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't, ed out te mnost against the persons who prevented the orgauization, were them selves the persons who prevented it. Mr. Winthrop of Massachusetts merely rose to state a fact. He said, on Satur day last, the House was organized, and uow it was not; lie asked who were the dis or-anizers? lie had no more to say. tlr. Keunedy of Indiana now replied to Mr. White, his colleague, who inquired where be came from, and how he came here. Mr. Kennedy said he ca-nc from Indiana-from one of the lar::cst, tallest, end most repectable families in the State -that he came here by a vote of 1,400, over two of the largest Whigs inl his dis trict, and that he had no doubt but what he could have beaten ihree more, such as ,.is colleague, hadl they offered at the polls. Ile said lie would aik his colleague if he --ould say as much; but le would, in con. 'elusion tell the llousc how his colltague -came here. lie came with tears inl his eyes, under the mantle of the deceased President. Mr. Weller of Ohio, now rose amid a terrible cry for "question, question," and proceeded to give his reasons why hecottld uot vote for the previous question. lIe was called to order by ir. Arnold of Ten. nessee, whom he stated sat so far otl in the precinct of Sic,.py Hollow, that he could not hear his point, but lie presumed that when a member could not understand the argument of a speaker, he cried out ordes." Mr. Weller repelled the unhandqotmc re mark of Mr. Sttaly viz:-"Lhat he would co with wild beasts before he would on n the Democratic party for an alley." He said that the Denocracy cared not for the Gientleman's sneers; they went for the Constitution of their country-with the lovers of that Constitution. atnd with ihem alone. lie would not address the llouse hy permission ie would address them by right, or not at all, and took his scat. The yeas and nays were now demanded tixjan the previous question; wherupon, a call of the lie-usc was moved, and ordered; by ycas 114, nays not coutnted. . After the call had progressed to some extent, a motion was made to suspend the call, and it was carried. The doors were now opened, and the questian, Shall the tmain question be now put! was decided inl the allirmative, by yeas 113, tayes 101. The main question was then taken, onl motionof AIr. Wellcrof Ohio, by yeas and nays, and decided in the affirmative by seas 119, nays 103. Mr. Stanly now mo ved a reconsideration of the votejust giv en. The previous question was deman ded and put. The louse refused to recon hider without a count. The debates in the House to-day show conclusively that the whig party are a bundle of rockets, and that the least excite. eant will send them off in a tangent. They cannot live out the session, though in the wordsofthe poet, many of them would rather "reign in Hell than servo in 1ca ven." "Strange that a harp of thousand strings 8hould keep in tune so long." Corrspadece of te CheaI#on Mercry. WasnaimoToN, June 17. In the Senate this morning Mr. Evans e-ceupied two bours and a half in a very elaborate speech, part of which was a reply to Mr. Woodhury's remarks, and part a justilcation of the increased expenditures recommended by the present Secretary of the Treasury, which he said were demanid ed by the defenceless condition of the coutn try, and this he attributed to the niggardly peasmoy of the last Administration. Mr. Wrightecommenced his reply to Mr, Evatns, and remarked that it was evidetit the De -tocracy would Giud it hard to please their opponents, let them take what course d-.ey would. Durinig the Presidetntial canvass last summer, nothing was a more frequent theme of thb indignat eloqjucnce or Whig orators than the extravagance of the theni .Admioistration; atnd upon the accessie:, of the present, we were Iced to excpect astound. ing disclosures of this prodig.al waste of the *public treasure; but beholdI a new cause for censure is developed itt the spcecha of the Senator from Maine, anid the l)etmo cratic Administratioin is denouumnced for its tiiggardly ptarsimnony. Ths contradicto ry charges, follow itt such ra pid successon,. concltusively proved that somec of them were founded int mistuikc, which of themt he would not undertake to say. Alr. W. wras proceeding to take up arid analyse the estimiates for the varius Depaartmets im Jetail. when he gave way to a maotion for adjournmentt. Iu the House resolutionts were adopted by which the hlouse, after Saturday ttexm, will meet at 1t) o'clock in thte morning and edjourn at three. A resolution was adop ted on the motiont of Mrt. 'itmner to appoint a Committee on Retrenchmrentt and Re form of five members. A Comnmittee was also ordered to be raised to emiluire into un-~ necessary expenditures in atnd about Con-. gress, during the discussion on which it was stated that the average expenses for stationary during the last Congress was .ne hundred and forty dollars a memtber. The greater portion of this was emnployed in eletioneoering purposes. The House then tookc up the bill to pay * o Gen.H arrison's heirs the sunm of65.000. Au ametadment was propiosed to pay to Mir. OJgle's widow $0,000. Before the House *ook a vote on either ptroposition, a motion fur adjourntment wvas made and carried ini jbo airirative. WVAsINTsoo..utnc 17. WVell, the first act of the grand Whig Alrama of the Extra Session is finished. The 21st. Rule is abolished, and a resolu uion adopted in its stead, putting petitions on this subject, otn a footing with petitionas on alli other matters, and prohibiting the re ception of any petitions on arty subhject ex reptiug those embaraced int the P'residents Mlessage, and a Bankruptcy Law. This subject is thus left ini the very worse posi lion possible. The protectiotn alliirded by the 21st. Rule is abolished ; violetnt agita gion has beeni prodluced. the most incendia ry principles and appeals have beetn made, tand the wholo sublject left opent for corntin-. ued anid more violent naitationt at the opeu ing of the ensuing Cotngress. Conld atty set of meni plotting the ruin of the South, have pursued a course het ter calcttlated to vbtain their end? And~ twhat will you say, whent I tell you, 'nti this state of things hats be-en produtced by the vote of South 'n Whiigs' (n .\r. Rayner's proposi pion to adopt the lttles genraaiv of the last Congfess, the vote was -10.1. to I./ I rew Southern Whigs voting against the z Resolution. So again yesterday, Mr. I Brown from Peunsylvania, offered a Res- i Alution proposing to refuse to receive all I Petitions fron any of the citizens in any i of the S.ates upon the subject of Slavery, t existing any where in the United States, and with respect to any petisions from citi- i zens in tite District of Columbia. relating i to the matter here. or from the citizens of t the Territories, relating to that institution I within these limits, that the question of the I reception ofthese shall be laid upon the ta ble. This proposition could have beet) carried with ease. It constitutes the dis. tinction which occasioned many Nort.ern Democrats to vote against the 21st. Rule I as it stood. But the greater part of the Southern Whigs combined with the North ern Whigs and Abolitionists in sustaining thre call for the previous question, by which this proposition was excluded. To the honor of your State, he it said, that from the beginning to the end of this whole af fair, your Represenatives havq voted in solid phalanx, and not a Southern Demo crat has faltered in his course. There nev. cr has been, at any period, any difficulty in settling this matter as it ought to be set tied, were it not for Southeru men. Yesterday the schismi amongst the Whigs was openly displayed on the floor. The lesocratie portion of that party I think are ol': anid if they are not sustained by President Tyler, he is playing raise to them. Contradictory things are said rela tive to his designs, in case a lank is pro posed; and I feat the uncertainty as to his designs, arises from his own language and conduct. I go uon his manifest interest, his pride. his honor, Ii consistency, and I think lie will vetl a 1lank. lie and Mr. Clay are notoriously not on terms. 31r. Woodbury yesterday exploded the humbuig of a National Ikb, contained itn the Secretary of alt ''reasurv's Report. Falichood and plunder, appear to he the t)wo gresat itstruments by which the 'edural party are to be ssttained is power. W.xoji irox, June 18. In Sense to-day, M:. Wright resuned and concluded his examination of the Re port of rihe Secretary of the Treasury. lIe cofincd himselfstrictly to the figures orte Secretary, and gave the following as the results of Iis analysis : Outstansding appropriaions ' on 4th March last, $33,429,616 ise appropriations by Con gress for IS11, were 18,318,197 Leaving a balance of out standing appropriations a, that (late of 15,018,419 The Secretary proposes to expend during the rensain ing- 10 months of the year of outstanding appropria tious, 2-1,210,000 And recommcsuds new ap propriations amounting to 2,521,336 Total proposed expenditure for ten ssonths, 26,731,336 'T'leSecretary gives his avail able means for the ten months as 20,730,395 Leaving a deficit at the end of this year, of $6,000,491 Tro ascertain the real decit, Mr. Wright said there should be deducted first, the new apprtopriations recommenided $2,521,:336; 2d, thea amtsfs o16 per cent Treasury notes, nlot payable till next year. equal to $1,000, t)0t; 3d.se amount itn the Minat and branch es, not insclusded in the Secretary's state ment, $215, l51-mnaking together $3,736, -lde; which sdedluced leave a deic or debt at thse close of fthe year of .226 1452 Thtns it appearced, sso far as the Secretary's report was to bie tasken as authouity the "grave ande wei;:hty matters principally conntectedl withs the revenane and finanstces ofthle counst y"' whsichl were given as the occe-ion of the extra Session, wvere nothing more naor less thans to anthorize the Secre tory sto take 5 '2,ti4,-152 fromn the outstand ing~ appropriations, anid apply it to the ser vice, of the year IS811. lie thsen 'weni intlo ans examsinations of the - debt," which the Secretary had re coummsendiaed to be funded, amunting toi F'roms this shild be deducted tthe ncw applroprsiatios rechumatnenided of $2,52I, - 33'; the amauot recommrsend~edl as a ba lhince is, the Treasury, sor rusher fos th~e use of the ne w Iheal agent, $l,000J&,000; Treas urs snotes not due unitil next year $G,087, 271; Trreasury notes issuedl isn January and F~ebruary oif this year, sand niot panyable un til nseu year, $1 ,000.000hh; Fund~s ins the Mint assd brassches $215, I51-amsounsting in all tao I3,623,762; whsiebs deductedl froms the Secrctary's *-debt." of S1G.088,2I5 leaves the exact amnount arrived us in assa lizinsg mthe Secretary's deficit of the year, viz.: $2,25i I,152. Th'us the Secretary to creaste a debt hasd aticipated the Treasury rnses not aloe till necxt year, amtounitingj, to over $7,h004,000t; hadl recommisended stew apptropriattionss ofr$2,500lt.0004; ands tat raise four nuillions for thse use of a lscal agetto Ie bank upons. That in thse opinion, of thtei Secretary shis debt was so large thtat is could not be paid shtort of eight years with, taut toos heavily biurdesninsg commtierce andI the people; that he therefore recommseneded the persmanent funding of thse debt for eight years; thsat lie then furthser recommnended ass increase of the taxes, by raising a duty upon articles whiech are now free from duty tos the amsount of fr-om five to eight mailliusns paer ansnum; and then said Con gress mnight meet thse current expenses of thse Gouvernmnent, pay the interest upon thtias sixteen msillion debt, antd snake any disposi ton they stuld please of the revensue fronm I the psublic lands. In other words, lher said it was a syntesm of finance whtich pro posed so raise by taxes from five to eight a msillious, ansd create a permanent debt of I sixteen msillios, to enable Congress so givei unnsy three millions in the shape of a dis tribution, of theo proceeds of else publicr lans.s Mr. Woodbury fullowed -\r. Wrights' rery lucid expusition ins reply to Mr.e E~vanis's remarks of yesterdny, anad showed) :uticlusively thsat every effeort that gentsle nans lad msade to extricate te Secretaryv 'roms htis plunrders hsad plunged him intoc athlers still msore embarrassinsg. Thte de-d ,ate.wus protloniged until after 5 o'clock, d *ven Mr. Calhoun annoaunced hsis iteno- c iota uf .nenking, otn the stubiect. and aftern illuding to the long sitingof. ive,bours in' I sultry chamber. and the appargot-o0 Iaustion of many of the Senators, asked for in adjournment. Mr. Clay hoped not, and toped the question would be disposed of o night. There would be pressing basi iess before the Senate on Meaday, to which the Senate had by a previous vote esolved to adjourn. The bill to incorpo 'ate the banks of the District, and probably he report of the Committee on the new iscal agent, &c. The questiow- was then aken, aud the motion for adjournment was :arnied. In the House the bill to grant $25.000 to he widow of Gen. Harrison, was debated ill day, and nearly twenty speeches were nado upon it. About 8 o'clock. it was aken out of committee, and ordered to be Dngrossed for a third reading-ayes 132, uays 66, and the Rouse adjourned. WAsaaroTON, June 19 The Senate were not in session to day. It the: ilousea question wa s raised oan the presentation of a petition to revise a a tariff, which. after discussion. was order ed to lie on the table-ayes 130. noes 60. Mr. Adams profftred a bundle of Abolition petitions, for which le desired-a receipt from the Clerk of the House, buttheSpeak er deciding that the question of reception would be taken on each one as presented. Mr. A. pitched them into his hat. A bill was reported from the Committee on Wavs and Means to defray the.-expenses of the extra session. A resolution was adopted to appoint a com mit~ee to inquire into the manner of collecting imposts at the various ports of entry. Alr. Barnard of New York asked leave to present a project for a fiscal agent, but it was objected to. Mr. flunt offerered a resolution instructing the select Committee on the Currency, to report a bill for a National Bank to be es tablished on a plan which accompanied the resolution. This was supposed to be the project of Mr. Barnard, and a motion was made to lay it on the table. Several members desired that tie plan might be read, but the Speaker decided it was not itt order, in that stage of the proceeding, to call Ior the reading. Before any question was taken as to the disposition of it a mo tion was made for adjournent, which was carried, and the House adjourned at three o'clock. From the opposition made to Ibe many efforts of Mr. Barnard at the present session to take a lead on the subject of a National Bank, it is evident that the Southern members have no great confi dence in him; and the Whip generally, and the Clay portion of them particularly, are anxious to preveut any interforence with the bantling to be produced in a few days under the auspices of their favorite in the Senate. \VASHINGTot June 21. In the Senate to-day a manssage firon the President in reply to the resolution of Mr. Preston, inquiring into the casses of the re turn of the Mediterranean squadron. The correspondence completely exonerates M r. Stevenson from all blame, and attaches it to Capt. Bolton of the Brandywine, whose conduct can be excused or palliated only on the supposition that it was caused by mental aberration. Mr. Prewno aimed his missile at bighergame, and cisad not con eal his chagrin at the&-sultbut vented it in growling at the occupant of the very desirable situation near the Court of St. James, whn ho ohoped, after this affair, when hae knew nothing, he would say~ noth ing." Mr. Sevier admitted that M r. Ste vetason should be censured a liule, for sup posing it possible that with our present very amiable Secretary of State there w as any datnger of a war with England. Mr. Cloy of Kentucky, said he was in - structed by thec Select Commoittee on the Curretncy to report a bill entitled "A bill to incorponrate the subscribers to the Fiscal Bank of the United States." and to submit a written report. The Rteport was read by Mr. Clay, and briefly recapitulates the provi'ions of the bill, and argues elaborate ly t ,o mnaterial points itt which lhe differs from the project recommended by the Sec retary. The report commences with de clatrinag that the establishment of a batik is indispe-n,ahle to thec regulation of thec cur reuiey, to facilit ate cotmmerce, and to insure to Iaihor its reward. Its constitutionality was conideredl settled ; its expedliency woul n. tot tie discnssed. Aa noense asa itrity of the people of the U. States expect the charter of a Batik at the present ses sioni. The oldI UnitedStates Bank charter to be thec basis of the ne w one; capital thirty millions, whtich may be increased to fifty; dividends, seven! per centum, the deficieni ey of one scar to he tiade up from the surplus of thec next, all over seven per centt: to go to the United States: loans and dis counits tiot to exceed capital more tilatn 75 ter cenat: its affairs open to the inspection rft he Secretary of the Treasury. Commit Lts of Congress and Stockholdlers; notes tot to exceed three times the specie in its vaults; nao paid oliicer of the bank to re :eive accommnodations. and embezzlement ty an officer of thec bank to be punished as rel.-oy. Mr. E wing's project reqjuiredl the rtisentt of the States as necessary to the cs tablishmnent of branches within their limn t-. Mr. Clay considers this unsound in rritcipile and danagerous in pratice. Con ress had a perfect righat to exercise the aranichiug powe~r, independent of theStates, anid the forbearance to exorcise it now would he a virtual surrender of it, and it :ould never hereafter be resumed. Presi lent Tyler has intimated on several occa ions sitnce the meeting of Congress that 1c could not sign a hill recognizing this ')wer, and Mr. Ewing framed his bill so t to obviate the constttutionl scruples of he Presidetnt and some of the Southern W~higs on this point. At a caucus haeld ast Thursday night, however, it was the pinion that there was asutlicient number funscrupulous Whigs to carry the mn re tharough, and it was determined to est the firmness of the President, and in ite the exercise of the veto. The bill and he report were ordered to be printed and nade the order of the day for Wednesday text. The motion of Mr. Clay to prinit extra epics of the report of the .'ecretary of the reasury was taken up. Mr. Calhoun, whao was enttitled to the floor said that it rats impossible to read the report without oming to tjae conclusion that it was the esire of the Secret ary to work out a large eficit a t the end of the year,. but the errors f thte report had been exposed with so ,.wh cleaness and ability hy the gentle-. mon who proceled hin [Messrs. Wood bury and Wright] that it would be an un warrantable waste of time to go over the ground again, and be summed up briefly the results arrived at by him from data furnished by the Secretary's report, and he clearly proved by the decretary's oon figures that the deficit at the end of lie year would be less than $2,000,000. Why this extraordinary effort to make a large deficiency? A wish to detract frnin the last Administration might have had some efrect, but there were evidently higher ob jects. to accomplish which the existence of a national debt was necessary. What those objects were the report of the Secre tarv of the Treasury had left nothing in doubt-n runded deht; a United States Bank; an oncrous system of taxation; and a distribution among the States of the rev enue derived from the public lands. Nor was the amount of the propo-ed debt a matter of conjecture, but acco ;.g to the Secretary's proposition, was to consist of sixteen millions deficit, six millions .o lie subscribed to the National Bank. nl - a millions three hundred thousand to .te same bank in behalf the States-amount ing to thirty one millions of dollars, The next siep is the imposition of a hea vy tax, increasing the duty on the free ar ticles from five to twenty per cent. nearly doubling the tariff, and increasing the bur dons of the people twelve millions of dol lars, and this principally to furnish capital for the new institution to bank upon; the bank to be made up or the credit of the Government and not of individuals. The next proposition was to cover the transfer of the public domain by inortg.a ging one thousand millions of acres for the payment of the debts of the States. And these wcre to lie passed as ieasures of "relief" to the country. Who are meant by the country! Is it the people-the tax paying people-who a~k notliing hut jus Lice from the Government! Will a debt of 31 niilliocs relieve them! Will an atn tail addition to the taxes on imposts of 12 millions relieve them? Will a permanent mortgage on 1000 millions of the public domain relieve themt? Would gentlemen dare to rise and say these are our tieatures of relief! Would they have dared so say so, during the late Presidential canvass! He then described the class to whom such measures would be a relief-tihe de pendentson the bounty of the Government. To these they would be a relief, and they wanted it badly, and were howling for their prey. The system of measures upon which they flourished, was now deniolish ed and in ruins, and this system it was the purpose of the party now in power to restore. Mr. C, here sketched with a ra pid but powerful hand the history of par ties from the origiu of the Government, and the Extra Session of Congress was called for the purpose of reviving the I1am iltonian system, to which was superadded a measure more obnoxious than any other, the distribution policy. If the majority succeeded in their designs, he would not say it was the foundation of a revolution iu our Government, but it was a revolution consummated-the establishment of a moneyed oligarchy more odious and more exacting than any one described in history. Mr. C. exemplified the manner in which the taxing and disbulRing power, eveb un. der the form of a republic, could be made to work the most despotic tyranny. lie said the true patriot would lay not one cent of tax on the commtunity, that was not ab solutely necessary, atnd would recomlmenad notne until useless expenditures wore lop ped of. Did the Secretary of the Tireasu ry propose any reforms, did he recommenad retrenchment? None, ntie; but a great increase of public expenditure andl a great iucrease of taxes. The Senator fromn Maine, (Mr. Evanis.) had snecered at what he termiedl the ab stractions of certain gentlemen in: the Chamber. That Senator does not like a b stuactions. Thec abstractions of the Con stitution are a bar to the attainmetnt of his objects. A bstractions have always heeni the aversion of plunidercrs, and the high wayman, wheti he steals tupotn the unsus pecting traveller is met with the abatrac tions of virtue tad law, and sneeringly puts them asiade ito reach his victim. The Sen ator from Maine hiad denounced the prac lice of Exccutive recotmmtetidatiotns to Con-. gress, but was lie tnt aware this was a duty enjoitied upon01 him by the Conistitutian! lIeI hopead the aversionl of the Setnator to the exertionl of Executive paower hiaad no relation to the piresetnt incumbiena, anad if it hadl not, it was a mere abstraczion. lie was in favor of the exercise of the constitutional powers of the Executive to their full extent, anal conside-redl the veil) power an importatnt onie for the protecmion of the rights of thae peaople. lIe dhen wett into an analysis of the operaion of a Na tional Bank in centiralizinig the mioney power, anal contrasted it with the lr:de pendaent Treasury, and. demonstrated coil clusively the superiority ofalie other. Mr. Clay coimplained that genitletman had anticipatedl atnd denonceed the- mea suires of the Admuintistration in advance, and told his fricends the h ist aniswer theazy could give to these long spieches was to enact the measures de~noutnced, in ihcem. Mr. Woodbury repliced andi shiowedl that these speeches were but ini answer to the Secretary's speech in favor of certain menc sures. Mr. Clay said if he had waited tuntil these mteasures had beent barought forwani, the Senator fronm New Ilnampshire would have saved a littde of his windl, which frmmi his large size (uniting his htandls and ex tending them out before him) lie supposed was a commodity exceedingly useful to him. Mr. Woodbury, said he would discuss measures whenever lie thought proper whether he was thick or thin, lonig or short. The motion of Mr. Clay to print the ex tra copies of the report was agreed to. anal seldom has he been so tired of a motion as he was of this before lie was done with it. The hill to incorporate the banks in this District was then taken up, atnd discussedl until half past -4 o'clock, wvhen a motioni w as made to adjourn. Mr. Clay "hoped not;" but it was carried and the Senate adjourn. ed. The House met at 10 o'clock. A mo tion wtas madle to refer the Seniate bill for the repeal of the Itndependetnt Treasury to the Comnmitieof Ways and Means, which iave rime to a considerable discussion, natty of the Whtigs contending that itashould ton be rcfcrred at all~but it was at last ngeed to. Mr. Adams tr.a Commenced the pre - sentaion of Abolitioun petitions, wlich le carried into the Hall in a banhox, and pro ceeded for an hour and twenty minutes before he got through, when he returued thanks to the [louse for the patience mani fested. Mr. iluna then called up his reso lotion of Saturday. relative to a National lank, the motion being to lay it on the to ble. This was lost, and the reading of it being called for, it was read by the Clerk. The prominent features of the plan are as follows: Amount of capital $25.000,000; the Uni ted States to own one-lifth thereof, to le paid for in five per cenit. stock ; min other fifth thereoif to he sold in oiei market, neit helow par, for specie only; the Baik and Central Branch to be licated in the City ofNcw York; the Bank to be: governed by a Board of Control. consi6ting of --even temibers, of whom five to be elected by the stocklholders other than the I -ited States, and two by the Secretary ofi the Treasury; the comptrollers to receive sala ries, to be paid by the Bank, and not to be L.irrowers from the Bank, either as princi pal or surely, the Bank at its bratnces, to be a hank oldiscount, delosite andi circu lation; the remaining $15,0(M),000 of the capital to be held by the Batik, to he sold tt market not below par at the branches pr pecie only; the circulating notes of the Bank are to le made payable at the Cen tral Branch: loats to be limited to80 days, Ind not renewable; no loats to be male to tlie Utnited States in amtount exceeding .:2.000,000; dividends to be limited to seven per cent per annum; the Bank to be obli ged to receive at par, in pnayments, the cir celating notes of all so-and siecie paying banku, and send sach iolc home to the banks respectively; the public monCy io be deposited wherever lite Batik has branch es. atil hoiheotes of the lai.k tol be receivedl, until otherwise ordered by Congress, in payients to the Uite'cd States; suspen-ifion ofspecie payments to work a forfiture of charter, duration of the charter to be thirty years, &c. It was re!erred to the Committee on the Currencv. Mr. Wise now called tip iii resolution, requesting the Secretary of the Treasury to report a plan of a fi.,cal agent aginst which no conttitutional objections could le brought. This was opposed by the Wes tern Whi:s, and su pported by .1 r. Ad-ims, Mr. Cost Johnson and Mr. Sergeant, and agreed to. The Ilonse then took tip the hill matking appropriation (to the amount of 8317,558"J.) for the expenses of the present Session of Congress, which was passed and sent to the Senate. The Ilouse then adjourned, WAsHINo-ToN, June 21. To-day the Committee of Finance in the Senate reported their scheme of a U. S. Bank-and it is a flank out and out; in all its main features the old U. States Batk over. Ewing's project to gaitn over ryler, by concessions, and reconcile the measure, to sone appearance at least, with hisicon sititional scruples, are contemptuously thrown overboard. It was determined in caucns, it is said, that the feature leaving it to the States to accept of branches was at all hazards to be stricken out. Ti:e constitutional question is therefore nakedly bluffed up to Tyler. If it passes Congrwss. in this shape, be cannot help vetoiug it. The Whigs must expect this or they must htave the most profound contempt for hima. Mr. Tyler's friends appear to have no doubt of his course. The poor Secretary seems to have no approbhationt or sytmpathy tromt either his frienads or his foci. After Mr. Clay had fimishied his lteporctfromnthe Finance Comn tmittee rejectinig his notionts as to a Ui. S. Bank, Mir. Calhoun comttctcedl on hiis Treasury Repoirt, and cotiede the pro cess oft demolition and attritioni be;;un by M1r. Woodury.-The fabr'catiotis anid in veutionis of this iteport are aibsolutely dlis graceful to ie r. Fwitg as a matn. lDo not be surprised, if in two weeks front this titme', the W~hig party aind th Ip lresetit C;: beinet are dissoilvedl. T1hat is at piresett the aspect of things here. Web~ster has ceeurted all the Democratic Mtlers oft the Iliontse-a thing tinheard oef before, anid 3Mr. Choate, it is saidl op posedl ,tretnuoausly in Cotmmit tee : le II atnk lIIill reported by Clay. It is alsoe rtimoredh that there ha., baetn high taclk in the Ca:.bi net Otn act'ciiit of Bll, letting out sotme Cabhine~t secrets. The Preside'nt pereebablly bhats focaid out that lie is mtore of a spy of Mlr. Clay's than his adviser. W~AlundaTroN. Junie 22. itn the Senate, to day, 3Mr. Alleni prsn tel a copiy oft the pr ceetditngs of a mecetitng comeiidse of a large nutmbher of the citizetns of' Cincinnati oeppose'd to a N ational Bank. Rtsesltitionis were aippenede to the proce dlinegs, tdeclairinog tha::t sholieiId a Iaw for a charter lbe enacted, measures 'ehould he in stamiily taken fer its repeal. Sir A lien said lie conicurredl heartily in the s~enitents of he mneetitng, and saidl that so) soon as it wa is atntiunccd to that leody that a banik char ter had receive1I lie signcattire of' the' Pres ident of lice United States. lie wocul give no: ice of his intenitiotn to introdulcce a bill for its repeal andl it should lhe fol loweed up with asll the energies God woui grantt imc. tint ii the repeal was accomplihed This wounld ward all thtose cotncernced, that the righits acapuirced tinder lice charter. bcy i hocse acce'pt oug it. were tiot to abrogate thic rights of thle peoepte uncder the Concstituteon. lie thetn moved that the proceedeingn be prinated. Mur. Clay of Ky. ro'ee w-ith much warnmth, andl said lie would infoerm the Se'nator fromi Ohio,. that the mnajoirity iti that body wvere not to he tdeterred, or driven frotm their course 'y thbreats of rebellion anid civil w-ar. They would march boldly up to their dnity and pass such tmeasures as were deman ded by the couintry. le then moved to lay the miotion to print on the tabile ; which mfotionl is not dlebiatable. This was dlone to prevent Mr. Allen fromr reply, atnd though reeiestcd by Mr. A. to withdraw the mnotioti tct permit him to explain. Mr. Clay refused; and the imajoirity voteed lto lay his inotin ona the table, 'c Thehill to incorporate the six banks of this District 'vas takent up. and the discussioni on thte various amenetnts propoesed,. occupied the Senato utttil a late hour, wh len it was ordered to he engrossed.. The reesolutiotn submcitted some days ncec by Mr. Buchann askitng the Presi denat to communicate to the Senate the names of those whto have leen remos edl treom office since the 4th of Marcih last. was t.,1..en. :it. . Ma.,g..n, bo,,,-t e Scan - for nod. 1enni: a t v, ;: dn e ton cabb: er a while. 'ihe moiseovai, whilch I:nl been Made were only as tle preface to the vol utne which w as to fulleow. When the work was complete. lie would he happy to assist the Senator in obtaining all the inforination desirel, andi he would have the nmames printed in p:trailel columns with those removed luiring the last Administra tion. The resolutiun was thern laid over until to-morrow. A great number or nominations have ben scut to tile Senate-that ol Bela Bad ger amoneg the nutther. And the remuo vai3ine ihe lith (flarch last already ex Coed those that were maide during the t clv'c years of the adininstrationse ofGen eral Jacks0on and Mr. Van luren. eit: bill miakin)g appropriations Pit the extra ses';oni of Cosnress was passed, and tile Senate adejourued to ncct at 10 o'clock to-morrow. It, hw lliouse a iotion Was made by Nfr. Kinlg of Georini to print 1540 copies ora ,urvev of LC1sey and 1Lapelo inlets which gave rIse to a debate ins which the merits oftlhei dilferenat modhes of coast survey were canvassel. Mr. hlolmen and Mr. Wise expressin;; liemtselves strongly in favor of the triangular systei or 1r. Hasler. The resolution was adopted. The rullow. ing resolution submit ted yesterday by Mr. Campboell was taken up for consideration: Reolved. That the Committee of Ways tad M -anis he instructed to inquire into the expediency of so amending the act entitled -An Act to provide for the collection, safe keeping. transfer and disbursement of the public reventie," approved July 4, 1840, as to authorize all dulatfes. taxes, debts, orsums of mone-y. accruing oand becoming pay ile to the United States, to be collected and paid in the legal currency of the United States. or in Treasury notes, or in current hank notes of swecie paying banks, paya ble and paid ont -lematind in the said legal currency of tshe Unitedl States: and also of providing by law for settlements with the banke, recpectively, for much balances of Iheir tiotes as may rennin on hand at the expiraimin of certain periods: and also of repealing so much of the said act entitled "At act to provide for the collection, safe keeping, transfer and disbursement of the public revenes,"as makes it obligatory, after a certain period, upon officers or ngents engaged in making disbursements lnot accoui of the. United States, or of the General Post Officc, to make all payments ins giold and silver coin only. Thi, after a lebate in which Messrs, Pickens. Campbell, Fessenden, Pope and Profit participated. was laid on the table. A motion was theni madIe to reconsider the vote by which the Bill fur the repeal of the linidepenlett Treasury was referred to the Cominittee of Ways and Means with a view of referring it to the Select Committee on the Currency. A very ani mated debate arose on this motion, dating which it was repeatedly declared by the Whig Members that their course was occa simned by a want of confideuce in the Com mitttee-comprisedl, as it is, of six Whig. and three Demn'crats-.1easrs. rickens, Jones and Atherton. A majority of the Commititeo is supposei to be averse to re pealing tihe Iidependent Treasury, until they have the substitute before them. Mr. Wise deejare himself in favor of this cours e. He considered the State Banke posit system worse than the Independent Treasury or the United States Bank, and the Girbt war lie had ever waged waaagsinst it and K. M. Whitnecy. If his hands were in a vice, and he was asked which was the hest, lie said he could not tell, so help him God. The Sub-.Treasury was dead ! dead! dead ! lIc askeud why all this wild exult a tiion among t he majority 7-this spearing of the dead llotspur. Ito was for a sub ttute biefoere lie repealed the Sub-Treasu ry hi" lie said if the House did wrong, there was power resting in safe hands to right it. .Alr. IBrownt of Phtiladelphia thought gen ietmen showedl that they were afraid of the dleadi llotspurt. lie thanked the gen sleeman from Virginiia for the word. He calledl upon gentleen to, show where and whetn the SubTc.renem v had been codem nied, or a1 Na;tiioal llank approved of, eith er at erons roads or taverta. lIe allnded tto the luone case', andl askedl Mr. Butts where Ihis hill wats to prevent niegroes from siing test imtonty befoare courts martail. lie aiskedl the friends of (igle where their mieat-ures to :educe the expenditures were -wh ere his log cabhi on nd horn spoon bill wats ! Proteceti ve tiritt', and an old soldier ait a doeor osf thne log cabin. were upon the hanner itt Pesylvania. and sno one said a wordl againist the Sub-Treasury or in ra veer of a Naitioinal Ihiank, but all were oppo sel to a Treasury Hatik. The tmotioin fo.r recemnsideration was at hetigth carried-ayes I l8, nays 90. Mr. Picketns thir enved to refer the bill to a Comitittee oif the wshole Ileouse :lost T'he hill wats thent meetsredl to the Select Commltlittee otn the Curretncy, and the llouse adhjournedl. Ible i iien : . rkamnsas.-Onle or the grossest an t mo hest astrroiu violaitions of the how, anud defiance to the consttituted asutheoriuies that we hease ever heard of, re ?enty ocecurredl in Phillips county, Ark. The reg0ular M ay term of the Circuit Court being uheeut tee lee heldl in that county, much pcroprty being advertised to be sold, an~d mtany executionts to be levied, a pett tion sigvned by 2001 names was addreased to Judghe linker, prayving him not to hold the Coutrt. That funtetiontary so the honorable discharge of hi, dluty', proceeded to Hiele nea, ande was ont his way to) the Court, when the Ilall ofC Justice was forcibly taken pos session of Iby 20 armeed mesn, who barnecad-. ed the~ door, refsseed admsission to any persons, and thireatenied the sheridl' with denth, ina case he attempted resistaoce. Th'le shteriff mtadle a reqsl~tion~ upon the Colnel of the counsty for fifty men to ena Ile him to suppress the rebellion. Anee this hie r,yignted, and' the Coroner inmme :liatei v foleiwedl his example. so that there being no ecicer to enforce the laws, and the power t'5 ap)pointt a ieheritl pro ter, de volvinag on ose wheo himoself was among the iinsurgenlts, the hnldinag of the Court was wsholly prevcnted, and Judge Baker retura e-d to ~Culumbhia. 'rThe rebels had possessin of the Court hleose at our mast adIvices, and no attempt hadh beetn madec to diisle'dge them. T1his is ;sbsieute~I ulis Trrce,,a to the State of Arka..as, and should be puttihed in the n'~t .i;-a! & acvere 5aUer..- 0. Bes,