tke Vatriot a anion. TUESDAY MORNING, MAIM 19, 1861. O. iABSMTT fk. THOMAS C. MAaDOWELL. Pub- Ushers and Proprietors. Oommnnicationaarill not be pnbliahedin the PATRIOT WM UNION unless accompanied with the name of the lather. S.M. PETTENGILL & CO., Advertising Agents, 119 Nassau street New York, and 10 State street, Boston, are the Agents for .the PATRIOT AID Mum, and the most influential and largest circu lating newspipers in the United States and Lanadas They are authorized -to contract for= atouriosesstrates FOR SALE. A seeond-hand ADAMS Passs t platen 30% by 26indhes, in good order; ran be worked either by hand or steam power. Terms moderate Inquire at this office. To Members of the Legislature. THE DAILY PATRIOT AND UNION will be furnished to Members of the Legislature daring the session at the low price of ON DOLLAR Members wishing extra copies of the DAILY PATRIOT AND Usrou, son procure them by leaving their orders at the publication office, Third street, or with our re- porters in either House, the evening previous The Re-action. The Republicans point to the result of the election in New Hampshire and the town elec tions in New York as evidence that there has been no re-action against their party. We are not apt to look northward and eastward for the first symptoms of a change in public opinion; but Pennsylvania furnishes us with the proof. The city of Lancaster led off by electing a Democratic Mayor by some 700 majority ; and on Friday last Reading, which has recently given heavy majorities the other way, also chose a Democratic Mayor by more than 600 majority over his Republican competitor.— Without specifying other localities, these may be taken as fair indications of the political re action which has taken place in Pennsylvania, commencing with. the close of the Presidential campaign, when the people began to see the fearful mistake they committed in electing a sectional President. When the offices are all distributed, the Republican party will be re duced to but little more than those who are Onafortably provided for. The dread the Republicans have of elections about these times, is clearly exhibited by the attempt now making in the Legislature—and likely to succeed—to postpone the May elec tion in Philadelphia until October, and to con tinue those men in office for a longer term than that for which they were originally elected.— This high-handed proceeding evinces the reck lessness of despair, and shows the deepest anxiety to postpone the inevitable day of doom. Ent it cannot be averted. The fate of the Re publican party is sealed. Utter and deserved defeat awaits it. Great Expectations. The sanguine friends of the present Federal Administration,.who expected that so soon as Mr. Lincoln assumed the control of the govern ment everything would come right, as if by magic, are already compelled to endure the pangs of early disappointment. During the last months of Mr. Buchanan's Administration, nothing was more common than to hear from confiding Republicans such expressions as— '°Wait cat Old Abe becomes President-A-then "we will have a government. He will teach 4ihezebeblit lesson they will bejllce_lir_tn— , member. Re:wra-sennreufforcementa to the ,laAcroon. He will cheek the arro- " gance of the secessionists and strike a deter. "mined blow for the Union." This sort of language was repeated until credulous i Repub licans came to entertain the belief that secession would die with the " corrupt and imbecile Bu " chauan dynasty," and the stars and stripes wave in triumph over the Confederate States as soon as the breeze began to blow stiffly from the North. It is always those who expect too much that are doomed to cruel disappointment. Already there is a striking contrast between what the Administration was expected to do and what it has done; and between these expectations and what it is likely to do the chasm is still wider. Let us eee : It was expected by the Republican party that Mr. Lincoln would adopt immediate measures to reinforce all the forts belonging to and held for the Government in the seceding States. It was expected, by very many, that the pro perty and places taken from the Government in these States would be recaptured at any cost; and to aid in the accomplishment of this pur pose, some of the Northern States pledged men and money, and that very valiant man DAVIS, Speaker of the House of Representatives of the conservative State of Pennsylvania, told Mr. LINCOLN to his face that the Keystone would be ready to contribute her quota for the accom plishment of this patriotic design. It was expected that the laws would be rigidly enforced in the seceding States, and the revenue collected either on land or on water. This point was not definitely determined, but at all events the revenue was to be collected; no question about that. Had any man insinuated doubts as to the possibility of Mr. Lincoln col lecting the revenue, he would have been hooted down as a malignant secessionist. Old Abe Would do it—that was a fixed fact. It was expected that every man who yelled for Lincoln and Freedom, and made a patriotic ass of himself by wearing a fireman's cape and carrying a goal oil lamp about the:streets on dark nights, would be comfortably provided for —have a fair chance at the pickings. These were some of the great expectations entertained by the Republicans since the be ginning of the year 1861. In this imperfect enumeration we of course leave out of view the expectations cherished before the November election, which were summarily dispelled within a month after—that there would be no secession; that the Southern States were only talking disunion to frighten the North; that Lincoln's election would strengthen the Union ; that the triumph of the party of Freedom - would give every working man a chance and a home, and theta...ceaseless tide of prosperity and fat things would flow in upon the country. Now let us see what is likely to become of all these fondly cherished expectations : The confident expectation that Fort Sumpter. would be reinforced and held is already de stroyed. Orders have, been, or soon will be, issued by Mr. Lincoln, the veritable "Old Abe," for the evacuation of this stronghold. General Scott advises it, and it will be done. The expectation that the new Administration would attempt to retake the property and places seized by the secessionists is not to be realized. The Government has not the force and means at its disposal adequate to this undertaking; min if it had, the policy of commencing hostili ties is not entertained. The expectation that the revenue would be collected is likely to share the same fate. How to do it is the question. There are so many Southern ports of entry, and the obstacles in the way of enforcing the revenue laws from shipboard are so numerous, that the Adminis tration cannot see through the difficulty ; and it may determine to be guided by circumstances, and not to attempt to do what cannot be done. The expectation that every active, coal-oil Republican would get a chance at the pickings is only partially dispelled as yet. Some have got their reward. Others are watching and working and waiting in breathless anxiety.— Others are already convinced that Republicans, as well as republics, are ungrateful. When this business is finally settled, and ninety-nine out of every hundred hungry expectants dis cover that they are not to have a seat at the government table, then the bubble of great ex pectations must collapse, and "Old Abe" be voted a traitor to freedoln and human rights. Mr. Lincoln's Administration seems destined to teach the folly of great expectations, and the striking contrast between profession and practice. Mr. Douglas' Resolution. On Friday last there occurred an exciting debate in the United States Senate on the fol lowing resolution of inquiry, offered by Mr. DOUGLAS: Resolved, That the Secretary of War be re quested to inform the Senate what forts, arse nals, navy yards and other public works within the limits of the States of South Carolina, Geor gia, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, and Texas, are now within the actual possession and occupation of the United States, and by what number of men each is garrisoned and held, and whether reinforcements are necessary to retain the same, and if so, whether the Gov ernment has the power and means under exist ing laws to supply such reinforcements within such time as the exigencies and necessities of the case may demand, and whether the defence and protection of the United States and their interests iike it necessary and wise to retain military possession of such forts, places and other property, except at Key West and Tortu gas, and to recapture and re-occupy such others as the United States have been deprived of by seizure or surrender for any other purpose and with a view to any other end than the subjuga tion and occupation of those States which have assumed the right to secede from the Union, and within whose limits such forts and other public property are situated ; and if such be the motives for recapturing and holding the forts and other public property, what military force, including regulars and volunteers, would be necessary to enable the United States to re duce the States aforesaid and- such others as are supposed to sympathise with them to sub jection and obedience to the laws of the Union, and to protect the Federal capital. The information required by this resolution is precisely what the country is most anxious to obtain. The inquiry comprises several ob jects: First, What fortifications are now held by the Federal Government it the seceding States, and how they are held. Second, Are reinforcements necessary to retain the same; can the Government supply such reinforce ments, and if it can, would it be wise to do so ? Third, Does the Administration intend to re capture the forts already taken, and hold those now in their possession, !aka seceding tates. _Fourth, If subjugation is to be the policy of the Admin istration, what would it cost in men and money ? These are inquiries now agitating the public mind, North and South, peace rneu and war men, secessionists and friends of the Union. They are questions upon the solution of which depends the future of the country. 'they go directly to the heart of the controversy. They are designed to ascertain what policy the Ad ministation of Mr. Lincoln means to pursue— whether an attempt is to be made to fulfil the declarations of the inaugural, that the property belonging to the Federal Government shall be held, and the revenue collected, or whether the order for the evacuation of Fort Sumpter is indicative of the conclusion, on the part of the Administration, that the carrying out of this policy is impracticable. These questions the Administration is not prepared to answer, judging from the deter mined and bitter opposition made to their pas sage by the Republican Senators. But they are only deferring the evil day. They must be answered practically, sooner or later—if not in words, in acts. It would be more satisfac tory to the country to know at once what they have to expect, than to encounter the delay and suspense of awaiting the development of events. But there is no possible way of dodging these questions. They must be solved by the Ad ministration and by the people. It is impos sible to act upon the theory that the Union is unbroken, without we are prepared to go to war and attempt to conquer the seceding States. They must eventually agree that the Union is unbroken, or it is broken. If we cannot per suade them, and do not intend to make the attempt to compel them to recognize the au thority of the Federal Government, it would be more rational at once to recognize their in deliendence, than to pursue this half and half policy, which cannot continue much longer. The Administration must decide whether their policy is to be for war or for peace, and must solve the very questions which Mr. Douglas wishes to be answered now. ANOTHER CONSTITUTION GRANTED TO Aus- TRIA--The Emperor of Austria has granted what seems to be a liberal Constitution to his ill-governed and dissatisfied people. It has been forcill from him by popular discontent, which threatened the partition of his over grown Empire. Its heads are given in the following summary, which was published in the London papers of the 27th of last month : The representation of the Empire will retain the name of Reichsrath. The Reichsrath will Consist of two Chambers. The Upper Rouse will be composed of he reditary members, and of other persons nomi nated for life. The Lower House will consist of 343 mem bers, who will be elected by Provincial Diets. The Reichsrath will have the right of legis lation and of initiative. Its sittings will be public. A bill becomes a law when it has passed both Houses and has been sanctioned by the Emperor. The Reicbsrath is to fix the amount of the budget, to legislate in all matters of taxation, to manage public loans and the national debt; to audit-the State balance sheet., and superin tend the affairs of the Bank. The restoration of the former Constitution of Hungary, Croatia, Slavonia, and Transylvania within the limits of the diploma of the 20th of October, 1860, is decreed. For the other provinces liberal statutes, with representation of the interests of the people, will be given. To towns the representation will be at the rate of five per cent. of the population. In rural districts it will be below five per cent. The Provincial Diets are to legislate for their respective provinces, to have autonomy, the right of initiative, and publicity. The Provincial Diets are to meet on the 6th, and the Reichsrath on the 29th of April. This is an approach to Parliamentary repre sentation, and the Times, commenting upon it, frankly says : "The fortunes of the Austrian Empire and the many European interests which are involved in it mainly depend on the atti tude of Hungary between this and the 6th of March, when the Provincial Diets are to meet. We can hardly doubt that the other States con cerned will follow the lead of Hungary, and we may almost predict that if Hungary does not revolt, the peace of Europe will not be dis turbed during the present year. Garibaldi will not attack Venetia unless Hungary is prepared to take Austria on the flank, and in the same event Prussia is virtually pledged to remain neutral." PENN'A LEGISLATURE. SENATE. MONDAY, March 18, 1861. The Senate was called to order at 3 o'clock, p. m., by Mr. PENNEY, Speaker pro tem. Prayer by Rev. Mr. Cattel. BILLS IN PLACE Mr. ROBINSON, an act to incorporate the New Castle and Darlington railroad company. Mr. BOUGHTER, an act to establish a law library in the city of Harrisburg. Mr. BENSON, an act to legalize the election of certain school directors in Potter county. Mr. CONNELL, an act to reduce the enroll ment tax on acts of incorporation of engine, hose, and hook and ladder companies. (The bill proposes reducing the tax to ten dollars, instead of fifty.) Also, a supplement to the act providing for the registry of births, deaths and marriages. Mr. WHARTON, an act to incorporate the Glenmorgan iron company. PRESENTATION OF A GAVEL. Mr. HALL, on behalf of the Sergeant-at- Arms, presented to the Senate a beautiful gavel, in a few very appropriate remarks, at the con clusion of which Mr. HALL offered a resolu tion of thanks to Mr. Yerkes; which was passed unanimously. Speaker PALMER received the gavel with a suitable reply, in which he paid a high compliment to Mr. Yerkes, as a man and an officer. Mr. SCHINDEL, on leave, read in place an act to vacate Oak alley, in the borough of Eas ton. ORDERS OF THE DAY An act relating to deer in the county of Cen tre. Passed_ An act relating to the distribution of the pro ceeds of sheriffs' sales of real estate; which, after some debate, was, on motion, postponed for the present. An act in relation to the accounts of the Delaware and Hudson canal company. The bill was postponed from time to time, from the early part of the session, and was passed, after a prolonged debate, finally, by a vote of 16 to 8. The object of the bill is to exonerate the company from the payment of certain taxes, said to amount in the aggregate to $30,000. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. MONDAY, March 18, 1861. The SPEAKER called the House to order at 3 o'clock. Mr. SHEPPARD made a statement, in which he emphatically denied the report published in a Philadelphia paper, that he had moved to re consider the vote on the !It'll to suppress fortune telling. He voted in favor of the bill through out. , PETITIONS, &O. This being petition day, a large number were received and referred. Among them the fol lowing : Messrs. WILDEY, THOMAS, SHEPPARD and others presented petitions for and remon strances against the erection of public buildings in Philadelphia. Mr. BRODHEAD presented a petition from citizens of Pike county, praying for a repeal of the tax on the New York and Erie railroad for a right of way through the 4tfttc. Mr. BHEPPARD, in favor of remunerating the owners of fugitive slaves who may be res cued from the officers by mobs. Mr. HILL presented a petition from citizens of Montgomery county, praying for an appro priation of money to send free negroes to Li beria. Mr. WILDEY, remonstrances against depri ving the Supreme Court from making certain appointments. Mr. GORDON presented a petition from citi zens of Jefferson county, praying for an appro priation of $500,000 for an underground rail road from the county seat of Cameron to the county seat of Forest, if those places can be found. Also, a further appropriation for the purchase of a set of teeth for the mouth of oil creek. Mr. H.UHN. petition of citizens of Ashland borough for a charter of incorporation of a cemetery company. Also, one from citizens of Schuylkill county, asking for an appropriation to the Pennsylva nia Colonization society. Mr. PRESTON, one for making an appro priation to the American Colonization society. Mr. PIERCE, one of like import from Dela ware county. KANSAS APPROPRIATION The Governor, in accordance with a resolu tion of the House, returned the bill making an appropriation of $30,000 to the suffering poor of Kansas. A resolution from the Senate, re questing that this bill be returned to that body, was concurred in. THE PHILADELPHIA POLICE BILL. The bill relative to the police force of Phila delphia, was re-committed to the Cominittee on the Judiciary Local. Mr. THOMAS, by con sent, read in place a substitute for the bill. RESOLUTION Mr. SHEPPARD offered a resolution request ing the Auditor General and State Treasure; to inform the House what amount of guaran teed interest is due by the State, on account of the Bald Eagle and Spring Creek navigation company. • Passed. BILLS IN PLACE Several bills were read in place, among which were the following : - Mr. BARTHOLEMEW, an act appropriating portions of fines and forfeitures in Schuylkill county to the creation of a free law library in said county. Also, a supplement to the act incorporating the Donaldson improvement company. Mr. PRESTON, an act to prohibit the Phil adelphia, Baltimore and Wilmington railroad company from running locomotives through the city of Philadelphia. Mr. LEISENRING, an act to incorporate the Educational Advancement Society of the Alum ni Association of the Central High school of Philadelphia; also, an act to divorce Edwin George Wells from his wife Ellen. Mr. SHEPPARD, a joint resolution fo pur chase the manuscripts of the State book of Pennsylvania. The bill for the payment of seventy-five dol lars each to the committees on the contested election case in the First legislative district was taken up and passed. Adjourned. EXTRA SESSION OF CONGRESS.—In case an extra session of Congress is called, special elections will have to be held in Maryland, Tennessee, North Carolina, Kentucky, Rhode Island and California. Virginia holds her regular election in the latter end of May, in season, probably, to do away with a special election. THURLOW WEED ON THE IRREPRESSI BLE COIVFLICT BETWEEN THE TWO TARIFFS. Already Thurlow Weed sees the impractica bility of the new tariff, the impossibility of collecting the revenue, and the dead lock to which the government is reduced. " The exe cutive arm," he says, "is paralyzed. There are no laws at all adequate to existing exigencies. * In the present condition of the coun try its embarrasse.ents have been aggravated by a complicated tariff. Congress adjourned without passing the laws necessary to enable the President even to collect the national reve nues. Greatly as extra sessions of Congress are to be deprecated, there seems now to be an overruling necessity for one." Such is the humiliating confession of the im becility of the Republican Government made by the organ of the chief member of the Cabi net. The duties on foreign goods, he says, will be all collected at the South, and the whole trade of the cities of the Northern sea board will be " diverted" there. The duties on foreign goods reaching Savannah, Charleston, New Orleans, &a., amount to more than $20,000 per day, " and to this extent the general gov ernment is practically paying tribute to those in gpen rebellion against its authority." Yet we were assured by all the Republican journals that in Mr. Lincoln the country would find " a man at the head of affairs, and he would soon prove to the world that we have a government." But now his utter impotence is admitted, and an extra session of Congress is called for to give him " backbone" and to stiffen his " weak knees." By the time fixed for the new tariff to go into operation, nearly two millions of dollars, says the Journal, will have passed into the hands of those who have thrown off their alle giance to the Union. Nor is this all. "After the Ist of May the rates of duty will be much lower at the Gulf State ports than elsewhere. The difference will be so great that the entire Northwest would find it to their advantage to purchase their imported goods at New Orleans rather than at New York." What is proposed to be done ? A blockade ? Not at all. "There will be no blockade," says the Journal ; for "as the law of blockade is now construed, blockade is nearly a practical impossibility on a coast line of thousands of miles." What then ? Has the government no authority on the land ? Just before Mr. Lincoln's inauguration his friend and representative in the Senate, Mr. Trumbull, declared that under any other go vernment than that of . Mr. Buchanan the Commissioners from South Carolina would have been arrested and hanged. Why does not Mr. Lincoln arrest and bang the Commissioners from Montgomery ? Weed has now discovered that "in holding Sumpter, an isolated fort, the . authority of the government could only be vindicated at a fearful expenditure of treasure and blood." No Republican journal made this discovery while Mr. Buchanan was in office. On the contrary, it was unanimously agreed that he was nothing less than a traitor in not vindicating the government at that very point. It is only now they have found out that "the executive arm is paralyzed." Rut Weed consoles the party with the idea that the authority of the government can be as well maintained " by collecting the revenue on the quarter decks of armed frigates, to be stationed at the entrances of the harbors." "This," adds the Jorunal, "will be a legiti mate exercise of authority. If bloodshed shall result from it, the government will not be the aggressor. There will be no invasion. It will involve us in no controversy with foreign Pow ers." Thus the cowardly government, know ing that the Confederate States have no navy, will invade their waters, but not their territory. It may rest assured, however, that if it pursue that course, it will soon have to defend itself on land, or make a precipitate retreat from Washington. And are the Cabinet so silly as to imagine that this plan will not involve the country in a controversy with foreign powers, and that the British and_French governments, ifirrpertae - ifffnea - frigates Or a government de jure to levy tribute on the high seas, from their merchant vessels, on goods which will nave to pay a second tri bute to a government de facto, when they enter port—to pay, first, the Morrill high tariff du ties, and then the low duties of the Confederate States ? The supposition is absurd, and any such attempt will lead to a war with England and France, who 'will not recognize the au thority of any government , over territory which it is not able to assert by land as well as by sea. "If this much of coercion' is not practica ble," says Weed, " then the government is at an end." There is no one knows better than the editor of the Evening Journal that it is not practicable, and that the government is really at an end in the Confederate States. Such is the pass to which we are brought by the elec tion to the office of Chief Magistrate of an ignorant, incompetent man. There is no states man in the Cabinet—there was none in the last Congress—nor is it likely that any will turn up in the next Congress capable of grap pling with the difficulties of the situation in which the country is placed. --H. Y. Herald. LEABNING BUT Too LATE.—The Republican press at the North is just beginning to com prehend and discuss the results in connection with the accession of their party to power on anti-national principles and ideas. They are rather late in the day ; but had there been a due capacity for practical statesmanship among their leaders, they would have deemed the re sults in question as inevitable even before the revolution which they have provoked, had at all begun. These results are such only as could legitimately flow from the premises Repubican ism assumed. But the wiseacres who thus set themselves up to become rulers of the nation, had not foresight enough tosdiscern the natu ral consequences of political injustice. Hence, now, we find that common'sense which taught others than fanatics and narrow partisans be forehand, as it were, has come to the relief of Republicans•only after causes have prOduced effects most disastrously. The Albany Evening Journal awakens to the impossibility of collecting the revenues at the South, and confesses now that paper blockades will not be recognized by European States.— And in view of the difficulties and embarrass ments that are to arise in connection with the revenue by reason of the lower tariff of the Southern Confederacy, a significant article ap pears in a New York Evening Post, a Republican paper, calling for the repeal of the Morrill high tariff bill passed at the close of the last Con gress. The foreshadowings of the future are evidently unpleasant; and the New York Tri bnne, in a long article on " The Future," thus owns up its ignorance of the past : Confession No. I.—" Before last November threats of disunion were common enough, but no one supposed they were anything more than electioneering tricks." Confession No. 2—" Indeed; so frequently had those threats been made before, that no one had any reason to regard them as of any practical importance." Confession No. 3.—" They were accordingly received *either with indifference or with mirth ful remarks • and the general opinion seemed to be that the South could not be forced out of the Union." Confession No. 4.—“lt was argued by those who oared to argue at all about it, that the very existence of slavery depended upon the Union ; that no slave State would dare to have Canada carried down to its borders ; that slave insurrections would occur as soon as the heavy hand of the federal government was withdrawn from the institution; and that the • dread of John Brown raids would alone prove sufficient to keep the slave States in the Union." Confession No. s.—"lt would seem now that great ignorance prevailed at the North as to the real situation of the slave States. At all events, we reckoned too rapidly, and accepted possible ultimate results as immediate effects." Such confessions of past ignorance as these, whioh are virtually made also by the new ad ministration itself, while satisfactory in a de gree, are not calculated to beget unlimited confidence for a wise ruling of the country for the next four years at the hands of those who have so egregriously blundered in the past.— Baltimore gun. A NEW COXISISSIONER OF PATENTS.—Yester day afternoon it was settled in Cabinet council to appoint Mr. Halloway, of Ind., late a mem ber of the Holm of Representatives, to be Com missioner of Patents. Mr. Halloway is a man of clear head, excellent judgment, much energy of character, and unapproachable integrity.— He is a mechanic rather than a lawyer, by pio fession, though through connecton with the general business and public trusts at home and here, he is sufficiently familiar With the prin ciples of law (as shown in the manner in which he discharged the duties of his late position in Congress) to enable him to make a very suc cessful administration of the important trust about to be confided to him.— Washington Star, March 16. DEAD.—Mr. Charles L. Rademacher died at his residence in Philadelphia on Wednesday last, in the 46th year of his age. Mr. Rade macher figured prominently in the terible tragedy which occurred about fifteen years ago, and for which Langfeldt suffered on the gallows. The Rademachers lived at the time in Fourth street, above Arch. One night their bed chamber was entered from the outside by means of a shed, and Mrs. Rademacher was cruelly butchered by the assassin. Mr. R. was also wounded. The excitement which grew out of the crime and the arrest, trial and exe cution of Langfeldt will be remembered by most of our readers.—Philadelphia Bulletin. A GIANT IN EMBRY6.—The Springfield (Ill.) Journal says that Mr. George Howard and lady, of that place, are in possession of a prize in nature of a mammoth baby. The age is six months, and it weighs sixty-one pounds. Mr- Howard is a saddle and harness maker, of Springfield, and lives on Adams street. Nei ther he nor his - wife are above the medium in stature. The child is, without doubt, the largest, taking its age into consideration, that has been on record. It is said that its strength is fully in proportion to its stature ; it lifts and throws the chairs around as easily as a boy of five years. AMERICAN LOCOMOTIVES IN FRANCE.—LOCO mo tires, to be driven by American anthracite coal, are now constructing by the Paris and Orleans Railway Company, at their workshops at Ivry, under the direction of a Philadelphian, named Mil'holland. The coal can be laid down on the line for $6.75 per ton, and the experi ment annoys the English coal dealers very much. It is said to be owing to the enterprise of a French nobleman, recently in this conn try, whose attention was drawn to the subject while traveling with Lord Lyons, the British Minister, over the Reading railway. ATTEMPT AT MURDER BY A NEORO. —We learn of an attempted murder, on Thursday night last, by a negro woman belonging to the lady of a Mr. Brittingbam, residing at Pitts' Creek in the lower part of Worcester county, Md. It is thought that both this negro woman and her husband, a slave, belonging to a neighbor, were concerned. The attempt was made by throwing an axe through a window, near which Mrs. B. was sleeping, she being sick and propped up in bed. Both negroes are in the Snow Hill jail. Mrs. B. made a narrow eseape.—Snow Hill Shield. PASSAGE OF AN IMPORTANT RAILROAD RILL.- On Monday last the Indiana Legislature passed the railroad bill known as the Pittsburg, Fort Wayne and Chicago railroad bill, providing that railroads may let their roads go to sale, and organize new corporations, and giving the new corporations the right to reinstate the old bondholders, auditors and stockholders in the same order as before, as first, second, third preferred stock without any preferment. It puss-ea botn-zrouacti. The Troy Times states that 150 men are now, and have been for some time, at work at the Watervliet Arsenal, manufacturing munitions of war, which are destined principally for the Southern ports. LATEST BY TELEGRAPH From Washington, WASHINGTON, March 18. The Confederate Commissioners have to-day been politely informed that they will soon re ceive a reply of some kind from the Adminis tration. Several of the highest class of officers in the Departments have to-day sent in their resigna tions. A Cabinet meeting was convened to-day to consider the question of an extra session of Congress. The head of the Post Office Department will to-day begin the appointment of the Postmas ters in small cities, and will continue the job throughout the week. Pollock stock, in the matter of the Philadel phia Collectorship, appears to be up to-day. Dispatches from Pensacola represent every thing quiet, there so far. In answer to a Senator, the President has stated that he would be through with the Sen ate business on Wednesday, and the Senate will probably adjourn on that day. It is settled that Carl Shurz will not be sent as Minister to-Sardinia. The acceptance of the Mexican mission by Hon. Thomas Corwin is finally settled. iov. Roman, the third Confederate Commis sioner, has arrived to-day. Quarters have been provided in this city for Major Anderson's command. Official dispatches from the East India squadron say that one of the vessels has been dispatched to Ningpo, for the purpose of finding out if possible the pirates who recently captured two American vessels on that coast. The Pacific mail by the North Star brought no information relative to the missing sloop of war Levant. The last remittances from any of the seceded States on account of the customs were received from Galveston toward the close of February, being about nine hundred dollars. Drafts on balance due previous to .the secession and on receipts other than from customs, are, it is said, honored in those States, with the exception of Louisiana.* Mr. Archibald, Engineer in Chief of the Navy, has resigned. Missouri state Convention. ST. LOUIS, March . 18. The following amendment to the fifth resolu tion of the majority report of the committee on Federal Relations, N which has been under discussion during the past week, was voted down on Saturday in the Convention by a vote of sixty-one to thirty : To amend the fifth resolution by adding the following : And further believing the fate of. Missouri depends upon a peaceable adjustment of our present difficulties, she will never countenance or aid the seceding States in making war upon the general Government nor will she provide men and money for the purpose of aiding the gen eral Government in any attempt to coerce a seceding State. From the Southern Confederacy. MONTGOMERY, Ala., hlarch 18. The tariff. bill reported last week was not passed into a law ; it will be up fer action when the Congress again meets. The Commission ers to Europe, Messrs. Yancy, of Alabama, A. Dudley Mann, and R. A. Rust, of Louisiana, will leave for New Orleans, to take an English steamer at Havana on the 27th for Southamp ton. Resumption of Specie Payments. PHILADELPHIA, March 18. Tne banks of this city resumed specie pay ments this morning. COMMISSIONERS TO EUROPE.—The -- - _ goverment of the seceded States has appointed li o ll u. William L. Yancey, of Alabama ; Judge P A. Rust, of Louisiana; Col. A. Dudley :Hann and T. Butler King, of Georgia ; special commie, sioners to proceed to England and Franc e t o obtain the recognition of the independ ence of the Confederate States, and make such cola, inertial arrangements as their joint interests may require. ARMY RESIGNATION.—Lient. Caleb Huse, of the United States army, son of Ralph C , M use , Esq., of Newburyport, Mass., has resigned. He is a graduate of West Point. His company was for a time at Key West, where he married and it is now at Fort Sumpter. He has beet absent on a furlough for some time, and was employed as teacher of a State military ae a d e. my at Tuscaloosa, Alabama. NEW HAMPSHIRE ELECTION.—Returns front 209 towns show a majority for Berry, rep. , f or Governor, of 3,896. Four of the five council lors have been elected by the Republicans, and all but two of the senators. The representa tives number 183 Republicans, 105 Demo crats-32 to be heard from. Last fall Lincoln carried the State by 9,100. John Eubank died at Charlottsville, Va., an the 11th instant, aged 68 years. lie was for merly captiveßritish army to s, a.l when Napoleonmerl was ldierin sent the a s was one of the troops detailed by the -English y a soldier government to guard the Emperor in his lonely prison. He remained there during Napoleon's life and for several years afterwards. THE OHIO SENATORSHIP.—Dispatches from Columbus, Ohio, announce twenty-nine ballots in the Republican caucus for Senator to fill Chase's vacancy. John Sherman and Gov. Dennison are the principal candidates. sh e ,. man was withdrawn, but will prol,amy b e brought forward again, stronger than bef ore , THE WHEAT.—In Missouri the young wheat in the country north of the Missouri river is looking unusually thrifty and flourishing f or this season of the year. In other parts of th e State it presents a good appearance, and far. mars are encouraged to look for an unusually good harvest of this grain. The proposition for a National Convention, in. troduced in the Legislature of Indiana on the first day of the session, passed just before the adjournment by a decided majority in both Houses. NOVEL USE or GOAT SKINS.—The mode of churning in Fayal, one of the Azores, is to tie the cream up in a goat skin, and kick it about till the butter comes. The official vote shows that North Carolina has voted against calling a State Convention by only 194 majority. The shad fisheries of North Carolina are said to be unusually productive this season. New Ithertionnents. HEALTH, MONEY I HAPPINESS !! At this season of year, when so much sickness prevnilp. every one should provide himself with DR. DM PHREVS HOMEOPATHIC MEDICINES, and prevent disease in its beginning. A fresh enpply always on band at SCHEFFER'S DOOK-STORE, Harrisburg. 'mari9 B ANK LETTER AND BUSINESS LETTER PAPER We would call attention to a new article of paper, called BUSINESS LETTER, which has been gotten up to meet the wants of business men and others who ab ject to Commercial Note as being to narrow, and do not wish to use part of usual letter sheet. This overcomes both the above objections; is a per. feet sheet; pure wove; plate finish ; ruled on one side; made from best material, free from adulteration, and put up in neat boxes convenient for use. We also have a paper called BANK LETTER, similar to the above, except it has but half the number of lines on, so as to allow a printed blank or heading above. For sale by THEO. F. SCHEFFER, mar 19 No. 18 Market Street, Harrisburg. Pa 1 H td i H Da ima egs , a ... . = 00111 WANTED -A WHITE WOMAN.--- A good COOK can find constant employmentand good wages. Apply to DANIEL WAGNER, at the Seven Stars Hotel, corner of Second and Chesnut streets. marl 2 CENTRAL NURSERIES, YORK, PA. EDWARD J. EVANS & CO. PROPRIETORS .-- Fruit and Ornamental Tree's, Grapes, Small Fruits, Rhu barb, Asparagus, Shrubs, Roses, Bedding Plants, &o.,in great variety. Orders left with G. H. SMALL, at the State Capital Bank, will receive prompt attention. Cat alogues gratis on application. marlB-Imda4tvr THE BIBLE ON DIVOROE.—The fol lowing words are from Mark a. v. 9, 12: "What, therefore, God has joined together let not man put asunder." "Whosoever shall put away hiswife and marry another eommitteth 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 app "What, therefore, God has joined together let no mart put asunder." anl2 dtf TrARRISON'S HOUSEHOLD SOAP. 1.1 50 BOXES OF THIS PERFECT SOAP. For sale at Manufacturer's prices. A. ROBINSON It CO. mare O p=• z tt tit