Letter from William B. Reed, Esquire. PHILAEELPHIA,UUIy 26th 1855. To the Ron. A. G. Curtin, Chairman of the Whig State Committee, Harrisburg . Dear Sir : I beg to resign my position as a member of the State Committee, and desire to state the reasons which have led me to this conclusion. lam quite aware that these motives may have no interest either to my Sate Colleagues or to the public, but I am riot less satisfied that there is something in exist ing political relations calculated to effect per• sonal character, and which admonishes every honorable man to be perfectly ingenuous and unreserved as to what he does. In this communication I mean to be so, and I shall be very glad, if I am in error on any matter of fact, that you will correct me. I was appointed a member of the State Committee by the Whig Convention of 1854, which nominated Mr. Pollock and Mr. Dar sie. To us was confided the duty of promo ting the success of that ticket in its integrity Darsie's success as much as Mr. Pel lock's: We were bound in honor to do all we could for both these gentlemen, and I can confidently assume that if any human being, in or out of the Convention or the Committee, had hinted the idea that one of these candidates was to be sacrificed, it would have been met by a most indignant rebuke. There was not even an undercur rent of intolerance then. These were Whig nominations, entrusted to the honor of a Whig Committee. On receiving the intelligence of . my ap pointment, I immediately wrote to the Pres ident of the Conventian, begging, for person al and official reasons, to be excused from serving. Had I dreamed of what has sincie occurred, my withdrawal would have been peremptory, and I should have been spared the mortification of seeing the party, with which I-have acted for thirty years, endan gered if not destroyed, by sinister and secret influences which I could not control and with which I might seem to be implicated. Yield ing, however, to the urgency of old and kind friends, who seemed to think I might render some service, I consented to act. In one respect, and but one, (aside from the pleas ant personal association we have had,) am glad I served. It enabled me, and in this my colleagues of the committee and our candi dates cordially co-operated, to aid in assua ging the asperities of political conflict, and so to direct the canvass that little or no per sonal feeling mingled in it. 'Sure I am that no word of personal reproach or unkindness to Governor Bigler, or any individual mem ber of the Democratic party, emanated from the State Committee. It was in this partic ular a-most decorous contest. Having agreed to act, I took, as yo are aware, my full share of duty, and attended every meeting of the committee, one of which was held three hundred miles from my home. You will excuse this recapitulation. It is necessary to the illustration of. the painful, and in ray judgment, most discreditable se quel to what was so propitiously begun. To the winter and spring of 1854, two incidents of public interest occurred, which in my opinion were attended with the worst conse quences—the passage of the Consolidation Bill, and the first election under it. To Con solidation, in every form in which it was presented, I am proud to say I always was, and yet am, resolutely opposed. The princi ple was wrong and delusive—the details of the measure, as has been abundantly proved, were incongruous and imperfect—the ma chinery rickety—and the manner in which it was forced on the public, no one venturing to resist the spurious sentiment that was stimulated, was most tfnfortunate. Its sad results no ono now questions. The most sanguine enthusiast of this great speculation can do no more than hope for the very dis tant future m the long run, (to use a favor ite phrase,) it may succeed, but it will be a very long run indeed, of suffering and dis honor, and social disorganiz Ilion and immi nent bankruptcy. Every one of these re sults has in point of fact already ensued. A huge municipality has been created which thus far cannot manage itself. Its legisla ture is a miaiatnre Harrisburg, translated to Philadelphia. The treasury is bankrupt.— The credit of the community has been nar rowly saved, so far as the payment of mere funded interest is concerned, but is prostrate in everything else. New loans are familiarly talked of. New taxes are inevitable, and yet no one ventures to propose them. These I affirm to be the consequences—the bitter and the natural fruits of this consolidation scheme. In May of last year occurred the first elec tion under the new system. It was at this election that, for the first time was developed a new and most danger ous element of political action, which has beer. running a short race of triumph ever since, but. which now I am happy to believe, is near its appropriate end. lof course refer to Know Nothingism or secret Americanism. How, or where, or exactly when it oriei nated: no one knows—at least no one out of its Councils, and, I suspect, not very many ,in them. It is believed to have had - a:very impure origin out of this State, and to have been transplanted hither by hands already stained with a good many black political spots, bankrupts in fortune and chat actor, spirits congenial to any device of fraud that might, under a cloak of secrecy ; be perpetra . ted - with safety. Such I believe to have been its origin, though I am equally well satisfied that much personal respectability and honest, though misdirected, sentiment has been infu sed in it since. No matter, however, how or where it began, the disease broke out with great virulence in this city in the spring of 1854. Hundreds and thousands of sturdy Whigs, who had been fighting open Ameri canism all their lives, and as many fierce Democrats, rushed into these Lod ,, es—were initiated by some mock ceremony, and swore that they would never vote or assist or nit: members of one Christian denomination— , that they would proscribe every naturalized citizen ;—swore too, though .nominal Whigs or Democrats, that they would break faith with ancient friends and abide by the decis ions of secret Lodges—swore further to a . code of disingenuousness which required them to deny their membership. Its myste ry made it attractive and seemed to make it safe. Many a man who was ashamed pub -licly to preach intolerance and proscription, could do it safely in a secret council room. This system of denial and equivocation—a cardinal principle of Know Not hingism—led to some instances of personal degredation in this city which I do not like to think of. It was not long after this election, when the glory of triumph was brightest, that the Whig State Committee met for the first time in this city. I am confident in the belief that at that time this secret party had no considerable foothold in our Committee. have no idea of recapitulating the acts or counsels of the Committee then or thereafter. You will do me the justice to say, that from first to last, in every form and guise, I op posed all affinity to this new party, and I am , ilad to do you the justice, that you were equally decided aml resolute on the same side. We worked together most harmoni ously. Then, too ; it was, that the question of our duty to George Darsie was considered and discussed, and then we were, or seemed to be, unanimous, that it was a matter of du ty and honor to suppot t him. The fact is now confessed, f regret to say, that some of our Committee, thu.; pledgml in fairness and honor, recognizing the superior oblio:ation of a Know Nothing oath voted for Mr. Mott, the Democratic candidate, believing him to belong to the order. The same subject of discussion arose at our meeting at Pittsburg, with the same apparent result, though I have no doubt.the scheme of sactifi_;inc , Mr. Dar sie was in the meantime matured. It •cer tainly was most systematically perfected, mid toils one of the gabled and most' upright public men in the Commonwealth, who, spite of his nativity and a few years of infan cy in Protestant Scotland, had been a Penn sylvania Legislator for nearly fifte6n years, was sacrificed at the bidding of a secret oath bound association, composed to a large ex tent, of individuals who openly claimed com munion with the party they betrayed. How little the State Committee could do to avert this discredit, you very well know.— The secret influence was ariiund them, and upon them, and within .them, and those who, like myself and others, were open arid candid in their condemnation of this secret action and organization, were not fairly met or an swered. The secret order was satisfied with rapid recruiting. Their oaths prevented dis cussion or fair play. It was confidently alleged and assumed that Mr. Pollock himself joined the order. From his own lips I have it that, at the time of his election, he was not a member of any party whose organization re qu,ired him to proscribe any ,portion of his fellow citizens, and relying on that aegurance, I continued my humble exertions, and voted for him. I voted for the Whig ticket at the fall election. I voted for Mr. Tyson for Congress, after he obtained the Whig nomi nation, though I confess I was perplexed by many rumors thathe, too, had joined the or der, and taken the requisite oaths. I could not persuade myself that a man at his time of life, who had pronounced so many elabo rate discourses in favor of religious toleration, and who venerated with a faith so sincere and professing, the name of William Penn— the friend and favorite of England's - Roman Catholic King—l could not persuade myself that he had abjured the principles of his ed ucation, and sworn to this new allegiance.— Had 1 lived in the first Congressional District I should no doubt have voted for Mr. Morris, for there would have needed much more than rumor to convince me that he, the ancient an tagonist of Native Americanism (which was at least a manly party,) had retracted, and joined the secret order. If these were errors on my part, they were errors on the side of fidelity to my friends and party. After the month of September, 1854, the State Committee never met. Governor Pol lock and Mr. Mott were elected. and those of us who felt we were exelnded from the new communion, had scarcely the heart to re joice—the means of triumph in oar opinion being so unworthy—and nothing to console us but the dim hope that things might turn out better than we feared. In Jinnary, of this year, the new andmin istration was inaugurated and the new Legis lature met. Of the doings of that Legislature I need not speak. and especially of that scene of imp' tent intrigue, the canvass for United States Senator. Though there was a nomi nal whig majority, the very name of whig was ignored. The caucus was one of "Se cret Americans" from which Whig Senators and Representatives were excluded—and within and upon that caucus, everything be int-, veiled by what was thought to be safe se crecy,-the influences of corruption, personal, pecuniary and - political, were thought to be brought to bear. What better illustration, (I now appeal to your own observation.) could there be of . the mischievous capabilities of this secret organization than Gen. Cameron's success in the "American caucus?"_ I do not unite in the denunciation heaped on that gentleman. I think—aside, of course, from all q nestion of right and wrong—that his con sumate skill and capacity of accommodating himself to an emergency, deserved better suc cess than he attained. He fought his ene mies with their own weapons and beat them. Tf they mined he countermined. If they plotted and organized in secret lodges, he constituted lodges of his own, or went into theirs, and beat them even at mystery. If they renounced past political fidelity, ix-big or democratic, he, without any effort, renoun ced too. If they swore eternal enmity to Catholics and naturalized citizens, he swore as hard as they. It was with them all "Death- to the Romans," Punic antipathy and punic faith. I confess I do not see how any `know-nothing" can find fault with Mr. Cameron. And this accounts in my poor judgement, for the feeble result of the seces sion which took place from the Senatorial Caucus. The deserters carried with them, as marks of shame in know-nothing eyes, the fragments of their broken oaths, oaths of fidelity to secrecy and obedience. They had on their breasts the "Scarlet Letter," and they could not get rid of it, or hide it, or disguise it, And thus it ended. I am sorry to refer to all these matters, filled as they are with painful memories, but they are too il :ustrative of the domination of this secret and dangerous party to be passed in silence. Dniing all this time, the State Committee was not called together, and if it had been, could have dnne little good. The melancholy fact had by this time developed itself, that out of the thirteen, of which number the Committee consisted, seven, it was believed, had joined the secret order, some cheerfully and readily, and from congeniality of feeling. and opinion ; others, I venture to say, reluct antly, blushingly, and under what seemed an overbearinc? necessity. Whether hereafter, when the ticcourft for these misdoings come to be settled, any distinction will be made between those who readily and those who unwillingly bartered away ancient political opinions, it is not for me to say. confess that, during this sprifig,, I was anxious that our Committee should meet, if only to enable some of us to speak out, and to let an organized body in Pennsylvania have the honor of striking the first blow at the secret party. The elections in New York and Virginia, and the local Spring elec tion in this city occurred first, anti gave the wound from which the life blood of the orga nization is flowing away. Nothing could he more creditable to the nation—more fatal to this new party, than the almost contempora neous election of Senator Seward and Gov ernor Wise, the one a northern Whig, the other a southern;.;Democrat; men of widely different opinions, but on this great question standing shoulder to shoulder in defence of the Constitution. Religious Liberty, and Equality of Political Bights. It was proved to be beyond the power of any secret con clave or its missionaries of mischief, effec tually to rally through the length and breadth of the land the secret rebels to the Constitu tion. On the 23d of July, ten months after we separated at Pittsburg, the Committee met in this city, and then 1 determined; and you well know, made no secret of my resolution, to bi ing this matter of Know Nothingism before the Committee and ask its action in the way of distinct and emphatic repudiation.- 1 felt it myduty a sa matter of self-respect.- 1 believed that- my Philadelphia fellow citi zens, whom I immediately represented, ex pected it of me, and I think having tried long to deserve their confidence, and having earned it, and being very proud of it, I prop erly estimate public opinion on this point.— Ilere, in Philadelphia, this secret party, ch p 9w its first breath and gained its first victory; and here, in Philadelphia, it has met its first reverse and will breath its last. No one can mistake its coming doom. What occurred in the committee you know. To the proposition to call a Whig Conven t ion I cheerfully assented, meaning, so soon as the call was determined on, to ask the Committa, by a manly declaration of princi ple, to free that Convention on its inception from the suspicion which, since this secret party has existed; has hung round every po litical body that has met. I thetefore offered and asked the Committee to adopt the follow ing' brief hut comprehensive resolutions. every word of which had - been well considered, and for every word of which I am willing to be responsible. Resolved, By the 'Whig Executive Com mittee of the State of Pennsylvania, that an address be issued by this Committee calling a convention to meet at Harrisbnrg on—, and asserting the following principles of ac tion. 1. Disapproval in the clearest and strong est form of all secret political association as immoral and unconstitutional, opposed to the pinciples of our Republican form of govern ment, and utterly subversive of the con - deuce which ought to subsist among politi cal friends. 2. Condemnation especially of that form of secret political association which proscribes American citizens on account of their reli gious opinions or their place of birth, this, committee anti the Whig party recognizing in its broadest sense, the constitutional prin-: ciple that every man has a right to worship God according to the dictates of his own con- science, and that organized political proselip tion on account of religious belief would be an interference with that right. 3. Disavowal by.t his committee collective ly and individually of any connexion or svni pathy with any such secret political organiza tion. 4. The assertion of the feeling common to every Whig of Pennsylvania, - and to very many of other organizations, that Nebraska and Kansas measures of the last Congress, the abrogation of the Missouri compromise line, and, as part of the same system, the lawless and violent conduct of Fndividuals since in Kansas, especially are abhorrent to the people of the North, and ought to be re dressed. 5. That these measures were a wanton re newal of sectional agitation ' for which in no sense are the Whigs of the North, and espe cially the Whigs of Pennsylvania, responsi ble. 6. That the restoration of the Missouri Compromise line ought to be demanded and insisted on as a matter of right. 7. `I he reassertion of the Whig Principles —the value of which every hour is confir ming—of Protection in some form to Ameri can industry, and especially to the staple in terests of Pennsylvania yet struggling •into existence—the policy of peace and neutrali ty on the part of the General Government, and resolute abstinence from all schemes of foreign aggrandisement and sympathy or af finity to foreign politics. These resolutions,' after a free discussion, were laid on the table, my own vote being the only one recorded in their favor; and yet I hope I may be permitted to say there were .few of the Committee who did not, in their hearts and consciences, agree to every word in them. It is due to my colleagues to add that some of them put their votes on the res olutions strictly on the ground of inexpedi ency and a doubt as to the powers of the Committee. With them, however readily united those others of our colleagues who are not ashamed to avow that they are Know- Nothings; and, as such, under a paramount', if not exclusive allegiance. During that discussion one of these gentle men, as you will recollect, said with empha sis, and without a word leading to it, that if these resolutions passed he should resign.— Till then no word which, by any possibility, could be construed into a threat, had been whispered—certainly not by me. But the feeling and resolution were all along cherish ed that, if, after all that,.had - occurred, the sacrafice of Mr. Darsie, the discredit of last winter at Harrisburg, the insolent abandon ment of the very name of the Whig party, and ; above all, the pi evalent suspicion that affected every one, these resolut ions, or some thing like them, were not passed, my duty as a gentleman was very clear, to vacate, as now do, my position." It is a resolution, I assure von, nut lightly formed or which can be reconsidered. The resolutions affirmed this secret•organi zation, with its, proscriptive and evasive oaths, to be not only unconstitutional, but im moral. I deliberately reiterate that opinion, be its value what it may, without agitating another grave question, whether these combi nations and these extrajudicial oaths are not strictly unlawful. It is a very safe kind of swearing for easy consciences, when no pen alties of perjury are risked. I am, by educa tion and principle, opposed to all extrajudi cial oaths—having been taught long ago by one of the greatest lawyers Pennsylvania ev er produced—one, too, whose memory I most affectionately nourish, that the administering or the pi ononficing any oath, except by au thority of law, is an offence against the laww. The example of this secret party is making them feat fully common—this taking in vain the Almighty's name—"this rash swearing not required by the magistrate" which the wisdom of more than one Protestant Church condemns. I am free to say that oaths of ex culpation are nearly as repugnant as oaths of initiation and proscription. Aside, [ repeat, from all questions of law, the whole secret oiganization is immoral, and degradingly so in this ; that it exacts evasion and sometimes the denial of truth. If it does not now, it certainly did so once, in its prime of youth and pride of victory. The obligation once was, and I fear is yet, to evade the confession of membership if possible, and if not express ly to deny it ; and T have myself seen instan ces of this degrading prevarication which make the use of the word "immoral" almost too g entle. One other word, and I have "done. I shall look with deep interest to the constitution and action of the convention which is sum moned to meet at Harrisburg in September. I trust its action may be unreserved in the enunciation of principle—conciliatory to those who agree in principle—and REPUBLICAN in every sense—and most so in this,, that no whisper shall be uttered, no intimation given that can be construed into an Interference with Religious Liberty, which the Constitu tion guard,:or with social or political rights, which thc„Constitution recognizes. • I am, very respectfully, yours, WILLIAM B. REED. From the Louisville Courier (Whig), 7th, inst. LOUISVILLE ELECTION RIOTS THE ELECTION RIOTS-BLOODY WORK-MUR DER AND ARSON-TWENTY MEN KILLED. We passed yesterday, through the forms of an election. As provided for by statue, the polls were opened, and privilege granted to such as were "right upon the goose," with a few exceptions, to exercise their elective franchise. Never, perhaps, was a greater farce, or, as we should term it, tragedy, enac ted. Hundreds and thousands were deterred from voting by direct acts of intimidation, others through fear of consequences, and a multitude from :he lack of proper facilities. The city, indeed, was, during the day, in possession of an armed mob. the base passions of which were infuriated to the highest pitch by the incendiary appeals of the newspaper organ and the popular leaders of the Know- Nothing party. On Sunday night large detachments of men were sent to the First and Second Wards to see that the' polls were properly opened. These men the "American Executive Com mittee" supplied with the requisite refresh ments, and, as may be immagined, they were in a very fit condition yesterday morning to see that the rights of freemen were respected. Indeed, they discharged the important trusts committed to them in such a manner as to commend them i forever to the admiration of outlaws ! They opened the polls, they pro vided ways and means for their own party to vote, they bluffed and bullied all who could not show the sign: they, in fact, • converted the election into a perfect farce, without one redeeming or qualifying phase. We do not know when or hoW their plan of operations was devised. Indeed, we do not care .to know when such. a system of out rage—such perfidy, such Bastardy—was con ceived. We only blush for Kentucky, that her soil was the scene of such outrages, and that some of her sons were participants in the nefarious swindle. It would be impossible to state when or how this riot commenced. By day break the polls were taken possession of by the Amer ican party, and in pursuance of their precon certed game, they used every stratagem or device to hinder the vote of every man who could not manifest to the "guardians of the polls" his soundness on the K. N. question. 'We were personally witness to the.proce dure of the party in certain wards, and of these we.feel authorized to speak. At the Seventh Ward we discovered that for three hours in the outset in the morning itivas im possible for those not "posted' to vote, with out. the greatest difficulty. In the Sixth Ward a party of bullies were masters-of the polls. We saw two foreigners driven from the polls, forced to run a guantlet, beat un mete:dully-, stoned and stabbed. In the case of one fellow the Hon. Wm. Thomasson, formerly a member of Congress from this dis trict, interfered, and while appealing to the maddened croWd to "cease their acts of disor der and violence Mr. Thomasson was st ruck from behind and beat. His gray hairs, his long public service,' his manly presence, and his thorough Americanism, availed nothing with the crazed mob. Other and serious fights occurred in the Sixth Ward, of which we have no time to make mention now. The more serious and disgraceful disturb ances occurred in the • upper wards. The vote cast was but a partial one ; and neatly altogether on one side. No show was given to the frieilds of Preston, who were largely in' the majority, but who in the face of can non, muskets and revolvers, could not, being an unarmed and quiet populace, confront the mad mob. So the vote was cast one way, and the result stands before the public. In the morning, as we state elsewhere, George Berg, a carpenter, living on the cor ner. of Nint and Market, was killed near Hancock street. A German, named Fritz, for merly a partner at the Galt House, was se verely, if not fatally, beaten. In the afternoon a general row occurred on Shelby street, extending from Main to Broad way. We are unable to ascertain the facts concerning the disturbance. Some. fourteen or fifteen men were shot, incl!tding officer Williams, Joe Selvage, and others. Two or three were killed, and a number of houses, broken into and pillaged. About 4 o'clock, when the vast crowd augmented by accession from every part of the city, and armed with shot guns, muskets and rifles, were proceed ing to attack the Catholic church on Shelby street, Mayor Bat bee arrested them with a speech, and the mob returned to the First Ward polls. Presently a large party arrived with a piece of brass ordnance, followed by a number of men and boys with muskets. In an hour afterwards the large brewery on Jef ferson street, near the junction of Green, was set fire to. In the lower part of the city the disturban ces were characterized by a greater degree of bloody work. Late in the afternoon, three Irishmen going down Main street, near Elev enth, were attacked and one knocked down. Then ensued a terrible scene, the Irish firing from the windows of their houses, on Main street, repeated volleys. Mr. nodes, a river man, was shot and killed by one in the up per story, and a Mr. Graham met with a sim ilar fate.- An Irishman who discharged a pistol at the back of a man's head, was shot and then hung. He, however, survived both punishments. John Hudson, a carpenter, was shot dead during the fracas. After dusk a row of frame houses on Main street between Tenth and Eleventh, the prop erty of Mr. Quinn, a well known Irishman, were set on fire. The flames extended across the street and twelve buildings were destroy ed. These houses were cheifly tenanted by Irish, and upon any of the tenants venturing out to escape the flames, they were immedi ately shot down. No idea could be formed of the number killed. We 'are advised that five men were roasted to death, having been so badly wounded by gun shot wounds that they could not escape from the burning buil dings. Of all the enormities and outrages commit ted by the American party yesterday and last night, we have not time to write. The mob having satisfied its appetite for blood, repaired to Third street, and until midnight made demonstrations against the "Times" and "Democrat" offices._ The furious crowd satisfied itself, however with breaking a few window panes, and burning the sign of the Times office. - At one o'clock, this morning, a large fire is raging in the upper part of the city. Upon the proceedings of yesterday and last night, we have no time nor heart now to comment. We are sickened with the very thought of the men murdered, and houses burned and pillaged, that signalized the American victory yesterday. Not less than twenty corpse form the trophies of this won derful achievement. [From the same.] THE ELECTION-ROWS AND BLOODSHED. —The election during yesterday was, as near as could be, all one-sided, the most unfair means being resorted to by the Know-Noth ings to crowd. other voters from the polls. In the first ward, most intense excitement prevailed for some time, and the polls were surrounded-by a large crowd. Whenever a Know Nothing voter approached the crowd he was hoisted right over the heads of all and landed et the - door, ready to deposite his vote. Several disgraceful fights occurred, and one man of the name of Burch, who had, with others, chased an Irishman from the polls, was in turn beset, beaten nearly to death, and knocked senseless by the man he had been chasing. Marshal Kidd, we learn, subse quently arrested the Ir - ishman. - In the sixth ward several disgraceful scenes occurred, such as six, eight, or a dozen men pitching into one poor Irishman and driving him from the polls. ' In the Seventh ward everything appeared to go on fairly and quietly, but in the Eighth it was a one-sided matter, none but yellow ticket chaps having any chance to get to the polls throughout the day. There were rumors of a serious difficulty at the Oakland precinct, and Marshal Kidd dispatched a wagonload of special police to establish order, or raise a bigger muss. In the seventh ward, four men were walk ing along, the street when they were beset by a crown, and ran off, one of them taking ref uge in a house corner of Ninth and Maga zine streets. The house was stoned, a wo man hurt, and finally one or two of the men were shot, one of them dangerously. One of the pursued pai ty was the first to shoot, fir ing a pistol at the crowd, who were stoning him and his companions. Some one came out from a house with a shot gun, and let drive at the fugitive. The Marshal subse quently arrested two of them. [From the Louisville Democrat, Democratic.] LOUISVILLE DISCIU No respectabla man can think of the scene of yesterday, without shame. We had a farce, or rather a tragedy, instead of an elec tion. A complete system of terror and blood was established by the Know-Nothing party or faction. The details are disgusting. The lawlessness W3S provided for by the city au thorities, in allowing but one voting place in a ward. The upper, and lower wards were taken at an early hour, and the middle wards were not exempt. We have had no election in any American sense of the word. Our city is governed, not by law, but by a set of hired scoundrels who obey the secret commands of lawless men.— It is not worth while to try to disguise the character of this city. There is no law, no police, no justice here. Our poll books speak not the voice of the people, but the dictates of a mob. We never heard of such scenes, much less have we seen them anywhete. Nor have such ever been witnessed in — this coun try. This sort of proceeding was not anticipated. It came fully up to all that had been threatened, and supassed anything anti cipated, unscrupulous as we knew the sect et party. If the election in Louisville yester day was legal and is to stand, then the right of suffrage in Kentucky is a mockery. There is no ft eedom here and no law. Scoundrel ism is triumphant. We have found means to subvert the law of numbers at the polls by violence, and passed off as legal. If the ex ample of Louisville were generally followed the liberties of this country would be ended. We shall hear from Kentucky, however, in a few days. Perhaps we shall have good news, when it will be necessary for the State to. take this city in hand, and reduce her to obe dience to law. The Jotc , na/, the Know Nothing organ, in explanation of the accusation that the Know- Nothings kept back the naturalize) voters from the polls, says: We all knew that it was considered very doubtful on Monday morning whether the wh )1e vote of the city could be polled with in the thitteen bouts of the election. The Native born American cit , zens thought and felt, that, if any portion of the people legal ly entitled to vote should have to stand back and lose their suffrages for the want of time, the foreign born citizens should stand back rather th an themselves. They thought and felt that this ought to be perfectly manifest. even to the minds of the foreigners. Un doubtedly they pressed forward early and vigorously to the polls, in order to be the first, if possible, and in this they were right. They had a perfect right to go, if they chose, to the polls at twelve o'clock on Sunday night, and remain there till the following morning. They had a right to go at what time they pleased and in what numbers they could. They had a right even - to toss their friends over the heads of the crowd to the polls, as we are told they did in some few instances, though this was no doubt a viola tion of courtesy. They had a right to Note as fast as they could, provided they used no violence in pulling or ilitusting _back their opponents from the polls. Horrible Accident A very distressing casualty occurred on the Ohio and Pennsylvania Railroad, yester day morning, between eight and nine o'clock, at Wood's bridge, about three miles from the city. James Webb, a brakeman on the freight train which left the Federal street de pot at half past eight o'clock, had occasion to pass from the front of the train to the rear, and ascended the steps to the top of the car in the usual manner. Without looking to ascertain the exact locality, Mr. Webb pro ceeded to walk along the tops of the cars, unconscious that he was vapidly approaching the bridge, and that in a moment of time, his earthly career would be ended. He had proceeded but a few steps when the fatal blow was felt. The bridge struck him across the shoulders, and so powerful was the force of the concussion, that his body was precip itated the distance of seven cars, and fell be tween the seventh and eighth cars, upon the track. This was all the work of a moment, and the unfortunate man was not observed in time to be warned of his danger• The train was checked up, and the body found lying upon the track horribly mutilated. Both legs were nearly served between the ancle and knee, and both ‘ of his arms were broken.— His head did not come in contact with the bridge, as not as Much as an abrasion of the scalp was visible; but owing to the force of the blow upon the shoulders, his neck was broken. This is-the third accident at Wood's bridge, sir.ce the opening of the road, resulting in loss of life; and we were informed that the same number of persons have been killed at a bridge at or near Massillon Ohio. These are Certainly melancholy events—which, of course, no human ingenuity or foresight can prevent.—Pittsburg Union. From the Louisville Democrat. To the Protestant Clergy of the United States. "Like Priests, like People." There is no country upon earth that does not give unmistakeable evidence of the truth of this proverb. The sagacious politician or the unscrupulous demagogue, when intend ing to - change public-sentiment, or work any great:revolution in society, goes not to the masses of the people to unfold the scheme and lay its foundation in their convictions of propriety; but ; like Archimides, he seeks the lever by which the - world is turn - ed. He goes directly to the fountain-head ; he oper ates upon the great cause that gives force and sentiment to, and moulds the action ofsocie ty. In order therefore, to the complete suc cess of any scheme, he has only to secure the influence and co-operation of the clergy —for all mankind are either directly or in directly priest-ridden. In every country up -lon earth, and in every age of the world, re -1 ligious teachers have maintained unlimited I sway over the minds of the people, and have given direction to popular sentiment upon all the leading_ questions, whether civil, reli gious, or political ; that have agitated the pub tic mind. The Protestant ministers of the United States must, therefore, be held -responsible for the political crusade and proscription that are now waging against the constitutional debt of Catholics and Foreigners. They are the very leaders and instigators of the whole vile plot. Three thousand of them have already, in one solid phalanx, petition ed Congress to repeal the Fugitive Slave Law and the Nebraska bill, while the mid i night cabals and secret councils of Know : Nothing lodges are presided over ; drilled, and disciplined by these modern clerical Cata ' lines. As the money changers of old dese crated the temple of the Most High, and con verted the house of prayer inta a den of [ thieves, so these politico-eclesiastic (learn gogues have prostituted the high and holy functions of Christian ministers to the ad -1 ministration of profane oaths in midnight councils, and conspiracies of Know Nothings against the Constitution of the United States, the palladium of our republican institutions, which guarantees civil and religious liberty and equality to all, and forbids the establish ment of any religious test. But while we hold those hypocrites and demagogues res ponsible who _have figured in politics, and Nvill neither attend their preaching, help to build their churches ; or pay anything to wards their supoprt, we invite every Protes taut minister, of all religious denominations, who have eschewed politics, and does not sympathise with Know Kothings, to come out before the public and give their names, as well that they may stand acquitted of the infamy of political proscription for a differ ence in religion and birth, as to afford all who are resolved to hold the clergy responsi ble for the part they have taken in pelities, an opportunity to discriminate between the innocent and• the guilty. Whilst we are re solved at all hazards and a'. every sacrifice to maintain our form of government, which guarantees civil and religious liberty to all— Protestant, Catholic, Jew, and Gentile, who have taken shelter under its glorious banners, and will preserve our Constitution to the ut most of our power in its purity 'as we recei ved it from the hands of our fathers, we dis claim and denounce all religious bigotry and fanaticism,- whether Protestant, Catholic, Jew, Pagan, mohammedan, or' infidel, and will hold the authors and instigators respon sible, so far as our personal influence and pe cuniary aid can extend. In giving utterance to these sentiments and these determinations, we hut publish the unanimous. voice 'of thou sands of pious and zealous members of the various Protestant denominations of the Uni ted States, who a:e resolved that, so far as their influence shall extend, Protestantism shall triumph upon the intrinsic ' and invinci ble power of troth and argument, without the extraneous aid of political demagogues, Know Nothing councils, and religious proscription; We have hitherto forborne, till after elec tion, to call attention to the unanimous determination of all anti-Know-Nothings to this well matured determination to repudi ate Know Nothing preachers, of all denomi nations; lest it might.be- regarded as a •politi cal stratagem to influence the election ; but for the sake of Protestantism, that it may suf fer no injury from its true friends, we now call upon all Protestant ministers to speak ont,and say . whether or not they are connect ed with or sympathize with Know-Nothings, that'sve may know who are hypOcrited• and pretenders, and who have the cause of'PrOtes tant Christianity at heart, as it is our fixed determination to presume all guilty who do not exculpate themselves, and treat them ac cordingly. The- anti-Know-Nothing papers throughout the United States will afford them ; free of charge, facilities to make their dis claimer over their own signatures: We ask the republication of this document in all the newspapers of the United States. favorable to civil and religious liberty, and opposed 'to Know Nothing intolerance and proscription, as it embraces the unanimous determination of the friends of civil and reli gious liberty throughout' the United States. ONE AMONGST MILLIONS. TERRIBLE RAVAGES OF TIIE CHOLERA.- Dr. Bills died at St. Louis on Wednsday last; after a brief illness of cholera. On the 28th ult., the Rev. Jos. L. Darrow fell a victim to the same. disease at Collinsville, 111., after an illness of seven hours. The St. Louis News says We learn from Sullivan 111., that the town is de serted, there being but one family in the place which has not got the cholera, and that there will not be persons enongh (unless the -doctors. do it,) to burry the dead, as there arc a numbtr expected to die. About all who are able to leave, having become alarmed at the ravages commit ted by this scouge in their midst, have fled from the town. Some are in the country adjacent thereto, some are in Decatur, and others scat tered elsewhere among their friends. The town has hitherto been considered very healthy; but from some cause or other the cholera.7i,s making a fearful sweep there now.