miraculous Mealing. The following almost incredible statement, is copied from a late number of the New England Spiritualist. It seems too authen tic to be seriously doubted, and at least chal lenges denial. VVouderful events are coming to pass. Toe Lame made to Walk. —A friend sends us the following extract from a letter received by'him, from Dr. J. B. Dods, who ha's been lecturing on Spiritualism, al Prov incetovvD.The case described seems to. have been somewhat remarkable; and had the writer lived eighteen hundred years ago, doubtless the religiourworld would have pro nounced him a ‘saint’s ’ .“A lady, the wrfe~of Philip Cook, who had been an invalid six years, and doctored by (he'physicians in' Provincetown and Bos ton, and to no profit, sent, for me, I found her confined to her bed, unable to walk, and in so much pain,.from ’ neuralgia, os to be compelled to sleep : under, the influence of morphine, to gel any ease. She was also subject to nervous spasms. I found that she also spent eight months at Northampton, under the care of the celebrated Dr.Halsted, at his water-cure establishment, where she. paid $l3 per week', —in all $3OO. She was but little bettered, and could walk about the morn a little, and a few times went into her next door neighbor’s bouse, which was not two rods distance from her own. But she on undertaking to ride out in a carriage, again relapsed and for thirteen, weeks' had been confined to het bed, unable to walk.* This is the sftnn'ion in -which I found her. 1 tried lo produce upon her' psychological impression, but failed in effecting the slightest result. I could not even close her e\ es. 1 then told her candidly t could do nothing for •her As 1 left the room of this distressed lady, she burst into tears. This was Satur day night; on Sunday night I had a most brilliant vision of seven immortals, —her Taiherrmother and brother, my father and mother, Joseph Alknis and Charles Parker, both formerly of Provincetown, —constituted the group. They told me what lo do, and she should be made lo walk and be healed. On Monday morning, I communicated the 'vision to her. She was not a Spiritualist, and would not believe. I frankly told her it seemed, in the usual order of-.things, almost impossible, but as my visions had never de ceived me, so 1 had full confidence in the result. Thar (Monday) evening X lectured at the Ocean Hull, and announced my vision to the audience; that I would, on Friday evening (for the hall was engaged till then,) have Betsy Cootyiakon from her bed, brought into the hall, and by 1 spirit power made to walk before (he audience and be healed. They almost laughed me loacorn. I replied firmly to their mockery, and said that I could stand the shock of any human earthquake, and I would poise the whole truth or falsehood of Spiritualism upon that single refkftt. The evening came; the hall was jammed; I stepped upon the stage amidst the long-con* linued applause of the audience. I staled the circumstanced of the casdj^—called up six persons out of theaudjgnce whom the vision had desired me to lake, myself making the seventh. These formed the circle, on which .the seven spirits of my viarorr-wero try rand through whom they were to heal the'in ■valid, I then ordered her to be brought into the hall, Two strong men went and look her from her bed, placed her in a large rock ing chair, covered her well up in blankets, carried her up stairs, and placed her on the stage and uncovered her. The solemnity and silence of the grave reigned ! The cir cle was formed; I brea’hed a short prayer, tu a solemn voice, proceeded to the ceremony, us directed by my vision, and soon the seven immortals appeared, each one of whom acted upon each one of the circle. Myself and ono other person at the other end of the circle laid our hands upon the head of Betsey Cook, When the ceremony was ended, I called upon her to arise and walk ; and, to the as tonishment of myself and all, she did so,— walked back and forth, several liflaes, the length of the stage; descended the steps of the stage ; walked back and forth over the hill; returned to the stage ; declared her self free from pain and weakness, and took h'T seal and rem lined until the lecture closed. She arose, and though it stormed, without any covering except a shawl, feft the hall, ami ran down stairs as light as a bird, and got home as soon as her husband. Next morning, she took a walk of a quarter of a mi!*, spent the day at my daughter’s, and has been walking the streets, visiting her neighbors, and about her house, ever since. The whole town was excited, as though in a hornet’s ne»t. The most of my opposers are struck dumb.” ? ! The North and the South. —The most eloquent of all Southerners, as I think, MrT Prentiss, of Miss., was addressing a crowd of some 4000 people in that Stale, defending the tariff, acd, in the course of an eloquent period which rose gradually to some beauli ful climax, he painted the thrift, the energy, the comfort, the wealth, the civilization of the North, in glowing colors, when there rose up on the vision of the assembly, in the open air, a horseman of magnificent proportions ; nod, just at the moment of hushed attention, when the voice of Prentiss had ceased, and the applause was about to break forth, the horseman exclaimed, “D—n the North!”— The curse was so much in unison with the habitual feeling of a Mississippi audience, that it quenched their enthusiasm, and nothing but respect for the speaker kept the crowd from applauding the horseman. Prentiss turned his lame foot around and said, “M >jor Moody, will you rein in that steed a moment V* Ho assented. Said he, “Major, the horse on which you sit came from Upper Missouri; the saddle that surmounts him came from Trenton, N. J.; the hat on ,your head was made in Danbury, Conn.; the boots you wear came from Lynn, Mass.; the linen of your shirt is Irish, and Boston made it up; your broadcloth coal is of Lowell manufacture, and was cut in New York ; and if to-day you Surrender what .you owe the “d—-d North,” you would sit stark naked,” (Laugh ter and loud applause.) —Speech of Wendell Phillips. 9 Hay is sixty dollars (per ton in St. Paul, Minnesota,' We shall publish another letter from our esteem* ed Western correspondent C. V. E, next week. Grass and grain look pretty well in tins region. Corn is likewise healthy and vigorous on dry land, or on land well ridged up.’ On low land the heavy wet has kept it back and rendered it rather pale and puny. Wheat shows (he effect of extreme cold In exposed situations, iboug it U not badly winterkilled. Orchards promise an abundant crop. The skies drip with showers still. June the blue eyed lingers somewhere, and scarcely a glimpse of her beautiful face, has been vouchsafed us. The skies are heavy and the green hills pine for a little , sunshine. People are not half enough grateful for j the sunshine. It Is one of tiie most lovely of God's manifestations. What smile is to the coun tenance of woman, the sunshine is to this strangely beautiful earth. It is the beaming smllo of the Creator; and when it is withdrawn there is no weak ness in grieving its absence. He is to be pitied who ; suffers the yellow gleam of gold to eclipse the sun. Belter than the gold of a thousand mines is the full flood-tide of a cloudless June morning. You can not make it .into ingots, but you can coin it into glu nous and unspeakable thoughts and thus enrich the life of the soul. Give to us the golden sunshine and a crust, and we would not exchange it for the gold of a hundred mines under asunlesssky. Huz za Tor the sunshine I A New Organ. We have received the first tiumbey of a neatly printedand vigorously-conducted Democratic paper published at Philadelphia by J. 6. Jones, Esq., and entitled the Southern Monitor. It is established for the avowed purpose of disabusing the Northern mind of its erroneous notions of Southern society. Tiie editor prefaces his salutatory with the to us .rather surprising allegation, that, “Hitherto the “ Southern States have had no voice in the North, “ and hence they have been misapprehended and “ misrepresented, and often condemned by good men i» whose sympathies might have taken a different di rection, if they had received proper information from authentic sources.” The editor of the Monitor must be cither badly in formed as to the Philadelphia press and the North ern Buchanan press generally, or he has a different idea of the institutions of the South for elaboration. Wc can assure him that the South has a Monitor in every neighborhood where a Buchanan or Fillmore paper is printed. Philadelphia has the Argus , the Pennsylvanian , the Ledger and the News —all pro. slavery papers of the straitest sect, and all Southern Monitors, whose labors are directed to the building up of Slavery. What necessity, then, can exist for the publication of a new paper devoted to the same object 'I After a careful perusal of the Monitor wc have a clue to Dial necessity. It is that the pro-slav. cry press of the Nortli lacks honesty and backbone. True, there is no direct charge of this kind ; but the publication of this new organ is an imputation ’of a lack of stamina In the Buchanan press, and the bold grounds taken in its columns put the hypocri sy of that press to blush. Such language as the fol lowing is clear, candid and unmistakable: “ The Union, being contracted by slaveholders, it could never have been contemplated to refuse admis sion to other slavcholding Slates. Slavery Is consti tutional. It is national, and not sectional, being le gally made so by royal charters; and especially so by tho treaty of 1783, to which England, France and the United States were parties.” The editor proceeds to slate that as the sixth ar ticle of the Constitution expressly decrees that all treaties made, or that shall be made under the au thority-of the United States, shall be the supreme law of the land, therefore, slavery, being established by the treaty of 1783, is national by the supreme law of the land, and* that by the same authority, slaves are property, and cannot be made citizens.' We do npt purpose in this article to argue the points sought to be established by the Monitor , but to exhibit them fairly. We may, and probably shall consider the treaty of 1753 in its bearings upon the question, in our next number. It is. sufficient at this time (o exhibit to oui readers the bold and defiant altitude assumed by this new organ of the Demo cratic parly upon the Nationality of. the God-abhor. red institution of Slavery. In reference to Repub licans it says: “ If they can prove to the satisfaction of the peo ple that the now unequal South ts perpetrating en croachments on the preponderating North; and make them believe it was the design that no more slave Slates should be admitted into the Union—in the face of the incontestable fact, that of the first eleven added to the original thirteen, six were slave States—be it so ! But let no man, as he hopes ibr justice in the Eternal Hereafter, condemn the South for that which must follow.” The Monitor is assured that nothing is more easy to believe than that the framers of the Constitution were averse to the extension of Slavery, and no his torical matter is more susceptible of complete sub stantiation from tbe record. In a further considera tion of this mutter we shall produce the 1 record in evidence. Wccan also assure the Monitor that the ifepubllcan masses are prepared to do their whole duty without fear of unpleasant consequences; nor would they be m the least- surprised or, frightened should the SjuLW rashly execute the threat contain ed in the above extract by an appeal to arras. Re publicans Jove peace while it is unuUisd to dishunor- Bul should Slavery cry for blood, we hare no hesit ation In saying that the North will accommodate them to their complete satisfaction, But to our ex trails: . t . " %£ jwJThe Soulh«|s .Stales arc gipw watching the K&slonc of Once outfit falls fotevcr. If' \ysJmotothe cl the Free-Suil party* be elected-—thus ralilying-£he decree.of Black Republicanism, that a wall of iron is lo circum scribe thcrSooth—Urcirtbe last fralenjahliuk of the Unien will be broken**, It.wfll strike with a peculiar, signifi cance—this newly broached doctrine that the people of Pennsylvania cannot elect a decent man Govern or without dissolving the Union. Tho South had belter deposit tins delicate thing called »‘TheUn. ion” in a.bandbox, and place it in. the bands of votve -mtllinctVVpprenlrcc for safe keeping; It is much 100. delicate ibr utility. But the real meaning of the SquUi is, Jhat.Pennsylvania must submit to elect such a man as it slfali point out, of tl will dissolve .the Union; .Mr. Monitor., you are remarkably can did.. Yotu are .as .unsophisticated. as a milkmaid. Your first number pleasurably reminds us of'grassy Helds, running waters and kitchen gardens. - We do •believe.in your honesty us we believe in the truth of the lass >vho religiously believes that .handsome young men arc gods in pantaloons,or the lad of six- Iceu who believes,that nice yards of calico and a pretty pair.of ancles make oue angel. We have Concluded lo act as your agent up here hi old Tioga, and shall do so in good faith/ And those desiring the honcslcsl and the ablest democratic paper in the North, can procure the same by sending $2 lo J. R. Jones', Philadelphia, or to the editor of this p.ipcr, who hereby pledges himself losend the same to Mr. Jones without fee or remuneration. Wo clip the following interesting advice to aspir ing Democrats, froil) the same paper; A Democrat* is very good and very kind and no doubt very candid in tils ndvipc and admonitions. But as a politician, ns one, perhaps, who casts an eye on the spoils, we think lie should make belter calculations. It is true, the 1 President himself is a resident o( the North. But is it nofequalty Irue that ihe Pawn that makes Democratic Presidente re sides in the South ? ‘•Then, if the Democracy be the Union party and the South the Democracy, does it not follow that the maintenance of the principles and institutions of the South, is the maintenance of the Constitution and the Union? It seems to us that any politician and especially ‘ A Democrat,” looking for 'prefer merit in the future , acts very unwisely in arraying himself against theSoilth.' 11 Can it be that some of the Democrats in Tioga took counsel of this editor during the last campaign 7 The Philadelphia News is a model newspaper in its peculiar way. It carefully conceals from its pa trons every disaster which may befall the Know Nothing party and studionsly Inculcates the lesson of eternal hostility to David Wilmot and the Re publican party. no important objections to offer as to the course it has chosen to pursue. But when it persists that the K. N., State Conven tion lately held at Lancaster, was largely attended and harmonious, we feel like asking Mr, Sanderson if his conscience has not stepped out at the “side door.” It is a notorious fact that but nine out ol the sixty-three counties composing this Common wealth were represented hi that Convention, and that its session was about as harmonious as a tem pest in a tea-pot. It managed to nominate Isaac Hazlchursl i>f Philadelphia, for Governor, with Ca nal Commissioner and Supreme Judges dt the like stamp. We now have a triangular fight in prospect. Republicans have nothing to regret in this shaping of things, but much to hope lor. We want a purely Republican army, marshaled on a purely Republic an platform. It is not presumed that Catholics or Know-Nothings will vole for Wilmot, for both hate Republicanism as intensely us they halo Religious Freedom. For one; we recognize both the Know- Nothing nnd Romish Churches as faithful allies of Slavery and as corresponding wings of the “ great Shamocratic party." They worked in'the same harness last year and they arc doing the like this year. Tiic News forgets to inform its readers that the Know Nothing press exists to no great extent out side of Philadelphia. The Lockhavcn Watchman , Muncy Press and Jersey Shore Vedette —a!!.Filimarn papers last year, have spewed out Fillmoreism and now stand on the /Re publican platform and battle for Wilmot. The Fill more Americans cannot bo rallied again except in Philadelphia and its immediate vicinity. Mr. San. derson cannot trade them off again. — « —— Tfj,c late purgation of* the N. S. Presbyterian Church in the secession of the Southern wing under the lead of Rev. Dr. Ross, of Alabama, is, on the whole, one of the most cheering signs of the limes. Dr. Ross certainly takes the correct view of the matter ; we agree with him that there is no prospect of a cessation of the agitation of the question. lie could as well expect a cessation of hostilities against any other crime in the dark catalogue as against this. We are only surprised that the Assembly has not forced this secession long before. In fact, as great cause for secession existed 70 years ago, and has continued up to the present time. The Assem bly declared against the sinfulness of Slavery in ’B7 and again in ’93, ’95, and To. In 1818 it condcni ned the system as a crime against human as totally irreconcilable with the spirit and princi ples of the gospel and as destructive of domestic peace and violative of the sanctity of the marriage relation. This was reiterated and reaffirmed up to 1849. The Church South in some sort acquiesced. Still, many of the Southern Presbyterian divines de fended Slavery as an ordinance of God in spile of the frowns of the Assembly. It has always seemed strange to us that the As scmbly'did not depose these Slavery upholding and slave-breeding, clergymen, even as it has deposed others for practices *' irreconcilable with the spirit and principles of the Gospel of Christ.” It has ever been quick to suppress what, in its judgment, it is pleased to call “ heresy.” and which heresy would no more countenance Slavery than it would polygamy or stealing. All churches betray tnoro jealousy of their dogmas than they do of the con travention of divine law. It may be politic so to.do, but to our unregenerate vision it seems a stupend ous wrong. We regard the various churches as the engines of moral progress, and do notlhink that one of the many sects could be spared without detriment to the cause of human progress ; but we. also think that they should lead in all reforms, rather than fol low. They should occasionally manufacture public opinion as well as build upon that produced by ex traneous influences. Bat lot us “thank God and take courage.” The slaveholders’ church is removed south of Mason &. Dixon’s line, in part. Some men lake a surface view" oF everything. Tfiey look upon the unruffled bosom of Uie calm deep river, and say it has no strength, no power. Yet its current is irresistibly mighty. They recog nize no strength but in headlong passion, no power but in selfish impulse. They pass by the silent and unassuming worker and deem that (lie machinery of civil government depends in nowise upon such. They pause before the wordy babbler on the street corners and conclude with open ears and bulging eyes that the wheels of government would stop with his tongue. They know little jof the philosophic calmness resulting from.determination, and less of the leavening influence'of righteous principles in the hearts of men who have girded up their loins to the AGITATOR. M. H. C0bb,....i....... Edjior. WELLSBOROUGH, PA. Thursday Morning, June IS. ISST. * # * All Business,and oilier Commanicalionsmust be addressed to the Editor to insure attention. Republican Somillations. . . Par. Governor, ~ , DAYID WILMOT, Of Bradford County. Tor (JanaTCommissioner , WILIAM MILLWAED, Of Philadelphia. For Suprejne Judges, JAMES VEECI-I, Of Fayette County , ■ JOSEPH J.EEWIS. Of Chester County. NOTICE is hereby given that books will be open ed for subscription to the capital stock of'the Tioga County Bunk, at the office of scy, in Tioga'Village, from the 22d to the 271 h .of June next, inclusive, between the hours oflO o’clock A. M., find four o’clock P. M., and if the capital stock' shall not then have been all subscribed, the books will bo opened al the Prothorolary’s office in Wcllsbnro, June 291 h; at the house .of L.D. Taylor, Covington, June 30; at the house of B. R. Hall, Blossburg, July 1; at the house of Guerdon Fuller, Mansfield, July 2; at the house ofNathanicl M-inn, Lawrcnccvllle, July 3, between the hours of 10 o’, clock A. M. and 4 o’clock P. Al. May 23,1857. By order of. Commissioners. Two, or more of the Commissioners w.tl be in at tendance at (lie several places above-mentioned. THE TI(XGA COU.N-TY 4GITAT(^E V ; fight the undw-currenjayfiowing from the fountain of -ttua mtiu integrity—-great under-currents whiclt , havejijjrept awaylhe lootholds and thrones of ty rants in the past, and which are destined lo sweep -nway-tho wiokedoppressoraof the American people, j They forget that thought is the seed oi every great ' fcnddaVor aniHhat works.are th&frcrit of thbdght.-' Such men have no confidence in integrity of the people—the masses, and of such men are the leaders of llic Democratic parly in the North. With them, the masses are so many rounds in the ladder by which, they are to ascend into place and power. They meet the hard-handed and sun-burned visaged worker with .a condescending bow and a deceitful smile, and the frank.hearted man forgets that Jesus Christ was betrayed with a kiss. When be discov ers that he has been cheated he becomes indignant, and he mentally resolves to bo Irs own leader for the future. And then'he encounters that, devilish leer which a just Ileuvch has branded upon the fa ces of'thc priests of Slavery, and straitway forgets thal'a man may bo A smiling, damned villain t” and repents his credulity a second lime, in dust and and ashes, and a painful humiliation of spirit. Good people, when shall we all get wiser ? How muc!) longer shall we worship parlies and fallible men to the shameful neglect of those alUupholding Principles which were never intended (o triumph iudppendenlof human endeavor! Wccomplain that the yoke of the Black- Power chafes our necks. How came it.on our necks? Has there been a great strife on Us part to yoke us ? There has been no such slnigglci We stooped pur beads for the yoke like thoughtless, children, and we not only per* milted ourselves lo bo yoked, but posterity os well Wo rejoice that the yoke chafes. We trust that it will leave a life-scar os a warning to those who shall come after this generation. This North deserves no pity, nor would It though its sufferings were ten. fold as intense. We did not elect to be free .in the outset, and this painful humiliation is legitimate. Dye's Wall Street Broket of the 6th inst., has a fee-simile of a coin sald to ba - that received by Ju das for the betrayal of Jesus Christ. We confess to same little doubt as to the preservation of the coins oi that remote period,; still, Mr. Dye gives some very fair reasons for believing the coin to be identi cal wjth that paid Judas. Anticipating a demand for this curiosity, be has procured diep from which he has coined copies of the, same, which anyone can obtain by sending 25 cents to lift address, 70 Wall-st., New-York, He furnishes copies o of pure silver at $1,50 for a single piece, or $l2 per dozen. The people of lowa are lo vole in August on ihe question of allowing colored men to vote on the,same terras as other men. Gen. Wilson in Kansas. —Senator Wil son went up lo Kansas from St. Louis in the sime bo.it with Gov. Walker, and left at Quindaro, wheie the boat stoppei, and Gov. Robinson and'other citizens paid their respects to the new Governor. ridge. Counterfeit new ccnl pieces are in circula tion already. They will easily deceive per sons at a casual glance, but being Tnade mostly of pewter, like all that kind of coin they have a greasy feel and a dead sound, which may lead to iheir-deleclion. At Cleveland, Ohio, a few days since, n lady look her seat in the cars, who had just discovered n loss of her pocket book, contain ing §S0 —-her all—and she was nearly overcome vvhh -grinf, when 17.1 ward.Munrctl, who happened lo be aboatd, assisted in raising a subscription of 576. The lady had two children with her, and said that she was on her way to Boston. The editor of the Fulton Republican says, he has fnr sale a set of “carved mahogany sofa chairs 11 I” This is the first instance we can remember of an editor possessed of such traps, and we think we’ll have to call up there and see what he looks like. A large reptile was recently taken from ihe stomach of a lady at Fort Wayne, Ohio, from two or three feel long, and an inch in diameter. It had scales and bones. The lady ihinks she must have drank it in some water some years ago, as she has been ill for a long time. The Newduug Thageuv. —Some weeks ago the inhabitants of Newburg, N. J., were thrown Into a state of excitement by the. dis covery of the body of a murdered female in their midst. At first no one knew the re mains, or knew of any one missing, but it was finally recognized as the " body of one Sarah C. Bloom, ariefa man named Jenkins was arrested as having been seen in her com pan/’jhe evening previous. But to the sur prise :of all Miss Bloom turned out lo be alive, and made Iter appearance at court thereby convincing the jury that they must look elsewhere for a clue to the murder. Time passed’ and the mystery remained un solved, till Brown, a negro from Boston, iden tified the corpse as that of his wife who was awhile woman, but again the alledged mur dered woman came into court. It was not Mrs. Brown. Who she was, who were her murderers, and what circumstance led to the commission of the crime, are yet a mystery. It is supposed that the real relatives of the deceased preserve silence lo avoid the scandal and perhaps odium which would accrue to them were they lo make themselves known. David Wilmot, the Republican candidate for Governor in Pennsylvania, has issued a very able address to ihe people of that-State on the issues now Before the country. He is politically and intellectually one of the strongest men in that Slate, greatly superior to any man they have had as Chief Magis trate since the daysof McKeon and Snyder. He has Ihe ability of the former and firmness of the latter. In his antecedents and from honest con viction, Judge Wilmot is a decided Demo cratic Republican, and ten years since was one of the most influential leaders of the democratic party in that commonwealth.— Being a firm Stale rights man, ho has opposed ihn extension and "nationalizing of slavery, and the democracy of northern Pennsylvania ha ye stood with him by their old principles, the old Jackson forces through that" whole region giving large majorities for Fremont in the late presidential election. -There are strong and favorable indications (or the Re publican cause in Pennsylvania, and in making Wilmot their candidate they have displayed wisdom and sagacity. The elec tion of no other man would give greater sat isfaction to the'' Republicans of the whole coun'ry. — Cotin. Press. 'S ■ Eufdpfceiaent of Bogus' Au ■ P’' P lUorlty. , i CorrcBgpndeufi££of the 2s'. yvtribimo. ; Lawrence, fifT., June 1, 1857. This afternoon Lawrence exhibited a little of the old--Spartan feeling that has so ■ often characterized, its citizens. The first fruits of Go /, Walker's ndw administration have been seen. The declaration made in the luaugu. ral jhat the Governor’s* instructions from Washington are, “Sustain the regular Leg islature of the Territory,” - is beginning to work. The insignificant representative of bogus law and rufiian dominion, ffm. P. Fain, paid a visit to -Lawrenee this morning. Nominally, he came to collect taxes, really he came to work mischief. Gov. iWalker had enma to the Territory, the representative of mote power than any other Governor had ever, been able to bring. Like ail his illus trious predecessors, he had opened his mouth when he reached the Territory; and out leaped, “maintain the auihority of the Ter ritorial Legislature.” d I The Pro Slavery men of Kansass are cunning. They want (o see how far that authority will be maintained. VViih them bogus legislation Bock Border-Ruffian domina tion are not a “sounding brass and a {tinkling cymbal.” : j Deputy Fain came to Lawrence ip-day lo collect the taxes. He did not expect to col lect them. He knew the thing had never been done except in ihe few communities under. Ruffian power. He knew he could pdt collect anything himself. All. he wantedjwasan excuse for gelling Walker and the United Stales dragons to do it.', ' • No sooner was his presence knownihan a fluttering was visible among the people. A meeting was Convened in the public s.quaire in front of the Morrow House. The old back bone of 1855' projected very unmistakably. It was bad enough to send any bogus Tax Collector or Assessor to Lawrence, but to send the man who had been made the prom inent instrument’in the sack of Ljawrence last Summer, was heaping insult upon injury. So it was felt, and such was the ! spirit that gave lone to the following proceedings : “Al a meeting held in on the Ist day of June, 1857, op the occasion of a visir of fc “Depaiy Marshal,” “Deputy Sher iff,” “Assessor” Fain to assess ihe will leave this town. | ' “Wm. Philips was called on, and! stated that this was merely a feeler pul oill by the anwny, irv—lasl I ha. fidelity af- t-ha-ipanpla-iiv. Their principles, and 5 the devotion! of Gov.' I Walker lo bogus law. They should give it an unmistakable answer. t [ “Judge Conway was called on, pnd made lan eloquent appeal, recalling the instances of John Mampdcn and the patriots ofj’76, who rcpudiaied taxation without representation. “T. Dwight Thatcher, esq., whs called out, and responded in a speech which was very well received. - Me stated thajt he was too much of a new comer to wishj to adviser, and would rather be a listener ; but he had fixed his lot in Kansas, and. he rec ognized a principle at slake, on I which ho could speak- when called on. Me skid it was the same question that so many Governors had come to Kansas lo settle, and hid failed in settling—the enforcement of Ihe bogus usurpation. Me would never submit to it, and he believed the people would never sub mit lo it., “[Cries of ’Never’.J “Mr. Wm. Hutchinson, Chairman of Com mittee, made ihe following report: "Whereas, We understand that a person claiming to.be Deputy Sheriff and-Assessor of Taxes, under ihe authority of the bogus Legislature, is now in our midst ; and whereas we utterly repudiate the authority cjf all per sons claiming to be officers of that Legisla ture ; and tcAercasthe monies so fraudulently collected from our people have beenj and may again be appropriated in part, lo defray the expenses incurred in burning hotels! and pri vate dwellings, destroying printing presses, sacking towns and plundering lhe{ property and outraging the dearest rights o| our citi zens—Therefore, } “Resolved , That, in the opinion of this meeting, no good citizen will in any manner furnish ‘aid and comfort’ lo the Assessor or Collector of Taxes, or render him a list of the valuation of his properly. j "Resolved, Thai, recognizing the princi ple established by the blood of our fathers, that ‘representation and taSalion ace insepa rable,’ we will never violate that principle by the voluntary payment of any taxes levied by the present Territorial Legislature. "Resolved, That a Committee o'l five be appointed to present these resolutions lo all our citizens for their signatures. | “Resolved, That a Commit 100 of five per sons be appointed to present a copy'of these resolutions to any person who may visit this community in the shape of an Assessor or Collector of Taxes, and that a copy he sent to his Excellency Governor Walker. “Oa motion, the following Committee was appointed to carry out the fourth resolution : “Messrs. R. - Morrow, G. W.l Dielzler, Charles Stearns, John Cook, arid G. W. Hutchinson. f “The following gentleman wertfrelected to carry out the second resolution : : people were prepared to drive the intruder - out of town,-or to tar and feather him if necessary. -The stronger-the -sentiment, the more enthusiasticilly was it received, and several., persons-' gave vent t 0 w f )at they thought ought to be done with the Tax Assessor.- The resolutions and the proceed, ings wete tempered by those whiT took an active part in it. ' • 1 “Messrs. G. W. Dielzler, f. H. Kagi, John Cook, and S. N. Wood. I “On motion, the meeting adjoursed. ■ “JAMES. BLOOD, Chairman. “S. F. Tapp a hr, Wm. A. Pint Lips, Secretaries." . Tjie sentiment of the masses pijesenl was much more radical than the above. The During "the progress.of the meeting the Assessor thought it advisable to decamp. He had received no notification, but little notice had been taken of his person, and he went voluntarily, as he came. Witt Gov. Walker collect the'bpgds taxes? Will he'sommon theUniled Stales soldiery and have bodies of them trooping over the country at the heels" of such scoundrels as.- Fain, to steal every mao’s horsa or cow, under pretense of collecting taxes? It cer tainly can he no part of the policy of even a shrewd Pro-Slavery man to do.’ He has taken one false -position, and- must recede or take another. But he may dodge. Yes, he is a politician, and will at least try to dodge. He will learn that iris difficult to ■ dodge in Kansas. Let there be no secrets in medicine, or rattier no pretended secrets. The Medical Faculty publish as soon as made, all their discoveries, and ajmost all that is known of real value for ihe cure of disease, has been discovered by them. Dr. Ayer takes the honorable honest course, and right because it is honest. He goes to work and -invents the best remedy which medical skill can de vise for the cure of certain complaints; then publishes what it is and maintains bis mo nopoly of it solely by. making it cheaper, belter, more perfect, than anybody else can. If the people would exact this of all who offer medicines, they would have much less treacle and trash to swallow.—New Orleans Organ. Dr. G. A. Culler of Topeka, Kansas, writes to the Indianapolis Journal, in refutation of the current calumny that the Free-Stale men of Kansas refused to vote at the Consltlu-' tional Election merely because the call ema naied from the bogus Legislature. He says: “The village of Topeka contains from 800 to 1,200 inhabitants, a majority of whom are voters—the male population being largely in the preponderance all over the Territory. With the vote in the surrounding country, she would probably be able to cast six or seven hundred votes, and, 1 believe, with two exceptions, all Free-Slate men. ‘'■There never has been an officer here, either Sheriff or Deputy, to take the Census, arid consequently the citizens, no matter how anxious they may have been, have not had it in their power to register their names, and are, therefore, disfranchised. Suppose we wanted to vote, what are we to do ? Must we neglect our business, and throw away our timto, which to us is viluable, in hunting up these bogus concerns, and begging' them to place our names ou the register, and thereby make citizens of uir? I doubt much whether you could prevail on many of our farmers, at this season of the year, to throw down their plows, and start d nvn to Missouri in search of the bogus Sheriffs or their deputies. Nor is Topeljm the only place that is slighted in this manner.' Every Frce-S;ate town in the Territory that I have heard from, and I believe-l have heard from nearly all, are treated in the same manner. While in those in which there are both Pro-Slavery and Free-Stale men, the former are scarcely ever slighted, the latter invariably arc. Tiie Li'gislatuiie.— The democratic jour nals of this State are abusing in round terms their political majority in ihe Legislature, accusing them of treachery to the interests of the Commonwealth, extravagance, corruption and evil practices generally. They are no doubt correct in these striking portraits of the ; r. friends, but their motive in thus rating them is apparent. They desire to shield their party from the accountability to which it will be held by the’ deceived people at the next election. The sacrifice of a few individuals, who, no doubt, acted in accordance with the instructions of their leaders behind the scenes, will not save the party from the fate it de serves, as in its organized capacity it is alone responsible for the power which it has abused. The history of the present legislature will illustrate in strong cojors the unworthiness and want of faith of the Sham Democracy. Let them, through theif representatives on the' State ticket from Governor to Canal Com missioner, be held to the reckoning. Gun. Packer, should he muster courage sufficient to take the stump, will adopt the • usual democratic mode of electioneering, by making great professions in favor of economy in ihe State government —short sessions, with other democratic catch-words, by which the people have been*deceived for years. The usual professions of hostility to monster Cor porations, Banks, &c., will be repeated again, with great unction, and considerable “flourish of trumpets.” But we cannot see how they can have any effect, with the proceedings of the present “democratic” Legislature ia the recollection of the people. —Pittsburg Ga zette. The Report on Slavery presented in the New School Assembly at Cleveland, on Mon day, stated that 27 memorials on the subject of Slavery were handed to the Committee, of which number, 11 came from Ohio and 3 from New York. The report is signed by Rev. Drs. Allen, Wallace, Burchard and Cleland, and Messrs. Griswold and Hastings. It declares that Ihe Assembly can nqver con sent to the idea that Slavery ought to bo perpetual, and that the Apostles never thought that Slavery was on a level with the natural relations,'but that they simply bore with it for the time. The report divides the question into two classes, and counsels 1 moderation and charily, but in the main censures tho practice of slave-holding. Its reading cre ated a great excitement. The Lancaster Intelligencer , which hith erto has been the home organ of Mr. Bu chanan, and whose editor is said to have been an expectant of one of the offices in the Custom House of Philadelphia, announce* the appointment with the following quaint cqmments : a “We congratulate several of the above gentlemen on their extraordinary luck, in he rotated out of good offices, which they have held for a number of years, into boiler ones I