I"- ? 'WE GO "WHERE DEMOCRATIC PXIKCIPLES P0I1TT THE ViY ; WLTTI THZY CZASH TO LSAD, T7B C2ASE TO FOLLOW." VOLUME VIII. EBENSBURQ, THURSDAY, 1PRIL 15; 1852. NUMBER 20. II J I III 3C J R 31 S. The "XOUXTAIXSEXTIXEL" is publish ed every Thursday morning, at One Dollar und y.fiu Cmts per annum, if paid in advance or witain three months ; after three mouths Two Dollar will be charged No subscription will be taken for a shorter neriod than six months ; and no paper will be di.coutiuued until all arrearages are paid. A t ilure to notify a discontinuance at the expira tion of the term subscribed for, will be consid ered as a new engagement. c Jtt IDVERT1SEXESTS will be inserted at thefollowing rates: 50 cents per square for the first insertion; 75 cents for two insertions; 1 for three insertions ; and 25 cents per square for every subsequent insertion, A liberal reduc tion made to those who advertise by the year. 11 advertisements handed in must have the rroper number of insertions marked thereon or they will be published until forbidden, and churped in accordance with the above terms. BtSAll letters and communications to insure attention must be post paid. A. J. 12 II El". A DEMOCRATIC SOXCi. We transcribe the following stirring and pa triotic song from an Eastern exchange. It breathes the trae spirit of poetry and the pure principles of Democracy. It is a gem which will be admired by every reader. There are thousands of hearts in this State which will res pond to the sentiments of this song.- What means the proud triumphal scenes, The shout and cannon's roar The long huzzas that proudly swell Along New England's shore? The lofty hills take up the sound, And from their granite heights Are streaming wide, o'er land and tide, Her countless beacon lights. lis but a dream of that which rocks The nation far and near Glad sounds of joy and revelry Fall ever on the ear. A starry banner meets the sky, From every village dome ; While hearts are light and hearths are bright, Within each happy home. Are they who march at midnight hour With torch and trump in hand, Returning from the battle iield A brave, victorious band ? Are those the mighty shouts that rise AVkjt tL iVUnw foe. When tyrant? yield the gory field, And freedom strikes the blow ? They're conquerors yet no bloody stain Rests on their glorious path ; They've conquered but no deeds of wrong Record a nation's wrath. With faithful hearts, and fearless aouls, A noble fight is won l A field on which long ears ago, S.arce prouder deeds were done. They've scattered from the peaceful sky A black and fearful cloud, TLat darkly hung, and seemed to wrap )ur country in a shroud. We see the fair blue heavens again We feel their breath once more, And doubly bright the sun's broad light Illumes our native 6hore. God bless the free ! cur country's pride, An iron-hearted band No firmer on the wild-hill side Their trranitc pillars stand. With homes to guard, and hearths to cheer, And many a tie to cherish They proudly go to meet the foe, And conquer or they perish. 3!evv Staple for the V lilted States. A Reminiscence, &.C. We have seen it stated recently, that a Bcnynge has at the instance of Mr. Lawrence, our Minister to England, come to this country for the purpose of iuviting the attention of the people to the advantages which will result to them from the introduction of about twenty of the most valuable agricultural staples of the East, among which are tea, coffee and in digo. He thinks that tea and indigo if properly cultivated, would become articles of export to an amount exceeding the value of all our present exports. He says that tea for which we now pay from sixty cents to a dollar a pound, can be iroJuce l for two to five cents a pound, free from the noxioua adulterations cf the imported article. He has recently published a small volume enti tled "The Future Wealth of America," in which be fully explains his Opinions. Doctor Smith, of South Carolina, has complete ly succeeded in his efforts to cultivate tea plants m that State. It would certainly be a great ad vantage to our country if, in the single article of tea, we could become independent of China. As to coffee, we are rather skeptical ; but in Q:tO was once the staple of Louisiana. We have feen the plant grow, and the article made our '6e!rt in sufficient quantity for family use, thirty .years ago, near this city, in Indiana, and it an swered eveiy purpose. The immigrants from orth Carolina, of whom there were many near kere our family resided in 1839, raised cotton and indigo, as a matter of course, having been accustomed to rely solely upon their own prod ucts for all domestic articles, of whatever kind, 'nether for food or raiment, cf necessity, luxu ry or adornment. Cin. Times. A 1 ankee in Bangor to avoid the operation of e Maine liquor law, advertises for sale " the nuid extract of apples, of very recent manufac ture ?" 'That'B much like cider. A poet out West, epeaking of a late tornado eays, " the frighted weathercocks alarmed the "pires." This is almost evual to Nat Lee's cel ebrated line " A raad potato -weal; howling down, the gale." Tike Drunkard'a Funeral. A SCENE IK .NEWARK. "Can you attend a funeral this afternoon at 2 o'clock ?" inquired a man beyond the meridi an of life who stood at my door, with an expres sion of sympathy upon his countenance 'can you attend a funeral at the corner of and streets ? There is a man dead there, sir, and, although he is poor, yet we do not like to bury him without some kind of religious ser vices. We should be very glad, sir, if you could attend.'' "I am sorry to say that it is out of my pow er to comply with your request," I replied, "in asmuch as I am previously engaged to attend a ; funeral at that hour in another direction." "I am very sorry, sir," he replied, but after a moment's reflection again inquired "could you not come a little later if we were to defer it an hour? Could you not come at 3 o'clock?" "I think I can," I replied. At all events, 1 will come as near that hour as possible." He left me, and at the appointed time I went to fulfil my first engagement. A man of four score years was sleeping his long last sleep. Relatives and friends were occupying the com fortable and well furnished apartments, absorb ed in grief. The services being over, the leng thy procession moved slowiy onward to the peaceful mansion of the .lead It was not a cost ly burial, but such as tve could desire for our selves, plain, solemn, appropriate, nothing ex travagant, yet nothinj wanting, and while we felt that the congeniality also in the place selec- j ted for the last sle. p of death, eveu our own beautiful and quiet c -metary. I hastened from these solemn, orderly and ap propriate obsequies to obey my second sum mons. An ore; wsgon, with one horse attach ed, and four or tii o individuals were standing near the door. I felt a chill run through my veins. Vr.rt of a fearful truth was now reveal ed. Th- Veen November wind was blowing, and the sky wove its gloomy autumual a?pecr, but I feared thre was keener anguish and deeper glocci -iihin. I entered, and at one glance the --o it -was ihr funeral cf a drunkn A small, cold and desolate chamber was ap propriated for the solemn service. Indeed, it wa? all they had. Here for a season had lived, and here had died, and now from here was to be buried, a husband and a father, who had lived and died a drunkard. It was a dreary X!ace. There, in one corner, upon a rough old rickety table, from which they had often eaten their cold and cheerless fare, was placed the cof fin, made of rough pine boards, slightly stained with red, in which was placed the corpse. He was a man perhaps of fifty, coarsely clad with grave clothe. His countenance, if in index to his state of mind, bespoke nothing but gloom. Around, underneath his head, where, in other places, I had often seen the downy pillow and the rich satin linings, were stuffed a few of the shavings roughly taken fnui the boards which composed his cofiin. I looked with a spirit almost crushed within me, first at this new tropl of the reign of death, and then at the living -cene around me. Both were expressive of tho .!eeiest wretched ness. In an opposite corr. r, upon a pile of old clothes rudely thrown together, sat the unhap py widow, a tall spare woman, pale as the corpse before me. Her dark eyes w ere large and sunken, and she was thinly and poorly clad; and as she sat, wrung her hands as if to relieve the agony she felt within, while almost every breath she gave a low, hollowj, consumptive cough, which told me too plainly that death had marked her for his victim also. Several little children, were standing around and beside the table where the coffin rested, shivering with cold and weeping from some cause whether they un derstood the meaning of a father's death or not and the tears rolling down their pale and hol low cheeks, upon the uncarpeted floor, in large and briny drops. A few of the neighbors had gathered to attend the solemn services connec ted with the funeral. There were seated some on boxes, others upon an old worn out trunk, while others stood. It was a gloomy scene, gloomier than the day without, and the anguish keener than the biting blast. I stood there in the midst of that group, a minister of Christ. The Bible was before me the Bible so full of denunciations against sin. But as Hooked around me, it seemed as if sin had denounced itself. There were the visible, tangible, heart-rending fruits of a godless life, and if possible, the more revolting spectacle of godless death, upon all which seemed written, forsaken, hopeless, miserable. I strove to di rect attention to the necessity of religion to pre serve us from the vices and miseries of life, and to its holy consolations to support us under the trials of our earthly pilgrimage. But I feared then, and still fear, that it was too late for such advice. There were hearts there that had so long been accustomed to the treachery of men, so steeped in sorrow and accustomed to sin, that they could hardly be led to repose confidence in God. Having oommendsd them to the care of heaven, End especially to the God of the poor, the coffin was carried down the narrow stairway, and the drunkard's family, half clad, and shiver- -ing ia the keeu November wind, waa placed in the one horse open wagon at the door, and fol iowing the hearse drove lonely and sad through the stre ets of our Christian city, to the Potter's Field, the last resting place of the friendloss poor, where the drunkard sleeps to-day unhon ored and unknown. MOCXT BLAXC. Those who have visited Switzerland, and have seen Mont Blanc from Chamoix, will allow that the following sketch, written from tho village of Chamouix, is a life-like picture of that inter esting country i My first and only Alpine excursion was to the Mer de Grace, one of the great indeed the great est, glaciers of the Alps. The glaciers is not a broad, smooth, glistening mass of ice, as I had supposed ; it is a river of ice ten or twelve miles long, a mile wide, and from two hundred to two thousand feet in thickness : It fills.or rather chokes up a great gorge which lies between snow capped mountains, and moves down one every day, descending at an angle of 30 degrees. As the mass melts at the lower end, where its drip- J pings form a swift river, the ice from above pres- : ses its way down, the motion cracks ittraverse ly, and opens ten thousand chasms, each of which is a blue, bottomless abyss. Its surface looks like mountain blocks of marble split from the quarry, and standing on edge irregularly to gether. Boulders of granite,weighicg five hun dred tons, lie lightly on the glaciers, like peb bles on an icepond, and are borne down by it to the valley. Imagine a mountain with a motion of one foot per day ! Really the speed seems as great as that of the floods of Niagara. After looking at this terrible momentum, the wonder comes how it could be staid ; wLether it be not easier to say, even to the ocean "Hith erto shall thou come, but no further. Walking out upon it you see death within a step, and feel yourself an atom. One visit is enough. The sides of these high mountains are always shedding snow, ice and rocks, which altogether form a glacier. There are many of them among the Alps. From these meltings of the Avro the Avcrnoon, and other streams take their rise. There is ua ot men, or ratucr a i, - v;.aa of life to understand the Alps, and to guide any pajties passing from one point to another. W ithout their coolness and experience to aid, traveller s could do nothing in the way of exploring, or even visiting the savage eolitude. They are a sober, virtuous class, and win upon every one by their very noble qualities. From all that I hear, I doubt not they would die if necessary to the safelp of such as put themselves under their guidance. These guides are ready even to ascend Mt. Blanc. Jacques Balmet, one of the most daring and ex perienced, was the man who first made the as cent when he was seventy years old. He started forth alone to explore some ice gorge far in among almost inaccessible and un approachable peaks. The old man never was heard of any more. Whenever you read of any one's making the ascent of Mt. Blanc, you may set it down that the guides ascended it for him': that is, guides have been employed, they have g one before and behind him, told him where to put his pike or place his foot, tried for him eve ry loose, dangerous stepping place, cut out steps 1 jt him on the very steep of the summit, and even carried him along, and lifted him up, and may be brought him down ; and thus secured to him the eclat and glory of having performed the hardy, perilous feat of having ascended Mt. Blanc. All the guides get a stipulated sum. As twenty of these are usually employed, it costs about $500 to ascend the king of the Alps. All the travellers are waiting to see his hoary crown, for he seldom reveals his august head. The clouds rise and seem to be moving right off, and ready to lift their misty curtain, but w hen they are almost gone they let themselves down again, as if to screen him at his bidding. As we all watched anxiously their sublime hesita tion, I understood what David has said of God, "Clouds and darkness are around about Him." The same traveler thus speaks of his last lock at this mountain, lie writes under date of Oc tober 1st. This morning I took a last look at Mont Blanc. The sun came out clearly, and there was not a cloud in the valley or upon the mountains ; pure lofty, uncompromising, enduring, unapproacha ble seemed this, the highest of the Alps like unto Him who made it ; yet, as the sun lighted it up and fringed its top, wasbeatiful as a moun tain of silver and as if one might easily ascend and step off, from it into Heaven. Every peak, and dome, and needle, gleamed with white glo ry, and all the circle of mountains gave witness to the majesty of Jehovah. "Above me are the Alps, The palaces of nature, whose vast walls Have pinnacled in clouds their snowy scalps And throned eternity, in icy halls Of cold sublimity, where forms and falls The avalanche the thunderbolt of enow 1 All that expands the spirit, yet appals, Gather round thesd summits, as to show How earth may pierce to heaven, yet leave Vain man below." g5A buck, while being measured for a pair of boots, observed: "Make them cover the calf." "Heavens ?" exclaimed the astounded snob, surveying his customer from head to. foot, "I have not leather enough." MfflCAGlS FI105I GOVERKOR B1GLEU. SUTE FlXANCES Sl-ECIAL LEGISLATION. Cov. Bigler transmitted to tho Legislature on the iih ult., a message on the subject of the publb debt, State finances, &c. Ho says there is nov due and unpaid $2 491,255 of the bonds of thi oaur.cnwealth, bearing an interest of six per cent, and a balance of near 100,000 due to domestic creditors bearing r. like rate of inter est, besides $1, 300,000 at five per cent. Over $2,000,000 will fall due in 1853 and about $3,- 000,000 in 1854. lie suggests to the Legislature the propriety of making jrovision for the cancellation of the matured bends, and such as may fall due du ring the crming year, by authorizing a loan for that purptse and issuing the bonds of the com monwealtl, reimbursable in ten or fifteen years, at a rate cf interest not exceeding five per cent. Or in other words, borrow ing money at five per cent, or lss, and redeeming bonds on which the State is paying six per cent, thus reducing the rate of interest. He is fully satisfied that the bonds of the State, exempted from taxation, can be negociated at such rates of interest, as to make a very desirable saving to the Treasury. It ia estimated that $772,000 will be suffi cient to complete the North Branch Canal, and $594,350 to finish tho road for the avoidance of the inclined planes on the Portage Railroad. The Goternor recommends that money be bor rowed for these rnirposcs. With the necessary appropriations, four of the ten inclined planes can be avoided during the present season. He also urges the propriety of adapting the system of cash payments on the public works of fixing a time after which the officers on the works shall not be allowed to contract debts for any purpose whatever; and suggests the adop tion of some more summary mode of disposing of claims for damages thjui has heretofore been exercised. The message closes with the following excell ent and judicious remarks upon a subject which has attracted considerable public attention of late. The evil complained of, is growing abso- Gov. Tlcr having thus wisely called the atten tion of the Legislature to the subject, it is to be hoped that such action will be taken upon, it, as to lead to the beneficial results which must in evitably follow the proper course in the matter: In conclusion, I beg to be indulged in a sug gestion on the subject of special legislation. I am confident that the General Assembly will a gree with me, that some reform on the subject is much needed. The volurans of our laws for the sessions of 1850 and 51, compared with those of previous years, show that our legisla tion is increasing to an alarming degree. By reference to these volumnes, for the years I have named, it will be seen that but a comparatively small portion of the laws they contain are of a general character, being mainly for local or pri vate purposes. These volumes when compared with the statutes enacted eight or ten years since, or with those annually enacted by Con gress, or any of our sister states, swell into an astonishing magnitude. This evil is on the in crease, and it seems to me that a remedy is im periously called for. Much may be done to ar rest this evil by the adoption of a few well di gested general laws. For the purpose of attaining this desirable end, I respectfully suggest for your considers, tion, the' propriety of constituting a commission of two or three experienced legal gentlemen, whose duty it shall be to prepare general laws to meet this oljeet, to be submitted to the con sideration of the next Legislature. I know from experience how difficult it is for the representa tives of the people, after their arrrival at the seat of government, to find the necessary leisure and privacy io enable them to prepare and di gest intricate general laws. Each day seems to bring it3 labors upon them, and the session runs by before a subject of this kind can receive the necessary consideration. The subject of regulating election districts, naming elcctionhouses, which annually occupies much of the time of the Legislature, and many pages of the journal and statute books, might be safely confided to the commissioners of the respective counties. The subject of divorces should, it seems to me, be left entirely with the courts, as well also, as the whole subject of sel ling real estate by trustees, guardians and those acting in a representative capacity. These mea sures, together with a few more general statutes on the snbject of corporations, would I think have a most salutary effect on legislation. As far as possible our laws should be general, and those that are so should be sternly maintained against special innovations. In accordance with Gov. Biglers suggestion the House has passed a bill authorizing the Ex ecutive to appoint Commissioners to revise the code of the Commonwealth. Washixcton Moxcmext. The block of gran ite which the government of the Swiss Confeder ation has had prepared for tho Washington Monument bears this significant inscription. "Diealte freieSchweiz dom Andcriken de Ge neral G. Washington." Old free Switzerland to the memory of Gen eral G. Washington. The Dawn of Spring. BT IK. SAaVEL. I love to traoo the break of Spring step by step. I love even those long rain storms that sap the icy fortresses of the lingering 7inter, that melt the snows from the hills, and swell the mountain brooVs; thct mate the pools heave up their glassy cerements of ice and hurry down the crashing fragments into the wastes of the ocean. I love the gentle thaws that you can trace day by day, by the stained snow banks shrinking from the grass ; and by the gentle drip of the cottage eaves. I love to search out the sunny slopes by a southern wall, where the reflected sun does double duty to the earth, and where the frail anemone or the faint blush of the arbutus, in the midst of the bleak March atmosphere, will touch your heart like a hope of heaven, in a field of graves ! Later come those soft smoky days, when the patches of winter grain show green un der the shelter of leafless woods, and the last snow-drifts reduced to shrunken skeletons of ice, lie upon the slope of northern hills, leaking away their life. Then, the grass at your door grows into the color of the sprouting grain, and the buds upon the lilacs swell, and burst. The peaches bloom upon the wall, and the plumbs wear boddices of white. The sparkling oriole, picks strings for his hammock on the sycamore, and the sparrows twit in pairs. The old elms throw down their dingy flowers, and color their spray with green; and the brooks, where you throw your worm or minnow, float down w hole fleets of the crimson blossoms of the maple. Finally, the oaks step into the opening quadrille of Spring, with gray ish tufts of modest verdure, which, by and by, will be long and glossy leaves. The dog wood pitches his broad, white tent, in the edge of the forest; the dandelions lie along the hillocks, like stars in a sky of green ; and the wild cherry grow ing in all the hedge rows, without other cul ture than God's, lifts up to Ilim, thankfully, its tremulous white finger. Arn'' N this, comes the rich rains of Spring. The affections ot a toy prow up w itu tears to water them; and the year blossoms with flowers. But the clouds hover over an April sky, timidly like shadows upon innocence. The showers come gently and drop daintily to the earth, with now and then a glimpse of sunshine to make the drops bright like so many tears of joy. The rain of winter is cold, and it comes in bitter scuds that blind you; but the rain of April steals upon you cooly, half reluctantly, yet lovingly like the steps of a bride to the altar. It does not gather like the Etorm clouds of Winter, grey and heavy along the horizon and creep with subtle and insensible approaches (like age) to the very zenith ; but there are a score of white-winged swimmers afloat, that your eye has chased as you lay fatigued with the delicious languor of an April sun: nor have you scarce noticed that a little bevy of those floating clouds had grouped together in a sombre company. But presently, you see across the fields, the dark grey streaks stretching like lines of mist, from the green bosom of the valley in that spot of sky where the company of clouds is loitering ; and with an easy shifting of the helm the fleet of swimmers come drifting over you, and drop their burden into the dancing pools, and make the flowers glisten, and the eaves drip with their crystal bounty. The cattle linger still, cropping the newcome grass : and childhood laughs joyously at the warm rain ; or under the cottage roof, catches with eager ear, the patter of its fall. Gen. Gorgry and his "Wife. The following singular tribute to the usual right mindedness of women, occurs in the ac count of Gorgey's Surrender, extracted from the furthcoming "Kossuth and his GeneraVa," in press of Piusxev, & Co : Whether Gorgey saw the fate reserved for his friends, whether he had any notion of the ter rible consequences of his deed who can say ? But it appears that he alternately entertained hope and apprehension, and that, in spite of his iron mind, he sometimes shuddered at himself, and then again imagined that his deed might lmve blessed consequences for Hungary. As if treachery could ever be justified by its results ! When body after body of the Hungarians troops, at Vilages, drew up before the Russians, and silently laid down their arms without any surmise of the treachery, Gorgey noticed at his side, young Remenyi, scarcely eighteen years old, and a virtuosos on the violin. This youth had always been at the head quarters of Gor gey, and often on the eve of battle, or on the morn after the combat, had enlivened witli his sweet melodies the Learts of many an ofScer and, as a new David, dispelled the gloomy thoughts of the Hungarian chief. Gorgey now called him, and inquired what he was going to do, and whether he was provided with money ? Remenyi replied, with the carelessness of a youth, "that with his violin he could fight his way through the world, but as to money he had none." Gorgey emptied his pocket, gave all his gold to r.emcnyi, united some golden tor which were hanging on the chain of hiwatch, and said : "Take this my by, in remembrance of me !" Aa Bemenyi noticed amocg these trifling jewels a email silver key, he returned it to the General with the observation ; But this key you got from your wife ; I can not take it; my lady would be displeased if you gave away what you received from her as a keepsake." Take it " said Gorgey, "for after what I hav done to-day, my wife will never smile any moxu upon me." General Butler. This gentleman who has been repeatedly charged with entertaining views favorable to tho freesoilers has recently addressed a letter to Francis P. Blair, im reply to one asking his opin ions on the great political questions of Let day, in which he states in the most decided and ex plicit terms, his attachment to tho Union and his determinatian to adhere to tho Compromise measures of 1850, as a final settlement of all tho sectional issues which have of late disturbed the harmony of the country. In this letter, Gen. Butler fully endorses tho resolutions cf the Democratic State Convention of Kentucky, by which he was recommended as a candidate for the Presidency. These resolu tions are plain and comprehensive, avoiding none of the issues which have grown out of the le gislation of Congress, on the subject of slavery. but distinctly affirming opposition to the Wilmot proviso, the faithful maintenance of tho Com promise, and a reliance on the doctrines of the Democratic party as explained by its past action. They were submitted to Gen. Butler and were approved by him before they were offered to tho consideration of the convention. These facts show conclusively that the rumors so long pre valent in the political circles of some portions of the Union, connecting the name of this distin guished soldier and statesman with the anti-slavery party of the North, are not entitled to the least credit. Daily Dayton Empire, Mammoth Steamer. We see it stated in the London Times, that a proposition is on foot to build iron Bteamers of 720 feet in length, 90 feet beam, ami 30 in depth. with four engines of 1,000 horse-power, aati a screw, whilst there will be eight masts, with.hu ge and will be not only shot but fire proor, ana, from the novel method, though simple, and for strength known to every schoolboy, their im mense length renders them more safe than those of smaller construction. It is calculated to car ry 2,000 passengers, with a theatre for amuse ments, &c, and could, in case of war, open a battery of 300 guns. This projected scheme is for the purpose of bringing the English colonies within a month's reach of London, but it is al together too large an affair. The only short way of bringing England's colonies nearer to London, is to give them the best system of gov eniment possible for their interests. North Branch Bill Passed. Tho bill to authorize a loan of $S20,000, to complete the North Branch canal, passed the House of Representatives Thursday last, and we presume ere this has become a law. This will be most gratifying news to the whole northern section of our State, as it will open tip a region rich in mineral resources, that has heretofore been shut out from a market. The policy of completing this improvement at the earliest practicable day, has long been manifest, and whenever the Whigs were before the people seek ing their suffrages, they advocated this measure; but most strange to say, when this bill came up it was opposed at every stage by the W hig lea ders in the Legislature, and every effort was made to defeat it. Throujrh the active instru mentality, however, of its numerous Democratic friends, and the effective appeal of Gov. Bigler in its behalf, it was carried triumphaui!y through both branches of the Legislature. liar. Union tS5-Gov. Bigler has vetoed the bill passed by the Legislature incorporating the Cbarlestowu Silver Lead Mining Company. Speculators and their mammoth and Mammon schemes seem to meet with no favor at the hands of the Execu- m five. The sentiments of the present veto mes sage will be cordially approved of by every good citizen in the State, whether whig or Democrat. JECySiLVER Currency. The bill engrossed in the U. S. Senate on Monday last, from tho Committee on Finance, provides for a new silver coinage, in pieces of the denomination of half a dollar and less, to contain a greater portion of alloy than the silver coins now in use. The measure is viewed as one of importance, in order to retain in the country a currency which is so essential in all business transactions. The bill, if it 6hall pass the House of Representatives, id to into effect on the first of May next. S?The Dublin Freeman's Journal, of tho 20th of March, states that orders have actually been issued from the Colonial office, or shortly will be issued, directing the immediate releae of the Irish Exiles, subject to the condition that they are not to return to any part of tho British Islands. This is "important if true," but is it true? The report creates something of a sensa tion among our Irish residents here. The Poet Moore. A monument to the mem ory of Tom Moore is to bo erected by his friends in Ireland. Moore's journal, which has becu kept with great regularity during many years of his life, is to be prepared for the press by his wife.