Muscogee democrat. (Columbus, Ga.) 184?-18??, September 06, 1849, Image 2

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The Ciba Project. —The. annexed extract from ibe New-Yoik loiter <>l (he Washington Union makes some rather remarkable additions to the rumors current respecting the mysterious movement. If we could only be satisfied of thoir truth, they would deserve to be culled important: Under these circmstances, and under the be. lief that the English, French mid American population of the island will gladly exchange the antiquated rule ot old Spain for laws, insti tutions, privileges and influences in the state more in accordance with the spirit of the age, a large number of wealthy Creole families and individuals are prrpariug to assert the inde pendence of the island on the first favorable op portunity. They have bought arms, military atones, &c., &e., to a large extent in this count ry and England, almost all of which have long since passetl beyond the jurisdiction of the Uni ted States and Great Britain, having been land ed and stored (not in Cuba, but elsewhere) at points most convenient for the purposes of the native Cubans. For two years past they have been buying such merchandise liberally among us, as in England ; and there are now a large number of wealthy and patriotic Creoles of the island in the United Stales, ostensibly travelling for pleasure, I . v £ally picking out men from a. j£i|aj|jpliW h i ■ m si * ‘• “base names and experience identified in the first movement, be j likely at once to create a deeper sympathy in ! their cause in the breast of the American peo-1 pie, while it could not fail to inspire confidence j In their ultimate success on the part of all resi- j dents of their island. Thus, it is understood that had Gen. Worth lived, he would ere this have resigned libs com mission in the American army, and commenced planting in Cuba, to be ready to head the move ment whenever essayed. The leaders in the proposed enterprise—those who furnish the means—undoubtedly considered him pledged to this purpose, and have been sadly put to it to supply the want of an American commander-in chief, of gallant daring, great experience and reputation—equal, in moral elfect, to half an army. lowa. —The following party resolutions, based upon the ground of non-intervention, were adopted by the lute Democratic State Conven tion of lowa : Resolved, That we deprecate any separate and sectional organizations in any portion oflhe country, having for their object the advocacy of an isolated point, involving feeling and not fact, pride and not principle, as destructive to { the peace anil happiness ol the people, and: dangerous to the stability ol’ilie Union. Resolved, That inasmuch as the territories j Ail New Mexico and California come to us free. ( etui nre free now, by law, it is our desire that j they tlioiild remain forever free ; but that until 1 it is proposed to repeal the laws, making the country fK'e, uud to erect others in their stead for tho extension of slavery, we deem it inex pedient and improper to add to the further dis traction of the public mind by demanding, in the mime of the Wilmot “Proviso, what is nl letvdy amply necumt l.y ft)” laws oflhe land. To Wash Linen. —'J/fie best way to lake iron stains out ot linen, is to dip the stained parts in a solution ol oxalic acid for about ten minutes, and then wash out in warm, and finish in cold water. Twenty minutes will complete the operation. All other stains except grease (which can lie removed by simple washing) must be bleached. This is done by steeping the linen after it is washed, in a clear solution of the chloride of lime or potash, for a few hours—taking care that none of the linen is above tho water- then take out the linen and wash it, then put it through some clear water slightly soured with sulphurid acid, when it should he afterwards washed well, and run last ly through a tub of clear cold water, with a W-1 tie blue in it, then wrung out and dried. These ‘ stuffs and this process, have shortened the old way of bleaching green goods, front fear months to one day—in fact to a few hour's- Scorched linen in a burned piece, nud the best remedy if only singed, is to wash in white soap, then rinse and treat with a little oxalic acid as men tioned above. To whiten linen, there is no use of milk— 1 the boiling of linen is a common practice to! xvhiten, every body knows that. The grand 1 thing about w hitening linen, is to use plenty I of water, plenty of good soap, and take out all j the grease, and be sure to wash all the soap out of it. If this is not done, tho linen will be full of yellow streaks. To take out stains of indelible ink, go to the apothecary and purchase ten cents worth of cyanuret of potash, or cyanide of potash, prop. Orly called, and dissolve it in an ounce of clari. fied rain water; and with a sponge apply the liquid; when the spots will disappear as if by majric. Let the spots be fiist moistened with his forehead, which fell his spindle shanks | quite to the ground and he applying both bunds to his face, scraped off the moving matter, and turning his eyes mournlully toward heaven, ex claimed, l () / God ! see my brains !’ How to Rum a Son. — 1. Let him have his own xvriy. 2. Allow him free use of money. 11. Suffer him to roam where he pleasej on the Sabbath. ■l. Give him full access to wicked compan ions. 5. Call him to no account of his evenings. 0. Furnish him with no stated employment. l’urstie either oflhese. ways, and you will ex perienoe a most marvellous deliverance, or will have to mourn over a debased and ruined child! Thousands have realized the sad result, and have gone mourning to the grave. Lithographic Stone. —-The Talladega Re porter states that Dr. Henry McKenzie, of that village, has entered a tract of land in Tujlade ga county, which contains a bed of lithographic stone of the very best quality. Ail the litho. graphic stone heretofore used it) the U. States, has been brought frdMft^^n any, the only place it has hitherto This discove k’ will jnc.oii.-iilei ii hie i ollingrapmsts of this country, tTu^n n of lithographic engravings; as itJian of course be obtained much cheaper from si quarry in Alabama than from Europe. The editor of the Reporter, speaking of this valuable discovery, says : ‘We have seen the Talladega and the German stone compared, and those who are familiar with the qualities which constitute the excellence ol the article, say that the former is greatly superior to the latter. Indeed, specimens of the former have been submitted to the examination of one of tho most eminent engravers of Philadelphia, and he pronounces it of tho very best quality. The bed is immediately on the banks of the Coosa l iver, and conveniently’ situated for cheap transportation.’ | There has also been found in Talladega a i liundance ol Tripoli, as good, we understand, |as any in use. Tripoli is an article used by , jewelers for polishing metals, precious stones, Ac., and it is called Tripoli because it was first brought from the country of that name. An Affectionate Spinrr.—We sometimes meet with men who seem to think that any in diligence in an affectionate feeling is a weak- ; ness. They will return homo from a journey ) and greet|their families with a distant dignity I and move among their children with the cold and lofty splendor of an iceberg surrounded by its broken fragments. There is hardly a more unnatural thing on earth than one of those fam ilies without a heart. A father had better extinguish his boy’s eyes than take away his heart. Who that had ex perienced the joys of friendship, and knows the worth of sympathy and affection, xvould not er lose nil that is beautiful in nature’s than be robbed of tho hidden treasure of h^ I heart. Who would not rather bury his wife i than bury his love for her ? Who would 1 ‘ml 1 rather follow bis sdtild to she grave than rfjtoHilj j his parental afleefton ? *> i Cherish then, your hearts best affections. Indulgo in the wjirtn nud gushing emotions of fi lial, parental and fraternal love. Love God. Love everybody ami everything that is lovely. Teach your children to love : to love the rose ; the robin; to love their Gad. Let it be the stu died object of their domestic cultures, to give ! them warm hearts, and ardent affections. | Bind your whole families together by these ! strong cords. lon cannot make them toonu. i morons. You cannot make them too strong, j Religimf is love ; love to God ; love to man. Latest from Europe. TE LFOKAI'HED FOR THE CHRONICLE & SENTINEL Bultimoiie, Aug. 31, 10 P. M. The Caledonia lias arrived, from Liverpool on 18th. The unfavorable accounts ol the growing Cotton crop in America, has caused a further advance in the Liverpool market, with large daily sales. The following are the official quo lotions : Fair Upland 5Jd ; Fair Mobile sgd ; Fair Orleans 3Jd. The accounts from the manufacturing districts are encouraging and business generally is active. The Queen’s visit to Ireland has terminated. She wes everywhere received with the greatest enthusiasm. Italy.—The French troops had left Rome. General Oudinot, it is said, had exhibited a strong feeling of dissatisfaction at not being per mitted to return to Paris. France. —At the close of the sitting of the National Assembly pending the debate in rein lion to Prince latter fas we lead mi§© ©© 11 &im©© ia &To Draining low Lands. —The present is a tavorable season for opening ditches in those lands which require draining, and which cannot bo worked on well except dry. There are many valuable tracts of land in Maine which require the performance of this operation tode velope their intrinsic excellencies and bring in to notion the almost inexhaustible riches ol which they possessed. Some of the finest grass lands in '/Sew England, forty produced nothing but bullrushes and wild grass, which was so worthless for stock feeding, that no one would accept of it as a gift; but by open ing drains, ploughing, and carefully extracting stumps and roots, it has been made to produce abundant annual harvests of good English hay, without the assistance of a shovel full of rna. nure. We advise nil those who have bog lands to turn their attention immediately to their aine lioration. Hay, in this State, is always a re. muneraling product, and capital invested in such lands, will alwyys give a good return. Hallo well Gazette. A Connecticut dame, the mother of a large family, was one day asked the number of her child re n. “La me I” she tenlied, rocking herself to and fro, f’ve * moatj-y boy a and MUSCOGEE DEMOCRAT, BY l_. F. W. ANDREWB. As lillle tfoverttmenl ns possible; that tittle noting from on it rout rolled by the People.nod onijosyi j in its application to oil.” \ Columbus, Tluir<lny, Se|it. 6, IWIS. • To Correspondents. O’Anonymous Communications thrown mder j the table. ‘Drop L tters’ not taken out of the *ost 1 Olfice, hereafter, unless postage is paid. tLT ‘Plane Dealer,’ though not a dealer in pknes ! except occasionally perhaps, as a Cabinet worknart.'j has brought a‘railing accusation’ which he cainot sustaiti. We have but one rule in relerence to ‘h gli life’or ‘low-life’ misdeeds, and that is to have resjon sible. authority for the truth of all allegations made.— Not having this, in the case alluded to, we could not j of course,‘speak out.’ x i ILT Writers for the Press should take as much pains as possible to have their manuscripts legible. The time spent by compositors, in decyphering had writing often amounts to a tariff of 60 per cent on their work, which is a dead loss to the proprietor. | H i” Short, pithy articles, well written always haWvp the preference over those of a different character.! II r Numerous articles on hand which must ‘bade their time’and take their chances. , / Il f Another Chapter ot the ‘War PatH-’-Jn tP p , / but wo are reluctantly compelled to defer 0 a It. Y. 1,, of Glennvillc is informed that nothing about his business and care less. lie will please pay hisjpostage. !1 r Distant Correspondents are shave had double postage to pay, several times, Inconsequence of packages weighing over an QUrS’ x, Law passed on the 3d of March last gHPffio siiii raw, tiy P*itz Henry \\X” ren, D. P. M. General,all letters weighing less ths%< two ounces and more than one ounce, are chargea ble with quadruple postage. For instance,on a letter ! .weighing one ounce and a half, the postage was 20 cents for a distance less than 150 miles instead of 16 ; cents which would have been the pro rata charge ! The effect of this is to compel persons sending heavy packages to divide them into parcels each weighing i exactly an ounce or less, to avoid the additional tin- 1 unjust and swindling tax. We say swindling, be- i cause Government has no right thus to share the pith- ! lie, without rendering an equivalent in service. This j according to the present regulation, the mail Depart ment does not render, as a letter from New York, Charleston, Sic. which weighs one ounce and one 16th of an ounce, is chargeable with 40 cents postage, one half of which is paid for the one 16th excess over the ounce! Whether this is a correct version of the law or only Fitz Warren’s interpretation, it is plainly an imposition which should not be tolerated. Our \ Correspondents will please therefore use thin light pa per, hereafter, for their communications, and be care ful to pay all the postage instead of one half! Affray in Russel.—On Sunday morning last a bailiff', accompanied by a Deputy and Plaintiff - in exe cution, proceeded to the house of a man of the name of Jones, living a mile or two out from Girard, for the purpose ot making a levy upon his properly.— While there, they undertook to take Mr. Jones into custody, and with this view, dragged him out of Ins ! own door, and commenced heating him tocompel his I obedience to their unlawful proceeding. The Dep- 1 uty, Kelsey by name, got Jones down, and was han dling him severely when Jones’ wife handed her litis- j hand a pistol, with which the latter shot Kelsey in the abdomen, the hall ranging upwards and lodging in the i neighborhood of the left shoulder blade. Kelsey was - not dead, yesterday, but lies in a critical situation.— i 1 - ‘A fair FICHT NO MAN TOUCH !—A good Georgia Democrat, in the adjoining county of Troup, said the other day, after having seen Gov. Towns at Milledgeville, that it was a fair fight bmx’cen him and Ned Hill, and the Whig candidate :—‘and that if both ends of a brandy barrel were tapped, and one of the candidates placed at each end, they would, meet just about halfway/’—Lafayette ( Al .) Tribune. This Georgia democrat state iTxvliat'ctoncfition the above named parties xvould *?, when they met abo t ‘half way’*of the bran ly barrel ? While George would only feel a lit lle mellow, Ned would he so ‘hoxv come you so,’ asto need the best services of bis ‘spittoon clean eiV £.the Reporter, to cleanse his patron from his own defilement ! •Speaking out. —AVhat possible claim had young Messrs. Crittenden, Clay and Davis to their appoint ments, expep* the accidental qualification of birth ? How many ‘elder and better soldiers’ werp pushed a side to make place lor these sons of Senators ? Boston ( W.) Transcript. The Whig papers are becoming restless under the I system of‘Nepotism’ which has obtained, under Gen eral Taylor, as wed! as under previous administrations of the Government, in tru^^ abominable the appointing lice lops and jAxUlvir 1 - 11 hlrli (V o lieml'tary descent fivj® for* mer illustrious men of tlie Republic. The “.Huddle Extramc.” The Rome ‘Southerner’ says lliat “Judge Hill is noilber a drunkard nor a Son of Temiieraiice. He occasionally indulge* in a social glass wliioli lie lias a rigid to do if be elioose*. and iioauui in this free country lias a right to forbid him. - ’ Just at this ‘crisis’ in bis affairs, the above is proba bly correct, as we learn that the Judge is quite abste mious in bis cups, since be commenced electioneering! Some writer lias said, tlmt “ extremes are generally illiberal. Ido not bold with the inebriate in his love of brandy, nor with the tetotaller in bis|devolion to wa ter only. But when there extremes meet, they make a very palatable fluid ” Are these not your senti meiiU, jdeasn your honor ? Wait upon tiie Mechanics. —Our contemporary of the'Times’copies and endorses the strictures of the Rome ‘Southerner’ upon the address of S. T. Chapman Esq. delivered before the Mechanics’ soci ety‘o'Macon. These strictures are hostile to Mr. (Japiiian’s views, and in favor of instruction of ne groes in the Mechanic Arts. The Mechanics ofMa. con, however, approved of the sentiments of the Ad- had the same published in pamphlet form. Tin i3ue then is clearly between these Editors and the Mechanics of the State as represented by their 1 gihten of M aeon. The latter, composed of all par- not permitted to vindicate their own cause or (jet l vindicated, without being taken to task and as favoring anew scheme of abolition ! 7/ie of Columbus who are thus placed on 1 lev J with the negro, will doubtless appreciate the mercies’ of such politicians as our neighbor, . ‘ldes of October’ have come ! If they do understanding!)’, and by w ay of rebuke to all we have lost our judgment. MlY’ the way, these friends of the policy of instruct rP ie negro in Mechanic arts (the right is conceded) U- Wnu more to make abolitionists in Georgia, than Garrison tribe of emancipationists at the Disgust at their degraded condition and the cmMflition thrown upon their labors, will, ere long, deadly opponents of those who are now friends of the institution 1 Mark the prediction! From the Enquirer. ‘Civis’ of the Democrat., floundered through a I garbed statement of Judge Hill’s course in the Legislature in No. 1 ; hobbled through a mis statement of the facts of the trial in Jasper, in No. 2; struggled into poetry in No. 3; and let down in what would have been No. 4. He should have concluded with‘misrepresentations correct, ed,’ then his series would have been complete. 808 SHORT. The above is all the answer we have yet seen to the scathing and searching operation of our Correspondent, ‘Civis,’ into the ‘pretensions of Judge Hill’to the Governorship, save what has been said by the Rome ‘Bulletin.’ If ‘Bob Short’ thinks ‘Civis’ has made a ‘misstatement,’ it is the easiest thing in the world to refute the allegations the latter has made. ‘Civis,’ himself in No. 4, points out the method, CO” Oet Col. Water's certificate of the falsity of the statement and the cannon of ‘Civis’ is spiked at once. But not otherwise. It cannot be done by th e face tiousness of‘Boii Short” or tho <i£wsf ofthe ‘Bulle tin.’ This Editor has no right to denounce that as ‘false’ and ‘slanderous’ which the people of Jasper know to be true. Nor will his calling ‘Civis’ an ‘telhilowed and graceless scamp’ be proof of anjb f but the Editor’s skill, in the use of bilh^JHic! That is all. It will not prove Judge I c m guiltless ofdishonorable con duct, any mo ‘°®an his denial that the Judge ev er gets beasf the Bench, wilUy^tf Round Islanders.—' The army and Navy officers | sent to look after the assemblage convened at Round Island, Pascagoula, are making Judies of themselves by issuing their proclamations and proclaiming mar tial law, and embargo, &c. against unarmed citizens. Lieut. Randolph of theU. S. Ship, Albany, and Col. G. M. Totten of the army are the individuals who have thus set at defiance the laws of Mississippi and the rights of freemen, without the shadow of author- j ity for so doing. Randolph tells the persons assem bled at Round Island that they are 1 vagrants in law and in fact’ and cannot be permitted to occupy their present position. He also says that he will cut off 1 all supplies from the Island after a certain date. And all this when there is not a single stand of arms on j the Island, or any other evidence of intent to violate ! the laws of the Union. Such high-handed issump- j tion of authority,on the part of tliese.officers, is receiv- j jpg proper rebuke from the press of New Orleans j and Mobile, and should, at once, be condemned by j the authorities at Washington. Behold your Ally. —The Muscogee Dcm - , ocrat joins the hue and cry, set up by the Can slitutionalist and the Federal Union, against us j upon the Calhoun question. It is not a little re markable how the ‘no-party’ mania afflicts those ; who are bitten by the eccentric Cajroiinian.— j They begin, straight-way, to sna>-Tat friend and j ami all for tlnmuyd of the : ■fcj&uniociut ■ jaK t.;i• imii'n innwspß •jl-’ f'i ■ IfadßL ■no in i Hilliard for their errors, and Polk, Cobb, and Lumpkin, when guilty ol the same.’ You have not spared POLK—that’s enough ! You class Cobb and Lumpkin with Polk, do you/ Very well—-very’ good company. Blaze away, | gentlemen, at Mr. POLK—let the democracy ol ( Georgia hear you! The above is from the Athens ‘Banner,’ that pink of fairness and consistency— the Editor of which has lately declared ‘war to the knife and knife to the hilt,’ against the friends of Mr. Cal houn, in Georgia, and who has further declared, that he would never again support a Calhoun Democrat lor office! The said Editor may make all he can out of our remark, that wo had not spared Mr. Polk when guilty of error. Mr. Polk was a great and good man, but be was not inlallible. He was liable to err, as all other human beings. We think he erred several times, first in giving up a part of Oregon after declaring that our title to the whole was ‘clear and unquestionable,’ 2dly in signing the Oregon I erritorial Bill, with the Wilinot Proviso attached, and 3dlv, in con ferring office in some cases, upon individuals, solely because they once had distinguished fathers and in opposition to the public will. Ncverthe less we have not blazed away and mean not to ‘blaze away at Mr. Polk,’ because he is now numbered with the dead, and because while living, he was an honorable and upright repub lican, and worthy of much respect and venera tion as a statesman and as a man. The ‘Baiti ner’ judges, however, by a diff'erenfrj’’ ,an< * Rr fl- His independence consists in aupporii£* lu Pr ty loaih.r whether right or wrong, ly denouncing his political opponent though he should happen to do right ever so often in his ( life. His praise and his censure ate alike in discriminate, senseless, and soulless. In one thing only is he consistent —in fulsome adulation of his idol. Howell Cobb, ever though, thereby, I he should become so erratic as to vilify the great statesman of Fort Hill. For, what but in curable blindness of eyes and hardness of heart could induce any Southern Editor to attempt to exhalt Cobb to the elevation of a Calhoun, or seek to lower Calhoun to the level of a Cobh ! Jehosaphat! But that would be a metempsy chosis 1 .Next Election. Mr. Editor: The following Independent “Ticket will receive the support of many voters at the ensu ing elections in October and January. For Senate, Gen. D. M’Dougald. “ Houseofßep. Maj. John H. Howard. “ “ “ Col. H. L. Benning. For Sheriff, Col. A. K. Ayer, Clk. Sup. Court, Thomas A. Brannon, Esq. “ Inf. “ Maj. Win. M. Reeves. Tax Collector, Col. H. Noble. “ Receiver, Theobald Howard. Coroner, G. B. Terry. CRAWFORD STREET. For the Muscogee Democrat. Hurrah for Jimmy Bethuno! Mr. Editor : I am surprised at your apparent op position to that incorruptible and independent Demn i crat. James N. Bethune, Esq , for a seat in the next . Legislature. 1 think him to be the very man for the ! “crisis.” He is pledged to reform all abuses now existing, and imposed by the legislation of the State. He goes in for an equalization of the burdens and j benefits of the government, and I have no doubt will I do all he can to accomplish this desirable object. At j present, as vou know, Mr. Editor, the people of the city are oppressed with heavy taxation, while the people are comparatively exempt. A citizen Ret — the Abducted. —IjMßßindividual ha* been delivered up and sent leans, where he is now in charge of the c authorities to await the trial of the Spanish Consul and confederates for hia abduction. Rev testifies to the fact that his going to Havanna was forced upon him by the Consul! Judge HILL and bis Pretensions. No. 4. “But when at all, there’s nothing to be got, The old wife law and justice will not trot. That law that makes more knaves than e’er is hung, Little considers right or wrong, . But, like authority, is soon satisfied, When ’tis to judge on its own side."—Bi'TLßß- To Hon. E. Y. Hill: The rock mav be carved by much labor into fantas tic shapes, and polished by the hand of art; it is still cold, heartless and lifeless. Although it may be said to represent a statesman or a hero, no Promethean spark of patriotism can be made to glow beneath its bur nished surface, nor warm its frigid nature. Artificial heat sullies its character and destroys its fitness for farther use. Yon, sir, may thus look on the world around you, as a mirror reflecting many representa tions of yuur moral state : your sensitiveness only w revealed under disclosures of your conduct; for it i thejfestering of an inward disease that, like burns,- smart most acutely when exposed to the air. Char acter is similar to the bone formation of man : io health it knows no pain of itself by cutting or harsh treatment. Lei chronic disease pervade its structure, j and it becomes more acute than any other part ot the : body, and its corruption more offensive. The simile is : harsh ; we have giyen the regular exposition of facts, ka'aJ these sketches vou to the , rT-lw ; Wt ciiiimjt . sir, have any that act for you. None have dared to ments of “Civis.” Garbled, nonsensical and irrele vant private certificates float among a limited num ber, to counteract the truths which they fear must in evitably injure E. Y. Hill. A wag has suggested that we may look, also, for the statement of Gen. Taylor, to prove that E. Y. Hill, as far as he kjioict, treated Mr. Vaughn kindly, justly, affectionately, and even fatherly. What a farce to act before high heav cn! # Some have given statements, knowing nothing ‘•Civis” had uttered on the same subject. Jesuistical questions have been propounded with no pertinency to the real issue. They are evasive, subtle and de lusive. This is a novel way of defending a reputa tion publicly exposed. The true question to which all honest men will drive you, is this: Are the charges of ‘-Civis” true ? Let the Democratic party and the Whigs ask Col. Waters (who voted lor Hill forjudge.) whether Ned Hill told him that he would show the case to he bailable to the Court if he could be employed in the case, although he had told the i court, in the most solemn manner that it was bailable case. Col. Waters’ veracity will nX be questioned. His certificate is worth more than Queen of England’s, the Emperor of Russia s, or the Sultan of Turkey’s. Your friends, sir, may, through much importunity, elicit statements to circulate pri vately. We impute no censure to gentlemen, who, to avoid annoyance, give what they knoic —which hai little hearing—and amounts to nothing, and oljly to he used by receivers (though not intended by givers.) ss quark eye salves for the politically blind or spurious hellebore for the party maniac. I Irntw ! -hown that you are unworthy, from passion, preju j dice and avarice, to sit on the bench, in times of po- I litical excitement, when you are the chief gainer or ! loser. You have forgotten dignity, honor, sell-respect and even your oath, to gratify passion; and you, it i* feared, may do it again ! Our commentary is on tha past, and it fore-shadows the future. Respect yon cannot obtain bv continuing on the bench. I’ausanias, the Grecian, held to the sanctuary to save him from the wrath of his fellow citizens. The subterfnge did not avail to protect him. The temple of justice caiinjpt screen you. It is of thousands of evmdfnfn to sec yon retiraMflKthe Ar'lir-r the .•'.•oil ‘ucerinb ‘-vbsV f ß .t’ offu'.^B 1.-.M.t. I cannot appeal to propriety. Such appeals fall on peals of’ the sounding brass or bai. Do many of vonr political o lie Governor ? I will refer to the ca*e\ 0 f ftjfr Tt-own, formerly of Morgan, now of Jonea cb y ’ When you were a young man you came to Mor(,„ n business. No man did more for you than Mr. ‘lron*, who was the sheriff and a popular man. Yo, ie> ’ vowed your debt of obligation, and smiled with )fn _ placency for more favors. Little did the huak 1M j_ man know that lie was fostering a serpent would repay him with ingratitude. darkest crime found on earth or in hell. V\ hetipil promises most profusely, tremble for the victim. As a Whig, as a friend, he thought lie had some i,flu ence over you, in the case of his distant relaive, Vaughn. He came, he appealed to your hone-, to vonr debt of gratitude, to your promises of friend hip. They were empty names. Like Shyloek, you a ted, and like the Jew, you were defeated. Cantlese Whigs and their extensive connexion think you worthy of any elevation ? Can they, possessing the least family pride and the most zealous partizan pre judices, forget this insult, or think the man, who thus : brutally insulted them, worthy of further reward* from any quarter ? The writer knows human nature, and can give the response for the honest Whig relatives and voters in Georgia. They asked only a fair investi gation, and this was denied. Coolness, temperance and freedom from prejudice, arc essential fora judge, i Your past life proves you arc u-an/ing in the: w Aor*- j arable requisites. Another sheet shall still make new developeinents. Your humbuggery we have not yet ! noticed. We have bigger game. You pretend to be a blacksmith for political effect. In Jasper you ’ were ashamed of the name of head of a shop, and | transferred aJI to your lady ! You now come out as 1 if you had served your regular time and become a master workman. Did you learn your trade of Vul can ? If so, perhaps you were selected by your par ty only to forge (like your master,) thunderbolts for | your “Jupiter Tonans’. If this be the caseL the fol lowing prayer, from the Litany, is respectfllly pre sented to be offered up by the whole Democijicv: “ Fromiightninr^mKemneatG^nyilaguejjMrilljMlJl