fA.:,'* pt "'' r4ii,411 .0 , 0 s pa iForthoomlng Rublioei. „,-4-.0g 74 - ' iirta ,routupkv -Totter, from fed ‘e-444PIK'n ;'PNIMPTg.g4OII..-141410.1•004)11Tomittning e--r-- ft widei ilia PO4‘OO3O•QP tAtlt Q t caock P' 7, - .4;? # 3 / 1 " • P te s ism f , ;..! nAl7,;4tti B,4titli*Yj D MeV. r ,42. ;•;'.--",:‘•,,, ~.., _, , 1 • 040.14, 1. '14' , kyfileV-Itiiptiviind Itithawity?, r '' ,- : - E . `L'*'tilait_AliFte,mPlitlls.,M o ,3 ,0 " . " -- 0-z,..**roiffir, tin*.into - on t,,,,gi vi: ,y, A 6 , - b ~ ja_.t. , 3- - - achy, were •-tui ArAdigi.ef names altFyairt:FaiNO#„ - ze, who 414 Pft,Mouk #* :Bait in 1819, ',44l.WPArrie4 Anwouou,...4aughtor of 105uis t . 41r, t I ng ., o p i ,ig avar i a —..tief old _gentleman, still •who 7 airiuSed , Wailed` by • Writing' in. :aid,' -darned with, 'the '"ditneing of ta.s.':Morittie; made her actual' XingdomL -Iri Jattuary; :1845;16tiNoie'V. iiiCaeiled_ liis Mather ,es he. reditgry cirand tiuke of; MOdenit; - and about .IWelearklater, on the (leak of Maim Loom; ai-EntiOns of France, claimed the territory ot sano, , whichwes assigned to Modena, 4 4 .4' , 103he treaties of 1815 , The inhabitants prei 13e,inited with Tuscany;and Faknots -'„'...Z*liiipdo , "„i , to\4‘l4,4l6 l l troops to compel :"...71:11 1 5;;.th'at si h e Tilsh ambassador might . -say, dio entice: them by forge".--to come under: big yola. On the apecosion of Popo when the, courts of Rome, Tuscany, and• Piedmont , formed a •liberal ullianco,:Faeactr -oh the other hand, prbferreer - ta draw; , cloier, corn. anil4olltteal„ treitty, the bondi which connected Modena with'Anstria. The ' re: `''!'''-ivtiit)ilii - ielilolroke' Out at Milan, in March, z -terribly Eilarmed this Petty ruler of I; , Mt4etia , that,lri hie ther,,ho'",:prorntsed a liberal • 4.finetlfrifion to.hhi,4lif eels; but, rsCii away bo. tore it couldbe ilrosin up. The Model:Lose, by Y y. an tidunimoua veto, , annexed .their country to After the overthrow of ' , Ortianuor , Ari*ar Xing of fiardirda ' et Ntriara,FliAnOlS • ' re:egered Modena, guarded Rik Austrian • rOnirsunderishose protection here-established ,;Jalinsel,f no an absolute ruler. During the pre-. sent ear, , w be, found that I,l'ar °LEON ,was • ; 'innt headway In Italy, (ten dui, In betihe - the browning vietortof Solferino,j k'se xoie P : fled `to the Anstrian,eautp,thlnk , ,with. Falstaff,- ; that_diseretion was the 4Lbetter, .patt,of,valer, Be_ has not • since. re- Zlawitddloi. Modena, andAndeed; boa • only,the 41 1 einbtrist 'prospect fof fever being aliowed to '' TistMtd or re tiring from Modena, wo will • , like an honest t my lik e a g entleman, but : '' 145:4' DukeF st me stele away like a common cmln;....- " a ll his pictures carefully " v"43144. Re had ill smuggled away out ; `-::;packed up, and a rf dreY Included in this Oelleb :4t. the epilintrY; hefe e w works ' of art which be f.,,,liiiii4nist 641 r ' but those ,which belonged lciged- u iikal" an d hung on the walls Of the ,1.,„.- 'kw hid country , thcity of Modena .' g o went • (kc P4l" in and e LibrarY (DiMeeteee Piens* , al° theljuseum andTraanosout had nieces. .4.; OwhichMilerait', 01t,,t , oina stole the value • ' -. ~faisoiir.been cuet'egiannY_,„ m e d a l s . which Lad s , No- collection of ,celtnian,..,..... tes :, He imoke ' '° ,:teen n'ennn'ink‘tthg‘ for centuries. and "stole ' the Treasury of , , there - :` . : -.' f l i.l 4lP :r n etiont-' every cent ',h Yr" every ' amounting 4 015140 0. 3 W. Ae picked litriatile. A . .•• , •- r mil it - all„ valuable an„, , , _ _ . ettlel9, 9 : 1 7 —• b prawn-jewels .ln nil -packed-*P. 9 4, t q • pa not per. ;Tie him ,which also were national, a , • 1 ''':e ' l.- -I .* Ile sotuelly, unscrewed Abe ~. ; 'menet prePe-4'.' rout doors of th elWriont ‘" '41113r handl e s the ducal paloce„and ."' • tate `apat,ments , Itt, 'tj-: l 4 threw . t h ese in with the rest o thl e pl ike nnu e e tte r. ' - 1 ' ; ~A '." if 'he did not able carry " oft some ' ,• Lint il cido i , it lsecchia.rapita,) which, -v:-'-' -- - 1 bPc °t° -' i to"' the famous wars be z ‘ !:,iive. centlirJes * OP , ed - 1 3 ,k, ese,it was '. A •"-- tioiModenese 4 41 the g n , 1 ' -It had no m oney r value . , beenttee , Thia-;pinawairlad !gal- thief has - been ' )forizieily 'cited; by thei 01'11 _lteeord!Cottip of ,- -is..3ledenss; to 'xistlite - , ,, iiithre thirty.daYs from of itie'-eitegnong, (Nov.' 4th,) (34* the Dueli) 'which he . - - • stole.:.There fa! little -expectation that Able •-•A.::$ 'robber eriO , obey.the citation. But one'object. OiOro'agh exPosiire; and thereby will be raised iniiiherininitinolid , , aloe •barrier again :-being" foried;•by ' foreign tiayonale ? :apOikthe puebrel Xeilena, which At once deapises 1468 That ,result .or the. expointre Vide made. 1 - !!!ebiaAet Dead. / -; OCre:s. aufc, newi twin Oude, dated Oetober perenthAluit N iA 8 xe the ?ruffianly Ibittchei of"defenceless 'gionuni . nd children, the. late - ; Indian . .reiolt;ctutd died, 'live di4p'before;:ln'aftralley:Ott Afer,:exid =that,' jberenpon, "bis followers directions., Ifturni out That - -Oa journals ,eome days later made no men of thlsd . e . tb, and it is dielared de was announced atAl. lelisbaditt, large printeCl placards, it was looked' only -it a , weak invention - 'of the ens si ofhia own; to prevent the winter_ "," big &feat skid tiripfehenOon ilefebedtil tie eininenced against him by tlie,British. ff:SO, llama ' not likely to take much pi, Ms motion, because the efforts ;against ,7 . olized. It would be :: r - ior such et bintsto be allowed to die in iliS,bed. t, , ; hi& Amweementsi, --; ' • - tbe;Malicin'operit i our'Aeademy riANUOCti during, the - ,Past ,week;:tanderthe .„ : Icalik,w,ae.egelccent-,of 'Met -excellent musician 'and 4_;m4E,Ais•katet,gemstleigazi, , Meirice Strakmh, may, ;;;,c; he„topp. asa;fixed fa4t7 = .lt owes 1./Ohio peak ;,-...,,,,y0per.,,yad1e:-notbing,: whatever,: to • exaggerated ,'l.i' - ' l-, ,adirpitisetaeliti. ...What - Mr. -13traforelt . modestly • has dhllit ...performed. ' Two operasl 'Honing:es, Martyrs (here:. renamed "It:Polluto,") ; Sicilian:Vespers, have beenilirought with geed singers, good choruses, and'a good Orchestra, together with appointment; and costume of the richest kind, , and beautifalscenery,- whielt: it a delight - to look' 10, so superior is It to what we .:kaveeeen at any.otb.or opera-house; in this mar in, Europe= -In ;the:most cf Moe operas, andAmedle appeared—in the otheribled ame _Colson, with Signor Perri, and Junes and -Srignoli. Thuradsy evening, the new ~.:prima donna Signorina Adeline-Patti made her -11rat : appearenee here in "LusiaAl Limmiriloor ;" and,, as -we had the pleseuro of, , reporting next' morning, achieved every: decided triumph. was a great pytut, , in her favor, of course ; --,1m4 she really.bas, a flue se Well as fresh voice,' and efebutlan.: , - - filie-repeated the perforin. ants on Saturday evening, (between an act - of the • 1 , -Travlicta" , and of- " The Stolliati'Velpers,") and thaw' sustained - the ;promiee of- her ilrst ap . peiniece.„,Moyarbeer's operatd "Les Huguenots" will be ?conformed ton oAt tonight—the. llng 'parts' by ;KiLdawiligh/se"; (whose - singing him created quite a fifrctro,) Madame fitiakeseh, and , Madame Guess - 'Mgt, with. Stlgeill,-(the -new' tenor,), Junca,, and ;,- ia a speatacile.opers, pllt be briight,ont with all the' reeourneaof the manage . 4 - , mll4 end of the house. .On Tuesday,' there willbe Oa; WiATPexformenth . of ‘'Rigoletto ;", and - Sig= L oorti paw make her. Jus t, appearanee on I9,e4nes t 4i4vpallig, "Ia ponnacnbuls." .The present treeic will be ; the last of the present season. We here theie,hcirnth , in the. report that Madlle *der Is' shunt performing 'with this company, the present,. season.: She ,has a splendid eQnLtalto voice, and, was; one of the 'most success. ;•. fel :and brilliant; pupils-,of the Conservatoire at 40L-thss.she is , also a Philadelphian ,k „ aght.to ; give Jpir„solditional chime for a favor' , eblari4eptien - 7i.lieleht-itrelt Theatre,. Mr.: and , Mrs. WS . : . .itatea 'continue to ; Mirk Cory full. houses. They 41.kr4140 1 t:t.-ilgbt. ) and will pro-. 4 00 i We* 44,144 lifhc.wvittais for • Mete by Starling_f/eyne, and - named " All Halleyrisy; , : Two other. pieces will follow; in one of 'which whotie versatility is cionsiderableOrili characters. •- • : 1 , PP4 12 -Xl l 7 successful 'at Arch - . evening eitur, will appear ai fkii'-trol 6 !...9rifAfbreek An Anequal Match," a ocePod,t,,h3 , . Tom Taylor,- never ,before" played 'in also sq, Jemmy Leacher/anti, in the :•.- - cIQ hiftotPi. , :Pkl' o l9 2ll 7 giving ---,=:,,4caiefor,Hrignoli, -Amodio, Lai Gunge, and others 90.;:gitt4 1 .1.44.iipgirs: Mrs. 'Wood is irately good _ , ctrss4 end:-yogalist,and meat the kmic,4* 040.)iegi,,galned heti. .; ' the pintomitike of :f- ` nee" 'wilt betpl a ysd = through ;week,: Othat,PerformanetiO, • ',.;',i".-"4o.*::iii?trainShitOu'Aitte4l,,c The .Stage - Stvik.k. ; -- - ,,, Triii 4 i'_ , Pr - ' 11.1 4 1 1 5 , 44 Ct 14- 'oVictint" 'wig be ' p1i 1 7 44: 'tend: and'.abettit'ut iiitinikiteti,; Mgt* w_l ' aiiVatire : ' to t 44 1, 4 1, 11 ,14 -,1 . -• • I: 1. • 1 9MOXIki2s 1 M , ~,~. , •,., , . . 11lir. Buchan - hies , Organ on the Demo :.. ' . . , , eratillitebels... Thellepresentatrte -in Congress from the &nth district in the, State Of, Non, York 4-, Joins -B. RASICIIi.-OH - Ffidar. 'Wit, aid-mated by the most ~r obelliene, spirit; did notliesitate to raise his volen-hattity againat the, Adminis tration and bratty in; thior of the principles which that Administration has betrayed. t , in was a sparkle, a substance, an. the telegraphic re t.. - . ' remarks that awakened - a # . B In thousands of hearts. aken , A , a -- # he continues to stand fast by the tat t to Which he is pledged was a glad assurance ..TiLto. Id many who look to'him, and to such as him, i to'maintitin a resolute attitude in the present [ Contest *lndust an overbearing and insolent filigarehy. ' The Washington organ of the Ad ministration, of. Mr. Beinams- the Conshtu lion—lei, o f gourse, .offended at, RASKIN'S frankness. Raving preserved a long and al most unbroken silence- in regard to the re bellion- against the infamies and treacheries of that 'Administration, (in Which rebellion MT: -RASKIN has made himself signally prominent ) ) the Conititution has at last lotit all: Patience and breaks outon Sa turday 1 iri a strain of vituperation, at once proving the insincerity of its silence, and the cemplete sincerity of its present malignity. That journal speaks for a master, however- a master who; obtaining power by the most ab ject devotion , to p." certain covenant, breaks that covenant the moment he pa* the dizzy heights to which' he: aspired,lo ailetwards resolves to exterminate all nib' will not ap plaud his trenchery. = No naffi , e-born Ameri can has been found willing to obey the man dates of such a master. A numb& of, such have been tried, but all, in succession, have fallen off thin the degrading' task imposed upon thtim. Dien the, Southern editors of that paper have refine:id to use the lash against independent men, who, in their turn, refuse to obey the imperious demands of a recreant Chief Magistrate, and gentlemen from the free States, who,‘aecepted an editorial relation to rho same joiunal;have gone off in disgust be fore the 'nauseous tasks set by the President and his Cabinet. ' ,_, At lasts scion of nobility, roared in the at mosphere of' the British Court, has been dis covered, who; accustomed to plead for power, Ind to sustain that which has been prescribed to him, has accepted the position of manager ,tf the organ of Mr. Becuntrati,, and is now Ingaged in that which must be a delightful pastime to him—the work of denouncing all ,who stand tbrth to advocate the great princi ples upon "which our free institutions are founded; Mid ' for which the Aiderican colonies revolted from the British Crown, and to which there is no doubt the British editor of the Washington Constitution owes a cer. Min allegiance, whether naturalized or not. fait not a truthful commentary upon the pre tent divisions in the Democratic party, that while such men as Ramer assert and main tain the great principle of individual self ;Orem/tont, they should be pursued and pro wribed by an Administration, the organ of which is conducted by a subject of the British Crown, who owes it obligations which, if his claim to a patent of nobility bo true, no oath gnaturalization can dissolve / We congratu 'ate Mr. Bemuses upon the fact that he has it last secured an editor who is entirely sub piastre to his demands. The former silence of the Constit . in re cant to such Democratic (g rob . ell JOHN 3. ILimucs, is to be accounted upon two e grounds-n dispositiOnte treat them with con- ' Tempt, because it desired to create the itn aression that they were a small and Inconsi tenable band, animated only by motives of 'revenge, and bemoan) there was still an oppor- Maki° apply the same persuasive means to tem that have been ,applied to others who started out with them in the contest spinet the encroackmenta of the Free!, lent _ upon „principle and upon decency. fir. Hamers , s trumpet-tone of defiance on Friday has, _ however, broken this dead calm. - The Tower of a few men entrenched bo iled the fortreas of a faith ardently cherished "mid confided in been found to be irresistible, mid their contempt of the blandishments of the triministration Is shown to bo no less uncont l'areardsing now) when it is rotting out of ca 1, steno, than when, with all their energies, they. resisted it in the hour of its assumed in fallibility: -- ": . , Mr. Maxis laid , down two propositions in ills' 'Meech on Friday, which, we are most happy to say, were re-echoed by that gallant might of the truth-Jorar Neossaarr, of this State—on the day following, attXtbat he would rot napped.- Mr: Become, beeMiire be was the eeprosentative of the Administrittl a en, and that . ~.t he would not support any candiattinfor the Pro dder:icy, who maybe nominated at Charleston tt 1860, who does not stand square and straight ipon that creed which he and his colleague cave so, nobly illustrated; _ and, as a result ;roip this proposition, that both would *hest -1 ;atingly eve, their votes to the Republican [ candidate for ,Speaker in preference to that candidate of the , Administration who will un prostionably be committed to the Administra tion dOctitio that the institution of slavery is to be protected in the Territories of the United 3tates against the popular will. Upon this leclaration, the British editor of the, Constitu rion explodes in a torrent of wrath. Ho charges Mr. Hams, "with having been re dacted to Congress by the Black Republi cans.". If he was so elected, it is a high compli ment to Arr. HAWN, for, during all his can toss, he stood straight upon thi Cincinnati plat- 1 form as curtained byJsmas BUCHANAN himself. Of all accusations that can be rallied against ltr. Ilessos, the last authority to make it should be that of the present corrupt Admin istration, or its still more corrupt organ. If If r. Mears combined with the Republican ;Arty in his district, ho did so holding on to his Democratic principles; but Mr. BUCHANAN and the Washington Constitution offered to combine with tirepnblican party of Illinois - bs, Surrendering Democratic principles. They were not only ready to give up the Cincinnati platform, in order to defeat Summit A. Coequal, Its ablest expounder, but they wore ready to accept, as candidates for the Legis lature in the different districts in Illinois, all men who ran against the friends of STEPHEN A. Domino, notwithstanding they were com mitted to a war upon the rights of the Southern Statel. We think Attorney-General BLACK'S letters to certain of his personal friends in ll [Mohr, asking them to assist in electing Repub . - (leans to the Legislature, in order to defeat Dements, might be cited as the best answers that could be made to the articles in the Con stilitioit,' charging ILissus with uniting with the Republicans; especially when we consider that the Constitution is, in a large degree, engineered by the Shakepearian Attorney General Of Mr. BUCHANAN. • ILO' opposition to the Administration party is' divided. There Is the Republican, and there is the American division. We have shown, conclusively, that Mr. BUCHANAN offered to join hands with the Republicans in Illinois; and It is within the universal recol lection that only a few months ago the Con- 1 dilution rejoiced over the election of General Hourros, the American candidate for Go vernor in Texas, who was chosen against a regular Democratic nominee ; so that,,while the official organ is charging HASKIN with re ceiving the votes of the Republicans in his &- hid, the Administration has been convicted before the country of uniting, not merely With- the 'Republicans in Illinois to defeat the Vemooratic 'candidate for Senator, but with the - Americana in Texas to elect an Atin -,-°] c = -- -citfaltiet'a _ for Governor. We are', m- li t tle Bul P'''''cl. - Ulm , air. Ramur, of [ Titans, should have indtdgea himself in the rencounter between thonsiss as Gover nor Silas, on' Saturday, knowing full nom that the hand of rho Administration in his own State ' was against the DEHUO ciiitth party. In order still thither to prove the anxiety of the Constitution, and therefore of the President, to unite with his political coo- Mltiii- , while denouncing Ileasts, Ilreirmae, Calla, Rarrionott, SOUNANTE, ADEAIN, sod Thetis for refusing to vote for the Administra thin candidate in the .House, - it may be men tioned, that -‘ every, offer has been made, through the 'Coristitutirm, with the consent of the . President, to induce ;the South Americans fil the:llpuse to Uottfor, Illr. Bocooe. Any reader:el that journal for the' last few days Wiiiirefice itOW'detierously the British editor, of that 'paper has, sought to teaks this point tell upon the Southern Americans. And yet *Very : ,such ,sppeal - has been made in view of the Chet that if the Administration creeds urban anything, it is' alresOlutely committed ligitii*#ut "Anteriaatta pf Alio South'si it isi mitteitthaßepolilicaris of theNorth. , [ - , ' . Y-Rcreartah , in , reference to combinations be. tweenparttes. So much hy way of *sapiens -1 . , , PAgSS.-,4"IVAPEOO.I.III,ONDAY. MUMMA 11, 1859. tion of the position of Mr. HASKIN, so in. sanely assailed by the Conititutmn—an expla nation that includns every'man. elected as Mr. Hawk was elected to the present Congress. The differenCe between Hamm and his con. patriots In the House, and the AdLin ntssrattffil; is, that if they hannestre arrfor 'by the Re pubepublicans have done 80 Lnffiwithstanding HAsiciN and his Mends have 1 declared their adhesion to! the immortal doc trines of the Democratic party; while the Ad ministration, on the other hand, has been ready to prostitute itself to the Repub licans,_ and to the Americans, and to any other organization that is willing to sup. port it in its corruptions, and to unite with It in putting to death the fearless, defiant, un compromising, and open rebellion against Ad. ministration authority. A few words in conclusion, in reference to the declaration of Mr. Hama against the cor. ruptions of the present Foderat Administra tion. Mr.llasstrts demands an investigation. The Constitution challenges it. We are glad of this. Mr. Elam throws down the glove. The Constitufion takes it up. Mr. HAMLIN insists that there has been a continued current of corruption in the present Administration of the Federal Government since its beginning. The Constittition denies it, and advertises its anxiety that the investigation should be set on foot. Tho issue is ado up.— Mr. I3uousnan, in his Fort Du Quesno letter, laid down the proposition in the most formal and fearless manner; that our institutions were running into decay, and our politics being precipitated into utter contempt, by the use of money in elections, and other grave authori ties have assured us that the treasure of the people Is being squandered at Washington and at other capitals ter the basest purposes. All these apostolic teachers assure us Ulla there is something wrong. The Washington Constitu tion says there is nothing wrong in Mr. Boonasiates Administration, and demands that JouN B. Ilasxm's declaration to the contrary shall be decided before a Con gressional jury. We are ready to accept the issue made by the Constitution. Let the commission or the committee be ap pointed. Let the basis of the investigation be the solonln charge of the President of the United States himself against the use of the public money in pophilar elections, and, from this broad and, comprehensive platform, let us start fornird to show who has squandered money to corrupt the elections. Let us mer taro whether the President himself has not set an evil example in this matter; whether. his officials have not sunk themselves into mere tithe-gatherers to their subordinatei to choke out the popular will; and whether this entire machine, which wo are accustomed to call a free gOvernment, has not been perverted from all its uses until it, has become a mere inven tion to feed contractors who, while taking the money of the people, tako their rights at the same time. The Washington Constitution de mands it, and we have no doubt the country will say amen to the demand. Mr. BASKIN announced his firm determine, tion to support. no candidate nominated at Charleston who would not stand firmly by the Cincinnati platform, as explained by STEPHEN A. DOUGLAS in his late publications, and we thank him for this. If Bram= A. Domes is right in the declaration that the people of the Territories have entire control over their do mestic institutions, then neither he himself can accept a nomination that does not expli citly declare this doctrine, nor can his friends support any other man who does not stand squarely upon it. The Southern politicians all believe, if they do not assert, that the Constitution carries slavery into the Ter ritories. Ono class, and by far the most sincere, of these politicians, insist that if the Constitution carries slavery into the Territories, then Congress must pass a law to' protect slavery in the Territories. The same instrument providing that all fugitives from labor shall be returned to their masters, Is so conclusive, that an act of Congress carry ing out this provision, no matter how resisted, has been accepted by nearly every legal tribu nal in the country. Upon the same principle, if slavery is put into the Territories by' the Constitution, Congress must pass_a law to pro tect slavery there. Another class of Southern men, however, while insisting that slavery itself goes into the Territories under the Constitution, propose to release the North. ens Democracy, and Congress, from the lpassage of any law carrying out this al. ed` provision of the Federal Constitution ; le:which we have to reply that if the Conklin.; tielKeentains such a provision, (which we utterly deny ; ) then ho who believes it, and does not insist upon a law to protect slavery in the Territories, while a Representative in Congress, Senator or otherwise, is guilty of perjury. There can be no middle ground upon this question. Judge DOUGLAS, and those who act with him, insist that slavery is the creature of the local law, and according to the declare. tion of Mr. Mactialisti, Mr. COBB, Mr. BRINK. INRIDGEI, Mr. STEPHEINA, and other authori ties, may be protected or prohibited by the Territorial Legislature. In so grave a matter the man whhroposes to support the Charleston nominee, upon whatever platform ho may occu py, commits a treason to the truth in advance. If Charleston shall accept the doctrine of the Democratic party on this slavery question as understood from the beginning of the present controversy, we aro for Charleston. If It does not, we are against it. Mr. 'lsms has said the same thing, and we honor him for it. We aro gratified in believing that if Judge Dou a LAB follows out the logical conclusion of his letter to Mr. Dona, of lowa, he will occupy precisely the same position. In that letter he said he would not be a candidate unless•upon a distinct recognition of his own principles, and, knowing the man as wo do, wo be- Hove he will not consent to support any other candidate who may rim upon a silent and an equivocal doctrine. Tho Southern men are ready to meet us halt way upon this issue. If we of the North are disposed to temporize for the purpose of electing a Presi dent, they aro not. They say they are strong in what they conceive to be their own rights, and we honor them for their self-consciousness, and they insist upon a Rill and explicit recog nition of principle at Charleston. We aro, to-day, as thoroughly devoted to Southern in stitutiis as we have ever been. We believe in the enforcement of the fligitive.slave law, because the Constitution advises that such a law should be passed, and we aro anxious to unite with the Southern Demooracy in such an explanation of the other great question ae may be satisfactory on all sides. Governor BROWN, of Mississippi, like Mr. Hamm, of New York, wants no cheating in reference to slavery in the Territories. Tho one speaks for the whole South and the other for the whole North. Lot Charleston give us the key to solve the mys tery. ILLOBTRATED NISWB OF TEO WORLD.—Ilonri.A. Brown .t Co., Hanover street, Boston, have sent us the last-received number of this English ploto• rial journal, dated November 20th. It is cape- dally rich in portraiture, The eupplement me; molt and portrait, (engraved on steel,) are those of Lord Bury, M. P., but there is also a portrait of Sir Charles Trevelyan, Governor of Madras, of Sohil• lees mother, of Schiller himself, and of the Grand Duchess, Marie of Russia. There' are also name• roue views illustrative of the Schiller celebrations in Europe, with a: full•pago plate, showing the birthplace of Schiller, his room at Wiemar, hie garden house at Jade, and views of his various residences elsewhere. This is a capital number, of a capital journal, which is obtaining groat circula tion in this country. - 8&L ot• STOCKS, LOll , lB, &c., to-morrow, at 12 o'clock, noon, and REAL ESTATE at 7 o'clook In the evening, at the Exchange. 800 Thomas k Bon's pamphlet catalogue and advertisement of both sales. IIP" Our thanks aro due to Hon. Jaoob Fry, i ir fo '— nra ri r ar . raLof Ponrsylvania, for hie kindness in this journal official documents. Tau ARBON CASH In 9. ' 1 1/111T STRNET. Marshal Blackburn still pursues 111.,, utf 11 is in the cue of arson reported in our vc...ga OA Friday morning. The latest developmenTe ns a° n that the sum of Insurance fixed on the building was $6,250, while the whole worth of the establishment was not more than $l,OOO. On Friday afternoon, the Marshal aseertained that a ten-gallon can of spirits of turpentine had been bought on Wednes day afternoon, and taken to the store of the firm, In Arch street below Ninth. On making search in -the cellar of the store, on Saturday morning, the Fire Marshal discovered the can, which had a hole thrust through its bottom; and all its content/1 were spilled among a lot of rubbish in the cellar. It Is supposed that the intention of the incendiary was to fire the store while the flames wars raging at the shop In Filbert street. FINANCIAL.—The receipts from taxes during the put few days have inoreased very oonelderabil, the amount ranging from $lO,OOO to $lO 000. The City Treasurer, on the Ong of December, bad a cash balanoe on hand, exolusive of Truet amounts, -of $52,183.81. There hail been paid of the tempo, rartloan of $500,000. the sum of S2OOM, the balance falling due in February next. The tax ditplioatts forlBoo will, it is exputed, be ready to belAseal is the ' heads of the - Receiver about the /btu of January. , 44 bade 4al. 9 ; W6OIIINOTON, Doi/A - 41'1859. Cosresounifeiistirlief While " Osouttonal" is , engrossed to othe r d u . los, arid your regular oarrespouShot in the Retied is occupied urion matters of graver importance, it has occurred to me that a glance at the propped? Inge of Congress for the last week will not be nn. Interesting to your hosts of readers. The Houma of Representatives has been crowded daily with ou. rious and excited ohtervers or the strange scenes enacted before them; Tho members, en their orimson.cushioned sofas, present a fine appear. alum, and, if they are . as welcestisfled with 'the 'change which has been made by the removal of the duke, and the substitution of the present arrange ment, as their constituents in tip galleries, I have no doubt the sofas will bo permitted to remain. The Speak °ea chair is vacant; the Clerk, with his assistants, occupies the second platform, and immediately before him are arranged the Congres sional reporters, Messrs. Mathew', Smith, flunks, and Hayes. • These gentlemen are the brief, if not the . abstract, chroniolers of the doings of the R i stplev are officers of the body, although in the direct employ of John 0. Rivoe, the enter prising proprietor of The Globe. It Is amazing to watch the rapidity of their movements. They take down every word ea it falls from the lips of the Representatives, and the next morning, about twelve or one o'clock, the Globe appears with a de tailed and accurate report of the former day's pro ceedings. Overhead, and immediately back of the I Speaker's chair, seated upon long benches running back to the wall, are the oorrespondenis of tho lead ing journals of the United States. When I occupied a seat in the gallery, on Wednesday last, all these benches were filled. Thorn seemed to be more than a hundred gentlemen engaged in writing and preparing matter for the papers with which they are connected. The rules allowing no persons but members of the House and members of the Senate the privilege of the door, are, I believe, rigidly enforced by the Clerk, as they have boon by thy Speaker, sines the new hall bee been occupied, so that correspondents are compelled to resort to the locality set apart for them, as the only place from which they can hear and see what is going on. This rule also tills the galleries with the lead ing men of the country.' Those who have hereto. fore been admitted within the bar of the House because of their pesition ) sash as ex-members, ex senators, ex-governors, and others, finding it im possible to obtain entrance within the charmed circle, gladly resort lo the gallorteal where the rte. commodatlone, acoustic and otherwise, are highly satisfactory. It is a curious eight to watch the immense audi ence daily assembled in these galleries. Panoy, your Academy of Music of an oblong shape, and Instead of three tiara only one—the parquette being occupied by the' members of Congress, and the single gallery, or tier, crowded with people from all parts of the Union, of both sexes—you thus have a reasonable idea of the appearance of the popular -breech of Congress during the past week. In a portion of the northern gallery are the members of the varioue foreign legatione, who have been regular Spectators since Monday last. The ladies and their male attendants occupy one por tion of the gallery, while gentlemen alone occupy another. In the present unorganized condition of the House, when no roles have been adopted, and the Clerk le left to his own discretion, you would suppose yourself prosenk at some theatrical performance, from the fact that whenever a good speech is uttered, and the telling-point made, the constituents who look down from above make the vast hall ring with their plaudits. 'have noticed, on several decisions, that these tokens of approba tion have been led by beautiful Southern ladles, who, nab/Wog no enthusiasm of the orators of their section, stretch forth their little hands and clap as loudly as those of the meaouline gender. These demonstrations are often responded to by the mem bers on the floor. In vain the Clerk aria out "Order," .and makea his hammer ring upon ids desk. There is an abandon on an hands that de. ties his power. Two things impress themselves forcibly upon my mind—first, that the spectators, being, in a large proportion, Southern people, heartily sympathise with the Southern members, and yet, on the other hand, they never fail to applaud a Union senti ment, no matter by whom it is uttered. 'Wherekir. Nelson, of Tennessee, spoke in reply to Mr. Pryor, of Virginia, although he was taking issue with men who profess to lead the Southern sentiment, he drew down the lions. repeatedly; and ithenltir. Corwin, of Ohio, who is very near a,, Republican; made his elaborate speech, ulnae days ago, he, too, was warmly and enthusiastically cheered. The appearance of Mr. Corwin is highly prepossessing ; his dark complexion, commanding figure, and rid, sonorous voice, prove that nature intended him for an orator. -Mr. Garnett, of Virginia, an exceed ingly able man, whose speech made such a sen sation on Wednesday lash has light hair,, an erect figure, and a most °weedy. Yoke. Ills friend and eo-worker—Mr. Lamar, of Mississippi—le a young man of short stature, and wears his hair long, speaking with'greae . and proving by his language his thorough edneation. Ills speech, although full of extreme and impracticable suggestions, was remarkable for Its ability and eloquence. Mt. Kelton, of lilt 'holt, who his become fan‘otts on account of his controversy with It. Greeley, of the New York Tribune, is a stoat, well-built gentians.", of about fifty years of age, and is almost the only mem ber on the Republican a . lae who seems de. elms of epeskiug often. • Mr. Sherman,' the Republican candidate for Speaker, la about thirty-five years of age, tall and erect In figure, with a fine bearing',,,,,aindmn easy and collected manner of speaking.' ills competitor, Mr. &omit, who hat been- put forward by the Administration caucus, although an old member, Is a young looking man. Ile is a ready debater, and well skilled in parliamentary tactics Mr: Etheridge. of Tennessee, one of the most fearless on the Ann dean side of the Rouse, line not yet taken part in the discussions. When ho does, a new spirit will be infused into the issues now being triad. The effort of the Administration has been, from the commencement of the session, to force a com bination between the South American members and the friends of Mr. Rama, and, at the same time, to demoralize the "rebel" wing, composed of such men es Admin, Riggs, Romeo rk. Raskin, Reynolds, Hickman, and John Schwartz. Nelson's speech, in which he defined his position with so much force, has put oat of the ques tion all possibility of any coalition between the Americans and the Administrationists ; while Raskin and Mama, in their de monstrations on Friday and Saturday, showed conclusively that the anti-Lecompten Democracy did not intend to put themselves, in any way, under the influence of Mr. Buchanan, or his sym pathizers in the Ileum. lion. William Montgomery, of the Washington (Pa.) district, ha; taken no part in the struggle, except to rote steadily on the side of the Administration, having gone into that or gantration at the opening of the tension' lie had a large Republioan support in his canvass, and was opposed, with great bitterness, by the Leeompton mon. It was predicted by these latter that be would en-operate with the Administration, and the prophecy has been fulfilled. Hon. John G. Davis, of Indiana, who ran as an independent candidate for re-election against an Admintatmtion (Lwow!). ton) Democrat, and received shout the entire Re publican vote of his district, declines voting for Mr. Sherman, although I do act think le will vote for Mr. Booook. Everything goes to ebony that Mr. , Shipman', election ii morally oortaln, He is a oonservative in the boot meaning of the term, and by no means a sectionalist. Although a decided kopublioan, he la not an Abolitionist, and I have no doubt that, i Amen to' the chair, he will administer its duties with so much impartiality that even the firo•eaters will have no right to complain, except' that he will bo sure to give his own party the ainendenoy on the committees. Tam duteous of adding a line in reference to Mr. Sickles, of New York; and partioulul y in regard to the universally accepted opinion that ho is not spoken to by his fellow-members. lt is quite true that th‘rt, is very little disposition manifested by any of the Representatives / to eotablieh intimate relations with Mr. Siekles, but justice to the man himself requires that I should state that he seems to invite no such relations. Every day, about fifteen minutes put twelve,f when debate bee begun, he walks in quietly from the side door, and takes his ?eat on one of the sofas en the western side of the House, where, resting his bead upon his gloved hand, he remains seated, taking no part in the discussions, voting, when celled upon, in a low voice. Re drosses In exquisite taste, and has cul tivated a large pair of brown whiskers. Ho seems 001111011116 that public opinion is greatly against him, and although his bearing is full of his cha racteristic ease and coolness, it is singularly reti ring and unobtrusive. Sitting. la the gallery on Wednesday and Thursday, I noticed several of the leading members of the Rouse going up to him, shaking hands with him, and passing on to their seats. I have not met Mr. bieklee, and therefore, speak of him simply as an observer. There is, of course, not so much excitement In the other wing of the Capitol—the Senate—as there le in the House, but the universal nigger " question has been introduced there, also. The de- Wee, not no exalting as iii the popular branch, hairs, noverthelese, been characterized by much bitterness and ability on both sides. Mr. Mason's " —, wittlee will no doubt be raised, and as he will of eounr‘,*•• the chairman of it, his side of the question will be I" — anted with oheracterlstio nar rowness and seotionaltem, '—'.li_provolco a mi nority report. Mr. Crittenden, of iteci,..l. 7 , did not hesitate in the debate, a day or two ago, to come forward to pour oil upon the tempestuous waves, but bin voice seems to hive been loot in the contention. In order to let 'mince how the case Mande in the Senate, I send you a copy of the resolution of Mr. Minim, as Mime : "Resolved, That a committee be appointed to inquire into the facts attending the late invasion nod Wave of the armory and arsenal of the unites states at Hsrper's Ferry, in Virginia, by a bend of armed men, end report whether the !AMC wee attended by armed resistance to the'authorltles and public foree of the United States, and by the murder of any of the °Wren of WIWI , / or of any troops sent there to arotect tin public property whether such invasion and immure wee made under color of any organization intended to 'obvert the go vernment of any M the States of the Union ; what wee the ohmmeter end extent of such organisation, and whether any ()Meow! of thoittlited Alateg, net present , were implicated therein resocessory thereto, by eon_ tributions Of money, agog, munitions, or otherwise; what was the ohnrectei aad egfent of the military equipment in the hands or under the control of mid armed band, and where and how and when tae hriiie was obtained and transported ttk the, place so invaded. And that said nomtnittee report whether any and whet legislation ma,, in their opinion. be necessary on the pert of the United States f,,r the future preservation of the pones of the country, or for the safety oLthe puhlio property; and that said committee hove poirer to send for persons and papers." Mr, Benator Trumbull, of Illinois, has proposed to amend the above, as follows : "After the words' Invades,' In the fourth clause of the towdution, insert : " And that said committee also inquire into the fads attending the invasion, immure and robbery, in Deem , WOOL of the arserml of the United States at Liberty, inithe State of hfissontl, by a mob of body ISt armed men, and report Whether sett, seizure end Tebbe, y was attended by resibtaboe to the authorities of the United States, and followed by an invasion of the Territory of Kamm, and the plunder and murder of any of its inha bitant', or of any citizen of the United States, by the persons who thus seized the arms and ammlinition of the °ova Himont, or °there combined with these ; who• ther mild seizure and iceberg of the arsenal were made under color of any organization intended to subvert the °averment of nay of the States or Territories of the Limon ; what wan the character and extent of mush or ganization, and whether nay citizen. of the United Staten, not present, were implicated therein. or atomi sm thereto. by contributions of money, arum, ammu nition, or otherwise; what was the character and extent or tbo military equipment in the hands or Wirier the eon trol of said mob, and how and when and where the sail ewer° subsequently tuned by said mob; what wee the value of the arms and ammunition 'of every deserty ' tion so taken from the said arsenal by the Mob; whe ther the same or any part thereof had been returned, and the value of such as were lost; whether Captain Luther Leonard, the United States officer in command of the simnel at the time, communicated the facto in re lation to the seizure and robbery to his superior officer, and what measures, if any, were taken in reference thereto." 'One of the,most fortunate of public men is John C. Breckinristgc, of Kentucky, and I 1180 the word fortunate wins no disposition to depreciate his full deservings, for he possesses ninny advantages over most aspirants for the favor of the people. Nearly every atop that he has taken in public life has been a success. Bleated twlee to Rib Douse of Repre sentativee, once over Leslie Coombs, and again over Robert Letcher in the Lexington district, after an animated canvass, he became the Democratic candidate for Vice President in 1858, having for mally declined the honor, which wee subsequently premed upon him, and before Ms term Of office as Vice President expire! he is about to be elected for six years to the United States &tato from the State of Kentucky—and all this before ho reached his thirty-ninth year. Ile has many friends for the Prestilonoy,who will urge him with the utmost enthusiasm. It it not often that we have such a case presented in these days. Should Mr. Breok- laridge be nominated for the Presidency, ho wilt, halo gone the rounds of the highest distinction be fore he has attained that period of life which, in England may be said to merk the beginning of a statesman's active career. A LOOKER•ON. Correspondence or The PreliC) WAORINGTON, Deo. 10 Judge Douglas is not going South. Upon the advice of his physicians, he does not deem it nacos. eary to leave the city, while all his friends and many of his political foes agree in the belief that his presence is wooded at this peouliarlyrevolu• tionary era in • the council halls of the country. Judge Douglas is as desirous to resume his place in the Senate as all conservative men could wish. Mr. Hickman's proposition, in the hence, yes terday evening, to offer a resolution for the plu rally rule after three ineffectual ballotings shall have hien had, otoupied the morning. The Ad ministration party, of course, exerted itself lustily against it, Messrs. tiochran, of New York, and Houaton, of Alabama, taking the, lead. With calm decision Hickman fought his ground, aided by Grow, and Israel Washburno, of Maine. The °oaten was as to the legality of the manner and time in and at which Mr. 'Holtman offered hie re solution. Alai much elucidation and twistiflca len of the Manuel, pro and 'eon, Mr. Reagan de nounced the resolution ae illegal, and a means to allow those who would not come out like men and vote for a Democrat to vote for the Opposition. In reply,Thokman, with the agreeable and forci ble ease which distinguishes him, told the gentleman from Texas that he would vote for a true Demo orettarr anti-LecomptonDemoorst. He had 'driven for a week toalards that end, but found it imprac- Helherefore would vote for a Republi can before any follower of the Administration. Bx-Gov. Smith, of Tiriinia, next tried a bout with Mr...fillokman, and got rather morn than he bargained for. It was delightful to see the anxiety with which the words of the latter were regarded by the Ileum, eipeolelly by nuoh men as Keitt, Pryor, and the most enthuslastio men of the young Southern party, ivith some attempt at jocosity, Gov. Smith made an effort to arraign the Penney!' rialto; bat Mr. Dickman defined his position in a brief, clear, and emphatic man—claiming for him self the expression and principles of true Demure ey In contradistinotion to those exprcued and held by the Administration and its followers. It was pot any member of this House, nor the whole Vir ginia delegation, that would determine the question u to the Democracy ofJarnea Buchanan, and those who differed from him, and carried out the Cincin nati platform in Its truth and entirety. The whole country would settle it. He declined voting for 3flik Boaock, bemuse that gentleman bad voted *Me the -Administration. Ile did not believe in eimeenth-hour repentance, and held the Vir ginia candidate for Speaker to be the seine now as when he gave his support to the measures of a cor rupt Administration. Anti-Leoomptonism made a good figure this morning, kir. Horace F. Clark, of New York, followed with a home throat at Governor Smith. He asked him Hite (Smith) believed the organise lion to be the test of true Democracy. When it is considered how often the Virginia ex-Governor has dolled organizations, and run on has own will. victual hook, the point of Clark's query will he ainnited. After a considerable discussion between the re spective Representatives from Now York and Vir ginia, tho latter pat the same question to him as had been put to Ilaskin and Hickman: " Would ho vote for the Democratic or Republican party ?" to which Mr. Clark replied, then he did not know whore to find the Democratic party. Ile could not find it on the Illnoinnall platform.. Mr. Clark, In turn, put a query to the Governor: If a President were elected by either the North or South, who wan devoted to the interest, of the section from which he came, would ho regard it an lust ground for no attempt to dissolve the Union ? The adroit ex-Oorenior fell back on his Stump experience, and did not like to talk so much in detail. Me said he was too old a politician to say now whet he might do in the future. The strong points made by the anti-Lecompton men—their direct and fearless losesty—tbeir aboveboard declarations—have made visible err feet on those who expected to break them down by spreading the disunion panto of the Administra tion. Mr. Curry, of Alabama, took the floor, and le making n strong Southern speech. He is our• rounded by a phalanx of Montle, and evidently reocivee many promptlngs therefrom. Chief of those Ia Garnett, of Virginia. Mr. Curry to a foroiblo spoakor, having a good voice, and a clear intonation. It is perhaps mo• notonons, but his convictions of the truth of his positions give his style an Interest which all that Is emphatic and spirited must command in - a publro as. sembly. lie has just made the declaration that the election of Wm. 11. Seward, Salmon P. Chase, or any other man on a like sectional basis as them, should be resisted even to tho disruption of the Union. This was hailed by plaudits from a ma jority—not ail—of the Southern side. The galleries received it with perfect silence, a significant fact considering the applause with which every Union sentiment Is welcomed. Mr. Etheridge, of Tennessee, fulled the gen tleman from Alabama if his candidate for the Sreakershlp, Mr. &week, shared the opinion just expressed. Mr. Curry, however, did not deign a direct or any other reply In time for me to got it in here. Before I close let me make a correction. I notice In the Aeeoolatod Bross report of last Tues. day's proceedings in the House, Hon. John Sahwartz's vote was omitted in the detailed Mete went of the eicorid ballot. This mission might create the imprrion that Mr. Schwartz was absent from the Honeellt the time the rote was taken. On the contrary, notwithstanding his compare. lively bad state of health, no member bee been more-regular In bin attendance, and upon every ballot his vote has boon recorded fur Eon. John B. Raskin, of New York. EACH RICHARDS. NAVAL TNTELLIGENC V.-A number of Phila delphian., smile time slime, petitioned Govern. meat to allow tome of the large ships to be sent to the Navy Yard for repairs, on their return home. Tho Secretary at the Navy In reply to the petition, snys:—. The steamer Powhatrin end sloop-of-war lath of which will require repairs, have beam ordered to Philadelphia. Thu Navy Yard at that place hen bad an unusually largo share of work recently—the following vessel', having been in the hands of the workmen within the lest fifteen or eighteen months, viz : Frigates Congress and St. Lawrence; steamers Lancaster, Wyoming, Crusader, Pawnee, Anncostia, City of Richmond, and the receiving ship Princeton.' • Fine.-0u Saturday morning, about nine o'clock, a Aro broke out in a large twp story frame building, at the corner of Mary oud Breen streets, In the building went. The building was used as a menufaratry of osbinet-ware, and ma. ohlnery profited by steam wee extensively need In it. upper portion of the structure was totally destrOyed, with all its contents. The steamer of the Wait Philadelphia Bose Company was on the ground early, and prevented the destruction of the entire building. A. row of brick dwellings were greatly exposed. They were saved bj the powerful streams of the steamer and the other apparittuf ppon the ground. The factory was owned by Mr. Nathan Edson. It WAR occupied by Mr. Benjamin Sage. The Supposed Murder of n Hoy nt Nor Nogent.x. Ve.. Dec. Io.—The ooroner's jury have concluded their Inquest on the body of VI rainitli Leon• ard, son of the editor of the Norfolk Areur. and return oda verdict of itoelyltel death, by it shot from a rill lit hlg own ands. T hi s o explanation Of what was at fir st Oongideled nlYstery, end produced much sensat o has given relief to the community. Fire at Baltimore. BALTIIIOIIIt. Deo. 11.-9tiaff's Plane factory In this otty eru dpstroyeA by Pre hot niiht. The hug exti- Eeted et en. which $ low minted in astern aloes inpolloies of VAN inch. THE LATEST NEWS BY TELEGRAPH. XXXVITII CONGRESS,-FIRST'SESSION, U. S. CAPITOL, WASHING/A t Deo. JO. Tho Senate ie not In Bosnian to day. HOUSE ON REPRESENTATIVES. Mr. Hies masi, of Pennsylvania. move,d an amend ment to the journal. as no mention had been made thereon of hut resolution for the adoption of the plurality • lie Clerk said that the resolution was merely rend for in ormation. lr. HICKMAN insisted that be lied axieht to offer the resolution. which took precedence nf ell other question,. Ile We'd for ft tlebiNoh of the 4-esnon. , Gaow. of Pennsvlrenik,and Mr. WA 'AIWA ntis. of Maine. contended that Mr. Hickman had the right to introduce the resolution. Mr. Hoe Ton. of Alabama, took the opposite side of the orpiment. lalisaioN, of Ohio. said that .even if he should yi e ld th e floor, to which he Wait entitled, the resolution could not to entertained now, as other questions were Witting. Mr. ei SAO are, of Texas. took occasion to say that the pliwnlity resolution was designed to enable men to vote indirectly for a Black Republican. when they would not come up like men and vote directly for such nnminee. Mr. wog ea •ej rep'ted that the remark did not apply to him. Ha should vote for a Republican in preference to any gentleman who sustains tine Administration. (Applx w so on the Republican side, intermingled with i see. in the oth side.) e r. "Mika maid that Anima} doubted the gentleman would vote :pr the Repliblican as against a Democrat. Ho reperve that the object of this unlawful attempt to het upon that resolution wag to shield gentlemen from the responaibility of doing indirectly what they would not do directly. Mr. Illegal aH. !have never conceded anywhere what net ultimate action would he. I pretthe election of a round Demonist . that, I Illegal a me rat opposed to the Alltnlttietration—an anti-Limo stun Democrat. I have endeavored for n week to elect such a man, hot 1 alit beginning to fear that I /Mill be unable to minium mote that work. I believe that either a (rulet of the Administration or a Republican is ultimately to be elect ed Speaker. lam frank to nay, tot at event. I nave de cioed °Tithe choice of the latter. I have offered this esolution fop the freirpoee of reaching an organ.sation. If the Administration early succeed. T trust Ishall anti- Mit in becoming spirit. I run perfectly willing that every mot io n to!he country shall know my views. Let the motion mend the journal be put to the House to decide. Air. Aalxa. of Virginia, said the mitten was unne eesnary, on hip view of thesubject. If the gentleman ttuug@nppt to vote to i r m t hoeimllgiu.hol,icitanndn thus An ds s e and t q tti n e s s e . tion. An men who has witnessed that gentleman's course for the lasttwo years could doubt that he wouldat tact land in the Republican ranks. tie says he wants sound Democrat elected. and yet will vote with the Republierins. Who does he fool by smith &doctrine as that The members of the Democratic party ate here to perform a loch and holy duty to their eggestry. I want film to be underntond ti a Birk Republican who only takee the ti rth e of Demoo for the purpose of gidttrinkiNg inisleedint, Le me sok him, would e ygte for Mr. beck to-day if he would•rise and say that he ,wan °epee id to the Ado inietwition ? Mr. HICIIMAN. I will state frankly and unequivocally that I world not. and viva my reasnna which are en tirely *efficient for itself I would not do it because I know Dint Mr Beenek suits nod the Administration in everything m bite done. and I in no. a believer in "eleventh hitier" repentance. [Laughter., As to the Omni of my bathe a Black Republican, that is a ewe lion for me to decide. and not for the gentleman from Vi re in a. I Shall continue to regard myself as a Demo crat until I find th-t the Demneritie party in the •enion of country where I bele , . have the morel and physical co-en in exclude me from it. I think I stand by the car dinal drietrlnes of the Democratic tarty. I think I have always done en. repudiate and condemn the semi mentatintertained by the Administration and its follnw ere. If they are Demers ts, I,.itm no DemOcrat. The euristlep the gentlehinn tram ttircitiot has undertaken to decide in one that gannet be decided hr him or hr the Whole Virginia delegation. It ie a quentdm that Will be decoded by the country as to who emb -dies the Democratic) sentiment—whether James Buchanan. or that. who entertain the sentiments of the Cincinnati platform in its integrity and entirety. Mr fintirw, in reply, remarked that the le unction. " Idan. know thyself," was one of the most difficult to learn. The gentleman avga 'lathe man to Ridge himself, but he i Mr. Smith/ and others were to elassify turn. lie therefore. classed the gentleman with the bleakest of the Black tteptthlicting. as acting with them not only thia but on mutt occasions There are gentlemen hoheetly opposed to the Kaman polio, of the Adminis tration. who are acting with the Democrats and not co operating with the Republicans. Since than question hits passed to the future and is no longer a living issue, yeti. should Democrats differ (invent Prints, pl s? Mr. CLAPII. of New York. inquired whether the gnu port oL the Democratic organisation was a test of Demo craws Id r. aanxa replied that it wax, tis e general rule ; an orianisation la to carry out the ptinniples of the party. Mr. auk naked What excuse a man could have who won elected against an orranixation, and was with out sympathy with any, where no principle was In volved ? Mr. Rimini explained that a man might be elected against the organisittion, and yet might be a good De mnorat. Mr. CLARK Mild he represented his tonetithents. who were opposed to the political cream nations throughout the Union. Mf~r. Are yott a Republican or a Democrat ? jilr. CLARK. I am opposed to all organizations BMITU. Then the gentleno in an hhmaelite. Hie, hand le against out parties. Ho t he was not here areinst the Constitution and t he Union. He (Mr. Smith) was sure of that. Mr. CL•ne. No. sir ; lam tint. Mr. Bolin inquired which part• maintains the princi ples of the Cenntitution. Is it the Republican or Demo cratic party? rer. CLARX raid he came into the last Canness as a Democrat. Ile wee a Democrat now, but wee net at tached to the franmeratio party of this. House or hie district. lie took hie spat in the brat Corals'ne with those whom Ira unposed to be _pledged to the P 001..- crank.. platform ; lie merit the Northern exposit., or it. Ile had rot bean here long before he fooral adore thnn one ea:glottal party. He heard the gentleman from South Carolina, var. Miles ) say la Routh wee extremely section'. anal then besot the doubt whether he belorgecl anywhere, and that doubt wan not yet removed: We woe a national men with Northern sentiment... looking for the preservation of the Union, and looking for national teen to co-operate with him. He eared leis about party than for his county , . f Applause.l Mr. Mit.Es, of Reath Carolina, in response. remarked thin on the occasion Mr. Clark alluded to. he did not ray the Souther.; notional in all its aims oind purpose.. Bat he did RAY. and he had repented it. the , he was a seasonal roan; that he was first devoted heart and soul to the interests of has immediate connituents and State. us owed his,ehief anti primary allegiance to South flarnlinri. which had a prominent claim on his love. at feetion. end devotion, as she had on every one of hot eon , . Even If it was trite that the South was now um tionnt.-even if it was true that there was a sectional epttit there -would she not be Minified • The gentle man front NeW York (Mr. Clark) said he first came into thus House execrating to find but one sectional tarty. lint that he very soon discovered another seasonal parts. Wag that strange? Did not like beset like? Could you have a sectional party et the North without ez• tenting to have one strafed riskiest it at the South Were they of the South to he reproached for a Sec tionnlisM which bad been thrust upon them They would fight fire with fire and meet force with Mr.. if necessary. By doing so they would net surrender any patriotic, motive or the lore of country which should animate every citizen. Mr. fiLasia said Mr. Miles Wal the xentlemanlowborn he had referred. He (Mr. Clark) never was. arid never would he, a sectional man. He wu a representative of the rreat city of New York-a cite which could net af ford to send a stational man to Convese. She could not consent that the chain of wealth which ennnecte her with the icher States should be broken. He hull.. salted ac Abolitionist Ills attention lied been celled to the Co. newspaper of the 7th leer., which contains a term: of the Congressionalproceedings. and which uses the followine " He I Me. Clark) of Washington." No doubt this wee either an error of lcul not bcon an Abolitionist until he Caine to the city the reporter or a maprant Ile had said that he had never sees an Abolitionist till he Mlle here. In easing hie he dad not refer to the member+ of the Republican pear ; they are not retarded as Abolitionists in that city. He did not regard the Reraublieno party art an Abolition party; there may to Abolitionist. who entertain the same political opinions Knaves, with that organization. But it so happened that he had no personal aequaint acre with any such who reside in his district He then defined what he meant by Atonlitiontern-those who wrand interfere, by virile., with the relation of master and slave. The recent affar at Harper's Ferry fur nished a strong illustration n r practical Abolisonram in its most hideous form. If Moro tro in the Northern States men who advt.c and counsel and incite such Pro ceedings, they are Abolitionists, and only Inch the de inonbie courage. the horrible re-klessneas. which che recterized their leader. If those were Abolitranists who would contribute mogey or otherwise make compensa tion to the muster for the nervteo of his slave. and in (consideration of the surrender of his title, he knew Lre were thousand. of them at the North. If to differ m the Administration ne to its whole Territorial ',obey -if to dissent from the action of the majority of the De nmeptho ORanixn boll in Congress ns to the alanisoon of Kansas into the Union, requires those who so differ end dies•rit to he classed as Ateilltionats, then tie &aimed the right to beer the 1141110 and gloom the honor. If he was an Abolition:et fo• these reasons, there were million. of them at the North. Mr. SMITH Iresumincl said he was well acquainted with Stir Clark, and die not believe there w. an Abu lotion feeling in his heart. or a drop of Abolition blood in his veins. The principles of a pert• are those acted on b. a party. Organisations are the means to_per restage them. Differences exist in tarry. They exist in the Democratte poise. Mr. Braraek was not put up bee.eo ha wail Kit Administration man. but beelines he had been long an le nored Democrat. Mr. South de nounced the inconsistency of Mr. Clank's conduct. in being elected es a Democrat and refusing to act with the party. Mr. etas's inquired whether Mr. Smith would de•m it good ernarad for a dissolutoon of the Union tf he should find the people of the worth combined us a seo• tionelparty asitnet the South. Me. Patten. P henever a combination of the majority le formed for the purpose of warring on he con.trtu snnal Tlfhts of any section of the Union, I am out of it. (Aeplauge.) Mr. Cr.se it. So am I. sir: but that is not the eines tinn. It a Freentont of the United Sintea shall be elect ed tin one serttoo, either North ornuth who ers• un ent.efeetory to the ntlier . portion, woul d you regard that s. just eau. for dineolvlon the Union. an advance of any trampling on the nicht' of the South ? Mr. Shout. No man van 101 l what a day noay bring forth. It le unnecessary to declare what I will do in a oontingeney which may never arise. Ha ins been elected a Democrat. and the Imes on who(' you differ with the party hams missed away. will you redeen , your agreement by declaring Yourself* Democrat and noting with the parts.? Mr. CL sax. My constituentx would never sustain me if I should have political consort with those aerie. an the event of certain men being elected eresodent-howeler anxious they, might be-without awaiting for some overt act or violation of a constitutional rich , would deem it sufficient ground for the draeolution of the Union. (APplause.) I now beg my foetid to answer my question. Mr. Shinn. The gentleman Teel!, tree very earnest ly to get rad of the necipseity of dealing with his present with i t o h n D a m sk c h et onaetmo r w h h h ßla v k ua p u ubl i i ta an party? Mr CLARK. I will AMMO!' that question. Mr. (Mum. Say yes or no. Don't crake a speech about it Mr. CT-Ault. I cannot oxtails° find nut where the De mragatio party in; I have looked for it in the Cumin nati platform. but it in not there. apple...l lAM willing to net with any party in thi•llonse which is de termined to uphold the Constitution in all its marlin tees-to trample on nn right. North nr South. I intend to exercise whoever discretion. ratellent,or enreetenee I may have upon any rumour° which may come herons the House I care noth ins for party. but Intend to five votes which I think are field. Panty organization I once nothing about. ( found myself compelled, during much of the Prat Congress. to act with the Republican tparty. because upon the num. of Kansas. the ques ion of the ndnnvelon of new Slates-which. nfler is the most impel rant political question before the people-I found then voted right. whether they tallied right or no , . Whenever a quern,nn nueee where my honorable friend and nisself con stand together in de fense of every one of the constitutional rights of the Booth. I assure him he will and me at hi. sole. 51r Roll tit. Then. I under: and the rennet.* from Now York toss, that ho has fonnatthe ennetitutranel party in the Blank Reptralocan party ; for ha has sot to find It either in that party ea- Coe Democratic party. He tell. on he acted with them a:urine the last semen trans certain leading fa ere and from the diameter of his remarks now. I Corals , roes he conneives he has found them to be the national, Union-lot tai party in this country. Mr. Cr. twit (i^torrnating). I did not itinT nn, so Mr. ISM In. It you did nct tl7 so, do you moan t.i - Mr. CL Pa made an reply. Me. Swint went on to any that he had taken pp erse:it ground star since 1104. when he saw. from the din elopniente made in this hall, that there was an abso lute nenessity that the South should present itself as unit—not as a means o' preserving the reign, hat ea or nieces of preserving itself. Ile wool., not onoerteke to env that it any particular man should he el , Presi dent. he would immedintely favor the diesolution of the Union. " Sufficient for the de,' in tie evil thereof." Ile maintained th at _ the House bad no right to let 'timer - may orgnnize it. rt is well known that a rennin number in tend to no over to Sherman whenever It is necessary. Let them do it like men, and let their constituents set tin the question. Mr Crazy. of dlehamq. There is a time, Mr. Clerk , when a whole people, like an individmil, holds their breath in missenee. anzinuel l y waiting the iteromPli - Tont of events. These par rails of time. which enure A like night intervenors between sorross,s . the d• atinfer of people. The excitement prevailing in the public( mind—the manifestation of interest- here and elsewhere. admonishes nether thin may perhaps he such an occasion. Nor dose this !moment and profound Notation of the public mind arise supply from t n qua.- Rion of the organization of this House, nor does it arise from the question relating to the publication and then , 'atom of incendiary pamphlets: nor does it net. hut in a modified degree. from the murderous incursion winch wan recently made into the Commonwealth of Virginia These are but incidents to the groat prin.. mote which is at stake. Now. the real cause of the agitation of the nubile mind anew from the question Which hen arisen here: That property iii man is crone; that the African is the equal of the white man • th it he is et citizen ofthesited State.. nod that 'he entitled to the urialletes and immiinitiee of other N o n e.. This tho rreat secret of the agita tion of the pirbho mind. This IN the seeret MOM tilf fieUlt, It is the general einsmficntion to which I have minded. end with regard to which here are modifica tions of opinions snd sentiment. The representatives of one extreme. and perhaps in the mamma. is Wit. ham Lint (I Gnomon. The other. representing the mini natiin of that feeling, is perhapa the dietinguotheil Repro sent - rnse front Ohlo, (Mr Corwin ) Now I will Bun. In the spirit ci that charity which I . ..doh:ea in the truth, that [ {ho not propose to hold the Republican pert' re. eponsit.le for inn excesses committed be men trohling anti-slavery -opinions. Ido not intend to charge any of that payty with emnolicitg—for, Iron, the bottom of me heart. I acquit them of Mt popp mai or %%gime.' romp i cor —ln the raid lately torolerhto Vi reinia. I en further nnJ gay. that I accept ilia plea interposed and ph :el upon the record, and that 1 arn willint to allow thc man tle of ignorance to cover the act of toning the recom mendatton of an Ineerirliars painphlet. I proposer ill can, tO Manta' the eironple set by the dig.ingtoshed ecittle man from Ohio I Mr. Corwin., Co far 'is I net ale, wit h Inuits-I rapacity. to ma to the hoisht of this great argument, and treat the grave and important subect as a philompher, a ittatirlMita, end a eibsen of the country, But I insknthi. averment that the ideas and erincieles and petitioned' the flepliffilloan dirty are nay °entente belittle toelys Constitution and kith, rights end interests of the South The erirpmento adduced assume MI antagonism between thpepossietintronzinedlirs'i`n.igrreateeess-, sible conflict" between, and the 'dens put forth in your so no Monis to your' . pupil,. through eget tellilie lectures throes'. emu psi-,, litical add ream,• through yeyr 'omelettes 'Melees. and through your I.; dieressionat mimicries preseppere end' imp y this auteconiert. and tie is the tenet oriental who stops short in his career and hesitates at the eeern?e of he recesior l y mega ot the meomPlieffolee r ta el purposes. 'I slavery lie A ernes amnia e *ll ' Against humanity—if it he a curse to sodiety—if it contains the fruitful seeds of unremedble woes. It u as vein to talk eft mnderatide end the onetadtion and non-interference with the rights of k ite gotta', MI it would be to propel a skiff up the surging cataract 'of the Niagara. The Medi *trimmed, inculcated. moat principles avowed, the &wined s prettier.), theleas mat have their Idneal develoelnent add result. The "Lord Georek Gloribin ridts of 175 J" when Leindan was in the possession of an infuriated mob. headed by a madman. and when the proceeding. of Parliament were almost suspended, when eiyil authority rts pros trated. and when the people were under the influence of the ravage cry of "no Popery." are but a fair illus tration of the effect of fedineigm. and folly. The re cent invasion that llife bath lade tette the 844 of Vir ginia (although disavowed and repudiated. as I have no doubt honestly and conscientiously. by most. if not all, of the gentlemen on that side of the Howie) is, in me iudentent, the neceseary.lociotLineviableeequenee of your principles and your doctrines. I propose to ad dress myself calmly and inofferamelyee the House and to the count''. Properly appreciating my reetintilli - Witt tied the high position which we hold. I shall not be en far recreant to what I belie , e to be due to myself arid my ctinatiluente to to videttl that rule to-day, I prilpose te show the effect and the tame fore consequence of thie mitt-slavery agitation and feeder. I am conscious of the fact that there ate in the Northern States two distinet abtieavivery oscine- I ration.—one represented by William Lloyd Gam. , son, Wendell Phillips , end others, end the °thine represented by the Republican party of the North. And. I repeat again. that Ido not hold the Republican party personally respocsible either Mr the doctrines avowed er far the 'etageres advocated by the 4aryienn perty. I have A different,phredae In the lathe? that I will sub 'sit; that In. to delmanstrate us theta o you who shnek Pam the doctrines avowed by theft party, that either dourselves -. through you. none auceemors, will he riven to the assumption of thesepnneireez. In Ihee. in an address issued by the Pun Rlevery Society of Mataohneette. pertielpeted in by Wiliam Lloyd ,Gar risen and lethal of that type of anti-sleNete men, 'I Bad recorded these senterients:—That they were not willing to secure the emancipation of the slaves at the expense of the safety of the whites: that they would not advo l rate the rigs t of physical resistance on the part of the oppresmet and that they would not sacrifice the Ilford' a sinele sleveholder to, emancipate evere, slave in the' United gotten. Tilet in the optima Whieh was promul gated officielly he Gaeriann Ittra thee , whom the gentle men from New York (Mr. Clerk i affirms a-c the ithe. !infatuate petted In 1859, Wendell Phillips, in his speech in Brooklyn the other day, need this Menage in regard to John Brown and his incursion iron V17.1111114: It is the natural result." he said. "of anti-slaver, teaching. For de, I accept it. I expected it." That is the positive to which they have teen driven be this volume or anti-slavery ,effintiments in the North. In Pat the Whig patty, in Nana' Ceonvetaleali resolved that the Compromise meas u res, tech:Wide the foxieve slave law, were a finality. in principle and imbiratiee. In six years from that time we find the great State, of (thin. throurh the Republiren Convention, resolving that the regales-slave law Ishnald be repealed. as de 'erectors of the rights of the States, and subversive of the moral sense of mankind. Even Demeerats were driven into the enenciatioe of extreme principles and tirctnnes from which, but two .1 , three memo hirer.. ey weed eave,shreek back wit t y. Mann mid ledigna .,i non. The feettive-strive law heelbeen millified. They) went so far in Massachesette se to Reedville commis sion to defend slaves in the court, of to State e and any laweer who sere-ts the ease of a olniment is to be -etruok from the roll ef atemner. and to be incapacitated from holdine dime. In Whim - mei n. also, there is e simile?' statute nullifeing the faxitive-slave law, and which nreventa its exeoution in that Stele. co far es the whale power of the elate Government, mu accomplish that purpose. I state this. te show that the Republieat orate were driven by events into the Reirumption of dootrines from which a few, yeays ago they, wotsT e have shrunk. But that in net all y . A distinetibed eater from New York hoest-d in fhis Capitol that a hundred representatives of the people. and some fifteen Sea ton. held these sentiments—sentiments which twenty rears aro ware not entertains it by twenty men in the whole Northern States e • and ye we are told to be under , no apprehension—to feel no special alarm! When ' these are the sentiments of the people of the North. WP have coed grnund for apprehension. Mr. Cueny_then referred to the law established is some of the Northern Slated. reeler negrosethe right of suffrage; to the operation of the tlithitirgrrqed, Mil road. end to the frequent mildew,. of the legatee slave law. an *retied that the South had good Mann to lie tinder apprehension. It was a poor areameat to advance that there were no more Territories to people, re es that. therefnre. the question of slavery or, no very in the Territories was not us for dlecnion. ( w an not the Reublican party organised distinctly. avowedly. and sole ly for the patn.. of preventing the extension of slavery tete the Temkin.* ? Ifyou do not mese to Meek es. fait you do one to interfere with slavery, di'snlve your orgarozation • and peat out of your power. in that respect, to do se an 1101. , use wit—l put it to your hearts and co-scienree—if yon had the pewee would you not repeal the Native-slave law ? There is nq negative resuoilee ta that. if you had the rinser of the Government to abolish slavery and render slave property insecure, would you not do it? Mr. KiLannz. of Indiana. .lo; net in the Southern States. im. Creete. Why. tu He" free States no legistsaion week) be necessary on the subject, hut you would gradually narrow and limit our ground until all of as weind hereto dee from thecountrg °lcier °cottager and nsaideoce. These are your avowed OPIn One tarChlgh the newspaper. and through your representatives in Congeess; and still we are told to dismiss our appre hensions and ditto's in no fears as to the results I ea tiredly. that the aneiviting principle of the Reentdieen party is oppootion to the ereneion of slavery in the Territories. Thiele the th e which binds the hater°. geneous macs together. Without that you would fall to dere Crone once. Mr. s oene then went on to show that GOVerIIOI . Chs...c. in a speech roc-deli delivereel by him et Boston. "emote d that every Government offieial should be ins- 1 ii 'ie. with ant -slavery doetnres, and that theepnneiple aileuld be one of the teen or getting appointments. Ili also referred to Mr. Fil mote's Albany speech is mes,, ar, !ratify in the ition which the South now ee -1 sums . and continue d —if po the North elected Mr. Sew ard cr it r. Chme, or any other member of the Remibli din pony. on a sectional platform. each an elegaion was hindsrestated. to great ruption of every tie w,hich tocether the Contedersey. [Applause Irom the Democntee bone bee.! The election of each men would indicate hostility to us. That would be an assu rance of our sitbiugetion. and deprivation of all seen nty in the (eters. That would be A calamity indeed. and to enbmit to it would bo a calamity embittered by ' disgrace. Mr. ETH na , D 0 11. et Tennessee. I wish to sane gen tlemen for information, and in elder to suide my future conduct. He avowed his opinion a cnomopl ant, es to what he will do lea certain contingeneY if a certain person is elected President of the United States. I de sire to know whether or not the honorable gentleman from Virginia (Mr. Becook I Po wheat he votes for Speaker. is of the same opinion? rm. Cue ay save no response, bat continued. He said. referring to the recent Union demenetrations e that though these were more or leas gmtifetng. as evincing a returning sense of Justice at the North. yet they amounted to nothing—they were not the true index of public, opinion. The test of public opinion was through the ballot tem. and looking to than last he found that New England stood here arrayed ist a solid phalanx against the consbnitional rights of the South; that New 1 ork stood here with but four or five Representatives disposed to befriend the South and Southern rights. and the fame Wes true, toe greater or leas extent. In regard to Pennsylvania. Ohio. and other States. When he looked at these indioatians. he wee not to be tailed into security by demonstrations at Unto; meetings. The parade declaration and eloquent. vindication of the union were but ne the singing or Welt— " The voice of the charmer, Charmins never so wisely," tellies the South and deceiving the worth In regard to the snmendonexase of the present crisis. If they were in earnest in these )lachaations, let them give to the Smith something practical. substantim. and tangible. Let them eo home and repeal their perional-liberty bills: their habeas corpus acts t their mandamus eels Let them Oleente their fuotive-slave taw; let them open their Prisons for the sere-keeping of fugitive slaves; let them refuse contributions of money i•, smut ate Mee/Wimp Vim phleta at the South; lot teen tare out -f this hall and senate the men who come to inselt and stermatize the Notate These would be indications of pubbereneme and tested' retueetne justice. He would pot deny that there existed in his State seriolle some hensionsin regard to the cense quenres of this agitation. There were men at the South who. while wishing that the Gorernment inight ...tin..darer...and happy. still recernised the fact that clouds and direness were gathering over the fatare which only the. ye of the seer could penetrate. lime eon stiteente looked solely to the Democracy of the North as the native' allies of the Coneritetion and the South. Admitting that taut men had JOllletlteel used the pres tige of the Democracy for ill, and lied abused its toe fi deuce, still they must recollect that it bad bees fruitful of crest names and great deeds. In war a had been the country's friend : in pears it hen dintributed lamely to the country's primperity. Its disbandment now wochl be la senors calamity. In enucal periods of the soon try's hater,' It had been the saviour of the Constantine, and the defender of the country's honor. Its onset pies had hecntne part of our mental hahaudes sod be trusted it would be adequate to the stneendous conflict ahead of ' us If. said he. the Democrats and our A merican (needs Should not be able to interpose for the security of the outh, and the protection of the Constitution. I shall counsel the people of my State to offer the most ef fentual reeintence. rend shell urge them to fling them reeve o hack on their reserved rig hes, sail u the ina lienable 'overcoat' of the State le which I pon owe my first and lest allemenee l [Applause from the Dermo t:ratin beeches and the gallendel Mr. Kar.coe. of Illinois. .1 would do fault to my , /relines end Ilene e of propriety if I did not take the ear-1 best opportunity to make an apology to this Ilona for the much-to-he-regretted occurrence Sill! h took place in this ball yesterday . . It mu an offence to its dignity— & breech of as harmony and decorum—ens for tt / Ma der to this body my Ind my geolog Loos'. Mr. Loo. of Illinois. After what hes by. een said by my worthy colleerue, I conceive It to be my duty to tan to this House, that if, in the eiritement y aterdey, I violated any of the rule* of this House, or as decorum. I regret it very much and hope it will not tend to mar any of me relation" with tee members of 'his House. Mr. lone Cool amts. of New York. Alter this eesto canon of the entrate conflate. 1 move that this House 'do now &bourn. The motion w a carried by a Vote of 112 to Mil. Adjourned at a quarter to three o'clock. Georgia Democratic Conventios. BOY. ROWELL COBS TOR TUE PRESIDENCT. MILLRDOMV LLE. fjy r Deo. 10.—The Pen:mentos State Convention. row in e anion here. has adopted a resolution recommending the claims of Bon. Howell Cobh for the Presidency. A umber of the members of the Convention have withdrawn, argon that the Con vention it Irregular and unauthorized. Later California News. Br. burly, Deo. 10.—The overland mail. from Fan Francisco on the 17th ult., paned Mallory's station. at the western end or the orerie rid telegraph hoe. thui morning, but from the absence of the keys of the mad Iris. the Associated Press in again deprired of Its sum trk. ry. The eiddernia news by time mail will probably renal hero on Sunday night. Damages Obtained against the M. S. unit N. I. It. A. Co. Tot.lhO, Dee. la —ln the ones of Ehhlth and D. C. Sen dorf Ns. the Michigan fkinthern and Northern Indiana Railroad tom any. for damages enema out of the de struction of depot, budding'. et-.,s erdtet of 811,11:1 for the pLeintiffu has been awarded. Destructive Eire at Providence. Peovtnance. Dec. 10—The Blom ofismee Rhodes was dento.ed by fire l* yeuteeny, together 'with four hundred tale . of Mob, The kin" I] about *WWI Wreck of Surveying Steamer Fenimore Cooper. llosroa. Dee. 11.—Intelligence hail boon reran red that the Government eurreying steamer Fenimore tooter has been wrecke.l in the harbar or $11.1311621, )*van. All hand. were sued. '1 he renal wee *total loss. Secession in the South Carolina Le gislature. WA .111 ,, C. Dec. 11.—The Charleston Courier says that the C untroitee on Fedora Relations in the South Carolina Letis'ature en Wednevday recomenended the thea• of resolutions reathrnunt the pouting of the si.re ..e osnreeaed in the Convention of JAC. declaring r • ,secede from the Federal Union. sod tent the ar nuld make common cause with Ih:weer Var :,,, • ‘, and be prepared to sustain her rind cation of the •i• .utions ef the &nth. minnrity of the committee presented resolutions eclatint thnt the Southern frontier Btateaeseeetal y. and the Smith' rn Suites tenerallr may rely on the aid of s„„ t h G ent hev in the vindication of their nehts. eit h er te er nut of :ha L nmxthed that the military con tinuant fund of the State he inereaaetltn Sw i m. the debate on the resolution will be proceeded with to morrow. Question of Jur indiction. pss*srivssis vs. vino. Ft rr.sr so, Dec. IC.— This morning the District Court nranted a rule upon Joseph K. Edgerton, receiver for toe Pittsburg. Fort Wane. and Chicano Railroad, ap pointed by the Circuit Court for the northern district of Ohio, to show cause why an attachment shall not he issued against him for obstructing T. Haskins Dupe, in the discharge of his duty as seitusstrator. A hearing was had this afternoon Aft. Ed anon applied for time to answer and appear by eounsai. Toe court fixed Nt turdny neat for argument. alter Mr Filsarkm made a promrse. in open court, that he would not interfere with r. Wetly in the dischvrge of his chateau sequestrator in Pennolvsnot until the question of iurialiefton hed been nettled. • • • Mr. Welly in now in undisputed custody of the road and a operating the Same. Front Washington. W•1111,1T.N. —ACC‘11,1111; to the opinion, of !imminent Congreasmon, it 1, not probable that the election of Speaker will ba etfected in she Moon to morrow. Indeed, no idea an tie formed as to how tong the debate may be extended. Calcula tions continue to be made initiode of the Re publican rankness to the best means for uniting with the Peinoctatt, the Southern Oppaition. end such Anti- Lecoinptoil Democrats ea lIIVO not yet voted for Mr. Rocock. 1. , p to this evetuns. they Wave not come to any ßae Oinlet. , ry erten:term:rot at the heave.. Lnter from Havana. New OALikn., Dec. 10.—The stesoinship De Soto bee arrireo I roin linesus. with dates to the rth inst. &leaf elnaed ',meant, And bottlers demand an advance ill prices. The stocg on hand in reduced, end the market dented unsettled and excited. Exchange on New York 5. Union Demonstration at Harrisburg. it 1811!Bal'AG, Den 10 -Erentne.—An immente reunn demonstration is now in progress at the Court Bound. Gen. A. L. Roumfort presides. 6811944 by a tarts num -1 er of our most respectable citizens. SPeriehes hone been made by John C. Balla. of PAlN dolietoa. and Mesa's. Doses. Aldneos, and Lamberic*n. Harrieburg. A series of patriotic resolutions. ltitlirizu ff. afiller, have been adopted, and the SITIFINI nnthasuutu prevail*. ,T. itr , el T, Y - • • ,4 FIZZ ON OATORDAT midnight on Saturday., a fire broke out in the teed store of Milton Bonnets, situated at the northeast corner of Second and Montgomery streets. The flames originated among a lot of bay that had bona stowed away by the owner. The origin et these tames was attributed to some hot web that fell through the door from a burning Move. The next building to that of Mr. Banners was an old hotel, once known as the Beg Bon" but latterly as the Farmers' and Mechanics' Hotel. A pordon of the - cellar under this hotel was occupied by Mr. Ben ner as a* reeeptaele of hay. The limes burned very stubbornly in the cellar, and made their way upward. They continued to barn for over twohounr, and it was found dlillealt to quench them. The hay produced an IMEMIIIIIII gustily of smoke, and it seemed that the flames were tears extensive than stibeequent investigation proved to be the ease. A great deal of excitement emitted, and the boarders in the hotel made their appenranee in the moat frightened and unfashionable manner. The firemen were on the ground in unusual force, and poured the water on the building to en extraordi nary extent. When the fire commenced no engi neer was present, and the firemen had it all their own way. Wherever there was a sign of "mkt, one of the streams was directed, and before Mr. Fru* or Mr. Young arrived enough water had been thrown upon the building to float a small float of naval frigates. The cellars adjoining, and the buildings in the neighborhood, were damaged by the water to en Incredible extent. The buildings thus damaged Mere not at all injured by the fire, and the damage will be that alone occasioned by the-firemen. The damage to Mr. Benner's stock is estimated at POO. It is covered by $OOO -tantrum.- Abe damage to the hotel is $1,500; no insurance.' Both buildings belonged to Mrs. Rex. Her loss 15 folly covered by insuranott. FATAL AOCIDENT ow SATCB.DAY ETEBI3O-- On Saturday evening, between seven and eight o'clock, a MOM named Patrick Marian. attempt ed to get upon the trent platform of a passenger railway car of the Citizen's lhae, in Tenth street, below. Arch. A number of persons were standing upon the platform, and Mr. MoErlane missed Us footing. He fell with his right leg under the trout wheel. The latter passed over the thigh longitu dinally, lacerating it in a horrible manner, and fracturing the bone. The "Offerer wan Immediate ly carried into Hodgeon's drugstore, on the cor ner, where he died in a few minutes. lie bled to death, the main artery having been completely eevercd. The deceased was about thirty-fireryears of age. He left wife and three children. They live in Eleventh street, above Carpenter. - Idr. Me.Erlan• was a bricklayer by trade. The body was eon rayed to the Ninth-ward station-house, where in hyped was commeneed by Alderman Hibbard, Coroner Fenner being 111. In ormouptence of the absence of important witnesses, the raped was continued until this morning. The darer and conductor of the ear gave ball to appear, if want ed. ARREST OF A BOARDING-110USE SITINDLEE-- On Saturday, ,Deteetives Callanan, Levy. and Somers, arrested a young man, with an extensive pollee reputation, named Piebald Peters, on the charge of swindling sundry keepers of boarding housal to thie city. Ile bar the usual number of alien's so peculiar to his fraternity, and has a moat pleasing, Peekvnifban address- Not more than nineteen years of ass, his record is es nem eive se the majority of thirty-year•old rascals. The specific charge leading to kin arrest was that of robbing a hotel Su Chestnat-street wharf. He was on the road to a pawnbroker's shop, with two stolen oirsturats, wearing 'a pair of stolen panta loons when taken In custody. Alderman Bottler eommltted him for a further bearing. The goods, recovered from him are at the Central Station. A RUNAWAY RAISCLL Asaserico.—& few weeks since a celebrated burglar named Horatio Ennis was arrested by Officer Bartholomew. When in custody of that gentleman. be was pilfered to make bit escape from the Central Station. Mr. Baatholemew was aeneured for the °eminence. but, determining to lose no time in redeeming himself, started on the tenth for Ennis. A • •mtdingly, be traced him through the Western °wintry, as far as St. Louis, where, en Friday, be took him In custo dy. Be will be brought home, it is thought, to. day. , New Tharnoxo ra Oraitaxion —The Thir- teenth and Fifteenth-streets Paarenger Bellamy commenced °petitions today. Twenty can hare been procured, and it is arranged that one car shall ran every Are minutes. The road is intended to connect with the Beading and Baltimore depute, thereby proving a great convenience to the travel. ling rubtie. The directors here effected as ar rangement by which this road will connect with any other road in the city on the exchange Balmi er commutation ticket "intern. Fula Liar Evian:ad.—About nine o'clock last evening there was an alarm of Are, occasioned by the burning of a cooper's shop, on Front street, near Washington. The shop belonged to Mews, Johnston & Appleton, and was nearly deatreyed. The fire is believed to have been the work of ante. cendlary. The The Marshal has the matter under consideration. A SINGULAR DZATEL—Art infant about sit months of ego, and a sae of Mr. Wiliam Pato. re siding at Adams and Holman streets, in the Nine. teenth ward, was found dead in its bed on &tar. day morning. The supposition was that if bad been overlaid during the night by its - .parents. Coroner Fenner wits notified. Tan WILMEa continues cold—very cold. Yesterday it was very cloudy, and people looted as if they expected snow. These are glorious times far anthracite Area, early hour; and the eomftnix of a genial fireside. Lao Btolllll.-011. Saturday, an aged man earned Levi Jackson was ran over by a esel-eart near the Boring Garden Water We**. BL leg lite fractured. - Mr. Jackson resided ist the Isstfila hothead, and was over TO years of age. FINANCVM AM) .COMMERCIAL. Tim 1111oaav Market. Peesalmaraza. Deane her "lila. Th • business of the stook exchange to-dar Iseteihrd tales of 13,8 bends, 330 Miami Relay limit Naticabcs. 11:13 shams Reading Raitroed, 1W sham Peanseirsata Railroad. ft thane Long Idaed. aid p dams Cotraaer eial Rank. Long Island Nod fiebnyllull Navigation pre ferred adraneed *-1111 the other Mocks were Wary, with prices destining. Reliable knee are steady at previous quotations. but no drapouties is !aesthetes to invest to seennties tainted in any way with Oath& • - The Pittsburg Pest of Pride, mates the Tittabetry. Fort Wayne and Chicago Railroad trouble Murat " On Timed**, of this week. Messrs. Moran sad Tom •ft ormon. of New Yost. renew. tine venom penman holding hoods mums Irr the Ohio and Pearreriegaja Railroad Company. made spetreetion to the Leiod suits Dretnet Coon for as Xerteera Dessreet of Mo. for an injunctive and recerarer for the Pittsburg, port. Wayne and Chicano Radmut On this tr -.!erte matt taco, the court, me Wednesday. irmeb'd the oliealeakaa. and named J. 11C-Pdaartrea- Rag, of Fort Ways*. and the cite-president attar cosesemy miming " be these proceedings Ware witheist ashes to the eem pony. and. edemas*. no toenail limns present to represent them. the coon made a prelionosnr decree. with leave spun *apart of eke emarmuiy. to more for the roe %too of the present receirer and to. userolfica two of the derw, the who're priourchas being wittiest preLudree tirnaloo of the ememear. Domestic creditors here. harm: lodgments 'rarest the company beenot of the aborts emeeedints ass - b nem apprebenaire that their nada might be comilead. e write, &relied to the Dierrice Coen for • mreuesi re tor. The apriteetron was made by Meson. Park, Mc- Curdy it Co- end others r and ;ranted be the mart. se w:e.t.a( T. Restous Po Pas. PM.. asersese ran.. This prompt moremeat an the part of Part. Ma- Carey. k Co., god Where. TO rearm the tomniolden aerator the road • to their prejudice, sad to the prep, dies of this rots. If the teeeirer.perakeed les t‘e Vetted States Diana Court re Ohm. latit mantra. to chits primeaton of the mad to this Mate: we pre sume ear Rtale coats would mead, to the but eiteat of their aotheritr. We understand that Um came of the company here. not briar advised of liNtaPO. ,6o . of art wo man of the road by the degree ce the Okla eallt. did tint feel warranted to emotes the &seem orediten, or the, meld thereby do emu ilihune•- • With the road in the heeds of different »minim it is evident that the public e editors sad shambeldera tonal ere tip safer and tt is to be hoped that it will aot loot remain or It meanie to on that the Pry York rep nesoatahrea of the boodboidorplare parsed a rery adirmed owns. out are tae really teeiroseelde Partme for the pnreoest earmtgante Imbroglio. If Meows Yee ran mad Told Rodinaa had woe before the board of