Newspaper Page Text
Cbt^oulbtrii(!:ntfvprisf.
O v *
A # ** * * ‘ _
iffit *4 . nrv v> # in #
• ‘TllitM \s\ll.u;. G v ..
i nv:D\ • J* - ‘ • *
•• • •
CONSTITUTIONAL UNION TICKET.
• ** •
J O 1.1 N. i SPLL,
• EJd. wai § <i. E Vi ■ll „
• • .
• Platform of tJ*<- CaWtitauMal i ni/>n Pari'.
Th- < * * ‘ •■ ’ i
Union •-f t: - ■ V ■ t':.
m 9 • ®
•• # #
• B*ELI> A*ND EVESETjjT MEET IN 4
persons lu’. “raUIo t
the gleetion” ® Jk *,
. BEU iVO ETEREI * -
are requested to meet at •*
.House in Thom ‘• i* at li> o’iiook,
\ M* on Saturda# the Fourth and 4
r the j * of •
Delegates to tl * ! .
be held at Mill ‘ bn the®
•*tla vg£ the satn month. \ •
The friends of the CJhstitutional
8 Union Candidates are to
prove their faith by their works, and,
. laying aside everything else, cqpae
out to the me<‘tinm®a id a help
ing hand to the good work, Üb<
4t@be remcmb'TT 1, tUat,®to inspire
• leaders with bwMuess, c.-urage ;:u<l
confidence, and ; ’suim vg av. iliev.
must have the unanimous support and
strong encourc • n.mit • Io
party, Lvery tnan s | resence, zeal,
anti enth ni, will hslp to swell the
tide for B ? . * j
hope none will stay away that can*
p<> * at tern!; _ Several ntlei
will a \ •
® ® ®
@ @ * * *** ~ -
I”o* !•••!• In-iitn . ® ®
-t.) A ®. w
i ncre w> i .-f i . s
of Fletcher hl *>
A fdll atKOida;. - • is rt
By ord r of tl ® ®
® ®
<§> ii® # . r- r ii,
■** - • ®® ®
See New Advertisements.
m ® ® -#•-••• ® ® ®
I> . . !i i.. t i * , in t JB
A *** stra • the ’ 1 ® ‘• ’U
or * m : ® *
• . , . . . ... . a m
9
A ®
of property is sLd to hive * ■ u destroyed The
p t # . • #
*• A. T. L . Pn sbyterian Church
Do . * <e
J. ( • 0 * * 0 b
by removal of yv _.. , ® ® ®
® - • - _ ®®
. Stalf* CouTrnlioii -i ;'i> ••> i-Jii :: ■ -j! H n^o.i
m ® ® _• ® ®
. ® T , n ... .. V. I'®''® 1 '®''® *•’ M ‘
have called n Sta e Com the°BeJl Ev
-8 erect men, to t held in MillAlge n® *
of •* - * * • ®
a
Aiou of Bell an i Ever..-, cud .
* a
for iie State 01 t• ®
Drnth 1 a Aliuibfer. ® ®
#
TV ‘ • t
.• ® @
year of his age. v’ ;ui . c sewn ere. ®
• -
Call at i*r. N. U. M 0* tl i*s an.l examine \
D w
his well selected tire . . >•. \ - .
) w
—— • - - ®
Thr S|K\ ili of the (’aaivaitrn.
We dev .. * *-vg to ‘- .
jftblieatiot ®-
which we promise :r readers, will fu!l\ rcr.nv them
® for the re ft:: < . • •
told it n:.-: e : ® a
country could have 1 tie. In met, the if le sub
jeet ma:: * a
*hr ‘ A. ! •* 9 , ;..
our Democratic friends to lav aside T arry prejudice
* , • ’ ‘ ® i
lor a few minutes, at le; st, and
and then tell u~, l.ae r.i .* they can vote
for Mr. Breckctirulgc * i:h any i. pe of electin ‘ him.
is utterly f. , • •
b--——■—@
V&m On the tirst • . ... j iper c lay, wMI
be found the let ? . • ‘ r. ? ■ ‘ -
® • -m
®We publish it t: .1 t. e pi go t. tv hear tVo-u the
“Little Giant” if . a ; ..s
on the .iucsti •• . _• Le ea.„e to be a
.. , . ~ ® * ®
tor
• Aiken Kiinia| IHachiar.
• Every body .i; •. <*._ : sewi: g ma
chines, we u..ir Vi t ... artention of the
** ’ :
in Thouvisvf.le ‘■ ■
pair of halt lyse, baa
specimen of its work, and we cheerfully acknowl
edge that it will bear inspection. The m are (
highly reeommendvd. havingreceive | *
... *
useful, but labor satire He"o i\ • w
•
and Jacob >.. ..• v.ei. and J d C ph Ikcw-
•
ft
young Patriarchs \rl •
■ms gnunia . ‘ • *
rejoice and give prait,j Aiken for • ; - •
’ toil by his celebrated eLuuAu • rm"V
• ‘ ‘ “v.
ting may now ledc .c v.g.u a ;lelabor
... ..-•rived
sit down iti the r-r. r r.ud e'rtertala their
friend* with the joy ful s>it : a niosi of kt w : r.. ,?
.
®
• t 01. Sewn
The Wire Grass Ret or er if the 14-l ; a<; . * ..... ~
a lengthy article front
“o’ .
which he appeals :. - . r. r 1 for the fa :s. arm
covers Mr. Breekeruf : v.dih wo ::
is good eapdtal tor the - .-n agains. -
ders, but rathep weak for Mr. Doc edas. The Colo
nel seetne-i afraid to let ont his stren-nh, lest he
should frighien off the game he designed to i, i ■
and his article is likely to fail in its object. Far
ther reference will be made to it hereafter
e
vir. llrcckrnridge's Kryord ou Sov
• iriintT.
In ‘ - ‘
of the yabratko U*U and took his posi.i^a.
I H-e is what he said:
‘i * \ . • < >n > wl ; } e *Nt br --
o
-• ■ a
Ir - •’ : 1 t •
rf/j.Kt of ihf n#f: •// of ihf Territortt to 9€ttt£ fht ?j u/ifi
• • .
do not now t tiiai it legislated slave j \
. •
. . • *• ‘
• ;*K • •
•• * *
• • •
* 5 0V ® •
* . -La - -f . .. a- mm
• * o tO) M
• i a*
# # M
> # . h . r
# # vreignty, then there is no
• .
®® •
.listinctly and positiveh
) . . _ . g,
* f •
®'• • N
• •* a
• territories and uncring the idea of their de
. •
®
w. and totally at with thesjfter
f the Soath and the Fedctol Constitution^ —
i’ tones to j>e the
•• *
® ■*
® ® ‘
idea of ,< i# y
the creature of. and®entirely dependent upon, the
• vernnw And yet Mr. Breekeerfdge,
® • ga t&i
A
. * 1 -■ m-t a territory to
y e 9 -
hue Lie t • nsrimtion ii- placed i: beyond ‘he*
j power the people of a Territory re tfcquir< ® -
r.:\. exeept in a particular way, and that by
, to the Union und r a constitution k 1
® _ /a ® c
1 ry, u® i Sate, aad entitled -
I to all tue sovreigntv of a State. Fftrr the people ot®i
• Territory to
® .
i ;. < oustUution. and the
m
upnm itself to exercise these powers for them, for
1
i) ® .
■® ® ■ ts. TV..®:. : s":: • ands
ion int(njl ui< n The South mu3t a
*1 1 gap wen—that n ikber t
® S . |ht i ® iti
vc in the Terrißmes, whil in a territ xiaPeon
?®.. ® , .
- ® • m -t
a® ® 9
• ‘
9 ® t (ftleaf
£ • ®i
■ -®’ - the:
*> 9 ‘ * ‘* -f ill
L m . :i - entitle 1
° ®-
® ® ■ ■ ® ® ® ®
■m
‘■■■ 1 nave tue rig.it to ja .
• rS)
(mh'tanafbg. (an you deny it, Democrat? %
Colam-l Srv-:*r:l ai*.s vj r . Bift-iiai;,iiit
a So afteri <^e-
A flw VftpflTtl i
1 ifi in® . s ; af . use of Mr. Doug-
O -®’ „ : ®® ®
“And yet Mr. has been®o®TriAd \
® , °
with Southern efaan|gter or SofttherE
9 a • * ■ m
* ® ®
on seceders did not consider :
I Wei !L’?e extract frora the (.'al: ;;.l, ‘
®. @ it exhibits fecta^which
• I ‘ Se ®l ‘® ®
m . ®
® ®
Lthey
0 ®
® ■ ® • l—fce v ®* a * ed if l '-’ l,e
® . o . S; ‘
I made its endorsement one of the resolutions of the
Htrien igticli :. Mated I. Brown ft
yarn r, and stood unflinchingly by it % ben that
* • - ; * v, ■:Pam n e
* ifto Ada, and
-. ® ... Luadstra
® ~ , • ®. ®
I : . -v.—
■*
® . %
9
a
- . ® . ■ ®
* to country.
•'’ ia ep from the Democra > *
* 9
l.e other “fa.-t” we have call'd xtraordi
■ navy, is :u the - •. w.r-g ■ f Col. Seward, that -‘the
i ®
*
° * •
w A euers. are marth
. ‘ ® A i ..I. U'.. ii n. and they
• a
inet are afiiioUd with, and %e*lous in the
support of I. ret lien ridge. Their refusal to endorse
:be Administration is an acknowledgement of its
- ■: I ? . 9 -a to 1- ,-t of
:r ami .tion w:: ..it.® 1; t: ey considered the t
t :::t. -Iratu. ti - : !. :: v. ,s very Asy to c Gi: •> :[;
and when were Democrat* ever known to overlook a
fact jf so much iiu: • ruime to them? Th^people
- on'. . e •sc iU-tffs. and give them full consid
; era.ion. ® •
• • * * -
Thr Sonthrrit Advocate*
.
-An
I* Brunswick iy Mr* T. S. Gardner, the ftrst
• exchanges. The
b independent and, judging by then
• * MiseawetL # Wo welcome it to . .-
sanctum ami wish its editor abundant succoss
Terms $2.00 a year in advance •
e
*
oje, and where, and :c\v it was hid. Said in forma
. ite lots of good eitiaons who have
. not yet found it ? A 11 inter.
-•
Ull ‘- , ' i str ®t upon which it lies snugly concealed,
, . *a, ptxUvip's iu non or oi tne great
‘air:.- and Statesman of that name, and that a
.
. “* triumph of the owners
iUore-t. iu moving the I\>*t oS.ce.
UoHSla- SlrM;. iasß
Another Democratic pai>er the
. ! amencas South
t . -■ -e.a:v.t tor Baglas and'Johnson.
. t enters boldly into :he campaign.
“* W..*4l pa.
ytarr H ooJ and the
Mayor Wood has announced l.is intention to vote
■ I give Lis tafluta, s lajfr D is in the ore- I
s nt c n cst toi the I*residei -y.
What will the Charleston and Baltimore seceders
ired th ta in Cbarles
# - . would go for
any man the seeede?s woul I p,’for which patri
o':c de.Tar . . -a to . 1 a!. 1 honu>'d jo his
• •
honors and attentions his Southern admirers and
® *
• .
- ■ ■ . ft Ot # • sen atel ‘ .tl the
*
• *
wviii l, uu> uuituii? i*c picujjruuim.i.i iu .UP BCCG* .
*
* • .
* a
rfbe
this time, an l m a.l franc s he .-.ears that his
- fe*. <
© Thcv lie i* D rak. §
*
■
* ■ * • *
e
ern man, living inn State as sound as Georgia upon
® * . • .. . ,
• L @
e vol al “t me Missouri
ati.iir- l ec.au e ..e said in • lor ’•>• that the Km
© 9
• *
.i
loro:,, t-.. # slavery a
Boil aad tturU in 2t ichtuoild.®
The Whigs of Em hm ml !. i leu ■ ; •.© •it fi ...
9
j i *| Satur iav ni- r 'it to raiifv tftc oooiinations ot* RpH
, * r ‘l*e people 'f
by intuitu n, gtth re i sear the m veble m yumenfef
lidi rj Claj, indgi •S- fai us 1
$ ® ■—
T tie l)illi liipl ninrd.
Tiie Columbus Enquirer thus shows the difference
between thm i g
* ■ le.andtbedlansasNe
with ( r without slaver\ miiri.t
® ffe | the ] w rto w
. t ■ * W 5 •
. *
• * . * ® .
* $>
* L®. ‘ ® 1 . ‘ ,u l! "'.
- ® @
. .
& ©
9 ■’ r
<§>
®< 6 m tv
® y 9
$ ■; fun^nlr®
■S’ © ■
-• | rnA ®e . f !
*° f hr n&iall !
oj ~®rcl for themrolecthm of silvery, while tlJof
1 §? - • ® ®
The Denso* i-sitic *■<•-!ers.
- ® #* . “ *• kith. is ® speech J
made® g - u mstrati nin N*w
®'° © A.
’
•s ®seceded from the Baltimore (.'on\ n
-- : ®
® - Maosaciiu*etls—no, not the De
!; - K'.oiy .jg, ; t.u :y®n iai n.l
‘ a @ ® ‘*
so s*
® |Lalvb Gushing [three
- - ‘ ® ! - “ ®® ’ ,
V sb
deft—9trious men, fellow citizens, revolted Aboli
tionists ®r
Lustittig. u tioiiticeu the ;.d ou ot Arkansas into
the Union as a slave Sit itt; worshippers of the Wil-
, revth.ns ot the PufitirtiSlave Act. cuii
® (@
v:vi. : v . e
, •© . . ,
1 u •
&
5# • <1 W
llllf (>iu> fliinr wtn-inrr - • .
x) ... ...ut . i- h.‘‘z to ruai\.’ [itis picture
s •
t / >®
®
I he I: l iable War iu Syria.
® i ®. Traveler V riiin*
® ® ®
. *• ; ‘ ‘■ - - litinur . oi
a
I 6 ::*! work they afe
- • . ,s. arid Lt people
Known ;iS t J C .UCtilWiuhCS.
From my window las*i w ‘f i k Ft* >rntf<l frnm fwpufy i
naies nom L e rut, trom w ; • ace the Hash ot’ musket- |
.y tuny eai-iy t>e seen, and the volleys heard one af- .
r in rapid a rh
tiie valleys. The ‘lying anil the dead are brought
daily into the to wn in large numbers, ant.l the wid
ow# and the orphans may he seen in great crowds I
weeping and wailing about the streets. “
Tiie barbarity ot tiiis war is truly shocking.—
* ■ ® *td children are overtaken widle tlee
iug for retuge and without arms, and ruthlessly
slaujhtered while pravin • for i t >ta ,- 'er
• .
All the Democratic Slate*.
We haTe been foi l a th ..sand rim^
w t * * ! 1 - 1 c*v iU6
’ ; *’ ■• v ’ - l ‘ T ‘ r ’ i;; { ,i 'itt*>rrn repre
’ li> -C * *• l til
.
St twcti-y •• thnnett rght elect a Brcsideut. ‘
r.-en, if their ensdilatcs get alt the votes'”of al’
. -. which . . ; ;; .
. ; ‘ .
pow ‘ • ! Stand- no chauce of an election he
’
• / u • • -- t‘-* . • _ u ;4DU
'rneen are necessary to a choice. What perfect folly
**js.'i viiiiv • i >.. _t>rci and L.aac.—
■* -♦ ♦ ► ►
• tlfliins out of the IVay.
It has been stated often, of late, that Mr. Breck
enridges dcsigus visiting California and re rua i rung
there during the presidential canvass. A New York
letter now says l;iiat hts associate nr be ticket, Gen.
Lane, intend# to make a trip to Oregon before the
reassembling of Congress.
Given man tiie necessaries of life and he-wants
tiie convtEHciicos. Fivc him the conveniences and
he craves the luxuries. Grant him the luxuries and
he sighs for the es. Let h’.m have the ete
gwqfies and he yearns for the follies. Give him ail
together and he complains that he has been cheated •
b.jrh in the price and qualify of the articles.
SPEECH OF non. BENJ. H. HILL,
Delivered at Vlarea. J aae ;50. 1 *'bf •
.Vr. Ti rjrlfmr. and i U; Ibe city >•]t ru hvd I
announced that I would speak to this m eting f®* j
day. The liuMaßcciKM was without my knowl-
I yA.ro .* I refer to this lor tlte purpose©!
savitut that Biy # app, .u.iiice now shall not be regard- ,
cdas a precedent requiri®g me to respond to aiiuthir.
j e. tami* if olitician to till bills to
‘-■ > *
1: m 1 ■ - . . ~ i' : i v * . - . . ’ a ‘ ‘C tr
Q
O,• • @
,-r i a ■■■'! • ■ : ■ ‘
v t,iuiy >iie ‘• iso ‘o. tt.y t • >-. “i . net -■u. i
® • ‘
.
a#f.
ri
>
m •
9
“® a v ! ";; 1; - u v ‘.
• erbood. Mina i# Tery dift'erent. I shall speak to
0 ? • ; Ibn.i ein"*s, Vv , ... American—C'.uu
’ trynien all, my word ot warning is to you ! 1 his land
* • f ; l> ’ ’\ r ® ‘ .y' 1 ’ ** Hi that
( : . 1 a • ‘ ■
nlr th qpvpn JpviU <' fc * mr'v vvhi *h have ai r idv
pit Oit. ‘c . p.ii.j'. u ait „
m ® *
) I: I • .i:. 1 v ‘ !; ■ ’ J". • ■: v. .
(jo \ . ; .
• v -
© . . . ® . . , . .
* ®
I
St effee uslly to secure and ptm*U tbs®
<e
C.', °
• in voted ©n in in . tate^.egi#
upon‘it directly at the hailot box. WhSlevcr may
•be o# oi'iuiuii# a... to tie t< ■< “ *. o r n- --itv. „V
a*, 0.l or evil to remit f r ®n sue! an issue “till yotUi
f’ao.t ot e\u to ronn trim ten an issue, stm j .
- tnd even 1 # nave t > -n*> uui >n u. f Iwe must
decide tt. aa nr a# ne ballot box can decide it.
w * •>’- ! 7'‘- - • Ml®.
’ lion * to aeLl l!e tii.-u the. Federal Government
’ We °"S Ut 30 *° dc.:tnre-ftr#f because •f
----
Subject the stabili^ofThe'lavr'ta the
whims of the multitude, 9nd end in Aurby. We
-® ■ j
zen V s ’ .'©-'o G.,rnmrnt and it is
the /* ® ■p’ ‘ r ■ ti.ry - l met. overnn.mu
> a ' l can do nothing else. Every net of every de
fose'or interni eratian ‘ Government ean
© s h
@ ®-
. e it ! lan n v
„ ® ‘• iouc rer mi
®. v° f. • # ss
,the even
_ „ ® ®
■ iction, and tpt t#.
ored by its tune-- - ®
o‘d ; S ote Human f Gov ‘HA
Jfiulsev'ei ® &
Os government witich most
But l do n..t demand a ti**4 imfe. Southmw men
- [l
* 1 * tpa rate specific -mve a 1-
I ‘Ti'tferenf from Grit'®’ <a 9 std
®
rhe gfbat original ground of this demand is tak a
isl © ■ t ®
- * ft
to exclude slavery from the •erHto, it #. e ,
. (§t
-
a i .
j 9 • @ s >e
©
Siarerv is tPcmtn e of Divine 1-iw He v
rtnaliy gave n in l,m.ini..a over tfe bea<i of the
®
. 1 ‘■ 1 ‘ “ • ‘ , 1 • 1 1 "9
atterwaris made daphett the mast tr of < an.-iah
®' '’ ** ‘ * -i
*® ■ : v' >■’ 1 r h, - htr iri au . th,>
@ ‘! “■*’ 1 l '” :r ‘ ® 1: ‘’ ‘t'"’ 1 *
wisdom of either He 1 n -ws best, itid there ean be
nojvv.lom or right which and. cs n# mhmit 11|
Ths Give, then, is propdrlj TA- tit'•
• the ns went down. Slave property dtf
. ‘is Horn otner property, not in the r>jn , tint in us (
| w ; 10 ,1! l ‘ @ ‘ • ’ • present) and rules
o* 9
a • uemaud otggovern
- i 9>ert* cmu tor t fe e
j protection of all property, and iherctore ot slaves.
Gut. gsi i. I ■ , 0 v
: slavey “i-etiM’ law# a# they now elan
side oi theMvansa? lull,
I?* - . . Il "’ g° Terai “* B * admimster^
trie ettliens iiav-e ample pioteeuon uiiaer rue rente
.©rmer
*> • ‘
m nK
by the organic act.) But it may be said, if we have
an I. duty •T t .. ut t■ i wr* t
We must insist upon it. First, because this right
and duty have h#m ■ 8
• T n, ' ,r
cess is the triumph ol tka denial. ready
this l .ctnncd'f irotectioti been deni l fv tctual
in one .a#c —iti the Ivansa# and >e raska
Again, all esperter.ee -how#, that remedies which
are -udicient tor the present, become inefficient un
der tiie changes of ever progressing and aoyrtuxir'!
event#. Why do your legislatures ncct annually?
Simply to pass such laws and la remedy #u<di
in existing laws as time and experience continually
-now to be to ■■ -- try. Thus in IT ’•>. C*n _ -, e## en
actcl a fugitive slave law, to carrv out a nhiin c>in
stitutional provision. For that day. and for years
after that dav, that act was sufficient. But the ever
growing madness of anti-slavery fanaticism, and
the interference of anti-slaverv l.egi-latures render
ed utterly nugatory the remedies provided by the 1
a’ oi 1793. Hence, it became just as much a .
tnd yt#ra- i ly, to ]g9s% new and
more efficieu* law. a* it was to pass the original act.
* uai woui'i now ..ive * ?en our condition had our
tatiiers agreed tt> be Satisfied forever wiih the law of
: du-v .f future
’ prot<-vrb,.n? •
00, iQOagk the ren. - ‘n*i'nr.
o
Btw wua
0 • •
of a mad. anti-slavery, world-wide sontiment. and
■ ;v> ! • . ’• ■! 17rv;
Le. - # and people, render pres -• n medi -
u -” gatory. We trust - -
>•■ ; - r ;;ient in its appropriate sp'here, shall
k“rp our remedies efficient tor nil time and against
all enemies wherever t.l ity rf ( tht. g -in
ment extenels. o
I have given reason# enough to show tire to.tieel
n .'## ot the great Ic.-rling : to be insisted
up©* as the true whdlM ©I restum in t °
canvass.
The next question is, for whom shall we vote in
order moat efeet unify to secure the triumph of this
principle? To secure this triumph and make it es- !
tectual, we must have a constant and hoaeat ey#> o
*wo things .• I
First. We must eudors.c the principle by our j
vote.
•* in Ily. We ongW s> to en !u se it. as to r*'-
f (tore peace to .the country, quiet the agitation, and
th;;- •• n e the - ’ yot tie Go’ er;.: :’.
il i> • - ‘ M - ‘ ;t Mr. l.ia
i. *. 1 u why ? Because ho say- tt is the rifht
the datg of Congros# to prohibit slavery in tire
’lh t rite* ies. This is aTlaini of power Other than to
lect. rard, therefore, one which we.desy; and bc
%
. *
It is i lie to and * . the •
i-t i.e tact. It®. : ’ ■ ‘i -
ct wi:l*t.ft-n out to be, in luv ! uarble *
® • in friends wish to
* • titer can rote f, r Mr 1 incoln -
Llf wntfi© insure th *
B pen a 1 the wrld s history* have four th >usfnd
* * *
. m : . r I , v liar tur
lff
pitate tl ■ hazard. . ®
’ \ !
iblt slavery. But he says
i 1 s
Federal GwTanunenL, mar prohibit slavery in two
ways—bv mu-action and unfriendly legislation. I
hare ©XI Lined his non-action theory and the pre
’ > -i. whi -h it is based Ib9 v tfe crr■ ar ?
and life
V
but may also interfere with anJ render nugatory
■ •
* . .•
- ai*CoutaineiJ in tlmt bill.
*
*l® v ‘
t'>e rv ;i ! kno never© .
’ • *
thanks A the -weet recollections, v struggles
We caun®t, therefore, support Mr. Douglas. The
iincntal, and I tea;- iucu#ibh
© I As I intend day to
my I will add tit ;r. outside t f this q >.• 9 B, 1 -
much iti Mr. Dong las to admire. On other questions,
TfidSSwrri - ■
*
: weare that ntanis StephtmX
i ?
: him. IDs / end* South, h&Y§riuned him Bj
® ftso oi ini : -,® lie
: Mfeto t :nin: their and the tn
® ,
® ® 2
. aunt wed Mr. Bell an i
r Prp<*k r*n?* dt?p \\ itll a Tt-rICCt Oil
8
%
the conclusion to which, I <Bhiuk, unprejudiced in
,® ■ *
event W?!l l make voluntary war *> Mr. Baecken
•l V t J anj - 9 <K
: -
■ . * U £. „4 I--7
bebintl, a mle r.m lbteu t® me.
I®®. -. j®. j ( ;,.q®ri r
B, sublet, tound. Hi®
IB •■ J proved last
Bight at. 1 could bare ju.,%1 much morecMtiam®
• 0 i ° ® f o. •
® *’ 9
\:.,v‘771:;,.,
, t. ’# r - { ©a ©
c ?O o ®
■ c. * S o ‘
$ ?i ri :
proposition and whic’.i I ahali establish
• ® - ■ ft
, . n vG'h aMr rei l, n 9
* ‘ ?.,.■ ■ * *
® “-• . ®- “ ahollph slave:y
t iSnlrSm.'*! ; .7 :.d,
• „ ®
. fthe contrary,9b is th# data
‘
j* • * * ■ , •
® O, (i
vauic gi niiiu m powej auu uaity. #
f J ne icV'.©Mr. Sewai i. of
New \ irk, off ® 9te ■ e
slavery nor involuntary servitude, ©th
erwt e then bv crime shall ever he
her oi said®’ferGlories’ of t . .
\®) ®. -.- .!, .
1 Y ,
of the ; , ittorm. ®
n that
-a 11,11 jH'it. uiau
eriHirnFy. John Cell
votu-ti v :tii*i lit •* e:. late ii •
■f f fP
i Win il
(©
tv -:'.SO i- to P**rrrni mud tmtMati Lf^iihh
3
*>f mo rights oi property of everv kioi I
vi ■ .‘'.i li \ at v m or in it v r teru i. w
able ro rhu Constitution aud laws of ti e r . ;., -i
- -
$
of the Government to protect slavery.
On this proviso .Mr. Bell voted yen, thu# i'#orcing,®
tin ier >ai It. the duty of protection >xkm ;U
the very Lilli yuay #of pa i/or in. ®
For •Mr. pro via* see Gongres-iomil Globe.
.... par page ; 71. For . i !.ev./ . ....
same book, page 1 BJ4. Therefore, to an actual de
mon#! rat ion, Mr. Bell is certainly a# #ound as the
Brecht n ndge* pint form.
My next pr. r ■ n is. that Mr. Be’.; i# <o*-Lr
than this platform. Now to the proof.
ltus platform, ot course, says nothing about slave
ry as a political, moral, or social good or evil; nor
does that platform assert any jooit in slavery to the
couutrv, o-r as contributing to it* prosperity
But on the ,th dav of J„l„ !- „* i.. *’t.
‘ JII llle ,Jlu ua * 01 outy, in his place in
, Senate. Mr. Bell made a #peech in which, after
asserting the right ‘ uon, te h.
nd ©• i nrt'ip'ifit rathl/i rr l.
* ; ‘ - ptoewsus iO give iiis views
-very itself. A better argument I.a-never been
made ;n defence of slavery. He proves it t *
the laws'of nature. and#jT§oid. and a poli ru (.
social and religious e od 1 1 beg every man in the
down witu a pure and honest heart, and read that
■tperc/i before be vote# again-t Mr. Bell, or stultifies
htmseli by calling hi® mmvund. Nothing like it cm
be tound in all tire fire Os John C. Brecketn id' r e.
Tuns Mr. Bell is sounder than the platform ami
.sounder than Mr. Greek .ru ; ‘ and his platform
•
i Now t enow-citizens. I will say here in general
• i hue to read -
that there is nothing in ail Mr. Bell’s record ineon
- -with this. 1 care not. ho’
. gues disgrace themselves with garbling
falsehoods, and mean perversions to the contrary”
i this is true, and there lives not in all the South'a
purer, sounuer, better statesman for the and
j ‘be Luton than John Beil .
But you will say how is it that Mr. Bell with such
j t* feeord has been declared to be unsound so often at
. the bouth. The groMwb of this charge have been
two —Ills YOtCS agulliM me *** 9 ‘
i compion Constitution ; and also the general fact that <*
everybody not <i d-mom is habitually denounced aa
nnsotu Iby the small mm of that party. In 1866
i they burnt me in effigy as an ally of the Repub
licans, and last night they hung (rov. Johnson for
the same reason 1 silpposiM. To the Gorernor I send
greeting, with the hope that lour years lienee, he
m tv stand as fully vindicated a? 1 do to-day. •
Jim why .should our Brcckeoridge friends condemn
Mr. Bell for voting against the Kansas bill? lie did
lo'iv -i]y believe aud fully declare that bill w ould be
evii ami .>nlv evil to the S. uth and the Lnitn. Bo
► you put on record the reasons fortliat secess;on*and #
in looking over v air reasons, 1 find many epithets
; L j, c v. in>Jl < bill anu the Cincinnati plut
‘*” i, ‘ ; -• --swindle ‘’.“humbug” and
!.'■ ~ n ,ff e siourdu’ On this bill, then, why
condemn Mr. lfeUl. The on tact l can see
1 befweeaCrou and Mr. bed Hiis point is. tks it
’ re>i".ired"six vears bitte* xp.nence at. 1 earnest
warnings ui’leach you what Mr. Bell saw froji the
’ Mr MM
- ‘:■<
, M .\. or not he be! n-red so. and so believing, was it*
lis duty to vote against it * We ought not to re
tire a man to be %r, -H. evt'n to gratify our own#
Lungs, ftreryn a who condemns Mr. Bell for this
vote® only imi ‘ • - “ ~cn r ,<l
! without intending it. However we might differ with
Mr. Bell as to the tact ot tratnts, vet tnt y t .
” . Mr. BeU wat mest. yes
f
j’ ,. r rii .... * tl.it
is%ossible! !b£‘t ~o gr-^oi- virtue, nor one
ve ®i)cen ktc (-< and out ! Why
He is a democrat!
* 1 n strongly favoring the •
a nal man, and his elec
tion will nationalize cor principle*. But bow bap
*
destroy. Therefore, he opposed agnation as nn
neci"arv’ and unwise. Foolish always
met .h i .11. I . ® e r
’ ‘’ 1
1 eating t!*? evil to the county of gratuUous^ag ita-
of th^ nio “’ W ° Uld t 0 iay - **
ii ft r iO ft t it.
wl | .a* f \r,ti rt ill crito our r*rincil-le*
a poieetiil. ‘piiet, ir* i . the Kepu%.(.-
can party, i fie election ot Air, JL>reekcnri'ii*e wiii
* ,L. * • t ‘ I ]
liter? tint (tit ztvi’K anu teiihrio ouiiti up iiit ihtpu<vutwii
. ® $ . ®
frit® <* ‘
•
| *
K.-u.- 3 ; : and y. u a us, called us ttai ■ rs,
ro w
i#his i,lace In this honrVil
® * 8
• **• * •
him. We have #*i ... .ho if
%, • T ‘™ ndß
-
, $ 9 “on.*
• O *
S’ •• 1 ‘ ‘I -
l p ruirih vote, i i:,it mi- •
r. ■
° .
*
...
® “° 4
* ‘ B
* ite ids name higher in the Temple of
S.* • •
But if oifr Br ■ wri tg *
Mi , ° * * * •’
. , ■ ‘®- * ”
‘8
§) *
‘Si
! .. . ’ ®
i *
® I r is folly to and ny it. People
*
n :i me with sueh a prest go? More t! aqplL if tl at
• ■ !ht: country a “cheat “ which
; how canyon expect us to be Cou:te 1 in itsga ui er
’ dices and get your ’ votes?’ For how many y7ara
9 ■ die y. u as the gam
n.c 1 you willrr.2 to he • * ,■ #
Cl ’ n ®? : •}" v ;'*. ,;on ot a Mecca pilgrim you did kneel
-® t u were told to abuse yoor
t. au“e lie would not worship with vou. In all the
of the den"io,,to •
* They who lokl you to wor
thing ]
_ v i • ■
t true ptr riot ; W- b. - ,*** maa
1 - ■ . i u u the rumble w wiK
... 0.., Wpt tests sh.ia oder j..u; V\ ul ~u * and
si- ‘-(>• ii•* ’r , n ~in kind , ess. I hare
. “i*— in it i stiatt speak
lijTiUK \| ,i v VOU ib vrvtl r *lnf it a ~
nd stand J H ,' njT ‘ * . *- • e your country
A Bihml ‘li diriar —McLean's Stremrtheniiur Cor
ua|iii| lilooii Badli r is one of the most useful and plea
l V' *** ! “• wme
t <ji it is p.nrtkularly rftfnmmrinlf fj wn it
tr
rhooHHmlle. • ’ 1
Thf Orest Draw back to per-on^
nvri * >u*9itaUH4 l<) LXI
> f n T„ y tvT e , be: tacked by this
... t iimue nelptese m a short time, without <tnv means of
airimimg nstief. In view of the great demand'for a rem
**
pwweH for id! .i>eases .'f r.•
nave been smvtwtllv acknowiedwd ti .. i .. ... ~
.
to trv them t<i i *’ • riv * . i . - , j
-
w uere. St-’e idTertitf meat in aiioth j J y
— lll o
MARRIED.
v, ! ' v Eev- t’<dl er EdwAd Aticiv
‘o ~<d Tbomasvilie. Ga., to Emllt J. daughter of ‘he
lute Andrew Lake, oJ: . , ~s~. . ‘
OBITUARY. *
’• V” ll '' V ‘ J °v a ! le l*l ti,is ! fear ; k> residence
in l oma.sv.ua, on Fndav the ldth Ist after-i lev rw
iliac -s of two months. Mr. Ork was about forty• three
‘■ : : n . ~ . . •
t ** *Sii iti n< tt> eulogise or detract from his tner
giit ttnan. lutiuiat; aetpiaintanee authorizes the state
t’-ur lt vVOU < ‘ uor ’ be made here,
lo Hr. Or*, death had no terrors. While speaking
upon this subject he remarked that, ‘'to die ana go to
. Heaven teas a pleasing rrjfretwn. What a eotnmcrta
r y m tke above thought. ‘ X Fwiro.
A