University of South Carolina Libraries
\ health. In his younger days he laid dowu certain excellent und concise rules, to which he always adhered. The health that he enjoyed, and the great age to which he lived, conclusively show their value. "Keep" says ho, your head cool by ternIterance, yourfeel warm iy exercise. R is * kably, go to bed soon. Never eat till you are hungry; never drinli but when Nature requires it." These words speak volumes. i ii i 11 i i ii i CHER AW GAZETTiC. W1uI>.NESL>AYT FbBRUAUY 10 We return our thanks to those suhscri-j bers who so promptly a;id cheerfully res- j ponded to the bills sent them, by remit- j ting the money. We hope many others i will still go and do likewise. We have received a Copy of Mr. Cal- iI * ' ' " I 1 houn s speech in tne oenaie on nic lauu question and shall insert at least part of it next week. The Anniversary Oration before theJ j*"p don _u.-im.jjfi delivered in the Female Academy, on the 22nd iostant, by Oliver II. Kollsck Esq. j Cen. H arrison was expected to arrive ! at Washington yesterday. It will bo seen under our Congressional j head that the land question has been dis- j posed of in the Senate, by passing a pros- j pective preemption bill?The treasujy 1 note bill is still under discussion in the House. ? Common Sciiool Education.?Mr. j J. Orville Taylor, who has spent the wintcr in lecturing on this subject in the j Southern towns and cities with so much I acceptance, delivered two lectures last j week in the Female Academy in this; town. We had the pleasure of hearing j both lectures; and wc have rarely been , so much delighted and instructed by a j public speaker. . j Wc shall next week insert for the infor-1' - ^ ?- J?? *Un I icf t\f Itnnlfs i manon OI our ri'oucia uic n?t recommended by Mr. Taylor for common schools. Mr.'D. S. Wingate has been appointed by the Governor, No! a y Put * for Ohea- | tcrticlJ district. S. C. Temperance Advocate.?We are pleased to learn from a notice in ? late number of this . ably conducted v * "! . and frery valuable paper, that it . v -is to be enlarged in July, and that more space will bo uilotted to tho agricultural ... departments : . Mr. Robert Pettlgrew, oversow r of M tj - R. Mitchell, near Sparta; Ga. was lately waylaid in the woods and murdered by .Major Mitchell's negroes. In the same ,w/ * * * " i < ?i--1 neigh t>or.K>ou travellers- minus nave su? j eral limes oflate been cut from the .singes j and carried off. Some of the articles knowu to have been in trunks carried off were found in possession of the negroes j who committed the murder, after they j were apprehended. .. Maine Senator.?The Hon. George Rjrans, member of the U. S. Home of Representatives has been elected to the Seaate by the Legislature of Maine. A bill to repeal a law now of force in Massachusetts, prohibiting the intermarriage of whites and colored persons, has been rejected by a vote of 204 to 1-10, in i the lower house. j ? . j TIV Tortl that wimp nonloCA* Ih I f?C U.IUVt ? , due for copying into the Gazette swclt matter as that found in the correspondence of the Baltimore American, under the Congressional head. But the people j ought to he informed of every thing discreditable as well as creditable to the country which occurs in Congress. AGKItl'LTlKAL SOCIETY. The Anniversary Meeting of the Pee I>co Agricultural Society will bo held in the in Town llali at Cheraw on Monday the 22nd inst. at 10 o'clock A. M. A* 12 o'clock the meeting will adjourn to the Female Academy where the Anniversary Oration will be delivered, after which the following premiums will be awaried. For the greatest production of cotton, on three acres of up-land, the product to bo not less than 12,00 lbs. a silver cup of the value of 830.00 For the greatest production if inHnn nn thrip nrrps fif A low grounds, the product to be not less than 18,00 lbs. per acre, a silver cup of the value | of .. 830.00 For the greatest production of corn on three acres of up. 'and, the product to be not *esa than 40 bushels per acre a silver cup of the value of 830.00 For the greatest production of corn on three acres of low grounds the product to be not ' . . less, than sixty bushels per * . V.v.. ' acre a silver cup of the value of ' 830.00 j For the greatest production ~,{J of wheat on one litre, the proj duct to be not les- than twen! tv-five hushels, a silver cup of the value of $10.00 For the greatest produc| tion of turnips on half an aero I the product to be not less ! than 400 bushels per acre, | a silver cup of the value of $10.00 I For the greatest production j of Sweet potatoes, on one # I acre, the product to be not less than 800 bushels per acre a silver cup of the value of 310.00 For the experim ?nt best j calculated to test the profits [ofsilk culture, the product to ; be not less than 30 lbs. of j reeled silk a silver cup of the value of 810.00 / For the greatest production of carrots on the fourth of an prculuct to 1)0 ttOt le3S than 400,bushels per acre, , a silver cup of the value of $5.00 For the greatest production of Sugar Beets on the fourth of an acre, the product to bo not les3 ihan 400 bushels per aero $5.00 J. W. BLAXENEY. Sect'y. Cheraw, February 6th, 1841. For the Farmers' Gazotte. Mr. ?r. B.'?'-The young ladies, no doubt, feel very much obliged to you for the "sincere, and reasonable regard" which you profess for them. And, perhaps at some future day (should your brain pan enlarge much more) they may unanimously request that you give lectures on the domestic duties of young ladies. I suspect that your mother was a most excellent house keeper. Perhaps something like an old women I once read of, who scoured the tloor until the boards were so thin that they gave way, and she fell into the cellar. You say a foolishly fashionable education, has produced a great many young ladies but young women, a very superior article in the female lino, aro#nuch more scarce. I have always heard, and it is my opinion, that Lady was a much more soft, genteel and refined title for a female than Woman, You say there is nothing incompatible between the highest degree, of refi.nment and a proper performance of the duties of our stations, on the contrary, those only 1 arc ihe truly refined, yvhose minds can fully npprecite the dignity of thoroughly d.scaargingadutv. Here, Sir, 1 agree with you?But I would be glad if you would 'ell me what you doe hi the duty of a f niale. As you say it does not consist in nuking apple-dumplings, or darning old stockings, I suppose ynO have a great - ? ?... i ? i ? i stock ol imc taller on. mine, ami as ine weather began te.gct cold you commenced blinking seriously how much better vour female friends would be employed darning your. old socks, than study.ng modem accomplishments, young ladies, you say, are ignorant of ail domestic duties, save sewing luce or weaving nets to encase their empty heads. Suffer mc, in their name, to thank you for the compliment, and assure you thai they take it as a specimen of your gal. lantty. But if you will give them your name no doubt their time will he morn usefully employed hereafter in weaving a net ro encase your head, so that if your brain pan should burst, (which I very much fear,) the brains will be saved in the net. You say frightening a piano into fits or murdering the king's French may be good bait for certain kinds of fish ; but they must be of that very small kind generally found in shallow water. I am sorry that you are so void of taste as not to l>e fond of music. 1 think it an accomplishment that both softens the heart and elevates the soul. You will sink Mow thesnake tribe in the estimation of the ladles ; for I am told that somo snakes are very fond of music. I presume you have heen called to attend many a poor juuiio luai ua? ue?u iuiii tu pircco in ti light. I also suspect that you are one of the deep water fish, certainly one of juipcrior kind. Pray sir, arc you a craw, tish, crab, lobster, eel, garr, or catfish ?? If I ever see your lady I expect I shall see an amazon with a scouring broom in one hand and a cowhide in the other; a lady of the old school I suppose. Your own sex are all perfect. If not, as they are lords of creation, why not commence the attack on them ? I am suro they are, or ought to he, more able to defend themselves. In your attack upon the ladies I think you have clearly proved yourself a most decided coward. But one request and I have done. It is that before you write another piece against young ladies, you will spell a little word that I generally ask my friends to spell when I think they are too smart. It is Bird. BRUNETTE. Fur the Farmers' Gazette. THE ROOT OF THE EVIL. After all is said of the hard times, 1 scarcity of money, and want of employment, the foundation, the substratum of the whole difficulty appears, on full consideration, to consist in this: That too ! manv have a distate for the cultivation of I t the soi', and by resorting to almost air other kind of employment, to avoid thai overstock th^lr occupations, and thin th fa-mers' ranks, whereby consumption i made to exceed pnxluclion. Hence th various new projects (o creare employ ment in ways almost innumerable, sue! as starting new and uncalled for pub Mentions, the ( ver'as'ing change of fash ; ions in a!i kinds of manufacture, the cs | fabiishm-mt of eo many mercantile com j pa He*. and so through iho catafogiie.? | W.re one half of the population nov | engage! in other pursuits, to turn thei ' attention to husbandry, it would.be bcttc for all concerned. There are too man] merchants, too many clerks, too man] lawyers, too many physicians, too man] ministers,* too many editors and to< many of almost every thing but Farmers We say not that all should hot turn hus bandrnen. We admit the necessity, th< utility of-man v of the occupations of so cietv?Kut farming appears to bo the j genera! aversion ; and men seenl (o prefei street-cleoning and chimney-sweeping,tc the healthful occupation of tilling the earth. E. W. * Tncre are not too many nor enough o ministers If the number of piou*,; faithful j competent gosjvl minip'ers were increased ' fourioli', the agricultural and every othe| ktwiul m'eeest would be incalculably benefitted by their influence upon the moral charactei of the people. Ed. CONGRESS. Correspondence of the Iiali more Am rican ol Jin. 26. U. S. IIorsE of Representatives. After the reading of the Journal, Mr. Tillinghast, on have, reported a bill from the Cominmitteo on Manufac turns., to repeal the act exemptirg import, cd pins from duty, and imposing on them after the first of Apjil a duty of 20 pci cent, ad valorem. Referred to the Com. mittee of the Whole. Mr. Pope, of Kentucky, asked leave tc make a motion, that a memorial frorn the j Legislature of the State of Kemuekv, re. ! lative to the Public Lands, be la-d on th? table and ordered to be printed?to whicl objection being made, Mr. P. moved c suspension of the rules, for the purpose o: its reception; which motion failcJ. On motion of Mr. Jones, of Virginia the House then resolved itself into a Com roittce.of the Whole on the sta.e of tlx Union, (Mr. Casey in the Chair) and re sumcd tho consideration of the special or dcr, . . " p.. Tiik Treaslrv Note Bill. On which Mr. Duncan was entitled t< tho floor. Mr. D. finished his remarks be gan yesterday. . {We copy the following from tho Na tional Intelligencer.] In concluding his remarks? Mr. D. said that immediately befor< j he had taken the floor this morning hi ! attention had been called to the follow in; statement, published in the "National In telligencer" of this day. Mr. Cuxhing hoped that, at this stagi of the debate, no technical question of or der would be raised, because he said, afte the extent to which the remarks of fh< member from Ohio (Mr. Duncan) ha< hi*en carried, lie (Mr. C.)should feel him self bound to appeal to the courtesy a'm the honor of this House to sutler him to re nlv. " Mr. W. C. Je'itiflon submit tod' to th Chair whether * wa.% in order for an i:di vidua! !o charg- Gen. Harrison with cow ardic< who h i-i hi-.nsolf been'branded a.s coward on ?iiia floor?" Now. (proc? edeii Mr. D.) I nev*?r hoar th.* reunrk inad-' by 'lie gewieman Itot Maryland, 0;r. Johnson.) It was not ud dressed to die nor to the Chairman of th committee Hi sucli a way an tr be heard And t was astonished when it wis put tub my hands; and if I had time for reflection, would have contradicted it through some othc medium. I say I did not hear the remark and 1 have no hesitation in declaring that th than who uttered it is guilty of a base fai?ehoo< and'is himself a liar: And I call upon th Chairman of the comrn ttee to say whethe such language was used in his hearing. [A<ote by the Reporter.?It is bete to be rc marked that at the moment the scene de*cri budinthe ?'lntel!igeftrer" of this morning and quoted by.Mr. Duncan, took place, th Chair was occupied by Mr. Campbell, of Sout Carolina, and not. as the Reporter,cowing t his imperfect vision, supposed, by! Mr Bankt of Virginia.] . __ { . When called upon br Mt". Duncan? .Mr. Campbell, of South t arohn^ Vose an said, I take upon myself to say that I hear no such expression when I was in the Chaii I .had called the g<o'lcman from' Ohio (Mi Duncan) to order for irrelevancy, and he ha I acquiesced I then understood the g nth mi j from Maryland (Vlr. W. C.J >hlisun) as risui j to the same point of order, and tjiat" he ha acquiesced in the decision. But. I repeat, did not hear the expression inferred la Mr. Duncan. I protest against the state ment that 1 had ever said any thing again* Geo. Harrison except what tue history ol th coumry sustained me in saying. I never u tunated that he was a coward, nor any thin like it; and no conclusion can be drawn froi any thing 1 have said other than that !v? wa not eniitled to that character of a great militJ ry chieftain which was ciauned for him by hi friends. Mr. W. C. Johnson. The report in th "National Irtellige-icei" of the remarks I mad yesterday is pcrlectly correct. I made thos remarks, and I intended.thetn to be fully aud ble in every part of this Hcu>e? Mr Campbell, of South Carolina, rose an inquired of the Chair, "Is the gentleman i order?" Mr. Stanly. lie is as much in order asyo are. The Chairman (Mr. Brrggs) pro. tem. ca led to order. ' Mi. W. C. Johnson-proceeded to say thf had he been conscious of the'disclaimi r whic the gemlenian from Ohio (Mr. Duncan) ha ' just made, it would have superceded the n< y cesfity of his Mr. J's having made any r? tJ m irks. "Bus as that g<-nll?ui<tn imi demol h; * the fact /hat such a stawmcn as that rcportel rc e in the flntoiligencer" had been made b* | himself, he felt it his duty to say that . it had been made; and he ttqw he d in hs J; p iiaitd he evidence of the fact uo<?n wli cli lit . rcmak was predicated. The fact was mi ju , only notorious to all the members uf the Ian in 1 Congress, but lie himself and other gentleinei ^ - here present haQ a perfect recollection that y( tiie charge which he, Mr. J. had yesterday 1, asserted as having been imputed to thi * gent I" man was mads upon this floor, not b? . o.te, nor by f wo. but by three several gen'br ? men. The subject matter had ended/here i'he gentleman was here upon this floor, ant fl, v v>:t, so far as he, Mr. J. was conscious, he Ml. y r D.jh'tduoi called upon any one of these get- a| j ilemen for satisfaction, nor had any cotiiuiuni- ^ r] cation been made lothein which could have r j been regarded in that light. ^ 1 _ | But, as proof of what lie had stated, he w ' would send to the Clerk's fable, with a view to ti r iiave if read, a statement?? Tiie Chairman said it was not in order. Mr. Johnson admitted, he said, the ir- p .rcvelancy of the matter; but he held in his hand the rej>ort of a speech made here by r; > a member of Congress?a man of as much character as ajiy in this House or in the a j woild?in which speecfi this allegation I was made. A reference to this speech r would show that he (Mr. J.) hat oot I Q > done the gentleman from Ohio (Mr. Dun. can) injustice, but that he was borne out |;i in what he had said, fie had no desire ^ to engage in controversies on this floor; f but to show that he had not done the gen ' tleman injustice, he would request the [i I .Glerk to read two sentences of the speech ; to which he had referred, and which was de' Jiverod in this House in 1839. r< _The Chairman said it was not in order. d Mr. Johnson. I will simply then say t< that with these facts a Mr. Campbell, of South Carolina, subrnitted to the Chair whether the gentle- it ** man was in order? If not, he (Mr. C.) J must object to this proceeding? p Mr. Stanly. For two days past every L subject under Heaven has been talked i< about here, and yet the gentleman from n South Carolina (Mr. Cant pbcll) has never b t raised his voice in a call to order, nor has v . any body else. y Mr. Johnson was unwilling, he said, to n force himself upon this House contrary to f t it$ feelings and its rules. He had been a t , member of the body too long to make such n an attempt. But he felt it due to him- d , self and to the member from Ohio, that s j the fact on which he (Mi. J.) had predi- J r ( cated his statement of yesterday should he i j- made known. Mr. J. then read from the h speech to which he had alluded the follow- t Tng passage: t ] . " With these facts before the House, s } what member will say that such a man is * a fit associate for gentlemen? Availing L " himself of his privileges, seeking to tie- r stroy the character of his brother members, a without the courageorthefeelingsof honor I 3 to prompt him to ask redress for admitted f instills, can such a man be deemed ithin i *" Alt the pale ol honorr .? That (Mr. J. proceeded to say) was the g languugo used by an honorable member c on this floor?language printed and pub. ( ' lished so long ago as* 1639; and it was this a s fact which induced him (Mr. J.) when he n r supposed the gentleman from Ohio was c * charging such a man as Gen. Harrison I with want of courage, to ask whether it c - was courteous, or in accordance with j Parliamentary rule, that a charge of that \ nature should be made by a man who bad t himself boon branded as a coward. That c j i charge had been made, and repeated t J ov e r and over against thegendeman from \ I j Ohio; and no man who would examine [ ? i the record could deny it. This was aii t that he (Mr. J.) had said; and this ha had r said. The gentleman from Ohio might \ uo< consider this an imputation?be might < consider that injustice nad been done him. [ He (iMr. J.) spoke only of the fact.; and he bad read the speech to show the fact; 4 , and although he himself abstained from i j| ^ % n discussions of a personal character as mii'-li i |. as possible, yet he hncHcIt it due to him- 1 e self and to the eminent personage who?*c t I. j cause he had advocated, to say as much t 0 as he had done when the character of 1 ' that personage had been assailed. t After one or two further remarks? t e Mr. Duncan followed in a few remarks, t 1, which the reporter could not hear accu- t e rately, but which were understood to j r have reference to a resolution introduced i in a previous Congress for his(Jfr. D's.) 1 :* expulsion, and to certain insinuations t r" thrown out at the threshold of the discus, i 0 sion that he (Mr. D.) had postponed the ( h publication of certain letters until after | o the passage of tha.duelling law; the whole < of which, he said, had its origin in a base j system of cowardice, by men who had ( j not the courage to stand to their own acts, i ^ It was to cover those acts that the resolu. t r tion had been introduced?and he had 1 r[ been told that a regular caucus had been i tl held at that tune to see what was to be I n done, in order to get gentlemen out of their t g predicament. I J Mr. Underwood rose to make an ex- i planation, but, being called to order, took ' , his seat. j it The following letter, addressed to the e Reporter of the Intelligencer, was handed ?- in previous to the adjournment of the 1 g House: n " Mr. Wheeler-?Had I been permitted 8 to proceed with the explanation I rose to , ^ make, I intended to have said that I was i a member of this House when the gentlee man from Ohio (Mr. Duncan) had ditfi. le culties with two gentlemen, then occupyIe ing seats on this floor, from Kentucky, to '* wit, Mr. Southgate and Mr. Menefee; that j I messed with the former; that I was upon ; | the best terms with both of them; and that I had no knowledge of any caucus be. ' iu ing held to adopt resolutions or to recom- 1 mend any action on the part of Congress 1 1* with a view to relieve either of those gentlemen from any difficulty in which he- i was involved with the member from Ohio. | j I never heard any such thing alleged be- i fore; and I have no knowledge or belief v; lat the bill against duelling was at all; istened in its passage by any measure or I :solve adopted in caucus in consequence I f difficulties subsisting between the gen-1 cman from Ohio and the gentleman from entuoky. or either of them. [ thought islice to the absent required this stutelent at my hands; but as I was not perlittedto make it on the floor, I request r>uto introduce it in connexion with your ^port of the proceedings, J. R. 1} iN DERW OOD. January 20." Mr. Davis, of Kentucky, then took the oor, and addressed the Committee of the /hole at length, and with great ability tid eloquence, expressing and sustaining le sound and statesmanlike views of the ^position party on the various subjects hich have been brought under consideraon during this debate. Mr. D. having concluded? The Chairman gave the floor to Mr. ope, of Kentucky. After some little controversy as to the ght of the floor? The Committee rose, reported progress, nd obtained leave to sit again. Mr. GVabb, on leave, presehtcd a premble and resolutions of the Legislature f the State of Alabama, against a revival fthc protective tariffsystem; which were iid on the table, and ordered to be print- j d. And then the House adjourned. Correspondence of the Baltimore Putriot.] Washington, Jan. 27. Mr. W. C. Johnson, said that, in the sport in the Globe of last evening of a iscussion wliicn arose in this House yessrday, the following language appeared s having been used by Mr. Duncan: ' " But that not being done, he denounced s author (pointing to Mr. Win. Cost rohnson.)a base liar, a contemptible pupy,ascroundrcl, and an infamous coward.' All that I have tosay, continued Mr. J., ?, that this lang iage was not used by the nember from Ohio, Mr. Duncan, as will i e remembered by every gentleman wno ms present. The member had stated esterday, most untruly, that the statelent in the "National Intelligencer', was alse; and he also stated in this report in he "Globe" that he had not heard my renark made to him the day preceding. I lid not feel disposed to enter into discus, ion on yesterday, but I was determined lot to be diverted from the object I had n view by epithets or interruptions of any ;ind. That object was, in the first place, 0 avow the language attributed to me in he report of the "Intelligencer;" and econdiy, to prove that what I had stated vas true?that the member had been iranded as a coward; and thirdly, to intiuate, in the most civil way I could, that 1 particular day, which had been passed >y a former Congress, would have no inluence on me in demanding or giving satsfaction for personal insults. This latter emark had not appeared in (he Intelli. jencer.* I did not wish to go into a disunion as to whether the member froin .)hio heard the remark I made or not. He ay3 he did not hear me; and yet replied it the time to the first part of the sentence, lisclaimiog that he had charged General rlarrison with cowardice. It was a litllc :urious that he should have heard the first irid not the last words, when those last vords were uttered in a louder voice than he first. The Chairman, Mr. Campbell, >f South Carolina, says he did not hear hem. This is not less strange, as they verc heard all over the House, and in the galleries, and by every one else, except he member from Ohio and the then Chair nail. I must have had some power 01 ventriloquism when I pitched iny voice >ver the Chairman and into the galleries levond them. I say, as regards this statement in the 4 Globe," thai it is false; and the language mpuied to the member from Ohio was jo: used; and that there is no member lere, of any party, who will rise and assert hat it was used; that it is not my purpose o engage in a personal controversy with liin; and that 1 shall never resort to the lse of Billingsgate myself, nor allow my. ijf to be governed by it. But I will not iufFer the manifest position 1 assumed in his matter lo he changed, and which was predicated upon a fact for which I wai eady to vouch, and of the truth of which [ yesterday gave ah abundant evidence .o this House. I say in conclusion, thai whatever I might know to be the true :haracter of a member on this floor as depriving him'of the rights of a gentleman? whenever, as in this case I had directly ind unequivocally assailed such a man, J should not take the ground that he was nflt a gentleman, however I might know such to he the fact. But I repeat that the language which I have read was not used; ind if it had been, I certainly should not have noticed it. I have not been taught that an insult, direct and unequivocal, was Lo be revenged by Billingsgate words; anil if the member is satisfied with that revenge, he is altogether welcome to its en. joymunt. * Note by the Reporter.?There were t wc sentences sp<?keri|by Mr. J. yesterday, which :he Reporu r could not hear with such cer taintv as to give the words; and which for thai reaso.i, he threw under a general notice at the - - close ot the report.?ivot. uu. Correspondence of the Charleston Cuor. ier. Washington Jan. 27. The Treasury note debate still continues in the House. Many members art yet to speak. In the mean time, the Treasury is quite exhausted. The offi cers and clerks of the different departments of the government in this city cannot be paid on the first of February. The whigs think the administrator might as well shut up shop at once, as t( provide, by this bijhfor- the expenses o the present quarter only. Mr. Wise commenced a speech, in the House, in which he advocated an issue of of Treasury notes to the amount of ten millions, thinking that such a sum would he sufficient to enable the government to get a long. He will propose an amend, nient to that etfecf, but I have no idea that it will succeed. The whig administration must commence business without a dollar of capital in hand. Far different with the present administration. Mr. Van Buren was embarrassed at the beginning of his administration by the failure of many of the deposite hanks; but he fell, in the course of his administration, into some heavy windfalls. He got over forty millions lrorn sources extraneous from the ordinary revenue?say nine millions of the postponed fourth instalment, nine millions front U. S. Bank bonds, twelve millions from suspended deposite banks, four millions from deferred duty bonds, &c. All these sums he received, independently of the ordinary revenuei But Gen. Harrison will not have a cent from extraordinary sources; the ordinary revenue from customs and lands hasheen greatly diminished, arid is about to he still further i lessened by the operation of the compromise act. . / If, iu addition to these difidencc?, the revenue from the public lands lie taken from him, he will soon he reduced to an income of about 'en millions a year. The whigs will have a very early extra session, and devise means to supply themj selves with money. Mr. Lumpkin, of Georgia, spoke in the Senate, to-day, against the" distribution project. Wr. Wright followed with ^ one of his mest cogent and lucid arguI nients against it. Mr. Wright has not i /.nn<.in,in,i enncch. nnd will Drocced | V.uiiV/iuuvu IIIO W|/vwm| .. ... | in it to morrow. JTojdttnj'on, Jan. 2S. This has been a remarkable day in the | (louse. Mr. Wise continued his speech ; on the Treasury Note hill, in a style that . greatly aiarmcd the wbigs. Consternation and coufusion were the immediate results of his hold and ardent denuncia- * tions of the Tariff policy and of the favoritc whig measure of distribution. The locos chtickle a good-deal at the movement,?declaring that "it is the beginning of the end." They anticipate that the Whigs will split on the tariffand other j questions. Mr. Wise has, by no means, "left the whig party," as some freely deI clare. I make 110such inference from hi i course. On the contrary, I think he has . 'J *' . ! shown his attachment-to ft, by warning it in advance, of its dangers. : . V He took strong ground against the 1 proposed and much desired Etfra Session. : He said he had an instinctive dread of it. Asa whig,?as a friend,of Harrison,?ho dreaded it, and felt that it Would be the ruin of the whig party. But he had bthrr obje^fmns. He forej saw,. that if there was an cxtp session 1 several dangerous propositions would lie ! pressed through, in 4ho enthusiasm of a party fluked witlf recent victory. The fatal disiribu'iori'prajcct would be brought up and passed?a measure* Which he deprecated moj;e than almost any othor. The tariff would be prematurely Agitated, and, under the pretext of providing for a deficiency in the revenue, the whole pro leclice policy would be restored and fast- ^ "" n..nL ^nn j Cm ll UpO.I US. 1 IIC llilllilliai uaim, . [ would be prematurey pressed, and pretnaj turely lost. He yiciuod to no one in his ' desire to have a properly constituted Na| tional Bank. But he foresaw that, if the ! measure were pushed, now, it would fail, | and the consequence would be that, instead of establishing a bunk for 20 years, we should defer the establishment of on* for twenty years. He aske 1 the whigs to go home and remain at home quietly ttfi tho-regular sea1! sion. In the mean tune, let them, in seriI ousntss and soberness, consult nvith the [people and karn their views. Let them J ascertain whether the people were really 1 in favor of making a diiribu.%.n of the ' public revenue, out of an empty treasury? ' whether tiicy were really prepared to re. 1 sort to the ruinous system oi pro:cotton, in 1 order to create a sufficient revenue to 1 gratify the cupidity of the states. 5 He would say one word to General ' Harrison, and that was?' be President ' yourself-?be ihe President of the people, ' j not of ike party." He went on to advise ' j him to look well into the condition of eve' j ry department of the government?to j provide m.i?s If wuh "men whom he could ! i trus?to know ev- ry do.ting of the i's I- and crossing of me t s in the public offices : ?to take flowing upon trust?for tuus only would tie be enaoiedtu jHjrform his 1 constitutional functions, and recommend ' proper measures. He would not be prepared in this manner before the regular session. Mr. Wise wont on tor explain the dif, J ferent indications which had appeared in i Congress already, of a design to restore - the old American, consolidation system. He did not conclude?but will go on to morrow. Mr. Duncan and Mr. Johnson of Md bad another row, to-day, bandying, back and forth, the epithets of coward, liar, &c. Mr. Wise remarked that it was a. , nother proof of the folly of the duel law. > Men could now blackgu&id eacn other, ac pleasure, but there would never another / . fight? - / Mr. YVebsteb concluded his able ' speech in the Senate, to-day, in opposition , to the distribution of the public lands, . j and Mr. Clay of KK commenced a f speech of*great power'in support of the measure. . . ' j Messrs. Clay ari<TWijB3TEB dined witfy