JL ( , : j , 'i !,' V'V' V V vi . : 5 i - : , ! ; . ,, : U "I j j : 1 ... J i J i ' ' If. 1 J i - llllll mairr ok wko.'.j;. WRKJt HIGHT, TO 3K KLI-r Kir, HT, WHEN WBOXC, TO BE PI T RIGHT. i:nc.siu'itG. THURSDAY:: ::::lLOKMltKU 20. Payixo Promptly. Tha present cri sis is unlike that of '57, says the New York Independent, Then there wa no ruou ey in the country and no crops from which to realize anything to pay debts. Now there ia in reality plenty of money i. c, currency and plenty of everything with which to get money. The crops nev er were eo large, and business, up to a very recent date, never was better. Mer chants aud business men generally, there fore, never were in a better condition to pass thro'tgh a trial of their soundness than now, and they never were paying better. Very few failures have occurred thus far, and very few, it is believed, will occur. On all sides we hear of a fixed determination to pay, let the sacrifice be what it may. A few hundred" or thous ands of dollars lo3t iu '"exchange" by the city merchant, is not worth a moment's consideration. Integrity, honor, fidelity, and promptness are worth more than mon ey. A man that won't pay his note be cause it costs him a $a:rijue, is not wor thy of credit. A business man in New I York, a few days since one of the bluest of tha blue days through which we have lately passed sold business paper to the amount of twenty thousand dollars for tn ttowtand, and thereby saved himself aud his good name from dishonor. Such a man never will go begging for credit. Jieader, pay your debts, aud offer jour ham excuses on gome other occasion. The Secession. The Tribune savs: It may be confidently assumed that South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Florida and Mississippi will secede before tho 4th of March, in spito of efforts to restrain their separation. If left alone by well meaning people, the danger might be less immi nent. .Some of them will retire, with the design of leaving the border States 10 ne gotiate guarantees upon which they may return. There are leaders in this scheme who louk to a consolidated Ilepublie or other form of strong Government, with the idea of their own advancement to su preme power. Many Democrats are open ly against free suffrage, in favor of the contraction of popular rights, for twenty one years naturalization, aud other rigid limitations, by which au oligarchy may be established, and entire control placed in the hands of lartre slave-holders. TriF. War of lslii The bth of .Ian vary, 18G0. The men of the Second War of Independence are requested throughout all the Stales of the Union, to celebrate the anniversary of the battle of New Or leans, and at the same timo to sijrn peti tion aud adopt resolutions, to be forward ed to Congress, asking pensions for the poor old soldiers of the war 1812 and the ge3 and infirm widows of such as are dead. Meetings might be held in the different couuties where any of the survi vors of the war are still living. This notice is issued by the President of the National Convention, at the request of many of the members of the Convention residing in different sections of the nation. The editor of public journals throughout the country are respectfully requested to pablitdi this notice. Election Laws or Soutu Carolina. The election laws of South Carolina, as we gather them from the Charleston pa pers, say s the Baltimore Americ an, contain what will be considered some curious pro visions in this democratic age. Universal suffraee does not exist tLr. T,. ksidea belnrr ft "f.-A ..l,it ' . - - v. ubti. o -... ujusi : b possessed of "a freehold of fiftv acres of 1 land or town lot." 'j'hp possession of ! this proprty-e,uabfication not only givos j a rhe right to vote, but enables him to q. ivY.-tx he s-.iir.ii v parish in wiii-.h iliougli not a r;v i .1 V,d.-r is te.'j'ji: tv. nnar tbru l.c '.; r:0n-C;)t!.Lai-3:. of the United fj't':t, by ilioh. 11 V. in t i .. : t r. : Ci iii-ion g (,:, r !;f'l r of : C-m:. ..l ii, nr esc-; t is u uirjg ei. -'.mrat! wit ii iiiT-Tr.e Ketmoky bank? bae rc-oiv?;1 t" rtitiuu ?-"ci'? p-.ir.ent iiuly fl Republicans. The 1 ittsburg CvmmtTcial Jwtrria?, in replying to the question "how should the Kepublicans act under present circum stances V holds the following language, which wc adopt aud endorse : "They should deport thenifclves precisely as if no panic existed, and no threats had been made. Whoever is turned by panic or threat to the right hand or the left is a coward. "Yield nothing to menace," is the dictate I iiul more oi courage man or policy, it wc (yield in this hour .f pressure we are en slaved furcver. e could never recover from thedislmnorable imputation of having granted to threats what we refused to ar gument. A great party must respect itself if it would preserve the respect of the coun try and the world. In the midst of threats and menaces of rebellion against the Con stitution, is no time to falter in our high purpose of replacing th government upon the basis established by Wa.-diingtou, Jef ferson aud the other founders of the re public." All the Kepubliean papers of Pittsburg advo-.-ate. the calling of a mass meeting iu that county to take such action as will render unmistakable the pervading desire and determination that whatever measures m ty be proposed at Washington the nrinciides of the 'hie:i. v.hitfnrm slmll be maintained in their integrity by our Congressmen, by action, by speech if need be, and by vote. On this subject the (luuttr speaks emphatically as follows : To the IIeitim.kan.s of Allegheny County. A bold and desperate attempt is now making to induce us to lower the Republican standard to pacify the fire eaters ot the.outh. Already a few nund men grow pale and wince under the South ern thunder ; tnd '" ililksops who never in their lives I lit so much eoij as over shoes iu snow."' show tremulousness in the knees and are seared at the menace oi those who, because they cannot rule, threaten to ruin. Let Allegheny county, with her glorious 10,(UU Republican majority, now, at the fitting moment, speak out emphatically. Let us hold up the hands of our Representatives at Washington, and show them, at this crisis, that their constitutents are at their backs to sustain them. The Republican platform, in all its integrity, must and shall be recognized as the true exponent of the pArty creed and basis of Mr. Lin coln's administration. It is fit that Al legheny counry should take the in itiative in the work jf maintaining it in tact. John G. Whittii ii on the Crtisis. John G. Whittier has written a letter to a Republican meeting at Haverhill, Mass., iu which the following passage oc curs : "A great responsibility is laid upon us. Wo must prove that wo deserve our suc ces by askiug nothing of any class of our fellow countrymen, North or South, luit what is morally and legally right, and yielding to nothing which is morally and legally wrong. We must be firm, but not defiant ; we eve too strong in the right and in our majorities to answer railing with railing. We can afford to be mo i erate and generous. With slavery in the slates we have no right to interfere, and do not desire todo sobeyond the mild per suasion of the successful example of free dom ; but outside of state sovereignty, sla very has no more legal right of constitu tional guaranty than polygamy out of Utah. Its homo is only in the" states everywhere else it is an outlaw. "i caunot but regard the menace of disunion from the South as more likely to prove ni'sehievous than reallv danger ous. It may do injury to the industrial and financial interests of the countrv, but i. : t. niv- vui in wuih. us own cure, liusiness men at the South will not long indulge in the childish folly of setting lire to the clothes on their backs, in the expectation that their neighbor's fingers will be scorch ed in putting it out. The clamor that' the Union should be dissolved, because slave extensions are out voted, for the first time in twenty years, is simply lu dicrous. It is a quarrel with the census tables and Greenleaf's arithmetic ; figure three complaining that it is uot eTjual to figure five." How True! The most disheartening fact iu our present public troubles, sa" the New York World, is the feebleness of tho national administration. There never tlmc m our "'story when clearness of vision and firmness ot neive were more required in the executive branch of our government, yet never a time when they were more deplorably lacking. What does the President think, and what will he do, have bean the questions on every man's lips, and no mau can answer them nAurr.na i Li f t. r. n !.,C ...jL. uvsn vi. jui y.nvi lUKu uciote me message and, what is worse, everybody has come l. . i: .v.. .i.ii - i . i , . LI. 1 VH -.1. 1 IP ! IIOIIT ti.li..r. ( ... . I kZ .1 I ZZT'ZZ'Zr"'1 ie. 548 I , - -11141 lift ailiitt ziuics ia I ,i i . s w J r ii.f'iti rn.r i-.... rather lr,A ,f l.;. . . . .... .... . ! " "j -in, i lv ni-ri i, Il'T Will rf 1,i3 owu to execute. The w inds arc u7' lx(i ?A ar. veiling mou.itaiu- "' v c " 41 r; in lUl, i nra net intelligible order ....... , ' comes t roin fb. !.-.- n v. I ' i st: :t R-O.i re;.::: etrii Ca:oir.a yns :Zr.A . go ...r rt!!!-it. frt-m the r r i t: : r, ' :. j;; t! i'!esi--le::t i -i s no si:ru ;'.iut an--- 'i v, :i : ! . . . I '-' V. !i C . 1 :i..l t; -U 'act'-".. I : V: Of :-foU!.t t'.at hv v P:vi:)'r ii;.i' ' 1 I i , 1 V r.'.I i I '1 . hi- EDITORIAL NOTINGS. X&jy" See new advertisements. Kf& Reading matter on every pge. fS!l Excelleut the sleighing. KSkm Coming in country produce. S Coming on the holidays. K?l5 The deliberations in Congress are comparatively quiet. JCST-Oiir State Legislature meets oa Tues day, January 1, ISCl. Ki3L it is re-ported thnt General Cass has resigned his ollice as .Secretary of State. Interesting the correspondence of our "Bevy of Beauties." iy Garibaldi's island of Caprera lies near to Elba and Corsica, and contains 2,"00 inhab itants. E-2n- riE" At Oreenshnrg. on Sunday, lOtli inst.. Alexander M Kinney, Esq., ajed 38 years. ETSaThe price of the London Times is $25 a year, live times as much as Anierieau news papers of the same size. tSIF It is reported that Hon. Edward Bates has been formally offered the Secretaryship of Mie Interior by the President elect. fetT" A man named Jacob West was frozen to death near Bolivar, Wcstmoi eland county, a short time since. Cause, intemperance. BQThe tot:iI population of Pennsylvania is rivt.n at 'J.tl 1 ,1 04, being an increase of o'J0.32:5 in ten years. JfcjyThc Southern students at Jefferson j ('olk-re, I'a.. have resolved to leave in u b dv for their respective homes. Pah ! feThe Bell men of Virginia, headed by Johu M. Iiotts, tuLe stroi.g ground in favor of the I'nion. Jtrjr-The Personal T.ihertv law of Massa- cnusens is SaM to be an o: the Personal Liberty law of Virginia. X5?tfTh P.nrch divorce case has been eon eluded. The jury rendered a verdict in favor of Mrs. Barch, the defendant. j&SrThe Homestead Bill has passed tin House at Washington by a vote of l.'I'J to 70. Its passage in the Senate is not looked for, ijThe Deiu. fc Sent, says that the last Message of President Buchanan proves him to be a fare-seeing statesman. Phariseeing certainly, just so. K.Quere What's become of our Balti more correspondents, "W," and "J. II.," iiud our or?" Washington correspondent, '-Bachel-Lct us hear from vou all. trood friends. "St?-John C. West, of Hollidavsburg, has been appointed a Notary Public by Governor Packer, in place ol'J. II. Patton, whose term lias expired. CThe Governor of Tennessee has issued a cail for an extra session of the Tennessee Legislature, to meet on the 7th January to consider the condition of the country. S?i,It ia thought that should Virginia con chide to secede from the Union, -a large sec tion of the State woul f revolt, forma, new free State and remain in the- Union. There is some talk of finishing the ! Ilompiield l.'o.id to Greensl.ur?. The work. ! it is said, is to be do!:c by the Pennsylvania Pailroad, and will be commenced eaiiyin the spring. i'.y Those of our friends who intend pur chasing holiday gifts should consult cor adv. j columns oelore deciding where to deal. The establishments therein named are the chenp-c.-t ia town, and have almo.-t every article U r sale that you could desire. EfW-Il is reported that Ex-Governor Thom as, of Maryland, has accepted the post of .Sec retary of the Tre.-e-.iry. made vacant bv the resignation of Howell t'obb of Georgia. The Treasury never was so near bankruptcy as it now is. kThc -Home Monthly" is j he name of a very excellent magazine edited by JU-v. Wm. M. Thayer, Mrs. JL K. G. A rev and Mrs. G. H. Gildersleeve. Terms, $2.00 per annnm. Ad dress Stone, Richards & Go., 11 Coruhill, Bos ion. Mass. A baby has been born in New York, having the features and whims of a rabbit. It has a stump of a rabbit-like tail growing from the back of its head. If this precious fib had only emanated from a Southern paper, it might truthfully be clas sed under the head of ' Cotton Tales. " E?, A bill has been submitted to the South Caroliua Legislature providing holidays to be observed hereafter in that State on June 28, the anniversary of the battle of Fort Moultrie, Good Friday, Christmus, January 1, Thanks giving and Fast Days omitting the Fourth of Julv ! Bf3- The year I8U will be the first of the CCCth Olympiad. There will be an annular eclipse of the sun on the 14th of January, another on the 7'h of July, and a total eclipse" 0,1 ,ne ot ''cmber . i i . . . . . There will nlso be ''"'"" " "l'et l " the 17th uf December 'BCSl.An insane man named John Loder, sirayeu away lroni his home in Snmw. county, oil t'o !"! .1 1 ' . I 1 :'..:! fci 'f hi v i-ei !. . ive I.I.-. !. a i ...o i.n ori: Vo ir: o: dr.U ). l..." .v.-., . OI' I'fiC ;!i -y a in cr. ir'. u ii. . t i: in 1 i.i -Li t i wh'.Ut it i.t iij woui 'v- iluli ! e,,-.v t.. i it bv. i.i an-j I'roclanmtl on. To the Peoi'Lt;oftiie United States: Numerous appeals have been made o me by pioui and patriotic associations and citizens, in view of the present distracted and dangerous condition of our con, try, to recommend that a day be set apart for Humiliation, Fasting and Puayek j ken up nor the records of the Land Office throughout the Union. ! seized ; and in fact that all of this excite- In compliance with their request ami j ,iK.iit K,cw out of the hanging of three my own sense of duty, I designate Fitin.VY, j ,;,,, y a vigilance committee of Southern the 4 th day of January, 1SG1, for this j Kansas. The Falstailian Judge, Williams, pupose, and recommend that tho People conscious, piobably, of deserviug punish assemble on that day, according to their j j, t7 saw multiplied legions of men in several forms oi worship, to keep it as solemn Fast The I'nion of the States is at the pres ent moment threatened with alarming and immediate dauger; panic aud distress of a fearful character prevail throughout the land ; our laboring population are without employment, and consequently deprived of the means of earning their broad. Indeed hope seems to have deserted the minds of men. All classes arc in a st ite of confu sion and dismay, and the wisest counsels of our lest and surest men are wholly dis regarded. In this, the hour of our calamity and peril, to whom shall we resort for relief but to the lod of our fathers? His om nipotent arm only can save us from the awful effects of our own crimes and follies our own ingratitude and guilt towards our Heavenlv Father. Let us, then, with deep contrition and penitent sorrow, unite in humbling our- selves before the Most H.gh in confessing our individual ana national sins, and in acknowledging the justice of our punish ment. Let us implore him to remove from our hearts the false pride of opinion which would impel to persevere in wrong lor the sake of consistency, rather than yield a just submission to the unforeseen exigen cies by which we are now surrounded. JiCt us with deep reverence beseech him ! to restore the friendship and good will which prevailed iu former days among the people of the .States; and above all, to save us from the horrors of civil war and "blood-guiltiness." Let our fervent prayers ascend to His Throne that He would not desert us in this hour of extreme peril, but remember us as he did our fathers in the darkest days of the Revolution, and preservo uur Constitution and our Union, the work of their hands, for ages yet to come. An Omnipotent Providence may over iule existing evils for permanent good. He can make the wrath of man to praise Him, and the remainder of wrath he cau restrain. Let me invoke every individual iu whatever sphere of life he may be placed, to feel a personal responsibility to God and his country for keeping this dav holy, and for coutr'-buting all in his power to remove our actual and impudinir calami ties. JaMLS !! ( HANAN. Washington, December 14, 1m;i.i. The above reminds ns, says the Pitts burg Jh'sjhttrh, of the grocer and his boy. "John," said he, "have you watered the vine".-;r v 'Yes." "Yes. 'Have you sanded "1 hen let us (jo to lb. V" l l V- w C i ar roji rs- Thk Coni;ki:ss:;;:n it.om Ottr.eioN. A Lesson for Youth Jfcn to Study. Mr. Nesmith, one of the new Senators irom Oregon, is a native of .Maine, forty years ol age, served his time as a carpenter's apprentice boy until twentv-on years of age, when lie emigrated to the West, and hneiiiiLr bimstll one .lay out ol money, aio! being unable to get employment at his trade, enlisted in the army. He serveu live years on the frontier, in Hodge's Reg- inient of Dragoons. At the expiration of) his term ot service he started overland for ,-..0-.., ...... . .. i,.,,,,,,,!,,, aii'j arrived in Oregon City in the fall of that year. When the provincial government was organized iu lbl-I Nesmith was elect- ed one of the territorial judges. He went to California in the summer of ISIS with many other Oregonians, worked for some llr..r..,i vv irl. t hi i.tni hoi. V ' . .1 months at mining on 1 eather river, and returned to Oregon next Spring. He was alterwards superintendent of Indian affairs for Oregon but was removed. The Hon. I iausing H. Stout, Congress man elect from Oregon, is a native of Cen tral New York, and a few years ago drove a stage between Utica and New-port, Her kimer county, N. Y. He went to Califor nia; studied law some time; emigrated to Oregon; ran for Congress; stumped a district eju::l in size to New York; and conies Last to tako his placo among the law givers of the nation. A ViRiiiMA Peksonal Liberty Law. It is a little remarkable that Virginia has a personal liberty law. It enactAhat any person, conceiving himself to be un lawfully detained as a slave, is authorized to sue for his freedom. Such person du ring the pendency of the suit, must be l'1 ln custody at the expense of the pcr- son clainnncr to le the owner 1. ::.!.:! li.ay ;:Av the e Us'o-Jy t l'U on gn ;!g t.o!:vis, i.i a r-i . !; t in- l i o; ."H.lili; i ! e 0 i" . . I-.. I iu.l. ('.,.;: 1-V tbf .!at. on the e:;; 'i;. : i I , i he is 1 '"''-. a; w c ;".'iC' :;'..l a t. lias 'i ' ton i..or: ii Cf. !enc o of ll,t. tj,,,! '1 iu rn !:!: iilii:g a - U iii ii lis re v id tii "it tU'll of 1 ': 111.:. V. his favor. th cir.iui 'O.-ts. he is to be d; tu i. j.'o.tletoU ir:rel it-, U e!-.pi.!ge3 i :. i The Repouteu Wak in Kansas. Later accounts h.how clearly that there has been no "war of extreme fcrocily" carried on; that Port Scott has not been taken nor even approached; that Paris has not been sacked or molested; that Missouri has not j ijetM, invaded, nor any of her citizens mo t lasted : that Williams' Court was not bro u j buckram, and fled like a coward to Missou- ri when no one thought of mob sting him, and there, in his flight, sat down to the task of alarming the whole country, by sending false dispatches all over it. And now the truth begins to come out. Col. Moiiu, the Register of the I.'. S. Land Oflico at Fort Scott, teletrnn.hs that demonstrations have been made against that place, and that he thinks that Wil liams is entirely unjustifiable iu breaking up his Court; the company of men seen in .Missouri and supposed to have been Montgomery and his band, are proven to havu been a company of I'. S. troops on their way to Fort Smith; no war or revo lution exists iu Southern Kansas, and thus the whole thing ends iu smoke. W e hope that in future men will think before they condemn, and when such re ports as these are sent out respecting Can- tain Montgomery, that people will beware Lu- tlu.v Lel;tW; fcUch tvidollL.c a;railist a , ljlau ., .;uSe clial.;U.ttr lnl, icr(.tol(,rL hi.en v, it bout spot or blemish, and whose moral worth has always, in the past, been fa- I greater than 'that of his malignant aceu- j sers. AtcJiiauii elm ii'hi'iH, J)'-r. . j convicted in the Clearfield Court f-- Kvj).'! be asl.in gton correspondent of! murder of his wife, and senteu.-ed "L" the .New York Tim of Satin dav, savs : ! hunir. n Tuesday II Rm-hr "Although it is eon;ai:lly denied. I am . Ksq., one of Cathca'rt's attorney confident that a majority of R( publicans in this city, and obtained from G,-nV will be ready for any compromise not ii.- j lei, Prothonotary, a writ to take the r oiwiig me loss oi me ersouai .-cJi -respect of those who voted lor Lincoln, and the dignity id" the Northern Stales. Tat pan, oi' New liatni shire ; Adams, of Mass achusetts; Ferry, i Connecticut; liow- ; aid ol Michigan ; Washburne, of Wiscon sin, and Aldrich, of .Minnesota, will be j ingenuity. If Mr. Swrre very ot the .North ana no saeuhee can priticiile.?. be in a majority a compromise iikc tne lo'iowinir, as an amendment to the Constitution : re-affirming the right of the States to regulate their internal institutions, making strong er provisions for the rendition of fugitive slaves ; repealing the present obnoxious Fugitive law, leaving out such provisions as an extra fee to the United States Com missioner in case of conviction, and giv ing the slave a right of trial by jury 'be fore the United Sta'cs Courts ; and pro hibiting the Slates from passing laws to obstruct the exc.-ution of ir. A planter from the interior el South Carolina, who owns a largo number of slaves, says that such a compromise would, he thinks, sat isfy a majority of his State, if the leaders and the press would only inform the peo ple of its provisions. ::nd the true state ol stn air-j. . , : . i : i .i . '.i JLIn answer to the statement in the Presidents Mes-.'ge and in the opinion of Attorney (lencial Rlaek. that the Presi. j dent has no power to enforce the U. S. the New i laws against. South Carolina, i York Kr ni;i l'o. t ives the following very strict m insi.tui" iir.iin b.- iin.-,.;i,- r' , . .1. ... .i .- j settlu from the code ol United States Stat- attests, and to the nr. : utes at hirer. 4 'i j "Whenever the laws of the United ! States shall be opposed iu the execution f thereof obstructed in any State bv com binalioi; binations too powerful to be suppressed by the ordinary coins" of judicial precee J- j vi L.y i no powers ve.-ici iu toe mar- j siials by this act it shall be lawful fbr ' the President of the United States to call j b-rth the militia of such State, or of o.ii j tlor Sfote or Statm, as ma be necessary ! to suppress such combinations, and to j cause the laws to be duly executed ; and i.w.i, I .1 . . . i i the use ot mihtia to be continued, if nr.-. essary, until the expiration of thirty davs after the commencement of the then next session of Congress." The law is in full forcr, and trives the President ample powers, if he chooses to exercise them. Tiif. Mkssauk Soith. Centlemen returning from the South state freely that the President has now, after the election, very few fronds n t)Klt section. Pour fifths of the people iu Oeorgia are against secession, but the difficulty is theyluow not how to prevent it. The message of 31 r. Huchanan, instead of showinghow to remedy the evil, complioatcs theaffair. It is a chaos of contradictions and illonic alities. It says a great deal, but mas Iilt.e. It will place the President iu a worse light in the eves of the Southern people than that in which he is uott re garded by the Northern people. A-hvv- MO '.f:.OM--.-.i i: -i 'V i'-t . ;at A I I ! :V .-i the vi, 111' " - 1 .1 i :'U : ;i' ; it is St i o; u- P.... . .r; n. .,;.! ' ... ! lb:. ; 1 1 i V ah.-.i; -.Uf: 'tho f.,'!l :.t:g t:.:s c UeW ci i,-.M5 ' h.,h.d i :' t v. .: :ve s t t! or.s:i; that i i '11 , I".-'.. IM i J. -us agenf:, i:;iv tin ir '.. oi l; Corn : i.ut i Us: vi IV. I. uii UK ... trutn is, tne iicfisa''e i r,nl- i. . l-t by all parties. It rar.8 ih,, n knuckles, and then tries to pacif The Southern Senators are partic vere in their criticisms, wlile crats in the House only ridicule'6', contradictions are attributed to 'L'f . trp. .-eeiai panics ocing engaged atd--"' times in patching it up tosuh a"" In spite of this ridicule. bo'wev'V Union feeling is evidentlv gainic ''' and the select Committee, it is coVfi believed, will be able to produce which will be successful in restorhv '" to all the States but South Carolina Union men are busily at work tbis, seeing, and consulting with the'd ! O1 delegations. H-jn. Joshua R i.n. . i r. . Jl".. ' vieui-ia, tens me ne leels conS.-r au win vet ue well. lh Vir i i . . .. -'.'tim u ' lr r;r no beis aio ttnnk that all difficult; healed. Throughout that portion of the M relating to Slavery i the Territ.'nC"': seen the cralfy hand of Jeff lb-;. :nsi.sippi. ne is known to have k". in communication with tie K lately. J,vading men say tboy kn,.Ti' me ungiuaior oi tne I resident g r.r,-,r tion for a Slave code. This dhlCu' party in the late canvass. ar,J , majority of that party are again-; icy. lie ret uses to meet IbjajV -r'. sition to bury animosities, t.!a'. common compromise -ro:n .1 b -., and his iriends, of course rem1' . .....vui 3 jo o,,o5iiion, ana cai.jti v to it. A Xick I'oint in Law. Some igo ii man nauiel ( atheart tri..: .... ew. to the .v m reme Court u.l r.1-0 :. v. j " v 1 1 1 1 :s .Mvupes intention to test the right cf 3, 'oernoi- to sign ami issue a death rant. The courts below will pia':. wait with anxiety to see what rm-ji-rv"; will be introduced, and their n f -r'.-.i : ; The Times correspondent feats -""r . " " "'t-.'"Kj 'i, uiiii- v ouii iiuii ii. e ijOTer!.'- no saeuhee or LepuL,ip ; n-jl t to issue the littl- .1, cp;, - 'j'he conservatives will ; sends men to the other s!b.- :i J.,:i;i:.'u and will probably c.'lc-r j will have achieved a much zrciT,-i iri anrl reputation than anv maa i, w ; legal prolessiou. JJurritlurj iLv.'.,: a tfiJohn C Frenicct will s it n. het man in the United Str.tts. NEW ADVERTiSEfiiEfiTS. rpUK NKW YORK TRIBUNE: v .rust u;at tnose who do not nor!:'. . ... TliK TKII'.LWK will subscribe for it.:::.: delay. The club j.rice of THK TTF.EK1T TiriHlWE and THE .S'EMI-AVEEKLY IT.'.l I'.N'E is ?o lovr that there are but :W :u; community tumble to take it. Ii.:: Thk Tkibcxk. as the principal j .ij.er ?:.-;.::-ing the new Administration, wl' Lt j interesting, while outside ef p...Ii::, ::.-:..- aide Foreign r.nd Domestic Xe-.. t meroi.-il ami Agricultural Ii.tell.'gtnc. ::.'-' Literary Department, give to it innrrit value- w hich t.o other paper on this t r.: - :: 'an boast of. How ably and accesr::u Tnini ne has ccnductcd the cami mLa .- gloriously ended, the result inNm V.: ". ; ntirin tser:i(.!:s capacity r.nd foresight of Ilosu'E t'.usini due iiuich of the glory of ti.i- vi '-. rv c-: w hich a nation of Freemen are new r.j....:: It is. therefore, the duty ef eurv ;:. Lean to aid in giving Ti;e Tr;: ; ne a ' larger circulation. As evidence :t?:.-: lai ityand reliability, we tnav state that wetk over S.'x II::ndrtJ T.'.i,u.utnl eel irs t:e sold a. circumstance i:njrev( ,'dt-r.n-d 1 '-' annals ef jotirnalism. O'uardiat tr.d Cut I'll uenixv tile. I'a. Terms : DAILY TRIBUTE, (311 issues rerfta. ii-'? SJI'MI M-T.-1.-I.-I i: iM J " - i.r.ivi.. I I 104 1 - WKEKLY, ( ,2 i- T( ( I.l liS Semi-Weekly : T '. i ::" ; Ten eo.ies to one address. $'10. ' any i.irirer numbpr t ti. 1itor r;.:e. i'- copies or over to addre of tach tut-trti-r- J.'iO each. For a flub of Twentv.c '- copy will be rent. For a Club ol Fe-j. ' send THK DAILY TIUBl'XK irratis oce ? Weekly: Three copies, fj" Fivp for : Tm f..r $12. and anv larLer Ui.rjl -irtt tbers of .1.20 each per annum, the j-.iper to te;" aresseu to each subscriber. To w ' Twenty we send an extra copy. Tven:jiT:rt to vnr adJrets for S'20. with cr.e tst-'d to who send- us the Club. For eftih Cxi ' One Hundred TIIF DAILY TP-lBl'Si- sent frratis one year. Ex&T Payment always iu advsr.vt Address 1UT. TRIBUNE. No. -N? - s der 20 lXECLTOKS -l.i Letters tr tni NOTICK t!ment;rr or T'Y : KVAN" e :j' J.- i-er.-.-i: i.t 1 II VUL