BURGH VAZEII -PUIJUSIJIRD PITTS'EMR4H:''-': - THURSDAY MORNING, AUGUST 9, 1855. ,Adranoe Paymenta.--Rareafter .!no, Rik eetirtios b• khan ibr. the Galli or teeth Gazette. ...airs, wawa k rd. la ...Meeks.. -Whenever. the peso le he •to which the insbecription Is pald, the paper, -GUI be knitted," kopped, Gahm the ettherriettoo le re ailed hiadtaato Minot. all transient advertising. of *very. deeetteto. .1 1 1 req.U.d. to to p.m in ad 'Later. The oak ezteptlau ar here ape..ded month 17 or Tearly cooked, are ma.. are4Ati te.plitiberio Weekly (lazetto! ixtftsin demillittop Off= IRsity Cknetre offal to our Wilma inn •moK&dMk medium of Making %M an i Our atntalatka la betvienll,o2ll/141 ivethommad, madam' emed•varymorebtat, eisantedttreer and ihopkorper In. Wasters Pennalenals. and 8441.4131M11/1. ateaalea Matter tat • taeliesse 'at Ma 'patter. Tan RIMOVAL or Gov. Bantriu.—The Philo - delphis North Asterium, - in" article on this . . - salderst sap: borderirffare very much afraid ,thatlhe effect of alt these transaction will be to Beunie the election of Governor Reeder to the - Vnited:Gtateo Senate from the State of Penni:7l - which ease they fear that'll% knowl -,tedo of their iniquitous doings might be treed , i&geinit that with effect in the Renate. We have seen no mention of such a parpole as his anywhere la Pennsylvania, but hevis un doubtedly& strongman with his party.' With the honest ',taiseee Of the party he is, unquestionably, a strong man at this moment, on account of the treatment he has retnived; bat with the party leaders and managers' he has no strength. They-will cast 'him off at the bidding of the President. Already the ,Peneicele . d and Mercenary premises of the National Administra tion, in this state, are lifting their coitus in con damnation. They regret, they say, . that he should be removed; but, they regret still - more -- that he should have given • cause for that remo •val. In other words, the Goveinoris wrong and theTiesident ,It is plain ehat trim his party, as a party, the. ex-Governor has nothing to hope. In his own immediate neighborhood the party trill revolt in his favor; bat it will be a mere local outbreak. If be expects to receive the justice at home which the President has denied him, he must throw himself upon teepee. pie. To most the administration party for a Till dication would be, orse than leaning on a bro. team& This two leading charges upon which the Pres idea( originally predicatod his threat or removal, were "purobsses of Kansas Half Breed Resorts- Stour, - made by him in the Territory of Kansas," end 11180, "other epaiulationi in bads of the Ti. ritory of Kansas apparently in violation of sots - of. Congress and of regulations or the Depart. mitt." • - • _ - With regsrdto the first, Gov. Reeder thus Ins "In relation to the firetcharge, ofpnrolutee of 'Half Breed Kansas lands, I have to say that I Lave purchased no such lands at all. With otb . ors, L have agreed to purchaie them in ease the contemplated purchase obeli receive the sanction and appmbation of the President; and this, in my opirioa, is a material and substantial differ ence. Until the President, by-Lis' approbation; and the venders by the execution of their deed', consummate the contract; it precludes us from I any intermit in the land, and even tho privilege of metering upon or possessing it. — Vendors and ereudees until then preserve all their rights nn; changed and unaffected:: and if the President shall not assent to the oontreds, it will he the BUM as though _they had never been made. If there is any wrong In the matter, it is not a wrong'committed, but at most only a wrong at tempted, and,-in the faceofallprobability, &wrong which we expected to be sanctioned by the !dent!" - To the other charge, as specified by the Indian agent, G. W. Clark, viz marking out claims up., _ on Indian reservations, he errs "in reply, I have only to say, that es stated it untrue. In October, 3We, several gentlemen, . ^includin g myself, happened -- to be at the house •of Mr. Ellison,- in a portion of the Territory with 'Which we were entirely unacquainted, and had never seen before. Being informed that de sirable claims were to be had . in the vicinity up an lands open lo pre - emption , we requested that hi would mark out force, end knowing - that the -Kansas Half-breed lands. were in the vicinity, but utterly ignorant of their lines, we molested him carefully to avoid entering upon them ea we bad no desire to trespass upon those reeler vaticlw, and knew perfectly well that the mark ing of a nisi= upon' an existing reservation would be utterly Made= and nugatory, result ing In the lore of our labor without the least eintuen of benefit. Mr... Ellison preftssed to know the lines, and mewed us be would avoid there reliance; we left before the claims were marked, and I have never seen Them since, nor do I now know wham they were epode. I do 'not believe that-Meagre. Ellison and Kraemer mad* them upon these re eervationi, or if the di d, lam satisfied they did .it in a mistake of t h e ' linen. Finding that we build not Personally occupy them, and that with „nut earimaney emerald not acquire title to. Mem, 'we abandoned all idea of them, and hive never looked after them from the day they were made.” • The Horientar aubstentiates his statement With the following testimony: - I, Edward C.- McCarty, of Jackson county, Ifiluouri, hereby State that in the early part of the month of October, I was at the house oflrarit 'Ellistm, in the Territory of UMW; on the south side of Kansas river; that, In company with Gov. Bui4Ag,', Judge Ellmore, fidge Jelutaton Dr. &QM" of Virginia, J. -8.. Dennison, O. B. Donal eon, emit'. A. Williams, .I staid all itight - at'lthe -house of Tarts Ellison and I. J. Kraemer:. that 'in the naming, whilst the party were preparing to start, Mr. Ellison stated that_ there was dut iable Led emus the met open to pre-emption; and span inquiry being made bysome of the par ty whether It did not interfere with the Kansas half-breed lands, Mr. Eakieo' pointed out the = A, — strintral'elites above where he Said the breed Kansas butd-ioided,and pointed out the plus, • severalmßes below, where, as he said the Delaware reservatieu ended. -I was myself under the 'mune , impression as to there lines. Bono of C10v..-Reeder's party, himself included, than requested Mr. Ellison to mark claims there ' for them ap c o rn as he would have time to do 80, • if- he - could make them, as he said, clear of these reserve, which Mr. Billiton agreed to do, and the'party left. These claims were ao marked, but' lam satisfied they were abandoned, and suiting done by the claimants after they were marked. • In the month of November, or uarly part 'of December, 1864.1 stated to G. W. Clarke, Indian agent, that I Intended to take a claim there, and Clarke, in a jocular wen mid that the land was in his agency, and he would drive me oft. • B. C. MoCARTY. Shawnee Mission, June 26, 1864. • Nothwithstanding these explicit .denials, and this testimony to beck up at least one of them, the President persisU In regarding the charges as tree cad making them a muse of removal. The letter of Mr. Marcy to Gov. Reeder, delivered to him just as he uselasving for Narwes, ,Idnied it certain other pave accuse- Ilona against him, besides these - two, which be totally otalltid to specify. The Goveraer in re PlYou7s; , "I would rtspectlidly requestaoms specifica tion of what is alluded t 0,,, to enable me to re: ply satiefluttorlifto jou u well so myself,. It is to .1* Implied from the charge that some com plaint has been made to the President by some one of specific sots done by me in violation of law or regulations, and ' I cannot' suppose it would be received and acted on without being in writing. At but - ,it, mast have bad form and shape, and arse though I may .not know my accuser, It is not too much to as h that I may be Informed of the particular , sot which I am 'charged with Italics committed, sad the parthr ular law I m chaoged with having viohtted." Now listen.to the reply of tits government to this very reisiiabie unmet: You assn me that when eireturistances in th e conduct. of a public offmer, m o n the question of hie dism6wd r wo „ which )eau 10 be cosoldosoil, it is the duty of the Eseentive to ask e toilet epeothentions of thane ; sod um this erroneous presumption you withhold eiple. nation in 'regard to -tie matters 'alluded to, at. though they were peculiarly within "cis ? ow , - knowledge; and you could not but be well aware that some of them, more especially the underta king of sundry minions, yourself bolo/hid, to lay out now elute on military or other reservation, In the Territory of Kum, were undergoing of. Halal investigation with n that Territory. The incompleteness of that investigadon, at that time, prevented its being spoken of explicitly by . this deparnrienk but it was taken for granted that you would have Awfully volunteered ex . :planzdons upon this eubject, so far as you were emeemed, more particularly an you bad sum. ,mooed the Legislative Assembly of the Tarrito -17 to meet'at one of the places referred to, de nominated in your proclamation , PawnsaCity..' .... have, therefore, by the dins:Sloe of the Pres- Hint, to notify you . that ;your functions and-sta u Governor of the Territory of /Lamm are kamlby terminated.' - , na, at; rospeatkilli,v r oi obedient siernint, Acting Secretary of : State. .1/111144404l...:"1".1P41111.11,1460/ talirthe Meodnaiithaidilthirtfarial"“ 1111..#0. •---;_t4.l.,‘,iii-,-”Zr.;'",•.:1::-14,-'7,-.' Y. ..t'i..!" - :gY.: ,- :::.'f. - . , , , :::::'..;.:V•:;,-,f,....-i-' , ..ti. - ;,:c!- - - ''`&-; .,. ' , 4., • , ; , ,,:. , :-;...1:. , ;. -, -.: -,: - '74i:., , -.7.. - sw4, , ,t ; tl:.sA--e - : :.:...'.': .. i 4 f 4 . .ITN'.F...-' ---:-:-. - !. - . . . . . rj. , ,.. , :. ,, , ..., ~-„,--,-..-.. -, - , ~ . . , . . . ministration would have informedidin of the ne tom of the vague one f ehat he might be permit: tate° anforwrit' also. ' , Mut it ryas` not -desiredi Silt be stauld . elearAirmudf, altAidrue #ec liiin to hiiirdld dot epee' Renee a loop-bole was left for his removal upon a colors Me-pretext, by therinwission to specify a °tiena whieh he wan required to refute. In rcforence to the charge hinted at but not specified by Mr. Marcy, and now for the first time del Oa 'the letter conveying the Govern or'e re moval, the,WasMngton Union says : The aseocion for the so-called Timms City,' In which allnilon is made in the letter of 'the acting Searetary'of State to Governor Reed. er,-end the articles of association of which are given uoite, was an organization to found a town upon a tract of land which lies some distance inside of the exterior bottridary of the military site of. Fort. Riley. The limits of the site, as miginelly.deciared in orders from the War Do. partment, embraced a larger amount of land than the Presidia deemed necessary for military pupates after the extinction of the Indian title, and the reservation.was reduced, but this 'Paw. nee City' was inside of the reservation thus re duced. It is proper far us to. say.that for per witting this encroachment upon the lands of a milliary site, and for complication In the acts of the amociation, and for military offences eon needed therewith, the commanding officer of the post of Fort Riley is to be tried, on charges pee. ferred against him, 'haters aeourtmartial, which has been ordered to assemble for that purpose." We have no doubt that Governor Eteeder can explain all this as Satisfactorily ad .. the other charges ; and the Prisident evincei his eonvie tion to thet effecAfremoving him before he can have the opportunity of explanation. . It is impossible not to see that ill these alle gations-art trumped up to conceit] the real cause of removal. Even the Westport (Mo.) News, the special organ of Vice President Atchison, says : "The Preellent in our opinion, selects the weakest point of complaint—the Governor's spec ulations in the Haw land.; bat it enables him to' carry , out his - misereble policy, originally adopted, and we doubt not, the decision Is al ready made, and delayed In its execution for de oeney'lleake, -or it may be that . the__ hearts of the people may be prepared' for the royal edict." Fortunately for the cause of truth, we are not left without evidence of the motive which actua ted the President in this 'removal. Jameson Davis, the prevent Secretary of war, in a recent tour to the South, spoke of the appointment of GOT. Reeder as one that was not St to be made, because it stood in the way of the purposes of the South, and gave the assurance to Me South ern friends that he would be removed; and in a recent letter from es-Governor Baown, of Missis sippi, the truth is plainly revealed, that there is no ponibility of misunderstanding it. That distinguished luminary of Southern politicians esys, "The appointment of a governor of Ken "sus is an mot of vast eorwegur.nos to the South.-- It eoggeets to neat one. the restoration of the "equilibrium which was lost In the admission "of California, and the extension of Southern area "and Southern km11540;14. These are consider "lgloos which elevate the appointment far above "the petty considemthme that usually surround "such acts. If the president made a mistake "in appointing to this poet a man of strong ".Free Soil proclivities, we UM she auurance of his territory that A. will qmeelity' *et the rustier This was some time ago—before any charges of hind speculation were brought forward. The removal of the Governor was promised, am; and it was only because the President bad not the pluck to remove him boldly, in aceordanee with his promise, that these land epeaulation charges were resorted to. And when even they tailed of being substantiated, the Presidenk, is compelled to; put fbrward ► new charge and remove the Gov, artier before he can have time to explain! Nev er was device so pitiful nor trick so transparent.• THZ EXPEDITIOL—The expedition of COL Kinney to Nicaragua, which has made no little noise in the world, and which mulled our government and the courts immense trouble, seems to be a peaceful affair after alt After great may delays, and several arrests, Col. Kinney made his , final escape from New York, with some twenty or thirty followers, in a small vessel, which iwas afterwards wrecked on one of the reefs of Turk's Island. All the lives, and most:of*, property were saved, and re-embark ed in a small schooner, and which arrived at San Run, or Greytown, at the mouth of the San Juan, winch was so gallantly bombarded _by our gbvernment about a year ago, on the 16th of July. Here the. company landed, and Cot Kinney had an interview with the Nicaragua and Costs Rica authorities, at the house of the British Consul, to whom he stated that his object was the peaceful colonisation of certain lands in N i caragua, to which be believed he had a valid title; if the validity of that title should be dis proved, be would abandon it, although he had expended thousands of dollars on the euppoaition of his lawful ownership. This explanation seem ed to Ore sal/dun:ion to all parties, and the hospitalities of the place were warmly extended to the Colonel and his piety. At last accounts he was building a house in Oreytown, which would be the handsomest in the town when com pleted. When done, and poesisidon taken, ar rangements are made for excursions Into tie terior to look idler the Colonel's lands, and to Make preparations for settling them. Such is thefts., of the affair at present. If Cot Kin ney has any filibustering designs, the ridiculous psucity of his - forces will prevent them from be ing carried out. CL/MILASD 4911) PlllllOOlOll RAILIOAD.—The receipts of this road far July have given great satisfaction to its friends. The amount is 9 69 ,- . 101,94, being an increase of 61 per cent. over the corresponding month of but year. The great amount of this increase Is in freight, mostly from coal, immense quantities of which are now trensported over the read. The Cleveland Her ald, noticing the road, pays the following tribute to the ability and Sdelttj of its officers: "No road in this country is better officered and managed, President Rockwell is devoting kis time, talents, experience and IatIOIICO to the advancement of the beet interests of the Com ' ploy, and Superintendent Durand is an ener getic worker, who discharges every duty of his depart:mast with sound judgment and signal success. The employees are selected with ref [TED°, to skill, sobriety and faithfulnesa. The prompt, economical and general good manage ment of the Cleveland and Pittsburgh Railroad, and its consequent_ freedom from casualties, are the remark of ail conversant with the Lice. To Cleveland the road is of incalculable value, and very muck of the increased prosperity and trade of the city within a few years past, is directly attributable to the opening of this im• portant thoroughfare." To finish the river extension, from Beaver to Wheeling, and furnish the necessary additional equipments, which will require $950,000. Towaxds this sum, the Company now has Beaver county bonds Allegheny county bonds.... Individual subscriptions.... 'lt is expected that the extension will be com pleted In the summer of 1866. The price of the stook- is *drawing. in the New York market. Tii PUBLIC Wet ne.--The Philadelphia NMI sap: "We learn upon good authority that be tween thi present time, end the meeting of the next Legislature, : the Pennsylvania Bail -Woad Etnapany will forward to his Excellency Gov ernor Pollock, a proposal for the' purchase of the Main !iae , ' which for . three years Pair they hared deioted thne, labor and, money, to decry and depreciate. What may be thought of Ode contemplated application by the Closerbor of the Legislitare/ire, of course, are not prepared to say. The Governor In the per formance of the duty assigned him tinder the Act of Assembly, will have nothing to do with the proposal but to terrord it to the body indi cated by the Ant, and that body, if its members shall represent truly and with fidelity, the sen timent, of the eonsUtuenoy whose agents they are to be, will kick that proposal from the halls of legislation." POLITICAL Konizzarrs.—The Know Nothings of Lancaster county have reaolved"to hold en open Convention, with the usual maohinery, for the choke of &count'', ticket. The Sepialtems of . Cissford county hare bad orgs,trd,' and balled s county eon ' ntkontojneit on ' the 10th of September, to aominste s :county ; SOW: ~ , The Cantos:MS/ Bemis *adorns ll* isovesentiotartily. 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