ri :s . 2 . o - 7: • ': ::"41 4 ~ THURSDAY, MARCH 1,1860; ' THE WE Eic For Fnrordaf. March 3.1 e now out. The c ome , ' of this number are of &varied oharaoter. jades itsueriMat.- tractions, it minutiae the LItTEirT YORRION NEWS: Editorials on thenopnler topic,' of Roder ; &Moe Lite.. Darr reading, original and selected; Domestic end Po rtia Markets, ism Read the list of . CONTENYiSt ORIGINAf...POETRY. -1 'lsllTnot- TO-BIGHT, Lova. OUR PORT.FOLIO.-Tin FAIRIES ott THE 111N.433 PHILOSOPHY OE 8310EING7CONIUGATINO A REEL= THE DOG AND HIS AusTER-,MARRIAGE 7 A rum Dail:4l3lloN -WELLINGTONIA2 16-PATIENCE.-THE TONGUE,PROMISES. _ EDITORIALB.--Tai Bona, Siteonn Tiodour-Ltr-- Ma ELLA Bonne-HOrti Annum G. CHET'N'OHE E NATIONAL DEFEITOITI-40FALTY4XISITS 'CANADA..." THE MEXICAN PRONTIEN,4 4 / 1 11110/1, FROM THE JAPANESE-ITALIAN Bass--ITEMS, OP REVENUE-, IMMURE OP SHIPS AND B'AI:4(3Ni-TN* GLACE MAIIt BYSTINN-MADAME RICAME.CHAPTER I'-MORAE* DINNEY AND WASHINOTONLOIS Or THE STAN"-THE HORRORS Or THE COOLIE TRADE-Tax FREE NEGROES Or THE SOLEIL ' - MISCELLANROUI3.-Dtip-A Gams strritso PEE: litan-FRANK LESLIE AND THE SONS OP MALTA-. NON-INTERCOUREE-THERTY-SIX. MILLIONS 'OE PEO PLE-FEMALE MAIL ROARERS-THE , CELEBRATION AT WASIIINGTONS INAUGURATION Or CLARE MILLS' STATUE OP WASHINGTON-LATEST FOREIGN NEWS BY TEE EUROPA-CALIFORNIA ITEMS-EXECUTION OP A Motinssan-Tita OnentansTort, coartsortor - PEOPLIS'S STATE CONVENTION. 00h$B8PONDENOR.-Dartarte arrow OCCASION 'AL"-Livrrala roost Wages:soros AND %mote el/14--Igairene PROM ,EKADINO-L-LETTEE FROM, NEWS.-Tno LATEST NEWS ET TELEGRAPH' PROM EUROPE, CALIFORNIA, WASHINGTON, AND PUERTA RIIREP.'CONGRESSIONAL-PROCEEDINGC LEGISLATIVE PROCEEDINGS, ETC.. ETC. RELIGIGUB.-Promur 'PORTRAITS, No. YID' Ray. BEGET A. WIIIV.LETTER PROM 'IIIUIALEM-THE OLDEST GREENE. MANUSCRIPT OF TEE BIBLE'EX "TANT. 4 AGRICULTURAL DRPARTAIRNT.=-A CHEAP INTECTANT---THE DROVER'S ,BOUNISE-ROLLING £ GRASS LAND. TEE CITY. WEEKLY Aerials - or TEE PaILADSLPH/A - MARKETS-Tos Moray fdemor-,-Tes Fumanti.- Mlle. CATTLE MARKET-NEW YORE CATTLE MAR IE? NEW YORK MARKETS •• RIARETAGRE AND DEATHS. THE WEEKLY PRESS It furnished to subsonbets M IF per year, in advance, for the single oopy, and to antis of Twenty, when mat to one eddressi, 810, in ad- Tanee. Slake copies for Mae at the counter of THE Passe Moe. in wrappers, ready for mailing. FIRST PAlll9.—Comparative Taxation ; Railroad and Telegraph between the Atlantic Btatea and California ;,General News. Peanut Paon--Thi City ; Marine Intelligenoe.,-, The Democratic state Conv i ention. One of the most infamous acts over perpe trated by any political body was performed by the Democratic State Convention, in session at Reading, yesterday, in excluding James F. Joussros, Esq., of this city, front the seat to which he had been legally elected by the De mocracy of the district he clainied to' repre sent. There is not in the State of Pennsyl vania a more steadfast And upright Democrat, or a more honest and sterling man, and few; if any, who have displayed more.zeal and ability in advocating the time-honored' prlitciples of the Democratic party. The honest Democracy of Philadelphia, who know him well; and who have learned to appreciate the value of his efficient and disinterested services in many trying political campaigns, also perfectly well understand that he would scorn the thought , of claiming a seat to which he wait not fttlly, en; titled. • If anything could bring the blush of shame upon the cheeks of the venal place men whose intrigues, excluded him from the Convention, their participation in this act of unmitigated - political thud slionld - do so; and , wo are amazed that.somit of the men ithe'cp operated with them should have thus stained their characters as Deinocrats and ,as fair:" dealing Mon. The evening session of fhe Convention was devoted to the appointment'of a delegatiOn to, Charleston. Thee , attempt• to Ignore diversi. ties of sentiment, and make the delegation a unit, failed, and the delegates of the respective Congressional districts were permitted to se lect the men who aro to' represent the Demo cracy of the State. in the approaching Na tional Convention. Onthe first ballot Senator Blount (who seems determined to cling pre a mill-stone'round the -neck of the Dentociaey of the State) and Hon. Joan L. Dawson were chosen as two of the Senatorial delegates, :when the Convention adjourned- until to-day. The -Commercial Treaty between FrapCe and England.* . • The recent Anglo-French treaty is asome what novel feature in modern diplomacy. Or.. dinary commercial 'treaties provide for the establishment of trade , between the countries which-form there, and regulate dhicriminationa between foreign and home shipping, &e.; but this treaty establishes the rates of deities which shall be charged by France, on the otie band, upon certain articlei which, England is desi rous of exporting to France, and the rates of - 'which - England is eharge upon certain articles which ; France is desi rous of exporting to , England. Al though France and' England are separated by a narrow channel, and pewees io 'diversi fied a climate that if they were united under one Government' and no restrictions whatever were placed upon the trade between them, their commerce would undoubtedly be very great, former rivalries; hatreds and jealou sies, and restrictive duties, have so diminished the trade between them that its amount is but comparatively trilling When the, resources of the, two countries are considered. Mr. Gun.. wrong, in a recent speech in regard to this treaty, said that while' the export of English manufacturetrevery year !sabot:ft Z 180,000,090, the export of nianufactered ',geeds 'to France in 1858 amounted to only £688,600, of Which £208,000 consisted of Cashmere shawls which only came to England for transit,and .£217,000 for machinery—leaving the value of all other manufactured articles exported from England to France in 1858 at £263,0001 France was thus almost completely auceesafhl in shutting Out 'from her soil the manufactures of England; and England, in tern, while she has admitted a much larger quantity of French goods, has also, by herheavy duties, particu larly on such articles as wine, Freneli brandies, and gloves, done much to check , the importa- tion of French goods into her dominions. It Is the object of the, lete treaty, which Is the work, principally, of the famous E. ngliab free-trader, RICHARD CORED, on the part of England, and of Louis NAPOLEON, on the part of France, to, destroy a,bonsiderable number of these barriers, and thue to increase the trade between the two nations. -For this purpose, the Emperor of France engages that the, duties shall in no case exceed thirty per content upon a large number of enumerated articles; con- slating, in put, of chemiCal production's, To. fined sugar, soap, stoneware, earthen and chinaware, worsted ;and Woollen yarn, cotton mannfaetiires, worsted and woollen - inanufae twee, mariefactures of hair, of flax and . hemp, of leathery' of camitchotic' and gate *mho, and articles of clothing, cutlery, metal wares, pig and east iron of every' desciiption, bar and wrought iron, steel, machinery, tools, car riages, spirits, cabinet ware; &c. The import duties are also to be reduced on British coal and coke. , On the part of Yngland, the treaty Provides that her Britannic Majesty 'than recommend to Parliament the abolition, of defies On a num ber of articles, among which are mineral acids, perOssfon caps, jewels set, toys, corks, embroideries, brass' and brthirie manUfactores, canes, hats,.gloves,-itockings, - lesther nianu factures, lact,'mannfaCttties of iron and steel, millinery and artificial &mire, olls,'nuusiCal instruments, worsted and woollen shawls, hand kerchiefs, °locks,' latches,end : opera-glasses, ' and porcelahiware, grapes; sulphate of quinine, manufactures of. slily &c:; an‘that she shall alio Tremble Jbat!the• duties on Freneli 'wine, be at once - reduce4 to three shillings a gallon, - and after the Ist .of April, 1861, to a rate of from - one Shilling to two shillings, aceerding 'to the quality of the wine, and that brandies shall be admitted on pay 7 ment ortwn pence Mori:Alienate excise duty upon home-made spirits, or 85. 2d. a gallon. If the recommendations mad® to the British parliament ere faiorably.acied upon, this trea ty trill doubtless lead to a very considemble In crease In thetrade of the two eountries; ' The English iniPorts of French wines,: brandies, - gloves, silks; and many other articles,' will doubtlese be gfeoy, , inciP4lo4 l .4a. we con sumption in' France of: many British articles, Coat; also be much 'greaterthan herigelforg.r. • - " 064400 4 x: /great fis the pifhly oeitY to Poo 41101 ,1 14000 Pak , i 1 3 14 Au .0 ariliallUS seats at the diati,atreetl Mare have helm exteelted" for arm retitte Mt ;rah' fit . tatifill 11 0/i t ifrrO t f i iri l ciA a Af:l•H. I. ' „ Vidal443;fleiklOWS)9olTre. - No i lrlttt attention to 'WO ihriaitisementveffee - 4nazitaietipit 4. yetty for sale, atileterth7 the hOthie 01 044tallate. MMEllfg=l _ ; ,Letter from is Occasionol.” (Cferrexperofenot of The Preehl • , • • 'WASHINGTON, Felmfiry 29,4850 You Oil remember that, during the .Leeempton _straggle; the President, Speaking threughlhe vo; melons Ups of John G. Jones, eaustal , it to be Intl- Meta that nobody was to be invited te;partekont tds hospitalities who did not politicos* Symiettize end Ce4perate with him. For the first time, the Chief Magistrate of the Union attempted to BOO 'di:table social life under the roof of the White House, Mad, his example has since then been rather extensiVely followed. - Within the lest Year, hewiver, is ()beige has some over the dream of his Majesty, and now invitations to his dinners go begging on every side. Some days ego, asl hear from good authority, cards were fumed invitin4 the Presence of pertain Democratic Item sentatives, at a Presidential feast. This z tardy politeness was not very graciously received by the gentlemen in question, all but- one peremptorily cefeeing to recognise, the man who had etudirody ignored them and their petition associates. It is stats that a great outburst of indignation followed on the Mart of J. lif.;'inid that orders Were immedi ately *id that no one' stieuld be appointed to. any offinceon 'the ritoommendstiori of a member of Onngveirs who bad refused to put hie feet under the Presidential mahogany, and that all persons hold ing offite under• euoh recommendations were to be sommonly, ejected. Unnatural and unusual as this worse 'may seem to the uninitiated reader, you may rely upon the general accuracy of this atate . ment. The Sinus of Attorney General Black bei be r& more aritioal than reported. He hoe never been in good health slue he came to Washington' to re side. The perplexities of his position were new 'to liinit; ; he had never been been,ln.Congress or, any other deliberative body. The intrigues, excite nenta,•alid schemer so rife at this capital, were ealonlited to disturb, the equanimity of a much more'liparienoed partisan, and I am not sur prised that they Should have greatly affected the tranquillity of the attorney General: Jtidge Black will never :be a political leader. He is a fine labeler and .a most fatale end ready newspaper writer. Hie ambition is really to obtain a posi tion on the Supreme Bench, and if he oan continuo on the' right side of the President, be may, in the event of a vacancy, close hie career as ' a member of that.high tribunal. It is rumored to-day that if the health of the Attorney General does not improve, he may feel it inouinbent upon him to relinquish his office, in whieb'event the Prealdefft will tender it to WB liam H. Reed, of your State, who, I perceive, is it li in Washington, doubtless assisting the head of the 'Government in hie various political and other ,plane. Whin I look over the list of great intellects in the ranks of 'the Democratic party of Penntiyivenia, it le difficult to realize that the idea oonld be entertained of elevating over their heads 'such a man. gigs Levels, St. George Tucker Oampbell, Jaime F. dohnston, George itharawood, (Marten Ingersoll, John 0. Knox, and others, in Philadelphia, Henry 'Chapman of Bucks, James H. Patter of Northampton, Judge Cunningham of Lucerne, Benjamin Chanipabya of Lancaster, Ha. mitten Alrleka of Ditiptin, William A. Stokes of Westmoreland, Charles Shaer of Allegheny, set to speak of the able Democratic jurists on the su preme bench of the State itself—Trromsaorr, WOOD WARD, Lawns, and Brame—all these men, most of them mestere of their profession, and all of them hailers of the bar, a number having occupied eetitelin the Congress of the United States, and therefore well acquainted, with the public men in every part of the country, may be called upon to stand back to make way for the new favorite of James Buchanan. The Senate committee on the printing eorrup• Lion fund will shortly close its labors. Although rome'siugular developments will be made, yet, owing to the manner in which that committee has been contracted, mush that was germane, to the tubjeot,wao exolnded, and, therefore, a somewhat whitewashing, and one-sided report will be pre tented. ' Happily, however, the same question has hem referred by the House to the Committee on Public Expenditttres in that toady, or which Hon. John E. Raskin; of New York, is the eidqient and ancoMpromiling oh/Armen. This able and pa 'triotlo Bepresentative . —now in his second Con trolliOnl term—whose career, from the first, has been s manly and unfaltering defence of the rights the people, ; and who, although bitterly op posed, has won the respect of his colleagues and itiseOlates bylkis fearless and independent conduct, LB adnliraldy qualified to sift to the bottom the cor ruptions of :the present Administration. That whiCh the Senate committee has refused to spread cronf the Journals during the investigation referred to, will be thoroughly ventilated under the vigi lant 'sonatiny of Baskin and his committee. I perceive that Mr. Baskin has been called to New 'York on important business, and lam informed that r ilen he returns, he will proceed in the good . work In downright earnest. NVO are alt' gratified it the news received thi morning from Reading that ipeaoeful counsels may prevail , at the Convention tawdry. At hot the me- Solna begins to work, and now on tto eve of another great 13 mittl,o and when the Administration ls waning airity:andtvben office and emolument are fast disappearing' in the womb of time, meg' here tofore deaf ,O the rotas of reason listen to its teachings, and Implore for that tranquillity which, bad thitY'beett earlier' impressed with the salutary l'esso'rai might long ago haie restored harmony and strength to the Demoenttle ranks. ShOuld any diffioulty take Owe et Reading, it will he direolly traceable to the efforts of the Gene ral pmh4letratien and Its 'mercenaries, who are, I understand, In "great force on the battle-ground. `That a majoiltylif that body sympathise with Mr. Donglaa and Ms friends There can be no doubt, and piollieentiment, as expressed through them, is '31=61 or overawed by the paid hireliage in office, let the men who may be guilty of the wrong be held; to a atriot and Wearable accountability Vanity Fair le, I pereeivs, bey.lpg a broad laugh in some capital oarloaturokdver the charapteristio reception of the 'military darling of Clothed the National (lipid, Indite last satires are exceesively njoyed by those who, while admiring this spoiled 3hild of all the regiments, hayi pot participated in she excess of enthusiasm which has particularly Iftlieted lion. John Cochrane, and other New Yorkers now Washington. Mr. Cochrane Is me of the most. popular and gifted members of the House, a good speaker, an Industrious legislator, and' a bachelor Adonis, He to fond of his joke, too, 'and it is, related of him that while the pone. lain gentry of the Seventh wero standing in front of the Presidentiefmansion, with mud' below, shove, and around them, waiting for him to return from the President, to whom he had gone to Invite him out to review them,the was calmly ensconced in one of the red-oushloned chairs of the White:House smoking a cigar with the venerable Book. The President is quite acne over this small mat ter, and thinks that the labor and expense of en tertainimi these well-dressed and well-drilled troops shisuld have been taken off his hands by Mr. Cochran aid his committee, and one of their frieleds complained to me that nothing would have prevented theft being properly entertained In the most Irixarious'manner by that prince of men, W. W. Corcoran, Esq., the banker, whose baud is al ways spin in works of public good, bat the fact that they'eame here under the auspices of the Pre ddent, who has taken more than one omission to show in regard to Mr. Corcoran, as well as In ref°. ranee to other of his old friends In Washington, that his sense of gratitude is not to be measured by 'he favors they have heretofore shown him, but by the manner in which' they might agree to submit to harsh Ind unnecessary treatment of them selves. Buohanan never bed many military tastes, end is not very fond of the Pennsylvania Ireton. teem.' You will remember that when Captain ()nehmen, with his Limiter Penelbles, as tine a body of men as ever shouldered a musket, or marched with the.flag of the Union, aocompanied tits chief in his progress to !Washington to be inau gurated,' he gave them the slip at Baltimore, end when they asked to be received by their old towns, min in Washington, before they returned to Len. caster, he declined the labor, and sent. tbem, I be someMeen or twenty dollars;to pay their homeward expenses! This incident may account for the fast, that while Virginia and New York were invited to Washington, in the person of their citizen soldiery, the unsurpassed regiments of Phi. lifielphts were not telegraphed to some hither to receive the "princely hospitality" so pompously prOmised, and so frugally forgotten. • lion. F. P. Stanton reached Washington last evening. lam gild to hear that the prospeots of his election to the United States Senate in the event of the admission of Kansas Into the Union as A Soveiel_gn State are rapidly increasing. Frede rick PA:Kenton In tho nate would give to the friends - el self government another able and coura geousoliempion. OditaslOHAL. 'Tax ITALIAN OPHlti.:.—tia ,approaching season of ]Malian opera promises to 'be an exceedingly brilliant one. The performanee will commenoe on Monday night with the Barber of Seville," in which Miss Patti` will sing; for the first thee in Phi ladelphia, the 'part, of Racism.' On Tuesday will be performed; for the Fret thee in halladelphia, the Italian version of the famous opera of Der Frei salmis." • It will be 'produced with a grand new scene,' On' '{Wednesday "evening Puritant" dill be sung, with Miss Patti as Mafia. , The sale of 'tickets for these three performances will cote liens* this evening' at' the Academy of Musics, at Obleherinis', and at Beek ft Lariton's, and as the sitascri will undoubtedly be a highly ingoessfed one, thdies who wish to Sainte good seats should do so at oiee. Tin?. 441.1:1$ 08 Oanni 4 allne.—The twenty-ninth semi-Annual Philadelphia trade sale of carriages is amid:timed to take , place at Mr: Harkness' Ba siarroit tho 28th q Morel next. The entire oats embrace at least 300 light earrlagea, in eluding about 60'of Dunlap's beet baggy wagons, with - and without tope, This will be the most ex, to isl 'eels of oarrlages over held in this elty, and thiopioittiniti has hover been so good fora, gen emstt,lo wirst-rate wagon at a low price. - • *ea traction relVortliement, tq I p..= Bsufor Bußiosoorto Turin AND 13orxe, This libittnltsf.' 4 4l,iooott,•Jt.; autionoer, 431 Ohastnut 41Frh,1T.4 1 „4;.1 1111 DiOintrig,.at 191 ionla*4oo dos= ii 4841.444— foliAlit Wok, 10. The Democratic State Convention. [Correapondenee of The Prem.] ; • nokrilleO, February 28, IMO: Reading le wit& withpolitioal exentement. Wrenn very easily Iniagine a beautiful little inland town, in habited by thrifty hnd honest people-Lthe centre of a large and important branch of Ameritilin industu—mho °ambit of one of the eteadiest anemostrespeotable °aunties in the Common Wealth—on a quiet evening, everything as still es the ocean in a calm, and nothing but the occasional shout of playing chi ldren, or merry greeting of passing friends, to disturb the si lence. I write tins letter at midnight, and in such a time, looking out upon it from an elevated window In the Golden Swan Hotel,—it Is not the Reading of your imagination, my friend—not the Reading of staid aid Berke county. I look out upon its main streets and see them thronged with a large body of restleu, daring, and aspiring men. I hear the shouts of political followers, the clink of wine-glasses and the loud laugh of revel lere,who will, in all probability, prolong their interne ha long into the morning. Flags are waving front the, shops and hotels; while the merry sound of the fife and drums of enthusiastic serenaders vies with the repeated shriek of the locomotive as it panes and renames on the wings of steam. All tide, and more than this, on a cool and genial evening, and beneath the rayed it silvery I moon that tide the distant hill-tops with an indescriba ble gleri—bring all this to your imagination, and you have a faint and uncertain picture of bewildered, ex cited, and enthusiastio Reading. , The only promeding of importance. , that took place since I transmitted you my last letter, in the evening mail of yesterday, was the arrival of the Keystone Club, from Philadelphia. The Club was brought on here by several politioana, of the Philadelphia school, for the purpose of working for Witte, and scouring the recognition of Mr. Faux as the delegate from the First district. For this purpose these gentlemen procured a hundred through tickets for Reading, and distributed them among the Club. A hundred other of the mem bers of the Club, procured their own tinkle, and to the number of two hundred they arrived here last evening, at six o'olook, under the command of Wrn. Byerly The Bemocratio Club of Reading, under the lead of J. Lawrence Getz, met them at the depot, and escorted them to their quarters. on Penn street. Beck's Band preceded the proosesion ! , discoursing muno eloquently chmatiteriatie. .00 arriving at their quarters. Mr. Getz welcomed the Club In a brief speech, in which, on tie half of the Demooracsy of Reading, he tendered their hospitalities. Re alluded to the Demooratio party. and the duties to be performed by the Club as members of that party. lie hoped they would stand by its destinies, andnever desert its flat ; that they would remember the obligations they owed to this glorious Union, and that they would be ever found fighting for constitutional liberty, the 'Union of the States, and the harmony and happiness of the country. After again welcoming the Club to Reading and its holpitalities, the speaker con cluded amid great cheering. Wm. McCandless, Ecu., the President of the Club, responded M a nest. and eloquent address. He thanked Mr. Gets, and through hint the Demooraoy of Reading, for their generous reception, their oven-handed and unostentatious hospitality. He appreciated the congra tulations of the speaker, and hoped the Club would al ways and ever be found in the rank/ of the pure Demo creep. [Applause.] They had come to Reading to reas sert the principles of 1856, and not to ally themselves to any partisan, or any candidate. They wished to aid in the restoration of Demooratio harmony, and In reform ing and restrengthening the ranks of the party. His speeoh was conoluded amid loud cheers, interspersed with repeated cries for Mr. Vaux. who appeared , at a window in reopens@ to a oall, and was enthusineticiuly received. .• . • Mr. Vaux thanked the assemblage for their com pliment. He recognised them as fellow-Demperate of Philadelphia. end was glad to meet them in the capital of Old Berks. Be came to Reading am a duly elected member of the Convention. as a Democrat who knew hie rights, and knowing, dared to 'smart them. He felt certain that the deliberation. of the Convention would tend to the best interest' of the party. and that the State of Pennsylvania would endorse the nominee by an overwhelming majority. Be did not desire to make a speech, and particularly to a crowd of hungry men. Accordingly he would eonolwie by again thank ing them for their kindness, and welcoming them into supper. The last sentiment was received with loud ap plause, after which the Club went in to supper. The town is so full of rumor, of every character and deibription, that it is almost impossible for me to obtain anything like a trueremelt of the caucusing, and plans of the night—the plots and oonnterplots of opposing forces. I understand that the Aiminlptratien callous is in session at the Keystone Ifotel. You may account of their doings in the morning. For the pre: ant, good night. SEMI-OCCASIONAL. At eleven o'clock the Convent - 4/A „lizentNo, February 29 IMO . commence ite seezione, in the Court House. 'Me Aar ill rather dame but warm, and only want,' the sun to make it giNious. I think we shall have the sun before eleven o'clock. as the clouds around the misty hill-tops are streaked in gold and blue. The town, as I write, Is compara tively quiet. The politieians have not come from their rooms, end many are, no doubt, sleeping off the effect of excessive draughts of raw whiskey. 'The Golden Swan Rotel. where your representatives are staying, is the quietest house in the town, It is a kind of neutral ground for nil parties, and hence there is not so moll excitement. This may be attributed to the faot that the proprietors of this hotel refused to lease their rooms Deforehand to politiolans. as was done by the merle- Mrs of the others. You will certainly pardon me for saying that the Goblen Swan is an excellent and commo dious hotel, well managed, and eligibly located. It, has been:lately repainted, refurnished, end refitted, anti presents just now the handsomest appearance of any hotel in the Piece. I understand that Robert Tyler is In town, and under this roof. I have not been able to see the gallant Vir ginian, nor has any one else that I know. One thing is very trulliPthe chairman keeps himself as secluded as though his person was es sacred as that of a Chinese Emperor. A malicious delegate, alluding to this fact at breakfast, hinted that Tyler heard of Yandrka'a being around, and did not wish to hurt the District Attorney's feelings. There is a rumor, too, that Tyler is disaugted with pertain doing,. and ix standing on his dignity, re• fusing to take ap aotive,part in the leadership. There is nmystery about his conduct, to say the least. They say that the Instructions brought from 'Wash ingtOn by the brilliant and accomplished Bigler are very imperfect, and may lead to divisions in the Ad 4311n4tratton ranks. The President asks the Convention to Wu, teaolutions endorsing him without qualification —.passing over the AdMinistmtion of Packer—gazet ting Bigler as an uvrigAt ond himrablo Representa tive,* true and loyal Democrat' —end westing, in al Its obnoxious phases, the Ransits-Leoompton question also, to arrange the delegates to Charleston so that Douglas may 100 slaughtered. Nothing at all is said about the Governorship ; and hence the dilemma. One part of the offloe•bolders, under Baker and Browne, are opposing Witte, white another part, under Yost, are marshalling their throes for ghs benefit of the "Little Napoleon." A word from Washington would have set tled the matter. and restored harmony. At the AAminlstranon °aliens let night, at the Key stone Hotel, the Ott thing under consideration was the contested scats. J. b. Baker ropoied to the caucus to retain Vann and McGrath, on oentlition that they wont) Sampt to oust Jolmatou and Jones )intao Leech was sent after lidparath, in order to communicate to Min the resißtof Jbeirileliberstions. McGrath went to, Baker ' who told imp that he woAild be all right if he would help the Custom House th get Swot/. Vandall into the Convention In place of Johnston. McGrath replied that he did not come here to make term with Baker or anybody else ; that he area the duly-elected delegate fon his district. and that Mr. Baker had no voice in the twitter. lia would have his ease decided by the Convention. and would folJo v bit own Indr ooo nt in the mum of Mr. Johnston. He had no farm to ask of the Custom House. and respeetfully declined the proposition. This reply startled Baker, and on being comntuniPataii th the caucus, it incontinently adjourned sine du. The anti-Admintstmtjon men are slowly and surely waloscing. They are in a minority. I pond's!. but a more talented and accomplished minority I have never seen in a Convention. There are men among them who ari not so easily killed. They are working their cards with more than usual skill and care, and I would not be surprise(' to Den them hold the balance of power in the Convention. I see here Alexander McKinney of West moreland, Bon. Williapr Montgomery of Washine ton, Charles D. Itineltne. Jobn ebony of Pbilatielphiq,liew. IS C. Cassidy, James M. Leddy, and others of equal ca. libre, who are quietly laying the train for the day's ex plosion. And it will be an explosion, as the sequel will show. James P. Johnston Faroe up last night, in the train that brought the Keystone Chill. go Is prepared (or a bold and brave kat. Vo bits . 1 4! eareektiee _lO or proofs that there were the mosg gross and infamous frauds perpetrated to street his defeat. lohnsion Is a game man, and will trouble the Administration. They would give anything to keep him out of the Convention, and I fear they will succeed. The telegraph will have told the story by the time you read this letter. I understand that the Baker and Browne clique, acting under the immediate inspirttion Of Governor Bigler, gent a deputation to Witte last evening. offering to make terms with him on certain conditions. Theso conditions ware; That he sitouJd yield the organisation of the Convention Ingo their hands, allow them the dele gates to Charleston. and aid them in paining a series of Boohanan-loving, Biglevwhite•washing, and Lecomp• top.swallowing, retolutionx.• Witte refused. Re was willing to gotta moderate terms, to do anything rea sonable ; but tie cold not go into the Convention on a platform of inevitable defeat. TI le, of course, raised tho ire of B. and 8., and they threatened to unite on Fry, or somebody else, and beat Witte. They claimed to have Nen enough to tarry out this West, and only wanted nerve tp put it ire execution. As it wag, a con ference was held, Henry M. Phillips toting aa mediator. Whether they healed the breaph or not I cannot say, Time only will show. Goa. George M. Sanderson arrived last evening, and is staying at Bourbon'e. lie has 'room on the third floor, Your correspondent visited him late in the evening, and found hint surrounded by a large number of en thusiastie friends. Be expecte to go into the Conven ticle with twenty votes, and, in case of an " irrearssin bleconiliet " between Witte and Fry, he may be nomi nated asp pomp:mire candidate. Sanderson is as ex cellent man,'snd would maks a good Governor. • Wendell is here, very hirer about something, Gil presence troubles the B's. They know ►hat Cornelius has a balance against the Adminittration, and that lie is a dangerous man. Wendell himself is Jovial,amiable, and non-committal. Re says he came here only to sea the Democracy " spread themselves." and only wished to be guarded as a looker-on in Vienna. Ge talks very independently about Buchanan and Bowinan, and rays be wily arrange mattere at Washington yet. What Wendell may want, I don't know, hilt be is very busy, I see him everywhere, and buttonholing even body. lip has hie cards to play, but carefully conceals the trumps. The Convention is almiit to meat, and I Wow You will hear from me by the nest mail, or by the telegraph. SEMI-DMA/3101t &L RZADINIA. 3 P. M., Fab. 39,1990. The Convention, as you will see by the report, was employed all the morning in considering contested seats. Nothing definite was exhibited, except that on the vote for temporary chairman the Administration rotors num bered ten majority. Smith mettle a speech, which was very well received, considering that the Convention was very restless. Another thing was shown, and that Is, that the anti-Administration forces are under excel lent leadership. John Cessna. of Bedford county, a hne speaker and a man of ability, led their forces this morn ing. Isaac Leeoh, of Philadelphia, was the month-Mime of the Administration. Leeoh is a very Inferior leader, although something of a declaimer. Cosine carried his point in every inetanbe, and completely checkmated Leech In his attempt to send the anti.Admtnigtration contestants to a peeked committee of custom.howie officers. !there was no little feeling when the Convention was oonsideripir the claim of Charles M. Lemming to re- Present the First representative distrlot. Mr. L. Is a custom-house officer, and when Dr. Jones stated the very palpable fact that the Administration had over awed the Demooratio voters at the polls of the primary elections, there wee an enthukiestlo round of applause. The ohairutan, Robert Tyler, was pacing 1/0 and down the space Mille rear of the president's seat at the time, and' when the applause was given, you should have seen his look of ineffable disgust at the whole proceed ing. flame most amusing to behold. The first business after dinner will be the'oonsidero tion of the ease of James P. Johnston whose aeatis con tested by Samuel L Randall. Jehnston ie very naafi dent ef biting able ti retain his seat.' The frlOsde, how= ever, Ate not Co sanguine. ' One very palpable fact is apparent, and that lie, either that the Administration leaders are singularly obtuse, orthat their (gross are wonderfully divided. To my owolinowledge' they' hive' beep compelled to chose their tactics three times within the last tweety.fzur hours. The future Is hill of doubt, and the general 3p ben.rOod'otniettere LS uncertain that I will liszertl np oonJeothrei or ,speoulatlons as to the Presidency' "Or epvernorshl9. SEMI-OCCASIONAL, THE PRESS.-PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, MARCH 1, 1860. THE LATEST NEWS BY TELEGRAPH. DEMOCRATIC STATE CONVENTION; FUMY DAY'S PROCEEDINGS. SPECIAL IiBPATOIt TO it TITO PAE93."] READING, February 29,1860. • It is almost eleven o'clook, and the Convention in as sembling. The court-house, where the sessions are be ing held, is really a magnificent building. I One the ad jective magnificent with the reoolleotion of the dingy, dreary, disagreeable, and disgraceful stecommodationg affilded to the judges in Philadelphia. The room to four three larger .than that need by the Court of Quarter Passions. There are scats without the bar for about a thousand speotators.. Within the bar the delegates are isocommodated. The President oeoupies the seat of the Judge, the table of the reporters extending down in front of the judge's bonoh. Around this table are seated about twenty reprosentativeg of the State preen, about one half of whom are from Philadelphia. The orowd with out the liar is very large.. I see among them a number of familiar loom, both high and low in Democratic) sta. Gnu. Robert Tyler has come out of hie occlusion, and is circulating around among the delegates. John Ram ilbm, Jr., ie actively engaged in ealoubsting the relative channel', while Leans 0. Cassidy. Samuel J. Randall, Dr. G. W. Nebinger, Richardson L. Wright, George G. Thome, C. M. Donovan, Chas. W. Carrigan, Richard Wm, 'William Mei% lin, Joshua T. Owen, William B. Rankin, Wrn. McCandless, James F. Johnston, and other Philadelphia politioiann, are busily engaged in conversation in different parts of the ball. A large number of old comes of the Evening Journal, contain ing artiolee on Mr. Guthrie and the iron interest, are here. Two boyi stand at the entrance of the hall, be- Beaching people, as they enter, to take a copy. While the olook wee striking eleven Mr, Robert Tyler. Chairman of the State Committee, rime forward amid great applauee and raid, the hour having arrived for the meeting of the Convention. the Convention will please come to order, and emceed to the transaetion of bull 1101106 Mr. McGrath. Mr. Cheirman— Mr. Leech. I nominate George Nelson Mabee tem porary- han of this Convention. Mr. McGrath. I claim I had the floor. I nominate Wm. P. Schell, of Bedford. The Chairman. I recognize Mr. Leech. Mr. Cessna. of Bedford., .proposed that. in order to avoid disturbance and confusion, the Chairman appoint two tellers to record the vivalimer votes for the eandt dates.. (Avignon.] He supposed there would be no ° Ve Chairman. 'Mr. Leech, from Philadelphia, has i i.rr e . d re c ci e eh. I wept Mr. Cessna's motion as an amndment. The molten of Mr. Cessna was &dented, and the Con tontine propeeded to vote the Chaired, anoolnting Leech, of Philadelphia, and Mr. Cesena. of Bedford, toilers.' Mr. eech, before calling the toll. cold lie had great pleasure in arising to t heeannou that hen. Reins, the contestant of Mr. Vaux, in ea Philadelphia dis trict, had withdrawn. Gen. Reilly wee only animeted. by a desire to promote the harmony of the Demooratio party. M oire. No, no ; thaPs not so. r. Leech. I know that it logo. (Applause. !speak for General Reilly. If any one else has authority let him be heard. Mr. Vaux's name was fret called. He voted for Wil liam P. Bone% tend great applause. Mr. Loeoh. There are two-third, of thoite here not delegates. I f they are permitted to create this confu s itpd applaud at every vote, there will be no use of ca ling the roll. he Chairman. Gentlemen will desist from applaud ing for obvious reasone. I hope delegates will remem ber their positions end conduct themselves like decent Demoorats. (Applause.] When the name of Mr. Booth was called. he voted for r aurldet.loh applause. Mr. &hell returned the compliment by vo irig for Mr. Smith. When the name Mn. Lseclt t of Allegheny, was milled, a voice cried "Schell." This re sedia dirturb nem several delegatei asserting that Mr. Lynch had not voted, and that a frendulent vote wag oast. The name was enlied rod Mr. Lynch did not vote. Mr. Comma announced the names at alt the delegates who were celled excepting those whose seats were contested. 'Much interest wee manifested during the Vote. hrentrontery, of _Northumberland. rose and said that the had vcded for &Mall by mistake, and asked to have it changed for zor. Smith. The Chairman. The gentleman's request shall be gr 'il te th The airman announced that George N. Smith re ceived sixty-eight votes, and William P. Schell fifty eight. Mr. Smith was conducted to the chair by Mr. &bell amid great applause. After the applause bad subsided, Mr. Smith said: gentlemen of the Contention, and Fellow-eiti tens: You will accept my grateful aoknowlerlements for the distieguished honor you have conferred noon TIM in geleeting too temporary chairmen of this Convention. / feel gamins' the oomph meet paid me. I emporiums o the dignity and irylpdrlnnee of pre.positionou have assigned me , and will endeaym to disethrge the duties n ee t ilbr you faithfully. We are now on the toehold of & nether fierce political °lmpel. and the duties de viWort:i upon thle t.,•onveotion are o the first and highest m a gn it u de. It i s un iy er ;:liv conceded that this will be the moot important Convention icicle D•fitigtof&tle ,party_ eyer held In this Commonwealth, and oar . vitt tie Waded with more than ordinary interest, on account of the Momentous importanoe of the mumps roots t. We have met to Waco in nomination a candi date for the chief executive °hare of this Common wealth. and for the purpose of seleetin delegates to the National Democratio Convention at_charleston. which Is to ,nominme a candidate for the Froradopoy, It la therefore. to be hoped that there will be the utmost hat- mony and unanimity on the part of the matcher, of Dm Convention fapplaugol, and that a spirit of fraternal Imo will characterize all our notiona In our seed lion a oar:Mate for Governor. it is to be hoped there will be breninated a candidate upon whom every Democrat in the Buds can unite, end give to him Mg cordial end enthusiastic suport; and that, if any Democrat shall be disappointed In the man of his choler), he will enter into the support of the nominee with the genie enthusiasm that he would have mani fested if his first preference had loser; chosen. (AD p'ause.l No friend of the Union, no believer in the principles of popular goverronfot. no loon who has the interests and the prosikirity or the aounty ht heart, no martin whose breast there flicker, a 'PRA" OfpfttflOtlßM. can look upon the present condition of the Imam of the genets) , with indifference. 'There is not en inditidual in the Immediate o matter what his position may the whose interests will not be affected by tho issue of the impending etniggle. The time in fait ap proaching when the people of these Veiled States will be called upon to oleo a Ihesident. and the earns party wide)) atm - poled to elect a gectional_caridate InlB3B are now endeaVorins to carry out the Imo sot In -which they , were tVn rolled by the Haien .Denstior. The 'same assures. thja sante smelts the the came primp es are now OM up fir tempt ati tee samehluk bannerpf din 94 /IF 111341fA 6 IS, be TATVlrettlttgairers frlhelLtd.toMdll not expect to receive _the vote of one of the slue States; rod. forlituatelc l'or the country, fortunately for our mogorti, for our Marty, and for our weltre, the Demoorat trusty pf enosylvards repudiate him( tapplatige ; and erughtd, for the time being, the mon star-Opint of (snatch= whioh recientlY,. at Perm's Ferry, presented ft practical illustration of the doe. trines nr the Opposition parti L Tne• name of Republi , pan. which this new party A itil.top i ted, warmily an in to Pit n e. tt oty ° e r a pee; i t t o 7 b h y AVA and , frir Tbq r alit luftie o guougs Stool/toe to conquer an rot and move disgratep move ment is to unite Ira any @lemma for the on e of se curing the spoils. The thoosltlon to the' Dem.:mm:lY never t o ued bet by the aid of treachery. We have again t battle with this the foe ; we hive grain to fight those traitors, (who corns toe. as the devil on mc to Eve, Ind attractive form.ingsonst the violence cif fanaticism and the tyeaolotry of orineplratent. Theo, how trait the nemounty of barmeniode action on the gars ef, is Convention: We must stand up In noble. eolth emir fighting ender the emu banner and for the me glorious cause--the proteption of our Interests and the preservation of the' iton. 441114 thanking the Convention for the d Wing mashed hoeor conferred upon him, and renewing his intention to disoharge the duties of hie pompon with equal justice to Atli Mr. Sandi MM. 01p4sl afoul great enplane°. lir, Baker nominated Thornesß.SearlithAfFayette, -.4secretary. Dr. J. Rouoh, Nelson Wiser, and Mr. m, A. Galbraith were also nemtnnted. The whole four were elected by aeobtmatlod.' Mr. Conine. of Bedford, moved that the rules of the Houge; of Itepregenftitlvell, as far ag pramicable, be Adopted di retest:if the' Urftweetion. Agreed to. The delegates ale l ed then presented their mien- Dale, and were enrolled. Mr. Vanunt. ofuoli, melted that when the Con vention adjourn it be until three o'clock. Agreed to. The Convention then proceeded to consider contested seats. Mr. McGrath. I hold in my band the 'certifier of elitetion 1p Pe Third district of 411adelphis, end find knowname maned untested on the list. would li eto know who the contestant le, / have been waiting patiently for an oppertunity to vote. The Chairman. The gentleman from Philadelphia asks for information. Mr. Cessna. of Bedford. I move you. Mr. Chairman, that them Conyention now proceed to consider the con tested IMAM, le ppep Coeventron, in the order they have been presented to oar Mr. Leash. of Philadelphia. I have en amendment The consideration of these own involven an amount o trouble and a loss of time hardly to be conceived. Propose that a committee of nine be appointed to con sider these seats, and that the committee report qt the afternoon session. As far as the Third distrtet of Phi ladelphia. and the claims of Mr. McGrath to repre sent it. are concerned. I. know something of the fame of tee cue. and am willing to move that he be permitte to take his sear,' Mr. Cessna Waisted to this form of procedure. The gentleman from Philadelphia Wished nave these seats referred to a ocanreittee of nine. Be desired that this Convention, in solemn nesion, 0_4,1 settle the gyallficiationg of its own member e. This committee might report. bat yet the method et' ruching the eon &emu of that report would have to be known to the Corileution at leaf. The CloeVeetfOlt 19111 al MOW° of judr the facts of the pudag pay pipe nom that mold illy be delimited. Mr. pooh said that all pf theee eoptestants, en both sidee, were willing to go before a committee. with the (Teflon of one. There wan an fimmenne amount of la rto be done, and it could be best done by a emu ni ttee. r. Coma would comproff Ise the matter. When the cues come up. and both parties wish to go to 4 commit tee, he would consent. My. Leech. I withdraw my motion, and consent to the tompromice. The motion of Mr. Cidiall4 was then unanimously agreed to. • if. Qsrerhout moved that a committee of nee from each district be appointed to nonneate permanent of ficers, Mr. Cessna 'Maeda point of order that the business before the Convention was the consideration of con tested swan. The Chair decided the point of order well taken, and the Convention proceeded to consider the seats The first seat was that of the Servitor's' representative from Crawford. Mr. Domekluge made R e statement as well as his contestant, after which the onvention admitted him by a large maim' tr. The Chairman said he hoped the officers and citizens would extend some facilittim to the reportorial corps. There should be Some chairs and stationery furembed. Be wanted the reiresentatives of the press to have every opportunity °lipreading thomeelvee, I.Applause and laughter.' se C tia r t i Or s ei t i fal7,Va n ct isiqi D r. Thomasl i admitted 'nes pre t o the Convention as, repreientati on from t Pita repro sentattee district of Philadelphie. m r. - velment moved to admit Dr. move e to the seat. Mr. Cumming', of Seyder county, moved to amend by admitting li l t:. Leisenrint. Mr. Len hoped that there man would have a chance to explain t sir pointions. A mot i on to give them feu minute' each to explain w iWr a .Z.V. t teisenrins addressed the Convention for twenty-tiro minutes, although the rule prescribed but 4 10. Jones preeentedlus claims ag the delernte to the contacted seat se a hrief speech, in which he detailed the inmeelts connected with the late primary elections, and intuit ed the control outraged by the Adm milt re tine over t Democratic votpre of Philadelphia. lie stated , that several delegates who had voted for him. end who has been employed at the gas works. were re moved, through the influence of the Administration, nn as oust of eueh aotion, ¬ion aid applance.i - Outsider. "It ain't co," Great confusion re v led, amidst which an officer ideated the offender against the dignity o r the Convention. When Or. Joey' ten minutes had transpired, there wore thud cries of kt Time sup. time 's up l" The Chairman. Will the gentleman suspend hie re mark; fore moment ) mamma that, es Mr. Lemon ring, the other contestant, hes (recopied more than the ender tune, the same co riper wilt be extended Dr. ionise, apetee, and prick of "On on. go on."' ler Dr. JQl2lO# 0110110 1 1 r 10111600, Mr. I etch eat iwairthe op ini on o itindelphis delegation tint r. Lehmerine wits anti led t his seat, and ice e made a motion to that e Mr. &mom, or Fulton. I move that Dr. Jones be en titled to his seat. Great confusion, and cries of " no. Quenon.' I Mr. Vangant, of Puke, aaid that as he did not en. derstand the Outten, ha moved that neither of the gentlemen be entitled to, the seat, but that it be de. (dared vacant. , • ' The Chairman, amid the confusion, not appearing to understand Mr. Venzarice motion, went on to put the motion of Mr. Penman. Mr. Cessna. I can't allow that, Mr. Chairman, Tim gentleman from Duke has made a motion, and has a right to be entertained. AIL Chairman. Ibe Auden of the gentleman from Buck,. I did not hear his motion. - The motion of Mr Sepeom was then put to the House, and wee [Wit by Per far majority. ° The mor fl Mr, I,seett was adopted, alter a divl tted to his seat. , " 7:1 1 1..t i e h r. its :174 w aVer4.l i him idea pre oan - nonce that the contestant the sent of Mr . McGrath; et the Third distrit of Philadelphia, bad withdrawn from the contest. Applause.] li e accord ingly moved that Mr. McGrath e admitted to hie seat, v Inch was agreed to tulanimonely. At hal roast one o'olook the Convention' adjourned to meet at three P. M.* 4FTERNOOif BEgfitON. ' T lo h e e k CP OW. 4l:l 2Orfirtronfa t i t r i garr, n n iti n egli t r i . "' ° Chairman. I will tooted now to appoint the Committee on Permanent Oirnters, ernorthng to the Tu r i ltidoGrath, of Philadelphia. That le not order, soon. Mr. Chairman. I think' you are beginning the thing too _ Mi. Cessna. I raise the point of order that there is nothing now before ti i onvention but the considera tion of contested sea t thoughthairman. Ithe _gentlemen's pardon. I that arnotioato hat eireot had been passed at tboroymng's session. Kr. altallaLtrlnved that the chair now appoint Comm ttitott Permanent Moots. Ya lt a di ( irt hl a t ele?Oi r e . business before the coneep two was thq oorideribt °pig this con t tes contested seat of trt• "XlP."l,lfi l airinligirt.tem b egerith'eopt. Atmndsat upon the election, and Went on to argue mat he was le. gally eleeted. After•he:a n d t, : mp ono r l i u n d a c i d pia th q ui r etatemen he imid that headed Pardon of the Convention for de Mining them ma he had Deeepompelled to do. He I. t o th r i tet t i b e e ert e lz P e re ns le o n t e h d a t d h l e stelet. Whatever mitit h t be done by this eloventi n, he hoped always o be found in t i r ranks of t lell?ooratio party. All be could d e 5 would do. Ile ti of Philadelphiemid eleewhero, or the sake of tits_ nionlhe Constltution, and or Demo oratio party. H Woul not go to the belittle* Aliment la Plan a Pletfella of d aetwd. He would ra es is voice in an hem hie wee - , for eyed in an humb e way. He was no publio speaker, he could go from man to man, Hie voice would be eardin behalf of the nomi nee and the resolution s 0 this Convention, whoever and whatever they may be, and he claimed that the De moaraoy of thedistrict that he ooneidered he properly Mr, Randall worildilhgno nvd do t announced lkew the c eeWs lu o s f i hie J he trusts &bet the Convention would extend equal Justice to Mr. °hasten and lomaelf. Me. Johnoton IMMO a very brief statement to ly before the Convention, but he would first make two ob servations.,lie had not sake; any friene ol his to soli cit the vetoeany delegate of this Conven t on. He pre sumed that his °epode* had also refraine from such notion, and they therefore, Were equal In that reepe•t. If he had an y friends here who, on eersoual or politi cal found, would rather see him have a eat in this Con vention, in preference to Mr. he would ask tiny 0110, his nearest or dearest friend, not to vote for him on &advent of personal feel nes after beerier his statemeet if he would not do so under the rules of the party. Me the proceeded to lay before the Convention an Foment of the ease, already familiar to the reader' of The Fressoind oonoluded tiysaying, in relation to Mr. Randaills ternerks about seine to Altoona for the Durpose of °retitle; discord, that he ad always been a emocrat and hod alweys voted the full ticket which, be might say, although oat in a spirit of unkindness, I n i t i lg e g . tre r t 2 Oi t the l ni hi :rU P :n e ig n it c ?r u it2l d s o ii excite ment throughout the large room. Tallies were kept of the yeas and nays in every part of the house, The clear and elrgeit reT r ia d rks t o t f" lig iv iohnston impressed of every Zlittatio it th eir en ' refus ed to to volr. " '), " iiio a c i r speaker had conoluded, Mr. George westrington Baker arose and moved that Mr Randall take his seat. This was followed by Mr. McGrath moving that Johnston take hie seat. When the vote wee announced, there were loud blues from every part of the room, minrled with appiatme. Mr. Johnston mote. and, bowing to the °hair man, Lett the room. There were loud expressinns of disapproval from all quarter., of the peop.etretinn of what wee ommidered a great wrong. The drill of the Administratiowtroopers woe too patient, and Johnston was slaeghtered.—Rxrbtermi.) On motion. the remainine contested seats, ,two in number, from the Seventh Representative district. and the Clearfield district, were submitted to a speolal tom mA°o6Bhafili%pointed Imo Leech. John Cessna. S. K. Calhoun. Edward Campbell. and J. S. Maitland. Mr. Jehn F. ,Meane. of Bradford. moved that a com mittee equal in number. to tne State Senators be ap pointed by the chair, to select the permanent officers of the Convention. Mr. Haldeman, of Dauphin, moved to amend so that the Convention should proceed to vote viva core for Preeident. - M Ceases, of Bedford. moved to amend the amend meat by the committee being chosen by the Rawson tatives typal the various Senatorial district,. Same ilh'eentll4. Mr. e St s tre s ig=it i e t i i ; Bead lh eie w r j es l ii i t " Mr. Montgomery, of Washington. eddreesed the Con vention, advocating the election of all the offioers in open Convention. ?dr. Haldeman spoke in favor of his motion. Be re ferred to the feeline of disapprobation expressed on Mr. Johneton's election from the Convention. saying that if he had known it would excite such Selingfie would hove voted for him. This wag received with loud &spinets and buzzes tor Johnston. Mr. Cessna in a warm and animated speech advocated his motion, and Indulged in severe allusions against the powers that be, the National Adminietration anti ire friends, and wee interrupted with frequent bursts of applause. Mr. Plummer. of Yemenite, advocated the appoint- Mirorals committee by the chair, r. Gibson. of Allegheny, moved a poetillinement. Ir, tmegt schen, of Redford , spoke vehemently stalest the Of llt t r a iilblyetnentieeperiPsy the e kee l :a: l gal (tolerates. Mr. Beer. of Someiset. made an eptinated speech, and was especially severe on the adherents pf the National Administratien, They were wedged together not for the benefit of the Democratic' narty k but to advance their own berenial interests. Me eulogised the young Elemoornoy. an warned the •otiloe.holderi that they would , not be (Anted to. If these dictators were Ns. timed to, the Demos c oy might as well trail their flag in the dust. The pe.r could not_zuoceed. If they listen to the vela, of , e young Democracy , victory will crown the efforts o the party. Mr. Ed. Campbell. of Allegheny county, wanted the contested seats settled, and then the vote for officers enn is fallen elves von. Mr. Wallach, of York county, favored it ° Vote in mien Conveption. Mr. einem' withdrew hie motion, and all three propo sitions offered as eubetitetes fell. Mr. Cessna moved that a vote be token viva yore for president, and the chair appo int a committee of three membem to choose t e other ch eers . Agree to. Mr. Pelona then bentfinet d Thom . ..8 Cenningham, of Beaver county..for presidenf the Convention. Mr. Leech nominated lily. Wry. H. Welsh, or York Cr 4g:l l Convention then proceeded to a vote, and Mr. Welth_wits elected on the first ballot. Mr. Welsh received 84 Mr. ..... On reotinn, orderCevention then took a recess for ten minutes, in to afford the Chair an opeertunity toyiregare the committee to select the other officer,. Onyeassembling, the Chair announced the committee on other officers as follows: Messrs. 0. J. James, Grime Schell, W. J. Bear, Z. R. Heindel. P h il lips . oh J i lhn o S i e l ve h n, J . ohoth 8. ' se 110w mow, lieiN,TßT,l,s4llutchins, box. lifoherts, Samuel , andel, ward Mc- Govern, F. A. Chadwiek, 0. W. Caseadoen, aini.r shall, A. J. Delriek, W. IL Oessee. John F. Means, Patriak Kerr, Meok. Robert Warden, J. J. Shat igpely, J. M. Thomps_gn. J. B. Sausorn. Ifiram Kline, U. Shannon. rt. A. Elliott, and R. Johnston. 'V i b e c ee reetlee then adjourned till eight o'clock this The Conventlarl reaeserribled at eight o'clock. this event hit. eaten N. Smith, the temporary ohatrman, va cated he chair and it was taken by lir. Welsh, the perrodmint president. Mr. Welsh addressed the Convention in a SPlseeh of come length. Ile thanked the Convention for the honor confetrod upon him, and pl•dged himself to perform the dirties of the °lige with flumess.strictness. end im partial ty, Invotterneard: harmony, and tinier! in their delibelationg. thout .lightee th e. potenredings would be marked with dieeord and disaiter: The fate of the Tiemoorntio party is in the hand of the Conven tion. Oil its action depends thtfitte of 'the party, for weldor tOr action all person a asperities ne fr'Ket ton; ell arty differences baniehed. Let the doe horn the cIW. Let all keep OM to the music. of this Upton and the Oonetitution. Nom iell.let tit All tith the flag of the country around mood our last expiring cry be for the Union and the Constitution! . Mr. Welsh enno`utied his remarks amid deafening shout. of !teatimes.. whloti were long•continued. The akotoh very imperfectly conveys no Idea of its beauty and eirtat. Mr. Memo. from the onnimlttee to appoint additions Psrinlment officers, reported the tollowmg list: • Pica-r easipears. Dislffeis. . 11/terrie_t, 1.-,-Phibidelphsa—l. W. X Iff.y.B.Montsomery ,Y. McGrath; 2, las, XII , . pbn B. Butler.l • hieleiushlin ; 3. G. XV. min Amain. W. Baker 1 .4. John XVI, Jacob Peters. K. ()amble. ' XVII I . John Danner. IV . . , ti,l l 4ll 4a l ll . °l l t anae r. XVI.J. B , Banner. X 1 . 3itenb resnrall, I. yramaid Venzant. XI. I. R. rawford. V. Itimininin Foyle , XX .J. K, slhoun. V1..011 Filbert. XXI ..lohn ',Neal. VII.-C. 21.F:trash, X XIIj. Jame; L Llnds e y. Vq. ''.. P . 4VZIP:ad ." - xXN V: Po " . T. Rey no lds. .1%. o ' .. Turner. X xVI. w. 11. Reynolds. XI. Charles Lyman. I XXVIII. Wal. Marmon. XII. John 'l'. Borer. I X XVIII. K. 1,. Blood. ' Eton events'. ' I . Pl° VV. 7 tanlpv Woodward, L. F. Barnes, W17,4', A. Oalgitith, II C. Bide, J. X. Roach. Wm. Patton, I , :d ward Campbell, 1.8. al. Woodcock, Iser e besot:, Pomo/ Rex. • The report of the committee was adopted, and the °diorite took their is on the platform. The OPMIIIIttee on contested seats .reported In favor or Robert 4. Wallace, of the Clearfield distriet, and ;Al bert Lawrence, of the Seventh Repreeentetive diettiot. Atioppd. Mr. , Vanzent moved thet a oommithie of one from 'soli Concrees'onal distriot be appointed to choose dele gates' to the Charlevoix Convention end Presidential electers,.from each of the cud districts Itr. COSIII3II moved the postponement of the motion for the present, and supported his motion by a Pity re marks / ?dr: Arnold Planter opposed the Postponement. and favored the appointment of delegates to the Charleston Convention nod °Motors by the uhair. Mr: Montromery favored the appointment of dole cites and Mentors lir a committee of theelegates, (one from each Conerenional district I. to Ude Conven tion, themselves. directly. It. regarded this as the most iinportantq u esti on that could be presented. and should be settled first. If the candidate for Governor is selected first. the Convention may be protracted. there Is a diversity of opinion on the merits of diffe rent candidates. end the contest may run into to-mor rew. ; Many of the delegates may be obliged to leave. and the most Important business would I hen be left to a minority. He word the immediate selection of (he delegates to the National Convention and electors by the several delegates from eaoh Conaresinonal distriet. Mr. Cowie tr Pauli ew h's motion to postpone. Mr. Schell, of the Nineteenth flenatorial 4istrigt, moved to amend the motion of Mr. Vangant, that the Convention elect, viva gore • four delegates to the Charleston Convennen. and two elector! at 'large and the delegates from emelt Corigresalonal'distrint so. lest • deleted& to the Charleston Convention, and one elector for the said district. Mr &aright. or Feyetto, moved en amendment that the delegates and elec tors be selected by a oommittee to be appointed by the Chair. Mr. Schell opposed the motion warmly end earnestly. Mr. &aright advocated his motion to an earnest speech. Mr. Vault, of Philadelphia. spoke at length and ably is favor of Mr. Pollen'. motion. . . Mr Plumer . wished the delegates from each Con messional district to choose a committee, consisting of ose from each district to report a list of delegates to the iVetionel ronvention, and electore, the cold list to he en eat to the approval or rejection of the Coneention. Mr. Hal fevered the eleotioe cd the National delegates end eleotorx by the deleg4tee troth eaph Con gressional district. Mr. 'Miming.. of Snyder, made an amusing enamel, ccnvolsing the House with frequent bursts of lase ter. !twee not clearly undemood 'ohm side he favored. Mr. North, of Lancaster, dims/m.4 the question of the next Preeddency, and expressed a preference for Aim 0. Breekinridge. When the name of Breeldpridge vas mentioned, It mg resolved with thunder. of applause. ),Ind say deprecated the introduction of the Pre-' Meet's] Question as being entirely out of place. The pending question had nothing to do with it. Re was th War of allowing the delegat e s from eaoh mum district to select their own delegates to the Oherleston Convention end Presidential qleolami and pppoeed to their appointment be a ocitninittee. Tell speech was followed by lqng end loud cries of " gi le t, ' ' " e meant announced that the question was on the amendment of Mr.&aright. for the appoiniment, by tie Chair, of a committee of one fmm each Consres no al g it t l i s e t s lp o t n to , :teingle l f u e t tes and electors. , and the Presidentan neuneed that it wax not agreed to. Mr. Cummings and others demanding theyeas and tom the President withdrew his decision and ordered the •eas end neje The vote stood yeas 40, nays 91, and the amendment tit lost. The announcement of this result elicited great By lines.. The question nazi pending was mtamendment by Mr, that the ratione Meat four delegates to this aganeleston Convention, and two elector qt large, and tiat thp delegatee of each Cosy ntr esinonal district geleot ten delegates and one gleoter r thenwelews. Mr. Plumer moved to amend; by requirina the 040- Una from the Congressional &stun; to be suleacit to tie Convention. Not sitreed to. Mr. achell's amendment was then adapted. and the resolution. as amended, agreed to, the result being re ceived with tremendous cheering. Mr. Pohell then moi sit that nominetione be made for candidates for the Charleston delegation at large. This wee agreed to, and the following names put In I. Daw s o n of Montgomery, ot Wnshinetont,John Dawson. of Fayette; Josiah "Andall.Riohnrd VntlX, Joseph Il Baker, nod John Bobbins, of Philadelphia • Arnold Phinonor, of Vowing° ; George M. Kelm, o Barks IL B. Wright, of Lezerne; James Bill, Franklin; and Wm. Bigler, of Clearfield Brodhead, o fitrthA rtiptoo , David R. porter, of Daup h in ; and Hen ry D. Fester, of Weetmorel and• des motion, the Conventionpmeeeded to vote tiro receiffeeh deilignte voting for pore candidates. On the foga ballot L 93 votes were oast. Necessary to an oleo- Biglerand John L. Dawson were elect ed The crime; of Moire. Robbins, Brodhead, Bill, Far lm, Mendell, and Foster were withdrawn. litiourned. TIM VOOO ON TUB RANDALL AND JORNNTON CON. TDSTDD SDAVI. Pon 1001E4 F. JOHNIITON W 1. 111. t . leer, A. s„Llaro, Upian F Barrie. T. P. Blair. J . rattail, R.R. Br rang , A:G. Brodhead, 'Jelin t" . Brain. J. R. Oil bona. Joan imllioun, John Cassm. ohn Cessna. /mirth Cole. J. R. Crawford, Thos. Cunningham,. Joel B. Diner, D. V. Comokson, Nathan A. t Blett, Bolimion Feather, Benj. Fogel,Jam K. Gamble, it. Ger hard. A. J. Gerritson, Ephraim W. 11 amlin, John T. Boy J er Chu. Johnson. Robert L. Johnsoh, 11. N. ames b Marshall. David Lynch, William V. Aro- RarOnel J. F. Moans, bumf Meek, DevlJd 11 Monigomers, Win. MontgoinerY, Henry F. Mott, Vincent Phelps. John Furman. J. K Raub, Joseph Rix, Wm. H. Reynolds, David V. Rowe. James D. Butner, j i l rn k j l; B. 4gule r it Y t V il le ' I X OTh? W d " e t m dak , E. Tager—rte. OR BAIIIIIHL 12A 4114L—h1048111. /01111 Apple. goo. . Baker,Larayette Valor, lionedY lerirga lbwynan, Fdw m rd Caabell. Jr., Francis A. ha Moir. Jtoob Cromwell. Joh_n Cummings, Thomas al y. A. J. Distrioh.Chajles W Vsser. C Eyans, Eli Filbert, Tao+ Franc, ohn /William A. Golbratth, I.V.IIIaT ) R. emcee. JAlru , A. ?PP A . Joh ° ui l fil l^l , . P. l° 2l3 e a r ria j h er irr l ne hh l. a ft:gr.t. l l o o 4 lll l er: Irjohnnilluroldns. El C. 4.10. Reuben Kel.er, Wllliam Kukndden, Isaac Leech, 1 Jul Leidy. Charles M. Lei paring, Chance D. Lyman,Edwayd McGovern, James thatigh i le, I f M i tquith, WlO. 0, o muitiami, r:11.14 , RY:4: 4 D. '"}" oje. n ohn Arnol d r o, r 'D i lt n n i ll/lh li 317 1 :1 1 111;111 ° 1 11 .%ofi n di, A.K. Scholl, home U. Bearight,Ceorgo Barnum 11.bbanya,Nyei b l i we Nhernian. Zh a tNlS ° r 'i d e , D ht 2 V/ :tiB h e r r ' NI, 1 1 1,i r dr Wiser, Bt4nto T ..W 000.74111-41. • Later Wont the Ma Grande. NVA , OaraAN. February IM — The .te 6 MuhiP Art" zpan, from the Brim., has arrived with 3ICOOIV in specie. The Rangers, under oommand of Tobin nod Tomlin mom had returned home, having beendiebended, Warne , continues in poseession cf the re ht tpuk (if die Hie Grande, end committing depredations an 'l'eses, Captain &enema's cavalry and Captain Fowles' Bangers are guarding the border to the extent' of their War. XXXVITII CONGRESS.-FIRST SESSION. U. 8, CAPITOL, Washington, Feb. 22 SENATE. The galleries of the Senate are densely crowded by persons anxtous to hear the expected speech of Senator Seward. i The inniltd minor) bill was reported, and p.assed. Mr, OWIN,of California, reported the military aca demy bill without amendment. it was lard aside. Mr. GRIMES, of lowa, offered a resolution that the Secretary of the Navy inform the Ssosite of the num ber of marine hospitals, and the number ofd atients. to gether with the amount of expenses incurred in sustain, Inc them woos 1834. Adopted. Mr. DOOLITTLE. of Wisconsin, presented a petition that the Poet Office Donartment be made free. Mr. TRUMBULL offered a resolution that the Secre tary of the Treasury oommunicate the statement of the revenue from each eolleotion dietriot from 1864 to 1839. Mr. WAGON, of Malsachugetts, presented the me morial of the merchants and underwriters of Roston for a steam mail twice a month between Charleston and Ken West. and Cuba Mr. SKWARD. of New York, moved that the bill for the admission of Kansan be put on seam! renting. Carried. By consent. Mr. MASON, of 'Virginia, offered a rem lution that the President communicate any communioa bon received from the Governor of Texas relative to the disturbances an the Rio Grande. adopted. My. SHWARD then presented the memorial of the Tasneature of Kansas, praying for admission into the Union. "Nrr. - AVV7A RD then spoke as follower Mr. President, the admission of Nazism into the Union, without further delay, seems to me equally ne oesintry.Just, and wise. In recorded debates I have al ready anticipated the arguments for this conclusion. In coming forward among the political aetrolozere, It shall he an error oftedgreent, and not of disposition. if my interpretation of the feverish d reams whinh th a n e turbine the country ehall tend to (fluent, ratherto allay. the national excitement. I shall say nothing un neeesurily of venoms, because, in our system, the pub ito welfare and Kapp near depend chiefly on inst i tutions, and very little on men. I shall allude but briefly to in• tridental topics. bemuse they are ephemerel, and be cause, even in the midst of appeals to passion and me indica, it is always cafe to submit solid truth to the de liberate consideration of an honest and enlightened peo ple. ' It will be an overflowing source of shame, ne well as sorrow, if we thirty millions—Europeans be extorction, Americans by birth or discipline, and Christians In faith, and meaning to be such inpractioe— cannot so combine prudence with humanity in our conduct con cerning the one dieturbing subject of cupric. as not only to preserve our unequalled institutions of freedom, but also to tinkly their benefits with contentment and humene. Wherever a genie** slave exists, be he Caucasian, American. Malay, or African, he is the subject of two distinct and °Rumple Ideas—one *het he is wrongly, the other that he is richtly s slave. The balance of mint ier, on either side, however greet. never completely extinguishes this difference of opinion ; for there are always some defenders of slavery outside, even if there are none inside, of a free State. while. also there are always outside. if there in not ineideof every stave State many who assert. with Milton, !het "no man who knows aught can be so stupid as to deny that all men naturally were born free. being the mete and re semblance of God himself, and were by privilege above all the creatures, born to command, and not to obey," It often, partitive generally. helmets. Mortimer, that in considering the entitled of slavery' sonar penis to overlent the natural right °epergne' Interest nf thoraxes himself, and to ant exclusively for the welf.re of the citizen. But thin feet does not me terially elf,. ettetimate results, for the elementary question of the rightfulness or wrongfulness of slavery inheres in every form that discusgton concerning it earemes. What is just to one class nfi men can never be interim's to any other; and what is unjust to any condition of persons to &Stateis neoessaeily injurious, In tome degree, to the whole oommunity. An economical question early arises out of the subject of slavery. Labor, either of freemen or of slaves, is the cardinal necessity of societ y. Borne States choose the one kind, some the other, Hence two mu nicipal systems. widely different, arise. The 'lave State strikes down and ,fronts to extinguish the parent. husband. chit . neighbor, pensnnality as e. h of the laborer, not only ag a member n i c the political body. but also abor, or friend. :Ile thus becomes, in a politica view, merely Broady. nitheut mend capacity, and without domestic. moral. and social relations, duties, rights, and remedies --a chattel, an object of bargain. sale. gift , inheri tance. or theft. Hie earnings us compensated and his women atoned , not to himeelf, but to .his owner. The state protects not the slave as a man. but the capital of another man. which he represents. On the other hand, the State which rotate slavery encourages end animates and invieoratee the laborer. by mai Mamie g and developing hie natural pus, polity in all the riddle and faculties of manhood. and gene rally with the privdeass of oltisasship. In the one mine. capital invested in Piave, becomes a great politi cal force. while in the other. labor. thus elevated end enfranchised, becomes the dominating political pewee. It thus happens that we may. tor convenience sake, and not Inaccurately, call slave States capital States, and free States labor States. So soon as a F eate feels the impulees of commerce, or enterprise,or embl i tion, its Mogen, twin tn study the effects othese or ternsef catutel and lebor respeo tiveloon its intelligence . its virtue, Ile tranquillity. it. futurity or unite. its defence, its prosperity, lie liberty, its happiness. its riegrandizement, and its fame. In other words, the great question arise/. whether slavery le a moral, social. and political good. ore moral. levie. and political evil. This Is the slavery question at home. But there is a mutual bond of amity and brotherhood between man and man throughout the world. Nations examine freely the political sys tems of each other, and of all preceding time., and aocordingly as they approve or disapprove of the two Interne of cattail and labor respectively, they sanction and prosecute, pr condemn one prohibit. com merce in men. Than. in one way one another. the slavery tniention. which go meny Among 04 who are more willing to rule than be pritient in strop= the condi- G ene of society, think it a merely accidental or mon o...nu question that might and ought to be settled, and dismissed at once, is, on the contrary, a world-wide and enduring subject of petition! c Rigida ration and civil ad ministration. Men, States, and nations entertain it, not voluntarily, bet because the progress of society eon element brines it into their way. They divide upon it, not perversely, bitt beafluse t owint to differences of con stitution, condition, or circumstances, they cannot agree. The fathers of the republic) encentitered it, They even nitiuste4 it so that it might a re given us mush less then our ' decent disquiet, b not circumstances afterwards occurred which they . its as they were, hitti not clearly foreseen. Although they dad in• periled, yet they generally condemned the mac re of slavery. and hoped for its discontinusnee. T ey expressed - the when they mister lo , lhe Peelg ration or Initeetideepeb ' ear a flieclaMen I 'principle of Ameri au sometY. Gat all Wien are created Weal. and have inalienable rights hi life, liberty. and the Pursuit of happiness. E ach Stele, bolftverr A"' served to itself exclusive Polleel plf DOM his subject of plainer within Its ern ers. sever thoiese. it linareidahle prespate its / fin their ton - imitations on a bond of Ooderill nape. wk. 7,;‘, — ' Government wee to be a feeteseroot ;re one si e ve s , were capital in some etktes, in ethers capital had dentedestreente in labor. Should those slaveette repre as capital pr ea tenons, taxed as capital or as persons, et shouldlligy net represented or Mud at ell/ Th a ia t;iisuiesgreed, debated long, and compro mised at last. Each Stnte, leer deternilne4, shallaeve two Senators' in Oonuess 't brae bf the illtves shall be elsewhere represented and be taxed as persons. What should be done if the slave should escape into a labor State' Should that State confess him to be a An tal and restore hint as such, or miglit It regard loin as a Penton, and huller and retreat him an a man? They emerge lied again. and decided that no person 1 gl 1 , 1 to 1111 13 . or service in one State, by the laws u thereo f , - ue lc into &nether , shall by any law or rnlet on of that tate he discharged from eagle Itsbor or service, but shall be delivered up on claim to the person to whom such Moe or set viCe shall be due. ..Free laborers would immigrate, end slaves might be imported into the State,. The fathers agreed that Coa lman may establish ordibmi laws of naturalisation. and it might prohibit the imeortetion of persons after we. Communities in the Southwest, detached from the South ern Stites were prestie up in the practice of slavery, to be united State,. N ew States world soon now gp in the Northwest, while at yet capital stood aloof, and la bor had nut lifted the exe to begin there its endless but beneficent task. Ibe fathers asthortzed Congress to male all needful rules and regulations concerning the management and disparage of the imbibe lands. and to admit new Statna So the Constitution, while it does not &stub or taut the system of capital in slaves, sa nding In any State under its own laws, dean, at the same time. recognise evere_human being, when within any soelneive sphere of Federal Inriediotion, not es capital but as a person. What wee the suttee of the fathers in Congress ? Theo admitted theew States of the Southwest as mei-. tal &Mee, beogise t wee practically Impossible to do °therein, and by t e ordinance of 1781, oonOrteed In Heil. they provided or the orcanteatfon end adoneeloo Of only labor States in the / Northwest . They directed fugitives from service to be restored not as chattels, but as perigee. They awarded naturalization to immigrant free leberers, and they prohibited the trace in African tabor., This dispositiop of th e whole eubjeet wattle heir. ninny with the condition o society. end ai . in the man, with the spirit of the are . he seven Northern States eeptepteely became labor States by their . own oars. Thu six Southern States, with equal traueillityy. and by their own determination. remained capital lamas ~ The ot merest-moue which the fathers did not clear' T foresee were two. :tamely: there invisoratirm of slavery oonleauent on the Increased ono gumption of cotton, and the extension Oat national doutain MM. the MM. is stool t and these occurred before 1810. The State of Lem sane, formed on a elaveholding Frances settlement, ' within the newts-acquired Ileuisiturien territory, had then already been admitted Into the Union. Thereyet remained however , / vast region , which Included Ar henna and Miseourt together with the then unoeoupied and even unnamed Kansas and Nelneska. Arkansie, a I a avehelding community, was nearly read! foe ily, and Missouri, another math Teeri*ry , wee aoeal apply ing for admission hitcl the Federal Union. he en itting capital Shiites seconded these aptiliestions. and claimed that the shale Louisianian terri tory was rightfully open to eleven, and tr. the /W °repenton of future slue States :I he labor Stares maintained that Comers had supreme legislative pow er within the domain. end could and ought ro exclude sla ver, there. il he question thus permed was one welch related not at all to slavery In the existing capital States. It wee purely. mid simply a national question whether the common' interest or the whole reeubile required that Arkansas. Missouri. Kum.. anA Nebraska should become capital States. with all the evils and dangers of slavery. or be labor P orten. with all she security, bene fits, end blessings of freedom. On the decision was sus pended the question as was thought. *Wither uiti irately the interior of this new centinent should be itp asylum for the oOnreelieft and the exile. corning sear Mier year. and ego after an, voluntarily Dom every other civilized and, as well as for the children of ma fortune in tier own. or wnether. through the renew.' of the African slave trade, those magn.noent end luxuriant regions should lie surrendered to the control of recital, wringing out the finite of the earth through the Im poverishing mil of negro slave& That guestion of 1820 was Identically the question or redo. so far ea principle. and even the held of its applicaume. was concerned. room element of the mitre any now present entered It then ; the rightfuineu or the wrongfulness o: slavery i its aeons present and future I the constitutinnel mei thority of Congress t the claims of tee States, and of their citizen t the nature of the Federal Croon, whether It is a compact between the 8. Rtes. or an independent Government ; the smug of its power,, and the hee ler/re men their s ouse idr. All these were discussed with teal end abijity which hare never been surpassed. istory tells us. I know not how truly, that the Union reeled under the vehemence of that great debate. Patriotiem took emote! from prudenoe. and enforced a settlement which has proved to he not a Anal one' and which. as is now seen, practically left open all the great political issue. whieh were involved. Mestere la "..11 ,t a h n i s n ag . d were e a admitted t ° a u ! capital tr r a t::: s 6 ;ri t , h y i e le t comprehensive field of Kansas Add Nebraska. Nnw, when tbeyresent conditions of the various parte of the Louisinman territory are observed, and we see that cepital mains undeputed possession of what it then obtained, while labor is onnyulaine the oountry with go hard end so protone ed a st ruzg le tomato the lust equivalent whioh was then guarantied to it under our. emanates of so greet glemnite: we may Weil defers not to be undeceived if the Mauer' compro m ise was indeed unneeeesarlir Recopied by the free States, inh umed by e teecerettiont of the claimers of disunion. The Itlig/CUrt debate diseloged Uwe of great moment for ulterior nn i " First. T at it is easy to combine the capital States in dem, ei even external intimate, while it is hard to elite tke abor States in a common policy. soond. That the labor States have a Piave loyalty to the Union, while the capital Styles have a natant/ facility for Manning that ' loya lty by threatening die "RAO That the capital States do not emetically dis tinguish 'between legitimate and constitutional resist ance to the extension of slavery in the common Terri tories of the Union and unoonetstutional negreeston azalnet slavery established by local laws in the capital Mateo . The early political parties were organized without re ference to slavery. hut since 1850. Europeanquestions have left us practically urinous:nod. There has been a great Moreau of Invention. mining, manufacture. sell cultivation. Steam on land and ou water has quickened commerce. The mese and the telegraph have attained prodiginue activity, and the social inter course between the States and their citizens has been immeasurably increased, and. consequently, their mu tual relations 'greeting slavery have been for miter years subjects of earnest and often excited disouasion, It Is in my War only to show how such dispute' have operated on the course or political events—not to reoneri them for argument here. There was a slave insurrection in Virginia, Virrinia and Kentucky debated, and, to the great sorrow of this ftde Motet, rejected the system of voluntary labor. The Colonisa tion society was establiehed with much favor in the capital States. Einanometioo sometime arose in the free litmus. South Carolina instituted promisdiege to nullify obnoxious Federal revenue laws. The capital States complained of courts and Leglslaturee in the la bor States for interpreting the constitutional provision for the stoirenrier of fugitives from service, so as to treat them as persons. and not property and they dis uninitiated against colored person. of the labor States when they mum to the capital State,. 1 hey denied, iii Congress, the right of petition i, and embarrassed or denied freedom of debate on t e subject of slavery. Presses which undertook the de mice of the labor sys tem in the capital States were suppressed by violence. and eventn the labor Matta public aasemblies, convened to ;onside f slavery questions were duipereed by RION elpaMieing with the candid States. ha Whig party, hem generally an opposition party, lr ebbed soma forbearance towelid the telemeter labor. imp plemopratia party, not without demonstrations of twat, was generally found sustaining the policy of capital. A disposition towards the removal of slavery from the presence of the National Capitol appeared in 11 , 10 latriet of Columbia. Mr, Van Kiiren, a Democratic y lis t en t, jeimphyd prospective veto against the u rutinated measure. A Democratic Congress brought exits into the gluon., stipulating practically for tie ure reorganization in lour slave States , hlenico wee lammed. War ensued. The labor Stelae asked that the Mexican lily of line*, Which covered the Territories orogen, In by the treaty n of peace, { plat r emain mid 15e oanfirmed. The einocratio petty refused, The Mtseourl debate of 1820 recurred now. under circumstance, of heat and elegem eat, is relation to thee° nonqueste. The defeeders labor look alarm lent the number of new capital States might become so great se to enable that blase of States to dic tate the whole policy of the (government; and in case or constitutional resistance. then to corm a Dew slevja holding Confederacy around the ay of Mex eo. By se this time the capital States em to have become fixed in a determination that the Fe oral Government, and even the labor States, should recognimi their slaves, though outside of the slave States and within the Ter ritories of the United Motu. at VOMIT of which the muter (mull not t „ any Way or by my aothority di vested ;en the la f elesstsS ; Wools lucerne now more essentially democrats' than ever afore, by the meet development of free labor. more rmly than ever in silted on tbe itonstitutionaliketrine that slaves volun tarily carried by truer masters into the common Terri tories or into labor Sttall, are wimp, men : Under the ouspte'ints marginate' of a Whig mum, Gatiforrilh en 4 heir It eppeareo before cortereee as labor States. The capital States refused to consent to thei r admission into the:Union and again threats ot disunion carried terJer and. appsterniqon throughout the land. Another nom promise WagMM actments admitted California btrOf ' State and re minded New Ataxic(' and Utsh to remain Territories. with the tit ht to chigoe freedom or slavery when ripened lionof May gave 00W remedies for the recap on.of fugitives from canner, acid abolished the open slaver - lark et, to the District or Columbia. These new enaotmenteaollsted with the existing statutes —namely. the ordinanta of 1187, the Bilinear; :prittlibitorT law 0(1811, and the &rendes or Texan annexation--disposed by law of the gubjeot of slavery In all - the, Territories of the United Hates. And so the rompromuie of : 185D was pronounced a fall, final, absolute. and comershemiive settlement of allexisting and all possible disputes con cerning slavery under the Feeer •i uthority. The two great parties, fearful for the Union, struck hands in mean ie and in 'presenting this as an adjustment. never afterwards to be opened. disturbed. or even questioned, and the people accepted it by majorities unknown be fore, The new President,' chosen over an illustriong rival, maquivocally on the ground of greater ability, even i f not more reliable mimeo, TO tmtuntaln the new treaty inviolate, made haste to justify this expectation when Congress assembled. , Hound: " When the Freya shall have closed over all who ire now endeavoring to meet the obligations of duty, the year 1850 will be recurred to to a period filled wills anxi ety 'and a_pprehension. A successful war had just terminated: peace brought with it a great augmenta tion of terntory. Disturb ing questions arose, bearing upon th e . domestic ins • itutums of a portion of the Con federacy, and involving the constitutional rights of the States. Rut. notwithstanding differences of opinion and sentiment in relation to details and !pacific provi sions. there quiegeenee of distinguished citizens, whore devotion to the Union can never he doubted. hes given renewed Vigor to our it atitationtri and restored s sense of security and remiser re the public mind throughout the Confederacy. That t is pose fe to suffer no shock during my official term. I have the power to avert it, those whoplaced me here may be aggared." Hardie, however, had them Inspiring sound, died away, throughout a reassared and delighted laud, befell , the national repose was shocked again; shocked. in deed, as it had never before been, end emitten this time by a blow from the very hand that ending released the chords of the national harp from their utterance of that exalted symphony of peace. Kansas and Nebraska. the ling-devoted reservation of labor and freedom, saved in the agony of national fear in 1820. and saved again in the panic of lone, were now to be opened by Con gress, that the never-ending course of seed time and harvest might begin. The slave capitalists of Millicnt. from their own well-assured homes on the eastern bangs of their noble river, I 'eked down upon and coveted the fertile prairies of Kansas:while a sudden terror ran through all the capital States. when they saw a seeming, certainty, that at hat a new labor State would be built on their western border, inevitably fraught, es they wild. with a near or remote abolition of slavery. What could be donee Cone ass cou'd hardly be expected to intervene di teat!! for their safety so soon after the Compromise of 1850. The labor hive of the free States was distant, the way new, un known. mid not without peril,. Missouri wee near and watchful, and held the keys of the gates of Kansas. She might seize the new end smiling territory by surprise. if only Congress would remove the beagler established in 1820. The ooniaticture was favorable. Clay and Webster. the dirt.nnuMbed citizens whose unquestion able devotion to the Union was manifested by their SO quiescence fit the Compromise of ISM: had gone down into their honored groves. The labor States had dis missed ninny of th- a Representatives here for too great fidelity to freedom, and too great distrust of th• efficacy of that new bond of penes, and bed replaced them with partisans who were only timid, but not un willing. The Democratic President and Congress hesitated, but not lonic. They revised the last • resit compamae. and mind. with dediubted surrinse, that it was so far from confirming the law of freedom of 1821 that. on the other hand it exactly provided for the abroestioe that venerated statute; nay. that the compromise itself actually tilted the spirit of the Missouri law. and de volved on Centres, the duty of removing the lifeless let ter front the national code. The deed was done. The new enaetment not only repealed the Millman prohibi tion of slavery, bupp. it pronounced the Pealtle of Ramat and Nebraska perfectly free to establish freedom or slavery, end pleired Congress to admit them in due time as Statei either of capital or of labor, into the Union. The hit representatives of the capital metes. in nn cur o strange bewilderment, concurred, and the Whig party instantly went down, never to rise again. Demecram seceded, and stood aloof; the country was confounded and, amid the perplexities of this hour, a Repubboan Pads was seen gathenng itself together, with touch earnestness , bat with little show of orranization, to regime, if it were not now too late, the reuse or freedom and labor. so unexpectedly and grievously imperiled in the Territories of the United States. I will not linger over the *equal. The popular gover ment! of Kansas proved to he the State eaveraienty of Missouri. not only in the persona o f the rulers. hut even in the letter of an etrialmary andrne! code. The per fect freedom pros'ed to be a hatefu l and intolerable bond tae. From 1850 to 1889 Kamm. sustained and enema. taged only by the Republican party. has been encased in aumessive and ever-vsrying struggles, which have taxed all her Tailoe wisdom, motaratlon, enemies, and resources. and often even her physical strength and martin! emotes, to save hermit( from being betrayed !MO the Union se s slave State. Nebraska. thong Choosing freedom , is, through the direct exercise the Executive mower, overtidine_her own will. he as a slave Territory ; and New Mexico has telatiled voluntarily into the preen°e of slavery, from w•ich she had redeemed herself while she yet remained a part of the Mexican republic. Meantime the Demo_ cystic party, advancing from the ground of popular sovereignty as far es that ground is from the ordi. "sore of 1787. now stands op the Kelton, that both Territorial Governments 1114 COni(Plia are UICOMPI. tent to legislate amnia slavery in the Territones, white they are not onlf antopetent. but. are obliged, is when it necessary, there... - I° -8 1 4, 6- 0 114 protection In this new end °stream position the Dernocratio Party now walks itself behind the battery of the BEI- P(eme anitrt. se if it were poseltde true constreobon or the Constitution. that the power of deciding prim tt milli forever between freedom and slavery in a portion of the continent far exceeding all that is yet organized, should be renounced by Congress, which alone posses see any legislative anchorite. and should be assumed and'exereised by a court which can anis , take coin' mince of the great question oollstetep. le. e Pri vate action between individuels , ea lemon ac tion the constitution will not suffer the court to entertain, 1f it involves twenty dollars of money. with- Mit thenVemiling intervention of entry of twelve good And ill moo of. the neisiaborhoW„ where the lion arises ' The Indeundeat.aver-renuted,andever recurrieg representative Parlolment. Diet, Congress, or Legighttareol the ens chief , paramount, essential, indispenvinla institntion in a remilihn. Even liberty, suanurned In Organic law, yet if it be held by other tenure than the soaks(' ke care of such a reeteaentative annular assembly, id but PPicaZifitunnutnitamlllda while slavers, enforced by eh Irrespoolneletedicial tribunal, is the completes; noun bit development of dempottem. Mr. President, din ever the annal any fiovem ment show atSlOre . juid ne . more nitiferleteneurture famott4 wis d om eslia vio'n o f its foundeis ? ever u,Otiarvi— ..L- • ..rnent of a great empire, founded on the of human labor, elide away so fast end so tag, and Moor itself so tenaciously on the barite of naeital , end that capital invested in laboring men f Did ever a free representative latislature, invested with powers so great, and with the guardianship of right, so important. of trusts so sacred, of interests la preedous. std of Nowa gnu ennoble end so comprehensive,rnerender and renounce them ill so ntitterieesarily, so unwise,. so Wally. and so Ingloriously? If It be true. as every instinct of one nature, aed every Dumont of polttioal expenenee teaches us, that •• ill fares the land, to hastening ills a prey. Where wealth accumulate* and men denim." then whe any Ireland. tn Ride, roland„or in Hun gary, hag ruler prepared ,for a gentnars end oen go ins panels disappointments. digesters and calamities equal to those which the Government of the United States holds now_enspended over so large a porAlon cif the continent of North America? • of the United States in t he _ eiztrttof , thli poli cy, snbverted the fees remtblio of Hiearatian. and °pel ed it totters's - , and the African slave tong*: and held It Di that condition waiting annexation talkie United States, until its sovereignty was rent , red -bs a onnibt na'ion of sister republics exposed bathe same &near. cud apprehensive ampule/ subversion. °time eitigua re-opehed thoforelgn slave trade in violation of Onir lawn and treaties ; arid. agar atiliPetialati °Mat fill train for fifty years. savage Africans have been once more landed on our shores and distributed, oars claimed and with impunity, among oar plantations. For this policy.. far as the Government has even. tioned it, the Democratic Party avoWiliteelf Everywhere cornplmt opponents incipient sorrels wo.rwas - thing becolot her resistance. the einiosratio. press detidistgll . ' let her bleed." official integrity has beenesese or rebuke and punishment, whey, it resisted trends de signedto promote the extension of atesery. Throagb., out the whole Republie there snot one know!) dissenter( from that poling reppeitung in pice. If the Executive arm. Nor over . the face of the whole world Is there to be Nun% PIM reoreiputstive of onr cnnetry who is not an apedoillit or the extension of slavery. flit is In Aviation that these thingshave happened „ In the mete ago cautprv, the era of the brever merest Progress. and while ell nations but onreelves have been either abridging or altogether suenrestits commerce in men; et the very moment when the Rumen serf Is ennverepated. and the Genevan captive, the Nubian prisoner, and the Ablssinisn savage are lifted on to freedom' by the anecessor of Mohammed. The wor'd, erepomemed in our behalf, by our early devotion to the /ht. of human nature. as no nation ever before emote p a its respect and sympathies. Oa in wonder and max meat whet all this demoralisation means? It has an excuse better than the world inn =mine, better than we am generally conscious of ourselves, a mrtis ous Steele. We , have loved not freedom so intern leee. but the Union of our country so much more. We have been made to believe, fredn time to time, that, in a trims. both of these precious instions could not be sexed together, and • therefote , wa w a, from lisle tO time. aurrendered safeguards of lto propitiate the loyalty of capital. and stay its bands men doing violence to the Union. The true state of t e cue however, however, nueht not to be a mystery to ourselves: Presoirnee. indeed. Is not plan to statesmen; but we ars without excuse when we fait to apprehend the logos of cement wont,. Let parties, or the Government. Choose to do what they mar. the people of the Veit. States do not Prefer the wealth of the few to the haunt of the Marge, capital to labor, African slaves to white freemen. In the N aliens Territories and in future Staten. Tbat veil - lion has never beep distinctly recognised or acted on ley them. The Republican party embodies the popular fcutest and reaction elated a policy which has been astened neon the nation by surprise, and which its recoup end coescience, concurring with the reason and consomme rif notokind, emidemn. The chouse of the nation is now between the Demo cratic party end the Republican natty. Its principles end policy are. therefore. justly and even necessarily examined. I know of only one policy which it hats ad o pted or avowed, namely: the saving of the Tani to rt. s of the United States, if rumble. by constitutionel and lawful means. from being homes for slavery and polegemy. Who that considers where ,this nation ex ist' of what rustic to composed, in what arkor the word it sots its part on the nubile state. and what 117,1 Its predominant institutions. citrtoses: satii=. u n . talents. doubts that the Reounbean WWI will. If unwaveringly faithful' to teat pone? hut hist and loyal In all besides. earry it Into trutrn: e net mamas? To doubt is 1, he ntice *Mtn wham.? Minh:anon can im prove, or chrnitt anita save, ev,,hci e d, may. P. rhsps: infer front the necessity of thecae*, that it silo. 011 , Afig ud places. stand by the free dom 0 1 speech :.niftif the press, and the constitutional right, 01 frnernen everywhere: that it will favor the eeeedY l.lbr cement or the public. domain by homestead law; and will encourage minute. manufactury. and in terim] commeree. with Rueful rionneettons between the Atlantis end Paitifie States—for all these are Nl indent Interests of freedom. For 411 the rest, the na - onal emergenci el not individual influences, most de termine. as society goes on the trolley end character of the Republican party. Already belong rte part in legis lation end in treaties. it feels the neoessity of Ming practical in its care is. , the national health and life. whin it 'eaves metaphysitialsreculeunn to thorn whose may it is to cultivate the ennobling Selenee of political t'h ill . 7n 4 iiie midst of these mildews, or rather, before fully reaching them. the Republican party encounters, unexpectedly. a new and potential issue—one prior , end therefore paramount to all others, meat national life and death. Jou its if So math had not Weedy been conceded ; nay, Just as it c apital in all had ever been conceded to the intereet of capital invested in men. we hear menaces of disunion. louder , more distinct. t hat emphatic than ever, with the conditinu aeexed that they plant. eximuted the moment that e lec te d , ban Administretion. though oonstitutionally elecd shall as-unie the Government. • • • - I de not cei Minty know that the people are prepared to call such sit Administration to power. I know WY trim.' tnrou.h a suceession of floods which never greatly excite. and ebbe wbich never entirely dis- Mirage me. the volume of Republicanism rises con tieually his her and hasher.. They are probably weer wholle apprehensions admonish them that it is elreedy immix enough for creet. Hitherto ti e Republican party has been content with oneself-interrogatory—how many votes it can coat.? These throats enforce another—ties tt determination eaiti to cast them? This latter question touches Its spirt and pride. lem quite sure, however that se tt has :theme Practised self-denial in so many other forma. tt end in this emergency lay wide all impatience of temper, together with all ambition and will Consider these extraordinary deolamations gummy and with a Just moderation. It would he a waste of verde to de monstrate that they are unconstitutional, and equally idle to show that the reeponeibdity kirdientilon attempt ed or effected must rest, not with those who. in the ex ercise of °entrant:anal au th ority, maintain the Govern ment, bat with those who unconatituuonally engage in teemed work of subverting tt, Mimi are the excuses for these menaces? They re solve themselves into this: that the Republican put! In the North a lentils to the South. But it already is Voted to be a majority in the North ; it is therefore preotically the people of the North. Will it not Mall be the lame North that has forborne with you to tong and conOneed to you no much.? Can you justly assume that affeotion which has beeq so eomPlying can &II at once change to hatred intense and Inexorable? You say that the Republican party le a sectional one. Is theJjiheinocratio party less sectional? is it easier for Its to Pear Your seotional sway than for Toil to bear ours , tit unreasonable that for once we anoulo alte r nat e ? flute the Rerublicati _party acetional ? Not unless the Democratic party ie. The Republican party prevails in the Rouse of Rep,esentatives sometimes; the DIIII3O- ridryn party in the Renate always. Which of the wo the most proreriptive ? Come, if you wilt,f is eta the free States, into the State of New York, anywhere from-Lake line to Sas harbor, _among my neighbors in the Owasso valley ; hold your Conventions. nominate your candidates. ada the people, submtt to them, fully, earnestly, altuthentirl tilt your complaint& and grievances y Northern dts loyaltyLoppression. perfidy ; keep golhing brink, speak Mates freely and as loudly there tie you do hate; you Will have, be pitsA welcomes and rippreciating an die c Witii be Wrongs open for all the vetee you thewig. Are youlass seobonal than this? Extend to De the same privileges, and 1 will enrage that you will very hoes have in the South as many Republreans as we have Demo-rate in the North. There is. however, a better test of nationality than the amulet:44l looation of par ties, Our Polley orlabe rin the Territories waft not rota tional in the first forty year& ofshe flepablio. !Unaware Inheres. It Wit be patio's' again, donne the third forty Vents, and forever afterwards. It is sot wise and ben.- Verit for us alone, or hely/lout to you alone. 14 effects are equal , and the same for us all. (Mr. &Ward continued at come length to defend the Republican Darts , but, owing to the great pressure on our columns, we are compelled to defer the concluding portion of hie speech (with the exception of the closing paragraph) until to-morrow.] Mr. Presidest•Ws IBM D.rntUallifolletting and oqMpisZ. Met obvious and ineabsuism of our Constitution; and because we do forget It, we are eon ttquaily VOlNJOrillt buy it is Oust ooutodsrsol of thirty apd more States, covering _regions so "Nt., 104 gulsting interests so 'miens of BO many miu o n , 0, tnee.nonitikated and oonditioned &dyers/31y, works nispui ootitisinslly loothur to see it sto paid attUortall suddenly into MSOO I 4 But, 7 KM. it will no Mop; it was* Alkitim.teiclii, in motion—in motion azways dog , and %meow sores. Pot my ova yam u this wooded's-Iw)est - .had newly come from the hands of tts almost divine in ventors. VRA the admiration of my OIGIG/T , In ll _ al thoash it ire. then but Imperfectly known aurora. so now, when it forme the central figure In the eonSofillY the wnrld's invilization, and the best • shillaom o f Mankind favor ite eentinnanes, I expect-that It will stanJ and work right on until man shalt fear its tukre no more thanwe now apprehend that the am' will cease to hold his eternal place in the heavens. Nevertheless. Ido expect to see this - purely pope • althoneh slelesbea system always amok= ca, unat tended by the presence nod exhibition of uman temper and human passions. Teeter : nada be to expect to AIWA rewards. beashrs.-aad elemo me,ariam m t p ife . and watchfulness—an expectation contrary to bonne appointment. These are the diaciehne of the Amen can cameo. and he mutt Inure himself to it.. When, AS pow, a great policy, fastened noon the country ehrench its doeMe and fears, eonfiresed by its habits, and strengthened by Its personal ISM rests mid ambi tions. is to Ie Mixed and &rade la *Mere. the nation may h ave its inst , an natural. ti e de velopments, then, indeed, all the winds of controversy are let loose upon us from all points of the political compass, we see objects and men only through hams. mists. and doubtful and lurid lights. The earth seems to be heaving under cur feet. and the pill s r! of the noble fabrics that Prefects us to be trembling before oar eyes. %Mho appointed end of all this salt:boo comes et last, and always eesaintably ;Alta tumults of the negate subside; the country - bsoomes main enee more. mad thou we find that only oar IMMO hems been disturbed. and that they have betrayed us. The earth is firm is alwara before. and the wouderibl streetnne. for where safety we have feared so anmoadr, sow more firmlyfixedmova then ever, still Stands unmoved, endings, and Imble. Mr. DOUGLAS. of Illieeig. maid that the Seestor from New York charged that the Rarmasf-ffehnialoa actlrge4ing the Comminute, was the cause of the tattoo upon slavery. That get never would have been repealed butfor the refuse, of the free-soil element to abide by it. The Smith tweed to extend the compromise line to the Pneifia, but the free-soilers de feated the proposition, and that refusal opened the con troversy in 1860. The compromise meantime of that yearre g: "Tt g beu t 2f e egen T Y ork i tes,tiu 62 Senator - to. Party aereed to abide by the measeres of WA fa 1851 the Kansas-Nebraska set was passed to carry out the pri nee ples of those measures. Hewes not wrlhnt to sit still end heat himself charged with the resonant bility for the flAiblialf which belonged to the aerator and his negotiates The present agitation resulted frees the resistance of that party to the measuresMP , !welt by the pimple in two Presidential elections. ism the Senator from iew York went still further. ;ad ha dos. trine was that theDeelaration of ladeasedeowe &mortal the equality of the negro race. and therefore that all laws in violation of that idea were not Miss obleymed. For himself, be thought that the Declandion of lade tiondence only referred to the whitest**. settee Senator had correctly interpreted the meaning of t Metre - meet. the emanc i pa t ed Declaration shoem hays im mediatelytheir slaws; but they did rot do so. He tbonght this Government was made bi white toes, and for the benefit of "elute men. Mr. DOOLITTLE. of ' , removals'. asked, Why sot, th on.lips the Territonee to white men I Mr. DOUGLAS replied that he was for throwing these oven to the white men, and Mame. tool but he Wanted the white men t,O organize them. fr they treated ebirery, let them have It. It wee their bushman, we his. It wae a nowquestion of politleal geonomy an self-interest. he Senator foym New York had coinott a new definition for the two sections of the Union by ending the North labor States end the /Moth eilintal States. It had taken kiln a rood wane. peen to eon these terms and twins them Into ass. oetethiox had occurred op in New Fnsland to induce him to brine out these terms and take the aide of a meet numernus elms of voters. Strikes bed occurred at the Soak arse the starving workmen, breause the doctrine* irrepressibie coeflict had driven of the soistaems but toss. Hears this term, add the Nestor thus .sigh- to Mare himself on the side of the shoemakers the working men understood this vary welt aid kaer win they did not gel es sissy Southern orders as formerly. Mr CLARNR. of New town o f 0.14 that homiest , from manetactunng town of 3.0 0 osevatiMail, sad business was never better than now, and weekesenwera never better contented. Mr. DOUGLAS replied that there Waa Soother maim for the stoke at Lynn, and roller towaa of .Massaelia eons, but the withdravel of the southern trade. It re mitted from the general prevalence of the rune teepee that induced the Senator from Viryinis to epeeef homerenn. Re was satisfiedwlth the iipplmedicia of pr polar soYereirate o , both in New Mexico and in Kamm !hoar h in one it eltitatodnlavary,med ut the other ex cluded it Re was satisfied with both: He emelt not vote for the repeal of the slave code In Maxim!, or to force slavery is Hanes Why did not the Re oublican part. stem to carry oat - their a Mei- Dias Why not holes in their bill, to.abohsh fris twin miles of barbarism. slavery and soiTeamx I .1.1.4 Senator from New York said that he had.enliele 111161- VMS to propose. What. than. became of triikdres The. wore afr*d to attempt to carry sot tbeir nee se res. Theydidnotwesttodnvsnffthe emiservatire men. and thought it would do beton after the 1111015V4212. In the event of the Senates. ham New York heirs sleeted President. let there Iwo whoa be _proposed. Its Ms ?peach made in Woe. he had said oßtepary arm be limited to its lament bound+ rles—it min be anieborated —it can ar,d ast be abolished, and ion and I matt do it." Without such immeak the Aboiion:int of the parte could not be re mined bet they say the; IMI3 O t do it. all under the Coast/tuition. Ttloy pfiitiluito n- tend to carry oat the Constitution exeete The Vart not conformable to the tarot God, and they are to decide what is the law of• God. If the Genet [odes' was viola tive of the law of God, he did not see how they could to cosactience take the oath to sopportit. Mr. DAV I e, of WilluiPol• replied to Mr. ftewarraise cements. and controverted the mention that the Mote, was regarded only as property at the South. He woe protected i q his Personal eights as soughed the while man. He distrusted the lip profeamoga Ode Mims to the Union when the Reenter °Warned one of the meet important pmvisioes of the Coasts baits'. Mr. BROWN. of Misameipsi. pored man amesdelleat that the Committee on Territories 'venire whether the Crvisidet of A tbp Itregbah bill is recast miasma had o.cliFfillkrll l l. of 'Dime*. mid that his ocdtessee had stated that he had-combated at home the Ides of negro regality, and than any portion of the enestaraPmt was at variance rite the Divine law. Re asked sum when had the Re pubboana of Meese ever asset tied these thieve ___ hire HOUGLAS and that M the fiesstor had kW/ corns from the Hainowatla party, he weld not nitdee• stand the prieetples of Xepubliesalam so well new leaders. and wruM refer km toils lf..tesltten) Mr. TRUMBULI. replied that bur °Meares 'meet Rad cattle% he waa spade as ras cipanent of this Detrocreay. Ha was reteroed as Tithes.easosed never ost that aids of the bharcher. The Raves= of aa bad w such arted dootrimu.. a s wookt his voile acne to his tee*, that a It"' a inekeltargen. tker were wholly indigo. mid *shoat foendation. He did believe with Ito Owsiotatloa. that all sesta to a atata of natija wars tree mat sand. tot that wittier,: had pray tnie Inettiohnee. The 114essia-P•bmska tan was So triumph of vattataz aoretehrati• bY 11 'stammers anointed is Kansas and Nebristst who todeoted for sots of 7'erritoriel slavarty. He Ind/10Y said that the ordinance of I'M abet preserved Moon to freedom. • - . . Air. DOUGLAS said that slaves were held in llll eras eller the earn.. of the ordinance of nu. Ps imp there sivos over seven hundred stases 1%. in 1840. three handfed were held then in setts of or dinance. Slavery was Ilbohihed by the fttate is 1W because their labor was not pfoltablo. la sewn_ Its the hlissouri Compromise be "MIA say that to ~pe al W.. Put * ti the Yr one-irebreekei a& to mdse to =VW oat the Coinlse rasueres of UM Mr. TFlplied thee tt hair needed s sierras gate6cta to destrriy the amnesic:it of the Senator. la d le for the ordieseee of DV Illinois would have hie* s stave Suds. A strong effort was wade to hold slaves, but the goaatitation decided tlicortlee to be valid, and that kept them nut, Wheft Dime knit made the proemial:km to IMP011iAll• Mig.llo/Irt CM/WO— filise. the Senator, on the other side denounced it as e fire-brand, but three days after they dismvered that it was necessary in otter to carry out the Cosseroadse at 1860. • ROUSH OF REPRESHITATIYM Mr. CURTIS, of lows, naked, 'ha faded to metre, consent to Introduce a meotaimi vain swathe Pre sident. if not moreapatible with the public memos, to transmit to the Home ammo of nap °Metal Gorr sesoo deice whioh the department Ise morn* had myth El a mmirir Hendon and other.. ocemen k ing lhs edam liars on the Southwestern hoarier; sad ateothatDa take= tie House what MeSallthie. a say. have been t ekes to protect our atlases. and preeerer the peace of the country t that be also inform the Haase whether seder* hare been issued satkoristax oar ,coops to enter 4b3 of the Rates of Maxine land if to, that copies of Pull or ders be tremsmitted to the - , es• with all ether wa portant latormation relating to th e Mater is poseeessue of the department. Mr. IrANROTT. of Kansas Territm. pretenied the resolutions of the Kailas Legislat e , am.. forad mioton into the Union under the Wyeadott• coostite iio%Made istr , dar. =tad the Maras/ hie Riede e I lietTOth for pnater was not reeorded. How this beetled be was at a loss to know. Daring tae • years to had been a intreber of the Holm he Mid tower nurse a vote. except whoa abet from the enty or ma nned to hoi ted be 'mimes& He was mate ire ant that he rood for Mr. Gionbrenner. and inthately stated all the elre4l4Sthee•S at the tone. Mr. HINDMAN. of Arlen/as, confirmed Mr. litelfia's stataMent. The reetleman's peculiar vote, ad man, ner nt anineense to his name attreeted his arteattort. Mr Ruffin had inquired whether his name lees reooeeed. and the Clerk mid it was. Vf these facts Mr. Hindman was perfectly eeeadent Mr. Fl OHRNCE'S tof Peemaylamale) maw; wee clear and distinct on the =Meet He did act hem Mr. Raft respond to his name• het heard him talk arlastiter his name we, recorded, sad for whom. The Clark seemed to put his finger on the tally. and rare an allir mat.re and to the Speaker who responded that Mr. ittelha's same wan recorded Mewl. John Cochrane •f Yew Yorlr. Winslow et North Caroline. As .more of South Carolina. and Steal of Oretrin. confirmed the Coteitotss statements- Mr. 811ERhl AN. nf Ohio. eureted from what had tees said that everybody was caballed that Mr. Mahn Toted. 1 hereof*. k's same easht to sewer ma the i ce real.whaterm may le the eoreseti-ecee- Mr. STANTON. of ithio. remarked. if Mr. Rafts ab solute!, ilea he not d. that ts flattish. Mr. GROW, of Penesetrania. said it was the dd.. of every member to rote when his name Tea enlbd. The object of the Clerk in readme aver the roll was for the mr maitre to learn whether the°. t ia z .. r had bee. re corded or not He it'd not rtudr„7, theme remark' as appli cable to thin case. Hut it v a custom for some members 10 fa / ia antwarths'..othr names what called wader. mid a ri araatda g how they are moorded If they would answer when they are celled I. the first aim the. be trouble. Mr. v. t.ORENCE You need not that address the N.7.die . ratie side. The cheeses oa that comma were on rout' own aids. • • • Mfr. GROW. f was apelyinc mrremertr to beth sides id . the Anse. FierryWitir known that the eastern to which I hare allotted hes crown OP Mr. RUF.F.IN slid no man to more particular than hens' in ros ier. Mr. GROW said t In taro the foortud wan tw iny. his Drain was that this is no that norreet it It is too hats bock. No motion to that PIN.: *odd booted* that the Hones had issued to other boslneaa Mr. PLORENCki said Mr. Grows glitcorrobr woe sot Fond in its asplifaitun at that time. He snekt ray the elements which *multi ruts this &atom blast are not 'arm as thee ware to old times. Then were probably, if ant More dicers*. mere perverse. The House bad better settle this nu.stion of main, now, a, that no tetra] doubt might hereafter alum Mr. CO RWIN. of Ohio, said there could he no doubt about Mr. Rutkole rote. Stoole the }oared be terlelet nd rt weuld result in what a called a tie rite, +adhere would tie no election. With the mew of coming to as speedy a conclusion an Invalid*. he wished to offer a Preamble recant the Item to the ease. einnebadirm with a resolution declanne, nobs" thstnedinzthis informa li ty. Mr. Ford to be printer et the House for the sireetat Confess.. - . . sir. RUFFIN refused to yield the Boor for the +atm demon of the mallet-me. Me had the rialtt to hare his mime recorded for Mr. Oloathrtmeer. The Hone thee ordered the Journal to to vo oor rotted. The SPEAK FR declared that the eleat'ea would be till 4NMNlgilliain made an Ineffectual effort ta of fer Ms merlin lion. The SPEAKER said the }louse would now proceed to the electinn of °Hater. . • . • . Mr. WA EHBI:1111. of ?defile. melted shetheror not U sosld be ben nipoettione the election tal to-martens or some or h.r.44.• _ . . . . Mr. Ha RttBDAIAt. of 2disszarippl, moved that the election t postponed till tor morrow. Thar* were a number of absentees In the Sienate elomber. whore. he understood. there \M SS sr represubbi conflict," Mi. Seward having t`e door. The motion was disagreed to. Mr 'BURNETT moved to postpone the electron till Monday next. Mr. MORRIS...a' Pennsylvanin, obleeted ; for much Pub' io time her airesd. been wasted on this subject Mr. BURNETT', of Kentucky. vepliad that the waste of time nit net on the Demoeratze side of the House. Mr. PHELPS was %satisfied titian° sorters's could be more to-day. It world be better to defer the election till to- morrow. r. Barnett's motion was lost. and the Hausa thou proceeded to a vote. li=l=ll Whole aerobe; ; : a : Necessary to a choice... ..... . Mr. Closet:termer— Mr. Ball. . Mr. Ritchie . a On motion of ?dr SHERMAN. the further eon:niers tine was postponed till to-morrow at two o'clock. The Boum then went into Committee of the Whole on the state of the Union. toll the members', with the exception of about clones, went into the Senate chamber. Mr. ti EAGAN, of Texas., made a speech maintain that the Constitution TPCOIIIIIIBB Piave, a, pro rly. and neither Congress not Tetritorjal Legislature can abolish or have power over slavery in the 1 ernto ries, which are the common property of all the people. In reply to the artumente heretoPire livered. he said that the rienvicrattn pasty was neither s pro-slavery ear an anti- alarety perty. Mr. ECCII,RTON of Ohio, argued that it was msd seaasto attempt to ignore the question of slavery. It vas the grand question of the day. and will not be ir noted. The conflict Is ri irrepressible."He argued against the extensionof slavery, and ilalisted that. wherever the Government is responsible Icor slavery. the latter should be stricken to the dose frfavlOg spoken of the pro potion of every constitu basal nett in the ?forth. be said that in the South to re seneeted of loner liberty and hating slavery was a opine. If slavery cannot stand before the freedom of speech and the piers let it go down. It la rain to talk of ferther concession/ to slavery. It, last act pf treach ery shuts the door forever to the privileged few. The slaveholdins aristocracy there vs, a - despeitiare. bet contained itself on the doctrines be the Demo braes attempt to testify slavery. The. nenMeracY at the N. YIP cionaists of a few cotters armee and cotton roliticians—a Swiss guard. Who fieht for pay sad do not regrePßOW,o n dis eased the propriety . serit thep i lipe en th e peopl e. of . cessine forever the sale of public lairds, and dedi cation them to free homes for free men. He said that. under the present slatem. thin Government is responsi ble for the abstraeboa of /#1.23 . 11 001,000 from cultivators to so into the pockets of land 'Peculators. Hs main- Milked that mast ban the night to tee free use of treaters: Nature has provided for his sustenance, It was time that the tiasering relics of biedithswi should swese from the astute book. He shored the beneficial @FOOLS* in a eocrel and national new, which would reset frees the bommatead cyst Mr. JUNKIN. of rennsylraata. advocated proteetios pottep 4114 4 614 and Poadereued the free-trade The the vemeoraey. 0441/11Itte• thett,nee, sad tha Now adiolcraB4l