geraid. CARLISIX !3;`,.1 ••0';' . 14. Pii , vrrescittr. &Apo.; 97 Perk Roiv, New Yorlc;,nrid , 6 11. State at.lteston, or our Agents for the thump .4esu atlna, And are autherited to trace Advertise. eats and Sabsarlpttont for UP .1X OUT lowest. rates. , . Vteetiiig of the Xidgislatui!e: The state Legialatnre plot last ! ' TunditY, January ild. The orgaiiiziition of tlfe '§'eri z.tePWas Yarnted Uv tlic alection of Hon. "Win. J. Tamil, of , Susiinehanna county as. Speak cr., George W. IXanwocraly wasirc,elccted as Clerk, and Luclul Itogor@ as assistant Clerk. The House was organized by the election of.A. G. Oltn.head, of Potter, as speaker.— A. W. Benedict was re-elected Clerk, and Win. li. Dennison assistant Clerk. SERAPE PROCEEDING!) The Goverhor'sinessege was received and road, and that portion of it referring to the quota of Pennsylvania elicited some d'scus ston, and a resolution was offered by Mr. Hell calling for a committee'of three to con sult with the Governor to see if the quota could not be reduced. On motion of Mr. St. Clair, the resolution was amended so. as to authorize the committee to confer with the President and Secretary of War, instead of the Governor. The resolution prevailed, and. the committee, composed of Messrs. Hall, Lowry end 'Wallace, were appointed. The death of Dr. Robert E. Reed, member of the House, was announced by Mr. Hop kins, end a eulogy pronounced upon his character. Mr. Bigham then offered the usual resolutions of condolence, after Which the Senate, adjourned until Tuesday next. Ecar3 On motion of Mr. Glass, the usual resolu tions were offered to the retiring officers, giving them $7. per day, for ten days, and mileage —3O cents per mile. On motion of Mr. Josephs, Zeigler's Manual," and “Purdon's Digest" were voted to each mem ber... The Governor's message wits receiy,ed and read, and on motion of Mr. Slack, 15,- 000 copies were ordered to be printed in English, and 5,030 copies printed in Ger man. A committee was then appointed to try the contested election case of Charles Wilson, from the district composed of_Ly coming, Union and Snyder counties. Ad journed to Tuesday next. The Senate of the United States Las before it a resolution to make free the wives and children of slaves who enlist in the ar my of the United States, while the House of Representatives is about to act on a propo sition to nmend the Constitution of the Uni ted States and put an end to slavery forever. Whether these will pass the respective branches of Congress may not be entirely certain, inasmuch as the old members con tinue to hold their seats and maybe able to defeat both. If they or either of them shall be defeated now, the next session of Congress will assuredly pass them both. . The spiritof old John Brown still lives. A few years ago the Supreme Court of the Uni ted States decided, that a negro had no rights which a white man was bound to respect.— A change has come over the spirit of our dream. May we not thank the r , bets for the Progress they have impelled in the march of Justice and humanity. They are not the first people whose crimes have enlightened mankind. SUBJCOATlON.—Subjugation is nothing more nor less than to conquer by force, and eneo r “.l one pn. ty to outnnit to tho govern ment of another. Subjugation is not anni hilation. It is simply to force traitors to re linquish their treason and to assume their position under the constitution and laws.— In the present position of our country, sub jugation means that the rebels shall submit to the government, to the Republican prin ciples of Liberty incorporated into the fun damental law, to the free election of the ma jority of the citizens, to equal rights, equal tranquility - with other citizens of the United States. These they are unwilling to admit in company with the North. They must have a government of their own. They are ready to run the risk of continual war with a neighboring nation, of forays across the border, of conflicts in relation to trade and commerce; they are willing to suppress in ternal trade at the mouths of their cannon, and dam up the commerce of the northeAl lakes and rivers, with iron clad fleets, but they will perish rather than bo subjugated. They have singular notions of internal re pose and domestic tranquility. TUE LATE STORY OF TUE PRESIDENT.- Mr. Lincoln is credited w;th an apt story to illustrate the present condition of llood's army: Out in lower Illinois, in a little village, there was a butcher named Sykes, who had a large, wicked,'inisehievous bull-dog, which was regarded as a town nuisance. Fowl were killed, clothes were pulled from the lines, meat-houses were robbed, children wore sea ed, and "Sykes' dog'.' was blamed . for all, an blamed justly. Now there was a man r med Henderson, who had a tine to tilled by this dog of Sykes' and he swore revenge. So ho took about a quarter - of a pound of powder and did it up in a piece of buckskin, tying up a piece of punk so that it projected outof the little bundle of pow der. Then he put the bundle in a large piece of corn-bread, and had it in readiness. It was not long before Sykes' dog came trot ting along, and Henderson, lighting the punk with his cigar, threw the bit of bread to•the cur, who gobbled it at a mouthful. Tho next minute' and there was an explo sion ! The dog's head was blown over a fence into the creek, his hind legs and tail wore sent up and lodged on Henderson's porch, his roji legs were throivn across the street, and the rest of tho bow-Wow was laid about in small pieces' "Whorra," exclaimed a looker-on, "you've rather used up Sykes' dog, paint ye, Henderson I" "Yes," replied Hen derson, "I rather think that as a dog Sykes won't And him of much use." A Sq.A.BR REPAIIT.Eg..7*r. Wendell wasriding in a railroad car, wharf lie was addressed by amen of sueh'rotundity that ho seemed to carry everything before him. ; This man asked Mr. Phillips what was, the object-.of his./ife. "To benefit the negro,"•,was , the.Wand,,reply. , 04A/oil; then, why don!t, you go ~down outli• to'do itl" i!Thatis - viorth thinking of. `seen white cravat around yout neck; pr.s.y what'is the object of your life ?" d'ero save souls from hell." "Mai I ask yini whether:You propose • to go there to do it ?" ' ,‘ • ' , • Thd foreign papore.cire. full of run - lore re"- !epeetine the alleged : attempt err tlie life ef -Victor Emanuel. ' Theliailty eerre . spoudont xrPthe. iiiroturbolleveaAlta - 1941i an ;el; , ent. bas,happened, Und,tha g was the, king ; wound. ed by a,itiletto. adds that. the .Earis pa pare have. been obliged. 'officially not to al lude to it. LiVerpoel tinjiere; however, be lieve tho rumor tb 'be, unfounded, but tbe Turin and;ldillark papers do nOt deny it. PROPHECY FULFILLED • The accounts of General Sherman's march through Georgia show ati enor mous lose to have befallen-the' people of that State. This sweep taken by stain vading army has destroyedlailwaysicar7, tied away slaves,,, cattle arid provisions, and desolated towns, bringing the heav iest burden of war upon the ver y ' centre of the insurgent district. If Mr. Alexander if Stephens is fond of referring to his own words, he might now very well point his fellow-eilizens to the remarkable lullilment of his prophe-. cies made to them in the winter of 1860- 61, when he was still resisting secession. There could be no stronger ease of cor rect foresight and a just appreciation of the results of a proposed course, than is shown in the following extract from his great speech against secession, made that winter and often quoted : This step (secession) once taken, can never be recalled; and all the baneful consequences that tun:it follow will rest on the convention far all coming time. When we and our posterity shall see our lovely South desolated by the demon of war, which this act of yours will inevit ably invite and call forth; when our green fields of waving harvests shall be trodden down by the murderous soldiery and fiery car of war sweeping over our land, our temples of justiee laid in ashes, all the horrors and desolations of war upon us, who but this convention will be held responsible for it, and who but he that shall give his vote fin• this unwise and ill-timed measure shall be held to strict account flr this suicidal act by the present generation, and probably cursed and execrated by posterity in all emuing time, for the wide and desolating ruin that will inevitably Pillow this act you now propose to perpetuate ? '• Pause, I entreat you, and consider for a moment what reasons yon can give that will even satisfy yourselves in calm- er moments, what reasons you can give to your fellow-sufferers in the calamity ' that it will bring. What reasons can you give to the nations of the earth to justify it ? They will be the calm and deliberate' judges in the case; and to what overt act, can you point, on which to rest the plea of justification ? What right has the North assailed ? What in terest of the South has been invaded What justice has been denied, or what claim, founded in justice and right, has been withheld ? Can any of you to-day name one governmental act of wrong de liberately and purposely dune by the government at Washington, of which the South has a right to complain ? challenge the answer. "Pause now while you can. and con template carefully and candidly these important items. Leavim , out of view, for the present, the countless Millions of dollars you must expend in war with the North, with tens of thousands of your suns and brothers slain in battle, and of fered up as sacrifices upon the altar of your ambition—and for what? Is it for the overthrow of the American govern ment, established by our common ances try, cemented and built up by their sweat and blood, and founded on the broad principles of right, justice, and human ity ? And as such, I must declare here, as.l have often done before, and which has been repeated by the greatest and wisest of statesmen and patriots in this and other lands, that it is the best and freest government, the most equal in its rights, the most just in its decisions, the must lenient in its measures, and the most inspiring in its principles to ele vete the race of man that the sun of heaven ever shone upon. Now, for you to attempt to overthrow such a govern ment as this, unassailed, is the height of madness, fl,dly, and wickedreess." The New Governor of New York. Hon. Reuben E. Fenton, successor to Ho ratio Seymour, says the True Democrat, was inaugurated Governor on Monday, Janua ry 2tl. We All feel deeply interested in the success of the " Empire" State—the centre of commercial oaimkh in our country. For the past two years her people have been trammeled by the unwise, and, in too many cases, unpatriotic action of Gov. Seymour. He has lost no opportunity to misrepresent the policy of the Adminh,triltion, and to ma lign its motives, and to impugn the charne- .er of these who sustained the Government Instead cf a hearty co-operation with the Government in raising men on the various calls, ho invariably sought for some manner in which the number to be furnished might be reduced to the lowest figures, and it is to such maneuverings that only 240.009 men were raised on the last call for 530,00. he " credits" for naval enlistments" w think was originated by him; and when such a plan is suggedted and carried out in one State, it can not reasonably be withheld from any others who, have a shadow of a claim and any talent for carrying the meas ure successfully into operation. Governor Seymour's revolutionary lan guage in his oration at the Academy of Mu sic on the 6th of July, 1863, did more to produce the riots that followed a few days afterward than any other one thing. His speech to the infuriated mob in which he said "My friends, you have stood by me, and I will stand by you," will ever brand his name with an indelible infamy. His re cent attempts to shield the parties implica ted in "manufacturing" soldiers' votes, will not soon be forgotten. He " died hard" in the late contest for Governor, and the cor rupt agencies and wholesale frauds made use of by " friends' came near fastening him for another two years upon the people of tho "Empire" State as their chief magietrate:— lie is succeeded by a man of worth and soli dity rather than brilliancy. Governor Fen ton is a good man, one of those whose mo- ivos aro unselfish and ppio—a man of in egrity and moral worih. As a representa- Live in Congress for the period of ten years, lut•presents an unblemished character, and has won a reputation for honesty such as few public men possess. Ho has bad much experience in public affairs, and possesses the confidence of 'the people of New York to an eminent degree. One of his first actiirwas to issue fiproclaination milting the people; to All up theii quota of men by volunteers, andnot to wait for the draft. The'old " Keystone" led by the gallant Oovernor Curtin, ;" by•GOve.rnoi Fenton, will' fur nish such assistance.and — support to tlmo Ad ministration as will onable it to deal death blows " thick and-fast" to the reeling