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2 LINCOLN NORTH AND SOUTH. How the Irrepressible Conflict is to Be Carried Ou. TERRORS OF SUZMISSION IN THE SOUTH, Fo= ‘Housaiy Millions of Property to bh. prstroyeds Richmond. WENDEL PHILLIPS TO STUMP THE SOUTH. Lincoln to Protect them by Proclamation and with the Army and Navy, &e., &., &eo, Our “Washington Correspondence. ‘Wastuxaron, Oot. 14, 1860. A Retrogyective View of a Recent Visit to Sowthern Stateo- What is Meant by Abektiontsm and Revelusion, dc. Just returned from ayieit to the intertor of tho States ef South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, cad from ‘he southern portions of “fennessee and the caswrn portions of Arkansas, « review of the tene and mont ef th: people of thove regiras leads to the following con- gtusirnr —1. That ¢bere are many who are for secession in ease of the clection of Lincoln, and it ts generally conceded sett? out waiting foreny orert act. 2 That that claee does aot comprize 4 majority. &. That the South will ugtedly @omand a separation in case Lincoly’s aiministration sehould initiate any polley calculated to interfere with the rights of the Seuth; in other words, to inaugurate the ochemes of the abolitionists of the North, as they have been sdyocated ever since the anti-slavery war cqm- meneed. ‘There is a wmtter which meny in the North do not omprehend when the South speake of tho Northern @bolitionists. Lange numbers of the members of the re- peblican party spera indignantly the imputation of being | Secured to day, throughou Wdolition ise whea it is preferred against thom, and yet they are ignorant of the characteristica of those whom ‘the Southerners almoet universally declare to be aboli- ‘Monists. The South do not think it alone requires an fmecndiary, cutthroat, robber, aseasein or a nigger in- @ugzectionist to be an abolitionist. Tbe moierate mem. (were of the Northern republican party think it docs. Bet whe Bouth insist that abolitionism consista in Jesser evite thac these; and those are the demands of tne Battslavery men of the North—iemande they have been uarging and presenting in the face of the South for years past—upan which the antislavery movement of the Nerth i based, and which infuse into it muob of its | Weetern Tennessee, Alabama, Missiesippi, and a slight skirmish op the Eastera trontiers of Arkansas. Every- where I have found, es;ecially in the agricultural regions vitality, independeat of the Territorial question, We mean — 1. The abolition of slavery in the District of Columbia. | government in the present crisis. Every movement is regarded with @ jealous eye. Tho report had reached & The abolition of the slave trade between the States, 3B The abolition or repeal of the Fugitive Slave law. Fee Southern protectionists (of slavery in the Terri. tertes), the Southera non interventionisis, and the South ere Unioniets, all unite in declaring that in case Lincoln’s edminietration should eusces#fully attempt carrying Into effet oiiber of these locg cheriehed schemes of the North- ere anti slavery meu or abolitionists, they will esteem fe act & just cause for secession; aad if the federal power appeals wo force for the purpoee of compelling submission, Sey will with 020 voice declare for open revolution, let Whe conse vences be what tuey way. This may be termed the porition of the moderatiais in the South, while the @iiras—and thelr numbers are by no means smull—are wendy to take the election of Lincoln as a cause per of ‘separation and the erection of a Southern confederacy. Bootbernere—men of intelligence, experience and taBvence—declare that oue drop of blood epiliod m defence of Southern righte wil! be the siguai that will bring the South together, from Maryland to Texas, with ono heart, one mind, one hand, one motive, ove imp " y say they d with sie rights, aud have no other alt rifle and bows while the copsery rtion of & ple will reatraia thetr more ardent brethren until the critical momeat ar vives or the impending danger be avertod, they will all Mant shoulder to shoulder with their friends and their neighbors in defence of their common right# and their property. In the words of Mr. W. H stephens, a Bell ‘and Everett or Union orator, in Memphis lately, the Baton men will advocate peace and Union wutil ao overt net is committed south by the ral 4 danghtere, and their families, Kiew and their property are as much interested in the solution of the question and ia the borrors of a civil war a2 the most ultra disupionist, aud they should have something to eny on the subject. ‘But Mr. 8., whea fe terrible moment arrives, and the aggreesiont of the Norib aod resistance o@ the part of t South, the Uaion men will be found wide by side with beir neighbors of al) shades of politics, battling for the Gaare of the South Bo ardent aed general ie the feeling of disusioa in the Bowth, that candidates for local offices cannot, in many places, be elected if they avow themselves op- to secession of the right to secede. This the case in the larger cities, as weil as in tho 1 ed gentlemen standing before s looow tive | South wbo petieves that we must separate from the | brave men, who ‘are now bristing with rife tins int rriles an hour, and with Weir gold-b aed we appeal (© bis humanity, in cage Mr. Linooln is | and John Brows pikes and disunioa, ‘240 ® conatitutional caves altempting to stop its a. The dashing ioco- | +iected, ’ (9 dissolve our connection with the North before | and Ohristian warfare, the of con of the en! aul oO! « * h ‘ol fegey emeat of the South | slaw’ ge rus of the South, by the on ot or | pushed forw ard through the dark wilderness. of bigotr lu short, the live, moving, active for seceesion or revolution; the conser vath ment is for peace DOW ad dissolution only as 6 las) ¥ isnt catremity, Which wil Our Georgia Correspondence. Important from the South—A Local Election in @ergia— First Gun of the Oampaign—Eizcilement abcecUrdering United Sates Troops—It Will Have an Biixt om the Campaign—The Southerners Ask If it Ik a Menace, de, de. The election !o-day was to fill vacancies *a the Legiah- ture, caused by the resignation of Thomas W. Muller, @am ison to Establish a Paper im | ‘vstcr, and William J, Rhodee,‘repreeesative. The Beil and Everett party pu Eaq., for the Senate, ex Governor Crawford, Semator, and George city; Mr. Barnes is & TAD a8 an independens Taylor’s administration) for representative. The Douglas democracy pieced in aominatien Jobn Davigon for Devigon is a warehouse aad comrigsion merchant in thie, Breckinridge men made ne nomination, Dickingon, however, rather sx ardent Breckinridge man, quietly conducted, although considerable interest was NEW YORK HF,RALP, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1860.—TRIPLE SHERT. 4%, 18 not like the ruin of any otber &D ere Joss of liberty, like the Italians under the Bour- ‘De om.” It isnot heavy taxation, which must still leave 1 o@ means of living, or othewise taxation defeats itself. But i ts the loss of liberty, 1, home, country—every ta and prejud'ge, and with your implements cleared the,-W:y for the great army of progress; and now, jostead of, siering in the victory, you stand hacking away at che old st |, and ceusaring the friends of ele és "y u man rig nts because are not art with the kind o! pe feeb le ee por wr ‘weapor.s which you expected them to carry. Avousta, Ga., Oot, 8, 1840. pong in the history of . We mast pre DANIEL D, SOMB3, i a ne, under penalties greater Sees eae entree people ia the ‘ori, | Black Republicans in the Sowth—Offen= sive and Vefensive Operations. 12. Lastly, we conclude this brief statement of the ter- rore of eubmission, by declaring ¢hat, in our opinion, they are tenfold greater even than ¢he supposed verrore of disunion, THE PLOT iN VIRGINIA, It is ascertained that the conspiracy extends from Cur- rituck, N. C., through Gibbs’ Blackwater, Great Bridge, and all the districts southwest of North River and Cheeapeake and Albemarle Canal. Every kind of instrument that could be procured waa to be used on the occasion, such as pickaxes, pitohforks, kc. One of the retrates issued a warrant fore white article from the N Why the Abolitiontsts Support Linco! i LETTER FROM HON. DANIEL f. SOMES TO HON, GEERIT SMITE. (From the Boston Liberator, Oct. 6.) Bmpmor, + in womjnatior John K. Jackson, and William P. Crawford, (son of » former Seorstary of War under NEGROES IN PRIBON. ‘There are twenty one negroes in the jail of Princess Anne county, Va., takea upon suspicion of complicity in the plot to which we have heretofore alluded. Taeir ex amination by the court will come off on Monday, the 5th of November. Ros Presidency in 1844, an: sentiment bas declined, because the radical a! party does not number #0 many votes ag it did at that ume. ‘With the highest regerd for your mora! and intellectual T. Barnes fer representative. Mr. MORE INCENDIARISM, 9) ave © point outs few facts which you “ young ti popular lawyer, The | Docre'tt have overiosoa, . ei Tre Galveston (Texas) Datly Cvtléan of the Ot tne Mr. Wyatt It is trae ny soy ‘thousand men cast their votes for aly et dwefling house, recently occupied oy Mr. Birney , and did so froma sense of duty growing out of the conviction that slavery was wrong in the abstract, and it was therefore right to adopt ineazures for ite abolition, as well as to prevent its exteasion Dy ., it Houston county, was destroy: by fire on the night of the 26th of September—believed to be the work of an incendiary. INCENDIARISM IN SOUTH CAROLINA. camdicete, The election was very Interesting Incidents im the Life of Jaceb Not long since we gave some interesting facts concern- ing the respected gentleman whose name appears in the caption of this article, from the fact of bis being so well and 0 generally known, and the extraordinary carcer which bas made him so deservedly popular, As a dis- tinguished Wall street dnaucier of the olden time, his reputation is imperishable among the mercautile and moneyed classes of this city; and as any facts concerning his personal history, in addition to those already supplied by us, will be read with interest, we give the following Orleans Picayune of the 80th ult., under the title of “ Old Names and Old Associations :’’— Of last week our well known aud venerable fel- 3 98 © 0 cera Ses on 3] om, HO nme Bowe . “1 opposing the admission of Texas, But while they all For come time past the citizeus of Greenville have had | Ji = eit by the Douglas and ell and Everctt mea wish re- | sfreed upon the two facts, the wroog of slavery an ibe | reasons to believe. that thelr slaves were tampered with | patcl bank, and handed the flac, in spect to thelr several eeadidates. The result was as right - meron o did not ngroe epenaey general | by abolition emissaries. A vigilance committee was golds to the bench—remarking in a natural manner, that DEPEND llores plan of operations. Some contended for immediate emaa- | formed, Dut owing to the cunning and dexterity of the Jways settied his iMlerences in cash. ict vor muaton, Eipation by Congressional enactments, some propoeed 4:3. | incendiaries It was found iim poasisie tyeatoh them. Ata | At ansther time, the old broker, who was expecting 2 John Davisoe: (Dongiss @2mocrat)... union and other insurrection. As these means were at | meeting of the committee it was determined to secure | from a distant port a shio ray faden, had a con. »2 John K, Jackeon (Bell ad Everett..... war with the principles of our institutions and tne | the services of detective police officer Cotes, who not long | versation with the President of a 2 epirit of a Christian civilization, the Clay bgp ot who were | since rendered such efficient service to the citizens company; the latter engaging his friend to have the ship 1 Melon lig Be DUPWE wines .ctscccsnnessescccsecs mainly opposed to the extension of slavery, clung to their Orangeburg, C. H. Officer Cotes has since visited Green- | insured, but Jacob objecting on account of the expenses, 8 POW REFREIRNTATIVE organization and hoped for the best, while the democratic | ville and succeeded in ferreting out and torning over to | Finally, although they parted without coming to any Premature birth. 4 Geo, T. Barnes (Oougirs)......-. party, pretending that Toxas would be an onlet for | the committee several parties, with such evidence as im- | decision, it was oor ‘that the President would draw Suffocation, accidental.. 2 W. P. Crawford (tell aud Everett). flavery in the old States, and thereby become ® moacé | plicated them in late transactions in that town. the policy, and the next day Barker would see Buide... eseveeserce 2 of ite dual extinction, triumphed and aaded another link ORDERED OFF. had better sign it or not; but the next day _ Majority for Barnes dt doles Ph erp oe nr lager William 5. Brewster, s school teacher from Massacha- was a Sunday, and the two friends did not meet. seeccseeseeceesereseneseee@® Mr. Dickinson obwiae votes. phate “A ng came ; old | Sette, was ordered out’ of Somerville, Ala., last week, for | ii the morning, an express, who hed ridden e long acm. This is the Orat tiene for eighteen or twenty years tha! peas ple stil in the garb of democracy, grew bold | | eatery sentiments. In bis trunk was found a letver | WAY, Went to the private residence of the banker, and | Under 1 105 80 to » the demoorats have ciected inembers of the Ingisiature | aut defiant: ons have gradually opened | from Senator Sumner, written four years ago, congrata- £2 Bon thas Ws able, 00 eng onpetiees, 084 08 | 3 te: Synare 44 40 to e from this county. The contest to-day was between the | | Me yr Py: grey 6 ly ope Isting him in his labors in “‘the cause.” board of which was all his been wreckeion } to 6 years 82 BOto 16 Douglas men and the Beil-Everetts. Tae Breckinridge du Jug <5 he people : io ree States, and they are now : the ehores of New Jersey. It must be remembered that | § to 10 years 1l @to 16 party took but little interest in the canvass, their votes | TeaOy . cpt aby sonatting jonal measures to Led ite CONVICTION OF NEGROES. at that time there were neither maguetic nor | 40 to 12 years 1 to "W being about equally divided between the several candi- | force; but t ey are as loth to accept any which are Three negro men were convicted at the county court of | even solpere across the Jerse; la, Another | 49 to 16 years 2 to T dates. The Douglas men regard the result at a victory— | 'Ueesl or impracticable as they were in 1844, and more #0, | Lunenburg, Ja bel last week, of an attempt to poison | man might have lost his senses under such an unexpect- | 15 to 17 years B to 1 the fret Dougine gun in Georgia—and rejoice accordingly. | SF they now see more clearly the necersity of prompt | the family o! "i penene, and gentenced to be hung on | ed blow; but Barker, eyes and cars always open | 17 to 90 years 8 100 years and 2 Meeers. Miller and Rhodes, the retiring Senator and | 6d effective action. Those of the sixty who are | Friday, the 0th of November next. The effort to kill was | to look for the main’ chance, reurembered ney Domes 20° Unknown. 3 representative, are both Bell men. The newly elected | 700 cpera'ing with you may be F omceay inthe republican | arranged’ by piacing @ strovg admixture of some poisonous | his conversation of the previous evening with his friend, | 96 to $9 years. 25 will, therefore, tncrease Douglas’ yote in the Legislature, | P@°tY acing good service. They have been engaged for | herb or plant into ® basin of milk. The pecuilar odor of | the President, and without losing one moment he sent ‘Total .... ifthe vote for Presidential elctors comes before that | M&ry years in scattering the seeds of truth among the | the poison preven oy Be so sieeae ont Che soepeee | tna ote — dody, as no doubt it will. The Douglas men think that if | MA#8€S, until a a. {f nota majority, of the voters in | those for whom it was intended were aroused re the > Joun—If thou hast written the policy, send it wetele. the election for members of the Legislature were to have | the free States are fired with the true spirit of wisdom, | milk was drank, and to this circumstance are they doubt- 5 ‘hou needst not | Disish ‘Amerie, ut the Mate, there are strong | "4 animated by a fixed purpose, not only to preven: the fur- | leas indebted for the preservation of their lives. trouble thyself about it, for I have just received news of | pecs probabilities of the Little Giant carrying the Stato. Ot Be arom ef Sa Mee pom, MS te Word Ge ten & te NEGRO HUNG. my ship. Thy , - | Bngland coarse the inridge men directly the contrary. 4 says:— Preaiden\ ingurance cory France. Hon. A. H. Stephens addressed a large iiceting at War. | -, HOW can this be done, it may be asked, witbout inter- Png ped Sy hy kd Sicom aah ae ieee iain BrP ys try a tag od ad German; Tenton, in Warren county, to day, in favor of Douglas. | fering with State rights! 7 antwer, by placing Mr. the ringleader of the insurrectionary movement in Talla- b he hastened, of | Holand bly of the progress of the utmort concern some of tbe of arme had prec! the purpose of aidis step on the part of which I have jast But when te! evough already to protect the frontier men and their | ©M##iPE fulee lightey Must we be satisfied with capturing, families from the ravages Of the Indiene—- , | Bow and then, one of the picket guard ora stray malo! at this Sceed. to Abgeta, Mieorgia, to parrince tar cted 4 | iat wike to ict the army that has wou a victory ia cvecy | time. in the’ Treasury, and be was determined that it Adventare, not » ship, was closed ", Tere, the feeliog assumed a new aod moro decisive | Costest remain quietly entrenched behind the Dalwark of | Should go towards ‘ing for the arms, even if the off. | of which Mr. Barker, thea in his minority, had not aay ebape. I met United states Senator Wigfal!, of Tezas, at beste og beg make fresh attacks on the rights of the | C€r@ Of the State had for a time to do withont their sala | @videnoe; therefore, on the following day, when he heard Chattanooga yesterday afternoon. He Spoke ‘of ‘the | People tbe first opportunity that oifers’ Or shall we sent | Ties. We regard this aaa eelf-sacriticing and patriotic | Of the diaaster, he wrote a nolo to the underwriter, re- intelligence aad a ‘aan not believe that | (¢ American slag, with free speech and a free press embla. | SCt- But it seems that the annoucement threw Yankee | questing the policy, if ready, if not ready that 1s should Mr. Buchapan would attempt tw coerce the South, | ned on fold, into ther camp, accompanied with a SSeS eee 2 fact, it made | Bot be filled up until bad another interview. No apd the Hon. Senator knows the tone of the proclamation t the President, that it “ must and shail be | ‘hem “tremble in their Gd such letter as you ‘was over written by him. Soathern Beart as well as many other Southern | Maintained?’ Should the latter course be pursued we | FORMATION OF MILITARY COMPANIES Ix Texas, | TC Maller was amicably soltied, and the parties re- orators But it was not only among politicians that re. | Swld bear no more about Congressional slave codes, or volunteer cavalry company bas been organized at | Mined friends for life, marks were made on the same sabject, Men in polit | °f Popular tovereignty imthe Territories, for the oligarcay Polk county. When Mr. Barker was fined one handred doliars the ‘landing, sound representative men, were startied at the | “Ul! bare no tle to attend to these outside srrange- zens Court said they were satisfied he did not mean any dis- demonetration, tweigniticant as it tnay appear a meute, but would be bury in defending the “divine instl- Fospect to it; that if he would ‘ize to the witness tanoe. They cannot conceive, as they ex reseed vation” at home. they would pass it by. Mr. Barker, ing the witness sclves to me, why the administration sh uid order troops Bat suppose the republican party gets contro! of the go- to have sworn falsely, Knowing bis statement to be false, into Ubis locality at a time when the Southern miad ia #> | Yérnment, what then’ Tefused to apologize and Paid the fine. fred, and so iliy prepared to Brook anything tuat boars aime he coeattoctional riginte ‘These little reminiscences will be found to possess e semblance of federal menace. i ied? 1a ord aaswer (neation cor i sages 1 have aamumienl Pry he og rectly, We must iret examiue the platform and then much imtrineie interest for tho friends of the veteran orderea here at the request of Mayor Blodgett and tho City Council, who deemed the property State in (he arsenal bere as insecure as at present pro tected J will look inte the The Terrors of Submission. From the Charleeton Mercury, Oct. 11.) Af # #ince we eadeavored to show that the pic- | costume are taken care of for f Broech arms : ‘ of future use. jor Facwo- tures of rain ant desolation t the South, which the sub- Firet, then, what are the principles embodied in the | ';0 Baltimore, was ia this chy, requoeted an interview tissiogiets to olack republican dominatioa were socontin. | platform? Second, what is the prevailing idea of tne | With him, before then a The Board ually drawing, to ‘fright us from our propriety,” wero We propage now to reverse the picture, ow What will probably be the consequences of & La Southern States to the ra) Voviem at ‘ington, ia the persons of Messrs. Lincoln aod Hamlin, ehoula they be elected to the Presidency aad unreal and faire and to submis Vice Presidency of the 1. The frat effect of the instalation of abolitioniets io the offices of Presiient ant He is just from the Cherokee region,” aud reports favora- tic latitude. Ths Form. In other words, it be done by placing the go- tents fora through antaan ofthe State, nia | fgrnmgat imi ands of mod why wl Aan fhe courage | SePUes damsel ee" tune witset Seay saa as a ta whactans the meeins Oak a ‘States. Let thie constitutional right be defined by the Ex- understand, was executed yesterday, at ibe town of Tuey are working eb ype day, and do not re. | €Utive, and slavery would soon be on tho waue. ita. | Talladega. ini woe, lax in their efforts, notwithstanding ‘the easy conquest | HOM, which is another namo for free speech, is ail the} aa. aaitoe of the lieuston (hoon Telegraph they anticipate and nearly ail pai ties prodict. Tne Bell. | ‘ends of liberty can rely on for success. It is the | ihe, adi of the Houmas, (texas) ss Kveretts are also wide awake, and work vigorously. Pioneer's axe, which hews down ignorance and praju- Moulars of the euseution of tho Ron Wan alice’ tte THE CNrrED vtatms 1adORS ORDERED TO avaera. | Mt and opeds the way for the eniranes of truth and | Particalere of the execution of the Rev. Wns. Bally, the 4 é ¢ exerci#e of thoke powers whi ven His have just returned from a ‘oar shrough Bastern and | coi rea a” the working Out of thelr Own. salvation, county, Mo., by the Fayetto- just been forwarded to Charles- ton, & C. The conjectures respecting the movement were infinitely various. Some deciared the act to be for their projected rebellion; others that {t waa an initiative South Carolita into submission in case of refractory pro- ceedings. This was the talk in the up couuiry through passed. legraphic despatches were received in Memphis and aij along the line that United States troops had been ordered (rom Fort Smith, Arkantas—a rogioa where it was eupposed the United States forces were fow Presidentsal chair, and a tion to the latter of the constitution and the republican plat dega county, was tried on Wednesday iast, by the Pro- Date Judge and Justices of that coaty, veforea jury lag and Johnson in that demo- while laws are but milestones by the wayside, showing how far the race has advanced toward self-government. Every political party since the Revolution has profess- ed, during some period of Mia biatory, to be opposed to the extension of slavery, and yet this monster las been blealthily faavening ite fangs on new terrt ', poisoning the soil, and ees oe? rom thing with its hellish breath. The reason is very obvious. It is because the South, by its adroit mancuvripgs has diverted the North from its constitutional moet new issues yearly put forth to divide the free and cousolidate the finve States. It is absurd to think of staying the march of this de- mon by resorting to unt Wwution sl means, or by carry- ing on a guerilla war in thie outekirte of the couatry, or even by aitempting to smother it by fencing it ia.’ It will either contract or continue to expand. It will never cease to be aggressive until it is forced into a defensive position, Shall we continue to waste our breata by regarding the astion of the feder: that a number of stand the seceders of South Carolina in the federal government to cource wnalyve the fentinent of the party. We shall thea be able to ascertain what its predominant idea is, Platforms do pot always represent the men who control the party the United They are 100 often used as 8 menss to an end—s stage ca] a, 9 ANDO SMB STATE OP YiRgINi4. which men of various shades of opinions aad degrees of mond Hnquirer ef the 13th inat says:—The arsenal to morrow, and report anon, {otluence play the parte assigned during & l'residon. 1 COMmMMasioners appointed under the sct pasmed at the last tial campaign; but when the performanse ia over, aad the ‘the better defenes of the pore pok en pay rg the State,” amembied in this city this anes y week, for the transac President is inaugurated, the managers take contro! of , baving ascertained that Me him. while the poople are left to see that the scenery aud party? ? pe they harmonise? in wing resoluQjon of the Chicago platform con tains the principles of party. The rest relate to mea- 3. tust the meatatrntnce of the prinelgles prom 2 maintenance nigated io the Declaration of Tadependoace’ and Cavett < the federal gonstitution, is essential to the preservation of our republican institutions, and that the federal constitu © Of adoli- ted States. mission of the*South to the Decimal Carrency for Great Britain. TO THE EDITOR OF THE HERALD, New Yora, Ost. 12, 1860. ‘The question of the adoption of a decimal currency has of late years been examined into by the British govera ment, but, so far as I have been able to learn, no change bas as yet taken p'ace. 1 have taken the liberty to sub- mit to you a pion for bringing = decimal currency ‘oto operation which I bave never seen anywhere, and which T think would be found to fully embrace the desired pur agrieuitural districts, But the meagrenems of the oppo- | Vice President of the Ualted Btates erful | obs the richie of the Stairs, and the Union of the States, ‘ yh aad denomination known throaghout the world, Gitton {0 mate up by the seeret an well aa Opes bitter. | conscilantien of we of the seein pale as the | Mast and shall be preserved bi a OS im inet nd there can be mo more ol 1 eee in which they prosceate the campaiga. Bot this | North. Soccens generally strengthens. IC. ntto Jn the Declaration of Independence, to which the above |, The Board then spake of al FF ee to tee |S twee os, wetah ean own cirendy oaepred. feeling 's not coufised to one party more than to another, | threats of resistance and disuaion tuado a Cougross and | "*yitloa refers, we find the following — Goon, but did oot stake’ the es he The To , Beither of the three parties in the Sonth love eash otber | out of Congress, the Southera States sick down into acy ut the cost ve $5, subject ales it The Briush dallar would assimilate in valve to the tiand arrayed at present; bot, when cummon | escence, the demoralization of the South will be complete. Sates (This form, ii is ib, Mexican and Americtn dollar, and the five franc Foren an tecttntae cit te atetstialic as | Acacluacmnegamneseani oni, sey ph Cy a FI 5 leet, eagerness with which they will sl) fiy together for the money emmualty, amd they ceust be trvectsitie brennan Kh mastet in the manner te wich ‘be’ trian fori, | ‘ft ae be useful ~. ‘~ eommon protection. OF ail parties the Breckinridge party | ihe general government alter the muskets in the and China | trade, and would be available for @ ibe bo im the South, and, strange as it may ap- | 2° To picnder the South for the benedit of the North. by ita most elective and’ reliable the British ’ North American Colonies, which Tins ta favor of Union, that geatioman Krongeet, | ot erie rit, will be one of thelr Srst meneares fs matters stand now, are compelled to uses 7 4 gents has bis strongest | of Northern eect! dominion; aad, on the other hand. different from that of the mother coantry. eo Bdvocater Cn RR Se oo ves De eee by sectional schemes of appro: 24. lt would allow of the continued use of many of the Wren spok: incoas! ' 7 ) WI @ congenial policy. coins, existence. toste: acknowledge \t, and say “Breckiuridge may be the first 3 Immediate dager wil! bo brought to slavery in all Fepresent Sve Brit tir tad tia Bal sorcieige “J man they may bave to hang.’ Major Brockiaridge’s | the fronticr States. When party ie enthroned at W ih sod e half Da EG Fw neg Lagan of the protection of slavery in the Torr! ington, in the executive and legislative departments of ab for a quarter and the six; for eaght! bt ‘tee is, however, the secret of his strength among tho | the government, whore creed it is to repeal the Fagitive The new outs requisite would ve Gimes, bait ultraiete of the South, and it le this which will give him | Siave law, the underground railroad will become aa over- and cents, which latter might be alloyed for ‘ mentened ee Se ee eee ound railroad. The tenure of slave property will te fel! to with nickel, a# ovr own are. Crowns and ‘ball crows Dined. The negro question te the vital question of tho | be weakened: and the sloves will be seal docn to the coven sbovid tn time be withdrawn from cireulation along with Bout. Touch the negro and you touch cotton. Touch | Sates for sale, and the frontier Sates enter om the policy of the ovine; meanwhile the crown vont represeat oo. fotton, and you touch the ma! tbat Keeps tho | making themastecs free Sates Galler ond ve conte, machinery of the world \n motion. It literally feede the 4 With the control of the government of the United cightbe of Drivin a, pee iota tet cake rt] hongry and clothes the naked, and is ope of the easential | States, and an organized and triumphant North to sustain Tue British public ‘would bo easbiea I To aoe gota fa estes oR wheels in the car of Americas commerce. In the words | them, the abolitionists will renew their @perations upon which experience in the Colted Mates and if France uad | Clark Rin of 9 distinguished fouthern, lady; “Before cotton, ki the South with increased oourage. The thousands io shows tobe very convenient. . ne Qermont. yh ‘ntates must bow.” It i# not only the South. | every country who look up to power and make gain out ‘Sd. The conversion trom the currency new, | Clinton v4 * ‘erver's pocket that ls touched when bis ro is tam. | of futore will come ont in of the abolition fund vice versa, would be oP on p-—4 | Darke. a pered with and taught to entertain wild goverpment. The Browsines ond thetert tate teen wid mercial ‘Qnd the public ier bd Fairfeia po Ay setae & eee, Se the commerce of the couniry, and » They will ; and from being a Union pound and ‘Galler, would tmety a’ Sore Ly mani interests of the civilized world, , to apport an government, they will become, Bialtiplication by 6; aa between shillings cad or | Payette. 12,738 1, are wopardised. “Fae Southerner knows tie, ani ales | fae he w atolttionsen. They will lara it would be by 4. ihe British cout’ would be camatze | Gone rng a ‘upon those foundations his rights 10 hie lave pro | bave au aboiltion party ia who South of soathere omen dad. lee four per cent, and the versa of tar nease | Gomes i May rest secure, if he succeeds in Keeping off the The contest for slavery will no be one between the aly been that the M) inte cents, ie versa, wl eaenymeue ja 3 Fy tous foun of the Pevalier taatitaticn, wae are out Sere ond Ge Geee. |B will bein the South, betwosn Besides this, Major paces cdess - i BB Higtiand Seren FH = ng ae comensnee aot mametaevaren, South. Moading carbines at $20 ‘apiece, and his breech- Hoek’ noe ¥ poy | except londing muskets at $25—both entirely uew. Proermurrt oF Tax as. —A geotieman who has traversed Sects ‘ane Pid ieacuhe ‘The Commissioners, we understand, bave purchased toe Testrarn part of we Gate Sines tne dongs commenced Lawrence 15,546 ‘the one an: 1,000 Adame snd Deane’s pistols, from ames, at $20 | Write to Austin Gasette thus, under date of Sept. ‘seas F- woe , and we hardly think it worth while to argue that 19-—in regard to the genera prosperity of tbe Sista, i one's a we Sparkes’ arms are moch cheaper and more vs- Uaen 20.3} bo iaety n Colone! ot as wa aauple, 38,218 a Dongics 38,361 . Pidge “ 4b,040 “ tore for sbe “ate—J a 7% rH Rene fou BOW The government wil be tn the hands of ee Tas sevre. noe FY aoa Khe regard slavery a8 4 curse and @ crime, and they wili | Governor John J. Pettus, in a letter announcing his 10,963 13 —— fending Kaan ot ee Mary, € cocompltah (heir purpecs Tae | inability to attend and addres: a public meeting, winds 736 a : fathers was liberty and they agitated > _ i Tease one? the tubject until the perple were ready to revelaciontse | °? PY ying mere by t+ the government, and to lay down their lives to atiain 13.968 iy on went to the of tat early, groaed and iy cult 4 Py — break down federalism and alld ap repubiveanioa’®” *” Sue prosuced brecl voualy to forty pueeete oo see "te ~Y oe Le Tpke individual equality wold = eo oa Gora ie ne monopoly ; in order throw bere offered beshel M p= hE United tates Haat, be tacspled the crastitinn es cine fouating eationna 4 from 81 fo 41 is aoe: fore, ae Atrued by the Sapreme Coart, ander bis feet. " dant everywhere, Gad, freee i 1a the greatest profusion. aiavery Since his administration the powers of the government Many persore are the by Py my om as. eereter hare been wishied to suplain, consolidate and extent a py based oa human flesh, amewating (> the exodes, — tee Ronaet tls of atlues at, eee SS rysesoe ih bert ot ie neue at tse! toterregater aarterpiece of “eapotiem, the conatitation baa teen tie ee Teens, lived by other means tian ; ged lane interpreted and grossly violated. honest labor or the developement of aay of the resources xEWw tere for paMagrablicns party ls made up of Northera mon with of our most bountiful country, It i@ to be hopet they | . CANANDAIGUA The Measenger has tho conaue re the be sentiments, ant we have a right to infer that The a [—a-F—) woes Cane Wo the Sosth wile n taper of ry aon nate. each wfvers han ise Thorens of 6 fe the fae ral and constitutional rice 1855." The mont of the towne in Ontario, aaputs sho dividual, they a0 \ocrease since the iast enumeration. vidio ae the cops.iiation hae POPTLATIO: |CRMOND. Pisionle the iimoiation and the iden of revolu- | & Delore Mewere Tintsle ned Hawt © Stes, El ad te suet = ot Gor eau me, dear ge ea MAY, De satmeraiod ue capitalists to Washington, we Premideat and vice Provigon ae uot | gli, tae, promibision of oo pooner owners | citiaa, the United the Bouthorn Staten car tament Of the | dockyarde and Rxecutive | a yr a and Oa at various walks wag ably we know what we say) their union with tke fomee, $ ee err shares out of 6,000 in the Mechas\se" ae, cat eae fees on re Thete eaee cohorts will have 90 South | duction Teal eatate owners in the city, recently dalared Seceasion movement was folly nnd an abeur.'ity, Saught. and that it would have pea the permanency of the Union teat Bank in New York wouit pon the banking \ceiitutions of the Soath. ia thie opinion the cashier of the Central Railroal an Baas ing Company of Georgia, in Savannad, concurs but these and! ail other opinions from similar sources term. with the deolarstion tbat if the rights o’ the South | ere invade! by Lincoln, and ibe tomo of war is sounder! ihe people will upitediy fy to the reseus. Such gentio. wen ae these, the “soll men-of the Soath, ‘ nas) Rcceptation of tbe term, are called conservat! res - fuga, bY ened aber gentlemen a@ W. Gilmore Simms, 7 of Seth Co rt. wh | of was when str! to | has ® is in barmouy Tee wee | T ienrues some © Why, thea, cannot | bas hi near Austin, in The evidence, whieh is mainly circumstantial, yy tol'gent pollti- | said to be Strong against him. Unfortunate! —_ Preaitont at you » guilty, he another melancho y example of ‘tive men of the party, | who “steal the livery of heaven 10 serve tbe devil in.” id 1 ip the | H@ 9 a minieter of the Goepe!, and one woe A ferebae om Deon # Feneral faroriis w HDL) whe Kew hw ArrRAy the your | for 1 wappase wound in the brene t we —E R. White and George ©. Wharton, two Judges of election at Charleston. (., on the Sih cowl inidiged in a fight with Knives. ir Wharton received three sabe, ope in the left bresst, just abore the heart one im (he back and another andor the r ightarm. The