Weekly Georgia telegraph. (Macon [Ga.]) 1858-1869, May 12, 1860, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

9 m UlBItOUail A BASSi, Forneys at la "♦taw. »"'l il>« craft.TOco which are with lilm. IK if Tax Receiver’s Notice. ,. for ]Ubb countT»F* now open at A. I»» ? ^Ion ian, where the Tax Herat ter win ’••"•liSwUw’ Iftoraarfitax payer* on Monday, Jtwity 1 .^. and Tbumbty of eeeb week, nntii E55T5S* r-tcm •■^-t^-SSSS. Tax Keerlver. ^•jrwBmsr: .ttoRNEV AT LAAV, A * ‘ MACON, GA. r „.Co.««> OV * r P ‘ y “> MACON, SATURDAY, 3 O'CLOCK, P. M, MAY 12, 1860. v! ) i;nev A at J law, ' TTOU MACOS. O.v .. Macau Circuit, end in the MIX F^J r M() “ 0(i Ptttii«in. Wilkinuon nod it«. ... . • JU<kL next to Boaidman fir* in * aakiuP" 8 (oct 23) k : 1 T ISAAC iUBOWt ,tTOliA'K^ AT LAW, VrjtfTOS' CEOROIA. «f»v l «,.»!**<>*• I 6i s. & C. ROBINSON, ttornoys at Law, ' CUTHBERT, GEORGIA. -i.* prompt attention to nil business «n- .iSmiMn. in Randolph, Clay, Early, Mil- Twrell, Stewart and Quitman ruuntioa. I am. ■ . ** rjUorSH, >>»l nrt w. ■ 8. 8. Haaa. , Ga- Daweou, Terrell co.. Ga. rriER s. numriiniEs .tsTt AT Uw. PXXKT, Oa.—Will Practice ill iJkntlrcuit and adjoining countlca. Alao in Ijj ^rti at riatannah and Marietta. .’■on aetiurt any man, the haw la open and nOvatS"*: In •them inruan one another.— X*. ' GEORGE W. NORMAN, ttorney at Law, Hsmters. Ashley Oounty. Ark., mo removed to Hamburg, Ark., wlU eoutlnue ,«rtkvUw In Aabley and ibo *Oolnta#coon- £?b Artuwtaa, alao in any other county In U»e ^WhrtWMWjUaotborttelt. ■„ rw.*. t*— K.A. Nr»bil. Jlou. Wa-Imi-rton nUtrX M«~a.«L...IIon.K.G.CabSiaa, a tARuni Vjafl- i» Trm\*N'~->b»rv, Mtnrn. oHww* march *9 w-flm CCUIKMUOII, *• A»*L*T. cmlrrriwutc A An* ley, TORSEYS AT LAW, RjraXVlUB, GEORGIA, <!X practice in Crawford and the adjoining aaatiM. All baainean promptly attended to. THE GEORGIA TELEGRAPH.! m oust rate, in this way, the absurdity of the PUBLUHXD I “irrepressible conflict,” a thousand times more clearly and forcibly than by public speeches and ri-BLunzD EVERY SATURDAY, AT 3, P. JL PRICE—Two Dollar, a year, aln-ayr In AJranee. | ]iolitical documents. Cotton.to defend his own realm. THE THE CONSTITUTIONALIST AND KEC'EDEUS—DOUGLAS, AND 50 ON Wo take issue with the Constitutionalist in its I sottin" forth that ItfaCil 4 An*A laJo I 1,I . .... O — * - — - 1 •, I ® . From the Augusta Constitutionalist. TIIE CHARLESTON CONVENTION. - - . We may, perhaps, at another time, speak Let us call on old King | more at length of our pleasant visit to Charles ton, but there arc other themes of more import ance now, than a premeditated ccstacy about a pleasant city, its old fashioned houses and nar- Yoltjme XXXJV.—Kb. 31 The Old Delegates to go to Baltimore* We had a despatch in yesterday’s Telcgrapli I row streets, commerce crowded wharves, multi- I . «„ address was in circulation | tude of ships, fine churches, noble buildings for its battery' with .. . . • T-u-o O —e- wnw ■MUWW tuv | vtnlllva IAI SUCUA U1UU1IU LUO > CrtlaUlt squares, the nominee nt Ttalitmoiv. ^tii^ ’cV™ Baltimore Convention. Assuming it for grant- with the ever-varying embroidery of happy 1 ** movement isfpr the pnrpose of bar- children. The beautiful bay-beautiful cvef, Wc have reason tnas'ert »W it,» ?-t' C |V nil o' 011 ! ? 18 } n * en ^°^ consolidate the if bright with sunbeams, dark with storms,or of Mr Doutrlas in Charh ton enn.i W i iM SontlicrnDemocratic vote upon one nominee, it sleeping at night like a vast mirror for the star- ho had «Sed his stroneth fnH a no n mCCt ^.°, ur ?Ppn>bation. It is mad- ry eyelof Heaven to look upon and see their • cxh * ui jc d his strength there, and a nom-1 ness to divide the National Democratic party, images, trembling in misty "lore on its lieav- fit - Can V C 0n * ConsUtutionaiing^ast Nor°ha vcvteLiumetoteHof *-^, f L lSrJS b V 8 ?’- yg *• behove it can be. It is equally the cannon-crowned island fort, the name of ll^l£Isuga^fartheSoothernDemocrecy-theoo^fwhicb.haa made a sand,' waste all hallowed f. nd . L th . cf ^ Uhat *hey would,proves conclusive-1 States have an equal right to settle in the Ter-j States, over the institution ofshve ly that they care more todefcat Douglas than ritori«7fthe“i® t S " p, " me C r t0ftbC LTnited ™ tbe Democratic party or hon 0 rif they would not have ^ aro ( ^':°Sn'z«I as ^correct «rp«- will abide by the decision of the Supreme Cou« taken the man for the constfnction, and sup- neither the rg.b of^ons^property ~ - ^^ °" ^ ° f C ° nSti ' ported him without platform or principle. ■ j-*-—~ i j at Baltimore. I And what of the Scceders » Constitutionalist ij.it.i.ui, «ud dwindle tomiscrablo minority factions.— I Bat before we enter upon that interminable tw';n'iXr,nrLn^ M o have,for one,no desire to press the election Lhcme, puliUcs, one woid as to the ladies of if SfJSL? tJTiS O—K. l-o bo,, b, . p.ll,o ralM. vention reassembles, therefore, it will know who are the nominee^, of the other two-parlies, and whether those parties, with professions antag- onistical to each other, are to co-operate in the . ^ support of one and the same candidate. , ~ -j can be tutional law. On the whole, we anticipate goodrather than It seems evident to us thatj as sensible men, I Territorbl w2 ° ^ Con S ressl0nal or /*- Resolved, That it is the duty of the Uni- evil, from the adjournment to Baltimore, and they cannot advocate protection in the Union in All the c , ,, .1 I too otates to afford amjle anfl complete protec- see no reason to despair of the. com monweal th« earnest; and if they arYot dl* ulnisLsXis agreed on^thKdhoX!, 0 . d ^» J}*** at . Il0 ‘“° a slight modification, which we mayspec- it that they cannot submit to a refusal o'their W Vnrl- w ! v 1 dst °. * tat ® of broad, and whether native or foreign. lfy hereafter, tho Tennessee resolution would newly besotten rights from a National Coiven He now ntrer^lf!,' 6 ? ti^ ? ssonttolts “dophon. “4. Resolved, That one of tho necessities of meet our own approbation, and, as we believe, Uon&felW DemoSwhchltMd^SSt , ‘be age in a military, commercial, and postal that ofthe great Ldv of the Democratic paffy! thev will have to submit tn tho enmo mSt* Kesulicd, rhat when this convention ad- point of view, is speedy communication between It is stated, in our report of Convention pro- from the Congress which is hv a Tinim-itv R J? urns to-day, it adjourn to re-assemble at Bal- the Atlantic and Pacific States; and the demo- ccedings, that tho adjournment to Baltimore publican ? IVhat is their’clnnce for mirpe! XX’ ° n tbo 18th da y of June, cratic party pledge such Constitutional Govern- was a movement ofthe Douglas men. ,Wo dife tion v There has latelv hren a tr-t nfnnXn ?v d ^ bat .'.^ respectfully recommenced to the ment aid as will insure the construction of a I sav that mostofthemapprovedofit, and soa!«o tiuT clecUon'oftlu; Speaker cT Uic'llouse ofRpn' nXisiX fo^ °f- Stat - CS * .“H ™lroad to the Pacific coast, at the earliest prac- did many if not most of fhe other deC^frr resen tatives/' I Uwnll t LIT .w ^ dV 1 P r0T ‘ sl0n , { or supplying vacancies in their re- ticablo period. the number of votes in favor ofthe mcisure was Republican,'who endorsed bv hU vote thJmen when U . ‘‘ 5 ‘ Kc ^'' c(! ’ That theDcmocmticparty are 195, whereas the largest vote pollad-for Doug- Whd bv his mm- m ^™ni.i n „.v U.L. |»a«igA^emi)i& jAppianee.] | in favor of the acquisition of the island of Cuba, | las was 152*. The Seceding Convention adjourned at a lato {L^MfCgUs willTSr^do^Ty ^ nmintaincdtlie^ights of^ifsttirfo divide M " eMofei ®oti«n« -ere mide to adjourn to Philadel-1 on 's“Jch tor'ms ^Ihiube hon^bL toVn^ekS at Baltimore. I,n,l 11™ “:. d,Tlde I ‘h^eb.ef delight of our sister city. .. ™leUnZiibnl,;ill. fb> a anclo New York, hut they were tost; andand just to Spain. I hour last night Mi. Bayard Signed the Pres- t , hc .7° tc ‘ n fevorof meeting h Baltimore was ”6. Rcsolv-ed, That the enactments of State ideney of the Convention 5 , andlftthe haft.-' d-cidedBy «y«sl95,to nays 5g Legislatures to defeat the faithful execution of Robert Scott, of Ala., was then chosen Pol lution of the party to the r-—r- of such a res- ° f i , I . lchlgan “°. ved l b“t this con- tho fugitive slave law, are hostile in character, dent The Convention, after agreeing that a . P* ,l y passage . | vention do now adjourn. [Cries of “question! subversive of tho Constitution, and revolution- Southern Convention should beheld in Rich-. quration. * ary in their effect.” 1 mond, Vo., on the second Monday of June next from the democratic party rests with'them-1 better however~in j” I P ruTI P” 1 ‘T V 10 ™’ an cr" e . I !. al1 °' U 'r s Pf cct “f I Mnstituents to'in'*qtriicVrtpm'w , ^rVl^v I Gen - Prat ^ of Connecticut—I first propose . We now also copy the resolutions of the ma- and that an address or statementof the grounds to look well to our stops, thattime is just now. | _ [communicated.] ~ | dwl.'l^ch a mcaime would‘‘die^till-bomln Com I ^" r t :L dl ^ dc ^ d I '"'th 58 wonderful piepe of carpentry, | 0 f Georgia in the Chariton Convention, took From the Augusta Constitutionalist. * J To th© Democratic Party of Georgia* The Georgia delegation to Charleston, were I Ma. EntTOH-In your editorialof this morn-1» toetL’ P-o^je^wuLtS^^ to ha^ «« ^en^T called upon to act on the spur of a moment—in ing, [May 8th] you ask, in reference to the ac- nuisance nor did the chairman when every men of the bolting school, who cannot bear a po- Tli^President—The Chair befo-e nntti„„ th ' S of f eno “S h ' vaIuo to s P Ut the P art y anJ executing the trust confided to them with the midst of a tempest of excitement—with no I tion of the' Scceders from the late Charleston I mnmiiniw i,- U ‘ ^ lite refusal from northern Democrats and who fin-.l e Chair bcfo.e putting the I the Union for it? I their associate delegates appointed by the Con- opportunity to consult their constituents and a J Convention, “Where i.71 of hot hLto” | l^r^«XS^i^tho2h^^cv«, | l^tathert^-^ 1 ^^ m °'I „ , MAJ0Rm ' IJEroaT ' ,, vention of Georgia! By a resolution of that very short time to advise among themselves, jcitemcnt and precipitation in this matter?” Itheir nmmrC?<r mik j—. ,u r i tion, they will nuietlv Docket tlie insult when I OrWIein r t 0 . ll c Convention. I “Resolved, That the platform adopted by the convention, tho vote of G-ecrgia was to be cast and it would he a hard measure to hold any and In view of all the aggressions ol the North— r„ r ;r nw™ tH ^ th ’ offwed by Oomthb.a ml tamelv submUto Re the . . Pres,< f« nt said = Democratic party at Cincinnati be affirmed, with as a unit, upon all questions legitimately to be sissssaa.twfis 5 Moreover, let it bo recollected, and wc call gian in the House took upon the subject of pro- Tl,! y,i;„ n ,i TVm,vr,i;r r™r.ni;«„ will be refused, they all refuse to sav what they nle ofthe UnY d -j° l - C Cltlzens , of l . h ® United States have an cquai nght demoralise, or destroy the Democratic orgamn- - -C lha I “■V? I The National Democratic Convention assem-1_.„ , ‘ a ‘‘«mse to saywhat thej' [ pie ofthe United States that, considering the to settle with their property in the Territory I tion of the United States. The committee on the whole number never took seatsln the seces-1 of the imminent dangers that threaten ^ tofa I lure ££%?£l I “2<^That itTffie *ity ofthe Federal Gov-15??J5SS?S5S5.-. S^^th^ won coovwtwh. and-of the remaindw- a Jarge | queation appears to n»to be a strange'one, to but that idea as a principle was I The action of the I minority. The next class was i F ..... . ... . -„ . 1., ... - . . t , , ^ e : Amajor- those whocared nothing for platforms, regard- i u,» 1 ,uii«aiuia iuu«ei cuuipeuuun ror me uoor, m tne zeal ol gentle- I tionat authority extends. I which nlnno rmhnrw? thn nincimuitl' °^ U W (L ' s, pP? ; ' c ' Dcorgia I ity of the coinraittceappomted by the Conven- ling them as a kind of political architecture that IUnion, and yet upon ideas purely sec- men to promote their respective opinions by “3d. That when tho settlers in a Territory cnnnled with a resolution for the DrotLxtion of stands uncommitted to the Richmond move- I tjon todraft a platform, reported one containing amounts to little, but insisting upon such a con- [ tl ? r ? a ,’ t ^ y . prop . l Jf c 10 lm ‘ ld U P * now . P“rty, motions or objections to motions, in the Iasi- having an adequate population, form a State native and forei-n bom citizens The vote was ,n *" t , , . , ^ ■i.tJuTif' p k ;- 11 was deliberately re- struction of the Cincinnati platform, as would ' T1,ch 7‘ 1 b ?* r tb ° ““1. n , ai - ne as lts twm ' an ‘ tudo of P rotractetl sittings, occasions havo oc- Constitution,the rightof sovereignty commences, first taken on Mr Butler’s renort. V maioritv Rut now comes the solemn weighty question |jected by the Convention and the minority re- dcfeat Judge Douglas; these were southern del- kce , sistor-the Know-Nothing Constitutional curred of apparent, but only apparent, confu- and, being consummated by admission into tiro ™ - “ - ■ • -- - ma J 0Ilt 3 It was when this principle was-J egates-and Northern administration Democrats. I * I SlOn. But there has been no real ennfiiRimv nn I TTninn thntr ctnnrl nn art onnnl fnrtHmr trifL Rtn I with all, what ought wo to do ? what is the I port adopted. til c. C. DUNCAN, ITTOBNETAT law, PF.HRT, GA. F PA 11 TNERSniP' HILL A HILL, aanwlale firm ol 8tubU and Hill, _mrlirrin Maonn and adjoining CircaUs, allitk Sowwaa and Federal Court*. On 3d Street, Macon, Ga. • B. HILL. J. It, HILL. ^ oaxaxui avium ■ mviN a BUTLim, TORSEYS AT LAW. dlktay, Georgia, Tlii:i;V Stprrier Oonrta of the Soolh-WeM- .tnrifl,—la Titrall, Randolph and Early Conn- thrIMtialaclm.lt—In Worth and Macon coon- hlwaftmiii—In the Halted State* Circuit v.uiiS-aMl br special contract, inany couu- Onsinarla. ixan - l*n 17 New Law Firm, ITHERFORD & HARRIS. sr.tcoy. a a. yvltr, Uw In Bibb and adjolnlnf coontlea la l a It. — Caaaun J. Ilanma. SPEF.lt * UUNTEU, IORKEYS AT LAW, MACON. GEORGIA. rrmayalar blot\. Corner of Ckrrry Stmt and CdlM Avenue. tea aaaoctal«& aa yartnxrt in the practice Iw \nUin rosatlea of the Vlaeon and ad- itrrail*. and elaewhere in the Stale by ape- Met—alao will attend tie Federal Court* at and Marietta. ALEX. M. SPEKK, SAMUEL HUNTER. ‘ , 7 apparc " t ' . conlu - ?? d ; bel "S consummated by admission into the 0 f the Georgia delegation voting for it, and so path of wisdom? where will this secession lead? I refased a place in that platform that tlrose del- I^W'^'divirion'^rfstod^e delentes I' The fact is, that the movement is either a dis- deliberate vioMion^of orf"r.° TambeTterYle ^ople ototh^Sta^ “aTtiii'stato tiros or- sfcld^tog^Lu “nXe^SeStioT^r to what will it commit us ? what will be the egates withdrew. It was a well known fact that I from the North-west and a portion ofthe North, I ™ °. ne . a qchcme for office. The than any other person to speak knowingly ganLed ought to be admitted into the Federal I th?reason?hat ffiwdid notthinklhere^lu- cffect of destroying the National Democratic this demand would be made, long before the who were for the platform upon which the par- , att ? r .7'? w ,s ve, 7 Pl. ausl ble, for while it is evi- on tiiis point, and to speak impartially, and I Union, whether its Constitution prohibits or re- tions went far enough for the oretection of slave party ? Has the proper issue been taken ? I Convention assembled. For months past, it I ty had once beon victors, and for any northern dent that protection in tiro lemtories will not say it with pride and pleasure, as a thing espc- cognises the institution of slavery.” property in the Tcmtories and preferring tho Are we prepared to pursue it to its final con- has been regarded as the only condition upon or southern man who would take a moderate p* - ® 4 *® negroes to go there, and would bo worth- dally proper for me to say from the Chair. It will thus be seen upon examination of the I resolutions ofthe minority of tiro committee summation ? These are the momentous points whroh unity- and harmony could be secured— platform. Ies ? £ the r® were negroes enough to go there I desire further to say, for, and in behalf of two platforms, that while the real disturbance reported by Mr. sXuels to tiro Ctodmroti of po.'cy which shook! engage the attention of The Constitutionalist and yourself.seem to In these three divisions there were sub-divi- and he protected by the votes of their masters, myself, that I also know, by the knowledge of is about a man, that the only pretended-differ-1 platform alone. When the vote Was taken on l,eorpa without reference to thoMnero status regard the pnnciple as a mere abstraction; as of sions that wc will notice at another time. That and wbl J? d ls worse than hopeless from the my own heart and conscience, that in the midst once is predicated upon tho question, have the the last named resolutions a majority of tho ° f jP 0 .'k C1W>S ii F* i th ° c °r s,dc ™ t,0 'l, 0 I f tbe ^ 2? ®?| ) ? e< l® cnc ® whatever; and even admitting portion which advocated protection as a princi- present Congress, or any soon likely to sit, yet I of circumstances always arduous, and in some Territorial Legislatures the right to abolish Georeia delation voted in the neeative the un- and other collateral questions, the Telegraph that it is of consequence, you say that the tact jfl c 0 f constitutional right, were so small aS not j xs a m . cre P^ty move, without any principle respects of peculiar embarrassment, it has been ! ^ -nj n i«-o^ I YYV?L “ “ c willaddr^itodf during d»d.ort imriod1 which | that we ^n^okain i^WiUjmby ^ | g^hav^^y ^tod" toeT^ult, ihT^ j I &***( ~i^\nd«vor tol^hffsh^ was t^madcto^ti^e ouC’or ffisagreeTthc "•“ft decide them with whatever earnestness gress, composed of its present elements, is a division being upon the^northem and southern If alltheisouthmii States could be humhugg-1 discharge impartially the duties of the Chair.— j those who insist upon putting the negative in I preamble and several resolutions contained Ih Hllljjl " XVi " - -- - H I 1 ed by a wild and discordant cry about southern I If, in the execution of these duties, it shall havo I the platform. But^we want i&emnmWH tw I R r ! a ^_. e l-“_.!. e .!!’ raI J?? 1I1 . tIons ,.f. onta,ne ? m and ability we may be able to bring totheir so- foregone conclusion. Well sir, pant, first, that construction of the Cincinnati platform. I 1 PJ a wuu anu mscoraant crj' about southern I If, in the execution of these duties, it shall have I the platform. But we want itremembered that I theminoritv renort—^which K'as'folTow^'-' lution. rwli* 11 abstraction; what objection could Upon this issue, which was simply a judicial protection of our property, squatter sov- happened to me to address any gentleman ab- the denial of this right to the Territorial Legis- _ ■ . Let no mat) deceive himself with the belief Northern or Southern men either, have had to question as to the time when Territories receive ere, S nt y. ‘^or Douglas, and such cant catch- ruptly, or not to have duly recognised him, I latures coupled with a general assertion of J - 3 ' fa^eh^difenmcea of-eplmqn aafalI lata? that this is one of tiro little party squabbles, it 8 in thnflatfonn ? ^ If the preserva- the attributes of sovereignty, we were met in "' ord } and b 3' a dl ^ io " ln tb ® ^ or «> between beg pardon of him and the Convention. right to protection when memory, is the great powers of a SSStarttf S™ id^to!£e which sometimes rise like a will^j wisp from n i,‘i ^3 was the great and I the fairest spirit of compromise by the North. D° u gl*saml Seward, the election could ho finally, pennit me to remind you, gentlemen, question held up by tiro secessionists, <Ae prin-1 powers and duties of Congress, under the Constitii- the bogs of corruption, and then wander off paramount good to be attained by the meeting Mr. Yaney, of Alabama, who is the leader of thrown into the House. Once there, the elec- that not merely the fortunes ofthe peat Con- ciple, held to be worth more than the party, 0 r tianoftbo United States, over the institution of sla- -- ’ J: ill-—* 1 — * •a'-- 11 " r UiuaaiteB r ’-'——*— •- ' 1 - .I,' .t,_ 4. 4 I toral colleire no lomrer exists W u..4 u.. 4 ’ r> u,.- _• 41 1' r„- very ivithin the Territories. very »vithin tiie Territori* s, K.'Solved. Th:it th- 1 )t*mo.-ra:i- pnrtv w..: i-- by the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States, upon these questions of Constitntion&l law. rtu n.Ti._i ir_Li_ i r-~init It Thn*".!* ««»a _ , , . . , , -» . r ./ . * , " v i oi uic couri wai> in our uyoi, ii was cviucni in»n ~ *, , , .* twnca, I 2 uluc aiiiiaiuni*, uk nave iiiiuourMay Ulan* i onuii we iorce iuei.\orui lO ueci *'; SSLSfSthS?ySte?S!dW ££ U cannot ** obt *« d * and ,r determine to cannot obtain the satisfactiqn of such a demand the decision would be, and therefore that they Congress or the party platforms <an settie that, fully on, until we have come to be tho great ne- wmen uu pa, ty .loiormine ? * ' J ■" InoLd lirvnn it *11 . ■ v f m 11 i f 1. * - Mi'hieli «rn I nvillft lirwrn tllDCP IVIIG Inm *!m nraRl I .... . ’ .... .* I ir\T if 1C n l.ur-il nilDCtinn nn 1V fn Fin coffin/) Kir I miKKn CM,nil nnnnn l n K n ».,.K 9 T .*11 I A _11 C. A U!._ # ,1 Ii . ing out the second resolution, so that the plat- Shall we_dis-1 form finally adopted by the convention con- 1. UOliEHT C. II.VItDIE, tiM/njrt.loiuil «nlcr» to the citizen, of T.cjnliy. He may be Ibnnd at an hour* wwJolaf. Ilarvcv * More, on Cherry St. km w-lr DK. It. II. NISBET Umy Street, ovw Menard A Borghard' ’Sere, Kealdeoce on the Bill in front of the if Bind. . Jan 17 ahould ccrtainly^o*!! if^Sand valuable tog^int'^t ;ff'go?ernmentn^te?eK7^ i- C ? arty ..^- tv I tiro courts • and protection is hopeless in pros-1 believe it; I will not belii right) then we may prepare ourselves at once pojnt where either fanaticism teiR nof grant-its that proposal it was objected thattle court r w of. .r-., u, shattered Into fragments; when it is not likely-that the whole n..«h'nn ^ fora national as well as a party disruption.— I citizens the protection the peaceful enjoyment might change its organization, and tirorefore th® shadow of a shade. I this great Republic to be but a name, a history would, not do anv cood ifdecidedin our favor* I Cmcmn . atl P 1 ^ 0 ™- The undersigned R.t-. ito No man cm brieve that Congressional protec- »f their rights and property require; or if the minority in their final report offered only ^ ^“"sh^f their position, and lot ps briefly of a mighty people once existing; but existing | Forbid it, ye southern men! Forbid it, ye Dem- ^"^ t J“ n pl ^“b"5^fi 1 sta ^- of 4^ n88 j m th ® . tiro firnnHimn .-bn W 5n«t I l,,uu “ U1 ““ A"»“™ )»“ I let, strange to say, tins piauorm, recom-1 — jt. «-•—r-r“ ~*w* ,uc uuuu, j uiu ,»orm as in uro i>ew—ime tne ongbt orbs I Uther States will follow the example, ana unon I . , ,- 4, , .. j, l"™** by b the SUte ° f ? C ,! rsia ’ Cn ^fJ 7 1 I ? f th0 fi ™ aul ® n i’ which roll on without rest, | the platform that the South has endorsed we | ntions in Charleston, finds on i ds t®*-when we cto present something that ural every southern press, and by even thedistin- the United States, aS made in the Dred Stott case; and this we supposed to be, in aceonlance' with tho wishes of our people, as expressed in the resolutions adopted at tho December'eotB' iks on New York MR SALK BY THE FACTUKERS’MXK wing! Engraving! WAHE. JewiJrjr, 4e. Ac., eacravudln -' m tTltol Wn*«y„f Letter,' in Ralston'* Ballding, vtlaek, ever Campbell * Colson^«. bj J. K. WELLS. OWN’S HOTEL. °mt tsi uw rail road Dcrov, MACON, GA. , , E.E. BROWN, Proprietor •« Uw Arrival of every Train ARITE HALL!! W- USIEU HOUSE, Ooa r - GcorgiG PROPRIETOR. * r, * # n«rle» * Groceries. “!?£*■ silihold suad No. 140 Mai berry .J"r* * anal s fall assortment of goods la XSffMeof Caudles of bis own maau- 1 £LJj’® c| i UaodUa. Ue U the only one in ,SW* Aroadu, moss, and HTjMKbisrar V. Ail kinds of fluo Uqnors and Wines ^^■•ir ssd boat Tobocco. Oranges, Ap- ,'jjlif. ICajslns, Figs, I'nines, Nut^and ar©h.ovu3© MSSIONMEIKIIANTS MAtK)N, GA. WOOLFOLK *°tMher. and will occupy the i"TmoOUarehoii*e new being ernetod T™ Hardeman ft Spark* ■ J*** awde on Cotton when asked for. ^*00*. Hope, Groceries. *e„ shall fJWweolion. g?F»wpi attention to bnsiaMs, to mer- M Patronsiro. M . JAS. H. WOOLFOLK. 8. COATES ^ KaX.T-kkI« Kiroirwire*; Cakes, «crs. Bauer, Chosso, Crackers, t *“ii I Urns. Potatoes, Onions, at.' Whcr snides tn that lino too amn march 10 w-ly Cab- feman& Sparks BCouso ‘MISSION .MERCHANTS, Karon, Ga., Bp f-r prompt att«ntlon attiieii a. f '*°DF WAREHOUSE, on the eor hjjj *• reels, to ail bushiest commit past favors, and a renewed to all their friends And CU8* *0 mu their friendft And cn»- * fecelr* their full share of pub- pr©* on Cotton and otli Htoma- als 0 Bagging, Rope baj*' "vest markot rates. O. C. SPARKS. iloij! " r AItD & CO., Am. • l*CTV. RERS If DEALERS, die Floyd House,) r GEORGIA *kTocg Miontionof tkoLublio t.> bailiirr* Munmlsipg Coa. I|< - Bri tt.- cdtnprUiog n o(th| most eiaboraio nn- North. 11.hHOHo. BUGGIES con- [qov is The,Editor < _ ^ __ ^h»rWm el fi^ t on hk I when w ® * present something that is rral I cvery'soufhe'ra press^ and byeven the distin-1 SU ®! £S blood; as tho whale does the little fishes, I because bound for eternity; without haste,* b£ I will Ibe'rtetors'yrt-' ♦w^^i?^aTftbor^aBt’.iti^MlTIninn « nd pwotk*! in its bearings, and demand iu j guished gentleman from Alabama in his glorifi-1 them to come . ln out of the wet MTien cause predestined for eternity; So may it be with table thortisolutionsonne ton. titutional Union ^cognition. This demand made upon tiro «ttion of the Supreme Court, yvas rejected by l *ro young man marries an heiress,-and wishes this glorious confederation of States. From the N. Y. Jour. Commerce. Convention, at Milledgeville, and treats them in CharIeston Convention for the recognition of the withdrawing d clegates, and even by twen - settle her property upon her chiIdren,doscs he I pray you, therefore, gentlemen, in your re- THE CHARLESTON CONVENTION. , „ .... , , this fashion:— the duty of Congress does involve a practical tv two GeorciaiS. chpos® a deadly enemy, or a known thief, for turn to your constituent and to the bosoms of The Democratic National Convention after held at Milieclgevillc, which ^s the We would now take occ^ion to say, in brief result—it was expressive of tho voice of al- ^Nor was thus the only compromise that our th ® trus ‘ ee ? Pola ” d trustcd the three great your families, to take with you as your guiding ten days of anxious deliberation, ‘has adjourned ou^effid^^the f0T - that the resolutions adopted are inconsistent most the entire South, before tiro Convention, northern friends were disposed to make, for P°' ver 5 ° f northern Europe, and they have taken thought the sentimont of the constitution and till the 18th of June when it is to resume its 1 h Convention not hay- with the policy and past positions of the party I and it is-thc solemn duty of the people to upl whe n the territorial resolution endowing the care of her, m fragments, ever since. the Union. And with this, I cordially bid you laboratothe dty of Baltimore The^toS TT* “ ^ on the question of slavery in the Tcmtones, and hold the seceding delegates in tiro course they decision of the Supreme Court, came up in the . Let us . ,n ? a S inc thc grim treason of the North farewell, until the prescribed re-assembling of 195 in favor of such adjournment and 55 a-ainst th^rhil^ta^ron vention °Ghe «S? that we earnestly dissent from the attempt to have taken. | m innritv nl.tfnrn' there was an anneal made I ln an amiable mood, consenting to receive tiro I the Convention. ° ft- tw. .41 S* e Charltston Convention (the action of th, tock us on as a caudal appendage to the socod- This cry of “hot 1mste” ding wing of tho late Democratic Convention. an d al! that sort of thing, is __ We leel that it is due to ourselves, and to tho unsettling of the Union nerve. . 'fv a vanct >y this paper, to I ^jr, that if a hill were introduced ... —. uuiuiuu otou, .«« unu iv—m-, . ,. , . p—■— --- ■ vnuu, t iiwij,wias 10 me canuiuaie 10 De put in nomination lor I ctm-tlnnc tn that .Beef 41,. , ■ say this much. At a more convenient season to effect immediate and total abolition in tho tion upon that simple request I groes in his anns, they are_ mine now. The the city of Baltimore. I ti,e Dratw. Ti.eoe ,1 , 11 stru . ? n ? to . a *" ^ 1C undersigirod we shall resumo the subject and present our I slave States—if tiro destruction of our rights That the action of Southern delegates was act of our John Brown friends in execution | views at large. “ 1 *- ^ ^ - — • ... 1 ...» 1 the Presidency. These differences developed no t f ee l themselves at liberty to bolt the con- ■ ami property was imminent—if ruin and des- IsuicidVl, tiicre can be no doubt, for as we have I of th ® delegated powers would be, of oourse, to I Tho Georgia and tho Convention Plat- I anTindeed were knownto^.xistbeforethe Cot- hhe l)emomri?^tv JSinir iu'X'--7,;'y''* So far, well The Ptotoctton resolutions.of olation wars -tarintr M C tin- face, and an at-|nid, there were but a handfiff who cared (br en,d that slavey exists in1 the Territories by forms on Slavery in the Territories. vention met. .Uthou-'li one „f them n-l-it.-s to m ! i! , ‘ the Milledgeville Constitutional Union are in tempt were made to resist, there are those a- the abstract, impractical, and insane idea of I. ,os ' t,ve . la "! °, f . L , onp T s f .. th . us ’ . at ? no blo "\ [From the Constuhtlonaitit.] men, and the other to measures they involve In tife ^t^InF wt to' remn'in fhr truth inconsistent with the party reconf of the mone us who lookinir unon thc Democratic nmiM-iinn Tim southern noliev—thev hoin<» destroying that bulwark ofthe institution, which Th. fniiowinn- ic th. ni,.tror m on I i,,o - • I on the contrary, felt boimd to remain m thc no injury in payment PBorecTiom”—Wc advise Protection to. - , ■, » ■ curb his “hot haste” enough to read what he T “ E Coxventios.—Members ofthe lato Dcm-. - 5s - wc „- known G, nt bv his kindness in IK® 8 ’ ?” 11 " oulu °® n S“t mat tneir lood should I nili ‘ r r H y^Sry hom^rnTnanv hare nS torouThoir I withdrawing'in 1856, he brought into power an | ^“? I shall citemcnt and precipitation' ceding delegates, into a < ‘ hot haste, &c., and then philippic against us on ' and predpitation” I But^tir ^ m^Mre I ^J5!? p ™~’ their biack wards were not getting regular wi- °‘ sla . ve 7, ,u , U T ‘ H i f “ f luor ‘t “ l;u ,nay oc P°P uIatl0n favorable to repeal,—this doctrine, tcrests, andharmony ofthe Dcmocratioparty, as ges, that it would be right that thrir food should aC< ? mr ^ W h ° St f tCS j- thc f T pl >' rc ' We - SaJ ’’ S 8 Part-culariy^odious to the South, wcU as the intercsts of those who delegated us ET lr n_» -...1:,- . n. , ^-. 0U . I quire that the inhabitants of eacli Territory as in substance denying them a common right to act for them, and in their name, to sacrifice them. Wc look for an intense excitement to I *“ '■“VT",I franchise small matters, it is better not to “go off a ‘ half I Paradetoetenant*^Tn hwTs romtro^l totrer of Suth, bv toe and if - th ®J cock, and how much more when tho fate of I “p» vor to impress his ''"‘•peculiar views, in I court, he the platform of the n'artv tl ® 11 . 1 from great political parties, of States and of nationsis 8p * .i.;^T^„,i I and nn the existim? noints of differenre tn s.ih! I . 0 1 2®* aT^f^C^oToirtod SrsmeXniro ffiroughouTiUlengthVdiffiirt^ chtok a " d on the existing points of difference to sub- ^ P arti< f/° a which they deemed so voto ‘f t £ a t body, determined ’thatffia! much L- 4-1 1 _«• I.:. : L. .... I discordant arguments. Better if no Convention I •»£ ‘°. the 8u P reme ,in, P !r ® that has aIrcad Y dc-1 rr ‘ n t im™ ml v wnsin,'Tf’th.J'"' I hci-'sacred honor, to support the minority plat-1 unjust to their constituents, and so inconsistent | as the delegates, ’from Geo -gia. were required ■uan who takes counsel of his passions or ex citement has but a bad adviser. had been held.—Sav. Express. cided in our favor. THE ADJOURNMENT TO BALTIMOREl Originated with Mr. Barbour of the Virginia cm planters the sandywastesof the creat Amer- T r TXA. , ^ P “»T -^1 , -t.7 e- UW0 ™™*T as the delegates, from Gco-gia. were required .... . . , 1 icand^ert, crown with vincyards^hc earth-1 ^ orm 88 re P 0 rt cd from the Charleston commit- ^ with the oquai nghfr to which they were c n‘i-1 to vote asti unit, and a majority of the delegates , J? for ‘b® nominee, however, their foremost b £ i ^ of the rock moun t' ain ; and b Tius t ^i 0 "* r ^?*. utl0ns ’ ^ Tj'.T 'll b ®, affirmcd in U ® d > n common deroam. The seceding del- having, by their vote, withdrawn from tho con- Macon i Augusta R. R.-An election was | choice.was the great states,™ of Ilhnois; and | thc thin P ? OT the Sout.fwhen Greenland K J at I I ^on, and having made that fact known to Iield in this for “Subscription' is county on Tuesday last, 1st inst, second, any southern man that was not his cne- nexe( j t0 o t ] ie 'Union cription” or “No Subscription” to the m Y- . ‘ * lat ***e Douglas men would have com- ^ ^ jg our ’| delegation, and tiie resolution was drawn up S(ock of the Macon k Augusta Railroad. A promised upon a southern man, had the Slates ; . t C m ^ ' C ^molo on L AV ° °° P l th ° fl I St r , CS ? Utl0n °, f th ® Dec ®™' J? C ® h ° Convcnt '°?P ro P? r ' , Thus ‘h®. two question beforeit We have only to add, thal and proposed by Mr. Russell of tho same State. vcr y large majority of the votes cast were for remained,- is in our personal knowledge, true h of June” and those who r^iTnedThrir hcT , C ? nvCnt ‘T 1 an ? -fH- tbos ® ^bo passed ,t Conventions were at loggerheads; and for a if the Democratic party ol Georgia •> not repre- A point of order was raked against it by .Ma- .-Subscription,” only about 40 votes having They could not take northern man, for that - l h ° , , ’ and bavc^ndorsed it, .f they d^e nsk the in- time there seemed no nrospoct for a re-unum. sentad in the Charleston convention, it is not — ’ ’’ ’ ‘ ' - " - * -• -iption.” would weaken tiro chances of Judge Douglas ThowiU renrcsenttiT^.tp<[ 7 famy of abandoning their plighted faith? Bffi^.the“sober second thought’ brought both the fault of tiro' undersigned; we have done all isting was made by the North under a mista- separate Convention, and adopted the Platform that body, thc minonty could not cast the ten ken idea, ofthe Wishes of thc bouth. * r<»nnrroi1 hv tho mnmnfv r»F fhra PlotfArm I . -r J- - reported by tho majority of the Platform Com-1 votcs of Gcorei;i in thfr PnnrDnfiGn nrAnnr TKne tKAireA .. . > in the convention upon anj^ spn, of Kentucky, which was ovcrntlcd by that been polled for “No Subscri] trump of a President. Tho resolution was then carried by ayes 199, nays 51—most of the [Federal Union. I the next time. They did not wantany oti.er | me ?- W _ h .° .»dnrepre*ent theStatre. northern man, for as we were told by delegates North-western delegates sustained it on the re- JIR. COLLINS’- STRAAYBERRY GARDEN, from Ohio, “when a northern man is nomina- quest of the A irgmia and Southern ddcgalcs. \\- 0 were indebted yesterday morning to ^°di|be patronage of tin ^',®'J'”™®nt a Hue went 10 ijiiariesmn prepareu 10 vo - ... Charles Collins, Esq., for a basket of strawber- Sp uth to renciliatc ffiem,^ but with a southern Ur Do^k,, if he was the ‘ ch ^ c ' e of the , APPEAL TO THE COTTON PLANTERS. I n 'es, not one of which would have measured less I ma ” wc^get our equal share. * . M At the suggestion of tiro President of the Cot- than three quarters of an inch in diameter, (the . Douglas never could have had the nomination SH5St°rKS5irS^2iS«s 5r!fS«sss;^»i<M?2£ tiful sight, rhe most or his plants are «>® | ^ wouId have been, wc bare entertain-1 j^ d | of th* Union, which have been rxcxxtlv pj. | party to th* toSteH* of .th* Pnltedgtata^ and | C.-4- L. J 1. , by ( Planters for a full representational the meeting of th* Conv ention in June next. He I'reM-ni- - - «■_ ,,, iif.mii.. -,.,1 ,-:n, 1 uiat man wouiu nave oecn, wc nave entertain-1' 1 01 uie u nion, which nave occn KLCXXTLT de- i ™ *T' oiaies, anu most important considerations why tiro t otton Hme\ seedliu and tluj art literally red WlU»l doubt for if the southern State* had have the usage ofthe party entitled tobenomma- , D VT iir Supbeub Couiit oftiif United that under the decisions ofthe bupreme Court, which Planting interests should take hold of tins sub- berries. He thinks tiro yield ofan acre during eq no00004, ,°* a ted by two-thirds. T1 "' DU E E U0U!T 01 THE U ' NITED we recognize as a correct exposition of tho Consti- i,cL now it is fairlv initiated and strike at omv tiro season, will be hardly less than sixty bush- remained1 nnd voted, tiro iron throated^cannon . We now believe that tho nominee of the par- S ,,- - 4, . .. , „ tution, neither their nghta of person or property can jeci* now * , t. « , I . nr .. r . ..Ajn.r them \r<* nr« nrcnftrmi I of Fort >f°uU n e, would long ago have heralded L„ • Vofinnoi « 1 r> • I- We now give the minority report m full, and be destroyed or impaired by Congressional or Ter- -Tonsil v-'-profllaljly. 1 ' W* hare but' (0° wflHt believe atooet any°r,.presentation ofthe kind. bj^tiro unTnlmoS <fo,lt ° fthe Statcs - wiU be Stephen A^Domtian. j £ "•^“iTed’TThat two-thirds of all the electoral way in this undertaking, and if they had the | bearer, and tl enterprize and courage of their Northern rivals they would go a good deal further than that. If wc will reflect for one moment upon the undeniable reactionary state of political feeling now existing in the Northern States, and its cause, we shall see at a glance where the true them policy lies. The very slightly dimin- d trade with this section was sufficient, last to call into action the most earnest effort- f the cummer itigatc tin orally lit diversion of tradi _ | Ring, an hermaphrodite variety, which lie, _ . „ , , ., . . . , ■ and better goods furnished for our own c!m-I has procured within the last two years, and is nf *[ 10 P a rty. But MB withdrawal, the s mption imported by our own merchants.- now propagating in preference to all others.- wnthem enuwM jarred; and had \ iretn.a, buriapijou,^uupurIC 1 ui ■ i, lrlrm,- • n v rr Iliriftv vinn-i NnlundHl Tennessee, and Kcntiickr aL^o, abandoned the The foreign will T«tum_half|XI«.* is a AtaJwitlulrawing delegates would line flavor A row of about twenty or thirty liave accomplished tiro very object that they feet length had already yielded several gallons, «' crc endeavoring to defeat, viz; tiro nomina- and was then loaded with ripe and maturing t ‘ on ® Douglas. fruit Mr Collins said that, with proper care, " e wl " h n0 "'- “» ^elusion, to call the at- two or three such rows would be sufficient to ‘>' nt 'on of southern men to two pictures; first, suDtdv any ordinary family with abundance of I the position of the seceding delegates; and sec- fruit during the season, and that a judicious j f nd ,. t0 tha certain results of Congresional pro- friend had estimated thc yield at 100 bushels I toebon, if hail, which will he twofold, one a] per aero. We believe the average size of the al and manufacturing interests I ripe lorries on these vines could not be lc.s.s fnnntiricm of the North ,ind it I tfi in five-eighths of an inch in diameter, meas- , . - _ ... .. , . , LnmtiriMii tfu Anu, 1 11 tri.in n ? lfh i not t u c i cne tu The I denial a great coustituUonal right; but there ' Ul "‘ we cut addreTourselves | R^body prolific, he has discarded as worthless. | Y® ^ of tllf,n .^o " *3fS the proposition ^ e now give thc minority report in full, and ask to be informed wherein it differs from the I demand made by our Stole Con vention in Dc- volc3 of the United States shall bo required for the I cember, and. which would liave been reafbrmed nominations, 1 ' in March, but from thc refusal to divide thc | These are what are called the Tennessee res-1 Hiram Warner, IIesrv Cleveland, S. CVCalfDLEK, • J. W. Bcbset, H. R. Casey, W. R. Gactdex, • Jas. A. Rendsk, James L. Sewakd, James Thomas, L. Nelms, , Charleston, May ftnd. lSijo. Jfr. Solomon Cohen, who acted with the resolution from that which recommended How- olutions. Thc Iattcrof the two was adopted bv minority of thc delegation throughout, would, I ELL Cobb. Tell nt VO hnlttrsT I It.. n a: 1—«L..J : I t .1 yi* *1 l.n.l Tell us, ye 4oilers: MINORITY ItErORT. tiro Convention proper, by a handsome majority I no doubt, have signed tho above if there had •which fact gave much.satisfaction to the se-1 been an opportunity to have presented it to him. From the Charleston Courier. Democratic National Convention. - TENTH DA V. Charleston, May 3, 1SC0. Thc Convention assembled at 10 o’clock. Mr. Russell, of Virginia, and Mr. Rwlin. ... ^ Tennessee, rose at tiie same time, and tiie floor clare our affirmance of tiro resolutions unani- find, however, that' thc Convention adopted thc I of them were opposed to withdrawing from tiro was awarded to— moody adopted and declared as a platform of former of these resolutions, neither did they re- convention, and that part of them were in flu Mr. Russell desired to make a motion, and principles by the Democratic Convention at (ject it. They probably desired them to consul-1 enred by the other withdrawing Slo' -. anil e’Ji- on a privileged question, asked leave to make a | Cincinnati, in thc year 1856, believing that tiie | er the whole subject, and hoped that the seee-1 ers by tiie idea that tho majority of thei .“1. Resolved, That we, the Democracy of I coders, as it rendered impossible the nomina-1 Perhaps others would, of I tiro Union, in convention assembled, hereby de- tion of Douglas for thc Presidency. AYc donot | It is due to tho ma jority to suite, that several few remarks. It was stated in the morning pa pers that Sir. Howard, of Tennessee, had olfer- Democratie principles are unchangeable in their ders would profit by tho same indulgence.— | delegation had a right to govcri nature, when applied to the same subject mat-1 Neither Convention made any nomination for the Presidency, and so there is reason to hop treetlv to the great body of the Northern vo-1^^f^ber^fsx^ anything|gg Jg-g &Ve°KS-fiS# ters. \Ye can bring them to terms, and de-1 of the kind we nave ever seen. ”• > negative evil, the other a very positive one. ed a resolution, which appears in print, nnd had I ters; and wc recommend as thc only further I In' gentlemen who withdrew from the con- stated that other States, including tiro State of resolutions the following: rentIon professed to do so because they were Virginia, concurred in recommending its adop- “Inasmuch ns difference of opinion exists in tion. The resolution ns published was not thc the Democratic party as to the nature and ex- one agreed on by thc A'irginia delegation. That tent of tiie powers of a Territorial Legisla- resolution was as follows: ture, and as to the powers and duties of Con- ( Baltimore on the 9th inst., and the latter at Chi Resolved, That tho citizens of the United> gress, under the Constitution of the United! cago on the 10th. n«™/™«. tt™ The New A'ork authorities have appropriated $30,000, and engaged the first floor ol thc Me tropolitan Hotel, lor the Japanese embassy, which they will occupy on their arrival at New York. The authorities intend to give them the most brilliant reception and entertainment that When the Democratic Con-1 any distinguished guests have hitherto received. for a harmonious result at the adjourned Con vention at Baltimore. In thc meantime, the “Union” party and the Republicans will hold their respective Conventions—the former at