Newspaper Page Text
!!!•: GEORGIATELEGRAPH.
3VE^OOrvT, GKA..,
Tuesday Morning, October 11.
1'uion Prayer meeting
Will be held daily, in the Reading Room of
the Young Men'.'- Christ)in Association from
12 to 1 o’clock.
ry" All persons arc cordially invited to at
tend.
Twiggs and tt ilkinson Courts. The I.nndmnrk Banner and Clicr-
The Fall Term of Twiggs Superior Court! OKEE BAPTIST, NEW PAPERS, Ac.
commenced on the 4th Monday of September, We have received the first number of a new
and adjourned on Friday. Tho docket* are Baptist denominational paper rccontly cs tab-
light—and but few cases now remain for trial, lished at Rome, Georgia, and conducted by Rev.
Four eases, two on notes and two sounding in ! J. M. Wood. It is a large and neatly printed
damages, wens returned, and one of the notes | sheet, and the first number gives evidence of
was paid before the Court convened.
Fair Fair Fair.
The Ladies of Perry, will hold a Fair on the
twenty sixth and seventh of this month, the pro
ceeds to be applied to tbc building of a Pres
byterian Parsonage in this place. We respect
fully solicit a large attendance and hope the
public generally will aid us in the undertaking.
Pony, October 6, 1858.
One Hundred Guns for Bulloch !
That noble and unflinching old Democrat,
but youthful Legislator, Gen. Peter Cone, is
again for about the twentieth time elected to
the Legislature—and Brown and Love have
over five hundred majority. Ilurrah for Gen.
Cone, and the invincible and* continually in
creasing Democracy of Bulloch.
— — -♦*•
Clark County.
The down-trodden Democracy of Clark are
gradually shaking off tho yoke. We are glad
to know that Wn. G, Delony, Esq., a distin
guished young Democrat, has been elected to
the House. He will make his mark before the
session closes.
Mr. Irwin of Wilkes.
This gentleman, who has for six or eight
years past represented Wilkes, is again re
turned. There will be no purer or abler man
in the House, than Isaiah T. Irwin.
A Brilliant Galaxy.
Tho Democracy will have in the Senate.
Ring, Lawton, Seward, Spalding, Cone, Gucr-
ry, Tracy, L. B. Smith, McGehec, Wallace,
Collier, Gartrell, Printup, Briscoe, Turner,
and other shining lights. They will be pre
pared for Hill, Holt, Trippe & Co.
The Democratic side of the House.
We shall be doubly armed with talent in the
House: Hartridge, Screven, Ely, Cnllens, Wil
liams, Dixon, Brown, Greene, Delony, and
m my other premising young men arc in for
the first time. They will prove efficient co-
laborers witn the veterans of the party.
Charles J. Harris, Esq.
We understand this gentleman will be a can
didate for re-election as Secretary of the Senate.
The popularity ho gained while filling the posts
of Assistant Secretary and Secretary of the last
Senate, will materially aid hi* claims. Wo wish
him
Florida Judicial Election.
We have a few scattering returns from Flori
da, which give no foundation for a definite opin
ion about the result We have no doubt, how
ever, that Hon. C. 11. DuPont is elected Chief
Justice, and Hon. DavidS, Walker and Hon.
William A. Forward, Associate Justices.
New Music at Virgin's.
The Wild Rose, Rondo Polacca, by W. V.
Wallace.
West Point Polka Redowa, by Christian
ElbeL
The Beautiful Melodies of J. It. Thomas
with brilliant variations by Charles Grebe.
Polka Brillantc by Fritz Spindler.
The Sylvie Mazurka by It. F. C. Ellis.
The Guitarist—a Collection of Beautiful
Ballads arranged for tho Guitar.
Vocal Beauties, Composed by W. V. Wallace
—arranged for the Spanish Guitar.
Kissing Courtship—Song and Chorus—
Words and Music, by It. W. Pearsall.
My Jamie Trudges Thro’ tho Corn, Written
by William TootheEsq., Comjtoscd for ai.il sung
by Mrs. J. M. Mozart, By Urn. li. Currie.
Loro me little—Love me Long, Sung by
George Linloy.
If our learned friends of the legal Brother
hood are to depend upon the litigation of Twiggs
county for support, we are sure they will find
this Jordan of their hopes a hard road to travel.
Out of debt, with fertile lands, and for the past
two or three years blessed with health, and
strengthening daily in lore and support of De
mocratic principles, what need have they of
lawyers and courts with their twin of sheriffs,
constables, and other concomitant evils.
We congratulate tbc people of Twiggs on
their present prosperity, and hope that in all
coming time they may be as happy and hearty
and fortunate.
The Fall Term of Wilkinson Superior Court
was in session last week, Judge Hardeman pre
siding. The Grand Jury was organized on
Monday, Col. John Smith, Foreman. The dock
ets arc crowded with eases, and it will require
at least two weeks to finish the business. An
adjourned Term is to ho held, commencing on
Tuesday after tiro first Monday in January.
Messrs. Nisbet, deGraffenried, Groce, Ander
son and Branham of Bibb, Harris, Kenan and
McKinley of Baldwin, Rudisill and Wartlien of
Washington, Moore, Smith and Cochran of Lau
rens, Crocker of Twiggs, Gordon of Chatham,
Winfield and Adams of Putnam, and Sol. Gon.
Lofton were in attendance on the Court.
Wilkinson county is in a highly flourishing
and prosperous condition. The population is
advancing in intelligence, the lands are rapidly
rising in value, and we doubt if thcro be more
than ono county in Georgia where the average
yield of Cotton to the land is greater.—Dough
erty may excel it Wo hear that fifty dollars
per acre have been offered and refused for sixty
acres of Creek law grounds in tbc south-west
ern part of the comity.
Considering tho peculiar advantages which
arc enjoyed by tho people of Wilkinson, we
arc not surprised that their lands arc so highly
esteemed and command such high prices.
The Central Rail Road passes through the
northern portion of the county. The proposed
Brunswick Road will ha quite accessible to the
southern and south-western portion, and the
Oconee which is now being opened to steam
boats as for up as Dublin, gives a cheap outlet
for the produce of the south-eastern and south
ern part of the county. Macon, which is the
chief market for supplies, is but thirty miles
distant, and successfully competes with Savan
nah.
We arc pleased to learn that more freight is
received at the Gordon and McIntyre Depet
from Macon than Savannah, showing that tho’
the Cotton goes to the sea, the trade comes to
the high lands. We think it would be well for
the business men of Macon to cultivate a more
intimate acquaintance with our Wilkinson
friends. The population is industrious, solvent
and prompt, and our trade with this wealthy
section, by a little attention, might be largely
increased. In summing up, we are sure that
no county in Georgia offers greater inducements
ter pleasant and profitable residence than Wilk
inson. It is true Dr. Cochran, a most estima
ble and intelligent democrat, was beaten this
year for the Senate, on side issues, but we hope
that two years hence the Democracy will heal
up tlicso divisions, sink all local questions, and
achieve a glorious victory.
editorial aptitude and application. Price $2,00
per amyim. Unless there are really important
and irreconcilable diflercnccs of opinion in doc
trine or polity among our Baptist friends in
Georgia, we think they will find their true ad
vantage in concentrating rather than dividing
their newspaper patronage. It is difficult to
sustain a religious newspaper from tho fact
that it most rely for support almost wholly on
profits from subscriptions which are necessarily
very small—so small, that probably the same
measure of reliance would be fatal to eveiy sec
ular print in Georgia. But no newspaper can
long maintain an efficient existence without
liberal income. As well expect the human body
to preserve a healthy vigor without nourishing
and generous food. No matter with what high
and holy purposes—under what generous im
pulses or patriotic inspirations a newspaper may
and devices, and by every expedient that a fal
ls a sickly and dependent existence.
keep it in being. It has really no indcp
voice, and dies at last as certainly as the at
tempt to feed an empty mill sluice with a buck
milling. The demands for money in a newspa
per office arc so constant—so unavoidable—-so
proportionably large, that any friendly liberal).
Ilnrpcr for October
May be had at Boardman's. The illustrated
article? of this number are—Daniel Boone, by
Benson J. Lossing, and a visit totheGuajigucro
Indiana. The other articles are : The Water
of El Arbain; Audubon’s Hymn In tho Ameri
can Forest; Behind the Cloud; The Picnic;
Country Life; The Lovers' Quarrel; Tho Blind
Preacher; The Teaching of Death; Two men
and a woman; The Romance of Life Insurance;
Two Birds with ono Stone; Up the Spout;
Tho Virginians; Monthly Record of Current
Events ; Literary Notices ; Editor’s Table ;
Editor’s Easy Chair; Editor’s Drawer; Flower
and Picturo Pieces Fashions for October.
Colton's Atlas.
Wo have just been shown Colton's General
Atlas of this year’s Edition, published by John
son A Browning, of New York. It is really a
valuable work, which should he in the bands
of every man who makes any pretension what
ever to literary taste, or who would know ex
actly what kind of a world he lives in. This
Atlas contains 170 maps and plans of States,
countries and cities, was formerly published in
two volumes, and sold here for twenty-seven
dollars. It is now condensed in one volume,
containing more maps, and the same amount of
reading matter, which is done by printing the
Gazattocr and Statistical matter upon the back
of the maps, giving us two pages where we bad
one in the other Edition. The map of the
Mountains and Rivers of the world is a splendid
work, and the map giving us the comparative
size of lakes and islands is a new feature of
great value.
country boasts the hugest lakes in the world,
an ample stream from a strictly business source,
must prove alike fatal to the patience of friends
and tho courage and character of tho enterprize.
To be efficient, consistent and influential, a
newspaper establishment, like every other, must
stand on its own fret—must be self-sustaining,
particularly so, in a time when opinions arc un
settled, and take what course a paper will, its
particular friends of to-day may he its foes of
to-morrow.
The foregoing remarks have been merely sug
gested by the notice of the Banner and are not
made with any particular reference to that pa
per, except in so for as the establishment o( a
rival to the old Index shall have a tendency
to substitute two inadequately supported pa
pers, for one now in efficient operation. Wo
do not know whether there is any danger of
such a result; but if it should happen, the de
nomination will soon see that nothing has been
gained by the substitution. We designed, how
ever, a more special reference to the passion for
multiplying papers which has raged in Georgia
for the past two or three years. The evil will
cure itself after a while, but meantime it has
worked mischief to the craft and loss to tho
public. It has impaired tho resources, circula
tion and efficiency of established points, and in
volved a good deal of loss and disappointment
all round - If the patronage of the eighty news
papers now published in Georgia, could be con
centrated on half that number, the forty might
employ the same men on increased compensa
tion, at vastly diminished cost, in publishing
much better newspapers. Take the expensive
out-fits, rents, ink, paper, contingencies, Ac., of
one half the papers and transfer them to the
profits of others, incorporate the physical and
mental force in the remainder, and all would he
better paid and the people get better papers.
Gwinnett—Lenoir, Blakcy, Reeder.
; table with Hancock—Smith, Lewis, Brantley.
The Electiou.
We have compiled the followin
some little care, rejecting all reported majori- j Clark—Billups, Deloney, Lumpkin,
ties, and incorporating only full returns. Ro Quitman—Guerry, Morris,
turns from 20 counties arc lacking to complete ( Jasper—Opposition ticket elected,
tlic list. The result as to the Governor’s race! Putnam—Democratic ticket elected,
is summed up below. It is a most awful and Thomas—Seward, Whaley,
overwhelming rebuke to slander, and we hope Decatur—Chester, Terrell,
all parties will see that mere detraction don’t
pay as an electioneering investment As a in
dication of the character and claims of Gov.
Brown, that table is complete and flattering.—
Without going personally into the field, and we
may almost say without a champion, the almost
steady display of gains shows that his reliance
on the good sense, patriotism and justice of the
people, was not in vain. -gT” Mark that eth
field of his highest achievements is the district
where he was most violently assaulted:
FIRST DISTRICT.
Gorxnaoa. Concuss.
Appling
Brooks
222
281
Bryan
... 167
119
152
138
33
Berrien......
Balloch
... 586
30
586
St
188
Chariton
Colquitt
Clinch
... 28S
79
261
105
222
Chatham....
... 736
638
696
649
101
Camden
... 133
37
137
43
19
Effingham.*.
... 185
252
171
254
27
Emanuel....
... 445
173
465
131
195
Glynn
... 191
39
176
41
71
Irwin.
Liberty
... 232
141
213
171
9
Laurens
... 134
325
235
187
34
Lowndes
... 262
193
236
216
26
McIntosh
... 137
86
144
72
45
Montgomery-
....
Pierce
... 185
35
1*99
19
Telfair
...203
137
192
140
96
Tattnall
Thomas
... 322
393
477
428
92
Wayne
... 180
26
175
22
11
Ware
... 229
45
237
43
10
Wilcox
... 260
16
259
5
SECOND DISTRICT.
Washington—Wells, Irwin, Wicker.
Chattahoochee—Johnson, * Whittle.
Greene—Ward, Me H^horter, Lewis.
Campbell—Tatum, Tuggle.
Catoosa—Racket, Sprayberry.
Cobb—Gartrell, Lester, Greene.
Clayton—Johnson, Gloss.
Talbot—Smith, Lumsden, McCrary.
Pulaski—G. W. Jordan, R. F. DeLamar.
Dougherty—Harris, Ely.
Lee—Batts, Cock.
Lowndes—Brunson, lloweli.
Monroe—Trippe, Settle, Clark. .
Spalding—Mathews, Patrick.
Fayette—Denham, Underwood.
Macon—Cook, Pitts.
Randolph—Sawyer, Taylor, Coleman.
.Quitman—Guerry and Morris.
Carroll—Merrill, Johnson, Richards.
Bryan—Hart, Smith.
Marion—Rushen, Bivins.
Heard—Oliver, Ware.
Paulding—Whitworth, McKccver.
Liberty—Boggs, Harrington.
McIntosh—Spalding, Hopkins.
Glynn—King, Harris.
Crawford—Walker, Ilicks.
Harris—Hood, Kennon, Mullins.
Schley—Crittenden, Perry.
Webster—Shepherd, Causey.
Baker—Lyon, Solomon.
Terrell—Vanover, Bynum.
Sumter—Hill, Brown.
Scrivcn—Cooper, Psescott.
Wayne—Cannon, Knox.
Camden—Atkinson, Dufour.
Stewart—Evans, Walton.
Forsyth—White, Whitehead, Hurst.
Baker 203
Chattahoochee... 3C0
Clay 270
Clay - •-■70
Calhoun. 303
Decatur....—540
Dougherty 3to
Dooly 564
Early
Lee I 289
Macon 308
Marion 433
Muscogee....... 74?
Miller 201
Pulaski 416
UoitmAn........ S13
Randolph 541
Stewart 568
Sumter 517
Terrell 280
Worth 277
Webster
Craw- Doug-
ford. lass.
207 92
522
211
214
279
252
297
511
102
517
197
230
For the Georgia Telegraph.
Mb. Clisby.—Judge Black, in his itevienr
of tny fxiend Douglas’ abominable Heresy of
Squatter Sovereignty iu Harper’s Magazine,
has literally torn that Heresy to tatters, but
For tho Georg a Telegraph.
Tlic Political KenainiscencJs of
WANG DOODLE.
BV B. Q. lAFICi,-' I. p..
I am no demagogue—I am no political trick
ster, and whatever political aspirations I may
have entertained, have vanished from my mind
liko winter’s snow before a summer's aun.
Three months ago, and that fickle goddess—
Fortune—nursed me in her lap—three months
ago, and I could boast all the sweets of domes
tic life; but, alas! melancholy idea! —two
months and twenty-three days ago, there en
tered the sanctuary of my soul, an invisible
: object that bereft me of my happine33 and my
: hearth, and made my domestic sweets, demes-
i tic sours. Two months and twenty-three days
ago, I attended a political meeting of some
| party, whose name and platform hare Dever
been defined to my or any bodyelse’s satisfac
tion, and there, from out of eight hundred and
ninety-seven patriotic aspirants-for the Legis
lature, whom the office was hnnting down, I,
the most unfortunate of men, received the
nomination amid the plaudits of a disappoint
ed multitude. My patronymic, in large let
ters, emblazoned every wood pile, molasses
hogshead, and house corner, from Walnut
Creek Bridge to Pumpkin Hollow. My pho
tograph, very highly colored, (too much so a-
bout the physiognomy for a temperance man,)
was very prominently displayed in front of ev
ery Dagucr^ean Gallery in the city, while my
autograph, with fabulous donations attached,
j figured conspicuously among the numberless
, subscription lists for charitable purposes that
: were gotten up for tho occasion. I connected
j myself with several different ChurcLcs, aud
united myself with as many different secret
, Associations; among others, tho Sons of Malta,
for whose gratification, I permitted myself to
be hung and consigned to old Ocmulgce’s bo
som a few nights ago. At the close of a bril
liant theatrical season, 1 individually tendered
the Manager of tho Theatre a complimentary
benefit, on which occasion, “in behalf of his
untiring energies to please tho citizens of Ma
Fertile Georgia TsIcktii >
StepDen A. Douglas.
SL'MBER HT-
Now that our minds, fellow Democrats, have
cooled down from the excitement, of the elec
tion, permit me to offer you a few more plain,
! practical views. In the fiercecontest justend-
lrU * ed in Georgia, the Opposition have had but
one great battle cry, and that, was “Stephen
A. Douglas and Squatter Sovereignty.”-—
When we come to sum up the casualties of the
fight, the dead and wounded are mainly of their
own ranks. The Democratic column stood
firm, and its serried ranks impregnable. Be
fore the election, the Opposition orators and
presses claimed that the triumph of Governor
Brown and the Democratic parly, would be a
Douglas victory. Candor prompts me to ad
mit that it is no such thing. But the result of
the election shows that democrats are not to
be seduced or driven from their standards by
such attacks npon one of their most distinguish
ed leaders. And why, my friends, should any
of you, at this late day, falter in yonr admira
tion of Judge Douglas, if he does hold opin
ions variant from you own, on one question?
He has held those opinions consistently, and
for years ; long after he promulgated them in
1850 and 1851, he was our pot and favorite.—
Why, then, with intemperate rashness, con
demn him whom wejiO loved to praise ? Why
when every question to be affected practically
by his opinions haB been settled and the settle
ment ratified over and over by our party, at
this late day visit on him judgment and exe
cution ? Let us be consistent, my friends.—
Do we exact from other democratic leaders,
conformity, in all respects with our own opin
ions, or have we ever done it ? James K. Polk
signed the Oregon Bill with the Wilmot Pro
viso in it, and yet he continued to the last, the
popular Idol of his Southern friends. Mr Bu
chanan urged upon Congress, rank heresies,
at its last session, on the subject of the Tariff,
and the Pacific Rail Road BUI, and yet many
of those who carp most at Mr. Douglas, pro
fess to be par excellence friends of this Admin
istration. Grant it that Judge Black’s opin-
con,” See., See., See., I presented him with a
solid Silver Tea Set, borrowed for the purpose; j ions on the territorial question are more sound
from 1). A. Wise's Tin Manufactory
I delivered numerous addresses, doing Dan
in doing so. he has declared and sanctioned i M Webiter the honor of selecting the entire
one ten times worse. After cnunciatmg it in .. . , ... . .
222
401
364
853
159
158
486
580
641
381
114
215
284
387
749
201
406
199
468
557
507
274
272
385
318
682
. . . . cnUnc | at i ng * n j portion of them from his speeches made in
7 his Review more than once, he concludes thus : | r< on „ ro ^ s
“It is also acknowledged, that the people of* 8
a new State, either in their Constitution or in
than Judge Douglas’, does that make him
better democrat ? He holds to Mr. Buchan
an’s Tariff ^notions, whilst Judge Douglas is
for free trade, or at least stands in deadly hos
tility to discriminations and bounties.
And again—Judge Black sits around the
! Conncil Board of Mr. Buchanan’s Cabinet, and
14S
157
544
572
592
378
109
I spoke thirteen times a day, on an
average, and on dry goods boxes as many
, , , ; more, until nature would forbear no longer,,
an act of their Legislature, may make the ne- . ^ j wa „ reluctantly compe51cd to retire from * looks to the Nestor of the Democracy-Lewis
grocs within it free, or hold them In MtW- j the field of assiduous labors, with chronic bron- j Casa—for ditoction and wisdom. His Chief,
|tude. . chitia, cholera infantum and congestive chills, j t00 > rests upon the old Michigander’s shoulders
Is this law . and docs itcomc from the high- j j bowever continued my exertions and enlist- I “* dependently as the Sovereign of Austria
ed as a sentinel, to observe the doings of tho ! did for long years on theback of the^ late
Democratic party, and notwithstanding War-
THIRD DISTRICT.
Batts 415
Bibb 970
Crawford 411
Houston. 578
Harris : 466
Monro*....
Pike.
Spalding...
Taylor
ilhnt...
Epson
563
660
515
*83
896
llarde-
Speer, man.
330 381 335
911 879 968
241 396 348
544 556 531
697 453 683
658 580 632
396 618 423
445 474 445
331 363 330
ITS 493 Ul
558 373 553
FOURTH DISTRICT.
Carroll 1200
Clayton 375
Coweta 803
Cobb 1157
Campbell- 803
Gartrell. W
491
Judge and Solicitor or the
Southern Circuit.
We learn that Augustin II. Hanscll of Thom-
asvillc has been appointed by Governor Brown,
Judge, and Mr. Smith of Laurens solicitor, of
the Southern Circuit to fill the vacancies occa
sioned by the resignation of Judge Love and
Solicitor General Sheftall.
Campbell- M3
DeKalb 733
Fayette 577
Fulton 1191
Heard 566
Henry 643
Troup 339
Meriwether 688
1164
385 357
505 775
700 1183
405 777
384 697
305 544
1115 1335
393 SCI
636 698
801 316
630 673
right.
138 :
383
477
553
389
363
315
889
337
659
750
593
eat Judicial officers of the government ? Is it
true, that tho Legislature of Georgia may set
the sereral hundred thousand slaves free with
in her borders? Is it true, that a Convention
of the people of Georgia may do it? If so,
they may hang every slaveholder to-morrow
without conviction of crime; for life and proper
ty, under all governments, stand upon the
same platform, under the samo flag, and both
perish together, when the arm of despotism
strikes cither.
Under absolute monarchy this power is held
and exercised, but under no limited monar
chy, much less iu a Republic, lienee it was
no new doctriue when our Constitutions de-
j clared private property sacred—it is as old as
Mctternich. And yet, Louis Cass and Judge
rior District brought seventeen hundred and i Dou^as’ opinions are identical, both being ad-
twenty-nine men in one ox-cart, from Savan
nah, I can safely assert, and would be quali-
rocates of popular sovereignty. When the
Kansas Nebraska Bill was born, after earth-
fled as to the truth of my assertion, that I made j <l uake labor pain*, Gen. Cass woundup the
one man drunk and forced him to vote the cn. I debatc tbat bad ra S cd dur!n S its ,on * P artur!
tire Opposition Ticket*. On the day of the tion ’ in a 6 P eech of a few glorifying sentences
election I battled like a Trojan for my rights,
and gracefully retired at the close of day,
proudly disdaining to display any solicitude
for myself while the votes were being counted.
Twelve o’clock at night at last arrived, and I
requested my wife to dress the children and
prepare to receive the congratulations of my
constituents, for I was positive, from the shouts
141 i lbe common law. Although Englishmen held that aroso from the crowd, that I could distin-
i« that Parliament is Omnipotent-that is, may j gu j 3 h the voice of that honest man, Tom Stal- ! for "the simples.’
congratulating the country on the triumph of
his principles. Then Douglas and himself held
the same doctrines. Now they stand togeth
er like Siamese Twins, on the pedestal of the
“Nicholson Letter." And yet, strange to say
there are green ones found, who crack their
voices in laudation of the Administration, and
grow hoarse from reviling denunciations of
Jnage Douglas. Such patriots should be cut
137
1ST ‘
153
FIFTH DISTRICT. -
....1051
....1010
.... 536
Crackers.
Since tho days of the original Georgia Crack-
er, wo never saw auch a variety of Crackers
as was found on one package from Messrs II.
N. Ella A Co., received tho other day. There
were Cream Crackers, Fox Crackers, Congress
Crackers, Farina Crackers, Dessert Crackers,
Walnut Crackers, Nonpariel Crackers and
Oyster Crackers. So crack away all good folks
and buy all these delicate varieties of the great
Cracker family a’t Ella’.
Tlic California mails—Further
from tbc Filllbustcrs.
New Orleans, Oct., 6.—Vanderbilt takes out
the California mails via Panama. There will
be no interruption of the semi-monthly mail
from New Orleans, except for the first trip.
The departure of the St. Louis is not con
firmed.
The Government yesterday ordered the Mar- i
slial of New Orleans to sieze the Philadelphia, '
, _ , provided he was satisfied she was concerned in
At a glance we see that onr ow» thc tifibuster movement.
A company of federal artillery from Baton
and that when we get Cuba, we shall have an j Rogue, arc on their way to a point on tho river
Island State about equal in territory to England.! New Orleans.
Accompanying each map is a full and accurate Thc monster Oyster Bed.
description of every country in tho world, ofi The whole line of shore from Rocky Neck to
Csis
Cherokee..
Chattooga.
Catoosa
Dade ...
Floyd 870
Fannin
Gilmer 90s
Gordon. 884
Harralson
MUton
Murray .706
Polk 303
Paulding 800
Pickens
Walker 854
Whitfield 865
Under
wood.
867 1336
436 ....
362
856 981 127 112
pass what laws they please—yet they dare not lings, whose exultation was the synonym of
I touch life or property without conviction of j my success. [I have since learned, that Tom
5 | crime. Hence, when a bill was introduced in ' Stallings, the infernal thief, voted against me.]
j Parliament to take away the chartered rights . The booming of distant artillery, and the
j of the East India Company, the stern old Eng- j harmonious strains of eloquent mnsic, an-
- j Usman, Lord Tburlow, cried out, My Lord!: nounced the consolidation of thc vote. In or-
this bill cuts every Englishman to tho bone! j dcr that I might perfect myself in oratory, I
; All the Courts in America have held, wheuev- j walked boldly up to my looking glass, (pre-
; | er thc question has been made, that private suming my constituents to be present) and rc-
j property cannot be taken but for public use, ■ pcated the same speech that Warren Akin had
and then on just compensation. Setting a i prepared to deliver when he defeated Joe
: slave free is not putting him to public use any j Brown. Fifteen minutes elapsed, and strange
' more than would be the taking from its owner ; to say, the Brass Band passed hastily by my
431 740 257
his horse, and taming him upon the public hctefC and struck up the most inharmonious
315
384
360
1139 155
Col. Harper’s Defeat.
We can’t yet get reconciled to Harper’s defeat
in tho 7th, as we had made up our mind thc
day after the election that he had certainly won
the race. At all events, Democrats of the 7th,
he has shown his mettle, and if you don’t re
turn him next time, we shall—be very sorry.
every State in the Union, and of all tbc princi- j New Haven has been roused to thc most intense
pal cities and large towns on the globe. The j excitement over thc accidental discovery of <
statistical matter is ofgrcat value, and is brought “ , ° nat ®’5 bcd °[.*f. orC tba ? 1 monster oysters.—
« . , „ . , The bed lies a little over the center of the Sound
down to 1835, when a census was taken by | in a Une from tho Norwalk to Eaton’s
many of the States. Wo were pleased to find j Xcck light—and from a party who lias dredgel
that thc Atlas contains a perfectly correct and j over it, we leam that tho bed is certainly from
reliable map of our own State. It is one of the i >nile wide to about two miles long. Other
most full and perfect maps of Georgia we have ! stories say three miles wide and ten long.'—
-- V. •... But, we have taken much pains to get at thc
yet seen, and is therefore of great value to all I ^ of ^ tu , Uer , and think thc firat state-
Georgians. This Atlas has been published at, niententirelyrcliable. Thc discovery was made
great expense, Mr. Colton having expended ; week before last by a party of five Darien fish-
eighty-five thousand dollars in getting it up.— - ermcn, whose namcaarc Wm. Wood, Jas. War-
The letter press description was written, and jj n E> t>arlin, William Hoyt, Alexander
nia . ttcr l W#s COl,CC “ ar ™f d i clS to™op “J s ?lbr OU i“2 over
by Dr. Fisher, whe has a very high reputation, the bed, when on taking it up it was filled with
as a scholor. j enormous bivalves, which led to further inves-
This work is endorsed and recommended by tigation, and tho result stated. One vessel, last
some of thc most distinguished students and w ; eck ; *«* «P hundred bushels in a sin
I_ - , glo day! The bed seems to bo almost mex-
ers of our country. ■ > ... *,#*
travellers
- haustible, and must contain many millions of
In a letter to thc publishers, Bayard Taylor bushels. We were shown samples of- the op
says—“ After an examination of yonr maps in ters yesterday as large as an ordinaiy garden
the General Atlas, I take great pleasure in tes- spade, thc meats from which looked more like
tifying to their remarkable accuracy, and the beef tonics than thc onlinaiy bivalve! There
. ° ... « ^ • trrro nn Siindnv two stmintbontM flml nlmnt lort
, - - .... i a ' . were on Sunday two steamboats and about 150
elegance of their execution. In these respoeLs j vesst .] s • .... - -
on thc ground dredging nearly all
they are equal to any maps I liavc ever seen, ,Uy—mostly New York people, we are glad to
not excepting those published at Berlin and . hear. This, Monday, everything in the shape
Gotha.” Bayard Taylor, the greatest traveller of a boat and an oyster-dredge has been brought
■n tint tivrlil /X,erht »i,„ -i,.—into requisition, and onr blacksmiths are dili-
in thc world, ought to know the character of
,. , igently at work making more implements to
this Atlas for accuracy and reliability. Such, J tbcm whh The £ Ls
no means oi even
Too jLotc.
Gartrell gave Col. Wm. F. Wright such a
mauling in the Fourth District that the Con-
federacy next day put in wliat Mr. Weller
would call an allibey, and announced several
reasons which had “induced Col. Wright tore-
tire, and request his friends to support Col. papers, or desires to keep pace with thc times, j below the reality. Nothing has ever equalled
-- - • »nd wo cordially recommend the work as imlis-
pcnsablo to the gentieman's library table, par
lor, or counting room.
a work as this is invaluable to any man who approximating at a p alliation of this disrevery.
baa a family to educate, who reads the nows- Probably five millions of dollars would fall far
Gartrell.” The Confederacy adds, however, by
way of explanation:
“The fact not being generally known through
out thc District, Col Wright received many
votes. His election would have been certain if
he laid only remained a candidate.
• CoL Gartrell then, owes his re-election ex
clusively to the magnanimity of bis Opposition
friend and opponent, CoL William F. Wright.”
Onr Friend Itanv
Was never so near Congress as he was last
Monday, and never will be so near again.—
Tho people of Georgia want him at home. The
Opposition can’t spare him. He is tho Demos
thenes and not Dr. Miller. The Doctor and
Mr. Hill fired their “thirty rounds apiece,”
completely raking tho State, but every man
they knocked over was an Oppositionist This
accounts for Akin’s losses. It was bad gun
nery. Ranse, the true Demosthenes, would
have managed the oratorical ordinance better
than that.
and marine speculators since thc great Bing
End oyster war some thirty years ago, when
the long toms, etc., were brought outand charg-
Tlic Agent of the publishers (it is sold only ed to the muzzle to tire upon thc New Haven
by Agents) is now in thif- city, and will receive ! marauders. This bed is in water from six to
orders for. tho work in Bibb and Monroe coun- ] e 'S ht frthonis, and there is no telling what the
fa. The Arnt ),r fa.j, -fa. 4^ " P ‘ h ‘“
disposition and gentlemanly bearing will ensure
him many friends, and who will not be oflend-
Gold Flowers.—Tbc inhabitants of Faria
ed if all who examine the Atlas do not buy—a 1 ilWe recently prevented tbc Empress Eugenie
good nropi-i t i‘>n will two superb vases of gold weighing 180 oun-
W# are informed by Mr. Denny, that Jones ; «*■ They contain flowers of gold, each emit-
* jZ -. ting an odor similar to the natural one of thc
county v. ill be visited by Mr. Denny in the #fc|dl {mm r4fptmtar
course of a few weeks, and wo trust our friends
there will avail themselves of the opportunity' Tho Arctic steamer Fox has returned from
. 184
. 746
.1051
. 808
. 690
Banks
Clark
Dawson....
Franklin...
Forsyth....
Gwinnett ..
Hall..
Habersham
Hart
Jackson 878
Lnmpkin 519
Madison 469
Rabun : ...
Towns
Union :
Wslton 556
Whit
SIXTH DISTRICT.
Jackson. Lytle.
... 501 90 504 67
... 49* .530 511 337
90
319 ....
656 699
448 587
137 ....
446
257
33*
241
335
384
356
308
385 583 416 104
SEVENTH DISTRICT.
Baldwin 414
Greene 38»
Hancock 335
Jones 398
Jasper........... 418
Morgan..., 344
Newton 796
Putnam..* 37s
Twiegt
Wilkinson 631
Washington 680
Harper. Hill.
385 313
344
750
385
347
383
383
383
189
744
333
639
389
189
449
383
733
383
common.
There exists no power in cither the Legis
latures or people in Convention, to deprive
thc owner of his Slave without his consent, so
long as slaves are property
Slavery can cease in no State where it ex
ists only prospectively. It is competent for
thc people in Convention to ordain that all
slaves bom in, or coming into the State after a
fnture fixed period, shall bo free; but cannot
say that those now existing shall ever be free.
Were they so to declare, every Court in the
slave States would be bound' by theft oath to
declare such a law or ordinance void.
What slaveholder wonld bo so stupid and
reckless as to ‘carry his slaves to settle in any
Territory, if his neighbors may meet in Con
vention the next month or year, and set his
slaves free beyond the power of Congress ?
Hence, I hold to Douglas’ abominable doc
trine, in preference to that of Black’s. Doug
las warns the slaveholder that he must look
out for hostility at the start, and that he had
better be off with his slaves before it is too
late. Black says to him, go there in peace.
' until some.collection of Topeka Robbers, some
EIGHTH DISTRICT.
Burke 611
Columbia 434
Elbert 535
Glascock 289
Jefferson 430
Lincoln 223
Oglethorpe..*... 483
Richmond 894
Scriven 298
Taliaferro 218
Warren 556
Wilke* ■-... 413
Jones. Wright.
889 514 351 2
396
188
375
1110
340
189
385
334
409
518
233
33*
820
473
980
883
188
448
398
413
64
454
186
386
1103
859
911
345
339
RECAPITULATION.
Gain.
Loss.
-Vet Gain,
First District....
...917
202
Mb
Second '“ ....
..920
302
018 j
Third “ ....
..007
CO
547 j
Fourth “ ....
.1481
155
138«
Fifth “ ....
.1144
80
1064 j
Sixth “
.1251
081
570
Seventh ....
. 980
000
osoJ
Eighth 44 . ....
*
*>$7
220
7
•
Krown’s net gain thus far.
....5,777
; fine morning, vote your slaves free and you a
;pauper!
I It is high time that the South—seeing that
such statesmen as Douglas and Black rule the
hour—demand and insist upon surer guaran
tees of safely. I see, or think I see, that this
constant cry of Peace, peace for the sake of
party and office, is soon to be the utter min of
the slave States. I was utterly amazed at the
declaration of so intelligent a man as Mr. Ste
phens, that slavery was more safe now than
heretofore! When ho knows that nearly all
the free States have become totally abolition*
ized—that year by year thc friends of the
South are stricken down and crushed, and
that there is not one, no, not one^ statesman
i sound that ever greeted human ears, and con
cluded with a funeral march, while at my op
ponent’s house, several operatic airs were per
formed to the infinite amusement of every per
son in town except myself. The most remark
able cfrcumstance connected with that Brass
Band was, that /had it specially reserved for
thc occasion, and the infamous leader, on the
following day, audaciously presented his bill
for services rendered, and threatening to ex
pose some of my rascality at the Hazard, com
pelled me to settle the bill.
I have nev»r fully comprehended why I was
defeated, but my friends assign as a cause,
that I did not receive a sufficient number of
votes; and upon mature reflection, I am con
strained to believe that such is the case. My
situation at the present time is a melancholy
one. I am scoffed at, as the defeated candi
date. I have no friends and left money, and
very much fear that 1 will be compelled to wear
nankeen pantaloons all neat winter. Mrs.
Doodles is near,- or quite insane, as she con
fidently expected to lionize at Lafayette Halt,
in Milledgeville, during the Session. - Poor
woman ! her hopes are blasted, while nine lit
tle Doodles look sympathetically in my face,
the expression of their countenance significant
ly betokening bread, i-n article of diet which
will prove \&y scarce iu my domicile, in thc
event of my failing to receive a salary up Salt
River. To the fifteen courageous men that
gave me their support, I here take occasion to
On this Territorial Question, fellow citizens,
there is at once, nerve and magnanimity in
Judge Douglas. He is not the man to back
down one cable’s throw from what he honestly
believes. He stands up before the American
people and proclaims bis opinions as if with a
Trumpet which all the winds of Heaven had
filled. And at its terrific blasts, Black Re
publicanism grows pale and trembles in every
joint throughout thc country. Still he is mag
nanimous and conciliatory. In the canvass
now raging in Ohio he has been on the stump-
rallying the Democracy, and he declares and
reiterates that he has no quarrel with any
democrat about this Territorial question—
that it is one on which democrats may honest
ly differ, and that he asks no new plank in the
platform of the party. While thus tolerant,
some hare no toleration for him—while thus
making sacrifices for tbc party, a few of them
would, if they could, slay and burn him as a
sacrifice on thc altar of other men’s ambition.
Thank God—they are impotent and emascula
ted Eunuchs in the Democratic Household.—
They may rage, but sober,'second thoughts
will possess the people—they may gnash
t 'neir teeth, but we read of “gnashing of teeth”
only by troubled spirits, who have lost power,
the power of doing harm to any but themselves.
No, no; this storm of persecution must soon
spend its strength—-the fiery bolts have al
ready been sped innocuously, and the Giant
of thc mighty West stand* erect and unsmit
ten. Mr. Jefferson declared “error was harm
less, as long as truth was free to combat it,”
and the triumph of truth, in- reference to
Judge Douglas, is certain. Madness may rule
the hour-—but soon reason will step on her
throne, and her radiance will rise and shine
resplcndant above the mists of passion and
prejudice.
Men of the South, are we just, honorable,
aud magnanimous to Northern Statesmen? It
seeking to brin
South do? I answer,
man that can beat Sewsrd 2 -^
into Africa. Takealeaa Cr 'f r ‘, *»
andmakc the grand fight;
ritory. Make thc North and vf "
battle, ».nd my word for it, , *
fear. Our danger is in
contest, and thus bv aroosin- *
passion and prejudices, ,; ;e ' V*
down beneath the infuriated nu
numbers. Our policy is to
Democracy as walls ofdefe n( Tu
our foes. To form in solid
them, and if they should be brtt
will be fresh to tarn back the
cism’s victory. It is quite cm*
cannot keep the Government o«
of the Black Republicans unfito'
We must look to the XafionjI f
avert such a calamity. And (L
to lead the Democratic host, ntr
all that is dear and sacred to J
and in imminent peril.'—I ]
Douglas. He has the intellects
needed for such a crisis. As M t
he is the Idol of the chivalry of
Democracy. Like Rhoderic [
blast would bring the brave, the,
ble iuto the field. At his sumt
of rushing clansmen would sojf.
oceans, as they come from ;e t
tain coves, and spreading prsitjl
of all, in the murky, sulphurotn
eventful contest, his white p!^
seen, like that of Murat, the ha^
tain victory.
It is to be feared, Fellow Citj;
spirit of disorganization isbcitJ
the Democratic party, that *jj
and destroy it. We hear
that Mr. Douglas is no better
and if he is nominated at (’harha
not support him. In the seme
are made, to break up the
tion in a row, and let discord»
heated ebulitions of feeling, an
the Slavery agitation. Men at*
minds to be tormented with ij
gloomy forebodings so long
seem unhappy, if the day of d,
layed. Tis to vaintcll them tk
comparatively high ground, and
ry question lias been settled in i
to quiet immediate fears. They
of such a thing, they insist these
for us any where or in any w»,
be miserable, not to be coming
friends, the strongest, cookkajy,
the South tell us differently,
moml, anti Mr. Boyce of South Ci
their high spirited constituents,
status of tho Slavery question •
and satis&ction. Alexander R
withdrawing from public life, li
into the shade of philosophic ij
all’s well. Jeff Davis on his X
year, filled New England with
that tlic troubled waters of sect*
fast setting into a placed com;
ccntly Mr. Toombs, than whoa
man of greater forecaste or cn
tellcct, pronounced an oration
with commanding power, not
South is well intrenched by
but that we are in good faith bou
and abide it. In this opinion
ridge, Slidell, Fitzpatrick and
our first men conctlr. Why
restlessness, to throw boml
grenades into the Democ:
insist upon issues, that are
ble, and will only distract and
What has thc South -to gain
It has steadily lost us that
we used to exert in the Sorer
divided our people at home,
will still more divide us, and
moral influence. It has lowered I
thc talents of our public mo.]
slavery agitation has been a I
a puny race of politicians, whs l
'
up into places once graced hj
statesmen.
Suppose extreme men and i
and thc Charleston Conventions
a row, or if Mr. Douglass shoi
his nomination be bolted in
me ask, will be accomplished j
separate herself from Democ
North Carolina, Kentucky, Aj
Texas and Louisiana, and whtij
the debris of a floating
routed, will spring up an <
give thc State to Botts, Bell, ora
And thus malcontent
will indirectly aid in Seward't
those malcontent Democrats if i
need in their aims they map t
Democratic party, but they will t<|
ruins. You may fell the preod j
has withstood the fury of so i
every brauch and twig of it will'
into rottenness. A Her afl, upon a J
of the past, this Slavery AS' todon ‘
tenors, as troubled spirits are i
invest- it with. It commenced t
ernmont, and rocked it in its c
will trace its history wifi find
in the Congress of 1790. in which!
General James Jackson of Gcorr
Thc latter made a fire-eating sp
EC
1th
Jl.e i
[tho
pop
{del
Ilf
\
|» • -j.
I'-:. :t
Isto;
1- , tl
hU-
I I
thifl
. I
has come to be a despotic requisition, tl.atthcy be bun , t the 4bo! it; 0 nists almost
must be ultra, and pro-slavery, or get no quar
ter. It is not enough that they stand by thc
Constitution and its guarantees. Because the
tender my thanks aud to the two thousand South is overwhelmingly Democratic, we hold
nine hundred and twenfy-sevemthat voted me
down, I have only to say being
018 left that dare stand up in all thc North and
advocate the full rights of slaveholders, ordc-
in 105 counties.
The real gain is greater, as new counties are
necessarily excluded in the computation, and
in some cases Akin’s gain is only apparent, re
sulting from the curtailment of an old county in
forming a new one. We should judge Brown’s
majority will lie about 20,000.
to get the best Atlas in the world.
-Ti-utli Crushed to Enrth,”
Wi.l lupin to n il again now that the polls
nr< >-!osed ami thovoti- all counted. We nev
er -nu man so thoroughly bespattered with
slander as thc Governor of Georgia had tho
misfortune to be at thalato election, and some
of the Opposition prints keep it up yet from
force of habit They will quit after a while,
however, and would have don* bolter it they
had never begun it. Let n -takc tin:- by tlic
forelock amt lodge a prediction here. It is this:
the rattle presses which have held up the Gov-
,-nior of this Suite in c'.-rr attitude repugnant:
to common honesty, truth, sincerity and pntri-
otimi, will, not far distant in the future, make
Lit, administration and its result* thc test of the
' in other. ,
Tlic TIiir4l District.
Crawford and Pike arc tho Banner Counties.
Where we expected to lose we have gained
largely. After the compromise in Crawford be
tween our friends, we learn that CoL George R.
Hunter took the field, canvassed tbc county,
united thc broken column and thc party achiev
ed a brilliant victory.
We are gratified to learn that the success of
our ticket and the large majority is in no small
degree owing to thc vigilcncc, activity and zaal
of CoL Hunter, and that the Dc
(buwford feel and recognize the val
efficient aid.
Mr. Speer is beaten, hut lie hn- made :t bril
liant canvass and thc Democracy of the Third
cannot attribute the election of Hardeman toll
her cruise, bringing interesting rcconis and rel
ics of Sir John Franklin’s Exploring Expedition.
1 Sir John Franklin died in 1847, and his ship
j was abandoned by his survivors in 1848.
The records of Sir John Franklin’s expedi
tion, brought by the Poe, are signed by the
captains of the Erebus and Terror, three days
after thc abandonment of tlic ships. Nine offi
cers and fifteen men were then dead, and the
Legislature.
Richmond—Miller, Gibson, JVioeles.
Columbia—Fulton, Colvard, Wilson.
Burke—Sturgcs, Heath, Rossicr.
Warren-Wellborn, Gibson, Pilrhff.
Wilkes—Hill, Irvin, Sims. _
Taliaferro—Reid, Holden.
Glasscock—Usury, Kelly.
Oglethorpe—Barrow, Lofton, Eherhart.
Walton—White, Hurst, llillycr.
DcKnlb—Alexander, Ragsdale. *
Chatham—Lawton, Screven, Hartridge.
when Seward men will control Congress, thc
President, tho Court,'and Army, aud’Navy,
aud ho knows, if he is not blind, what will then
bo the fate of thc cotton growing States.
JOHN HAMPDEN.
in a violent passion, I hare concluded not to
express myself. As I am in doubt whether
myself or family will outlive the blow we have
received, the gentleman- at thc Hazard, from
whom I promised to purchase shingles, and
fence posts, will please take notice, that I am
not at present in thc shingle line. To Tom
Stallings, who. I am told, sold his vote for a
fishing line, and to numerous others that I had
promised to retain in office, I only hope, that
in thc Municipal election, they will meet me
at the cross-roads, near the head of Salt River,
where they may,’ in undisturbed felicity, join
to their lips the poisoned chalice which’is death
to them if they drink,—and if they refuse to
drink, then the cry is to shoot them as traitors.
So it is just now, with the crazy requisition to
shoot down Judge Douglas, because he won’t
recant all his opinions, and espouse the imprac
ticable' and mischievous demands of Southern
ultras for Congressional protection and reopen
ing the African Slave Trade. Suppose he
'Could so far dc-grad* himself as to espouse such
Utopian qpbemes, and what then? At the
North aud West, he would be shorn of all in
fluence, and the democratic party lose its right
bower. Then his Southern opponents would
start the cry, alas! alas! poor Douglas has
killed himself, and is a dead Cock in thc pit.
me in invoking thc aid of the god that pre
sides over the destinies of the unfortunate pol- ; And because he won’t recant his opinions, and
lion. Janies L. Xiewnrd.—Preside?!-
CY OF THE SENATE.
Editor Telei;kai>ii The approaching ses
sion of our State Legislature will he thc most
important in regard to State policy that has as
sembled for years in our beloved State.
In the Senate there will bo some of the first
' men of thc State; men of experience and abili-
| ty—men who will not fear popular clamor in ;
giving their opinions of State policy, and if needs
• That drunken man was myself.
Macon, Oct. 7, 1839.
Ollicc of Shcritr.
Mr. Editor; Allow mo to suggest the name
| of that old and tried Democrat, Capt. WM.
! BONE, as a suitable candidate for Sheriff of
I Bibb county, at the election in January next:
One of the Unterrified.
he did thc Records of the Yazoo |
he brought fire from heaven thn
glass to consume them.
Since that tiindl the agitation ij
riodically in thc National I
litical Horoscope of many a <1
ot has descried signs in the b
ing wrath and ruin to the devotefj
sis has succeeded crisis—and t
fied political Milleritcs have l
ccnsion robes, in earnest exp
mental strife was at hand, aodtl
technics of a dissolving nation -|
off. Rut still the South live*; *
pie are prosperous and happy :
it is the barometer of
Southern stnplc3 mark the time *
Bourse, and the Rialto,
Threqjlncedle Streets.
No, my countrymen, thertt-’j
us, so long as tbc democratic p-
cr, whether Mr- Douglas, or
his I
ent I
|whi<
l Roil
ll’i
I no: |
Ho
l J
be guilty of “felo de se” by adopting ultra-
isms whicn a large majority of Southern men
reject, he is the best abused, end worst perse- nnd faitlitul man wields t- : -
cuted man in America. If Douglas would on- No honest, truthful man bate |
Iy consent to dig his own political grave, these ■ But the danger is, that
Southern Hotspurs would gladly take the ! Chester speech may carry the
spade and cover him up forever from the view ! Somo believe, if elected, b« ’
of the world, chaunting a requiem over him ' from his Rochester speech,
meanwhile. But because lie won’t, they are does not, the South may then
i excessively indignant,
H J
: i,I
1
f I
question of life or death. To*
a horrid alternative, there »
Many a noble Northern democrat has ! “ idway U!t,rccn Northern
Now, friends, this game has been played’ ahorrid ;Utern&tive ’ thcr * '
lty the Overland iflail.
Senator Broderick Killed i* a Pl«—; j JZJ i ioa». who can keep the Go*
1 be to-give tbc ship of State a new direction and ; St. Louis, Oct. 8.-The Overland -Mail has ar- j ultras> from tonabl(J f , | hands of the Black Republics*
if necessary to embark thc State in new enter- rived with San Francisco dates to the ICth of j , e^rouna . , , wdiong
Senator Broderick and Judge J Ju L“r *° Cr °™ , J “ dge ‘
survivors were endeavoring to reach Great Fish
River.' Clothing, skeletons and duplicate re
cords had been discovered. Franklin died thc n ,.. T . ,
year previous. One ship was crushed by thc ; Bftftz-Tracy. Lo^ ^arf^ew.
icc and another had been driven ashore. i 'J usco 5 ce Holt* A\ miamit, Dixon.
The King of the Belgians’ proposition to set- Newton—Jones, Henderson, Stewart,
tic the Italian question, it is reported, 1ms been Baldwin—Briscoe, McComb.
was uninjured.
i-mocracy of accepted by Napoleon. His proposition includes ; Dfli n ^ham Hints,
:e i-f Ids very ! an European Congress, to a— cmbleat Brussels. P . ” •• . m
' There arc conflicting statements in regard to , Ftmou-c oll.er Ji
other pr<
it has re;
post not
1 he London Herald says
- to believe that a treaty will soon Ware—Sweat, Cason
Grovenstine.
Thrasher, Taliaferro.
Bulloch—Cone, Goodman.
alleged Inefficiency of some sucoes-o
be concluded at Zurich, by vfhich the prelim- .Morgan Reid, Fannin.
, , .. t .stipulated at Villafranca will ha strictly Troup—//HI, Fannin, Nbnbood.
any want of ahuity or effort nn tl;.-'j».*irt of the maintained. _ 1 „ ’ ..
candidate. riro a. ClUcago. Bryan-Hart, bn., h
'"*** , Chicago, Oct.G.—Thc Chicago Rope Factory , ^ LUl .. . ’ T U " ° n '
was ,1, stroyed bv fire to-day. The loss is csti- , 1 loyd-Pnntup, Alexander, Turner.
Jefferson—Tarver, Brinson.
prises which wifi bring upon her increased pros- : September,
perity, or “unnumbered woes.”
Over this Body should preside one who will
look with tlie eye of a Statesman to the interests
of all sections; one who has comprehensive
views of what our future may and ought to be.
At the same time he should be one of unbending
integrity, firm and conservative in all of his
! feelings—and more than all, one that should bo
perfectly acquainted with parliamentary rules.
In view of all of thc emergencies of the times,
let me suggest thc name of the lion. James L.
Sewanl, of Thoma-. a- one peculiarly adapted to
w rough, ,a,„i „ «„ !3 „, JLSril -
The former was pfrr^l through the tongs, and | ;'; d f, cDo, ;f ,a3 ™ lld “<* subscribe to Talley- Scwnedtrininphautly tothe
died on the morning of the 10th. The latter |3*? 11
j a crime." But he will practice on that other and there,e
ngrossional expo
loing, will pay
Beldcn,
In the way of Hats, beats creation—as wo 1 mated at live hundred thousand dollars
understand See advertisement.
'surnnee seventy-eight thousand,
Lincoln—Lockhart, Barksdale.
the stntinn, from his Ion
rience. The Lcgislatun
a tribute to one of tlic worthiest of men, and
compliment that will long lie remembered by
the Iron ribbed Democracy o! the
WIRE GRASS.
Arrival of tlic Fillilmsters.
New Orleans Oct. 8.—Thc Fillibustcrs ar
rived here, in custody of tho United States Mar- bo a death struggl
shnl, this morning. Messrs. Xlaury, Fayssoux,
Anderson*and Scott, have been held to bail in
the sum of 83,000, to answer thc charges against
them, on Monday week. The rest of the men,
who were left at the Barracks, liavc since de
camped, having been left there unguarded. In
* maxim of the shrewd Talleyrand,
hurt yourself to please your enemies.'
The Presidential election cf next year will
between thc De
the *1
float*
mocrats
and Black Republicans, for the possession
tlic Government. Seward and hi
speech will rally the Black Republican?, and
woe to the South if they triumph. Who can
the.democrats oppose successfully to Seward ?
Is there a Southern man can beat him ? Alas
never to Republican is
the democratic banner tatty t
That man is Stephen A- ^ I
one toil you he i-_iK t a tf'- 1 ’ •_, ,
c j go read his speeches again 51 .*” |
M
c °lt„
["ext
Rochester viso ' in oi \
the acquisition of Cnbii-
whisper lie is not a t* ue
his own words:
Great God
_ a an
•tio]
A * ' .1*1 a**L-*vj 0* K/vuwiviu uinil UdU UC.U IIIUI ; Jtiita . ’ ’ '-«**• ’
i coming up 15 ; 0 ,^;’ ^ 1 ^. 1 ' 'poiiisjon betmmrt no ' Nominate a Southern man, and forthwith ocr'dic party
between .
t certain. tl,e contest becomes
soldiers leave the steamer;
the two partit- —- - „ , m ..
The Fillibustcrs state Jlut they Wf re on a tub- triumph certain, f o this complexion of a pure
sectional, and Seward’t
if it is not there
do I want
Where
IiG
1 she
i gal who spent Ids heritage
i oi cau expect anything. 1
it - -.
party.
- i expect a u y ;mu p;:
eetipuat tight, tho Black Republicans are eratie party : aud am 1
k;