Georgia weekly telegraph, journal & messenger. (Macon, Ga.) 1880-188?, June 23, 1882, Image 6

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( wd* Swcnst & Jflejscjmgfcu, 37T» ITHWTUPn re ■WHMI 8(,«J n< . wnm ug Mown IsrstUiM' t car. ruin Hrsdsj, sat wseklj inn ;:mDiu.Tte«.llT»T«t by canton IsUnfit; fra l. irtwrUon II n |JI lin R»n *f iin aim bucii. j ratter a few of them, calling themselves The steamed Macon paper mi "ihe tenure , Lacandoties, whom he ileacrlbed u alml- bjr which Mr. Stephcnr linlds on to lilt is (err | lar In appearance to the Itiaea in Yuca- trall.” And pet those who oppose him will un anJ wll0t0 proBlea mere the same ai discover that the tenure W hold, en ^ lU() m g[ 0WctoDi pro . to the people ol o*»*la 1. rent .iron,. f) . vU1U!ll , These people are called The CotuUMUm: Is a reeeut covert lo | ^ of Xobua , ..Caribe." Here, tte genu uentra of Air. Stepben,* | Jo, he received Information that Meg- . Cirro wombs, ¥> 1st ill «AOi 7«v. rxi8VvTa.it to uailrdtj Lete4,wi.I* JraAiaUl] mi * fciWnai ■*iirfttrmnw tt *J#OT KU « of UUUflto ™!fuiS.& 40d IiUr dirokJteeMu^u^ I knowledge”—one that utterly disregards I advertsvataui want* I (Mit 4n( j the fitness ot things. Wo have iwawmi^ML tr»fpom for potHotlon i from time to time utaiitioned a number **tai baaorowpaoia-i tr th» 5?^’*,®!"? I of conclusive reasons vhy Mr. Stephens o^dsaMsiCgoedltim.^ 0 1 ua * I should not receive thft nonJuatlop M-smtiiaittAM Till not ba rttunrofl I 0 f tb<9 Democratic convention ^^^j^J^OTUovernor^taon^thf^tuoni^we adroit and wary, and supplements the •kill acquired In frequent Jousts with the aits and devices which do not of a right belong to tbo science cf political pol. emics. There are, swordsmen trained po perfection in carte and tierce, who may overcome on antagonist of equtl skill by a sudden turn of the wrist or an agile SSt wS^?bri!rf 4 *ni*brwrttuu up*a bu ns <S Uol C.o i+t*r. to ?>▼« au/.aUoa. | rjintlT ini i aJbcatd t« siCoUr Spim Mod*} ! un3a.«rRes'«vcr»t,Leasr. ■ JBE i, r. MAJnoXi an******. ■ W**»n. G^crvr 4 *. referred to tlx« fact that his physical Infirmities unfit him for a proper discharge of the duties of the office. This fact was admitted by him, in effect, when he announced his purpose to retire to private life—a purpose which ho was liCOS THJ6R1P0 AM BBBSa ! doubtless sincere in uttering. But whethei 1 lie bo or be not conscious of tho fact, It is FBlDAY, JUNE 28, tS82. I n0 ne the leas irufe that he is worn out and L-re ‘‘ v - :r I utterly unequal to the duties of the guber* CoimliluHon gra-hlf t»fo™» „»torl»l office. During tbe%t fourteen i«"> >>« b « b « n 0, “ Mr * b «“ l from hi, w.11 bo filled by “Atlanta gas experts, ana i * . . , . „ ttat It will bo rant forth on . »rt of .Up- 1"»‘ °f duty In Congress thin present lit anfigoJeteh-It frUr-wouiin schedule. it. A. . Congressman he hu beon eble- With^uu-ual modesty it fails to state that bodied only u an abeente*. His the “gas sxperts*will be Remus and the I district lias oontluued him In olhce “young man" petitioner of that Jefferso- j became the Democrat! knew If upaper. (they nominated anyone against him teuton 7,™^7uiio.r^ electod b * woulJ “^*r d * DU »- “J f“ rthe , r g^Ttor again. Senator Anthony once at. nnyUmughth. needed the sal- Ihlrtv qnsils In one day. It eamo r.ry of the offlee to sustain him in hie age osar killing him, and “Gath says tho little »nd feebleness. He has, for tour years sense ke had before, baa been ntterly lost past, been a regular Congressional gum. •iace. Now Col. Thornton ate thirty quail* I log—not over ornamental aud still loss in thirty days and it did not mako him 1 useful. As a whist-player, tho old com. hiccough. What a Senator he would make I mouer Is undoubtedly a success, if his lor the skillet dub. I Augusta Boswoll la to be believed; but as No .twtme7oont.niporary hu yet told » r » nd »» Congrcmman He «, how Mr. Stephen, oonldrejeet a •reeom- i»a failure. He baa neither the health mendation,* ” says the Cvn»tUuUon. Keith-1 nor the strength to discharge the er has any Ktephens paper explained how I duties of that office, nor has it Is that an organised Democrat oould I he such qualifications for attend- wrilo to Teltonand indorso hUmeetint;, hng to the burdensome responaiblli* and state that ho had “conducted matters I ^ 0 f the executlvo otficc. Tho Censfi- admirably, and for the bc,t interwta of tha (u((()n kn0 wi thla to be true, though it 3tale.” Will the Jelfcreonlon paper, with j m notlall lu preMI . t u »p.* at o.d. the Blaiuo ettuchmcnt, pleu. amwer? | m , t „ lhere ^ , n , necCMlly for tho Tw. fact that we hare eonaoltad with old oD! » » f 6 0,fra " r ' 11 o"* 1 ' 110 *> al: °' 1 b ? Mr. Pope r ed H.rr (loathe during the pro.- » « hoK “>«“>»' »'»* »»l,y»ic»l power, eotmmpaisu.willdonbtlce.be eoioeived «e equal to the <11,charge ol IUd<itlee. By Mr. Bottom Stovall and our Columbus I The fact that the elevatiou of Mr. Sle- ntemporary-~<nir fly-blown Oolumbus j pliens to that offleo would further the po- toaUmforary—as a personal affront; and I litical ends of certain Democratic trick- this, too, when wo did not resurreet t!^ 1 steis in Atlanta and elsewhere, will gentlemen. However, in the language of | scarcely be considered by Georgia Demo, the Chronicle's French editor, ffucview, t/uc I u offset to tho inefficiency of Mr. >i™lvI .Stephen,. The old man’s infirmities are stianger proved James Club, Piccadilly, London, and an held in high repute by Ihe skillet club, amateur. The two Joined forces aud pro- that in politics everything is fair, as It Is ceeded to make a thorough exploration of said to be lu the lists of war and lcve. the city, whiclt consisted of a multitude of Mt us look into this plea of JMr, edifices—palaces, houses and tern- Stephens in his own behalf. Let us ex* pies, similar to those visit- amine tho reasons why above any aud ed In other Central American every other Georgian ho should now be ruins, situated on natural elevations aud I selected as the candidate for governor by reached by terraces ami steps. There,! the Democratic party, lie claims that he too, were found hieroglyphic inscriptions, 1 has been'a consistent Democrat in faith and the acme persouagee, with the same I and by works, and that be has not been facial types In the bass reliefs, proving its I involved with the coalition elements of injection aud kluship with the other | Independents and Kepubllcanism, cities. Ot these inscriptions aud bsss re-1 which for months put hu threatened lief* fine cast# were taken with paper I the Democratic party with a campaign un- mat lie, some of the later being described I der his leadership, u superb. “The great temple,” says I Mr. Stephens will not deny, the Skillet Clumsy, “is still staudiug. It it built I Club cannot deny for him, that for months the summit of a pyramid ono hundred I the organs of the coalition made daily and twenty-five feet In height, aud faces I bouts of their claims of him, without one river. The curious decorative I word of denial or protest, upon his part, wall which rises some ten or I He denies that he ever wrote s political twelve feet above the roof, hu I letter to Lougstreet, Lawshe or Willing- number of window openings, all I bam, which could compromise him. The equal dimensions; it reminds me of I denial is bold and catching, but if a certain edifices in Yucatan described by I charge of that kind has been made It hu {Stephens. In the middle of ibis wall I escaped our notice. He admits that Mr. there once stood au enormous statue; the I Willingham Is his friend, aud yet Mr< base Is still in position, and on the I Willingham hu written and published ground below Is to be seon a large piece I where It must have met the eye of Mr. of stone which formed the left leg. The I fitephens, as follows roof of the edifice is slightly obliqne, u I “Mr. Stephens would prove untrue to the edifice at 1’alesque. There is a I Ms ovn written declarations were he to grand frieze, richly decorated, the orna-1 Iganore the independent element which moutatlon consisting of large human I hu been the prime factor in presenting figures, three of them accompanied by | him u a candidate for governor.” The arabesques or hieroglyphics.” In this tem- I italics are cur own. Mr. Stephens admits pie wore found magnificent bus reliefs I that be wrote one letter to Dr. Felton. figures, each holding In the band a I What a timely letter that one wu. How regular Latin cross with flowered arms. I assuring and encouraging to the leader of The explorer docs not think, however, he I a coalition caucus. “You havo managed hui found the “phantom city;” he is of the I things admirably.” But one letter, opinion that It L upon iho other aide I “Ou« bla«t uxx>n h!s bugle hora the hierr., In the SUto of Cbi.ju ^ h* On quitting the pUn, he 1 indeprodentfriend,Mr. Willinghem.Oil* h»T. p»ld . lut vl.it to the neighbor-1JZ., hood of the great - temple, and now This ia tbe way Uncle Tilluian, of the I too groat, his bold upon life is too unccr* Wayeroee llcporter, lays in the shade the I Uin, to justify his nomination, eveu if 1m racket of a Un-pau serenade: I were perfectly acceptable to the Demo- The cry comes up from every quarter: “Ptc-1 crats of the State on every other count. »!.en.~!ftci'!!0i:«-SUT>hcni for Uovernor." | H;| tt| , j el , OTnverti thorn who oppoeo him vrlll discover that crT7 I lU “ nu ™ bT whlcb ho b< ' llU '“*» “>« n .re bound to ooaoludo that th. o)d-V)n-1 P™? 10 of 0eor G l » '* TeI 7 rirtmg. W.II, M ig mixed—not to say taogled. I ihat is woith no more than tho prophecy 1 of any other profano babbler. The Con- Oou Balu-u. THomrroj. denim Uw Con. I itttulton knowe loine thlngi tint It doe. iriruttim’. ch.rce th»t he I. on. of n I not n.11, end It telle eouie thing! thnt 11 •W” ofI^ll.U.towi!loppo«M-. | d|< , n , A kD0W Mf slfpb(>Ml , uott mmn.n.nn, .no »n gewron.» . eernn-. 1,1 tl|e Oc:n<,r:»tlC petty in £tek> the .Sect thnt «ben he (Thornton) Uoor K l »- Wart <« there in hie record dur- 8l,tr *- fa*t mMle hie eppearenoe <u eneh, ho n> *»S tb * w » r or tlnco llio wer to give him [jnit it full of admiration lor the 1 artttnt, admin, that he deceived th. Indepand' genius of the builders. Of a truth, I euto who met In Atlanta and conferred inch tlxeee Toltecs had a very clear idea of tbe I alxual honor upon him, we will retract this requirements of comfort and beauty In I . . . the conetruction of their dwelling* when '■ on « ,lrc ' t ““»**•* » ^ we take Into account the climate lu which I * dbnl » l - bnt Folton »” d they lived. The pyr.mld wae a neceuity « >lllngham .till etand. In tl.«e torrid and mealubrinue region. IMpbene nUo gone fcuk to hb cel.- Then wb.t a magnificent view greated tho I brll ® d Indejamdant revolt In U» eighth eye u the epectator etood upon the eum- dl * lrlrt - » ad * n , ‘“Sonlou. de mit of one of there pyramid* To the fen “ tai north he had hclore bin. . chain of Util. 10 ConMttuthn,i,M hllle crowned with palace.; then w «*W»gI«B, June 3d, lfflB, Mr. Stephen, be lied . view of U.e be.utiful option of the caucue:-Twonld river-ln eummar a torrent lu rath" b. a dog and bay nt the moon 1 than tb. rainy .eure a great etre.m-lu I * uch » d ‘ b «cd c ; ..turo In either Stale water, rielog to tbe foot of the wooded Feder * 1 “G ul “ io P* hills and to the cultivated uplands. %o tbs Constitution M A mooMtcr of such hldoous mien That fc« hatod, bnt necdeit to 1»« seen. hold on either tho coolidcuco or affec tions of Georgia Democrats? Tbe Con- stltutlMs admiration for him is of too recent a date, aud of too queationable au origin, to Justify it In speaking olther for Tax Georgia Democrats will utter get a 1 HUu or the Democratic party, it does not But wbenonce seen, familiar with hi* face" hotter opportunity, than will be famished I represent the Democratic masses, and it by the coming convention, for eraahins I has no authority to speak for them. We out the Atlanta ring. Thla is absolutely I know whereof we atilmi when we aay •cMntial to the maintennnoo of Demo- I there are lu Georgia thousands of men, mdeanpr.maeyintb.8Ute. The Allen. whol „, IHJVtr , ohKl tnj ^ tbau , . “* I ‘ 0l "' C ‘* l>«™ocr.llc ticket, who hare not th. •o Georgia's interests. The ring -ate” who would absent themselves from the angfat to b* amrehed wb.n tb. eon, tiw. P° IU , lf ,hnulJ ,,e twmiuated. TUU I Is largely the case lu tin Eighth district, I as is indicated by the extremely small vote Cawtox, June 17,1WJ. I wbleh was pollsd for Mm in 1678 and in SdliortTSLerssknnd Msssnssrt—I wo in 1 1wijn . ... a row paper of the 14th Instant tbe following j esertlons of his knrnage: “And cow the rumor comes thatl^® 0 ^* *»'•» sn enthusiastic in- lln irtenda of Judie James R. Brown, in tho I donemeut. Thera u no', a prominent ChcMwecuunUT, are movie* for him as agu man in Um party who is so weak, and so Mau tb., t khrii not b« eIXtiSFSgZZ ^ - Mr. Stephen., gnbcraatorlal oonreatlen. I u “*• tonetltatfon bad known the fecte Jean R. Baowa. I m th. caw, u It ehonlit, it woald net have Hu. ie plain and .iplicit, and now the I taken part in reltlng upon the decrepit Irteud. ol indge Drown in Cherokee I old man, when be wae „n the point ot eel- 3aor*i» need not tronbl# tbemnlvee to Ung out with the o : i coaiiUoniele, for the •it np delegatee for hie eopport. I puipoee of offering him what he eonceivad Ha. Junta, ol the Charlotte Obttrttr. la 1 10 *>• * ,ur,r pro,pact for conatnn*. «n net(oia,inei,gaii.in*doel. He aay.: I ploymsnt 10 public office. The very lhav.uot, an. pewiblr dull not, pay any | aagerneea of th. C'oiutftutfon, and tbow tanhreatee.nonn me miw. I d-i not he-1 who train under i*, to divorce him Herein the red.iotlUto wtu. rach oatu™, I fn)m y,w. crowd ' bv tie. ttt 1! 1,11,1.1 .hould pul nyrelf only on a 1 .. ‘ „ by v ,U# leitl with gentlemen bavin* quafitfMoi miud I t * D ® er °* Hie axeeoUva office, shows at sad heart of which Mr. Canady twins to u, I Ms polllical iniincrrity and the Con- . I •Walfoa’s Ignorance of the light in which Mr. Jonas is right Tha dnlies and obll-1 lie is held by thousands of Democrats. In gatino., of hia poaiUoo do not compel kin tie ollmatlon of many ,^od and true teytirerec.rybirekrrenl wbnumyb.pre. be hu air-*,, bee,. rewarded ^h ooiamneofanew*I of3c „ , Mj Uj0DlI hu , I Me didn’t want it whin it required Oou Uoaem'* tMbtt that there and b. "an I Mtnc manhood to bold it—In . .of bayonet rule; •re 1. Qenui. mm lfc * , ” nl " of our Ool HeU n. Thornton U nearer righHo I ' w,re ^ 0lld ' r ^ he came to the We then creel. We really have an tease fr0 “ ,1U ' “ ‘'npreetlble wlllingneu to with newly every man in Oaorgia. Iliean I ,,tTC lb -J-opl’. The people remember ten. of tha lauuaem aas Haraaaon, | three thing, end they are not witling un. and wbao tha paopto rend In It tha atcry of I *» <" how Cot geil-na and hie cateemed volet I fore ’nttnarlhautuatioa,a whoop torn nplthei hotn the HUta not equaled elnoe the day I who k. laid djwn the bane, of tbe thirtieth I will quail and remnedbie cru.nul feather* I b,|n e Air. JantaaDiaineWtraeopwiihl [a dtenenlad memory. Hr. Trrecott d*. eiaiea that hia inatraatione from BeonUeyl " Kaiua in,lined him in offering Chiu the I In ti 11 “f *ueh a tnanrial agent re tin I tha| tadit Industrial, red that if thi, company can ■ not mentioned to the official oorea-Ljl tpemdesee it we. ondentood. Hr. Maine. I u,J ea the other hud, hu trel.ttcd l^fore the I -nitlre that the State Dep.rtment.whre r hie control, had nothing to do with I , the eahema of the Ciedit Indtutriel to pay I tho war indemnity ol A-een to Chill npre n I lbe pw.'.-wf l’ern'egnaoo end nitrmte. Thai 11 •< mt iuony of Atinhtae Trerertt conduce | «1»1 pee: od Sir. Hubert eh liande.ll. ihe agentof tho euud any. Itl.ei Ihte] “Cbl'liler iwopl. ere eayiug lh.1 II meleomi. j.... agree are what liny praCre to be, du-y will I , Hekrte paraltor epnag weaihre ki ™ ny crop at leaet a fortnWht, . X exit in the mreiuiu.c, ,, a «l,.—l Utouof Mote of retumi craieat enbney ly, Car- Ameri' iwaken Tbe ebon la teepeetlully referred lo Hil-or J. Chandler Uarria btephena Pro ' Jteten «t th. wted, tel! and JaSeraeorea of th. Allan:. Ureal* chirked their labor, end when control,tod by irate liuabanda almply pulled their noeea or pouted until tho “lord." weak ened. It began to be understood that a woman wu n human being end deterr ing of attention. Hareme were dierolr'd and th. favorite, ruled nlouo. Then came rallglou. which cut down tbe number of wire, to one at a matter of conerienco; aud with religion cuuo uew right,. Uut why follow the gradual eneleTcceut of tbe male race down tho ago,. Sufficient to eey that time hu brought the woman to an equality mid left tbe male eex lo.-de cf everything In creation except woman, and baa given to her the poaterehn of ev ery right rxeept that ef voting—a right which aome do aay will alao be accorded her lu court, of lime. Tbe laleet blow which hu befallen man la that be can be held reapoulble from prootlet, made a woman on Sunday. Contracts with women are known to bo binding, but that a contract mad t on bun day, eapecially pronounced void lu gen eral, should become toll J aud blading u between .male aud female is indeed startling. And yet tbe Supreme Court of reuusyi- vania bu so decided. A gay and festive widower iu the Keystouo Statu went .parking Sunday night, and under a prom ise of marriage lipped the nectar of t pair of willing roao-bud lip,, fondly relying tho lact that a Sunday promlae amounted to nothing. Thia bo repeated time and •gain upon every occasion presented, roneonaly concluding that an agreement void in the beginning wu void for nil Ume. He wai taught better the other day, when, having retired from the field, a Jury laid a heavy aueasment ot dam- ages upon him and the Supremo Court knocked bis ldeu of a Sunday contract Into a cocked-hat. Thua hu another lib- leader to a party can bare no refection, cast upon lu birth. The first Democratic national conven tion wu held In tbo city of Baltimore, Ud., on tbo 21at of Alay, 1832. Air. Saunders, a delegate from tbe State ofScrtb Carolina, offered a resolution presenting tho two-thlrda rule, which was adopted. We find no record ol it in IKtl j direcU 7 lwfo ™ ■*>« organlied Democracy, and 13-10, but In the convention of 1-44 would ** u!ed T'leWy and definitely. controlled by cso*** and have ulterior ob jects lu view they dare uut lay bare to public inspection. It may Vj asked “hovr can Mr. {Stephens be elected in the face of this apparent dtuger, and how c&u his election further tbe ends held iu view by these men?’ The auswer is easy. The question,brought Mr. Saunders moved to lay on the tabl< the two-thirds rule adepted Id 1632, which motion prevailed by a vote ot 146 to 118. The convention of 1848 in Baltimore and the convention ot 1852 in the same city adopted it by a large majority, and since then it hu prevailed in all national con ventions, and hu been adopted and used u> s greater or lew extent 1/ the party iu the several States, both in gubernatorial and Congressional conventions and others of less note. The reason it wu adopted waa to afford minorities protection against ma jorlties. As minorities often furnlshvd Die intellect and patriotism of a country, it wm considered wise to clothe them with a power of defense, iust as a small man might be armed with a bludgeon •gainst a brutal bully, or. to put it more nicely, u David wu armed w ith stones and sling to meet the gigantic U-liath of Gath. It Is true that tho question or slavery wu a dominant one iu tho tiinea of which we write, and the South wu iu the minority, but It Is no argument to say that a minority shall not have the power and protection of a tlino-honorod rule, be cause a negro hu become free, hu been made a voter aud affects to be a states man. Nor Is the position sound aud tenable that a rule which hu worked to advan tage iu national conventions and State I remarkable comment: “Whenever Ma Stephen*, with hlj own band it wu a well-known fact that no one Looking southward, the eye surveyed a 1 d .° *J r * 8t *pkcna. etty bees alaln. It only remain, for our i for year, .ndyeara ah.ll be young mou to exercise greater caution on ™ . ntd bjr tt " ! Crtt * lld disIulMcd b y the tl«ae *0^, entrancing aummtr SucJaye, and make no p,omUea. The altuaiion ia fall of danger. A Wicked rnrpoee. The effort! of Iternue, the “young man," the bats drummer, the Blaltio Im portation, and the other “able,” of the Constitution, to drive Sell-ua out of the Jeffersonian skillet dub, Into tiro realm of tbe oppoaillon, la exceedingly wicked. Sell-ue made the Jelfenonlan tVIllet club a possibility. Flayiug on the feara of the Atlanta ring, ho aroaaed them to the sup- pooed neceuity ot captaring little Aleck In order to cave themselves. Having dona thla they propoie now to kick him out of the Stephens move ment, in order to claim for themselves the luppcaed credit of having originated the Jefietaonlan aklllet club. Sell-ua Ie the author of the movement. He has mauaged It all tbe way through in a mas terly manner. Cranky as he Is, he Is the only brainy, responsible leader In tbe monstrous purpose to nominate Hr. Ste phen. for governor. Ula object in lead ing out In thla affair ia to break down the Democratic party in the State, knows that tbe nomination of Ur. sto vwt plain hemmed In by the distant 1 Kobo<! f < * r *' 1 '«* (or the Totter re»lu- phens wiU accomplleh thla result. That r!;c Inhabitant* enjoy§d a cool, I ti jas than tha Democrats of tua eighth. pure atmosphere, removed from tbe un- \ J®®°wlgible wag had In » »pirit of wholesome miasmas, and Insect plagues of Ialarmed the .peculiar friends of tho lowlands.” He save the name ofl^ r * 8t *P* >CDf » Bod ho defied the W- b Z* Lori!!ard”to the dty. What a study there Is In this neck of We uy defied, for though nominated by a convention he treated It with disdain, and . ” “ , * rr’>. with bones, coach and baggage wagon, land lying tetween he two America. 1 ctlor „ , friim August, m Altera J'’"*"! “‘“f r? 1 ' Wbo ^ lt P ‘'^’ w- at muting .foe. In uy one elm temples, carved statues and bass reliefs, and wrote inscriptions? Whence come they aud whither have they gono ? It Is <uid have been a most ridiculous pr > •ling, but It happened to he inlschlev- n is. Mr. Stephens hurt nobody but the .11 - . _ . ltd 19. i*r. oa-puvau UUIW UVMHIY UUl llifl *“ * “ 10 rt “‘ ln v “ ,U "T Democratic puty and helped nobody but fortunate hud unearth, the key to the | F , lton tllb s *p, cr . luauage—the American Boaetta stone— and lilts again the turned down leaf in the old world'e history. Hr. Steptenn finally admits that he hu an istue with Speer, on. of Independent- lam, ud notwithstanding a canning al lusion to a certain Cmclnnatl dispatch, he Cillra Nlatrmrnl, According lo the New York Financial I mu,t h® ukca “ sdmltUog that Speer CAroalcIe of Juno ntb,lbe total receipts dl*ps'.?h 'l>» cn.lltloni.,,, Taken of cotton np to last Friday night, the 10th, for »>l that it la worth, all that the skillet •luce tbe let of September, 1881, were club eUmi for »•. »fMr. 4,W«,ni bale,, against S.OiS.OW bales In Stephens means this ud thla only, that 1881, ud agalust 4,9fil^W hales In 1880, 1 w * lb Ul * *‘ 0 1 I ® » ,ld d " ,lre of becoming at aame date, .honing a falling off of 1 r »o«rnor, lm U now willing to be conald- f<10,.Wl as compared with 1861, ud .. «d an orguUed Democrat by the only compared with I860, of 215^04 bale* wlth P° W8t 10 * r » tlf f hl * »® b l The total receipts for tbe week ending I tlon - June 101b were 13,648 bales, against' 28,-1 TbU *®P°w* “ obligation upon tiro 218 bales In 1.61, at aarue date, ud I P* rt T to (va hint this nomination. Tba against 19,870 bales In 188), at same date. I P* rt f haaVundreda of good men, who do The stock at interior towns on laal I k»ve to writs letters to proro their Friday night nnmhared 72,408 balsa, I Democracy, or to mend tha broken gape against 96,047 bales In 1881 at aama date. | ln their record. But more still, Air. Tbe stock in Macon on last Friday was I Stephens comes u a auppllant, but bear- ljfo4 bales, agalnat 4,236 bale. In 1881 at I ln * ln bu huda tbe elements or discord •ante date. I ratter than those of jnace, The total visible supply of cotton on I He cornea with a proposition to break laat Friday night wu 2,287,438 bales, I down the two-thirds rule. But a abort against 2,480,010 hales in 1881, ud I time since ud be wu for preserving all against 2,139,464 bale, Jn I860. Those I of tha "landmarks" of llio party. If thla figures Indicate a decrease in cctiss la I n <***. “landmark” where may oca be sight on last Friday night of 122^38 bales I found? Whan U wuplutadHr. Stephens si compared with 1881, and u Increase ef I belonged to a party which sought the de- 147,992 balesuooeuparad with 1SSO. latractfouofihoDamDcratlcparty.Tteteat Middling eolten In Liverpool wu qaot-1 years' the moat brilliant labors of Ida ed lari Friday at 6|, and at tba lame date I lif* were aimed at an organisation, which laat year at 0 8-16. I uw fit to Incorporate e two-thlrda rule In I lie conventional proceedings. When Air. the leal ull ef she Hkuie. deb. I Stephens abandoned hia old faith ud In the discussion whlcb bu followed I sought a new ona, it it to be supposed that wu the object be had ln view in noml- T [ eWi noting him weeks ago. Whatever motive the CoastfltiHon may have in -arming to tho support or bli*cudi- dale, It la manifestly wicked for tt lo seek to create the impteulon Hut Sell-ua and Mr. Stephens are not In accord In the mat- ter of the latter's candidacy In order to bring np hesitating Democrats to the point of satisfying the purposea or the Jeffer sonian aklllet club. It la Idle to deny the fact that Thornton la the leader of the Stephens movement In Oaorgia, and It la a piece of short, lighted lolly to refine to ate that It! aueeeu means the overthrow of the Democratic party lu the State. Sell-ua la at home In tha Jeffersonian skil let club and It la following hia outlined policy. The Constitution ia a mere sub ordinate In the movement. i in the tuddeu forcing of Hr. Stephens into I be knew wbat ho wu doing. He gave ihe political field, u a Democratic candi-1 bra allegiance to a patty with dare for governor, the skillet club, of I a two-thlrda rule. He claims to have Atleuta, which bu taken the contract to I lived In fellowship and acted In good faith elect him by acclamation, and which la With that party. So much ao that bo *e- nuinly composed of the staff, editorial of I tire* and tho akillcl club demands Us the, Teat-Appeal and C’onafUuUon, hu I nomination. teen terribly wur*ad. Stephana atockhad In order to help to thla and, ha cornu dropped ao bullly ud testily far below 1 to tear down a landmark of the party, par, that something energetic wu wanted older lo yean, honor and custom then tha m stay a drooping market. To this end aklllet club, therefore, tha envoy extraordinary of the aklllet club at Washington «u Instructed I lawinr Liberia isinla. to get upu Interview, which Interview | Tone wu when than were tUolately reached Atlanta by due coarse of null, I no restrieUoi* thrown about men In hia amt nude lu appearance In tho ConeMfu- treatment of wbat Ip now termed Iho floa of Sunday morning laat u a special gentler ux. In tba olden days ha almply telegram. 1 purchased hia wife from her natural guar- To Uu moat Indifferent reader this must I diu and wu at liberty to devote her to appear u the skillful and crafty hand!-1 whatever ur« hia fancy suggested. He wo-k of Hr. Stephana himself. It bean oould put her to work In Uu Baida, art bar be, m cot end ^edition Cashing have act »k, ud its have >f ruins sobered the imprimatur, of Lie indorsement u to I to making brick, hewlng~wood7d«wtM Its correctness and we reprodace It In u-1 water, southing, watching Hock* and other column. I heating hardens with Uu almurt impu- Tha most significant fact evd red from Inlty. This wu u inalienable right lu the nua of word* u Uut Hr. Stephens la I pouuaed, and poauaaiag the right which u eager, ambition* anxious, but not I wu the result of custom, ho took tt Out over-hopeful candidate for the nomine-1 tba power lo aoforea Uut right wu lm* tkm for governor by the approaching I piled, and did net bullets, when hia Democratic State convention. He no I lordly temper wu enraged ty diaotadl- koger apeak* c( a desire foe retirement encr, to sell tbe abater of hlsjoys and wou ul rest, which may ho foregone only at overtire tread with hia apeer handle, th* demanded u unanimous call Horn wipe ber-rtdaway. with tt* flu of hia Urepeopl* He ia a candidate tn all and baUVUda shield. Borwuhe reclined everything Uut word may be capable of lotto pouaasfon of on* helpmeet only; conveying to Ure poputu uodenteadtng. Ihe wu *t liberty w praavu ununy u And he beset his claim* nponlhla require menu demanded end hie I hu consistent Democratic faith and 1 worldly Imatmacte would rapport. In practice. Forty ytsre in public ] thou days men ware indeed the -lords ef life. In au arena calculated to | creation," end enjoyed lit* Innovation* politician tatter thau to however, and atraug-ulnded women be- Foi tte John he* oh- ot rums « city.” ^hewu , gave to rentes- foarnay. futility I photo- tlad for Kord of to Ume 2mm, larch 29. AftercoauleasdiCcuhlu and many hard- ahipe ha wstfti4 tbs fixer Usanacints, npoo the benxa of which be expected! educate Th -Vdayemut toffteltlrecy Creotted. At the.’ Remould a Z^Zvelm^Ttem^rilW Jh. nretrttt amrtma «ho -prapte.te j a muterT^tS fine* U. T3! i Z U^^re .^n^ ^te The Twe-Thlnla Itwle, A convention of the Ueorgi* Democra cy, which adopted tb* two-thlrda ml* and than repudiated It, eubmUted to tte party tt* question u to whether tte rule aball prevail In tte approaching convention. The Democratic muses shortly to uaem- hi* in primary mosUags are expected to Instruct the delegatee they may select to represent them In tt* July convention to vote either for tho adoption of the majori ty or two-thlrda rale. NoUflcatloo of thla fact wu duly mad* and published by auttority of Uu State central executive committee at Its late union. Beyond n brief paragraph In lbs columns of an ex change now and Uun and ten and there, w* hare noticed no dtaeoulon of this im portant matter—w* have seen no reason* advanced for IU further continuance or lu future abrogation. Ia tte partisan debates of two yean since, tbe argument may have been ex hausted pro and con; there are no fitll records of tt* proceedings of Uut body. W* wen not present and can only gather from Uu publications of Uu day that blind partisanship, personal prejudices cr predilections, usurped the places of rea son sad argument, Uut Uu party adopt ing tha rule became anxious to undo it* work, and that tta oppoelUon Insisted, bnt in vain, upon bolding It to the record. Ever)one la acquainted with the result A majority dominated a minority In de fiance ol established rales, aud poign ensued Uut wu memorable lor a lack of ability and an eabibltlon ot per- aonal rancor which bu seldom been •puled and never surpassed. It It beat that there thing* b* forgotten, and Una mention la only nude necessary as intro ductory to tte topic under discussion. Tte Democrat!, patty la asked to decide If It shall tear down and destroy an hon- ored and rueful landmark of lu history. Tb* query invite* discussion which Uu not yet bun had. for the mere esprualou of individual opinion, or strong assertion onsoatalired by argument and reason, is trot fait and Intelligent discussion. It is uoat unfortunate to ttte dlacuaaiut that a gentleman who bu boen Injected Into tte campaign under murt peculiar and unwarrantable circumstances, among Ure first to appear u an advocate for the abrogation of a wise, suf« and aoaud rule, in Ure intereat* of Lie own candidacy and tn ftmteranee d hie .Him itable ambition. Th* two-thlrda ml* la u old u the Democratic organisation; Indeed it pre ceded Democratic national convention* Before three bodies were assembled a Congressional caucus did tt* work, and tt* first knowledge we ten bun able to gala cf tte twwttirda rata wu when Andrew Jackaon wu nominated under and by lie authority u a Deaaocratle candidate far Treat dent of tte United Stale* Every Democrat must agrea that It wuboca In worthy company, and that Minorities are entitled to protection against mere brute force, at all times and under all circumstances. This truth la receiving such general recognition that much discussion hu been had among publicists u to some plan whereby minor ity representation may ho had in tho leg- alatlve departments of the governmeul. The two-thirds rule stands u a monu ment to tbe wisdom of Democracy, It ia venerable In yeats, custom and honor. Before It shall be tom down the politi cal iconoclast* should to able to pre sent aome reason for Its destruction. Tboy should bu able to ahow that itbu defeated tbo will of tbo people and brought wrong and shame to the commonwealth. It should not ftll because perchance tho am bitions of individuals have been ill-appointed, and that profes- aional politicians and office-seekers have been; successfully confronted aud defeated by It wb;o they wer: reaching out Witt unholy seal for power aud patron age.. A msu whoso service and whoso possession of virtues commend him as a leader to bla people, has nothing to fur from the two-thirds rale. It Is tho trick ster, the ring master, tbo machine polltl clan who feat* Us operation, aud who views it as the tramp does policeman, as bis natural "enemy. It will he peculiarly unfortunate lor tho Ueorgla Democracy to tear down this landmark at thla particular Juncture, The omhonofthe contest ol two years ago had ao far paled, that It was comfort ing to think that they might not be' fanned into (lames again. Bnt the dis cussions ol the put few weeks have warned us that human passions are weak and pcraunal ambition reckless In Its au dacity. We turn our faces from It u frightened children do from grotesque shadows upon tte wall by night, hut tho Democratic party of Georgia la not bomouogeneous ln •antlmetit and purpose. Handed to gether by a common danger, nulty ao far hu given strength and strength bu be gotten safety. la this a tlmo In which to leu down landmark whose usefulness has stood tte test of party strife for nearly tte hall ol century 1 Drew Cbe Lilies. H Is lime that Democrats throughout the State ahould arrive at the true conclu sion u to tha present gubernatorial cam paign, via.: that behind tt lies a great movement, the onject of which Is to wrest tbe State Irom the hands of ths organ ised Democracy, and wield It u a power to further certain ends, whose outlines are now but dimly foreshadowed. The now being urged; when plan of the Independents wu about to ba developed, there wu but one Idea at tho bottom cf It, and that to break down tt* Democracy with a man snppoud to b* popular In the party. This wu tbo In dependent moiement, and Its object wu patent to eieryons. When, however, delegation cf Democrats, self-appointed and Joined with a noted liepubUcan, call ed upon Air. Stephens In Wuhlogton City, tba “conspiracy" wu perfected and the true movement begun. Suddenly, without warning, certain Democratic leaden—officials and Journalists—In tt* State bloomed out u advocate* of th* •greet commoner's" nomination; from being pointed out as an rveweJ Indepen dent wbou defiance of hia party wu no torious, be wu held np u tn organised Democrat wbou political record wu un spotted; tte party, which tbeu men knew, end had declared time end again harmonious and solid, became under their skillful manlpnlstiocs des perately Is need ol a savior, and that But it la not in tbe plan Unit it ahatl he to submitted. Mr, Stephens, holt remeu. bared, Is to he entered through Demecrollc convention, hut ef forts will bo made to give the independent elemeut such a representation ln that con vention u will, united with wbat follow ing can be' drawn from tbe orgaulzed Democracy, nominate him. To this end, In all the conntjr conventions and primary meetings, Independents will, lf allowed, press to the front and endeavor to place Stephens men ln tte. delegation* scheme ia a cunning on* Tbo great body of Independents have accepted 1 Mr. Stephens u their candidate upon the recommendation of their load- Ibuy have bis promises and his sym pathy; no voice In their ranks bu boon raised against him, and a vote for him, even in a Democratic convention, Is nu- tho circumstances, from their stand point, permissible. Thla will not be felt the strongly organized counties, but those sections where tte Indepen dent strength Is visible, It will deeply lelh Each county will have to meet the danger un der Its own leaden, and should do It promptly, unflinchingly. No mao, who bu cut lumself uunder from his party, by vote or declaration, and proposes to continue, ehonld be allowed * volco in Its counsels or place among lu representatives. The evil whlcb ia to be met moo Is the evil of independentum, of disorganization. Let tbe Unee be.drawn sharply and forever fixed. Tbe election of Stephens means disor ganization. It means the silencing of all opposition to Iudcpondentlsm; It means tho overthrow of pure Democracy. Any man who reflects a moment must per ceive it. Who Is there that could rise up be fore an Independent andopposo him, with Mr. Stephens—himself bnt yesterday an Independent—as tho head of the party ln Georgia, fully in sympathy with tho du- organizers and pledged to divide tho pat- ronago of bis administration without regard to party. There could forcible opposition, sod the Independents hue their movement upon the knowledge. The safeguards of au organised party broken down and swept away, Georgia will ho ripe for any thing, be It au Independent representation In both houses of Congress, or a mixed presidential ticket lor 1884. to meet to nominate t oeadidate In the regular way. He wrote to me at this place indoaimr a oopy of the call. I re plied. giving him a Cull nocount of the sit- uation here, end what it was for.; that tho attempt wae being made to rule me out of tbe party ;but in that letter I distinctly aaid: “1 do not at ail obji<ot to ooavenlioue aa a prQji^r mode of se lecting, ctudidatre, etpeolally where all peraoct participating in them agree upon certain principles to be maintained aud cer tain policies to to pursued, and where there aro several or many aspirants for tho I*o«itloa. and where lucoeaa can only be reached by conoerl and anity of aetion;nor do I object to anything done by your com mittee in Uw mutter of calling tbe Thorn- eon convention, nor their recommendation touching the two-thirds rule. That rule I al ways remarked as unjust and unfair in its .... . I* t r -c 1-7 RTS** operation ana uu«tly oat ot place: other than Federal nominating c lions. The effoct of this role in o ihico iu anr _ ng conven tions. The effoct of this role in our dis trict, State and county conventions, under the manipulations of ring masters, is gen erally to defeat rather than carry out the will of the people, aud from this evil has sprang very naturally throughout the country a growing disposition to do away with thin mode of selecting candi dates. Another point in ooqelnsion I wish to be distinctly understood upon. .From the tone of thai class of paper* to which I have referred, it would seem that I am to be considered hereafter as having aban doned the Democratic party aud plaood myself iu antagonism to its organists- tionby the tologram referred to, etc. If the que»tion of my political princi ples or affiliation therefore is raised in that convention, I plead to its jurisdiction. If lam not a Democrat of the straighteat sect in Georgia, then who ia? You, my dear sir, know the material and stuff of wkioh my Democracy is made; you know well w’io, io one of our darkest hours in 1870, framed that Platform of principle# which maintained the integrity and equal ity of the several Btates and-rallied tho people of Georgia to a rescue of their con stitution and rights in the (memora ble campaign and election of that year. You know that yon were one of them and I was another. In tbo event therefore that this convention shall repudiate me as au un fit representative of Democratic principles and shall attempt to rule me out of the Democratic party because of that telegram, or anything also connected with my recent public acts, then 1 say to yon aud to them plainly ana distinctly that I lhall regard r edict as but a brutum fulmen, issued and whether I or they are sound in the faith of tbe fathers shall bo left with the true Domocrary of ttie district to settle at the polls in that contest.” I stated on all proper occasions that I would not Mr. Stephens's Letter. Mr. Stephens, iu reply to the Constitv- lion reporter’s question if he had anything to say for publication, replied: “I will, if you will report exactly what I My and submit it to me before sending, so that there may be uo mistake about It. Ia one of your reports which was not submit ted to me, a misapprebensiou on yonr part of the application of my remarks to one telegram in*trod of another caused me some annoyance, aa it, taktn in connection with other statemeui* by me, involved iu- consistencies and contradictions. The tel egram which I so unqualifiedly denounced was not Mr. Speer's, which he told me he wna going to send, and which he did send, but Tt was the telegram from Atlanta to the Chicago Tribune ot tho 15th of May, staling in substance that I had oonseuUxLto aooept the nomination of the Independents and coalitioni-vu;; that was tho telegram which I aaid I had never given authority to Mr. Speer or euyb-udy else to send. On tbe contrary, 1 have uuitormly said 1 would not accept the nomination of any party except the Democratic, with which alone I was particularly associated.” Upou iny oeeuriug Mi. Stephens that ail ho might * • y on this ocoesioa ahould be written oct .-.nd submitted for his approval before beutg rout to the press, he then pro ceeded to ee.. First, “Oae of tbe errone ous ImprseU re attempted to bo made un tbe imblic mind in aome sections, to which I refer, ie that there has been a cor- oppose the nomination of any other by the convention unloss my vote on the Potter resolutions should be censur ed and I ruled out of the party be- oaussofit. But if they did condemn my vote referred to and nominate another, 1 should appeal from the lower to the higher tribunal. I canvassed my district, met the people in m*sees, aud defended my cense on the principles of Democracy. 1 main tained that fidelity to party organisation did not reuuire pliant conformity to party causae or dictation upon questions of legis- !•♦!«!. Thia was tbs height of my inde* pendentism in that oanvass. I had been •ut down in the House here and denied tho privilege of addressing them even for three minutes aron the passage of tho resolution. I was not then war ring against the Democratic party but trying to aava it with its organization from inevitable self-destruction. 1 told the le ading men of the party who were pressing the adoption of the resolutions that if they socuseded andmado them apart/ buae they would not, in iny opinion, cirry thir teen Gongresvional districts in tbe next election throughout the entire Northern States. This warning did but bring down upuu roe fiercer denunciation by certain presses both North and Mouth. When, how ever, tho true Democracy of Pennsylvania, tho old KsrstoLe State, tn convention a few weeks afterwards, spoke in condemna tion of the policy of the Potter resolutions, which really involve] the peaoe of tbe coun- tryt this voioe fell upon the care of tbe leader* of the party in the House m dis tant thunder, indicating a storm of popular reprobation which brought them to their senses. They soon determined t> tack ship and abandoned farther proseoatica of the measure. I© thua sketched tbe status of the cane when 1 entered the cinvaaa of my district in 1878. At that time nearly WHICH A Iffiltr, AH Utah Micro iuu ucru * wt- Iroapondews between me and leading coal- 1 tionists and Independents (whose object is to destroy the Democratic party) and that an understanding exists between them ard me aa to their plana and pur port. and that I am in sympathy with Item. To Ulia I bev* .tmiil, lo ee, most liuptetfoeUx that thac. ia not tb* eliahteet foundation for this ids* .kOanwot or la- sinoetioa. It U true I aia oo friend!/ re lations personally, end her* been for seers, with tt* leading Independent* eo allied, in | the State, end with many ol tb* leadW correspondence an/ parties dtsbinnud. No Bira'e fidelity to to tt* greet principle of the Democratic party was star maintain*! with mot* stead- faalnare than mins baa bean sine* my first connection nitb it, upward* of * quarter ot a century a<o. 1 bat* Witt one eieeption, roted for tts oudidate. nominated by that par y, on all oooailoct, daring au that todorererseee loth* Totter resolutions. . Jit cessed the question before tba masses as a Democrat talking to Danrecrate, plac ing iny dsfsnss before them tends of tte ratty and eppMlioa. to them to rend men to tho eonremion win would decide wheth er I was a true Democrat or not TU re sult was a unanimous rote in tbe eonren- Uou, save one, indorsing my oonras and ( reienUogray name for ncminxtlon. If there »«, treason to the party in this, then let those who wish make tb* more of It." I then eatd: “But bow, Hr. Btepbene, about your saying that there was no iasn* tertwetnyou and Hr. Sparer Hr. Ste phen*—"Oh, yss; that is another ona of tbo metier, to wblrh 1 intended to allude ba rer. dosing this conversation. My mean ing wu einu and explicit that there wu no Iren* of fact between mytelf and Mr. Speer touching the sending of hie tele- cram to Hr. Felton on th* 14th of Hay. Of courts I did not mean to My there waa not apolitical Issue, or difference, between Mr. Speer and myself, u tvs been Ineidl- euly argued by com* Three Ise wide duierene* between u. lb* rad difference batwsen u, n I undent end It, is that Le Is an lultpeodent, and sets outside of the organisation, while I am an organized Demoorat sating within the organization. In conaludoa, I wish to add that I bare authorized no person to any eu* to aay that 1 weald accept the nomination of any party orguizition or etaociathm of Indi- vtdnala except tbo nomination of the Deoeoeralie party, or that 1 would vote for proposed nomination of Mr. Sla- Iona'”p*riodJin county', district. State phana by tt* Independent lied nothing andf•dreal rfeetion*. TLl* exception was to do with tb* main object for which my refeeat to eopport th* nomination of Hr. Greeley for the Treeldoney in 1872. Th* who** ol my life hu been devoted to th* detenu and maintenance ot thou prineipiea opon which th* party wee or. ilzwl upwards of eighty year* ego. How gontzed upwards of eighty yeere ego. 1 u it [Outole lo suppose that I, at my [ sot eg*, oould bo ooaeptrlog to , throw ood destroy those pnnetpies lo which my who!* prariou Ufa bu been do- voted, or to overthrow that organization in which .loot then ia uy bopofol prospect of their pteeotvationeodpscpwteetion. It hu been stated that Willingham, Lawshe, Loogrtreet end Felton ere portico with whom this correspondence hu been held, or by whom tt i* elslmafi that 1 wu made aware of ttoir plans and purpose* that I wu in full sympathy with Urea never reecirsd from 1 »rj Lougstreet, . »y iif* as wrote him ono of that chsxaeur. I have not written to nor remind from Mr. Lowsho a tetter in tbe tart twetre month* on any aabjeet, that I osn tldnk of. I haveboen intimate with Hr. Willing ham for many years, hot no eorrtspoa- deaoo hu taken pisee between us in tho last twelve months spec political is. ■ore or qaeetion* 1 hare raooiud bet one latter from Dr. Fattou on any subject for noarly, if no* quite, a year. That o» wu tbs letter to which 1 replied on Iho 18tt of Hay, and Ure reply to which ho pobliebsd .iny, aim ure f.p*x vs woieo oe poDUSO* in tto I'oaafilafiua as the !2d cf Hsy. flreood,anotheretrovexists In ttspob- lie mind In relation to ray position in 187c, savior Alexander H. SUpheu. Tb. erens piracy to el act Ht. Stephana’ district and proclaim, i myseu an iode- of which Iho Atlanta CcnfitJtlois Ua candidate wilhoot regard lo tte emit toldnt, wu perfected, but behind that conspiracy lay tb* greater treason, plot to ''liberalise’’ Georgia in preparation for other startling political .rents, and tte realization of certain ambitious. Recognizing this tte Tncomera bu opposed tte candidacy of Mr. Stephens with unceasing effort. It bu day alter day laid ddwc overwhelming reasons tor its conns and stripped disguise, from there plotter* u feet ae aeeumed. Not on* writer ln *11 the State, during tb* long Interval which hu alsperd eiere Mr. Kte- pbens’s avowal, has answered them or dared to advance t rtaauu for bit support. Tb* Journal which hu Urn meat active In bla behalf bu regaled iu read-re with mean, npaieiij, wild ptopheetee rad even foletbood, bnt nscon, unr. It I* absolutely a hurlres cea4.dacy,cco- •tdend ftuai s DemocfUrc Waudpr.!r.t, sad no man can bring himsell ink. sympathy with it without erbftraril; :nr-;haj--n th* principle* of bis party. TU men, the Journals, which today are leading th* convention called by tt* eaaeatire mltteo of the district to , t * sendi- dtte. Vnrthsr.it is said lathis •MAC. IIUUiCr.lAMHJU laUWI thatlbsra Uadifferrac* in Uw rrineiDUa rot forth to »Jw Bufito laur and ihe (Jaroy vfckb gara An&a* Jackson as a morctacnt in Uhalf ot Ur. fftopbaua. letter on Uw snbjsoi of a «**"**s4innr A rafmaoa to Um rtoord will show that aro miwi. First, to Uw Oaroy let- Ur I did not proclaim m,roll an toditwa. dent raniadau without regard to the tkm of Uw district aonvStioo. aa J, roc- “•Ur, three i. no roriaoae to prlcdpte I tween lbs Carey and Smith tetters as _ ■ny vtew* oc tha propriety of party nomi- nattog cootration*. Tho farts and dr- under which th* Carey tetter ed Totter raolutioos to a vote under tho B5SS3HES SBSaBasSMs tamy dtelrCte' rote me ont of the | by i . man of to* Broom teem the district. any ona vxorot cratio party.” AftorUw * phens, I ill raid "Ye*, end that all persona who may - — assured that it Is correct, nomine* of the Demo ns, read to Mr, Bte- rsad it may fesl i I hereto rigs a Ktcrheu.” rt itlr this euthenttontion I send the in terview tor pnblimuoo, believing tut tte reader* of tt* Constitution wUT be Inter ested in Ua perusal. Cornsmerer# .minus lima, gw. 'f. («'. Tbo World's Xpllrplle iM.uiule. laid 1,111 located bsr*. I roticlud.1 to Mr Uw rrlrbrat-lteiutqthio a .Sort rlrJL W* were gniocL raputatSSTro lnQaS > ^S r tK«A%j>a! > - m a. '' ‘ at oc waa. of t»attoaanlv na»nn.._. _ rbcwlAC ni^molh oWitunori. It Is a flre-«-A>ry balMinf, av! ' <t, wto* toroment, sad cantalns orn t whom I rotrom pamit*aUr, a latlar on a I JESSS'JSPJiS asfrowf ihiraro political^ qaesilon te my df*. and.neve.- KSSmgmjgS.* Mrolehrrfbi the must *re^rt ud uiutSsT- no* to this tod otkar ooaatrtsa. to ueoiMcti>m with 1 ImtiWteUateammeUi pfH.UuhS.VS tb* Wc»L aud he has tha i joa*» dwccrai^d > •/. jrMand trtnawl an wUh ro wueh cam' and laxurj m fi hia own prlnu* oCHem. On tha f r.» r.. w of thi, BMataoih bulMlcz La tha (•if*. Th*: weoafi bur baa th* hotel oflei FEM»assattss JTwStt «"frl;“lr d n,rE££ S i aS‘S52 |ud thdTtrtead* TU laSSm!. ViV. ;td rrffio V) K-i-bU. r.e r.-'f,. r **t. and i> on on : j aunu. r- » II LI IT re klw»V .huL" 1 * ^-*^.'*4 LlAffil- viktfiiinro, diiil. re. . -.r.