Keutucky by a swt*eping majority.’The a dulitioimsts.—The abolition parly lias issued its call fora JS'atior.al (/) Convention lo be bold at Philadelphia on the 17ib of June next. There arc four names attached to it from the South, or* is that of Fr.incis P. Uluir, (oh ! how um the mighty fallen !) of Maryland; nnoihet is John G. Fee, of Kentucky, a kind of t broken down niiuister. we belieTe.— Another is James Red path, who is put down for Missouri, tm wl.o pretended to represent Kansas in the Pittsburgh Mulatto Convention, and had been in mat Territory for the past year, manufacturing lies for the Missouri Democrat and New York Tribune, lie is well known in ti it city, where be formerly resided. VVhii* hrre, be wrote for the New York Tiibuzr. and came very near being thrashed lcfwe le be left, for some slanders be published in r-j that journal. lie is an importation urn ' - Hold llengUtvl, ar.d is ns prejudiced and knows as little of the theory and spsrii of our institutions, as Brit.shf^-Tl.e fourth on this “cal!,” is that of Lc«« Cle'phanc, of the District of Cobnuts, who occupies the distinguished nnd exalted position of clerk in the olTicc cf ths Era, the atxdiiion newspaper in Washington. Such are the persons that this *fc Republican ** party put forward from the South, a renegade Democrat, a broken down preacher, an expatriated English* icon, and nn abolition bookkeeper! Yet these men have the audacity to act as tk representatives of the Southern people 1 —.Veto York Day Bock.Vr-P-olo*e-y-e-hemti*Slit