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Columbus (£ : iu)iurrr.
JOHI R. MARTI!• Him*
fludaf Xorninf, May Iff* HCO.
Conititutional Union Nominations.
FOR PRESIDENT,
CTOHlsr BELL,
OF TENNESSEE.
VICE-PRESIDENT.
EDWARD EVERETT,
OF MASSACHUSETTS.
Hell siul Kvrrctt.
We accept, with p!fa*ure, Ihs nomine,
linn of these distinguished gentlemen foi
the Presidency and Vico Presidency, by
tho National Union Contention. Had *0
been sblo to n>* <e a selection beat suited to
oar own tirat, wo might have chosen
other*; but we are aatisfjed that these arc
the b»at niminstions that will be made by
any parly, and we aery cbceifully giro
them our humble but hearty auppori.
We have no tnnr, at prsaxnt, to make
more than a paining remark or two about
Mr. Brll'ji poaition on fh* slavery question.
Though he voted, itr I, agaimt tho
Kansas.Nebraska bill repealing the Mia*
aoori Compromiae, he believed the Miaaoari
reatriciion of slavery to be unconatitutional
and unjnat towards (lie South. Iln only
respected it because long acijuirsrenco had,
in hi* opinion, imparted to it the aacredneas
of a cotuparl between the sections. In all
originat legislation (as in that of 1850), ho
is and was opposed to all Congressional
iniarfsrrnca with slavery as unconstitutional
*' d inimical to the Houtli, and at the some
time opposed to squatter sovereignty. In
o.her words, he elands by the Territorial
bills of I860, as conforming to tha spirit ol
tbe Constitution and the rights ol all
aeetiona. He feared that the repeal of
ihs Missouri restriction as to Kanina and
Nebraska, after auch long toleration as a
compromise between the North and the
8outb, would stir up and embitter aectional
stnfes. and therefore he op|Hisrd it—at the
same time acknowledging the right of the
Mouth to demand of tho Federal Govern*
merit "bands off" in all tho Territories*
The result shows that he was right in his
ap| rrhension of tbe mischief that would
follow the passage of the Kansas bill, with
all ibu encouragement which it alliirdrd
to sectional partisans to cnminnnco in the
Territories a strife that would convulse the
whole Union.
Mympatliy Wasted.
Many of our Opposition friends are
"aitting up" with the Heceding Democracy,
sympathising with them in their rebellion
against freetoilism, and oncouregmg them
to poraevera in the right direction which
they hav* taken. If wu had any confidence
that the eland taken by the Hi-cedera would
bw maintained, we also would olli'r th:*ni
condolence and encouragement. But every
indication strengthens our ilrat impression
that the majority of them will soon "ground
the weak arms of their rebellion" and take
poaition again under the banner of the
National Democracy as unfurled at Haiti*
more. To-be-sure, auch ilellant and scorn*
lul Dougins leaders as John Forayth of tho
Mobile Register declare that "there is no
concetvntde and honorable way by which
they can rotrace their steps"; but tho
ingenuity 01 politicians is equal to almost
any emeigemy, and ii the Hecesaionuta do
not eventually "turn up" at Baltimore, we
shall bs more surprised (ban wo have been
at any political event of recent occurrence.
Hera in Georgia the mode ol reconciliation
baa all* aily licun indicated. The chairman
of ttie Breeding delegation gives notice that
a Muir Convention will be called "to appoint
a sal ol delegates to attend both the Rich
mond and the Uallunore Conventions—
there terming now a disposition ill the
lallai C> nveniiuri to ennesdu something on
tiie plsilorm." If that Convention con*
cedes anything on the platform, with what
•hjecl will It be done * and what will bn
tho value vr sincerity of such a concession,
In view of tho honest expression* of poln.
leal opinion that bavc been mudu at Char Ins*
ton 1 The concession will bo made simply
to procure the nomination of Dougla*.
Ami what will the concession in the plot*
form be woith, with Douglas as Picsidout 1
t'an he ba diverted of squatter sovereignty
by any reluctant and hypocritical declara
tion ol abstraoi principle which his Irieiids
may make at Baltimore, altar having tefuard
it'at Char'eston 1 Without an asaurai.co
t .at Douglas shall be nominated a
aideration, the seceding Democracy may
whistle lor the “concession on tho pisi
form,” but they will novrr be able to obtain
it. Will tbry then lower their pretensions
on another tack, and consent to thu plat*
form already adopted in consideration that
they shall have ihs candidate Y If an, we
have only again "earnestly" to urgn upon
them tha claims of lion. A. li. Htcplieus,
who has all the requi-it* s of availability to
make him acceptable to the stubborn Dem
ocracy ol both Illinois and Pennsylvania.
We do not give up "our man" yet. We
believe that, like a giant ('oloasus, Lo over-
strides the narrow gulf that kcparalcs the
Northern advocates ol squatter sovereignly
from the Southern piotartionials, the Finn-
eylvania tariffitrs front the Southern “free
traders"—planting one loot on either side,
end nicely balancing biiuself upon Mason
Sc Dixon's line. Lit tho nominee be either
Douglas with "something conceded on the
pisiform," or Stephens with the platform
aa it ia;> lud let every Democrat go to
Baltimore 10 assist in greasiug the creakt
national machine and alatliiig it with a lull
head of ateaui in tbe race (or the spoil* !
———
iy The purpose of the Northern Doug
la* Democrats, if they can get power, to
re-open and disturb the Compromise meas
ure* of 1850, is becoming more apparent
•very day. A lull introduced into the Sen*
•te by Mr. Pugh of Ohio, to ispeal those
sections ot tba organic acta of UlaU and
New Mexico which restrain tbe running
out of slavery by lha squatter sovereignty
process, has l*een pending for some time;
and in the House of Represents!
tbe 1st inet., Mr. Hickman, a Douglas Dent* 1
oerst liotu Pennsylvania, “spike of the
humiliating concessions to tbe South in the
Compromise of I860, including tbe fugitive
■late taw, which compels men to leave their
fields and shops to tun after the fleeing
negroes, while tbe people of the North are
denied their equality in tha Union" !
rsr The squatter sovereignty wmg of the
Democracy of Alabama haa uaurd its call
foe a Convention of "all peraons in Itvor of
Alabama being represented in the Baltimore
Convention of tha llrcnoctscy ot the l mud
States, and who are grilling to abide by the
•ciion ot said Convention and support it*
nominee a." li is to be held at Montgomery
on Uie 4th ot June, the tune aud place fur
Aha assembling of tha Convention railed by
giro L*ecuu»e Committee.
"The Moon and Venue.’
-The abort communication on this subject,
copied from the Mobile Mercury, will engsgi
the attention of those of our readers who
delight in tha investigation of the pin
nomena of the heavenly bodies. Tbe Mer
cury's "Doubter" would almost degrade ou
beautiful satellite to the idea of Pollok’i
unsophisticated peasant, who
■ . “thospit Uie silver moon,
Tlist ntjrMJr e’er him led the starry host,
ho U'ltert than his lather's shield";
but "Doubler” has evidently misconceived
tha rul* by which he work* out his prob
lem, ami of course hi* result is incorrect.
Venus, it is true, "gains upon tbo Moon*
about thirty wiles sn hour" (subject to 1
little vsrntio# fc ^tJibutible Jo Venus’ posi.
lion in reference to tbo Earth and Hun); 01
rather the Moon recedes at about that rate
from Venus' doily position as presented
us by tbe Earth’* rotation. But it is thirty
miles of ihe Earth's surface, not the Moon’r
We grant that if Venus were just behind
tho Moon, and we knew that she apparently
traversed thirty mile* of Ihe Moon’s surface
hour, when we found her making the
transit of the entire diameter of the Moon
hours, we would have arrived at ihe
well-supported conclusion that the Moon
only sixty miles in diameter. But no
such deduction r an be made from any dis
tance cf the Earth’* aurface which the
Moon gains in her course compared with
Venue’; nor Indeed could we make any
computation of distant* therefrom, unless
we had ascertained by aorne other rule the
distance of one or both ol those bodies.
If "Doubter'*" estimate of the diameter
of the Moon were correct, it would Of course
also upset tho received theory of lior dis
tance from the Earth, because at the dis
tance of 240,060 miles ao ■mail a body could
neither appear to' us so large nnd brilliant
it does, nor could it eclipse the Hun at
his imputed distance and with hi# imputed
bulk—it would pass over his eurfaco like a
mere epeck. "Doubter," then, would have
altar Ihe distance and tho bulk of the
Hun to correspond with hi* discovery,
and would play the very mischief with
Newtonian Astronomy" in other respects.
Indeed, that system being founded rather
upen corresponding phenomena anil relative
results than upon simple demonstration
(such us the cettnin ascertainment of one
independent lucl), a discovery like that
claimed by the Mercury's correspondent
would derangn the whole scheme, and
hardly loave lo modern scieiicu proof that
Galileo himself was u martyr to the truth.
may say that it is tie mam! ruble
that tho Moon is moro than 2,700 milts
distant (tom the Earth. At that distance
tho modern leloscopea of immense magni*
fying power would exhibit to ua the shape
and color of even small objects, and thore
could no longer be doiibt about tho exist-
of vegetation, clo'ids, water courses,
Even "tbe man"—if orfn exists up
there—could bo found out by some of Ills
visible works; and Vanki-o ingenuity would
satisfied until it hud invented a
means ol communicating with him nt so
insignificant a distance; perhaps some of
cute land speculators would quickly
cheat him out of his little plantation.
Dougina ami the illuck Republicans.
Wsbli'a New York Courier <\ Enquirer
one of tho moat intense Black Republican
papnrs in the country. Unlike the Tribune,
it talus nn thought of party expediency, but
all the time insists on thu running o|
straight-out Republicans for office—it goes
for "a clean victory or a clean defeat"
under the broad banner of its own orgam-
zition ulone. Just now it i« engaged iu
the task of opposing the nomination ol
Bates of Missouri by thu Republicans at
Chicago. It insists that nobody but a
simon-puru Republican should bo nomina
ted, even il defeat ho tlm sure result, nnd
its choice is Howard. But, if overruled in
ita policy, and if thu party conclude lo go
outside of it* own organization lor an avail-
ahtn candidate, it is lor Douglas in prefer-
any other outsider, os not only
Ihe ■tiongcsL auxiliary, Dut thu uua most
acceptable on tho score of principle. We
copy below nil extract from ono of its odi-
toiiuls on this subject, which will show why
t is that it is lor Douglas us the best of all
'available" candidate*:
"NV'o expect to linvo tho namo of Dougina
preset d upon tho conaiderutiou ol the Na
tional Republican Convention by tho very
ask lor the nomination ol
non ns they find bis success
And why not I Beyonu all
who
Mr. Hutu*, as
is Impossible , _
question, ns an expediency cnndldaio for the
Republican party, Mr. Douglas, rejected by
ilia Democucy ui Charleston, in altogether
stronger a* 1 muio d- pitablo than Mr. Hates.
The 1>. no era* v will rvjoct him beenuan nl
Ins doctrine ul Squatter Sovereignty; nnd
although thu Republican puny reject that
absurdity, they do not tcur it.. They know,
ns has been proved in tho Territories ol
Kansas and Nebruaku, the people will
reject slavery wherever tendered to iliem
nnd that, therefore, Hquntter .Sovereignly,
though wrong in principle, is os ejftrtuul a
bar to slave retention «# ran be the action of
Congress, And in all Ollier respects Mr.
Dougins would inaku quite ns good r
Republican President na would Mr. Bairs,
lie would certainly bo u much Htruuger
candidate, lor two very conclusive reasons.
In ilm first place, lie would bring wiili him
n very large portion nl what remain* ot tbe
Detnocratio party in Illinois, Indians, Penn,
eylvania nnd New Jersey ; and secondly,
ho would be lur moro acceptable to the
Republicans who louglil tho bnttlo of 1856.
thun would Mr. Batus. • • • •
"As between Mr. Bale* and Mr. Doug
las, then, there can bn no aeritua question
beloro tho Chicago Convention, tl their
name* should be presented tor nomination.
Mr. Douglas is altogether the strongest, by
reason ot the ail hr units hu would bring
Irom ihe Democratic ranks, and hu would
be immeasurably tin* moat acceptable to the
Republicans ol IBtiU.”
ftF’ Tbo Mobile Register, tbe Douglas
organ in Alabama, says that "the conserva
tive Democracy of Alabama will bn repre
sented at Baltimore, whether ils strength in
the Htate bo an hundred only, or an huu*
dred thousand. Let the disruptioniats go
lo Richmond whither they have adjourned,
there let them meet Ike Cook from Illinois
and whoever else sees tit to join them. At
thu polls next November, we will rount
nosea with them aud see how the people
will select: Democracy or Disunion." If
tho same spirit actuates the Douglas men
of the other acceding States, the nomina
tion of their favorite con be secured even
under tha Iwo-lhirde rule. Douglas lacked
only filly voles of two-thirds of all the
States in the Charleston Convention, and
the seceding Stales (which, though abaci I,
were all counted against him) have tatty-on *
elect ml votes. It ia pUm that Douglas
must be stronger at Baltimore than he was
at Charleston, if all his friends who sup
ported him at the latter place stick to him,
becaase tha total
Protection to Slavery In the Terri
tories.
Tbe Macon Telrgruph (a squatter eov-
eteignly paper) declares that tbe "protection
resolutions" adopted by the late.Constitu
tional Union Convention at Millrdgeviile
are "ineonaiatrnt with the party record of
the Opposition" and "still more inconsistent
with the Democratic record in this Stale."
We shall not at present look into the
Democratic record on this question ; but
otir purpose now ia to show that there is
nothing in the platform referred to incon
sistent with the oft-declared principles of
the Opposition party of Georgia.
The Opposition party of this Slate have
always professed acquiescence in and fidelity
to the Georgia Platform and the Compro
mise Measures of 1850; and wo maintain
that tbe resolutions adopted by the late
Milli-dgeville Convention are nothing
than a rn-affirrnance of the Territorial policy
of those measures. The resolutions declare
— 1st, that slaves are recognized aa property
by the constitution of the United States;
2J, that the Territories are the common
properly of tbe citizena of all the States;
3J, that neither Congresu nor a Territorial
Legislature can prohibit or abolish slavery
Territory ; aud 4tb, that it is tbe duty
of the Federal Government, to the extent
of its constitutional authority, to protect
all its citizens in the enjoyment ot their
properly. W<» apprehend that tho only one
of these propositions which will be seriously
disputed is lit at embraced in the 3.1 resolu-
and therefore we shall not seek lo
vindicate any other.
lintain then, 1st, that the spirit of
the Compromise Measures of I860 and of
the Georgia Platform is adverse to the
assertion and exercise by Congress of the
power to prohibit or abolish alavery in the
Territories. Thosn measures explicitly and
Unqualifiedly left it to tho people of tho
Territories organized to decide the question
of slavery for themselves in "their Slate
constitutions’*—thus at least renouncing
the part of Congress any authority in
the matter. But in effect this legislation
farther than a mere quit-duim ol
juriediction—it operated a repudiation of
authority previously exercised. Congress
bad previously, hy the act of 1820, declared
its purpose to exclude slavery from all terri
tory north of 3G°30, and hy (lie subsequent
admitting Texut it had expressly for
bidden the introduction of slavery into a
part of the territory embraced in the com
promiae legislation oi 1850; for all of Utah
part of New Mexico are north of
30°30, aa was also a small portion of Texas
annexed by the orgnnic act of 1850 to New
Mexico. The Compromise Measures of
1850 provided that, notwithstanding pre
legislation by Congress excluding
slavery from territory embrucud, New Mex
ico and Utah skuuld determine fir thorn-
selvee jn their State conatilulions whether
thpy would tolerate or prohibit slavery ; and
(he meanlimo these organic acts treated
slaves as property in tha Territories and
provided for the trial in the Foderal Courts
of all questions affecting Ihe title to slaves.
at least say, therefore, that Con
gress hy these acta divested itself ol (he
authority which it had formerly assumed
exorcised over parts of thuae Territo-
; admitted slavery ao lur a* its action
could admit it, and extended to it all the
protection which tho Constitution of the
UiiiteJ States affords to tho slaveholder.
Equally explicit is the repudiation of
squatter sovereignty or Territorial juridic
al a very hy these acts of 186U.
Not only were their constitutions to "pre-
■cribu” whether they would have or reject
lavery (ami thu word "prescribe" cannot
allow any contingent qualification), but ull
acta of tho Territorial Legislature were
made subject to revision and annulment by
Congress. This provision repudiated Ibu
idea of Territorial sovereignty or exclusive
jurisdiction over this question so distinctly
that there can hardly lie any cavil about it.
Tho Uouglasiios in Congress admit it to
be a repudiation of their squatter sover
eignty dogma, ami huvu at this late day
introduced a bill repealing those clauses ol
thu Territorial acts of Now Mexico and
Utah which require the assent of ('engross
ts ol the Territorial Legislature.
0 insist, then, that Congress, hy the
Territorial acts of 1850 (the Compromise
Measures), renounced for itself the control
of the slavery question in tho Territories,
and restrained tho Terri'oriil Legislature**
from n-suming jurisdiction over the ques-
This is ull the "protection" that the
Southern Opposition contend lor, and it
ought to satisfy any Houltrorn man. Wu
say that it ia the doctrine of our Southern
Opposition parry, and we c
very recent affirinanco by many of
Southern convention*, and challenge the
citation of a single ono of them that has
rejected it. The various Htate Cniivr.ntiona
of the Southern Opposition, held ou the
82d of February last, all (without an excep
tion, wo believe) rr-affirnied their adherence
to tbe principles of the Compromise acts of
1850, and Georgia haa recently followed in
their wake by the resolutions that have
encountered the opposition of the Tele
graph. Our record is clear and consistent,
and our "platform" ia so strong and sound
that it can only be demolished by tb«
infraction of the Constitution itself.
A l ute by Delegations.
The following is published as the vote of
the delegates on the lUth balloting in the
Charleston Convention. It* is .evidently
wrong as to New Hampshire, which had
but 5 votes iiutead of 10, and probably aa
to Massachusetts, only 7} of whose votes
am reported. We think it likely that New
Hampshire gave 5 and Massachusetts 4 J
votes lo Douglas :
Ihe New Territories.
A a article copird elsewhere in this paper
gives tbe boundaries and other statistics of
a batch of new Territories carved out in the
Committee of tbe House. Of the fire thus
made, there would be only a remote chance
to make a alaveholding State of one of
them (Arizona), even without Ihe diluted
Wilmot proviso attached; and aa that is
already a separate but unorganized Terri
tory, the committee could not do otherwise
than report a government for it. The effect
will be, with tho proviso, to make five new
noii-slaveholding State#, and without it to
make certainly four and most probably five
free Stales.
Tho total population of all these proposed
Territories is estimated at £5,000 or 60,000
white persons, of whom about one-bslf are
in ono of them—Bike's Peak. There is
therefor* no demand on the score of popu
lation for these Territories, and tho bills are
to be reported for the purpose of either
hurrying on the premature formation and
admission of a number of free Utatea to
increase tho political power of rbe North,
or to make capital for the Black Republican
party in the coming Presidential election.
This species of legislation for psr’y or
sectional purposes is tbe Irene of the con
federacy. It must produce aectional and
party bitterness and retaliation. The Htate
of Texas contains ten times the amount of
population possessed by all these Territo
ries, and her area in square miles is shout
half a* large aa all of them—her area of
cultivable land much greuler than that of
alt of thrm. By the term# of her admis
sion, Taxis may ba divided into five States,
each with or without slavery a* it rosy
determine lor itself. But il Texas shou.d
apply for a division un tho terms thus guar
anteed to her, and with so much greater
population to justify her demand, who Jots
nat know that the Black Republicans would
almost to a man oppuae the measure ? And
yet they will make a great clamor if tha
South should oppose the organization ol
the uninhabited waste* which they propose
to mark out and seize upon in the interest
of the North.
We trust that an early vo(
may he obtained upon , • *. *0
proviso contained in sor
Territorial bills, and that
Three Day, later from Europe.
Arrival of the Steamship Brazil.
Cotton Advanced—Salta of week 01,600 bale*
St. Johns. May 8.—Tbe etcaraebip Bra
zil, of the Galway line, reached thi# port
last night, with Liverpool date* to April
29ih.
Livxaroot. Cotton Market..—The sales
ol cotton lur tho week reach 91,600 hairs
of which speculators and exporters took
16.000 bales each- The market closed very
buoyant, and nad fully recovered the pre*
rioua week's reported decline. Fair qual
ities closed firm and unchanged. On Friday
the sales were 12,000 bales. "I which aped-
l.itora and exporrors took 8.000 bales, and
tho market closed firm and active. The
authorised quotations were :
Fair Orleans 7^d | Mid. Orleans 6}'4
K*!r Mobile “U.l Mid. Mobile 0 ,4
fair Uplands — .d | Mid. Uplands 4* B d
The alock ol cotton in Liverpool was
1.027.000 bales, ol which 812.000 bales were
Liverpool circular* received by this arri
val are conflicting in their siaternents, as 10
the advance in trie collon market. Some
report the advance at l.lfid., and others soy
i !. The market w ,a evidently excited, and
1110 discrepancies may be accounted tor in
thin way.
State of Trade.—Mancheater ud vices were
favorable. The trade active and prices ad
vancing.
Havre Market.—New Orleans tre« Or
dinaire quoted at 106f. t and Ba*
fair qualities had unproved
Mr. Stephens Against tlic Meccdcr*.
Avgusta, May 11.—Tha Hon. Alex. H.
Stephens has written a leUsr in reply to
several gentlemen in Macon, in which he
sustain* rbe principle of non-intervention j j 0 ji 0w ,',Vy
tell delivered a capital speech,
1 "owing is an exiract :
Wa* slavery a rin to such _ . ,
should he excommunicate*
991. The
Hales of the
hand 290,000
. llau>',i#litrrl«uUri-l to
Illinois,
Michigan,
Wisconsin,
laws,
MsMsi taurtta..
• miiirfUrut
N«w Jersey.......
l'sut sylvaiiU ..
Maryland
and constitutional 11
propose the policy ol the bills of 186)9
substitute. A fair division of parties would
thus be obtained, and we could distingui.h
the Northern sectional agitators from the
politicians of that region who are disposed
drop the slavery question aa an element
agitation and mischief.
HP* We perceive in tho Montgomery
papers a call niaJn by the Democratic Ex-
f'cuiivu Uomtni'ieo of Alabama for a Htate
Convention of the whole parly, to meet in
Montgomery on the first Monday in June,
to take into consideration the question pre-
■cnlcd by tho split n( Charleston. Thi*
Executive Coinruitlco was appointed by thu
Htate Convoiilion which sent the lute dele
gates to Charleston, and its piosnnt action
in pursuance of instructions requiring it
call another Htate Convention in (lie
contingency of thu withdrawal of the Ala
bama delegates. The Committee, of cuuise,
r of thu seceding wing.
Wo have not yet seen (lie call, which it
is sold tha Douglas wing of the party in
Alabama will make, for a Huto Convention
Conservative Democrat*" to send dele
gates to Baltimore. Perhaps, aa they are
invited to tho Convention called hy th*
Executive Committee, they may rusku an
effort lo obtain the control of that body.
Thi* certainly is their policy, if they fuel
strong enough to warrant the effort.
Removal of tho Holy *rc to St. I.oula.
A New \ork letter to the Washington
Constitution says that Archbishop Hughes
i* to he made a Cardinal next October, aud
adds : "Ho will lm tho first American Cs •
dinal. Had Bishop England, of Houlb
Carolina, lived, he would have boon a Car
dinal."
1 ho Riuue writer then gor* on to *prak of
Cardinal Hughe* a* the future Pope—not
of Rome—-but o| the Romish Church, lie
*ay*: "In making Archbishop Huglira a|
Cardinal, the Pope ia actuated by motives
that lie deep in ilia bosom. It ia seriously
whispered that, if he i» deprived of political
power at Romo, he will wipe from his san
dals tho dust of that city, and remove the
Holy See lo some place in the West —say
Hi. Louis, Missouri, where hi* agents are
mid to have secured immerisu quantities of
land. Tho Pope may not live to carry out
his plan—hence he wishes a successor who
ha* onargy, genius, will, and knowledge of
^ I (ke new Continent. That successor he haa
determined shall be Archbishop Hughes.
To lu-como Pope he must first become Car
dinal, and this will be accomplished this
year."
ty The Democracy ol Chatham county
had a rousing meeting in Savannah on
Tuesday night, in which the Heceders had
everything Itiair own way. They pasted
resolutions approving th* course of the
Hecesaiouiats j declaring that they r« gardcd
the invitation of the squatter sovereignty
Convention to the Democracy of the seced
ing Hiatts to send delegates to Ualiiruora
as an insult; and t«-atUnning the platform
ollered by the majority of the committee
and rejected by the Convention. Col.
Jackson, Solomon Cohan and Julian Hart-
njgr, Esq#., delegates from Georgia lo tho
Charleston Convention who remained uu'tl
they were ordered out, made epecX'lic* in
which they declared that they were in feel
ing with the Hecessionista, and that their
retirement was a "question ol tiiuo inly"
(wo think it was on« of mode al*e.) They
Jcclarod that they would not go 10 Bain-
more, but were looking to Richmond. The
meeting tavoraU tba proposed Htate Con
vention, and appointed lo it the following
di-legatea: II. R. Jackson, 8. Cohen, J.
Ilarlndge, J. M. Guerrard, and G. P.
Harrison.
week 9,500 hales; tiock
hales.
Liverpool, Saturday, April 28.—Thu sales
fit collon to-day wure 10,000 bales, uiid
the market closed firm.
London Money Market.-~Conaol* clnrcd
at 9(1 to 95. Tho Bullion in 1 lie Bank ol
England had increased JJ6J,UOU. Money
was generally unchanged.
There wore rumors of several arrest*
having been made in Pam, ot per*on« im
plicated in an Italian plot againat the life ot
Napoleon
Barnn flrouck haa committed suicide- He
had been dismissed trom the Austrian Min*
iairy, in consequence ol some complicity in
iate gigantic Iraude.
Late news irom China report* that the
Chinese are making great delwnsive prepar
ations. It ia mated that two Britir-h vessel*
have been sunk hv the forts si Peilio.
Bell's Lite 111 London caltrii* that Hayer*
would have won tho next round in the
great light witli Ilc-nnri, if another round
had taken place, The condition ot the
parries, alter the tight, is thu* briefly re
ported in .the Liverpool. (Times : Sayers'
right arm was helpless; hi*mouth and m>*o
dreadfully beaten, nnd the side of his head
/t nd forehead much punished. Ilucnari was
V *0. wnt unrecognised run human being, ao
I \y \ Aflul had been his punishment about
/'d% f' * j‘|flKceand neck. Anri yet tho elite ol
i* t j r ***** I (/trope were there to witness tho tight—
w ill j nrrnbrra of Parliament, clergymen and
(a* understood by the Northern Democracy),
and disapprove* of the secession of ihe
Houti.rrn delegates at Charleston. Jle , t ing slave* t Now, if it
recommends that delegates ba sent by the
Democracy of Georgia lo Baltimore.
Hound Views of a Nor! hr
At tho recent Confer*
ir: Church North, the eh p JJH §P
underovnaidernilnn, the.In -»i r iCpt-
«-i...-...,r ;._i .. \ • >ir ', u
Inch me
Arrival of the Japanese Embassy. question w
WAtiUixoTox, May 10.—The L\ 8. attain There *1
frigate Roanoke, with Ihe Jipaneae erabavay ^
ort board, arrived at New kork la#t nlghi,
and re-railed for Norfolk this morning. ^
The Japanese are exprclrd here on Mui.- outof ibu tnarrias”^^, 1
Death of "Peter Parley.’*
New York, May 11.—.VI'. Goodrich, the
celebrated author ot juvenile works, who j
has become famous a# "Peter Parley,” died
on Wednesday last.
Boundaries ol the Nctv Territories, j
The f< Rowing arc given ho the boundaries
ol the five new lerriionea.
by the liou*c Committee :
Arizona.—Tina Territory wjll bo bound
ed by tho 108th mer.diun on tGo « a-*., Utah
on the north. Virgin river and Calit >rn a on
the wrat, and Mexico on tho south. Tins
will leave about 110,000 square miles t »
New Mexico, giving the new Tcrrit -ry nat
far from 200 000 square mile*.
Nlvaha.—Tin* Territory will be bounded
on ihe north by Oregon and tho tuny-third
parallel to Green
liver 10 the
thence
ol Utah to tho one hundred and fourteenth
meridian ol west longitude, thcncc by ike
ent Butt
hold-
thure wa* no alternative: tU ...... t
cutir ofl. root and branch. Yet L|. r , n
who toid it was a tin, objeciud to \
slant abolition o' slavery. Now, tlie«h<do
, "Is slavery a run or p*
gr/at deal of piotrs rliu, r jc
rtalnrm spent on this the..
•S.avery was called sinlui, hrciure c\s,
grew out oh*, fie denied it wa* nece»»
any evils growing
■ uu.ui iu, relation in tbe pretcti
I imperfect state ot socit., ^ ut , narr j B j, e
) nor ninfn. per sc.
The Bienopreminded thebnm^. jj |3l j, e
From the Mobile Mercury.
The Moon aud Y'Cuu<
Messrs. Editors : In our
children are taught that the hi
Irom the cQMh, 1* CtO.Oou m
diameter 2,160. 1 ask the qut
lea.
1 admit that, whether it be true
the lulschood or the truth has no
the fertility of the soil or the bus I;
suite »f men, and that tho world w
on about a* well tinder a belict 1,
ibesc proposition* u* ihe other.
end that t
u bo useful, harmless, or amu-n—
we detect tine harmless lilsrnood, .
U-ad us to the exposure ol otbu* i...
be detrimental to the bt>t mier. ,t .
Therefore, 1 seek the truth, thai ,
result. ...
To como to the point—1 doub; t| ;t
rectnesi of many ot the piup..,: u<JI-
wiut is called ttwNewionian As'.n,...
, 11 deny thu* tb« Moon is 240.0.u u;,.,..
ttic earth, and *a> that rbe 1- M
nntinued : The Sabbath, ^ deny that tha Moon i> 2.li;u
"jmlater, and eay that her diameter 1,
>l'» “ N'to; , . , , ,
.npponV.»«' Kt * h *“*™J 1 “• I*
!>i>° ilZ"'..'as
Moon on she 24th tn#V n< ' oll l ‘‘ 1
ild disi
occasion of
debauchery, but who would dare tn
Sabbath was a sinful institu'ion Y ’
world owed every
/ ol c
were right 10 exuot labor by
a principle wa* understood and
at ihe North, in our vagrant and
system. The question with us
vould ndopt such a
s adoption
ivlin
All t
rhe
1 hundred and inuricenth meridian ami j (l , n
loric expended about people awning the
bodies and Soul* of slaves was nonsense.
ily os nod the right 10
i.iako (heir slave* work, and to convey
hem from me place to another to make
and Rome, the
about ono huntfred
■and squarn
■■ pp roarin'*
1 iho south
nd seventy-five thou*
! diy s
Hl.v
fouls x
ehy
boundary
11 about one hundred miles j | „
ot Halt Lake City, and takes about fifteen ; (j p j,,,
thousand aquaro milaa Irotn Washington n „- r( , r
Territory, amt a small portion of thu norm- „
weal corner ot New Mexico. I
Idaho.—'Thi* 1* thu expressiva name of J
tha Plit’U Peak territory. It means "lha
gem ot the mountains.’’ It is hounded by | p roV ,»
question wa* *
4.000 000 ol p
everely.
ould lot
world,
of tho
> in tho
of taking cn
; forty third parallel of north iattiu
.'others
'Ihe National Union ('oiivcutlaii.
Baltimork, May 10.—The first ballot for
1 candidate resulted ss follow*:
..65 | Houston...
• ■'AS j Kverett....
...26 I Graham...
OKgtn..
the north, tire ono hundred and h ton;i .
meridian went longitude on the n't, l,,e Code'* w;i
thirty-seventh pirnllel of latitude ou i!io rJfg (
south, and Green River on the wont. Tni* ; ■sr orlMt Br!( j
will make Hie new Territory to consist of ! h | )1Vtr ’ v . j, n ,j
about 150,000 square miles. About mi' j freedom
hull of this i* uken from Utah, a small , mphaticali
portion Irom Nebraska and New .Mexico, j f |, lV( . lv
itld the remainder trorn Kiami.
Theoommiiteehmkirevii that ...
anew of Utah cast of ihe Green River, about 1 • j
20.000 square rni.es, shall be attached n, j ,i .
Nebraska. This will reduco Utah t«» about ' \( I11|V K|l |j,
90.000 square miles, winch will be Mr. \Vesle
rounded by ll.o new Territorial Govern- |
incuts ol Arizona, Nevada, Idaho, and that „ m; , r
portion ol tiro old Territory of Oregon ! j 1%ve |j
which was attached to Washington Terri- f ,. CV( . r
lory lul Congress. If thin doc* hot 'i n
lii" M"I..: "Il • i:« ar<T to • iv.li/.iU'iu uml
good government ir will bring civilization wealth fluv
and good govei ninont nearer to them. cotton crop
Daoutah.—'I hie Territory is om.
of a part of tho present territory ot that ol , (l
name and portion ol Nebraska utiU bounded 1 ^ oll | h nn ,| t
ns Inllow-Si The forty-sixth meridian °* | raoue ratio
nortli latitude on tbo north, Minno
.1! • Do Antilie
;ab!y. Touisaint i’Over-
Jiacemcd the evil* nf trcctlom
t established tiro famous "Rural
intent to finally enslave
■ re you would in our own
ruded the mg
birn^f Ho ^
oviden
the o
ed Ih
i man who would dare
Is, licalth and civilization,
ir above tho free negroes.
an slav- ry was the
he .ua," Mr. We
tded by prejudice, o;
Tina did
1 did, i,
1.urpo
Missouri. But tiro approx,n
to tho Moon was near •-
ttieieas, to time tolerably
lire .Mr.on's lull d<
^ n Murengo county
lance, Venus gains upon tin
mile* an hour, (the Sun a in
u* twice thirty 1* sixty. I cm
requited two houm lur Vein
full diameter id lire Muon, ou
aition# to proven, rintiu l>* :j,
I* not merely a person atquoi'
tain foriiit or route nlionatitn >
ami sell-ptuaeski d in society, j
ithd act, and in«vu in ii)« M
awkwardricas, free
vulgar And in hsii taste. t \
suiuuthmg beyond thi*. ,
hi* ta»e and refinuntent, ,
power of pleasing, i« the sjiu>
10 P. M.—Tha Constitutional U.
Convention adjourned finuily at 8 d’eioen
this evening, subject to the cull of thn Na
tional Executive Committee, at some future Niobrarih
time aud place. During its deliberations |
not a di'cordant word wa* uttered, but
everylhir.g was dona in the must harmoni
ous and good humored manner,
A ratification meeting is now
in Monument Hquare, tbo number punier
paling being estimated at 2l),0U0. Hpmt
stirring speeches ami a largo amount o
i-rithusiaem have so far caraetcrizsd its pro
• W , |uwa to tiro mouth of rite Big Sioux on the
t°8 I east, on tiro south lollowing Hie Mleaouri
from thu mouth ol the Big Sioux 10
tliu mouth n| ihe Niobrarair, and along the
no hundred and eecond
iongitode, ul>
irundred and second mcriJni
third parallel north Intiiuiic, lbenc<
tiro lorty-tlurd parallel to tiro crest
ky Mountains, and on the #
tuny-
by
Thursday, p. m.—Edward Everett, o( J Dacotah
MaaMarliUNetiH, Wu- unanimously declared
the candidate lur Vico President, on the
first ballot. The result wus received with
great enthusiasm.
Ship Robert Stewart I.ost.
Wll.MlNuTON, May 1U.—The barq
WoHtern Sea, hrouglit to thi* port
lour black ami two white seamen, ot the
ship Bolter: Stewart. Thu neurnun wure
taken irom a raft on the 1st nisUin latitude
thirty-tour, longitude seventy-otio, forty
I»vo. One other seaman was picked up tty
nnotiirr vessel. It was supposed that hu
wan the mine of thu Stewart* It was
thought ihm sixteen were drowned. The
Stewart Mink on 1 lie dOili tilt. Hho was
laden vi li three thousand ono hundred
bates ol cotton.
th<s net und district <
lo>a is usiiuitttud ii
The properly wus
Congre*kionnl.
.Washington, May 8.—Senate.—Hon.
Albert U. Brown, of Miss., mtroducrj a
lull tor improving the nvrr* in Mississippi,
and the levying of tonnuge duties.
Huu. Jefferson Davi*' Territorial resolu
tions were discussed. Hon. Htupiien A.
Douglas will speak upon the subject on
Thursday.
'Washington, May 10.—Tho Senate pas*-
ed. hy l.iriy-lour to eight, the ilomcsiead
hill, so as 10 soil to the actual occupant* of
land tor two years, at a quarter of a do.lur
ilouax.—Tiro 11 oii/b passed, by aeven
majority, a bill declaring null and void tiro
laws ol New Mexico, in relation to slavery
und puonago.
The Il.m. G. A. Grow, oi Pennsylvania,
reported fivo bill* lor tiro election ol Ter
ritorial Government*, witli the Wilmot
proviso. Amendment*
looting slavery, but or
bills were postponed.
Tho protective tariff hill wa* passed.
Washington, May 11.—The Senate to
day pusaed tbe deficiency and appropriation
being held j Washington Territory.
will coirorot of aboui 011c hundred and tliirty-
thnusand square miles. This does not 10.
elude or iniurlero with any oi iho nettled
portion* ot Nebraska.
CmrriWA. —This i»on entirely new Ter
ritory, ts corn postil oi tho northern pan ot
and Nebraska, and 1* hounded its
J Inflows : The Brniah Possessions on tlrol',’',
north, Mmr.l*oia on tiro cast, 1 lie lorty-
sixth parallel of norMi latitude on the siutli,
nnd Washington on thu west. This will j or ,
mnkc an area ul about one hundred and Fvr
j thirty thousand square mile*. t d,
barberem '
isAr^arinns ;
equal ru u*
.■a 1 ion. The Speaker here
trust tho product* of ilro
Nortli, finding an en >r-
nr of the latter, and end-
Iunion that we were the
dually deriving tba moat
n institutions by
1 ol the European
It is thu thoughtful (
instance to ulheis a
should do unto i
thinking, not indi
pleasure to others
pluasiug, but bow
spec!, how he m
feeling*. Whou
scrupulously u-c*
tact, *ihat be tiny
non or. He atudro
.very
upoi
r.y *c
up M disagit-tfsbii-
A gentleman trover 1
pear* consci/ue of
bodily deformity in
■ucH'ty h’ i. (jl.u.d
sny superiority—m
boasts, never makes 1
powers, or rank, or t
dulge* 111 habits whic
others.
Eacli ot tiro bills will coinairi tiro foliu
ing proviso :
think i
Provided. That, iroverlheleaa, alavety ha
no Irani malm T.niluiy, und | iiinlni iinii c
nothing licrein contained shall bo so con-
sirued 10 auihurize or permit ils existence |
therein.
New York One Hundred und Ten
Yervr* A no.
The Now York Evening Post ha* got
hold of a copy ol the New York Gazette,
published 111 1750, and comments as Inflows
November 1750, is tho date oi number
607 ol ihe New York Gazette. It was |
edited by a Mr. Parker, and is a stnnli folio
ol two column* to each page. On 1I10
margin are printed smalt advertisement*,
trom one oi which wu learn that "likely |
Irish servants" were then leg titnale arti- 1
clca ol merchandise; ior the advcriiMiucut
I household w ik j
Enquire ot thu Printer here of."
Tho publisher* ol this paper used to I
economise Apsce ; lor, along the margins, j
ut tiro tide, top and buttoin, we find,beside
occasional advertisements like me above, 1
sutfgestivu ui the remarks ol “Mr*. F.’a 1
aunt" iu Ub ak House :
"Choice Bristol Mustard, in bottles, to |
bo sold by tbo Printer hereof.’*
" flic Play House is now floor'd and made
very warm ; und this evening Sir Harry
Wildatr will be ucrlonned with the panto-
We Ii a
which s 11
inciir* apart,
It. nnd ho didn't
it. or thnt it would
Id plan;.
. tiro sa
utter from A. June?
Ihr Editor of the Xrw
cw York, April
ou* newspaper ace •
n fig lit between Jo!
who admire cuitivuii
Ring at oneo ; nnd '
be, ol course fruitle*
us a uandidatu for fix
report* wo hnvo rue
nnd pridu in the ('ini
aincu I lull tier idiot e
| I Republicans, i*
. country nnd th*
. linn.. In ml., r
I ! only defeat th
| themselves iwot
nblicnit*.
attar# worse nnd wc
ly nMother name for
enemies ol tbe South,
tiro triiiii
and the <
Mo
To BE Lr.
-The Hou
back by many planters
bad
consideration tiro | this tune. Some burgh
I premises, and he atta lortii ms io»sc* 1
following advortitemont:
"November i, 17
Whereas, on Saturday night lust,
housp of Benjamin franklin, ot
The llouaa *ucce*aivaly tabled five bills [ Phtiadelphii
tor new Territorial Governtneiite by .an
nvnrugu of twenty-nino mejority ; * mho
Republicans amongst the number. Each
bill contained tiro Wilmot proviso.
Tbe Eapt. Faniliam Caie.
Savannah. May 8.—-The grand jury of
the United Htate* Court tn-dsy found true
bill* against C. A. I.. Lamar, C. W. Stylet, ! pa
J. M. Middleton, and Wot. Hone,
rescue of Capt. Farnham
jail.
tbe toilowing tilings feloniously taken away. !
vix: A double Necklace of Gold Bead*, n ,
Woman’s long Scarlet Cloak, almost new,
with u doubt* Cape, a Woman’* Gown ol ,
printed Cotton, ut the sort called Blocsdu !
Print, very remarkable, tin groani dark |
wun large red Rosea aud other largo ted '
and.yiUow flower*, and smaller blue and j
white flowers with many gr«en Leaves ; a 1
ot Woman's S'aya, covered with white
l'abby hr hind, wiili two la tiro Hire I Hooks !
i :»r-i'Lt:n^. , or sntri. j
they may be ■
tiro Union, which
I Cannot Itnmocrats understand and
are this tiling iinte true light f W . 1
What mailers it lo the people whi,
ol ilm mill sloveryist*, tho Urpuh
I tho Free* oil Damon at*, succeed
South end tiro North, too, should a
1 them both, (or, in our honest jucj
j wt shall trover have ptrmunenl prut-
rity and «a/#fiy until both are defri
Au.RNitoRyr.— On tho second dav
th day, Stoner, Abend.
1 (by Lexington,) star 1 r.i
■e. Tiro last-named w 1
or winning the heat tn
1 neck. Alter tiro hen'.,
’cramped and had lo t
More Counter■frita.
Washington, May 8.—A large amount
ot rouaterlrit notea upon ihs Common,
wealth hank of Philadelphia ha* been j
uttered here. Tiro Richmond detective* 1
are now in pursuit of one of the parties,
who has just returned from the Houth, ;
where it ia supposed he had issued a con- |
siderable quantity.
ods
Justice, shall
ard ; and fur recovering any 1
eward in proportion to me
Atlendorflf 1* undoubtedly the
hors'u in thu country. At New
Mr., I.
l.',Mo
Meeting to Approvo
. SaTANNAU, May 8.—A large meeting is
being held at the Masonic Hall, to-night,
to approve the cour*e of Southern delegates
at Charleston. There is a great crowd.
11. K. Jackson is now speaking.
value, paid by
The amusing description of the tru
remarkable gown witli largo red roses, r<
yellow, whitu and bine tlowurs and gre
leaves, all on a dark ground, would sln-w
rather surprising loudness tor variety
color among tiro ladies or women—t
world ladies is uot mentioned—ol FranWlu
I household.
At ihat time tho African slavn trade w
the Hcceder*. I carried on, und it ix not surprising that tl
ing advertisement appeared ;
c oicemrnti' thei
didate.—Phtladt Iphii
Grkat La,
Miseitsirrt KivkR.—TiroCtin
‘I ribunu coutains a long c
from Mr. J. G. Gindelu. a
construction of* canal, sultif
lie navigated by s'uamhoais.
More I'.videurc <
Sippt
> tributurii*
Chii
I A very likely nrgro wench, about twenty
1 years ot agv ; has be?n but six months in
; lire country, and, suuns veijr tractable.
1‘cmisylvauia
Maryland
tVUcunslu
Minnesota
Total
New Jersey
I'cimsylranU
North Carolina....
. B'% IMaaarr...
US Maryland
■ 4’, Vlrgiula....
Total...
roa A>NKsox.
| Minnesota..
1 Tout
Il turns out that tho whole of the
-a,„,....... cauni.a P , Xjck „ tucc , M(olm „,
,,.m. I.im .1 ( li.ilf.lou, .nj ,f th. | , |K |n p UitoMpki ,. Mr . „ ullJi ctB .
didale for the office of City Comptroller,
who was supposed to have be# 11 defeated
by hi# Democratic opponeut, has 102 ma
jority by tho official returns.
delegates go to Baltimore aud parti
cipate in the ballotings there, Douglso will
gel scanning vote* I tun Georgia and
petbaps otheis of the seceding Htates.
If The National Constitutional Union
Couventiott at Baltimore have to thank
1‘iesident Buchanan for au act of courtesy,
A grntleman of Baltimore, 011 their bt haif,
applied to the President lor leave to bold
thu CoQveutioit in a Church edifice now
the property of lha United States, and the
request was readily acceded la.
Cf To show the pluck of the Douglas
mm, Forney’* I’ress declares, if he is
slaughtered, his friend* "will avenge his
fall by such an appeal to th* ballot-boxes
aa will well be remembered f«r a century.
Tho secessionist* shall have Douglas or a
Republican. The hour for compromia* has
passed forever."
TheCottou Scheme.
r -~ , r . . , ! Washington, May 5 — It is reported that i 1750. dream ot railroad*. But a* there was
ir 1 no Atlanta Intelligencer says truly j tho Government of Belgium lias advanced I already considerable traffic between the two
the ; funds to Mr. Baylor, ia-e American Con- citixens, Daniel O'Brien published ihe lul-
sul at Manchester and Hamburg, lor the lowing announcement :
. I purpose ol opening a central cotton export |
mined to nominato Douglss or break up | agency iu tho cuy of Baltimore.
ihr sai.ro political U«bt.
on the Mississippi, Missouri t»'
river*. Tiro opening ul such a wv
from the Mi.'sisiippi to tlie Lsl.c
I greatly increase lltu business trom <1
! aud west over all th* eastern lire#
j way ; and although tho project
t*oid one, it may yet he complete
| many peats.
that a portion of the delegate*
Charleston Convention want there "Jeter-
nployed to edit ,he Herald by the stomach by accident, will i
all Gentlemen
tho Democratic party, and another set went
there to dafeat him or break up lha party" ;
and it gravely adds that both these factions
Mas* Meeting tn Xevv Orleans.
New Ormans, May 8.—A mass met
cat held in La Fayette Square to n
and Ladies, that have ocean
I either tlieinacives, Gonna, \
| chandtsea Irom New York to Thtiadelp
(ing | that by the said subscriber tiroro is nor
stage-boat, well fined tor that purpose k
cicrk in the Pu
•'“if"" I J.lin. hi, du.ic,
that he performed auv. tiro bii'ousncaa, arising f
. . . . . , cession nrovemem at v
If both had been turned , hfr r e*olve to regard
“ attempt to product
States ot this Union
of the Un
out, the Hall of the South Carolina
tute would have looked like "some banquet [
hsll descried," and the Democratic party 1
throughout tha country would beve been [
left minus nine-tenths of ita voter*.
— — w* ♦ «^— —
If The grand jury ot th* United Htates
Circuit Court *t Havannah hav* found a
uue bill against Martin V. Brantley, a post-
office route agent, who waa recently arrested
at Macon on a charge of atealing money
from tha mails.
tf Treasurer May has paid into the
Hta'e Treasury $10,000 on account of the
Wcviern A Atlantic Railroad for lb* month
of April.
j and. il Wind and Weather permit, shall
tend at the late Colonel Moor’s whnrt
as enemies all who New York every Wednesday in every wc
separation of tho I and in_proceed to the ferry at Amboy
errnce being that O. Flynn paid ina edit"'
nn, it wilt he remenibered, was
>vud by Mr. Buchanan nut long sm
will bo found i _
1 bier of lemon juice, ft can bo repea'c
I necessary, and will put many a hcaJa-i
flight.
l.ater from Mexico.
New Orlkans, May 8.—The ship Clyde j
with Vera Crux dates ol thu Ut inst., arriv. I
ed bore tn.day.
The Constitutional government rejects
the propoaed mediation.
Thursday, where, on Friday morning,
j Stage Waggon, wdl fitted, sbali be ready
j to receive them and immediately proceed to
Borden's.town, where there is another stage '
boat readr to receive them and proceed di* i
tiy to Philadelphia. All people may de.
id on Ihe best usage, and an iho Passages
Waisr are much shorter and easier per- |
k-way, and ihe
rotJ* generally drier, it is hoped this way
iii be found the most desurvtug of cneour.
Deal
$
Gen. Miram.in's party ha* been defeated I l°rmed than the Bruns
upon all sides, and bit money a 1 ‘ uu ' “
bausted. 1 *-«•• — •-
Gen. Carvajai was organixiog an expedi* »g««nem.
lion to attack Puebla. Daniel O Brian.
It was reported that Minister McLane
was to leave lor tlic interior for the pur;M)se
ol having an interview with (Jen. Mira.
con versa tic
ubject ot hi
s» oi house,
A Vet sifted Paiaphnueof the Lord's Pray
Th# fullowln* paraphra** of ths • l' rt '
has Uvn srt to music In KiigUnii, and i> ha' 11,
annul Htorra j ** *■ lJ » bmi w* hav» s»er *«u lu *
over titty win- ' bmruags—thars Is nothin* vraotin* auJ nolln
H*nt—as usual, rrduudant.
-table thought J Our Itaavsely Fathrr, b*«r
t party in Iowa
ose who have ,
privileged I
A llallooutst killed.
New Yore. Mey 11.—Conner, the »ero-
teu 1, was killed Yesterday, by tailing with
1 coltapstJ balioou.
ong—ii he fc
, ye*, nia'eiu," we.
Icei a good deal
cemly engaging in
d asked him how
t home, Ate.
piy
I
the lamily |
Thy klugdum coiu»; Thy p-rL- l «i
lu Mtrib. as h**v«n, 1st alt fulfill •
<ilt* this -lay's tm4 that *« may II
K-trziva nut sics as »# Ibrgtvsi
lioip us tcuiptailon to wtth*tan<t.
Frosa svil sltMld us by Tby bead
Ocz Railroad.—It will be gratifying
the people oi the county to learn that t
success ot the Troy Railroad project,
| Tiro ladies hi
the inl.-rmation
! their husbands.
iips, nnd coi
L'AuUes TnUU. 1
placed beyond doubt.
The survey ol ibo route will be had just *0
soon an an engineer can be procured, and
our Columbus triend* may Icei assured that
they will gam * vast amount ol trade which
they could not ol Iter wise
A Strono Care.— 1 Tho effect ol tbo mr
feeling* on the body ia wonderful.
e !>■ j enthusiastic admirer of lleenan, in this <
An exchange paper, announcing the became m excited in hia champion a be
• •r'r n r\ w r\- -»• ib “I XsSTSwS^ISi’Snw
1 .-Tn
I -■*«
, though a bank director, it
upou (is j generally belroved, diej
. utucrtsalijr tvsprcttd."
. . ........ ... the morning
Cbriatisu and j shorked to discover that hr t ad
1 eye.-—Detroit Advertiser, May 2.