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Home > Documents > New York Daily Tribune.(New York, NY) 1857-12-12. · Hatsomewill sap.Pt-rhap*¦n-Uher ofthese...

New York Daily Tribune.(New York, NY) 1857-12-12. · Hatsomewill sap.Pt-rhap*¦n-Uher ofthese...

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I.Aimm; Lovr.i ink** .T>.» fa/reat fad* the .imIU> l»«'.t m\ ¦..»»*«"' Thlett ititUn « *.?> ore e«cepO<.<i Mm .*». .. »^» ic .». ft* tri leaafara Hat» a»M by K»o\.* ! Hfida»; aud rultnritV. Iii» hM i'it ¦( »i.n..-'i b»»it'.i rev>rr«iri;:. fid ,«.. tat rlirrabuny. f irrn. «n1 tVt'tO t? f f J>ri. Is t-<i..»l t * eny oat wannt» i.i >4 io Uii« c-. ¦* ..»»»De.-. HM uew «tyte of C«r« U . <. ktkf «i t^i!"f Oums Ma i m./ m I ano Win how 8ii\Ltr« Cur if ruft Ctsa. Bat I Kiel It* Wt Br -tiwuy, W*ee .fill w4 ehnice «t'-o* of B-n-^trl.e g»üu, ret'ie, *Aot«u4 Uta».at, Ct.rwea, wtub. «r» caTtced «t .«.« iiiaa «tHt vf I».for*«Wo«. Oar ttoeA of "Vli,*,.w B*aVfea it BM U-v»it hi SeW-Tot*. ins" oa< .»«¦«rlor roaowlariuv f. Bit a* *¦*!*. M bf laeia a*!. lie* other bo' Hi a> ) R Mil i5s, Pat* »' 4 Mr -Ii-«- tj »' O'tMnitUu »»(.!.>», it ci»»'.lr reduced p»v,et. g ft *tot inn, Ha aX Broeowty. CrtA» at i, B< ak» I amd lliv- U r ;»rt» aavitaie-it turn ..BeteS (t aiTAll rWI Cll'l In Pi al 00 a b<>«, 61 Nmmj 4h i/MrK . Tbu Wi tTiii.u The Weathkb! »*o mf) buy your Bv(k-» » a i.an ml DbawbbaoIJ. r*. tfc*>«l,cotpatof Balt' iitiid 8r< in;._ Sr.wiN«. Mammms r«>K 996..Ths LajmbaV C«iMr«Ntoa B«.<*i*o Mamiim it lae t evt ia eeery r-«p«ct iir lau Cr i.w root li.eeiit.-d 'C*i»j are warranted to i;K- u'.Vac ru.». I'atTY't Petal: Ufh <* No '»7T Broadwty._ To YoiHo Piiymi ..In ail ir.n»mmiiti>r> cease, er*, at a nileof peaer*. BapawStlBBA warte ft: it prefect, (ire a d<e» <f BajJlOttTH'k PlUUl BWt tbe uoai(.mlBt trill be found elv«r« oure raacaaetLle. Oae^l fan Life Aarfitlio Pili« of *A.r L Itt'eaia. _Aa OtB M P. t (jr.M'rH' Cratat>, TtTaV.Kevi Pahu Stvmis. aVaitt, t jtribito llaadAeruuefa r ;<¦;¦¦ U fiatpeader«, Ac I"* > ilr:« aal aaeimfeeiuiei. Sti- h tt Ketail. i.uUl Jaiiiitry 1, at .Dp t 1 rot Ire* tban r'«t it 1') *ioedar»y._ Pttor. Al.KI. C. LaAaUtY'l laUCOPHaafeOVa la tb> b»»t and ahaapaal atataal fur üntMlna;, Ueautliylne, Cleaalara. 0-jrliof, r. . FUetor.nr Um Ualr. LtdeM, try IC Put at r by all i/i«i ill atrfi feiioaiert Uuea|buat tbn ardrIA HoLUirVAY'ft FlU.s..Mck hcttdttcha, vertigo, fU'iiieece, pa'ta'at'iiii .( h Aear'.. tirtlna «t tae rt( "it b, ti. all tort! '* teearal rompiriDti prooeectnii f.ou. Imperfect itfaa> tioa aia refieaed by tbe tiMt eVae of Ihn anediclu«, aad eotirely rrae<re«l by ita oeoatlonal lite TfMTAI.E fjTAMfJi (.» aaJ 10 erat), for aale at HiUoffiaa. 8ATUKDAY, DKCEMBEK Ii, 1Ä7. 1.on.Ion Aatrnry. pfe<ere v.rtoa Low, Ck>s a liv , Nu. tT Lud«>te HQ), le.a ua, are euUiorized to r».«.." ro beoriptltftit t.< 1 mi. Tkiiim. ILe uiaila for hurope, per I. S. mail at-Amor J'nlt'eB, will ciawe tili« ;norniü| at I0| o'clock. TLe Kartiph, with three daji' later advicei from Euroy*, ia Brow fully dua, but bad not been t -.e- graphtt. op to the hour of going to ptem. At a net t rp of thirty eight of the forty 111 ano- rlattd BaBks of thii city, called upon rery ihort ortice, yeaterdajr aflerncoe, a roiolution was ubao> mi bil) adopted to ramme specie payment, to day. Ttoae Lanka which were Ml represented will, it ii ludtritood, act in concert with the otheri. Tha Coett of Appeal! of >'ew JerVy hui Mi. mied the judgment of tte Sjprem- C>urt in the ca«e of .lamea Doonelly, the murderer of the bar- Beeper tt ike Sea View House. He will b3 executed in tte -;h of January, unit is the efTjrts n .a BHibg aiade for obtaining a pardon or a coininutatiou of Ua lenttDce prove t.Toctuai. From MtMt o we have V.-.t . .r t to the effect lhat the poaitioa of the (.oterameut had improved. 'Abo force* of the op^roeitioa ha4 b:ea routed, aai Cointiofort formally mitaiied. P'roiu Vuoatan we learu that Campeacby, at Lait aso. unti, wai a:i'j neiifg d, ated that the inhabitbiit* were graatiy »<i . .. for want of;' .^natic I>ougiai, tnough he paired otT against tne otHitirmaiion of lienver, is not to be puuiahed f 1 h-.s rtwistance to the bogus Comtitnti'>n maken of Kaaaas by tbe -t of hii poiition at t!ie head of the CeOatnittee on Territorie*. The fact i*. the Je> innatic part) cannot do without him just njw, and Butt tolerate in him antics whx-h would bring the bead of a amaller man to the block. We are tuoreaud more aaiuted that he will triumph in his present policy and bring O d Back to his marrow- (M»oe*. If a .. we entreat him not to tu*n th? Prea- idest tut of the party. Let magnanimity be re¬ ciprocated. C 4. Ji>hnaton's dispatches to lien. Scott r«ach as by way of Washington. They are of the aame date as the letter of our Special Correspondent, publiabtd yesterday, aod contain nothing additional aa regards the movements of the troops. Upon. ike plaas of the Comiuauder of the Utah arm/ they si ij l-.wvfei, abed aome light It is not Ci>l. John^ eton'a intentioB to enter Salt Lake City before Spribg. He intends t) form a j unction with Col. Altxacder at the m >uth of Pontenelle ( reek, ab.nit thirty uiilee from that otTicera'a present camp at Ham'a it and not far from (evenly miles from bis own cemp at the Sjuth Pass. He will Winter at Henry's Fork on Green Kiver, atbeie be bopea that Col. CaaaVa c mmand, with whum ia (Jov. Cummiog, will jo a him. CA. Jobtatoa thinks his force barely adequate to the protection of supply trains, aud predicts that the trotteat wiUbe a protracted one utleas large re- MforcemtLta be aent tim. lie gpeaka of the im- |ew**ibility of hi* making a retrogade morem»nt, a* if be tbiught that exigenc et might tn j before loog th> t woBld afford a poorer aollier bq excuse for beating a retreat Who ia it now that is keeping up aa agitation shout K icrao and Slavery 1 At the laat aceeion of Congress, Mr. Grow, from Ike Cetnmittee of Terutones, reported lo the House a bill to end the complications and trouble* Tesptcting Kansas by referring the whole matter to a free and fair election by the IV .pie of that Terri- kV ry. This bill waa so fair, bo juat so manifestly proper and argently demanded, that it was sup¬ port! d not only by all the Kepublicans in b >ih Houses, bat by several Democrats aad nearly all tbe Americans from the Fiee States. It pataed the Houae, wherein the Republicans were a minor¬ ity Vi) a Baajority of twenty, bat waa killed by the leffBttcrat* in the Senate. Had that bill been al¬ sowed te pa**, and bad Mr. Buebanan taken care that it abould be fairly executed, Kansas would bare ceaaxd ere thi* to be a focus of inter.est or a subject of ooatrovetty. That opportunity failed; but another is now pre- Bected. Ail that is asked on our aide is the sub- inisaioa of all queetiooa affecting especially the Peo¬ ple of Kansas to a direct and lair vote of that I'eof le. Let Coo gross provide for the, and all may tea settled bp the 1th of March next, What hin¬ ders? There is ao aeed of a new Constitutional Conven lion in Kanaa*-no need that a new Conititution be framed. There is one too many of these already. Oas more than is wanted.let tha people say which it Ther* it tbe Top#*»CoBfti*Tjti<«, fHtnet! by h Ctmnrnmrnmrn Contention in OcWisr, 1851, sub¬ mitted ha tb* people «t 8m election frae to Left' vofi-rt <Tall parties, and ratified by a mi l.mjs vot* That Ofstitiition nvgtt p»rh*ri be crw i* ; r#W. but oar aide ia wiling log'» Ig tte t-* >ple Bfxn it. Tbe r-ppr aite ptrty tare als> imxrCc, <«ti tution, frame! by a C\-cvea*ion wh'ct "i»t iti; 0: tober and adj> timed N-»T»rob»r Tth. Taey ara t> Tote on the '.'Ii: inst, on the reter.lioa or r'jeetion of otv article thereof which relava lo BLaroty. The Free-State m n will keep e>ar of f.eir enoeton aa the other aide did from theirs »¦> tint (befriends of tttl La|WaB||illl ClIIIOtMllioi erjoy Ik- rarlia- II aentary privilege i f perfectirg their cm meaiure prior to ita final aubmuaicn to ihe whole Peo¬ ple. When, it was deemed p-s^We that the Free-State mem might be talked into ttia trap, it wm loudly procla mwi that taeir r*fu»».l tr, vote would injure tbe racceai «f the " Coc- atitation vtfA Slavery.' But then whea th.. waa intended to alarm bad been too 1' ng in the wooda to be oeared by ao amall an owl t(*t aa this. Tbey la.gted at tbe tlreit that Kanr-as might l*e made a bona fide Slave State, and ad¬ dressed themaelvei to tie parchaae of halten. Ttui caused aa inHtantAoeoua fhasge cf tact'Ci It waa d<>w given out that C llcun, Hestern, aa I their fellow conspirators, who vot«d tne ultra Slav¬ ery article into tneir btgnaC-nrtitatioa, will com¬ bine t> vote it ottf again at tbe p' !lt ol tbe .'!»; inat Very good. Let them vote :t out or in aa they choose. Then let C ingress pars an act pr> Tiding for a free and fair election in Kansas, and let tbe two Constitutions be submitted (or r-cib- uiitted, at ycu prefer that word), ati let the People say *' Topeha or Lecompton Ccost.tutloa as they choose, and let Congress, irrrneLately oe the determination of the rest It, arlmit Kanins order that eoriatitntiiu wb-ch a majority (tall have r itified. By purming this course, we mj kave Kar.iaa fnily id tbe ri.cn. a- all c 'Stroveraf with regard to her concluded, by tbe Ita of next March. Hat some will sap.Pt-rhap* ¦n-Uher of these Con- stitubona entirely suit a majority of tie ? et pie of KaDi&a. Very well, we are prepared fjr that oi ti- tingticy. Let each legal voter e:.*t »MLotfof "Topeka Constitution," "Lecomptoc Cruetitc t on," or "New (.'oLvention.'' aa he shall fit. and if neither of tbe exiatirg Constitutive «tt.ll have a clear majority of ell the votea, et it be agreed that there shall be a new C«»ae©*iion auch as Mr. l>ougles route in plates by hie FinilHlg Act. We would not have the Topeka Constitution prevail unices by tbe votea of a char ttijorit* cf the People. Why atouM iny Me object to thii courie " Tte action of Congress will have cured cr i-erborr.e all differences as to form or regularity; the Tote of the People will kave settled all d ot- as t . ... ?ta'.s. What valid, what plausible obstacle rein&iaa i W e call upon tbe Petiple of the whole couLtry to ux.i'e arid (cid petitioui to Coa&reei, agk ng taat ihe question be aettkd at once by a full ltd fair .nbmiaaion of tbe rival State Comtitutioiii. to a direct vote of the People of Kansas. Suet a veto will give peace to Kanihs and t< tt4 otuitry. Why ahould any one reaist it.' If we are to take The AVtr OrUans ')>ltei hi authority, our Government is tte e^epieit and aloweat upon the face of tb* globe. Instead of emulating tbe exarop'e oi Kuea'ia, " 9«vecpicg d iWI " with her foreat of bayouetd o~er ti» Cuuchaiw M into Aaia," < t Prar.c^. " p bahlag ter eo&qaooti .'in Africa; of (inut I.'- -t.'irg tJ.ity.t* " throat and strangl.rig e^en' nationality wittlfl ita " limita'.not to dwell Ou divers otheT aUBoartertog operatiocs aimultaneouly carried on in Asia, Africa, ai dAmeiicft.tbe United States, under tba ccttrol o " effete at&teomen,' " rrfuce to budge a foot If tte " great race of latter Jay pro^resaiou." The Wn acqnititiona from Miiic«.Teva«, N*W*Mozic \ t 'tab, California, Arizona.iustead of aatiafj icg Tne Dtitn, do but whet ita eppetite It ciopiauit bit- terip that, haTtBg conquered M-xic>, we did tot heep tbe whtle of it, or, at le'rft, tt-b Iith?-.u< of Tehuatitepec. Bit this it rot by tny meana tbe (oie initat.ee we bare gifM of " excesaive magnanirrity." 8i:ce ties we have lost " three golden opportamtiea for tie " acqui*ition of valuable territory," lot ".xtend " itg oar dominion uud our republican inttitut.ocs " in tbe tight direction.'' We ought to have taken advantage ;>f the 1'lack Warrior atTa.r t> U .e " taken posaeaaion of lh«" trow aicg batteries >; ti e uMlJO." We ought tj ba7e 3vai!ed ouraelvea cf tbe Panama tawaacie to have Uaea pNIBliflat >f that IstiiOiTifl. Weibouid have rja^e ,,tbe mar " tlfr of Americana by tbe niongreia of Cectnü "America, ' during their late operat.cj* for the expulsion of Walker, tte oecarion for MOBtirg Nicaragua and "holdirg ite commercial i utefor " the berefit of the world." However, there are still come gleacir.rt Uft. There ia the island of St, iHmingo, " neariy aa " large aa South Carolina, bavicg an irea <icm :'leg, " twenty-ievcn thousand aquare mile«. with an Ld< " exhauttible toil, and a OOMI lLdented witr bays " allordirg fine 1 arbora, rich ic all th-* r ctoat " prcK'ucta of thetrop ci, cloAei witk the r- " petual beauty (f ac unsurpaiiei Tegetati * " 1 There it b'ea, like a waif cf the aea " "Take it ciiea The DtUa. In taking it, we ahould get something more than tbe land. Tte Don.iicia Republic hut a populati ¦ of a tusdred aci forty thounnd, Line tenlka of Africac leac»r:t The Hsytien i.mpire has a population of half a mil- lioo, all negroes. " Ia it not a burnLtg ri.>aae that " a black empire ahould lay alm.xt at our doori. " that a half million of negroes thould be per^ittei " to lord it over soch an island aa St I'jmingc''' Set to wotk under " a judicious (ystem of agricul¬ ture, what a deal of sugar, coffee, ar.J ccttm they might raite! Aa to excutes for seizing up.m tte isla: i and the inlabitante.if any were needed hfJOIlfl thuoi already tuggrsted.tbey are M pltcty ai b;lra^rr- tie*. Pvtry m>w and men some American cavtt u is iiLtririiied or fined b) BwkttOJhs, cha--ei with seme vioIatiuB of tbe laws of the country. Why tot tum the tables on Soulou jue by imprisoning tim and ftrfeitiag his bland ? ' If the (.iovercmejat ii unwilling to act itaelf, wfcy Deed it play the deg in the manger "Let Congress ius>end tbe neutra'ity " laws for one year, and the S'-uih oriH 1001 lo " tbe tueirets I r S-rn'onqoe." That such icntimeDts and projoeti at thoao are t ildij. avowed ia a remarkable proof of the low crop of OfUou rapidly spriiginj- op tkrotig^ ut tbeScutb, aid Coking eut all tne political id«a> aud ptincip'ea which Jefleracn and bis caa^jutors tcok such pairs to diese tu inate. If ¦.-> other obit#c!c ttood in the way but the ceutraüt; Law«, it might not be difficult to carry oat theae p.-oj-. ti. But Walker's recent fa lure in Central America M tufllcient to ahow that tills stealing ac Lthah.ied country is not so easy a matter, while it is absurd to expect that Prince acd Logland wouli looh oi qtitly «5*1 tee iM. Docicfo coc^i*r'4 by tlfibci- ten It* fVfrtUry of the TreMary it endend* \n9.lfd by ttri gboit of Protection. AH t - p >i 1 cu life s bitt«r eeerxj < f tee i'roteetive Poliay. h* < h' «1 ü*'' fee's that it* overthrow if ooe mvo MM 'fur pmaeut disaster*. Tkoegh o'>» -i> if ¦jfDfi i*»g or SLtiripatitg « r* tun to Protection Mr. Cobh retabat* icoh retern at though it were ka bi a ieee t sc-1 fearful penI Thoojb there be 1 o airrraer} ir. the field, he is 1 to hare hit f5a.it Ite same aa though there were. He aayi w At a atsaaar* t4 saBaf >> fjaa aaaajQrp, N h propoted t»la- rre>-» tre lit if A rttu o n a fc.i,b >>. *i»- .'.onSB ' j aa u ta- - .reet atode ».f .»«-.»..;.¦£ tba »¦ .! «r; i: i..u»c.U':'«a'iu ui aflorliaf. laaaaaSMI* aa w<l aa r- 1 > .»re t.'.iM V U,r \ Hit dlatreea. Tbe pe0**" If* alreB'tj -....« fraa ¦¦.id". mt4 tbe pveaaaBiaaasaa*toakaWakva (.. ra :'. lit .- 1.» b.i-: i to tb-ir I ::4eaa Tb» earcettneaaBid ? lira ai**|hl u> tk* tapport of tbu p-»r>»i f »'i .(. ). .! b- "ii'i.;-". ».:.. >.-¦.» ' and wHkiiiii aliaai|rila| aa »laba*a*»aipafHtae afa ajaaa B«j abet httstofote coo n.*ad>d to atu'-k of '.he p.fc.ic at'- i'" - I to refer to ac«e ef rh» aider* ti .f.»»-. ii Li.« lfi» aitpuoo of tuck a podcy enwia« atd Lipf p< r. .. l! * tefw; f I ? tioniitf la IB** »bat Bf i r a low lartaTthe hw ported lea tf lot. lfu n-amftcriret e:.ec:-a*-J, a. .-. t*it» ir a-* 'it; *t.a r',^o»rj at ioaer prwei ttao they s 1 .> *v. rxwpttitiea with tu loaäaatai uia_ -a. Iura* I* tain*** ta III ba^Saae*. Toe n-riedy I«. to raiae tha tS t. . fy.11 tiie I' :-u wtiuk to t ick a point Uat either ü wul he etr.uiird, and ti.ua five to the djme«j. mit .'v t .rer the . it*r* Itaaa* BartaS, ot ti*» it artJ ba ao taer»M'd in pnea hy tka aalattia*%idaty *ato euabin U* doset'.v n.ac-ft-'.urer ta tK-:v> a r*a 1 r«r^ti: | prlea fat bit p-odi ^tVici Ttat tba äf¬ fe I w vli I* UP-y-:%t:.j ( 1 tt.» tx-taktof the BiaBLtV t«r»r it C a - Bat Iba* th* l -i'«i Feet woaM be alike io,j'leui . btac aa w»i. t <-tL« . irterMteta eota. j ciea/. .ookiaj .. t, parttlca aa a 1 a* r* ' r itte} wp n '.-t rtaaafaw tt* e'l -u Det I iiij p-a |B* domettic Laaiafae xtr, but alao upoa . " If thehteraai J ty l. '-.te: th radaita* Iba iupcrtatlarat n : Lb i>»».i U.e yr e, ; MBii*«tth*t aoa^eaata^e baa be»c Btiiwi ty tl a din.et'.ir tr.ti-.fv.;;».-. It :b" effect rrttld ba la ttobtda tb-- fureian artlt e, tb»a tba deaaeatia ¦i rei ;. /.> th* 1-L-.- atit.*. a^d roiaiuii . [ j' ratted has**** it . kdadtarpiiea fcr ait f. r It as* a> a fatta* of eaeiaa, -^rratfained aa ae wu. uea f - by tbalawaof covpetttic* l.e w-::. ao raiae hit prl'*t aa ta renied u.e *\i < lere p~' ¦« of »£.i<-h be bad rompJaiwd. 1 .< 1'¦ (tun mtt %t 11a*f 11 o i..t; .)tt.»:i Reaaed p . rbot p.t upon tba ir.!> .e af c->tatinipti a. Njt £c t it atop ': I '«r tl < sltttaf «Ute f ttiita, wheo ha haa p uca*a*< ta. attiala Ba ha* not aah furatthti 1 inteif »i.bt 0-ti .- »'. tu' :-d -. i {-rlee. bit at the um« t ¦ . La« ft t* t:> T-^atury t^e tax recutr-d nl bis f^r V*e ti.pt. :. ¦. '1 - m I r* rptapaaad by 1.1 Pto'e- :i tirtt ir rea»» . the pH* It re.,ulred tu rat fer «»''. t. h .. i. .. »f'i « t. 't itt.d teatea ...1 i:.t i. Tat* 1 ktaacy tf tbe terec e m*it b< ¦ pplie i, a. 1 h it railed] tpri t> pay It fr< it hia ether reaouieaa, Thepreyeeej .ea..re c.f te.tef tbut imp-t-t i:p«/a .lir thaaa atfdflintjal bardetia. in lb* imraated or «-e af *a* aooda and the addlti »,.«'.... r* ti i-»ptj ft lioa-arer, U 'i .: awdldaty tk**id t aaeb la the Ivpatfailaa of the 1 . - t. p'r > acce tij» [..'¦ - to a real ra'.of point ta tbe ( .¦' . .... ./ "'. . tp.L 'Jf r .UUB'l »"l d bf to ieq-,:re tin- to pay la* ad.litif r,... prl-e, .i«t y pan tbe I. Lja ailieta, I tiUoipos th* (V>aie«tl-: mar Cacti to. The 'a ii.c" at taittut p' ' ft 1 I -it. for toe h-nefit reapactiftlyof ttiaT.*** ry *a*IbaaaaaaatJ inaatiiaatvrtT will depend apaa lbei»;aiii- ptoporB u ef ta* fon ita abd d >o>.!ic t.-t'ele he r ay OOBtl U.11. In i. r*at cat. Ibl lb l*a*ad duty operata t-t ::. td.t.'u i. te! .f 0'ti.« aai -at.i': «t ept by a c>r rei;«cd^a l.jcry t , ti . rocr roer Theafnoitnt of benefit coa- i" 'at.' j I jud r t r pe»ed tt ief n-.. at ire hraald *#f Bdupaa lb* r.^tire n--jber rf roatiitartutert tad . Ol tot ar'.k.ea upaa wb .i lb) hu .-rat' 1 d^t et were laid; ti4 at tbe rcs.l'er of cntimera exreeda tbe dm a.her if e :.. ireja. ae a Lid tbe la ury a'a/>d eneed 'be be'.efit < .i. A pcl'i > aa*raittal t: a a* aal -i iu caa- lot -otru.au.' tbe r.p; rot A of the co-jatry." l>t vi etcfider i ctaterrjent in deta-1. i. Mr. C'obo aiiuiaf* that Fereiga I'ibric* are ItOpXiltetl to the prejudice of OV own r»al pr> dti.-titns ocly in cate toey are "brought into the '. c IBtrj at 1 ^erpiict-a IBan the/can be pro- " .luccJ." Tie fact if othc: wi*e. bwaUUmbs' worth of Cloths, Furniture, Vi'stches, ubJ artiolei of luxury ..<¦ latkios a;c iir fort-ed, Lot beeAtiBS tiiej can th-u te"'rt*:ftd cheeper, bnt becauee t^e cociucen ClAtearhat It fsr fetctP'l, or b?cinae the locg-es- tai>l'*he-i ail veaitby turoptau maunfactirer* c^a g->e!ixger cr'i'^ts t^an their haif M-dg/1 American rival* eat. poeaibij tdTcrd. Wo aan show that hum- c*« dt of kitiriei hive been cteapene.1 by Protection vtLere e.ne has been in;.*!* dearer. II. Wal, then, my* Mr. C.»bb. I'roteetioe can¬ not Let?fit tbe Manufacturer, for what he wa&ta ii a h'fcber pricb for fiii pn ducti. No, Mr. Secretary, yon we entire1? tt: if. We, for eikmplc, miao- ftv.'j-o Lcwijhperj. nr.el mahe a living by it. We piiu h graBt deal ehcafac Bbeet, m\i make a better 'irirg ty:t. tbtn t»etoall do il Foreign r.eari- ptper* c upete i with run fer our M'.me Market juit tJ Foreign C'M*Lme:es ar l Cjt*C'>ei no with Aseriaaa Litta. We sfcoa'.d be &bi<'iate'.y ccm pelUd to xcreave the price cf mr paper, or priat it ut fax le*a coat, if we were ezpoeed t<« a af>ri>aa io'ritrj ceaapetiaica.If a cargo ef Pritish j >arr,als rrct.TtdwUting the Light cou-'i replace and iuf plact OBI seue of tbe -;nsi.;rga- ruing. Noaaac did print L. RaW'Yi rl >o -oit:y a ite.t a* thia forte?i> cent* undei s'icj a #)fteui A free for» pn ccmpetition. A*. row, If by a: j uv t .i we cculd be ?iia*Änfee J a r ady an'.e for hil the ripen «e c mid pritt we e .ould f.ii-i a cbeapei sheet.that la, « r.e on which vela.' ,'.t ?v , xpe.-.sr?.than v.e can tow pcjf.b'y alotd. UX Bot HiysMr. Cobb. If the effect 1 of Pro- " tecticu ] itonld be to exclude tte foreign article. " t:*n t.»!? öon.eftic n-anufacturer mon ipolirei the " htme inatket, ur\i iominar.ds his o\tn price." Wfcy, to he (!.<. r ">t, Mr. Secrttarj be.-auie tlÄer boBM EfcLi foc'.i.r^r* win't lettim! Tiere is no moBCporpia »r.j icunt favor, but a fair field for all, .-o tt a: the.) employ American workmen, con- sjiL tg Atuerifan foot] atd receiving Acerictn sTBgea. 31 ex rtrj I rijo aiarufacrureni, whom fou regard shut oat, are united to c>me t'.il r i BTCkt abtil eturrience aci their rr.; 't&i.ta;, the* ri.'.' eorr.c. J* come, when¬ ever it it Buac'e tLeir L'terest to to fo. If a Protective Tariü should resier a-.y branch of maLufactire largtly temuneratte, tboiiaand* wou'd iic'tatiy :uih into that very b:kn:b. kui tempo- ririly overao X bftt t2e ultimate result would be an tquil-brun. A fcty of ten thouiand per cent. i.d foiei^n cK th eoulJ cct raiie tr.e price of hemo* c-*^ cloth cc i th? profits of making it above a fair rate. IKce coanpetiaiOB would soon cure all in- rquklniei- low ta k of the home manufacturer .... e'er i'jc* circumttatce* as " unrestrained by the .'laws ofcczcpetit.cn" is moastrcutly wrong. Vou I ifht as vm'L! U'.'a of the Amt ::;sq hay-uiaker or eabb»ge grower a* " ocrtitrabed by tie laaya of '. comtetiti. * t?c* i»e we dou t td^pen ti import kkj oi call**?*. .We W«tX| ( paxiaiBf a: 1 expoiirg this .<'. rrora, »U:eia er*.-) aatimption is a iiiiitaie tzi ev.»t; s*>ert. - a b!u:.der. At a e»a- inaTJOrOf fT.-mtt every art.cN- aitherto protected iad a irecuoti of LOL,e of them, we" ktow that a etrady Proieiti.e Tar'.:! wouid give as Iron. Cloth. BlMa, 0!**f ware, Cn ciery. Ac, far cheaper i. at. vte cha ovis.- thA uiier ou: present policy tecacse. by attrrctirg t£e pro-iucer of Metaii or Fairies u Ue #iiie of the producer of Fool, Cot ton ar i MS\ A, it would acnihiiate uielew and vtbitefd irac;po:tati"D. and thui diminiih the ccit <f t-acl a:;icie tf tie cociumer while iaereating the giLLi of tie pröiucer. Mr. Ccbb hu been educated Lot to ite the truta on tt.* po ut.he is 'iLiier a pv'il.cal teceatity of blindaess thereto . but the to issttl » th whxt he pr^p IB«]*I the meet t-teadbare fallac'ti may well excite aniatsment. (itv. V .*e. as have k'reaJy tutcni, is unu- ins ty j in Bfc f a ¦.'!>6f» tUl sta#on, aid La* just r.iflu-td bipleta in which Le treat* of finanea, r. Ltjry, Tt*ike|inrg dtys, ojiten, mat- wsy e*Bries. and nther tfcisgi too rumirouit' iierjtion. The uoveraot s monetary duja j.t'jii* e jeaterdty di*eua*ed. A great deal ii said about »e;.t«rs of t;a-.'* Ntw Yoik iithe great importing renter. Tien ttaira are asteliite and lecocJirf oebters, lock ss li.*ton, CLa.'.eii.n. Sen Fraa- ciseo, &«. Rot Got. Wit* state* the punfa1 fact that " Virginia, N"rth Carolina, Teoneaoee " atd Kentucky here no eeaters of their rwn. bat " are dependent upon ccoteri around then, north .' ltd sooth, »ist and weit " This, according to the 0 over dot, a. lows the Near-York center, and tbe other centers, to take away tbe money from the centcrl*** States baviog a homogeneity of trade. Tte remedy it for these State« to prk cut a proper piece for a center, and forthwith to baiid it ap. We lap pose, of r to, that Virginia would furniah (he must eligible spots for centere; and then, when tte new French stsambott line it fairly in opera¬ tion, tricgitg brandy and ai'ka, and taking in re- tun tbe htney-dew, the virgin leaf and other aarootic Inxuriea, the aedge patchea wiH diiappear, tbe atun.p taila of the ateeri will iproat with mrraouloui luxuriance, and cegroea will be worth at teaat $9JBM each. Saeh will be the lucrative ad Tintage of having a center. Bat aa this centralizing process must neceouri'y he rather a alow one. Got, Wise has another plan for increasing the prosperity of the State, which may ha called tbe luvalvular. Thia ia not indeed eiactJy a covelty. For aeveraJ yean tin G »ver- nor hfj < ff.ciaily gaj urned over the Crimea of the marauding rkippera from New- York and elsejerhere, who have ravaged the opulent < yiter beds of the O.d Dominion, helping themio»lvea, without leave .r license, to the Largest, the wbitett and fittest of the esculent Crustacea, and lea I ing poor V ir- gicia with icareely the material for a single fry, stew or roast The Governor has devoted himself, with the z.al of an epicure aud the energy of a patiiot, to the oyiter quest on, and bis Message is or,e of the tintst essays upon the subj-ct in tbe language, and worth) to be perused over a plate of Down tg s best. Here it is calcalated precisely how a.biy ojeteri each mother oyiter spawns, namely, three million! innually; and how many jrars aust elapie before* these will be fit for market. Ihe oyster beda, we learn, belong to the State atd his hii ellency reai'y cannot see why the State ihou'd not make mooey oat of them. No more can we. < lyiter-d gging ia qaJta as honorable a buiineai as any other; and so ia oyster opening, and 10 is oyster itewing. Therefore we have not a word to say againat the ipeculaliou, if \ irginia should, with her iword of State.that celebrated breed. proceed to opening oysters. Hut we want acticn, and cot talk; and therefore we are pleased to see that Got. Wise recommends a fleet of four war-steamers to cruise on the oyster beds, and pro¬ tect the ahelly treasures from foreign and interlop¬ ing rakes. These also wi.l be doubly useful; for, aa Got. Wise very justly aoggesta, they will pre¬ vent the slaves from running away from the coast. Could atjthiigbe more charmingI Topreserve the oysters and the "nigperi" at the aame time The next important point dticuised by tbe gov¬ ernor is tbe eonititutioriality of Thanksgiving Day. Here he ii very clear and conclusive.the old- fashioned feiÜTil is aneonstitutionil, at least in \ irgbis. " I am cot appointed and ennititoted to .. handle Got'i holy thingi," says Got. Wise. V ery true, and a iclf-evident proposition, we think we may lafely say. Bat, then, as no man, even in .Mai: ael usttta, ia compelled by law to go to church and to cat pampkin pie on Taanksgiving Da/; and as all the GoTsrnor of any State can do is to designate a day and advise the people to keep it. we must say that the Governor is just a little iqucainish. But then, we suppose that if the people, the benighted people tithe North are attached to an institution, tiiit very fact afTordi puma /trie evidence that the aft re raid institution is a bad one. Moreover, we must du the Governor thojuatice to admit that he speaks in tbe most respectful manner of Christian¬ ity, and has not the slightest objection, should any free and icdepeident Virginian desire to give thanks upon his own hook, having, by accident, something to be thankful for. The* Gov-rnor, how ever, enters a streng caveat against " politicl re ligion," and also against " religious politics, * from which we infer that he ii a follower of Dr. Rom .nd is in favor of irreligious politics. The free blick population of Virginia also g'ves tie Governor some t'ouble. He thinki it would be humane to reduce it by the atrong arm of tha 'aw to a state of Slavery; but hedoul.ts if such a course would be exactly just. He therefore recoiu- mendi the use tf "persuasion " and a couTeraioo of as many of them as possible to a senie of the otiutiei of iirritude. Those who will not be ^on- verted ibculd bo cVaxed to go to L'beria: and thoae who in spite of all possible blandishments will insist upon rej a.j'nz free open tbe soil, should be sab jecttd to more .trir.'gent legal liabilities and worried it to reuse n. Some of the reconimenditioniof Got. i. are curious enough.that free negroei should oot be allowed to hold real estate, eicept a limited otibbtr of acres for a homestead.should not reituitttd to own a house and lot in a city or tow n.should ¦<> prohibited fro a lending money to white men, and from holding slaves. So it is nec¬ essary to pasa lawi to preTect this ihiftlesi ind de¬ graded and impOTerished people from buying booses and Imda aid ilavei, and from lending money b> white men 1 Which, then, is the tnoit useful citi¬ zen.the black with money to lend, or the whito needing to borrow' Got. W. distunes many financial questions, but he does not touch upon this. The re moral of Secretary Sta.ntun.to be fol¬ lowed at once by that ef Gov. Walker upon the first attempt or offer on his part to execute hence firth the dut.ei or discharge the responsibilities of his office.ii a most significant act. so far as the President is concerned, bat it will not undo the eiB of the new Territorial Legislature. That call is not -nly a fact accomplished; tbe Legislature is already in lestion, and will probably have had a week s .'tart before the new Secretary pro um. can inter¬ fere with iL Iu that time, it will have turned out tie "Democratic" delegation from Leavenworth C< ucty, elected by the scandalous fraadi at Kcka- pco, and admitted their Free-State competitor!, tbertby securing a Free-State preponderance of more than two to one in either House. The Secre¬ tary! vet", if a Secretary has a veto, will thus be : üüVred of no eilest, and the Legislature may pro¬ ceed, in defiance of Denver if necisary, to fortify the liberties of the Peoplj against the 1 .<¦ >i i.pton conspiracy.of bogus Conititution makers.I werk wh.ch is doubtless already in progren. The importance of this gain cannot be over¬ estimated. Hitherto, the Tree Stile men of KtaV *\i have held the position of outlaws in the es'itn* th n cf the wielden of Federal power and the dis¬ pensers of Federal juiface. Their Legislature was wreiied firm them by invasion, violence- and fraud at tLtit fint eaeet on if March > lr.v., and has ever, till new, been in the handi ol their enemies IkeShetifla, Jodgei of Probate. A.c., were the Ttitorei of thia Legia'ature. Kvery exercise of power which was recognized ai legal by those who wield the iwurd or who poise the scales in Kansas, iu by and for their bit>r eoemiei. This weeh io aoguxate! a ciril revolution which nut enable tlem hecceforth to resist Ha« ifjotAba* of their d-are it rgfcta without «oMittWf tmocc, even in the judicial apperbeeewou of Leooaptc ind Coin. Henceforth, tte aabera of tbe dragooni cannot bo throw* into the Pro-Siivery scale ot every ton in the cootro veray. There will be crave queebooa to oettlu as to the legitimate poweri cf the Coov-ofcoo nod tte LepitLatare respectively, and they will have to be decided by Congress or referred to the Peo¬ ple. Border KnfTianitm cao no more Waneb iti ragged legions sgiinit Lawrence and Osawatarn e omVr pretense of beirg " tbe Ana) of Law and order in Kansas." " Sheriff Jor.es can nerer again lead a legion of miscreants L barn hotels and rob dwellings under pretense of executing the de¬ crees of Grand Juries. We strongly hope that the) worst is over, arid that no more blood need be shed to secure Kansas to Freedom. < >ne week's start with the Legislature is a year's ga n t> the right May it prove to have been well employed We have bad repeated occasion to refer to the remarkable chaoge of position which is being exe¬ cuted at tbe South oo the subject of Slavery and tlaveholding. To all eameat, sincere and logics! sla\ehoMing minds it has become obvious that the LTounl hitherto occupied in the specu'ative discus¬ sion of that question is no longer tenable. To somit that slaveboiding is an evil and a wrong, is to admit ever> thing necessary to make oat the case of the Abolitionists. If the institution be an evil and awe eg, instead of studying apologies aid exeuses for it, and seeking pretenses for persisting in this wrong ard evil a little longer, it is evidently the business if men of iutelligence and energy, who have tbe r;ood of the public really at heart to set tremselves at work persistently to root this evil out If siaveboldiog is to l>e persevered n with the in ward «atisfadi« n of au approving conacieuce, it can only be done on the grcund that the practice is innccent To inspire enthusiasm in its support, it must be exalted into a positive good. A ccnsiderable number of publications hare ap peared at the Sooth, within a few years past, har- iDg this object in view. We have now before us the first number of " The Southern 1 > al; A Monthly " Magaz'De devoted maialy to a discussion of Afri- " cau Slavery, and the interests, moral, sooial and '. polirica', which it involves." This new periodioal is published at Montgomery, Alabama, by the litt J. D. Williams, aa the imprint states, who has em¬ barked in the enterprise, not out of any tordid cal¬ culation of gain, but Irom " a disinterested desiro .s to do good to a degraded race and distracted " country." Thia maga/.'ine already haa, we are told, near fore thousand subscribers, scattered from New-York to Arkansas, aud in a few weeks they are " expected to come in from one extremity of " the I nion to the other." By a slight deviation apparently from the theory that the planters are entitled to lire upon unpaid labor, the publisher cast* in his own case, upon tbe doctrine of pay as you go. In fact he pushes the point a little fur¬ ther, and demands in advance the two dollars whieh is the annual subscription. Looking at the enter¬ prise as " patriotic and hamane and strictly beoev- " olent," and beiog " advanced in years aa well aa " limited iu means, be doss not feel called upon to rish more than be already baa doue in getting out tbe first number. If thit "African Advooato and " Fxpotitorof Domestic Slavery" is to be to stained, the subscribers mutt come forward aud pay up. In the litt of contributors we notice the names of five doctort of divinity, of tix or seven presidents and profcsiort in colleges and institutes, and of a large number ot clergymen. The periodical, in deed, it evidently designed for the class that pro¬ fesses to have a ewnicieoce. It takes the Bible for iti starting point "s the source and lifeguard of all morality, au<l proposea aa iU mtin object "a " liible defense of Shivery, not merely as su ab- " atractioo, but iu its applictttim to all the phaaea " :tnd relations of Southern society." "Mauy men " at the South," we ire told by the editor in hit ntroductory iddreti, "do still doubt the rightaous .. nets of the institution, ind thit doubt makes us " i-owirdi, md the dupet and tlivei of eompro- " miaea." "We have ditcredited the power of " the Truth.the omnipotence of Justice the " wisdom of Providence.the almighty protecboa "of the (Jod of our fathers, who irave ui these " bn id plantationi. We have been content to rest " our ciute en tide istues, end to plead the bond of " our 1 ederal compact." But the vanity of this reliance Las abundantly appeared. Political parti- tiufcbip sou Government influence have been a- vohed in vain to put a atop to in agitation which hat gone on tpreadicg daily wider and wider. Rea- tenable men, we ire told, no longer calculate upon irretting this agitation by party combinations. The only tuflicient defeute of the institution of Slavery is in its righteousness, lire South needs '. to educate itself ia the science, the thorough mo- " relity, the social, commercial and politisal adapt- " ation of Slavery .and that is the great object which this periodical ia designed to promote. It would appear, however, not to be the intention to stop short at a mere eulogy of Slavery as it it. The Uutl maintains not only that Slavery has itt sanctions in the Bible, but that we are to looh there fi r the principlei of its police. It teemt tobe tug getted that ilaveiiolding uecdi not merely to be de¬ fended, but also to be regulated out of the Bible. " If we have abused the institution, sayi the editor, " have impriperly denned or defectively "enforced the thtJtt. rights or .bli^ttioui of mat- " ters or slaves, it behooves us, for oirselvet. to " iLouire in what pirticulari, ai.d to what extent, .' we have been betraied into auch grave aud Li " aid) Hi errort. These tubjects will open up to " the reil thinkers ind genuine Chriititn philtn- " li.ropittt of the South a wide fie'd of hopeful in .. vettigation and activ.ty." We have noticed thit new maga/ine at the m< re length, becauae we feel a air<Dg interest ih it. W e are an .iout to tee what can be taid and done, not no much in the way of defending Slavery out of the Bible.for wo have (.ad a plenty of LOat.». in the way ef regulating it Itter the B.bie model. Anotcer job of the Lowber species it quietly .lipping through the Common Council. The iciieme ia the parchaae of land on >N erd's Itland. at a price to suit the teller and hit accomplices. Not daring to carry it through openly, the parties to the enter prise offered resolutions in the lower Board appa¬ rently of simple inquiry.at least turn they were understood to be, and with that uncrrttindiog they were suffered > past ilmost without opposition, lint now it ippeart that the resolutiou provides for appointing referees to agree upon a price, and uakei their report bLtdirg it i bent fide aale. * nd who is to appoint the'cfcree for the city' Not ib.- Co.itrol'er, who«e duty it naturally would be; cor the Corporation Counsel, even, whose eatctvn it expected to tte title; but Mayor Wood it to make the selection ou the one hand, aud Mr. Alex. Met tier the otter. ThitMoCotter ia the agent Of \tt $J*T*rt Of ftf Ued. dbirh.' «r,BN et-*, net ce in dtalrg with the eity. In I9CJ he act* m the agect of Abraham ß Lawrence in eethu (j§ acre* oe this mom iw'acd t, tbe Co-noeo C.>«orL l.awretoe paid MeCotter cearl, $*),.*>) m ,. mi**:.*" for m»kug tie »ml«. aid MeCuUrir w>>rteJ it tor'trfc f»»r (I >«j an acre. If,bnj , ^ however; Mayor Tiemanr; mj fa BetHoÄ true, i:d»Mi stumbling bi^k and ts of***, u Sturtevent, Tweed A Co. McCvtter trat is grast tribulation about the tale, mmt)a ^ sent to hi* a«*:«^nce Mr. Molt, of the Kureeu of Aaeei.ments. Da M^u WM *»a4ut-g with the d.rTculte*. aod undertook to pat gale through for ten th< aiead do tar*, declined at first, deeming the «tderat,», i^, great, but subsequently c-caeeted; I.twracea « MeCotter paii I-e Mutt the ten thousand, ati ao** afterward the Committee reported in f»»0f ^ ^ purchase, the Common Coancil adopted the laaart, acd the rity paid §108,450 for laid and «ater m worth 8^40,000. The «hole matter is aat forth ta official document*, exd is.« plain case of bribery hi acme quarter. At any rata, the present A4« or* cannot p'ead ignorance of the fact*. Thsy kasv the referee business is a mere dodge. The city has aot made an offer to buy, nor tbe owner ts aal; there is ne diaagreement for referees to setae, ao call f" t their interference, anlese to serve as seaa*. goats for MeCotter acd Mayor Wood, who are . appoint them. We bare had about enoajja of Ms. Wood s refereacee. as the M^nhattaavitJe balkhaad and avenue contract awarls show ; but if we cjesi be sure that hit referoe* woo d drei a* f«<Hv by tbe city at Meaar*. Everts CoebraM and Eiltaa did, in tbe case of Marvme v*. Wood, w* raigat r'sk the eonae<|uence*. We have at length th* vote eeat at the re***, Charter Electkn in our City so nearly oftina) chat the declared result cannot vsry more than t «.z*a vote* from the following. A «o^d deal of site**, cance may be extracted from the following hfirw Vote fbr Mayor..Tiemann..431M 1;. uiann'-Br" si ,2,39U /..Wood.40 9wf Ot v. AJ*i»-Höti$e.*mith Kep.sjjjjsj Wairner, Am. ..!.; M Im.; .1. D*m.41 MO S-,/ti (-<vr< average].... lit publican.tlt'A American. .14.soi Democratic.4'^Aitf The vote for Coverner of the Aim* House may be regarded a* a fair teat of party strength. Assam- ing it to be so, tbe vote at this dec |ej compere* with former result* as follows: Nor.liM No»,|867. Dr*. ,«*. FrsDM.Dt....l7 771 Olapp.13,413 Smith....-0 9*! ¦nnBOte....19.921 I'uitun (*. 164 Wagner..IS'Ctt Htubaaan .. II N3 Tucker.. ..:i?,8lrt Dogro. Republican .rain on bremoate vote, o/.ll; oa Clapp's, 10.. ?. !>. ir.< rat gain on Hochanan* vote, 1.7; ee Tack¬ ele, t,5J2. The Democratic msjority over the RjpuWioea vote of this city wa* in 16 for Buchanan \M,1 V!; in Nov. '57 for Tucker, 84, \0o-t in I>*e. UT, far Dugro, I - 368. Republican gain since the l'reti» dential election.">,7-t. And this gaia doe* aat result from a falling off in the adverse veto, bat fram aa increase in our own. It took place aitea- over, at a time wL*a it could not possibly attributed to any feverish intesest in " bieadiag "Kanaaa." Tbe vote of Mayor Tiemaan appear* to have been made up a* follows: Republicans.B,MB I Amerieaaa.16 *11 Democrats.l.',ff84 | - Total.43,1» The above ia bated on the aaaumptioo thst at' who voted the Republican or American Attas- House Governor were oi the party thus indicated. As these, however, were borne on the same ballot with the Mayor, it is probable that tome aiti Wood Democrats voted the Tiemann ballot that cans to hard without caring for the nam* bvroe on it far Aim* House Commissioner. It may bo fairer, therefore, to assume that all Kspublictaa aad Americans, with a few exeeptiona. voted their respective ticketa for Supervisors, who were voted on a separate ballot; and we know BS reason, way any 1 >emccrat should have voted against his parky on Sup-rvisors. The total vote on this ticket was. Republican, 83,864) American, I4,5u:i-Tital, :T7, ir.7. Tiemaun's vote, 4:< 188 Deduct: 17,157, leave* 6,031 a* tke utmost poaaible Dttmoeratio vote for Tiemann. Hi* actual Democratic vote la somewhere between these extreme* of ti 8H aad 8,981. Suppose we split the dirTerecce, and call it 1 167, and we aball be very near the mark. There were no more Republicans in the City at our Chatter Etectiru than at the State Klestiow fiur weehs earlier; but there were many thousaada more at tie polls. PBRiOSAL . Madame Otto «ade ber first app^suancs »r mw- ms. years id a concert for tbe poor, at Hobnkeo, last ever ing. Her voice it said to be as rich and full a* ever. .Dan Hibbard, a prominent farmer and a wjrthy meUiber of the Society of Kriemln, recently died at his reridence ia Cortlacdville, N. Y., aged 7C years. Ha had been a resident of Cortlandville for to ysara, wher* he was universally esteemed for hs many ir.anly scd coble qnalitie*. (ieneral William V. l'acker, (loternor alsat, while out Lunting, about thirty miles north of Willia-nerjort, ruptured a blood rcaeel, cr strained hiinaelf in some tray, which caused a hemorrhage of tbe longs aad for a few days bis darker vu coaridered imminent, but we are happy to learn that he is now out of dansrer si.d ab.e to be out o' doors, and receiving tba oon- «ratnlationf of his namerons fri'tods at the woe** et j< yrd nnriiig tbe huU, in the course of which tba Genet a. shot a Hue k l'üila. H .. -tin. .Tbe Waahicgton corn pendent of Tie Keening Put tsys that Senator Suaner'd cervoua cjoditwa ou'd m.t et cut* the exettement of listeoiot; to Douk las; he was ablif* d to leave tbe ball immodia e'y Rlirr the ccnimeocen ent of his speech. Mr. Joshua H Giddicg« said to ho atai a*r*ia, u^ u*abla to participate in debate. Tie Ali rahdria (Jazrtte aay*: " Tbe last will and Uttament of the late 0saiga W. P Castia of this roarty wae ««fir.iited I* proba'a at the DtcenJier term of tue County C' urt, and by it we ieam that he direcred that all I >* *laxe* on hi* d ff-r«it platitatiors be set free witbtn Uie next five years, !«.«¦- i »t it to his *iecators to p,f>v ii* the receeary f inds fiom hi* estate, to remove them from tbe C >mmoa- wea>tL. There are, probably, some two or three haa- Crtd rlaves thus set free. ' Kr.\Tic*Y..The new \.- ifisia'ure cwvered at Yiatkfort on tbe 7th. J t^. A. Kmr (tm ) »w :.-n. Fpesker of the Senate bv I'.' rote* to 17. J. ft Uaekitr was cboeen Otash wi'h " Annercan" o(B>fVs tbrr.agbout Dr. D 1*. V.'tite Dero J of Greeoe C<>actv was (ho*en Speaker of tie iioo«« by (A) vote* to M fcr J. 8. .lackeoa Am.) The tutor oih »rt are of OBBtta Dtu.ooia'e. a»?g»»»ereee»Bie»-i ijf_» j fir JVitar mi T\, K. Y. Tri*a»# Bib: In jour list ot the Members of Corres*, who** ura.e sir \e. n'i. si eUl ta app-arr io Tn* Taise»< .<t**»y joo stMMatStrt put dowa t*e name <l Ja*i a C. Joa«a ef Tri rjr.-e, e be reel tte Ci>d|reationaJ career rf that »erUeaia» la(aaBaaa*4(tl tbt t h tf Merch laK. Aadrew Jokuaoa a*na* i" eu rb« tec aa bia auo. eaa..-, aa j»n sre weil aware. to., aj ui reiy, tk- t»» Wade* - B. *'. ia tSe Seaate, acd Kc'araiJ la the liouae- betb r* ;-.»..». Ub*b Uate Am *>i, pt\ Ik IV. W, 1,4*,
Transcript

I.Aimm; Lovr.i ink** .T>.» fa/reat fad* the.imIU> l»«'.t r» m\ ¦..»»*«"' Thlett ititUn« *.?> ore e«cepO<.<i Mm .*». .. »^» ic .». ft* tri leaafaraHat» a»M by K»o\.* ! Hfida»; aud rultnritV. Iii»hM i'it ¦( »i.n..-'i b»»it'.i rev>rr«iri;:. fid ,«.. tatrlirrabuny. firrn. «n1 tVt'tO t? f f J>ri. Is t-<i..»l t * eny oatwannt» i.i >4 io Uii« c-. ¦* ..»»»De.-. HM uew «tyte ofC«r« U . <. ktkf «i t^i!"fOums Ma i m./ m I ano Win how 8ii\Ltr«

Cur if ruft Ctsa.Bat T» I Kiel It* Wt Br -tiwuy,

W*ee .fill w4 ehnice «t'-o* of B-n-^trl.e g»üu, 0« ret'ie,*Aot«u4 Uta».at, Ct.rwea, wtub. «r» caTtced «t .«.« iiiaa

«tHt vf I».for*«Wo«.Oar ttoeA of "Vli,*,.w B*aVfea it BM U-v»it hi SeW-Tot*. ins"

oa< .»«¦«rlor roaowlariuv .» f. Bit a* *¦*!*. M bf laeia

a*!. .» lie* other bo'

Hi a> ) R Mil i5s,Pat* »' 4 Mr -Ii-«- tj »'

O'tMnitUu »»(.!.>», it ci»»'.lr reduced p»v,et.g ft *tot inn,Ha aX Broeowty.

CrtA» at i, B< ak» I amd lliv-U r ;»rt» aavitaie-it

turn ..BeteS (t aiTAll rWI Cll'lIn Pi al 00 a b<>«,

n« 61 Nmmj 4h

i/MrK . Tbu Wi tTiii.u The Weathkb!»*o mf) buy your Bv(k-» » a i.an ml DbawbbaoIJ. r*.

tfc*>«l,cotpatof Balt' iitiid 8r< in;._Sr.wiN«. Mammms r«>K 996..Ths LajmbaV

C«iMr«Ntoa B«.<*i*o Mamiim it lae t evt ia eeery r-«p«ct iir

lau Cr i.w root li.eeiit.-d 'C*i»j are warranted to i;K- u'.Vacru.». I'atTY't Petal: Ufh <* No '»7T Broadwty._To YoiHo Piiymi ..In ail ir.n»mmiiti>r> cease,

er*, at a nileof peaer*. BapawStlBBA warte ft: it prefect, (irea d<e» <f BajJlOttTH'k PlUUl BWt tbe uoai(.mlBt trill be foundelv«r« oure raacaaetLle. Oae^l fan Life Aarfitlio Pili« of*A.r L Itt'eaia. _Aa OtB M P.

t (jr.M'rH' Cratat>, TtTaV.Kevi Pahu Stvmis.aVaitt, t jtribito llaadAeruuefa r ;<¦;¦¦ U fiatpeader«, Ac I"*> ilr:« aal aaeimfeeiuiei. Sti- h tt Ketail. i.uUl Jaiiiitry 1, at.Dp t 1 rot Ire* tban r'«t it M« 1') *ioedar»y._

Pttor. Al.KI. C. LaAaUtY'l laUCOPHaafeOVala tb> b»»t and ahaapaal atataal fur üntMlna;, Ueautliylne,Cleaalara. 0-jrliof, r. . FUetor.nr Um Ualr. LtdeM,try IC Put at r by all i/i«i ill atrfi feiioaiert Uuea|buat tbnardrIA

HoLUirVAY'ft FlU.s..Mck hcttdttcha, vertigo,fU'iiieece, pa'ta'at'iiii .( h Aear'.. tirtlna «t tae rt( "it b, ti.

all tort! '* teearal rompiriDti prooeectnii f.ou. Imperfect itfaa>tioa aia refieaed by tbe tiMt eVae of Ihn anediclu«, aad eotirelyrrae<re«l by ita oeoatlonal lite

TfMTAI.E fjTAMfJi (.» aaJ 10 erat), for aale atHiUoffiaa.

8ATUKDAY, DKCEMBEK Ii, 1Ä7.

1.on.Ion Aatrnry.pfe<ere S» v.rtoa Low, Ck>s a liv , Nu. tT Lud«>te HQ), le.aua, are euUiorized to r».«.." ro beoriptltftit t.< 1 mi. Tkiiim.

ILe uiaila for hurope, per I. S. mail at-AmorJ'nlt'eB, will ciawe tili« ;norniü| at I0| o'clock.

TLe Kartiph, with three daji' later advicei fromEuroy*, ia Brow fully dua, but bad not been t -.e-

graphtt. op to the hour of going to ptem.

At a net t rp of thirty eight of the forty 111 ano-

rlattd BaBks of thii city, called upon rery ihortortice, yeaterdajr aflerncoe, a roiolution was ubao>

mi bil) adopted to ramme specie payment, to day.Ttoae Lanka which were Ml represented will, it iiludtritood, act in concert with the otheri.

Tha Coett of Appeal! of >'ew JerVy huiMi. mied the judgment of tte Sjprem- C>urt in theca«e of .lamea Doonelly, the murderer of the bar-

Beeper tt ike Sea View House. He will b3 executedin tte -;h of January, unit is the efTjrts n .a

BHibg aiade for obtaining a pardon or a coininutatiouof Ua lenttDce prove t.Toctuai.

From MtMt o we have V.-.t . .r t to the effectlhat the poaitioa of the (.oterameut had improved.'Abo force* of the op^roeitioa ha4 b:ea routed, aaiCointiofort formally mitaiied. P'roiu Vuoatan welearu that Campeacby, at Lait aso. unti, wai a:i'jneiifg d, ated that the inhabitbiit* were graatiy»<i . .. for want of;'

.^natic I>ougiai, tnough he paired otT againsttne otHitirmaiion of lienver, is not to be puuiahedf 1 h-.s rtwistance to the bogus Comtitnti'>n makenof Kaaaas by tbe -t of hii poiition at t!ie head ofthe CeOatnittee on Territorie*. The fact i*. theJe> innatic part) cannot do without him just njw,and Butt tolerate in him antics whx-h would bringthe bead of a amaller man to the block. We are

tuoreaud more aaiuted that he will triumph in his

present policy and bring O d Back to his marrow-

(M»oe*. If a .. we entreat him not to tu*n th? Prea-idest tut of the party. Let magnanimity be re¬

ciprocated.C 4. Ji>hnaton's dispatches to lien. Scott r«ach

as by way of Washington. They are of the aamedate as the letter of our Special Correspondent,publiabtd yesterday, aod contain nothing additionalaa regards the movements of the troops. Upon.ike plaas of the Comiuauder of the Utah arm/ theysi ij l-.wvfei, abed aome light It is not Ci>l. John^eton'a intentioB to enter Salt Lake City beforeSpribg. He intends t) form a j unction with Col.Altxacder at the m >uth of Pontenelle ( reek, ab.nitthirty uiilee from that otTicera'a present camp atHam'a it and not far from (evenly miles frombis own cemp at the Sjuth Pass. He willWinter at Henry's Fork on Green Kiver,atbeie be bopea that Col. CaaaVa c mmand,with whum ia (Jov. Cummiog, will jo a him. CA.Jobtatoa thinks his force barely adequate to theprotection of supply trains, aud predicts that thetrotteat wiUbe a protracted one utleas large re-

MforcemtLta be aent tim. lie gpeaka of the im-|ew**ibility of hi* making a retrogade morem»nt, a*

if be tbiught that exigenc et might tn j beforeloog th> t woBld afford a poorer aollier bq excusefor beating a retreat

Who ia it now that is keeping up aa agitationshout K icrao and Slavery 1At the laat aceeion of Congress, Mr. Grow, from

Ike Cetnmittee of Terutones, reported lo theHouse a bill to end the complications and trouble*Tesptcting Kansas by referring the whole matter toa free and fair election by the IV .pie of that Terri-kV ry. This bill waa so fair, bo juat so manifestlyproper and argently demanded, that it was sup¬port! d not only by all the Kepublicans in b >ihHouses, bat by several Democrats aad nearly alltbe Americans from the Fiee States. It pataedthe Houae, wherein the Republicans were a minor¬ity Vi) a Baajority of twenty, bat waa killed by theleffBttcrat* in the Senate. Had that bill been al¬sowed te pa**, and bad Mr. Buebanan taken care

that it abould be fairly executed, Kansas wouldbare ceaaxd ere thi* to be a focus of inter.est or a

subject of ooatrovetty.That opportunity failed; but another is now pre-

Bected. Ail that is asked on our aide is the sub-inisaioa of all queetiooa affecting especially the Peo¬ple of Kansas to a direct and lair vote of thatI'eof le. Let Coogross provide for the, and all maytea settled bp the 1th of March next, What hin¬ders?

There is ao aeed of a new Constitutional Convenlion in Kanaa*-no need that a new Conititution beframed. There is one too many of these already.Oas more than is wanted.let tha people say which

it Ther* it tbe Top#*»CoBfti*Tjti<«, fHtnet! byh Ctmnrnmrnmrn Contention in OcWisr, 1851, sub¬mitted ha tb* people «t 8m election frae to Left'vofi-rt <Tall parties, and ratified by a mi l.mjs

vot* That Ofstitiition nvgtt p»rh*ri be crw

i* ; r#W. but oar aide ia wiling log'» Ig tte t-* >pleBfxn it. Tbe r-ppr aite ptrty tare als> imxrCc, <«ti

tution, frame! by a C\-cvea*ion wh'ct "i»t iti; 0:tober and adj> timed N-»T»rob»r Tth. Taey ara t>Tote on the '.'Ii: inst, on the reter.lioa or r'jeetionof otv article thereof which relava lo BLaroty. TheFree-State m n will keep e>ar of f.eir enoeton aa

the other aide did from theirs »¦> tint (befriends oftttl La|WaB||illl ClIIIOtMllioi HÜ erjoy Ik- rarlia-

II aentary privilege i f perfectirg their cm meaiure

prior to ita final aubmuaicn to ihe whole Peo¬ple. When, it was deemed p-s^We that theFree-State mem might be talked into ttia trap,it wm loudly procla mwi that taeir r*fu»».l tr,vote would injure tbe racceai «f the " Coc-atitation vtfA Slavery.' But then wheath.. waa intended to alarm bad been too 1' ng in thewooda to be oeared by ao amall an owl t(*t aa

this. Tbey la.gted at tbe tlreit that Kanr-asmight l*e made a bona fide Slave State, and ad¬dressed themaelvei to tie parchaae of halten. Ttuicaused aa inHtantAoeoua fhasge cf tact'Ci Itwaa d<>w given out that C llcun, Hestern, aa Itheir fellow conspirators, who vot«d tne ultra Slav¬ery article into tneir btgnaC-nrtitatioa, will com¬

bine t> vote it ottf again at tbe p' !lt ol tbe .'!»;inat Very good. Let them vote :t out or in aa

they choose. Then let C ingress pars an act pr>Tiding for a free and fair election in Kansas, andlet tbe two Constitutions be submitted (or r-cib-uiitted, at ycu prefer that word), ati let thePeople say *' Topeha or Lecompton Ccost.tutloaas they choose, and let Congress, irrrneLately oe

the determination of the rest It, arlmit Kanins orderthat eoriatitntiiu wb-ch a majority (tall haver itified. By purming this course, we mj kaveKar.iaa fnily id tbe ri.cn. a- all c 'Stroveraf withregard to her concluded, by tbe Ita of next March.Hat some will sap.Pt-rhap* ¦n-Uher of these Con-

stitubona entirely suit a majority of tie ? et pie ofKaDi&a. Very well, we are prepared fjr that oi ti-

tingticy. Let each legal voter e:.*t »MLotfof"Topeka Constitution," "Lecomptoc Cruetitct on," or "New (.'oLvention.'' aa he shall fit.and if neither of tbe exiatirg Constitutive «tt.llhave a clear majority of ell the votea, et itbe agreed that there shall be a new C«»ae©*iionauch as Mr. l>ougles route in plates by hie FinilHlgAct. We would not have the Topeka Constitutionprevail unices by tbe votea of a char ttijorit* cfthe People.Why atouM iny Me object to thii courie

" Tteaction of Congress will have cured cr i-erborr.e alldifferences as to form or regularity; the Tote of thePeople will kave settled all d ot- as t . ... ?ta'.s.What valid, what plausible obstacle rein&iaa iW e call upon tbe Petiple of the whole couLtry toux.i'e arid (cid petitioui to Coa&reei, agk ng taatihe question be aettkd at once by a full ltd fair.nbmiaaion of tbe rival State Comtitutioiii. to a

direct vote of the People of Kansas. Suet a vetowill give peace to Kanihs and t< tt4 otuitry.Why ahould any one reaist it.'

If we are to take The AVtr OrUans ')>ltei hi

authority, our Government is tte e^epieit andaloweat upon the face of tb* globe. Instead ofemulating tbe exarop'e oi Kuea'ia, " 9«vecpicg d iWI" with her foreat of bayouetd o~er ti» CuuchaiwM into Aaia," < t Prar.c^. " p bahlag ter eo&qaooti.'in Africa; of (inut I.'- -t.'irg tJ.ity.t*" throat and strangl.rig e^en' nationality wittlfl ita" limita'.not to dwell Ou divers otheT aUBoartertogoperatiocs aimultaneouly carried on in Asia, Africa,ai dAmeiicft.tbe United States, under tba ccttrol o" effete at&teomen,' " rrfuce to budge a foot If tte" great race of latter Jay pro^resaiou." The Wn

acqnititiona from Miiic«.Teva«, N*W*Mozic \t 'tab, California, Arizona.iustead of aatiafj icg TneDtitn, do but whet ita eppetite It ciopiauit bit-terip that, haTtBg conquered M-xic>, we did tot

heep tbe whtle of it, or, at le'rft, tt-b Iith?-.u< ofTehuatitepec. Bit this it rot by tnymeana tbe (oie initat.ee we bare gifMof " excesaive magnanirrity." 8i:ce tieswe have lost " three golden opportamtiea for tie" acqui*ition of valuable territory," lot ".xtend" itg oar dominion uud our republican inttitut.ocs" in tbe tight direction.'' We ought to have taken

advantage ;>f the 1'lack Warrior atTa.r t> U .e

" taken posaeaaion of lh«" trow aicg batteries >; ti e

uMlJO." We ought tj ba7e 3vai!ed ouraelvea cftbe Panama tawaacie to have Uaea pNIBliflat >fthat IstiiOiTifl. Weibouid have rja^e ,,tbe mar" tlfr of Americana by tbe niongreia of Cectnü"America, ' during their late operat.cj* for theexpulsion of Walker, tte oecarion for MOBtirgNicaragua and "holdirg ite commercial i utefor" the berefit of the world."However, there are still come gleacir.rt Uft.

There ia the island of St, iHmingo, " neariy aa" large aa South Carolina, bavicg an irea <icm :'leg," twenty-ievcn thousand aquare mile«. with an Ld<" exhauttible toil, and a OOMI lLdented witr bays" allordirg fine 1 arbora, rich ic all th-* r ctoat" prcK'ucta of thetrop ci, cloAei witk the p« r-" petual beauty (f ac unsurpaiiei Tegetati * "

1 There it b'ea, like a waif cf the aea" "Take

it ciiea The DtUa. In taking it, we ahould getsomething more than tbe land. Tte Don.iiciaRepublic hut a populati ¦ of a tusdred aci fortythounnd, Line tenlka of Africac leac»r:t TheHsytien i.mpire has a population of half a mil-lioo, all negroes. " Ia it not a burnLtg ri.>aae that" a black empire ahould lay alm.xt at our doori." that a half million of negroes thould be per^ittei" to lord it over soch an island aa St I'jmingc'''Set to wotk under " a judicious (ystem of agricul¬ture, what a deal of sugar, coffee, ar.J ccttmthey might raite!Aa to excutes for seizing up.m tte isla: i and

the inlabitante.if any were needed hfJOIlfl thuoialready tuggrsted.tbey are M pltcty ai b;lra^rr-tie*. Pvtry m>w and men some American cavtt u

is iiLtririiied or fined b) BwkttOJhs, cha--ei withseme vioIatiuB of tbe laws of the country. Whytot tum the tables on Soulou jue by imprisoning timand ftrfeitiag his bland ?

'

If the (.iovercmejat iiunwilling to act itaelf, wfcy Deed it play the deg in themanger "Let Congress ius>end tbe neutra'ity" laws for one year, and the S'-uih oriH 1001 lo" tbe tueirets I r S-rn'onqoe."That such icntimeDts and projoeti at thoao are

t ildij. avowed ia a remarkable proof of the low

crop of OfUou rapidly spriiginj- op tkrotig^ uttbeScutb, aid Coking eut all tne political id«a>aud ptincip'ea which Jefleracn and bis caa^jutorstcok such pairs to diese tu inate. If ¦.-> otherobit#c!c ttood in the way but the ceutraüt; Law«, itmight not be difficult to carry oat theae p.-oj-. ti.But Walker's recent fa lure in Central America Mtufllcient to ahow that tills stealing ac Lthah.iedcountry is not so easy a matter, while it is absurdto expect that Prince acd Logland wouli looh oi

qtitly «5*1 tee iM. Docicfo coc^i*r'4 by tlfibci-ten

It* fVfrtUry of the TreMary it endend*\n9.lfd by ttri gboit of Protection. AH t - p >i 1

cu life s bitt«r eeerxj < f tee i'roteetive Poliay. h*< h' «1 ü*'' fee's that it* overthrow if ooe mvo

MM 'fur pmaeut disaster*. Tkoegh o'>» -i> if

¦jfDfi i*»g or SLtiripatitg « r* tun to ProtectionMr. Cobh retabat* icoh retern at though it were

ka bi a ieee t sc-1 fearful penI Thoojb there be1 o airrraer} ir. the field, he is 1 to hare hitf5a.it Ite same aa though there were. He aayiw At a atsaaar* t4 saBaf >> fjaa aaaajQrp, N h propoted t»la-

rre>-» tre lit if A rttu o n a fc.i,b p» >>. *i»- .'.onSB' j aa u ta- - .reet atode ».f .»«-.»..;.¦£ tba »¦ .! «r;

i: i..u»c.U':'«a'iu ui aflorliaf. laaaaaSMI* aa w<l aa

r- 1 > .»re t.'.iM V U,r \ Hit dlatreea. Tbe pe0**" If* alreB'tj-....« fraa ¦¦.id". mt4 tbe pveaaaBiaaasaa*toakaWakva

(.. ra :'. lit .- 1.» b.i-: i to tb-ir I ::4eaa Tb» earcettneaaBid? lira ai**|hl u> tk* tapport of tbu p-»r>»i

f »'i .(. ). .! b- "ii'i.;-". ».:.. >.-¦.»

' and wHkiiiii aliaai|rila| aa »laba*a*»aipafHtae afa ajaaaB«j abet httstofote coo n.*ad>d to atu'-k of '.he p.fc.ic

at'- i'" - I to refer to ac«e ef rh» aider*ti .f.»»-. ii Li.« lfi» aitpuoo of tuck a podcy enwia« atdLipf p< r.

.. l! * tefw; f I ? tioniitf la IB** »bat Bf i r a lowlartaTthe hwportedlea tf lot. lfu n-amftcriret i» e:.ec:-a*-J,a. .-. t*it» ir a-* 'it; *t.a r',^o»rj at ioaer prwei ttao theys a» 1 .> *v. rxwpttitiea with tu loaäaatai uia_ -a.

Iura* I* tain*** ta III ba^Saae*. Toe n-riedy I«. to raiae thatS t. . fy.11 tiie I' :-u wtiuk to t ick a point Uat either ü wulhe etr.uiird, and ti.ua five to the djme«j. mit .'v t .rer the. it*r* Itaaa* BartaS, ot ti*» it artJ ba ao taer»M'd in pnea hytka aalattia*%idaty *ato euabin U* doset'.v n.ac-ft-'.urer tatK-:v> a r*a 1 r«r^ti: | prlea fat bit p-odi ^tVici Ttat tba äf¬fe I w vli I* UP-y-:%t:.j ( 1 tt.» tx-taktof the BiaBLtV t«r»r it

C a - Bat Iba* th* l -i'«i Feet woaM be alike io,j'leui. btac aa w»i. .« t <-tL« . irterMteta eota. j ciea/. .ookiaj.. t, parttlca aa a 1 a* r* ' r itte} wp n '.-t rtaaafaw tt*

e'l -u Det I iiij p-a |B* domettic Laaiafae xtr, but alao upoa.

" If thehteraai J '¦ ty l. '-.te: th radaita* Iba iupcrtatlaratn : Lb i>»».i U.e yr e, ; i« MBii*«tth*t aoa^eaata^e baabe»c Btiiwi ty tl a din.et'.ir tr.ti-.fv.;;».-. It :b" effectrrttld ba la ttobtda tb-- fureian artlt e, tb»a tba deaaeatia¦i rei ;. /.> th* 1-L-.- atit.*. a^d roiaiuii

. .» [ j' ratted has**** it . kdadtarpiiea fcr aitf. r It as* a> a fatta* of eaeiaa, -^rratfained aa ae wu. ueaf - by tbalawaof covpetttic* l.e w-::. ao raiae hit prl'*t aa tarenied u.e *\i < lere p~' ¦« of »£.i<-h be bad rompJaiwd.1.< 1'¦ (tun mtt %t 11a*f 11 o i..t; .)tt.»:iReaaed p . rbot p.t upon tba ir.!> .e af c->tatinipti a. Njt£c t it atop ': I '«r tl < sltttaf «Ute f ttiita, wheoha haa p uca*a*< ta. attiala Ba ha* not aah furatthti 1 inteif»i.bt 0-ti .- »'. tu' :-d -. i {-rlee. bit at the um«t ¦ . La« ft t* t:> T-^atury t^e tax recutr-d nl bis f^r V*eti.pt. :. ¦. '1 - m I r* rptapaaad by1.1 Pto'e- :i tirtt ir rea»» . the pH* It re.,ulred tu rat fer«»''. t. h .. i. .. »f'i « t. 't itt.d teatea

...1 i:.t i. Tat* 1 ktaacy tf tbe terec e m*it b<¦ pplie i, a. 1 h it railed] tpri t> pay It fr< it hia etherreaouieaa, Thepreyeeej .ea..re c.f te.tef tbut imp-t-t i:p«/a.lir thaaa atfdflintjal bardetia. in lb* imraated or «-e af *a*aooda and the addlti »,.«'.... r* ti i-»ptj ft lioa-arer,U 'i .: awdldaty tk**id t aaeb la the Ivpatfailaa of the1 . - t. p'r a« > acce tij» [..'¦ - to a real ra'.of point tatbe ( :¦ .¦' . .... ./ "'. . tp.L 'Jf r .UUB'l »"l dbf to ieq-,:re tin- to pay la* ad.litif r,... prl-e, .i«t y pan tbeI. Lja ailieta, I tiUoipos th* (V>aie«tl-: mar Cacti to. The'a ii.c" at taittut p' ' ft 1 I -it. for toe h-nefit reapactiftlyofttiaT.*** ry *a*IbaaaaaaatJ inaatiiaatvrtT will depend apaalbei»;aiii- ptoporB u ef ta* fon ita abd d >o>.!ic t.-t'ele her ay OOBtl U.11. In i. r*at cat. Ibl lb l*a*ad duty operata t-t::. td.t.'u i. te! .f 0'ti.« aai -at.i': «t ept by a c>r

rei;«cd^a l.jcry t , ti . rocr roer Theafnoitnt of benefit coa-i" 'at.' j I jud r t r pe»ed tt ief n-.. at ire

hraald *#f Bdupaa lb* r.^tire n--jber rf roatiitartutert tad. Ol tot ar'.k.ea upaa wb .i lb) hu .-rat' 1 d^t et were

laid; ti4 at tbe rcs.l'er of cntimera exreeda tbe dm a.her ife :.. ireja. ae a Lid tbe la ury a'a/>d eneed 'be be'.efit< .i. A pcl'i > aa*raittal t: a a* aal -i iu caa-lot -otru.au.' tbe r.p; rot A of the co-jatry."l>t vi etcfider i .» ctaterrjent in deta-1.i. Mr. C'obo aiiuiaf* that Fereiga I'ibric* are

ItOpXiltetl to the prejudice of OV own r»al pr>dti.-titns ocly in cate toey are "brought into the'. c IBtrj at 1 ^erpiict-a IBan the/can be pro-" .luccJ." Tie fact if othc: wi*e. bwaUUmbs' worth ofCloths, Furniture, Vi'stches, ubJ artiolei of luxury..<¦ latkios a;c iir fort-ed, Lot beeAtiBS tiiej can th-ute"'rt*:ftd cheeper, bnt becauee t^e cociucen

ClAtearhat It fsr fetctP'l, or b?cinae the locg-es-tai>l'*he-i ail veaitby turoptau maunfactirer* c^a

g->e!ixger cr'i'^ts t^an their haif M-dg/1 Americanrival* eat. poeaibij tdTcrd. Wo aan show that hum-c*« dt of kitiriei hive been cteapene.1 by ProtectionvtLere e.ne has been in;.*!* dearer.

II. Wal, then, my* Mr. C.»bb. I'roteetioe can¬

not Let?fit tbe Manufacturer, for what he wa&ta iia h'fcber pricb for fiii pn ducti. No, Mr. Secretary,yon we entire1? tt: if. We, for eikmplc, miao-

ftv.'j-o Lcwijhperj. nr.el mahe a living by it. Wepiiu h graBt deal ehcafac Bbeet, m\i make a better'irirg ty:t. tbtn t»etoall do il Foreign r.eari-

ptper* c upete i with run fer our M'.me Marketjuit tJ Foreign C'M*Lme:es ar l Cjt*C'>ei no withAseriaaa Litta. We sfcoa'.d be &bi<'iate'.y ccm

pelUd to xcreave the price cf mr paper, or priatit ut fax le*a coat, if we were ezpoeed t<« a af>ri>aa

io'ritrj ceaapetiaica.If a cargo ef Pritish j >arr,alsrrct.TtdwUting the Light cou-'i replace and iuf plactOBI seue of tbe -;nsi.;rga- ruing. Noaaac did printL. RaW'Yi rl >o -oit:y a ite.t a* thia forte?i> cent*undei s'icj a #)fteui A free for» pn ccmpetition.A*. row, If by a: j uv t .i we cculd be ?iia*Änfee J a

r ady an'.e for hil the ripen «e c mid pritt we

e .ould f.ii-i a cbeapei sheet.that la, « r.e on whichvela.' ,'.t ?v , xpe.-.sr?.than v.e can tow

pcjf.b'y alotd.UX Bot HiysMr. Cobb. If the effect 1 of Pro-

" tecticu ] itonld be to exclude tte foreign article." t:*n t.»!? öon.eftic n-anufacturer mon ipolirei the" htme inatket, ur\i iominar.ds his o\tn price."Wfcy, to he (!.<. r ">t, Mr. Secrttarj be.-auie tlÄerboBM EfcLi foc'.i.r^r* win't lettim! Tiere is no

moBCporpia »r.j icunt favor, but a fair field forall, .-o tt a: the.) employ American workmen, con-

sjiL tg Atuerifan foot] atd receiving AcerictnsTBgea. 31 ex rtrj I rijo aiarufacrureni, whomfou regard shut oat, are united to c>me

t'.il r i BTCkt abtil eturrience aci theirrr.; 't&i.ta;, the* ri.'.' eorr.c. J* come, when¬ever it it Buac'e tLeir L'terest to to fo. Ifa Protective Tariü should resier a-.y branch ofmaLufactire largtly temuneratte, tboiiaand* wou'diic'tatiy :uih into that very b:kn:b. kui tempo-ririly overao X bftt t2e ultimate result would bean tquil-brun. A fcty of ten thouiand per cent.i.d foiei^n cK th eoulJ cct raiie tr.e price of hemo*c-*^ cloth cc i th? profits of making it above a fairrate. IKce coanpetiaiOB would soon cure all in-rquklniei- low ta k of the home manufacturer.... e'er i'jc* circumttatce* as " unrestrained by the.'laws ofcczcpetit.cn" is moastrcutly wrong. VouI ifht as vm'L! U'.'a of the Amt ::;sq hay-uiaker or

eabb»ge grower a* " ocrtitrabed by tie laaya of'. comtetiti. * t?c* i»e we dou t td^pen ti importkkj oi call**?*..We W«tX| ( paxiaiBf a: 1 expoiirg this

.<'. rrora, »U:eia er*.-) aatimption is a

iiiiitaie tzi ev.»t; s*>ert. - a b!u:.der. At a e»a-inaTJOrOf fT.-mtt every art.cN- aitherto protectediad a irecuoti of LOL,e of them, we" ktow that a

etrady Proieiti.e Tar'.:! wouid give as Iron. Cloth.BlMa, 0!**f ware, Cn ciery. Ac, far cheaperi. at. vte cha ovis.- thA uiier ou: present policytecacse. by attrrctirg t£e pro-iucer of Metaii or

Fairies u Ue #iiie of the producer of Fool, Cotton ar i MS\ A, it would acnihiiate uielew andvtbitefd irac;po:tati"D. and thui diminiih the ccit<f t-acl a:;icie tf tie cociumer while iaereatingthe giLLi of tie pröiucer. Mr. Ccbb hu beeneducated Lot to ite the truta on tt.* po ut.he is'iLiier a pv'il.cal teceatity of blindaess thereto.but the to issttl » th whxt he pr^p IB«]*I the meett-teadbare fallac'ti may well excite aniatsment.

(itv. V .*e. as V» have k'reaJy tutcni, is unu-

ins ty jin Bfc f a ¦.'!>6f» tUl sta#on, aid La* justr.iflu-td bipleta in which Le treat* of finanea,

r. Ltjry, Tt*ike|inrg dtys, ojiten, mat-

wsy e*Bries. and nther tfcisgi too rumirouit'iierjtion. The uoveraot s monetary duja j.t'jii*e jeaterdty di*eua*ed. A great deal ii said about

»e;.t«rs of t;a-.'* Ntw Yoik iithe great importingrenter. Tien ttaira are asteliite and lecocJirfoebters, lock ss li.*ton, CLa.'.eii.n. Sen Fraa-

ciseo, &«. Rot Got. Wit* state* the punfa1fact that " Virginia, N"rth Carolina, Teoneaoee" atd Kentucky here no eeaters of their rwn. bat" are dependent upon ccoteri around then, north.' ltd sooth, »ist and weit " This, according tothe 0 overdot, a. lows the Near-York center, and tbeother centers, to take away aü tbe money from thecentcrl*** States baviog a homogeneity of trade.Tte remedy it for these State« to prk cut a properpiece for a center, and forthwith to baiid it ap.We lappose, of r to, that Virginia would furniah(he must eligible spots for centere; and then, whentte new French stsambott line it fairly in opera¬tion, tricgitg brandy and ai'ka, and taking in re-

tun tbe htney-dew, the virgin leaf and otheraarootic Inxuriea, the aedge patchea wiH diiappear,tbe atun.p taila of the ateeri will iproat withmrraouloui luxuriance, and cegroea will be worth atteaat $9JBM each. Saeh will be the lucrative adTintage of having a center.Bat aa this centralizing process must neceouri'y

he rather a alow one. Got, Wise has another planfor increasing the prosperity of the State, whichmay ha called tbe luvalvular. Thia ia not indeedeiactJy a covelty. For aeveraJ yean tin G »ver-

nor hfj < ff.ciaily gaj urned over the Crimea of themarauding rkippera from New- York and elsejerhere,who have ravaged the opulent < yiter beds of theO.d Dominion, helping themio»lvea, without leave.r license, to the Largest, the wbitett and fittestof the esculent Crustacea, and lea I ing poor V ir-

gicia with icareely the material for a single fry,stew or roast The Governor has devoted himself,with the z.al of an epicure aud the energy of a

patiiot, to the oyiter quest on, and bis Message isor,e of the tintst essays upon the subj-ct in tbelanguage, and worth) to be perused over a plate ofDown tg s best. Here it is calcalated preciselyhow a.biy ojeteri each mother oyiter spawns,namely, three million! innually; and how manyjrars aust elapie before* these will be fit formarket. Ihe oyster beda, we learn, belong to theState atd his hii ellency reai'y cannot see why theState ihou'd not make mooey oat of them. Nomore can we. < lyiter-d gging ia qaJta as honorablea buiineai as any other; and so ia oyster opening,and 10 is oyster itewing. Therefore we have not a

word to say againat the ipeculaliou, if \ irginiashould, with her iword of State.that celebratedbreed.proceed to opening oysters. Hut we want

acticn, and cot talk; and therefore we are pleasedto see that Got. Wise recommends a fleet of fourwar-steamers to cruise on the oyster beds, and pro¬tect the ahelly treasures from foreign and interlop¬ing rakes. These also wi.l be doubly useful; for,aa Got. Wise very justly aoggesta, they will pre¬vent the slaves from running away from the coast.Could atjthiigbe more charmingI Topreservethe oysters and the "nigperi" at the aame timeThe next important point dticuised by tbe gov¬

ernor is tbe eonititutioriality of Thanksgiving Day.Here he ii very clear and conclusive.the old-fashioned feiÜTil is aneonstitutionil, at least in\ irgbis. " I am cot appointed and ennititoted to.. handle Got'i holy thingi," says Got. Wise.V ery true, and a iclf-evident proposition, we thinkwe may lafely say. Bat, then, as no man, even in.Mai: ael usttta, ia compelled by law to go to churchand to cat pampkin pie on Taanksgiving Da/; and as

all the GoTsrnor of any State can do is to designatea day and advise the people to keep it. we must saythat the Governor is just a little iqucainish. Butthen, we suppose that if the people, the benightedpeople tithe North are attached to an institution,tiiit very fact afTordi puma /trie evidence that theaft re raid institution is a bad one. Moreover, we

must du the Governor thojuatice to admit that hespeaks in tbe most respectful manner of Christian¬ity, and has not the slightest objection, should anyfree and icdepeident Virginian desire to givethanks upon his own hook, having, by accident,something to be thankful for. The* Gov-rnor, however, enters a streng caveat against " politicl re

ligion," and also against " religious politics, * fromwhich we infer that he ii a follower of Dr. Rom.nd is in favor of irreligious politics.The free blick population of Virginia also g'ves

tie Governor some t'ouble. He thinki it wouldbe humane to reduce it by the atrong arm of tha'aw to a state of Slavery; but hedoul.ts if such a

course would be exactly just. He therefore recoiu-

mendi the use tf "persuasion " and a couTeraiooof as many of them as possible to a senie of theotiutiei of iirritude. Those who will not be ^on-verted ibculd bo cVaxed to go to L'beria: and thoaewho in spite of all possible blandishments will insistupon rej a.j'nz free open tbe soil, should be sabjecttd to more .trir.'gent legal liabilities and worriedit to reuse n. Some of the reconimenditioniof Got.V» i. are curious enough.that free negroei shouldoot be allowed to hold real estate, eicept a limitedotibbtr of acres for a homestead.should notreituitttd to own a house and lot in a city or

tow n.should ¦<> prohibited fro a lending money towhite men, and from holding slaves. So it is nec¬

essary to pasa lawi to preTect this ihiftlesi ind de¬graded and impOTerished people from buying boosesand Imda aid ilavei, and from lending money b>white men 1 Which, then, is the tnoit useful citi¬zen.the black with money to lend, or the whitoneeding to borrow' Got. W. distunes manyfinancial questions, but he does not touch upon this.

The re moral of Secretary Sta.ntun.to be fol¬lowed at once by that ef Gov. Walker upon thefirst attempt or offer on his part to execute hencefirth the dut.ei or discharge the responsibilities ofhis office.ii a most significant act. so far as thePresident is concerned, bat it will not undo the eiBof the new Territorial Legislature. That call is not

-nly a fact accomplished; tbe Legislature is alreadyin lestion, and will probably have had a week s

.'tart before the new Secretary pro um. can inter¬fere with iL Iu that time, it will have turned outtie "Democratic" delegation from LeavenworthC< ucty, elected by the scandalous fraadi at Kcka-

pco, and admitted their Free-State competitor!,tbertby securing a Free-State preponderance of

more than two to one in either House. The Secre¬

tary! vet", if a Secretary has a veto, will thus be: üüVred of no eilest, and the Legislature may pro¬ceed, in defiance of Denver if necisary, to fortifythe liberties of the Peoplj against the 1 .<¦ >i i.ptonconspiracy.of bogus Conititution makers.I werkwh.ch is doubtless already in progren.The importance of this gain cannot be over¬

estimated. Hitherto, the Tree Stile men of KtaV*\i have held the position of outlaws in the es'itn*th n cf the wielden of Federal power and the dis¬

pensers of Federal juiface. Their Legislature was

wreiied firm them by invasion, violence- and fraudat tLtit fint eaeet on if March > lr.v., and has

ever, till new, been in the handi ol their enemiesIkeShetifla, Jodgei of Probate. A.c., were theTtitorei of thia Legia'ature. Kvery exercise of

power which was recognized ai legal by those whowield the iwurd or who poise the scales in Kansas,iu by and for their bit>r eoemiei. This weeh io

aoguxate! a ciril revolution which nut enable

tlem hecceforth to resist Ha« ifjotAba* of theird-are it rgfcta without «oMittWf tmocc,even in the judicial apperbeeewou of Leooaptcind Coin. Henceforth, tte aabera oftbe dragooni cannot bo throw* into the

Pro-Siivery scale ot every ton in the cootro

veray. There will be crave queebooa to oettlu as

to the legitimate poweri cf the Coov-ofcoo nod tte

LepitLatare respectively, and they will haveto be decided by Congress or referred to the Peo¬

ple. Border KnfTianitm cao no more Waneb iti

ragged legions sgiinit Lawrence and Osawatarn e

omVr pretense of beirg " tbe Ana) of Law andorder in Kansas." " Sheriff Jor.es can nerer

again lead a legion of miscreants L barn hotels androb dwellings under pretense of executing the de¬crees of Grand Juries. We strongly hope that the)worst is over, arid that no more blood need be shed

to secure Kansas to Freedom. < >ne week's startwith the Legislature is a year's ga n t> the rightMay it prove to have been well employed

We have bad repeated occasion to refer to theremarkable chaoge of position which is being exe¬

cuted at tbe South oo the subject of Slavery and

tlaveholding. To all eameat, sincere and logics!sla\ehoMing minds it has become obvious that theLTounl hitherto occupied in the specu'ative discus¬sion of that question is no longer tenable. Tosomit that slaveboiding is an evil and a wrong, is toadmit ever> thing necessary to make oat the case ofthe Abolitionists. If the institution be an evil andawe eg, instead of studying apologies aid exeuses

for it, and seeking pretenses for persisting in thiswrong ard evil a little longer, it is evidently thebusiness if men of iutelligence and energy, who

have tbe r;ood of the public really at heart to settremselves at work persistently to root this evil outIf siaveboldiog is to l>e persevered n with the in

ward «atisfadi« n of au approving conacieuce, itcan only be done on the grcund that the practice is

innccent To inspire enthusiasm in its support, itmust be exalted into a positive good.A ccnsiderable number of publications hare ap

peared at the Sooth, within a few years past, har-

iDg this object in view. We have now before us

the first number of " The Southern 1 > al; A Monthly" Magaz'De devoted maialy to a discussion of Afri-" cau Slavery, and the interests, moral, sooial and'. polirica', which it involves." This new periodioalis published at Montgomery, Alabama, by the littJ. D. Williams, aa the imprint states, who has em¬

barked in the enterprise, not out of any tordid cal¬culation of gain, but Irom " a disinterested desiro.s to do good to a degraded race and distracted" country." Thia maga/.'ine already haa, we are

told, near fore thousand subscribers, scattered fromNew-York to Arkansas, aud in a few weeks theyare " expected to come in from one extremity of" the I nion to the other." By a slight deviationapparently from the theory that the planters are

entitled to lire upon unpaid labor, the publishercast* in his own case, upon tbe doctrine of pay as

you go. In fact he pushes the point a little fur¬ther, and demands in advance the two dollars whiehis the annual subscription. Looking at the enter¬prise as " patriotic and hamane and strictly beoev-" olent," and beiog " advanced in years aa well aa" limited iu means, be doss not feel called upon torish more than be already baa doue in getting outtbe first number. If thit "African Advooato and" Fxpotitorof Domestic Slavery" is to be to stained,the subscribers mutt come forward aud pay up.

In the litt of contributors we notice the names offive doctort of divinity, of tix or seven presidentsand profcsiort in colleges and institutes, and of a

large number ot clergymen. The periodical, indeed, it evidently designed for the class that pro¬fesses to have a ewnicieoce. It takes the Biblefor iti starting point "s the source and lifeguardof all morality, au<l proposea aa iU mtin object "a" liible defense of Shivery, not merely as su ab-" atractioo, but iu its applictttim to all the phaaea" :tnd relations of Southern society." "Mauy men" at the South," we ire told by the editor in hitntroductory iddreti, "do still doubt the rightaous.. nets of the institution, ind thit doubt makes us" i-owirdi, md the dupet and tlivei of eompro-" miaea." "We have ditcredited the power of" the Truth.the omnipotence of Justice the" wisdom of Providence.the almighty protecboa"of the (Jod of our fathers, who irave ui these" bn id plantationi. We have been content to rest" our ciute en tide istues, end to plead the bond of" our 1 ederal compact." But the vanity of thisreliance Las abundantly appeared. Political parti-tiufcbip sou Government influence have been a-

vohed in vain to put a atop to in agitation whichhat gone on tpreadicg daily wider and wider. Rea-tenable men, we ire told, no longer calculate uponirretting this agitation by party combinations.The only tuflicient defeute of the institution ofSlavery is in its righteousness, lire South needs'. to educate itself ia the science, the thorough mo-" relity, the social, commercial and politisal adapt-" ation of Slavery .and that is the great objectwhich this periodical ia designed to promote.

It would appear, however, not to be the intentionto stop short at a mere eulogy of Slavery as it it.The Uutl maintains not only that Slavery has ittsanctions in the Bible, but that we are to looh therefi r the principlei of its police. It teemt tobe tuggetted that ilaveiiolding uecdi not merely to be de¬fended, but also to be regulated out of the Bible." If we have abused the institution, sayi theeditor, " have impriperly denned or defectively"enforced the thtJtt. rights or .bli^ttioui of mat-" ters or slaves, it behooves us, for oirselvet. to" iLouire in what pirticulari, ai.d to what extent,.' we have been betraied into auch grave aud Li" aid) Hi errort. These tubjects will open up to" the reil thinkers ind genuine Chriititn philtn-" li.ropittt of the South a wide fie'd of hopeful in.. vettigation and activ.ty." We have noticed thitnew maga/ine at the m< re length, becauae we feel aair<Dg interest ih it. W e are an .iout to tee whatcan be taid and done, not no much in the way ofdefending Slavery out of the Bible.for wo have(.ad a plenty of LOat.». in the way ef regulating itItter the B.bie model.

Anotcer job of the Lowber species it quietly.lipping through the Common Council. The iciiemeia the parchaae of land on >N erd's Itland. at a priceto suit the teller and hit accomplices. Not daringto carry it through openly, the parties to the enterprise offered resolutions in the lower Board appa¬rently of simple inquiry.at least turn they were

understood to be, and with that uncrrttindiog theywere suffered > past ilmost without opposition,lint now it ippeart that the resolutiou provides forappointing referees to agree upon a price, anduakei their report bLtdirg it i bent fide aale.* nd who is to appoint the'cfcree for the city'Not ib.- Co.itrol'er, who«e duty it naturally wouldbe; cor the Corporation Counsel, even, whoseeatctvn it expected to tte title; but Mayor Wood itto make the selection ou the one hand, aud Mr. Alex.Met tier o« the otter. ThitMoCotter ia the agent

Of \tt $J*T*rt Of ftf Ued. dbirh.' «r,BN et-*,net ce in dtalrg with the eity. In I9CJ he act*m the agect of Abraham ß Lawrence in eethu (j§acre* oe this mom iw'acd t, tbe Co-noeo C.>«orLl.awretoe paid MeCotter cearl, $*),.*>) m ,.

mi**:.*" for m»kug tie »ml«. aid MeCuUrir w>>rteJit tor'trfc f»»r (I >«j an acre. If,bnj ,^however; Mayor Tiemanr; mj fa BetHoÄtrue, i:d»Mi stumbling bi^k and ts of***, uSturtevent, Tweed A Co. McCvtter trat is grasttribulation about the tale, mmt)a ^sent to hi* a«*:«^nce Mr. D» Molt, of theKureeu of Aaeei.ments. Da M^u WM *»a4ut-gwith the d.rTculte*. aod undertook to patgale through for ten th< aiead do tar*,declined at first, deeming the «tderat,», i^,great, but subsequently c-caeeted; I.twracea «MeCotter paii I-e Mutt the ten thousand, ati ao**afterward the Committee reported in f»»0f ^ ^purchase, the Common Coancil adopted the laaart,acd the rity paid §108,450 for laid and «ater mworth 8^40,000. The «hole matter is aat forth taofficial document*, exd is.« plain case of bribery hiacme quarter. At any rata, the present A4« or*cannot p'ead ignorance of the fact*. Thsy kasvthe referee business is a mere dodge. The city hasaot made an offer to buy, nor tbe owner ts aal;there is ne diaagreement for referees to setae, ao

call f" t their interference, anlese to serve as seaa*.

goats for MeCotter acd Mayor Wood, who are .

appoint them. We bare had about enoajja of Ms.Wood s refereacee. as the M^nhattaavitJe balkhaadand avenue contract awarls show ; but if we cjesibe sure that hit referoe* woo d drei a* f«<Hv bytbe city at Meaar*. Everts CoebraM and Eiltaadid, in tbe case of Marvme v*. Wood, w* raigatr'sk the eonae<|uence*.

We have at length th* vote eeat at the re***,Charter Electkn in our City so nearly oftina) chatthe declared result cannot vsry more than t «.z*a

vote* from the following. A «o^d deal of site**,cance may be extracted from the following hfirwVote fbr Mayor..Tiemann..431M1;. uiann'-Br"si ,2,39U /..Wood.40 9wfOt v. AJ*i»-Höti$e.*mith Kep.sjjjjsjWairner, Am. ..!.;M

Im.; .1. D*m.41 MOS-,/ti (-<vr< average].... litpublican.tlt'A

American. .14.soiDemocratic.4'^AitfThe vote for Coverner of the Aim* House may

be regarded a* a fair teat of party strength. Assam-ing it to be so, tbe vote at this dec |ej compere*with former result* as follows:

Nor.liM No»,|867. Dr*. ,«*.FrsDM.Dt....l7 771 Olapp.13,413 Smith....-0 9*!¦nnBOte....19.921 I'uitun (*. 164 Wagner..IS'CttHtubaaan .. II N3 Tucker.. ..:i?,8lrt Dogro.Republican .rain on bremoate vote, o/.ll; oa

Clapp's, 10.. ?.!>. ir.< rat gain on Hochanan* vote, 1.7; ee Tack¬

ele, t,5J2.The Democratic msjority over the RjpuWioea

vote of this city wa* in 16 for Buchanan \M,1 V!;in Nov. '57 for Tucker, 84, \0o-t in I>*e. UT, farDugro, I - 368. Republican gain since the l'reti»dential election.">,7-t. And this gaia doe* aatresult from a falling off in the adverse veto, batfram aa increase in our own. It took place aitea-

over, at a time wL*a it could not possibly k»attributed to any feverish intesest in " bieadiag"Kanaaa."Tbe vote of Mayor Tiemaan appear* to have

been made up a* follows:Republicans.B,MB I Amerieaaa.16 *11Democrats.l.',ff84 |-Total.43,1»

The above ia bated on the aaaumptioo thst at'who voted the Republican or American Attas-House Governor were oi the party thus indicated.As these, however, were borne on the same ballotwith the Mayor, it is probable that tome aiti WoodDemocrats voted the Tiemann ballot that cans to

hard without caring for the nam* bvroe on it farAim* House Commissioner. It may bo fairer,therefore, to assume that all Kspublictaa aadAmericans, with a few exeeptiona. voted their

respective ticketa for Supervisors, who were votedon a separate ballot; and we know BS reason, wayany 1 >emccrat should have voted against his parkyon Sup-rvisors. The total vote on this ticket was.

Republican, 83,864) American, I4,5u:i-Tital,:T7, ir.7. Tiemaun's vote, 4:< 188 Deduct: 17,157,leave* 6,031 a* tke utmost poaaible Dttmoeratiovote for Tiemann. Hi* actual Democratic vote lasomewhere between these extreme* of ti 8H aad8,981. Suppose we split the dirTerecce, and call it1 167, and we aball be very near the mark.There were no more Republicans in the City at

our Chatter Etectiru than at the State Klestiowfiur weehs earlier; but there were many thousaadamore at tie polls.

PBRiOSAL. Madame Otto «ade ber first app^suancs »r mw-

ms. years id a concert for tbe poor, at Hobnkeo, lastever ing. Her voice it said to be as rich and full a*

ever.

.Dan Hibbard, a prominent farmer and a wjrthymeUiber of the Society of Kriemln, recently died at hisreridence ia Cortlacdville, N. Y., aged 7C years. Hahad been a resident of Cortlandville for to ysara,wher* he was universally esteemed for hs manyir.anly scd coble qnalitie*.

(ieneral William V. l'acker, (loternor alsat, whileout Lunting, about thirty miles north of Willia-nerjort,ruptured a blood rcaeel, cr strained hiinaelf in some

tray, which caused a hemorrhage of tbe longs aadfor a few days bis darker vu coaridered imminent,but we are happy to learn that he is now out of dansrersi.d ab.e to be out o' doors, and receiving tba oon-«ratnlationf of his namerons fri'tods at the woe**et j< yrd nnriiig tbe huU, in the course of which tbaGenet a. shot a Hue k l'üila. H .. -tin.

.Tbe Waahicgton corn pendent of Tie KeeningPut tsys that Senator Suaner'd cervoua cjoditwaou'd m.t et cut* the exettement of listeoiot; to

Douk las; he was ablif* d to leave tbe ball immodia e'yRlirr the ccnimeocen ent of his speech.

Mr. Joshua H Giddicg« i« said to ho atai a*r*ia,u^ u*abla to participate in debate.Tie Ali rahdria (Jazrtte aay*:" Tbe last will and Uttament of the late 0saiga W.

P Castia of this roarty wae ««fir.iited I* proba'a at theDtcenJier term of tue County C' urt, and by it weieam that he direcred that all I >* *laxe* on hi* d ff-r«itplatitatiors be set free witbtn Uie next five years, !«.«¦-i »t it to his *iecators to p,f>v ii* the receeary f indsfiom hi* estate, to remove them from tbe C >mmoa-wea>tL. There are, probably, some two or three haa-Crtd rlaves thus set free. '

Kr.\Tic*Y..The new \.- ifisia'ure cwvered atYiatkfort on tbe 7th. J t^. A. Kmr (tm ) »w:.-n. Fpesker of the Senate bv I'.' rote* to 17. J. ftUaekitr was cboeen Otash wi'h " Annercan" o(B>fVstbrr.agbout Dr. D 1*. V.'tite Dero J of Greeoe C<>actvwas (ho*en Speaker of tie iioo«« by (A) vote* to Mfcr J. 8. .lackeoa Am.) The tutor oih »rt are ofOBBtta Dtu.ooia'e.

a»?g»»»ereee»Bie»-i ijf_» j

r» fir JVitar mi T\, K. Y. Tri*a»#Bib: In jour list ot the Members of Corres*, who**

ura.e sir \e. n'i. si eUl ta app-arr io Tn* Taise»< .<t**»yjoo stMMatStrt put dowa t*e name <l Ja*i a C. Joa«a efTri rjr.-e, e be reel tte Ci>d|reationaJ career rf that »erUeaia»

la(aaBaaa*4(tl tbt t h tf Merch laK. Aadrew Jokuaoa a*na*

i" eu rb« tec aa bia auo. eaa..-, aa j»n sre weil aware.

to., aj ui reiy, tk- t»» Wade* - B. *'. ia tSe Seaate,

acd Kc'araiJ la the liouae- betb r* ;-.»..». Ub*b Uate

Am *>i, pt\ Ik IV. W, 1,4*,

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