RATES OF ADVERTISING. YeUr iine23 or lees co astitute half a square. Ten lines or more than four, constitute a / uare. friusicomeday—....-4guis (Inc(O ' one day—.....50.6t "33 r doe woes, .r LOO sq. , One week- -- 1.26 one month.. 2.00 i 0 one kouth... • /Lob three mon th s. 3.00 If three month — a. 6.00 Biz months— . 4.00 ~ aix months.— 8.0 , ~, one year— . 5.00 11 one year...« 10.00 v• Moine.. notices inaerted in the LOOAL COMMIX- or for , = eines and dentin, PT'S evirs ran Lien for each i bt ' ou ti o o Ea Idfircharttagnii others advertising la theyasy l ib e ral tses IS will be offered. 117 r;le numberof insertions must bedesignatedon the drertisencent. . . v . &hom es and Deaths will be inserted at the same e teg a regaiar -.I ertisemeete, j3uuh, Ztatiotterv, &r. scHOOl. BOOKS.--School Directors, mo o rs, parents, Scholarsand others in want oil &heel Books, School Sraihrre4, WM fled eomplete issortment at B. M. POLLOCK & SON'S BOOR STORE, gmketSquare, Ilarrisburg, comprising in part the follow ng— _ pau&DRKS.---thictitiffere, Parker's, Cobb's. Angell's e psudric BOOKS.—Mefikaffey , s, Cobb's, Webster% Town% Combryls, KNOLLSH PritAMHA.RB.—Bullion's, Smith's, wood bedge'S, blenteith,s, Tuthill's, Hart's, Wells'. HISTORISS —Grimshaw's, Davenport's, Frost's, Wil• En o s , traisrd% Headrick's, Pinuock's, Holdinnith's and Wart's- ABSTMETlUM.—Hreenlears, Stoddard's, Emerson's, pike's, Rose's, Colburn"s, Smith and Buiruhs, DOW& ALOKBRAS.--GreenleaPs, Davis's, Dare, Ray's, Brideo- DICTION/MTS.—Walker's School, Cobb's, Walker, iforcester's Comprehensive, Worcester's Primary, Web. earls Primary, Webster's High School, Webster's Quarto, academe. HATIJRAL PHILOSOPHIES.—Comstock S s, Parker's, Swift's. The above with a great variety of others can at sny time be found at my store. Also, a complete assort ment of School Stationery, embracing in the win is a com plete outfit for school purposes. Any book not in the store. procured it One days notice. • Country%tee-halite sappUed at whOlesale rates. A usuaLkes —robe Baer and Bon's Almanac for sale ai it. M. POLLOCK SON'S BOOK STORE, Harrisburg. Irr Wholesale and Retail. mil -JUST RECEIVED • AT . SCHEFFER's BOOKSTORE, ADAMAN.7 . IIVE SLa TES ON VARIOUS SIZES AND PRICES, Which, for beauty and nee, cannot be excelled. REMEMBER THE PLACE, SCHREIER'S BOOKSTORE, NO. 18 MARKET STREET. mart B OOK AUCTION. BEN F. FRENCH Will supply his old friends and customers with the following Books at Auction prices : Pacific Railroad, 10 vole., complete, 4 illustrations g24_ Zama Blpodition, 8 vols., complete, illustrated and Illuminated, $l2. Emery's Expedition, 2 vols. , complete, illustrated illuminated, 510. Congressional Globe, 51.50 per volume. Waverly Novels, complete, 12 vole., cloth, $lO. IS CS " 27 vole., half calf,l34i All of the above Books I will deliver in Harrisburg free of charge. BEN P. FRENCH, 278 Pennsylvania Avenue, Washington, D. O. feb&dtf • N E W B 0 0 K. S 1 JUST REORITBD "UAL AND SAY," by the author of Wide, Wide World," Dollars and !Dents," &c. "HISTORY OF METHODISM," by A. Stevens, LL.D. For ease at SORRVFERs 2 BOoRSTORR, ape No.lB Marko st. JUST RECEIVED, A LARGE AND SPLENDID ASSORTMENT OF RICHLY GILT AND ORNAMENTAL WINDOW CURTAINS, PAPER BLINDS. TISSUE PAPER AND CUT FLY PAPER, At luxy24l WILMER'S BOOKSTORE. AN ALL PA..VER WALL PAPER 1 inet received, our Spring Stock of WALL PAPER, BORDERS, FiRE SCREENS, &c., &c. lt ht the largest and best selected assortment in the city, rangiug in price from Ms (6) cents up to one dollar and a quarter ($1.25.) As we purchase very low for cash, we are prepared to sell at as low rates, if not lower, than can be had else where. if purchasers will call and swami, we feel confident that we can please them in respect to price and quality. B. ei POLLOCK & SON, aP3 Below Jones' House, Market Square. T ETTE a, CAP, NOTE PAPERS, 1i Pena, Iloldere, Pencils ; Envelopes, Sealing Wax, of the beat quality, at low prices, direct from the manna factories, at mar/50 BOREFFER'S MIEJLP BOOKSTORE LAW BOOKS ! LAW BOOKS ! I-A general assortment of LAW BOOKS, all the State Reports and Standard Elementary Works, with many of the old English Reports, scarce and rare, together with a large assortment of second-hand Law Books, at very low prices, at this one rite Bookstore of E. M. POLLOCK k SON, ins Market Square, Harrisburg. Miscellaneous. AN ARRIVAL OF NEW GOODS APPROPRIATE TO TILE SEASON! SILK LINEN PAPER NANBI FANS!! FANS::: ASOTHER AND SPLENDID LOT OF SPLICED FISHING RODS! Trout Plies, Gut and Hair Snoods, Grass Lines, Silk and Hair Plaited Lines, and a general assortment of T ACHLE! s 0.1131A1. ?AMITY OP WALKING CANES! Which we will sell as cheap as the cheapest! Silver Head Loaded Sword Hickory Fancy Canes! Hanes! Cones! Canes! Canes! HELLER'S DRUG AND FANCY STORE, NO. 91 MARICKT 811166 T, South aide, one door east of Fourth street je9 11 J. HARRIS, B WORKER IN TIN, SHEET IRON, AND METALLIC ROOFING, Second Street, below Chestnut, HARRISBURG-, PA. le prepamd to fill orders for any article in his branch of Dualisms; and if not on hand, ke will make to order on abort notice. METALLIC ROOFING, of Tin cr Clai►anised Iron, constantly on bawl. Alan, Tin and Sneet-Tron Ware, Spouting, &c. Se hopes, by strict attention to the wantevf Ilia enato mere, to merit and receive a generous than of public pat. renege• 11:k• Bvery promise strictly fulfilled. B. J. HARRIS, jan7-dlyl Second Street, below Chestnut F - 181111 FISIIIII MACKEREL, (Nos. I, 2 and 3.) SALMON, (very superior.) MAD, (Nees and very Eno.) HERRING, (extra large.) (SOD PIBIt 314IOKED HERRING, (extra Digby.) NOTCH HERRING- SARDINES AND ANCHOVIES. Of the above we 11.8.0 Mackerel in whole. half. quarter and eighth bble herring in whole and half bble. The entire lot new—DianoT Paola THE FISHICRIBS, and win null them at the lowest market rates. sepl-1 Wit. DOOR, Jn., & 00. FAAL', it .B 1 I3L ES, from 1* to $lO, . tr wn g and handsomely bound s printed on good paper s with elegant clear new type, sold at mahal so it nee ISIVR Cheap Ronk t CRANBERRIES !!!--A. SPLENDID LOT just received by octlO FFUR,a superior and cheap TAtilit or SALAD OIL go to KELLER'S DRUG STORE. THE Fruit Growers' Handbook—by W AKlN[}—wholesale and retail at MARI 80 II P WEI Bneketere. SPERM CANDLES.--A large supply ft , lust reeetved by aeplB & CO. VELUM'S DRUG STORE ie the place 11 to nut the beat amortment of Porte Monnalm. WM. DOCK, JR., & CO :DOCK ..9:: --- • _ ,ArF.:-* -- _ - _ - 0 - '-'.2__ •.: - - - -'*,--i:- . -- ' \ --,---• --- w - • . /1,- - . ---- ~,!--___ L -- , - -=" V.:-,-„: - •:" — . N - - , ,, ,. -.._. !. .,, ,,, ~, ,,- -7 .., • ry ',,,"' .---::•_"!,, IL:, -. 771 I . F,tr , l'! - 1,:." - ' • ; tilit4:"!:',L..: - !. . •-!", - • - ,- '.f.- ,:'"_,:-' ..._." .. , ::: 7 " - -I____..„ ''7. - - , ' : :.T . :_:', :. Z... :. '-- - :.72 - _, - LL1L. , !;, ' .: =14, • W 2,4 • i''KZ-i s! ' ',.:::"-. !. !, i• ,_!• :' :::";!, -"---------".- ' - '-•• 0!-:•3! ' .4...`".• --,-, ----. I. ''' '' : j , . - . • , , . . -,:-.-_, t , ! •L . • •.4 .. „ -, "- •,- I . - 1! 4 A " '• • ' - • i,:•••• • • Union • ~,, ~._,,,.,,,,...„ ~...,_.___• _ ...____.__Tc,r777.--c,-----_ •__ --.• VOL. 3. {goal. TO THE PUBLIC! JQIIN TILL'S CoAL YARD, SOUTH SECOND STREET, BELOW PRATT'S ROLLING MILL, HARRISBURG, PA., Where he has constantly on band LIKENS VALLEY BROKEN, EGG, STOVE AND NIIT COAL ALSO, WILKESBARRE STEAMBOAT, BROKEN, STOVE AND NUT COAL, ALL OF THE BEST QUALITY It will be delivered to eansamera &aim, and full weight warranted. 117" CONSUMERS GIVE ME A CALL FOR YOUR WINTER SUPPLY. ily Orders left at my house, in Walnut street, near Fifth; or at Brubaker's, North street; 3. L. Speer; Market Square; Wm. Bostick's, corner of Second and South streets, and John Lingle's, Second and Mulberry streets, will receive prompt attention. jyl3-dBns avail 'TILL. COAL! COAL!! ONLY YARD IN TOWN THAT DELIVERS COAL BY Tll.ll PATENT WEIGH CARTS! NOW IS THE TIME for every family to get in their supply of Coal for the winter—weighed at their door by the Patent Weigh Carts. The accuracy of these Carts no one disputes, and they never get out of order, ae is frequently the ease of the Platform agates; besides, the consumer has the satisfaction of proving the weight of his Coal at his own house. I have a large supply of Coal on hand, co•-:. - ='ng of S. M. CO.'S LYBENS VALLEY COAL all sizes, LYHENS VALLEY d o 44 it WILICESBARRB do. • BITUMINOUS BROAD TOP - do. All Coal of the beat quality mined, and delivered free from all Impurities, at the lowest rates, by the boat or car load, single, half or third of tons, and by the bushel. JAMES M. WHEELER. Harrisburg, September 2 0 1. 2860.--sep2s U TOW N ! PATENT WEIGH CARTS For the convenience of my numerous uptown custom ere, I have established, in connection w.th my old yard, a Branch Coal Yard opposite North Street, in a line with the Pennsylvania canal, having the Once formerly occu pied by Mr. it. Harris. where consumers or Coal in that vicinity and Verbeketown can receive their Coal by the PATENT WEIGH CARTS, WITHOUT EXTRA CHARGE FOR HAULING, And in any quantity they may desire, as low as can be purchased anywhere. FIFE THOUSAND TONS COAL ON HAND, Or LYKENS VALLEY and WILICESBARRE, all sizes. iEr Willing to maintain fair prices, but unwilling to be undersold by any parties. Err All Coal forked up and delivered clean and free from all Impurities, and the best article mined. Orders received at either Yard will be promptly ailed, 'lams tons, and by the bushel. JAMES M. WHEELER. Harrisburg, October 13,186.1.—0ct1b ITKENS VALLEY NUT COAL POP Sale AM TWO DOLLARS PER TOE. irr All Coal delivered by PATENT WEIGHCARTS JAMES WHEEL Kft gr. Coaldeliverod from both yards. .no/7 ,helical. HELMBOLIA4 HELMBOLIPS HELMBOL))'S .11 LMBOLD'S ELMBOLDYS HELM BOLD'S H ELM 134 oLD'S HELM BOLD'S HELMBOLDYS HELMBOLD'S KELMBOLD 9 S II EL MBOLD's Extract Bnchn, Extract Bach% Extra tt Eucbtt, Extract Berlin, Extriut Bustin, Extract ourbiz, Extract Dicta', Extract Buctas, Ext act Socha, Extract Rocha, Extract Buc - itt, Extract Bunn, Extract Raclin. Extract ' FOR SECRET AND DELICATE .1 , ISORDE.RS FOR SECRET AND DELICATE DISORDERS FOee SECRET AND D PLICATE DISORDERS FUR SECRET AND DELICATE DISORoERS FOR SECRET AND D S LD'AT E . DISORDERS FOR SECRET A%.1) DELICATE DISORDERS MR SECRET AND DELICATE DISORDERS A Positive and Specific Remedy. A PesitTe and 14 Petitie Eirnefir. A Positive and Spec Be medV• A Positive and Specific Remaly, A Positive and Remedy. A Posi lye and Sr- vfle Remedy. A Positive and Bperific Remedy. FOR DISKAMBv@ THE BLADDER, GRAVEL : KIDN EYS, DROPSY, BLADDER, GRAVEL, EIDN EYS, DROPSY, BLADDER, GRAVEL, KIDNEYS, DROPSY, BLADDER, GRAVEL, KIDNEYS, DROPSY, BLADDER, GRAVEL, KIDNIiYS, BLADDER, GRA vex., KIDNEYS, DROPSY. BLADDER, GRAVEL, KIDNEYS, DROPSY. OMANI.) W ORGANIC WE ..IfN.i 4 B, ORGANIC W EAKNI.I9S, ORGANIC WEAe NESS, ORGAN C WS:A[OWe, ORGABIO WeAhNS:IIB, And all Diseases of be:, wit Organg, And ail Diseases of Sexual r••rgans, And all Diseases of Sexual o,gans, And all Diseases of Sezwz l 0 '4' 043 1 And all Diseases col 3112.9011 Organs, Ati4 all Disi-asrs of Sezital O rgans) Exemises,Expoiures, awl Impruiencies in Lire. Excesses, Exposures, and Isnerndenews in Life. Excesses, Exposure•, and imprudences in Life. EXCeP3eS, Ext oi urea, and Innnudeneira in Life. Exc.ases, Exposures, and Imp udencies in Lire. Excesses, Exposure", and Impru•ieneiee in Lift. Prom whatever aiiso orfalmiting s ; roiwhether 4.xistiog in MALE OR FR II ALE Nemolea, take no more Pala! They are of no avail for Complaints incicl.ot to , he Rex. Use i. X rRACT BUCHII Helmho Extract tinchn is a Medicine which is per fectly pleasant in its TASTE AND ODOR, Bat immediate in its acti^n. Kiving Health and Vigor to the Frame, Bloom to the Pallid Coeek, and restoring the patient to a pen n t stst. of lIVAL PR AND PURITY. Mambold's Fatract Bue,,ti is prepared according to pharmsea and Chemiataband in pr.! Tined and nand by THE MOST EMI ENT PHYSICIANS Delay no longer. procure tie remedy at once. Price $1 p-r or ix, for Si. D...pot 104 Sontu Tenth atm. et. Philadelphia. BEWARE OF lINPRINOIPLED DEALERS Trying to palm off thrir own or other &amine Of RUCH(' on the repuia ion actaiood by RELNItIM.D , i EXTRACT RUCH]; The Othrinel only Cknuine. We desire io run on th. MERIT OP OUR ARTICLE Thair'sia w..rthlvaq gyld A t woo ma rates and com missions); conaequently pßvlig a much britttr profit. W. DEFY CO vtPIaITION: Ask for BELIKBOLDI3 EXTRACT =CHM Take ao o , h4T. &Id by JOHN WYETH, Druggist, corner of Market and Second streets, Harrtnintrg. AND Ar.L DICVDCrISTS EVERYWHERE. nol4 deorain. EXTRACTS! EXTRACTS!! WOODSWORTH & BIINNRL'S SUPERIOR FLAVORING EXTRACTS OF BITTER ALMOND, NECTARINE DIME APPLM, BTRAWMIRRY, BOSS , LEON orb Vik ILLA, inn received and for sale by foie W3ll. !LOOS. 7i., /COO. Eljt Vstrut & anion. To Me Senate and Ilouee of Representatives: At the opening of your present session I called your attention to the dancers which threatened the existence of the Union. I ex pressed my opinion freely Jolt:en:king the orig. final causes of these dangers, and recommended such measures as I believed would have the effect of tranquilizing the country and saving it from the peril in which it had been need lessly and most unfortunately involved. Those opinions and recommendations I do not propose now to repeat. My .own convictions upon the whole sulject remain unchanged. The fact that a grez.t calamity was impending over the nation wan even at that time aeknolvintlged by every intelligent citizen. It had already made itself telt throughout the length and breadth of the land. The necessary consequences of the alarm thus produced were most deplorable. The Iw. ports, fell ofT with a rapidity never known be ft,re, except. in time of war, in the history of our foreign commerce. The treasury was un expectedly left without the means which it had reasonably counted upon to meet its public en gagements, tea le was paralyzed, manufactures were stopped, the best public securities sud denly sunk in the market., every species of pro perty depreciated more or less, and thousands of poor men, who depended on their daily la ocir for their daily bread, were turned out of employment. I deeply regret that lam not able to give you any information upon the stale of the Union which is more satisfactory than what. I was then obliged to communicate. On the contrary. matters are still worse at the pre sent time than they were. When Congress met a !Along hope pervaded the whole public mind that some amicable adjustment of the subject would be speedily made by the repre sentatives of the States and of the people, which might restore peace between the con flicting sections of the country. That hope has been diminished by every hour of delay, antias the prospect of a blood less settlement lades away, the public distress becomes more and more aggravated. As an evi dence of this, it is only necessary to say that the Ti ea-ury notes authorized by the act of the 17th of December last, were advertised, accord tog to law, and that no respon,ible bidder offered to take any considerable sum at par, at a lower rate of interest than 12 per cent. From these facts it appears that in a. government organized like ours, domestic strife, or even a well-grounded fear of civil hostilities, is more destructive to our public and private interests than the most formidable foreign war. In my annual message I espreaced the con viction which I have long deliberately held, and which recent reflection has only tended to deepen and confirm, that no State has the right, by its own act, to secede from. the tr-iAti or throw off its Federal ohli.atitins at .icatsure. t right existed, and should be exercised by any State of the Confederacy, the Executive Depart ment of this Government had no authority under the Constitutipn to recognize its validity by acknowledging the independence of such State. This left me no alternative, as the Chief-Execu tive officer, under the Constitution of the United States, but to collect the public revenue and protect the public property, as far as this might be priteieahle under the existing laws. This is still my purpose. My province is to execute, not to make, the laws. It belongs to Congress exclusively to repeal, modify, or enlarge their provisions to meet exigencies as they occur. I possess no dispensing power. I Certainly had no right to make an aggressive war upon any State, and I am perfectly satisfied that the Constitution has wisely withheld that power even from Congress. MELMBOLD'S lIELMBOLD'S But the right. and the duty to use the military force defensively against those who resist the Federal officers in the execution of their legal functions, and against those who assail the pro perty of the Federal Government, is clear and undeniable. But the dangerous and hostile at titude of States towards each other has already far transcended and cast into the shade the ordinary Executive duties already provided for by law, and has assumed such vast and alarm ing proportions as to place the subject entirely above and beyond the Executive control. The fact cannot be disguised that we are in the midst of a great revolution. In all its various bearings, therefore, I commend the question to Congress, as the only human tribunal under Providence possessing the power to meet the existing emergency. To them exclusively be longs the power to declare war or authorize the employment of the military force in all cases contemplated by the Constitution, and they alone possess the power to remove the grievances which might lead to war, and to secure peace and union to this distracted coun try. On them, and on them alone, rests the responsibility. The Union is a sacred trust left by ourrevo lutionary fathers to their descendants, and never did any other people inherit so rich a legacy. It has rendered us prosperous in pone and triumphant in war. The national flag has floated with glory over every sea. Under its shadow American citizens have found protec tion and respect in all lands beneath the sun. If we descend to considerations of purely material interest, when, in the history of all time, has a confederacy been bound together with such strong ties of mutual interest?— Each portion of it is dependent on all, and all upon eaoh portion, for prosperity and domestic security. A free trade throughout the whole supplies the wants of one portion from the productions of another; and scatters wealth everywhere. The great planting and farming States require, and commercial navigating States send their productions to domestic and foreign markets, and furnish a naval power to render their transportation secure against all hostile atraeks. Should the Union perish in the midst of the present excitement, We have already had a sad foretaste of the universal suffering which would result from its destruc tion. The calamity would be severe in every portion of the Union, and would . be quite as peat, to say the least, in the Southern as in the Northern States. The greatest aggravation of the evil, and that which would place us in a most unfavorable li g ht, both before the world and posterity, is, as I am firmly convinced, that the secession movement has been chiefly based upon a mis apprehension at the South of the sentiments of 'the majority in several of the Northern States. Let the question be transferred from po Weal assemblies 'to the ballot-box, and the people themselves would speedily redress the serious grievances which the South have suffered. But, in Heaven's name, let the trial be made before we plunge into an armed conflict upon the mere assumption that there is no other al ternative. Time is a great conservative power. Lei us pantie at this momentous moment, and' afford the people of both the North and'Bouth an 0- HARK ISA) H,G. PA., FRIDAY, JANUARY 11, 1861. FRIDAY MORNING, JAN. 11, 1861 THE NATIONAL CRISIS. PRESIDEN7"2 MESSAGE. portunity for reflection. Would that South Carolina had been convinced of this truth be fore her percipitated anion. I therefore appeal, through you, to the people of the country, to declare in their might that "THE Union MOST AND SHALL BE PIIESEBVED" by all constitutional means. I most earnestly recommend that you devote yourselves exclusively to the question how this can be accomplished in peace. All other ques tions, when compared with this, sink into in sightfieance. The present is no time for pal liation. Action, prompt action, is required.— A delay in Congress to prescribe and recom mend a distinct and practical proposition for conciliation, may drive us to a point from which it will be almost impossible to recede. A common ground on which conciliation and harmony may be produced is surely not unat tainable. The proposition to compromise by letting the Narth have esclusive control of the territory above a certain line, and giving Southern insti tutions protection below that line, ought to receive universal approbation. In itself, in deed, it may not be entirely satisfactory; but when the alternative is between a reasonable concession on both sides, and the destruction of the Union, it is an imputation on the patri otism of Congress to assert that its members will hesitate for a moment. Even now the danger is upon us. In several States which have not seceded, the forts, arse nals and magazines of the United States have been seized. This is by far the most serious step which has been Wee siege the commence ment of the troubles. This public property has long been left without garrisons and troops for its protection, because no person doubted its security under the flag of the country in all the States of the Union. Besides, our small army hos scircely been sufficient to guard our remote frontiers against Indian incursions.— The seizure of this property, from all appear ances, has been purely aggressive, and not in resistance to any attempt to coerce a state or States to remain in the Union. At the beginning of these unhappy troubles, I determined that no act of mine should in crease the excitement in either section of the country. If the political conflict were to end in civil war, it was my determined purpose not to commence it, nor even to furnish an excuse for it by ,any act of this Government.. My opinion remains unchanged, that justice as well as sound policy requires us still to seek a peace ful solution of the questions at issue between the North and South. Entertaining this con viction, I refrained even from sending rein forcements to Major Anderson, who commanded the forts in Charleston harbor, until an absolute necessity for doings() should make itself appa rent, least it might unjustly be regarded as a menace of military coercion, and thus furnish, if not a provocation, at least a pretext for an outbreak on the part of South Carolina. No necessity for these reinforcements seemed to exist. I was assured by distinguished and upright gentlemen from South Carolina that no attack on Major Anderson was intended, but that, on the contrary, it.,.was the desire of the State authorities, as riiire as it was my own, to avoid the fataLcumwma n d heie 1 * deem Thlit:Parailattitar for your information copies of a uommun 4 cation dated the 28th of Decem ber, 1860, addressed to me by R. W. Barnwell, J. H. Adams and James L. Orr, Commissioners from South Carolina, with accompanying dorm ments, and copies of my answer thereto, dated the 81st of December. In further explanation of Major Anderson's removal from Fort Moultrie to Fort Sumpter, it is proper to state that after my answer to the South Carolina Commissioners, the War Department received a letter from that gallant officer, dated on the 27th of December, 1800, (the day after this movement,) from which the following is an extract "I will add, as my opinion, that many things convinced me that the authorities of the State designed to proceed to a hostile act.— [Evidently referring to the orders dated De cember 11th, of the late Secretary of War.]— Under this impression I could not hesitate that it was my solemn duly to move my command from a fort which we could not. possibly have held longer than forty-eight or sixty hours, to this one, where my power of resistance is in creased in a very great degree." It will be recollected that the concluding part of those orders were in the following terms: " The smallness of your force will not permit you, perhaps, to occupy more than one of the three forts ; but an attack on, or an attempt to take possession of either of them, will be re garded as an act of hostility, and you may then put your command into either of them which you may deem most proper to increase, its power of resistance. You are also authorized to take similar defensive stepsw- h enever you have tangible evidence of a design to proceed to a hostile act." It is said that serious apprehensions are to some extent entertained that the pence of this District may be disturbed before March next. In any event it will be my duty to prevent it, and this duty shall be performed. In Conclusion, it may be permitted to me to remark, that I have often warned my country men of the dangers which now surround us.— This may be the last time I shall refer to the subject officially. I feel that my duty has been faithfully, though imperfectly performed, and whatever the result may be, I shall carryto my grave the consciousness that I at least meant well for my country. (Signed) JAMES BUCHANAN WASHINGTON CITY, Jan. 8, 1861. TILE IMPENDING CRISIS Front the Albany Argue. We spoke of the encouragement offered by the official recommendations of the incoming and outgoing Governors of Pennsylvania, and by other evidences of a growing conciliatory spirit. These signs, however, are r.ot general enough to afford a well grounded hope that loy alty to the Constitution at the South is to be restored by the example of returning fidelity to it, at the North. The retreating Governor of Michigan sends a Partition arrow back, poisoned with sectional hate. His successor in the same State upholds the unconstitutional Liberty bills in the Mee of judicial condemnation, and we may add, public reprobation and civil war. Worse still, the newly installed Governor of Massachusetts, a lawyer of low type and a brutal fanatic, proposes to maintain the con demned statutes of that State, and to force upon the South by arms, an allegiance to the Con stitution thus violated. How do threats of " coercion" sound from the lips of a demagogue who proclaimed that "John Brown was right."—John Brown who, going into Virginia, murdered the mayor of one of its cities, robbed the family of Washington, and imprisoned its members and others, and emancipated one slave, by liberating his soul from his body because he refused to, join the predatory and murderous gang—and who, after sacrificing the lives of his followers, expiated his crimes with his own. When his instigators and upholders talk of "coercion," while per sisting in treason, they only prove that the gallows on which he suffered was erected too far from their homes to be a sufficient lesson These miserable threats are made in the face of the fact that even such moderate men as the Governor of MissoUri, (a Douglas man. elected against the Secessionists,) says that unte=s the guarantees of the Constitution are enforced for the North, his State will go off with the united South! Virginia is prsparing for a like result, and as our telegrams of to-day show, the crisis is precipitating itself with a terrible gravitation. Meantime, the Black Republicans, hoping lo arouse &Agar spirit in the North cry "No compromise," and proposes to adjourn Con gress sine They would adjourn the Union sine die, for the day would never dawn upon it again. • l'o. : OOMiII 0' :IR '.- • - A NEW FUGIT/YEaLat.T.E LAW. The Natiend e lntelliaeneer publishes the sev eral propositions adopted by the committee of thirty-three, appointed by the House of Repre sentatives to consider and report some plan Of adjusting the present sectional difficulties.— The resolutions of Mr. Davis, of Md.; Mr. Adams, of Mass.; Mr. Bristow, of Kentucky, and Mr. Dunn, of Indiana, included in the propositions adopted, have heretofore been published, and are, we presume, familiar to our readers. On the 7th instant the committee adopted the following fugitive slave bill, to be submitted to the consideration of Congress: Be it enacted, t tc., That every person arrested under the laws of Congress for the delivery up of fugitives from labor shall be produced be fore a court, judge, or comutiatieher, mentioned in the law approved the eighteenth of Sep tember, eighteen kindred and fifty, for the State or Territory wherein the arrest may be made; and upon such production of the per son, together with the proofs mentioned in the sixth or the tenth section of said act, such court, judge, or commissioner shall proceed to hear and consider the case publicly; and if such court, judge, or commissioner is of opin ion that the person arrested owes labor or ser vice to the claimant according to the laws of any other State, Territory, or the District of Columbia, and escape therefrom, the court, judge, or commissioner shall make out and deliver to the claimant, or his agent, a certi ficate stating those facts; and if the said fugi tive shall, upon the decision of the court, judge, or commissioner being made known to him, aver that he is free and does not owe ser vice or labor according to the law of the State or Territory to which he is to be returned, such averment shall be entered on the certifi cate, and the fugitive shall be delivered by the court, judge, or commissioner to the marshal, to be by him taken and delivered to the mar shal of the United States for the State or dis trict from which the fugitive is ascertained to have fled, who shall produce said fugitive be fore one Of the judges of the circuit court of the United States for the last-mentioned State or district, whose duty it shall be, if said alleged fugitive shall persist in his averment., forthwith, or at the next term of the circuit court., to cause a jury to be empanneled and sworn to try the issue whether such fugitive owe labor or service to the person by or on keiatiWt --- tro-I, l tteealeterrekreeledened. and _ &Aram on which trial the fugitive shall be entitled to the aid of counsel and to process for procuring evidence at the coat of the United States; and upon such finding the judge shall render judg ment and cause said fugitive to be delivered to the claimant, or returned to the place where be was arrested, at the expense of the United States, according to the finding of the jury; and if the judge or court be not satisfied with the verdict, he may cause another jury to be empanneled forthwith in like manner, whose verdict shall be final. And it shall be the duty of said marshal so delivering said alleged fugitive to take from the marshal of the State from which said fugitive is alleged to have escaped a certificate, acknowledging that said alleged fugitive had been delivered to him, giving a minute description of said alleged fugitive, which certificate shall be authentica ted by the United States district judge, or a eemmissioner of a United States court for said State from which said fugitive was alleged to have escaped, which certificate shall be filed in the offiee of the Clerk of the United States District Court for the State or district.ip which said alleged fugitive was seized, within sixty days from the date of the arrest of said fugitive; and should said marshal fail to comply with the provisions of this act, he shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and shall be punished by a fine of one thousand dollars and impris onment for six menthe, and until his said fine is paid. Sec. 2, And be it further enacted, That no cit izen of any State shall be compelled to aid the marshal or owner of any fugitive in the capture or detention of such fugitive, unless where force is employed or reasonably appre hended to prevent such capture or detention too powerful to be resisted by the marshal or owner; and the fees of the commissioners ap pointed under the act of eighteenth Septelnber, eighteen hundred and fifty, shall be ten dollars for every case of a fugitive from labor beard and determined by such commissioner. On the Bth inst. the committee held another meeting, when certain resolutions presented by Mr. Dunn, on the 27th ultimo, were called up for consideration, and after various amend ments had been proposed, the original reso lutions and amendments were referred to a committee consisting of Messrs. Dunn, Davis and Nelson, who it is understood, have agreed to report the following: 1. Resolved, That the faithful observance, on the part of all the States, of all their con stitutional obligations to each other and to the Federal government is essential to the peace of the country, 2. Resolved, That it is the duty of the Federal government to enforce the fetieril laws, protect the federal property and preserve the Union of the States. a, Resolved, That each State be requested to revise its statutes, and, if necessary, so to amend the same as to secure, wit bout legislation by Congress, to citizens of other States travel ing therein the same protection as citizens of such State enjoy; and also to protect the citi zens of other States traveling or sojourning therein against popular violence or legal sum mary pun i s h me nt, without trial in due form of law, for imputed crimes. 4. Resolved, That each State be also respect fully requested to enact such laws as will pre vent and punish any attempt whatever in such State to organize or set on foot the lawless in vasion of any other State or Territory. 6. Resolved, That the President be requested to transmit copies of the foregoing resolutions to the Governors of the several States, with a request that they be communicated to their re spective Legislatures. A MAGINANIMUUS dAMBLEIL—The Grand Duke of Baden—the keeper of one of the largest gambling establishments in Europe, in the Grand Duchy of that name—has, by ordinance of December 4, pardoned all the persons who were condemned for high treason and rebel lion, in 1848 and 1849, and authorizes such of them as are in foreign countries to , return home. BY O.BARRETT & CO. CIIY. DAILY DATP.IIIT can ljsion will be served to sub scribers residing in the Borough for six OMITS rex vrims rival)]e to the Carrier. Mail subscribers, POOR. DOL. LAFIB PILIt T uß waggsm will be publinhed se heretefere, weekly during the session of the Legislature, and once • week the remainder of the year, ;or giro dollars in ad. Vance, ar three dollars at the expiration of the year. Connected with this establishment is an extensive JOB OFF/CE, containing a variety of plain and Taney type, unequalled byany establishment in tho interior Of the State, for which the patrons& of the inane to 1110. united. NO. 111. PENN'A LEGISLATURE. The Senate was called to order at H o'clock, by the SPEAKER. Prayer by the Rev. Mr. Marts. The SPEAKER. said before the Senate the report of the Commissioners of the Sinking Fund, which was ordered to be printed in the Legislative Record. The Committee on Corporations reported a number of bills, as committed—among them the act to incorporate the Penn gas coal com pany, the Continental brush company, the Ame rican engravers' company, (with amendments,) an Rot in relation to saying funds, &c, On motion of Mr. SMITH, the bill appre printing $5,000 to furnishing and repairing the Executive Mansion was taken up. Mr. PENNEY moved to amend by making the KIM $2.600, and dispense with the repairs. Mr. lIIEST AND offered an amendment to the amendment, that $5OO additional be added for repairs. The amendment of Mr. lIIESTAND was lost. The amendment of Mr, PENDITI 19843 yeas 13, nays 17. The motion recurring on the original resolu tion, a committee from the House invited the Senators to a joint meeting, to open the returns of the late election for Governor, On the return of the Senators, the resolution appropriating $5,000 to re-furnish and repair the Executive Mansion, was again taken up and passed—yeas 20, nays 10, as follows; YEAS—Mema. Benson, Blood, Clymer, Connell, Craw• ford, Finney, Gregg, Hall, Hamilton, Imbrie, Landon, Wein ro, Mott, Nichols, Parke; Schindel, Smith, Welsh, 'Wharton and Palm'r, Speaker-20. Nary—MeSara. Bound, Fuller, Irish, Lawrence, Mere dith, Penney, Robinson, Serrell, Thompson and Yard ley-10. Mr. KETCHAM, an act relating to the Dela ware and Hudson canal company. Mr. SCHINDEL, a supplement to the act in corporating the Allentown railroad company. Mr. NICHOLS, an act in relation to the police of Philadelphia. Mr. PARKER, an act to incorporate the Lom bard and South Streets passenger railway com pany. Bill No. 1 on the file of the Senate, entitled "A joint resolution for the maintenance of the Union," was taken up. Mr. WHARTON moved to strike out all after the word "whereas," and substitute a series prepared by himself, which were read. Mr. WELSH moved to amend by substituting the following! "Resolved, That it is the, right and duty Of every citizen and public officer of this Com monwealth, to aid end assist in the execution of the Constitution of the United States, and the acts of Congress passed to carry its provi sions into offset ; that any act of Assembly which interrupts, impedes, limits, embarrasses, delays or postpones the exercise of such right and duty, is a plain and direct violation of the Constitution ; and that it is therefore expedient to repeal the 3d, 4th, 6th and 7th sections of the Act to Prevent Kidnapping, &e.,passed the atsfalvoNff i lac u sip t l u t he 95th an 96th see -81, 1860. r , Juu - v, - Passed March "Tnat tie - . . • section 2, clause 3, of the Constitution or MeV United States, which declares that 'no person held to service or labor in one State, under the laws thereof, escaping into another, shall, in consequence of any law or regulation therein, be discharged from such service or labor, but shall be delivered up on the claim of the party to whom such service or labor may be due,' is sacred, inviolable and binding upon the people of all the States, and that it is a positive viola tion of good faith for any State to enact or main tain any law which interferes with the rights of the master to reclaim his fugitive slave, or encourage in any manner, the citizen to aid in the escape of such fugitive, or embarrass in any way the officers of the law in executing process under the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850. ' , That the people of Pennsylvania are now, as they ever have been, true to the Constitution and the Union; that, in a spirit of justice and fraternity, they will exclude from their Court. ells any measures that are calculated to irritate. or inflame any portion of the confederacy; that they will exhaust all peaceable remedies to prevent the destruction of the common bond and common brotherhood ;' and that, clearing their record of all causes of complaint, no mat ter from what quarter they may come, they will stand unflinchingly by the Executive of the United States in all his efforts to maintain the Constitution and exact obedience to the laws. "That the people of Pennsylvania fully re cognize and acknowledge the equal rights of all the people of the several States in the com mon Territories of the Federal Union ; and that they earnestly pray that such amendment or amendments may be speedily made to the Con stitution of the United States as will permit the citizens of all the States equally to enjoy said Territories, without Molestation from any quar ter, and thus remove the question of slavery forever from the political arena." Mr. SMITH spoke in support of his resolu tions. Mr. IRISH asked leave to read or submit a resolution, which was granted. It was as fol lows : Resolved, That we will roll in the dirt until we bear the first tap of a Southern drum, whew we will bide under our beds, Mr. IRISH'S resolution was ruled out of °Mel% Mr. WHARTON addressed the Senate in favor of his amendments. The hour of one o'clock having arrived, the Senators repaired to the Hall of the House to elect a State Treasurer, in place of Eli Slifer, resigned. The Senators having returned to their Cham ber, Mr. SMITIi moved that when the Senate adjourns it adjourns to meet nt 3 o'clock, for the purpose of consiticiing hill No. 1; which was not agreed to—yeas 14, nays 14. Mr. HUSH moved an adjournment; which was agreed to—yeas 21, nays 8. lICIUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES The House was ealled to co drr at 11 o'clock a. m. by the SPEAKER. and prayer was of fered by Rev. Mr. Robinson. The SPEAKER laid before the House the report of the Commissioners of the Sinking Fund. Petitions and memorials were then received. Many of them were in favor of the repeal of certain portions of the 95th and 96th sections of the Kidnappers' law of the State. A resolution was offered referring that part of the State Treasurer's report relative to taxes on private bankers to a committee of five. The House refused to proceed to a eecondreading. Mr. ABBOTT offered a joint resolution in culcating Union sentiments. Laid over for one day. On motion of Mr. HILL. the House pro seeded to make nomin at ions for State Treasurer. Mr. BALL nominated Henry D. Moore, of Philadelphia. PUBLISHED EVERY PrIORNING, SUNDAYS EXCEPTED, SENATE THURSDAY, Jan. 10, 1861. BILLS IN PLACE. SMITH'S RESOLUTIONS THURSDA Y, January 10, 1861 ORIGINAL RESOLUTION. STATE TEEASIIREE