Jg q Ogyrcsptatigt, A,LirtEit rBO3l N.E3f iltspular Correlondenee of the Potter. Journal. Nscr ;Zoas, June 2, 1858. 111p...1 - 14/IToR, : used to 14.a.ve a clerk ] here,'' Eight E. Neriam or Brooklyn .34eights, - .?..1M : took trxcellent care of the .ireathil,:inare:ported every day's changes, th.titilviao.any; or every yicck, westh ,ei in. no; but .1. - learn he "took sick" last `year from expcisnre to his Rpm eat:ier, :and has not been able 'to attend to the . dutieS'iCrhis 'Office since. , During the 'u:Orith - of 'gay . , as the rain delUged' down icay after flay, I indulged the hope that, -1 some oo ing after the weather, :at least•enOnal to g4t up a spiti2,tie as to ',whether it il . "4 l .•ilin every pe,.of the" hist thirty-one eba'y.s . 'of .what seemed likely tt. :Lc al: ion literally an eternal spiing. It :is my impression that 'it did, but I "Foultrtit by any means offer my mere im .pressions against the Unerring observa tions of science. If tlierc was one day .when it - didn't rain; why at, all events, as I the Icing sabring Mrs. Caudle used to! - ay, "it wanted to, and that is jest a.s ! lid." if I should see a barometrieal itatemeiiif anywhere that eculd be relied - on, giving assurance that there was one 'days in that Merry month that *as not water, trtt .the tears of weeping clouds I -OW. ,taireediately Morin . you. . June, wever, opens warm and bright---that is ;compensation. The oldest inhabitants here have been greatly annoyed and 'broken of their teat now for tVo,F,tinday Mornings on account ai. ..:C . ry singular and unexpected cause 6f 'disturbance—no less than the eruui 'hle; and crash and dissolution of a very venerable New York institution, one of the oldest established, so that the memo ry of map runneth not back to the time; when it did'not flourish had make itself heard in the laud. Thorough bred Newl Yorkers had long been aocustomed to' extra noise and roar and rattle of every !seventh morning,and had Coale to re- i beive as a speciy soothing lullaby the -ells of milkmen and the cries of a oho-1 sus of Uetisboys, melodized and modula-. I Led on every key of the scale, in delight,l fa areerd with the invariable refrain-,-1 e,terc s the Suailey 'Braid, Tinzcs, Afer- , cury, Dispatch and, Sunday Courie-e-e: er !" - But afertnight since a paper bull, issued from the police department, Com b:landing that all bellowings over pews' Milk or its swill distilled imitation should cease immediately ; and also, if the afore said swill was not- a sufficient gag in their. piouths, one, more effectual still, should be applied to all the news=boys, for the purpose of stopping all this "windy sus piration of forced breath," to spread the Sale; of. Startday literature. 'Tomas done, and milkmen , auck news-boys have been Compelled to "dry up;" and the conse quent quietness, expressly.° silence and.: Sabbath stillness have operated upon Sun-1 day snoosers, like the sudden stopping of , a saw-mill, or an express train at its night, i stations—to wake up all the sleepers.— We expect, however, to recover very soon from the sonorous abstraction and be able to take deeper refuge than ever iu our! Sunday Morning nap-caps; unless, it may be, a few must be excepted who have b, , ,- Simi° so accustomed to the lulling stim ulant as to be thrown into a sort of delir ium dreantens. ' But even they will re ;over and sleep the - better in time. The iffect on Sunday papers themselves re- Maine to be seen. Same of them are iharacteristieally kelligerent; but the Pisoatch, the inostieputable of the brood, yAelds to the new order of things and pub lishes its edition on'Saturday afternoon. The celebrated Barnum is on his legs; #,zoi in, The Jerome clock debts which , kt own:ll 4 im up so effectually- two or three years ago, have now run down, and the i hour has struck which starts him out on i a new career of speculation and tick. The hest business he ever did in the showman i line was his concert expedition through b, t e U. §. 'Cala jenny Lied.; so now his rst, post ba'nkrup), enterprise takes a mu ical turn, and he proposes to 'tiring to, New York next fall the entire Grand Op- era and Ballet companies of her Majesty's 4'heatre, Leaden, consisting of 14a per sons, accompanied by its celebrated lessee and director, Mr. Lumley. The enter prise involves an outlay of more than $300,000, and as some guarantee that iufficient patronage wile be extended to him to, eusure him against loss the Sub , Seripttous for Sob seats, at $lOO per seat for twenty nights are opened at once and will clo'se on the 10th". of June. I un derstand that more than half the seats have been taken already; so no doubt we I ttll have an opportunity to see and hear; the: same Pt Opera which so delights her Majesty •of England, and part with three quarters or a million of our dollars all pa meat for the luxury : The swill milk agitat;on contiues and • IS . inducing som actiontnv official circles.' lcalf a dozen Aldermee and Councilmen, 0 onstituting a committee from the Board pf Ecalth, whirled away up town in cm : poration carriages one day last week On a 'isit to the distillery stables. This move nept comes rather late, since the public xposFs-of every dealer and purchaser i ta4 p r ptty I n l ch put a stop to the traffic, !md tha 'proprieters had killed and sold pff the weakliest of the cows, demolished the worst portion of the stables and white washed the rest. The reporters Were not . invited by the Committee, yet with that nfallible seefit for news, even if afar off, Which characterizes' that department of the "Piess-gang," they smelt out the ex twAlitfon a.nd were on hand after "Items," lika sapless after carcasses. They formel VI igiitro4e.nt committee on the part of 'o* pt-' , 14 ,4 * 'hit !amid not be bribed, nd - who reported ; at once through the press! to the ' , neat all the facts - in thel ease,so_that, exgry! reader can know and lUdge for biniself;ap ; to ; the guilt,orjnpo ce.nee,of Oinkrested dall7ll6lf The other: committee; howoeri' muSt go through all the winclings of the o. ; iicittplo.; cution office lidote they can•,‘ affoe.iis the faintest ; glimmer fr . ein . theiroa,eial lan tern. They took specimen ,bottles of the different stylesAif Milk; kpoivn as "stump tail," and "long tall ; " • also it ;specimen of the guffll feed, ,which they will submit -to a. circumlocution chemist for examination. When they get his conclusions, they will "set," like a cora ; mittee of geese, two or three weeks; on the investigation mid finally 'hatch e s ti't al I '.rreport:' that will "cackle-ate nobudy'S to !blame" and give the late whitewashing an official! coat which will plaster the! I Whole thing over,lud, as'far as legal sane- I lion can CIO it, allow Uie Dq) . o3oll* to pilr-; sue still longer their deatli-clealing career. 1 The press 'tlud public t.ninion, howeVer, ' will see to it that they do not.. We are talking a brave aniop.nt of war; herc; ori account of British ag,.; - -ression • but % den% see anYbody's' hair standings ; • ori en d for fear. of - a. fight. 11ie only I, I place where any fight sticks out is Wall !street, where those coustitational ene lilies, the Bulls and Bears, make use of the least I interruption of peaceful rela- Lions to rn .up or down the prices of stocks. 'ust now the Bears are on top, and priee4 are 'down hut ;hat state of things won't last Q. week: The war-cloud will cvapoylif,e, ip no time, and- prices and t:„fraits WO resume their wonted tone. IMPORTAZ I i7r INTELLIGENCFO FRONI K,ANSAS, 0.1.7-TRACE BY .1115:OCTRI RUFFIANS Wive Fret-State :90n %Ailed, and roue Itlk-oraidcd. [Prom t e Lawrence Repukican—E,ctra.] vittxt7F.,. Sunday Morning, May 23, 10 o'clock, A. M.—We hasten to lay be fore our readers the following communi cation, just. received from a' gentleman whose character for veracity is•unirapeach , able 1 . 4N,N Co., K. T., M , iy 20. 1558 Yesterday a party of Pro-Slavery men, from . Misemni., came into the " Tradin7, POst," situated on the military road lead in.-from Fort Scott to Fart Leavenworth,; where it crosses the Qsage 'river, about! three miles from the State line, They were not seen till they emerged font the; timber, and rude up to. the store. Here they took Mr. G. W. Andrews and John I IP. Campbell prisoners. They then start...! ed ou the road towards Kansas city j They 'overtook here a Mr. Stillwel, fruit Sugar Minud, who was piing. up the riv er fur a !bad" of provis4is. - They took' him prisoner, and ordered the others to get into his wagon and. ride.. In a half a wile further, they came to a missionary, by the name of Rev. Charles Read. They ordered hint into, the wagon and dismiss el Andrews. They continued. 00, fur two miles and a half, when they had taken 'twelve men. . These men had been taken when at their work, without resistance, and un armed, and had never been implicated iu the troubles in Kansas. They were cue- servati re mom - Oh arriving at a deep ravine, in a skirt of timber, the commander called a halt. The prisonerswere formedinto line, about five yards iu advance of the.lairsemen. Tlie command *as given to " present ' arms ! fire." Every man dropt , ed. Four were kilted dead! and all hilt one cf the, others Were badly wounded:- The B.uf thins then wheeled their horses and gal- 1 loped off. In a few minutes three of them returned and searched their victims for money. They kicked the men, and rolled them i over .very roughly to see if they were dead. Finding one was only slightly wounded, a Ruffian put'a revolver to his car, alid fired; remarking that he had always found that the •nmst certain ' shot he cookl make. He took the key of I the sale ouoof Camphell's pocket, saying, 1" there was" money in that safe, and he I would comeback sonic night and get it." The moues cif the killed arc : William Stillwell, of Sugar Mound, re cently .from lowa. He is a young man, with a 'young and beautiful, wife, null two; young children. Ile felt perfectly safe, remarking to a companion that " he was; a Free :Mason ;" and it is said that a Free Mason, Dr. Hamilton, of Fort Scott shot, him. He was killed with a double bar-1 reled shut gun, loaded with pistol balls, the charge entered his left breaSt. He I was highly esteemed in this neighborhood, and his - death will be avenged. Patrick RosS was an Irishman, and had been driven from his chum or thh Llttle. Usage by the same gang. Mr. Colpe,tzer was a farmer from Penn i sylvariiil, •' • , Michael Robinson the same from lowa. John F. Campbell, a storekeeper from Pennsylvania. He was ayoung man high ly esteemed, and ad no family. iThe woundc are William Hargrove land his' brothe Asa Hargrove, formerly Id Georgia, to came here to live in a free State. : This is the head and front of their ffeudig, Also, Rev. Charles Read, a , aptist preacher, from Wisconsin, who m yeti that place a week ago. He ii badly wounded, and .crept into the odds, and Was not found till morn in , Amos Halt, and his brother Austin yall, Who was ant hUrt, but fell from pru *odd' reasons. Charles Snyder was slightly hurt in the leg and back. The Ruffian band was led . by Brockett. of Fort Scott, and accompanied by Dr. Hamilton and others of "that ,pladeotrlio have made:- . themielres notoricins.fm. - .two years ! past: "There . Were. twetity-five all,. anti they were. well acquainted- with . ,the men whom thi4 killed, exoptirr; , !Stiii. well. Eight * pf them lived in E,arisar : , • and seventeen liyed, in 'and arOlipollyirqt- - 1 port. This place yas ,the Border head-quartersin 1S Q, havirigahlalodge, and being the rendezvous of the Southern army of iuyasion under Gen. .Clark and the !secret Chamber ofi the. 4 .‘,C.Oniaed of Ten," iYho decided the fato,Of—prisoners . ,and settlers during that floomv• year. The murders were committirlyesterday at, one o'clock. The ..-news -spread like wildfire over the cOuntry,:andjieforc, mid , night three hundred armed Men had t7l , as sembled at the trading post. Seoutswore - . • sent inib Missouri, but no clue could be ! found of their retr,eat. Mist of -the peo ple in tit; Sti3.l.e condemned the act, .and I rwere willing we should take thenu if we could ; It is supposed the rutiaus are at ' Westpoit, aud our men are marching on to that place, with the intention of taking tlieni - --peaceably if we can, and forcibly if we must. Captain 3...Toritgoinery and his men are here. The other citizens goa eralfy are not organized: There are no arms iu the country except sporting MIPS•• . 7 and not lial,f of the men have . those. Brig. Gen.. McDonald i 5 with the company, but haying no Military knowledge he does not . . attempt any organization or discipline. The teen,- however, being determined to !fight, will go on, whether they. bye offi cers or not. - - 11. B. 31441 is. takitis* ' an ho.norahle part, and is aiding Gen. Meßaniel. Drs. Danford and Weaver attended the wounded men. W RAIZ The ruffians s73ar there shall be no crop* raised in Linn county, this year, so. you will see the necessity. .of sending us seine arms. Crolvds of Men assenililed, who could not go for want of the r m. The old men were on . haud to steady the boys, for it has conic to this, that every man must fight or run: I noticed Mr. Rat des, Rev. Mr. Addis, Mr. Artlinr, imd several others of the old eitizips'and old men. A few of the timid may leave, but; the general feeling is life- or death in ' Kansas. FP,OIII 111:ASIflni6lICt8. Edda?' of the Orpwrition—Rrpresclfatires—Fete .Podyc of the ...I,dir..;nieratica; to, Carry 4A:7in :wit:an/a thbi b4t7l. Corr;!spond , :tice of Forney'g Press WAsitiN.V.reN, May 29, ISSS. The Opposition members have acted with great firmness. '!hey have at no time, and it is only jet that it should be known, made captious objections and on: position,. Strange to say, they hate ani-. formly opposed adjournments, and re mained to consider and. pass the general. appropriation bills, and to clear the cal enderof private claims, It was expect ed that the Administration- members should do this, and for what they have done they deserve no eltra,rilinary cred it. It is a pleasure .to kLuw that all, 11;:ve dune A Ler, dodge Is abort to ha perpetrat ed by t:.e Lee'mptoul:es. Tney ulakej no secret of it. It is intended for the I •Pennsylvania market particularly. I i'leau the adoption of the Protective Tariff pi icy, to get out of the ignominy of Leceinp-1 tonism. Owen Jones is in high glee about it., and he, Reilly, Dewart,. Dim-I wick, Ahl, Gillis, Allison White, Landy I and even Phillips, are expeciA to mount( the hobby, and to join in and fill up the c:v. They are already booted and spur- , i re - d. It is even reported that F. W. 4tighes ef Pottsville, is to tit•tuip the ' State On, the tariff policy tn; Kivu the necks of the Lecomptouites. It is sly trick to resort to iu these days el prostra tion in business. - But Who will trust these excellent Repres.:mtativc.'s? "If "mine enemy cheat me once, Amine ou ; if lie cheat me twice, shame .on ' "me." The men . who were so ready to iiolate a pledge in one case, call never be confided in again. Better let the.S . e. wan take up their original sin, and carry it, f han run the risk of being laughed at by offering a new premise which they never intend to keep. 6lit 'gear 4gurital. COUDcztspowr, PA., 1 - 1)0$049 iü, 1858, T. S. CHASE, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER. Every person who owes us should endeavor to pay Ili) Court Week. WE .MUST HAVE MONEY, TO DEFRAY UNAVOIDABLE PUB LISHING EXPENSES. Senator Henderson, of Texas, died at Washingtop on the night of the 3d inst. Senator Uouston, upon viholn it devolves to announce his deal} in the Senate, has noC spoken to him} for ten years, The city of New grle* has just passed through a bloodless reyOlUtion— passiog its municipal affairs out of the control of the Mayor and Council irate the hands of a Vigilance Cmumiitee,.,a la San Francisco. For two or three days the streets were barricaded and hilsiness in general suspended--those interested every moment expecting to be plunged into actual combat. The cause of the imeute was numerous murders and outragei which the city au- thorities.had not - bniy - pey.mi.tteli t to go Ip.- pti l nished; but had even : ,screened tip per,.- petrators The people,' therefore, undertook the" . ..raana.genient 9f wetter. .themselves, to which the autheritiesloh jected, and threntenea civil war; but finale ;Ly surrendered to' a Vigilance Oominkttee on the 4th inst.; and once more quiet reigns in our American l'aris". Artd„o,_tt" rna3r be set doin as one of the legitimate fruits - ar Slayery-:•--that :Wherever it exists, the politkal caaraeter of the. people is ;reyolutionary, from the fact,.proveoty all past: .eiriaFiepoe,' that the cdtiditio'n of aristocracy is discontent ,--whereverl unlimited 'application of the lash to the backs of an inferior class is permitted by law,or custom, those ex• egeisin - thitt power become• !dissatisfied with, and jealous of, their aria class—con sequently revolutionary. Hence, the mor al degradation apa recklessness of society in our Southetsi States. ; An inhuman master always lives in fear of his neigh. hors; and a social system which requires national administrative nourishment, nat.- wally tends to revolution. We give, in another place, full par ticulars of a recent pro-Slavery o4trage in Kansas, ! Snob spores as are there de scribed'are to le expected now, when a usurping National AdMinistration is pre paring for its last and hardest };:tittle against popular Sovefeignty. The vote on the English Swindle is fixed for the let MondaY .of August next—(luch:Ay, the very day when every voter in Missou ri Will be needed to vote at home on the. question•of Emancipatiou)—an4 the E.x.- ecutive who has thus far'devoted his ev ery effort to the services of the' Slave power, wilt leave uo ruasure untried„ no sclunne unexhausteci, by which that in famous bribe, with its infamous conse czences may be fa,stened. t t,pon the•people of Kansas. Au evidence efthe southern servility of the President and his Cabinet is given- 1 by the fact that Gov. Denver's instruc-' Lions from Secretary Cass,. enjoined him not to eau . a meeting of the Board of Com missioners do fix the dey cf the election until alter .4ttorn%General Trier's sue eessor had reached Kansus and was in stalled into o . gice!--4.11 - us-giving the Ad minislration a majority in the Board.— But a majority or the Board compelled Gov. Denver to organize it, and thus ac complished a. great victory over his Ex ecutive master ; and those who shape his policy, by fixing the election on the saute day Nii:th ;the Missouri general election. G. Dl e.-, - er intimated to die other Corn mit.iont Is that his early resignation of the posit:.m of Governor of Kansas was contemplated—he being doubtless dis gusted with the dirty duties which his masters required at his hands; The perpetrators of the race nf outrage have left the Territory-- 7 two of the lead ers having already reached their homes in Alabama ! Fear of the just vengeance of their victims' :\•iettds lending them wings to travel w:11.. Alddson Wl2lle Against the Settlers. On the 3d of May, Mr. Grow, of the Wil mot Dist: ict, moved to suspend the rules so that he might introduce a joint resolu tion that the public lands shall remain open to preemption for ten years after their survey, before they shall be offered for sale, so as to give te the settler a pre cedence of the speculator, This Motion was defeated by 4 votes— Allison White, the member from this Di.;triet, voting for the speculator against the settler, p, l eh is Buchanan Democracy. Prepare.lfew the rail ipectioas. The Democratic Keystone Club, made up. of office-holders in city, has voted to furnish oue million of doeuments for the campaign in Pentisylvraa.---,.• ingtan Republic. It is quite time the Republican press should call the attention of the people to such items as this. Shall we permit the office -ladders to control the public seuti meot State ? If nut let us at once send out an antidote to the poison of the keistone club. The lowing notice'of the Republican Association of Washington City points out a way of supplying this antidote : "THE NATIQNAL REPUBLICAN Asso- CIATION have completed arrangements for publishing and distributing Tracts, Es says, and Speeches, bearing upon the im ptirtaut question .new agitating the coun- try. ."Most of the Speeches. delivered in Congress during the preseqt session by Republican Menikers, and also that may hefeafter be delivered, canhe had ; enyel °Bed and free ofpf sive, at 75 ccuts per 100 for :eight-pige, and $1.25 per 44111'o; sixteen4w7e Speeches. " Our, Republican friends ought to take immediate steps to' flood every Cenges sional district, and especially distracts now represented by Administration Peinuerats, 1 with these Speeches and Documents. ------- :gqe,tofnre :this qer Ips been Ague by Alep4isors of Pcrrg4s p k t their own ex-' .pence; hut , q.fter the adjournment of Con gress this responsThilityyii4 devolv,e upoy Other friends of tip cause: Ta j F. NATlni , ar, REPUSLICAN ASSG• q.typoN at Wash ton City stand ready to lend alirthe as4"tatine in their power. "Send in youtiordera without delay. 4ddres3, i L. CLEPIIANE, " &acetic?' 'National RepaL!icon Association, Washington, D. C. . "Nay 8,1858," r I Secretary Stanton Against the Pet of the Adintnisiration. It is }refreshing "to turn from the servile toadyism bf the Baclnman press of this State to the letters and speeahes of a Dem. oorat who }-has a miwi of - -his own, and back-bone enoggh to impel him to say what he thinks. Tho . lloa. Fred. F. Stanton of Teanessee-, late .Seeretary. of Kansas, is such a Dem ocrat; and his letter of May 21st to the citizens of 31emphis, who had invited him to address them on Kansas affairs, is a document of the most refreshing character. The following extract will show the spirit of the latter. We commend it to .he attention of the Clinton Democrat, and the Lecompten concern over in S meth port, which is about the utast abject laugh face sheet that has made its appearance. Hevo is he last half of the letter : "It is to, be deplored that a President, elected by the Deumeratic party and sup ported by most of the Democratic repre sentatives in Congress, should be respon sible for the results of such an alternative as that presented to the people- of Kansas —an alternative which distinctly says to them, Pi You may enter the Union with .a small population if you will submit to a Constitution. which you have vepitdiated; but you, must have a Much larger popala .tinn if yod insist on a Coustitutieu of your own choice." Beyond all doubt, the au thors of this measure, ..and they whose stubborn adlteseuce in the Lecomptou Constitution made it the only practicable solution of the difficulty in Congress, will alone be respoosible for`the renewed agi tation, which cannot fail from the inevi• table rejection of the proposition by the people of the Territory. "in assuming this unfortunate position, the Democratic party, especially the South ern portion of them, have yielded a great advantage to their adversaries, the Re publicans. These latter, where they sup ported the Crittenden-Montgomery bill, actually voted fur the admission of Kan sas into the Union as a Slave State,. pro-. vided the people of Kansas should approve the Constitution. The election. was to' have been held under the d,irectionof two Federal officers, appointed thy the Presi dent, and two others elected, by the peo ple. Nothing could have been fairer. The rote of the Republicans was liberal and patriotic. It was a virtual abandon ment or all sectional grounds, and an ac knowledgment of the constitutional rights of new State to be admitted: into the u n i,, o , with Slavery or wailiout it, as her people might determine. " A wise policy, and a faithful adher ence to Democratic principles,. would. have induced the Administration party. to ac cept this measure, as a just - and.great con cession made by their opponents. On the contrary, however, by `insisting upon the acceptauee of a Slave Constitution, not ,only without submission to the people, but in direct violation of their known will, the Administration party themselves assumed the sectional and indefensible ground,' leaving the Democratic and true constitu-, tionaiplatform in possession of the anti- Lecompton Democrats, Americans and Republicans. Even in the final arrange ment under the English bill, with an in fatuation and blindness - almost unprece dented, the Administration party still in= listedupon retaining the fatal credit of not permitting the people to vote upon their own Constitution, while iu trnth they virtually surrendered the substantial right, content with clogging it by the most unjust conditinns, sitch as will sure ly "return to plague the inventors." " Briefly, gentlmen, I must say to you that I can see, in " the present and future prospects of Kansas," nothing but coiltin ued agitation, as the consequence of that gross injustice which the President and his Oarty, in violation of all Democratic and Constitnticatal principles, have insist-I ed iq perpetrating upon the rights of an injured and distraCted people. The ac,i counts of renewed cliff:m[6es recently re-, ceived from the Territory, I have no duuht, are greatly exaggerated, pessibly for the very purpose of repeating the out .rages which formerly desolated, that un happy land, and with a view to. enable the authors of the Lecompton fraud finally to accomplish their unjust, designs. II recognize some, of the quales con.neeted with these rumors, and am free to. state, that little faith is due . .to their statements' relative to Kansas, without confirthation from some unprejudiced source. " I sincerely hope, and, without some further fatal error on the part of those in authority, I believe the agitation will be confined to _the political arena, add will have no more serious effect than the over throw of a faithless' dministration, 'which has betrayed,the fights .of the people, com mitted a high crime against liberty, and misled a largo' portion of the Denioeratie tarty into a ruinous and suicidal error. very respectfully, • FItED. P. STANTON. KANSAS.—Leavertworth city was visited by a tremendous storm of rain on Wednesday, 2d inst., which inundated la large portion of the city, and done much damage. Air We and the following' call for au Oppositinn State Convention, i the late city papers. The,plan is . a good 9e, we think, and will unite all the (various ele. menta of anti-Buchanan strength : STATE CONVENTION, The United American, Republican, anti People's' Committee of Superintendence for the City of Philadelphia, earnestly de, sirous to ez.tend and periletuate that union of the elements of oppes:tion to 'the pres ent National Administration, which is this City has latelysesulted in reit bril liant success, do hereby respectfully sug gest, and recommend to the State Qoi . mittecs representing those - several elonients of opposition, that they call uptin the Cit izens of Pennsylvania, who are oppesed to the present National Administration'; especially to its despotic and fraudulent Lecompton policy, and its wilful neglect of the just claims of domestic industry ; and who are in favor of the Sovereignty id the People over their; own local eon. I cetr.s ; of American institutions ta.c, against the policy and intrigues of foreign Gov ernments; and of adequate protection to our home labor,. to assemble lin their . res. pective Senatorial and RePresentatlve D4B - to choose delegates, to a State Con vention, to meet at Harrisburg, in the Hall of the House of Representatives, at 2 o'clock, P. M., of Wednesday the 14t1, day of July, 1858, to nominate Candidates, for Judge of the Snprew,e Curt, and Ca nal Cemmissioner. 1,80N.A.P.D R. PL,FITCIIF4P,, President. J. R. FIANIGEN, Gen. A. Co vexe . . Vice Presidents. - W. J.. P. M. V. B. SUSISIERS, Secretaries, J. It. LYND.:LL, Philadelphia, May 20, 1358. In view of the above recotnin . endation,. and its general _ acceptance, I hereby with draw the call for a State, Convention, is sued by me, for the Sth of July next,, and earnestly request the American Re publicans of the State to accept it, and participate in the election of Delegates to. said Convention. By order of the State Committee. LEM'L TODD, Chairman A. it. S. Cold.. Attest—EDWARD 31'PlIERSON, Sec. Caßt4s4E, May. 31,1.558. To the 4nterijaps. Pennsyli:aniir The above recommendation having been+ submitted: t.4..).ine for my approval, afien• contultation , Nt , ith the majority of the members of the A.mcrican State COMmit. , - tee,.awia large number of the prominent A.,tmericans..of the State, I cheerfully- adopt it as our call for a State Convention, and urge the members of the American party throughout the State to participate in tha election of Deleg,atcs. • 11. BUCHER SWOOPE,' Chairman of American State Come . 04EAuy41.1), May 29,1858. Inasmuoh r.s the above recommendation and Calls point out the plain road to, p,rac., deal, decisive, and endurin2; victory, ov.er o ', the present National Administration aner,\ its tyrannkal t\tv: t s.ec.tir;plpuliay . ; Lthere-. fore rtc l uest the Bepaiicans of Penusyl vallia tO.unite.in•tle elegion of delegates tu.theabve COIAVOLI.6OII,' ' W3l. B. THOMAS. Clun:n. of t. 14; Rcintlilircia State Com.. , Philadelphia, June:l, 1858. MoNsTErt DEIaNSTILITION.—A call signed by one-third of,the voters of Erie County, New York—including Buffalo i-; published, asking all - opposed to the infamous 'attempts to , forte, by threats and bribes, a repulsive and anti-republi can constitution, on the people of Kunsan to meet at Buffalo on the. 27,th last. The call says : • "Let the past be buried in oblivion, so that the people-of Erie County may de monstrate, in an emphatic manner,- that despotism, even when exemplified by James Buchanan and a subservient Cabi net and, Congress, finds few sympathiscra • and advocates among them." The Buffalo. Coninti:rcial says it ex,: pects to give one tho u sand more names: to the call pefore the day of meeting. We sincerely hope • I the meetings will' fuse into one miss allithoSe who' oppose the present, Administration, and its acts, And that thus united, l i the Anti-Lecomp ton men will go forth Ito do battle shoul der to shoulder in onej common cause.— Thus they will prove linvincib)e. ?dies. ALLES. wife of tile Presbyterian. Cler gyman of Cuba ' was strt k down by lightning in that village during t e storm on Monday last, We bear• no. particulars, other than that the sole of her shoe was Lord of at the heel, and her limb. benutuk,ed paraly;ed to such a degree as to be eatirely useless as yet: Sho was taken- up for dead, Brit by the prompt ap-. plication of remedies„ slt v. - as restored to eta-. sciousness, and is now i a fair way-to reeov er.,o/ean Advertiser. UDZ - PATENT WATER FILTER. THE BEST FILTER IKNOWN for Fa'mily use ; has given the highest.satifactidn for many years ; is scientific in construction, port able, durable and cheap. It renders rain wa ter perfectly pure and greet,' making cisterns more economical than mjells, and avoiding the diseases arising from the hard water of lima-, stone regions. Five sizes; retail from $8 to $l2. Wholesale to the trade at the usual dis count. Can be forwarded safely any distance. I Formerly made by J. E.lCheney & Co.; made now only by JAMES' TERRY le CO - ; at the old stand of J: E. C. & Co.,] State Street, Roches ter, N. Y. For descriptive circulars address [1.10:-17-3m.] JAMES TERRY CO. I\7 0 CHARGE FOR SHOWING THE NEW 1.11 Goods just received at .OLMSTED'S. TN% and step e articles is tbe.Dru g linefor. 111_, sale by 1;,50:2.) E. K. 15.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers