The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, January 28, 1858, Image 2

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.IS-e4lr'liArragrvoa,4l..tntlato commit.
.5,..7,,,,,40,1izna1f ift • ten Ifittribbiirg, January
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T0:*,,,;-tql ev entaheaDoxitrietwrottio:illitakV
len be held at.llatcishum 9te,ble 4th 44 4f
_ . yards next.
kr -, 4'' , 4ttt . '" 2 1%14 1 174 - P3ltitritaTitifilenAtitirgiteitratilti )
:,,,,,,,aever#,Senceyiektankitenmntattie 3.istriots of
~s.-4D4Stlsf.e wili&ntenVrialiiM'all of the House of
- Reprosentealvisrakiho Capitol, - on THURSDAY,
~ .1 „ .,1i :i",...,;;1 NARPRsf-0185834st`,10LegOalt . st 14., to nominate
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- Act vERIPIt_44O,I4kCeTh fIiMAREVRAL 70-
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ITie. •-...t , 5111•BIACONLION;CIONSTIT'IIIICIIi: - . -- I .kZ -0.1,, c ,
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M" r. t' ~.""'S' : OFLOGVAIONS • t;DY. • TIM BENATI4
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,P.lolNSYLVANT.WirithfrAtlrßg„t:', a )
.1 , 41 , .. Milifkr ;flOrPrialtittOE TELNittl AND
yaliWgeTim,..;4l 0101.1Aj
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MR. ORoRGII,. EtIMSZfP
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;• 41iPpimiNas.-; ...1
OtiTTLE , NANKETN; .`
PNl.4r REVINW,OF,TNE I'!NILADISIMAINAR-
I r;BIANIAANDS.AND •
- 't."/,••4 itii:AttfiliiN'Aq' •
; ,A.r INY Lyempi,,i3TAT,s„4ctigqicarrtriu.k:giOcu--,
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• PR9.cilii4f)ViA AP)4Q, I 7T , • •-; - r".;
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)3 4 315T BOIL it4s/rUKE.,•%:, rI
•-; i 71.1LIMBitlit-PRESiCier ifU l itlnkadVitilbffraiqtiegA
. .21 PeF.Yellt:_
imi!orwTz, - 1i ,7, 0 —, ..Att. , ..;..riwiii`i4;;; '
, ~ -,..boiit'in *lnd thafrthe'rsipar than ordsrPit CSanst toe die,
.• r repteal•tfresch'sabsociber onteiS the 'dub iris, DTP sd
E p9e.i4len k is•minttrulitaticf 'hi satintreg PAIN Ti c ia,
. M i ric p, e". 3 fitkoarragthlithaii_oisiss, 'old - soma of Sur
.9. TOCIFICAt Vex howrylista teolapelin
'l' `" v tdSdlters so iTials. i . i;. ~ • • 0•• " '7.4 0. f .--
_ ( linammula ms , S 2 , 22.-. , 2 ,
-23 , "PlltSTN2l}3'. l aADilitlifk.4464sll432ltl '7(13P84 -
' `.. 4,611 -6 2 trifell4fpretil*:;11I0 5A21441422' bedt.the
• Ix- ; ., i I'9 ' t oh i lt ,tl . it rb •Alith p. 4 44• 00 :„ .1 0 / 6rk,
ri ja,
t 'L ll o.' :jfiftlllo4,4s'.4l:‘:-.311.0.; nr,444b)i_ fn
.
J,A , l9rthem maxi 00 Ransist-Aot feY,Snotp_st'iKeor:
• ~.%_: Altatioitat9Owsn,ticeittify?Po'lloe'f,,The City,
.. o- wrie Minis ; ''o'9niCritlf,i4ii ; ',...e staide-rielot he
7 • filith s , , , c. -. ., ! -1., i z ~ , , _..i•-•., ‘ ,,.,4 .... H • "s •i
. y• ~ 1 MUIILIe SEIVIISIMM IN I‘ENlCS,lti l vitNt.k.
' - -,--, TOildliphh:9, l q,olC.pild,pli :Ofiratins7l-
iinfariNre credit thin the faetlhat isavo Is
~o ne, in stance, othey 'llO6 , stehalr-rihsedi to
approvo the despo t tic prtnolitile tee,4?isea hy"
' :'1 '' 0 4 '4l(ltte Pf.thcATlWrltY:fulph/ , Katike
• Agieit oe ,inefuin g: at 41lynelriTalt, in; ibis
" - ,' city, a fAiViveblrS•agOino;l4Hioi,bll l / 4 e . , Ilf-Db"-
''
InOcia,fa Or Otherwise hhas`beiitTdiel4•' A ((iii -, great State,`..whicirlian endorsed the:tecomp.
ton Constitution; while seveibr, Of t 113 M.0131'
'' ' poidorrid Detnothtch deniiinittations , in, Ile
" Western - cone lies have,,biddlituidiantiparizigly
denounceddt.• t wil'.. „ , ~ ,,, ,,, T 1, , ,. ,, , , ,
~., ,
, y . ,• ArifiillitAtikip:oltiie,Ge
,r l'ilto 3 r3 ll q o ,Tetatelatt44lndolltood tfp 1:le t
. 5,0n1 %
,; l --
,itittetictr-fteettais Ifne,9f - 4b li oy; fn
, rugifit te
•,,,,, ,e. ~.Kant i ffis/hisbladuEl3. d nattefons`frlonds of : that
•'-' ' - ' ll ;Aduilcikit:atl6 : 4''tli*iii4l.l4i'pki xoc4spablic
, :,$ ,„. • Viallfest4lons,". unfit- posgresir'uncreyitakee If
, I• " , Iforeethe Le" contpletremAtiti lieq
,_itiii) ,44 i fti
• Viflingind rote t' iliti'at':
1 •
- i 694. PifslV•49 *ROI Courati tgaY ta-ib t , for:th
'. A .• . Etatemiesx,of fraud. tolihrelsoi:iftirttiat, is„rg4
•••- thana k fr POVFM44ol4hkgrti o f ihtgi '
~,,
~re.pifi4e,kiqtrvs. -,, r , ; ',::t.....:: . q ,
~ ;1 1 :,:'``,L l '
WO have never known so, ritifieft4 and so
(' ;.tfalbehrliik crtefiliieitV f thlktrh,ll has been
' ' I iiiiiiiiit6V.)ay ,4111 . „(41olyZettiiensr,4iiai eiid
:; g ll_Yo
ialtY4w vr, them th invine el, y oikili 1.13
, 2 -12 , „ Viet dedsl7B-tr'-' 3 lX,Plingerikral(Or ilibtion- in
' % 'fittiii;as."' i rii r pi . feeeatitisdy 'on tfels!riti§et;
, ':. • •;hut they Atill.fidt ttelievettbat it 6'eprOpoan,4 to
i; :1 iddilitrrlsoi a' 4a•talopti Itif c.l-1)1 e i s ,, , r pit i Kansas,
'' ' ` f etidydoinlisi t iliO , l44l4fire.t4acelptihride'
f..• P ,la irtaQiiaao na,stubleisetingsi , -Thernip not.'be
, .. ~ • •/,= 41elte5' th at 10 . dp afilkily, neli, buttages , seo
• .; , L.Tp°9itraNtei,PlPOillitP,4l?;' of Vcf l / 14 4, *the
' l /.4E B.° allalbirdle ftgeflottlYs9r:thb 'rim, ,e
sauvers , in this leecoittpton borltdistce, the
• -'' ' , Only effect , orttrooremiya.iiii;,,fit;„ harden
' 'the" hea;th of thtiatlvocritas of this contrkiunoiy 4
.., •,.. ,:'F-en d to - tdakortheht zn'tilje - aiii il atA rot oNti kt
r, ' • fOrO r tngl't throftli' c'iligle§,e;cl)94l.pe, to be.
t 1. 1, ge. 6 a 0 6),4 1 ( pgfA would Iv, toe, hehOfek *hat'
' wiaulditavedniett-regardediti kr 1141)61,614y,
• ; .t_,: leis tliin'aty,ar afoll '''';' 4 . 'lt''''::, ; '' 4 '
2' 'L' : ' i lithEi ea ',bd. 9iir. iipzie,i3,:i4tte imbue
, ' ,: ..:14:enirmoit ilv:PionneyhAni.v.otethiti -question
may, be ascertained jn ,
_a y r 9ryipili I tfitlol ,
- - " '' •' iiiit'cApilieltagres: l ts) , Ataji.' 40 :iort, to
' , (.1 6 6IPPO4ws14 1 ithe:kii104gIvto Batt oll4,4v, o
. . - ,imildjate rieldgates. SI , thad/berieerapy,thitile,„
• ••• fe: rrenhisylir4pla, Is sittto_liiva l ul,iff,Afoqgomery,
' , F)Shtiihre, ? ;Chelityi`illWiiii t ;t§CY . ollllVj , :atf ;
eller, tohuldn;:i4ilkitPenz z an46ert4c.
1., v Zrankilip-ttlesterling:Denloersaf.of 4104'444
-, , ' ,, !llkii •coittitles• - sh'nkriptiakelrie, i` , •fhb :quinifes,
P''' ' '' kiadiiii ditrtif,tiiiinti:Oes4o44qa oenh
:tiosulho bordfriuOtten'slongll:_sw Jtrtitiy.toid
,-, , ,NeVf Xl:trig , ate. aninte,te4•,by..tho -slid bind- .
t ' th9n 'f&-Itotconiudiibie Abiti li tti tel aelffrlicy that
e ; ^, . i , EiS C. ~M 1 r "., ..,,r,, • r.
. i .
, woutavorce „tile .t.esclyt trap, s i anme noon upon
' , I
,„'F ,' , . .2.• .0.... •I ~.... 2
r ; , ~.liqe,Ergfe, " Pgl/4 " 1 4? 11 2 444 4".' 1 34APT 0 are, no
~: 5),,i , 4:Sl364kt:l*e* es'abeptiotat;ebhtthegreel fitpt
stands out paratuount j that the fiGtheile_Ae
____
Aqqpii4 tti WEI' i 8 411 6 2,9P9r 1 PY but one Istfifrao
N poweF -48,11 drive f.thelniltroallil Efi &fin
' :I `I froth it: -, 0 , ...= ...t7T, 4141 Ix
- ~I , ' , We Speak Of VI ihrdif ffiloyelig(ng the'des
• , • *vatic): leTatusds',L ))epitll4l,:*ll l :9o4o,R
- ' ei;iiiiOn 4 AO„qElitse*?!. ith/ali rAlliQt'lh°u
-
`sands eV tilViy`filf `Aille fr , *e4tisei ''S'
(. 1 ,&). ,- AMP c Pl3 4 .ta l AßCi r APPqad4g4 l 94 l .l lo carioi
' - -‘!3 ATAlA•theOhl, PitherrSiipfkrio,4oo9 kilt Yet , •dare&
• , .51 , ,1.,14 oseltOdp, ern likanotherodiroathsci i . ~. - - ';i - •
L.: ). :I ~;, -t tilkherse toluvheso3 , beetidkettdeirds igt.,TAlged
' 3 ';l, ,'-' •BMatititkt etn6 . l lBBEect ta d.iPiiiii 4 1tiettit
: d ' `'' ‘' 1 fikotil'ifila 'MP ire, AIM% tilb ' f - iox
44:
...4.,....., 1611 . 15:t61 i ffm , Flit v j e k,
_wid er
;',.'i1.,7 3 1`,.',4.,Mti , trii.tia: §N...24' , .thrt,‘Pl,,''
i p
1710 .cr I AEI I . PAR 24, `3;,. tlllll - `
r ulty.3 ling them out of that party because ey 'mu,
For BOW TO A. WilllTOs PASOD,Might all roadily
lift the Alleghenies from their eternal founda
tions, and Afty them s ,ly into the bosom of
the 5ea..4,4
The mineilk, .: ~ ru. -•. 5.„ . .,. , 01?e , :„
tt
the majori - I .h - t eed, ht will, ''', , tail.
Mr. Ca.ino ;sal.;aqd l is i t ii , was power"
in this 6un Tatake )4stkie I.4l.etithat
the Foy cannot always control thb Many.
We hear it said, indeed, that it is purposed to
force this fraud upon our citizens in Kaneas—
lifilisid—dtts-theiermurtrldle--them.with-_it;-and-
ro,l4bloll444 l of desperadoes to ride them
49- , -wittai.A, ,, ,,UP,Kalfra ,,t,- gt ii ?-R gt i r 7
Iselye t it._ tsut i! ft his so, we call NPOfillse"
Deinohisici‘of Pertullitrania to rindfcate their
ratip . ,hpel; and, to r spcalt, out. In that vent; Lois'
f*F.# 4 C.IIM aioo' l',l 4 6 7,xi rtll9 e s */ 1 4: 1 ' :1 ! 1
be guilty assent-to• a.. guilti hetraysil: , Vie .
1 - ; inourent It becomes app_sissist -aid ois deal is
to istilNyked, let those AP, 7 44.i'is.n . O'un,.,
'nrke.reisragentativett taka.the 448 p into their
- totiisisnag.'l4,lbicy'4le 'of #lClomoctacy,
speak to the servanti.otihes DeMoCrry: ~- .
:,11NViris#arti•thcike,,,yflia- slchibt, the:strength
of thi-popular-Lieiii4n2;;‘nt on ihi,s' , l ll. sicf4,
-tespyinst'inheleifsk , oll yleikerting . this aehtlinent,
. 9. oe,:4laut,liv. t e,iota:dni4p , p
tinsvat:
;ti.Pdoi, .06.!cii-nitiiiir* -cg,
m.
sa 'ilsiii
'esintsousalt fii ; lhertolicyh_ft'eseiersinp. the
~,11c41;04FALVitAii2iiLiti.tecIN'or: itsdke-Ctiy,
Therezis , rsolns4,ln renusylraniti lOr'thla
, t1142-Thfife rilaY..tob'ifiurP4e to , veield party.
. r maelashly 'lrs", that ,dir:ection'.' The're iit,"we;'
arre`toM, a. niovoment, to. commit thd*Wino
'Ciae.y. of ThilAdilphia by ficelftissii drain.; lint
iTte.l l 9l )o 'OAP wh9:are,eiliaged• bl. Ws' tuhl.j
ness will Pause in time. - They . , eannot:lielp
'tlifresiesei?iiss; Of stierigth,bri ite Adraiatration;
by Its .therisili . only biealt.itown the ,Ilenso:.
Macy; and this theyysay ilo:if tlitsy Persevere..
Of the 86, - 01/0 'irien . mPhiffidelPhiss whQ voted
"for‘ , Tilsits,l3htstailatf; we atisert thlif there isre'
not Vie , thouisia- , - - rter, not Or l:s
ieled—who.
:,ilifine't*P f olk . 4 fi)rbin,#).* doliiitai,
00,igtitiliiim:, belied that-theie 'snob win. rt-,
slat; and asfY evPitaftempt,iticoMmkt them to
ihat pClicy.c,The.responSibihty is-yltli: thieSti,
who ine:Y inhice'llit! eer7.=. - r,-4 . 1 , I ' F ' I
STORM Elv i n ,l N.f4 lß4) , !Pe' .
Early in the resent Month tc-Parmiati, Jour? •
nifl.46 ceetai46o teadei, intended .
to be a sort of New Year's resumiof .
ilifeitfiesition of' E tirOpe. ) Thop'tjcl4was well
writtemplaiii tied dependieg%fot;its
effect upon tho simplicity.r(nd. eirneitneis of
its vpressien z , lviigtl l y,dEritiipkoti. of the
'fdifd,gkiellitledsOcYkatmeit;Piesente Ocii
disclosures
,as :thioCve,4lio
ErNich-joncutilsinto-:a 163 of Illtel4B•oXCite
went. . "' • ° r" ' "
-,lt,freely and' openly : states its conttletatiet,
-.Evige,,fixiMivitonalogAticely,aione ; ' that it
la isolated from all the.Eurepean:pe*Cra
p; einci`
i;Mttvitiatehding the treaty.of Earls, Eng
land-tnd Austria have , entered into a 'conibbm)
flea againather.- ,In proof of thm, tho , Spec
latsverasicrtte that about the middle of the'last
ycac a ,`iftaeel:iie;i, hi:Venni, by the,,
Ehglish ,:iiiebaseador end the Anstiidr;'-ilfinis, 7
ter; by which-11? - 0,Selemaly konitoed mutual
issistinba 'and preteetiee.' adds,that Prus:
.B).‘„xap FipA to join- the alliance, and that
,Frumittro WALTAx.Woulff- have 'willingly, en
feMd the compact; but4hat,-, nietivee 'er polic
Mtn Y 1
festal - ha- MAE; the: position ,C•i-Russit
.couldlie ascertain 'eff.'r this account he ar-
- iiniged the:, itterfie*;het,tien;:sittkiiinp,vat
firid.EiAnMs7,Tbsamr
mar, but the new Oak declined to beCoMis
:pertyjci„the compact, as it - 8140 his iannti ; tOr•
the 011;e:4 least, to stand'as a mere 'spectator
,upon the arena of 'European ' politics , keeping .
r bimsolfentiri3l4frep'.fret,l4 - 411'ongagements,
these ;startling 'assertions have. Proveked.
a 'verysoieral seu ont the joininalS,
'the"Odurrtir'la P P a y s, P t Le
•. a a ne,
Jeered/ der-PEnipiiek'and „Le' Coustiitilickiinel.
,A4l ;express theit: ntter'and, unqualified Alahe
;lief„ in allthe atMeinents. ,They inai4 that
TOLEOK 18 now the pacifleater t ef,'Enrope,„ and
'that' his' Viladdinival - 415)d:dation` hein gained
' , tor, him the confidence of the'whole Continent,
an additional proof, i:e'cit•hafitutibinel urges
V BiE '
. , ,
tho - iblintility of the ,sup Position , that Russia
kwould remain inactive in each a coalitiOn ; the
' dzat',' 'alert, ane - i'itilant 'ae he is, would car
-4110 not Maintain a. neutral positioh in such
.ati.important posture of affairs , ;
'' ; :
..,'
,'.-,
',..k`kfroin abandoning its greittid:on account
:OA°, strength : °Lille , opposition, I and the
violence of the denunciations 'hurielr twatist
it,ii4 kieial'tur VS . ,_ittlisb: ,4 a_a'ac:ond editorial
•' On",the :7JlLef •S'ailiar`f to) 161" - plallion --- by
:.. e . '..- -, WouvelleVetzetle 'du Prusse,
..: the - gerliii • iorreapondent of the London'
.
' Times; an Nacconnt of the 2 .'etenpletion of a
Afoity'hy i tyltieli I:itglApd:gu4antipsth A.ustila
tlie,Poiniossion of, her Italian provinces ; . abd i
letter-trom yiennsl,:pablishml•hi the Journal
4Qr.a::lo.t . ort,•writteit ta a spirit 'of iMtulatiot
-upon the, tirpestablishntentof friendly relations
lietweetc the twti'gvitat'Petioilis or,,Aitlstria.: and
:4,,ealAi i ..'l;',. ( ohetOr:,atilt ,further, ,. p l roor, the
r;Sßedateterrefefa l ttr the'reselts - of-th 'inquiry
InaltAil r ef)"lstPlint4loito:tlie:p:oalt on
,of , :the.
/
,Enkiitihr nitnisiri!in, rel;ttion to:th foreign
HaiE s tiziorthiV-attlidm' ', ': '; ''' 1' • "'; t ' .
-ii iWtiiio OKtoiOtp..ieWskalitioti;the'Jour- :
-hat Bays,: that - England, notwithstanding.: iiiir
Atrarigth and position, finds .befselelvneed of
:4 11 ) 1 } 1 4c 0 with sortie great itilfitryi Gbiern-:
trightupon,the_ continent; .thato France "is too
_powerful and daitgere*an • ally; and that she
Is compelled to' Ipiii,th "arm ot
-• • This debate raged vioientlyfor sevoral days;
• but: i)thr'S'eaedd editorial of the siectatear
:seems to 'have provoked no reply. t• the and
d'enlistontimianc9 of the discussion purprised
:9) hnt, a Parisianletter in ,, ./aqiieYesce, of
thrusiels, fluidal:mails with thwkey to; the mys
tery,; , Tfie - rush l oCitrgutitarit' has'been fol.
taWacl:by ono of those peculiar pauseti to which
••11•: trammelled•press)s - subject.' The journals
fears' tlifit..!thez-,havo r akcady . `said 'too much,
find ~
'that 'Ulu - haat, step may be a dangerous
101404..• Mtn: assailants saw ' , Die, awaiting flip.
*:ther , information; and - the most violent pro-
Telada to, ‘gl;fe at seine 'future time a more "stn=
;died,reply to the , offending, dOcummit--a sus:'
pension vliich:liasi',POrkipsi - , frtlf nyllp:.
- 1 , 1 §,40iCiff..4 0 *q 1 401, 6 . 1 ' itkpifitii . : • , ,•,
.I,_, The,.CheelritMtheir Momentum •100/ s a good
'dealtdcd'pfcip'a'';preiliCaMerit pkt io. fence,
'•;iklialti.hg.Siii4C."4,;4l4:•..crciitkid'ealled , ont to
him: fe Whore are you going; -irly lad 7"
-56 •Bieknaiithi 4 ,YP) said •SaWirtr;kt'itowltliat you
ittelheile.":, Eiavaixoti takes'eare of hlipoli
,tlaiPhiervett II- •-•,• r ,': -'
is It la , ''.oadly thi
;htt , ited, hi odeof th;o:joutials,
enthoinf tho'artielo In the
, •
R.
T 1 E
, •
—We have yet; to Sad' the *DeMociiitie, 'paper
that does not heartily approve'iiie 'fitaugnral
o;aele,f4„eF aDeetta4ela ,of the
fee Dag its "beautiful, style :and sensible pugges
!Hens have-excited, take - ,thci'folloivlng from
ilia r Ailniitoiin'bernoeritt; ajpapor Dint:speaks
for, the ,Eceßbi r of . Lehigh, , A 4ieti . nguteliod.
~glintdotaan, froin-that ieoubtlo7llci ka tows :the
3relitlmiints s Of flie%inttliabs' 'says thti( Governor
.
penicznlsottrici ~itliptoyed',l4. Men of all"
inangurtl, address efHoicerrtor'P,aelser; in
another column, ut , a production well Worth yore.
-sari ..Xtpointq.oaCsemczocasuretrof yoforte In our'
if, , oarried but
prove, .most•-salutary „in their effects„-Thc poliey
01 . .a11pWW/billS,Of doubtful' matedlineY *pine,
tirof : the exeentiv,o, ye
eeiken, p4aep. eoedetrunitieß n n di Of ' Go
P.aolter;" ‘ „Th'e'Dovernnes'Alqwgi mi. Ate Kansas
quectiow,.:es*talf4 Litre the... - Aink,:bf the vim
metal,;' He condern4 , a:s every Democrat,
the.AototiC,t the. teenidp,ton . Vonyentionjn , re-,
,tutitrik to eirbeilf tho tdaft.itatiori tcy Hui vire' firthe
;pe`atile,:fairly,kad",iiiii4nivrierally., Hat we .leave
0;C eader.ttl`eaopiluo lbeintniguralanci make la
?afrtecritintiiitC,":, - • ; '
iv ran s..': •--
i; : ";:Viji Ati ,ne!vi±,. lig 00:: karfgaivld
sreiv-stearserothicb zreacliiid :Now irgrk .yes
terday)ktind lett. , Liveipdol zOn•rtbd 18th
The 'dlfi.WigiissT -1 .. Havelock, and .th`e' other"
tfiNtgebed-i news, is copttrmed .
ments in Bengal had mutinie.4.,,priaga4m
;Canton wet( mentioned as; aboutnheing.madq.-
I, oo , ln h cke r pp' . :T4 4 o4h"l l 7 / Ovaoding ,
04,014,91i;miqiiiyptga#.4 yap vary, easy, but
some more commercial failuves are-reported. •
- :11,1?",4116,apkisintillptt, Honi Jour
A - 4 4 ,1* ) ,:ttbr.i ? ky dyisr Von.
cift the °t3oth
j filreffitV* fititifily""Opnalidildb4 "ty- it 6
„ -` ), ,, 171' 1
pu pretia ;
t • ' '
1,1137," . .NANN.8,4;:u41.0.6.y,,Eriq r ; cf: this - city,-
has bptiti - ip , ppotute4t4timagraph'pr of the In
-416.40/tff.o;}:#44lo,t.4ol*4ll,i!iiii
110wiev Represenotiveai.,Qu n the Ifiddlesel
""''' , C• A .17
;617:T0
. i:othtti.dotty thinks to ili•
Yl 4 g*fo ' o44;; - ilittAtXtfittiii 1401 .- /Igt4
Bentatives, .foVPlttate ; dnikitalbt
valuable favor 3,
THE PRESSi - -4 1 111LADMPMA, THURSDAY, JAINUARY 28, 1858.
PU81.,10 ENTERTAINMENTS.
There w eguldr Art" at the Academy of,
Music, on ,4 looeasio i n, Clan Formes makingllie
' in title 14, Madame Do Lagrange,
E'
7
' 0
b f , toliepubliogibis omission, ler thi'
Formes teekftlia'
f p l ,,tl) of PifO l k(Algbiqntr's opera of "Maithtt; . ,"
vrtit it iclear 10,44 we believe. .
"It would bo iriaq spa and time- (at the
hour when wo write) te.discuss the incongruities,
of "Martha," with Ha 'English yeomanry of the .
time of Queen Anne wearing,thelaney eastturio_ef
Tyrolean peasants. The question 16-7#ll9 - mart;.
nor of singer is Carl Formes? .
rePatit!,
Goa, which gannet well stand higher than it
new ; delis,;;." 119,,..,1ta5. a deep, cleat iesonaht;
voioc f; ;In ..forni,"''and:.capablei of ireat
islprecl,ileill;':',lforainfne#tly,a:sympathetio singer,
etidattillifeehigstokertjeying What ho.sang;
is Ilse ti..dramatkoSinger,-;Mdeh• more I thitl,'se.Ve
iii ' , bon Visquale alow'pet parts, Lableahe'
hlnocilf Wel • The 'inn:de:6l'i' Marthar iettieely
allowed his vOlOOll4l play r i :4llexeilptitin was: it •
'rattling song at • the oommeneement of =Act
which was boistereuely encored,': • .., - - •
ilfange,'es Lady 11,, , ,irrieroiling '
dgltghtfdily~ and toted better, than usoalt She was
-encored ln.a.,Get : men -verslortaf "The'Last • Rose
• of fitimmitrp. l l:Whielt she gavalvith pathos and
eve roar eQoat to
,
60 character
of
Lidtiel, and waseneci within n hair's breadth,
of an encore . in.ene of his
„solos. ; Narai,! as givbri,
by Madame Von Bergel, aiithTtiitati;6ll r. Oct.
`lain, 41splaiifi 'no • ordinary share ;Laetrile Agee...
'The lady aancvery well indeed: - , I •
; this afternecoi, With Gassier, Bignardi, l
Madrona Seidenberg,-and Madame Cardori in the
leading Ohleraeteri.. -W e would 'r•riontion_ that ,thie
Matianie.daiadert Is 'not to be tionfeunded with,
Madanie:, Carad,o l ;4, l „ifil, irk) retired from the
int
rprofessieerty y,eura age., ; • ; • ‘.
•
The first of thb series .of.three Concerts, etlia-
Bloat Fend Hall; to assist in -the founding of anew
hospital', combs erthis is:fining.", The Misses Heron
andldr, Itudolphaenwill,he the L yooal.perfornieTY
aided byepowerful 'oroliestra under the direction .
* .of Yin mid Mr. M. ‘ Cress will'. pr,e.
'side at - tie piano. :
fiia 4,;i416%, Colonel J; W Porney,wlil leeture
roni , Areerleart Statesmen,', in aid et the exertions
,rude by Alte'llolloif Committee - of -Vie', Fi fte enth,
`Ward; teXtilleira the dlitinasee the peer
of that:loaaliLg. t The' leetnie,:whlchwill be de='
livered. im Sprirok'Gardonanstitato, Breed' Sled`
Spring Garden treats,
Is that . Wolf Colenel:Fr„
Ikt i elftjhliverecl , ht•Leneaster," end • is,' to give, 'an
:the i ptening i or Fehrtioxy 9th; by speolil:invitation.
• from,ilia_Beziate tind,dleuse bf,,Reprosentatliteraf
-Pennsylvania in:the the - House of Repre
sentatives at Ilarrieburg - ..; - :: '
OriSalurdaY, etercleg,,,e grand_„ Concert is to be
"' jgea, at tiusicul Fonft,HellY flit ; ; Fraser (the
welPktiown - tepor,)Xisisipti by ttfies,Carelleti Rich-
Shepherd,, aril Iliekars: Rehr, A. R.
rxibi. r iev,va F tio,,tiO,l: - , E.
,Fairltimb., This
lit ii;irtatkky,pr - o?iiity, , atidArt: Friizir deserves
Land islikely,to hat,o a oreWcled.hoittat; - •
~The Hon. Edward Everett basennsented to give
his Oration oil Washington, b4fore';th'e Illstorioal
Siaiety ofpentaiylvania, on the evening of There
-City,, obitier,i , 4. 1 , The, Inked. of admission will be
. fifty seats; and. the Oration . will be delivered at the
Aeaderatof Music, whieh t no .doubt, will be filled
Upon that ritoriiion. " • -
The l .ilaXenth itininel'A‘tisty-drees ball of the
ifionnicitor Mnsioal Soeietyis announced for Tues
day evening,Tebruary 10, in ,the upper and lower
'saloons' oftho'new Nattiest Rultding, Race street,
lietc7 • „Two orchnities are engaged, and,
,proviouste . tbe.bali, the inembeis 'of the Society
(Mr:Eohr; as leader) trill' perform favorite scenes
frith " Massaniello.' • Half the net proceeds Will be
1 , donated", (given
• tolhe, ailorisleoor funds. ; •
Jliiisrpo,crrrtoisx on CARL * FpIiMSP, - - - The Soir
upday ,gazfete,-(23d).bas the following
eritioism upon the' " Handel and Haydn SpeletVe
Oonoeit:". • `,
, • _
a,Tha aririancentent Ilerr,Fairriett and other
new ttara In* the oratorio-JElljahi—nits remark
ably`.Boo Weather, retesting visitors ;from the
country,..brought intothe Mush, Mill this evening
ahput firteen,hundred auditors. For' dollar con=
cart, in' this seasen of comecereial disaster,• that
magbe considered a great, audience ICcomprised
:delegations from iihnost every musical community
in Eastern :NOW England, and the performance, by
itasenorallY , excellent obarloter. repaid the ea,
'peyote and trouble 'which it cast. Itre gannet at this
ratehonr`.go into a thorough Oxfuiliiiation of
parts; but inertly give a glance at the, meet promi
nent. Herr 'Formes naturally clines our notice
ill*, because he was the celebrity to see and hoar
vrhom moSt,of that • discriminating public bad ass
siclablnd in a ioneert hall. •He Is a short, rather
thick-sot Irian WithllOwing block heir, in a white
cravat and suit of blank, giving him a decidedly
clerical appearance.' Teens acquainted with
General Nye, of the New York hietrotsil Can Polio,
Beard; the faca and manner of Formes immediately
suggest that distinguished counsellor., In the
Part of ' Elijah his voles appeared remarkably
sweet and capable of patio:4 and exprodsion. Its
compass,truth, and power were not so extraordinary
as repot t had made there.; IWe,it, very untqual,unt
telising execritant: In deolamatiou, with ease in
time; he brings out, splendid, tones occasionally and
makes some magnificent passages, dev.a..rt.is too
aentimont and soul with a perfect
/Mt a finished artist,
- warted TrTitter..-E,..r,....'1 6 15. 1 39-Ico ant feebly and
,Neither io,ho , invariably true in pe -ere/r
-ip artioidation and enuntclatfon. ' ills defects
trots m os t distinctly betrayedin "Is not his word
'like a - lira" . he ' realty „made • nothing. of ;
with all los short-etaningefront the undue - expeo- - .
•
tatione inistol: by. previous reports, Herr Formes
made a-favorable impression. and comparisons
with his p redecessors in this rae were decidedly
in his favor. "
- - - -
RELIEF ASNOCIA
gorThe „ , .
• „ _
The Fifteenth Ward itelief Association, at whole
request and for whose benefit you have kindly
consented to deliver a; leotare;this 'evening, at the
Spring harden Institute, lutilmen 'for marathon
two Months Pail, in genre Lind energetic operation :
The -EXecutive Committee, , composed. of twenty;
- eight 'irentienten, are all limikinOtisd, naively
fulfilling the,duties 'thtiy have undertaken—visit
ing and examining olosely into the oases of those
.te„ whom relief is: extended. • Many ! destitute
families, out of employment in consequence of the
stoppage of the various inantifaotories, mills, and
machine shops, throughout the ward, have been
assisted and sustained so far through the winter
by this association.
In order to raise means to continue operations,
for at least another' nientb,,it course 'of lectures is
theits - Whe will attend to-night will
'strengthen- the hands'of this Most excellent com
mittee of the Fifteenth ward in the performa:nee of
its work of mercy. They spay also have the satisfae
tion to know that, with the exception of a trifling
charge for the use of the bail, the mere cost of heat
and tight, the wit* proceeila will go intci the trea
sury of the aqsadation, the• oommittee.porforming
ttligto labor of Solling,-,rocoiving tickets, 'Le.
, „ „ Sigma GAnn,EN.
-.„
TRE WINTER ON .1,914 CE EIIIE.—The Ohio
:Farmer of January 23, - published in Olcvnlind,
'thus notes'tho *egress of the - action Irilao,buds
are quite growl; elders glow r A shrubbY St,
Jonswort in our garden has oome out , ln full feat.
Violate, aro: peeping. out hero and there, and the
buds' Of "pins ' bushes Orb ,00nsiciornbly
Gdoseherilcif , and •' all ' Varieties' 'of currants
ditto: , •ITho ' Only ththg' that has 'surprised
mai '3a. the ;foot. that few, if any, of the
'bulbounrooted flowers show any leaves. :Even the
nnowdrop, earliest of all spring , flowers, has 'not
yet'made its apiniaranee'vrith as. The effect upon
the wheatorop ean , be 'nothing hut bad, for the
litany freezings 'and. thavrings 'have the; chest of
throwing, opt the .plants, especially when sown
broadcast. ,Drilled wheat will not, howeyer, suffer
to anyappreciable extent, unless the changes
should bo'much greater than they have been."
UNtiStrAL VIBITERB.—A flock of cedar-birds
'were seen in New Bedford, says Abe Mercury, on
Wednesday, January 20. This bird called the
Cherry bird, Canada. Robin, Recollect, from the
°pier of the crest, and which Is known es the Bom
llcilla•Carolinensis, usually ippoars here in the
latter ?art of April or biter. In 1850,. , Juno 20th
was tho date of its arrival with us. It is amiable
And amiable bird, very fond of .wandering, has a
faint Bap install(' of a song, and Is known from its
handsome (west. • It subsists on the berries of, the
-Virginiatjthripet, ,(redmedhr,) w'ax•rayrtle berry,
cherries; buoUlaberries, dra; , The. oodar-bird was
seedinlkston this week eating the berries of the
mountain ash. In its migration, it goeti very far
South, to Idixtoo, and even to tins trepiaal forests
of Cayenne.sA visit from these birds in mid-winter
is, We believe, a feet hitberte.unreeorded.
The Taunton Gazelle announces the death of
non. Eliant.hittt Pierce Hathaway, which, took 1:1111:06
at his 'residence at _Freetown, Mass:, on Saturday
er ening•last,. the 23d !net - Ifograduatedatßrown
-llniversity-in-1818,•twid,Was one of the oldest and
most respected members of the• Bristol bar. • Ile
.wns a prominent ,leeder, in the Demoaratie party,
and had tiled many offtee.s of hoitor and trust. He
had served lioth branches Of tho State Legisla
ture, and wee a MeMberof the Constitutional Con•
Yentiea 171'4853: was also a member of the
Demooratio National Convention whit* nominated
•
James 43uchanan for the Presideney
. ,
eXpeoted to make Mri•Fill
kohl O .We - happiest of inen,"ion 'the Ilth of Feb
ruary next, says the Now York Post,- is a li
„Molntosh, a.woreau distinguished, for a great ye
-410.Y ' ol44ns, pond as wa ll .as transitory. Itcr
forafeY lltstaitl made) a fortune in the crockery
business, in Albany, and riaa•Preeidiit of.theAl
bony ind"ScheisestudY . ltailroirl 'during the, lost
OuVA YirtlkPreeedirt the,coasolidatiom
•
Silt" -four farmers pir•ing 1n and about Mid
illetiavin, Conn., Imio 'given notice to the oitizens
that on Moaday. at 11 o'olook, they will - Cornett
ox•carte, , liithin etith"trobd and"p4ovt.
donator-gratuitous diatritnttl6u , to tho poor, und e r
the matmgemanto4tho mayor and,tt committee of
citizens.' •
ShiOdii; the
ieXtbe k :Kille liefo'nfied . ChUral, tir
_Foils,' fill IT,Neini oitaged in fixing ' the lamps in
the church until pine o'clock, when he came in the'
..boutifiTitid, Whir 14.8 f. itetting,lnto bed whowlio fell
lifettintly fide& p o i the tioor;. -
• ,
in' the, '
'4'o4 stit,te Tteaserer i s 'Office, ler the establish.
mant et a' hail& e To:nulls • Etver, fa be called the
Tiedir t " - sitth ert 50,000, tznaei
m,Bir',l , ltre
• tt president,'
k •
I< E ".(1
V . /W{ l v tcpplittehttilr , Bili .4501111,"Artiated
ffdvi rdWitiltiliiiti 4 f6 ail Itri'itOwttog two gold
ban 'valued at 82,090,
'SPECIAL lIARRIBBORO CORRESPOND.
,
ifiiintanunn,Jati. 2t1., 4858.
the oldies' of Ilnur jripee(or
And le4tteTh4ector, Intiodnood into.ilkatigase
by
Mr:ll4op,x, , id:'Obcatir, not-ii!mptalde doAlleTati/Oratid,patiA'andlbopo,,,llFnet
only' 'reiSonloriniskinptldir division' is 44;i:
provide - And - on:lips certain expeotanis. Lift;
_ea : they aro, may_ got 'that-rata mark- to fill
'thenr,"and secure honest and responsible officers..
LeituiS.:-Viiimitir.Soperlntextdents et
common Nolteplepi-Adqltiondl, pug setb s e‘ildnint
Braidch
(Oorrespendiese of The Press.] •---
ct BAnnisnunct , ,January 27, 1858—,
The eitis,ens, of-liarrlihnrg, o -iiitt the members of
the Legislature also, had a rich "feast of reason,"
in listening to Mr. John Cf:' Saie's poem ,entitled,
r lhe j/lOnsy Ift`ng., tm Tuesday
,evening,
was foliovied, at ' tbe request of his audience, b y .
the luilniteble'Worq /I
-rids• the,.
fOrnier,
,it Is high' praise 1.3 . '114 ft. 'la pr;o or tlie
oleVerest of hid productions; witty, without being'
volatile; without bit terness';' with
occasional Opriedes' of true sentiment 'and poitie,
beauty, that Shaw ilte author to have no meagre'
- gift of the ' The latter had, nu
dealt, boon retid'hy atnajdriti of thosh present- 7
- for It has been in print Several yeare—and it must ;
therefdre hada' been' the more gratifying to' its
author to observe the univeisardelight Manifested
at' his' Many to palpable' hits:" • I-will give Ale ,
opening, teallow howl:tinny sithilea—ind good ones'
.
at that—he can orowd into a.
smatterer°,
• . As landsmen, sitting in Itmutious ease,' "
Talk of the dangers of, the stormy seas;
As paupers , gathered In onngeuMlllocke,• ' •
- Babble of banks, 10119116110t11, bud steaks; , , • ,
'Ai cowards, talk of p tick; misers; of. waste; -
scoundrels; of honor; country deists, of taste;
. legio,
hr , s cam "' „
Mr.tftillegais`read an not - repenlirig the'lari au
thorizing the election of count"; superintendents of
common sohools,'and throwing the duty ef eland,
ming teachers, making out reports, and attending
to the interests of 'education in the sev : iial noun-.
ties Upon thenehool directors: This is it step back
ward the Legielature will not,. be to take,
especially In the face of the advantagesto the
onuse •:of ediontion, which' .are ea manifest,
aid - *hien :are testified 'l,n, 1414, Ilieltok,
state,. Superintendent, lit' his "annfilic'':dePOrt. ,
as growing , out. of the system now!in vogue.
,Pohnsyliaida occupies a ,very *Mid position now
witit'respect to the educational ridiantiges of her
Wentd it; not be Weise than a foolish
iericeent, to Jones', either' the County or State_
Inperintendenolet, when-both have' been weighed,
in the , balandannd realised the airpeetations
everironsonalde Min? ' • '•
Arritstrong,'ot your city, and ,T,it inember Of
the Judiciary ComMittee, hoe read in pie en alt
to raise the fees oflaialers front two antlia Half and
IlyndollaratOilyti and_ten„ , sus oeitaln Cases
brought in the District : C ourt rind. Supreme Court'
In the county of Philadelphia., 'lt is a sapplement
fo the secontl section of, the "act Pehruary -22;
182 t.
A bill .raising the rate of interest-to seven.
per cent.; and in tome , eases ton per:cent :
per annum, and imposing ' oortein fined and'
forfeitures for usery,'weapreiterited to-day bybiri
Colhonn. it Ana been very c itaiiiity,' drawn• anode
intended to do.away with many of the evils under
whioh; monetary affairs at'present labor. It in
dederrini of , a'mote . eFiended notice. than I can
give 3t, today. , •
The Attorney emieral lei 'hereafter to be gnar l
tared is the rooms ocoupled by the' , SOperinten t
dent °Nommen Schools—Who has remoyed into xi
room 'adjoining the Canal Conradisioneis' ' In the
main Capitol Building; Col. John /si,'Saiiiitrel.f
the way, has been appointed Deputy.Bnperhiten ,
dent of Common Schools, by Mr. 'fir. 0. Hiokok,
State Superintendent. •ON ari exe(ellent'ap.
pointmont , for as .Cepitty SeerCtary ofi the
monwealth, he • won. the respeoi.'and iestcem of
every man of every , party,. 1;15 , - his coorteey anti
obliging manner. •
Judgo Kn'ox will now have his Mlle
eteliadjoining the: Secretary's, : (doh
great convenionee, as his sphere 'of duti
more entonded under the:l'4ooo4min
examining all oases of paidonllfoio tL
will exercise the enmity° Olemeney., • t •
A resolution was offered and passedi t e effect of
which is to handOcor the nishitgenisintof tbeNorth.
Branch Canal to the Ciaarßoastl, Vhosebands
it'was priorrolho appointuient of Wail. R. itolt
as superintendent, in NM, with a salary of sl,ildly
par annum. His resignation, It is thought, doos not
re•lnvest the board with tho poison of its enrage;
meat, hence the conoh! of the House. •
" •
knoll PlTTrilrußOtt:
[Correspondence of me Pram.] • . • i,
P1'0 . 8E4611, January 9e, 16.58
Pittsburgh having been unusually dull sines Sep
tember, has resumed her good hum and, the dirty
face, and a hundred rollintuillls end fe4torlcs 'viii
aeon gladden the heath of thousands by -giving
employment to the honest laborer and rticitati
and by stimulating business geritm.RE - 4; oa f
will
or fortnight the "BirminiAttil parts of this grept_
be sending her,nr.- , I
'eountry—,- entirely subdued the panic- , -a task
eaffily accomplished because of Its fietitious ohm
raoter—and our banks are all able to resume specie
payments. But three of them aro In a 'state of
suspension; the Bank of Pittsburgh and the Iron
City pentium, to.pay specie, and the Merchants' and
Manufacturers' Bank, after a suspension. of ninety,
days, and a Wear riddance of its unworthy officers
and a portion of its directory, has returned, and Is
speedily regaining the confidence of the public.
During the late ficianoial embarrassments, and
while hundreds in every other city in this and
foreign countries were driTon to bankruptcy and
ruin, the actual copltal employed in conducting
our business machinery saved us. No failures here
were caused kly the panto. Mow forcibly those
things argue that business done upon , a substantial
beam will stand the test, if it does not remove the,
causes, of all finanoial revuislens !
. ,
, Reports are in circulation here to the effect that
Mr. Buchanan is about to make a .test question
of the admission of Kansas under the Lecompten
Constitution, and that General Cass and Secretary
Toneey are the only members of the Cabinet
opposed to, this measure. All honor to General
Cam! Ilia Pennsylvania friends--end whose
friends have been truer!—would hail; with ex
ultant joy his dissent from, each ;premises.
But I do not for a moment credit • the idea
that James Buchanan—whom hie friends and
neighbors delight to honor—the "favorite son" of
Penneylvantaja about to assume this position. Ile
will never thus insult the intelligence and patriot
ism of the party upon - whose platformacfprinciples
- he stood last year. Tho Democrats of Western
Pennsylvania, whose motto is, "principles, not
men,' and who still cherish the same principles
that elevated a Jefferson. a-Jackson, and a Bu
chanan to the President:ly, wilt demand to the
bitter end their rights and privileges. ,
We are all sovereigns, eaoh one possessing
more power than the kings of Eueope. Then
lot us, in own majesty and power, speak plainly to
the : servant whom we have ,given to, the nation
to execute its will.. Let us remind the minority in
Kansas that they are striking at the very root of
the &et great principle nowhinding us together;
that their positron oontravenes the principle of popu
lar sovereignty on which the contest 1856 was
fought and-won. Why stand we in the streets and
byways trembling, and afraid to speak our honest
opinions ew questione affecting the vital interlude of
the Republic? Per the sake of - united, effort; it
becomes good Democrats to saerifice personal pre
ferences and,predelictions;,this is one of the en
nobling features of the party. - ;
Our personal dissensions' do not prevent union
when united action on fundamental principles is
necessary- The question upon which le is sought
to test our political faith is of vital iniportanee
to our organization. It involves a principle which
cannot be compromised for the sake of harmony.
That "the will of the majorirlt shall prevail" is a
Democratic doctrine, no one will deny. That the
people of any State or Territory shall have thapti
vil ego of ratifying or rejecting Constitutions framed
by delegates °looted for that purpose is a principle,
and has been a practice, of Democracy !lAA DU
Buchanan will aoknowledge to be oorreot before '
the close of his Administration, In his annual
message he boldly. .aeserta this to be "'ME ONLY
SOUND PRINCIPLE." Now, who is willing to admit
Kansas as a State,wlth a Constitution which has
been rejected by a Note of three-fourths of the
qualified voters of the Territory ? Who will ex•
elude from the Democratic make freemen whose
fearless honesty gives breath to opposing senti
ments? Thank God! the Demooratie ;party In
this State will bo the ftret to speak out and,
in
stead of the sovereign people being proclaimed
die
seaters from their ones -.'..raverite son,3' and rend
out of the party, they wit! repudiate the acts of the
dictators, and again batt/c for the principle which
elevated him to power.
As aPenneylvanian hrough a line of ancestry for
one hundred years, awl. as a member of the Demo
cratic family since !ay birth, I appeal tcl Mr: Bo
°ltalian—and I speak,the voloo of the people of,
his own State—to pause and to preserve the party
North and eolith by tethering to the true doctrine
of popular sovereignly as proclaimed by his friends
from theatump throughout the, Union In the last
Presidential campaign.
The vendorof garments at Tower Ifell has era.
ated quite a sensation amongst the readers of The,
Press In this city. Ills mode of advortising is
quite novel and original, and hie poetical effusions
era well written.. Worse productions hare made
a good book. I regret that. I have not tetalnod
the papers oontainiag these advortisomente, and
knowing that It will. be utterly impossible to, pro
serve future numbers, my regrets mill, be kindly
•pormitted to continue. (Everybody borrows The
Press, and your'stibseribers, proud of its position,
gladly lend it.
t T t bie good it
. doett Is' afterwards
Ve a rl 'i L s r e d en „iiil o ce s h o e k l in a r as r.) to Nseonw if d
e th a e o l op o y we o r f
his poeres—l take' it for granted that ho will pub
lish thorn—he will do a savor to ono who appro.
elates. his efforts.' Ills "Littleton Ooke 'versus
llora Malitueo7' has won me; and' on my next
visit, to the " QOaker City!' his shop Will lately()
'my undivided patronage. ' •
Writing of this, I AM reminded of the many
obmplinlents paid to your adiertising columns by •
the blisinese men of the West. - The commitment'
display given to each adv,ertistiment,, and, the
heardifid• type on whicirehey are printed; causes
espeolal notloe of that, as well' es of the literary,
yolitioal, and other highly interesting departnients
9f your 'valuable paper: Your 'advertisers for the
.complry trad e should take note of this fact,
, , • ..Theitelist'lfunoc IIAT.
Boiler. Esplosion.—A boiler at; the, ware,
hong° of Mr. Tower, on:the Getmantown
-rialown Railroad, at tho Witiaahlokon depot,,nx.:
ploded - yeaterday morning. '.`4l'has.only ..p‘ireon
injured wee a' lady named Mre. Boyle, who' .Was
washing In the yard. Exaggerated aceoanta of
-thltalAtir *ere pito proalant,yeaterday.
,
1 ,
~ The brew of the Arlel, eb'arit.which ther,o is
' j oie' :udi anxipty;kisfrniii," nitiriberi eixty-three
pirednr, VI or *both" remitted -in New , Ytirk, mid
with throe or four exceptions ;aro, by birth or
adoption, oltizene of the United State'',
THE LATEIS3iINIEWS
LlSPlput`Pilli4OVl TO run rise,' ,•
• -
*'hi*
.beeoriinton
Shin Pest-Offlee.—Paelfle Railroad, , '
W . ; snirearow, January 27,1858.--Almost every
principal Federal officer of Philadelphia is in
Washington, and a great many Philadelphians be
side." These offiCers are looking after their con:
iirui2t loll Wale Ra*,
The o Mei acoer,y; of_ the tiioriien Coneti tu t ion
-
has not yet reached hero. It is expected every
day: The President will 'not, it le said, now send
any message to Congress on the subject until he is
asked for information. . ,
Thebemmitioe on the Post; Otlice end Post Rade
have tired Wednesday of next Week to have a full
Iteerlng• on the location of a city post office in
Philadelphia;
I• ! ,The .select committee on the Paolfie Railroad
-was,not organized. It willto-morrov, and the
effort will be to got through with the investigation,
•
and to-report a bill in a fow weeks, At present, the
belief is that there will be half a dozen minority
'reports, aeconipmiled by separate bills. , : •
- 'Die chances for a l'adiftollailroad'aro bettor now
than 'I ha4e knowil them in previous Congresses.,
There will be a warm discussion as to the termini.
It promises to be the main feature of the session.
Rouse have been engaged in "discussing Lc
. compton, Utah, and Nicaragua matters. '
..
. •
Four Days Later from Europe.
ARRIVAL OF_ THE KANGAROO AT
NEW YORK.
The Launch of the.Loviathan Progressing
ne!offs , Of , 'Hotta's Jreios—Jrfatri in
) COTTON lINOTIANOED—CONSOLS'EU-XeD94,14
' Nuw Teitu, Jan. ,
27.—The screw steamship
gangiqoa, arrived this evening from Liverpool,
With thine to taro ISth inst., four days later than
raneWed by thls Europa
- The steamer Canada arrived out on the 12th.
• The papers arellled•with the details of the in-,
41ligonae from India.
Mr Colin Camp Nell has evacuated Lucknowl
Oenorat Ontram remains at Alumbagh with a
strong division.
General Windham, after defeating the assailer
contingent, was himself taken by surprise and his
camp destroyed. The "Gwalior- Mutt - neon subse
quently were beaten by General Campbell, and
again by General Grant, with the loss of all their
guns, stores, ate. • •,
The Oasis Insurgents were pushing to the south
ward,
• Alt' pniiquiet in the Punfauh,
, '`The 'dates are from Calcutta to the 11th, and
Rocubay,ta the 18th. of December.
Tho death of Hen. Havelock to confirmed.
'The viotory of Sir Colin Campbell over tho
Gwallor mutlneere wile Ti decisive one-.
, Themutineers had 14,00 man, and were pursued
,fourteen miles. , The fugitives were subsequently
fallen in with by General Grant, as they were be.
'ginning to UM the' Ganges, and, after ebarp
firing, fifteen guns and ail their. stores an ammu
nition were captured. General Grant was slightly
'wounded, but he lost no men in the notion, although
the loss of the enemy amounted to about 100.
MUTINY IN.TIIE BENGAL ARMY.
The 31th and 73d regiments of the Bengal army
had mutinied. thus extinguishing the army. Two
companies of the latter were cut up by sailors at
dam.
- Tereaty-four thousand European troops were in
the Bengal presidency.
,-Tho steamer "Great Britain," with a thousand
Troops, bad reached Bombay.,
INSURRECTION AT KOLAPORE.
.. •
An insurrection had broken out at Holapore,
but it was speedily suppressed.
.Tunialahadon with 9,000 men, was on his way
to must Sir Colin Campbell. •
• r THE NEXT •NEWS FROM INDIA.
• A week's later news from India only be expected
by the steanier Canada, nearly due at Halifax, as
11,1 the new mall arrangemeht the news should
reach England on the 14th instant." •
Tho pails, from which the foregoing news Is ob
tkined, reached England on the 12th instant.
ENGLAND. •
• ill be 'a
es will be
atratlon to
I. Governor
The launch of the Leviathan steamer was daily
progressing, and was expected to be complete in a
foirdays..
'The Leviathan was Moved twenty foot on Tries
day,, and it was expected that she would be at th 6
bottom of the launching ways on Wednesday,
'When she would be hauled ofby Trotman's anchor.
She had been moved over thirty feet in the last
two days. ,
-' The London paper]; giro all tho particulars with
regard to the arrest of Gen. Walker, but with the
exception of the Post, which applauds Commodore
Paulding for hie conduct, they are editorially
Went!
The- following suspensions' are announeed.
Messrs. Arthur it Co., warehousemen of Glasgow,
Kith lore liabilities, and James Barinatyne
Son, of Lirrieriok. The liabilities of the latter wore
£50,000.
The Prinoe of Prussia is to visit England, to be
present at the marriage of ,his eon with the Prin.
'cols Royal. -
The ship Philadelphia, width arrived at Liver
tee n th, was struck by lightnla~g. Two
—'l2)Nzfrlinv 'Times' oily ar
ticle published this morning, says there is scarcely
any dendand for discounts at the bank rate, and In
the open market the rate is only 4a4do'per cent.' ,
FRANCE.
Tho papers furnish no news of Importonoo from
Franco.
The weather in Franc* had been 'very severe
but the cold had materially moderated. •
Penis, Jan. 12.—The Congress revolting the
Principalities has been loostponed till February.
• • SPAIN.
The Spanish Cortes had been opened. The
Queen's speech alludes to the Mediation of Franoe
and England In the Mexican quarrel, but In what
strain the despatch to the London papers does not
state.
Bravo Murillo was elected President of Couno
at Madrid on Tuesday, by A majority.
ITALY.
The remains of Field-Marshal Radetsky were
lying in state at Milan. The funeral wee to take
plane on the 14th inst., and would be attended by
25,000 Austrian soldiers
TURKEY.
All Pasha succeeds Redsohid Pasha as Orand
Vizier.
RUSSIA.
It is said that the RUPSifllla have ceased to in
taffeta in the navigation of the Ciroassian coast.
Conbaenoe was reviving among the commercia
community of Stookholm.
The Indian mail bring.' further noire from Can
ton.
The admiral and the prlneipal portion of the
English had gone up the, Canton river, and an
attack was expected on the arrival of reinforce
ments. .
The city is reported to be ruined.
Lord Elgin had gone to Macao.
Tens wore quiet at Shanghai).
AFRICA,
Tho British ship-of-war Sappho has captured a
sliver of one thousand tons burthen, on the west
coast of Aftioa. The slaver was run ashore to
Fevont capture, and 'after' throwing overboard
eight hundred of the negroes, the crew escaped
to the shore in boats. Half of the negroes thrown
overboard were drowned. Four hundred tome
were found on board the slaver, which was subse
quently burnt to the water's edge.
MADAGASCAR.
The persecution of the Christians in Madagascar
was continued with unabated severity. Thirteen
had been put to death, many had been tortured
horribly, and numbers were reduced to slavery.
- COMMERCIAL INTELLIGENCE.
LIVERPOOL COTTON MARKET, Jan: 22 •i—The sales for
the put three days have been 14,000 bales; Including
1,400 on speculation, and the same quantity for export.
The market was generally unchanged, and closed
quiet and steady. Messrs. Richardson Spence, &
clret,lare report that in wale oases middling qualities
were disposed of at a decline of 1-164.
NIANOIIESTER MARKETS.—The advlees from Man
cheskr were of an ,unfavorable character, there being
but little Dignity in the trade, and prices ruling weak
LONDON MONEY MARKET —The money market
was slightly easier; °masa, closing at 04,004 X for
mosey._ •
LIN6RPOOI, lIREADS7IOIB IILK9ICET.—Diessre
Richerllion, Branca, tr„Co. , o Clreplar reports flour doll
and Male lower, at the following quotations: Wrote
2l 21a, Philadelphia and Baltimore gaeo24, 6d, Ohl
28a.
Whest closed dull, with a decline of Sletad ; Red 135
6d; White 7a lid Dia Od ; Choice
Corn 'tits also dull, and all qualities had knightly de
clined The following quotations ere Oren: Mixed and
Yellow 34 84032 a 9d; New White Slea ; Old White 378
&NM.
ravzittoot PROVISION BIARICET..-s-The circulars
of the Lirepool Proclaim; market quote;
Beef gotorally quiet.
Pork clowd dull,
Bacon hell Arm and steady.
Lard ate* and Ity rather better demand.
Tallow slow of eels. but with unaltered. prices,
LIVEIIPCOL PRODUCE MARKET.--Rosin was dull
at 48 ; Sum Arm; Coitus steady; Tea end Wee quiet;
Turpentine Writs quoted at 12a.
LONDON WlRKET,—Broadstuffsgeoerally were dull;
wheat had a Monti; rig tendency on all qualities; Sugar
wee buoyant; Coffee Arm; Tea generally unchanged.
From Kansan.
Sr. Louts San. 27 —Tho Kansas oorresfiondont
of the 'Deoterrot saytrtho tree-State people of that
Territory have doodled not to Memorialize Con
gress for an enabling act, but to pass one them
zolves, and to frame a Constitution, which will be
like the Topeka instrument, eubmitting it for el
ooptanco or rejettion.
, Mr. Clarkson passd Booneville yesterday, en
ronte to Washingtwi, with the Leoompton Constitu
tion and the official returns of the late election.
Fran IVathlngton.
WASHINGTON. Jan. 27.--The board of -medical
dicers will assemlia at Richmond; Virginia, on
the let of April, fot the' oxamination'of assistant
surgeons for promotitn, and of such candidates for
appointment to the pudica! staff as may bo invited
to present themselves.
Although it is llnall!determined to send General
Scott to the Pacific coast, the time of hie deptature
fe uncertain, es, ascertained this morning at the
War Department.
Cractford'i Matte of Washington.,
Ittennonn, VA., Jan. Z.—Tho stain) of Wash
ington, eieouttel by flu. lau3entod Crawford, was
unwrapped to•day and Isspeotod by thousands of
l a dies and gentlemen. It Id pronounced an fault•
lem and• in Ovary reamer a grand , and glorious
pork of art.'
The Seat of the,gattadlalt Gevarainent.
Toßow7o, Jon. 27.—ahe Imperial Governmont
hee fixed u p o n Qttowa: Clty, late Hytovin, no the
pormamit §pltpr.tpii bapadian ont. , .
Meeting of the fir editors et Ohne. H. Mills Si Co.
.13oteror, Jan. 27.—At the first Aneettni.of the
orediters of Chalice Qo, in tile clout of
Ineolvehey, ts the amount, Of $1,200,000
were proved, end .ndeltional debts 'to tho amount
of several hundred thmhnd dollars will be proved
at the next: nteetlng. 'Memo: Bark Lincoln and
B. It. /Judge were ohopn.assigneem.
, • ,
of 'the
BO9TON'i 'Jab. Cunard tittntztaluip Argun
Man flailed at nuon l wiry fBOO l OOO In oPeole.
LATER FROM CALIFORN/A,
ARRIVAL OF THE MOSES TAILOR I ;
$1,600,000
7 . 1'13* OREGON tkl,i4;p xo
Aptotiier
NEw Tonic; January 27.—The nowltoll7l lll 4
Moses Taylor has arrived from Aspinwall,lhinging
California advices to the sth iinstant. She-con
nected at the Isthmus with the steamer John L.
Stephohl. — The Taylor has on hoard $1,600,000 - hi
specie The principal consignees are as follows :
Wells, Fargo, .t Co $515,000
American Exchange Bank 60,000
Freeman di Co 87,000
Howland Ji Aspinwall 95,000
Kelly A Company 47,000
James Patrick 100,000
.Strauss A Brother 40,000
Coleman . A Co 32,080 ' -
Stage AG Co 40,000
G. G. Hobson 32,000 I
Ross, Falconer A: Co 25,000
The United Stites itakinei Fulton left Aspinwall
on the 17th for San Juan, to convey thither Gene
ral Lamar.
The MOBO3 Taylor passed the 'Spanish Beet off
Havana. ,
The San Francisco papers era barren of newt
' The intelligence from the mines is very favor
able. ,
81151130118 was dull both at Ban Francisco and in
the anterior, . .
,
' Fine specimens of staple cotton have boon raised
in Tulare county.
John Murphy ) of Pittsburgh, has been reordered
in San Francisco.
• PROM OREGON.
The official vote at tho late election in Oregon
shows a majority of 5,000 against slavery. There
was also a majority of 4,000 in favor of the Consti
tution, and 7,500 against the admission of free
negroes.
Mr. Caineo, the former Governor of Oregon, is
dead.'
The Legislature was in erosion, and the drat eleo
tion under the State Constitution is to take place
in June next. •
The great's!' part of thelown of Dew nieville has
been destroyed by lire. • Loss $500,000.
An anti-Mormon meeting has been held at Los
Angeles, and a memorial adopted asking General
Clark for 500 men for the protection of the citi
zens..
The annual session of the California Legislature
oommonoed on the 4th inst. The Governor would
probably recommend feistiest of the mining
claims. The_9uestion was expected to cause a sa
-1 riot's quarrel in the Democratic party.
A slight - stook of earthquake was experienced at
San Francisco on the 24th ult.
SOUTH AMERICA. -
Mr. Lerner has been arrested at Lima, charged.
with having organized a filibuster expedition in
the United States, in aid of Gen. Echenique.
Capt. Duane, of the American ship Lammegur,
complains of an outrage to his boat's crew and an
insult to himself, committed by the officers of a
Peruvian war steamer.
SANDIVICII ISLANDS.
An American whaling captain has been"pursued
and caught within a leave from the coast of the
Sandwich Islands, tend compelled to return and pay
the debts incurred while in port. The American
commissioner sanctioned the seizure.
CENTRAL AMERICA.
Tito intelligence from Central America wee un
important.
The British mail steamer Valdevia was wrecked
during a fox on the 11th of December, in Mahn
quen. All on board were saved.
BOLIVIA.
Affairs in Bolivia were quiet. It was rumored
that ox-President Beim would soon reappear on
the frontier to oppose the Government.
PERU.
Antra in Peru were unchanged.
Some extensive failures had taken place at
Paella. Two firms bad failed for half a million
each.
CONGRESS
IV ABRIXOTON, January V, 1853
SENATE
Mr. WILSON, of Massachusetts, Introduced a re
solution authorizing the appointment of a commis
sion to examine into the difficulties connected with
affairs in Utah, and whether they can be settled
without resort to force. Referred to the Military
Committe . e. '
Mr. Pima, of Ohio, presented a series of join
resolutious passed by the Legislature of Ohio.
Mr. WAIT, of Ohio, said they were disrepute
ble in their tbelr character. •
At the impatient demand of several Senators,
they were read.,
The resolutions express the entire confluence of
the Legislature in the integrity and ability of the
present Chief Magistrate; say the Administra
tion commands their cordial and undivided sup
port;and re-affirm the doctrines of the Cincinnati
platform; regard the refusal of the Leoomp:
ton Convention to submit its Constitution to the
people as unfortunate for the peace of the eclat
try..and deolare it to be their unalterable judg
ment that every Constitution of a new State of
the Union (unless otherwise directed by the peo
ple) ought to be submitted to the "bona fide"
electors of such Territory, for their approval or
rejection; and conclude by inetruotiog the Re
presentatives, and (requesting the Senators from
Ohio, to vote against the admission of Kansas tin
der the Lecompton Constitution, or any other not
oloarly expressive of the will of thelpeople.
Mr. WADE remarked that the reason why he
stigmatised these resolutions us disreputable, was
because they did not speak out with that manly in
dependence with which the Legislature of a
'sovereign State should always speak upon any
question iof sufficient importance -for expressing
tinllitilon at all. These resolutions endorse the
Fnt and itt-i15, 4 g4 4 t kiffiderla t itratiit hey
tend to conclude by inetruoting their Senators
to go againet the only great and, daring measure
the Administration has presented. Why not come
direetlY' to thh' question at issue, and with that
calm dignity which, becomes a - sovereign State,
declare and announce their purposes and their
wilt? Why go crouohing like miserable slaves,
to the Administration, and hypocritioally declare
they have the fullest confidence in it, when they
mean to end, by declaring their stern determina
tion' to oppose the only important measure it has
brought forward?
The President not only announces his determi-
nation not to allow the people of Kansas to make
their own Constitution, bat to force upon them one
made by their enemies,and compel obedience to ft
with the point of the bayonet. He (Mr. Wade,)
proposed, if it should come to that, to resume the
same arguolent where our fathers left it. The
South had pot upon' their plantation a More era,
ven-Spirited set of people than those who passed
these reisolutions. [Laughter.] Of course, there
was no necessity of instrifeting him how to vote.
[Renewed laughter.] If the Executive should per.
slat in this policy, he was a tyrant, and deserved
the frowns and reprobation of every Man. The
resolutions call his policy " unfortunate," but be
called it downright knavery and tyranny, which
demanded, not argument, but action. It tends to
breach the peace and stir up civil war.
Notwithstanding all this, they do not lose their
confidence in him. They sly, although we adhere
to him, we instruct you to throw his message in
his face, and, for ot.e, ue (Wade) was ready to do
it. [Laughter.] Tbr resolutions, were not the
voice of the people of Ohio, and mot no sympathy
or acquiescence from the Republican party, They
were crowded down the throats of the Republicans
in the Ohio Legislature by a cowardly majority,
under the gag rule, because they dared not face
the scorn and contempt which would have been
heaped upon them had they permitted the liberty
of speech. Tho brave and generous people of
Ohio would have spoken out directly, without
,catering to the favor of any man. • Baldly and in
dependently would they have pronounced their
will. The resolutions were passed under the
statement that haste was indispensable. And yet
more than ten days have elapsed, during which
time they have slept in some man's breeches-pocket.
He was willing to go with the Legislature and
resist to the death the attempt to force the Le
conipton or, any other Constitution not the wilt of
the people Upon them This is the first attempt
since the American Revolution to take away the
liberties of the people. And it must be the last!
Mr. Puna said ho would not interfere with the
special order by making a speech now. When the
Lenompton Constitution was presented, ho would
express Isis views upon it at length, and take the
opportunity to correct his colleague in some mat
tars of fact. ' '
. ' The resolutions were tabled and ordered to be
printed.
Mi. Dim, of Mississippi, presented a bill as a
substitute for the Pacific 'Railroad bill, embodying
the views of the minority of the select ommnfttee.
Mr. Bnuounfett, of California, introduced a bill
directing the payment into the Treasury of Cali
fornia of all , money collected on duties of imports
prior to her admission Into the
The Senate then pieceeded' to the 'consideration
of the army bill:
.Mr, fitv,lff, of California, submitted a substitute,
providing for five now regiments, affording to the
recommendation of the Secretary of War.
The substitute was rejected by a vote of 8 yeas,
against 38 nays.
Mr. BULL, of Tennessee, said be could per
celve no absolute necessity for the proposed in
crease of the regular foreo. Re had heard it sug
gested that the servioes ofyolunteers had been
offered, and presumed they would be suffielent for
thepresent eniergency.
'Mr. Ivanamr, of aeorgia, remarked that our gal
lant soldiers were in a condition to require reinforce
ments was suffieient to insure the passage of the
bill. Tho mere item of expense should not influ
ence Senators under the present circumstances.
In the growing oondition of the country, it ought
to bo expected that the expenses of the military
establishment will be annually Increased. As had
been .saidit was true forces had boon used in
Kansas Not to control popular shvereignt,y, how
ever, to assist the minority to put down the ma
jority, but to keep the peace, and maintain the
supremacy of the laws there. lie regretted as
much as any the necessity of their employment.
But if it had noLboen for this, long before now not
an Abolitionist would have boon left to desecrate
and pollute the soil of that Territory. Lawrence,
that sink of folly, filth, and falsehood, would long
ago hays , been rased to the ground, and the history
of that place might have been written in the
words :
Lawrence was ~
Much bad been said -about the border ruffians
in Missouri ; but he did not know a worse set of
marauding ruinous than those under Jim Lane.
If there was a band of raglans more despicable
than another, it was that same band. Indeed, if
one could rake the infernal regions, from centre to
circumference and frOm the surface to the bottom,
ho did not believe a set soinfamous could be fished
ciut..
, In preserving peace in Kowa the President db]
no more than his ditty,'and Mr. Iveieon 'alluded to
the employment of troops in Rhode Island during
Governor Dorr'e movements, to show that the Go
vernment bad interposed in certain cases.
Mr. Suctoxs, of Rhode Island,. vindicated the
Charter party,.and - gavo the history of the Rhode
Island rebellion,,ooatining himself to what the peo
ple did. With regard to the GoVernment's action
he would say nothing, and not even mention tho
name of the Chief Magistrate at that time in power.
If the ',Senator was not satisfied he would lend him
a book giving the fall history of the ease.
Mr. rvonsoN expressed himselfiatisEed.
Mr.' CHANDLER, of Michigan; expressed the
'opinion that Brigham Yining was only carrying
out wlnitwas suppose] to be the principles of the
Kausas-Nebraska bill, which declares that the
peoplii of a Territory ought tribe left perfectly free
to form and regulate their domestic institutions in
their own way. In the innooenee of his heart
-Brigham Young eappaaed -that the: family was a
domestic institution, and under that interpretation
'hi had the right it. eitittir one op one )intdre4
Willa, at he pleased. If the Democrats propose
to maintain their former doctrine popular
4 3 er t igity-isnd non-Intervention, and jet declare
Of libikto intervene in Kisnsas:heoegaM •
granted thez`benops necessary to presstve Order
but he Monett - the beet way would be to employ
a miseenary tdito to Utah alone. and isfplein-to
Brigham Yount the views of the Go p viment; for
It ;wise 'oridlit - that he now sup the idea
tf non-intersention by the Demoo Bo Ad
teittlatratlitilitith the domestic Institution". of. a
Territory Watutterly groundless. lie oxtail it bad
not been for the troops in Kansas, bordemnflanism.
would have been wiped out, and not only that, but
a terrible account settled with some of the border
towns of Missouri._ II the _Eartator from Georgia
desired to have the troops removed from Kansas,
hb could easil,t.vote ,
skid that it must be evident from the
tone of the debate that mach ot. - theroppoeition
the bill spring from a desire to foment anvil war
in Kansas, and he again spoke of the neoessity for
taking the question.
Several Senators'expressing ts desire to be heard;
and the hour being late, the Senate adjourned.
HOUSE OR REPRESENTATIVES,
On motion of Mr. ToitretarkEts, of Tenneisaa,
resolution was adopted calling upon the President
for all information showing what gave rise to the
Utah expedition, end throning light on the ques
tion how far-Brigham Young is in a' state title ,
hellion or reslstanoe to the authorities of the United
I States. -
Tb 6 Florae went Into Committee of, the "Whole
on the state of the Union, and took up the motion
to print the deficiency bill.
Mr. Davis, of Mininippl, said that threats made
by gentlemen of the Northitgainst.the South were
held in contempt. The South expect a conflict at
a period not far distant, and come when it might,
they-would be found ready to meet it. If the
North should invade tile-South; litatheta do it in
open day, and not by night. Whenever a single
drop of blood snail be rind there, by way of coer
cing them to submit - to Injustice and wrong, it
wild be followed by a stream of fire into the
North. They would find an army winching from
the South into the Norfn, with the sword.% one
band and the Bible in the other,
scattering duo.
lotion in their path . the Booth has born, with
patience the atleokemade upon them because they
love the Union, bat will not much longer submit,
s bad more reepeot for the Abolitionists than for
the Free-Rollers, on principle. The assassin meets
his victim In open day, while the other stabs him
while asleep. The only difference exists in the
fact that one is the greater robber than the other. ,
Mr. C1)150; 115, Of Ohio, asked whether the gexo•
tleman from Mississippi would carry hiadesolation
into the Western Reserve. - , ;
Mr. DAVIS replied that that Would be the tint
point be would strike at, because that was the re.
thiamin of the meanest and worst Abolitionists in
the country. [Langbtera
Mr. LEAOR, of Michigan, said the aeople have a
high regard for the Presidential offici, and for the
functionary himself, when worthy. But they have
learned, 'from sad experience, how far the President
has strayed from the landmarka of freedom. Pass
ing over the iniquities perpetrated in Kansas, he
proceeded to speak against the President's ream.
mendation of an indemnity to the Spanish Govern
ment, "for the purpose of distribution among
the claimants in the Amistad case." Congress
had not hitherto deemed the; case worthy of serious
oansideration. It had long slept quietly, end its
repose should not now be disturbed. He
trusted the question would be put in a manner
es emphatic that it would nova: again b 0 intruded
on Congress. Those nogroes were free by the laws
of Spain, by the laws of the United States, by the
laws of nations, and by the important and eternal
law of Heaven ! But even if they had been slaves,
there was by the treaty with Spain no 'authority
to deliver them up as merchandise. In conclusion,
be argued against the extension of slavery, and do
mended that all Territories and the District of Co
lumbia should be purged of the ourse. The beans
of the people are for this, and ultimately the prin
ciple will triumph.
hir.•AVERY, of Tennessee; alluded to the '° un
warrantable usurpation" of Cora. Paulding. He
declared the Clayton•Brilwer treaty was a mildew
and a blight to the prOgress of American institu
tions, and should be abrogate& _He favored the
application of the Monroe-doctrine, and the ac
quisition of Cuba, which was of great importance
to the country, - and was doubtless so regarded by
the enllahtened Statesman who 'fills the-Presiden
tial chair England, stimulated by national ag
grandizenieet, Is the most filibustering nation on
the earth. and J 8 seeking to extend her - possessions
on this ebtenent, whieh_should be prevented. Ile
advisoated the Leoomptot Constitutibn, as being
in conformity to the Constitution of the United
States, and the legally expressed will of the peo
ple of Kansas.
Mr. THOMPSON, of New York, wont into 'a full
history of the Mormons, showing that their Gov
ernment blends is one the qualities of church and
State, in imitation of the Hebrew' , theocracy.
Power and polygamy hold their leaders together,
and not one American among them would stay
there longer then he could help, if loth these lux
uries wore denied, bins. Iliatighter.L
Mr. GIDDBUS asked whither the Mormons bare
not as much power, under the dootripanf squatter
sovereignty, to establishlygamy -as other Terri
tories have to establish slavery ? , • '-
Mr. TROMPEON replied that be did not wish to
mix this question with - the question - of slavery,
and prodeeded to condemn pelygimy as being
against the moral law and the opinion of, civilized
mankind. In view of the enmity staring them in
the face, be Would pass a law making polygamy a
crime, and send a force there to ecatteaoviry harem
to the - wince. Do would apprehend ,all con
spirators,- who would• tis fournt-toinithole every"
head of a seraglio. Be. Would !try- thany - for_
treason, and' have• every one 'found guilty and
hanged, excluding all Mormins from participating
in the proceedings of the court. Be. would-spare
the inhabitants, and give them a republican form
of government, and see that they enjoyed it with
out the heel of despOtism on' theta necks, And if
all this failed, he would tarn their territory into a
vast military camp to. protect the highviay to the
Pacific. What inueoesnry to he performed should
be done now, whether volunteers are to be em
_oloyed or not. lie wood committed to stay the
121820R - brtill3 prlarfo tire, before it shell extend
and involve the whole country in the conflagra-
The elitnmittee then rose. -
Haunts, of Illinois, made tt partial' report,
from the Conn:Ansi on s leatlons, atoring It In
expedient to allow Mr, Campbell, _MO as he
requested, any forther tatiwato take sapplimentary'
testimony affeelinr his seat in the House, which is
contested by Mr. Vallandighani;.: • , "
-- Mr. Citizen, of-North Carolina, made aninority
teport. . • _ • ' -- - -
Mr. STEPHENS, of Georgia, from the 1181120_00131.
mittee. offered a - reeolution, which was adopted,
admitting Mr. Vallandigham to the floctr,during
the proceedings in the Ohio contested-election case,
and giving him the privilege to' speak'as-to its
) merits.
e Mr. Henan laid he would,shortly tall up the
e to sat, .
• he House then adjourned -
PENNSYLVANIA LEGISLA44IIC.E.
ilaaalentraa, Jan. 27` 1858
SENATE: : '
BILLS REPORTED PAYORIOLY.—TIO bill to amend the charter of the Pennsylvania . Asylum foi the
relief of Indigent widows and ingle t weans°, of
Remington. -
The bill to divorce Thomas W. Smith and hfs
wife. Elizabeth.
The bill to provide for the recording of inven
tories by the registers of the Commonwealth.
BILLS IN Ptaxa.—By Mr. Siam.. a.bilt relative
to the Twenty-sixth judicial district."
By Mr. Gas ZANE, a bill relative to notices or pro
'test to endorsers residing in cities and towns.
REsOzErioNs ADOPTED.-4. resolution was
adopted, calling on the Canal Commissioners to
transmit the annual report of Wm, E. Mott, su%
perintendent of the North Branch Canal.
CONSIDERATION OP BILLS AND RESOLOTIONS.
The bill to incorporate the Norris Cornish Engine
Works was ,considered and discussed by Messrs.
Knox, Bell, .and others, favorably, and by Messrs.
Buckalerr, Wright, Marselis, and others, in oppo
sition,. on. the ground that the general Manufac
turing law covers the ea4e. The bill was negatived
by a vote of 13 yeas to n nays.
On motion, the vote was reconsidered, and the
bill was referred to the Committee on Corpora..
lions.
• The bill to repeal the - sot for the election'of two
District Attorneys for The city of PhiladelphiaWa3
considered and postponed.
The resolution relative to the small:ix/6i outran
ey, requesting the Governor to oorrespond with the
Secretaries of other States, with a view of calling
a convention of delegates from all the States of
the Union to discuss the subject, was taken up.
After a lengthy discussion, the subject was post
poned till tomorrow. .•
Adjourned.
ROUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
A resolution to adjourn on the .28thof March was
passed.
BILLS REPORTED FAVORABLY.—Mr. ARTI11:11,
from the Committee on Corporations, reported fa
vorably the bill to incorporate the ,Cathedral Ce
metery of West Philadelphia.
BILLS L 4 BLACI6.—By Mr. CA1.017, a bill to in
crease the rate of interest. te 'seven per tent., and
giving the power to contract at the rate of ten per
cent Also, providing that no institution onn re
ceive more than seven per cent.
By Mr. lionnsox, a supplement to the act
in
corporating the Wilmington Turnpike Road Coon-
Per.Y.
aly Mr. Ntr.l., a bill making Harrisburg the par=
manent place of holding the Benton of the Supreme
Court.
Alec,a bill to repeal the law relative te Cella
oral inheritance tax.
By air. Hita,racs, a supplement to the act ineor
porating the Llmekiin Turnpike Road Company of
Montgomery county.
By ItEr Ilium., a bill to repeal the law appoint.
ing county superintendects of common schools.
BILLH PASSIM FINALLY.—The bill restoring the
superintendence of ' the .1 4 Torth Branch Canal to
the Canal COMMiSSIODOIS wac passed finally.
Adjourned.
United State* Supreme Court
WunntxnvOzi, January 97;--No. 49. Jaeob N
Payne et al. va. Jonathan J. Niles etal. Argo
wont. concluded. '
No. 50. Paul Spofford et al., claimants of the
eteanishiplnmes Adger, or. W. L. Todd Appeal
from the United States Oinsnit.Court for the South
ern District of New York The matter in contra
'verity having been settled,the appeal was dismistied
with costs.
Nos, 51 and 52. Edward M. Chaffeir, trustee of
Horace H. Day, vs. Nathaniel lla,yward, and H.
11. Day us. N. Hayward. Argued for the defend
ants and submitted on a ptinted - eignment of the
plaintiff. , '
• No. M. Iforace C Bilsby et al. vs-Eli3l.a Foote
Argument for appellants emzimbneed: '
The Southern Mull
Wminixorox, .Tan 'mail from New
Orleans has been received as late as duo.
The barque Seraphim for New York, hid re
turned to Baton Rouge in distress.
' Tho message of Hid Governor of Louisiana has
boon transmitted to the Stale -Legliaiture. It
states that the receipts to the treasury for the year
amounted to $1,100,000, the expenditures - to
$1,140,000, - -the defloiency general fund 5270,000.
The amount in the treasury was $4B 500. Ile re
commends a large retrenchment.. The sates of
State lands brought about $700,000. A modifica
tion of the banking system, by prohibiting' the
Issue of five and ten-dollar notes, is recommended.
so as to induce a greater metallic circulation.
On Federal politics, he says, in view of the ina
penaing War wi , h Utah, the people ofLouisiana : I
will certainly tender their aid to the Government:
Ile urges the admission of Kansas into the Union_
under the Lecompton , Constitution: - The - Sonar:
will not ask more, and cannot take less. He urges
the abrogation'of the Clayton-Balwer treaty, Ng
as to open away for_legitimate Southern expan
sion. . •
MARINE ' /NTELLTOVICIS.,-Atrited at New Or
leans from New York, ship Normandy : from Boa.
ten, Lady Blesslngton, the Seaman's Brids, and
Alvarado.
Piiclitutiread BM.
iiittini t itorilJaii: l 2l / .. - -The bill reported in the
d i krßaJ.tka , dir.;llWilia alisarlirdt..ilio select coat •
irdttee_oalba:Paotikd.rail.r9ad. M 9 a substitute for
tat of the nrsjotity; direefe the President to ad-
Tartisefcriimotabs for establbritimg xailway, end
to . oontraot for the trenspoitation over it cf
mails troOps;" - aud, supplies of the &nay and rev..
and all iitbbr Giiintrizettet service. The reed to ie
t onttreieled -tat yeare ippropri a It
tentptUien'dol l ~-rg t be Odd as the fond pprog [We:.
'arid - altarcata *ea tiorki of bind - for six Utiles on es...h
sideetthe road. - -
fi Diemphls.
..Crtaatitstoiraaa. 27—_The atom:tier Memphis,
for New 'York, waadetained at the bar till Sunday,
by a beery sea..
Markets
_ .
Ravi Oat.z.ams, Januar); fit—Cotton —Rates tr
day )3,500 bales at irregular prices, the marl - cc
closing with an advance of SD; Middling quotes at
9helOo. The stook in rortia 3.54,500 bales Sugar
quotes firm 43a4e. Maar has a declining ten
dency, quoting at $4 37.1. Rio Coffee is is better.
Freigble An...mtled.. On Cotton to Liverpool 7-161
sl5-32. 'T...hangs on London :tat per cent
premium.
- -BALTIMORE, January 27 —Flour dull. Wheat—
Red 110a112o ; White 12021350. Corn lower, et
55a58e for White, and 56160 c for 'Yellow. Whiskey
20a21e. Exchange on New- York 39.3 per Cent
premium. -
Nnw BELEAME, January 27.-Sales of 17.000
bales of cotton to-day; Breadstnffs are generally
firm and buoyant; 'Flour selling at 4,40, and rd.
Taming; Sugars are firm; white - Corn quotes a t
580; Freights aremke &oda*: on Cotton to L:-
verpool f. 1 5 .321; to Mire - Xl5 1k; to Boston Ic
The other markets are unchigiged.
Crarrarreir,la& 27 -Hags kid - provisions are
nominal. Ideas pork offered at $l3, without r...1r
.The whole number of hogs packed so far tbizi
eon is 401,009. against - 341 000 to the same periA
last year. The receipts for the put twenty-bar
hours bas been 3,000.
The' river is falling; there -is now ten feat of
water in the channel. „ -
CPICINNATI, Jan. 27.—Flour ii unchanged
Whiskey advanced to ate.
Bogs and provisions nominal. -
Weatbei Report
[Per the Western Totr . ph %es. Wee 311 Chest
JAhaary
Ther
New York, noon-alesr ' wind N. W r,'
Montreal, 8 A. w. -mll2l, clear cc
Quebec-raining, wind E - `....5
Calais-'ony, wind W 22
Portland-warro 42
Subtitle, N. 8.--overeut, slight fog. wind ii W.... 37
Hatriabarg-clear and warm-beautiful day
WUbesbarro, Pa.-mild. elpating_lP , 4
Easton, Pa -cloudy, wind K W
Cinetruniti--oloudy, threatens snow 43
Lortiatilte--ei/Ady 4.2,
Teledd-cloudv.... 44.
Andale-elaudy cad- - rainy, wind W ...?3
Pittaburgh--clondy 4'
Columbia-eland, 44
Cleteland-d - only, wind N. W 43
St. Lonia--clear, wind S. W 40
. _
Boonevflie, Ma.--clear .
_. .
Springfield, 111.-dear 4'
Janearille, Wis.-raining 35
Chicago-elear
.. 37
Prs , rie deChien--fogity 3.3
Fulton, 11l -vind S. E , -
.
Burlington, lows-clear , 31
Dubuque-cloudy and tales ..
Rock Island--elear - - - -7
Afilwankee-ciondy, prospott of mow
.
Portage eityzeloudy r
Fond do Lae-foggy - . .. 7
Indlanspolia-cloudy 1.
Washington-dandy, wind N. W
Baltimorc-elondyi wind W _
- •
5
ETIL3IIO3 PAPOSL:
New Orlaiuu—elese,-Wiod: y -
MATTERS AND THINGS IN NEW Volts:.
[From the New York papers or yesterday.)
TRIAL OP E.soonsscs.—A witch; to teat tbo
strength and endurance of Mickey Free and W
lowusend,:htis bran made to walk against
time. On Tuesday, at llo'cloek - A. M. Free com
menced his walk upon a platform node for tb:
purpose. at . the Arcade, in Grand street. Town
send, who is a Pennsylvanian, will commence at
o'clock this morning, thus having the
-advantage
of his competitor tirmay hours. - Ten minutes aro
to be allowed cash Vey every twenty-four hour,
for sleep- - • -_-
Srsortsa Bmcwz—A Craws or Tan Wiscos
SECRETARY or STATE Snoors litstsatr.—Leivis
Beardsley, of ildadison, Wisconsin, a clerk in th, - :
office Of the Booretar, of - Stater, Mime to this city a
few days Biwa; and bullet stopping at the Me
tropolitan Hotel . About nine o clock last even
ing he-entered Mr: chignon's shooting gallery, in
Broadway, Cut to Lafayette Hall, and, after
firing eight or' ten abets" with a-pistol, and paying
for them,lie ran:asked' that he would shoot two
shillings' worth more. Taking the loaded pistol
which was banded him; he deliberately placed it
to his head and shot himself. the ball'entering just
above the left eyeand lodging in the brain, end
erinsing immediate &sat- -
- The deceased was a rielb - tarofJiaage Beardsley,
of this State. :A-relative - of Stye he has
Geed something enumal In his condtfet for the len
few days-and has' kept watch of him, suspecting
he was within} , d t rapared. Ii is believed be cm
initted 'the deid In a fit of temporary insanity.
It is thought thatat the time of the suicide the
deceased-had a, valuable gold watch in his pocket.
worth some two hundred dollivs,-and that it woo
stolen befbro_the bairwaSzamoved to the etation
house.
Coronet; Petry held an inquest to-day, and a ver
. diot was returned in accordance with. the facts
DEATH Of . Hoie. S. H. 110311 i aiwe ra
gret to 4D/1010100 the death of Mr. Haws, who
died this morning in Troy; of bilious °olio. He
had been to Saratoga to attend upon some M
iamians ease, where he was takensiek. and, when
on his way home, was taken worse in Troy, where
be died at one c this morning. Mr. Marra
(Whig) was in Congress two years from the Sixth
and larrraind'ing woede. - - -
Easiburn Mariners Church, Water Stree,
a4ovo'rrater.—ThO visit of the.. frigate Congre-;
to. this port Was msdo the OeCasiiii of very inte
resting mese at this ohureb. (situated in Etter
street, above Waluatd last Sabbath evening The.
indefatigable and ever-watchful limiter, Rev J.
Ripley, had limed stnrerel hundred cards of invi
,tationt whioh were distributed -by himself and his
congregation to that Crew and Other sailors, when
ever they could be met with. The (=sequence
was 'a tarmig of these hardy'sons of the ocean.
snob, as his seldom been sees at this old church
It lividly reealled the days of Father Eastburr,
when crowds of. "blue-jacket?" were wont to
throng these ewe aisles. The centre block, sct
apart for their accommodation, was literally
thronged with sailors and other young men. The
opining piece:by the choir—" The Star of Rope.
fat, far at sea"—irae peculiarly appropriate. If
our eitizena Itedierslly would avail themselves of
the stpporturaty of meeting at times, with tress
goierous tail, within these time-consecrated
_they_wonld bevreloomed and amply eompensatel
by the pleasure there. derived.
-. Bali of Rtaittatale.-r.4 Imes A. Freeman,
auctioneer. told the following real estate last eve
ning- et the Merehants' -Exchange A two-story
brink house and east - side of Vernon street,
Foithwark, sold for 31,375; subject to id les
ground rent; a lot of ground, with the two
story brick house thereon erected, north side of
Harmony street, sold for $125 90; subject to $ll
ground rent:
- 11nother .2 4 1eir Counterfeit .—A new coun
lerfeit ten-dollar bill on the Delaware City Bank
was shown to no yesterday morning. The rignetta
is a locomotive and train of can. On the right
end of the note n boy may be seen, lying by a
sheaf of wheat. It to very unlike the original,
but it is calculated to deceive, .
.•
Dull,—Beyond" all 4uestiow yesterday, 50
far as local items are eonoerned, was-one of tha
most uninteresting that we remember. The hos
-011, and the offices of the mayor, coroner, acl
are-alarm telegraph: failed to produce a single
_mutter worthy of note.
PHILADELPHIA I)IAEIiEtS
WEDNZSD4T, Jan. , 27:—Erenitig —The market
for breaslataffs continues invaded, and in the ab
sence of any- material demand for export, save
holders have again reduced their prices for Flour.
and about 1,000 bble common mixed and ge. - I
superfine were sold at $4 5044 6.2} per bbl ; the•a
rates are refused by : some,, but the market close,
quiet ; with a moderate business only to note f
home consumption at from $4.821 up to $5.75 per
bbl for Common to extra and fancy family brands
as to quality. Cons meal and rye flour are not tr.-
quired for, and held at 53 for the former and $3 25
per bbl for the latter. Wheat is more plenty, but
the demand is fair, with sales of 3.500 bushels to
note at 114allSc for fair to gosid reds, and 125a135c
for oemmon to prime white. in store. Corn is dell
and lower, and sales of 8,000 barhels are reported,
mostly et Elio for new Southern yellow afloat, in
cluding some in the ears and in store at 57a59c. as
to condition. Oats are dull at 34e. Rye
wanted at 70c, with sales_of 900 bushels at that
price. Cotton is selling at full prices, with light
receipts and sales to note. Groceries and Pre%t
!dons are held with more firmness, but buyers er too
forward slowly, and - the - mark - ets are quiet to•da3.
Seeds--Soma small lots of Clorerseed hare changs 1
hands at $9.37a59.90 per bush, and is scarce and
wanted at the former rate. Whiskey is more a,
tire, at 20.1.121idf0r bbla ; prime do brought
and drudges 190200.
NEW WAX CATTLE MARKET, Mom) rx,
Jan. 27th.—At market 2,399 Beeves, 191 Cows, .71.3
Veal', 6,679 Sheep and Lambs, and 1,480 Swine
The stook was in tolerably- good condition, and
sales for prime beef were made at 10e, which wait
the highestprioe realized; the market generatly
was depressed one quarter cent.
The quotations are—for prime beef Cattle, SS
410; Cove; $228a560; Vests, 6x71; Sheep, Salo
extrati—Cumnion, se; and Swine, 5351, live
weight-61a61, dead.
.; The receipts show from last week a decrease of
151 Beeves, 7 Cows, 3i Veals, 1,102 Sheep and
Lambs, and 77 Swine.
• One it of premium Steers were on view, helot g
ing- to Mr. Baker, weights estimated 5,000 lbs; tb a
pear were offered sea slight advance on the current
rate for prime Beeves.
PROVISIONS AT BALTIMORE —On the 20th
the market was eccited, and prices were gencrt.lly
higher, except for Mess Pork, which was in le.:
demand. The sales were In Bulk Meats, S 7 hhd- , _
Sides at 7c, packed; 65,000_1bs do (slop) at 6;a,
loose; 55,000 do at To. louse and.2o ithds do .1 ,
at Tin, Packed ; and 3,000 pieceaSkoulders at str,
loose. In Bacon. 15 hhds Sides at no ; 60 do do
at'So, and 20 do Shoulders at 61e, all racked. In
Lard, 25 tads at Sle, and 120 tcs head at Se.
In Mess Pork, 200 bbls at 1413.50, and green
meats, po, pieces Shoulders at 40.
NEW BEDFORD OIL ItISRKET—(For the week
ending Jan ?S.}-Sperm—The activity noticed in
our last has continued through the week, and the
sales bare exceeded those of the preceding week
The transactions include sales of 700 bbls in parcel ,, ,
at 105 c per gallon, 500 do at a price not transpired,
and about 300 bbLs heavy dark, fie.. at 100a103,..-
Per gallon--all.for manufacturing. The market
closing with further inquiry both for export and
home constmoptinn." While--The Market for Whale
remains quiet and wittiont .trahractiotot. Whale
hone—The tidal inactivity which has prevailed in
the market for 80112 e tithe continues without any
obange.
•- TOBACCO. AT BiCRMOND, Jszt.-55.—The re
ceipts are target than we hare ever known them
at this ileal3ol2 lA' the year, and prices are very de
cidedly lower ,this week., We quota lugs. heavy
weights, at 33.511 to 85.50 ; ter y fine.laseiy prized,
•woold bring $6; leaf, frout__..toslo:lo no fine
stemming!! ioldlltti week. * Loote'lelleeie, ail eriees,
Nita 45.9 for lugs, and . from 14.50 to $lO ft
het