4 graultliu -frpoitoip, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 13, issi TErtiie—s2 per annum, in advance; or $2.50 if not paid within the year, AU subscription accounts stud be settled annually. , No paper will be sent out of the State unless paid for in advance. ADVERTISEMENTS are inserted at 'MN cents Per line for first insertion, and men cents per line for each subsequent insertion. Advertisements of five lines or less aro charged 50 cents for first loser tion' and 25 cents for each snbsequentinrerhonp end Advertisements exceeding five lines and not ex ceeding ten lines, are charged $1 for first insertion and 40 cents for oach insertion thereafter. All Obituary and Marriage notices exceeding five Ines, and all communications, resolutions and other neticeiof limited or individual interest, arc charged ten cents per line. Advertisements or Butiseriptions may be sent di rectly toTherubliahers. or through any reeponsible city Agency. M'CLURE & STONER, Proprietors.' .Tourr S. Saß:ioc.s. is authorized to receive Subscriptions and contract for Advertisements or the RL?OSITORT in the r .astent cities. !MISERS of the legislature will be fur nished with the REPOSITORY during the session for 75 cents per copy. . SINGLE copies of the REPOSITORY can be -had at the counter, with or. without wrap pers Price five cents. Persons "ordering single copies to be mailed must enclose a two cent postage stamp. • : • We` entreat Congress•to trust the People in providing for the vigorous prosecution — iif the war. They desire most of all thirigs that ' the coming spring campaign_ shall 'be the 'closing scene in the bloody drama ; and'the "representatives who demand that resistiess power shall be displayed by the loyal ar- L'mies at every point, will receive their most cordial approval. The government is theirs ; its Cause is their cause ; its success their safety; its preservation their pride; itsearly , and'vverwhelming triumph over treason their hope of enduring peace and prosper ity forlhemselves and - their children. • • It is no time for hesitation ; for 'tempo rising ; for cowardly_ devices to shield the people from the cruel demands of war for a. time, with protracted strife, wanton sacri ' flees, and increased burdens as the inevita ble consequences. The People knew and • appreciate that this wastiQ,, wicked conflict • demands the whole energies and Powers of the Nation to secure early - and substantial success; and they will despise the law ' maker who withholds from our armies the needed reinforcements. _ If our armies are not made invincible by the opening spring, it will bring with it the most desperate and:deadly struggles of the war. And if 89, upon Congress and the Administiatian will rest the fearful respon sibility. The remorseless, desolating ha of treason has yielded more than halt'` `territory to our victorious armies; has ex hausted its resources and flung appaling sorrow and bereavemept into every house hold circle. The voice of mourning and the 'Wail of despair come up from every home. that . espoused the traitor's eau . Their once fruitful fields . ,are withered wastes; the slave confronts his lordly Master in the conflict of arms—at last equ'als, for each can die blit once ; terrible want has fastened Upon the lanT fratricides. as with hooks of triple steel ; credit has vanished never more to return; and shattered and despair ing hosts are waiting away even faster than unwilling anithOpeless conscrips can fill their places. - • Mit one faint star of hope breaks through the bewildering gloom that envelopes the narrowed limits of treason. With trem bling solicitude the arch -fiend of .this,crim sated record, and every satelite that yields obedience to him; turns to our Congress and_ waits with all the forebodings of remorse and despair, for it to withhold its conceded power—to spare for additional conflicts and, fresh butcheries, the traitorous armies. They _see treason but illy disguised - by cow ,ardice- in our National legislature, and their last refuge is in its partial success in shap ing a hesitating policy in filling' up the ranks ot ohtbrave soldiers. Let Congress but" hesitate—refuse. to trust the People with theft own great cause, and there will be joy in Richmond, and every soldier .00' crime will be nerved to crowd new fields with iin timay graves. , Extravagant bounties to voludteers—save to veterans—have been most demoralizing to the cause and injurious to the service. It hoer appealed to every selfish attribute of the People, and shut out the high and holy duties devolving upon - exr.ery citizen. Partial drafts have been' ineffectual, for there were &w-wbo mould not escape, and the few who did not, were reluctant soldiers : Lir CONORYAS CALL OUT THE rim= AN ttowesrr—d'emand just tribute from those. who stay, and pay liberally to .those w and:ithe great work will be practically aceiauplished. Thousands will go because Abe Aorexaoleat gastkifests its purpose to . give certain and `speedy success to our ar- r. Mies. They'dan enter the ranks with their lived ones protectelagainst want; and with confidence that their ovenrlelinning num bers will avert sanguinary battles. Such a call would be imposing upon the people, with exact justice, the burdens of the war,. and they would respond to it with an en thusiasm that would declare to traitors and to the gOvernments of the world, that our Nationality shall be prikrved. Again we entreat Congress to TRUST THE PEpPLE 1 Call. upon 'them to discharge their whole , duty, and , it will be done. Call f(* . enough and more than enough, and trea son will reel back from the advance of in vincible arniiea, -and a restored Union and lasting Peace - will be the fruits of a single campaigh. P ' atriot, and traitor alike wait anxiously for our tardy Congress to act ; and if they would not give fresh, hopes to treason, and entail protracted war and fear ful peril upon loyal men, let them' strike a decisive blow. by employing the whole pow er of the government, and. another autumn will witness a 'rescued and disenthraled Re public. SENATORIAL 'EIiIIIIRLE.RIGGERSj The State Capital has been famous in story and in song for its varied amusements. Ordinary inland cities may have their cir cuses, their wandering minstrels, their De- , Mocratic orations, and other means of war- - ring with dull care; but Harrisburg Makes all pale' before its shifting i seenes of faki nation. In variety.it defies the hues of the camelion—in quantity it would make the horn of plenty blush. From the thrilling polemics of the Senate, to the dulcet strains of .the sable Sanford, and the syren sun shine and shadows which flit in and about the Capitol, there is a richness of variation pe - collar only to capitoliauerryment., . • But new occasions to new duties, vid 'the very fulness of legislative enjoyment, has so sated its devotees that new clowns and jesters—new novelties of the most orig inal -brand, have to be invented. All Other sources failing, sixteen grave and reverend Senators have undertaken the task. The classical Lamberton ; the impassioned Cly mer; the thrilling Hopkins, lead off in the fantastic effort, and the rest of the troupe qo in,.as scene-shifters, semi-supes and an improvised committee on applause. The ' original cli ms of the entertainment con sist of the most eipert•political thimble rigging—starting a 'Senate in chaos, and keeping it there by an endless , and bewil dering variety of such subtle tricks as might make the original. "little joker" abandon the profession in despair. It partakes some thing of Hamlet with Hamlet omitted, or the " now you-see it and now you don't 'see it " with the "now you see it" left out; and the famous " What is it''' ' is .a familiar child of history compared with this striking • ovelty: \ select and deioted circle_ of gentle men who are' the constant auditors of this festive performance, are just equttl in num ber to the stock company of dip:obi-rig gers that furnishes the amusemtnt gratis, There are occasional side shows—such as the epistolary bombardment-at long range of Speaker Penre. by'Senator Clymer as she landed . :1- H herleb, to ask, and as he wanted none to buy, he had no price to offer. Thus closed the prelim inary diplomacy, and thenceforth the boards of the Senate became the tribunes whence in turn thundered thimble-rigging sPeeChes; thimble-rigging offers to huckster off clerks and Wood-carriers; and thimble-rigging sci-. eine generally. A bill is read 'in place—Clymer objects; there must be• leave and leave won't be given. It is Unconstitutional. Stein rises to El point of order. The Senate not being in order, nothing- is in order but organiza tion, and organization shall not be had. A resolution of thanks to Gen. Grant for his heroism is offered by the Union men— Wallace and Donovan call the yeas and nays, and it is thimble-rigged out. Clymer wrig gles ; be speaks ; he thinks / Grant a very ' proper fellow, and will thank hini at the proper time ; but just now he stands in the way of the Performance, and as thimble -rigging and voting thanks to brave Generals are in irreconcilable conflict, the lesser issue must yield, and• Grant Mast go under. He perspires, and threatens the Senate with dog days; sets' his thimbles and invites Penny, to say just where the little joker is; will play give and take for the sake of being constitutional, and opens -at short range to ra ke 4own 'half the offices. As Clymer hacl ,nothinglo give and .Penny could take no more Ahan e ke had .already, he let the little lokerverform its 'orations without a stake ; and. Lice ,tlie itaa ost dm shooting-match, Clymer saved himself ut lost his turkeys. He insisted it wasn't his faaat that he was - oi'Stankfini Ittpiss . . . . delaying orgaiaization. , e minority svgs e i occasioned, not by the. ca , ture of Nit'or White, but by the failure to deliver his s ignation, and he would insist upon his n"- stitutional rights until he knew exactly who was who and what was what in filling he offices. He knew that Major White lad resigned—he bad seen it in the RepubliCan, papers—in one edited . by " Col. M'Clutre, formerly a distinguished member' of +is Senate ;" and although be never believed any thing he saw in such papers, still Mai. .White must have resigned or they wouldn't have said so. Thus logically and withex quisite expertness thimble-riged - the Seia tor from Berks ; but his little jokers Were still innocent of game. itopkins, the veteran of the troupe, lowed. He had forgotten that= —"honesty once pawn'd is ne'er redeeml —and he - tried to falsify history by a/ i dating the memory of his 'auditors. protested against the "-farce;" prob bly preferred tragedy such as . 1838 produ ed, when like Macawber, he waited and tuned up. He denied that the - thimble-rigging performance was at all original—solemnly averred that it was based upon fundamen tal'i principles adopted seventy years aco-7 , or if not seventy, certainly forty. Hej ad initted that there was some diversity of I d opinion about ,political thimble-rigg ng ; that it made " apparently a bad reco ," but nevertheless having espoused it he would stand to it though the whole oral law should fall. He voted against rea Jackson's Proclamation,..and Farewell dr s • against thanks to Meade for hil "C defeat of Lee at Gettysburg; ag increasing the pay of our brave soli and with him steadily voted the othe een thimble•riggers of-the Democratic f suasion. He also voted against prays in the Senate, doubtless on the principle that thimble rigging and prayers together, as a waste of material on one side or other. But he was still not content. He declare his purpose to vote against the instituti n of marriage. In this he probably meat to make the legislature consistent—to give the' sanction and ceremony of law to its practi, cal operations; or if may be that he bolds an expression of faith in matrimony asl dead without works. Having tilted the little jo ker against maiiiage, he• next threatened to deny the divine authority of the Bible, unless he could endorse it in a perfectly constitutional manne : r.: He closed with his little joker still guiltles.s of winni4s. 1 The classical Lamberton also threw him self into the breach. He had listened and-- "What great ones do, the less will prattle of --so when the Governer's message wits re ceived Lamberton objected; LambertOn ap pealed ; Lamberton protested, and Lamber ton sat down s •He- represents the smallest district in the State numerically, and the people -reciprocate the generosity .Of the State by sending a very small Senator.— Therefore he is' not to blame: If lie is a fool it isnot his fault, since hedid not Task ien himself; and to complain of it 'would be unfilial to his parents and blasphemous to his Creator. He is not alone, bOwever, for of such the poet has in pity written— , • That which I am; I am: I did no seek Fur life, nor did I make myself." But thimble rig he must, for so did 'all the great ones do ; and' he forthwith thimble rigs an appeal from' the decision of die Clair on the ground that, tkere is no chair tO make a decision. The little joker was well nigh lost in this violent stretch of logic ; but the Speaker saved the performer and hiS jokers by deciding thatif there was no Speaker to appeal from no appeal could beenteitaitted. Lamberton seemed,to think that fotipeople Who liked such decisions, they were just the decisions such people liked, but las the " now you see it" was rather - out lof the play, he confessed to a painful dOgre e of obscured perspicacity. In this confused darkness, 'Larnberton -sat down gameless, and a week's performance of ponder thim ble rigging closed. —lt was expected to open on illonday fight again with a grand change of pro me, new scenery, new thimbles and jokers, and improved in all particUlars ex cepting patriotism and sense. GO*. CIIRTI'N'S MESSAGE. We give in to-day's paper the third an , nual message of Gov. Curtin. It is a brief; terse, business like doeumint, and bonspic uous for its practical suggtistions ratter than for rhetorical embellishment. The feature that will attract most attention; is his rec ommendation that the interest on our pub- lie debt be paid in currency instead But for the express provision of authorizing the debt, requiring the of the ipterest coin, there con] division of tentiroent as' to the change; Wit ,the established tutu older governments when driven to suspension by exhausting war, and now patent to every candid obserN the State cannot hope, to confirm( Coin during the protracted susper have just entered upon, fully wari the ExecutiVe recommenxiation for' don of currency payments at once. If Eng land could be justified in a suspension of a quarter of a century because of /4r coati dental war--a suspension that applied to her trarn securities as, well as to.all private transactions,--surely the States tuUst stand acquitted before the nations of the world, in yielding 'to a suspension now, 4hen the resources of the country are so severely. tax ed to maintain our National existence. The bill of last session Kovi • s' for the ositii: e 'l itiniiiiriAk :1864. payment of the interest in coin by depleting the vaults of the Banks. Is wasin no ,res pect creditable to the State to abstract; by an arbitrary law, the specie from the, Banks at two per cent. interest, to keep up a sem blance of solvency before the world, and it will not be attempted again. _ The law in question took one-fifth the coin of the Bank of Chambersburg to pay the 'interest for t B one year, and g thi auks of the State were generally deple ed in About the same pro-_ portion. It would require but simple rules of arithmetic to ascertain how long our State could pay specie by such a process. The Banks cannot meet the wants of the State, and nothing' remains' lint to resort to cur rency, or to pay $1,500,000 interest in Feb ruary, and a like or greater sum in August, instead of $1;000,000. The cost of, coin, in Addition to The interest, would' not be less than one million a year for many years to come, for the present suspension- cannot be recovered from, in our judgment, for ten years, if even so soon as that. We are glad, therefore, that Gov. Curtin Advisesa resort to currency. 4 before the State is ex, haunted. By, this means we can resume much earlier than if we allowed our coin to be abstracted in a fruitless effort to keep up specie payments. We might do so for a year or, 'two, but suspension is inevitable, and when certain it Cannot be accepted too soon. d,% 1 ' te- He Another important recommendation of the Governor relates4o the obvious necess ity of making ainpleprOvision for the faim ilies of soldie . rs who have fallen in this war. Every dictate of humanity and justice sat tions such a suggestion, and the legislature will be faithless to the high character of our State Wit does not make liberal enactments on_the snbject. He also refers. to the ne. cessity of increasing our revenue.; to the National Cemetery; to the propriety of aiding the starving loyal men of East-Tenn essee ; to the rebel invasion. arid to the proinpt response of Pennsylvania, to every call for troops. He states, from, official data, that , 277,409 men - have been in the service at different times from this State since the war commenced, and he justly pointstwith pride to the record of our people in maintaining the life of the Republic. In conclusion Gov. Curtin reiterates his. often - explessed determination to give all the moral and official power of his position to aid the Government in suppressing the rebellion. He justly declares that "we are fighting the great Battle of God—of Truth, of Right, and Liberty," and that "the Almighty has -no attribute that'; can favor our savage and - degenerate enemies." Al together the message is one of the -most creditable of 'our State papers, and it will be widely accepted as faithful in all things to our great State and to the Government.' ing Ad he- , inst tens, f-; ft per- The Pennsylvania Legislature met on Tuesday of last week. In the HOuselloa. Henry C. Johnson, of Crawford, was cho sen Speaker by-The Union men, over Hon. Cyrus lA. Pershing, of Cambria ; A. W. Benedict, of Huntingdon, was chosen Clerk; James C. Brown, of Mercer, Assistant ; Messrs. Caleb B. Walker, J. B. ,Niles, A. D. Harlan and Henry Butterfield - were elect ed TransCribing Clerks, and James Subers, of Philadelphia, Sergeant-at-Arms. Mr. Johnson is "a lawyer of fair standing in Western Pennsylvania, and is now serving his second session in the legislature. He is a gentleman of high character for integ rity, and possesses eminent fitness ,fer the duties of the chair. He will preside-over the House with becoming dignity and \ strict impartiality, and cannot fail to give an ele vated tone to the b6dy in all its proceedings. Mr. Benedict has been Clerk before—in 1855 we believe, and' was member gne year ago ;- and Mr. Brown was member during the last two' "sessions. Both are therefore experienced Men and will make acceptable officers. . —ln the Senate a dead-lock clogs all bu siness. he Union men nominated Speak er Penny, of Allegheny, for re-election, and Geo. W. Hamersly, Esq., of Philadelphia, for Clerk, with most if not_all the old subor dinate officers of last - session. The Demo- -crate nominated Senator Clymer, of Berks, for Speaker, and Mr. :Hutchison for Clerk. The Senate being always an organized body, Speaker Penny, very properly tooktheAiair at the opening, and has held it ever shit& ; but he, with his friends, voted steadily to go into an election for a new Speaker, as has been the custom of that body. A dozen or so ballots have been had, which uniformly resultedin 16 for Penny and 16 for Clymer ,--each of the candidates'always voting-for, his Competitor. All business; is suspended, however, by the Democrats Persistently re fusing to proceed to the consideration of any legislation until a new Speaker is chosen, and as they can giye a tie Tote on every proposition to legislate, of course they de feat all progress. The absent:e of the Union Senator from Indiana, Major White, now a prisoner in Richmond, giVes the Demo.; oasts this temporary power;; and they seem determined to wield it to the , utmost for evil. The Union men have proposed to consider almost everjthing that is demand ed by the peopla; liut the sixteen Demo crats openly declay4 that there , shall be no business done until new officers are elected pr, inother_words, there shall be no leg islation until they get a .few clerks, lusters and'folders to dissipate their Constitutional objections to the present organization. of coin. the law payment Id be no roposed dents of general the fact, •er, that • to pay sion we 'rant the te adop- —The position assumed by the Demoera• ti4,Senators is as novel as, it is flagrant.' Strange to say, too, it is persisted in by X,EGIALATIVE. such experienced legislators as' Hopkins, of Washingtotr, Clymer, - ofperks, andalso by Wallace, a comparatively new Senator, but an able lawyer and high-toned legislator. It is sad,. indebd, to see inch men subordi nated' to the tnadness of party prejudices, or the petty demands of small-fry aspirants for petty places in the Senate. Against them are arrayed reason, law and precedent,. and the record they afe now making will stand as a hideous monument of attempted revolution and usurpation on the part of a. legislative minority. They are in the mi nority in point of fact, and also by the rules which provide for the perpetual organize= tion of the Senate.' A majority - of the reg ularly, chosen and undisputed, Senators is against them, and they are also subordina ted by the existence of officers in every po sition, who hold until their successors are chosen. Thus equitably and legally in- borclinated, they would but recognize the ordinary proprieties which usually obtain among Senators, by conceding the election of Speaker_ Penny, without attempting to dieter about who shall light their gas, make their fires, or copy their,' laws. But they declare the Senate in a state of revolution, and, while attemptingito usurp and revolu tionize themselves, they vainly endeavor to screen their folly from their constituents by charging revolution upon the Union' men. Senator Hopkins declared in the Senate, 'with all the solemnity of a scienced.trickster, that the Union men were usurping the powers:of the Chair, and violating' the nni form custom of that body for seventy years. In this Mr. Hopkins either deliberately, or ignorantly falsifies the precedents of the Senate. If he will turn to the Senate of 1849, he will find the position of Speaker Penny and his supporters accepted by all parties without - so much as a question being raisetlas to its legality or propriety. Gov: Johnston was chosen Speaker at the close of the session of 'lB4B. Gov. Shunk resign ed in the following July, and Johnston be came Governor, by virtue of his position as Speaker of -the Senate. When the session of 1849 opened; Gov. Johnston continued as, Speaker uf the Senate, and Governor by virtue, of that office, without a re election, or without entering the Senate at all, and no one gainsayed his right or duty so to act. If Hopkins be truthful or his memory faith fnl, Gov. Johnston ehould have returned to the Senate, resigned \ his office and been re elected before he douldreturn to theExecu • tive chair ; but on the contrary he contin ned4 by universal consent, as the legal Speak er of the Senate, and as such discharged the 'functions of Governor until within one day .of his inauguration. If that .precedent wainniversally sustained as lawful and prop er, wherein does Senator Penny's position • offend against the laws? If Gov. Johnston could continue as Speaker -to discharge the more responsible duties of, Governor, with out a re-election, why cannot Senator Penny discharge the less sacred duties of presiding officer ? Will Hopkins explain whether he blundered or falsified in his speech as to - the pecedents of the Senate ? • The presetit position of the Democratic Senators is an after thought, dictated solely by-political policy anicreated for the occr.- sion. Perhaps as a political policy, it is le—perhaps otherwise; but of that they be their own judges. One thing, how r, they cannot escape—they have wa ev dy, lawlessly arrested legislation, and upon them must rest the responsibility. qf they are prepared for it—have counted the cost, we bid 'them be merry while they can in thus insolently defying the verdict othe people. • Oua obstreperous Democratic "friends " of the Senate seem to have run mad. Lam berton probably hadn't very far-to run; but Clymer, Hopkins and Wallace lave made his follies respectable by sinning against light and reason.. If we belonged to *the Democratic party we should proceed in the Datiphin County Court fora Committee to' take care of the - Democratic Senatorial leaders, and no impartial Judge would re fuse the petition. They allege that the Senate is not organized, but recognize it as an organized body every day they meet. 'They vote against re - solutions of 'thanks to Grant ; to Meade ; against increasing pay of soldiers; against reading Jackson's Address and Proclamation on the Bth of January ; against prayers ; against bins ; for and against adjournments, and threaten to vote down the institution of marriage, and the bible, and yet they say they are wanting in Organization and that nothing but the ques tion, of. organilation is in order. If tbey had refused to vote on any, proposition but. such as. related to organization, they would have been consistent in -their folly, and displayed method in their madness;.but they declare the Senate not organized in their ripeeches - when they want to huckster in a few offices, and then confront their own position aid admit the organization by voting against everything fro ' the bible down.. 'We affectionately advise er to insert a brief advertisement in the REPOSI TORY running about thas--' Wanted—a leader for sixteen bewildered Senators. Ap ply immediately, to Clymer, Hopkins, Lam berton 4 Co." Advertising terms cash ! ON Monday next the legislature will elect s State Treasurer. The revolutionary De mocratic Senators will probably pro - otherwise seek to embarrass th • election ; but it will come off a... • . o law whether agreeable to them or not. - We have-heretofore spoken of, the eini neat fitness of re electing Hon. HUEY D. MOO/M. lie has already been State Tree surer two years, and ptiiVed a most faithful, competent and acceptable officer._ His high character as a gentleican 'of moral and vr : "ideal 'mirth especially cOmmends him for the management of the finances, and the' State will, best serve its owngreat interests by his election. We de not doubt his suc cess. THE Union &asters and Assemblymen at Harrisburg have signed a paper cordially approving of . Piiistdent Lincoln's war poi- icy, and recommending him for reelection to the Presidency. In this they but re - - - - fleeted the sentiments of the Union party . of Pennsylvania. WE are indebted to Messrs. MeSherry, Sharpe and Graber; of the legislature - for valuable documents. WE are indebted to Hon. A. H. Coffroth; M. C„ for a copy of _the Agricultural Re port for 1862. THE Government at Washington-will not " permit Gyn. Butler to be outlawed byludah _ -P. Benjamin. / The . exchange of - prisoners, committed solely to him, will be continued in his hands. Secretary Stanton determined ,on Monday to enlarge his powers and confirm his agency, by putting all the rebel prisoner* in the United States un:ler his care. There will be thirty thousand of them at Point - Lookout within three weeks. - The policy is re.rhttely decided on of insisting that the ex-* chrnges shall take Osten 'through•Gen. But ler, and that none shall take place except through him. Jeff. Davis was in favor_ of recognizing him, as Commissioner Ould had already done., Benjamin, who wrote the !t . proclamation 'outlawing, Butler, effected . majority. vote in the Cabinet against dealing with him, on the ground that he was An out law: President _Lincoln's last proclamation 'outlawed the whole Richmond, Government, and=-through this, equalay in disability, there is no doubt that the exchanges will again be re-egablished. The fact.that all the rebel prisoners, about 38,000 in number,- are to be transmitted to. his Department,-is true, and retaliatory mesa ures,.to a proper And legitimate extent, hayo been determined supon. There 'is also ern briced in Gen. Butler's scheme a Moviiin the game which the r4be little think Of,= and which cannot fail to brilg thorn to terms. He has prepared a counter move to every'poesi ble contingency, and w ther they refuse to hold communication! wi h him op not, 41res result will be the sani./ , Q , . TFIE Pottsville , Miner's Journiel entered its fortieth ;year 'on th'e lit inst., dressed_ in beautifid- new type and gii , ing every eviderax, of abundant prosperity. It , ha.s been-pub lished for thirty-five years by our friend Barnum, and Is one of the ablest Unicin Journals in the Staie. It has become stand ard authority on everything pertaining to the great mining interests of Pennsylvania. _ 50 Horticitlist for Januar J , las a con tinuation of its , able articles on grat i pe Culture. with several illustrati*ms ; several plates Of Cottage Architecture; an interesting article on Plant Houses, with plans, and vaTious pars especially interesting 0 the horticul - , turist. Price $2., Mead it . Woodward, Nec4: York. OUR old frienk and s,choolqnatc of early days, Capt. Wm. Linn, has beeeme a knight of the quill, and now fills the editorial chair of the Newville Valley Star: Het is an enterprising gentleman. a fine writer, and will make the Star sprightly and :readable- Success to him. - THE Scalpel for January. slashiA away at, the , follies of medicine and domestic life with its usual pungency. It aims to popularise the laws-of Health and has done much good in that way. Price $1; E. H. Dixon, lL D.. , - 'gm York. THE Philadelphia 4yews appears with the New Year, in a new dress. The News is the only outspoken Union penny paper published in Phil adelphia, and is prospering we are glad to observe. . ms's are quite willing that the Reading Journal should teach its readers, - by articles from ,the REPOsITORT, how to construct lee-, houses, &c.; but itshould not refuse the - usual credit. • Cot. You*/ has retired from they Erii4 Dispatch, and is sueeeeded by B. F. H. Lynn 1 Esq., ,who maintains thtold vigor and fresh t • ness of the Dispatch in eVeellent FINANCIAL. A National Bank of Fi, o Million Dollars has just been started in New,.York city.. • The gitizens_of York, Pa.,,have subscribed $200,060 to the capital stock of a national bank in that borough. The stockholders , number thirty-two. • THE Richmond Examiner of December 16th appears to be coming to e true sense of the condition of the Confederacy. "We are fast drifting into self-contsmpt," it - says: • "The adjective 'cone rate,' as Applied to the various make-shi rendered necessary by the war, is quite e reverse of oomph mentary. Confede to coffee is roasted rye. Confederate pape s only tit for . wrapping parcels. .Conf erste swords aro as harmless as if -they w made of lead. Confederate notes a rented as if they were no more ylifile le than candle-lighters." - Messrs. Anderson Sr. Smith, members of Congress from Kentucky, have made speech es beforeJhe Union League of Washington, favoring. the emancipation of the slaves in Kentucky, and in every other southern lame. Hon. Lemuel J. Bowden, U. S. !Senator from Virginia, died at Waiiiiiigton, on Bat t urday.Aveek, of small-poz.