l Asuntißgbon \,t/ .„.„,--- 0!1_ - , r vvoaN tvi;:wtk-77-: \\ WM. IMEWSTER, Editor and Proprietor, Wednesday Morning May 12, 1858, The Circulation of the illun thagdon Journal, is great er than the Globe and Am erican combined. CLUBBING WITH MAGAZINES, The Huntingdon JOURNAL for one year, and either of the Magazines for the same period will be sent to the address of any subscriber to be paid in advance as follows The Journal and Godey's Lady's Book, for one year, $3 50 The Journal and Graham's Magazine, for ore year, $3 50 The Journal and Emerson's Magazine and Putnam's Molhly, for one year, $3 50 Tae Journal and Frank Leslie's Family Magazine and Gazelle of Fashion, fur one year $3 50 The Journal and Lady's Home Magazine, far one year, $2 75 She Journal and Peterson's Magazine, for one par, $2 75 The Journal and Atlantic Monthly, for one year, $3 50 Mr We copy to day in our paper an article from the West Cheater Democrat. and recommend its perusal to all who ever doubted or slandered the great principi••s of Republicanism. They will see that even our enemies being judges that there is no other doctrine that can sustain and uphold this great American Union. All who supported Col. Fremont in 1856, must be gratified to see ; that even our enemies and traduceriare acknowledging, virtually, that we were always right. We are glad to see honest men returning from the error of their ways, they do, and 1111/sl admit, that they have built on hay aim stubble, when they supported Buchanan and Slavery. The true, equal, and just platform stands firm, and must, while lib erty has a place among us ! The editor of the lliest Chester Dent. acknowledges the fatal error committed by the locofocos and himself. in having elevated to the Presidency such a man as Buchanan. And is now, candid enough to acknowledge his former errors. But we think he ought to have gone in hi s candid confession a little further, and have ingeniously mentioned that there were in the Rowse of Repr ,sentatives, same nine ty three Republican members whose voice fur freedom and opposition to the negro oligarchy resisted the Lecompton swindle to the bitter end. We think he should not have arrogated to themselves this man• ly resistance to the Democracy. As out of the whole delegation of Pennsylvania. only (our were found aho did not w•ar the negro collar fastened upon them by the oligarchy of the :south. He says TBE BILL PASSED. We give the proceedings of Congress 1 which has sought. by its machinations. to at length, of Fridry last, by which it will I saddle upon the people of Kansas an odi• be seen that the proposition submitted by ous Constitution in hick has never recei Mr. English, of the conference commit- ved their sanc'ion. I also see in the fit tee on the Kansas Question, has been turt. a National party, which shall arise adopted by both homes nf Congress. We la, your bidding. and which shall have for took our position on the Cincinnati Plot- !its motto, 'Popular tsovereiguty, 'and Pro• form in ISSO, and have stood there ever tection to American Industry. ' since, and expect to stand there in the fu Ex Moyor Conrad, on the same occa too. We conscientiously believe that the i d, said effort to saddle upon the people of that 'Yesterday we were slaves—the revs- Territory, a Constitution which they have tered, signed and recognised Flaves of the again and again repudiated, is not only a slave drivers. To tiny . .ve are free (iin violation of the platform of the National mense applause)— fr e from our fetters. Democracy, but is a high handed act of land have given a check to Executive tyr tyrany. On r opposition to the mer sure arm y that I trust will be effectual. Lib,- has been most sincere and ho est. A ty arose in Philadelphia, and Ph iladelphin sacrifice of personal honor might hove giv• has been the scene of its second birth. So en us the smiles of power, but we prefer • limo as Philadelphia is true to herself red to have frowns rather than pelt with she ne d shrink (ruin the accomplishment our self respect. The proposition of Mr. of nothing.' English, is, to our mind. more rqectiona ble than even the naked and deformed Le- "THE LAST SUPPER." comptun Constitution itself. The bill pas- The Messrs. Onksinith St t 'll . No. 371 Fed, is both a bribe and a threat to induce Broadway N. Y. Publishers of Emerson's the people of Kansas to accept the Le• Magazine and Putnam's Monthly. has compton Swindle. Anti•Lecompton Democrats—that noble , sent to us one of their fine Steel ii.ngia band of moral heroes in Congress, and vings. It is truly a tine Engraving, cost those who think with them in all parts of Mg over VI 000 to engrave. the country—have done their whale duty. By paying $3 you will be entitled to They have failed to secure for the people the Magiszme for one year, also to the En of Kansas their rights—the principle, that the majority shall rule, has been in this graving of the 'Last Supper,' Gotha chance case violated, list we hope it is a tempo. ,to draw one of 'Three Thousand Prizes? rare violation. One thing is now cerium. those who have at last, and with such iiii mense, and we fear improper efforts, for- eed this thing through Congress agoimt the sentiment of the whole country, are but at the beginning of Ilea trou les. The citizens of Kansas are now to deal with. The effort is Congress must now be con• tinned on the soil of Kansas, where there is a population all on fire with indignation at the long succession of wrongs a hick have bees inflicted on them. 'I hey can• not easilv be subdued. The promise of lands and land percentnge irons the gov ernment, with the fear of being kept out of the Union for au indeffinite period, may have its effect. Those, however, who know the Kansas people best, soy they will spurn the bill of the conference Com mittee. It is a question fur themselves to determine. If they like lands and pecti• niary emolument better than their civil rights, they must take them. 'They alone are to be affected. One result of this whole matter is the demoralization of the democratic party, We are tent and torn by dissensions. l he prospect ahead is a gloomy one, sot we cannot cease to recur to the difference kr We have received from Vlessrs. which would have existed in our ranks L. Johnson & Co. one of their large New had the administration given its influence Specimen Hooks, which cmitains till the against this unfair and unjust. effort to • force the Lecompton Con•titution on Knit- recent improvements in tvptigrapty, and sus. II it had mai"tained the original front which we will. from byte to ground of submission to the people of make our selections. This is the oldest Kansas, of their fundamental law, the ; Type Foundry in the United Stales, being democratic party would to day have been tablished in 17911, and has cautioned to invincible against the combined hosts of the entire opposition. The Republicans improve down to the present; and now may well boast of the passage of Mr En. stands unrivaled est.'s bill. It brings them strength, but brings weakness to 119 us a party. it e shall patiently await the end of this con. trivance to induce rho free state men of Kansas income into the Union with a slave constitution. We do riot intend to anticipate specihc difficulties, but the very countenances of those it hn are known Le compton men, show ',Willy that they think their troubles are only just begin ning. They evidently see br alters ahead and if they find thettiselvt.s on the ree k s , the fault is their own, and riot those who have faithfully warned them against the dangers Mr We have reci hied the Am.rican Agriculturist fur this ninth, published by Orange Judd of N. Y. This is decidedly o ne of the very best publications fit the farmer. The information which it con vet's is worth more than five times the, price of the Agriculturist. It is published monthly at $1 per year. Ser Ench 'varier of this paper is re• gm sled to procure a new subscriber nod send the mine and money to this office. Recollect only one Jollal. and fifty mils a year, and may be sent in postage stamps. Address, Wm. BREWSTER, Huntingdon, Pa. THE PHILADELPHIA ELECTION. The following are the inunicidal till tors elected by the Opposition on Tnes• day of last week Their majorities range from 4,000 to 4,500. Miiyor A lexander Henry. City Solicitor Henry 'l'. King. City Controller Gen W Holly Receiver of 'Faxes A I. Floinerfelt. City Commissioner E 11. Wiiiains Of the Select Council, 4of the mem. hers newly elected are Administration sod 10 Opposition; but owing to the foot that 10 members hold over, the Board will stand 13 Administration to 11 Opp...llion. The Opposition will have a majority of abut 48 in the Common I louncil, there being but 2.1 Administration members out of 90. Of the Assessors, 5 are Adminis trillion and 17 Opposition; of the Bo ird of Health, 7 Administration to 15 Opposition; lof ..he Guardians ol the Poor. 6 Adininis• ktration to 15 Opposition. The Aldermen, o proportion of whom only are elected thi, year, would appear to be about equally di vided. These figures are not precisely accurate, inasmuch as they do not include Ithe returns from two nr three wards, but they show the turn of the title. l The follotving, paragraph from the I speech of the Mttyor elect to the concourse of citizeos who called upon him at his residence oil Wednesday evening; shows the princi les which have triumphed : lit the result of the election wh ch you have this day determined. I look beyond the locality of the contest, and see in it. not merely a municipal triumph, but a rebuke to the National Administration. ELEcrios sr Yoaa.—At the elev.inn for town ofhoets, at Yolk, Pa., on Scur day, the Democrats were defeated by 116 majority. The entire t'enple s Tick. et, (American and Republican fusion) wee el cted, awl gained in the canniest newly three hundred votes over the last election The vote wins th. largest ever polled. RAILROAD TRAVEL On ane. after Monday May 10th, all the t hrough trains, passenger and freight, en the Pennsylvania Railroad, will be rue, both ways, through Utilumbta. This di ringetnent will last Ulll. I the completion of the enlargement if the tunnel on the Harrisblig and Lancaster Railroad. For a change f tun«, see our Railroad Schedule in another column. DP Nicholas' Bank Note Reporter for May to before us. It is one of the best and most reliable Reporters in New York. Price •I ter month. Our New York Oorresplndonee. An Evening with Cohmet Atty4i. "C"nspirators" f re.vent.— tifiable sonvtim,c—bmi, limtemi to he Killed yet.—Stil argimmat one of Ike "Conspiralors."— Newspapers. —Him the Proprietors make it Pay, trv.. (Cc.. New Y to, May T. 2A.14. I passed a very pleasant reciting. lately, with Col. Al'sop. to English gentleman, understood to have b•en connected with the hoe attempt I on the life of Louis Napoleon. Two 'eh, neonvirators," Italians, were prsent, ant stone dozen or more Americans, among theist tt lien ladies. I may as well confess, at once, to it toning sympathy with the “assassins," although I do nut, of course. defend die blundering, reek less mode devised by the “conspirators." and resorted to by Orsini. It was Italian, all over. Nu Yankee would have even dreamed of such reekless, unmitigated coin foolery—could not, by any possibility, have been guilty of it. Ira,. organization of Amet icons were to deem it ne cessary to the liberty of their country to kilt Louis Napoleon. they would select a loan for the deed able to hit any blotto' lot his coat. or I tooth in his head. with a rilie ball. it a 111.11,1 yards, or a pistol ball rat fifteen. The ides of as infernal machine, which might kill tole or two hundred innocent persons, while it was de sirable to kill only one particular guilty one, would never enter the head of a Yankee. But, apart from the 'node or aopoytio g to execute the deed, the killing of Leads Napoli•, on is, I think, jostifiable. As within, I can say on - the subject, however, would be u tithe as forcible as the argumerts of the "consproors" themselves, I will give you the substance of the reply of one of them, made in my presence, to an American gentleman, who mildly. but firm ly contehdA that, "Alter all, no provocation justifies assassination." "I am no longer a boy," replied the •`coospir ntor,'' told epithets have no terror for me. I regard not words, but acts, facts, eiiiitlitions; motives, purposes. The idea of using it single word, expressive of odium to de:•i;;mtte every act of taking human lite by surprise—an :e•t which may be performed under tt conei less ca• riety of circumstances, for a million different purposes, and from us many distinct motives as there are sands in the sea—is too seriously ab surd for either criticism or ridicule ; and I can not think, I will not believe that nu•n wh are the leaders of their fellows, clergymen. spurs men, philosophers and echobo•s, re, inl as crime the killing of a tyrant who is so as to be amenable in no legal lrilmaal n, redo V honor. What else in In be thole wilh such roan? A despot who forces himself upon free people, or a people who civet ireedol should b, regarded us a mad bull, and Whenever or wherever he eau be found. ‘ll,, I hear an educated, thinking American cot demo the attempts on the life leott by those whose country hr 1... s I con have but one of three opinions in . the American,—either thin. be bus wonili gleeted the study of the world's history. dor,. the lost tint years, or th..t he in an iilisolitti, heart, and in principle, without perli.ips knot ing it, lir that he thinks an every into agent ver 01 liberty and progress thinks on the stil jest, but is a mural cownre., and ufruld to pr, claim his belief in a truth, until it han becinn popular. "When yhu, air, were struggling with Uri, Britain fur your freedom, had the sovereiv Hanish' sent an army to New Ynrii, and in'. the scale in favor of George 111, 1 very utu miitake the character of the Ann•rnu people of those days, if thousailds would not have volunteered to kill Ow despot, it' they hail been coirviiiceil thin ibi• el slnvement of their country would end with till single life; and I equally mistake the eliaracii of your forefathers. if any large or nisi.. .club portion of them would have been so impair', . illuyieul, so stupid as to revile thug• who sn cessfully or unsuecessfully attempted the nt And the prenetit generation 01 A mertoths, their own interests were at stake, are about 1. 1 lust people in the world who would regard tl life of a selfish, perjured, murderous, ileeo plished villain more sacred than ihe lints, h erties, happiness, progress, and general pr, pretty el a 'tenet', and indirectly, of the et& race. " Louie Napoleon has placed himself, vnitut turidy, in such it position that only his death by what you %nay term ussassinittion. thou is. ha being killed on the lint favorable import unit can restore to France and Italy the rights of which he has robbed them ; for there is 1111 law in France by which he can be fined a centime for committing a thousand murders a day. The villains has not even the lame excuse of other despots, that hu has inherited his obsolnie pow er. Ile hits gained it as he holds it. lay perjury bribery, baud, intimidation, nod wit a..- sitssication. Have you nu sympathy, sir, ex. cept for this crowned criminal? Hat s • you none fur the thousands whom he has despoiled? for the friends and relatives of those Mean he has assassinated ? for the people of France and Italy whom he hav enslaved ? Or. ore you of that class of morbid philanthropists who would let every murderer go free, because it is so cruel to punish rascals? ..We 'conspirators' know well what we ore about, sir. There is not one of us who. if on a jury, would not convict of murder the matt %vlitc should lobe the life tie view l'resifi.t, or that of the Queen of Gnat Britain. We 110 not believe, sir, iti using more violence than is to cessory. in the acconcidishing of right ; and in Great Britain and the United Mates there is no nevecomy for taking the life of the chief ex • ecutive by assossinotion ; because in both of those countries, the power of that personage is constitutiohally and lewdly restricted ;and sub. jects and citizens are ametiohle to laws framed irrespective of the wishes of the executive branches of gov eminent—lmes which theox• ocutive dere not, cat not let aside." The Voice of Indiana. hole API,OI, Marc G. 1858. Now thro. the smolt, f the hank h. elomol itway. I want to give you SO.. items of interettt in coon...ion with it. The Republican party has achieved 0 splen• did victory in the late manicipal tannest. Th e . Democracy made rotor 'flirt possiltle t.• maim Not a stone was left unturned. Every v.., was hurried up to the poll:, i•VI , OV offered to secure support. Iry both parties. The Republica.. have won. Nor will it lie a tem porary vietory only. Until Koos,. shall he in! mimed thirty met sqii trek. melt will ever vote nr Indiatintioli+. Hindman. has for. end the issue „Imo the cilium y 1,0 his meanie.. surreider to Souther. Fire .1.11.1, and the friends of Freedom iteeept it. ii the night of the election, after tlot remit hail hemo an taituttectl. the Itepahlienns met in Dam..l eouncil in from of the Journal ionic, amt stored out their thanko,iviii,s Mr the victory The streets were lively during the and the whole town illtimitotted with bon tires. Last flight, : out, hintolrvi 'nor were tired in the Count 'louse square, mid ilw erowil there convened was ini• dressed he the hest speakers or the thy. The managers or the cannon adjourned from the Coat( House 811111t11, 10 the rust 1.1111 of Main torttet ; and, eller keepin, op n lively firing there for altstio hour, teljouri.ed th.• west end smile ,dreet. and tired away 1111 . /1114.111, 11:1‘, " hula Tar upon the oret.nimt, nod the jobilnot cotta vowed unswerviii, rt....tily to 1 , 11. ZlllllllOl , l ; cause or Freedom during the c. 0.., The heart or Italian. is all right Freed , ... Mto voted ion 1 / 1 4,11(. or too choice , o:tit hot. to express their 111111.),1,1•0 OP' Letommon Democracy. Nlatuy I)mica cos op• tatty avowed (hilt lIS 1).111,2111i 111111 11,11 n .l.lttot of IIR! rtrly they tnilht 111 well 11.IIVI. 111•11,1siti011 11011 GI i•,, 1.1111.1..11. The prilitlittl retitUrt tt 111 ill, lemi 0. i.e., .leti•Leemnptem All tl.O cam tlitlates elect ere iZel.llloll . lllli. Th,. s:Ly they Were 61,1te1l by !heir ewe l ' riends The idea is 111112610 e ill the extreme. The I).og hrs lbmitiernts heat their ..wit tiehet. vir I hey say. I). ilwy 11111 n 11.1,40 in 11t11111,041,1,1 terms the 11.,1;‘ , Dernoer . Lev —proserile• iiew rumt hopes of olliee—disno•: tlni.i wh are in the enjoyment of office, awl thee ,rurnltle berne,t• the IThnellids lnen vrlll not •lippoct i •110 ? V 1 , 111 , .1•11 , ti who .01 1.111 whippinl ill %Y1 . .1 'aril:, hack —W. wrong.—wlio licliere parties ore Hulegervicin 1 0 principle. awl who will unnnitcsi their 1011. ro• i,plepeuidtmet• itt the 011 opp itiloty occurs. And then. f,r t itII, 1 . 111. Slit, 1:4 I{4IOIIIOICW. 111,1 fall lit , 1..1111 a perotivetiture. lc iteue:sars, will iii hurt the elliame 1.01. witti th.• ~t S., marel, 011, ItolV,lllCillg ri . %101 l Ili. Bills to lir Vets' J by '-,.v 1.,1,!cmr It i llltOlt within trn dayi thrrrOl . l.•r. 111:0 (pine it detnsi V.! ni that qayst . n GoVertnn• :aid in that nddroiS: "Tbw 1.1,403'111r., 11c it, wlj wirw , uwwo w tell 111 V:.• 11111• r 1 / 1 1t , 1114 yd 1,60. 111.• EV.,•titiVe dtii. iw! ii, 11 .1 10.,•t.it 1i provbl,l w.•li (• SYB it :It:111 IL hIW 111114 •I• 111 iti t 11,i• day. priii•Cei• the I wit hilt 1111. 1 Ij„iiritiitl tit 11t . die I ... gi.bouro whi.•ii ii i itilpti.:4lllll• i•titl4lll., 11,1•• 11..Corl• 111, Iltliliornttwilt plavv. lit ?Flo 11131 i, 31 , pielll 10111111 iit flip v.., I.l.l.itiz lii ir. id tl i . s••• it emild n•:.iii:tl:ly as]: in the full om.tiltilioit;tl pri,(l 18, ionising hiA 10161111, Mitt 11131 311 1311 s I, I". 13, 3 ,1 it Ilk duty tlt nilim.ve shill' In' :will:111y within that pori.l. Ity .11 rpa-,111:11,1e !his 111 1111111 t• IP• illeti.sttell hill; a: Ito twill he hold over to he retatatial to tie laatteli tor the General ASll,ll.ly triil three day, arter their et•xt ineoiaz, avuordtaz to the emeditatianal The, will 1a..10.r1y dispose of all hills in his 'wads at the adHarte meat. lades: 'take,' it he allo,vable .1.1.er hill; and laa.aiit them to I,,elater woli.ad hi,: Hellen. propriety of bill 4 ern, betwitett ses-liotiA of Or iiiirstiontql. II 11.14.4 ltot .11,...• I WII It ihr 0111 oolil i, o,lllioly During 70/I 11,10 frill lie >aridly °of go, ti Io: the 111%4 li' duor after rill Wiji//11 . 11/Ill'of. td/In Ind 'hen nppraeer 1, toy annalist , / the next meetioy n/ the Geneod senility. to he returned frith Me h;reentir , (spprinnel. The 1 . ;; XYLIIIIIVO 81111111 , 1 1101 j 1•11.1.11 lilt bow pt.riorls of 01111.111 Illi• 11 , 111 i IP! tho•to ititPrempri in Milli, nor ',lt 5.1,1 8111ijol•I to 1110 i11111•11,4i. 1111:IVII111 . 1111O ilt , orltl' 1,11 • ,. Nor i. it r',lll tlott itt. 1111•1 ill, lif inllot•tter holtllo., 111, 1111% filil f• 451 0 . 1. ,1,•111 11111 . , li 11111141• ill Ii,INIIIII ~,,, by 011 01 , 111 I;Ir 111.11011 ill 11111,, ,1141 IIII! fate of 1014 11111 which their their property or tit-ir hiiiiiiess may he involved. flees., ere evils whit+ au Eseits• ttre way tiltviititt 1y settlititi, his ..,lieu firmly in the outset of his ittlirtittisintlits, It w..„la hP well, also, for the I,egisist tire to so sitspe its 111111111 HS Ihi. 114.1•1 , SIIV ionny inire.rhoit bilk 1n lilv litiverstir itt .11- closing 'toys or hours tifit The sentiments (Tett:tined in lb:: tootle , were I'PITiVIA with universal appr.tyal ni, 1 the Governor was applauded for Invite, demi soteh a rule or rclion. We reeard the rate a nil such bills an were not approved I the .Ith 0. Man ns settled. The (invert., we pt., ,itte. will return them to the next lt , gis'ature wi, I. his disapproval. 012 Y. 'Motll , r; said a little , square, boilt o chin. allow fine roars old. 'whc' don't the ion , eller make me m o nitor eometimee, I can lick every boy in my clan but omt,' The Utah Expedition. I QUEER LETTER FROM TR • ROM/ESTER MOB. I PlOEons —The Pigeon Roost in DectL: Sr. Loots, M a y B,..._m ii i, G ener al PerSifer DERER.—The murderer Stout, has written a tut county, Ind., extends over an area of F. Smith hes issued ehiborate orders relative long letter in his own defence. It is a curious : twenty eight miles ; it is about fourteen to the movements of the trains and troops of production. He claims that he might be p ut mil es wide: The birds not nested at this the Utah forces. to better uses than banging, declares that he i roost f or thirty yen ta until this Spring. Ov- The trains are to be divided into divisions of had net a fair c h ance in In, and in reference 22n wiletios peel, has front ten to fifteen nests, and every The troops are to he organized into columns 1 to his rictim, Littles, bolds the doctrine thin. a t o who was so bed as he had no right to live. er this vast extent of country every trees each volume constituting tut escort de divis- stout b ee p s abuse on the dead man ;lauds his nest at least one bird. The young are ion. sister Sarah, nod appeals in his own behalf to now hardly able to fly. and the shooting the g eneral supple train is to be escorted by the sympethiei; of a public, w hi c h, h e says hue is suer • slaughter The old birds leave the first eitititt it t, under the command nt Lieut. been unduly prejudiced against him. The let ol tln-tvu. This minion is already organ ter is interlarded with a series of mural refl.- park , in the morning in search of food, and r A return in the evening w... .l. e.,,i litis been ordered to march. bons. I __.----0...--------. The tinder command of Col. A Marriage at Bethany.—A young Mut.., will be composed of an escort I etratons Ihsoveay.—A curious and extra. roan of Bethany, of highly respectable ma nna of The Ord iiiitrY disco. ew days very was made near Greenwood sections and an only son, being about to nun. will ansrA fret. Leavenworth on the 1:011 Cemeter y' it trt age.—Some bo y s pla'' leave his home for South America, made inst. in that vicinity sunk through the earth, and ou looking around finind they were in a large , n few calls upon his acquaintances, when cave. As may be supposed, they scrambled n young Indy who was desperately attach. nut as qniekly us possible, and immediately ed to him and ns her last means of gain gave nomination of the fact. when a number i nv. b iro. had t h e mennueas to plan with of men proceeded to the spot and went down carne of h.r associates to drug him and a the hole, and they, muck to their surprise. found evidences that the cave was inhabited. ' "rnee t o then ff lae r s h ere the marriage There was a table, lantern, chairs, shelves,&c, ceremony woe preformed They were fearful of making a thorough ex ploration and retreated. It was thought by some that the place is a resort of thieves and burglars '1'11.! third column, under Col. May, will march 011 ihe 20th. The llirth column, under Col. Murriuon, will nuu•eh on the 25th. The Oh column, under Cul. Sumner. will march it. the 30th. ' l ' lw sixth colon's. under Major Emory, will Nardi on the 4th of .Inne. Thes columns will, Iltr the present, consti irate the first hriztnin of tine unth forces, under the command rat General Hartley. Each col. nine will he supplied with four mouths' prods. im:, which will he replenished on panning Fort l'ettritey tied Laramie. Geheral South is y.. 1 in this city, the state f leis 'woo, 111111 4 4 such ns to require his re u short !whirl. Four frinimili. of the sixth Inlnt.try left on the sth inst.. and one cote. tr... Fort Riley is to join them at ro , t Ke,te.y. .1.,1111 seerm:irc of iTtlth r.• v. , ,i(q.d.ty Leavomirilt. Is 41.441.,V tttY .IPtimo , IIA o f nuestah against the Ihisas Retie!! ion in Intl (a.— ~ I•rt.:41111U 111.111 , 11 reeei ,ll of the 111..m+ of the Illiptist MiAqiototry Union in from their various !nations in ',tail, ‘vili,.ll wt• ie the followin;.; svimpsi, Dr. Dawamt writes, Dee. '2lst, that the Kt, of Butmalt is reported to have withdrawn his e.mlidenea from a host of' Buddhist priests at .Iv.t. who have hitherto crowded the royal eity, having lataidfril handrails or them titan the ill 11)5 aeighltorlitatil of A merapura who have a. , eordittgly emigrated down into the 1.. r titory of l'i.gll. 'llk measure has beet, car ried out, out by lIIIV direct peruwation itti the part id' the king or his govertnii,it hat simply ~ his withdrawing the royal favor through which they were...aided to subsist & maintain li.dr popularity tonoeg the people. The enemies ot the Kitt_ assert that he has eiehrseeel l'hristiattity. Others report that he hu n :41,et Itteitlitist, he has undertaken telly Or an 11111.11 Se 1111111 member, fee the looter Of tho .1 , 1.i1i.1,1. It. is I{lSO n well ka , ,wa favt, that ,• ;•;;., ilmt he may have talam ..v. ,„ ; I, ~„,iv ~f 1 the Ruble , ti ~,py of which Was 11 • • , 1,1, loonl.i on the oce:tAion of Dr. Dow ,;. il,k• in April, 1855 %VII; smith, i. Ili, Say,' the wily is Hitiriily • II i mKh l'roper will Lo entirely .0: .:tie,., long He the preaent, ihromt of hii nahers. The 13111.'• I . IIIIS 111) and down thn lirawadi 1/111 . 1• Iniintii, 01, that the capital nl:ky . 1,•• n•m.hed. Mr. nod Danforth, of Assam, on ac .nuns of tilt! ht.:talt of the latter have embark. Calcutta, on their return to tltu Uttited 1.1 r.•prct ta Indht, Mr. Dan Wr!.., • • 111:0 th.. S.•p:q•n have mutinied at s.lliVellill Itutive 11V- It rr 10 whit•lt Waves tire tit - tstr Ittit.t• mused witelt ailttritt here. " Upit.•r .1..:u" IL Ititi, It wore flitittirlittil mate Ilittit tititl tt has prop.metl t., eutivelltrate ..tr , lttget . intlttary M. 4.1118 file ph,' 1,1.,•111,,ii ill iS not yet. Mr. toot .1.1,n re and family. un 'lll' Mrs. A., huvn sailed from Sion' tin. Hong Kong China. Nlessrs..lewett and Douglas have returned to their swim, ut Nellure, believing it safe to go) toil,nth their missionary work. The labors pit the year have been smelt interriipted; there lots le'ell however, some interest in the sellouts. Boston Thin. See Some one nays 'the lobster is a postha ser•The Opposition palters ore jubilant ,over MOUS work of creation, for it is oily red after the election til -Ihm i se's ito the , , ts death. , 4 ieleloltiit city clut•tiott. Why del they n e t e for ? 1111V1. 11., 11 11. 11,1 111 . stren.tilt. For the RI, thli A Large Raft. ' 1 1 100 A1111.1 . 11.1111S and Allll Ll,OllllOlllll 0011111- Th e h ugest re f, ever floated upon t h e era, 111111111, 1111 :1 111 , 11111 , 'S 1111.1,' thllll . 1,11.41i.1,,,. 1, I," ,1 . 1,11 triumph alter all. line Upper Missis iippi passed La Crosser on its ",' 1'.:"1""ee..fe.... way from Block River rolls to St Louis, ,1•11 , 11 , 1111 1111. 1131'1..1 1111: ItVIIIIIIIICII.II, ',levee. mtSaturday morning last. •'lt was the Yes. i 1 i. wetly eertaitt that the Reptiblicai.s greittest sight,' says the Democrat, "ever al.ine are not majority to It city where they se. nin these .vaters•'• The raft was man le•ver pitied a thoottatel votes ;Weir to told. nod by 24 "red shirts" every man nt his 8 , 0110 ha' Freotant, and w t• re oar nod every nor doing its work. The issues 101011 ilhoi :10.001 by Boehm., But size of the reit was 500 feet long by 200 thli.i " tiuni 1114110018i ' tvide and the amount of lumber which it .ver Freot.itit awl Fillotore ' s vine ned full a million feel, together with imae.l t feat 800111111101 Vial! was ill good em "'" 2r 000 lath, and 300.000 shingles I,,,,idaleiii, but ant vear the elemion was 1 . 161 . 115 11..1111. Itlld 111011 the Bach 111.111 Vl/10 There were two good sized houses erected exeeedea that at all others by liver Thirty,ven on board, and the whole crew consisted of Bandred. Now, on a great, poll, after a mint captain, 24 oarsmen, two conks, one cleik nninuteil eltllsoin, the linehanan ',Arty is heat-„ridt tittle washer, which, together with a en Filar Thoteetnd beaten on event ticket, nod black hen r and a hull-dog, made up all the in mery department. The Select Council is Orphans' Court Sale. occupants The raft was owned by James T tied. hat oolv by the preponderance of Bitehan - one of the heaviest of the Block HERE will he exposed at Public Sale on 1 an moo over t the ineinhers elected this SATURDAY, the sth. day of June next, on the premises, all that certain lot of ground y elmintrly anti•Lecompton. If River l lumberdealers . situate in Porter township near the borough ti " 1;0 ”. is 'mit great are overwh triumph;' whip. would be a i urent tille? A Pie Preparation and a 'Last' R e , of Alexandria. adjoining lands of Philip Botts. I low+ on the North and West land of James spoiler.—A horticulturist at Lafayette, nrr on the South West, 'land of C. Rae. A NIUTOIIIOUM CHEEK OUTLAW KILLETE—A Ind , advertised that he w. , eld supply all nish on the south East and the Hartslcg bury. the sentient.. Agency, west of Ar sort. of trees and plants, especially Acr ' ing es he groun the sad on the South less. conta To in inbe g Ten me more or sold la do. Fo r t Smith TenzesomY.: pleats of all kinds ' A gentleman there- ' prima.° of an Order of the Orphans' upon sent him an order for tone peahen The killed the notorious bull -01 cus t ar d pie seed and n few dozen of Court of litintingdon COUlity, its the property Vold who lots murdered so many persons of Ann Stewart late of the said borough of Alexandria deceased. Sale to commence at a, di, rew months. Thee shot him three mince pie Plants.' 'roe garder.er prompt- two o'clock P. N. of said day. em out both his eyes, Red knocked him ly filled the order by sending him four sale. Acc o t E n o be Fi ma s d r e E k l n v or a n T on , t z he r.o dly y ef in the heed with au axe, to be sure of his death. gees eggs end a small dog. May 12, '5134--It. FIFTY YKARS Ix PIIIIION.,—A rare event has occurred in Saxony—the release of a convict after not fewer than fitly years' detention. is Mail was condemned to imprisonment for life lire having rimmed part tir a notorious hthd of brigabcbtiud wassent to the prison of Wtildheitu Ile r , inained there until a few days ago. when he obtained it portion. Notwithstanding his long c•ndiaement, he is in gond health, and he has rettietieil to his native village of Louters• duet with IL sum or 2eo thole., the product of his labor in the gaol. FROM WASHINGTON. ‘VASIIINGTON, 'May 9, 1858. The intimations in the Democratic newspa pers that Judge Douglas in seeking reconcilia• tion with the Administration were pronounced false by lodge Douglas himself to day. He of. firm: chat lu . innintaam his position upon Kan' to the fullest extent, but at the same time In. stands with his party in Illinois, on H. plot• poem not ostensibly opposed to the Adtninis !ration, though openly hostile to the Repot)li• eau party. Mr. Delights left hero for Now York this tiftertaion.—N. Tribume. ••Ma. •chat is hush ?" asked a little hay "Why, my dear, do yen nsk ?•' Because I asked sister Jan , . what made her dross stick out so all round like n hoop, and she Said /,Quit• per' Sallie Jones says that when she was in lore she kit. as if she was inn tunnel, with a train of ears coming lt:tth ways. ''Gently the demi are o'er Inc stealing.' as the man said when he had five bills preien. ted to him at tine time. There is Much in a Nam, After me quick' is the name given to a new pe r. bane, that appears to meet with general furor among the Indies. 'Madame, what perfume do you pre fit ?"Kiss lite quick,' is the re ply; and what beau so stupid as nut to net on ihe suggestion? Indianapolis Municipal Election. Wednesday, April 0, 1858 The 111unicipal Election here yesterday re• stilted in the choice of the entir, Repel)Henn ticket, by 200 0 300 majority. rice of the seven Councilmen chosen are Republicans. Stopping Newspapers, An exchunjzu piZ forth the tiAluwing quaint rt•unulis upon the subject, of the above cap. W 111 , 11 Il unto gets mad nod stops his piper abrnys borrows the next number to see if ttn• withdrawal of his patronage has not killed the editor nod put the columns in mourning. This grows out of the fact that none try to show their spite in this way, but those who iM• tight.. the world rcots on their shoulders. aer The Kansas land sales. by order of the President, hare Inon postponed front .Idly to October. The postponement was asked by the people of Kansas. Aer The man who tried to whistle a bar or soap, has attempted to sing a stave off a too -1 lasses cask. The English Bill in Delaware. The Washington (Del.) Journal of May 4 says: Th.. English bribery bill, es the amen ded Lecompton swindle is now termed, passed the House of Representatives on Fridny last, md is now a law. This act on the part of Congress settles nothing in relmion to Kansas, except to remove the question for the time being out of Con. gress. it will go back to the people of Kansas, who will spurn and reject the infamnus bribe; and with increased deter mination and unanimity resolve to have a Constitution in accordance with their own wishes, despite nll trenchery and the da prcity of Democratic professions &bolt , Pripular sovereignty. We lank upon this English scheme es one ndmirnbly adapted to build up the gr •at opposition pnrty, and organize it for 18110. Indeed, it has furnished the basis of a platform upon which every free and independent voter it the country can stand, and. in proud contrast with the present imbecile Administration catch up the stand,rd of popular sovereignty and State rights, which the Democracy hoe ingloriously thrown down, and bear it in triumph through the coming conflict. Mr We have had a continuous rain for some days beck. SEir Avoid entering into on argument wits denf innti it: a railroad cur, an it in aura to lead to high words. CON FESSION.—A sailor died recently its Texas, and en his death bed confessed that hr was one of the crow who murder ed Mrs. Alston of South Carolina, forty years ago. Mrs. Alston was the dis t ughter of Aaron Burr She sailed from Charles- ton for New York. in a brig, and on the trip the crew mutinied and murdered all the officers and passengers. Mrs. Alston being the lust one to walk the plank. Thrt sailor remembered her look of despair, and died in 'the greatest agony of mind. t_, On the evening of the sth inst.. at his reci dcncc in MeConnellstown, CHARLES LEAR • HART, aged 34 yenrs, 4 months and 8 day., In ihe deadrof Charles Lerthhart. this cent munity has lost one of its most useful metn• hers, and the church ono of its brightest orna. meets. Although Mr. Leabhart has been in this hit msdinte neighborhood but one year; the gym' pithy and grief which his sickness and death awakened, told how truly his earnest and of fectionate disposition had endeared him to ever• one. 13 business transactions were cbaracteri• red by honor nail the strictest integrity. In his intercourse with society, he wan courteous, kind and obliging. Above all he was truly a (Animist). His was not n profession merely. His walk and conversation bare evidence that he had “been with Christ and learned of Him.' Ho was a living epistle, known and read of all men.' At the time of his death, he was the superintendent of the 'Methodist Sabbath School in McConnellstown. His loss in this capacity is irreparable. The youth who, from Sabbath to Sabbath were wont to duster around him, will sadly miss in him a faithful monitor, and a bright exam pine lie was a kind and devoted husband—a ten der father—an affectionate son and brother. To his bereaved widow and little children, bath the Shepherd of Israel not said, Leave thy fatherless child;en. I will preserve them alivtt; and let thy widows trust in me. Long may his memory and his ehristiaa ex .ample tive in our hearts. Rest in peaceful slumber rest thee, Jesus Christ shall keep thy dust; And on the m . trn of Resurrection, Ho shall wake thee with the just.