1 .. .... ~ ...,,, ~, ,:,. THURSDAY. JANUARY 2e,1,1860.: Parr 'Now Poot--Sydney Dobai ; zLettiititcfr`olis'Now York andlYeadangton ;TOrionoi and Po!Moat:: Forntra PeCip.Lme Oedrta; GPO! railiews ; - 10rino Intelligence, dia. The Footprints of Disunion. Whoa the Garrison Abolitionists in solemn °avenge% a few days ago, passed resolutions tremplintenting JAMES GOEDON BENNETT, of the Neiv'Tork Herald, for his liberality ln - oftlating the, most treasonable seutlieente against the peace andivelihre of the Southern State's; ' performed a 'Piece 'of tiplondid ,satire„ and furnished "a fruitha theme to / the -retteeting men of: the country. ~T he .Herald .marbe said to bo at the head of- that class of -newspapers in the North which delight in rats. 'Vepresenting the real feelings of :Mu' people. - "yhifeliss'ofjourinils—neitrly all `Of-them in Via pay of tles - ,,AdrniniStration ,ofthe Federal 9evernsient,---,behold ,Wlth 'great unconcern, ,the constantly multiplying evidences Of die- Unien in the Southern States, and yet busy themseivesm trying to detect certain signs of 'disloyalty •in their own section; and where 'they - tail to detect' such signs, do •not hesitate 'to:fabricate them. The eonse4uoirice is, that, In *portion as they encourage the'epirit of secession in the South, they increase the panic among :the treat industrial' and commercial interests of the North. These journals do not applaud the one, or soothe the other. They refuse to denounce the riot and violence that control the House of Representatives of the United States, and • daily assert, in elaborate, - editorials, that the trade and commerce of the 'free States delights' are perishing. Nothing delight them so much as to hear that American seen 'ride's aro depreciated in foreign countries; or ,to.predict that Market street will soon bp a :desolation. They revel in the anticipation of 'coming bankruptcy ; they gloat over the pro spect of closed factories, of starving families, -of deserted wharves, of failing railroads, and 'of anent workshops. These men do more 'to increase the anxiety in business circles than 'even the Secessionists themselves. Is it pos sible that all the commercial disasters, If dis 'astars thembe—all the gloom in business eir ' cies; tf it is gloom—result from the, treason of the Northern-'people? Can it be that the yeomanry of Pennsylvania are responsible for :this condition of things'? In the name, not -only of our own population, but of the people of ail the non-slaveholding States, we deny that - they 'are, even in the slightest degree, responsible- for the excitement in the South, or for-the disorganization at Washington. - "What a libel, for instance, it is to allege thitthe Republican masses, as a body, ap proved the attack of Tens Riming upon Har per's Perry. In this city, where the Repub licarts•claim from ten to fifteen thousand votes, -we believe there are not ton men (and these the members of the old Abolition organiza tion) who did not vegan that event with feel ings of abhorrence, and the same Is true 'throughout the State. On the other hand, -the Democratic masses are equally averse to mil sympathy with . violent disunion send . Philadelphia •has always been re nowned for her attachment to the Constitu lion and the laws, 'and yet' she is threat. owed, net by the Southern extremists alone, ; baby certain newspapers in her midst, with bankruptcy by the withdrawal of the Southern trade, because, forsooth, she does not, In some its yet Unascertained way, more emphatically 'express herself in regard to the present condi. lion of public affairs. Will these oracles tell us 'what Philadelphia is to do to entitle her to their high consideration 1 and what, indeed,bave the Northern States, as a body, done to make ,them the objects' of the suspicion of the Ad ministration journals; from' the - Washington' , Contilittiorilo the 'Philadelphia Ledger, and , tomtit upon them the persistent and organized itticks of.thi'dlininlon leaders in the slave States ;Is it their-representatives who prevent the organization of the .popular branCh of Congress 1 Is it their postmasters who refuse to allow the letters of American freemen to pass through-the post offices sustained by the • Money of the peoplel Do they eitablish non-' intercourse, laws? Do they expel froui their' Midst inoffensive fellow-citizens? Are they engaged in the amiable pastime of tarring and feathering poor mechanics and sending them Orel...heir borders covered with ignominy and shame ? • Are they making immense military . . preparations looking to the final catastrophe of iiathinal dissolution ? Are their legislators 'occupied In the adoption of measures antici pating the same fearful event 1 Are their 4tatesteeil U . Averalni from point to point call ing upon them to meet in a sectional Conven tion in order to take up arms against their own brethren f None of these indications are to be seen In this quarter of the Union. Here all is peace, and tranquillity, and confidence- In the per petuity of the Republic. The farmer, the Mechanic, the merchant, and the lawyer, pr ime the even. tenor of their way, unaffected by ih; storms that rage in other sections—ready at all times to prove alike their attachment to their fellow-countrymen, and their deter mination to sustain the equality of the Statue of the Confederacy. And yet if the Admin istration Journals—the New York Herald, the Palle Ledger, and the Washington Can attlutian—are to be believed, the North has become the very citadel of disunion. They say it is from the North that all these cries and threats 'proceed. It is from the North that these missiles of destruction are hurled. It is our people - who are girding on their armor for the ilrialliour of national disaster and death Our readers need not be reminded that more than two years ago—when the great panic fell like a midnight pall upon the country—how sensitive the public became in reference'to the course of the leading newspapeia of the day. The editors of these Journals were appealed to to avoid exciting and disturbing the public mind. Thls,'it will be recollected; was in re ference to a mere financial crisis, and yet now we see the men then foremOst in deprecating the slightest discouraging paragraph to our financial future ilaily',engaged in playing with the very heart-strings of the nation, busied with the fell anatomy of tearing asunder the Republic, of severing the very arteries of our national brotherhood, and of hunting the life of the Union to its very source. And all for whir purpose I To promote any useful pur peat) 1 This is not asserted. It is done sim ply and only to gratify the malignity of be sotted Mire, and to assist a class of malcon tents and traitors, who, if they had lived in the days of imam /Amon, would have been arrested and punished as- the enemies Of the public-peace. Is it to be supposed that the Nerthena people are to be educated,' even if ibey'viere ignorant, in theirduty to-the Union Vibes() refined proiesses of the Secessionists of the South, and their followers and echoes ffi the North 1 Theatrical, IdUsteal, and Lectures. "EverybOdy's lertand," at Ateh4treet tae, will be played this evening, tomorrow, and upon Saturday, after wbioh it will be withdrawn. It has been remarkably Succeed:a, and has been very well played and ~ g etten- t ip," as the saying L... We believe, that Metiers. Wheatley & Clarke talgitt easily heys played it, with profit, for at least another week.' bp . cooper, treiztpf, for theperfennanee of opera in the: language, now at Walnut-street Theatre, have had fair encomia, so fat.. -This even ing they. Wilt perform the 'Barber. of Seville. feW novelties would draw (Wallowing home, and we ligg to *quaint Mr. Cooper . that as Philadel phia has, beard the stook operas in Italian as well as Irc,English, it is not so abaolniely requisite as he aieme 'to 'think, to publish partioulars 'of the plot, in' any Instance—efeepi when an: entirely new pleisola presented. This evening, at the Academy of Mnslo. the efieoed and" farewell performanoe of the Preach 'Opera 'porattpos will . be 'even. ` Two operatic' draiiisCWlll, repreakitild ' be ,both. of which Ifecl'lle,Derey And M. Gentler wilt perform. In the 'Wend:not of the , 4 Trovatero " hiasPlie Anna Wbsder,Willippear in theta of Anocen,z. "It wilt is remembered 'that her debut; as a dramatic vo *dist, frilifondaY;(despite the awful drawback of, in-aU respects, a. thoronghlyinadequate Gullet:a tolterliofteo ) was -most anooessful. There will be, a, crowded, hones lhls , evening, for the per• figroaneei are, popular. Thlt venlig,. at Mash:cal • Feed Rail, the Rev. Dr:, &rudder will4-doliver 'the Stet' of 'castles of taridraen •india—a" country with widthlong r1,q1 466 0 :bee gilidiibtikrplritocpaintpd: -Ite - bee tioteik!edie : /ifoAkho icnowil: the people, aint,,vre heir that he lectures extremely well. ;53 c• - • - * piattiltiation or candl- 411*Ifedmiselon to th IpgiiSobool will acne 4 , 444. the week, eemmenoing on 80th eankeiliy- 1411 ooiumenee the semi. sentiat examination for 4111/118810,11 to lhos Gine' 1140 Vahool, ' • ' Letter from " 00CaSIC/Ha/a" [Correspondence of The Press.' WASHINGTON, January t 3, 1880 Our relations with Diexioo are being rapidly and Irresistibly complicated. The condition of things on the borders of the Rio Grande, and the triumph of hiiramon over ham ; the latter having been recognised by the United States Government ) present a case widish may doMand a prompt re sort to the remedy suggested in the last message of President Buchanan. You will recoiled, that ho makes this Mexican question the important fea ture of his communication. The following extract is partimilarly interesting, in view of the events which have lately taken place "The ease presented, however, is not Iners'y a case of individual clams, although our must claims againet Mexico have reached a very large automat. Nor is it merely the mum of protection to the lives and property of the few Americans who may still remain in Mexico, although the life and property of every American citi zen ought to be sacredly protected in every 'tauter or the world. But it is a question that relates to the future as well as to the present and the past. and which involves, indirectly at least, the subject of our whole duty to Alex; um as s neighboring State, The exercise of the power of the United States in that country to redress the wrongs and protect the rights of our own 'nations is none the leas to be desired. because e ldulent and neces sary and may time be rendered at the same time to reetore peace and order to Mexico itself. In the mom yliehment of this result the people of the United States must necessarily feel a deep and earnest interest. Mex ico ought to bo a rich and prosperous and powerful Re. Public. She possesses an extensive territory, a fer tile toil, and an irmilonlable atore of mineral wealth. She occupies en important position between tho gulf and the ocean for transit rontesend for commerce. Is it possible that such a country as this can be given up to anarchy and ruin without an effort from any quarter for its and its entity f Will the commercial nations of the world, which hive so many interests connected with it. remain wholly Indifferent to euoh a result? Can the United states especially, which might to snare most tersely in its con/menial intercourse, allow their im-, mediate neighbor thus to destroy Itself and mince them.? Yet. without support from some quarter, it is impossible to perceive how 31exietiotin rename her position among natione and enter upon a career winch premixes any Food results, The aid which she requires, and watch theintereste or all commeroial countries require that she should have, it belonsa to thin Government to ren der, not only by virtue of our neighborhood to Mexico, along whose territory we have a continuous, frontier of nearly a thousand miles, but by virtue, aloe, of our eatablished volley, which is inconsiatent with the inter , vention of any European Power In the domestic, con cerns of that Republic. " The wrongs which we have suffered from Maxim, are before the world. and most deeply Impress. every American citizen. A. government which in either una ble or Iv willing to redress ouch wrongs, fa derelict to its highest duties. The difficulty consists in selecting and enforcing the remedy. We may in spin apply to the Constitutional Government at Vera Cruz, although it to well disposed to do on justice. for adequate redress. Whilst its authority is acknowledged in all the import ant ports, and throughout the sea-coasts of the Repub. its power does not extend to the city of Mexico and the States iu its vicinity, where nearly ail the recanted. rages have been committed on American Minns. Wo Must penetrate into the Interior before we can reach the oireadem, end thie can only be done by Passing through the territory in the occupation of the Con stitutional Government. The most acceptable and least dif f icult mode of accomplishing the object will be to eet in concert with that Government. Their consent and their aid might, I believe, be obtained; bat if not, our obligation to protect our own citizens in their just rights, secured by treaty, would not be the lees imperative. Per Chess reasons, I rerommend to Congress to pass a tato authorizing the President, under such conditions as they may deem exPedPent, to emote.' a sufficient military force to enter Mexico „for the per. , Pose of obtaining indemnity for the past, and security for the future. I purpoeely refrain from any auggestion as to whether this force shall consist of regular troops or volunteers, or both. This question may be most ap propriately fettle the decision of Congress. 1 would merely observe that, should volunteers' be selected, such a tome could be easily raised in this country among those who sympathize with the mutterings of our unfor tunate fellow-citizen's in Mexico, and with the unhappy condition of that Republic. bitch an actesilion to the forces of the Constitutional Government. Weald enable it soon to reach the city of Mexico, antl extend fte power over the whole Republic. in that event, there is no rea son to doubt that the Just claims of our citizens would he satiated. and adequate redress obtained for the in juries inilioted upon therm The Constitutional Govern ment have ever evinced A strong desire to do no Justice, and this might be secured in advance by a preliminary treaty. It may be said that these niertatmea will, at least In directly, be inconsisteht with our wise and settled policy not to interfere in the domestic concerns of foreign nations. But does act the present Ode* fairly ,conatitute an exception An adjoining Republic it i n OtStO of anarchy and confusion from which oho has proved wholly unable to extricate hetgelf, She Is en tirely destitute of the power to Maintain peace upon her border,, or to prevent the incursions of banditti into our territory. In her fate and in her fortune—in her power to establish and maintain a settled Govern ment—we have a far deeper intermit, socially, summer- Mails', and politically, than any other nation. She is now %creak upon the ocean, drifting about as she i 3 impelled by different factions. As a good neighbor. shall we not extend to her a belong band to save her: . . . If we do not, it would not be surprising should some other nation undertake the task. and tithe forte us to interfere at last, under eirminsetanees of iroreased diffienny, for the snaleteatteee bt our established polio]" Mere, now, is an Ivan of commanding and over vthelming importance. It is ono which will arouse considerable antagonism and dieouseion, but I 0/ID not doubt that the good sense and patriotism of the American people will be arrayed on the Ado of the Prenident in the above recommendation. Even the most conservative men have long fore. seen that some such atop as that euggeeted by Mr. Buchanan must betaken, either bytur Government or Vomit° other civilized Power, and of all the Gov ornments, upon which torrid the solemn duty of protecting hf.esleo from her own dimenetons be de volved more righteously than upon our own'? Lot Congress respond to the suggestions of the Provident, and before thirty days have elapsed Mexico will be in the hands of an organi zation that will completely revolutionize and re form her whole system of government. She will lie tarried forward upon the path of progress, her religion promoted, her people encouraged in all the arts of humanity and civilization, her porta opened to the navies of the world, and her name respeoted to the uttermost ends of the earth. What a future may not this philantbropio invasion, if Inv use thephrese, offer to hundreds of thou sands of young men in the United States, now looking forward for employMent, and pfintiag for distinction ! Jere is no new, untravelled unex plored empire; no Utopia, no Orogen ; but the land flowing with milk and honey; a land f the tropics, the Italy of our conti nent, fronting two teas, and capable of sub firming up o n its broad, beautiful, and capacious bosom, millions of freemen„ Lot other nations say lebeit they please, manifest destiny potato °featly either to the entire redemption, or to the complete conquest of Mexico. I trust that our politicians will not commit the error of opposing mots a pre. teetorate as has beenproposed by Can, Sam Mows. ten to the Preeldent ; forlf they do they will make as great a blunder as they made in opposing the MexiCan war. The partition of the territory of Mexico—would the ripening pear fall into the hands of the Americans—will no doubt create some discord; but, as Mrs. Glue observed, "lot us first catch the fish, then cook it." T em enabled to as. cure you that a number of distinguished military men, now in this city, are making every possible preparation for the contingency suggested in the President's menage. There is quite an earnest war la Kentucky, be tween the friends of Guthrie and Breakinthige, and the Lexington Statesman, which is celled the home organ of the Vice President, does not hesi tate to soy some very sharp things of the ox Secre tary of the TrOaeury. lam not of these who be lieve that Mr. Guthrie wilt ever be President of the United States. That he is an honest Men and made an upright and vigorous minister of finance, under the Administration of General Pierce, is true ; lint that he is the sort of person to preside over the destinies of this Republic is not quite so clear. Mr. Guthrie hes Dome warm friends, how ever, in Kentucky, in Washington, New York, and Petzusylvanie, hut it is alleged that the delegation from his own State to Charleston Is not disposed to go very far to serve him. Bennett, of the New York Herald, I perceive, backs op Charles O'Conor, of that city, in his late attempt to elevate the Institution of slavery among the divinities, Mr. O'Conor seems to think that the peculiar institution is a sort of ordinance of God, and that whiob oar forefathers looked upon with pain and fear is neither more nor lose than a dispensation from Beane; and the angelic, Bennett is of the mane opinion. I do not wonder that the Charleston Mercury and other fire-eating news papers declare Mr. °Toner to be the only sound men in the free States, nor that he should be nomi nated for President by the same interests. I say it to the credit of Mr. Cassidy, of the Albany Atlas and Argus, and other Democratic journals in hew York, that they have repudiated the monstrous doctrine of Mr. °Toner ea utterly unworthy , naaound, and diagnoting. OCC4BI Cosmopolitan Art Association. In a few days—on the last day of this month indeed—the books now open, at Messrs. hunt A Co.'s, corner of Fifth and Chestnut, for the in. seription of subscribers' names, in connection with the above Association, must close, for the drawing of tickets will take place, at New York, Imme diately after. Messrs. fleet Is Co. are sole agents hero of the Association, and can deliver tine impree• stone of the new print (Paed'e "Eittakepettre and his Friends,") the Cosmopolitan Quarterly Art Jour. nal, and corncob, of membership which may draw one of several hundred prizes. Powers' Greek Sieve," it may be remembered, wee actually wan, two or throe years ago, in one of the drawings of this Assoolation—a pretty good return for an investment of three dollars. The objeots and details of this enterprise have been on largely ad. vertised in'Tius Press and other local journals, that we need not here repeat them. Whoever wants information had better go to Messrs. Ifunt, at the above-mentioned address. UNITED .STATES HOTEL, ATLANTIC CITY.—We understand that thla house has recently become the property of some wealthy Philadelphians, and is now being fitted up in the boot manner. duests to the number of sir hundred can be accommodated, and,they will be oared for by Jeremiah MoKibbin, Esq,, of thißlerohents' Rotel, who, we aro much gratified to learn, has leased the house. We con- gratulate the public , on the enlargement of the house,*and the lease of it to Mr. Moltibbin. -E The gorgeous spat:tato of the " Ida& Ring of the Four Moments," which is drawing such crowded houses to Dan Rice's "Groat Show," will be played on Saturday afternoon, in order to give pantos from the neighboring towns, and the jay°. an opptirtunity of witnessing what is uairer• ally pronennoed the most magnificent show.piece produord In America for many yearn. Lola Montoz on John Null. Tho announcement that Melanie Lola Mentes would deliver a lecture At %ideal Bend Hail, last evening, attracted a very large nudism, in which the sterner element largely predominated. There was much impatience manifested to nee and boar the fair lecturer before she made her appearance, anti when she entered the platform there was no stint of applause. She appeared neatly attired in black velVet, relieved with flowing white lade undersleoves, and a collar of the Slate materiel. The lee tore was given with all the grace of speech and atcuraoy of iliontinelation peculiar to its authoress, who is undoubtedly a woman of imparter Intellect, whatever may bo the popular opikila re specting her mode Of using IL The subjoin-matter of tho lecture was a com parative portraltere of John Bull in contrast with his ale-Atlantic blood relation, Brother Jonathan. The picture also drew, though candid, was not de- void of pleasant satire and graphic, touelles," home of which were not any mere oomplimentarT to the Yankees than they were flattering to the English. She hoped, in 'opening, that she should not be no. ousted of maligning tho character of the English, if honesty should, at times, compel her to speak plainly of their faults. The kind receptions else hod met everywhere in England, and the flatter ing notices she had received from the press while there. bad eo deeply impressed her heart as to make her ashamed ever to forget Motu. In speaking of the relationship existing between England and America, she said that between na tions so much alike as these there was scarcely sufficient to make's lecture of a piquant character. The general characteristics of human beings were, indeed, strikingly similar alt over the world; faith lone, however, differed. She knew it was outdo mary to suppose that forms of government had much to do with the moulding of chataoter. Ba ther were governments the outgrowth of those national characteristics, which she proceeded to il lustrate by a reform:toe to English history from the earliest times. it me no metaphor to call England tho work- Shop of tbo world. What woe In this oomAry called smurtnots was peoullarly English. Fortis mown no part of America was no much like Old England as New England. Thera was something iu tho movements of Englishman that marked them an eminently a dotng nation. Especially was this true of the middle Cia6Boo, who were said to be as much like their Yankee cousins as two peas out of the saute pod. This country bad Indeed not yet had 'sufficient ago to deroiop a distinct nationality. Those parts of our country which had beau settled by Germane showed it untaietakably, and the same discernment told us plainly that New Eng land was English at bottom. The whole tout en semble of New England habits, modes of doing business, and - displaying their philanthropy, showed this to be the saes. It was not a little singular that an insignificant fog-heolouded island, with a little load, tin, fuller's earth, and wool, should ever have made as mush fuss in the world as England had. As a specimen of English modesty, Madame read s very hifalutin love-letter, addressed to herself, adding, that she had reoeived at least a half bushel of similar specimens of English indiscretion, during her recent lecturing tour in that country. Speaking of English sensitiveness on the subject of American slavery, she mad that the Duchess of Setherland, while she extended her patronage to every negro that presented himself, bad not one penny, or tear, or prayer, for the millions in India, reduced to the moot abject condition by English tyranny. Quackery and humbeggery had the widest held in England for the display of their wares. For her part, the could never understand why England should taunt Americans for their love of money, as nowhere, she believed, was the mighty dollar more worshipped than in the British Islands. The reign of the mighty god Cupid, she believed, was about the same all ever the world, and cense quently eucceeded in making as many rascals and fools, under the guise of miscalled love, in .tlT land as out of it. The coqcluding porllon of her lecture—which was considerably over an hour in length, and elicited what May be called enthusiastic attention through. out—was devoted to a humorous comparison of the idiosyncrasies of both English and Americans, in which every ism on this aide of the Atlantic wee supplied with an explanatory counterpart upon the Bess, the poet, was delivering a poem at Trim` ton, N. J., the night before loot, *hen suddenly the gas trent out. The atidiento born the delay so good-naturedly that Mr. Saxe complimented them on their patience, and, remarking that he under otood the difficulty was in the metro, aald that if the audience would promise not to find fault with his " metre," he would never mention tho defect of theirs. " Olsolt.vic Attu OilxnexAX SitatxrolfMnr.— Among the novelties of the season, likely to be• COMO popular in our marts of trade, is the ," von dote Trail Skeleton Skirt," "Mode ;le Parts, manufactured by Medal. Osborne 24 Cheesman, Ansonia, VODDOO iio t, whose ad vortlsem ent appears in another part of our paper to-day. Wo have examined the article (at the house of Messrs. Evans & Hassell, No. M South Fourth street,) and era of opinion that for symmetry of form, quality of material, and porfootton of worknaanshlp, it has been hitherto unequalled. Letter from Hrtrrtebarg. (Corrupt:a:tern of he MIMI Ileltalenceo, January 23, WA 4. this time there aro LSO bills reported, which is Corey mom than at the game period last year; and the number noted upon and mused up to this date, exceeds the number acted upon and passed two web Wee In the session of 1859. Thie shows that legislation IS pre. greSsing very rapidly, nod mime an early adjourn ment. There is no reason In the world Why thn bald ness of the Legislature should not be time through with by the hut of April. A eddolulton is now before the }louse fixing the Rat dr Month. If the party in powershoeld get tbrough with the legislation and ad- Jou& by that time. or a routed later, it would ~ t 4 greatly to their credit with the people of Pt nnsylVania. 'The Senate is equally advanced in busintla. Mr. Abbott, In place, " na ant Tor the registration of births, marriages, and 'deaths In the city of Philadel phia." The tithe bill passed the House last winter, but failed 111 the Renate, In minsequence of the oppoeitiou tat Senator Martell's, who thin season is not inclined to obstruct its passage. The health officer is to be furnish ed books, in Whist he is to keep an accurate lie of the births and deaths, Ail clergymen. cleolte, or keepers of the records of all churches and religious societies, ma gistrate, or any Whir person capable of aolemnixine the marriage. service, every undertaker. phymoian, turthrile, sexton, or auperintendent Ma burying ground, is to furnish hie or her name and residence to the health officer; and these persons are ,to furnish the aforesaid officer with the names of all the persons who have died, as well ae the Wane. A neglect to comply with this injunction will result in aline of filth A miens. tion law was passed in ISM, but it was so intricate in its detail', that it woe repealed in 166.5. T 11.5 act is a great improvement on the ono repealed. Mr. Connell road in place" anhat gecurine to the peo ple of Philadelphia the right of free travel over certain highways." Section 1 authorizes a majority of free. holders menhir real innate fronting on the whole or any section of any turnpike or plank road within the city of ?Madeleine', ouch section being nearest the paved highways, to petition the Councils to declare the same to be taken as one of the etre eta. and within thirty days it shall be the duty of Councils, kir ordinance, to declare that such turnpike or plank road, en far as 'within the city limits, or for such fraction as may be next the paved aureate, shall tie taken and used an and for one of the Streets; hot the/same shall net ho taken so/sermon of by the city authorities until the damages shall be riesessed and paid. Bix cernmuisioners, appointed by the Court of Quartet Bei:Biome, aro to mess the damages—but the present actual value is only to be considered. Coancils are to borrow the money on the faith of the city to pay any damages. An ant relative to hrokere woe reported upon favora bly in the Senate to-day, compelling all brokers to pay a Mx of four per cent. upon all their profits. They are to mate a sworn statement showing the amount of their annual profite for the year ending with the 30111 No. Veinber, to the city or county treasurer. Banks have now to pay a heavy percentage on their profits is the shape of a bonus and mace, but brokers, except a nominal license, mime comparatively free. This bill is intended to remedy ouch unjust discrimination, and, besides, it will be a source of revenue to the Bode, and it will moat likely become a law. A deduction Into be made of the amount of the license slid. No !manna for Philadelphia shall be granted for a less sum than $100; for Pittsburg Ste, and in any ether county $3O. It was introduced by Mr. Miller, of 'Washington. A communication was sent in today by Hon. Eli Bider, the State Treasurer, showing where the State moneys worn depo.ited at the and of every month during the past year. They were divided around among upwards of Mt, public. and private bank,. A bill is before the Senate, introduced by Mr. &hell, providing - for the sale of the Pittsburg, Connellsvillo, and Baltimore Railroad, or that portion located in the State of Pennsylvania. The preamble recites that it bee failed to pey interest for more than three yearn, as it had agreed to do by resolution of the board of directors, and in inn failing and insolvent oondition, and blesses. John 0. Kimmel, W. J. Boar, John 1). Roddy, Ross Forward, and Alex. Stutzman, of Bonierset county, are appointed commlasioners to conduct the sale. it is to be so'd to the highest bidder—s6o 000 of the purchase money to be paid Connally ; provided, that if the Penn eylvania Central Railroad Corupatly shell become the purchaser, they shall pay $1,000,000 additional, in fire equal annual instalments, with interest; and in conside ration thereof the Pennsylvania Central Company is to be exempt from tonnage tax. If this bill b -conies a law, Bellmore will lose tier Pittsburg connection. How will she like that I Penn. From Washington. Wasnixtvrou,Jan. 25.---The dead letters, instead of being returned horn within sir menthe, no here tofore, aro now returned within half that period of time, thus proportionately facilitating the re. atoration of valuables to their owners ate well as preventing the Inconvenient accumulation of each letters at the various post oftloes. This new ar rangement works well. Tho Postmaster General suggests an alteration In the law to return them within a still shorter apace of tiro. The oSloisi documents submitted to the Senate, on the call of Senator Sumner, embraeo the cor• respondence of our minister at Stoma with the Papal Government concerning the outrage on Mr. Porkina and Afro. Doane at Perugia, and shown the final settlement of the question by Cardinal Auto noill. No formal proposition has been made by !;pain for the settlement of our claims •agalnet her, but her disposition, as recently expressed, is considered highly faro:elle to that result. uur Oovernment has received no despatches from England for tho last two weeks In relation to the San Juan difficulty, which, it la agreed on all aides, will soon approach a settlement. On the voteto-day for Speaker Mr. Sherman was supported by his friends, no formerly, in a solid column. All the votes east for Air. Smock worn from the Democratic aide. The Southern Oppo sition, with the exception of Messrs. Davis of Maryland, Etheridge, and Doteler, voted for Mr. Smith, of North Carolina, together with 'Messrs. Clark of Missouri, DeJarnette, Relit, Pryor, Smith of Virir,inia, and Taylor, (Democrats.) Mr. Davis, of Indiana, received six votes, and twenty-seven VOWS were divided among twelve other gentlemen. Information received hero states that a resolu- Son was Introduced in the Senate of Mississippi, on the lfith instant, to send a commissioner to the Legislature of Virginia in view of the impending dangers to the South. More India Rubber InJunctions. Br. Lours, Jsn. Z.—Judge Treat has granted In junctions restraining some twenty.four firma of this oily, against whom suits worn brought by Ho race 11. Day, from Felling emetic vulcanized rub ber goods without a license from Mr, Day. Departure of the Steamship Europa. Ilosnu, Jan. 25.--The .royal mail steamship Europa galled for Livorpool this afternoon. tiho took out no specie. THE PRESS.--PHILADELPMA, THURSDAY, JANUARY 26, 1860. THE LATEST NEWS BY TtEGRAPH. CONGRESSI-411IST SESSIONI U. S. CArtfoto WASVINIITOIf, Jan. 25 SENATE. . kir, Lutz, of Oregon, presented the prooiedlogi of the Union meeting hold at Now York, snit read a letter from the secretary of the ineetiog, stating that the citisons of that city *Ore true to the Con stitution and the Union, and wished the fact to be known. Mr. Lauo expressed the pleasure It gave nil to present those resolutions, though he might not agree with every word therein contained, !le hoped these meetings, as indpattve of A round sentiment at the North, will, ocnOnile to be held. Ile moved that the resolutions adopted at the ifteottingips read. Mr. 11.0. E, of Now Itompahiro, objected to their reception on the ground that the Senate had here tofore refused to receive the more rooord and ex pressions of opinion whioh required no action at the hands of this body. lie suede the objeotion in no fooling of unkindness. lie was as much gre. titled as any ono at this expression of patriotic sen timents. Mr. LANG said if it was not in order to receive the resolutions, he hoped they would be incorpo. rated in the remarks ho had made, Mr. Una suggested that the subject be laid over till to-morrow. If the practice of the Senate has not been what ho has supposed ho Would withdraw objection. Mr. Davis, of Mississippi, thought the resolu tions could not properly go on the Met of tho Se• nate. Mr. LANE then withdrew the Paper. Mr. I'ESSENDEN, of Maine, presented a memorial for paying the mileage of the late Hon. D. C. Broderick. Referred. Mr. Panne; of Maryland, offered a resolution to All the vacancy in the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Institute, with the name of the Yiee President of the United States. Adopted. Mr. Baowa's (of Mississippi) resolutions, declar ing that the Territories era tho common property of all the states, then came up. Mr. WlLsocr, of Massachusetts, then addressed the Senate. No commenced by referring to the fuel, that when this Itopublio entered upon Ito existence, it proclaimed to the world the equality of man. Now, in Ito olghty.tburth year, it presented the humiliating spouted° of a nation dletraoted by die eustions growing out of the bondage of four million of mon. Everywhere In the United States en /4 ir repressible conflict" was noir going on on this question. In fifteen States of the Union, the pet. vileged class of slaveholders ruled, abrogating is support of its interests, tho inborn, inbred, con etitutlonal right of the freedom of speech and the freedom of the crest. The Federal Government, in nearly all its departments, wits under the eon. trot of the seine power. The speaker then went into u history of Af rican slavery In this country and in England, from the time of its introduction down to the present time, and quoted the opinions of 'Washington, Jet. ferson, Madison, and many other illustrious mon, to Dhow that at tho time of the adoption of the Federal Constitution, they had held that eatery was a moral, social, and political eVil; and that they desired and antielpattd its extinguishment. The first Government was composed of anti-eta very men ) and nearly all this principal appointees of the Administration of Washington entertained the name opinions. He contrasted that eats of public opinion with that °rioting at the present day. The mails daily brought inielligenee of the lawless deeds of Inlaid mobs; of Indignities per. petreted bn freemen, guilty of no crime, unless it was a crime to cling to the opinions o the fathers of the Ropublio. The Post °Mee Department, In half the States, eras at the matey of foist Cat pro slavery postmasters. Farnflieb were banished— free negroes were offered the alternative of ban ishment eh slavery. In no country of Christen• dour were freemen subjected to such Insults and indignities as in the slaveholding States of this Democratic Republic. Southern statesmen admitted that the opinion)) of Southern men bad undergone a revelation, and this change had effected the policy of ,the Fediral Government. The power of the tinveholding Meta was ol:dsined through the Vettrumentality of the.thmtti,:rtithe patty, which was forced to carry the flag and bear the burdens of the privileged ethos. He recounted the history of events from the close of the Mexican war to the present time to show that the Democratic party had been compelled to act always In the Interests of the slave _power. The slavery propaganda desired Cuba and Mexico In order to extend slavery, and it was to arrest this aggreasivepolloy and to restore the Government to the policy of Ito founders, that thq Republican Par. ty was organised. They believed that slavery was local and sectionat—the t ,Congress or the people of tho Territories could prohibit slavery. On the points they had folioed Woe with the bewoora o party, ethic% had been overthrown In neatly Mt Le free States. Mr. Wthiott, pronounced the threats of South ern Mee su asive the Union in the event of the • efeitlon of a Republican President, sea "disunion farce" which had been played in MO, and was to bo repeated now. The Northern, Democrats, who were fatiguing the weary oar of the country with worn-out professions of love for the Union, dared not rebuke the disloyal throats of their loaders; end I wore willing to condone the 431100 of the coca- try In the hands by MO who Avowed their Wen tter" to rate or ruin.'?„ Ma qtteted from the re marks of(Siflell Toomba, Minims, and others, and totiny)ohritrls of the South, to show that they had ' threatened a dissolution of the Union In the event of Fromont'a election. During the present session views had been expressed with reference to the election next fall, He referred to the remarks of Mr. Clay, " that ho hoped the drat fruits of a col lision might be reaped here," nod interpreted them to mean that Mead Who favored a dlasOltt donor the Unioh did not Intend to lowie the Cap tot, but were ready for a petpnal dolliskin, a bloody struggle" to the, has of Congress. In reply f 6 this threat he had to say that Northern Senators would not be in timidated by It, They were here. not'to" fight, but to legislate, but he would give thotaena ter from North Carolina notice that should they be assaulted boo with deadly intent, while in the discharge or their duties, those assaults would be re‘Alled and retaliated by eons who will not dis honor fathers that fought at Rooker and eon quoted at Saratoga. Though reluctant to elder upon suob a straggle, they would not ahandot at In dishonor. Mr. Wit,sow then refetieil to the disloyal speech es made at the Other end of the Capitol, and coin fp'entbd on the remarks of Mews Pryor, Curry, Pugh, Moore, Boyce, and others and the disunion sentiments uttered by Democratic presses In diffe rent States of the Union. The American Demo cracy, led and controlled by slavery propagandists, 'stood before the nation as the enemy of human pro gress Ile recounted the wrongs It had perpetra ted In Kansas and elsewhere and closed by express ing the hope that the Intelligent patriotism of the notion would rebuke the used exhibition of folly and fanaticism whielt would Oliver the Union into fragments, and proclaim, In the language of Jaok son, The Union must and shall be preserved." During Mr. Wilson's speech, he rend an extrttot from the speeches delivered by Mr. Iverson in Georgia, in which he said that the Condition of the African slaws of the South watt better than that of the white Mayes of the North. Mr. Ivansor denied the correctness of the re port, lie did say that Aftioan slavery improved the condition of the poor white man, bet said no thing of Northern white slaves." Mr. Wihsom was glad to hoar this denial. Mr. Char, of Alabama, remarked that, while Mr. Wilson said disunion was a Democratic doc trine, he would refer him to the action of the Le gintaiiire of Alabama, which had endorsed all such sentiments, Alud the Americans of that fitate go further than the Democrats in their ening mon. Wideox brie)) , eiosed his speech. Mr. CLINOVAN, of North Carolina, said that the State of Mateitiehusethi for the last seventeen years has boon engaged in nullifying the fugitive-slave law. Men had to take oaths to support the Consti tution. The laws of that State make amen perjure " himself before be can hold °Mee. In 1850 Massa ' ehusette had throe limos as many criminals aa the whole South, which was owing, he thought, to the bad legislation of the Mete. fifesanchusetts orators alwaya eulogize the notions of that State during the Revolution. The tionace4 of no State had been exaggerated so much as those sfassaehusette had rendered, while the other States were her Neale in that trying period. Suppose innocent men had suffered at the South, no mobs were ever got up to prevent mon from reclaiming their pro perty. • Mr. Davis, of Missireippi, agreed wlththe SOYA. I ter from North Carolina Ile repeated that if bad men should eeizo the Novernment who hostile intentions towards the Institutions of the South, the South would redress the wrong with her strong right band. She would net er submit to be driven into exile. The Senator from Massaohusetta bad I no right to oall them imoosaiontsts. Tho Republi- Oall party practically seceded at the last election; I it Assumed a mere sectional form. Be defended the tsouth from the charge of violating its promises, end vindicated the repeal of the Missouri Compro mise, end the course of the Senator from Illinois, (Mr.' Douglas,) on that measure. lie quoted from a speech able. Wilson, in which lie bald that he owed touch of the love of liberty he had to reading the Liberator. Thus the editor of that paper, Wm. Lloyd Oatrison, wee the tutor of the Senator from Massachusetts, and the soutimenta which Garrison avowed were: Nu Union with slave holdore. The Conetitution is a covenant with death and an agreement with hold" But he believed there were hi the Old Bey State enough Democrats to-day to drive back these men le a hand-to-hand fight. Be argued to thew that the speeoh of the Se nator how fideasaohusette was virtually an . en couragement to the schemes of such men as Jelin Brown. It was the language of ono who seeks to carry war into a neighboring State. lie had some nava for sincere (amities. But the wattle elate power," as used in the spoeoh of the Senator from Massacbusetts at Fennell Ball show that he want ed more power end spoils. Ito asked what was meant by the aggression of slave power? Did the Senator mean to intledua the prejudiced of the people? Re (Mr Davis) would not count to be pieced in a false pestle's. Ile flaw dark pelt hanging over the future. Re dotted the preserva tion of the Union which our fathers had establish ed, but he could not sacrifice honor and consistency, The real disunioniste were those who sap the foun dations of the Government. The South had never sought to demolish it. The hietory of rho Govern ment would show this feet. The Senator from Massachusetts should not arraign the South, espe cially ilea State of South Carolina, white hie own State had nullified the constitutional law, Ile de. fended the legislation of Now Mexico. It was such As any honest man might give to hie neighbor. The Senate thou adjourned. ROUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. Mr. Itnterow, of Kentucky, spoke, but In so low a tone that but few words distinctly reached the reporters' gallery. lie woo UlltlerilOOd to depre cate the Extremes of bolh partice. Even if an or ganization of the House was not now effeeted, he believed our rights will he guarded until the people have time to twilit) another election, end Bend other (tope( sentativeft here in 1861, when appropriations (meld be made to pay our debts. Kentucky would never look to disunion as a remedy for political acne. She will be the last to go out of the Union. Mr Wooesoc, of Missouri, rose to make n per sonal explanation, and denying tho truth of a des patch published in the New York Herald, that ho intended to propose the adoption of the plurality rule. Believing the election of Speaker under such u rule would be tirmonetitutional, be doubt never vote for or favor it in any way. Ile indi- opted the t the resolution he intended to offer, from which the despatch had probably emanated, pro posed on successive Millets to drop the eandidato receiving the lowest number of votes, until the contest is narrowed down between the two timely ing the highest number. which would necosearily result in en election by a majority. Messrs iIATTOI of Tonnesiee, Cox of Ohio, and LOGAN of Illinois, severally made personal ex ploantione. Mr. Actimone, of South Carolina ' said he wished to offer a resolution that the reporters of the New York Herald be expelled front the galleriee. 1 No reason was given for tide resolutiOn. Mr. AS/INIORS said ho gimy bed the resolution road for information. if an one desired to dig. cuss It, no would consent to lot it lio over. Mr. Kaitt, of South Carolina, rose to reply to some of the arguments of Mr. Corwin and to cur root many of his hietorloal mlereprosentetious. After Interrogating Min to ascertain whether he correctly understood his opinions, Mr. Heat said they were engaged to e groat drama, and not a fame. Were the Americans, patriotic, strong, and 1111nomble, loyal to their country, engaged in a farce? Wore the Democratic party, with their splendid aobieveraents and illustrious memories, engaged in a farce? Were the anti-Lecomptonitti, who carry out what they belleire WI cermet prim elides and correct dngaged in a fame! Were thee tenet egfiron filet/ own line, independent of party organisation, engaged in a farce? The very capitol woe invaded when the barbarians entered Rome, end it is said the Senators were au dignified that they looked like statues. We are engaged in a groat drama—standing face to face with the very existence of the Repubhe ! The country IS on trial for its life, A struggle has risen, threatening to be fatal to the Govern meut Itself. Your bill of indictment agninat the South is, first, that slavery is immoral, unjust, and a crime, and, Secondly, that ltd. Is a consolidated national democracy. 110 conceded that the renti• meats of the fathers of the Republie wore anti slavery; but irhat did they do? Fresh from the battle-field of the Revolution ' they subordinated their sentiments and made a pro-slavery Govern ment. The Republicans say they carry out the policy of the founders of the Government, but while they profess the sentiments, they cover up the eats of those teen who mule the fugitive-4nm law, and erected Territory after Territory with slavery In them. Jefferson acquired Louisiana, but they did net restrict slavery therein. As to ala Very being the creature of local law, as Mr. Cerwitt,end ethers maintained, it was establiehed ih the UM Testament, and recognised in the New. Ile maintained that this lea federal government The anti-slavery sentiment against this South 13 pressing on the barriers of the Republic. She is ill resist those aggressions, and wilt stand before the bar of history with no stain on her name—no blot on her escutcheon What is her policy? Ills ad vice was to prepare for dissolution. If the exi gency came the will be ready. If not, she will have adopted a wise precaution He reviewed the history of the Repitbhcan party, who condemn and stigmatise the fugitive-slave law, nod !mist ou the Wilmot proviso and that there shall be no more slave States—who insist that slavery shall be con fined to Its present area, that the Institution may die by etarvation and suffocation. But the South ask no protection from mortal man or power. She will protect bernelf with her anti right hand. She would drive back the hordes of Northern minions which might Advance against her. Hie will march on farther and farther Routh, and around her tin will be e. eivilizetion brighter than the sunbeams around the mountain spread. Her destiny will bo fulfilled, end then damned be he who drat cries Gold, enough !" Burgeen, of Virginia, raid it woe not his intention to make a speech Re hod sought tho floor simply to submit a few suggestions to the eon aideration of the House. Ile wished to bring this matroeeray to a close. He had no pyrotechnic dis play of "glittering generalities." His deatre was to produce a practical solution of the great question now Miming up the depths of human feeling. It Is expected, and the country and patriotism de mand, that gentlemen should come bore, In the lentuage of a distinguished Virginian, feeling that they have thole country to serve as well es a party to obey. There were three parties in opposition to the Republican party—the Denueratle, Fouthern Opposition, and anti-Lecomptonites- and without a union of these there could ba no defeat of the Re publican neteleee for Speaker. The gentlemen oppOsed an organisation In that manner had allowed party prejudice to interfere with their patriotism. lie thought the Republican agitation of the elavery question was the direct cause of Brown's raid on Harper's Ferry. l'irginla had comb to the determination that theta thoniti bo an end of such invasions. She had buckled en her armor, end her bayonets ate bristling todcfend herself. newer ,ro the reY , ettod on the united shields of all her sister States for protection, but at the moment when she least expected the wits reminded to depend on her own right arm for protection. Why would the Re• publicans persist In their aggressions ? What good was to bo accomplished Referring to the circumstances tinder which Mr. Sherman's name was obtained to the publication of a political pamphlet, the " Helper Compend," he said the Republicans had betrnited him And Made him a tout and victim. OtherAlse, Sherman must endorse that book. lie would toll Mr. Sherman that ho noVer could bo elected Speaker, standing as his name did, In connection with the infamous Reiner book. The adoption of, the plurality rule would bo a sneaking vote for Mr Sherman. The Louse sould not caste to a vote ou It. lb had Bought end signed the paper pledging to 'valet that rule, and would die hero before he would sanotion It, for it would reouit in the election of Mr. Sherman. Mr. COLFAX, of Indiana, asked • Suppose a bill, bo reported from the Committee 0111 Ways and !leans, omitting an appropriation of Money Which ft was auponsed might he used by the Administra tion for corrupt purimse 4 , would the gentleman jus tify the other 81130 cf the honey in signing a writ ten rape: or agreement binding themselves to :v -alet the passage of the bill bye faotious opposition, instead of allowing the majority to rule t Mr. Bor Ma replied that the gentlemen WM responsible to hie oonatituents. Ile (Mr. Itoteler) wee responsible to Lis constituents, and when be returned to them his position would bl enduraed. The gentlemen from Indiana had proceeded on the sappositlon that the Repubboaaa a aro la a tuolorl. ty. It was a national organisation. Not a single Southern man Affiliated with it. Ito made an op pral to certain gontlenion from Pennsylvania and prow Jersey (313301); HOMO or wham he reaornised old College mates) to take a national gronmt tin regretted to boo them on the Republican side In coualutian, he expressed the hope that the Sin would reuse, noel the Mouse make en (lilt to organize by voting from day to day till an organi zation to effected. Mr. Eruattinon, of Tennessee, isald he believed 1t had been two weeks ranee the roll was called. t cmoorred to him that this perlud had boon lung enough. lie gave way to Mr. ARREIOII.I, who said the resolution he intro duced this motmlng, for expelling the reporters fur the Pew York Herald from the galleries, was based on an outrageous attack made to that paper on a member of this Rouse. lie presumed every man had either seen or heard of it. Ile was free to say that it truadhe most infamous and libellous at tends over made on tiny deliberative assembly, and In which every man must and will feel aper sonal Interest. It called Mr. Pryor, of 'in - - globs, a "filthy liar and hest ho should de Injustice, he had obtained a certifl eat° front the telegraph operator, with the consent of the reporter, in which It was said those words were not contained IL) the Rouse report of Monday at prepared by the reporter of the Associated Pros. Mr. Ashmore said that reporter had made a fair, candid, and impel , tart report of the proCeedloge, but in It bad been interpolated, in eta of the leading journals, the mast Vile and infamous assault upon the gentletnan from Virginia ho had over known to be ovule on tiny gentlemen in any quarter of the world It became the duty of the house, however Innocent the reporters may he, to wt . pol them entirely, and not to allow anything togo from them as authoriz e d. If the Ilouse were OrgalizEd he would Introduce e resolution to have the reporters of each a paper expelled, never again tic be admitted, se ken a" this building stands. Mr. COLFAt t of Indiana, raid no member depre cated i,crsotealities More than he till, and no one had listened with more rain than himself to the attacks on bath sides of the Iloore. Ile asked the gentleman to begin the purgation at the proper place. The official organ of the Administration, rho Constitution, had se far forgot Ito dignity as to stigmatize tbe Republicans RA !ratters, using language the moat loathsome, and bitter invective, saying that they had been bought with a chilling. If the axe is to fall , let it fall on all libellers. lie vas a friend to the freedom of the press, and if r ,entlemen do not like the press to 'tribe back, they should themselves withheld the blow. The language of the lleivitd 1111.1 not more offensive then that of the Constitution against the Repub licans. Mr. Armours did not see the applicability of the gentleman's relnarke. Although the reporter i 5 Innocent, a fraud has boen commuted, by the inter polation, in ti fair and Impartial report. If nay such language should be applied to hint, ho would hold thelndiv (dual personally rcaponaible. Mr. Gnaw, of Pennaylvanio. potA the gentle man throw any bionic on the reporter Mr. Asititonn. No. My object 14 that the In- necent way eeoepe. Mr, Cot.t•.ts, of Indiana. As the gentleuran esetnpts the reporter, he, of course, blames the editor. Ido not Justify any language iu the La lure of a personal attack, Mr, Ashton . I hope I may not bo understood at desiring to abridge the liberty of the press, When it runs into treed and Iteentiousueno, it ought to beet:Focht:a. Por the sake of our honor and dignity, we ought to protect ourselb Cs. Ile withdrew the resolution, us tt could nut ho acted on In the present condition of the llousi. Mr. SrevaNa, of Pennsylvania, proceeded to reply to Mr. Dokter, and to answer Non a he con stdored to be reproaches for nou.organiz ition lie arid that the Southern mon were the Demo. arctic party, and these acting Alai them parasites. Mr. VALL4NMOU,IV, of Ohio, called him to totter for using such laugunge. There wan muck confusion during this port of the proceedings. Mr. STEVIINIi replied that If ho know whet lan guage Mr. Vallantlighlini preferrol, he should use it. But if the language was offensive, ho would withdraw It, and any that those acting with the Southern men are the eatellites revolving around them, aceording to the law of gravitation. (Laugh tor.] After stating how unfair it was to ask the Republicans to disband, he said that President Buchanan is a politician tot well us a tomes. man, who thought the only way to aid the Democratic party North, was fee the South to I frighten them into the belief that if they venture into an election the Dubin mould be dis solved, and till their industrial told pecuniary in• forests taerlaved. Me believed this whole pro gramme was drawn up in the White Rowe, and ' followed out, at he repeated, to aid tbu Democrats of the North, by fri,, ,, litoning all thu old WOlllOll and men iu petticoat+. When tisk programme is suffloiently used up a word from the Whito Rouse will organize the Moire. We should, ho sold, stand by Mr. Sherman, if the Reese du not or ganize fill tho "crock at doom," (Cries of -good" from the Republican side I Jlu proceeded to state the principleit of the Itepublitaii party. They are founded in the love of universal liberty, and hostility to slavery and °ppm. glen throughout the world. If they • had the legal tight and physical power they would abolish all eervltude and °Nerthrow all despot hill under the Run. But they elaitutd no such mission—that belonged to the rather of lie,,. They claimed no tight to interfere with the Insti galena of foreign nations or the institutions of thu sister State's of this Republie. They ( mold wish that R 119411 oath Turkey would liberate th e ir ;errs and the South her slaves, but the laws of n a- Hone gave them no each power in the one cite, nor the Constitution in the other. Ile denied that there la any desire or Intention on the tart of the Republionn party to interfere nit!' tho-c inslitu• Ilona. and It is a stern, inflexible principle of the Republican party that every law must be obeyed, unless it becomes so intolerable as to justify rebel lion. While there Is liberty of spereh there it no power which can prevent the utterance of these things whenever they may deem proper to do so, While they would not Interfere with slavery in the States, they do Plaint that the power to regulate and abolish slavery In the TetritQfiCB exist; in Con• gees, and nowhere else. Weave re.oleett to stand by th ese principles until they Mistime triumphant, and cheerfully submit them to the ledurnent of our 6pirOlT•oollntryMoll, 111111 to the civilized nations of the earth, and to posterity. Mr. tiatettnir, of Virginia, eked whether the gentleman held it expedient to exercise the power to abelieh slavery in the Distriat of Columbia, end would he apply it to the arsenals. dock-yards, and the °easterly° VOU)131(lie0 STLYZNII replied that ho uould fpn) no till furore° in the jurisdiction over the District of Co lumbia and the dock yards and arsenals; be was not prepared to say the came of the coastwise conl- Mr. CL/IIVIR, a Virginla, thought that ldr. Slovens was mat eamclontly explicit. He wished to know whether he was in favor of the fu4itive-elave law ea it exists, and if in favor of its repeal or modiflaation. If ao, to what extent; ehtl if ho was entirety opposed to the law of riba or the law of leso, and whether ho believed the power de pends altogether on the 60 , zrelenty of the States or not. Mr. 811:vgNa replied that if the gentlemen would turn to the record he would find that he voted in the negative on the law of 11350. As to its ropoal or modification, ho was in favor of it. lie thought the low of Ind sufficient. lie did not object to a fair late. Ile was for giving the South the opportunity to reclaim their olavee. Ile be lieved the law of 1850 to ho unconstitutional ; yet, do long no the decision of the Supremo Court re mains, ho would respect it. Mr. OLGIIENS said that Mr. Stevens bad in for• tune years proposed as the policy of the Itepubli• can party to surround the stave States with a cor d.un of Ore, so-that, like the scorpion, it might ' sting itself to death. Did the gentleman make a remark of that hind's Mr. Stavrts replied that if ho did it was in the books. [Laughter.] Ifo was understood to say that seinehody elso had made the remark. Mr. el-ant:Ns thought Mr. kitevens had the ge nius to conceive it. Ile addressed the gentleman from Pennsylvania FOLIO other question, which was imperfectly hoard, to which Mr. Havens replied I don't know, not being it prophet. [Laughter.] Mr ' , Lon FMC's, of Pennsylvania, wished to prp. pound to Mr. SLyt-ans a question of figures. Ile had understood his colleague wee once a echoot• muster. Mr. SiEvEss replied, Yes, he was mud of it. He had had several hopeful boys. of whom hls longue was not one. Ah ! said Mr. Stevens, with a smile and a ~ignineant nod of the head, I wish you tud been one of buy pupils (Laughter I Mr FLOArNCE rEjoined, lod would hare found no Incorrigible. Mr. Ste vn`44. I dare say—lta' hn ! Mr. 1. 7 Lonna, n My oollenyue spenka about the opinion of the White Howie. lahk a mathematical quebtton. Bow is it possible, with even the power of tho AdmiChtr4tion, to c froct an organtiatbm Thy Demoorats have ninety men, and It requires IW votes to elect. Mr. Srevesti (Laughter.] Mr. rhottesen repented hls question, to which Mr. &ovens replied : If my friend mid five other men get a little sick and stop out of the Rouse, we'll do it ILaughter.l Ft.ortit:ser desired to know how his colleague' knew to touch about the Pre.ident fr Mr. SITVI:Ng Why, the President is one of my conititnents jlmughter.) ltr PLonnst.n thought if his ecllea;,mo did not represent the rest of his constituents better than ho did the President. there was no hope fur him. bfr Erumtioun resumed his remarks. It co. curred to him that us they had been discussing on various tuat.eri tor tiro whole weeks without voting, the hc,t indication they could give the country of their doeire to organize would be Meal! the roll and take a vote. The congregation as sembled was as largo nu it had usually been. They had heard two or three speeches to-day, to which he always listened with pleaeure. Tho only pain he suffered was when they had too many of them. They . lied beard grout many now things, and now If any gentleman had arything new he would yield the filmr to him. lie thought he might speak for his friends when ho Bell there was not ono I lout think they ever will of theta but who would abut his mouth In the way of debate, awl proceed to a Note (App!awe lie would venture to say fur the Itcpubli.mtis, immune!' as they had ovinmld disposition to bo silent, that they would willingly follow the example. If they are not willing to ibis, let theta fay so, or forever hold their peace. The Democrat.' will not deny that they have had fur bearing. They might be in collision with an •• irrepree.ible conflict," might run their ploughshare+ in the ruins of a dismembered coun try," n.+ hod been gal 1, yet they had been fully heard. Ito preAtiuted that no gentleman bed come to the coneluoon that there was not finally to be alt organitation. Thu records show that the Democrats have done mono of the e2eaking than all the rest of the House put toffether. Dy common consent, then, let es Tote two weeks for Speaker, and If ono in the meantimpp should net be elected, then speak fir tno wech4 longer. (Laughter, and cries of " agreed."( If you consent you Will have a Speaker to preside with dignity ant! reasonable fairnes3, and the Union will endure for twelve ca lendar Inouthl after the elecibm. Laughter.] If we get Into a general debate wo shall have wore excttement lie appealed to big own friends, and to the Republican and Democratic 'mays. Mr. DortToPty, of Louisiana, wanted to know whom Mr. Etheridge called his friends. lie had appealed first to the Detnotratie party, thee to the Republican party, and his friends." Mr. Drunitiune was glad the question had been asked, lic claimed every man for his friend who has na honest face, who could read, write, and speak the English language, and does net spell Constitution with a K." 'Laughter.] Mr Bountusr (who speaks with a French az• cent) replied that lilt friend did no: include him, ' !menus,' he did not -peak the Ynglish language, though ha did not spell Constgutleti with a h." Mr. Ertiantnon replied—Oh, yea; be would re. cognise the gentleman from Louisiana 23 a friend with us touch pleasure as any one. Mr. Dal is, of Sliaoleeippt. Lat us stop talking, and hate a tote. Me. etukuipae said he would Justify everybody in everything which bud been said, provided they would not repeat it. 'Laughter.] Mr. Iltviptsv, of Arkansa., wanted to know whether the Anti•LeCOLlOOLlites were not to ho a potty to the compact? Mr Brunton.% thanked the genUmnan. When they were Indulging In a repeat they always reserved the best things to the last. Those out siders limo played the part of 1311M&Oillef, and nnly apoke when they were called up, and ho would mu it privately that they were called up very often. )Laughter.) Ills purpose wets to get the House in g.xel humor to act. ite to taking care of the country, that was for the people, not fur us The gentleman from South Carolina (91 r. Keitt) quid to-day the count!) , was on trial. Ile (Mr. Etheridge) wet glad of it. It la to tho coun try they should appeal for a safe deliverance. If the coutcst should be kept up nut.th longer the country would take care of them. [Laughter ) lie underttood that there Is to be no more debate for two weeks. This determined on, they would have a Speaker in Ic-a than die dap. Mr. atm,, oltleorgia, was Imam-gond to Inquire how tunny times a dny they were to vote. Mr. Ernymioun suggested three tribee a day That was as often ac the cock crew before Peter denied his master. (Laughter I The !louse is almost orguniicd After a call of the House, a ballot for Speaker token with the following redult Whole number of votes .15 Neee.wary to a choice Mr, Sherman Ind Mr, Doe.lek S Mr. Smith, of North Caroline Scattering 33 Thu Faltering re'eu were divided urn •ng a dozen other gentlemen Adjourned PENNSYLVANIA LEGISLATURE I. 23n SF N The Speaker laid before the Senate tnn sloth animal report of the Northern tone for Frieodless encdren. Itarog to iik CoNiNlit T. gr.,—tee laden in; bile were reportell Inceratily the at endued c o o, ulittees: A hill relative to hulk.) toll relative to the elinliengtne of timore in reititiii ',see ; h 14'1 regulating the Inca of auditors tin the ells of fliilatteitliia; a I.i it relative to nttachmenta ; n bill re 'stile to ci dunce a bill relatlidi to Fictions ol replev tit n 1 ease"; 01 that resit for rent; a bill to nothorize the 5n,1 , 1 el I'l3,l,oo:pine sil"ertirri a lint of real estate in three newsy 'per.; I ill to filitliOrige the Clerk of Olio Hondo of Health Ott Philadelphia to admen Disler nsilie tin certain ripen; nupplithwilt to the eel incorporating the Petritietron Fire and Morino lesurariee U onpans of Flidadelphi ; n dill t • incorpoioto ute edo,yll,ll County •n Comp :es ; a 101 l to to-error:tie tits Franklin .31in ne Cutitinnh n 411g1.111Inent Ti, the 3 , 1 Ineorwratirg the l..aene Vann) boat Ciimpany ; a hill t o ~,,,s urete the Doom Insittacen Company of l'iolailciphiaz a toll to incorporate the Fenn Alarket Compan) 01 Fpl ailatlcl file bill to incorporate the Port Kennedy itilfirhlil CornpariV. In Molitgomer) county. wail reported rent the Vonanittee Corporadons, and taken up and passed. The following bills werereported with a nasal.," re• erdtiniericlati , in A hilt relattt to mu teei, is PhilO dellihin; It to I relative to aponale faint the den Steel of a'ilermen end itiaticeit of thin pence. DM, K KAD PLar e. et 111 , PrL read ini i sce a sup lenient to the act incorporating the Ironton ail- Nod letit , e3lll•, M Lehigh enmity. ate. Oita ca. a toil to tncorperoto the Filed) Deposit Company oI Philadelphia. Ale. HALL'S blinfileilient to the net to encourage man ulacturine operations in thin Coninome ea .th. • e , cot, art.t., a b II to secore to the citizens of Nola dolphin Due travel over cettion hug iisa)e Mr. tit art.:- a bill to intne,. rate the Fornatiott Coal and flea Colo puny. 'I he senate then rreceeiled to tt e corsider•don at the euppplemeat to the Oct IlienrpnrGking the Della are Motto! Inenineco Company of Matinakisnies ed tenntead In, aulitiee not rho i ro priAtilatitl4 a otttli.'q ores!. nil trn censitle r able d110116611.R1 at tWI• rirselitl had dine tne umhnn and 31, :Milli and others opoesint it. Fin ills, ilia ailosedineht "eat Lit, smiths toll mimed fin)ll,—)e in la nese It. 'rho supplement to the net incorporating the Likens Valle) Cool Company, vaued to ri third readin.;, and wee then laid over Adjourned 'lice Speaker laid before the Ifettse the montltly u Vr l . o 'l l ll 'e B'' at i ke e , 4 iie r.' a r t . ent'UPT eiNt from Drophln oeeatt , A bend nDDen•v3 tot seat thta pet nuts 811.1%101 duly aviprn 'fee different standins committees were than called fir thole reports NIS Crsllllliltieti Mr. Actek. from the Co I.miltos on Corporntions, re p n hill tocorportathg the l'enningtoucille Old Fel lows' 110. Mr. MooUN. from the alma COnlinittee a Inn to ineor borate the Lafayette Alarieet Company. PkustoN, torn ti.e Barrie oommettoe. a iintirle moot to the act JnOnrp 7011n0 the rem..Jlton .panne and Fire inguyanee Company of Piollielphia. Man no net incorpornting the C 011110614 Coil Comeau. and e tilt innorporgting the Pitieburg and . 1 1enon;ahel% la ger% ce Company, Mr. O'lnlziLL. Irom the hid diary Coniinittee, an art relating to tenure.. Companies end AlustrtiM6n‘lls lit the counties of Philadelphia and Allegheny. Mr. WINK I.L grated. in reportia; thin 1 , 111, that lie wag goly, r ygg e r tor, that partici. orpoyeil to the 'my° Cull epgortunity nit been; heard [reline the Committee. Mr. Atf awrr. frotn the runo conimittee L reported An Act for the roller of the Ilibernt t .trigiuo Company, of tititnNo. from the cini• committee, with cop, tire reecionientlAtion, imoclAinent to the Oct feinting to the AM.:11111011( ,e,sri, (Ylircird., iron the runs cointriatea, nu art for the ',otter weer , realion of game and insecto croon lard, Phu Committer, on Ronda retained as conianttal thy 101 to nutho tea tho arldeoirit of Fayette anti other wants, to ino run of Philadelphia. A into., number of uther bide ul n local ChellACif Cr were rported. 1.1., ry Piece Witdpv ralit in placa a bill an thorizina !ha Court. of Common f L , ae to appoint con, noesioaers to invoritipto contented election cases in folore. Alr. Anon rr. an net prOVIdIU for the rer.latratton of births, marrtagee, and ttenthe in the C,O of rtuladel- Won. Mr. 13 in, n supplement to the act incorparnting the Cut, zene Parmenger Volitive? Compete) el lite+ Int ; also a bill autharizinit the I alumli trill Htillo,l C inpanN to Mite up their trlea 1.4a1 upon tubed) three; to titteburp \t r. PRIP;TON, R lull IrleOrrnrntillt the j'arlonn chino Company, and n!so en net incorporatint Iho tlnk tinnx. supplement to the net for the gloater rertninty of ,f flea, toot the more aerate 1`0111,,,le" mt rent retntn oho, n tap. fefeent to tan net I nrataatnting the Pna.olef Ala and ,recent NILVI,L. 101 l Gnnyanr, NOIIIOIOII9 other 1,1111 wo.e uttr Mr. otorr utlereda resolution 'Ott 'relit tlinuelnd eopies ol the report ho Auditor . , Upon rail roetts In. Printed. hilt the 11.U1S, 11,111,010 110110 the to ei.lntion road the second tone NIL, it A p 1,, ',mon , (.1101 the cat zees of cm.yl e y rrowity, ankiii,; for the 14x00,0 of a personll lilieity Mr. a toot r, arreral for an nsro, iattory to the Pennsylvania I rainoir Sehool for peotilr moiled 0.1 liiintio Children; set croi h Inn fur 1120 reg.NEOMI: of birdie, !ham 0000. 110,1 deaths: nil a remonstrance oks r.st 11,0 Poorolos Fora Platt Road Comipsny. Mr. Wit.ier, two lOC h ..hainC+ in th e mu d, 01 00 , sessinent tax 08 in Pin) Wein/Mt.. . Severaljoral 1,111 were coueolered end Nbard, And ho House adjourued. State Politivm. DA% 25 —The eenfereee appointed by the Peopled POIIVLIJ tionv of 15•ynming, 2%100011r, and Sullivan younties, met here te•lldy, and appointed Col. S !I :Coy, of Cow l:l bi d . a n d P. M. Osterhout, Wp.aning counties, 9. dole g it,to fu the People'd 6:ate Con; erill-n Putt; gea• demon pre 'CUM Irleuid of Ilea. Lieu 11 Teggert. The Tennessee, Kentucky, and Ohio Legislatures. Coictriart, Ten. 2S.—The members of the Ten nessee and Kentucky Legislatures ore eapeeted td arrive here to-morrow morning, and 17111 proceed directly to Columbus in a special train. They win return on Friday, accompanied by the members of the Ohio Legislature and State officers. They will then be received at the tleent by the Military, and escorted through the principal streets to Pike's Opera Hone . where n formal reception by our city dignitaries will take place. The (torornor and other State cdlleer& of Indiana have accepted an invitation to be present. In the afternoon there will be a grand banquet at the Burnett, Itouse. The gues . t& will leave for homeon Saturday The etrair promises to peas off with great Hat. hiuch entbuitasta prevail& here. All the public buildings of the city are decorated with flags, The Harper's Ferry Inquiry Committee. SIR. OIDDINOS AND JOU(SICOIVN, JC., SUMMONED A 9 WITMFDSISS. CLEVELAND, JOEL 25.—Marshel Johnson was in Ashtabula county, yesterday, to serve summons on Mr. Giddings and John brown, Jr.. to appose hoforo the Foliate Commit , ce of Inquiry. Mr. Giddinus is now iu Now York, but has been noti ited bY telegraph, and wilt undoubtedly proceed tv WaAbiogton forthwith. Brown could not be hand. Both aro suhausoisea to appear on the tteth inst. SUDDEN DI) trPEAHANCE OF A WM939. Bosrov, Jan. 25 —A United States official yes terday wuitest upon Mr. Sauborb at Concord, with a summons to appear before the Bauer's Ferry Investigating Con:mitten at Washington. Ile te• fused to accept of the usual witness fee, and, bef , re 1 other tuealurea could be taken, he had diese peared. It is supposed he boa gone to Europe. The Recent Accident on the Hudion River Railroad. ANVIIIER ALBANY, N. Y., Jan, 25.—Mr. D. St Irwin, , 1 Fulton, Otyiego county, who was injured by Ile aeci•leot on the Hudson Ricer hattrosd last week. died this rooming. Connecticut Politics. BARtroltio, COLD , Jan. 2:).-116 Republican State Convention mot hero to-l l y, Noa l ly legatee were in attendance. William A. Buckingham was noluinatei for do vert.ur, and Julius Catlin for Lieutenant Glover nor. 3 he attendance at the State Convention 'wet very large, nearly every town of the State having been represented E. K. Footer, of New force, WM eloeted president. A decided, but strongly oon- SerViittVe, sptrit prevailed, at well as the uttn,st hartoony. The present State oll'ers were rentanioate,l Ly acclamation. The delegates to the Chicago Na. tinned Convention are: For the State at large. Filet disqlot, 11i30 , 313 Wells, of Hertford; tiecotd divrict, F. K. F , atat, of New Haven ; Third di"- trio. Chauncey F. Cleveland, of Hampton; Fourth distsct, A. is. Holley, of Ltkevilte First Cs n gressional district, S. Q. Putter, L E. Pease; Se cond district, S. W. fiellogc A 11. Cotef; Third district, dames Gallop, 11. It. Starkweather Fourth district, E. S. Tweedy, Georo If. Noble. the first of the series of resilntiuns adopted de clares that the Convention will frown upna every attempt to 4itschey or violate the Constitution, and every threat to sever the Union by fanatics or demagogues, in all verbs of the Union. he second ant third resolutions deeply deplete aid oßideurn the repeal of the .H:ssouri Cotupro tom, re.; trding that ft/ the wicked end and frostfal sumo of all rho present etrif, the fourth realution opposes any interference by the citizens of any State with the institutions of another, and that the Republican party would defend any State or Territory from la•less inva sion. The fifth resolution giv,:.s uniuslideJ Condemn a tion of the lite feeble.] iavaton or Virzicie, 113 well as the inca3loo or Kansan by 'ruled rutts us Burning of the Bark Caine.n W YOH K, Jon 25 —A despatch from .3f •hile elates that tho bark Ualens, booed to Aturteriaoa, with a cargo cortr,h, was destroyed by fire yes terday (II Apalachicola, Florida. Destructive Fire at Delesan, Jan. 25 —A 11/0 at DeIPT&D, Wiscon sin, on Mn., ni4la?, destrqyei the dry goods atore of H. Tuppln h eon , the book store of U. C. Lyon, the clothing store of W. W. Ilrelley, the bookstore of Baker & Parrish, anl the law odes of Sfesirs. Clerk A Pechia. LAI In surance $l2 GGO Boston Allairs. BOSTON, Jan 25 —3lllle Pattl accomplished a great triumph I,nld:ht, in the opera or I Put - Irani. :the was called before the curtain three times, and •it each appearance received a great oration. The audience was the largest sad most bnllleat of the season. Baraiaig 01 a Cotton Ship. Ca tt:Ltearr:r. JAIL 23 —Tha bark Eleat , r, lositug Cro Amsterdam, took fire at Apal.hirola Dr) ion lay night, aml wan Rattled and sank. &he hid 1,310 bolt-sof cotton, of wtion only 109 halve, tho deck load, were lined. No ii-Arrival of the Steamship America e.tetiviiie, Jan. 25-11 o'clock P. M —There NTOTO no room of the steamship America it Halifax at eight e',.htek this evening. her *deice; will be to the 11th inec. fire nt Clinton, Wilconsin. CLCV 6L/M1), Jan '25 —A Ere ceeurred at. Clinton, V; ts,, , ,naln, on Monday. The d3rnige eglunted at teenty tbou3aLd dollars, a whkn twelve thou !lnd dollars 3re1.1 inured. Resiguation of a liorrard College Pro fessorsbip. .130 gtoy, Jen wiry 2i —Prate...sac Ilantingtoo bss rostignad the Plummer Professorship at ilarrard College. TH E CITY. MgLTINIi or VIE lONDUOLDEII9 Or TUE U. 7 ,10 7, CANAL.—In aceordewe with a rublithe.l call, a meetit4 of the bocdhotl e r d of the Canal wee held yeaterdiy afternoon at the :der- EvAtange. John A Brown, , wsa reUri to the chair, and Mr. James W. P, u t wo e erp,.inted seetetsry A vapor signed by a ntintbtr of hoary bondhold ers was submitted the tneetir.4• sugges,in; that the h.aidholders SUrittain, a SUffitiellt f.,111C,0 oS the heed : : held by them for the purpose of paying utr the tloattog debt, and that the canal worts go tithetoln.l'aolat vs. Atter !-.ma en:6o.lole dil.zuvion o the oper wal re frrhlA lA. eoratulttze et nine, appaktel by the ehatr, Vittm.nt L Ilradr , r3, CO. Jame.; Jamcz B. McFall tad, Chaste," Maeato,ter, 1:. S 11 , oktey, J. J Thompem, C IV; 0,1, F. M. opd John Wel,ll The imutuittee were directed to rev.at on the of the eec,:ition of the company at an al joui tied meeting, to be h.reafter taliel. meeting then adjourned. A Case of Lll , Play morn ing, ot young seta, caned tterga W. Vti,lan, bul a betore Alderman 1.1,.ider....n the ehar,;e of iilltuotimr a young tidy narnt d Myers. Ihe ta•ts of this Case, Re del elopol at th.., hearing. are these . Mr. Dugan, Chu Is a married man, roam time last 21111.111 W eNntilencel paying his a s iness e s to a dau.thter of Mr 11. Myers, a new-raper carrier, residing iu the Nineteenth ward lie represented himselt as a single man of the tame el 31,rrls, end paid his aJ.lrear with all the sP , l.latty ac 1 detwutti a .t.l hiller, 1101:10rib:0, y‘iing man. Miss Myers is only alumt sixteen, ant re.iled nub her father en the road. 11-r father is a plain, honest, hard-working man. One ol ening, Isugan Inched Miss Myers to accompany him to a party. She complied, and, while there, was iniuruird of the fact that her !Geer wis a PRP riod man lm on. however, col ce.l bee to ga with him, eel *ben J. her hems and Izier.d.. soe cm e,,uted, and is new iu a if e - .l:l,:ealineu , . pagan refuses to giro any information at to when) she is, two", he t. :Ifni 1 her tither will titans her In the (louse of Refuge The magistrate committed him to answer to &taut( of .$1,56U Lail. A.Lwost ACCUMNT Tuot , lty the C 13 .- giOter of a train on the Itenlirkr, lisilrot I Li. a tali') child ervesm; thu track ea feats:vivaria al erne, rear Castes wee, just ')heal cf the train Ito imuaediately whittled •, dawn brakes," at: I re versed the engine. The impetus of the Iran was too great in be eLeeke,!. In et,,t the Child rye, caught by the rew.esteher era thrown upon the other track Greatly to the surprise and gratin:. ion of those who witneesed the the child jumped up and run 0.3 un• Lott, carrying away a pitcher which escaped frac.. tore. SEVERE At:CM:qr.—Ott Tuesday ecerhe at ati early hour, et plait:ago: rati , ray car. en the 'Second and Third rtrcet railway, came in contact i , ith a wagon, to Front ereet above Oxford Tao wagon had been very careletely left tho tracY, tied ca the evening was a.alt a e,liili m coined b - 1..r0 the driver l'OUld stop the toret/. The tongue of the wagon pelted through the 'adore of the car shd ',truck a etuallelord to the face. throrrtzg it %,olelitly to the other and of the oar, and locsehing iia front row of tooth H woo Nary firm:ate that tho injuries did not ttsuro. a tuore marten.; nature borate CE St.reEntus.—Tho Mayor of L tut moue has telegraphed to the equatilittee of st na.getuenti f.d. Mrs. llortere lecture in this city. n Friday evenlnt„ that he thinks thegenerosit, el the public bee proi , ided for the pressing Deers silica of the suffering, but that the amount received er and 104,0 that relltkito for their relief wilt be appropriated to the education of those who have been mode orphans by the calamity NET/ MARKET HOURE.-011 Saturday even. ing next, the Ridge avenue and Coven street aket 'louse will to opened for 1,1) frit lime, Oa which occasion the entire building wilt be lit with gill, and there all be a handsome display of choice beef, .1.0. The market contelns siaty-odd stalls, o bleb will be rented to firmer' at the low rate of 4,z; per power. The building is paved, plastered, wolf I, 4 t, tac t, a nd ventilated, and the stalls Very handl noely hotbed It will no doubt be a very great convenience to the neighborhood in which it ti located B R r A xisa rue PICACE.—On Tuesday eve tdug the driver of A dray ran his vehicle on the truck ahead of a car on the Welnut•etreet rail. way, et Eighth street, end compelled the car to log behind him to Eighteenth street, et 'which punt he came noro*s en omnibus, and instead of turning out to avoid it, he backed hit dray into the horirs attached to Ito cat Ile wet attested end t Ikea before a magistrate tel compelled to pay a fine of five dollars and costs of prosecution. IcR FOR TIIE MONTIL9.—We have on the banks of the ::"Jhuyikill. no less than six. teen ko houses. It I! mitnated that they possess an aggregate e3pacity (A. storin4 93 3110 tons Al read) the ..ymeri of the wsechott+es here stored away 73.3ii0 t,ns. if we hare any arl.litionst colt weather—a thing not beyond the range of probe• i,ittty—we may look for plenty of tee, at reasons lA, pinto, during tlw melting days of thesummer Cii IIIGED WITH PIoNIVO POCHTT:..-011 THeS. day, a man, naute , l Teoruas Carter, nag arrested in Carter ztreet, vu the chatgo of picking the pockets of There Wade of the sum of forty dol lars. Ife erns taken before a magistrate, and held for n further hearing. Tun WF:ATHER for the bet few dat•s hoe taco genial, t!!cAr, end epelig like. The at' winds et this writing betoken a speedy change, :1;-A we [coy soon look for cold, sharp, and in. eletutnt weather /4:310%1W/1116 nr:Am—TM) remains or thou , intmett in the old burialgrou tu l of 13ap tHt Church ore to ha I,lcen un •trtel 1. Int , tr , I t.• :\R`li!liCeUletury The BirthdaY of Hume. ONE 11C3DIILD AND FEES? .ISSIYACIAI3I% CELZHA.S.IILX FS POILIDgLTIIIi One hundred and one years ago. on the !Stla of February, 1759, Robert Burns was born. An who remember with That a reeling of ilnirenti enthe slasna the centennial anniversary of Cie tient, was celebrated last yeat, in every pert of this civi lised world. will remember one of the misst its - portant and extraordinary orations ever given to the memory of mortal man. Whatever there aria in the character of Robert Barns; whatever fault a he may have had, and be was human; whatever opinions_ may be entertained of bla abilitieaLla writer of poetry; there can be nit doubt that to day there is co came eo titivereally Cherished by every admirer of gentle, genial, and aympatbetin verse, and every hater of tyranny and oppression. There is one reason for Ibis the great and only reason. Burns wrote from the heart ' The con ventionalism of artificial poetry and mathemati cal verse, never trammelled his free and bril liant mind. Re wrote of man as he found him,— of nature as it presented itself on the heathery hills of Stotiand,—and of society as it existed, with its merit- aod its demerits. To be care there are things which Darns wrote, and which might have barn left unwritten without tarnishing his fame ; bat we forget anti forgive all these frailtiea and ehorteominv when we think of the eenti ment of •'.'ten was mule ,to mourn," the humor or "Tam O'Sharter," the deioriptire satire of •' fislloweeb." the piety sad pltTiCtb= of tho Cotter's dsturday Nsaht," and the /Vett memories that doter Hound the beat:vital Grro of his "Lishlthd Usry.” lire forget and forgive all hiss Coif[.. far we know that they are not the fardu of the deliberately and mallei•Jusly risked, but the errors hod tui,C)rhane3 of ono who, ft:waned on by fortune from his cradle, and scam:Med by every thing cito-.l!.zte I to ell:aguish the tree of poetry in was nesettheless one of the greatest geniuses that ever nivel, and the complete Ilea of the proverb of An honest than't, the nobler; work of thud The anniversary was celebrated by the Earns cf Phil* lelphia by a banque. which was Aiieli at the St. Louis hotel, CD Chasm= straeL fhe r.)..ra was decorated in a beautiful manner. At the heed cf the table, the Atnerican and flrttiti dag,t were entwined. Oct the east tide of the room tray a bust ~t Batas, with revere! prints, Inctstra tive of the poet's history and dterlti itl paatiah !UV. The [abler were covered with the delicacies the re.a...n. sad the barque: wee the snipe: of ncirersal c , tx.tnectlatton. Shortly *Ler *even th• gues , s tack their seats at the table, ne/ . tere- , n, Fiq , presiding. Robert C. eta 'Wader dlengh. Eal., acted as Vice Presidents Charles Jerrie, prftl.l4 at the piano. The eatables on the table were ddrentied at length, std etnat tin o'clock the was re am,tel hlrPhers4n, Erg , prealdeat the Sara! CL'. Tenor t;.: . 'c;s h a bren T1N:301'24 IL Cie • neat eti +to aidrtst, to which he daleribed the therneter t Burns, ami rett,Ni a gherins erhity on hie memory. 1. 1 . a mu Teat a vbiloaopher—oor a earri , ,r—t j.l.ri4. , :—r.Lr a mint! , er— te)r • flet—• nor a rhp's Lis fame, ar.iying aa lc, :pram/ tr , :in Lone of thole eaueet or porsisii s. wee a men bn=t'a extraetien—he wag a p"..et. No • ~:ber pact are, but the pee 't poet of 2 .7 11212111; a taaa war asked atty croa :::•th of 2tathre's try t) 5: him rnsit.r.n. as the 1.211 t Szotland. coz,leg be re to ton): tse =exory •-..! Hams...* dits7A an tonor upon cureclrea. prove ear de rotiJo to cur dear old fe.her!ar,d; war lima for the 4 toot co.at >ries (Ideas cli tang eyne. (Applanas..l The speaker elistdoi huettureus:y to tle - kw - emeriti asseaittteci with the early day§ of Dia life 13 Cala duels,, and war arrl‘adei- To tke tzenexet who Dad o-ese to bouts tke tsets e .2. toe estee , 'ed a Iteerts wetnece TD , XISA ee.e. tend ;..e9. yet 1:11 lE111;`t w lth 'Ent's!. A end 14,3 ir la,* • IVC.4. STotitlai.Sll4 t.,0•4 'C. , "a o,lr sm•LY• hod CIEVE.V.a.r recall• Cool re' tte :and Cr t: tr 11432.,./... Lad: mar t'a U;101 cr tees' eoetsda .' , 1.1:4•11 greagra,2 Sorter t ti rszcv sad flperSt.t.C.lL 51..4 clre• 01A fly , t the CALL,:I2,:Ie MO= of PC.C44.13.1 to (call ac-ens eta VIC • &fete...N.4d our corsta.it •;r 2:1 oar !.!.arty. Monad .p;! toe I me .;ester outc:kdect attui loos so , 7:scs• /be their-oleo thee' TO.ll thst tvtlowtzsg as the etre: regular toast. Ithi:k was drur-k with el Litt 1:1` , re : I—Rato• " A rob 1,:n3 Re ' , Hires. Of ;.....;•CAld s b, a, Af jva a. 71,1,1 In, a.sa ors II•••2 3 br Is hart ,•••• f; ~r• t re 54.,.• ivms. B I !ors., ha fr;ssd, he lased no (lass. H. bred L.llllll. s. 1.1 NJ ;sae ; WhOi Lae 9 ed. ea-r,s. 111 h.= 71.11. He's bat a t, , ,,0f Ltd 114.11" John D. Stockton, ,tae, %h.= at the pet of the etr&uing lie rasa the fAlo= original poem. comp:sed tae OCLIX:3O. great spi:ante: ODE 10 THE NIEVORY OF RO3ERT " Ae4 C.se waned is exiT P , ,....1acay:,31102?.1L2.1.7.31.1.,.. &At:" I Von t , y. en 1 diy raa boce err. A 61 tsecocerroctkEirt3 Farah smolt ter ta:lrt tltt tare CAP poet t.ctl- And h•re tc.•c eay. 116 ..red sad d ic.11.11 <le 0r0r..1..tt etes,:ffel Lay.• !tett ;ore. We, a sadly Ca Faro tper. to lie tact Lea ped t3vocrf?rk 13 LIU /334 03 3 SEt wred; be it vower co cot. 134 sate it le CI tot be I,r:ct— is toe , ttu4 re of ton lard TL seiteric . yrdet tte Wee!. p Ist ut ■ sh nee (mica forelz3 avrattd. Sete of the teem bel4Ted tie e.ce•-. Ail r 3.sUr.d kith ter Area (11. t.. And Ecotlend tteta the Bads ci Aft. It la end e fAttery It is me vol . /aril:44 ea7m:l4 Tn wrest/bra won tr rigors tnei potty Yrea Lovw odr ittaaAlty to MLitt t r yrotta.--as air do rAvi— F , e t.ce unit Ipnvitees. crates rie. tut 5 ; , n Rini:: Fir./ Ure..1441 tit-. ort Br. N , spp.er toriftnefs mareVirvid. I.r..ar mined tots areal:annul:44 hiernre.-- And t. Vs: re,..1 ones. - Fonear s a e paths he lad far us as trate. Fe, A•. to e.t,ary. A r.l area% Lftn the mos. L•kie t h ee Idoc k apea, env.: L.A.a. oa TrAll d ant nets raciarforrn tsar it. ar. rill. Las 'Naar their rr:aimirr sympathies_ nc.l they 'haute as =MI 1.1111111211. uaih t hr.,. Nth. 10 the Mallet stets irst ;wed fa a tarty rheas.- A nd tboaesho Scanty aerre Mel Trttlii T` .at it not can to hd-4or my=: But • rate with Salter. 5z. , 3 b.!, of bate Tani r thug and sn.rit• d Adam. Ira all.! (mare:at Voniraa Thor...re tray. I.! nay tn To. antes ci that at ran.• Terriitte nay trenthe Its oral rr than. And En:zit:Ll hatrt ker Ar. n. fur. And Sceiito . tarn to • Buirn of Ayr ; Ainltarraid le lie Pilfer atretin. Eli.: haunted by tie PJrt t eade.. And n s ,-,t c dream. °on: tire:, d ;olr Where ant's are a1 . ..1. std .acute biTW• or ercr flow and flow. And ,nllll4l /A Ih. VIA es tei , r, Alf Lava. of the earth sod 114 n. tar ~r tat r•rir that try mina as tiler skier When the C 1e ttetTe.,i , et a rti !tvsil 1 a mcrn.urse.-..rt r,/ Sties Tr 1.3ter..m.; tzgr bt• Fir ts,• 111 ss - oetar raf !rt.:eft ebtren• •rs kr..!tr. Tr.. Greve., cor.aL Th,,h sra.!er. Ant there in tli‘ esne. Or., aanrui. rtsv • ‘a Ail the hviv.h.,re:lttude lie 10. es ::// 311 ; T• ISA rots thstmd.tns 'se te.sv:resd To see ; I. pa I:. •p.res.! T`e .9, •ave stlsi • ; t.re! Wo,ts t , s.s were wetk. Ile! , : 7, t! e n.rs, v._*, -1 !es4...fs.ewr :1:1.13u Inc F:ou...histn,rt.tht Ce 1.41 thra,y,,t And , n the 5.1:4.4 Rts<en. W. , ll , ,,patronf h.. trio": And wItS the el.S.;6cd y Crow. ALrf ress4l or-c. h heart. Pte az eetest thy: Se. t-tz-i mho,. An f ••• r.•.t • V,. 2% Pm: rkt‘rd th• f*At.r.l t oC te•ft. P'e hevY.. t!'•t frcra Natv-e's `resit l h. p•Net's ki the rao,* re s 'ske St rfte. ,•.r. lietateth litsa 411 , 4'. lie a , es r,s • s f•au - st, 2.1 r. 7.e 61.1 s deer, r. 1r v‘roa.4.j.r.Eett•t: drop. d:s.,c!rt o :St L.-112 /......%0/11/I.IIP. Az! - tore: F • otv.s!. , .: s Issd TL • .trva e-cl.telistat ssee 4;,... r,s . e t - 't 'rw•...4.:•.,,c.t.5e ter c`,.G•es Butht. 0 1 , •T +tn.; Ely.,,les es 4, 11:7 0 ." Aci es e . • I s r 2,0 •e+l ttta —• jIA3 t,:f7. Ar.l g. , cn wanport — ts..ze 1'31:0.7 tart. Is, - totet: ea,: to f ail.ed.t.lrs: hs ISst re`.itllet t , lesrs IZAtes see '.B Vitt.? Loon' it the ' tote: eee tae e•tb at s e: sees Fret.: C. 0,(7, ttenv a:Nsts*. lir 'Lett ~1.9.41::! %Of 11111 - 11 V.t f ft , l s Le 4 11: 6r, it!ze ire I.'re!, , seer. zlrau &ri— p ;If Trrlztt rev , er•v7 'e f•Ce I" Co' ets,k oe Sz, • . - .1.1te.1.V.1 - 1:1:.‘11,4- se:• ,- ese• On tee f e‘: t s • tN ss.: tmre ' Nitro fh,t 1.1-i • ! , e WL ,• • wd :Ave.: Cro:Jr,el•:..ll.A. e • }•ut sn*e ! tt,s v.Net si d.— Prors t.te r selrel ",:sa,!. Eta retow t'se !..ee e In e‘ell te• E.,..1t,1111:0r T'. , I,lof •• w.‘• 1,0:1 tt.2.r.°. f3.,• r s' g.u.e..U.ni L.* latrrs le :low !as At: r•ve c. v .. 0 rot tlie ro I of &nt.'s! At , ' 'at th bs”..lC,rlg•• CO aArert• IZr Et Me Train then sang the zis:':e'e 7: an tin 'Robin,' amid great ar plants The mono toast was then :sal as fclZawo: f —Tao Cat f:-ass.—T , • .s•taccf ea.. zr.‘t Wegtan hatn.scheao: the 13) : uri of the °pr.!: raced c! a' nat:o• ; the •efror Isnot, ; ntaxaft- , ..a to its orretoe.ry tuatet•tess .n ate tnte:pr , ge. Mci 1!s- , ., ULCe or maws exott um! , 'IA O.J ru.,6—tr , !:` , -se vb. , - Eggnnt to .:•••eact nod lit,tde then. go t o the J ug ; Wh , uce 4an.fed trld fstsas ner.eff4 wilt carts them. •• F ' ' C ^ rah e free h aria cr.:ft:rate. It ) Suet na .t. tt rotor; re;' T.., lasso :se se-to, .red all thy horsw e-e t "ul^. Fore fa r d.aat that et.grAVA*l. , et! ) )Piste breathes the fry ts..t fa's Issfe's to ? Wan froLedom's soli !sensate sve Post. And freedom's tanner streact.tc Cerra r" Wm. 11. Crump responded in a brkt and quent speech. whieh wee received with great e..p. ['lsom. The subject wee too mighty (Jr any cce 14.11 to grasp. lie would not stoop to adulation eren In ton,r et the United States The sun hal • and humanity was fallible but ye: be th , u,ibt the Unit,7l S'a:es were as rear perfect it was p•ible for any moon to be Eighty years aq,, ante were but thirteen States, and three mil tiSni irhatitaa , ; to-day we have thit:y-three z3•r.'e;. thirty millions of people, and Are topple rnentary Territories. This country. with the ex ceptbn et England. contained halt the commerce et the wort T)-day, there are but million peo. pie educate-1 at the public expense. We had three then.and newspapers and pencdicals, sustained by thew people. Property had risen to a price never equalled in the history of the world To-day there were 1,60 banks in this country, representing $130.0. 1 0,000 of capital. These facts told more than any p.).sibta eloquence coed do, and with pleasure he announced them. Ile tat down mil great applauq. David S. Winebrenner then sang '• The Star. SPeneed Danner." 3—5r.”14,!.-1,c4 or the mocu k ta:¢ and the Coed. laud or Idoa - u heath and ehaegy caned—ber Pt/ers. parts. i!urians. s:Jteenale. wart:ors. Maori. rom.neists. 121tyers.dta-,nea, inet,physlelsrcana tr.e. charm.. hane laid tae world under eretluttag obliga tions, culoael Fi•rgertild replied " Nearly ererytbiag war etprerurd in the tow that had jail been reed Ile would /1, - 4 atteeird :0 gild relined gold or palat the Illy The whole world had beta laid una,er othni fir rreat new, and the world woald redozni.e the chh;eth,fle, Hu rmlrki wer- hrief r , T with I'4l
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