WEDNESDAY, JANIIARI, .25,4860 FITIST PAON. , - , Miteastitlyaaa VONT from Now York; -The Port ; 'Parma sand Political. FOURTH PAGB.— isoellanewis Itema ;= Marine Ins telitgenoe. • . Stephen A; Douglas, of Illinois. It must be said Of &mem A. DOUGLAS, even by those who are, in - the habit of as cribing motives to; or of assailing the motives of our public men, that he has the daring Jo originate, and the courage to defenii, some of the most startling ideas ot the day. His whole ',public career has been, so to speak, a career of Sensations. We remember well when, shortly ;titter his first appearanCe in Congreea, he took issue with lons QuisOlt ADAMS on the dis puted boundary question between Mexico and the United State's, and when he ex 'Sorted from that distinguished patriot a gal ' lint, yet a reluctant, tribute of praise. The young Representative was an over-match for the old , statesman, and although Mr. Avers did not tiaiit, ho might have said t Great lot 1110 oral him, for ho conque'reS me." His defence ot General Tamales, in regard to tits fine imposed by Judge 'HALL, prior to the battle of Nett Orleans, was the only real solution of a most vettatiouti problem, and the sago of the Hermitage admitted it so to be to hls dying day. 'His course during the Corn , Inomiee measures, in 'lB5O, Was marked by a series of dashing and novel demoustrationS. • Retuiy.in debate, correCt _in his authorities, courteous, bold, and Untiring, he won• the ari plans° of. his old opponents, CLAY and Win erna,and even survived the terrible anathemit Of TuOzis H, BENTON. &MIEN A. DOUGLAS can never be an Administration man. He • frets under the harness of authority. And 6, In 1864, when he proposed to repeal the Mis . lourl Compromise, as el logical Sequence of the Vomproniise measures of 1860, ho was ready to , take issue with the Administrationef FRANK . LIN Pnuceß, becautie lko •sup.pcTO the la. •ter was dispoicd to halt in - that great 2 measure of reform. How he carried ~the bill repealing :the Missouri Compromise, the country knowii. It was a great expert merit. It woke up the slumbering fanatic* of the North ; but Dimas, believing : himself sight; perceiving the end of what he conceived 10 be a principle, . persevered to that end, and won. , His achievements during this long and bitter struggle, apitk.from the.mere measure itself, were a succession of wonderful in tellectual triumphs, and hiS final speech' on that bill, In March of 1854, cr4wded with points, and calculated to awaken the enthusi asta of his friends, almost conquered his ene mies, by the audacity and daring of Its style, and its argument. These enemies said he would not be true to his pledges in 1854. But he was. " • ' ' In 1866 he sent his cohorts to Cincinnati, - Mid opposed Janes 1313011ANAN. Backed by the South, he 'demanded that his Nebraska bill," and theirs, should be endoried in its let ter and its spirit. And this was done as ,he and they desired in terms. Mr. litieneivAN was nominated. Illinois himg tremblingly :In the balance. DC/MLA s rescued Illinois from the general opposition. Ho made numerous speech as, and spent large sums of money to accent. pliati this result. Shortly after the inaugura tion of BUCHANAN, and as if to show that the latter was disposed to try his late rival, he conolnded to attempt the hazardous experi ment of violating his pledges to the DonozAs principle laid down in 1856. The result was a natural result. The rebellious spirit of Dourizas rose at this movement of Buommtri's, and in Deoember of 1867 the former drew the sword upon the latter in a speech of memorabbibeld mess, and of unparalleled power. Here again was another step to startle the country. Here was a single man grappling with an Administra tion freshly entrenched in office,—a man too, whose re-election to tho Senate was coming off in the very next year, and wbo could only run for re-election as a Democrat. ' What en sued is universally familiar. The Adrainiatia tion came out of the contest with ad"varinna victory. The Senator from Illinois went back: to his constituents opposed by the Administra tion and the Republicans, carried his State, beat his adversaries, and re-elected himself to the highest legislative posithin in the world. The doctrines he laid down in his contest in Illinois had awakened Intense hostility in the South, among the • extreme advocates. of sia:. very, and a no less embittered hostility in the North among the extreme opponents' of sla very. The Administration threw itself into the melee. Tho paid pen of a most profligate Attorney General was employed by the Pros 'dent to insult the Democratic party, and to poison the reputation of STEPHEN A. DonnAs . for standing by the principles of that party, The South sent its ablest journalists and its most accomplished statesmen into the tourna ment. DAVIS attacked Donotas in Mississippi. Wise denounced him In Virginia. OM thun dered against him from the Treasury. Torezr traduced him from the Navy. OILMEN criti cised him from Missouri, While such men as Mazza of Pennsylvania, in order to entitle themselies to the opprobrium of their .race, united in the wild halloo. Almost alone, save where aided by a gallant volunteer like RE VENUE JOHNSON, of Maryland, DOUGLAS won the good tight, and put his adversaries to the wall, writing the truths ho had spoken even upon what he supposed to be his dying bed. Much that SzErnan A. DOUGLAS has done in all these things has not met our approba tion. Some of his movements during the Lc. compten battle we have resisted and opposed. We do not agree with him in an unconditional submission to the decree of the Charleston Con _vention. It may be that circumstances will Slid us hereafter radically opposed, ono to the other, but, In comparing him with other public men, we are compelled to say that we admire the aggregate of his character. We do not believe the Charleston Convention will nomi nate him. We do not think that body is wise enough to appreciate the destiny of the Demo. cratic party; and we think the Republicans, In their assaults upon ROULAS, have commit ted a great blunder in considering him merely as the representative of an organization, and not of a principle. Any man may go with en organization, bat he who attaches himself • to a living truth cannot desert it, whether he rill or no, and DOUGLAS is identified with a truth not only as "an dent as free government Itself," but essential to the perpetuity of our present republican institutions. The speech of Judge Donnas published in • allows:yin Tha Press of yesterday, is emi nently characteristic of the man. ITo sug gests a new remedy for a new and an unexpected disease. He begins by taking .Issue with the 'President of the United Stated, who has commended himself, by rodent demonstrations, to the warmest re gards of the Southern extremists. We have no space, to-day, to examine into the princi ples of the remedial measurer proposed by the Senator from Illinois. It is evident from Oat' has transpired, that they are to bo assailed bitterly on one or the other side. At all'events, be has sustained his whole charac ter by Infusing vitality into all organizations, and by offering a new theme for the considera tion of those politicians who generally wait for the cue before they speak, and who are fre quently grateful, even to an enemy, who will • give them a good chance to convince their constituents that they are still in the land of the living. A Peculiar View of England. Last year, Lola Montez spent a considerable time in England, where, Indeed, she had resided formerly. She went over on a ipoture-tour, and was very maccessfel. - She hap thrown her impres• Mona and recolleetions,,lather tinged with a spice of merry satire, we ,believe, and will deliver them, as a Lettere upon John .Bull, at Musical NM Ball; ills evening. Madame Lola will have a gO4 hopsi,'no.donbtrfor she really is tho best female *tater in the world—easy and graceful in .manneri without the slightest theatrical eonveit- Senility. • Very apropos to, this manifestation, is the pub /lotion, by T. B. - Peterson .b Brothers, of Lola Moutee's"Lectures, (including the two in which she .„ her '.eafobiogrephy,) with a Mao Portrait of theeuthoreas. I , hisps agreeable hook, with „ - . I good deal of infas:mallen abont eminent foreign poopto end eztraordinesreventa--with which Lola hoe heiirmati acquainted during n life which, though St odvelti Y_elie - tin yet, has been 0n,0,0f nineltable .vie'lesitndes. , The book - is balulsomely got up; ('t gotten up” in ,our.provirelal patois ) „ " en 4 will have A large male, we know. , Tian R loe's Great Show, this afternoon, for tho vitillbiation of strangers and others; the perform• jag rbinoomoi, the elephant, and all the other „.tralied animas, will be introdnoed in' their re. ~, ,..,parkahtifeatS, while a great variety of surprising • equestriati , ,and iierobatto performanota will be Oven. Herr Moe will appear on the tight-rope At night the Magle Bing" will be played for the time, Thaekeray and Tennyson, We have 'road the fiat number of The Cern hill Magazine, edited by Tit/team:ay. It is a bulky octavo, in a gay orange paper-cover, on which is an emblematic title, representing ploughing, sowing, reaping, and thrashing— the rural occupations of the four seasons, and therefore, it seemoth unto us, not exactly suited to a Magazine which takes its name from a great thoroughfare in the city of Lon don. Itts the very "Stout Gentleman" of Magazines; as thick ari one of PETERSON'S fifty cents novels. Its own proper :quantity of 128 pages being added to by over 60 pages of ad vertisements, for which, no doubt, such a high charge would be made as would cover much of the expense of the number. N. B.—ln England, periodicals are not usually sent through the post office, as with us, so the ex- Ira bulk . and weight are unimportant. Tirmixnuar has certainly given a cheap shilling's worth. We do not mean the tradi tionary, nen-existent coin, variously known as a ninepenny in Boston, a shilling in New York, and (still worse) as a levy in Philadelphia, but an English shilling, containing twenty-four cents of our money—a little less • than our quarter. Neither in quantity of letter press, nor in quality and number of illustrations, does the Cornhill Magazine come within a long way of Harper's. But, for an English magazine, ft is wonderfully .cheap--almost equal in quantity to Blackwood, Fraser, and Bentley, and not beneath either of these in literary merit. CALLENDER & CO. are the agents for ft in Philadelphia. Timms:Alt himself commences two series here. One a ROTOI . called “Lovel the Wi- do*er," the other chitty and diteursive, en titled "Roundabout , Papers." ANTRIM TROLLOPE opens with three chapters of a tho roughly English novel called Framley Par sonage"—FßANK MAROKEY ("Father Prout ") is there with an Inaugurative Ode— and Several other well-known hands are also visible. There is a good sketch of LIIICR HUNT, which represents him not•at all like DICKENS' Herold '*kimpole. In fact, not to enumerate all the contents, this new Magazine is very good, and 'over 70,000 copies of the first number have been sold. • This may not seem very many, compared with the pale of periodicals hero— with Harper's 200,000 and C. T. Peterson's 75,000-,but it is wondrously large for "the old country" where the circulation of Black wood, the best British magazine, is not quite 10,000. TRACKERS:4 has engaged ALFRED TENNYSON to writes poem for the second number. There is a new periodical, called McMillen's .2Wage. rise, edited by Professor Maims, which in its January number had a poem of about 800 lines, for which, report says, the remarkable sum of 250 guineas was paid, being at the rate of over $1 per line. We have not seen it, but have had various accounts of it In the English papers, and can give some account of it here. TENNYSON'S new Idyll, then, bears the name of " Sea Dreams." The story which, in ratti er bald blank verse, it tells runs thug, " A city clerk, not gently born and bred," has a child, who is unwell, and he takes her, with her mother, to the sea-side. He has been induced by a rogue "To bay shsrea is some Permian mina,' and loses it. After the clerk gets down by the sea•eide he aid his wife go to church, and then ramble About the beach, and finally go to bed. There they dreani, and happening to be awaked by the tempest, they begin to talk, he accusing his false adviser, and she pleading for for giveness. His dream shows him a gigantic woman who tolls him that her strength came by working in the mines. He asks her of the prospect of his shares, but sho does not answer hint, and then he sees a fleet of glass wrecked on a reef of gold, hears a dash, and wakes. w Nay," said the kindly wife to comfort him, w You raised your arm—you tumbled down and broke tho glass with little Margaret's me dicine in It and breaking that, you made and broke your dream. A trifle makes a dream, a trifle breaks." This explanation does not satisfy him,.and he tells her how, on the preceding day, belied niet the Peruvian miner, and had asked to see the books, Ind how the miner had dodged him :with a long and loose account." this sketch of a hypocrite is good: •' The badge, the bongs t" Rut he, he could not wait, Sound on a matter he of life and death : When the great Books (sae Daniel seven, the tenth) Were open% I should and he meant me well Aid then began to bloat himself add ooze All - over with the fat affectionate SMile Tam makes thciwidow loam " My dearest friend Have faith. have fe itlt : live by faith," said he ; " And all things work together for the good or ttioso"—lt makes ma sick to quote him—last Griot tap hand hard, snit with God-bless-yoU went. The clerk describes, further, how ho stared atter his swindler, and how, with curious physiological interest, he - Read rascal in toe motion of his hack, And scoundrel in his supple, sliding knee. Here, not without humor, is the photograph of a British bank director: With ail his conscience and ono eye askew. Pio false, he partly took himself for true ; Whose pions talk when most his heart was dry, Mode wet the crafty erowtroot round his ey e ; Who, never naming Gel except for gain. Nn never took that useful Immo in vain: Nor deeds of Inas, tp.t. gifts of ii I , e forged. And snakelike slimed his victim ere h. gorged ; And oft at itibie Triestine*, o'er the rest ring, did his holy, oda best. rosining the too rough tr in Hell and Heaveo. spread the word by 'Which himself had thriven." The wife attempts to moderate her anger and tells her dream—as vague and incompre hensible as his own. Presently, the wife tells him that the Peruvian miner died of disease of the heart, shortly atter the clerk saw him. Their little child wakes and has to be sung to sleep with a favorite song : Baying this. The woman half turn'd round from him she lOVNI. Left him one hand. and reaching through the night Her other. found (for it was close beside). And half embraced the basket cradle -head With one soft arm, whmh. like the pliant hough That moving moves the neat and nestling, eway'd The cradle, while she sang this baby song. What does little birdie gay In her nest at peep of day t Let other lot says little birdie. Mother ma By away. Birdie. rest a little longer, Till the little wings are stronger. 14,1 she rests a little longer, Then she files away. What does little baby say. In her bed at peep of day Babyllityll, like little Let me rise and fly awn r, BOY, sleep a little longer, 711 the little limbs are stronger. If she sleeps a little longer, Baby too shalt fly away. Tho child falls to sleep. The father de clares that he forgives the dead Peruvian miner, and the couple forthwith go to sleep again. Surely this is a poem which TENNYtiON ought not to have published for any n oney ! It is weak and diffuse, commonplace and dull— in a word, evidently ci made to order." More of the Magazines. They come in, like ettegalors. All except tho liiticksrteekes, which seems to make a point of net coming to hand. From T. B. Pugh, in the Amide, and also from Peterson k Brothers, we have the Atlantic Milady for February. A right good number it is—opening with "Counting and Measuring," by George S. Lang, of Phila delphia. Other, artiBles, which we can affiliate properly, are Robe di Roma, by Mr. Story ; the Amber Gods, by Miss Prescott, author of "Sir Robert," a renentlypublished romance fall of ge nius and promise ; The Memorial of A B, by Rose Terry, (we love the roses!); Some Acethnt of a Visionary, by Marian James, an English author, who need to be great friends with Dinah Mutook ; The Maroons of Jamaica, by T. W. Bigginson ; Mexico, by 0. C. Ilazewell, of the Boston T'ra yeller ; The Professor's Story, by Relines; The Truce of Plseataqua, by Whittier; and some well-written reviews, which, of course, are from the scholarly and acute mind of the editor en chef. We notice, with pleasure, the decided im provement of the Atlantic Monthly since it be came the property of Ticknor b Fields. It is not en the 2/retest degree sectional, a rare advantage initheso troublotts times, when some people have the idea that other people should bo chary even of their thinking. The 'Gentleman's Magi:sine for December, oldest of European periodicals we believe, has reached as through Pennington is Son, the agents, who:supply it at a considerably lower price than the London price. For each a melange of anti quities, literature! (ancient and modern), and biography, who would not give six dollars a year ? I The engravings, on steel and wood, aro worth all I the money. In the present number is a biography of Colonel Wildman, late owner of Newstead Ati ' bey, to whioh we may return at another opportu nity. TUE COOPER OPERA TROUPE attracted a good audienoe to Walnut-street Theatre last night to hear Bellini's opera of " Bonnambula," in English. Annie Milner, as Arnica, acquitted herself very well indeed. She has a well•oultivated soprano voice, which she manages with great skill In the lest act she wag particularly tine, and gave " Ah ! don't , mingle" very effectively. Mr. Bowler. as Eltuno, gave satisfaction; ho has a good voice, but his gesticulation was at times rather ex travagant. Count Rodolpho,by Mr. Rudolphsen. was rendered in good style, while the character of .l.osa, by Miss Kemp, and. Teresa, by Min Payne, were all that pould be desired. Tonight, Balfe's opera of the Bohemian Girl" will be performed, with Annie Milner as Arline, THE PRESS.--PHILADELPHIA, WEDNEBDAY, JANUARY 25, 1860. Letter from " 00ettbi011al." [Correspondence of The Frees.) WASHINGTON, January 21, 1800. The letter of the Rev. Robert J. Breokinridge, the celebrated Presbyterian divino—whose eentro melee with the dissensioniste iu hie own denomi nation, and with the oracles of the Catholio Churoh, have familiarized his name in all religious circles— ' addressed to hie fortunate nephew,, the Vice Prost dent of the United States, is ono of those produe- Hong which, in the midst of such excitement as that now agitating the country on the slavery question, carry conviction wherever they go. The — Brookinridges aro a remarkable family, and (the truth may bo sald,) they have generally in Kentucky been regarded as the most distingulehod advocatee of the amelioration of the slave, and of the gradual abolition of the peculiar institution. They are the patrioians of Kentucky, and bear a striking resemblance one to the other, being men of fine presence, and generally acoonoplished soholars, leaders either in Congress or in tho Church, and always ready to eeetaia the honor of their country on the hattle.field. Of all the race, however, John C. Breokinridge may be said to have been the meet promising, especially when we consider that he took his position in politics when there were more actors upon the scone, and, if possible. more exciting issues, than those which marked the era in which his immediate ancestors lived. Elected to Congress in 1851, from an old Whig district, and re-elected in 1851, he at onoo assumed a high poeition, and when he retired 'in' 18.55 be had boon tendered at least ono Important mission by President Pierce, and wes looked upon by the country as emphatically the rising man of his section. Ills appearance at the Cincinnati Convention, as a delegate from 'the Lonington district, as the warm and unyielding friend of Stephen A. Douglas, was greeted with enthusiasm, and the Cesar-like manner in which he declined the Vice Presidency, his handsome figure, his graceful, ale. gant, and modest deliortment, won for him the mien which he so courteously put away. Ile .un. questionably added great strength to the Demo, ()ratio ticket in 1858, and to increase the chances of hie future advancement, ho bad hardly been Gloated ,when his venerable copartner, Mr. Bu chanan, drew the Presidential sword upon him, and Included him among those whom he made popular by his prosoriptione. The seat of the Vice President is a silent seat. It is, of all other places, the niche in which a can didate for the Presidency may take his stand, (particularly if he should happen to be an impres sive, well-looking young man.) and bo admired and commented upon by the critical audienooe, who assemble in the aristocratic department of the Congressional theatre. It Is the place for a cautious man, and I can conceive no more elegant snuggery for an aspirant, whose whole previous career was a continued suc cess, and who, iu the late struggle for prin ciple, had placed himself high and etrong upon the national ground °coupled by the Demobratio party. Mr. Breokinridge has filled the Vice Pre sident's chair for nearly three years, and in the divialone incident to the contest between Mr. Bus ohnnan and the Democratic masses, hie name be came the 'watchword all over the Union as a valuable nuns, because it represented a South ern man who stood fair with the conservative sentiment of the country, and who had ne ver committed sin error in • his political re cord. lie had been among the foremost to assert, and among the most eloquent to defend, the imperishable doctrine of popular sovereignty, as laid down by Judge Douglas in the Kaneas-Ne break& bill, and reiterated by James Buchanan in his letter of acseeptance. Notwithstanding John Brown at Harper's Ferry, notwithstanding the con test in his own State between the friends and foes of this doctrine, Mr. Brookinridge was elected for six years to the United States Senate, by the Legie. letters of Kentucky—thus adding another long lease upon the highest relation of Congressional life, to hie present distingniehed position. Ile had, in fact, boon chosen John a. Prittenden's suoaessor as a popular sovereignty Democrat. His continued al. Immo was therefore expected by friend and foe. Ills opponents qt bomo, beaded by Mr. Guthrie, now in the field, an active ennvesser for the Presidency, had gone a bow-shot beyond Mr. Buchanan, and bad assumed the extremest ground against Judge Dou glas ; so that the Vice President's past record and his present policy, both conspired to advise him to maintain the quiet and urobtresive attitude he bad "occupied since hie election. Moro chap one of his friends were netoniehed, therefore, when, niter bie election to the United States Senate, the Vico Pre sident concluded, voluntarily, to go to Frankford, and there to place hirmtelf on the extreme Southern platform, side by side with Mr. Buchanan. I am very sure ho will not complain of those Qom manta on my part. Possibly, in theeoursoof things, we may all bo moiled upon' to vote for Major Brook inridge as an alternative. The surprise which his now position baa aerated in the besom of one who loves him dearly, and who has watched, and watches, his career with mere than the interest of political affinity, may well be shared by his trice& in the renke of the Demo cracy. The Rev. Mr. Breokinrldgo, in his westerly • letter to his brilliant and fortunate nephew, struck the popular chord. and while operating for Ken tucky, and vinfileating that State against the see. picion of disloyalty to the Linton, conveys an ad monition to the youthful Vice President, which only speaks the sentiment of tens of thousands of men in every pert of the non-s 1 a veholding North and Northwest. When Cortes advanced into the interior of Mexico, in order to convince his troops of the des peration of the contest before them, he caused his ships to be burned behind him, so that every man fought with his life in hie hand. Hew will it ,be with us of the free States who go to Charleston on the 21d of April, to assist in securing e national platform, and in placing on that platform a national candidate for President? I notice, in a letter of one of the Virginia correepondents of the N. Y. Herald, the remark that the delegation from the Empire State, headed by Mr. Cassidy and Mr. Striper, and eupported by those gallant fellows, Isaac Fow ler and Peter Caggor, may be in danger of per sonal assault, should they insist upon taking their seats in the Democratic Convention; and sit you will reed over the late numbers of the Charleston Mereury, you will find that the most ultra Tome. dies aro suggested, not only against Northern Inter lopers, but against ell Southern men who falter in the movement of denunciation of Stephen A. Douglas. I have a great opinion of Southern hos pitality, and I am very sure that there will be found a good many courteous gentlemen in the chief city of the Palmetto State ; but it would be a rather bad business if the Southern men gath ered in Charleston, on the 231 of April, should take it into their beads that they were about to be captured by a Northern horde, and should deter mine to Insist upon the expulsion of all popular sovereignty Domoerats, inasmuch ac these latter might be regarded as foes of the South. A Northern Democrat going to Charleston must carry with him the eantiment of hie people. It ho loses it on the way, be had better remain among the fire-eaters, and if ho takes it with him to the Convention he may occupy a somewhat disagree able attitude. At all events, my earnest ad vice is, that the friends of moderation end of oonservatism should Seek to Charleston, should there take their stand, yielding nothing to the fire.eatere and tho &unionists ; but resolved to contend, to the last, for that which will be found, ultimately, to be the surest safety of the South Built. They need not, if they are discreet and eourageoue, he alarmed for the coneequencee They need not burn their ships behind them, for if they are animated by the proper motives, they will not only defeat the foes of the Union in the slave, but carry the flag of the Democratic, party in triumph through the free States. I notice, without amazement, n Joel tidal article In one of your Philadelphia Administration papers against the telegraphic report of Roger A. Pryor's attack upon the fiend of the Now York /braid— which report was published In all the newspapers of the day except the Herold itself. The writer caile upon the company hewing Margo of the Con gressional reports to decide what portion of the debates In Congress is fit to be transmitted to the people. This is really refreshing. Mr. Pryor, shamefully assailed by Mr. Bennett. who boasts that hie paper has a world wide &inn:dation, gets up in Congress, and pro nounces a philippic of extraordinary ability and severity against his opponent. This obaranteristio epaeob is received with delight by all who beer It, and, of (course, is caught up by the men with the ravenous pens in the galleries, and sent over the telegraphic' wires. It is preeirely the kind of thing tho people want to see. The truth Is the masses have now, for the first time in thole lives, (thanks to Professor Morse), a chnnoo to see a daily daguer reotype of the doings of their servants in Congress. What they want le a faithful Octave. They do not want to have only a part of the features of Wash ington life, but everything. You might as well try to satisfy a visitor at Brady's gallery In New York, or at that of Modlees and Carmen in Phi ladelphia, by trying to take a copy of his face by gas-light, and pass It off as the work of the sun Itself, as to expect the American people to be satis fied with a fan-simile of the doings of Congress, revised and corrected by an Administration critic, located here as a sort of censor. I wonder why your Philadelphia Administration organ did not sooner mnko this suggestion—labile the tole ' graphic, soiree were being used by Mr. Buchanan here, in the course of his abuse of Judge Douglas, and while they were convoying calumnies upon th o Republicans of the North, denounoing them as sycnpatilizers with the Jobe Brown affray. It seems that the moment the lightning streak James Gor don Bennett, in hie sanctum, all the moralities and demotes of the Administration organ, heretofore latent and silent, were startled into indignant ac. Reify, You have often road in the autobiographies of neglected geniuses the difficulties attendant upon the publication of their lucubrations, in whatever department of literature. Just the same difficul ties, which have befallen the Honorable Jeremiah S. Black, Attorney General of the United States, for some days past, have afforded talk and amuse ment for the booksellers and publishers of this city. He went from one bookseller to another, end all refused until it was provided that lessee ehould be made up. The work to be got out IS a collection of Judge Black's writings on the Territorial ques tions, most of them attempted replies to Judge Douglas. A gentleman who saw the subecription list informs sue that the number of copies sub. Earthed for Is 2,500, of which Mr. Black takosl,ooo. tionoral Casa was asked to put his name down for a number of copies, and, I am told, the old states man replied : " What ! I take copies of a pamphlet which antagonises the political principles of my life! Oh, no, sir, I leave that to others." Thaw+ been fortunate in obtaining the estimatea of appropriations required for the service of the year 1861, arranged as usually, embraced in the bills reported to the House of Representatives from the Committee of Ways andltleans..They are accurate, and foreshadow the bills of appropriation for the next year. Of course the total will be much enlarged by additions to the oeveral bills, by amendments in the House of Representatives as well as by the Senate : I °violative Executive and Judicial. ... • ••8 00 1 5 Re 07 nertni'. Civi1.................... CC,3.316 P 3 Poet Office Deficiency.. ogi 411 111 (Infielder and Diplomat c.... Livia) o Pen.ion "•" • " oro 00 Indian ......... ............. 1.0 . 8 t 11,623,003 122 A rmy . . MR/2 00 Military Academy • • • • . • 075 000 112 00 Fortifications.. I see that a good many papers are envious to have a statement of the exact condition of toes. Gone before the Rouse of Representatives. Bore it is. Before any vote was taken for Speaker, Mr. Clark, of Minsourt, offered a resolution that no member woe fit to bo Speaker who endorsed the doctrines of the Helper hook, which were de nounced as Incendiary and insurrectionary in their nature. For that Mr. Gilmer, of North Carolina, moved to substitute a proposition approving the Compromise of 1850 as a final settlement of the slavery agitation. Previously Mr. Stevens, of Pennsylvania, bad raised a question of order that no business could take precedence of the election of Speaker and the organisation of the Rouse. Both statute and parliamentary law sustain the point. Mr. Stevens. 'tourer, withdrew his point to lot in Mi. Gilmer's substittito, and then Lion was made to lay • tlie whole subject upon the table, which was lost by one vote. Mr. Stevens renewed his point of order. General debate progressed, prinelpallyby members on the Democratic benches, the Republicans maintaining a studied silence. The, next move was by Mr. Hickman, who presented the plurality resolution, which being ohjentol to, the Clerk ruled it out. On the mortc,v Mr. Ili-1; man roao to dotted the journal, the fact that ho offered the plurality rule not appearing. The objet, I presume, wes,.lf the journal allowed that the rule was not enter- tained under the decision of the Clerk, to take en appeal and have the matter detailed by the /louse. Then other questions of order ware piled up. And now the immediate question before the llolcee is in reference to thendinissibtlity of Om resolution of Mr. 'Wishing, of Ohio, In fever of the adoption of the plurality rule. • The Republicans have stated their desire to take itp'end dispose of those ques tions ono after another ; but Mr. Burnett, and oth ers of the Iternocratio party, have announe ed to the House that, oven if there were no question before it, except to elect a Speaker ; if all the pending questions were disposed 'of, they arc bound to op pose the adoption of the plurality 'resolution, from which will result the elevation of a Republioan Speaker, if the Oovernment, in its departments, now cripple', has to go Mt without tnonoy until the opening of a new Congress, in March, 1881. There seems to ho hope entertained by none I have seen that the deed look will and Ibis week. Yesterday •Mr. Corwin made an able spew+) It was nonservatlve to a remarkable degree. Of oonim it is not relished by the Southern Rem aionista, who have 'mahliabetl their &Aim to break up the Union if q certain man is (slanted by 'the people Prosldont, without wetting for any overt uneonatttutlonst not. OCCASIONAL. From Iforrisburg. (Correspondence of The Press.) . ABRISIIVROr Jan. 20860. Avery important HI. entitled "an set relatinic ' fn the alt• insurance companies and easooiations in the city or • - - Philadelphia, and the °punt,. of Alleghenr," was read by IA the Republicans, and they dleregard the r7,'s why his bad gold that their success brought Mr. O'Neill. Ittution in the same way,lf not in power, here. Section one requires every insurance company, now or here. her oherler , d by this Commonwealth, located V , " to fade with revolution. He road the law In the city of Philadelphia, or county of Allegheny, or row York to which he had referred, doing business by correspondence or an agent, to pre. Ir Rom, of New York, ached when the law sent annually. in the month of January, to the Auditor 0 Pr"ed• General, a full and occur/4e statement of their affairs. Sr. Tomtits eald that when the question was verified by the oath or affirmation of its resident and ed with nn honest Intent, and not designed ns a s N secretory. A regular order of statement is provided for sic, he would *newer eon rteously. The law was end embraces every essential quality to Waco before the sed by the New York Muse , but felled in the public all the necessary information to lend to an into!- ate, two or threo Ropublionng declining to lieentdisennonVion between legitimate and reliable 461.4 Inch si plain violation of the Constitution companies, earl a armies of insurance known as i r. KIND. That la all I wish stated. The law '' bogus;" and a refusal or neglect on the pert of any e'er Was paned. , company or neenciation. correspondent or arent. to fur- Mr. TOO( PSI continued, charging that the failure meh the statement required. shall operate as a forfeiture carry nut the fugitiveislavo law was a breach of of their °barter, sad a denial of all privilegoe grantedrith• Vine any tine on the other Aldo of the them• once reedy to execute that tow in good faith ? He Section two provides for a sreoinl record in the officeld tint believe 111 l many onnld be found art God re. of the Recorder of Deeds in the city of litowe r l i tintred to save Sodom. In the name of the people and in the county of Allegheny, in which shell 14 kept ?f hie State, he demanded the fulfilment of the eprisiot and lull record of the statements furniehed t''') Menet, and the redemption of their plighted the Auditor General, and makes it accessible to 'Pali The RePehlleges pretend that their only public. • deciro was* to prevent the extension of al every, and re Section the empowers the Auditor Genern?, up; curry back the Government to the 'Jaye of the 1 hie own conviction of error or fraud in any *teem father!' of the Republic. The deeeption Wan en furniebod him, or at the instance of any two relic utter feleehood, when they say they moony the persons, to appoint two Porenni of known intesri position of Jefforton. He was not oprinewl to the conversant with Recounts end the principles of 1 extension of shivery, rind ho condemned the Mir aniline°, not a stockholder. director, or employee. setirkVertrlction of 1120. Mr. Madison took the any insuranos (lee, commiamonere. wire, alley liet , earn 3 view. It wail a ewe imposition to say that du1y „ ,,,,,, i4ed owl 0r0v, ,,,d ro „Ai n . l e m o w, the Ropithlimone had eriltiona in accordance with affairs of eueliecoirens•lreirsts , ----• ,,,- ..r,..*Oree thou of tbo early fathere - They het jirdit MI of the proper (unt ; and if it eppene from tneireppeCia,4pry in I..,eutelona sort ask anses, jinn n., ~., that the company. whose whin es they invasileiroed4 to prieerre Abelr memory from eneit degradation. insolvent, an intonation shall Issue immediately , i t The h i lipublican party was built on the dogma ere. i bigheet teibunal of the country had declared tins restrain numb company from transaction business, sn. braced ip the Missouri act of MO. whleb. this a n ft e e o r n fi a r n afri o in n 1 O n rt t i° ls 4 IVl Q e r tf It c y ° , In the l e shall i nT r appoint Prt. t'n melts/Gonad Such was the Party enticing to ad• receiver to Nettle it. affairs ; and If the coatmiestoner Inlllifilme the Conatiostion. He then argued his examination indicates that the assets ere 'redneed e third charge—that the members of thin party had Shy per cent., or lens, of the capital paid in, after di beau Permitted to commit stets of hostility against ducting all liabilities and reserving an amount eutileiel confederate Steles. Ile here reed from Grottos to reinsure all outstanding Yugo, an infuriation she and Vette!, to show that any attempt to disturb 1 lane to reetrein said company from dottier leisinete I's, the tranquillity of one State by soothe-, or to I the space of throe months, and unless ndiiitional ear ' Subvert Ito institutione, wee a cause of war. I tel be realized within said period, the court Anil, at tt Everywhere In the North. this party, through expiration of the time specified, appoint a receiver. the pulpit and the press, were committing . Rots of ' Section foul problem, under severe penalties, 1 aggresoion and seeking to stir up servile insurree• Publiestion of am etatement b r non company not reels lion and war et the South. Slat v•eight members It in conformity with the statement furniabe.lto I of Congress had endorsed the Helper book, nod Auditor General; end prohibits every foroinn Into one of its signers wan seeking to become Speaker ranee company ;transacting business, either three of the House The Ropublienne had undertaken or Indirectly. within this Commonwealth, from Ira, to elect a roan Speaker of the House who could acting soots business in an other manner then by I nut travel throughout what wee called oar common establishment eta regiderateney,ln conformity with' a-sentry—not common for such men, rind he honed Provision. of an act entitled •' An not relative to hied it never would be. Many 'hominid Re agencies of foreign Insurance companion, trust and publicans IBliked on John Drown an a martyr, end nuity companies, approved April 9th, latil.” all of them were lost in admiration that one man Section five provides the mode ot collecting fines i could be found amongst them who war ready Penalties, to die genic. lie urged harmony among all &idiot, six repeals ail acts that conflict with or patriotic men to preserve the country, iind invoked superseded lir this art. thorn to disregard these miserable abstractions. It aso provides that ell transatlantic continents el 110 conoludod with a glowing tribute to the South conform with the provisions of the art of April S and to Virginia. Tire latter, which had borne the lite, and furnish satisfactory evidence Pi the Audi burden of the Revolutionary war, had been in• Onnernl Ova 0200 000 trove been and are neeurely .ended, an i tho blood of her children bail boon vested In the United States. That there is need of en ph o d. . Thin tio u tt, w e re anxious to avenge her low that will root out bogus and unsafe inewnime o. wrong. One Lifter from Virginia would eurinnon a panics. and place upon a safer basis tlie whole loinh tnillion of men to boy aid. tfe pronounced the of insurance, no man who has ever been tsiiii“l, solves.; of tlin black Republicen party a Mtge fur heidine a policy in one of those companies'. need be r secef:don, The South should never let tbe Repub. There will be °remit= to it—that is exPeeled . IMAma get hold of tho reins of Government They matter of course; but if the 101 l now before rho Ito elioul I not wait for overt debt. War was alto fly confers the benefits that it proposes, it oortitirib ot deoltir , d, nril blood had been abed They should to pm.. inert them at the threshold and drive them back, Mr. Freston, in rlic , , "O n act to incorpornten or tear (lona the pillars of the temple of litany Perham Smol t . Modem , Manutacturing Pavinvsl end n helm Blida universal ruin. Loan Company of Pollees Iva nia." Corporatera-l - Mr. roarrn, of Conneoticut. defended Connect'. ton Cooper, Rama Work. George hi. Stow, e? cut from the charge of passing unconstitutional Callender. J. Gearhart. 'William M. Parham. Cleg laws. Ito referred to the eats of 141, IRIS, nod Perhani, Joseph R. Harman, and Henry Megee. ti- lesi, to shorn there was nothing in them to joatify tel stork not to exceed ten thousand shares of awl- the therga of the Senator from Georgia. There five dollars each. The object of the ororporstiof was Po lain to prevent • imager bringing his slave these goutlemen Is to mann f.eturo ',ening nine ,, into the State, and nothing to Interfer.i with the under the letters Patent issued to Charles thirliannil relation of master and elan , . The law of 1054 wee the furnishing of the ennui to, or melons mien lose' designed to Punish any one who falsely end me ths members ot Mud earoorottoo. depositors, or ere Mb - itly endeavored to enslave a free men. lie who shall contribute to its caving fund, in iy rem believed that was also a crime In Georg i a . Ho wee . ... .. upon easy and ad ventaireona terms. Mr. Preston has withdrawn his fitst bill fir',le at Manny epic, and substituted In its piece elwthenth new corpnrators. They ore A. Campbell. Joseph Lit. Wm. D. Stevens. James M. Preston. Saxon E. Wen. Joan 11arlies, D. B. King, Fred. Pairthorneli ehael Blynn, Thos. S. Darling, .1 V. Ames N. L, ea. Win. MinFrieden, Bernard McCain, P. H. }brine P. Sanderson. Ed. E. Jones. Janus B. Win penny. nos Spam 11. H. B. Ogle, C. Thompson. John ConrY, 1 1 • James Henry, B. Cogsthall, John Harm, Jr.. Pomeroy, David nine. Samuel 1.. W n it, Cher M. Jackson, Wm. P. Smith. It. G. Irses, David Waco, Charles E. Graff, John Adnlna, Aifred C. Harineill lieni M. Showell, T. II Fete., Ileorme W. Ilanotly, John Ilowker, k &Nerd Prostrui. Jr., James der, William Damson, A. Ripka, S. .1. Healy. Hard Share. Daniel Arbuckle, Jame atom an ti , tree Shields, Charles 'Boone, Edw. Stromlo, end coot Brown. it is to be oronized under the proms of the General Banking I,aw. One would sit Inshore were emperators onnugh. at any rate. ate. Riley, of Blair, a hill to cnerease the 1.11109 of the Ceinmenweelth by taxing the avert quer,. sirs in all hanks end insurneee onmoanios with thins privileent, to the extent 1 two per cent. Thoenati tuitions era to file in the mites of the Auditor sore. swarm fiat merit of the average aim lint of moots /1.5 ahnwn by their boots in each quarter or Greco commencing with the let of January, IMO. If ;shank or such into teller' refuse to Iloilo snob etetens, the Auditor General lied Siete Treitenier are to nee and collect a further tax ol two per cent, on thetpital Honk. The Democracy aro put in e very uneemfortelpeai - non on the tame is When the reselmipwo re before the House few days si ce. they war- emend ed lis to assert a disbelief in the stneerityPident Buchanan's views expressed In hie message sir of spenifie ever rut valoreni duties. Inasmuch or per mitted Howell Cobh lilt Secretary of the Tree" - , in whom Consrose look for advice on all quests of revenue. to helve that we ought not to think Mon-- denies the lid valorem mine pl. The result K, that when they OEM! UpOlt their finac.piniesee ifie flocrats all voted 'Kettles and the Republicans for the tn.r roan lotions. The Democracy put themselves in the noon of preferring old Bunk to protective tariff, of ietoK to ask Cons reel to modify the present las-, bora was doubt expressed of the sincerity thy Potato a Oita palsy. This is planing, themselvet in omit: nicht before the people. and thin some of Hamill dud rover neat fall.; for there is not one nova in andred . 1) in aunty's—ma, whin does not believe steel what the resolutions expressed on the solicit. [Cr Ifit. Oman wee earnestly in favor of a modifiel lunf tararon coal and iron. who did he net ever theowar of t•is Administrationtto briar it about Whlid not whip the refractory M. Into the trust at he didon the Iscempton (Amnion If he ti half the treuMe to e vanes the coal A nd iron stems, of Pennsylvania that ho did to extend the motion 01 slavery over the Teri Rory of Kansts, am OKA' nil' . yams the intermits of So 111 Caroline an d Mori. 31 would unquestinnehly have InlCVOiled. But ins one care he used all the petroname of hit noverione white in the oilier, ho permitted t ne of his Cabinet sisters to thwart his pretended Clown. It is Co iliatioroll, therefore. that tome of ou t PO fly's) li anis uteri of the beencleture will I" nil it diffiedit to est& their course on Friday feet. The and mirlt—repremented by Sim in B. Anti)). Ell rnbeth Cady Stanton, Caroline H. DtII, Emile 1. Hose, Antoinette Bolen Tlhwell. Maria end Ca -oline al. Severance ies are bolero the I.eloure• in the thane of a petition for such leristaiiete will meenre :to women the right to re e, to net e.odset : boom, conetablee, and to hold ether 01E008 of for and profit. The Petition it also mened ay a mbar, of emote In enaialinee olieracters are an 110111orrni. with the Aber mos that all the pulsations of their los are in that direction. They do not ask for air loguilation to ripen new avenues of Pinola) int to Wo men, or propose nay ineveMent to coin:owe th'etl in termits of the sex. They probably have scold hoer they most desire, viz.: notoriety, anions 111. g , to n ne Blackwell is not mons the sinners. c'hi , n 1160.1 coma exprestione of surpriee, nntih it was Phoned that Ow was enraged in the more useful prop $" rocking the cradle. PENN. AramwrEnannar —Prom Callender Co, ire have the Illustrated London News oho 7th Inst., also the Illustrated News of thill'orld, (with a memoir, and splendid steel portrs of Nu• nelson Hl,) and the first number of 71 Corn hill THE LATEST NEWS B TELEGRAPH. ONGRESS,--FIRST SESSION, ITOL ! WASHINGTON, Jan. 24, 1880 .SENATB. fjunxn, of Razsachusetta, 11 , 14011mm' a bill to swum lb wages of Examen in eases of wre3lc. Referral. Mr. Bnotx, of Alizzittalppl, introduced a bill to provido forte pabilo printing, binding. lithograph• ing and (wawa , by nstablishing a Government Printing Ore. Aerated to tho Committee on Printing. Mr. Bilotti Minnesota, introduced a resolution instructing he Committee on Territories to bring in a bill foram organization of the Toriltory of Da notch. 1.41 over. Mr. ICipla N. Y.) roFolution to appoint a oomenittea, of ire to investigate trbothor any mow hibeer paid from the public printing fund for the auiort of certain nowspapers, &0,, was taken up tad slotted. Mr. Ivnaorrolforod a Joint resolution relative to the paf of retired and dropped offleare of the navy. liferrod to the Committee on Naval Af fairs. A memo was resolved from the President eons. munleatO information relative to the Perugia outrage. Mr. Troxsa resolution !intruding tho Judi ciary Cemittee to bring in a bill for the batter suppream of iniesions, ices called up. Mr. 'buns, of Georgia, proceeded to address the Bents. Mr. oolong. accepted the resolution of the Senatotirom Illinois (Mr. Douglas) as a move in the tie:direction. Ire feared tile disease was too deep-seed for the remedy proposed. A common interests common danger, carried the country througlhe Revolution. After the forms tion of the Governentt, parties were formed, groat interests dividedind deeply moved the country. The peopleere divided upon the alien and sedition laws, o currency and the tariff, the ware with Greatvitaln and Mexico, but they submitted to the dedon of the ballot-box. All was now changed. Men ilonger regard the compact by which they aro bud. and dieregard the ilea which united themgether. Now the time has arrived when the aucceof a particular party brings no face to (see with revolution. This was no time to seek is re. mody,Pe r threats of the Senators from Maine and MW , .. aren't avail. Until they had oome out of tlittltatest with victorious banners, they had betttrcfrain from boastings and threats. The fountions of moiety are threatened and endan gers We are virtually in It state of civil war. A lee body of the Representatives here are ene• mieaf the country, ready to trample on the fun rental laws of the country. The De• mastic party had never been truer to the Contutlon than during the last seven years, nrubeeause this was its position, a combine. Gotha: been formed to plane a party in poe, whose success is inconsistent with the pea of the country. Ile charged the Republican pas more in sorrow than in anger, with having stiten down the fundamental principles of the Gtirnment, with seeking to deprive the Southern of equal rights in the Territories, end to I °Own the decisions of the Supreme Court. ' 'lloo,lnclividtial members, through the State Leintures, and by overt acts, they ere seeking towele the rights of ono section of the Coufede• ra Ile argued to prove the trolls of there elle. One at come length. In nine of' the States of tittnion the clause of the Constitution for the million of fugitives from labor Is a dead letter. it:viewed the history of the ennotment of that , the constitutionality of which. in former tie. was approved by every Northern State, ox• oilVisconsin. lie made a legal argument against tladverso derision of the Supreme Court of l)onsin. Ile read the cote of Ohio end Conner. t, to show that the Legislatures of these States liparsed laws violative of the Constitution of tynited States. Ir. FOBTlttt, of Connecticut, netted what, act of inecticut was unconstitutional Ir. TOOMII4 read an act prohibiting the bring tof eleven into the State under penalty of a fine t PORTF.II said the prohibition related to cases Wti e daves Were brought into the State for pur rictsale. ts'llroeSnia replied that no State had violated theastitution more nrtfully or fraudulently than Ceedleut. It imposed a fine of five thousand doll and Imprisonment of a man coming into thntte to enslave free negroes. When a man webers to reclaim fugitives, such rules of evil. del were enforced as to suture him from convic. tie Connecticut had violated the Constitution wins the manhood to gulp down the treason, as 1.1 - York had done. Ballad showed that no oaths .115118 v 3 53 quite willing to compare the legislation of Connec ticut with that of Georgia, or inetiluto a compari son in any . other respect. Mr. MALLORY, of FlO, asked If he was wit ling to carry out the pr 9 one of the Constitution for the rendition of fugitives front labor? Mr. roam:. Yes. as far RS It Is constltulionni. Mr. MiLLORT said that Connecticut bad adopted no mensicros to carry out the fugitive-slave law. Mr. HALE, of New llnmpshire. N'eithor hoe Florida. Mr. Fostrv.it denied that a legal process for the execution of the fugitive•elave law had ever been obstructed in Connecticut. Mr Itun.eautc, of Louisiana, having obtainol the law of Conneetlout of IBM, entitled an not for tho dofence of liberty, and to provide against kid napping free periods, read its provisions, and con tended that it was aimed at inaster4 seeking to re clahn fugitive eleven, anti fully sustained Mr. Tcouths' allegations. Mr FOSTRIS de fended the law es only designed to punish thorn who Manly end maliciously sought the enslavement of free persons After further ilc.tiltory debate, Mr. DnowN, of Mieshaippl moved to pas pone thew. ronlutions and take up f 1 ,61.0 offered Icy himself. This 11 , 1Ie q p:reed to, and the subject was then poAponod till h a lf pact I o'clock to-morrow. Tho Senate the. , wont Into executive section, and subsequently namrrecd. HOUSE Oh' REPRESENTATIVES. Mr MeCbErotavo. of Illinole, rose to a personal explanation, snying that his colleague (Mr. Farris worth) bad, In effect, charged him with baying suppressed certain resolutions of the Illinois De• moerftey on the subject of slavery, In the speech which ho made the other day. The charge wan unfounded, and this reflection upon him unperlia montave. Mr. Fsnvawontu Stlolo,l that all he nought to do wag to lot the South nod the country know where the Douglas Demoornay of Illinois stood They de.dtre they want no new Congressional tort on slavery—no slave.emle; no revival of Hen African slave trade; and they estert that slavery is a mere local and municirol institution Ida belly.' the FrPeeell of Senator D0te4139, yesterday, in which ho proposed n , lave ',ale, by making it a penitentiary offence for any person to interfere with the rola thon of master and slave. Mr Leone, of Illinois, said that so far as the Democracy of Illinois wan concerned, it can take pate of itself, and if his colleague would attend to his own platfotm he would not with a little more propriety. With regard to the slave collo, it was none of Mr Farnsworth's binciness The distitc guirbed Senator (Mr. Dourlas) had proposed a law to lee pasotl to open thu doors of the ponitentinre to receive those who incite treason and insurrce tine, and those who ban I together to run away fu gitive daces from their masters lie suspected that his colleague desired no such law, for fear it might affect :mum pert Me living where Mr. nuns worth does. Mr FanNstetenTll in t ellect?, what did Mr. Dou glas props° hut a slave code I Mr LOGAN Mid Ito endorsed every point of So• nntor Douglas' Spßeoll. Ills design was merely to euppresa contpiracle4 fn violating the rights of plater Staten, lie did not know that his (mileages wan emended in toil) things. but his constituents had endorsee' them• end their ministors had preached sermons holding up John Drown as a martyr. Mr. FnExatvonvu repeated that Senator Doug las had proposed to p 443 a slave code for the pro tection of slavery wherever it exists, notwithstand ing the Douglas Democracy of Illinois had de clared that slavery was n more local and munici pal institution. That Is the tniserabie eophist r y end the position of the mon whom his colleague, Mr. began, worships. It became necessary for Douglas to make a bid for Southern support, and he rolls over in the dirt and favors a Congressional slave male. His eolleague had talked about tend ing the Republicans to the penitentiary. No doubt, the man bid colleague worships would be glad to mind the Republicans to the penitentiary till after the next election. [Laughter.] But we expect to get him into the penitentiary before he gets us there. [Laughter.] Mr. MeCt.trixaND resumed his personal expla• nation, saying in conclusion, that Mr Farnsworth had given en erroneous Interpretation to Mr. Den glee' preposition, and such an Incorrect exprovalon originates in Mr. Farnsworth's prejudices and hos tility to Douglas and the Democratic! party. is Conwm, of Ohio, resumed his remarks from yesterday, saying that we stand with the fathers of the Republic and the Constitution, and whatever may be the opinions of this day, wo should not be accused of treason while we adopt the dootrines of Jefferson, Madison, and Monroe. If wo are wrong, those old gentlemen wore wrong, and if we aro right, then the - Deumeratle party is wrong. He wished to present a question of logic. It was said that Mr. Seward, being the head and leader of the Republican party, hail proclaimed at llochester that there must bo some conflict between free and slave labor, and that in coast - Immo° of that decla ration John Brown dotermincl TO murder some body at Harper's Ferry. Did gentlemen suppose that Brown had not read Jefferson's Notes on Vir globe, and the remark of Washington, that he would render cordial co operation to the abolition of slavery throughout the country? Did they sup- Vose that he had not seen the debates in the irginia Convention, In which it was said that slavery wee an enormous evil, and that unless it was abolished it would advance steadily, step by step, until it would bees fatal as death ? Dld they suppose that Brown bad not read all these things, and pondered on them in his mountain soli tude in New York for twenty years, end prayed over them? It was there this enterprise entered into his crazed imagination, being superindueed Vv tho principles consecrated by Jefferson and Washington—Brown belie% Ing that the angels of the Lord et some time would encamp around him. Now, be (Mr. Corwin) appealed to the gentlemen to say whether, instead of tracing back Brown's raid to Seward's deolara lion, they could not more properly trace It to their own heroes and great men. No—not their heroes and great men, but our heroes and great men, be longing to the whole United States and the world. Theirs are names which will brightly illumine the pages of history, while we hove been food for worms. Ito asserted that the resolution of Mr Clark, of Missouri, was an advertisement of the Helper book," and that Mr. Sherman bad satisfactorily explained how hie name had become connected with that work. Mr. Sher man bad not endorsed that hook. It wag not prepared at the time he authorized his name to be appended toe pelitical pamphlet, after being as sured it would all be right. Criminality is to be determined from the intent, and none such existed against Mr. Sherman, who neither endorsed nor ap proved of incendiary or insurrectionary teachings. Suppose a CM subscribe fur a newspaper for nix months, and the editor turns out to be a rascal and a blackguard—is the subscriber to be held reupon sible for that? It had been said that the election of Mr. Sherman would be the Initiatory step for dis solution, and if followed by the elootlon of Mr. Se ward to the Presideney, that calamity would be as compliehed. lint no menace or threat from any eection could make him shrink from exorcising the rights bequeathed to him by his fathers. Were he to submit, that very moment he would he disfran chised, and would have a collar about his neck and ho treated as a serf. Re argued at some length that Territories are to be governed by Congressional law, which could provide that slavery shall or shall not exist there in, and referred to a fernier period of our history to show that Monroe, President, and John Quincy Adams, Crawford, Calhoun, Southard, and Wirt, Cabinet officers, all agreed thatCongresa ban power to exclude slavery from the Territories. Ile also alluded to the judicial history of the country to show that the position of the Republi cans was consistent therewith. Their principles, nn thia subject. were the same as thee() of the old Wbig party. Mr Calh''•tn bed emphatically sail that the doctrine that could not legislate en the subjeot of slavery so the Territorlea was ab. surd and contrary to the practice of the Govern. meat from Its foundation to the present time. Mr. Wisrstow, of North Caroline, snored (Mr. Corwin expressing his willingness to yield the floor) that the Mouse proceed to rote for Speaker t 4 Na VON , . Mr. iiICKWAN, of Pennsylvania, and others on the Republican side objected. Mr. Con Wist resumed, reviewing the position of the Ohio Democrat.) , in IS-18, when resoliitions were adopted declaring that they looked on the in• etitution of slavery as unfavorable to the full de velopment of free inatitutione. Entertaining these nentitnenta, he said they would be derelict to their duty If they did not prevent Its liminess, mitigate, and finally eradicate it. The Democracy of Ohio in 18-13 be,[ll these dootrinee, going further then the Whigs; but in that veer the Democratic party WA-9 RAMOdO/IptiVe to Babylon. Zachary Taylor was elec.ted President. The Democracy bong their harps on the willow. and mourned for the slain of the daughters of their people. While up to 1853 they maintained slavery might be restricted, the Donmerney suddenly woke up. cod now sty that slavery la very good, and will develop the resources of the country. Re referred to these things to show Democratic inooneistonolea. The question as to slavery must bo tried here after the Rouse 13 or centred, if this shell over take place. If the Southern gentlemen announce, as they have, that this Gnion shall be dissolved if the people of the North elect a President of their choice, we shall then see where the treason Bee. Adjourned. [Mr. Corwin occupied the floor four hours.] PENNSYLVANIA LEGISLATURE Efanntsarno, Jan..l3, 1660 SENATE. There wore quite a nutnberef petition!, ,to , p 'anted, and among them ono by the Speaker, signed by 132 citizens of Lawrenco and Mercer counties, for a law reouring to every resident of Pennsylvania, not charged with crime, the full enjoyment of personal liberty, and to pmhibit the surrender of any himan being claimed as slam Iro.. wheeler, orli'Llree t A l t....""Z: 6 • l from 5. for the sorvantg taken from }i lk, it i :allgin I t i y o to 1855. It Wag TWO. Orderna in V. rhliPhect In Lem elat ve Record, and referred to the Vomtnittee on 'Monett. A number of petitions were presented for a law changing the mode of assesament and collection of taxes, and the sale of real estate for taxes in Phila phla. Mr. SMITH promoted a petition for the eatabliah• ment of a hoard of practical engineers, to examine and grant diplomas for competency. Paversl petitions were presented for an ineresae.l appropriation to the Pennsylvania Training School for Idiotic and tieeble•minded Children, at Media ; and others for a change in the license law, relative to restaurants. The Committee on Corporations reported, no coin• mitted, the supplement to the act incorporating the Southwestern Market Company of Philadelphia. The following were also reported favorably: A bill to change the name of the Lehigh Zinc Com pany, to reduce the capitol stock and authorize the company to borrow money; a supplement to the not incorporating the Brood Top Improvement Company. The committee on that subject reported a re;o lotion to open and read the returns for Auditor General and Eurveyor General on the 4th of Feb ruary next. Ilizt.s IY PLArt: —Mr. PItYNT read in place a bill relative to proccedinv on mortgngea and re cognizance; ; n supplement to the act relative to county rates and levies Mr, BET r„ a bill relative to antra in equity in the Nutlet Court of Philadelphia; afro, a bill rela tive to cemetery Into; also, a bill relative to taxes OTT Ils'arins and ennolumento of office; also, a bill reit (ice to flatfeet of sales by emcutorr and other trustees. „ Mr. Coxart.t. road iu place a bill to incorporate the Philadelphia and Montgomery County Rail way Company ; also, a supplement to the act Inror• wanting the Pemberton Fire and Marine Ininran.re Company. Mr. PAnann, a bill to incorporate the Franklin Mining Company: also. a bill to authorise the she• riff of Philadelphia to advertise sales of real estate in three newspapers; also, a bill to Incorporate the Philadelphia Agricultural Company. Mr. Eintrn. a bill to authorize the Pennsyl vania Llfa Insurauee Company to hold certain real souk• Mr M ti.rt.l . a bill relative to taking Nett. molly by ef.tutei-doueri of other States iu Penn• sylvan's. Mr. (Inv.: t. a bill relative to billiard st!oone ; also, a bill 1., eo extra appropriation to he Far iterH. Soheoluf Pennsylvania. Mr. Tc liSk.r. a bill to incorporate the Western liallroad Company. The bill relative tita bastion of the South. western Market Company of Philadelphia wee ounitierell and pastel The lilt relative to tho Miura re Savingt Insu• ranee Company was taken up and debated at sOlllO length. The tiuss.tlon on the bill kill panting, tue Senate adjourned This being prh me-hill day, a ittre number of local bills were taken lip - n I pas.o,l first and final reading. Amon„ the b... passed %ere tl, o follow log : An art nuthotiting the cit:rens of Delaware county to elan nno person for Prothonotary, and one person for Register of Wilk and Recorder An act to incorporate the Bellefonte Fire Insu• ranee Company of Centre county. An net to incorporate the thlawnro County Ad smintion fur insuring against horse stealing An act extending the general nitinufnotnring law, for the manufacturing of leather lu Potter county. A supplement to the net Incorporating the Point Breeze Park Association An not incorporating the rEllOn Hose Company of Philadelphia. An act to change tbo time of the annual meeting of the Hartsville and Centreville Turnpike Road Company. A supplement to the act Inoorporating the Pitts burg and East Liberty Passenger Railroad Corn• pany. An act providing for the better seourity of the wagon of laborers. The ant to Incorporate the Penrose Ferry and inland Road Plunk Bead Company, was objected from the calendar. Bit.ti In PLACE.—Mr. O'NEILL reed in 1.1 tee a bill relating to insuraneo coinpanien In the city of Philadelphia and county of Allegheny. Mr. O'NEILL, In introducing the bill. Fat it Wag divested of every objectionable feature contained Ina similar bill introduced at the luit ',don. It provides for a full statement of the nff are of all insurance companion doing business in the city of Philadelphia, and seamy of Altogbeny, to such manner an to furnish reliable data by which the public can direriminate intelligently between corn. panics worthy of rorifdloneo nod these termed be. gun. The bill supplies a healthy and much•needed regulation on the subject of insurance, and will at (4.l the nocesnary proration without doing injus• tire to any legitimate company The bill ninebn very general Approval Tho Auditor tionerst a requited, upon applica tion of ton pi to appoint a r -mietitee to ex amino the ah.iirn of any company Thu motto of organiz ikon te net changed. Foreign are prohibited from idling buninvi by correspon dent a ; two itlantic companies aro required to hat , a capital of $200,000 In the United Staten. Mr. Ilt - PLEr read in place a bill to increase the revenue of the Commonwealth. Mr. Pri.NELL. a bill to incorporate the Media Manufacturing Company. A resolution to appoint an suidetant postmaster of the 11011N3 wan illscusned at iamb length and adopted, when the House adjourned. rue at New York. NEW Yorts, Jan. 21.—The huiWing, NO 142 Broadway, was burin,' at an t fitly hour this morn• ing. It woe ottattuiad by Messrs. Lockwood Henry, clothing deafen,. The loss amounted to 1620,000, and is covered by insurance. Later from California and Central America. TILE BALTIC AT IIiKW YORK $1,7c0,000 IN TREASURE: Meeting of the California Legialature NEW roltii, January 21.—The steamship from Aspinwall on the 17th inst., arrived at this port at half past six o'clock this evening. ' The Baltic. brings $1,760,000 in treasure, and San Vrancivo dates to the Pith instant, which are throe days later than hare been received by the overland mail. The Vanderbilt Moamar Champion bad not ar tired at Panama when the Baltic sailed. The United States frigate Roanoke, sloop of-war St. Innis, and stores* Relief were at Aspinwall. The eioops•of-war Lancaster and Cyane were at Panama. The steamship Northern Light, from New York on the sth inst., arrived at Aspinwall on the even ing of the 13th inst. The steamer Orizsbn, with her pasgengers, left Panama for San Franeiseo on the 16th. The steamer Sonora, with the Bank's wean gem nailed from Panama on the 13th for San Fran. The sloop-of-war Levant left Pane= on the 18th for Realogo. The principal consignees of the Baltic's treasure ItYO 1114 f011OWS: Wells A Fargo American Exchange Bank A. Belmont Duncan, Sherman, A Co W. F. Coleman E. Kelly Q Co R. Patrick Taaff, .51cCahill, A Co Wm. Feligman A Co. Wm. loge A. Co Freeman A Co CALIFORNIA. The steamer Cortez, with the New York mails of December Iltb, arrived at San Francisco on the evening of the II inst. The overland mail from St. Louis on the 12th nit. with telegraphic advice!' to the 14th had reached SanFrauei:vo. In the State Legidaturo the Senate had agreed to meet the Muse in joint convention on the sth instant. for chaise of L tilted States Senator by a vote of 20 yeas to 12 nays, whieh was regarded as a test of et-Governor Weller's strength. Bon. Philip Moore (of the Welter and °win in tereFt) was chosen Speaker of the Ileum, and that hraneh of the Legislature had agreed to the Se nate's resolution to meet in joint convention. The Senate had adopted resolutions instructing the Senators and requesting the Representatives from California in the National Rouse of Repre sentatives, to urge the formation of the new Terri tory of Careen. Trade at San Franotmo was stagnant. The money !vinyl:et was easy. The message of Oovernor Latham would not be sent in before the 6th inst. More trouble was anticipated In Pitt River val ley from the Indians. Some 1,500 had collected at the bend of that stream. CENTRAL AND SOUTH AMERICA. (len. Ouardiola had been re-elected President of Honduras. A severe shock of earthquake was felt at Guate mala on December Bth Hon. Alexander Dimltry. United States minister. had presented bis credentials to the Nicaraguan Government. A forced loon of SlO,OOO bad been decreed by Nicaragua, to pay for the munitions of war lately received from England. A decree, issued on December 13, declares M. Relly's aenat project at an end. be not having paid up mono francs due before the end of September. The co tat was now clear for Vanderbilt. San Salvador and various other places had suf fered from an earthquake. Many houses were de stroyed, and one place was nearly destroyed by Ore at the time. ECUADOR. The Peruvian army was still encamped at Mae. laptop& and their squadron was at anchor in Oneyannil river. Trade was quite free. A nit ii war was expiated on the departure of the Peruvians. Valparaiso dates to December 15th, and Callao to December 28th, are furnished. The news is unimportant. A French obilm of $3,000 against Peru had been paid. From Mexico. BATTLE BETWEEN =RADON AND TEN LIBLRAL9- breCr.ll9 Or lIIRAMOI. Ntw Tont, Jan. 2L—lnformation 4 received by the steamer Battle, that on the 2tet nit. a bat• tle wee fought near Colimo, in Mexico, between Mi ramar!, with 3,000 troops, and the Liberals, nom. bring 7,000. under the command of Generate Eons and °gluon. The action lasted for tire hours. The Liberate bud from 600 to 700 killed or wounded, and the Conservatives 300, liftramon captured Lre field•piecee, and 2,000 prixoners On the 241 b, he took possession of the town of Colimo, and sent a detachment to hiensaniili. Ile aieo seised two 1 / 8 111.018, the General Vine, and La Pointe, and armed them. Their destination was supposed to be Mazatlan. From Washington. W.tanisaros, January 24.--There are on the docket of the Supreme Court upwards of .300 cuts, about forty of which are an appeal from California courts!, relative to land Calms, and involving mil• Ilona of dollars. Among other confirmations male by the Senate a•day, war that of Alexander Dimitry u 3ffnister o Costa Ries. The Navy Department has been informed that the steamer Slobloan made eleven and a half milem an hour dating her trial trip on the way to Africa. The Constellation. San Jacinto, and steamship So-poly were at St Paul, Loando, on the 27th of Noestuber. The Portsmouth and „Nlystio were tore expected there. lion. John Cochrane, having recovered from his recent illness, was in the House to-day. Thero are about 53,000,000 in possession of, the Fo•t 01Boe Deportment, bat which cannot be paid lig till an appropriation bill is passed by Congress ' turpme. Er_ REVIVAL ItrmlN6aPllo9 Ayres. NSW YOWL, Jan. St —An — ex cortulrunme. furnishes advtses from Buenos Ayres to...tisla port 29th. Business, in all its departments, had revived. The amount of wool and hides for exportation will be leis this year than it has been for wm e year , . past The ratification of the trait} , of peace had beau celebrated by a Te Drum in all the churches. and a grand military display throughout the province. The new Government enjoy, in an eminent de gre,. the confidence of the Buenos Ayreans, and political and commercial affairs were going on bar inonionsly. The Reported " War of Race% " in Canada. 12131=1 SCHOOL-ROTS. C111711(4, C W., Jan. 21.—The only foundation Cr, the reports which hare been published of a trouble between the whites and ne4ros..s in Canada, was a tight which took place a few days mg) be tween a petty of white and colored school-bep. No partioular damage was done, and the excite ment has -carcely been noticed here. The Virginia Legislature. TII F. ICNPLX4r4 or TIIR HARPY/CS rrenr ARUT itirilllOND, Jan. 21 —ln the Virginia Legislature it re.qlution has been introduced to appoint a Hut committee, consisting of eighteen member. c eider the recommendation:. of 1!r. Memminger, the special commissioner from South Carolina A Lill has been passed appropriating SISI),VCO to pay the expenses attending the Harper's Ferry af• fair. The :tlassaehusetts Legislature. Rosrov Jan. 24.--In the House, today. resoln• lions were referred eommending the r, fusel of the Republican members of Congress to enter into de bate before the election of a Speaker. Destructive Fire at Grand Rapid, Mich GRAND RAPID, Midi.. Jan 23 blork. occupied by Miller Grinnell, gn)cere ; Porter .t Sllgh, dry goods, Ooodrieh d (tray, hardware: the pet.t Oleo and county (Akre, together with en adjoining wooden building, were •Itnoßt entirely de.trnyed by fire lon night Very fete a tbe couitte ree.ortli were eared. the lola is estimated slvo,ooo, on which the In WWI nnly The Lawrence ealnnittr. NO MORN AS3IPITANCE itT.QtIRF.D Unlit Ice, January 24 —The Mayor of Law rence and the committee of relief announce that 1.0 genorotte hare teen the contribution, kr the .ufererr by the recent ealamity, that no more as tittanee than what has siren ty been pledged and •übrrihed will be required to proyide for the want. of the really needy. No now foots witottaveloped in tho iwran•r'e to quest to day. Alabama Lep!,!attire. MONTOOMCHT, Jan. 23 —The Entree on F aturJay pe.sed, by a large majority, a bill to charter a bank In Mobile, a prerleo in which requiree the •tcekholdera to take a certain amount in the ()teat Central Ra4med, between Deeatnr anJ Montgomery, In thin Stater. The 1,111 will i robably pare the tenate. The DilFmnlties on the Rio Grande. A WAR WITII ARIlul TUC !KODAK'S aEsrmr New ()lux...ass, January 21 —The Galveston Niers le of tha opinion. formed on tellable Morena ti.)n received from the Rio Grande, that the pre sont ditricaltics there will enl with a war with Mexico 'rho LCIIIMOn Slave Case. !an or, January .?-1 —The Lemmon flare csza wn• heard today in the Court of Apneatr. Mr. O'Coner had nor eonelurted his argument when rho court adjeurnect. Fire near Hamilton, V. W. ♦ YLOVIE MILL BCRNT II (I.Ift.TOV, C. U' J•,. 2a —rite Water:. an dour ralll,onnatt by W P. Howland. was destroyed by Ciro to•diy, tugether with its Nintent..A, bushels of wheat anti a qnsntity of flntr. The 1,-.44 it partly covered by iteursuce. The Atlantic Loan and Fund Associa tion or Massachusetts. 13 o'., Jan. 21 —Judge Merrick to-o) granted tunparnr, injunction on the Atlantic loon nad Fu.l,l4 , i.netton, one of the oldest instltutii•nf of the Lind in the State. Fire at Daubers, Mass. 1104roY. Jan 21 —The tannery of Janaer South wick, at Ilanverr, war burnt last night. Low SIO Iwo — "Our attention het been dirented to the state• meat of the Liverpool and London Fire and Life Insurance Company made to the Auditor General, and published in our advertising columns in aowrd• AllOO with the law of the State. This company has it beard of directors in New York, having funds in their hands amounting, u per statement, to our seven hundred thousand dollars, to °over liabUi ties in the United State,. The name/ of the directors are familiar to our busdnus cunt:nail, as mcrehents of high standing and credit in New Yolk, and, with such an amount of funds (nrested i❑ the Unite I States, are justly entitled to the con fidence sf our dealers THE CITY. AMUSESLENTB TIIIS EVENING NA 'VONA TKRATItr. Vremit tzret. Tie FL, i% And ?tinth.—Dam Rtoe4 Grtet Ehow.—" Map, W hVATLET k CL iLoT'e kat-11-Slat"? Arch street. shore stgth.—" 2.c em toll ' s Fitend"— ”wizard nkill” WALT /r ,- EITRILIST TR7 , 7lg. °rimer Watinq • Ninth.- - The Bohemian Two Bonn yotstles TPOMPCY'II VARtETIE.i, N. W. corner Fifth end Chestnut.—" Bongs, Dnucee, Farces," Sr. ArAlrelzr or Fit AATI, Chaatant atreaL—" aina"— .. —"The Martyrdom of John Buse. to." 8-""""'' Chestnut R 1307.1, Jsyre'. :“^t. wealth Budding. •treet, above den's Museum of Art. McDonorcoga Gargyir.,, Rao. it " ! t, bei,,w - Bate rtainumial nightly. Chestn TIMP ut itsLwEIRP, northeast corner Tenth and isnorliLtz. MrsicAr., Pip Ratt..—" Anr.trersary of tle gar chants' Fund. NATIONST, 011/ID5' HILL.—' Band." IMPORTANT ARREST ! AN ALLEGED FORGER CAPTURED A RIVAL OP HUNTINGDON, MONROE EDIS'ARDS, AND JOHN SADLIEH. 1118 LIFE AND ADVENTURES t3orne nix months ago, a number of daring, and extraordinary forgeries were perpetrated n'cn the Bank of Commerce. the Menufaoturers' and Me ohanies' Dank, and the Consolidation Bank.. rf this city. The amount of money OA tined vs , s and the circumstance! excited a great deal of erm. went in police, newspaper and mercantile o;reics The facts of the case were communicated to the Detective Department of our pollee, and Officers Edward Schlemm, George It Smith. and Charles W. Wood were detailed for the purpose of tracing up the author of the socces4ol crime. Their sus picions fell upon a man named Ross, who had been figuring in the police records of some of the Fast. ern cities as participator in fo ,ree,•rie-s that toad been committed in Boston and New York, For Fix months. quietly. bet calmly- the diva;; pursued the investigation, without suceem. object of their search was too shrewd. and too well sorted in the way. and means of poli.-0 hnslners, to leave any traces of hi 3 prosresa f,r the ncat of anxious nod inquiring detectives, and he was there fore, permitted to sport in the cities c f the t o lle States cn the proceeds of his opersti,os Two cr three weeks since, however. Captain rt . the New York Detective Police, who was else in tereated in the mecca; of the inveatigattm, de spatched a package of bank rotes on the Orar ;a County Bank of New York. through Adams' Fv press, awompanying the astme lby a letter to Pan through the Post office. The pa , Asge arrived, an i Deteetivra Wood and Smith kept a watch on the office for two weeks, but no one tipptared to c'sicri the bundle, and it was at lass returned to the New York detectire, and the so., ah a r,,k ne d Last Saturday evening, however, a your, man called at the Express offre and claimed the psck age which had been returned. His desef w piat.i ne ,f , an d on the strength of it, thislcor; man was arrested. on Third street. he 0i...."er Smith. On his person were found letters and documents which proved. to the lati*r.“ - iron ref tie officers, that 11033 was in Pittsburg. Oeicers Wood and Sthletcm immediately left. ft.,3 Pittsburg in Ito I next train, and arrive-1 there on San lay They at once proceeded to search the hotele. hut without the slightest degree - of 3UNt3,33. They dropped into the St. Clair Hotel. and were about to give up in despair. when. in cor,verni ion with the barkeeper, they learned that a man ar..l his lady named Crawford, In company with a person who was supposed to be either a Spaniard or an Italian, were there. and bad been there isr a week or two. The description of Crawford satisfied the officers that he was rote ether than Res., and they proceeded to make the arrest This " Spaniard or Italian" was none other than I lIETTO3IITOWbohai been purchase 11-.ss hot who was more of a eiropanion than 'servant le Elm. lie was r,erfeetty white. and na one world hove supposed ham to be the nosses,or of rsore Being strangers in Pittsburg, and wisely ranpesic; that an attempt to arrest the negro would be eon— etracsi into an effort to convey a fugitive alive Into at , an cffiaer of the Fittebnre fare! was tent fur and the party proceeded np stairs into the room wooled ligaerawford. Officer Sol:demur entered and introdcrel himself. Ross was engaged in conversing with bin wits and the negro. He rose and shook hand§ with him cordially, saying that Schlemm really ba.l the ad vantage of him, and wished to know ta what triv ia!, he owed the honor of the visit Officer &blemm produced the warrant, and. with as mush affability as was possible under the circumstances. Informed Rem he was his nrLs• - •ner. Rota riled very calmly, and. with as air of dignity moat re freshing to behold. replied • " Sir. this is strange; you must be !shoring ruder a mistake I assure you. my dear sir, on my he nor as a gentleman, that I knew n.)thing of theta charges However, I recognise your arith:Tity, and hold myself ready to accompany you when ya will and where yon Will." Mr. Schlemm replied that the broicess was a very disagreeable one, but he was ccnirePcd to discharge his duty. • 4242.000 4.. 153,000 100,000 • .. 136 000 91,000 •.. 80.000 ... 80.000 ... 49,000 ... 40,600 40.000 •.. 19.000 Mr. Ross. "Certainty. sir. certainly. I STrT3* elate your poeition perfectly lam a gantlet:lan, and I only act to be treated at pleb.. The next train left at three &yin+. sni on thet train" Crawford," hit wife. and their " foreirn friend " came to Philadelphia How string" srd 60)0818 life! how uncertain tta whims of fortore In twenty-four hours the affable. 'ay. an 1 hat. some truest of St. Clair Hotel reposed his weary and luxurious limbo within the bwately walls et Movatnensing ! Externally, Ross 7.,ettleme a rather Float person, dremng with exqui.ite taste. wearing handsome pair of whiskers, en a eery hardsr:r.e face, and poessssiog all thee iseeto!nrlishments no necessary in the gentler: an fie it lliZhly has travelled over Ear 'erred is :ha A pi,' army before Sebastopol. where arss sr:tolled, and converset fluently So Enel.h, Trs.r.A. Spin- Lsb. and Italian. Rla wife 13 a Toting , lady of rota and extract Hoary beauty. MOOT ars.-omplished, and pnasmated of a Inc mind. She f.lrtensedy do. yoted to her husband, and Caine with him :a tide city. t lhe nemn, named Robert SmitS, 31 Bernell, Will perrehmed by Rom, in New Oriesne, a:Kea five years ars, and has been Kt e , tonsolon sias e „ tra- Tellinq with him over rairspe, and omuevira. sLe relation of a friend. Re is very erromorrh'-1 sz3 highly intelltiont Wben Rom wtl ar•,•ed. ha Wan3-4,e° South and sell himself into .Itv , re to . . _ . termed. ande,..ea.. I.t his mauler . The clfer'ws_l future events. —.ire in the rityanai;:r4 It la 3t;.1 that Bose woo the antan,_ pud a n which oaoe TPI7 n•te S don, the celebrated 'ger York fo.ger. fr‘ , ta pri 3 o, l He hasleen en,;:eqed, it is en v y,-, > l • In forgeries sennunlini, to nearly sloo..tra). a.: I balathoviniwghay,semresranl4edlimetos `, the p rienn mere 3r, bills of indictment a . ;winst ha a baldly enraged in neangting ' , feral the law or fu'Z'rl - cee• !toiled It with ease He will he , Carroll Brewget, Fag.. and in o-~f :cltd E.!, him will eondact hie cite when tried. We earaAteloletb;34ingulAr. el:, rneasntie very. withcza Wool. to.bef of the for their ere-;r wc , rkin t ,j.. " . Y . • They bare cl, , ne •i tLe cE.7er , of the lag pie and attain tb..fsme art of _ a moot futtunVe .r Commrzwellth. ant the cr.ore th• i , r - cp.k . r.s - ro•ot!ift+st ,- ‘tr , Y., ETtn day.a..Ertal rn •ccr.ar. rfn.t.nc. .1 a • of ta• at,ork tl•-• C...r..:5y • 1 ,0,4 at st - of #l7 - er v.v . art , . "1;47.10 to • ".. h • •• . I CI ha the a. 0r r: 7, 4 I . •alt .7h tb• laserr! . i. j,ne•!. •r arh ;• were tra.l, a 0,4 ;a _ rornalrne to. ••? I It? 51, Ult.! " * N.Y. Mr GoNs. 05 Netwasia Tarr; t.ar). !nor t frli tarn entive.l to t - e Ft:n . ll gru•an , 1 work. •a• the (at aptaltor 14e rem- a 3 • - 4. in IL. •ndieette bara•reb..m as an •1,,10nt • r•• • 1.- ieg ankLeNt,oo a( %ha ave.. I rf o site,ll CO F. ,5,.• The n the re . -in rz—e's 1,10 wit nLse thanks tat!. al. tra •• 111 ,- en LS ,r F• -. • ane,nc t/ a rau , e t 1 • Fu: e? — • - hers h a tnts , or .0 •-• •' - • nrer•rdr.,,,,t • e . I ‘>/tal..: art! ' • • ! tu:• 1. :On as an f•t. - rat nt ti , ar a • . Tn• ir,anter ta t . •-t - At• '•. ---. [nitro ohm. 11.% - ferl.ll .• . 12 '' .... t•11.;" —• • orti m'• e] eN c•r• ' 4!!•^,10`. •IN•n!”, e'..n•d o' ,, _+.• facer of thl rlzve.scA •st •ws co - tocen,".:. " 1.,1 • W•eter. I .1 - irs. sc•ac.•Pr•••• , -, fit- IN.sci of R•• , ••Ir• r!.' v• • -1 twn rrath , eil:t ac•r• t'•-• ' - 11•11‘.1 v , rk.•^. I V., 10.1.1•-e t N•-• et••••., g. - ••• nut!. yti. n t y..nn: it t•• r•n• `2 O, • S' a •tp A f rntlan tmnlll,' 9} , n th•••••T • or 1.•: nal `• vu to h• cretzni by ttls W. 1. • — •.7 - • _ 4sf 1. f •r+ vrx 0,1'4 `4O, b er o • A en ?<•••iln vas r> I •...,•r • t: • 1}..) •Z re es-. . At •1 ee - • - ereef they , rf 0 . a s,-.etr..! P . a' • i .-• t.;.. , fmm rh, Iga• • x• -•• f , ft . tTf . N.st)Mba , 1. SU: rarer •; a •: rf s,x rts,r•ho: ":66 . ~hr.:. z• 1 a'11...a . T !..ir t orr.r w‘te•e4 rt... war , it 1.:74; 13 , 4”. , • tar Va. al.;fff t'a Oft.. .e n., 11 al; re^ erre'ed .t the I.r n: r - r.r. -•••• r ' s , v. 1,0 -1 4 .1 tt • U . ' a.s...at nos !. 4 ,2 - • - • the.' *eh, he' - IS+dta: ve.farnea of re'i.int t a ,a‘ss , • $ p a directly by n sa•oe.•,•• 1,21,1 ; • a. l!ht ,-, Matt. More /3.03 TASTUNG Fut —N taltaer E. e.' try. Ta. , .! 1 1 • ta i. —Toward. ridn'th. rxt %fwd.!' rrer,rx„ - . ate down - erod I,rn the tl,r, • a e lebliabment of Mr. Ce•rlea Grie , feeb . 1 , 1 beg stmt. .r. - S. The - • *O4 11112110101 fal it. C,Cafalial ft .Isl,. m.• trmartd. Mr. ardfre eat Km family earn a- 0 . $• • • time 43 th." ...Noel eta. ta e. 61. thalt Apartment t . a.s t!rectzb Ne stn.." ea •'• fry, na- , r3 , erse , ard a V.V . b a rx • •••It • the der.t.ty .4 .5. • '•••& I•vo that be ra•ried in h . . bard. a w -u -t.err t a • sh.d.r . r, Ira th it 1...A....hat. • ' • a a • `. Bo threw artr• beds ' '" 121.5$ tar • I tx• ts.l rwt r:.•••• • kettloc h , a i ' vrq , safe • frfl r e ;• • Ter(' sui.ev•te , !y elf, •.;• -- •. th. /V •'.•• 13 th• swo• rrn,, , ,v,' • •1 - 1.• ••-•: t•ek•• & . .•••• , t• ' M=MAM2Miti • • - r,(17 nl Le t 'ea ts( TPL rEIL We ce-. ,r.-anted.s,C,ol! ru 411 - .... A.• • -- CltrVe rttAr ." 11 - .•! ttri, c tentav the ?slat , cl f ,4 • .4 A r - A - • r•e. ' •e ,ere ere tart. AA - 1 . r-dre , I,f ,- IC c.,ret.,tlt.ee. . • I .•. r" , e.‘II.IISPIr re • • • . tatt:t. • - e rr • r.lv; tot at 014 i•wher1e.......,A,` _ t ' + • r+ilmeet w.te 'P.' s '' , • '" ! , ereth•Ord ,,, 4 , teert lontell!0&11:2 ho r. A. , Aif.7 s<^ Btreet:e WITII I , 7F< On Yoe ts, R...se•t a • i'Lltearto an.l c.l 11,..e.1 ita thee. 7.: et • ,•*,/..••• ) 1 - n+ t,” - er•..r. Wlt s i t`,"-I , :tte the CAP • a vrot,, t. , reS• 4 o K deities, Feuttett,....t.N h , re • tha oh•rce oreissan't or Vr. X• A the Iteeisa.4 IX 3.SL" fir .11 , ‘ Ssafio:t oo bit arlt.. 'I tt• the orf.tet narrowly riesorl tr cort-sL Stns or Its u. E , TATE. S.!' f• , '. -,.“,c art et. sal.a at,i.a. teat,. Ic. tr M. Tbor,* h total. at LI - b.satt.e. al tool shares Ph.'adolaS 1 sa•to I,trarr enci,Arsr-1!:;:. I fall 1h 2) tar sham • 5.2: Prmzukro Two first rrortztaaisth,. tea Mszatsetnrce g Co=a11:-35 toot. 1 share Po tat Brett. Piet —II M. 44,..3 had, :Iwo" c , otsit taa:sy,Texaa - -S 4. 4,13. ef Si it? seta. " Annual Ball of Beek's ME=
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers