"TnwTn -witisot'T aii ' FOH PMES1DENT, JAMES BUCHAlVAff. (Subject to the decision of a Kationa Convention,) APPOINTMENT BY THE GOV ERNOR. John B. Butler, Levi Reynolds, and William Overfield, to be Cannal Commissi-, oners of the Commonwealth of, Pennsyl vania, for one year commencing February 1, 18 43. Kentucky, with Tennessee, Georgia and tMiisouri, recommends that the Deniocra ic National Convention bo held in Nov, 1843. What saye' Pennsylvania?11 The Columbia Democratic savs yea. ' HAiiKisWb, Feb. 7, 1 843. Yesterday the governor returned to tho Legislature with his signature, tho act can celling 8100,000 per month, of the relief Hole?, until tho whole shall be destroyed. "We have now n fair prospect of getting this trash out of circulation, and (mouthing is certain, if wo.do not get any thing better in Ha place, we oannot get a much worse sub stitute. To morrow the first $100,009 is to be burnt. No Congressional apportionment till has yet passed, although both branches have pasted a bill to 6uit themselves, both of which wets voted down when they come into tho other branches. Last week, the subject was again up, in the House, and on Saturday was postponed until the Mth inst. This, and the bill apportionment of the sen tf fflAJtWJMeoJlifi be two of the most vex islature this session. Evcrv memberwish! es to have his own district to suit his own views, or in other words, to advance his own ambftiaus notions.and it will be almost impossible to h&imonize these conflceting ntdAal fPI. C ... r 1.-1! ?. . u .uiuibBHi j uridine i uuiievo ii will De several weeks before the apportionment bill will be passed, and then porhaps.lha major ity will be compelled to take a bill not al together as palatable as could be desired. The bill abolishing the Nicholson Court, passed the house some days since, and the senate has been engaged for thrse or four days past in its discussion. It will eventu ally pass, and the court be abolished. The old Canal Commissioners have been re-appointed and on Thursday last com menced making their appointments, and so far as I can learn, they havo been made, as regardless of the expressed will of the peo pie, as those appointed for the district of Columbia and Luzorne. More of this here after. I see that the Danville faction are deter mined to coniinuo their misrepresentations in relation to the removal question, however plain the. facts may be. Tho Danville Democrat says,that the vote on transcribing the bill for a third reading, was 40 to 36. How the editor received his information we know not. He certainly couldnot have obtaiaed it from tho Harrisburg papers, as they all gave the true vote. He must havo depended upon his friends hoie; if so, wo ran assure him; ho will often be led into similar difficulties, if he publishes whatover information they may give him, as facts. Ho will be as far from the truth in other cases, as in this, the true vote beta" 40 to 27; Sunday was a cold stormy day. It com menced snowing on Saturday evening, and continued without intermission, until Sun day evening. From all quarters we learn that the enow has drifted very much. No xars left here for Philadelphia or arrived in coesequence of the snow drifts on the rail roads, nor did the Northumberland stage onive. Yesterday and to dav. the mA extreme, with a high wind, which renders it very unpleasant Theliouse was encased in ilnv m, . v;ti a a ' ' Dili waking the Canal Commissioners elective yearly by the people. It brought out s spirited debate between Messrs. Wright" avowry, Heckmnn, ami Elyvell. Mr. "Wright fully sustained his high reputation as a powerful and eloijue.it debater. The hill will pass, jiotwith)anding the powerful opposition raised agajael by the present board of Canal Coniniiifiers. " r HAnnfstitjna';ijFeb.,'8l843. - In '.tho house; after the introduction pf original resolutions, reports, &c, had been introduced, tho bill relating to the canal offi cers ivas uken up and discussed at length between Messrs. Dufnfil.Harrct, Karns,and Hecktnart, until tho hour of adjournment. In tlto senate, the removal bill was repor ted. by the judicial committee, to whom It was referred, with an amendment. It will be up for cohnidcralion ln a day or two. The senate (vis engaged the most of the day upon a resolution compelling the tide water canal Jo receive their notes in pay ment ef tolls, which was finally referred to the judicial .committee with instructions to report a bill to that effect, by a vote of 20 to 8. This is an important movement for our boatmen, who have so much of this paper in their possession. FOR T11K COLUMBIA DEMOCRAT. Ft How Citizens : ' Having wailed for a considerable length of fline in order to watch the motions of our anti-ropublictn brelhern.of Danville and vicinity, so far as they relate to the removal question in, this county. 1 am now prepared to state that their move ments hive be:i any thing blit fair and honorable, they havo as' far '-as in them lies, endeavored to put a false colouring upon the vote given at the last elections, and so soon as the Legislature had conven ed , they lay three pleas against removal of the county buildings from Danville, to some more central position. The first of these pleas .is that it was not decided by a vote of tho county in favor of a removal, The second is that tho inhabitants of Bloom and the adjacent townsjiips, must bind themselves to erect the county build ing without any cost to tho lower part of county, and the. third is that Mahoning township, shall be exempt from paying any taxes for county purpose for the space of ten year. Now I shall endeavor in a spirit of candor to show tho inconsistency of our Danville brcthern. First then 1 shall take up their first pica that the re moval question was not fairly' before the ihbijantsf this county at the last election. ii,"!Kturdity of ui:ha'WVijJL Was not the question fairly before the people, although the Danville faction ex erted all lleir er.eigies to dereue the peo pie and to defeat tho remoVal ticket, yet ii was tiiumphanlhly elected. Why will they still throw in such abuse and ('round- less pleas. Why will they pervert the truth and basely seek to gratify thoir avar ice and still continue in a state of open rebellion to every dictate of reason and their belter judgment, do they suppose that they can always carry iheir points by sticli daring effrontery. The second plea that tho inhabitants of Bloom and tho ad jacent townships must erect tho county buildings without any cosi to the lower part of the county. Why what unnn earth do they mean by such a plea, has not Mr. M'Kelvy, and others p'edged themselves to give as much towards tha erection of the new building as ihe old ones are valued at. Therefore I apprehend that cverv one who is not wilfully blind and obstinMelv dumb can at once seo the fallacy of their second plea. Who among us is so exceed ingly avaricious lhal he would not willingly contribute his mile towards advancing tho happiness and advantage of the majority, certanly no public spirited man would or could hesitate to pursue the course marked out by every consideration of justice and reason. But their third plea that Mahonitif is tn be free from taxation for the space of ten years is what raps the climax of their usurpation and villany. Who 1 ask over Heart! ol such a demand, the anna Is of his. lory anciert and modern furnish no pre cedent. Why had we been subdued by an in vading foe, and by them held in subjection the utmost demands of that foe could nm be greater. But what is the standing of tho removal and anli-removal nariies in this county, which has the majoti'y the former most assuredely. Then it follows that the minority even of one county shall make claims unjust in the extreme upon tiie majority of that county and ask legisla live aid to enforce their claims. What is this but saying 10 iho legislative body of this state that we aro your masters and we dare you to do any thing conlray to our instructions. I honesty I can con ceive of no oilier construction that can be put upon the language of our "Danville neighbours. But this is harmony wiih their conduct on former occasions when this same suDject was Uelore the legislature of this slate and by way of erplaaation I shall here lelale one instance which occurred a few yeais past, the re noval bill was before the legislature and it was in a fair way to pass both houses, news reached Danville of the fact and filled the mom of jhe inhabi tants wiih dismay, when Judge Mont. gomeiy with one or two fuends met in a pri vaie room, and there after somo iwo iiours silent medilalion the mutual inquiry was, can wo 1)0 nothing to have this matter post poned, yes replied the Judge,- J have hii V?.V, P'an lel 118 immediately draw up a Trillion ag comlne from the inhabitant!, of j mo township in Norlhumbeilaiid adjoining ,lhis county, praying thatliny '.may bejnns hexed to this county, and no 'sobner -id' than done the Judge drew up a petition" if was signed by a few and forwarded, post Ii usic, and (he result was that tho removal question was laid ovci. This tho Judge told ton friond of his who now lives in Orange township, at llin same limo re marking that in this same ivny they had got the question laid over at different times and in this way alone the.y expected to bailie the removal men out of the idea of n removal. And now when they know that justice reason and common sense all coinbitic in favor of a tcmoval pf the county, seal of this county, the inhabitants of Dsnvillo an'1 vi cinity bring in these plea3 for the sole pur pose or having the manor deferred until another sftssinn, not becattso they place any confidence in these please as being legal 01 reasonable, but because thoy arc a means of annoyance to the legislature and afford our Danville netghbnts the opportunity to gratify their1 malignant passiinrof revenge. And I bo.dly assert without fear of success ful contradiction that a more dishonest piratical course of procedure neyei was recorded upon the page of history than the course pursued by our Danville neighbors in this case. ' ' They remind mo-very much of.tho.boy who was in the practice of crying" that, the wcl"cs weto afier his sheep in order lo make fools of his neighbors anil laugh at them foi coming to his assistance, and ho persisted in this course in til at I ast his neighbors paid no attention to, his, cries for help, knowing that he was a liar, and tho wolves did come and kill his sheep. Arid in the same man ner have our Danville neighbors been play ing the fenl with the legislature year after yearlhcy have thrown in their false pleas until nearly every citizen of the slate has become acquainted with (heir daring false hoods. NUMA. Rhocrsburg. Feb., 3, 1843. a New movement. The following resolutions, passed by a public meeting in Albany, and which have been published in the Albany Atgus, Mill attract the attention of the reader Resolved That we view the law for the collection of debts in this stale as useless, and the so5e cause of nearly two-thirds the loss 8iisuined by creditors, and a fruit ful source of much of the embarrassment derangemenUn ouYJelfll1 BJMBIf?,'00 tho law itself has not ihe power to reculate. and which we believe would regulate itself in the absence of tho law. And we aro led lo believe that men would be more punctual lo pay all demands against them in the ab sence of the law than they are under the law; for then all debts would bo debts of honesty and honor, and every person who pays any regard lo honesty, "and considers reputation and credit the only sure road to prosperity.and by which he expects to gain the .esteem of men, would punctually pay that individual, who placed implicit confi dence in hia honesty and granted to him .without any sign of reluctance the assist ance he demanded. And we do further believo that if the law was abrogated wo should not witness m its absence thoso wild schemes of speculation which we witness under the law; for men could not get the moans lo build castles in the air if there was no such law; but under ihe law they recog nize iheir friend as security; and get means by which thev ruin themselves and others. And we do further believe that it would supersede the usury law, for it would open free trade on true principles between , man and man, which we believe no body of men havo a right to lake away; And fuithor more( wo do believe its repeal would break up theso hungry swarms of lawyers and pettifoggers who fat in consequence of the law, and bring them to the necessity of a bandoning iheir now lucrative businegs,and drive thorn from their petty offices into Borne more honorable business whero their pro ductions would add something to national wealth or national honor. Resolved Therefore, that wo recom mend to tho legislature of this Slate to repeal all laws for the collection of debts in this State contracted subseqent. to tho first day of January, 1844, and such law to take effect on tint day. honorable to the women. It has been the practice in the Post Office Department to appoint the wives of deceased postmasters as their successors, in tho cases in which it is agrqeablo to the people. This practice 1ms been in opera tion a numbsr ot years, and tho number of females who. have thus held office is quite large. Duiing all this lime there has not occurred a single instance of defalcation among them, So much for public testimony and the same is almost as invariable irue in private life. Woman has a more rig'd regard for the obligations and distinc lions of mcum and tuum than man. A woman, with her friend's loose money in her work box, on her knee, and her own in the sixth story, will rather go up and get 0 sixpeuse at the top of tho house, to pay an errand boy, than touch what is not her own for an instant. A. man, who shall be deemed honest, and is in fact so will.tise a friend's money, when ho has himself none in the woild, and trust lo the future ts repay it. Such is tho difference between tho sexes; and such is the way in which rogueries arLe, without tho intention of evil, on the part of tho stronger sex, when in puces of trust. ANOTllErt-.COURTjMARTlAt: A'Gnrioral Naval CourlvMartialffor the trial of all', offence's jlTat .may besought before ii, was ordered V convciioi on board the Norili Cafollria'on "the 1st oPKebriiary, Com. Downcs presides, and the numbers aro Com. llcslt!, Captains Uwitin, Bolton, Skinner, Tumor, Aulick aud Wyman, Commanders MrKein, Sliiibrii'K, nnu Olcn, S.iimiel Rush, of IMiiladelphu, and Wm. II. NOrtis, 01 uaiiinioro aru Advniiiiies Tho ofiioefs anil aliened mutineers of the Sn'mcrs Will be' tried. The' rliarses against Commander Mnfkonzio are 1 fur murder, oppufsiou, and illegal punish' incnt, with a "irlety of spceilieatlon-J. Upon this Milijret-tho Madisoniah corrects several errors into which thu press has fallKii. In the first place the Cpuit Martial was not called by the J'rrsijent 'will out wailing for the decision' of tln5 CoiJrl ol Inquiry,' nor lias he meddled with tlfc matter's', nil' it having been left to the Navy. He haii followed his routine duties in the case, precisely as he would have done in any other ease. A Court Martial is necessary, under every possible view. If Mackenzie be guilty, it is necessary hi order to try .him; if he be innocent, it is necessary in order 10 try the mutineers. It was not nccosmy, therefore to postpone ii even .till trip rising of the Court of In 'finiri- ' Tlii. fm-l ilmi it'lvn IipRn nrnttiniictl . - ,.- . - -.. , . - , till several days after that event, is proof enough that it is now called with a ,.vicw to take lie cose from the civil authority. Wo understand that tho charges upon which Commander Mackenzio will he tried embrace thrco counts; thu first murder, the second, cruelly aud oppression, and third, some minor matlcr. Tips, however, it i proper to stale has no other foundation than report, A third attempt, abortive like the two preceding has been made to get tlic-ase before the civil courts, by the con nexions of Cromwell. foal. AN AMBASSADOR INSULTED. The New Hampshire Gazette, alludinu lu ilanlilio, the Ambassador ' from the King of the Sandwich Islapd, sas that on Wednesday last 'The Rev: Mr. Richards and the chief took passage in the steamer Globe, at New York, for New Haven. On applying fur breakfast tickets the clerk offered Mr. Richards one for himself, and half one (admitting to the second table) fur his servant. INlr. K. informed him that the so-called servant' was a Sandwich Island and an embassador to tho United ,arm U.J W001, so accredited nt Wash- "gi mi. 1 no cierK replied iliat this mado no diflerenco; and if Iho man breakfasted at mi, iiu iiiusi no so wnn wirscrrimisv m . mild way Mr. K. appealed to Captain Stone, and he fully justified tho decision of tho clerk. The result was. lhal Mr. Richards was eiiher obliged to separate from his friends, or to share with him the degradation. He chose tho latter course, and both or them took bieakfast with the servants of the boat 1' The Mother of Nitpolcon. 'The, family of Napoleon, say s Alison, through noble, had not been distiuguislied.and had suffered severely from misfortune. The mother of the great captain, who was remarked by ureut beauty; and no common firmness and intrepidity of mind, shared in tho faligues and dangers of her husband, at a period of great trial, and was engaged with him in some expeditions on horseback. His father died at ihe age of 38 bin ihe want of pa tnrnal care whs more than supplied by the mother, lo his early education and Hilici Hide Napoleon, in after life.mainly ascribed his elevation. On one occasion he express ed the opinion that the future good or bad conduct of the child, depends entirely on the mother. Though left a widow in the prime oflife, the mother of Nipoleon had already borne thirteen children, of whom fi-e sons and llitee daughters survived their father. Sho lived 10 see one of litem wear ing the crown of Charlemagne, and another seated on lite throne of Charles V. 7Vie Poor in Jialtimore.TUe conven. lion fur the relief of the ponr.rcceived from ward collections, 62,121 00- from' church collections, $228 81, and from tho ball given at the Front street Theatre, 713 17 of which 81,920 25 have been disbursed The distributing coinmitteo have relieved i.o latntlics, by tho distribution among them, ol wood, (lour, fish, corn patatoes. meal and Law The firm of SetiPcal & Caucliais, of New Orleans, were indebted lo a Mrs. Smith, of Paris, in tho sum of 9 or 810,000. She supposing thai they were 011 the evo of failure,- instituted a suit against them for the amount: they, jn return, brought 1 suit against her fur malicious prosecution, and locovered, damages to the amouul of 84000. Effttls of Fear. An aged lady, of harlestown. Mass- died in convulM.ms on Sunday evening week, produced by fear of the end of tho world. the supposition that a fire in the neighboring town of Cambridge was the beginning of the end of all things. Suicide. Chits, W L'win' in a XTJC11 r"' ' Mined? with a pistol at hirt Wayne, Indiana, 011 tho Oil. instani. Ho had hold various public lrtisls in (hat Slate, wiih honm jwab highly respected in public- jfc, OftMONjSM, lThi3jf delusion' would appear, Ml tho Wcsfjlo beraiher upon the risi than on tho w'aiie'.vPhero lias been indicated in thu Legislature of Illinois, some disposition tu take away tho Mormon charter, but vheu the bill camo up, on its third reading, it was so wunnly opposed by thu member from Nu'uvoo, Mr, Smith btother of the prophet, that the bill was laid on the table by u vuio of 00 lo 43 Joe himself, as wo have befufe'slntcdJiarr beeii'releasud Irum airest 011 tho requisition VV of jhe Governoi of Missuun. It is relutcij I 111 tho Uitawa l'reo 1 radar, that tho exam ination, nt Spnugtivld, t'ruiitbd quite asvuix lion among all classes. Tho uuurt room was crowded with spuctatora. Judge Pope presided, and on either side of hint wcio the seati occupied by the Ladies. Prophet Smith was also present, and was defended by Mr Dutlerueld, of Gliicnyu. After tho examination closed n dead silunca ensued drop anxiety pervaded the eiuiro mass, aud Mr Buttciliuid rose in a solemn and imposing manner 10 upuu the cuso as lollows: '1 rise under ttiu itwst extru. ordinary ciicumstanccs in this ago ami country, religiuus as il is! 1 appear before .the Pope, supported on ohhe.r hand bv Angels, to delcud the Prophet of the Lnrdl Tim I'tophct, it understood, wus so well pleased with, his counsel's defence of him, ilial lie immediately gave It 1 tit a lexse in purpeiutiity of a suite ul rooms at his big hotel. Wo learn, however, from the Springfield Journal lliafnuotlicr requisition will bo nude uyon tho Governor ol Illinois, fur Joseph. Ho is not tins time to be again 1 claimed ander thu charge ol conspiring against Gov. Boggs, .but under theluimcr iiidiciirint, which charge hiiu with rub bery, arson treason and murder. I' or llfu purpose the indictments referred lo are 10 j be reinstated. I he athuavit under the last requisition was dciccttvu, but, in this case, those couceriHU do nut usnovc mat any legal objection against thu requisition can bu made. Post. Postponed for a Thousand 1 'ears.hl is iindeistood, gays the Journal ol Uurn- incrcu, lhal Miller and his associates liarel recently cart fully rene wed .'lliu caluulationl upon which they found tho prophecy ufl .the near apptoaeh ot. the end ol the wurlJI when an error was discovered in the fuoi-l ing of one of the columns of a thouiunJ yeais. Tins is u very important discover;! just now it 'will dispel die uneasinrn about so sudden a go, off, and give nruia-l i.e thai we aru yei lo witness the filling oil 01 many a panic uelore tlio end ot all thing! ui wic tuiieruca on uone iaiuuu Have nn)l c . i. .1 . . t . 'I vnicd iliUiusblvu.3, are nut likely lo he wuJ leu. fill I A . . j lie maKinn 01 ascension robes' is nrj confined exclusively to Long Island, bJ nas occupied many a fair hand in 'iliei diggins' and in our neifirhborimr Slates the Bay, and Iho disappointment of the! crcuuiou ones must be great at thl larther posiponomont. We recommcrJ them to pack up their 'robes' with lobil co leaves, and wail with patience, ail is nol probrblo that the great lttimM Miller, will have the assurance to make postponement beyond that period. iVJ Jlgt. Melancholly Occident. A stranJ whose mind was evidently in a derail state, oni'riuay weeK last went into 1 barn of Captain Hummel, of Perms lo ul ship, Union county, where sumo pcriJ were engaged in thrashing, lie threaictl 10 run niinseii through the machine, tl ( sit il oetore ue couiu ue prevented, giaspesi itauuiui 01 straw, and thrui( hand ana all I lie was immediately dragged back, bull till his arm waB lorn into shreds tin to i elbow. Ho manifested no feelings off! whatever, when his arm was umputatetll lie was well taken eare ol, but owing his restlessness, ihe wound was reopt: and bled freely. He died on Tuesday I from exhaustion. "11c called hi 111 sell Journeyman Printei, Sunbury M can. The Small Pox Thi lonilisomc case is said lo bo prevalent in our large I ues, titan 11 nas been lor many yeaij u'isiuri anu new urieana hot i. are in infecied'with it. Tho superintendent of the Salt Sol 111 Onondaga county, stales, that ihequil of all manufactured there during "'M year was 2,291,003 bnshtl. This ii than the quantity inspected any pre year since 1837. MastacliiikcllH S'mthio linnlts.- number of depositors chirms the ai was 42, 587, the amount of deposit) uoui'ioi 7U, me dividends lor tne 8283.312 18. In 1838 the amuuntij pnsttes in these institution); was only 392 59. Jl aood Move. The New York mercial states lhal iho Secretary of i' 1 vy lias delcrmmed m test the fconol advanlago of a change in lite system' curing the supply of clothing rcqw"! ma sailors, ty mo employment anu iiiuusitiQiis lumales to malic up -, porliou of these clothes,