Newspaper Page Text
S. 'IONKS.
j + .J*
* U+l*r*4*-y
. U ‘i‘7*'l *• ** »* fca A*l®*}
-—“ ,»«s4iSg »* T<a DoUar*, j
TO CLUB* er “ vce year,tfcaß/ur-
Übint th* pfc?« f *• '■* rAt^ t ' ‘fgg dollars,
j v )i » ' a8 /np« *ufc»criberii
•r * free rr,pj t-> *’J
ggN TINEL
CHfiON.C %L T , jj.IAKKKLV,
11 1 A ' l gth subscriber*-.
4re %lco puM.W»eti & - t"*» '
.... f* per annum.
_~ 0 iiM fcßTlinO*
* *• , eot » per ««iuare(lo lines or
V *' rs ’ . for each anb»e- 1
• j >,).
, ' o, j‘. j* Wy. .'ok CLOTHING, ,
I‘. H L'MTED Si**™ HOTZ'., AC.os**, ■ ». ,
i ■ samsasjs l
tl. * •■• !-»■■■• 1 i,/ yi i. liU/T INU—
«.V, ; , •!
. lor ,
«i. ( . jui ~o *. J UVi-iiY BiABEE, '
,• ,m rui.viv.*;.., • o»*d i
L «- 11. f< -: 'iJ .i., . «.t of i.e Oou»» Uomc, I y
k • wu i. ts • tts >.ly-*kl.r»-.«i»U«»fv.tori«:.T«f Bipoo * *»«&,
A i. <» A 00.,4ud k .seftbury, Sew, York,wnic^
%rn e.krr 4 ar* i irr r s»;ect- to r>« %t cist felly equal to
i ,y.osifuinr' ip nA . (pci j# •» thucountryor Europe,
i . ■ ui© ftoer* *p* id a'so slate th in the intfUamentstio*
t ir cast* or
I y »--• r>lsmces,»t liSO, i. OAi it? A CO. ‘B
my lk k ano, Bock ana Metis bepct,Bro*d-st,
* W i LLIA M~Ti. rfSTT.
VfojOLLfcAL*. AN D ART AIL LaUGGIBT,
IS MOW V IX<; a very targe and complete
r ck of ba r J<irf. PA 4 N r»,OIL9,rjLABr
P ;i, f J tfA’.i. liiiUSli. QVK i.YUWtE.&iid FANCY
A ' . . , t. ; .., rHi eel. - tee. ,a person,w.tlithe
f itest cara, m * .#« : ira .. Imooriem and Manofacto
rs *ra rinse* iatry,»nii which.ror craaiur and cbeapocs*
en * : . He woaM respectfully Invite the at
tc -»>u o! ..ere,. atß, PtA iUrz and ibyslclans te hi.-
•to a
A .r l-rs will be executed with tbs utmost r-eatr***
S' :■ . '-’.A-vj.
OSAJJi lUASOK PLANTS fOE XTBDGIMG
nr«« NlJalf iUBKH will offer for sale, Jarlug the
T. \ ‘
T-V T i n\ t 10 L /.*■ NIT ,*KAM* *iIIPLAN Th,
h' ■ * ■ »f<>j»cr iire,i*lor 4 years. Pamphlets, rle
t , virr 3‘c.iiOc’ . ding and t -inlnp the plants
- ...-W'
su > - yin i Iraaoe, will add res» D.BKOkfOND,
Aogaata.G.k
«30 'tV wAKD ~
It A%AW AY tr -m the «uh«cri»*t*r, residing in
5# Pfftuaai-lounty, near Merrill, In \ugost last,
r Man.F.-aok " - nl.r.ot 1.1 years old.^k
fl- t-m t rn infh ... h Wh, of medium slr.e, has aJBk
■1 /-it imped:roout in hi 4 .*.**ch, and her lost the sight <»•
aeya. . . 0.... • sod >n Virginia,and hasheen In Ueor ■
g » .f tw . years. Th« ..hovereward will tie paid so
U*. *'f ’ JOHN A. IIARBIS.
T M.,uth. rr. Reporter will •mhlisl till forbid, and for
.
rjMIOi 11. HXVK IM «roil in rm Mi friends of C<.
I I'lm -ia, n\th• aq .i in r o unt ••, that he contf- ue
tfm :r.oe n'jr-INTd, «n<iKt<Y Halits bran hu<
A 1 o m u na on prof.nuino i 1 boslu'-ss, ad Iresaed h
hi 1 »t vv rig t ibor , w i ..ouise promp aUeaUon.
fl-ly
O EEN3BOkO» HOTEL.
under L - hn- parchafcd th House formeri
J kept *s u Mote by Mr. Hanford H the centre of
Or en b'.ro*, dir *y 0| j» mie the Court h*u e, and con-
V * ie»it to i Kaihoa D-pot. H viug At ed 't up *ltl
n«- « furfiito •,he w I • ji■ •• no eflofi.i in .inis'eatog toth>
Cni3 r rti -firs rue '> and m kir/lt *ori: y t‘e patron
a- «f his friend* and the t'av* !ling public. The Mouse
w be *»pen for the r cto.-Hn of guests on th fir t -'ay of
January. M.fl. WILBOP,
PBACTICX OF BUKUEEY.
"I \Jt. Jilffl AM is prepared to acOftmmo
X / d:.'.- w;-‘» Lodgings *tid Nursing, such patients a
m»y bedir-* .1 to im for ai operations or trea'- «
IT’ nt. S' C r * m V h- •v that their Eerraats we (
t., ■ -rv r.-' rv .'■'• •'■■.n rnvf-wly
SiiU SWARD
1 ) '>i V U \Y f in the su»« iiher, res'dHg in
\ Mo gan cot y, ne tr Buckh Poetofflc, or, to
th« i'i'l heecnib r-,n»v N gio Mm L »IH -K.
la I- »It fit* y t 8 < l, 5 I .t i -r 1 ,urh M hig cf »-Jut
Cop;- r c lor, */ th * letter *‘G * branded on hi* left £
hr* t Prorn c r urns an es, 1 have go d reasons to t
thj '< that th<- b. k w .fl d**coJ :i «*flf by some white man.
li waa iif the kmCi-v * pirt.on oWJf umbers county.
A' ,na tcttUe 18:h J nuninoewli ch tim« 1 have
n t t erd oyrhhn. I wjH ay t.ke rewafd .f* r the*
Wint- m*n n i-i hoy, or sV>r>r theA»»./, « b»* jn.,
I d,* • fi • hTt.rrfsf.
/ ujj. * J
’ v r-i m tn • ?a‘’rcrt*jer ffbar n- At
k I y ,ts o, i Ju e l iht, a NEGRO M \ >l, TO G
IOIMSyr -r, ~f agfi’, a g‘»t copper co’or, -''Ji
a'out B fe *t 6 i tches hig.i ; pquare buil , quick *
s vik •an 1 mi in • when spoken to-name t D OK. i h<- si
b • few r l for bed iivery t- s
h nof*iHS. gr •» r olg*d in any s-ife Jail; or Fifty
Dj I ' -a >y iif • m .tijo conoeruing him.
H pU 8 * NOAH M0 v AHB
A'-JiTus al s ,
Hl'lt ('. tl <i l otT-rs f r ■ a’e rtpht hundred
J , r -of l» \K l.*N \ii.uvrd r h a si* mi es of Au
i rm ihe trn t a rererat fine Bpm gs and pre'ty
bn M Og I c t 005. i.ewl' B*H Iheeuir ■ tract or .n lots
totu-io rc »«e . For term , whi h will be m i<le ft* i.m
--p,; tU , u aji ;1 y 11 » JUmIM E liUUCU.
C U- « LEWIS,
ATTom* Yrt AT hAW, Sparta, Ga, will prac
l„ Wvi ing* .u, Jeff Tson and Bal lwin counties. Office
OV-r ». T Windsor’s store, first door to the right.
K Ciii». | I>. W. Lawis.
mb' Cm
NOTICE
npO a'l whom it mav «*onc.>rn, I h r bv g«v© notice that
ll .'.i n i M v •>*, IV-of "ati ,ferro county
kj |as *if a I testament defil d an.l tequeathed
::g o‘ i-anda and to be
e j \ iy U vid d rur - *‘t f*ia “iclatl n« accirdiug to th«
st r it-, * f u rtiibuuon," A■. The p-rpert will »>« ready
for <trl ntio as <! : r.c td, by the flru of January ne*?,
a* .I ail p us on • t> au uieroetin It, under the wil!
of . ! u- A.tor, will j.. •<) prrseut their claims In the
m unt ion. properly autheuticaled ac‘« rdl- a to law.
GU.C K'a'P >MR TON. Fa»r.
Omrfor ’.Tills Qi., 'i May, HB6. _ md wlni
TO THL* V, B> AT GnU w EJftd Vt LINOUJ-Jf,
WII.REB ANOOGLI RBU.
RAYSTI' LB M’LLH.
1 hfJ ALl.be prepared by or before the Ist of June,
J w ; •(? -ry h»-g in complete Older, to grind all tin
W t { a m \y off r . -rd I wilt RUarautee lo in.se Os
fn t . r •at o -,Nf YLutW as any Ml! on Little iTer.
•1 . ■.. t r.*.»i..e prcepaldfrW BaT at ths Mils
3t u.i V-' \ r;- • uj7< * h? 8
%V i fl H, May i, lch6. Soe i roprietor,
my ' r t
UHEfijnC ' PtTEc, vVuiXS VrutA l. I
tt |1 V\ a , rviu»T I.rkulofvs lie WHKATthat 1
X wi I **r, -f* th -*e wl - .-'may waut to purc ase or
po d w .*u;. r the”* *t croo, lobe deltTere at the Lagr .ogc
X) .-log > si-mg cks couta-nug net more ihau ■n
b s e , .iideas or,«e e.l, nor less than a t r, narked wi h
t’... , n . , the iiurc.i eer aa l p'.csof dcli?e y. Thl?
\v .-I h*Y v ca-le tan i wh-L-st k*o t b«wan>
ti i V rC- c:t by the *r-th of Mij It has
b *u . at f >ur d'l rrftt i'a rs, a d hn 0» talueo
ftp m, -u. « e f j U’«’a.ce l hay air adymidetOHoy
tj av. ‘ r he x owl g ailWe l>oll r-p r'' »bei.
L. , .k.Ma.'C l-88. P. 11. t»UE' NS.
A OU • » UooP *» A * Y—oLFa
( T l- . O lli . Al*i L > ... 185
G .i .. in r • ► a.b*t F A 11,Mortgage,Ac.
I; o the 0 u*t lom «h p tiinn oi tor?e
ft ; » v. • tof r, t»w i: »n Ib.- '£* i dav o
J oj wof *oi on saun >, tn tuts .** ate,
5 w.u ug? . ’ ry*.oiau only edited deed of moit*
c . C: ‘ Od v th d 4. an JCHT. f. ..we • by. i»
J f .: r.o t r u C d lar, Uh- s%d KI.
b.’ 'll . • H * *R pa d.H • 1 for th fur her pur
p p f *< 1 > . a>m-a? <fa pro ms «y LOte, uu • r
- I• i . uar * i fit. «d d e one day ft ter
da ji • u*. ? W'rnHanire D»l«re, mad D.v
th • nil E a«b. th *ni ca ffa. H Am>*«t to thes* u
H, ; , Ci ,v’y*.i t o t!?c • !’ 6 r.,e K, foieVW in f e>
, rt o' t j '* •. y■ O leth rp ~ n.» In'y dr
K'r I»C iHia >o ♦ ft-c b. the :Md Gere K. for the
H • - t dK a ■ * ,b ft f ‘at I't of Jaun ry,
w* , M,h» iau nwtiifid ti * •'•-th war
. \ . ,t he Ith-.t ■4 i • »i t i: H>ni c ge R. . cot .
A- ."hV-aV y i?.r>' iGoorgeß a.i primWiy V
i-a - ren ra*'.t:a ■ *>+' npptunu fra ssud
,> •t: n -he s.lk n.t ’-t ; unpsii a d .hat th-t s d
t, »i ’ »-uema dU-d x-j-a '-t cf the ? me, whici- hai
It » rs.tr d, 1" a* ' v *s : 1 > livibeth show cause cn or
be' »e ib» xi term 4-.lv- ;n t. why »he oe not p->
th moo > cu > • u; Hto Oou t, cr ese ha e th •
y Q i .f «• rto tv. aor: ; ; .we p 1 erases f r ver
•
at ? r » b c:e tie ir • t term, of th s Overt; or Be p«b
'
al u< i , e ji 4 ill.'" r Lur c.lUp neat p t
.tn ex.rsct ,r x'‘ra ’.he mins l -* of the Superior Court, 1
t -1 I ' v HSO. h. U6a» RR, Clerk.
v k . . *OiI l i
k' il' > s f» K av ikiijt, r#cksoc
11» *M»I 3 Hill' * w| i n Hal, tra'e ehidren **f J
?.V “* r ,\ , a : f *•','**• U \V°s *to iJ s P i i
Th* mv ll A i d ‘git thl
Ms Cad u :of anu w v» t g hat waemn ih/Wrd
Na cy • lh a * M- r.,..a j4ng at this time
1* a.f Z c i h dU.h »«!. p; yW. Bond ;»n
it firth. p r.g t-a s:ui •v• ira -re rp*rt-•- j
a; v way j.rovi i - I3r'f r; an I said Jackson, time r, I
l> S«r‘’ l ."! ;\bi I
CU Boss • ssa * .at * d u vt oi muy with
S 4 : bon I : u . ih re *hee* y r .er. , .h*: aii per
•o so rc r «u are te- by co. fiei t' row can-, If any
the lave OJ o -ure the hr Monday m •• tenber j
rex , why sad.’ se h eh, a .n:. .i*trs.t 'r'o f he e>t U
Os Hid w noTe. v «d, sboolti not te uirec - j
AX n cr, Janus, >* n i'o lira Lh J, n Cv&formit,- I
lit U t r r V t<i. i 4>opj of Uus rule be pub
li-h di be If . .*6 ; ud ouce ara nth fr thret
Cour. 1 0« d e*rj JLbinoo i.ty fisl-ih vs May lSid.
M u , rT> I
4~' T.% 1 LHlut.'lA'rW-i BM AjuAJkfti’V
t,‘bL V a iJiVoSOJt, APRIL TkJLM OLFanlOa*.
CC l l e *o’ ? S arborcuth ▼«. Be ia Scarbcrt-nah. Pre
se- ;*.• Uu. . vWe Garnet. Jud a e cl the sail !
Co - ’ , . . ci..: m
*1 ft-ear n • -o the Court, by tae ret cm or fie boena,
tha i* ■ ’ fesdaat net r» de in th e coun.v, j.nd n
• ® .. e th-»t h. Hk~«s not re* de .n thi* riate, it i
Uu. rue O.tik b -ive tas m AtPy .
.u.«,c from. b «
XS4S 01.0. W. DI.KiOK, Q«r«.
Utf 18».
" B aS R Bh?8Y!-Sl 000 B‘ WARD!!
p .j, . for thr « prche' kioL o the i o w t er, wit proof tc
eouvtct iiax, a re« .<d of •» o or ! r feeh porihecs f*a
WUJ pro.-', aua re over* « t ma.> .arawamuf #i,U* d
Wi) tie p**d 4 and ft oiop.<U.n»i-fttaojutf»r the reefer/
Olftuy on n >!A e AM UAiMI' I ’, . ICS.
: h ‘ w i>«bdgia, Lraiicu at Vt ashingwa,
fbttwwiVtf
% - k
Weekly Chronicle & Sentinel.
FOR .SALE.
a Fian.iuixsKiaui siFpi plas iahoji roa
SALE.
A GREAT BARG VIN WILL BI G’ VEW.
I" JLL posttlTsfy seU on the 2fith da’’of Dvrvzb*r
n*rt, tt p bbc eatery cn the premises, if not prev.cus
i ly *oid rvut s*ie, oa a oedit * f one, two, three sind
| 'oar yen-*, my w*ii known Togo* Ohitto Plantation, k.
J • n %coj: i , Mies's pp:, w ihl.'-. fire miief of its Jackson
a..ci Y.c soorg Ha liosd, »t Oin on, a'd e ght oX the gr-at
j f'e* Orleaos RaLrosd, at thseity containing
.180 a r s,a lan er goo-1 faace, f which SHjO acres are
c *arnrs, and the balance *c!. timbered. I-* advantages
*re ftlmo* unrivaled in ios tio fertility of aoii, rpiendid
bet m land, fine adapts ti mta the production o c rn
••ad co. iji*— upwards of 800 bales of cotton, and 6000
buahtis of corn, tav Lg o_*n made on the place in a year.
i ■ p* UT lanu. are enterp'-ssed, for g'ars. wine and
ctTerf ili g water, aii c ns*d-< log the in kst for butter,
beef, ftr.d mu’ton, tit the seat o; government, i» of lue f a
«re*t § o'ce of reve u And then i*s irnjroTsinentf,
w-th a!ed fc rdtn, two cist-rns, awsllina bease wstn brirk
cb cr.nej r, ca 1 .ns fir 100 negroes, w in p.ani floors and
raf. • r roots, gin h u«e, h r»e mi, cotton press, Ac., Ac ,
niY*e it one ■ f ihe most valuabe ectates m tie county.
. Ccssas oc g ob on the fir t o. January.
To any one who may wiah to Dry the P antat'on prirate
ij» my term 2 ihall be : oera , whi h may be known by ap
j i c t on to my brother, General Patrick Henry, who re
i r# Lea-tr.e pr» m ~es. He cjd have the option to *ake
ta* pr-r; sions, s-.ock Ac, cn the place, at a fiir price;
otherwise, i wi l e t on a cr«d >. of twelve month , at the
a a ‘ K 1 °» r
f cattle 100 so k h ogs 180 ! ead cf »h ce p, c .ra, fodder,
oat-, pra», aid potatoes, and .arming utetsils cf every
eacrpti- n. o. A. HIfiNRY,
PySO-fim of Clarks lile, Teonessee.
LAbD AND HLIL3 FOR SALE.
r pIIAT valuable PLANTATI ON oi Ed*, acres cf good
A Lai- J, w.th we Ing ami oat build.ngs complete,
for cerly rimed by Uavid Ross, d-ceaa d, situated in
Putnam county, on t eOc nee kjver, and in the vicinity
ftie Cu Fac-ory, sn >w -flertd fir sale, on ex*
ee i-ingly 1 beral teim . Oa :he premises there i 9 agc<-d
V uri -k, Or st and e ■- FL.J in goe d raaaing order, with
* t r po er of c» *city to propel Machinery to the
x ect of kO,OOU , ilium*.
1! tie above inentonid va’oafcle property is ootsoli
dur ng th< rex. hre- months it wi Ibe exposeu o public
u* ry on ne -»t iursdav of aUG bT nest, at tae Courr
-11 u * in the town o' G eeatbo o’ Ga.
Fu th«r ta'crma icu cv. bi obtained by spp'ication to
O nNC. O' BMICiiA>L, Au u»U Dr. JOHN WjNG
l»*-iar «>Bf.4oiU» wUMRUiaT. ue»r
w :' J, *>■* '"* )
US I All D SALE
rill V sub-criher offers at private sale that tract of
P NE LA Don bpirit'Creek, In Richmond coun-Tju
y, <>ou t tw« v*r milesfmm and within two r
uhr*e mil«fßof tbe Ge->rg*a Railroad—known as the Han
v»n Bsrv*y—sontaining 5C4 acres, more? or Ifrs, and
v tided bv ianuH of Alien Km*, John Janus, Fimoo
• rd, P. llaynie and others. If not diepoH dos
efore ' hwßrt Tuesday m Nov mber naxt. i will uffer it
it puolic outcry .cn that day, at the Lower Market House
a Augusta,
Any (ne desiring to porch .* th* tract, wil please ap
»!y to A m. A Walton ~m Augusta.
gdylft-wtt RKBECLA CAM7I ELD.
FOR BALE.
I ■'II subscriber offer* for sale the tract of LANDAHB
on which he resides,containing Eight Hnndred^^
• a ) Forty A res, more or less, lying two miles east of tne
Jhalyceate Springs, M»riweiber county, Ga. There is
•bout th ree hundreu acres of clearer Land, of ou
;un :red us ft Is rich tiottora land and in a high state of
- it v,it ion There is upon th*; five hundred acres
if heavily timbered ohk and Pine Land, and two hundred
. res of va'm.ble bw.ini. Land, also well timbered.
-ere is & good or-hard of choice Frmt Trees, a comfort
.ole D *eliiiiV, snd a splendid Gin-house and new Hcrew
• i ft ‘bed to his place; an excellent Hmoke-house and
C tchen, and a 1 other baHuinge necessary fora farm. In
he yard, • etwe* o the kitchen anu dwelling, and conve
•*:nt to both, it a- eli of good pure water. The place has
he character of being exceedingly beallhy. Any perso.-i
ißirons of purchasing, wi il always find the subscriber
pon thepremises, wf o will show the Land.
»M. J. MITCHELL.
Meriwether co., Ga., August 18, lbi>4. au22
Fwß BALK,
FARM ca le i “ Isa Mo-re/’ and known S"N&
a ih • rri.d. m: of Col Thomas M. Berri n, ccn-3-.
• n i g Eight I undr«d and Fif y Acrer, in.,-stly
u)ui and red upian 1; over two huaured acres tka ed.
i is s uated five ini b» fr m K ng>toj, on the Western
n i Atlantic Rai.io.td, an l tiirec-qunrters of a mile from
Ve s water s alion ou Rome Radi - ad. T e re. i tnce i >
mar to one of ti.e most b &atiln', argest, ami pnre»t
.•ringsin Che:oaee. Address IHOMAH M. BKRKikN,
t j csix.ro', Burrc cunty, Ga., or apply to JAMM M.
fc.’PEtt on the premises. mh23 6m
VALUABLE PLANTATION FOR BALE.
undersign' d off rs f r sale a valuable PLANTA
. TION lu Oglethorpe county, situated six miles east
Lexington,containing lOfi" acres, more or less. There
c ab .at 2tU acres of good low grounds and between 4
d hOO acres of woodland In the tract. It is improved
/ith a good Dwelling iiouse and such oat-houses as are
anally found < n a pianta'.ion ofthesist*. also with a fine
hard of select Fruit Trees. The locality for health and
ood water is surpassed by do place In the county The
■-•-tty of the n ighoorhood is g od, and supp ied with
hoois. Ai y person oerirous of purchasing will please
ddress the undersigned at exington.
n‘iß ts Z. P. LANDRUM.
PLANTATION FOR BALE.
* 'll K subscriber off rs for sale the PLANTATION on
1 'hiefihe resl*i**«, in Gglethorpe county,on the Athens
1 ranch >f the Georgia K«ilro»d, 12 miles above Union
oiut. It contains 8 0 acres, more or less; about 2CO
acres well timi»«-mJ oak nnd pine land. The place Is In
«»d repair and well suppled w th water; a comfo t-ble
We'hog and all ueces-ary out-baildings, and perfectly
healthy. Adjoining ihe place Is 86' 1 acres, which can be
arc a ed ldo of which arc well timbered. Any person
s.rous of; urchasing, will always find me on the premi
is, v-r address me at Mxxey's P. 0., Oglethorpe county,
(.a. [dlO-wtfJ W. MuriDEx.
FOR SALS.
VLAliUKand convenient BRIOK STORE, situated
in the centre of business,in the city of Romv, now
. euj itby Kobt Batty, Druggist. This store wastltted
upftSftGrug Store, without regard to any reasonable ex
;--nse,and with a little alteration could be oonvertedintc
auelegantly arranged Dry Goods Store. Thesituationfor
thesale of Drugs, Dry Goods, or Groceries can hardly be
v*qualledin thecity. Termseasy. Apply to
GEORGE BATTY,M.D.
Rome, April4th, 1858. apr6-tf
FOR SALE.
iNOtV OFFER for sale my entire River PLANTA
TION, 28 or 8d miles south of Columbus, Ga., in Bar
. >ur owuaty, Ah4.,lyingoit theOhattfthoo' iiee river, con
taining 2400 Acres ; some 1200 acres in a fine state ofcul
,ivat ion and good repair. A good water Gin and Ferry
across the Chattahoochee river. The above will be for
>ale at any time untiGold and possession given. Terms to
suitpurchasers. ja2l-tf MATHEW AVERETTE.
FOR B ALE,
ttllK FARM known as tie Hawes place, 9 miles above
Augusta on the Washington Road, containing 215
a res. will be sold at a fair price and or. time. Apply at
Augusta t ) LEON P. DUG AH,
tuyl-iufim Trustee for B>rah Ann Dixon*
CHEROKEE COUNTRY;
A VALUABLE LOT OF LAND FOR SALE.
r||K snbicriber offers for sale r very attractive MBk
and valuable lotof LAND, -dtnated between threeiJE
ind four mile* from th* flourishing :lty of Rome, Ga. The
ract contains Three Hundred and Twenty Acres of good
upland, well adapted lo the growth of all the small
Irvins,lrish and Sweet Potatoes, Peas, the Grass**, such
s Clover, Ac., and peculiarly suitable for Fruit Growing,
is it is situated on au elevated plateau above the reach of
r tinary frosts. A beautiful Natural Pond or Lakelet, of
h* purest water, oocupiea the centre of the Tract. The
narginc this Lakelet affbrdfone of the most attractive sites
oaginablefor a country residence; as the supply of wa
ter never diminishes, and Is of great depth and ciearnest
It is fed by subterranean springs, and has no perceptible
inlet or ut-et. The tract is heavily timbered, with Oak,
•ickory. Chestnut, Ac., amd an abundance or Pine, and is
w’thiu a Kile and * quarter of two good Bhw Mills. It also
•ontains an iuexhansttble quarry of superior Limestone,
winch may easily be made available for Agricultural and
Building parpos-s. The improvements consist of a very
•omlbi table l*>g House, with out-buildings—a well of good
water, Ac., with twenty or thirty acre* tn cultivation.
Hie itMntion of Fruit Growers, fftuok Raisers, and all
les<rousof a delightful s''tension in a salubrious and healthy
climate, within easy reach of the best focisiy, is particu-
Mly invited to the above tract.
F. r v rms. Ac., ipply to thesubsorfber, or lo 001. J. W.
M. Ur.KUIKN,of Rome, Ua., who Will teks pleasure in
oointiug out the land. D. REDMOND,
q.;2H-dtW*Wtf August*, G».
OAFOJLD HOTEL-NEWTON COUNTY. GKO
r|IK gLIIHt iilßKrt begs leave to inform the
L patrons of Emory Oelleg*, and the public g«ne- ■&
nlly.thet he kas taken charge of the above Hotel,and he
k pes *r!tb trusty servants, good cooks,aud an ardent de*
i re on Ins port to render his House second to noneln the
-Irate u,ob.*iu a liberal share of patronage. Person* or
fw.c'lUs.'*. vlshicg to spend a season in one ofthe most
-> au'lful and healthy raral villages In MlddleGeorgia
• lb accommodated with rooms, Ac. He is also con*
jiruct ngeommedh'Ufßtablvs, which will be attended by
»n “Xperleneed Oetler. Terms to suit the titn*s. His
ox ttowillbe. “toseethatnonego away Hssatisfled.”
j*Bl W. W. COOKSEY.
LUMBER*
I'HK a ib-crber ha* constantly on hsnd, at Ms Ftesm
taw Mi l near Bel ftlr, a lary* supply of
which h- will deilv.-r at any point on the Ocorgi. Ka real.
mvlS-IA 6t JOHN M.THOMAS.
PRINTING OFFICE FOR BAIE
I"HK una-rs g*d 'a» f r sa e. in Atlanta. a
cvmplrte PRINTING OFFICE. It cr nebt of one of
: esWahigtnPß CASKS, IMPOSING
'TONE to etrn r »it*i th* a*- s» vry TY»‘E. aud a'l other
p:i.i ;n* «■at nalabel neng to a ooirplete Newspaper os
t ,i> i-hmtnt. Al*o, a :üßc ency of JOB TYPE t do all
r mar work in tr at nnr.
Th* price is very lew, an i th* terms easy ard lib ral—
*y, > e-h* f C4.-h on the d* ivery of the material-, and
I t e< th rhafp.y l twelve mentis as er d r .t**, with in-
A G war , At onto, Ga.
x a'H'-rs wanted
Trretee* o ;he Or<oo Tnsti nt*ar-* dee'ro’• cf en
* Ka.iQgT le-vch-rs o take charge f the Ma e, Female
. d e t >ar tmet-ts of .aid School for the Fall
Th * S *hoo\ b. irgshu tel in ave-y h a’’hy village, far
r move fr ra h-* a *nrei e \* e s vice and Immorality, and
h4Vin» b *en in sne operation for seven ye-trs, eu
•vs a « x'.er**.v p polarity ; so much so, that those who
a e hii terto haa char e of it, have been amply and fully
v> p -ua.t-df r their 'ab T.
The pro ot Princfpa l has rern competed to resign on
acco-nt o f the continued Ll health of h l * lady. Ag-rtie
i.na. d his lady wul be pre e:red. For farther ptriicu
trs, a .dress W. H. ROBkRT,
Secretary Board of Tr s*.**es.
Orion, Ala.^ Jan Jtlß-w4t
tTJIEW,
; "'ROM try stables et ihis r-a'e. In the la ter
T p»rt o March list, a B Y MARE, mice ed
, wiih white hrir.“, Bcr 8 years ill,
jereehigh; ’ ei mas* h*4Q£s on the'.eft side of her neck,
i cy in or matton thank uliy received, and any pains ;ib
l ra ly rewsrved by JOEL HOOD,
i JoreO Mila, Meriwether Ga., June fi, IIW.
w&
GTBEE HirSE
I'll Hander : g ed info ms hit frltnds and the public
that e h a Ut« y erected a ap ecdid HOTEL a*
i *F*jette, W» ker ouiiiy.ua. The Hen#- is ibo oaghly
i ornishei wi.h eoiirr y tew Furniture. P.rsons i the
j ow cun y, who wth o spend the summer in a pirasant,
j 1 .hy vii a *, wool 1 do wel to c-1 at the Go ee Hon«e,
j where t ey w: 1b- we'l aco mrrota ed. The trrmi will
eroedtr tc.acdn t-ing w. i te cmit.ed on my part to
aka Icon L tube. [jeS-Smj ELI QOREK.
NOTIOS.
HpHK Fl BMC are her-by cautrooei not to trade far a
JL PROMI'BOEY NOTE, ma eby George G Btur-e« as
I p ircipaLar A K Ptnrgee, e unty, for Five Hundred
| 4nl Thirty fl e l>cdl4?s, paysble to the subscriber, »nd
! is; about th '4 hor 's:h of Februa y, 'BSB note
; having been kwt time aNwt tke Ist of April Ett, and
! jneifurt a having bee- taken to renew th* sam
jeciefl MkRY M. toIoRQES.
STRAYED,
b'ROM the subscriber’* Pi snt alien on the 28d
April, two young Bay >»ar* MULES, aboo 1 .
j 13 or 18 fiends h gh. Taey have been worked one ».r two
j years. A liberal reward wid be p*ii for them, cr any ic*
■:m4*ioG ccacer: iag them wiL be thankfo dy received at
j Fry tr*» Pond*, Burke county, Ga. F. G.GODKEE.
ep2J-twxwlm
j “a, BOOTS, SHOEa7Ip > UAK&.
VALISES, CARPET
mL bag*, ac. mm \ i n
YAK iMYITB the attention cf Merchants and the
! ,rad c wracerxily to one ofthe largest snd best selected
,-kvof BOOTS, SHOES, TRUNK*, VALISES. CARPET
* -S Ac. -ver brought to this market, most or which be
i *5 ma’nnfi’ctcred expressly for ns. We esn and will sell
u iow as they can be purchased in New York, Charleston
i rasj Scnthtrn market. Call and examine Ter your
is.ves. FORCE, CONLEY A CO,
Sign cf the Mammoth Boct,
opposite Insurance Bank.
Great attentioß given to orders. ft*
BOVKft, BAKtK ft CO’S SXWiStt MACHIS Es
I LiK»«k Machine .having received the highest pre
mium* at all the esding Fairs throughout thiscouc
j jtj s . kuro;'**, and now Justly admitted to be superior to
a.l others :n use, treoffete to the publ.c at p ices which
I v r 'ng u.*m w-thm the reach of all. For simpiio'ty, dnra-
I y and ceria.nty of op-ration, no other machine esc
! stand in comparison; wbrefnthe brxaty, strength ard
Tnaneno ./work ex see ted by them, th«y surras*
allfte Ui> thing heretofore done by mach nery.
They r*c be seen in onetaHon «Uily a t Mrs. Mitchell's
j Bonnet Woie, opposite L *• Hotal, where ftpectmens of
work done ‘‘3 i!i- 1- .re ■ .t,ior.-.i.
1 1 hr.e aretbcv-U} -0.pt.4 pi.at*tion use
»nd fan he m.-i-ge-i i-J stream.. Si ioiir. r.ghu (or
; 4utricw.tr «t f!c M«b;ar», or »mi> tjr
*aOU.F. STOV.u. ft 00.
j Antruet*. J.ou.rj 4,16. VS. _ j^al.wSm
. tUA MOUAbbKs.—i*St4ia prime Cu.iirntwa,
I V_ ijr »..c oa :s« vfiut ojt _
I JC« UA9O, WIMW* ft 00.
WEEKLY
I'MONIDLE & SENTINEL
Tor ih* ChronUU de StntmtL
I'B- £mto® : In Hr. Stephens* speech,
written oat and aathentioated by himself, in year
tri weekly ot Thursday last, te calls upon me to
produce my authority for saying that the Jaoobina
first styled themselves “Friends of the Revolu
tion,” instead of “Friends of the Constitution.”—
By reference to Vol. VI, of the Encyclopaedia Amer
ica ua, under the word “Jacobins,** the following
sentence may be found:
“The private house in which they (the Jaooblns)
first assembled, soon became no longer capable of
containing the number of 'Fritndi of th* Evolu
tion,’ as they first called themselves.”
They accordingly met in a monsatery of Jaoobin
mocks, snd were from that fact colled Jaoobina.—
This was in 178 SI. The difference, then, between
us, is the difference between our historians; and
analogy is very much against the statement of
M. Thiers.
Bat this has but little to do with the great ques
tions at issue between Ur. Stephens and the Amer
ican party. These may be simply resolved into
two leading points: First, Is it the policy of the
Romish Church to aim at political power in this
snd every country where they can gain the ascen
dancy i Second, Is there any danger of such pow
er ever b ing attained in this country, through the
addition of Catholio adherents to our population
by immigration 1
These are the points at issue, and if they can be
clearly established, all else that we have contended
for is substantiated, as a matter of conrse. Mr.
Stephens will then, by his own admissions, justify
even secret Cgsnir.- ...» for such » defence, as (
/real t» horror au lie for them. For we
have never seen more earnestness and fervor, not
to say frenay, man'tested against any sect or party
than he does against the American party. —
Hj charge* us with fanaticism against foreigners
and Catholics, but it wild, extravagant, ill-founded
zeal be fanaticism, then Mr. Stephens is guilty of
the charge in reference to this new party. Al
though be announces that “he is not afraid of any
thing on earth, above the earth, or under the earth,
except to do wroDg,” yet we are inclined to doubt
his assertion, after we behold the monster Know
Nothingism as depicted by himse f. He mast have
forgot this “monitrum horrendwm ” of his own
creation, when he said he feared nothing. Bat let
us have the picture. He says that the Native
American party “is wrong in its aims and object*, n
wrong from beginning to end, and exceedingly
ur jast. Great evils and dangers are to be appre
hended from this now and most vicious poktioil
monster. He compares it to the embodiment of
vice itself, which is
* »f to hiieoas mien,
That to be bated needs b-t to be Been.*'
Ho sajs that with its general embrace by the
people of this country, comes political rain and
d ath. He who fosters it, fosters an insidious and
poisonous serpont in his bosom. Oue of itH gene
ral effects is to dscsivsy equivocate and prevaricate.
Hundreds and thousands go about daily and
hourly telling palpable lies. Ho admits that all do
not do thi*, but it is common with the order, thus
to equivocate, mislead and deceive. Even minis
ter* of the gospel, under the influence of this or
ganization, may preach from your pulpits, and
then toll lies at your table about their connection
with the order. Church members are also as deep
iu the mud as the preachers are in the mire. The
whole thing, he atys, leads to d>.oeption y hypocrisy ,
knavery, and universal treachery, and the only
remedy is for this great monst&r vice to be held up
to he public gaze, that it may be seen, hated, and
abandoned speedily, as it ought to be. Ho farther
sayß, “that it is anti-American, anti-Tepublican,at
war with the fundamental law of the Union, and
revolutionary in i\s character.” All this Mr. Ste
phens has said of an order and its membership, of
which he professed a few days since to knew noth
ing, without bringing the first particle of proof to
substantiate a single charge.
We call upon all the candid and right thinking
men iu the country to decide the question, which
evinces the most arrant fanaticism, to oontend
that Catholic supremacy in this country will ruin
it, or that the precedence of the native American
party will. Mr. Stephens has said harder things,
wilder things, more extravagant things of the
Know Nothings, than we ever did of the Catholics;
and yet, when we refer to Smithfleld and St. Bar
tholomew’s unmistakable facts in history, as warn
ing us what might be done in this country if the
same immutable churoh gets in the ascendency,
he begs his constituents not to listen to such
fanatical appeals ; while, without any guarantees
of history to fall back upon, Bave the Jacobins,
and without any similarity of objeots, aims and
sympathies, between them and the Know Noth
ings, only that they are both secret societies, he
makes au appeal against them, that has more of
the wildness and frenzy of political fanaticism,
than any thing we have ever read in the history of
party politics at the South. We admit that among
Northern abolitionists, the monster slavery has
some such hideous proportions as this new order
presents, under the touch of Mr. Stephen’s pencil,
(indeed we are struck with the similarity income
pointe,) but at the South we have heretofore had
no such specimens. Flain, honest, common sense,
statesman like views have generally characterized
our political debates. Bold assertion, empty de
clamation and fanatical detraction, have generally
boen left for the laud of urns. For once the gen
tlemau has o\ershot himself; while he may stag
ger a few nirvsillant whigs, who ; have dared for
once iu their lives to think before Mr. Stephens
speaks, the great mass, we have reason to know,
will not only think for themselves, but can never
forget, in all the after political strifes in which his
name may be presented before the public, the
unwarranted, unexpected, uncalled for attaok,
made by him on this now American party, who
have organised together for the perpetuation of
the rights of consoience, which Catholics and
toreiguerc mutually enjoy in this land of freedom.
They never will forget the unfounded assumptions
which Mr. Stephens has made against them ; for
knowing that the objects, aims and principles of
the order are such, ae every true patriot, every
opponent of a •ombiuation of ohurch and State,
every lover of the religioua liberty of his native
land, can sustain and vote for, they will either
award to him a wild fanatical seal for a bid oamse,
or something more unscrupulous and less to be
pitied.
list Mr. Stephana charges th. Native Atn.rlaen
party with rebellion against the government of
this country. “ Not en open end manly rebellion,
(we use his own words) bnt a secret end covert at
tempt to undermine the very oorner stone of the
temple of onr liberties.” Did he weigh the pon
derous dimensions of that sentence when ha ut
tered itt and afterwards, when with the sober
second thought he penned itl If so, then he may
bo able to bear its weight. If he does, he will :
prove himself greater than Aristides, for it is j
enough to crush sny political sspirsnt in the land. |
’Tis true, he has attempted somewhat to parry the 1
force of this deadly blow levelled at the honor, in- I
togrity and patriotism cf the very men who have ;
made him what he is, by saving that “those who j
hoard him and thousands of others, had gone into ;
the organizat on unwilling’y,” but they bad been
diceivod, (we now speak inferentially,) they tad j
not sense enongh to know what the thing wonld I
lend to, poor deluded, spell bound oreatnres, re
belling against government, undermining the cor
ner stone of liberty, and not knowing what they
were about, until he, Mr. Stephens, had penetrated
with a prophetic ken, almost supernatural, into the
deep profound ot Know Nothingism, and unveiled
to them the dirty work in which they were en
gaged. Does not Mr, Stephen, perceive in this
admission, that the wnoie force of hia argument,
founded on the Jaoobins in hie letter is overturn
ed. If ail the Know Nothings who heard him,
and thousands of others, are too patriotic to tarn
Jacobina, then there are no elements in this coun
try, st least in Augusta, to make Jaoobins of. If
there are no each elements here, and the people
are real patriots, and only hugged the monster be
cause they knew not whit they were doing, then
all the hue and cry raised by Mr. Stephens, about
“rebellion snd underming liberties," smouats to
sbout ths same thing as the cry of “ wolf,” when
there’s nothing on the air but the bleating of a
lamb.
Gut Mr. Stephens brings ap s constitutional dif
ficulty, into which this new Order has became en
tangled. He quotes from the Constitution of the
United States, as toilows:
“ But co religious test shell ever be required, ss
s qualification to any ctficj or public Dust under
the United States.” He then ahows from what he
snpposes good authority, that the Know Nothinge
are opposed to e’evsting Borneo Catholics to office
n this country. [How does it happen that the
Native Creole CstholiOß are supported for office by
the Know Nothings in New Orleans!] Ha saya
‘•they have Urns pledged themaelves to set np a
religious test in qualifications for office, against the
express words of the Constitution of the United
States.” He here attempts to place the American
party in antagonism with the Constitution, in re
fusing to vote for Boman Catholics. Now, ws un
equivocally de-y— lst. That the Oonsutnti >c makes
suy such test for voters si the ballot box, snd 2d.
Tbat tke Know Nothings in their pledgee make,
by intention, s religious test in the selection of
men to fill offices of honor snd trust under the
United States.
The sentence in the Constitution, which has
been dismembered by Mr. Stephens, reads thus;
“ Tbe Senators and Representative# before men
tioned, and tbe members of the severs! State Leg
ielatures, and all executive and J udicial officers,
both of the United States and the several Slataa,
shall be bound by oath or affirmation, to support
this Constitution; bat no religious test shsli ever
be required, ss S qualification to sny office or pub
lic trust under the United States.”
Now wbst connection would there be in the
two parts of this sentence under Mr. Stephens’s
construction. It would read sbout thus: “The
several officer! above mentioned, eftali bo bound
by oath to eupport this Constitution : but the peo
ple shall be bound to make no religions test in
electing men to office." Can it be supposed tbat
th: framers of tbe Constitution, would have beei
guilty of such sheer nonsense, iu eonuectiug two
subjects so irrelevant, by a eenjanetion, into the
same aentenaa. Now ae the firat part of the
■catenae refers te what tbe officers shall be re
quired to do, as a test of boiling offiee, vie: take
an oath to support the Constitution, so the seeond
part shows what they ahall not be required to do,
aa a test of holding office, that is give iu their ad
hesion to any religious faith or sect, The Consti
tution means to say, that after the people have
sleeted a man to office, the oath of effioe shall be
administered to him wkether he be a Protestant,
Catholic, Mormon or Atheist, provided he is cot
debarred by any other prineiple iu the Constitu
tion. But Mr. Stephans maxes this religious teat
to apply at the ballot box, which is so palpably ab
surd as to hardly bear tbe charge of sophistry
even. He says, “So of all the reasons you (the
voters) may have, or objections, or disqualifica
tions in the uiection of men to offioe or places of
public trust, under the United Btstes, yon msy
make any other test but this religioas test.”
While it ie true ss we admit, that if an Atheist
should Le elected President of the United States,
the J edge administering the oath of offioe could
not interrogate him ae to his religioas opinions,
yet it is equally true, and within the letter and
spirit of the Constitution that a voter at the ballot
box has a right to interrogate him and refnse to
east hia vote for him purely on the ground of hie
religious faith. Bo muoh for Mr. Stephens’ Con
stitutional religious test. That would be a glo
rious instrument indeed, for the basis of a free
government, worthy to be made the political wind
ing sh«*t of this modern Aristides, if vfitb all itm
other rights ■ 6 by it to a frekpeople, tt
withheld the right of voting for whom they
pleased.
We propose, Mr. Editor, through your courtesy,
In a few days to substantiate what we asserted
above, via., that the Native American party do
not, by intention, make any religions test in their
selection of men to fill offices under the United
8 atea, snd this will involve s reply to the diss
vowsl of Mr. Stephen>lu behalf of the Catholics
sb a church, thst they form a political party in this
country, or are seeking for political power.
Meuasothon.
Sparta, June ith, 1855.
Forth* Chronielt db Sentinel.
Are rbe Hon. A. H. Stephan's Sentiments Hostile
lo tbe but Policy of rbe American Party 1
We have read, with considerable interest, tho va
rious articles in the public journals of the day, elic
ited by the letter of the Hon. A. H. Stephens, upon
“Know Nothingism”—its principles, objects and
aims. The discussion of this new issue is, we ap
prehend, right and proper; for if the movement
be a necessary one, and its pnrpores compatible
with the but interests of the country, a free aud
impartial diaensaion of the principles invo ved and
the thorough investigation of their merits will not
prove detrimental. An entirely new quesiion like
the one under consideration, and sprang so sud
denly into pubho notice, must, from the very na
ture of the circumstances attending its incipiency,
present some ol j iotionable testures. Opposition,
in its early development, to any new question, if
based upon sound aud correct principles, instead
of preventing or even retarding its extension, has
a direct tendency, by pruning it of every thing su
perfluous or detrimenta 1 , to acoelerate its progress
to ultimate sucooss. Butour object, however, in tbe
present article, was not to defend the “American
movement,” (as it is termed) but to snbmit onr
views upon this celebrated letter, differing aa we
do, so essentially from those who have proceeded
us in its review. The scope aud tenor of his letter,
iu its bearing npon veritable Know Nothingism,
duly cor aidored, we deem his co operation to ac
complish the legitimate purposes of this new party
neither impossible nor improbable. That it has
been tbe subject of panegyrio and invective, we
are aware, but nnder all the cirenmstanoes of the
case, we consider it in tone, temper, and senti
ment, generally unexceptionable. While on the
one hand, we discover nothing in the letter
likely to bridge over the gnlf which has separated
the writer from those who nave waged political
war unrelentingly against him ; on the other hand,
we see no just cause why tbe po itioal ties which
have existed between him and his oonstinency of
the Eighth Congressional Diatriot should be dis
turbed, even admitting their proaelylißm to the
new political faith.
But to pass on to the consideration of onr main
proposition, tbat the sentiments of Mr. Stephens,
as Bet forth in hiß letter, are in perfect unieon with
the legitimate aim* and purpote* if the “ American
Party." Mr. S. admits in his letter that “many
evils whioh all good men regret and deplore, exist
at this time,” bat hie language is even stronger
than that, he adds, “they are felt by the whole coun
try, and they ought to be corrected .” Hero is laid
down in terms, aa explicit as language can make
it, the great fundamental doctrine of the Know
Nothing party—the very basis of its organization,
to do what Mr. 8. emphatically says “ought” to be
done. Now, what are tbe leading measures pro
posed by the “American Party" to accomplish the
objects at whioh it aims 1
1. Tbe modification of the naturalization laws,
or their total repeal if the purity of the elective
frenohise cannot otherwise be preserved, from the
evils growing out of their present administration,
2. Tbe prohibition of tbe immigration hither, ot
all foreign paupers and criminals, and their total
exclusion from the country.
8. Tbe elevation to office of native, in preference
to foreign born citizens—talonts, character and
qualifications being equal.
4. Beligiona toleration to all classes and sects
not incompatible with civil liberty.
5. Thorough reform both in onr State and Fed
eral Administrations, holding all public officers to
a strict accountability.
8. The eettlemont of the “Slavery question"
upon a “ national beuit" (clearly and distinctly
recognising the Territories as the common pro
perty of the people of the United Btates,) its pro
hibition or toleration there to be decided by the
people themselves, when met to ferm a State Con
stitution, the naturaliiation laws if modified to be
prospective in their eperation,
7. The maintenance, defence and support of the
Union upon Conatituttonsl principles.
From Mr. Stephens’ letter are evolved the fol
lowing propositions;
1. To amend the naturalisation laws bo as to
prevent the great frauds and großß abases which at
present attend their administration.
2. To unconditional ly exclude, and prohibit from
ooming amongst us, all paupers end criminals
from foreign countries.
8. To confer no office, whether high or low npon
undeserving Foreigners, to the exclusion of nativ
bom citiscDß, better qualified to fill them.
4. To oppose the control of the temporal powers
by tbe tpiriheal.
5. To 00-operate, in every proper ana legitimate
way with any party to effeat a reform both in the
Blate and Federal Administrations, holding all
pnblio functionaries to a strict accountability.
t. To settle the question of Slavery in the Ter
ritories upon the principles of the “Nebraska
Bill.”
7. To stand by the Union upon the principles
enunciated in the “Georgia Platform,” resietancs
to succeed unconstitutional Congressional legisla
tion, npon Slavery.
Now we must confess thst it will require s nieer
oaeuiit than we are to point out even a shadow
of difference between the first five propositions of
the “ American Party,” as hero laid down, snd the
sentiments of Mr. Stephana in reference to them.
Even upon the remaining two there is no radieal
difference of opinion. Mr. 8. favors the removal
of the question of Slavery from Congress »nj
leaving it with the people interested in it, for
them to decide. Bo do the Know Nothings. The
only thiig really at issue on this snbjec*. between
the new party and Mr. 8. is, the one favors the
organic law of the Territories in reference to
foreigners, the other is opposed to it. The public
sentiment of the oonntry, we are of the opinion,
is equally removed ffem either extreme, while it iB
opposed to a fife time (as it were) exclusion of the
foreigner from the rights of citixanship, it is
equally opposed to his immediate admission to
its privileges and immunities. That portion
of his letter whioh insinuates the possibility of
Georgia “ Know Nothings” affiliating with the
Abolitionists of ths North,
wbo have o.nnected themselves with ths new
movement from the most selfish motives, we stall
paas over in silence, as the only portion of it we
reprobate as nnworthy of its author. The two
main objections urged against the order we shall
briefly oonsider and harry to a conclusion. The
exclusion of Catholics as a dags from office, (we
allude more particularly to foreign Dorn) is based
upon their acknowledgment of a “ higher authori
ty” in tbe spiritual power to control ths temporal.
Upon the same principle that Mr. S. excludes from
office all who maintain the doctrine of a “ higher
law,” do the Nothings advocate the exclu
sion from effioe, as a class, all Catholics who admit
this “ higher authority” in spiritoai affairs to con
trol them in thought, feeling snd action, in tem
poral affairs. If there be inconsistency in the one,
it equally attaches to the other; for to our appre
hension the rule of proaoription is alike applicable
to either. The feature of secrecy, which some who
favor ths general objects of the American move
meat reprobate, and to which Mr. S. decidedly ob
jects, is ths necessary result of the existing order
of things. When ths canvas for pat lie office,
whether high or low, is oondacted without s re
sort to the misrepresentation, slander, invective
and vile bi'ingsgata, prurient with all the venom
that political malioe can distil, tbat has heretofore
disgraced this oonntry, than will it be time enongh
to consider the propriety of removing the veil of
secrecy. Have we eo soon forgotten the ignomin
ions false hoods snd misrepresentations which
characterised the last Gubernatorial election I
While one oandidate was held op to public odium
as “in tsvor of depriving every poor man of his
right to vote,” the other was openly proclaimed a
Pisonittust, aad utterly wanting is every eharao
AUGUSTA, GA, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 20, 1855.
teriatic of human. *.ure. Where waa Truth then?
utterly buried berk rh the load of obloquy Leaped
upon iu Public pinion is favorable to the perma.
nent correction of tasee abuses* The question is
naked—“ What do onr Georgia friends intend to
do F’ Tke a newer han easy one. They intend to
stand by these principle* herein stet forth, with
the same u-Sinehixf devotiou they have stood by
Mr. Stephens aud judgment passed by Geor
gia, upon the great now agitating the
oonntry, when its jtveraal was sought by those
who now seem so v*ry anxious to affirm it. But
what will Mr. Stepbeos'dc 1 la he for an armed
neutrality? or ha 9 Hs such a horror of the name
Know Nothing that ie stands prepared to sever
all those warm ties that have, for so long a time,
bound him to his coistku ccy aud league with Lis
old foes for the overthrow of Know NuthiDgicm,
though some cf the principles he has ever held
dear go with them? We soe no necessity for a
separation of oki friends. There is no radical d;f»
fereuee of opinion between Mr. 8. and bss con
stituency to justify such a coarse. Auti-Kuow
Nothing is but anuher name to preserve the unity
and integrity of thp Kaiiomd Democratic Pierce
Administration. L\t him’see to it, tbat the result
of this movement oAhis part, does not p*ove to
him a “ Nessus shirt*’ Consanus.
Public filacting lu YYaireu.
Pursuant to previpua notice, a large and intelli
gent portion of the zsns, ladies and gentlemen,
of Warren county, afid some irom the adjoiuiug
counties, met in WatrAitou on the 12. h inst., to
confer with each other gainst the Becret political
orgar nation of Know NotUngs, without distinc
tion of former party ullHtitibus.
On motion, JAiige M oM-ali H. Wellborn, was
on, W ►
requested to act as HeordvU ( /4
The Hon. Alexander H. Stephens being present,
rose from his seat and addressed the meeting in
one cf his fairest, ablest, and happiest efforts, iu
which he routed tho Know Nothings at every point,
and left them without one single foot of ground
to stand upon, either as a secret or open enemy tc
the constitution ot onr country. We would give
the main points of his argument against this new
movement, aid we not believe he would visit eve
ry county of the District and proclaim ’he doc
trines of eternal political truth, as ho did here with
us. He stood npou the rostrum two hours, ana
did not fail to arouse the feelings of ail,
our white-headed sire?; aud sat down amidst tho
applause ofthe multitQde.
Jesse M.. Jones, E*q., then introduced the fol
lowing preamble and resolutions, which were
adopted, without a dissenting voice:
Whereas, in view of the excited state of the
pub ic mind upon important national quo t’ons,
which, in all probability, wil be tho subjects oi
Cong'essional legislation iu ihe next Oongre-s ot
the United S ! aies, the condition of tho c >untry
will require thi aid of the purest, ablest, and best
men iu the land, to guide and direct ti.e uffairs of
ihe Federal Governim-nt, men who have been
tried, and f juud able and true to the Constitution
and tne reserved rights of the several States of the
Union —therefore be it
dissolved, That we hail with feelings of pride
and pleasure the unnoancemeu* ol tho name ot the
Hon. Alexander H. Stephens as a candidate for re
election in this District to tho next Congress of
the Uuited States. Having, as we do, an abiding
confidence in h s integrity, honesty, and ability
as a pure and able statesman, we wid use a 1 hon '
orable means to secureh.s re election.
dissolved, That we are opposed to all political !
organizations or parties that make a religious test '
port of their politico! creed, and morec.specially to
secret,oath-bound po’itical religiouaorg m'z i ion- 1 , (
as being at war with the genius of our govern- '
ment, the Constitution of -he United States, ai d
the State of Georgia, and without a precedent for
good in auy Republican Government.
dissolved, That in the judgment of this meeting, 1
the oaly qualification tba ought Lo bo required of '
the citizen as a test for holdiug office is, “Is he
honest?—is he capable? ’—-and not what are his
religious opinions or where ho was born.
Resolved, That we hold this Union secondary in
importance only to our rights, aud that we will 1
stand by and maintain the Constitution and the
Union of these States as long as onr rights can be
maintained in the Union ; but it the day should '
ever come (which we trust in God will never,) 1
when Congress shall paes any law violative oi
the great principles of the “Georgia Platform” of
1850, which wo adopt aud upon which wo stand,
then, in the language of that emphatic instrument,
“Wo will and ought to resist even (as a last rosort)
to a disruption of every tie that binds us to the
Union.”
Resolved, That wo will unite with all those true
men of the North who in times past have stood by
the constitution and tbe rights of the South upon
these great questions, and who will continue to
stand by and with us upon them in future, be they
W higs or be they Democrats.
On motion of Judge Moreland:
Resolved, That the proceedings of this meeting
be published in the Avigasla papers.
The meeting then adjourned.
M. H. Wellborn, Chm’n.
A Jackson, Secretary.
The capita! invoked >a tho manufactories of
Lowell, Mass., on the Ist of January, amounted
to over $14,000,000. There are 52 mills running,
871,838 spindles and 71,407 looms; at these and
other departments of the woolen and cotton raann -
facture, 8,728 females and 4,542 males are em
ployed. This working force produced weekly
2,288,000 yards of cotton cloth, 30,000 yards of
woolens, 25,000 yards of carpeting, and 50 rugs,
consuming therefer 785,000 lbs. cotton and *O,OOO
lbs. of wool.
The Cincinnati District Court, not very loDg
since, decided that a broker who received a note
to sell, having no suspicion that the endorsement
was a forgery, was not responsible to the parch* s
er of the note. On Wednesday, the same case
wa» decided the other way by another Cincinnati
Court.
It is stated that the U. S. Treasury is now bur
thened with the custody of over five millions of
dollars in small silver change, from half dollars to
three cent pieces. Two or three years ago there
was a universal copoplainfc of tho scarcity of small
coin, either American or foreign.
Baxxum'b Baby Show. —Barnum’s celebrated
baby exhibition is said to consist of 100 single ba
bies and 4S twins, tripletsand fatcflilJren. Os the
total nmmber th§re are seven sets of triples and
eleven sots of twins. As the children are brought
in, they are all neatly attired and are labelled
“twins,” “triplets,” <St2. as they chance to be,
Bab* Bills not Monet —ln the case of the
State of Georgia vs. Russell M. Tuttle, tried before
the Superior Court of Chatham county, cn the 2d
inst., the indictment charged the prisoner with
having swindled S. A. Griggs out es SBOO in money
The coui sel for tbe prisoner asked the Cou*t vo
instruct the jury, that bank bills we. o not compre
hended in the term money, but tfcat money meant
coin, which instruction the Cour (oonnsel
having been heard on both sides,) gave ; and the
evidence having shown it was bank bills that the
prisoner received, he was so nd not guilty.
Filibusters en route for Mexico.— On Tues
day last, six’y of the three hundred men enrolled
in Louisville, Ky., fjr the inva* ion ot Mex co, left
for their destination, which is unknown to any save
themselves.
Marriage Fxtraoroinart —The newspapers re
port that Th mus Thumb, E-q., tbe celebrated
Aittie great man, was married, at Webavaf t 04
Thursday lost, to Miss
Connecticut.
SipracLAß Fishin*.—The New London (Ct.)
Chronicle says that, at GrotOD Long Point, G orge
W. Lamb caught a codfish, weighing 65 pounds,
in whose stomach he found, besides six bonyfi b
and six squids, a com pit te cod-fLH : / D g. g farj ex
cept tke line. Th* hook, which is large, w*s air
ti>ched to the lower end of tho which ia of
£ singular shape, with *,« eye at oach end, and
weighs pounds. The ash ia believed to be the
largest ever caught in the waters of Con
necticut.
The city of Boston has appropriated the large
sum of SIO,OOO to be expended in the celebration
ot the coming 4th of July.
In Washington iand warrants are offered plenti
fully at SI.OB per acre. Two hundred and seventy
five are issued daily.
The St. Domin*o Cqnsfiract.—Dn the Ist May,
Generals Pallater, T. T. Ay bar and Sen or F. Riuz,
were sentenced to be shot in St. Domingo for con
spiring against the Government. The consuls of
England, France and Denmark immediately ad
dressed a cironlar to Santana the President, order
ing him in almost direct terms, to pardon them.
The President at first refused, but becoming
frightened at the probable aDger of England and
France, who are, in part, masters of the oonntry,
pardoned the men after they had been led out for
execution.
A scheme is now In process of incubation, nnder
distinguished auspices, for the formation of a toad
through London, eight mile* iceg, roofed in with
glass, with houses akd shops on 6*eh side, and be
yond these, also on each side, two lines of rails,
one above the other, the lower for trains stopping
at every mile, tbe upper for expresses.
The Western Viboinia of thx
Methodist EpiscofAL Church at Whexlino.—
During Friday’s session this body by a unanimous
negative refused to concur in the circular recei ed
from the Erie Cons- recce recommending the next
General Conference to change the general ruie on
Slavery §o as to read: “ The buying or selling of
human beings with the intention to enslave them,
or holding them in shivery where emancipation can
he ffected without injury to ths slave" shall not he
tolerated (the words in i slice are the proposed
alterations.)
The Alexandria »nd Washington Railroad will
be finished by September next.
An earthquake took place at St. Thomas on the
25th ult.
Destructive Flood in Jamaica —The Jamaica
papers, are filled with accounts of the flood*, that
have swept over the Island. Acres of care have
swept off, and several persons drowned in attempt
ing to cress the Rio Cobre.
Standard B&arrs Dead. —Mathew GlHfery w ho
planted tne colors of the Pennsylvania Regiment,
on the heigbLs of Cerro Gordo, and bore them at
Vera Cm Paebia, died at Philadelphia, Tuea-
Democradc Couvrutiuo.
ibo proceedings Aid piatfoim of the Demo
cratic Convention, have elicited the follow i.g
ecmmeats from th* Maoon Journal and Alts-
Unger
We have examined this long sories of umfuliy
worded and elaborate rei-olve.-, critically, but with
out any disposition to find fault with tne in, or urge
•aptloua objections against them. Many of them
meet with our hearty aud unqualified approvai,
as they simply express opinions the subject
ot slavery, which aro neld in common by tbe peo
ple of Georgia. But wo cannot approve the po'icy
which was adopted by the Convention, or assent
U> the grave conclusion to which it came alter a*i
its brave worus upon the subject of ala, ery, ol Cu
oa and of Kansas, i. e. that the National Demccra
ticPartymust be preserved, and that it is the only
organisation which cau be or ought to be made tLo
oaale of a Southern Union movement, by which nil
men at the South may be united to resist the en
croachments or the North, and to preserve slavo
r ga»s and protect slave property in the comniou
territories of tbe Union. The scries of resolutions,
takeu together, are a strange mixture of Southern
Rights and of Democracy— the firat ingredient
introduced liberally and without etint to aooom
rnodate it to the temper of the public min i of the
»3uth upon the subject of slavery—the latter can
tious'y and sparingly, to make it palatable to the
Democratic party of the Siato, without disgusting
that class of its opponent* who, it was understood,
wuuld support the uom ne6 of the Convention, if
not compelled, with him, to swallow a strong do.-e
ot unadu.teiated Democracy; and ye;, uotwi'h
standing the care with whichthe»r phraseology has
been guarded, they amount iu substance to au en
dorsement of the National Democratic Parry and
ot the Administration of President Pierce, and
Will commit every mao who votes tir Jobiifron t‘u •
iy and completely lo the support ot that party and
of that administration. The qu sliou then for
every voter to determine for himself, the only
quesiion 01 any real importance presented by t e
action of the State Democratic Convention, b
whether he is ready $0 be transferred lo the De
mocracy, and to be committed to the support of
gthat party aud of its AdmiuMraliqu at. Washtoglo ~
rsi V . . . * ;Im the foho> ; .•»*«'‘
r*a«or.s, which we shall ota e briefly, without ar
guraent:
1. Ihe Democratic Party is a coalition of fuo*
tions who do not pretend to any agreement in
pincipie or policy, upon the paramount questions
of the day, which is the only basis upon which a
strong, efficient, naLioual party crgacizition can
I « formed. Its vital functions are deranged—il in
tffl cted witn a disease wo/se than the dry rot, ut*d
pr.served from niter disorganization only by tho
strong cobe ive powei of the public pirn der.
2. Tne Democratic Party us a a tiuna! organize
• tion, is unequal to the exigencies of the t imos, aud
utterly powerless to resist the encroachments of
Northern fanaticism.
8. Tho Democratic Party, a*a national organiza
tion whatever may bave been its proleoMcns or tho
declarations of tbe platforms it has constructed,
never has placed itself fairly and squarely npon
tho compromise ol 165", cover has su taiucd tho
men at tne North cr at the South, who originated
that great plan cf adjustment, and never lias,
Practically, carried out the princ’pies upon which
it whs based, in tho distribution of its patronage.
4. The Democratic Party, if wo may jndgo from
i f s phot history, never will eudoreo tbe Fourth
Rjßo:ution oi lue Georgia Platform, re t fii * od by
ihe State Democratic t OLvention on Tuesday of
Let week, or give auy guarantee to Southern men
tbat it will make any possible action cf Congress
upon tho subject of slavery acau-e for tho d.rso
lution of thi.-Union, or oven require of thoso who
enjoy its cflieo 1 and its patronage an . test upon
this paramount question of tho day. Tms tar it
has demanded n„ such test, and a \ an evidence of
its p licy her after upon the subject of slavery,
we take the following extract from an article in
the Washington Union , headed ‘ Too Democrati
po-ition on the slavery question,” which appe* red
iu that paper on Sunday the 8d inst., only two days
before ti.e meeting of the Democratic Convention
of this State;
“The abstract question of slavery has been the
sul j of earnest and elab.ru'o d scusnioa in tho '
ditt'urent sections of the coulc-deracy for many '
years, but we are unable to discover any evidenoj
of an advance towards an agreement betwixt the !
disputants. Those who aru opposed to slavery
because they regard it as an immoral institution, <
have not been convinced by tho reasoning of those *
who maintain that it viola.es no moral obliga ion 1
or Christian duty. Oa the other hand, the advo
cates of slavery, aB a legal aud moral Institution, 1
have found nothing in the arguments of its oppo- 1
neuts to weaken their original opinions. As to
whether the institution is moral or immoral, cr *
whether it is a social or political blessing or evil, |
the question is as far from i-ettlenient as it was
when the disscussion commenced. Perhaps it 1
would be more strictly accurate to say that the I
only effect of the disscussion has been to strength 1
en the original convictions ofthe contesting par
ties. The Northern man, who was educated to 1
regard slavery as a great moral and social wrong, (
adheres to tho opinion with which he has grown <
up, and whioh isalmo.-t au instinct of nature.
The Southern man, who has been familiar with 1
the institution from his childhood, and has been t
taught from his earliest recollection to regard it as
entirely consistent with morality and the leach I
ings of the Bible, still cherishes Ihe same senti- |
ments. We think it may be safe'g assumed that an 1
agreement of opinion on t'-e subject between Aort/i
trn. and Southern men is an impossibility ; and in <
looking at the dangers involved in the. question, and
in seeking Jor the means of avoiding those dangers,
it is justifiable to act upon the assumption tkit ail 1
heps >f ever effecting such ag eenUnt is impossible.
“It we are right|iu assuming that the North and
the South can never harmonize on the abstract
suljdot of Blnverv, it follows that • here can be no such
things as national parties except upon the bests of ad
entire exclusion ofthe subject from their political
creeds. No mathematical proposition is more trus
than ‘.hat the only basis of patty organization is
agreement amongst those who enter into it upon
tho sabjeots which they recognise as belonging to
it creed. They may differ as widely as possible
as to all subjects not embraced by the party creed,
but to be harmonious inside ot their organization
they must have common sentiments, and stand
together on a common platform. These trntha
wiil command ready assent, and they demonstrate
ihe proposition that no party embracing members at
the North and the South can be national or harrnon ;*
ous in its organization which df>es net exclude the
question of slavery from Us oreed. It northern meti
insist upon ingrufiing upon tb*ir »arty creed tl e
doctrine that slavery ia amoral or political evil,
they raise an insuperable barrier against a hermo
ni us association with pou*hern men. Inlikeman
tor, if southern men insist on making if pat t of
then- party creed that slMviry is morally arid politi
colly ri' ht, they thereby cut off nort trn men from
political association with them. 'lhe necessary result
is, that, wdhoul t le ration of differences of opinion
a*? to the abstract question ors’av ry. parties are ne
ceesarily seoteonul, and cannot possibly be. national.''.
Thus the Washington UnioDj tho organ and
mouth piece of the administration, proposes that
tho National pemocra’.lC party, should, in future,
ignore the subject ofslavory, blink this “paramount
question of the day,” arid accommodate its plat
forms to suit the views of Freesoilersand of Bouth
ern men. Admitting that it docs not the
views of a large portion of its party, still It has as
much right and as good opppftnnityjto know what
will be the policy of the Democratic party npon
the subject of slavery as Howell Cobb. We
quoted its remarks, to show how ludicrous mid
how absurd is tho idea that the Demo
era ie party ever can be made the basis of a South
ern Union movement, qpoß the fourth Reioiation
of the Georgia platform ot 18$t),
5. Th® Dew omic narty has elevated to office
and sustains a Federal Administration, which (not
to enumerate all the substantial grounds of obj c
tion whioh wo hav* »o i ,) is opposed to the aoqn -
sition ot the Island of t ur>a, aud to tho admission
of Knnsas into this Uaiou as a slave gtfta, if man
agement can prevent it,
fl. The support ct the Democratic party of the
Union involves a proscription of every sound man
at tho North who stands outside of its organisation.
T* The support of the D*muorrtlo Furty, cr cf
any other National Party, which recognise* u
N rtheru element of Free Sod or abQ.ition, iu
volves a surrender of tie principle $ and of the
policy ofthe Georgia Platform of 155'). Mr. cobb
1 abandoned that Piatfofiu in 1852. in his eagerness
1 to t»ok in' o line, with the National Democ
racy, and to be represented at Baltimore by 3 par
ty which had received the endorsement oi a ma
jority 01 18,000 ot tho voters of Georgia. lie fail
ed then to transfer the Union Party of Georgia to
the Democracy, He will tail again, because though
he has incorporated the rte dutions—the words,
, ihe principles of the Convention of li 50 into tbu
Platform which he repo ted in tho 8«a;a Derno
cratic Convention he stid refuses, a* be always has
ref used, to adopt thf policy of that Convention
1 the nectary sequitur ot i.s principles,—and stand
1 sloof from ail national parties.
1 8, The support ofthe D* moor tic or of the Whig
, party ia not consistent with our views of fidi hty to
the South and to her institutions, and twvendorse
mint ofthe Administration by &dy parly in Gcor
I gia, delays, it it dc«fe» not altogether delect that
union people ot this State, us one people
ani one party, whioh is day becoming more
1 urgent.
» For these and for others, wuich we shall
give length when w« have m re le** are, w«
are unwill.ng to be transferred to the National
r Democratic party and to the supjfort ot tho adrnin
-1 Dtration of Gen. Pierce, and unleas we are willing
j thus to be transferred, we cannot, sooordiag to
oar constractien oi its platform, sustain the action
* of the State Dtmoc atio Convention. It* strong
position in opposition to the 4mert ian party does
not remove or affect a single one of the reasons we
have given :
) ' -
l Later from Texaa.
Bv the arrival at New Orleans of the Steamship
Charles Morgan, the Picayune has Austin and San
7 Antonio papers to tbe 2d inst., Galveston papers
to the 7th, and a number of other exchanges irom
the interior and coast towns ;
The Austin papers give favorable account* of
’ the oorn, wheat andootton crops.
1 Tue State Times says that the recent intelli
gence from Fort Belknap, represents the Indians
f a-* peaceful and quiet. The arrangement of f3ed
ing is progressing auspiciously, and M<*jor Neigh
bors expresses himae'f ■anguine of ultimate sue
- cess. No difficulty in restraining the “colored
. brethren” has yet been encountered, offering any
thing like a serious obstacle to the consummation
' of that plan.
1 The bark Miles, from Hamburg, with 12$ p&s
, sengers, arrived at Galveston on the sth inst.
Galveston was visited by a thorough drenching
rain on the night cf Ik* eth inst. It was much
needed.
, The lodianola Balletin denies the existence of
the cholera in that city.
1 The Galveston News, of the 7th, has the follow
i ing paragraphs :
A private letter from Fort Clark, dated tho 28d
nit., inform* ua that M&j. Ruff’s company (I) left
* that point on the 2oth nil., trom Fort Davis, to
\ take the place of Capt. Elliot’s company, (Aj which
ia reduced to sixteen men and recalled'in conse
qoenee.
L ; ght showers have fallen at San Antonio. They
were greatly needed.
Cotton is ooming into Lavaca pretty freely. The
\ reads are excellent, but f r want of rain the teams
suffer from the scarcity of grass and ter.
T e Seguin Mercury says the grass hoppers have
L entirely disappeared from that section.
1 The Galveston Prices Current, of the fth inst.,
f remarks:
In f-umming up our in'elligence from our own
* State, we must concede in advance a short crop
» of co ton. Grain crops, though flee in some and
i poor in other sections, will crake a fair yield.
We note too that herds of beef cattle are
being taken in various parts oc the State fi>r dis
tant markets, both North and South. Tnis ines-
I timabie source of income to the Slate is steadily
1 on the increase.
The steamship Perseverance, from this port, ar
i rived at Gaivptton early on Tuesday morn rg last.
Tbe bark Francises,from Bremen, with 120 pas
ser gem, and the bark Weser, from Bremen, with
i 200 pa-v-engera, arrived at Galveston on tne 4th
L inst.
3 There were only 12 deaths in Galveaton daring
the month of May.
} 44 Bitter Late than Never.” —ln the Commune
of Bt. Hilaire de la Noaille, France, a man name!
[ Jean Lapierre, 1.7 years of age, was recently
. married to a woman named Petron Nenvill*, of
lk« Vender age of Bs.
Prom ths New Haven Palodium.
Translation ot Pkceulclnn Inscription 4L»cov
•re* ai eldon.
[We give place with cheerfulness Vo the follow
ing communication from two of the gentlemen of
Put j*** IU inUrMt Ve apparent.—Kse.
Wuniu a few weeks past, the attention ot the
puHio has been osiled to the tact ofthe discovery
of along and very perfectly preMrved PtefciioUn
inecription. Thie inscription was found upon
the lid of s sarcophagus d ainterred at Sidon on
the 19th of January iaat, in the course of exeava
troua undertaken with a view to finding treasure.
1: ia in twenty-two tinea, each line containing on
an average 48 letters, written continuously. Not
tong efier this discovery, the oorreepondiug secre
tary es the American Oriental douiety received
from Dr. Henry A. DeForest, of the Syrian Mia
aiou ot the American Board, a manuscript oopy of
toe ini-ort tion. Auother oopy wss sent to the
Albany Institute, aud waa very promptly engraved
under the auspices of tbat association. A oopy ot
this eugraviug was published in the Uuited Statee
Magazine for April 16. Tne original copyiet ol ihe
iusor piiou ie understood to have been Dr. C. V.
A. Von Dy ok, missionary es the American Board
in Syria.
Some gentlemen connected with the Oriental
Society immediately made tr ala in reading the in
scription, aud came lo results which they put in
to tue form of a Hebrew transcript, and communi
cated’ with copies of the original, obtained
;'l ro “? h lh o courtesy ofthe Albany Institute, to a
mb f r ot ‘he moat prominent Hebrew echol
°‘ ‘h« oountiy inviting suggestions from
f d , p 'a p r n -f to present th“ results of the
neetinv ° ri * inal Society at its annual
? ’ascription was found to be in the
more ancient form of tbe Phoenician obaraoler, the
parent ot the Hebrew alphabet, and aa waa to be
expected !r m lue views now generally entertained
ot the I'hceeicau language, nearly iud.ntical with
tbe Hebrew in words aud lufieclione.
Iu reply to th > circular sent out, oommnnioa
tions were reooived tom Prof. W. H. (iroen, cf
Princeton, N. J., tbe Bev. D. Jaa. Murdock, of
New Haven, tue Kev. Dr. Jeuka, of Boston. Mr.
gesti-ns, coinciding with the Interpretation indi
CHted in the transcript which had boen communi
cated, so (arms the general tenor of the inscription
is ooocurued, and proposing conjectures which
may prove to be important relative te obscures
passages in it. Here it is proper to observe that
porti ns of the inscription, of considerable length,
presont no difficulty to one acquainted with the
Hebrew; while other portions are quite difficult
to be interpreted, and cau be read, at present,
only cor jeciuraliy. It must also be remarked, that
the similarity ot some of the Pb« liciau letter* to
one another, tfives room for suppoeirg that tie
copyist may not in all cases have distinguished the
letters which make tho correct reading ; and that
there is some reason to suppose that the stone cut
ter may have mado occasional mistakes in the
originui lettering, As a whole, however, tho in
scription bears marks of having boon correctly cut,
and well copied.
The geuueruen who first took this matter in
nand in this oouutry, are pursuing the study cf
the inscription, aud expect to rtoeive from Syria
the results of a re exatni cation ofthe original,
which, it is at derstood, will be made by the
American missionaries there. Copies have also
been eeut to Europe, and doubt less some of the
ab est Oriental echo ars cf Lhe old world will soon
propose readings of ihe wnoie inscription. A full
statement of the latest result obtained is intended
f>r tho forthc miug number of the Journal of tho
Oriental Society. But, meanwhile, it haa beeu
thought best to publish an interpretation, which
uvas laid before t e Society last we- k, as being iu
v iow of the gentlemen who issued the circular on the '
subject, the most plausib e that haß beeu suggest
ed. The italcisod portrors, being translated oou
j rcturally, are to bo regarded as merely provisional.
The translation of the last four lines, included
within quotation marks, is by Mr. W. W. Tur
ner.
translation.
1. In the month of Bui, in the year 14, the thir
teenth of the reign oJ Malicimelek, Eamuniyed King
of tl e Sido.uians,
2. son of King Tibnath King of the Sidonians,
speaks King Esmuniyud of the Sidonians,
8 saving; My death has taken place in the midst
of my course of misfortunes , the end has come amid
silence, aud I am resting in my sarcophagus and in
my grave,
4. in a place which I myself have built for my
self, together with the whole kingdom. And let
no one open my resting place, nor
5. seek within the place of sleep as for a man out
side of the place of sleep, nor take away the saroo
phagus of my resting place, nor remove
C. tbe elevation of my resting place. Shouldst
thou enter my resting place, whomsoever thou art,
being a master of judgment on tho part of the whole
kingdom.
7. And if any one opens the entrance of my
resting place, if aDy one takes away the sarcopha
gus of my resting place, if any one removes the
elevation of my resting place,
8. let neither of thorn have resting place with
the shades, nor be buried in a grave, nor have a
son.
9. And let it be ill with them below, and let
them come to a judgment on the part of the holy
gods, together with the kingdom. By the begin
ning of the reign of the son of the king
10. of the Sidonians over the kingdom, if any
one opens the entrance of my resting place, if any
11. one takes away my sarcophagus, may he
have experience of what is said. When he. who
soever he is, iB made to die, let him not nave a
shelter of peace. Prosperity.
12. is weaker than the causes of languishing to
those who live under the sun, and so 1 am reposing.
My death has taken place in the midst of my course
13. of mi fortune, the snd has gome and silence.—
1 Esmuniyed, King of tbe Sidonians, son
14. ol King Tibnath, King of the Sidonians, son
[or grandson] ot King Esmuniyed King of tho Si
onians, and my mother Amaehtoreth,
x 16. a prieatesa of Ashtoretb, our royal lady,
daughter of King Ismuniyed King of the Sidonians,
have built for ourselves the House
16. of the Gods, the House of Judgment, of the
land of the sea, as well aB founded the [House] of
Ashtoreth * * aud we
17. have built ior ourselves a temple * * *
and we have built for ourselves temples
18. to the supreme deity ofthe Sidonians, in
Sidon, the land of the Bea, a temple to Baal Sidon,
and a fcomple to Ashtoreth “ the glory of Baal.—
To us L rd Milcolm giveth a city
19. the jry and beauty qf the earth, our glorious
splendor , which is in the dwelling of our deity, to
spread out the fortunes which l have made ; and they
have reared them
20. on the borders of the land, to sustain aUthe Si
donians fore/er. My ourseto every xingdom and
man ; let him not open my’doter,
21. aud not remove my cover, and let him not
take lie fruit of my resting place, and not remove
the sepulchre of my renting place. As for
tfiose
22 hob. gods shall terrify thsva, and they shall cut
of that kingdom that slayeth, that it
may bo i 1 with them forever.”
To tha translation of too inscription a* given
above we append the following marks respect
ing its approximate age. other points of inter
est in it.
As regayds the ago oi th® ibstrlptlon, it is to be
observed, in the first place, that the Sidonians had
an era from wllie they date their autoaomy at
rather a late period, beginning with 111 B. C.; that
all the autonomous coins of Sidon which have been
preserved, with dates, are dated from this era ;
and that tae numerical aignsfor the date* on
coins, us on those of Aooo and Amcdhu*» «orres
pend to certain signs on our inscription, by which
as we suppose, the year of the King’s
roign is indicated* In view of thei4eoircum*tauces
one m’uiht ne disposed to count the year 14 of the
inscription Irom B. C. 111, making it* date to
B. C. 97. Bat they do not restrict us to thig in
clusion, and there are reasons so; V e^v Dig the
inscription to be muoh ancient.
A comparison v,f ti*e teller* with those of the
inscription* of Cyptua oollected by Tooocke, to
whi Jfi Gcseuius assigns an age not long poulenor
: to Alexander, shows our inscription to be paleo
gruphically older than these at least not at all
To this is to be added, that one of those
of Cyrus reads, “To E-muniyed, 4 *
giving ua the same nam* as tr>*t oi the king on
wfiu.-*e sarcophagus our inscription is cut j and it
seems not unlikely that the same person is re
ferred to. This identification, and the ooueJusion
our paleographioal argumont. ia reudered
more plausible by a statement which we find in
Pbe» iian fit lofy, that a uerson nanru d Tonnes
was iuj.de king oi the Siaonitns, in the time of
Artexerxes Ocbus, about B. C. s6o,in consca ienoe
of a revolt trom ihe Persians; or Tibnath, it will
be remembeied, is the name given in ihe inscrip
tion to tho father of Jhe iatter'King K rauniyeci.
The general bearing of the inscription, too, ia no«
su. h as CvU» would expect in * monument of a king
who was subject to the or the Ueleu
ci< 80 ; or whose individual reign began, as might
be supposed trom g«reumatanoea above mentioned,
only uni yea; aue? * declared autonomy ot Sidon.
It appears, at present, most probable that
this interesting inecription is aa old as the time of
Alexander the Great.—Future research wits prove
it to be much older still.
The historical oonten'cs of this inscription of
course vive it value, ft gives us the name of 8
kings of B'ldop, of one line of descent from father
to sun, eucceeding each other; and it tells us of
publio edifices baiTt and founded by this dynasty.
The connection of this dynasty with persons al
known in Sidonian history, is the great pro
blem before us. The inscription affords us a
glimpse a’so of the government wielded by these
potentates—showing that religious and political
elements were mingled together in it.
The particular deities who were the object* of
worship are also named : Baal and Ashtoretb, the
deities o* Bidon and Tyre in the most accent times
ol which we have any record, (see 1 Kings, 11:
81; 11: 88;) and Esmun, a reoognised divinity of
the PLosuicisns.
The inscription also present* a view of the Btate
of the departed, which is of much interest lor com
parison with tb* representation of Shoe! in the
Hebrew Scriptures, as, tor example, in the 14th
chapter of Isaiah. With respeot to the language
of the inscription, the following examples of 113-
brew words oceurriug in it may be given : bon,
son; melek, king; leber, grave; tnushab, resting
place ; mamteketh, kingdom ; also, the pi oral sign
of Hebrew, m, as in Tsidonim.
The name of deities are traceable in some of tbe
names cf persons mentioned in the inscription, as
E&muniyed and Amashtorelh, in accordance with
the usage of all the ancient nation* of tha East,
From the translation above given, i. will be seen
that thesnbstance of the inscription consists of
dire improcation* against any one who shall in any
way violate the repose oi the deoaased King.
Nxw Post Offices in Georgia-—The following is
a list of the Post Offices established in Georgia
since April 1, 1854;
Aubnrn, Franklin county; Benevolence, Ran
dolph ; B ilah, Hancock; Bailey’s Mills, Gordon ;
Belair, Richmond; Bengal, Bulloch: Chesnut
Mounrain, Hall; Culverton, Hancock; Cooea,
Union ; Cuba, Whitefleldq Cooks Store, Appling;
Copper Hill, Carroll ; Dave’s Creek, Forsyth; Dd
Boto, Paulding; Eastwood, Theroas; Fort Lamar,
Ma Jison; Flint Hill, Carroll; Fields’ Crosa Roads,
Cherokee ; Goodwill, Franklin ; Girard, Barke ;
Green Cat, Barke ; GhentsviUe, Henry ; Ha&nler’s
Mills, Murray; Hartwell, Hart; Hornersville,
Clinch; Isabell», Worth ; Linder’s Bluff, Appling;
Long Leaf, Psalding; Lanesville, Hancock ; Law;
t00,.8 .rke; Morgan, Calhoun; Middle Ground.
Scriver.; Mntiock, Tatnail; Mount Pleasant, Glynn,
Nebraska, Colombia; Newton, Cobb: Nail’s Creek
Franklin; Phi Delta, Franklin; Pomaria, Clay •
Paoli, Madison ; Bolin, Fannin; Band Hill, Car
roll; Scottß, Effingham; Sofky, Decatur* Tan
nersville, Warren ; T'ger, Rabun; Town Creek
Gilmer; Union, Stewart; Utah, Greene* Valley
Store, Chattanooga : White Oak, Columbia * Wil
low Dell, Cowet* ; Cedar Creek, Floyd; Tali Pine
Carroll. *
Health of Jao.z MaaoH.-Th. following ia
from the Paria “American,” of tbe ieeue of May
“Hr the beginning of tbia month we have elated
that the Hon. John Y. Mason has been much ben
efilted by a visit to the shore# of the Mediterra
nean Bea. Hia health haa continued to improve
since hia return to thia city, aud we rejoice at being
able to announce that he haa raamued again his
official duties aa the Envoy Extraordinary aud
JaiLister Plenipotentiary of the United Btetea to
Erenoe,”
VOL. LXIX.—NEW SERIES VOL. XIX.—NO. 25.
Know frothing Convention.
The New Yor ie Herald of Sunday contains the
subjoined correspondenoe. The roader mast take
th* apeenlations of ths correspondent for what
th*y are worth. Our own impression is, that the
Convention will sever upon tho alavery quoation,
if a platform whioh the Senth will sanotion is pro-
Fhiladklfbia, Jane 9, 1855.
In my hnrriedly written letter yesterday, auifl
oieut space was not devoted to the American Cath
olic quesiion, as presented by the appearance and
claim of the JLoaiaiaua delegation tor admission to
the National Council.
As it ia confesaedly an importadt question, I
must be pardoned the recurrence to it, and the
more eapeoialiy a* it ia my purpoae to embody, to
aome exteut, the opinions so ably elaborated by
the prominent speakers on the occasion.
It 1 am oorreoiiy advised, it waa argued that it
was the claims ol the Papal hierarchy which neces
sarily imparted to Protestantism a political ele
ment, and that (it the hierarchy) being a political
corpora ion, animated by political designs ct a
more comprehensive character than that of any
other political structure whatever, it could only bo
effectually opposed by political action; that tho
laity of the church are not members of the church
—a fundamental dogma of that church being that
it (the churoh) was composed solely ol the hierar
chy ; that the priesthood alone constituted the
corporation, and that the laity were mere vassals,
without voice or influence iu its councils; that
there doubtless was a spiritual character in the
hierarchy, in the Benso of haviDg charge < f routs
—the worst ieaturo oi the s a out—ua by It reli
gious sanctions were invented to obtain power over
the bodies and temporalities of men ; that the spir
itual was blended with the political element, and
that as tt e so. mer waa the pareDt of the latter, it waa
alway superior lo it, ruus into it, pervade? it, aud
imparts lo it all il* authority; that the fundamen
tal, all pervading principle was that the Roman
Pontiff was God’s vicegerent on earth, over kings,
princes aud all political corporations whatever—
over all nations aud people, claiming, by diviue
right, allegiance, loyalty* «uuy&e titular control off
all temporalities; that it va*>, thoruiore, poliuca.
in the strongs t Bouse ot the term, aud that to give
potency au i effect to these cia nis tbespiriiual
thunders of the Va.icau are invoked, aud are ever
ready to be ponred onion the heads ot the disloya
and rebellious recreants; that hence the necessity
ot a political organisation like the new American
party, to oppose th s formidable political po*er ol
the Chnrcb of Rome, ever at work to undermiut
aud to get the ascendaucy ot car instilations,
<fec.; that the two groat poltt cal parries have
beeu mere tools iu tho bunds of ho papists foi
the attainment of their end.-; that the formation of
the American party, therolure, wus necessary lo
assert the rights of PioiestustisTi, which neither
of the old parlies dared lo do ; that the American
party did not ast-ort the e rigi t* or oppose the do
sign of the pap*\l hierarchy iu tho character of
religionists, butaa AmericanCititenfl—the politic*:
element of Protestantism being alone made use cf;
that ProlesUutism as a tailh of the Bible ter tl e
soul is one thing, and us a political element of tho
Stalo, which ordains that every muu shall be per
mitled lo read aud interpret tho Bib'etor himself,
and n»t to be lo cod to receive aud believe only
what tho priest prescribes and orders, is quite
another thii g ; thut the political element of Pro
testantism was esseutial both to civil and religious
freodom, as the latter eon.d only be secured by tho
former, and that the American party have no de
signs against the freo toleration oi the Roman
Cutholic religioi , as contemplated by tbe genius ot
our institution.-, and as guaranteed by the oonsti
tutiou of tne United S ates and of the several
8 utep, <&o.
This imperfect sketch of some of tho arguments
employed, must suffice lor the geuoral outline of
the debate, which ah are agreed constituted oao ol
the richest intellectual repasts with which tho
Grand Uounc.l has boon favored since the com
mencement of tho session.
FIFTU DAY.
PhiLADAiRuiA Juno 9—B P. M.
The National Council have done nothing impor
taut lo day, exc pt lo adma the Louisiana dole
gates, and reject finally the Catholio sot.
The Committee on Platform w.li sit until mid
night, and then be ready for tho Council on Mon
day, when action will be bud, and h-» slavery
qwestiou will be settled. It will bj npnn the
following busis:—Tho Nebraska bill will bo ul
lowed to stand, and tho oompro.nise will
not bo restored—in place ot whioh uli Territories
will bo settled by people who will make their ow
laws, and elect ail their tffic.r.s, without any in
terforence by the general government, except to
appoint judges, marshals, &c., as is now done iu
the States of the Union. This will ond all diffi
culty, and must be satisfactory to the North and
the South. The Council on Monday will adopt
that portion of the platform.
Bftiker’s defeat was owing to several causes—
first, his address, which attacked freo sobers and
secessionists; second, it is pretty well settled that
George Law will be the candidate of trie American
party for the Presidency, and it was deemed bad
policy to have the President of tbe National Coun
cil come from the same Stale as the future Presi
dent ot the United States. Mr. Burker himself is
perfectly well satisfied, and has acted like a pa
triot.
Washington, June 11.—Vespasian Ellis, Esn., ,
editor oi the American Organ here, writes to that
paper trom the Philadelphia Convention. He says
that so fttr no concession* have been made by either
the extreme North or South, but tour resolutions
of a national character have been adopted by tho
committee cm the platform.
Now fork and .New Jersey are conservative lu
their views, end Pennsylvania is not ultra. He
believes that a conservative platform will bo adopt
©d by a respectable majority.
A correspondent of the New York Herald , wri
ting from Philadelphia on Sunday, the 10th inst.,
has the following speculations in reference to the
adoption of a platform by the Know Nothing Con
vention;
The absorbing topic here is the platform—a mea
sure replete with so much c ifficulty that its eaily
solution is most anxiously, and, 1 had almost writ
ten, impatiently awaited. To the fall extent,
of my observations—and they have been
ral a« wall a* critical—l am inclined tp t j io h©|j e f
that no platform can or will beereqV*d W n on which
the entire party can or will bL&riU Tho distinctive
dogmas of the North and Somfi—the very antipodes
of each iu positive cfo*mn,d» —cau never be harm >
nizad and convened into a unity of sentiment ai.d
opinion, and the effort now being so s dalously
made by'tfip intelligent committee appointed in this
behalf must fail, as ul\ similar ones have done, iu
the proposed recomriliatiou of such uncongenial,
incongruous, aud opposite principles. I am
aware that the hope is held out to the oar, and
sought to be impressed on tho heart, that the
thing itsolf is not only perfectly practicable,
bat that oonaidereble progress ha- positive
ly been vasde towards the attainmoi t—and in
’ti* stated that tho great and disturbing
question of slavery has already found au impreg
nable constitutional deleuce, and iu terras not to
be ntiannderatoo.i aud misinterpreted, ’ll* truo,
the plank Os the platform on this vexed question
has, in tne committee, and at tho suggestion of the
District of Colombia, found a constitutional basis,
and for the time being rests secure by a largo
vote. But what of that t Does that plank suit
Massachusetts and New England generally, aud,
perhaps on* Os two of the Western States! Who
wi‘l affirm that it does # If it suited, Vfiy, as is
now being made, was an effort
day te convene a caucus ou so morrow evening to
take into oounidera iem the threatened eu.Touch
ment of “ slave power* 14 and toeneooiut* the New
England ulticn*' am on the subject f
Rely upon it, no oompromiso can or will be
made* and the upshot oi the whole business will
be,that all the dist-enliesta lo a national constitu
tional party will have leave to quit, whilat those in
ita favor, heng freed from all such entsupliug
alliap.o**,' aad aided by th* national men of New
England, of whom “more than seven thousand
can be feuud who hav* not bowtd the knee to
Baal,” will Qonstitute tho great constitutional,con
servative American party.
Tut deliberations of the Convention will present
no striking or interesting features nntil the report
of tho Flattorm Committee, when may be expected
a most able, eloquent and angry debate.
The South it most bbly repiosented, and I but
record the common sentiment when 1 make the
statement.
The Noith is also ably reprosentad, bnt not
generally by men of such marked ability us charac
terise the general Southern delegation.
A da t or two at most, and the great body will
have embarked in the war ot angry words. Tbe
strife is inevitable, and muet retail in the entire
(Tfotaion of all maiconlenu and lac 1 ions from the
body. Tiie dividii.g qoe-tions must no mat aud
the issue joined. **ke cannot serve God *n;j
Mammon.”
I'll JL A DEI THIA, JuU<’ li, 1855.
I have watched wan intense iutererd the vanour
combinations here formed, and ‘.no distinctive
f ecLjonai dogmas euunc..ued byte j ;veral cl q o>,
wuo occupy ad tho.r leisure hours u score, cau
cusses.
That three diatinctivo parties arc in tho field
is a fact that wiil not be controverted by auy ou<
cognisant of the facia in ihe c-n , aud that thest
three parties aie the representative* severally of
the dinanotive doc r ncs—
First. Tost the K**ust.» Nebraska act f-L .11 be
repealed, the Fagmve Slave li w annulled, the
power rs Congress over hiu'.ery i.. the D: trie. O;
Columbia ooucoded, and the further admission o.
slave States iuierdic ed.
Second# The fad recognition of the Kant at-.
Nebraska ac , and the admi.-s;on of us a
slave State; no interfe.oncj with save yin the
State or Territories ; the unquestionable righto
transitu; tbe ceasing to ugude the question in
Congress, and the general and explicit acknow
ledgment of the whole question, in all its phases
and Aspects.
Third. The constitution, and the laws enacted
under it—the rights of a'l being defended and
protected, aa contemplated by its framers aud
founders—no sectionalism b» ing recognised by it;
the doctrine of non intervention with the rights
of tbe several States; aud the cotioossion that,
under the constitution, tbe onfo requisition to be
demanded ofthe Territories seeking admission as
States, shall be tbat the State constitution shall be
republican in it* form of government.
The first section embraces all the factionists of
New England and the North-West, headed by the
notorious abolition!-t, Wilson, of Massachusetts.
As intimated in a previous letter, the preliminaries
for a general abolition caucus have all beeu aojus
ted and arranged, and their ultimatum is boidly
to be enunciated and demanded. This faction has
not tbe entire sympathy of all the New England
States. Connecticut, Rhode Island, and Vermont
interpose, to some extent at least, the national
standard aa a barri -r, and will be slow to recognise
the lana'ical ultimatum. The former SLate espe
cially, in the person of Sperry a d his worthy com
peers, will battle, if not effectively, at least patri
oticaliy, for the supremacy of the constitution and
the law*.
The second embraces the extremists of th©
South, who, though few io unmoor here, are nev
ertheless urgent in their exactions.
The third constitutes the great bodv of ibe na
tional conservatives, and are the legitimate repre
sentives of the principle* and dootr nea of the
great American fraternity.
As previously intimated, no affinities exist
whatever between tbe first and the other two aec
tions. Whilst the two latter may readily coalesce
and stand on tbe same national platform, the firat
must, from the very necessity of the case, be cut
adrift, and i's connections effectually severed from
the national body. That it will so eventuate will
not be cont'overed here, and the sooner it shall so
eventuate the better it will be for the body politic,
is the current and popular sentiment in the con
vention.
The committee on the platform are aedu'ously
employed, and will be prepared, probably, to make
their report in the mornmg. Depend upon it,
the platform will be national in the whole and in
ail its parts—in the geueral and in detail. In it
no countenance or support whatever wil be given
to Massachusetts fanaticism and lo!ly. National
ism i* large ly iu the ascends u’; and maugre the
wily mHchi*tttri n9of the unscrupulous fanatic aad
pseudo philanthropist, will continue to constitute
the Btapie of the ac s and deliberation* of the con
vention.
The Mftifurm.
Philadelphia, June 11—fl P. M.
The following resolutions respecting tho slavery
question have been adopted by tho platform oom-
A ‘esclotdy That the American party having arisen
upon the ruins and in despite ot the opposition of
, the Whig and Democratic parties, canuoi bo held
in any manner responsible for the obnoxious acta
’ or violated pledges ot either; that the systematic
> agitation of (he Bluvery question by thoae parties
, b*» elsvated Bootional hostility into a positive ele
ment of political power, and brought our 1» stitu-
Uoha into peril. It has, therefore, beeo no the im
perative duty of the American party w lutcpoee
lor the purpose ot giving peace to the oouatry and
perpetuity to the union; that, us exponent* has
shown, it is impossible to reconcile opinions so ex
treme as those which separate the disputants; an J,
as ihsre can be no dishonor in submitticg to ihe
laws, the National Counoil has deemed it the best
guarantee of common justice and ot future peace
to abide by and maintain the existing laws upon
the subject of slavery, as a final and conclusive set
tlement of that subject iu spirit and in Bubrtinoe.
Ittiolwi, That, regarding it the highest duty to
avow these opinions, upon a subject so important,
in distinct and uuequivoca' terms, it is horoby de
clared, as the sense of this National Co moil, that
Congress possesses no power uudor the o mrtita
lion to legislate upou the subject of slavery in the
Slater, or to exclude auy Slate from admission into
the Union because its constitution does or does
not recognise the institution ot slavery as a part of
the social system, and oxpre?sly pertormittod any
expression of opiuiou upon the power of Congress
io establis i or prohibit slavery lu any Territory,
it is the souse of this National Council that
giess ought not to legislate upon tho subject of
slavery as it exists iu the Distiictot Columbia, and
that any interference of Congress with slavery, us
it exists in the said would boa violation
of the spirit and intention ot the oomuaot by which
the Slate of Maryland ceded it to the United Siatea,
and ajbreach ot the national faith.
Dame Rumor hath it that L.vous, ot New York,
had tho honor to propose Hub measure, which, the
same garrulous o!d Dame asser s, was adopted iu
the committee by ayes seventeen, uoes fourteen.
Philadelphia, June 11— 10 P. M.
The two resolutions sent in to day constitute
the platform on the sui j mi of slavery in the gen
eral sense. It will be added to and construed iu
sabstgttpe as follows
To the d al resolution wi'l be added this pro
vision, via.:—Subject to the decision of the proper
courts having judicial cognizance thereof, and push
amendments us shall be needed to fully carry out
•he r spir t and more f ally give to the inhabitants
of the Territories the entire power of local Hove
reign'y, as the sume iw possessed by the people of
tho States.
Auer ihe second resolution will be ad ’ed tho
following, giving the fcobeme of the American
party for the solution of the problem ot Union :
Kisoliei, That it is the opinion of thia N&t oual
Council that the people of the Territories of tho
United S'.utes should posse.-s as full aud ictual
Hovero gnty within tho same as tho people of the
States do; that Congress, iu passing tue organic
law for the organ zition of a Territory, should put
therein uo more provisions than will meroly au
thorize tho people of the Territories to act for
themselves; aud sh 'uld empower thorn to create
their own scheme of government, limited to a re
publican character, authorizing them to determine
upon whatullioois, irora Governor to Iho lowest
Huboidinato, they will posi'ess, und to elect tho
same; to establish wha* Courts they choose, und
appoint or elect the jndgea of the s me as they
rimy denude lor and give to their
Courts ihe powor to adjudiouteou their own laws,
as the Courts ot Staton possess the power to do,
subject to the laws oi the Slates and ho dec sient*
of tue Courts of the Suites to review by tho 8u-
Sn-.mo Court of the United States iu oane of u ojii
ict with the constitution of the United StuteH amt
the laws pfv sed »u pursuance thoreof. Thai Con
gress shall create within tho Territories such
Courts ot tho Uuited States as exist by Uwm of
• ongresft in tho Slates, aud the Prosiriout of tho
United States shall appoint, with the con mnt ot'
the Senate of the United Sia es, iho judgoH there
of, and the ju iges thereof shall hold < Hi d nn l
p ss H 3 jurisdiction us all such judges do ii, the liko
Courts of tho United Slaves in the S'ate*; that
Congress shall 0 cute all such ollic s < dicers in
sai«l i’e ritory ns a»© now existent in tho Siatos,
uid said ctii ers ahull bo appointed by ihe Presi
dent ua tlie same uro appointed by him, eiiber
done or with the content of tho Seuute ol tho
United fc-tMtes, and that the Territioriea should in
general poarCbs th® powers, rights, piivilegts und
iuiinunilios aa do tho S ates, except u representa
iou iu Congress, they huviug noithor Senutors
nor R preaeutativoa therein, but only u aiuglo
delegate.
W nei t.aß, tho constitution of tho United States
contains the provisions following, being tho third
clause of the second aectiou of article four there
of, v ; z:—“No person held to servos or labor m
one State, under the laws thereof, escaping into
another, shall, in consequence of any law qc regu
lation therein, bo discharged from such service or
labor, but shall be delivered up ou claim of'ho
party to whom such service or labQY may m due.”
Resolved, Thut this national council recognise tho
full aud binding obligation ctf this provision of the
constitution upon the S*y,es of this Union and tho
people thereof, and it is due to the cont-Motion
und to good faith' t u one State towards anotner that
tho proper laws should exist to fnlly, fairly an t
honestly party out the said provision in letter ami
hud thut alt tho courts of this Union and of
the States should fully, honestly and with alacrity
enforce all luws ma *e in pursuance of suid provis
ion of the constitution, and render at all timesand
in all places tho said provision operative and effec
tive, for the keeping in good faith of one Slate
with auotker, and for the rendering of ju-ticj and
the protection of property ; aud this National C
oil pledges itaeli to all just aud proper measr.res
to socuro that this provision of the const itutio\i HU <i
tho laws made in pursuauco thoreof shall ' rt6 <j u |y
onforced, and that fa»th shall bo kept j itt u C e
done in its regard.
The platformas sent was adopted , n the commit
tee ot thirty one on that aubj ;ot BO vontet n to
fourteen. Tho abolitionists standing in oppo
sition on the one side, the national men in
support on the other, Its adoption waa an over
throw to them—t a6 y W iil now strive in the Con
vention to car>y their views, and failing in that
will bolt, phey camo to abolitionist the Order,
u °d ’when defeated will secede. Their departure
will clear the skies and brighten prospects. Every
thing now 1 oks well, and iho friends of tho Union
are iu high spirits.
As onr readers donbtleßs take a very lively in"
to re at in tho proceedings, and desire tosej tho
fullest report, we subjoin the correspondence of
the Now Vork 2'ribune:
Philadelphia, Monday, June 11,1856.
The mooting this morning amused itsoll with
expending a great dual of indignation and
inont over the reports of the Council in the Tri
bune. Extructs from its correspondence of this
morning were read, and a variety of in-asur ~H sug
gested tor discovering the leak. Rrolhe 1 : B.rkor
ol New York, proposed swearing ouch /nombor to
aee if ho had told any of the secrets 0 f n, O <j r er>
Gou. Wil on suggested if member* would drink
less liquor and talk lea* freoiy <, !K j loudly n public
places, they would have oause for complaiut
on this score. Members ' < oo should be certain that
gentlemen whom tb «y lß |g w ith ar6 really mem
bers ot the Cor U ti on before they “iet on” to
them about ’Vnat is done. Some vordar cy is ex
cusable, b, a t tne greenness cf supposing that every
K eD V'.eman who is stopping at the hotel is a fellow
*rtmber, is literally that or a know nothing. Fin
ally the Convention appointed a committee of
three to iuv stigate as to bow the reports in the
Now York papers got out. Let mo recommend
them to Judge Edmonds’s voluminous works ou
Spiritualism, and to the highest authority on the
laws of aoustice* A few weeks 1 carefal study of
these sciences will give them an idea or two ger
mane to their investigation.
Ex President Barker took oooasion this morn
ing to deny having taken a contract for tho “Live
Oak ’ Candidate as has Deen intimated in the pa
para on the authority of Daniel Uilmtnnaml oth
era, and he showed some sensitiveness at an a!
In si on of Sena or Wilson’s that The Now York
Herald pot its roporis from tho George Law run
nert inside and outelde.
I am glad to have the testimoney which se /oral
gentlemen gave in the Council to day to the fa,th -
! nlnose es auy rr porta. The meuns by t! , e y
are obtained are not yet reduced to a and
it would not have been strange if in ’ # ne infancy of
the art some errors should have V yoen made, but
thb morning’s proceedings iu ~y vindicaed tho
value of the and its qq jro pructicsbidiy.
I congratulate The Tribap;* on its being iho first
journal in the v.orld to '.[,augurate this new means
ot extracting life
inanimate walla beuches.
Nothing «1* 4 of imj or a.iCO was done this even
ing. The ‘.jounc'd is waiting for the Cornmi'.tee on
the Ph’/rorm who are s ill in labor. It i« uu-ler-
tt.ey have so tied the Slavery pari, but are
not willing to report it by itself. 1 predict that
this wi I r.e the most ultra Pro Slavery, tyrannical,
gtggiug platform uu this quon ion ever prupOfed to
or adop ed by auy po iliCui Couvtu ion of the na
tion. It will bo the very essence of slave dnv.ng
end wiil arouse the Free States as with a whirl-
wind.
I .shall hopo to send you tho resolution* to night
by telegraph. The Council haw limited d<sba’% io
five minutes tor each Speaker unioi-s by ,-peoiul
O/nsent, an if the resolutions go in o night there
probably will boa late and vioient sitting.
By Ttltff apk to the A. Y. Tr.bwa.
I'll ILADELTIiIA, JUDO 11, 1.555.
Tho Committee on Ite >la 10 a reponej to »h e
Counc I this afternoou the follow.hvoaolutiouß
on Slavery:
[Hare follow tho earns Keßo!ut> )na reported by
the correspondent of the
The mi jority report bav, D g been read, a minori
ty report wan submitted wnich was signed by *he
following members of the cornmittje : vVilnam f.
John*ton,Pa; A. i>. Bpirry, Conn.; Thorns 11.
Ford, Ohio ; Anthony Colby, N. II; Joan t>. Say
ward, Me * John W, Foster, Ni hatnel
Green t ic. 1-j Joseph 11. Barrett, Vt.; bchuyler
Colfax, Ind.; D. IC. Wood, Wia.; J. Cogshtdl,Mich.;
Wm. J. Phelps, 111., twelve in all; also by Kichurd
Clement, Dal., and C. D. Deahler, N J. as to fi st
clause. Mew York alone of tho Free Slates went
for the majority report, towa was not represent
ed. Minnesota Territory went with Mew York, as
also the District of Colombia; and these with the
united South carried the majority report in Com
mittee.
In the Council Mr. Mallory of New York
thought no discussion was needed. He asked in
sultingly if any man there woula uot succumb to
the wiU of the mi jority. Gov. Gardner or Muss,
took up the gauntlet, and declared that mother
be nor hiaSlate, nor* majority of the Free Staten
would abide by tho Resolutions firat reoor ul.—
The partty could not carry a village in Massachu
setts upon them. He charged the M. Y. Djlegation
with deserting the North, and of even going so i*r
in donghfaceism as to complain to tne S uth that
they wore conceding 100 much to the North.
Gov. Gardner made a bold, earnest apeech, pro
testing against the resolutions of tho majority.
The Council adjourned to 8 o’clock this even
ing, when the debate will be resumed. A Jon&
and violent discussion is anticipated. The ruo>.
lotions of the majority will undoubtedly pass.
The minority resolution is as follows:
Absolved, That the repeal of the Missouri Com
promise was an iutraotion of the piighiod faith of
the nation, and that it should be restored, and if
efforts to that end shall fail, Congress should re
fuse to admit any State tolerating slavery, which
shall be formed outofany portion of the territory
from which that institniun was excluded by that
Compromise.
The 10>f o’clock Counoil is still in session. A
doll discussion is going on, on resolutions other
than those relating to slavery. These are unobjec
tionable, and meet no very serious opposition.
Slavery will be up again, and more dir ctiy, to
morrow. A greut debate is expeoted. The s’mth
show indications of waveri g. They never found
the North so determined and bold before.
The debates in the Kdow Nothing Convention
this morning were quite uninteresting until about
noon, when the *• Committee on the Platform’*
were called upon lor a report. The Chairman
'hen made a partial report ot the por.ion that had
been agreed upon, which gave ri-e to a debate so
exciting that the acssh n was prolonged till long af
ter dinner hour. No decision on a tingle issue ot
the platform has basil reported. There was no
regular session this evening, the time being deves
ted to caucusing.
[SKB SECOND PAGE.]
Dtniel Whiting, of Philadelphia, a coterrvjwwy
of Aaron Burr and Alexander Hamilton, died that*
on Thursday l««t.