It'lTli,'BUßGiii -GAZETTE =ll P 122 B B tr.ll Ti ..T81:08DAT MODNI,NO, MARCH 18, 1852.7' ]i2rBEADING MATTER WILL BE Fa ON .EA017P.:4611 OFTHiSPAPER. ; spritok croansisErs LEartraE. .The Bight llev. Bishop &Tanner, of the Pitts-. burgh Diemen of the Catholic Church, gave a public iletitttre ,last evening in Masonic Rail, to a v4ry reePeatabla audience: The object, of !the Bishop, in the first part of tho lecture was id pierce, that to'Catholicity we owe all that is realty volt:table in our political institutioes. Title he showed by asserting that our liberties 'And usages are .the fruits of the common law of Erigland.mud her represOltative institutions, which be said had heen.iderivnil wholly from Thert4oin it 'iras,ihat to Catho. licity we °well our free gnveiviroett. In the second portion,dif bie discouise, the Rev. Leetarer.lostitutta i alcomparbson between . ;Piblestaniiem and Cathbliciato, or rather ha endesiored to prove that Prdtestantism was a lifeless trunk, deriving all the vitality it ever Possessed from the Catholic ,Church, that vrae,now Past felling into rationalism infi "dfility, ' and desuetude—and thht Catholicity, boding recovered•from the shock' of the Actor , Mailer', was advsucing in power and great nese. iball give the lecture in full, fronr: the a -1L543 pf our reporter, in our papor ro-M arrow. coidee mu be had of the counter. PASSAVANT'S PITT3I3OtOII completioaef. s new and sulddantial four-story boildintr„ tut an addition to thi44 excellent hospi tal,'Wou celebrated on Tuesday evening by a sniper to the war:lit - eta who had been engaged upon. it, together with a few Invited gueeti. At eight o'clock the company sat down to a sump: U101:13 ems rat; at which Judge filmier presided. IThu ocinpany booing done Justice to the mate: riot feast, "the leant of reason and the tiow.of soul" commenced, with an adman from the President, in which he paid a glevling tribute to the value ouil importance of the enepbanic arts no exercised in the erection of dwellings, ' templeituf religion, science and tore, and cspe. dolly such edifices 39 the one we were then in, consecrated to the relief of destitute and suf. (*dog humanity. lie paid.a , vrell-merited com pliment to The moral worth of builders as or Cbgt, atitl4lostfil withst: glowing eulogium upon that institution: its founder sad its members. -. Ho was followed by Wm M. Shino, Esg , who* remarks were of a similnr tenor, and were warmly applauded. A neat scotime.st offered by lilr:Wals;brought tie Her. Br. Pasimtant to bis foot, who, al **nib laboring under indiepoliiion, spoke for sometime in his tienal strain of, simple hot im ,nressive eloquence. He begged ihose present not to bestow on tiny man the honor which belonged only to Cod. That hishielisiag had Leen signally •Manifeated towards that. institution, and had 'carried!! on from itt :teethe, beginning to its 'preterit strength and efficiency. He spoke of the lefig and pleasant intercourse that had sub -riati,d between himself and the gentlemen there tesetubled; and. plead earneetly,f. i.degree of cordiality and mutual sympathy be tween workmen of. every class ,and those for whom they toil. Hi showed, by eirgnMent and by etaiciients of facts that greet. moial, serial and peentuary ntlynntage would resolt6oa nth . interconAe and Mutual sympathy and esteem. Bev. Di. Cool: delivered a short and animated .addrees,, in .whiel the earnest sentimhits of the 'Christian were besiiitifully blended with kitre fined "plemantries of soma: life. • Another gentleman i whose name we did" not :learn, !poke very plelleantic in broken English. He is, we believe, a Phyedyian in rho ==== • tettaxtbe would do a ilek man good After some firrthef, remarks and sentiments ' Mr. 'Wills and other gentlemen, the company imp/Listed eseellent huMor. •, Ifs congrutulato Pm:ea:rant, who to the rotindeeof this institution; and to whose anti ring energy it Uwee no much, and its numerous friends and patrons, upon this One addition to their !pearls of doing goo). We shall not now attemptutlescriptien of the newbuilding,which li . to he used in oonjuetion with the old, other than to nay that everything tba: skill could do 'foribe cotofoit and conveoieoce of both patients • and - nurses has been done. We regret that we T not obtain the names of the Tortoise satin erho'did Ile work; but we-were tno ihient upon the pleasures of the occasion to spend ef,, l We ought to have' done to business. - • A niovomont of thedeem t interelt-nred partanee ieneticed in the pa;agrapb below trim the Baltimirre American. So rat ea it in thowre -: ' • vetted to an it atriken us fasuralily..,. Leaving out of view entirely theglispaid.wieriention of;col nnization ma remedy for elarezi . , there is enough . . .merit la:African Colonization no a' great scheme for' the Chriitiitnizatiou and civilization of ;Uri -' Da and the elevation of the negro race, te'jcw . tiny any yonsonoble effort which can be made for Ito present. - peesperity ' and. ultimate ancient. ' .- , 'Ma. Sy,....wer, ineml.er of Gangrene from Natal? Caroline, is preparing a bill, as the'publicjour ' Weis state, to restore to the Staten the fourth lied Ir.st instalment - due to them frdth the General Government by virtue of the distribution act of Congresa in lferaT. The last instalment, it will ' be remembered, 'was retained in, tlri Treasury itan'meet the urgent and immediate veanta of the .Government. Mr., Stalely's. bill prepolien that certificsit s eri of Bolted States five par . :cent adoelr. • ' _ ter the amount of title rotirill inetairneutrearne - nine ruillipes or dollars—shall ho iesued to the sereraliltates, no they shall he reapectivety en titled, upen,tha'utprean conditionahateriali state 'shall appropriate the interest thereof, amount `.log 'bathe aggregate to over fair hundred and ' . fifty therionoil dollars autrualli, to the transpar• tatieinviffree negree3 within the Staten tcVl..ibe ;/, .'-',Riairrti'itintif the edusatian and irnprovemant the •Iwr., - ,i,al c i r libezilin'ealontat..a. Thu Principal , in never to be Ailliout further dongree6unal legielotion .7,.;. „ l,.?*,:tina,.:i4o,.e.eri.ificates are not to be ironed to any legialative uothoritiee - thereof to - receive4...Apingreg` the name, upon the conditions aberre,eliOnid: If : there should dein any Blate, r i4freerazegicica — for tranePortation to Liberia, thendle•lntereet money is to be- appropriated in eitabli'shing edhools and colleges, and in im proving the moral; social and religtona condition orthe cititens of- the Liberia Rept:l6llc. ' Thie, It will be admitted on all haudrt, In a anent important Ines/lure, —Wei are glad to learn ' that the friends of the bill have great confidence in its passage. Itlwould be hailed with plea.- , are, we! are rare, throughout the country The Wig Conve n tion - of lowa, met at lowa City,' on the 16th ult. . -. The resolutions express strong approbation of 71thernweent National Administration, and a de .. .termination to support the nominee of the party, , -wheever hr may be. The delegates from that ;state ere leftnninstructed, as appears from the followingresolution. Besotted, That the delegates to the National Convention be left live to act according to their ownjadgment, when they meet their brethren in the National Convention to laminate Whig can didatee for President and Vice President of the United States, awarding to the lights that then anYhellresentesi; and so toast as to harmonize consisting claims and interests, and to maintain the integrity of - the-Whig party sadlthe amen - dency of Whig principles. , . . . Wilms an ii247esing letter in her columns this . morning from 'Hit. H. Beacuan, Esq ,Lit Cult,,tieW York. on the subject of ibaAlleglie i - isy - lalley 'and flenesee Valley, Railroads.' It '-f : will be obsured, Mit . he Col2fipall all we said a • . : few .0 li o reheating the' Lime and fiyieum - • of theser villeya I , ~• .., On fitir , .. übjeotrlean being the northern . 1 . t i .. ~ uni4IDS;,O the A.V. ' rood we would 'simply re ,. ....',, mark, thii that paint wan assumed as such, be cause itz t loealion is better known and its name ~...,„ ~ . mosey iar to the people of Western Penney!- '" : - 'weals' than that of 'any ether in that 'region of ... eouitry, and beosuse ; we knew that the point of , lunation with the liew York and Erie road would . ba sontewherrneallbuit place. - To have said - '"Sha Neil York line". would • have conveyed a eery indefinite idea::; -- : . . , . „....; Ho little intercom" hareem with that part .. : of our sister. State,.that we confeee that until - .1... we received this letter we could het lash told • .-'''' ...,- whether Cuba contained 300 or 8000 inhabitants. . - -.,.'•,. Heave, therstety, assumed that is the northern ''isrminne of oar road, leer, without raferenne to :':the map; would ' , lave" had arty . More definite Ides than if we had mild the scathes : bordei of ~ :. .15[ 6w York; . ,- Bat we hope tube better acquaint- It istuad by the opponents of General Scott that he - otilild not 'carry the Whig vete, of the Souther° 'States. We do not believe—have never believed—ilia — nesertions. •We know that Mr. Fillmore is the fiat choice of southern Whigs, bat if Gesfi' Scott receives the nomina tion of the Whig' Nationaf - Convention, we most firmly believe that hewill reedee a larger 'Ole, even in the Southern States, than any other marothe whigs . can nominate:: . When the Amer icanipeople came to vote,' they wilt then recol lectthe glorious old Chief of Lumley's Loo and Mericii, who has brought to his country - ouch imperishable renown.' A time-serving pol itician, like Mk *Buchanan, will stand a poor chance with the great Americ an Captain." An a proof of the feeling which will run through the .South,-when Gen. Scott's name is-fairly. befo the people, we copy the following lodigoant response to the slanderers of the old General, from the•Nationc/ Banner,'s pap...which warm: braggarts the claims of Mr. Filmore t-- peaSegtt it not,aur choice, but are we there fore to stand by in silenoe and suffer. one com mon political enemies to blacken with'impani-1 ty his honorable names Ood forbid! lie has bravely, brilliantly fought the battles of his country, and is entitled to some justice. His life has teen one of patriotism and v alor, de voted to nienountry's glory, and it is grossly ungrateful to refnee to lift a finger ifir defense, ithereqa thousand engines , of detraction are playing their muddy waters in torrents upon hie hoary head. lie stands this day the greatest' living military captain eftthe age—his. renowO has fixed the gazeof the world, as upou the 'ascent of some brilliant planet its the heavens— Ms conquest of 'Mexico has eclipsed the do, :ling splendor of that of Cortex—his skilful combinations nave shed new and unhooked for glory upon the heretofore unsurpassed renowu of American arms.. Ana are we to sutler such a Chief to be literally titung to death by politi cal vipers crawling alb over the ground of poi itics, and worming their 'poisonous folds int the body politic 7 - frielit4 of Whig principle. .do not put trust in tho (Stiles of your- enemies, intended to distract at.4 dirida you. Of the four Boston negreeasold into slavery lu Texas. for attempting to carry off a slave named Frank, in the thig itillow, syn board , T.hieh they were employed, thq. V. Journal of Commerce says, , ~ We are sorry for: these negroes, and hope that the Abolithmista will make up a p,t3nie and redeem them; I. e.,j if they have got iluviugli with.paying the $20,000 bail ponds of their beloved brother Chaplin, whe was esptured while engaged in a similar operation in the State of_alsrylond. Th ey. are not likely to ap. ply their money to any 4tetteruse. The "Vtg ilanee boromittee of this city boast of having helped Orr 150 to r2OO cloves during the year mating ?day last, tel doubtless their operations still continue. While such is the fact, nothing but severity can he expected towards these who are caught in the act." The above coliltilcoded, and utterly heamiess paint,raph, is from a paper which makes mpg eivl firetansiOns to morality. flow shoesingly must iti moral sense be blinded he the Mile races oilthecottoriocracyof New York: If four American white sailors hod attempted to rescue 'one of their breihern held in slavery In Algiers, or any where else, and had failed and been pun., lobed by being told into slavery themselritit what compassion, what indignation, what sym pathy, what threats, we should hare seen and' hoard from the Journal of Commerce. onitsim ilar prints! Tbs•.'clitrle esiandtr which has befallen four colored milord affords the opor tursity for a poor juke,, and a enitetal feeling at abolitionists, and evinces that the editor tikes a malicione eejoyinasyrt in the calamity Of the your unrortnnate.3..?,i, TAN 'xosstrra BE BANE?' Both is the title to en elaborate article in the Nctional .Intryistenre . r, the object of which is to prtere the ineittity of the great Hungarian ON -4434 and it concludes with the Ilssertiun that his seri and thetities Jo not sine to thi/ . —resplax• 11'4 of an imposition"— that ..it is eocuplitueritt lag :them to call theta, han4v, and that they a4the aiekly ciaions ; of a dietorted brain, and notoriginal !" If we were disposed to retort in kind; we ehould say that the Intelligeneer exhibited the - unmistakeable gignsof the weakne, oi senility, os.,„l.ati under the Influence of ut bandied pas- .ions, when it published articles to intensely rifid disgranefully unjust to ,e - gkeat anil suier ing,apostle of human eighth and national liber, by—hut we forbear, hcping that the unprecw dented exhibition if unfaiimvis and w ;asess whioh hot lately charasterixed the, ,rolumus of the InteDigencer, willstoon Ass Siiy.,..iind - thai' tthifold, .111 a bittterto.tricatjuserand retipectahle :Sheet will Si!!1:111 reennse its wanted ability and regard to justice- . - * The only , reply to the article of. the Intelli tenser we deem, consistent with the exalted character of theti ble Hungarian, is to copy it extract from hhi is . epeech in Louisville,— W) the last of hie, pnbre ed speeches,—sad if that discovers insanity, then we confess we bare onljf to regret that there it not more insanity ; in use wovkd i . BROtIICILUOOD H of 9111006 PeePleagainit another people nhould [sever feel—hstred, bat brotherly sympathy. I memory of !tutored oppressionlfrom Sloven, meats, shank' never be imparted 6 Natiims, and I children should never be bated, deepivell or pun. i isbed, becatifeitheir Where have eilltfra •The Hungarians hive wrestled for centuries with Turkey .ind now we are friends, true (daps, I and natural allies against a common enemy, I deveraTlif my' own secretors lost their lives i in Turkish were, or theirlproperty tot redemption 1 out of Turkish captikity, and to me it ts Totk. lob Sultan whoeaked my life and gars bread to thousands of -icy countrymen, which no ants! power did on earth. .Such is the cheese' of' time. It is Rimeits which cruellest my bleeding fatherland, but the ikiszorable hatred of , my • heart does not.sztend to the people of littletil, I love that people, I, pit; it, poor unfortunate instruments of deepotism.. Wherever there is a people, there is my love. , Therefore, teethe 'paesloeste ckeßersent of past times subeide'before the prndenr dyke of•pres• mil necessities. You are blood from Englotore : blood, halos from its bone„aed dash froth its dash, The Anglo-Eason race 'eras the kernel, around which gathered this glorious fruit—youi Republic. Every other nationality_ in oppressed. It is the Anglo.tiason alone which stands high' acid erect in its independence. You, the younger. brother, are entirely free, because -ftepubrieou They, the elder brother, are monarchictil,' but they bare a ocsatitotion: and/ they have, many inititutions which even you retained, end by ie. mining theta Lava proved that they are con;!enial to freedom and dear to free men. The free ?res., the Jury; the fsee Word, the freedom of associa tions, the instituting of Municipalities, the abate of the People in the Legislature, are EaglistOn etitutiodiers._-the inviolability of person a4il in violabtUty of property are English .principlee England is the last stronghold ofstheee princi : plea in Europe. ,Is this not enotigh, to stand side by side with these principles in behalf of oppressed human*? • , It is bevel take - the opportunity brioffy to rm for to an assertion of an Anierican statesman who bolds a high place in your affections and in ray respect. lie advances the theory that ghoul,' you now take the course which.' humbly claim, the deepota of Europe would be provoked by your example to interfere with your lostitotions, and turn upon you in the hoar of yourweakoves and exhaustion; because you have set ou amtm pie of interference ; I, indeed, am at a loss to underetaad that'. Is it interference I claim ? No; precraely the coio4• t.rary. if you now deelere "that'youriery istenet being founded on that iirlisciple of the eternal laws of assure and of odium's oa4— . that every nation hue the independent righoso regulate ate domestic concerns, to[ i tx its insti tutions and its government," yo cannot Con template with indifference that fife absolutistl . cal priers form a league of mdtaal support "'genet this prinetple of mankind'e common law therefore proteat ngalapt . the violation of this principle " by. foreign intelference I, in deed, cannot inderstand by what logic each a protest could be,,taken. qty . _ the despotio pow ers 15 precedent for intelfmnee in your do.. inestio concerns.; hl,f. 15giclis entirely different, it runethus:' . lf your countryiremaine an Indif ferent sPeotator,of the violation of the laws of nations by foreign Interference, then it has es: tablisbed a precedent; it has established that the principle of ;Interference become interpolat ed into the book of international law, and you will see the time when the league of deapote. coMmanding the whole force of oppressed Eu rope, will remind you thus: ...Runts has interfered Hungary because it considered the example eat up by Hungary dangernue to Raul& America has silently re copized:the right of that interference. France ban tuterfered In Home, because the mange of the Boman democrecy was dangerous to planes. A me.r ica bas silently agreed. The abeolutiati= cal lilovenument in protection of their divine 'right, lave !espied In Ina Mt alliance with the o p e nly avowed purposb,.! d one another by. Intitusl interference &plat the spirit of revo lution and the anarchy, of republicanism. Amer its hut not protested againstta. • Therefore the priilleiple of foreign it against every flow, of generolas example, halt, by common con duit of every power on earth, contradicted by norti, not even by American, became & firm In-, ternational law " And, reminding you thus, they will speak to you . in the :very words of that distinguished • statesmalto whom I respectfully allude: "Yon have nultdhe ground upon which your national exisitancels founded. You bitM con (tented to the altetatfon of the laws of nations. The existenee of your Republic is dangerous to tie. We, therefore, belizoiny Mot your anarchioi (Mat is Reputtfinso) dOctririrs are destructive the and Iliot monarchial princyles ore essential to the pease and see-linty and happiness of our subjects, trill obliterate the-bed which has 'tourist/4 said noxious weeds. We trill crush you dine's . , as the propagandists - of doctrines Lou destructire to the , peace ,and -good ondes-rf the teorti." .-t-.. I haecqnoted the very words very uncipect- .. . edly giver/lover to publicity, from a private in terview; which 1, out of...respect and persoual' affectionjid not answer then, precisely because I took the interview for a private . one. Ev 4 er) now, 1 refrain from entering into further 09s-, cession, out of the same' consideration of re, spect, though f am provoked by thaOinlooked for publicity, and will-eny nothing mere; but after having quoted the very worde, (leave to t dliti public opinion to judge if that authority of l jutit words is againht 9r for a national protest I against the principle of foreign interference ..et once the • principle become .establitiheil with your silent dom”ra, and you will soon see . it brought baste to You, nod 'brought; bornefin a moment of domestic discord, which Russian re. sett diplomacy and ,Russinn gold will skilfully mix. You can be sure of title: and , this mighty Uniail will be shaken byi,that very prim pie of foreign interference, easy you silently lot be established. as an uncontrovertible rule for the despots of the earth: Tor. VETO 00VAHNI. —The Ilerritburgh Union mays that if the Legislature coo meet much longer, the 'Governer Will "have to eih ploy, a'ready 'writer to . tit constantly at hit el bow; to write out veto tnessag,ev, at be will at, ! or he able to write them all himself. Almost daily the two Hoare, have their nett nullified by iv 'CO. This is democracy ! or rather loco focoitm—the one man 'power against the voice ! of the rlFesentatives of the people. Why not leave alli the legislation iu the hands of:his Ex °Aleoo/, on 110 cue now think., it worth while to-i introduce a hill until it is tart before the Gov .ernor, end has received the approbation of his hightiess., We know this it the cnuin Napole. oa style,but we are not aware that we have bail a rouil.frial in l'enn!ylvantn giving the euprounr. power'ti the Governor We ore no use in keep log 141..inen nt lierrieleirgh merely to ahoy the will ag one Mans - who„ ny hit interpret... 0r the eke powi.ii°., has usurped all their duties We eve glad to learn that all , the member , . of the Ligbdaittre from this oNtoty, are-in fay, of ttnew bill founded on the Maine law, for the 'cuppression of intempe'raum tutroduct+l into the Senate by Sir Carr Ar.,. We belie•e that n rose majority of our citizens are in f,ror of this bill? or one of a eimilar tenor, and nor members may real ItKalied that Om Coerce in this repent 4111 be approved tortarmt echo I by the people. FROM WASH/NOTON , enrie.pondrit,.. 1.1:* poy Ci . . . WASIIItiGTS,f. March I. ' The ilosee, ito,day, 1 . 0110 y noted-upon SW/ pissed is Ott; rine, tulpollarlt scoot 01 tot; sei efon leads an to antisiiiste tannest/. results (1,4 tta , labors of the seat nix mouths. The ~.... . naw broken, and titre it reason to hope that, t.y i the Discoing cf aniumn, the DpiyrDpriat , cin :n- Ilispennshie ni the heliport of iv - tors:sew: stay nii ho dii,ed or,' The bill p-,enci ,.. to cloy ingiin,i printer 1 , A1040 for the cools:ma iiin.sf warn Do the eater- an of the capltql, -T r - - The comudttee of ways and , moan, have not yet reported. the .leticietthy Val. nod whether' they intend to allow 0e administrsti in soy meson for remunerating its ageom for tory'ree, .ett,l for paying 4arupcLee, cat Opeeiolly erect ,ied for by previous legislation, 1.. d...ohtfol It ik quite certain that the chairman of the eau, mitten of Iwo and'imeans either does not desire the business of the. Heirs, to proceed. or Le is incompetent to . the pe.eitiou oseignoi to him Ile manifests not the elightest anxiety ha confine the House to the geceenaribusinees of 'the ors sic., and when he does make a repregentati . on in reference to a partmo.lar Metiewre. Ii le done to "lamely and unfashionably - as to eteitccon octopi at.d Oftem indifference. ' • - In ihe' woN nf the/fog:,s it is doubtful to which : the plume of victory inclines Tile defence of : the old fogies by Breckeuridge rather startled , the youngtfogies, but the repliea of Marshall' had Richardson have resterel I.;_tiieco.ty ad- vantages they may base lost-in that skirmish. Some isouptcrn erpilg politicians begin to can vass with animation the chances of Crittenden t and'Jortea,..pf Tanneseee, for tne first place on thr-ithtelid.ket, in the event of the inability of the conventicoto make a selection from the . ttati 1 matt promitiepLcandidettes now bellies tho coon i try: It is a part of this calculation teat neither [of these gentleman will be required to fire - any i dedge on the subject of the comprotnire, which will be offentive-to--the north, tomanse they are Isouthern Men, end -known to be ..aotrod" at is i bIaTE7I/ iyity cattno Gen. Scott he taken . on the name grZotp;l,! Ile is sound, ales, though probs. lily he ia'o6 tarn compromise roan The north ia wilting to tuba him without a pledge on either i ecide of the 11 - C:cation, though he ie toy birth, edu- I cttion and aseociatione, a euuthern man Am], i'wbat,is more. the northern whig•party will take , no 1940 who pledges himself to the compromise; ' and is .set. up tadely as the representailve of elavery, We sec 'hole Mortifying, has been the fairttre of Mr. Webster„ who is n northernanin; 0 awl tirlog's to the maweirehieh he tins repented, the ro:atigr of It_greei"Miiiit and forty years of sigh”' pdhlie services. With the ditintereeted aid of the friends of Bcott and . Filltro AU New York, the late Webste l e meeting there wee Is per". fent extinguisher to tie hopes of its to:njectors What, then, mama Le, the reception, among the . , whip massetc.ef a acuthern man kuownenly an n wed roasts of unrestricted Aare catching among :freemen? The movement I have referred to la 1.1111 au insignificant one it has made coneiller alile progreie, and will work no little. mischief, if alluWed to mature without attractini. public attention. . I have read both the famous article, of tbn Democratic Review, whiii have produced ouch an excitement among fiVdettiOaracy. 1 find' that they are not written hY thei lame hand, but procee,l frwm.the mine-bead' Gorge Baundgre, Esq., a .. SkintnekLyanirec, is the new editor of tbe Revitiii, and be dinutted the first and longert article for the January number, which denounces all 'Mid fogice" and all fogyism, and inaugurates the '•young democracy But the diction he trayo,n mare ptqshed ken than George's. The second article, liewever, the anti Boller demon stration, in the work of Santndern alone. It In marked with all the brartinees of abuse with which ilealwayn favors the General in his ori eat el enneernktion Judge Douglann•heard pat this uumber was to contain on attack upon his competitor, and he inetantly telegraphed to bin friend,Baunders to suppress it. George replied f by lehtning—"The Review in my own, and 4 Will !Allah what I please." Thin wee the petty sour, 13 of our woes. The feeling between the Dopglass and Butler factions is tremendous. The animosity between them. is no intermit that it le hardly ante rot. non•combatanta to walk the pithlic streets. Thlipartleans of one leader bite their thumb! at tiluee - of the otheeon °eery street , corner, and unless;eimething be done to menthe their aeperlti.e, we beet , reaeon to fear • eeriens public tumult. J ours. W4'entiona, March 14,1852 I 'have. my doubts upon the authenticity of tho'reporte that the late British Cabinet bad agreed to comply at once with the requirements of the Clayton and Bulwer treaty, which *Or government had been deliberately and grossly vlolating,for the space of two years. It is my belief that persuasive means will never induce them to perform the . stiptilationa of that treaty. and that we owe it to ourselves, and the canoe 'of non.intervention, by EorePearl nations- on thisoontlnent, to concert with the States of the toCentral Xtnerioan Coafederatim the mesas Of expelling from their soil ever'' , vestige of for alga domination) Oar routelo - Califorubt will never be secure until 'that is done; and there 'nein has beenhor will be al more favorable cc caaion for doing it than:the present. It belongs -to no to vindloate ills integrity of that republic, originally brolkuu up by British futriptel; And apy partly covered by Britbib juziad4pn. to so press alt such shams sal the Mosquito tVoyeettluent, a &tad devised as a.cover to seiz• it4p - ifio,' . territory 'embraced by it. Mr. Slay le expected to reeame his seat in the Senate to-morrow, the day be a Etna one. There is hardly a probability, however, that he will ever again 'addretis that body in any consid erable' effort. I have paid •ery little attention to- fienate proceedings vitiate. In truth they base bean of - marvellously small Importance. I dropped lapis, day last week, and found the "grave and rev ersed seniors," disousing with intent., gusto the particulars cf Eossntli's nt Brown's Ho tel, amounting tonur•or five thousand dollars. Mr. Hamad had informed the strict construc tionists, that Kossuth had'offered, if permitted, to pay this bill himifelf, on his departure, bat eon not permitted.; But this did not present the most minute inquiries lute the amount of 'cold chicken, honed turkey, London porter and .brown stoat, which had heen consumed by the governor and hie suite. flowever,fhe bill was ordered to be audited and paid The next day Commodore Stockton made a grossly virtuperative assault upon Mr. Sewall& which for vulgar ,malignity has "rarely Wan esl milled and never eurpasesed.' Mr. Seward madea brief explanation, and then the gallant Commodore discovered that he had been mista ken, and that there wan in reality no cause what ever for his bitterness. This whole scene was suppressed by the nwora reporters, and hot- a word of it appeared in the official-reports of the proceedings, which Ire published at a heavy ex pense to the people I They are therefore false, nod not to he depended upon. These are the two moot important passages in Senate proceediitge flir the past week. it Lord Derby's first speech, as premier, to about ae near an approach to unadulterated tory imply any British Minister could be expected to make aI thin stage of his country's history. Ilad it I bsen delivered previous to IShy , it. ',vlid pro beady have bseen received by the "passive obe : dience''. end:high church pair) , an very passable con.titetienal doctrine tie is in fay, of pap s ular education, but would leave it to the paro chial crergy. What a quiet -way of turning the young lamb over to the tender cave of the wolf. Popular education would snake very short work I with the English ehurch establishment. For elga refugees may still fnd safety in England, [fiat if they attempt anything agniziat their awn land they must he puninhed or e , xpelled The Preniler means here to warn the piffle, that the government will regard a‘ty manife-to non of hostility, by them, agitinSt the tyranwrn which may have driven them from their aaliTe at. ass attempt against their ~WO land'' In regard to protection the mew ministerial leador says he is in favor .4 the restoration of the Linty on corn, liar will nor attrntp, It until at. ! ter a general election The-Peelitei. tnranan Lord .il,crtiten, proropt ly declined that they tenitsld not !sanction any Increment for the micratinn of the CM, Au tiee. and it in riaident that the mittintry trdi hoot , to ennotutter the apparition of that pricanf2; , ho• .Iy. Se for an We arc concerned, throe, rnlttire : are of no convequence at ell is you bare lat. ;,1; ehown, our exports of broad-ms. to Great Brituo slate the Irish famine, Are been et at Ito nothitur baeht thither, of .I.ilara eavrta I them Lest year and the pr , ,o af ft,,tr and.Fr,•n never was lower in the A flaw.. eeephrts than beet nom., when MOO flea trade lc {Lin 'particular bad reached the masatrity ~f, it: de' volopment Tie feet ii that ho highly tiviliv.d no/ intelligeni people can export taw xerithite sal protilletawt prices so law as to rompete 'nth eountrire in which agriculture la the solo necta ralign Of the people . Poland and Southern ftue;d+ supply' every grain importing oc.natty with wheat. Why is this! Simply hennas, the Ishortug mutation are serfs: vrtually stavral an ache dto the .. , ,,it, wh 1 w,ei. re, the great . prartietere ta . the land, end what nut, ware , are the food whir? 1111,1V113. :hem end the eh-ep shins Which corer them. They have at the !clozntion, the shill, nor the ,freo manly stunt 1 require-I to latel,t/I3 eaactfartures, matt giro them ' di•ersitrof emplopnent From gel:161141On 1 , georretanch therefere, they go on ealetewthea , t. for rheit lords. who tell II to England for three i stuffings a hotheL Can American farmers aver compete With three men! Is it desirable that they, moult The experience of the last gee i , years bar shown that free trade in core lo on 1 n ern to Ile, and ;. entre reasoning proven .. lost it: would be greitly for cut advaniage if the corn lowa were re-enacted, for that would re move the flimey pretest 'upon which our one noble sod admirable tsritt galosh of 1842 was I abandoned. . . , Bat they will not M re-enaoted. Free trade, .41 breed ie undoubtedly the true 140,v of Oreatj Britain, because she has so !arms part of her dense ponniationi•ngaged in manufactures that, she most from necessity impart flour aodwhest. It would be evidently absurd to Impose a duty on cotton with view to protect that article, and hrslad and provisioris'etstol upon nearly the some footing , . the ministry appeal to the country on this Issue they will be beaten. and they will be beaten any how. 1 don't see how they can stand six months. Ruseell waft it very fishy sort of a liberal, brit he aid, both in conduct and profes sion, make some sort of acknowledgment that the people had o right to sbarelo she 'govern ment, and he cam in tho act ofaxtending to them a means of exercising it, wire effiri.nt they before possessed, when he was 'edited.— The tories begin by denying ail Ruch rights, mud by repudiating the particular measure for as sextfig it. But, usd have before said, they are a race of pygmies, and will fade before the-popu lar breath.irott l . • Dißtalrd and Malt Lismorc —The Wallington Telegraph b r as a !able allowing the production of into:laming liquors in the Volta Staten and Territories. The details. are taken from the recent Census Returns. The' Teelgraph toy' that the table does not reveal thiquantales of wines and liriuors 'consumed lathe !bolted Sista annually, but simply the q'utintitiele produced. euddhe direction glienl to a capital of eight end 1. third millions of dollam'and'in • direct way io tae labor of five and a half hoUsaucid of men, leaving out of view 'the capital and the lehor ex pended In producing the grain, be., and In the nuarquent treatment, ale, fcc., of the praduo• lions of tAc laboratory., The following are Ihn results of the addition in this table; Bushels of barlej annually consumed 3,787,1%3 Uo tarn do do 11,067,761 Do rye do do ' 2,143,327 Do oats do do 66,517 - . Do apples di do '526,840 lihde. of molasses do do 61,675 Tons of hops do do 1.294 Bands employed 5,487 Capital iovested • *6,884,254 ilarrels ~tole produced 1,177,324 Oetnos of, , whiskey and high wines' 42•137.U55 Galloon of rum, Sc. 8,500.700 sfir Mn. SAY% M. Stull—Lot inn know what you o.a out the rantat.ent at. foe me to arto,leesae lb It le going o'lf with • rueb, etnes 1 heat the Circulate AM , aohutad artiale to uielos unlterral retlefaMlon. 'oeore truly, A, W. HAftTOLET. larearrea, Datrrua Co. Naar ifaxweglao guit, Few, Prreacaun—Deer had 1.11 wi ue, a quantity of Petroleum: It I. aliwu4.l, and more 1. wooded. 13end us IY doyen; fro. , Preeeut antwarannew it will eeil npldly Truly Your., IiaBT3IAN, .TALTJN Al For tale by Drwirglate generally likAughout the niazaidawT Nelson's First Premium_ DAGUERREOTYPES - Prot Office !heading, third Stria. CITIZENS and etrangers who with to oh auf, ...curate, eremite and Of. like liken., at a ,poderme We, will and It to their In Wen to roll et tilt well known eatabllobotent, when eittlta astlolantion iftrkylret.tarn%giagllll:ll:ll o.e.l"e'ifotoOs. ko. the -purpoca, with Instonntenno of too moat ~ocoryol kind, mot h. lug ulopted tbonyvtorm of Dago.. reottOlnk, at tom preoltsed by the oelebratcl Rocco, of rta1.4.100. and .New York, Olt. h.llattero himself to be able to oder •to the patrons of th• Art, • styli of Dniner. reotipok .elther Anal" or In grout*, which had neml boon tattisoti: "'come coon and •opetallnit, In all r& from o'clock hlt to 13 Weathe toaltdOwT gerINDIANA-90.1e of Dr. Al'Lano's.Ver meno I -At1.61:111 file hundreds of irottsmertlflutei end order nevelved bl the proprietor. of tbl medleimaktie foilowlos L. elated to show Its wharactar, sod the *Deer of It. OW in a dlecoat part of the Wes. la. Wore. Col dry good.' merchant, but are also gents for the eats of the cheese medicine. .fillvetteerria, 1a.., Sept. at, 1647. Mare. Wwb/ 4Kb—We b‘PPere/to wet a lot or art..... v.ftlf uivp last Iprins, prepared by youreAres. Bu t ton 0 to o :monism. was Wood tmed too tommonlty. tt • 00flo d Nee. to great Mr It that our retook mu soon elbowed. .It too produced the boot eon wherever tt by teen toed to Ibis scaUon, sod Is very Writer ametS poo ropy , We we desirous sf obtadolno the medleloe b„.. 0 11 0 direct Prom ye:melee. Y It ..11. MeV rapidly . Mob ony.other roedDiee we keep. Mate end tte • %reel D. 1. 3.W. COLTON.”. 4holues . ad retail b? J 1 K/DD.s. Ou., Ham Iccost sL . •' • DEAFNESS AND EAR DISEASES RADICALLY I ar- YE. LE BRCNN °frees to those Buffer tog !ram Peafne.m. hie Infolhhlr adral . .remedlee, which have Into succes.ful In nearly Or. Liaajand ears of rote tamed deaftte,.. These rornedlee coMOII. dl fleiVO...an.* for di.eetwo of th. Internal, modle., , nadalterualLO.lll.l hstti Leon yronouneed by there celebrated aurottr—Dr. Kremer. of Berlin; Itard • peleun. of Para: Curtta. Pilch , • yiereley. of London—as bring the inoat trotultrlul and effeetual ever applied for diveaa.. °tot., int . .l.i and rold.:1• ear: their effect, are apparent on , the fifth or sixth day. Dr. It 11. te.erunir a cur. In error cu where ti e ear it perfect in formation s He hu elghtwo eernticotee tnon thorn who bat been deaf and dumb, stud wh..re heor , na Is now eompletely restored. and are nee loahled In I , nrci the I.ol.Blname. The or over fawn. p rer•ru'Auadredp , ronz who hove Leuu cured by hr I1422:0 J. 1:.12,we1l " 7 ' . . . ~. .. - RAIL ROAD CONVEYANCE PEN7ISTLVA:7I/1 11 Alt, hiktile-EAST. The Es;nen throoub train Ms's* , 81 o'clock •••• known,lance mints.. 38. o'cinok, e. 01 . 110 PENNITLVATI• The Ex7rtes Iran, 1.7..eca Fo,oral Cite, etitims at 8 o'clkok. • M. •ed art - late at 7 eche:, I. tn. avary day 4.- e.4tln4 Sonday. Th. docontooltli.a. Mtn :cants st 17 aticek.; a. 14 and 4 r.rx. • IMPORTS BY RAIL LOAD a:n..l Ft..= UAL.. 14,32 14-5 LLD 4400 441 eves. Lemberg i Ehltstav; Cssnr• Ls•ls;_a_Weelt; 4 bow wise 1 DI. , W 04 , 11 0 ; totv LAs' DOR): /1 bxs nom Mee• ear d 3.40145aut_11,11.• Isvf., los i 5.140 It 3 1.44 9. wed 1 14411444.] I.lortS' Dv . iLI I vD. It A' layettes-4 t• Dtv 45 4 , x LroatasA) u fllntis,ll. , dts vttaa,-4, Bova: 1 car La4lbay.e Dm, : 11 t•ttls Wu, D. 21 a Dyes: 3: .4.lvvesl. Latter: 14b1 2 Lae tot,. /ober: To 4414 e/41/2 1 keg butter 7 l Vt. J Cale; 2 11.t•Dvslas• 3 . 5/4 4 0 144 a ta , 34 bble rye Dour. L 3 W4teltun, IV .artathma. Lant4l , 014 14,1 I do ta low, J S D•stvet tot 45 , 422141. 1,4424 d: 144 dry gads. It nU1 , 101: MO wool, Gyrate 4 Graham: Cvs• flotx wed. Dohnev2t I tztsrs. - Ir &Med . tat D Hown: L5l DeJ 1 4 • nar 4 a Co: I W10400C.11425450Ld; 6 bs It 10 44,11; 414 2244., 9 tIL WV ltsitatts4tl Li ro s do, st 1 , 5441e1 6 Co. • . ACCOMPIC:4IIO., . Tads. 1,1e2c1, An