, and the sixteen Democratic manors voted against such improper proceeding, Convention, for the purpose of nominating condi- do. Such protection as the Constitution and the cause of the Union to the cause of Ab I . o - and defeated it. Thus the contest continued during the session er last week ; and how much longer It dates for the Presidency and Vice Presidency of the laws extend over it, they believe their duties t i„,,. United States, be held at Chicago, Illinois, on rte good citizens call upon them to afford it. Resolved, That no State can withdraw from will eieutintio LO one seems disposed to foretell. Ilia conflict of opinion between Senators should Monday, July 4, 1864. Nio more. the Union by its own action ; and that the . be adjusted at the earliest possible moment, and L has By a vote of the Committee, at a meeting heldassumption of Mr. of the war —INCOLN, as indicated in when the Republieau side of the Simate scoff t any in Their s anoti , and support 7th, 1863 the number of delegates for September been in defence of the Constitution and Union each State was fixed at double the number of its revolted States are now out of the Union and dents Which nave directed all past orgauizattous of this body, or bo regarded us usurpers of place and electoral votes —riot an assault upon the system of slavery power—disregardiug alike the acts of their prede or the domestic institutions of the South.— cuasurs, the organic law and the bust interests of the State. What it desires, is to see the Union restored The ninth section of article first 01 the - Constitu- oder the Conetit ration, leaving the people of tiou says •• each house shall choose a Speaker and other officers.' This is imperative and has never all sections free at that time to compromise been disiegarded until now by this attempt of the their grievances and regulate their own Republiean officers to hold over. The words " each domestic institutions. as.° ' are repeated in the Constitution several tames, and ulnas each branch of the Legislature. We do not believe that the people of this 1.111.•• houoo " is composed in old and new members, and it was not intended by the framers of the Con government are one whit less capable of self etautiou, nor claimed by any previous Senate, that government, than they were ten, twenty, or old officers should preside over u new Senate and fifty years ago, and we do not think there is new members. The Constitution does nut say that - each house" shall choose its Speaker annually, any necessity for the formation of a stranger but that is its mewling and such has been tea prac tice under it bar seventy odd years. or more consolidated government. IL, divest this novel plea of " perpetual organi- At the Presidential election the Democratic cation '' of every pretense of right ur custom on the part of its authors, the Senate Journals hove been party will pledge itself to a restoration of the carefully examined back to the year 1704, and the Union. The opposition will not. Conserva- result Cl the examination is stated briefly as follows : From 179-1 to 1861 sic late Speaker has ever at tive men will unite with us ; radicals, and tempted to yttuhly new Senators, and Ito new fanatics of every shade of opinion, will vote Speaker has administered an oath to any Senator elect until qualified as Speaker himself. At every with the opposition. The question will be aunual meeting in the bouate, alt the officers were settled, and the Union either lost or restored. elected or re-elected and qualified in due term by the new Speaker. From 1791 to 1864 the chair was always vacant during ballotiits for Speaker, and the Journals show that the successful candidate •• took the chair," or was " conducted to it" by other Senators, made his acknowledgments and invited some old Senator to quality him. From 1704 to 1864, all the Senators voted for Speaker in alpliabetical order, without the official designation, except in 1825, when thwarts Burnside voted as "late Speaker;" but be was not a candidate for re-election. From 1791 to 1.52.5 in the Journals made up during the annual organizations of the Senate, he is desig nated as " late Speaker;" and from that time to the present, he is designated as " Speaker," until the motion to proceed to elect a Speaker prevails, when he is referred to as "having vacated the chair." In several instances there were a number of bal lots fur Speaker, some of which were a tie, the chair always vacant and the late Speaker voting with other Senators in alphabetical order. It, 1842, there were thirty-five ballots for Speaker, and much time consumed by the contest. During the struggle, several efforts were made to elect a Speaker pro tempere, even for a few hour, bui they were, un successful. In 1833 is the only instance on record of a late Speaker entertaining any motion not strictly per taining to the org utizattun, and that was in rela tion to contested teats, but when the Senate pro ceeded to elect a Speaker. Mr. Penrose vacated the chair. lie was re-elected on the first ballot, and - took the chair '' again. It, 1853 on the 4th day and on the twenty-seventh ballot, a Speaker was chosen. The late Speaker was the unsoccesstul candidate. He did not occupy the chair, nor attempt to qualify the eleven new Sena tors present. lacy were qualified by the Speaker elected, alter he was qualified himself. In every election in Speaker the clerks have acted as tellers, except in 1814, when a Senator was named to act as one of the tellers, and, judging from the Journals, they have conducted the elec tions as presiding officers. In 1891, 1111, and 1119, the Speakers resigned their offices near the close of the session, in these words : , attic Sntelligenta OZO. SANDERSON, EDITOR. A. SANDERSON, Asiociatit. LANCASTER, PA., JANUARY 19, 1864 B.i.M.Pwrzinsur , k 00.'5 Anizalsancia dam; 87 Pak BarkiNisk YostlNty,Wnd 10 State 'treat, Boston. B. M. Trikennwit Clo.; ars Meats for The lasmiter araftweler, and tip" most toduentbd and hugest einrola- Wr con ilul trtt i t a rt a rs the = lBB' es MAME Anson!, Na. 825 Broadway, New 7•511i5 s zuuthoritio to iialarise adrertlsements for The Wpower, aCtisie baize Abs. W.Tottis WinionneisADVlSToool deillcrf is located at N 0.50 North sth street, Philadelphia. He to authorized to Mahn advertisements and subscriptions for The Lanoaster i l i t e riss, No.l Seellay's Building, Court Bt, Boston, ts oar authorised Agent for receiving advertisements, etc. OTT 1:2. FLAP - Now our flag Is _ rg -- Let It float o'er our father land, And the guard of Ito spotleas fame ahall be Columbia" chosen band. " CLING TO THE CONSTITUTION, AS THE SHIPWRECKED MARINER CLINGS TO THE LAST PLANK, WHEN NIGHT AND THE TEMP ST CLOSE AROUND HIM."-DANIEL " ZBBTER. AE GUST BELMONT, Chairman FAZD. 0. Secretary. Nviv Tonic, Jan. 12, 1884. Correction There are two Assistant Assizgors to be elected in each of the Wards at the ensuing City Election. The proper correction is made in the ad vertisement in to-day's Intelligen cer, and the other City papers will please make the same correction. The Inauguration The inauguration of Governor C.uaTrc will take place to-day, at 12 o'clock. The fact that the Senate is not yet organized, will not interfere with the inauguration. The Supreme Court Of this State has reversed its former decision t respecting the Conscription act, and dissolved the injunction granted by Chief Justice Lowrie previous to his retirement from the Bench—the new Justice, Agnew, taking sides with Justices Strong and Read. Now For Volunteers As the time for paying bounties to recruits has been extended by Con-' gress to the first of March, ample Opportunity is therefore given for the several townships, wards, bor oughs and districts to fill up their quotas with volunteers or substitutes, so as to avoid the draft entirely.— But to accomplish so desirable a re sult it is all important to act promptly in the matter, as the result cannot be attained without an earnest and determined effort. The News Notwithstanding the rumors of some movements in the Third army corps, the Potomac army remains perfectly quiet. It is reported that Gens. Cadwalader. Hunter, and Wadsworth have been appointed a commission to proceed to Chatta nooga and investigate the causes of the defeat of our army at the battle of Chickamauga. Despatches from Chattanooga re port a cavalry fight near Strawberry Plains on Sunday week in which the rebels were repulsed. Gen. Long streetis said to have been reinforced from the armies of Lee and Johnston. Gen. Grant at last accounts was making a tour through his depart ment. His army is in fine condition. A correspondent of the New York Herald, in British Honduras, dated at Belize on the 26th of December, furnishes the important intelligence that the American schooner Joseph L. Gerety, Capt. Nichols, from Mata moras for Havana, with one hundred and twenty-two bales of cotton on board, had been seized by rebel pas sengers, and run into Belize under the British flag. It appears that the Gerety had taken six rebels on board at Matamoras for conveyance to Havana, and that these passengers, when at sea, suddenly overpowered the captain and crew, set them adrift in a boat and then painted off the groper name of the vessel, changing it to the Eureka—a rebel schooner. The British authorities offer a re ward of five hundred dollars for the arrest of the leaders, named Hogg and Brown respectively. IDM ME= As we enter upon 1864, who does not pray God that it may be less prolific of battle and bloodshed, of sorrow and suffering, of woe and want, of reviling and hatred, of proscription and persecution, than that just passed ? Who does not pray for peace, for a restored Union , for the rehabilitatriM of the Constitution and laws, and for assurance not to be doubted, that the hereditary freed , .,m of the American people is not lost forever ? FRAUDS i FRAUDs x We might fill a column of our paper every day with frauds committed in every depart ment of the government, civil and military. Arrests are taking place almost hourly, and yet, strange to tell, we seldom hear of a trial and still more seldom of conviction and pun ishment. Prominent politicians are now in confinement for deeds of prime rascality, but there we suspect it will end. Palmer and his assistants, in New York, and Given and accomplices, in Washington, and scores of others, are just now under a cloud—but po litical influence, and the fear of exposing others still more prominent, we fear, will soon relieve them. Frauds in the War Depart ment, frauds in the Treasury Department, frauds in the Custom Houses, in the Commis sary and Quartermaster's Departments, in the navy yards-frauds everywhere ; in fact the whole administration is a stupendous fraud ; and, the fountain being muddy, the stream that.,fiows from it is disclosed through its whole length. -- Whenever one of the rascals now in durance is. tried,. convicted and punished, we shall make a -note of it. -Harrisburg Patriot. LET US PAUSE AND REFLECT The New York Journal of Commerce, in the course of some reflections upon Governor SEYMOUR'S able message, remarks : " We are unquestionably approaching the crisis of our national history. From the Pres idential election, which is to occur this fall, we shall, if conservative men succeed, begin to restore the glory and the peace of the American Union : while, if radical measures edntinue to remain innower, our downward courio will be rapid to atoireby aid ruin. We doubt whether free institutions con p..ssibly survive four years more of trial such as they have endured under radical management. The great truth brought out by Governor Seymour, that there is a bottom to the national puree and a limit to the national credit, is of pro— found import. Shall the plan of war and con . que , t„,t the expense of other thousands of millions, continue till we reach that limit?— till we pass it? Will prudence, caution, reason, never resume sway at Washington:? No one can doubt that this nation is able to bear as great a debt as any other nation in the world ; but that does not imply that we can bear any amount of debt, to the extent of unlimited thousands of millions. Let us not blind our eyes and close our ears to the de— ceitful promisee that the war is almost over. It stretches away before us into years of dark ness, fearful years to a free country. The expenses of treasure and of blood are yet to be enormous. We can carry our present debt without doubt. How much more can we carry? This is the question forcibly pre— sented in the present aspect of our national affairs. It does not present itself, as radical men will pretend, as a question of abandoning the war for the Union. It is a question, of abandoning a war for conquest and abolition, and resuming a war for the Union. Shall we go back to original principles, or shall we plunge into chaos ?" MEETING OF DEMOCRATIC CON GRESSMEN. The d: rnocratic and eeuservative members of Congress met on Saturday evening, the 9th ult., at the Capitol, the Hun. John L. Dawson in the chair, and unanimously adopted the following important resolution, offered by James Brooks, of New York : Whereas, gold and silver is paid to our ministers, consuls and commissioners, repre senting the nation in foreign countries, and gold and silver only are received from the people at the Custom Houses in payment of duties ; and whereas, the people are taxed to pay the capitalists their interest in specie on their investments in the nstiunal debt ; there. fore, be it Resolved, That the officers, s 'ldlers and sailors in the army and navy should be paid in gold or silver or their equivalents in amount. And be it also resolved, that the Chairman of this meeting be instructed to prepare amendments to the army and navy bills to this effect. The following resolution from a committee appointed to consult upon the political matters likely to come before Congress, was also adopted. Resolved, That the President's proelLmation of the Bth of D cember, 1863, is unwise, inex pedient, revolutionary and unconstitutional, and is therefore disapproved. A STRONG RESOLUTION The Democratic State Convention of New Hampshire, amongst other resolutions, unani mously adopted the following: " Resolved, That the freedom of the ballot MUST AND SHALL BE MAINTAINED sacred and inviolable ; and that we, the Democracy of New Hampshire, will unite with our brethren of other States, BY FORCE OF ARMS, IF NEED BE, in resistance to every attempt, from whatever source it may com . overturn or abridge, by menaces or dire terference by military force, the independe. and purity of the ballot-box in the ensuing elections, State and National; and to this end we pledge each to the other, and to our brethren of other States, our lives, fortunes and sacred honors, being firmly resolved to maintain, AT ALL HAZ ARDS, our rights as free and patriotic citizens of the American Union." DEATH OF THACKERA f English papers give no particulars of the death of William Makepeace Thackeray, further than that he was found dead in his bed on the morning of the 24th December.— He was taken ill only the day before, and his sudden decease is attributed to effusion on the brain. In the death of this celebrated writer the literary world sustains an irreparable loss. PUT ONE IN YOUR MOIITH.—These damp mornings and evenings are very prejudicial to your lungs. Sore throat and hoarseness is a common complaint, but one little wafer can fix it. Call at Kaufman & Co., and try a box of Bryan's Wafers-25 cts., and note their effect. are no longer States, and that they can lie re constructed as States and re-admitted into the Union by a mere fractional vote of one-tenth of their people cast within the limits of each, is a proposition at once revolutionary and preposterous, manifesting an astounding in clination on his part to act in utter disregard of the Constitution and the elementary prin ciples of our republican form of government, and at the same time foreshadowing a scheme through which stupendous frauds may he practiced upon the ballot at the next election, and a still more stupendous fraud upon sovereign States that have furnished without limit of their blood and treasure to put down rebels and rebellious States, by admitting into the Electoral College men who would have no legal or constitutional right to seats in that body ; the consummation of which scheme would be so gross an outrage upon the rights of the people and the States, as might fully wfirrant resistance on their part, by all the means which God and nature have placed within their reach. Resolved, That it is our deliberate judg ment, that the enunciation of a wise and judi cious political policy, at this time, on the part of the Administration at Washington, n the effect that, any State heretofore in .It. within which resistance to the authority of the Government shall cease, should be allowed, through the vote of a majority of its ele:tors, to resume its former status and functions in the Union, would promptly draw to the cause of the Union thousands, if not hundreds of thousands, of citizens of the revolted States, thereby hastening the restoration of peace and union among the States, and saving the lives of thousands of our fellow citizens now in the field. Re3o//yei. That Lite Deai wratit - • party will continue their efforts to uphold ;he Constitu tion of the United States, and to re-establish its supremacy both at the North and at the S; uth ; s ) that neither the revolutionary sehsmes 14 the Abolitionists nor of the Seces sionists shall avail against it. The resolutions were unanimously adopted. On motion of the lion. GEORGE SANDERSON, of Lancaster, it was unanimously Resolved, That the thanks of this Commit- tee be tendered to the Hon.. CHARLES J. BID DLE for the able and efficient manner in which he has discharged the duties of Chairman of the Committee. The Committee then adjourned. CHARLES J. BIDI)LE, Chairman. ROBERT J. HEMPHILL, SPorrtary. PLAIN QUESTIONS. iltvu you ever known a Democrat fy a violation of the Constitution' Have you ever known a Stamp Ai-t coootsd under a Democratic Administration ? Have you ever known a Democratic Pres dent to suspend the writ of habeas corpus? Have you ever known a Conscript Law be passed under a Democratic Administn tion ? Have you ever known a Confiscation Law be passed by a Democratic Admiuistrati Have you ever known a Democratic Ad ministration to form a new State in violation of the plain provisions of the Constitution ? Have you ever known a time, except the present, when a citizen could he incarcerated in a dungeon without authority of law'? Have you ever known a Democratic Ad ministration to compel the people of a State or the District of Columbia, to sell their property. whether willing or not? Have you ever known an Adminixtra except Abraham'H to create a national debt of $3,000,000,000 in the short period of three Have you ever known a time under a Dem ()untie Administration when a day 'e labo would purchase only two pounds of coffeo Have you ever known citizens t he 19 en into banishment and exile under Democrati Have you ever known a time under Demo cratic rule when great crimes and out rages have been committed hr our allele under a plea of "military neees-sity " or "reascins of state ?" Have you, before this, known a time when the military was made superior to the civil Have you ever known a Democratic Ad ministration to tax the people of the whole country to buy the negroes of the States ? Have yon ever known a Democratic Admin istration to ignore the rights of States ? Have you ever known an Administration, in opposition to the Democracy, to leave the affairs of the country in as flourishing, a con dition as it found it? ABOLITIONISM The sum .;f all villainies is Abolitionism It is a crazy, unreasoning monster, without heart or soul. It began with an overflowing love of the negro. How that love hail practi cally operated where it has had a good chance to display itself, may be seen:from the follow ing, which we clip from the Cincinnati En quirer: We learned yesterday, from a respectable methber of the Society of Friends, in a neigh boring county, that the society to which he is attached recently sent a committee to Vicks burg, to ascertain the true number and condition of the contrabands at that place and immediate vicinity. The committee have re turned, and report that they found forty thousand, one-third of which were entirely or nearly naked. Four hundred deaths occur on an average daily. Can this be true? Vie BROWN'S BRONCHIAL TROCHES, for Coughs, Colds, Pulmonary and Asthmatic disorders, have proved their efficacy by a test of many years, and have received testimonials from eminent men who have used them. " The Speaker reminds the Senate that in case of death or resignation of the Governor, the Speaker of the Senate is the person appointed by the Con stitution to exercise the office of Governor until another Governor shall be duly qualified ; that the time for which he was elected Senator will expire immediately preceding the day of the general elec tion; and that his office of Speaker will expire ac cordingly at the same time ; that from a c .nsidera tion of these circumstances, the propriety of electing a Speaker who may continue in that office until the meeting of the next General Assembly in December next, is evident " From this language, and from the practice of those men who framed the constitutional provisions re ferred to, it is very evident that no Speaker, whether he held over, or was reelected for the vacation, has been or can be the Speaker of the Senate after the meeting of the General Assembly. Every Legislature has been considered indepen dent of the preceding one, and has invariably elected " its Speaker and other officers " as directed by the Constitution. It has been left for the Re publican Senators of this session to make the dis covery, that a " political necessity," under the cloak of " perpetual organization," will justify an unprecedented and dangerous usurpation for the sake of a few petty offices. From this examination of the Journals, back nearly to the date of the adoption of the Constitu tion, it is ascertained that the Democratic Senators have all the precedents—nearly one hundred in number—to justify their course in thie contest, whilst the Republican Senators cannot point to a single case since 1794, to justify theirs. And in view of the constitutional requirement referred to, and the precedents for so long a period in the history of the State, there,is but one proper and incoutestible course to be pursued by Senators upon this floor, and that is, to be guided by the law and the experience of the past, and resist all violations of the one, and innovations of the other, firmly and fearlessly to the end. In conclusion, the undersigned beg leave to re new, as a basis upon which to organize the Senate, on their behalf by the Senator from Berke, Mr. Clymer, on the second day of the session, viz That the Republican Senators shall select the first office in the gift of the Senate, the Democratic Senators the second, and so alternately through the list. (Signed,) Wm. Hopkins, Geo. H. Bucher, Wm. Kinsey, Jno. C. Smith, I:Hester Clymer, A. Hiestand Ulatz, Chas. L. Lumberton, H. B. Beardslee, Geo. W. Stein, Jno. Latta, Berd. Reilly, Wm. A. Wallace, J. B. Stark, Wm. M'Sherry, D. B. Montgomery, C. M. Donovan. SCENE .EN THE. FRENCH SENATE A mast exciting scene tedk pines in the French Senate a short time since, on the dis cussion upon the address ti the Emperor. The Marquis de Boisy, an eccentric politician, criticised the conduet of the Government in a manner that so astounded M. "froplong, the President, and the Ministers, that they almost lost their senses, and quite lost their presence of mind. The Marquis spoke in the most sarcastic terms of the politicians who had sacrificed honor fur the sake of honors, and whose servility had been recompensed with titles and more substantial rewards. He then proceeded to warn the Emperor that if he did not mend his ways his dynasty would share the fate of the Bourbon and the Orleans dynasties, and that as Louis XVI. did not leave the crown to his son, as the " King of Rome" did not succeed to the first Emperor of France, as the crown of his ancestors did not descend to the Duke of Bordeaux, and as the Count of Paris still lives in exile where Louis Philippe died, so the Prince Imperial would not succeed to the throne of Napoleon 111. unless that sovereign were better advised. —lt is well for the Marquis de Boisy that he did not speak thus in the U. S. Senate about our " six-foot Government," the " best," so " loyal" men say, "in the world," If he had, one of the Bastiles with which the country is so plentifully supplied would have been his abode the be - cf his existence on this mundane sphere - LOCAL DEPARTMENT DEiIuCRATIC WARD MEETINGS.—The Demo crats of the City of Lancaster are requested to meet at the following-named places, on SATURDAY EVENING NEXT, the 23d inst., between the hours of 6 and S o'clock, to select candidates to be sup- ! ported at the ensuing City Election, on Tuesday the 2d day of February, for the offices of Mayor, High Constable, City Constables, Select and Common Councilmen, Assessors and Assistant Assessors, Judges and Inspectors. [The N. E. and S. E. Wards will in addition nominate one candidate each for Aldermen. .I At said meetings each Ward will ap point Tangs delegates, to meet in Convention the same evening, at 9 o'clock, at Messenkop's Hotel, East King street, to add up the returns for Mayor and High Constable, and declare the nominees of the party PLACES OP MEETING. N. W. Ward—Shober's Hotel, N. Queen st. N. E. Ward—Schuh's Hotel, E. Chesnut et. S. W. Ward—Fitzpatrick's Hotel, S. Queen et. S. E. Ward—Effinger's Saloon, S. Queen et. —The Democracy of the city are further requested to meet at the above named places on Wednesday evening, 20th inst., at 7 o'clock, for the purpose of placing in nomination all the candidates who desire to be supported at the Nominating meetings on Sat urday evening. BY ORDER WARD COMMITTEES. EDITORIAL VISITOR.— \V e had a visit on Saturday from B. F. Mnreus, Esq., the good-look ing, spicy and vigorous editor of the Bedford Ga zette, and a member of the present House of Repre sentatives from the good old Democratic county of Bedford. Mr. M. is looking well, and is prepared to go into the next campaign with high hopes of success of the Democratic party, and, per conse quence, a restoration of the old Union and an end to this horrible war. LEFT Fog CHINA.—Mr. ONG 1100NG a resident of this city for the past ten years, left for Shanghai, China, his native land, on Wednesday morning last. Mr. NEOK came to this country With Dr. J. P. MESSERSMITH, Surgeon of the Japan Ex pedition, in 185. i, and shortly afterwards entered the Examiner office as an apprentice. tie thoroughly mastered the business, and is an excellent Printer and Pressman. tie is, besides, an intelligent, soci able and amiable young man, and leaves behind him many friends. We wish him a safe and pleas ant journey to the " land of the Celestials." On arriving there he will doubtless be looked upon with greati'estonishment, for he has become a complete "outside Barbarian!" Who knows what mark he may make on the future of China? QUARTER SESSIONS' CCURT.—The January Term of the Quarter Sessions' Court commenced yes terday—Judge HAYEs presiding. THE LiuLIIAN OPERA. TROUPE.—TiIe famous Holman Opera Troupe opened for a short season at Fulton Hall last evening. From the flattering en comiums bestowed upon them by the press of other cities, they will doubtless be greeted with full houses in this city. MissieNear.—Over S3UO was raised on Sunday last in the Duke Street M. E. Church, (Rev. Mr. Carrow's,) for Missionary purposes. PRIENDSIIIP EntE CoMPANY.—At a stated meeting of the Friendship Fire Company, No. 1, at the Engine House, North Duke street, on the 15th inst., the following officers were elected to serve for the ensuing year: President—John S. Gable; Vice President—George W. Brown; Secretary— Charles T. Gould; treasurer—Godfried ; Messenger—W 'thorn Frailey ; Chief Direr tor—Lewis Haldy ; Assistants—John Sherif, Samuel J. Pool, Charles T. Gould, Daniel Trewetz, Matthias Hart, Thomas McGinnis, William Caldwell, Frank White, Benjamin 0. Conn, Benjamin F. Srtiakez, William Fralley, Samuel Kreiner ; Trustees--UodfriedZahm, Henry E. Leman, John W. Jackson, Gee. M. Kline, Robert H. Long, John Sheaffsr. READING AND COLUMBIA RAILROAD. —At a meeting of the Stockholders of the Heading and Co lumbia Railroad, held on Monday, the 11th inst., the following officers were elected for the ensuing year: President—W. G. Case; Directors—E. Her shey, George Bogle, Frederick Lauer, Isaac Eckert, C. S. Kauffman, John McManus, Samuel Small, Michael Clapper, S. S. Detweiler, William McCon key, Abraham Bruner, Sr., T. W. Northrop. The Board met and organized by electing T. W. Northrop, Treasurer; A. J. Kauffman, Secretary ; and Robert Crane, Superintendent. SIiOuTINU AFFRAY.—On the afternoon of the 11th inst. a shooting affray occurred at ,Sohuh's Hotel, in East Chesnut street—the parties being two mulattoes, named Roland Patterson and Henry Clark. The latter fired a revolver at the former twice, the balls striking him on the head and under the arm, but neither of the shots did any injury.— W e have not learned whether Old Abe has considered it necessary to issue a Proclamation in reference to this speck of trouble among his " loyal American citizens of African descent." FATAL RAILROAD ACCIDENT.-0.1 the 9th inst. Mr. John S. Espenshade, of Paradise, this county, was instantly killed while attempting to cross the Pennsylvania railroad track at Ranck's Mill, between Uordonville and Bird-in-Band. Mr. E. was driving in a sleigh, and, the night being very cold, had his head closely secured in a fur-cap, which covered the ears. Being also blind in the right eye—the side on which the Harrisburg Accom modation Train was approaching—it is supposed he did not see it or hear the usual signal. The lo comotive struck the horse and sleigh, instantly kill ing the horse and driver, and smashing the sleigh to fragments. On stopping the train, the body or deceased was found upon the cow-catcher. dreadfully mutilated. Mr. Espenshade was about 37 years of age, and unmarried. COLUMBIA AND MARYLAND LINE RAILROAD. —The following gentlemen were, on the 11th inst., elected officers of this Company : President—C. S. Kauffman; Directors—Jeremiah B. Haines, Jacob Tome, Joseph Ba'lance, Gen. Bertram A. Shaeffer, Jeremiah Brown, John Long, W. W. Miller, Jacob B. Shuman, Maris Hoopes, Ephraim Hershey, (leo. Bogle, M. M. Strickler. ' WE DAVE RECEIVED from the Author a neat little publication, "Fragments of Song and Senti ment, consisting of over One Hundred Pieces," and upon a perusal of the same have found it really an excellent series of poetical effusions. The Author is an esteemed friend, Mr. BENJAMIN U. Heaß, of Strasburg, and an occasional contributor to the col umns of The Intelligencer. DEFINITION OF THE BUSSES.-BUS6-tu kiss. Rebus—to kiss again. Blunderbuss—two girls kiss ing each other. Omnibus—to kiss all the girls in the room. —The above definitions are given by the Lexi cographer of gallantry and politeness—the local editor of the Harrisburg Patriot. He is a "buster," and all the girls will pronounce him such. His Lex icography is the best extant, and hence we never dispute the correctness of any of his definitions. ve SULDIERS' FAIR.—A meeting of the Committee of Arrangements was held at the resi dence of Mr. James M. Hopkins, on the 14th inst. In the. absence of the Chairman, Mr. Roberts, Mr. Hopkins was called on to preside. Mrs. D. W. Pat terson was appointed Secretary pro tem. Mr. Goo. M. Steinman, having resigned his place as Chairman of Committee on Fine Arts, Rev. T. C. Porter was elected to fill his place. Mr. Jacob Stauffer, Mr. Wm E. Heinitsh, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. A. Atlee, Mr. and Mrs. D. M. Kline, Miss S. S. Steinman and Mr. and Mrs. D. (S. Eshleman were also added to said committee. Mr. Charles A. Heinitsh was added to the Com mittee of Arrangements. Miss Annie Burford, Wee Emma Steinman, Miss Lizzie Rutter, Miss Lizzie Eioholtz, Miss Lizzie Henderson, Miss Maria Twelves, Miss Margie Rus sel, Miss Louisa Russel, Miss Lizzie Rathvon, Miss Annie Carson, Miss Mary Carson, Mr. H. Hopkins, Mr. H. Duncan and Miss Alice Nevin were added to the Committee on Decorations. Mr. Brainard Kremer was added to the Commit tee on Tableaux. Mrs. B. B. Martin was added to the Committee on Refreshments. It was moved that each Lady taking charge of a Table shall appoint a Cashier, who shall take charge of all money—the money to he handed to the Treas urer on the evening of each day. It was moved that each township, town and vil lage be earnestly solicited to select two delegates— a lady and gentleman—to collect and take charge of such donations as may be collected 'in their re spective places, and to assist at the Fair. It is also requested that the several Committees organize, go at ones into active operation, and be prepared to, report to the Chairman of the Committee of Arrangements, Ron. A. E. Roberts, on Saturday, 23d inst., at the residence of Mrs. Rosina liubley. -- TRIBUTE us RESPECT.--Tile Alowing reso lutions are inserted at the rate of 10 cents per line. Persons wishing Tributes of Respect, Ac., published should bear in mind that this is the charge fixed in the new schedule of advertising rates: CAMP OF 2ND PA. CAVALRY, BEALTON STATION, Va., Jan. 11th, 1864. At an adjourned meeting of the members of " 'he Pequea Dragoons," Co. D, 2d Pa. Cavalry, the fol lowing resolutions were unanimously adopted : Resolved, That in the death of Isaac !deans the service of the United States loses a good, faithful and conscientious soldier, and we a pleasant com panion and true friend. Resolved, That we deeply sympathize with his bereaved family, and obligate ourselves to deliver to them his body as soon as possible. Resolved, That a copy of these resolutions be for warded to the family of the deceased, and also to the Lancaster Examiner 4. Herald, Lancaster In telligencer, and the Daily Express. Committee—Serg't M. B. Eshleman, Serg't H. W. Shultz, Corp. G. G. Fraim, Corp. J. F. Herb, Pri vate Martin Buzzard, Private Sam'l Mclntyre. Seem The Montrose Democrat has a most excellent review of President LINCOLN'S late I messagez, The following point is well taken. '• The feature in the message which attracts most attention and comment is that wherein Mr. Lincoln proposes a basis upon which to re-admit the Southern States into the Union. Had he required repentant rebels to take an oath of allegiance to the Constitution and Union, as the terms of pardon, it would have been a very liberal, just and appropriate offer, and would have met the approval of all parties. But in addition to this, Lincoln announces that in the rebel States he shall exact of every person, whether rebel in fact, or not, an oath to supper; all his proclamations on the subject of slavery, and all acts of Congress on the same subject, as the condition of pardon—this pardon to be a complete restoration of former rights, except as to slaves ; and no person in those States, even if innocent of aiding the re bellion, shall ever be allowed a citizen's privi lege unless he takes such oath. This scheme is original, cunning and we believe, damaging to the Union cause, and so intended. Why ask Southern men to endorse all he says re lacing to slavery any more than on other sub jects? And when a man is pardoned why restore him to all former rights except those relating to slavery ? There its neither sense nor justice irt:these remakable features." STAMM TRIAASSREWS MMIPOMM. The annual report of Wu. V. ktoeiturt„ Esq., State Treasurer, is a very clear and satisfactory document, and reflects great credit on its author. We make the following extract to show how widely he differs from the Governor in relation to the payment of the State interest. It shows that, whatever may be the public estimate of the integrity of the Executive, we have an honest man at the head of the Treasury Department, and we are not without hope that his recommendations for acting in good faith to the public creditors will have more weight with the Legislature, than the repudiating scheme of Mr. Deane: 1 The subject of the payment of the interest on the public debt of the State is one which, from its importance, ought to receive your early and earnest attention. For the last two years, and including the amount due on the let inst., the interest has I been paid in specie, or its equivalent, through I means furnished by the banks of the Common wealth. In 1862, under the act of April 11th of that year, they were required to pay into the treasury their rateable proportion of such premium for gold, or its equivalent, as bad been actually paid by the State. During the lad veer under the provisions of the act of January 30th, 1863, they were required to exchange with the Commonwealth a sufficient amount of coin for currency to pay the interest of the State debt, and the State Treasurer was authorized to issue to them specie certificates of exchange, not transferable, pledging the faith of the State to return said coin and re exchange for notes current at that time, on or before the first Monday of March, 1864, said certificates to bear interest at the rate of 2k per cent. per annum. Under the provisions of this act the Com monwealth has exchanged with the Banks currency for coin, amounting to one million nine hundred and sixty-eight thousand nine hundred end four dollars, and ninety-seven cents, ($1.,968,904 97,) interest on which, due the banks on the Ist of March, 1864, will amount to forty-one thousand and forty dollars and fifteen cents, ($41,04015.) To return this auieunt in coin at the present market rate for gold (1511) will cost the State $1,013 968 06. which, with the interest there on $4104015, amounts to the sum of 1.055,0 ° 6 21 This the Commonwealth has` pledged her faith to pay on the let of March next. If it he determined to keep faith with the holders of the loans, by paying the interest on the public debt in specie or its equivalent, and the bunks were freed from similar calls, I do not doubt, from the disposition they have manifested to aid in maintaining the credit of the Commonwealth, that they will he willing to relieve her from the repayment of their coin for the next year, if prompt steps be taken " " m provide the means for their re-imbursement at on earlier period. But to continue longer thi stem of c ,mpelling the banks alone to 276 53 1. - .nisli coin for the interest on the public debt, 18, I think. asking more than they can bear, 57 and more than they can be expected to do.— 776 Holding this opinion, and desiring to obtain 222 for your honorable bodies all the information c,,uld get on the subject, I last month ad- Total, $147,612 99 dressed a circular to the banks of the Com- The following is the amount paid from the monwealth, inquiring whether, under the terms of the existing acts, they could be State Treasury to Corporations and ineivid- r, lied on to furnish specie or its equivalent, uals during the same period : 1 ,r the payment of the interest of the next Henry E. Leman, for repairing " old" year. muskets, 14,627 18 Some of the hanks that have replied deem For Pensions and Gratuities,. 283 00 it unjust to their stockholders longer to (=- Home for Friendless Children,. 1009 11) tinue this system at exchanging coin for cur „ timl therefore decline to do so. Others Millersville Normal School s ' n” aro willing to e,:nt.nue the system if concurred Common Schools, 11,350 f in t all hanks, and required by the State ; Abatement of State Tax, Stilly 5 but all agree as to the impolicy and injustice Mercantile Appraiser, (Isaac Mellinger) 19 . "' 6 f vingiing out a particular interest in the $37,350 S'ate t..bear all the burden of doing that which equally interests the whole people. A THRILLING AD VE NT CRE. They claim that as they furnish an annual The following account of on adventure in revenue to the Treasury of over three hundred . .issod ‘I it sr .1 ire now being brought Vie rieeiir great sii.,w,storm 011 111.! pe i n if II soother system of bank ivre in a private letter front Captain J:.ines Ixi tipt 111 a large ehere of the taxation H. Dodge, of Milwaukee: imp upon them, it ought to he the dispo , FORT Leas an, Kunsan, Dec. 1 ;;11t1; , i the Suite rather to relieve, than im- On S tturday morning, Nov 28th, we started t e.se litional burdens upon them. loom Fort Lyon f.rr Fort Litt - cid, expecting t • It is evident therefore, from all the infor make the trip (the distance being 240 miles) mation that can be hod, that the State must in the usual time of four and it half days -- look el.ei‘ here for the means of maintaining Our party numbered her orrdit And is it not the duty of her The first day we came about 45 miles 1 nt tos.ple, ;n view her heretofore well settled night made our bed on the bare ground, and policy. to make some sacrifices in order to in the morning found six or eight -inches f imcompli-h it ? snow covering us, and the wind blowing fear This sub t iec - was very ably argued by my fully, as it can only blow across the plains. predecessor in his report to the Legislature On Tuesda we traveled only seven miles. y came another fall of snow, and last winter ; and fully concurring in his views day or During that whole week we were only able to I take the liberty of quoting two• the very pertinent questions therein three of put, thaw out our provision 4, not even making au He says: " '1.1,e question generally asked effort to cook anything, for on the whole route in discussing this subject is, can the State there are nu habitations. Until Saturday afford to pay this large difference between morning we were obliged, every little way, to currency and specie in the payment of her shovel the stage out of the snow banks, and, interest ? Ought not the question rather to finally, when we were about fifty-two miles be, can she afford not to do it ? Will not the from Lamed, we gave up the idea of proceeding credit of the State suffer materially if she re. farther that way. fuses to do it ? Is her credit of no value to Hearing that there was a small Indian camp her and her citizens ? Is the State so strong not far from where we were embanked, I con- and powerful, so above any liability of future eluded to leave the stage and go on to find it want, that she can exercise her power irres and get some dried buffalo meat, for our sup pective ~f any effect her action may have upon plies were exhausted, as we had only laid in her edit'!"p S. store for a five day trip. The Indian camp, The State, by the act of June 11th, 1840, however, proved to be farther off than we ppropriated a sufficient sum to re-imburse thought for I walked fifteen miles, with the her loan holders for the difference in value snow up to my knees nearly all the way, between specie and the currency in which before the huts came in sight. When within they had been previously paid, and then a mile (or thereabouts) of them, one of the solemnly declared "that hereafter the drivers overtook me and reported that the interest falling due on Pennsylvania stooks mules had given out entirely and he had shall always he paid in specie or its equiva started to go to the fort for help. The camp lent." being close by, I told him to go on and get , This is the law today, and for its obser sbmething to eat and I would be along. I , vanee, and the maintenance of the present . found him there with his hands andleet badly ' good name of the Commonwealth, no effort or frozen, so I told him to stay there and I would sacrifice ought to be spared. go to the fort myself—thirty-five miles. I started The general government pays the interest at three o'clock p. m. The mule on its debt in specie. Massachusetts continues carried me until sundown, and would not go . to pay in specie, and New York partially so any farther. I had with us, fortunately, a ' though the system she has adopted of dist:Tim buffalo robe, so taking the saddle for my pH- lusting in favor of her foreign creditors I low, and tucking the robe close about me, laid think unjust. down to try and keep awake till morning. I home of the States that pay in currency was then twenty-seven miles from the fort and contracted their debts since the suspension of 'tie cold so intense that one of the mules had to death the night before. When specie payments, and therefore harrowed cur frozenrenoy ; but Pennsylvania borrowed money from morning broke I was thankful to the kind her creditors, and she ought to pay them in Providence which kept me from all harm. I money. had nothing to eat, but saddled the mule, Let us therefore so act now, that in the which had not strayed more than six rods future it may be the boast of our honored old away, and started again. The poor animal, - however, would not carry me more than three Commonwealth that, amid all the trials of this eventful period of the nation's history, miles and laid down. Without hesitating one shefaithfully performed her whole duty, instant I stripped him, piled the saddle and and came out of the ordeal with unsullied robe together, and in less than five minutes ' honor. was wading through the snow up to my knees. I I knew, probably, I would have to be out I another night, but there was no such thing as turning back, for there were left behind six human beings whose lives depended upon my exertions. When within ten miles of the fort I had to cross a stream and leave the Arkansas river, striking across a rolling prairie. The snow was here from one to three feet deep, and the track entirely filled. I had been over the road but once except in a covered stage, and had no particular idea of the direction. I only knew that the fort was on a creek with trees growing along it, and the best I hoped for was to reach the trees that night. I kept two objects in view so as to make a straight line. I walked all day, and just as the sun was two hours high or so, I saw the trees. Two miles, or about that, beyond me I saw a lone tree, and that was the last object I had made up my mind to reach, but when within half a mile or thereabouts of the tree„ I saw what I thought was the fort, and took courage. I walked on at the rate of a mile an hour. Before I reached the tree I knew for a certainty that it was the fort I had seen, and saw that a sleigh had started for me. They were coming on a gallop ; 1 could see them ; one or two was standing up looking toward me. They were whipping their horses, and the snow flying in all directions ; I knew that I was saved, and my strength gave out; I could go no' farther and sank down in the snow. When they were almost to me, I saw Lieut. Crocker driving and heard him Bay : "Good Lord 4 it is Dodge !" Dr. Clark jumped out with a bottle of whisky in one hand and a pie in the other. I was in no mood to refuse either. They had been looking for the stage with a glass and saw me as I came over the last roll of the prairie, and ordered up a team to go out and help some One, they did not know whom. In half an hour they had two six mule teams and one two mule team going after the stage, with refreshments for man and beast. They came bank in twenty-four hours and say that ,I saved their lives. Only two were frozen, one very badly, and will probably have to lose his foot. One man was with us who had been in this country for thirty two years, and in all that time says he had never seen a worse storm, and that he had made up his mind' I could not possibly live through it. Those who went out after the stage say they never saw a more rejoiced lot than they when they knew of my safety. Lancaster County in Account with the State or Penneylvania.—The report of the Auditor General shows that the whole amount paid into the State Treasury for the fiscal year end ing Nov. 30, 1863, was $4,289,451.63. Of this amount Lancaster county paid $147,642 99, as follows - : TAX ON BANE DIVIDES DS Columbia Bank. Farmers Bank.... Mount Joy Bank TAX ON CORPORATION STOCKS Colombia Bank Farmers Bank Farmers Bank of Mount Joy Mount Joy Bank Chestnut Hill Railroad Columbia and Chestnut Hill Turnpike, Columbia and Washington " Lancaster and Ephrata Lancaster and Litiz Sancazter, Elizabethtown and Middle- Town turnpike 125 93 Lancaster and Susquehanna Turnpike, 119 00 Man.'. Turnpike .. 55 31 New Holland Turnpike '7hestnut Hill Iron Ore Company Inland Insurance and Deposit Comp'y, Columbia Gas Company Lancaster " " Columbia Water Company Fulton 'Jail Association.. TAN . ON REAL A PERSONAL ESTATE Real and Personal Estate do special tax of A mill per act of Mac 16,'61 Tavern Licenses, Retailers du Broker's d 0.... Theatres and Circus Licenses , Distillery and Brewery ..... Bowling Saloons and Billard Licenses Eating House Licenses, Patent Medicine do Pharuplet Laws,.. From Peter Martin, Prothonotary... Geo. C. Hawthorne, Register " Geo. Whitson, Recorder From Peter Martin, Prothouotary,.. Henry Musser, Clerk Suisions I=l3 From Geo. C. Hawthorne, Register To Incorporate Presbyterian Parsooage Association of Loacock To Incorporate Lancaster, Lebanon and fine Grove Railroad Company. To Incorporate the Safe Harbor and Susequehanna . Turnpike Company. FREE BANKING SYSTEM. Farmers' Bank of Mt. Joy for expenses incurred, EU= City of Lancaster, per City Treasurer. TAX ON BROKERS. From Reed, McGratin & Co $1,293 37 A 9 0 66 057 25 1,129 75 1,642 50 37 50 423 6 3 241 30 31 79 26 22 48 30 120 00 169 43 150 00 178 62 74 30 500 00 100 00 37 12 SS 144 31 15 S' 72 5,636 25 5,952 79 202 35 95 00 1,044 00 MEM DEMOCRATIC PROSPECTS The New York World, in an article on " The Democratic Party," with entire truth says: What we beg the reader particularly to re mark is, that, throughout our whole political history, although the costume has frequently been changed, it has been the same identical struggle between exorbitant federal preten sions on the one side and popular liberty on the other. To suppose that this struggle has become obsolete only,betokens the shallowness of the supposer. To fancy that the present is a time when the Democratic party has no work before it, the performance of which is demanded by its principles, is to be as incapa ble of discerning the signs of the times as a bat is of seeing in the day-time. If the Dem ocratic party were annihilated to-day it would spring up again to-morrow. It is in the nature of things that overgrown power will become oppressive, and that part' of the com munity who hope to share neither the power nor the plunder—that is to say, the Democratic masses—will resist. But what is the prospect now? To those who are capable of looking beneath thesurfaoe of things and seeing the principles that underlie them, the prospect was never better. Mark ! we do not say that the prospects of the country were never better (for God knows they were never worse) but that the vitality of the Democratic party was never so sure to assert itself. Burdensome taxation, suffering, wretchedness, will come to the dwellings of the common people, and they will shake the Black Republican temple till not one stone is left upon another of its ruins. This is as certain as that night follows day : and, in revolutionary times Ile these, changes in public sentiment are often very sudden. In August, last year, the Republicans felt secure of a large majority in every State ; but the fall elections, nevertheless, all went against them. This fall the Democratic raft dipped into the trough of the sea, and the waves went over her ; but the storm is high, and she will mount with the bounding billow. She is so constructed that nothing can sink her. Louis num, January 16. A despatch, dated Mooney Creek, Jan; 18, -says: " A part of Col. MoClook's cavalry attacked the tith and llth rebel Texas regiments yesterday, and killed 14 and took 41 prisoners." Rebel Defeat