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GEORGIA TELEGRAPH
CVAdveilii.-rs would oblige by haudin
tlu-ir favors us earlv us Saturday morning
i t lssible. The Telegraph goes to prr
*. M.. MoihI.uv.
at .'I
Arrival oI'IIm* Aorili Aiurrira.
Nkxv Vhhk. Aii". 25th.—Tlu 1 stonuislii]
North Ainoricu lias amxcd to-day, bringing
Liverpool dates to the I3th instant, three
days later than the news by the Africa.
Liverpool Markets.
Cotton was steady, the advices bv the last
steamer from the I ni ed States having had
effect iipon the market. Sales of the week
11.tun bales, of which Speculators took 31K1U
and Exporters XlUtM). The market closed firm.
Qi citations.— Fair Orleans, 7d.; Middling
Orleans, (ltd,; Fair Uplands, GJd. j Middlin
Uplands, 0 3-Uhl.
Flour market advanced 6d. a Is.
W heat advanced 2d. a lid.
Indian Corn advanced 6d.
The Money market xvas unchanged. Con
sols same as at last quotations.
General Intelligence.
The Niagara bad arrived out.
Scandalous rumors were afloat about tbe
French Court, in which the Empress is impli
cated.
Spain is quiet.
The Cholera had broken out at Madeira,
and fifteen hundred deaths bad occurred at
Fnnrlml.
The French arms have met with important
•accesses in Algiers.
Rm-iit is willing to surrender Kars, but in
sist- on retaining the island seaports.
Arris al ol ilic Niagara.
Halifax, Aug. 25.—The steamship Niaga
ra arrived to-day, bringing three days later
news than the North America, having left Liv
erpool on the JGth.
The following was the state of the Liver
pool market at the time of the sailing of the
steamer.
The Broker's Circular nays that only a mod
erate business was doing iu cotton at former
prices. Sales of the week 37,000 bales, of
which speculators took 3,000. Sales of Fri
day (tin- day previous to sailing of the steam
er.) 6,813 bales.
Tbe Flour, Wheat and Corn markets were
unchanged since Tuesday.
Bacon declined Gd. to Is.
Trade iu Manchester was rather quiet.
Bell A: Son quote American Stock market
quiet and unchanged. Consols had advanced
i, and were quoted at 95$.
. Baring A - . Brothers quote Money market as
tighter.
Havre Market.
The Havre Cotton market was steady.—
Sales of the week 9,000 bales. Stock on hand
1 OS. GOO.
The Persia arrived out Friday night.
Political news for the most part is unimpor
tant.
Russia has abandoned her claim to tho Isle
of Serpents.
Sevastopol is to be rebuilt immediately.
The were rumors of insurrection at Cadiz
ami Naples which, however, were discredited.
ALArox; a a.
B TUESDAY Mill". I: 111 i: Vltl-IU •-*. is-Ml.
FOR PRESIDENT,
J A M K S J3 l C H A X A X.
FOll VICK PRESIDENT,
JOHN C. BRECKINRIDGE.
DEMOCRATIC ELECT0P-AL TICKET.
For Ah Stale ol Largt.. .WILLIAM II. STIFFS,
IVERSON L. HARRIS.
First l>idr ' THOMAS >1. FOREMAN
Second Putrid SAMI MI. IIALL.
l'h.rd District JAMES N. RAMSAY.
Fourth District LUCIUS J. QARTRKLL
Fifth District JOHN N. LEWIS.
Sixth District..........3. I*. SIMMONS.
.s', r, i,’h 1>.. net THOMAS I’. SAFFOLI).
Fiul.li, lh,t,,r! THOMAS \\ THOMAS.
EP'Iu another column of to-day’s paper ap
pears a communication over the signature of
Publius” on the Kansas question, to which
wc would particularly call the attention of
our Kuownothing friends, as it was written
especially for their benefit and contains matter
that deserves their consideration
CP* The publisher A. Rainney. 195 Broad
way, New York, lias sent us a copy of his
uatioual political map of the United States."
Besides an ncce ate map of tho country and
various statistical tables, it contains the port
rnits of the different candidates, their letters
of acceptance and tho platforms of their par
ties. Price only 25 cents.
Yellow Fever nt Fort Hamilton.
Nf" York, August 29.—-The yellow fever
is raging at Fort Hamilton—rich and poor die
indiscriminately. One hundred dollars a day
aro offered for nurses, but they caunot he ob
tained at that price.
I.nier from Wnslilngton.
Wajbimtor, Ang. 28.—Mr. Crittenden
has introduced a Kansas pacification bill in the
Senate.
The House of Representative lias “adhered”
by a majority of four to tbe obnoxious clause
in the Army Bill
The Committee of
Houses has disagreed.
Conference of both
J.utcr from California.
Nkxv Orlka.ns, Aug. 2G.—The steamship
Grenada lias arrived with late dates from Cal-
ifonia, Sic. She brings hut little news of im
portance. .
The Vigilance Committee still keep up their
organization at San Francisco, and have hung
two additional offenders.
£az* There has been a great deni of rain in
this vicinity during tho past week, and the
weather is now quite cool. On Sunday it
rained without intermission for the whole dny,
accompanied by a very severe wind that- did
considerable dninage in blowing down trees,
fences, walls, &c.
The crops about here are almost entirely
ruined by it. The river is very full.
New Books.
"We have received from Boardmnn’s Book
Store in this city, a copy of Mr. Ilowell
Cobh’s new work entitled “A scriptural ex
amination of the institution of Slavery in tho
United States, with its objects nud purposes.’’
We merely acknowledge the receipt of tho
hook nt present, in order that our readers may
know where to find it ns it, will doubtless be
in great demand. We propose noticing it
more at length hereafter.
Wc are also indebted to Mr. Boardman for
a copy of “ Saratoga—a tale of 1787,” a very
neat volume just issned by Messrs. Fetridgc
& Co., New York. Wcliave not read it, hut
have been told by several who are au fait in
novel reading that it is quite an interesting
book.
r A Grand Confidence!
The “American State Council of Kentucky,’
recently in session at Lexington followed suit
in abolishing signs, rituals, grips, tokens, oaths,
passwords, lanterns, and so on. and adjourned
alter issuing an address in which they express
entire “confidence" that the State will go for
Fillmore! : That confidence approaches sub
limity. Taking all the facts into account, such
another case of “simple, unreasoning faith'
is hardly to he found on record, and the only
thing which detracts from its merit is the plain
fact that the Fillmore men must believe they
can carry Kentucky, or confess they can car
ry nothing at all. But a party reduced by
public opinion, on the eve of a great election,
to the necessity of remodelling and rcorgan-
izing.'nud at the same time claiming a popular
majority in the very State where it has been
forced to such an alternative by an adverse
public sentiment, is blessed .with a “ hard
cheek.” Their confidence is surpassed by
their imprudence. Isn’t it so, Master Brook !
Rrli|jion ami I’oHfics.
The Northern plan of resolving Churches
into Fremont and Jessie Clubs and pulpits in
to hustings docs not work well. A recent
number of tho “ Herald of Gospel Liberty”
has what it entitles n “sadconfession” in which
a great and all prevalent spiritual poverty is
complained of, and declared to he the “ conse-
quenceof carrying external and agitatingques-
tions of the day into the pulpit.” Greeley’s
Gospel of anti-Slavery” is found to be a had
substitute for the old one. On the other baud,
other religious journals of tbe North persis
tently declare, in substance, that nothing can
be done for religion until this great obstacle
of Slavery is removed. It is consoling that
the section which lias raised the Abolition
storm is certainly destined to share the dam
age. It will tear them root and branch before
it is over.
The T'niou with Equal Kliiliti.
In this presidential contest both parties at
the South pretend to he fighting for the pre
servation of the Union. The Democrats con
tend that the nation’s safety hangs in a great
measure upon the triumph of Mr. Buchanan
as the only representative of national princi
ples ; whereas the KnoiV no things, with le-s
reason anil perhaps with Ies-* sincerity, urge
the election of Mr. Fillmore as tho means best
calculated to save the country. Now as both
parties, according to their own showing, arc
striving for tho same end, it is well for the
South to let the North understand the terms
and conditions upon which wc arc willing to
remain longer in the confederacy. Are we
striving for an unconditional Union, or for a
Union with tho proviso of equal rights, privi
ilegcs.nnd honors? To this question uo true
Honor to wliom Honor is duo.
Iu our notice last week of the passage
Kansas Heeling at St. I.oai*.
St* Louis, Aug. 25th—A very large meet
ing. to deliberate on tlie Affairs of Kansas was
held in this city to day. Resolutions were
passed denouncing tho Abolitionists, and a
committee appointed to proceed to Kansas
and inquire into the condition and wants of
the ,women and children. A company of
twent-fivo hundred men, well armed and
equipped, arc preparing to march on the 22d
instant.
Startling News from tlie West!
Louisville, Ky., Aug 2Gtb.— A man
named Paschal D. Crstmdock, a notorious
character, was mysteriously killed in this city
to-day.
A duel was fought at 1st. Louis lo-day be
tween a man named Brown and another named
Reynolds. There was one fire and the former
Was shot in the knee.
From Nirarunun.
Nicarauua, Aug. 9.—The accounts from
Nicaragua represent Walker’s prospects as
very gloomy, and that it is impossible for him
to huh! out unless speedily assisted.
Ah! lor kaiiMis.
Xf.iv Orleans, August 23.—A call appears
this morning, signed by the conductors of our
Journals, our leading merchants and by many
citizens, for a meeting in aid of the rights,
interest and honor of the Southern States, as
involved in the Kansas troubles.
Knil-Koa<l Convention.
OFrier, or run Brunswick A Fla. Rail
Road Co.,—Now York, August 13th 185G.
B. F. Griffin, Esq.—Dear Fir:—You .-.re
aware that the President and Directors of the
Savannah, Albany and Gulf Rail Road Compa-
ny, linve issued a call for n convention to bo
held in Thomasville on the fourth of Septem
ber. The objects of the meeting, so far as
they can he traced on the surface, are set
forth iu the address which accompanies the
cull.
The President and directors of the Bru os-
wick &. Florida Bail Bond Company, are pro
foundly sensible of the tender solicitude for
their interests indicated in this movement.—
Nevertheless, they will have nothing to do
with it. They trust that no friend to tli.eir
Rond will sanction it by his voice or even his
presence. Our intelligent friends atthe South
will not fail to perceive, that under a smooth
and rather sanctimonious profession of friend-
shin, their lies concealed a deep hostility to* us
and ail our plans.
Whenever it shall become desirable—as it
soon may for the President aud Directors of
this Company to speak to the people of South
ern Georgia, they will do so—in their own
name and on their own responsibility—with
out the aid of interpreters from any quarter.
Verc Respectfully,
' HEN BY O'. WIIEELER,
Secretary.
Killing of Mr. Clowes, in Kansilf.
We regret extremely to learn of the killing,
by tbe froesoilers, oil the I5tli instant, of Mr.
l/iuwCH, editor of the Kansas Advocate.
'.IF A ‘member of Congress has bet ten
thousand dollars that Mr. Buchanan will cury
twelve Northern States—Maine, New Hamp
shire, Cmineticiit, New York, Peiinslyvania,
New Jersev, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Iowa,
Wisconsin, Michigan and California.
SjiorKiNo Muruf.r.—The Danville Repub
lican gives mi account of a cold blooded mur
der. recently perpetrated near Pittsylvania
Court House. A man named Win. Motley,
sent bis son, a hoy about 111 years old, lot a
jug of liquor, and the hoy having over-stayed
Ills time, the father became enraged, started
after him, and meeting his son returning with
the liquor heat.him to death, and then placed
the body iu a branch. Henfterwards took the
body aud hurried it.
Bucliannn anil Breckinridge Club.
SPEECH OF E. D. TRACY. Esq.
The Buchanan aud Breckinridge Club met
at Concert Hall in this city on Friday night
the 29th ult. The meeting, which was one
of the largest of the season, xvas addressed by
E. D. Tracy, Esq., xvho proved himself an
able and gallant champion of Democratic prin
ciples and one well worthy to lead “ our war
riors on the war-path.” His speech was char
acterised by lurid arrangement, strength of
argument and earnestness in delivery. It was
a complete review of the Slavery question, and
a clear exposition of the present condition of
the country and tho relative positions of tho
different political parties—contrasting their re
spective candidates and exhibiting the utter
unworthiness of Mr. Fillmore and the pre-emi
nent claims of Mr.JBuclianan to Southern con
fidence and support. Upon the whole it was
such a speech as was calculated to have a good
effect upon the minds of nil who were open to
conviction, and was received by the audience
with every indication of a full appreciation of
its merits. At its conclusion James A. Nisbet,
Esq., delivered a few forcible and pertinent
remarks, after which the meeting adjourned in
high spirits, first giving at the suggestion of
Judge Powers three hearty cheers for the
“ Union, the Constitution and the Democratic
candidates, Buchanan and Brcckiuridge.”
Aid for Kansas.
The late news from Kansas ought to arouse
the whole South to the necessity for prompt,
decided, concerted action. The abolition hordes
have raised a civil war to wrest this territory
from us. Anarchy, bloodshed and confusion
arc the order of the day. Southern men are
fighting for us, and right or wrong they must
be sustained. But thank God our cause is
just! The hirelings of abolitionism are the
aggressors. They have driven us to tho de
feusive, and honor, duty, self-preservation all
demand that we repel their attacks even at tho
point of the bayonet. This fair and fertile
Territory justly belongs to us. It is admirably
adapted by nature to our institutions, and un
less wc gain possession of it, it will become a
stronghold in tho hands of our deadly foes,
the Abolitionists. Hence our interest and
safety both imperatively require that it shall
become a slave State. We must have it—
peaceably if we can, forcibly if we must. It
is absolutely necessary for us to send out means
and munitions. Missouri will give the men—
let us furnish 1bo money. Other Southern
States are moving in this matter, aud will
Georgia prove recreant to her duty ? New
Orleans, St. Louis and other cities arc acting,
can Macon do nothing? Let us have a meeting
soon as possible and do what we can. Let
us meet without distinction of party, and with
one voice, with one heart, and with one hand,
move in tlie defence of Southern Rights and
Southern honor. This Territory may yet be
come the modern Thcrmopyhe—let every inan
of the South stand ready to throw himself in
the breach. It is now too late for discussion.
I Ft must act, and act at okck.
Distressing - State of Affairs.
The Boston Atlas of the 23d ult., in an ar
ticle upon “ Massachusetts Politics” laments
that “up to this time there lias been no union
of the Fremont forces in Massachusetts; that
there lias been only folly, dissension and
wrangling; that we lmvo lost all power of ex-
ercising’any influence upon our sister States,”
and concludes “that affairs have assumed such
an appearance in Massachusetts that, unless
we have at once a union of all Fremont men,
it is very possible the State may give her elec
toral vote for James Buchanan!”
The Atlas’ Jeremiad is doubtless for effect;
hut if he ever expects to see tho day when
“folly, dissension and wrangling” do not make
up the three distinguishing attributes of Mas
sachusetts Frccsoilism, he is a sanguine man.
If it were possible to determine the ease, we
should like to wager a trifle, that Massachu
setts would quarrel, wrangle aud dissent in a
union all by liersalf, at a more fearful rate than
she does now. Wc would go our entire pile
on that judgment.
Great Democratic meeting in New
YORK.
i Mi ill.' l.-t ult. there was li.-I.l in New York
an immense Democratic meeting which is re
ported to have been the largest and most en
thusiastic rally that has been seen in that city
since the days of Polk and Dallas. There
were 50,000 voters present, and speeches were
made from five different stands. Among the
speakers was our esteemed townsmen. Col. O.
A. Loclirane. The New Day Book thus no
tices his speech
The next speaker was tlie Hon. Hiram Walbridge
who niailu an able speech, chiefly in reference to
our foreign policy, lion. I). L. Seymour, one of the
State electors at largo followed, and Mr. Locbrano,
of Georgia, closed, giving ns some good healthy
its. lie defended, as he should,
Democratic sentiments. lie defended, as he shoul
the Ostend circular, and nobly contended for the
abased General Walker. Nothing said at tho meet
ing was more vociferously appluuded than his ap
proval of the Ostend meeting, a convincing proof
that tho people are not to he frightened from ac
quiring Cobs, simply because their opponents false
ly assert that Mr. Buchanan is in favor of stealing it.
After tlie meeting, a procession was formed, and
ter tho meet!
at the SL Nicholas Hotel.
marched up Brojulwsy.aud serenaded Judge Parker
Fill-
NIore Testimony against IIr
HOKE.
In spite of the evidence that is every day
brought up to prox'O Mr. Fillmore’s hostility
to the South, the Southern Knownothings still
deny the charge, ami stultify themselves by
pretending to disbelieve in that which is as
plain as the mid-day sun. Hear what Uon.Hiram
Ivetchum, Mr. Fillmore’s “right bower” in the
State of New York, lately said to the people of
New Haven. Hear it and be convinced :
“Gentlemen, I attached myself early in life
tojbat party which was always and ever oppo-
se*d to the extension of slavery, and I say here
to-night, that the Whig party of tho North
has always had that creed, and those Republi
cans. can’t take out a patent for it, for many a
long year—(merriment auu applause)—and I
say that Millard Fillmore has been true to
that party and has never had, since he enter
ed into political life,, any other principle but
that which would prevent the farther exten
sion of slavery. (Applause.)
IP* The New York Day Book-one of the best
newspapers in the Union—says that Buchanan
and Breckinridge will carry tho state of New
York by seventy five thousand majority. It
predicts further that they will carry all the
Southern States, Pennsylvania. New J
Conncticut, New Hampshire, Maine,
igan, Iowa and Illinois.
rsey.
Mich-
Tlie following report of Colonel Locltrane’s
speech we take from tho New York Herald :
Mr. Lochrane, of Georgia, was next introduced to
the audience. He believed that in tills crisis of tlie
country, we should all stand by our arms. It win a
glorious sight to stand here and see the re-unitedDe
mocracy. Ho had heard that a black republican
cloud had overshadowed tho country, and that the
Union was in danger; but this meeting assured him
that tho Union was safo, and that this government
should he as eternal as eternity. Tho spirit of the
Revolution, he non' believed, still survived, and was
consecrated in the hearts of tho Democratic party.
So far as Fillmore is concerned, he is deserted by
his own friends. He is in bad company. Those who
were once with him, who love the Union, have
como over to tho support of Buchanan and Breck
inridge. (Applause.) There is no danger from the
Catholics. They have no such impious work os to
overthrow this Union. Mr. L. went on to review
the principles of tho Americans, denounced them as
opposed to the constitution, and to tbe principles
upon which our fathers established tho republic.
He also denounced Fremont as a traitor to his coun
try, xvho is unworthy tho support of any man who
loves tho Union ; reiterating tho scare-crow of Fill
more nt Albany, thnt tho South won't submit. Ho
fully indorsed the rule laid down by Mr. Buchanan,
in relation to stealing Cuba. Put op a man, said he,
who will support the Ostend platform. (Loud and
prolonged applause.) He went in for Nicaragua,
and beliox'ed Walker was tho George Washington
of tlint country. Tho republicans ought not to suc
ceed, because they are opposed to the principles
promulgated in the Ostend manifesto, and because
they xvould not be in fax-or of admitting Nicaragua
into tlio Union. IIo believed tho American people
were in favor of the sentiments of tho Ostend circu
lar, and therefore ho heliex’ed that Mr. Buchanan
was suro to be elected.
At the close of Mr. Loclirnne's speech it xvas an
nounced that a procession would bo formed,Jieaded
by a band of music, to proceed to tho SL Nicholas
and serenade several distinguished Buchanneers sup
posed to be there.
Resolutions were passed by the meeting
adopting the Cincinnati Platform, ratifying
the nomination of Buchanan and Breckinridge,
and denouncing the Knownotliing and Black
Republican factions in Congress for their con
duct in attaching an unconstitutional proviso
to important bills appropriating money for car
rying on the government. The greatest har
mony pervades the ranks of the New Y’ork
Democracy xvho are animated with every con
fidence of success.
son of the South can hesitate iu his reply,
xvas lately declared in the U. S. Senate that
the day for Compromises had passed. So lot
it be; and wc'ntay add that the day for con
ciliation, and above all the day for concession,
has passed. Wc have on all occasions con
ciliated the Abolitionists—we have done all
that we could to prevent agitation of the slave
ry question—wc have cried peace, peace,
xvhen there xvas no peace, until the people of
the North have learned to treat the people of
the South os slaves to do their bidding rather
than as equals under a common government
Wc have compromised xvhcrc the South lost
everything and the North gained every tiling—
wc have submitted to wrongs,“insults and de
gradation—and yet xve have continued to com
promise and for tlie sake of this “glorious U-
niou” have crouched like dogs at the feet of
our masters. We have mado shameful con
cessions to the aggressive spirit of the North
—wc have permitted them to nullify laws that
xvero framed for our security and suffered
them to legislate upon subjects that the Con
stitution prohibits them from touching—wc
have yielded to Frecsoil the xvholc of Territo
ry that xvas bought in common with Southern
treasure and xvon by Southern valor—xve have
made concession after concession, and yet
they continue to_cry give, give, until tho fra
ternal spirit that once animated our fathers
has been converted into bitterest hate, until
treason has shown its face in the Halls of Con
gress, until a brother’s blood has been shed by
a brother’s hand, until a civil war lias been
kindled in our midst lvhiclt threatens ere long
to blazo forth in a general conflagration.
Such arc tho fruits of conciliation, such the
fruits of compromise, such the fruits of con
cession. We arc politically nud in all other
respects the equals of the Northern people,
hence there is no occasion for our conciliating
them. Our rights aic plain and xvell-defined,
and if they are insisted upon by the South and
recognized as they should be by the Nortli
there is no need of compromise. We have
given upon everything even to our honor, un
til xve cannot with safety concede anything
further. Axvay then with conciliation, with
compromise and concession! It is time for the
South to knoxv her rights, and “knowing dare
maintain them.” We want nothing but xvhat
justly belongs to us; xve ask for nothing but
a Union of Fraternity, a Union of Equality.
If the Union last, the laxvs must be obeyed
sectional animosity but give place to brother
ly love, insults aud aggression on the part of
the North must cease. Southern institutions
must be respected, the people of the South
must be treated as equal paiticipators in the
public domain, and each and all of the differ
ent States must bo regarded as co-equal sov
ereignties. If these conditions be not observ
ed then tho spirit of the Constitution will take
its flight, and the Union will become a dead
body to which xve can no longer remain tied
xvithout dishonor. We believe tlie Democrat
ic party to be the only one that is composed of
sound, patriotic, union-loving men at tho North
as well as at the South, the only one that is
capable of preserving the Confederacy as it
xvas hauded doxvn to us by our ancestors; xve
believe furthermore that the Democratic nom
inee (a Statesman of undoubted patriotism, of
great experience, and of pre-eminent ability,)
is the only candidate that is capable of guid
ing the Ship of State amid the storms that are
now raging around us, and for these reasons xve
call upon the whole South to lay aside all for
mer party ties and political predilections, and
rally to the support of the Democratic party
and its noble leader, James Buchanan. We
do not think that we shall be disappointed in
the nationality of the Democratic party, or in
the ability and patriotism of tlie Democratic
candidates; but if this last hope of preserving
the Confederacy fail us, then xve arc ready tp
take up our arms aud sever tbe “last tie that
binds us to the Union.”
through the House of Representatives of the
bill establishing a Naval llepot at Brunswick,
xve inadvertently omitted to give to. the tal
ented Representative from the first Congres
sional District, liis due meed of praise for
his untiring and successful exertions in that
behalf. To the Hon. James L. Scivard is the
the State of Georgia indebted for the passage
of the bill—a debt xvhich we doubt not the peo
ple of the whole State fully appreciate, and one
xvhich we venture to predict, they xvill always
stand ready to discharge. Mr. Seward bos
done more .efficient and practical service to the
State by promoting the passage of this ntet
ure than if he hail made ten thousand speed
on the “ Slavery agitation.” Ilis motto
factis von verbis. We hope onr able Senators
Messrs. Toombs anil Iverson, xvill carry out
the wishes of the people by having the bill
properly cared for xvhen it reaches the Senate
Freedom of Speech.
The Augusta Constitutionalist gives an ac
count of a man in that city being fined “ ten
dollars and costs” for making a Buchanan
speech! Mr. Alex. A. Smith, the person fined,
is a hard-xvorking, respectable mechanic whose
only crime is that he is a Democrat. Recorder
Gibson who imposed the fine is a ITigh Priest
among the Knownothings. This accounts for
the “milk in the cocoanut,” and furnishes
another proof of the «tJi-American spirit of the
so-called “ American” party. Let us no long
er boast of freedom of speech or liberty of
conscience, as lang as a party exists in our
midst that denies the blessed privileges for
xvhich our fathers “fought anil bled.”
Fat! ol tlie “Charter Oak.”
Hartford, (Conn.,) August 22.—Tho “Char-
Oak” fell yesterday morning at a quarter
before one o’clock, with a tremendous crash,
and hut six feet of the stump now remains.
This famous tree xvas far past its prime when
the charter was conceslcd in it on the 9th of
May, 1 ti-G, aud xvas probaly an old tree when
Columbus discovered tlie Now world. It stood
upon the old Wyliss estate, now owned by tho
lion. J. W. Stuart. Crowds of citizens are
visiting tlie ruins, and each one brings axvay a
portion of tbe venerable tree.
“What’s Out?”
Under this caption the Columbus Sun, a
neutral paper, contains tlie paragraph copied
below. We had thought, or at least xve had
hoped, that the Knownothings had in a great
degree abandoned their mysterious signs, pass
words, grips and all the other concomitants of
their aidt-coinmon-sense ritual, but the Sun
rather intimates that they have again returned
to their idols. It says :
Much speculation prevailed yesterday, as to
the meauing of the marks “C. F. C. 27,”
which xvcrc to be seen in xvhite chalk, on al-.
most every cellar-door in toxvn. Some talked
solemnly of Dark Lanterns and Midnight Con
claves ; some, of inccudi-aries anil-ism; some
of tlie late escape at the County Jail; aud
sonic, of the “Levellers,” a nexv Society iu our
city, as report goes, numbering six hundred
members, and whose cardinal tenet is, “make
the nabobs divide xvith tlie plebians.” We are
unskilled in riddles, but xve venture the folloxv-
iug translation, the xvords in parenthesis being
understood: Columbus Fillmore Club (meet to
night) 27 (th inst. This may or may not
be a correct translation: it is certainly a plau
sible one. One door that xvo saxv had au inde
scribable something between a rose and a floxv-
er pot, and not a little like the ancient laby
rinth xvherc the young and gay became entan
gled xvithout hope of extrication.
Porter’s New Paper.
It xvill he of interest to many of our readers
to know that Win. T. Porter, Esq., the found
er of tlie New York Spirit of the Times and
its Editor for many years, designs issuing this
week the first number of a xvcekly paper to be
called “ Porter’s Spirit of the Times.” It xvill
he devoted to Sporting and Literary subjects,
aud xvill no doubt prove a successful enter
prise.
Appointments on the State Bond.
The appointment of Janies M. Spullock. late
Auditor of tho State Road, to he Superinten
dent of the W. &. A R, K., in place of James
F. Cooper, resigned, is a good one, aud xvill
prove acceptable to tlie people. He is a man
jf stroiir
:ood business qualifications
and <*f unquestioned integrity.
We congratulate our friend Gnuldingon liis
apoimtineut to the post of Auditor. Editors
of country newspapers seldom have justice
done them ; and xvo are gratified that, in this
instance, the confidence of the Governor has
been reposed in one so xvell deserving the office.
Fed. Union.
Position of the Kison nothings
The Knownotliing party certainly occupic
a very uneuviablc position. It is powerless
at the’South and completely Abolitionized
the North. Upon the great issues of the cmr
paign it takes a neutral stand. Without abili
ty to do good it has lost the little power it once
had to do harm. In a xvord it has become
mere faction too odious to be pitied and too
contemptible to be dangerous
The elections of the past month prox’S, what
we have heretofore predicted, that Mr. Fill
more cannot carry a single Southern State
In Missouri, a State that the Knownothings
classed as doubtful, the Democrats have beat
en both tho Bentonites aud the “ Americans'
by very handsome majorities—Arkansas, the
for a short-time held out a glimmer of hope to
the Fillmore men, has given about ten thou
sand majority for the Democrats—North Caro
liua has elected Bragg, Democrat, by more
than txvclvo thousand x'otes, the largest ma
jority that she has given for any candidate
since the days of Jackson—Texas too has ex
hibited large Democratic gains, and Kentucky,
the only State that our poor deluded friends
xvere willing to bet upon, lias repudiated Know
notliingism, Black Republicanism and all other
isms, and given a noble pledge of her devotion
to national Democratic principles.
Such is the hopeless condition of the Knoxv
mthings at the South, and at the North it is
even worse. There Fillmore has been sacri
ficcd to Fremont. A coalition has taken place
between the “ Americans” and the Black Re
publicans by xvhich the former have become
swallowed up in the latter. The New Albany
Tribune, the leading Fillmore paper in Indiana
contains the folloxving paragraph :
Coalition between Fillmore and Fremont.
“The Fillmore fctnte Contention of Imliann have
just united with the Fremont or Itlack Republican
party, by nominating the same Electoral ticket for
the State. If any of our Democratic friend- have
be, li feeding tin ni-ei*. * -. up " itli hop*- .. 1 a di\ Gnui
among tho American aud Republican parties, upon
the State ticket, they would do well to give that hope
uji as utterly futile. ’
“ The fusion of tho parties for the Presidency is
now complete,
hich seals tbe fate of Buchanan De
mocracy in Indiana.
“ Tho friends of Mr. Fillmore should now go to
work to secure,* majority of the popular voto of tho
State of Indiana for him; if they succeed,- of which
xve have no doubt, tho Electoral voto will be cast for
him. Let there be no crashing between the friends of
Fillmore and Fremont, because their cause is one
cause. Let the energies of the frieiids of each be
directed against Buchanan, and we will have so
.more slave soil to curse our government:
Tho same paper has at the head of its col
umns au Electoral ticket wliich (xvith the ex
ception of the names for President and Yice
President) is identical xvith that xvhich is pub
lished in the Fremont organs throughout the
State. Nor is this state of affairs confined
This union between the
solely to Indiana,
txvo parties exists in several other Northern
States, and such will be the case in every one
of them before the election.
We xvant Southern Knoxvnothings to ponder
upon these things. Let them consider that
they can do nothing for themselves at the
South, and that they arc affiliating with Abo
litionists at the North; and then let them de
cide like sensible men aud true patriots to
abandon their anti-Slavery allies and unito
with tlie Democrats in supporting the only
candidate that can be rclicil upon by the South
and the only one sustained by a party that is
imbued with the spirit of nationality.
Knovvuotliiiigisin at the North.
If there is any Southern Kuownothing who
really believes in the soundness of bis party
at the North, xve xvould advise him to read the
folloxving extracts from that reliable sheet, tho
Pennsylvanian, and xve xvill warrant that after
perusing them, he xvill xvakc up to the un
pleasant consciousness that there is “ some
thing rotten in Denmark.”
Four Fillmore Electors Declared for Fremont.
The bitter portion is being put to tho lips of tho
Fillmore Whigs by the Fremont fanatics. Stevens
aud J.ilmstou have resolved that it shall be swallow
ed. On tho State ticket presented to the Fillmore
Whigs for their votes, there are txvo avowed slander
ers of Fillmore, two Abolitionists, two active advo
cates of Fremont. This is two of tho three men on
that ticket, to say nothing of Cochran, the third and
last, whose hostility to Filimoro is notorious. But
this is uot all. Tho Electoral Fillmore ticket is m»do
up to client tho Fillmore Whigs ; and to prove it four
men on that ticket, viz: Duflield, C. N. Taylor, Wells,
and Youngman have already declared for Fremont!
There is no Filimoro Electoral Ticket.
When Thaddens Stevens heard that Andrew
Stewart had composed the Fillmore Electoral Ticket
ho manifested unbounded satisfaction. This occur
red at Chambersbnrg, while the Democratic State
Committee xvas assembling. Tho cause of the exul
tation of Thaddcus Stevens is now well disclosed.
This Filimoro ticket turns out to bo an arrant fraud—
a Fremont ticket iu disguise. But tlie men selected
to do tills xvork liave gone at it most clumsily. Four
of them have already declared for Fremont, exclu
sive of Stewart, viz: Youngman, Duttield. C. N.
Taylor, and Welles. There is evidently uo Fillmore
Electoral Ticket in tho Held.
Italtimorc iu a Blaze.
The noble Democracy of the Monumental
City held a meeting on Monday ex'cuing, xvhich
was one of unparalleled enthusiasm. It is
estimated that 20,000 persons xvere present,
lion. S. IIillkr xvas President, and the lion.
Kkvkrdv Johnson, former Whig Attorney-
General of the United States, was first Yice
President. Gen. Cass mape a powerful speech.
Pennsylvanian.
Editorial Correspondence of tire Georgia Telegraph.
NEW}YORK, At G. 135G.
Dog days expired in a cold North-east blast and a
txvo or three day- rain, from the chilling effeCts-of
which tho’ earth and atmosphere have not yet re :
covered. Thocountry air is chilly enough to render
the fireside desirable. In toxvn, it is just cool enough
for ,-i,mfort. Trade is moderately active, but from
the South a good deal lighter than usual nt this sea
son; xvhih- it was never mure earnestly in request:
.Southern credit Stands relatively high. Tlie West
is in a reactionary condition from overtrading and
extravagant speculation. Grain has ruled too-high
for tho last few years, for tlie good of producers or
thoso xvith whom they deal,
In politics, 1 find a much better felling than ex»
isted fotir weeks ago. Well informed Buchanan
men xvho were then ready to despair ofliis prospects
are now entlrel v confident. J hey entertain nf> doubt
efcarryiug tiiis State. There is a cordial union Of
the two branches of tho Democracy, and when the
time arrives for a demonstration, it xvill be ail 1-floC
tive'ene. At present, they aro quiet, but united nml
active.
On board steamboat on the sound, the other night,
( met one of the Fremont fuglemen, in the person of
tho senior partner of a large dry goods house in tho
city, which has tho reputation of establishing and
owning that organ of Bcecherism called “Tho Inde
pendent." He had been negotiating with some of
the “American Councils" iu Connecticut, niul was
highly elated with his success. Iu one, nil hut ten
stood committed to Fremout—in another ail hut
T. i,*g,- ; ,
someth
pra.-f,,..
''same, that (
'hi
[For the G, <r
Mr. Tfi.EURUM! It
strange, if you will alloxv
11 li: "- lu m '-" ■'>- now. . ' p|
leadership -.1 the K:mwn.,H mg , ; jj
aide to li-„*ihvitik the body ,,f that erg mi/ •; “
an- patriotic and' xvould, if left to them-.], '''
out the right and do it. It is evidently the objtf*
these leaders to keep thetiiprcmac-yin me*, Y? ‘
of a local nature, and have the slim i-erqui,;!'/'
of county patronage to give or distribute
their dependents ivhifo tin
of shajjgbying around th
over local rivals.
For the truth i- they liave no principle- of j
lu ll as they purloin from the
party. They do not objw*
penly yet as to make it appear that they are *
and Nebraska hill, but Mr,
(, f tin;
enjoy the lean triu r f
county Court IfoY*
riotic nature but
tional Democrati
posed to the Kan
Squatter Sovereignty as an objectionable f.
and intimate that .Mr. Buchanan is in favor
feature when they know, that the Squatter
eiguty to which as a people, and as Democrat,' 0
object, was that doctrine or practico xvliieh **
sought to he engrafted on tho policy oft),; s (,, !
eminent by the Filimoro Administration, Gen '•
Taylor being the nominal head cf tho AdminimT
tion. I refer to tho mission of T. B. King t 0 p
lbrnia with a Constitution in his pocket, cut and J ; !
when tho Babelites of that unorganized Territ ’
were called together hi hot-liftpfn and .. •’
igotber in hot-haste and moved to -ui i
hoc nnlv a luilitnrv bmm,.*: . , '
up to which time only a military usurpation, ,
three—in a third all the members xvould vote for
Fremont. Nice samples of Americanism, indeed, hut
I suppose not very far differing from all the rest in
that region, no had but one inquiry to make of
me—“would any of the Southean States bo carried
for Fillmore?” Was there no hope,'after all, for Ken
tucky? Maryland ought to affordsomechance. IIow
about Lonisiana? The nnsxvers to his inquiries wero
ex-ideutly unsatisfactory, and tho inquiries them
selves pretty plainly indicated tlint kis hopes for
Fremout rested upon a division of tho Electoral
vote, so as to throw the contest into the House. At
all events, they showed plainly enough that his mind
xvas dxrelling upon that contingency, and in hisjudg-
ment tho South held out the only chance for such a
division. Tho; Black Republican! are more anxious
for tho triumph of the Fillmore men in some of tlie
Southern States, that they thcmselx-es can well be.
In return for such information, or rather opinion,
as I could give, lie told mo that Pennsylvania would
bo tho battle ground, aud ho thought pretty nearly
all the other non-slax-eholding States certain for Kre-
mout. Ohio, from his description of the state of feeling
there, must be “in a weaving way” xvith niggerism.
Massachusetts he ranked No. 2 in tlie same accom
plishment. New York he claimed for Fremont, but
admitted it might go for Buchanan ; but scouted at
tbe idea that it could be carried for Fillmore. Tlie
contest ho said xvould ho a tight one, but he thought
tlie Fremont excitement rising every day. I told
him the excitement might be rising, but I thought the
rotes were falling off, and xvould continue to fall un
till the day of election. J. C.
To the Friends of Kansas.
Let me submit a fexx- facts to you, not as a parti-
zan, but as an American citizen, xvho desires equal
rights administered to all sections of the Union, and
quiet restored to our now distracted country. You
Kansas men who are doing all you can to elect Mr.
Fillmore, let mo ask you to pause and calmly re
view tho events of the last fourteen months. Fill-
moro men tell us they are for the principles of the
Kansas and Nebraska act, or for the admission of
Kansas into tho Uuion as a slave State. This I am
compelled to believe. But aro you consistent ? Can
ou consistently go for Kansas nml Mr. Fillmore at
the same time ? Let us see. When tho American
Party met in Convention iu June, IS53, they adopted
senes of resolutions, among the rest a resolution
conceding to the South her constitutional rights in
full—a resolution to which tho most ultra-Southern
man could not except; it is unnecessary here to
state it, you can find it iu almost any newspaper ; it
is the 12th Resolution. What next? The same A-
merienn Party met again in National Convention in
1850 and adopted a series of Resolutions, in not oue
of which is a single word said about Slavery. Tlie
noble 12th Resolution was abjured. This same Con
vention nominated Mr. Fillmore, ami In Jiia tetter of
acceptance from Paris ho says he approves in the
main of the Platform of principles. Consider this.
Southern men and Kansas men ; do not allow your
selves to be governed by party spirit to tbe destruc
tion of the country; it is high time that party spirit
Iiouid yield to the dictates of patriotism. We will
not stop here; he, Mr.Fillraore.not only accepted the
nomination with a platform of principles not oppro-
ing of the Kansas and Nebraska act, when that act
or the principles of it are the greatest questions, and
ere at tlie time of the adoption of the Platform ar.d
nomination of Fillmore, and is still such before tlie
American people; but Mr. Fillmore, I say, said rc
cently at Rochester iu Now York, that the repeal of
the Missouri Compromise—the Missouri Compromise
as repealed by the Kansas anil Nebraska act—was
the Pandoras. Box from which liave issued air our
troubles. His friends, nearly all of them including
his intimate, personal aud politiccl lriend and former
law partner, Mr. Haven, in the last Congress, voted
Iienever an opportunity presented itself, to restore
the Missouri Compromise. Are not these facts,
friends of Kansas, sufficient to prove beyond tlie
=sibility of a doubt that Mr. Fillmore is opposed
Kansas coining into the Uuion as a slave State f
See Kansas, if the Missouri Compromise be restored,
ill be free, forall of.it is above 3G 30. Mr. Fill
more kuows full well tbe most important questiou
before the Southern American people; and to those,
if there be any, who will still persist thatlie is a Kan
sas man, I xvould say why does ho not como out and
deGno his position ? Now lioxv strange, how iucon-
istent, and how deplorable it is to witness .Southern
nen going for Kansas, and at the same time going
for Filimoro xvho is opposed to Kansas. Southern
men for your country’s sake pause and reflect. You
tre rapidly advancing in the xvliirlpool of destruc
tion. Let Iovo of country be your governing prin
ciple in future, and xvhen tiio selfish, cunning and
designing politician approaches you xvith a view of
influencing you for men instead of tho great princi
ples of tho Constitution, treat him as you xvould a
public enemy, for such he is. PUBLIUS.
provincial general unauthorized by laxv
sh-wlow of an organization.
shadoxv of an organization.
They also knoxv that tho same thing was ndvotj
ted by that Administration in the cose of Utah.
New Mexico, and that it xvas opposed by Mr. CUj *
who together xvith tho leading spirits of the
natioa,
forced down'this odious doctrine, bringing f ont ,,
in regard to tho latter Territory and referiug to r [B
the remaining Territory of the United States, t 11
morq righteous doctrine that the people, after*],, ^ e
civil organization of the Territory, meeting in c 0 „ it
veution to form a State Constitution had the riq," **
adopt or repeal a Slavery clause in that Constitm;^ *™
the Tc-rritdry being open to immigration fro,., -
sections of tho Union, during tho time of Territory
organi zation and up to the time of the calling of tp,
said Convention. This was the policy of the Con.
promise ofl630. which spirit was carried out in r,
Kansas bill. They know that Georgia has sancti- a
ed both the doctrine of tho Compromise of 1850,
the Kansas and Nebraska bill, and yet in order to
make a shoxv of consistency and keeping their
together, they wield this mysterious blade.
You xvill also occasionally hear an allusion to fi*
Ostend Manifest—which is also intended to injur,
Mr. Buchanan even in the chivalrous State ofG, .
ia, and how do they expect to do it ? Why, by th« I
ile presumption that tho people are ignorant of iti^
that manifest contains, the doctrines it emboib,
namely: that if Cuba in the hands of Spain she*], I
provo dang erous. to the confederacy, we would U
hound to wrest from a power that had proved it*# I
incompetautso to hold it, sota control it, as not to* I
riously complicate andjeopard this Uuion. Whit** I
it intended to rebuke, the intention of the Briiiq
Empire, whoso efforts were to bring it into the- pre I
ent condition of her own once flourishing Island qf |
tit. Domingo. And is this an argument in the non!
of Southern politicians against Mr. Buchanan r Be. I
Mr. Editor, it is on a par with all the conteaptllfe I
baldardasli. by which they, at the expense of pm*. [
tism, seek in the Comities and Congressional b» f
tricts, whenever thoy are in tho ascendant, to'ken |
up their numerical superiority, Nero fiddled wtil
tome was inflames—and such men aro now t»kl
found so selfish, so factious, so contemptible aj * |
loose sight of the true interests of the country b|
their own little fortunes and triumphs. Bat, kr.l
Editor, 1 have not .-aid xvliat I took my pen to cm I
municate; it xvill he reserved for another occasion I
I will say, however, that there are men among al
xvho have belonged to the American party, *1.1
hiuk for themselves, read for themselves, aud di I
teriniue for themselves, who do not wish any disistef
to happen to the country which has otir-risheil th-n.|
and xvhich they liopo will cherish tlicir childm-l
xvho do not take their cue from Judge Monkey ml
Gen. Listeutome and who will voto Buck A Bred!
Yours, BRUTL'i I
Then
A Providential Jinn!
spiratjkm so glorious as
pos
Prospects in Tennessee.
Tlio news from all parts of Tennessee in
dicate a most glorious triumph of Buchanan
and Breckinridge in that gallant- State in
November. The Knoxville Standard publishes
letters of invitation to Hon. John II. C'rozicr,
of Knox, to address the people of Union coun
ty, signed by seven old Clay xvliigs, anil one
om Jasper, Marion county, signed by twenty-
two old xvliigs. Thcdcmoeracy of Tennessee
never xva3 more firmly united and zealously
engaged in a political contest. Added to this
unbroken phalanx, which elected Johnson by
over 2,000 majority last year, there is Gov.
ones, lion. John HJCroaier, ex.member of
Congress, Samuel Swan, esq., Cttpt. Jns.
Williams, anil a host of other influential old
line xvliigs actually co-operating with the dem
ocratic party in the support of the democratic
icket. Set down Tennessee for Buck and
Jrcck, by not less titan five thousand inajori-
y! Mark that.
Fko'u tih: Altar to tiik Grave.—A mar
riage occurcd on the 26th of June last in Jef-
r.-on County, Florida of Mr. Thomas A-
Foudeo, of Sumpter county Ga., to Miss Sta-
tira Woolf.
Thtt groom xvas sick atthe time of marriage,
anil died three days after. -
From the Cassviile Standard.
IEoii. lalijafi W. Cltastaiu.
We have been repeatedly asked, by corres
pondents and friends, if xve could inform
them of the xvhcrcabouts of Hon. E. W. Chas-
ain—hoxv be stood (politically)—xvhat he xvas
doing, &c. We have dilligently enquired
at ter him. Last week, to our joy and satisfac
tion, aud no doubt it xvill be to that of his
frcituls, we received a reply from him to our
enquiry, couched in the folloxving xvords which
c extract from bis letter, dated
Moruatiox, Ga , Aug. 1856.
* • * * * You ask what I am do-
for the cause of Democracy in the moun-
uns. I am canvassing the counties of Fannin
and Gilmer; and that you may certainly rely,
that those txvo counties xvill roll up from ten to
fifteen hundred majority for Buchanan and
Breckcuridge over all others.
I made the first speech in Cherokee Georgia
in favor of Buchanan and Breokenridge, and
the ball was then put in motion, it is noxx -
•weeping, like an avalanche, all before it. So
soon as I get tliro’ with tbe counties ot Fannin
and Gilmer, I purpose to canvass the xvholc
5th Congressional District, and hope to see my
friends on that occasion.”
He has represented this (5th) district, four
years iu Congress, liis term of office expired
last ycar-
I.atest Indian N civs.
2'women fired on by Indians a! Punla Kassa,
One man hilled, and one scrercly uxnnided.
Smie time during the morning of Saturday,
the 2d iust., t wo soldiers who xvere on the
beach about 150 or 200 yards in advance of
tlie block house 1 , at Punta Ra-sa, xvere fired
upon by a party of Imlians-one of them killed,
and tlio other wounded by three balls. Our
information thus far is authentic, as we have
it from Col. Monroe. About town, xve have
numerous reports, sonic of xvhich are exagger
ated. The: deceased is said to have beeu per
forated by eight balls.
The Indians xvere promptly[pursued, but tlie
condition of the country xvas such as to forbid
hopes of success. The trail xvas lost entire-
It is supposed that an attack on the block
house xvas contemplated, but that, on finding
these meu so much exposed, tho temptation
could not be resisted, and thus the original de
sign was frustrated by giving the alarm pre
maturely.-— Tampa Peninsular, Aug. J 9//f
couch of sickness and smoothing the pilkur -:T
death, xvas greater than Napoleon at AusterJit 11
And Thomas Ilolloxvay, whose inestimabls A
medicines are subduing disease of every type.®
in every part of tlie habitabe globe, is moffll
xvorthy of respect and honor that any wartiaH
tlm: ever drew the sword. When Kossati! I
visited the United States he xvas designatedL-11
one of our clergy as the “ providential nm'l
Surely Professor Ilolloxvay, xvho has come t H
our country on a nobler errand, better desert* I j
that title. His establishment in New Yoiil
has been the fontal source of health to tho:-H
sands of our afflicted fellow citizens. iftM
agencies, established in ex’ery city aud long
of the Union, are the People’s Dispensari«l|
What is true of the popularity ofliis medicine i
here, is true througout the world; for nbet-KB
ever civilization has penetrated, by land «H
sea, they are known and appreciated. FrcaM
Greenland to Terra del Fuego—from tie II
Mississippi to the Ganges—they are advertise!H
in every printed language, and resorted to b Q
races of every name anil eolor, as the only re- j
liabe and proven remedies in all the phases d H
disease. The leading medical periodicals d W
London and Edinburgh not only except HoBe-H
xvay’s Pills ami Ointment from their geoenlH
denunciations of patent medicines, but tn-H
rest rredly commend them. In short, if j
arc to believe concurrent testimony of all
tions, Professor Holloway has doue more tt* ^
Ameliorate human suffering and rob the gnu J
of victims, than any other medical discoverer I
of this or any former age. We have tmqo-l a
tionable authority for saying that his cento, j I
offices the for old and new xvorld—London idl
Nexv York—send out annually more tthanterB
millions ofdohtrs’ worth ofliis medicines. TbiB|
statistics of the cures effeted by their mean:. I
cannot of couse be asceertained", but jti<lg Ul -,Bi
from tbe facts within ouroxvn limited sphere c-iM
observation wc should say that no ordinarjO
quarto volume eould contain the record. Sure-
ly the discoverer aud philanthropist who hi j
accomplished such results may, without ar-jr
rogauce, be styleda Providential man.—-5.
Picayune.
itiittcr Font- Dollars per Pound*
Four pounds of fresh butter were sold “I
this market yesterday, at the rate cf 8? P®|
pound. It might be xx'cll enough to add, th 3 !
the butter is to be paid for when Fillmoft*I
elected—or, in other words, sold at a htaf
price for a note that tlie day of payment«
substantially “ on the other side of Jordan-
We might add that the purchaser offeH
the same butter for sale, payable when
clianan is elected, ami ilic highest P™**)
could get offered was thirty cents. That kj
ing par, or cash value for the commodity*
sale xvas effected.—Constitutionalist.
National Coininittcc.H
The folloxving is a com plete list of the Dtfj
cratic National 'Presidential Committee,_ 1-
head-quarters of which is in the City of
ington, and of which the Hon. Chas. J-
Faulkner, M. C-, of Virginia, is the Reside-
Chairman. Communications may beaddre*
ed to him, or any other member of the Co-
mittee, for documents or any requisite ink-
mation.
lion. Clias; J. Faulkner. .Virginia*
Hon. James L. Orr South Carols:
Ifon. George Vail New Jersey*
Hon. Jesse D. Bright Indiana.
Hon. 3’. J. D. Fuller.. Maine.
iron. John Wheeler New York*
lion. J. V. Wright Tennessee.
lion. G. AY. Feck Michigan* . ’
Hon. J. (tlancey Jones... .Pennsylvania
Hon. Amos Kendall Washington-
C. II. Winter; .'.Washington-
Josiuh 1). Hoover.. Washington*
Walter Leonox Washington-
John W. Forney Pennsylvania
Chilblains.—This painful affection
easily cured by a few applications o
Davis' Yegatable Pain Killer. It is C'PV
effectual in curing scalds, burns,&c-
family should be without it.
The efficacy of the Oxygenated
psia, Asthma, and Gtn U
of Dyspepsia, . .
Debility, has been attested by many
xvho arc well knoxvn to the public, M'-* 1
statements are ample proof that this nin-
is one of great value.