CclV .?o?r. c> the public tir L<; I t*ie r.moutii ?f dividend* [>kid 01 pavtlde I in each sii'.r, v the Bsnk of the United S.atcs an?! the ?m"unt of the raprnse on account of tne academy at Weat Pji iii ail Ut reference to ihc year 1823. Rr ? o\>ed, That th?- ?e< iet?ry of state bv Jiixcted u> lay before the house of representatives during the first week of j iU next hess'u.n, a list of the factories in ; tai.h state, employed lor manufacturing ! tor sale *?ich articles as would be liable V> duties, if imported from fircign coun tries; the said list to he c&iracttd from the digests of manufactures, and sut h outer sources ol information as he pos sesses or can obtain; and to specify, as tar as passible, the capital of each facto ry, an l whether it is incorporated, or no'., hv sta e laws. j Revolved. That the secretary nf war ' be rcq-iesrrd to lav before the house of 1 i t p eseiua*. ives, during t?e first week : ol us #ii:xt session, the number of rev??- ! ]u'.i<)?rary pensioners in each sine then i on the pension list. Objection being made to acting on these resolves this day, tncy lie on the j tat-lr. j Tilt- lep^rt of the committtee of fo- ; rei^i: afl'airs on the subject ol an act of : the British ptiiiament, on th? 5th day { ol A j gust, 1822, imposing duties on im? ; portatiuiis from tnr United States into j Canada, was taken tip, concluding with j the following resolve: Resolved* Ttut '.he subject be refer- I reo vo the president of the United States, ' and that he be requestrd to obtain, by tciation with the government of G. Br: iin. such modifications of the act cf Parliament, of the 5'hof August, 1822, as mar remove all just cause of coin- < plaint. | ; he reso.ve wai agreed to. | The house wcr.t in and out of comnrvt xez of the wnole on the state of the union on a number of private hills Irom the sei.atf, the (jrca'tr part of %?hich passed 'he house, (hough some of them met w:th strenuous oppo-ition. j At a little after four, the house took j a reccss until 6 o'clock. Meeting again nt six o'clock, the hoese aat until fiaat :wo o'clock; the w.ole of wnich time was occup.ed in the consideration of bills, and amendments >o hills, except uiat par: ol it which arose Irom a rail of the :.oust be omitig necessary ahout midnight. Thii caused some warmth mi'; perplexity. The doors of the house were lo. ked. and the absent members sent for out ut their beds. Finally, the uoors 'jeing opened, end a quorum ap pe irin?, the proceedings in the case w<-re dismissed. \V . th this excepiiun^the ?Hung, long, arduous m.l besides bein ? the last evening, was more than usually orderly and harmonious. A good deal ol tune .vas spent on a 1 smalt subject ? a res^iuti^r fro.n the se nate to re-print the journal of the old co.igrts-*. An amendment was made in the I'.ous - ct rrr.' ts ntativcs, to which trie *er?:.u dnat(reed. tiie house Insisted , the sc'iait adhered. anM firiad} tae nnuse adhered, *>urcby the resolution was re jected. TIIE WINDING VP? MARCH 3d f.V THE SENATE. Having rt.ee. v. d ? Ricia- information that 'he president f?l the United Stales 1 a 1 ipproved the several bills presented for h.s signature, The s :ia e appointed Mr. Macon and Mr. K.ing. ol N Y. to give i he cus tomary notice to the president ol the L*. S hies, that they ????? completed all the legislative business before them, and were ready to adfourn. The senate then wn?t into the consi dcrati n of executive business, and con tinued sa occupied until half past three o'clock; when they adjourned lo six o'clock, F. M. A*. 6 o'clock t lie senate resumed its session, and continued with closed doors (deliberating on executive nominations, ;t was understood,) until a late hour; when Toe senate adjourned sine die. IIOUSE OF R E T HESE.S~T.1TIV ES. M . .Cocke Bubo i ted for coi.side ration lb'- 1 Ho wing resolution: H> 'olvedy T"al thr president of the Ui.i'?o State* he r cp-csied lo i'ifor house, at an ts riy period of the next session, whe"it-r any member or m?m be?* it' toe present or ensuiiii^ congress ar or have neen concerned, cither di it" t y or indueotly, in contracts e ntcred Mil ?? with any of the departments of go vernment; also wntiher arty mcmbtrs are io arrears to the government. This resolution, from its nature- most he on the table one day, unless the house unanimously A to act upon it. C) ctlon brin< made to acting upon i?, Ine rule took effect, and u was laid on the table Mr. Cocke moved to suspend the lute which has this opera: lor.; but the in >< ion wis decide^ in the negative. Mr. Wright submitted the following: Resolved, that t'wee members of the house, wi h the superintendant of the put ho h? tidings, cause the room to he anangtd in such a minncr a, they may jod e best suited *o the public business. A'ter some debM*, t? is revive was orrlt- red to he on I f tahl^? (rejected ) On motion of Mr. Hla'.kledge, n was Hesolvcd, Thai the committee of the public building* furnish ?uch e speaker (Mr. Bat hour) rcse, and delivered to the house the following ad dress: To receive the approbation of our cotuiliy. it at all times th** highest re ward which can be bestowed upon a ci tiaen in the public service; to receive the expression of that approbation from the representative* of the people, with whom it has been my fortune to act, gives to it, in my estimation, an inc?eas ^d degree of interest; vut when, in addi tion 'o this. I recollect that this is the se cond occ avion on whic.' I have received this r.igh mark of confidence, from the sim: house of representatives, from gen tlemen with whom, for two successive ses sions,! have been associated in legislation, it inspires n?e with the deepest sense of gratitude. 1 ii iVc nothing to offer you but my sincere thanks, in return for this le newed evidence of your uood opinion, as well as for the kind indulgence with which you hive supported me in the discharge of mv official duties. There are few stations in civil life of a charac ter eitner more important or more diffi cult than that of the presiding officer of this house. On your Deliberations es sentially depend the prosperity of this \ extensive an. I extendtng confederacy; in their p ogress, the must novel and per plexing questions are frequently pre sented for the instantanenus decision of your speaker; and the duties which, in general, appvrum to his offi< e, involve in themselves the highest degree of re sponsibility. In such a situation, to be able to Command success is the attribute of no man; to endeavor to deserve it} is ' within the reach of all: that endeavor. I ( am conscious of having earnestly made; | and, to the pleasure arising frotn that consciousness, the resnluvon which you have just passed adds the gratification of beli -ving that my efforts in this respect have not been altogether fruitless. We are now, gentlemen, about to j [ close the labors ol the 17ih congrcss. 1 ' trust, th At, upon a review of its mea ' suie>, it will be found by our consti tuents, that, however we may have cii! fcred in opinion in relation to the means, we have Jl had in view one grr-?i, one j ' common end ? ihe promotion of the gen- | era! wclfire. j We jre soon, t?cntlcn.en, about to se- J : parate; niany of you, perhaps, I ;nay ne- | | vei meet again. May you long live to enj >y the rewards ol your past set vices, 1 and to render others to a grateful eoun I Uy' ?. ! After interchanging the usual civilities : with trie pres:d'. n1 a id the sina e, the ' sr?eakT adjourned the house sine tiir. l-x. ? ? Voreigu lnteWigence. FROM EUROPE. rhiUdi'lpliia, Match 6. By he packet ships Dido and Alex- J ander, arrived at this port from Liver- ? pool, London papers f-.tr the n?o;.th of I j I)eci mber, and as far down as the 6th i Jan. inclusive, were received. J The question of peace or war remain j ed just as it was ielt by the previous advices. In Paris and London, the no.e of the French Cabinet to the Spanish government, and the change in the French mmiMiy, were intcrpreud as indicative of the continuance of peare, or at least the postponement of war lor some time. Tne London Morning C hronicle says, 44 In the b. st informed circles of Pa ris. no doubt was entertained that peace with Spain would not, for the prraent al ali events, fie interrupted. It w*s generally understood that his most j Christian maj< s y > > ad madr. a private communication to his most Catholic majrsty, in which the mentions of tfie Fr< nch government was fully explaiti ed, and H ey were in the highe?t de gree, pacific. It was also thought that ?he "ffit lal note from M Villele to 'he French ambassador a' the court of Ma drid, could not have been more pacific, considering the pledges wnich had been maue to tne holy allied uionarchs at Verona." Th? Nur?mbcrg papers assert that th' continuance of peace between Tor j key aio Russia is impossible, whatever ? appearance there may be of renewed negotiation. Every thing was quiet at Madrid on the 2 4ih Der ember. The Peisians were rapidly approach ing lUgr'ad at the latest advices. It is said, under the Paris head of the 30' h December, that M. de Raynevul, French minister at Berlin, is to be sent to these United S.ates as minister pleni- i potential y. M. dt Rayneval i? well i known a? an author on public law. I T lie English ambavador i? said lo be in great Uvoi at Madrid. The iuccr?et rliimed for Mina are asserted to be confirm* d by the testimo ny of eye witnesses. The Bayoune pa pers state ihttt the French fotces on the frontier* very rtgmarly make the fojci live Spanish insurgents gise up their arms on passing into the Spanish terri tory. Some of the ministerial journals of London now contend thai it is the right and the intetewi%l England, to interfere in favor of the Cireek>. The Paris correspondent of the Lon don Moruing Chronicle say^? - " rely on it there is no notion (in the French ca binet) of an immediate *ar between Fiance and Spain." The surrender <>f the cas'l?- of C"r intH, and of the Fortress of Reiino in Candia, to the (ireeks, is primely af firmed. 44 The ruppostd c hinge in the policy t of our government respecting the (?reeks," bays the London Morning Chronicle, 44 gives geneiai satisfaction, Stc. A tiigate i> ordered to cany out lord William Be?;i<"k immedioti ly to St. Andcro, or ?'>:r.c port in the Bay, on a special misM>>n to Madrid." Mr. Monroe's h?t message is pub lished entire in the same papei of the 4lh January. Mr. Ravenga, tlie Colombian minis ter, had arrivrd in England. There was much fluctuation in Colombian bonds in the Loncon market ? they clo sed on the 3d January, at 67. The Paris Monitctir contains the royal decree for the convocation of tae French chamber of deputies, for the 28th January, 18-3. The latest accounts from the new British settlements at the Cape of Good II -pe t4 continued to be ot the most un satisfactory kind." I he Pans ministerial paper, the Journal des Debit*, observes, ?* The Chamber of deputies will soon be r.pen ed, reinforced with a great number of Royalist*, wht.se election is, in a great measure, ihe Work of the ministry." M. de Chateaubriand has been ap po.n-ed minister of foictgn afl'ans by the king of Fr?i>ce On the 29th Drc. he to<'k the oath of c fficc. Some of the Paris papers remark ? *? Between M. de Chateaubriand and \1. de Mont mo lency, (his predecessor in rffi. e) the shade of difference is to slight thai it is not, properly speaking, a change." M. de Montmorency is announced in the Moniieur as miniMerof state and a mem bcr >f the privy council. The destruction of a Turkish vessel of 74 euns and twu fr gat-s, at Tenrdos, by (t.ecian fire ships, is confirmed. I ?o n.ore of the fleet were wrecked at thr same, place. From tin- M?ming Chronicle, Jan. ?. j Ti t message of ihe president of the I L'ni ed States, to the two houses of Cor* gress. which we rece.vcd yeterday, is a slate paper of a veiy diff. rent de scription f.t.m those to which we are so muc h accustomed in this part ol the world. Wclare in it a plain, I oneat, and unvarnished statement ol the affairs ot a gre: . pe?-pie, by one of themselves, j honored L?> the confidence ol his fellow j citizens. A communication from the i king of f ranre 10 his clumbers would ! be one half false; it would be fuij of the ' monarch, himself and the re ? of the hopes of l'ian?e, not forgetting the duke of Bordeaux, a- almost the onl\ ob ject in which the nation ould take an in- j teisi, while the national concerns them selves w'lttld occupy a secondary place. In America, howei ei , things are order ed differen'ly. But the pail of the message which will excite the greatest interest in Eu- j 'opt, is the nci.lc tribute which he pays I to the struggling Gieeks, and the testi- j mony wnicn he bcar? in favor of the re j volution in Spam and Portugal. ?* A 1 great eflnrt has been made," says he,. " in Spain and Portugal to improve the < condition of the people, and it must be very consoling to all benevolent minds , to tee the extruordmary modt ration with whuh it ha* been conducted " i I his testimony of the head ? f an en- | lightened anc! prosperous state, i? some- ! thing, at all events, to place in compe tition with the commendations of suc h vitiuous and gieat statesmen as the Russian autocrat, Ficdirick and Fran cis. from the Plymouth Telegraph. Plymouth Dock, l)ec 28. The squadron under the command of commodore Sir E. Owen, K. C. B. consisting of the Gloucester, Phaeton, Valorus, Eden and Belette, sailed on Tuesday morning with a fair wind. The Ranger, capt. P Fisher, arrived here ou Thursday morning from Poits ruouth, and the Pioneer, Lt. Favell, from the Downs. ? The Ranger, after taking on board a messenger, who had arrived at Coudc's hotel, sailed in ihe evening, and the Pioneer yestciday morning, to join Sir E. Owen. There appears no longer to be any doubt that these thips are in ended as a reii forcc rr.ent of Sir Charles Row ley's squadron at Jamacia, for the pur pose of being employed in taking pov session of the Island of Cuba, should Spain be forced into a war with France. The French have a small squadron of ships, including one line of baule ship, at Martinique, whose intentions it may iconic necessary to thwart. ? Should i the cicprecated event rot take plate, and Sir Charles Rowley with lo return lo England, Sir K. 0*?vit may. in that case, hoi>i a broad pendant, and as sume tlie commat.d ot the union tor the next three jean. Paris, Jan. 1. In France the triumph ol the aristo cratWal pany has put the people aside, and in Europe the holy alliance nab ex eluded the prople tron? the govern ment. But these two aystem* have also had other results, which may be favor at le to those to whom they were at first mischievous, vis: the disagreement in France of the domineering party, and i in t rope tl e quarrels oC the cabinets. The year 1822 has witnessed the dis cord; it is ptobabJe the year 1 1) - S will witness the comhat. We may now bay, with more truth than ever, that the pre sent time is hi* with future events. Intelligent European*, wno snw the Ottoman fleet, in the Dai ps which w?*rc un < er tm orders have been disbanded. *1 he thstncis wh:ch had subiuiitc.1 are again taking up arms. Idrnt. Charleston, March A ENGLAND AND SPAIN We received, la*t evening. some loose Havana papers as late a* the 26th Feb. A Cadiz article in one of them, is of considerable intercut. From the " Diario de Cadiz" of Jao 3, 1h2J. CONSUL A DC). The signor political chief of this province, under date of the 28th December, says to the national consulship (consulado) of commerce the following: ?* Hw excellency, the secretary of despatch (despat ho) of the govern ment of the peninsula, writes to me I thus: ??The British government having claimed the indemnification for vari ous capture* whit It they assert are made on the commerce of that na tion, from the year I R04 until the present time, and for sfvcml decrees pronounced against English proper ty, and so consigned that it wan not in power a?f the king to alter, whilst it was apparent, (they assert.) that these decrees were very hasty. Now to the end that there should be nr> prejudice or damage to thv pro perly engsg# d in Spanish commerce ? his map Sly the king ha* ordered that it should be made known to the consul ado, that various r essels of the English squadron have sailed in a di rection lor Terru Fir?ia and Puerto Hi - Co with order * to capture Spanish ves sels engaged in commerce, for the pur pose (as it is presumed ) to secure the amounts due, which are cUnmed by tht British government;? and that his majcMty, still hoping to conclude smi< ahly and with justice, a negjjei aticn which may deeply affect the interest* of the two nations, hut ac companied with his primary duty, which is to protect the interests of1 Spaniards, ? he, by thine pre?en's, ' gives notice to the consolados, by J which individuals may take every . necessary precaution, and the l>kn ? notice is extended to the authorities - of the provinces beyond sea, and to *arn the mnsulados that if occaaioii ? should present itself to repeat this , irntice, they muft avoid all delay or ! hindrance, which the shortness of time may accidentally occasion. "'I his royal older I hasten to communicate to you, that, without the least delay, you may communi cate it to the consulados of your pro vince. I send it forthwith for your intelligence and direction." And by disposition of the same consulsdo it is toade known to com mercial men, to take such mea sures as they may think proper to adopt in ronsequem e of this ve ry important express frotn the go vernment. Vrudencio f/ernande ? Santa Cru%, L'aJu, 3) ,i b* c. 18J4. &ee*y " ^till later from lCuroi?? Fro? the ' W..,?p ,b? prt?10 ?>*?? ?f Ihe I... Uel.lden, c.p,. George Hob*.*' !>? days from ljverp.*!, -he net ,h on the 2*lh January. We ,r? ?,'lt4 ,0 ,h? ?y of the Pyrenees, the rrpu|?eof the factious enemies of Spain, who take refuge in Fraitre, and an energetic on. position against ail tho*e wIh> shamefu:. ly Hefatne the institutions of Spain a-d her cortea. 1 o the cabinets ol St. Pe tersburg, Vienna and Berlin, do direct reply is made, but a circular dispatch has been addressed to their ministers*: courts. It contains seven dtc'afi tions which show p.anny enough, that no spirit ol compromise at present anu. ales the Spanish government. London, Jan o? A government messet.gci has arrived in London with advices from Madrid tu the 13th. 1 he Russian, Austrian, aiid Prussian ambassador ban received their passports, and were on the point of lea ving Madrid. The Paris papcis say they left it on the next day. Ihe )a:s tcnni, ihr London Courier says, ?? England, it ireins, is pledged to support Portt^-I in i ase of attack; yet Portugal is ahcut 0 form an alliance off ns;ve and difen i.vc, with Spain and Fiance. In tint a*t, ihe- cause of Spain will become "ie :ommon cause ol me peninsula; anr!, if ?o, will an attack upon one coun'ry he 'otistrued by out government into ?uch 1 danger, as affecting Portugal, as will ?all upon ii to redeem its pledge of ??? iiatance and protection." PORTUGAL. Front the Courier Fnncm (by eipr, on tlic 3 1 ?t December, the minister of fortign af airs said that hi* moat faltl.ful majr?tr laving required from the fri? odnhip <>f >reat Hiiuin a frank declaration o' the xtent to *huh she would countenance irr at 'hi* moment, whin menace* he formidable league o I four girai p?iw r*, has received from tbe Britsh mi?i? er i he follow irg c onfidintial rrplyi The Knglish Kovemmrni havi'*K *?* rmnly declared in ttw fate of t r.e world, hat it doca not assume tne exigence ?>f ri^ht of intci vent ion in the .ntert*al oriceriia <>f other state*, bngland will eel herself oblige d to Iri.d in thu king Inm all the succor ol which i' tn*T tand in need as wftcn a* its indc pendente r>?y he menaced by any Hhcr power, ft any manner whatever. Tliispromuf. 'hich is only the repetition ot that wbiih ''t gland has made t nder other circum lances and at various times, hst no rr ?'ion, and can have none, with nut P0' tical institutions; its objtct being ?"n* ly to declare that those InMituti'"'* ave not changed, in any manner, tl* elation* which heretofore exutro ???' ween the two countries. ?? Such, geM^* nen, is the u/timatum of Grest Brii>,n* Ml Kurope will sec what we haff to e* ect Irom that power, in the great *,ruf" le in which we may be engaged. Hayonne papeia to the III'1 cached us this forenoon. The p?*#aJe f couriers between Madrid and Fari> *? oty frequent, patticulwly comm*rt'