The New York Herald Newspaper, May 22, 1860, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

2 NEW YORK HERALD, TUESDAY, MAY 22, 1860.—TRIPLE SHEET. “4 eeheol wacher as 1 opuld, and when @ cabinetmaker bad more active and ardent Tz PRESIDENTIAL ABPAIGH made s good bedstead ana table, although my old bess Bib rata bona and lending Lig bald | succeeded better with bureaus and secretaries than for the last tnres years, ts the Legtletane, ‘With apyibing else; but I Believe that Lincoln was always . and in levying black mail, to the | more sveescefu! im bosiness then 1, for bis Dastness enabled | io news reccived (his aftermean ard was Py hin bim to get into the Legwisture. ma re, | ei e Convention wi was arranged for his es pecia! The Talkin Was) gton on the | SX. ermpeay | wi om Decause edventage came oun apet the republicans eae wie . ‘ of tbe w strogi ia hife. was (ica most crashing wei Their couptenances i Chicago Nominations. u dot be an anecdote as now. He ooald | uputterable disappointment. More than an: . — f the boys wrestiing or running @ foot race, ia | eous, they walked the streets in the sem! | quous cr tossing @ copper; could ruin more | bearers. Indeed, they mi ; IRGINIA INTEND TO DO? | isii:r'2e2 80 te Boye of the town together; and the | Senator Seward’s political demise. Because for him alone ot Wi AT DOES VIRGI cigvily acd impartislity with which be presited aia | bave the leaders held the black republican masses in lead. | ‘‘*quatter soveres berse race OF @ fist Ogbt excited the admiration | ing etrings, and allowed no name to be breathed for the | construction of m and won the praise of everybody that was present | next President, but William H. Seward. His aim has boon | settled, and io Alexander H. Stephens, Robert Toonibs j0' i sicraing wih diienuce, and to ‘was | wrctght or from the momeah he 'alred, de a | taartre for snd Howell Cobb on the Se | ss, wien we bah ered, and bended or hace | hus, (ree doer abaloniaty "aad every thr sag Comreatcn cession at Charleston. se ti “i tadwham Whos incase sis | Cee ta ion tge "tha skews wi ai rated proviso, and the abolition tornado swept over the | Bishop Hoghes, and recommended ools and soparate country, Lincoin again turned u of Con- | {unde fgp Catholic scholars, and caused the distribation of , con" YMPORTANE STATE MOVEMENTS. | grees trom the San, Se catia” fnctine ikke Se, | bis ok Petrick’s Day & im the Chatholic eburches, | clusion io re than Milton's perviexed spirits did Hi fF 8 i BL Seward, dating from his ia‘amous Rochester speach of | agitation, while ita direct aad immedia’e effect is to im. | *ececed from the cenvertien om their failure to get it mited States, and (ad to welcome my | both in this city and in New York, Seward was elec: | upon the abstruse questions on which they held such high | necessary for mneethnnhannnane old a Irlend and sempeaic. ! Wut in, Gongrone he ‘distin Woneering for the Catholic vote of tla Bisle and nation; and yesionaet debate when they Lem prG ol ree ghe we entered. Inte gui elf by bis opposition to the Mexican war, | anc e been nominated woul iv Providence, foreknow and fate; THE COMING CONVENTIONS, | tkicg me tide of the common «nem against his own | celved a large portion of that. vote fa this and other eur- Py ry eer ye om as j pened Ricbmond 8 reselaiien, whish country; and when he returned home he found that the | rounding States. But he bas been de‘eated. His ambi- And found ne end ia ‘mazes lost. }, CAD clearer lights for te guidance O. a. & indignation of the people followed him everywhere, and | tiem can never become gratified. Al! bie vaulting, vacille- Jt ig ret my purpose now to enter the Mab of these dte- oe oe wie aay considerable ep. Resoly: United States have icin be was egain submerged, or obliged to retire into private | Ung, fascinating conduct availed him nothing. He 68 | iscie My own opinions upon the subject are known; policy 1 suggest thats Convention of am equal im the Terri- = » _ life, forgotten by bis former friends. He eame up again | down to the shades of oblivion with the irrepressible coa- dit is equally known thas thie difference of 5 ees eer would authority, that the tories ef that under the decision of @UR WASHINGTON CORRE3PONDENCE. i 1864, Just im time to make this abolition oF black repub- Siet upom bis head, as great a disappointed demagogue ss pocabal ads. io bo ew thing in the history’ of thie eatloss, tbe party be pos by Re _sriper ouees Ver mseel, the Bepreme Court ot the ne ee aan we renee. . 5, 1880. | lican pi ‘%. pany with Gi * ver aspired to the ruipation of any nation under heaven. may take immediate action ‘correct exposition ‘constitution betypearreamsnny Chate and Trcd. "Dewghea,te” “the Fepublican purty 16 | “abraim Linooln ean reise no enthusiasm ia his fevor in | Tote Who bold the doctrine that the people of the Terr!- | no party or other meoessity cam ever indvco me to give MY | United States, neliber the right of ner Mir. Devgan ond the Southern Demreracy—No Blige of | 0G open the Bate of New Yor. There is no respect for him here Corer ee otto eret, principles, of self govern | assent to any declaration of principles which afirma oF | can be destroyed or impaired by or Peace, but War to the Knife, dc , de. Now, the only poinia in all thie statement of Judge | ™0re than would entitle aay man tothe common courtesy | TAPt tle) by Territorial law, and regal (yard ec ee RRS ag Oe enn orty | Mxial le 5 % Whore am Ito got”” exclaimed Daniel Webster, when | 020) ‘T.00d wy ae. Lineoln on the ocsasion, wore, | of,B¢ people: He We not known out of Iuinole. He has | For) seal oaher property, held the same views they | from aay poruon of ibe public domain, (open to setlo- | ys ‘Ghowsnan pein he peoronce us oie tse meoheae, Jolt, the last of the Oxbinet of General Harrison remaining | 11 0 Sugse's charges concerning the Mexican war, the Ili. | ‘eader. All tbat is known of ee this en at | OP do when we agreed ‘with thom to stand on these | mens te emnags,_wania the lenis ofa sovereiga | whenever the pr opportualiy, ocurred, us the ulti fm the Cabinet of Captain Tyler, It was @ uice question, platform of 1854, and the grocery siore, | ‘Be Country is bis aitempt to. prevent Douglas trom re. | lerme.,, Teo tit tie ee Poth} Sat, cad by hee Satherky. This vice principle of | matum of tbe Mr. Rustell, the Obairman Ser Tyler had bean read entiof the Whig, erereh, of which the Mexican war, Mr. Lincoln explained, that HERE called.” eeveral ef ihe ee eo he hot exelue elavery—that this required an ach of sove- | away or even pus in jeopardy. for the sake of party har- pe aa by all the Southern deiey “a Webster sti | claimed to be's mem>er in goo! standing had oppried tbe preamb'e to the war bill, de- | cane remarked this afternoon, af f00n a8 Lincoln's nomi | Teieuty todo. Some gentlemen of the North held, as they | mony or party eucces#, I will be no party wo such 800m | inained in the Convention, and ibe New York delegation. © Where am Ito go?” was aleo muggested at every pola x that war exialed by the act of Mexico,” bead | nation was announced, tat ‘tbo campaign was siroaiy | 207, sooty as abeclutely aa taey oould any caber Kind | Dacet the tect rattasbes Wstee,icr alte circum, | He.%as informed that there was strength enough 10 pass ‘of the greet campaign speech of Mr. Douglas to-day. Bat | Tieton ‘be bent ro oy Da eG ie ond did bat ontete | eae eee area wih sonrosiy a eumpett. | of Property, and by aaysiem of awe could virtually ex- | stances of each case, ending to protect, 1o strengthen, oF ee ad a cect ee ‘this answer was quite as broadly hinted in the tone, tem- | tainauch sentiments; and with regard to his keeping ® | yor, Nobody bere believes that Licooin can cerry acy clude slavery from amonget them, or prevent its introduc- | to advance the policy to be established. Truta is forma will, in all lity, be im the por aad drift of his speech, to wit:—“I am not going to | grocery store, Mr. Lincoln on the occasion referred to, | Susie, except Unio, Vermont snd Massachusetts. ‘Tnere | Hon if they chose, Often slaughtered in the and by the hands of ite vention when it assembles at Bal That ques- pays : and ip reply to the aforesaid speech of Mr. Douglas, made | jg ro helief that Iiinots will give her electoral vote for own friends, by ® struggle for that which is im- | tiog is not beyond the power of the Convention, as I was ‘withdraw, nor will 1 yield an inch of ground $> accom. the following oorrection, to wit:— bin. ible to-day, but which may easily be ac- red by ita President, General Cushing. a medate you, ye fire-eaters of the South. I am goimgt> ; + Now I pass on to consider cne or two more of theto | ‘The democrats are heertly chuckling over the result. complished tomorrow. It ie sometimes wise to usar these circametances, the separate Convention, Gght out this Ngbt, a2 we are in for it, and we shall see at | litle follies The Judge is wofully at fault about bie carly | They reem to tbintt this notination iccreases Dougiss’ | wg ie, | Booept ® part of our just rights, if we can have the residue | wishing to take all the chances for attaining ite objest, friend Lincoln being a‘ grocery keeper.’ I don’t know 8 | progpe the 18th proximo at Baltimore, Av New | No aenertion or declaration by ben gd one Way ae uate) and uncom, by the partial instalment; | from the voluptary concession of the other Convention, Badtinore which side will be in the best condition t> g1v9 | it Wouid have been # great sin if 1 bad been; but heie | Yon ws now rendered nearly certain for the demo. | other, could have affected the question in the leaas degree; | but nothing can justify a eurrender of | merely Abe resolution which has been stated, in’ quarter. Iexpect to be nominated at Baltimore; acd! | mistaken. Lincoln pt y cratic nominee, as well as Peopsylvans, New Jersey, for if the people, according to Great principles of self. 8 indiapensable to tbe rafety and of the Ib See elon teas vere of the United States, in favor ”» world. Itistrue that Lincoln did work, the latter part | Jodiane and several otber hitherto doubtful Btates, there | 0Verpment under the constitution, have the right con- true, we are surrounded with danger; but 1 do not of the platform of the majority of the States, to meetin defy you of one winter, in @ little stillhouse up at the Kead of i not b - the few Southern | “ded for by thoee who would espouse that side of the | concur in the opinion that the danger to the Union is even | Richmond, ‘week before the reassembling of the other his we take to de the true interpretation of this speech | Fosiow, "And 601 think my friend the Judg> is equally | Jecedere, °° Mt the fear om aczount of the tow argument, then Congress could not and cannot deprive | one of our perils. Our greatest danger to-day is, | (icnmond, oge mack be ef Mr. Douglas. We percetve that his friends are moving | at fault when he charges me, at the time when I was in a them of it And if Congress did not have, and does not | that the Ui will survive the constitution. The great ‘Such @ Convention as that invited to assemble at Rich- fm tho seceding States to supply at Baltimore the vacancies | Congress, of having opposed our soldiers who were ight: | HON, A. H. STEPHENS’ POPULAR SOVE- | have, the power to exclude Savery from THe | ed et ee ete neler’ niet, Protea, | mond will furnish an opportunity {or securing ooneert of he Convention at Charleston; aud bie Northern | "Fa us it appears, in part from the undisputed testimon RRIGHTY LETESR. bot, then they could not and did not confer it upon the | ardent atlachment to the Union, and, 1 doubt not, feel | sctio in the matier of obtaining & proper plakform from. pbalanx thus expect to carry him tnrougn by two thirds | oF Dougies in the presence of Lincoln, before an Illin Your letter of the RAY ZORDVILiE, Ga, May 9, 1860. | ‘Territorial Legislature. We of the South held that on. | such attachment for a union unrestrained by the oon- Genvention, SS hae @f the whole electoral vote of the Union They forget, how- | audience of thousands of men, from the testimony of Mr. prs Se inst. was Fecsived lest Bight, | gress hed pot the power to exclude, and could not dele. | stitution. Do not mistake your real danger—it in great, Of ection in the matier of the measures to be ever, tbat when the Convention #ljouraed over from | J incon himself,on the same ‘occasion, from the speech and J promptly respond to your ocail as clearly aad power they did not :) ‘that the people | Look to the tion of your ‘The Union hes Savaumtiodeesens. from the Baltimore Grarlesion, the Southern ultimatum of Teanesee, Ken- | 1/mcoln himself, on the same otcine rapubiioan sereaad. | S24 Davy Press of business engagements will permit. 1 Tes ones te mtteke eaiae tan beeaaiae a | aon amas tien eeattens eae, Sp ‘hag | Omaveation should be: ted. ‘The times of the as- tooty 150 Virginia remained to bs acted upoo; thet Uitime- | fog pany, that the antecedents of Mr. Lincoln eurbrare | Sra! “rdearor te be no less polahed and explicit than cam- | iHereforo the miutual sgreement was 10 take the subject | os its continuance will be compatible with your Speaiied © Sees Conmnuees ave 00 neat SLO ron Lip avery J Reemend on RB Say the following strong points for @ popular campaign: toa tn Ga ee weg Bye = cat of Congress, and leave the question of the power of R. TOU bogie a pm yi d Kadler say be anu eps that uldimatum. Pu peapia whats the conationtion 3 Bi friends can Seve Hof Should, Whey tall, they’in | 2° That he wan'a iat rata wood shopper Fin Ee Ey tle anol guy surprise ar arte, | cote thie bthe wool off Toe quanioa in dpe | HON, HOWELL COBB'S LETTER TO THE MA. | Seu Courezusne. "nm Porous should be celgsis to agp deoomne Deller. Ot (he Caewcation P| _ & That he was for a time engaged in a atilhhouse in the Suit, conaldering the elements of ite composition, and the ae and no act of Congress, nor any resolution ses IN COMMITTEE ; Realy remains to say that the majority of the Georgia ou ase it fact : y y 4 ‘eat anoula the Douglas men be strong enough 19 rele war that Be could best any of tbe boys at wrestling, run- Ger ce nae box Gun taoehe teres tee eee. tales we frat abandon the position ef Zon intervention ccthinome: Sn ise ae eta Ta tahoe a neh eats ak ere netsee platform, Border sage Mata bling and jong ibe chwriion, we | "RY ina incu ute more intor Une a tbe ober | {UNS mug nemas inanecane med rere, | fe Reema cowengysrange tome ht te paoie| Teehed me, Tan hee tne ered tr cage (niver | nnd ae Batmare Convento, tore seine so Sierctine democrats party. Thus we construe thie wocech Teaha preaiea vem fist fight or a horse race in & be'as useless ax ungracious to inulge in any retlectons | $1.) tule Northern Construction, os Xie tarmod—oopecial, Sna'T shall endeavor to make i equally “candid.” * | to be w disposition im the latter Oonvention to concede ‘tir. Doogias. It moans, that having alreaty a majority | siyig which excited universe! admiration and praise. a8 10 whose {ault the rupture was owing to. CerbsPs, | ty since the decision of the Supreme Court, in the case of lone Se for the fatare | something on the platform. HENRY 9 @f the National Convention under his commend, he in- ‘are recommendations which. are hard to beat. | 222 most peababiy, wates extament sat of pas- .d Scott. in this ‘connection, T ‘may be permitted to | % oer country. cannot be thet both the L. BENNING, fends to use it, and the vacancies left by the seoeders, @ | 1), ‘are ibe Teal genuine old Jacksonian qualities of pop- sion , in pursuit of particular ends connected with the ele- | soy that Thave read with deep interest tho debates ot | Safety of the South and the of the Union ‘Chairman of the Georgia Delegation. ect his nomination his own platform. Weare si- | Tati they appeal to the masses, who understand the | Yate OF overthrow of particular rivala for Dreferment, | the Charleston Convention, and particalarly the able, logi- | 87°, Seriously threatened. It aa conviction sania tpenisbed that be a only bal way Mhrough; shat perbape | Tpnil work of w poor Poy, and eympathing with bie suc: | Teccesary on ‘uch oasins to navancs th public good, | CA 824, eloquent speech’ of the Hon. W. L. Yansty, of peoples ths inporant ee eye and SQUATTER SOVEREIGNTY MEETING IN AU- The very worked part of eno win was the real cause of the ruptore. Be that as it may, na. soshodiy, ———— ‘on the part of the South ‘secari GUSTA, Ga. mid to leave an o for a reconciliation. But as there | Sct#® + | have seen on his of the question. its greatest 1g policy. part ve iy sae reriscetr area ace | ba onion surg ccapeer he mune tO MA | etpe'cnastbelaaea?Tomyiiad me coume meas | Eat antega mempneanry at Sizer | oy'uSer ante ib Sey fem, ibe Cae |g, rom Angee Carole, MATT) aa ug an O ids be oth pono ore ior than Ml to de clew. J t of the one and the maintenanee of the other. Like your- | write it with shame and mortification, that s majority of cee pany, oe she deme- | bays the town together? Dose not this prove, considering | 4 sae Convention should be called at an’ early day— | \te'iSa sen wile alibas baa been aud to tho oourrary, | elve® 1 nage sated to tho necinal eqmeratia Sirw 09 | 6S ues Weleonee mae oe = om f rr ¥ . vention consid , ’ 4 conquered w popalar sccial habit, which in the case of any ph og pe wie the wae po notwithstanding. "This, be put beyond the power of re: | ibe elements of the yea ws be brought wr to aquetier ‘ ‘We have always ‘Wasumvcron, May 19, 1860. | other than a retolute man, fully competent to govern bim- | thought,” and determine whether to senda representa. | {utstion. But he stopped not thero-—he went oan into united and cordial co operation. With thie convic- | feared the worst. while: for the desi. When Kaneoin ond Hemlin—What is Said and Thought of this | self, leads down to ewift destruction? “Old Abe” i# the | tion to Richmond or to Baltimore. The oorrect determi. | Té/eremce to the decision of the Bupreme Coart ‘0, | tion I witnessed the Of tho late Charleston | the first news of the seceding movement reached Angus. boy’ for the people, and the republicans are in to win, nation uestion, as 1 view it, will be showed, conclusively, in s most pointed sad thrilling | Coovention with intense deeply regretted we believed a the democrats were in favor Maka in Washinglon—A Complete Surprise 1o the Pols | 097 Seaber; and Goss ow The doctrine of non Jator: | Simax; (Det this frightful doctrine could not, by | {he eausce which led to ta dareption., Of the seooders. But within three daye, wo begun to foal Meians—Limeoln the Real Author of the “Irrepresitle OUR RICHMDND CORRESPONDENCE. vention by Congress, with slavery in the Territories, | ROOMDUNT 00 10 yo WRN dhe tes maamse | _ 10 considering the ‘course now to be pursued, | they would give Sy, evel het the epescdes of @onfiiet’— What Will Seward Do? dc., de. Ricnuox, Va., May 11, 1860. ovgbt to be adhered to or abandoned,by the South. 18 | hand he showed that the doctrine of ‘squatter wo should understand dietinctly the reason of ‘the failure | Governor King and Fiournoy. At second ie Abe can.” Judes Dog rected Teeny |, crm ef Pipe ae many meno ina Pre | Scalanher iempetal Wetec fedantars | 1 gee te Coma oninrm avn chy soe | Sitmenteneen Wi mendes, “tiger | Sct‘at ue’ wierd" aratt"and’ corey he frm despatch 10 the Capitol announcing the noml- | “Vins sentiment om te Platform—Motives of Virgina aa tbe prometon of thle or oat individual, bowever We.et the South now complain of non inverventioa, oF ask ferenoes which led to the result at are imma- | the letler of Mr. Stephens, like a bomb in the camp. mation of ‘Old Abe’’ as the republican candidate, on the Palien Mating | ¥orthy OF unworthy, ought to enter toto ite consideration. hk - to insist upon our allies to | tefl and unimportant, then there is no cause for trouble | The people had not the rey bg hy Se LY Ghivd beliet, Ry mueeh praghe Mwanenepenltebiuhas, | “4Oreee se Pep Demers Ttis « great eubject of public policy, affectiog the vast in. | ,, What else h } Would it not here bees sence | oF apprebension. The'public mind should ‘pro- | Gevernor Cobb and Mr. Toombs, the Wednesday wh + | im the Btate— Movements in Regard to the Black Republican | tercsts of the present andthe future. It may be unneces- pon ye see ounce them to be 80, and they should be from | Bight meating, although we hed, at the very first oppor- played off by some wag upon the Little Giant, the report | yy inos im Firgimia—lmproper Liberties by @ Doctor with | tary snd entirely uscless for me to obtrude my views | more mavaral to look fer dinching on thelr side than on | ou, ts as unworthy of ‘consideration. Are | tunity, the ‘sin our Wednesday ove- ‘peomed prina facie 90 very abeurd, improbable and in- Cobslitads, de. Be pen this queation, in advance of the of such STzmcgttetean ek hoped oh Gadeaany Wien the ‘of Georgia prepared to pronounce this jadg- | Bing . John 0. Snead, meeting, pro- qmeéhie, Towards night, however, all doubts were re- tone ater have received through rella- | Soive. '{ tarnot, however, comply with "your request, | WROstood with ua upon it in the contest of 1866 are will- | Seth, Toure destiny of tha Soul Thsre. were, we Brown ‘end Judge’ Lave, but, be ‘ras vot silSwedy how volve. I cannot, however, ar req! 70 3 “4 moved. And what then? The nomination of Polk 10 1844 | 1 crannels, 1am satiated that he Virginia delegation, | willicut dolng ao io. limited extent, atleast.” This, Yshall | }26 sli) to wand on %, why dhowla we not be equally Mill: | ‘notnts of diferesee at Charleston which produced the die- | ever be managed to stale tne substance of them In bie 2d not create here a broader grin among the dolighted ably of one or two members, wil) | °°. 2 the first place, then, I assume, as an un. to have @ juarrel with the ‘North anyhow on general ruption of the convention :—1. The plaform of the party | speech. the whigs than did this repott of “Old Abe” among the ipa n ia hen questioned and eaquestionsble ot thas noninter- | Socount. it'so, in bebalt of common seaee, let ws put It on the eul bef clovesy; 3. The nomination ofa proper PL peme pledggmety ty = ft cr wi they tated been ears ro. » candidate Preaidency. . ‘amused democracy and the Union opposition party. And wast én ayia kok Se aeatiin ofa platform. Nine ceived,’ reetguiagd,' kad. acted Pg Bl pg ne ee ee co ena eee For oe ee ee at cman wi Se one ence of Col. Gardner, and to the letter of Mr. Stephens. Sen Hannibal Hamlin for Vice President. Why Hamlin, | 1.05 twentieths of all whom I have heard express an , ayy Mes oo Ee. pA pas pp tive acts of our enemies rather than say supposed | “emocratic States of the , agreed upon 8 platform be Ska joes had mone Rohe ling ‘when Simon Cameron, Pennington or Dayton, of Now | orinion upon this subject strongly favor that doctrine. bathe amine of #1 meyny ef en her force | *Rott comings of our ‘cna ge aren ahiod ihe rahe iaek erate 1S os Gib Goa prope, feo ify of the citizens ogetunt the intdlous of Squat Joreey ; Preston King, of New York; Banks or Wilson, of | S10 ao ao from policy a8 well as principle, believing shes | ®gsirat it, mmauy way—that they shall not latertore or act per BARS han geting oad among, | the common Territories of the Union-—claimbag for’ them ter sovereignty fovght the battle wo admire Masachusetis ; Femenden, of Maine, or Solomon Foot, of it is the beet means of stopping the agitation o: ahis vpou i at all—or, in the exprere words of Mr. Calhoun, Foint which may eo 4 subject us to « charge of pao hoped gmp dy Wy Yate po fe pte ey a pane Boge hy ran “ twe great Southern jeader, that Congress sbali ‘‘jeavo the tution and laws of the land extend to their brethren of | particularly to Mr. Smythe elder Mr. Sacad, whe ‘Vermont, were at the command of the republican party’ | sigvery question. Bince the disruption at Charleston, the | whole sui ere the Constitution aod the great prin. | CPC#ch of plighted faith. Wnetever may befall us, let | ino"non-slaveholding States and thelr addressed the meeting, bat the same zeal and forvor ‘We bave already heard this ticket of Lincoln and Ham | |.1.::9¢ merits of the doctrines upon which the democratic roment pisces it” Tais has ben emi. | Ue ever po , by friend or A good as our | Tore, nothing lees. The seventeen ‘which which sctuated them was manifest also in the rank and Mm christened “‘the dirty shirt ticket,” for while ‘Old | oy guia aro very generally discussed. ‘Toeresult has m docwing. It was gpaounced by Mr. nt a ta} Bg as, pt ——s pertect ‘unanimity agreed upon ‘his platform are all of pay ee ee We — abe" is said to be as rough a pion of timber for the Waite | Ter’ very dectded conviction that Douglas’ equaticr sov. | Stas, acdv afer too yeursot Clusia, wag, topo es Fy'our principe, or shall we, outung looge from our | ‘2% cerlain democratic Sates. The candidates to be | 1ers Mae 10} of Set ee treo romances, that "-hngus- Bouse as Gutbrie, of Kentucky, Hamiia is about the most | 7. doctrine would lead 10 an intermin. | ibe batis of the adjustment flasily made’ in 1550. Is was | Moorings mbere we have been, safely anchored so many | Vicg must Teoolve thelr voles to give them the | ‘ # not the Slate of Georgia.” At Milledgeville the coa- atovenly man in sppearance that we have had asa sand! nae the demand of the South, put ferth by the South, and | 2°?» — onan, ween new slightest prospect of success. The remaining sixteen | sttutional democracy wili meet the coborts of Douglas and ny in spe Lewd able sections! warfare for the mastery in the ite! be 4) oft perilous adventures, under the guide and pilotage of thove ‘and there will come “the tng of war.” We Gate fer View President since the time of Col. Dick Joho. } F re i crtablishinent tas been agate aud again ailirmad | Who prove themeeives tohavo no more Axedness of States, by virtue of their superior mumbere in the Cos. e an ~{ ferritorial Legislatures. This oonvietion is strengthened med as the settled polivy of the South, by par- pore oF etability ae to or ‘the vention, refuse to these principles. They did be much Cobb [vergon are a won. Bamiin, however, a pleasant, good looking, mid | >), recollection of the terrible conilicts Of which Keoveg | 'Y Conventions and State Irgisiasures, in every form that | Tinie hy wei Pat ~~. 2 | not aesert by the they efopted antagonistic prin. | strovger than , Stephens & Co., in this State. @e aged, middie sized man, with a complexion and hai N ® people can give authoritative exprsesion to their will rm See ae the Southern and demo- ‘This being on meeting, (the third time since ; has been the scene for years. It ts argued thata full re- | and wishes. cannot now be metter of dispute. It cratic States. Dolicy was to leave the question an | the Charieston adjournment), Mr. Garcner took the cheir and eyes as dark as those of Davie! Webster, Ho bat an | ovo of ube auty of Congress ty afford adequate pro- | history, as indelibly fixed upon the resord 4s the fact that open issue, so far as any declaration of principles was | and called the aseembly to ie. were perhaps serecable, musical votce, is & good spoaker, and in both | 110 10 piave property in the Territories would effecta- | ‘ht Olony of Georgia was settied under the auspices of concerned, but to give 9 practical construction to their oe hanaeek cua Oly Succes prewes, geny hy Gs houser of Congress he bas had a large experience in p> | 11. Lr mmate this conflict in the fature. The South Ugietborpe, or that the war of the American revolation platform, by the nomination of a candidate whose chief | gers and spectators. ry re Be affairs. Lit was a democrat down to the org snizavion iy ter o necessa- | was fvght in resistance to the wojast claim of power on claim to ihe nomiastion grew out of his Maowe Reslny ares, Ad Mr. Pritchard, of peng eg oa ef the republican party, when, with thousands o° over | rily detires to see an end put to this slavery agitation; | the part of the British Parifament to the doctrine for which the Southern and which Deen kept tandip that paper, we men of the Van Baren free sail school, ho weat over 90 | put such a consummation is deemed hopeless so long as Treier to thie matter of history connected with the sud- Btater contended. since that t'mo, for the e¢ the faithial, were the the vew free soll camp. He bas been chairman hereto * ne ee F ae Jeet under consideration, barely ae a starting point—to ‘The seventeen democratic States were prepared to | Sret business im order. Mr Swain desired to throw some fore, as a de the Senate Committ Com. | the Territories continue the theatres of sectional coniicte | show how we ttand ip relation to it. It ls not @ new unite upon any true and worthy man for the oom Bee rere Gacmien, ent provers to read the let merce. Asa Northern man, he is somowh between hostile intereewe = While ander either doctrine | quettion. Ithas been up before, and, whether rightly ‘There wee on their part no — whatever ters just received from Mesers. }, Brown and Love. hie notions of the tari sectional rivalry mag be inevitable, it must necessarily be | °F F#0rsly, it bas been decided—decited and settied just force upon their brethren of the States a candidate | Jops Pmyziy, Jn, in a few remarks, moved the lt je raid that Hamlin’s splepdid eocoess in Meine ia ag the South asked tbat it shoold be—not, however, with unacceptable to them. The issue on their part was for ¢f the reeolotions and called for the previous 2856, aa the republican candidate for Gdvernor, ant his | Cf @ peaceful ebarect,y should the doctrine of protection | out great effort and a prolonged struggle. Che question principle and success, involving ne consideration of | The Chair does Gis primary, eeoting wes ‘net con subsequent services on the stump ia Penasyiyi bed | prevail. Like causes produce like results; aud in apply- | Dow ie, aball the Sonth abandon her own position ia the mere personal advancement of a favorite candidate. | trolled by strict rule, and therefore the Wery inuck to co with bis Chicago nomioaion, >it 1s | ing to other Territories the policy inaugurated in Kaasas, | decision and seltiement? This is the questioa virtasily ‘The fixteen opposition Slates, on the, other bend, inpe ‘would be allowed. aBeged that the bard fought lifiaois campaign in 1858, of | we must look for resulte similar to those which have | pretented by the action of the seoeders from the Charles. Rot ony. to vmite upon the platform , Sacrum ceared restietions custateing Ge Caste. Lincoln against 1 rugias, was coneite: as eslablishing | marked the brief history of what Territory. As these | Won Convention, and the grounds upon which they based offered them by their brethren of the demo- | ton Ly delegsies bo the elements of ability, availa Mty and popularity oa the | facts come to be fully underatood the doctrine of proec. | their action: or, stated in other wdrds, it amounts to cratic States, but force ey id the | tent to and that the of 4 of “ Old Abe,” which would more (han ponsale | tion is rapidiy gainlog im popuiar favor. Next tothe | this: Whether the Southern States, after ail thet has nomination of Judge las, the and prmdpae f ngrenm Lon eg to both party for the oversisughing of Seward, Mf Bates, | consideration of its involving an important prin- | t#ken place on the subject. shoold vow reverse tneir pre. united voice of every certain demosratic State in the | mond and (The of Mr, Pritchard ‘Chase, Cameron, and ali the other shiaing gots of the | ciple to the South, comes that of its efficacy | vious course, and demaod Congressional iniervention for Union. 1 venture to assert that such = spectacle was | only proposed sending delegates to y 7 eS republican Wigwam. in putting an end to the slavery agitevon. | the protection of slavery ta the Territories, as & condition = eres fm the history of party conven- | SurTuE made a forcible speech in favor of his mo- Bi is conjectnred, too, that from their stamping quelil- | ] question if this latter view of the mater dow jag longer iu the Uatoo? or I take tt for tora. The were as pearly Givided aa it | thom, handling and squatter sovereignty rather ations, both Lincoln and Hamlin will be seat oat to prove | not effect more in the way of conciliating t! uence of would be considered by all as the most —a for them to be. Onone demo- i ‘their meta! and define their principles ‘rom State t> State— | ihe border Southern Stalee in behalf of ' dostrine | mircbierous folly to make the demand uniwe we intend ‘State and on tbe other all the and ’. replied ina few remarks, sestaining Lanoo'n jwally ‘n the Raat, where he is a stranger, | than apy other good whic it i208. If Dougias’ doc. | to purb the lseve to tts wimost and legitimate resulta the latter, who were not certain of . mage vote Dougies and equatier or ‘and the iso- and Hamlin io the West, where he ie comparatively wa- | trine presented any hope of Ineling this agitation, | Sha! the South, then, make this demand of Comgecss, and for the candidates that might be 2: on | thermal doctrine of Bob. Walker. He the exer- kpewn The chief merit of the ticket is its protomiant- | many of 1s other aisadvanteges would be forgotten in | when made, in case of failure to obtain it, shall she ne making both a platform and « candidate for the demo- | cise of authority by the people of an ‘Terri. fag aud unqualified {ree soll character. Lincoln, in truth, | toe bieseings which it would thus coofer. lastead of | cede from the Union, a8 & portion of ber delegates, (so ne cratic to elect. There certainly could not bes pot AT ay a A? }, and the ex- ie the author of “ the irrepressible conflict,” and not W. | that, however, it ls regarded as furnishing new food for | ancer instructions, and rome from their own free will,) Ko the coon o things. Chin = foreman beeper = epaer Qotoder, 1855; for om the 17th of June of thet year, Oid declariog 1 unworthy of ranted there? from Georgia would not consent to the consum. | forgotten recent letter » or did mot pr , eaid J Pad et he eal of proves: | Erica siance the nakea question, se I understand i, fefacr tha trensenea poly of the memevionl moajertey | comaider: him ‘geod asthorty on po ‘of the It is generally scpposed that the Virginia delegates will | preeenied by the action of the seceders, im tte full di of the Convention. In common with the delegates from | phrases equatter apd popular sovereignty. His speech meet tbe seceders in the Richmond Coaventioo, put not | Mepaions— lie «ngth, breadth and depth, in all ite magal- even otber Southern ez andrew from the oul, Bunk the akmogphere of Musou or Tuiaols, we Jor final action, however. Tueir influence wiii dountiess | tude body. Their action by the democra. | abould think, much en eat De exerted in the way of reconciliation; aed if that cannot It ie prevented not to the demoeratic party alone; it is . to the trust Svmsp made the closing feeling dis de effected, they will go in for an adjournment uat!l a'ter | troe that # conven ion of that party may fret ast on it. and the Balumore Convention. ESOT een tad scat pap TT gp py eo pa aes majority plat ar leetom, @ reun! e 's . eboa! stkaed. it oe an 8 douhern ‘mansion duly ane Umely consider It, for they may all have to take will De made. It le gurmieed that the Richmond Conren. | #i¢ 0s on it sooner or later. en i i i i ‘Tecommend the mame of some conser: It vies in importance high above any part; 4 candidate propeeed, the people would have recetved pwn the Milled, —— Thos Semnterien Southero canatdate, witheet ootuslly noma!” tion of the prevent dey, ano it may, and Sagnt to, ¥ need their report in sorrow, and spurned their candidate with commences the war in ‘we sincerely nating him; and if be shall be accepted by the Buitimore | be, weep them ali from the board. My jadgment is Sati ‘and his doctrines, Convention, the tthe demand. Il it were # nex question, prosented ; the sixteen States which | and bis aiders and abettors, may yet be united to defeal a this candidate effected. Virginie will, 1 ie thought, ntlight, for the Sret time, my views upon it Tage | them. We believe seventy thousand voters in our State lly co-operate with the seceiers to this extent, | might be different from what they are. It is known to but | may yet be arrayed against the equatters. end 1 sball not be surprised if she ery the we you and my Phe te I mR genet ee 9 will defy all aseauite from without My groatest appre- : Weed ai of tals compromise ition to the Baltimore | # cetblisbe! * Ipatanoe b 5 no favorite om | gam ta comprare ropemion gine Bulumore | Sect mes Ase my powtion upon tana the doce | LeMOCE i From conse wida ere the greaic Carleton inore | APPEAL OF TOR peas PARTY In enter the convention entirely purged of tho odor of evived, when they were original and open questions, | O2F'ti1 noing and unparalleled prosperity. course and | ‘The Charleston Democratic Oouvention has fiited | squatter sovereignty, whieh she unfortuaately brought } as my present views, I wil cite you to an extraxt Tiwe ls o Goteney pate ct ealy ot the North ‘and unjust | make = nomination, and to mest at Badimore with ber from Char This little error bas eujected made by me in Augay y last, om taketog | yet at the Routh, to Gre, desenaion, Oharaer aadon’ Particularly the | on the 18th of Jane. yf her to very bitter taunts and very oly names, as Tam | foal leave of my coostituents. I oould not restate them | prone ty w agalont this tendecy tbat’ the sober mipaed whose votes, | from the Convention before ite ‘thos ‘nod the prospect i that abe will falgg more clearly or more briefly. In apoaking of, and re: | S'0hy.. Tt # mgniae 7 SS mai Jn copnection with the certain democratic states, we look | [r0™, ‘Ae com > — hy wad’ more then cowaterbalance the evil whichtaiities | viewing this matter, I then said pant ae nye now be called | with tne greatest confidence for the election of our oan- | '**’ 2 hee | done by active and efficient service om the other exde, y ‘My then, in, that delegates ought to be sent to | ‘ates. withdrew with the ‘Alabume delageticn, "and + The following ureent. call, avued by the demoorata of It was, in my view, not the fall | wo éd Convention at Baltimore. The demand | __7¢ truth ie, that the sound democracy of the North | themselves into s separate organizstion, and adjourned aon shjent | Caroline county, wilt show Lnat the people of Virginia | measure of our rights: ‘bat required, in my judgment, the | esta Charieston by the seceders ought Rat to be nm, | afe éelermined to stand by the South in this hour of yg ag en > ‘ese bim Wo build up the republicac party for the dene ave a proper sense of the dangers by which the covsury | Coactment by Congress of all peadful laws for the protes. | MAGS a eet ote ont. %, | if the South will only be tree and faithful to heresit. ee 6S artctind ain ado of Seward in 1860. Its Known that Seward’s frieads | @ now surrounded — tion of save property in the Territories solong aa tne fer. | “ised thon | Harmony being restored op thie point, ® | unwise ceclaration of a few Southern men in favor of tte | Scatauon in the Neliooal Democratic Oeoreries ante ‘were es tanguine of his nomiaation st Chicago en wore DEMOCRATS OF CAROLINE, riterial condition lasted. ”” ee SS made of some man whom | nomination of aa matter of policy and ex- ‘thos far severea from hat party which bad oo long fe friends sucess at Chariorion. I i | Amemb’e in your sirengus st &-wilng irern on Pot an overwhelming majority of the Soxth was against ee we ee ee ae , bas in no small degree to the pro- | Fe Agee bead Te +4 wey Rnown, woo, thet Hr. Seward's frente cleime! bis af 1 the piitieal asp: your | that position. It was rail that we who maintained it | Amd the same ardor with which they entered and waged | fon, state of These exceptibnal casse | Preserved the constitntion, oo ae nation knd expected it are simple matter of jastion ani | Santry ae the Convention whist wiil | yielded the whole question by yielding the jurisdiction, | We contest in 1866, when the same principles were In- | hoye Deon tm some quarters for | Promoted the wells ‘cod caster Gs @ todas, cian to the man who has borne the drunt of ihe battle | meet Praaliect at She iame | ac bat, if we conceded the power to protect, woneone: | TUT ee poblic and will scgount for the otherwise unec- | Shon’ lomened, and) om S a Fine repevican party, We alreaty lear, 130, that they | py ty —; feguiea wh) were | fAarily conceded with it the power to probinit. This, by ; ae ee By ph 4 persistence with which the friends of Mr, wae en ene ee Semmplain thet he was cheats1 out of it by votes in the | apport ied s¢ your usw Con othe Crnveatin whieh | Ro means, followed, in my jacgment. Bat euch was’ the | [rst “por os. Let oar hands be tin | Dovglee press hie nomination against the exrnest protest | f° gs tne warn “rope, Convention from Southern Slates in whicn the republican | sasemsied in ubarisaton on ihe EM of April. The omiaraeia- | prevailing opinion. " And was map until it wae well as. | {bere be no cause for casting censure at our door. If, in | of a\uniied South. decom, ey party will harcly be tafe in veotaring to put up an | ‘iestions of eri wo ovr sountry demand the attention of every | certained that s large majrrity of Me South woald aotas | {be end, the great national cemocrelie party —the strong | ” 1 ‘neve thus briefly alluded to the diffioultion in tne | 7emers0e, Jackson, and « hows of the illustrious dead, the electoral ticket. So it ie possible that New York may go FF DeNGORATS OF CAROLINR COUNTY. for oF even vote for, Ccngressional protection, Wind thoes games wees 7 poe, pow gh hg Qarestcn Convention, and Se See Sie posto oor Taet_Siefterearie, ont, mete ome erence tld thes Seward We oot o Vac Buren to tate | 4 meeting was recently held in Richmend | though it came short of err wishes, yer Nt ountatmed ne | *8a 10 ‘we have so ohen looked with « hope that | Soon tke course of action which the of organised form, ratere er Tide nd tatoos his revenge in defeating hie own party because 0’ a per. | coudty in thie State, at which resolutions favoring Ooa- | sacrifice of principle, bad nothing aggressive in Mt, and | feldem failed, ae the only, party North on whioh to rely | cogni sow to pursue. As the time is #0 before (ee TR Penal Sinapointment Ik the meter of the Presisentat | greemional protection were adopted. Similar expressions | fecured, lor all practical purposes, what was wanied_- | ‘= we moat trying — were | reassembling of the Convention st Baltimore, I would Ba a yf yp a eran “ of optaton are jooked for from every quarter of the Sate. | (hat is, the unrestricted right of expansion over tbe com- | ‘8 Peril, let it not be eaid to, us, in the midet of the die | suggest the propriety of an immediate call by the Siate | i ie name and under the mask, So 4 umsented to the nomipativa A meeting of the citizens of Prince William coanty hes | ‘ron public demais, an teehinaton, convenience or mecen, | ester® that may ensue, ‘zon gti it” In any and every | T5tCvuve Ohmmiues for the March Convention wo rene. | FOS wa yy ft deen called to moet et Brenteville, in that county, to take | pity may require on tbe part of our aw @ | Crent, let not the reprosch of Punic faith resi upon Our | semble. It affords the best a4 our command | ‘™esb7se of i + a Blow weder te Oh some sction in regard lo a black republican meeting beld | "* thus the settlement wea tande-cther the record stands, | B&i2@. If everything lee has to go down, le: our uater- | For saccrtatning the democrats sentiments of the trate as Leh fought for = p AL, ft 8 few weeks ago at 8 place called Ocoaguan, tm that coun- | and by it 1am stil willing to stand, ea it wae fully up 19 | BB%d honor,at least, survive the wreck. to our future policy. When emembled, 1 would pI oy Ae EEG Seward and all the ty. The meeting was called for the inst, amd hae, | the demande of the South, through her representatives at Sen ©. coermaee. yace vee tion to the action of our ¢ }— t+ Dillows of the future week of the spoils conbt} ee, been held, Dut no sooount of ite proceedings not up t@ my own; and, as by it the Char and eutborize withoet knowing where we shall rest, or what shall bo their personal e | bas reached here aa yet, i should not be eurprised if the to the extent of population and capa: LETTER FROM BON. R. TOOMBS. in 00 with the of those with Some of the here are very indignant at thy | Diack republicans who dasembied at Cocaguen would be ‘Wasmrvatos, D.C , May 10, 1960. whom they acted” at. Charlea on to renew at “he . ere close upon us, we can. spology ticket of Lincotn and Hamlin. bat the faithful | waited on by @ committee and politely requested to leave you clearly perceive what 1 think of the Your letter of the Sth inst, was duly received, and | their efforts for a settlement of the difficulties which net who to destroy this’ ‘workers in the trenches affect a good deal of enthusiasm. the county. The dieck republican Convention which | course now to be taken on the game sudject. tn | would bave been before to, but for the fact thet I to the disruption at Charleston. ‘thelr parpose more anequivecally lately asgembled at Wheeling made outa list of electors cootroversy I was have signed an address my opinions somewhat that ‘not favorable to y The course of the delegation hes oo true dome certainly could not expect them to for every county in the Sate The list proves to be alto finally yielded my assent. It | at large upon the which you have to | they are entitied to the ungualifed thew are Tepiily towards ts consummation then Wamevorox, May 20, 1940. gether eperitas, vo ene meameors S Kaown to South—to the prevailing sentiment of me, and which reat T expected would havdlbeen pat Cvcrutecnia ant ln bemfly rane wet corres they are doing. the or will- "Old Abe Lancoin,” a8 Desorthed by Judge Douglas and | reside in the to which they are ) save ever would have been yielded | lished before this time; that having been delayed ia the | ing their ection with 4 to separate ee Bnei Barly History of “Old Abe —A Maier oy | SA ey car important righte or any meantime I thought beet to give yon brief reply Bite Geir pet soe wl best ot (tSwocratic party? et reer "Sihont Whahey—A Great Hand to Punish Whistey, and a tra perdias abroad should not be deceived by i. » operetion Nor woult Inge be the proceedings, unmistakable evidence of the steady | thorized to represent the State im to be | towel Ses Sa narnia tart carn Aplendid Regeree ala Pit Fight oF @ Horse Race — seth nett oe eeeel workings sbvance of sound constitutional privelpice, Perhape the | held in Richmond if time for the | must act, and sot decidedly, We ~ Guabsties—\N Abe” the Man for De Pox OUR ALBANY CORRESPONDENCE. South likely to arise trom time may not hare come fer the atiainmea: of the full ofthe Tasiar M4 we rombonet | must reuaite the ‘wih the para uaa, May 18,188 Ssvancne,"T Sst | Earbove Sen pedset ee petal we pe? | Wo acaeeea racing te, | aaa sng em tas cn ‘The most graphic, and, we dare say, the most retiadie Nomination of /émcotm—The Regency Dishaartemat—fhe has occurred’ since to cause | sentatives of sevenioen States to have sanctioned | sensions in our portions | city of Rontgomery on Monday in Jane next, to historienl aketoh of “Old Abe Lincoln’ tat we have | Black Republican Sewardites in Deapondency—Bridence te, to change dar position in relation to it le | and prewenled mach truth on the. slavery ‘once more into ~o poe RY ‘to ‘them in the Nationad tat thove of tbe Ee jsoue as ie Gonta'ned in what is commonly called the ma- | sound ond in of ecound I Baltimore, and to #opport an seen w beard, te thet which follows. Ii ts embraced in © the Barly Disruption af the Party, de. from 1848 to 1860, did afterwards stand n we Jerity platiorm, but when It wae thos sanctioned Sot ieen be a electoral ticket fo represent the emocratic national the opening specch of Judge Dougiae of the firet joint de. | When the intelligence from Chteago reached here leat Ted, tm aking of We elt Coorepmaa!ratation ot Proved and preented, to the Convention, it was well ir gd ty 10 | ncenination. ‘ate between himesif sad "Old Abe,’ at Oltaws, Iuinoig, | sight, that the Convention nd agreed upon « nomination | TS" 50 sui" becaaah of the common public dette? | the mincrey. The seceding dele Sees a men who have never deserted | several counties of tbe tate 10 tane such wepe as tany be Avguet 71, 1968, and reade:— | DY a majority vote, the frends of Senator Seward wore pL. in age) firmness, and | approve their . From the peat ia- | you to save themesives—will not force upon you terme of poy A, | ~ TA 4 Ie the remarks | have made | exultingly certain of his nomination. They boasted that | at the bazerd lives and for: | formation I have been able to obtain, I believe the ms- eat Se rest will sot, ventare to prem thom the fir im Jape, and ip suk counties where | they bad everything arranged should such « favorable | (net, the This cannot be; platform was not ouly acceptable to © majority of zou iret indicate by your action that You are pre- | meetings cacnot be held In time: we also fo al ; Bete for never W rally and eo | tbe Dut also to @ majority of the di if thelr a toa -4 trve democrate to at ada Cr eontingency occur were freely offered all this the South as | votes could have been taken per ‘thie be #0, it demooreay of Coorg’ must pow choose between | reople of fee mare toe marning, in the streets, in the Exchange, in the publie ka ack of 1864, | onght net \o have been defeated either by accident, weet | We two Wines ASD PSY, Ot eet, ne cb rer erme Ees'enort e musta our party, the hence Georgia, o D been a pame. offices, and everywhere elee, that Seward would certainly toes Ti te aseerted that the democratic party hitherto have | eesurance of thelr aid and support tm the The Cece ver dow ~ sy = reoeive {he nomination. From the activity displayed in hold | sflrmed Se principle of, 20a intervesten by Osngross other abandoned in the hour of danger and trial, and thie city and throughout the State during the last inte. | with slavery, in the States and Territories; but none | invite of your confidence, with notios in ad- ,

Other pages from this issue: