tit Com * i ikassibie, Miaow. aik• Proprirlor• GE TT YSBLT R G , PA /141114.7 Xaratag, Kay 10, 1.848. DEMOCRATIC STATE TICKET. /VIVI O► 111,1,11,4111 COCIT, WILLIAM A. PORTER, of Philadelphia CLXAL COM11113110:4C11, iIIrEBTLICT 'MUST. of Fayette county The Hattie is Won! The victory of Friday week in the Congress of the United States is one of tin most signal and important that has poor been won by the Deinocrat:c par ty in the history of our country. It will gin to our party a new lease upon the cienidertee of the patriotic masses ;011ie Union, It attests anew its con sonance and national character, and plants a hope tor tho perpetuation of the Union, in the heart of the nation. The itruggio which commenced in ' 1820, and, like a fire-bell in the night, Owned Mr. Jefferson in his repose at liar now reached a conclu sion. The policy of strife, which the 001111reis of that day inaugurated, has hot been completely abrogated by liiis - final step, in the substitution of! smother, based on constitutional prin ciples. The statute book no longer stomps a stigma of inferiority and in equality upon one section of the Union pr another; and so far as the ides of sections can continue, a principle has been established under which the vie terries of sections over each other can po longer be the result of partial and' unequal legishttion, but only of superior 'capacities for physical and political de velopment. The battle is now won, We trnAt that there will be no need of fighting it Aver again in the admission of any oth er new State. It is for the adversaries of the Democracy (remarks the Union) to decide whether there shall be 4 truce pa this question or not. But., whatever their choice shall be, we thifik the dan ger is over, and that the back-bone of the controversy is broken. We have fought the battle under many disadvan tages, to which we need not revert. It poets always a prodigious effort to es tablish a great principle, and its cham pionship is always attended by discom. /Mures and defeats. But., once estab- Baked, great principles are apt to stand forever. They vindicate themselves. They fight their own battles. The gates of hell arc unable to - prevail pgainst them. If the Democracy shall, indeed, be challenged again to the de fence of the policy they have now in. fpaggrated, we shall have no fear of the result of future encounters with the enemy. We have fought the great fight unto triumph; we shall carry it in the skirmishes scatheless and un harmed. MrThe Democratic Ohio delegatiod In din - House voted unanimously in fa vor of the Conference bill of Mr. Eng )ll4i. 14 cannot too earnestly express per gratification at this auspicious to ken of future harmony in the ranks of the Democracy. Pie Detroit Free Press, the Ohio Statesman, the Cleveland Plaindealer, and the Louisville Democrat, hereto fore violent opponents of the Lecompton constitution, cordially endorse the new gamma bill. Tho Kansas land sales, by order pf the President, have been postponed Pm July to October. The postpone pbrat was asked by the people of Paw. Dar Though the K. N. faction is dead gas political organization, the mon that pace swelled its ranks, who, but four yaws ago, succeeded in establishing Frey oar heads an unmitigated reign of terror, of deadly persecution, and big rated villainy, are alive yet. They !MVO, as a mass, but changed the name pr their political creed, from more plqit s pf policy, bat their creed is the PAW: rie Fin; New Wheat.--Messrs. Me. gasikey, Parr k Co., of guitinsore, on frOga 116 !ought p!, of *epic county, Vq., tilmidlo of utulks of wheat, iuessuring forty-niqo kakihes height and traded. The 444 (mut irhieh they were indnicrirribuitely =likes, will, titan expected, be harvested pad it market by the latter part of the fass.at sumth. This is fully six woiks POO , la t4 O 40• Viet! 04P W14c41. rot WIPP m 4 04 this market. Jaqpectqr of Legitsis iglu} If *Avg* it 4 iym Wog * hiw prqviAling Ole aßpoliic post crt *pool* by OA sow* city .016.114.11 sad itiferkkr OZASO4 t 00 "PI) # 4 9 Rivri,sn4 WIR4 II I set, 1U4 11 14 1 4 1 1 441 1444r 6 cif 4e 1 140 0 4 lAA Oliff ritewoneseti4skuo4o,thiscitik 4 .1(4111V. 4 0,4 10 0 w "!iquip ostrige ihrompi qe:rirgli : r 44, 4de1i 4 44 &I F '11k• - TM "WWI" Mar aqpieded the New York lomat) olVotaxwerce in speaking of the bill Alai leo pow; both nooses of Congrwes for the ad minim of Kansas into the Uaioo, re- 1 marks: iltx. The bill which has passed has been stigmatised, in some quarter*, as a bribe to the people of Kansas, inasmuch as it provides for the transfer to the State, on its organization, of certain lids for school purposes, the erection of public buildings, die., making such transfer, of course, dependent up- , I on the acceptance of the act. There is' no ground for such an imputation upon the bill, for the amount of land donated to Kansas, under its provisions, is less dill■ one-fourth the quantity claimed by the Lecompton ordinalice,—less, it' we remember correctly, than the To pekaiteti asked for ,—and no more than the Minnesota and Oregon admission bills provide for giving to those tern- , tones, on their admission into the Union as States. It is the settled poli cy, on the admission of new States, to grant them lands, to a certain extent, , for school and other purposes, gc neral ly regulated by a grunt of certain num bered sections in each township; and the provisions in the bill under consid- . erution are the same as other States have received, and all new States will receive on occasion of their admission , into the Union. When Kansas comes , in as a State, whetlicr it be under the provisions of the act which has just t passed the House, or at seine future period, the usual share of the public, lands will enure to her citizens for the usual purposes, agreeably to the pro-', visions of the punt bill. The settlement of this question will; have an important influence upon po. I , litical affairs. It ,is a matter for'eon gratulation, oven among those who have no party obligations to fulfil, that , so many of the members of Congress who separated from their noviciate* on I the Senate bill, have been enabled, in i considering the proposition of the con- i ference committee, to concur with the; administration, and to cast their votes, in accordance with their previous hab its, against the party which has made! Kansas shrieking, if not a profession, at least a practice, for several years Governor Walker land Secretary Stanton ga i have also, it seems, acquiesced in the mode oradjustment finally agreed to, aid it is net improbable that the Democratic party will be substantially a unit on this, the leading measure of Mr. Buchanan* admi ' • n. I The real vote on t e ill son Mr. English's motion to reconsider the vote and Lay the motion on the table, and the vote stood one hundred and thirteen to one hundred. This is exactly the same vote as that by which the Mis souri Compromise was repealed four years ago. The political horizon is clearing off. The clouds which have boon hovering over the country and the Democratic party are passing away, and the future looms cheerily and brightly before us. The administration of Mr. Buchunau bide fair to be a brilliant and successful one, notwithstanding the combination which was formed against it at the very threshold. With a calm and truthful heart the President has looked on the angry elements in their wild commotion, and bait never faltered in his belief that all would eventually come out right. And we rejoice that his anticipations have been so far rea lized. The Kansas question has been fairly and honorably settled. The necessary supplies have been given to maintain the army in effective force. Treaties hare been made with Cen tral American States which are deemed highly advantageous to the future in terests of the country. The State De partment, under the control of the vet eran Statesman, Gen. Cass, has acquired new honors in its correspondence with Lard Napier, and its maintenance of the dignity and independence of the country. In short the skies look bright, and the signs of the times unerringly indicate the continued suprema.:y of Democratic rule and Democratic meas ures. The country is safe from the machinations of Block Republicans and their Know Nothing allies. Abolition excitement must die out as returning reason resumes its sway. And we may reasonably hope that the firey ordeal through which the Administration and i the Democratic party hive just passed will servo but to purify and strengthen them for the future. We breathe free or, and fool more confidence in the stability of the Union, which we trust will long survive all its present factious opponents. There is still work to be done. And may we not hope that past differences! will be forgotten, and that in the future; the great National Democratic party East, West, North, and South, may be found firm and united, one and indivisi ble, marching forward with conscious i rectitude to the accomplishment of the great destinies of the Republic f—Balti-' more Republican. Rejoicings.—Everywhore we hear of groat rejoicings of the Democracy over the final settlement of the Kansas ques tion. 4nd well may the peopli rejoice, foe it hes been a sore and perplexing subject, and detricnental to every inter est in the Union--exoept that of Black " Republieanism." For it It Luis been meat and drink--the pabulum qn which it t grew sad had strength ; sod its sot tietnent will prove more destructive to that political interest than the boated iiiiaoo4ll is to 4311111,114118 iiittbo desert.--- .Nu. Yerkfleme, Know liothings carried USW' OA* in if, on Monday INC bet by n redened inejority from tort or hR 7 41 4 f. - Ott ht said that quire !mat t ! rainy l*Y 9 ii! Sips of the Ttmes. l===C Ilkdolgairs (her th• LUSA BilL, Ewa assissm kills VirieLvic anis: ALBANY, May I.—On the announce ment last evening of Pie passage of the English Lecompton bill, one hundred guns were fired. HAerroao, Conn., May 3 —The Dem ocrats fired tlarty-t. wo guns on Sa t unity night in this city in consequence of the passage of Mr. English's Kansas bill. DETROIT, May I.—A salute of thirty two guns was 814 here yesterday in! honor of the passage of the Lecompton bill. The Herald office was brilliant-' ly illuminated last night, and bonfires were lit up iii different sections of the city. ticw YORK, May 4 —The Democrats last evening fired a salute of one hun dred and twelve guns in the Park, as an expression of their exultation over the passage of the Kansas bill in Con-; gross—one gan for each rote cast for, the bill in the House. How it is Received in Indisna The passage of the Conference Kan sas bill has caused rejoicing an over the Union. In Indiana there is but ono ; feeling, and that is in favor of We moil. ; sure. The following is a specimen of, many letters received by the editor of; the Washington Union upon the sub- I ject. The writer is ohe of the most prominent and clear-beaded Dom icrats in southern Indiana. He says: "English's mea4ure is universally ap proved by the Democrats here. I drove not heard an objection either from Le conipton or anti-Lecompton Democrats. In fact, it reunites the party, and it is for this reason that the Black Republi cans are so hostile to it. They had cherished the hope that the Democrats were split beyond all hopes of reconcil iation, and they looked for the certain triumph of Black Republicanism at the next presidential election. Prentice, in the Louisville Journtil,• rages and foams, denounces English as a traitor, and exposes his disappointment in every line. The Democrat (Harvey's paper ) takes ground for the compromise, and advocates it warmly and ably. Bo does the Courier. We are all rejoiced that the integrity of our party is preserved, and the Black Republicans again disap pointed and defeated." Prim die Writbeton rano of tits. lit inst The Regan sad it. Asthma The passage of the Kansas admi."sion bill yesterday, one of the most momen tous result' that have happened in our constitutional history„ was secured by the co-operation of the unanimous Dem ocratic delegation from Ohio and the almost unanimous Democratic delegn. tint' from Indiana—the only exception from the ;auks being Mr. john Davis, of that State. If there could be anything which could add more than another to the gratification of the Democracy of the Union at this result., it is the fact of the cordial fidelity of the maj ority _ of the Democracy of the great Northwest to their organization, their measures, and their pnneiples. The Democratic par ty could very poorly have spared such men as Mr. English and his colleague*, of Indiana, and as Mr. Groeeheck and his colleagues, of Ohio, in the groat struggle . which it is waging with the fierce fanaticism of the North. To - the talents and influence of Mr. English the country owes a very large share of the credit which fadue to the champion ship of the great measure that his Just become slaw of the land. And, when we can count a man ofthe learning and ability orMr. Grooebeek among the supporters of this measure, and the ad herents to the Democratic cause and organization, after the trying struggle that has neenrred, we have a source of great felicitation, indeed. Nor will the country fall to award Hr. Hunter, whose bold and energetic espousal of the Conference Bill, to which the South was somewhat dispos ed to be adverse at first blush, and to which it was induced to rally in a great degree by its confidence in, and getoorn for, that trusted and influential Sena tor, a large share of the merit of the consummation that has now boon reached. With a united Southern Democracy, a united Northern Democracy, aid select North western Democracy of tried ard approved principles and fide ity, who will doubt the continued and en during ascendency of that party and its principles in the councils of the con federation? All honor to the noble and devoted men who, at the cost of sacri fices of opinion, and in the spirit of un selfish devotion to the common cause, have stepped forth in this twirls to save our Democratic orgalierm, and to preserve it through a stinger indefi nite period in vigor and integrity, for upholding the Constitution and main taining the Union ! The Kum Question Decided. The long agony is over, and the Kan sas bill has passed and become a law.— The great principle of President BUCH ANAN'a Administration has triumphed. All he contended for was the ascenden cy of the people of Kansan in deciding on the form of a Constitution for the ineohat.e State, in a republican form, as ready been sent to Kansas by the Re required by the Constitution of the publicans, to prevent the acceptance of United States. In the outset, the Pros-I the Locompton Constitution, and thus %dent had no foregone conclasious AR to; keep the agitation open for political any particular mode by which the peo- 1 plc of Kansas should express their sov-iPurP°4"• Ono of thole emissaries ;Mee ereign pleasure. By a r egu l ar ly r a lis ti. l as the correspondent of the New York toted and legal Convention of the' Times, and is the same individual who, people of Kansas, they thought prope r 4 i' little more than a year ago, was cu te send to him and Congress form of entering the Unkm. Deo lt irain'agl! polled from the House of &Troia:sta. their own chosen mode legal, arid ht i th us here , on account of his Portkilhui oooordance with our general institutions oy in the bribery and oorraption sebeasas 4 Pnwtiou, 'no thought proper to ' of the renowned Matteson clique. ibt , ~,. ..,,Mr. DMIOLAII and his eters were of a diNerent opinion. __....................... 4111 , 419*-.-----------.. T... T. L y went for a wood Impression of Struck by Liyhtstey.—We leers that the popular 141111tinient, after ire flew; the barn of Ms. Joan Strickler, near Ilea bad ones beep legally an4lolo. II i New thnabeekend, was struck br light *of would hail Um Te4ati*al ningi on Thiamin? night Wt.. Tees . by open ai far a sion toiledeelelqq, tire oast was thrown of the baildhig, the m imp it and ebbriered to pieces. A wan leis - IWO mid fovea dui It et, was In tile bans, memo sear being hour- An' lentional pompom, until et fougth, ad br the &ging of thabers.--Ewrie il might los to A diovpiptitu 4 pr lip 3 bwry Herald, • Union. The Tresident was not at all disposed to keep a dangerous ganation open, for Presidential strife, tjtrough &nether Presidential eleetioe. He, thesifore,Wisely Mom mon‘d 'all early settlement, tinder the Constitution le gat, presented, II the people of the Territory, in fair Convention. Could anything be more honorable, fair and statesmanlike? After all the factious and sectional opposition, the Constitu tion of the people's 'delegates has been adopted by both Hoeft*. After all the controversy, this will answer the aims of the 'President. If the people of Kansas sanction it, so much the better, for there is an end to the perplexingquestion. If they should not ratify it, the President has still dis charged his duty to •the Union, in set tling a dangeroirs question. With his patriotic recommendation, his mission as President was fulfilled, and Congress had the sole responsibility of rejecting the peace-offering. But Congress has sanctioned it, and the real, matter-of fact wishes of President BUCHANAN Will be carried out. We may now assume, that this na• ' tional feud is ended, so fur at least as the Administration is concerned. The, subject is now taken out of Congress.— It. belongs now to the people of Kansas. If they chose to keep up a perpetual; feud, and fight it out, among them selves, to the extent of civil warfare ; and fraternal blood, they must do it on their own Territorial responsibility.— The course of the President has been etraight-forward, frank, patriotic, man ly and upright. He can place his hand on his heart, before the whole Ameri con people, and say, emphatically, "I have done my whole duty faithflilly, come what may." He has dune his whole duty, and tks rest depends on the common sense of the people of the Territory. If they chose to discard local factions, distant emigrant aid societies, home filibusters, Abolition as pirants to the Senate and house, travel ling and other aspirants to the Presi dency, and accept a favorable opportu nity to enter the Union, as a sovereign State, they can now fulfill theirpurpese with honor, and a prospect of future ' prosperity. On the other hand, if they wish to dash their fair p&spects, and remain as a meagre Territory, at the mercy of factious and unprincipled j politicians, they have the power so to decide. But so Ow as it depends on the action of the Administration, the troublesome question is ended and the Union is safe. The only faction that is disappointed at this result are the Abolitionists and their allies. They have opposed the settlement from the start. They wish ed to keep the question open for perpet ual discord. Meanwhile, all the inter ests of commerce, of agneulture, of the mines, of the mechanical arts, of ship and of the planting States, have been deferred, by these agitators, to the factious aspirations of political adventurers for office, from the Presi dency downwards. With the settle ment of this question, we may expect to take a now start in national peace, tranquility, prosperity and happiness.— Pea asylvanian. sor The Satiaaal hateffigearer, an old Opposition paper, announces the pas. sage of the bill for the admission of !binges, in the following decent style : We are sure that all our rea4optivill learn with pleasure as heartfelt .00 our own is in announcing the fact that the protracted, angry, mischievous, and, as regards sectional interests, unduly ex• sggerated Kansas contest in Congress, has at last been terminated, and termi nated, as all of our sectional s differenees have been from the formation of the government to the present time, by some surrender of impracticable ground on both sides, and by an acknowledged corapromiso of extreme positions in the adoption of a iniddle course. This language is in rgreehing eon treat with the high-strung expletives to be found, on the same subject, in the Know Nothing Black Republican jour nals of this place. • Letter from - Washisglion. WASHINGTON, May 6, 1658. Dear Compiler:—The Kansas strug gle being at an. end, Congress has set itself to work to attend to the legiti mate wants of the country, and the strong probability now is that all thu needed bit* wlll be got through before the day fixed Sbr final adjournment. Tho billlor the admission of Minne sota has airea4y passed the Senate, and will pass the House soon. Oregon is also knocking at the door, and will probably be taken in this session. The Deficiency bill has become a law, and progress fortcard is being made with the Appropriation bills. The passage of the bill fur the ad mission of Kansas caused great elation of fooling on the part of the Democrats, and a corresponding depression with the Opposition ur Coalition. A salute of ono hundred guns was fired immedi• ately after the passage of the bill, and from that time until Saturday night the rejoicing was continued. It was rather a singular coincidence that each House passed the bill by sine majority, and that was exactly the ma jority by which the House passed the Kansas Nebraska act. It is said that emissaries have al- WlNlllolollllllllfr uiij Rs PU14441011' Matto& The eigetion hirlifsgrar and other city officers of Phltedelplia wasbeld on Tuesday last, and remitted, as expect. ed, in the slimes of the Know Nothing Black Republican " fusion" candidates. Their majorities range from 2,800 to 4,700. We say this result was antici- ' pated, because it was known that May or Tsar, nominated for re-election on , the Democratic ticket, would be oppos-1 ed by a solid union of the Know Noth ings and Black Republicans, and by hundreds of disappointed office hunters, and their immediate friends. The event has realized the expectation. Mr. Henry, the Opposition candi date for Mayor, and an out-and-oat Know Nothing, was first nominated , by a gathering of Know Nothings with a sprinkling of Black Republicans ; as the people's candidate:" then the Know Nothing city convention adopt ed him as their candidate, and"' few days after the Black Republicans did the same. Thus cordially chosen by all the isins, and as cordially supported at the polls by them and the disap pointed in the Democratic ranks, the election of Henry is not a matter of lastonishment. It adds another proof to the position, however, that to be a Black RepubliCan or a Know Nothing is about one aa4 the same thing. Deny it as they sometimes will, they are with and for each other—with interests and aims exactly sae. Speaking of the causes which operat on the election, the Pennsylvanian knocks the props from under thow3 of the mongrel Opposition who exult over the result as an entiLeeempton tri umph, thus : "As to . the statement put forth by the Coalition that tbo result of the re cent Municipal election was a rebuke of the Maio* Administration on ac count of its Kansas policy, that is sim ply ridiculous. That was an element which did not enter into the contest. It influenced or altered no man's vote at the polls. The question was not dm cussed, nor were the people agitated up on the subject, in connection with the Municipal election. The Democracy of Philadelphia have over ind over again put upon record their devotion to the principles upon which the Kansas-Le comptenntroversy rests. They led ico the tight by the meeting at Jayne's Hall, their delegates were instructed to vote for resolutions endorsing the Kan sas policy of Mr. Been Axial it Harris. burg, and at the State Convention they did so vote. lybat Treii died party son timent i 4 doughy so now. • That fact will not he denied. Again, it will he oh served that tholeading Journals of the coalition are found to confess that the contest was merely confined to "local is sues," that Lecompton wasonly used by die Icadirs of the Black Repu blicans in order to prick the silos of tbei r followers and make,them work tip to the task as ! signed them, while at the seine dine the question was ignored by the fuglemen of the straight Americans, a large por tion of *hem are hostile to the Aboli • tionists And their negro-equalizing doc trines. Those are plain foots, and they entirely set at rest the silly assertions that thefiefeet of the municipal ticket is an indication that the Democratic perty or the people of this City art op posed to the Kunsasipolief of Mr. Bu chanan. "If the opposition wish a fight up on. the .Tianals-Leemnpton policy of the President, if they ask that this question, which is now settled, shall he dragged before the people ever more, they eatnle gratified at the proper time, whoa the qualm') will legitimately a rise. lint just now we wish to watch the plunderers whom they have placed iii a position where ,heir fingers can each the City treasury. The coalition journals may talk of Locompton as the jeggier does while the real article is being removed and a bogus one substi tuted, ball these candidates cannot thus escape from the strict watch which will be kept over them. The people will not be robbed without letting the plun derers know they are observed." The York, Borough Election. The election held in this place on Saturday last, for Borough officers and School Directors, was one of the most spirited contests that, was over held in our town, and resulted in the success of the opposition candidate by a major ity of 81. The Democratic candidates for School Directors in the South Ward were, elected. The vote polled reached ' nearly fo . orteen hundred. The BLACK REPUBLICAN and KNOW NOTH ING forces were thoroughly united in this contest, and resorted to every ex pedient, to regain the ascendancy of the town gov.irninent. Rowdyism, drunk enness and bloodshed, reigned triumph ant, throughout the day, and an awful retribution awaits those who have been instrumental in bringing about such a disgraceful state of affairs. If we aro permited to judge from the spirit that was predominant on this occasion, we are inclined to think that our daily union prayer meetings and the late re vivals of reli , sion in our town, have had very little influence over the murals of a large portion of our citizens. In the evening, about 9 o'clock, a ter rible riot occurred in main street, be tween the Market house and the bridge, between some of the members of the Vigilant' and Laurel Fire Companies, in which two or three persona wore wounded by shots from a pistol or mus ket. A gentleman standing - on the in side of tho door, in the "Tremont llouse," was struck on the back of the head with a ball fired from a pistol, making a rather frightful bat not a mortal wound. Another person, we are told, had a portion of his ear shot off, in the street. A number of other persons were somewhat injured in the, melee. 'ilidlet bolos and other marktrof nay be teased in a number of the along the street. The shettion willit, &0., of the Store of Woe, Psyabagar & Oa, and the Bank ing bow of the York Bank, bear the marks of a amber of bar, etques &tr. be -lkhr enld starts of ifta, 'htowni Ithe Yorbkae, flfeid ito (*An etuhrei will beadop e ' to pierelit a Lion of such a prow. dare.-- York Press of Tireklay. Past aad Posy. " 4.11 01 n IN A JOT lIMUL." fffiesidirst has signed the liCaasas bill. Oaltiwo divorces were granted daring the recent fission of the State Legislature. It is said that the President bad prepar ed a message on Utah affairs, which would hare been sent to Congress had the deficiency bill been defeated, as on its passage depended the support of i tiee.espedition to that territory. It rumored that Queen Victoria intends to pay • visit to Prussia during the ensuing summer or autumn. James O. Vandyke, Esq.—This gentle man has been re-appointed and condrased as District Attorney for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. Senator Douglas appears to be in full feather with the political clergy, who but lately threatened to call down the vengeance l i of heaven upon him, and consign him to perdition for his political sins. Who has changed—Douglas or the preachers? - There are some twelve or fifteen steam ers lying at the wharves of Wilmington, Del., awaiting repairs. It is said that more Iron steamboats are built In that city than in any other town or city in the United States. Almost daily, lottery dealers are arrest ed in New York. The Mayor is determined, if possible, to onst them. In Lower Canada the agreement of nine jurors out of twelve is silkiest in all civil cases. This has toughest' the law of Scotland. The rolling mills of Pittsburg mad vi cinity, with one or two exceptions, have re aimed work, and are now in full blapt. Newnan' counterfeits on the North. weseern Bank of Virginia are abroad, portico. tarty of the denominations of five and ten dol lars. They seem to be well sprinkled along the line of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal. The nomination of Judge Loring, of Massachusetts., to supply a vacancy in the Court of Claims, oecasioned by the death of Judge Gilchrist, •as on Monday communicat ed by the President. Nearly all the Democrat ic Senators united in a request for his appoint ment. In Philadelphia there is • widow bidy who has twenty-five children, all living at home, and bone married. Three pianos have been made from the wood of the Charter Oak. It takes • high polish, and the instruments which the wood encloses are of the beat deseription. Yankee Doodle is said to sound well on them. of the letters addressed to mana gers of the bogs. lotteries recently broken up in the worth, enclosing thousands of dollars, have been forwarded to Washington, to be re stored to their deluded authors. The Bordentown "Register" intimates that daring the coming Simmer a steam wagon will be running on some of the turnpike roads in the vicinity of that village. There is a pear tree at Third &vb. nue sad Thirteenth street, New York, which was planted in 1641—two hundred and eleven years ago. It is now in bed, and bids fair to Present its usual supply of fruit. Y. Chevalier declares that in France at the present time phosphorus I. the moat dan gerous form of patron known, hitting replaced arsenic, which is now so dialcult to obtain. He mentions forty eases of criminal poisoning by we hear of an econowileal mast who takes his meals in front of a mirror; be does this to doable the dishes. If that is not phi losophy, we would like to know what is. 11loving for s new trial: courting a sec ond wife. Pertington says that her minis ter preached shout the "parody o e proba ble sou." "Nrsi. Grimes, lend me your t " .an't do the hoops are of—it's fell of rads ; besides, I serer had one—l washes In • bar rel." ......Dow, Jr., says that the reason that man was wade after everything else, was, it he'ha,4l been created ant, he would have ansoyed the Almighty with endless suggestions of iltikefft meats. 4 bill leas been passed by the legislitnee of this State, *ger the better proteetioa of la bor." It is a Ilea law to the extent of one hun dred dollars. ...-11htry •ralnard was arrested, in Buffalo, for gi'd. bar Sego lord as unmerciful thrash. lag, bat lit of, upon showing that abe had to support the family, while be—lazy, good for uothing_fellow—gare her "sass" when she told him to ran an errand. There is a divine out west trying to per suade girls to forego. marriage. He might as well try to persuade ducks that they could find a substitute for water, or rose buds that there is something better for their complexion than sunshine. The only couvert be has yet made is a single lady, aged sixty. StiirThe Baltimore American learns from Colonel Taylor, that the celebrat ed light artillery corps, known as " Capt. Bragg's Battery," which ren dosed such invaluable service in the late war with Mexico, has been ordered by the Secretary of War to proceed to Utah. The company consists of seven ty-four men. Tao company carries with it their light battery, consisting of four six pounders and four caissons, but will not, be mounted until they reach Fort Leavenworth, which will ho about the 20th of May. Leaving that post they expect to travel ~[tt, the rate of 15 miles per day, and reach Utah some time during the month of July. short time sinoo a Mrs. )itickle swore out a warrant against her hus band at Frankfort, Ky., for some im aginary offence, and while he lay is jail packed up the valuables and jumbled off to Cincinnati with intakes saaft.— The husband got out of jail, pursued them, and had thim both arrested for grand larceny. The woman wished she had staid at home, bat her husband would not forgive ear till the law bad taken its course. So that what was first thought to be a capital way to got rid ofa husband, tamed out to be a cap ital way of getting into jog. Longevity.—Mrs. &rah Benjamin *din Wayne amity, Pa., last week, is the 115th year other sga. his stat ed that she had Owes two of whom served in the revolutionary wee, and theolberlu Oki war of 1811 Her youngest abet is 71 years old. 11111rInr. Omen, the eeleansted en& amine diver, is about to make explo rationsefritelorthls sunken iteseabost wrecks in Lake Brie. • Lwow. or Nati The anniversary et tiglillieW l 6 l6. KT CLAY WAS Celebrated by sk fietival at the Commercial hotel, litempleisportbe evening-of ehe 12th alt. Raw ILA Foam, presided. There eme.ictipmd time generally. Among these mho made speeches, *era the president, and R. H. Bererros, of Kentucky. Mr. Foorr. related an interesting incident es follows: . I shall never forget a seems whilst!' as tarred in the, city elf Annapaikka a Maryland, daring the summer-of 185 Q. Mr. Clay bad become 'greatly extutust ed with the severe labors through which he had been passing; those la bors, a continuation of which was so soon-afterwards to terminate his valua ble life. An old and valued schoolmate of my own, Senator Pratt . , of Maryland, invited Mr. Clay and a few others of his friends to spend a day or two at his hospitable mansion. Mr. Clay accept ed the invitation, and proceeded t 6 An napolis, attended by several gentlemen quite well known to the country. Mr. Dickinson, of Now York, was among the invited guests. Mr. Bright, of In diana, and Mr. Dawson. of Georgia, whom you all know so well, and valued so highly. I had the honor of being in the company also. The day after we got to Senator Pratt's, it was proposed that we should take a short walk through the city, and visit that ancient, time-honored building, within the pre cincts of which the Revolutionary Con gress hold its sessions at the close of the War of Independence. We wont thither accordingly, and entered the venerated room where Washington performed one of the moat striking acts of his life. I allude tont° surrender of his sword to the Continen tal Congress. When Mr. Clay entered the hall ho inquired for the spot where Washington stood when this scene was enacted. It was pointed out to him. He stepped forward and occupied it for a moment, gazing solemnly and earnestly around the room, which is precisely in the condition it was when o",cupied by Congress. A crowd of citizens gathered about him. I never saw him when his appearance and bear ing were altogether so majestic and im posing. Ile seemed really to be for the moment the grand personage upon whose glories his mind was meditating. The multitude assembled demanded to hear his august voice. Ile addressed them.—The speech was short but im pressive beyond any oratorical effort I have'ev4if witnessed. Ito took a rapid view of the condition of the country; the co 04106 eitisting, the dangeouf the lour; (bents necessary to to be resorted to In order to rrocue the Republic fmtu destruction. He espe eially enlarged upon the danger of show ing too mach respect at such a moment to party and its behests ; closing with the memorable declaration —" 7 hat pm.- ty shall in future be my party which shall prove mot :faithful to the Union." Ehtmeer's Health. Every' now and then we find a touch -44g paragraph in sumo Black Republi can newspaper concerning the condition of Senator Sumner's health. Tim lan that has fallen under our nohow is the following from the Wapiliington eons,- pond( nt of the Boston Traveller. " Don't be alarmed by the report in regard to 31 r SUMTIer now afloat in the papers. He has been slightly indispos ed, but is about as well now as when ho reached here two weeks since. On last Wednesday, while in the Congressional Library, ho was. notified that. the Sen ate was about voting on the admission of Minnesota, when he walked rather fast from the Library to the Senate, reaching his seat in time to vote. Tim next morning he was very lame, anti very mach exhausted. The sudden ef fort and the excitement was too much for him, and he fit pain for several days in his back, and a slight praiser° on his brain." We concur with the Richmond nig in the oppinion that the talc will hardly boar telling. It is not more than thirty or forty steps from the Congressional Library to the Senate Chamber; and yet, because the martyred Senator " walked rather fast from the Library to the Senate," he be nine "very lama and very much exhausted " and " fols pain for several days in his bark, and a slight pressure on his bruin." Is not thi4 funny to tell of a man whohas lately traveled all over the European Continent, and who is now continually walking the streets of Washington at ter the harried manner of a genaine Yankee ? Really, the "pressure" game of the notorious Sumner has been pm. ticod long enough. As tho New York Policeman told Mrs. Cunningham kith* bogus baby affiiir, the "game is about played oat." Do let us have a Champ of programme. eiier-The Bill passed by the Legisla ture at its late session for the regula tion of the Militia and encouragement of Volunteers, is aa " long u the moral law." It occupies forty.eoven pages of printed matter, and would take up ten or twelve columns of this paper. Un der its provisions the militia enrollment is entirely dispensed with, and all vol unteer companies parading, are allowed for every person one doihtr and OW cents per diem. In addition to this, the. commanding officer of a regiment may , order the companies composing it out for an encampment parade, not exceed-. ing six days once during each yeiir. This is intended as an indacznent to. young men, with military aver, aim cannot well afford to lose the time he: the indulgence of it,. It will **the soldiers, and go far to increase the M(ll itary spirit throughout the State. Revise/ Among A few evenings si übeeting-bonses in Ed to hears Chet liondfeier, who rel perienoe, and told of the Gospel of CI phi of his nation, bees converted sad nary. Orval, ' Imo =by- • . . • 411111raortgashtelliNg . 144014044‘0 in die atlit4 otbelmvaie. IRE CM i