ailg Edegrapt THE PEOPLE'S STATE CO THE PEOPLE OF PENNSYLVANIA, who desire cordially to unite in sustaining the NATIONAL ADMINISTRATION in its patriotic efforts to suppress a sectional and unholy re bellion against the UNITY OF THE REPUB LIC, and who desire to support, by every power of the Government; one hundred thou sand heroic brethren in arms, braving disease and the perils of the field to preserve the Union of our Fathers, are request•W to select the num ber of Delegates equal to the Legislative Re presentation of the Slate, at such timed and in , such manner as Will beet impend to the spirit of this , oall, td meet in STATE CONVENTION at HARRISBITHE, on THURSDAY, the SEVEN TEENTH DAY OF JULY next, at eleven o'clock, on said day to nominate Candidates for tho offices of AUDITOR GENERAL and SUR VEYOR GENERAL, and to take such Measures as may be-deemed necessary to strengthen the GoVernment in this mann of common peril to odmmbn country A. K. McCLURE, Chairmen People's State Committee. fig• W" Hex 1.; Secretaries Joss M. •Sorwmt; ItARELISBURG, PA Saturday Morning, May 8, 1562. UNION FOR THE SAKE OF Till UNION. The call of the Peoples' State Committee, sum moning such delegate& as the people of Penn sylvania may select, to meet In State Ott:lnven tion, appears at the, bead of our editorial columns today. We accept the . union which that call proposes, for the sake of the Union ; and on the issue made, of giving the National Administration an undivided and a patriotic support, we havera right to anticipate the m..:st glorious moons. In this contest there are two parties, as there are contending armies in the country. There is a party at the south which is battling to destroy the federal Union, while there is another party in the north laboring to overthrow and - demoralize the federal Adminis tratioa. There is, no difference bet Ween the design and the objects of these cliques, though they seem to be marching in different direc tiona,and fighting under different banners. The one, with torch and sword was beseiging the federal capital for months, while the other with vituperation and falsehood, has been tra ducing and assailing the federal administration since its butugurittion. It is to crush both these influences, that this union is now • proposed. To crush rebellion by strengthening the hands , of loyai men. To counteract treason, by shutting pp, the avenues of the goverrunent to traitors; and to give tone to that.publio send; mant"witich first aroused the rn ssess of Penn sylvania in their deviotion to the Union. The People's State Central Committee have acted With a'wisdom, a patriotism, and a judi cious regard for the feelings and sentiments of thetuasses. of Pennsylvania on this subject, whiehdeeerve our warmest approval and fullest confidence. Their action augurs success, and for the 'issue which they have made, we bespeak the hearty endorsement of the patriotic people of Pennsylvania. In the meantime, our broth. ran of the press must not be idle. Let the word be epolren that while our armies are strug gling. Vttk armed traitore, the people,are nobly contending-with those who are secretly in sym pelt ivitli treason. _ _ liscirArramti, the traitor, is earning only bits* and muses,• among those whom he has abruned`to lead in rebellion and intrust in warfare. ' As Brigadier General, he has accom• pIW ad nOthiog but confusion and death, • where be bad promised to lead his men to glory and, victory. In a late battle, in which he 'and his • brigade were engaged, one third of hie satellites were killed-41116i by the indiscreet conduct of their drunken and desperate leader, Breck eqidge—sacrificed to the ambition and passion wbich Made a traitor of John 0. Breckenridge. It la eiR/Pdar that. while Breckenridge, the open traiter,l is thus hurried to his disgraceful fate, his *nit Sympathizers In the free states are bit deo:nail; in the eame condition. There is nok a leader of , the Breckenridge faction in the north, who is not secretly engaged in giving aid and comfort to the traitor cause. They imagine they reader ouch aid by attacking Be • publicans as abolitionists, and assailing all who are engaged in the war to auppress the rebel lion, as emancipationists. Of course these men are understood. While the Breakenridgers of the path, have .tbe blood of the rebellion on their . hands, the Breckenridgers of the north and free states have it on their souls. T B* 8141(4.4B "DIANA Aeene-teTt d d rlog the Mahan .war, was charged with cowardice by Jett Da* and his Mississippians. The charge hap liften been refuted, but never so completelY ea hyltheprosent record of its cAcera and men. Brigadiar-Generale , Lovell H. Rousseau and Nathan Kimball were Captains in the 2nd In diana, and Brigadier-General Jeff. C. Davis a priiitte; Col. Win. L. Sandereon was a Oaptain and Col. B. F. !Scribner s f3ergeont; Lieut. Col.- Osborne was a Captain; Major W. T. Spicely we. a Captain and Major D. C. Thomas a pri vide; J. Barrel) a Lientenant t and Oaptelne Wain Abbott and John Elungate privates whiltLietits. R. Pennington and H. M'Ooy Go copied the , same rank. EDWARD STABLY, of California, recently ap pointed militerYgeiernor of North Carolina, is • native idthe latter state, and formerly repre sented a strong 'Whig district in Congress.— Illzelgreting to' California in 1849-60, he soon Minnie Widely known there as an able lawyer. *Oh we pelleve, the ReptibH4n candidate for t :mem! in 1867, when he was defeated 17 seejesorZstlistn. He subskuently stinted politioitaiiititAmOnneeil his Intentteia of hearts lag a =Wolter of the Gospel. THA.DDEUS STEVENS• It is not our vocation to refute the slanders or answer the Sang of the Patriot and Union. Such a task would be as hopeless as replying to the babbling of an idiot or the ravings of a maniac. But it is pleasant, occasionally, to turn aside from our other duties, to write and print a just and honorable word in belmlf of those whom that sheet delights to cover with its slime. We experience that pleasure to-day, while pla cing on record our high regard for and full con fidence In the eon. Thaddeus Stevens, whom the Patriot assailed this morning with its pecu liar and malignant baseness. It has revived all the old locofoco, slanders heretofore hurled 'against Ir, Stevens ; and,while in a: paroxysm of passionete.hatred for: those Whom the Patriot deems most tifiVrattlltti tiug to crush the slaVeholder's nitsillionTitilFrgitis outThaddeue Stevens forts bitterness, as if its assaults on him'would ccoaceel - iti real , design of assailing the governmait Which is now struggling to save the Union. Every word of slander and falsehOott Whialr.the.Pirtriceakilles to Madam& Stevens is designed by that sheet to be a direct attack on the federal administratiOn, and through that administration, also, an attack on the men whe are battliag.f9l4 l / 3 not the man who has struggled successfully for thirty years against locofoco contumely and its controlling gennts, southern slavery; it is not the political opponent, now so eminently snc oessful in. poaition and influence, whom the Patriot hates and Nolo to howl down. It "is Thaddeus Stevens, the defender of freedom and the advocate of law and justice,' Whom the Patriot opposes. It is Thaddeus Stevens, the author of the common school system, whom the, whole pack of iiemi-traitoro assail; because by that measure the doom of modern Democ racy was sealed, and has been steadily made to decline as darkness declines before the light of day. The patriot hates Thaddeus Stevens,'be cause he has more then •onee stood alone be- . tween the Oeniooracytiilid theydmest interests of the country. miligus 6 - BtiattA so often in its vile attempt' at plunder, and is now so bnively engaged in oPPoeing a regularly Democratic organisation 'for treason, that his recomnienthitionnanst °Owlet; of abnee of the Patriot, and his brightest reward be qonsti tilted by the fact thathe is opposed by a party, of which the' Harrisburg Patriot and Union is the organ. ThaddeuiStevens is now before the country as tbe chldnnen of the moat impartial Congres sional OOmmittee--that of Ways and . Meant.— He has faithfully and fetirlawily disclaimed his dray whilistipervising the financial optitations of the government. He has paused at no labor that promised to , relieve the masses of the-peo ple from pui.llutiiet, of_ this struggle. , li