11••.-; ~.~=~~ .. 7 ----- f 0 iio7 DlTT.cr.:7s"e'iilllii kifIVII 1116 ilt _ p, Ili:, LtAa4;:l k iJBI 9 . , Or NS , •41 ::-', 13 it W. C 'el v.EDNES I-I, AV .!16.1N ATION,•3. 3: ST:,T Fvti. 4T:TRYIIII itTIICIY, k 31 FOR COU1111;;IONMI, WES' uu FASCITE C,)I;:,;TY -acting: ItTatb_r will be fond on Ist Page SP! i:4CII ()1-.` S.E', '',.‘()12(..k.f.A3 The telegraph infVrillfi us of the fact that the lion. Stephen A. Doneial3 delivered his great speeeh on the Kansas qiu•stion on Mon day evening in the Senate. Every available Ppot. la and 11-•;:nil - the Senate Clambrr wss iirtcliecl, to tear tho fac-„lfite sot, of Illinois. We have no doubt the tbni of the Little Gis:nt is e qual to his most fansht , d efbrts, and ill ad to his n:putatiun ns stat , ,, , r2an and oralor. The pubhc l.t h with interest for the reprint of this svech by the press of the country. :ss' nn_..rEpEtGe We are informed by advertisement and handbill of a meeing to be held this evening in City Hall, *hie': will be addressed by John SS Foiney, Esq and Will A. Stokes, Esq. TM-meeting is callolby - Democrats, and will doubresi - , be largely attended, as this Kansas cr,e,;tion is now its pinching point, and cites the attention of the entire cenmunity. - We shall giv: our crown w full upon this movement tomorrow. TAM 1 a. 1' JURA . 30X. WiA. 11, Lafrd, ooe of the deputy sheriffs of Philadelphi . : county, has been sent to pris•• on ten days, :.end fined S2O for contempt of Court in communing special jurors in the case of Freeth„rec ntly tried for murder and con victed of manslaughter in that city. Samuel Carson, one of V - e juror:), wag held to bail in $lO6O for perjury. 'The facts of the case are these. The panel being exhaus:ed, the Court directed the deputy .sheriff to summon thirty jeross "from the holy Of the county." Mr. Carson thereuoon w Liked up to the sheriff in open court, and :Pee , ved f-orn him a paper, which he took c,ut of his desk, and which was nres:mcd to he a s'unnicy.s. Judge Ludlow decided that it was a defiance of the order of the couit, to stuniniti juto:s from the Court House when o€ tiered to summon them from the body of the county, and hence the punish , ' went of the Aliecr Ce:son swore he receiv • ed no taper iri,ta the five witnesses swore they saw hrr, take it and put it iato bi hat, and the perjury case. It would appear from tb remarks of the Coutt, that the jury tax is not a peculiarly institution in the good city of Philadelphia. Judge Allisc.n. sties ling of t he matttr said, that this was nothing imw ; instances had occurred where it was ahimit certain that whole juries were packed hi this manner. He alluded to a case which occured a year ago, where eleven jurors where placed specially in the jury-box by fraud. In that case the S - eriff took charge of the venire him. elf. Another case (Keurrixl hot long s:nce. A person was heard inquir ing for the deputy Sherd, saying that he was desired to sit on a jury in a capital case, and do what he: could fur the prisoner. This is nothing new ; hut this is the first case in which the Court itas determined to act. The testimony in this is so clear that nobody can deny that cutlers had he . en defined. His instructicms to the Sheriff were to go to the bat of the county, :way from the court house, and bring in himest and respectable citizens. The first juror called was summoned in the Court ; (Mr. Geci. L. Miller,) in direct violation of this :)rikr. This is a case in which the testimony satisfied the Court there was an improper and corrupt, understanding between Mr. Carson and Mr, Laird. The Jud es also said, the Court had lost all • confidence in tha deputies of the'Sherifl and it will be s. cpesti•:3e with the Court whether it will net avail itself of its legal right to dis pense wi - th the services of both the Sheriffand his' deputies, and appoint two respectable citizens to take charge of the processes of the Court, UTA°- Over one hundred youutr men have already enrolled theroseive= in Philadelphia for the " Utah Expeditio ., .." If the Government [timid determire , to accept of volunteers for this servic, Pennsyl , rania will be ready with her quota of soldiers. The bill for raising five reg - imenm oF volunteers, which has passed the House, will probably pas the Senate. 02e regEment is to c.onsiat of mounted men and will he einploed to defend the Texan frontier on the r, - Ate of emigrant travel. Thn other regiments may be 'mounted men or In fantry, an - n'ac be called out or not, as tho President's epvm. TLey will no doubt called out. A regiment nag been offered from Kentucky, alto ff•m_ri New York, from Califor nia ao.d other State 4. The five regiments will add five millions of dollars a year to the els penses of the military establishment. A letter dated :lend, Erie county, Pa., March, 15. says A very afflictive dispen st.tion of Providence has taken place within twenty miles of this place. A Presbyterian minister named Reed wim going to attend 1 , , meeting el the presbytery. He stopped over night w'th another minister at a private house. Mr. Reed was taken with a tit in the night, and it was supposi.d he had died. The other• minister being in a hurry to get to the meeting fn seasdn had him buried the next day. On his return from meeting he left word at Oxford that their minister was dead and buried. His friends went immediately to get his remains and bring them to Oxford, when to their great sorrow they discovered that he had been buried alive. The cover of the coilin wes split, and his shroud was completely torn oft, and turned nearly on Lis face. He was larheilor, and a very worthy man. His dread ful death is much lamented." I.pprnaching. The ettd, no of the world, but of the everlast. log Kansas question is belie.; ed to be,approach lug. The ) 1 7a$;hinuton Union thinks there will be no delay is the =ction of the House, and that perhap, the subject will be disposed of during ~resect week. Four Kansas shecehes were !nude in the Senate, and ten in the House on tilturday. Who th',at lot-es a good dinner is not ac. quaintcd with the ways and means whlch Col. Frick at W . al. , a ut Hall, has always at his dispc'sal fur the hungry man ? The easi est delicacies of the season Bean to reach him as if by magic. We have before us a "specimen of his quality " in th'. shape of a fine fresh s had of the largest dimensions. He who away from h,fain , : wants a good meal. Or be who wishes to take to hi home' something nice," will always find Uol. Fricher prepaied to ac cemo.odate him. • * - • - • , • MARCH 24 ISSB. T k 4.1 F Et 0 S rr VL> , U:',TEERS MIME al:ort I"! GAS. 11 4 1 gi EL. 6., cD All over the country the people are de. ka.t- . 1/ g.g mending more light upon the gas clues% tion. Gas companies are jest now the object PENNSYLVANIA. LEGISLATURE. of legislation in New York,Massachusetts, and other States. The' consumption of gas is a , •. , NM t HlOll OIL matter, (as has very justly been remarked by -- the New York Journal of Commerce) in which every citizen is interest. d, being an almost in • dispensable adjunct to the management of his s p heli OF MR, DOUGLAS. household or office affairs, yet one over which he has little or no control. In fact, gas corn- Reptile% of MI etisrs. Toombs and panks have held each individual in the corns Green. munity under a sort of vassalage, from which there was no appeal or means of redress. The great evil existing in connection with the management of these companies arises from the fact that the gas consumer has no satis factory evidence that be is honestly dealt with. The article which he purchases is measured by an apparatus which may be fraudulently con% mrr,ete ; and there is equal liability to impo. t-J tton from fluctuations in quality. The ex perience of the gas consumer early teaches him that remonstrances against exorbitant charges,_or imposition of any kind, either real or suspected, is ordinarily of little avail. and that he has only to foot the bill presented, or have the gas shut oft. Under such cireums stances, it is not strange that legislatures are asked to interfere for his protection. VARIOUS THINGE, ---The pollee of Weellingtou City sre to tve:r —The Cl irk county (Virginia) Journal uomi- note! , Hun. It. M. T. Hunter for President at the n.xt el-ction in 1860. --The Achui, tlx.ens Company brought to the P,tet.o. Office, recently, a mamma-h pear,from Oregon, weighing tour pounds. It was trans ported in a glass jar, tilled with. alcohol. The pear 1210118Uren twenty by eighteen inches in circumference, and about nine inches in height. —lt is a mooted question iu New York, wheth er the Wall Street Bauks or the Faro Banks are he safer institutions. —Another of those bloody and fatal affrays, for which New York has unhappily become promi nent, occurred tan dance house in Howard street, au early hour Saturday morning. The actors in the affray were Paudeen McLaughlin, of Star:- wilt Hall notoriety, and a man named Ddmiel Cunningham Paudeen committed an unpro voked assault upon Cunningham, and the latter, during the melee, drew a pistol and discharged its cowients into the chest of his antagonist.— Paudeen was conveyed to the City Hospital, where his wound was attended to, but it was not expocted that he would live till morning. Cun ningham surrendered himself to the police, and uuw in prison, waiting the course of events. —The Philadelphia Conference will meet on the 24th inst. at Easton, and Bishop Ames will preside. This conference now numbers about two hundred and fifty ministers, and embraces within its bounds the „State of Delaware, the eastern shores of Virginia and Maryland, and the part of Penusylvanitt lying bqween the Del 71fa F.ucl SuscLuebantia rivers. Although coy Bring but a portion of the territory originally occupied, yet there are at. least one hundred and eventy.flve stations and circuits; and there are now, allowing for the numbers who have been converted by the revivals now going on, perhays sixty or seventy thousand members of the church within its bounds. —The Boston Post. in noticing au er,:cellent r per by James Madison, which was recently read in that city, says that "it was printed for private di.etrii)utioa by. James C. McGuire, Esq., r,f Washington. The same gentleman peints at his own expense a quarto volume of the pli cate correspondence of this illustrious patriot, 4, among which are papers that, it is not too much to say, are invaluable; and which by his 'patri otic multiplication of copies are placed beyond the reach of accident. This gentleman has much more of the ex President's manuscript yet un printed. It is to be hoped that the day is slot fax. distant when the public will be favored with the life and works of Jefferson's great friend—one whom Chief Justice Marshall complimented as •the model of the American statesman.' " How Wine is Made The adulterations of wines are statiatieaby discussed iu " Hunt's Merchant's Magazine," and he makes it out that almost all the wino we drink is disguised apple juice. lie says Cider, prepared as a basis for every variety :if wine, consists of—cider, forty gallons : pure spirits, under proof, three gallons ; sugar, or syrup, three pounds ; and of crude tartar, half a pound. These should be well stirred together in a full cask, which should be left with the bung open, and exposed to the necessary degree of temperature to produce fermentation; after which it is racked off, fined, etc., and kept for use. Thus prepared, and mixed with wader, sugar, honey, tartartic acid, lemon juice, cream of tartar, almond oil, fresh grape juice, wine, and yeast, it is used for imitating almost every variety of wine in commerce. The finest imitation of Champagne is said to be made. of equal parts of native Catawba and prepared cider, with a little water, lemon juice, sugar, and tartaric acid. Champagne is also exten sively intimated by charging low priced, still wines with carbonic acid. This is done by ma chinery adapted to the purpose, similar to that used for charging soda water." The prestige of pure native wines, derived from the spotless name of Lougworth, has lately received a severe check by the refusal of certain wine merchants in Cincinnati to have their wines inspected. This circumstance is virtual acknowl edgement of adulteration; and it is well known that the Cincinnati wine dealers are, to an equal extent, dealera in such crude materials as.consti tut° a well assorted stock, according to the Wine and Liquor Dealers' Guide.'" Appointments by the Governor. Joseph Clark, of Armstrong county, Inspec tor of domestic spirits, Philadelphia James Allison, of Mifflin county, Measurer of Corn, Salt, Coal and Lime Philadelphi. William F. Comely, Philadelphia, Auctioneer. Uriah S. Lowe, Commissioner to tally ac knowledgments of Deeds, Elmira, New York, Solomon Fegel, Sealer of weights and Meas ures for Lehigh county. SlGNS.—When will signs and wonders cease? Not a day passes but we see good and bad , iens, as the following will show : It is a good sign to see a man enter your sanc tum with with a friendly greeting. " Here's two dollars to pay for my paper." It is a bad "sign to hear a man say he's too poor to take a paper—ten to one he carries ;Imo a jug of - red eye " that costs him half a dollar. It is a good sign to see a man doing au -act of charity to his fellows. It is a bad sign to hear him boasting of it. It is a good sign to see the color of health iu a man's face. It is a bad sign to see it all concentrated in his 110E0 It's a good sign to see an honest men wearing his old clothes. It's not a good sign to see them filling the holes in his windows • It's a good sign to Bee a man wiping the po-a la oration from his face. It's a bad sign to see him wipe his chops as he comes out of a cellar. It's r. good sign to eee a woman dressed with taste and neatness. . _ It's a bad sign to see her husband sued for her finery. It's a good sign for a mnu to advertise in the paper. It's a bad sign for the sheriff to advertise for him. It's a good sign to nee a man sending his chit ,iren to school. It's a bad sign to see them educated at eve ning :ohools, on the public squares. &a, et cetera t.nti A " PAT " REABON.—The medical attendant at the St Louis Hospital accosted an Irish ser vant at the door of the same the other d a 9, with, •• Dui you give the medicine as Ir ttld you?" " Faith an' I did Sir 2 ' " And the t•randy ?" •Shure, an' I thought it a pity to waste so much good liquor on them thg, were bound to die any how, so I drank it mon" Pmvsoge of the Ibecompton Coast it add iopa. YEAS 33; NAYS 26. NEWS Fito3 . l THE UTAH AIM. Arrival of Despatches from Col. Johnston Pw..un , go Of Le4.i-nip:4:n lilt genuhylvani4t Scna:o SI , KING OF 4 I'ITTzFBURGIi STEAMER &c., &c.. &..e p r ecial Ues; atch the Morning Pun.l Pgrck:bliLvit IN I A d. EGISLATUILE. HARRINBURG, March 23.—Senate.—On motion of Mr. Gazzarn, House bill 49, relative to the Aqueduct, and Rouse bill 432, entitled an act to incorporate the Erie and Pittsburgh Railroad Company, wore passed finally, bat having been amended, go the House for concurrence therein. .. - House.---This being Private Bill day, the Rowe tuok up bills n the private calendar, acting upon the following, among others:—No. 570, entitled an at to incorporate the Manchester Ass Company, and No. 597, to incorporate the Mount Pleair.nt Union College, in Westmoreland county. These bills wale pureed finally, and go to the Senate. Alec, the Uuuse bill fur the incorporation of the Kittanning Water Company. Bill No. 576, to incorporalb the borough of Malta was, on motion of Mr. Scott, objected off the private calendar, and will require a two4hirds vole to take it up. AFTERNOON scsalorq In the Senate, Messrs. Gaszam and Schofield de bated the Kansas resolutions, and Backelew's Le compton resolutions were passed by a vote of 11 against 5. The Boas(' passed finally several bills which passed a first reading in the lorenoun, among them a bill to incorporate the Pittsburgh Gymnasium. Also bill 551, a supplement to the act to incorporate the Bir mingham and Browt•sville Macadamized Road Com pany. Bill 234, relative to Allegheny Commons, be fore being passed, was first amended on motion of Mr. Voeehtley, that damages and expenses of im proving the Communs, be borne by individual sub scription. Eighty bills were acted on to-day, eight of them belonging to Allegheny county. THIRTY•.IFTEI CONGRESS FIRST SESSION EVENING BESSI DN. ASHINGTON CITY, March 22.—The St-nate re-as• sembled at 7 o'clock. Mr. Douglas, on entering the Chamber, was received with applause, which he dep. rccated by shaking his head and tnakink gestures to the multitude to stop. Not a foot of vacant room was left in the galleries, and the reporters wore over run by the invading border ruffians. All the seats on the floor were also occupied, and the windows near the roof were filled. After alluding to the repeal of the Missouri Com promise, he said that Congress eventually decided that new Territories should choose their domestic policy for themselves. He was one of those who, for want of power to carry out his own measure, agreed with this now lino of policy, with a view of healing the sectional antic and restoring peace to the coun try. The object was to localize, not nationalize, sla very. The people of Illinois approved of his course, and the Legislature passed resolutions to that effect subsequently. As a Senator from that State, he felt it his duty to apply to the Kansas-Nebraska bill the principle which had been substituted for the geo graphical line. Now, said Mr. Douglas, the question arises, is the Lecompton Constitution in accordance with the pringiples of the Compromise of 1850, and in accordance with the organic act? Have the peo ple been left to manage their own affairs in their own way, subject only to the Constitution of the United States? Does the Lecompton Constitution embody the will of the people of Kansas? If it does, you have the right to admit her into the Union under it, and waive any irregularities that may have occurred in minor details. The whole action of this house turns on this: whether or not the people bad fair ex pression of their will -in that act? Bukilp.:at evi dence have we that it is so? = '- At a subsequent election the vote againstAt"-was 10,000. This was evidence to his mind that the Le. compton constitution is not an expression of the will of the people. It has been said that the election of December 21st was legal, and the one on January 4th was not legal. The legislature possessed as much power na January 4th as on December 21st and February 20th. If you can judge this constitu tion by technical forms of law, it wag voted down. You are called on now to give it validity, but as you approach it in a spirit of statesmanship you find it was no embodiment of the will of the people. Hence I deny your right to make it the organic law, and if it becomes so it will be by the act of Congress and not by the will of the people. We are told 'that the constitution may be changed, and that it is a small matter. The principle is the same when you sot the example of violating the principles of free government for a day or for a year and give pramments to unscrupulous men. Further, it is said, that the people may change their constitution when they will; that they had no right to tie their own hands till 1884. He did not agree that the people could nut tie their own bands. He held it as a fair interpretation that when or e ,node of changing it was proscribed, every other mode was proscribed. It could not be altered until 1864. He did not object to it because it bound them till 1864, if it is the will of the people i and if it is not, you have no right to bind them to it, even for a single hour. What right has Congress to annul the provision prohibiting a change before 1884? If Congress can change one clause, it may annul or alter another and another until the whole instrument is subverted. You have no right to annul it, to alter it, or to construe it. Lay not your sacrilegious haLds on it—be it alone the people's act and deed. Fare well to State rights—to State sovereignty—when Congress undertakes to construe State constitutions. States would become provinces, with no more inde pendence than their counties now possess. The latter portion of his speech was devoted to the Washington Union, attributing its hostility to his declining to vote for the publisher as public printer Mr. Toombs then full Owed Mr. DLuglaa at grt length, and characterized the gentlmnen who new voted with Mr. Douglas as hypocrites, dn. Mr. Stuart hiefly remonstrated against the impro priety of appl;ing terms so ill-advised to Senators who had only followed what they believed to be the lino of their duty. In the use of personalities, when arguments had failed, the Senator from Georgia bed certainly wen the laurels. Adjourned. WASHINGTON CITY, March 23.—The Senate was I again crowded. The treliminary business was un. important. Mr. Green replied, denying the assertion of the Senator from Michigan that the friends of the La compton Constitution have been driven from their position. The Senator from Illinois implied the same thing, but it is not so. The committee report stacdEt unchallenged. Its every individual charge is sus tained by official evidence, and the only exception taken to the report is by the Senator from Vermont, who objects to the use of the harsh appellation of rebels. He made some desultory and preliminary remarks in reply to the Senators from Illinois, Mich igan and Vermont, and then went into the main line of the argument, saying that the Kansas gee. ernment was the government de facto, quite as much as in the case of California, even if yeu admit that the alleged frauds were committed. He thew a parallel between the cases of Kansas and California, citing Mr. Douglas' opinions en the latter in support of hie own views on the former. He said that the statement that nineteen counties were disfranchised in Kansas was meant to deceive. Those counties were a wilderness, without inhabi tants. He defended the early steps for the formation of the Leoompton Constitution, and denied the as sertions of the Senator from Vermont, Mr. Foot, that there were broken pledges on the part of Governor Walker and the President. Everybody knows that Walker was in favor of submitting it to the people; he advocated it, but had no power to pledge it. The Senator from Illinois says that the only reason they did not submit the whole Constitution was because it was said that it would be voted down. Who said so? No one, except the Senators from Illinois and Michigan. Thu great question is, does the Consti tution embody the will of the people? which is the legally expressed will? The rules of evidence are the same in equity and law; we cannot take flying rumors and the opinions of Governors as evidence; that it is fraught with a danger that, if carried to its ultimatum, would bring bristling bayonets and can non pointed at the walls of the Capitol, to substitute the opinions of a mob for forms of law. All the legal forms having been complied with in completing the Lecompton Constitution, it was a completed fact, and the people bad no right to vote whether or not it was a Constitution. What would the Senators say if the Constitution of our State, after being in actual operation, wal to be submitted to the people to see whether it is a Constitution or n'bt ? The Senator from Kentucky says it could do no harm, but only show abundant care to submit it again and again to the people. Yea, try again, try again ; Col. Fremont wftW have liked that principle, to try agains As ta 0 „;.i.....,,.7,4.43; ; ; : ,7 4M' , :i-': , --'.,'.'- .1',.-4'ttt4l, ;k•-:: , :.:-.:;:::'',.•• •_-,,,,.,,..•..,,,:.- ;EN ATE. SENATE the cry of reeled, it reminded lies (but he di ILe "11F.eteBo UT DYSPBPSIA TO A Mune SitIILETOA.' apply it to too j - ,41 - lat , r) th t 1 1 (' Well '''"e 4. —Curter) ax " FlexanivE'st llonmetto Birrutts."— to and often repeated i.e ae good as tenth, Mr. A. Matchote, a trader probably as well known as Mr. Green euntinned to analeze the reputed frauds, any man in Western Pennsylvania, states as follows : admitting that if tilt; frauds did exist, there were "I met with a farmer in Armstrong county who was . Lone to vitiate the Cometitntizu. Further than this, reduced Dyspepsia to a mere sketeton • I persuaded 1 TELE ALE IDR. 0. JAVii ES' no legal ev . nienee guts to show that the Lecompteri him to buy a bottle of Bmrhave's Holland Bitters, Constitution dead not embody tile will of tee pc , ,pk, believing it would cure him. Meeting him some and if we go beyond e iegsi evidence we strike at months after, what was my astonishment at finding the very principle ei liberty. Ida then referred to him a hale., hearty man; he told me he now weighed the statement of Sir. Deuiel,e that the Constitution 200 poteide, and that this wonderful change had been can only be cliet.enn bet ru 1801 rho exerc:ee produced by Beerhaeo's Holland Bitters, ta which he a rev lutieeery field. Is not so. New Yore attributed solely his restoration." and other States have done it, and a provision wee Caution.!—Be meta to ask for llueeltaee'et Elonand ineerted with a eimildr interprotatien in the Kansas , Bitters. Sold at $1 per bottle, or six bottles for $5, Bill of Rights. The people must have that right to by the role Pruprietors, Benjamin Page, Jr., Co., change the Constitution in a legal way, otherwise No. 27 Wood street, between First and Second streets, they could not regulate their affairs, but would bo , led Tereereiete re:teeny. bound by the preceding generation. Ia summing up, he said he would not In peal to the Americans to teGTSP. IVSTANCE OF TAPE WORM. CUBED b did up the Detneeratic party, but would ask them BY TUE UqE OP PR. 3^t ANC" Old" EBRA'PVD VentML to help break down ch.., only party d:!EI L ,T , UB to both. , FIIGE, PREPARED BY rl,nmlvG Bites. ni Mr. Crittenden, of Kencky, said he would not reopen the debate, but made the explanation that hie NEAT YORK, October 15, 1852. etatemente were made on efficiel records, not e n ear This is to cerify that I was troubled with a tape worm versation of the Governors of Flan-a.'. Thank G. , for mere than .ix months. I tried all the !mown remedies he could dielincuisli right from wrong, end had :1 . for this dreadful affliction, but without being able to destroy courage to say Se. He followed c. , ovitniee, see it. I g ot one of D-. Wi.ane's Almanacs, which contained party. Kentucky's maxim, "Ba just and fear not," , 110.. C. 8 of several wonderful cures that had been performed by h:s ‘k h Vermifuge, prepared by liming Bros. was also his. lie believed his course to be the he , for the North and for the South e he had never need I resolved to try It ; and immediat.ly pirchased a bottle, the words, " arrayed himself on the side of the Norte which I tone according to dir, cti , u.; and the result was ern Democracy." He whiled neither to build up nor . I dte , charged ono large tape worm, measuring more than a to break dewo any party. Be made an affeetierne a yarn, besides a number of small ones. reference to his compatriots ef the Senate whenelle , Senate was great, and included among its member; 11118. 'KOTA No. 70 Cannon street. Clay Calhoun, Webeter and Benton. Ile professed dXb Purchasers will be careful to ask for DR. 11PLANE'S himself an American, and it was hi., principle to pre- CELEBRATED VERMIFIICIE, manufactured by FLEMING test the ballot box as the only instrument by which BROS. of Pittsburgh, Pit All other Vermifages in com the people can exercise their eovereignty. parisou are worthless. Dr. JPLands gennlue Yermifiage, When Mr. Crittenden bad co ncluded, Mr. Greer, also his celebrated Lirer Pills, mu now be had at all re. without further remarks, moved three amendment. eportablo drug att:rea. 1\7.-m , :enuirre without the signature of Mr. Green withdrew the bill altogether, and move 1 , 251 FUMING EllOB three amendmeote to the original bill : let. To stele out the preamble and insert the following : Whercteu the people of the Territory of Kansas, did by a Coe vention of Delegates, called end assembled at Le compton on the 9th of Sep.ember, 1857, to form f, themselves a Constitution and State governmenn which said Cenventien having asked the admiecicu of tho Territory into the Union as a State on equ ,1 footing with the original States, Ac. Carried. [Sce enacting paragraph.] 2d. To amend the second see tion by inserting snit- adding the following clause : That nothing in this act shall be construed to abridge or infringe on any right of the people asserted in t b Kansas Constitution, at all times to alter, reform or abolish their form of government in such manner r they may think proper; Cengress hereby disclaimitig any authority to intervene or declare the construc tion of the Constitution of any State, except to see that it is Republican in form and does not conflict with the Constitution of the United States. Tt e amendment was agreed to—yeas 31, nays 23. 3d. A verbal amendment in the eleventh lino of the sec ond section of the bill : to cancel the word " of " the sentence, in the ordinance of the said Constitu— tion, and substitute therefor the words "annexed to," to make it read " in the ordinance annexed to said Constitution." Carried. Mr. Pugh withdrew his amendment of March 2.1 to amendment of Mr. Green, and substituted anotta r that the federal laws nut inapplicable be extended into the State of Kansas; that a judicial district be formed, and a Judge, District Attorney and Unite States Marshal he Appointed and paid as in lowa. The amendment was agreed to—yeas 37, nays 19. Mr. Crittenden moved a substitute ter the Mil, in substance that the Constitution formed by the Le compton Convention be submitted to the people t f Kansas now ; that if it be approved, the President shall admit Kansas by proclamation ; if it be reject ed, that the people of the Territory shall call a Con vention to frame a new substitute. The substitute makes a special provision against the occurrence of frauds. Several Senators here took occasion to explain their votes. Mr. Kennedy, of Maryland, as a •conservative middle man, would support Mr. Crittenden's substi tuts, reserving the right afterwards to vex , fur the original bill hi obedience to the resolutions reseed by the legislature of his State. Mr. Pugh, of Ohio, reluctantly voted against the bill for the game reason. Mr. Iverson, of Georgia, defined hie position. Mr. Green accepted the suggestion of another verbal alteration. Mr. Crittendon's substitute was then put and lost, yeas 24, nays 34. The bill as amended to admit Kansas into the Union with the Lecompton Constitution was then put and passed, yeas 33, nays 25. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. The House went into Committee of the Whole and resumed the consideration of the Deficiency Appro priation bill. .. Mr. Kelly concluded his argument in opposition to the Lecompton Constitution, commenced yesterday. Mr. Singleton, of Mississippi, while advocating the Lecompton Constituticn, reviewed in condemns. tion the Northern movement against slavery, ca. pressing the belief that there were members of the House who have stolen slaves from their masters. Mr. Howard maintained that there was nothing clearer than that tho admission of a new State W 3 ; in the nature of a contract. .If the people were not represented, iri admission would be not only inter mention but oppression. Ho denied that Kansas was properly here. * Its Constitution was the wort: of a few reckless mon in the Territory. The Legislature which broughifthe Jsocomrtn Constitution into ex- istence never had alegal existence, and no recogni tion on the part of any branch of the government could give it validity. . Mr. Burnett said that the Republican party was responsible for all the trouble and the revolutionary spirit in Kansas, by sending armid emigrants to ex , elude Southern property. --Mr. Blair said that those who were elected V 3 friends of the President, and the President himself, have fully exPosed his forfeiture of his pledges t, the people that Kansas should decide the cheAstcler of its own 'neitutions. im Y", Yr'', , Mr. Pottifittributed the present agitat i'em trl tbo viols - the pledges of the Domoura - cy b). re. pealil4,t . : Missouri Compromise, that: , ioie , .laing t4:irritT - 4 to slaiery which gives no renose toles vie thisit , ailiite or'black. A:. , p-- boomed. ~ , The Utah lEspedttlota ST. Louis, March 23.—The Leavenworth Tinted of the 19th says: "Yesterday morning two companies of infantry and two of cavalry left tho Fort for Utah, numbering about three hundred and thirty men. They deign overtaking Colonel Hoffman and escort, the supply train for Colonel Johnson's army, from • Laramie. The train consists of one hundred and sixty heavily laden wagons. The Republican publishes extracts from a private letter from Colonel Johnson to to friend in this city, dated February bth, which says that he has received no communication from the Government since the 22d of October. He complains that the contractors take more than three months to carry the mails to Utah, whoa the contract says the service shall he done.in two months. Col. Johnson describes the march to Camp Scott, and compliments the troops. He says that th,, Mormons have fully, as words and actions eau mani. fest intentions, that they will no longer submit to any government bat their ewn. And that the people of the Union must submit to the usurpation of their territory and have a government erected in their midst acknowledging no dependence upon or alto glance to Federal authority, or act with vigor and force to compel them to succumb, and expresses an earnest hope Abet every exertion will be made , u forward supplies early in the spring under a 5111.50101 it guard of mounted men. CINCINNATI, March 23.—The steamer St. Lai: renoo, from Pittsburgh for Now Orleans, struck on rocks near Pomeroy, on Sunday, and sunk. The boat was valued at twenty thousand dollars, and 1p total loss. A portion of the cargo will be saved in a damaged ,condition: No lives were lost. Despatches of Col. Johnson. WASHINGTON CITY, March 23.—C01. Johnston's letter is of such a character that it is deemed advisa ble not to permit ri.copy of it to be made for publi. cation, although it is sa.d that nothing of particular interest has transpired since the last avices. THII HAREM UNVEILED. —A Moldavian coun;- ess, a frequent visitor iu the harems of the late Redschid Pasha and other dignitaries of Con stantinople, thus takes the romance oat of the popular idea of those Mohammedan para dises: "Women, fat, ill made, dirty and stupid--- such is the personnel of all harems. Add to this. that the woman pass their days in jealousy of each other, disputing, abusing, and even &C -aul:Eng, and then you will understand that the happiness of Messieurs the Turks, which has for centuries inflamed theimaginations of ronmacer, , , and poets, leaves much to be desired to make it perfect. " The harem is a bell, where four or five fu ries busy themselves in torturing a poor devil whom they call " n aster end lord." "A well-kept harem, of four women costs $75,000 a year, and that of the Sultan, f.r 1856, cost 100,000,000 of francs, or $20,000,- 000. The young Turks, who have adopted Le ropean ideas, regard thp harem as an institution that has had its day." "Attswe, for thee—yee at thy command pluck the eters from the fir=ment—l'd pluck the eun, that oriental god of day that traverses the blue arch of heaven in such majestic splen dor—l'd tear it from the sky—" D ,, n't, Henry ! It would be so very dark!" riLYC HEINE AND'CAMPHOR SO A. P.- ILA 1 grins just received madfor Kilo by rl7 m B. L. FATINESTOOK L- Cl boxes Bxlo Glass for sale by mrll3 .B.E.NE,Y U. COLLINS. DRIED APPLES.-30 sacks prime Dried Apples received, and for sale by McCANDLESS, MEANS tcCO., Corner of Woad and Water atreets. TWO DVITELLINO HOUSES, .with largo lot of ground to each house, shunts on Carson stoat, South Pittetmrgb, will be sold on favorable terms, by B. CUTHBERT liarke4 strest. Steamer Sunk. T.'''. - : : ;.:t:4;5 1 . .. .: . :L: .P' ..... ... WHOLESALE CLOCK DEPOT, No. 42, Fifth street, near Wood. REINERIAN &NEYRAII, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS 1N FINE GOLD AND SILVER WATCHES, JEWELRY, SILVER AND PLATED WARE. FANCY GO It S. ViTATCHMAKERS"fOOLS A N D WATCH. MATERIAL, AT EASTERN PRICES. uirl3 Office of Sealer of 9'V eighty and Measures. THE OFFICE OF THE UNDERSIGNED, 111. SEALER OF WEIGHTS AND MEASURES', May bo found ncefortki, in Cherry alley, bets. _.,.1 and Fourth streets, whore orders may be left. mrl3nf CHARLES BARN ETT. Wki. MILLsa., Philo C. 49. ILICBETS:N, Pittab'h MILLER & RICKETSON, WHOLESALE GROCERS, AND IMPORTRILS OF . BRANDIES, WINES AND SEGARS. Noe. 221 and 223, Corner of Liberty and Irwin Streets, PITTSBURGH, PA. IRON, NAILS, COTTON YARNS, ho., ha., CONSTANTLY ON HAND. mr2. TERRA COTTA OR STONE WATEM P1P144159 From two to six inch calibre. PRICES from 12 to :30 Cente per Foo A.LVO-ROCHEST.EIt PE'AIIL STARCH For Sale Wiplesale at manufacturers Prices by rift. COLLINS, FORWARDING AND COMI ISSION MERCHAIIT ' AND witoLtaim DULL= DI Gina 'ros BUTTER, SEED:'., FISH, ap PRODUCE GENERALLY Nc •?,5 Vicon STHLIIT, PITIBBITIIOII. !In CLENOVAL. • • JO H . MOOItiIEA.D.WIs removed to Mottq areet, below 3LIIN 41100RIMEAD, CON MISSION MERCHANT, son ?RR LILLE Or, PICMLITAL AND BLOOMS, NO. 74 WATER STREET, BEL')W MARKET, mrl9 PITTSBURGH, PA A. H. BOOKHAHHER JOSEPH BUDD. 69.5111ARIMER r Ett'DaP, COMMISSION MERCHANTS, AND DEALERS IN Fish, Clieese, 'sous, Meats, :and Produce Generally, Nos. 5104 and dOO North Wharves, Third and Aftla doors acme Race stret 1 , lOLA DELPIII A, AVE NOW IN STORE, AND TO AE lz. ILIVB, a full le.scatlnent of Mackerel, Cod Fish, at: d Bening, which they will dispose of at the very loweat mar ket rates. -P. S.—llluxus, Shiba, ShoulLs. - 5 Barreled Pork, or other Produce taken in exchange, or sold oneommission. Jordoo Brother, Stroup & 'Bro., Wm. S. smith gall!Sto— BAGALEY,. CO., 4 WHOLESA.LE GROCERS . No.lB and 20 Wood Street, mrls PITTSBURGH. BOWN & TETLEY'S SHOOTING GALLERY, No. 136 Wood street. Light Crean" ale. THE SUBSCRIBERS RESPECTFULLY announce to their customers and the public, that 00.. ing to the price of Farley and Hops, and to suit the times, they are brewing a light and delicious Savored CREAM A t.ri', which they are selling at $4 'ft barrel, and have KEGS OF TEN GALLONS each, to accommodate private families. They have also, X ALE, at $6; XX at $7, aed superior RENNET at $8 1/ bbl., and smaller casks in proportion. Alen, excellent PORTER AND BROWN STOUT. Otders sent to their Brewery on PITT STREET, will rccsive prompt attention. mrlo:Sm GEO. W. 831ITTI .1 CO. RINEW OUTFIT OF TIN, COPPER, and Brass Ware: Brittannia and Block Tin Ware, in sets or single pieces. Also, Table Cutlery, Tea Trays ar.d Bells ; Cooking Stoves and Stove Pipes; Tinned and Enam eled Nollow Ware, and oth r articles too numerous to me”- ti.m, can be had cheap for cash, at the stores of the tub er' leers T hIM k SCHWARTZ, Noe. 44 Wylie, and 102 Smithfield afeet.. N. B.—We invite builders and others having job Work to give us a call, as wo will guarantee satisfaction. mr2o.3tkialVar NESHANNOCK POTATOKS.-25 sacks received and for sale, by mr2o HENRY H. OOLLINF. RAPER HANGINGS, FOR SPRING OF 1858.—The beet aesortment ever brought to Pitts bnigh. Prices range f , om 6 cents to t 5. Walt Paper for Churches, Lodge: , Plain Oak, Panel Oak., Walnut, Marble, Fresco, Eordtsra Statues, Paintings, Testers, Ceiling, Fire Screens, Wind° Ekadea. Come and saes W. P. MAP.SEALL k CO., .1371 •IS ,rd! se. HAVEN'S First Quality Lead Pencils, for sale st the Statlone , y Warehouse of W. s. RAVEN, Noe. 31, 23 and 35 Market street. $27F t PIANO FORTE FOR $175t." An elegant Rosewood, second- hand, PIANO PORTO in perfect order, which cost when new, $275 will be cold for $175. CHARLOTIS BLWSE, Old Established Piano Depot, 118 Wood et-est, second door above Fifth. INSEED 011.-24 barrels for sale by mrlB *, BMW 11. COLLIN? DOTATOES.-50 bus. for sale by mrlB ILIENRY IL COLLINS CLOVERSEED.-10 bushels received an tor sale b.? nal7 HENRY Et COLLINB. WRITE FISH.-10 half bble. receive and for ode by [rad: J /WRY H. COLLO& 1131331 Sicentchoon a. ()onkel, Coleman a' Kelton, Budd & Comly, Frm_tnackots Dining R.LJELIi Ctininberrs, Entries, iiGEN T. JAYNES' EXPECTORANT, for Coughs, Consumption, Asthma and other Pulmonary Affections. JAYNES' TONIC VERMIFUGE, for Worms, Dyspepsia Piles, General Debility, go. JAYNES' SPECIFIC, FOR TAPE WORM. It never JAYNES' CARMINATIVE BALSAM, for Bowel and Summer Complaints, Cholics, Cramps, Cholera, JAYNES' ALTERATIVE, for Scrofula, Goitre, Cancers, Diseases of the Skin and BMW, au. JAYNES' SANATIVE PILLS, a valuable Alterative and Purgative Medicine. JAYNES' AGUE MIXTURE, for the Cure of Fever and Ague. JAYNES' LINIMENT, OR COUNTER IRRITANT, for Sprains, Bruns, ao. JAYNES' HAIR TONIC, for the Preservation, Beauty, Growth, and Restoration of tho Hair. JAYNES' LIQUID HAI tt DYE, also, AMERICAN. HA.1.8. DYE, (in Powder,) '6 $121,L,0 is,t) 2,1,0 00 • 4,1c1 67 4.6 11,4 i 3C4 1 ;,311 45 DILZOTOP,. h. Miller, Jr.,' (hvngo Vi.Juckzm., Spi. , t , r, Wm. Knight, Alezmudcr Vim. 11. Brultb, N. M. (JORDON. B.3m..gar DIASCRO/1.9 NNNV EPRING GOODS! at VW Blacisot Sfixest