WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 22, 1862. EXTRACT FROM FALB LAST SPEECH OF JIBEEPIIEN A. ikititiLati.—"“The conspiracy Ito Arndt ay the MIAMI ie a fact new knew* t• Piteteliare,belag raised, Wed war levied to acessiplish "ilirre, can be bat two Sides to the controversy. Every man must tie on the sid&of the` Wined states - sr against it. There can be no neutrals In this war. There can be sane het i patriots and traltors.” JOB BALE—The doable-cylinder a Ter Loa" Paine •ttn ,Wbich this' paw ban been printed for the last nine finonthe... It is in excellent condition, haying been made Lo ,t,det.tt year Bin and will be sold at a bargain. for *rota aptly at this °Rice, or &Adria' Jean W. ironiar, 414 cineetnut Street, Philadelphia. THE LATEST. WAR NEWS. Further particulars of the recent battiest Somer. let will be found in another column. The rebels, in their precipitate flight from Mill Springs, left two hundred dead and wounded on the field, be aides all their cannon, ammunition, and coramissa- Ty and quartermaater's stores. Their rout was complete, and 'as no official intelligence from - General Thomas was received yesterday at Gentral ituell's headquarters in Louisville, it is presumed that he is busily engaged in following up the ene my, and making priSoners of a large portion of them.. The affair was one of the most brilliant victories achieved by the Federal arms since the present rebellion broke out s and too much praise cannot be awarded to the gallant officers and Fri vatot :who were engaged in it. The Statolauthorities of Rhode Island and Massa chusetts have, within a few days, received a com munication ',from the War .Department at Wash ington, inquiring what number of troops could be sea into active service, from each State, within the next aeven days. • The annual official return of the British nary has been published. The list shows a total of eight hundred and fifty-six vessels building, pro prring, oe in commission, of which seven hundred and two are steamers. It comprises "eighty-one line.of-battle-ships, each mounting from seventy four to one hundred and thirty-ono guns; twenty , two vessels, each with an armament of from sk ly to seventy guns; forty-four 51-gun frigates, the whole, with the exception of about ten of that num ber, being screw steamers; fifty-seven ships, each mounting from twenty-two to fifty guns, and the majority of which have a tonnage as large as ships of %elites ; twenty-nine screw corvettes, or frigates, each mounting twenty-two guns; three hundred and seventeen screw and paddle-wheel steamers, e sok Carrying less than twenty-two guns; and one hundred and eighty-five screw ' gunboats, each provid6l with two Armstrong guns." The fleet in ' American waters comprises fourteen line-of 7 battle steamers, 'ranging from fitly-one to one hundred guns; seven from twenty to fifty, and fourteen smaller vessels exclusive of all the yes. sele ordered to join the same command. ' The Paris correspondent of the New York Ere sting Post, writing from that city, under date of January 3 . 3, says: "I beard yeiterday a very important and inte resting bit of news about Queen Victoria and the despatch to Lord Lyons, on the answer to whicha co much is now depending. You may rely on it as craning from every authentic source. It is in substance this: The original despateb, concocted hot and strong, as befitted the excited state of the British Cabinet as well as of the British people on receipt of the T:citt affair, was handed in to the Queen 'for approval. Victoria is queen of a great nstion, jealous of its honor and rights • but Victoria is also a Christian woman and a mother. She recalled to mind that America and England were united by many intimate ties. Race, lan guage, religion, literature, commerce, such wore the considerations which rendered a war with America a sort of civil war in her eyes. ' .Then she remembered bow the Prince of Wales bad been received among us, and that thought alone toads the Idea of war revolting to her mina. When she ran , her .eyo over the draft of the instructions to Lord Lyons, she ex claimed, But this is war ! war against oar flesh and blood—war against those who have so lately given their hospitality to my boy. This must not be !' Prince Albert Was then naturally consulted. Though the Prince held no political position, the British press is unsnitnous in admitting that he was the Queen's best friend, advisor, and guide. The result was that the Prince made such modifications in the language and tone of tho despatch, that from a peremptory and absolutely warlike Alocument, it was transformed into a palm and courteous mes sage. So that, perhaps, we owe it to Prince Albert that our country is saved from a disastrous war with England. For I bear of no ono in the Cabi net of'Great Britain but Lord Palmerston, ' whose Voice 10 still for War.' This was the last act of the . . lamented Prince's lifeg-and assuredly in the whole course of his life be never did a more immensely important service to bis country and - to the world.' The Washington correspondent of tho Augsburgh (N. 37,( Gazette, speaking of Dr Russell, the cor- respondent of tbo London Times, says: " "'When I remarked to Mr. Russell ihat be had fallen into some disfavor here on account of hie de am, mien of Bull's Bun, he explained to mo the sir enmstikees ,under which he had written the letter. Ikerrived, he told we, on the ground only when the battle toss already over, and he fell into the midst of the rout. This, therefore, remained es pecially impressed on his memory, and ho wrote off hie letter immediately after his return to his guar tars, and aftefa ride of some fifty English dies; told be bad to 'despatch the letter without reading it, 'over, He admitted that he himself KM sur msed at muck whin& appeared in, the letter when rt arrived ant hero six weeks after." AiVe have some definite information this morning, by way,of Norfolk and Fortress Monroe, from the Burbride Expedition up to Friday last, at which time the fleet was all in Pamlico Sound, but had not commenced its operations or indicated its real destination. The Virginia papers contain but little infofinalion on the subject, the recent law for the suppression of war news doubtless preventing its publication. A private despatch to kgentleman In Richmond, from a merchant of Wilmington,' states that a fleet of thirty vessels was at anchor off the month of Cape year river, and a demonstration upon Wilmington was hourly expected. Wilming ton is the capital of New Hanover county, N. C., and it is situated on the left bank of Cape Pear river, just below the entrance of its northeast branch, thirty-four miles from the sea, one hun dred and thirty-five miles southeaat from Raleigh, one hundred and eighty miles northeast from Charleston, and four hundred and sixteen miles from Washington. It is the largest and most com mercial town in the State, the business and popu lation having been greatly increased by the construction of the Wilmington and Raleigh Rail road, which extends north to Weldon, on the Roanoke river, one hundred and sixty-two mites, and-forma part of the great highway of travel North and South. Another railroad was not long singe opened from Washington to Manchester, in Routh Carotins, where it connects with the Camden Branch Railroad. The length of this line is one hundred and fifty-six miles. In 1860, Wilmington had 9,553 inhabitants THERE ARE two classes of Democrats in the North, and their distinctive principles aro be coming daily more and more Manifest—those represented by Dingo:sox, MUMMA, and Ars- Dago_ Jortafans, and, those controlled by such men as VALLABDIGgAIIt and WILLIAM B. RE ED. The drat class are for the war—for the best means of putting down the rebellion—for the restoration of the Union.. They, are willing to confide in the Administration—they are in fa vorof taxation—they consider no sacrifice of blood or treasure too great to attain these re sults. To, them aparty organization is a name —a thing of the past—a temporary convent epee Which gave way to a national necessity. They are for the country at all times and under all contingencies. The second class were against the Government in the beginning, and are against the Govespraent now. Their sym pathies were always with the men of the South. In the old tines of peace they were the Aires of the Southern aristocracy—they followed them into Conventions,they voted with them in Cengress. There ivas no legislative propo. silicon too offensive for them to endorse, • and whenever Northern humiliation or an outrage on ;Northern sentiment was intended, the Southern statesmen found their most willing implements among those people. When the rebellion broke out, they defended its leaders and misrepresented its motives, and clamored .abotit .eoercion and compromise, while BEAU. ,REGARD was building batteries on Charleston Day. - W,hen Port Sumpter. fell, they wore silent._ During the dark hours succeeding „Bull Run, they were silent. • In every period of danger, they were silent.' In times of vic tory; they :Mewed no joy. In times of de. feat, they- exhibited exultation. They cla snored Air au English war, and denounced the _Administratien for refusing to precipitate an English war. They are the enernles of the country as_trialy atsDLVIS_Or EttAVELEGARD. They are Striving Jo, show their enmity now. They desire to _obtain control of the Democratic organization, that they may use it and the masses it represents for their treason able purposes. : This fact is daily becoming more and :Mere apparent, and the duty of meet ing the ,diumkeihidalty becoming more and moratiekrtaist. That 'duty is the political untosi: of ill men for the sake of the find ire king for its - speedy consummation. TIIEEE IS BET OER WAY to overcome diffi culty, and that is to drive straight at it, and either pluck it up by the root, or trample it level with its surroundings. Who turns aside for a mountain will easily come to avoid a molehill; and what is true of the single man is equally true of the aggregations called na tions. Great, and irresistible by human means, is tho momentum of human energy, when once fully aroused and properly directed. Like the mountain-lake, swollen by the spring floods, if it rends its barriers, it cleaves the bills, bores the mountains, that block its path, and thunders on to. its destiny—the sea. So it gravitates to its level, which is but another name for PEACE. There is a class of men in the loyal, as well as in the border States, who seem to be look lag at these times through the largo end of a telescope. This class takes to itself much pride for its conservatism. But its conserva tism consists in resisting motion in anyAiree flea. It abhors everything that threatens to destroy inertia, which it adores. And it is so wedded to this idol, that were it to practice the art - of healing, it would study to cure the victim of disease without destroying the disease. It would deplore the prevalence of fevers, but frown upon the man who should propose to drain a miasmatic marsh, or con struct sewers to convey away the filth of a city, This is a great evil. So obstinately to resist innovation is to declare that our governmental and social forms aro perfect, and that this stu pendous civil strife has no object better than domination. But such is not the fact. This war is natural in kind, in degree, in everything which distinguishes it; as natural as is the lightning, the rain, and the hail, which suc ceeds a period of calm and sultry heats. As a people, We shall never deserve success until wo learn to look facts in. the face, and to call 'things by their right names. "God is God," said the philosopher, "call him by what name you please." So, wrong is wrong, and right is right, and war is war, no matter by what ad jectives preceded. The - sooner we ' begin to' look upon this struggle as we would upon a war with .England or France, the sooner it will be 'ended. Is it a war with brothers 7 In the sense that tc all men are brothers," yes ; but in the sense of a true brotherhood, xo, These relations of brother, friend, and neighbor, are inalienable. They depend neither upon con tiguity nor the accident of birth. Are loyalty and treason twinned at a birth ? Never I Let us have done with these superficial distinctions. These are but the slag of the furnace in which the ores of true relations, of right and endu ring justice, are smelted. _ . If there be a man in all these States who harbors the expectation that nothing but hu man life, and the business interests of the country, are to be sacrificed in this tight; that all the infinitude of cogs and wheels now thrown out of gear, are one day to drop back in their old places, with neither a cog nor wheel, more or less, than before—if there bo any such expectant man anywhere, he makes poor use of history, and ignores the law, which, by laborious process, fashions a Bold- Door out of the beforetime unsightly and Opaque. Perhaps not all that is false and in- compatible with higher national life will be shred away ; but the palpable wrong, the un disguised and patent shams, that have made us absurd in the eyes of the world—these must die the death. The momentum of our energy as a nation is gathering for a decisive blow; and when it falls some. of these idols will be ground to powder. It is inevitable ; and why put out the hand and cry, , e spare this ! we worship it; save that! custom sanctions and justifies it." Let the false go—up with the true. The aroused energy of the nation will hew right througi these wooden walls, and level these seeming difficulties; and finally set us before the world wiser, better, and purer for the ordeal. LETTER PROM 44 0M:A.51014AL." WASHINGTON, January 21, 1802. The battle of Somerset, Kentucky, is a terri ble blow at the rebellion. It is a forerunner of their defeat on a more extensive field, and a sure pledge of the deliverance of Tennessee. We shall now almost daily hear of victories, and it is possible that as the traitors aro struck in the Rank and rear, the great host on the Potomac may make a compa ratively easy advance upon Richmond. The friends of General McClellan justify do lay in this quarter by the argument that ' t he will not move till ho can do so irresistibly. And if you have care fully read the late Richmond papers, you will remember that they-no longer conceal the panic . and discontent that have been created among•the Southern People by the formidable preparations of 'the Federal Government and the poverty and indecision of the rebel usur pation. • Day is at last dawning; and when it comes upon us, the heart of the nation will be lifted from despair, and every element of so ciety, business, politics, and religion, will feel its reviving influence. Felix K. Zollicoffer, who fell at Somerset, on Sunday last, was one of the most reckless and gifted of all the rebel chiefs. He was cruel, remorseless, and cold. I knew him well as a Representative in Congress from the Nashville (Term.) district. Ho was more of controversialist than an orator. Tenacious in debate, logical in his argument, and perfectly fearless, be was a formidable adversary at all times, A highly educated man, ho became a practical printer after he graduated at col lege, and was directly or indirectly connected with Wbig newspapers, even while holding official positions for twenty-three years. From being a Whig he advanced Into Know- Nothingism ; and from being a vehement Unionist, of the Henry Clay-John Bell school, he broke out into a worshipper of the Calhoun doctrine of' Secession, giving up his life as a sacrifice to that shameless heresy. Is it not strange that so many of the Southern Ameri cans should have become so active in the re bellion 1 John Bell, himself, Zollicoffer, Percy Walker, of Alabama; Jere Clemens, of the same State; Humphrey Mar shall, of Kentucky ; Albert Pike, of Arkan sas, have been among the most unforgiving of these leaders. The secret is undoubtedly to be found in their hatred of the adopted citi zens, who are distrusted in the South, and re cognized in the North for their loyalty and courage on the side of the Union. Zollicof fer was not quite fifty when he fell. He resembled John Hickman in appearance, though a little taller, and was greatly confi ded In by his followers. He has shown great tact and energy since the breaking out of the rebellion ; and was, beyond doubt, the best general that Tennessee has furnished to the traitor forces. The next news from Kentucky will prove that our Pennsylvania boys have been doing good work. They are regarded with high favor by Mr. Crittenden, Andy johnson, and the other Union men in Congress from Ken tucky and Tennessee; and they will do honor to their State and country when an opportunity is presented to them. • OCCASIONAL. ED/TOR OF THE Puns :—ln your iFtl3llO of this morning, under the heading of " Latest War News," you say that the Bailie Peyton who has jest been killed, was " the son of the prou/inont Tennessee politioian or that name, who was minister to Brazil during President Fillmore's Administra• the—un error ! Robert O. Schenck, of Ohio, a true and loyal American, wee minister to Brazil during Dir. Fill mores Administration. Ile was surceeded by General Trousdale, of Tennessee, who was sent out by President Pierce— a distinguished Southerner he was--and could not spell plenipotentiary." SSCREPARY. Philadelphia, Jan. 21,1882. PRODtOTIVENEBO OF CALlFORNlA.—Califor tila is a wonderfully productive State. Cattle have got to be so numerous as to be almost worth iest, and every kind of fruit and farm produce is abundant and cheap. During the autumn full grown fat cattle have been sold for $3 to $5 per owl.; horses from $lO to $5O ; hogs at all prioes; sheep" from 75 cents to $1.50. Contraots for good fat beef, with the petite and legs out off, have been made for the army at $1.50 per 100 pounds. and still, such aro the facilities for raising stock in that climate, money can be made at the above prices. Good clean barley, in HO-pound sacks, is selling at $l5 per ton. Wheat at $3O to $35 por ton, Excel lent papa at $2O to $3O per ton. Potatoes this year are unusually high, there having been but a short supply planted. They sell at 23 cents por pound, twice as high as grapes. OX a bitter cold night of last week John Fanwright, of London, C. W., while drunk, turned his family all out of doors into a neighboring bush, and want to bed. The attention of the family was soon called to their home by geeing it in flames. The eldest girl reached it first, and, opening the door, she called to her father, who answered, when she rushed in and pulled him out by the arm, he having been lying on the bed. When taken out it we found that every stitch of clothes be had on was consumed, his body being literally roasted from his bead to hie feet: 110 lived for about four boars, suffering the moat excruciating pain. THE PRESS.-PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 22, 1862. Some Notable English Items The latest Loudon papers bring us an tm. portant financial document—the annual and quarterly return of the British revenue for 1861. From this, It appears that there is a net decrease in the last quarter of $6,011,545, and on the year 1861 of no less than $16,817,620. The falling off is mainly in the Property Tax (nearly $15,000,000 in the year), and in the Excise to the amount of nearly $5,000,000. In Customs, Stamps, and Post Office there is an increase. The annual reve nue for 1800 was within a fraction of seventy two million pounds ($360,000,000), but the receipts for 1861 amount to less than sixty nine million pounds—actually to $343,019,255. The main falling off is in two articles which show the prosperity or decline of the middle and working classes, viz: Property-tax and Excise ; and it would be amusing, were it not also somewhat vexatious, to see the English papers endeavoring to decry American re sources and credit, with its own Revenue fall ing down to zero. The anxiety which pervaded the English mind respecting the arrival of news from the United States was manifested in a remarkable manner. The Africa, which was expected on the Sunday after christmas, did not arrive until New - Year's Day, having been detained from the 18th to the 20th of December for the conveyance of Lord Lyons' despatches. At the latter date, Lord LYONS had not delivered Earl Ilusssut's letter to Mr. SEWARD. The Africa's despatches arrived at Queenstown at three o'clock on the morning of the first of January, left Queenstown, by spe cial boat, for Cork, at 3.40, and were sent on to Dublin, and thence to Kingston, by special train. At Kingston, where a steamer bad been kept day and night with her steam on, they were put on board for Holyhead, where a special engine had been ready for two days, and reached the Euston-Square Station, London, at 8.50 that same evening. The journey from Queenstown to London was thus accomplished in ten minutes over seven teen hours. From. Holyhead to London the distance is 264 miles, which was ran on the rail, all stoppages and delays included, in five hours and forty-three minutes, without the or dinary traffic on the railroad being interrupted. This makes 264 miles ran in 343 minutes. Tho last accounts represent the war fever in England as very much on the decline. The tone of all the anti-American papers, The Times excepted, was considerably abated. Our old enemy, Punch, is as insolent as ever— without exhibiting wit or humor. In the last number received—the opening number of 1862 —there are fifteen separate articles ridiculing or abusing Americans and their country. Hero is one, entitled "The Free Born Ame rican Citizen's Privilege," which wo suc ceeded in understanding, after half an hour's serious study : 'To woke our Preentente, the right claim we, Whether with an 4, 3 i or n,, c This is meant to be a play upon the words President and precedent. This is rather heavy joking. The Cartoon, entitled "Boxing Day," represents Punch as a pantomimic clown, armed with an enormous poker, on the handle of which the word " Peace" is inscribed, while "War" figures on the other end, which he holds very near " a lean and slippered Pan taloon," with stars and stripes on his dress, to whom ho exclaims, " Now, then ! which end will you have, Jonathan 7" This is positively what the wit and sarcasm of Punch has dwin dled down to. The hunchback has fallen into his dotage. Death of Ex-President Tyler Ex-President John Tyler died in Richmond, Vir ginia, on Friday night last. Ile was born in Charles county, Va., on the 29th of March, 1790, and at the ago of nineteen was admitted to the bar. Two years afterwards ho was chosen a member of tho Virginia Legislature. In 1815, when, by the death of the Hon. John Clopton, a vacancy occurred in the representation in Congress in the Richmond district, Mr. Tyler was elected to that position; in which he continued tin 1821. In December, 1825, the Gubernatorial term of Mr. rIOB.S3IVMS expired, and Mr. Tyler was chosen his successor. He con tinued to fill that office till 1827, when be was chosen by the Legislature to fill the office of United States Senator, made vacant by the ex• piration of the term of the lion. John Randolph. Re was early noted for his opposition to the princi pal measures of General Jackson's Administration, and when the Force' hill was before the Senate, ha opposed it in on animated speech. After a length ened debate, the bill was passed, Mr. Tyler being the only Senator who recorded his vote in the ne gative; the other opponents of the measure having absented themselves from the Senate Chamber while It was being adopted. In 1833, he was re elected to the Senate, but ho resigned before his term expired, and returned to his home in Virgi-- via., In 1840, ho was cleated, by the Whig party, Yieli President of the United States, and on the deaf of President Garrison, in April, 1841, he suc ceeded him to the office of President. His disagree ments with that party on the bank question, are familiar to all our readers. At the close of his term, be retired to his mansion, near Fortress Monroe, where ho resided when the present rebellion broke oat. In 1861, Mr. Tyler was appointed by Governor Letobar, one of the Virginia delegates to the so-called Peace Congress, convened in Washington. Ile was elected Presi dent of that body, and although, during its ses sions, he professed to be an ardent friend of the Union, he early distinguished himself as one of the most active instigators of the existing rebellion. On the adjournment of the Peace Congress, he re paired to Virginia, and was elected one of her re presentatives to the Rebel Congress. In that body ho exerted all his influence to keep that State in a hostile attitude to the Federal Government. Ile was seventy-one years old when he died, and loaves a wife and several children, by each of his mar- Tinto, among whom are Robert Tyler and John Tyler, Jr., who formerly resided in this city. Public Amusements A`II-gTREETIIiATBE.—Tho drama of " Bandy Andy," BB rewritten by Sterling Coyne, bids fair to be the most successful comedy that has been pro duced by Mrs. Drew. It is replete with e'ont, and the humorous parts are effectively alterbatod with incidents of a more stirring character. The wit is often striking, and the broadest passages are dell cato as contrasted with those of more pretentious Irish comedies. The present version is better constructed than that previously adapted by Mr. Drew himself. The acting of the entire company was meet creditable. Mr. Wallis rendered an infirm and irritable lawyer with his usual faithful nese ; Miss Wells was not less accurate In the ren dition of an old women ; but John Drew was the life of the comedy—so true to nature that the audi ence countenanced oven his endless habit of rope title's, and so merry that his associates upon the stage were compelled to laugh. In walk, move ment, feature, and dialect Mr. Drew preserved his identity with the part, and a broad grin sat upon the people continually, as upon the face of ono man. Of the ladies, Miss Price (hereafter . Mrs. —), and Miss Henri wore noticeable. Bandy Andy will he repented tonight. Mr. Barney Williams produced at the Walnut street Theatre, last evening, an amended version of an old Irish spectacle, under the name of the "Lakes of Killarney." This piece ran two weeks in New York city, and watt received here by a good house. Two of the scenes aro very beautiful, and en Irish May-pole dance is rendered effectively. Mrs Williams hrs no rival in the eccentric dances which she essays, and she is, in this, as animated, supple and graceful as over The dialogue of the piece has no claim to originality ; the plot, if we can in charity so call it, is loose and irregular, and the incidents gossipy. The conclusion of the first net leaves nothing tangible upon the mind as a clue to what follows, and wo are left indifferent as to the fates of any of the personages. Neither is the humor of the piece broad, although the more good natured of the audience found opportunities for laughter, as who will not laugh at an Irish drama? In point of construction the piece is a failure, but as a opeotaeleit is pleasant, and may be moderately successful. Barney WI Hams sang a good song or two, and retrieved the humor of the piece when it occasionally became ghastly. A love quarrel was invested with a sort of ludicrous pa thos. Kemple, Johnsen, and Vining Bowers made creditable representations of the lesser personages. "Mindy Andy" will he repeated at the Arai to night, and " El nyder" at the Continental Theatre. The Old Folks and Blitz continue. Signor Blitz. the admirable magician and ventriloquist, will give afternoon and evening on• tertainments to-day at his Temple of Wonders. The feats of metamorphosis aro to be of an astonish ing character, and the ventriloquism laughable and surprising. The learned canary birds will likewise take part and amuse old and young. Tho Signor announces his intention of soon leaving us, but wo hope be will not execute his purpose. We cannot spare him from Philadelphia. A USEFUL lloa.—Mr. Schenck, at the Farms, has a deg which goes out near the railroad track every night, a few moments before it's time for the cars, and waits .uutil they pass, then picks up the paper which is thrown off by the express. man, and carries it to his master. Re is always on bond at the regular time, and never foils to'brlng the paper when it is there. Monday night ho came back without it, and co confident was Mr. Sobenek that it had nol boon thrown off, that he walked to Rockport, and there learned that another person had been on the route that day, instead of the regularmtin' and had forgotten to throw it off. eB hi e s x s ' a r me dog usedto got the paper by the stage•ceaeb, ore the oars commenced running, and never missed being at his post when the stage came along.—Cape lines Advertiser. LATEST NEWS EY TELEGRAPH. FROM WASHINGTON, Special Despatchec to "The Press." WASIIINGTON, January 21, 1802 Secretary Stanton's PoltcY. It is very evident that the new Secretary of War intends to create . some radical changes in the management of his department. Already he has infused new energy into his oubordinatos. The in fluences which hampered &MARTI OADSZTION wilt not be permitted to hamper Secretary &Artier% However necessary care and caution may be to protect the public interests, it may happen that army officers of experience and assumed integrity may commit, as many mistakes as civilians, and have as many favorites. Mr. STANTON is complete ly independent of all mere political managers, and his bold and vigorous character will strengthen him in introducing some of the most wholesome, as well as some of the most startling and rigid refOrms. The Star, of this evening, says : It is understood that a thorough reorganization of the War Department is rapidly programing, and that it will, in a few days, bo folly up to the de mands of the occasion. Among other things, it is not improbable that the following will occur : 1, That in order to leave room for promotions for gallant acts in the field, and other reasons of public patio', no further appointments to any rank in the army (übless of men ia the field) will be made until the let of March, 2. That all the nominations that have boon made, and are now pending before the Senate, will bo suspended until after the let of March. 3. That the disorganization produced by officers frequenting tbo city instead of remaining in camp to instruct themselves and soldiers in the military art, will be checked by dropping from the list those who frequent the city otherwise than on mi litary duty and by command of their superior of ficer. 4. That in order to conduct the business of WAIL as war, the Department will bo closed four days in the week against all other business than what ap pertains to notice. operations in the field. 5. That Saturday of each week will ho devoted exclusively to the transaction of the business of Senators end Representatives in Congrois; and that Monday of each week will be devoted to the business of other persons requiring personal inter views with the &oratory. 6. That the Secretary of War will transact no business whatever, and will see no person on bb4- ness nt his private residence, but will receive hia friends socially on Wednesday evenings. 7. That the despatch of business by mail or writ ten communications will have the preference, and will receive the personal attention of the Soorotary on the morning of each day before entering upon other duties. The foregoing order is generally accepted as nutbontic, although not endorsed by the Star. The Cabinet, in the session of this morning, ap proved all the suggestions of the Secretary of War unanimouly, but it is proper to add that the second. proposition in reference to the suspension of nomi nations before the Senate is not expected to affect those oases that have passed the regular committees or to interfere with deservedpromotions. A Correct Version of the Attempt to shoot Gen. Montgomery. ' The followirufie a truo version of the attempt to shoot Gen, toIVTOOItEItY, at Alexandria, on Satur day : It appears that a shot was fired in a house of bad repute, about half past eleven o'clock. Lieut. Col. JOSEPH A. Mawr, Captain J. REESIOE Wmtsvg, and Lieut. llErtausurtunn, with a guard, entered the house, and found two captains of the Sixty-third Pennsylvania Volunteers drunk, After considerable trouble the guard succeeded in getting them into tbo street, when one of thorn backed himself into the street, alongside the house, and swore ho would kill the officer or any of the guard who would attempt to arrest him. Just at this time Gen. MONTGOMaRY came along, and finding how matters stood, called on the guard to do their duty. One of them at this time raised his pistol and pointed it towards tho General. Lieutenant Colonel McLuaN struck and grappled the arm of the drunken man, bot ire snaceeded trt discharging two loads of lois revolver at the amo ral, fortunately without effect. The lieutenant colonel throw him across the steps, the captain still maintaining the grasp of the pistol, when Captain Wnitz struck him a severe blow moss the head with tho barrel of his revolver, which compelled biro to relinquish his bold upon the pistol. Ho jumped up and showed fight, when one of tho guard pierced him with his bayonet. Even after this, in conveying the drunken captain to the, provost marshal's office, the guard was compelled to knock Lim down eight or ton times. Arrived at the guard-house, his wounds worn dressed by Assistant IthyoueLL, of the Eighty-eighth Pennsylvania. en . JA3lisoN, in whose brigade they belonged, was telegraphed to, and the next morning an am bulance, with a guard, was sent, and took charge of both of thorn as prisoners. • The wounded man was badly hurt, the bayonet piercing his left lung. The officers and mon of the Eighty eighth are on duty day and nig*, and it is no small matter to preserve the peace of Alexandria, as it is :visited by about twelve hundred soldiers daily, and as many civilians as can got passes frond Washington. The arrest of men and officers has averaged two hundred and fifty daily—the major port of them for drunkenness. .A Protebt. From the clerks of the Adjutant General's odoe a memorial has been presented to the House, pro testing against the injustice done them by the recent passage of a bill in the Senate rating the entire number of clerks authorized as of this first class, salary twelve hundred dollars per annum, that is, to grade with the lowest priced clerks of other departments, who are required to perform one•third less labor, so that not a single person connected with this department is placed upon an equality with clerics of other departments, who receive from one-sixth to one•half grouter com pensation for less labor. It is argued that since the employment of over four hundred thousand volunteer troops, in addition to the increase of the regular army, an enormous amount of labor has been demanded in tho Adjutant General's office. It is asked, at the utmost, that the bill be so amended that the sum of $21,000 be appropriated for the employment of eighteen clerks, at a rate of compensation not to exceed the sum of $21,600 in the aggregate. The American Colonization Society. The annual meeting of the Ifoard of Directors of the American Colonization Society took place today. The following named States were repre• Rented: Massachusetts, Maryland, Maine, New York, Vermont, New Jersey, Connecticut, Pertn• Sylvania, and Ohio The receipts during the past year amounted to $112,200. Over $ll,OOO are now in the treasury. The operations of the society since the last meeting have been principally con fined to the internal affairs of Liberia, including the ease of the recaptured Africans. No emigrants have been sent thither during the year. Ninety eight who were emancipated in Virginia, Louisiana, and Tennessee, were to have loft this country in May, but were prevented from doing ao by the po litical troubles. Two intelligent colored men to-day gave the Board much valuable information, and &gratifying account of affairs in their republic. The forty-fifth anniversary meeting of the Ameri can Colonization Society was held to-night, in the ball of the Rouse of Representatives. The presi dent of the 'moiety, Mr. LATROBE, of Baltimore, and a colored merchant from Liberia, delivered addresses, the latter arguing in favor of the recog nition of that republic by the United States Go vernment, and showing the advantages presented to colored emigrants from this country. The only members of Congress present were Representatives MAYNARD, of Tennessee, and FRANK, of New York. The Assistant Secretaries of War The passage by Congress to-day of a bill au thorizing the President to appoint two additional Secretaries of War, was, according to a statement made in the Douse, by the request of the Secretary of War himself. This is preliminary to a thorough reorganisation, by which not only will tho trans action of all business of the army be facilitated, but visitors have an equal opportunity of obtaining access to the proper officers of the Department without unnecessary delay. New Representotivo from Missouri. Tnostes L PRICE, elected to fill the vacancy, from the Fifth Congressional dietriot of ttlissouri, occasioned by the expulsion of nRID, the Seces sionist, was today sworn in a member of the Houso. A Salt Tax Salt, in consequence of the supply to the South being interrupted, is selling in Washington nt .30 cents per buehel. This article, it is said, will bo placed in the now tariff bill as a source of conside rable revenue. Presentations On Saturday, Captain J. F. GLENN, of company A, Twelitydhird Regiment Pennsylvania Volun teers, was presented with a beautiful sword, &o , all the gift of the men of his oompany. Captain DAVID Bnowu, of company B, DicOlellan Body Guard, Major C/lAIILES DATIKED command ing, boon presented with a handsome sword, sash, belt, and spurs, the gift of the men under his command. Speeches wore made by the Captain, Lieut. Sires, and Major BARKER. Thomas Francis Meagher. Tho Comtnnteu u..!.!!!!tary Affairs in the Senate have reported unanimously in confirming TuoNtete len:ants MEAWIER as a Brigadier General. Governor Denniston, of Ohio Governor:Dunnisrox, of Ohio, inhere on:matters connected with the volunteers of that State, The Naval School. It has been finally determined to remove the Naval &boot from Newport, Rhode Island to An napalm, Maryland. Washington News and Goisip. Tho foul weather continuos, and the mud on some of the roads on the other side, in some planes, is nearly two foot deep. It would take at least forty horses to draw ono of tho largest sized guns ton miles a day in the present condition of the roads. The report that the rebels have deserted Manas sas, which is published in this morning's papers, is not believed, es it is well known that a large force of the rebels are fortified at Oentreville. Some of our officers estimate the rebelforce at this point as high as fifty thousand, and It is scarcely probable that they would desert the strongest hold—Mame sae Gap—they have, and fall back. It is their Thermoillai, and when it is given up, the war, ea far as the Cotton States are concerned, is done. The rebels Gannet make another successful. stand on the seaboard. A private belonging to the Seventy-fourth Regi ment Pennsylvania 'Volunteers, while on picket duty near Munson's Rill, was accidentally shot through the heart by a comrade,•who was carelessly handling a musket, Out of the fifiy;nine wounded volur;ieers in the Draneavillo affair, but one has been compelled to undergo amputistion—Jonx Mums, of Company D, Ninth Pennsylvania. State of Affairs at New Orleans. METING OF THE FRENCH RESIDENTS. THEY DESIRE TO LEAVE THE SOUTH CAIRO, Jan. 21.—A report has been received from Now Orleans that a large meeting of the French residents of that City was bold, on the 10th instant, to devise some means of leaving the city and the South. A committoo was appointed to communicate with the United Statoa forces at Ship 'eland upon the subject to obtain the amistanco of the Federal Govern/lent. THE WAR IN KENTUCKY. Gen. Thomas xn Pursuit of the Enemy LOUISVILIE, Jan. 21.—N0 news has been re ceived here from Gen. Thomas to-day, nor any tidings of the Federal loss in the battle fought en Sunday. Gen. Thomas has taken the steamer and nine barges in which the rebels convoyed their forces across the Cumberland, and which, in their precipi tate flight, they foiled to destroy. The theory, at headquarters is that General Thomas bas been too busy in using the boats to carry his troops across the river southward in pur suit of the retreating enemy, and providing' other means of transportation, to send. the details of the levant fight. No private telegram of military matters can eons° over the Southern lino to Louisville, and no private information has boon received hero relative to the movements of our troops. THE WAR IN NEW MEXICO, A BAND OF HUNGRY TBRANS MARCH ON • FORT CRAW AND BACK AGAIN. KANSAS CITY, Tan. 20.—The Santa Fo snail, with - dates to the 7th, arrived here to•day. An express from Melilla arrived at Santa Fe on the everting of the 4th, bringing information that 1,500 Texans, with seven pieces of artillery, were marching on Fort Craig, and were within thirty eight miles of that post. Tho scouts from the fort had been driven in, and a severe battle expected, as the Texans were fighting principally for food. Gov. Connelly had called on the entire military of the Territory to prevent their progress. A later express, which arrived on the evening of the sth, says that the enemy had retreated without making an attack. It is not known whether Col. Canby, in command of the Federal forces, intends to pursue them or not. The scouts from Plicate had not arrived when the mail left. Col. Canby bas a force of 1,000 regulars, and 1,500 volunteers and militia, in his command. Santa Fo was in a state of excitement, and mar tial law had been declared. The through Nano gera by this mail are Col. Street, J. Rowe Watta, and John Gwynn°. The Return of the Cal!i) Expedition. OAilco, Jan. 21.—The lust of the expodition into Kentucky 09111 , 2 up to-day. They saw no signs of the enemy during the return march. Only two regiments of Federal troops now remain encamped on Maydold crock. XXXVIITII CONGRESS-FIRST SESSION, W19.111:40705, iOO. 21, 1862 RENATE'. fieleral petitions wore presented lu favor of eMancipa tion. Mr. FOSTER', of Connecticut, presented a petition in las or of a coannuaneo of tho coa.t. survey. . . Mr. SHERMAN, of Ohm, presented a petition of the: mayor and otherr, of r3andlisli7 i Ohio, for a naval depot at it at place. Mr. SUNNI:II, of Meriichmette, from the Committeo on Foreign Affairs, reported back the resolution to allow goblin officers to reecho prceents front the Japanese Go o ernigelit. HALE, of New liatumbire, objected, fin thought the revolution loosely drawn, as it did not state the name; of the caccre, nor the preccute they were to receive, and was a bad precedent. Tho resolution was passed—yeas 22, nays 11. Dlr. 111tOWNING, of liih ole, o cri red n resolution that the Cormnitho on the Judiciary ittquiro into the ezpodi ones of so amending the naturalization laws as to confer the right of cillsonship on foreigners who may servo In the preeeqt sear. Adopted. Wit 131111.71.1.., of 1 / l lno/s, offered a bill to regu late the Coln sensation of Visit ict Attorneys. FF.SnENIMIN, of Maine, intrieluced a bill to au thorize the extuninittioni of parties in the courts of the United bistro. Ireferred, On :notion of 11r. WILSON, of lifassachimetts, the Lill to coinfiltdo the defences of Washington was taken up, and the attiendiarnta of the House agreed to. WILSO;1 offered a nou section, repealing the act allowing the dibeliarge of minors, an P , OViaing t hat no ha coons berenitcr mustered in the service shall be under 18 3 ears of age, but the oatu of . unfit oient shall be con elutiva to ego. Mr. PO w ELL, of Kentucky, moved to strike out tho last part, 1‘ hick ninlos the oath of enlistment conclusive. After a diSLIIE,IOII, the amendment wen lost. amendment of ➢lr. Wilson wag agreed to. Mr. 'WILSON offered another amendment, altering the articles of nat., in ovitling the puniehment of sleuth, to persona found lurking in tho camps as liriC9. Agreed to. Alen, an amendment providing the death penalty to any person nig the este.gunid. After further dibetoolon the 4111 was laid over till to morrow. 11r. of Illinois, presented the memorial of N. C. Jewett, of Colorado, Prote.tiog ' , galled imme diate adieu on the )harry question, from its tendency to i.reeent thu reestablishment of peace, clainalint that the sentiment of neither the North nor tile Soma was re preeentrd in Cosigrees, and proposing the joint notion, North and r oath, for all amendment of the Coniditution provieing for the gradual emancipation of elevery in thirty 01111'. On motion of Mr. WADY, of Ohio, the hill authorizing the Secretory of Wor to appoint two Assistant decrota ries of War it as token up. Mr. WILSON offered an amendment as a substitnto, to vi it• That the President, wiin the consent of 1110 Senate, shall appoint two additional Assistant Secreta ries of War, at a salary of $3,000 each, the offices to last for one y ear. The amendment was agreed to, and the hill woe passed. Dir. BALE, of New Hampshire, offered a resolution for the regulation of the componsAtion of colf.ctore of customs and marshals' officers. Referred. The report of the Committee of the Judiciary on the resolution to eXprt Mr. Bright mils then taken up. Mr. gUMNEIt, of Massachusetts, said the expulsion of a Senator seat ono of the most solemn of acts; but Each duties must lee performed, especially when the good tome of the Senate and the wolfaro of the country, are at slate. In former cases, the persons who were thus to be expelled were absent, but in this case the amen was Nereid. Catiline, while plotting the downfall of Borne, appeared In the Senate, and Benedict Arnold, while con,. nettling treason, appeared at a count inertial in Phila delphia. Therefore, there could he no ni gement front the presence of the person charged lu his floor. It was clearly the right of the Senate to expel a member op the twldence before them. Tue facts in this case were foss and could be staled briefly. Mr. b. then briefly referred to the loading ovoids of the rebellion, the taking of the forts ' the seirdiro of the national property, when Jeff Darts became the head of the rebellion, and war ac tually commenced against the Government. At this time, Jesse D. Bright, a Senator of the United States. writes a letter to the chief of traltois. [The letter was rend.] Mr. Bright had always boon notosiolltlY n friend nun sympathizer of Davis and all dell in their 'schemes in favor of slavery, and nth aye vo ted with them. Ito commented on the address of the letter, "To Ilk Excellency Jefferson Davie, President of the Confederate Status," and claimed that ft was, RY far as possible, a recognition of the pretender as President of the rebel State,. The totter, In its general character, was a correspondence with a public enemy or traitor, and was a kind of local aid to Site rebels. It was a letter of (need ship end sympathy, all the any through, and showed that there warr ono person, who forgetting what nee duo to his country, and his duty to re bellion, etretched forth his band lu friendly mitigation. An American Senator seeds hie friend to the rebels, with a velunble linprot enters in &tonne, and a traitor, going for 11l out an errand of treason, le announced RI ti a gen tleman, reliable in every respect," The writerof such a lethal may belong to a robot chief, but surely must be dieenelifird for a teat in the United States Senate. The mown who so mixes bhuself in the rebellion must bo traitor. tint agate, am writer, on the 7th of September, 3861, puts forth another letter ton Mr. Fitch, defending hit that letter • and again, in debate in the Senate, do ,clarett lie lied done nothing that lie would not do over again tinder t h e same circumstances. There could bo nothing gainiel by apologizing, that the Senator did not know that war had commenced, for it was not true. Ile must have known that war had actually commenced, if he Was at all alive to the events of the day. LANE, of Indiana, said he would prefer to say nothing on this subject, but for the interest ho felt in his State. lie referred to his content for the seat in the So tothi with Mr. Bright throe years ago, but mid no me mory of the outrage perpetrated on hire, and against the loner of Indiana, would influence hie feeling now. He hail, no Renewal ill-feeling toward his colleague. Ho Would do justice to lilt colleague to say that, on the fret day of the seulon, he came to him and told lam that lie dealied and demanded a full investigation into the charges, which would give him the benefit of a manlY avowal. Bra when the letter to Davis was written by his colleague, ho must have known that war would be the result of this unholy, unprovoked, and Goilmecureed rebellion. War sin, actually levied ow the GoVOrninent at tint time. Before ill' lot of Meech the rebellion war Meliorated, and Davie elected the head, and all the NS mere or auotner deluge cannot washy out the stain of that treason. At such a time a letter war written by a member of the Se nate .to tam Arch High Priest of rebellion, addressing lthirby the very title the asmunption of which we are to day restating, The letter might have been written carelessly • but of all things, HAS it proper for him to Introduce the inventor of Improved &annual If there was to be no war, why should Dane want improved firearms f He believed toe litter unexplained was sufficient evidence of treason, and the sending of improved firearms Mae aid and com fort to tbo enemy. Bnt be considered that the second letter to Mt.. Fitch was wore° than the drat. He had nothing to say against the terms in which the letter alluded to Abolitionism, If the Senator from Massachrisorta would let that parea,Lre Lot non/Myra° add; but in that /offer his colleague said he was entirely opposed to the coercive policy of the Government. He (Mr. LIMO) woos in favor of all the coercion the Government could employ. tie would tax every dollar, sod would carry an the war, till every Individual seas bankrupt. Be would give the coat oft' Ids back, and even die in a pauper's grave, and no burled by the hand of charity, rather than clam tho war. (ft pt-louse in the galleries.) Thou Vice President ordered the galleries to be cleared to the right of the chair, which was done. Mr. LANE continniel to speak at some length en the deadly heresy or opposing goon:lona which he sold had found nu favor In the proud State of Indian. Dentine, to far, thank God Almighty I had participated in no defeat and uo repulse. So let It be to the end, and let ail people sag awn," The war war waged for the coer cion of rebels, and ho thought the Government lied a perfect right to confluent° the property of rebele, even their clines, though he was opposed to minden& emanci pation, unless necomPanied with some ocher of coloni zation. But R 9 11,10 letter now stands without any ex ploitation, lie mind vote for the expalston of his colleague, Mr. BRIGHT said, if lie had known that he was to be arraigned for treason, and bringing war on the country, he would have employed concoct. If ho had known that there was a regular party organization against bloc, and letters and epeechea on the subject printed, he would have been better prepared. If slander could harodriveu him away, he familia he where the Senator front Massa chinetla lied gold ho ought to be—ln the South. He bed been charged by a calumnious sheet, the Cincinnati in quirer, with being a brigmher general in the rebel army, end by that still more eelninnlous sheet, the Louisville Democrat, with recruiting for the rebel army in Ken tucky. He paid no attention to these attacks until an old friend wrote to him about them, end then he +/rote his second letter, which affirm to be more offensive to gentlemen litre than the other. Ho wished to hold no relations with the Senator from Mashactinsetts, hut felt kindly toward the other Senatere, and what ho now said wire to unbiased, unprejudiced men. He would simply elate thcfacts of the case. If ho was guilty of treatan it was for writing a later to Jeffer son Davis, introducing Thomas 6-Lincoln. lie. Lincoln was born in Philadelphia, and reared there. Ho subse ouentiy came West to live, and aid the largest ensfriesa of any nine In Indiana as a wholesale merchant, and es taldislied a character for truth , and probity. He then went to Texas and engaged It:training cattle lie comelier° afterwards to forwara the project of the Pacific Railroad. 110 (Mr. Bright) had no recolicelon of this letter of introdiirtion, but he mutt have mitten it He had also given Mr. Lincoln a letter to Captain prankiir, and would rend both, to chow that th, y were siroliar in lan guage, When he addressed the letter to Davie by his assumed tide he wan only following the example of other Senators in too Senate at that time, and if Mr. Lincoln had told him he had an improved cotton-gin, he would hare mentioned it In the sumo way he did the firearms. If any me had naked him for ouch a letter after the pro clamation of the President, he would Inivo answered no. lie did ant believe at that time we would have war. He did not believe the mad fanatics, under the lend of the Senator from Massachusetts (Mr Sumner), could bring about euch a state of illitigsitas now exists, and he did not think the South minty of ouch mad folly. Keen atter he had written hie letter, the einpioyees of the Go v, ,amens vent doenmenta to Davis, Benjamin, and other,,. De went himself that summer forty allies Into Virginia, not dreaming, that there would be a. gnu fired. Do be d it oily when the end ruddy came. He had his own polities) opinions, lifter twenty-seven years gnlltical service, and would not give them up, every nailer threats of ex oulsion Fort Warren, or the halter No man should charge him with want of fealty to-the nag of his country•. He did not anticipate a war,. Wean ehe be lieved in the PI esident, who he was sorry he had helped to elevate to hie position, and who proved false to his trust. Hr. FESS'ENDRN, of Moine, asked Willa Senator did not suppose there was to be any war, what occasion was there to suppose that Davis m anted aco improvement la firearms Nr.111110117 replied that lie had said repeatedly that lie bed no recollection of giving the letter to Mr. Lin- COM. He had before given ➢fi. Lincoln a totter to Floyd, and if he bad been in collusion with tiro Smith he would not have Kept an improvement in arms to this Govern ment, but be had no doubt Floyd throw the matter over board and then Lincoln bored him for another letter and he gave it lie. SUMNER said the gentleman from Indiana had intimated that there was some personal feeling oa his Dart against him. Hr BRIGHT. I said no such thing. Mr. SUM NEE. I wl , ll to state that I never had ally Pert onal feelings against the Senator. Without concluding the subject, the Senate adjourned. ROUSE OF BErEESENTATIVES The House proceeded to the conableration of the bill regulating the carriage or prin'etl matter °Waldo of the requiring mange to ho paid, Ac. The bill requiting ❑oagpapere to pay postage coming Dlr. coLrAx proposed a substitute, limiting its ope rations to trains carrying the mails which are delivered at the varlona post offices, and allowing newspaper dealers to receive packages at the same abatement as Is allowed to regular subscribers. and adding a tax of three cents on all money letters and collection packages sent by ex press companies, and on all telegraphic messages except ing those for the Government or the press. Mr. Colfax said he preferred this substitute to the original iletaila of the bill, as drafted at the Post Office Department. Ile wished to avoid all reasonable objections that had been made. The bill was unpopular with the widely-circu lated metropolitan press and the nowapaper dealers, and ha had been severely criticised for leporthog it. But the loyal public had insisted on taxation to pay for fighting, in which he concurred; and the most natural suggestion was that ell mailable matter should pas postage. Therefore, two bills were prepared —one abolishing the franking privilege, which was dis tasteful to many of our members, as it took from them a pHs liege enjoyed since the commencement of the Govern ment, %Odell they were patriotic enough to pass. The other was this bill. withdrawing a privilege of exemption from postage enjoyed since 1845, by the press, which they denounce as unjust and men lee. Ile argued that for the first fifty-six years of oar Government Congress bad con strued the constitutional provision to establish past offices and post roads, to gi , e the department the eXclasiVe right of earning mailable matter. In 1845. lion ever, ex presses were authorized to carry now spleens, provided they were not intended for • immediate distribu tion to subocribere, but intended for sale as merchandise, out of which, the present system expanded far beyond what the law intended. be result has been, that While in 1852 the newspaper postage, after the reduction in rates, was nearly $BOO,OOO, in 1861 it had run down to $571,000, a lois of One third, although the population had increased one third, and the !biter postage had increased two• thirds. Indeed., the newspaper postage receipts has fallen off ten 4 „...r cent. since last year, although the war has largely increased the circulation of papers, and will continue to fall oil. Nor does it decrease the cost of railroad ser vice, which hoe increased from two hundred to three hundred per cent. in the past nine years. From New York to Philadelphia, $3.75 per mile is paid for railroad service, while the newspapers are Mainly carried outside of the mails, in the very same trains, and the depart ment left to carry papers on distant routes, where the express don't find it profitable. A man is fined $5 for writing the words "all well" on a, prepaid paper, w hilt, at the same time over a pest route established by Congress tone of papers go free. lie also contended that subscribers would not ply as notch tinder thin bill as now. In Ohio they par for the Cleveland dealt a ono shilliag per week, or $8 10 per year—through the mail the posing+ of 78 geese per year added makes the total charge $5.78. In Northern En .eeon . iney pay 20 cents pore' eek for tin Chicago dailies, which makes the seat $10.40 pop year, which bytho Snail and noised ption 'emit only cost ....51,513. The Cin cinnati dailies insist that 60,000 papers go there every morning. By their men calculation, at the lowest Not, age, $50,000 of postage is thrown away, and abont the same at Chicago, smell as their circulation is compared to New York; and then, adding life other great newspaper centres, like Bos ton, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Et Louis, fie., he ho lier ed that over a million of dollars would be realized; and if so, with the franking abolished and the California snail pall for out of the [mummy, as provided by law, the 'supposed posilliiiitY of malting the department self. sustaining would be Death if not quite realized. After speaking an hour, his hair was extended by iinaniumita consent, 111:111 he read a Letter from the Postinanter Galle n!, farming the bill, also a letter from a valued friend, who urged hint to give up the bill, as the press would roll a mountain 011 lam and crush hint. lie said his only rulo was to stand kr his convictions though the heavens fall; and if lie could aid is relieving the People of the tax necetsary to maho up the post office deficit, and this so alma adding a burden to any one, the mountaiu might fall and ids public we end. Ife corrected an alleged error in lila quotation of the law made by the Philadel phia Inquirer, by reading the laws of 1852 and t 353, which modified the law of 1345, quoted by the boraces, and said that though he could scarcely hope for the passage of this bill with the able tootrotoolitan press against it, so potential in forming public opinion as they are, be had pet formed his duty to the department and the public reVerine. Dlr. 1101,MAN, of Indlatia, suggested a proviso that this act idouli net apply and operate on newspapers for distribution within fifty miles of their place of putdica• lion. Mr. MORRILL, of Vermont, sitel that nay legislation on the iithjeet would tie strictly In relation to the Post Office Pepertment, end not non means of replenishing the Treasury. Ile etas (mulf ing. aid it mould he im proper, to etato m hat the Committee of Ways and Means coottinplate, but he might remark that they prow"io ley, log a tax in tome form, perhaps ty• clamp, on all new aosoere. and nlso a tax on telegratfflic comentitica. tmg. While tie mould cordially co-operate m tilt the chairman of the Post Offico Committee (Mr. Colfax), in relieving the Lindens of that Department, lie believed if me compel nil the nenspapers to go int, the mails, we that' be compelled to pay larger (glees for the trans intiadon of the mails when the contracts are renewed. Reece there could be but little, if any, peLuninry relief to the Department. Mr. BLa IR, of Misiouri, moved to commit the bill to the Committee of Way a and Memo., with n ctlmia to bring In one Imposing stamp donea ou newspapers, in lieu of Its passago. Pe believed that a revenue of three millions can thus bo collected, end with more readiness, tnuch leis excel - tie, and with greater certainty, than by the precool. so item of charging. PIDDLE, of Ohio, said that the Post Office De pertinent woe established for the transmission of letters, mttliont special reference to printed nuttier. its del not ice 0111 the manufacture of nem Reapers should be more the eubject of tax than the ninnufaviuro of pig iron, or any other. lie moved to lay the mimic subject on the table. Plianriell to—yeas 61, bityli 68. Mr. MORRILL of Vermont, moved to recommit the Lill to tho Post Office Committee, with instritetiona to report one incrensing the postage from throe to flee cents This mss Soled dome, together with tho motion of Mr. Blair. Dir. COLFAX reported a substitute for the HI re. ferred to in les speech, mach MIA disagreed to, one of the Sections proposing a tax on telegrams. The original bill being before the louse for fined action, Sir. DAWES, of Slas.acbusetts, moved to lay it on the table. Corned -3 um 73, na3 8 80. The Senate bill. authorizing the President to appoint tau additional Assistant Secretaries of War, at a salary of 53,000 per !memo, to perform such duties an the Se cretary of War may prescribe, or may be reunlred by ]au, the tens of appointment being one 3 ear, posed. Thu Homo then adjourned. PENNSYLVANIA LEGISLATURE. Ilennisuona. January 21, 1802 SENATE. The Senate was called to order at 11 o'clock by the Ppeaker. Prayer by Bev. qtr. Gans, of Harrisburg. Leave of absence, was granted to Mr. Johnson, of Ly. coming, for a few days. PETITIONS AND MEMORIALS The SPEARVE presented the petition of Wm. Cobbett, Into of Philadelphia, now of London, executor of Wm. Cobbett, Sr. praying to be reimbursed 864,000. Mr. 11111 TH, of Philadelphia, a memorial from Phil MOM, for the passage of a law relative, to copartner. sides. Mr. CONN If LL, a memorial from stockholders of the Fanners and Mechanics' Land and Building Association, for so extension of their charter. Mr. LANDON, a petition from Pomeroy & Bro , of Bradford county, for the repeal of the Oct taxing brokora and privato tutriktro. REPORTS OF COMMITTEES Mr, DENSON, (Finance.) as committed, the hill to pay officers and volunteers enlisted under Col. McLane, at Erie; nod Capt. Dick, at Meadville. Takeo up and passed finally. Mr.IIICBOLS, (Corporationt4) as committed, the hill to incorporate the ASSOCilliioll for the Publication and Dif fusion of Religious Periodicals in the Lutheran Church. 3 Mr. CLYMER, (same.) as .nut itled, the bill to extend the charter of the Farmers' Mutual Insurance Company of Philadelphia nail Bucks comities. Dlr. ROBINSON, (same,) as committed, the bill to extend the charter of the Farmers and Mechanics' Land and Building Association. Taken up ant pawed. Dlr. SNIT If, of Philadelphia, (saute,) as committed, the supplement to the act to extend tin charter of the Penns, Icania Salt Manufacturing Company. Taken up and peens!. Mr. ',muff, (same,) as committed, the hill supple mentary to the net incorporating the borough of Potts. Dlr. IST ()CLIME, (ItallrondB,) nq ennunitt.l, tho 1.111 to incorporate the NewenAtlo And Bearer Volley 1: ulroni Company. Tnkon up and pnsAed. Mr. ]iETCIIAV r tt 9urrlrment to flat act rclative to courts in thin fkontnonwealth. Mr. °LA CZ, n bill to provide for tbo recortllng of lit- Yonkers of ocrraisenients of drecdonte oatato,4 In York co»nty, Air. 'ONSET, a impplonient to thy net to sectirn to farmers certain richly In the MAI ket4 of Phlladelphil. tttr. lIIESTANP, a bill to Ineorporato tho Continental Express tom pony • Dir. 9011T11, of Philadelphia, a hill relative to copart ner:44,s; oleo, EllPPletnetit to the act incorporating the city of Philadelphia Mr. McOLURB offered a resolution, that toe Quarter master Gem ent ho requested to furnish tits Committee on /MAIM) all claims connected with the v. innteer service which have not been allowed, and cannot be paid u infer existing la, e. Adopted. The SPEAKER befotn the Senate the roport of the Auditor General, in compliance with the act creating a loan and providing for arming tho State. On motion of Mr. CON Ng LL, the bill Incorporating the Publication Abenciniion of Om Lutheran Church wO9 token up and pnered, On motion of Mr. frLYMIIR, the bill to refund to Samuel .1. AVaiter the gum of SPO, erroneouslY wm i In collateral Inheri:ance tax on the eNtlan M Janes T. Mor phia!, of Philadelphia, wad considered and passed. Air. CONNELL announced the death of Harman lerkes, tato oeigenut-nt.arma of the Senate. and Paid high tritnito to the moru of the deceased. Ito concluded 1,1 ollerlng the folio. hut t eeolution : Resnirrcl, 7hnt tho Senate hao beard, n,th deep regret, of the death of Barman Yorker, late sergeant-at-arnia of the Senate, anti that, no a tottett of regard for his calm terms and faithful discharge of tint) lir bile nn oil rer of the Senate, Mid no Ti marl: of regatta for hie am mtory j do order this resolution to ho euter..l on the j uthal. Pawed mainuneuely. Adjournen. The Manse was called to order at 10 WOW! A. M., by ha Speaker. Prayer Was offered by Rev. Mr. Rubinson. TDB SBSVE 0, BUTE BONDS 800 TIM WAX. . . . . A communication *WS received from the Auditor Gene ral, the substance of which nos as follows: . . . . The second section of the net of Nay 76,3861, providing for n loan for armingthe State, requires the Auditor Gene ral to make an anneal report to the Lepielature uum the condition of the sniff loan. In conformity with this re quirement the Auditor General state:: that, since the close of the fiscal year, b rode of the value of 852T,®0 have been token, of which MAO were by the Pennsylvania Railroad Company. The receipts from the pate of bends, fluting:he year ending December 31,1861,were $2,6 t 2,15% making an aggregate of $7,739,160. Among the bonds lesued are the following: Of the denomination et SDNOI $1,614;000 Of the denomination of $lO6 224,500 Of the denomination of 8:60 43.150 No part of the bonds Meyer yet been redeemed, they being payeble in 1871, and bearing nix per cent. interest, each baring twenty coupons attached. The report was laid non the table, LUOIBLPTITH' PitAtfle OP 1851. The following resolution• from the Senate was pre sented: Whereas, repeated allegations have been made, public and private, against the integrity of legislation in Penn sylvania; and Whereat, moaners of the profmat Iffouseof Represent atives, in their place, have direetty charged that both branches of the last Legislature were influenced corruptly to enact important public measures Therefore, Retched, if the House of Representatives concur, That a committee of three members or each House be appointed to inquire into the integrity of the legislation of the last session, and especially enactments affecting corporatloaff, and that such committee have power to Bend for persons and papers. Mr. ELLIOTI, of Tiogn, moved! to postpone certain resolutions of the same tenor, mßicb had already been originated by the HOWE', and to consider the proposition of the Senate. This wee refused by a vote of 2S'Yblll3 to 71 nays. The special order of the day being the resolution g 11r. Hopkins, of 'Washington, /presented on FrlanYlastO the Home proceeded to ite consideration. The resolution 14 eR follow b: Whereas. it hay been alleged, and• to believed by many Cltimm of tide Commonwealth, that Improper influences mere used in ',enduring the passage of an act, at the last eeaeton of the Legislature, enticed “2,1, act for the nom• imitation of the tonnage duties:" And Whereat, It Is doe to ihe parties Implicated, and to the Public at large, that tt e allegations upon which Feld belief are predicated should be investigated, in order that the truth may he vindicated, end justice be dorm to all: Therefore, Resolved, That a committee be appointed of three, to inquire into alt the facto connected with the Daemi4o or Sold act, and that they have power to send for persons 'and papers. An amendment, appointing five instead of three, was agreed to The (motion then recurred.on an amendment offered by Mr Scott, of Huntingdon, on Friday lost, viz: to add the words: ‘c And that the committee ho instructed to report the mimeo of all persona or officers, either in or out of the Le gislature, by whom, and upon whom, they shall Unclench corrupt influence. to ho used." • Mr. DMUS, of Philadelphia, said that the amend ment was the most objectionable feature of a very ob jectionable measure, giving, as It did, the power to three men to roam throughout the, Commonwealth and publish the names of certain persons to the world. The Rouse woe not competent to take any such action. Could any gentleman say in what manner the committee could at complivti their object t Row would it be possible to open the lips of wttneeeesl One idea probably was to roach tholitrieutive of the State, who might respond, with propriety, that his acts were answerable only to the pen • pie, and that with James Buchanan and John Adams tun], where the same attempt was mode) ho refused to recognize the powso/ess committee. And what could be done in case the witnesses refused to testify ? Punish them for contempt? Impossible! Let the HOLM aban don noel ideas and confine itself to acts of practical benefit. NY. 'WILLIAMS, of Allegheny, declared that the re :parka of the gentleman were extreonlinarr, as coming from a professional man. It was actually sionied that the Unite had power to send out Its process or to take any measures whirl, might involve one of the functionaries of the State. Did the gentleman not know that this body possessed the solo power of impeachment 1 In every grand leanest, as in this case, the jury of the county arts en ports, bearing evidence in the absence of the de fendant, and obtaining sofficient grounds to make out a presninptive case before the pablio Impeachment. Mr. DENNIS 'granted the right to impeach the Go vernor ; but if this proceeding bad that object, the lan guage of the resnlntion should he changed. A process to Accomplish Gila end would he legal, but it did not follow that the bonne could OririOror a committee of three, with a roving commission to go through the Commonwealth. No committee. miles , appointed for a legitimate purpose, could compel the attendance of witnesses, and the action contemplated by the resolution was not legitimate. WILLIAMS thought that the gentleman from Philadelphia had referred to all the parties in this con nection, both inside aunt outside of the Legislature. Ms rein er, be had alludes particularly to the chief Exe cutive of the State, and the drift of his argument had been to enforce the idsn that the Amiss bad not the power of impeachment He now declares that we cannot roach men entomb of the Governor or Legislature{ but, Mr. Speaker, if the mitten referred to In the investigation ap pertain to the legitimate function, of the House, and aro necessarily connected with the preliminaries to impoach• trent, then it Is perfectly competent for us to exercise those towers ex necessitate—in fact to do anything neces sary to bring the facts before them. The right of im• prachment amounts to nothing without the right of in quiry. How is the evidence to be obtained unless by the issuing of process, and its enforcement, it near-gamy, by imprisonment 1 We may send our servants anywhere armed with the proper authority, and can bring forwent and imprison any man in the Commonwealth who refuses to testifs. We are a nowerfnl cunt. armed with func tions designates; and designed by the Constitution. Mr. ORE ENtIANN, of Philadelphia, called attention to an Oct passed June 13th, 1842, as follows; Rese/ced, That each branch of the Legislature shall Lae e the power to issue their subpoena, or heretofore practiced, into nuy part of the Commonwealth, and by attachment to compel the attendance of all persons sum mon") as at itnes,es ; and in case any witness brought to the bar of either home shall . ..se co he Mu or MP/Inc " l iet , ha'sleig i gen toVorn Pt tlifirsneds shall refuse to render an answer to all legal Ottestions duly pro pounded, the Speaker of tho house beferp which such refusal shall be made shall have full power, by the direc tion of the sold house, to issue to the sergeant-at•arma a warrant of commitment to the prison of Dauphin county, tl e inspeetore and keepers whereof aro hereby authorized end rsquired hlr receive and confine such delinquent so committed until discharged in dire course, and the ex pence of such imprisonment shall IA paid out of any money not otherwise appropriated. Section 2. That if any such person so committed to crime shrill persist in his refusal to swear or affirm, or, being sworn or affirmed, shall still, on being brought be fore such house from the prison. refuse to testify, such home may make it rnpriler 71rfler for the detention of such dslingnent in said prison, until the next succeeding Legislature Isbell hate met, and until the proper house soccer ding the one ohich orders the commitment °de m shall 'Moist. an order for his 'further detention or discharge, On to them shall seem expedient. The question being taken, the amendment of Mr. Scott. of Huntingdon. Won agreed to. The resolution, as amended, then come before the Home. Mr. ABBOT contended that if the object was to re- Peal the act Or ravr serrion for the commutation of the tonnage tax. RR he hollered, that the Supreme Court was the only. tribunal to which recourse could be had. It was usurping Judicial powers not properly belonging to the A sir ntlolv. Mr. HOPKINS, of Washineten, said that if the theory ens trite, that the people could not anent through tho LeOrlettne for the investigation of froutle, there woo hut little vitality in our system of government. The question hod Lien ache", Where were the people" and had been properly ans. ered by the gentleman from Allegheny [Mr. It flu:m.llo.n, on a orevisus occasion, hod pointed to tha faces of new members around him, and shown that, through the tribunal of the ballot-box, those people had administered a sebuke to the men w•ho voted for car. toilr bard:afro nieasnres in 1861. Outside of the city of Phi1114(100s, there ma, hut ore old member lathe House, and that nut Mr. Cowan of Warren. It had been intimated upon the floor of the Manse that the resolution scan open to the suspicion of haring other objects than mete investigation. no desired to rn pet this I rishontlon It nos enoyea'ed in Ruud faith. If he seas dierNed to impugn motives, hn adalit fled as good reason to attack those opposed to the reiolntion, as they could find to assail him. Wlin object of the resolution WWI sim ply to uscerlam the truth or &laity of certain Allegation , ' and, if they u Pre found to Le true, to punish every ravcal, whether in or out of the Legislature. Might we not also horn that the inrestiestion mould result in driving from Harrlslairg a 08 2 . of Men who have hung like vampires arousal the Lenidative hallsl Let the friends of investi gation be not diverted from their purpose by the finger ing of mouraltsl pigeons at the other end of IMO Capitol, or elFer here. Mr, ABBOT, of Philadelphia, explained a relrrirle which he had outdo an Friday last, and which bait eri deptly been inirundersinfol by the gentleman who bad just spoken. At that flare he had said that the resobt , tion area open to the suspicion of being promoted by other motives than those of mere investigation. The term "other motives. wan not intended to refer to anything more than a supposed desire on the part of some members to obtain a repeal of the act commuting the tonnage tar, mulct the plea of an investigation. Mr. BENNIS declared that it was impossible to Mama. tiynte the conduct of the members of the Legislature of lar I, to less the affidavits were sustained by oath or .IfilTllllltinn. Mire rumors should newer receive even a respectable treatment NOM:dice of the peace could be Mond in tho Commonnealth vho would issue a subpama upon such vogue allegations. The names of Governors, A•tornete General, 1,1. , , ,, ,erd of the Canal Board, and other officials, had Peen tainted with rumors for years past, no matter hoar honorable many of them may have been. • He then alluded to the retains of the passage of the resolution. The effect upon the mind of uneducated pereone in the Commonwealth would be to fix a damning hatred to 1., agislativo proceedings, while the effect linen the educated class would be to awaken a latest etrapicion. There IF an adage to the effect that it was always safer to travel immediately niter great railrend accidents, and it might ho said that the Legislature aged experiment more boldly niter a great investigation than before. Ito desired thin prediction to ho noted—via: either that the commit. tee or ould find themselves without power to act, or that having sown the wind they would reap the wierbrint having unchained the fins, he might travel new and un. exported gronnd, and find tainted alr where it was least BlMOfted to extol. Mr. HOPKINS, of Washington, said that reference Lad been merle to the Canal Board. Ito had been a mem. her of that body. and if any gentleman here or to the mbar Chamber, tette was not covered all over with 'en, ruption, Mould offer a txuointion appointing a courufttoo to investigate the proceedinga of that body, he would cheerfully sortain it. Mr. PTINNIS explained that he had not known that the gentleman had been a rneuther of the boon]. The hour of twelve hating arrived, the debate was suspended, and the House proceeded to appoint a C"111. iodine to try the contested.eleetion ease of Mr. Manakin, of the Sixth district of Philadelphia. The following named members were chosen—viz: Messrs. Armstrong, Worley. Chatham, Gratis, Graham, Strang, Hannay, Hanks, and W. S. EOM The Home then adjourned without any further action on the resolution. From Kansas LPAYENWORTII, Jan. 20.—1 n the case of Craw ford versus Robinson, contesting the Governorship of Kansas, the Supreme Court has refused to grant the mandamus applied for by the contestant. Under this decision, Robinson, the present incum bent, bolds over for a year. Considerable excitement prevailed at Atchison to-day, owing to a collision between the citizens and a band of Jayhairkers. Some arrests were made, but more trouble is anticipated. TIFNCIDS BVIIGLARS—ANOVIER" SPIRITUAL" Mrsrany.--Some time between Monday night and yesterday morning, a dwelling.house in the vicinity of Twelfth and lt,alman streets was burglariomly entered by it party of voracious teetotallers, who made sad havoc with the edibles. Having effected an entrance to the kitchen, they lit the gas, put on the teapot to boil, and then ransacked the drawers and closets until they discovered a loaf of bread, a quantity of crackers, and a five-pound lump of chem. After they had eaten to contentment, and drained the teapot of its ambrosial nectar, they turned off the gas and wont their way, taking with there a leg of mutton! But the most incompre hensible part of the whole affair was the fact that a bottle, whose contents were solely " spiritual," (no allusion to the cotemporary,) was left undis turbed upon a dresser. A nice little supper the teetotallers must have had to themselves, decided ly ! And what a commentary upon teetotal MUIR- Oily, that the scoundrels should pay their "evening devours " to a dwelling house in part occupied as an alderman's office Moral : Look up the teapot before you retire for the night. FlRE.—About 9 o'clock last night a fire, attended with little damage, occurred in the trunk rnanufnetory of Messrs. Focor & Kenny, in Edward street, below Second, in the Sixteenth ward: SINCE the preparations for the Burnside ex pedition began to be made, the applications from women for posses to the South hove more than quadrupled, as they did while the Port 'Royal ex pedition was on filet. All are well armed with vouchers from members of Congress Rad other Union men, but somehow they are sure to present themselves in fullest foree when the information they can carry will be most valuable to the robots. THE CITY. AMMEIZIIIIITEI VHS NYZNING. Cronntirni. Traesis—Vishad Knot, .bore ILgbt, Erder "—"Sixteen String Jack." W.Wror4S2stir Tamsril—Ninth sad Wabrat ,6 The Lyles of Milan:ley Lew for Inreer"—..ll2* HaOrr Mon." dicor-Bmini Trimix—Aroh street, obctve Handy A.ndy"--. , Forty and Tine—. Mod as a March Bare." HANDEL AND , HAYDN ISIDDIE' HALL.—rionthead miler liglith and Green street✓.—Literary and Muted Soiree. Mostoet. Fans Max—Locust etreet,abaTe Old Folks' Concert. 7311(PL8 OP WO3lOllB-aq. E. corner Tenth and Mash tmt streets.—Signor Blitz's Entertstamont. ODD CONEIPPLACT CASE IN COVILT—L WIDOW SWINDLED OUT 01 , A FAILW.—A singular COO of alleged conspiracy came before the Court of Quarter 13tesions yesterday, wherein six Indies, named Bowen and Payne, accused foar defendants, named MoManus, Husband, Huxley, and Anthony, of at tempting to cozen them out of a farm and its per quisites, under circumstances of a heinous °hesita ter. Mr. District Attorney Mann gave a statement of the outlines of the ease as follows : Some ten years ago a Mr. Bowen owned a farm. cent , ining 252 i aores of land in MifirMs, Cumber land county, N. J. He died, leaving a widow and five children.. The family lived on the farm for some time, and then moved and rented oat the cul tivated portion of the farm for one hundred and sixty-five dollars :per annum. A short time since the family were induced to move to Gloucester, where it was supposed they could get employment in the faotory. Being disappointed in this expects- Con, they moved to Camden. Up to this time the farm was entirely clear of incumbrance. 'The family had been in Camden but a short time when it became known that they were the owners of, this land, and it is alleged that an effort was started by interested parties to get Mrs. Bbwen to- raise money by mortgage in order that the proceeds might .be used for some purpose. This was sue cessfUlly resisted. A prosecution was thervatarted against the family by a party who were provoked at their disinclination to sell the property. They were persuaded to plead guilty, and they did so, and were sent to prison in Oemilen-for non-pay ment of fines ($100), and were incarcerated five or six weeks. While in prison, they were again asked to sell the farm to raise the fine. They stilt refused. Mrs. Bowen, however, got into-debt to the amount of about $75, and this seems- to have been the first step to effect the ruin of the family. After the re lease from prison they were brought to Philadel phia. and taken to Bedford street. Here they re mained two days, when, discovering the character of the street and neighborhood, they removed to the house of Francis Huxley (one of the defend ants), in South street. While at Hurley's, Mr. Miller, a friend of Mrs. Bowen, called upon her, knowing that the was dis tressed by the debt of $75 to the pasties in Camden, and told her that if she was desirous of selling her property he mead procure a party willing to pur chase. About that time Henry McManus, another defendant, called upon her and told her he bad a plan by which the family could be relieved of all difficulty. He referred to a lawyer whom he had known fromboyhood, who was god to the poor and who would not charge Each ; that ha was very Mot and would lend them money, to live on while negotiations were pending for the sale of the property, if it was. pat in his hands. The family were then taken to the office of Mr. William A. Husband, where they snot that, gentleman, who expressed great pity for their situation, and proposed to become a protester to them if they placed the property in his posses sion for sale. itirs. Bowen still hesitated, and the matter was then dropped. Subsequently, Mr. Mil ler osiled on bars. Boren in relation to his propo sition for a purchase. but so soon as he made his appearance, Mr. Huxley went to Mr. Has band and brought back from him a note to Mrs. Bowen instructing her to have nothing to do with Mr. Miller. Mt. Bowen was harmed to call again on Mr. Husband, where an agreement was (drams up. Mrs. Bowen bad inquired what Mr. Husband's fee would be, whether $lOO would be enough. and in reply he told her he could not tell, but be preferred to take his pay in the form of a per cottage. She did not know the meaning of the term " per centage." Mr. Husband ex plained that he sometimes got five, ten, twenty, thirty, forty, and fifty per cent., but be explained that the higher the figures named in the agree ment, the more money she would att. Tho agree ment was then signed, by which Mr. Husband was to receive fifty per cent. for his services. The property is estimated to he worth $4,005, and the. District Attorney stated that it would be in evi dence that Mr. Husband fixed that price on it. During this time the family were living with Hux ley, where pistols and knives were kept, and when Mr. Miller would call, Mr. Huxley would flourish a knife and threaten that if he continued to come there he would be assaulted. A short time after the agreement was signed, a message was sent to Mrs. Bowen to come to Mr. Husband's office, that the farm bad been sold forsl,soo, and she was needed to sign the papers. The daughters refased to go, amerting that the farm was worth mach more, and they would not agree to the sale upon these terms. The clerk of Mr. Husband was sent to bring the girls, and, when they still refused, Mr. Huxley took a eartewhip to drive thernup, and they were threatened that if they did not go to the office they would be driven to the street, and sent to the Almshouse. They went to the office. 1 ,,„.t,„ty tad_ been sad to riwtp Mtboor k (another defendant,) and it is alleged that he was a' party to the transaction. When the women at Mr. Husband's office were about to sign the papers, Mrs. Bowen inquired how much Mr. husband was to receive for his fee, and he replied, "Good Gad Almighty! madam, .loan't answer a thousand ques tions at mace; this has got to be settled first." The papers were signed. and Mrs. Bowen received $7OO for bet share, Mr. Husband retaining $BOO. Sahara quently Mrs. Bowen had to pay Huxley $lOO for board ; she bad to pay the parties in Camden, and subsequently Mr. Husband complained that there bad been a mistake committed, and that $7O would have to be returned to the purchase?, and Mrs. Bowen gave her share—s.3s. Whig way her share was reduced 'to between $3OO to $4OO for a farm said to bo worth $5.000. The case will occupy several. days. Huxley is not upon trial, flow far the evidence snstalna the allegations above made has not transpired. The plaintiffs aro very ignorant, and it may be that they will be tripped up in some of their de velopments. WHAT BCOOIIEB OF FOSFEFFED might be of advitntage If some inquiry was made into the manner of collecting money that has been forfeited on security. We believe that, during the last ten years, not more than five thousand dollars have been paid into the city treasury from this course. In that time, perhaps, a hundred thou sand dollars have been forfeited. The limbs* operandi in these cases is, we believe, for the crier to announce in court Quit the security of a prisoner it', forfeited by his non-appearance, and the District Attorney then autberizea the sheriff of the county either to collect the bail or to levy upon the pro perty of the security. If the action ever goes thus far, it generally goes no further. The sheriff is generally appealed to on behalf of the security, and his sympathy aroused--Bo that thelaw does not take its course, and convicts escape. There are around our courts and alderman's offices dozens of professional bail-goers, who, for a small bonus, will swear that they are possessed of any-amount of property. These are known to professional thieves. The ease is fresh in the minds of the people of the New York receiver, Snow, who was held to bail in the sum of $lO.OOO, and afterwards escaped to Canada. Ms security is a resident of this city, and a man of property; but, althiat4h court after court has decided that the security is a forfeit, it has never boon paid. To ho released upon bail is virtually to get rid of justice. and the more incorrigible the offender and the offence, the more means ha has at his dis posal to hoodwink the law. The sheriff is sworn to fulfil his functions, of which this is one—by the neglect of which both justice and the treasury are left at fault. THE DEATII-WARRANT READ TO A. Nun.. TEILER.—On Tuesday last the sheriff of West Ches ter received from Governor Curtin the death-war rant of Lewis Green, the colored man who mur dered a pedlar, near Mortonville. On the follow ing day the sheriff, attended by his counsel, Mr. Pennypacker, and the Rev. Mr. Moore, proceeded to the felon's cell, and read to him the warrant. lia listened to it with very little apparent concern. After the sheriff had read the document, he inquired how long a time was given him; he was told about seven weeks. Ho then said ho thought he had been need pretty bard, that others had got clear who were as guilty as ho was. Mr. Moore then admonished him with 501110 appropriate remarks. lie was told if others escaped through the imper fection of human law or its administration it was no reason for him to murmur at his fate. The guilty must and ought to be punished, and he must suffer the penalty of his crime. Ills comrade in guilt was dead by disease. and will be judged by the Judge of all the earth. Ile must now prepare for his doom. He appeared stolid to his fate. The time Axed for his execution is Friday, the 7th day of Mach. CHARGED wort BURGLARY.—Yesterday af ternoon, John Owen was charged Wore Alderman Bottler with burglary. It is alleged, on the night of the 4th of January,be broke into the store of Mrs. Mifflin, at Twentieth and Locust streets, and stole therefrom some money and a clock. After considerable difficulty, Detective Sam Henderson recovered the cloak in the nomession of lane Hor ner and Mary Edwards. These women, after some trouble, were induced to testify, and alleged that Owen gave them the clunk, and they presumed, at the time, it was stolen, but were afraid to say_ anything about it for fear he would do them some harm, as he had made threats. The defendant was_ fully committed for trial. THE CONNELLT Mount:R.—Thus far, the offer of five hundred dollars reward for the de tection of the nasassin in this case has elicited no testimony likely to lead to such a result. The police. however, are still on the itys rms. and the Inviolability of the law must ultunstely be vindi cated. Tire coroner's jury hold a meeting the day before yesterday, and renders(' a verdict that the deceased had come to his death by a stab at the hands of some person or persons unknown. There leers no 'witnesses present. TIIE CASE OF GILCERIST-UNITED STATES DISTRICT COVAT—Judge Oadwaladcr.—The case of William Gilchrist, charged with treason, was fixed for yesterday morning, for a hearing on the writ of habeas corpus granted by the jed4e. continuance of the case was asked by District At. torney Ashton, in consequence of the absence of Mr. Baker, an importaet witness. Mr. Baker is now at St. Louis, and, according to a telegraph de spatch from Washington. he will return on the 23d inst. The court fixed Friday, the 24th, at eleven o'clock, for the hearing. A NEIY ALTEItED Nom—Yosterday coun terfeit fives, on, the Manufacturers and Mechanics' Bank, altered from ones, were circulated in this city. The counterfeits are exceedingly welt ex ecuted, the "one," in colored ink, being removed, and the "five" substituted with green. They are well calculated to deceive, and shopkeepers and others should be on the look-out for them. rASSINO COUNTERFEIT MONET.—Yesterday afternoon Elam Arter," alias George Thomas, was charged, before Alderman Boitler, with passing a counterfeit ftve•dollar note on the Blue MB Bank, of DorohOstor, Mere. He nnsoommitted to answer. THE MERCANTILE LrnRARY.—The annual meeting of the Mercantile Library Company was held last evening. The annual report was pre sented, and from it may be gleaned that 67,500 books were loaned at,varlous periods doting the year. The receipt; were $0,7t6.20, which is an excess of $350 71 over the expenditures HOSPITAL CesE.—Yesterday afternoon Wm. McConnell was admitted into the hospital, with a alight wound in the head, caused by being %truck nut a musket at Camp E%ttse