I ) c iteptiblicau GETTYSETTRO, PA. ItIONPAY 31o1NLNG, JULY 9, 11455. ite(sr Canal ContatiNsifotter, ARNOJA) PUNIER, of Venango CO. ~.71:{cad the card of the 31.es.s...pKamoot:tr., in --asjothcr column. They come with recout tnendationt; of the . most complimentary char- actor, and front gent:lenel of the best modes of teaching the art of writing. iIOTEL.7-We take pleasitr'e in recommending the SUS4UNIIANNA oppo site Calvert, Station,. Baltimore, -to such of our fri.entlal.aspay haveoecasion to visit.the “Mon 7. umental City." We have several times stop ped there, and always found the table supplied with the choicest of everything the market af forded„ and enough of it 7 --the chambers neat and clean—and all connected with the house attentive to their respective duties. Col. BAnit, the proprietor, knows exactly what constitutes ,/, , nod:tiotel. and pndeavors to keep Such-- and, ifvuijudgmerit is Worth anything in the prentisys; heianeeeetli: His charges aro very ! - 137rWelad , the pleasure of meeting Mr. John Scott find his brother, Mr. William Scott, on Thursdai Week: 'l lie former, it will be re membered, was so seriously injured by the collision on the Baltimore -and Susqtrehanna railroad, on the fonrth ofJuly, 1854, that his life was &spited of ; the latter was also in jured, yet not badly. Mr. John Scott is re covering, his bodily vigor _amazingly ; and that Orden of his leg, which was so badly crushed is beginning to show very healthy signs. To the Mends of thik gentleman, his convalescence will'bechecringintelTi erica. .146sivONG lerrxitS.—Tho sygetW reg istration of valimble letters prescribed by the Post Off= Department, vent into operation On theist inst. The regulations provide_ that. on the paYinent‘of a:registration fee or five oents, h reeei pt. Anil be given by the Pestmegter when a letterfa mailed, and extraordinary precau. tion'nee'd iii its forwarding and delivery. It is not, to be coitilited to money letter's, but any letter will : be registered which the writer con. eiders velnablos but for which the Department dif net malte'thetoselves liable. 11:'David Small, EA., post Master at . York, raceutly , applied to tho .Pot Mister General to Iz - 4°w:whether a • letter containing, as-was sti&tised; coontetleit Money, could be opened atiki xegiteiti:if the police authorities; in order that: the money contained therein might he identified as'ithe SUMO as 'that passed by the prisoner, and that thus further evidence might furniabedto4lid in his conviction and pun:. ishinent..*':Theyeist Master General replied, empliaticallY,, that - it could not„ that ho had nti,riOL :liar any officer under him, to open any letter until it reached the Dead Letter Office: and that. this principle must be al ways acted nPon 'by these, in the eniployinent of the Department. ' . Postmaster General has ordered the the re-establishment of the Post °nice at Mount Alto, in Franklin county, Ps., and appointed (1,00 N 1 Tunis, Postmaster. 'lt:7qt is reported that' there has been a vio! lent personal rencontre in Kansas between Goy,- 'Kee der, and Mr.' Stringfellow, resulting in the Guwernor being badly beaten. • RAILROAD OPENING.—The first nineteen nriles'of the Noith Pennsylvania IlAilroad, from Pliilailellitaa to Gwyuned, *a opened on Teekalay: - • ° O'PEILSONS 'KILLED trr LiG fITN I N .-Dur ing a - recent thunder storm in:Nlitinesutzt, the struck the house of a widow ,holy named Wright, killing two members of the family* and, what was most singular, it proved fatal to .One - that was sleeping in the upper story and one on the lower fluor. These rr ions bad each - a Companion in bed with them at Elie time, both of whom were unharmed. The Oldest daughter, a young lady, and a boy some seven or'eigl►t years of age, were killcd. The family were strangers, having but lately arrived in the territory. Mant,--,We learn that James , Myers. the Clown, and one of Aim proprietors of Myers &Madigan's Circus Co., met with an untimely diiath while performing on the Suck rope attienuva, N. Y. The ring by which the rope Air a$ fastened gave away, throwing him to the ground with 80 much force as to dash Ins, brains out. QUA little girl, fourteen ` months old, (laugh ter of Mr. Freed, teacher at • the Point Breeze school house, died recently from eating the composition from the ends of incifer snatches. The salary of the (lovernor-General of Canada is ten mousandAullars a year wow than tout of Like President gf the U. S. El.l7sLocusts are to be seen by thousands in some pasts of tlerster county. They appear to be as numerous tsg they were during the to- ettst year, is iinv years ago SQN STROKE..- A n Iri sl wan, matt Wt. tilt. in-t-Itt-turplorof Ilk 11,,a-o-vrt li. i- - ---,-• - - .1. - .,...ii4id Company, met, with lies" de '--, atn Olt rr i rlte ' ll - i - tilicilial -- ;;leCtioiiit Bolivar. Va. Lith'it 4-t—i'llvito i a .1 1 , 1 :,7 11 1 , L ,fii c -t c . r u- s u ' r ' -t o r ' rali l k -c-r 'h:::1 - : no duel aratio — u of pritieilles !" flow -- ittt — teli eNtent. Snot, `I Fridoy wuek. from sun stroke. came Ulf ott 'Monday, and resulted in a total died and eighty-six soldiers were cart ietl off! like a bravk. , - hearted .1 mei jean this sounds to- I -- -- - -- front Ist of .M:Ly to 2.1 1 1.11 June. Some mild ca. i lie-nft'• Tiro c.'w:lrtilY In tlvow 3 . 0 111 ' Pfloci• Try-B ower , at ~,so da Depot, ,, on chesonot ‘4o . citt atilt: Know Nothitigs, who were Kan ses have appeared on board tile ships at Nett- ; l'ks , "(1 it claim - to hc Attio•i4:ans. rzr ex ,- me of success. It will be remembered that • i re/lericr ! I;:tit ! boor actions, -lye the lie to gtmet, P11424100* ...sold un Saturday week., le" . vitas. .c, 2.5 60 glasg..l4 of sodarwater. Sam" was qiiite trium lv phaut there twee • -- -: -- -- - --- ; your professittos.—/.:.rdoigr. 11.15 E vs: (ii . ANI), I t 1 4, stat. - 11 in the Baltimore • ..___ _.. ._ .. .. __ _ months tigo, and defeated the Densocratic cowl- ' 11, atr rj . Tht widow df lie 'Witt Clinton died at ', 1 iot, ')" chat - i l'ENnuA r,I.F: Pt.: ;i. IN Ei:s. elk and abletnieti• ity, that Nes....tr st . ita te d a 1. i;1 1.. I ;Ise asisitorsd ' jrt the Prii: , iott ollire. the ...... _ the residenceor her danitter, in Poughkeepsie. '• .._ , . _ ... __ .____ _ ' the price of l'ertiviaii gtiait o ; > - _, p er to il . Th e y ; Junes, of Alabama. and 11111. I tyr4i. of Tenuk7c= - , -- Lt _., . i • 1 ,Or Pim L (-owes out 1-..tinst elrl,,y ristu.'- , New 1 mk, on Monday. She vras in the 733 ''.' ' , - ' •'' ' 'e' • ' r" • now ultat'go*ss,-itvs' , Atatl of :2.'01, as 'heretof o r e , ' ia,:e, ',vete tilt . 11 - the former of it Itom is in the says that several cases of aolern. ILI,' :IS Mille:1101y. `one that we trot of most -if 11,,,, a illoottis I, '.s titre Om tv toit.i. , f 1 i_'-tip )1....0.0t . hi:. a..;e, the Later I oTtli. , .in the 11-1 soil Itli e. w , l. Ili lieui 1 . 111, * .'3,rdlt of he! :3;;1 - . . : . tilt: opluic) 1 1)t thv 11(..•ti4 lz., t.,1..• t cht. , l 1)11 ________ _ _ _. ____ ::,,," 7 lji ;4; VOW t A tc, voy L,c..lli,lally (..t.b.bia.• , ill 1. iy• tilt LtLA t.LVI , s UA. a t ) ud littsl.l!, 11l 111.11 11 11 ini „ ~o, lt.Cl tl/uujsuut tin. ,uuili3 . . .t;eIL. • • LLL 41. oi_ Ct.t/Lo ill 1 / 1 ;.. v.. 11. ........._ The Democratic Mate Convention ns , :einbled at Ihnisinirg on Weduc*Any last, for the nom ination of :t.incli•late for Canal Comnsigsioner. , Eon: J. GLANci JoNio,s, of Iterks county. pre sided, assisted by a large number of Vice PreA derng-;---ar.-d----Seefemries:-Thnt-,--iuerling---_nn(L highly-respected old `Denoctat, ARNOLD PLUMEII, a Venango county, was notnina-. ted for Canal Commissioner, on the third bal lot, his-highest opponent being WM. Curt -I::sq., of Alleghen.y. Majority and mi nority resolutions were introdime . d from the committee on that subject. The majority re port was adopted—but all in that perfect har mony and good feeling which characterize() the .deliberationsof the Convention thritiughoUt. Flat proceeding; tnay-be expected in our next. 711 - e Choi - ce tor - Canal Com oner-i s-a- mos happy. onc—ene which every Detnociat can heat lily endorse and support. Success surely .must follow this auspicious beginning:. A. J. DoskasoY, who edited the Washing ton Union a few 'years . ago, but whose course gave so much offence to-many true and tried Democrats that he was compelled to vacate the editorial chair in order to prevent the pa per from sinking, and who was an unsuccess ful applicant for a high office under the present administration, has become a Know Nothing. This is right. Whenever a man becomes so much of a patriot,as to think the government can't get along without his ax,sistance in some of its departments, he ought to join the Know Nothings and inveigh against bqhe wild hunt for ollice."i 2 '--Ommtti,sox claims relationship with Gen. .I,tessoN, though in fact he is mere ly a ,relative of JACV.SON'S wife. We hope he won't follow the example of Swig' and ,foxss,' and decline being a candidate for the Presidency. We have had Old Ihickory in the i person of Jitekso!..:, and Young Hickory in the person . of Toms:, and why not take Rotten Hickory in the person of A. J. Das KisoN ? Hurrah for Hum ten Iliekory DoximsoN ! Down With Live Oak Law.—Spiril. Our distinguished fellow-citizen, Col. A. G. EuEduis just returned from a long tour through Kansas aril other parts "of the great West. Ile arrived . here'on Tuesday, and was cordial ly welcomed -by. his numerous friends. Ile gives a glowing-account of the Kansas country, and designs going West in the Fall, with 'a view to a permanent settlement. By the way, judgii.g from the tone of the press, we think it, -not unlikely that a change will soon he made' in the Governorship of Kansas. - In such an event, we take the liberty, thus early, of :nig gestitc'r to President Ptsuez the appointment of CoLEGE to that station, We doubt whether a more suitable man could he found in the Union. Kansas needs a hold. yet skillful hand to guide the helm in the disorganized state of affairs in that country—one who is right on the great questions of- the day, and yet - .Chki manage so• prudently as to secure the confidence of all. lie possesses every qualification for the post, .and would, he emphatically "the right man in the right place." Ills appointment, we think, would be very popular, as it would be de serV y meritorious. !Vestal/lister Dem. rf•We "second the motion" for Colonel Emes appointment, if a change is to be made. Ile has the ability to fill the pest well, and would, we know,- exercise it, to the boner of himself. the territory, and the appointing power. • ta -- -The Prohibitory Liquor Law, in Maine and Massachusetts, does not seem to work very restrictively. At legal decision in a liquor selling case in Maine, has completely nullified the prohibitory law, so far as the manner and form of execution has been attempted. The decision is, that the trial and punishment qt. liquor sellers can only be clone by the Sur. preme Court of the State. In Massachusetts the law is scarcely opqative, from the fact that the juries being clothed with the power of joilgin6 of the law, have invariably decided against the law iii some twenty cases.—Ger. Ted: l‘fota; K. N. PuosenwTioN.---Rev, Illeazer Smith, an esteemed Methodist clergyman, aml a Democrat, was in 1848 appointed chaplain of the New: liampshire State Prison by Gov. Colby, through the influence of Rev. Jared Perkins. lle has now been removed by the K. N. Governor, because he would not bow the knee of abject submission to the modern 11anl. T:iis is another practical illustration of What the Know.tiottlings mean, in theif platforms. by “religious freedom." lUow-N6TniNcism l',AnooEn.—The Pitts burg Synod of the Lutheran Church bare adopted the following resolution : '•ltexulrcd, That in the judgment of this Presbytery, the principles of our church ex- Chide from communion, the members of the secret society called Know-Nothings, and the niendicrs of all such societies, and that the Presbytery direct sessions to enforce this opinion." (a - Mr. Joseph Hiss. N 1 ho was expelled front the .Nfassachusetts legihlature, is suAt allied by the know-nothing council to which he belongs, in Boston, and is now the delegate to the .Late council that will meet this week. KNow-Noritimi DEvii.trs.—ln nearly all the important elections held throughout the Union, within the last two or three mouths, the Know- Nothings have been defeated.--:Saan's 61111 is evidently setting. •.SAyi"'strr nAcK. - .u: ate.--, the recent inn nicivzii election in San Franei:;oo, Mr. Van Ness, the Democratic candidate fur Mayor, was elect ed over his iiiiow-Nothil conipciitur. Last year the Deinociatic candidate was badly beaten. _ 'nnn►ed Ited. Democratic State Convention. Rotten Hickory ! Col, A. G. „Ege. Banks—Governors Bigler and Pollock. The Know : Nothing press, in attempting to j us tify t;cw. Poi.i.ors's course in sanctioning the charter and re-charter of so many banking institutions, try hard to create the impression that Goy. litci.su was equ Ay, to blame. f low ilarifrisitUrne_,Anay Lein furred from the fact,_ that during the entire term of Gia. Bemini's administration but two new banks were crea ted—the Erie City Bank., and the Warren j County Bank. The former of these was to supply the place of the old Bank of Erie, which had gone out of existence ; the other was in- ' tended to meet the wants of that class of peo ple who were largely engaged in the lumber ing business on the 'All4gheny river.. The j aggregate capital of these institutions is only ! two hundred thousand dollars. In addition to -these_riew_banks,le_alsoanetioned_there:Lj charter of /Lee old banks ;.but as these institu- tions were all sound and.solvent, and not- ob.] ' jected .to from any quarter, we think- ho was 1 right in signing the bills. This is the extent of Gov. Ba;tyit's approval of banks during his three year's administration. Ncw, let us see - what his successor has -done in the first year of his administration. Governor Pou.onc. has already sanctioned the creation- of 1 , 4C111: new banks, with an aggregate, capital of over TWO MILLIONS; and has also . sanctioned the re-Charter of -.:LIN'E'S:oId ones! At this rate of going, the three years of his administration will show an aggregate of twenty-four nosy banks with a. capital of six millif;ns, and the re-charter of 11iirly-llcree old oils—being about twelve times as many new ones, and nearly seven times as many old ones, as were passed under Gover nor BIGLEIL , If it was wrong in Governor 13roLsit - te cre ate in three years !Iva new banks and sanction the rc•chartcr of five old ones—it is a ninth greater wr fur Governor PoLLocx., in one year, to create ek/a new bunks and re-charter eleven old ones. These Ku ow-Nothing editors will have to try some other scheme for bolstering up the rotten' policy of the present SUM AdttlirliStra- OUJI, than to 'attempt the up•hill business of making out Governor I>inixa a bank man equally with Governor PouocK. It won't work. Thu people aro too intelligent to be thus humbugged. Governor BIGLER. was al ways opposed to a wanton increase of the bank ing capital of the State. Ile so stated in all his IneSSltgeS, and carried out - his professions by vetoing no less than eleven bank bills at one time !--hanc. Intelligericer. Where will it End? The- Know-Nothings who have assailed the Catholic, church and rondo pretensions that their hostility wits to stop there, have not been satisfied.- The "Covenanters" in Butler coun ty, Pu:, are denounced. and upbraided on ac ' count of their religion: The Seceders have. a share of their persecution. The Rev. John M'Cauley, who thought it his duty to speak divaragi ugly 'of an oath-bound secret-political party - as anti - -ibristi - an and anti-republican, • has gained their displeasure, and came under the stnartinv,• rod of an author who dared not give his name. , That is well for him, fur that servant of God would wipe away his proper title in one discourse so that he never would he: heard of again, only as having an existence.— On the Presbyterian church, too, war has been made. A fearless watchman on the tower, has been threatened. with a dismissal from a con gregation as a pastor.. Where will this end ? Either in the establishment of a single church in connection with the government, or in the lota overthrow of the proscriptive party ! drgus. SAM:—The Boston 1'o„: is after Sam with a funeral text. It suggests "that the following will answer very well as n. text for , SAin's' funeral sermon : Job, 6th chapter, tlth verse—Tor we are but of yesterday, and know nothing, because our days upon earth arc a shadow.' " llalliin•ire Republican says the rea son A.. 1. Doneison has become a Know-Noth ing is that President Pierce refused to give hiin a fat office which he wanted. Otherwise he would have tuuained a Democrat. l'AsTur.u. Rit.i.En.—.l few days since a Pan .ther measuring six feet eight, inches from nose to tail, was killed in Path Valley, by . .lessrs. Gonn;p: and SrixBsnit Doil.N, and their Dog 4-14numwr." It is supposed the recent tires in the mountain had driven the animal down. —..cl o t n ib c rsburg Tran3cripl. • SMALL l'ox.-- ; This disease now prevails in our town to a pretty dangc . rous extent. Sev eral families have been alllicted with it during the past week, nail we learn that another fan►i ly sonic distance in the country has also been dangerously attacked. Great cam should be taken, as very serious consequences might happen from the further spread of this disease. —Chu nibersbfirg lrj"lhe ulajority in Illinois against the pro hibitory law is about 14,000. It was the larg est vote ever polled in the State. s AD ,Ir u s A in.—:llr. David Burton, who was Shot roar Smyrna, I►cl., a few iveeks ago, by a negro lllntl, Tout Oliver, died 09 Wednesday week. Distressing circumstances are connect ed with the ca.c. The wife of Mr. B. was sick at the time of his being shot : upon hear ing of the occurrence .:he b e came very f ee ble and died in a few days after. leaving a young child, in delicate health, which soon followed its mother in the train of death. FEr Ku, —lt is stated - riot s'e . fever. hhtek vi)mit. prvv3,ll --al I . lotigst, the- ,t,., 2 ,;: it 1\ .. 111) , I ; )) r„l} , F - 4;. r t,.:!. 7 ,- !l j ,i, • Itl I .1. , Ti, , i)t .11• I It! V (.11 I I '1"41 t ;‘, II y14,- 11,r An3IIV.II, TM; STrl.lll , :ri. AAll:ll.te.k 77.111 E. D. 7 VS L. 17 1,,71 The Allies Repulsed by an Attack on S FIVE TI1011 . .•ZANI) U;N LlP.kx..., \..'.. July 5, A. M.—The RoFat Mail Stcainship Xineirii; . -- 4 ijni Liverpool. at, I:o'clock on Sa in, the 2:ld ult., arrived at this port yeste/day-af ternoon. HI DEpc.:AT op rug LLT -TERJOHLK :41,A rGIIT ! The allies have matte an unsuccessful at te►npt to storm Sebastopol. The most sinis, ter rumors prevail in re , rard tO the transaction. By some accounts the English 10::s is set d o wn at finfr llemseind men, but the report is be lieved to be much exag The following are the only official notifica tions of the event : • Lord Paninure regretk' to have to announce that he has received information that the En glish troopkattae Iced - t h - e - RadauTand - the - Frettch: the Malakoff towers at daylight on the morn ing of the 18th. without the success which has hitherto attended our efforts. Both the French and .ourselves have suffered considera hly. The names of the officers who have fallen will he forwtirded immediately, but it will he impossible to receive complete - returns of all the casualties - befort the 30th inst. (June) at the earliest." Private accounts published in the London Standard say the loss Or the British officers in killed and wounded amounts ,to no less than seventy. Among the killed are General Sir J. -Campbell, Col. Yea and Col. Shadforth. . From the obstinacy and courage with which the com bat was maintained by the British at the Re da% and the necessity of eventually retiring from the attack, the slaughter on ,all sides has been immense, and if the information be cor rect, the loss in killed and - wounded of the British alone, amounts to very little short of 3,000. The greatest portion of the loss VMS experi enced in a ravine where a powerful and unex pected battery was opened on the troops. There is reason to fear that the loss has been Very great, but Lord Palmerston' said lAA night no additional information had arrived. The allies lost terribly by the Itussians.spving ing a wine, and during the confusion they le captured the Matnelon ToWer.- All the camps arc healthy, excepting that at Balaklava, where cholera- prevails.- The Sar dinians are suffering, and General Martuora, the younger, is dead. The Journal of St. Petersburg semiofficially says that peace is possible if France and Eng. land are willing, inasmuch as the 4th point is morally although not formally settled, and the other points, namely : the navigation of the Danube and the evacuation of the Principali ties, are also settled—leaving only the Vienna third point to be arranged. Pennsylvania Know Nothing Council at Reading—The Philadelphia Platform Repudiated--Split in the Council. REAnisu, Pa.. July s.—The. Pennsylvania. State Council, which commenced its session in this city yesterday. has divided, Gov. Johnston leading Of for 'a Northern party and that di vision has repudiated the Philadelphia platform by striking out the 12th article, and inserting a declaration in favor of the restoration of the Missouri Compromise. • It is said, also, thaalov.Cardner has address ed Gov. Johnston a letter, inviting Pennsyl vania ,to join the East. .The seceding delegates are to-day, organizing a State Council on the seceders' Philadelphia platform. There is much eiciteuient in con sequence of the division. - Scene's in the Philadelphia Convention. At the meeting in Redman Hall, last even ing. Mr. Carey, of Ipswich, in his speech, stated that when Gen. Wilson rose to reply to the assault made upon the Massachusetts del gation al d upon himself ii particular, a Mem ber from the South, sitting directly in front of him (Carey) and within four feet of Gen. Wil son. drew his revolver, cocked it, and so con tinued to hold it until the close of the speech. During all this time, Mr. Carey sat with his eye fixed upon the weapon, teady to act if the slightest movement was made. When (len. Wilson rose to reply. to - Bolling, of Virginia, he (Bolling) rushed across the hall and took, a seat beside Wilson, with an evident intention to intimidate him. 'Mr. Buffington, o f Rd) liver, who had heard Culling deelare that he woitldlike to whip some one of the Massachit-_- settsmen, TaFreeiving his movements. walked across the hall, and took a seat directly behind Bolling; ready for defence if neeesary. Pitting this speech. Gen. Wilson turned directly to Bolling, and said that he was the last ' person to be intimidated by threats--that if a perso nal war was necessary to vindicate his opin ions, he was ready 'Or it. —Boston Telegraph. The Virginia Election. The Richmond Enquirer, in commenting on the lact_that some of the Know-Nothing papers attribute the election of \Vise to the "foreign" vote, although they are not ignorant of the circumstance that his majority hugely exceeds the entire foreign vote of the State, says :—"[t is known that a considerable pro Portion of the "foreign" vote was cast against the Democra tic candidates. A correspondent of the Balti more Sun says an examination of the polls in Alexandria has developed the surprising fact that a large number of foreign born citizens supported the Know Nothing ticket. There is another Net which settles this dispute be yond controversy. In the cities and in the counties through which works of internal im provement are progressing—in Richmond, in r e tc t shurg, in Norfolk, in Alexandria, in Wheeling, in Fredericksburg. in Augusta, and in Loud - on—in short, just where the 'foreign' vote is the strongest. just there did the democ racy sustain the greatest loss. On the other hand, in° the remote Southwest and on the South side, where nobody ever sees a Catholic or a foreigner, the Democracy made thelargest gains. These are facts which the KnoW Nothing papers can no more dispute, than they can make them 'conform to their fantastic theory. that the election of Wise was the work of Catholics and foreigners." , 1 77 -- The Juniata &Wind, a 'rabid now- Not Itittg and Whig paer, published at in town, appears to he much gi iketlbecause of the disruption of the late National Council of Traitors at Philadelphia. The editor says 4 •There zhnirld haec ca to) dee/arra/on if prin ciples," by the K. N. Council. No doubt such COUrSC would hare bean the policy of the dark-lantern gentry. but the Southern del e gatetitrecal their Nrtrth, rn fellow-traitor , to the I Sravlin Washington Star wall, and Sam of the South finally kicked Sam intimate:444l:a the President has removed nom of the Not th out of the co:med. and sent him i\ ! o bo e eusamm.hous e 6encral C. A. Brad iii l4l l_ , lns . -Titmeshooltl e been Steamboat Explosion , . Let Protestants Be . re. 31,1,xy Liv E.-: Err: l'—itoxie BURNT. Th e ; • 'tterrololit sehjoined paragraphs from the Nngoerrl setni-religions paper. the. in • 011 st-in Kv. Jiiiy2.—Thesteamer Lex- organ 4-reedsnite Free-Soilism—areciantitend ington, running between Louisville and St: et ! to three people to Whom they are addressed: Louts, was blown to atoms near Stephensport, Lei Protestants beware—they are in Mimi- Ky.. by an explosion of her boilers, on her up neat danger of disgr;'icing, their own cause. It trip. The packet Baltimore leas just...arrived., ist,nj,e,ssihlethat t h e prroseriptive. oath•bound - from- the-scene-of--4lisaster_with-2ti_oLthc_offi ret _ r Ai ;kai_ or arai t izatiiku, corn p reltend litr, cers and passengers of the Lexington, includ- • infidel and Christian, the pious and the profit ing the-captain and first clerk, Mr. Davidson, gate, r,,s„iii— y and respectability. bound to beth of whom are wounded. The captain wailer by the common resolve to inflict civil thinks that thirty-five were wounded out of II disabilities upon the Cathollca, can long hold one hundred on board. ` 2 -le ladies Were all together; hut when it hail have been broken in. m unhared. The accident occurred at 3 o'clock On Sunday morning. The boat and cargo are pieces, what a reaction mav 'follow in favor of the very body new so fiercely proscribed a total-loss. The Louisville Courier, of JlJnday, says:— extreme of indiff;•rence as it has into the extreme The boat, it is - sii - ppoed.exPiedetl all her hen - 'of bigotry. And with what - arguments will • • _ not the miserable experiment have fated-the - mouths of the advocates of- Catholicism ! 'They will illustrate your boasts of liheralitY• and toleration, and - justice, and magnanimous reliancenp orolie_trutli_of_Protesta attain ,_/1-7 0 " - miniseenees of Enaw , Nothingisral Already, the most thoughtful of the protestant ministers are looking forward with apprehension. An emi nent divine, in a recint letter to us, remarks: 4 .13 w a word as' to konianisin. I feared two things as soon as it was brought into apoliti cal moVernent—first, that in uniting the infidel. opponents -of Romani:lm with those who are evangelical. the vital truths of the gospel would be left out. The result of this would' be an ultitnate recoil into superstition and des potistn,lor. infidelity- can never, destroy monism. A positive religious - power fitting the heart is needed to• do it. I'f - eared also, superficial arguments and a reaction, so that the final result should be to strengthen Re inanism, rather than the hieratchy, another re action." It has been to us one of the strongest devel opments of Know-Nothingisrn that men pro= leasing piety, and, in many instances, minis ters of thc gospel. have been detected in issu ing- down dark staircases leading out from the obseure dark room in which the Secret Ort'er were wont to congregate—alternating, in their stealthy•egress, with persons of the most open ly profligate habits, of the most abandoned lives, of the most openly professed infidel .opinions.—When religious intolerance .reaches such a point as this—when hatrerof Catholi• . cisin brings professed ministers and represent atives of the Protestant religion to consort with the representatives of every degree of sin. and wickedness in midnight conclave—well .may the National Era, and every other Protestant • paper in the land. , exclaim newsne ! It must be remembered that Know-Nothing ism is not, in fact, a Protestant organization--. that is,'it Is not controlled by men 'who care a fig for the Protestant or any other church-. -It is purely a politicatengine, in the hands of the same petiticians who moved heaVen' and earth to obtain the 'votes of Catholics and for eigners for Gen. Scott, in the Kist PYesidential election. It is ,anti-Catholic only to enlist Protestants le support of its candidates. Jt panders to the morbid anti-Catholic spirit of the country only to bring to the aid of its Presidential schemes those Protestant Demo crats whose zeal runs away with their discre tion. The old Whig party disbanded., and Know-Nothingism succeeds it; and the new organization sets its sails for that popular breeze With which they may possibly be filled., That breeze is just now hatred to Cathol icism and prejudice aoainst foreigners, siituu hated by violent appeals and arrosinit narra. tions of a mendacious character. We repeat the injunction of the Wational Bra, 'get beware." They are,. indeed . , inimminent danger of disgracing their own cause. - When Protestantism shall lend its name to build ,uP a political religious or ganization—it wilt be more than disgraced—it wilt bit ruined—"lel Protestants beware:" F1?U.11 L'L the Russi ebastopoL ans zn LI,EI). GLIKU Oil Bt TTIN(; (I , Z ErEcTioN:-..—The last rzrand )u -ry iii [)dtllc. Va., not only piesinteti per sons for betting ort electrons, but pre, k -Ht et i 4 tho.c too g 4 ,0(1s, payable when -( We( k. certain candidates were elected. of Thomas C. • hat absurd ideas soin , ...iitics get into K •ople ! There is a 'Anent is noise, catistwg- ers wit struction to nil around. The upper works of the boat, forward of her water wheels, were • blown to. fragments, throwing the sleeping -Passenger-s-ana-the-cteliz.like “chaff before the wind," many of them falling' in the river, and others alighting among the fragments of the burning boat and red hot furnaces on the low er deck, as the boat, almost. on the instant of the explosion, caught fire, thus exposing the survivors of the wreck to the horrors of being either burnt alive or drowned. At this junc ture the boat careened and commenced sinking, when a wood boat was caught, and that, to gether with skill's, and the steamers J. C. Fre mont and D. A. Given, which , cauni up, saved many lives. The J. C. Fremont, with eight of the sur vivors, all wounded, reached this port Satur day evening. The D. A. .Given stayed by the wreck some time, and arrived here yesterday morning with a good many Of the wounded and the passengers who were saved. Capt. Throop, who . was terribly burnt, went back to St. Louis, accompanied by his mate, John Johnson, first enginer, Mr. Davidson, the .cterk, and a number of the cabin crew, on the Baltimore. The boat turned bottom upward, and sunk near Stephensport. The second Mate was standing near the forward bins at the time of the explosion, and the first thing he knew he caught the Captain .in his arms. The latter was on the hurricane deck the moment before. Several of the pas-.. sengers•who were saved, ineludinc , Capt. T - . White, who arrived in the Given, knew noth ing of the disaster till' they found theniselves in the river, in their night dress, among the floating portions of the wreck. how they were saved, or in what manner they reached the shore; was equally a mystery. A passen ger asleep in an upper ,berth was saved, and the one in an under berth of the same room. The second engineer, who was on watch, was killed, and his assistantsaved. The second clerk and an assistant bar keeper were killed, and twofiremen, names not known, burnt to death in their butiks. Two passengers who got on the boat at Smithland were killed. One of them was a gentleman about 30 years of age, rneditnu size, with brown hair and dark sandy goatee. My. Wiley Johniron, of Madison, had his leg broken and received several contusions. A German deck hand and- a colored man, who lived back of New Albany, - died on the D. A. Given. All the ladies, children and passengers in the after part of .the boat were saved un hurt.—One or two dead bodies and portions of the wreck were met by the Rainbow 35 miles below the scene of the lisa-;te." The Lexington lacked only a few days of being, 5 years old. The - machinery was - made by Philips, Ills & 'Co., of New Albany. and the boat was quite old eucugh to be condemn ed. She has been a packet in our trade, but was recentiy sold to St. Louis. The Inspectors, of course, knowing that the damage is all done, will investigate as usual. The boat was un der way, had but two firemen on watch, and . it is, the opinion of those who 'saw the wreck that the boilers had no ,r“ter in them. All the wounded persons are burnt, 'bruised or crippled. A MoNsTint I, VEDin:sa; arr.—The Rich mond. Dispatch, a tiy' day.ti ago, contained what seemed to be a fabulous account of what would be a monster wedding. which, it was stated, would soon tallc place at the St. Nicho las Hotel in New York. The Herald, however, sl.ys the account is substantially correct, and adds: The bridegroom, who is, a Louisiana sugar planter, named Mitchell, and reported to be very wealthy, is n o w cn route for New York, accompanied by two hundred. pairs of young ladies and - gentlemen, who ON w take part. in the wedding exercises. On their arrival they are to put up at the St. Nicholas Hotel, the ex elusive use of ‘vhich has been hired for the occa sion for the slim of two thousand dollars per day, the festivities to continue four days. The bride is understood to be the daughter of Judge Concklin, formerly Judge of the Northern Dis trict of New York, but more recently appoint= ed .Minister to Mexico, and whose successor to.' the first' mimed pust is Judge Ball, foriuerly Post master-General. The. marriage ceremonies ate to take place at the St. Nicholas, aittl we understand that two—thousand invitations have already been issued.—The religious rites arc to be most im posing, and the attending festivities are to be on a scale of the most profuse magnificence, and will include balls, fancy, dress and mas querade, private concerts, and dinners and suppers the most recherche. C2l AT FIELPS OF WIINAT.—The celebrated traveller and agricultural writer, Solon Robin son, a few years ago pronounced the farms of Messrs. Henry K. and Thotnas Burgwm, on the Roanoke, in New llampton county, N. C., the best between Canada and Louisiana. Wu learn that the harmer has a field of 000 acres of wheat, which good judges estimate will yield 20 bushels to the acre, or 18,000 bushels in all, worth at present prices about :•' , .'40,000. It is said to be a most beautiful sight. Mr. Thonins Burgwin has• a field of 900 acres in wheat, almost as good. These gentlemen make, besides, large quantities of corn, oats, Ctio!yrt.s. tN Missoußt.—Cholera liar broken out in ticor!:etown, 310., and there had been twenty-two deaths at the last accounts. ~Not a single Qamilv in the town it is stated had es e‘caped visitation Ns-Ith the epidemic. A large p o rtion of the population had , Iled in conso quence.. litm; FisT.—The lilla rc Rirord informs ns that a chicken belonging to William Nelson, of Chester county, was lately accidentally shut up in a barrel, where it remained - for twenty days without food. and was alive when taken out, though - reduced to a skeleton. It has completely revived - 44141,-I,t-hi-)-tv43.s_ one ut . he.d • ••:. • • • bum to the revAlit Ktiow-Noth- Natlolvil Council. MI 1 r+ 'I 771 Ili'l ti la .1:131- GEN'. HOUSTON' AND THE BATTLE 6F SAX JA.• ClNTO.—General Minster), in a recent: address, iu 'relation to the battle of San Jacinto,'gave a version of the history of iLs incidents, and his own connection with them, which has brought out a host of indignant commentators, who not only deny the truth of his narrative,•but accuse him of - cowardice and incapacity. The Sew Orleans Picayune, of the 27th eh., says : "The first to reply was David H. Burnett, formerly President ot Texas.- and by the mails which arrived yesterday we have two other addresses—one by Gen. Sidney Sherman, and one by General Mirabeau 1L Lamar, also once President of Texas. These. gentlemen - were officers during the battle of 'San Jacinto, and they concur with Burnett in declaring Gen.. Houston's narrative false throughout, and in allirming that' the battle. was fought against the wishes and judgment of Houston, who is -accused, moreover; of behaving with- personal cowardice as well as showing utt,er - incapacity as a general., lien. Sherman saYs that when ever a full narrative of the.battle is given truth fully to the world, 'Gen: Houston's mushroom fame will rapidly decompose and sink into' pu trescence with the mass of falsehoods upon which it rests ;' and Gen. Lamar says, •My own opinion is that he, himselfi . (Honsten) was the only coward on that field. I can name no other, and him 1 know as one.' " . 110 ---CITILDKVIN KILLED AS U EATEN' By HOGS. —A Mrs. Abashaba wife of Thomas Ellatield, became deranged about twenty days ago. and left home, taking with her two small children, one aged about two years and the other about four years. Search was made by her friends through the woods for a space of twenty days, when she was found in a frightful condition, and the two children were found eaten by the hogs. They had evidently been killed, as the skull bones of each had been broken. The maniac mother, is now in charge of a friend a couple of miles from this city, in Perry township.—Evansville (And.) l uquirer, 251 k ult. A YouNo MAN SAWN IN Two.—On 'Friday/. week, at E. O. Brigham's saw mills, about miles from Dunham, Canada, a young man named John Spooner. was sawn in two by a circular saw. The saw was going very fast, and is four feet in diameter. The young man was stooping to pick something up, and fell on the carriage moving toward the saw. Be fore he'had time to recover himself, the saw caught bun and cut him in two instantly. - FRIGHTFri, DISASTER AT MAZATLAN.—( )n the 15th ult. a violent storm of wind passed over the harbor of Mazatlan, _Mexico, causing seri ous coflisions among the shipping. No less titan six English, Fretith and Eeruvian ships and barques were sunk and 23"0r their crew drowned. Their cargoes were valued at over 1.0o(1,(100. The American schoduer Cope land, in ballast, was also sunk, and it was re ported than an American touS had foundered 11l the pill, - SA 7I K. ; N wealthy ittruter, t•e•zicling in Callaway c ounty, `icaz, tntirdered by a female belong ing in hiun, on Thursday 'tight week, thrown into the tire and con,lint6l, cell to the bowels and head. The negro has been arrested and acknowledged the dyed. m. ho has been employ e d for two •:,etunig Trir - a I ,o ivse en-me sintlf Le ‘rffl - ked \vitt' Epboin ail:~,i;oiningroon, pro p T p 1 1 c.- 11/110 o "to ca r. tax, water volal It jll ill the asylum at t