gljt ::11. grit anion THIIRSDri MORNING, FEB. 21, 1861 0. BABREIrT & THOMAS 0. MikoDOWELL, Pub- Ushers and proprietors Oonewunicationswill not be pnbliahed in the PATRIOT •aD traioa =leo accompanied with the name of the author. S. M. PETTENGILL & 1.M., Advertising Agents,llo Nassau street, New York, and 10 State street, Boston, are the Agents for the PATRIOT AND UNION, and the most influential and largest circu lating newspapers in the United States and Canadas They we authorized to contract for neat our iowestrates FOR SALE. second-hand ADAMS PRESS,platen 39K by 26 inches, In good order; can be worked either by hand or steam power. Terms moderate Inquire at this office. To Members of the Legislature. TELE DAILY PATRIOT AND PRIOR Rill be furnished to 'Members of the Legislature during the session at the low price of ONE DOLLAR Members wishing extra copies of the DAILY PATRIOT AND Union, can procure them by leaiing their orders at the publication office, Third street, or with our re- porters in either House, the evening previous It 1) Dilli OD) tAii 4 tbiLli ITN II MLIKIRIVIII 3 , :11 4 till The committee, (appointed at the last meeting of the remocraric State Committee,) to whom was entrusted the duty of perfecting arrangements for the meeting of the Democratic State Convention, to be held in this city have adopted the following programme : The Convention will be held, agreeably to the call of the Hon. W. H. WELBII, on the 21st inst , at 3 o'clock, p. m., in BRANT'S HALL. Necessary arrangements have been made to enforce proper order in the Hall during the session of the Con vention, and to secure the comfort of the delegates at tending. To avoid confusion and set re order, the Committee of Arrangements have determined that no member or person shall be admitted within the bar of the Conven tion without a ticket of admission- Delegates, upon their arrival, will please cull at Room No 3, BUEHLER HOUSE, where they will be supplied with tickets. lie porters of the Press must apply as above to secure seats. Saitable accommodations have also been provided for the public outside of the bar of the Convention. Excursion tickets to Harrisburg and return, good from the 21st to the 23d inst., can be obtained at the regular stations of - the Pennsylvania Central, Philadelphia and Beading, and Cumberland Valley railroads. A. L. ROUMFORT, Chairman Committee of Arrangements STATIC CONVENTION.—Levi L. Tate is the Senatorial, and Geo. Scott and Wm. H. Jacoby the Representative Delegates from Columbia county to the Democratic State Convention. The New York Evening Post advises the post ponement of the Morrill Tariff bill until the next session of Congress, and says "It is evident from Mr. Lincoln's speech at Pittsburg, made in the midst of a strongly pro tariff people, that he desires no hasty action.— IBS own mind i 3 not made up as to the policy he will pursue on tho general subject. Of the Morrill Tariff itselfhe professes that he knows nothing, and he recommends members of Con gress to take time to consider all the bearings of the bill before committing tllemselves by a vote. Towards himself, as the chief of the new administration, and the person who is to take the responsibility of a new order of things, it is most unfair to decide the revenue measures of the future, before he has been able to give those matters de mature thought their impor tance demands." So it appears that Mr. lANcoLN's Pittsburg speech gives immense satisfaction to the free traders, and is taken as evidence that he does not desire the passage of the Merrill bill. If it does not pass the Senate before the 4th of March, its defeat will be justly attributed to the influen.3e of Mr. Lincoln's Pittsburg The President Elect and His Political Exhibitions. The lack of good taste and proper dignity of deportment that has marked Mr. Lincoln's course since he left Springfield, Illinois, with the ostensible purpose of journeying to Wash ington to assume the office to which he has been elected, is the subject of universal remark, as well as universal regret. After keeping as silent as the grave, so far as any public expression of his views and opinions are known, ever since the election up to the 14th inst., the day on which the returns were opened and counted in the presence of the two Houses of Congress in accordance with the provisions of the Constitution, it was but reasonable to - presume that he would pursue a similar line of policy up to the 4th of March, when he would have a fitting opportunity of spreading before the country and.the world his matured epinihnOitiliin, ialiquestions touch ing his future canna Of -04taluistrative conduct. Had he been the dignified Statesman he ought to be, in order to be qualified to discharge the duties of the high trust confided to him in a proper manner, it seems to us he would have proceeded from his home in Illinois to the Fed eral Capital by the most direct route, in a quiet way, avoiding all parade and ostentation, and thus save his friends and the nation at large the mortiftcation of seeing the elected Presi dent of the country making the most puerile and disgusting displays of inountebankista that were ever given by any harlequin who ever strutted upon a stage or gambolled in a circus ring, to delight a gaping crowd, at twenty-five cents a head, The honor, if honor he considers it, has been reserved for Abraham Lincoln of departing from the rule usually adopted by all his pre decessors, of traveling from post to pillar—of boxirig the compass in order to show the peo ple, by ocular demonstration, how great a fool a man can make of himself when he tries.— The truth is; that Mr. Lincoln forcibly re minds us of a little boy who has been pre sented with a new hobby-horse. His delight knows no bounds as he contemplates the object of his adoration; and of course he needs must show his hobby-horse to every one he meets, descanting the while, with infantile volubility, upon the beauties and excellencies of his prize. So it seems with the President elect. He too appears so much delighted with the fact that he is President elect that he traverses the coun try in a zigzag couree—first in one direction, then in another—accepting all the invitations tendered him from any and every quarter, in order to gratify the inordinate desire to exhibit himself in all his vast proportions to the gaping multitude—to tell them what a great Mall he has got to be—upon whose shoulders rests a load of responsibility more ponderous than ever WBO borne by the Father of his Country—in other words, to convince the people of the 'United States that he, Abraham Lincoln, is a man of much more _importance than Washing ton ever was. We repeat, that never before has any President given such painful proof of Ida weakness at the outset of his Presidential career, as this man Lincoln ; and the American people may well feel humiliated when they contemplate the spectacle he presents at his public exhibitions of his ignorance and inca pacity, as at Indianapolis, Columbus and Pitts-, burg. At the latter plaee, whilst addressing the people, such was his ignorance of the geo graphy of the !Locality, that he pointed across the Monongahela river, and addressed himself to the people of Virginia, not knowing any bet ter than that on the other side of that river was Virginia soil, instead of that of Pennsylvania. Such things are almost incredible, but they are lamentably too true. We allude to these things, not because we differ with Mr. Lincoln politically, but because we feel, in common with all our citizens, the humiliation which such ignorance and folly as he has displayed since he left home naturally and inevitably inspires. Painful as these Likings are to which we have alluded, they are but a drop in the bucket, compared to the postions he occupies in his Indianapolis and Pittsburg speeches on the condition of our national af fairs, and his miserable attempt-to talk double headed tariff, when he speaks of protecting the "manufactures of Pennsylvania and the corn " of Illinois, together with the reapers of Chi " cage." Ilis congratulations of the people on the fact, as he assumes, that " there is nothing wrong, "and nobody hurt;" that such a thing as dis solving the Union " can't be did ;" that all the present ills of the body politic can be healed by the application of a few homeopathic pills ; and in the next breath asking the people to stand by him whilst he shall stand by the Con stitution ; his silly allusions to the cause of the present. crisis as being but conjectural and the work of a few politicians—these, and a score of other equally shocking absurdities, are enough to make the blush of shame mantle the cheek of the veriest tyro in politics ; but to the intelligent mind they are absolutely horri ble to contemplate. Is such a man a fit person to conduct the country through the trying scenes which it must pass before the political and social problem involved in the present con dition of the nation shall be solved ? That we have fallen upon strange times is, alas ! too true; and unless this man should fall into the keep ing of men whose lofty and enlightened pa triotism, sound wisdom and discretion shall mark out for him a path of duty commensurate with the occasion, the worst of consequences to this nation must follow. We confess we shudder as we contemplate the future in the person of this weak and ignorant man. i iI~ i t ~ ~ I _ ~ Correspondence of the Patriot and Union. WestuNnrox, Feb. 18, 1861. DEAR PATRIOT :—We continue to vibrate here between the alternating sunshine of hope and over casting clouds of despair. When the committee of the Peace Congress first reported, the newspapers alleged that it had adopted, substantially, Mr. Guthrie's plan of adjustment. Without knowing the details of the plan reported, I oio know that the true report has not yet been published. I still think that Lincoln ardently desires that an adjust ment may be made, and that this feeling is known to some of his confidential, conservative friends, and hence we find a conflict between the editors of some of the leading Republican papers, conspicu ous among whom are Weed and Greeley, editors of the leading Republican journals in New York. To outward appearance, Lincoln manifests a leaning towards the ultras of his party, and thus, for the time being, keeps his party together. Judge Kel logg, (Republican,) who represents the Congres sional District adjoining the one Lincoln resides in, proposed and advocated a plan of adjustment, immediately after his return from a visit to Illi nois, and, no doubt, he did so with the implied, if not the expressed sanction of Lincoln; and the other day some fanatical editor took him to task for his conservatism, and the Judge gave him a •foretaste of coercion and internecine :gar, by giving him a sound thrashing and letting out some of his . Black Republican blood, which is to be found coursing the veins of the Abolition wing of the party. Hence you see the Judge is determined to have peace if, like the Irishman, he has to fight for it. I was rather amused at Sumner, in presenting an Abolition petition in the Senate, this morning. He said it was true that there were but few names to it, but that it represented truly the sentiment of the people of Massachusetts. He said when you get beyond the reach of the paving atones you find the true sentiments of the people ; having re ference, I presume, to the people of Boston refu sing to hear Abolition lectures in that city. Vain man he is, clinging to the last straws that float upon the political tide that carried him into official power. He made ncr mention of the twenty-two thousand voters of his State who petitioned for the adoption of the Crittenden proposition. Yours, truly, PENNA' LEGISLATURE. SENATE WEDNESDAY, Feb. 20. 1861. The Senate was called to order at 11 o'clock. a. m. by the SPEAKER. Prayer by Rev. Mr. Robinson. The SPEAKER laid before the Senate the report of the Auditor General and State Trea surer, on the claim of Christ, Long & Co., al lowing them $1,102, for damages sustained at Clark's ferry_ Mr. HALL, on leave, presented two remon strances from Cambria county against the in corporation of companies tO Oink Wells for Oil. Also, two petitions from citizens of Blair county, praying for the extension of the-pro visions of an act for the protection of fruit and to punish trespass. BILLS IN PLACE Mr. SCHINDEL, an act to amend the charter of the borough of Catanqua. Also, an act for the formation of a new elec tion district in Lehigh county. Mr. SMITH, a supplement to an act relating to inspections. Mr. HAMILTON, an act to incorporate the Berks and Lancaster County railroad company. Mr. ROBINSON, a supplement to an act authorizing the citizens of the borough of Mer cer to erect a Union sohool house. Mr. HIESTAND, an act in relation to the transfer of stock in the Dock coal company. ORIGINAL RESOLUTION. Mr. GREGG offered a resolution that the joint committee of arrangements be authorized to provide a dinner for the Old Soldiers on.the 22d, which was agree_d to. BILL BE - CONSIDE RED. • Mr. CONNELL moved that the vote by which the act incorporating the Allegheny oil com pany .was negatived, be re-considered; which was agreed to—yeas 20, nays 9. Mr. HAIL moved that the further considera tion of the bill be postponed for the present; which was not agreed to—yeas 14, nays 14. Mr. HALL moved that the bill be postponed until to•morrow; which was agreed to. BILLS CONSIDEILID Mr. YARDLEY called up public bill, entitled "An Act to enable executors and administra tors to sell and dispose of immature securities;" which was laid over under the rules. Mr. MEREDITH called up bill, entitled "An Act in relation to hawkers and ped/ere is York County;" which was passed. Mr. LAWRENCE called up a supplement to the act relative to supervisors in Cross Creek township, • Washington county; which was passed, finally, Mr. WELSH called up an act, entitled "An Act to repeal an act relative to the preservation of fish in York county;" which was passed Mr. NICHOLS called up House bill, entitled "An Act to extend and make perpetual the charter of the Delaware fire company, of Phil adelphiqu which was passed finally. Mr. PARKER called up the act to incorpo rate the Philadelphia express steamboat, com pany ; which was passed. Mr. - ROBINSON called up an act relative to the claim of John Kelly ; which was passed finally. Mr. SCHINDEL called .up an act for the organization of a new school district out of parts of Berks and Lehigh counties; which was passed. Mr. SERRILL called up House bill entitled "A supplement to an act laying a tax on dogs in the borough of West Chester ;" which was passed finally. Mr. SMITH called up an act relating to the real estate of Edward Shippen Burd, deceased ; which was passed. Mr. PENNEY called up supplement to the act incorporating the guardians of the poor of Pittsburg ; which was passed. Mr. THOMPSON called up thellet to incor porate the East Pennsylvania agricultural and mechanical society ; which was passed. Mr. WELSH called up House bill, entitled " An Act to change the place of holding the election in Heidelberg township, York county;" which was passed finally. Mr. HIESTAND called up an act authorizing the supervisors of Martin and Conestoga town ships, Lancaster county, to pay one-third of the cost of the erection of a bridge over Pequa creek; which was passed. Mr. PENNEY, for the. SPEAKER, called up a supplement to the act providing for the erec tion ef a poor house in Schuylkill county; which was passed. Adjourned. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. WEDNESDAY, Feb. 20, 1861. Tee House was called to order at 10 o'clock a. m., the SPEAKER. A supplement to an act relating to lateral railroads, was postponed. Reports of standing committees were re ceived. Mr. MARSHALL, an act relative to dogs in Allegheny county. Mr. WILSON, an act relative to the Cleveland and Pittsburg railroad. Mr. BOYER, an act refunding certain mo neys. Mr. BUTLER (Carbon) an act to incorporate the Nescohoning railroad company ; also, an act relative to the collection of taxes in Carbon. county. Mr. LAWRENCE, an act relative to the bo rough of St. Mary's. Mr. BALL, an act relative to certain lanes etc., in Erie. Mr. COLLINS, a supplement to the act reg ulating banks ; also, an act relative to the Cum berland road. Mr. M'DONOUGH, an act to incorporate the Niagara hose company. Mr. THOMAS, a supplement to the act incor porating the Foster iron company. An act to ratify the title of certain real es tate in Reading. An act to extend the limits of the borough of Mechanicsburg. An act supplementary to the act incorpora ing the Foster coal and iron company. An act relative to the Wilkesbarre and Scran ton railroad. An act laying out a State road in Luzerne, Centre and Schuylkill counties. An act relative to elections in Chester county. An relative to the estate of Edward Sbippen Burd„was considered, but the House refused to suspend the rules. Mr. HUHN read an act to lay out a State road in Ltizerne, Centre and Schuylkill coun ties. Mr. SELTZER offered a resolution tendering the use of the hall to the Democratic Conven tion ; which was agreed to. Mr. BRODHEAD, an act to exempt the home steads of families from sale. An act furnishing a dinner for the old sol diers of 1812 on the 22d, was negatived. The Rouse then proceeded to the considera tion of an act separating Brady township from Lycoming county, and debated it to the,hour of adjournment. Mn. LINCOLN'S WHISKERS AND THE GIRLS.— The taste displayed by Mr. Lincoln on his tour to Washington is, to say the least, questionable. The idea of the future head of a great nation, the President elect of the United States, one of the great potentates of the earth, the represen tative man of Republican and Democratic insti tutions—making speeches in which he alludes to his own whiskers, and amid the terrible calamities which impend over the country, on bib way to take posession of the chair of Washington, telling the people stories about stupid letters he had received from stupid girls he had never seen; nay, more, calling the girls upon the stand to him, and kissing them before a gaping crowd, is anything but imposing, is, in fact, disgusting. People of ordinary dignity and refinement are accustomed to keep their endearments for those who have a right to them, and even to these they are offered only in private. But our new President calls the women he likes up to him and salutes them in public. One cannot very readily imagine the grave and decorous predecessors of the Hoosier making themselves spectacles in this way for the vulgar jests of the multitude. It is to be hoped that Mr. Lincoln will not expect to carry the same style of behaviour into the White House ; when he is President will he still throw the handkerchief, and summon ithomsoever he . prefers, to offer her a caress ? What is prohib ited even on the Paris stage as too gross to be offered to public women, the successor of Wash ington commits as he prOgrOM t 4 the capital, of which he is so soon to be the ruler. It is also to be hoped there will be no allusions to the important subject of Mr. Lincoln's whiskers in the inaugural address. Such things may do for the hustings of Illinois, but hardly for a man with the weight of a dissolving empire on his shoulders.—N. Y. Express, SOLON. WENDELL PHILLIPS MAKES ANOTHER SPEECH. Mr. Wendell Phillips delivered a lecture yes terday forenoon at Music Hall, before the Twenty-eighth Congregational Society. The hall was crowded, and the • bitter personalities of the speaker were received with frequent ap plause by his admirers. Mr. Phillips regarded South Carolina as occupying substantially the same position in relation to the North that Massachusetts did to England just previous to the war of the revolution. He rejoiced that the Union had been dissolved, and that the Constitution, which was patched up by a parcel of lawyere, had been broken. The South had seceded from the North, and the North from the South ; the sinner had kicked the saint out of the covenant with death. lie desired to tell Mr. Charles Francis Adams that we didn't want the border States ; they might go and take the forts and arsenals, and the National Capital, if -they wanted them. Commenting on Mr. Adams' compromising -spirit, he said " Take care— take care, Mr. Adams, you need a long spoon to sup with the devil." The North had not a President to-day, but she was sold. He had no doubt but that through the influence of Seward and Adams, there would be compro mises and concessions. They would have, to wait another four years, perhaps. He knew that there were mobs in our cities; that here he could not speak without the consent of . the Mayor; but the right spirit was beginning to show itself in the great West. She sends a Lovejoy to lead Congress in such a time as this. BILLS 1N PLACE =I SPECIAL ORDER. The speaker commented on Mr. Richard H. Dana, Jr.'s, speech at Cambridge, and de nounced him as worse than a Legree. Seward was a perjurer, and Dana was a man-stealer— and of the two, the perjurer was decidedly the best and most gentlemanly.—Boaton Courier, Feb. 18th. COTTON CULTIVATION IN AUSTRALIA.—What is required to bring the cotton lands of Aus tralia into cultivation is capital and labor. Of these two important essentials, the men of Manchester have no lack. They readily sub scribed $lOO,OOO, when the repeal of the corn laws obtained for them cheap bread for their factory hands, and procured for them new markets for their manufactures in exchange for corn and flour which would be imported. The same sum judiciously applied would have gone far to have obtained for them a supply of cot ton from Queensland and other parts of the British possessions. With respect to the supply of labor, that is a difficulty which might have been and would have been overcome, had the necessary capital been forthcoming, by the importation of coolies and Chinese into the new cotton growing districts. With such magnificent colonies as we possess ; with lands suited in every respect for the culture of cotton, which may be purchased for a merely nominal sum ; with all our manufacturing skill for producing the necessary implements ' • and with abundance of capital at our disposal, and with facilities for obtaining labor from India, and from China under the new treaty, it will be a crying shame and a disgrace to the country if we contiue much longer in our state of preca rious dependence upon the cotton-growing States of America. Whatever may be done in directing attention to new fields of productive ness, we hope that the unequalled facilities of Queensland will not be overlooked. We are glad to learn that the colonists are fully alive to the importance of providing addi tional labor, and a memorial is in course of preparation to the authorities, praying for some relaxation in the present regulation re specting the introduction of coolie emigrants. Now that the treaty of Pekin recognizes the right of emigration on the part of Chinese, there can be no difficulty in affording increased facilities to their leaving the country and set ling in Australia.—Australian and New Zealand Gazette. ' LATEST BY TELEGRAPH XIIIIth CONGRESS-SECOND SESSION. HOTISE.—The House resumed the considera tion of the volunteer bill as reported from the military committee. SENATE.—Mr. Doolittle (Wie.) presented the credentials of Timothy 0. Home, Senator elect from Wisconsin, Several private bills were passed. On motion of Mr. Wade (Ohio) the House bill to authorize the Post Master General to discontinue the mail service in states where it is liable to be interfered with was taken up. Mr. Green (Mo.) moved to add that the Secretary of the Treasury he directed to prevent any further attempt to collect the revenue in such States. Mr. Douglas (Ill.) suggested that it was not the proper place to offer this amendment. Mr. Green (Ill.) said that it was an indirect attempt to strike at the States claiming to be out of the Union. Is there an insurrection in any State or any obstruction to the mail ser vice in any State ? Even if there was, the Post Master General or President have no power to interfere unless asked for by the Governors of the States. Mr. Hemphill (Texas) offered the follow ing: WHEREAS, Several States have withdrawn from the Union, and the laws of the United States are no longer enforced, that, therefore the Post Master General be directed to discon tinue the postal service in the said States, and make arrangements with the Governments of the same for an inter-postal communication therein. Mr. Green withdrew'his amendment. Mr. Clingman (N. C.) said that he believed these were out of the - Union, and had become foreign States just as much as Great Britain., and he thought the mail service should be stopped, but he wanted to amend the bill, and moved to out the word " insurrection," and insert, as a reason for the discontinuance, " the secession of certain States." Mr, Fitch (Ind.) suggested that the amend ment should read, "the refusal to acknowledge the laws of the 'United States," so as not to recognize secession, and also to strike out the words "postal laws maintained," so as to give no reason to employ force. Mr. Clingman accepted the suggestion. Mr. Mason (Va.) said that the bill was a declaration, by the HPuse, that insurrection existed on the part of these States. He trusted that the Senate would look well on the ques tion, as it is one of the most grave and mo mentous character. He said that the fact was that certain States had confederated and had a Congress in session with as much power as we possess, yet the bill calls it insurrection, and assumes that this is iLe new empire, but that the federal power is still in existence in those States. He proceeded to argue against any thing which would plunge the country into civil war. Twelve o'clock having arrived, the subject was dropped, and the Tariff bill taken up. Mr. 'loco& (Vu.) said he considered the passage of the bill a foregone conclusion. He opposed it on account of the features which ap peared on its face. He opposed it in consequence of the effects its passage will produce on the peace and prosperity of the country. He op posed it above all and more than all in conse quence of the policy it indicates, if it does not imitate. He yesterday characterized the bill as a declaration of war, and having since care fully read it, he reiterated the remark. it was more than a declaration of war. It invested the President in time of peace with dictatorial powers. President Lincoln in New York. NEW YORK; Feb. 20. Mayor Wood formally received. Mr. Lincoln at 10 o'clock this morning, in the Governor's room of the City Hall. Mayor Wood paid it becomes my duty to ex tend an official welcome in behalf of the cor poration. In doing so permit me to say that this. city never offered her hospitality to a man clothed with more exalted powers or resting under greater responsibilities than those which" circumstances have devolved upon you. Coming into office with a dismembered Government to reconstruct, and a dismembered and hostile people to reconcile, it will require a high pa triotism and an elevated comprehension of the whole country, its varied interests, opinions and prejudices to so conduct the public affairs as to bring it back again to its former harmo nious, consolidated and prosperous condition. I refer to this topic because New York is deeply interested. The present political divisions have sorely afflicted her people. Her material interests are paralysed. She is the child of the American Union. She has grown up under its maternal care and been fostered by its paternal bounty, and we fear if the Union dies the pres ent supremacy of New York will perish with it. To you, therefore, chosen under the fortis of the Constitution as the head of the Confederacy, we look for , a restoration of the fraternal rela tions between the States, which is only to be accomplished by peaceful and conciliatory means aided by Almighty God. MR. LINCOLN RESPONDED. Mr. Mayor. It is' with feelings indeed of gratitude that I make my acknowledgmints for the reception which has been extended to me by the great commercial city of New York. I can but remember that such a reception is ten dered by a people who do not by a majority agree with me in political sentiment. It is more grateful on this account, because it is an eridence that, in support of the great princi WASHINGTON', Feb. 20. pies that underlie our government, the people are nearly or quite unanimous in regard to the difficulties which encompass us at this time, and of which your honor has thought fit to speak so becomingly and so justly, as I sup pose, I can only say that I agree with the sen timents expressed by the Mayor. In my de votion to the Union, I hope I am not behind any man within the Union, but in the wisdom necessary to conduct affairs I fear I may be deficient, and that too great confidence has been reposed in me. lam sure, however, that lat least bring a heart devoted to the work. There is nothing which could bring me to consent willingly to the destruction of that Union under which not" alone the great com mercial city of New York, but theh whole coun try, has acquired greatness. As I understand it, the ship is made for the carriage and preser vation of the cargo, and so long as the ship can be saved with the cargo, it should never be abandoned. We should never cease in our ef forts to save it so long as it can be clone with out throwing overboard the passengers and cargo; so long as the prosperity and liberty of this people can be preserved in the Union, it will be my purpose to preserve that Union. He closed by thanking the Mayor, &c. At the close of the remarks the members of the City Council and State Government were introduced, after which the people were ad mitted. An immense rush and scramble was made to get into the Governor's room, and the jam was tremendous. Many thousands at tempted to gain admittance, and rent clothes and some bruises were the consequence. Many were unable to shake hands with Mr. Lincoln, and at one o'clock he returned to his hotel. Missouri for the Union Missouri has gone overwhelmingly for the Union. The present indications are that there will not be ten secessionists in the State Con vention. The average majority in this county is a little over 4,000 votes for the the Union ticket. From Washington. WASHINGTON, Feb. 20 The mail contractors in the Seceded States are continually asking whether they 'will be paid as heretofore, to which the Post-office Depart ment responds affirmatively, stating that drafts will be issued to them on the postmasters to be paid from the Postal revenuecollected within those States. The Postmaster General bas removed the route agent between Grafton and Parkersburg, Va., on the ground that he had left his business without permissicn, to engage in the secession movement in that State. Sev eral postmasters in Kentucky and Tennessee have been removed for similar causes. Excitement in Nebraska City. NEBRASKA CITY, Feb. 20 Old Fort, Kearney was taken possession of last night by a party of secessionists, and this morning a Palmetto flag waves over the for tress, bearing the motto, " Southern Rights." Great excitement prevails, and efforts are being made to take the fort by the Union party. An attack was made on old Fort Kearney this morning at ten o'clock, and amid great excitement the Palmetto flag was torn down, and the Stars and Stripes raised in its plaoc. Secession in Arkansas. At the election to 7 day a large number of votes were cast against holding a Convention. Upon raising a large Union flag, the stars and stripes, over the Court House, the enthu siasm of the crowd was unbounded, and cheer after cheer was sent up from more voices than ever greeted it in Washington county before. Parties are now parading the streets with Union flags. United States Steamer Niagara. zir.w Yons, Feb. 20 The U. S. - steam frigate Niagara was aL Aden on the 14th of January, Mr. Ward, the Amer ican minister, with Col., Ripley and Surgeon Woodworth, sailed on the 19th in the English steamer Orissa. The Niagara departed imme diately' homeward bound via the Cape of Good Hope. SPECIAL NOTICES. WARRANTED IN ALL CASES ..a1 DR. RA:RVEY'S CIERONQ THERMAL FEMALE PILLS For the prevention and Cure of all those difficulties to which the female system isyecidiarly liable. arising from STOPPAGR OF , NATURE OR OESTRUOTION. These Pills Aare never been known to fail when the directions have been strictly followeel, and they are perfectly safe to mice by the most deticate. TO MARRIED LADIES they are particularly recom mended, es they prevent difficulties, and restore nature, no matter from what cause the obstruction may arise. A few days in most cases will produce the desired effect; and although so powerful,. yet no injury will ever result from their use. But ,those who are pregnant should not use them, as they have an effect contrary to nature. Pamphlets detailing their virtues, with numerous certificates from well known physicians and apothecaries, can be had on applica tion to the agent, who will send the Pills, if desired, by mail, post-paid, to any address, on receipt of the money. Sold in boxes containing sixty pills,—price One Dollar,— by all the principal druggists and dealers, and by DYOTT & 00., wholesale agents, Korth Second street, Philadel phia. nov2-eodddr,wly A NEW REMEDY Superseding Onsans, OoPerna, OAPSITLES, or any compound that has ever been before the people. It has been used by ONE HUNDRED PHYSICIANS, In their private practice, with entire enema, in all cacee BELL'S SPECIFIC PILLS, For diseases of a private nature ; a cure is frequently per -formed in a week, and entire confidence may be placed in them. This remedy is a newly discovered specific, more active and speedy in its effects than Cubebs or Copaiba alone. The pills are half the size of Capsules, and never nauseate the stomach, or impregnate the breath. Six dozen pills in a box—price one dollar, and will be sent by mail, post-paid, by the agent, on receipt of the money. Sold by all the principal druggists and dealers, and by DYOTT & ,pO., wholesale agents, North Second street, Philadelphia. nev2-eodd&wly WE call the attention of our readers to an article advertised in another column, called BLOOD FOOD. It is an entirely new discovery, and must not ba confounded with any of the numerous patent medi cines of the day. It is FOOD FOR mos BLOOD, already prepared for absorption; pleasant to the taste and natu ral in action, and what one gains he retains. Let all those, then, who are suffering from poverty, impurity or deficiency of blood, and consequently with some chronic disease or ailment, take of this BLOOD FOOD and be re stored to health. We notice that our druggists have received a supply of this article, and also of the world renowned Dr. EATON'S INFANTIFB CORDIAL, which every mother should have. It contains no paregoric or opiate of any kind whatever, and of course must be invaluable for all infantile complaints. It will allay all pain, and soften the gums in process of teething, and at the same time regulate the bowels. Let all mothers and nurses, who have endured anxious days and sleepless nights, .procure a supply and be at once relieved. U 7 See advertisement. arkl7-d&wam MRS. WINSLOW, An experienced nurse and female physician, has a Sooth ing Syrup for children teething, which greatly facilitate the proceed of teething by softening the gum's, reducing as inilamnation—will allay all pain, and is sure to regulate the bowels. Depend upon it mothers, it will give rest to yourselves, and relief and health to your infants. ',er ectly safe in all cases. See advertisemv Ls in another col umn at 1,1859-d&wlv NEM abuttlistments. ON the 22d the Store of the subscriber will be closed from 10 A. M. until 4 P. M. W. GARRATT, feb2l - 112t Corner of State and Second streets. aARDEN SEEDS 1 1 1- 7 A 'FRESH AND VI COMPLETE assortment, just received and for sale by fel= WM. DOCK, JE., SG CO. • FIVE DOLLARS REWARD'! -Lost, a Black and Tan Terrier SLUT, with a leather collar and silver plate. Answers to the name of 4 "ate." The above reward will be paid if returned to the "Brady House." [feb2l-dlt] JNO. FARRELL. N U T COAL!!!. ONLY $1.75 PER TON!!!.,En ' TREVERTON NIIT COAL for eels at $1.75 per ton, delivered by Patent Weigh Carts. PINEGROVE COAL, just received by care for sale by feb2l JAMES M. WHEELER. CORNS REMOVED IN FIVE MINUTES WITHOUT PAIN ! !—Mrs. HANNAH Boa- LET, the celebrated Chiropodist , or Corn Extraetor, is in this place and may be found at the house of THOMAS Short etieet, Harrisburg. She retrieves Corns, Bunions, he., without the least pain. She ie hilly recommended by prominent citizen. of Philadelphia, Oolembit, Lancaster, Casuals, Chant bersburg, Beading, Harrisburg, West Chester, said other places. Why safer leapt when rclicf can be had? ST. Louie, Feb. 19, FAYETTEVILLE, Feb. 19 Ntw Wwertistmente. fiß A R G A I N S! BARGAINS!!" SELLING OFF AT COST! TO CLOSE OUT BUSINESS! AT NO. 12, NORTH-WESTERN SIDE OF MARKET SQUARE! I AM NOW CLOSING OUT NY ENTIRE STOCK OF GOODS! EMBRACING EVERYTHING IN THE LINE OF CHINA, GLASS, QUEENSWARE, GROCERIES, &0., FLUID AND COAL OIL LAMPS AND LANTEItNS. GLASS BOTTLES, TUMBLERS, DINNER, TEA AND TOILET SETS. if OLD BOTTLED LIQUOR." CEDAR WARE, BROOMS, The Public are invited to call, examine the GOODS and the LOW PRICES I am selling at, and judge for yourselves. W. L. TREWICK. feb2o-dlw VR - UFT, &0., FOR B.,t,kLE-At Boas & Forsteris Warehouse, on the Canal. The subscriber has just arrived from Bradford county with a fresh supply of Apples, Dried Apples, Apple Butter, Buckwheat Ilour - and Butter, all of which he offers for sale low for cash. febl9-d3l JOHN MIQIIEEN. THE AMERICAN READER ! A popular and very interesting Iteetts . r, (16111010 d for the use of ACADEMIES AND SCHOOLS generally throughout our country, and now in the nee of the Public Schools of the First School District of Penn sylvania, by order, and with the unanimous vote of the Board of School Controllers of said District. It may be had on application to the Author and Publisher, South west corner of Lombard and 23d streets, Philadelphia, for $6.60 per dozen, or 75 cents per copy. Orders may be left at this office for any quantity or number of them, and they will be promptly delivered to address free of freight or porterage. febl9-416m. MADERIA WINE !-WELSH BRO THERS, OLD RESERVE WlNE—full bodied and fruity. In store and for sale by JOHN H. ZIEGLER, 78 Market street. feblB FIRST CLASS GROCERIES ! LARGE ARRIVAL!! Mauro nrwr nErtlawan from the Eastern cities, Where Me have selected with the greatest care a large and com ete assortment of superior GOODS, which embrace everything kept in the best City Groceries, we respect fully and cordially invite the public to examine our stock and hoar our prices, fehlf• WM. DOCK, as., & CO. FOR RENT—The Buehler House RES. TAIJRANT, with ottio of Fixtures, fol)14 APPLES ! ! APPLES ! ! I—Five Hun dred Barrels of superior APPLES just received from New York State, For sale at lowest cash price by febl2 JAMES M. WHEELER; ELECT I O N; OFFICE NORTHERN CENTRAL RAILWAY CO., Z BALTIMORE, :Feb. 11, 1661. A general meeting of the Stockholders of this Com pany will he held at CALVERT STATION, on THEIRS DAV,,rite 9.Bru or FEBRUARY Vg", between the houcS of 12 and 2 o'clock, P. M. ; for'. the. election of Twelve Directors for the ensuing year. The Transfer Books will be closed on the 16th of Feb ruary until after the election. By order. febl2-dte ROM. S. HOLLINS, Secretary. HOUSES TO RENT.—Two or three dwellings, in the brick row, on Third street, near Walnut, are offered for rent, from the let of April next. For terms, enquire of MICHAEL BUR E. febl3-dtf VALENTINES ! VALENTINES!! A large assortment of COMIC and SENTIMENTAL VALENTINES of different styles and prices. For sale at SOHEFFER'S BOOKSTORE, feb9 18 Market Street, Harrisburg, Pa. FOR, SALE.—The BUILDING on the corner of Walnut and Short streets, used as a COOPER SHOP. This building was originally built so that it could be turned into Dwelling Houses. It con sists of three separate frames placed together, each frame being 25 by 20 feet, making the entire building, as it now Staudt], 75 feet long and 20 feet wide. Will sell also an EIGHT HORSE POWER ENGINE AND BOILER, nearly new, and one of Drawback's Patent Stave Cutters, and a Set of Saws for Jointing Staves. The above property will be sold at a bargain, as we wish to clear the ground on which the building stands. Enquire at the Broker's Office of S. L. M'OULLOCH, feb9;dtf 126 Market Street. HE BIBLE ON.DIVORCE. , --The fol - T lowing worth( are from Mark a. v. 9, 12: "What, therefore, God has joined together let not man put asunder." "Whosoever shall put away his wife and marry another 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, thereloto, 6424 has joined together let no mut put asunder." *MAU EW BOOKS! The “OHILDREN , S PICTURE POOH Or EIRM" /11custrated by W. Heaver. Price 75e. cloth. The '"CHILDREN'S PICTURE FABLE BOOK," II- Instated by HARBISON WRIB. Price 76c. cloth. The tiOIIILDRENII PICTURE BOOK OP QUADRU PEDS, Illustrated by W. Heresy. Price 76c. cloth. Nor ale at EICHEFFEWS BOOKSTORE , feb9 No.le Market Etreet, Earrleburg,ra. TEAS, LIQUORS, &c•, GOBLETS, &c. BASKETS, &r,