JEFFERSONIAN REPUBLICAN TSic Pardosiiiag Potver. The Harriburg Telegraph, in a scathing com mentary on the recent denunciation by Judge Par sons of the pardoning power, as exercised since ! ponents1 were sanguine an ITSie' lLa.Se licet aosis. The Whkrs have noblyustained themselves in. - i the recent Stale elections. Thursday, November 29, 111. lEPThe Odd Fellows' Hall, at Easton, was sold at Sheriff's sale a few days since, for S 10, 500. The purchasers were T. IX. Sitgreaves, Joseph Savitzjand Japes M. Porter. ' - Hon., .Henry Clay. The sage of Ashland, as Mr. Clay is familiarly known, -left Philadelphia on Monday a week for Now Yovlc. He remained in the latter place a few days, and then repaired to Washington, to enter upon his duties as United Slates Senator. What a host of distinguish patriots will again meet in the halls of this mighty Republic ! What wis dom, experience, and eloquence will congregate in the Senate Chamber of the nation! Clay, Ben ton, Webster, Calhoun, Cass, Cooper, Seward, Berrien, and many others of nearly equal celebri ty. ..Truly the Senatcofthe United States is the noblest body in the world. The railroads completed in this country meas ure over S500 miles, and the lines already in pro gress and rapidly advancing, will add half as muclrmore to the aggregate, Tlae Great CZtristiuasaiMl Iew Years Pictorial. -JJnoTriER Jonathan's mammoth sheet for the coming Halidays has made its appearance, and a grand and imposing spectacle he presents to his numerous readers and admirers. It would be al most impossible to overrate the truly splendid col lection of engravings which appear in this magni ficent Christmas sheet. The fine large and graph ic, picture of the ""Pleasures, Follies and Miseries of a New York. Christmas,'! is a masterpiece of American Fine.Arts; and either that or the group of spirited portraits of " General Taylor and his Cabinet," is alone worth double the cost of the whole paper. We. have not room to enumerate a tithe of the fifty -or sixty beautiful Engravings and popular reading which go to make up this stupend ous sheet. Of one thing we are ccrtarn. It is by- far the best and handsomest pictorial' paper ever i isucd in America or any where else. Published by Wilson & Co., New York, at 12 cents per co py, or ten for one dollar. m$ ISM, furnishes the following statement of the whole number of pardons granted since 1841, which includes the last three years of Gov. Porter's administration. These are made up from the offi cial records in the office of the Secretary of the Commonwealth, and show that since Gov. John ston has occupied the executive chair, a period of sixteen months, he has granted 116 pardons, or an average of 87 annually, while the annual average under Gov. Shunk, his immediate predecessor, was 100, and under Gov. Porter 1G3! Moreover, the number of rioters pardoned by Gov. Porter was 50! by Gov. Shunk 37 ! while Gov. Johnston has pardoned three, li is evident, therefore, that neither the cause of justice, much less the cause of truth, dictated tho animadversions of Judge Parsons, and the public, who know all the facts, can arrive at their own conclusions as to his mo tives. The statement Is as follows : Governor Porter Pardoned, during the last three years of his administration 491 Average number annualy 1 03 Convicts pardoned in the city and county of Philadelphia during these three years 130 Number for riot pardondohed in the State 50 Number for riot pardoned in the city and coun ty of Philadelphia 10 Governor Shunk Pardoned - 350 Average number annually 100 Pardoned in the city and county of Philadel phia 153 Number for riot pardoned in the Stale 37 Number for riot pardoned in the city and coun. ty of Philadelphia s3 Governor Johnston pardoned - l p Average number annually 8 Convicts pardoned in the city and county of Philadelphia Number for riot pardoned in the State 4 Number for riot pardoned in the city and coun ty of Philadelphia " " 3 From the above table it will be discovered that Governor Johnston, since he came into office, has has granted patdonsto forty seven convicts in the city and county of Philadelphia. These were gran ted on the following applications : By the Judges, orsome ofthem, of the Court where tho convicts were tried 14 I3y the Board of Inspectors 7 By the Warden of the Eastern Penitentiary 4 By the Attorney General ' 8 By the 'Prison Discipline Society " ' ' 1 By Jurors trying them and by citizens? of res pectability ..---?.:. 9 By removal for insajKty ; - J 1 a- 7 - In NewYorkroimop confident of an over State the old Hunkers whelming victory. In tho and Free Soilers had forrmly united upon a ticket mode up of an equal num'br of each faction ; and they moved forward to til contest with the cer tainty of success which afvays accompanies the recollection of former triujps. But the result is that til Whigs have carried their candidates for SecreSry of State, Controller, State Treasurer and StatqEngineer, and secured a majority of two in the mate, while our united opponents have carriedthe Attorney General, Judge of the Appeal Coii, State Prison Inspector and Canal Commissioner and secured a majority of two in the House tlni making tho joint-ballot a tie. The successful bcofoco candidates were all run by the Anli-RenlcL which shows that there is a clear Whig majoriV in the popular vote. Under the circumstances, the Whigs of New York have done nobly. They handed, against the combined force of all tho. fac lions in the State, bound q contended, single- together by the " cobe- 4 '1.4 44 Since Gov. Johnston came into office, there have been lhree hundred and heenly applications for pardonTfaf hence two hundred and four reject 7 The SEJsqiEcJsaissta E?arot. ! An agent of this -defunct institution, a few days Thf edJP of thc Fo-llowsTille (var) Dcmocart since, presented a check in its favor, for twelve d , himsef t0 be a Whig .top sAe, bottom nuncirea acinars, at me nroom oo. nann ai jjing- i . , ... -. -1 1rt j. j 43 side, right side, left side, lore side, ninn side, in3 Hampton, borne ot the sutlcrers by the lailure ot M M w , sid norlh sid me usquenanna Dans, goi wma oi me tact mat sd h gid and wegt sW , No on there were assets to that amount accessible, and, , . rT,; ,n ' ' accuse mm of being. a one-sided man. at the moment the agent drew the 1unds from the Broom County Bank, pounced upon the proceeds for, the benefit of the bill holders. eican Uiiiufr&ral Children. In the CouiSuarter Sessions of Bucks coun- I ttr lief , tTnnl- Clsang-c of Vciws. a , J' , ' ,. , , , Tti" ri -7i n , n . .'ViYi. oil the charge of incestous adultery, the prose- .. . ...t,.ww....e cutQrs bei the song and brollers oflhe defend- v alker tOfthe Mon the visit of the Hon. R. J. ants. The daughter had oecome pregnant, and tour Iron works, a few days since, .mentions a re-, the proceedings were instituted, charging them I his free-trad notions as far , w'ln tne cr1165 ' incest, becatse the father would )ort that he has altered as regards advalorcm duties on Iron and Coal, and that he will lend his influence in favor of moder ate specific duties on these staple articles of Penn sylvania, if a bill of that kind 'should be brought before the next Congress. Thus it is always that speculative theory will give way to practical ex perience. Dr. Wing, on beinji asked where a young lady's waist began, Teplie'd at the altar. The moment they have you trapped, thev come down on your pocketbook,1ike a hawk nn a June bug. After they are married,-he says, they are all waste. Auoflicr Fire at ITfancSi Clsxasik. This place was again visited liy another destruc tive Fire on Friday last. The Democrat of that place says: " The fire occurred in that part of the Town known as Broadway, and destroyed the upper stories of the following houses ; James Andreas', JohnTree's, Benjamin Williams1, Conrad Koch e.fs Abraham Andreas' John Painter's and Ira Cortright's. Wenre unable to .learn as yet how the fire or iginated. The loss wilL probably be about $5, 000: We cannot say too much .in praise of the citizens of Mauch Chunk, for the untiring energy displayed in. subduing the flames. Their exertions and a calm day saved our town from total destruction." not or could hot accede to the temands of his sons in advancing them money. They were acquitted, but it was only after the trial that the daughter for the first time, and then under oath, revealed the name of the father of her child. The most imprudent thing one can do is to in sist on an editor's standing treat, or to try to.bor row a shilling from a printer's devil. Pszuisliing iLia;"?. In Turkey whenever a storekeeper is convinced of telling a lie his house is painted black to remain so for one month. If there was such a law in force in this country what a sombre and gloomy appearance-ome of our cities would present.--And what a righteous lawT it would be to give labor to some of the painters. sive power of public plunder," and eager to clutch the spoils of victory. Remarking upon the result, the Trilune of Sat urday says, "while the1 offices filled by the two parlies respectively art equal in -numbers, the Whigs have by far the; preferable portion, if we regard their relative importance. The office of Judge of Appeals is of ho political account; that ot State Prison Inspector of very little, while all the officers chosen by t't)e Whigs are members' of the Canal Board, and thc control of thc Canals is by their election secured to 'our side for the ensu ing year. . A few cleiks &c, in the Assembly and thy Attorney General office arc all the appoint ments which inure to our adversaries. "The senate, in whif h the Whigs, have a ma jority, holds through, two years ; the Assembly for one only. There are no appointments of any po litical mark lo be made bv tho Legislature this yeai; bin another session brings an election for' U. S. Senator, in whicl; our Senators now chosen will participate with a iew Assembly." In New Jersey, as Ive stated last week, ihe Whigs have both branclcs of the Legislature, and a majority of nine.or ten on joint ballot. In Massachusetts, tlaugh there is no election of Governor by the peojjle, the Whigs have a ma jority of 62 on joint ballot in the legislature, and taking the last Presidential election as a test, have gained 10,106 voles. There were three candidates in the field for Govimor. Briggs, the Whig can didase, has a plurality of 24,000, but fails of a ma jority over both ofhrs competitors by about 1,500 voies. ne Licgsfiatore win now nave tne ciec lion, however, and will of course lake care of the result. ' Congress The Wew-IToKsc. We made one mistake in our summing up of the relative strength of the two parties in the new House. Ohio has chosen eleven Loco-Focos and but eight Whigs, (the former correctly printed in Roman, the latter in Italics in our table;) beside Messrs. Giddings and Root so that the new House will divide, Whigs and Whiggish Free Soilers, 111; Loco-Focos, Loco-Foco Free Soilers and Abolitionists, 116: doubtful, Messrs. Allen of Mass. Root and Gidings of Ohio. Vacant, the seat for Middlesex, (kite Palfrey's,) Mass. We still don't see how the pro-Slavery and ami-Slavery Loco-Focos are to agree in sufficient num bers to elect a Speaker, but the Clerk, Sergeant at Arms Doorkeeper and Postmaster they will" elect, almost beyond doubt. iV. Y, Tribune. 'A Day After the Fair.' Mr. R. W. Walker, a Representative to tho Al abama LegTslaiure, from Tuskegee, has given no tice that he will early in the Session bring for ward a bill authorizing the State to purchase 100 negroes, to be sent to California to -work in thc gold .mines, and the profits of their labor to be de-, voted, to the payment of the public debt of Alabama." .fl Mr. Walter may be a very nice man, but lie can't come in. The door is barred,. If we are not misinformed, it is the ' white folks' of Alabama that pwe her public debt, and we respectfully ad rise them to go to work and pay it. Such head work as Mr. Walker's will net er answer. Ib. Mails for California. The Postmaster General gives notice that a mail will be despatched from New York via Chagres, for California and Oregon, on the 13th of Decem ber ; and that in January a regular semi-jnonthly mail will be established on that line, to leave New York on the 13th and 28th of each month. The postage for a single letter not exceeding half an ounce in weight will be 12 1-2 cents to Havana, 20 cents to Chagres, 30 cents to Panama, to be pre-paid in all cases ; and 40 cents to Monterey, San Francisco, Astoria, or any other point in Cal ifornia or Oregon ; to be pre-paid, or left unpaid at the option of the sender. Newspapers and pamphlets, sea postage three cents each, and in land postage to be added. The JTcsdiatES. The Osage delegation held a talk with the Com missioner of Indian Affairs yesterday, at the Indi an Bureau, in which they expressed their wishes to the government. They desired to be given cannon and numerous flags ; and hinted at a wish for more money than the treaty stipulations allow them. The Commissioner stated the impossibility of yielding to their desires, and that the Great Father, the President, could not go beyond the allowance of presents. The chief, White Hair, desired the uniform of a General, which was al lowed him, and military coats were ordered for the other chiefs. They retired from the talk appa rently satisfied that they could obtain nothing fur ther from the Commissioner. Washington Re public, Nov. 22. On Wednesday last, a procession of eighty-six negroes, consisting of men, women and children, recently manumitted by a gentlemen in Fauquier county, Va., passed through Hagerstown, on their way to Pennsylvania. They were in charge of a white man. " There is a time for all things," said a crusty old fellow to his wife. "I'll believe that," an swered his wife in a sharp vinegar voice, "when you pay for your newspaper," Hit him again, old woman we'll stand by vou. The Columbia, S. C: Telegraph notices the suc cessful division of thc jaw-bone of a woman,, by a surgeon of that place. The.fact of a woman's jaw bone having time tp-grow together, is remarkable enough the separation cfitis still more -wonderful. . , ' i - . . To Remove Warts. Wash thorn with a "strong solution of perlash, and lei itdrv on the warts. If this is done two or.three times the warts will dis appear. S-cicntifc American. Great Prices for Poultry. At the sale of poul try by Messrs. Clark it Hatch, on Saturday, at the exhibition in the public garden, red Shanghaes, of Capt. Jlden's stock, brought 13 per pair : white Shanghaes, of B W. Balch's stock, $10 per pair; white Dorkings, of Dr. Wight's stock, 910 per pair. At private sale, fowls ranged from $6 to $18 per pair. The beautifulgeese of Col. Jaques were sold at $5 each. Fancy partidges $15 per pair. Boston Transcript. Heavy Mas! I2.ofoScry. Springfield, Ohio, Nov. 26. A large mail robbery was discovered in this place this afternoon. It appears that a young man, named Charles W. McWilliams, who was for a short period during the past summer, engaged as mail agent between here and Sandusky city, lias been for some time suspected of robbing the mail, and the proof was brought home to him to day. It is not known how much money he has abstracted, about $1,200 have been recovered. The young culprit is under arrest. aovr In SSarylaEid. - ' During last week there was a fall of more than two feet of snow in the glades and on the moun tains in the western part of Allegheny county. The Civilian says the trees not having lost their foliage, were, throughout extensive tracts of coun try, born down by the weight of the superincum bent snow, thus blocking up the roads. Dr. Briggs and three other gentlemen of Hart ford, have been hunting deer at Saranac Lake, N. Y., and report that on the 8th of October, the shores of the Lake were covered with snow to the depth of afoot. f , , . Private Accoussts fvoin Calsforseia. We have had an opportunity of conversing with a gentleman residing at Worcester, Mass., says the N. Y. Express, who arrived from California in the Empire City steamer. He gives a melancholy picture of affairs in California, and predicts that the next steamer will bring intelligence of a gen eral smash-up there. Property, he says, is tum bling down, wages are reduced, and hundreds of persons are begging for chances to work their pas sage home in the steamer, guaranteeing at the same lime, to pay their passage after their arrival here. This gentleman also tells us, that miners return ing from the mines to San Francisco, have ceased to bring gold, and now bring instead, sore heads, sore legs, and ruined constitutions ; according to his account, many persons have perished at the mines, and upon the road for lack of food and rai ment. But we cannot give his report more in de tail it is a most melancholy one, and he says, what makes affairs siijl worse, is that speculators in California are doing their best to send out fa vorable accounts, in order to ge'tout of the scrape themselves, by putting their burdens upon the shoulders of new adventurers. Arrest off Counterfeiters. Infernal Machine Mystery Revealed. It' will be recollected that a diabolical attempt was made jn May last,7to take the life of Thomas Warner, Esq.", and his family,-by means of a box filled with explosive combustibles, which was sent to this houso, during his absence at Philadelphia ; and, upon being opened by Mr. Warner, exploded, throwing down the partition wall between his dining-room and hall, damaging the ceiling of-the room, and throwing the windows into thc street, Mr. Warner and family escaping just in time to avoid destiuction. Since that lime, Mr. Warner, Air. Geo. Wilkes, arjd officer A. M. C. Smith have been indefatigable in their exertions to forret out the perpetrators of this outrage; and, about two months since, Samuel Drury, Jr., in a conversation with an individual (which was overheard by Mr. Wilkes and officer Smith,) stated that his father had prepared the infernal machine, ' ahd that he, (the son) had, disguised as a Spanish "ttegrtf, de livered it at Mr. Warner's house,' also saying that he was very sorry for it, and regretted doing it. The evidence? thus obtained, was sufficient to im plicate the son ; but further testimony was neces sary in order to "connect the father (who, since the occurrence, has been suspected as being the perpetrator of the. plot.) in such a manner as to warrant his arrest. ' f ... -On Tuesday last this! evidence was' obtained. In conversation with twh notorious characters in the upper part of -the citj, Drury; Sen.,' was over heard; by officers Jenkns and Crasseau of the Sixth Ward, to say that he had constructed the in fernal machine, and had1 used every means in his power to make it effectual in destroying the lives of Mr. Warner and his family, and urging them to I take the matter in handi In the course of conver sation with these two men, he reverted to his suc cess and-that of others in passing off a large quan tity of altered bank-bills of the Eagle Bank of Bristol, Pa., for which offence a man by the name of Ashley and a young woman named O'Connor, were arrested m Boston some time since. He also conversed about the price of dies, plates for the counterfeiting and nltering of bank bills, and for manufacturing spurious coin, fc. On this in formation being obtained, the necessary affidavits were made, a warrant issued, and officer A. M. C. Smith and Mr. Geo. Wilke, 'arrested Mr.-Drury and his son at Brooklyn. Immediately on the ar rest, one of them dropped four $10 altered bills on the Eagle Bank', which were picked up by the officer, who conducted them to the Tombs, where ihey were locked up. The officers proceeded to his house in Astoria, and upon searching it, found a large number of dies tor counterfeiting doubloons, and other Spanish and American coins, vignettes and apparatus for counterfeiting and altering bank bills, and several thousand dollars wotih of gold watches, silver spoons, &c, the greater part of which is supposed to be the proceeds of a burglary committed at Roxbury, Mass., some time since. N. 'Y. Tribune, Nov. 19. (TJ? Mr. Drury is a man of considerable wealth, estimated to be worth sonic $80,000. l' He owns thofaTtn he re&ides'on at" Astoria, valued at near $15,000; he is also proprietor ofu bank, called the " Merchants1 Bank," at Canandaigua, in this State. He has resided about nine years at As toria, and was known as a smelter that is, a pur chaser of sweepings from jewellers' shops, which he purchased and melted the same into bullion. Some few years ago his premises at Astoria, were consumed by fire, and a rumer was raised that he had fired the same, for the purpose of obtaining the insurance. Indictments were found against him for arson, and he was tried and -acquitted on all. Since that time the inhabitants of Astoria have considered Mr. D. an injured man. Tfcrald. T seful Statsslical Table. , The following Table, specially prepared for the .Berks County Press, exhibits the names of all tho Counties inFennsylvania, together with the times they were respectively erected, and the Counties from which they were taken : ' Philadelphia, Established at tho commencement of tho Bucks, & Chester i Piovincial Government. Lancaster York " Cumberland Berks , Northampton Bedford erected ( Northumberland " May 10, 1729, Autj'19, 1749, Jan. 27, 1750, March 11, 1752, March, 11, 1759, March, 9, 1771, March, 21, 1772, 14 i'i Westmoreland Washington Fayette Franklin , , Montgomery Dauphin Luzerne Huntingdon Allegheny Sept. 24, 178S, . ,: F.eb. 26, 1775, March, 25, 1781, l , ScDt. 20. 1783. . " a . Sept. 9,1784, . " .13, Sept, 10, 1784, . "iw.'iMartsl! 4, 1785, . " Sept. 25, 1786V Sept. 20,1787, " out of Chester; " Lancaster e Philadelphia. " Chester, and Lancaster. Bucks. Cumberland', f Lancaster, j Cumberland? Berks.NorttV '(ampton, and t Bedford. .Bedford. (i u u l( ( H it Mifflin Delaware Lycoming Somerset Greene Wayne Adams ' Centre Bfcavcr Sept. ID, 1789, ; Sept. 20, 1789, April 13, 1795, "April 17,:1795, Feb'y 9, 1796, March 29, 1793, Jan'y 23,1800,- , Feb'y 13,1800, rintlnr Crawford " March 12. lson. it Westmoreland ii Cumberland. Philadelphia. Lancaster. Northumberl'd . Bedford. (i, 5 Westmoreland. & Washington C Cumberland, " 1 and North- ( umberland. " Chester " Northirmberl'd. " Bedford, " Washington, v Northampton. " York. Mifflin, Nor thumberland, Lycoming and Huntingdon, it J Allegheny and' (Washington. Alleghany. Erie Warren Venango (i II Allegheny & ltkT II ' 4IV- II II ( Lycominj Armst.ong - jlgfe .nA-.KttJM&'J . . - t WestmorelM j WestmorelM andLycominR Lycoming. Huntingdon and Somerset. Lunerhe.and Somerset. Luzerne. r Berks and I Northrmpton. Northampton Northurnbeil'd . Dauphin and I Lancaster. NorlhumbcrPd. Wavne. Cumberland Mifflin. Northampton and Pike. Venango and I Armstrong. Lycoming ( and Centre. Luzerne. Northampton and Monroe. e Jefferson. Clcarfield'and ( McKean. Huntingdon and Bedford. Lycoming. Bear-er and Mercer. First callatl " Ontario " name changed March 24, 1S42. Indiana ".-. ,Marcffl30,1803f- " Jefferson " . a;Marcti 20, 1S04, McKean " ' " - " Clearfield " ..tV?;?.'-'. " Potter . " , . , " Tioga "J ' " ,v " Cambria -- ,- f 'r ' " . r " " Brandford "n ': Feb'y 21, 1310, " Susquehanna " Fb'y: 21; 1810; " Schuylkill "; Jtfarch 1. ISll; " Lehigh " " '"March' G; 1312; " Columbia ... - ' march 22; 1813; Lebanon Feb'y 16; 1813; Union " .. March 22; 1S13; Pike " ' " do- 26; 1814; " Ferry ." do 22, 1820, " Juniata do 2, 1831, " Monroe ;-:', , April 1.153G, Clarion March 11, 1839, ?' Clinton " ' ' June 21, 1S39, ' Wyoming'. . .April H..1S-12, Carbon , " v .March, 13, 1S13, Elk 'April IS, 1313, '...". ' Blair . " Feb. 26,1816. Sullivan " ' ' "' march 15, 1S47. " Lawrence f .,,do. 20..1S19. " IE? There is now living in New York city, in ex treme want, a man, who at one' time had one hun-; dred and eighty thousand dollars, amassed by a few weeks' successful gambling. For some years he lived in the utmost luxury, having over four hundred suits of clothes, but the smiles of fortune deserted him, and at last he has been reduced to beggary. In thread-bare coat, and without either energy or character, he is daily seen in Broadway. Oiar State. The State of Pennsylvania, says Mr. Skinner, comprises about as many acres as the six New England States, and supports a population of less than they, by about 500,000. But Pennsylvania feeds 100,000 more horses than all tliose six States united. Now supposing 50,000 of these horses give place to 50,000 oxen, and then there will be 50,000 horses more than in all New Fngland, how much beef could be raised, for feeding men, on the 300,000 acres now dedicated to tho feeding of the 50,000 horses, supposing three horses consume the produce annually of six acres of oats, each at 33 1-8 bushels to thc acre ? TIae Treasury Deficit. The Republic, in referring to the deficit of between fifteen and twenty millions, which it has already been announced will exist in the amount of reve nue requsite to meet the expenditures of the gov ernment for the fiscal years, ending- the 30th June, 1850, and the 30th June,. 1851, thus explains it from official documents : Our receipts ifl 1847 were $26,340,790 ; our expenditures in the same years were $55,929,093. Our receipts in 1848 were $35,430,750 : our disbursements in the same year were $42,811,970. In the same -years.1847 and 1848, therefore, our expenses exceeded our income 830,957,523. By the law providing for the exeution, in part, of the twelfth article of the treaty with Mexico, $3,720,000 are appropriated to pay the principal and interest due May 30, 1849; and $3,540,000 to pay the principal and interest due May 30, 1S50. Under the provisions of the fifteenth article of the same treaty, the Secretary, of the Treasury will be called upon to pay $3, 250,000 of claims of citizens of the United States against the republic of Mexico. Here is a sum of $47,467,523 over and beyond all our receipts. A portion of it has already been provided for by the issue of treasury notes, on which interest is to be paid, and all this cannot be defrayed from tho current revenue. This constitutes the deficiu--It results from the acts of the last administration, with which the present has had nothing whatever to do. The Waller Joy Bank at Buffalo has suspended payment, but its circulation is good, as it is amply secured by State Stocks with-' the Controllor. The notes are still redeemed at the same rate as other State money, by John Thompson, 61 Wall st. There arc also rumours in regard to the Un ion Bank of Dover Carbon County- Papers. -The Carbon County Democrat, and the Carbon Country Gazelle, the materials of which establishments, if willbc' rec ollectqd, wero destroyed in the great conflagration which occurred at Mauch ChUnk, during the past summer, have both been revived. Charge to Austria. Thc National Intelligencer announces, unofficially, the appointment o"f Col. James Watson Webb, of the iV. Y. Courier,-and Enquirer, as Charge d'Aflair.os to Austria., . Handsome Gain. At thc Presidential election. the vote for Gen. Taylor in New York, was 10,225 Ipss than the combind vote for Cass and Van Bu ren. Now tho Whigs beat their combined oppo nents by about 1 1,500 voles. This shows a Whig gain of 30,725 votes. Railroad in Bucks County. We notice in the Doylestown Intelligencer, indications of .the com: meucementof a movement for the construction o( a railroad from Doylestown to New Hope. Foreign ft'ews. 'By the arrival of the Caledonia at New York on Saturday nicht, we have news from Liver pool and all parts of Europe a week later: The market for breadsiuffs was dull, but without much change. Cotton had advanced an eighth to a quarter of a penny per pound. Russia axd Turkey. The Czar demands that ihe Hungarian refugees shall be located in the interior of Candia, or on such other point of the Turkish territory as may afford tlib greatest facilities for keepino; them under sur- I voillance. If any of tho refugees wish to go j to Franco or England, they may be permitted to do It is supposed that they will be busy in preparing for a new revolution in Hungary. Tho Czar : complaips of the interference of England in tho affair between him and Turkey. The Turks continue their warlike preparations, and their whole fleet will bo ready very quickly, for they are actively at work upon every sKrj fit for service. Turkey is now in ai state to;de fy Rtfssia. 1 France anId Rome. The French goverrf ment have ordered a steam frigate to be placed at tho disposal oflhe Pope, as he appears de cided to return immediately. to Rome. The above comprises all tho news of impoj tance or interest. U pwards of sixty thousand 'erni'erarits have left Germany within the last six months for the United States. - ... A sublitule for Tea. Dr. Graham, an old jind experienced physician in London, says, "I may state on very respectable authority, that the first leaves of whortleberry, properly gathered and dried in the shade, cannot be distinguished from real China teas," Major. J.' P. 'Gaines',' recently' 'appointed Gov ernor of Oregon, has sold his farm and negfoe3, and intends taking his family to Oiegnn, with a vuw of locating there permanently. Stockton. ., , Bayard Taylor, in a letter to tho New York Tribune, says" After a journey of 150 miles, since leaving San Francisco, I find here, in the heart of California, where last winter stood a solitary rariche in the midst of Tule marshes, a canvass town, of three or four hundred inhab itants, and a port with iwenty-fivo vessels at anchor ! The mingled noises of labor around the click of hammers and the grating of saws -the shouts of mule drivers the jingling of spurs the jar and jostle of wares, in the tents almost cheat me into the belief that this is some old commercial mart, familiar with such sounds for years past. Four months, only,iave sufficed to mako this place what it is; and in' that time a wholesale firm established here (one out of a dozon,) has done business to the amount of $ 1 00,000. The same parly has jus t purchased a lot 180 by 100, on the prinqtpal street for $0000. The cost of erecting a com mon one story clapboard hause cm it vriI bo