„ I t 1 -That the P videot of the tinted States to-author ized to borro , on-the credit . ol the United Slates, notto exceed 810;000,00, in such RUM or sums as the exigenci of die public- service may esquire, and issue thereifor the stock of the United States, bearing interest at su It rate *s may be fixld by the. Secreta ry of the T .ury, .subject: to the: appiOval of the -President, hti not to exceed six per cent...per an num; for the gm so borrowed, redeemable within one year from t h . date of issue: Provided , That soma shalt be' issue new less rate than its Orr ialite; Pro did, also, Th t the authority herein granted pall ex pire on 30th f June, A: IX 1859. I propos 'to limit-the amount to $10.0.109,- '. 000, buster' of $20,000,000:; 'aid " - that. tit: . dovernqie t shall, borrow the money instead of issuingTreasary notes. For ( think the Sec i rotary.. of t e „Treasury has fallen into an er.: ror in pro sing to throw out these Treasury notes,"and , have limited_the amounlto 810,, . 000,000, ti tfze the Secretary of the. Treim urfasyrtt he does ;not -know that $241,- 000,000 wi I be n e e d e d . He says : - ... I _ • ".ThoUgh‘tie amount. of 8.1.(1,000,o(x) wilt not, din r all prAidntit', b b needed atafi early day, if at all, yet it is deeinek ' t that the Department be authorized to issue aria - cep out that sum.” - - I am 'op ased to putting, out any • of this paper.; It i$ to keepitiip, that I ask that the Governnieut- shonM horroir money., Thir 'scheme s&ms t providei what - the gentle. , Men Irom.,Coun tient [Mr: Bishop] claimed the other - day to 6 the effect of the s 4 notes --she sup Ply -of a currency, the isinting of pa : Der to he. jused a s such. Pay your ..;;debts, like an honest Man in the bu-siness transac t Lions wink. You go to s your debtor, and Ask-Itiin to Pay $1( . :). 1: - He 'says. `No I can. Rot do it." - ' Have you, ntit the means to pay 1" .`;:f.s, I , have property enough 'to pay buil baveno mdfiey. I will give you my note,imiyablew yewr hence, with such interest as I to fix." Would you not consider -that a disbonest transaction 7 Your debtor having the ability to. borrow,•it ii,his btisi; ness-to gcl into the market and gbrrow to pay you. j It would be.dishonest thus to pass off piper,twhile he coed borrow add pay., Equally open, to objection, in my opinion,' is the systet4t proposed by !the vidniiqistration, while at tie UM time they inflict',a great iireng:tipoo the bushiesi transactions of the - 1 eettnt7 - 1> -adding to dts paper eirc6lation. , • .._. T • Debates in Congress., , The editor of' Harper's WeeklY of the 2d instant saiw: ". The English have one 'Oven ,- tage over us :.they report their parliament ,' ' 4 ary debates in full; we give but a inesiger summary ofours. Hence, very few 'people la this'country have any accurate notion • of ' 'the speethoiswhich Senator Douglas; - for, in stanee,lisis. delivered on the pending issue 1,1,c, . betWtien imself and.theAdministnftkon. It is a Seri() s lass: _ These speeChes deserve. to be repor ed .in full." The readers of th e - Globe,#w may also have been residers of -. Harpet's Weekly; will lose confidence in the • publish 7 lucubration of. an, editor who Speaks confidently and so erroneously. . Itlsmoi : ue that the English 'Mport their - parlia - tart/ debates - in full; it is not trite thiit We ive but a meager summary. ' The reports congressional proceedings are giv: .. en with ore verbal fullness than the debates if any O er legislative body in the I world. We hai di .spatelied to the • recluse - editor— for reclu he necessarily' must be—la copy - of-the. I l e Sily, Plobe Which contains .I.udge - Douglas . spesich, • in which he gave utterance • to bis di ntifrom, the, Executive policy in relation Emma., .That nuintier , of the Dai ly tio • was laccorepanied by six sUpple- •• mental es, and contained nearly sixty cot: earns' of ebates in congress, thirty-two eel r intins s Of Which were uttered in the Houses on the preceding day. -.The editor is equally r f e in error • his statement thaf•very, few pest • ple mitt' country have any. tioeurate"nOtion of the s 'dies which 'Senator Douglas • and others d liver. - The sic . ..4a s h, i.-- kali; e" ' transrs4l - io XI - Xi - after isflisrper's - . • Weelc., ii i ly was üblished in the Globe the. inorniog after its delivery ; on the day succeedingie Ina pith ished in the New York Tim e s, and subseq ntly in• many other newspapeil in every tion Of the Union besides, upwards • _ of one h flared thousand copies llakp been ilistribu din pamphlet form with the: e san ' .tion of udge Donglas himself, , whO sidmyes 'the shill which produced it; and - takes repeat ed obi:min:ins to say that it is the best- sped 4. 'men or porting he ever saa. ' What, .tben, does th editor mean by ° very few?" The :speech been .read •in every ' hamlet, an d . his giv intensity to thought amongst* -all classes f citizens. . Political circles - alone Ana: late mortis policy, but this is a - theme stamps the historical chliracter of ithe ' . Its importance is shown 'by the ability n ce aught both to the support and the o c . refutati nof Mr. DouglasOarid if Such speech ,es we re of reported, we should concur with • : the Haters in the lamentation ,' it is a seri= • ous 1 'T "'lt would,lndeed, be tnarveloiis if - the "jo mal of civilization ", should be found .. to be toe 'veritable "Tilletudlern ' Turkei • Cock a d Daily Strutter" And if (he) fledg-- flag 4 gbow ,acting upon the advice 'of the publish • r's - Lo\ineer, should "'assume that his sheet j . the onl y e source of news:to every reader.' =Daily Globe. • ' ogtie Bigler"; towable Dem LaCaiiii . Treachery Exposed. Huntingdon county,takes strong ground • against the Administration •on the • Kansas questioil. - It speaks l out as fellows : _ "•W are fora free vote upon . a free Con stitutio ."` We are against this force work a a band f political desperadoes in a 'matter; involv' the vital interests of '.community.. We ar for popular, sovereignty—really, not nomin ly. In Short, although we say it with regret, e are,tipon this question against the . Adm . ' tration and pi th Walker, Doug*, Forney and other leading Democrats. If the Ike ocmey of the l'lcbirih wish to'sink. in- to - , utt insignifieance-Lif they wish to be routed d overthrowrfin every State north of la n: and Dixon's .I''%e- i -they have only to s in the. Lecomptbn iniquity." - • The lobe also , publiabe - s the following ex . tract fr m a speeekdOvered ,by Gov. Big _ ice, at untingdon.last Summer, in answer to a- - of Judge Wilmot: ' . " W -claimed that the Democracy were snore e friends pf `free Kansas,' .because shed to tare her people perfectly fres ALL their domestic inititutions." the Globe comments upolt, it as.- fol. their w to silec Axad lows - We retput. that Hen. Wm. Bigler,: who not kiu months ago pledged - the Democracy 44 this -tate as being earnestly the frier:d of " free "ansati," should so soon, assume the leade • , ip, of the enemies:of " - tree .Kansas." His po -Mon and past influence may lead astray few who do notthink for themselves, and Ot Jeri who are " Democrats on. ly, bu the misses:, the honest"Oen of our party i the - State, will remain firm, and do. mand hat the people of Kansas be left per - let* rec-to select .4.14. titir domestic institu lions. 1 The Democratie party will neither be lea , orllriven Into the support of minori- - ty-rul: Kanms. Anderson, the , Lieutenant of rillibus2, ker,_Arlioifter, Walkers capture re in .A.Ni*agna with. po ! tio n ., o f • been arrested, seitV his qr.ea, in bi3rhood f Grestown: . ter AV main forces, the few digit shift j•oung lady of _ ter. N. IL, while skating; brbke the lee in twelve . feet =ot water. • Her skirt tnaae a wide ring on the ice,. 'ed her RI) ingii Ole vras rvspued. thrim • hoopedl and bu =I * l / 41 . os-.. - -ivase ,ta Kraut. .. •.''' --Tie following from a le ter of Gov. Wise of Virginia, writeri•in.reply to tin invi- • tation to participate iiAlie.eidebratiotkof the anniveraitry.tof thelaittle - ntNewf Orleans, at Tammany 'flail,' will he read , With interest by donglifa as slin*ing that they atiready to.'ko fartherin - sustaining the Bor der-Ruffian frauds itiKansita thansotne of the fieriest of Smithern fire-eaters can, , Observe hov.:•empliatieally he etimdemns the fraudulent i sub Mission to the, people of the4Leeompton •osnstitution : • . ' _.- The entiFe Constitution ought to havelieen • submitted to their law fill voices at the polls. .The power was.not delegated.to [the_Conven-1 lion to proclaim and establish A State-C,onstb. tutik n; . it, had to be approved . by Congress, ,, and much more bad it to be approved by the sovereign, principals -for whom the !titre agent, the - Couvention„ acted, It was not a mere statute law repealable at will, by a Leg islature to sit •yearly, .find to ' be chosen by the precinct's of:annual electioris ' it was the great futiclameutal .Organic law tinder which titks and tenures and franchise 4 were to be held.; sour Judges 'and Legislators-were to. sit ,Sand_Execiitive authority wasitoxield the arias of- Statel and - Office: wereito lie filled; and Justice was to be fidtranistered ; . : and law . was tit he-enacted; and confederate station was to be assuined ; and - sov - ereignty, itself was to - be assumed ; and. it wa.4 to be irre pealanle by legislation ; and to lie, in a word, the Supreme COnstitution of a State, under ' which she was to be received into the most .glorious Unloil'of States wfilbh ever pf;oteeted 'and fortified the liberties of mankind 4 . What ! —tell us Oita an instrument of Miis dignity .i . that Repo llean Government itself,•was not tip Pe submitted in-its form anclplanpropcised; to/the-ldy lawful sovereigns—fha organized people—not a-mere. mass of persons,.libt the bona AA-inhabitants and 'legal k.oters-of the • State to -be giwerned, for their election, to adopt Or reject it L. Di jure, I I say it ought to have hoc', submitted. Pure and undefiled. Republicanism, eonservati'Ve Democracy, re quired that it should be so submitted, There is no mobocracy in .that ideaj It is even, jest, steady, orgahized, free Republican . 'ae thin; the law of popular liberty, defined-by eitizenship.and the rule of election, and is the true example of essentral sovereignty in the People. Instead of so submitting this pro posed Constitution ,by.the ,Mere agent, the Convention, ;deferentially' t'o the prineipals, the organized. sovereign People ; there was a usurpation, a withholding from them' of a' fair, free, full and equal election .to ehOose or. ~not to choose their, own constitution of self gOvernment. — Ryas ez pate;, it wasall on one side;_ it was, in gambling .phrase, the 'foul.," Heads Fwin and tails you lose ;" -the Constitution .was obliged to We:adopted ; with the.Clausc or'llrithut the • elan4 ; •the vote Wag bound to, be "for the Constitutiqn;" it was All protuid no eon.; and We say that was no submissiOn to an election at all. .Election is choice of alternatiVes, to adopt or to reflect; to reject as well as - adbpt, to 'adopt as well ai reject.' • ' - , • Theie was, no choice in Oita . , case; ' and s no equality of Voters' IR the• ease.' Three men went ;to -theirs - ills ; A said, "(I vote for the Constitution . . with or - withoet•the elapse. ;7' but g and C l said; " We vote against it With or without the clause." A's vote was counted, B's and C's were . - not to be colinted,"and thtis one was•nuide not only. to offset two, but to be sole substitute in fact 'for three,agairist 'the . majority of two one out of, three: . NoW this was. but the unveiled trickery amtshame: iss .'fraud of• n sculled .schedule.- There was neitherlright 'nor justice in it. The De-- mOcracy of Virginia at least scorns a title of any sort founded on &fraud, OCeult , or palls .s-va...-44..-- Tss--4.-sy-iusF - 4.ii oetw the Convention of Locomptoe end thepeople ollians.as, the question-was one de jure,. and de jute the whole COstitutioal in all its parts ought to.tiave been submitted Ito all the legal "oterS, 'pro and con, and the two voters ought; •to have been. alloWed their• eqices against it as' well as the -one Voter ids voice for it,— And, so far as Slavery is concerned; it made the ease - woree, against that - species of property, to subrnit..the Slavery clause alone to .the electron of the people.,. [ Why .diserim s: inate in respect to that "peeult institution I" Is it because it was peculiar? . If wieontend (Cr anything especially, it is .it our proper ty shall not be distinguishe o' discriminated from other property in legisla(lim. It stands on the sinie footing of..right to protection 'and preservation, which is claimed, for any other description of think oWned 'and pos sessed by others as property. Why w`as this singled out for the chancel ofprohibition7 Was; it not enough' that the Badger amend . - inept of the Kansas-Nebraska bill had already enacted that all laws protecting and establish ing it prtar to 18J9-20 should be repealed.? Why - repeat a.discrimination Against Slavery in. this - schedule of subroissikml This was groan!' ..enciugh to make Prb-Slavery parti sans reject it. In fact, and of right, if the Constitution had riot,heen submitted at all, in whole or in part, to the ileagle, it would have been more impartial anti more just to the Slaveholder, than as it was submitted.— If there be an} mistaken and [misguided, and misguiding - parties in :the South,who would be guilty of arraymg against . f he equal right's of Slave property. the. irreshctible and indis putabfe rights of popular sovereignty, we would save ourprorierty fro the guardiar ship ge such tolly,.and rely a a- property and protection . must 'always. nit • safely rely,' rather, upon law atd order end the rule of justice and fair `dialiag—to " kisk nothing but what is right, and to subunit'}, nothing which' is - wrong." On the ground Of ''• policy, then, 1 AS we ll de jure the whole Co 'sfitutio n ought have been submitted to a I -the legal' yrs ter.s," . without fear, favor, frau , or force. gi,231,777.81. The 'above figures indicate the amount which the; State'lleht—a debt, that under ev. • ry Loeofoco Administration [siNe the . days f George Wolfhad been largely tamvased,- 114; been REpllCED,duringl the three years IGoe. Polloric's term.. The reduction does i it include any revenue or Rayment 'receiv ed from the Sale of theinain line of the pub ic works. If that be added,--and it is quite i. rtaitf that a sale would:not have been effect .. under a Locoloco Adatinisttion—the • mount which the State debt has been redue •d during tbelast three years to ould . be with. 'n• a fraction area millions ofdellaps. This . : been due in the face of heaay extraordi i ry expenses °tithe public Works, ailment ilos ' rig in the past year to $1,41 906.50. The eatest leak having been topped by the eof the main _line, and A Feet existing r a riddance of the other ivisions - of, the iuhlic works, it is hoped dm we may one Ti r •. y see.the end of the enor ons public debt, •r Bits-accompany* taxati -The's* of he remainder of the public ' orks is strong. y-recommended by the Got.; "or. - • Well will it .be for the • people if Gen. Packer, upon his retirement, can present its _a voralile a report °lbis sfe, dship its. but tomediate predecessor, and 'nvoke.the ttr lunation, which all but tbe laerable, bigot. • i tilinft timorcl lo our :pres • t Teti tug Chief ~ agistrate- 1 ` WKLI. DOVE G I . • MID WAITE i. 4•- z ' • "—Chis rTi . . . • gar One,hundned and thi aim; and ninYty-eight- new Methodist Church, were tbe ions 'protracted' meeting in pi . j E E 1 . ANOIITER Vtuurr.—Tl4 people of this city,•on Tueiday last, rebuktd the , ,adminis. tration with a verdict larger than *as ever tO bercire ,---1 Republican given in the city majority, The pOple.-of M , Banks' district.) in Massachusetts4cilowed " the same path on 'Thursday . • .4,th .r e No ember - election the majority in that dietr, againit Mr. Banks, for Goverror, was ; _ishikt en' Thursday last., the majority, or Mr. 'Gooch, the Esputlic - an candidate , o succeed ~Mr. Ranks, ws WOO. Thus lr ir,0. , ---Pillsbuig Gazette, - , . . i , 1 - • . , - 1 y-fiie 4fiver. nt heti to the esti It .of44.efig , ' '''''';'Vennsylvavaita ' Lestala tirft. - As yet but ° little has been 4.tie`tp the Pennsylvania Islattire, ot . ketierar inter est. We find in the repOrts of -te. proceed ing the following which- may i / terest our I readers:;.;`..' -‘ 1 ... - 1 In thellottse, Jinuary 13th, ?dr. Chase of Susquehanna, read inplace a bill to author ize executors. and administratorito idminis ter oaths and-affirmations in certiiin cases. January lAth, Mr: Chase, 'a 'petition of Samuel F. Carmalt and one bun. 'red and ten others, for a State Road tram the Mead ows, in:Susquehanna county, to- 'eßaysville in Bradford county. .: ~ January 15th, Mr. Smith, of, Perks, (judi ciary) reported, with a negative' fel:ion-men dittion, the bill to authorizeexpetnors. and - adrojnistrators to administer oat i in' certain case'. January 16114 Mr.lChase sutnnitted the, following-resolution : 1 1 1 - lesolved, That here after the Hall of -the House be olosed on the Sabbath"--whicli was 'read twicf, when, on the motion of Mr. Erwin, it s6i- postponed indefinitely, yeas 5.1, nays 30. I — &' -- In the course ofi a late investigatlon of the affairs of the Middlei - ex Mtinufacturing Company, a heavy New Engl . d concern, the statement was•authoritativel , made 'that the gents or the CemPany in New York, had expended $87,000 for thei purpose of effecting 'the passage of the lateltariff act.— Commenting-upon 'this fact, s'i,:im of the high tariff" papers in thii State, fiavh• discovered' that the tree policy fer Pennsylvania is " to cut loose from New England. . ] Some of these same' prints are the very ones which,. when the the tariff of 846-wasinacted, were the fiercest in denoun -big Mr. P.mot in en deavoring to effect whet now is_lo apparently the interest of Pennsylvania. During the memorable stri6g,gle which preceded the passage Of the to of 1846, i. the true friends of Pennsylvenia interests, knowing that the pliblic voice demanded a reduction of-the tarifil were ar4ious to sepa rate the great national interests of Pennsyl= vania from those minor invests ents of New England, which had already been sufficiently protected and fostered, and ito -"protect" which was only to increase the burdens of the people for the purpose of 6 ticking a few , capitalists. On the han. the great in terests of Pennsylvania- were languishing.— They needed some sort of prinection from j the occasional depressions of tr 'de in foreigi conntries,i which reducing the rice of iron largely,. threw large ,emounts 'i nto the mar kets of this country et- ruinou rprices--rain,- ous to the makers, gld fatal 'to the invest ments of this country', What, l'he iron inter est needed was stability in- thia tariff—with such regulations at should protect them from excesSiae_importatiops at loOprices. This it was. 4 lll any stage of, the diseussion,in the • power of Pennsylvania to have obtained; had her Representatives ibeen willing to consult her interests, and submit to such ti modifica tion of the existing tariff as vas plainly de mended by the public, interest. But those Representatives jOied the interests of the State with the looms and spindles of New -England, and refused to listenlo any change in the existing tariff:! _ , I . Mr.,Wilmot earnestly sou ht to impress upon his colleagues, the neke ity of separa ting the interests of Pennsyt anial from the manufactories of thelEast---be without avail —and at:every step Of the -p ress Made , by the. bill his-action was influenc by the de sire alone to procure -for Pe sylvania _the 1 protection, which her representatives so blind:. p ly and foolishly - cast aside.' :It/was this obsti. nacv and blindnesa ihroughlut the State, .., amongst the tariff, trienreh ,eisea-•••ii. --ieirn - rie-a - ooti - oriairrii r . i e in 'fact, he wane, 'of the • Pennsylvanta " elegatilin, was doing that 'which was ealcolated to advance the in terests of the Commenweahlit Those who were looking for the Profectiori., f the. coal and iron interests of Petinsylvania,bllowed i r them selves to he made the tools o the manufac turers; of New England', inst ad .of taking high grounds of nacional im tance • for de veloping and fcistering the reqources of our State Ohey chose to share the fortunes of the button and cotton manufacturers, end put r aside what was tee dered the , which was really all they needed or desk d. Under the tariff of 1846, the . New England : manufactures have flourished, while ,Pennsyl, ' yanis's productionslave suffered fromforeigre csimpetition. %---The I former have grown so strong that they are not afraid , to competition 'find it soon bedtime i an object to them to cf. , " feet a farther alteration in theOariff by which ' they may procure ;the rim- material free of duty.' When a further redik,ion in the tar iff is proposed, da l these manufacturers:for whom the interests Of Pennsylvania had been sacrificed, in turn see that we suffer no answer is_ gi en by the juju t•..,ry ? The beg, an nouncement of the fact that the Middlesex mills by their agents, expedded the large amount of $87,000 Itp pass tire late tariff bill, .by which Pennsylirania is sill more at the mercy of low prices in Engle d.• If the men who denounced Mr, Wilmot in(1846 had .not been so tardy in- m aking theiThwvery that Pennsylvania s i tiduld separatt her interests from New England, the forKs 'a - the State would not now be silent, nor her furnaces cold and useless. ' i We trust that the Lime wiliket come when the great interests of this St te a ill be rec ognized as of national impoitanee, and full justice done to them. But taleffectthis they must be left to stand upon thin.. own merits, and her Representatives mat unite with out regard to politics in as g what is ripe eSsary- for' their protection l ,l d revival.— Bradford Rrix)rtei i .! . t. PROPOSITION TO IiCSTRUCT S NATOR SIOLtR. —The West Chester Village Reinrd has the following : • L' We are not su b re that it, always expe dient to instruct 114 reprcsen ive upon pub fie questions; but Certainly if the,pmctice he ; 11 at all justi fi able, 4 would [ w be pon the Kansas question, or the question of . e- LeeoMptou Constitution. As Gov. Bigler in consequence' i , of hit absence at WaShingto , . does not ap pear to be aware .4' publieSe iment at home, we trust , that immediately o the as'sembling' of 'the Legislature, Col. Hod ' n will ce intro -1.1 du resolutions - nesting .instructing our Senators and M mbert of ngress to use their influence to pleat the heme of Presi dent Beichanan rue{ dragging pans into the Union with a Conttitution to s which the pea' ple are utterly opPosed. -- " Governor Big hp's resolwions of inistruc -1 tion against the- p urchase o any Territory from. Mexico with 'ut the ilp_ot Prthiso, might serve not oly for a. el, but to re move any scrupl ! his friend might hirve-as to the , right of ins i ucting. ' is not possiblethat Senator,Bigler would fle found voting against the expressed sentimitit of his State upon this subject: Let Mi. Bigler be . in structed !" - . • n . - ' UM Interesthist Divirder•Trial. ' The trial of "Thennaa,Washington Smith for the murder of maNiA T. Carter, Pres': dent ..e the Anthracite Bisnk atTamequawas commenced in`Philadelphia„lait week. Car ter was shot dead by the a ccused with pis tol on the afternoon oUthei4th of Noveniber last; while sitting - on a'seifa in the parlor of the St. Lawienee Hotel, lifter , which Smith at once - gave - himself up to the authoritiee.— His motive fur . the act was the alleged se duction by Carter of a young roman,Elizat both McCauley, who afterwards became the wife of Smith, and. who‘bore a child but roar months after their Marriage.' This circtim. Stance had such an effect upoti the 'min? of the prisoner that be beeinne unsettledd - ind derangedie -his conduct, and imagined UM: Neff perpetually ..hassled with' the presence of Carter, the destroyer of his happiness—the final result being the tragedy at the St. Law rence hotel. The evidence brought forward proved that Smith had been the victim of de ception, and that Carter was, the undoubtAd father efthe child. The fact of the killing was admitted by the defence, who:nought to justify the act by the•enormity of the injury inflicted bj , the deceased, and,also to lirciVe the insanity of the accused. at the tithe, of the. commission of the homicide. The case has excited a good deal of interest in Philadel-. phia and elsewhere, as the parties were Very extensively known. ' . . We condense from the remarks of Mr.' Thayer, one of the prisoner's counsel, the re ' *chat of facts undertaken to be proved by the defence in justification of the act.. After re lating the early history of .the, prisOner, and his connection with Mr. Deßow, as .canvass er for Deßow'r Review, he continues:—.. During his stay with Mr. Deßow, he came to sec his si'ter at Wilmington. She was employed a a teacher in the Methodist Fe male College, at that city. Here'Smith vie , ited her, anion one aecasiop he accidentally fell into the ( company of Elizabeth Jean Me: cat/ley, a young lady of exuberant spirits and universal attraction. She was there as a student it, tke Institute. Mr. Smith ,left the institution rind went about his business, and 'perhaps wold have feigotten- Miss McCau ley if she 1 d not been recalled to his mem ory. The ate of this visit to the Institute was May, I '56. He went away on the same day that'he me, and did not rear!) to Wil t mington, and 'did not see -that young 14 again until October of the same year. Slut had, in the meantime, written to Mr. Smith, with which he was so pleased that he answer. ed her lettek - A correspondena ensued and the two be ' me enraged after only having seen each o her once. • - There li ed in the month of March , 1856, in Wilkes rre, in the valley of W,yoming, a niodest, i dustriou, and Uprigh t man—a clergyman ,f th e Methodist Chtleh—whose name was ohn McCauley. This man had some husin ss relations with Richard T;Car ter. Thor ' was a furnace. in Wilkesbarre which beloged to Mr. Colter , and was under the superin endence of Mr. McCauley. Mr. i Carter was frequently in .Wilkesbatre, and, of course, saw Mr. McCauley, his family,and his friendk • He saw there in that family a young lady whom 7, have-named—l mean Elizabeth 'Jean McCauley. , . Mr. Carter seemed to ' take a t . atey to this young girl. e was •a man of wealth; re ! siding in T iqua, the President of the eAn thracite Ba . He proposed to this innocent 1 country girl and tolier father, to take _ her' under.his protection, to put her in an institu tion ohliarning where she would acquire a liberal education, and to return her to-her family a finished lady. This proposition was not consented to 134;tAust., father, but his sister; 5.,-,:thri g - ..eryiev witemnos,. prevailed 'upon- Wu: to allow her to go} , On a certain-dal In mo i reiontfr 4 31 5 1174,6, 1856, Carter came to Wilkesbarre in his pri vate carriage, and the young girl from her father's house, a pure and uncorrupted Maid, with the promise that he would restore, her to that home a finished lady. He brought her down to Wilmington, placed her at the female college, at which _place he put himself off as her guardian , . her father, and as her protect Or. He left, her there. While she was there she frequently came to this City to see, It.tr. Carter., He was regarded by the in- 1 stitution, by the teaehers,'by every body who were-cognizant of the transaction-, as a man so much farther advanced in years than this young girl, that notipdy at that time suspect ed that-anything , itnproper could result, No. body suspected evil t Gentlemen, .1 regt.ct to say, but duty to my client, and the terrible position in which he is placed, obliges, me to tell the truth— Richard T. Carter forever ruined that, help less country girl. 'I wish to say no more about this than is necessary. Such is the fact, and it will be proven to you.- It is an important point of the case, and it cannothe kept out. She was ruined. That secret was locked in -h breast, and in that of her de stroyer. That happened, gentlemen, in the Summer of 1856, which followed the month of May, 1856, in which mouth my unfortun ate client-met this young ladyjn the public parlor of that Institution in Wilmington.' In ' the interim, between the months of May and October, her ruin was accomplished. Their engagetnent had•taken place by letters. .Af terseeing her in_the month of October heart yearned for the rest of the domestic. circle. Ile supposed no evil bad taken place, and the day for theic marriage was fixed.— \ These facts were cornintsmcated to Mr. Car ter. He immediately came down to the city of Philadelphia and spent Thanksgiving Day, which, I believe, was on the 20th of Novem ber, 1856. He was here introduced to Mr. Smith. That day a - Featival was held at the Madison House, and Mr. Carter sat down to the table, btside Mr. Smith. Carter ' with the fearful secret lodced in his guilty - bosom, induced induced them to put off 'the marriage until . Christmas. He consented to the mariage. -W The ceremonies were celebrated on theOth of December, by the Rev. Dr. Wadsworth. After the marriage, Mr. Smith and his 'wife went first to. pay a visit to his - uncle in Delaware. After; remaining there a few days, be returned to the, ity of Philadelphia, and took lodgings at the 'Ashland prOitse v iii Arch street, and -subsequently went with,his wife to live at a' Mr. Leonard's, in Market street, below Twelfth, at the Farg@er's Inn. Gentleinen, the time - which elapsed 'be tween the 16th of December- and the follow ing month of - Apfil was spent in unalloyed happiness. He was supremely happy in the society of his wife. - His devotions to her were extraordinary. " It was no common feel ing. He almost worshipped the very earth .upon which she trod. He heaped upon her every gratificatiotti.which his limited means could- afford—he was happy nowhere except in her sorcietk-- 7 he iris - a devoted, upright and faithful husband.-- Gentleinen, on the morning of Friday, the 10th of April; 11357, his wife was token ill, with those syn3ptonit , which precede 'child birth. Mr. Smith Went as fast as he could after a doctor, and, told Jam to come lame. diately as his wife was' about to hare s mia• carriage. Ile then went sifter a nurse ind returned to the house.-i At this time Mr. Leonard was . spoken to ;by Mr.'Stnith in re. 'gard to the funeral of this child which was to bp 'born. Mr: and Mrs. Leonard kisei more than my pnhoppy client. Mrs. Leon, ard, supposing he could not --- b l inrrant Of the.real state of things ; began to' roily him about it. Whin she did so she aaw a ker b! 'change come ern! that; map's Coon,* !lance.' "She'tlebpped; !cretin saw he wag' a: ceived,,and knew nothing of the 'terrible s ry that was in store for him. He..hdd izr them,,!,..Yoti know it !is impossible - the.. a child SR youngsa this an possibly', !lye. :1 have Only been' irnrd since Ott 160 at 1: , •-' cember; andhereii the 10th of.. April, whi , is lesithan knit' inionihs, : - ' Too' know w 'll enough that any child bbrn in that, time ~• not live." The child wee born, and all e, ' and is living, and, as the attending physici:n will tell you , was a ; fully d ev eloped n e months' child. 7 That ( fact, gentleni wi en. told to my Unfortunate . client , struck,„ m down-like a thunderbolt from heaven. Gentlemen, I have (neglected to state to yOu a few factrwhich - 1 will now take o, a sion' to relate. First; - that Richard Ca ter visitold the wife of Smith after his marri :E., during his visits to New York. Second,t at. SMith subsequently discovered, during is time, that his : wife had been clandestin •ly writing to Carter. Third, that Carter, a er Smith had left his wife; visited her, and . b lid; acknowledged the child to be his ow i seemed to be proud of the paternity, and 'li ly regretted that it tad not been a' boy -- Fourth, that subsequently Carter had i rs. Smith removed to Bristol, to live in the f in ily or an old lady pained Sanderson. . ' - Mr; McCauley, after hearing of the rui of his daughter and-her husband, proceed , . to Bristol and endeavored to induce Jima da gh ter to go ho'me, in which he , did not su i• ed, on account of the Influence exercised .ver her by Mr. Carter. lir. Carter honer re,- moved to West Cheater, where she is li ing at the present time. Much ridence hat been produced for the defense, tending to dhow that the birth oi the child produced a remarkable change in S ' ith; that his brain seemed unsettled. his lang ago incoherent, and his Manner flighty. Ace. rd me to the testimony of a clergymen, .1' ev: Wm. CoOper, who ivas intimately acqu 'nt etl with Smith's family, insanity is her . 'Ea ry in the: family. Other witnesses sub tan tiate this testimony The demeanor of S nith during the trial is quiet. The News , tes that he sits ‘ the'gremer part of the time , with his head inclining against the . railing o the dock, salliat his face. is 'entirely eon • i led._ Ile does not appear' to take any inte -t in *hat is going on. , . Horrible-Double Murder • A most horriblerand unnatural . crime was • committed near Poolville, Madison • co , nty, N:. Y., on Sunday evening, the 10th in-t.— .William Comstock, an. unmarried • in, , 37 years of age, who lived with his aged. f. ther and mother, while laboring under the e ects of mania a petit, killed them loth • an, ' cut out their hearts, which; lii roasted and par tially devoured_! Thecrimemsks.disw ered about 1.0 O'clock Sunday evening, by a gen tleman whose suspicions wore arou s ed by the condhet•Vif the parricisle and his remar to his brother 'that there were "lots of fresh meat in the house." . Looking-in throu h the window,:this gentleman slaw the liodi s :of Mr. andlirs..Comsitock lying on the' oor, horribly mutilated end b100dy,..-tbe so 'sit ting qUietly. hetween theni, and the knife with which the heart" were cut out, a b oody axe, and a broken skillet' stilt rimaini g in. the,room. On tbeatove Were the two eter nal hearts, partially toasted, and porti ns -of each gnawed offs Aix alarm was luau - . late ly given, and the criminal arrested. 46 -is represented ac a mati of mild And pea rahle 'disposition 'when. Sober • but he had been drinking freely for several days. -A.' r his arrest he described, the manner in wh eh he deprived his poor Old tether and mot er ol life, as coolly as if sneaking of butel Unr..- -.-Tu...-‘llo‘l.,l4ifits his account of '. For about ovewstysy-4010 1 seemed to tell me that he must have al bar of hearts. This was repeated t many tinies during the day. He seen live in Sherkurtie, and a wire came ovi hill connecting with, the side of the i which seemed to say, "I must have a: hearts." ; Some one who lived in Sher i -seemed t'o telegraph for them. I would my ear - to the side of the.room,and I Would be told hy,this voice to get hearts. Three -or four dale ago, I fii tempted to kill my brother to get his I Yesterday I went again, and placed an d the room, intending if I could find my er and his wife sitting dawn - I coul them both at once. It seemed as th, must have their hearts, but I did n , them so situated. ' About dark I wen to my father's. libund my mother s• Walked round to the stove, took a spid struck her over the head with it, and it. She reeled and fell to the floor. ' father then sprang toward me, and we scuffle. .The old man for a time 'was e "for me,. but after striking him three e times over the heed with the remain broken spider, I it6t hold of the ax and. him.- He raid. he got the old man's litst before 'he had done -.kicking. ' . 1 1' woman tie said he got along with pret • lyibut the,old man's hide was tough d-1-1. After knocking father down, I ax and cut out their hearts,, and put t the stove and buCried them. This ram seemed to tell me' that their hearts. btfrned After the deed I washed my ban after.remaining in the house a shor left and went down to Alpheus Gust When 1 arrived I found ,my brother. visiting. I told them that I had som meat up to father's: After remainin a short time, .1 went down to the b Ifarmort ; Gustin, and told•tbem to g quart ofeider andf bottle, and after oh it, left for my father's house without m ingonything concerning the dead ; 'up°. ingl lardown upon the lounge near m and mother and slept for some time.. I the' night after the deed, I attempted arazor - to end rny own life, and th the tragedy ;. afterward I. went ) , to m .er's houee to kill My brother and his . I kicked the panels of the door in, , b had gone- away. I 1 went and seek. him. Went noMe_ and slept/ un morning. On awaking, I left thick) met several persons coming toward th Ido not recollect who-I bad inforni , , deed previous 'to ;this. As they app me some said, " There. is Bill" —t; abOut eight rods West 'of my fatherls, asked me what- I had been doing.: them it was none of , their business. the eiampany . heti me, while a couple went to the house and returned, and If they took Me to I, Potter's, where I rested by the constable." • Suit Ertouarr i z.—When the Siam hassadors were presented recently to Victoria they • throw themelves hands and knees, and went the _whole of the roots on JSII fours, and the I ambassador laid his chin on the ate throne and read his addreswin that nod alter the forinalities they , all bliC in the simeawkWard . -The ro ity was sorely tried : by the n'dieuleuo ele.' , When the distinguished„,th were invited to a luncli in one era apartnentalheyal) pulled. one' the i and' ed , the tutil with a cloud of Or the great hiiriorhf ttte court anol_the of the Queen, Win; abuininates the wf The'notrdnatien • of ssine , yt ludge of the United St Verno Cllirrt, *been eonfirmcdi 1 I - A - OO3MM)/11W.OrNEWS .'... John Randolph used to say that J. Quincy Adams was serving out the? rem: i lug four l ,y ears , of his father s term. fri Otservit that ilue/uittaii -hi serving opt pther'fiiull years of Pierete'i term in the Way.—=.All.anyffuSwing JotirnaL, ..:.'Plain Dealer Gray is to be rem • from the l elevelind Postoffice, unless ho r signs;, for refusing' to dendunce Dough: So, says a. recent despatch from Washingto .Postmasters are obliged to think like I t - Aduiinistration, or lose their heads. .... Governor Packer, of Pennsylv.n has appointedthe • following State offal 'Secretary 'at State—Wth. theater, BerkeNCoubty. Deputy Secretary-411 L. Dieftekbach, of Lock- Haven. Alta GeneralL—Han. John C. Knox, now of the Supreme Court of Peposylvavla. .. Mr. Blair, of Missouri .has made a speech in'Congress, showing the injuriou j eft' fects of Slavery upon men without prop rty, and recommending the colonization on - tral America Nyitl? freellacks.. The beh leri made a senstitionin the House, and .stirred up the chivalry not ,a little. - • ' 1 ,: ~ The Pittston Gaietle - says that t package of counterfeit S 5 notes on the _ hils delphia Bank, was picked up in. the stre is e that Borough brone of tke citizens;w ee before last. The Gazette says that the Bc I v oughis infested , with rowdies, uto insult ci zees in going to and from Charon" .... A preacher writes al s emn letter to some friends, to show lhait clergy are sufferers by the coTmercial A llev• sion. 'The reiverendlentlenlan says: 'more than two months .I rave not had,' except w hat 1 received for .marrying o marriage fees are n verylargo in this The Republican StatConventiion Connecticut, on the 14th insE, notninat d the following State tichgt t—For Governor, Wm. A. Buckingham. of Norwich ; for Lieut. Gov ernor, Julius Catlin, of Hartford ; for core tary of State, JOhn Boyd ; for Treesur r, Lu cius .1. Hendee; fur Controller, \V . H. Buell. • 3 e .... It is stated by , Harrisburg lette writ ers' that the Democratic members ( f tl• Legislature, a large number of whom h to the Liquor League, -intend to seep I present Liquor., Law, and substitut i which will give a freer flow to the." a er and-also intend to repeal the Sunday lqi law. They hope by this means-to' •• d their party strength. In this we thin t ,'lll are - mistaken. A free flow of " stry hni whiskey " would cause them to die o' li sheep with the rot. They are bent o d {ruction, hovfeve and may as well be alio ed to have their own way. Nothin.- e could use thew% faster. .. The . Lon ville Coignes says I at I artesian well of the Messrs. Dupont (f tl city hai now reached the depth of 1910 p It adds : This is the deepest well now - niv th us in the world. ' The next in depth is I well at Grenelle, nor'Paris, which i. 131 feet.' 'Louisville has therefore the leepi well in the world, and the_tailest ste pie the United States-=the cross on the. S Lo Cativdrat bein'g 286 feet high while t esu mit of Trinity, New York, is only 2 fe .... The Chicago' Times, Deuglai hot organ, says of the outbreak of civil war Kanslts: .. It is to be hoped_ that those who ha e h tofore advocated the admission of Ka sas der the Lecompton GonstitutioN wII pause and estimate the fearful cost wit w into operation will be necessarily at. en, 3EB +Judy num- o me ed to •r the Prosp r etas for 185 S. $41084v gbeolg E am ot of 1 urne .Established August, 4.1821. THE PAPER "THAT NEVER . SITS • EN] '.ll. Family Weekly i —DoToted to Litaratote and the 'ors. TN things times of . Bank suspensions and ercar ..,suspensions, the proprietors of the atur Evening Post call the attention of the readi g pu to their old and firmly-established weekly ,ape r, the paper that never rruspenda. :For over ' THIRTY-SIX TEARS The Post has been published ; and in all th , t pet —through "good times", and. through "Is'. , the through bask inflations A bank contraction. thro prosperous seasons and through panics, the Post ,been regularly issued every meek, and fo arded its thbusands of subscribers. Its proprieto : th fore point to the past as an unfailing.; des the future And they feel that _in 'king the reading public a continuance of the , tics az heretofore so liberally bestowed upon the l ost, are asking no more than what it will be r bo tin forest and the presser of that public to t. Among the contributors to the Post, wenay tion the following gifted writers:— WILLIAM IrOWEIT, ALICE CART, T. S Am GuAcs GusstriVcion ANNA BLACRWELL, A Gar DUGAWN.E, ides ll.A. l .Brfrrsisos, EMMA ALICE BRov The Author of "An Extra-judieitil Siam t." Author of "Zillah, the Child-Medium," & . arc. We design commencing in the first pape , of unry, an ORIGINAL , i place then Bonne M ear I • axl :m] ugh I t find over wing, • and IMI My had a ough all R: of a killed heart e old iy easi -1 as the lot the em in !- voice NOTELET, BY T. S. ARTHII Mr. Arthur'S produetions , are. so Widel • i that we need hardly say that the tone of th Notelet will be entirely consistent with the , : ,ust be • instructive character which we have always strive impress upon the Post. Readers who wish to pci the FLASH STORIES which abound in the In d—pi cious and destructive in their tendency at. effec can find them, we regret to say, at eve cor cor But, the Post will still maintain its high eit nimei a paper wMeh the most scrupulous pareht ay a freely' to enter • . TUE FAMILY CIRCL .; And which will purify and instruct, instead of des alining and corrupting the mind. Especial y will conductors avoid, in the publication of th del news, all thoselong and'ilisgustiog reports--unfc nately now so common—of ' VILE CEnELL CASES • . Believing; as we do, that the practice of üblisl the details of such loathsome cases, and of the the c inal trials _ resulting therefrom, is a, fruitfuk caul the recent alarming increase of vice and eme ii community. Like begets likeand what the if feeds upon, thet it will grow ,to resemble s, and 1 tirae, n's.— there • fresh there , use of QM =I • ntion arriv- father wring to find close broth ife.— t they 1 :al for I near se and house. of the ed is was • They 1 told Part of f them • rward was ar .. - Choir* Selections , of all kinds, from 'the best foreign and l 'dean sources, shall continue to - be, as heretofore ,o lead feature of the Poet. -The Stories, Essays, - Sketches, Agricultural and Scienti fi c Facts,• &e. &e., obtained in this way for the readers of the Prs are among most instructive as well as interce g Portion of ri its c on t e nts./ , • • ' ' = .• ••• ... TIIE' VERY CREA - , -•. of the ramoineat r.rraiarean of the 'Bat an Luis is thus glien to our readers.. The Post, weeklyphas i d , SOKETHEIG FOR AL L - the members of the finally. NOVELETS, ESSA, STORIES, ENGRAVINGS, AGRICHLT AL AR TICLES, THE NEWS, SKETCHES, POE RY, AN .ECDOTES, RIDDLES, THE WHOLES E AND RETAIL MARKETS, TUNIC NOTE LIS &c.4c. • Filially, we may mention three good reasons why tire reading public should give the preference to the Post,:— . . A is superior to any &kir . paper.of the satn2 priCe. ir , lt is cheaper than'any' Other paper of e tat merit I It win be entails to corms when paid f ' TERMS (Crib In advance)—Single Copy $2 ay( 4 COPIES { • , " '• ' $5 a : 0 " and Ito the getter up ofthe,Club )10 ' 18' !,! 41 it , . • it -" 14 20,,, 1 - 11 41 -• a.' '.'K ,'• It . 20 • • 1 The Postage on -the POST -to any part f 'The' oid States, Told quarterly br 'catkin ad ce, a aline Where ikis reeeivek is may ~.2ft eat a yew • Addrele, always post = paid; • • • - .• ' ECON, & PEThi E N, ' ' No. 182 Booth D Th A ir4Street. P dial iurSAMPLS tivitggilSaank gethla auy when requested. -, , . i ts' TO EDITOIIB.-4411w a ii isholive the ode Insertion, or condense the•mateliat P lolls frir theft editorial, columns, shall be'entie to A change, by sending us a marked • copy o the , t cSuitsining the advertiument or notice, idecl6l EEO Queep n their 1 kength rincipal of the Sidon, ed out DI grey ? specie. eigne s re le state 'r pipes oke, to disigust I ifford, tett -Su- Sr4orttns, Satukday, JIM. l 6 1858. The,,Beifitahvi n learns that Gee. Casein had' r,eturnid4o - Lecotiipton tiniler an escort d of. Unitad , States ' tat he wield e leaVe: Letixeinvorih on Wednesday lasi s tor Washing* with the Vecompton entistjtution., Th e vata'upon it is expected here to night. • Ths,Leatteniiorth Times of the 9th stye that reports indicate the success of the Free- Ti State ticket; , while the: votes against she Celts" • stitution probably exceed 15 ; 000„. • The Leavenworto .- corTestiondent,. of The Democrat says that so far aa heard from. the Free-State party has secured .31 out, of 44 Representatives, and 14 out of 19 Senators- - The vote against the Constitution' is 'about equal to that polled at the .oetober election.- Gentlemen who left the Territory 'on the. 11th hist. report the.Democretic State ticket • elected. : • • of ,nry :r1 Trial.l4st..-eaw • BECOID WIFX. Smith vs. Wilbur, et. al. Taylor vs.-Coiner.: Shifter vs. Hollister. Bunnell vs. Curtis. Fraser vs: Mitchell. • ' 1 Gavit'vs..Dennis. - Grow & Bros. vs, Case, a Tyler vs. Fowler. - . A- Bennett vs. Hollister. of Bennett vs. Barnes. - ek, 'Westfall-vs. FritChley. • .COntnonwealth vs Hickey. or- O t Lintsklin vs: Thompson. Kiimber. Bennett vs: Carmali..- Morse. vs. •Miliarel. Skinner vs.l'Ope. the Brackney vs. Gage wed- Newcomb N. r..k B. iOnt ---------- IS ~ Jury List... Jai l -nary CoSri, ISM r nd TRAVERSBVIIRORS. Auburn.—Edward S. Cogswell, Daniel O. Cooley,o re- ESA& H. Layman.* s . , Ararat.-William Carpenter.* • , o f - `,. Bridgewater.—Gideon Allen, D. Austin,* Mer ritt Mott,* Robert Moore,* Benajah Mc\ I Kenzie *Un hen Nyell.,* M. M. Mott* . _ Brooklyn.—George Chapman,: George . W \ Ely, B, T. Ashley,* Cyrus Oakley,*. Amos Tewksbury,* it:. M. Yeomans:* '' . • Cliford.—Jas. C. Decker, Aaron Hivirver, Joel - Sterner; Rufus .Buiritt.* - • . \ Choconnt.--Jasper Stanley. - ' • . , Dimock.—George Stevend, Jonathan Kellogg; Minor Tingley.* ' ,„ . Dur.dal f.—Thumas Arnold.* "‘" 'Forest Lake.—Milon.Birchard, John Bromfn, That. mg' Meehan. • • ' . the Franklin.4-Daniel Davis. • one .Greit Bend.—G. W. Brown, PeteiDecker, Milton nt, ” Gillman, P. W. Meesiek, William Smitk. " . . uor . Gibsoii.-.4abob Denny. - . Harmony.-Benjamin Comfort, Jacob Taylor, to . 1 / a rk/rd.—L. T.„l"nrrer, Milboum aley, Maths* hey Brainard.* r. line Herrick.—Henry Lyon, Elisba Churchill;* Join like Miller.* . . 7 . Jackson.—ThoS. Butterfield, Amasa Page,* Join. les - - Mann.* • )vil. Jessuri.—Lucius Smith. , :he ~ Liberty.—Albert Truesdell, Joseph Nitebster, Ismer . Comstock,* A. A. Fish.* • Lenox.--Chapman Harding. . ~. . the Lathrop.--,Elisba Lord.*". . , that • Montrosc.--"Clia.les Dunn, H. J. Webb, W. .il.. ' ee t,„ Deans,* J. P. W. Riley.* . • , - wri * Midilletwien.—Evan James.• .„.- - • New Milford.—William Harding, William T. Mu the, ley, Jeremiah *undo.* . ;00 Oakland.—Charles Beebe. . • ' rest .. Rush.-4:oren Huen, Manson Lung, Isaac Han-. ' i n cock, A..L. Pickett, - Richard Shoemaker, Nathaniel ; Hillis,* William H. Sherwood.* - - Khs . Snsquehantut Depot.—L. F. Clark, K, 0. Wihom„. tin- Robert Wallace; Henry Hall,' A. J. Seymour.* eet, Silver Lake.—Mortimer Gage, Michiel Rill, Hri--. "ward Hoag, Benjamin S. Gage, • • -•"" . Ime Springville.—Daniel Shelden, H..P.Loomta,*Bloll. in uel Quick.* . . . Thomson.—John Vanhorh, Terry . W. Whitney.* 1 ', g I M 1E1: . .ltt : . W 0 . 0;1 0 1 ci siy , . '• : , N E W .- t p R . K , _TAVE recently published. new and improved , _l.. Editions, with the. Author's. last, eorreetiona t of ilicearammaticul !orbs of Gooid Brown, namely :==.. I ' . THE GRAMMAR OF ENGLISH GRAMMARS. With an introduction, Historical, and Oritisis whole Methodically Arranged, and amply Elmira. • fed, etc., de., and a keg to the oral Erereisea witAr Appendixes, Ike. Second .Irdition. Revised and; Improved.: With a fine portrait of .. elie..diethor,.; engraft(' on Steel. 1,070 pager,- larye Wins, handsomely bonnet. „,Priee 44,50. - • The: Second and Improved Edition of the *Ork, as now offered to the .public, is a Considerable 011- largemenf on the first Edition; and contains a number 'nod of new' disCussions of importints points in Engliels. lee,” Grammar hitherto but little examined, nevertheless- of nigh great importance to the legibility of the langcrige..... has It will be seen that the work now covers the whets I to field of English Grammar, and brings the subjeet, tern- up to the latest period of the histgrfof the 'swans . for —the peculiar views of almost every extant wrfter of on • English Grammar being, In some part of thiS , cage work; either directly commented on,, or incidentally; , %el' noticed. e in- BBOW7it GBAINdit DIPROVED.' len- .T__H . . 12 INSTITUTES OF ItNGIJS.II GRAIIIIAB::, m ethodically arranged, dc. &c. Loefiyned for 'd# .„ use of Schools, Academies, and Private Leaser. , 3 -- , - ; 'By Goold Brown. -I new Stereotype. 'nation; rim, carefully rtvised by the author. 235 pages, 1 Isla:: Th e Trice 60 cents. &c. The excellence of Brown's Institutes af‘Grammar . Jan. is admitted on all hands; and notwithstanding the multitude of school grammars which have fronifind to last come in competition with the Institutes; it" • ........ his steadily advanced in . public favor , and Is lardy' • """, in use throughout the country. The Anctrine's of the. ~'s ena t work are those whish , are deducible from al* ' `.-.°°," sense view of the subject of language, and a - e " I° . consideration of the analogies of speech. A hi iii 7 wus ? point of perspicuous arrangemenl, accuracy dee-- be ,f. n. " - Talon, fullness of illuitration,anprehen• veness e ' - ' -- of plan,- the work is considered by competen" : judges "?.en' of be unrivaled. In the new edition of the I stitutek, I, r *, aS teachers whb have-heen accuitonied tense' the mirk. " .°w will See many,important amplifications ind impkt.irs . ' ' ments, giving to the whole more of cOmpleteness as. to the subjecLand a baler adaptation - of the john Kw mom- the general purposes of instruction. - -", "" • " 1 .its 111. r rtnyßrown's Small Grammar Improved. THE FIRST LINES OF ENGLISH GRAMMAR. * Being • a Brief Abstract of the Author's. Zdtiyyr- Work, the `4 Institutes of English Grannitar.' By 'Gadd Brown. A: new Stereotype Bintion: Carefully. -Revised by the Author. ' .122 pritsi 4 . . 1 21110. • Half-bound.. Price 25 cents. * e . the ;January 20, 1858.—tf , .mind I. ing rim- Just Published:. • THE TRIBUNE ILIN/NAUFOR 18/18. tic ri! eontains, in addition to the usual Calendaingew g .1 and Astrononli4d Hatter: • • ' THE GOVERNMENT OF THE ITNITEDSTATES,, Raeoutire and Judicial. • • A CLASSIFIED LIST OF THE MEMBERS OF THE'VNITEIf STATES SENATE. • LIST OF :THE HOUSE O F R E PRESEtITA.• TIV43, Politically classified. • • ' .• • AN ABSTRACT OF ALL'- THE IMFORTANT Maws passed . at ,the Second gesaion of the XXKIFth Congress. • - • A BRIEF SKETCH otthi OUTBREAK AGAINST ENGLISH RULE IN INDIA. ' ' A BILL FOR .THE RELIEF or, KANSAS (re pealing the Bogus Uwe, ke..) which passed. the Elam and was defdated in the Senate, with die vote thereon. • " A SKETCH OF THE PROCEEDINGS-IN RANI, SAS during the paet•year. - A CONCISE ABSTRACT Or THE BRED SC DECISION; ' • A.SKETCH OF MINNESOTA. A SKETCH OF OREGON. 1 THE -THREE; NATIONAL PLATFORMS—Rs. runiacis, Awittnesx, - sod Dititociumc—adopted in - 1856, complete. A LIST OF:SATES, CAPITALS; GOVERNORS (with their aslatien3-Times of Leghtlatire'llecilwri o . Uni. Holding of Calera! Elections, kc. - • t the ELECTION RETURNS fmm all the Suites which sr.. held _ General Elections during the year 1857;: by Counties, *ingressions) Districts and Staten, esrefuP iv compared with previous Elections, expressly for TRIBUNE 'ALMANAC. . One, • Prlde,, with peerage , prepaid, Single Copies, 13 cents American coin ; .13 Copies f0r.31 Hi; 100 Colk , litre lea for $8; or, if sent by, exprese,-.13 Copier fir $2.1 • Of it to Copies - , n es- „Orders inclosieg the intitiefrespeztihily Ad&ei ORACE GERELEY th CO., ' • • ; wt - ?MI. 20 •V. " • Tribune New.Tplit. . • MEM lutanist] Neelvv:‘ nary Term; 181111. Railroad Company.. . IWells,vs. Bennett. Green vs. Bronson.. - Wilbur vs. HeWear:- Williamson vs; Pratt. ermerbornms-Stephess Young vi. ;Warden. • Drinker vs: Whitney., ... birch re. perch. Weeks vs: Dolmen. , • Howey vs. Giabanto Wayman vs. Doti& - Cermet vi. Bartow.. Whitney Is. Paula's— ' Milt VB.. Roberts. Williamson vs. Decker. Wagner et IL va.sbecken. Chandler- vs. Green. . Comnfwith vs., Breckney— McKim is. Steliti et aL. Drawn for second week.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers