MMI :'-',, 4 -" ' • if 14,1 , , ' 1,,, ,--ALt ..kii,,C•tt z f .., (1 1 . 111 • ' ~, :;46 - SA, 1 „L. 4 :‘, 1 .%. 4 ltr;li:r. ‘ , 4; i',o {,._, # ~ , , D ie. `-:-.: ~ V 4,iC 4 • ;-' rs. ~:: .sf-' Al A 1 , 4 # , * - _, : -I ' 4 ' '4. , '- • - " - it; f-, , - , f,,.... .. __, .., ~. , ._ _..47,777, ,sl7-7.1.7-a.-7tos lt , vaifs.- ifinfli,t,;,,,, i0.k.uat0i:".,..k.........::,;:, , , ' ''l .._ *'',''•-•..'--4.------'' -2140,ista__,_am-rielltaiii,.li.,to--), ...rif •-)., .• • fr i, in th i1in5w•,,,,,,..=0tb, Tile - TrieVliali'' e a i* /14 th" lithe 1 'iiiiitefiet Wiliest. r ;74;:,.4 *** thl iitir • t0,400 , h . ~,s he " t 10; 'PI4;4 .:t0 , - , 00 t 4 - ' 1 14# 11 19 -: P t + '', -.' k - tw.toterest., 4 ' . 5 ' 41"trliati 101 , -'I , t. , itia, :A14100430641L_, a.. lamedto Clia lo ,l ' ',,,,:1itq1240f14.447' 0 * p l a i ce ,id ik On, .`, 1im:7140. 1nea11....„"11-"ftiothut - tehtiortW !Oe g !' v.awar ' .;,...lotity.- of Jar.tigr* , r'lll"with t(*,00044,T e_tko4titi,Cioiso". c(oitt;_iiniiiiiiiis in , e ,,,. 4'tvii Vitifit-t h i ' "- • thal f - slitheel, *Poe, "‘ A ' :' llooVbild.at" - - - it die; '"-i 'l6**(l,V*- ~a . ''' '' ' i h t o ts ''''''sosssiss—tioTer..,-- •-1. • i t ill sflhi 0 'I ' Y f li .7w,-,-* aiiieeneet.,l4 '- - - 'liias sho i t4 1 0606k0 111) ..r pittiatuvi.;t - - the gafa° - -t 1,,,.il -.141a0 !' ' - *Seips af '" . v*IIIMPT.M.WOW(' ' Itzed ''•'sr.,.:iiiiirl"4l 414,54MWintidomps#01 Zrt''. -'1,1.'1, 24,llolnlatit... r,s ', ' , reit* of .tidireeso•,,,/ .. t, -4.4,*,i,,r,!%it, b . her ..,o 4 ,siti k i'LegioloPirv i. _,.2A:_olii,....L'''Nipieo'v ' Y i ,3 "* ---‘ -' ', ttorpswa.i.•l,..' -44V100. - ~ior7 Ef l Ok ' Isissit C04 1 ` , 40- , ' • mar l 0114.110'W .4 41 , 0000.101‘10° _ , i'°l*'- k if itiliie l l iai j. a t i ,k ... ..‘t •-iiiihi,i , eteWllo--"r" .i. rat., - Tiiitio , '-‘,..7..., „__: - - pow` 'zed 00 04,- ta;r , .. , ; '' ' rvot o.4,sseiroval" -o'' -- - 'o.cztekich.* 46,4 0 4,16' tinsteaat Aaar 1#77. „,e...1-:Drel, 'Pie , - • igottisiaikiment' t '1,7,..*,`,t- odists sante a , po w Of , asti 'Pa • - ~-d4-,,1, W--100::508.442;_.• . •' E 45.-126 i ',44"--' lPairinV.PauT ag m. .'' - ,‘ ~,,,,X144.1,4" I),,t' of the ' nrka6 r ailroads ' 1'1. 4 1 ',, Artieff-,ll:it;'-m0nt47.....a. wire liiiiiikr#. ''''",-'ct`iiiilolo ; t4 " . '"''''''' - of pr9ololl i fF x. 4 ______..... ,, , . suoi:thip; but!ilik! ,-. demmoiste-. ..'''=,, -6,u,-u'i•"iike,citY.fr,ll4.- , th a t illio ''''- ' 7 ''lletl'attilf and Iluwsw ' these 4 . - '•= 7 lt itiaoliatol ed-in Abe bide °l ' , ot , vie0;11 03 0 0 7 data" I)B'l'l*in-o's:4lf $ , Y'T. -Iloofie tble -tO, of the` •,-; , der et re , oirriessiti'tha 4" dint ',u so ,le L r" t !' - lethal on. in *et Triter 1 ,..- , ! ~4 4gri, .0 . , ' 6"1"1 " Ile irera l ' ' ' "° ll 4lea bilulf ln .was at -''''''', , - - .1, , 0hmt,. that, 4 ~ . ';','.,,*-1043414 h a ir, tocommendia6 la -''''", one time instnu , nen ' ht l ' ' '1 1. of iliair 1 , - ~,,; .- 00 ' ,'" i4ttes t . ) .t hlt r. I . 1 • 11 !" ,lier,toitooolo PO dis no , to 01 dreaded fa- Vaa 011 agova4o/M0 ,ii pouss, trial bya il.4lailial:itifir,l;r 44%.`tii, truth :_ : Th is .: ha 't•l e„*tot;:iihal<ia47-;'°'' - yo s ii: ofle4ooo : .-.._.heis lotiei: Tho o6 e . 0,, tb,‘ ' band-h 014,1-. p -- li - 4...'tnin44,61- "I ',o 6 t;ti##o*.*lte" 1" ''' ilVi • ntlibtitlat4:''' ' .' eptiOrig Oftiltr .!''' ' 4-,w.e-ii-A'liiiiiiiiii‘ii;V' Ic h ° 01 - •,. ' .I„d6d -",:.14,...-,..t 'pi - -'. ii'.iiied. - '' 7 , ,, , ou t owskaifi iiot'us,: sdeiteteg,' din;'',,lpie',4l/Pteitiotbili.'"w""7. lit .Aidei4e:tl : ', •i'iii . 'ie x,l aun'krr*l 4 y 9 . •,'- fictiatt", ' ~ ' are !1 aix. Ifiee - Aht 'mid, the intiorftfee oilltts-, 4 , , ft * o f a'WM 10040) arMa , - - ::i-j-,..10." h; , ::creit to sairtstrurg;ratAigiktipik r 7.41 ottion". • 'imati m ut or Evispow,- iiiim'irrefa of ' " T. • , rte. ...,:lreOro'SP44ol4"l" in :04 16 04 de-, -§ .= , 3.1114XV1 2 1. L. I ' igt•tottiavtialn; , Aii:. t h,' -',C . ,...' , 141-t , ftoot#o ll i,w . .,* , , , - :As c i nn . -,,f; .--, vow :opt foliknik . , ......,, ots=etipecially Ii , ','• A li a ire t' .pivio,,ennumnn•vt7f. 24' , '• s; toirk, bave ..,.:' ~'' ;: pre-- =•." .er -Ins. it 4 true, jam' " - ' et:legt;i4t4etsf a ~..1 " 6 " .. soniik., 1 . ~ to 4oduce -, jtr4tAilikiklll.," .. T ' ' ' m ' i•bittit blimilitived : - '-;., ' , 44i;ordisorilic 4 6 °11 ,..,,, 4 ,-- - e p ect i, will io kw- , th s to kfte no muff . __ , 771 4 gii. thes,ipkittl ptotir — tifiiO4 fail''' laik'9"P.l" iiiivomoi tieen , I inltiotWt•SOPOOPliiileiebaida le the oict l'--.' iniktitrisilY dampened il t ill tlinAiianibei of ' A'''''46othii.V'*4.lg Si . °. 1....45 'to make-their , • lurio4/1404r59415,:---' , VW iflat t!'-':_____l_____4oM - ' '''' 'EtirOggilnal f o r.'' . ' `,Among l9' ' lie£• of ,PaillePeril 1 _ .i ll° '161141. tb° ,4,4.. ficihn Asia, • olLl''''. P l ' ' imilliir front'lljiw T--, the:- iamesi . of iernit, .i.,•itAiiil4-'314 w e lietiee ,-- : : m r . •E. I,ainina, v t ,piwateir'••• ."•,'Lliozhic#BE '-'. Atil"fik.b."46bCpgrli ttfins(of•- Wooli; ir a taii -16. 4 .* oo ,tes , Cot ... ii . of ~.,,, .• „arAiiii,,,44,ll:l4rwooo., ~.. , , --.,„,„,., • ‘ s,, Co. _i; , ,, - --, /moan/ IL.liAigp— ,, , E I; ‘Mgqlia, ° :The Mettles; TheilthitiitiCiiii kat thd.Offloereice be vtoiett __Sett* rowaiseisiwaritiriewiiia lif on city by both ,pataies, oi.u.:l l Yek:* - ew that Oa cosh* obably'be ems batbsdacedibe kaohlair-66wwithoww4W- twelewhee r:.,5 1 . o . * 116 , „..1ei14 4 10 es than ler atiatinaltzlnuk eeelk '`_=-As was gem. .41417 affikipated,lba analaseiesairtbaDetoo , - 4 " 4 C'pliaty iisa catered upon liaarliaualtiblibia; - Tbarreople's party 'eyeateatap iliaaselatedthiPnianstlaexinbent, IiaI<TAPAT, . r 2 ',v., by hi! mod alai 044r40 to!ho 01 0/ 11 dean, well de n_,.lol•o4Leeliereer and regard fecle Petaleatimmetstoa. - • . nr, connaiwrau—n to o .Bu.LfAen• Taaaaa_ to--.. lto elkara____4llll =are ' l. gaper grallri" ' +Mae we ars, miff tinst ?, , , "setbsav . ' or dues, do tillit 'a :7-.. ' *l' rtia7 - " ' , tit alb la 440 i we ih ,„„m b. ____,, ; d u, pidia4d,Pli • , t i v i pawn or .ii ! ...." I 4i i .‘iivois s i' d ia we lot. aur &owns& 6311"'ili hillihiS*w botsi A n tt Tbi ta ratlsatd,", ..'.; ,':E4 6 I-• i - ..billigoar .-• -t o gpo - Mpg ,im timpicie, of —,,IttaIII4IP"P°I,7 maim Mora a. toed -,-.. iiiamaintima_ iii suktat *7 thaw ' ' *ft 046-011.1111 iallOt qll,OOllOl •"la tb• 14 ''' - oc 1111641101", —ea *Mon ,et 4 riagleg , - Olk 040= t u s ilve dm ,`, 4‘i 1 1 l OM immix' ectiti* *4 '- 4 wet asTh ,'. ,2111#, v All b01a,.,; . OITA* I'M' i..; ' litedli,, by P*610,1,114,1 * Illit. h!".-'.."'' Tlaios; - aaa Ini i r i t ....---.lsaa baea '''''' 'lil. tic-14.4.bi almOst OE7 T,'"*.a,se Isar fl ',t ibiethl---,-, ' them *rant --, .'`,.Meth 07sitts'itti 6%10: -. ' ' sots ot iskisillefilr, ~pies to 12411116"1_i_nie Wei al' •5 , i, Ciihr bine IW' Wore . k l'lllir° of thift, ' ilato 10hr% auk * 1 sadik2C in Doc , • ailay to, thin oturir w ,00:406 ~Ivi *Orr ‘O4O ' ' Plyby .Imliallmit" ‘-4',oloiillll.4llllii libkowleillid' Tor thud the -, ow,. 4 —r--;• 'woo .to oEkTinif - ta‘ ' '4* • "ba - ..4.41.07 aillo."P* , 7 1.. , •-' et wariabft% . ow:4 ill 66. ~,flidgeop..... foibaitbailkal!Wy __. en t o " 10.',;1600'11411Z;67.x5tiw50urfi n._,... .,1410 Take Bomb -4:;;Ailairr4Frailigill4l.!ini"? .7.''" +,7---. 4 -''''''''', Vt,Aak:fteltt "----- .4:.'' ittitit 4 ) lo44ll .o4o4 :Jaelifi oo Vvikg: l, ,cnt 4F i, 6 4=4#. 3 ". t ,:i w t F ab* P!* 4 ProhOn woe 11 1344 r17/41tori 4 0 sa tt ;t t :Dfil is r .ll "C e t i st r i liao4o4NfiAV 4. IE7 414 4# 0 % 0 4 , 1111 ,1 t, 'Cr `;', eaa jvisaby 14 , lace* tr(: sod , badly' 0 0` 1 TOP : $ 7 14 6441410b a1d - • ai l , ft* 4,l Pr e Trw ':1010104-71*04144,' 416" oIOPAT, !"fr Air" lkt 11 - 11 1, 16. "." 114 sOleal&btalesik ws• "IN • •4o 100,1141raadisal,90***swelloIL ' th iiiiill'iiib leis4ii — A -4 i* -144 4 - ,40* .c Mao l 4, +, ,Ifi- ,i, - z s g mitacmcpsail AA •••-• ' A P I4 / 1 01141. ?' 11 1 ,1,... iiiiit s''' hiPabliC f:A g * , 114 . t iti - h7.• Iti ,I.W4'elieit to olo‘' — thAt t l a il4 alba tiili to tiomo l . . . . T. , ' akibirdobid hags ilk NW ,-'!-- Yet ' letior tents* tahoii, gill - mftlit dovii , ti , 41 Afteari!lo,lkirit'l'frf,l,l,°l7:77r, J ia1,,t0gr0.„ !.. „ .. ... ,, -.1- :f T-l o i f e r b.&,41.14P1'- ---'""-'..-----7-17-TAW., Clijr. r4l%.4bEeblalle", "M'Airill'-' W , :44 ' 1' ' I fi lit°ll #_! tir M i t A li i . . 4 "lit k rn • 1 4 jitfliziki 41110 0 44'1 , 1414 41 11 , 1 4 1! , Zilk ' 44 ' *isittitileyibit al• ,116 ‘ 6 0 111 44 11 47: =.!ta • •, ' , 40r4Q.,; ~,ii:~:=T»wiiv:: = il~~ra: WASILLIFICE. , Letter tkiiii„tweerketestel." ' tOormigiandmiee of Tbrinal)' I, 49 l Wrwriar. hlnreh 21,•1866. `. Although the Brunt (hie Cabinet bare been more than lawdlyrantivel *WagtoeVil the true reasons for the removed °Mir. Vandyke, I have beseinabled, by means of a certain spirit nal medium, to get poesiouton of a number of facts to oonnoodon with this last cot of Mr. Buchanan, aired *Molt iiri-bitsresling, Imola% they exhibit tkeineraPfaiantO Wed the ingratitude of the head 'of `fhbllotranment; and at the same time coned. titiSsitanatili vindication al 'the deoapitated our. Thera Tema bu been any eordislity between Oblleator link% and the Dheriot Attorney, at, least never stave the election , of - Mr. Mahan's. Mr. Vaidykiiiedarid another gentlenian for that of. lard when-Baia: odoceeded to it he felt no dim. Ipodtioa to conolliste hie opponent. prom that hour there:atm* between the tea has hews* more and more bitter p a th it has oulndaated in the triumph of thelloileotor and the defeat of Mr. Vandyke. -me cenlatar•frala manaled to induce the Patinae -. ter, the Surveyor, anal the Naval Officer of your AI *lan with Ida in demanding the removal , of Vandyke, and I hear that the President was Inform 'id by them leadbig qfdeiabtithat, utiles' the District Attornetwakdierdwail, they would throw up their oommisdons. Ts addition to' thie, they noecoded in obtaining the aid, in this demonstration, of at IPIII4I Ilia ahertlel the Cehinipt, lAlleved to be Attorney General Black. Secretary Cobh, and Be. 9 _ ,catiPll'a l kalleen I while: esieug the,Welders, in 'Philsdelphis, Messrs. Hebert' Tyler, Arai M., Phillips, and William D. Reed were most %Went is ereendirritthe *We of .the•,Collestar and his friends. An attempt will lamed", as I understand from my confidinhal informant, to account for Kr. Vandyke's %Word, on the pretext that he did not Vacherie Ids - dude, with promptitude, and that his displacement was necessary to produoe a har mony of action between the representative , ' of the Adtalnisivntion in fhiladelpitia. Newt whatever Mos•nay be, mid of lir.Vandyke, it witl,appear In evidence that be is a lawyer of very conshiorable abillicr, sad I learn that each men , as lion. Gerrbalt Mallory, Derdanain H. Dweller; and others ieinally disthei trtied at toe_ Philadel phia bar, will not be unwilling to ter tify to thie ' fast. It is et course natural that the Dlstriat Atiorasi should have made every effort honor* to keep his plias, and that he should hove appalled en more than one occasion to Ladd Mad, thepreshienti to save him from his enemies; butlitive no doubt that if the oorrespondreco be. testi the Plnaident add the District Attorney should be published; it will awesr that the letter has ob t Willa,* tare advantage over the Chid Magistrate of the nation. If such a conespondenaa hex taken $1 ii it will of %awe be Printed. The friends of lir—Vandyke wilt not permit him to be damaged by the pretexteaf the Administration that he was ranweed ,aaeount of inedolency in °Sae, and ehollanf , thali that Ise shall protect himself in the oitl7 way left tri hint. It L rumored here, that_tly 'President, in • anticipation of snob a , revels , 416104 *teas be provide for Idr,""ar , will ttiother Way, nut I Understandlltegs'AiNt "ith anhesitatiegl7, refers any in the oßlos of the ....afladslphia is undoubted The real:easca faat that Mr. Vandyke re. `" ‘v" l ""'''''''' the other offlosholdsrs in pack. IY In 4 6 In order , to carry oat the pro s measures of the Administration. He tined the President in his Lecompton policy my did, but he refused to co-operate' in the iota biken' to compel the subordinates in the cr a tem.hori pest °Moe, navy-yard, eta., on pain ' imagist, to sanction all that had been agreed 'hire and endesed in the old United States •• building; on Chestnut street. Air. Vandyke nativitriand of • the Vie President, and al though 'some of the offlowitolders who have been caret delegstes to Charleston profess the greatest Suess to that aspirant for the Presidenoy, the feeling* ofMr. Baohanan in regard to his assoolite on the ticket in' 1856 may be gathered from' the summery - manner in which he disposed , of one of Ms most Wire suipoWers. Should there be •any pablie oxibarree of the •ream which Induced the 'President to yield the head of his old Mead, they . Intuoiethir rsmovids—that, for Instance, of Mr. Marshal Yost, who is 'adhere to have aimpa- , `Owl against the tuen who have jut suaoseded -In waiting a, Wallin of the United States Distrat"At. the Way, 10e,you ever redhead upon the Siedar of Wallis; in Pinnaylvunia who have hir aerid.,llte, :Oder Magistste.of , the Republic, by 'libelee , favorite eons hie f il mstrip's • roma ? There to aciartkly et, peaty in Peassylvinia in which there. is not at lea% bait a doses Jetties Blahs. alas" ' 1 . 1 0 60 lave pawn' to staiwirt Wanllpod, others its still in their terns, and there was a 'fresh amp:deilegi the campaign at 1856. 1 'can %oldie* for initanoe, each met ias James liu eheaan Vandyke, James Baohanan Sarney, James Badman' Weish, •of York, James Buoitenan Martin, of Philadelphitylsola of George H. Mar dal Bni”) Jeenes - Haahansea Crabber, of Dartpldn, Antes Statesman, fieniik, Jame Buchanan J'onse, Jame Bachinan Blocks, Jamas Buchanan Brown, Wad others In more thin one ease, however, Ora, ycaryptera refuse to wear the entire title, sad ana 111 several the indignant fa thers have deliberated an appeal to the Leghia. tare to give darn another nano. • Thefriendi of Judge Dawdles claim that nearly WI the delegates et . large elected by the Demo. erstia Canventlins of New Yaw, MU on the *6th at - Traiime, are hie „decided friends, and among tae sham Meat • the distriwa, %%vim several wheat* put do's online saute list. -Ifiskin's report has created as muoh %astern'. Wm in Administration strobe as s hand grenade weald create if thrown among a set of imugry Hone aid „ :110,1Mietrity of thellomedttne on Paha, Rx pinmiltunn eentemplate a reply to Mr. Seakin's =PA sad Omahas to be - a were in the epin- Made ti be has bien hold 'and 'able in the Mut ; bat Chit indomitable aeyreseetative has any Tian- Hey of ilettillataithat to return their - siterestAre interest. for every broadside aft ,`deliver. upon hint he will return one even time tenths„ than that, with which he has just startled tini‘ehentry, and for every attempt to re mintinate.uposalin, and hL, amoolates upon , the eimumittisk - he will-'produce a new exposure even moinsonclUslve Mid eferwhelming than the drat: Zits t 1., Raskin hae a Roland, for every one of their Slivers, - isidthiy may as well understand It advance. , ' There ii treat mimes here among the officials Orkiti; mordnatdou of Joim ,Robbins, for Mayor of Philadelphia. Bobbins is a thorough Administra tion Min, and is an completely in the toils of the President as any of lie nearest devotees. Should he he chosen, he will tarry out the beheld of 'ptivoir mitimut scruple. No one pretends to doubt this that knows the man, or who understands the ensehinery by which he was put upon the ticket: wee: riot Wirprimd, in reading over the pro eindiMps of . the Ditnoeratio Convention of the 04, of Philadelphia; two days ago; at the enihrt- Ilea exhibited when the nom of William P: Peekhr ems mentioned in that body. Ills thise penis:term is 'mildly expiring; but what • Mer e.* betimes his retiring from the ofhpe be has so "wortKrilli , d. JAusary, 1861, and . that Other redraws% of the 'Chief Magistrate, In March, of ehlisms , ftorimor Packer, seising hold of the greet primiltde of eiolf-government, In the clew .psignot 1817, which malted in his eicadon,low never' for Wisonnent "yielded It. Traduced and told beyond ail parallel, he hat devoted firtilgrityto an honest Ilk iiiingiof all his diatiesiand Is now one of the most :pcfrlllim,',loOviniorn' Pennsylvania has over had. Mil iitcwe'of - eorrupt partisan - prideeis are models - cl` conmositiOn, ' unanswerable ht login, and, al though ososSonallioverrhUn he the Legislature; may Well be left as models to his "Aomori. pociaroxtL. rublicAmilemeatio. Parry Stall. thieelebrated Nogg& otter, I. now playing Insgeneatent at the,Waleat.street Theatre. If ere bdiihre the bills, this will be the farewell en. -ingesting of Mr. Builfrea in tide city, previous to bitrittiirnl4ll4iglesmi. nu engagements is Phila. : 00/44 bays sIWITO"' Flood very fodeolocoli and Yismost.ene einany, so. Ile hes played, sine. d. 'apPearanee; on Monday light, the principal e .theraeten in , Ilaselet," ," The Gamester," and A/Whine:.' , Be in:forted the Part of Deis relit in: Mc Onthore's "comedy of , iThe Wonder ; or; Vines -Reaps .6 Secret," to a litripi'andiente lastevenist Ills Bondy, in l' 0 11 ..aaNtnr," ,r l 4 Rschaisti are both of then @plan. petionainiseti Be' will hie* ii benefit this „appserft in the two chancier, of /14. t iendrliad-pon Maser de ...linens. It would be very Alineltlorillr,lialliven to Omen, a otos* Mose -tie* B . hytope,looof bin pietist persons :Alit& in.-to o , line Of tragedy, Fad Do* Cans, in t.kid kinkgonteiV. ' Reserred. Oatsntar!): sir " °Wielder's/ the 44-at this , grly.woda *ice ilti'fortlaular attention of tki evade Si tie isle of embroider's', ladles' Oent 110,InizatItiVablaa, ,beint4 and tstnitiAs and blend Inees,,velvet ribbon/Olt!** !lair !Pal htesPelats Mai 11;111thilh to., to be iold this ,liatttal vat tin veleelttyll. Lea;et, Cheitiut stfiet. • • , - Tsar Fortinui;or Ittoeusr, Cooit:—Wrlto fa took Natty Yea mint. At to Weans Hall, in %mon Ronne sad s dintitta dna was ',Won inendente azt e nts i4if i t a rot lg .' : e tV • _Until woo utt t=kozo/ ttifttgetk v :iic• NititoAirit ,proomat.;l%. T=4; !neat •t t fo r Beredea 4siOtatiost took 7 the otollooor. mood a Imo 'ding *ovum LATEST NEWS to, The Pram ,FROM WASHINQTO2i. RP Ulfi' DESPATCHES to 441111 PUSS" THE TARIP? Wasutnotollaslarolt U.,.-The tariff disouesion htes been fised to the Rouse fbr Wednesday of next week Our friends are 'sanguine that Mr. Moustmis bill pill. Pen by decidSod sugoilty. The utmost anxiety is manifested to Ina General FOSTER, the Demooratlo can didate I Col. Ctravin; the Repablican candidate and all those who are actively supporting thus exoellint can •didatem for, Governor, on the ground, to rally their re erotivaftismis. so as tohave action on the question. and take it out of the i'residentiel canvass. THE BUNTER COMBINATION BROKEN ,UP. theism. upon good authority, that a carious held for thi parson of uniting the Bonniest' delegates at Charleeton upon ktr. litravin, of Virginia, biota up in something likes row, the high tiontraoting patties Biding It imiesinblis 'to bring their forces together,' ' MORE" TROUBLE IN TOE 'ADMINISTRATION CAMP. Mt INDIANA UNITED STATES MAR BEAU There has been a sharp fight going on between Bens-, for Freon sad the lion, Mn IFitoLtin, of *cilia bill notoriety, for the United States Marslialahlp of In wide vacant by the death °Lion!! Mr. Exeisen is a Mina - date fiir" the Oilfired Plates fie this pligeb of Mr.' Fircir, and . presinied his father 'for the °Mee. Prron opposed the appointment, on thoi ground Ostßuozoisu Would use the patronage and influence of the Ace to elect hie son, and asked the appointment of one ofkus own friends. After a terri bie,contest, the President to-day sent rn the name Of - E1101:Ilik to t. 40 6 enate. FITCH will try to defeat hie confirtnation.' Oy the appoisthielt, th e Pr esident'; hi . Mideritood to declare hl wish that ENemsi shall no ! Geed Fires. 'tramline Ito ba sesn'whiiik'side the mosrstie flenatorsi will take in the controversy. Tin 881ZURP. ' OP THU sPeNIBII-MEXICAN STEAMERS, AND CAPTAIN TURNER. Ptahlie sentiment hers is almost universal to support of the action Of Captain Unmet, who' led in the at tack men the finnisieldetioan steamers. Rig de- Mitek,s,will, be published to-day ; or toloorrow. From, his letters to confidential friends it ; miners that_ he fined ender clear orders, thug confirming my former despatch. Illis ‘ friends fear that the President and hie Cabinet will sat as usual, and only half sustain the ce • tare of these ships. ' OccAelo.,7 •rsz COMMITTEE Tma• Committeeoll [DESPATCH TO THE AeSOCIATETAOItiEB. ft..l consider the Atlsonri WastrixorexiMarott POT - Territories met tit • ts ironeltudoe evidence, the Porti a° Jeffsn " rtsur Srabont twelve thrnmand, Jdn Mowsrpv-'. ex.:incise Cation of le,ihs - delegate from New Menlo°, concurred o ' .n was's statements, and testified that the ma-, ..,..ffion of Arisons was regarded all a necesintr tor the pie of New Mexico. , Mr. Wsurasis, from Jefferson, semi a statinant, showing the neoessity for a Territorial Goireinment He estimates the votlnt population at eight thouesiid. The President has appointed Major ELIIHE 3, 800 , Lieu, long a member of the Indians Legislature, and an active Democratic politioien, marshal of that State, in Diann of Mr. Roninson, deceased. The President's neatest took the House by surplice, no intiutstion hexing encoded its transmission to that body. IMPORTANT REPORT ON TEITI ADMISSION OF KANSAS INTO THE UNION, COMMEEIOATED 'TO THE ROUSE OP REPRE EENTATIyEgI OF THE UP TED STATES, .THURSDAY AFTERNOON. ' - DIY mow. TILIORAPH WOK " TAY PIMIL"I The Committee on the Territeriem to' whom 'were referred the Constitution adopted by the people of Kan gas on the fourth day of October, A. D. leiCend the Memorial of the Convention, Marini! Congress to ad. 't altlganssis llEltste:into the Confederacy, beiges had the gams under etnedderatton, beg leave to submit the following report ; Article first of the amendments to the consilhation guaranties 't therfght of Meese/ 4 v tellftlabietearentbie exteto 'Deities the Gsterneeett far a redress of Wet,- meat." , The Constitution being the imprimis laiW Of the thhi right, of the - people eattiot be restricted or i re- P . M red in any manner by any action of Congreee. :The people of a • Territory have, therefore, the right, at all , times, peaceably to assemble .and to petition for sta ling@ of grievances. _ If the grievance iminpisined of be the Territorial organisation, they may a4mimpikay their Petition for its abrogation with a 'apeolbeetion of the kind of , Government or the form of redress Mildred. This is their 'lat, whether authorised by any previous act of Congress or not. • Bach wee the doctrine affirmed during President :act son's Administration in the decision of Ms Attorney General trsniegitting .lostmotions to the Governor of Arkai3sas, who was disposed to prematlhe formation of sConetitatios by the people, witbbut a previous act of Congress for that purpose, In these instreotiews, given by direction of the 'President, September 'Met, Igte, referring to the right of the people to ree‘without sunk sothoner, he says: They landoubtedlY. Poetess the ordinary privilege' and immenitiss of eitisens of the United Slates. Among thew le the right of the people peaceably to assemble and to petition the Government for-the redress of grievanees. In the enemass of this right, the inhabi tants of Arkansas may ganeeidAY Ineeetemettier in Pri mary amenably, or in convention chosen by sash astern tiles, for the pursues of pebtioning Congress to abro gate the Territorial Government, and to admit them into the Union as an independent State. "The _Union form vitiates/isi may give to their pa• talon cannot be material, solo:4 as they rondos them• selves to the niers- right of petitloniag, and conduct all theMproceedings in a peaosableksommer. And, as the rower of Congress over the whole subject is plenary and unlimited, theimar swept any Constitution formed, whisk, in their Judgment, mem the muse of the peoPIO to be affeetred by it. If, therefore, the citiseas of Arkansas think proper to weaurepany their petition by a written Constitution. formed and agreed upon .by them in primary 11111118111 blies, or by s convention of delegates cheese by such sagemblies. I perceive no legal objection to their poker to - do so." Under this doctrine, which is only, an enforcement of • one of the guarantees of the Constitution. and is in ac cordaitoe with the uniform practice of the Government formore than hall s century, the people of any Tani tory me/. at any time, petition Congrees for edmilmion into the Union as a State. An inquiry into the manner of the formation of the Constitution of a prorated State is of no importance. save as IS means of aocergaining whether id" meets the sense of the people to be affected by it;" Entblmg acts pf Congress, or any other acts pre /snooty to she rar(Statica Of 4 Goes ftstroe'hy the pee. pre, are, therefore, Important only as a Means of authen ticating the will of the people, or of proving the germ ination of their Pennon. Of the twenty States added to the Union since the adoption of the Federal Constitution, eleven have been admitted without any previous act of Congress autho- Aging the forniationpf a Constitution. Six of these formed their Constitutions sod State Governments in pursuance of laws emanating from their respective Ter ritorial Legislatures. Following these precedents, the people of Kansas present their petition accompanied by a Montanan formed in pursuance of an sot of the Territorial Legislature, approved by the Governor on' th e eleventh day of February, A. P. M. and ratified and adopted by the people at an election held for that Purpose, as required by said law, on the first Tuesday of Ootober lett. • liourMirtutilttes, regarding the right of the people of a ,TerritorY peaceably to assemble and• form for them selves a Constitution and state Government, to be pre sented as their petition to Congress, as one of the 'OW maces of the Constitution, cannot regard any condi tion imposed,by Congress, attempting to impair the ex creme of that right, as valid or binding, either upon the People themselves or a subsequent Canvass. If suoh a condition mould be imposed, then the people could be deprived of a right scoured in the Constitution itself, so long as Cotopaxi should refits, or neglect to remove such condition. ' As In this ease, should it be claimed that until soar. tam population shall be ascertained ter 1 . legal weans no' application for admfalion ,of s "State) into the Union is to be !cleaved; then the. people' Of Mintsoould be excluded so long as Congress should n y egleot or prevent the taking of a 01111AIUS. 'Buda a dootrina would ridable a majority of Congress to nullify at will' oily of UM guarantees of the Constitotiom ' • ' The people of Senses, therefore, in presenting their 'application for admianon tie s State Into the Un.ti hate done nothing bat whet they. have an ondoubtil! right to do under the Constitution ; and it m for Con gress to 'make each dmposition of It u, shall seem to them to be Jest and proper. By satiate 4. notion S. of the Constitution, " Nato Italic may bs ddmited by the Congress into the lesion." The power of Congress over this whole subject L. therefor., plenary and unlimited. The acceptance "dfraletition of a petition for the admission of a State testa entirely in the decision of Congrem at the time of such- application. The queetlons to be considered on such appliestion are—the oonformity of its organise don to the requirements of the Constitution: the amount of its population; and whether the majority of the people desire to' be admitted as a Slate under the Constibition presented; If so, would the welfare of the people of the proposed state, and the general interests of the whole country, be promoted by its admission. The Sort and meet important of theme inquiries is to, determine whoa's? the mojority of the people to be effected by it desire soh admission. For, however clearly the application mar-be ithe Moneta, of a non mitutional right, it le, nevertheless. a mere petition and unless approved by a majority of those upon whom it is to operate, the petition should not be granted. da this ease there can be no question but that the Con stitution presented meets -the wishes Of those who nre to be affected by it, for it was adopted atd ratified at a fair 'Melon, held for that purpose, in which the whole people, without distinction of partyi participated, by a majority . of fourl thousand eight hundred,and ninety; one. In an aggregate vote of After.* thousand nine hun dred and fittpope, being almost two to one In its as anima br the official proclamation of the Governor, which ii thereby aerinded. and made Cart of this report. 4a to population. if there was any doubt on that point, ram committee regard it as ',lived by the station of Ckmgrese. A:nishirity of both Houses, on the thirtieth day of April; A. D. item. deemed by vote that there was soffialma population within the limit, new Prorated for Kansas to enable it to be admitted as * slave State i and certainly that semi populatiOnr increased by two years' immigration, should be; in the judgment of Kim eomMitteir, sufilelent for a free State, Deleon Congreji prepares to establish one rale, as to population. for the admissions of slave States, and another and a different one &Mires States, , ' Your corropittee, therefore, deem it noneoelleary.to inquirointo Me precise number of the prosent Noe of Katmai, for, if ordinary mourns tutu tbel* W could be any °allow. on that Ilanat.theY MY e sit far as Kamai. momerried, bun twice removed by them:ding of congress. In addition to the instants, )use tilted, the Hours of keyresentatirts four /taro ago tUtsead an act for the admission of the ditto t and the Renate mused an sot for the Immediate formation of tidbits Govern mast, id order to snob admission without regard to population. Nina the first notion of Congress the popu lation tom snore than doubled,and hag increased very tamely moils tittlaat. . , At the lest session of Convey/1; Creeps was,' admitted with a hos *mutation thin that of Kamm. -The largest Tote seer polled it any elution in Oregon swoons to admission wu ten Outland one hundred and ;Monty one, (10.111,) while the vote, polled in Kauai on - the adoptitutof tide COnstltation, (and that, too, under ji glary lair that iimilred Ma With* reeidshoe for the uteri) the aggregate vote polled, inoluding the vote of the fifteen oonettee not,olibnallt tettirled, azotqad eft vantern thousand (If .000 ) Of the SU Cougnmeionol dlathoitillt the Union, there were, by the offloial return, of the last Congressional one hundred owl gifts-two distriote that THE PRESS.-PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, MARCH 30, 1860. polled, itioh,leie tithe einonteinthottetind(ll4oo)votes , 80, the legal' Voteof Xllllll4l, on the first Tuesday of April, A, D., jeggionoseded that of almost two-thirds of the' Gengreasolonet distriets in the Maim. A Teiriterial Government, being limited in the exer cise of political power., and the people thereof greet 4 rearward in their action. should be Continued only E. long as the nice-elite' which give l'ite to.lt last. When ever, therefore, the population becomes sufficiently numerous to maintain a Government of their own, with out impaling upon theca excessive biirdens of ta xation, and they are - desirous of taking upon themselves the responsibilities of a, Mete Government, why should not their request be granted, unless there are remitting of a general character, affecting the whole country, e n d thug relieve them from a condition of Terrllbrial pipilage by restoring' them to their - right& of self-government, of whleh, front theyiecteesitiell of the case, they have been Partially deprived? For, during the existence of {he Territorial ,Qovernment, the people do not select their own rulers, nor can they legislate without .being sub jected to the supervision of the General Government over their sots. Their Governor is appointed by the President, with - veto power on all ante - of the Legislature, which neu tralises the votes of-two-thirds of its members. The Judges who construe the kiwi are shin the appointees of the President. The people of a Teriltory, therefore, have no voice in the selection of its executive or Judi cial officers, for they all hold, their positions at the will of the President: ,While the Oovernment of every independent people, under our eyitem, is competed of three departmenti— the' executive, the legislative, and the Judiolal—the peop!* of n Territory have no voice or control in the so leotipn or the manngement of either ?! these depart- ~..,... manta, save in the legislative; sod even in this depart- Weireanior the Government. ought to mimeo the Con meat an executive officer, wholly irresponsible to the l oot of all of them, in their relatimistowards eaoh other, *nth mutual forbearance end respect At least, °nob people, controls by his veto two-thirds of the power of iaa a ri to &mend justice from ,the oti ar. .Tne that. Sr it the people of a Territory, even under the Ken- , a ,," l it fmpl is that the Coneuthtional rights and sag-Nehreeka bill, are Invented with only the one-third mmunities of the Executive have been violated, in the emit br the powers 'of one of the three departments of rson of the President. The trialdran impireehinent of he President before the genet° on ob era es Preferred end their Government. .So long, then, as the people non-, reseauted against him by the Oouseed Representatives, Untie under a 'territorial organisation. as n ot e oonsti. ould be en imposing spectacle for th.i world. be the toted, they ate clothed with-only one-ninth hart of the malt, pot only his removal !rem the Presidential offiem ' "W ere e f their Go ver nm e nt' t h e hetes " bein g vested 7m o ii i Olta b :oi t i n g i li v i e rgire b lehi ti :tial s acil'r i , n b a o r ri i rtgeTyli in the Government of the United State,. cattle present slid of future generations. might pima Lily Vidilthe formation of a State Government thiii Neer' be tarnished. The disgrace esst ripen him would in vision resulti not only from the poWer vested in the sg e e ri g:Srg o tr e 4,e h ri o e i lt o d u rgl in lh . e i g=te e r p t r i. e f c l l , l , o . pymyse .....,„ meir de• .. opptirtro 1 General Government by the Conehtuttostitself, but to a tines ado n pted p br the Constitution to secure a fair trial. great degree from the nature of a Territorial Govern- On rush a trial , it declares that the Chief Justice shall meet and the neettinty of the ones. The settlers of a relpi tia ll o gi n is l '2:,t,lXb i t t iegi.:. zi ecitAte il t i lt: framers th octli c e . new Territory, at the Urea...able in numbers and widely, "' President might be biased by th• Mat that "in pass of separated, have to contend with the wage end the 'the removal of the President from office" " the same wild beast for the dominion of the wilderness, and are. shall devolve on the Vice President." involve impeachment, have „ or al i h s e ir er g iti e l s irn w lme hi r c y b pr . oc r eedings in the Howe in the ease for a time,tiot of sufficient numbers I strength, or wealth to protect themselves alone against the ancleilised ln- been wed and wisely se tied, by long practice upon pr in linemen which surround them. Renee the General fiCeiOlolex ol 0 1° 0 JUs4ae, both tra,;(l,:ctresoe,tis:nodfijou,tile vernment establishes a temporary government. appoints precedent rel e. of T ___,_,./ersi V i ? l____ after careful review of all r „ WI.I vend] ro to predict, stand . the Luke Edward I,,awlesiq the its executive and Judicial °floors. ties and limitingtheirJurisdietiOY;fixing tlieVilartrie accuser, Pi 7 leintad a's- itcwi l all the expenses of theta xman' of its sesaions ; build set forth• ffiklatois arß" °°l° ' the Hausa. in which lie laint fle prayed " thatißlhaallYi his canoes of cern" l' d uct and prooeedings in its members and the y dielr public headings, and sae . i i his behalf of the s ai d Judge their mule and,aohret must have is supervis or y power • by your honorable body, and suoh rbe inquired into necessary aim:tent thee created. But this supervision as to your 'wisdom and Justice shall sedViD made tijefesm over theaie at the earliest practicable moment consist- Co i f:rim waseN re erred Th e e jUdidiallM t r i Migee ' shoed& the general welfere and protection of the Iron- to make Similar inveatisations. a irt 9 s P it ' s a t t iin c d i ii - M7 I _iernettlements. . iniitee. supposed to be appointed without reference o. In the cub °tannage there eardbe no doubt that there any spoofs ease, and at eminent three is presumed to he lest this - time sufficient Population end wealth to male - Womlit e re:ent pOr n trots e a' thetrtiion. e ; s ho n ee actil l ial u n s t e - Min a firm Government yritt out excessive taxation snots with Judietal proceedings. and Whose habits of in elreenotigen, b t e he no Te re n as it o o n rm o l n or th geni at se -- nature Of things, e more important. in the case of veetigation qualify them peculiarly for the .task. No tribunal, from their position ,and ohmmeter, could, in the u om i x i u n n t i filo people, cllli ° n t h g tion. 1,. : . . Judas Peek the w itnesses were selected by the cem r If there was a uniform rule as to population for new • mitts* itself, with the view to ascertain the truth of the States, and that of Barges was less than the required charge. They were cress-examined by him, and every= thing was oonduated in such a manner as to afford him number, yet the history of its Territorial Government, no reasonable cause of complaint. and the etrounistances surrounding its people, from the In view of Chic precedent, and what is of far ,grenter time of their first settlement, would of themselves be * pretence, i 0 view of the Coaititution and principles sufficient to 'make their Ordination for admission an the Ilin i d li gnie e s i lle l li tr at aTe a lgy er th i r I t l h o e us l e 'W o l fitlp t r o e- f exception to any general rule. even if snob rule existed. sentativen 7 Mr. John C e ovode a Representative from , . The Government under which they have been forced Pennsylvania , is the accuser o f President. Inatead ' to live began with a despotism cruel and Woody, seta- t l especially i° tiiitti;eotwiin Judge e o d k e , n a te n d o r r i r r i r n , n e r the times, sad _ bliehed by armedusurpatlon, and marked in its continm don to the Committee on the Judiciary, the House have s antis by the revolting atrocities which characterise made my accuser one of my Judea*. savage warfam,emanating directly from the Territorial to:Vclfilaekseollhuerd accuser the i Judge Is " caolataintino:dotri; the e Organization, • or supported and 'defended' by those practice of all civilised nations. kvery ireem n must clothed with Its authority. As to the character of the revolt at MIOD a spectacle. I am to ape beeore, Mr. Territorial Government imposed upontlim peoplelof Kan- e C =l:e tg 'i ri:iritels o :eitrhgh h ii4 l grigri;ot: aroprsc; spa, your committee beg leave to refer to the despatches himself, to sustain his own accusations against .me ; of Governor Geary to the President, 'dated Sept. 9, 1955, anti uerhaps even this poor boon may be denied to the Executive Bailments, SS Sees. Sith Cong., Vol.l. Pt. 1, President. And what is the nature of the investigation which his pap:4B3mnd /10,in which be says i - - _ _ — .resolution proposes to institute 1 ~..it vi as vague and se . , _ . __ find twit I have not simply to contend naiad bands of armed natant and bninole, wheel-sole aim rd end is assassination and-robbery ; infatuated Rd erents and • advocates of. conflicting sentiments and al institution, end evil-disposed person. actuated hy a desire to obtain elevated positions • aut.-worst of at), nonce - the, iniluence. re men who 'hays beertplaced authority and have employed all the destructsve aunts around ahem to promote their own personal interests, at the sacrifice of every Jest, honorable, and taxied con sideration. •• I have brirely . time to give yona thief statement of facts as I find them. The tdwn of Leavenworth is now In the hands of armed bodies of mem, who, having beta eprofted Its militia. perpetrate outrages of the most atronove character, under the shadow„ of authority from the' Territorial Government. Within a few days these men have robbed and drivin from their homes unending eitisens ; have jived .upon: and hilted; others in their omit dwellings, and stolen horses andproperty, under the pretence of IM ptoying them in the public service. They Imre seised persons who hid committed no offence, and after 'Ode ping them of all their valuables. placed them on steam. ere and sent thenout of.the Tecritory l " Innolated or country 'glues no man's life is safe. The roads are fi lled with armed robbers i and 'murders for mere plunder are of daily 000111101100. Abnost every farm-house is deserted, and no traveller , hem the temerity to venter s upon the highways Without an escort," In dentibing the condition of the Territory at the time 'of his arrival, lu his farewell to the petiple of /WWI • Senate, 0•0.01080/111011. Seth Cong., Ito. IT, page NO, he says t Delegation 'and ruin reigned on every hand ; homes and homing were deserted ; the smoke of burning dwellings darkened the Iktmosp.bere ; women slid ',atilt dna, driven from their habitations wandered over the prairies, emus the woodlands. or soutipit refuse and protection even among Um Indian tribe*. Buoh was the ohaniter of -the flovernifint, and the condition of the people of ideas's, is denribed by an ere-witness in his official deinenes to the President of the United Kates, at the tortilme that Cossense, by reason of the disagreement of tin Senate 'to Skelton, bill admitting Kenn., refused to redress the wings or this people by. aepplenting ,their nutted Territorial Government by on of their own formation. • T h e people of Kaman again apply for admiseion es a Stets into the Union, with a vaunt poputatton exceed ing that of a majority of-the Celngressionst districts in he old States, and a representative ponnialdon greater than that of either Florida or Oiegon, sod with an area of 80,053 square miles of territory, and undeveloped ma , tonal teloofimo of vast extent. For five years the freemen of the nation have watch ed the progress of events in' Kansas with an intensity of feeling seldom, if evert equalled in in history of the country ; for there they hehe'd, firths Snit time during inexistence, an organised effort of the minority, by fraud and throe, and armed invasions, sustained by the General Government, to establish and perpetuate slavery against the will of the majority. la order to give quiet to the whole cou ntry on fhb? subject, remove an element of discord from the political arena. and restore to the people of Kenna their rights of 'self-government; we recommend their admission into the Union is a State, and hareiwith'report it bill.' 1.01DiV1111411114 [O Protest of the ,Prestdent Aguinst yodels Committee ,of Inquiry. Mr. CLAY, of Alabama, from the Coinnlitte• on COM WIMP,.e. reported Overeat', pe the iptition for the ere-- Ron or certain mer in De aware bay. Also. reported a bill to provide thy the introduction of B. P. Rogers eirle of marine "tenets. Mr. Green's. of Missouri. Joint resolution for an ad journment of Commas from the fOth of April to the flat of Map wee then taken up. Mr. ANT ON If. of Rhode Leland , moved an amend ment that t two Rouses-of Congress *Wenn) sine die on the le,h June. Mr. OLIN MAN opposed the recess, and offered an amendment for the adjournment of Congreaa sins die On the first of June. Mr. GREEN edvoeated his resolution. was well k no wn that during the seasons of rt atlonalConvon- Cons no homes' could be tmnseeted. and edionntmen to would have to be made every three days, adding to the .1 : 8° l art4=. the Louisiana, and OMR of California, copoledt o motioned adjourrinient. The amendments were withdrawn and the resolution voted down by yeas M, nays B. 3 he bill supplementary to the net to authorize protec tion to altisens of the United States who may disoover demi' is of guano, was taken up and passed. Mr. OMR, of Californin. gave notice that on this day week he would call up toe racifio Railroad MIL Ho hod lost all hope of anything bet done in the other Rouse. On motion of Mr. DAlrtn, the bill to prevent deser tions and facilitate enliennentejn the army of the 'United States was taken no and passed. On motion of Mr. GRIMES, of lowa, the Net resolu tion, removing certain restrictions upon the Arent of five nations of land to lowa. we/ taken up and rimed. The army appropriation bill, wee received from the ;rouge and reseed second reading, and then referred to the Committee on Merino.. • The Senate then wont into executive eesilon, and sub sequently adjourned. HOWIE OF REPRESENTATIVES. ' The Rousepassed the army appropnation Mr, FENTON . of. New York. from the Committee on Revolutionary reported a bill providing for the settlement or the claims of °Moe» and soldiers of the Revolutionary army. and the widows and children of those who died in the service. r Mr, ROYCE. or Vermont, from the Committee on FOTellett Affairs, reported the French spoliation bill. • The conelderation of the was Poston:led for two weeks. Me. Ulu OW, of Pennsylvania. Trorn the Ciommittee on Territories!, reported back the bill for the admission ot Aeneas into the Union. He desired the vote k, be taken at an early day. • Mr, CRAWFORD. of Georgia. saw no niennity for a lengthy disouseson on Mho bill. Re resumed the milk), of sentlemen were made up on the subject. He •fts willing to *Word anoePortnnity to test the question by moving , that the bill be laid on the table, • Mr. CLARK, of Missouri, wanted tilfTeesday to pre pata7ll3l33l7ragAbt, of Ohio, said im bad an titter contempt for that equivocal position which sometimes gives factitious importance to• • the meinbera of this noose, from a doubt as to how they shall `auto tone im portant meaeures penning here. To relieve 'himself fremenT much posit - lona:a desired to say when a condi. date 10 M. before those who have honored him with a meet in this House, he said thet whenever Kansas should Cresent a republican rorm of Conautution. framed by onvention. mbled. end soting under a valid law of her Territorial Legislature, and submitted to and rati fied by a fair and honest vote of her people, she ehoiod have hi s euppon, for en immediate admission. whether she had ninety three thousand inhabitants or sot. and at :the liter session.when the bill for the admission of Oregon wee pending in this Rouse, herald that where ver Kansas sheuldere as Oregon had come. paseetibly. orderly, and wit a Constitution expressirm the will of her people, ega l ly,and honestly ascertniced, he would vote for her admission. The se pledges he proposed to mete gond. • Kansas was ere. having, his Judgment , eubetantially oomplio wlth these several cenditions. and upon all the w rte lioMade in RO(4 faith, whether direct or inoldental. be eld co vote em to secure her early admission into the Lot i o n . .as gentlelnan.. and sea man of boner. he. wee und so do vote. Haling said thus Much. and leaving tier herein° the motherly nurture end solicitude of the gentlemen from Pen i t vane, (Mr. Grow.) skilled lie he was. too, In civil ob stetries, he now bade farewell, a wind t hin must I*, and bath been, geld, that makes us linger—yet, farewell, forever, to bleedin g Keesim. Mr. GA_RNE Of Virginia. said it was well known that the Engli sh 'in never would have been missed had i. not been provided that Kansas should not be admitted until it has a population of ninety-three thousand. A legislative compromise hinds nobody but those who vote for it, As a gentleman and n man of honor. he eould not vote for the admission of Kansas until the condition. of the English bill be complied with. Mr. DAVIS. of Indians, said he shout!) vote, at the first favorable oppertunitg, for the edmisslon of Kan gas, mid this would be consonant with his whole politleal idly r. GROW proposed to postpone the odnilderation of the bin tin edneday. Mr. BURNETT, of Kentucky, wrui prepared to vote Mr. ROUBTON, of Alabama. 1, - too. Feltner prinmedinge were interrupted by the reoet.- lion of the following oommunication from the Presi dent : To the Howie orlif eptesentehteti Alter &dela,' which hie afforded me ample time for Natation, aid after intieh and careful deliberation, I find myself constrained by an toMetious sense of duty M a eo-ordinate branch of the Federal Government, to protest against the first two °lenses of the first resolution, adopted by the House of Representatives do the aft, instant, end published in the Congressional Wags on the sueeeirdins day.. These Mamma are Ithe following words t • Beiclved, hat a oornmjttee of five inernbers op- Pointed by t e !Meer or the purpose First, of in vestigating whether t e re s ident of the United Mates, Or any Other °Meer 0 the uovernmeet. hie, by money. thtronage,or other Improper means , sought to influence e action of Congress. nrt,py oemrvotttse thereof, for or : 1 1 4 .Ig t fi t t h . e arn s a a rg i tz . , o la s i n r itirgr i l d d n also to inquire into and Invesogate whetner nee otheer'or Officers of the Government have, by combination or otherwise, pre vented or defeated, o attempted to prevent or detest, the execution of any law or laws now upon the statute book, and whether the President has failed or rehised to compel the execution of any law thereof. I confine myself exclusively to theft two branches of the resolution; because the portions of it which follow mists to- alleged abuses in the post° gloss, navy yards, ptddle' building's, and other puhho winks of the United etttee. In siieh times inquiries , are highlytgooPer themselves, and belong equally tot he Senate end House, as Incident to their legislative duties, and being neces sary to enable them to discover and to provide theoppro V. 8. CAPITOL, WA THIITOT ' OPI, Maroi; 29. MESSAGE OF THE PRESIDENT. mime heislisive remedies for any abuses tirhioh ma* be e mertalined,,Althourh the terms of %imitator Trillion of - the resolution are extremely vague and general. Pet tor, mho purposeiriadvethlng Ott ihsoltr at varied! fete mark tee broad line of distinction between the apeitiatory mot the remedial oiliness of this resolution. , The gouge of immeee n tatives passes no power under the constim. itrotaLle tri rstteoortzpztigo roUtiop , nrptlhltrtlt a :f t ' ! °l em wthle 7 nathe4 l n 7 aa t lelajly body is fully and eheertifly ei ti ltie solely the grit, or paver,propose at to make a AM ObefflVEltlonli. Broom in this single case. the eonstitutiOn luau toweled the, House of Representatives withao cowman turkdiction. no supremaey whatever over the Presi dent. la nil other respeote be is quite es independent of them se they ate of turn. As a co-ordinate branch of thil °morn:neat he their equal. indeed. he is the only dirent representative one earth of the people of all and *soh of thesovereign States. To theimand to them alone, he is responsibie, whilst noting within tee sphere of me eratntional duly. and not any manner td`the House of itepresmtatives. The people have thought proper to invest, him with the most honorable. iesponsible, end dignified office in the world i ,and the individual, however unworthr , now, holding this exalted pos.tion, wilt take care so far as in him hes, that their rights and ethrogetives shall never be violated in hie vermin, bun &Wiliam , to his sucicersors unimpaired by the adoption of a dangerous precedent. He will defend them to the altextrernitr itgathlt'l,ny' unconstitutional attempt. tome from what Quarter It may, to abridge the °mutton , / t s o o r r ia l a r t iwithattyo human the n E v x n e; t r i v e e x , o,. a p n t d t r h e . n m d . e v h e i a m . su b . The people have net confines the President to he exercise of executive dotter. They ,have also m A upon him largo meas u re tor legirla dye 'discretion. No bill can bedtime a law with in' his approval as representmg the people of the Uoited majri, if two-thirds of both houses. fa his legislative °sca nty. he might, in common with the Bennie and House if flepressntlitivee. initituie eh inquiry io kecettain my facts tglooh ought to in fluenoe n jUilgment in 'roving or getolug arty hill. This participation an thoper ormanoe of legislative duties between.the (xi nrdinate - Z1"11" — "'"alr 14" n rat an t e ng saguaro o worth to make i. The committee is to itiquire.not into ant speoifio charge or charges, but whether tho Xresident hair, by " rndney, Patronage. or other Improper means, sought to influ ence," not the sewn of any individual member or mem bers. but "the action" (of the entire body) "of Con• great" itself, "or any committee thereof." The Pre sident m'ght hey° had some glimmering of the nature of the offence to be investigated had his mouser point ed to the sot or acts of Congress which he Bought to base .or to defeat by the employment of " miner, patronage, or other improper roma." But the accusa tion is bounded by no such limits. It extends to the whole of role of legislation t " furor against the passage of any law Appertaining to the rights Many State or Ter ritory," And what law does not appertain to the rights of some State or Tat ritory And what law or laws hag the President failed to execute 3 These might easily have t e lle en erke i tl e a d nrttu l gT t 4 ole s iti c a n dr e i z ir s y t Red h 1 r. her !edge Peak, in general terms, had not violated his Judi.' "me dame without the speotfiaation of any particu lar not. I do not believe there would have been a single vote in that bode in Savor of the inquiry. eines the time or the Star Chamber and , of general war rants thertehas been no such proceeding to ungland..The House of Representatives—the high impeaching power of the country—without consenting to hear await of explanation, nave endorsed this accusation against the President, and made it their own aOl ~ 'I hey even re robed to permit a member to Menem o the k'resident's accuser what wore the specific charges against d i m e.o Meson this prelimlnary acausation of ' high is and misdemeanors" against a co.ordinate branch of the Dous e d order the impeaching power, the House refused to hear a melte suareetion even in • regard to the correct mode of proceeding; but, without a, mo ment's tleley, passed the amiusatory resolutions under thy pressure of the previous quad*. to the institution of a pratecutien for any offence sitainet the _ most humble citiken—aid I diem for; for silif no greater rightly than he enjoys—the • Constittation or the united States, and of the several States, requi re that be shall be informed, in the mg besinnolgr 01 the nature and cause of the accusation against elm. in (rider • to enable him to prepare for his - distance. rtwee Awe other principles whmh I might enu merate. not len ignored, presenting an impenetrable enters pro test every eitisen falsely obarAed :with At orrin • offence. • These hose been violatied in thee tion instituted by the Homo of Repro. illintatiVeie against, the executive branch et, the llovernMent. Shall the President alone be deprived of the protection of these great principles, which revail le every land where a ray of liberty penetrates p the aleraM of despotism t Shall the Executive aloes be &reeved of rights which all his fellow•citleens edict' ? The whole proceeding against hum Justifies the tears of those vase and great men who, before the Constitution was adopted by the Matte. apprehended that the ten dearly of the government was to the aggrandisement of tee legislative at the espouse of the executive and Ju &Oat departments. I WWI. gaoler, emphatically. that I make thie pro test for no reason personal to myself, and Ido itwith Perfect resct for the House of Representatives. in which I Ma d the honor of serving as a member for five successive terms. I have lived looajn this goodly laud. and have enjoyed all the offices and honors which inr country could bestow. Amid the political storms through which I have passed. the present is the first st tempt which has aver been made, to my i nowledge, to , assail my personal or official integrity. and this 214 the time is approaching when I shall voluntarily retire from the ammo. of my (toiletry. I feel proudly conscious that there is no puha act of my life which will not hear the strictest scrutiny. 1 defy all investigation. Nothing but the basest perjury can sully my good name. do not tear even this. because !cherish an humble confidence that the gracious 'Being who has hitherto defended and protected me against the shafts of Wee- Coed and malice will not desert me now, when I have ,teloome oldand gray-headed. I can declare, , before God and my country, that no human being, with an exception scarcely worthy of notice, has at any period of MI life, dared to approach me with a corrupt or dishoeorable proPoedion and until recent developments , it had never entered into my imaginatlen that any person, even in the storm of exasperated political excitement, would charge me. in the meet remote degree, with having made ,uch a pro ton to any human being. I may now, how ever, exclaim, in the language of complaint employed by my first and greatest predecessor, teat el have been abused. ',in such exag g erated and andeoftin terms as emild scarcely he applied to a Neio—Lo a 1104710th" de faulter, or even to a common pickpocket." I do, therefore, for the reasons stated, and in the name of the people of the. United State., solemnly : protest against these proceedings of the House th e pesents tives,tehuse they are in violation of rights of a co-ordinate executive branch of the Government, and subversive of its constitutional independence ,• because they are calculated to looter a band of interested para site. apd Informers. ever ready, for their own advant age, to swear before ex-parte committees to pretended Private ooriverattione beta eon the President and them /elves—lncapable. from their nature, of being disproved, thus furnishing materiel fur harassing him, Misruling him in the eyes of the country, and eventually. should he be a weak or a timid man, rendering him subservient to improper influences, in Order CO avoid such persecu tions and annoyances; because they tend to destioy that harmonious action for the common rood which Might to be maintained and which I sincerely design to cherish between 00-Ordinate branches of the Govern ment t and finally, because, if unresisted, they would establish a preoedent dangerous and embarrassing to all any encoessors, to whatever political party they might be attached. JAMEd SUCHAIVAN. Wage/1407ex, 23th March, 11760. Mr. SHERIVILAN, of Ohio. said the President has made, for the first time, an issue with this House on a moat important power, lie was willing to give to the communication the consideration which its nravitxdo mends. He was willing that the House should go into committee, and consider whether they have the power to investigate Anything_ done by the executive branch of the Government. The Constitution declares that the President, Vice President. and others, en convic tion of treason, bribery, and other high crime'', shall be removea from office, and another clause declares that the House shall have the sole power of stiperioh meet. Under these clauses the house has the right to inquire into ansthing, whether affecting_ even one of the little pages here. or the President. The President, however. nays the House can only make inquiry tato his official conduct by impeachment; but how can It be ascertained whether the President has violated his du- Vestals tt be by en exam nation There is no ether we Would the President have them round articles oft ambulant on mei° rumor No. The very ne cessity of the case implies that the House has the power. Should there be probable cause, then they could prefer articles or impeachment. Every session they exam:, into the noeduct of some officer or member. What die- Motion was there be twern a member and the President as to their constitutional rights that should induce them to mere an exception in favor of the President? The dooti ins avowed by him wee the same that prevailed in England when Cantles the First we; brought to the blook:nantely The King can do no wrong"—the mine that led Lathe death of Louis the Sixteenth. The dm trine of the Preeldeat was the worst that bad been ini tiated since the loundatloo of this Government. Mr. OR aIGE, of North Carolina, said that tee Presi dent does not deny thewer, and therefore the argu ment et the gentleman talls to the ground. The Presi dent admits the right of the House to impeach: but de mos tnat hie accuser [Mr. Covello] shall sit on the ease. lie could net sit quiet and permit the allegation to so uncontredieted. [Cries of order l" from the Republican side.) Mr. CRAIGE. Be objects to the mode. Mr. SR e.R MAN. By what other mode can the charges be investigated? Mr. CRAIGE, Refer it to the Committee on the Jo. dietary, as heretofore in such oases Mr. SHERMAN. Wm* should the President tell us how te ref , . r the 'subject ? We oan refer it as we choose, and the President has no risht to say oay. We apPoint gentlemen to examine into the tinth of the altegatione, so they may ascertain whether they are such founded. ea the President has entered hie protest, I am willing that the House shall accept of the challenge. I move that the measure be relerred to the Committee on the Judiciary, with leave to reporf,nt any time, by bill, re. solut.on. or otherwise. Mr. BOtIOCK. of Virginia. said that Inasmuch as he had asked that the message be taken up for considers tine, the usual courtesy should have boon extended to him to make the motion concern in its disposition. Ile knew the Speaker wee not aware of the usual custom, but the member from Gino 1 Mr. shertnani knew better. tie intended ro submit the very few remarks tie had to make in a spirit of calmness. It was an important mes• sage calculated to create n (bounden throughout the country. It was it grave, able. And imwrtant resonate, end he hoped gentlemen would mime to its consideration us a manner worthy of the occasion. The President does not °Meet to an inquiry concerning his conduct; but asks ro be treated as the humblest individual Woul d he under allegations of any character, the chimes against the President were vague and indefinite. When Pdr. Covode offered his reeolutioq he hound Mound(' in en embarrassing position, and did not vote for it for the reasons shadowed forth. Mr. CAMPBaLL, of Pennsylvania, said a grand jury have the power, nut only to found an indictment on eneeifie shames, but unlimited power to make a pre 'ointment to the court on all matters which come to their knowledee. Mr. BOCOCK replied The proposition wati. that grand icier can net as a witness if he knows of a vim cal act, but cannot in Pennsylvania call tip a witness end sok him whether he knows of any wrong of any particular person. You must call attention to some wrong before you can force him to testify. He repeated that thq honor and dignity of the country demand that you ought to extend to the President the same fair deal ingy ou would to the humblest individual. COYODE eiplamed, that in his resolution he did not make theteharge. The Presto ant himself made it in his CentennlE Pitieburg Celebration letter. when he Mid that money web used for the purpose or carrying the election' in Pennsylvania. He IMr. Cevedel had merely stepped forward to see who used the money. Mr.GROW agreed with Mr. Booook. That was smatter of ooneemance, as It pertained to the rights of a of? -or dinate branch of the uovernment. Jr the House pro posed to impeach by any committee, the President would be right in his concluelons, he House Must prefer the articles of impeachment and the Senate mutt try the case, but an inquiry as to what influence had bean used to adept the legfelation of the country, of emerge, games with it no impeachment. Your corn matteeshould ascertain whether the President Weeguilty of a violation of duty. Suppose that was the case, your committee would simply , report the fact. • • MT. Wnrr bLEY, of Deware, naked tbe gentlem en whether he was willing to investigate the conduct of the President without specific ehareet. Mr. FLORENCE, ot eennsylvania. I hat's what the President objects to. [Laughter from the Republican side.) Hscompliins that you will not extend to him the (mattes) , you would to a common plogpresket. Mr, COVODE repeated that the President himself made the 'charge. he testimony onst previous mos. Mon reamed tee' belief that the Pregnant's party in Pedneylvania used' money to affect the elsotiens. The President handed mere letter to the Secretary of the Navy for that putedse. •Could they not inveitifate and ascertain in what districts the money Was ed BRABSON. of Terms's°, meld they could not un dere and the nteensse until they had ,an opportunity to read it, And suggested that the consideration of the question be postponed until this day week. Mr, OVODB said that the speoial committee had al readywitidence— r. RANCH. of North Carolina, intern:Ming, bid the gentleman could not divulge the prooeedings of the committee. Mr. COVODD remarked that he had the best evidence of inch use of money. as the President had been written to for come. to use azai nit the party opposed to him. Mr. &KAN gm said. if the reotleman was stating the teeth:emir bp fore the committee. he must ewer, Mr. WINSLOW, of North Carolina, rimplained that the President mates no objection to the inquiry, but to the first branch of the resolution. which brings no spe cific chars°. Na =liaison objection to the latter part. eut i j r rier l d e :o p t E be lt N tliiife r d . 1' VI e ;Vol could discuss it now, BOCOCK resumed t Jt was not true that such communications were without precedent. A do tinguisbed Democratic Pte Went Old Hickory" sent to a protect to the senate amain its action which affected him. Tice gentleman from Penney Wawa, [Mr. Dm/ode) hod not Omen that this was not a vague and indefinite inquiry. Mr, COVOI/R. I cannot make it otherwise. Mr. HOCOCK replied that the President - has not pro tested against what the gentleman cannot do, but what he has done.. Does the use of money show oorrupttoq The gentleman With his other party nawoistes has in circulation asecret circulor callica on their friends to contribute nidneji Ihr the nee of the Republican party. Mr. KILOOR of Indiana said tne circular contains a recommendation to contribute money to disaitimnate usetufinfortnation, lust the same es the WaileiOnary so cieties raioo money to send Bibles to the heathen. [Laughter on the Republican side.) Mr. BOCOCh replied. But the abject was to sand,out (else Bi hiss, false doctrines. and false prophets, It wee reserved for the generous and portly gentleman from Indiana to ()Mlle forward and take the defence of this matter. The gentleman wee the very one who required of his candidate for Tie printer that the profits should be divided for l.ne oefit of his party. [Laughter on the Democratic Side. BEA If the President should hap pen to Allow the use of money. then it is wrong. and • there meet be sweeping charges against him. Mr. HASKIN, of New York, said this manner of pasting the subject was unworthy ot the dignity of this icily. It was not in order to descend' to ditty party Tne President's plea is abatement should go to the Commitiee OfltheJudioiars, Thevesting of reference only wee legitimate for discussion, This House has heed Insulted by the - Napoleonic decree of the President.. Mr. BOODDIt replied that these remarks came .aP propriately from one who had declared that he had noted as a Republican ally. He bowed to the goalie man. in humble noknowledernent for his lecture on the dignity of this House. i ',oughts.' on the 'Derneeratte side,and a voice " Good "] He asked whether it was not an injury to the Precedent to bring forward loose. vague, and, indefinite charges T Was that no punishment ? The Presiden t has tlehied the sweeping allegations. He moved the noatponernent of the question. Not agreed to, On motion'of Mr. SHERMAN. the mensage was re ferred to the Committee on the Judiciary, with leave to re m rt ;i nve.' .ltcrAN, of Pennsylvania, as chairman 'of that committee, said an early, report will be made, and a fair opportunity allowed for its discussion. Mr. SHERMAN..from the Committee of Was and Means. reported the consular and diplomatio bill. The House went unto committee of the Whole on the state of the Union on the deficiency bill. Mr. MONTGOMBItY.of Penns , Ivania, made a speech in favor of Douglas' view of slavery In the Territories, and advocated his nomination for the Presidency. If he was selected tie a candidate, he would parry_ every Southern et4te: There was not a disunionist North or Booth whole au advocate of Douglas. lim friends will meet the cry of disunion at Charleston. The committee then rose, and the Houma adjourned. PENNSYLVANIA LEGISLATURE. Etartalsal7RO. March -- SNATE. . thr"" ' " " II "kals The Cessjon vas devoted to Private hills. several-ea.° Zeh passed finally and amour them the following: im pont i, - "ta, ? time & Western Merket_flornmsny CotaP ill inrui lthibidelphia •to rate the Sooiety -Braddiag 61. "%1teel hia -to ineorpo- Incorporate the 'Wyoming Nominee hatioti• corporate the Pottsville Dimes Malaga tie; bra . vat. of I 7 toe; to incorporate the Western 1,1 noa and Trust co. of Philadelphia ; to authorise the rotation of the rittaburg. Fort Warne. sad Chicago it. R. Company' to incorporate the Saegersville Railroad Company. of Lehigh county t a Wit relative to the Pow elton estate, of West Philadelphia, held by or for , the Pennsylvania Railroad ComeallY supplement id the" not relative to the sale of certain real e'tate of Eliza beth Powell, deceased. 7he Rouse amendments to the bill relative to the atSpoustment of auditors (making the bill general, except in Philadelphia)were concurred in. The bill to erect the new county a Cameron, ' watch P dlo n o ' d 'd , Alttrilo'ins veryi 1767:t t Ylt!'ploro d w lIff; hands of the Governor, and doubts areexpressed u to his approving it. Adjourned. - - SO-DAY • , PRoctriMlNOs. The several standing committees reverted a large number of bills, and among them the bill from the House to nature to lerrnere certain rights in the Piffle delphia markets ; abill to reduce the width of Wake held street, in the Oity of Philadelphia ; to incorporate the Amermatve rhino) Aid Association' to Incorporate' the Farmer ' s Company of Phil adelphia; to in corporate the United Fite men's luminance ComParlY.o Philadelphia ; to incorporate the Union Hall Aasoma tioil of the Falls of Schuylkill; to incorporate the Borth American Transit lneuranoe Company; incorporating the,Parliam Sewing Machine Company ; incorporating the United States Traveller's Insurance, and prohibit ir it bone-boiling establishments in the First ward. An net prohibiting the importation of fish in certain eeasohs wee retorted with it negative recommendation. Alec tie bills relative to mechanics' bens; requiring the e. usquphenna Canal Company to comply with their charter; incorporating the Cotton Flax Manufeetaring Company. and incorporating the German Hospital of Philadelphia. The Committee on Vice and Immorality. to whom were referred numerous memorials for an amendment of the Sunday laws so as to allow the running of passenger railway cars on the Sabbath. made a written report les mining the present laws, and deeming any modification inexpedient. Mr. Saliva read in place a bill to inconate the }a mide Dementia Missionary Society of P hiladelphia for the spiritual benefit of the inmates of tee almelinnae, which was taken up and passed, es was also the bill re lative to auditors' fees. Mr. Scsett, of Bedford withdrew the bill authorising the tale of the Pittsburg and Coneellsville Railroad. The general appropriation bill front the House was reported to the committee. and was at ones taken up and pained Committee of the Whole with but few amendments. t ne of tlrese.amsndments raises the ea lanes of the law Judges to the interior counties to riteper annum. Senate then took up, on second reading. the bill to establish a system of free banking in i'enn sylvan's. The first seotien Was agreed to—yeae /7, nays la. This was a test question - An amendment was adopted that no bank shall be established under this law, with less than five oor voraters. PENNY offered an amendment that no bank shall be established with legethati 8100,000 capital. Instead of 866,000. es the bill provides ; but it was not agreed to— eas It. nay! le. Mesarg. WELSH. Parer, and IVlAlsgme opposed file hill generally, in earnest speeches, while Messrs. 111- NET. SMITH aid Kagnifial advocated its passage.. Mr. liv.owiar moved to amend the thirteenth seetion so as to require a majority of the direetors to reside in the county where the bank is located , which .Was av i resd trtrit. y** 16. nays Ip. F •y end other* declared that this amend ment immured the usefulqess of the bill and voted against the section; but it was agreed , to-yeas 16, nays Mr. SHAEFFER. Moved to postpoae the bill indefinitely, Which was not agreed to—) vas 13. nays 18. Oa motion. the boor of actiourfirtient wag enspended. with a view of making adisposition of the bill before adjourning. The bill finally passed second reading. The only ma terial additional emenduient was One proposed by Mr. KRTCHULS, VI, authorise any of the banks applying for Chatters, at this session, to organize under the provi stone of this law, without further advertisement. Pro vided the Attorney-General Lenity that they had duly advertised. . . . . aIr,BALDIVIN'a amendment, requiring a majority of the directors to melee in the county where the bank in located, was reconsidered and struck out. Adjourned. arTMINOON eiteeloN. The afternoon session was devoted to the considera tion of private bills, quite a number of which peened, and among them the following: To reduce the number of aldermen in the Twenty-fourth ward of Philadel phia; to incorporate the North American Transit rill Company ; 17. nay. 6; to ineorporate the Allegheny coMPaPY; to reduce the width of Chatham street. Philadelphia, to incorpor.te the Parham Bowing Ma chine manufactory of Penneilvunia; reduce the width of Waketield street, Irom hal t Noble to Penn street. Philadelphia; a supplement to the mocha. nice' lien law , laPpl)ing oniv to Chester and Dela. ware counties); to authorize the Pint Baptist Church of Philadelphia to tell mertain reel estate; to extend the natter of the Columbia Bank—yeas 16, nays 12; a supplement to the_ect to authorise the i3erman Hvauseheal Church oiWittsburic to Im prove n certain lot; a supplement to the set relative to the enrolment tax—lit provides that the enrolment act shall not apply to the North Philadelphia Plank Goad Company, provided said company pay the enrolment tax within ton da. after the passage of the nog/ ; to incorporate the U nited States Travellers Insurance Coany. • T mp he bill to extend the charter of the Columbia Bank was reported favorably. The report of the committee of conference on the bill relative to the license of vehicle' in Pittsburg and Al legheny. was adopted. bin Batt, called up the bill to allow farmers certain rights in the Philadelphia markets ; but it was objected to, a nd laid over. Mr. TURNICY moved to proceed to the , :oneideration of the bill from the House relative to the police of Phi ladelphia, which had been vetoed by the egovernor. bat it wan not agreed to—pean 11, nays 21. This was a strictly Party Vote, be i ngdicates the certain defeat of t two-thirds necessary to its passage. Mr. Bone maoher,Democrat. was absent. Mr. YALIIIta read in place a supplement tn• the militia law. The object of the bill is to distribute the military fund among the organised volunteer com panies of the btate. Adjourned till evening. The Renate returned the consideration of private bills: The supplement to the act incorporating the Pittsburg, Kittanning t and Warren Riulroad Company. which had been vetoed by the tie vermin was taken up and passed by the constitutional majority of two thirds—yeas 21, myr,..r.bills to incorporate the Farm Mock :Association of Delaware county ; to incorporate the Philadelphia Amaidental Insumnos Company ; to incorporate the United Piremen's insurance Company of Philadelphia; to vacate old Harrison greet. Philadelphia; a •UPDIE, meta to the chatter of the Pittsburg Bridge ComPanY ; and a Mil to incorporate the Weatena Boup society of Philadelphia. all posed finally. The bill to incorporate the Pennsylvania Canned Coal Company passed second readmit. Tho t.ommittee of confereime on the bill to inoon, potato the Roberts lion Company made report, and the report war adopted...A4lmuned. ROUSE. Mr. O'NEILL offered a resolution for the bolding of an evening session, for the coneideration of the bill autho rizing the A tto nay General to withhold the foreclosure of the Sunbury and Erie mortgage until MM. Mr. GontroN moved to amend the resolution in as also to make the bill prohibiting the judges of the Supreme Corn t from issuing write, except in distrusts in which they are sitting, the order of the evening. Mr. BEARDSLIE moved to postpone the subject for the present, which was not agreed to—yeast!), nays 61. The amendment was agreed to, and the resohltion adopted. Mr- &meant) presenter( memorials from the Mayor and Bpard or Trade of Philadelphia favoring the OX4i. sage of the bill for the re li ef of the'Bunbury and Erie Railroad Company, releasing them fr.sin the payment of interest on their bonde, ko. Five memorials were read. Mr. Peru OAST called up the supplement to the char ter of the Green and Coetes-street Railway, authoriz ing the extension of their tracks on Green street and Landing avenue, watch passed finally. The bill extending the °barter of the Columbia Bank passed Mlally—yeas 41, nays 56. The Henze then resumed the consideration of the private calendar of Tuesday last, when a large number of bills were rend and ordered to be prepared ror a second reading. Among them were the following: For the erection of new public buildings in Philadelphia! rem hating , the election Mistrusts in Philadelphia.; Incorpo rating the Veterinary College • enabling the city of Philadelphia to net apart ground . for the erection of new public building q ; incorporating the Ratchets' and Drovers' Loan Alsoonition ; supplement to charter of the Petawrire County and southwark Railroad Compa ny, and euppiement to Girard Col.ege Passenger Rail way Company. adjourned. The Governor hes signed the hill relative to the grades' in %Vest Phltade.phia ; satablirlang a house of correc tion; atithortzing the Mayor to act as a committing magiatrate; supplement to Philadelphia and braystinah steamship Company ; ineorporattns the Conservalory of arta ; for the relief of the Humane Engine COM'. rjrny ; and for the_payment of the expenses of the con tested once of the Fourteenth district. CM= The House reemned the consideration of bills on first read ng on the en vote calendar. The following. among a largo number of others, were prepared Inc second loading : Preventing aocidente from steam boiler ex plosions; preventing frauds ov oily officials against the oily. through false °lmmo, fur the better method of assessing taxes and valuing real estate; authori zing the f4:huylaill Valley Railroad Company to extend its mad ; for incorporating the Good Spring and Mahoney Railroad; for requiring the Union Canal Company to car the State road and school taxes; for incorporating the Old Guard of Phila delphia; for °bonging the pame of the !defoliants' In entente Company; for Incorporating the Mineral Transportation Comptinyt a supplement to the act in corporating the Hopewell Coal and Iron Company an ant confirming the titian( the Mutual Saving Aesoolas tion to certain real estate; a supplement to the ant incorporating the Chamhsrsburg and Allegheny Rail road Company; a supplement to the sot in&epo rating the Mount Airy • and Lime-kiln Plank-road ; an sot relative to Philadelphia ground-rents end Judgments; a supplement to the Incorporating the Carbon Mutual Interlines, Company • an act Incor porating the Oil Creek Railroad Company; an act tor opening Drum street. from buttonwood to Poplar an sot incorporating the American Engravers' Compa• ny; and act repealing the law respiring the Supreme Court to appoint three Guardia,e of the Poor. Mr. n ItIYNAOY moved to reopealtter the vete by which the House had negatived the bill providing for the laws of the Commonwealth. Agreed to—yeas to, nays M. The question was then takes, shall the bill pass ? Agreed to. Adjourned until evening. from BESSTOIT. Mr. STAMM. from the Committee or Ways and Means, reported, as committed, the bill authorizing the appointment of oommmeionera to negotiate for the pur chase from Virginia of the Pan Handle Railroad. The Sunbury and Erie Railroad bill being the epeoial order, the House proceeded to the consideration of the act supplementary to an ant for the isle of the hate Canals. This ant allows the Attorney tieneritl to exer else h k discretion as to aiming out the Sunbury and Erie monger° in case of ninety-dors failure on the part of the Company to pay the interest after January next. ~ Biles.o.l.ltx moved an amendment, making it the imperative duty of the Anon°, (Memel, instead of making it discretionary with him, to commence Pro ceedings against the corneae/. The amendment was lost—yea!' 31. nlye 67. Ail the Philadelphia members, except etr, \Vales. voted against it. Mr. PrnoNo moved an amendment sick that no pro ,ceedinee shoud, commence, under soy circumstances. until February neat. Agreed to. Mr. LW. moved 'an amendment, imperatively re %Wring the Attorney tienerdl.to commence proceed ings; if the interest was not paid within nicety days ak ter the lit of February, next year. Lost—yeas 32. nays 60 All the Philadelphia members voted against the amendment. MO.; Jacitientrinseyeeig asnandnient, making' the' '- BMW Ilen of throe mi ei* preferred one, and appro• priating the lirsrpiloceedeolkatil Mile to pay,this teed-pas VA nay, ( BaaansLen Offered ma amendment that, when the .works are offered for sale. end the bids shall not be spf- Orient to yay the interest due the State, it shall be the &Ayer the, Attorney General to stay proceediegs t atid that this' set shall not allot the priority of ,the estate lien. Massie. Elitsntiscsi mad Antics favored the amend ment. Mr. Goupoe spoke earnestly in opposition to it., - Mr. Kinney broadly and %utterly oeposed the bill. de claring that it laced too much power in the hands) of the Attorney General. • After some further discussion. of .rather an egniting character, the-bill wee agreed term the second reading: - yeas b9.naye.l3--xll One Philadelphia mem bore voting in favor of It. : 7 ;• Mr. Idrtiorr'o'oefered pi new section that,' in ease of a sale. contractors' and laborers' aligns shall have prefo-_ rence over the State clean. - - - Mr. Mira. moved to amend the amendment by limit init.the amount to &SOO MO - Mr. GoRDON meld the contractors' claims already reached nearly $lOO,OOO. :rhos. were entitled to prece denoe by law and runt. - Mr. Antics said the first duty of the Legislature was to protect,the olti gene or the State by opposing the pa. gall of (tee telauttous Any. Elppogo thought the interests ofqhe citizens would be best promoted by completing this great and important thoroughfare. - ter. etey.le.t denied that the Ruebury, and - Erie Rail road was more thin s pnvateisPecelation. , Why should the Mate favor Knw, than Others ? Neither the Penn sylvania. the Reeding. 'or other meritorious radroade, had come here begging for aid. the original bailor the sale of the canals wris - mionitOnv Mr. WILLINTON denied this. 'rho tlati_eanals had been an eremobecal measute to theStatei. , pe also dented that t hie wag' the only road which had sought. pt. te aid. Many others had obtained it. Mr. Kitenew denounced the wholes projectnewel) as the road. as rotten and corrupt. What had become of the money already advanced by the state ? Mr. Alricsnx agreed' with Mr. Kinney- • Mr. HILL declared that the new section would destroy and over-ride every State interest. Vol.:lams might 'seek tollhouse( dollars: • - - . • • , Mr. GORDON said $6OO 000, a. provided , would not re lieve the contractors, and appealed to the house to pay the laboring men trembling °lithe verge of r01a.... Mr. tIi.EAD urged the passage of the bill. Mr. Pitoczcaron pleaded that the Banbury and Erie road was Justus much entitled to extension as any nn= fortunate creditor. lie refuted the assertion that the State had not helped other roads. She one gay. the Reeding nailtoed an gatemen for twenty years. The House wag' still in melon at ten o'clock. LATER FROM MEXICO. ARRIVAL OF THE IL S. STEAMER WA*E BOMBARDMENT OF VERA CRUZ. Three Attacks- on the City—Miratoon tinkled with Considerable Loss. THE AMERICAN CONSULATE MIRA:ROWS - • ' ESPECIAL MARK. THE SIEGE RAISED AND MIRAIIION WITH DRAWING TOWARDS THE CAPITAL. ' MIRAMON ORDERS THE BANISHMENT OF AIM RICANS AND CONFISCATION OF THEIR! - ' PROPERTY. Naw ORLEANS, March 113.t-The Uni ed &Mee "Genetic Wave. from Vera Cruz on the lid for thus nort. has rut into Berwick Bay short of coal. The object of the Wave in coming here is to obtain suppliegand ammunition for the squadron. The following Interesting advioes froni lifenicoere furnished: The bombardment of Vera Cruz was continued till the morning - of the 17thortien litiramon attacked the nit but alter half an hour's combat his force wad 'd with °onside table loss. T - women and children of the city, to the number of M.eotreet refuge in the.castle during the attack. The bomhartment Wei resumed on the same day with renewed vigor, doing m ach damage. • One bomb burst inAbs _America. permutes, which seemed to be the especial mark for Miramon. Another 'insult was attempted on the night of the 19th, Initials.; quietly repulsed. General Caravajal's tome had captured aeorrlalapn a convoy of fifteen wagons, loaded with munitions and provisions, and oontanong x 21060 in.apacie. deattoed for al i ramon's army. Ihe guard, consisUng of Ito men. was dispersed. Miramon raised the siege im the 21st, and withdrew towards the capital. The dates from the City of Mexico are to thelBth instant. After the capture rf Marin's steamers Miramon pent a deoree to the capital confiscating. nielArnertaan pro perty, and ordering that all iitobnoans be sent out of the.contitry. F r Days Later from California. (By overland mail and telegraph.] MT.LOV% STATION. March 29.—The. overland limb, _with elan Francisco advices to the 9th instant, and tele g"itheiUdgteesdoSttataiiTgittreiev4B4sitgrirgh. i f s or ' itf. n° %id. the Shubriek, for a cruise. down the coast, sailed from San Frenetic° on the Bth instant. NAN NBANClscoadarob 9.—There have been no #ryi vals since the last deipatch. sailed, on tlaritti, snips Amadei and AintEldridge for Callao - • t - Dui:nese in first hands was 'light this Week withthe country. There wee more doing by jobbers, but the demand was not reignited at the chme. The stoakwul be run down very close by both the city and country trade before taking new supplies. in the hope of lower the the views of holders and spermlators. - The effect is, the market has become inactive, and it is difficult to say which way the scale willturn. In,orMhed sugar there is no transantion. tint the market is strong, r manageta offer 14alrithoutfinding sellers.' "A yetiring of the Re Anery Company controls their stock,. which moves lighter theatres' expected: and as 511 the hastern w held by two operators. Joint action by these Tames willpush the market to whatever point the con- ' sumption will stand, and i 8 to Itleents is likely to do th e •rule. The transactions this week. in Adamantine CanHles were 4.000 boxes at leo, the market closing heavy; In Coal there has teen a small jobbing sale, but, the ten deney for ell kinds is downward ; Lackawanna is ;Mated et Sat West Hartley, 420. Corso is dnti and upahauued, Drypoods drill_ Fruit and Dried Apples heavy • no toad lots offering, .Tin sad Glue ami slow, at the i.E anew: Lions. In Metals nothing doing. egolames and Syrup high. Nails unsaleable at 80We. Naval Stores low and declining for Tar, Fitch. sad Noels. o.la—The market is quiet. In Fork titers have been no sales but inferior at auction, at which the market was eustained. Saconl--No sales ; prism firm. Sutter—Sales in lots of 8 1 5 Paekagse by auction at Itlialitior, WO Cape Horn and-Isthmus Rutter, 2(1025c. Lied is mrequeet, withoutteitther ad- Vallee. Aug Rice im Hari. Sugar—lvo 22 Cabe and Musooyado 9rill3h'e. Cruihed.l4o. ofthred :anima Turpentine is nominal at Me. - ' Wines were unchanged. There had beep an increase of folly fifty ear cent. in the toren , n invoices entered at the custom house lime. January Ist. over last year. Toe new steamer Milton B. Latham ha* commoned running between Ban Immo° and Sacramento, es an OPedtt,4,°,,,en boot. oe to be received at San Franoisce for the construction of machinery ,-for the Washoe Many men of means were leaving for them. Ihe nbenrbing question in , the Legisitture was the bill to grant to a rompany the right to constructsea wall nlong the water front of Ban T h ere was great danger of its varietal!. The Senate had passed a bill ampropriatilig"66o,ooo to the company constructing -the first telegraph irom California ti the Mississippi. and 640000 tel the second line. Another, route was rig&tred to a Wileet committee, and the indications of its passage ware fair. There were dMt 00 in the State Treasury at the end offiebruary. - The Senate has a special agent out spying the noun try seat of sierra Nevada. the design Ming to mature into tbe practicability of annexing -the Washoe gold and silver region to California. There was a proposition to substitute the 118th for the 120 . 11 meridian as the boundary line between California end Utah. by which about MOW square miles will ha added to the former, including the settlements and all the .rahle end inhabitable Laudon the western rim of the Great Resin Ragas rumored in the Legislature that, as 60.000 Cali fornians may vitut the new mining and aericultural re pion the ensuing season. it is ad, tektite that Congress wilt extend the borders, of California to se to include and protect them. Tele plan is to be ursed on Con*vess se nieferable to creating the proposed Territory of Ne vada. A bill had versed the Senate authorising Dulls county to issue Sn)0,000 worth of railroad bonds, ono tiontanur mg the Sacramento Valley Railroad to Oroville. The survey of a railroad route from Sacramento to Folsom proves that the ground was more favorable than anticipated, and ft was estimated that the road would be completed at a oust of a million dollars. A. vein of coal had been discovered within two miles of the town of Sonnies, which, it was thought, would . Prove extensive. The quality closely resembled Cannel coal. The news from ghe Washoe mines is of the eamo'cha rimer as hitherto. A passenger train of it hundred mules will'ioan inks regular trine between Neyada and Carson The Grass Valley Natrona/ say, the owners of the ground known as the Shaft clambers struck the web unation of the Cometoek silver vein, at about ri aerator of a mile from the rich mines already opened It Virguut cl Extmctions from the original Comstock lead were of astonishingrichnest. The !demean Company had declined to sell more of their claim, and refused an offer of 51,000 par foot. The Ophir claim was held at even. a higher sum. About 8100.00 u worth of ore was visible at the Ophir gulch or caner for ten miles below Virginia; and mace were being worked for gold. and paring Israeli. A correspondent. writing from Alba. near Virginia City, on the 29th. says, "there has been almost every mineral in the world discovered here—gold, silver. lead, coppers., antimony , bismuth. plumhago , An.. and lead and copper almost ii their pure state. Already there are mines of gaver being developed for sixty miles in length and fifteen in brinulth." Very exciting accounts continue to be received from the new Fold mines in Southern Oregon. The quarts found at Gold Hill, near Jacksonville, was the richest ever discovered on this coast. A ledge bog inien opened in two plum, and two men have already taken out $50.510 worth of gold from one of them. with only the ordinary mining implements. On the sth, $75,000 worth of rook waa taken froth the other. . _ , People from that nor th ern part of the State ware flock ing to Jaokko.vi ire by the hundred, daily. A destructive fire occurred at Sacramento on Bandar. Six valuable houses and a number of fine borate *we.* burned. The loss amounted to 825 000. - Flour IMO selling at 25 cents per pound in Carson Valley, and other kinds of provisions were charged for in proportion. Sala FRAINCISCO Match 70—Afiernonn.—Saw Sugars are active ; sales of a million pounds of No. 1 to ape ro tators nod the trade. The highest priee realized was 530. Sales of 600 hble of Levering's crushed to Jobbers at 18c. The country demand was somewhat better for general merchandise. Provisions are wearier. A large fire at Tehanta, on the night of the 9th, de nt mood a flour mill and ice contents, valued at ammo. There was an insurance of only 810.000 On the loss: Front Washington. WAstlllfaToN. Mende 29--The House bill No. 241, au thorising publishers p print .on their papers the date when their subscript toes expire. and reducing the post age on town and oar drop letters to one cent, was final ly passed by both Houses of Congress yesterday. ; Arrival of the Steamship Ariel. 'Maw You. Much 99—The steamship Anel. from Aspinwall, with the California mails of tna oth instant. arrived at this port this evening. Her advices have been anticipated. The steamer Ariel brines sissmon in specie. . Delegates to Charleston. Pirrueseneo Va.. March Sl.—The delesates to the Charleston Convention, elected from the Fourth COn- Hp , moons' dtstrint,tare equally divided between Wise and unter. Fire at New Orleans. elstv Onianns. March P. Mears. Fell & Brother's ',rockery Mote. on 13 ravier street, was destroyed by fire last night. The loss le esti:anted et 860,1X10. The Prize Steamers. ORLSANII. Ideroh 22 —The prize etesmers he.'•e been libelled by the U. [I. Marshal. The prisonere ere now being examined. Non-arrival of the Steamer Arabia. SANDY NODE, Morels 30-1 o'clock A.M.—There are no amino(' the steamship orebts, now due, with Liver pool advteee to the 17th inst. Markets by Telegraph. • HAL2tNpAH March 29.—Flour Steady at $9.75 for How ard 'treat. Wheat firm at $17001.65 for white. and $1 406144 for ed. Corn deli; white ham deolmed 2o ; Kal* et 650020 ; yellow 70airlo. Yrovistone eteadri but not native. Miss Ntonrotuams on NUMINO —ln her relent ly published work on "Nursing the Sick," Miss Nightingale sale: • Macaulay somewhere says, that it is extraordi nary that. Whereas the laws of the motions of the heavenly bodies, fav removed as they are from us, are perfectly well understood, the laws of the hu man mind, which are under our observation all day and every dny, are no better understood than they were two thousand years ago. "But how much more extraordinary is it that, whereas what we might call the coaeombriea of education—e. g., the elements of astronomy=—are now taught to every schootgirt neither mothers of families of any class, nor sethool.mistresses of any class, nor nurse( of children, nor nurses of hosm tats, are taufibt anything about those laws which Ood has assigned to the relations of our bWies with the worliclu which Ile has put them; In other words, the, laws which make these .bodies, into which he has put our minds; healthy or un healthy organs of thoseminds, are all but unlearnt. Not but that these laws—the laws of life—are in a certain measure understood; but not oven mothers think It worth thetr.white to study them—tq atudy how to, eve their children healthy existentwia They call it medical physiological knowledge, At only for doctors." Porairom. sxmoq i io69. 7 —Tho rriptoo of ginger Henry serenaded him test evening en donne. Benjamin H. Bra water. En., on amoutok of bin iionnection with the recent. fuertivtralave ease. was onmehmested by a serenade. There wet* spimichii., moo, patuotam, onthwuaiiim, NW so forth, ad libitum. WrSi/ViHfmii.' ir,t- CITY Ciiirieiiii77liiiieinVu• weekly meet ing of City Countritiwas held yesterday afternoon. Coniniunidatioiis 84 Prorgrirere presented t' For opening - York Mist ; forewoman @ calculated to ea force ommthearisseugerrattway commie. the perrimm. th an e ce .t o n clitei . r ie d r ut lr y h i t % e i lean hey ta p ; fr T ir e pi pe n t s it i i ri on or y de m r aigned by, a large number ,df tuteees. insaiding emi nent Physicians, who state that the bealth of the city is suffering from the bed tiondition of the Street.. - Thin pitUtioniens,offererl through Mr . D m y t ,,,, w h o mid that there war an undercurrent of feeling in the community dminst they railwari..which total not minim longer be braved The ri k tg o r t h, ~„, 'neverie`so foul' a - <Medaln. The railroad itorepaniaa had professed to be dome the work as last as noun. bb. but this wo not sufileiserfor the pubic.' Th.. warm weather in taming on, aad -farther delay should not be countenanced. Mr. Drayton moved than the matter be referred to the Committee cm Highways. Agreed to. - - - A communication- from .114- cofillaValiOaff Or High ways was read.- in winch it is torah th at'll the rad. way corn psniei have been notified. and all nf them are doing the work as rapidly ertlretilble. Referred to the same commit tee. . . . • • • . A resolution was adopted asking the eoltindenoner to report 'upon what 'authority Coates street, below the Reading Railroad, has been converted in-s depot for .t igill e4 airt;xl seen the store. which was Main from at culvert. and Wanted to know why the contractor bad blockaded the street with it ' • • A reeolugon authorising the ileitis of the lower mart welfth lame; by the rin party-owners conuenous, this cite only tope' , fry the intersections, Was off.red and passed finally. Mr. Cay ler orerented a memorial from the lessees of the tobacco warehonse; - for which a rent of it 6,700 paid, asking a reduction of therein; to ektrat. Mr. Cul ler intoxle_ced a resolution toting effeet, .which, after a rang debate, wee not +urea" to. A resolution prohibiting procitesions, exhibitions, pa rades. and nu blirrnatetinsisibein being held in the nab lie squares. independence Senate alone excepted, was debated at some lengthy, -; • ler 'Thompson desired Jefferton Sentare 'to be also ex cepted. bir. Davie delineated 'any Each action. 'The Squares weremads for the people. sm. for Councilmen to shut the nmelves in. Any such action= Our. in is opinion of Mr. Daihs, was ill Judged. 3 he resolution did not pass. - A communication war presented from the railway companies, eels ina.leuve to meet a mono stand and seats at Fairmount Park. The president stated that lust year this very thing cost the city over twolhoweand dollars for repairs. - -Mr. Farkermowed that the matter be inferred to the Committee on Water, Several members itimultesecusly .obleabid.. on the netted that- the 'Committee on City Property, bad 'charge of the parks. Mr. Parker. They hare not. Fairmount Park Is in charge of the Water.; Committee. - - The question of reference to the Committed on Water was ME by it Jell*" 1116 /^riVe and the matter was re !erred to the Committee on City rroperty. A corttrrinnieatino was received from Mayor Remy relative to the relief of the Sunbury and Erie Railroad Company, fere - report sr Common Council j aceolnPa nied by a resolution that the city and State will both be benefited by the pAifiele of t he bill now before the Legislature, having thatbbject in - view. Ay reed to. Mr. Curler. also offered, as a further resolution , ft re pommenattion to the Legislature to also pass the bill now before it equalising taxation, the virtual eireet of which is the repeat of ‘ the tonnage tax. The resolution p A resolution re/eosins thassomities of Edward Book ley collector of outstanding taxes, eras aceed to Ike Chamber now retired, to units 'with Common Council in elections of port warden, • ke. (See report of Common Council). Upon returning to the - chamber the result was an . nounced, and the body adjourns.]. COMMON council.. A communication was received from the I.nerd of mu:vixens of the ounbury sod kneßeitroukehlhee the attention of Councils to the prevent positumcor the COMPRI3I and the dangers to the interest, of the city of Philadelphia. un'eas prmupt relief is obtained from the notion of the State Legislature, and a king them to me monetize that body_ on the estdeot of the 'bill •om be fore- it: Mr. Bul look °Tenet aurae's nfresolutions in favor of the Nil. end recommeedine rt tothe eartiest support of the members of the State Senate and Lemelatum. A communication was received loom Mayor Beare in favor of the memorial, which was aceromeseled by a document addressed to the State Lemeleture, urging upon that .body the importance of the bill. daml atot'od that oaken the Compsny re proentitty rebored the city' of Philadelphia msy Inge 83.60e.030. Mr. Mdher opposed the resolution because he re.. tended the ralier bill merely a; a measure to rive the Sunbury and Erie Comm, en opportunity of real iliserizthery demi. - Mt. bullock said it Was not a bill to allow any repu diation whatever, but to furnish the company tee meow for the vomeletion of their road. Mr. Tbomaswode a brief statement directly awr of the road, mid then came to the question e REBUS, whether it should be rwri need, to te hee allow the In terests of the State end the city to forever lot. HY the passage of the bill be ore is Leaded:um the same privilege would be Merely attended tote . road that is granted by busmen me n to their oreditoreeeery dee. Alter sone furcherdetats. the resolutiose were ed. by a vote offil yeas to erra7s. pt- The tunaal number of pantions for gag lama. imeanse etreeta,of were presented and referred to the sp proprate committees. A resolution was submitted by Mr. Miller fire the rommittee on Highways. directing the riving of ' I Waßet.Cohleltda. - Gad, Tort, sad other streets. tied the grading of-Lehigh avenge • one shoo notifying the owners , 0' toneertr extending front Mermaid lane to Lehigh avenue. that that thoroughfare wilt to opened for public use in three months alter_ they have been no tified. Atteed to. A resolution wen presented by Mr. Potter tie* the Committee on Police. appropriating CVO sea reward for the arrest and conviction of the reurdereretif Herrs Gercker, said reward kasha been offered by the mayor. An aniender.iietwee offered by, Mr; Quinn that the stem of IMO be emprommted for theeerea sod reeviesern or then orderers of John Parker (or Pfeiffer) and Henry Mr. Qeinn.in enpeork of ble meoletleti. swide'si loan epaeh-tri which he denounced the present police faros in the most emphatic remetio. Mr: Potter replied. end defended - the pollee from the_ attach mate uteri them. and said that we we» not hem to maks poliberit !geode% bet for the tratissetion of business lot public Interest. ' - • - - The president end members of Egret Commit hem entered the ceambeeousd - west tato joint Convention wait - Common` Council, tor:ther anew of Mattes a sueenntendent of this soiree and lite-elarits tolegreeh. and a port warden for the 'betimes of the tent of El batten W. Ireyeer,.dereseed: • - Mr. Witham Patna ems elitedglerosperatemiPet of Police and drizalarm telemeigh, sad Qty. Pftsr was chinen enttwrietten. - ' The Convention paned e lend nesointion naMstateed- Mg William Martin to tla lamed of dwootomn of Ma Pennarlyanie Hailmad Coes& a T stet "MUM,_ osu.ed be the resignation of Wet. Curtis. Ibe debits w_es Ti timerinns _end emmineed„st tall.. - one length on Mr. einers ameedesent.: Not agritild to. Theo:nudged re sues weatheineareid to. = - .3lr O'Neil called up, the reenletireserele famine. that the Mayor he authorised to Mfrs rewound of ems fat the attest and liosmiiitios - t • murderer of John` Pfeiffer or Pailter eadtgenre,Weiskes. Aft.ranother long deflate. =a sectio&te - Wee the left-_. tor to the Committee on Pelee*, with Mares mire Mi report to the next nesitine of Vtweeila rare eirread ts. The president. Mr.. Tromso. said M had never be,.. re much Ashamed defier the period of tiro year, he has Presidedover this bodies lowa et the ancisediere of the members this afternensa bedgeincerich other. , he ordinances from'Peleet Carnet,. =Wag as ammo filiation out, of the Nude of.thisHirerdestata, oak carred Int "' Alm:the riecileitree rigid to lii towage Mx ea the Pennsylvanis Ra'b ad. Adjourned. • 'NZ PEOPLE'S Cosvverloir.—The Conven tion of the People's Party, for the memos* of planing la nom hat on candidates for the offices of Mayor. Soli* tor, Receiver of Taxes, City Controller, and Commies stoner, assembled yesterday aftersooa at the Count, Coort House, Peter C. Ellmaker. Ent., acted as tarnee ram, chairmen, mired by Edward Hordweas Nom trier. After is Committee on Permanent Oneseizatine had been appointed, the chairmen elade few renterhe acknowledging thee honor which-had been conferred u V ra . hi ed - ems:from the Committee an Permanent Or mini ration, - reported in favor of William Webb. hen, as Pi...ardent. serrated by a wnirsher of Vice Presi dents, seeretariee. denr.keepers. and trimmer. Mr. Weleb made a brief add rers on arsatelint.the petition to which he had been chosen. The Committee on gee d made a report. There were two sets of dele gates from the Twentieth mire. both of whom appeared to be re:trimly returned. Mr. Bilmaket moved that both sets be admitted. with the nederitandiag that they poll but six votes. which agreed to. • Ott mitten, the Convention proceeded to MIMI nominations as follows: Foe Me . ena.- alexander Henry, S. Studer I rutty.' Charles R. Treed. Pod;ii ino tov Tsxz T e.- Wm. P. Femur, EPldasB umadge,h.muJ.jerre * Pot CITY CONTROLLRI.=GeOrge W. Hefty, S. 5. - Leldr. . FOR CITY Sowriroe.-William L. Dennis, . Fein MeC/11). Charles Gibbons . John B. Adams. Cherie, B. Vex. Wm. G. Baker. 1.. R. Fletcher, W. L. Bledee. E. W. Sellers, Chu. Gilpin. FOR City COMMISSIONER. -.0. H. Ramborgor. R. W. Revell. B.lsnyder Leide. John A. Housemlamere Luther, Job Welly J. Work. John ft. Orr. fil oorn, Joshua Karnes. Peter Glasgow, George F. Waite, F. J. Streetton. Wm. Summers, chas Hurts, Jonathan Brooke. Bartlett Shea. William P. Small said he bad in his hand a letter from one of the eandidatee for the mayoralty. which he would read. The letter was from 8. Snyder Leidy, de clining the nomination for that position. It was reed amid loud applause. Mr. Small then moved that Alex- , ander Henry be the nominee of the Convention- by se olmeation. Not agreed to Mr. Harding then withdrew the name of 'Charles B. Trego. atter which the Convention proceeded to a bal lot, with the following melt : Necessary toe choice.- . . 49 S. Border Leidy- Charles B. Treg0...... 2 The •nonaination was made ttemilmons amid loud cheerer. Mr. b mall withdrew the name of S. Snyder Leidy es candidate for Receiver of Taxes. The Convent i on omas proceeded as withdrawn. o he theno a helot, with the following result: Number of votes clot.- ...... .. Necessary tea choice ......... William P. Hamm Simon Mudge Charles E. Printout. William ..... e .. William e. Her ru was then tieolored to b unani mously nominated forth. position of Receiver °Mass. A motion was made that each gentlemen pay an se. wren:rent of tw'enty•five cents. Agreed to. The Convention then proceeded to todlot, for the posi tion of City Controller. with the following result Number of votes ..... Nc o es eW W. t H a t h oice . n 8. Snyder Leidy.. Mr. Rutty wan deciared to be the candidate of the Convention. amid loud cheering. Tho Convention then proceeded toe ballot for at eau* didate for City Solicitor, with the following meet: First. Second. Third. so 43 29 44 PO 0 0 7 0 0 1 Penni& Liz bons - Be,al Gib s IrceSellersll ..... Nude's Masts.. 124 139 Charles B. Lex we declare:lto be the notable') of 144 the Convention for BoliettAr. _ . There wee a great deal of excitement on the third ballot. occasioned hy a number of gentlemen charism's their vote. from different tandidates on the lie. to .lit r. Lex and Mr Dennis. The result vs, ennOunced eraid great cheering. A motion was made to adjourn. but was voted down amid great sop'aune. The Conventi , n then proceeded's° ballot for City Comrlissioner, with the folloainuresuls i irst. &con 4 d. Third. 0 4 o EQ - En 0 0 o 31 . 0 a e 0 : 6 . 1 : 1 5 7 0 4 2 o 5 0 g o s a 6 a o 2317 11 3 2- 2 0 1 0 0 24 so 24 Rsmborger... Ker nil Houseman .. Luther Orr.. ...... Alcorn &rennin—. Summers. . Brooke... 141 , leB 138 Mr. John A. Housemen wee clef:duet! to bl nornt. acted. site redact* the Convention artiotirned amid great excitement. A SINGULAR CASE or Fonozar.—The de tails of a successful attempt et the peepottattop of a forgery name to our knowledge yesterday. It seem. that on last Petards'', a lad called at the office of Maitre. Drexel, on Third street, arid 'presented a check for the sum of el OM- Purcoriing to be issued by Charles Creams. maeufacturing chemist. No. 129 Muth tont street. The bankers were acquainted with Mr. Crease's signature, andbehoving - the oheok to be gentile., •honored it at once. To ao book a few dat a previous to the date of the trans action, we may say that the way the lad came Into con solation of the check was as follows: un lest Thursday week, an advertisement appeared in one of the, pub in Prints. stating that a toy wax wanted to attend to the du ties of an errand boy in a banker's office. The bo) An swered the advertisement. &ad obtsised sair.l.terview with a Mao who la suppd to be toe author pf the for gery. The man stated that he bed tome became to do at the Bank of /forth America, and handing the boy the check, told him to go and get th wished, and buns bin the money to 6 place on tllisattuit etteet, between ne ,, ond and 1 bird, wnem he would meet him. Th e he, as we have said, got the money, and repair ing to the place demeaned, he was met by the man,,whi tapped him on the shonlier and asked him if it was al right. The lad re_plied fa the affirmative. and hand ed him the money. re man toad him that be Plight go home nod get his dinner. which he did. In the afternoon the man repaired to the home of tki• lad, an d Imth th .ryvbaa bee n : k employ had come back atn. didt wi!tod ra ther g..lLthe dt:or; Warded he gave him a_Quarter for has tropmhs, This transaction exeitedits suapicion of the t. of the lad, who repaired immediately to the Of Moors. TleSielotoe Mewed Writhe eirearstarices oleo ease. Berndt)/ proved the check to be a forgery, and the po lice were set upon the otsek Of the forger. Yesterday Morning Detectives Franklin and Bar tholomew arrested the atiossed and took ham before Alderman Heftier, who held him in the guns of MAO answer the chart. at court. The antountof the thee' , wee recovered by the oftieers. The rarer of the party is suppressed by the police for reasons of their pssAo s but tar is Paid to be very respectably cosneeted. %Witt is a .very convenient thing, aid, in Qui nee. It hag saved the perpetrator the anuoympie of Publicity. The °Moen were especially careful that ht* name Mould not transpue.
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