K'i2:=l REGISTER. 1 + . Editor. TH URSAYI;AIiiII44I, 850. ,i'; Wright's Pennaylvarda Justice. 4 this almost indispensable Jusfices of the Peace, have jii.Ft Bale nt this oflire. Wiz and it& .W.arriern.,...,„. :testing history of the late War nitll .sketch of the principal Goneralssind in it—a book of near no pages and bound, nod illustrated with nu -wings. 'Ton SALK AT TYRA OPTICS.. t 1 volume of the Susquehanna lteg the years 1836 and 1838, tuts been ....e one, who would confer n favoi tubsoribers, Don't forget, At being court week, will furnish a ...rto those hi arrears to come or 'they owe to the Printer. We hate to tg—;but we hate full as much to be dun tont the means of paying those we owe, of the delinqueury of Aim's, and the cost wa must suffer If our call is neglected, ns to make costs fur others to pay.— blame us for the consequences there ,* may ensue after court. A.ll7Who would benefit themselves and us Nate time by paying in advance,- are invi al themselves of the advance price. All in arrears beyond the first of January have that privileg; fur this 'year if they would eall the attention of our agricul , to the advertisement in another col- Ilhaelileie Ploughs. Many will remember ene of them at the ploughing-match , which was so much admired by all it They, are highly recommended by At competent to judge. Things at Efirrietniig. Baal passage of an Apportionment Bill thro' WAS the most important of the doings at Harrisburg. A Bill providing for 'le amendments to the constitution to a 4 the people nest fall has passed the Senate. 4/11114 1 iiit of the great Divorce cases (Wetherill's) lite been defeated in the House. The lastday so: the final adjournment is Tuesday the 16th. . The Apportionment Bill. , .'i The Senate after several days spent on the :Ip-. llXtrtkainent Bill last week, finally passed it in a I )111hapelf possible more outrageously unfair and un lust than any Bill previously proposed in either Ilkommek of the Legislature, and the louse on Thnra 1 day concurred in all the amendments made. It is j acid That a caucus of the Locofoeo members of both p limes was previously 41d, at which the whole '‘' l l 11111atlier was , Arxanged, cut and dried; and aecor r; amity one tillisoloco S'estitor after another, 1 L tri his A Ineti came, offered amendments -here and there to llnk portion of the Blil as it came up, engrafting riposi.it inch Combinations of counties as had been •• wait:Toe for for each district, and the-e were 4 i normally pot through by the casting vote of Mr. Brake; Best, mating 17 to 16 on each proposi fon, however outrageous, while every amendment 11 alisted by a Whig Senator to make it more fair ii . an 4equal, was unceremoniously voted down by IA the same vote.. Mr. Best has now probably put if thadlled-liack the favor of his' party which he lost 1 at-thecommencement of the acs-ion, be electing 0 , kilmalf Speaker in defiance of the regular caucus r , I s nomination, since he has helped th em in the con i '7 110MI111110 11 of such an abominable ontrate upon . ': i i Aar people of the state. Doubtless he will be for- . I.,iirgieHeslad taken into full fellowship again by those ~.., : i . . *be oitercely denounced him as a renegade and 1 tridtor to the party, W l 'L'. ?ball Fee I whether' their I 7.4 denunciations are not now all hushed in silence_ . .-r - The following area few et the abominations of ,' 1 ~:. this B at in the appertain:Tient fie- Senatorial tlis' - 1 1 ititds: . IThe ratio for each senator being 14.743 taxable=, sod Delaware county with 5267 being adjoining ..' 14 ether counties than Chester and Mentg,omery. illiiolllll of which having aloim 24 more than the eitin required, and Montgomery 1227 less, reason s and justice would dictate that Delaware should be_ ita t thea to the latter. . But the Locos who preach so touch about eqUality put Chester and Delaware itogether; making over 20,000 taxable., fin , one sen ! idiF. ',And Why I because they are both. Whig eplistWit, and little Delaware might possibly some '. SS* overbalance Loco Montgomery if put with her. 'in this irtstanee.,it takes 6500 more taxables 1 .1 in Whig counties for a Senate than in a Locofoeo , totiriet adjoiailig. This is Locofoco equality I ANIS, taa,:ii!!tor a Whig county • with 22,844 haneldel6 or senrplus of over eight, thirinsanil, is al butaiiitilig me Senator, (instead of giviteg Lcuicas tar and Lebanon 2 as before,)` while a double di: , 44111 formed to elect Loco Smatc;rs as composed - of bit a few more taxables than Lamas-ter alone, and, one Loco district composed of Tiova, , Potter, Me -1 elp and'ph, With only 8663 is allowed a Sena 'c tar, the tame reF,Lsentation as Lancaster with near there times the number of taxables ! This is an other spiiehaan of Locofecojtistiee and equal rights ! ''Afirst ! thumb single districts are more truly detnielhan double ones, when gross inetinalis' ties blii . i that of Lancaster can be avoided, they luisivinsde two double districts where there was ivii-iartio necessity. For instance Berks and Schuylkill connties might just as Well be each a sepstste district—the Topmet having only 1 . 019 .lOW and the 114er:inching onli. 1676—neither . b*Airlabc Sooner so far from the ratio as some cibir ',Sab tlieylave formed. BUt TheirSeheyl - aumetimes elect a Whig,, Send& if left slow ? , Then again Mercer. Crasvfonl, Vguangu, .4MlOienet.und'Werren are raadeinto a double • dis tiiiteielieillie 4 / riffwe :aid' tho lattthree*ould be fat shore eourideatViiogia„.si - elta. But thaii au !hese wwill LOOO . eonotiea are wanted to holti eitii#Atialiettie itehdy .044-insure 2 Senators 4.414***01,i1041 1 0 4 -jil :6144.4 4 ' 9 111 t ' ct3e. AlNlfilkd..bilt‘e. : • ..' ' '' "' ' ''• .. .. ...,_ ~.. _ _ .. . . • ...111,11110110111111giva. tAxi, *gab anCtreble,die ilietivoratifried* litreritruiStatioes #sixweitliere *jai iiiktbiele4llo.43 Pr'the Wnyriejile and Monroe are put together for two members, when, Wayne alone Eliould be entitled to e tinctrike anikAtontti-tate dds too and (,reen p l og er , e hasl moriAllutn for eite 13 (*tie tncliOs wantecl--to ee iiver*la , n', the .'snia. soractimes4,:iyenihy Wa t shingtori x Loco members where each county representatives might give the Whigs Mercer, VenOgo and Warren arc likewise strung together for I 3 inernburs, when each would rather jiaxe,.., 9 neil,hte.,,HitAmi,,,Mya - ce - fiigijtchoose 41 Whig if left Slone. *lice tine object of this. But look at tbe , iiotlisied '.'•equality" the Locos tame flown in this 4.: Oolumbia iind• Sullivan being stiff Locitococourities Tire allowed f.r. members for 7.198 taxatiles, while Butler with that precise I number must have LaWA•eur.e.attached for 2. _Here I :we 41425 mate taxableSltequired to chose 2 Whigs Anvil Locos. Finiiilyto slow the tinfairns . .nuel iiiirptity most glaringly Dauphin, a Whig county is allowed but one uteinlier for 7683 tatnbles, 1 Fayette a Loco count with 7611, is allowed, 21 awl Brie a Whig county with 8.134: is allowed but one, while Crawford 4Loco county lying along side • of it with only 8130 islallowed 2! Solt takes 30 more forone'represe4tiie in a Whig county than , for two in a Locofo coiinty ! Lope theillovprnor tuts or will •I , r-e.to this abominable Bill: If eer there was &case of pal-' I rible violation of the Spirit of the constitution, this one. • t POSTSCRIPTII-7-Xhe Bill Vetoctll 1 - A. Tele graphic despatch in the N.Y. Tribune says Gov. J. would send in his i•eto on Tuekdv. (loch)! Bony F041)--PROBARLE Mt'ansa.—We are inj formed that ihe body of a man apparently about 25 or 30 years of age and six feet, in hight was found in thelinaquelumna river at Reeny's Ferry, Wyoming connty,.on Thursday the 4thinst., which from appearances must have lain m the water sev; end weeks. Physicians and,a Jury of inquestrend ered averdiet that, judging from wounds - on the body, it was, irobable the deceased came to hiS death by vitilCuce from an unknown hand. Among the papers karat m, his pooket.was. a letter froM H. Z. Frisbie, dated at Wilkesbarre, and directed to "Johs Thompson, Barton Hill," which may have been the name of the deceased. This letter referred him to his (Frisbie's) fathei in Orwell a*, having a tavern stand - anctsinall Wm to let . -An other paper found with him was a notice to lewd& certain premises as tenant, signed. a P.. Herrick, Barton Hill, Jan. 3, 1849." BUCKED TO DEATH:7A young woman of an Eng lish family named Henstoelt, recently settled in Forest Like lownship, i la — tbis county, was so se verely burned by her'clotlies taking fire on Monday last, that she died in a few flours, after' suffering intense misery, ns any one-may imagine. r • The Elections. Co:vim-rimy, cis umal when there is a slim turn out, h as gone. L•. o. They have a majority in bob I louses, and their candidate fur Governor luis . a plu rality of 4 or 500, tho' lacking some 2000 of a clear majority over al RHODE ISLANO hang gone Whig by a very 'dec t itled majority. Onto in aux.in g members of a State convention to amend the constitution, has given the Locos a majority of Pelegates. -- t — - Things -at Washington. The funeral cjremonies over Mt. alhoun's re mains and t 1 'continued discussion over the subject al Slavery—the l. admi.sion of Califomia ark! adjuet ins, affairs relati e to the Territories, form the har den of the last Meeks proceedings. rjr Mr. -FILL-MORE has given the Senate fair no! ice that lie shall henceforth take . the respoasi batty of repressing scurrility and blackguardiam in the deliberations of that body, eved though no Senalor shtimiti cal to order. 'fills isentirely right, though it subverts the rule established by Mr. Cal houn nearly a quarter of a century ago, and eVter since till now acquiesced in. We trust the. Viee- President will draw the srutflle with a firm hand, now that he has undertaken it. There was a tnUe. when-the Senate needed no rigor of discipline ot:i the part of its presiding of fi cer, but since the irrup tion of Foote it has hecomealmost as rowdy as the House_ The country will thank Mr. Fillmore for a resolute persistence in his just announced deter miontiorL—New York Trite:me. Mr. Calhoun's Death. kr. gmrser submitted the following preamble and resolilsions, in the House of Rept&entatires Weditsedav—'' - , - I Wticas:.;:t, It has iSteased an All-wise Providence to remove from earth one of America' s most dis tinguished sons, whose name has been associated with her hiStto7 during the last forty years, and whose digtinipisheil talents, private virtues and pu rity of chameter, have shed lustre on her name.! AND wnemess; It is becoming and proper that society. whilst humbly "txnving to the dispeusatiio& of infinite witlorn, should - iii mach cases tesifyl its sense of the worth and molted character of the illustrious decemied, by appropriate tributes of I re spect thins memory, forgetting all points of differ ence, and cheriihing the recollection only oiling virtues: 13e it therefore ; ! I?esolred vnapintously, *c., That this kien+ral Asimbly his heard with profound sensibility and heart-felt sorrow of -the- death of the honorable JOHN C. CAtunes, of South Carolinia, for. wlibru; in his 1en..,6; and dtstinguislid earlier. whilst c it e s. ri diffem , from his 'views ant) policy, we have-dyer 4 entertained the most pnifound respect, and in. whose priiate virtues and item:mat character -there has been every thing to wits admiration and concil iate affection \ Re.soterd, Thal as a furt4ef testimony of respect for tlie'rmimOry of the deqheff, and extract frotn. the Journal 'Of each lions?, to be - sill by the -Speaker be communicate4o the Governor; with a retitte , t te' fOrward the srtme to-thii- widow -and family of the deemtsed; with a letter of otadolence; expre:',...Qine i the sinaere yrinpatltv oflive General AN'sembly - With - them•in thifratilicling bereaTemeut n,soryeet the Govdrnor be farther request-, ed to forwaid a copy Of lie' , foiring. resolutions; to tich ihe elrnor of - Muth Otrolima, with Braque:at: thit he coiratinakte id, fe-samti -10 L -the legislature of the saidommontilialtkr - - .' •--;, '' t 1 - ; --; The aline resolitfam, entirientlY'-4tie -le the public servile& and the Tit tiof illepiiirate cliar-; ei.... actor of thfr illustrioUs d ,the passed unan imonsly by [both b=arb; es of the Legislathre. How cliff' > t the it ion of i Petutsylvinis Leg r la. i4iittgc of rginii;v ieli refused to`conaiderAttach less pasts i ielatierat il gar to the 'above, - Ws: the: deathgjohil*Qtembr' dams: at one tints-4 1 mi.: A leut of the 'Oohed Pita ii . .i! The ground thenAuh' _sinned *it'lliatliir[; - ' '''ll . hieloppesed the pea: culler likitiitleni iFf th South se far as: he cones' tuponall could.' 14. r., alhoun was as devotedly attaclie to the intim* of oneleatition of t he - wen. ( tray ai'') 2:Aditriti 'arse 'to the either,:- but.iPetussyli: vitnis if Firilijpilid) thotiitelinturihinatitild' l 4 lo l 4- :never ait' be, fikmd watithit - in: that -sheet and , veneraton due IA; thoe Wlv; have -erred their eoontry l'itithrolly i , Itemarkw.Oflir.", • r.t. - . mi ~- maxli nt tof the . • of N 0 . ,.- T. iy his co •eM. ! riot' $o ~. i - i t he U. S. ti e, • r , ,....,i. - y blacce " ' fol ding • s• • el; the f.Z. .. Jilt C'' .widen - ill ;'• my n linannf regret, 1 wish, on rising to second the res inchlffit'eltiarbeen-readrteadtrtelrhat [ W well and loilstlYsaidllitkftiftlritint colleague of the illustrious deceased, a few words. M' personal acquaintance with iim commenced uPI II O I4 If twritYAJliti, YIPA's a&V:_,...—' Wirtoeutereit at the - same time, and together, 66 muse of 'Ttep nesamtneinenatetheoanwealiefALandiniiiinkoi ...,..,% _ _ The Congress of which .we thus bc.xxarkitaem iperii; Was that among whose deliberitiont ainkacts was the declaration of rat: against . the most jiYor; erhilnatien, as it respects us, in the-woad. ring the preliminary discussions 'which smile in preparation for treat great . event, na welt as daring those which toot place when the resolution was for mally adepted,ao member displayed a more lively and patrionc.setisibiliti of the wrongs which led to that awful . event,, Than th e 'dean - red,' iabiaie death, an unite n.4* in dePloring:,. Peer' active, ardent, Ale—no 'One was in advance of lrim in ad•. tiucatlag tie cause of his errantry, arariedenounc ing the injustice which compelled that raining to appealitrarms. . Of all the congrmtses, with which I have had any n u er ili a t l i Government — in since m er tcm in e t , o- i t a l ' ' t e ny ser‘ Ottlet has been* assembled such , a galaxy of etninent Alia able men as were those Congresses 'Which 'declniea the war, and Which immediately followed the peace Of that splendid assemblige—thestar whiCh has now set—stood bright and brilliant. It wits my happiness, sir, during a great part of-the life of the departed, to concur with him upon all great ques tions of national .policy. Man ,all session at which the war Was declared, we were messmates were other distinguished nienthers ,of Con• gross from hisawa Patriotic' sAlti. •'lwas 'afforded by the intercoti* which resulted from tluttlict; as well as from Subsequent intimacy and intercourse, which arose .between na, an opportunity-to form an estimate, nut Merely, of lira. pablic.;.' but' of his pri vate life ; and no man - with whom I have ever been acquainted, exceeded him in habits of temp erance, In all the simplicity of social intercourse, and in all the te.ndernesS; affection rind rempect, which he extended towards that lady who . mourns more than any oilier the event which has happened, and such. 31r. President, waa the high esthriate which I formed of his transcendent talents, that if at the end of his service ,in the Exetutive depart ment, under the adininistration , of Mr. Monroe, he lad' been translated to the highest of the govern in§nt, I should have felt perfectly assured Oat, lib- . der his arispices, the honor sti l l also the Preapeeta„ arid the , glory of our country Would' have been; ,placed. Birdie is gone--no more shall thmse halls witiiesi 'fence ,yoediielfit Mislies: °rate. keen and penetrating eve Which' he possessed' darting through the hal,-no more shall ness that torrent of clear,.concise and.compact gic, poured out of his lips—the eyes awl these' lips are closed forever; and when, Mr. President, will that great vacancy created by th e event to which we are now alluding; when_will it be filled' by an equal amount of purity and of patriotinti, and of devotion to What he conceived to be the' best of interests to his country. Sir, this is not cue proper occasion nor shouldl he the proper person to attempt a delineathin of his character, or of the powers of his mind. I will only . say in a few words, that he possessed a lofty gewus—dhat in his powers of genemlisat ion of those subjects of which Ins mind treated ;, I have seen him surpassed by no man, and the charms and cap tivating influence of liis.colloql4l powers have been felt by all who have-ever witnessed them.. I am his senior, Mr. President, in years, and in noth ing else. According to the course of natiiroplitugbt to lave preceded him. The Vivirie . rtifrer crhu man events has determined otherwise. I feet that I shall , lingerbut a short time, and shall soon 'Tol -1 l o w him, and how brief—how rapidly—pawing is the period of existence allowed, even to theyoung est amongst us—Or, ought we not all to be profit ed by the contemplation of this ' event—ought we not to draw from it the Conclusion how unwise it is to indulge in the ascerbity of debate-how nn wise it is to yield ourselves tdtlia animosity of par ty feeling—how wrong it is to indulge in those un happy and hot strifes which too often misled us in the discharg e of,the high duties which we are cell ocell- edon to perfonn. In conclusion, Mr. President; I desire to express the -most cordial sympathy, and sentiments of the deepest condolence for those who stand in the nearest relations to him. I treat, that we shall all profit by the singular merit* of his character, and learn, relying upon our own judg ments and the dictates of our own eonselisree, to discharge our duties as he did, according tobis best conception of them—faithfully to the last: - - -_- 17, GOVERNOR Jortssros's "FoaEtir..taA..vci..-L;tirl. 4 - 1113 Sttei Atththeniugh, froe ieltiehriance'ikeleine* id' Raeford in 1799. to .110:111,ar — intestliniti14 • de 4he3l>tbotsel the Ret • Seth Williston, 'she • ttsuljeet •reneeiDg - ecilleptimma churl Atisileileiohf Lid • marked wittPhsiliftitrattikfit. bode, , r44l,4vl%!finist , " l her wilikliilonf 'Alt* ragre,viith lit tle Aseikobeadesk ditio-46 adva' ce ' tka . ;: t. 41.4:; Zat &IA ,1; . dzfr,' 1, 7',;;;;i: re.Ltai.l3' 5 V , ~....7,.,..'N ',..' . \ P L SUTPIDIC*,OO.,. me-- jest , Teeeivu, , g 0 Itioikeliniiii , iutalieritiOtheiiiirmOit of ) / i t *ot . 1 4: . l iv a l ak . l i tr. ,ii t a ace t a . wi s th e 4 ..cso hi tivii,Faigirkina*N..a - ' ' Th q '"" , tilliklittkif. ' hthirttethg,p4blic, for de very liberiu:deini ot-Win4gbotog 4 on !be' the Ott 'year, saCipßkl; tetpOltilVi t in: call Ludt ; examinattleit,l4:WlFun '''' Mira* Oat they , ea . #‘ - iiitd - tairatiir - ' tiiper tor , v6 3tA 4 . ," ' - kinirsOliP*-Ri e AP 4 t ? e P /:.4 ~. , ,„ i 4 >,l „...,,, -„,Nrix„ ..,,, , ,i ,- - 1",/,.,.--- , -..---r---, .-3