'IIIE BALTIMORE TROUBLE, As we go to ptess we receive the unex pected news tkat, Governor Swatin has re fno'red the Baltimore Police Cotnmission- The "evidenee, so - far as it has reached tettainly seemed to warrant no such 'decision: We hope the. Governor has not itcted Witnout the clearest and most decided evicljnce; for he has, in the whole ease, takeli upon himself a..very serious respon sibility. --, We suppose that the Commissioners will, acting on several precedents, decline t„,give up their offices, and thusoblige the Men nominated in places by the Gov ernor to move the c.ourts to oust' them. Thug the matter may be peaceably and arid poperly tested.and decided. . . Swann should attempt to 11K. force, as his remark ) about calling on . the President would seem to hint, he would put.firmself so gravely in the wrong,, that he could not expect the support or coun tenance of the public.—.Y. Eve. Post. • The Alabania The iLondon Tintes onco more urges - the appointment of a commission to settle 1.13,3 Alabarha chili - Ds. ; When, during the .I;var, -- scinte hot-beads were advocating a Aleclaration of war against England, on cc gook (:* the Alabama's injuries to our commerce, the EVENING POST urged pa tience, on the ground that very soon after the iebellicia was crushed, England would bag us, as a favor to her, to adcept of full „payment for all damages inflicted. : The fret isi the Alabama precedent hangs over the British. government like a nightmare. Nothing wonld be so annoy ing or embarrassing now, to England, as for us to refuse payment for our luSsee, and accept the arguments of .English writers and officers during the war as presenting the true Meaning of the neutrality laws, and the whole duty of a neutral towards a belligerant..• •, !We need not be impatient, therefore, about the settlement, of the Alabama claims; England is much more 'anxious to pay than we are to receive. It -would be, however, a pleasant revenge for us if the •I'ories, who now have power, should settle these claims; for they 'were the fast friends of the rebels during the whOle war; they contributed money, and suppo l n in Parlia ment; and they insisted Unit the whole `Alabama bUsiness was legitimate and right. It. will. not do them any harmlto eat a mess of humble pio baked in a Yankee oven.— Eve. Post.. At Their Old Work. The Northern Democrats, in urging the s~uth; to reject and 'spurn' the Consti4u tional Amendment, are, under the guise of ;friendship, doing the same sea: of harm to tithe .'Southern people that they have so 'often done in timer past. Everybody knows how these 'same Northern Demo -1 cratie leaders encouraged the Smith in its Violent Pro-slaverYz policy ten years ago, encouraged it iu 'the course that precipita ted rebellion six years ago, and again in persevering in . treason three years ago. Andeverybody knows how terribly the South suffered in each instance from .fol !Plying the course , which the Northern Democratic leaders •advised. We should think that even , these Pachydermatous leaders themselves wolild begin to feel some eoinpunctions in the premises, and desist from their foolish course, so often ] con= demned by the Northern . peo - ple, so disas trous to the Southern, people, and K, dam- iiging ; to themselves. , But it seems that fur them, in this cage, misfortune tenches tm lesson, suffelilla no wisdom: There are political advantages which they are mad enough to think even yet they will -gain, anal they will persist in pursuing them, though general ruin he the result. If the ,Southern people ,will pow spurn the advice rehich the Northern Democratic leaders give them in regard to the Amendment, and adopt.the course which is dictated at onto by expediency and necessity, they will not only improve their• own political fortunes, but will put .the, last nail in the coffin of a party which ought to have been buiied seven years oho. Coming Evengs. The latest advicesl from the 'Eta fc(re- Lode'atreptentlOns convulsion in that quar ter of the globe. The little 'spark of war kiiidled in Canada is rapidly spreading in to a wide conflagration, in which what re mains of the -great Ottoman Empire will be swept away, and the dominions of the Czar he extended to' the shores of the 'Med iterranean. There is more prospect of the near .approach of this inevitable event than ever before. It is stated that ; the armies' of Russia are moving down to the lower Danube, that Russiatueeruiting officets are at work in Greece, a4that the authorities of Greece cooperate with them. , Attorney General "Meridith has been cffored a re appointment hy \ the Governor sloct, Rpiiid HOerelfse. oses Parallc-I. Returns lately ten in to the Census' 141 s The Eadical !Unionists in the Western II 1 l .• 1 Office give tis an interesting glimpse into i Statc€ are enjoy;pg, !a parallel ran by some : the growing iprosperitY of the country. It I Wit on the praitiics, between our Johnson seem froth [them, 4t, netwithstamline liMeses". and thelMeses of Scripture.s,to the [l t hem, ravagesiif the lat 4: war,ithe population effect thfit: . . . . . , of the United States .has. been and is in- Mosesled his people throngli - the Sea; creasing at he rate la a Million a year. Johnson fled his into it. Moses asked Pharaoh to let the people The Westciln and North-Western States \'\ stern 1 • 1 go; Johnson was asked by Congress to let are mainly. absorbing Ois added population.) the people go, but would'nt. 1 lases cast down and broke the table's of the law; so has Johnson, Moses erected a serpent in the wilderness and th& people lived; Johnson erected a serpent .in New Orleans and the people died. 1 1 MoseS slew an Egyptian; stews Johnson sle liiinself;! • . , , NoW that thelielection is over, the people would be glaljto know just when negroes are to. been voting, marrying white women, filling fi i ont pews in churches pr j edicted by the itlemocratic era tors. When is the ddik era to dawn? . , . SIVINGI I , MG ROUND , have faith in Andrew . Johnson; but if the ful lowin frOm the pep of Col. McClure of the Franklin Repository indicates anything at all, it is that the. recent elections have sobered Andy.' The Colonel says in his I:st paper: • 'We speak advisedly when we say that be [Andrew Joh . rison]' asshred a leading 'RepublicanM. C. within the last ten days, that be would be in• harnabny 'with Cort igress in a very short time ;?hod he excused his removals by saying that; he had.rewov ed but few comparatively' that he lost largely by ,it; that every appointment of fended all who were 'disappointed, while his appointa4 very often voted the Repub livan ticket to save themselves in the Sen 'ate. . It does not make mnehAffereme to the people wheiher Andi!e4 !Johnson comes round or not. They have res' olved. to restore the.coMitry till their own way,. and they will dd it. -1 AWFUL LriNG.—A6 Copperhead pa pers state that withip six months 537 32,- 000,000 of indebtednis& has been paid off as a result of Johnqin's' Administration This is a deliberate falsehood. It *as the • .1 Congress whichof the acts of the people's,' Congress which Andrew Joluipon opposed all the time while his acts during that period tended to destroy con Pence and business, and impair the fec6pt'z of' the n goverment. • Andrew Johnson his made himself. a mere cypher in the adminiStration of the gov ernment, by his treasonable conduct. THE President, insists that the Copper heads fastened onto him and defeated him, , • while the.CopperheaLis say that the Presi dent siezed their skirts and sunk them in the bottoiniks pit. you pays your money and you Lakes your choice! A disease resembling cholera carried off 'several persons suddenly in Lebanon during the past NVeek.. The Courier says it has, no existence there at all now. The matter .• was cons:derably exaffgerated. , • A great 7 meteoricisho;wer expected to tako place the night of November 13th and 1-1-0 4 ! The last ono : occurred on the morning Of - the 13th of November, 1933., -' Quelled( suffered terribly by fire on • the 14th ult. Two thousand houses