Newspaper Page Text
The Dio is Call*
The groat atruggle la oVor anti our
wotst fears aro rcnUzod. Abraham
Lincoln, the aoctioiial cundiduto, who
wui nominated and supported to a largo
oxtont boonuso of Ida hostility to the
Institution! of theSouth, has been elect
ed by a fair majority. Tho present in*
tent ions aro that be will surely get 168
totes, and possibly 10#; whereas 152
would elect him.
And now this stale of clrcuinstancer,
for which tho great mass of the people
r jt.rtlu "t : in to a™ nliuost entirely unprepared, sud-
msoovint will be’ mJ&l to those denly bursts Upon them, and demands
Iuy'I'Tdw'i n ifi l l.
I Editor and Proprietor.
f Subscription.
.j-- n ce. P oP ft0n P n '» * * n an
the find of_th. Year, s. 4 . J #0 ,
, J"dM»e f n'*wm be'indericd at the
r.. T„i. r.irescb Oubseguoat Insertion.
■ Vo’ . TI.r™ Monti,., . , : #3 00
six Months, .t, I . ; *.
J ti T'volvo Mnjjtlifli h.*
I lil'Brtil
LWlsatwsorHtoottJto,
f." nf mure than flvo lines charged
‘.xfarrinqt* ’and Death*, not ex-
: h« W»f* >!
nt their hands on immediato solution of
a most difficult political problem and
one that will probably forever fix the
•-- ,r. ... . destiny of nil this fair land of ours.—
lead l»“ tliess. no- i T>‘« Idea ol l.ineoln's olcction, has been
lfseso»P*niJ with n rvsponulhlo name, frequently talked about It in true, but
| they will ho published with ploasure. j t j lft8 n | W|l y B Beem(H l to be at vague dls-
The Law of Ptownpapors. tunco with its blddcolindeformities, and
Subirrlbor* who do hot ulvo oxpr-iss no J lnts rather existed at a creature of tho
7 th. eontrnry.nroronijidcnMUs Wishing | lunB | ||ft j lo? , tUon M ono tlmt could pot-
Ilf subscribers order the dlsoontlnunm^e J *>ibly have a realization in the prnctlcnl
n Ti* wwspspors thtf publisher u»y cun tin- working of our Go. ernment,
thorn ant | But hard ns It may bo to appreciate
o the office to which they • the imtoful truth, yet It is a fact, and
lirwted. they nre JuJd fljjj} I with uniniittakcnhlo stoamness it stares
L hsro settled the bills I
new enterprise.
[Iff. Ti
Exclusive Dealer in
iOCKERT, CHINA,
—AND— . ..
■1’ssWare.
ALSO,
ikin® Glasses & Plated Ware
Broad St, Dome, Ga.
WBflS-
!r,K-kery »»*l
.1 Ware, will'
kiiiUntW lt.pt 1
und including
and Dinner
jfroin the low-
I priced cheap
*"i, to the finest
. Also Glass Ware, In. nil its various
and qualities, for table and culinary
|splendid sMorlmstilof Fine Mirrors.
|1m s good supply nf Plated Ware, Inelud*
ICastors, Spoons, Sngar-Tongo, Cuke and
f er Knives, Ao., Ac.
e subscriber will koep a larger stock of
.leery and Glass Ware, than nns hitherto
b kept by alt the Morohentsof llorao—tho
kit stock in Cherokee- Ga., and by buying
Lrger quantities, he will get them cheaper,
e able to sell lower than tho former
e public are respectfully Invited to call
t «tore, first door above MeClung's, and
Inine Goods and price*,
mtrlly. WM. T. KEWMAN.
K B. EVES,
MANUFACTURER OF
Ind Dealer Extensively in
of all Styles. .
ntiiy, Quality ami Pricet Challenged,
, THE FARMERS
I UK toil brcxsthlns mr ' lorgs ns-
. sortmnntof Planfatloit ‘llrlulrts, Ooltsrs,
ochiag and Team Goar complete,-at the
[honest Possible Oash Prices,
nd o’jqr mad* tq prder, and repaired
otic*. Mr stock. will bear Inspcc-
i and seflbefiire purohasiug.
NEW
■IRM
WORE & DUNNAH00,
rROCERS!
A full Assortment of'
FAMILY SUPPLIES,
.n.UDINO Flour, Men)/.Sugar of nil
’nds, Coffee, Duller, Eggs, Fish of dlf-
t kinds, Dried Fruits, pad Preserved
* ' All kinds of Nrtts, Candios, Cigars;
\ Fine Liquors, Ac., Ac.
ih it Distinctly Understood thnt
/e will Sell qh'Credit to
p resnonsible men, who nro
I the habit of paying at the
is agreed upon. /-
swill duplicate upon time to promnl
|| D gmon, any eosh purchase made l»
e uj a call and^satisfy yourselves as to
»nd prices,
>»ly.] MOORE A DUNNAIWO.
HOWARD ASSOCIATION,
PHILADELPHIA;
Nnevolent Institution established by speck
Endowment; for tho Relief of the Sick
i^Distrcided, afilicted with Vlrnlefat and
i-P'oeralc Diseases, and’espoeially' for the
VDra. Dhowm* of the Sexual Organs.
IEDICAL advice given gratis, by the i
jmg Surgeon, to all who apply by 1
f Hh a doscriptlott of their coimitit .,
°««upatlon, habits of life; Ae.f) anil lij
■r. of ® xtrora o poverty, Medicines furnish-
|hee of charge. • ^ '
Tdoable roports on Spcrmatorrhooa, and
^VIJ«f ea,,0 * o ^ the Soxiiul Organs, and on
RBMBDIES employed in tho Dis-
i,.n7 80 11 ^ tho aifiI/J^eii',,ia. sealed lot-
L, Vo l 0 I ,os > of charge. Two or threo
|K s J or postage will b« accentablo.
lin u ' DR * 8KILLEK ‘ItOUGIITON,
t,V 1 8 ®J“ , Ro o n, Howard Assoclhtlon, No. 2
rf, ol *i Stroot,'Philadelphia, Pa. By
l cr oftho Directors. ,) " • : ,
, t EZRA D. HEARTWELL, Pj-esrt
’• FA "icnir,p, Boe’ty. , , fobStrily.
u« in the fare. Tho isnuo is U|H)D us and
wd have got (o moot It, Every man In
Georgia jias got a solemn duty to per
form und it is one that by its immense
magnitude makes smnll all the other
acts of Ills life. IITlaf shall be done? Is
now the question of awful import tlmt
hangs opon the mind of overy thought
ful man! Various plans for relief have
already been proposed and they each
have their advocates >yho ply thom-
selvc« with great seal and earnestness.
Discussion, Is altogether right and orop-
por, and Is probably the most effedtual
method of bringing out tho truth and
correct principles, Out there is ono thing
that should always actuate men in the
discussion of any subject if they would
bo profited that they should bo as will
ing to reccivo truth as to impart it. Our
relations to the gencral'government are
vory complicated and few men can at a
glance tuko in all its various barings
and dependencies and it may ho that a
course of conduct supposed to be adtni-
tubly adapted to our present exigences
would bo proved to be entirely imprac
tical because ol tho want of some nec-
sossary element tlmt had been over
looked. Let us then not bo rash or in
considerate but calm cool and deliber
ate and in a free and friendly manner
counsel with one another in regard to
theso momentous questions before
The recommendation tlmt has airoad-
y l>oen made, that a Nlnto Convention
should l>e called immediately, wo most
fully appfovo and |wpp tho Legislature
wiljat once issuo a call lor delegates from
every county. Wo would suggest tho
Uumbor of delegates bo the same ns the
No. of Senators & Rcprcsentivcs in tlie
Legislature. Lot such uien’as Joseph
Heury Lumpkin. Olios.'J. McDonald.
Alex. l[.‘Stephens, Wm/LaiW, 'Robb.
Toombs, Tlersch'el V. Johnson, llines
Holt, Ilirain Warner* and other men
•of ox)>crienco and wisdom compose this
Convention and the people will ho al
most sure to ratify their notion whatov.-
it may be. ■
Things lie Cnn't Do.
Had 'ns he may ho aud bitterly hostile
he may bo to our institutions, there
e many important things Lincoln can
not do. As the Congress now stand*,
there is a majority of eight against him
in the Senate, and, if the recent tele
graph reports are corroot, twouty throe
In the House. It will bo rcniemberod
that till tlie appointments, of Cabinet
officers, Ministers to foreign Courts,
Consuls, Custom House officers, and
all otltdr offices 6f any considerable
trust or profit in the United States
irnvQ to be filled “iy, and with the advice
q/ the fkmt*x" 'file President rccom-
monds men for all these various places
but their oppointuit?ut is not complete
until confirmed by the Scnato.
The Black Kopubllcims will not bo
ablo, of their own strength, to carry a
single hity through either jlouso of the
next Congress and it is thought by
some, that in less than a year, even if
LInobln should bo allowed to go on
)vitli lus Administration thnt his party
would bo torn to pieces by its own in
herent fanaticism und corruptions.—
But yet if may be better to socedo than
to suffer the'disgrace of a Black Repub
lican Rule. If Goorgia so decides in
her sovereign capacity wo Bhall go with
her, heart Add hand.
Kerosine .OU and Lamps
‘• the best quality, for bale
cheap by . ’
TURNLBY, No. 3 OkoicaJIouso
Otis,
I WK„i Roro *? n .9/ Maohino Lard, Tanner
|i,i. Oamphene <md Burning
FARELL a Y^ISER.
” * [communicated.
NOTICE.
All then, without distinction of party
who are opposed to Abolition domina*
tion, and in favor of resisting the same
in sUcli tnantior as tho sovereignty of
Georgia may order and diroct, are re
quested to rnoet at the City Hall in
Rome on Monday, tlur 12lh Inst., at 2
o'clock to consider what oourso,interest
duty and patriotism require them to
pursuo ns good citizen* and true Southerneri.
Dr. w/V. Wall..""
It is with.iviin me chroniclo the sud
den dentil of Dr. Wall. On yesterday
he was in fine health and buoyant in
spirit. None bid fairer to live than lie.
Yestorday about 7 o’clook; P. M., lie
was suddenly died with appoplexy
or disease of tho heart.—Calhoun Itcjia-
ter qflthinet,.
§6TWe are requested to publisli tho
following Ticket for Mayor and conn-
oilmen.
FOR MAYOR
DR. T. J. WORD.
FOR COUNCII.MEN
1*/ IPart/—-FRANK A VUE.
J. C. PEMBERTON.
2d IIW—O. B. EVE.
A. J. PITNER.
3d BW-WM. RAMEY.
JOHN R. FREEMAN.
Political Complexion of Congress.
Tlie next Semite will be composed
thus:
DEMOCRATES AND CONSERVATIVES.
15 Southern States 30
Mr. Bright, of Ihd., I
Mr. Rice, of Minn. 1
Mr. Thompson, of N. .T. 1
Mr. Lathurn, of Cal. 1
►.
n
B
!
w
S
r
12t
851
110
107
275
330
20
548
150
348
115
203
"aifi
320
410
on
070
00
501
95
305
414
255
289
011
321
038.
730
37
153
79
288
51
273
..*«*•
10
100
57
108
251
300
2111
270
07
302
2U-
4U.
400
1000
500
802
285
375
"53
GOD
1158
405
802
332
807
1051
454
1114
3G2
550
3CG
431
**63
535
405
386
300
434
20
211
310
522
540
'
244
604
384
723
00
547
103
340
50
127
"***3
242
185
73
445
Total
imwiTION—— REI'UUI.ICANS.
Pennsylvania and Indiana will send
Republicans in the place of Messrs. Big
ler and Fitch, and hence we put 'them
down, thougli their successors have not
yet been elected. 1 Mr. Dougins position
is such tlint lie may or may dot not With
the South and henco we class him with
neither. If Dr. Gwln is re-elected, the
Democrats and conservatives will have
35 instead of 34, and if ho is dufented,
it will stand thust
Democrats and Conservatives 34
Republicans 31
Mr. Douglas 1
In nil probability Kansas will bo ad
mitted during the approaching session
of this Congress or the first session o!'
ext, which
the i
almost tie.—Kr.
\ will make the Senate
Taking tub Veil.—Fifty-fivo young
ladios took tlie white veil on tlie 1st ult.,
at tho convent of tlie sisters of Notre
Dame. Milwnuki, Wisconsin, uud uigii-
ten the block veii otf the 8th, in tin
same establishment.
Monti.E and Onto RailroaD.—'The Murray
cars on this rond are now running Milton
through to Verona, a distance of about Madison
tixteeu miles above Okalona—two linn* Morghn
drtwl and seventy-seven miles nbovo Newton'
Mobile. Tho first train from tlint
point reached Mobile Mdnday.
Till Origin;—Torchlight processions
were designed more than two thousand
yours ago. Hce 1 Maceiiboc#, iv. 22, wtier-
in ttcoOunt'isglveh of tlie high priest Ja
son who escorted King Aiitioehus into
Jertisalum “with torchlight nhcl great
shout-Dig." Jason lived in the fourth
century before Christ.
To Whom it Concern*• -
AH indebted tb us must pay iram^di-
afoly ’or ho fiu^d. * Jones, Jb, Scott.
Nov. 10,1800!
..Ttii'VjeTB IX Ga.—Of tho 44 oounties
lieard from the yoto stands ; for Bell
20,483; for Brockinridgo i8,803 and
for Douglas 0,918.
U3F Tlie Prosbyterinu Sabbath School
will liold its Anniver»wy noxt Sabbnth
afternoon at tliroo o’cjocki ill the Pres,
bytorian ChUroh. 'Exorcises—i^hort .ad*
r dye»s'and bihging.^Uaio i-qspeciruliy.in
vitod tpatMnd# jgiW-
Goudo.v Co. Yoni;—Boll 481—Breck,
874—Doug. 97. '
IQhTho Constitution of South .Carol!
na provides that K tho Goyornor leaves
the State he vacates his office. Gov.
Gist gave tills as the reason forjiot visit*
lug Alabama wuen invited a few weeks
since,
*
Early
Elbert
Fayetto.
Fulton
Fannin
Floyd
Franklin
Forsyth
Glynn
Gordon
Gilmer
Gwinnett
Greene
Glascock
Houston
Harris
Heard ......
Henry ......
Haralson
Hall
I label sham
Hart
Hancock
Irwin
.Johnson
Jackson
Jones
Jasper
Jefferson
Liberty
\uurens
.own tics
I.ee
Lumpkin
Lincoln
Montg’ry
McIntosh
Mitchell
Muscogco
Macon
Marlon
Miller
Moliroo
750
"481 "«T4
222 228
400 335
305 577
347 U15 1101
118 05*
280 850 870
" 84&,
740
101
884
002
... 322
... 30
07 431
...... 070 1051
581 114 151 020 289
14 51 125 7 289
544
40
448
137
188
A Great KxuorV Movement.— 1 The
ports from tho port of New York for the
past week, are valued at more than
three million six'hundred thousand dollar*—.
larger, by neatly a million, than any
previous week in the history of our
commerce. Nearly or quite one-hnlf of
this great valub was made up of bread-
stuffs, nnd included tlie following quan
tities of domestic produce: 7.00G hales
cotton, 90,200 barrels flour, 900,000 bu
shels wheat, 845,000 pounds cheese, .43,-
240 gnllnns sperm oil, 13,000 barrels ros
in, JL278 hogsheads and cases toliuceo,
333,000 pounds manufactured. tohnoco,
318,000 poutfds tallow, 4,200 bale# hop#.
Dixie.—Tlio'most fumops thing now
in America is “Dixie." The forest# of
Arostook and tho gulches of California
aro equally familiar with-its jingle; by
the shores of tho Chesapeake, nnd by
tlie pictured reeks of Ixiko Superior it
Epundeth. An amusing anecdote is
told which happened at tho St. Louis
tieatre:
The orehestra played “Dixie" when
the curtain rose und the pluv bogan.r-
But the audience would not listen. The
cry of “Dixio" ran through the house
from pit to gallery, completely drown
ing the voice of the actor. Ho made
several ineffectual attempt# to bo hoard
and left tlie stage. The old manager
appeared, flushed with anger, and in an.
exoited voice exclnimed: “Gontlqraon,
what moans all this ill mannered confu
sion ? What do you want f" Immedi
ately a hundred voicescriod out 'Dixie.'
“Well; you can'thave it. "You’vo.had:
•Dixie' once tonight;* and' ymi’ff haye
•Dixie’ no more." He retired’ to the
green-room, arid tho notOj- again appear
ed. ButitaVasno use. A deafening
shout for “DixiO" mot him from tho
audienco, and, after stammering and
stuttering for a few moments, he left
tho Stage. Tho curtain dropped nnd
tho orchestra played “Dixio," and tlie
play progressed without further inter
ruption.
Tub Gi.utof Avw.es.—Magnified! tap-
pies—full pippins, pound sweets, grobii:
ing, and otlier lino viuietics, are selling
from the orchards;-tip‘the river, utfcoui
twenty to twenly-fivo cents per bushel,
on tho trees, and good* eidor may be
had in tho country for one dollar per
barrel of thirty-six gallons. Never,
within the memory of that stereotyped
stand-by, tho senior inhabitant, has
there been such an apple year in tho
North ns this prolific 1800. Cider brandy
is offered in New Jersey at from 60 to
62J ots. a gallon. The State lightning
was never so oheftp before.—N. Y. Dag
Book.
I’lercQ
Pulaski
Pike
Polk
Paulding
Pickens
Putnam
Qnitinnn
Randolph
Hubun
Richmond
Schley
Stewart
Sumter
Spalding
Scijvon
Thomas
Telfair
TatnpUW
Terrell
Taylor
Talbot
Troup
Towns
Twiggs
Taliurerro
Uiwon
Union.
Wui'O
Wayne
Wilcox .
Worth.
Webster
Walker
Whitfield
White
Walton
Wilkinson
Wusb’gtpn
Wniren
Wilkes
17
208
152
200
. 384
878
214
235
U 183
298
"303
431
412
07
320 307
420
141
232 1
325
134 c
ioa
262
229
222.
85(1
649
170
3(i
105 188
222
270
72
29
i75
80
.127
98
358
785
700
101 853.
747
401
308
..... 364
432
44
038
404
57 058 .
562
620
OSS
315
706
......
236
470
208
400
Ml"
102
142 344
244
810
304
351 714
700
307
241
188 372
487
......
35
185
159
410
- $ai
300
060
345
48 384
302
260
800
......
75
750
285
375
185
213
504
59*7*
57 480
541
840
m
1052 40
557
825
403
1052 1110
894
214
228
"eoi
"380
580
131 011
445
508
517
515
240
298
398
522
137
203
—*“IL
105
800
;i«7
227
69 381
230
301
803
22 321
383
505
400
89 57|
89?
404
329
25
330
163
339
173
9
220 189
218
558
200
5.4
750
r.--t-
45
229
20
180
,T- -,
10
200
114
277
281
210
497
854
582
805
04
412
528
784
214
875
96 .368
G31
......
840
660
080
55
427 285
516
802
2(10
171 324
413
ExrflmvB Dtei’.xrtment. V *
•Columbia, »S. O'., Nov. 5,1800. J
Gentlemen q/ the Senate,
and House qf Jlcprescntativetx
Tho Act of Congress, passed In tlie
year 1840, enacts tlmt tho Electors of
Prosldent nml Vico President shall lie
unpointed an th6 . Tuesday next nfter
the first»,Monduy of tho month of No
vember, of the year in which tliny nre
to be appointed. The annual meeting
of tho Legislature of South Carolina,
by a constitutional provision, will not
take placo until the fourth Monday in
November instant. I have considered
it my duty, under tlie authority confer
red upon mo, to convene the Legislature
on extraordinary occasions, to convene
you that you may, on to-morrow, ap
point tho number of Electors of 1'resi-
deut and Vice President to which this
State is entitled.
Under ordinary circumstances your
«lnty could bo soon discharged by* tho
ejection of electors representing tlie
choice of the people of tliofttnte, but in
view of the threatening aspect of af
fair#, and the strong probability of tho
election to tho Presidency of a sectional
candidate, by a party committed to tlie
suppqi t of measure# which, if onri led
out will inevitably destroy our equality
in the Union, and ultimately reduce
the Southern States to mere -provinces
of u consolidated despotism, to be gov
erned by a Hxod majority in Congres
hostile to our institution#, nnd fatally
bent upon our ruin, l would respectful
ly suggest tlmt tlie Legislature remain
111 session, and take such uotion ns will
irepore the Stato for any emergency
i hat may arise.
That an exposition of tho will of tho
. sople may beobtainod on a question
evolving such inomontus consequences
I would earnestly recommend thnt In
the oventof Abraham Lincoln's elec
tion to tho Presidency, a Convention of
tlie'pcnplc of this State he immediately
called, to consider and determine for
thomsolvcs tho mode und measure of
redress, My own opinion's of what the
Convention should do, are of little ’mo
ment; but believing that tlie time aas
arrived, wltcn every one, howover hum-
blq lie may be, should oxprq#* Jiis opin
ions in unmistakable language, I am
constrained to say that the only altern
ative left, In my judgment, is tlie seces
sion of tho State of South Carolina
from tlie Federal Union. Tito State
has, with groat unanimity, deolnrod thnt
she has the right, peaceably, to secede,
und no power on earth caa rightfully
prevent it.
If in tho exercise of arbitrary power
id.forgetjul of ,tUo,. lessons of * *
o Government.oldhe United
iould attempt coercion. It will
ir solemn duty to meet foree l
id whatever may be the decision w « um.
m von tion, repreieuting the Sovereign-
of the State, nre amenable to nooarth-.
Iv fi ibtihnl, it shall during the remain-
Ter of my ndthinistration, ho curried
o ns to place tlie whole military foroo
f the State in a position to be used nt
he shortest notice nnd with the greatest
ffieioncy, Every man in the .State be-
w&Ori tlie ages of eighteen and fovty-
ive, should bo well armed with tho
nost efficient weapons oi modern war-
ire, nml all tlie nvnilable moans of the
tnto used, fpr that purpose. .
In ndditlon to tins general prepare-
ion.T would also recommend thatnlie
orvlces orteti thousand men be imme-
Iiately accepted; that they bo orgnniz-
d nnd drilled by officers chosen by
hcinsdlycs, ami hold themselves in
eudlhcss to be called on upon tlieslior-
ost notice. With tills preparation for
l- t ‘ ronl ‘b* New York Herald of Nov. 4th.
Igh 1MV POP tho DUunioti la* the Noath-Frogrnmme
of,n Boailicrn Confederacy...
Our raulers will hnvo seen, from our
telegraphic advices of :the other day ! ,
tlmt at Wellington ‘Miihre is no doubt
that • tlie President lms Imcomo thor
oughly alarmedthat •‘'htthfcrttr h4
lifts trusted that, however threatHiliiii
tho portonts might boj tlie crisis Wr*ih1
not occur until after the expiration of
his -t«rn>;” but' that- Secretary*Cobb;
who returned some dnys omi from Oeor-
gim haa disturbed even this consolaiinh
by tbd assurnnco.thnt Hint .Stale is pre
pared to go with • South t’amlhtft^ nnd
withdraw.hereelf^-.from tho Union upon
the elootion of Lincoln ; and' (hat the
Secretary* with the secession of Georgia,
will be ootnttolUd to withdrew from the
Cabinet and ao homo. • ,
Tho prevailing tone nnd temper of
tlioSouthorn j>oiitical journal# sinee the
recent elections in Pennii)*lvRnhi,' Ohio
and Indiana, had prepared - us fouthls
ppiui-officinl informationi of life ♦same
import;, and as wb'have now overy rea
son to apprehend thatithp recession
soy oral o f the .Stiutliorn Stateft • with ft.
low dose upon the heel* of Lineohy’s
r _ oloction, tho question recurs, what is Uie ;
will give her A naval supremacy along Pregrnramo of tlio leador# of this dlsun*
tho whole const of tho new. Republic ion movementT From intelligent-jjMi
that.will" lay ovevy strip of it* iuiuvom* at
the foot of tlie Briiisli lion.
Extinct DOm n Lei
Moore, ol ItiitoiL
Difficultios of Disunion.
Among all the ’.njiirjos complained,of
by the South to justify disunion not on*
r\f than will be redressed or mitigated bg It**
event. •
1. That ono which now, fur the fiiat
tiuio in tiiolUstpry of.tho Government,
isdeuutmlcd. namely, that Oongrem. shall
/him a slave code for the Territorial, will
never bo licurd of ln.thonow Hopublic;
for no more slave territory', nor territory
of ntiy kind, will be added to I ho.Sou th
em Hopublic. All holies in Central
America will porisb, if not by otnigra#
tion thither and settlement of tHo . op
ponents of slavery, yet by, tho destitu
tion cf maritino strongtli in the-new
UcpuiiliQ; and,.if they perish by nub
tlierof these, tlicy will bo 'CiusUpd bo-
neuth the univerrul British proteothmito
bo extended by England alike to Cen-
tinl America and,our. Soil them Repub
lic. All hopes of Culm will vunUh, nnd
a Spanish squadron belween tho More
and tho Belize, will.. I four* appear a
much' matfi fotniiduble armument than
now it seems. On theuowniall of,Span
ish power in this hemisphere thoQueou
of the AutUlos will pass under tho yoko
of England, und this western Gibraltar
2. The rmUtion of fugitive slaves. Tills
will cease with the right to .demand Jt.
Great Britain receive# with o,.en arm#
all who reaoh. Canada. All othor na
tion# udopt the same rulo, Aod the.
United States liavo ever submitted to
tills universal law. Tim South bus y iol-
tied to it in silence, and after dissolution
will have neith'er. strength »ior compact
tocnforcoor Insist ,uiioh it. . Fanatb
cism, always most zealous when most
opposed, will be upon Ut*r long border
of fifteen huudrccf miles with the promt
iso of a free liome to every slave, who
cun put foot on her soil.; Within nnd
along all that border^ where npyri the,
•South has tliousnnds of friends, whose
re#peo\,fortho Con#tltution and gcqd
faith drlye hack tho fugitive slave and
givo such raidsmen as Joliu Brown nei
ther a resting place nor . a hiding, place
lYpiutlio v«uglance .of .the, law, tho
counsels of the fanatiq alone, will bo
beard and alone bebcedod. The. South
ern Republic will not go to war Lo
calise the Northern Republic shall, like
Canudt^ open ariiw to receive tlie
fugitive slave. ''
3. ’ The agitation of the question qf slaverg.'
Will that bo hushed in our HputhOrh
Republic? It is Vory certain that'un
less wo change our own conduct, It will
lie none the less agitated. When, have
the majority of our political orators
censed to make that theitf otomql and
iioverbndffig’tMenio of aigcussionf ’ In
and out of Congress wo have had odr
full share of tUU sin; It has been for
the cotmtprcial intere#ts of the ritato
^lXgency ^ ™ 1,icscut l )oIitl 'cal
Jf(solved, thnt wo respectfully suggest
to, the Legislature to uko immediato'*'*
oiis to organize and arm tho forces of
io,.H|atQ........ .3 . - i„ j -
,i?r«>/mf,.TJmt copies of Hie foregoing
resolutions bo seiit without delay to
our Senator mid Kopre.-ontativcH in tho
Gonerei Assembly of tho State, who aro
hereby.requested to lay thernlieforo tho
^ouseef whioh they are respectively
lembers. "..ttniu i ; . ; *
dsed Thii aftornoon on GrpeiioC Mon-
ayawte
Wferend(lre»s°d by several speakcf^, nni
vnto sources we understand that this
nrugrenime will bo:—First, tlio condi
tional Hooession of Mouth Ciirulittu, liy
not of her new- Legislature, which is to
meet in Columbia on tho day of tho
Presidential election to olootdiet PriwI-
dontinl: electors, and do< such Atiier
things as the crisis nnd “the withty of tire.
State may require." Seooudly,' time'
uuder exulting' legislative instruct ions,
the Governor of Alabama, on satisfacto-
ry..infownaUen of Lincoln’s electibn,
Will Issue ibis proclamation culling for
the eloctionof a State Convention to de
termine tlie question for tlmt StatA of
submission or secession; and - tlmt tlie
Governor of Mb»ls#is#i)fipi will, in a#im-
ilar manner, bring her people directly
to tbesameiftsue. r . r
Jn- tlie next place,
bolloVcd tlmt-
Tub Rei.iuio.n or Payino.Debts.—One
of tho Religious papers lms the following
strong remarks;
Men winy sophisticate ns they please.
They can never make It ^ight, arid all
tho bankrupt laws in the universe can
not make it right for them not to ’ puy
their debts. There'i# a Ain in tjiis neg
lect ns clear and deserving of church
discipline as ih stealing or fal#o swear
ing. He Who violates his, promise tp
pay, or withholds payment of u cToht
when it is Iri his power to mrct Ills en
gagement, ought to hq riiadb to feel
tlmt in the sight of nil hotf'est n^en he
is a swindler. Religion may be a very
comfortable cloak under which , to
hide, but 1f religion does not make
a man deal justly, it is not worth hav
ing.
AkjfGpd bus written op tho jlowqrs
that sweeten tho i>ir—on tlie breezq that
rocks tho flowers upon, the stem—upon
tho rain drew that reiroshes the sprig
of tnoss thut lifts its heud in. the dcsort
—qpou Ita deep Chambers, upon every
penciled sheet that sleeps in the qaY@rii
of the deep, not loss than . upon. the
mighty sun that warms and oheers
millions of creatures tyhich lire in
its light — upon all his works, bq
lms written—“None Ryeth for him
self."
Resignation is a rare graco among offi
cial#..
liy, mid' with the knowledge tlmt we
are contending for tho sai'oty of our
liomcsund firesides, wo can confidently
appeal to tho. Disposer of all human
events and safely trust our causein His
koeplng. WM. II. GIST’.
A Northern View of the Matter.
•Brant/’ a Northern correspondent
of the New Haven Courier, la a letter
to that paper from Montgomeryi Ala.,
takos tho following view of white and
black slavery:
1 find no difficulty in expressing my
self frankly, both politically Wnd social
ly. I do it fearlessly," without receiving
any abuse, though I assure those who
may rend this letter tlmt I am no aboli-
tiouist, but ono prepossessed In fitvor of
tho South nnd its ;>ceiiliar institutions.
I would not object to being proprietor
of a half dozon smurt negroes I could
^iick out at my hotel. ThT«r excitement
about slavery i# more than hulf huniimg;
there i# as much slavery at tlio Norlli
an at tho South. It is legulizbd slaVcry,
too. Tho working population' of Low
oil, and girls at tlmt, are slares 'iti tlie
strictest sense of the word; a# compared
with tho slaves of the South. Tho ne
gro has more imvildges than they, more
time to himself, and is as much respect
ed by tho community na those employ
ed in tho Factories at the North. One
hostile stigma of a ‘‘factory *girl/' the
other of “hUvvo." One is tW.slnvory of
liberty, tlie other tlie liberty of sldvfefy.
1 ray this in all -opmlcr tuul honesty ; I
say it from a sense of justloo to both.—
I believe, from what I have seen of sla
very on soveral plantations and at the
hotols, tlmt the slave is the happier of
tho two;. there are exceptions, of course
t6 all rules. Tlio. overseers of the* facto
ry girl und the slnvo occupy’ the samo
position in . society in - their different
iosalities;. some ure human'and other#
rbusive; some are men, And some are
beasts. > ■•••; ’" i '
many years the escape valve of tlie No£
them nnd Southern gas manufactories,
more to make capital at home than to
do gOod any whore. Tho only result
has been tho ineulcntion of a disastrous
hatred between'tlio renders bf those op-
posing'spocches—the humblo and uni
formed voters at homo.
■ Now whon a line shall bo drftwn around
the slarcholding Ropfthlic, which wilt
excludo Ml otlier people from lawful
counsel on the suqject* of slavery, ’ is
there any prospect that agitation will
cease? Will tho advocates Tor any ex
treme proposition on Tho subject of sla
very be qulett. Has It not alwayd boou
characteristic of thorn to push their
opinions regardless of opposition among
tlio modLrateof their felluw-'citizbnrf?—
if you stop short of their views' and fo-
fuso to go with them in'thelf ftilHcrigtU
you aro donounccdluimcdiutciy as uh-
sound on slavery. * l
And now, sir, Ufter tho Soutliorn' Re
public shall toe estuhU#li3Hwill' tlio A«l-
VQcnto for opening the feiave' tvadu ho
quiet undor the idea tlint tlffi area'; or
Hlavory will be then fixed, wlillo so ma
ny millions of acres of cotton land still
remain forest ? NVMl lie oehso to agi
tate'tho question, t Rough tho pricos of
tlmt great staple.may lie low, And tb$,
supply excessive, so long us there shall
uo any men without slaves / Will tho
slavolos# laborer in tile Smith, taught
tlmt white men cannot labor in a .South
ern Min 1 ,- bo certain that onr potts shall'
remain closed against the importation
of Africans, nnd so pmervc‘.thc high; r -
ce# of sluvo*, while ono freemnn among
us owhs 100, and 100 frpemah ainong'us
own not oqc iipiece? Tltink you that'
oi; tho question of opbnhig this inino"ot
promised wealth the two, ehtssefe will not
bo arrayed In opposition ? Tlio 6n’o to
preserve tlie value* of it's ' property' and
the country frdm being AnTcanizml;
and tho other to become wealthy ns Its
iitML'Iibor, though the country ,siiall he
Afrieanizotl /• And’ do you doubt which
of;tlie parties will Curry riro day ? For
remember that no small iiuniber bfthe;
influential people of the South liavo
boon-for’severa I years arguing that there
4s more sin (if sin. there be .at all in
slavery) lit 'holding tb bondago tutored!
' irilixed African# than 'in''r&luo-
With tills disunion movement thus
ckgorii Mayor
f njddresj"
t *_i. .Tudrcssltog an
°t c >.Tueps on Johnsons
’L"*’* *
Tien ton, N. J., Nov. 7—Ferry (Dem)
was elected to Congress in placo of l’oh-
niugton, (Rep.) . . :..
-ELECTION NEWS.
STATfej 1 SOUTH 1 OF TENN ESS E E.
Wariiinuton, Noy. 7, a.iii.—It is be-
liovckl hero tliat all? tlio States south of
TotmcsKco have gone for Breckinridge.
• - MLSSOURL ’
Upnguu 8,200 j nml J- ” 1
Kcnltcring rolurns
ions ol tlio Slnln inti
ICIIICiAX,
Dbtsoit, Jiov.7, n. m.—This Slftto ls
cluimml bv the ltcnublicuiis by about
25,000 msjorily.
; ■FBBTH.prt’Mwar Congrcjsm.n liavo
j CuARunra^ N. (t, Nov. 7,ia. m.*-Tlin
Central,Hailmui,train lias just , nrrivsil
Carolina and bar scoading associatos; ’ KtNTUCKY.
nml thnt thus aating in conoart thay
will establish the nucleus or a .Southern
confederacy .on or.berora the day of
Lincoln’s inauguration. The President
cannot inlerfero until some overt act of
nullification of the federal lairs or coni*
jinet shall have been committed, ami,
when committed, the intervention of
the federal government must take tlio
form of military movement to suppress
pen rebellion. Any, movement of
tort wa know would, from tho Hist:
collision of arms; bring all Die remain
ing,Southern States,' except, porhaps,
Delaware, Maryland and- Missouri, to
the rescue of tlio seceding,coalition.-
i INDIANA,
niidoivL. _ . . .
ing to huniliigo^iu a land of eliri'sthmi-
ty tiii.l eivilimtion, tliu uhtaugUt heath:
on nnd rude* barbiuian. Avalfco, tho
love of . indolence, anil tho agraribbs'
pica will prevail against the wise coun-i
soles of the few ; and tho pulpit oven
will become fervid under popular favor,
nnd reproduce the buried wnrb'ons'of
by-gone centuries td siimiort tlio popu-
|ur sentiment. '• ' " ''
Tlio Man who won't l*ay tl,o.Printer.
May lie bo shod witii. lightning and
compgjlo<j;.i|o wander over, gubpowe
tfiiy ho liavo tpro eyes, ami'a ehest-
iiut burr for,,nil eyo-atono.. - •
May every day of his life ho > more
despotic than,tlio, l)ny..of Algiers.
May, ho never ho peruiittod to
strengthened, tlio only sensible thin
which tho fedaral government couli
do would bo to give it up and recog
nise the sepamto nationality of thh
Southern confederation.
Wo loam," (oo, that it is. nxtonsive-
ly understood in tho South thnt ifi be
half af a Southern confederacy the par
ties concerned would be mire to com
mand thecOropcration of England and-
France. The argument is, that as a
war for ..tho subjugation ortho South
would Inevitably ,eo far unsettle tho
wliolo Southern'social, fabrio ns to ro-
sult in suspension of tho cotton culturo
during-tho conlinuanco .of i such war,
England and Franoo;. looking to tlieir
own intorosts, would-bo bompollcd in
tho oujset to interposo ns allies of tho
seooding States In. order to maintain
poaoo. Nor have we gny.doubt should
tlio occasion doinaml it, -tlint such
would be tho line of action on the. part
ot England-and Fmnoej for in ovbry
point of view it is their policy, tui com-
moralal, mavitiroe and manufacturing
Slates, to encountgo tho dissolution of
tills overshadowing Union. England
could afford (o .pay. soma millions of
nionoy.tQosktbllaU an Indopendont-con-
fodurasy of our Sotuhorn States, fupshe
could muke many millions of money by
fbaoperation. ,
Wo-dura say Uial undora Southern
confederated government, with tariff
regulations, putting our'Northern con*
federaey on, the soma footing with otlier
fbreign.Fowers, tho South would draw
from England and,Franco, .in miuiufacl
lured nrticlcs,.fifty millions or uioro per
hminm.tUan.bre now axpendtil in’Ynn-
keo, notions’ under, onr oxisting tiirilt*
laws, Thus we see that, the protection
Of tlio institution of slavery against the'
Ovorwbelmning andetiU increasing abo
lition power of, the North is nqt the‘oil-' '
hr Southern incentlro. to - disunion.—■
Cheap goods,. including all tho house
hold articles and agricultural necessities
of the Southern plantation, the estah-
llshmaot of » direct .Southern, trade
with Europe and-.South America! Ac.;
and (he establishment of homo mnnu-
•niotures, onter into this comprohonslvd
idea of an -independent, homogeneous
Southern Hopublic. -
It is not difficult to boliovo then,that
‘the Union is In danger. Hut wlint mo
wo to do f All that roinnins on the part
of our Northern oonsarvativos, opposed
to tho division of tho Union, is UrdO all
in their power to defeat Lincoln. With
this duly dUuhargod, whatever may.be
the issue, wo cam await tho oonsciiucn-
ccs witii comparative composure. '
twenty or thonty-fivo thousand.
ALABAMA.
Monii-e, Nov. 7.—Tills city nml coun
ty givo :Dougins a mnjori y of 219 over
Bell | and 322 over Bi'cckiiiridgp.
Wasiiixotox, Nov.: 7.—lit Vermont
Lincoln's mgjorlly will bo from 25,000
to • 30,000.
in Massachusetts his pluraBly will ho
near 70,000, •
In Indiana about 25,000.
In Ohio IVom 30,000 to 40,000.
VOTBHS NEW YORK AND PHILA
DELPHIA.
WaiiiiKutox, Nov. 7,'n;m.—In Now
York city, (at all. but six preolnts) tlie
'Union tloket received GO,078, and tlio
Republicans 31,084. „
. In PhUaUelpliiii tlio Republican ma
jority over all Is 873.
CONGRESSMEN- FROM NEW YORK
2$Ur York. Nov*»-7; Oi m,-—Messrs.
Wood, Kerrigan, Taylor, Caolirano,
Ward mid Do la pin i no, all i Democrats,
aro elected to Congres#,
RESIGNATION ( OF- JUDGE MA-
:
. CharuestosvNov,7,12:nn—TlieUnlt-
cd State#. District Judge resigned hi#
Offico .tliia luorniqg in open Court.
’ STATES GONE FOR LINCOLN.
J0^“\Vork1" #aidT,' v «irn »uu. tray.
and see how sweet it will toe'; work aha
soo how ohebrfhl it will be ; irork’, and
see how independent you will be; work'
and soe how nappy your family will ho; rfl003
work, and soe hour religious you will lio:
for before you know where yoli Hrc, in-
stead of-repining nf Providence; you
will And yourself'offering up ‘tbanka
lor all the numerous blessing# yoll eh-
» uuvec 4a pcruiittcu to kiss i
pretjy woman. nuaKi 1*
May-hp ,bq Rorpti. to,deafh by. Inxml-
Ing spljoql mwoa praatioing - thei»i'.first>
lessons in wusi^ without ike * privildgoi
of seeing RwjpriuoD tor#, nut :i Lm«, i,
May 240 . ni^itrmmv* Irot quarter
ranoa pyor liifl »tuipiaeU every iiiglit.
yhlsboots look, hi# gu *
gun lung firo
^ COItgll. .
811ERIDAN. Knowles,Jcwt oft: thViDwf* f -Mu’y hi#' MIe cltd of murrain, an
it WOOL IlttU,: Eug. t and Crenstradt>! the pigs destroy his garden.. t .
botweiti ,
was not thoouthoi:, as at firat .reported,
but tlie Ainuripaii-Agent.of thd Ameri
can Bunk Note Company, charged with
the porformauco of work; for the Empe
ror of Itulssitt. • • : .
John R. Tiiojirsox, Esq., former ed
itor of th.P • Southern Leterarg Messenger
nhd now. oditor .of the FicUl and Ficrsule,
intends delivering Uu Lecture on Lima
A. Poe in tho Southern citios during tho
coming winter,
“mis
and his soup si.iwioiid Wii!
• May Ins frii'ml i tin of 1%
mul nis cl\il«lvyn take the hAPjuufla
cougliV. ' . . s^, , „uo
* and
‘ .Mass' Meeting in Suyanuuli,
| Satann* au, : NOv. B^Tho largost me6t-
Ing that.ever assembled in tkia city i
now beingLpkL stfi ia
Capt. Jolin W. Anderson is President,
hbd UlmrUon ll.-Wnr is • SccrptAryi
'file-following resolutions were ntoTod
CJupt, F. 8. Bartow, and sedondiM by
- jl.- Henry R. Jackson, mid supported
ili anieloquent arid patriotic speech “by
HoiuiWmifliawr (one’of*- tho*Bell oloc-.
Tors fur tho Statoatilarga.) The resold-*
tions were adopted-With-great enthu'-*
siuani. »: i ** Bit/, jxuii
“We, tho citizens of-iheireounty^-of
Ohatiiam. ignoring al!< party names mid
view#, eardmlly-.' uMtoXn tho following
resolutions: •/ l mi
.IUsoheif, Ti^it/ihe'eTc.
ham Lincoln^ nq^lytpl
life Fr^kid
Wasiiinciton’, Nov. 7, a. m.—Dis
patcher received^.liero clearly, indicato
tlmt Lincoln ha# carried Pennsylvania,
New York, Illinois. Connecticut, Mas-
Mmlmsollj Noiv Hamji.liiro. Ohio,
Rliouo .Islaml, Vermont, Indianu,
Maine and Michigan,, mukiug 158 clou-
’ — ' votes, nnd sjx fiioio (ban U nocon-
to elect I n* ,i......
LINCOLN’S MAJORITIES.'
AVASiuxaidji, Nov. 7, 12 mi.—It Is on.
timatcil lievo that Uneoln's mnjoritiea
aimed by the Ropulilieaiia. . .
1 .«vui Mi TENNESSEE . in „ .
Wa’su ikoibx, Nov. 7, T2 Wi^lfoVo-
irns rccelvad lmrc indicato Unit Bell
m carried Tcmiowmo.
GSSEHVATIVK POWER IN CON-
, . Gil ESS., b.r.nl'i,. •
WAsnixofos, Nov, 7, 12 m.—Tho
friends or the South ami tlio Union,
are hero warmly .congratulating them
selves In cone«iucnco of tho increased
opposition lhgjority in'Congresi to Lin-
coin's'admlnistlou. 1 Tho Republicnnn
aro divested of Lejdslativo power lo in
jure tlio South, even' if they were so dis-
BOMU-oire ■
May n Woop of printers' dovils lean t .
iank'and hungry; dog his heel# each
May tho famine stricken .
editor's baby haunt.hik slumbprs, ntul
hiss “Murderer !" In his dreammu eur.
May his cows givo sour nfflk/ jiiicl
chum mnoiil biittor, •'
, In short, may ills business go to ruin,
and ho go to tho—Logislaturo.—Ex-
change
■‘"it , ° r , Ahi'-v
pbrL iha-JIi*. JncoW/hW i
npjiiied tlio President ‘of
States of tliolr intontious to
...All-Fcdbral officers 1 ,in Sofiffi CivipUna
; — ■■ .
’ South Carolina for Disuuion.
. ;CoLUkniA. 8: O m Nov. T.—Tho Soutli
Carolina Logislaturo will most assuredly
call a8ihto Convention ’forthwith, and
t bocly will dikkolye the Uni6nr
l .r, **, lUurkcls. .
v ‘.JjfuifcftiloN, -Nciv.’8.—Sales, of Cottou
dqy, J,4U0 j>ales,^fc.pricps ranging from
. ^yiiesoiveu, j
lure to ann<
lutlon, at thd cai
aniKumi imiiK.yi uua, .iiw peeia ana 1110111, and to Ouiuwhiuvuiii ,».ai,u W
day, nn'd a reguneut of cat; caterwaul Senators and .RoprOsontativo in Con-
under his window oniih night, gross, and to co-oporato with Iho Gov-
gi.-ia- JM ioIIJcis. The market was ii’ivgn-
iRecsilits oldbd week UifiOObnlea,
ernor ill calling a Convention of tho
people to dotormlrio on tho mode and
ulonsuro of redress,
" 'limbed, That wo rosppolfully rccom-
11100(130 thd Loglslaturd to ' tuRe into
their immediate OQUHUlumleau tho pas
sage of such laws ps will bo likply to el-
loviate any unswl ombunassmont of
Pbettv- 'Oiai.5 at tub' I)ai,i,—It, .
conceded on nU bands, says tlio New
ag8Bi|‘
L
SQyWhnt a difforonco It makes wlioil */
er before or after marring© a pretty vro-
mnu ;a found making slips,