- Orot`6foro tpovtev. --- Towanda, Wednesday,. Feb'y 11, 1840 PARTICULAR. Nonce.—We are soul to be again compe lkd to call the attention of thorn indebted to r. 8. GOODRICH and E. t 3. Mitigates & Bon, that payment has been delayed, until forbearance has ceased to be ai nue. The notes, accounts, &c., must be pad ; and if net paid by Unitary court, they will be put in comae of collection, every cent of them. Ptactssrr—Viar.—The Postmaster at Burlington, informs as that the Reporter addressed to B. M. Tomp kins and Wm. E. Campbell, dead in the office. The former has run away, and the Lauer don't take his from the office. Both into the Printer, • a feet," of course. W;Tcrnas 0011 TaiNKI to those who have so promptly accepted our general invitation, and ',ruled up, while thole who have taken no heed, cannot now find Ault, at a more personal and pressing notice. E The Armstrong Bank Veto. We published last v 4 the Message of Gov. Shank, vetoing the Armstrong Coady Bank. We were obliged then to defer our remarks, nor is it now our intention to enterinto a full discussion and defence of the principles embraced in this message. But we cannot permit the =salon to pus, without expressing our commendation of this able Veto, and its sound and healthy doctrines. If any act of Gov. Bhunk i ecould raise him higher in the confidence sadaftbetions of the people of Pennsylvania, it is this firm and decided stand he has taken in defence of the rights and interests of the community, by opposing the creation of more Banks, and the consequent evils which are the result of permitting an unguarded and in: fisted system of Banking. In his annual menage, the Governor most emphatically and clearly defines his views and intentions in regard to the individual liability princi ple, and no part of the Message met with a more cor dial and hearty welcome from the Democracy. One of the first official acts of the Governor, after the meeting of the Legislature, was to veto the bill incorpo. rating the Armstrong County Bank. This bill proposed the establishment of a Bank at Kittanine, with a capital of fifty thousand - dollars, to be in reased to one handiest thousand dollars at the option of the stockholders. The stockholders are made individually liable for the notes issued, but not for monies deposited. This evasion, in part, of securing the rights of community, the Governor has plainly shown, end it forms an insuperable objection -to the bill. "The Annual Report' of the County Commissioners ts published today. We congratulate the citizens of the county upon the improved condition of the County Fi nances. The report bears evidence dat the edministra• tion of otLZ . itty affairs has fallen into competent hands. It gives re, although the board is politically op posed to us, to bear testimony to the faithful manner in which the affairs of the county have been conducted, of ba" The hurt Argus - contains the abate paragraph. We are perfectly, astonished. But we bit* that this glimpse of returning veracity and honesty is but the foreshadow ing of a determination on the part of thp Argue, to aban don their fil- natured end habilis, and pursue a more dignified and manly course. Bradford County Court. FIRST WEEK Motrnsa, February 2, 1848. Present, Judges CONTNOILIM, President, Harry Mor gan and Reuben Wilber, Associate& CONIMONWE•LTH O. ALVIN FCRYLN.—John Higgs, prosecutor. The defendant was indicted for committing an assault and battery on John Higgs, on the eleventh day of November, 1845, in Columbia township. The defendant pleaded, Not Guilty. The substance of the evidence was, that John Higgs called for liquor at the her of Mr. Furman, (brother of the defendant) and was refused. as be was intoxicated at the time. On being refused, Higge got angry, and used some insulting lan guage to the defendant. ) After a little altercation between the prosecutor and the defendant, the prosecutor having had the defendant cornered up, and in the attitude of smiting several times, the defendant being but a boy, sought an opportunity, and struck the prosecutor on the head, with a large iron shoveL The Jury rendered • verdict of Not Guilty, and that the County pay the 'costs. Cow. vs. Jour M. Piee.—Simons Lockwood, prose cutor. The defendant was indicted for forgery. The alleged forgery consisted in signing Simons Lockwood's name to a settlement purporting to have , been made in defendants cook, between the prosecutor and de fe ndant, which reads as follows !, The above $507 89, found due John M Pike. " March 7, 1814. BiNICINS Ler XI/FOOD. " Aflet hearing the testimony on the part of the prosecu tion, it was discovered that there was some defect in the indictment. The defendant consented that one of the jury might be withdrawn, and the suit was discontinued. CONI.T6. ELIZi BA riar.--John H. Fa rman, prose cutor. The defendant was indicted for stealing four $5 Bank bills. on the . I , othltlay of January, 1846, from pro. secutor. The def dant being arraigned, pleaded Guil ty. The Court sentenced her to restore the property stolen, if not already restored, to the proper owner, or its full nine ; to psi the him amount to the Common wealth, pay the casts of prosecution, and to be confined at hard labor for the apace of six months in the jail of Bradford County. Cost. Ti. Cearwroramt F.T.—E. D. Montanye, pro secutor. Indictment for larceny. Detendimt pleaded Not Guilty: The only evidence against the defendant was what iras sworn to by his son, Garret Fay. Garret was in the employ of the Messrs. Mentanye's, and was in their store at times, assisting as a cleric He swore that he had taken at various times, from the store of the Montanyes, broad-cloth, eassimere, shoes, shirting, cof fee, &e., Ikr.., which he gave to his father, or left them wherikis father should get them, and that his father did get them. Garret Fay had at this term been indicted for taking the same articles. The Jury rendered a verdict of Not Guilty. Cox. vs. G Ps v.—The defendant was indicted for feloniously taking from the store of Mean. Montan yes' & Co., broad-cloth, eassimen, shoes, sheeting, cof fee, &e., &c. The defendant pleaded °WILY. The court certify, that Garret Fay, convicted in said court of an affiance, which, under the existing taws, would be pun. fishable by imprisonmeat io the Penitentiary is, in the judgment of the said court, declared a proper subject for the Rouse of Refuge. Cox. n. Maar Poor, COUNILICA Poor. and Nue sox Poor.—The defSadants were indicted for stealing shingle of R. Wilcox, of Albany. The jury rendered a •enflct of guilty of taking 1300 shingles, of the Talus of $h 20. Ting Mon Hon 71 between Towanda and Williams. Is" refight as well be abolished. n far ma regards rem:- lar and speedy eommuniattion. i . !satters'and papers are frequently a week in coming from Harrisburg here. The fault lies to the eharge of the pato:mans at Williams. polo of Nonhaniberland. The LetteraC t our Harrisburg torrespondent has not bowneectired, and we are obliged to depend upon oar wimps fix Legioative information. • Tel DixociATtc Rsvisile.--Tlin Review, tie Ana sly, is an unusually aunnetive imam :The contents are as Aglow,: . . L The Reciprocal lothienee of the Physielificiences. andFtte ' lostitutboa. U. The Pattie of NoAh America ; its nomenclature. habits, bonne and seasons; With dints on the scienceof Wouditill- - By Frank Foss-star. No. IL The Woad. cock. Sunday Sonnete. IV. Prospects of the Legal Profession in America. V. The Mystery. By R S. S. Andros,. VI. - Papers Of an old Dartmouth Prisoner. Edited by Nathaniel Haathoroe. VII. lklanufarturo of Wool, Silk, Cotton and Flax, Ancient end Modem. VIII. The Polish Revolution of 1830. By Major G. Toehman. . . I.Y. Ameiira in IR46,The Put--The Future. X. Monthly Financial and Guannercial Article XI. New Books of the Month. Monthly Literary Bulletin. XIIL Index to Vol. XVII. The Democratic Review is now published at $3 00 per annum, and each number is illustrated with an extra Bite merzolint portrait, engraved from Daguerreotypes of Anthony, Clatk & Co. of N. Y.. the flrst artists in this line in the country. For the current year, thus far, por ttaits have appeared of F. P. Berta, Esq., late Editor of the Globe; Gen. ANDSISW JACKSON, in hit; last day.; Hon. Cala Jona-sos, Post Master General; Hon. Jitua A. Dix, C. 0. Senator, 111: T., and Hon. Csisa Cran ing. late Minister to China ; and portraits of like charac ter will follow. The back numbera of the current year, can be fUmish ed to all new subaeribere. eabwriptions (in ill cases, in advance) may be forwarded, at t h e title of tee eta, by mail, post-paid, to 0. C. (Jainism' & Co., 136 Nassau-st., New York. Cosonsas.--The proceedings of Congress have not yet begun to be interesting. Several attempts have been made to stop the flood of eloquence on the Oregon ques tion, in toe House, without avail, Judge Strong has had the floor, and mode an excellent'speeeh. HON. DANIEL S. DICKIssoN, has oat thanks for his Speech on the National Defences. It is a moat masterly effort, and we shall take the first occasion that presents, to lay it before our readers. BATTLE BETWEEN TUE BLACKFEET AND CROW INDIANS.--A gentleman from Fort F. A. C., near the Falls of the Missouri, and upwards of twenty-seven hundred miles distant from,St.. Louis, reveutlY arrived here, has kindly furnish ed us, says the Reveille of the nd ult., with the following information.: On the 17th of last June, some seven hundred of the Crows fell upon a small party of the Blackfeet; who had encamped about seventy-five miles from the fort, and in .advance of the main body. The Crows killed twenty-two, wounded as many, took upwards of a hundred women and children prisoners, and succeeded in capturing three hun dred horses. Intelligence of their !disastrous defeat having been conveyed to the main body of the Blackfeet. they came up. and, though less in numbers than the Crows, attacked them in turn, and fought so desperately that the latter were compelled to retreat to a place they bad Strongly furtified,which they succeeded in reach ing with all their plunder, though most of their prisoners escaped. The Blackfeet were not strong enough to dislodge the Crows from their position, and ultimately retired. Ihe battle continued between various parties of each tribe for quite four days. The actual number of kill ed in the affair it was difficult to obtain. The Crows acknowledged a loss of eight or ten kill ed and several wounded. Our informant states that the Blackfeet intended to revenge themselves upon their enemies the ensuing spring. It ap pears that the majority of the tribe were on the other side of the mountains near the head wa ters of the Columbia. whither it is their custom to go every spring, and those who were engag ed-in this affair with the Crows were but an ad vanced party who had recrossed the- mountains somewhat earlier than usual. The Crows had been driven into the neighborhood where the. fight endured—whirl is called, in parlance, the Blackfoot eountry"—by the Sioux, who were out in dreat force against them. They usually visit that section of the country, likewise, when the Blackfeet are absent. About a fortnight be fore the tight, a small party of the Blackfeet at tacked the • horse-guard," at Fort F. C. A., a trading post of the ,American Fur Company, killed one man, !tallied, James . Riquett, whose family is supposed to be in this city, seriously wounded another, and succeeded in stealing thir ty horses belonging to the post.' 'rile Crows and Black feet. as may be known, are biar ene mies-, always assailing each other whenever they can get an opportunity to do so, with dead ly hostility. The former are very, friendly to the whites, and the latter tribe directly the op posite. THE MAGNETIC TELEGRAPII.—AiTios Ken dall. in a letter to the Union, - mentions the dif ficulty- that the company have between this city and New York to moss the North River. lie says: .• Knowing the interest you feel in the suc cess of Morse's elecuo-magnetie telegraph, it gives me pleasure to state that it works beauti fully on a line of more titan one hundred miles, from Philadelphia to Newark, and on one occa sion has been worked from Philadelphia to Fort Lee, a distance of about onelondred and thirty miles. There is not a doubt left that it may be worked with perfect success across the conti nent. • .• We stop for the present at Newark, New Jersey. ten miles from New York. not having succeeded in crossing the river. Such is the affinity of the subtle power we employ to earth and water, that it is difficul to make it pass any distance through either by any guards which science knows how , to place around it.— Keep it in the air, and it will follow your wire around the glooe ; but bring it in contact with earth or water, and. it escapes as if seeking its home in the caverns of the .earth, and the coral depths of the ocean. We mtist ask science to teach us how to stretch wires in safety, aloft in the air and a mite in length. or we must beg commerce to permit us to raise pillars, beside herpath, on which to erect a tiny bridge for our invisible messengers. We eannot try experi ments fot projectors; but he who can and will take us across the North River without erecting supports in the river itself, and in such a man ner as shall promise durability, will entitle him self to a liberal, compensation." , A BRTDLE FOR THE TounnE.—MaryL..Mar tile recovered a verdict of fifteen hundred dollars in the Court of Common Pleas of Worcester county. Mass., last week. against Origen Her bad', for slanderous words uttered against the lair fame of the:plaintiff by the wife of the de fendant. ELIZABEIW' VAN VALHENIOMON. who was convicted for the murder of her husband, was eiecuted in the yard belonging to the common Jail in Fulton co., in the presence of eorne hund red witnesses. on Saturday the 24th ult., at 3 o'clock, P. M. North Bratich Ciotti Meeting, Pursuant to notice, the friends of the• North Branch Canal convened at the Court House in the Borough a Towanda. on , Toesday even. inn. Feb. 10. 1846. and organiged on motion of Col. 1. F. Means. by t eatlinqtol. JOSEPH KINGSI3 'EBY to preside. and electing C. F. WELLES.. H. MORGAN, D. W. Tiacv. W. H. OVERTON. D. M. BULL and Altrtorc BALLARD Vice Presidents. and D. L. Scott. B. F. Pow ell and E. 0. Goodrich. Secretaries. The object of the meeting was stated by Wu. ELervu. and EDW'D OVERTON Esqrs., and on motion of Col. P. C. WARD. a commit. tee was appointed to *aft resolutions_ for the consideration of the meeting. consisting of thir teen persons. as follows : P. C. Ward, E. W. Baird. Wm. Elwell, John F. Means. D. Cash. D. Brink, G. F. Mason, R. Fowler, T. 'l'. Weirman. J. 1%. Adams. Ulyesep Mereur. D. 11. Goodwin, Edward Owstrinn During the iibltence of the committee the meeting was addressed in able and eloquent speeches by C. F. WELLES. lien. D. Buxom Col. D. M. Boar., and 11. W. TEAM The committee made thelfollowing report, which after being debated by Messrs. Bancroft, AYHliston. Mor zan. Cash, Baird, Meteor. Ei- well, and Adams. was adopted. The committee appointed to draft a report beg leave to submit the following : That they are of opinion, that the early com pletion of the North Branch Canal,and its con nexion with the Chemung and Chenango Ca nals. is -of the most vital importance both to the citizens of Pennsylvania and New York, and as we are satisfied that the passage of a law for those connexions will insure the immediate completion of the North Branch Canal. we trust the legislature of New York will not hes itate to pass a law for the union of those works. That the citizens of both states will be benefit ted, we are entirely satisfied from the (act, that all experience has shown, that the stock of ca nals. in this country and Europe, is more val uable in a ten-fold degree; when used for the transportation of coal and mineral products, and to illustrate this fact we need only mention the Delaware division of the Penn'a canal, and° the British canals that are extended to mining districts. It is a fact well known that there is no coal in the stale of New York, and the anthracite coal fields of the Wyoming valley are unpar alleled in this state, and probably in the world, —and it is not at all problematical to assume, that the average ainounruf anthracite coal from Wyoming, and bituminous coal from this Co., that will pass north for the next ten or twelve years upon the public works of New York, af ter the North Branch Canal is completed, and the connexions made, will not fall far short of 500,000 tons annually. •• The population of N. Y. in 1840 was about 2.500.000 of which 1,500,000 would now become consumers of coal. The rate of consumption in the city of London is 1,188.- 35 tons per million of inhabitants, giving 1,- 782,471 tons fur a million and a half of people. This is a quantity the wants of New York are continually approximating to as wood , disart. pears; without regard to the increase of Opole. tion." Indeed the quantity for the mapfac. tering of Salt alone, is computed to be 100.. 000 tons a year, in' the western counties of N: Y. Nor does the consumption stop here.— The lake' trade. and the various Canals, must in a great measure look, to this channel for their supplies, indeed altogether from the N. B. and N. Y. Canals." But the interchange of trade between the two States, embraces other productions. • The great valley of the 'Susquehanna has depended almo%t exclusively for many years past for her supplies of salt, and plaster from the State of New York ; and as the prices of these articles become reduced by the facilities of a cheap and easy transportation, the demand most in crease. Vast quantities of plaster are now transported by teams and arks into Pennsylva nia from the plaster beds of N. Y. which would pass over the Chemung Canal was the =lnez. ion made at Elmira. The valley of the Susquehanna from the state line to Northumberland contains now more than 3,000.000, of acres and would re quire 150.000 tons, ectimately one 'ton to twenty acres. In addition to this, we have a population of 160,000 along the S.usquehanna, depending upon the Lake country for their supply of Salt, •• which cannot be estimated at less than 75,000 bhls. per annum, and this quantity would be increased as the cost of transportation is less ened. And next in importance to the citizens of Northern Pennsylvania' of the completion of the North Branch Canal, and its connexion with the Canals of New York, your com. mittee view the early completion of the N. Y. and Erie Railroad. Resolved, That this meeting. are unani mously of the opinion, that the prosperity of a large portion of the citizens of Pennsylvania and New York require the immediate comple tion of the North Branch Canal and its con nexion with the Canals of New York. That the vast amount of money expended on the Chenango and Chemung Canals. and neither paying the interest on the cost of construction, should convince the Legislature of New York of the ,necessity of authorizing an immediate connexion of those works with the North Branch Canal. Resolved, That the assurances now and heretofore given by citizens of the State of N. Y., that the Legislature of that State will when requested. pass a law incorporating a company or companies to connect by Canal or Canals the Canals of that State with the N. B. Canal at the state line are of a character to give eon& dente that such a law will be at once passed upon the subject being properly presented for the consideration of the Legislature. But while we thuir,rely opon the good faith of that state to carry out what we have been induced to believe her settled policy, we must be per mitted to say that the time for action on her pan has arrived, and that longer delay would justly lead us to distrust her intentions to pass the requisite law. Resolved. That we are io favor of the spee dy completion of the New York and Erie Rail goad, and of such Legislation in this. state as will beet promote this object, and for this purpose we are in favor of the passage of the bill as originally reported by the committee of internal improvements granting the right of way to said road through parts of this state. Resolved, That the President appoint a corresponding committe of five. Whereupon the lollowing were appointed said Committee; —David Cash, Wm. Elwell, Ulysses Met.- - cur, R. W. Tracy and J. C. Adams. . On motion of P. C. Ward, Resolved, That the 'proceedings 'of • this nieetiat be signed' by the officers; and published in the papers of this county, and copies sent to our Senators and Representatives in the Legislature. On motion. the meeting adjourned. , [SIGNED' DT Tim OFFICERS.) ANOTNEZ REVOLUTION IN MiNICIII.YNaIIaN declared Independent.—We announced a few days ago, on the authority of i letter from Cam peachy, to the Spanish paper at New Orleans, than revolution was contemplated at Yucatan,. in consequence of a repudiation, by the M exican Government, of the treaties entered into with Yucatan by Santa Anna. Later intelligence shows that that province has absolutely declared itself independent of the Mexican authority in consequence of the bad faith of that government, and is now a separate republic. The intel ligence is conveyed in a letter from Merida, the Capital, January let, and addressed to die New York Herald. Yucatan is no longer a part of the Mexican 1 federation. Yesterday the. , Assembled Depart mentall" pronounced against their existing form of government, and have recalled the deputies in the Mexican Congress. The Mexican eagle has been torn from their hanner, and replaced by the stars of 1843. They have gone back to the old state of things, as they existed before the treaty with Mexico. The cause of the rupture is this same treaty ; a resolution having been introduced and carried, in the Mexican chambers, fur a revision of said established treaty. Incident upon this has been the resignatioh of the Governor of the Department, Don Tihurcio Lopez ; and his place is filled by Don Miguel Barbadian°, formerly holding the same office. The feeling against Mexico, and the state of things in Mexico, has been, fora long time silent h> running in the under current, waiting but for sufficient cause to put itself forth in bodily shape. Mexico. as usual, has shown bad faith towards this section of the confederacy. Mexico. lay her treaty with Yucatan, was bound to admit at her ports of entry all productions of said depart ment duty free. Gradual infringement took place against the basis and letter of the treaty---r, the Customs refusing to comply therewith.— Reclamation was made by the government, of the Department to the general government, which met with no reply. In this state of things came casual intelligence by the steamship Gauda loupe. which put in at Laguna, of a rumor at the capital, that negotiations were on loot to hypo thecate the customs of Yucatan, to the &Wish, which, probably, was a ruse, to terrify the Yuca tecoes into compliance with their desires. Thic heightened the feeling; then came the resolution for the revision of a solemnly-made treaty, arra the fire burst forth. What will be the end of the business God only knows. Yucatan is one of the finest provinces in Mex ico. Its population is nearly 600,000. which is exceeded by only three other_depariment out of the twenty-two composing the whole counuy. IMPORTANT BILL.—We understand that Col. limes, Senator from Clearfield. has reported a bill to provide for the payment of the State debt, which contains some excellent provisions. It provides for tax upon inheritances, both. lineal and collateral, of at least fire per cent.—a tax which we regard as eminently just and right; and which if properly assessed and collected, would of itself pay off our whole State debt be fore the year lUOO. The bill also, as we understand, requires the State Treasurer, immediately after the passage of the law, to ascertain the entire value of the whole property as revised, equalised, and istab fished by the Board of Revenue Commissioners. and to ascertain' the amount of per eentage, which the entire State Debt, including the relief notes yet in circulation, will be upon the whole amount of the taxable property of the State, and so transmit to the Treasurers of the several coun ties a statement of the per tentage, whose duty it shall be to give public notice in their proper counties, and the owners of real estate can have the opportunity of paying in full the proportion of the State Debt that property attaches itself to their real estate ; and the County Treasurers are authorized to receive in payment for the same gold and silver, certificates of State debt, &c., and tf paid within three years, art abatement of 15 per cent, and receive an exoneration fur ever from the payment of any tax in part of the exist ing State debt. %Vs have tin doubt, then, under such a provi sion at least one third of the valuable real estate in the commonwealth would be redeemed and exonerated within the three years, and thus a considerable portion of the State debt paid. Harrisburg .1r gus. " FROM CANADA papers of the 27th. we find these extracts in the Albany Atlas. The Mont real Times of the 26th says that despatches were received on the 25th. appointing the Earl of Cath cart Governor General of the Canadas, and adds that it has heard that " the militia is to be im mediately embodied." The Transcript regards the rumor as to the militia. as " premature," but says as to the new Governor : The appointment of Earl Cathcart to the gov ernment of this province, has been, in all proba bility, suggested by the uncertain nature of the relations at present existing between Great Bri tain and the United States. Although we byno means apprehend a war, we can perfectly under stand that the appointment of a man possessing the military reputation of Lord Cathcart may be useful in more ways than one. Tile same paper makes the following an-, nouniement It is stated that thirteen thousand troops of the line, includingtwo companies of sappers and miners, have been ordered immediately to this. country. This will account for some of the re cent movements that have taken place in the Lower Provinces. VACCINATION.-Dr. Fahnestock, of Borden town. N. J., in an article on the Small-pox and Vaccination. comes to the following posi tions as the result of his own obserratton and experience; 1. That vaccination is the hest protection from small-por. It modifies the diecaae and preserves life, although it does not io all cases exempt entirely from an attack of variolons die ease. 2. That re-vaccination becomes necessary to teat the protection of the system. a. That after re•vaccination, an individual may have a reasonable certainty of exemption from an attack olvarioloid. - 4. That re-vaccination should be resorted to by all persons on whom it has not been re peated, whenever the small-pox assumes an epidemic form, as the changes constantly ta king place in the human system, reader an individual liable to infOtion at one period who may have been exempt at another; and par ticularly as that liability is greatly increased by the existence of the viriolous constitution of the atmosphere, which fans otherwise sporadic eases into epidemio prevalence. l'roeeedi s fthePenn'a. Legislature; paregondepee of the American &wind] • February 4;1840. In the Senate this morni ng, the Speaker presented, a report from the Canal Commis airmen, in snifter to a resolution inquiring in to. the prhpriety of constructing an outlet lock at Black's Eddy, or at Wells' Falls, and form ing a connection between the Delaware Divi sion of the Pennsylvania Canal, and the Dela ware and Raritan Canal. The Canal Board give it as their opinion, that Wells' Point is the most eligible situation for an outlet lock. A Hilo authorize the construction of an outlet lock on the Delaware Division of the Pennsylvania Canal, was reported by Mr. Hoover; a bill supplemental to the act to in crease the revenue, and to decrease the expens es of government; and a bill relating to inspec tions were also reported. A letter was received from the Auditor Gen eral, in Relation to Registers. who have not 'complied with s the law requiring them to give bail for the collection and payment of the collateral inheritance tax. Mr. Benner from the Committee on Banks, made an adverse report on the memorial of the Pittsburg Deposit Bank, to issue notes, which after consideration was re-committed. Mr. Gibbons read a bill to consolidate cer tain loans of the Commonwealth. The bill granting the right of way to the Baltimore and Otte° Railroad Company to Pittsburg, was taken up on second reading. and Mr. Crabb took the floor, and made a speech in opposition to this bill, which he con.: e:dered as calculated to do immense mischief the interests of the Commonwealth, as well as to the city of Philadelphia. Ix THE Housx,..-A statement was presented from the Auditor General, in relation to the compensation allowed John J. McCahen for collecting monies from corporations, &c., for the Commonwealth. Mr. Burrill, from the committe of ways and means, reported the annual appropriation bill, making specie appropriations for the support of the government. Mr. Burnside from the judiciary committee reported against the impeachment of Judge Ewing, of the Fouiteenth Judiciary District. and asked that the committee on education be discharged, which was postponed for the pres ent. Mr. Trego from the committee on education, reported as committee, the bill to incorporate the Philadelphia Sacred Music Society. Mr. Bighorn 'repotted a bill for an inlet lock on the North Branch Canal, below the Nanti coke Dam—also, a bill directing the mode of proceeding in Courts of Chancery. The bill to incorporate the Lewieburg Uni versity. has finally passed. The Tariff resolutions were take op in com mittee of the wHole. Mr. Edie advocated the Tariff act of 1842. and opposed the amend.: meats of .Messrs. Burril) and Piollet. Afters Mr. Edie had conclUded his remarks, he was. followed by Mr. Shuman in favor of the act oe. 1842. [Correspondenteof the Public Ledger.] lIARRISDURG, Feb. 4,1846 The, afternoon session of the House of Rep resentatives yesterday, was exclusively occu pied with the discussion of the Tariff- resolu X= IN THE SENATE, to-day, a large number of petitions were presented from the city and coun ty of Philadelphia, for a change in the license laws. The bill providing for the removal of the seat of justice of Fayette county, was taken up and passed. The Senate then went into Executive ses sion, and unanimously confirmed the nomina tions of Wm. N. Irvine, to be President Judge of the Courts of Common Pleas for the district composed of the counties of Adams and York; of Charles Lyman to be an Associate Judge of Potter county, and Fergus Cannon► to be an Associate Judge of Indiana county.' The bill supplementary to the act incorpor ating a company to make a lock navigation on the river Schuylkill was read a second time and passed. Mr. Crabb presented a petition from Phila delphia, for a change in the mode of collecting taxes, and for the abolishment o 1 the Board of Health. Mr. Bigler, from a select committee, report ed the bill to form a new county out of parts of Indiana, Clearfield and Cambria, to be called Pine. Mr:Sullivan from the Committee on the .Ju. diciary. reported a bill concerning tenants in common. In the House, this morning, Mr. Burrell of fered a resolution, which was adopted, calling ingmon the Canal Commissioners to commu nicate to the House the amount of Tolls receiv ed upon the State Works in 1844, exclusive of tolls upon boats, car and wheel-boats. . A motion was made to reconsider the vote which negatived the bill, the other day, to re duce the capital of the Northeast Railroad Company. This reduction of capital would enable the Company to get the stock incorpor ated. The motion was agreed to—Yeas 60, Nays 27, when the bill was postponed. An act to incorporate the ‘Vindsor Assist ance and Fire- Insurance Company, in Berko County. passed, and was sent to the Senate. The House.went into the Committee'of the Whole on the Resolutions in favor of the Ta riff of 1842, when Mr. Breckenridge, of Pitts burg, took time floor in favor of their adoption , and was followed by Mr. Boughner, who was speaking when the mail closed. Mr. Matthias introduced a bill to change the name of Margaret Gray to Margaret Loeser; also. a bill to form G ß new county, to bb called Dallas, out of pars Erie, Crawford and. War ren. MORE MURDERS IN THE CHEROKEE COUN TRy.—The Cherokee advocate of the Bth mat. says :—This dissipation attendant upon Christ mas season has been' productive of its usual consequences, and resulted in two or three murders. One of the murders was committed at Maysville, • a little place just across the Cherokee line, in the State of Arkansas, which abounds with those dens of degradation, crime and death—whiskey shops. On the 24th ult. Charles Duncan killed John Ward by cutting his throat with a knife—they were both drunk. John Ward killed a man several years ago, by the name of Jordan, near where Evansville now stands. Duncan has made his escape. They were mixed blood Cherokees, and agreed in their political sentiments. being in favor of the " treaty party." so called. On the, 25th ult., on Spring Creek. Saline district, Henry Smith a young man, was killed in a drunken broil. by Ook-equa-Isb-ti. who has surrendered him self to the Sheriff, and will undergo a trial this day. Mit Vu Mutual Lead, We learn from the Evening Expre nu o arrival in this city, via Pt:11121211mM and dulphia, of Linos W. Miller, Esq. of Ch u , qua county, on his way home, Mr. was taken prisoner in 1838, at Niagai a ,,Z . the Canadian outbreaks, and transportri! London, where he was tried, and sent /124 4 Van Dieman'i land. Through the intent,. titan of our government, all of these Ri o% have now b een - pardoned, but Mr. Millero t% that there are about twenty poor fellows irk have means of getting home. He inteadia give the world an account of his travelsao adventures. The Melborne Herald of the 13th of Sep ia tier, which Mr. M. brought with him, rh o the particulars of one of the most hdrribletbif. wrecks on record, by which 414 lives a n , lost. The “Cstaraxoi," Capt. C. W. H a l s (emigrant ship of 800 tons,) sailed from Lin. pool on the 20th of April, with 369 emim ak and a crew, including two doctors, font'. souls. The emigrants were principally fr o: Bedfordshire. Staffordshire. Yorkshire o 4 Nottinghamshire. About 120 of the po i , gem were married, with families, and to seventy-three children. Nothing °cou n t worthy of notice until the 4th of Angus!, cs which day the ship went ashore in a 'We n gale, on a reef situated on the west coastal Kites Island, at the entrance of Bass's Straits The Ship filled in the coarse of a few ban and through the night a scene of horror wi a exhibited without a parallel. Before mornint but thirty of the company were alise, the ni l having been swept into eternity by the waves, Out of the whole crew only nine were saved, Maim. Our readers have been already apprised o( the revolution in Mexico, by which the rein of that Government have fallen into the handl of Paredes. It was bloodless. Herrera harioi relinquished the office of President in farina Paredes without firing a gun or offering the slightest resistance. Paredes was acconipans ed by only 6000 troops, and there were it the city of Mexico, when he entered it. 800 rego. lam and 30,000 armed citizens. On the a. rival of Paredes and his forces the 800 'ego,- lars declared in favor of the revolutionary party and the citizens surrendered, President Hes rera retiring. Gen. Paredes then dissolved the Mexican Congress. and declared that the, should legislate no more until they should 1131 e done fealty to him.' At Vera Cruz inbake blood was shed, but all in the shape of legal sea tions. Several officers who had favored' administration of Herrera, proving somewhat refractory, were tried, condemned hod shot:— From various accounts it appears that the pno cipal reliance of Parades for the success of the revolution was on the hatred of the people to the United States. The following is an en- . tract from the manifesto of the garrison ofTam pico, announcing their adhesion to the revolu tionary movement 'lite officers here assembled are mailmend that the administration does not in!end to pros ecute the war against Texas, thus ,setting at defiance the will of the nation, and that. the greatest assurance, in the face of the who s e people: it is actually treating with the Go , crrment of the U. S. tar the sale of Texas. Id for aught we know the Californas also and thn therefore it behooves the army and the pecpe to depose an administration which has so h tle regard for the national.honor," Atct, Ste. GOLD DOLLAR.—Judge Douglass has made a movement in Congress to mingle the gold dollar with our currency. The Washington Union says: "This coin has been long known in the hard money countries of the world. We have seen it in Turkey about the size of a diene.yet much thinner; and have considered it the very best representation of value in existence. It is there put into roleaux of fifty pieces, ecru pying the space of a small cigar, and 'packed in little perfumed purses for the ladies and the higher orders of society. Such a coin could be remitted under a seal from one end of the country to the other, and would be a vast im provement upon the present currency. Wr trust the Committee of Ways and Means will see to this matter. When a vast amount of these violuable coins shall be thrown into cir culation, they will drive out the small bills dm serve to banish specie from the every day cur rency of the country. Such a dollar-would not be hoarded up in banks or private depot tortes ; but would for ages circulate without loss by abrasion, a coin for-the people.". THE ACCIDENT AT THE CARBONDALE —Though several weeks - have elapsed since the accident at the Carbondale Mines, in Wayne ceunty, by which fourteen or fifteen workmen were buried alive, and the workmet ha'e been busy ever since endeavouring to reach Their un• fortunate brothers, yet they have but just sac succeeded in making their way to therm The Democrat of that place, of the 30th ult., say!, the bodies of two persons were found the night before. One, named Patrick Walker, was die• covered a short distance from the main mad, lying on slate of about eighteen inches depth, his head supported by his right hand, and his shoulder by a pillar. His legs were brolea: probablytty the flying car boxes . ~ It is sullpae ed that he lived for some time after, and prob.• bly died of fatigue and hunger. The other Mark Brennan, had been thrown by the wind upon the top of a. loaded car, and was there caught by the falling roof, which crushed hha to death instantly. AMALGASIATION.—There was quite a stir re cently in New Orleans. in consequence of the marriage of a white man named Buddingtoo.a teller in the Canal flank, to the negro daugh ter of one of the wealthiest merchants in that city. Buddington, before he could be married was obliged to swear to his having negro bloo d in his veins, and to This he made an ineisierno his arm and put some of her blood in the eta• The ceremony was performed by a Catholic clergyman: and the bridegroom - has recelu d with his wife a fortune of some 50,000 or 60.- 000 dollars. The NATIVES serenaded him with such abominable music, that to get rid of their discord he paid them 900 dollars to be used for charitable purposes. TUE SCIIIITLKILL BANIL —Judge King. 1 1 Philadelphia. on Wednesday, gave his opia• ion in the case of the Kentucky Bank agains t the Schuylkill Bank, on the question whether it was the Schuylkill Bank itself, and not in late Cashier, J. Levis. that was the agisr of the Kentucky Bank for the transfer of stock. &c. The question, it is said. involved a lir hi* of upwards.of a million of dollars. Thy Judge; after reviewing all the evidence. 13 E 66 '. ed that Schuylkill Bank itself was the agen 4 and as such, responsible for the acts of MS cashier.