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• “ i.i <u s . bkA\. i Dirou. *®
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*. TBKJiUSVTLLE, GA.
JIM. 47. ISOO.
* - - —m- —• _ @
CONSTITUT£ONAT> UNION TICKET.
• • © . i
# FOE PRESIDENT, ®
‘.T OIT X BECiL,
•• OF TENNESSEE.®
•-*® © © I
V ® FOR W( E PtßlDElfr,
: Egdward. Ev©i%tt*
®*F MASSACHUSETTS.
& @
I'htrimn of llir #ontitnf ionnl Inion Party.
’ljn> Conr-1 it nti<>s <8 t li* ( ‘ountryi trfb
UAoa ®r ttaa
• _ Enforcetnenfol ih” Laws! <s>
• • <§) (g)
® ® ®Foiirfti of July. ® © !
_\ * ii'i a famous. ‘■ iy a] pro i we listened in
to ■ to celebrate it in
/Thonin®To'finty. hwubocotoe of the ancient j
paDrioH—her cjtweaa? Are®the old patriots j
4I •: id. arid have their suns an 1 daughters
ted frafti tfi'e ojJ onthu-ia-m in the cause of liberty?
Wl at 4’ tl®
tfi,. ... : with enth® . and
•i .. : M . . & v . di Us, chickens, &c.
® v® % . , ,<; r 1® w
®©® © ®
. Hon. !.*• -!. | i family arrived afc*
heme.afrom Washintol, oo*Mondap la-t, all in goDd
Stealth spirits.® Tiie Julvo lias betn absent for
• • near seven nasnths, and witnessed the most intense
fA (®j
the CabitolL City has ever es
-1 ® fS)
perienced. He says th peculiar sensation of
tpleusiirtothat pervades a man- heart upon return
• in® to liis old liofffe and friends, and we wifh
him. ®‘ # It is si c legitimate reward of absent, and
maueg a man feel kind towards liis neigh
bor. The Judge ha.4*lior. suffered by the excitement
° (5) (§)
, at .Wa-tSingion. and the cares of office, biit jn
tli- L ns of humor and oftitet
meut, as before. ® ®
** ® ‘*•*’—®
Dentil of Jliifttr K. IS. Young. ©
.It again becomes oflr punfttl duty to
tl® death of an old and valued citizen of Thomas
C nsity. ®Maji ; *f.. i\. Yoi-xu, attci&yarotfutfcd ill
ness, died at his residence on Friday lqstf (2fth git.)
at the age of t’>2 y* vc-. and 4fas buriojl with Muon
ic honors at the Cctncterv of Thgmihs* Jones,
on Sunday. ® ® ® ®
During #i- IB’e he idfuir.ulatfd a large f#rtu®c,
l®s 1® be spirit and .ri\©ite affections turned
to good account®and him to many warm
and am>rcciativt licags. Fora long® fine uedirector
•of the M®n Trunk lie manifested a strong 5
! ’ •'oe># •* of tftat enterprise, amf'deYcMo
ted®all lb- energies so its rapid progrefc, that die
• Wight witness the dentbpaent ©f toe country and the
* o’ti ISTIi It® >a rod if*© n his fellow
IlWimv-ir ®.id the n-l\.•ullage's d? an education, end, !
g tjuglit hy a lttfe-long experience ana observation,
the incalculable benefis to be derived from ii) ho
. was a zealous tidrotiate of the cause, and ffavfng-ap
] lifted dir • rs, -et apart in his
•li3@erec!ion of a r omalc College in Tbon^asville.— “*
The ffigh opigjion he entertained of Free Masonry,
a >Tl!d liis <®‘Vo;i(Bi to the Lodgs \\®h which he affilia
• ted, sfl Tbe%as,) prompted him to |gpk®it a dona
tien of $2,d00, also© ® ,
Majfer roung yrsu want in.)iis f 1-ienAshij.,
,* siastic in all his undertakings, and ob
l.ging t•> his lu igiil'oPs:* l!is®dcath is a lerfciufdos*
to tu’#county®nnl lnuch regretted.
Florida t'ou®i 1111 ional I uioif Parly.
The Const ml ional liiou Partwof Florida held a
(§) . —(g)
otute Convention at on the 20th lr..ratiti
* ® 1 v w 9 r ®
cd flurnomination of Bell aiuFEverett, ad ifominit-s
led ward Hopkins, of Dural, for Goeernor, and
I>. F. Allen. Fs<[., (fr the Tallahassee
Sentinel, by Congress. TiSfb nomi--
nees wcee present and acceptci.l. Among the dis-
persons present in the®Conve*tion, we
notice the n;®nes of Hon. G. T.
ß andfUeueral Call, who’ addressed ihe-Con
vent ion and are zealously a>ngagt©l in martialiiisf
Bell and Everett forees.® The nominees of the Con
vention are men of
••ally in the past. ;®id will carry great for?c andfn
• tlueuce with them tfi tlft contest. o
® **** ® ® c
• the Prnileutiary. ®
John E. I. JStanaland, who <#vas arraigi#d and
•.tried befoft Jlansell, at the iaft? session of
Thomas Superior £ourt, for the killing of Samuel
Simmons, was convicted of voluntary manflaugLjter
and ©enteneed on to imprison
ment in tli®Fonitentiary. © © ®
The Court adjourned on Saturday following. l?
6) ‘•> J e
® ®— 7 ’
C heaper Cooil. than Jew or Ctenlile.
It a ftelicioift ■'| ) atc to be in during this ‘ftafhi
weather, that of keeping cool, and between John
Stark's ice ceila®Velour us,©pndlß)the luxury of bear
ing onj’of B. F'. Huberts fin e eoutu, we
, flatter ourself’, that we are about as well
for V4by c . the exeitemenfof poli
tics to the contrary notwitb|tanding. Ms anybody©
else desires to keep cool, we (more es
pwtiauy our nayuhor) to go ami get one of friend
Huberts tfr ®- c. © and then pall? deliberately
4 vn to©f :, u
sodH. It u.at dtjgs net cool him off. we shall suspect
bun of pfifious ;®-.pli(fatiii oi Breckenridge*
“ota ¥ l. Fri - “and Hubert has made a la'fge ] !B<shase
of tbesom:oats and van fi|th* body asawell as suit the
• as e atyl pterae of the mqpt and fastidi
*For ivtial iomM, he Has cloth
*v.s,w i ;ich tray summer and fiied for
- - 1 : idur a speqrf -rWiety* made otlighter ma
terial. • The®reader is not to fnfer that coats are j
?#C V mu: friend dealt iif; he has on
il^ n * a “d keeps steadily*supplied with vests, and !
1 1 and styles, grgpfevaicety :
*• ‘ . f;llFn -/under the hel of Dry Goods.
1,. a 1 ••' # adv f i. .seiuesu m another place and snake
vour purchase acccv ® ©
• ® , i I>O “T‘ JVa V c . * or tatem® - TWM 9 . ®
s 1 !,e ttauftphia Suulhem Monitors heretofor®a
s voncsDe::. journal,%nd *hiph®carried oJT 1
Mi-e at rsii s ast he if for il w /i/siiency, until the |
Vspl.t in Baltimore Ccnyentcou, has I
bodily f- r Bell We clg> the vo lbUo#-,
ing items from its ctfumms: ® • ©
Thk *x;-cf s -,ie._ T!g re a 6e no®af*tenij.# to
;V?. b ‘. : i L . : R -•’• •• 4tor the election—and V
I ; t V* ‘ 0 T V - 1 h:lTe a of the
o. l fra'i: #4 -ntere ~br- • between the sections which
I: x xcu 2*'. . e of WMhjpgton', aai the Con- >
stifittioml Inion partynU # ggve|n®he cotfitry for I
# fiuy years. © _ # ’
new between Bell fnd Lincoln.—
The C.ipotitunon.il Union Party is tlie only National
par:#;. M . ’ i. : combat the Abolition party.
The other fa are merely engaged in a Ktlken-3
ny r • ftel ve. and nothing but tlie
• small ends of their taiJi will bf left £i the end ttf
*Le baffle ®
®®® ® *
Return of n Dougina Delfgntr.
It is sometimes necessary to note the political
eh of men whether great or small, in order to
| establi-h a for the future—of great men, to
I keep up with their and of sm til men to
. mark their dabbling propensities and overgrown as-
I sumfitions. „ Men vdio dabble in poll’ s- P 8© to b®
6 r. riced. and of #oursefl “the d?v.l si; this©
observation®and with alMheir brass and
assumption, iif handmaids, after a short swell, die
i ingh never be heard of or
j ed: The delegate under (©ftisideration does not ex
actly belong to either of these classes, for while we
■ count not do him the injustice to place him on the
sm.tll list, we will neither do him tlfc injustice to pre
sume |.Wit he elfins position with tho [ifyat. What
heyeafly (©and has I is tli% questfon now before
u-.*and winch to treat; not in detail, for
; that wotnd he tedious for this time and place,
I nor vet in general, fo|,that®vould involve liis whole
record : but to notice in a special and friendly man
! ner, a |pw particular positioinsglie flias I-’t-ly ocdipied
politically, which,©although ncitiier him a
w®rld renown,©aor buried him in lfiftpelsss ob
livion. we think note worthy, his
position among nie#and politicians. The familiar
* reader h: perhaps guessedby the above what Del®-
gate we allude to ; but if he has not we will now in
h form him that it is our utn Colonel- Seward, whose
” ® a, ® @ ® ®
long Hbsencvf at Baltimore cauW- l some anxiety
among his friends as to his ? ufeess tlie
ern “ C -u a.’ ir.-rs, - ’® and retmi home.—
“ Weß, we in a>suring fliem. one and
all, that tlie Colonel haa>returned ho Oft, an# although
weltave not seen him, are infin-nied that he -till has
tlie spunk to stick?’ o (ip t# Douglas, a© 1
Breckenridge soundly fo® ]©s ba'l eeoil^beibre the
country. This, ofecottrse, is very gratifying to u.^ ;
and much more than we for n .w we shall
have “<sreeklngainst Greek,” and if any of those’
Breeflteniadge democrats so . sancti
fied by their ignorance of liis record, are not satisfied
with neidSfiapcr reports, just let tfiem be patient for a
season ancPtSey shall have it from his ltere|pfore ff
filiated
has always g|pd among Democrats, and we
shall protest against abandonment of •■ancient
1 W*gm. Os all the people in sie world, -She Demo
crats are tlie upon “ancint
usages,” and we shall expect Biem to abide bf their®
faith. ° But to < f’lie@Clonel and his positions.®
desire his Democratic lWends that in.
fee was a ltte of gie bittereot Cobb man in gie
Statg of Georgia. Why? ®Howel (Jbb ii®that year
#as a Union titan and fire eaters, of
which the ColSltel was one, for Governor of Gts^i a.
.in 1*55 Howel’s peculiar to the Know
Nothings excited his highest admiration and finding
s> himself #t 4lte same fellowship become llu'l'l's most
(S, (S)
obt. ser#f. (gle reiutiined thus Anti!
wCoeventioil( meantime, recommended forts
IVi'-i-b-nt
State Convention ; o#crtlirovgi by tlie people,
‘cj though and reappointed to Charleston.—
Howel refused to let Ms mute tie CharteO
ton and Coifernel was to give
him up. Thinking something might be gained |)v
taking ffrae by the forelock, and to do a
4 great deed, lie offered a resolution in the CMiv®ntiott>
to make Mr. Guflirie PresideOt. o ®
wos reacted at Tlie .Mr Guthrie ul
trfimicly Soon after tlie ©ouventlon
split, insist of the States withdrawing in a
i> body, with®the few®sc;^tfti-in| ) dejg-
still adhered to the Democracy,
> among % hom was in com
pany |vith nine to cast the Georgia
agaftst the majority of (sfte delegation he was again
overthrown and obliged Jfeavc the Tonvenfion.—
Astonished at the summary proceeding of ‘that body
lie returped home only to be (S struck dumftiy the dis
_ X), t (£) __
0 paten of liis friend Howel, recommending tbs Scce
ders to repair forthwith to Richmond and thus aban
'Mi ®
don theDouglasite#altogether. Howel’s antipathy
to Douglas, by his low* for the
h-oyercamf his patriotism for the regardless
of the lfi* frilhd |he Colonel, deli veredtgjtim
up to Douglas and went .® er o the Seceder® The
(g)
Colonel seeigg liis determined to work in
s “tiny harnes^he“might be placed fit, and accordingly
went back to Milledgeifllle, “pitched into” his
frigid Ilowt# about of the Adminis
tration in the Kans as @ affaitf II er
schel )J. Johnson fdr i’residcntf refused
o ment b}- the Secedgps the national fc'onventiotig)
split the St:Se Convention ,#td accepted an appoint-,
merit to the Baltnnore Convention from Dot®tla.s
illng. Having now declared wtfi- Igainst liis friend,
li)Howel, lie proceeded to Baltimore as an anti-seced
ing delegate Again he was howeWCr,
and although Doughy was nqgpinnted, tfte conjfnittee
on Cretan! ials reported against tlie Georgia Douglas
delegates and tie Colonel had no car
ry iptentiffu® toward Hie country.—
4'hus he encountered c&feat at every point, strange
as it mseem, at the those, ir®every in
stance, whose cause he was strenously
We think it is time for ltiin to abandon such l#iends.
lf|my man ht®ls)iecn so ill treated half tha€>long, by
t?ie opposition, he iwould have deserted* to Democracy
long ago. This issnll we have time a(n resent to say
on the subject. ® ©
(6) @
- - (§)
; <? Fine TlvloTi. %
AVc acknovndge®Hte receipt of a fine melon from
Mr. J. S. Button, of which rifeurif
many)tlyxnk^. o It gas a very large ons. and we have
,aPo doubt asowell flavored) as any produced in the
country; tut, unfortunately for us, tlie stage driven,
took so litfle of it trip,%ml suffered
it t# be so badly bruised, that we m-re oyiged to
ttu nit over, “meat® and ‘ta ind,”aiot to the “devil
but to same animals that our nei®)i
bolfls tfrind.” was®not our®frieifd Burton’s
fault, however; A.o maant to us a toeat, and
we ap>*ecmte ft a® fulfy as if @ we had enjoyed the
j feast,®’ ° ® ® @ J
S?c-*sfbn Aoiuination A'ol Rftirliii&>° upon the
Ucniotralir Parly. 0
The 41aeon T#,jr<i r k, a Democ/afft Jotarnal now
in@the support of “Breckenridge VuSll Lane for the
.<Dresidency and Tice Residency®, sj>cakflng of the
Baftimore, snv# • 9 ®
@.® ’ ®
“Neither nomination ajfiears to itsdf,
accordingo establislicu®tisage, any binding fufee vj>-
on the vartu „
A J ® ®
leading Democrat? openly make such confes
j soinf as this, whatpower is there to biod the ©vmmon
I ' eople BreclenrAlge
l ” -•-• bold themselves bound to a nomina
• ion ‘heir leaders decTare to be informalomd in vio
• |ti. nos their- usages ? jyic party have
° F an 4in cases of appeal
, **** ‘‘"W-at magtm” and a#c* we nfw to under
stand that thev have - 7 7 , .€> ®
ndoned their ancient usages?
, H so, .and the Telearanh • ,
no longer be identified aji?L n ‘ ! ® C * n
allegiance to the,U
iyw fangled concert# under tit; iead of 0 BUPP ° U
Amffdate. though falsely s.vled fc e D
party. To caß the party helded by Mr
r,dg|any thing else than a mere facOon^llf^T
| agernpt to S
*# • 1
I
How Hr. intends to Stave the
Union. ,$
Breckenridgg, the Seceders candjj&te for the
Presidency, was at Washington the
’ night of thg 25th his address, after express
ing the reluctance with which he accepted the nomi
nation, of a faction, said “ he luM read th'e platform,
and believed that instead of breaking up the Union,
it propose* ft o add Cuba, lie als#cei\sidered tlyit it
erpr&dy advocated th*bindinq ty tfie Union uith*the J
Pacific Railroad These prompted him to
the nomination. @ ®
©
Is Mr. Breekenrhljft, then a Union candidate?®
What have those rabid Democratic disunioni*!s of the
Souft, to say to thiifl? Their object, in supporting
the nofhinee of the Seeders, as'®sxpressed by them
® ... *
selves, is to thcuUnion, aflsl can they now be
consistent in voting for Breckenridge ? ft is outftof
the question. If they will vote for a Uniolf cnwff
fdate, whvnot vote for Bell ? ® Does Breckenridge ex
poet to bf elected by palingthe Opposition thunder 1
Without a declaration in favor of the Union Breek
; ’.!>■ ‘he stands not the slightcst-chan# for ‘!
‘B’
ethin, nor, indeed, for a roywctuble vote; and to
remedy this, in the trct of sinking, with his remnant
crew of Democracy, he crawls u[® exhausted from
the whelming) waves^and ygsts his
eth<*platform of Bell and Everett. We do not mean
that Bell and Everett or the Opposition, propose, to®
saafe the Iftiioigffiy ann&ing Cuba and building the
Pacific Railroad. These are institution#* they #rc
willing t# leave for tfte policy of tfHe nation
out. Fiji and Everett propose to save the Union by
“0 Uorcuuj the Constitution and Be laws. Mr.
eumlge proposes to save it by constructing a^i&lroad,
and annexing Cuba. D M ill our Democratic friends
@
examine these plans of the Union candidates for
the Presidency, and tell which is the most
ible? Does not the former address itscs directly,
to the conwion sense of every man in the Country ?
® Mr. Brec%nridge proposes tific&iplicate the affiftrs
of the Government in onftr to save the Unit®. Mr.
.o
Bell accomplishes the s:yfße grand result by simplify- \
iny them. Which wilf you choose ? a complicated,
or simplified plan ? _ ®
But supp She, for the sake of argunscnt % that Mr.
would save the Union if carried
®out, t y what m&tns does he carry' 9 ’# out ?
.Both ®lic conditions of his plat*, dcpetpl upon the
passage of separate acts of Congress. Cuba coulif
g, uot be admitted without an act of Congress, neither 1 !
can the pacific Railroad be built without® 5 jjssiatronal
Igippropriation, which, must be done by act of Con
®| gress. Now let Mr. Bre#ceffridge s supporters show
•
\is°*/ure will be his power to force any Democratic
lias ,Jately been totally dismembered at
Charleston and Baltimore, Jie himself, the candidate
of a faction only, and lie tall! about passjpg
Democratic measures in Congress? Tie cannot, car
®® (9> ®
ry, na, he claim a solitiTry Norther^State,
° J toral vote, if he carries any State, will be wholly
sectional He is not even Jlie unanimous j
the Southern Democracy: na, lie is even worse off
-fell an this—he is the nomine# of a faction of a faction;
for we prrsume@t be disputed, that while he
was being nominated at Baltimore, a ofthe
Southern Seccders, whose candidate he is, was ac
tuuljf) delibefjitiftg inA’onvention at Richmond , taking
no part whatever, in his nonftnafton. The
faction were in haste to git lira through and. would
not even waft for tlicfi- colleagues in lUylmngid to
repair to aid in his why
this
ther (fifficultieji would Arise and result in another
®withTrawal ? These facts show that Mr.
ridge is utterly” destitute the po#r> carry ®ut
his plan of savinjfthc Union, and his one sided pntfffi
sitioff as absurd as it is original. What course,
1 t>hen, shoidd*tlie people of l9 ?—
Gtfftled by the experience of th* past, does not wis
dim dictate the adoption of that simple plfth, known
and field to fcy ttll prosperous* nations, “ enfrt&ement
Constitution amfdaws'"] We think it £oes
nWfet us ask every democrat in the South, to si#
9 for the sake of hoiiQty, whether such a
cowse is not the surest safeguard against dissolution,
and the greatest promoter of peace harmony and
prosperity. IP it if we will surrender the
tion; bilk mark you, if i feds, we shall ask all honest
men, everwlrere, < io lay aside their party
and come tifi to the support of Bell !®id
Everett, the UnionfsCSncUdiDes for the
Presidency, bearing on their standard, rlie motto,
“The Constitution oe the Country! thi^, Union
ok the States! an# the or the
n V ‘ @
® POLITICAL INTELLIGENCE. %
® (§)
Sam Houston far Bell anil Everett.
We have received infermattion, says the Augusta
Cfcrouicle, coining direct from a friend in Texas,
that the hem of Jacito lifts deciitred for the
only National ticket, Bell and Everett. „ >
® < ®’, o Another ‘Sign.
s Gen. Spirke, who was recently Commissioner from
Mississippi to Virginia, on behalf 1 of a Southern
Conference, has declared fffs purpose to support
9 Bell and Everett.
© ® ® ® <o) ® ®
Bell and Everett in California.
The overland mail brings<3ntelligence that a hun
dred guns were fired in San bf-ancisco on receipt' 9 ®
rlie news of the nomination of Bell and EveretC-
Great enthusiasm was created among tfie oonserva
tivesghy the acti#n of the Baltimore Convention.
® ,®
The Lafirenceville New* says that R.
Uobb, of Athens, Ga.®has bee#appointed to fill the
vacancy in the Supreme Court of the United States,
creat'd by the death ofqjudge Peter V. Daniel.
j) j!. (g)
lam connect#i°u-ilh no party that has for its
object the extension of slavery, nor with any to prevent
theypeople of a Statuspr deciding the
question of its existence or non-existtnee with thfin jor (S
themselves. Johx C. Breckenridge.
2 ® ®
For Hell and Ererrtf.
Mayor Ileitfy, of Philadelphia, wSo was recently
4 re-electedgis the candidate of the “People’s partv,”
-lias declared himself for Bell aid Everett, and the !
Black lft'ptiilicans are bitterly* denouncing hgife
therefor. @ ® ® ® ® 6
@ @ # ® ®
® A Dougins State Conveiition.
9 ®The Augusta fonstitutionafist annouce# that the
Execuftve of Irhich®James Gardner,
1.-q. is Chairman, f ill issue a call in a days for
a or the National Democracy of Geor
gia, tojie held at Millcdj^villesn the 24yi *f July
1860. @ ® ®
® ® ® Si ® ® ®
®
o l our S< nfflor m the Field.
The Washington Correspondent of the N. Y. Tri
bune says : _ v
‘‘ The rival facttojjs of Democracy have now noif*
inSted four Senators, forgetting Hint no,smember of
Hiat ever elected President. An attempt
will be maifb to iiftuce both candidates to withdraw,
and to patclfi up a <#>nipromise, by calling anew
convention. It is too late for that expedient. ®The
die is cast.’’ ® ®
@ Fitzpatrick li!'tng withdrawn, the number would
be redtCed, were it nttt that Hamlin,®of the Repub
lican ticket, is also a Senator. @ % <s>
® r _
£’i tzp.'itrirU Dtrlines-llrnrhcl V. Johnson is
iS'oniiuatcd. “ @
Washington, June 25.—Gov. Fitzpatrick having
declined the nominatfon, a meeting of dele
gates was held here this evening, t wjjich Hon®
Heraehel V. Johnscin®of Georgia, nofiiinatetl for
■'he \ ice Presidency in his s ead. | |
John Tlitfhel on he PicAlrnlial Contest.
We exhort all Southern Democrats ft read the let
ter of John Mitchell copied below, and more especi
ally do >f e*touimend it to our neighbor, who liaj so
been delighted to <spy from the “Irish ratfi
otf w4ien he published a paper Southern State®
and Democratic vtinciples. Read it ncigli-
bv all means, and copy for the benefit of your
rea^crs # ® You shoukft keep them posted a#to the
whereabouts and position of Hie “Irish Patriot
® CntgAoo, Sun lay, Ju fe 10, fciliO.
To theQSdttor ofvic True Demo rig: ®
g> i n the Free Democrat, of theJtb, I observe tluit
you *lo me the justice to repel, ii%my @ behalf, an idea
VhiA you in your ity. namely, thar l
came to the Noi-thwe®t on tfie present oecsftionu u#
! Jer color of lecturing about European affairs, “to
make political iiarailf ues for the benefit of the Dettfb
] c mtfit partfi. 1 ’ If the persons who entertSned such
suspicion came and listened to my lecture, ft toy
must have been undeceived. Be assured, also, thait
|if I undertone® to ©stump” \Yi*o#siu at all, it
would be for anything else rathe#than fttegDefino
era tic Paigy. < ®*
. A three years 1 have bc<®i in my sphere j
Journalism to -breakup that party, and 1 hope
fiot altogether wifiiout effect. ®L’liere is no Demo
cratic Party now that lam aware of. 1$ w#s kept
alive four rs longer than it had any right to live,®
by the generous zeal and attachmftit of the Irish
born citizens of wlio loved ii for the
traditions and associations of its vigorou®piime. — 1
It is impossible any longer ®o belong to a pars’
w liiini is dead gone, tlie soul lSving gone out of
; it, ancUfhe very body torn limb from limb. If Iliad
any credit with my 1 should ex
hort them to seek new combustions— to isolate them-
no longra@as the “Irish vote’’—to inerg<®in
the sev#al organizations of their fellow citizen's,
Amid be guided®in all giiMic aHflfts by their own
views of rigid, and the politi®il interffts of tl)^
] in which they live. For exanij^’. 9 1 ■
should wish u> sec Irish Northern States
acting party which de®res a^protectivc
■ } home industry, and also the largest possi-
of territory for the field of free labor. If
the South fee aggrieved, as she may, sh© lias her >
remedy. ® ® @
I know that Irish citizens have avoided Free-@oil-J
m amrprotection, because they felt that such doc- ;
ti mes and in|i respire unjust ttgjtlie Fiouth and in
juriou®to Southern Tights, they lgivewoted hitherto
agiftnst their own obvious industrial interests. They
| may ns well give up that generous struggle, is
too ftue:
nor by the North, anti must either herself or go
unsaved. - ®
If the
ard.riieir great stateynan, leader and creator, most
9 bf tlie Northern lri#*r—perliaps ntSftrly all—would
? have supposed him ; bound to him as they are by ‘
his uniform vindication of their citizens |
against his own party. u On the
hanalrishmen dwelling South will, I presume, most ‘
be disciples (as I myself am) of Mr. Yan
cey, of Alabama. Mr. Seward is right in asserting
that there is an irrepressil^(®confiict; and Mr. Yan-
is right i$ admitting and accepting that tfict,
with .a ®ew to ending said conflict in tlie easiest way,
namely, by a dissolution of the Confederacy©
Your ob't serv’t, John Mitchel.
® ® ®
<§) Hr. Douglas’ l.rtlrr.
The following is tfie letter WUdressed by Mr. Doug
las to the Illinois delegation, authorizing the with
drawal of his name; (0) (5)
(*; dVAsiitNGfbN, June
Jly Dear Sir —i learn there is iminent danger®
that the democratic party will be demoralized, if not
destined, Is> the breai®ng up of Cii®
Such a result would inevitably expose the country
to the perils of #ectiqgal strife betweSh the North
ern and Soifthern partisans of Congressional inter
veunon upqj;i tiie sftbjeclgof in the Territo
ries l tirrftfy and conscientiously believe that thei®
is no for tlie hope for the juieser
v;#ion of the Union, except by a faithful anurigid
adherence to the doctrine yt no hy.j
Congress with shivery in
disunion. There is uo difference in
principle between Noifticrn antTSomliern intervene
tioifi The one intervenes and the ufjicr
ttfuinst^slavery; bur each appeals to the passions
| and prejudices of liis own section, against the pop
ple us the whole country tlie right of sel?%ov-
I evil meat by Tlie pefiple of Territories. Hence
the doctrii®! of non-ftitervendon mqgf be maintained
at all But while Igpan never sacrifice!lie
principre ev|ii to obtain Presidency, cl*cr-
I fully sacrifice myself to mfjiptain the jftincipda.® If,®
therefore, vou ams iny other friends who have stood
by me wirfi such heroic firmness at Chaiiesto#snnd
Baltimore, 4lall be of the opinion that the principle
can be preserved, and the unity and ascendency of
the democratic party ma%tained, and
saved from perils of cithern abolitit#sm and
Southern disunion by withdrawing my name and
muting with soq|/®bthef non-intervention Union-lov
ing democrat, I beseech yom to pursue that course.
Do not fiknd#rstand me as wishing to dictate to my
friends; 1 have implicit confidence in ywhrs and their
patriotism, judgment and discrelioi#
nftlv d#in the jremises will meet my hearty appro- j
val. Bu®l conju#’ you to act singTc eye to
the safety and welfare of the country, and without the
slightest regard to my inuividual interest or aggran
dizeiffent. My interest will be promoted, and
my ambition gtguified, and motives vindicated by
that on the of my friends which wilfibeii
most effectual in sa\ ing the country from being
orfuined by The action of “tltfc
Convention, Jjy- me by so large
a majority on Hie platform, and designating me as
the first choice of the fiarty for the Presidency, is all
the personal triumph I desire. This letter is prompt#
ed by the same motives which induced my dispatch
four yea# ago, withdrawing my name
“cinnati Convention. this knowledge of my
opinions and wishes you and your other friends must
act°upon your own convictions of duty.
® ® Yery truly, your friend,
0 8. A DougSas.
®To Hon. AYr® A. Ricliartlson, Baltimore, MtL
® ®
oA Plrnitiiul ITmiilj.
The following is a specimen of tfce spirit winch (
Baltimore in the Democratrc family:
Pending the motiap c °tT> adjourn', Mr.
of PenusylTOnia, complained that had received
no tffiket for his delegation. ®
° Mr. Josiah Ilandall, an aged gentleman, of the
Pennsylvania., delegation, pronoun@e<L the chaftte
false, callifg Aftntgomery a ®suglas bully and cow
ard.
JJr Montgomery replied sharply and
ously, alluding to Randall as “fliat old man.”
Randafi rushed toward Montgomery amid
order. ® ®
Tht crowd separated tlieffi, after whuff Daw
*son, Chairman of dele|lition, vin
dicated ni*iself, saying that lie had done®his duty®
; concerning the tickets. ® ®
Montgomery, amid uproar and hisses, called
Dawson a gross ® © ®
A delegate held Dawson and persftaded him that
Montgomery was unworthy of his notice.
Convention adjourned. 0/
Outside of the theatre, a Mr.JDftidall, aged
him, drawing blootk
Montgomery is bully, ami fellerthis youth
ful assailant to the ground, when friends interfered
and tlie belligerants. ® rs
And this is the party, made #p of such materials
that we are called upon to look to® s the only hope
of theCnion!® <§>
® J —9 —° ® ® *
Ah Oiitrnsc- on the ®
The latest instance of “adding insulftto in
jury#’ its the holding of a “ large and enthi&i
astic ©Douglas meeting at Lancaster, Pa., the
home of ou® “ Chief Magistrate.”® The gath
ering tvSs held last Thursday, and is said to have
been |uite an imposing one, and the speakers
Jere anything but-conijilimentary to the Presi-
QJt. If we were “Old Buck,” we ftould ( ,
move from Lancaster, and take up ou®
aljpde in the Peeje Islands.— Ex. ®
a ® @
In setting 8000 ems of types, or about 24,000
letters, the baud of the printer Haverses a <|is
taneg eijual miles ® ®
The Drinjf Agonie* of the Denfi*cracy nt Balti
@ more.
Gods would destroy they first make mad.”
@ We refer the inquiring reader to yesterday's pro
ceedings in the Baltimore Convention. They are
unique, and in point of view they are full of
instruction. They betray the character of the ma
terials of which these national party conventions
are exposed, and particularly the Jg'edoniinatinfj
elements of riftfianism, to the full gaze of the world.
We perceive, too, in these scenes of brutal violence, :
white all should ie harmony and conciliation, that ,
the days of this demoralized Democratic <§>aisy are |
numbered, and that it is in the agonies of
Upon tlie question of the contested Southern del
egations the New Yorkers asked another niodu s re
flection. Theyfhcsitate between tliejaltemative ot i
sacritif ing the party fotgjthe sake of Douglas and the
expedient of dropping Douglas to save themselves. ,
They fear that in dropping Douglas they will array
the solid, against the Albany Regency,
and thev see that in adhefjng t 0 him they only pre
cipitate tlic inevitable explosion. For once the wily,
plotting Dean Richmond is in waters beyond
dept®, lie finds that all his beautiful arrangements
perfected at Syradfte last Scp#mber. for dictating
iljy,’ candidate of this Convention, fall short of the
necessities of the case. But lie and his delegation
do ut yet despair, or they would not have” asked
another night for the purpose of a treaty of prove.
)Ve can tell Master Rfthmond,
sulon at once all their delusive Jiopesitof the spoils
baud plunder of’ the next administratum. They are
lost. Tlie party is desffeyfd. There is
not the remotest visible gnost of contingency low
the r®mion of the belli go refit cleriientsof this revo
lutionary convention. The moral consequeiicegpf
what they have®already done render superfluous
to speculate upon they may Jo t#day or to
morrow. g) ®®
Assuming fighting factions, cliifftes and
sections may still a|(ree to bfi\ - y the hatchet, and 0
unite upon a compromise ticket, it will avail tfeem
nothing ThepaityTs broken to pieces, ami with
one. two or three Tickets, it must be superceded. It
i is too badly cut rfy, too seriousiy crippled and has |
too many bones broken, to be healed and put upon f
its legs again in a single day or a single year. It is
practically dissolved atifi dSbnnded, whatever may
be the remedies attempted by Convention. In
$ brief, the National Convention of the Democratic
party- having become degraded to t-lie condition
of Timimany Hair i# its worst days of ruffianism,
is only suffering the fate of Tammany Hall—dis
cords, alivisions, religion, defeat tflhd disgrace.
there no other drawbacks to the reunion of
jyae®fragments of the’ party, and th<#fact that this
disgraceful Baltimore Convention represents thospar
ty will be capital enough for the Republicans. A
’ miracle, and only a miracle, can save the distracted,
divided, and distorted Democracy, from a terrible
(Revolutionary explosion at Baltimore,wind disp-iir
of a miracle of this sortffrom Dean Richmond and
delegation. They arc but tinkers, and
# it is this dir:©tinkerinjfcdlmt has ruined their party.
s>—A'. Y. net aid, of the ‘lord. , (S)
Os thi* ten thouauid fence-rails wli#h Abe
Lincoln “and fAnan . naimed Hanks” are ©aid
to in 1880 tlie Republicans of Illin
ois have already gathered up nbouf J -eventy-five
thousand, and the cry is still they cope. It
is feafed that i# tlie election is not brought on
preipitureiy, Ri#sum#y won’t hold out. <5)
g ® <- - ►
Here is a singular °
arepo opoa rotas.”
l ° 1. This spells backward and forward all the
£ sann# ®
The# taking all the first of each
\©ord spells the first word.
3. Thqp all the second letters of each \v#rd
Spells ttie word. ® ©
® 4. The# all the third; and so on through the
fourth%nd fifth. ® 0 ®
0 5 Then coniinenciiigswitli thc Jast letter of
word c °spelfe the hist #ord. ®® ®
• 6. Then the next to the last of each word;
and so on through® ®
® ®-■ • >—©— ®
® Gentle Annie. —We love that song. Its
pathos stefils over #,s like a dream, lint we like
its associations. heccunes #l;idy
gentleness? Ah lit has ti
hf-ttft —it has cheeked many a hasty and wick
#d fesolve —it has soothed many a torn bosom 1
3j and cajed hack many a wanderer to the Baths
of virtue. ANOmfer why®vfilncn ever stuny to
be pcftfwhen softness antf>kindness do so mueJi
more good. AVhy Ifte they ever so quick and j
shifty® ever resentful and feverish, ever fcilk -
with a barbed tongu#, when their quiet rnc*des
ty--their meek and “entle manner, ngiy eon
<°quer LeFthem striftfe to he gentle.
PROCEEDINGS(jOF COUNCIL?
ltita iAR irt i rnu;
5 COUNCIL CHAMBER. Jut.r 2, IHGO.
Present, Hon. C. C. Beall, Mayor—Aldermen Hubert,
:°Laiie, Swift, and Dyson.
Absqnt, Aldermen Tooke and \Yright.
It is ordered tliatnlie m-eounts in favor of Reporter of
fice, for $15.00, and C. S. D. Johnson, for SIO.OO. be paid.
Onftiotion, the petition of Dr. Eaton to replace luiild
iftg on .Jackson street with new wooden building, was
rt-jeeten. c ®
It is Imre by Ordained, by the Ma#r and Council of
| the towtrof ‘i'homasvme, that those blocks in said town
‘Sknown and distinguished as blocks H and F, be attacUnl
to the Fire District oT,the town. ® *’
There being no furnier business Council ad^urned
a F- H. REMINGTON, Clerk.
“1 S ■ ...
XU ry Present ments.
> SEISIN D@VVEEK.
rpHE GRAND Jl HORS, Chosen and Sworn on the
JL second panel, Term, Thomas County Superior
Court :
ThaPowing to their having ascertained that the first
paiftl jurors, during the last week, had under ekisider
ation the condition of the public ifeuildings. roadifticountv
finanew, &c., they are measurably released from these
important duties. They cannot, however, retrain trom
l-stating that the gutters around the Courtjious.- are resort’
ed to be choked,®o as to prevent the fre*- passage al the
,gwater falling upon the roof, which thev would liruigato
the notice of the proper authorities ; and also recommend
im alteration, under the direction of the Court, of the
railing aero# and seats within the Courtroom, for the
abetter accoinmodfition of citizens and visitors during the
BeH **i < #Hftf Coin# who may be desirous of witnessing the
proceedings of Court, the present amusement being
considered altogetl#r inadequate.
The stage road from Thoi&lsville to Monticello, is i#
ported to he in mat#- places too narrow for meeting car
riages to past or to fulfill the reoaisemento of law ; ti*,
road lead ll lgTroni Gritler’sl-'erryno Bainbridge. as far as
the county line, to lie in bad order.
\Vt- concur with the first panel, and for reasons given
in tfbir presentments, of the truth of which Dus jurv
have had ample demonstration, in fbconiniending a tax
of one Jumdred dpfiars per annum on all retail groceries,
us an etSefemt iffi*ans of abating tm- nufeance. ®
’’ M e adopt own tout portion or tlie first panel *
presentments cYilling the attention of our Legftlatun- to
the consideration If the bmittihuv question between this
SUite and Florida. ®
Our acknowledgements are due to his Honor, Judge
llans,£, for his urbanity, as wall as tortile dignity and
abihn whichi-haracterizcs his administration of justice
? the perect onW-r maintained, if not without a parallel has
never been excelled. ® ’ .
.'Ye tender our thanlfe to the Solicitor, Col. Spence# for
his politeness, attentum and assistance to this body
The publication ot these presentments is requested Wv
the jury. • ® ®
® <B} S. ALEXANDER SMITH, Foreman
D ® John Sheffield,
® David Harrell ®
® Isaiah Dkklz,
®® M illiam J. Singletary, _
Er.zr Thomp&n, , ft @
Thomas AdAms, ’ ®®
is, ® Daniel Elwell,
u ®® Joi# J. Baiter.
® ® Lewis Ward, i
@ ® ‘’ rt-l-lAM F. %ungrlood,
Kenneth McKinnon* ®
@®® -® ® McD. McKhwon, ®
Browning,
Daniel McKinnon, ®
® T V Vi L w M H “*' vu - ®
J. H. Whaley,
® TtfibMAs C. Stanaland,®
® ® ® ® A LLE “ ? AC,IN >
® CURTIS Carroi*.,
® ® Charles T.^rvinel
Malacai Jones, 9
TT William E. Hayes.
Upon motiom of the Solicitor General, it is ordeied that
the foregoing be published in the city papers. ®
A true extract fro in the minutes of Thonftis Superior
Court, July 3d, 1860.® ® 1
® LEBBEUS DEKLE, D. Clerk
*_ - •
MARRIED, • *
® ® @
•Tunc 20tli, 1860, by Elder W. X: Chaudoin, Dr. James
R. M. Reid to Mrs. Susan O. Wallace; all of Thomas
ville, Ga.
(§A Good llrdij^nr. —McLean's Strengthening Cor*
dial and lllood -Purifier is one of the most useful and plea
sant beverages ot the day. It is mild and agreeable to>
i the taste, bracing the nerves, giving a healthy tone to
jhe stomach, and imparting a glorious appetite.” A wine
glass full ttken three times a da*® will be Inter than a
family physician, as no ether medicine will be required. <
For ladies u is part it strengthen* *
the ribs of the weaker vessels iifthn astonishing degree.
Nee'Udvertisemeiit in Mother column. Sold by ft. Seixhs,
Thomasvijie. .
The Great Uran bark to persSiis emigratingHo thm
r'cxtreme south and tvi stern country, is the fear tlu-y have
of the Fever and Ague—the most direful of all diseases.
I Every day we bear of persons attacked by tliis disease
and made helpless in a short tifte. without any means of
’ affording relief. In view iff the great demand for a rein
edv, l)r. Hostetler Ims p.rcsWited liis celebrated ‘'Jiitteis,'*
tetvhose curative ]>tgj\ ers for all diseases of the stomach
igiave la • n universally acknowledged. The “ Bitten-. ”
; prepared after along experience and deep study, hhv*--
received the encomiums f the most emgienfl phy sieiamp
as well as all ( lasses, from ever*, part of the country.—
To those who doubt their many nrtnes, all we can say is
Jo tr\®hem, and judge for them.-elves. respectively.
® Sold by ii@mcysts arid dealers generally, every
where. See advertisement ijfcanother column.
W
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
NEWOOODSf
* c NP (*O*ODS! r
CHEAPER THAN THE CHEAPEST!!
i * fipAT
11 Rccciviu? IScKcr llargains Ilian
° Jcwrir Gnitiics oiler. ..
SUpHE UNDERSIGNED HAVING ADOPTED THE
1 übovt&jnotto, hi leave to call the attention o£ til*
ladies and gentlemen To the extensive stock of
iEKiKS- A IfD
v # GOODS,
SOW IN STORE, CONSISTING OF
Muslins, Beragcs,
SILKS, Tissues,
And Trimmings, .
All of the most tasty and fashionable styles; together
with a complete assortmeftj of ® *
Ciciiilemen’K Furnishing floods.
Those wishing something neat, and at tho<§Kame time
APPROPRIATE TO THE SEASON,
will find it to their interest to call aiid,exaniiii,*his Stock
before purchasing elsewhere. > •
I iij Remember, I’RfLES and GOODS to suit the
tiics and season. ®
a, ® BEX.TAMI.'* F IirUEKT. •’
jy i the Old Stand of 11. W. Sharpe.
Lands! Lands!-
® • •
frTtHE SUBSCRIBER NOW OFFERS PORTALS
1 o ° his small, though , *
Well €mprov6cl Farm/^jfp?
consisffhg of FOl R HUNDRED acres, situ
ated on the Troupvillc and Tallahassee road, -fj
about eigldt miles from Tbomasville. He will sell l4® .
stock, on the place, farming utensils, Arc., with the pres*
cut gnnying crop of seventy acres in excellent corn, and
and forty li veneres in cotton. The lands are good pine,
and well worth the attention of those wishing to move
to Thomas county. Helms just completed on the place
anew gin-house and screw-press, which will be of great
advantage jb the purchaser, and thesdweHing house, #ut
houses, &,e., good log houses. The favorable lo
cation of my farm, vAll not fail to please. (Tune and see
it immediately, as I inn determined to sell, on the most
reasonable terms, f, I® Cush or Credit, or both, t<> suit the
purchaser. Now, here is a hargniwfor any man who de
sires a smalEriejb farm, well located. •
® ® %.%BAY.
Thorns County, Ga.. July 4. ISfiO.
• , P.*S. ‘Address me at TbomasvfUe. , .
SALE. OF tOTS. IN
Q°if i t m®arL.®
\\ r ILL BE SOLlFftx U’EDSESDA', tl# twenty
t V second day of August next, a number of lots in t*e
town of Quit man. • ®
<sty order <Jf the of Brooks County, this*
Juno 25,1860. ® ® .
jy 48 t D. W®McRAE, Clerk. .
/ 1 liOjtIB.I, ISKOOii| ( (M .\TV. •
XU * jl'o all 1 wham it may Concern
I® BERRY ANDERSON and JAMES M( MULLEN hajf
mg, in proper form, applied to lmyJor permanent letters
ot administration on ibe estate of llenrv Anderson. 1 * hue
of said county deceased.
Thisis to cite all and singular the and next of *
‘ j Afid.-rson. to tie and appear at my office,
w it hill the l line allowed by law, and cause, if any
tin® can, why p<ym#yrt administration should not be
granted to Berry Aaiderson and Jiinies Mi .Mullen on
Hi itfy Anderson's estate.
}\ ltui band andLoflieial signature, June JO ISfiO.
jy 4-30(1 !*#<>)_ Anil's MORRISON, Ordinary^
XJO-TIC’K —Two months after date abdication will
i.l be made to the Court of Ordinary of Brooks Countv
Georgia, at the first regular term after the expiration of
two months from the first publication of this notice for
leaV(®jo sell the lands belonging Ao the estate of Irwin
J Lewis late of said entity. deceased, fo*.tbe benefit of
the heirs of said deceased. Jane 30,1860.
jy 4 bOiP |sJ.oo] JOHN D. Adm’r.
/Mi \ is ‘-sunns SALSiR.—WILI m*’
the ( ourthouse door, in the tiwnof Mag
nolia. Clinch County, on the first Tiieeduvin AUGUST
in xi, v, it 1 1 in thwlaw ful hours of sale, the ioliowing iiro
perty, to-wit: * 1
One lot of land, containing four hundred and ninety
a@vs, more or less, some improvements thereon, number
-tint known, but known as the place whereon Qeorve
Aarons lives, adjoining@lands of Tknothy Alderman lv
ing and hyiig in the twelfth districFof original!v Appling
now ( linen county, levied on as the property of .ft'hn C.
Nichols to satisfy one li fa issued from the Superior Court *
°* f m Cli , ,K,, MuV nt Y’T iu of James Inman vs Thomas*
Aldridge. <♦. ton! Lastinger, and John C. Nichols endors
e
j?* SIHM UEL TIMMERMAN, Sfferiff,
Lost, ® •’ ®
A SMALL HAIR BREAST I*lN in THE SHAPF
u X . ol !l Maltese Cross, and tipnedVith goldl The finder
3Z rewarded, by leaving the Same at the*
-j° ~'~ 2t 9) E. REMINGTON A SON # ®
Bargains in Lands. *
T'!!v f . A - ( 01 NTV—Seventeenth District Nos 154
* 1 66- 1 < •>, 257, 265,269^97,344.
No b’, N " S ® O, ‘ ,7 ’ ‘'*• 18lh I >ist"JHHR ‘
Decatur, Countv—l9th Dist, No 41 on*t,
District, No. 264. ’ <9 JgT ‘ ~ 1,1
Colquitt County—Btb Dist.. Nos. 100,182.183 317 -tio
Lowndes Countv—oth I)ist XAr 40
269. 379. 280, 386,391. 402. 1 ith Disf’No’ 349’ 34 ’
h-win County-*-Ist Dist . No. 108. 9,,h Diet No -*v,
9,. 6th Dist.. Xos. 151,330,384,416 433
Api.lmg Co,ity—2d Dist . No. 291. 3d Di't ft o 113
Ware County— Nos. 307, 427. *
Coffee County—No. 178.
Dooly County—Bitk Dist., No. 67. *
Cherokee County—gth Dist , Xu. 395 ®
Lee County-15ih Hist, 255. ffu. I)ist„ No®9o
Etuiy.( ounty—Uth Dist., Nos. lSi, 157. 216 L'l?’
road’ 0 ’ 1 aCrCB nCHr Tllol,laßV *ile, on the^l'allahassee
. Alsu 300 acres improve, 1 land, on the Tallahasse road
<two mdes fcjnm 1 hoinasviHe, belonging to J. H. MeLeUan!
.%r I neae landa will be sold very low for (’nsb A A
dre*B tlie subscriber at Albany, <Wi.
2/, 1860. j> p SMITH
* Grooverville Academy
rpilE CNDERSIGNEI) WOULD RESBECTKJ LLt
I inform the citizens ot Grooverville and the sun-ound
mg eoimtry. that the ensuing Term of School will open cm
_. ® , Monday, July 164 h
®Vm . 11 , the hl "' ial patronage which he has reed
, ; ai> l'l' s ‘•>’ “ MY -f, diligence and uerscrerance, not
ft’ n - v , ,l) receive, but to merit a continuance of the same
in tlie future. •
Terms per Mess ion of Twenty Weeks.
Primary Branches ip qo*
. Common Englislfi 12 00 *
1 ligher Englislm or I.ut.in Xt> 00^
I No charg, ™made for less than half a Term.
. if No deductioiftnade lor absence, except in imses of
sickness. ®
N. B. A Boarding House has been opened in th#place
wU-re good board ran lie obtained. Good board can also
beTiad in private lanftlms at reasonable rates.
je 20-lt E, J. H^hMES.
A D ;’ ,,: ' ,!,l K' to ß’ NOTICE.—Sixty days
ber date, to-wit,n*n Uie first Monday in September
‘'cmi -'l'l'h'al mu will be nrade to the Court of Ordinary
ol Ihomig County for leave to sell all the lands belong
ing to the ujftate ol James B. Edwards late of said coun
# PEYTON J>. SMITH, Adm'r