not soon lulled, the storm will raise to such a pitch, that a vacancy in the gubernatorial chai** of Kansas will be the result." This man Strougfcllow is reported to have said, in a speech made at St. Joseph, in Buchan an county, Missouri, that in this struggle to ♦ tablish slavery in Kaunas neither the federal nor -tate laws were to he regarded, and that he advised those who were present to enter every • lection di-trict in Kansas, in defiance of Reeder and his myrmidons, and to vote at the point of the J.oVi i Iviiifi' and the mouth of the revohti*. After tin election the following; significant paragraph appeared iuhi.-. paper, the j Squatter . ■' The election in this district pa.--.-oil off very j quietly. Ereescilcrs, as o general thing, acted j viscly and kept ah int f rem the pells. ' We are saved all necessity o! looking for proofs, In the barefaced confession of the scoundrel.- who perpetrated these outrages.— The federal exeouia* will not be embarrassed by any doubt a- 10 their existence or their enormity. Meantime the Atchison parly, by whom this villain* was planivd aud carried into effect, have attempted to commit the President in its favor. As soon as the news of the election of pro-slavery candidates to the Kansas legisla ture had time to reach Washington, a letter, purporting to be written from Washington, on the 11th of April, was published in the St. Louis Republican, a paper friendly to the in terests of Atchison, and in favor of the exten sion of slavery, iu which was the following passage : As it is, however, the seal of slavery g fixed upon Kansas, and the Nebraska portion of the administration is in high glee at the result. Quiet a rejoicing came off at the White House on the day the news readied us, and tiie toast, the song and the wine, were the order j of the evening. Yen know that our excellent' Chief Magistrate, onc-c on a time, was fond of' 3 glass of good brandy and water, as many other gentlemen are. I don't say that he ever ! indulges uow-a-days, but I do know that he frequently visits the heights of Georgetown for his health, and the day succeeding the festivities incident upon the result of Kansas election it became necessary for him to pay another visit." We are willing to believe to what is assert ed by the Washington correspondent of the Courier and Enquirer , in its sheet of this morning, that this story is false. We quote the denial of the calumny from that paper : " Among otucr outrages perpetrated by the Atchison division of the Nebraska party is that j of originating and circulating the infamous ; dander that the result of the late riots iu i Kansas, called au election was celebrated by a j drunken debauch at the White House iu which the President participated. * * * * * * " To illustrate the falsity of such allegations, j I may repeat that I have been assured by ardent supporters of the Nebraska bill, and consistent adherents of the administration, that the President was indignant on hearing of the violence and fraud which had been practised in Kansas, and so expressed himself to Judge Johnson, a member of the Territorial Court, uow here. "That a portion of the Cabinet was well, pleased with the result, and not at all concern- j ed at the mcauc by which it was effected, is : not unlikely. Bui they had no carouse at the ; White iioa.o to give expression to their satis- j faction. The time for that indecency has not arrived, though I would by no means charge that any member of the present government is capable of so outraging public propriety." Wo have said already that the course which Mr. PiartM* tx>u pursue iu t'tiia tester isobvi ous. There is but one course for him as a just aud honest man, but oue course which can save Lis administration from the charge of the basest and most abject lack of spirit, but one course which can enable it to vindicate itself from the suspicion of an understanding with Atch ; .6o?4 and his hired bailies, and of having intended, from the very first introduction of the Nebraska bill, to make it the means of taking forcible possession of Kansas in the name of siavery. Oar readers will remember that the friends of Mr. Pierce ail along vehemently contended that the repeal of the Missouri Compromise would not introduce siavery into any part of tiie region then called Nebraska. Mr. Cass in a speech delivered at a democratic convention in the st3teof Michi gan, stated that if there was any likelihood of Kansas becoming a slave state, he would sur render the whole question. The papers in his interest took the same ground, and the Michi gan State. Journal declared the Nebraska act to be " a glorious enactment for freedom."— We now see the territory on the point of pass- j iag into the haudi of the slaveholders by au act of villainy tbc most foul and shameless, which nobody denies and nobody seeks to ex tenuate. If the administration does not inter fore to redress this wrong, it will take upon itself ail the iufamy with which it is sure to be atteuded, both now aud hereafter. Reception of Governor Reeder at Easton, EASTON, (PA.) Monday April 30,1555. The Hon. A. H. REEDER, Governor of Kan sas, arrived here to-day from the West, and met a very enthusiastic reception from his friends and neighbors He reached Phillips burg at noou, and was there met and escorted to the Cotirt-House-squaro, in Easton, by a large concourse of the citizens of all parties, accompanied by the Easton Band. On arriv ing at the Coart-House, Gov. HEELER was welcomed by the citizens with hearty cheers, and a formal welcome theu extended to him, in au eloquent and impressive speech, by the Hon. J. PORTER, who complimented Gov. REEDF.R on the manly and courageous as well as able man ner in which he had discharged the duties of his difficult and responsible office. He went into a hasty narrative of the growth aud pro gress of the Slave question, attributing its dau gerous and threatening character at the pres ent time to the fanatical Abolitionists at the North, but adraittting also that Slavery men had in their turu become as fanatical and wrong as the abolitionists themselves. He went thro' the old routine of apology for the South, say ing that they had Slavery entailed upon them, and asserting in full the broadest Pro-Slavery claims, declared that Gov. REFDER had done his duty ably, and that lie would aud should be sustained by Pennsylvania aud the country at large. Gov. REEDER, in reply, expressed iu feeling and eloqueut terms the grateful impression made upon him by the warm and enthusiastic recep tion given to him by 30 large an assembly of his fellow-citizens. He referred to the reports of fraud aud outrage upon the part of Slavery nun iu the Kansas election, and einphaticallv confirmed the very worst statement of/them wh*eh bad preceded Lis arrival. He said his oybdo&i on :be subject of pepc.Hr sovereignty had undergone no chauge, but that the conduct of the people of the border counties ot the North of Missouri had astonished and amazed him by their reckless disregard of all laws, com pacts and constitutions : that the 1 erritory of Kansas, in her iute election, had been invaded bv a regular organized army, armed to the teeth, who took possession of their ballot-boxes and made a Legislature to suit the purposes of the pro-slavery party. Kansas was subdued, subjugated and conquered by armed men from Mi.--ouri, but her citizens were resolved never to give up the fight for their freedom and the independence of their soil from foreign control or interference. The State of Missouri would be called upon to disavow all sympathy with these border ruilians. If she refused, the South would be called on to discountenance her. If the South refuse, the solemn duty would de volve upon the North to take up the matter so that the rights of her sons who had settled in Kansas in the faith of solemn compacts, shall be vindicated and sustained. He declared that the accounts of the fierce outrages and wild violences perpetrated at tiic election, published in the northern papers, were in no wise exag gerated. lie concluded by saying that Kansas was now a conquered country —conquered by force of arms—but that her citizens were re solved never to yield their rights, and relied upon the North to aid them by demonstrations of public sentiment and all other iegal means, until they shall be fully and triumphantly vin dicated. During his speech Gov. REEDER was frequent ly and enthusiastically cheered by the large au dience present. Mob at Parksville, Missouri. We have an account of the destruction by a mob of the office of the Parksville (Mo.) Luminary, published by George S. Park and W.J. Patterson. It appears the editors did not comment upon the emmigration from the North to Kansas in terms suitable to the mob, and hence the destruction of their office, accompanied by other indignities. The St. Louis Intellligeucer, after referring to the proceedings of a meeting, these mobites, says : They proceeded to the office, tore the press from the building, mounted it with a cap labeled Boston A id," marched it deliberately through (he streets of the town, and tossed it into the Missouri river. They had determined not only to wreak their vengeance on the mute wheels and levers of the priuting-press, but to give the owners thereof a taste of their wrath, also.— They dragged Mr. Patterson, one of the editors of the Luminary, into the street, forced him to witness the destruction of his property, and then prepared to tar, and feather, and ride him oa a rail. But a guardian and protecting angel was sent to save the unresisting man from the mortifying disgrace and degraded puuislunent ready tu be inflicted upon him by the enraged populace. His devoted wife clung to him to the last—" stuck to him like a leech," as a brutal eye-witness and narrator of the scene expresses it—and endeavored to defend him, by her feeble strength, from the fury of the crowd. She succeeded. Her frail form was au effectual shield and saved her husband from the infliction of a personal outrage supposed to be fit only for villains. But while he was spared the disgrace of tar and feathers, he was given to understand that he could remain no longer in Parkville. The mob resolved itself into a committee, and re solved that if he and his colleague, Mr. Park, were found in the county at the end of three weeks, they should follow their press and find a grave in the waves of the Missouri. Mr. Park was absent at the time, and is, perhaps, indebted to that fact for his exemption from the same humiliation visited on his associate. Th