aLi ci;J4lDcsu Qtraas,sx) Ca? revondence of the Pennsylvania Telegraph. A,NINGTON, April 11, 1846. IhtAtt SlR:—The scenes witnessed in the llouAe of Representatives for the last two or three days are enough to make one turn with shame alai humiliation from the ; aroncile of the nation, to which we teat ti• s.l to look up to pride with and admiration. The causes which led to such painful re sults may be looked at briefly for a proper understanding of what we ate about to sae. Sono.- time since, during the discussion of the Oregon question in the popular I branch, C• J. INGeeam.r. without the ; .lightest cause, made en attack upon Mr. Witmer' in regard to the pert he took in negotiating the treaty at Washington, and made Porn e serious charges against that distinguished man. It passed unnoticed. When the House had disposed of the Oregon subject, and the Senate had gone into its consideration, Mr. I/reel:flow re- CPI% ing his cue from Mr, INGERSOLL, quo. red from his (L's) speech, and with slight additions adopted his language, and sent it out to the world—incorporated in, or appended to his (ll.'s) speech. While Mr. DicnialsoN was addressing the Senate and using the offensive re marks, Mr. WICBSTIR in the moot emphat ;c manner denied unqualifiedly the .barges, and denounced them as false.— Yet, notwithatanding this, Mr. Droll NSON oblist ed, and circuiated them. On Tuesday, Mr. NVEDSTER took up the matter and handled Mr. Drcerarson and r. INGERSOLL without gloves, and from what we have seen since, refuted every , charge 'wide, anti stamped falsehood in delibly upon each one. On Wednesday, Mr. Dicroarsos; re plied to Mr. WERSTER, anti endeavored to defend himself and the author tram whom he quoted. This was all very well; and here toe matter should have rested, or it adverted to at all by Mr. I smemou, should have been done for the purpose of substantiating what he hail already said, car like an honorable man if untrue, to have retracted. But on Thursday Mr. INGERSOLL pre facing them with some offensive remarks, introduced some resolutions calling on the President of the United States to furnish to the House of Representatives an ac count of all payments made on President's certificates from the secret fund, front the 4th of March, 1841, until the retirement of DANIEL Wans Tait front the Depart. merit of State, with copies of all entries, receipts, letters, vouchers, or evidence of, payment, and to whom and fur what paid. The resolutions were agreed to by a large majority. Now I want you to look at the position in which Mr. C. J. lamens(n. has placed himself before the world. He makes serious charges against a Senator, that Senator in his place denounces the charges as grossly false, and their author as a slanderer and falsifier. Does Mr. Irsosusou. affirm or reiterate what he first said) No, sir. Conviction is imprinted upon him, and for the purpose of diverting public attention from himself, he brings forward a series of new charges,and when these are consigned to their proper rest ing place, another and another sett will be brought forward ; but each new series will settle heavier on the head of the in ventor. During the discussion, Mr. Yaweey, of Ala., a mimic' ful young man, took upon himself the task of inflicting a tongue lashing upon Mr. WICOOTER. It is said by one who knows, that the main, and active powers are developed earlier in this country than elsewhere, that our young men come forward sooner in life, and mix sooner in the stir and con (lids of politics. With Mr. YAcEY, the effect must have been unusually early - and happy,and we have to thank him for giving the contradiction to that old apothegm that the talented die young" for his' eon case is directly in point. This young roan—fur his eyes are hardly dry from the tears shed at parting with his Alma Mater —this prodigy—for we hold he is a prodi gy when in his own proper person, he can turn aside 64 arrows which destiny lets fly at the precocioo—said among pretty things in Ilia speech, " that he admired General Washington as a Whig, but he would loath to keep company wit"; Daniel TVehatcr !" Loath Its keep company un:. 111 Daniel Webster ! W e do not know which to admire moot, his candor of his bravery. I airs afraid ambition is his prompter. lie has not forgotten his school books; the illuminations in the bible his tory, which he was so fond of, remain viv idly impressed upon his mind; the dimin utive David with his sling capsizing Go huh he would imitate, that he too, might be sketched and handed (town to future schools for example. And he has Samson slaying his scores with a weapon, which Mr. l'Arverx (he has an advantage over Sampson) always carries with him; this picture likewise comes in for a share of his admiration." On Friday morning Mr. Dixon moved a reconsideration of the vote by which the resolution passed, and gave his reasons in a most eloquent speech. Ile poured broad side alter broatisole into the Locofoco ranks, and had the odds against him riot have been so great, the enemy would have tied dismayed. In the course of his re marks l v propounded the following query to Mr. INuiensoxx, which for the future will set all speculation in regard to it at rest. ?Jr. Dlxov. I a;k the gentleman from Pennsylvania sholter it is true that lie 11:,1 said that, it he had lived in the times tit the Revolution, he would have been a toev 4r. 1,-.stskot L. Yet. I .:it r• Mr. lhxoN spoke his hour, and was fol lowed by Mr. Vasov, reeking with smiles, for he bud lectured in Baltimore the night previous, on " the rights of woman ;" it would have done any one good to have witnessed his classical attitudes, and braining features ; he's such a hand some man." He endeavored to annihilate the remnant of the " god-like," as he facetiously, though not originally called Mr. AVEIPITER. After he had concluded, the motion to reconsider was laid upon the table. The House then, (in committee of the ohole,) resumed the consideration of the bill from the Senate to raise a regiment of mounted riflemen, and for the establish• ment of a line of military posts on the route to Oregon• An amendment, offered by Mr. Wnrrp. of New York, that all the officers for the said regimeut shall be selected from the 'regular line of the tnited States Army, was agreed to.. . . Before any further action was had, the House adjourned. On Saturday morning, after some ex planation between Mr. WINTHROP and one or two other members, the !louse took op and passed the bill pending wheu the House adjourned on Friday. It will be sent back to the Senate for their concur rence in the House amendment, and if they act upon it affirmatively, it will soon be a law, and one of vital importance to emigrants. Tile consideration of private bilis was then gone into, and discussed till the House ..ljourned. In the Seilaie,on Friday, Mr. Farnmn made some remarlo; in reference to the Northeastern Boundary question and dis sented from the views given by . M r. WEB -rim on Monday. They did not make much impression upon the Senate. Mr. WEBSTER replied briefly, and satisfacto rily. Mr. BAGIr: then took the floor on the Oregon question. lie was in favor of the notice under all circumstances; out title title to the whole he considered good, to the greater part clear and unquestionable. He thought the notice should have begin given in December, and the wht;le matter would have been adjusted ere this. The great question regarding the revenue be regarded of mere importance, aid he ho ped this matter might be settled at once to give way for that great subject. He con cluded by guying, he would vote for any thing except compromise. On Saturday, Mr.CLAYTores resolution calling on the President for late correspon dence in relation to Oregon, passed the Senate. Mr. Urnam, who had the floor on the special order being indisposed, the subject was passed over, and the Senate at a very early hour went into Executive session, and after some time spent therein mired. Correspondence of the Richmond Inquirer. Deplorable Event. CHARLOTTSVILLE, April 12, 1846. Gentlemen: —Could You be with us this morning, you would perceive grief depict ed on the countenance of every person you meet owing to the unfortunate occur rence which took place at Messrs. Ray• mend & Co.'s Menagerie last night. Du ring the performances, and just as one of the managers had entered the cage with the lion, tigers, leopard and cougar, sonic of the audience approached near the rage, and were cautioned by one at the men at tached to the Menagerie not to do so as 'serious consegnences might ensue to the persons in the cage with the wild beasts. So:ne words ensued between the keeper and one or inure of them pressing on to the cage, when one of the latter struck the keeper twice with a cane or stick, and he struck in return with a stick, and leveled two or three persons, one of whom never afterwards spoke a word anal died last night at about 12 o,clock: his name is Glover, from Alabama. Two others were seriously injured, and are now at the Monticello House, Messrs. Johnson and Williamson, and another, Mr. Waring, less injured. While these things were ta king place, the Elephant entered the crowd, throwing his proboscis about, to drive the people from the ring. Cries of horror arose on all sides; some were par..l - with fear, and could not move or be moved by their friends. Men, !evil)g as it were, dead on the ground; the tinge Of pliant driving out the people; the keep er lio'''n cage; men pale with fear; the mime': shriz•king; children and ser vants crying ou.: th a i !lie wild beasts had broken from their csizes, and were upon them. and each person t wxious !o make escape, presented a scene which tfw would desire to witness. Nu daine was done to any person, except what resulted from a blow given by one of the keep ( ers. We did not learn his name. IiPIAMAN EMICHASITS.-It appears from the anneal report of the New York her• man Society, read at their anniversary a few evenings since, that during the year ending at that dale, 30.312 German emi grants had arrived at that port, which is 2,000 more than last year. A leading oh• ject of this Society is to protect and pro. vide for the German population, and par ticularly emigrants. Their expenditures during the year were about $5,500, and their tcreipis some $5OO inure. 'rhe Nlontreal Courier cloaes an article on the relations of England with the Uni ted Stales, with the following paragraph: We are told, however that many indi viduals to town have received private let tern from England in which it is under stood to be the fixed &termination of the British Government to yield no territory • nerth of the River Columbia. 1 THE JOURNAL. HUNTINGDON: Wednesday, April 22, 1846. Democratic Whig Candidate For Canal Commissioner JAMES M. POWER, OF MERCER COUNTY. (Cr Hon. A. R. Mcilvaine hes our thanks for public docurner.te. oj.The Mexican news, published in to-day's paper, will be found very interesting. We have " wars and rumors of wars ;" and-trom the present aspect of the world the people appear more likely to have occosion to beat their plough-shares and pruning-hooks into swords, than the reverse. The late news received from England by the Pilot-boat Wm. J. Romer, will be found upon our first page. cc). IL W. Middleton, Esq., has started a new Whig paper in the city of Lancaster, entitled the Tribune and Public Advertiser." Mr. M. is an editor cf experience and ability, and the columns of the Tribune, the two first numbers of which we hikes received, shows that his mind has lost none of its former vigor. We heartily wish Mr. M. a sap. port commensurate with his merits. c-i• We observe, by reference to the yeas and nays, that Mr. Patterson, one of our representatives, voted for the "Right of Way." Did Mr. Patter son correctly represent bin constituents by this vote? Mr. Gwin voted against the bill. Congress---The Tzriff of 1842. Congress has been in session almost five months, and the question, What has Congress done?" is tinily asked us by almost every person with whom wo converse. The people are becoming restive and discontented with the protracted debate which has been had upon the Oregon question, prolonged as that debate evidently has been by political dem- 1 agogues for the purpose—the sole purpose—of ma king war speeches for buncombe. Without going on to speak of all the transactions of the present Congress up to this time, we will speak merely of what is now before them, and of vital importance to the people. Well, they have passed the odious Sub-Treasury in the House by a large majority, the Locofocos, who have always been loud in their pro• fessions of regard for the will of the people. voting to a man for it, with the emphatic and decided veto of the people, upon this measure in 1810, staring them right in the face. This we learn was done to rally their party, which had been somewhat scattered and disorganized by the debate upon the Oregon and Barber bills. If we are not greatly mistaken, they will find that if this bill becomes a law, and its blighting influence once mare felt by the coun try, that the old adage in their case will be reversed —that they united to fall. The evil effects of this measure are already being felt in our eastern cities, in anticipation of its final passage; and what else need those who have again warmed it into lifc expect from the people but total political annihilation—such as was visited upon them by the memorable cam paign of 1810. But let their expectations be what they may, this must inevitably be the result. There is something that smacks too Much of monarchy in a system having fur its object the cleating of two currencies—Gold and Silver for tho office-holders and rags for the people—to be sanctioned or even tolerated,by a free, intelligent, and independent peo ple. Tho Tariff policy is the next great question of interest about being agitated in the House. The Committee of Ways and Means of that body have reported a bill to break down the present prolative system; and the probability, from the best infor mation we can receive, is, that the party will be again rallied and this bill, which will carry death and destruction into every brunch of domestic industry in the country, fastened upon us.— The Whig party have done all in their power to avert this blow, which must fall with terrible force upon the prosperity of this State, and it now be comes the duty of Pennsylvania Locofoces, to make good their promises to the people and speak out in such a tone upon this subject, as will be heard and respected at Washington. How can honest Men for political purposes, act an equivocal part on a measure that is life and death to the interests of our Commonwealth ? Pennsylvania can never pay her enormous debt, A etch hangs like an incubus around her neck, tithe Tariff or !Sl2, is destroyed. If it remains as it t o now—the piesent encouragement and protection to the enterprize and indotry ,f our citizens contin ued—she can pay it all, and triumphantly vindicate her character for good faith and integrity. And how, if the Tariff he reduced our National gov ernment can pay the enormous appropriations Con gress is making every day, without direct taxation, we are at a tom to foresee. Pennsylvania, wo fear, was much worse cheated in the election of Jas. K. Polk, than was supposed at the time it wusdone. The whole American pea. pie will be aeverelf punished for their folly, and Pennsylvania, the old "Blind Giant," will teceive a double portion of this punishment, for her party madness and simplicity. THE MARKET. In Philadelphia, during the laid week Wheat Flour was selling at $4,80 a $4.81; a lot of extra sold at $5.12,1 per bbl. Grain.—Wheat—Penn's red, $l.lO a $1,12 per bushel. Rye-70 a 75 cts. Corn-61 cts. Oats--43 a 44 eta. Wl~lakey—in barrels, 22 di—market quiet. Public Opinion. According to the Hollidaysburg Standard, it would seem that public opinion on the subject of the Loco loco nomination for Canal Commissioner, changes with every change of wind. Before the meeting of the Convention, that paper favored the nomination of Mr. Foster, but after the nomination was made, when it was rumored that Mr. Ferguson would succeed Mr. Watson as Superintendent, &c, on the Allegheny Portage Rail Road, then the Standard came out in a long and denunciatory ; article against the nomination of Mr. Poster, from which we made an extract last week,showing that the Standard had kicked out of the traces. By the last number of the Standard we learn that the confirmation of the rumor that Mr. Fergu son was appointed, has brought the " donkey's" heels into the traces again. The editor glories in the continuation of the Assistant, Mr. Boone, which will in the public opinion aforesaid, "do much to secure the efficient management of the road, and to render the administration of Mr. Feguson os bene ficial to the State and to transporters," and as prof itable to the foundry of the sub-rosa editor of the Standard, (where all the patronage of Mr. Wat son and Mr. Boone was cast) as we believe it is now generally conceded was that of his immediate predecessor." - The variable public opinion above noticed would be enveloped in mystery, if the fact was not known that it is cast at the same foundry where the cast ings for the Portage Railroad are furnished. Lutinarzys Occap.sTroxs.—For the informs. Lion of the curious, says the Harr:sburg Union, we annex the occupations of the Members of the House of Representatives, which shows that the agricultural interest is well represented. The House consists of one hundred members, and is made up as follows :—Formers 4 , 1; lawyers 14 ; merchants 8 ; doctors 6 ; millers 3 ; morocco dres ser 1; carpenters 2; saddler 1 ; shoe makers 2; tanners 3 ; artist 1 ; clerks 2 ; teachers 4; inn keepers 2; printers 2 ; oak cooper and guager 1; transporter 1; currier 1; gunsmith 1 ; geologist 1 Roc:ammoAr..—Tho Rcv. Mr. WINECOTP, of Somerset county, has received and accepted a call to the Lutheran Congregation of Williamsburg, in this county, in place of Rey. Mr. Eyrrsa, who ac- cepted a call to the Lutheran congregation of Green Castle, Franklin county, Pa. '"The Aspect of the Times." The suggestions contained in the following, which we clip from the York (Pa.) Republican, aro worthy the serious consideration of the People : o The new dose which locofocoism has prepared for, and is beginning to administer to the people. has commenced to operate. 'Phe passage of the Sub- Treasury Bill by the House of Representatives— our disturbed relations with Mexico, and the an nouncement in the London paper brought by the last packet ship to New York that the Queen was about to send a special Message to Parliament on American affairs, have combined to cause a great scarcity of money in that City—to depress the price of Stocks, and bring about several commercial failures, leaving the apprehension that some more of the same sort" may shortly be expected. Thero is in fact a great alarm now prevalent in all busi ness circles. The domestic policy of the Govern ment, and the entanglement of its affairs with for eign nations, check the spirit of enterprise, and are already operating to reduce the value of property. This is only the beginning of the end." Let the party in power go on—let them curry out their measures in full—let the Tariff of 1842 be repeal ed, and the people reap the fruits of Free Trade and no Protection, we shall then realize in earnest the blessings and benefits" attained by the elec tion of Paste and the success of the Locofocoa. If to all this are superadded a War with England and another with Mexico—both of which may be—our cup will run over. The signs of the times are be ginning to be worth watching. The cities may first feel the blow; but, as heretofore, the country will have its full share in due sewn," New York Elections, The election throughout the State of New York for corporation officers took place on the 14th inst. In the city of New York, the vote for Muyor stood --Mickel (Loco) 22,126; Taylor, (Whig) 15- 061 ; Cozzens (Native) 8.208; Smith (Reform) 634. The Locofocos have carried a large majority of the City Council, In Brooklyn the Whige elected their Mayor by about 1000 majority. The election in Albany, on Tuesday, resulted in the succesa of the Whig ticket. William Perm.- lee was elected Mayor by a majority of 596, and fourteen of the twenty Alderman are Whigs. NEW 'roam CUSTOM9.-David McCartney, a Custom House officer, has been arrested for felling a man to the earth with a stone on election day, and causing his death. John Rose, another Cus tom House officer, has been arrested fur persuading others to vote illegally. C►PT►IN FRENONT-INTERNEIPPTNO.- The Union publishes the following extract of a letter just received in Washington, from „ Jalapa," March 27, 1846. " Letters from Mazatlan of the 4th inst. state that Captain Fremont. with his corps of observation, arrived at Sotter's Settle. ment, on the Sacremento, early in January; he is said to have discovered a good wag on road to Oregon, which is much nearer than any heretofore travelled. Lie had gone to Monterey, in Upper California, leaving his corps on the Sacramento. A Washington letter to the New York Telegraph says : "It is pretty well settled that Mr. Polkwill consent to be a candidate for re-election. If so, this will upset the calculations of a good many as pirants, who have been looking eagerly to the suc cession." Cr The M. E. Church in Warrenton, Vt., have unanimously protested against the action of the lat. Baltimore Conference in determining to remain under the jurisdiction of the Northern Church. A reiolution wan adopted in favor of transferring their circuit to the Virginia Conference, and calling a "..";unvention, in Fredericksburg, in May next, to further this object. EXPORTS or FLOOR, &C,—The exports of flour from Boston, from September Ist, to March SO, a period of seven months, has been 84,818 barrels. The exports from New York tor foreign ports, during the same time, amounted to 442,057 barrels. Pennsylvania Legislature Correspondence of tho Huntingdon Journal: THE " RIGHT OF WAY" PASSED—THE CENTRAL RAIL ROAD DILL SIGNED BY THE GOVERNOR. HAuniestno, April 17, Mt My Dear Captain There is nothing se's the Legislature to work in good earnest as effectu ally as to see the day of final adjournment, but a few notches ahead of them, with a lot of important Bills undisposed of on their hands. This bag been exemplified during the present week. Voting has at length succeeded to talking end several impor tant questions have been disposed of,—how well, remains to be tested by time and their constituents. The " RIGHT or WAY. " This Bill granting to the Baltimore and Ohio Rail Road company the privilege of continuing their road from Cumber land through Pennsylvania to Pittsburg, on certain conditions, was warmly debated during the fore part of the week, by the champions on both sides, as well as by the smaller fry who read speeches which had been prepared by themselves or some , body else for the occasion. Amongst the Cham pions who opposed the Bill none were superior to your old (though youthful) friend, John C. Hun ' kel, Esq., of Harrisburg, whose eloquencehas given him considerable celebrity in the Legislative Halls. At length a vote was taken upon the hat section of the Bill, on Thursday last, which resulted in its adoption, Yeas 50, Nays 48. Mr. Campbell of Luzern°, who would have voted against the Bill being sick, and Mr. Patterson of Blair, who ought to have done so, being absent. The bill then pas ead in detail the same day, on second reading, un dergoing some modifications—not very important. This morning coming up in order again, the same passed final reading. Yens 51, Nays 45. The bill must be returned to the Senate for con currence in amendments made by the House, the moat important of which. is the proviso offered by Mr. Kunkel, to prevent the act from going into effect before the 30th of July 1847, and providing that if a certain amount of the Stock of the Penn's. Rail Road be taken, and $1,000,000 actually be paid in, and 30 miles of the road be put under con tract at its Pittsburg terminus—all before that day --then this act ganting the right of way to the Baltimore and Ohio Company ,to be null and void. It is thought the Senate will concur in the amend ments, as with the meagre majority which the bill sustains in the House, it would be hazardous to risk it in the hands of a committee of conference. The general appropriation bill is in the hands of a committee of conference, having passed in both Houses, with amendments, which cannot be agreed upon. The principal of these is the School appro• priations. The House passed the bill with $2OO, 000 to this object. The Senate reduced it to $l5O, 000. I think the conference will restore the amount inserted by the House. Since the above was written, the committee of conference has agreed upon a report, corresponding with the above intimation, which report has been adopted in both blouses. So it is finally disposed of. The appropriation to the Western Reservoir which the Senate had proposed to repeal, was not meddled with in the report of the conference. So the appropriation to the Reservoir remains as by the former act. Tho bill authorizing the Canal Commiasionera to construct en out let lock or. the Delaware Division of the Pennsylvania Canal, at Wells Falls (some distance below the famous " Black's Eddy") passed final reading in the House this morning by a vote of 53 to 38. It has now passed in both Houses. It was ° log rolled" along with the " right of way" procession. The bill to abolish the Mayor's Court at Lances- I ter—a perfect sinecure—having nothing to do but draw a salary--has at length been passed in both Houses, as it has done at former sessions, and lwhether it will again be prevented from becoming a law, under some quibbling pretext, for the purpose of allowing the incumbent, to draw another year's salary, or not, remains to be seen. The bill to incorporate the York and Cumber land Rail Rood, which had previously passed the Senate came tip in the House, this morning, and Ipremed final reading with some amendments. Yeas 46, Nays 41. The " right of way" is thought to 1 be partially acquainted with this bill too, for the Cumberland members succeeded in getting an amendment on, to keep the road entirely on their side of tho river, with the privilege of connecting with the Cumberland Valley Road either at the West end of the Harrisburg Bridge or at Meehan ! icaburg. It was ordered in the House, this morning (on motion of Mr. Trego) that the $4OO of Plainfield notes, said to have been offered to Col. Piolet as a bribe, by M'Cook, shall remain on deposit in the Dauphin Deposit Bank, subject to the order of the Court of Quarter Sessions of Dauphin county, be. fore whom M'Cook is to be tried for the said alleged offence. A bill to incorporate the Black Mine Rail Road passed final reading in both houses, together with a host of other private bills, " too numerous to mention." Tits CENTRAL Roux!. It being understood that the Governor was about to veto the bill to in corpotate the Pennsylvania Rail Road Company, on account of some defects alleged to exist in its details relative to the powers reserved by the Legis lature to regulate the Company or repeal its charter, and vest the property in another Company ur in the State itself, in order to complete the work, a supple mental bill, to obviate these objections was got up on Monday—passed through both Houses and sent to the Governor, who the sumo day returned the bill and the supplement, with his approval. 8o the " middle route" men, may go to work now.— ' Their bill is a law. And they must go to work or the Baltimore and Ohio men will get ahead of therm We shall soon sae whether the Central road is a " humbug" or not. The Revenue Bill from the House ha. been the principal theme of discussion, in the Senate during the past week. The Committee of Finance in the Senate changed it so much that its own Father in the House would scarcely recognize his progeny.-- But when it got into committee of the whole it was worse dealt with still, and I doubt now whether it knows itself. I guess they are getting it up for tho fun of seeing it kicked over again. It is now on second reeding, at the 9th section. A supplement bill in relation to " Blair county" was pawed in the House and subsequently in tho Senate, with amendments, introduced by Mr. Mor rison. The House then concurred in the amend ments with additional amendment.; but the Cleik by mistake brought in a wrong message, and the bill was about to go to the Governor when the mite take was diacoversd, and the Senate then insisted on their amendments, and the bill is now in the House. , It is not very important, having reference only to the transfer of Suite, Mechanics Liens, are. from Huntingdon to he tried in Blair, where the parties residing in the latter county desire it. [The House,we learn receded from its amendments, and the supplement passed.—En.l A great many private bills were disposed of this afternoon between the two blouses in the shape of amendments, &e. The House spent a great por tion of the afternooa to.day on the bill to extend the Charter of the Bank of Commerce of Phil'a. It was passed on n third reading. The Senate pas• se d finally the bill to extend the Charter of tho Farmer's and Mechanics Bank of Philadelphia. The Rope for the Ferry at this place is not yet stretched. It is a tremendous; weight, and is too I much for the machinery employed. The original Icontractor has " guv it up." PHI. Webster and Ingersoll. The Washington correspondent of the N. York Herald, (Locofoco neutral) thus speaks of the Webster and Ingersoll controversy " This has been a tremendous week in Congress. The episode in the Senate came in upon the quiet monotony of the Oregon debate, likes tornado that has long been brewing in the horizon, but which has suddenly burst upon us in the middle of tho day. The old-black-maned lion of Massachusetts , . who has been, for some years past, the theme of abuse and detraction, by every pettifogging dema gogue in the country—of the cellar-door democra cy—that class who regard it aristocratic to wear is clean shirt, and as sn evidence of federalism to t.it found in contact with soap and water—old Died( Dan, we say, has been waked up, and has shaken himself; and has moved up the hill with the gates of Gaza upon his shoulders. No report of his late speech can give you crcn a shadowy idea of the second day of "the god-like'' in the Senate. Ho stood Ilk an isolated, stern, rag. ged cliff, in an open plain, with darkened clouds around its summit, and thunder muttering in them, and lightning flashing through them ; and a storm of hail and meteoric stones descending from them. In short, he loomed out as dark as a thunder-cloud, and the boldest felt something of terror in his pre sence. The greatest, or at least the most conspic uous, and unescapeable point in his second day, was that Hon. Charles Jared Ingersoll is not a man of truth. Never was mortal man more unequivocally explicit in denouncing the lie, without using the word, than Webster. Ho has raised a direct quo.- tion of veracity; and there is no escape front it. The fact is, Webster has been ape/scented man. All the dogs of party— " Trey, Blache and Sweetheart, Only see how they have barked at hirn." And they commenced again at the present see- Ilion, actually forgetting that the man himself was on the ground, and that there was a probability he might think fit to discharge his "seven vials of wrath," (us Mr. Dickenson was pleased to call the , wrath of his „ faithful adversary,") upon their humble and devoted heads." Mr. C. J. Ingersoll, with his very equivocal posi tion in the affections of the democracy, and anxious to divert attention from his equally equivocal posi tion upon the Oregon question, rather than to con fess himself, was driven, ex necessitate, to some thing startling in his closing address upon thy no tice, as Chairman of Foreign Affairs. Hence his assault on that common scope-goat of political hacks, that resort of patriot indignation of tho Round heads—Daniel Webster. His shoulders were broad, his forbearance had given a tacit assur ance that he would not notice it; and Charles Jar ed would reap the immortality of having disclosed to the democracy the latest, and deepest, and basest of Daniel's derelictions! Alas! for poor Charley. He counted without his host. Hewes caught nap ping that time; and the only regret is, that Mr. Dickenson had to coffer with him. But he stood as Charley's endorser, and he was bound to foot the bill. It was like drawing his eye-teeth, to be sure; brit ho had to do it. Mr. Ingeraoll's manner in the House yesterday was rather peculiar. His face was positively livid with mingled ferocity and fear'; for we know that the men was in fear. He stood before the house under the most scathing and withering denuncie firms of falsehood. Ho attempted not their refute lion ; because tie could not, we are apprehensive— he could not refute those blasting disclairnora of Webster; but will this extract that "emphatic monosyllable" so openly cast into the teeth of Charles Jared I No, sir. And what else? After having denounced the imbecility of Tyler and his administration, after having used him to his purposes, and then betrayed him, we find the gentleman actually crouching and creeping and whining, like a cur lashed out of the kitchen, at the feet of Tyler. We know some thing upon this point; but we also know that John Tyler will never turn traitor to Webster, to servo the purposes of Old Veto's own political deceiver. We shall have something more upon the subject presently. We may have no particular affection for a grizzly bear, but when we see a whole pack Of starveling wolves around him, we go for the bear— we'll fight for him, rather than look on in silence at such foul play. Go it, Webster! Hit 'em again. You have shown fight at last, and we like your style of °putting in" exceedingly. - 7 - (C. The Grain crops look exceedingly well in this neighborhood at present. The earth, however, is becoming exceedingly dry, and a rain very nsuclx needed.