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Show , EASTERN EWS. 4 WkatobefVro hw YorklrVask-iBgtoH, YorklrVask-iBgtoH, a4 St, Iiouis advicesi w to the Alk ot Jaauary , In ft Chicago diepakh to'tho St. Leui j JtiiWcan, it ie stated tlist.tfee JkwiM-caH tAwciatit &t the foraer. city ad fired one hundred! gwss on the morning of the fourth in honor' of the election of Shormani Wu tery much, doubt the correctness of this' dispatch, dis-patch, stho WaahTngtOa'telegfaphic'nd-vices WaahTngtOa'telegfaphic'nd-vices of the sarac date arc silent on tin subject. Sherman had held thbwi the, jJleptbUca.votea, from tkegU-mencoment tkegU-mencoment of, the falttotUn&'reaelmg ori several ocqnsions whhiu three, 9! the rcuiskqjnumbcr jt secaro hj's ehwtien, while the other leading.riSjKes.in the opposition op-position have,, bpb after ahothcr, been ovlilawrfro 'tlicontest. ; - , Tho Senate seemsfto b cntirely.occu f id ' witW the Nigger auction. -.in the 'resident's' Jfessagei., 'The ,JIpt(so has added. to it? bumcombo speeches, sym pailiy 'fof nlnii eontraetow 7 The non-eiectidn non-eiectidn of a Speaker is sniil to greatly in-convenumco in-convenumco .tho hitter gentlemen no pay?iall tKVllouso' isropcriy orgauized. A Washington dispalcli of e fourth states, that our Delegate -will, tm soon as tue House ia organized, present an application ap-plication .from this Territory for adrnia-sion adrnia-sion into the Union aa' t sovereign StaXej Bat in case that justice should be 4e-riicd 4e-riicd his constituents, he suggests that Hf, they were, allowed to elept. their i officers, they .would b! almost as. .well .satisfied with Territory aa "ft Stale- organitation, and probably ho willing to 'pay tho'" fex-jwases fex-jwases btTthoiif gbveroteenOcsidcs..' V J Several of the GdVrnorloftbenbrtliern State's coiidemni in' their;, messages to thcirrcspectivd legislatures; the Harpers' Ferry affarn ' Governor' Banks ot Mas-, sachusetts.'has .tiiev following" very significant sig-nificant passage Jin ;hi8 i-ime'ssagetT "It is; unnecessafy-'for mo to call the attention of the Legislature,, in view of the rugged jmths'j of national'ilifo. npon whicntoo obviouslywe, rtf entering, to the expediency of maintaining tho. jn-stitution'of jn-stitution'of the militia' ' 1 - Quite a number of very respectable citizens of Kentucky have been forced, to leave, that State with their families on ac-count'of ac-count'of their! Abolition sympathifes; no misdemeanour is laill to;their charge- A large, meeting hadjl.Biepn'held--atvRic n.ond- at:,which speaker lniji( down, as: an. axiom'that suck seriUments as ; Abqlitidii ists entertained we're not to t& tolertlted byftsveboldingpepplethat Abolition doctnes.ansW be'pefmitted'gptKertuat qne't'or"the ; other musi go '"under, "and "'th"r they wpro, resolved that, the. paries, and their friends-must forthw'itlv.sceKQtljepXoro?. i THepersonVwarried'to leave .lthot State, j appealed to; Governor-Magoffiaf o'fc pro-; tqctionj arid : commilteo-Jof them-prq-sented, a petition; The -GpvSrhor re cei'ved the bcarbrs'cif tho .petition courteously courte-ously and(advised,then, tfor'thesakerpf (Reserving" ;the "peace of the State,, tn eavo ii.' Ue said that the public mind was deeply moved, by tho events in Vir-gihiaI;nndvjthatatil- thd. excitement subsided; sub-sided; their presence fn!tlieState4vouldi be dangerousf 'and ho .couhL'notiengagCi to protect them against their' fellow-citir ens, vho;had Tesolvedvthat' they, must go., He,tpromised,thom. security while taking their departure, and that their property should be "protected. Texas; T)EAri ot'Ex-Pjiksidrnt Lamar. La-mar. The Gklveiton Newsf of the" 22d brings intelligence, of 'thesuddenJ death of JUrabeati B. Lamar, ex-President of Texas' The'Xowa says: As a, soldier. Gen. Lamar was the pretat chevalier of the army of San Jacinto. The official report of that battlo fltatesthat Lis conduct on tho 20th won for 'him the command of the cavalry of the 21st. His friend, Gen. Husk, while, on a reconnoisance, was surrounded, by Mexican lancers, and Lamar rushed singly to thcTcscue. The enemys)ltpe confessedtheir admiration by a volley as he passed, He reining in his liorsp afad 'bowing in reply, ' As President; ho mc.Uhc- difficulties pfjtljo period, with an', open, 6traigh.tforvard policy;- lie audited the public debt and ascertained' thfffamdunt yjnch4 it was .necesWry';tJoyackhQwledgeihs a hiatter of justice, whether the government was oyer abb to pay it or not. lie expelled the Cherokee -Indiana from. -Eastern, Tcxus, where,Hli"e"v occupied' ft" section now the molt Valuable in tHt yegioh.and; large enough for an4 ordinary State. In the Mexican war lwon'nW.liiurelS at Mon terey, as a volunteer with Burleson and others, in Wood's, command -His last service as United States Minister to Central Cen-tral America shdwed him in ndpther light as gentle and soothing to the pride of ttiat inferfor beopl'e,asliovhitd; been fierce, and Unyielding,, to the insolence of the Mexican hordes, Gen. Lamari died j'of apoplexy. STILL LATER. SVc have .been' favored with a perusal ,of a St Louis paper of the 9th, containing contain-ing Washington despatches some days later. No Speaker had then been elects ed. Tho JltpvLlieaifi correspondent on that subject says: "The question of tlio Speakership is just a far off ft solution as ever, and be-gins be-gins to give rise to serious apprehensions as to the result." Tho same correspondent, in speaking of the introduction of a letter from a moil contractor ift'distress.-saysf -; "A very sharp colloquy onsucd between be-tween Washburn and Houston; Kenyan, F-y of Texas; , obtained tho' floor, and bis speech calteil Up paany members with inquiries in-quiries iud? explanaticms. Tlie; scene soon became boisterous,, and exeitott weBabers frow all sections isinglifig in tb ellony, maifesled. muck fe'eTwf . The excitement culminated tew Hatkw, of Tennessee, (American) substantially told Cox, of Ohio, thai-his statements were folio, All the taembcrX. ros M4 gathered round the parties, and after ft while the riot wast quelled by ft, motion to .prjed to,ballot for Speaker.'! , 0f the stmo assembly,, the corresppa dent adds a not over credible statement: "Many Republicans are ftfraid that if theysH' through the, night, ft drunken melee will ensue." i The balloting on. the 7th resulted' ia 103 votes for Sherman; Hamilton;, 89; Gilmer, I4i scattering, 6 ' Sherman only required the usual three, v . " ' : . The Philadolpliia Journal saya, that 4'byer one.! huHtlrcdhands have decently been discharged from on?,6f16ur largest mahufactoriesf in consequence Of orders from ' tbe South having been cbuntef-maridedt" cbuntef-maridedt" ' " " . A horrible caftb of f wife' murder, and; suicide is reported fromiI)ickinson, MX-The MX-The wife of one Henry Meacham having been tmfaithfal to him; the injured band.shot her in tle p'resenco of her father fa-ther and, mother, and afterwards cut her throat and shot himself dead. ' ' v DocdiAB AT WABhiKaToy-TboWaah ingtbn correspondent of the phicago P t'eti and ;Triunep& )aper that haa. been, very inimical to Douglas, has tho' following.. Jft should' be taken with. some grains of al-; lqwance': - .."Douglas ;ia rdportfcd. to? bq' down iri tlie mputh and' desperately discouraged. dis-couraged. '-He feels that ho is usedtip that ho is' ifelitically dead, ' with nO hope j of resurrection. jAU the Anti-Lecbmntdn men denounce him .as ft, traitor !to them and falsp to'hisovfn pledges. Fornoy.is indignant at himviGeneral jSchwarsy ,who represents .thetold Gibraltar of Pennsylvania Penn-sylvania (Berks )J 8a!y8' that he is worse than'a'Lecomptonite'. McKibbin, of California, Cal-ifornia, called on him and taxed him with ingratitude'to the; gallant Broderick; and with having deserted . and betrayed . his friends. vi .He was Zvery bitter' oawhim.1 AH tho, Anii-Lecompton Democrats are indignant at his apostacy to- .thenerayi; Outside of the'Democrats from jllinqfs, Douglas has not carried a singlo -Anti-Lecoaiptonvman over ta the 6amg;V- 'j |