the attiot THURSDAY MORNING, JAN. 81, 1861. 0. BAERITT & THOMAS 0. MaaDOWELL. Pub llama and Proprietors. Oomonimicationewill not be pabliehed lathe PATRIOT •!D Milos unless accompanied with the name of the author. 8. M. YIETTENOII.I. & Co., Advertising Agents, 119 Nassau street, New York, end 10 State street, Boston, are the Agents for the PATRIOT ASO Moon, and the most influential and largest circu lating newspapers in the United States and Canada. They are authorized to contract for 'mat our lowest rates FOR SALE. Leeeond-hand ADAM Palms, platen SilX by Winches, in good order; can be worked either by hand or steam power. Terms moderate Inquire at this office. To Members of the Legislature. THE DAILY PATRIOT •ND UNION Will be furbished to Members of the Legislature during the session at the low price of ONE DOLLAR Members wishing extra Copies of the DAILY PATRIOT Ann Uszovr, can procure them by leaving their orders at the publication *Mee, Third street, or with our re porters in either Lipase, the evening previous Meeting of the Democratic State Executive Committee The Democratic State Executive Committee met in the Supreme Court Room yesterday af- ternoon Hon. William H. Welsh, Chairman, called the Committee to order. A select committee of seven was appointed to report a preamble and resolutions. After a brief rece.-8 the Committee made the following report; which was adopted unani mously WHEREAS. The dismemberment of the Union, by the withdrawal of the slave-holding Stares, now in rapid progress, has been occasioned by a departure Ir..m the Democratic construction of the Comfit w ion of the United States, which holds •the equality of th.. States of the Con federacy," in respect to persons and property, to be a fundamental principle of such Con-ti stitution, and by a contemplated abandonment of the conservative Democratic policy which has, for sixty years past, sacredly guarded "tbe rights of the States," and developed the resources and capacities of the people by Dem ocratic legislation; thus guiding the whole country to an eminence of prosperity and re nown: And whereas, A speedy recognition of the patriotic counsels anti conservative policy of the Democratic party in the Administration of the Federal Government, by the people of Pennsylvania and of the other non-alaveholding states, is the only and sure means of effecting a permanent re-construction of a dissolving Confederacy : And whereas, The organization of the Demo eratie party of. Pennsylvania, hitherto " the Heyatobe of the Federal Arch," now harmoni ous, potent and animated by a love of country, and of the true principles of the Constitution, is entirely competent, if called into immediate action, to restrain threatened sectional vio lence and to materially aid in reconstructing the federative system on a basis of perpetuity ; therefore, React/sal, That a Democratic State Conven tion, to consist of three delegates from each Senatorial and Representative district, three hundred and ninety-nine in all, be bed in the city of Harrisburg, on Thursday, the 21st day of February-next. at 3 o'clock, afternoon. Resolved, That the several districts are bere by earnestly invited to take, in the manner most laNaptlt and arm/table , _to Alimir..tarouttlgyi measures to insure a nu, tam an a e representstion. Resolved, That the Chairman of this Commit tee issue. immediately, a copy of these resolu tions to the Chairman of each County Commit tee, each absent member of this Committee, and such other Democrats as may be thus conveni ently and promptly reached; and that to aid in and facilitate this matter, each member of this Committee furnish the C hairman with the names and addresses of Democrats in his district. The Committee then adjourned. The Pennsylvania Railroad and the Ton. nage Tax. We commence, in this morning's issue of the Panticer AND UNION, the publication of a pamphlet which has been kindly furnished us, which may be aptly termed an argument in favor of the proposition soon to be submitted by the Pennsylvania railroad company to the Legialainre, on the subject of the Tonnage Tax. We deem this course on our part as both right and proper, in order that the public should be put in possession of all the facts in volved in the case, as welt as the arguments to support the position assumed by the parties interested. We are well aware that there ex ists a strong prejudice in certain localities in this Commonwealth against anything that looks to a repeal of the Tonnage Tax now imposed by law upon the Pennsylvania railroad; and we are equally well aware that there exists not a little ignorance in certain quarters on the real merits of this tax question. We purpose now, in the most dispassionate manner, to devote as much of our space as we conveniently can to what might be termed an exposition of our own position upon this ques tion of the Tonnage Tax. We were among the first of our citizens who exerted whatever influence we possessed in favor of a project to connect the Atlantic sea board with the Western waters by means of a continuous railroad from Philadelphia to Pitts burg, and to that end did everything in our power to forward the efforts of those intelligent and enteprising men who conceived the bold design of making such a connection. In due time the Pennsylvania railroad was chartered, and the great work commenced. In a much shorter period of time than the most sanguine Mends of this great improvement had ever contemplated, the waters of the Ohio were reached by the iron rail, and the wished for object was accomplished. We remember with what pride and exultation We watched the progress of this mighty work, as it steadily made its way westward. We re member, too, the wonder and amazement that inspired the hearts of those who, like ourselves, felt an interest in this great artery of trade and commerce, when, by the skill, perseverence and courage of the enlightened men who had charge of the work, the almost insurmountable obsta cle—the abrupt and precipitous elevation from Altoona to Galitzen—was overcome, and a successful passage was cleared through the very haaai of the Allegheny mountains, rand' the b e t res t natural barrier gave way before the power of scientific skill and man's indomitable wilL The success that has attended this enterprise nit() the presint writing has never ceased to interest us, and 'never will se long as , we are permitted to breathe this air of Pennsylvania, because the Pennsylvania railroad is, to every rimnseTaPitm, s,just source oflndividual pride. When the company was chartered, the Com monwealth was the owner of the Main Line of the public improvements, embracing the Phila delphia and Columbia railroad, the Penneylva nia canal from:Columbia to Hollidaysburg, the Allegheny Portage railroad, from Hollidays burg to Johnstown, and the canal from Johns town to Pittsburg. - In the location of the Pennsylvania railroad. it became the interest of the company to locate it so that it became a parallel line of improvement, and, consequently, apparently aformidable rival to the Main Line; and for that reason the pruvi,ion was inserted in the charter of the company, that a Tonnage Tax should bepaid, as an offset to the rivalry thus cre ated to the public improvements of the State. To this imposition, at that time, no objection was made, because there appeared to be much force in the reason that controlled the mind of the Legislature when it was inserted in the charter. But the people of the State soon became cla• moroue for a sale of the public improvements. and that clamor was only silenced by a com pliance, in the sale of the Main Line, at public auction, to the highest bidder. The Pennsyl vania railroad company became the purchaser, at a fair sale ; and in pursuance of the terms of the act authorizing the sale, and of the sale under that act, the Pennsylvania railroad com pany became vested with the Main Line and all its appurtenances; and in all fairness the Tonnage Tax should have ceased to be imposed en the company from the moment of the con summation of the sale, because by the sale the reason ceased to operate that induced the Le gislature to impose it. But such was not the fact, however; and now the company submit a new proposition to the Legislature, by which the difficulty thus involved shall be settled.— The new proposition is one that will, we think, commend itself to the intelligence of the Le gislature and the good sense of the people throughout the Commonwealth. It is not a proposition for the unconditional repeal of the Tonnage Tax, but for a commu tation of that tax in such manner as will re sult in benefits to the Commonwealth. In the bill that will be introduced by the company in a few days will be found the following provi sions, or rather, the Company propose by said bill to accomplish the following results : 1. They shall loan to certain lateral or connecting roads, pro rata, as to their length, the amount of tax that has accrued since the Ist day of August, 1857, in exchange for bonds, and thus aid in their completion. 2. The company shall pay taxes to the State on all their property and franchises in such manner as may be required by any other rail road company by any general law now in force, or that may hereafter be enforced by the Legis lature. 8. The company shall ratthe a reduction in their rates of transportation of all the local freight passing over the road i quivalent to the amount of tax now chargeable thereon—thus beneficing the shipper in a (lin* 014170 Cr. 4. The company shall increase the payments on account of the main line purchase $460,- 000.00 per annum—say $230.000.00 every tcx months—until the entire price and interest thereon is paid ; which sums. when paid, shall be applicable to the reduction of the State debt, and to no other purposes. By this proposition it will be found that the entire State debt will be paid Iv 1885, without resorting to the disagreeable expedient of ad ditional taxation. In view of all these advaa. - which we are-. -• • - ••• careful examination, are nut over-estimated, we are induced to give to thi+ fair, we might add, Munificent proposition of the Pennsylvania railroad company our hearty assent. But whilst this is our own individual judgment on the subject, deliberately formed, we do not, in the slightest manner, desire to interfere with the judgment, of others on this question. Can dor, however, compels us to lay before the public the argument of the co evilly in support of their proposition, in order that each man shall form for himself an intelligent judgment upon a subject of general importance. If the Pennsylvania railroad company asked for an unconditional repeal of the Tonnage Tax our course might be one of a different character; but putting it in the form is which it now is, as we find it in their bill, we feel justified in giving it the benefit of our approval. In conclusion, we ntk the readers of the PATRIOT AND UNION to give to the articles which ws will publish on this subject from time to time a careful, candid and impartial exami nation. The Canada Extradition Case. The Case of the negro Anderson, a fugitive from the State of Missouri now in jail in To ronto, Canada, seems likely to become one of national importance. We have already stated that the Canadian Courts have decided that he ought to be surrendered, on the requisition of the Governor of Missouri,but that the surrender is delayed for such further legal proceedings as are applicable to the case. Late English papers announce that in the Court of Queen's Bench, application was made for a writ of habeas corpus on the affidavit of the British and Foreign Anti-Slavery Society, and that the Judges, after consultation, de termined that the writ must issue. If this shall have the effect to remove the prisoner to En gland and to discharge him from custody, it may become a subject of diplomatic correspond ence betwe'n the two countries. The principle involved is similar to that in the case of Kentucky against Ohio. The offense committed is against the laws of the State from whence the fugitive fled, but as slavery does not exist in the British dominions, it cannot be a crime Mere for a negro to kill the person attempting to prevent his escape from slavery. If the British Government intended to limit the operation of the treaty to crimes pronounced such by English and not by Ametican law, it should have done so by express terms, instead of seeking to evade what appears to be a plain agreement between the two countries. Letter to a Member of the Legislature Particular attention is invited to the letter addressed to a member of the Legislature which we publish this morning, It was written, as will be perceived from the date, some time ago, and its publication delayed until this time, for various reasons which it is usit neeeesary to mention ; but its truths are not impaired by lapse of time. At the request of the author, his name is not attached to the letter, but we t a k e th e liberty of saying that he is one of the most eminent. and accomplipled chi z rns of Phil adelphia, who has been a private citizen' since the days of Van Buren—under whose admin istration he was Several years the represenla- Live of the United States at a foreign court. ' The sentiments expressed in his letter are those of ab p *mot of the old school, who has no selfish purpose to promote, no object to gain but the good of his country—and as such we commend it to the careful attention of members of the Le L iAlature and of all our readers. IT is stated that from the free States alone petitions containing the names of three hun dred thousand citizens have been received in bothllouses of Congress, urging an arrangement on the basis of Mr. Crittenden's resolutions. What is the response? "Stand firm!" "No compromises—no concessions to the slave power —no breaking down." "Whip them, aye, whip them into subjection !" THE NATIONAL CRISIS. LETTER FROM A eTTIZEN OFPENNSYLVANIA TO A MEMBER OFTHS LEGISLATURE PHILADELPHIA. January 8, 1861 Mr DEAR Fla :—I owe many apologies for not sooner replying to your favor, but imperative engagements have put it out of my power, and will Fhield me, I trust, from the imput Con o' intentional neglect. You a-k my views 6 - relative to the duties of members of the Legislature in referen e to the questions which now agitate the country,” and further say In addi tion to the repel of the 95th section or the Penal Code, dues the present exigency, in your judment, require a Sate Con , ention ?” Where the combined intellect, judgment and irttriot isro of the country, as exhibited by the wisest and most experienced ststt amen, seems to be at fault in devising a remedy, sat erectors to all, for the evils we are suffer ing, a private citizen may well distrust at leas: the two former qualires in him at a period so momentous. I need scarcely ray that I entertain the sincerest distrust of mine, and cannot i.nagine that any views I may have formed can be of any use to you ; but as you have ex pressed n wish to hear from me, 1 will not withhold what I think. I ewe this to your courteous letter, which comes to me unexpectedly after the long interval since we met, and agreeably recalls the recollections of a for mer period. With reference to the paramount duties of the mem bers or the Legislature, such I mean as bear immediately open the great subjects which now agitate and convulse the country, they are happily clearly defined, and im peratively enjoined, in that celebrated instrument of government ordained and established by the PEOPLE of all the States, in Convention assem:led, gi in order to form a more perfect Union," dated the 17th of Septem ber,l7B7. and signed " tiItORON WISHINOTON, President and Deputy rom Virginia." It is gratifying to our pride as Pero sylvanians to recall the fact, that that celebra ted instrument bears more signatures from our honored State am from any other member of the confederacy, and may be added, as a curious fact, in passing, that it also bears more signatures from the State of SouthCaro /ina—all of them distinguished names too—than front any other of the Southern States. Happily the third section of the sixth article of th it great instrument of government, thus ordained and es tablished by the people of all the States "to forma more perfect Union," is susceptible of no doubt or cavil in its construction: " The Stioaters and Representatives before mentioned, and the members of the several State Legislatures. and al. Executive and Judicial officers, both of the Weed States and f the several States, shall be bound by oath or affirmation to ..upport this Constitution." Without, Meet fore, al strict, unqualified, unhesitating obedience to this umnistakab'e constitutional mandate, " SHALL be bound," I confess I do not see how any mem ber of tne Legislature, of this or any other State, can conscientiously perform his duty to his country gr self, so long as the Constitution of the United States remains, on its face, " the supreme law of the land, any thing in the Conststution or laws of any State to the con trary notto«thstanding," and until it be modifi d or ab. regaled by the only power that ordained and established it—the people of all th- States in Convention assembled. Whether any of the Senators or Representatives of the United States, or any of the members of any of the State Lnsialatures, or any Executive or Judicial officers of the Unit d States, or of the several States, whose names have lately been a good deal before the public in an atti tude of hostility to the Constitution, have been absolved _ ' by what process of law the may have been accomplished, I have nut heard ; nor do I believe that any earthly power is capable of so absolt ing them short of that which or dained and established the Conetitution, namely, the people of all the States of the United States in Conven tion aesemt.l.•d. There is another clause or part of the Constitution which is equal b yond all cavil or doubt. It is that which is fou“d in the third section of the second article of the instrument, wherein the duties of the Federal Executive are defined and enjoined It is in there words: He SHALL take care that the laws be ittithfultg exe caged." And this mandate, it' true to his oath, he cannot die regard or evade Now as the members of the several RAO Legislatures are sworn to support the Federal Constitution, in all its parts, it is to me equally clear that the site obligation requires them to , upport the Federal Executive in the execution of the Lira. Should the General Government require the support of the States for this purpose, the latter are bound, as I view it, by the oaths of those who compose its Legislature, to furnish such support to the full extent. The members of the respective State Legho lotures van no trio 'e disregard their sworn obligations in this respec , should the occasion arise, than the Federal Executive can disregard his. That Fu h an ..c.casian has arisen, has unhappily be. Cehis a fact la history. Renee, in reply to the first part of your letter, I should say, let our noble and patriotic old Commonwealth, on the soil of which the Union was first cemented by the sacred pledges of 16, and the Con stitution ordained and established, and from whence Washington issued to his countrymen his immortal Farewell Address—let Pennsylvania take the lead among her sister States in the full performance of this impera tive c natitutinnal obligation. Ler hers be the prowi dietinction, when the history of this First Great Rebel lion against the Union shall be written in after ages, to have rallied, first of the States, to the support of the Constitution and the laws. Let Pennsylvania then be unanimous aid prompt in tendering to the General Gov rnment, at this great national crisis, all the vast power and resources of the State, to enable the Execu tive to perform his constitutional duty. That the other loyal States of the confederacy will be prompt to follow the example of Pennsylvania, there can be little doubt. Good is contagious as well as evil. The tide or patriotism will spread, and with a far broader and more potent sweep, as it gathers strength from the inspiring consciousness of the performance of a consti tutional duty. Those States will far, far outnumber numerically, as in power and majesty, and in the moral grandeur of their mule, the rebellious States. Let there be an overwhelming demonstration of the constitutional power of the General Government, backed by all the power and resources of all the loyal States, to support the Constitution and the laws, at any hazard, wherein,- ever and whensoever resisted, and mankind will see that Mr Jefferson, that most philosophic of statesmen, was right when he declared that our government was « the strongest in the world.lt Nor can I forget to recall, in this connection, the emphatic manner in which his illus trious successor in the Presidency, Mr. Madison, one of the purest and calmest of st.tesmen, proclaimed his in tention, in his Inaugural Address on the 4th 6f March, 1809, " to support the Constitntion, which is the Cement of the Union, as well in i is limitations as in its AUTHORI TIES." "Our Constitution,” said Mr. Madison, on another occasion, "was formed bs the Stetesi that is, by the people in each of the States, acting in their highest sovereign capacity, and formed consequently by the same authority which formed the State Constitu tions. Being thus derived from the same source as the Constitutions of the States, it has, within each State, the same authority as the Constitution of the State, and is as much a Constitution, in the strict sense of the term, within its prescribed sphere, as the Constitutions of the States are within Owls respective spheres; but with this essential and obvious dlfference, that being a com pact among the States in their highest sovereign capa cit,, and constituting the people thereof one people for certain purposes, it cannot be altered or annulled at the will of the States individually, as the Constitution of a State may be at its individual will." It by no means follows that such a course on the part of Peobsylvania, of preparation for the worst, would pre cipitate or bring on the result which all good citizens, from their inmost soul , , would deplore, and shoed I strive, ceaselessly and earnestly strive, to avert; On .the contrary, such a course has the sanction of ages, and the wisest and bravest of men, as the best. adapted to ward off such a' result; i Awl:may Heaven seed it !. May the .6 Great Author of Peace and Lover of Concord' , 4 39inniand the tempest to Cease, And allay, by His mighty agency, the winds and the waves of human passion ! May His wisdom enlighten the minds of the people, and His spirit prevail in their hearts, to the restoration, once more, of the happy days of the Republic ! To this great end, and imploring His guidance for the success of her efforts, let Pennsylvania, through her Legislature and representatives in Congress, also be foremost in tendering, and acceding to, every measure of just concession and honorable compromise, with every future guaranty for the establishment of the equal rights of all the States, and every section of the confederacy. And let her manifest to the world the sincerity of her desire to give peace and stability to the Union, by the repeal of all such laws of her own as, if not absolutely unconstitutional, may have been found in practice to give jest cause of offence to any of her sister States, who may have thought their co-equal rights and dignity in the con federacy thereby invaded. There can be no compromise of self-respect in so doing where she manifests, at the same time, her inflexible determination to sustain the Government in upholding the Constitution and the laws at any and all risks, No wiser measures for the peace of the country and security of her institutions -have been proposed, as it seems to me, than those of the venerable and patriotic and eminent Senator from Kentucky, Mr. Crittenden. I would vote for them with all my heart, and should anticipate the happiest results from their adoption. I shoull rejoice to see our Senators and Representatives in Congress instructed and requested, by a unanimous vote of the Legislature, to endeavor to secure their adoption, But I woull not reject other Conciliatory measures, should Mr. Crittenden's fail. I would go for any plan of adjustment, come from what quarter it may, should it be found, upon the fullest consultation, most likely ff to insure domestic tranquility," and secure its blessings "to ourselves and our posterity." Of this, the removal, by further constitutional enactment, of the slavery question from Congress, into which it should never once have been allowed to enter, would, it seems to me, be the surest guaranty. Replying to your next question, I see no necessity for a State Convention in Pennsylvania. A National Con vention, on the 22d of February, in the Hall of Inde pendence, for the purpose of revising the Constitution, adapting it to the experience of three score years and ten, and the amazing changes in the extent and condi tion of the country, could not fail, in my opinion, to accomplish great good. One of its first lets should be to read to the delegates of the States and people, there assembled, the Farewell Address of Washington. But I doubt if any Convention in our State would, or could, now accomplish more for the peace of the country std the integrity of the Union, than can, and I believe will, be done by the present Legislature. In saying this I give the best proof of my confidence in the patriotism, wisdom and firmness of our representatives, and in the spirit of devotion to the Constitution and the Union by which 1 believe they are and will be actuated. On ordinary party questions—questions of administra tive policy—it is my misfortune to differ with a large majority of the Legislature. But happily there is no "party" in Pennsylvania on a question of allegiance to the Union. On that inspiring question we are of one party—one and indivisible; we are all Republicans, all Democrats, throughout the length and breadth of the Commonwealth. I voted against Mr. Curtin for Gover nor, and Mr. Lincoln for President, and exerted myself to the utmost to defeat both, within the rules of honora ble party warfare, believing that their election would be productive of the most eerie= evil. Under like cir cumstances I would do so again. But the former is now the constitutionally chosen Governor elect of my native State; the latter the constitutionally chosen President elect of my country. It is my duty to respect each as the future Executive head of the State and Nation; and while each remains the embodiment of the popular choice in his high office, and keeps STRICTLY TO TER CONSTITUTION AND TR& LAWS, I hold it to be the duty of every citizen to support each in the righteous perform- ance of the oath he moat take faithfully to execute his office, and to the best of his ability preserve, protect and defend the Constitution he is called to administer. I have endeavored to answer fully the questione is your letter. I only fear I have said more, a good deal, than need have been said, and have tired your patience. And ye; if you will bear with me, I feel, while the pen is in my hand, as if its subject might fairly warrant me in a little piece of history before I conclude, with a word or two of the Palmetto Fin.. While Mr. Calhoun was Vice President of the United States he gave, as I find in the National Intelligence,' of - 141119 mn et last mwircirjheloitowrag — remarkutire-crourt a public dinner on the 4th of July, in his own disstrict of Pendleton, South Carolina—remarkable, certainly, as compared with present events: "By John C. Calhoun—The State and General Govern ments—each imperfect when viewed as separate and dis tinct Governments, but, taken as a wkole, forming one system, with each checking and controlling the other, unsurpassed by any work of man in wisdom and sub limity." Could that celebrated statesman and pure-minded man, for such I believe he was, whatever we may think of some of his latter theories, have been suddenly re called to life to wituessiu MienCe the proceedings of the State of his birth, within the last few weeks, which are now a part of history, I wonder what he would have thought, had his mind unconsciously wandered back to the above sentiment, uttered while he wielded the power and influence of the second office of the Government! Alas! he would have looked in vain for the "wisdom and sublimity' , which, according to that sentiment, Could only co-exist in the General and State Govern ments so loog as they formed "one system;" more than that, he would have beheld that same 4th of July blotted from the calendar within the limits of his native State, and his eagle eye would have gazed upon the State he adored es the disjointed fragment of a matchless con federacy—an "imperfect" structure, with a "separate and distinct" emblem displayed in the breeze over na tional defences, which, as War Minieter to President Monroe, and earning his early laurels as snob, it had been his highest glory to protect and preserve with the Stars and Stripes! The Palmetto Flag This is new to Pennsylvania, and to the Union. I honor South Carolina for memories of the past, which will never die; for her revolu tionary history; for her great names in peace and war; for her legislators, her statesmen, her warriors; for her contributions to the renown of the nation. They are a part of the property of the nation, and are the property of Carolina as part of the nation, protecting and pro • tatted by its flag. I say this with something of the feeling of early, as of subsequent yearn, for 1 was edu cated among Carolina boys, and some of my first, most agreeable and cherished associates were Southern men, and men of Carolina connection, whose high principles, accompWhmenis and courage I could not fail to admire and respect. But none know better than Southern men, and none better than Pennsylvania men, that to gain the respect of others we must respect ourseivea, an 4 that the err& ted code of mankind is founded upon the acknowledgment of mutual rights. The grievances of Carolina and the South, in the confederacy, have been enormous, In char acter, duration and amount. I have said so again and again, in public and private, in my own State and in New England, on more than one public and marked ones,. sion. The South may well Complain and demand re dress; and redress she ought to have, ample constitu tional, satisfactory, with every constitutional guaranty for the future. But Carolina has no right., nor halt any Southern State, to take the law into her own hands and seek redress by tearing down the pillars of the Union; that costly and magnificent fabric, which was equally devised to Penn sylvania and her heirs forever by the illustrious testa tors who constructed it, and to which, therefore, we in Pennsylvania have an indefeasible title, with all its in estimable blessings and precious memories. We are no tenants at will or sufferance of this glorious confederacy; our estate in it is one of inheritance, to us and our chil dren, and no earthly power has the right to depth% t s of it, without the deliberate and united assent of eta. with whom we hold jointly, and who constitute the Union. If the Palmetto Flag shall continue to be displayed by oAreifria as the embleill of other doctrines, let us ardently hope that its converts may be few and of short duration in the Republic. The flag of Pennsylvania, on the other band, is the proud emblem of doctrines which unite the allegiance of all loyal hearts. Nor is it new to Carolina, for it derives part of its lustre from deeds of her sons, in former days. It Is one to which we are enthusiastically attached in this State, for it is imper ishably entwined with all the proudest and moat endear. ing recollections of the Republic, from the hour that it was first unfurled in honor and in token of the nation's birth. It is the same that waved in triumph over Wash ington at Yorktown; Jackson at New Orleans; Scott et Vera Cruz ; Hull, Bainbridge, Stewart, Decatur, MiDon ough, Perry, on every deck, everywhere, on the ocean and upon the lakes; astonishing Europe and the world by the rapidity and splendor of its achievemente, and which at ones eiteblished this young Republic ee the 'onlylpower ihat could cope with :the. klistress.ottke Seas,Ahd'was.able to vanquish her;; .the. flag which; i n one hour, confers more honor and protection upon an American citizen in the remotest quarter of the globe., than be could derive in a life-time f om the emblem of any disjointed member of the confederacy, and which has now become immortal in song, making the heart strings vibrate under its magnificent cholus ! In the patriotic language of two distinguished Senators of the United States in a telegraph to Georgia, not many days since, let us "cling to that flag;” yes, cling to it ever. Let us resolve to live and die under it, and transmit it to our children's children, still blazing with Stars and radiant with Stripes, though the lustre of a few be dimmed, not, God grant, with blood, but tears, when the present shall have become the past, and shall .tell its mournful tale! Weil may the patriotic John Leteher, Governor of Vir ginia, occupying at this moment, IM I Cone ive, the most responsible, and therefore the proudest, position ever held by a citizen of the United States since tlo Union was formed—for the decision of Virginia must inevitabvy exercise a tremendous influence at this portentous mo• inent--well may that enlightened and patriot c Executive Maestrate exclaim, in his message yesterday to the Vir ginia Legislature, " Ia it not monstrous to see &govern nsent like ours destroyed, merely because men cannot agree about a doaseAlc - inatitutirn, which existed at the formation of the government, and which is now recog nized by fifteen out of the thirty-three States of the Union?" All honor to Governor Leteher for his noble eff irta to stem the tide of disunion, and preserve this great con federacy, on a just and honorable basis! And all honor to him who is laboring, as only true patriot • an labor, in the same righteous and hallowed cause, the intrepid Hicks, of Maryland ! Posterity will applau 1 their efforts and their names wil be held in i everence ! Old and honored Virginia! Birth-place and home of Washington, a-d where his mighty duet repos a, whose shores still echo the tolling bell of the vessel .sit glides noiselessly past his tomb on the banks of the Potom •c in token of the veneration of the American people; that tomb in presence of which the youthful heir appa• rent to the throne of England. scarce three mouths sine stood uncovered! Virgini%. horn- of Jeffe , s D, of Madi son, of Monrce., of Patrick Henry! Printu• - inter Pares; oldest of the 011 Thirteen! the mother of Slates! lee pride and hope of the confederacy It, is impossible that Virginia can forget her loyalty and go down to his tory with hostile States ! Rather let us hop in the sublime language of Him who spake as never man spake, that Writs QUEEN" OF THU SOUTH SHALL RISE UP IN THE JUDGMENT WITH THIS GENERATION, AND SHALL CONDEMN And Maryland, chivalrous, patriotic Maryland, seventh in order of the Old Thirteen, and linked to Virginia by a thousand ties; 'who gave to the confederacy the " last surviving signer," and whose soil now holdi his ashes, after lingering among us more than half a century, at d witnessing the unparalleled success, and some of the most splendid trophies of the young Red üblie he helped to found; Maryland, on whose shores the Star Spangled Banner" first echoed is immortal chorus; birth-place of genius and valor, and parent o the highest order of social and individual accomplishment! It is imposible that Maryland can leave LIS and go down to history with a like blot on her escutcheon. No—never ! The very stones of the capitol would cry out ! I had not the most remote intention of inflicting such a letter upon you when I took the pen, but drawn out by yours the subject has grown upon me, and now that it is written it may go. The date of my letter recalls that illustrious man of iron nerve, and hero President, of whom it was said by his great competitor for the Presi dency, the younger Adams, that in after ages, when nations have crumbled and all other men been forgotten, there were nevertheless two names that would be im perishably associated with the fame of the great Ameri can Republic, WASUINGTON and JACKSON. I am rejoiced to perceive, by this evening's telegraphic news from Harrisburg, that his great Nullification Pro clamation of 1832 was read to-day in the Legislature. Nothing but the principles of that majestic State Paper, with its unsurpassed combination of Roman firmness, with the most affectionate conciliatory tone, can save us now, as it saved us then. Very truly yours. LATEST BY TELEGRAPH From Washington. WASHINGTON, Jan. 30. The President has approved the bill for the admission of Kansas into the Union. The number of Federal troops which arrived hoitA-ase niah4. yr ems 00, 300. These are divided into three companies of artillery and one of infantry. An arrange ment has been made for concentrating them tot any particular point in case it becomes ne• cessary to quell disturbances of the public peace. Acting Postmaster General King has received complaints from Northern gentlemen that their lettere from the South have been violated. One person writes that six letters addressed to him by a lady in Mobile, and not on political sub jects, have evidently been opened by amnin ized parties. The department has promptly in stituted an investigation. Lieut. Sanders, of the army, will leave Wash ington to-day, with dispatches from the War Department for Florida. A delegation, consheing of a committee of thirty-three, representing fifty thousand work ing men of Philadelphia, this morning waited on Mr. Crittenden and Mr. Cameron, at their respective residences. They were introduced by Senator Bigler in a brief but appropriate address. I. B. Nicholson responded for the delegation eloquently and patriotically, stating the object of the visit to be to testify the ap preciation of the Union held by themselves and those they represented, their desire for a settlement of the national difficulties on a satisfactory basis, and that the proposition of the Senator from Keigrucky, whose character they revered and whose patriotism they ad mired, was heartily endorsed by them, and they wished its adoption urged and secured.— The Senators feelingly and hopefully re sponded. • The Legislature of Georgia. MILLEDGEVILLE, Jan. 30. The Convention refused to re-consider the revenue ordinance adopted yesterday. A resolution was introduced, giving the Governor power, under certain circumstances, to make reprisals and grant letters of marque. It was tabled. An address to the citizens of the South and the world, detailing the causes which prompted Georgia to secede from the Federal Union, was adopted. An ordinance, declaring it to be the fixed policy of the State to grant security to all the States, was adopted. The Convention then adjourned to meet at Savannah at the call of the President. The Miasourl_Leglelature. ST. Louis, Jan. 30 A joint resolution passed the Senate yester day, appointing Gen. Doniphan, Waldo P. Johnson, J. D. Colter, Judge Hough, Gen. Atchison, Ferdinand Bennett, and Judge Back nor, commissioners to the Convention to be held at Washington, on the 4th of February. The same resolution was introduced in the House, and laid on the table. Mr. Vest, Chair man of the House Committee on Federal re lations, reported resolutions taking strong grounds against the action of New York and Ohio, in offering aid to the general Govern ment to ioerce seceding States, which passed by a vote of eighty-nine to sixteen. Anti-Slavery Meeting at Syracuse. BYRACI3I33, N. Y., Jan. 30. The anti-slavery meeting again convened this morning and proceeded to pass the usual resolutions. At noon a large mob took poses sion of the platform and one of their speakers addressed the audience. During a temporary lull the Abolitionists adjourned sine die, claim ing that they bad carried their point of holding the meeting. Egan were thrown at the police, but the hall was finally cleared. Secession ... Meeting at Wilmington, N. C. WILMINGTON, Jan 30. A large and enthusiastic secession meeting was held here last evening at the theatre.— Prominent gentlemen formerly opposed to the movement, took a strong position with the South and declared that they were a unit with the,Boutk. • .New)Mook Tobacco Salm..., Naw Yoax, Jan. 80. The tobacco sale to-day was spirited, all on the catalogue being disposed of 260 110. 1 of Kentucky tobacco were sold at 4i®,111, • Conviction of Armstrong for Murder. PHILADISLPIIIA. Jan. 30. The jury in.the case of Armstrong, f or tho murder of of murder C in tbe rawford first degreed,, ret urn a verdict of guilt 7 e CASS FOR LIVERPOOL.--The next ; mow' which flails for Liverpool from Philadelphia sill take out five handsomely finished po on , t : ger railway cars, which are to be used up on a Liverpool city railway. DONATIONS TO THE AMERICAN ttoArto,-....The donations to the American Board of An s , ions from August Ist to December 318 t 1860 , amounted to $78,000. This is a much smaller amount than wne anticipated. New '2tbuertisements. TO LET.—Thy DWELLING Part of the House at the north-weet co ner rf 11f rket . 11 4 Fourth streete, from the tiret • f April n•lct. ro.. CRC more years Inquire uf THOMAS J. REHRER. or jan3:-std* J J AVANA MC-ARR.—A I ine A Mort. meat, comprioing Figar... Zoiagnzons, i ,a Rom Bird, Fire Fly. Etelvina. La Serb:lto, Capitolio nt a u t•izes and valities, in quarter. th and uue-tenth boxes, put received, awl fur ,ale low by JOON 11. zr I•GLER, 73 112trket Street. N ORTHERN CENTRAL RAILWAY. Ea NOTICE TO T it A VELER S. The Expre s Train South at 7.40 A. M., and the Ex. prem.; Train North at 8.15 P. M., will be diaennteued Pram this date until further notice. jar.n3l-dat JOHN Iv. HALL, Agent. OE RI4s•NT— A. good DWELLING r noun, with considerable gro"nd and T ABLE at. tached—near the Water Basin. Po•aecsioa given innne dia,, iy. CHAS. C itaWtt. Harrisburg, !Antlikry 30, 1861, jan3l dlw lOH S ILE--f Ins first-rare HI G'4I,ES CARD PRESS, in excellent order—works from 800 to 1000 Cards an hour. One small CARD AND CIRCVLAR PEWS, In goad order—Platen Balo. Both Presses will be sold at very moderate prices. TilEO. F. SOD DETER, }tmrrisbarg. jan3l-d2t 1)0,- ITIVELY the lapt chance to buy BOORS at your own prices, s BEN F. FRENCH will only sell on T.HVIINI)AY, RID YANDS ATUR- Yh. V h.: N NG S, at No. 1< IlttrkA stre-t 5aL3l-dst N ORTHERN UEls4 rIiAL B,AILW M_NEIMMI_MRN NOTICE. . CHANGE OF SCHEDULE. WINTER ARRANGEMENT. ON AND AFTER WEDNESDAY, JANUARY SOra, lht 1 the Passenger Trains of the Northern Central Bad. way will leave Harrisburg u follows ! GOING SOUTH. ACCOMMODATION TRAIN will leave at.. 8.00 a. m. MAIL TRAIN will leave at 1.00 p.m. GOING NORTH: MAIL TRAIN will leave at...... 1.40 p. m. The only Train leaving Harrisburg on Sunday will Is the ACCOMMODATION TRAIN South, at 8.00 a. m. For further information apply at the office, in Peer. sylvan's. Railroad Depot. JOHN W. HALL, Agent. Harrisburg, January 80, JUL—Jana,. M A N H O 0 D, HOW LOST, 110 W ENSTORN D. Just Published, in a seakd Envelope, ON TIM NATTIIO4, TRffidaIWEENT AND RADICAL CURE OF SPERiILiTORDHONA, or Seminal Weakness, Sexual Debility, Nervousness and Involuntary h. miss ons t WU. eing Impotency, and Mental and Physical Debility. BY ROB. J. OULITYRW ELL, N , D, do thy - of f se Book," dre Tile world renowned author in th 4 s ed.nbehle Lecture, cletrly proves from hie own euge•ri nee that the awful eon erquenens of &If-abuse may be eff,ctual y rebind %ab out medicine aid without [(exiguous euigical op. retitle). bungles, luetrumenit, r. vas or cord ale, p itatiog 'lv so ode or cure at once certain and effecurl, by wi i b en r- ,uf lerer, no matter wlrit his canditon may tie, may tare h;m self char, ly, pr ra egg and red eal , y. This Lecture will prove a boon to Mona/ode and Mouton& Eentunder seal to any addreae, pest 7.42 id, OD the Mar KUNIO, 127 Bowery New York, Poet son 4,586. aplO-dt• wl • COAL FOR s A LE.—ln rd, rto elm the business of John Wallower 13014 the dobserb bore will deliver in any part or the city of Harrisburg, first quality of I.YRI:NS VALLEY COAT , at Tao Dol lars and Seventy-Five cents per ton • or they will sell Seven Hundred Tons at a reduced wholesale mice. jari3o-3tda3tw COAL REDUCED!H CONSUMERS OF COAL, 7:1 kE NOTICE! _Coal delivered to any part of the city limits by the Patent Weigh Carts, at the following low rats, for cas4, vie ; Lykene Valley Nut Coal at $2.00 per ton. ts Small Egg 2.90 " cg Large do. 2.90 " Broken 2,90 gg Balt. Coal Co.'s Wilkesbarre Steamboat, 3.00 per ton. cs Broken, 3.00 " Ear, 800 IS it zt Nut, 2.28 " Broad Top Coal, (for Smiths' use,)]2X eta. per bushel. 2,500 Bushels OATS for sale, at lowest each prim. A large lot of superior HICKORY AND OAS WOOD for sale, at the lowest rates. Agent for DU PONT'S GUN AND DDAsTING POWDER—for sale at manufacturer's prises. Coal delivered from both yards at above rates, by Patent Weigh Carts, which are certified to by the Sealers of Weights and Measures. 11 - Every consumer will please weigh their Coal os delivery, and if it falls short 10 pounds I will forfeit the Coal. A. large, full and complete dock of the boat kinds of Coal will alwaya be found on hand. JAILER M. WHEELER. Harrisburg, January 29, 1861. 1 1 L1E ORIGINAL AND CELEBRATED GENERAL TOM THUMB , SMAI.LEST MAN ALlrst AT BRAN T'S HALL, HARRISBURG, FOR TBRER DAYS ONLY! FRIDAY, SATURDAY AND MONDAY, FEBRUARY 1,2, 4. Two Brilliant Entertainments each day—Afternoon at 3, Evening at 7ji. Doors open half an hour previous. The General appears in all his new Songs, D 111300 0? Imi tations, °mien Statues, See- assisted by Mr. W. TOM LIN, the great English Baritone and Buse, from the Nobilities Concerts, London ; Mr. W. DE WIRE, the American Tenor, and Mr . C. G. TITCOMB. Pianist. Admission—Day Entertainment. 25 cents; Children under ten, 18 cents; Evening Entertainment, 15 cents; Children ender ten, 10 coats p Reserved Seats 25 Gents. Schools admitted on liberal terms. The Little General rides in his miniature carriage fm the Jones Hotel to the Hall. The Grand Piano used is one of CHICKERING'S BEST, from W, Mown Music Store, 92 Market street. ALFRED GATELY, Business Agent. jan24-411w&2tw A 88IGNEW8 AL,}4.7.-Will be sold at Public Sale or Ont-cry, at the e , rner of Fourth and Chesnut streets, In the city of Harrisburg, on THURS DAY. FEBRUARY Pre, 1861, at 2 o'clock, P. /12., the following articles ~ — FOUR HORSES, one Two-Horse Wagon, three One-Horse Wagons, one Cart, two Wheel barrows, one Patent Straw Cutter, Single sad Doable Harness, lot of Lime. Bricks, Boards, Rails Chesnut Posts, Board-fence Posts, &c. E. BYERS t Assignee of Daniel Rhoads!. Harrisburg, Jan. 23, 1861. jan2l-dts* j UST RECEIVED—A large Stock of *1 SCOTCH ALES, BROWN STOUT and LONDON PORTER. For sale at the lowest rates by JOHN H. ZIFOLFB, 98 Market street. CM VIEBLE ON DIVORCE.- 2 the owing 'words are , from Mark a. v. 8,12: "What, therefore, God has joined together let not matt put asunder." “Whetit+fter shall put away blawifo #iud idol arotheg committeth adultery. And if a woman shall put away her husband and marry again she committeth adultery." Legislators and others, the above is the edict of the Supreme Lawgiver, from which there is do appeal:— "What, %herder% God has joined together km PO !Pam put asunder." jan7J.4ll/ AT COST!!! 1 - 10 E W.ILV BRATIPIE4 .LIQU9.ItS 0,.. f ErE.R.Y D.E.StCRIPTIoNt . Together with s complete assortment, (wholresie snit retail,) embracing everything in the line, will beladdike wet, without ra3erve Joni A. 0. ►►IESTRS ► C. P. bithlture, Assignees WM. DOCK, Js., & Oa.