i ' 711 • „. „ :•••-• - • MONDAY, JANUARY 9, 1860, 'Plan PAOS.—Authors and• Books; Now PAR callous ;• tatter from New York ; Passenger Rail roads at Harrisburg ; By Telegraph : Congreeslon al; Further from California; Personal and Folio se;, &a. FomttU PAGE.—The Courts; Llet of Lot tors. . , The News: William Kraft, oonvioted•of setting fire to his • own workshop, for the manufacture, of .pieture frames, was on Saturday sentoneed by 'Judge Al lison to undergo an imprfsonment erten years In the Restern Penitentiary. ;Peter A. Browne, Esq., a distinguished member of the Philadelphia bar, died In this city on Satur day. . . 'The steamship Arabia arrived at New York yes terday, with three days later news, whiolt will be found ; in our paper to-day. The funeral services of the late Bishop Neumann will take pitioe in this city to-day, and will be of a ieleraisnd inspresalve nature. ..Two hundred and seventeen deaths occurred In this:eity last week, an increase of twenty-nine over the Week previous. -In 'the national House of. Representatives, on Saturday, the 28th ballot for Speaker was had, hitwith no better result than previously. :The Knoxville (Tennessee) Mfg, of the 29th nit., gives a long account of the arrest of an Abo litionist from Rochester, New York, a peddler of fruit trees; who had previously been driven oat of Ashville, North Carolina, and who was taken be- Pre a public, meeting in Knoxville and interroga ted. The Whig Bays : ' "According to his own version ho is an Abell.' tionist, - but he said he had not tampered with':any slaves—did not believe it right to run negroce out of the South to the North—and ho was opposed to getting up insurrections. His - business was to sell fruit trees and ehrubbery for an extensive estab- n Mama at Rochester. "The excitement 14103 great and the crowd large. Boy. James Park and Ar.. Brownlow apoko, re commending coolness and reason, and opposing any personal chastisement of the man. General Ramsey, however, made an inflammatory speech, and excited the crowd. Colonel 0. P. Temple fol lowed, and denounced Rainsey!sientiments as only worthy of acorn and contempt, and was loudly cheered. "Opeeehos wore also made by James IL Cooke, -Fag„ and William L. Scott, Esq., who also took proper viewe of tho subt a cunselled modera tion, deprecating the g reat - evilgof mob law pro vailieg to a dangerous extent In the South. and - hoped that reason, moderation, and justice would be acted out on tbia occasion. "The committee of three recommended that Cregax, the Abolitionist, have twenty-four hours to leave. "This was, as we understood it, se amended as to allow hirrtthree days to wind up his besiness 4 andthis, we are inelined to thiuk, met with thq approval of the meeting. But an unfortunate de bate sprung upbefween Messrs. Park and Charlton, and the consequenees threatened for a time to be fearful, :as the friends of these gentlemen drew weapons. But by the inteference of friends peace was restored, the ordwd dispersed, and the New Yorker has left for his congenial North, where he - ought•to remain." She Whig speaks very severely of General Ramsey's speech, denounoing it as more treason : "able than any sentiment uttered by Orogen . Accounts from Arizona state that the • Juarez Government of Mexico has directed Gov. Posquiera, the,Governor of Sonora, to revoke his orders ex- .pelling Capt. Stone and his surveying party front the country. The Governor is also ordered to In. eite"oapt. Stone to return and enter upon the our , vey i and to, protest his party from molestation. It is regarded as highly probable that Pesquiera Will `give no ,beed 'to these orders. Under'iho hoed of ' 4 A- flood hipert," the She!, by (Sy.) News publishes arrextraot from a letter 'by a young Xenia° - ,, inedisal student at Phila, • delphie. , The nr says : , "About three uridred Southern students went South in a";tiody, lest IVednesday night. Our elm Iseult-serge,, though sensibly diminished. There are More going yet.: keheok for $l,OOO was sent from-Vir gi nia to pay their (travelling) expenses to ~the South. They can go to New Orleans, Nash ' vill ,e or -Charleston, free of charge, and hear tho Ileotaree gratis. Of twenty ICentucklans, not ono left. Mu are asaservarsess—sound eggs." Tho Ohio Janet: Garotte, of Wednesday, says that a party of fdity, free colored"peeple, 'mostly women and ohlidree, arrived la that (Avon Tues. Any orating from Arkaniai. They,were welcomed by a ciremittect appointed from the colored people ~of. the City. They were assured by the chairmen of the committee, that if they were induitrieut and sure in their conduct, they would be , care tnain a good livelihood, and many *Janda'. -Tite.exiles, as before stated, are mostly women • and children; the husbands and fathers being held Witorvitude. Thoy report, concerning the emigre : tion e thathindreds of the fine colored men of Ar. ltansas have left for Kansas, and hundreds more • are about to follow, These exiles had iought the, North in oentequeithe of thiadt *teed by the Ai-. kanias Legislature, giving the free Degrees of that State the alternative . of migrating before January .1 1 1860, or of becoming slaves. As the timeof probation has now expired, while some few indi viduals have preferred- servitude, the great body of the free colored people of Arkansas aro on their way northward:-' The upward:bound boats are crowded with them. Selena letter of October 26, in the Nett/ 'fork ',Toured Of Commareti states that, within the- pies -ICU fortnight, two slave prises had been brought into that sport. One was the 'American brig Lillie Mills, which was taken by surprise in Jambe bay,•September 20, by the Englieh steamer Anther, the orew taking to, their boats and pulling ashore as, soon as they discovered the steamer. She was folly equipped for the dare trade. The other prise was a beautiful Spanish craft, -the • Elgin, caught by the same cruiser. Tho writer Wake It a pity to destroy snob splendid vessels, as is required by the Englith laws. In regard to the - New Bedford whaler Memphis, he says : ,4 The whaler Memphis which left New Bedford under some suspicions about: seven months since, and of which notice was taken in the papers, has been recently here, and has sailed ostensibly for the Falkland Islands. I learn from the consul that her papers were all right, and there WAS nothing about her to indicate such intentions, unless it be that she is unusually large for the whalers in this ocean, and though so long out has taken no oil whatever. But she has been boarded several times on tho coast, and one of 11. hf. officers told me she had at one time in a fog a large num ber of launches alongside, which immediately pulled for the shore on the lifting of the fog and the discovery of ono of If. M. Memnon." Gerrit Smith is at hie home in Poterboro', very much improved in all respects, but not fully restored to health ; and the doctor has prohibited him from receiving visiters, and from giving per sonal attention to his correspondence. 117, The most important feature in the re port of .31r. &ma, the State Treasurer, M the exhibit, actual and prospective, of the reduc tion of the State debt. It appears that the amount: thus applied during the fiscal year is within a fraction of 8850,000, leaving a balance 'in the treasury of about the Name amount on the first of December- last. The mea sures which initiated this result were first operative in 1855, and they have beert constantly progressive. The present year the reduction, it IS estiniated, - will exceed a million of dol-- -1 - ars t It is honorable to the diligence and ca. parity of the chief of the department that, tlie resources of the treasury are.thus steadily ap plied to diminish its liabilities, in conformity with the laws, which enable him to do so. ,If a Northern Representative in Congress trottld declare What Mr ; GARNETT of Virginia, stated on Sattnday, nuttily; that' he. and his friends were resolved that the plurality rule should not be adopted until March;lB6l, wo abOuld have -It circulated all over the Union, that the aforesaid Northern man was an enemy of the Confederacy.' But Mr. autrferr, is we presume, an excellent friend of the aforesaid Vain; although we understand that he is by 3/0 means indisposed to go out of it upon any fair provoiation. The threat of Mr. GARNETi prives that the majority of the House is rum- a led, and that no vote can be taken upon any VFoposition not acceptable to the minority. _My the way, are not Mr f GARNEar, and gentle men of, his class, somewhat afraid lost Mr. 41110111A.11, should he be elected Speaker of the Mouse; may mount the chair and', deliver a strong Union speech, and appoint strong Union committees And in such an event, may not the stock of red hot coals which certain gentle• men from the South have been subeleting upon be exhausted 1 PAN itton'it Einnsr Snow.—The anniversary of the battle of Now Orleans will be celebrated at this establiehment in a oharscteristio manner. Tho great heraorLst is always loaded and primed with patriotism, ready to go off On the slightest provo cation, and he never lets an occasion like this pass without memo Mod of s demonstration. The bill - *mated this evening is full of attractive features, - -among wbioli may be mentioned the _: -tight-rope; exercises of • Bert Olioo, and, for the first time, tbo entromilY funny equestrian extrava 7 gents of Bllly - Button's Journey to Brantford. A. NEW PaRENOLOGIOAL CL A.98.—8y a oar& la another (mime . , it will be seen that a class for the systematic• study of phrenology is 'about being formed by Mr. S: L. Capon, the skilful practitioner, Nor_ 912-Vhistnut . street. This will afford a de : Sirabto opportunity •fot the Investigation of a : : :Itiefily.interepting • subject, and- should be largely • • :•• BALM sin. Orlmn fti z &TOR 74, so. , —This morning, sit o'olookriskthe "sisriroOms.of - Messrs. Hogust 'st - licitton; Nn. 29'13dulhThird itrdet, will bo sold tiio stooleof oskand walnut, and offia6 And' "Ittstrer tables and disks; atso . siSiretary and book, eases, eztouoloa .dining iablis; wardrobes, and, othettamsitfirt, ThQWae , )31r011 4. Son, notion-, 9011, • AN ANSWER TO A SOUTHERN COR RESPONDENT. To THE. EDITOR on run PARRA : In your salute- tory of the New Year you claimed, independence in polities, devotion to the Union, impartial contribu-' tions to your Columns, dm. I em it very recent sub scriber to The Press, a Southerner, in politics a reformer, only anothor statue for opposition to the present Administration' of affairs—oorioption and fraud being the ruling element, opposition implies reform. I'm a right good Po r rney man; though I'm about to assail Forney. Your entire article under the head of " Commercial Relations between the Nortia:and South," of 3d of January, is a fallacy; and that on the 4th is but a continuation of it. You saythat the commercial intercourse between the North and• South "is based upon the interests of both motions, and therefore it cannot be disrup ted; that so long as this mutual interest to found In this mutual commerce, so long will the Union and trade and eonanienio last,. in spite of agitators, poll. tied demagogues." Ale. Now, this, instead of being a great truth, is indeed a very great error. The history of the world and. mankind proves exactly the reverse, that the interests of nations have been oonstantly not only sacrificed to the passions and fanaticism of man, but even to the caprices of woman. • The most stupendous events in the world's changes have been brought about by causes so trivial, exoept intheir results, sato appear almost ludicrous. Why, I think It probable that if you bad never been born .Tames Buohanan had never been President. Ido not mean to say that your advent was a trivial [molder:it, but I do say, that the elec tion of James Buchanan to the Presidency has been more fruitful of evil to this land than any other event that has transpired for fifty years. I acquit you of the crime, but charge you guilty of the art. You contrast the Abolition sentiment" at the North ageing the use of articles produced by slave labor with the Southern movement, to abjure Northern manufactures and importations. There is really no similitude. The one was a mere MI timent, which, In its indulgence, required a great saori fiee of personal interest. The other is a vital prin ciple, the exercise of which would immensely sub. serve Southern interests, and the practice of which, in the minds of many, involves the very existence of Southern society and public safety, with a largo mejorit y of those who participate in it. This move ment is a adriserrativa one. They believe that a withdrawal of Southern patronage from the North would so disturb the prosperity of the North as to bring out the conservative feeling there, and cause an agitator to be bunted as is now an Aboli tionist in the South. That when they see that higher-law preachers, and &unionists for con science' sake, stop your factory wheels, blow out your )(arum° bleats, and paralyse the uranufaetu , ror'a arm, you will treat him in the same way that we do ono in our own midst, who threatens to di minish the production of cotton, rice, and sugar, fires our buildings, and jeopardises our safety— you'll treat them either to tar aid feathers, or a gallows, as they may deserve. We honestly believe in the South that there is a deep-seated, wide-spread determination in a ma jority of the people North and East to overthrow and destroy the institution of slavery; and we also 'believe that this cannot be done without a servile 'war 'and all its inconceivable horrors ; and you may be assured that the movements now transpiring in the South have their origin in causes altogether above and beyond any idea of commercial advantage 'or political supremacy. The South is now driven to the Wall, and only desires to be let alone ; she can• not now recede an inch, or oven stand still. Sho has never claimed more than the Constitution coneeded as to slave property, and this elaiin has only been theoretleally recognised ; and now she finds, per haps too late that her safety enjoins her to demand all that she is entitled to practically. I, like yourself, believe in the existence of the Union. It maybe that it la to be more firmly co• merited throUgh the turmoils, suffering, and de• gradationof a dissolution. But that, if so, its broken fragments will be again reunited into a mare solid structure; that some great being, a whole head and shoulders above common humanity, will spring Into place, and shape our destiny, I have no doubt. It cannot be that Cod will permit our final destruction--will permit disunion; for disunion and dieintegratien Is but another name for polittea(death. There is a' great deal in your two urtlolea affording material for further. comment; but I will abstain for the present, hoping, in mein. that fan will So longer believe the South to be merely maw:earth:lg. It is a great error, and to propagate such an error is a great crime. Our correspondent, "Union," writes frankly and boldly, but not conclusively. Be makes our articles of the 84 and 4th lusts.,, upon the commercial relations of the North intl - Sonth, the subject of his strictures, but he dpes -not undertake - the refutation of our skein - lent, .otherivisethan by a broad denial of, us sound ness, and byithe assertion of an opposite, doc trine 'without furnishing its necessary proofs. Nor does he exactly understand our main proposition. Wo ,said that "the -trade be tween the North and the South is based upon the • interests of both sections, and this fact affords a guarantee of its continuance,...(the continuance of this trade,) which no popular animosities, sectional tumults, or denzsgoguical appeals can afflict so long as the original basis which established it remains, as an incentive to its perpetuation." We did not say, or intend to imply, that the maintenance of the political union of the two sections depends upon, or is insured by the persistency of their commercial relations. Trade maintains itselfindependently of national confederacies. The United States trades with all the outside world. Political connections or separations, sympathies or anti pathies, have no power to determine its career, or to prescribe its range. This is the point which we made; It fa a plain one, and we need got rehearse its proofs, but we may restate, and apply it. As the commercial relations of the present Union with Great Britain do not now, and never did, rest upon our political union with that kingdom, so the commercial rela tions of the North and South are not based upon the union between them and cannot be destroyed by its dissolution. Prohibitory regulations could disturb, and •an actual war between the States would suspend, their trade, temporarily, but by force of its own laws it would again return to its natural channels. The Confederatiy IS a matter of compact, and owes its existence to the will of the pat lies, but the trade between its members obeys laws which they can neither make nor unmake. Nor is our respondent any happier or sounder In his reliance upon the frivolousness of the causes which have one time or another been credited with giving rise to wars and revolu tions. Wo aro aware that a spark may ex plink, a magazine ; that the caprice of a king, or of his concubine, may shake a nation to pieces; for, "behold," saith the text, , c how great a matter a little fire itindleth"—that is, when the matter is combustible; but we do not, therefore, infer that a Incifer match will set a river 'retire. "The history of the world teaches" nothing of this kind. It is nothing new or wonderful for despotic and dissolute rulers to disregard the interests of a nation, but a free and intelligent people, who actually govern themselves, never go crazy all at once. Our friend cannot find an example, or demon 'strafe the-probability, of such a case. On the contrary, he thinks that a dissolution Of the Union would result in a better and more se cure reconstruction of the Confederacy. Ile evidently believes with us, that the laws which have induced it will maintain or restore it. In ef fect he does not contradict the conclusion, as he really does not Impugn the reasoning on which we rest its continuance. We differ only in tills, that lie gives more weight to the threat of an impossibility than we do. On this point we stand thus ; ho knows that the laws of trade rule their subjects absolutely by their own proper force, but because people y have done very foolish things, they can do inipossi ble ones ; and, that they may do practicable follies, which they know will be undone again as soon as they are done. In these things he speaks like an oracle for the whole tribe of dissolutionists. He betrays them, and en dorses us. There is, therefore, nothing be tween us on these two points—the laws that govern our commercial relations, and those which bind us together politically—to dispute about. _lle makes a bettor point—a better•iooking point, at first sight, of the effect of non-inter course awl threatened dissolution upon the conservatism or the North ; but he overlooks the fact that that vein has been worked to its uttermost productiveness all the while that the controversy has peon raging. We mobbed our Abolitionists ferociously twenty-live years ago, tarred and feathered them, dispersed their assemblies, and burnt their halls, as he sug gests fur present practice, and for the very reasons trjach he proposes to supply, but without any of the excellent results to be desired from them. Moreover, this way o f securing Southern trade and preserving the Union is not, by any means, so necessary or urgent now as it was then. The anti-slavery Sentiment of the North was stronger and more radical in 1820 thin in 1830, and through every sacc - essiye" decade to the present hour, it -has been steadily abating in the rigor of its doctrines, tamper, and demands. Every free S;ate in the Union resisted the admission Of Missouri, by tho uriequivocal and almost unanimous resolutions of its Legislature, re presentatives and peoplo, en maw, standing firmly upon the restriction doctrine of the or dinance of 1787, and applying it to all new States and Territories. CLAY'S compromise conquered a concession, and WI degrees 80 minutes divided the domain and the doctrines of the resistants for the next following thirty years. In the Meanihne Texas was annexed, and Northern Mexico was acquired, and the North contracted its doctrine to the dimensions of what was left of its requirements. It accepted the compromises of 1850, submitted to the re peal of the proviso in 1851, and finally . , to all intents and purposes, abolished it by a unani mous vote of all its representatives in Con gress, upon the MontgoMery.Crittenden amend ment to the LecompttM Constitution. The North has bean busy these fOrty years in abolish- Mg its Abolitionism, and it has at last almost entirely succeeded. Virginia accomplished the same work a little earlier, indeed, but it is not to be forgotten that in 1832 her Legislature came very near abolishing slavery; and the sentiment of her citizens, which opposed the system, persisted at least until her last-elected Governor endorsed Dr. RUFFNER'S anti -slavery book. ' There is nothing now left standing in the precedents, statutes, or judicial decisions of the Federal Government against either the rights or wrongs, the chances or claims, of the slaveholding people of the Union, and there is nothing inimical to their constitution al, economical, or political rights threatened by the people or the official representatives of the free States. There is no sentiment, no organization, no projected movement among us worth the cost of a single coat of tar and feathers, expended for the security of the South. All that ever was substantial in the corn. plaints or in the apprehensions of the South has been thus completely • removed ; but our friend's notion that very trivial matters may convulse a nation, producing very distressing immediate effects, has some support in the 'consequences of JOAN BROWN'S raid at Harper's Ferry. The South, we are assured, is alarmed; c , the very existence of society' , there is imperilled. What, or who endangers it 1 Does she fear a servile insurrectiV She says, no ; and her remedy—dissolutioti And non , intercourse—is in testimony ths this is not the danger she fears. Is it an rived invasion by the people of the North hat she appre hends? Nobody will say„Ves to this inquiry. The thing-is simply previterous. It will not bear talking about. 'tllT North, and more par ticularly the political party in the North which the South holds to be an anti-slavery party, is this day snore frightened by that in vasion of Virginia, than the South professes to be. If the South will but exercise the wisdom, and prudence which the awakened conservatism of our masses invites and warrants, the next Congressional and Pre. sidential elections will quiet this whole ques tion forever. We will go further. If Mr. Pm- CHANAN bad kept his pledges in the matter of Kansas, the Republican party would by thin time haN:e been utterly extinguished, JOHN BROWN would not have been heard of, and Ilimecit'a book would have been as inoffensive as Jerrensox's notes on Virginia. It is our heaviest charge against Mr. BUCHANAN, that in violating all the pledges which he made to its and we made for him, in the canvass which elected him, he has done all this evil, and all that is to follow until it shall be remedied by a better man, and wiser and better mea. auras. The tt guilt" with which out friend charges us, or the blunder—which in politics is held to be worse than crime—which we committed in working so earnestly for the election of that perfidious luau has been deeply repented for. Under heavy penance we have obtained our own forgiveness, and by works meet for re pentanc,o we are endeavoring to earn the pardon of all whom we have offended. That campaign was in itself a success, fall of the most cheering assurances for u 3 wv—assur an,cea which all the mischiefs following upon it , cannot shake. It was the triumph of that very conservatism to which we look now ror the redemption of the flatten and the establish ' ment of Its future peace and prosperity. I s et the South reeoveV,* another-wit, gird np its courage, and unite With us upon - practical men and measures ; and In the next trial she shall see bow "out of this nettle Danger, we will pluck the flower Safety." The honest and reliable conservatism of the North is sufficiently wakened up thr good ser vice now,—what mere can be scared up is nothing but calculations upon our sup posed , commercial cowardice. The &Foote of dissolution and non-hatereogrse, pushed beyond reasonable or excusable measure, can awaken nothing but defiance from the manhood of our people. Carried further, they will enlist nothing but a miserable rabble of hucksters, who will be the first to subscribe liberally to supply insurgent slaves with gun powder, pikes, and provisielta, when the two sections of our country aro forced by eTtrerne measures Into hostility, commercial, political, or warlike. Every such measure will merely demoralize the Korth, and weaken the party In it who would'otherwise be abundantly able to take care of the just rights and Interests of the South. The balance of power between the two sections lies in the central bolt of States, of which Pennsylvania /3 the principal in power and steadiness of devotion 19 !tie Con etitutiou, and the general welfare under it. %e appeal to the pact, If the South cannot point to the time when we have failed to do our duty, ' will she venture to name the time or circum stances in which we shall fail? We speak advisedly in all that we report of our position and purposes, and we ask our over excited friends to do us justice ; to threaten nothing which they do not intend to do ; and to undertake nothing against us which they cannot accomplish. Our personal friend, " Union," Thinks ho sees a difference between the "lucre senti ment" which induced some of our Aboli tionists to abstain from the use of slave pro ducts and "the principle " that lnits the pa triotism of the South upon a similar absti nence from the produeta and trade of the North. We can see no such difference be tween a sentiment and a principle, which are alike opposed to an' interest and a necessity. The free-labor consumer found his policy itn ' practicable to any Purpose. De found that he could not starve the shareholder into Lath mission; and discovered, moreover, that with the help of every man and woman itt all the free States of the Union, Ito must fail, for there was all Europe open to the trade of the South ; and that very England which ,Itad abolished slavery in all her islands, and opened Canada as a refuge for fugitive slaves, to his surprise was enjoying the most harmonions commercial relations with the South in all the products of slave labor. Thu inherent laws of busiueas ruled as absolutely against his enterprise us a protest, and as a measure of propagandlatu, as against its practical success in its ultimate object. Ho sucked sap sugar devoutly in &l apilli of Louisiana, for a while, but Havana and Now Orleans slipped into his tea-cup through the refineries of ehti-slavery England, and Senator Mason will not get his second Virginia pepper-and-salt dress coat until a Pennsylvania twill will be detected in its tex ture. There is another thing to be considered In relation to the troubles that are upon us, and their prospective settlement. The pressure, i hostilities against the North, for the purpose of arousing its conservatism, must have ex actly.the same effect upon the South. Make the threat dangerous enough to disturb us, and the Unionists of every State . beyond the line will be aroused. This has more than once happened already. Senator lustsioND was frank enough to say that the South itself should have kicked the Lecompton Constitu. tion out of Congress. Very soon we shall hear similar things said of HELPER'S book and Joust BROWS'S raid. An incendiary duodecimo and an insane foray of a score of desperadoes, aro rather too trivial to explode a nation, to establish manufactures in the tropics, or put Boston, New York, and Philadelphia under embargo. Tilt Belli's and Milan decrees with which N6POLEOS blockaded Continental Europe did not put out the furnace tires of Great Britain. They smoked bins out. Prom all of which, and from all other instancea in the world's history, we learn that business is ruled by business principles, and is not subject to the passions or caprices of men. There is but ono remedy, as there is but one cause, for all our present troubles. Our curio is in the men and measures of the present Executive Administration of the Union. Our duty as patriots, and our welfare as a people, require tha exposure and the expulsion of the great criminal and his confederates from Mike, the condemnation and reveraal of his policy, and thereby the restoration of the con fidence and harmony which ho pa de stroyed. Tut 1 RESg.-1 3 1-litAbgt.PHlA, MON Supposed Reply of President Buchanan to Jas. Gordon Bennett. Wasuisarox, Jan. 8, 1860. lily Dear .81r: I would have answered your letter received here on the second instant before this, but for the reason that I had a severe fall on the ice the other day, which rather shook my nerves, and I was compelled to go through the wearisome process of receiving the people on New Year's day, according to custom. Tim absence of yourself and your "delightful family," was the only thing to mar the happiness of the (ley. I was compensated, however, by the attentions of Mr. Orund, Mr. Shaw, and the titled Brown-c, of the Constitution. Ac the Chevalic4 Wikoff has ar rived, I have no doubt that I will have the lea— sure of taking him and you by the ha a course of a few days. when we will together die coos the past and speculate upon the future over a glass of Madeira. I write this on the Sabbath anniversary - of the victory of New Orleans. Why did r not followthe example of General Jackson? Why did I not ad here to my solemn declarations in favor of the • Union? Why did I over yield to the fire eaters—the men who resisted my nomination at Cincinnati, and who so coldly acquiesced in my election? Why did 1 ever take into my manse and confidence such men as William B. Reed, i Pennsylvania, who have been, through life, ‘ 4ot merely the enemies, but the traducers of ' Old Hickory?" Why did I not throw myself tip ci th e people for vindication against the poll m i ene o Alas, my dear sir, these aro questions th 1 b eet , more than once asked myself. These aro ne kt oee that will wear to me to-day as I dt meti tier ,:, my Presbyterian elergyman,Thee cresting that will whisper to me like - the vot .... n imp. passed conscience at mY bedside fiat will foi'ow me like shadows in the day, an .urround me Ike apparitions in the night. Th are, indeed, eier present admonitions and. rep aches, and if my Ad ministration is (alit is) a 1 ire, it is only became I have refused to obey tit groat example of fiat noble man, who, strong „wolf, made himself en conquerable by his trot ; In private life, his emirate in public life, and hilitneore devotion to the Uniot at all times. / ' Your letter is sr frank that I feel tempted n follow your exotrjle, and to be equally frank in return. l ant ee'rer entered into the bargain wilt you that I cannot retreat, but candor compels no today that the moment I yielded to Wikoff, an/ agreed to overlook your falsehoods against me, I committed the great blunder of my life. I did nit know how odious you were, I supposed that you. boasted oirculetion of the Herald all over thi 1 world, and your large wealth (I havtiggoat reaped ' for rich men) would enable you to do me a grog deal of good. My whole course of life bed been de talon to my own interests, fear of my enemies, tint distrust of my friends. These motives led me b think that Wikoff was right when ho came to on and stated that you were anxious to support In:- Administration for a consideration ; but, as I sold I have made a fearful mistake. I have lost b; your support. In trying to serve " myself " b; 1 permitting you to enter my household, I have re ally injured " myself." My fear of you was prover to be unfounded, because I now know of no jour !mild who is read morn widely and despised anon heartily. To crown all, the feet that I had taken you, as you say, "to my arme," has driven 41 every true friend I have heretofore possessed, ex -1 °opting those in office under roe, or who entertain certain expectations ; and I hear that all of these either hold me in bitteroonteutpt, or secretly laugh at and denounce me. You know, l)ennett, how my first attempt to bring you into my confidenop was misted by the Democrats of Pennsylvania. There was not ono who did not protest apiinst it. You had elle:dell the Democracy and 'betrayed " Old iliokory " in your first newspaper enterprise in Philadelphia, and you had devoted youreell for so many years to personal abuse of me, that it was very hard to con vince the men who have really put me wheral am, that any reconciliation between you and me was net something like a reconciliation between the. puritan and the blackleg. There was not a single Democrat at my own home in Lancaster who did not look upset you as sue of the greatest eeount drels that ever lived, and who did not stare at me with amusement when I proposed to bring you over. There was scarcely a Demooratie editor throughout the Isometry who did tint think that I had personally insulted him by taking each a knave as you by the hand. All the ladies of my acquaintance referred to the first manifestation of an attempt to tolerate you about the White House as a monstrous hallucination. Antl,.in. cowildrtece, those ;tweet and dearest to me protested against it as an insult to every honorable ;consideration and ovary delicate sensibility. Dail you hisd abused me, Bennett, I had also very bitterly abused you. It is true, as Forney says, that 1 " would have given a eool five but dred dollars to any man who had gong to N 4 York and taken off your worthless ears from yolk, worthless bead," after your brutal attack upon l , a lamented lady, new deemed, end your no less brutal intimation that I had attempted my life in reanasquenee of the melancholy death of that lady. ' I had talked, publicly and privately, to every body, about your attacks upon Forney, on account of hisTorrest letter, and charaeterieed them as the attacked a fiend. I had defended him against you at my own, as well as at his table, and every where else. I had denounced your attempt to dia. hquor me, in reference to the exposure of the trea ty of (411,4elnpa nidalgo, durteg Mr. Polk's Ad ministration, as the wadi of a reckless reprobate. Rut I had passed my wqrd to Vikolf, and, having l?roken my pledges to my friends, I resolved T. would not break, them to my foes; and, therefore, I Trent to Washington rpm Wheatland, determined to stand by you. When I arrived there, Imagine my consternation when I found all the Southern gentlemen agaicat you—partioularly the Mgt !liana. Independent spirits like Pryor, John For , eyth, pad the Charleston Illirettry—not to speak of the newspapers pnylithed here—greeted the bare suspicion that I intemls4 - to cultiys to friendly re lations with such a creature as you ail an inardt to l the South, and a disgrace to the country. I now regret that I induced you to republish Nrney'a rorreet letter, because it is evident that he will be able to defend himself—particularly if he ascertains that I told Shaw t. send you word to print it. I repeat, that I have gong further to -iy diet.le Terney for that letter, than any other man in the country. - I did so at Lancaster, I did so at London, I did so at Weeltiluton; arid if I bad foi a moment recalled this fnet,l weuld itc,Ntave own. milted the mistake of requesting your cErroponl. eel. fa induce you to oopy it. , What repkrB my present relations it ilu you more disagreeable, lit the feet that you continue to abuse soy Cabinet, while prairie; me. I levy , told you that I have little confidence in tiny of tip men ecOltosing the Cabinet, inasmuch as ell if them, excepting ale venerable Cites, are candi dates fur the Presidency, sod I would like to con Untie four years longer myself'. But yutir Dffilnia• yersjons look, either as if you owned me, body nal soul—es the devil owned Dr. Faustus—or asif I hal made a bargain with y . oti. trt induce you to attack sty' Cabinet. Matters are reudered ',sem, too, by your ridievle of the Washington Constioriqn ar,i) General Polffaan, and my dilapidated Irish Le blown, Drowit-e. I wmild Advise that in your future ornaments tivhieb I trust yell w;ii e c titinto) against my Cabinet and the tiensfl/Wie", ) 1 4 will not be fitilto eo severe us you have bceo. Since I have written the above, J inks has cone in with The Press, of yesterday, in which, to ay lierfor, I find that your letter to tee. of the fir:Alas been made pOlie. lean well imagine the offset it will produce upon ay those who resisted toy to- cognition of you at the beginning of my Admids tralion. I have no heart to write more at presmt. 4ftpr I have seen Grum' and oonftsrred with a bu. of my fria,ode, f will write you more fully. Ought not We later le be signed, dear normal, affectionately yours, • 4"Agl:9 Iit'CIIANAN' Lotter front 4, Oeettsionnt." teurreonenlehee At The Press.] • Wmiumrex, Inn 8, 1801 This is the forty.llfth anniversary cf the victory of Nosy Orleans—a (lay uhieh has generally 41,11 faithfully celebrate() In the city of Washingbn; but since Mr. Iludionaa 'Quitted into the dential chair, tho exaMple of daoksoti hys Olen into contempt. Ills motto was "The Felon nest and shall bo preserved. — Southern mon al be was, ho throttled the enemies of the Confederacy in South Carolina, and broke them down in every Southern State, telling them, in plain twins, that they should swiog a p p high as Homan if they laid irreverent hands upon tim rtqco. The consequence was that he nationalized Deuce - .toy, crushed out fanaticism in the free States, and idle the Constitution irresistible, because he aiplied to provisions to very section alike. Sir. 13u. denim, while full of abualtept professions if ad. nitration of Jaokson's Administration, ruin' to have acted upon the reverse principle. Ile has put on end put off opinions as readily as In bon put on and put off his own coat. Me bar been all things to nil man—for the North one day, and for the South the next ; and, to crown the column of his inoonsistanoy, has, at last, surrendered to the organized and public enemies of the Confederacy. If General Jackson hal gone into the Presidency in March of IE4, his noble soul would hayo revolted against -the attempt to force upon the people of gams a slave State against their will. Ho would have kept hit word to 'Robert J. Walker and Frederick P. Smnton. ii,, would have adhered to the gallant frienis who had clung to his standard all their lives with un yielding constancy and WittwitY, and would have regarded his own written word as his bond. Although no formal notice is taken here of the on. eiversary of the battle of New Orleans, tte pre• cepts end the practice of Andrew Jackson have sunk deeply into the American heart, asd will never bo forgotten. Mithons of free men this day will talk over the prominent overate of his life, and the great lesson he loft to posterity, with gmthude end with praise. It Is now almost reduced to a certainty that election of Speaker of the House of Represents• lives can be effected until the plurality rile shall be adopted. Mr. Hickman has repeatedly at tempted to offer that propositlen, byt every obsta cle has been thrown in his way by the Administra tion leaders, although it in notorious that n decided majority of the House ie ready to vote for it. ova Rated, o Nitton to tbo a( White Rouge I that both tto the Tilnoury be, adopted ; al 00 rem° n by the non. J, decent tootle lons exizting litokman thn both ativooatoo lar'sexo reign; to adheto,anct, s 'Quid have reef dined the latter from making this gentleman who, however decided he may be in th.;,,, expression of his opinions, has an additional Mahn upon the regard of the Secre tary of ,Int Treasury, inasmuch as ho, Hick ganrwali one of those who wont to the uttermost to asst in securing Mr. Cobb's appointment to the bgh position he now occupies. The President it ueneed in his opposition to the adoption of t a, rule by the apprehension that It may result ht the appointment of a Speaker, who will see that \ ;rioh committoesaro Mooted as will inaugurate end enforce such an investigation of the corruptions of his Administration as will, when laid before the people, still further aggravate and deepen the re sentment entertained against him and his polity. Let ne look at the two last Instances when the plurality rule was resorted to by the House for the purpose of electing a Speaker of that body. You will remember that the Congress whioh oommeneed Its session on Monday, the third of December, 1849, tiaa delayed, and the whole Administration of gen eral Taylor embarrassed, by the failure of the House of Representative' to organize. Sixty-three ballots were taken, and three weeks of valuable time consumed, before a presiding officer could bo agreed upon. On the twenty-second of December, the eon. Frederick P. Stanton, of Tennessee—the aamo who has become so distinguished for his fear less oppesigon to the treneherie" of slr. Buchanan on the Kansas question—offered the following pro position : "Rrroiced, That the House will proceed immediately to the election of a Speaker vivo yore, end If, after the fell shell hare been called three tunes, no member shell receive a majority of the whole number of votes, the roll shall again be called, and the member who shall then receive the Wost number of votes, provided it be a majority of a quorum, etmil he declared to be chosen Speaker." Atter a good deal of skirmishing this propo sition wee adopted by a vote of one hundred and thirteen to one hundred and six, and on the sixty-third ballot Howell Cobb was elected, having received one hundred and two votes out of two hundred and twenty-ene thrown—being a ma jority of a quorum, and a plurality of the whole. Mr. Winthrop,isof Massachusetts, was the Oppool lion or Whig candidate for Speaker, and received ninety-nine votes. The rornainder were scattered between Mr. Wilmot, of Pennsylvania, and Mr. Morehead, of Kentucky, Mr. Strong, of Pennsyl vania, and others. Great satisfaction was every where expressed at this decision. The business of the Government immediately commenced, and con fidence was restored to all parts of the country. Mr. Cobb made an excellent presiding officer, and afterwards took a leading pert in supporting the compromise measures, contributing greatly to the settlement of that vexed question by the vigor and fairness which marked his action as Speaker. The second trial took place in 1853-36. Con gress assembled' on Monday, the 3d of Decem - ber,1855, and tried in vain to elect a Speaker un til Saturday, the 2d of February, IBA, when a choice was effected. On Thursday, the 81st of January, Hen. Jelin Hickman, of Pennsylvania, offered a- revolution substantially the some as that offered by Mr. Stanton In 1819. No notion was taken upon it until the fullowiog Friday—tire first of February—when It came up in the House for ' tileeessaion, and woe voted down by one hundred and eight to one hundred and ten. The next day —Saturday, the second of February—a proposition precisely smaller to that adopted in 1849—which resulted in the election of Howell Cobb—wise of- I feted by Hon. Samuel A. Smith, of Tennessee, present Commissioner of the Land °Mee under fir. Buchanan, and it was adopted by one hundred and thirteen to ono hundred and four. On the, one hundred and thirty-third ballot for Speaker, under thd operation of this resolution, Nathaniel P Banks, of Massachusetts, was elected Speaker, laving received one hundred and three votes; Aiken, of South Carolina, one hundred totes; Henry M. Feller, of Pennsylvania, six totes; Lewis D. Campbell, of Ohio, four Totes, and Pastel Walls, of Wteconsin, one vote. It will be seen that when the plurality rule was elopted on the occasions referred to, it was offered ly Southern mon, as, indeed, it was sustained by a number of Representative' from the South. Now, however, the same remedy Is to be resisted by all the powers of the Government, and especially by the Soutitenk Administrationlets, on the ground, I premise, that le unconstitutional It Mr. Bit. chemist felt that be could elect such a man as Mr. Poortek,'or Mr. Milian, he, and hie Secretary of Iko Treasury, would regard the adoption of the phratity tufa to a geed Insecure of peruse, but, In. tieleeh all 'they fear that In the struggle they meg P bee the prize, instruotions have been greet' to resist this role until the bitter end; and, accordingly, we see the evidences, every day, that nothing but the sheerest necessity, and the greatest publt Indignation, will induce the Admit:llB4a tiOD forces to yield. Nor is it quite certain that they imay not be able to combine eo as to elect: thelrmen. They affect to fear Mr. Sherman ; but as tlifre will be three trials before the Speaker is cheerio, they will have every reasonable opportu nity'n mks combinations. In order to give color to tha factious purposes of these men, they make 91'4 , possible exciting appeal to the prejudieee of the ftoptfs, and to the ;apposed interests of the Mont', and loge, of their newspapers do not /mi ta top say that the election of Sherman will die roles the Union. Such is the work in which 14r. Bnctanan's Administration, and those who rep portit, are now actively engaged. Publip 4mppments. AReu•SrRRRT THRATRE:•:-Stitllnglnta, op Irishman who has long been connected with the preas in London, for many years more partioulerly with Nrindav Tames, a great theatrical and sport• in; .inurnal, bee written a variety of plays, from time to time, most of which helm been remarkably pointer One of the beet of Mese, entitled "Kre rybily's Friend," a comedy dashed with gleams or broad humor, hes been a great bit, not only in Len. dombpt me, at Wallack's Theatre, New York, where it bias lied a run cos ;um thou two months. Messrs. Wheatley 1 Clarko bring 'it out this cypnlng, the whole strength of the company, ac the saying is, being in the root, and they will thus agreeably gratify public curiosity. Peter Wilkins" will be played ns uu urterpiece. It to the intention to hare on afternoon performenee :t this theatre on Saturday afternoon. WALNI T^STRELT THEATRE.-31194 Matilda Ho• roe may fairly be claimed as a Philadelphian, commoners a star engagement at this theatre to night. Elie will appear ln her own adaptation of " Camille," sustaining the part of the heroine, with Mr lieneb, Mr. Ehewell, and Mrs. Thayer reepectliely sustaining tLo characters of Gaston, Ar'uutrr 1, and Prudence. This is by far the meet drsmatic version of " Candile." It was with this play that Miro Heron, three or four years ago, Alloyed tpo 'post brilliant coerces at Wallas/0o Timetre, New yorlt, all the critics being spell bound by her earnestness and eatgalness. We ho ,a that Philadelphia will have the opportunity of witnessing the representation of another new play cs4tcd "Lerida," which Miss Heron has adapted Nur. the French, and which has been played wtth grptit IltleCllLta at the Howard Atheneum, Boston. Tlp sums is vhistly in Venice, during the proud times of that republiu. Vh2 leading characters wire sustained, in Boston, by Miss Heron, Mr. J. IV,. Waltack, Jr., and Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Devon pr. We dare say that o Lesbia " will be found tome/it the high enoomitima passed upon it by the Baton newspapers. * McDo-ci can's ;s a now local birlesque hero, with new scenery arid costumes mine() "The Irrepressible Conflict in the Impend- I+ Oriole," in w h i c h John Bronn, Cook, Governor Wise and (we Oceanic, the glicst 01 - 1 General Washington ore haute to figure. The comic panto- Mkine of '• Mother Goose" is the windup. 400 me.--A Panora mio Diorama of Napoleon Proorins tho Alps, with all the firmer attractionP of Thiodon'o Theittro, cootie end mechanical, axe to run through the *Font week. Mn. Jens D,,rw.—The numerous friends of this Tereatile actor may like to know that ho was in Australia, doing very well, when last heard from. We have waved, via England, the Melbourne raminer of October Bth, which devote; a eo• Wen to the consideration of Mr. Drew's merits. says . •' It has not often fallen to the duty of a theatrical reviewer to record so prolonged a pope• larity a; that whio:t heti attended the porform• anees of Mr. John Drew. We inuct add that, this gentleman's qualifications considered as a whole, seldom has popularity boon better earned." Af ter praising his Ifandy Andy, the critio adds : . "Mr. Drew, bowel or, Is not a bird of a single nOto, and during the last fortnight—since he bas aestuned ehureveis that demand higher and more varied abilities—he hog vindicated his title to be accounted a repeeseritatitio of Irish eharagtor of the very highest of From 'the 'first we gave hfut oredit icr talents of no Meal/ order; but wo has e pleasure In confessing that ho has far ez •eeded our evneetations. In Gerald Pepper, in deed there Wits a pain: ?r two here Tad there which, in our opinion, was nut so happily hit oil us we had seen it accomplished by Mr. Iludson, and his liVatt,intt is not quite equal to that of Mr Brooke; but sve doubt whether Pierce gl in "'Thy inch Attorney, ' was aver better—it, indeed, it over mar tc , IQl)—played.'' Mr. Dross was cbaiit 4ppcaring in a new piece, Called "Paddy in Australia," writthn for him by a literary gontlemai; of Australia. Public Exhibitions, Noes VENrs.—The lovers of fine art have a fdrthor opportunity seeing this wonderful paint ing a short time longer Its oxhibition will cor tritely terminate on Wednesday evening, until which lime It remains on view at the rooms over Weltering's, Chestnut street. ACADE VI" OF FINE AP,T.9.—WO were favored, by the politeness of Nr. 1 1. Q. Itani:s, who hakehrtrip 9, 180. them, with an int Ration to a private view, on duchy evening, of Garstaldi's painting of 4 Pao- 'inn" cud O. Lucy's Government Prize Painting "The Pilgrim Fathers." The inclemency of soother prevented our seeing these works of art. karstuldi, we understand, has realized the heroine f Byron's poem of " Parlsina." Mr. Lucy's pia ire we have eon sod can speak of doeldodly. IL ton a high prize, if We recollect rightly, offered by le British Government, and fixed the artist's name Igh'among the leading painters of the age. It wee tainted in VIM and represent, the moment . when to venerable Pester Robinson prays with the Algrims, at llelfttliaven, ore they sailed for South ampton when they departed for America. Patton's History of the United States sap, "The night be fore their departure I from Delft-fla veil] was passed in religious Intercourse: as the morning dawned, they prepared to go on board the ship. On the shore they all knelt, and the venerable Robinson led them in prayer—they heard his voice for the last time." Title is the action, this is lie moment seized by the painter, and he tells the story with his pencil—the great test of composition. These paintings are on view at the Academy of Fine Arta, and ire aro confident that they will bo ex tensively visited by the public of thie city. Ifettrirra's " VILLAGE BLACKS/lITII."—This original oil painting, which will be one of the prizes of the ensuing drawing of the Cosmopolitan Art Union, has been on view, gratis, at the store of Messrs. E. 11. Hunt it Co., northwest corner of Fifth and Chestnut streets, the office of the Union in this oily. It will be taken bank to New York this evening, and will not again be seen here unless some Philadelphian draws it az 's prize. An en• graving from this fine painting was given, with the Art Journal, and other advantages, to every sub manioc last year. This time the engraving is Feed's " Shakspearo and Ills Friends. - Messrs. Hunt S. Co. are agents to the Art Association, %these drawing will take place at the end of the month, and can supply the engravings on receiving the subscription, which is only three dollars To the public we say, whether you subscribe or not, go and see " The Village Blacksmith." THE LATEST NEWS BY TELEGRAPH. THREE DM LITER FROM EUROPE. THE STEAMSHIP ARABIA AT NEW YORK NEW Iona:, Jan. B.—The steamship Arabia has arrived, with Liverpool dates to Satur,lay, the 2lth ult. Tho mails by the Arabia will be deipatohed south in the morning. The Arabia passed, in the river Mersey, the ship Wyoming, from Philadelphia, bound in, end also tho steamship America. On Sunday evening, the 25th ult., she passed the steamship Europa, bound to Liverpool. Ceneral Comonfort is among tha passengers by the Arabia. The steamship Circassian, from Portland, arrived at Liverpool on the 221 ult. It is stated that the 19th of January haft been fixed for the meeting of the European Congress. The report that the Pope claims the presidency of the Congress for his plenipotentiary le denied. The Parts Bourse wee Irregular on the 2:14 ult. but olosed firm at 70f. 50a A vague unconfirmed rumor prevailed of an out break in Hungary. 1 he Spaniards have again repulsed the Moors in Morocco, entailing heavy lone.. The overland mail, with Calcutta dates to Nov. 23d, and Shanghae to the 19th, Ina been t . ele• graphed to London. There le no nova impor tame. THE PEACE CONGRESS Count Avigdor, the representative of the Re• public of San Marino, is nt Paris, and has resent• ed a memorandum to Count Milewski, addressed to the future Congress, proteeting against the en• aroaeligents of Piedmont. The nomination of the Marquis of Auvergne es the second Frenoh plenipotentiary to the Congress, has given great satisfaction to the friends of Italy. A Paris dispatch of the 231 nye that the French Government hed, by telegraph. informed the Pow era concerned that the opening of the Congresa would not take place before January 19tb. The Marquis Antonini, and the Chevalier Cane fart, have been appointed Bret and second plenipo tentiaries front Naples. ENGLAND. The London Herald, the organ of tho Conserva• live party, has announced that a complete and ootnprehonslve reform bill Is to appear in the Constitutional Peers and Magazine, and that In tho event of the postponement of the promised Ministerial reform bill, or Ito proving unaceepta ble to the Constitutional party, tho bill to be pub lished will be immediately brought before the Mouse of Commons. Lord Palmerston has been making speeches, highly eulogistic) of the volunteer movement. The atomiser Great Britain was spoken Decent bor 14, all well, whirl rong thous the conviction that the report of her !e. tug foundered at sea is a base hoax. The wife of J. 11. Gurney, a member of Parlia ment, baa oloped with one of bar family domestics. She is a lady possessed of half a million sterling in her own right. The Belgian Government has agreed to forward mails for Canada and the United States by the Canadian steamers tts well as by the Cunard line. It Is supposed that the German Postal League will adopt a similar arranqement. Till, LATEST. Lennon, Saturday, Dec. 21.—A Madrid des patch dated yesterday says that the Moore attacked the Spanish troops on the road to Tetuanln order to obstruct the progress of the works, bat they were victoriously repulsed. 'The Spanish bad 4 killed and 40 wounded. All the works have now been completed. Albert Smith Is reported in a marine state from an apopletie attack. Hong Kong tuition to Nov. 15th, received by the overland mall, report the rate of exchange as having declined abaut 1} per cent. The prices of tea were firmer; silks 'hotrod an opposite tendon ay. THE 'EUROPEAN CONGRESS. Prince GortscbakotT has expressed a desire that the opening of the Congress should take place after the commencement of the Russian new year, (Jan uary 13,) as he will be detained on that day at his court, by the duties of his ofilse. ENGLAND. OCCASIOYAL In reply to the recently presented memorial from English merchants trading with Mexico, for protection of their intereets, Lord John Russell Nays that her Majesty's Government are endeavor ing to come to come understanding with the other Powers respecting the advice to be offered, and as sures the memorialists uo opportunity will be lost of interfering, by counsel. with is view to Mans about a termination 01 the present (levant/sting and a ansoinarY war. Ills Lordship alludes to the diriiculty of ascertain mg which is the de facto Government, as Great Britain and France arknowledln the ?resident who tars pna s.esvoo of Mexico. and the United States. another Presi dent at WTI) Crux. A. deputation from the Prier Fccista had had an in terview with lord Jong Runnel!. 'Me memorial pre sented censored the proceedines at the mouth of the Ileum. the warliXe preparations, the conduct al the orfiters generally.and concluded by deprecating Imo, tint titles. Mr. W. It. Ward, of Auburn, NOW York, has been Win. experiments It Woolwich dockyard. polo.. the Coinmodilie-taui,ermt rodent. with his imprvernents on hie original Ocean NlPtnne Telegraph. " The im provements were admitted by the Commodore to tie ex ceedingly ritislactory. FRANCE. The pamphlet entitled, "The Pops and the Con grese." signed by M. de Lagnerrointere, had been lisheit, and nttrarted great attention, Lath in France and England, no it v. as beliesed to expieu the ser.u merits of the Emperor Napoleon. The pamphlet is writ ton in a spirit of conciliation and cianproin se. and al though tt does not piopose to take ewer the temporel powers of the Pope it advocates a curtailigeot of them. end urges tint the .ROMSSIIa should not lie returned to the Papal dominion. The Pant Consritutioanst. in an article alined by itsD editor. s pproveson general, the contents of the painn'Act, declaring, howew, ihr intention to co mber to. of the propositions e the nuthor. The London Ti met mineludes a leader on the subject try saying i "On the whole, we have read this pamphlet with considiseebie satisfaction. It is sent probable tt o .t the ji:trie•feir o the French has been for serums time liebitatins isatween Austria and England, Ise twe liberal' end a revolutionary police tint we reed in these sentence, a, promise of a nordial understanding between intatwo oremtriea in the coming denberetions. We have arrived. though 111 very di:latent courses, at the satins pr. 'ti' d conclusion. si,We leave others to cavil on forma and ceremeniell, enough for its if there in a rem/wad° prohelidity th a t the two great Europeantoe erg will be found !irritated side by so le in defence o the rights of the li th os peo ple, end that Protestant Enalsnil will find hearty end efficient support In the Emperor of Catholic Frahoe." The Ilfuttionx foot questions if the Pope will accept the new position &maned to him by the French Em peror, andasks, shone! he retuee. how Mr will his re fusal be supported by the other Catholic States. The DottyiVeies says the illusion expressed in the pamphlet on the question of restoring the Rein:igen to the Pope will be approved by the British Got crnment mid people. France will not use form to com p e l a people to nubbin to n tioyerninent which their %ill re jects, rind ant wilt not permit Austria. t o interfere. The Moritter Herald eta the Emperor RR, tales wise and manly course. On the es eol the Congress, he has lifted the veil which 113.1 hitherto shrouded his poli cy on the Italian question, and Europe will learn 'Ault antisfact on that France is true to the principles which she prcoehsed at the outhet rut the late war. The French war steamer Unonexltu, while try nit her entrees otf Brestirao on a reef, and mull) sank in deep water. The Emperor lisal conferred th Ore m! carrion of the Legion of Boner so the timers IY01111:11. It Is stated t at an apeniao is aboat to I earcaled for the Prince Imperial, sui that the litisteau of ttlna is to i.e conferred upon bun The taconites Milos Forest at Biota and Boulogne are in be Joined to the meanest. The consent of the Legialative b.sts ma necessary ter the creation elan dpsrome. The AI 'meter of Marina has misted a Stearn corvette to be fitted out P ith the utmost dolpritoti. hIR aura MR to i s m i g for the port rust acquired by France in the Red Sea, and that tine IRITt is to he the hesitant/no re el a. naval station, composed of five corvettes, two tr i gatp e , and tee gunboats. The Par:Bl3onm on the 221 was hear y and lower, but on the 2rd there was a return of firmness, and rentea rioted at 7.N. I TA LY. A Turin dihpatch of the lid says that the Rat of Sal - dints had that day tooled the nominations oh count ca your and M. Besambroia ae representatives of Sardinia in the Consume. 111. Buoncoiripi.gni arrive!) at Florence nn the 21st ult. PRUSSIA. The Prussian Chambers are convoked for the 12th of January. • AUSTRIA. Military preparations continued to be made against Hi• apprehended troubln in lirmarr A I,llllol' pro yalled in Paris the (IA) before the MAW r ended that a revolution had travail) broken out in Hungary, but it Inched confirmation. One of the Vierina Journaht had received n gegond warning front lioverbniene Ahmed Weft Effendi had becin appointed Anibssal dor to rant INDIA. AND (MINA. The steamer Inmernda. NraM na) knots of the Indian subrnarmetclograph cablo on board, armed att./Mon on (heath of December. The Rombay mad of November 26111 had reachod. De• tails are unimportant. V.v.:lunge nrOdcutta on the 2,M1 November unaltered. Commercial Intelligence. LIVERPOOL COTTON MARKET. Frw. MlDingr. New Ode e 4 M ob,lo Pland4 . ..... •• • • • • vier, T he stork of Count in port is 4 00,1 W bales, including 2: 1 5,1ak1 bales Americo', The !Windiest° , adr vet are unfavorable, and all de seriptions ol 0 , 0 , 14 hive de th ned, the mai - I.ot closici; d all. 114 Var, TIOC. 22 — New Orleans tree Ordino, , ( 112 , Nat /ill. The sales of the week . hie 1,00. 'Fhe stock in port II 24,14.1 bales The crulitt opened didi, but closed With nnailvancina tendeucr. L i vriiro .7., Dec. 21 --Hreadstrul4 flew') quote Flour voeilir at 22'S ado 2tis ; Wheat ; red 9s.frier9l Ild: white Is edit' il:1; Curs doll. prices easier hilt quutations linchauxed )411aw 3ls ,r 44. Polk hosvi ; descriptiohs I.lre 'Hotly declined, but there is wore d Bacon gip ; newtons middles, raeraiis, Lard dull et Saliones. Produce — Sugar firm. Coffee stead). Pica dull, but prices firm. Resin firm at en advance of lild2d; cities ul common et is 211irten 4,1 for medium nod fine; the qUotatiocs are comics!. Turpentine dull at 345. torritiov. Dec. 21.—Messrs. Baring Brothers quote Breicistutls quiet,but prices steady; Fuser steady and tree firm, and all qualities aught!! dearer. ONDON MONEY NARK I,T, Dec 211 ml securities are slow of sale. but stases ore The engin in (be Bank of Eni land NI IPGrotlSei The money market is unchanged tn rates, though there Is an active demand. meas.. stohlyerr e ht quotes cotton dull, but the im- Porter. ere free seller., but buyers are holding back; nrsoce hare declined Sd.3-/6, particularly for the new er greara Richardson & Spears to the recen torrials cause the holders of large lota to be willtng reahze Prices !id Muer. MOl3lll. Clare quote n limited demand, with an irrer• ular market and price in favor of huger., at a &elms othre'.l. Thu imports of the week hive teen 7.5.000 bales. snit 265 000 bales are known to he at sea, Nernst sg MO bales sit .at at the same time la•t sear 1` Mears. 'Wakefield & Nash quote the decline at "Irgtnia Legislature—. Message of Go. venter Letcher. RICHMOND, Jan. d —Tho message of tiovernor Letcher was delivered to the Legislature yester day., He begins by alluding to the happy tram. quillity that prevailed during the earlier periods of the Republio, which has been interrupted by the interference of the citizens of the Northern States with the rigida and institutions of the South. In Massachusetts, Wiszonsin, Vermont. and perhaps other States, legislation has been employed to de feat the execution of tho fugitive-slave law within their limits. It is cheerfully conceded that a large portion of the citizens of the North are loyal to the Constitution and the Union, but it is not to be disguised that a large number are indifferent to both. and prefer a dlimointion to the extension of slave territory, and the increase of slave States. This lamentable state of things originated in the oonstruetion by the Northern people of the Consti tution. He suggests that a Convention of all the States be summoned, in order that a full and free conference may be bad, to ascertain if the question in controversy earl not be settled on some basis mutually satisfac tory to both sections. If the differences prove to be irreconcilable, then let the question of a peace able separation be discussed. He recommends that the Legislature adopt resolutions in favor of a call for euch a convention as is provided for in the fifth article of the Constitution. and appeal to the Le gislatures of the several States to unite in the ap plication proposed to be made to Congress, in pur suance of the provisions of this article. lithe free States fail or refuse to unite in the application, it will furnish conclusive evidence of a determina tion on their part to keep up the present agitation. If the Convention meet, and the question cannot be satisfactorily adjusted, it will furnish evidence equally conclusive. Ile also suggests the appoint. merit of a commission, consisting of two of our most experienced statesmen, to visit the Legislatures of those States which have passed lawn to obstruct the execution of the fugitive-slave act, and to insist, in the name of Virginia, upon their unconditional re peal. The controversy has now reached a point which demands a speedy settlement. If the Union is to be preserved he is prepared to do all that honor, patrietiftn and duty enjoins towards its preservation. Nevertheless, it is the duty of the State to be prepared, end he mom• mends the revision of the militia laws, that mo nitions of war be procured, that brigades of minute men be organized and the Military Institute be en larged. Ile also recommends the fostering of direct trade, manufaotures and the mechanic arts, and the earl 7 completion of the Internal improvements now projected or in progress. From Washington. WASHINGTON, Jan. B.—The bill recently intro duced by Senator Lane provides for the settlement of the Oregon and Washington war debt of IBSS-6, according to the recommendation of the military commission, who spent twelve months in the ex amination of the claims. To guard against specu lations, the money it to be paid only to the original claimants, or their legal attorneys or assignees. The amount Involved is about foe millions. The bill Is altogether independent of the measure now In progress at the Treasury Department for waling the various items to the army standard. It is known that Senator Toombs, during the Congressional recess, carefully prepared a general bankrupt bill, but Its presentation Is prevented by the unsettled political condition of the country. Present information from Oregon and Wa.•hing ton shows that the last appropriation has been suf ficient to sustain the Indian service, and as a con sequence there is now in that quarter an entirety peaceable condition of affairs. From Sonora. Sr Loris, January 7.—The California overland mail which arrived yesterday at Jefferson city, brings the following intelligence from Sonora: The Governor of Sonora had received despatches from the Juarez Government directing him to re• voice Immediately his order expelling Captain Stone and hls party. Ile Is also ordered to write to Captain Stone's party to return and enter upon the duties of the survey, and to protect them from injury, and to see that they are permitted to proceed quietly in the performance of their duties. The Arizoniutt adds that it fears that Governor Pespiiera will disobey these instructions, and that the settlement of these difficulties is as far distant AS scar. The Last Ballot for Speaker. WASHINGTON, Jan. 11.—On the twenty-eighth ballot for Speaker, taken in the house to-day, all the Democratic members Toted for Hon. Andrew J. Hamilton, of Texas, with the maption of Messrs Adrian, of New Jersey, and Horace F. Clark, of New York. Sixteen of the South Amerioaps threw away their votes. If all the votes in opposition to the Repub. licaneandklate had been polled for Mr. Hamilton, (who was nominated as a conserrative candidate,) he would have been elected by two majority. Few England Forger Bono; Jan. 7.—Oliver Howe, of Lynn, N. 11., has abounded, leaving behind him forged paper amounting to $B,OOO or $lO,OOO, on which be real• bred the cash. Several businera men in Oroten, Noes and the Lens:aster and Townsend banks, as well as a Fitchburg bank, and the Brantfort (Vt.) Bank, are among the sufferers. It is supposed that Howe left in the last cleanser for California. fatal Accident. NEWANK, Jan. 7.—James Taylor and Edward Duffy, while returning from a pleasure ride to kli zaboth, were run over by the night train about three o'clock this morning, at the crossing of the railroad and tiouth Broad street, hero. Taylor, a man about thirty years old, was instantly killed. Ito was employed on Budd's express, and leaves a wife and two children. Duffy was injured, but not seriously. The hone WSJ killed stud the sleigh de molished. The Steamers yigc! and Kaniaroo at New 1 enc. Naw Vona, Jan. B.—The staamshlpa Vigo and Kangaroo, from Liverpool, have arrived here. Their dates hare been anticipated. The Vigo wan bound to Philadelphia, bat has pa' into this port under the ruppoaition that the Delaware river is blocked op with iqe, which, however, is not the ease The Kangaroo passed the steamship Persia on the 2.lth ult., and the steamship Prince Albert on the sth init. Shocking Tragedy in .Massachusetts AriCIDE AND ATTZIIPTED Itt'RDER Bogrov, Jan. 'T.—Henry Meacham, of Dickin son, 1111159 , shot his wife, last evening. In the pre sence of her parents, and then shot himself dead. Ito motive of the rash act was his jealousy of bie wife The Court of Claim.. WAsiivinros. Jan. S.—Ex-Congreasman Jame. ltugher, of Indiana, will be, if he hal not already been, tendered by the PreAdam the qppotatment of the vacant jua,ges.hip :of the Court of Claim•, and there is every reason to believe that ha will Baer tho Nou•Aruuil of Southern Muik Wa , utNuruN, Jan. S —So &Althorn mail hai arrite4l to-day, and there are now w(en back mails due hero. Market , ' by Telegraph. BALTINWRE. Jan. 7.—Flour very farm and advanclas ; Howanl street and Ohio held at .?,l1 60. Wheat firm ; receipts s ere small • isles 813U.r 144 for wh:ts : red 51 Zvi JO. Corn dull; %lute el., 72c ; yellow 70.• W• Pros eions buoy ant. with an advancing teue ency Me,, Pork 5:16.75; kit little doing in Drama; the quotations are 511. Bacon ON. Whiskey dull at no. Bills on New unchatured. • . . 31onit.1 , Jan. e.—Sales of Cotton to-the 6,000 Wes: middlings are quoted at 10`11510'S; 'Meg 0 1 the week 23,f5X) bales ; receipts 31,530 tulles, against .11,720 for the corresponding week last tsar; the receipt. here are now 9 , 1,1 le bales ahead or last tear; the stock an port is Z3s.:.sa'i bales • the exports for the week amount to 81,4M.930 • for the month 83.03.275. and for the guar tor 812,048,50). Cotton freight to lota pool 15.323 IZ-33; nlle ou New York 1 per rant di•count ; Sterling ex change 5•4a7‘.j. THE CITY. AMUSEMENTS THIS EVENLY() INkIVATLET & CLA.IIOI ARCH-STIOM TREA'4 , 2. P A e street. Stove Birth.—" Everybody's Fttend er WALACT-BTRIRT THIATItIe. corner Walnut fine Ninth.-- , Camtlle"—" Two BUZZItaII." NitttnNtL THEATAX. Walnut street, between P.;glith and Ninth.—Dan Rice's Great show." flu CHNSTSCT Brume.—Page's Venus. ACADPITY OP Fcrz Aars. Chestnut street. Part sma"—"The Martyrdom of John Huss.Sco." B‘NDEitsoN's 1x1111111w: Runty, Jay'ne's Comenon wealth But Mini. Chestnut street, almredigth.—Thio. don's Museum of Art. MCI/0.101 , 0n S GATXTIP.. Rare street, below Third,— Entertainments nightly. TEMPLE or WONIARN, northeast carnet Tenth and Chestnut streets.—Bignor 131itz. Toy EIGIITIt or J.i.Nr tWr.—The forty-111th anniversary of the battle of New Orleans. when the whole of our southwestern territory was freed from the claws of the British lion, occurred yesterday, hut will be celebrated to-day. In the city of New Orleans, surrounded as it is by all the associations of that glorious day, the Eighth of January- is the great holiday cf theyear. Not only the military, bat citizens of all professions, join in the general scene of celebration. While Andrew Jackson lived, and Was in the zenith of his rresblential power and pa tronage, the Eighth of January was a national holiday, but since the old hero has gone to sleep beneath the willows of the Hermitage, the national interest in the day has died out. North of Mason & Dixon's line, but little attention is paid to the anniversary of America's most glorious victory The soldiers—if the weather is fine, and parading don't soil their white pantaloons—generally turn out in honor of the day, but civilians, of all classes, think it of as little consequence as the anniversary of the birth of Napoleon. A sketch of the incidents connected with this remarkable and erraottlinary battle may prove interesting to oar readers. The details are fuel liar to every student, bet it is well at times to recur to the chronicles of the past, to refresh the recol lection 3 of our country's glory : In the latter part of 1814, General Jackson at that time, a major general in the American army, received news that a powerful fleet had left the West Indies, with the design of attaching the city of New Orleans. De immediately repaired to New Orleans and found the inhabitants of that city in a state of inteuso alarm and excitement. Ito was greeted by the citizens with every demonstration of affection and gratitude, his presence inspiring them as it did to renewed feelings of bone and courage. They will ingly hailed him astheir leafier, and pledgedshera selves as one men to support the General in his measures Of defence and safety. With that vigor and promptitude go eminently and proverbially QbanicteriVio of Andrew Jack son. he set about erecting a lino of defences at a point some six miles below the city, on the Mis sistipti river. lo the meantime a small 'squadron et' gun-boats, under the command of Lieutenant Jones, were stationed in Like Borgne to oppose the entranee of the British feet. This force was over powered, fled the British advanced to within nine miles of the city, end took tip their position. Jackson was in commarol of the city, where he p ron ou n ced martial law, forbade alt intercourse with the enemy, and prepared to repel the audit. clans invaders, who, with the tempting cry of " beauty and booty." were anticipating en easy victory. On the Ad of December a detachment of the Americans tallied forth and attacked the Bri tish at a place called Obstimette The Americans were repulsed, and retired to their entrenchments On the Bth of Jonuary, 1815, Genorni Yokels- ham, the commander of the British fortes, amount ing to very nearly 12.000 experienced and veteran soldiers, directed a general assault on the Amen ean fortifications. They were to meet an army of about 2,000 men, many of whom were inexperi enced in the ways of warfare, and few had ever been In a pitched battle. They comprised in their ranks a number of Kentucky and Teaneesee men, whose peculiar mode of fighting greatly as- sisted the Americans. Paekenham's army ad venced in two columns under the respective com mands of General Keene and General Gibbs, earer to mount the breastworks and plate the cross ofiit. George over the Cresoent City. When they had approached within aixty rods of the breastworks. the American artillery opened upon them a most terrific fire, which they were unable to return, and which scattered bares in their well-disciplined ranks. Rank after rank, column after column, of brave men fell, and over their dead bodies their comrades marched to defeat and . death. For one hour and a quarter the battle continued with fearful fury. The British lost their principal officers, among whom was General Beckenham, wbo died on the field of battle, beneath a tree that is known to this day as "Packenham's tree." General Gibbs was mortally wounded, while Gene ral Keene suffered a similar fate. After losing their principal officers, the splendid army of Great Britain fled in confusion, leaning on the field more than 2,000 men, dead and wounded. Strarre to say, of the Americans but sir men were kilted, and seven wounded. On the other side of the ricer the British succeded in carrying the American bat teries by storm, killing forty-eight, and wounding one hundred and seventy-eight. Bat the main body of their army having beet defeated, and dis heartened with the day's losses, they retreated to their shipping, and abandoned any farther attempt at`possessing themselves of the beauty and booty of New Orleans. A month after the battle, on February 11, 1815, intelligence of peace was re ceived in the= country, and the last (end we hope it may always be the last) war with England was over. As is onatonuary with them. the soldiers of the war of 1917 will meet this 'Morning. at thecou.nty court house to renew old asaociations, and take public notice of the anniversary. The Keystone Club will also " fire the first Democratic gun of the reason," at their new wigwam. on Twelfth street, below Chestnut, this evening. Ilminmat orators will address the nonliitrele. The military will remember the day in a r.ntni.r r of company parades. The Washington Blues will parade in its honor, and the State Eencibles. Capt Page, will raise in hoot of their armory, Chevout street, above Fifth, a handsome flaz-staff, from which, eta height of over 100 feet trOn, the pave ment, will be displayed the Stars and the Stripes" of our glorious Union. The staff will be started from, and rest on, a circular iron fal cons', and ornamented with national and military emblems, adding much to the architectural finish" of the front of thehntldiag, and presenting a nr - - minent object on the line of Chestnut street. The flag will be ran up at four P. M. THE OE,EIarIES or Mann. NErlt recent sudden death of the lit. Rev. J. N. Neu mann, the fourth Catholic Bishop of Philadelphia, wet appropriately noticed in the various Cathoits, churches yesterday. The bell of St. Jchn - s Church tolled a mournful monotone during the day and evening in memory of the dearted prelate. The obso4rdes will take plate th is morning, in *writ dance with the 'published arrangement! The ft, neral pooemision will leave the Episcopal residence this morning, at an early hour, and win marsh down Eighteenth street. to Chestnut. down Cheer nut to Thirteenth, and up Thirteenth to St. dohs a Church, where the services will be held, in the fol lowing order: Military. CaMolie Lay association, Sodality of the diderenLehereties. Conference of EL Vincent De Danl. Students of €t. Mirka, Borremeo. Funeral ear, with the body living in state. The reverend clergy of the Church. The tultiOaeand archtuehows of the Church. Laity in !mend-fact men ge.ap. The ceremonies at the church will be a a 211511 capering character. DASH or a DIiTISQ - 13HED PRILALELPHISN. —Peter A. Browne, Es; . for a long time a mem ber of the Philadelphia ba , ., died In this city on Saturday evening in the lath year of his age. his. Browne was finite celebrated during his long life as a local politician of the Native American achual. Ile has been an able writer for the preaa of Ili; city, and a lawyer of no mean capabilities_ Be leaves a large number of personal and political friends, who will sincerely regret his loss. Ilia funeral wilt take place from hit late residence, tio. 1113 Walnut street, to-morrow morning at ten o'clock. CORONER'S CASES. John Kane, aged 141131 . 01111 d in & street in the 14th Ward, yesterday morning, frozen to death. His head war badly eat, and several wounds were found on other parts of his body. Near him lay a leX of mutton. leading to the supposition that he had fallen on the pavement on his return from market. Henry Price, a German, from Readin,v, nhite on a visit to his friends residing at Seventh an.i Costes streets, died snidenly on Satnriay evening, from the effects of excessive drinking. fiesr.re OFFICE, Jan. 7, 18 o.—The number of interments in the city of Philtdalphis for the west ending January 7, at 12 o clock, is ...... .......... Last week..,._..... ....._.. Inert:We— .... Apoplexy.. ... - Burne.—.. 2 4 CS.tld sa.. Cancer Casna ..... Congeolom ef Haim ..," et Conrcbaoas C • 11.404.16 DrOgritig k it e iZ ••• • 111:1Pr. ..... '_Wit .... • Reamarh.Rit, - 31 infi4enatlUreg:::: I:nder I Tsar• • • • • - ..L & un Ai: t.- -- 2 , 1 %men 1 sal Bov Cl2lll I E Lungs . 25 Yeas ..... / I :Fms,la-- 3! Inanition old set. Slelitewn..- Sore Throat.. . r From the .57=32:03,3 ... 31 Li tPc.:rts of 34 , ARTIMILE.FpI3I-S. Other disaaaes. Totai— ..... _ sr; Futhantirnit Trio.poitanntrat. Socreri.- 7 On Setunlay evening the annual eft:causer officers of this society was held at the Mall of therm As. eociation. Tha following gentleman were elected: President—Eugene 11. Monday; Vice President— William E. Walton; Treasurer—John E. Cu/card; Secretary—William IL Jones; AstristantSerretalf --James Moloch ; Steward—William Mooney; Lt brarians—B. Diffenbaugh, William Lefty, lames S. Keyser, Samuel Doughty . Caner; Benedcent Fund Committee—James Leighton, Charles Brig ham, Thomas W Swain. William C. - Kelly, Jebn If. Taggart. From the annual reports read. it appears the So ciety number three hundred and two members. During the past year. the receipts were 12,15-3.ltt. and the payments to sick ant disabled members. $1,91299 Paid from the beneiseal land to wi dows of deceased members, Stt The society is in a highly prosperous condition. /NTESPERLVG wrru TICE ENDS OF Just NE Ire understand, from a number of citeumeances. that efforts ars being made to spirit away a natot• bar of the moot Important witnesses of the murder of the sailor Anderson, in Pine alley, on Christmas ere. A female who witnessed It, committed sui cide some days since; some think because Istr life had been threatened if she di I not refuse to dis elv. her knowledge of the transaction Since that oc currence a youa tusu, named Patri:k Ccoan, who was a very impartant witness in the case, del to Baltimore. It was as..tertained that his expenses had been paid by the friends of the lionised, and he was followed to the Monumental City by Veer Prettyman, of the First district, who arrested him on Friday and brought him home on Saturday. Connor will be watched closely until after tie trial of the sucused. There ware a Lumber of witnesses of this transaction, and a speedy trial weal! occurs their attendance at court. 111,: %I'M DEP oRTYECT STATISTIC4.--The O- W amount of the appropriations to the Health De partment during the past year was $31791 r 3, of which mtm $2-,700 57, was expended, leasing balance of $1.091 PT which remairs no hard. The receipts during the pram have been as follows - Fees of vessels from foreign ports, 5t,193 ; coastwise vessels, $115; outside channel visit., Sill) ; examination of foreign passengers, SI repayment of costs for the remora' of nuissnsrs, $91035; board of patients at h::.spital. Sill ii, permits for privies, removal of dead. etc., $.N5:3237; fines and penalties, etc.. $ , -17 2i. in addition t the above. there is due for costs.paid for removal of nuisances, which have either bean liened, or subject to lien, the sum of 31.6-16 S.ri, which will mate the total revenue $15.417 57, being an in crease of 4 1 3,;.;57 over the receipta of 1&5.4. ExTEMIVE TRAVELLER.—On Friday evening a men applied at the Eleventh-ward sta tion-house for lodgings, accompanied by a boy &tont three years of age. lle had inhia pyoses lion. when at the station house, a light eovered wagon, in which was a small tool bor, containing tools for repairing clocks. He stated at the sta tion-house that he was from that •• land of steady habits and wooden nutmeg?," Conseettent; that his wife had deserted him, and that he bad trav,l - here with his child and wagon. mending ebek 3 by the way to pay expenses. lie bad been through various parts of the country, and stated that he had travelled in all about twenty-three hundred miles. A NARRCIW Ev LPE.—On Friday afternoon a horse attached to a eleigh became frightened, and dashed down Brown street at a frightful E f eed Dr. J B. Jackson and a young lady, who ecen pied the sleigh, were thrown out, but fertunewly not injured. At Eleventh street the animal ran against a car on the Citizens' Passenger Railway, crushing in both woodwork and glass. A lady, who was seated in the ear immediately at the spot where the shafts struck, observed the Formally, and changed her position just in time to escaps probably instant death The horse was very much Injured about the head and shoulders, and is not expected to survive. A SOLDIER DEAD.—On Friday evening Mr. Charles Wigtnore, a member of Company 11, First Pennsylvania Regiment, died after an illness of a few week,. The canoe of the demise of 31r. W. was chronic diarrhuit, contracted in the service of hie country while in the Mexican war. At the time of his death he was an employee in the Mint, and was a favorite with all who knew him. Ha WM buried yesterday morning by the Scott Legion, of whiohebsupany he was a member during the 31 exican war. riNES d 5 / 1 PENALTIES.—The City TM:triter tas received the following amounts collected by 'ideal:ten during December, from persons before them, who were subject to the law inflicting err. Lain tees and penalties: From Alderman Butler, $l3; R. Hutchinson, $26.20 ; John Swift,s234 l , Thos. Dallas, $24 00 ; C. Bra z i er , :Arco L. Ramsdell, $5.25; W. P. Ribbeoi, $17.00 J. King, $6 09 ; A. H. Shoemaker, $24 50 ; J. Plank ingtod. $6B 53; John Clouds, $4l 23; J B Kecry, ss2 50—making_a total of $366.72. lIENRT C. WAYNE YACHT CLLB.—WO leant that the members of this Club are to be favored with a complimentary ball at the Musical Foci Hall, on Tuesday evening next. The arranseminta are in the hands of a competent committee of gen tlemen, and, from what we have heard, there can be little doubt that this tall will be one of the most magnificent affairs of the season. This Club is de• sen-edly popular, and we trust that it has a pr..:. , - pertus future before it. May its glory never CHILD Rry 01 - mt.—A man mined Raymond Clark, while driving a light wagon at a high rate of speed, on Friday afternoon, run over a child at inch street and I . `a-shryunk !road. without inflinVng on it any very serious injury. The child's exemp. Con from death was miraculous. Clark was arrest ed on the charge of immoderate thriving, and h e ld for a further hearing by Alderman Femington. ROWDYIS34.—At a Late hour on Friday morn ing a fight took place at a drinking saloon, in Third street, below Herman, during- which a man named Shatter was struck over the head with a rag!-beer glass. He wasbadly injured *boat the head. A rowdy named Solomon Elwell was er mined on the charge of committing the assault, and scut to prtlan on Saturday morning. •