' ‘ I&Wfa fc*ii ‘-j \’ J:»i ; *■' tv;.; • • ;a**W*o*»» «U Wjobt.’iajAbla to tMaafriara. - BfiffOfttairbat ortka CttrjiilSuiDaLUM '• • - iili -Biair/MoaTM | ■ MatUdlteßabaartbaaarcwtbtaMCUaAiTaaßißOl -:^aWjMkiaßnp);ii>ailfwaacipjb;tw i - *MBIIf&~a! , -. f: < i; ..*'~/'.L- : - ? -_' tWaOaplaa, « <•••....j.5 8 00. . Tail Oojiaa,: (l *»»•«» ”9? ',BfaßtjiOaplafj\if f -SO 00 aKSfeowioe .**<* ;■ > • Vygp— olll**l > M«»»aa|^c>a<* * 99. gyPoelnatm-atA nm«ta4 taania* A««ta rot nJfliiwdfeaSVais-0.-im. »« .„ = ■ r-lS SidkiiroaklA'.rßßMi-;: 3 IflJ f. tt imQjoO^Btop^TiiiTiaaerappUed fcjj^. t *t|kjt%*4 , BaAa^ j J(a*a«k|.,ik»iHl>aal*»,.TM Claartaf IIoUM, and Aha Paolo «r 1867|" jnat pnbliahad . b*D.-SPPLKION feflpjMl. .sffj-ati tha >oS«a of s tha .i&tva‘AmMti M» i&retojMrffOifAKMa Hot*], -I. ■, -'; l f ..A P vlr.>yUtt«r,W> 4 i ,r.JOHN'MoP*BI.AN ) .Ag«nt. , .3t.3a8-^B*jaMe :: *- K biw ft • ';■'<• j ?y!?Tg^L t 0 : t. .r w l ■vl . ■' N. l '* Ir ■ ■■ ; p-J)llNTAti ) ’AND .J.<3t>£favOTßKßf PBBIOOIOAI.iI JOB 1880:<’ j 6«tBoftptionflr«ceirod *n *xt - i ' '*'l IAKMItOHjT j nPobllahata aal seokaalloia, > >«-Sonth.SlX3H:«treatj abanOhaataat. • MBOIOAI.,BSYIRW.-,t<in»<>a B4Ulob.,e*s.p«ryfarj . -. p* THJ( i’^HbPioSuS*»SQß6fKioildi,t;TOlMtAt?S'par - THE AMI&IOAN JOOBSMLJ.OF: MBDIOAI. 801-! £fpl«n£?i ■■’MSS BOOR'?FOR.iEVJSKYiOERISTIAN l! Xl;. aMMASRABIB PROVIDENOB9,I j xOoll*ot*<tuiil nnugnt hrtkcßfr amigglutiM BeTJ . ' '-V '': 1 W;H.:Brlal>*nß,-wlth eq ‘ ' -i' ■ ' ] INTRODUCTORY EB3JLY ON YBOVIDBNOB, 1 » { h'ssi -..-linßy arr-, J(»epli.ChMU*>D. Drr, » ! ' ■ j . “ A-hof* for tlui.pprloc, atsdr orcnhool-room, which f*uh «hdjil!a»*r»tc..lavE»ai>»C:mo«t 10-; God’« Bpee!ldriot*rto*Moa>'Jß-‘b»b*l*©# the cbildreii or men. *f tender merelesere hrer 01l his works.”i efciwri,' for iule.bj booYeelto* geberellf. Address,] ftiXHQOINB.’ ' i “ Btre *t> PhlltdelphU.j jsntus* physioian'S pooket dat-- c-JtBOOKrVIBMIK&UBT,»u»,BWKOFSNaAGB. Wow MOT'in Taribaaatjles of Mndlbff.'the PfajaJ-' - 5 . «Ua'a PoQftt D*jr-BookforlBWiV«ktl7 improTWand raviaadj^rfthfhß'eoUdptoktiob of* ratal emlnaaVuMm-' £• -it ***** f? <}'.?* j •WelfKwcaA Opinblafiaifißnmntlitti^ArtlcUa’oflHaty pmStaa :• eodot.Hereee.'BlUauod'Aeeounte aui forjT.Vkctln*- Uod unil Obitetrfo Aujmfemente, Jtn*Ujh. Yrenehnnd! tia«f paridfof 4h*pt«ihr AfttofbtlTu aai ew befttroUkwl wparaUl/, of bpnndl F Poem i pituin W, mbilfn,6oel •• vM)&.'--.u>i ‘AV i do, moroePo/wIW -Mtkib,,... • • Mit*V*B fl ?**? •[*•£• *'«*••• • »«ir* »**»*,• *nm Fookot fprM ptbeniß,, . pocket/..^ 26 With tbe kedioaliUoora tha nrlea <#ni;b«vKi -eanU additional* KentbjrnUU to*ny addMaaK . j „' No. 830 oath SIXTHStr«et, aboro j BOOKS' WORTH HAYING, FOR' BALE,! aTTHB pricks ArtREXKD.BY :' J '■■ _ ~ ,J. SABIWirWiK SIXTH Street. { BABTLETT’S CANADIAN 80ENBR*. . AVnupiiaJ •out HiiM of Pine Lin* KnrriVlnrt.‘ ; Rroofs lefori Letterion India "payer, richly Turkey Mo^ .■ t00e0.v!.....Vi.......... ..$3O Ofl Alw, tb« >slos work*- blelnnletee, wiUtAettetprcrt deeoripUoni.c 2 Tolu., inhelf Morocco,- ft U edges $lO.OO ■ BABWi*r*>a BOBFfSRT OP- IBBtAKIk, Bqo Knof Improkiiona of 110 plates on India pa per, superbly - bound In Turkey Morocco... $30,00 OOMHIMBHAH GALM3RY 81 BHGRAYINGB. $ .jzsss^Sbss^sssssmiS r ,s»«t lOotowl JPUtee. 8'’»ol«'. 'Bfo?<:'Ulr ’*erop«oi v «««».'« »y<»'4Asl» Al'l i .'fit M <* Meo'/ef gonynl '•omrtnietit Of $ll the recent Gift - Booktof icliMtlt; IA their yariouiatylee sued at priced i*W«altoloee:boyeßr."'.s- i -'c«»b’ ;',, litin fr.i=-;ir«s-i-iff j .aA«UC(Mf|M«fei4|S>6,%tMbS Me#**# *•».•».--' { -<>u OTjCUBKOTIiV 1 r- r -fbn «UMi tfft .vUAbH uuua gl,6of**toi4Ofißthty **4t <<»■* •* •■» c> <'«jit *-tw <■*•«.■»'*>?«» >■<->- ? . OUKIO0S;™ 80ABOB, SAKE! '*-»rAH»:ouy»ooobMfkiiywiw;o«ii‘MMl J JosrtE Md Cli»»u»tiiU»4t» r \jPkll«i«lpkl».’ 181 jbtst BOOKS In allutyieii, selling |, V/atih> towMt r»t«,aft, AIXBN 811 Spring <3 wdeo t *.-. VA--/ . --,-• a ?■-:-- ---■ -- • i JUST.STEP IM AT AfcEEN’S.OHEAP ’ BOOK-3TOEK,' fiii' Bpriag Uajrden jrtreetj' iog«t mmm <-> ifc.w.^ojuMnmggftsk : Uam^t^umM-mma^W£w:oai •la>gtMM*oop«,ror»»l«bj JAMES W. QUEER, ■ Stotiira^rfi. .OfS^'ljSpMjEEj^OO.^ Lj , ILAHK AOOQUNT'BOOKMAHUFiOTnBIRB| > / * '■'" !|C|PKML£IU»6;-:J£;Sljtf)fp’Sßßj, ';i ' ;.t4ii.dotrH'*::»‘oaK \ ’ ; Of taafplloa 1 , im bud, or • Bolt* Mad 'Bran) BANKEBB, BROKBBB, r IHBtn£H«Ii: W«f»nt«4U^niiuty^iiditloirssiprloof..... , ; 'SMBIIGSI AMBiDOMMnO BiiwoNßßY, - I ' - Jf-W-i OOHHHBOf All BLANKg, fco.j AO. -- ■■ ■ | JOB PRI«mjSMI,UTHOBKAPHY,.t ' > s 'i ,V , j _. - 'ln ,lliheir.y»rlfltl«a. • - ' .’'PBNC'jftiLtTY 1 a (lATlßifiotioß :<II}ARANTIB] I. ££ Hif ’ J|.OEw*Jf«t,tt4ytW»6B Pooket *. ’«re»V Tirtatjr of itjlM'»o*a|Ma I '<>rthejmUy eelebr»t*d ft - zv^jwjfmtpßutioatti);}- 1 ; %t, gfltrTy- 1 ,; v-'oEaNK. ACCOUNT. BOOKS*-:The. «nb^ ■- 1 [J® f #»iber -hM. wr unhand,a larfcs assortment Of wj, -BUKk'Aebdtmt Books] adSpUdtoereVy grade.ofbuSl *~iiMiif,‘ftteh MV U ** ’ ' tr Vf i»,- ■* o „ *c,‘ I ‘ . > Letterßooks,- f. *{ % *Check-BOokS,- -T ; *t*dger.*obks, > WSS . ; /Bin * - J • , r xOlih >Book«V, ' .-Meth&randdfo Books, 1 •- 1 • /.'•I BtoieeBook!,* Mafia?**; n ,| * /.' BliAßTOksbfanysUe/fttlaof.binding, or pattern VofjalWffvmadf J<f.owl*r s&skprt-j&tlce, atm warranted 1 wj j nnrifrnilsed forsteatites* orrnllisg. quelity.ofmatenale. doifiniflUy ofhindiiJg ;,N6V bad old AnmMfcbpliia oa/orortflo terms.* Xlf-HOORAPHIO AND UIHB %liwmf*ttßBi IHU'.Hrtd., Bttdi; OWnUr»: SMp -/ '^plngjUwwpfti'ooa' efifcf dodtefjWoai of "gob Pnflfiog : f&HuMtfa npoH&#jitfrnmH. OHBIBTT, j • iY.gtatloner*nd Printer*, ;. ' £ Bi;I?HtBPiQPPP«Us j ilPSßlii , ■' ft c 4S£ «« --- ' : «'^&ii|^imt^^oy«i<Mß l ;iMß l j« VC * { *s■*]s f • ? ... ■ it i - , ~,• : y.i, ■■. - .. . ....... VQI* 137. .rflbtaUtDrijiiffiS^obs. 1 3 ; tostook-; " Would be* ioare to > ATmimne&'that, tbs Holidays being now orerthey aW'pre'bfaiUyf for Btock-Ultlng; end'Will >i“r '.7 f ' r ; THE BAtANO* 0F TBEIB PAL& AND WINTER •?.•<' ' V' 5-;OOODSl, • *>• » • Cloaks and Raglans. ; • t .... v.s,; ■ Shawlsahdjwka, -v..;’ ', . “ ~, < Metfaoe* And OMbmerfts,. n DeLilneiTihd ParmatUS, f \ Batin abd Yafiaelas, * ', - OEtlntterahd Gltaghams, ■-> 1 > ' ? Oiothsand.OasebnerM, ** « in i:,; J.Mw;■ Bl*nk.ttuxlBk»wl«, ,>■ ! ! • '.4 Table 1 idnehs and Towels, XkdleV and Qsnilemen’s'Hdkfe. '* V ' v •» v” ‘t HofllefyailiiQlOTei. &e., &c. ■" WUh a Urgd tixl wellMaortSd generalstock of j ' *PANoV AN® STAPLE DRYIGOODS, l AH Bought OHBAP for <1 ASH.'and now. to be sold *7;-AT.'REDUCEI>:PBIOSS! ; - Tocloaeout preparatory,to » •:> V* vT • ' BTOCK-!WKINa! - . . . I R«■ n'-WxyEr. .p.HJBHB.', .- i v Sorttsut Ornn.r WOHTH A. BPBINW OABDIK SELL FOR CABH AND HAYE ;BTJT ONE • !-t x_. ; pßigß.” ■■ ■■ J.i-tf ; '|7|TINTER OLOAKS CLOSING-.OUT;. k: til * ‘vTltf U‘ J ' ■' - ‘ •■ - ! # »si«vW fIKAIi BEDUOTION IN PBI0H8? e•' • ; - ■- PARIB, MANTILLA tvfILQAK SMPORIVM, M „ $l2 Olotkf, Reduced to,so 00 .... ,“sl4'OtoUu RfthuMl to $lO 60. " • J ,*18’01?«U:»edn(i)Kl tolls 00. | y »lS,ol6«k»BednMd,to Jl6 60. *, ' '-(.I -*3aoloik|.Redn»ato*l6 00. 4- :■ I :|j, a'b.ktißalnded>tottB 00. ■ ■ ; 833 Olofckß Reduced: to 042 EQ. .v ;.M0 Qloafts Bwlnoßd to $3O 00. t ■ , ■ rsso OO. , . ~ < WO ciooia Redticed to *6o 00. . - ■ -r; ;:jioo,;oio»v<Rcdac«i to*is oo;*., . The «oh<Mriber*'hkTO ;«tU! U'Store » foU ukortaent of:*U the Hudftg St.le., hitt h.Tlog elo»«4 their work room. for theieftson.no NKWOLOaKS will henoofortb b»iwooiv«d."i.;'-i Jl' ITii PROOTOiB fc 0 0., ;d29 - ; TOB OHESTNPT ; BTKgffT- ■VBTINTER; STOCK, REDOOED. ▼ P ' Lsd I ea’Be*ver Olothk. r r~r. y Qlothe. ,< ■, - Boys* Weer—CaMlmere*. ' -• .r.-j'r BAtfMttliMAsTeitlnp. : | .‘V V’' All at, RATES. - . .*• ; ic : J , z GOODS. ' > ' HetryViileneTai/ 18Xto46oent*, ’*'* • iL r U'S6'Mnt D«Ulikaiatl7-eeDtB. 1 • j lUcMerrliaiekPrinte Atfll oeat*.: 1 1 Merinoe*—Color*—Pine Bine* And Black*., • } • f {.itr, "H-u- CLOAK ROOM. , . . • t,. And Raglans.: Very handsome GkrnlehMAt'uiueti 1 lea*’ than nstxal price* for same quality. 'slo.sl3;i*ttds!fiOtoak*ara UNBURPABSED. .*-* »• a . SHAWM. , . J - ‘•’Avery lanre’ttock aUo'or Woollen Bbawls. ' ' A.m •'.?•<•;? BBDUOTI&N -') Will thelStb.! BBOIHBER. ; N. B.i—No deviation from price. - ;: 1 .... 1 ", t rCOOpBK * CONARD, r , - - r .■dig.,.,;;; g:E,;»raerIfjWTn*MAHKJITBt4. ; nBILESSSHEETINGSEOR EXPORT. 1 MJ BBOWH] BtEiOHBD r A BitTE DRILLg. mtATY * EIOHT BHEKTISQB, aide by , «PBOTHINOHAJr* WBLMi I . t M ts9*tk, JEggHF-ST., t 2& LETITIA ST. i - ' 1 1 '.'•‘B. VALENTINE' VCO,, > ! J. . ‘ OeMMIBiIOKM*ROHANTa or'• j AMERICAN MAtfUFAOTURRS,! No. 61 COMHON-BTRHBT, . NEWO B-lilA KS. j Special Attention siren to .OolleeUag And Bemlttiag SzokAßge. ,i c;. J-. d23.3m# ; f 'l»E*B POR MEN’S TOAR.' ~ JLi. AperlcanXlpea l Oorop*ny , a mperior.*tyle.Bro?m ,'A - chSse^jMisirtnii»t qf Aber*' Giood*; ribi? .bn’b&ple, And‘fdr'*3e7by;'.'-' \2l%3pszm hMk t j .©abbe;; j Vi7ikOHE*TER & CO./OENTLEHEN’S • • ’■ •' 1 -'..IV. ' Ufit i 1 : < l"'-, i ifATBHT BHOOTDBK-BBAM BHIB* MAITQIAC4 SI',4i"4TOBY..‘ •■-—j - AttftrOM gtud,'B«7Too OSEBTHUT BTBBBT, o]ip» dUtheWtatimrtOn’Hcttk.. ‘- '• - t.'i.it 14 A. r WIKGHKHTEK «IU gtr».u BttMofo t*i hU ptet to 1 Menhi^torlng faMitM.iit.? «Mnplar.hi>';MH6t*tM,at]rla«rsUit> gllM At Uh ahOirtett >»d«wpplUd<grlHiiW«l>»iii.. ? . >’ ‘ ‘ JyOt-lr ■ f-iTT (lote 'of' tbß’flhaof'Wrii atri W itWitlipof Wj tottair fMtrdttJ luid frleiiddto'hißhtw Btofß, and lipr£ Kr gniBTB «t>ihort Mtlbtr-A iUTi&li*gHißfa'«aa aot£Aii « iWEtf > ': .'J'" t&ii.i, ,Tj~ Can! LavaaadMcaaloSata. . tor tk* Ml* of Okula froMum’iiiOMaoaixiiE-KEEyEaa. ■m 8 i f S. JARDEN fc 880. : ’ '!' V-* '. ■. KutcrAOToiiu no ixro»r««« or i , SISVBB-PLAIED WABE, Ho, OM OkKtußt iltnatvkbon .lUra, (xp ittin) " OoojUnUj- onhlodujd'Ar'iiln totha *r*4«, ■ VBA BSia. OOMMtTNIOH SERVICE SETS, UHNB :• moHBRa, goblets, ccps-waiters, bab- t : ; BETS, OA0VOB0; KNIVES,SPOONS, PORKS, , OllMrittnd'pUtlgtoo »ll)dt&afmat»l. laMp, OtrK SJTO be. . V ! PHILIP WlLisdK Ic 00., :v : !' jss cuEatHUT muni below fifth, j . ■ "i,! - ’>' ■' - 1 < I ' . MOSBAY. HOVMCBIB 199, i ,A»M»ortn>«ntbf J l fink GUNS ■ i 'oF iiiia owH, hanoiaotom, ). '••• * • -'tan-' ,■ i i THOU OF-TH| MOST ,oiiLBBBAT JD ,i IS KUBOPK. * Tk* Attention of/ (ii '; r/ '* : ' \t •. ■ BPORTJ3MBH. b roqaeited to their BtockVwhloh tk«y tin pr • j SHALL NOT") BBi BUBPASOIH By.nny fa Vkp -United BtetH. ’ PIBTOLB, TLAgKB, SHOT, 4e, U -GUN TURHITUHI IN ALL VAKINTY. | oolB>Bm . '«■ ; ‘ &raeerits. QOODGSqCEEIES ■ '■' AT PAIR PRICKS!! ! ,-OHA S/. n." MATTS O N, SOUTHWEST.OOBNEBVTKNTK ANB ABOH STS., i Bag on baud, end is generally receWiPg, TIIE BEBT OF GROCERIES; «h?eb he will sell attbe moat BEA fcON ABLR PBIGBSFOR CASH,. Hiting; % LARGE end V flfc BLACK' and GREEN -TEig. he ia oonfldentofbelng able. to- suit, both la quality tad price, all persons in. want of 4he article. In. quantities or fromone pound to the half chest. His general aaeortment .embraces everything!?! the way of FINE GROCERIES, and he would -respectfully invite All in want of good article* to give him a call. It will :be worththe trial. * <■ - i ■ - », apSfrtol IJ&OOEBIES.—C. DOtfOGHUE, 10 8. UTVaTEB Street,: offer A tor sale, to reduce hia ,»tock,da«og UiU moath,>t reduced prices for Oaeh. Philadelphia and' New, .TorkJiteam'Re&ned gager aua Strap' of Vkribus ’gradep, I 'prime Coffee, Cuba and New Crop Now Orleazui-Molassesj gifted,Pepper] and Ada* mantine Candles. _ ' d9~lm*: >J»fIE wAeehousing company ■OX PHILADELPHIA. DIBBOTOHS. FATBIOE BBADV, ' PIINY lIBK, ALBXANDBB HBNBY,' 880. 11. HABBISO''. ! a; j.plsasonton, 1 wilmam nbilsoh, WM..-H STBWABT, :. 8. B. OBAWPOBD. ! ■ PATBIOK BBADY, Pieuldent. ;/■ ■'. ' .' S .B.' OBAWPORD, Vlm PrMldeat. i” '• ' WILLIAM DDNN,- TreMttrat.’ WILLIAM NAILBON, Bttretery. ; ;: „ !OLII'POBD S. PRILtIPS, W.rehoose K.apu. ,THB WARBkoDSINB COMPANY : OP PHILAD’A V AES PMKPIBfID Td ; ; KBOBtVE 800DS. ON BTOBABB, '.WkiuVlP Biod or PrM, »t Oarrant Kataa, ud wlUßaaerawlpiaor warranUthatarot. ’ ", iV'AfpUcatlod mfVj'.La atthair , ;4| ;) 1 optioEj iN laObbl street, Utaly oarajled by tha Dnltad SUtaa Omtom Home, or at tielt pramlwa, better koown M the f •:::.v.tobaooo warehouse;. !'• C.'.v.i Uv;?‘Vif’,/.C dO>y v f’ '^E^A^NT^LrmidOOEOBE^GLASS. .'HM';itook <rf.tlMKr!ily SaantlfißSd »roliltMtot»l *p> jSfcdift.JO,. OhK«))ei(,Ya>atral*a,OoA<erratorieri aad otSaFßyMtaiafwiara liladaamadUaiaasUT to embaL < JU>, or to elT* a cheat, cndalegaat appatranfta. 1 Any SoloSrfioaS tl*lir« r ,brtKj(nl«J, elabo .•*ffiyofltf>tUaf.' ; J .-zibBlbb * smith,'’ - }&£f <i{V- <>r. t'-.ni:-/ ‘j ?s*v £O4 W,? -! ,u> v)i ; FRIDAY, JANUARY 7, 1859. ( Daring the past year, three ont of the great 'EngjiaVQwar/er/iej have contained articles la mentingthe. decay of Modem Satire.' They have referred, ' one and . all, to, the collection called' 1 *’ Poetry of the' Antl-Jacobln,” - com prising the,,celebrated political' and satirical poems,,parodies, and' jeui d’esprit ot George Oannino, Lord Carlisle, Marquis Wellesley, John 'Hookham’'Frere, William Gifford,' William Pitt, Geoeoe Ellis, and others. As there seems to have been Borne doubt about the Anti-Jacobin, whence this Selection was made, English, -as well as American, readers having often-considered that it was a Review, rye may' as well .'state'that if was a weekly newspaper, published in London daring the year 1797, under the editorship 1 of William Gifford, the satirical author'of “The Ba vlad ” and « The Mmvlad,” published sepa- ; rarely, in and 1795, but,'the sixth edition .of which appeared,ip 1800, in one small vol ume. - Nor.have they, since been separated, i ■ The Baviad, a poetical-satire, in imitation of the, first satire of Persius, was specially directed-against the Della Oruscan rhymesters at Florence—Mrs. Piozzi, Robebt Merrt] &o.—white, the Mroviad, an imitation of Ho*. baoe, was severe upon] the dramatic author] ship,of the,time. ’ Giffoed, who was esnath tutionally -irritable, had obtained so much re pute,’ as a satirist, by theae pooms, that when the-high Tory or'anti-Jacobin party 1 among English statesmen of ,the end; of. the! last cent tury,-determined to have a journal, of-their own, they unanimously appointed him to coni duct lt. , Hd had so. much volunteered aid from the proprietors and frionds of tho papor, that he wrote very little in it. himself. Can siso was by far the most efficient of these oc4 casional writers. In his,“Loves of the .Tri-j angle ” he amusingly ridiculed Dr. Daewin’s “Loves .of the Plants,” .while hiS parodies (the Weaiy Knife-grinder and the Inscription over Mrs. Brownrigg’a celt ini Nowgate) upon certain , poetical .platitudes by: Sodthet, ro tain rank, to this day, as among, the more racjj •ud stinging satires in the language; - : ' 1 -' 1 ’ The satirists of the JlnH-Jacobin possessed good animal spirits,;the .botjscibusneaaof ini tell actual strength, the confidonce arising-from having.snccessfully-battled in the war of poll* Hc4,''considerable knowledge oftho; world, and a certainty that the hoarts of the poople worei with them—for what were, tßon. called French' -principles were not generally in vogue, at .that time. ‘Theso men were scholSrly,' too, and wrefe like; gentlemen', roihembbrlDg ’Sheri-! dan’s' hint, that wit, like, a 'sabre, dhbnld ' bd pplished as well as keen. - Scarcely one amond thorn-but bad-won'a:high position in the ■world’s race for: fame and power! William Pitt, for . example, although' under! forty at the .time, bad been Prime Minister for,mare thanr.twelve years; George Cahninq,'after running a - distinguished caradr at Eton'-and Oxford, whbre his‘wit] eloquence] and scholar-; ship mado.a .rdpiitatlon which preceded him to London, and immediately obtained him the entree into,. the highestpolitical,society, wa| now in his under-secretaryship of State, (obf tained through Pin’s' liking for him,) and then aged ‘twenty-seven, ■ was considered -the handsomest and most gentlemanly ainonh rising offlcials. Indeed, a few years later, al -the age of-thirty, he married Joan Scott, a Op-lid'Fdss ’-wltli. the ‘handipme' .fortune of £160,06b] paid down on the-nail when the marriage-settlementa were signed.' 'T.Wentj-I seven Tears -later, 1 this same Cassini) - died] bayinglww'tbe'" Pferaiamblpj _ the.. emhiL t-Wtr -oC TJfetijner, and jhavlng months.' The* Mart quls -bf-WEhLEiiLEy, who wis made : Viceroy of India .during the publication of. the jin/t- Jacebin, was another elegant scholar: Fusee, who had been Oansino’s Coadjutpr in the Mx? croconn,-at Eton, was another, of this corps ojf contributora,;and, sot haylng'died Until 184 G, outlived them’all; .Lord Carlisle—he whose 6'paraiytiC pnling ’’ , I was ridiculed by Btror] his kinsman, in 'English Bards and Siotch Reviewers— was something' of a man of let ters, occasionally making..a -happy hit. Geor6e "Ellis, the correspondent and. friend of Walter Scott, was. not the least brilliant In this circle. And, over all, exercising the most complete Autocracy over eyory contribu tion-adding here, and curtailing there, stri ding, ont one hit and putting In anothert-was William. Gifford, who relished satire ijs much- as.' Mitbbipates was'.fabled to, have .loved poison, thrivingnpon what wonld have 'destroyed other men. ‘. A few, years lajter, Be had .(unple scope, and a wider, field for hlspi culiar talent, as was evidenced by .the manner ;in which he conducted’! the' all-dreaded Q«ar lerly Review . - Wo have particularly 1 alluded to Canning fa parodies upon certain early ‘ compositions wbiob- Robert Southet ; Wrote, 1 bn his hot yontb, when; he was avowedly a red-hot rc publican,and seriously contemplated becoming one of the founders of’a-Communist settle ment somewhere in the far -and fertile West of this great ,country of ours. Alter Wards, changing his opinion, Sodtiiet became a Con servative, declaring, however, that ho “was no.more ashamed of having been a republican than' he was of having beon a boy]” In 1797, at tho age of twenty-three, and glorying in Ms ultra-1 Ib'lfel principles, -Southet * was looked upon, as fair game, and Cardino p’ouncdd'down upon, him. He had written an “ Inscription for the Apartmont In Chepsto- Castle, where.’ Henry Martin,' tho regicidl was imprisoned for thirty years,” andthe llni ran thus POWDBB, For. thirty years, secluded from manktod, Here Martin lingered. Often have these walls 'Echoed his footsteps, as with even tread He paced around hie prison. Not to him Di^Nature’s /air Tarleties.exist; t He neVer the sun’s delightful betms. gave when, through you high bars, Ijje poured a t And broken splendor. Host thou ask his crime ? He had rebelled against the king/ and sat i Id judgment on him; for his ardent mind Shaped goodliest plans happiness on, earth, Abd peace and liberty! Wild dreams! but luck As Plate loved, such u, with holy seal, Oiir Milton worshipped. Blessed hopes! awhile Ijomman withheld even to the'Utter days, When Christ shall come, and all things be faldlli Now, this to really "a good poem, and w is' written, wo doubt not (i with as, much sincerity aa force. Canning, however, imagined—or pretended to imagine—that Southrt doslrid to assert and vindicate' the abstraot principle of the shedding of human blood:' Tbore Isa good deal of humor in the parody which Oait nihg wrote for the Anti-Jacobin,- callingft in “ Inscription for the door of the cell in Now gate where, Mrs. Brownrigg, the Prentlclde, was confined previous. to her execution.” It reads.thus i, [ tor «ne long term, or era her trial urns, Ilero Brownrigg lingered. Often bar* those cell, ) Echoed her blasphemies, as wltk’ahrlU voioe She soreamod for fresh (ier.ers, Hot to her hid the blythe fields of Tothlll, or thy street,. ( St. Giles, ite fair vsrletlee expand ; -- Till, at the lest, on alow-drawn cart she went To execution, Dost thon sek her crime ?' i She whipped two femslo Treaties! to death, And hid them In the coal-hole, tor her mind Shaped strictest plans of dlsolpllne. Sage schemas 1 Such as Lyohrgns tanght, when at the shrine Of the Orthysn goldeeehe hade flog 'The little Spartans ; such as erst ohastlsed Onr Milton when at college, tor'this aot Did. Brovprlgg owing. Hirsh laws! Bat time shall , cpme ■ When Prance shall reign, and all laws be repealed, , This to. one of tbs closest parodies eypr made, and to saidto have had the, effect of unprecedented rldiculo upon the' poet whose original it so saucily laughed at. . With the exception of Byron's English Bards and- Scotch Reviewers, and, from tpn : to.ttiirty years liter, Thoscas Moore’s transient qpwspaiier squibs, ' there has been nothing like teal, slinging satire in English literature, since the reckless days of. the Anti-Jacobin, over: sixty years’, ago. Byron's onslaught nponttae critics who had stnng.him, and tie. contemporary writers who had won the ropu tation which waß denied to hia own. feeble and’ pifcnupuerile “Hourß of Idleness,” Was dookbtbkbt, Modern Satire. PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, JANUARY 7, 1 a "terrible outbreak ‘of anger ;..but its.'bffifr • personality is more observable than Ittiwlt- He tried his, hand- a second time,and wrojje; “Hints from Horace” in cold blood,. ..bpi' these rhymes were not considered worthy; of publication by any one "(except the author),; and never were printed* in fact, until some, seven yoara after Brnos's death* Mooßk’s “Two-penny Post-bag,” and other brochures hadthoir day, Tint require ,to hawT done for them what Mr. Thomas .WriOBT di® very ably, for - Murray's last edition sm Byron— namely, to be elucidated by.notes d© tailing the circumstances and the ipersei® glanced at; Some of Moore’s "neWspapeg squibs are equal to the most sparkllhgiettC d’esprit of the Anti-Jacobin, But they relate, to ophemeral subjects, fuul a generation 1?!U0V rant of the subjects which suggested them; must read them with diminished. pleasurfv from want of lully understanding them*. With, the exception of Btrom and Moore,' the prej' sent and last generation of English poets havpj produced no satire worthy of the slightest rev gard. . ; ..In this country there has .as yet oiistedpnly one poet who has effectively pointed the, barb, of satire. This is Jambs Russell Lowell,: whose.“ Fable for, Critics,” and “ The Biglow Papers,” published'ten years ago, are at least! equal tothO entire “ Poetry of the Anti-Jaco- 1 bin/’ and Immeasurably superior to all other' satire published since. Mr. Lowell's hits at persons and politics aro discriminating, sharp; and witty, besides being good-humored and genial. As you read Lowell, you perceive, that, laugh as you may, he, also, nmsthave luxuriated in The fun while he was wrlting iti “Nothing to Wear,” by Mr. Butler, is,a pleasant satire, of mote' recent but it is disfigured by so many bad rhymesj I and, what is' worse, by so many co'cknej/ rhymes,, that it,deservos reprehension Ph that account, rather than praise. In JMr; Duoanse’s . Feems, lately- collected and ret published in, this city, there is a.stinging satire, in the English Bards’ manner, which ihlls upon a groat many American writers; with severity and force. As a poetical effiit sionj this satire is vory good, but.there is one leading defect—it is deficient in discriminatioii and analysis, and does not sufficiehtly temper condemnation with eulogy." In a word, Mr! Duoanke is much too fiercer-one half the ] wrath "would have made a more effective j satire. We take no account Here-of the.various satires, in prose" and verse, written by Tawf pore Hook and Dr. Maoinn. v They amusing at the time, but the interest perished with the passing away of.tlia circnmj stances which'’suggested or provoked themj Hook wont in « for the fun of the thlhg>’ ( *4 ho'paod to say, but Maoinn was fiercely, anf griiy bitter;' and few oan sympathise, ih "or out o( print, with an angry man. We do not name Sickens ' or Thackebat among the satirists, though both have be'en 'satirical! One is, genial, the ether. cynical; but sureli CidkENs,,'whose writings have led to Uanv great Bocial aqd political refonns in England] must rank higher than the clever writef'wbq lapghs. at every thing. . Jeeroup and thd Punch contributors we scarcely know how,t<j class.' Punch, it seemato ns, is as much indl* Vidualizcdas the Jlnti-Jacobin itself.' ’ As' a literary satirist; Francis MAnoSyi author of “ The Rellques of'Father Prout, r, j originally published in Fraser’s Magazine, now holds foremost tank in-. England. ‘ Hi* quizzical attempts to' prove that Moo ah’s host songs woro translated from little known am dent and foreign poets are said to have driven Moore almost to frenzy. Of late, he has heed beard little of," and, Indeed, we wore asked whether he was!not dead.’ fed lives, however, and has lor some tlmd beaiHhoJPafis |md*pre^nsiy'd^^cted?''^e , shown that he is alive.,., , , ;■ In the lastnumber of the Quarttrlyßetimb. is an article, attributed to Mf. James Hifeii', upon-Horace and his Translators. ' Itf -thi* article’is to be found that translation, by the. Earl of PEanr,.of the most celebrated;of #11; the Odes of Horace, (the well-known Donee Bratus,) which wo published in ThePeebS; some time ago. - Lord Debbv’s translation, however, is rather a paraphrase. Hr. Glad stone, who is one of the best; scholars in England, as.well as a leading and eloquetif politician, has also made' a 'translatlonj more literal and terse. It 1b as follows: " ! . HoBiOK, While no more weleome arma could twine ! Around thy anowy neck than mine— 1 Tb/ smile, thy heart, while I posaeet, ! Not Persia's monarch lived aableat. ! LrntA. Whilst thou didst feed no rival flame,. ! Nor Lydla next to Ohloa carao, 0 then tb/ Lydia’s echoing name Excelled e’en IKa’a Bomaa fame. HoßAca.; He now Threirlan Ghloe arrays, '• Skilled in soft lyre and aofter laya; . My forfeit life I’ll freely give, So she my betterUfe may live. Lvdia. , Tt}* son. of Qrnytna Inspires •’ ; My burning breast Area; i I’U face two several deaths with joy, J Bofatebnt sparemyThnrianboy. > Hobaob, What if our ancient love awoke, ; And bound ns with ite golden yoke; ' If anbnrn Chloe I resign, And Lydia once again be mine? Lrnu, Though brighter then a ster la he, . Thou rougher than the Atirian gen, i And fiekle as light bark ,* yet 1 With Ihse would live—with thos would die ' Immediately - after this appeared iq the Quarterly, a corrected copy of it, (that given hero,) waa published in the Times. My. Gladstone’s scholarship was piqued at two errors of the PreßS having crept into the copy given in the Review.' In the Globe, a few days after, appeared a parody, which has been generally attributed to “ Father Prout.” To uudorßtand and fully appreciate its point, it should be ’ remembered that Bard Derby and Hr. Gladstone were colleagues in Peel’s socond Ministry ; that they wont ont of office together- in 1846, rather than support Peel’s Free-Trade views; that, while Disraeli con tinues Ministerial. loader of the House of Commons, Gladstone will, scarcely consent to bold office, with, or, rather, under him; that, as an ultra-Tory, Gladstone has some' proclivities approaching the ulira-Liberalism. of John, Bbiqht, as extremes often meet; and that there has been some rumor of Dis raeli being sent ont as Vicoroy of India, on which, event Gladstone wonld probably suc ceed him as Chancellor of the Exoheqner and leader.of'the.Commons. With those points in mind, here is the parody attributed to Francis Mahony : Dsiunr. While Teal ’a old Ministry eould twins Tby lot political with mine— Breyet on.corn we disagreed, . Aa oollesgusa we ware blast Indeed. Gliddt. Whilst thon didst feed no rival flame, Nor ctladdy next to Dlisy eome, Oh then thy Gladdy’e eoholng name Excelled Its since Bomerle fame. DOUBT. My heart from FeeUto loves outworn Br Diwy’s corkscrew ourls is drawn; My forfeit life I’ll freely give, So Dls—my better life—may live. Gliddt My bosom burns to yield possession • Of ell my oharms to Bright next session; I’ll face two eereral deaths with joy, So fate but spare my broad-brlmm’d boy. Dsbbt. Whit if oqr ancient love awoke And bound ns with Its golden yoke : If Dls were sent some Indian venture, And Glaldy his old piece re-enter ? (minor. Bright as the Morning Star is 8., . Thon rougher than the Adrian Sea, And flokle as light hark; yet I With thee would live—with thee would dls. yfo are inclined to endorse the opinion, expressed by one of the critical tribunals in England, that this is, of its kind, far superior to any thing that ever appeared in the Anti- Jacobin. '■ . ' An ' AQBEEADLB SURPRISE. —Two or throe nights ago an agreeable Incident occurred at a wedding in New York: iThe' father of the bride .groom was Blok and not able to attond tho'wed ding, but desired .to see the bride in her. .bridal dress: 80, immediately after the performance bf the ceremony, tho “-happy pair” etepped. into a car riage, and drove to his residence. On their arrival they fonnd the Sidewalk, .steps, halls, and-stairs covered with,Honors,'and, in addition to thb warm congratulation of. the ofd gentleman, the, bride reoelved -the deed of an elegant new house, Sue perbly famished and elegantly fitted up in every jespoct. ;ADDRESS OE VIOE PRESIDENT; BRECKINRIDGE, ' .On the Removal, of: the. Senate from their Old' u-y j , Chamber./ V > ,‘ <\ : ,1 have been ohargedby the commit* UVto whom you ednfided the arrangements of this 'day with the duty of expressing some of the re-‘ ■flections thatjaafcnrally occur In taking final leave Jof a Chamber which has so long b‘oen ooonpied by. 'the Senate., In the progress of bur oountry end. 'the growth of the representation/* this .toomt’.has goo -.too ;ooqtraoted//or.the repreaentatiyea of States now existing arid soon tpexlsfc; and, dihgly,'you are? about to exchange lt-for <a Affording accommodations adequate to the n|;and suggests many: estlrig remiriiiberibes it may‘be agree-' ;ble/iri a few minutes with a ahorfacoountof tbe various places at whioh ( pongress ) baa ,tne struggles whioh pro- 1 needed' the 'permanent' looatloirof the seat of Go* VeromenVand of Jftgwas* finally established on .the,banks of the Rotomao. _ , ‘ ' 1 / / * '. J ’ /?The Congress 'of'the devolution was Sometimes 1 | holding its 'sessions, as the changes of ; T^r-required, atPhiJndelphia, Baltimore, Lanaas* ; . ? ter{ Annapolis, and Yorktown." Daring the pe- : rfod between .of peace and the fOmmenoement. ofthe present .Government, it jnetat Prinoeton. . Annapolis, Tronton, and New Tork..,' ~ " v ‘ ' w - the ldea of a permanent .Union had been' executed in part by the,adoption of the Artioles bfCqnfederation, the qaestion presented itself of afee&tof Government/ immediately bailed forth intense interest and rivalry. r place.should be central, having regard popufatiqn/and territory of the confederacy, Was the only point* common to the Contending* pat- Propositions of all hinas were offered, deha* I ,find rejwtod, 'raometlmcs with Intemperate warmth. At length, on the 7th of Oot.;l783. the Congress being at Prlnceton,whith dr they had bean driven from Philadelphia by the insults of a body of armed meh* it wns resolved that a.building for the jriW.cf Congress be ereoted near the falls of the Dela ,waro. this was soon after modified by requiring Bui* Jable buildings to bo also ereoted near the falls of the trOtomoc, .that the residence of Congress might al- Jfrnate betwoen those places. Bat, the. question ftps not allowedto'rest, And at length, after fi'e iquent arid Warm'debatos, it wris resolved that the tartiddhoe; of Congress should, ; continue - at. one .plpcq; ,apd.commissioners were appointed, with fq\l pbWer to lay cut f adistrlot for a “Federal town hear the' falls ofthe Delaware; and in the mean* t(me-. Congress assembled alternately at Trenton and Annapolis; but the. representatives of other ‘Stoteswere 'unremitting in ekertlons for tholr re* (Sp'eotiveJooalities. ;w » m • , v / ijiOft the 23d of December, 1784, it was resolved to remove to the city of New York, and to remain there until the building on tbe Delaware should ■:be.?oompleted ; acd accordingly, on’the lUh.of the, .Congress met pt New York/ where .they continued to hold their sessions until •tbe OonfederatlOn'gave place to’the Constitution; 'Vi.The.QqmnjUsionera to (ayout atown ontheDela* thpir proceedings to Congress; but nb farther Steps were taken to earry the resolution 1 ,i’? b.., -fallen the bonds of uqiqn were drawn oloser by we. organisation of the. new'Goverriment under ti»e ; ConstUution, dn ; the '3d 6f r Maroh, '1789; tHe fubJoet TvasiTevlved and fllscuasedwtih greater! Wamth, than before. It was conceded on ; au >qid«s that the‘restdenoe of Congress Should coritlnue at' tihfi > lfi£de, t And the'prospect of stability in the Go* temment invested: therquestion with a deeper in*, terest - fiome members, proposed New* York, as being f< superior to any place 1 they knew 1 for the orderly!end decent' bebaviof Of Its!inhabitants." To this it was answered that it desirable i Jhafctbe political capital should be in a commercial |,metropolis. Others ridlouled the idea of bnilding pajaoesln the woods.'Mri r Gerry,-of Massachusetts, 1 'tijiraght It highly unreasonable to 'fix; the seat of fievernment in-such a> position as.to have nine States of the thirteen to tne northward ofthe place; fe the South Carolinians objaoted toPhuadel oriacconritof the number of Quakers, who, the Bouthernmem- With schebaes of emancipation.: ; &tuihe midst' of> these' disputes, the Bouse of Representatives resolved < ‘, k that . the permanent seat of' Government ought* to he at some opnvenl* ens place on the banks of the Susquehanna,” * On thfijritroductibn of a bill* to’give effeot to’ this -resolution muoh rfeelingiwas exhibited, especially by tho Southern:members.: Mr. Madlson thought i(4he proceeding or that day. had been, foreseen; 1 Virginia/ that,Btate might not havo'become a pi*;ty.to'the Constitution. 1 The'quostlon was al* ICwCd by every member to be a matter of great Mr. Scott said tho future tranquility. aniwoU-being of the United States depended.as much op this as on any questisq that ever had or. could come before Congress; and Mr. Fisher ’Ames every prinolple Of pride and honor, ahd etf& bf'patriotism, was engaged. For a time any appeared to impossible; bnt of our evsteip finally prevailed, ag.ioa the 28th of June, 1790, an aot was passed hontaintfig the following clause: ■ ’ v - v tfThatli4Utriet of. territory on ‘the river Potomac, place betvMß the months ofthe eastern branch aqdyth* Oopoogooneague to, aad the aaiae U hereby / The. same aot 'provided that Congress,'shcnld hold its sessions’ at Philadelphia until the first Monday November, 1800, when'the Goverh* _ment should remove to tho distriOt -selected- On the Potomao.":" Thus was settled a question which had-.produood muoh sectional feeling between -the - But all difficulties., were not yet,surmounted; for Congress, either from indifferetocq or. the want of monoy.. failed 'to 'make r adeqd*to aapproprlatiom for- the erection of pnotio bnllatagt, and fhe commls* sfoners were often reducced to great, straits maintain the progress of tho work. Finding it impossible to borrow money in Europe, or to oh* tain it from Congress, ’Washington, in Deoember, 1790, made a personal appeal to the Legislature of Maryland, whioh was responded to by an ad* vanoe of $100,000; but in so deplorable a oondl* ’ tion was the credit of* the Federal Government that tho' dilate required, ns a guarantee of pay* moot, the pledge of the private oredit of the oom* mistioners. ,• -From the beginning Waahiwgten had advocated' tbe present seat of Government. Its establish* merit here was due, in a largo,measure, to his in* fiuenoo; It was his wisdom and prudenco that com* puled disputes and settled oonfllotiog titles; and.; it was ohfefly through his personal influonoe that the funds were provided to prepare the build ings for tho reooptionof the President and Con*, gresa. The wings of the Capitol having been sufficiently prepared, the government removed to this district on the 17th of November, 1800; or, as Mr. Wol* oott expressed itfleft the comforts of Philadelphia “ to go to the Indian place with the long name, in the woodson thePetomao.” Iwill not pause to desoribe the appearance, at that, day, of the place where the city was to be. Ootemporary ac counts represent it-aa * desolate in ■ the extreme, with its.long unopened avenues and streets, its deep morassos, and its vast area oovered with' trees instead of houses. It is enough to say that Washington projected the whole plan upon a eoblo of centuries, and that time enough remains to fill, the measure of the groat oonoeption. The Senate continued to ocoupy the north wing, and thellouse of Representatives.the south wing of the Capitol, until the 24th of August, 1814, when the Britlsli army entered the olty and burned tbe publio buildings. This ooourred daring the reoess, and the President immediately convened the Con gress. Both Housesmet in a brick building known asßlodgot’s Hotel, Whioh occupied a part of tbe square now eoverod by the General PostOffioo. But the accommodations In that house being.quit© insufficient, a number of publio spirited citizens erected a mdre* commodious building on Capitol’ Bill, and tendered it to Congress; tbe offer was aooepted, and both Houses continued to occupy it until the wings of tbe new Capitol were completed. This building yet stands on the street opposite to tbe Northeastern oorner of the'Capitol square, and has since been ocoasionally oeoapled by persons employed in different branehes or the publio ser vice. On the oth of Decembor, 1819, the Sonate as sembled for tho first time in this ohamher, whioh has been the theatre of their deliberations for more than thirty-nine years, and/now the strifes and uncertainties of tho past are finished, we see around us on every side the proofs of stability and improvement: this Capitol is worthy of tho repub lic ; noble publio buildings moot the view on every hand; treasures of science and the arts begin to> «acoumulate. As this flourishing city enlarges, it . testifies to the wisdom and forecast that dictated the plan of it. Future’ generations will not bo disturbed with questions oonoornlng the centre of population, or of territory, slnoe tne steamboat, the railroad, and the telegraph have made oom* mnnioation almost .instantaneous. The spot. is. •acred by a thousand are so many pledges that the city of Washington, founded by aim, and bearing hfs reverdd name, with its beau tiful sito, bounded by picturesque eminences, and the broad Potomac, and lying within view of his home and his tomb, shall remain forever the poli tical oapital of the United States. It wonld bo interesting to noto the gradual changes whioh have oooarrod in the praotioal working of the Government slnoe the adoption of the Constitution; and it. may. be appropriate to this occasion to remark ono of the most striking of them. At the origin of the Government the Senate seemed to be regarded ohiefly as an exeontive council. The President often visited the ohamher and conferred personally with this body; most of Its businoss was transacted with' closed doors, and it took comparatively little part in the legislative -debates.. The rising and vigorous intellects of the I country sought tho arena of the Hcusoof Repre sentatives as tho appropriate theatre for the display of their powers. Mr. Madison observed, on some oocaßion, that, being a young man, and desiring to inorease his reputation, he oould not afford to enter the Senate; and it will be remembered that, so lato ns 1812, the great debates whioh preoedod tho war, and aroused the country to the assertion of its rights, took place in the other branch of Congress. To such an extent was tho idea of Beoluslon oarried, that, when this ohamher was completed, no seats wore prepared for the accommodation of the publio; and ft was not until many years afterwards that tbo gallory was ereoted whioh admits the people to be fitnesses of-your proceedings. Bat now, the Senate; besides its peouliar relations to the executive department of the Government, assumes its full sh are of duty as a coequal branch of the Legislature; indeed, from tho limited num ber of its members, and for other obvious reasons, ’ the most important questions, especially of foreign policy, are apt to pasa first under discussion in this body, and to be a member of it is justly regarded as one of the highest honors whioh can be oonfer* fod f»n an Amerloan statesman. . • -r ! . It Is soaroely neoessary to point out tbe causes of this .change, or to say that ft is a concession both to the import&rioe and the individuality of tho States, and to tho free and open oharaoterof the Goveramont. . In oonneotion with this easy bnt thorough transi tion, it If worthy of remark that it naa been effeeted without 1 a' oharge from any quarter that the Senate has .transoended its constitutional apWo; a tribute at one© to the moderation of the Senate, and pother proof to thoughtful men of IP^' 1859, tho comprehensive wisdom wlih which the framers of 'mie' Constitution. secured essential principles without inconveniently embarrassing the notion of the , . - .Thopfogresd or this'popnlar movement,' in one aapeot’of lt| haa been steady and marked: At the origin of thOiOoverpmenb, no.arrangementa in the Sanate -were, made for speoiators; in this' cham ber about one-third of the I spaoe is allotted to the public; add in'the new 1 apartment the. gallerias cover two-thirds qf its area.ln alifree countries .the admission of the people to sHtntsa legislative proceedings IS an essential 1 element 'of publio con fidence,• and it is not to be . antioipatedtbat, this wholesome prinoiple will ever bo. abused by. the substitution of partial and interested demonstra tions for this expression of a matured and enilght-' ened pnblio opinion.. Yet it should never be for gotten .that not Franco, bat the'turbulent ‘speota-i tors within the ’hall, awed ’ and'eon trolled' the Frenob Assembly. With this lesson and its con sequence before .US, the time will, never oome. whop ibo deliberations of the' Senate shall be swayed by the blandishments or the thunders of the:galleries.; i It is impossible.to disconnect from an eoeasion like this, a crowd of reflections on oUr own past; history, and oh speonlations on the future. The most.meagre .account of the Senate involvea a' summary of .the progress/of our. country. From year to year you have seen your representation onlarge ; time and again you have proudly wel comed a new sister Into the Confederacy; and the ooonrrehces of this day are a materlai'and impres sive proof of. the'growth and prosperity of- the; United States,: Three pcrlodsin the history of-tbef Senate mark, In etrikleg contrast', three epochs in the history of the Unten. ■ . < ■• ; Oh the 3d 1 of March, 1789, . when' the Govern-' mept was. organised under the Constitution, that Senate .was composed of the representatives hi eleven States,"oontelning'thrce million people.' ] ; On the Oth of December, 1810, whin thejEenate met for thp first, time In,this.room, It wasoompo-! sod of the representatives of twenty-one Stales; ’containing nine mlllion'people:- J ■ ; To-.day it is, oomposed of the representatives of thirty-two States, containing more than twenty-; eight million people, prosperous, happy, and still devoted.to constitutional liberty.'.'' Let those great faotq sppak lor thotnseiv.es to all the .world.- , , , The career of the Doited States cannot he mea sured by th'at of anv'other people of whom'history gives account; and the 'mind is almost app&lUd at the contemplation of the.prodigious forcowhiah' has marked their progress.; Sixty-nine years ago] thirteen States, 'oontaining- three 'millions of in habitants, burdened, with debt, and exhausted by the lopg tjrar .of, independence,' established for their common good a free Constitution, on prinolpies new to mankind, and' began -their experiment with, the: good wishes pf, a few doubt-, ing friends and the derision of the world. Look at the result, todaytwenty-eight' mil lions of people in every .way. happier than an 'equal number in any other part of the globe!, the oentre'of pspUlation'and'pelitieal power descend-; Ing the western slopes of the-Allegheny'mouni tains,'- and' the' original < thirteen: States tormina bat the eostern margin on the map,.of our yeas ' possessions. See besides Christianity, OivllKation] and the arts given to a continent j the debpiiod colonies grown intaapowor of .the first class, red presenting and proteotiqg ideas that , involve the! progress of the human race; a cbinhleroa greater, than - that of : any other nation eypry .of, plimatp, soil, and, production; to make it people powerful and happy; free intern change 'between the States—in a word, behold! present greatness; and, in the future, an empire to which, toe.anelent mistress ,of the world, in the hclght'ofhbr glory,' could. not be' oompared, Suoh is onr country—aye, and more—far taore than my mind could cenooive, or: my tongue oould utter, to, thorp an Amerioan who regrets .the past? Is there one who will derido his country’s laws, per vert her Constitution, or alienate her people 7 If . there he snob a man, Ipt his .memory deseend to with the execrations.pf all.man- So happy is the political and seelal condition of the Uaited States, and to aoonstomed are we to the secure. enjoyment of a. freedom elsewhere Unknown, that we are apt to' undervalue the* treasures wo' possess, and to lose, in some degree, the.senioof obligation to onr .forefathers, TBut when the strifes of fae.tlon shako tho Government, and.even threaten it; woinay pause with' advan tage long enough to remember that we are reaping, the reward of ether men’s labors. .This liberty r we inherit; this admirable 'Constitution, which has ■ survived • peace and war, 1 ' prosperity 'and! adversity!, this doable scheme of<Jovernment,Stat« and Federal, so peculiar and so little Understood by; other powers, yet which protec lathe earnings of in-! dnatry, and makes the largest personal freedom! compatjbio wit)) pu.blio order, These great results were not acquired “without trisdom, and toil, and) blood., .The touching and?heroic record'is before! the world 5 but to nll.thls we. wpre born,.and, like heirs npon whom hns.been oast a great Inheritance,! have' only the high'duty'te preserve; to ’exlendl and t* adorn it.» The; grand productions of thp era in whioli the foundations of. this Government were laid .reveal the. deep sense ita founders' had of their obligations to the whole family of man,' lotus never-forget that the respensibUitiei ,im4 posed on this generation are by so mnoh the greater than' thOie'waroh rested on ourrevoluUonary an] castors, as I the, population, extent,' efid power ~ot our- oountry turpqsq the dswning pMmlse-ofn “Hi ‘ I® would be a plowing' 'task to pnrflito' many trams of thought not -wholly foreign to this occa sion, but the temptation to enter, the wide field rimst .be vigorously curbed yet' I .may 'bo par doned, periiepsiforone'or two additional refleo tiona The Senate is assembled for the last time In thii Chamber* Henceforth it-will be converted tj other oses; jet it must remain forever oonneoted with great events, andeaorcd to the memories of the departed orators and statesmen, who here en? gaged in high debated, and shaped the polloy of their'oountry. Hereafter,' the Amerloan and the stranger, as they wander throagh the Capitol, will turn .with instlnotive, reverenoe to view the spot, on whioh so many and great materials hav > accumulated for history. ; They will recall the images of the great and ihi good, whose renown In'- the oommoa property of tnC Union; and ohlefly, perhaps, they will linger around the seals once occupiedby the mighty three, whoso names and fame, associated in life, death has not been able to sever; illustrious mem who, in theirgbnoration, sometimes divided; some* times led, and sometimes resisted public for they wore of that higher class of statesmen who seek tho right and follow their convictions, i There sat Calhoun, the Senator, austere, oppressed, but not overwhelmed, by his deep sense of the importance of his public function#, seeking the truth, then fearlessly fol lowing it—a man whose unsparing intellect com pelled all his emotions to. harmonize with the de ductions of his vigorous loglo, and whose noble countenanee habitually wore the expression of one engaged in the performance of high public duties. This was Webster’* seat. He, too, vras.eveh such a Senator. Conscious of hisown vast powers, he reposed with confidence on himself; ana scorn* ing the contrivances of smaller men, he stood 'among bis peers all the greater for the simple dignity of hts Senatorial demeanor. Type of his Northern home, he rises bofore the imagination, in, the grand and granite outline of his form and intellect, like a great New England rook, repell ing a Now England wave. As a writer, his pro* duotions will be cherished by statesmen and scholars while the English tongue is spoken. As a Senatorial orator, his groat efforts are historic oaliy associated with tnis chamber, whose very air Beems yet to vibrate beneath the strokes of his deep tones and his weighty words. ’ On the outer oirole sat Henry Olay, with his impetuous and ardent nature untamed by agk, ana exhibiting in the Senato the vehement patrioti?m, and passionate eloquence that of yore electrified the House of Representatives and the country. His extraordinary personal endow ments, his oonrage, all.his noblo qualities invested him with an individuality and a oharm of charac ter,lwbioh, in any age, would have made him a favorite of history. He loved his country above all •oarthly objeots. He loved liberty in all countries Illustrious man! orator, patriot, philanthropist his light, at its meridian, was seen and felt in the remotest parts of the civilized .world; and his declining sun. os it hastened down the west, threjv book its level booms, in bqes of mellowed splen dor, to illuminate, and to cheer the land beloved and sorved so well. , j AH the States may point with gratified pride h> the serviops. in the Senate of their.'patriotic sons. Crowding the memory, oome the names of Adamb, Hayne, Mason, Otis, Macon, Pinokney, and the rest—l cannot number them—who, in'the reoora of their acts and utterances, appeal to,their suc cessors to give the Uniona destiny potuawortbjy of the. past. , What models were these to awaken emulation or. to plunge in despair! Fortunate will be.the-American, statesman who, in this age, or in, succeeding times, shall contribute to invest the new hall to which,wo go with historic memo ries like those which duster here. f And now, Senators, we leave this menlorable Chamber, bearing with us, unimpaired, the Gofi* etltution wo received from our forefathers. Let ps cherish it, with grateful acknowledgments to the Bivine Power who oonlrols the destinies of em pires, and whoso goodness we adore. The struc tures reared by men yield to the corroding tooth ot* time. - These marblo walls must moulder inj.o ruin; but the principles of constitutional liberty, guarded by wisdom and virtue, unlike fhaterial elements, do not decay. Let us devoutly trust that another Senate, in another ,Bge, shall bear |to a new and larger chamber this Constitution, vigor ous and inviolate; and that the last generation of posterity shall witness the deliberations of the Representatives of American States.still united, prosperous, and free. I In execution of the order of the Senate, the body will now proceed to the new. Chamber. ; ■ We learn bt a Letter from Rome,‘save the Washington Union , that on the 28th of No vember, Mr. Cass, who has been for some years the American minister at that place, took lo&Vo of the Popo, and presented Mr. Stockton as his succossor. Upon this occasion the Pope expressed very hind personal feelings towards Mr. Cass, and as a testimonial of his regard he sent him, the next day, a magnifioenbmarblo bust of himself. An Ingenious Downeabter has constructed a miniature faotory village, with engines, wheels, windmills, oarriagos, waterfalls. persons walking) playing, swinging, <fco , .and the whole so deli* oately arranged, and so nioely adjusted, as tojbe put in complete operation by a single mouse, whioh travels in a small oiroular oage, as squirrels are often seen doing. * I , Large Amount of Gold.—lt' is stated i that the amount of gold shipped by steamers from Son Francisco, in 1858. was $36,179,345, against $34,222,904 in 1857. Difference in favor of the past year $1,956,440. Of the shipments of 1857, however, about $1,600,000 was tost in the Central America, whioh is not inoluded in the aggregate amount for that year. : Miss Mart Brawlet, of Hartford, Connecti cut, won a gold bracelet, at & ball in that oity,!the other evening 'for Waltzing without’cessation {for fifty-one minutes, having distanced all the other Terpsichorean competitors. Her partner, Mr. Gardiner E. Green, was presented at the same time with a slim «up» ; 1 * TWO,CENTS. BY TEBEGRAPII. THIRTY-FIFTH CONGRESS, Second Session. U. B,.Capitol, WAanrsoTON, Jan; 6. SENATE. Jt-JESSPI Tork , »ment«d the Ootuttto l.U It ?^SL. 7 *5? ’£*• OomtitutiOMlConranHoa Kl, .QmTmn mai of Ks&taokj, the T6»«to W“? ”p. v 8 , J,™’ W* l '«“ brought In on th» 6th of Jaaoarr, of ■l*? 4 7®tr,bjMr*ffoawnden, nnditforred to n idoolbl CommtttM, of whloh Mr.-OrttfoniofvJtfoSnßSSl that" B* «nift e Sltti]lsSi Crat * mollll ni«Dt, and protidßi' to the ratification or the convention between the Unt. ted States end France, ratified July 31,18011 , Hr Ohjttbsdin addressed the Senate. urging the joetlce of these eUimi, reminding the Senate that ( Waahingtoß,~.J6ff6rson,’'Adams, Webster, and other statesmen, had recognised tijelr validity,* and showing historically how ©nr filth l id pledged to France, as well •as to our citlsen»/fbr their liquidation. - The bill provides that the claims shall be and settled by a board of, commissioners at Washington' within two years., « hoar for the speclat, order of the day haring ar-j rired, vis: the Foolflo Railroad, the spoliation bill wur postponed without action: and -, l - -•-- .-w j Mr, Bigler. of Pennsylvania, took the floorto tiouehi* speech in favorcf the Pacific BoUrood . which: was Interrupted yesterday by .the announcement fretn. the House of the decease of General Quitman- .. { Hr. Btai,eß was' happy to discover in the many made on this subject, that bat Utile diversity! of opinion exists as to the necessity pf the construction of a railroad across tho pobliq domaltf to the Paciflo ooean; The* riuln difference'between the Senate and' thercountry. is, u tojthfc proper m?ami to accomplish t &' desired end. and as to iUrp pper location.. Torhlm viJ l wo ?‘ d nofc *** tenadonaod minor.points. VHIs: object Was to secure ‘the construction of toe-road,. not *2 ?i , M * means of developing the material wealth of the Intermediate * country as of maintaining-o&r' righta tna protecting our <tltliqu<M.th«,PaeU)aild»J The wheiaabenta of the load jiao object of moondirr importance, whether It he a few degrees‘farther north or eonth. «o that It ha a.great natlonaVhtghwaT.- No b» forced where Nature! nerariotended It tohe.* He hlmeelfpfeftrrtd a eontril *?**£•*' ?? oonldaee no reason ‘for serions 'difference about either .termini of the, road.-. The - main trunk E23HE *sf main consideration. In ionsWeration should'be'had : tothe ? ork » hdghtor the grades and character above all,totbenature of thecll depths of the finow. Mr. Bigler here made's dtgteMlon to notice the pragma of railroad enterprise In the United States, showing Its effect on .the trade eommetee, wealth, political growth and strength of the Union, Illustrating hie statement J>y-the fact that many .weeks elapsed‘before the Declaration oflnde pendenoe was koown tq all parte of the lnrant Bfpnblle, i and es late ee 1814 It was long be fora all'the States l knew that the capital was laid 1 1n asheo. 'Yet now,! tTiVL- in *°J one State is known prompt-1 Irnnsir, «zeept in the one on the Pacific. ■ Were any I i- 8 Sfsle atsaHed to-day bf a'fore'go' foe,' the fact wonld ha known to all the bthere saya one* ti-morrow, i •ow.the whole military power of.the BepnWio oonld.be ' ooneentrated for ito derence. Meantimethe Self of bar-! ren country hetweSn the Mtesiesippi and the PaMe;' progresajof' raUroads, and . theteskof oyerepmlng.tihls obstaole Is erldently too' great for Indlyldual means, orer an inhospitable cott#-1 try, Uly adapted fbr agrlcultnre, iownrat rich If may -be tn mlnersta- .Therelbre, It; it be lift to meto.oom. merclal eonslderatlona, It la dot likely to be oonstrncted 1 in time- for thi neeeulttes of thJ tfirfernraent. Oon. alderlnn andte did, that tt la far mere ot a military and politteM maaanra than of Immediate commercial : «i’u didkod notlea4 : ** would pv* is In eligible for Immediate settlement. Its completion, as * prenutionary measure;ofJdefendeV wofild be- a frise * Vj?w«l ytrlotly ss a military] measure, it is wortby r of m Ust affort or the G6r«rn.' J r ™ t Z 9 *\ *** *ol»«ak: <mt,with.n greet ma-itime. Power,.without the means of concentrating our forces, j Californiawould lb all probaWity, within sixty days, * be cut off fron? al| communication /with the Atlantic States, Qe eonld see little difference between the con itraotion of sueh'a work and of fotti to’deftnffibe com- i merclal cities of the seaboard.,; -not, prepare, ini time or peace, for eontingenoiea wbi h mint mevltablr [ arise >ln case or war? Borne may be ready to eonelnde tbat we shall have nowar.. Hetrusted In God we should 1 ®°*' ',f° Tyr * T « always a calamity: but'not such a oa*l ‘lamiti'as insult aud degradation.• It wonld be,idle to) *f? n °t Involved in an imbroglio now in re*? gard to Oentril America, Nioiragua,"Mexico, and Spain. 1 from whioh sudi a calamity-may .'.readily spring.-, ifc would singular Jf-thq first ,Blx. mouths- of such a] war did not- cost mote than' wdnla the'" cbnfeti'uc*; tion of such-a road. Wjll..any.mau-say that ( w4 are in a condition to defend out Pacific posseaeloiia ?| Then, how eah we talk about' the acquisition of addi-f tionol poMeaeions, about a war forCaoa, op a protecto-; rate over Mexico? Let us establish this protectorate! over ourselves, and' we shall 3fien'-be> in a better 1 , position fo Influence the. deßtinits of others. Probably noßenator, himßeU'iheluded, but would vote three oif four huadred million* for ‘ the purchase of Cuba, yes . they would not vote a.grant pf.pubiie.lards y or tbe.pre-? Bervatton of Oanfornla, Oregon, and Washington! ‘ what Power, would be strong enough to meet us on tbs Pacino with such' a railroad, or weak enough not to annoy 1 tts without' it?- -Ai k chant el of eommetee* .wortd open thedirect rcqtafroruXlhina.ancLJapan. It would be a ronta, not for mayy tonnage, certainly, but mitals, to ha finer ondvfov l&tusniwfprpcallyfrbmeasttOwett. GfeatPrltam Is watchful to forestall these edv|U)taff(Mi*''ahd'it it how ascertained thit a raffrood fs practicable thW British, valley. of the Bed. river of the North,and or Fraser river. Flniny,'Hr. Bigler disposed of various objections agftln«r,-(he and eanoluj ded by warning ,the ( Goyernment r not toibe pennywise and pound foolish, out to bind together thettonfederaev of sovereign States, for their mutual aid nnd'froteotipni No statesmen needfear,the.effects' of such.aprecedents Mr. HixLlv. oflowa. Spoke forcibly on the ptop'riety, of Oosgrew locating the'route, r The capital required tv one hundred minions dollars, nearly one-third of the surplus capital oftheocuntiy. There are-but fewladi-* viduels or companies in our own couqtry who can qou*{ trol so much money, and heo'ee it is sure to' he a mono poly, and perhaps a foreign one'. - What security is therel too, that tbs,contractors, haviogaeoured the eight mil 4 lions of cash and fen millions of the best lands for eon-2 strutting the road through a fertile -district, will ad* vance one step aoresa tbe .precipitous mountains and * sterile plains ef the' interior ? Topographically, there Is but little difference betweenithe central routes sur-* veyed. Either can be built in tau or twelve years, with* out deranging tbe financial condition‘of the country* He was, therefore, In favor of the central route, as beirg the most thickly populated. 1 Hr. Harlan was severe on the members of Congress who, after having spent half a million dollars In explo* rations, the results of which had been published in im4 mange quarto • reports* illustrated with' pioturea for those who cannot read, now want to shift upon the mall contractors the responsibility 'of locating the road* lest they should offend their constituent* by not securing it for their particular locality. Hr. Ward, of Texas) spoke In favor of locating the rood on parallel thirty* two* comparing the advantages of level and d!staocs over the central and northern routes, and maintaining that the southern road can he built with the smallest amount of money and In the ehortest time. Mr. Ivbrsox, of Georgia, made a strong seotlonal speech. He moved that the bill he re&emmHted with instructions to report a bill for the construction of twb roads, one Northern apd one Southern. He admitted the eonstitutloDal power of Congress to grant the pub llc lands, but was astonished that Southern Senators should vote such a magnificent donation to tbe North! It Is a known foot that all'Southern railroads pay teveu and eight per cent, dividends, while Northern roads pay nothing 8o small ls‘ tbe opinion held ht Northern capitalists of Southern Investments, that be believed if the wealthy Senator from Bouth Ca rolina (Hr. namurnd) offered to' mortgage his plantation of - negroes, worth half a million, for S loan of ten thou and dollars in New York, he could not get It, notwithstanding the popularity of his Barn well speech. lie traced the slavery sg tatlon from itr 1 rise, among a handful of New England fanatics of both I sexes, to Its present monstrous proportions. He referred I to the demon of Abolitionism In its onward marob to power. Referring to Senator Seward’s Rochester speech; he said be knows but tittle of the human heart who imagines that the anti-slavery agitation will stop short of tbe total abolition of slavery by the action of the Federal Congress. ‘To.tive and relgu, it must go on till it attain tbe Presidency, both houses of Con- Stoss, and the judlolary, and either abolish slavery or isaolve the. Union.. Witness the results of the late elections In the North. He did not consider the returh of Senator Douglas a viotory of the Democracy. Tt was only a victory of “free-anll” Democracy over Abolition Whlggery. He would not torn oh tbe heel to choose between the Wilmot Proviso and the squatter-sove reigoty proclivities of the Benator from Illinois. Mr. Iverson professed himself, in unmistakable terms, a disunion man, under tbe aggression of the North. .Let the Senator from New York be elected President* and It was his belief more than one Southern State would take immediate steps to secede from the Union. In certain contingencies, which he' Btated, Georgia would secede. _ j He did uot believe that the South would go out by a general Convention; but let a single State swing out aid she weald draw with her, or after her, tberemaimug States, to form either a Southern Confederacy or pro* eurean amendment of the present Constitution to se cure the'rights of- the' South.' And. as' be be lieved the dissolution, of the Union is at hand, he wsi unwilling tojvote money and lands for a road which is sure to be located outside of ;the South: Hence he wanted, the South to have a route equally with the North, Which shall ald’h'er while In the Union and be long to her when out i.« • !. Without taking any action on the bill, the Senate adjourned.'' - ’ HOUSB 0» REPRESENTATIVES. ! Mr. Guild, of Missouri, arted, but failed to obtain, leave to Introduce a bill making a grant of lauds in' Kansas andNebrasfcato aid In.the construction of rail* rods. j Ur.Oox.ris, of Indiana, introduced a bill for the^ef dr. Colfax, or Indiana, ritorlal Government of Colon*. Referred'to-the Com* mlttee on Territories. 1 ‘ j Mr Hopxtxs, of Virginia, from the Committee on Foreign Affairs, reported a joint resolution aathorte'ijg Mr. Townsend Harris, the oonsnl at J*pao, and his in terpreter. Mr. Erskine, to aooept presents from the Queen of England. Mr. Hopkihs also presented a bill from the same com mittee, authorising the payment of salaries to the mi nisters resident at the Argentine Confederation, Costa Bloa, aodHondnrai. . , ’ The Moose resolved Committee of the Whole on the si ate of the Union, and proceeded to the consideration Of the speolal order, being the bill for the codification of the revenue laws and for other purposes. John OoOHBANB, of New York, said that the bill was verygvoluminous, covering two hundred and eighty nine pages. It in nowise affected the collection dis tricts or revenue officers, nor the ports or entry ana de livery It was a pore collection of the revenue,laWßj whloh are now scattered through so many statute books and bavo been so amended from time to time that it is row difficult to search out and determine what is the M He Vlluded to the dlfflcultieswhich now Surround tjie present revenue la«a, and quoted the opinions of gen-- tlemeo in high official positions, to show the impossi bilities now standing in the way .of theif proper admin istration. He appealed to the House whether they would not, under* the array of faots presented, iegar<f the great interests of and pass the biU con solidating and codifying the laws which have been ac cumulating during a period of sixty yea nr * -• The committee then rose, ■ V • The amendments proposed by theOommHtflfeon Com merce were ordered to Iro printed,'and the farther con sideration of the bill was postponed for a,week The House again went into Committee of the Whole oh the state of 'the Union, and resumed, the considers- 1 tionof the Indian appropriation bill. Mr liOVBJOT> of Illinois/th\d that if the process of centralisation shall go. on :as it has for the past few years, the Executive, can say, with tru'h. u I am the- Government.” * The passage of the Mils received from tpeCommittee of Means ia nofurged on the ground of right and necessity, hot simply because the Executive has reoommended the'-api rdpriatlon*.- He, wished.'to'know from the chairman, of. Ways ind Means whether the report, that unless Congress shall kevise the tariff to suit the‘Presidentjthme,Would be ah extra Session, had his sanction 1. Mr Ph*i.P3,oV Mlsflbarl, replied that he woe not ro ■irinYlble for hW.popor r*morto.,bat would Out, aaleu Oonrr«s» oImIII prorido the, mouo for OMijpng on' tbo GoTernment during the nert fljto.l ye.r, etlhfr bT • loon or tho ro-Ueue of or by » B o4lBe,Uoa ?( ft? t»tlS,Qr by KOTIVK TO COBBSSrONSEim, oorr **P<»dent» for ”To Fuss’! will pleuebeu la wind the following rolee: '" - - Ini? eommunientionmiilt be noeompanied by the Mm * or the writer.ln Orderto Inaure dofrectneflejln tie typography, bat one'ildrr of til ahiei ehdnirte written upon, • - 1 J We ahailjx, greasy, eblfcede to gentlemenjn Poor, •ylronlaandotherßtntae'for'eoniflmHoM giving tie carrentnewa or the day In their pertlenlar loealittea, tie reedttroej of the nutonUnc ootmtry;th» laereaa. of population, or any Information that wIU be lnUrett lngtothe general reader.'' ■ ?V}' '' : d«&tt. e .'LSn“ I aired ‘ £ o wi i ' ei P ondBd that.when the Prealdent de- IS- •?.“' r Wn i«re,.be w o nli..Ml«otaome I hr. whan, tb. President curaamnleatoa lh[a k o E ln.loMoffloWl r ,tbiywii;beMtdfromthe'clerk>a I 104 etated .hla.objections to the '! tB .r *“? l dt *•“*»' adrooated the appropriation j for additional aginta andjnterpreteni, and far baying I He argued that the I ShSHiff State were entitled toprrttlSonf and in I y they word faat being alienated from I rufihmf DD i H<,B >_ of ou °i here anggeai d that tb*e Tel »»*hould Introduce a reaolntlon I - 110 th« ?S? : * re r pll f d **•* ttat annexation measure was in the nature °f aikFriowln force:- •• * Boms had. In the repeal amnnf “•“'rart OompromUa 1n.1864. an Ulnatrlonaer th. S ana«,ioh rMo, “ t,on * Br I bona - an/fa Bepeal the* annexation reaolo- I know hot* 15!? n B^, l ] know what to do. He did not e, t _r w!l.?»U t w “ tt, I 4 har * *»•« vaitiy to the inter- I ahe hS £ e r P'? l “ tiom had not been paeaeS, and i Wien into the Union. Ifpro -IWU' tttak-!? 4 glTen - 46 *£'> People of Texaa, they wHI |wiUtai n r„ r , ?{, ”'**"»* ?“X now do, and will be I tlatory rtlpi. pMl ’ “ d themaelrea Uke -the lni- I thX r T«il el *« Tork.wranted to know whe ss?S!S r .vsnir^xris wonFd n P ot b. S’J'r 6 .^r l * 4 ' from ti, Va, °°’ tbm " s%L& sSES!&i&£iaf & P r sHhJ taehwuni.Aa are 10,4 m!Texett?!? 1 * 6 ' B '' Texas consented to the I n »151 ; «5Xf *'' Imt abe ooaeented *B, a aorereizo 1 8 w with a eorereign power. . ... ' * I a.SK'3’m A * deniii that the’ Government hadpild the StJlwn’iV•R.’tfS ■*“*» fl“tgso,4nvaatterri „{J ’? “•United states, and from the prooeeda or the “'* of *s*t territory It waa that'the'debttof Texae were paid; < *. t •<.; ■ j _» iJ?* Bioonios ; «eidi-We- conquered Texas hr onr >• arms—there itmda.the truth of history. At ftrafthe . ®°“ nd “y wm claimed to extend t>biy to the Nuecei: Mr. with har Krf W<>^ r *.^.;« 4 «'»red in l tlo^„^T^?i’ n^^j “^: 4o ,*^ 0,^4^“^4 * i »If>^ r e af 49 'naned on-the appropriation for rtino tne Indiana In .Oregon to the reeerrationa, and them"eirea 4^ 410411 liie f fl ball be able to maintain 9 .. m^ tor ! <k3corami,,Boro "“- PENNSVLVANIALEGISLiTMK. ' ' v ' r 1 • ’i «’ * • -t" -v. J,» or *j~.&uupumpajin 0*1*69.. .. . BBffEB. ;;,,, *~ > Sp&akerproaantedtlUjwsnal reportot tb* Coin miuioners or the’ Sinking loud; wbiefi '• vu mdintl orderedto-beprinted; • c: n, >. !' . *, ‘ i, *v Mr. Part one bjtheeitiseoa brPeah'ylruria toredae*thepayefmembertf id *W&bttennttm. -t -* iofflav 1011 *' tnA W* 1 * *te»T»fbank ;,Mr.PAßr« 4 e&d *bffl to Maetaa,aad-?alraoatttrPaaaeßger3a!lMßd.&.-.:< yr.t; '-Ur: , CorvftT}nkdft bill -to provide farther meana for the redaction or the State debt.', ' ‘ - n A ptMdxefrom the Governor w«rweli*d/v*totn*a mna S? ** ’PM*** ■aplon.rJUxoag th*m l?**** 1 * tb® made Is other states: the bill to exempt certatEfprtfperty from taxa tion ; the eappleaest to the ‘MttOimlatetneaianee oompaeiea., *- ,• *> The ftMjdlnghoar for'the meeting of the Senate vai fixed at li o’elockA’. H., s irfth theexeeptibirof tfo&# • <JaTB r when the hour ia a o’uloak t - .The Senate then amounted over till'Menday next at 3 o eloek P. If., to enible the' Speaker" to Prepare"the standing oommitteei,- ' * *<'-i';?. - - *“ 7 ' : -* HOUSED The House net et.lo o>el>ek... Theofflcers,'ik screed in- eeqWi. were {Veu'eleete'd m follows s Clerks^John* Wrtln* >bf Adorns, B. H. ReaehofOerbon; 0. W; Gelflllisn -of Meroer j Mr, Foster of Allegheny. r ' > ' • 1 The House then edjonrnediM Monday at three o'clock?;!!. , • \j. i - ,„V-. ;:The, Michigan Legislature/ / “ , DSTBOIT, Jan.,o.—The Michigan issem y«terd*y. v HonVHtnryll.Bbaw(Be publicanf wax alerted Speaker of the ; * > -y: .iTb® retiring and-; incoming Goveraer* delivered their messages, ad required *by'_lawV The/farmar states that . the finance* of thi State are In condition Toe receipts of the treasury for the fiscalypsr amounted .to JLOM.QOO. andthe expenditure* to *848,000, leaving abaianceon handot*l7B,Opo: ‘The entfreßtatt debt ie *2,817,000,-a diminution in four years 6f I*2lB’ooo.' U» recommepoa the speedy extinguishment of, the pubiio debt, and reports the State Agricultural College; the Schools,-the asylum*, A«.U.« flourishing j»*<dltJoa - ,V . Govsroor* Wijmer>a jpenagefii entitoir daroted. Jo state affairs.' He'vtocmmendC' tjtfkppowtment' or a fltato'georogitt «nd<aw eulgratlffu fkrdrs-the lmr and the erection of new Capitol bhfld nM. , The election of United States Senator in place of Hon, Charles V. Stuart, wHort'term-will expire' inhftroh, will probably takepUce/to-day.’.' i ? - ; =„• * L 'lndiana i/egislature. " ~ Ibouhapoub, Jan. lndiana LegTtHture eon. ▼•ned ; at nine o'clock tbU. morning. „'The Lieutenant Governor wu absent on recount of ill-health. : - The'flenate vu organized by the eleetionof Hon. 3 B. Crareng m President.. The secretary, airirtant eec retnrj, clerks, and doorkeeper continue the game u at tbe extra eeuion.. The Houa»,after several ineffeotoal attempts to or ganize,; adlonrned over till this afternoon ' The con test for the office of Speaker lies between Mr, Gordon (Republican) and Bljthe (Independent).' Two Demo cratic and-one 'Republican member were-absent, and their arrival Je expected this afternoon. The Governor’s message will probablv not be deli vered until to-morrow’. - * Legislature ,of-Maine« PoatlAsd, Jau- o ; —TieBtite Legislature met yes terday at Augu*ta. The' Feuate was orgah : ied by the election of 0. PT. Goddard as President, and the House by the election of Wm J Johnson, Speaker. From 'Washington. THE PROPOSED TERRITORT OP COLON A. Wabbwgtox, Jan 6— Mr; Colfax’s-bill for the or ganisation of the new Territory of Oolona (which was presented to the Home to-day r aid referred to the Committee on Territories) embraces all the recently discovered gold regions of Pike’s Peak, Cherry creek, **• The Territory will stretch from the 103 d parallel of longitude to the crest of theßoeky Mountains, being from four to five degrees in width, and from the 87th to the 42d parallel of-latitude, making it five de grees in length.’ It will thus he nearly square, and will inoiude parts of the Territories of Kansas, Ne braska. Utah, and. New Mexico, nearly all, however, being taken from Kansas. It will embrace within its borders not only the gold diggings, but also the famous Three Parks, the head-waters of 'both forks of the Platte, of the Arkansas, end of the Bio Gratde; also, its exterior lines will be guarded by Bent’s fort in its southeast corner, Port Massachusetts near its southern boundary, and fort Laramie, just beybnd its northern Hoe. St. Train’s fort will be near its centre; Bridget’s Pas*, which shortens the road' to California overdone hundred miles, Is in the northern part of t>e new Ter ritory, and the Cooohatepa Pass in the southern. Co- Zona is the name favored by'the settlers thera, nearly two thousand of whem are wintering in the diggings. Mr. Colfax expresses the opinion that by next rummer there will be at least, twenty thousand persons In Colo ns, and, it being* important that they should have a Territorial Government,'he has prepared the bill. , WASHISQros, Jan. 6.—Advices Irom Bremen state th«t letters from the United States going to the con tinent of Europe, with the exceptfon of England and Prance, pay tolly fifty-per centum less when senkdlreot to Bremen than by the way of London. Li euteaant Doyle bas been ordered to the new steamer Brooklyn. This is the first appointment from the navel officers recently restored to the active list. Gen. Scott at New Orleans. Naw Orleans, Jan. s— Gen. Scott arrived at noon, and was received by a military esoort, the firing of a salute, and an immense crowd, evincing the greatest enthusiasm. Death of Dr. McNewton. Ga., .Jan. 6.—Dr. George MoNewton, the distinguished anatomist,- died here this morning, of lock-jaw. «• r Suieide at Tamaqtm. ~ Tamaqua, J*n. 6 —John Bitrier, a German, commit ted suicide last night; by cutting his throat from ear to ear. The deceased has been melancholy for some time, resulting from a recent severe illness.- The Schooner SI, A. McNeil Ashore. Norfolk, Us&. o.—The schooner M. A. McNeil is ashore south of Qape Henry. .Her cargo (cotton) ha* been saved, In a 'damaged condition.- ' She was* from Mobile,- bound to -New York, and was -owned in Phila delphia. The Steamer C. Vanderbilt. Boston. Jan.'6 —.The passengers of the steamboat 0. Vanderbilt arrived here to-day via New London. The boat ia a-total loss. Havre Cotton Market. Havre. Deo. 15— (Per North American.)—Cotton market closes firm the sales for the past two days have been 2 600 bales. New Orleans trts ordinairt Is quoted at 105 f. NEW TOBK CATTLE, MARKET, Jan. 6.—-At mar ket 2,688 beeves, 138 cows, 544 veals, 5,296 sheep and lambs, 18 009 swine; showing an increase of.fi oows, and a decrease of 849 beeves, Bfi . Teals, and 2,474 sheep and lambs. Tbe number on sale at AUerton’a was 2 819 beeves. At Bergen.N.' J,‘ 400 head sold to butchers for this 1 market. 1 New York and Ohio contributed largely to the stook of beef cattle; 1,210 head were by Hudson River road, 1,760 by Erie. The market this morntog was quite dull; the qualify of the stock'at; AUertou’s generally medium io fair, very lew extra, and a good number of common. Prlrei ranged fromOU to 10c a few ashigbtslOtfo. The Sheep and Lamb market was lively, and higher, under a decreased supply, Yf e quote an advance of 20c to 60c.; rales at $3.60 to $7, ae to quality. Veals have sold iuu« derately at fioTo: Cows are nominal at $25 aO5 each. Swine are lower, and less active. , . - Railroad Speed in. Oitieb.—The Common Oounoil -of Newark, New Jersey, after several months’ consideration, have.-decided that it is a satisfactory speed for passenger trains to run through thatoityat the rate of .twenty inifes an hour, and way.jrains at fifteeimiles an hour.- ' Captain Labbe, .of the'engineers 'serv ing in Ooohin Ohiaa, died on the 29 th of September oh board the Admiral’s flag-ship Nemesis, in oon sequence of » fall from his horse while making i reoonnoissanoe of the enemy’s position., He at born'-at Lille in 1820. < Extensive preparations have been madefor a grand celebration' in New Orleans oh the Bthjf January, and the oity government have tendered the hospitalities of 'the oity to General Scott, who is expected to be present. - ‘ State of Arkansas has .not a single tele graph wire within her borders.- A project la on foot for establishing one between Memphls'and Little Kook. A. portion of a comb, bearing the name ot George .Washington, has been found at: Valley Forge, and Is supposed to be oneloA.by him during ith*KeVQluUonMy war* -
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers