''...,...,...1at.. -. .:.(t . 0:.b . ..,.T . ttf)tt... - 01.i. - :•. - 64t . H ..-.' .. t.i.:ct,Ito,ttr:.•..' VOL. XVI.-50. THE STAR AND BANNER Is published every FridayEvening,in the County -Building, above the _Register and Recorder's Office, by DAVID A. BUEHLER. Ir• paid' in advance or NVl;.hin the year, $2 00 per annum if not paid within the year, to:.: 50. No paper discontinued until all arrearages arc paid up, except at the option of the Editor. Singles copies G} cents. A 'failure to notify a discontinuance will be regarded as a new engagement .thivertisements not exceeding a square inserted three times for $1 00—every subsequent insertion 25 cents. Longer ones, in the same proportion. All advertisements not specially ordered for a giv en time, will be continued until forbid. A liberal reduction will be made to those who advertise by the year. Job Printing .ot all kinds executed neatly and Promptly, and on reasonable term;. Letters and Counnuairaiimy to the Editor, (ex cepting such as contain Money or the names of new Subscribers,) must be POST r.un, in older to secure attention. CITY AGENCY.—V. B. PA r.mcn, Esq. at the corner of Chesnut and Third streets, Philadelphia ; HO Nassau street, /Vete York; and Southeast cor ner of Baltimore and Cal% ert street's, /With:orr— is our authorized Agent for receiving Advertise ments and Subscriptions to the "Star," and collect ing and receipting th.: same. SELLING AT COST. rr HE undersigned, being desirous of clo- Aff sing flusittess, will offer .././T COST, from this date, their entire Stock of . • aNconz, by 1171olesale or-Relnil. The Goods hay . ing been bought for Gash, can be had very /ow. All are invited (Merchants and oth ers) to call and examine for themselves.— Tho,se desirous Of securing bargains will do well to call soon. .llso, for Sale, THE "(OUSE & LOT. The Store Room is admit- T,l j' I ted to be the most dtisirable in :1 4, the place. The. Property- will be sold low. J. M. STEVENSON, Ja. & CO. Ge.ttysburg, Jan. 16, 1846. NOTICE.. T IIE business heretofore conducted by SAMUEL FAIINESTOCIC, as my Agent in Gettysburg, Adams county, l'a., is this day discontinued and is hereby dissolved. All persons having claims against said A gency are hereby notified to present them to Samuel Fahnestock, late Agent, for pay ment, and all those indebted to said Ageti cy are hereby earnestly requested to make payment on or before the first day of 11- pril next, to Samuel Fahnestock, late A gent, who is alone authorized to settle the samc„as it has become necessary to close the same as speedily as possible. ISAAC BAUG lIER. Ot Jan. 29, 1846 NOTICE. T HE undersigned hereby gives notice that he will continue the Mercantile business on his own account at the old stand in Gettysburg, Pa. He (eels assu red his long experience in business and fa cilities to purchase goods cheap, will be an inducement for his customers to con tinue their patronage, and would hereby tender his sincere acknowledgments for past favors. SAMUEL FAILNESTOCK. Gettysburg, Jan. 30. Ot D. IDURKE UI, ITTORNEY .47' .L.l TT'. PDURKE E, having resumed the • practice of law, has taken the office formerly occupied by William 11. Kurtz, Esq. in Market square, one door from the store of F. A. and S. S. Small, in the Bor ough of York. During,the sitting of the Courts in Adams county he can be found at his room in the public house of James McCosh, in the Borough of Gettysburg. Feb. 13. 3t. ZIV.O Za ka, 1.8 •A. First-rate Second-hand CARRIAGE Newly Repaired and Trimmed. WPCountry Produce will be taken in payment. Euritiire at - the . oflice of the "Star and Banner." 1111 1 1 LOWER. SEEDS, from the eelebra .ll ted Gardens .of E. RISLEY & Co., N. York-7—a large variety.just received and for sale at the Drug Book Siore of , •. S. H. BUEHLER. Gettysburg, Jan. 23, 1846. (1 ARDEN! SEEDS—A . fresh supply . 1 r lust received and foriftle at the Drug Store of . . S. lI:BUEHLER. Gettysburg, Jan. 16, 1846. Markstatithing, N 'all its branches,: will be attended 51, by good workmen, at the. Foundry the subscriber. - • , • THOS. WARREN. Gettysburg, Lim 10. IRUKT OEM 63E1 11311 IP.LXIIN IN EXCrItNOP: Pun sunsenirries, 47" - 711.18 OFFICA. T E It DI s . ORIGINAL, Songs to L • • • • PART SECOND I've sung that I would ne'er forget thee, Until this constant heart of mine, Upon whose shrine supreme I've set thee, Has ceased to throb in death's cold shrine And this is true, if aught on earth,— If faith, if love, it heaven be true! If e'er the soaritn; soul gave birth To hopes e'en death cannot subdue For I have lived on shattered beams Of mem'ry, darted from the past— On cherished scenes of bliss, whose gleams Devotion's spell have o'er me cast. And oil, when 'mid earth's heartless minions, Without a kindred to my breast, Memory, with fond love's trembling pinions, Hies to thine image—there to rest. I've given my love—my life—for broken Day-dreams ; I've vainly sacrificed My heart, without response or token, To tell that it is not despised. Can the soul lose forever thus ? Without a hope to rest upon ? To give its flow an impetus O'er doubt, to soar to faith's high throne? I blame thee not, if thy heart tells thee ° Thy spirit is not like my own, That *tw!ll nohmingtc 1)0 ,repels me— To prove lite's bitterness alone: The spirit cannot be controlled ; The elements of earth and sky— Eternal ;Ives, yet untold— • Are mingled '‘vith its destiny. The world U:Mild mock—but I must feel The panes; the tear, despair's deep sigh, If, for thy pi!y, I'd 'reveal - The secret of my agony. No! I am proud! I have a soul That bends to none beneath the sky! That spurns the power of earth's control, And strives to conquer stilly! HARP OF THE MOUNTAIN et • Pennsylvania College. MISCELLANEOUS. 1 VISIT TO THE STAVE MARKET OF • CONsTANTINOPLE. Such is the title of a most interesting paper in a late number of Chamber's Edinburg Journal ; whi. h gives a graphic account of a visit made to the mart of female slaves, in Constantinople, as recently as May, IS4 5 ; —together with general views of the system, its causes. and the probabili- ties and poSsib•lities of its extinction. For tlieFe portions we have not space to spare, but the "visit" itself we recommend t . the reader : "At length we reached the place of our destination. It was a long low building, forming a (filar° of considerable size.— We moue ed a few unsteady dirty steps, and found ourselves on a large wooden platform, running the whole length of the building. It was divided into pens, shut in by wooden railings, in which were con fined the black slaves ; whilst through the open doors leading into •the house itself, we could distinguish the. veiled forms of the 1 white women grouped behind the wooden creens. On benches, so placed as to coin ! mand a view of both, were seated the buy ers, for the--most part heavy, ill-looking Turks, dressed in the hideous costume in- I troduced by the late Sultan, and occupied as usual in smoking, though the, quick glance of their calm, piercing eyes, seemed to take in every thing around in complete detail. The sellers stood before them, vociferating and gesticulating in the true 1 oriental manner. The court below, which we were to visit aftewards, was filled with ! all the less valuable part of this human merchandise, consisting of those afflicted with any infirmity, very aged persons, and young children. It was some time before we comprehended the scene, in all its de tails ; it is not to he wondered at that -we were stupified in witnessing such a sight on EUropean ground. At length we approach ed one of the pens, determined to examine, to the fullest extent,lnto all that was re volting and horrible in this market of hu man life. It was-filled with young Cir cassian women, some of whom were re markably handsome. They were seated close together on the ground, seemingly in an attitude of listless despondency, with' ; their long white garments flowing round them. "AS we came up, they fixed their large dark eyes upon us, and I certainly never met a gaze of more unutterable sadness.— !Nile conviction thrilled through me; as my eyes met theirs, that these unfortunate beings are not, as modern philanthropists would have us believe, utterly unconscious of, and incapable of fooling- the dishonor and wretchedness of their fate. I felt, as I stood before them, arid encountered their soft melancholy glance, that they looked on me as the free and - happy stranger come to gaze on them in- their infamy and their misery. Presently the slave trader, to whom the poor creatures belonged,eame Up, followed by a- tall phlegmatic looking Turk, with the unmeaning features and coarse corpulency- wIA.:I - 1 are so character iStic of this nation. 'The merchant ad vaticed,•tind seizing one of the slaves by the arm, forced her to-standup before this . personage, who, it _appeared, wished to buy her. He looked pt her. fora few Min utes from .head to foot, while her master descanted on her .merits ; then he placed one hand on the back of her neck, whilst GEI V IVSBURG, PA., FRIDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 9. 7 , 1846 Far the "Star and Banner." rociing he jerked her head rudely with.the other,l Ire3TAN• REATNESS.—When the funeral io . as to force her to open her mouth, that !service - for Louis XIV. was performing, id!inight examine her teeth ; he roughly the church was hung in black,' a magnifi handled her neck and arms, to ascertain if cent mausoleum was raised over the bier. the flesh were firm ; and, in short, the cx- the- edifice was filled with trophies, and amination Was such, that I do •not hesitate other memorials of the monarch's past glo to declare have seen a horse or a dog ries; daylight was excluded, but innocent more tenderly treated under !similar cir- tapers supplied its place, and the ceremony ctnstances. After all, the decision was ! was attended by the most illustrious- per, unfavorable, for the Turk turned away with sonages:of the realm. Massilon ascended a contemptuous movement of the head, and the pulpit. contemplated in silence for SOlllO the sla,ye-dealer, in a rage, thrust back the time the scene before hint, then raised his unfordinate creature, who sunk down trem- arms to heaven, looked down, and slowly tiling amongst her companions in misery: said, in a solemn and subdued tone.---- ; "My "Neither my friend nor I had uttered a brethren, Cod only is Great." With one word during this scene; we stood silent impulse, all the auditory rose from their .side by side, and mechanically followed seats, and reverently bowed to the altar. our guide, who led us into the,,adjohung en-' !I • , nrOT A BAD Her. —Vapixec vs. EngliNh. closure. Here we became witnesses to a —The Vicksburg Intelligencer recalls the sale that was just about to be completed. story of;a quiet but enthusiastic Yankee A most interesting-group presented itself' "wise, some years since, was travelling in a before •us ; two young' female slaves, both . with pleasing countenances, stops! together stage coach with two Englishmen, who an closely embraced, the arm of the one round ,toyed him very much by running down every thing they saw in the century, and the neck of the other; their attitude, as freely determining tiiftevcry thing in Eng pointing them out at once as sisters. well as the strong likeness between them, y land was deeidedi.auperior. Jonathan B their side was an African slave-dealer, in bore-it, but impatietly. After some time whose ferocious countenance it seemed im- a thunder storm broke over them, the hor possible to discern a trace of human feeling; sec dashed off in alarm, and the English he was armed with a large heavy st i c k , men were nearly dead with fright, when with which he drove them to and fro, liter- suddenly a bolt of lightning struck the two fly like a herd of animals. Three or four near horses, killing them instantly, and ar- T ur k s were discussing, with cons id era bl e resting the stage, which, in the stldden animation;the•priee of a beautiful woman.: Plunges of the leaders b ws upset. Jona but the b • argam had been struck . jest before than was the first to conie,out, as the Eng we came in,: - and-one7of the party, a stout, l with fear, he exclaimed : tslnnen - crawled out,' badly hurt, , and lalf , good-lookihg man, - was paying down the dead money. ,When this was completed, with • "There, gaul darn :ye, have ye any better an imperious movement of the hand, he thunder than that in England?" motioned his newly pifrehased slave to fol low hini. It was the youngest _and the most timid" of the two sisters whom he had selected; nothing could have been more! painful than to watch the intense, the ter rified anxiety, with which both had follow ed the progress of the sale; and now it was concluded, and they knew that the mo ment of separation was at arrived, she whose fate had been scaled, disengaged herself, and turning round, placed her two hands oil her. sister's shoulders, with afirm grasp, and gazed in her eyes. Not words, not tears, could hare expres sed one half of the mute, unutterable des pair that dwelt in that long heart-rending gaze. It were hard to say which face was most eloquent of misery : but the Turk was impatient: he clapped his hands to - (retnei'. This was a well-known signal. A t ' slight tremor shook the frame of the young slave ; her arms fell powerless at •her, side, and she turned to follow her master. The voiceless but agonized farewell was over. In another moment we could just distin guish her slender figure threading its way through the crowd, in company with the other slaves belonging to the Turk.. Her sister had hid herself behind her compan ions, and now sat on the ground. her head stink upOn her folded arms. Our guide would have led us into another pen, but W?e had seen enough ; we hurried through the various groups till we reached the open court; then for the first time we addressed each other, and the same words burst si multaneously from the lips of both—"C'est infante !" "But I have heard," I said, willing to relieve myself from the painful oppression this sight had caused; "that these poor slaves are brought up to this situation from their infancy, and, knowing nothing else, do not feel their degradation or their mis ery." "Let us ask Joseph," said my friend, shaking his head incredulously ; "he is an intelligent person and can doubtless initiate us into the mysteries of the slave-trade." "Are these wretched creatures born in cap tivity ?" he asked addressing the guide ; "or if not, how are they procured ?" -"Very easily, monsieur," said Joseph, composedly. "None of these arc born slaves, and ,t,lley are all procured in the same manner. Any paella who wishes an addition to his establishment, mans a ves sel with a well-armed crew, and sends it over to Circassia. .They go on. shore, penetrate some little distance into the coun try, attack the first quiet village they come to, burn it to the ground if they meet any resistance; and carry °Wall the women and children. They throw them in a heap in-, to the hold of the ship, and bring them tb Constantinople. The pasha chooses what he thinks fit for himself, and then sends the rest to the' slave-market. Some of the more extensive slave dealers often under takt;.- such expeditions on. their own ac— count." "But after they arc bought they are well treated, are they not ?" I asked. "In many eases they are. It depends entirely owthe temper of the master: he has the power of life and death over them ; and at all events the bastinado is always more or less in tile." "And what is the fate of the children who arc brought in such numbers. into • the world in consequence of this most infa mous system ?" asked my friend. "They are sold as slaves," said Joseph. "Do you mean to say that they sell their own flesh and blood ?", I exclaimed. "Certainly they•d& They can acknowl ledge them, and give them their freedom if alb . ) , choose, but they never do. - They have the children of their wives to provide for, and, that is enough." We asked, no more questions, for we had heard quite sufficient. Revolve 4.,y-eur_mi n d what you have last been • BREACH OF PROMISE.—AIIOther of these , cases was tried at the Essex county (New York) Circuit, a week or two since. The parties were Fanny L. Orley and Rod erick C. Phipphin, olCrowapoint. The courtship had' been three years in progress and Mr. Phipphin had uttered the fatal word. Nay, more. He bOrrowed a &l iar of Fanny's brother-in-law "to pay the marriage fee," and - • the same night he went to St. Lawrence county; 'where, without the loss of time, he married another- WO man., The jury gave 'a verdict of $lOO damages. • 1306TS.AND SHOES Is MASSACHUSETTS.— The shoe basiness anro—' w ee the lead- In the old Bay. Waite. We learn from the statistical tables recently published by the Secretary of the Common wealth', that 20,890,312 pairs of boots and shoes were produred there last year, val ued at $14,798 ; 140. There are employ ed in the business .15,897 peisons, of whom upwards of 18,000 are females. FOREIGN. Arrival of the Steamer Cambria. Great change in the Commercial Policy of Great Britain—Sir Robert reel in favor of a total Re peal of the Corn Laws—Great excitement in England —Meeting of Parliatnent—Pacific feel ing.evinced towards the United States—Mr. Pa kenham's Refusal of the 49th degree not appro ved by his government—Speeches of Sir Rob ert Peel, Mr. Hume, and Lord John Russell,' Reception of the War Speeches.in Congress— Difficulty between Mr. King, the American .Min ister and Mr. Guizot—The latter's reply to the President's charge of an interference in the af fairs of,Tcxas, &a. The news by the arrival of the Cambria was expressed by the U. S. Gazette front Boston to Philadelphia several hours .in advance of all its coiemporaries—having reached the latter city on Thursday even ing the 19th inst. The news is of the most important and gratifying kind. Parliament had assem bled, and the Queen's speech, as well as the tone of the Press, with regard to) the United States, is of the most pacific char acter. Both Sir Robert Peel and Lord John Russell sdisapproved of the course pursued by Mr. Pakenham on the Oregon question, in refusing the offer of Mr. Bu chanan, without consulting his government. Expressions of regret are made on all hands, that the difficulties between the two coun tries about Oregon are yet unsettled. Sir Robert Peel has annouced an im portant and radical modification of the Corn. Laws, which has produced an immense sensation throughout England. Mr. Secretary Walker's Report on the Tariff had been communicatedto the Brit ish Govrnment long before it was made known even to the proper committee of the United States House of Representatives. The new pOliCy of. the United States, as indicated in the report of the Secretary Of the Treasury, has coMmanded much at tention in the British Parliament. Sir Robert Peel spoke highly ofthe report iii the great speech in which he introduced the new Tariff; and subsequently, at the request of Lord Montcagle, the Govern ment consented to reprint the document, - and place it on the table of both houses of Parliament—an honor which was pr 47 bly never aivardcd to tiny similar docu ment before. All these facts prate the desire which the .British Government has to make her future relations with the-Uni ted States as-amicable and as business-like as possible. 1 . . . From Wilmer and Smith's European Timer. 4 • • The steamship Cambria,. commanded by our excellent and esteemed friend Capt: Juditinsoakea out to-day the most import ant and gratifying intelligence that, ever left the shores of. Great Britain. Si—rlOliert. Peel, England's powerful and brilliant Min ister—has developed his future, commer cial policy. ; It is at once simple and com prehensive ; and, under its operations, the exchange of commodities between this country (England) and the United States ! will be carried to an extent, and will be MU Wally productive of advantages, greater, to quote not irreverently the words of the sacred volume, "than eye ha's yet seen or the heart conceived." The new scheme embraces, with a 101 l sense of their impor-: tance, the principles of free-trade—repudi ates all protection for commerce, manufac tures and agriculture ; admits corn duty free at the end of three years, with a scale in the interim, which Willgprobably oscillate between four and six shillings per quarter, (eight bushels,) and at once admits Indian corn and buckwheat free of all duty what- To the details of this great measure we earnestly entreat the attention of o . commercial readers. - Great Britain at the ,present o:toment is in a blaze of excite ment; men talk and think of nothing else ; they have set their hearts upon securing the great fiscal scheme for the regenera= tion of the country,-which the' Premier has laid before Parliament; and they desire to curtail the period fixed for the total extinc tion of the corn laws. The friends of peace and progression on this side of the--water hope—earnestly and sincerely hope—that the new policy will bind Atnerica to us by the ties of amity, brotherhood, and inter rest, and .that the miserable squabbling about a barren :waste Av - illgi;e way to more liberal, civilized, and comprehensive - views. The immediate effects of the new tariff, on the most prominent articles of American exports, we have noticed elsewhere. Alto gether; the snbject, in its various phases, is most important that ever crossed the Atlantic since the introduction of ocean navigation ; and all that is now wanting is for the government and people of the Uni ted States r 6 meet us in a kindred spirit, and, in the true spirit of commerce and of friendship; 'forget Ihe'pa6t, and run a gen-' erous race of mutual happiness and pros perity for. the future. In a word, the new scheme is es near an approximation to the principles of free trade as can be safely consistent with the policy- of a country which has its credit to support and the interest of an overwhel ming national debt to pay; Sir Robert Peel has ack nowledgeattle principle that du-. ties ought to be laid lor revenue and not for protection, and his future policy, it is clear, will be directed to that end. But it would be too much to assume that he can carry out the new course of action on which he has now entered, without a desperate strug gle, with the powerful interests which be lieve themselves to be jeoparded. The protectionists are boiling with fury, and the language recently held in the House of Lords by •the Dukes of Richmond and: Buckingham indicates the fierce passions which sway the breasts of British landlords towards the most clear-headed practical statesman of the age. Agriculture, they say, cannot exist without protection; but Peel says it must exist without it at the end of three years. Thus arrayed, the hostile forces face each other with scowling front, and in the centre stands Peel looking bravely on, preserving a placid dignity in the midst of Ale onslaught from either party. In the House of Commons the Premier is omnipotent, and, however furiously the war must rage out of doors, it is believed that he will be enabled to carry his tariff by a majority ot eighty—certainly by more than fifty. When matters come to a crisis, and the free-traders in the popular branch of the Legislature have to decide between sacrificing Peel and hii plans, they will be come, it is believed, less crotchety and more practical. Looking at the queqion, then, in every point of view, taking into account the Ares ' ent position of parties, the advent of a new election, the flush of triumph ,which man ties the cheeks of the free-traders, the gloom and anger which reign in the faces of the protectionists—viewing the state of the registry, the condition of the food market, our relations with the U. States, the ab sence of an excitement except on the ques tion of free-trade—we arrive at the conclu sion not only that Sir Robert Peel will pass ltis new Tariff triumphantly, but that he will do so at the present Parliament. THE QUEEN'S . SPEECH. Opening. of Parliament.—On Thursday the 22d day of January, Parliament was opened by the Queen in person. The roy al procession left Buckingham Palace soon after two o'clock, and arrived at the House of Lords soon after. • Her Majesty having passed through the royal gallery, which was much crowded, entered the. House of Lords, and,.after the usual formalities delivered the royal speech in which die following paragraph occurs : , s j‘„l . regret that the conflicting claims of Great Britain and the United States in re spect of-the territory on the Northwestern coast of 'America, although they have 'been made the subject of repeated negotiation, still remained (insetted. You may be as sured that no effort, consistent with na tional honor, shall be wanting on my part to bring this question to an early and .peuce= ful termination," The following paragraph from the same speech,indicates* that the Queen sympathi zes with, Sic Hobert in his new meavures: 4 , .1 recommend you to take into your early consideratiOn whether-the prinetplei, On which you: have acted may' not with, adillfiNte be yet more sitsnsi).ely applied, I WHOLE NO. 830. whether it may not be in your power, after a careful review existing duties upon nra,. ny articles, the proddce or, manufactures of other countries, to make such further• reductions and remissions as may tend to insure the continuance of the greatbeneflts to which I have adverted, and by enlarging our commercial intercourse, to strengthen the bonds of amity with foreign 'sowers. Any measures which you may adopt foref fecting these great objects, will; I am con vinced, be accompanied by such : precau-. bons as shall prevent permanent loss to the : revenue, or injurious results to any of this. great interests of the country. I have full reliance on your-just and ditty passionate consideration of matters so deep ly affecting the public welfare. It is my earnest prayer with the blessings of Divine Providence on your councils, you may be enabled. to promote friendly feelings bo ,sween different classes of my subjects, pro vide additional security for the continu- , ...4 ance of peace, and_ to maintain -content ment and happiness at home, by increas ing the comforts ofthe great body of my, people. The Queen emphasized 'portions of. the speech which referred to the continu ance of peace and to the reduction of the tariff." ---In-the-House of Commons on the :first night of the session, the ministerial and op. , position leaders both Yolunteerod- explana tions on the circumstimccs which led to the late ministerial crisis. These . expla nations now belong to history. Their in terest is merged in the still greater plena for the future which the financial scheMe of the Premier has developed. Peel, it would.seem, supported, by two or three °rids celleagues, wished to open. the ports for the admission of Corn, duty : free, when the potatoe disease becetne a ' harming. The majority of the Cabinet , op- posed his views, and finding their differen ces only widened by discussion, they went in a body to the Isle of Wight, where the Queen was then staying, and placed their resignation in her hands. •Tbesubsequent results are patent to the world.. To Lord John Russell was confided the task of. for ming a Cabinet, wliich broke doirn through the difference between Lords Grey and PalinerSton. 00n a subsequent night howeVer the Duke of ratted upon the Duke of Wel lington to supply : hio--,crbtua, faced thelequest hy asking whether.the hero of a hundred fights had received her Majesty's permission to do so. The Doke,. with the frankness and promptness which mark his conduct, immediately •launched into . a history of theaffair. It was,a very different. story. from that of his oily and ap pearance-loving colleague at, the head, of the government. The Cabinet differed about the Corn-laws, and resigned. The Duke disliked the repeal of these lawS,hut, he disliked a difference in the Cabinet more. 'l', preserve unaniinity of opinion he wag ready to sacrifice any law—to give up any pet scheme. Accordingly, when the Whigs, through divided councils, broke down, Sir Robert Peel wrote to the Duke, who was in the country at the time, telling him that he would meet Parliament alone if necessary, and propose a repeal of the corn laws.— The Duke immediately gave in_his adhe sion, and highly praised the "pluck" of hie , right honorable friend in coming to such a determination; it was what he would have done himself under the pressure of 'tirnilar circumstances. ENGLAND AND THE U. STATES. - In the House of Commons on Jab. Sir Robert'Peel, in reply to some obser- ". vations of Mr. Hume upon the Queen's speech, remarked that he had no hesitation in announcing the sincere desire Of lig_ Majesty's government, for the interests of i Great Britain, for the interests of the U. States, and for the interests of the civilized world, to continue to strain every effort. which is consistent with national honor, for,the • purpose of amicably terminating those disputes. He thought it Would be the greatest tnisfornine if a contest 'about the Oregon between two such powers as England and the U. States, could not, by the exercise of.moderation and good sense be brought to a perfectly ' honorable and satisfactory conclusion. (,sheers.) The. Oregon and River Plate Questions. —Lord John Russell saidlie wieitetabout to allude to those subjects which had been before the House last night, but there were two questions in that part of the speech from the throne which related to our for eign relations, which he- wished fortomo explanation upon. First, with regard to the Oregon question. Me entirely partic ipated in the feelings of the right honora ble gentleman, both that peace with the U. States was most desirable; and that we ought-to do nothing that was inconsistent with the honor of this country. But certain statements had- been put forth in America, and reported to have been made to the Congress of the U. States, which made it dem:dile . that-some expla nation should' be given upon the subject. He had thought that the Presidentor the U. 'States had last year made di3ClaratiOn's ' to Cougress on this "Object whtch Ittle - not Conformable with 'the lized countries; or to the friendly . felittloits of the two 'States but it , 'filottld, 4pritlek• however that a -posilion mise had proposition been niAde from the 'l/17esideUtto • he; Majesty's GoVerntnent,:iiiidlietteitit John Russell) conceived thetAhitt: lion had ellangedihe-itatirotdit' Tie proposition -Welt iiitightqmg •