The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, March 02, 1861, Image 1

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    P KESS.
LILY, (SUNDAYS EXCEPTED,)
rOHN W. yozorsr,
417 OIESSINTJT STREET.
.LY PRESS,
, ER Wzaz, payable to the Carrier.
111 out of the City at Stx Domani
DOLLARS TOR EIGHT MONTHS.
OIL Six Maxine—invariably la ad-
WEEKLY rftEss,
there out of the City it Twigs Dot.-
in edvsnee.
FOR THE IN-
STATE OF TILE WEST.
USN TRAL raILROAD CONPA.NY
Rave for ergo
.000 ACRES
FARMING LANDS
Y ACRES AND UPWARD,
ON
AND AT LOW
, AND WORKING MEN.
enterprising and industrious
ty is directed to the following
&memento offered thorn by the
L RAILROAD compA.Nv.
-naive, will enable them. by
no, and industry, to provide
ent homes for themselves and
ively speaking, very little MI-
OF ILLINOIS
Y . of the Miesinnepi offam eo
the nattier ex the Stele of lilt
-oil of the world where all of the
nd soil co admirably combine to
t staples, corn and wheat, an the
PRAIRIE LANDS.
pTAiritns tia cultivated with
that the farmers of the W.
are trionnt to Illinois in mat
Illinois is about equal to that of
so rich that it will support
SOTYTEERN MARKETS,
. nous to a railroad seven hnn
i• oh oonneets with other roads
d rivers. thus' affording an =-
with the Eastern' and Southern
lON OF CAPITAL.
abor have been applied to de
- t resourees of the State in
t nntonehed. The invariable
• arts Sourish best where food
'll follow at an early day in
ll
ofthe next ten years the nate
of the ease 'warrant the belief
- thousand people will be en
"nois in the various menet-no-
YSTEM OF ILLINOIS.
Snvare earbitei.have been ex
es stem of Illinois. Inasmuch as
several of these works, with a
lands, go to diminish the State
- light, and must consequently
STATE DEBT.
y slo.loe,alB 14, ana within the
en reduced 2059,746 ee and
• t that in ten years it will be-
POPULATION
ing up with population ; 863.096
dad manna 18.21. making the pre
-a of 101 per neat. in tan
URAL PRODUCTS.
ore of Illinois are greater than
The products sent out dur•
--tied 1.64).000 tons. The wheat
,es 35,000.000 bushels, while the
Is than 140.000,000 bushels.
' TrLITY OF BOIL.
dimtrions farmer ammo each im.
a labor as upon these prairie soils,
of a deep, rioh loam, the fertility
ed by any on the globe.
I AL CULTIVATORS.
parry hare sold 1,3E0,000 acres.
cultivators, and every contract
tto cultivate. The road has been
these lands at an expense at 830,-
contagion of the forty-nine tome
" passes Was only 05.598, since
dded, 'making the whale porn
ar WI per mt.
ES OF PROSPERITY.
be thrift of the people, it may be
a of freight, including 8400.000
1 000 barrow of flour, were for.
hot year.
DUCATION.
ing men will find the f ree -school
the Stare and endowed with a
sopport of eaboola. Their ohil
of the ohn-oh and whoa bonne,
provenly of the leading State
Empire.
TERMS OF PAYMENT
lands vary from iO6 To Sall per
•ntion. oneltry, &o. Firet-olias
nt $lO or Onper &ors; sad
tit,m
eg prairie lead, es amn
ia the ratio of one to ten in ta
he tonakof isle for the balk of
11TEREST IN ADVANCE.
-imam- and six interest notes at an
peettvely in one, two. three, fon".
from due of sale; and four natal
ble in four, five, eon, and seven,
of sale ; the contract stipuls-•
of the tract purchased shall be
each and even year for five
of 'sale. eo that at the end of five
be fenced and under cultivation.
CENT. WILL BE Dr-DUCTED
or cash, except the same should he
e. when the cash pries will be five
ptrve of tl'et Lands, soil, chmate,
and terms of payment,can be had
J. W. FORTES,
"ones, Illinois Central Railroad,
Chicago. Lligioin.
towns, villages, and olttes mom
, Central Railroad, see pages 138,
Railway etude. fel-tntlutsam
WILSON
mAcHI NES.
s REDUCED,
sa 76TH• /SW
UT Street, Second Floor,
OUDOIR
'• MACHINE.
FOR gun/rum AND
WORK.
without the trouble of rs
ittie or no anise., _ _ _
JCR Street.Pbiladelphia. and
Beltimore..lld. len-ft
'RNITURE AND ELL
A MIPION
BECUND BTRbET.
extensive Cabinet Business,
muotior totals of
RD TABLES,
fall supply finished with
'l3 IhiPsOV.ED
Po' all who have used them, to
jah of -these Tables the mem-
DELMIMIUII patrons throughout
'iar with the character or -''lr
A L
,EN & BRO.;
it friends sad austqatera that
mt from No. 240 South
Street to diem
STORE,
STRUT STREET,
always on hand a firm sanortment
WALNUT, AND OAK
:ITU FCF;
toss thatheir former rigor: in
greater actinides. for busyness,
[Mere.
'lotion IS calk qbefore vtinottmaing
fa9B.llm
'ORTNINGTov.
'Yu eT R
IXH BTEBT,
A sad Doinastio CIGARS.
made oonstantly on liwidr
.rtieles of the Trade.
Pugh's, Bookseller end Stational,
4. W. °or. iatn and Chestnut.
6HORE Penns, Ivnada.
made ,n Chilton and L7oonuuag
=132:1
Haub, YhrW49)ollB. ; J. H. Humes,
• Messrs. leroroit & Co., Philads.
Co., Betted% ; Frishmath &Co
Loot r.sven; Yard, Gilmore,
er & Woddr op, PSUa da iP-a.: Rey
tem
, WINES and LIQUORS,
9 WALNUT Agree& (busmen'
%nu Fourth. aorta aim) Philo,
" Whiskies always qa.Mnd.
Oa
BANKERS,
11 THIRD STRISET.
rth of the
.wok st r eet,
;butnnt street,
PHU.
A. B. NICHOLSON,
V.MAIL CRUX&
ZOrri Strain.
ow
axoortment of tiontablo
• l 'stalk for orwhpr o-
(LA.) PIOAIII3NR.
OE• & Cos
1e agents in Phitele , hla for
r i e g ore Pe rjgr/s_ r b ' iset " Lirts:
atry, tlgLonacts of JO_ GO_E.
ens., FirlH and CHESTNUT
'Tribune Buildings. New York.
VOL. 4.-NO: 181.
BY TUE BAUD 01 TOWER HALL
Men may spread their sage opinions
Over all the earth's dominions ;
Spread their names in song and story.
Rife with metre in which they glory.
They mar stand in proud positions,
Ae oar leading politicians,
tome bs some se loved are brothers,
stoma Cr eic snany others*
Fighting well, ea gents and 'scholars,
For our country and hor dollats:- •
ft inning fame and setting money.
Living well ". mirk end honey ."
While the trump of Fame doge round them
To the startled world around them.
Still. they find With all their trouble,
That their, fame is but ale:Mtge
Though with relabels tints !tie glowing,
Yet it does not psi for blowing.
Then, the man who by his labor,
Helps himself and helps his neighbor,
With no spreadi-g but the spreading
of his table-cloth and bedding.
And the spread of arms, enfoding
Healthy r hitdren he is holding,
npreadiwg for teem bread with' butter.
is the man who well may utter
Thanks and proton, and never- grumble
That his lot in life is humble.
Though for female Is no olaimant,
y_fit very best of raiment,
He, at ewer Hall, of Bennett,
Can procure—lt feet I pen it :
Ali pen no ink is shedding;
L out spread no more on spre ading.
Winter Stink eteeing..,iint- gt great!) , reduced woes
tit TOWER HALL, DM MARKET Utreet,
BENNETT & CO.
COMMISSION HOUSES
WILLING,
COFFIN &
No. 118 CHESTNUT STREET,
AGENTS FOR THE SALE UP
DUNNELL MFG. CO.'S PRINTS AND L.AWNS.
GREENE MPS. CO.'S TURKEY RED AND STAPLE
PRINTS.
Fine Bleached Cottons.
LONEIDALE , HOPE. BLACKSTONE, STATERS
VIL L.E, JAMESTOWN. RED BANS. GREENE,
UNION. AND BELVIDEER.
ETHAN ALLRN, MT. HOPE. FREDONIAN. =-
TRICK. 01110. GROTON. VIRGINIA FAMILY
AND MECHANICS' AND FARMERS'.
GRAFTON, SLATEREIVILLE, AND JEWETT CITY
. DENIMS AND STRIPES.
LONSDALE CO '8 NANKEENS AND SILESIA&
GLENNAM CO.'S AND GLASGOW GOBBET JEANS.
BOTTONILEY'S BLACK AND FANCY MIXED
CLOTHS.
STEARNS AND SAXTON'S RIVER CABSIMERES.
GREENFIELD CO.'S BLACK DOESKINS.
RODMAN'S FINE JEAris. DOUR LE AND TWISTED
CASSIMERER, NEGRO CLOTHS. Re.
MINOT. BASS RIVER, CRYSTAL lIPRINGSrCHE
SHIRE, BRIDGEWATER, AND BRISTOL
SATINETS'! fen-ti
SHIPLEY, HAZARD, et HUTCHINSON
NO. 17:5; CHESTNUT Err,
COMMISSION MERCHANTS
FOR THE HALE OF
PT-TT T. A 1 4 )E.L.P.ETIA-MADE
GOODS.
0,84 m
SHAKER SWEET CORN,
WINSLOW% GREEN CORN,
FRENCH. TOMATOES, PEACEES,
GREEN PEAS, &c., &o.
ALBERT C. ROBERTS,
DEALER IN
FINE GROCERIES.
j&7-tf Corner ELEVENTH and VINE Streets.
FIABLILY FLOUR, •
MADE FROM CHOICE WHITE WHEAT,
H. IVIATTIB9I‘.
B. W. oor. AMOK and TEETH Street:a. .ell
iZ w
LOOKING -GL SSES,
POILIUTT AND NOVAE PG/AWL
ENGRAVINGS,
OIL PAINTINGS, &At., &o.
JAMES S. EARLE & SON,
/11f.POR.T.ERS, MANtIPACTUARRS, WHOLE
SALE AND RETAIL DEALERS.
EARLES , GALLERIES, •
REMOVAL.
C. A.
SURGIC DIY BOUC AL AHRT.
ND ALH AIL D.. D. D. 3
/CAL
DEVITId C.
~ ~ ~ 1
Dr. DU BOUCEET avails himself of this opportini
tr to return hie thanks to his numerous petants, and
hopes that, bY untiring *Torts to give satisfaction and
donation to their conndenon, he snit continue to secure
their patronage and inlinenee.
TERMS MODERATE AS HERETOFORE.
In order to render his sersiona as efficient as possible,
and guard against interruptions white operating, his
hoursmaking Engagnments, Consultation, and Ex
tractin Teeth will continue tote item
Bto 9 o'clock
to .41,. M. 12
ck Pto 1 M clock P. M.
4 8 o clo. .
Xiir Engagements mar be made by note. fess-am
PERSONS HAVING FINE WATCH:MS
that have hitherto given no satisetction to the
Wearer/ are invited to bring them to our 'store,_where
all defeats can be remedied -by thoroughly skim sad
wailuttrus mearbanen, end the watch warranted to Live
entire satisfaction.
Mesita' Clocks, Musical Boxes. Sce.. carefully pat la
complete order.
FARR & BROTHER,
Importers of Watohes,Husioel Boxes. Cloaks, &c.,
Jell-2m 314 cazerm UT &Weill. below Fourth.
AT DEAN & 00. 1 8, 335 OHESTNUT
Street, Ptatadelthis,_Fo..
JUDEAN & CO.'S, 80 West FOURTH Street, Cin
cinnati, Ohio,
At DESE & C0.'8,148 DEARBORN Street, Obiono,
'a - 161
),N & C 0.% Detrott, Miohigsn•
At DEAN & CO.'S, 414.MALN Stmts. Heffillo, Now
York,
at DEAN & CO.'S, 8 ARCADE, Rachman. Now
Y --
,
tort
At DEVI & CO.'S, nest post office, Harrisburg.
Pennsylvania,
At DEAN & 330 CHESTNUT Street, Phila
delphia, Penrisylvania.
YOU CAN RUT •
A arst.rate Vest Chain.-- for 'xloo
A good Guard Olson.- —. for- 100
A Lady's Qbatelaine Chain. —. for yOO
A 0.47's Nook .... for 100
A Child's Nee klarm .for 100
Al 4 karat Gold Pon and Silver Holdor —. -for 2OD
A counting-house Pen and_Roider....- --for 100
A Gold Pe__ .for 100
A ady's CaurmoSet— for 100
A Lady's Jet Sot : .for 100
A Lady's Lava Set- —:......---- for 200
A Ladr's Onyg Bet.— 100
A lady's Coral /
A Lady". Enamelled Set— .for 100•
ALades Carbuncle Pet— for 1(C
A Lady's Garnet Set... for ICO
A Gold Ring _—. --for 100
A Set Gold Bosom audit —... for 100
A pair Gold Sleeve Buttons—. —..........f0r IIS
A I-old Pen and Holder— 100
A Gold 100
A 0014 . —for 100
A Gold Tooth Pink__--- -for 100
A Set Gold /poetry. all /dodo. -. .. -for 100
A Set Silver 1". Table 'moons _..... . ... _ .f0r / 00
Ant Silver P. Tea Spoons. ----- -.for 100
A eat Silver P. Forks. 100
A,Silver F.trAt dor -3eo
A Set Silver P. X MAW ......for 100
A Silver P. Mug. negravod....l-....... for 100
A Silver P. Spoon Cup.-- for 100
A !Silver P. Wine Cop. GollThood--- ----for 10e
A Gold Band Bracelet—. ..............for 100
A arialoguro Draoelot— .for 100
A Link Bracelet—. 00
A Coral Bracelet 100
A Cluster Br:motet— ------..for 1 CIO
An. rimspolled Braoelet. 100
A pair of Armlets:- —.----... ---. for ,100
A splaudidisasortment---. -........f0r 200
And take your chows-- .for 00
W
And take your ok : :--
..---..for I 00
sid matinee you 1 00
And any article ts the Irmo.. for 100
And no Doalso,ffoods here.-.... ----for 100
And no Grit 3sweri7 gold 'bere............... ..... for 10R
And no Galvaius_ od (Huffs sold hem-- —..tor 1
All our goods are 1411
Ail our goods are Gold or plated —.....—.f0r 0
All row gooda are A NO: ..........for 1 0
Ask customers who.have 1 0
Ask Swallows who have bought... —.for 10
Ask font f 110 4 40 *kV kay.e for HO
Ask car Bosco imitators_ -- ----for It
Ask theV ll ic. ----..for 1 I
Dean . ga
Dean & do not humans-- _ or 1 (
Doan & Co. amknown as A No. 1.... • f 1
Goan & Co. are the original ..../
Doan & Co. sell no bogus goods- 1
Dean & Co. deal on the BMWS _....f0r1
SEAN
OBAN lc CO..
31* COES rtu Stroat.Philadelphia, Pa
.80 West FOURTH litraett_Cirminnatt Ohio.
lib DRARBORN Street, taussagoalimots.
fn ir oNVi g ester, New York.
214 NAM tElfulfalo, New York.
Next to th i ost 0160111 4 7 r AlTisbUrff. Pa.
Drecrt'com 0 miNAt. STORE,
334.CHRSTS Street. Philadelphia P,
NO 102
W. e. 1110018 MAD
Those iwho yunthene On wenn to one tam mitu
maw to s o y artlolB in the store, of their own tellso
- free.
Bend orders, bt , mail or exitrent, to &Mr of our storei,
or eon vereonadr and lIIVIaIanIS the hurt and NM
stook of Jewelry and Plated Ws the rated States.
res-tf
HOI7SEKEEPEREL LOOK TO' YOUR
l' i tEß-Efer Youß con, at mew
ethers eothing but the very teat Lehigh sad Schuylkill
Cast amireeed, at the fetlownsa redacted prices :
Lehigh, Broken, km and Stove-- —.eels aer toa.
Belmyttilt. " " 410
_tette . . . 3.80 "
mtr
alluded free 'lran - as - tit - tiritust, sal - fell weight, at
HICKS' Yard, apothem* -oarasr-of MARSHALL sad
WILLOW. Call aad See.
Ot
formed
AURPRY,
hove weU-
N, tEtto9l4ll
denims
,-lIPHOLI3I ZRY
and CABINET WAREHOUSE, No. 1524. WAL
NUT Wrest, °flout* hut donee fivurei fewmetly
oc on Cneotout Ittron. COM&
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~..._- " . "'-' 4 . 1 ' 114 M. -'........
A./ - - - - - . - --
-.., 1_ ,- ..,71,........._ . .
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......• iaa• • • • a.' •Nat . 4 : . .
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Spreadng.
Brown Cottons.
GROCERMS.
PitfiAulwlithia
REMOVALS.
COAL.
r i 41 ru
SATURDAY. MARCH 2. 1861
Literature.
°COPRA'S Novin.a.—The new volume, illustrated
by Darley, la " Mercedes of Castile," published in
1840. It is a romance founded upon the Discovery
of Amerios by (Jobambuv, and closely follows, In
its details, the journal of the greet Genoese. In
this respect, it is full of intermit, and will bear
oomparison with Washington Irving's history. The
engravings, as usual, are very good. Thisedition
of Cooper will be oompleted in thirty-two volumes,
of which twenty six have already been published.
The whole lane, a volume appearing every month.
will be completed OR the drat of September. The
remaining volumes will follow: in the following
order : The Crater, Heidentuamir, Afloat and
Ashore, Miles Wallingford, Ways of the Hour, and
Precaution. ThiaJast volume will oontain. a .por
trait of Mr. Coopii, from a painting by Elliott ;,
view of Otsego Hall: a Blographieal Sketch by
William. C. Bryant; and a".liet of the volumes in
their proper order. blr. S. 408 Walnut
street, is sole agent for the series in tide oily.
Wssumarow Invisa's WORRS.—The moat re
'mit volume of this,Naitonat Edition of our great
prase writer, is the Life of Oliver Goldsmith, an
extremely interesting and readable work, which,
however popular in this country, was Oki-least
liked in England, of Irving's writings. The
feet is, it had been immediately preceded thereby .
the admirable biography of Goldmilith, from the
pen of Mr. John Forster, whigh, indeoendent of
its literary merit, wee admirably
_illustrated. All
the engravings is the present 'volume, with the et
caption of the frontispiece, have been copied from
Mr. Forster's book. Irving could not treat any
subject without adorning it, but hie Life. of Gold-'
smith, though pleasantly written, is too obVionaly,
Forster's at second-hand to be considered an ori
ginal work. -
By the way, we may here exprems a hope that
in this complete edition of Iriing will be included
the Biographical Sketch of Thomas Campbell, the
poet, which Irving wrote as it preface to an-Auto
slows edition of Campbell, and, bavirg " revised,
corrected, and materially altered" it, reprinted it
to The Analeetie Magazsne, Vol. V. 9 his peri
odioal, edited by Irving, was ptiblished in thishity
by Mr. Moses Thomas, and this particular volume
covered the period January—June, 1815. This
aketeh occupies sixteen Ragas octave, and is writ
ten in Master Geoffrey Crayon's earliest, which we
take to be his beat, style.
CHARLES DICKENS' Wonks.—Aenew volume has
just been added to Palawan's 12mo edition of
Mekong' Worbe. It contains the lad Chriatmaa
Story !t A Message from the sea, , i written by
Diskette and Wilkie Collins, and " The Unoomnier
oial Traveller," wholly from the pen of the
great master, and, though somewhat in the vein
of the original " Bketahea by Boa," breathing
that deeper philooopby which is created by bard
aentasta in tha battle of life. Thera/Ire tome parted
the " Traveller's" narrative's not ourpareed by any
of his more ambitions efforts. The little eketoh of
Carlavero's Mammoth Bottle, sent from Italy as a
grateful offering to a benefaator, is natural and
touching to a degree. ' '
For The Press.]
Oar Cauntry'atr law.
BY MRS. EOM
ho for the Union! The, sty there is none
Oh, ho for the Union ! They soy we're undone—
That the hand of rho Amman io rod 411 the fold,
And the fate of our country in darknees 'geed.
But why do thee say it? and what do they mean ?
The Flag Nee, where our ensigns lobar;
Why, that is the Flag our Fathers bore !
There are the Ptripoe, the rod and the white;
There are the titan. in their places all right;
There is our Eagle. with beak and claw, •
The royalist bird that a foe ever saw,
The omen of empire that notions have Bean
Fronting our battles and bearing us through.
The Fathers, the Fathers, we have them no more,
But they've lett us the standard they bravely upbore.
With its Earle of Freedom; far-maionad and true>
And the red and the 'White or the Vid ThirMegi
And the BUM that are PIA ona held of blue.
There's a thrill= km heart as T see it unroll;
There's a Inds* In my heart that I osanot control
It fills me with hope for humanity horn
It makes me a part of that glarions morn.
That save us a country to live' in, and die,
And gave to our country its FOurth of Atli.
Away with the traitor` would trail itin churl
Let the WILTON; of oblivion cover hon o'er ;
Let his name be heard upon earth nevertriors.
Bat loved of his people, and blessed be he,
Who bears it stint on the land and the sea ;
May his name go dowa to uncounted dates,
May his children's chi'dren slain our eaten, - -
Strong in the faith and the Flair of our unit,
Waving in pridb o'er a hundred States...
The beautiful Flag that oar Fathers nebore !
Clod help us dolma it,lind long may it soar,
With its Eagle of Fiesdore Tat-Itudened
And the Ted and the white of tie bid Thirteen,
And the stare that ere 'old on a Ba ld of bine
MADISON, Wil; Feb. 22, IBM
Sunbury and Erie Railroad Bill.
The following is a copy of the aot to change the
name of the Suntani and Arlo Railroad Company,
as it passed both Houses of the Legialabare
Ottonott 1, Ile it emettit, 41.4., that Om Our P
o- name and title of the Sunbury and Erie Refi
ned Company be, and the same is hereby, changed
to the Philadelphia and Erie Railroad ComPany,
by which name and title the business of the said
company shall hereafter be managed and con
ducted with the same effect as if the name thereof
had not been changed.
Sec. 2. That the said the Philadelphia and
Brie Railroad Company be, and , it is hereby, au•
thorised to execute and issue, under its corporate
seal, Ave thousand bonds, not exceeding in amount
the aggregate sum ofpue million of pounds mer
ling money of Great Britain, or Ave millions of
dollars lawful money of , the 'United btates ; any
number or all of which may be issued for two
hundred pounds each, alb:riling money aforesaid,
and any number or all of which for one thousand
dollars, each peyable in twenty years from the
date thereof. The said bonds shall bear interest
at the rate of six per centaur per annum, payable
semi-annually, and shall not be subject to taxa
tion ; and the said bond!, or the proeeeds thereof,
shall be used by the said company for the purpose
of completing and equipping the said railroad, and
for the payment of debts contracted eoncernbur Ute
same, and of the scrip issued by the said company
under the act of thirteenth of April, ens thousand
eight hundred and sixty; and as seetirity for the
payment of the principal and interest 'of the
said bonds, the mid company is hereby author
ized to execute, in trust under its corporate seal, a
mortgage of the whole line of it railroad, finished
and unfinished, and to be finished from Sunbury to
the harbor of Erie, and its appurtenances, ben.
ding all locomotives and•ests which' may, at any
time, be plaired thereon, together with-ell its real
estate; rights, liberties, privileges, and franchises ;
which said mortgage shall be delivered to - the
trustee or trustees therein nanied, and recorded in
the several counties in which the property therein
described, 'or any part thereof, may be situate,
and shall thereupon be and rema in the AM Mort
gage on all the property therein desoribed until
fully satisfied, except rte to that part of the road of
the said company which extends from Sunbury to
Williamsport, on which a mortgage for one million
of dollars now exists. • .
Sac: 3. That the said companj be, and is hereby,
authorised to execute, under .its corporate seal,
forty bonds for one hundred thouaand dollars each,
payable In forty years from tbo date thereof; bear
mg Merest at the rate of six par cent. per annum
from and after the first day of January, one thou-
sand eight hundred and seventy-twe, and secure
the payment of the same by a mortgage. to the
Commonwealth of all
,the. reliroads of the said
company, finished, unfiished, and to be finished,
and all the property, rights, privileges, aini fran
chisee, including locomotives, oars, and rolling
stook of the said company which said mortgage
shall be subject to the mortgage authorised by the
second motion of this sot, and to the mortgage for
one million of dollars on that part of the said road
whioh - extends from Sunbury to Williamsport; and
the said compel:lsbell deliver the said forty bonds,
together with: the said mortgage, to secure the
Payment of the same, to the commissiouers of the
shaking fond, and the said coussaissioness 'shall .
re
ceive the nine as collateral securit y for the pay
ment of the said five per cent. bonds for three
million: five hundred thousand dollars, now in the
sinkintland, and the treasurer of the CommOn
wealth shaU thereupon cancel and surrender ail
the bonds belonging to the said company, and de
posited in his Mace for wife keeping, under' the
provisions of the sot' for the sale of the State
canals.
Sac. That the 'time for the payment of the
prinoipal and Interest of , the said bonds for three
million Ave hundred thousand dollars now in the
sinking fund he, and the same is hereby, extended
till the maturity of the bonds for four millions of
dolthis toles given as collateral security aforesaid ;
and the payment of the said collateral 'bonds, with
the interest thereon, as the same Mall become dna
and 'payable shall be full satisfaction of the said
bonds for Saes million Ave hundred thousand dol.
lure, and of the conditions`thereof : -Provided,
That the whole amount of 'prinelPal and interest so
to be paid by the said company shaft not be less
than the debt new °win by the said company to
the _Commonwealth, with the allieriated interest
thereon till th time of payment. •
Sao. 5. That on the surrender and cancellation
of all the Ave per cent= 'bond' of the said com
pany, made by authority of the act for the 'sale of
the State canals, approved the twenty-Arat of April,
one thousand eight hundred and fifty-eight, except
those 'belonging to the State for three millions five
hundred thousand dollars, and now in the oinking
fund,. It shall be the ditty of the trustees ef tha
mortgage for raven millions of dollars, executed by
the said company, to secure the payment of the
said bonds' forthwith, to enter' satisfaction on the
record thereof, and the lien of the said mortgage
shall thereupon be discharged and forever satin
ribbed.
Sec. O. That all the bonds authorized by the
seaond section of this Rot shall be deposited in
the office of the et/ow Treasurer for safe keeping,
apd . shall be delivered to the said dompany for
weeks hereinafter provided ; that is to say, that
when satisfaction is entered on the record of the
Mortgage - mentioned in the fifth . section of 'this
act, thellovereor shall' by hiewarrant authorise
the State Treasurer to deliver to the said company
one thousand of the sold bonds; which or the pro.
Oats of which, shall-he appropriated'bY the corn,
PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, MARCH 2,
,1861.
pany to the purposes mentioned in the acoond see-
Gen of We eat; and open notion to the Governer
that snob appropriation has been made, be shall
forthwith appoint saompeterit person to etamine
and report, at the expense of the said °employ,
the Indebtedness liquidated and Work done ; and
on being satisfied of the faithful application of the
said bonds, or the proceeds thereof, the Governor
shall then in the manner aforesaid authorize tbe
delivery of another thousand or thy said bonds bt
the said company for the purposes aforesaid, and
the remainder thereof from time to time, and on
the same oonditions part passu. " But before any
of the said bonds are delivered to the said com
pany for rune, there shall be endorsed on each of
Unite the words ' Waled by authority of an sot of
Mom* el titled. An Aot to change the name of
the Sunbury and Brie Railroad Contpany, and to
facilitate the Completion of a road from Sunbury
to Brie,' over the signature and (facial sent of the
Secretary , of the Commonwealth., who is harsh"
authorized to alg a and. seal the said eertilitiato se
aforesaid; provi ded, however, that such endorse-
Meld shall not render the Commonwealth liable
ter the payment of the same in any contingency."
THE FALL or GAETA4
Sieger in Modern Times,
I Front the London Times,
Gaeta is at loot taken. On the day that the
French fleet left, the doom of the plane was sealed.
It is, of course, to the oradie of the besieged, that
they have been able to , protract the defence for
three weeks longer, and it may be that Frenat
and his advinere have had routine for keeping
their bold on itallan territory for as long a period
as possible. Ihtt the fall of She place within a.
limited time was certain from the day the Barcilol
mien fleet was free to blockade it, and the army of
Eleldini could sot without fear of offending the.
Imperial arbiter. Aooording to news received this'
morning, the place had been earrendered yeater-Y
day ; Csaldini was already in osenpation of Mount;
Orlando, which commando it; and, probably ad we
write, the last stronghold of the Bourbon king err
the Italian Continent is in the bands of the Ito"
liens, and he he:aegis steaming tratmially across:.
M
the editernuan to whatever land he has oliosol
for bit easy and luxurious exile.
We know so little of the details of this siege, that
it is difficult to say host far the Pledmobtese have,
shown tbemselvee possessed of military esienee.i .
The theory of Louie API, that the highest qualitielf,
of a general were rued is siege op: rations , width,
fighting in the fie ld could be directed by average
talents,-has truth in it so far-that many very
coded commanders have been repulsed by very'
ordinary fortifications. We English have gene.
rally managed to supply. the *ant of engineering
skill Or Material by sheer courage; and we vane-.
laded Badajo fifty years since, and captured Delhi ,
the other day, with very little aid from science to
smooth the path of the storming parties. Conti
nental, armies go to work on a more scientific sys
tem, and delay the final moult until resistance
has become impossible. The parallels and sp•
prosohes must ne complete, every battery of the
place must he enfiladed by the besiege:a, lugs
masses of trope must be brought up ready to nap
port the aseutulting column, before athodern gene.
ral thinks it his duty to try the last'resources of
war. And, thanks to late improtements in gun.
nery, sieges hate biocides More soichtifie thahever.
The modern taker of cities most be an engineer, a
meabanioian, perhaps even a chemist; and if he
be these, be may sometimes hope for victory with.
oil any other quality of genetalahip. Ills men
may never have to dare death in the imminent
deadly breach ; he may. look on the " forlorn
hope" as a coarse and new obsolete instrument
of Ettedere. All he has to do is to calculate dimes.
lances, to measure the strength of guns, the weight
of projeotiles, the explosiveness of compounds.
Whether the Piedmontese showed a due kpowledge
of these subjects, we are unable to say; they have
been successful at last ; but the garrison, on the
other hand, has been able to make a long defence,
and by its tenacity to disturb the peace of the
oountry, and to shake the new Kieg's throne. The
length of the siege, however,' may be ascribed `
,
! touch More justly to th e etreoxth. of the Awe than
to any want of skill in the Piedmontese. Gaeta,
hat been, for a very long tithe, a tradition in the
Bourbon faintly. The late Kieglrerdinand-lavished
wealth upon it in the confidence that it would
always protect him in the time of need. Situated.
at the extremity of a tongue of land, It is
impregnable as long as the defenders have the ocure.i
mend' of the lea.' As insurrectionary &worn
manta seldom possess naval resources, and as hie'
own navy had always shown-aufßeient attachment
to his throne, the King naturally thought that
Gaeta was a sure refuge whenever treason sbould
raise its head itr the capital, and that it would..
serve as a basis of operations for any campaign to
be carried on in Southern Italy: Indeed, one can
conceive how easily a King entrenched at Gaeta,
and supported by Austrian and Tuscan and Roman
levies, and by his own faithful fleet, wend& make
his preparations for the reconqeeet of skde king
dom. So Gaeta was made a brat rate place of
strength, and had the honor otdefeeding the Pope
from_ &Xt - Auer:tee - of his own eubjec us thirteen
years ago. The present King seems from the first,
to have - bad no confidence in any spot of the Teta"
Sicilles, except Gaeta. Until he found himself
within its works he showed every kind of weak
ness, vacillation, and even cowardice. Ile gave
orders and countermanded them, entreated tpe
feirbearance of Oaribsidl, offered to join him in a
war againal Ansfria, and finally fled froth his
capital before a dozen red shirts. Bat such wa,
the strength of Gaeta, that from the time' he '
reached it, his courage returned. He probably
knew, or was told, that without the command of
the sea his enemies could do little against him, And
be resolved to retrinvichhi repatativer Icy-benoinier
tbe hero of a historio siege. The emsourageteent
to. this (muse sumo hate been sal the more since
the'Plidmontesse, wEciti - ka I:aerobes nastily through
the Pipet territory, were in want of heavy artillery,'!
and generally tinpNpaPed to undertake siege
operations of snob megnitude.
Bat all is now over. !Francis LI. ball done his
best and !his -.worst, and it has delayed and not
*hanged the event. The siege - of Oneta, hes been
an useless and senseless conflict. Every man who!
has fallen during these Eve weary months has
been murdered for the vainest of reascosito
satiety the point of honor, We, in England, taw
this from the first; and the Prince, who has more
than any one else helped to prolong the struggle,
mnst have seen it also._ Those who watched the
'affairs of Italy from a distance, knew bow Impost- ,
side it was that the royal power, onoe overthrown
in the Two Sleilies, could ever b e rehabilitated by
the anooesaes of limas. When at. Palermo 18,00 e
Neapolitan troops surrendered:to 1,400 Garibaldi
am, the Government of the Bourbons ormiabled to
the ground in the eyes'of Europe- Snob an army,'
it was justly thought; meat argue a political sye
tem and a ruler whom nothing could lave. Ever
since; the tame apeotecle has been continually re
pelted. The army, the fleet, the civil depart
. mente, the Church, even a part of the royal
dorerted to or endeavored to make terms
with the enemy. The Rowboat' could never be
restored, for there was nothing left through whieb
they could rule. Some priests in the country dis
triota. with the peasantry they taught, were the
only Bourbon partisans left in the kingdom.
• Had no foreign Power interfered all would have
been at pease, in a few weeks. But the French
Emperor .thought fit to chow hie symPaihY with
the royal cause. We have been told by the MOM -
teur—and the statement hius" been repeated from
Imperial lipe—that Napoleon was situated only by
pity for one who at an early age had met with a
great calamity, and that be desired only to insure
the personal safety of Franoie end of his devoted
Queen. Bat, with all respect for the imperoes
talents, we must take leave to say that if these
wore hie only motives his conduct was singularly
ill Jedged . There can be no doubt that every
man in Italy—Constitutionalist, Republican, Bi
tramontane, or Royalist—bas interpreted the pre
sence of Admiral Barbier de Tinan at G'eta as a
support to the cause of the Bourbon Monarchy.
As Boon as it was known that the French were
interfering, back came some of the European di
plomatic corps who had previously abandoned the
fallen King. The Pope openly thanked Napoleon
for his pious resistance to revolution. In Naples
itself signs of a formidable Bourbon ownspiracy
soon appeared.- There was everywhere a belief that,
the grenoh were, perhaps, about to reinstate the
King, and the (Marching and Dative of Southern
Italy began to reflect that it would - be as Well tribe
on the winning side. Henoe, treaeotable - move
ments began in the eapital, headed by oftioera in
the Neapolitan service, and summary arrests and
punishment were neces sarily resorted to'by the an
amities. The insurreotions in the Abrussi were
planned and carried out by the assistanetruf politi
cians high in office in the Pepsi States, and the
whole power of the Churoli in France was employ
to confirm the Emperor in his supposed' design of
protecting the Bourbon sovereign. Entails him
self was mainly encouraged to persist, by the hope
that the Emperor meant ultimately to. Give hint.
He is indeed, to be excused ;'for, shat.ttp in a
fortress, be knew but little of what was going for
ward, and perhaps, thought that there was a sin
cere and general wish for his reiteration..
The lose of life and the misery which have
been canted by this long strnegle will stain
his reputation legal than that of the monarch Wife
permitted them, knowing them to bo useties.
44 Solid Cash." '
Emmen or Tun Mass.—Your correspond
ent ce Huron," who rejoices so eaceedingry'
in the commercial prosperity of New York,
says, "while these enormous exports are
adding immensely to the actual wealth of the
country, and bringing ne the' solid!cash, we
are growing richer in another way—namely, by
diminished imports."
Now, any person acquainted with the A B C
of Political Economy must know that there is
only the very smallest pr,fit on It solid cash,"
and that t; diminished imports" do not make
us richer.
For example, we send our prodece to Eu
rope, and thereby make a profit, 11 We are paid
in gold. But we make double profit It we re
ceive, as payment for what we have expoited,
commodities—not competing with our ;.own
natural or manufactured produc ns—Upon
which further profit is to be m by their
sale in this country. In a word,. e do not
44 grow richer" by increase of go and dimi
notion of imports.
A hiamtaisr OF Pain .
March 1, 1861.
—A student in the Charity Hospial, at New
Orleans, Gilmore by name, was faly wounded,
• few days since, by the accidental a °barge of a
pletol, which fell from the pocket of b fellow-MU
dent, A 11. Given, as he stooped to Ook upa pen
knife, which he bad dropped. Tie ball struck
young Illimore In the abdomen.
The explanatteme given to ex l? esident Tyler
touching the military movements a ortress Mon
roe are deemed'entirely satistneto Two howit
zers were mounted to command the 'ridge leading
to the main land. The other guns re remounted
on iron carriages, the wooden ones living beoomi
410 N. E. JOY. MORRIS.
The fine speech of Hon..E. Jor Mosses, Re
presentative in Congress, in the Rouse of Re
presentatives of the United States, from the
Third district in this State, on the 80th Janu
ary, bits been on orir table for several days,
and tip to . this moment, we have had no time
'to notice it Is Its great merits deserved. Mr.
Militate is . ati'aCColliplished drator and scholar,•
,
and„ though co operating With the Republi
tan vitt ,'of large and comprehensive national
JAI speech on the 30th nit. abounds
in splendid passages,. of Which the following
maybe retarded as specimens:
I teed hirdly Ban dr, tbat-I have no sympathy
With. the. stemmed right of sedession. It has no
jastillostion in feet or. 001115thational oonetruotion.
.
Our aneptotil tut gone the experiments/
trials of colon al Confederal olio,. the Orrintltlental
Congreeraand a confedaratlcin - of Soteriilgn States,
and,Mey bed found them all univaiiable frit the
purposte of a solid, eubstantial Union and a grand,
permanent Government. After all these trials,
they canoe , to the sconelution that it wde not
ceesply foir the States to nitrate:let a past of their
thildMindelloo,,fOri:tbe purpose of obtaining the
proleaticitni , a tenon' Government, latish should
repreErmlifthe saeregated Stan* ttrtheaworld nit
political spit. This object- sgagi ' artilted4stibe
Corttitatien.of theTniteigM , OW • '
l/dhe Artiolee of donfederatianeach &tie fei•
art. )'retained 14 sovereignty. In the Coned tu
ctio no itircili" reeerititioir is litft,;4l4,,,tailaT'
sysOmrsmitalesgrie of Slates IblonittaaP difitet•
an refers. Iterlii_listaxidad„to Aerate on the
I, Ejti tirsosh,lnnlllssatooleArblu. WI%
I , ta stet a Governaient the El ;lirtt °Ric
• itemole. ' Arnold three orttle Articles of Conflidera.
sap!:
Wig Mires hereby severalir Inn:La tem
le per indship with each other," etc.
• •mhle of the Constitution . says:
. .
V:" otimptie ( - 1 'tile tutted states . order to
. mere pelmet Milieu. eltablish justice. Metre de
nedudiet trilneekiitv, provide jar the common defect's..
Promote the srnetal welfare. and wars, the bleasin
• of litietty to 0111111,011(811 ad our vestal. itr. do ordain arg,
sistabilsh this Ckmaitellon for th e United Mates
• Ainsries."
Pori:cod by the people, the whole people, of the
United States; Its drdetenee is diriebilint on them,
'mid not on the States; and it can °mile dissolved
by the power that gave it 'birth; 'States - May pest
ordinances of secession, but they cannot overthrow
e - fabric erected by the scone of alilieditioal
.thority in this country—the people. • -
The lmbeoility of the Confederation was owing
to its dependant oti the - Stitee, Inc Mont of 'nine
being tettnistto to carry into' effect the Most im
portant powers-of Qoagresi. Until this salient
was obtained, money could not be borrowed or ap•
propriated, war eonld not be • declared, treaties
formed, nor mortify coined. In an important crisis,
when the fatikl:the — nation xnlght deFend on the
prompt and is depend ant action of the central Go.
:vernmenki it was in the power' Of a single State
Ito arrest !to movement. The perils of snob a de.
'pendent* were so great, and the want of power for
ail practical purposes so evident, that a strong,
; golf epetsiniug National Government could not be
'said to exist. In order to establish such a Ge
"vernment- the Constitution rendered the Federal
.Government IndepOndent of State control, and oa.
•pable of executing its men detirees. It expressly
'declares, in section two, article six, that... ,
Tea Cdriwitution, and the lives of the United States
mshieh be mad. in pursuance thereof, and all nes
this nada or wh , ch shall IV nude under the antbeinty
. df-the United Igtetee, shell he the supreme leer of the
.one, and the judges m every dodo shalt be bound
Aberebr, aarthme in the eon- tilintion or laws of ~,2 7
ktate to the iimtrary notwithstanding."
It is absurd to attempt to justify secession by
the Conetiludeo, when that instrument is made
,the supreme law of the land, and the exeedtive
;and;judiotal officers of the States, as well as the
',l,eglelistures thereof, are bound by oath to regard
,and obey it aa snob. Its notion cannot be arrested
tby State authority and the States are 'liberal.
nate powers. If any one State 'mold obstruct Its
;operations, the purposes of the Union„,wsuld be
frustra44, and the Federal Govertnitst would be
atiorn of its legitimate power, and reduced to a
oondition of vassalage to the ea. Its laws
aced not he supreme if the ha ant at dee-
Quo° by the States. To a t the supremacy of
the Federal power, and to m tor the States the
tight-to control or eve It, Is Bo glaring an ab
sardtty that it needs only to be stated to. , be ad
mined. The States Are expressly restrained by
the 4iongtitrition . froin invading the sphere . otthe
Federalil overman:et, or usurping its funotions:
mate Shall, without the conssist of Congress,
lob an' duty of tonnage. keep troops or ships-of-war in
time of peaete, enter into any agreement or compact
era another ,ita e. or with a foreign ower, or engage
to war, unless itotn.llv invaded, or in snob imminent
danger as Will not admit of delay.' —Ser. J 9, an. 1.
The - Oonstnution was intended to form "a more
perfect Union" than the Confederation, the chief
defect of which was thiaparelyelng power of the
States over the General antrnment. tf seoeselon
lind nullification - are to be tolerated, 'Mead of
being' a more perfect Union," It immune
impotent than the Confederation iteelf. The pre
sent Constitution was not- limited in duration, or
its existence put at the mere). of any inferior
authority, but it wan made for all time to come—
in the words of the preamble—. for ourselves and
our posterity." No State can withdraw from the
Confedioy without violating the plain !inept of
the Co tution, committing and a moat &grant
breach faith. Swing embarked our fortunes
in a contion bottom, any State which breaks the
Union jeopardises the welfare of the whole fester
eleteeeteeta States, &Midianite armed reelatenee
on then-, part for the 15retteiletion'of the Union.
neoeston is nothing else than a declaration of war
against The ; mot,- tr- re -- is met . - brnoodle
response from the Federal Government, The plot
ters of treason must be held for the coneequenees.
What has the Federal Government done tojnati
fy these aeserulta on Its extstencei- nee it proved
false to itspbligatione? Haa it invaded the rights
of the States, or used its powers oppressively and
to the injury of the people of the seceding States?
NO allegation of this kind is made; and in vain
may ate seek for any provocation on rte part. A
fogitlyesdave. lase .has been enacted, the stringent
provisions of which feint' every requirementof the
Constitution. It has in every case been suotiess
fully enforced, though often at great expense, and
at the point of the bayonet. Repugnant as nt to
the feelings of a large proportion of the people of
the North, it has beeif submitted to,_- and no slave
has been wrested from the grasp of Federal watt°-
. rity. The invasion of a slave State for the pur
pose of exciting a servile 'estimation wee prompt
ly put down by Federal troops; and the whole
military and naval power of the Republic would
i be employed to suppress such movements in the
slave States. Slavery, as it exists in the States,
enjoys a guarantee under the Federal Constitution
each as ft can receive from no other souroe. With
its destruction,
the inetittalon of slavery will re
ceive a shook that mut seriously affect the value
of slave property; Impairing, as it will, Ito sego
ritY, by the loss of the powerful protection it ono*
enjoyed. In the event of a division of the free and
slave States into two separate Confederations,
slaves escaping from the latter into the former
would not be restored. This would lead to great
lassos. as the certainty of freedom would oonstantly
atitulete them to flight into the free States.
Disunion, sooner or later, through one means
•or another, would lead to - thee ruin of the slave
States. T hey wenid be "surronaded on all sides
by free States; for,•it is • not to -be 'supposed - that
Mexico would ever join aslaveStatetionfederation
after having , abolished slavery on its: own -soil
81041116dr eonld net.thns.be transported from the
exhausted lands of_the elottonlEitates to contiguous
regions fresh in soil end of congenial productions.
The slave States now forth part of a Government
'Thiel commands the respost- of- the world by its
power and its energy, and its free institntions.
An exclusively slave State confederacy wcinld Con
stitute an exception - to all other Governments in
this age of the world. It would not enlist the
sympatnies of the leading litotes of Europe, averse,
ea they ere known to be, to the exteeeten, and ex-
Jenrette, even, of negro slavery. It could not be
formidable in power, owing to the divisions of its
Population into free and slave, the letter in
all probability preponderating. Being almost ex
clusively a planting and agricultural community,
it would want that diversity of pursuits and inte
rests which make a nation rich and powerful. It
&mild not have within itself all the elements of ma
terial independence, as the United States now pos
_ rues, and which enable it to treat on a footing of
equality with other leading nations. It would no
=warily occupy a dependent and inferior position
strung the community of nations. Its citizens
would not, consequently, be animated by that na
tional pride 'lhst natural belongs to the members '
of a first-class power, like that of the United
Status of America ; nor would they enjoy
such a protection as that which ie derived from a
Government whose power is known and feared
• throughout the world.
If tree trade is to be the policy of the secession
Government, after it shall have dispensed with
the provisional adoption of the Constitution of the
United States, and established a new and perma
nent system, direst taxation nun be the only
means of Government support. From this source
alone must the army and navy expenditures be
sustained, and they will cast at least, per annum,
-.fifteen or twenty million dollars. Then, there will
- heavy cost of the civil list, and the diplomatlo
• establishment, domaking, in all, for a mixed-po
pulation of white and black of little more than four
million, an annual expenditure of at leapt $.30,000,-
000. All this must be raised by a capitation and
property tax, affecting alike the rich and the poor,
and reaching the pockets of every man, however
bumble in condition and poor in means. Men who
have lived under the Government of the United
States, participating in ell its invaluable privi
dirges, and it stimulating influence on individual
and national prosperity, without the oonsolousnese
of being taxe d . for its support, will not long remain
contented under an expensive system like that
propotied in the cotton States, the burdens of which
will rest oppressively on every man's shoulders in
the community. They will not fall to institute an
, favorable oomparisorus between the economical Go
vernment which their political leaders assumed to
renounce in their name, but without their ex
press authority, and that under which they are so
heavily taxed. The great revolutions have Arleen
from this very cense, and many a strong set throne
and ancient political system has been soddenly
overturned by a people vexed and harassed by the
burdensome taxation of an extravagant and costly
Government. When a man finds that the hard
earned fruits of his industry are seriously en
()coached OA by his mines, and that he Is obliged
to surrender to the Government what ie naneurary
to the comfort and independence of his family, a
spirit of discontent is kindled in the general mass
of the community, which, when least expected,
breaks forthwith voleanio fury, carrying desola
tion and destruction before it, and uprooting every
thing in its path.
If, air, any one has a right to be proud of his
native State, a Pennsylvanian surely has. No
State in the Union possesses more of the requisites
for independent existence than Pennsylvania.
Seated between two great rivers, one of which
give!' easy edema to the Atlantic and to intercourse
with the Old World, and the other washing the
shores of the great States of the West and /South,
I and interlocking with the watercourses, whose
,navigable tides penetrate the innermost heart of
she continent, she enjoys the most admirable
ties for trade and cammerce. Within her mountain
ranges Ile imbedded inexhaustible deposits of heal
and iron, of far greater value to her than the
"wealth of Ormue and of Ind," and which will
ever make other parts of the country dependent on
her. The elopes and summits are severed with all
the chief varieties of useful timber; and the val
leys which lie among them, and the broad plains
that stretch sway from their feet, ylektabandent
c'topa of the grains whisk fneisish the staple food or
man. A healthy and vigorating climate nourishes
a brave and enterprising people, made up of the
best races of Europe, who have contributed =net
to the common glory of the nation, by their disco
varies in the arts and sciences, their valor in the
field, and their statesmanship in the Cabinet.
Favored as she Is, by Heaven, in all that makes
up the greatness of a State, Pennsylvania, sir, will
het never desert the Union. With its maintenance
er own prosperity is inseparably linked It binds
her in chains of love with , sister States, with whose
destiny her own Is intertwined. Eke regards. the
Constitution as a guardian genius, whose eye - never
slumbers, and which is ever watchful to promote
the welfare and defend the security } if. all whose
interests it has in keeping. else will.pour out her
last drop of 'blood in .its7defenoe, and exhaust all
her' resources to maintain it against a world in
arms. Let other States court eternal infamy by
conspiring its destruotion,:she will prove anew her
loyalty to the motto of her shield, "Virtue, liberty,
and independence," by :rallying around it with
her brawny MB of labor, end defending it to the
last,„ iII the darkest hour of Its peril.
Shoufd all other pro Positions fail, 1 will bring
forward the following, as •an amendment to the
Oondlleation :
" ffelther Conflate nor a Territorial Legislature shish
mate any law reepeounitnvoinatary servitude, except
la pu,ishment fermi, .htlpt o iao . Dare:: ream pews taro
P"
Vit i Vent% obr rA a 6:g .
R i. • • • .
`ls
The tifiligiainsindinetit4ctura be tko'fiitever
, issanaltsehediatiiMVof Adavery from Congressional
or•TairftorWlegigsitloff.-';'ne Matti?" °tette legis
lation of Congress on this subject is a history of
fruitless agitation;and is has of late become ed.;
dant that it.ealitit legislate .ton alavery to !
' finality. Or witlaue endangerin the tranquility
-
and Union of the States' Me moan Compri-
Luise, established as: a bond of peace between WI
North and South is 1820, was repealed 11%1854 ; an
since that time the attention of congress has for, he
moat part been °coupled with. irritating and un
profitable disonaidose on the elavery. question.' I
have faith in the people. We cannot overrule their
predetermined will, and if they.wiah slavery we
cannot prevent them from tolerating it in the Con
stitution of a new State, and we Cannot oblige them
to ,etcsinde it. It •is 4greed on all sides that we
• have no right to reject the application of a State for
'admission to the Union, because of _Ate domestic
institutions ; and even if we hod, when tbo State
is admitted it people.selath "modify their Constitu
tion according to their own we cannot
force slavery min people of a State who do itot de
sire it, nor deprive them of it if they see fit to
toieratellt, all one leglalatlcrn must be temporary,
and confined - lei - the term of Territorial probation.
Why not dispense with the exercise of the power
of prohibition, and,take the. risk of the popular
deviator' ? If the advoCatee of slavery protection
by Federal legislation,
and of popular sovereignty
In the Territories, will surrender their respective
claims,
I am willing , by way of compromise, to
waive the tight to prohibit by Federal legislation,
and thus to remand the whole question of slavery .
beak to the popular arbitrament. Such an amend-•
meet as I propose, all other plans of compromise
falling, would at least pacify the country by egpei
ing the question of slavery from Congress._ Under
the decialontof the Sdpreme Court, (if it ka.s really
made such a decision,) slavehotders have a
right to take their slaves into the Territories,
and to hold them there until they are ruled out, or
admitted by the State Constitution. As long as
that decision stands, no tlongfessional legislation
can invalidate it, and we must, therefore, aot ac
cordingly. Such an amendment as that which I
propose, Mr. Speaker, would allay all apprehen
sions of the interference of Congress with slavery
in the States, the District of Columbia, Ac., as it
would deprive Congress of all power ever the sub.
loot. It is also not ulansixioua to the objections which
must always exist against a geographical line of
division—that of perpetuating sectional distine.
thins. I have ne desire to press this amendment;
but, if a datable peace on the slavery question is:
desired, I venture to suggest that some snob pro
position is the only one by which It can be secured.
I have every reason to believe that the interests of
freedom would not Buffer by its adoption ; for one,
I am willing to hazard the unbiassed judgment of
the people on the subjeol.
Remarks of Judge Lewis • to
chatter:, on Presenting the Bel:1011P
tions of the Denioerntic Convention.
The Convention of the Democratic party that
assembled at Harrisburg on the 224 ultimo was the
largest that ever assembled in this Commonwealth.
It was composed of distinguished men from every
part of the, State, representing every shade of
opinion heretofore existing in the party.
Ex-Chief Junkie Lewis was chairman of the Com
mittee on Resolutions, ant reported them to the
Convention. They were unanimously adopted. A
committee of thirty-four was appointed to convey
these resolutions to the Peace Congress, and to the
President and Vies President of the United States.
This committee attended in the East Room of the
•
White House on Saturday evening last, and Chief
Justice Lewis, es its organ, presented the resolu-
Sone to and addressed the President as follows :
Ma. Panalnlini:Xtaa:pre in attendance thirty
- .
fon, 'eitieens of - frennspivanhcssannitating a coup
•
mittee appointed by the Demooratle Coneastiesi_
held in Harrisburg ou the nat. and-223 February,
rem.
It gives me great pleasure that I have been ee
'toted by my fellow-citizens as their organ on this 1
Oceael011: first, because I know that you will be
- gratified with the pleasing Intelligent'e we are
about to communicate; and, secondly, because it
comes through the channel of one old neighbor and
personal friend to another. We are charged with
the agreeable duty of presenting to you a oopy of
'the resolutions adopted by that great Convention.
I speak of it as a great Convention, because it was
the largest representative assembly ever convened
in that Commonwealth, and because it comprised
the wisdom of men distinguished for their long ex
perience in publio life, and the energy of others,
younger in years, but equally well known for their
patriotic devotion to the free institutions of their
country.. I speak of It as a great Convention, be
cause it was composed of leading and influential
man from every part of the State, and of every
shade of opinion heretofore existing among our
polities' brethren.
Your Rxeellemay is aware that the party which
has hitherto had the ohipf agency in sustaining,
and in administering our wise system of self
government, was unfortunately distracted by dif
terenoss of opinion in relation to the selection of
your successor In offioe. This destruction of our
harmony paralyzed our action, and was one of the
principal means by which our political adversaries
were enabled to gain their temporary triumph at
the late Presidential election, and thus to bring
upon the country the deep gloom which now
spread' itself, over the land.
It will give you
greet pleasure to learn that the dissensions to
whisk I refer, so far as they street your native
State, are entirely healed - that all private griefs
are "in the deep bosom o f ocean buried ;" and
that the great conservative party, whosebattles,
when united, are always victories , are now united
as a band of brothers, with one heart, and one
voice, and that they are ready and able, when a
legitimate opportunity shall offer, to rescue the
Government from the hands of those whose avowed
principles and threatened purposes ate rapidly
producing its destruction.
Our Convention met on the '2lst of February,
and clod its labors on the 224, a day which gave
birth to the Father of our Country, and a fitting
day for the serious consideration of our prevent
national difficulties. The closing action of that
Convention was the adoption of thee* resolutions,
and the appointment of this committee. The full
number of delegates called was three hundred and
ninety-nine, and, with very few exeeptians, all
were in attendants..
A Committee on Resolutions was appointed.
That committee was composed of thirty-three
members, selected, not by the presiding officer,
but by the Convention itself, the delegates residing
in each Senatorial district choosing for themselves,
the member who was to represent them in the
'committee.
In speaking of my brethern on that commitee,
trust that I may be allowed to assure you that
they were statesmen and patriots, distinguished
for their sound discretion and their past services.
After many hours of oalm. dignified, and inde
pendent, buklirmontous deliberation, they unani
mously agree 'upon every resolution reported to
the Convention ; and every resolution thus report
ed was unanimously adopted by that Convention,
every member rising from his seat, and proclaim
ing with an earnestness which could not be mis
taken, his hearty approbation of the sentiments
expressed in the resolutions.
you will perceive that the platform thug con
struoted ie ono on which the whole Doncooratio
party may stand fa their union and strength .
There is not a single unsound plank In it. It is a
platform on which all true friends of the Constim- •
tion and the Union, and all patriots and law
abiding citizens, of every party, may gather them
selves together , to save their country from the
oyamitice wbieh threaten its destruction.
You will also see that the Convention has clearly
affirmed that the several States of this Union are
sovereign and Independent over every subject not
eurrendered to the - Federal Government, and that
they have no right to interfere with each other's
domestic institutions, but are bound by the Con
stitution to protect and defend them. There is also
a distinct recognition of the doctrine that the Go
vernment of the United States, although limited
in its authority to the subjects enunciated in the
Federal Constitution, pnaleeses, within aims limits,
supreme authority, and has the usual and neces
sary powers for preserving itself and enforcing
its laws
I know that it will give you real satisfaction to
learn that the high council of our party whoee re
presentatives we are on this occasion, has not
hesitated to affirm, - with entire unanimity, that our
Southern brethren have equal rights with ourselves
i in the Territories, acquired by the blood and trea
sure. of all for the common benefit of all ; that
this right is founded on the clearest equity, is eup•
ported by the decision of the highest court in the
Union, and ought to be sustained by • every law
abiding citizen until some satisfactory division of
the territory be settled by an amendment of the
Constitution_ In this fearless support of estab
lished rights, our Coniention has not followed the
example of those who acknowledge the justice of
these principles, but have not the courage to sup
port them, and who know the duly of obedience to
the decrees of oar highest court, but cannot bring
their allegiance up to the true standard of an en
lightened conscience.
You will also perceive that our people in Penn
sylvania are in favor of aiding in the execution of
that clause of the Constitution which requires the
Stites to deliver up fugitive slaves to their owner's,
and also in favor of repealing all statutes which
obstruct its execution, and of substituting other
enactments, In accordance with the Federal duties
of the State.
The Democratte party have also avowed a deep
and abiding attaohment to the Union of the States.
TWO CENTS.
They will cling to it as the last hope of freedom ;
as the great erperiment in self-gOvernment. whin
is to light the nations of the earth to liberty and'
independence. They have also expressed, in one
Othello resolutions, a determination to oppose. die
countenance,-and prevent, by all proper and le
gicimate means, any attempt, on the part of the
Republicans in power, to make armed aggression
upep, the king:tern States, sepeglaily ISO long as the
nights of the latter continue to -be unaware% de
vied. and obstructed.
All these resolutions were adopted with entire
unanimity. Bat the one which oondetaried armed
aggression upon the Southern States while their
rights were denied, was received with the most un
bounded onthuaisem. It wee evident, from the
loud and lonpoontinued shouts of applanse k whieh
burst spontaneously from that grave and Intern.
gent assembly, that their besets revolted =against
oivii war,-• arraying father against son, brother
against brother, and friends and kindred against
each other. 'Mingling foremost in the bloody
scene, and slaughtering each other in the fratriel
deroontliot would, of manse,- iko found the brave
heroes of the Metxthan war; the companiona•in•
arma.who had won their laurels together, lighting
side by side Against, our foreign enemy at Palo
Alto. Buena Vista, Cerro 'Gordo, and the gates of .
Mexico. I hove no hesitation in saying that the
resolulion repotted by- the committee fell far
short of the feeling of the Convention against
tbo inauguration of a ,civil war in an tappet
nun.
- But pardan me for detaining yon so long. Here
with I have the honor to present a copy of the re."
solutions to which I have referred. We know that;
you will do ail you can to preserve our beloved-
Union. We hops that our common dog may,con-,
done to be the, banner of one united sisterhood of
Eltatet4liearing 'aloft in every oiler? its'aicrrias
trymixdsof =Hy end power. I . • • I
„At#4l,aorkoltadosanf Judge Ellis Isewis' remarks,
he stepped forward and handed a copy of the rem.
latiorcto Mr. Buohantok,,_w i _lto when receiving
them;, replied' VrithAilfithliiiiinig ft' —ittrrietinit :
eloquent address to the committee.
Union Demonstiiiti4 in Washington
Speeches by Illnssrs. Linedln, Haueliii
and Coniin.
[From the New York Herald.)
WASIIINItTON, rObICULTy ZS, 1661.
Honorable Mr. Sp_aulding, mentlmr of Congress '
from thy lioifolp, (N. Y.) distriot, gave ,a 'dinner
party this evening at his residence. . Among the
invited guests werelbe President and Vice Presi
dent elect, Mr. Sew*d, Mr. Chive' Mr. Cameron,
Mr. Montgomery Blair, Mr. Caleb-B. Smith, Mr.
Gideon WeJlee A lthil Mr. Bates, 7 ezebrseing the
manors ofthn,new Cabinet; also Senator King
and Senator elect Harris, of New. York ; Speaker
Pennington) Itr. Sherman, Mr. Corwin and Mr.
Washburneotif - Illinois, of the House of,Ropresen
tatives ,• and..ludgo Davis, of Illinois ; :add balers.
The affair wee very elegant and highly intellectual.
Mr. and Min. Lincoln, after their return from
the magnifies — tit dinner given by Mr. Spaulding,
held a- levaelef and received a very
large nowhere ladies and rintlemen, including
Senators and B e epresentatives, army and navy of
and,meMbirp of the , diplomatic) corps.
At half past ten o'blook 'the music of the Marine
Band was heard from Cu? spacious and crowded
parlors of WillerVe- A rush was made to the
balcony and windows, and very moon an immenee
throng.was gathered in front of the hotel, the band
playing "Hail to the Chief." Three cheers were
called for Abraham Lincoln, and were given with
a hearty will and repeated.
After.many calls for Mr. Lincoln he appeared,
when.three more hearty and enthusiastic cheers
were given for him. Mr. Lincoln bowed several
times fo thd Multitude, and the band struck up
another faiarite air, during which time the tall,
dark form of Mr. Lincoln appeared agatest the
illumined parlor window of the hotel, the target of
every eye When silence was restored, Mr. Lin
coln spoke as follows ;
MR. LINCOLN'S SMIRCH
MY FRIENDS : I suppose that I may take this as
a compliment paid to me, and as such please ac
cept my thanks forit. I have reached this pity of
Washington under circumstances considerably dif
feting from those under which any other man has
ever reached it. I have remand it for the purpose
of taking an official position amongst the people,
almoat all of whom were opposed to Me and are
yet opposed to /1214 SS I tempo*. (Severe] voices,
No, no.". Other voices, "Go on, sir, you are
mistaken in that, indeed you are. "J I propose no
lengthy address to you noel.` I only propOse to
say, as r did may on yesterday, I believe, when your
Mayor and Board of Aldermen walled uponets,
that I thought much of the ill feeling that hag co
existed betweenyou and the people of your
surroundings, and that people from amongst
whom I come, has depended, and now
de
',pends, upon a misunderstanding. [Several
voice.- - " That's so," and applause, / hope that
if things will go along as prosperooely as
I believe we all desire they may, , a may have it in
my power to remove something of this 'Maunder
stanoling—[cries of "Goode' " good," and loud
apPlause(—that I may be enabled to convince you,
and the people of your section of the country, that
we regard you Be in all thinge being our opals
in all things entitled to the same respect and to
Om same treatment that we elates for ourselves—
(pries of "Good," and applausel—that we are in
no wise disposed, , lf it were in our power, to oppress
you or deprive you of anyofjoter rights under the
Constitution of the United States, or even narrowly
ter split , hairs' with 'yea in regard to those rights;
(hld and prolonged cheering ;I:but are deter
mined to give you, 69 far as lies in , aarhands, all
rights under t h e Doustitution, not grudgingly,
'llettldnye-sed-fairles or," Good, and scp
planter. I I hOpefiraW.Muwileid,lng with you we
will become better acquainted - and. be better
friends. [Cries of "Good," Mid applauee.) And
now, my Wends, with - these few remarks / again
return my thanks for this compliment, and oz.
pressing my desire to enjoy a little more of your
good must's, I bid you good night.
The speaker retired 'amid the most vociferous
cheering.
After one or two national airs from the hand,
the crowd proceeded to the rosidenoeuf the Hon.
Thomas Corwin on "G . , between Fourteenth and Fif
teenth streets. The bind , perforated the favorite
patriotic air of "Hail Columbis," when, in re
sponse to repeated calls, Mr. Corwin made his ap
pearance and address ed the assembled gathering
in the following words
• coasvirt's arearn.
GEWILBNIEN : I cannot misunderstand the ob
ject which haa brought you here I know it is the
passion which every true American feels who loves
his country, the Constitution, and the Union of
these States. (Applause.) I think the time in
which we live has come upon us for the purpose of
revivifying that ancient lord of true conetttution
al liberty regulated by law. ("That's so," and
applenee.l And it gives me great pleasure, under
these circumstances, to see this number of men
united for that general idea and for that general
purpose. [Good.] I em happy to say to you to
night, gentlemen, that the Congress of the United
States, in one of its branches, to-day, said that that
portion of your Constitution. made by your fathers
and mine, which secures to each State the right to
mould its own domestic institutions according to
its own ideas of policy and propriety shall remain
so forever. [Vociferous cheering ] I think that
the developments of to-day, accompanied by such
as we shall be happy to see in the course of a few
weeks, will have the effect to dispel muoh of that
misunderstanding which led to the late unhappy '
consequences we all so much deplore. Gentlemen,
it is a time when men are required to cease talking,
and work —r•Good.'•j—to attest their feelings of
patriotic devotion to this great and glorious eGue.
try of ours, not so much by words as by deeds.
'[Applause ] Let each of us, therefore, remember
that since we have a constitutional President,
elected in a constitutional manner, it becomes our
duty to give that President and the policy which
he may happen to present to the country a liberal
and fair consideration. ("Good."J If it shall not
equate with the doctrines which belong to the Con
eutntion and institutions of this country he will find
himself abandoned by the very men who have eleva
ted him and be left at the mercy of the few. ("That's
so."] Gentlemen, if I were able, and it was your
purpose, or mine, here to confer together upon
this subject for ten hours, it would be nothir more,
at least, than I have said. Let each one o fus re
member that we are citizens of one Government.
Let us remember that this country is incur betide
to be saved or lost, as our madness or our wisdom
shall determine. Gentlemen, I again return you
my thanks for this mark of your kindness. [Loud
applause
' From the residence of Mr. Corwin, the vast as.
semblage, which had by this time gained mime
rons accessions, repaired to the residence of the
Hon. Win 11. Seward, on F street, between Thir
teenth mid Fourteenth.
' After one or two stirring airs from the band; Mr
L. Clephane came forward, and stated that it was
with extreme regret that he had to announce that
Mr. Seward was absent at a dinner patty. The
, prooession then took up the line of march for the
quarters of Mr. Hamlin, on Pennsylvania avenue,
near Third street.
On arriving in front of the homer, Mr. Hamlin
, made his appearance, after loud and prolonged
cheering, and, on being introduced by Mr. Ole
phone, spoke as follows.
MR. imaines spumy
Mr vantaria : Whether amid the anew' of the
Northern States, or beneath the genial inin that
/mile. upon von ao gently here, everywhere.ln the
;broad land I am rejoiced to meet American citi
zens. [Enthusiastic cheering, and odes of "flood."]
We have a common country, and it's a country we
. all love: 'pries - of "Good !" and "That's so.")
However bounded, or by whomeoever governed,
I" That's Bo!" and applause,] and I do believe
that it is only neoessary for us to understand each
other hotter, to remove all the calends that lower
in 'the vilified horizon: [Loud and prolonged
ohesriog J Ido not believe that there any
considerable number in any section ef oar coun
try who, when divested of passion, would en
croach upon the rights of their neighbors. [The
• oheeriog at this - point of the speaker'oremarks was
so enthodastle and continuous that it wee some
time before Mr. Hamlin Wu enabled to resume ]
We, at but. as Republicans, hold to the °tined
tution, and the rights that it guaranteoa to every
State.] Loud cheering. J And It is In the light of
that Constitution, and In the principles in which it
has been administered in years long gone by, by
sages and patriots,•that we mean to guide and di
reoL it now. !Cam of " Good." and immense
'.cheering..'And, come what will, come weal or
come woe, good it is, In the maxima of Jefferson
.and• Madison, of Weehington and of Jaakson, that
we will stand by our common country, and man"'
'tain its integrity and its purity. Gentlemen, lam
`glad to meet you on this occasion, and I thank you
'for the kindness and mates/ which it manifesto,
but more, much more, for the principles whioh it
exhibits in your lantana as loyal lovers of tho land.
I prise of ig Good," and applause.] You will allow
me to bi i you a fond good night.
After Mr. Hamlin conoladed be retired to the
main par:or of his hotel, where be Wes congratu
lated by a large number of ladies and gentleben,
who bad essembled at an early hour to pay their
respeete to him and Mrs. Hamlin. '
Mrs. II bad quite an ovation,
and is exceedingly
u
popular in Whington " among the elite of the Me
tropolis, •
THE WEEKLY 'PKESK.
•THi ANNELY Puss will bei pent to••rnbaoribere by
mail (sew annum in advance.) $2.00
Three Copies. s. Leo
Five " " 4 " 8.00
;Tee " " " ---. 12.01)
" " " (to one addreig) 20.00
Twenty Copies, or over
each subeonbaro 1.20
For a Club - of Twenty-one or over, we arm ism a ll
extra am to thiesetter-up of-the Club.
161 " . Po*tuinotero tom Foomootod to sot Amu for
WXEILT ntESS. •
CALIFORNIA Fanslll,
ferny' three thee" a Month is time for the Califer
rum Stemma.
Letter front New York.
TEE EXPRESS BUSINESS ANIA SOUTEIBIE AMR.
CHANTS: ENORMOUS TRANSPORTATION DURING
THE LAST TWO WEEKS : WHO IS To COLDEOT DU
TIES ON GOODS SENT INLAND CURIOUS STATE OT
AFFAIRS—NORTH RIVER NAVIGATIoN—A pulw AND
IMPORTANT MOVEMENT IN PRINTING ntstrovEirso •
AT TEE TRIBUNE OFFICE—SUCCESSPDL DEBUT or
ANOTHER YANKEE PRIMA DONNA: WHO EDUCATED
EDE : Tins BROZiILELS Aid/ Tiiit SiDosoi : amour
HINCEINT To BE MARRIED—DOW OUR MTV TA
- TREES GROW RICH.
[CorrosPondeeoe of The Frees.]
- NEw Tonic, Feb. 28;1881
The business of. Adems' Express ,Company for
the last week hue been unprecedented!! largo ,
Southern marabnnts, in view of the duty brute-.
forth to be laid - by the Southern Confederacy on
all goods pnrohased at the North priorto'this day;
have
,sent on large orders , especially for light
goods,. and the Express Company's facilities have
behi taxed to their utmoet capacity to get them
off: I: em told• by Mr. Hoey, the manager of the
company, that after to-day they look for is great,
stibeldenee, indeed' an almost total snipennon, of
this trade,' temporarily at- laud, and eintiPthe t
commercial .relations-,hatetheri l ibe..hro• ooughing
are placed upon that basir_pg, kility- 4044..
for the safe and stioe'ealful pro littera) /, Kong^
affairs. . But a iodides tqlentileis , arts 1M ltkeir
very Atiteet it Aeforonett"to.,. go2dsaimpgrted.
into the, new qiintederacii
Mew " dirtiet 7 tei There are '
naithersiniitomihmises„ nollectorsif_kustoms,:navid ,
qi4oeri„
,rooveyors, insopetore, tide-waiters, nor.,
any oT ho, numberlesif offlidete employed to collect
rovenbe end `7prevehrlettiogiling at ports - on the
seaboard; and t• station•them at every, railroad,:
;crossing end. on .everi highway on the dividipg,,
nee between the United Statue andthe 'new.COnfsi- -
deraey would squire an.arMy.of °Metals greateet
Akan tlie bstrinroiyroakivre!ript. ,A:pordon would
be required from Jklepiihis, Teiffieesge to - Wile,
.mington North Ciirollba—lagiliernrefoli-nise
•dreo-mtitor. -Bvery -tewn on the northern ltua-i
Louisiana, Mississippi,
Sotith corona: M'UIII 'n.eormtrili. "Titemisp.
teL -heirs .00! , rdio •liitirlivfdentiontiflSlP- 7- Itl- 1
•vested, with • power rfe tiOUeot duties: , All,
Mhis„would he .prodpc)tlye en,.amotnit of in.
ioUnvenienoil, annoyance and fielai, lamest' fatal'
*te dile; and 'ordatee•nitelfraillldayeamiong- , ouri
. .,inerehante.. riudis to Notions pi* Alio,teg
ig,fge of travellers? -Everybody , knows. that the
'milt itfgenions espedients are roobriel"te'e,fpitg
loom oorqing from Edrope to smugglecOrily irtttigas
vent baggage os• on th e
. "orlon. ,f,(owieireatteritie r
manage about this? The subject .expaeord as 'We,
oontemplate • ' With 'a frontlet. and' 5 1:11A61101 ,
measuring theusands of miles, it istliffiliniCtienotk.;
mate the yeti tinny. of employees that • Mile, J O l 5
mastered Info the - service of the Confederated'
States if they-witiiiil Ciente • the fa* they
have already enaoted: , •
The steamer Columbia this afternoon for
Charleston, with the largestfielght'sliti star took
from this port. On her utottirlp she will proba
bly take the smallest. • .. • ~_
The North River is open as far atiYonglilliepaie,l
and boats have been running eindtrhfeliday. -"Pero
eons engaged in the river tradei statelluit, bythe.
Close of next week navigation will be open to .
-bany. •
The publishers of the Tribune have at lett pee ,
footed. he experiments they have been making for
upwards of a year past, to stereotype their daily .
forms, after the manner of the -Lontioir Tidi x.
Tho' rtibune entire Is now stereotyped fiery morn
ing, and on two days •in the week doable seta of
plates are made. )3y this process the paper ap
pears as on new type, and an hour and a half is
gained each morning in time—a consideration of
the first importance for morning. pepgre. . The ,
Tribune has "arieemplished this impertant'reeult
after the expenditure of much time and money,
and - will dont:awe reap its reward ' ;
The debut of Mira Kellogg, last ,evening, in
Italian opera, was a great novelle. Site has
marked talent for the stage, beside:, :a Atte voice
and high cultivation. She ill not np to Mies :Phil- •
lips, bat superior to Hinckley, an&(excop 'hug
voice) Patti. She is understood to•iiii proton*
of Colonel Y. Stebbins, an onnlerttbrokert who
long ago discovered her, talent, and has assisted
her parents to prepare her for her Vocation. Col.
S- is the brother of Miss Stebbins, the soulptrees.
bear, by the way, that another member of the
broker, persuasion, formerly•interested in the pub
lioation of 'a fending daily paper of 'Western New
Writ, bat now greliii 146 h taieSettsfeil !patettitt
time stooks, , ho e s discovered • a young musical
prodigy, and plautid her under the best molest in
struotion, with the' view of making—her a prima
donna. , Would that I 'were a broker i -Would that
we were all brokers ! able to go into the hcii•boarted
benefactor line for ntakanit eopranim in what Mrs.
Farrington mould call "indignant oireumstaneee"
—young women with scantily-filled , trunks, but
cheats opulent with vocal power.. .I.hold religions.
ly to the belief that there Is no human heingenual
to a brokeffor.deteeting-mnakelgenins hi a young
woman; and I. state, in support of .it, that almost
every men of the crowd of curb-stone-ere that
daily cultivate the doerr' affection and " do" . eaoh
other at the corner of William street and Exchange
Place, as he offers " Illinois Central et seller
30," turns to We brother operator and ssYs "My
dear fellow, if yoti know of any clever young
@legit% women, virtuous and good looking, desir
ous of becoming a prima donna, tell me, and I'll
point np - the denuntion cash' for heredneatlon.'"
Speaking of Mies.llinekley, itie said in:airofee
likely to be welkinfopmed, that she is ahant, to be
itarriecl.to very iealthy young man of this City,
of'about the same age its herself. Shale a eharip-,
• '
A day or two since A. J. Haokley leciged a con
tract for cleaning the streets of this city for 'five
years at 4279,000 per annum, which i.sooo 000
hiefr Pr" ; that pf . the Jo ispyt *W i g. ; : It is un
derstood that s ent : city fathers how},elegular gra
duated Neely whioh thePyill'to obilariu the
bid: ;from $3O 00e to $80,0013' They of
fered to Co retina-SAO 000 bid for. WINO •, the
neietfid'for $5O 00$,fted•ft'is . Qpkgetmq onCimiah
down for ooiifirming th i bid of 1 14•10fri;
Crime in Lyeoming Coanti s •
A HUSBAND LMIIRDERS HIS WIJ?E AHD COYISH'S
Ea=
[From the -Lyeominr Gasette,February 27.3
_ A horrible murder was 'committed iu Williams
port on the night of the 11th. The particulars of
the affair are as follows :
A man by the name of Barney flindley, former
ly of Philadelphia, residing on the corner of Front
„street and Pine alley, in Williamsport, with a wife
and four email ohildren, the youngest about
six
teen months old. killed hie wife, Mary Medley, in.
a most eboeking manner, and buried her.
Bhe was seen on the 11th hist , since which time
she has been missing. Inquiries concerning her
absence were made of him, by the neighbors,
some of .whom be told that she had gone to
Philadelphia, and to different persons be
,told different stories concerning her where
abouts. Suspicion was soon excited by the dif
ferentia of storles,and secretly, the officers went
to work to ferret out the yet undisclosed mystery.
lea few days, one of the offiaers went to the house
and saw a quantity of feathers scattered about the
floor, and some tied. up in a cloth In thg course
of conversation, he inquired of }Medley, why the
feathers were thus strewn over the floor, to which
he replied, that his wife had taken the bed fieke to
Philadelphia to get law fathers for them. Similar
inquiries were by different persons, to some of
whom he replied that ha bad emptied them him
self, and to others that •he had another person
empty them that they might be washed.
Snspiolon was aroused, and for several days an
investigation was carried on for the purpose of dis
covering a eine to the whereabouts of the , missing
woman. Bindley was arrested on the morning of
Saturday, the 23d nit., and committed to await the
result of the investigation. The scarab was con
tinned dories Saturday, and it was supposed that
the body was tinder the ice that was piled up on
the bank of the river.
On Saturday evening the prisoner,. in; his cell,
confessed to a friend that he had killed his wife,
and that the body would not be found in the river,
that he had buried it,: but world not tell'Where.
During they forenoon of Sunday, Bluffly, white
Ii hie cell, aucceeded in saving 'reser from
another prisoner, and partially out hie throat,
nearly severing.the. windpiph . The situation was
almost immediately dircovered, and a physician
was called and the wound dreamt. When he be.
came •able to speak, he stated that be had killed
and buried his wife ; that he had killed her en
Monday night, put her into a meat barrel in the
hence, dug a hole on Tuesday, and buried her on
Tuesday night. He 'offered to tell the physioian
where he bad burled the-body of his wife, , on eon
dition that he would not disclose it until after his
(the. prisoner's) death—supposing that his suicide
was effected.
About the time that there confeselene were made
to the physician,, the body of the deceased was
found buried, almost in a state of . nudity, in the
wood shed, about three feet under grotlnd, having
been covered with "a bloody pillow. and: blanket.
The shedin whit& she was burled was about eight
feet r4uare,
and the illailitere he out his wood,
previous to the murder, and during the•than she
was buried. The body was exhumed and carried
to the house. A jury was summoned, and an in
quest held by - Justice Montg, inery. INnmerous
'Antrim:4 were elemined, lint the verdict wit de.
ferred , until Monday ovvahoiv_ After .which the
body wee laid out, near a window, so - that the head
and face could be seen by the anxious Crowd out
side. In the evening the undertaker's hearse ar
rived with the coffin,,end,. taking charge of the
body, removed it to the cemetery.
On Monday evening the jury that was sum
moned by Junto, Montgomery on Sunday evening
returned the verdiet on Bindley, in substance as
follows : - '
"That Barney - with a certain - maul,
bountririth tote, and en - a xe, made of Iron and
steel; did strike Mary Hindley on the left aide Of
the head .and face; rand that the said .Barney
Bindley did .tiolently, feloniously, voluntarily,
and of hie malice aforethought, with a knife or
.some other sharp inetrement, out the throat Of the
aforesaid' Mary Wadley, intliming inoitoi wound',
of which mortal wounds toe said Mary Hindley did
inetantly die; sktbe - Bartley Bindle', feloni
ously killed and murdered the said lidszy - MinXey,
against - the peace and ( Li t h e Common•
wealth of PennsYlvunits "
On Tuesday morning, albeit half put five O'olcick,
Barney Bindle, died iluble'esllll,-freba the Whets of
the wound in hie throat, indicted' by himself. •
jury was summoned hyJnatioe Montgomery, which
returned a veirdiotin substance u follows .
" That Barney Hindley name to bls"deatb by his
own ant, which apt was 'perpetrated upon himself
by himself" with a - :raaor borrowed -from a fellow•
priepook named Ignatius. Grimes."
Si --- Sr
ittIOIDE. Or A PRllloitlit MOMS SiNTSII9S'
OF DSAIM—John Cathcart. in'. the °aunty jail,
in this borough, under scannas of death for the
murder of his wife last anmmer, andwbo ism. to
'hair* been exeouted on the, 1&b Of, Arra next,
oommitted suicide en last Sabbath' night, by bang
ing himself in his WI with'a pooket hand iterehiel.
rlt seems that he had pleoeC' the . frieuidkorohlor
tanned one of the iron bars whit& run aeroatibe
plank lining of the cell, and then tied it around
hie nook. In order to prevent himself using his
hands, be had tied .thiin' trifether, and passed
them over one of his legs' iollitit'he stood astraddle
of them. In order to atringle himself he had to
draw up hie ,to Asap thorn,' off. the Boor, or
rather, perhape,_ litskjuid to lean: forward in a
stooping_poiture to aeobmplieh hie fearful par .
poee.—Clearfield Republican, Feb. 27th.
(to gams of