buttunarti ni HMI getup. Q -CONGRESSIONAL PROCEEDINGS. Foreign and Domestic News. THURSDAY, July 13. Tho steamship Asia has arrirld at N. York - - front Liverpool, bringing Inter intelligence from Europe. The aepeotaf the war is °hang. ed. Austria is ready to-,marat an army Of 200,000 men into the Prineipalitins, 'and to .pommence It on the 3d of July: The army of ithe allies was at Varna, preparing for an ex pedition into the Crimea, whither the Czarivas journeying. The Rutsian forces were retreat ing in good order from the Prineipalities.-,- The White Son is to be blockaded from the first of August. In the Baltic, on the 27th, Nap iet's fleet was threkening Cronstadt: The Austrian Ambassador has Been reaped from St. Petersburg. On the 20th and 28d of June the Turkish vanguard of 25,000 men attacked the Russian rear guard and drove it beyond Trajnn's wall. By the Austrio-Turkish treaty, Austria agreed not to make pence with Russia except upon the basis of the sovereign right of thellultan and the integrity of his empire, and also stipulated to evacuate the Principalities immediately upon , the conclusion of pence. The' British Baltic fleet has bombarded Boni ersand, dismantled the' masked battery, and set fire to the Russian magazines. A pontoon• bridge at Dalarosch broke down on the 20th of June, and drowned 500 Russian artillerists. The assassin of the Duke of Parma has written ts letter, which is published inn Parmese pa. per, confessing that ho committed the murder for an insult offered him by the Duke, and saying that be was formerly in his service, but now resides at New York. In the Senate, yesterday, the Homestead bill was taken up, and Mr. Seward made an elaborate speech against the principles of the new American organization. There was quite an interesting debate on Mr. Clayton's amend inept to the bill, in which Messrs Clayton, Clay, Butler; Cass, Chase, and Stuart partici pated. In the House, yesterday, sometime was spent in discussing a bill repealing so much of the act of 1862 as makes a reduction of fifty per cent on pre=paid postage of news papers and periodicals. The House then went into Committee of the Whole on the River and Harbor bill, which, after much debate, was reported to the House. The Hard Shell Democratic Convention of New York State, met at Syracuse yesterday, And by acclamation 'nominated Hon. Greene C. Bronson, for Governor. The Canadian Re ciprocity treaty has been reported to the Sen ete by the Committee to whom it was referred. •Searetary Marcy is endeavoring to have it ' passed at this session . The steamship Star of the West arrived at Now York yesterday bring- _leg $1,087,865 . 17 in gold. Matters were quiet at San7uan. The Of fi ft - 31 men, left there by Mr. Borland, for the pro - tection - of-the - Transit - Company's 'property- et Punta's d'Arenns, has disbanded. The Star of the West brings news from Jamortia that the cholera continues its ,ravages in that island. In Barbadoes also, th . ere have been two thou .sand deaths by cholera. Belmont's banking house in New York city was, broken into on Tuesday night and robbed of `fourteen thou. sand dollars. , Advices from Santa..Fe represent that the Indian hostilities in Chat region continued, and n.general Indian war was threatened. The B. commander of the troops there was prepa ring for active operations. Later intelliglnce from Mexico informs us that General Alvarez was sick, with no hopes of his recovery. The revolution in Michoacan still continued, and a force was sent there to quell it under the com mand of Count Boolbon, the French adventu rer! Santa Anna had sent the cross of the order of Guadalupe to Queen Victoria, -the Emperor 'Napoleon, the Ring of Prussia, and other European crowned heads: In the Elenate, yesterday, a bill was iepor ted granting &pension to the:widow of the B. S. Marshal's Deputy, Batchelder, killed in the Boston fugitive slave riot. The Homesthad bill was then taken up and debated. Mr: Clayton spoke Aft length in defence of his a • enendment and in explanation and vindication of his uwn position. He said that he is oppo sed to a repeal of the naturalization laws, or any change in them, and is opposed to draw ing any distinctions between citizens on an count of their birth or religiontropiniona, - but denounced the preference of foreigners over native born citizens. An executive session 'wits held, in which the Japan Treaty was re ceived, and the Reciprocity Treaty discussed, with a favorable prospect of„its ratification.— In House,lesterday, the river and harbor bill passed finally. A communication was re ceived from the Washington Monument Seel-. ety; representing that their funds are exhaus ted, and all recent efforts. to replenish them ,have failed, though 334 feet 'of the monument remain to be constructed. • It was refer red to a Select Committee of thirteen. The Post: Office and Light House appropriation bills. were passed. The latter contained an appro priation of $20,000 for life boats, to save life on the New. Jersey coast. The London correspondent of the North A toerican, writes that there seems to be a danger of a rupture of the entente cordiale between France and England, on Recount of the con duet of the English representatives in Turkey.; SATURDAY, July 15 In the Senate, yesterday, two private bills were passed; and a jointresolution, which also passed the House, for distributing the works of !Thomas Jefferson to , the State and territo rial authorities, colleges, &o. Also a bill ap-' preprinting $600,000 'to commence the erec tion of buildings at Washington to accommo date the Departments of State, War, Interior, Treasury and Navy. Mr. Chase introduced a bill to prohibit slavery in the United States territories, which was read a fi;st time. The Ilorneetead bill was taken up, and Mr. Chase's amendment,'giving to 'diens hereafter arriving in the Union the benefit of the bill, wae, re •jeeted by ayes 18, noes 86. Mr. Dixon offer-, ed en amenJmenti.ineerting the words "any free white person," in lieu of "any individu al," In the section referring . to aliens. This was adopted—ayes 87, nays lg.' Dixbn also offered anamendment, which was agreed requirineohildren. of aliens, twenty.onai years of age, born out of the United States, tdl file their declarations of becoming citizens, be-. fore acquiring, the benefits the bill. This, was also adopted.• An amehdment, offered by Mr. Brown, was also adoptticl, declarin g that any foreigner failing to become a citizen with in six years after entering upon land, shall forfeit his claim and rill rights under the act.: Au amendment offered Mr. Benjamin was also• agreed to, extending the benefit of the act to all native born persons over. sixteen years of age". Mr. Clay moved an amendment,. which was pending when the Senate adjoUrned. In the „House, yesterday, the Select Com mittee on Mail Steamers made, so elaborate report on that service, giving a history of it, but making no recommendations. The,Judi ciary Committee reported a bill providing pla ces of meeting for the U. S. Courts in Boston, Philadelphia and New York. MONDAY, July 17 In the Senate, on Saturday, Mr. Pettit off ered a resolution to print ton thousand copies of the Nebraska not. Laid over. ..The joint resolution from the House, offering a vote of thanks to, Captain Ingraham, ,pn l d directing the presentation of a medal to hiaifor his Con duct in the Rasta case, was amended so as.to strike eut the vote of thanks, and then passed. The Light House, River andellarbor and Post Office Appropriation, bills were all referr4s— The House aniendment to the Georgetow%gas light billyrati concurred In. The Senate went A . 10,00 into. Executive session. The Homestead Dill was taken up, anti by the debate which en sued it was made apparent : that new biltia preparing. which is to give to Battlers the right of possession after aultivation , for five yetirk, on payment of a fixed price at :the end 'of tkat..titne, the prices ,of land to be on graduated scale according tä the-time they hare_ 'been In market. .A . denim of Democratic tilenatorchne resolved to pose the Homestead till with amendments: -In the Homo, ou Sat urday, twelve private bills were favoitibW noted on in Comniittee,'and' reported. to tho Hoose. An over issue of 8,000 ebares'of the Ver mont Central Railroad by the President of the Company, Edwards has , boon discovered at, Boston. This is hie second offence of the kind within %month,: A POwder Mill eiplb eion occurred atiSpencer, klass.,.on Friday, by which a, workman lost his life. Mn. Paul, Belmentes3 cashier and robber, has, confessed to a defalcation in his accounts of $lO,OOO. In Boston last week the deaths by cholera were 81. The whole number thus far in Bos ton bas beenB6 deaths, nearly all foreign pau pers. In Philadelphia last week the "total number of deaths was 418, of which 69 were by cholera Asphyxia, 81 being at the alms house, 88 by ,oholera infantum, 6 by cholera mOrbns.' 2 by 'cholera 'coma, 18 by thorn! con, and 25 by dysentery. Inblew York last wetik the whole number of deathirwas 817, of Which 147 wore by cholera. Among the deaths in New York last week by dysentery was Leen Javelll, the famous tight-rope dancer and pan tomimist of the Ravel. troupe, with which he has been connected fourteen years. • TUESDAY July 18. • In the Senate, yesterday, the Homestead bill was again considred, and after the rejection of Mr Clayton's motion to strike out the sixth section a personal debate of some length ensu ed between Messrs :Clayton, Wade, Dodge and others. In the House, yesterday, the army appropriation bill was taken up in committee of the Wholti, and after a debate on the coin pariSyti merits of military and civil superin tendence of the armories, the committee rose without any action on the subject Four men named, Mathews; Gill, Mintzer add Saxton, has been arrested at the eastward for obtaining $3,700 from the Rutland Bank by meant:cif for ged checks. $3,800 of the money was recov ered. A large body of Indians, from Mexico, are said to have invaded Texas, marching into the interior, causing great excitement among the people there, and complaints against the, management of General Smith, The Home stead Bill, according to a despatch from Wash ington is most likely to be defeated since the rejection of MO. Clayton's amendment, as ma ny of the original friends of the bill . are now opposed to it. During an Irish family riot in- Washington on Sunday night, a' man named Keefe was killed in a brutal manner •with a hatchet, and his wife and another woman se verely cut Tho perpetrators were arrested. ORIGIN OF lENOI* NOTHINGIBAI The Harrisburg Democratic Union, one.. of Gov. Big'el.'s organs, gives its pinion of the origin of the Know Nothing party in the follow ing paragraph: "We again repent that James Campbell and his jaokall, Forney, have infused into `the or ganization of the Democratic party the elemets of its destruction; we repeat that the 'unmeri ted - eldatinn - eflatries - Catnpbell was tin - insult to Pennsylvania, which, has excited publio in• dignation, and -handed-to aformidable organiza tion that now threatens the defeat of the Demo cratic party; we repeat, that the_unrelenting proscription in Pennsylvania of the friends of the venerable Case, who was assassinated in the Baltimore Convention by the Campbell clique, has alienated from the General Admin• istration two-thirds of the Democracy of the Keystone State; - we repeat, that if these arch intriguers are not repudiated, both at Wash. ingtOn and in Pennsylvania, the people will pees sentence upon them at the next general election—and in proof of the truth of these rimer lions we appeal to the future." FRIDAY. July 14 This extract we think skeds n deal more light on the origin of this "formidable organi zation," • than any thing which has yet appear ed in the Volunteer on the subject.. We are glad to learn from the Union that the .•Know Nothings" are engaged in so good a work and sincerely trust their exertions may be crowned .with success. The cholera bee not only made its appear- ActLinNew York, Philadelphia and BlNMauro,. but in hundreds of other places in the United States and Canada. It seems indeed to be every where prevailing in the North and South. It' has been very fatal In slontibal, 56 deaths having ocourred on the 10th inst.— In Chicagb, Illinois, it is raging fearfully. A letter from that city, dated the 12th inst., gays, from the 8d to the 9th of this month, the deaths by• cholera hgve averaged over one hundiod - pet day, - and the carts "iciSiNeyirig combes to their lest resting place, have been traversing the streets day and nigbg-for,Ae last two weeks, some of them containing three and four bodies. A greatmany,nre buried before they have been dead half an hour. The emigrants appear to - have suffered most. At Detroit 250 Swedish migrants have been nearly all carried off by cholera. The Irieh adopted citizens of the country seem to entertain the fear that they will be outnumbered by other foreigners and thus lose the political position they are anxious to adguire. ^ Bence the Romanists are willing to shut out all other /foreigners, and the last Boston Pilot has Ih€ audacity to suggest that "it would be well to naturalize all respectable IriSh emigrants as soon as the laws will permit, and then, in order to . itheok•mate the Geimans, French, Italian and Irish imported radicals and anarchists, to agree to an alteration of the Naturalizatien.Laws." The Pilot gives as it; reason for proposing this policy, that "Borne thing must bgtitracto stem the tido of import ted radicals and anarohists"-or in other . words naturalize all the Irish Papists as soon as possible, and then change the Naturaliza tion Laws to •prevent Pretestantßermans, Frenchmen, Italians and Irishmen 'from be coming citizens. THE MEMBERS WHO lINEW BETTER THAN TLEIII CONSTITUENTS —h is Curious tO mark hair ungracious a reception at home every —member of Congress frOin the North, who vo ted for the repeal of' the Missouri Compraniee, meets with. We have chronicled n number of instances of Via, but we perceive another hoe 'just been made public. Montt Maponaid, a member of the U. S. House of Representatives from Maine, who voted for the Nebras lately visited his constituents and was mobbed at the railroad depot at Bedford. Such was the popular indignation against him, that for a time violence; was apprehended. None,' however, wilt inflicted. The most effectual, way to mob these members is to go in a mass to the polls on eleotlon day and veto against all candidates who arenot opposed toithat bill • , pe-Tile" West Chester. Republican (Loco) of last week, states that the Know Mailings hove organized in that place, and are Initiat ing rapidlY3 Ae none but the insiders know anything of their proceedings, it is evident the is liter of the Republican must be "Oie of theni." Many of the prominent Locos in different parts of the country ore connecting themselves with the order, we understand, notwithstanding theY: iiitY some hard things against it. PriEPAILING •oa A RAIN! DAL—The Hart ford Thyme says, immense quantities of liquors are daily' sold in that city; preparatory to the ulstef Auguet,! when the prohibitory liquor law goes into operation -throughout the State of Connecticut. Bloat of the families aro laying In a Stook for one year. , PELLVOID WATER.--The voter of Lgicei aeldilwaukle, Wisconsin Territery,:erae recently eci alear and traneparent, ,that it is ":paid a pin could be seen at the bottom in Of teen feet depth of Water, and several loot oleo of merohandfte were thus Itliaorered and, • fished up. SPREAD OP CHOLERA IRISH vs. GERMANS HERALD AND EXPOSITOR. ;i7 . , f 1-!,k .4", r • ; 1 1‘ . '•,' ' •:) 7.41 . 5- -e,.4 - ' 1.440A.1'Ar.r74. 47.4.B.razsLE; P.A. WEDNESDAY, JULY 19, 1854 IHE LARGEST AND CHEAPEST-NEWSPAPER • -'a IN CUMBBRLAND•COUNTY Terms—Two Dollar., a year, or One Dollar and .Fifty Cents; if paid punctually in Advance. $1 76 if paid withiu the year. WEIG . . FOR GOVERNOR, 4AIIIIES roLLocK. . of Northumborlaud • FOR CANAL COMMISSIONER, GEORGE DARSIE, ' of Allegheny FOR JUDGE OF. THE SUPREME COURT, DANIEL. PI. SUSSED, of Montgomery REQEST.ER. WE are requested to Announce Mr. ALFRED S. SENER, of Carlisle. as a candidate tor ltegisier at the ensuing election. [tiny 17. TO the Voters of Cumberland County.— FeHort Citizens .—Through the persua sions of many of my Mends, I offer myself as a candidate for the office of Register, subject to the decision of the Whig county Convention 0 1-IEN RV A. THRUSH Shippenoburg, June 4, '59-3m, Clerk of Courts. We are authorized to state that SAMUEL S. SNYDER, of Newburg, will be a candidate for the offloo of Clerk of the Courts and Recorder, subject to the decision of the Whig County Convention. Prothonotiry We aro requested to state that J. S. Hos. .Terraii, of Mechanicsburg, will be a candidate for the officio of Prothonotary, subject to the decision of the Whig County Convention, DICKINSON• COLLEGE. No lice to Purchasers . of gcholarshipa WHEREAS, the plan of endowing Dickinson College declares that "no payment shall be de manded, nor any' certificates issued, till the subscriptions shall amount to $106,000 ;" and whereas at the late meeting of the Board of Trustees, on .the . 12th inst., it appeared that Scholarships bad been sold to the amount of - said ;sum - of sloo,ooo;'=Now — thereforo . tbis ip to give notice to all purchasers that the not given-for-Scholarships are due and payment is hereby demanded. The agents, Rev. Tuomos B. LEMON, of the Baltimore Conference, and Rev. CHARLES J. TnomrsoN, of the PhDadelphia Conference, will proceed without delay to collect the mo ney and issue the certificates, according to the terms of purchase. For the information of the public, notice is also hereby given that the Trustees at the meeting aforesaid Resolved, that the price of Scholarships, after the time of the r ext meet.' log of the iatronizing Conferences (the Con ferences concurring) shall be advanced 60 per cent, on present rates. By'erder at the Board of Trustees of Diokin son College. C. COLLINS, July 19, 4w] War The Philadelphia Daily News—a spiri ted and' ably conducted Whig'penny paper— has dotmed a new and beautiful dress. It de serves a liberal support from the Whigs of Philadelphia. Qom - The Norristown Herald comes to us this week in u well-fitting new dress, which' makes if look as sprightly no e. bridegroom. The Herald is one of the old-established and reliable Whig phpers of the State, and we are pleased to witness this evidence of its pros perity. Sty-The York Republican has come oat in a new dress and presents a decididly neat ap pearance. The Republican is edited with sig:- Dal ability and_is.one_of_.ourfavorite exchan, ges. We aro glad to notice this evidence of its prosperity. BACCALAIIREATES.--Bishop JAPES is to preach a BadCalaureate sermon,to , tlo present gradu ating class of the Wesleyan University, on the Sunday before Commenoemeht; and President following the custom that once pre vailed in our own Dickinson, will deliVir a .Bactialaureate address to tho class in count.° Lion with the graduhting exercises on cool: meneement day. APPOINTMENT AND DIBAPPOINTMENT.—John M'Keon, was nominated and confirmed as Dis trict Attorney of New York last Monday, in place of Charles O'Connor, resigned. M'Keon is said to be no particular friend of tho Prosi. dent, and owes his good luok to. a desird on the part of the Administration to conciliate the .Aiintrinntines.' Theodore B IY,O9tbrook, a Nebraska Congressman, expected the post in paythent for his vote on that swindle. The N. f...Tribune,,alluding to the 'sell,' thinks 'there .have evidently been over 'Wipes of Nebraska stock, as well ns of other fancies, .and, poor Westbrook has boon. taken In by the bogus ar ticle.'. XteL.The jury in the case of Father Ersow• aen, a Catholic priest at Cincinnati, indicted on a (Margo of assault and hi3ttery, on a young girl belonging to Lib church, with intent to commit a rape, were disallow(' on Tuesdak het being unable to agree. It is said they . stood six for.conviction for.assauft with intent , to commit violence on her person, and six for assault dud battery. The case excited much interest and attracted a large crowd during the trial. AN AOOEBBION TO 'llllO KNOW NOTNINOLL— The Albany Atlas staterthat the last number of .Brownson's Quarterly Rade) (a 'Catholic work,) announces the adhesion of the centric philosopher to the new political soot, the Know Nothings. He stipulates for one restriction of the creed that while it need abate none of its hostility to,foreigners, it will cease its procrip don Of native. born Catholics. He remiinda them that the native born Catholics are as hos tile to- foreigiiers as any others; and that die lint native Am . orican sheet publiehed . 'in this country was stadia by a catholic writer. , geZrqhe idea of rspelling M. Sumner from the Senate, as we yarn from the Washington Union, was entertained by the Southern Dom- - wan° Senators, Gut, according to the same authority, fearing the result of such a Move• treut,they have 'come to the conclusion to pocket their indignation nnd .treat Mr. Sum nor to a (19ton:tined "letting alone." DIMON ON .PETTIT..—• ' Pettit; a Benater,from Indiana, recently,made a speech in that State, in whioh he told that BentOn wee In favor of breaking the Miesouri Compromise s to , which Banta' replies in a letter to'tne India:nit editor who published the speech :r—,!..131r, your fillut toris a • great liar and a dirty; dpg, public history fer,a criminal purpose." That!s what we call plain . • , CALFO.-Thp Careoll ooanty (ga.) , . . 'Thiniooratlnfopnan a'c'o.y.:Bet'iongins to Maj. AO', near TaneytOwn,'gaii r Mr* a, calf on Om 21ei,ult., rvldati . wat6od when himea old, one hundred and nintriffn pound: ' F'Avris von: TAX PAYEItS A compariron'dratrn from the Auditor Gen oral's Reports" betiueiNie . financial operations of the State in• 1868; during. doe. Jdbiiston'a udminietration, and" in 1863; during that of Gov. -Bigler; tells terribly.. agaiiiit .the latter. Total receipte from all sources, during the year.lBso, of Gov, y J e oll ar tiston:s administration, ,$4,488,181 61 Expenditures daring'the tame' . 4,569,058 94 Total receipts from -nil seems, - daring . tho year 1853,.,0f God. .• • - - Bigler 's Administration, 9,486,770 08. Expenditures daring . ..the same year, . 10;144,968 72 time be seen, says .the Lancaster 'Union, that .GOV.,Blgler, during the last year, received $6.04830 67 more than Governor . Johnston, in 1850,: this being more than .double the whole amount of receipts during that year' of Johnston's admihistratiou. And yet it ati, Pears that he (Bigler) hod expended this whor9 sum and $758,000 additional, over and above his receipts; 0tc56,675,909 79 more than Gov: Johnston I Is it not time th4..tho tax-payers of Penn. ; eylvania were inquiring into these things?— What do they think of ,tll6 Pittsburg Union's suggestion, made 'on Wu& of the administra tion, to go a latiejurther, and build a Stlto railroad from Columbia to Pittsburg? REPUDIATING PIERCE - Mgt. James T.-ffirady, a distinguished e law- . yer of New Itork,And 'a prominent•Deniocrat, having been the candidate of that party, last full, for Attorney General of the State, has conic out in a letter on the Nebraska bill and Gen.' Pierce: , Of--the former ho says Ile con -sit/mu it "wrong-in principle and mischievous in policy," and pronouncos it "the joint pro dilation of proffigate administration and an ambitious intriguer; that it was conceived in . unwUrthy motives, and will be used for nnhal ' lowed objects." Ile regrets having aided in afflicting the. country by the election of Pierce, and thinks that Pierce's election "is enough of injury to'ouy country and our principles for one century nt least." He concludes with the following invocation, which.will be appreciated and responded to by every true American : Ileav4n grant that you and I may live to ses the Presidential chair filled by some gentleman entirely qualified by intellect and moral char acter to adorn the station t .end that the de scendihg gradation of the incumbents, which has for some yeletu injured our national-repu - tationrmay-not-bi-continued-by -adding-to the success of the incompetent and unworthy one whose only-reliance on success .will:he-found ed en his unscrupulous use of the artifices by which a selfish demagogue elevates himself nt the expense of detriment, if not disgrace,'to his country.- Ell PROBIeRYPTION FOR OPINION'S SAKE.—The , contemptible manner in which the general ad ministration at Washington is bow managed, is exhibiting itself.in every department of, the government. A strising instance of the petty tactics With which they attempt to drill, the freemen of our country, was exhibited in Pike county, in tide State recently. A correspon dent writing from Milford to theAmerioan 'Banner, says: "A Democrat residing a short distance from this pince,'applied for the office-of Postmaster in.the small village where lie resided. He had been the' warm end firm supporter of Bigler and Pierce; a consistent man in his party pre dilections, and thought,that ho, might justly apply for'the _His applications and re• comendations~naPe sent to Washington,laid in a few days, took came a letter from ariefft vial, asking the Otraordinarylliestionr_Wdte ther he voted joitUmpbeidwhets . he was a candi date for the Supreme Basch ' •"- Like a true American be answered And that .he would not vote for Ja'nree . Campbell under any cir cumstances 1" Of'course he uid,not get the of fice 1 This is one more instance showing the enlightned patriotism and enlarged liberality of Je•e-miCanipbell, Postmaster General of the United States." President The Laricaairrian, a looofooo paper, publish ed kr our 'neighboring city, cites two or three cases similar to the above, as having recently occurred in that county, and yet these - very Campbellites complain bitterly Cif the proscrip tion brought to bear against them, by the new political organization which has. been estab lished, in good part, s to counteract those high handed measures. Thp Pierce and Campbell Looofooos. seem to forget t hat the "crushing out" policy they have Adopted may bei made to work more ways than one. , par Tho ',German Liberals" of Boston have responded to the °alba their brethren in-the West,nnd put forth a platform almost identi :al. with that laid down by the Free German Dern oarajs, of Louisville. Accoeding to them, the Anierican people bait+ strayed from the true principles of freedom and republicanism, and they demand a numbei of modifications in the constitution and laws of the country, vhich modifications are necessary, in their vtow, to remedy the Imperfections of our existing gov eentnent. As , their platform ipvolves, aong other things, the repeal of Sunday Laws, Tem .peradee laws, and the exclusion of the Bible from schools, it is not probable that the party will thrive greatly in the uncongenial atmos phere of Nevi England. . 'lsza,„Modest "German Liberals" timely:— Are net the Know Nothings needed about these times'? ANTI-NSIMAIMA 310VEMCNT.—A large meet ing was held at Lewisburg, Union county„in this Stow, On the 4th inst.,,to consider the course to be.pursued in•,aur present national crisis. It was composld opf members of both ,the great politioa parties. Francis Wilson, Eeq. (Democrat) presided. A solles of strong resolutions were passed. They all tend to one point--a repeal of that portion of the Kansas and Nebrasta bill which'•hbrpgptes the eighth eeotiop-of the Miseottil Compromise Act. gigg:ln Michigan a State Convention orall opposed to the repeal of the Missouri Compro_ raise, ifiespective.of party, has been held, at which a st i rong platform was laid down against further elspreq aggression.. The meeting was parthsipatid lb by many•of the lepling Demo crate, Whigs, and Free Sellers of the State, and is coMmended by many cif ; .the prominent Demoangel papers of the State., iparbapt. Adams arrived at Noshing:on on Monday, With dispatches from Com: PerryVof the Japaa squadron. lie briogs the Jaw Treaty, okoing the ,parte of that country to American vessels. • The treaty also provides that in the-event of the • future formation of treaties between Japan and 'any other foreign nations. the United States obeli be placed in all, requiem ,on the better footing which may be stipulated for In any etioh convention, . Tun KuowNtrinmas.—The Cincinnati Timis says by , dint of. great industry and bluirpness we dischrofed the' passwor,d.of this mysterious Order. Horsy. is—. 4.Ktnimui=Ca•Knormnbum mumus—Kellilltitarobeit-ksaniluziminoux.o Ilig)4lliinunt , har resigned Abe Presidency, I, of the IferriYOrk Crystal Palace, and the pros. poets nlir are that the concern will, go to the ter.Tba subject of (he Indetnindenao of Canadit bstilteen introdttood into 'the Britlish PatliStnent "It' Is Slot iikelj >