hit - .. 1 filwi '' 'T, ,. .,..,:. f 1.,.. z. •:.- ...., , , i,3 ~ . . , FRIDAY, JANUARY 29,1868. ' ^ oSTATEIpONVENTIOIii "t` At it;•-retwASl of-the Deraooratio State Commit: reepteld.staluehler's Rote Harrialirg,• January Dir.-1.558y ia wit!. , 4 , 1 P • ,:Rdiaiiidi-Tbat tke next DemeoratieStatA Oen. iffanle,u,464...kield.: Harrisburg, : an. therAt,hdah of, fdarelrneit: Defile - 4$ Id 1411 rebotutlettl!detiOdar‘from the eeterarfAnalirial and Raprieetitattiif diaries of ,the State WIC convene in the Hall of the /NUN of euriAufidtfea; fat the , CildtolAnOtHflßSDAY, • - - MARCH:4,IBSBi atlOulelook A.llC,yr nominate , •eandfdatiat for , lndge of the Buftemi Mae, and Canal Conlinlibber, and- for the itinesuition' , of other' tualtiesa as tfirtalni tor the , authority ' of ° eaeh'Oonnintkine, .• O.JW:I3IICICALE,CrivaIrmati; -4:11`..0 ur urpusolt, . I=ll-.4.7.vattimax ecnrsam or i EnkFr - P.1::44.',4ntt139131ir ; he; ap~eine Beggs:;:frßaT it.amth • The-News train. California t_ Foreigi , apstel7 Utah; G -91,,r4 owa .;1177 Ger*Eiitione bia. been, la 3yike e 'ieteral xlaye;and , wlll q 't“, ,r 1 • SUPREME ;lUDGE. . , --; 7 , `2 t t • TheiW itt,a,,sisitex,4 l ,„lek,t ;Le*,..fer,'„i t hentonl , r l , estion., of AtOsticet,of the Sttliretne,OotAutt. the liemo ratio *atetlon,epitioetofbehehli t at h'iiifro, 43..' 6 ".P 1. 944c'0( 1 )Earvit ' 40 4,.. i: T Y I` P : rstss,didatits have thus fer:beetivresented Mato: thisPOitio 141 'fOri , , Gr.oaez - Fished , jurists , , „seas. -Nre -hese atielidy... t spoken -Jo - sirong • tarsus 'if Ehd •tapseity," chg.raoter,','and:po- 1 Siiticak' ii#44,Wtlioslrukis'latcli 4P ,s pointed by , Governort_AitmEttl - te:1111' the, va-, ; setter 4iSsifeir f fhp" resignatign of t i tustioe,,Xsois,-,;-eallett. /sAtoroey,43eperolshiko r ef l the,.Stetel, and tve, "tsiow:desire to bear:equateetimony to tiie - 1trii0P0.4,0(,..0i 1' -.amils, - ,tve;!thhi'llotiriiingi 'admit a zolum'utlieg.- ~!••;,,i,•0114 . 0 ' the, iteoeyfeileif,ctia fo iebtf;titif the iter, fp: • :mistaken wheit,lie says that. J.telStr-ShAltsivoob ois is beyoxid , question the oalv chefcm of Phil i r :t4 1 .: 14 0. 14 44 1 i, listiooiietTiity,iti4 *top. &old, .. : *i ; tfixt,Sl7"Pri9lout:'Aesirinq- - 1 - cfArepiepiateibe. distinghed claims ittvolA 9itr_ithatejs.,,toAttoleratiost aro eoneiliatioakJin the dise:essisostbf .thiti goes-. vtioif. xediriiitiltiOn; ".7". I • THE LECOW/Fire ORP4MITuT I OF4 'tire.have ,, eVery- tenon: tolbeieve thatapeftorVts Ksnsast't;' givn 4aorgOlitlagrOelible hite ll l - ' 'gamey to out' political- ftionits; 'had Loped` :the ,ifff! t ! d ftW.V. eh 4 ar, 4,l4iii?d,t l lo In . istritnarit';woAti:.tto 'enengli;to izalsig4 nttiverial ignominpifrAliat it vill.be resisted in Congress, tvohopo,lnd bclieve • l; it will WifebigB4l:6 l ol:, _ nexer wei-J ; question' uponlihiattits,Demo,, cracy of Pennsylvania were tie fidirtiniteitits' • inleariess hostility' to:thn:rutertif th'e heiidd; itici:4C4l3top: c-,:99138101#?1!;• I • ; The Canada maillteettiq, which left Lire} pool on the 10th inst., arrivod at Jaaliftales, tertl i p4Priping. „BIM reports the safety; of the v.fAandegbilL steamship arid, which left South r,tiMpton for New York on the last daytif , lBs7.' 7::%irterii'a fear dais lit'sea;ahe Main . abaft, and bad to go back. under canvas, reach 'ititCoili 'on 'the Sinnott lipPrelierisibilai, „for p9.fiafe,ty otthe 4rfrflutt,A bnen ,-,foraoveral days. - 2 : Spropot of , mteattiships; - the". hailmen .; sure, alniost to thohnd of her latinehhig-ways, -and- wsslo be left there-until-tire strong pprini4,' ,lidekpf . this"' irio nth would'he& qtiletlyS, .to float. _ , . , The- Bank of England -'.had stillf`tittlier"-re `4uied its r4te'..;of , per eent.' , itbaney.wa,weasteli: - The-cotton and bretulstall's markets 'eeirtirirred &TIM . lug prices. Console were „iretrer tbeless ) some further commercial failiiretrare reported.' • t The Eropeior ireneti.tiad been shot at. - Ety was unhurt.', but hitrbdttui'll bettnfierkirateii. , • be employetLugainst,st.pnblielnaM " • • ftli(iti ' i P 6 s4 l -;e o EcOl4- 6 44;<N4Weln baq and -Cakritts being; inttirraredi there Is. _` vo'fiirted ./ 7 I RECORDF.StiIfaIIP:9IFITHE CITY.r" r i EtS2ititaiXerraik4 of ari ! lmose.gionsaiiiikAirid Ito Goterner Paoker Jab resigitation ef the °Sao tIC Reeoider °VIM* eityJ , fitilfitepctedevoting. him `olt wife* tithe itadniiget;thei fair`,,WeAmp4x Ok9r exPrptses is reerrogsand states gia.views.:,,,u, Rut:hempen Claitiri'mr Ofrr hi Orme.; ITanuiry - 14.1.858. IlittE r a.selthrW Oce.wirrer Paaftr „ ' Dish Sin :111 hereby tender; fot • ydu nej; re= aiguatiim Recordermf -rho City pf Philluleiphip` Having held. the office', foe terrhyyears, find never pitiditted myself to - reoeivedne farthing of costs for the several thousand warrants I have issudd, gene rally foralut protoetioneort hene fi tof the very poor of the city ; nor returned to court over ono dozen' eases, thus saving basgespent&to &city ; and Int no instance omitted promptlTO diseherga.egYllotY the laws Impost:a upon me, I retire from theofgeo to derite - my entire LIMO Mod attefitiorito tufprotes- Mon, tetdreing my Otenntissfon to year' Exeelterraft as the worthy representative (AI thatl greet party from wbioh /ulatho honitr recgife tr gst ,as pare and unsollied as tire day it :emote i 4y lotp, hands. Roping that the Giver • Ot lgbda Ituty,se , : ehre to you Mid your's hia riehese bleisher, gobd health- :and that he may, guide ych pm:Sperm:WY through, your ,laberlens, high,, and- xespenalide duties to the end et „yonr pdminietratipte,_proptir. ins you for still higher genera forte good` of your follow.eitizens and (, • ; - Lhave the honor to ho your Excellently's friend and moat obedient seryanti ; • ti 1 • f • • s I t CPERT. 4 1 - •lA-lo ;• t AarostomENTlS • • at , the.Aeademy , of Music.: yesterday, itass,ulpsos,t; art-,ovelflow.,,There •w era ,n ,, orealo ;Yeti , WAS, Oat It: llfirean, taking _, , theAnest' ..• eligible ; which ho abOtbanik , aaankil.,lificonnio,' -v:-therofere, on the t. Arstosomecluttoorredl prink tinVoltrliest in the house, quietly dropped=kitii I„the beat seats; Itatenoomerehn4lo.4lt-:-.Whorethp could, and the beauty of it was that tho-unpune7 . fashionables wore, to,lbo lowd, in , the sectd ' and third tiers,:inatead of, as usually, in the, dr as circle and parquette; Remover, tberorreltiof 41e whole affair, made a sensation; -and good deal or .. Amusement .was elicited, By great , good, Junk,, ..hoving• arrived ten /ninnies before the.overturo,Wns ' got a back seat in the third tier, andnirri indebted ?to _that- accident for zdiscorering—what we now gfataitensly make public- 4 41nd, Wilkthe prelimi nary of having to ascend a good trwryitairs, the third tier is about the; best .part. ef the , house to bear in. !pore was `` 4 - nwhigh,i3llll3or eier vvee to have talon flit:pert „Ot , Prmvsso, • the . eußigh Priest, but ihoorsequeneo„of illaoes was,tin, • •able Ao_apneari and , the; part-woe taken, at_ t2o briefest notion, and very respectably performed, j , by SignefßutrueLi Madithliliedenburg, always rellablejalmayi mistress ofithatever Mai lit • • dertakest , ltit not -, quitei-indfiwed•itith "alt , fhe' ,` , 4:lmixtrel which ca• prfweertfenna: ought ;to have., waathrf Ads/siert. - -.Bhp sitar: as dirt : , 6 d ' Odailvith , great , sweetness: sgat afongrveri - 'oredltably, in the concerted - pleeeip With -Pollio amMirstrw Then therovitie Steer Bignatdi !as ~..i.Polito.,4lMwbioli Mario was WOnt - ,ta • display:; 4, inCet„ -- provolcing nonobalanOCV: &disk riittle. morn' - - nitres *4Hr:through the part, dometintee throwing - - himselfinto a duet and occastonallvir theespri;ce .tended thaeivay, eleetrifying his 'auditors by; sing: log de onlyhea the 'very pririae 'of tenors,4oeld shig. ,, `Bignardi did'tPt' indulge `in: any of -these odeiritrielties; 'but got- through 'the .part , steridily and fairly.- Be is aver* good singer,',but searealy equal to BrignolL ' • " - • ` Midame , Caraderi= 'Girmitti lady, We hrivo ,••• hiaid, - and It- is - probably true, Seeing thet:she' '-names under thidenominatiorf of ' ,, Datoli•builti,'' , •'- - She is loll s sittiare; and broad, with = , a. 'tepee - teas' At first, she' did 'not aired the audience y ,c , werfai , orably,' he voids sounding uncertain even &little rough. "Tier 4 , Gaeta Dille:Wad thin: ' , dent in , !earnestness, After this ; beheVer, •'she made wartrell•oeough; tend , UM- last , sot showed belch:it() a good iiieger; attbo bead of ;her dlast- , bid - that , alals-notthellrat. iler ,, drarcatie , neW . - er seems limited—but every singer has. to compete • With the recolleation °Wrist - Nortna,' Madame. • Gettulori dims not move grtmefully,tand hag sit'odd habit of raising lier=lliands 'over her:head, atl the 3ileeti , ortviddenta; imetbon tb4m 0111 arnintdo She elsolnntat twrirwardnbrailwhieli 51!hie litelyandriruted , uPOnlifatalie Derilsgraige3' -` jiwrtttnbfp3fgiving an'antintatoiy Motion tci'llet•heild,' 7 a 6 tvhin'Altereisingler *Mei and-vibratintitatrated! • fro while the vocal effort is going en. I. i -" ~fin The • ~el'e chorus eras rvergg64:4; '` the fimald; Anditrerent;s , inettentite; and, earelewy franking :Audience and whispering end smiling all the tithe They were kneeling as if in prayer. - o i Jo t 9 bo phrict tiao OTOWPS, and not repeated. Madamcpe Lagrange, Signor Ti berini, Signor Gassler,ina Oar] Foibles are In the cast. 54rmtk.. Miss Williams (I. Th,e,TraliPightliletial..lB/Titf. a farewell concert, figOietijo, ti*Ats, at the Musical Fund UPI, foe.the fiefit . fof the Welsh Ohara. -I** Ha, Irish, Beetediond German chair/eters. The price of admissioill is put as low as twenty flee clouts. Jo:4ll ; pytallT MAIL: lien, tkleorne. Basterert—iiasmas—Speeohes trf dentrieis;:ecc,qui.g • [Correspondence of The Pfeil!' -,Wassmorrolf, Tan. 28,1888. - qp i f thedistiriguithed. visitors in Washington jest new,' /fon: Chiorde Bineripft, the Vonerible hiStortan oY the , ,tritted ,§Ates, reeeivee , pailiqulor and marked attention from memberstli, ell,partlee. to 'hinrget *ell'along inlearsoutd,do4 not look over istrong:•;:Teti his energy - isindensitable. - . lle Works beid at Ids liternrylheki,sbtit'-*Or4iSiess finds tune ,to go the round, of visits atitrOooptiotts. -Tery•fott,- beside those reatkap in perainal Meal historytAt iimitbef , his political life and its BbitieySiiiseelpythat : he was itteoretarj , of I,he Petry antr , Mitildier„te,,England'; bit t pobod7 ignorant , that Ofliste,"yeers -he has, in , his lino histoly of the:United _States, beentbuilding,an mortal monument for hie l:nth honor and the glory hisVorintiY: &deter Donets gives a party fer '- • % , - ;'J,...0.! - ; finehtin'itn, oenmintioate: to Congttis special ;name, on ;Renew affairs: written, - and wi11 , 14 *anti:n:4lk 3001$ as Rathoun arrives tiii:tota i d. - It'll) certain that Calhoun is reontreci, by tho sbaditiefet ;tie Letioraptoti Convention, to Submit the Conititntien a114411r to' Congress, and .4hat,these NILO favpr him and the coarse helms put 'sued-will advise its submission in that way.. „ Tile equally' certain that the President is desfrot(e of liYingbeibre botlittonses his vialeit of the lcan sasiineetiott,aa it oo*,pi . epento 'hoop: r The strong probapility is that thereiill be a ppeolat Message. 'Tito; tartionlar grolnid to betaken in it does not seem tobo decided upon, but linive iio'donbC that and - ' Prost:hint Oilhonn 11 will be piistauned : • -; ' • ; ; •; * 7llentititi, hare' been. foOhing: to 'the - Stand ,the;y - must bike on thie,guettfiennf Kansas, whirl harries to L Isettlementioise -way or the other ; and, with. entoeunting'denbtfel 'totes, ,Imoinnton will, it is ,naleniated,htiinjeoted byr,it majorityof Seven. - In ..this eatentaticitiPOOneylyiniA:it:ooip4;do7n''fqr three rotes, when it is believed - that ;a large mun• beret thetiDemoOratio ,delegation from, that,6tate 'wlll:ippotto Leoorapton.,." - ' every,daY,that thesewhe aretoq. tread 130.0' thnikomeeratioparly t for diffoidogyrith, !the Message. on tono of its reoommendations, aro' Ocii:ll:lthor Matters, and in the main business of tll,6,:iestimri'fini ablest and.Steadicst supporters ,44.A3gchiani,'3 . AiimMistrethin. 'They have been, ,mo,..Jong,,professing and practical. Democrats' to thmwoway v at thislnte day,' the principles of their ,uvric arid, indeed, itis a praiseworthy consistency `'o f,solitlistiLitotion—now that 'induces them, in the ,ease of "Ktinsis, to sustain the great principle of popol,ar Sovereignty; 'which made noteworthy and .piipularAhe compromise measures of 1850, and the , gatilas-Nobraska , bill of:1854. - =ESN A telegraphid despatch hae been received to the street' that the-official copy of the Lecompton Con stitution - salt Ain% Tho P 4 1 .0 •,11:ailroad 'O•ommitteo will organize . to-morrow, at 10 o'clock A. M. ' • Shaw of Minnie, • and Hiditman of Pdhnsylva,- ala i both" Deeloarats, made speeches supporting th'ti positions of Clocernor 'Walker and Jag° Dou glas., ;The speech of the latter gentleman woo dis passionate, forcible, and coholarly. The singaler 'energy with which it was delivered, the aptitude of •Ita illustrations, the pith of its matter, and the gtioefulness of the sperdier's gestures, gained the applausOiiven'of those, wbb differed from him. It was a and lade 'an en7lable reputation in Congress for;lifi.' Hickman as an eloquent and pairerfickbalier•-: ' • • • • TherfOommitteionCommoree will report an. cot- nibus internal-improvement bill, in whioh will be embraced appropriations for the prinoipal - works of• the Atlantic and - Paoilld seaboards, and thulato atidreil:'-• What notion Congress' 'will take upon this measure it is dimdlt to eurinige. 'doubt, as it has done beratotere, meet with strong Opposition from the majority of the nomoci!ttio ;party.. , , , , „ 1.4 i ?pt , • [Comapondeme ot, The ROBB.] , .„ . 'll.l.anniatna, Jan. 28,•1858 ":'The monotony et the 'flonse procieding wee' re lieved to-day by a Knpinie episode., 4n opposition nriiiribeiLPraeriled-a pre'amble ,a nd joint' resoiu ,Senatore, and revoistiut 'our IlePfesentatiies to oppose - the admissloi oof Kansas 'unless the people have . hid a fail, fair ands free, :vote, upon.,:theiv ,Constitution. 'The resolutimas tare,_ goodon tbemselvee, - attd, 6o ,it the preamble, _which -le 3couched in the used' „words of Prepident . nuehanan's instruotione to Go ' vernorytalke ,I“; but thefoatnoTrom h bad goalie, and nisi): firelight them ae there le a universal impression here that Lecompton is a very " dead cook' in the :pit; P' But Mr: Colhoun, ohair . man of 'the Committee °Maya and Means, nioved they be referred to a select committee of three, to Preventthasubjeot NED hecuipoing afoot - ball of the Repoblicans The yeti was strietly a party ono, and 'did not 'lrtilidate . theslightest , sahotion of, that 'iiti ii , i oteitrotntasion of the' rights of a free PeoPle,"Yelept' the Leaorapton . • Ohne titution On the contrarY, 4 l and oonlidsnt there le a majority not ugly of the.lloo.se-rbut of the Demeemtie por tion nf •It.,l..opposed to that. instrmuent, and when aver a deeided,tilepasition' is .mmtileated to malt through4ougreas,that committee will report, sod it:Out - tight MAY; • Air, ealhoun,,,for px,emple, i s untehentinglY.hestide to tile, LeaotoPtAn PePatitti .tietti,stud,44ittotem,,comety,-of,Armatrong, in , mom _,Oenventiong Jonanimetisly-itemed, resolutiona deg - nounciew the fraud. ' , ITl4ArsaAtere, numberless . petitions presordu a so' Ansa, by members from ,aus different oeuiltieh En favor of the repaaLof, the - present-license 1a r;. britiilleJ'.W9re. nearly: ell - ,from ()likens, of, Phila. &IVO* , = • refetrette some tiMaiinee, In'epeal{ingof.basty' legislation : , Ito, an.; eta 1' which., bad passed both -Hetidea, permitting 'the -borough of Scranton, : Lb; ,_sernacernty, tea O loipa ttilts-n aat year'arevenue ,by issuing certificated of indebtedness':bra did: not ,limit' their donominatiOn eo as to, preyent a shin tlester ortrrenoy ;.opintequontly Governor F•aokle, as I predicted he would, sect Ju a Teto ranting! o iito-day.. The veto sae 111 1 44/11 1 004.7%inge*, by the hones upend Oal,l-tor: the y i lm,aqu 98593, I.ThoicalaxiagliaJfalitos OA An make ttks . aeeSlOPS,Of,Al7oB4pfeleAoA;qttab permanent at J;Ear rilibttrg st,t :•••• • • Sacgton.l,,That- the .-diestern,,Western; and North: era distrio's of the Supreme Court are abolished; but thaProthonotary.of the Eastern district obeli continue es Piothcatitety of the Nial Pries Court. Elto:2;•All rodords and Papers - relating to any cadre' . 'pending itisfUtindeteterdned- In either of said districts, 'shell be transferred to the tustodynf the prothonatory afield court atliarrisbnrg, din. S.:The:regular sessions of said court in bane, ?Militia held in the capitol in llarripburg. TbO,judgesiif, they think it .necereary, may sit eletwherato hoar err:l:manta ; but. ' all dual ca dets,, jadgotedts;and decrees: shall be made and recorded at garrleburg, moral), writs shall issue FrO l ki thence. Sac:6, The , ordinary runt proper espouses ..of said court at Harrisburg eheil be paid by the Oonantenweslin, upon legal appropriations;.hat mhos?. the judges bear itrilumente elSewhere, the eXPexxxes, shall be pakt by the ,promer county, ex heretofore.... ,„- , - Sat. 6. VoccmarAxeiiill _meet at "Sitarilsburg on the 'Orel Monday of May, Id eactryear, and, sit by c o nti nu ed Seteeobi leei nixhay neceseltry.' • 'Heti. T. The (mutt Shall have power; as heretofore, to ax the return dayebf Write for the respective oouuti es, mat thettme fey hearing the conies therefrom. I Bee. B. Thie,act shall.teke effect en the ant Monday 'et MaY.next; bat, nevertheless, the regular September ,Xerrif Tor 18bS shall be held at Pittsburgh, AS heretofore nil !iota Intermittent herewith are hereby repealed, , 4 :This; or semeihinglikii it, stands a good chance - of `getting: through. There is 'a general opinion among ratryera and oaten,' that "the uncertainty of the law ” ,la bre, tight' about in good part by dragging Sages of the Supreme Court around the 'State nail, in. a few years, they 'get tired of the horior,a 'd resign and eo' we ,have. a majority of fresh' men about oneo yeara: Thera la no State Whose court of last retort is 'used lit•this scurvy manner; that does not suffer from a weak And inefficient - Judiciary. Just think Of &Mina being oompolled to' write ' their opiriimis in boarding-houses or hotels, often with- Oat the advantages of a library, and so decide upon Cases involving thou Sande Why, there is not spot ty court in the Commonwealth curved thus. The subject will be disousied soon, When I will revert; to it - - , 1111 he Senate,: - Mr.' 'Randall read in - place a bill Inobiporatingthelfutlismatio Society of Philadel- Oia.; J. Mickley; 4.` G. Coffin, A. B. Taylor,, 8, Vans, John 'Bohlen, S. • Fnitori,. J. -L. fledge, 111 A. Frederick, being the "oorporateri—:whieh -is to be devoted to numismatic, eelenceorhich , believe-is the science- pertaining to coins and ;modala, either-rare; envious, ler cent : mon. The'ebjeet of the incorporation 1e to permit them to hold property, ?come bequests, do., but ito income-is; limited' to six thOusand dollars per danuum. • '• Gen. seett not Going to , calltornia.. i , Wesnistarox,Tanuary 28.—1 t is stated on un queslionabla authority, that Con. Scott is not to go out to California to orgaiiise the military movement, against , tho Mormons, al •anticipated. Be wan to have sailed in the California steamer, on the 20th proximo, , ;With. his t suite, consisting of • Col. L. ThomaspAssistant Adjetant-Genttral ; George W.. Lay, 'Aid-de-Camp, and Assistant Surgeon 'Charles Crane. Yesterday Adjntant•Ceneral Irwin McDowell Wrote to thePaidflo Steamship Company, counter -manding the order engaging his ' , passage. Con. Seottis to leave for New York to-day. - 4 - • The Ohio River. ; • 0114CINNATI, San. 28—The` Ohio is stationary, yrith'ten feet of water'in the channel: ' • 4.t An adatrable .1114i.--'r.'JaMett M. T.ledily, "one the' C I ty'Comin issionera„ hie had arena red a Map •of the Fifth and 141x1h wards of the whfish shelve at a glance the Position of ( mil house, Its grotifid plan,, and the number according to the new plan ' Ol flambeaux housei. 'The, object' in &tang thl4 M4llllO bring before Cohnoils the - Itakrtange of hiving-one of each' ward upon the shmaplan,Wi'ati to* aid - assessors, and also, to have' ,Properfy,milessod bY the number, of in the '04 , 118111 }Arno. Lferetoford, a groat many proper ' ties have beenotdtlooked by the assessors, in con sequence Of a negliet liPon their part to Visit their "dititritits,'Whieh feat is shown by the recent exami nation made in their books, by widish- it was-found thatproperty to the Value of nearly $500,000 had beenwilitted.''itt he Idea of Mr. Leddy is decried out,- those raistakesinennot occur, as a glance at tab lamp will show, the.number omitted. rl'hii:Beit's of • Ilialtth--:-Vorkmen are now , en kagitir fn!ittini'dp,-iti . a handsome mannorit the third - 14617 room in the berth end ot'the Assonibly . g for the two ''of the , organtration knOwn ad' he Sens 6flfalia. Oior $2,060 we we enderstat4 min be appropriated for.this purpose Ae Mut as this room is comialeted It will be thrown open fur grp topeotion oE Welton, THE LATcgsTNEws T4EGRAIII, t',wpEE'tDAYS RATER FO,BUROPE. Ervit „otput -.041114DA AT SAFETY OF TH I gVRI.E . L. nER AItItIVA_L AT CIORIC. 41fempted Arseassination of Jra,polson. lankagggilD, AND 8/7ralr.WOUpitTD IST TILE EXPLOSION: - Pitooniss 6 - r TIM :LE,f6tTIIAII, ;N 'COTTON ,tonsolp O 0,8a94 3.4 ITALIFAZ, Jai. Canard mall steamship .Canada arrived here at '4 o'clock this Morning, with Liverikod dates to Saturday, the 16th inst., being three days latsrt than the ,the by the Kangaroo and Fitton. The Canada left Liverpool nt half-post 10 o'clock on Saturday morning. She called off Cork on the , morning of Sunday, the 17th inst., and tooknn 'board the malle • and 66 passer& Sere from the 'disabled steatnships Ariel, and pro, oceded about amino thelitne day on her voyage. She left liere'at 7 O'clock this morning for 'Bested, where she Will be due about 2' o'clook to•merrow rn afteoon: The weatherwas cloudy, with a 'stiff N. W. wind. - • The Canada repoits having ,spokon the following .vosselstuic the 16th the Serena° for Philadelphia; the British' shin - Sea' Snake bound out, and the Steamer Persia bound in. • • „lhe - Canada reports throwing overheard a dos- Witt for the New York Associated Pram, about ninety miles off Cape Race. She did not go nearer to that point: • The agent of the Associated Press Is indebted to the kindness of A. L. Holley, Esq., who came pes, (longer in the•Canadt, for the following partioulars rotative to the disaster to the Ariel. • , . The Ariel, with - ninety-six passengers, the mails, and a hwyfr@lght, left Bremen,Beeember Met, She. experienced strong Westery gates, which graduallyinereased until January Mu, ghee ut 0 in lat. SO N., long,. 29. W., 1 she broke her 'starboard shaft just outoido the 'ship. She was hove to under drag and storm sails, but oh the Meriting of, thsi?lth was found that her 'port whod eould be .worked. The ship was then put about, and moved east at the rate of eight knots plc hour. She% shipped several tremendous seas, and, broke her forayani, when she WAS again laid to until the morning,of the9th. Sho'succeeded In sighting cape Clear on the morning of, the 14th, and leached Queenstown about noon the next day.. The ship Qxfard,,of Westpeit„ Maine, wee aban doned at sea in November, in a very leaky condi; dlon. Aaptain Minott andlor - crow , were pioked "OP nintdaltati to Gibraltar,ity the" American ship Mary and Martha. _ The steamer 'Leviathan has been 'lashed icy within half a dozen feet of, the extremity of the launching ways. , Ste would remain in that posi tion until - the' preiailing spriug tidos were over, when she would be pushed orthe ways, and ao await the high tides at thalami of January. Reform' meetings were being extensively held both in London and the priwinces: The Chartists 'were taking part in - them. ' Brigadier Inglis bad been promoted to the-rank of Major-General, for his gallant defence of Luck /lOW. On the 14th inst. the Bank of England reamed its rate ofdiscount to five per cent., being the lowest, point touched in fifteen months. It was antici pated that there would be a further reduction in a week or two. The discount houses have reduced the rates of allowance at cell, from four end One half to three and one half per cent. The joint-stock; bank , rednoed the rate fin; deposit to three per cent., The action of tho bank imparted firmness to the stock market. °bole° paper was negotiated at three-and-a=balf to four per cent. B. 0. 1?: Gray & eonsof London, in the Canada trade, bad suspended for about £30,000. Also, Bishop & Gossing, wholesale stationers, for about .£,50,000, PRANCE A despatch to the London Times, dated the evening of the 14th, eaye: "The Emperor was Bred at this evening, at half.pnst nine o'clock, while entering the Italian Opera Muse, la Rue LepoHier. Some persons in the streets were wounded. The Emperor showed himself to the people at the doors of the Opera Rouse, and woe received with enthusiastie cheering. Ile remalnad till the end of the opera. On his return, at mid night, he wee hailed by the enthusiastic, cheers of the immense multitude who were waiting ip the streets to greet him." The Moniteur of the 16th says: i'Qn their ?delu ges arriving at the opera, three explosions, coming from bidden projectiles, were beard, A consider able number of persons who ware stationed before .the:thentre, inoluding some soldiers of tho escort. were wounded; two of them mortally. Whe hat of the Emperor was pleroa , d by a projectile ) and gene ral_ ltoguest, aid-de•oamp. of the 'Emperor, ..was slightly wounded in the nook. Two footmen were alsawounded. One of theborees attached tv, the .}..)nperor's, carriage, was killed; and .the.tarriage was broken by the projeoglen4' Thciatest advises say that,,sizty persona were, wounded, and three killed by the shells which were thrown at the oar riago. The conspirators are Italians, anti many arrests . have boon made. , The Emperor and 'Enaniega suffered' nothing from the event, and tho following day attended solemn mass, acoompanied by the Minister of Metter from Marseilles 4eports that the Ame rican ship Adriatic; which was conftsoated by the French Court of Appals, on acoount of her col lision with the steamer Lyonnais, made her es cape from detention at Marseilles, and put to sea on the night of the Bth of January. A French war steamer went in pursuit, but without effect. It was feared that serious diplomatic complica tion may arise from this. D. is said that the question of the Danubian 'Principalities is now so complioated.that no day can be flied for the meeting of the Paris Con •forenee. ' The monthly statement of the sank of Franco slum a Ion! of over eleven milllah from, in cash, held in Paris, and a gain of twenty-seven Millions to tht'oountFy branches '• .• The weekly mail from Bombay, with dates of the 24th of. December, had reached Alexandria. It contained nothingfreed Dade or Omni:lore, owning, it is presumed,. to the continued-interruption of the mail between Cal cutta and, flombay. . The garrison of Vuttehpore was pressed by the insurgents,„and they have abandoned pert of their entrenchments and taken up another and more imenie'position. A eobimn front Delhi, under Col. Seaton' attacked a body of insurgents at tienowtee, and defeated thous, killing 150 of them and taking 3 goes. Three Dritleh officers Fero killed and one wee wounded in tbia engagement, • ' , The insurgents In the neighborhood of aubbulpore Wore attacked on the 20th of November, without decisive reruns.. • Reinforcenients were advancing to JulTulpore. The Rajah of - Aarojhere and Minister had been sen tenced to death. Tho Minister wee hanged, but the sentence egainet the Rajah awatta the eonfirmation of the tiovernor of India. Other ezeputiona had aleo taken place. , The Puniaub, SeWe, and Bombay were an quiet. , No further rebel leprodationa were reported, and 'quiet yreralled generally. At Bombay the Import market way generally lower. - Cotton had declined. Exehange was 2a 2301. SPAIN, Baron lifurillo has been elected President of the lower Chamber of the Cortes by a majority of eight over the Ministerial candidate, . despatch troin Madrid of the 14th mays that the Spanish Ministry tendered their resignation in conse quence of the nomination of Bravo Murillo. Their re signation had not been accepted The Cabinet would remain in °Mee It the Queen would consent to &naive the Cortee: The Queen, In her speech to the Cortee, In regard 'to the Mexican quarrel, merely remarks that she has as copted the mediation of Prance and England as a proof of the conciliation crhich animakm her, but that under any circumstances the honor and reputation 'of Spain shall be preserved intact, A despatch from Madrid, dated Friday, the 16th, re porta the aCceptance of the resignatlOMl 01 tho Ministers and the formation of a new Cabinet. as follows: . . President of the Council, Isturits Moister or Fl nonCes, Ocaus• Mil:dater of Justice, nos ;•Ilinister o the Interior,_llez ; Moister of the Marine, Guess4a lifixklater of Wei t Esskelete.. • • had published an article of eight columns in the Italia del Poputi, alarmed to the 4 . Men of Action,"", and telling them that to soneplrek Is not a right but adutif. PRUSSIA. The Prussien Dlot was opened on the nth. The open ing speech was read by Baron klenteuffel. It refers to the Wpm of the King, and expresses a confident hope of his speedy recovery; rejoices at the approaching matrinionlat alliance between Prussia and England; refers to the Danish Holstein question, and eve that Prussia and Austria are resolved, in union with all the other Governments of Pederalltermany,to hislet on the vindication of German rights and interests; also, al ludes to the Government measures to mitigate the re. cent panic. The allusion to the Danish question pro duced lend and unanimous applause. The nobles of the district of Nips, Novagorod, fol lowing the einroples of the noble. of Lithunia and St. Petersburg, bad asked the Emperor's permission to en franchise their serfs, and the Emperor had granted their mil:test. . The long Kong correspondent of the London Tunes, tinder date of November 28th, says: "Hon. William L. Reed, the American Commissioner remained on board the frigate Minnesota, carefully avoiding any entangling alliances. 'lie says the Minnesota, from her great sire, would 'prove almost Useless for warlike purposes In China. The same letter predicts that the Sritieh would have poseession of Canton before the end of the year, and' that the free and unobstructed intercouree with China would be demanded. • . LATEST. !By Telegraph from London to Liverpeol.)' Pan* Friday Evening.—Fony Italian', among whom are Counts Orsini, and 'Pierre, have been &riveted. Many,other arrests have been made. There are See persons dead and Bay or sixty wounded by the explo sion. PAM, laaturdsy aloraing=ln addition to the fore going particulars, Will ascertained that, Ave minutes before the attempt, Peltre bad arrested, dose to the opera, an exile of 102, who had removed to Pule under a false name. On his person weefonnd a grenade, a revolver, and a poignard. The pollee of Paris wore forewarned on Thursday, by the Belgian pollee, of an Intended attempt at asaisinetion. Of the sixty per sons who were .wounded, eleven are in a dangerous condition. Some of them have been removed to the prison'of Mines. Axreete are multiplying hourly. PAM, Priday.—The Emperor and Eloping' drove 'out to-dayott three o'clock, In au open caleche, with• out escort, through the streets of Earls. They were en thusiantionily, cheered. - This morning the Emperor went to the hospital and visited eight of the sufferers TAE LOAN FOR INDIA. The London Tints; says that en Impression seems to he entertained that the amount,lnstoad of befog limited to six or eight millions, will be as much u ten million pounds. The London Times' oily article says, the attempted aaeaeaiaatlon of the Emperor Napoleon caused flatness in the funds today. - The, stook exchange rate for ad. varibes remained at three' par cent. 'COMMERCIAL INTELLIGENCE. LiVURPOOL COTTON MARKET —The Drokeee Circular Ataten the sales of the week at 85,000 bales, in eluding L4OO on speculation, and 4,000 for export: Fair and • middling . qualities bad declined Md, while the lower grades were leas affected, owing to scarcity. The gala of Filday mere 6,000 bald, including 1,000 on speculation and for export—the market closing quiet at the following 40otatione Fair Orleans, 6%f; Mid dtinggOrleans, ; Fair Mobiles 6%; Middling Mobiles, 0616 d; Fair I.lplanCe, ONd; Middling Uplands, co. The stock in port was estimated at 416,000 bales, of whleb 022 000 were American. 2TATFI OP TRADE.—The 'dykes' from Manchester are unfavorable. There Is but little Inquiry for weeds and Timm, and prices were barely supported. LIVERPOOL 13REATISTUFFS afARRET.—Tho Liv erpool DreadstulTs market war generally dull, with a de. ebning tendency. ' Messrs, Blehardeon, Spence, 8c Co. (mote Flour very dull, and prices barely maintained. 'Wentern canal 23802 3 1 &l; Phdadel All and Dalthasere Via; Ohio 2Tser2Ba, and 25 for choice from New Or leans. 'Wheat very dull, and 24 luwer than on TUORfieli, Med, &den 4d for western, and MOTs, 8d for obolce. Curd doll but steady ; mixed and yellow' 328 (Mans ildf, white. Ste for new ; STs for old. LIVERPOOL PROVISION MARKET.—DIeeere. Big. and, Aytbo s 4 00., Bicbardnon, Oporioo, k Co., 50 THE PRESS.---PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, JANUARY 29, 1858. others, report Beef steady, with an improved de mand.- Perk dul.4- *boa quist.‘,•;aud sold nominal. Lard steady; bist riot. %Tellow4-quotatiorai were barely maintained, butt a.nreickat eloped Orfuer—Butiihro664. LIVERPOOL...IIOPM. MAREET.--The Brokers , and other circUlart, quote - Ashes steady with' a' good business ' it 22s 0d0113,31 for Pota'autd 818 We iii Pearls. Nagar lie luiproyed demand, ; brit quotations, barely,malltained. -Coffee Att. ..11as Jia„Llttlis trigyitter and p ikes weak; Carrollna, I.oolllli stetisei Coogou, gdes,i ( d; Rosin steady; teanneen,l3s 162. Cod 011 £27 1020E18. Seal 00 unchanged. Sperm Oil unchanged, nearer', and would fetch 12013 p ton higher price.. Lillie- d 011 quiet, 6 80031 e. Spirits Turpentine steady, at 321032 s od. Bark eteady; Philadelphia 8s 9.1095; Baltimore Issis 6d. oloverseed ' in good demand at 6050645. , JIAVRE DIA.RKET, -January l3;—The miles of cotton •for,tho week. l ending the' 121jr, Were 6,600 :balm `The _market beds declining tendeney. The etock Import was 86,000baleiblow briearur ;'free'ordfdafie LONDON MONEY MAREET.—The Blink of England had reduced the rate of discount td 6 Percent. Mears, Bering Bros. quote .money plentiful below the bank rates. Consols for money 04%0414X, Pad for account 94N 00111. TLe bullion In 'Die Banker England had Increased 1714,000.: Barillser 6sIVI; Mexican; dol lars , 5s Md ; Eagles 700 2x4 , LONDON MARKETS.-stheere: Daring Bros. quote. lireadstnifadull. Wheatdulkand English lsto 2a lower. White American 40s 610485. • Bed 4210455, Inoue 24s 026. 'lron firm at IA 630.60 10s. Pig Iron steady' at 6560554 61 Sugar firm ,OoSeeadtanced Iscogs, chiefly on line qualities, and firm. Sperm Oil In bitter demand ht 475876. "Ltheeed 011 steady at 3.00. Eke dull. 80tpaLre unchanged. ~Tea tlrm. • Congeals ldols 3d. , Baring Brothers quotes American Securities : ' 'Massachusetts 6 , s,•ltende. " " 00 0 Maryland ,do dpOft iw Penn's State 6 , 4 73 Do do Bonds; 1877, ex die ' 81,4 • Virginia 6'e,1800 81 03 Do 6e, 1888 ' '' 83 0 Peon's Central Ws, lot mort - a 86, 0 , do .. do 2d mt 84 086 N. It. 'Central lle • • 00 , 0021 Erie 8d mortgage bonds 72 o , Illinois Central R. It, shares (diaco)ent)....6 0 do 'do bonds '62 084 Michigan Central WO, 1800 80 /MI Dell k Company report the market quiet but slightly dearer : D. B. slxes, 1807-8 104 re. • do horde, 1808 102 6104 Maryland Elven, bonds 83 0 90' MAIM. do 00 a 08 Penna. fives 4.. 71 a 73 Va. 81w, 1888.70081 ex-dividend. . - Do Fives, 1888-80082 11l Central shares 7a5 discount. ' Do Freeland Donde and Londe of ' • IMS 82 084 Illinois Central It share* (discount) 40508 Now York Central It d 0„,„.. ' • • ' 70,10 ' Mich Central, 80, 1009 88 000 Do do share, " • • • • .55 '9OO Ntw York Central do • 73 '075 ,De tre ' 83 085 'Ps • - • 91,;®0134 Erie RR. Stock - 1r •.• •• r 020 Do l'a Centre:tildes 40 042- 34 Mortgage Donde J .02 013 Do Sinking Fund - • 45 050 Penn's Central 0 , 0; let Mortga e ' 081 . The LOndot, papers reports the Dinginess on the 14th, as only ,in 111. Central .shares at A 41. count • PeosioNsas Pint' OINAD'EL-MLIN Tower,' Mitt Brown, Mr Baton ;and wire, Mies' Datong Captain Sherrold, Mr Ingham and wire, Ceptain ,Itoblimon, Mr Herrin and lady, Miss Brattier ,•• Mra eariood and seven chit drenildise Lilly de liaaye, Miss Gerard, Mies Dawson, ise Dnrdwell , Mre Lepron And two children, Miss Marrow, Neaten Olmiteat, bfeyerhelm; Dorn, Ilorneastle, Long, Dewy, Dremechefdt, Mclnnes, La cings,- fiwantrick, Leland - Calm, Wilson; Martin, Clark, Bartholomew, Derrondat, Smith, Blank, Perry, Metirosnan, Jervelin, Hamilton, Freeman, Morgan, Bost, Itsbobs Werth, 'Richards, Mcßride,' Brows, Breit, MurpLy, Oppenhetm, Lebreen, Delta, Kloim, Nlebolpa , Fortran, Antine, Ilahn, Holley, Bernand; Striven', Volk bag; Menthol, May,Coltorne, Hugh., Moore, Schaffer, Tuckeritwoltibisends,Schram, Heiken, Alma, Orotte, two Merlons, Hunt, Delatorne, Virgin, Tittle, Reethinger, tanngerth, 'Winter, Dosch; Foster, Deist!, Jean, Ardoine,•and Hoffman, TH(RTY•i'IfTII . 6O . NOI,EgS, Mr. FOOT, of Vermont, introduced a proposition, as an amendment to Mr. Davis's Pedigo Italtroad bill. ' In Case the bill of the majority of the select committee shall fail, the latter bill bad his °endu rance In committee ; but if was defeated, he wished to add a, clause providing for a Northern route, to the bill of Mr. MITES. Mr. DAvte, of Mississippi, eald hie bill did not specify any route. Mr. FOOT remarked that be did not intend it ae antagonistio to Mr. Davis's bill, but as additional, so as to have two routes, Northern and Southern. iiir,BLinELL, of Louisiana, from the imlopt cam. mitteo appointed to consider the banking system of the District of Columbia, reported a bill to pro hibit the 141M0 of bank notes by oorporations, essoii Mations or individuals, and prevent bank notes from being issued within the District of Columbia, byisorporationi located beyond the - limits of the District, of Ow denomination then fifty dollars. The bill was made the epeeist order for the se cond . Tuesday in February. Mr. SLIMY . . also raported•a resolution that the committee doom it inexpedient to authorise the establishment, either by genbral or special laws, of banks elude within the District of Columbia. • On motion,ofMr. lisamix, of Maine,ia resolu tion was adopted, instructing the Committee on Comteorce to inquire' into the expediency of re pealing the law creating the Light-houte Board.; Mr. Hsu., of New Hampshire, rose to Make statement of feats, saying that in hie remarks the other'day'Oit the rainy bill, he called attention to the expenses of the army, whioh were annually in creasing, and he noticed that his statements had beta made the aubject of editorial comment in a newspaper called the Washington !Union, which, be believed, was the organ of the Administration, the Supreme Court, and the Lecompton constitu tion. lie read an °rimed from that paper, in substaisee !amusing him of inexcusable ignorance of the shb. jeot in baud, or a wanton disregard of truth ; and ho said the editor went on in a column of twaddle, whioh he a:opposed woe Intended for wit, but whioh would have to be explained before anybody could see where the joke was; and had concluded by saying the Senator bad mado'a alight mistake of five millions Mr. Hale then read extracts from documents in support of hie former statement, to show that the expenses fur army fortifications and the Military Academy were put down at nearly nineteen and a half millions of dollars; and the deficiency naked for by Quartermaster-General Jesup woe $5,700,000; and should the operations against the Mormons be carried on from the Paci fic, an increase would be required of over that sem. Having the figures on - his side, he would leave thewit to the editor of the Union. Mr. Dairta t of Mississippi, said that the Senator fell into the error of charging everything to the expense of the army. The amounts expended for fortifications formed no part of the expenses of the army any more than the Capitol extension or Washington aqueduct. Mr. Ilatn simply wanted to vindicate himself before Me country for the use of these figures, which las, had obtained entirely from official docu ments. ' Mr. DAVIS 010 tfiehed to put the army in a 'true position, and not to enter into a controversy between the Senator from Now Hampshire and the editOr of the Union. . _ The Senate then took up the bill to inclose the army. Mr Toouno, of Georgia, said there was no ne cessity for the pottage of this bill on account of Indian hostilitiem for there bed not been an em bodiment of Indiana' within the country for twenty five years( rat which was eapable of fighting two thousand men. With regard to the Mormon trots bles, ho doomed it ridiculous to suppose that Brig ham Young was able to compote with -three thou sand. United States troops. Hence there was no necessity for un increase on that score. In allu ding to the remarks of Mr. Iverson yesterday, who said if It had not been for' the troops in Kansas the Abolitionists would have been exterminated, and to those of Mr. Chandler, whd thought that, If such had been the ease, a fearful retaliation would have been visited on the border settlements of Missouri, Mr. Toombs remarked that he would not enter into any cOntreveray,on these 'points, but be would not vote to give a single man for the pur pose of maintaining peace in genera, whoever might there hold power. Experience and history, for the last forty cer.- hales, had demonstrated that order maintained by regular soldiers was despotism, and that the pease only thus obtained was the cemetery of liberty, lie would not maintain peace in Kamp on ouch terms, nor have order there at no such cost. If freemen could not maintain peace among themselves, they were unworthy to exer else self-government. They were not fit to bo freemen. A regular army has always been the instrument of despotism. There was not a des potic Government, in Europe to-daY.which could stand ninety days without It. When Mr. Calhoun was Secretary of War the expenses of the army were reduced two hundred and aoventy-three dol lars a man. Now, estimating only the legitimate expensee of the army, they amount to more than a fitousand dollars each man per annum. He earnestly expressed bit opposition to the regular soldiery, except so far As actually poottesary for the common defence. The last soldiers seen In Georgia were sent thither to help the Indian against the whites, and ha expressed the hope that the solo of the foot of another Federal soldier would never again press the sail of that State. The hour having arrived for the consideration of the special order, the resolution to present a medal to Commodore Paulding, it was taken up. Mr. Pumtest, of Maryland, in the course of his remarks, said the attempt to deny so notorious a fact that the expedition of General Walker was of a military and illegal character, was calculated to remind one of the ingenious work of Archbishop Whately t In which it was attempted to rebuke the spirit of incredulity, by bringing forward historic doubta, not only as to the marvellous exploits of Bonaparte, but even to the very existence of ouch a person. The Grand Jury of Now Orleans, by writing ignoramus on the bill of Indictment igainst Walker, had. by that word expressed its own character. He could not sec how any man could sympathise with Walker, who was a mere dreamer, a visionary, whose ideas belonged not to modern times and the present state of civilisation, but to the period when might made right, and predatory incursions were viewed as both proper and fashionable. He argu ed that we were entitled to consider the territorial sovereignty of Nioaragua as waived, as far as the removal of Walker was concerned, and contended that Paulding was entirely justified in hie conduct. It ha committed any error at all,'lt was not a " grave error," but the smallest fruotional part of an error. Commodore Paulding had his heartiest thanks, and doubtless the thanks of the mass of the people of the whole country, but ho would not vote him a medal, for that was not the desert ptiop of service for which such marks of approbation should be bestowed. Mr. Smntun, of Louisiana, entirelydisepproved of the act of Paulding, and hoped the President either had, or would, recall him. lie equally die! approved of the motives and cause of General Walker, and tied no confidence In him either as a soldier or statesman. General Walker's past enures had shown him to be incompetent in the cabinet as well as in the field. In conolesion, Mr. Slidell submitted an amendment to the bill re , ported by the Committee on Foreign 'Relations, au thorizing the President to suspend the neutrality laws at his discretion, but not exceeding twelve months; and if the President does so, he shall communicate his reasons therefor tb Congress. The subjeot was postponed till the 9th of Feb ruary. The consideration of the army bill was then taken up. • Mr. Sruenr, of Michigan, thought It evident, in view of the situation of our troops and the troubles in Utah, that en Increase of the army was flown ry, and ho shonld sap; sit the bill as reported by the Committee on Military Affairs. 1184 he had his way in dealing with the Mormons, he would have pursued a somewhat different course from that adopted by the Government. lie would not have declared war against them, or Bent troops thither to suppress the rebelliLm, but hare cut off their Government supplies by, suspending the np. pniutment of the Federal dicers there and with holding the appropriatiem of ,money. All, the monaY,tbey hove WIN° on is the, forty: or Orly thousand dollars a year they receive from the Gtoverament. If that were taken away, they First Session WAsnisatox, Jan; 28 SENATE. would have nothing with which to 'teak, the 'Gov ernment, and; would be forced te beeednit,,prneea hie. The beat way to fanatic s was to a.PlTOttth 'their pookets. • That was on argument thef.obuld Unduratend,-;-a fOrOa. they could not b i nsaattnatr; In the course of his l'Ortserksi dirtied Opt k rebellion existed in Ken jtedause someof the despa tches of Gofern metWorifsiere so Galled it, that did not make it so. The ohganisation at Lawrence was simply a civil organisation to clear the streets, ate. and did not propose to resist anybody or anything. It Lad the entire conourrence of all the citizens. To call that rebellion was like making out a ease of con • atruotive,treason, ; • • • ' fdr. , ,Onnex,-or fatuous!, replied that the,objeet :of that Rigel:l4 , 4ton was. rellstanee to law. The organisation of a Tirrltory, and laws pissed by a Legislature which required every man to support the Topeka Constitution—was not that rebellion naiad the Goverataentl • • 'Mr. Bassani - est; add ho did not call it rebellion, which must be au oyort act, and this was a mere civil arrangement for their own convenience. If they levied taxes, they did not coerce anybody to pay them, The Senator from Mississippi (Mr, Davis) intimated yesterday that the opposition to the hill sprung from a desire to foment civil war. Did the ;Senator from blissitelpp• aeons the Senator from Georgia (Mr, Toombs) of being actuated by that motive? But,thore woro'esses when it would be reasonable to expect civil war. lithe Govern ment undertakes to force upon the people of Kan sas a Constitution they did not make, it would not be strange if that course of conduot should pro duce civil war. He would justify the exhibition by them of a spirit similar to that which animated their ancestors, and he trusted to God that, spirit was not extinct. He hoped the tithe bad not yet arrived when Senators could not express their views on these great questions without being ac cused of a desire to promote civil war with all its attendant calamities. ' Withent taking) the question, the 'Senate ad „Maned till-Monday. . . HOUSE .OP. REPRESENTATIVES The House went into Committee of the,Wholo on the state of the Union, and resumMl-the oonsidera 7 Bon of the printing deficieney bill. ' Mr. Snew, of Illinois, oommeneed..a, speech upon the Kittle question, when Mr. Burnett, of Ken tucky, rose to a point of order, saying that the rule requires members to confine 'themselves to the euhiestroer consideration. , , Theiggrialrman rOtAlltked that, if this question bad now been"presented for the' tat tithe, be would have dieided the point to have been 'well taken, but a different usage had prevailed. Mr. Binutarr said that too much time had been occupied in 'making speeches for mere home con gumption on subjects which require no legislation. It was time that an end wan put to such proceed ' legs. Mr. MMus, of Illinois, thought it discourteous to make the point on colleague, after ether gentlemen had slider' Without objectless, on ludo vent subjects. • Mr. Bowasirtreplied that he meant. no Aare soot, and mentioned that he and others had in vain struggled for the floor, in order to discuss the bill before the oommittee, but he. Would not now oppose further objection. - • Mr. SHAW resumed and said :, Take a Republi can to the South and be would become a Bre eater, and take the fire-eater to the North and he would become a Republiean, It was not in his bead-to fall in lave with either of these parties. lie had a contempt for any portion of the North or 'Pouth which seeks p dissolution of the Union. The people of the section from which ho came stand by the Constitution: The voters of Kansas tied not bad a fair oppettunity to decide for them selves upon the Constitution under which theY are to live. Fifteen out of the thirty-four coun ties of the Territory Were excluded from casting a single vote for the delegates to the Lecompton Convention. , lie wanted justice done and the truth to pre vail, lie oared • not whether tbe people of the Territory should decide to have slavery or not, but Insisted that they should judge .of that question forttemselves. lie believed there was 9 numerl- Sal AS well se a moral strength here to reject, that Constitution, and for himself he would never, vote foe-the Constitution that the people of Kansas had never bad an opportunity to endorse. This was a question'of principle, not power. Ile was sorry to perceive an intention, by a party in this House, to deprive tho people of their inestimable rights. ' Mr. Sum', of Virginia, wanted to know whether the people had not an opportunity to vote for dole gates to the Convention. Mr.. SHAW replied that they hail not, and re ferred, in proof, to Om Walker's late letter. Mr. SAM said the revolutionists prevented the execution of the law, and now the gentleman and h's friends complained of frauds. Mr, Strew left the gentleman from Virginia (Mr. Smith)i to decide the question of veracity which he raised between himself and Governor Walker. In reply Man inquiryof Mr. Crawford, of Geor gia, Mr. Shaw said the South insists that the peo ple of Kansas shall live under institutions they never endorsed, and it is sought to•palm a fraud upon them. They had never signed the note, and should not, therefore, pay for it.. Mr. Coons, of Massachusetts, reviewed the fripmeial policy of the Administration, showing the inconsistency between the President and the Se cretary of the Treasury on that subject. He con tended that the application of the bankrupt law to local blinks, as recommended by the Executive, would be fraught with disaetreus moults to the industry of the country. It was for the States, net Congress, to regulate and conduct these insti tutions. . Mr. Rims AN, of Pennsylvania, sold he was eon/palled to dissent from the views of the Pre dent.on the Kansas question. But his opposi tion to the President's treatment of Kansas affair. lid not arise from any objective, to slavery, but It was based on it foundation more plainly understood, namely : A violation of the declared principle of the Kansas-Nebraska net. To ask bins to support the Lecompton Constitution would be to insult him by casting a suspicion on his integrity. He might stand alone, but ho would not part with his free. thoughts for a throne. Ile knew different motives would be attributed to him If his conduot, boaring immediately or remotely on Southern in stitutions, should subject him to the anathemas of his Southern friends, so bo it. He should not conceal his sentiments in order to obtain a chari table construction. The attempt made to force the Leeompton Constitution on au unwilling peo ple, by force or fraud,. would induce him to resist it Ire would grant to his brethren what ho slammed for himself—namely, the exorcise of their rights iu their fullness, conferred by the pure spirit of liberty. This wee the golden constitutional rule, sound alike bOth for individuals and Staten. He strongly de nounced the frauds and impositions on the people of Kansas, slavery having been fastened on them in bold defiance of their sacred rights. He could not lend himself• to any movement to undermine the foundation on which legislation rests, or falsify the pledges mode by Democrats to the people of the country during the lest Presidential election. In alluding to the President's message, be said he always know slavery was a peculiar Institution, but never before knew that it embraced all the do mestie irstitutions, vrbloh, by the Kansas Nebraska law the people were to be perfectly free tonctin their own way. This doctrine ofpopularsovereignty is not as popular as it was. ' It was formerlisupposed to mean something giving the people power over all domestic institutions. But now, as thought by the President, it is to be. sweated down to the con temptible dimensions es to whether they shall hold a negro in bonds or not. This is all the extent of popular sovereignty. The case, however, ia worse. It is false pretence. The question of slavery could not bo voted on, because the proviso of the Le- complon Constitution rendered it impossible, for the reason that it deolares slavery shell not be in• terfered with as it :lOW exists. And'it now exists in Kansas lust as firmly as in South Carolina. This was the first time he had learned that that State is a free Wale whore the institution shall not bo disturbed. Were lDoutoorats all bound to support the Looompten Con. stitution simply because it has the Exeoutive approbation? He should as soon admit a bastard to be a lawful hoir, as that Constitution to be the representative of the sovereign will of Kansas, with no lawful blood in it. The Ranias Legisla ture never was a lawful body, and hence the acts emanating from it were illegal. Ruffianism has there held sway from the beginning to the present time ; and in order to conceal this from everybody, efforts have boon made to conceal the fact. How had it mulled that no Democratic officials were found strong enough to stand the atmosphere of Kansas? Four Democratic tie - remora Lave sue- • • - • • • • • cessfully been sent thither, and all have returned telling the slime story, and in nearly the same words—that popular sovereignty was crushed out of Eames, The reply to the question, what is to be done with those who vote against the Leoompton Constitu tion, was given in a Southern newspaper. They are to be branded, have their ears alit, and be then rend out of the Democratic party. But care must be taken that too many men of the North aro not read out of the organisation. Ile thought that be had a pretty tl - .stinet, recollection 'of the necessity which existed fur strenuous efforts to secure the vote of Pennsylvania for Mr. Buchanan, and re membered, too, what feeling there was in the South lost the Presidency should fall on a seellonal party. Might he not, then, inquire why the soldiers in that content should bo slaughtered so unceremo niously? To *upped the Limempten Constitution was to support that which was begotten in fraud and brought forth in iniquity. lie scorned the recommendation to admit Kansas on the ground of expediency, in the absenee of.right. It was in direct violation and contempt of the pledges which bad been made to the people, and violative of the title by which President Buchanan holds his pre sent position. Had the President's annual UM sage been read before the election of 1850, there is no telling bow large a majority there would have been against him. Let Kansas be forced into the Union with the Leoompton Constitution, and there will bo an end of national platforms and the be ginning of sectional Presidents. Mr. SUMI/AN, of Ohio, recapitulated the history of Kansas ' and said that the free-State men there have by their courage done more to secure our in stitutions against fraud and violence than any other people since the foundation of the (tavern went, If the endeavor was made to force the Le compton Constitution on them, it must be by the strength of arms, for beery aspiration of liberty will be against snob an attempt. The committee then rose, and the House ad ourned. Front Washington Waanisarost, Jan. 28.—Tho Secretary of the Treasury, in response to the resolution of Senator Wilson, has communionted a statement, showing the amounts of revenue collected during the six years to Juno last, together with the expenses and number of employees. The following figures are given: Total amount collected, $355,500,000; ex. penso of collection, 01,752.000; number of em ployees in 1852, 2,530; in 1857, 7,388. Governor Wise has postponed for the present his contemplated letter on Kansas. for the perusal of which much anxiety has been manifested. Mr. Davis of Indiana, who 000upied tiro chair in the Committee of the Whole on the Mato of the Union in the pause to-day, gave the floor to three opponents of the •Lecompton Constitution. Mr. Lacher, (Vs.,) who desired to be heard on the other side of the question, oontemled that h e was entitled to it in preference ak Mr. Sherman, but he did not persevere in his Mut after Mr. Davis onnounced that he acted honestly in assigning the floor to Mr. Sherman. Much confusion was con sequent on the proceedings. Mr. Douglas in vain tried, in the Senate, to have tho bill fur the admission of Minnesota into the Union considered, and at that period the Senate adjourned till Monday by a nearly two-thirds ma jority. United States Supreme Court. WASHINGTON, Jan. V.—No. 30. Dal id 'A. /Jeoombo et al. vs, Franklin Steele. Jthitlee Campbell delivered an opinion, affirming tbejudg moat of the Supreme Court for the Territory of Minnesota with oosia. No: 84 . Minnesota, Bibby a al, vs, Disko Foote, Argument condoned. PENNSYLVANIA LEGISLATURE. lIARRISBITRO, Jon. 28, 1858 SENATE. • The SPBASH/1 presented the annual report of Wm. R. Moffit , euperintendent Of the North Roma Extension. 11/49 IN PIACI) —By Mr. RANDALL, chill ta In corporate the Wet. Philadelphia Manufacturing Company. By Mr. STRAUB, a supplement to the act regu lnting courts. By Mr. RANDALL, I% supplement to the act pro viding &reporter of the decisions of Supreme Court. By Mr. Wntaar, one to prohibit the running of locomotives in certain parts of the Second ward of Philadelphia. By Mr;lYrtmove, an act to incorporate - the Ori zaba Iron Company. By Mr. RANDALL, One to incorporate the Numis maths Society of Philadelphia. By Mr. MYXII, one to provide for the bettor re gulation of banks and security of 6111461 am. ' ' By Mr. &usu. one'to cantina° the law gradu ating the prises of lands on which money is due to the Commonwealth. and regulate the charges of in, tercet thereon. COISIDERATION - OP BILLS ANDICSSOLUTIONS.— The resolution relative to the emu]'-note currency was then taken np. "The' resolution proposes that the Governor shall open a correspondence with the Secretaries of all the States in' the Union, on the subjedt of the •eturcuoy; with a'view•to ague upon some uniform law to abolish bank notes of a less denomination than five, top. or twenty dollars, It / suggests'that a convention of - delegates from the -several States, shall be held to .consider the question. . Mr. COP . VEY !nova toctrike out the chase re lathe to the (holding of a convention. 'Not agreed to—yeas 12, nays 18. • Mr. MYER moved to amend by providing that no delegate shall be appointed by Pennsylvania unlestdelegates are sprouted from at least one half of the States of Abe Union. Agreed to—yeas 20,_nays Mr. GA,ZOAM moved that no compensation shall be allowed to those delegates from Pennsylvania attending the convention. The motion was discussed and lost—yeai 7, na.0.19. • -- The resolution was then passed finally, by a vote of you 21, nays 9, asSollows • YBAS—hfessrer. Bell, Brewer, Iluckniess, Craig, Cromwell, Ely, 'Evans' -Potter,. Ingrain, laubach, Marcell, Miller, Randall, • Schell, Scofield, &other:Steel, Straub, Turnoy, Wright,and Welsh, (Spraltor)-21. NAYS—Mosel" Baldwin, Coffey, °lmam, Gregg, Harris, Mer, Rutherford, +Shaffer, The bill y relative to making repairs on the North Branch Canal' war Nikon up for Consideration. Pending the dissursion. the Senate adjourned, ROUSE OP REPRESENTATIVES Mr. Mti,t,gu, of Crawford, offered a aeries of re solutions instrooting the Senators from Penney"- yenta, in Congress, to resist the admission of Kan era into the 'Union, unless a Constitution Is pre sented which has received the unqualified sanction of the Majority of 'bona fide" residents of that Territory. A variety of motions were made on these reso lutions, and great confusion prevailed. The reso lutions wore at length referred to a special com mittee of three. ' The comrnittea has not yet been iihnounced by tha Speaker. The bill refunding the $7,000 lost by the suppen don of Pennsylysnia Bank, by the EaatornTeni taatiary, came up and was discussed by Mi. 'Dolmen and Calhoun for, and Jenkins and Beepp against. Pending its consideration, s motion to adjourn was carried. Upwards of fifty Petitions were presented, asking for a change of the license law. - Adjourned till to-morrow. Later from Kansas Sr. Louts, Jan. 28.—The Kansas correspondent of the Democrat says that the Territorial Legis lature has decided not to give way for the Topeka Government, but prooeed to the enactment of an entire now code of laws to supersede all the laws passed at the prior and special sessions. The pro test to Congress against the Lecompton Constitu tion has also been published. Colin Clarkson, the bearer of the Leoompton Constitution, left here this morning for Washing ton. General Calhoun, Judge Lecompte, end Henry Clay Pate, will probably reach hero to-morrow. Later Item Havana CR ancEsroa, Jan 28 —The steamship Isabel, from Havana, arrived off Tybee yesterday, and at her wharf to-day. ; The mail steamship from New York for Now Orleans, had not arrived at Havana on the 2dtb inst. The steamship Grenada, from . Arpinwall, arrived on the 23d. The steam frigate Wabash, Com. Paulding, was still at Key West. All swell. Nineteen of her men came passengers in the Isabel, their time Of service having expired. Colonel Anderson and six of his officers and thirty•nine • men from Key West, have arrived. The court has decreed that all the parties shall be hold for trial in the District Court of Louisiana. In default of bail, they are still held In custody. There is nothing said of the fever at Havana. Sugars were unchanged ; Molasses declining ; Exchange on London was quoted at 16 per cent. premium ; on New York and Boston Sao per cent. Steamboat Exploslon—Ftfteen Lives Loot. taxmxtrart, January 28 —The steamboat Fanny Fern, bound from St. Louis to Pittsburgh, with e cargo consisting of form hundred tons of produce and fifteen cabin and twenty dealt passengers, ex ploded her boilers at 2 o'clock this afternoon, about eighteen retie* below. Fifteen lives ere reported to be lost, including Capt. Woodward, several deck hands, and three ladies. The boat took fire, burned to the water's edge, and sunk. The clerks, Messrs. Rogers and Durue, were both scalded, the former badly and the latter slightly. The train on the Ohio and Mississippi Railroad brought up thirty of the passengers, fifteen of whom are wounded. The pilot, engineer, and mate escaped injury. Itlarketi. P/TTBDURGII, January 28.—Our Markets are dull and unchanged. CINCPINATI, January U.—Flour unchanged and dull at $545 75; 900 bble laid. Provisions unset tled ; bulk weals inure active at 51 for shoulders, and 6; for sides; nothing doing in mess pork or lard. MATTERS AND TRINES IN NEW YORK [From the New York papers of last evening) • FIRE IN PETELER'S hOTEL GARE—A Her; Die- TUREED.—LA fire broke out in the upper partof Pe teler's " hotel Carob," 691 Broadway, near Fourth street, about 12 o'oloek last night. There was a hop in progress in the building at the time the alarm was given, and the cry, as might have been expected, created quite a panto among the fair omit!. Hoods, bonnets ' and Shawls were forgotten, and there was a great rush for the stairs. Mean while the firemen had arrived and were dragging their hose up the stairs, and the rich dresses of the fugitives suffered severely from the eon feet. A few fainted, but no serious accident occurred. The fourth floor and attic were almost destroyed and the damage to the lower part of the building was serious. The lose is several thousand dollars, though no exact estimate hae yet been made. A sandy-haired man, claiming to represent en In surance company, who evidently understood a re porter's duties no better than his own, was on the promisee this morning, and seemed anxious that no informittlim on this point should bobbtalned. Mr. Pettier is said to be fully insured ARREST OP THE PRESIDENT OP THE MARINE BANE or 110D0RRN, CHARGED "WITH EltliEzsi.E -REN.T.—TIII Marine Banit of Hoboken has had a brief 'existence. The doors were thrown open for business on the 11th of this month, and were closed on Tuesday night with the arrest of Mr. Lewis M. Van Elton, the president, on a ohur,,oe of embez zlement and swindling. ha was taken before Justice Crane, and in default of $l,OOO bonds, was committed Ile ouriondered the notes which he had received for the bank stock. The bank had no bills in circulation. The funds which were en the bank, amounting to about fil,ooo, have been deposited in the City Bank at Hoboken, for the benefit of the depositors. This amount is not auffosient by several hundred dollars to pay off the depositors; but it is understood that the citizens who were drawn into this financial operation will make up the deficit from their pri vate pockets. THE COURTS YESTERDAY'S PROCEEDINGS [Reported for The Press.] UNITED STATES DIATITICT COURT—Judge Kane. —United States vs. Alexander Downey. The de fendant in this case was charged with passing eounterfeit gold 'coin, of the value or a quarter eagle, on James Monteith, in the pigment of a bill. The prosecutor offered to settle the ease for $7.60, which was refused by the defendant. On trial. James C. Vandyke, Esq., District Attorney. fur the prosecution; Thos. K. Finlettor and D. W. Sellers, Ems , for the defendant. COMMON - PLEAB—Judgo Thompson —The Com monwealth of Pennsylvania, to use of the Guar diens of the Poor, and Robert L. Curry vs. Mary Kelly. An action to recover the penalty for viola ting the law against selling liquor on Sundays. Jury out. I. Cooke Longstreth, for the plaintiff; William B. Rankee and George Fenner, Esqs , for the defendant. UIBTRIe7 Cover No. 2 —Francis S. Buckner us. Thu State Mutual Fire and Marino Insurance Company. An actionion a policy of insurance to recover for tlio loss of the steamboat T. J. Height, burned near the Indian river. On trial. Con stant Gunton, Esq., for the plaintiff: Messrs. Jones and Morris for the defendants. DPITRICT COURT No. 1- I ,ldtigo MM.—Jacob Robb vs. Thomas Shaw. An notion 'on a promis sory note. Verdict for the plaintiff, $389 23 Wil liam 11. Wood, Rat., for the plaintiff; J. 11. Ran dall, Esti , for the aefondnut. Thomas W. Jacobs and Bdtward B. Jacobs vs. Chiles Bender and Charles Worrell. At notion for maintaining a nuisanpo near the premises of the plaintiff. On trial. Messrs. lifehfurtrle and Brinkle for tho plaintiff; A. V. Parsons, Esq., for the defendants. OYER AND Tnnsiman—Tudges Allison and Lud low.—The jury in the cue of James Quigley, charged with the murder of his wife, wore charged by Judge Allison yesterday afternoon, and after a short deliberation returned with a verdict of "Not Guilty." The prisoner wan ordered to ho dis charged. Tho jury in the cog, of John Gallagher. charged with the homicide of AleVey, have not yet agree d. Thore will bo no court in the Quarter Sessions until Saturday. Union Temporary Ilome.—The second an niversary meeting of the Union Temporary Home for children was held lastevening at Concert Rail. The attendance consisted of about a hundred and fifty persons, two-thirds of whom were ladies. 'The chair was occupied by Mayor Vaux. The proceed ings were opened with an earnest prayer by Rev. Mr. Furness The Mayor stated the objects of the meeting, of er which the annual report was read by lioy. Dr. From the beginning of its oporation two hun dred and forty littlo children destitute of the ordi nary comforts of life under the parental roof, have bean made happy beneath the fostering care of this institutlob. ' , There has been very little sickness among the children except in February last.. The treasurer reported his accounts cs follows : Receipts $.7,548 74 • Expenditures 3,211162 Balance in treasury '45/ 1 . 3 At the close of the report, Rev. Mr. Tyng made an excellent ertenipore address, and was Yellowed by Rev. Dr. Brantley in an equally interesting one. The exercises terminated very pleasantly, The institution is situated in Francisville, at the mansion of the late Dr. Wylie. It receives children at a dery of 0117 tents per weolc. THE 111Q,NRY MARkET. PRIDUSIIILPOI/. Jan 28, 1854. It Otrikes ue mirth unw4 - provision that is contained: In the bill for the relief of tits stockholders of the Bank of Piiinsylvaula y that no `erector Mall be allowed to torrertmoriay 'front the 3,4, We advert to the metric , timailopt because it irdrabodled to that partieular set: 'hut because the iden*it it Is a good provision aroma to lievffrowlog into general favor, without belay based cpe* any very strong ground,. It will be found tree, •• a general rule, that banks are involved in difficulties, not by locust° direetors-themselvee en much Ite by loans to the favorites and friends of directors and officers. A board comprieed' whoniett - Men ringleted in ietlie boa= Item Is objectionable ; Immo,' !b,Larc CU niter!) or lines anilons to borrow froWtfiii bank, and Samna a direc tor fuels a hesitation Moat objecting to any particular des• of paper, when his TudgMent disapproves of its being taken by the batik:. _• ,:" • ••• Inie is a grocer, for lattices, and thinks there Is roe Mardi' of it partlenlar kind' of dry-goods paper Olrer•di he may enter his objection to It, but the prehabillt is chit he will. find other members *So favor it dreidied to retaliate upon the offerings a friends, !nails own line of business,. 'abd in fear that another 'tan's cam of 10-dayMaylimontihre - own ease of te-mcrrivi he soon . l eareate await hlp ohleetienes, and in en emended period of time the bank suffers, through the withhold fog of VW foresight 'and wilt - own if or them rcluons It Is a ',.tlisadrantaire to a hank to bay's its whole limed toc;Tocsdilf n l lan iAgOti Y . But men not so engage!, are apt to lose the mu of com moueialpaper. Theiltarefeweropportunies, after retire menteof knowing' the nature of the operations Id *Lath the variens applieants for leant are engaged; the class of customers to whom May are giving credit, and the proportion' of their baldness engagements to their Pepi- They are far more likely balm impeseeopon thragh ignorance of the changes in. the,.Uanaartioot of old arias, through their our fruit and forgetfulness apart from actlea baldness, and more ,espeetally .thrtmgh want of proparkiowi t edge respecting new finusiar.i the combinations and enterpriie of bung and rising men: We think that, for the reasons thus stated, epos which our space leer/Ens no opportunity to *erne our reideri will admit that it lealMost equally aa oh: Jectionable to,have a board of bank directors tiompnatli wholly of men retired frou'ibuilnese,asJt Is to hoe one of moo in native business, likely to be borrowers them selves; and snail:ma to accommodate their friends. We have not tonehed at all upon the natural prejudices or retired men for their successere and relatives, which in i measure offsets their own abstinence from borrow. Inc. It would not be an easy matter to get a board of bank directors, who could not be borrowers, from the ranks of active tallness men, because three menhawe neither the time nor the Inclination to attend to thedotlea of a laborious poet, from which they could derive no edmtn. • i and we therefore think ourselves justified In wo nting that the board under mach a restroeion would be composed 'almost 'wholly of men retired tom bnalness, or of wealthy men who bed never been so engaged. We deem it - far better that the board of directors of a bank should be composed of equal portions of both classes. It might be settled that one-half of theloard should be - restricted from borrowing. It could be • law that, of the thirteen directors, only nix should •be bor rowers from the tank at one time, leaving the preel dent and the other nix out. Then the board'would be equally constituted of baldness men And retired men. The former would aril as advocates for their own firms end their friends, and they would give the benefit of their knowledge and opinions and objeotions to the book, under the restraint and control of the remaioder of the board, the member, not In active businean, who would constitute the judges la every cue, and in whet* hands a director could safely lodge his oppoiltion to any objectionable paper, knowing that they could end would protect him from coy attempts at retaliation en the part of brother members. The news by the Canada that the Bank of Instant had reduced its rate of discount to Ire per cent., and that financial matters abroad continue to mend rapidly, produced no change in either the stook or money market worth recording. Money continues easy for favorite names, solid securities continue in favor, and the opera- Vona at the stock exchange show increasteg Lvelineas and good feeling. The message of the Governor of Louisiana states that on the lit of January, 1830, there was a balance in the . Treaenry of $43,410. The estimate of receipts of the current year are $1,100,000; the estimated expenditure. are 81,418,803; probable deficiency, $570,388. The Go vernor, in view of this deficiency, recommends - In creased economy. In his reference to the late finan cial crisis, be reetunmenda that bank, bills under 110 be prohibited. , The statement of the Pittsburgh Banks, made up on Monday led. 18 as follows : Banks. Loans. Specie. Cireulat 7 n. Deposits. Pittsburgh.. g 1,602,630 $307,380 $132,038 $530,196 Mer& Man's. • 571,089 90,115 73,846 106,129 Isehange. 1,318,543 687,426 916.645 • 260,812 lleehatues;„. 603,470 196,14 f 132,330 98,223 Citizens'.... 650,635 121,911 151,915 15,131 Iron City... 164,723 42,9= 1,930 69.063 Allegheny .. 257,854 20,846 31,2661 _25,849 4,066,946 1.301.160 1,607,960. 1,165,041 Last week.... 5,010,013 1 : 283,609 1,379,081 1,183,664 Inorsus 24,251 .28,885 •MO Decrease 22,091 The amount due to banks Ie E 68,218; duo by i 417,164 ; notes of other baaks ; ,11284,153.. Total los, mediate liabilitipa, V 4735,246; total inottediato *tot!, 82,010,707--or $1 of immediate means to syst7ll4l of Immediate liabilities. Thiele tbe - stroageststatatosat yet presented. , PIULADILPHIA STOOK ISCHAPOZ BALLS, 7ancary ZS, uu ,Ititol7llo IY 111.111. AT, saws, & CO., 11. M STOVT AND iICIIxIIOII IBOIIRI , lORLIZIMIT 0011111 !HIED LID 071181M11 Train BOARD. 1000 Peonß blattart.94 5000 City 11. ea. 913 2000 do ....2dy a 91X 400 do 91 1300 City Oa ....P101.91% 1300 do 9115 100 do ....PHR.9IX 7000 Penn Id 831( 5000 do 88 29004.11 e Co 6aConnl.4olG 500 Mlnehill RLoau 111 1000 N Penn R 34.. —.52 1000 Pohl h♦ 08'32 95.58 300 D Harriet, R 8......85 2300 City es '97 79 450 L Inland lt V% 100 do cub.lo% 125 Elmira E Z 10% 3 do 10X - 03 N Penn A 9% 7 Morris Cl pfdOikr.il I 28 Norristown 11.....54 X 100 Beading 11 28% 130 do . 29 100 do .. - ..2daya.20 50 do ....bayou 29 28 Com& Arn R MX 1 Penn R ....... ....41X 2 do ..41% 192 (lizard En* . -..,9% 82 Bk of If efaucky.llo BOARDS. 12808 Penn 51 1000 Leh Zine..aswn. Brrin 3500 Read en,311241.10 1000 do .464.....70 1000 do .'7O 74 4000 Penn 58 2dinort.l66•• 45264 Penn 62 frx 5 'Rolling R, 5 CounkAm R..... 903 10 do b3.00N 60 Lehigh 6ezip....5T.14 400 Loh Zino..sstru. Y,; 91 N Penn R AY AI /so Lisi.ird it' 104 25 Morris Oust 433( L Pehoyl 39 Ilarrisb A 55' 2 Norristown R, 54)( BOARD. 60 Long Island R OLOBII4O Pll.lO Bid. Asksd. U 6141440 s 'O6-112g PLSls.o'rtnt 0ff..01,K 99 RE.904, 92 New.o7g 0341 PouLsylv Reading R 28 X 22 de Bonds '70.73,4 74) do Idrt 04'44.45 do 2440080.70 70 Pon. B 41 413€ Mortis Orkal 0412.43 4 314 Rohn N dr 613,/ L4l, 4.5wn.20 29 I .18-STEADY. Bid. Asked. Be N 56 2 12 pref..l6J( 767( nook SX 9 Winsp't & Elm 11.107( 1O7( do latmart l't .60 • 04. do 24m..411 417( Long Island 101( 10X Vicksburg TX 87( eirsa Bank OX 9X Lehigh Etna.... X 1 Union Canal 2 9 Hey Crest . ..... y e X Catalans B. R... 63( 87( EST. 300 Reading R 800 do .... Reading closes.. • .20.1`4S PHILADELPHI4 DIARICErS. Tutlunar, Jan. 28.—Vvening. The foreign news hate bad no effect upon the markets for either cotton or brendstuffs, to-day, and of the former the sales have been limited, and prices the same ; of the latter we have only to note a moderate busi ness doing in flour, forborne use, At from $4.821 to $4.75 for superfine, $4.57505.25 for extras, and $5 5046 per bbl for fancy tote, according to brand and quality. Shipping brands are held at our lowest figures, without finding buyers at that price. Corn Meal and Rye Flour are dull andnear ly nominal at jprerrious quotations. Wheats are not plenty, but the demand baa fallen oft; and about 2,500 bus eold at 11431150 for good red, and 1.2.5a130 for fair white. Corn is in steady demand, Mad about 7soo bus new yellow bare been sold at 57458 e, in store and in the care, and COaGlo mostly at the latter figures Oats continue dull, and about 2 500 bus have been cold at .330 fur Southern, and ale for Pennsylvania. Rye is wanted it 100. Bark is wanted at for first quality, and but little arriving. Groceries are in active, with small sales of sugar and soiree at about previous rates. Provisions are firm, and rather more active. Mesa Pork is quoted at $15416 per bbl. Bacon hams oal2e; sides Nape ; salted at 7+a710 ; shoulders at rde, and lard at 9.1940 per lb. Seeds are quiet. and Cloverseed wane at $5l per bus Whiskey is unsettled and bbls selling at 20 a2le, drudge 19a19i0, and hhde at 19a20e. Fortune-Telling in Philadelphia.—We have been furnished by Alderman Erma with the par ticulate of a once of fortune-telling, whit& exhib its a state of most pitiable ignorance. It appears that An afternoon or two since, a young servant girl, who is in the employ of a family at German. town, applied to this magistrate to know whether he would provide her with a warrant for the arrest of a fortune-teller. She slated that she had be come too intimate with a young journeyman ear pouter in the place,'and es he had left German town, it was very important that she should as certain his whereabouts. With this view she had applied to a Mrs. —, a notorious " fortune teller,' to restore' her delinquent betrayer. The sail promised to do so fora consideration of $5. The girl had but $3.50, but the sorceress said that the process by which the desired event was to be pi-educed, was by shaking in a box three pow dere together with five dollars in silver. The girl then begged that the fortune-teller would supply the balance temporarily, and said she would repay her the next day—a proposal which was declined. on the ground that the efficacy of Atte charm de pended upon the money belonging Solely to the op plieant. The poor girl thou borrowed the existing deficit, and received three powders, one of which she was directed to burn each .night on retiring. and 'Was promised that iho third powder - would restore to her the truant loser. J Finding that the charm proved unavailing. the girl applied - to another 'soothsayer, and was simi larly voStimized to the same amount. Lipoti learning the facts, Alderman Erten caused the arrest of both astrologers, and made them re store the ill-gotten booty, pay the girl's expenses from aermantown, aud the costs of the arrest. Upon asking the girt how atm could be so ignorant as to become the victim of so gross a deception, she said that ehe read the advertisement of the swiniier in a oily paper, and, of ours; whatever is printed must be true. Street Nomenclature. This tutilicat was again "tinder considoralloit at the meeting of Se- - Tact Counclryesterday afternoon. To give in ex ienro the numerous amendment, offered - to the bill submitted bathe special committee ' would require Much more apace thin we elin - well afford.. Suffice it to say, that ail which were proposed wore put to an immediate vote, without any prolonged discus sion. Sever I members opposed the introduction of the Mimes of Mend:ars of Connell' the bill, to boglven as the names of Amiga. ' Mr. Nathans, we understand, will introduce a resolution whici embodies his views to this effect, at the next meeting of the Chamber. After the ordinance bad been gone through with, in Com reitteaof the Whole, Mr, ,Cuyler rather surprised come of the 'meinbers by' bbrpropositiciti, Which will be found under the appropriate head. 'To odi mind it appears to bo the meet feasible of all the plans premed in reference to this vexed subject of street pornepolature. BY /.I)ILOVUNE. Mirlit: *ROM Pilt* *6l Correspeadliiisik Mlw YOnw, Jan. 2&-5.20 - P. M. • The Kampen mews byline ILangaroo sad by tele graph from Halifax le llossidind gavonable, and the in creased activity In niosaymeatioraillu wiriest (which I find hairnet reached you: Meng is mete neglect in the post send meal contlamarvmth !sty inereasing conikeems, end an eider markattentound amsomercial bills. The - fall li. thatom,sasemated _by the Canota. was expected—l think I mentioned the probability of Inch a declion it a foxier leethm—mat Imo not had ear di mangle" amt. The &eine In the rateaf disc ;mat of the Bank of England was alao looted for, aid Is As sorest indica tion of the abundant* Of moray aid Ito an °Teethe sunountotesoceMahlo paper offered-6u dilatant_ The sate state of things whisk exists hare seems also to esdertin London. A gist of money crippled tads awl commerce ; a scanity of Int-clam paper; great digtrust of any- hut Ant-elan names, and roomy mans sate lorestakent eremdtreetioa. I have seta ornate letters from London, Tinton in aetlelpstion of the induction of the rots nt dheeent to Bee per con., _which- pPru^ of the-step, sad 't wee/ an °plain that the sate of-things on the Conti •tentetiforope, and Ismtlenlarly the diminution la the bullion reserve of the Bank of gotsco, :wilt- cause _ a dreshalreen-inglandat -Srement-Meteeeeedsktdigetehe bank to pot on the - serene again rt is therefore thought that It would has been well had the bank kept Its minimum rate up CO 6 per nat. The fatten of.the seam teacher here;wldoklasny mind. is most cidenletdd to eminiage, is.-the pools cot:Menai in legitifeateal business. 'Every day the happy improverneist bemuses mere manifest, and In prom -boa as met Iled‘ that the distrust felt by others direintslese, do they change from fear to extehl nation. aid from examination to iteidlditese in enter prises In which they are Invited to intact their einem ploYed capital. - •- ' - • The Cali fosuieeniyal last night g 1,6416,719 is geld odds so Minh - to our already overacting coffees, - sod Made the dead weights* meet the heavier for capitalists to carry. The _ casemlneee is ease for gaol borrowers,med Meaterr. ty tine elmailleatleas et names ' I cannot" non - materiel idteratlei yens of interest. but the Improvement consists In the circle of acceptable borrowers bang midi enlarged. Names that would have been refused almost without ex asnlnationsexinthatosre sowsseemptedwithamaness, and both at the bank, and the discount home* thole who ought to get acesouncodation get It at reasonable ntes. - - Money on with mei Whitetail, it Tay „elm /tat at' Med per, neat. ; good - short' paper - at lee per east., and' rates ranging -fro-a Owl 3 per eest , aftbrd to quality. Ira paid for alt calms:kinds of good paper. Thereld stillsoaribersble -disband:lan to Sleek sof paper loads by put* involysd . ,- Sit...elle -or Isdkectly. " auspenelents" or eaten/low. ;" but thu is hardly I. be wondered mad will continue to be the ea.. unti , the 'mock! cawed by the storm Limy bees eleas..d n 'ens Ilub.Trossurer; Mr. OlseO, island on the treasury notes in moderate Snail. and in a too days wlil be able to satisfy the demand. The ,banks do not like then, and !ban only based of one bank, the Shoe and Lea ther, labial bat otteted - totak• niacin Ins, The lait mentioned institution Or t5b.4130.000, when the gab- Tramline *wound) , notes to th at =omit. I heard, to-day, of a large lot being sold la .the street at per cent. diaeortirt. • - 'TM fob:ming is a table ibosturths exports of specie teen California in 1867, se colonized with them of the tour preceding Exports InlB6l $34,4142,000 Exports In MS fl-5,164,t331 do 1352 46,V0n0/11 do Jibe td eat t ial do 1853 54 903 000 I ma - 43.850,669 do 1851 51,4M000 110000TID TO MT TORT. ITTOITID TO lIVOLIND. 1853 547,912,448 1853 - 54,976,063 1854 48,289,649 1554 - 3,731,000 1855 34,130.644 1856 5,152,155 1858 39,165,254 1156. 8,066, 4 0 1557 35,247.778 1857 9,347,153 The Metropolitan - curreacy cartifleatas unredeemed do not now armed 52,397000. On the let of February they will be further reduced 20 per gent; The PX. chrome at the clearing . ..tun:um to day were 514,251.- 681.25, and the betlaneed ware 1902,010.01. The cash tratilactione at the Opyrcemery were sefolkrwa: Receipts $332,349 15 - Payments 33,04 68 Bs Ume 3,320,5t3 32 _The receipts hided, 575,600 from customs. WA meeting of , the directors of the Bank tag was held yesterday, at 'which it was nnashoonsly resolved to propose the following amend meets of the charter to the stockholders, which, it is believed, will be agreed to wittiont hesitation To nod ucetbe capital of the . bank to $318 , 080 (4asee 512 50 each), with potently Increase the amount again if desired ; to strike out the sixth article. which re quires forty per meat; of the myna - to be levelled be Government, State, or eitr Was; Or in becdi,and I manatee k -t. retire. Ord number of. directors tem twenty to eighteen * almeduangtha present divivon Into I three classes.- AR the annuadmouta.to *aft:tides of association to be recommended by a two-third vote of the directors, and adoptadbyathree-fourth vote of the shareholders, at a special meeting to be held far the . Pjfuriderlei.. Ilenk-otBeboker,!Weirl4 few days ago. is already 61064„ aid tome out to be a swin dle. !! The President of_ the baekhas been arrested for imbessleznent. _The losatothad 'tors will betunall. The news hythe lifargiare* o and thwdalas had de , pressing laffuence on the Flour and Provision markets. Vlocr Le 56 lower, and Wheat-very heavy, with very little demand. Corn is in better demand at a slight de cline, and all kinds of`Bnitislori an dull and !ewer. The rates charged by the Genesee Walley serie roads for the carriage of Fleur to New York larresen reduced to 16e jr Mil, (a reduction of be) end it is thought that the New York Central Railroad will be obliged to make a similar reduction. = The stock market opened heavily this nioraing, and prices fell slightly, but the news by the Canada mused a reaction, and the docile, was more than recovered. State Bloch and the best railroad bands are skill eilaght after for invelliment, Auld )rites are steadily sustained. At the second bout the market eas_ftreser, and eased decidedly in favor of WWI. WSW 'YORK 820014 BXI , FLIRT 5000 N Y Cs ,nstic, ,do • lilt -,do 13 .113 X, 5000 Eenl'y RV. Sr 103 10000 Tears da ILO 1;39 90 - I 5000 68 -86 X , • linDOVirgird,e de 16000 Ifissoeritls ' 8000 do 111% ; 10000 do lug 30000 - do 84 10000 do 330 84% 3400 Cal Male Ti 'lO 15 10500 N Y Cen fel 8111 2000 do ' St x 3000 NY Cen Brit'n $0 5000 N Y ten 13. Ts osx , 2000 Brie 24 kit Bds .90% 2000 Brie 3d lit Bds 13 ' MO Brie 4th Mt 4 60 5000 Irla Bdt I& 60 3000 Erie Cone 'll 44 -- 1000 Iludein B let in 95x 3000 do 95 2000 Had R3d sit 01 5000 Bead it 'BB b 3 10 2000 Mich Oen 3 pals, - Mt Bk Nd Cox -'94x 5500 111 Oen 9310 5000 do 560 93 4000 2 11 /a Al 2d m ' WOOLSCrkNIILGbd 43 MOO do 510 43 5000 do MO 41 5000 Chl&Rk Td Bda n 504.0 leCht 109 a bin le 30 Atlmado Bank 10 30 Butt-ILO/rev Ilk 101 x 10 Artisans; Bk 77 10 Nassau Bk 5 Bk of Commerce 100 X 9 do 101 69 Ilk of New York 1021( 90 Deltlind Cl MO 112 8 do . 311 X 10 Cunt Coal , 530 15 15' do - 15 100 do 141 14,3 300 do 14% 5 do 14X 100 do 14,x 24C B Quincy It to 880 City 5i .71 • 77 IWO Read 8...b2vz.20yi` 27 Psna R 411( 11 Harrlib StA 5090 Sitvais St 140 92 1000 da 92S 2900 llissozui 6* 3000 Tana Gs '9O. NS 4000 Cal Ts Tsg 3000' - do 151( 1700 City 8. !Kt 1001( 5000 Iris 21 111 Bds 90j 10000 Isle 3.5 „51t Bds 75 50c0 Lserk 3IU L G 4.4)j 6000 do 45, 16 Bk of Comment, 101 9 Am Ex Bank 102 S 50 Coro Coal 15 260 do MO 25 3 100 do i6O 15 - :00 do 151( HO Galena & Chi Si 75 20 CIO & R Sol R 67 300 Lacrosse k. MB 11 71:111 MAUVES Mass.—The demand for both kinds is limited; safer of Pots at $6 6214. and Pearls at IV& COTrEZ.—The basinraw Is mom active. end ender fa vorable edifices from New Orleans prices hare shorn more firmness. Sales to-day of I,IQO Pigs Me on pi vots terra; after the sale yesterday, 1,600 bars Rio mid at 13810 Xe. The total stock la now 94,000 haze, Including 16.000 of Rio. Corral—Very little Is doing; the market has not opened tinder the 01112161110/1 neva. We quote nominally at 10 tfe for middling Ppland. FLOCS. Se —The market for the low grads, of Wei-f -ern Canal Ykur le easier and dull under the news t y the Banamoo, and clove. with Increteraliewrinem and .r the still Wormers by thif Canada at liallfax. The de mand ts Mainly for the home and Butern trade. The mire are 4,000 bbl. at s4.Nas4.*3 for common to good State. $4.44254 65 for epics do, p. 2044.4 30 for superfine ludiana and Michigan, $4-40*5.5 for extra do, $4 70et51.90 for common to good extra Ohio. (round hoop.) $4.90a5 0 .40 for goad to choke do, and $5 25.11 for St Louis brands and extra Genesee Canadian Flour% in fair supply, and le study; sale' of 350 bbie at $4.30a54.40 far cope-fine, end $4.60455 90 for extra brands. Southern Flour is la batter demand, and there IL perhapo, leas irregularity In prices; the sales ars 1,000 bbla at $4 60656 for mixed to good brands Baltimore, &e, and $6 Obeld 60 ter the better evades. Bye Fleur is unchanged. Corn Meal is I. fair demand at $3253.10 for Jersey. Bock - wheat Flour ie in demand et $.l x 5 49e1Q0 The. lien are plenty, doll, and somewhat deprfosid in price. Oasts —The Inquiry for Wheat Is moderate, era the market is unchanged, with light /Mice/ sales of 4,200 boa at 111.14 e for damned Southern, $.1.12, for fair red do. $1.05 for wised. and 'Western (spring and win ter) $1 Oh. Rye is steady; sales of 1,000 be. at 'Mt for Northers. Barley is Srmer—soles of a cargo of prime tour-row' d State at 78e. Barley Vsit la quiet at 80a9Ors. Ott& are unchanged--sales of State and Western at 42346 c Corn is more plenty and rather lower—axles of 16,00) bus at 66065 c for Southern Yellow • fair to good prime is scarce, sod would command 6 60, and 700701 be for new Southern white. Peovisioss--She Pork market is less active for lots on the epa4. and is lower. and CURIO nominal. Soles of 725 bbls at 515.15 a 515.25 for Mess; $ll 900512 for Prime; $14.505514.70 for Western Prime Mess. In cluded to the sales are 500 bbls Mess, sellers' optlon.for Slay and June, $14.10. Beef to in fair request and is steady; pod is held with more confidence—sales of 250 bbls at MieS7 for prime country, 69a510 for do mess, $lO 50e513 for repacked Western mess, and $13.2.50514 for extra do. Prime mess is grain 16ci24c. Beef hams are firm-- small mice at $lO 60d615 60. Bacon is better and i r , demand—sales of 250 bores at t tic for long ribbed; ',a for short do, and Scly' for short clear; the supply is moderate and the export demand is good. Cut meats are in fair request and are steady—sates of 200 hhds at La Bair for buns, and 63•6,t,,c for &boulders Lard is steady—the supply is increasing; nles of WO bbls and tea at 9.a9);c, and legs at lnalox.e. Dressed hop are plenty at e. Batter is In fair de mand at 12.15 c. for Ohio, and 53021 c for State. Cheese is steady at 6e. Rims Is quiet, but steady at nen 50 tr 100 IDs. ScsAl3.—The realist* is much better under a reduced stock, (cot over 5000 Wade and 5,000 boxes,) and a more active deeme d with less liberal receipts. Tb• sales show an advance of h axe ip lb on the lowest prices of the stason. Beamed are higter;and more is doing MIMIC , —The demand le fair and the market stead, Bales 200 bbla at 21X°. - - - CIANIBBIDGB cATrtz SARKKST—lnnuary 27 At market 1,010 esstle,4tout h 4 hearelan4 160 stores, consisting of 'rocking oxen, cows, SRO VW / S I PSI and tliree years . Parrot or sElazzr 8aer.—Eitra5,67.2.5661 50; Ora quality, sll,2serstr6; Second quality, $5.250 55 .60; third quality, K ; ordinary'7 quality, 04 60. PRICES or STORY CATTLE.—Working oxen from s7se soowslso to '6175 per pair. Cows and calm trOurl36 a $4O/445855455ED $6O. _Yearlings. sll.sfli. • Tun years old, a2osss2s.. Thiel 'MEOW, s2sas2o. PRIMP am Listu---34113 at market; prim in lots, 01.56,11166.12451 60 each ; Extra and selections, 03.8 53 ¢Oll4l - At nairiet ; rice*, Bre *tight, 6eky e 11, : dres s,)(o.9K V , b. Batt Ras .—The increased supply of Cattle and Sheep to-day otter last week, and a large number final the Western Stites and, Mains at litigh.ton,Spalulorted the price. dean on Beef to 'hat it Wall fortntett sign, nal on Sheep from 2646001' head lower than our violations two went. &Info fin' ilk* qualities, Vas Isaissation S az, ULM the Walt silt M Weer tomorrow, / • GI, JANUARY Mt .50 Reldelltaß Cio 67 14 105 do • 6B 68 124 Cora - JIM 1274 do 6134 300 do ea 11.1; 200 do • • bat 4A 34 200: • do Ida - *dig It do 111 R 200 do MO 81 b; 200 do 6134 55 Gal Chi It 7434 100 do 7134 100 - do WO 75 15. do - 75 50 do b3O 75 20 Ida Rallond 2114 650 do 9111 100 - do 538 3I 2:0 - do 21 34 753 Harlem R - 50 do ••• 7 10 do 7 34 110 £l4rltue pod 14 45 Sixth Arena* R 100 25 N Raven 44 Ear 114 150 Reding B - 54 50 - do- 571 e 400 • do -57 h Miels Coo R 5034 - 60 MRS So&N Ind 11 1 - 9 h, 43 do - 1914 50 do 530 1934 590 do 19 50 do blO 19 10 Xi& 8/IN 1 prof 3334 75 do 33 50 do b6O 51 50 • do 613 .Wlg 100 Panama X 69X 100 do 40 141 X 200 Off Pitta it 11 486 Olax & Teta 41)4 R 10 4 115 12 Chia & R Isl It 67 170 • do 9 do • • • 9434 300 LaCrosse & Sill 1 0 14 60 do 10% 300 do 1034 570 do 1034 60ST Cos& 60 do 03 alt; 100 do 81 It 200 do bt7,16 210 do 51 100 Erie Railroad 4 2'2S 10 do tr.l 100 MI 810 2: 50 do 40 22 250 Beading B ta 100 do 61 .1 4 40 tfulem 311 eh Coo IS -to 60 illoh footle= It 106' 100 111 Con I; 530 95 60 do 530 '6O do 530 00 , .. 150 do f 22 do 115
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers