The Cassville standard. (Cassville, Ga.) 18??-1???, October 06, 1859, Image 1

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4 P' % $Mg Jfanttfg U etospaptr—§fktelr 1® Jsdratfrtrn lligjrts, iTitnrati >—- —... ■ - ■ 11 ■■■ “ ^ art, ^grititlterf, jBfdiprji v.-wBwwrt'a^y — : — mb fimneslif fttfes, fa. . —■—r-nfifw Bo Ms KEITH St Bf F. BENNETT, Editors. S r » • * • ' * ' * “ EQUALITY IN THE UNION OB INDEPENDENCE OUT OF IT.” TERMS—TWO DOLLARS a-yemr, is Advwn. VOL. 11. —— CASSVILLE, QAl., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1859. TSTO. 38. CHEAP GOODS! CH8..P isteilanfmts. FOIi FALL AND WINTER, From the Red, White and Blue. Washington’s Prayer at Talley Porge. BV J. W. BRYCE. ‘ Father! the hour is dark and gloomy, Humbly I bow before Thy throne, \nd if this bitter cup my doom be, I only say 1 Thy will be done.’ J it becomes the imperative duty of Con-! tion, and in a Territory where no regula-1 From the Cartersville Express, j gress to interpose its authority, and fur- tions has yet been made on the subject j A Plea for the Press, nish such protection. j Thtre the Constitution is equally im- All common sense views and philosoph- i “ Third. Those who, while professing partial, It neither frees the slave nor en- j^) teachings, hold that it is the boundeti 1 to believe that the Constitution establish- slaves the freeman. nTt requires both to j u tv, as well as the exalted privilege, of ■ es slavery in the territories beyond the remain in statu quo until the status alrea- cv . erv sanc citizen to subscribe for one or I power of Congress or the territorial legis- dy impressed upon them by the law of „j 0re 0 f the papers or periodicals of the 1 laturc to control it, at the same time pro- their previous domicil shall be changed by day and times in which he lives. And not JUST RECEIVING AND OPENING, At Wholesale and Retail, Bujt for my bleeding country hear THE LARGEST^LOT OF ClottLing EVER BROUGHT TO TniS MARKET, AND AT THE LOWEST POSSIBLE FIGURES. Be sure to call and examine. OPPOSITE THE POST-OFFICE, Next door to Kaj*g Book Store, ATLANTA, GA. M. LAZARON, Sept. 15, 1859. Agent. j Just Received, A NEW AND LARGE STOCK OF only to subscribe for them, but read them carefully and attentively. And ao ordi nary duty or matter should prevent their One prayer, unseen by mortal eyes, I come to offer all that’s dear To man—a willing sacrifice. “ If I have erred, spare not thy hand, Let all the punishment be mine ; But from my loved—my native land, Father! withhold thy wrath divine! ’Gainst me let enemies prevail, And all my hard won honors take, But hearken, Father ! to the wail Thy suffering children make. test against the duty of Congress to inter- some competent local authority. What is fere for its protection; but insist that it is ! competent local authority in a Territory the duty of the judiciary to protect and will be elsewhere considered. maintain slavery in the territories with-‘ 3. The Federal Constitution carefully j thorough perusal for “whatever is worth j out any law upon the subject” guards the rights of private property a- j j 0 j ng at ^ j s worth doing well,” and ev- We give Mr. Douglas the benefit of his gainst the Federal Government itself, by I er y j s frought with interest more or , own statement. This is his mode of ex-! declaring that it shall not be taken for j i ess t0 one or a fl 0 f readers. As our public use without compensation, nor p^ers come into our houses and our homes Slaves arc of Infidelity by thousands at a dash. A I men who can in anywise assist in their moral David in the cause of Patriotism— | support, careless how many wives the men with the stones of truth in the sling of | may already have, ^.nd herein is found philanthropy, it prostrates the mighty Go-1 the excuse for polygamy on the part of liah of intemperance, profanity and abom-1 the females, though they may pretend to i nation. j receive the institution as from God. The In fine, if the Press is not really the safe- j men profess to many wives wholly as a guard of a nation, it certainly is a vigilant religious duty, claiming more wives as re sentinel looking well to its interest, ready ligiouwlight and knowledge increase f f “ If on the deathless rolls of fame I had too fondly hoped to place, By honest deeds, my humble name, The record let thy hand efface— I Purge pride, ainffition from my heart, I And make me feel thy awful power— j Let not thy countenance depart I From Freedom's cause in this dark hour!’ DRY GOODS, SHOES AND Clotliing, which will be sold at LOWER. PRICES than ever heretofore offered in Cassville or Cass county, At Levy’s cheap cash store. S,-pI. 22, 1359—3m. II X. SALMONS,..A. II. MATHKMS, .J. X. SIMMONS. iiAL.UO.NS, .HATUEtVS & CO., (FOIIMKRI.V (IF GRIFFIN, GA.,) clUMesqle itoO fltfiiil Spiel's ii) SIWMI I. A DUS’ AND GENT’S Shoes, Boots, Hats, and R ]■; A 1) Y - M A L) E C L O Till N G , WlllTKUALI. .StUEKT, Atlanta, G I. April 28, 1359—ly. SCOVIL & GOODE Lb FIFTY 1141 SMI Ill. PATENTED JAN. I, 1859. 'I''ills M.tcliine takes the dmible-lucK stitch, L ami sews with two threads, frum common spools, and is perfectly adapted to all work, Irani the linest lo the coarsest. Its extreme simplicity adds greatly to its value. It is ea sy to adjust, ami ihe operator can learn its use in a few hours with perfect ease. They are durable, and canuot get out of order except tram gross c irelessness. These Machines are far sale in this place at my residence. Call amJ s ;l* them—no charge for showing them. J. A. TERRELL, Agent. Cassville, March 3d—tf. M. McMURRY, dealer in Family Groceries. CASSVILLE, GEO., K EEPS constantly on hand a large anil well selected stock of Groceries, Confectionaries, and Hardware. Also, agent lor Wright’s Indian Vegetable Pills, and Jacob’s Cordial. Jnlj 28—Gill Carriages£H£Buggies AND WAGONS, ! ’Twas thus while kneeling on the sod At Valley Forge, ’neath wintry skies, The chief in secret prayed to God With contrite soul in humblest guise. Then through the clouds asunder riv’n A solitary' star was seen : It came, a messenger from Heaven, And in its light he grew serene. The Territorial Slavery Question. Ileply of Judge Black, Attorney General of the United Suites, to the late Popu lar Sovereignty Manifesto of Senator Douglas—the “little giant" beaten with his own weapons. Every one knows that.Mr. Douglas, the Senator from Illinois, has written and printed an elaborate essay, comprising 38 columns of Harper’s Magazine, in which | lie lias undertaken to point out the “.di- * t iding line between federal and local au thority.” Very many persons have glanc ed over its paragraphs to catch the lead ing ideas without the loss of time, and some have probably read it through with care. Those who dissent from the doctrines of this paper owe to its author, if not to its arguments, a most respectful answer. Mr. Douglas is not the man to lie treated with a disdainful silence. Ilis ability is a fact unquestioned; his public career, in the face of many disadvantages, has been uncommonly successful; and he has been for many years a working, struggling candidate for the Presidency. He is, moreover, the Corypheus of his political sect—the founder of a new school—and his disciples naturally believe in the in fallible variety of his works as a part of their faith. The style of the article is, in some re spects, highly commendable. It is en tirely free from the vulgar clap-trap of the stump, and has no vain adornment of clas sical scholarship. But it shows no sign of the eloquent Senator; it is even without the logic of the great debater. Many por tions of it are very obscure ; it seems to be an unsuccessful eftort at legal precis ion—like the writing of a judge, who is trying in vain to give good reasons for a wrong decision on a question of law which he has not quite mastered. With the help of Messrs. Seward and Lincoln, he has defined accurately enough the platform of the so-called Republican party; and he does not attempt to conceal his conviction that their doctrines are, in MADE AND REPAIRED BV WM. HEADDEN, • "CASSVILLE, GA. H E ham lot of Buggies, Wagons. Ac., for sale, all of which were m.iJe by experi- the last degree dangerous. Thev are, most enced t*orkin*ii and cauno* full Ui give satis- ® , _ .. , . * . faction ; those who need anything of the sort assuredly full of evil and saturated witn are requested to call and lobt^t his work*—■ The 44 irrepressible conflict” Blacksmith mg promptly attended to. , . , . . . . . , . July 28,1S59—-ly. • which they speak of with so much pleas- —rr j ure between the 44 opposing and enduring Washington Hall , | forces” of the Northern and Southern ATLANTA, i States, will be fatal, not merely to the GEORGIA, peace of the country, but to the existence ‘ of the Government itself. Mr. Douglas BY E. R. 8ASSEEN, kt.ows this, and he knows, also, that the (Formerly of the Supper House, Calhoun,) Democratic party is the only power which LD friends will please take due notice and is, or can be, organized to resist the Re publican forces or opposes their hostile march upon the capital. He who divides and weakens the friends of the country at such a crisis in her .fortunes, assumes a very grave responsibility. Mr. Douglas gfftarates the Democratic party into three classes, and describes pressing those differences, which, he says, disturb and threaten the harmony of tfie American Democracy. These passages should, therefore, be most, carefully con sidered. The first class is the one to which lie himself belongs, and to both the others he is equally opposed. He lias no right to come between the second and third class. If the difference which lie speaks of does exist among his opponents, it is their bu siness, not liis, to settle it or fight it out. We shall therefore confine ourselves to the dispute between Mr. Douglas and his followers on the one hand, and the rest of the Democratic party on the other, pre suming that he will be willing to observe without due process of law. private property, and every tnan who has taken an oath of fidelity to the Constitu tion is religiously, morally and politically' bound to regard them as such. Does any body suppose that a Constitution which acknowledges the sacredncss of private property so fully would wantonly destroy that right, not by any words that are found in it, but by mere implication from its general principles ? It might as well be asserted that the general principles of the Constitution gave Lane and Montgom ery a license to steal horses in the valley of the Osage. 4. The Supreme Court of the United the principle of non-intervention in all j States has decided the question. After matters with which he has no concern. We will invert the order in which he has discussed the subject, and endeavor to show— 1. That he has not correctly stated the doctrine held by his opponents; and, 2. That his own opinions, as given by himself, arc altogether unsound. 1. lie says that a certain portion of the Democratic party believe or profess to bi- licve, that the Constitution establishes sla eery in the territories, and insist that it is the duty of the judiciary to maintain it there without any laic on the subject. We do not charge linn with any intention to be unfair, but we assert that he has in fact done wrong to, probably, to nineteen twentieths of the party, by attempting to put them on grounds which they never chose for themselves. The Constitution certainly does not es tablish slavery in the territories, nor any where else. Nobody in this country ever thought or said so. But the Constitution regards as sacred and inviolable all the rights which a citizen may legally acquire in a State, and goes with it into a territo ry, he is not for that reason to be stripped of it Our simple and plain proposition is, that the legal owner of a slave or other chattel may go with it into a Federal ter ritory without forfeiting liis title. Who denies the truth of this, and upon what ground can it be controverted ? The reasons which support it-are very obvious and very conclusive; as a jurist and states man, Mr. Douglas ought to be familiar with them, and there was a time when he was supposed to understand them very well. We will briefly give him a few of them: 1. It is an axiomatic principle of pub lic law, that a right of property, a private relation, condition or status, lawfully ex isting in one State or country, is not changed by mere removal of the parties to another country, unless the law of that other country be in direct conflict with it For instance: a marriage legally solemn ized in France is binding in America; children born in Germany are legitimate solemn argument and careful considers tion, that august tribunal has announced its opinion to be that a slaveholder, by go ing into a Federal Territory, does not lose the title he had to his negro in the State from which he came. In former times, a question of constitutional law once deci ded by the Supreme Court was regarded as settled by all, except that little band of ribald infidels, who meet periodically at Boston to blaspheme the religions and plot rebellion against the laws of the coun try. Tlje leaders of the so-called Repub lican party have lately been trcadingclo.se on the heels of their abolition brethren : and willing to give the alarm of approach ing danger. Could the voice of the civil ized world be heard in one general con clave to-day—it doubtless would be : God save the Press in every land, The foe of tyrants and the friend of man. ONWARD. Stilcsboro’, Geo., Sept. 20th. as messengers of intelligence, vehicles of thought or mediums of communication ;— we should “ beware therefore to entertain The Mormon Abomination, them, as we might thereby entertain'an- j A correspondent of the Philadelphia gels unawares.” j Christian Observer, under date of Camp We can conceive of no sight more pleas ing or lovely, than a whole family group, all seated together around the fireside, pouring over or listening to the contents of the latest village gazette. It breathes or begets a genial influence—smoothes the rugged path of life—soothes the sorrows of the way—renders home pleasant and life happy. While it cultivates the head it benefits the heart; while it strengthens the mind it expands and ennobles the soul; it fits us for time and prepares us for eter nity. Next to “the family Bible that lays on the stand,” some good periodical should ever be the most welcome visitor in every family circle. For it comes as the bearer of useful information or pleasing repast for sire and son, matron and daughter, suited to every condition in life, temporal or spir itual. And the family that will take the Bible for its Sabbath reading, and the re spectable periodicals of the day to fill up the spare time of the week, will soon be a family noted for cultivated heads and sanc tified hearts—a moral garden in which the trees of science and religion flourish and opine an excuse can be easily found for this abominable polygamic habit. I know of seven men who hate the mo ther and daughter to wife. AmHttie, who has the mother and her four daughters to wife, and. children by all of them. Thi* man has ten wives. The reporter of the Tabernacle services, having five wives,, has his half sister to wife. They have three children. One man in this district, an elder, refused to seal to his son a spir itual wifi-, but had himself sealed to that same woman as liis tenth spiritual wife, and lived with her as such for two Floyd, (Utah Territory,) July 9th, writes as follows. ..... , ! months, then divorced her and. sealed her You cannot surely know the high-hand- 1 , , . . . ... ... , i to that in question; and as such they now cd crimes which this people commit in the live. but it is devoutly to be hoped that Mr. j g IOW — a flock, happy aud prosperous on Douglas has no intention to follow their earth, united and saved eventually in heav- example. In case he is elected President, lie must sec the laws faithfully executed. en, the great fold above. For the fine mor al, as well as the intellectual influence of Docs he think he can keep that oath by a good family paper, vs too evident to ad mit of a doubt; too plain to require com ment In the first place, we hold that no man can be so valuable a citizen, or fully fill his station in life, unless lie be posted on the general news and topics of the day.— And there is certainly no medium more capable of posting him and keeping him posted than the issue of the press. And no excuse, save idiocy or deafness, could justify him in being a non subscriber.— And really, an idiot had as well gaze upon a good newspaper as upon anything else; and a deaf man has as much right to hear the news of the day, as a blind man has to see what is going on—for we understand Q govern themselves accordingly, ulv 23—3m V&lnable Invention. PEELKR ’ S leMsafrel, Variety and Steel-Blade PLOW STOCK. IGHTS for flftiilies, districts or counties 'than as follows: ! “First Those who believe that the R may be purchased bv calling on ■ S. H. SMITH, or M. A. LEAK. Agcnt.% Sept 23—tf. _ ,EAK. Agents, (Cartersville, Go. Constitution of the United States neither establishes nor prohibits slavery in the States or Territories beyond the power of slavery or freedom is local or general, is lighting the judiciary ? o. The legislative history of the conn, try shows that all the great statesmen of former times entertained the same opin ion, and held it so firmly that they did not even think of any other. It was univer sally taken for granted that a slave re mained a slave, and freeman a freeman, in the new Territories, until a change was made in their condition by some enact ment. Nobody believed that a slave might not have been taken to and kept in the Northwest Territory if the ordinance of 1787 or sonic other regulation had not been made to prohibit it. The Missouri restriction of 1820 was imposed solely be cause it was understood (probably by ev-1 a blind , nan came one hundred miles to ery member of that Congress) that, in the 1 or witness the execution in Atlanta a absence of a restriction, slave property | f eu . W - C cks ago. would be as lawful in the eye of the Con- j Even suppose a man to be entirely illit- stitution above 36dg. 30min. as below ;— 1 crate, it will ever bea pleasure to his friends and all agreed that the mere absence of a read to him, and would be a source of restriction did, in fact, make it lawful be-; interest to both. In fact, we know a num- low the compromise line; ber of this class, who are liberal patrons 0. It is right to learn wisdom from our 0 f the press ; and really, they are better enemies. The Republicans do not point posted on general intelligence than many to any express provision of the Constitu- profossed literate. Should poverty prevent, tion, nor to any established rule of law, j, e nee( j only communicate the fact to the which sustains their views. The ablest ever liberal editorial fraternity of the quill men among them are driven by stress of an( j an fl we will vouch for them necessity to hunt for arguments in a code that their papers come flying to him by there; and a merchant who buys goods in unrevealed, unwritten, and undefined, eV ery mail, thick and fast, “without tnon- Ncw York according to the laws of that which they put above the Constitution or C y an fl without price.” State may carry them to Illinois and hold ; the Bible, and call it “ higher law.” The | Should a want of time to read be offer- them there under his contract It is pre-! ultra abolitionists of New England do not c( ] ;IS an excuse, we pity the case, and dis- ciscly so with the status of a negro car- deny that the Constitution is rightly in- miss it under the head of idiocy aforemen- ried from one part of the United States to terpreted by the Democrats, as not inter- tinned, and conclude that a man that has another ; the question of his freedom or fering against slavery in the Territories ; no time to read, has no mind to comprehend servitude depends on the law of the place but they disdain to obey what they pro- what is read—no soul to pay for his read- where he came from, and depends on that nounce to be “ an agreement with death ; n g—and consequently no place among alone, if there be no conflicting lawat the and a covenant with hell.” human beings: for “’tis the mind that place to which he goes or is taken. The 7. What did Mr. Douglas mean when makes the man.” As the body without Federal Constitution therefore recognizes he proposed and voted for the Kansas-Ne- food, so the mind without culture, will slavery as a legal condition wherever the braska bill repealing the Missouri restric- pine and waste away, local governments have chosen’to let it tion? Did he intend to tell southern men The press is the mighty Atlas on whose stand unabolished, and regards it as ille- that notwithstanding the repeal of the pro- broad shoulders rests the moral, literary' gal wherever the laws of the place have bibition, they were excluded from those an d scientific world. While it heralds a- forbidden it A slave being property in Territories as much as ever ? Or did he broad the words of divine truth, enabling Virginia, remains property ; and bis mas- not regard the right of a master to his the minister of the Gospel to address thou- ter has all the rights of a Virginia master slave perfectly good whenever he got rid sands at a breath ; at the same time, like wherever he may go, so that he go not to of the prohibition ? Did he, or anybody. a central sun, it pours forth intellectual anv place where ; the local law copes in else at that time, dream that it was neces- light upon the broad field of science, aid- conflict with his right. It will not be pre- sary to make a positive law in favor of the ; n g the adventurer in his research after tended that the Constitution itself furnish, slaveholder before he could go there with truth and scientific discovery, cs to the territories a conflicting law. It safety ? To ask these questions is to an- The printer’s ink is truly the nation’s contains no provision thalffan be tortured swer them. The Kansas-Nebraska bill life-blood, bounding at every throb of the into any semblance of a prohibition. j was not meant as a delusion or a snare. heart, every stroke of the press. It is tru- 2. The dispute on the question whether j [to be continued is ont -vext.J jly the school-master abroad, possessing "‘ ubiquity ; going into every nook and cor- name of the most High God. You surely know not the blackness of the heresy— know not the fearful rapidity with which these abominable doctrines are promulga ted and embraced, or you would speak ant : warn the unwary. The basest passions of the basest men have full scope of gratification in the name of religion. In the name of religion arson and murder are committed. To save the souls of men who have apostatized, their throats arc cut If women refuse to be come the second, fourth or fortieth wife of some lustful saint, their throats, in many instances, have been found cut in foul murder, and the report started—“com mitted suicide for fear of the wrath of God.” All these and more are done in the name of the Lord, and by and with the advice and consent of the heads of the church. (!!) The Judge of this Judi cial District (the 1st) informs me that there are now over one hundred and sixty mur derers, many of them known and acknowl edged as such, running at large, and in full communion with, and protected by the Mormons—a large proportion of whom are Bishops and Elders, and other church dignitaries. This is the district in which were committed the Mountain Meadows murder, the Parishes, the Jones and For bes, and others. The bones of the murdered of the Moun tain Meadows, lay bleaching where the dead fell, until the present May, when Judge Cradlebaugh with a detachment of soldiers gathered up and buried the bones of about one hundred and twenty persons, all but forty of these were women and children. Children whose little skulls were not yet knit together—whose bleach ed and bleaching ribs are not a finger in length—were among the killed. A few skulls were saved and are now in camp, to be used in Washington City at the proper time. There is also in camp a sack full of long female hair, (most melan choly memento,) gathered off the sage bushes and rocks, amid the bleachin] I cannot find how many wives Brigham Young has—probably, from forty to one hundred. The common statute laws ac- jkknowledge only one wife, the others are all called spirituals by one of Jos. Smith’s revelations ; the records of which kind of wives arc kept in the church archives, that is, if any record is kept of such mar riages. Hence the difficulty of obtain ing correct information, upon this, to the Mormons, delicate subject. But I sup pose Young has thirty-nine spirituals in his harem at Salt Lake City, and one or more in every town and settlement in tbe Territory, and perhaps several in the States, and even in foreign countries. I know several men who have married women- years after they were dead and buried, and in some instances women that the men had never seen in life. Little- dead girls of a few months or years old are often married to old grey headed men as spirituals. This they do to save tl * souls of the dead females from purgatory, and to furnish for them husbands for eter nity ; alleging that women cannot get from that place of fancy without men’s as sistance, and must be married on earth or go companionless throughout eternity, as in that world they are neither married nor given in marriage. Thus Scripture is perverted to the basest purposes. They preach vulgarisms in the Taber nacle ; this I aver from personal knowl edge. Heber C. Kimble . is famous for this. I have heard John Tayler take for his text, “Jump ouLof the frying pan in to the fire.” I have ♦ heard Oman Hyde prophesy in the name of Israel’s God.— Brigham Young, a few Sabbaths since, said in the Tabernacle, that lie (Young) was expecting a revelation from God com manding bis children by one wife to in termarry with bis children by another wife, to secure a pure priesthood. RICIMRD. “'Squarish the Circle.”—Among the parlor games occasionally used, is one call- bones, whither the wind had blown and ; cd “squaring a word.”' If'consists in ar- fastened it. j ranging words in such 1 a manner that s Eighty Mormons are known to have ! perfect square of known- words shall be been personally engaged in this murder ; 1 made which shall- read vertically in tbe and writs have been issued for forty odd j name order as horizontally. TheproWemsr persons—among the writers one for Pres-! of “ squaring the circle^” which has puz- ident Haight, Bishop Fee, and in fact for every Elder, Bishop and Legislator in that Presidency who has not fled.- Over eighty thousand dollars worth of property of this murdered train has been reclaimed from the Mormons in the last few months. Twenty children of the train-, too small to testify, were saved alive. Some weeks after the murder, the largest girl of the saved children was -foully murdered for saying to the Mormon woman with whom she lived, “ you have got on my mother’s dress,” thus giving evidence that she knew too much for their purpose. The Mor mons have denied all knowledge of this murder until lately, hitherto attaching all blame to the Indians. They can no lon ger deny the fact of its being done by the command of the church; the testimony is too strong. While I write, a murderer is in this (Judge Eckel’s) room, who has turned State’s evidence, and stays in camp to protect his life—otherwise the Mormons would kill him. zled philosophers and mathemeticians for ages, has been solved in this way, thus: CIRCLE ICARUS RAREST CREATE Ii AT S T R E ESTEEM Tliis is a pleasant game for evening par ties, and requires considerable ingenuity; —Clerelavd Herald. Parson B. was a truly pious man, and at the long graces which usually fol lowed the meals, he and the whole family reverently knelt,except the parson’s broth er, who being o’er much fat, usually stood with his back to the table, and overlooked the garden. One day—it was summer time—the parson was unusually favored ; not appearing to notice the fidgety move ments of his brother, who kept twisting about, until finding no end to his thanks, he broke in with—’’ Cut it sliort, parson —cat it short—the cows are in the garden This people have pretended prophets | k ^ with the cabbagjc - -- — ——— » sv—-, “ - Vat you make dere?’’ hastily in- VlTtOK PUCK the P°°P le ks* 0 * to contro1 l«*Tes: mere war of words. The black race in quiml a Dutchman of bis daughter, who ner ’ bnn g in S ll S ht out of darkness 5 and Hill Slid, ^ people thereof perfectly free to form this country is neither bond nor free, by was ^g kisged by her sweetheart very d «Pf|“S ignorance and superstition, as A *11 kinds or Jewelry Repaired, in good and regulate their domestic institutions in j virtue of any general few. That portion ■ thp " s,ns sun of daT disnels the receding of’weh’ilSk d«e P ^ their OWD 8U, f Ct «« the Con, | of it which is free, is so by virtue of some ^h. not moeb-jnst courting s little- questedto give me a trial. stitution of the United States. i local regulation, and the slave owes ser- j^t’s alL” ; - M*rehst,i85»!^■' MO c3£irillXa ^ econd - Thise who believe that tbe vice for a similar reason. The Constitution “Oho! dat’sall ; pytam, I thought you * * ’ Constitution establishes slavery ip the end laws of the United Slates sjpiply de- m righting” itoffes, araMpithholds from Congress dare that everything done in the premises (hie Tenitajpl feg^jfeture the power by tbe State governments is feifet, and E0T* The editor who kissed hgapweet- fortune. ' ’ it, and wlMMBsists that, in tbe .they shall be protected in carrying it ont heart, saying “pleaeeexchauge,” ffbeliev- TbePressfeamoral Sampson in M. J. CRAWFORD, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Ringgold, Catoosa Co., Ga. A|JJL business entrusted to hi» care will be -c*. promptly attended to. “F*-1*. 1852. ^ the rising sun of day dispels the receding shade ot night. It is the channel through which flows the stream of general intelli gence, and he jvho is out of the channel often misses Hie draught, aiSi perhaps the “tide in the affairs of men that leads on to and revelators, who pretend a revelation for any emergency, commanding the per petration of any crime, that may be de sired to accomplish any end in the name of God. • All their wives are taken in accordance with pretended visions, dreams or revela tions. Should the woman object, she is asked to reflect with care, and admonish ed to obey counsel. This admonition to obey counsel it ominous, savoring of berof admirers, throats cat,pretending suicide. But pov-J nounced by sun erty here it to distressingly great, and women who apt not wives have so little liberty, fegfthfr with the feet that maey are members of lerritorial legislature fails to But free negrom and s lives may both fimd eduottohaveexceededthe proper “liberty for its protection^ tbimeriras outwdeof any Stale jwrfefee and truth. With the quill this prrlwuhdrbuuli, that women hardly it days the FhafetipeBjcrar object to besoming the wives of any csekf, to which tbe girl is first akm* is Swiss Courting. In Switzerland, when a girl lias arrived at marriageable age, the ymmg men of the village assemble, by eonsent, on a given night at the gallery of the chalet in which the fair one resides. This creates no man ner of surprise in the mindofber parents, who not only wink at the practice, but are- never better pleased than when the charms of their daughter attract the greatest num- rival is soon mo st the. different windows. After the,Madly in the house- has been aroused ana dressed, (for tbe scene usualfg takes place at midnight,— when they have all,retired to rest,) ths windows of the TMWLMiparedftv these-