• , Cts gittilmto Gitytte 197.111cE511..1-Y, JANUARY 15, ,1..888. ECitTORIAL CoRgBgN.NDESCE. 'HAtuttaarrito; Ja.. 7,1 S ea: The readers or the Gus.77 - s aie at ready informed by t4egraph that rape Heyablioin members n ofthe . Hoene, -in ela* :three from county, refastd attend the IRerohlieao email therielecUon ofileara of that body, antainottneed their iateallon . to defeat the ticket agreed upon by that ae4.ca• Having been at Harristnirg throughlut this contest, and'in such ie• latter' to legislative Pmdereis to give It pretty correct. Ha of OA; fncts in the teal, I prcTone to int Iforth the restalt of my obserrationa. '+ The natloii is ruled by political Psr 7. lies. Hence therelsl always a . struggle going on for mastery; In Hke. manner political partici arc alwaja rola by fac7 tlone, - and each pariy.ls °vitt:wily dlyt dui Into two or Caore clans, each jealous of the miter, and each teekink the eon tinl, end camel:W.l , i the dispensation for the - liatronme. , jPeansylrenia the 'claw that divide the ., Republican nasty are knownas the cirui.Catatinces and the elan e CUM. is baa'birrn ray (creme to „he fully :ideal* with 'neither' or As noon as the recent State election diselowei r lito fact that the, Republicans had a majority in each branch of be contbinailona were ,scr on foe by each of these oleos to control the organization of that lirwmes.. It was early conceded that the 'Senate would organized with a mixed tiaet—a Ciuneronfan for Speaker, and a Curgn fin for Clerk. For Ole it?nae.the Came• zantins united on lfr. EicCemenT for • Speaker, and the Cartiatana oa Kr. Dome!. "The Samciontana Ought ,to make Mr. Conannstha State Tresenier; the Cartinius;lslr.l Inwte. It is not needful to specify the minor *Mem As the cancel progretted, it . 11'13 manifest the Cuitinians.had the wields:Mien In their ham* and by sio large a majority as to involve the election of Mr. Introc see Treasnier. This •escht 'was deemed • of put sigtdficance,l and of in view of the nomination of Mr. -Ctralior fertile Vice-Presidency by - the Soldiers' Convention; which its to meet the fol. • lowing 'Wednesday I at Philadelphia. " When the Camaro:Aire discovered they were to he heater! In I the House Moue, they hanledoff, • and 11l hut ten of them . .reit:wedto go into the Meeting it all, and I aincsancad their intention of running a candidate; Sot Speaker of . their own, thus making a triangular contest" to the Noise, in WWI tosiection world', he icaPossible, if !lo respwtive forces stod .Srm, andthosTly compelling Mr. = Davis . to decline; or to got over eventually to lbe Democratic nominee, Mr. Joann, with enough other's to "make him jpeeker. was.'desirea was not „" this latter caldt, , lnd!to'force Mr. DUM out of the way. • Thii arrangement wee ,promptly met try hnohnter poolect!by the. Curtutisas to defeat Mr. o.asitsit Iri the -.l3eroste . in dela /fl• irti3 not allowed to go through. It wustitedthat three Dot tiniait Senators ward , ready to Tote for the democratic nominee for Speaker, id order to exicate rig:dealt tor the Cam eranisn'Aiolt to the 'House.. Tat seems not to have been authentic. ' 'Whi,le. these were ' influeeliti pnsmi sient.inisrhe struggle, , , pretense - lot a ,dif derent nature were set up to 'justify the • strategy that had beth resolved upon, - andthe ends intended to be: rezelied. . - The Catacronlans urged - -"thet • Mr. ; . ' Dame's - legislatieeMseer was bleadsh.: ed, and the Cardnians retorted by point .ing to Mr. Cowszyz's . ;deftelenciei in the mine, particular. If it must till , . confemrd that much these inspeeti:thric- embers taid was true; it most, alb,' be admitted tratneither got the start of the . ; other. II was simply absurd for Cam . fronts= to set up as purists .for the par- J• pssebf.defeating Mr. Davis,'while they , . were cordially sepporting men no better -.‘-' Then It was alleged that Kr. Davis -,-- -r,'. ; stat not reliable to those questions in • whia:Allegheny --county and the west ', `': ern Portion of the Commonwealth gen . essay feel an especial internsttimt he wig 'not . sonnd on, the. Free Railided low and the restoration of the Cloratells • trillsseharter. It was insisted, =di con siderable force, -.• that Kr. McCaw -thy voted for the genuine Free Itsibiel bill last winter, *nu? lin Daviidedied the -question. In nenly : _i , to this, Mr. DiXtil '.maintained that ha (dodged last-whiter ',beat= his aid 1 wee undergoing undergoing a change; from being against the proposed law hi-was tithing', in fthor of it, but bad not reached the point where ha was - , fully prepared trithendon his old views end associations and openly espouse new ones. Ho stated that ,he Was natir 1 -, confirmed in his convictions on the aide ;of freed*. 'in' railroad building; had ;__ definitely proclaimed his purpose in pub -- Rolled letters; bad prepared his ' in .. • animal address In anticipation of, his ' election as Spealter; and had made It as ; • .direct and ancompremizing as he eonld; I Aid promised to nutheillr. Ifiltaort, Of • Allegheny coutity;; , Chairman . of :the • . Behold Committee, and 'should do it, '. ;- believing him to have the foil Clillitde:th , * ;.• of alt the Free Railroad men; and that: he 'braid advecate and vote for theses- torstion of the CoMinellsvUle Charter Me further stated aid the opposition to - him was In fact, not based on any dimlits ssiolatetnal position, for - one of the ' - - bolters from Allegheny county hid of- Sued to vote for him on consideration of i lsithing the Cbairnumehipof the Railroad ; . 'Cesumittee given to instead of hie IVILIKM and that the batter was Mr . 1 ' But the Cameronithe urged that some l i - of the eupPOrteni of Kr. Dams were Inot Free Railroad . , men; that , some of I , them wererirtertanik In the interest of L . the Peinulvsale ;Railroad COmpal?st -1 'This was simply tree. Bat, then, what 1 I =ire already add Mum be terms in i "mind.' . Thetis' cotebinstlons bad ' ; not 1 , primary reference teeny - quassia= about i, - - rereads. It was not more 3mi:deices that 1063 Monopalists should go In for i • Kr. Direr than that some c f these aimed I - gain forif.r. Onthast and-hir...003311LL i 1 Mr. GILLItn% and Mr. Dann are both r =questionably sound to the railroad I, questions, bit they soppora Kr. Cos- Maim, who has been bitterly and effect. 'l'''' ' keely - on the other for years .-; Kr. '+- .Llonorr, who did more 'against the Free - 1; . Railroad Law and the Connellmfite bill,' 'I at the but suasion, th an any other Bens. : ' tor; supports Mr. Guarani. This Ii not' t , beanie:of Identity of views on these -questions, hut because of identity in t . tholship ror general purposes, I And here it Is proper to ire:mug. , that i the deride not pull in perfect harmony • on tinn Ocnnlanint IThey nt'ler do. Al ' 'ways, incidental pi' collateral questions . sp.-tog no, which dieert particular mem. ' . bets of either clan from the body therie . 1 ..., temporally. -- . Hence it happens that dome Wes/em Cauieroniens now favor ; i. - . Mr. -Inwth. i The'- Idea that controls them in thts special deviation is that the Rest has monopolized the ;advantages of 3 . - the Treasurership, and that- Western in- I ' feri`ste will be promoted by the election t'l . le iitirins•Allezhenien Li, - the mut:iffy of ;the public moneys! In these ampere. 1 1 , ' Lively feir Instances the sentiment-of it 3ocalitY overbears the zeal of chit:slap. i . - - The; three i hotbirs him Allegheny !; county, when pressed , justify their re : - - volt egainst the usages a the party,by a communication in the oolcuons - o( the Casty= as., Boiday 'Morning, ;dined '.".; `tAllegheny.. , 1 They say drat butler ..:t • : that articio they shenid have reel Intl; -caucus and endd abided by its decision. i lln ' -.- fortunately f.r tide: view of .the sale, 1 `,,, `,,, %mid of their daterednation to bolt at f • ;oast Mahouts beßtrii the 01,731M1L con -1 .1 -~ ~~J. - u i . • "VAT - 171W - VT - T. e D T s n . V ir-. rA rA. • A‘_ .1-4 1 t -- .1 VOLUME LXXXIII.-- TO.:' . taintsi that. ccnaranniestion sr:lfoot at rhaV/hin. If the fact kid loan other , wile that documesi world not hays I 'toiled the Juthlcation they , sought. The experience' /dr Join Hicriten hit the nail exactly op the head, in mew, when he said, "IC these men have real grievances, why to they not mime here and state them, and denind ;reireis I" It is cot easy to seb what answer cam lie Made to that inter"rogatory. - - But this example may be erected into prone deni that Will Wend , th east' effect not many months hen Next year a United States Benatc# will be chosen in Place of Mr.. Beceisaivi. State Senator of- it& clan Camas - wants It, : and it I i wanted for him. :"Fie Mai-large mezttal - Powen, unceinteon at taliments in knowledge, andtacaptint ing eloquence. Ile would adorn the station. Bat he has been a most sturdy opponent of s genuine Free !Railroad Law and of tierestoration of Ithe Con nellavillecitarter: True, be silts he is la layer of a General Railroad Law, but it . Is one whose chief feature consists is providing "bow, not to :do IL". The r limitation and provisos weigh downi =eh an enactment se he would make io as= cause it to 'lnk into the ca egory of • nullity, So long. is. the Republican „party in State Convention did not plant itself oir one side or the other of this: 'question, this Senator was sOltertP to act in :referee= to it as he planed.. It was in the same. case as the 'question of Protection to Dpineatic Indestu in the SePublican party at large. NO National Conveustlein paving decided that gui don, &Republican maybe a Fiee Trader or ;CV : Protectionist; as he Wilt' But the " last State Convention at Williamsport adopted Freedoni in Railloaff Banding as a plank in the Republican Platform, and, ao far, has bound it& rein-mutative& Now, we concede that if any ralwil prig dple.'is involved In a quition.„ no man can be concluded .4 the action of his felleis.. Re : is bound to lake ISt 'conduct thereon.accord With his hull. vidul judgment. But *hist, not such a question. • It hu no absolute moral character, , but it purely, a question of political economy. It falls exclusively whiffs the legitimate domain of Policy or Eapediency. In party fealty, there ! fore, this -Senator is bound to conform his official =induct to the judgment of the Convention... Re probably will not. I judge him by . what he bas aid to me, within .a feW days: . Row will his Senatorial aspirations stand next •yeart Serisly,it will be la vain to ask, Free Railroad . Republicans to. go. Into a caucus where he will be sure to win, or to be bound by %emcee that agrees to elevate him to the United States Senate f Violating the dlscirdine Of the party himself, he cannot expect It to be enforced in -his own - behalf; and if abould indulge the , expectation would' surely be mhdakeinn the end. ' 1 Another 'view remixes to ! be tikes. The Republican party in year promised the people of this State a Free Railroad Law in case it Wits ellen enii_uste_d _with "pawn'. ? This was 'on e of the 'defin ite pledges On which it was traded.. It will shortly be- den:ions:rated whether its/ pmmisowaa made in good faith or not. "Mho -law demanded and prom. . Seed "stall be en=ted, all will be welt What if it shall fail 3tore,ifitsfalldre shall be °agog • to the fact' that none of regular -and acknowledgedappllances. of party, diseiplioe,were need in,lts be— half? l(the - coofectu.re indulged that the Republican advocates cite. Free RAIL road Liw may be fooled with,mpunity? If ao,-ilust delusion' may le wall be put iside, and that right ipeedity. ' There are indications that the Demo- cratic nasty, as such, swans to commit itself to the monopoly; that even Mr. Wai...nscit intends to head a Hank move ment., I Shall be slow to believe thisi of him oral] constrained t y potentest facts. But such a movement would. comport .with that party, aid give it Tenable al iSances text , year; while it would - make OA course of, the Republicans one of in necessity. ' These indications have greatly per plexed Mr. Grunsoi. Widle earnestly desiring not to violate the comities of the Senate by demading Mr. LANDON., from the Chairmanship of the. Railroad' . Committee, or displiMivg him altogether from the Committee, he feels that true ness to the interests of his, immediate constituents and to the declared policy of the pasty, requires he should run- no risks. If;lie should count on Mr. lA= as afriend toe Free Ridlroad Lsw, should Constitute the Committee on that presumption, and. that Mr. • Wallace •should.he found on the other side, he I wdiold be with Out setiPdent reasons to Justify his cause, and would fall under the imputation of actual treachery pr culpable confidence. However, he is determined to make are of that Corn. Cain?, 'even if has:comes necessary to remove Mr. Lannon altogether, an even not improbable. In making choice of I its members he will.age great caution, selecting only such outwitsl as can be fully r " - ] e iisd - upon in soy emergency. Having said so Much of the influence of factions In these matters,' it is nectar nary to wiper°, itiorder not to be Mir moderato& Factions alertly' have a shibboleth under which they . rally—an idea, a pattriple,,,a measure, or a name; The two factions 01 1 which we have spoken each have the name of an ridaal as its badge or }okra. Each of these individuals has acted a consple uous Put in the politica of the State or nation. lane is now in the United. States Senate; the other hoping to; be there or intnthe -Vide Presidential Chair. Each is a magnetic character, adapted to at tract or repel other persons. Unlike in dtspositcons, taste, 4ptltuden and capad each boa nitwit points and signal Merits: As chiefs of fa:tioni neither is *- without !iv:qt', though far. enough from Anstifying the harsh criticisms pronounced upon them. It happens . I with them, as with persons similarly circumstanced, that their. respective claps sometimes do things, ostensibly an their interests, which they do not sane llon. In.popuisr governmenu clans use their chiefs often more' thin the chiefs use them. In the case under considers don no evidence h adduced to show that Mr. Cauaßox sanction/the bolt or his clan. Re to at Washington, and those who maybe supposed to -represent his wishes in $ special manner have appa -1 repay not directed, advised or consent ed to the schism. It seems rather that the discipline of the clan was invoked, withoutauthority, for the accomplish. izonfot periorust ends The contest is blnter one r. TIM action or the Soldiers' Conven tion It Philadelphia in nominating Oen.' Grant for the Prewdency nuty be take' as indicative or the enthnshwor with w hich hut r.t ,, tion as the idandard-bearer of the Republican party wlif be hailed throughout the whole length Aid breadth or the lied by the men who suetained the tuitional flag In the field during the dark days of the rebellion. ; Gi i . 04.1iTaorr has eignilled his, willingneas'again li/comae a candidate "tor-Auditor Central. fiio ,fitg ;so other person Lair been Envied in eonn!ctSon with the -nomination. It kg, bt pre• snored, therefore, that be , will hare no conipelltor for the place. Igo made an excellent soldier, and is making an` equally good civil Milner. MA : Morrox bas oe. clintd renomilatloa for 'AM oftico of Mayor of Phll.deipbla. , • ORCIANIZATION. ' .e Legislative Lockout continues, and the tWeety.lifth hellos wu reached ' in the Roan yesterday without effecting the explesee return, the;election of Mr &Turks Speaker: The dissenters scat tered their votes after the twentieth:bal. • lot,'as no gentleman would consent to permit his mane to be need u their can didate. The conduct of the fractious members excites condemnation and re• buke from the leading Republican Jour nals of the State, and they certainly cad not blind their eyes to the fan that they are worlriug their own political destruc tion =rapidly as it is possible for men taaccomplish that end: ' if it had been left to tu to name the tam for Speaker of the House, the choice would not have fallen on Mr. Runts W. DATIL No tuck authority wan Ten; ted to • us. Nor were we , deputed 40 counsel or advise the Republican mem bers' of the Legislature ix the matter. We coisequently did not counsel or ad'. TIMI them. Bata large mejority of thou Republicans chose Mr. Dam, LS wan their privilegd. - rum others, not only exercised the privilege of Omelet 'for themselves, as they were entitled to do, - but when they found they were badly beaten refused to go into caucus at aIL Some of them roll up the whitesof their' eyes and suctimeniensly 'protest they. cannot vote for such ateen as Mr. brriz• Wall; Hiczmalf, Hawn, Niononterr, , WITAON, and most others who are wide ly reputed so have high penoaal charac ters, have ito difficulty on. that score. Mr. Dam has.resson to be proud et - the support of such men. :The fact is this unreasonable bolt has ditmaged' the prospects of ,a General Rillread.Lsw and.of the restersUon of the Connelleville charter. Republican members fronsother parts of the Suite, who have hien acting Its good faith, and meant to go straight through, are so tired. Others who wanted as excuse -to strike the measured particularly de. mended by Allegheny end ether coun ties. think Limy have found' it. This il lostrates the truth of what we Said some days ago, that Allegheny WAS altogether too provincial for its own Welfare, and could not alter its coarse in that partic ular a moment too soon. Er. Darn has been acting honorably, and would undoubtedly bare made all bin pledges good. He las been badly used, and naturally feels aggrieved. Ho would be less or more than human if lie did not. His particular friends are angered. No reuonablo roan can blame Nen from all party of the State who have the welfare of the Re publican muse: at heart, and want it to triumph in the fall, in the election of General rilnastr,.are aggrieved, ire out of patience, and "with abundant cause. Frve Railroad Rill, or any other measure of Importance, cannot be' ae. 'aired to thu way, and certainly mild not to he. THE DEAD 'Eocs.—.‘ CARD. The following is the card (referred to yesterday) of the Republican memhers of the State Rot= of Representatives who refused to support Mr. Davis far Speaker: - assamorno, January S —Editors of that State - Guard:—Gentlemen: Oar st• tend rfr has been called to as in the State Guard of this day, reflecting severely on the position sad motives of those of us who feel it to be ourAuty to withhold our support front the Hon. Might' W. Dams, as a candidate for Speaker of the House of Repreacmatives. Permit to to state that we are not diem gsnizers, but have at heart .the enact-ea and welfare of the Republican -party. We have voted and acted with that organization ever sincelt,had - an exist- ence, and we Intend tte do so in the ' fstitre., , ezcept'When an attempt is made to inflict a great wrournpon that party. This We believe is now •belig done by some gentlemen who desire to sea Mr. Davis elected Speaker, and• who are and have been freely applying to us the epithets of theorem:deers and malcon tent'. lo the 'faithful discharge of ow date to an honest and incorruptible Con stituency, we have taken this stand. assured that when the time arrives far us to lay before the world our reasons at largo for o r action, it Will meet with the approbation of every honest and true Republican in the,Srate. A. Annwrnoso, Lancaster. Daum L. FRITH, Allegheny. Jena T. RICHARDS, h'elton. GEO: R. RIDDLR, Allegheny. J. Bain ESPY, Crawford. . ' • SAISIIRL MCCAILANT; BlAlr. • H. S. WEARTOR, Huntingdon. Tint Sur DIVIS' Conyxxxxonwill meet . next Tuesday at Philadelphia. The re preeeniation from Allegheny county is quite Small, in comparison to the num ber to which it is entitled. Stith, the delegation from almost all the other counties will be full, so thit the aggre gate attendance will be large. Ala matter of coarse, this body will nominate Gen. GEAR'S for the •Presiden. cp. it is most anitible that aml Itary convention, assembled for polities] pus. poses, &herald present the aim's: of the most Mundane soldier in the republic for its highest honors, and especially as he has exhibited in the management pl' this Wt Department, . as 'elrewhere, high tawny for the civil eerrice. It might likewise be expected that tle' Convention will express' preferenke for' a candidate for Vice President. Bo far,' Governor Muni and co-Governor Cou r= hare been most prominently named in this connection. A isrge majority of the - delegates, so far as we • ars tie! fontneelcins ~for lie. CII,II.TIN. we hear of fewer no delegates instructed for General Gunn. Even in his own county, Cumberhuid,' the delegates are for lie. ',Cowan': Two considerations, at least, hare-contributed to this result. General GLARY'S term as Governor not expire until Cie year after the clic ' sion of President and Vice President; and a decided inclination exists not to create an interregnum. It is ordinarily "suitable Mit a civil emcee should serve out the term of his election before enter leg upon another place. Then, if. the Ira: place gls the ticket is con ceded to a • Shan, it is wise to concede the second place to civilian. Soldiers are entitled to just tocognitiontemdral loyalists are ready to gess far as 'reason dictates in. that distellon. But if they should claim all the teats of honor a - feelleg would be apt to eying up that the slave.holding oligarchy had perished only to make room for the pretorian gaardx This is an impreashin that thoughtful soldiers are as anxious' to avoid as any other ,dass. But, be this,as it may, GOTCTIIin . CURTIN will moat likely be the choice of the Convention. Whether he will, 'upon this backing, go actively into the can vass, Or decline, holding back. for the next Senatorial vacancy, is a ,pointon which we have no informstion. Tim noble and patriotic county. of Allegheny, with her thousands of re turned soldiers, Is represented at the Convention of Boys in Biae, now in scuba 11:Mtladillphl., by a single dale gate. We do not know but Ibis fact con. Teri a compliment to QM soldier citi• sons, who have not st.own much desire to piers In political circles the claims they hold on s aratefal - people for mili tary 'anima ?Tinted and rendered through pure patriotise4 6 " 7oCi t Esq.. First Vice Pets. dent or the Atlantic and Greet Western Adieray; bas neighed his position. lit served with honer sad aredit, end con tributed largely to the general attracts of Ghat road, with which he has been file:i f &Med since lie latency, (pi the brat WedOentlas of neftinontb the French natliet villtolebrate the cert. tennlat anniversary of the Witt of Na poleon Bonaparte.' i INTERNAL REVENUE. I The mead annual report of Mr. DA- 'TID I. WALLS, Special Commissioner of this Revenue ofthe United States, was laid before Congress yesterday, and le a highly important and interesting doe. 1 .neasrit The duties of that officer re- ' quires that he 'hall investigate the sour ces of national minima, the best methods of collecting the anme. and administra tion 9f the existing laws tearing on the subplot. In referring to the National debt and the requirements for National expenditure, be presents the following Irma: .. The amount of the National Debt on the filet of Auglist, 1865, e period of 4 Its maxinsure—lees cash in e Treasury, was V,757,680,571 43, iny vine an en. octal obligation for interest f $l3B 031,- 629 PI , The debt in' gen ' ,at 1 a pe riod, fight be classified as. oliew r Of no obligations (5 po, i oda, sof 1681, t 1040 s, &c.) $1; 2'22,8 ;of dart hew paper (temporary loan, cer. Uficates of Indebtedness, tempo in tercet notes, Treasury notes, Malted !hated notes. fracuoaal currency, bonds 1 of 1847 and 1848). $1,672,466,871 43,, of which $373,398,256188 was_ currency I propet. 4 By an elaborate table cud comparison thekCbsemissioney defnonstrates flail flu linitid Sesta is the Only ono of ties lead ing notions of Ma world rehdar is, at pros- Wit; ruxtetelly diesinishinr its debt and ' raw:tag ii..szes; end Mu only 'one; . snore , ash A ears any tubstantial so' co of its ai`salty to pay its debt with i f er in a , definite oval, or rein anticipated a e.probeldlily of gni Audi Goon rrenco. In' speaking of the immense revenue should be derived' Rom distilled epirits, he 'aye, what Nil bautoyer held, thatstho tax has been placed Nt each a rate its to constitute in i'self se great a temptation to frond, that average hn max xtstturo, as it exists in the 'United States, is nt(t able to resist It. And the risteni under which the ufflosrs have been selected to collect the tax and se perrise ,the manufacture Las not, thus far, recogaised honesty, intelltytnee, and lagainau mistily as the first, only, sad essorrialuprallication for appointment. Be proposes that the special taxes re ferred to, under this head, should be resealed; and that a tax of from two to axed per cent be imposed on the yalue. of ill spirits sold at wheleule, to be paid monthly, aid a tax of ' ten cents. per gallon on all spirits rectified, to be pile! weekly. A tax of two and a half per' cent'. on miles, and ten cents on ipirits rectified, will, in the opinion of the Com: .miseioner; yield $ reyenue,'whichcanuot be easily evaded, of at lout twenty mit linait of dollars per annum; making a total amount of animal revenue which Can probably bedetited from tke tax os distilled eptrits, : under the proposed eye- tern of from fifty to' sixty tuilliou of dollar. . Tuns are many and significant midi cations that Russia is mirriag,up chill! against Tuthey. These signs have boMme so manifest that the Sultan has dis Patched an envoy to solicit the inter veon of Englaud. there was • time wh4nall Europe trembled at the treed of the Moslem cohorts, which threatened Sebdue the continent and extinguish chtkolanity. There was alto • time when all Europe rang with enthusiastic thetas or ansedlegioas on the way to drive the Twits out of Palestine. For long and bloody centuries there was no • I mity between these two forces, follow lex respectively the crass and the eras wit. Row, as for many years past, the )I4idems have begged at: Christian bands the boon of iemaining in Europe. Se fore the Turks bat appeared the dark &Widow° of destiny, silently .motioning thee& away. As they were driven out of Spain, so will they at last he driven out of Europe into Asia. Strong's& religious antipathies are commonly accounted stionger, indeed, than all other repni. skins besider—bere is an instance to which political passions and Interco's!- . together outweigh all snegestions of ec clethastical and theological rivalry. The Ttir'lis remain because the Christian Ea tioeis can agree &Meng themselves what Omit be ate with the country when vs• cited by the present dominant race. If a judgment should be formed touch. rag; this grave matter, bawd upon, the " relative value of the respective peoples inhisbuing Europealy Tuitty, -it . may weft be conjectured the balance would., , !statue in fever of- the Turks,. Cacti's. Vonably when the Roman 'Empire of the East succumbed to the followers of the; Propbet, the Christiana bad sunk below the ordinary polytheistic The ancient , vitality had• gone out of theist. No stamina remained, and they yielded because they were the weakest. Slime then the Diabometans have de cayed; but not faster than the Christians.. Beth have gone down, but about ratably to*ch.other. • Ersiiit missed its. clumee when Sari bel • di recently rose egotist tome. Thep coMblitations were feasible which would tide terminated this debate of =aeries, and made St. Sophia ones again •• Chris . tiaa temple. ;Tun Philadelphia "NUM American of Tnesday.dimourses at length on "Con— udbilted Ailishuy." After 'pretties of the benefiti which consolidation hu brOught to, Philadelphia, and of those which it ,would bring to Pittsburgh, it Windt up with the following : Il' We read and hear so much In these uses respecting the importance and pro— style of Chkaks.o, Bt. Lents and Chicle. MO, that the extent and magnitude of. Pittsburgh generally escape notice. persons, therefore, learn now with a e ase that the wtoth of Plttaburgh has &population of some two hundred thou. send souls. Wealneerely regret that at the elution lately held there the people di di not vote to make one consolidated city of It, Utile approach of the period for taking the national census renders it 'eri desirable that Pittsburgh , should not again figure In the official' reports anions the sixth rate cities of the /club lid, Instead of coming to the,front rank, where she properly belonga. It is, how• eYer, gratifying to know that a step in the right direction, by consolidating Witheach of the two leading cities all Ale's outlying suburbs, has been taken. i r t; now, tile three divisions were c updated into ono city, it would always bei easy to abow the statistics of the real Pittsburgh. Hitherto this has been 11:11- Ocala for anybody except a Flits tiurgherotnd even many of them were unable to do It accurately. A good map or. Pittsburgh, Allegheny, and suburbs should be printed and widely circulated all over the republic." , Tnw l'us'dentocrat's have taken the !nide. tile, calling their State' Convention early in March. Among other moor , , uernesits that base Wien in their way lathe legislative lock•out at Ilarrlslitug. 'They take this as a symptom that they ite to encounter a host during the rota. idg summer, which will be disoordast. tlnerant, belligerent; that will be car. g weapons against Its Own il . t ' etnhere• 'le doubt mot they are calculating wild. I tyi but it meet be confessed the present leek favors their infereece, Republicans! lie close up this diferince, and right apeedily, that not e trace or it shall be left. `—Thp London :hew hu, for some time past, been engaged In a libel suit of great importance to newspaper publish. efs, hfch was timidly deckled on De cember ;WM lt was tlio atilt of WILSOD Walter. Mr. IgYalter being proprietor of the Thou. 'l l w question at Dam, most afreming th o pubbe was, whether a news roper might print debatas It... Parli ament without incurring the risk of an aOtion for libel. 'The use arose in refer slice to stalemating made in the house of o rds by the Lord Chancellor and other firers et, So kt petition com gainimi of thea pp ointment of Fur Vita. rb hotly an a Judge, and which Mr. Nyison .vrnplained ot gut llhollans. The to'r4 o ",ird 4ilitA distinctly deolined Oa in Ws °On correct report dl "1114 Pain in rullatneof wait prlt Isged, and Delos so Instructed, the. Jury Dina for the deforidguat. `,_ ~ _ I=M 105M,IPMrWIWZMM t ,tlOll !EOM% I. It is -well that out-of-door work some times ceases, era! lewd hecoutas so little pressing, that we have time to plan arid think. While the general aspect of these notes is town e. 3 might lead one to sup pose that they were repro:Mal from year to year, there is' really .tao more pains taking work put intothelpaperlhanjcuit here. Certain things, ri Is tine, have to be repeated, and It is not easy to give di rections to transplant cabbages la any great variety of language. In Making' up tame notes 'we are obliged Io have several distinct classes of. readers in Mind: those who cultivate entirely for protit, and those who growplaats for the love of it, and without regard to gain; those who are familiar with the ordinary operations of horticulture and oak y need to be reminded of the semen in which to do them, add thous who essay the sim plest operation for the drat time. Bemides the routine directions it will be found that we each, month Inenresirate'ranch that Is new under the different division., and answer in general terms many letters of Inquiry. ilortierilturists have always been in advance of farmers in availing themselves of the recorded 'experience of others, and we now have not only gea, eral treatises, bat many excellent works upon special subjects, in which the va rious promeses are treated more in detail than ithey can be by general writers. The past year has brought out works of great value in all departments of horti culture, and no one whose operations are upon any other than a very small scale can afford to be ignorant of the current literature of his favorite branch.—Agri earturiatl Oreban! and Xavier, Order Trees Early.—lf one lives : near a nursery it will sometimes pay him to give even an extra price for the priet. lege of digging his own trees. Rabbits are troublesome, especially wben'the allow on.theground. Among the various preventives blessi has been found the moat easy of application and as efficacious as any. One aprinklinti will last all winter. If blood cannot be obi turned readily. rub the trunks of the 'trees with liver or bloody meat, but lbw is s more troublesome.. • Mire work under covert keep all rub. hush "away tram the trees, sod, tramp. down light snow's. When there Sr. not many treko It will pay to claep the base Mete trunks with a girdle ef old tin, or sheet iron. \ Tke Text (latopiliar is one of the most destructive insects in the orchard, and one of the most readily controlled. The eggs may no w be seen glued ones a band around the' twigs noir, their ends. (let them off at any ex oDee of time and labor. ClB.4l.—The sooner these'are cut, the better, as experience has shown that • much larger proportionof earljeut grafts will lire :ban of those taken after they they hare...keen exposed to the sever) ty of the winter. this Is especially the case when the autumn bee been unfavorable to tilt ripening of the wood: Label co rectly;and pack in boxes of fresh saw /loot .6',:elliese may be done:, graft at the "collar . ' and never on the tine of roots , Waxed cotton twine le thermoet convenient thing neeterial. Jlttp the Oreleirrd.—We often Selvhee this, and cannot de, en too frequently; 'Ms Mat label wlll.gtit lost or °bitters/eel in time, and memos:. he not lobe treated. If a place is ter be said, a imated orchard will Ave' rundi toils valuer. Nursery Stack may be beaded back and shaped any tlenoduring winter when the weather is mild. Irby list • Itiodwilquersai Those who live In cities and towns have usually hut *small lot lo'ensh*l7 lisp, hence, the necessity of getting the mart out tint. The fitting out of such laces in too often left to tle cars of a obblusrgardoner who bus more conceit than knowledge, and a knell front yard wo cut up and filled with a confusion of things ti4t it looks still smaller. We recently posed a place that struck us ea particolsrl♦ neat. A bit of nicely kept turf bad in the centre a magnificent Rhododendron, six ton high,and nearly as wide. With Ito beautiful, broad, ev ergreen leaves, and an abundance of 'buds of full promise for next spring's flowers, it stood to marked contrast to the naked stems of the deciduous shrubs of the neighborhood. A aingleogood plant like thus wall give more eatiafaction than a crowd of shrubs, neither of which has a chance to develop Itself. Good numry grown ;Rhododendrons (and none otherli are likely to live) may now la had at from one to throe dollars.• They noy be transplanted in spring or summa. Trait 1314r1111111 Wheefer co tents. bitumen' with a ail:t ele vividly of strawberry, currant, or other fruit, gets only halt the; astisfaclion his garden 13 capable of affoidincr, or, if hoc - ulna - stew for market, only a portion of the profit he might otherwise re ceive. With proper forethought in' selecting early and hate varieties to supplement the main crops at both code, We mason if mtwt fruits may - be much extended. Now is tho ttme to think slouch matters, and to arrange for a succession of fresh from the time the earliest straw berry ripens, nntd the last winter near and lortg-king grape is gone. At the sou th, preparing the soil and even plantog may am . on; but in our colder climate but little can be done save preventing injury to trees by ani mals and horsemen, and in mild spets to prune such grape vines and currant bushes as bate been neglected until now. General Work, such as protricting trees, removing the eggs of insects, is hinted at under Orchard and Nursery. = .An average rempature of Ur in Om green-house, with arise and fall of some 15. for the extremes of midday, and night, wilgdo for generallopections. Camellia* .and Azaleas now • In bloom need liberal Watering; *hob doae !tow eling prune into shapo. Hyacinths, and other kalbs may be brought into a warm placb to keep - up a bloom, and as soon as the flower fades, cut away the stalk. Propagation of Yerbeans, Itellotiopse and other summer bedding , ,stuff, may be carried no. _ . Seedier ranges, Stocks; Petunivt, etc.. are to be sown to furnish pLanui Ter spring flOwering. • • Oranges and Lemons are to be kept In a cool part of the lion.* and only spar. , Ingly watered. • Frozen Plante In dwellings are often killed by kindness. .11“. or them always in acool room. Inaccbt need to be kept under !rem the start.. Tobacco smoke, and the 'use of the thumb and huger, are genetilly sari fielent remedies in small collections. A surrztga wishes to know what she do to secure agreeable manners in her children at the table. There are probably a good many mothers among our rmilers preened with theism. solic itude. Good breeding shows itaelf at the table more then alsewhoie, for hers we come to gratify an animal appetite, and wititput some painstaking to redeem its coarabness the repast is likely to be • purely andanimal exercise. Children learn mare readily tram example than from precept, and unless the parents are agreed in having a little formality at the table, it Will be impossible-to form deco rous babite in the children. If the pa rents will observe the rules orgoiul breed ing themselves, there Is very Little diM cuity in training the children. It helps the matter ver much to have the table set in are order ly mariner. Every article 1 to be used Upon the labia should have its place and be In It at the beginning et the . meal. It is a terrible annoyance to any well-bred person to have a perpetual running Id tho pantry or kitchen-for some forgotten article. Then neatness In the appearance of the table helps neat ness and order In the children.• Clean table-cloths and napkins, are contagious somewhat. The merle eould be it used booth," and punctuality at ..the table should beinsisted upon. Nothing should be allowed to Intrude upon the time al lotted to meals. It shoul4, be made a thee of leisure and social onloyment. Mental rare and haste disturb digestion and make dyspeptics. There should be a few rules observed in good society laid down and enforced sir early that the child will have no relearn prance of a wrong way of using his knife and fork or hand ling hie cup or goblet.. Politeness is al ways to be Insisted upon; and brothers and deters should be mule to elndy each other'. happiness. Thin with stake them surevable In larder circle.. Politeness often eontributes more to ono's euccess in 1110 than brains or capltal.—Asiericen Aarvulteriel. HOMO TIIIE egn the Journal of Botany. (Enidlalt,) published the statement that (our nshistanta in the blerbarlum mligued on account of tlbbealth, three of haul died, eta. This was copied in yulous papers with such additions and bnprovementsliset made it apply to the Kew Gardlnur, and to plant culture gen erally. The article in its latest form Ia quite a bugbear, and 1.1411 beep sentsis by a eorrespoodeitt, wike Is evidently con cerned the le tatnont that all war dens the health of the practical cultiva tors Is Oir(010d to certain degree ofrisk." So Is the health of everybody every where. t may untidy our friend "J"" to know at the midi has Just this foun dation. Si the assistant. In the Eels It ;ban tunately nieeht, Iv 111 bef the othe was 'to not 'pardons, nutor, muuoumoLl to NuaUtuoonal sil r Ow ono, aloud, wax serious oiollo entered upon Lis &atm,: dial ed in India; whilo third uluoTkpr in lotutrnitn." • LB UANDFUL OF MANURE put of awn will often make the Into a la difference, between fotir or five little abhins,' and six or eight groat plump •ears that will shell their bulk of sound corn. A. thousand . handfuls count up heavily in the autumn cord crib.• How Many handfuls of manure ere daily lost in your stock yard that might be. saved in nice order be a little care in heaping up, and. covering from washing rain? Thew handfuls of manure are more val. liable to the cultivator than the separate grains of gold that the =frier, with care ful toil, gathers and washes, from earth and sand bank. He hunts, gathers and eaves them all, and thus accumn• Mtn hia Philmumbical, success fal cularators can see the glitter at gold even in the manure heap; they,only welt a little longer than the miner for the pure gold to be washed out by the growing presses, instead of in the wash. pan. ." . .11. word to the wise Is sufficleat." Flow to recp Cp our Hoy Crop.--;A. farmer whir Ind been ii tio bebit of sell ing his hay for manyysa seccession, ie beg silted how he kept phis hay crop without manuring or cultivating his land. replied, "1 aevorlilowed the allot swath to be cut." U this rule was gen erally followed them would be less mid about running out of grass fields orshort crape of • hay, Some farmers feed oil every, green thing and compel their cat tle to pull up and gnaw off the roots of the grass. Crating rowan la certain death to hay crops. , A farmer had better buy hay at forty dollar. per ton than ruin his hay field by close griming. • Tim general treats:heat of grass land to this respect is wrong and/ expensive, and should •he abandoned as a Matter of profitand econ omy.— Wisconsin Forster. A central New York lady ♦onchs for the following recelptel Bottled Feast.-13ollclown ono quart of hopi In two quarto Or water, one-half; boil and mash twelve potatool add to this add ono cup °rouge a table spoontal of flour, onolielfcup o Salt, Rye and radian Rresd.—Twovarto of Indian meal to one Of rye; put the 'corn meal Into your bread pan, with AL Lisle salt and molasses, wet It with scalding water, and be aura that It Is scalded, working It at the,:' mine UM* with A 'spoon. When lukewarm add the rye, a cup full of gwi , tfleast, ands mix It up with water not very-stiff, knead It into loaves, hit It stand to rise, and bake It In a m o derate oven. Bons* or RoUs.—Tbleken ono quart of warm water or milk, add a little salt, 01:111 half cup of melted butter, and one cup of good Yeast; make into biscuits for morning, or Into an oast roll, and draw a deep cut. If not very light, add • Utile mods. . AM OLD Wiring 0010. IT .riakr ureimow. • • • , And what will re heszoey dinglitersdriskt— tr. what will ye bear this MVO , ' • 1 Wag yellow= of the yeletldeekser. Or el 10.611 mid ladle. britilit t , ‘ "Thou shall Won." they snl Obr we dwell • tar • eY, From the land where Wu would woke), "Thou stall .Dg tut agate some old woad nrua That le stow in ear own ommtria. Thou aisle mind us moor Matt:nal tale, -When we welted oa as upload lea. Whli.tb. oldbarborliget wszedlshifinthe Wilt* • - Lang rays shooting eat from Um sera • , While lambs ware yetariktadh And thildWir lay deep 'a Or, the Aram, sad their dames elearkond Never ones was seed so Manor so Aiwa,' As Ow grass that Erse tip there I In the town ono no smoke, far none there awoke.- • 'At our feat IS lei Wiliam still could bet • And wrisee fqr below the long Overdo. , d the sebormen A.Warple I Out WIWI:. Singes:lowa @Midst shall wakens feel again • Alt we tell Io tbatishred peace orkeerw. When het lio we ttbe dritytew of tbe wet apark. rr dela, , • . tbe septets of a day, lost born:* . • So magi rm— sorig—it Was not I sad t lo • I bail mai sa sl;s It eery Mk whim they And long are It was dorm they \ war. emy Telling was all the song--this wasp: The sneer Iles erbits, and the nition s gives out in the freest:lg mere, . • \ And ease my heart *Oh one wog, \ For Am. will lonigh to hear. a • And It'. 0 my lore, toy lore And Ire U ray my deer We of her that VII ~ /.4 tat th../ 1 4 w!XXIS !Mc • Me* 11 . 00 dre met M hear. No toys la youn g`. eke Is yeavg. is young[ • Whim cite latish* the dimple dips.- We walked In the wind, and her twig lock, blew • t, Tall I'll'arory tey mbed my Ilpe,, , And oat toh !co m the freesias ere., Weere the DUO reeds remade so my, dad' I'll tell my mind to theytendly wind. Bemuse 1 bare lOTed her srk, Ay,,and etsre trim my lady Is true I • • And stsos the be. at It all: • , And when ilia blushes rov heart en year. That teem are read!. WI And 1110 my loreony Ins• I , • And 10e 0 y deer, my dear • Itheof ber lime Ong ttll the wild .Xlds ring, When nobody's itgh to hear. 1 • (Os. Meer. =II We are in receipt of a copy of .the "Annual Report of the bnperintendent of Common Schools of •the C91111:12011- "wealLh of Pennsylvania, for the year ending June ad, 1667," and make a brief abstract: . The number or distrlcti In - the State (exclusive of Philadelphia) at the close of the year was 1,639, an Increase of 1 26 over .1E68; number of schools, 13,001, an increase of =8; pupils la attendance, 600,163; increase, 10,041; average attend ance, 414,637; Inereme, 1,488) average nest of tuition, eighty-five cents, an increase of thirteen cents;: whole number of teacher; 9,D)9, of which 0,619 were males, and 8,590 were females, an Increase of 485 males. and • decrease (trona hundred and seventeen females. Average salutes of teachers per month, twenty-seven dollars and fifty-one come. Total coat of tuition r.,44,519.93--an In creme of 1270,991.Z—f0r fuel andlcon tingencies, 1001,067, and for purchasing building, renting and repalring,l4sB,3l6, an aggreo increase in these particu lars of 14T2,252. The State appropri ation. was 6355,000; paid . to county superintendents, 150.221—en increase of 16,419. Whole amount of tax levied and State appropriation, 1 0 , 071 4- 5, an increase of *.V2.Z.25. Tax levied in eighteentiundred and eighty-nine dis tricts, 136104=5, an 'Uremia of 1602.X7. In Philadelphia (not included in -the above abstract) there are three hundred and seventy-four • schools under',State superintendence—tout high- schools, sixty grammar, exty-sine secondary, one hundred and elghty-nine primary and illity-ell unciamidedschoohn seven tns male, and twelve hundred and thirty-five female , teacher, number of pup s belongingto the schoolat the clue of tbe gar, 77,164; -average attendance, 06,033; amount paid for salaries of teach ers, 8645,552.77; lots, bonitos. additions, an, $1117,816; books, Ac. 1186,5887-total. or school purposes, 11,102,787. School' accommodations and- teachers were provided for 245,01 more pupils thin attended regularly—the average at vandanoe on the whole .number being nnly-a little more than sixty per. cent. This irreguisruy (says the Superintend- ent,) in attending , schools necessitates the unproductlia expenditure or an hu mans. sum of money, and this is scarcely the worst Of its effects, for it everywhere deranges the school 'and cripples' the teaching. Brom facts that have come tb the knowledge of the School Department, it it believed that quite a large number of children, of proper OM in nil pails of the Mate, never attend school. I Some such are to be frond In almost !every ,oral district, and every village, and thousands, it is feared, mull be hunted up in our large lowa, and cities, Boma thingshonld be done to bring these neg lected dames into the schools. and, u al preltunuary step, It is suggested that I provision be made by law to take the oeususonee cyst, tore.or flee years of all tbachddren tu the Stale," between the 'ages orate and twenty-one. Only eleven high schools made reports to the Department. This Is but al small proportion of the whole number, m the State, ea there aro now 3,147' graded school., and every . system of graded schools must. livsnme lentle, have high schools. The number of publio high schools is increasing rapidly, and whersver well =waged they are meet 'wreath favor from the people. • The past' hes been a prosperous year for the Stale Normal schools, and the State Is relining a large return of fruit for her liberality towards them. The nuns tor of students attending them increased from 8. 0 10 to 14185, the number of their , graduated frouil forty-three to tortyelx, the volumes In their libraries from 5,490 to 6,986, the total vales of their proper t y from 1101,370 00, to 12444830 00, and their whole Stuitialal condit l unlum been some what improved. , In addition to the State Normal Scheele, some twenty private Normal schools or Normal inalittitea were in operation in differ. nt parts of the State. probably two thousandstudent* attended thou institutions for a longer or shorter period of time. Bolter than anything else ,they indicate the want of more State schools and their proper location. The prospect is thatacreral mere State schools will ask for recognition within a year or two. Thn State will of coerso encourage Mem lo lila 'ante war •it has aided those al. ready established: Here aro tris great Mots of the Penn sylvaula Common SchoolAystom: Tile whole number scbtols, . 13,435 " tear ers, 10,523 • " • . pupil 78'8,383 The overage iticadanc o of, . pupils 480.070 Total cost of tuition ... .. 70 Total coat of building 1,733708 03 Total tint of contingencies.. 700,075 83 For. inition, '5,0/4149 71 For all school purposes 8,103,750 17 , —An outillol and naughty daughter In' 'virann recently murdered her mother; as old woman of seventy, attar icatrog; gie lasting fifteen 'minutes. BOW plotted both her mother's eyes with a knife,. In flicting thirteen mortal woodwind leo crated her clock ‘l6it her toetti. l . HARRISBURG. Meeting ot.the Legislatqe. Organization of the senate I Speech tf Mr. Graham, Speaker Elect (arsall Dlteatee UP rithat.kb Gadit.) HAlll63lll7lte, Jeri. 7, 1843.. The'S4niate eoilireited aU three o'clock ufterneon, Speaker Grahim " presid ing. The new Senators answered and Mr. If cambia, Derooentt, .of Phila delphia, protested against the old Speak erineesring to the 110 W Senators. Buled out of cedar. ..For , Sptirker, Mr. Gra'vim,. Itepublil can, received, raiisteen votes, and Mr. •Ws.Dias, Demoeret, fourteen. Mr. Wallas saminlataied the "oath of oflles to Ift; Ontieun, "who spoke as fol lows: : " • &seders Inaisuming the reiponsi ble duties of tho Chair, to:, width your partiality" has= called me. I can only . promise you to devote tottbir discharge whatever ability I may possess, aid. to give au ea rn est attention to the business of tho Senate. The rules 'which govern this chamber, if observed with ordinary strictness, are safficient I. enable my to Usuutactthe hulloes' of our oonstltuents, and to frame such lawa at may be need • ed by the. people of the State with dng deliberation, without protracting the am nion to an unusual peeled. I aball In ell kindness. endeavor to have those rules •oteerred, and by - every -means in my power to preserve the dignity . of this body, and to expedite, am WA's may be nenelltent .with• a'proper regard for the deliberative character of the Senate, the consideratiote of the various legislative tateastwee to which your attention may . . . The Important Interests a a great State are entrusted to our rare. The en terprising pe op le of a mighty toromoo wealth, stretching from -Lake Erie to the Delaware, with resources as diversified, as they S r. boundless; look to to to legis; late for their' advancement in material "ProsPerity,and moral grant:newt Let us, then.aw tell, that 'whatever resasars will develops the buried wealth of the State, will make available the new litsccessibls forests and mineral* of cur, nioantaltra and. the products of our soil; et whatever will encourage thelabor and Industry of our citizens, and dlfinse In telligence amt our children, shall re- Wes our prom pt g and cordialsupport. Prominent amongst th Itake It far granted, a liberal "Ave. Itallread Law," which will extend the. benefits of our railroad murkiest' to , MI Dry. comer of the Commonwealth. and to every rater In our mallet however 'obscure or remote. will receive your early and careful sum thin: - The day for grantee( spratsl and exclusive privilegesin the mn7ing trade hu rimed. They might Ninthly have been joatided, er at least excused In .he Infancy, of our Commonwealth,-when money was scarce and capitalLetsfew and dead; but t now, when wealth hi liblind a4 whereapital 'esti evhryiehere for rhhauneratlie investment, and while the Deicer part of the Vast resources end pro duttlons of-the State tie hidden from pubilo 'view, and Sr. abut but hem the .markets of the world for - Want of trans _radiate's, a broaderand more liberal pol icy Is demanded by the reqiirementa of Not "the test good for the greatest I timber." but the general good of all, should be ode , mono and our gine. The voice of. the great political party. which for savers yearn has controlled the LigiaLatton, and wielded, lbe destiny of Pent o ug y lv= u na a r : i p ‘ r 4 we l e . : 4 :l4 t er a. ..e . tom was heard to unmistakable lane guage on this subject, by' Its appointed .represantauvea In convention et Wil; harnaport teat summer; .and the emphatic declarations of the candidate of the minority Gubernatorial hon ors, troth on the floor of this /Innate, sod-elsewhere, during the cabvam oi were endorsed by the other three hundred thousand voters of Ulla 000. 1001:0111.thil. \ILL good faith, and In all .Itleerlir then, let usbany out the clear ly enpremed will -of,tbe people of the State on this all important subject. The war for the suppression of the re 'Milton has left the '',nation brirthened with a debt. the magnitude of which seems to stagger the mludeof fumy, and mode schemes for its Indefinite pompom : mentor virtual' repudbition \me openly agitated. -Though that debt, contracted to preserve the NATION,LL 1721117, had been ten Mime.greeter than It neic (a, the stemenful defense Vf our OOMIDOP country sealant treason and diaruptied , would have been cheap even at that cost. The breanlag of this once united hind into fragments and the overthrow of the work steer fathers, would bare been, a calamity far above all :computation In mare dollars and ceota. I thine I but utter the voleenf l'ennailvaa la, a - State which has been prodigal of the precious blued of hereon*, a sacrifice, costlier far than all mcneyer property, when I sac, let that debt, contracted :fora sacred ob ject, dear to the heart of every patriot, be sacredly and lonestlyliald. I mean not that Its whole weight should be tor ea.d upon thle,generatkin;, Let there be DO imprudent or unnecessary haste; but let the Wortin relowr, that as our tu-: sources are ample and are cenatently In creasing, soli NATJONAt. Parra •surtm, paitsenvzs renal-ars, and every oblizatien of.. our Government shall be honorably redeemed. Slot at all lneousiatent with these views would be • halve reductlin or repeal of the Internal Revenue. taxes on the principal manufactures' of the country. All the leading industrial interests of the nation, and especially of our own State, atenoWdejoressedkndaufferinght come. /mance of the heavy and unnecessary burthen of taxation bad by Congress on our manufacturec • • . • 'fain are all our tar t ff. laws for protto Son against threlem competthen, it our onnneuctures an weighed /lewd by an enormous acid grlndlog.systene of taxa-. don at home. I trust that Peonsylvanis will demand of the llsiticnial Congress' immediate rah*/ from the bean burT then* which,oppresa bet labocand which experience has shown to be nolommnne catesty. Gratettil tier the confidence reposed io me; thaskingyou for the honor con tarred by this aleMion, and soliciting your kind indulgence. for my- erten,' laws' now only is ask you to,dasigiude a Senator to administer tho official obligation I am required to take on this ocession. George W. Hammenly, of Phikulel. Phis, was elected Clerk. Ire M. Hutch'. I " • OrPfits Wilk Was the DOMDemocra tic Candhlaio. • All the candidates ofi yesterday's Be. publican dace were 'sleeted. The de• foaled Candidate, of the Democratic can cut were:. For Asuatant Clerk, 7=l. Timothy Sloan; Sergoantat- Arms, Edward CMutelty; - Jutaistruat Sergeant-at-Army , W.; W. Williams, James Cady; Transcribing Clerks, Rich.: ard Kuhn, Waters, Thomas W. Watkins, Yobn Pratt;, Doorkeeper:Sam uel Carson. • Mr. Worthington, Representative of 'Chester eounty, offered a resolution'ap pointing • Joint Committee to Inform Uovemor that the Ltd/Ants WIN ready to proceed to • Mr. Lowry, of Eriey motkid to amend. by appointing a Senate Committee: The House, might not organize , , for several days, and tfie Governor had lready. sent ills Message to the newepepers. The Message • should be read In •ths Senate. Masers. Davis, of 'Berke, t3earight, of Payette, Dem., and Dillingfelt, Ilop4 , pf Lancaster, thought the . cloverner Was premature In delivering his mesa:lgo to thenewspapera Mr. Searighteontended that the message could not be received till the House wax organised. Meseta. Whlte„of f lndlana, ,Worthlng ton and Lowry elted the proceedings. of 1664, when the Senate was unorganized, Mt. Lewry's amendment was ao cepted. The Governor peened the t3ensto that he would mean his mosange at 'twelve o'clock tomorrow. Mr. Davis, of Becks, submitted a reeo lutlon for the purchase of Pardon's Digest, for Senator', clerks and commit tees mom, which Mr, Lowry charm. as an outrage In &fronting Costly foot for . Mr. White, of Inputs, moved that the rules of ISM, Instead of 1537,. be adopted, bemuse by the latter rule • hills bad been read and passed by Sem and some,ho wee Informed, bad paned w ithout an intellf gent height Into their cherecter or bear ing on the part of the Senate: ;Agreed Solna two hours were taken np in the discussion of the' valloity of Mx. George Bergner's contrast fur printing thp Legie lathe Record for three years to coma Hr. White moved anew ,beiintoittee to frame s contract; arid announced that the nevrepapens here would' nucleoli rTeason , able bid. He did not believe, thatin law a preceding Legislature - could hind a. subsequent one to a contraet lei printing. htr.-liovrry moved irefeAwice.of the object to the Judiciary Committee. 11- ESTABLIS4EI). .17'6. believed tho cOntrert whn hemmer wen hipline . , and' his claim on the ireavury Insunnountable. Mr. Landon, ;A - Bradford, aum.,,rted Mr. Lowry: All asserted that they had not been satisfied with the manner in which the itererd „wee published and Punished. • .IE4 White accepted the amendment, providing that if no .valid contract al ready emists, thel new company may make a different chtreet, and report on law points within ids days frOm tae or ganization. of the Legislature. Rending'ißsaission, adjourned till to. morrow. - Havennistrno. January ff, 180& Te Sintere met at eleven o'elockF - Mr..:Emelt, of Allegheny, preset4d a petition from A. W. koater, of Pitts -I,tergh, for a system of cumulative young for Senators and . Representatives. . " Mr. Lowry, of Erie, presented thirty nine petitions frem Crawford, Veiango and Warren,- for a new county, to be' created out of parts of Crawford, Wrest, Venango and Warren. ' Mr. ErnOt also presented a bill Incor porating the Pittsburgh, Brownsville and-Geneva Packet Company. Mr. &aright, Democrat, of Fayette, a Wilt° repeat- Bus liquor license law of Mstoring the charter of the Pitts bath and Connellhellio Railroad. Mr. .Los - ry, of Erin; a bill changing the name of Um Cleo/eland, Paynterille mut' 'Ashtabula Railroad Cornmury to - Mr. Wallace, Democrat, of Clearfield,' a .bill repealing timed of last year/men pelting the admission of negro, into Mr. "teak, Democrat, of Lycomlng, Joint resolutions relative to eurrenoy,la voting an early return to aped(' pay ments, , oppiaing national banks, nod favoring an increased tariff and decree!. of internal revenue. Laid on thp table. Aftweivi o'clock the Governor's Mee seowatt read. Five thousand Copley In Eiglish and two thousand In, German were ordered printed. , • 4djoittned. 1:1011BEOF REPRESE...NTATTVE , 9. The House met at twelve o'clock. The climber was crowded and the excite. Ninemiens ballots, making fifteen in all, wait taken without effecting an, or ganization. • pUthe eighth-babot Mr. Wharton, of Huntingdon, wittadrevethe name of :Mr: fifeesinant, 'and .3fessrs. Armatrong, Ilockert, Espy, Maauriant, Smith; 'Rid "die, Madan, Richards and Wharton voted solid for Ewing. On the fourteentholiet Mr. Riblnisim, or Nercer, changed his vote from Ew.ing to • Davis. Davis then: had forty-ads,: Jones forty-six, and Ewing eight. t - Several lneffootnal motions - were madik brltepublleans to adjohrn.' On the fifteenth ballot, . Mr. kikag; Thai had voted for Davia, changed his . Vito to Mann, of Piller, leaving Davis Mr. Ifickssan, Rennbllnon, of,, Ches ter, raised the 'pent that nothing was In order hut balloting or'adjouivrasent, and moved to adjourn, became tho Republi cans could not proceed farther without a CONfOrellol/. Adjourned 1.11 l tO-marroW morning' at tea o'c.lock. nansiisona, Jan. 8--10 P. X. Ai thing, yiew look it. is almost cer tain that the Legislative lockout will bo br night los close on Thursday or Fri day., l'he •cancus- noisLoees will be elected; an the dissenters are glvliag sista of compromise. They will receive all tile pledges required on the Free Ball read Law, as Mr. Davis is certnirdy Ia favor of that measure, and was earnest in the pledges already given. They will , likewilse receive places on important Mr. Graham is determined to • imam a sure thing in the Railroad. Com mittee. Mr. Landon will be dliplueed ste Chairimus of ttatCommittee„ if neceislay, and it is prchablethat he will not eion be appointed a member of it. tree rts l 4 :road prospects use growing more brit. • \ • Ilanaranuna,•Jan. 9. 1868." SENATE.' The 'Committee on the contested seat of Senator Shugart . was drawn." The ()memo; sent In the vetoes of a number of Dills passed at the last session, among which were note authorising. the Sheriff of Allegheny county to. tax costs In cer- Min eases relative to:vehicle license, arid the conetructism of board wakens Mount Washington, and iegultding the fees ef Notaries Public of Allegheny county. ;the 'afternoon session adjourned at The twenty-fifth balloSwas taken with mg electing a Speaker.' \ : On ,thet., twentieth ballot dlr. "gwinif withdrew requestlng the dissenters to vote for Mr. Davis, but they voted for other gentlemen, who each Ls turn With- On the twenty-third Idio; Mr. Webb, of Bradford. offered a prey a ble declar ing Mr. Davie plodgpd for a Free Rail roadf.arri'and fl resolution for hit else- The preamble cao ruled oat bi,the Clerk . . • chin, offered an Nur,. of Dauphin, . amendment embodying the substance of the preamble in the resolution. Ruled out by a unkjority or. the Henna. Variousingenious motions were wide by the Davis men, but were defeated. The Clerk refused. to revolve repose from the GorernOi. The House MICA to-morrow at eleven o'clock.. It cannot adjourn over till or _ The Working people. • It ',announced from Wmihlngton that several employer's bays • notified their mechanics that tkey. must reduce .thelr wages, and as the Government is re ducing ha form at the arsenals - and sat .the navy yard In that city, Ahem are many pentane t o onf employmeet . The worideimppers Ln the employment of the Salisbury (Gunn:) iron madufacturen are now paid from tiny to sixtycents a cord.' Last wit.ter the pay woo Mom $1 to $l,lO al cord., The Poll,liiver risks states that the factory operatives of that thy; beida.meethig on Tuesday evening lost, to consider the questiottthe re duction of wages the r and what should be the prope action of the bodyjn view of that. • circumstance. Siveral gentlemen spoke, mostly In a pecille - auram, the general sentiment be ins opposed to strikingf and advising that no more of the operatives ahould turn out until all remittable measures had. been tried to effect a compromise I with the Mill-owners. Upon a statement from the spinners that s petition or me morial had been drown up, and was to be sent to the corporations of the several cotton rattle, asking a diminution of one half in the reduction Made in wages in the different rotors of the factories, a res. elution wan adopted that the spinners draw np a similar paper and present it at the same timeto the oorporatioaa, ask lug that the reductleu be diminished 013 e. half, or that the mills ran four 'days n week at the old ram of Payment. The River Time/Mopes that some ami cable arrangement will be made, for If It should fall n great deal of misery must ensue. The wages dispute In the iron trade of • the North of England is assuming a somewhat serious aspect. It was generally anticipated that the men Vombi accept the, reduction of Mn per cent., bet a strike has taken place at govern' places indicating nn i ntention to contest the reduction. The proprietors of the loading iron worka la South Wales have given make ate reduction of wages —probably ten per cent.—at the end of —We. prosaler - Yonkeet, have .got an enebantal land in Alaska. Here Is what a Russian guide told a Californian who baked about a range oftnountains near ditka —"They Cr. mighty in aloe and mina° much cold. Wonderful Wog% ate had of them. It. Is said, that In some' placei there are deep pools and idko i -i n which dwell monsiets—toarpents as long fir tree, w bleb; were they in the *ben sea, would commit mighty damage. tine thing the Anthems tell Int for oeft.in, that yonder, for awny to the north; in the hoot of diens bills, there is a- wonderful valley, to narrow that only at/midday Is the One of the bun to be aeon. That sal ...ley lay uwilleovenhl and unknown for thousande of years •, no person attained .of its existence; Out at leat,a long time atot, two Indian hnniera entered it by chants% and then'wthit doyen think. they found? They found a small triboor an known people, speaking an unknown tongue, who hod Hoed there atone the 'un:ation of the world, a nd without know lag that other beings existed." FROM _ !LSfNG American kbiP ltied I. Russian Waters. 7EI . . i. . . Public* Debt' btatement. Supreme (kiwi and Becomstnictiolk . £Bl 'talesman to un mutant, fherante.l Wassrmarare,lan. B,iltift - mune' rar-ro an Amprucirt imp ry atm areas wernie.. - • -• ,; • The. President sent a imessage.to the Rouse to-day in answer to a r esolution concerning therallegni interferen bye 4 , Russian man - of--war '-. with v of the United States in Ochotak i Sea. Rue elan having warned out of the baY near . raliorter Wands what Ame..l ' Whala ships which were found - there. outset resi n theM, not eleplying `' ,, 1 , :1i . ag. clent . nromptness, was fired at fh,o ., :np m lott whereupon 'she took- her ,- de These facto were caranenusf t.o the State , Department by Mr-Chine; Vim= I Commercial Agent lo the Aratobr cone try.. hir,,Wittica, of-hisseezdineetts, Ste. communicated .to Mr.; , Seward4, from Captain Thomas," Maeter - of that ship Europa,- that.. that - and - other vessels 1 while cruising fog whelps had been die- turbod by a Relleiftri vowel, and finvok: log the proteotion of this Goverrardent. 1 Mr. Seward.tro theEld of December. ad thvssed • letter .to hir. StoccitAlethhili whether the. litter' hid 'received any in formation onthis bubject. -- Mr. Stoeckel replied, on the Mh of Decembe4thst he had reason to.. believe i 5 the...3 dent fa question wee the result f exaggeratiert, and be would address: his ~Gloverrunent without delay on tbelll2ll,ll 9/48S to ascertain that:tete: „ I •-, •.. 'viand kariosta.,t, Yanks: In rem:ones to the . Stineter, reiMittitin . calling for information' heregarfl to the taxation of :Selena& ban' Vey the' Seers - tart' of the Treasury toiday transmitted a statement , of the United Staten Trees afar, showing the amount, of the eenal annital. duty collected' from „national bank.. up to June 50th, 138; to:rho $l3, 033,330; amount of i borids heldlDlKerlie beratl4lB67, sesecurlty for hank circa 'Arlon. bearinginterest at alx pen cent: in min. 1247,763,8 00 ; arnourd. bearing. Inter= est st:tlve per cent. in Cols, MBAS* bearing Interest at six per, °sot, lawful money, '53,577,1:00. Totar - P0.977.7fd. The aggregate =What. of Interest. paid 0...- bonds held as reourity, cocaine date, was; la c0in...V.1,833,364; Ira lawftitenoney,. $311,000. Or a total' interest, redrioed to Lawful money, of $76,603.221, -, ,- , ~_ .• - . Anaccompanylpgaommunlcationfirain the Commissioner on Interraidihrrenne states that the manner Ilse width trattset. tinne ape reported dotes:rt. enable Mtn to dlecriudnate the "taxes, pald by Ire. Hanel Banks fronte.those paid Sy State Banks and private banker; but he gives the total amount of license tancollected from all banks during 1885 and 1887 as $3,543,0.51, and the total et dividends and profits for them= time as 1112,42, kn. ~ " rtrat3c near err =Myr. ' Statenient of the PO 110 Debt on' tie first,' of January. 1368: ' ', , . . i Deu Searerd On lernisi. , , , rerpe i rcent! . 2reutieilliGialilP ill Ell fa blip.. ot. B. d. 1111...,,,:i, , =reuse Se Naryzest 64 . berede...—., IX" awn) 03 refeelea 111•4......... .......4 El ,AAKOARO le : lhartitir - 01 - it*lskgetext. , +it per teat- - Yn713.030 00 ?tees year rossp!nl Interest Molts 46 24.760 Three year7..lo ,221. its Ye le 2 Wye par Pan. akrtilealas 23 213 WO CO . • 221' ell 213 . . • Zatured /1:144,10:11 - • •• Of • • 3.1 . -ar 741 No/ILL. Lao /Lin IL f .. Conooned GUM' /. le• Eli' tared J.• IL /CI Id; Laval.' IL Lad Vetelvt LL15L1....1...., IL mak, VT. ladesta..y... • , Trtason Mute* • Co; .u.lyrt DE, and ir , or sbereto • Bawls of LlOll V, 1143 ~... . .2 reasLlT LICI•L AL1..5L,11 43 -. , ." Centatates of lnatlngelLLlL.. - ..... , , , mann Debi /leering , Wert. C. R Netts . 3-5413 1900 Tractional Carmel'sliat.lea Mot/ Carttileota• 9.104 0-0 al ' '• 407 1111..50 EMI ME:=l = MEM 41117.1110,•••• !tom Ed= =ED =Salt THY RECOHITHII6TION. LAWS AND TIM BUYBEHE caner. It is learned • that, the gussflon of the constitutionality of the Recouaruction Laws will soon be brought before the - United Ststoi boprenie Court. in snobs, shape oh to secure a..direca decision on the subjec.t. In the, eorgla and' lassie:, slept cases, brought up lest spring, the matter assumed such a purely, politigsl aspect that the Court desdded it had no Jurisdiction. It is understood now, that a teat case, arising nude the regular ad ministration of tho.recoruaniction laws in the South, and coming through the - Courts in the regular way, or soon roach the Supreme Court of the United States. Those Whopestend to legovr, nay that the Court will decide all the recon struction laws .of Congress uneonatitn-: tsonol. t The Court will eland Me to three. k Special to the New . York Telegram says: -n have the :best' authority for atati rig that hi the - cases brought'..be:are theatnited States Supreme Ociutt last a Georgia. for testing the constitutionality of t h e recemstraction ecte.,the diciaien of theme jotity ,of the Court will- be ad verse thereto. Itis likely the Minority of the Court will be smeller than win at first summed, and therein* even hints that ChiefJostice Chase may net care to placompon record a dimentlng do !opinion. Snohi decision will strike .ka at blow all the reconstruotion work thus for done, and lesve the :decision of the' next Presidential !contest in the hands f the liorth." • . . .tisrotmcoNclgal/A4 TAPPB•tqf..,: , General 'toward, Commissioner of the Freedmen's Bureau, hes received a te, peat from Storm Brig. Gen. T..,T.' Sew, eU, acting Araistant, Inapector.,General, dated Holly Bohm', Miss.' Dee. 'MM. and giving a !statement of e' tour of inspection throughtlintliCarolinsGeor gia and 11 .Wlth.regard to Georgia; Oen. Sewell statist tradienrwere generally in ahatielactory condition. , In the upper, comities, tbe freedman are. doing welt. But rep - rte lroni the loiter counties, 'in the . southern 1' part !of the State, -'•indicate there is some lawlessness among them, remaking from the 'unsettled condition of a((= airs the -.Planters . "being'! unable to pay their?inds., This produnee dis content; and no doubtln many instances freedmentavosougbtai remedy for the suppposed this has tewvmalligiAt"t?ti * rits. o v t i el edet' sa b d General ce ell - shad ierir g neo of no Wert. onsoutbres w k. - "erheecomplaints swithat negroca plunder; and in Some Pas cm seise crops for their, wages. *. 'General tests was to leave Atlatatiritwthat part of the State on the- Seth ult.,. t& person- ally investigate complaints stutissugur. ate measure. to prevent a recurrence,: , Gen. Sewell has halals interview with. Gen. Ord in reliant to, makers in ILO; slain* as, also with Mittens am parsons d ifferent parts of the State. lie ex. presses 60030 difference of opinion with -Gen. Ord es to Mere being mach mum fur apprehension of serious trouble there. and States that there areminry letters and papers from different parts ,of the' State office purporting to give the, COl2- dittm of Ohms as they exist,: but, them are merely 'statements of what they_ fear may takeplace and persona sp: peals for aid from indigent tehltespeo. , pie; also 'petitions from_ planters and factory men for his interference to pro. tees them, against the' frauds of each . .. , Coaside:side apprehent ion is manifest ed of negro inaurrectlon4 It la sald there ore organization■ for that purpose, -but Gen. Sewell had disoortesd no ovicinees of inch. Ho thinks that during. the winter there will be connidersible deal. lotion along the river cow , and aid rosn the government ey,bit required tail le p revent suffering. -na , 'antral Sewell woo Writes t at pros. not there Is I tale or no destitution In that, dusk% • and no ad was nestled, except to thophsts nod anyloing. • . . ThW.Stgoerintendent of Schools is pros. eeuting binwark vigoroualy s. rod with the moist practical result • • NOYINAT/0715 Tua,iaxarmqvt. The President tadaiseinto the lbllowlng actalnettonin . Benjamin ' Pontrunter, Jetramonaille, Indlinia; John - .Robertson, l'aatmseter, New Lisbon, Joseph Oclilhr, ?catmints:: Pam Sandell, Dakota:: Wm. O. Power;' readaneter, bonne Vernon, 10‘1114 Philip D.-Foulke, 'Navel °Mom New Orleens•. rillahs fteridi.: tom, Einrveyar or Ontrime: Qtilticr,.lllln. ode; Thames Indiana, /.3 . Resident at Venstnels, .been , armotated daring the recess; J'phn lii Jones; Paidon :Agent. Fort Gibson, cheroki,ivountriitiam, l . l : liatitlede, In dian, Receiver . - ir.Publiolfoheye at 111 Zilftr/LVIVe Thoratinixratio banquet waal.iteki. _tor di feastbaditai . er the Committee, annonnivalbit lettere had bort received frma the fellowluS . Rantle• meet , Bon. Geo. It' Pendletun,.HOo. John Qulsayddards, Hon. ' Au Bak moot" Um/. Odan Bower. Hoe. '4,94.-:Ft. , Br.mittia.ux-Gos'. Parker, of nor eon ot , •Preahlent Fierce ex•Prnatdont• , Buchanan. Frocretatt• hlkolloch, ' wanit,' of. Haar Admiral ~ Iteadl'ard: Col. Chu... G. Green: of B 4 * - : 7 ' , ton, Hail. Goo. W. Jones. of lowa, Hoz. no. A,'Grnaue, of 'Sow York,ll. , n. Jock )f• Sink - idol% Gutted- - States Analatant Attornoy thotnal, Hon. J: P. L POUND, Gov. '13.. F. Parry. South Carolina,,tllt, Got. t4'-‘ytnnur, of Connecticat, others - 'Follfsenng is the ono from Mr.-Pendia- r w e; Josianss 1, IfitlK--,11 D. . s ifoorr""i' WitAhinsnow, , ,,D; C—Mlf pear it regret that I cannot partici- . pato in,yotir celebration of the, Nth inst. It wilt ho un "dodo* of unusual inter- • • ' . set.. attempted Africantedion -of !' the ten ,southern States under "the false • 1. , pretenCe of reconstruction of the Union, the utter subversion of the Constitution , to accomplish this .extd, the profligacy' .. and corruptiov pervading many branches. of thef f public wirvicP., haver brought" , r proper results. The s reton ' against the revolutions:7 yiolanoe and licVateof the past few years has at last oommeeced its proems* and: Will Ws: aided by s worthy contemplation of the- - lifo and character of Jackson, of his lifs ni trny : ocofuraght. persi e. _of tent i, : with:which he maintadedthe rights and. dign ts!, sod equality of the States, at the' same thee that he enforced obedience to -. „,' the Constitution. it will be well to re- Member by whorl.' when: end tor what purl** the hist battle of the war of ) was relight, andelde by side' with that ; recollection to niece the fact- that the' '- Stab:4ton' saved from a foreign _foe is- now govenced by a military power, in Order compel its Foyle to adopt a:' Constitution which they 'do not apProce, and ,f,ifetabl setticW; - they - abhor.- The retrospect , will woke sympathies and awaken mu- in the midst of frldith we may_;; hope ,that detred.pok, , bitterness and yongeance melfaway, and thatkind; ' ems:Maxi will and letudity, *lll cement the tieion by , ike, UPI: L: 4 4 OI O M*. : /4 10 1 contentraeti, widen alone :can:-': effectriarly conantute us one people.' VerribisPetraffilly,.. , GE?. 8. PIADUrMt!- Lh374.realdent rieree's lettst sollitrarade .s -o Moment condithim Of the countrywlttt t when Jackson was Preeidenr,'and' - Purtidtdarly . Tennessee, which le Ituntillri ,eted tinder, the reign- of absoluistsm. oPee,the day is not remote When the fl - UnirOitihall be In factradored,eiteltilltatei.,', amoditurtbrth as the e.t.a:mai 'of *viol otherliitate, with dignity, equality a.W , • rightli unimpaired, • and thlMnralte".olP.' i .*rirmsnarked and. cheering •frulleatteruPf • thatlimfiefiPlealn riling in lbt tO ,, aeuyor * ltelF country front 'COI2fACIE • • TW1)111. introduced din the Sonde day by Mr. , Shemin nravideslor the ,conforming in weight and value of coin- - .2644 lb° , United Stelae to the Trench:, adopted by the Monetary chtresid EMs* rod, ntly held at Pert . :' The otheset ..go of. sliver dollars and five- andibeee cpnt pieces to'be dfloontinuott.• ' ThO' d I. .the iu at'illP; be - In , staled .' oitso Groat Sritain conforms; the pound. sterling to the satne'cif - the flys dollar, - .7 tho Tenicein. - Brithdr formileradeo . to be stated. The act is to, fake efface Santa,l669,.but" edit Maybe ri. oeioodAli tbklllat feu: re-coins/scat audio::. after'gd Ist CiOctobernrakt. El 0 • - AFFMNS, IN TENNESSIt. , kt Mr4iioneT latiscvast ;Tr HI P. a I s li t s a e . 11 rt P; Usher% Pon Alga tb.4.14:4."' Sesi—The fiber*" theal;' ilsttahPrloder'slow • ^ 4J. .• • - " - Ifirhirats, notoil= Mtn arrested - ' 7, ; t eotratioi pliu4s*.Cceadrygoodsatoreftid.oxarreti,' ed aijaiL On entering the. cell br die= envnuiti irprisoner,namid YoCae- In tumid asleep: 'and annulled , satlyetrangllng him McCarthy 'lran -, , :yr.- -- . sled ?with 'pain, assaulted bin, I. tutd.betare .the guards Assad . latartattr,ttr!' ,goupd Buena' oyes out . of &heti eaehetsk, - ,,t it tet-rible affair occurred at Itlyereb. Went TVI2I3IMO• on Tneiday. ehri Feritintanattempad toe/relit an old mats .s-t nos.o4.Danean, w the erect. - Daman,;' 'drew a pistol' and fired, stioatlng ofirthe.:',.., • tagertfrethumb. Parktnhm`ason.stand: - . inn Afar; And a platal,lnlltag,Duicasti:! i whose,. son condeng up at this blatnallt, youngParkftuanitunantl}.` Seeing:hien:on 'Lida, the *heeler drew , plia,ht - ;and shot young ,Dunean through the be*t. The moat Intense egaltetnent .'. Ibllawied, bat at last amounts nothing had been done, though owing to - tlitiexteniten relations of .both parks trOuttl,e Li apprehended. , .9.52 Ito ,4 1.157 .0 to in irtt 114 44 LSI IN 71111 In 0 la 4 EA IS . li tr . al TB ABKEBBSIIBGMUaPEEB. i;, Arrest—of the ?Murderer. He a Pull Confession: ;Cs;. r . W . rist,rtio. Neer Virgil/In, Jen: but yeaitwo mast horrible murdini - were .oOkomitted rericirs-: bait; .)Vest Vixsints, and • few months " ag4j , ib. rethesis ora inpictered' 6uid In a oulbert leer the clty-, arramarsourderer.lt wasaseertaleed,onie . herakan Parkersburg. Qn Monday nigh bu r 4 German named Joh,: Ekbafer, ;•. olee beldattempbtotake the life ofa me sprat:able citizen •of :Parkersburg', wan frustrated in his designs, and placed underurreet. remarkable' simllbrity . whlchexisted In the deo:lmbue:et' ten lea these torte; e murders caused the citizens to - suspect, Schafer of being gnilty.of the commissien of them and a large :;.crowd: surrounded: the threatened to lynch him this afternoon., Schafer made a fall et:adhesion to _a . " ; j Cacho*" in the presence of sever , ' I acknowledging his grnit of; j , all the Murders mentioned above. , • 4 eiegnlu . case to : b s e t r t l' e al p~e Court-of lt Alt r at; the . . year 1 8 10 women named:: , :M in alta°, *messed an . I 'lmeg 'of Saute - Roan,' by which - it Was belle Val Mae' wrought wonderftd MM. :-Takinu advanterm of Qui supentl;„, .;? , non of the people , - she in short time ,,.. I" by means .of the Image, :gabled-a largo fortune., The Archbishop of ibuntago,Q,: , herring of the. circumstance, became lesions of dapple:anion set opt° what, so dottbt., he'-considered the ,exclutiwk rigt& of. the • Church. , end Ordettd,tba, Image, together with all the property apt., en Mated by the woman: to be taIMV WI handed over to the Church, was done. A. daughter of the woman Tema bas recently claimed the property COlakkated. from her mother. The de..[ I; mend having beennefused by theft:clad nand court, has been hrought before, theiiMpreme court.' . . . 44ohn Welnieed'writed to the Beetle .r. throe:ended dentiter, egegesting spun •, bY Whirls be thinks_ all passengers eon' "l i • extricate themselves wherarrerandhead, car npasts. His _plan le thin .Let.the roar be loose and Unattested to Oa skis!! .tf* car lei- fate:dap whstrbrar, I t butdecured in its place on the top atthe' cur by means of a groove &lengths to p s mid end of the sides of cap say„two"; col three inches deep; let! the not made in divisions, say dye on vtleiri fat each at these divisioeslettherte , , , t be, Iran Sang or tenon tottiordlYintol • the groove. The roof would not be. the bona affected by the . Jolting or latatin of the OM but the.moment , thseit fell on Its aides Me roof would feltilsi "t",. on the ground and lone the psosengerg to Welk or'enrwl'ent es best they caul& It is the opinion of we .Tinilmned.lsL... 1. - Dinitingians T hat the. revolotions Deming° wilt end to an applimiten to ': - 0.1•111. Government •to 1* admitted:: aSeEtate of" the Onion: .Through. the-, mMe, channel' we" learn that the news . I: . freer the &anent West India Islimds IS' '- nothing hut . bed; iarthquekes..horri... amps and revolutions ,being the order J.,! of the day: '.Under there circumstance* ; Ilito-,thlitteements for,, admitting new T` , Stales to the, Union from that quartet do bot seem very.' apparent. In regard te tbe special IMO mentioned by our cor, vespondeot; the prospect of having - a 15e .;.;:.-. Dominyo within our own liming Is sued drably flatteringbo prochtdethe necwaity, ennexiow one fromshrew& ,•; 1 1- ' 4.,, The ' EitelistlpatUnaLareitsiing,oeitt, 3-, ple_thte about *neat their Adruiraie, who' I ordered two naval steamers to go from Lisbon to Gllnaltar toots aback of Wilbert return to Lisbon. I One of them extinded MO tuna of coll. and the Mbar' 1 : : : .444 -Ittne,in going- 'to Gitordter. wham .t thaeach took on board SOO tune ,When. they got back to Lisbon ona of them had 1. ' . 2 50 tuna leas. and the adverted nine lees or' gon board than when tbey_started, Wile the voyage eon them FASO i gal . which the - British Exchequer bee 4.A: Poughkeepsie paper says that five I t \ .34409 ligcl.,ll gentleman who Is in that place was a resident of a southern city, with an Income of Igo per day and tile • raleiraor of • large amount Ofproperty: te Moot his fortunes with the Southern fr. Undederacy,and resolved Ito die inthe, . last , . ditch. One day ' hug Week be was r' Weeping . out &deer and eh/sing t Welke for whatever he could i • kgltio health of the EMprion dfrlotie.` continues - to improve:. goes cot every day lbr a long driven walk, then Maweek jesties twice a at Weaselly . , sift: the of her , time hs devoted to tn4 l "Sad!Palainfly for which the dlr. 4., puts • mat aptitude. . , ;; is , • western ex-soldier ' ruder •-• waiter,to walk, seventy-Ave tiles' in . r j, . tvrfracy-kiox hours, carrying a. Musket,. kr.aq,nack and other icaxttmeniente. - The feC ts. to be: perforated - at: the Drotter.l,' Park; Chicagoond the wager to be SEW.. ~!,Ifteporte 'fortislAltrestel ,dasertbe the .1 OW , fr.lehtint ,etreering,.smour the i;. Amos. , .Thecholera has already alerted . eff. 52,006 of 'them,' and now ihoy threstened.wittr a terrible APPP4loll,edusns4Pt9gillaa!Sfrkdpi,,liz; , MEM =EI