Weekly Georgia telegraph. (Macon [Ga.]) 1858-1869, May 18, 1860, Image 1

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MACON, FRIDAY, 3 O'CLOCIL. P. M., MAY 18, 1860 Receiver’s Notice. -srjr-Kfcsisa Sooth ncTcr to mate the surrenders which they exacted. But, as a tribute of deYOtion to the Union, she did it. - Georgia, in her wisdom, ordained that she would acquiesce in the policy of leaving the people of the Territories perfectly free to regu late the question of slaTery “in their own way, States which I haTe designated as opposition States to say, that I use the term “Opposition States" in no spirit of disrespect, bat simple intend to designate them as States in which, un fortunately for the country, the Democratic par ty is in a minority. In many of flt ir defega- Llcl ITU III Hull. Xi. ii. ltiaJCu. I they hare strangely miqndged the means. They I of submission or re-'Stanee. Dt December l<oh ILucos, Ga_, 8th May, lSfol |«eera to me to hare acted «» ifaegmiatipgwith Georgia in sovereign cor.Tention, agreciTto ae- fiWfiUti-lMrh receipt of y—rlatter !—■»».«*» *■" ««> t/Oeito mriewftim these taeranrefiaa* final aeUjcment of 5ft fwt, a^»afaai^ri^»rtuae w1fhj^“ of ‘^^ i ^ t .J^ 0 “ r ?? 0 *£. £» rftostereryaaitatioa Joa. in the sentiments therrin exn^rak <mrecmt freesoflum with pUtlorme. . TpapprecmtefaUy their ntutBerara inrete- ~ltr if flliimi farrlrrlTTT HI/ ~ era not fight abofitaomera utoratotrararara hen to toyertran (Ha oeratic Convention at Charleston, is well calm-[ ft “ tane < T. th 5,P e ?* , to know that there are important to remember the arcumstaneas at- lated to excite alarm. The spiritjrevalent there, } ****•»"£*£"“*€ *** fr"?*** of the State of California Which rodoKtlv'tbarmctanxe asdisorzanixin~ tuhona^r through the ballot box by electing *[and her admission into the Union. Sbavtm- •g Ht lTffirT?Tf11 ” jlWhW and «ani«» an tAmtoiatrati— fca—JaArtfo.nw to, fe-te -r f-“ --p-x— tr and therein therateeritv to ITwin _{ able to our interest; and the other » by oat | sovereignty. Brigadier Gem Ritey. under the In no riewf the staterffte times, hate 11”* 1 "*• "-rotation. The toe fw this [pretext that Oe safety of to pe^fe required been eoul.hd to sec, the sho low of a necessity *** rerort rf wronged and <E*ho°or*d Slate ik conatitoted himarifehief executive of to ter- i r the tB-timed movement of the Secedera. «* *"•* » Pad, tot it wgjritory, ordered a convention and prescribed the Or to-nitetrai K.IH— tejna, tote rontoteir-gg”—«» th>t ** U »*°* * rfa« and mode of efcctin- delegate*, to rillir uier ijaiildmeliiei nf iTiiriWinr-r- rf l K< ~" nominations are made, howbter, one at-j that Conrcntipa. The people whom it rare- ery i ,: -tu-*df patriotism and ererr sugrestioo I Baltimore on the 18th of Jane, and one at Rich-1 seated were squa tiers upon the soil, cor. -re-a- of statesmanship It was eminently an occa-1 3107 ^ on the 14ft of Juno, my judgment is. | ted there a heteroganeoeg gathering of mixed sisn for onion, moderation and »>-tol [that to Freesod eaatUato wffl be elected. and 1 races—to work its mines. And what was to The Cotrreeitioo at Charleston exhibited the re- **•* beginning ofthe end.-_ [obtetoftot Convention?,.If was to perfonn proacbW imectacle of a divided, disordered I 5th - Becanv, It is unsound ineoastitutuxnl (the highest aciof sovereignty, to form a State EfroUi ttepreMMe of towimrVwtoelf^Pi^. ft a in coofiirt with State«igbts as 1 It did organise a Stetowltba Cooirtitutoi pro- ton that eta feraiiy • convened for counsel, [‘•a*** by-aueh venerated rages asMaJiam, tobfting slavery, and ires admitted hi to to Dn- wrangting in the presence of their household I A&«o». CrawfiM - The States; I wo.' Thus Congress ratified to usurpation of practically, we would gain nothing by Conmcss- iooal intervention, in our behalf—lose nothins for to want of it. 3. Congressional intervention is not neeesm- if. Onr protection is ample, iT the Constitu tion of the United Slate can be enforced into fal*it*rien. If to. Constitution aunt, bow can ataferte? Fmnd' in any and wnjf ■■ peet, all questions touching slavery in the ter- rifalfe, mast Unally, if prosecuted to the end, whittle, ^*ET AT LAW, C^B^tvw W*P7* ^#*fT J LAW, iucos. c.a . . neat to Boaetoan’a who condemned to course and policy of their colleagues, as wrong in principle and'urjatt to their brethren of the South. Ihi, wa* r.utic- ularly the case in Pennsylvaua and other States to whose votes, in concoction with toe certain Democratic States, we look with fte greatest confidence for the election of our Candida ws. The truth is, that to sound Democracv-of to North are detenninod to stand by to South in this hour of trial, if to South w® only be true and faithful to herself. The unwise de claration of a few Southern men, in fare* of the nomination of Mr. Douglas » • natter of pqK- oy and-expediency, has contributed in no small degree to to present unhappy stafe of thing) These exceptional cases have, unfortunately, bean mistaken, m same quarter-, for public opinion, and will account for tootherwise un accountable persistence with which the friends of Mr. Douglas press his nomination against to earnest protest of a united South.' * -1 have tfaUB briedv-iBoded to to difficulties in the Charleston Convention, and the pauses which produced them, as proper matter for oqp- sideration in determining upon the aoorse rfac- tion which the Democracy of Georgia ought now to pursue. ' „ # ” As to time is so short before to xe-as^em- JSAtC* XT0K>' £ • r/vro-v g a & C. ROBINSON, irt0 roey s «-* ^ rmiBERT, GEORG L L. -I ynir.pt atfntioa to ail barinim f".3vCe. in BaiwtnljifcQay. Early. .lIBKOUGH A BASS. rjJsBYS AT LAW B. 9. Bass. * ft. D 11« n ■ Taa~i ill i n Re •JORGE W. NORMAN, ;ornoy At Law, fbaiiirr. JOMty County. Ark., K HaabaraartiriB eamtee wUrv *aa the aaoiata* cooa- eayothwcSuSy la the ■ “ l£l A. Srthtt. Hob. Waahtiften been told, upon to highest authoritv, and with) contemplated the demand and refusal, and oracular soletnnitv. wuhbe ti»e sicnal for a dts- [looked to such refusal as to touchstone of Tuptfonof to Union. These things being so, [ revolution. * Whether toy did hr not, Tcan- the Convention convened, discussed and divid-1 didly avow my unwillingness to apply anWsucb ed. [test atthis-time.* The time may come, when I 1 Without noting fractioha! differences of opin-1 will be constrained to choose between the-Union ion, it may be sufficient here t#*ay, that the «ad Southern honor and right ".Come, Hcome Convention adopted, substantially; the Cinctn-I* mos*. wheneverit may, my place in life and nati Platform of 1836. ] indeath, is with my halite State. As yet that The secedinz body adopted the report of the I alternative has not - been presented OS me. lam, majoribfdf the Committee. The vital datrenceUtofir mistaken In the scotiment of Gtorgiaifi or to two consists in this, that to former as- [ foar-fitths of her people &> not think and feel serts the doctrine of noo-interventioo, and to | ** I do on AU subject. I have hope in the vir- latter asserts to obligation of Congress by leg- tue of aflother struggle for to PTeSidency,.. I illation to protect slavery in the Territories: stfll believe that. Northern sentiment mayjsofor The resolution of to Secedera is in the follow-1 right itself as, if we are united, to crown, that ing words: *“ Thar it is the duty of the Feder^ [ struggle with success. The highest obligation al Government, in all its departments to protect, I <* Southern patriotism is foe men of aUpartia when necessary, therigtttsof persons and of to unite to make it a success, woperty in the Territories, and wherever eiseits I Yoa eodtlude by asking my advice in thepre- i Jonstitotional authority extends.” * The limits [ s™ 1 emergency. * I have, gentlemen, bat a low proper to this letter wiH not permit me to dis- estimate of the value of any counsel I may cuss these platforms, but I beg leave, in the few- [g>ve^ but t have been- accustomed to speak J est possible words, to make upon them a brief when 1 have any reason to believe that mv | comment There can be no doubt tot the! words can, in the least benefit roy country.—=1 resolution of the Seoeders asserts-to duty of} My opinion is, thal if there are two Dtmocra'ic I Outgrew to intervene for to protection of sla- nominations, the Black Republican candidate very, because Congrttn is one ot the depart* I will be elected. . If this should turn out not to J meats of theFederal Government; and that Con- I be the result, ton I am smre^ that there wH^be| gress must intervene by legislation, because it I election by frie College, and that the election J >n act, for that purpose, in no other wgy.— I will devolve Upon the House. In^that event one | Again, this is.declared to be the tfsty of Con- <* two thmgs.will happen—either to elec^oti gress. • Now duty implies, obligation, and that I a Free hoj!,President pr rsvolntion, "b^tn-1 involves righf - We have, therefore, in the I "' n " *t Washington and pervading to Slates. I generalities of this resolution, the* ooh^tito- j Therefore it Js tny conviction that fte Canton- tional right of Congress to legislate upon to|h<mat Richmond ought not to he held—that a itavcf institution, fully, dedared. This riaht I Convention ought at once to be called to choose | rauBt. it it exists ataU- hc an txclmmcrTgnt— l-K»-=atTa! wuSin . f it oannht exist in Gmgrctj, .and at. to same that to people should move pipmptly m the K lime esiA dseWhere. That would he a Consti- countit* and appoint delegates to the State Con- J tutumai absurdity. All power, therefore, over | venti'on. and that the delegates to BUtimore t to* institution ol slavery is by this resolution [should be chosen, irrespective of what hastens- I unconditionally denied to to people of a Ter- Pto* *t Charleston. The breyh in the. party ritory. This may become a troublesome doc- may and ought to be healed before it widens in- trine, if perchance, at some future dav Cm ha, [juriously. Conciliation should be the ocftrofl n some other land of the cotton plant; should [ the day. Crimination and recTra;nation should [ become a Territory of the Union. Farther, to he avoided. Differences of opinion are to be ex- resolutioa determines itoa Congress shafl Pfded, but concert of action ipust be secured. L exercise to right, orfulfil theobUgationof pro-1 Above all let the people ponder these things tectior—end that is when necessary. 'VVTio [self-reliant, unimpassioned and uninfluenced by [ than judge ef this necessity ? tVhv Congress ? office holders or office seekers, by cliques, cent No authority on earth, but that clothed with binations or flatterers; and let them 4ake-ti* to power can oronounce upon to time, the ex- control of future movements, for verily it is i tent, and to manner of its interference. - This ‘heir afiair. Respect folly. Ac., j protection ides is of recent intoziirtdoQ unonsr I E. A. M^BlL j foTrawms ^ Democratic feith, and it is ar^l Messrs. JtSb’L CoIRna, John J. Gresham and taconistic to fte established formularies hf its [others. -. . -I ^ remedies. ThU principle feso wefisettlrri, that it » femaiar tojvery inteffi-ent lawyer. Now suppoae theRriomentof England shquM, by xtxpress statnte/reeogmize glnxery and decure a « ihtve tobe ha owner's property, &n it be douht- ed that, even in the absence of-statutory reme- tos, to common action wobfd lie. , for to foil protection of tW rights of the slaveholder and i ■the redress of wreng3 done to tot property ? Now took* at fte question under considera tion, in fte light of analogy. In the United- States, fte constitution is fiac supreme law of : In the excitement ef fte Charleston coatest and to rapidity rf coadusioos there- we should cmlrtrMM* tnslcy. TORSE TS AT LAW, KXOinUE GEORGIA. rj. fncon X c'rawfec* *niItb* a^Mtot ,iiaw. Al bwmem promptly attcaded to. C.c. DUNCAN, trOBXEl AT LAW, ..;y t-EEHT. QA. - ~- V partnership• HILL A HILL, KJ0an ulu<>ina utStabbeasdHiil, fide proudly in tq port, with .the flag ot victory streaming from her mast head. Respectfully your obedient Servant „ - • , V' . And fellow-citizen, HERSCHEL X. JOHNSON. Messrs- Rpbert Collins and ethers; Macon; Ga. to Telegraph of to-day. Got. Johnson traces with a finger of light to attitude of Georgia, repeatedly and persistently asserted to the world through more than thir teen years, by her political parties—her Gene ral Assembly and her highest authority—a con tention of her sovereign people! Iler doctri nal stand has been most deliberately taken and baa been heralded to the world by fte same au thority which has established her fundamental law—by to same power which ordained to Georgia platform—fixing metes and bounds to to assaults and aggressions of fanaticism upon her dignity and rights. * _ *' Now tell us. what overpowering exigency has arisen calling upon the Democratic party of Georgia to obliterate and reverse her record —to abandon a platform adopted under fte aetaMt .sanctions of her Constitution Itself— Letter from Gov. Cobb. '’WssmsGtos Cur, May 0, i860. *' Gentlemen :—Your letter of the 5th instant, has just reached me. The limited, time allowed for action, induces me to comply with your re quest for a “prompt" answer, and I shall en- deavortomakeKequally “candid.'’ n sympathise fully m yOur apprehritsioos for to future of.oar country. It cannot he dis guised, that both to-safety of to South and the integrity-of the Umpn. are seriously threat- I aid the principles'of to Nebraska-Kinsas Act. I It is the following language: “The American Democracy recogriis*and adept the principles eoctaioedia the organic laws estob- liahing the Terrttofieqqf Kawaaa and Xebraeka. as. eatbodving the only-eoand and safe salstion of the I -slavery (jneafloa' which the great national [ idea of the people oCthis whole coonter can repose [ ia ks sjetermir.ed conservatiam of .the Union—wo y- ISTiSriRCVCE. BT roSGKStS- WITH SLATSST IV STAVs-eso Tsttatjoax pa .IV ths Dbtkict o»Co- LCXBIA.’ ’ f ” That this was the ComprtxnUa of 1330. confirm ed hi- bothahe Democratic and Whig parties, in na- tiodkl CVmvemions. ratified by the people in the elec tion oi 1133, and rightly applied to the organisation . «* —An*, in HSC- And that it whs intended andunaeramoato ap- pfy to all |iiture territories is evinced .by the following resolution of the Cincinnati Plat-* form: * * “Thatbyth6 uniform application of thii Demo- cratic principle to-the oriramaatioo ot Territories, and to the aumfenon of new-States with or without domestic alavery, as they nay elect, the envoi rights Ofall the Stave, will he preaervedAntaA. the origi nal compacts of Ulo Cocstitntica maintained invio late, mad the perpetaitj and expanafon of this Caion ■ injured to the utmost capacity of embracing, -ia peace and harmony, every future American Skate that may be conantuted or annexed with a republi can form of government.*' -t In Georgia all-parties are pledged uneqmrn-’ caHy to the prindptea of the- Nebraska Kansas. ‘Act The -Legislature rf 185L,passed unanl- Vrw Law Tirzz. iZERFORD tfc HARRIS. MJ.C0X CM .ytnrrkm :n Whb and ndHaing enaatim 1 a a. L'kited State. Coart at Savaaaah amt ~m a u< tuanty of tha State by apaelal era and until tenng policy, on* to part of to South, will give security tether awn. rights and peace aS*d quiet to the Union. Any other course* Will tie equally fetal to to preservatirti of the'one and the mairrtainance of to other.) L&e your selves, J have looked to the nafioou Democratic party, as the only political organization In which to sound constitutional elements of to whole country could be brought into united Tam, respectfully/yours it, F : * H01VELL COBB. Messrs. Eobt. Collins and others; Macon, < a. Letter from Hon. A. E Sienhens. *?EEK A HUNTER, fTURNEYS AT LAF, I MACON. GEORGIA. I Tnmmr^ARlxk. Corner of Cherry Street 7 met Cette* A*rear, f lav. aa».'ciatwl aa partuara : n the practice rflaw VutVa«matt*» of tha Waeoaaadad- C'trcaita. and -ifc.W. in the State by apa- lirv-l-aiao wiH accod lb. Federal Coarta at laA and Varietu. ALEX H. SPEER, rt S.IHCEL HUNTKR. oorafcnana to act rf repudiation. Too veara ago, wo .first raw, heard and ad mired to Herculean power of Gov. Cobb, as a popular orator. Ha was then to Union can didate hr Governor, and he based his argu ment wholly upon to non-intervention princi ple asserted by to resolutions of 1847 and ’48, and in the Compromise Measures of 1850.— His argument carried 'with it an auditory gen erally hostile at fte outset to bis claims. We thought it ooarf those speeches which may be remembered a life-time. With great force he demonstrated to equity rf the principle it self and. the policy of removing out of Con gress forever, if possible, an agitating question upon which the very prejudices engendered by habit and education precluded fte possibility of harmony. Mr. Cobb is one of to founders of to non-intervention.principle in Georgia. *- Georgians, shall we abandon our position?— The effort to harmoniae it with the claims'cf Yancey and to Alabama Platform art prac tically rain and futile. The question simply is shall we take their platform or stick to our own? Ifyta, we canget oar own platform In its meet just and equitable interpretation. ■ Before to meeting rf to Charleston Con- . ROBERT C. II VUDIE, i - pmf-wweal terries* to the etOaoia ef neneiam. Be way to (bead ae aO keen | be read on page 589, of Laws of 16534: **-- - Resolved by the Senate aa2 House of Repreaen- ! tatives of tha State of Georgia, in General Assem bly met. That opposition to to principle* of the Ife- • brisk a Bill.in relation to the subject ofahtrery. is ro- girded by the people of Georgia, ts hostility to the rights of the South, .-ted (hat aU persona who par- tAe in such opposition reonnntto be recogoisedas tOaJ o theSooth- ‘ - - - Not content with this expression, to'-same Legislature adopted the following preamble and resolutions, vide Later of1853-4, p, 590. *? - . “The Styte of Georgia, in solemn convention, hav- *ig firmly fixed herself npon the principles oi the 1^- relating to fhereb-' be done honorahly, should be 1 jeej ol slavery U tiie Territories of the doited states. • • . [ si a fio^lsettlenSeot of the agitatipa of that qaCsdon, [ The schism, in tho Cliarleston Convention, was jfroduced by the refusal oU the majority to incorporate into the party platform, a resolu- j niaiwt^a those compromise mens tion*n tivo» of Congressional intervention for l “*rompetont for Congi the protection of slavery in the territories.— | Stji'iDbh ihYcbiaeoa mOTine iol This presents the question whether theSbuth I oa tbs Territorial of the UrSooTj ought to demapd such legislation, as the eondi-1 hereafter acquired: but tbit the. tion on which she will remain in the Union.— | tlaveryshalJ or ahqjl not form a r tkink'ehe on<cht not. I meatioinetoutioos. i»for them al r, -^- o UU I - . .. «. I fot themselves; and her praoeat 1 1. The South has agreed not to do it She [ reiterated and affirmed the same fi has heretofore asked for “non-intervention” on-1 inaugural address. ! ’ Iv. Let us alone—hands off—has been the [ Be HyBmlrt,f by the Seaatend lingua of all our leading Statesmen. We have stood and acted upon this ground. , repeaa«>!«twca oUh* pe-.pleiwpe The.Soatb has Agreed to leave the question I oa4 dpresAi^ their feeiin^.bur ' of slavery in the territories, to the decision of the L fence *tren*ti»e»edta tie Bettled ti*t of ft* L nitetl states. vn the .of I of them to the.billa reportci December 1847, Gen. Cass, in his famous Nietfl from, the Commitee cm- Territeri olson letter, announced fte policy of “leaving | State* Senate"at thepreMot sesa!< to tfaeqftople of any territory, therigliUo re-1 Sf**”** 1 * 0 ?" 0 ^ * Twritorial.yw gubte it (slavery) frf' themralvei. .under -to I a jir£?&solreJ, That general principles of fte -Constitution.” He Congress, be and they are htrebj was the Democratic nominee for the Pref-fdencv our Representatives reqaested. tp > z Isl ./.ol. o " frart tknfos nrinmrlM. fimi td nM fill on New York r FOR SALS BT THE IFACTURERS’BAM Gentlemen :—The Union is no£ an object fo be idolized, but its preservation,- if it, cap Tie, consistently jrith "the interest of the South, is ! worthy of patriotic desire. It is wise to avoid -such measures, not demanded bv necessity, as tend to weaken its bonds.- The overthrow of I the national Democratic party would be a pgan.: I i n , twaftt apow'th* tic stride- towards dissolution. Hence, its io-[ compreraisa'mews<wa» of lSAO, nl tegrity, if it can U 1 ’ raho||teitefa|mm|tijraW|tofi| does not remember with what ferried zeal and indighant.enthusiasm fte .leaders of the Democ racy m Gabgrese, and out of Congress, repelled the very position that disintegrated the Con vention at Charleston ? Remove to agitation from the halls of. CoogreSs, and localise it 'on fte Territory, was their counsel? Cgflgress, tpust not, said they, be any linger the theatre of agitations, which* disturb fte Union. Tiie_ people, argued our leaders, have the right ao- eotding to the Constitution, to pronounce upon* Hie question of slavery in the Territories. And so "it traa settled, that to Government—that Congress,’ hod nothing to do with to question. The people ocqnigted. and thejarty advanced to victory—from triumph to triumph—with non-httenrention inscribed npoa its banner.— If anything ought to be considered as laid up iving! Engraving! its withdrawal poUtytri areqm. Temterfes inte incorporate into the party platform, a rcsolu- MACON. OA. E E. BROWN. restrictions, a* to the eaistence t>f slavery among .A.ISI.TE HALL!! LANIER HOUSE, [Con, Georgia. -■-.r| s £»I»’SE. L. PROPRIETOR \V areh-ouse -iXISSION MERCHANTS MACON, GA. ft WOOLTOLK together, and wilt aecopy to iTfreofWarahouae M* bdsg erected JjvHardamnaASpraha. . Ugatiqn<of Constitutional, canonize old John Brown publican hqdts threaten in tory in the “irrepressible Jeman& Sparks VoHouso '^ISSION MERCHANTS, <•(!.. -roast par ^“‘^te.taahb.aineaieraraiiit «w past tavofi, ami a renewed The £ rZr* ‘••■iter Mmteoadeaa- tooddre )P*<e tseeira their fob share of pab fi.xi of Black ItepuhlicanDm. That is .their mtsfortone rat'.LT than (heir fault, ar. I furnishes t» reason why we should abandinn fte common ground rfCompromis.' on which we haveagreed with them to stand With their co-operation, wemuybe able to maintain our righte in the ! Union; without it it is scarcely fteth I Io»k at the fiosition rf tho South in fte li.'hc of the Compromises :o which she ha.- de- i lib-.rateiy yieidol, from December 1850 down to the present, m order to define her best policy. I iiad no agency in putting her in that posi tion. It hoaorabiy released from the oblica- tions it imposes, my opinion of her true policy would l>« very different, and my language ani mated i.y a more lierv spirit I opposed the measures of 1SU0. and i: we stood now where viv limited. 8o they tell ns, and are are obliged to oonwdn that th^rafi (inthlhBj. - ft* Cincinnati platf-rrm ai^andons no ifouthern ri^ht, cten admitting tiiat it doe not embody ail that we may justly claim. If tl-at be aq what objection" could lie to to action rf to Convention with reference to fte expe-fieneies of the case* Let no man u!.!- hi.self wi:h the idea il*it a Democratic Presi lent can be dented witiiout Northern votes, and iiet ev ery man tie well as-ured that it w.i] requiW every it- m of strength possible at the N r. to eh- t him. i*jr secedn.g delegates are not icn-srai.t of thts-r thir.es, and yet they prescr.oe to their own friends at the North, term* that would in evitable weaken them ar.d thereby defeat the : .sn ii late. 1 speak :iot now oi thc.r -n.,^ai..m j to look to the ulterior consequences of his de-1 for feamailvra wbefter to ismtitntinm at •iavere! rfto corapromfee to which the south is a par- •halt or *hiU not loem apart of their aortal jyateia.'' j ty, by almost every conceivable form of recog- I In 18M, this raot question was a^aln uod r rnition. Ls it -.nsistentwithiMS cotapromise, consMerui. a, and as was supposed, finally do- j aow to demand, that Cop.zic-s -hall inter.-ene teiftillyyfadfiferttM lhs “taps-Ito nsfrgin tholigtiteMtaujhuuhisttii [■tea mmaaraa** » Item aawaas anaststtjl 0 * tews for (hw protegtfoa of .-ia-. -y ■ I -1st., in modSa sateMMbaTWiitoriliOprgggi-Tspeak m aebSiw Ik'jWSrajjjMMffl race: 5>r 'tab; CL i Territorial Government! -• Sochintervcntion would bo oflittle, if any, for New Mexico; 5-1. to settle the question of! value to thaJRoath. In New Mexico, slavery is boutehry between Texas and New Mexico; 'protected by dirt : action of the territorial AO^ fer She admtedaw rf QfifeaU~_tlfc~ forWifetete, and therefore. |Congressional in- ccnsumation of this tr.reatened p’iucy of the nu ns r.. a. majority the ConvcaHafo. In caa- mon with the ieleaates from sever, -.her em States, they withdrew from the body. Their action should be sustained by the democracy of the State. They were true and loyal to tho trust reposed in them, and deserve the cordial approval and renewed confidence of their coo- -tituents. ft they had returned from Charles- j tor., bearing to the people of 1 ieorgia. the hu- , mi’dating terms of surrender which the majority ot the convention sought to put upon them in the platform and candidate proposed, the peo ple would have received their report in sorrow, and spurned their candidate with indignation. It is due to the Democracy of the sixteen f delegate* to attend both the Richmond ana } the Baltimore Convention*—there seeming now [ to be a disposition to fte tetter Convention,’ to concede something oa the platform." J Would it not be letter fcr Ge-'.-u to stand by lier principles and assert them in the regu lar democrat! tfon-. ration ? The terannih Secedera 1-*" • •- atht-iued acainst Jude| Denning, that tiie very invitation logo to Ba timore is “u/t insmit rc'uci cannot he too je,tnteJl. 'Linked : J i-.c Democracy of' Gear- put ' jio they then unite in tins recommend*- j Don—trill they go to Baltimore ’ ' partj alone i* **x*uim m€,the pc U. k- t. S c °Opr||: r Cfei :. * lir Nacth- “ILRIJOSo blthilfc-' nor U are u .ix - —-“-r . , ' ; ti im"'>rt^ ni,<1 aijffa abov : d of the present day. xn-i it m. ^ sweep th«m A.l irom tt“ ; against the ti«n*and. I: i' 'prcucctcLl ia itJ ptc&cn: li^a: judipnen tjarttiou coa- warnL, especially in