ffraWrlllFl.lo4 - 214VX WWI! Gen. Scott and the Adminis- - ‘ , I Irifliou.‘ _ To afiurd mlr tendon I: correct unuleulnnding of the umlroveny halween Gen. SCOTT nnd the Ads Ini'mlmlunn. “c p‘nipm‘e amiing. briefly. n hungry or the” lzlllbrifillnlo difficullly. When Mr. 'l‘rin landed al Ven} Cm; as n Conuniuionnr In uoguli: ails”; bq‘écfifilh Mexico. (u prqjcl 6f \\ hic‘h ho cnr (lt'd wuh him from Iho Slnle Dopntlmcnl.) as nlm n qyltnnnuicnlion from tho sumo department lotho Matron Mint-tor oi Foreign Affairs—ho dcnpatch ed nintt-uenger to Gen. Smtt. who was than at Jul-pa. informing him or his arrival. and the object iii. his miuion. as ho wns ittalrltclvti to do. with tho ictterto the Mexican Miniatcr. CHLSroll refused In Iran-mil thin‘communirotionr although L‘Xpl’eafliy ordered to do w by the President. nml returned it In Mr. Trial. nccuntpnttlcti with an angry and ill tompgml I.lm, In which he nssumod the idle phantom thnt Mr."i‘rin was sent out to intcreforo 'itilhhir authority. This gave risé to on angry rontrorony hotwccu tho-o two functiottarier.—- Mnl'l‘rin’idutin were clearly defined. .tHo war not to interfere with tho military: operations in any \uy.nor to do any thing until the hiolicnn nuth~ critic. would manifest a done. through Gen. Scott. lu negotiate 0 pence. Scott and Triat. however. on would appear from tho last letter of Mr. Trill, buried tho hu|chet. and ntndo friends—tho result, probably. of the tohuim they both received for at tending to their personal griovancu, to the great injury and neglect ofthe important public duties they were required to perform. ' Nell. the difficulties lx-lwccn Gen. Srolt nml Gerigrnll Plllow and \Vorlh, nml Colonel Duncan. twli‘plhée. during and nflcr lho hullleb nl lhe (:in of'Nhlcdfillpon uhich we will endeavor to shed wills lighl in our_ next. ' IW9 Will ‘brgili wnh lhe {allowing leller {min the ySoorelary of War 10 Con. Stoll. ll is parlly in nply‘lo a loner from Can. 8., dalcd at "Puc hla. Juno 4, 1847," in “lnch he uses lhe follow ing oilraordmary language : ‘ {Considering Iho many cruel disappulnlmcnls nnil morlificalionsl hnve been made lo lccl, aim-o l lell Washington. or the total wnm ofaupport nml lympu ,lhv. on‘ lhe par! 0! lhe War Department. wluchl have-0 lonf exporiancch beg to be recalled frum' Jill! army l re moment that it may be safe lor any person to embark n! Vera Cruz. which. I suppose. Will be early In November. Probably all field.opo~ rations will be over long beforp Ihnl lime." \thl a commentary dnen this briofoxirnct {ur nilh on lhe noilc. Ihu‘has been made by chunl Congrcnmen and Pursues aboul General Scan be ing summarily recalled! LETTER, FROM GOV.‘ MARCY T( . GEN..SCOTT. __.? , Wm DEPARTMENT. H'aalzmglon. July 12, 1847. ~,Stn: Since my letters at the Slst o Meyand l4thune. pointing out your en tire misapprehension in regard to the unis. aim: 01-Mr."l‘rist. so far as it was assum ed to be an interference with your militu ry command, a part 0! his communication to you; as wet! as your letter to him ofthe 291:. of May, has been received. This correlpondence discloses a_ slate of things between youraelf and him must deeply to be regretted. as it is much to be tenred that your personal relations are such as «my compromise the most important na tioml interests. , ._ My previous letters on this subject. it received, must have convinced you of the groundlenncsa olyour suspicions and the precipitancy of your conduct in this whole attain ‘You cannot tail to pcrccivr that. so fur from having cause to complain and indulge in disrespectful reproaches against. your-government. on account of this mis sion. the utmost care was taken to secure tor-31m all the rights and authority 0! your command. and to yield to all the preten -319m you cnuid pl_.opcrly set up as In any wise belonging to it. i Regarding, as the President locls com pelled lo do. your course in this matter as the tcsult M an entire mistake an lo we powcvs and duly ol Mr. 'l'tinl. he ugrcls lopctccive lhal the conduct 0! Mr. T.. on Ihc olhcr hand, has not been free from er: ror. No two agents of the government could have been charged with duties more diu tinct and non-conflicting; duties less like ly to bring on pctsonal collision, where any sort of communication was required. To you was entrusted the conduct ot mil itary operations;-to him. the business at negotiating a peace. if a favorable oppor tunity should occur”, Only a very limited official intercourse between you and him was requiied, and that was 0! such a char a‘cter u to preclude. us it was supposed. the possibility of any misunderstanding. He was required. in the first ploee.‘to de liver to you s despatchdrom your govern mcotito the minister otlorcign relottons of Mexico. ‘Wheo thus delivered. all his agency in regard to it was ended. - It was ended. it was committed to you to be forwarded; not even the President’s or der to you to send it forward was commu nicated through him. but through this de- ‘ partment. To this course the most over. wrought sensitirencsn could not properly tlltothe slightest exception. ' Your false alarm in regard to thepowers of the corn milliooer. and the min-step consequently takeoff-{the first in the setliee of blunders—— led lttmflto interfere, infirm unauthorized 19¢ Improper _inanner, to on aflair exclu sively your otvné-the transmission at that despotch; l“ lhe‘Mexiean authorities.— thflpdhis department, Mr. 'l‘rist had no in‘lifidcttons whatever, and I am well no sui'edthttt he had nobt! from the President or the'Siate,'Departmeot'. relative to this deopotch. beyond “the. simple direction to place it in your hands. Whatever he mlav ' hay’é'done tut-ther than barely ,deliverin'g, it toyou, wasunauthorized. lo undem. hing. as 'he appears to have donetin his letter to you ofthe 20th of May. to be the medium through which orders to you were to betraosmitted. hehaa assumed ruthor. ityjoot'eonl'er‘re’d on him”. and the oei,ié disallowed 'au‘d "disapproved by the Presi: dent. He had no authority trigive you any order whateier. The only Orders (”rm yam-government to you. relating to » this sirbjecl- were issued through this tie-‘- plirtnieut. and tire eontniried _inmy dea patches of ttic 14th of April. and these or ders ‘llle President confidently expected Iyoo to execute. it is proper that I should say. In concluding my remarks on this point, that the President trusts tlirit you liuvettliacoVr-red your mistake in returning: the dr-spiitcli in Mr. 'l'rist; that you how witlirlratiri it from him, rind executed the order to forward it from this department to the Mexican authorities. Should you receive from there authorities on inttmrizi tion o! a willingness to enter upon nego tiations, \‘titl oi“. as a matter ril course. apprise Mr.'l‘rist of thrit loci. and do what may be deemed proper to taicilitute the conclusion ol 0 peace. It is not expected that you still crinliun ue under your firrit,’ strange delusion as to Mr. Trist’s instructions to interfere in any manner with your military operations. My previous letters. and the extract fur nished you from ‘tlio~c instructioririr Iliuul have put to Ilight all your misconceptions on that subject. The utmost extent of the commissioner‘s authority, beariug on this point. was to git-e you written notice ol the happeningof a contingency on \iillCiti a suspension of hostilities was to follow—i .. . , not by Mr. Inst 9 order—not by an or der cmnmunicatrd through him—but by the order of the President. your superior officer. conveyed to you directly by the Secretary ol War. - This auspensimi of hostilities was not, as you saw titto assume. to be It preliniiri my to. but to result front, negotiations conducted to a successful issue. Your course. on receiving the first communica tion from Mr. Trist. shut you out, for it time at least. from the information uhicli would have secured you lrom the fol-e po‘ srtion in which you so precipitately placed yourself. You would have learned from Mr. 'l'rist. if an tntervrew “'llil him had not been obstructed, that the'coutingency, referred to in my letter. was a distinct event—not an undefined condition oi things. to be determined by discretion— it Was A certain fact—lhe actual ratifica tion ol it definitive treaty at peace by the Mexican government, containing, in one of its articles, a stipulation for the suspen ‘sion of hostilities to follow immediately. such ratification; and it should not be lur gotten. that it was the intention and ei-a pectation of your government. that youl should be as well acquainted with what: constituted that contingency us the corn-l missiouer himself, ,bctor‘e you ,could be rrquired to act in relerence to it; for Mr. Trist was authorind, on arriving at your head-quarters; to show you his instruc tions, and the project of the treaty hcivna einpowued to matte. Had you been less. impetuuus in taking umbrage at the course putsued in this mallet. and less inclined to conclude, without the least warrant lor I, that yourgovcrnmcminlcuded dnszes pect to you. or was unmindful ulwhnt was due to the salt-t] of the gallant auny under your command, the dearest Inlet eats at the nation would not have been exposed to receive detriment llom an Ill tempered personal altercgtion between twohigh functionariés inttuatcd with im portunt public conccrnu in _a toreign coun- UV. A: past ctrors must have been discov~ cm]. the President expects that false steps on both stdea have barn letrnced. and ‘that you and Mr. Tlist are now ‘c'u-oper- Ming. solar as co operation is required, in your respective spheres ol duty, In bring the war to a successful close by an honorable peace. Your letter Srotn l’ueblfi, of the 4th 0! June. has been received, and land below lhe President. Cunqulcring that you had claimed, as a matter 0! right due IU your superior rank. U) be placed at lhe head 0! our armies In lhe field In a stale 0! actual war. and had earnestly hesuught Ihnl po~ film" as a mailer of lnvor, lhe President was nol nu lilllu surpris‘edfllhal, after so brief a pellod ol service. 'y'ou should ask to be recalled. The grounds put lorlh fur this change ul purpusc have not. pru bably, had wnh hun lhe influence yuu ex pcclcd. They are of such an exlraurdr .'l'ary characler as ((2 claim a passing nu lice. i O! the “many cruel disappointments i and mortifications I (you) have becnmude to teal since I (you) leit Washington.” you have omitted to specily'o single one, and whether they are real nr'imaginary is left in great uncertainty. The sending ot Mr. Trtst to Mexico as a commissioner of peace, and.the suapicion'you cherished that you had been degraded by his being clothed with military authority to inter tere wi'h your righttul command. are, probably. prominent among these “ cruel ‘ disappointments and mortifientions.” 'l‘he exposition winch has been made of that case. shows the lamentabie extent to which error may prevail in personal mat ters, where perUdice and (suspicion pre occupy the mind. Should your other un disctoaad “cruel disappointments and modifications” be of a like unsubstunginl chnrncler. as it is presumedilheyure. you may well conclude thnt lbey constitute no sufficient motiye mm the President to grant lhe Indulgence you ask. ' I am un’wiiling to believe ihol lhegravc charge, that you have ‘experienced so long " lhe loml wunt‘of support and sympmhy on lhe part 0! the Wn'r Department.” was thrown in as u provocative to eu~urc success to your application, and [cer tainly cannot concede that it rests on the slightest foundation of fact. In View 0| the vaq! diversity of human ;chamcler-I ought ugh'perhaps, to be surprised at any extravagance ol sell-delusion ; yell should» Misunin this instance} it this i3lO be re-‘ garded as n yell-considered; allegation. reflecting the settled convtcnons ul your mind; 'l‘hat.i'.indicuted the true state at your feelings at the moment it was writ ten. Ltvtll not question; but that it is at all just towards the. Vl’ar Department; I must positively deny. It is an assertion unaccompanied by has to support it; It tom's, to a matter, in regard to which my linlorrnntion must be at least as lull and urcurnte no your own. and l leel bound by the most uolcmn convictions ol truth to say that you are mistaken in the, entire length and breadth ol the nllegstion.-—- «That you have been disappointed in some of the arrangements made here. as you have in some of your own which did not depend upon the action ol* the War De partment. is undoubtedly true; but such ‘disappoiotments do not warrant or sua tain the charge you have made—they do not even show that you hate not had all the support Irom this department which was within its competence to give. The department cannot. by the mere lint ol its will. call lttlu instant existence the means it may require. and place. them where they are needed. Ilutnnn agency cannot control the elements so as to make them subservient in its “lid-(w.~ or to prevent them lrorn sometimes lrnrtrutrng in. llrwl concerted plans. In conducting a “...', such as that in which we are now t'ttga zed. the scene ol operations, as you With know, is ol the widest range, the nurtu nery necessarily ol vast extent and com: plexity: the agencies executingty numer ous and dispersed over vast legume.— _'l'hal all this complication of tnen’us and agencies should re~pund “111 l prornptness and punctuality, in every’ instance, to any directing wdl. cannot be reasonably ex pccted ; that one lailure, whether by acn dcnt. necessity or negligence, should in volt-e others. Is inevitable; and that no lur‘eseen disappointments sltould occasion ally happen in working out results. should surprise no man who takes a sensible View ol human affairs. That the War Depart ment has not realized all that may tum: been expected in ttsvarrangernenta. may be solely admitted. -vrtthout laying itself open to the charge ol havrng lulled to act otth energyend efl'ept. (Sr of having neg lected any one ol its esaential duties; or to the still more unlounded and reckless lcharge ol having lailcd to ulTord any sup ‘port whatever to the general at the head of our armies in the field. The War De partment, most deeply interested as it is In carrying the war to a successlul issue. could have no motive—and. by any other than a rntnd ré‘trungelf"deluded. It could not be suspected ol having arty motive to do less than its utmost to Insure triumph and glory to our arms ; and to a charge ol larlure ol duty in this respect, unaccompa nied with any specification. it will only Oppose, in its vindication on this occasion. its anxious, triceasant. and strenuous el forts. zealously devoted to the conduct oi the war. Regarding the inducements you have assigned lor begging to be recalled, as deservlng to have very little influence on the question, it will be decided by the President with exclusive relerence to the publi; good. When that shalt render it prop r. in his opinion, to withdraw you} lrom your present command. his determi nation to do so will be made known tnyou. Very respectlully, your obedient servant. W. L. MARCY. Sec'y of IVur. Maj. Gen. \errrELnScorr. Gammon rling U. S. flrmy. Illez‘ico. a FIVE DESTRUC'I‘IVE FIRES IN PITTSBURGH. Prrrsauncu, April 12. Our city this morning was vinted with no lens than five terribly deutructive fires. The first fire broke out in a stable near the canal. end before the flames could be subdued, twenty-six houses were tlett troyed. and three smoke houser, contam ing seven hundred lhuusand pounds at ba con. the preperty ol Holmes Brother, Jur dan &5 Sun. Alchemn 81 Dang, J. Dalze". and Carson. & McKingle. The smoke houses were insured. . Four houses were consumed at the sec-‘ and ltre. including Hill’s Paper Factory. Al the third lite, (our houses were des 3 troyed. two ol them dwellings. beside! a stable. At the lourrh. two hnuscn. At ilhc filth, three houses and a. dwelling in Mulberry nlley. The five fires were rn ging in rliflurent parts of the city at the same time. producing the utmost conater nation. as the belief was general thntit 'was the work of tncendiaricr. The loss must be immense. although no correct el timnto can be made at present. Fortu. nately. there was no wind, or else half the city would now be a mass of smou’l dering ruins. The flames are completely subdued. RESOLUTIONS 0F SYM PATH Y PASSED We are happy to state that, after sev eral houra' discussion in the Senate, yea tenlny. dpon the resolutions declaring theirvaym'p'athy with France in the extol). lish‘m'ent of'n refiublic, they were phased unanimously by 32 ayes. Several ofthe Whigs declined to vote,‘npon the ground that it was premature to express any sym pathy with Franceuntil her National Aa aembly has convened; and n constitution has been [armed and a republican anv crnment‘ established. .But the decided majority of the Senate acted wisely.” in our opinion, in giving‘ the prompts-sire» pression to their sympathies in lnvor of regenerated France. ' , ‘ To the above. from the Unwn of the 60W we add the resolutions and the mate upon them m the Senate: ‘, . Resolved. &c.‘ Thai} 9‘ the name and héhnlf 'ot the A‘me‘ricdnseoplc. the non- gramlalin'ns n! Cungreggvfi'm hereby ”mi (INT!d ‘0 "‘3 [’9oP]? M Wannanfiofifmer success n! lhcir ascent ofTorts In mason. date the principles of liberty in a mpubli.‘ can form of anvunmem. , ~ ‘ ' SEC. 2. Thin lhe President 'of lhe U. nixed Smles bernnd he is hereby requen" ted to lrunpmil this resolution In the A merican minister M Paris. “withjnalruc. lion’s to present it [0 lhe French govern . ment. . The WHO (allows: . YEAH—Meow. Allen. A-lllcy. Alchi non. Ashcnun,"B’cll. Bradbury, Bree-se. Bullcr. Cass. Clarke, Criuendep. 'quii, 0! Mimiuippl. Dickinson. Dix. Douglas. Dmvm, Eelch. Fuuto. Hnlg, ”human". llouuton,fJohnnon. o! Morylanil} Johneun, ul Georgia. Lewis. Manson. Moon. Niles, Rusk. Sbvuance, 'l'urney. Underwond. “'nmulf—B‘J. - NAM—None. WTho foregoing rcsoluliunl pnsud lhe Houao u! flepn-annlnlivuu by n Vole 01 174 yen: 162 nnya -——|ml.h “’higa mcmncratfc Banner. (1‘ L E A R F! E L D, PA. Arnu,..lB. iB4B FOR PRESIDENT. JAMES BUCHANAN, 0/ Pa. Suly’cct (o (In: decision qf the National Convention. FOR CANAL COMMISSIONER lsrm'l Painter, qf IVcahnoreland. H. W. CARR. United Smlrs Newspaper Agoncr‘ N. E. corner of Third and Duck alrcfla, Phllnda ~ phm. is our uulhorizcd. agent, In rccelve and receipt for subsmplwns. ndwrnsmncnln. &c. Domestic Nlatlers. All peraom indebted lo lhe undouigned. either for subscription, advertising. orjoh-work. wlllfind Ihoir accounll in lhe hum]: of Esquire ALEXANDER. wlwwrlf they doliro rlo lave coull, Ihoy will call and senlo Immediately. N. il.—Tho bookl 0! Moore & Thompson are placed m the hund- of Esquire CUTTLE. whom, nl w. cnsla will ho saved by Ihoao indebted culling without delay. April [B. 1848. W'Wo nun Ihnl no pctaun will complain ol Ihil couno. N 0 can: will be added. il lhe oppor tunity now offered, is embraced. And lelf‘grcn prvnllon requilel Ihnl nll Ihcne old ucvoums should be willed. WNo paper has been issued from thin office since Iho 25th of March. We have been uni-ling our lumb'ermcn WWO renpocuully lendor our [banks 101191: A. lnvm. for a copy 0! lhe Execulivo massage and accompanying documenln. REJECTION 0F JUDGE BURRELL On tho 4”) iml.. lhe Slnlo Sonnlo rejected Ihc nomination 6! Judge Bunn‘iiLL. nu President Judge ofthe [olh ‘Dinlricl. compo-ed oi the counliu ul Armurung. Indiana. &c.. by n vole at 14 lo 15. Thin in tho dinricx about which there wan to much nomo made hm fall. The Whig-.having conlrol of lhe Sonnle, look lhe Ilnngo Lullon ol compelling Gov. SHUNK lo rc-oppoml Judgo “’IHTE. on in velcrolo Whig. lor onogher lerm of len yen". by rejocling ’iho nominnlions 111 {on no lhey were mndé bynho Governor. Judge Burrcll but held Iho (.'UUHI In Ihnl diumcl fur Ih'rlnll year. and in highly Ipolion of til. i: Jun-I and a gentleman.— Tho olcclion lnal {ull‘ was In decide between Gov. Shunk and Judge While; and, if we um corroclly llllol’lned‘. his Honor, no! coulenl lo leave his case in llio bunch of his friends. descended lruin lhe Bough iq cnnvuu his dimicl. and glvo the Gov- L-rnor such n rehuko nu “ould compel him lo yield lo the domuudu of Federalism. Well—lho elec~ llon came—and Iho rebuke. where man it? Why, il'wnl l'olher way! for Governor Shunk received an increased vole in each county. and comequcn ly in increnled mnjorily in the dialriel Mr‘ Jorma‘rou. we regret to my. voled again-l the confirmation of Mr. Burrell. and nine made a speech “signing his ransom lherolor. which were ——nol Ihnl Judge B. mu dcficienl in the necennry qunlificnliona, or legal nllainmenla. lo make A good Judge—bin became he believed lbs! a majorin of the people preferred Judge While! The Governor has since nppolnled (which won unanimourly confirmed by the Senate.) JOHN C. Knox, of'l‘iogn county. as successor to Mr. Bur roll. So then, 01d Frank could not be made to yield. and Judge While can be Judge no longer. 1 {JO-Thom is no aubject upon nlnich tho pouple have l 0 frequently. nor mom plainly Ipoken. than on the question of teform in the prglenl banking system. As often as the electiunl occur. the pcoplé select than men to (opulent lhom who are fully committed, or solemnly pledged, lucnrry out their wishes. Butjull as olten, by some manna—no mnllnr how strong or how unilod the Demo‘cmls are on all otherquelliom—whenever a lull comes up to charter, or to extend the charter. ofu Bank. theroare just enough [and no mare. and lhll‘ll in llntl mukol the thing most mange] of lltolo gentle. mcn go over to. Iho Whigu. nml, by either voting or dodging. gnvo these Bunkocmtl the control of lhe Laglnluluro. . ' There in nomolhlng vary singular about Ibi maucr. The billn lately vel'acd by -l\ho‘Govornor ‘weru panned by :ho aid afabmo an" or night apati au: Democrats; but wholn they came up ior a two'- lhird vole. after the veto. only (wk-My. including one Domocml, was arrayed against tho pcpple. A number, howovor, played Iho dodger. . AGAIN IN THE FIELD. The Pennaylpanian of lhe 13m, contains a lo!- 'm from Iho Hon- Hicrinv CLAY. lelé’émplxod from Cincinnnni. dated on the 10m. in which hein {ormn Iho public—and his Whig {riehds in panic ulan—whal. indeed, no person much doubled that he will accept Ilia nominnlidh oflhol‘V’Vhlg National Convonlion tor'lbe Ptemdqncy; ‘Ho any: ‘lomo‘vory hum-Ir Ihingn‘in' lhi. ndyrou. Mihich'hélf 'inolino’ul go the belléf jhfl-Ihera 'il'lp'ma‘hpu aboul il. V =" ‘ ‘ ‘ ‘ ' -» On the 7m, Governor SHUNK Viewed Iho rm,“ lii-ll» rc-chnrlmng Iho Enrmcn' and mantra.“ of Wnynosbufg. Iho Columbia Bunk nml Briilg. Company, and Ihc Farmerr' nml Mechanic-R Bank 0! Philadelphia Tho ten-rm- unignvd by lhe G“ vernur {or returning his mum lo lhe utennion ol the charters of lhe-c Banks, urépowerlul and Con Bllllwr, and if ”my are nut in nrconlapu wilh il.. opininnn 0! n mnjorily of the Legillnlurc, l'noy will moo! Iho unqualified npprebnlaou uflho people“ which lrl much holler. To secure the npprublnlion 0‘ Governor Slumll, nll bankn' applying lnr elm; lers murl cumo under such rellnclionl a"! round ill-“(‘0 and a careful regard for lhe right! of uh. WONG require. The prelcul chnrlern of_ Iho .. bovc Bunkl do rml expire until May and Novem. ber nut. .. l THE LUMBERMEN.—Tho Lumber buniueu thin spring. hns been quilo qclive—pricen ranging. liulp lugher. we believe. ‘lhnn umny farmer p‘eri. OIL When good pino brings nine remu. and good oak lw‘olvo ccnln por cubic foot. and vowed lum. her not Ina than ten dollars per lhnumnd. Ih. lumbermen can live. ’ ’ fire you going to (he Show ?-—Thia is the all-pyevailing queuinn among our boys, For particulate, see the advertisement in (ela. SPEAKER OF THE SENATE. At the late adjournment of the Legisla. ture, our district again furnished the Spam ker ofthe Senate. tn the person of Wu. F. JOHNSTON. “Would that Mr. J. would follow in the footsteps of his immediate predecessor. (Col. BIGLEIL) as well in his political principles. As it is. however. we duly appreciate the honor conferred ripen our district. D. W. MOORE {rr'l'he Imgialnluro udJuumed on 'l'uendny lan The latesl Foreign News." ARRIVAL 0F ’I‘HE HIBERHIA. THE FALL or Dasmnsu The following is adigest 0! her new, taken from the European Times and other sources. i The history of the present fortnight has witnessed the death of despotism itt Wes tern Europe. Vienna has followed the example of Peru. and Metterniclt. like sznt. hat fled front the etnrm. lle has lied. but the; Emperor. mote dieereet‘than Louis Phil: ippe. remained, the popular monarch ofa. popular movement. This great "enltf more important than the French retold-1‘ tion. took place on the 13th. The people; guided bv the heads of the learned bodies; presented a memorial demanding lromtlte‘ Government the liberty of the press and other organic reforms. The counctl wast‘ sitting. ‘bttt betng unable to give a prompt. reply. the deputation became impatient! entered the Chamber and; an amellleiwat" the result. The eoldierjl‘jfired on the peo ple. several 'lives wares-lost. but in the midst of the tumult the counctl demanded the tltsminal ol Mett'ernieh. " l have re signed.” sattl he. entering the Chamber at the moment. The replYaWaO a doubtful compliment-" You have saved your coun try." ' Insurrection in Lombardy—fighting in Milan éFlig/tt 0/ III? Viceroy—flbdi calion q" the King of _ Bauaria.-—'l‘he a le‘clric lelegraph announces that the peo ple of Lombar’dy. having no failh in Iho promises of the Emperor. have leVO'lcd in Milan. The fighting was going on he lween the people and lhe military when the accounls left. The clli'Lens had rais ed numerous barricades. The Viceroy had fled. Bybanow and Bleaca had aho revollcd. A supplement to the "Recorgementti'f ofthe lSth. states that the people. nolsat iafied with the promises of the Empetorlu grant a Constitution. have broken out into insurrection and open resistance to the (o'4 ernment. Barricade! had been raised In lhe slreela. and al lhe deparluu ofthe cou~ rier fighting was going on between the Iroops and lhe people. ' FROM Puns.—\—The financial measure? 0! M. Gamiet Pages have been all gener ally approved. and none wow so when hit laal declee. crealing public slnreo. ’undn'. the surveillance of the State. with the inch of warranting the receipts to be n'egoliablr for the specified value of the deposits in WRITE. ‘ The Express announces the abdication of the King of Bavaria. There had been a fatal‘iumult at Munich. The student! and tradesmen joined the police. ‘1 The monster meeting in Dublin came 06' without disturbance. An'addteu to France was adopted. Alcoa pelitionio the Queen for the repeal of tho-Union. T The next day Mum. Bryan. Meage and Mitchell was arteetcd for sedition an put under; heavy bond: for trial onthe ml of April. Great excitement has been emu, sed In Dublin on account (if the amal: Scotland is growing mole: qiel ”11l riola have ceased. England is quiet. ,A number of failures have occurred on lh continent. 'lt to reported that the Provisional Gov ernment Would buy up a" the'nilrond linen a'nd pay for them in 5 per cent match The Rouon Bankhas auepended.» ~ ' A‘permnnent- guard has_ been offered:'o the Rothschildu’ for that? banking boom but in. declined. . V - «u Business continues slsgnanl. ' . .II the Polearriss France_,will intsrfetM» Ml {he Russian and. English workmen his liver: Ordered outbv Franco, , , . 3‘? Forlyafour difl'ercnl clubs have but) for ’I‘HE BANK VBTOES. _ sin
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers