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The Weekly Mississippian from Jackson, Mississippi • 1

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Jackson, Mississippi
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1
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A A Ay -rr-imij OTQ OufcM fvat fiTG ft iodktc ItdtkMdiM of XInr Utm yidBt Bri Lavra Oraria'lniocr Miw ply Am -M 8 (ALE 1 10 a 4ro( to CAoorr Coart eraimdM CoantT MlaWMi for Dtitrict So S' UM 7th Ja fife wfcwein SVV mad A Dinki jln et ate an frfiiinA la vhtah th Iiiiiii I shall PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY MORNING ON CAPJTOL STREET JACKSON MISSISSIPPI- design recently wbR he wrote a celebrated letter to his Minister the apparent strait forwardness of hich is as candid at the appeal in one of Mohere comedies of a lover to hie who doubted hte einomty Sapoieon like this lover cries point ie voia- ri yaa tea aatambles coups un soopcon outregitxit demney loot ie temps de vous ccnvaiaere par mille et mill preuves i do i iionnetate de mea fan To-day he ia the guiding spirit mi the continent of Europe 1 1 is that bis illustrious uncle possessed a more brilliant and dashing genius but less of that caution end finesse by which the present Emperor indies tee his policy to others after it has been accom plashed From bis great kinsman he baa been taught tempted fate will leave the loftiest Seated upon the throne of an empire that I will compare in pemtof power with any ofanti-j quiiy and lookup out upon the world from the "height of social security and political peace his own experience penetrates the veil ol futurity and in silence plans the perform-i once of one thing while diplomatic magnates Paris Aug 15 I860 to him He is not beiovedby the m- Editor of Mississippian discon- Upe Fretch i be is not bated by Item tinuance of my letters has been the result of Their toward him is a compound ol continued indisposition for the period of almost loYe fear td ne ration He has been a vol-two months but now once more I essay the wHter i he is statesman be proved JACKSON WEDNESDAY SEPTEMBER 12 1860 VOL XXVIII if! "4a Ml tlM WII1 la to city of Aooirj tfctlnlMf c( Ootobai next Property known Mr Douglaj Draws hi own Picture i European Correspondence of tLc HI la Jeekeno aorf being ti whole of and foot off of to weet anil i of lot M1S8ISS1PP1AN Can th South Condemn the Democratic Party for Repealing tiffi Missouri Compromise 1 Jackson September 7 1860 BARKSDALE Editor Proprietor FOR PRESIDENT: JOHN BRECKINRIDGE KENTUCKY proval of the acts known as the of 1850 consummated the repeal of that odious restriction called the Missouri Compromise Now in the name of common sense and 1 sheer justice can men of the South in view of thtse facts arraign the Democratic party for repealing the Missouri restriction and again placing the Southern man with his i slaves on an equality in the territories with the Northern man with his patent clocks and wooden nut-meggs No matter what may have been the motives which actuated the fatb- er of the measure Mr Douglas it was a South- 1 era measure which meu of the South of all parties everywhere asked at the hands of Congress and the Democratic party because Those familiar with the political history of the country will recollect that in the Whig Convention at Baltimore in 1852 the North demanded tho nomination of Gen Scott and the South resisted his nomination The South however was voted down and Gen Scott was placed before the country as the Whig candidate for the Presidency It was a sectional contest in which one section demanded the nomination of a particular man ust exactly as it was in the Charleston Convention when the Northern States required the nomination of Mr Douglas In July 1852 Mr Douglas delivered an address to the Democracy of Richmond Ya in which he animadverted upon Gen Scott as a candi- FOR YICE PRESIDENT: GEN JO LANE OF OREGON oam-aambor two I aboil offer i of load aekaon end tko eoo-k-wt quarter of the north quarter of tec Don foartoon tawnbip fire on oooty (on which there is dwelling Bona) together with oll oad ainguler the ft ppm -neaoeo belong! nf to the said two lota of lend i ho aaid property wiU bo (old separately and one half the perches moaey payable in three and the other half in aix atonthe from the dey of ale The pureheeer or parehaoM-a giving approved aotee to be atutaaaered op with the title deeds oq th thereof The title it beiieewd to be good bat 1 shall only convey ouch title as is rested in nee by the said ecree ELLIOTT July 11 Comniosiongr TRUST SALE: BY rirtre of a deed of treat saade and executed to me oa the Ud day of December A 11 1853 by Holland aad Hoilaad bia wife to secure John Hall Agent and Attorney for Mr Margaret A Eeafroo the (am at money therein named aad iatereeS Iherene whR deed ie recorded in the Probate Coart of Honda eeeoty in Record Book of Deeds amber 14 pages 878 end pub! ie ootery at the boot doer at the Capitol ia the city ef Jeekaeo Negro laiaaaef Asihony of black sobs yd erica bow ngod aboat 28 year to pay the tala ere dwo finder said dead ef tract to Margaret A Rewfroo The tiSo ia believed to be good aad iadiapa table bat 1 shall convey no other than that rested la me by (few mid deed of trust JOfDT A VOIGT Trust -PROCLAMATION "jar- year of onr iLrd on tbouandegh hundred and Sixty being tta si aa elects the time appointed by Law tor lion in this State for seven 1 ectors to Pedant and Vice-President of the United States writ of election requiring youto ho the election et the time end plaoe appointed by Law Ua 8tU of MiMUfippty do iQ my wnt re airing you to hold eioctioa at the several pre-ciota in jour County on Tuesday next llt Monday in the month of bovmoor A 1860 for the J5tion of seven lectors to vote for Preeiuent usd Vice President the uted states of America aad I do moreover enjoin it upon you to conduct said election in all respects conform ably to Law and make due returns thereof to the Secretary of State Grvsx under my hand and the (treat Seal of the State of MissiMipju herean- to ufixed at the City of Jackson this the llfch day of August A I860 nmmrro By the Governor JOHhi PKTTUS A BtovoHEt Secretary of State Aoft 14 PROCLAMATION JOHN PKTTUS Governor of the biale of nippi To the keriff of the Govnty of and (Sta aforesaid GRJLKTISG the first Monday in October A 1560 ia the day appointed by law for holding an election in this State and wbeieas it is made ay duty to issue a writ requiring you to bold the aaid election at the time and place appointed Law Now therefore I John Pxttus Governor of the State of Mississippi do issue this my writ requiring you to hold an election at the several in your County on the first Monday in precincts in you himself a vaffiaot military chfbftain when with desparate valor he elevated-the eagles qf France and crowned them with victory in the great battle Of 8olferino He believes in manifest destiny and well he may for he has been ia a condition but little superior to that of a vagabond At that time he cherished the idea that he would one day be the Emperor of the French I do not know thaujiaeYor: married in England or elsewhere before performance of a promise made in compliance with the request of friends and I shall endeavor to be punctual in the future You have learned of ih death of the last surviving brother of the first Napoleon Prince erome inherited some of the qualities which gave his brother immortality but his virtues moral and military were tere than overbalanced by that equanimity of tem-perment which unfits a spjgpuus part in scenes sugji as he passed PRESIDENTIAL ELECTORS STATE AT LARGE THOS HARRIS of Marshall A BLYTHE of Yallobusha FIRST CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT CLAPP of Marshall SECOND DISTRICT it secured to the South equally with the North the exercise of the right of settlement with I date forced upon the Whig party and the na-her institutions in tho common territories from tion by the North in defiance of the loud which she had been unconstitutionally exclnd- protestations of an almost unanimous SsVBtt" ed by the Missouri restriction If miuuuthe that address he pictures his own position uiider the guidance of the great genius of the former His life was varied to a de two chTdren aa for him when he was passing through the straits of poverty in Loudon and had not a operations of that measure the South lost Is0 truthfully' that we cannot refhfin from giv-Kansas it was no fault of the bill itself That Kansas foiled to obtain admission into the Union as a slave State the abolitionist? may thank such Southern Opposition men as JOHN Judge ing it to our readers Substitute for and the picture is complete General Scott received the ncmina- RICHARD HARRISON of Monroe THIRD DISTRICT r-F LIDDELL of Carroll FOURTH BISTRICT LIVINGSTON MIMS of Hinds FIFTH DISTRICT CHRISMAN of Lawrence The Belleverett speakers ah3 writers are making furious charges upon the Democratic party on account of its repeal of an unconstitutional statute the Missouri restriction It is charged that the party unnecessarily repealed that compromise for partisan purposes In the repeal of that restriction the party showed itself to bo upon the skle of the Constitution and the rights of the States Seeing the North not only enjoying the whole loaf it had received but snatching alter the crumbs granted the South under that compromise the Democratic party true to itwpast history came forward and rescued all those rights which liad been violated in the passage of that restriction Let briefly explain tb--fctory of that matter in order to sustain our position The South consented reluctantly to the passage of the compromise of 1820 for the sake of peace and in order to secure the admission of Missouri into the Union as a slave State In the Senate there were ten votes against its passage from the South and seventeen it favor of it In the House however a body coinpos-j ed of representatives direct from the people there were from slaveholdiug States thirty-i seven votes against it and thirty two ia its favor i while the whole North pressed the bill through Congress voting for it almost unani- mously The South in the same spirit of compromise and with the hope that we might rest quietly South cf that line (while doubting in fact denying its constitutionality) on I several occasions agreed to the extension of that restriction even to the Pacific In 1848 when the California and New Mexico bill was I before Congress the South agreed to run the line of 36 :30 to the Pacific which would have 1 made (according to a published statement by I Mr Clayton taken from the land office iu I Washington) one million six hundred thou- I sand square miles of territory free from slavery i forever and left for African slavery South of that line only two hundred and seventy thousand square miles the poorest parts of California and New Mexico Or in other words the Southern States were willing for the sake of Aagwst I 1S8A-w8w sWed the'emer- tion unanimously according to the official I except in courtly contact with the Ue has not ber- 1 h3Te beea told proceeding? of the Convention Laughter softer sex in Parisian society He was a good I thit lle bas Pllrcbaed for br pleasant I ellow-citizens did you ever hear of a unan- man in the sense in which that word is snnli Chateau where she now lives in ease and a Ss rr nothing ki rtta remonstrances of the delegations from one- WaS ve as a knightly in his bearing OT 001 1x5 true half the States of the Union represented in ckivalric in his notions of honor and uprodi I the Convention? Every Southern State in gal of He could love with ferventde- timely XTdTnd nt Xr nltnd with which I Tke Presented yet the was unanimous (Great i bls 081 WJfo clung to him in the ever-changing laughter Th nomination of Gen Scott Tecissitules of his career Of his descendants therefore presents to the American people th6 American portion are by for the most re this extraordinary anomaly For the first SDectable Hi? son I oeea an time in the history of our party contests has Napoleon son-m- I where he a sectional nomination ever been forced upon 1 laW lctor Emanuel is a man of the either of the two great parties You may talk of the dangers to the American Union in the Empire Hu -i I i Boston on bis way he had a very handsome £wx tbe October A I860 for the following officers to TRUSTEED SAXE BY Virtaa of a deed of Trait made by A Pardon dated Sid of Mirth 187 to me aa Trustee to see are to Thomas tie lie oertain debts therein named I will oa thaSStb day at September 1880 before the front doer ef the State House in the eity of Jackson sell atpublie auction to the highest bidder for eeab all aad singular the frees ta types eases sad printing material! and fixtures at the dote of said Dead of Trust known and used as those whereby and with which the new paper then kaowa a the of the was then printed together with everything then belonging or appertaining thereto so far as they may some to my hamda they being now ia the office of the -Kego of SHELTON Truest Aug 17 Id BELL John Crittenden Sam Houston Winter Davis and others who vioiatingthe known wishes of their constituencies sided with tho North that exciting struggle The Democratic party repealed an unconstitutional statute lifted the ban of the Federal Government off the institution of slavery and vindicated the rights and equality of tho States It was done in accordance with the wishes of the Southern States and the act was greeted with but one voice at the South the voice of approbation The Black Republicans may condemn the Democratic party for repealing the Missouri Compromise but the South never without stultifying herself and striking at that party which was then battling and is now battling fo uer rights her interests and her honor Public Speaking Livingston Mims and Merwin candidates for Presidential Electors in behalf of the Democratic and Opposition parties respectively for the Fourth Congressional District will address the people at the following places and times Benton Yazoo Sept 14th Yasoo City night Sept lth Viokxbnrg Warren Sept 19th Edwards Depot Hinds Sept 20th Utica Sept 2Ut Raymond Sept 22d Public Speaking Green Chandler Esq will address the people on the Presidential question zl au and in serve for the time specified by law to wit One Judge of the High Court of Errors and Appeals for the 1st Judicial District One Judge of the Probate Court One Clerk of the Probate Court One Clerk of the Circuit Court One Sheriff On Tax Assessor One Coroner On County Treasurer On County Surveyor One Banger Five members of the Board of Police and snch Constables and Justices of the Peace as the Law requires At the said election you will notice sod carry out all the requisitions of Law and make yonr returns duly as thereby prescribed Grvxn under my hand and the Great 8 Seal of the State of Mississippi hereunto affixed at the City of Jackson this the 11th day of Angust A I860 By the Govern or JOHN PETTUS A BaocGHBa Secretary of State Ang 14 tE growing out of partisan strife and political thilde would be denied balcony of the Revere House His speech contests you may tremble at the nes mission into our d- was extremely radical an the slavery question uc rrr: i in set forth the issues upon which tbe ack re- 8 SALE Circwit Cewrf of Ike Umitmd St atm southern IHetrict the fbl- of Mietietipai She: berwood njjp les at John BeU on Protection Does not Favor it in all the Lex Loci Hon John BeU it cannot be denied has voted for the last ten years against the South and his own party upon every question affecting directly the interests of the South This his record shows Hence his selection for the Presidency by that party which at the North has freesoil proclivities hence the admission of the Abolitionist Horace Greeley in a speech at Ossawattomie that he would support Bell hence the reluctance of Southern Opposition journals to place name at their mast-head for many weeks after his nomination Having no platform now to stand upon it is the policy of the Opposition to ignore party creeds albeit it was the alpha and omega of their objections to the Democratic party in the last campainy that their platform was susceptible of two constructions Driven to the wall they at last extract from the public speeches of John BeU a few sentences which mislead the public as to his true position The extract is garbled and we call upon the Opposition press to publish the whole truth by which it will be seen that John Bell is not in favor of protection in nil the Territories Let bur Democratic friends stick a pin here Upon the issue before the people that of the duty of the Federal Government to protect the slave owner in his rights of property in all the Territories John Bell is not sound His doctrine is that the in to a cannot the local laws in force prohibiting slavery when tho United States came in possession of This is his position and we defy contradiction This protection is partial not absolute According to Mr theory the flag of the Union extends over one Territory and not over another The Constitution is in force in one and hot in the other Tho lex loci overrides the Constitution the local laws cannot be superceded because forsooth squatter sovereignty began before the cession of the Territory to the Union What a doc-trihe for a public man! If slavery is prohibited in a Territory prior to its cession to the United States the law most remain in force the Constitution cannot protect slave property until these laws are removed This is the very essence of squatter sovereignty A Territory where there is no sovereignty existing by authority of its creator Congress itself its Governor Judge and other officers appointed and removed by the Government at pleasure has the power and can pass laws prohibiting slavery which must remain in full force after its acquisition the Constitution propria vigore the flag of the Union cannot it aDd the citizen in the enjoyment of his rights of property of every description This is Mr position But here is the mutilated extract going the rounds in the Opposition press: Constitution propria vigore the flag of the Union protects the citizen in the enjoyment of his right of property of every description recognized as such in any of the States on every sea and in every Territory in the Union The soundness of the general doctrine held on this point I think cannot well be questioned or disproved and if the question related to a Territory situated as Oregon was when the United States came into possession of it property in slaves would be entitled to the protection of the laws and Constitution of the United The extract from Mr Bell's speech from which the above is garbled is as follows: it is contended that the South is secured in the full benefit of the doctrines held by some of the most distinguished champions of its rights who maintain that the Constitution propria vigore that the flag of the Union protects the citizen in the enjoyment of his rights of property of every description recognized as such in any of the States on every sea and in evety Territory of the Union And this doctrine it is said if well founded and if it is so declared by the Supreme Court it will authorize the introduction of slavery XT NT rri 2 -The senarntoi? ti limcU'd i world-T ob sequies were celebrated with royal pomp and obligations of the HIGHER United States Supreme Bench-Vacant Judgeship defence of Democratic pn I lowing times and places: Homewood Seott 13 Hillboro Sebastopol Decatur Newton 17 Paulding Jaeper "24 The people of all parties are invited to tend imposing solemnity and hi3 remains were de- was nothing all that so perilous to the I safety of the Union as a sectional nomination for the Presidency where tha North demand -I ed the nomination of a particular man on a sectional issue And tbe delegation from every Southern State without exception re- sisted the nomination as dangerous to their I rights and institutions A nomination forced upon the South by the Freesoil wing of the Whig party North is now presented to the American people as a unanimous nomination i one It 1 the matters not whether the North forced I posited by tbe skle of Motel des Invalides In this city we see one grand centre and at view a centration of those elements of We are somewhat at a loss to understand why there should be any difficulty in filling this vacancy from the district to which it belongs We believe to every other district in peace and fraternal feeling to take one-sixth I the United States this right is conceded of that vast territory gained by tbe common From the meany learned and able jurists 2 That they are contending weal or woe for life or death in the IRREPRESSI-! BLE CONFLICT between freedom and slave- 3 That are now in the last stage of the conflict before the great triumphal inaug-1 oration of THIS POLICY intothe go vers IT OF THE UNITED STATES 4- this victory comes the end of slavery" the nomination upon the South or the South wea glory and improvement which to be found in the States of Mississippi and the North the danger consists in the to modern civilization such an exquisite Arkansas whore the vacancy exists surely wTutoriai Une divided we form our opinions ions that Northern men were one way and 1 some one can be found in all respects eompe- Southern men another But after the nom- tent That the President should desiro to ination is made we are told that it was a fair cast a reflection upon the character or judicial compromise because tho South received the platform and the North obtained the candi- and Thufwe I I haveen7andTi7only'' i fce correctIr spit upon tne platform 1 bus we 1 represented the real doctrines and purposes standing of these two States we cannot for a moment suppose He can have no motive personal or political to do them of Paris and 1 may say of France from state- bis speech short addressee were made ments which give us but an imperfect idea of Wilson and others endorsing and their real condition yet the defect is of that 00111 plnnenting Mr and his speech has been peculiar sort which may be detected not I endorsed and commended by the have Winfield Scott before I fictional PRvt of Parisian wonders hurls into Public Speaking Chrisman candidate for Elector of Presideot and Vice-President for tho Fifth Congressional District of Mississippi on the Breckinridge and Lane ticket and Gus Wilcox candidate for the same office on the Bell and Everett ticket will address the people upon the political issues of the day at the following times and places to-wit Colombia Marion Bspt22nd Monticollo Lawrence Sept 24th HolmeeviUe Piko Sept 26th Liberty Amite Sept 28th Woodvllle Wilkinson Oct 1st Notches Adams Oot 3rd Fayette Jefferson Oct 4 th Port Gibson Claiborne Oot 5th DELINQUENT TAX-LANDS Gffick Jckson MiMa JoJy 18th 1860 THB following land in Lheooantyof Lsqun delinqnest for non-payment of tax-m of 186 7 will be subject to entry or parch ut this office after sixty days from the date hereof by any ci risen of thid State upon payment of amount for which said lands nre delinquent and all cost to th fttate with daooageM and subsequent taxes accrued See Revised Code of chap 1 ec 9 art 46 and 46 page 82 IH vision of Section Lot 5 Lot 3 aad 4 half quarter half of quarter half quarter quarter quarter quarter quarter quarter intereet in quarter interest in quarter 4 intereet in lot 3 interest in half quarter 54 interest in lot 1 6 and 7 34 internet in lot 3 4 and 5 half lot 1 2 3 and 4 Lota 4 and 3 Lots 2 and 3 Lot and 6 Lot 3 4 and 6 All of Ail of half quarter and quartei All half quarter half quar rrafi in grRatianRl Lot 2 3 4 5 and 6 half of half quar qunr Lot 1 Fraction! ball lots 126 and 7 half a quarter he If quarter half quarter a quarter I they have been true to him true to principle true to the Constitution and the country Mississippi is almost unrivaHed in the support of Democratic principles and Democratic Statesmen her whole representation in Congress present an unbroken front to the enemies of our Constitutional Union whether in the council chamber in the Halls of Congress or in the battle-fields wherever duty and patroitism have demanded her service her sons have not been found unwortay or incompetent Why then should they be longer us for the Presi- dency After mature deliberation he pro- the back ground my most extravagant pre-mmt i-c conceived notions of the richness and splendor toe French Capital and presents in lieu a I picture which for the moment makes us doubt i the reality of the scene We behold every coacievable thing developed until there ap'd therefore feel well warranted in my own i pears 10 no malYin for further improve-mind in attributing to the imbecility culpa- ment no condition of life but finds numer-BLE NEOLECT or the CORRUPTION of the ous representatives here There is but little Administration all the blood and I expenditure which have attended our reamt I for it is considered disreputable tils relations with the Creek Indians and aiKl drunKen are rarely seen reeling rmteh of the dishonok which must attach the the streets at midday or rendering asv ceeds to accept the platform and to write the letter which be had promised Mr Archer in the private note which was found in breeches Laughter) More of John Bell Record of that party It will be seen that tbe war here declared is not against slavery extension but against slavery in the States The and are to be into the Government of the United with Abraham Lincoln and then says Mr Seward the end of This doctrine was announced by Lincoln as a part qf his creed some time before Seward poclaimed it and whatever professions he may make now to secure votes this intensified BTo November Term Win Shearer 1860 Virta ef the abort stated writ ef fieri Faria to me directed from the Hon Circuit Court of the United State foe the Boutbern District of Miminippi I will sell at Public Auction to the highest bidder for cash oa the 1st Monday the 3rd day of September 1869 before the State House door in the city of Jeeksoo county of Hinds State of Mississippi within the hours prescribed by law the following described property to-wit One negro mil named Horace about 60 years old levied on as the property of ffi Sheerer sod will be odd to mtisfT the above stated case end 11 oosta RJCHABU GRIFFITH Marshal Southern Hist Mississippi Aug G7 w3w Executor's Sole BY Virta of aa order of the Probata Court of Hinds seoetv mod at the July Term 1969 the uadeirignod executrix aad Executors of the estate of 8 Terpiey diseased will sell et pub-lie (action ia front at tho Capitol ia the City of Jaeksea ooo aogre ass aeaoed Josrt aged about 38 yean Said aO to ba aa a orodit of twelve months Rotas with appeared eeeurities will be required of tho purchaser TARFUSY Executrix SIMMS ISAAC HULL aug 10 wit STATE OF MISSISSIPPI! In Cbaaoery Court Soon CovurT Oev Tana A D-1899 TW all other persoao eieimiag er taring aa interest either legal er equitable ia the lands hereinafter described at the time the same were old for taxes aad all such other persons as may be interested therein Take sotico that I have Sled my bill in the Chancery Court of Soott for a confirmation of title under the set ef 19k ef February 1894 ia amd to the following lead! ia mid Couaty to wit hereon the West-half of Southwest quarter and North quarter of satin fists township six range six aad the East -half of Southeast quarter and Wear half ef Southwest quarter of soetlec uioe team aad tho East-half of Northeast quarter of section thirty erne and East naif ef eactionHhirty township sevea range six East sold for the taxes due thereon for Hi year 1644 and Deed dated 17 th June 1844 aad aaless ye ptead answer or deatur to aaid hill am or before the 3rd Monday of October 199 the (tat day of the next regular term of tba Cbaaoery Court to be held at Hillsboro ia aid County the (am will be taken a confessed aad decreed ecoordinrlv CAW) LINUS BOYD RrH Bcoxxxa hoi for eompioimaai Aag wit MISSISSIPPI neaps a Cocbtt At hoover Rule before the dark -dug 6th 1869 John warren 1 rt Bill to Perf set Land TiUes BarfcoO I HERKAH Joba Waerea ha filed hie bill ie the Cbaaoery Qeart at Neebota Couaty preying for luefirairin ef khlUtU to the Wert-naif of tba auettaraek euurter ef township tea of Neebota Ceuety iHM tolfi Imad erne to the 8tuta of MleSmipfi far the Seem due aad aeaid fee the year 1(48 eethe toad aad psefaty oToe Jaeeph gartei) aad add toad twee nar-e tamed oTrtdeetaed et the State at MlaitafeaL by oaa Berry AueeeB wta seta aad eeaveyed said lauds uJ she Waneawrtahadfitod hto WQ pMy-iag ii elnellT- ef tax MM a re paid is the Chaaeery Ceoxlef Nssklkl eeety ft ie therefore artarai That netiee ef the peadee-ey of this salt be givea by aabBeoMea ia the pahflebdd ia (he city of Jaekson aad by poistiag at tho Court Boot deer in the town of Philadelphia far thirty days to Joseph Burk all aad all ssni as eieimiag or haring an ia tercet either legal at soadtoble ia arid lands at the time the earn am forfaited is the State to be aad appear at toe next Ham at the Chaaeery Court to be bold at the Court Bene ia the torn of Philadelphia cm the tad Maaday at Sept 189 andshow eaaaa If any they eaa why (aid title thall not be confirmed or the mm will excluded from equality in the judicial depart- wdry by the reason of speculations in their I night hideous with disgraceful I 18 bis 1011 doctrine It means a a John Bell on the pert of the General none to Jackson Female Institute We are pleased to learn that the indefatigable Principal of the Jackson Female Institute has fulfilled his promise of making his school more attractive and more deserving of public patronage than ever that he has been visiting the different institutions of our country and securing the best teachers in all the departments among others a native French teacher educated in Paris who will be devoted almost if not quite exolueively to thia department' also a teacher of drawing and painting a pupil of the distinguished Sully whose reputation is world-wide Largely endowed by nature for this art add the pupil from childhood of such a master the school and community will be peculiarly lavored in having such a teacher The lady selected as the presiding teacher is a graduate of Mount Holyoke an institution so well known for making thorough scholars that no higher recommendation is necessary See advertisement valor and treasure of the people of all the States A bill for that purpose passed the Senate receiving howerer but tom Northern votes and those Democrats It foiled in the House receiving only five votes from the whole North and in the Senate on the question of receding from its position not a single Northern man voted with the South in favor of the extension of the line The bill was thus lost and why That fell spiritof Northern aggression demanded our exclasion from all that extensive territory They succeeded but too welL The deed was indirectly consummated by the admission of California into the Union with an illegally formed Constitution Freesoil crossed over on the Southern side of the line of 36:30 disregarded their own Compromise and violated that compact without the shadow of law or justice The South submitted to this in consideration of some beneficial features and enunciation of principles in th Ceiyyaanis measures of 1850 In 1854 it was thought expedient for Congress to pass a law authorizing the territories of Kansas and Nebraska to establish territorial governments Tbe South knowing that the North would not consent to the extension of tho Missouri restriction to the Pacific but would disregard the obligations of the Compromise whenever it was to her interest so to do determined with the assistance of those Northern men whose returning sense of justice enabled them to deal fairly by the South to secure tbe principle declared by the Compromise of 1850 and repeal the unstitutional restriction of 1820 The Black Republicans arrayed themselves against the measure while I the South and the conservative men of the North supported it The Legislatures of the Abolition 8tates protested against the pas- sage of the bill even the pulpit was invoked and Mr Edward Everett presented a raam-! moth memorial signed by 3050 clergymen of New England praying Congress not to pass I the bill On the other hand every honorable means were employed by the South to secure meet of the Government bold sir for one rtbat 'who and Of the young but not less worthy sister believe this war (Mexican) to be unjust and elccss- Bnt nnder tfie supurb sheen ofehar- Arkansas quite as much may he said They i iniquitous or whether just or unjust tliat the millS civilivation and captivating ceremony have been represented for long years by the furtber prosecution of it is likely to inflict up- which shines so radiantly and brightly there i -i on the country greater evils than can be com a fomented Judge Daniel a citizen of a distant penaltcd by all the territorial acquisitions current of socuu corruption and morel Government with sovereign States to end slavery! This is th epolicy says Seward that is about to be inaugurated into the General Government No sane man can foil to see where such a conflict would speedily end this victory and would come the wreck oi the Union not the of slavery' BURT And of Pub State a man wholly unknown to these States and not familiar with their laws or people of this they have not complained But now July 18 60d which tho courage and resources of the coun- inconstancy which seems to me to be anta-try may achieve have a perf ed right to arraign gonistic to tbe stability of society subversive llifZh ATT kw destructive of when justice propriety and equality all forbid Among the French generally there is little it why should any distant or other sister which the Constitution warrants I hold State seek to impose another stranger upon 8r that to deny them the exercise of this pri-tbis district We think no man worthy of i vdege by law would be an act of despotism i nr- I undur fog1 forms and to seek to forestall the exercise of this privilege by intimidation and the station and with proper respect for these morality no modesty yet an abundance of what we regard as parlor politeness The distinctive differences in the orders of society are net so nicely drawn as they are in the For the Mississippian The Democracy of Adams Northern States unquestionably I do not include the nobility between whom and the people there is no intercourse or sympathy Those who move in what we call the circles are numerous but the principles upon which their social regime is based display a levelling process which I little expected to STATE OF MI88ISB1PPLI In Chancery Court NxsHOBn County Sept term A i860 TO all person claiming or having any interest either legal or equitable in the lands hereinafter dsseri bed and all lueh perzona as may be in term-tad therein Whereas I have filed my bill in the Chancery Coart ef Neshoba County Slate of Mississippi to have perfected my title to the North-half of the aertk-eact quarter of auction nineteen township tea range twelve Rest in said county and State sate tract of laud was sold and conveyed by Meydstsa Tax Collector of said County to James flsnhatrnta Little Berry Austell end John Heath a the 19th day of July 1843 for the taxes dna taersou for the year 1842 assessed against Thacker Winter and Hardeman afterwards by deed rslssaeil bia interest therein to said Backs trom aad Aasteil aad they sold aad conveyed said Is ad tom Yea are therefore notified to be end appear in said Court at the Courthouse in said County on the 3rd Monday in September next and show cause again at aaid tax title and why my title to said lead should not be eonfirmed BENAJAH WILLIAMSON Aug 22 wtt On the evening of the 23d ult Gov John McRae addressed a very large meeting at Natchez The speech" was clear forcible and argumentative The writer has often heard the Governor speak hut never with such ability He was listened to with profound attention rarely interrupted by applause as I tbe people were evidently desirous to lose no word of his exposition of tbe antecedents of the candidates and the issues of the day or a link in his closely-connected argument Oa States and for himself would allow his name to be forced upon the President in opposition to the wishes of Arkansas and Mississippi and if he does we bepe we have not to appeal in vain to the justice of Mr Buchanan for equality in this confedation of equal States He Generally Votes with the Northern Freqgoilers the influence of official denunciation by charg- ing those who avail themselves of this privil- ege as tbe allies of the public enemy and their Auxiliaries in the war is an attempt at moral despotism only to be excused as an emana-i tion of excessive and over-heated zeal John Bell sir should the tone of remonstrance against this war rise so high in this chamber as to penetrate evert vale nt Mexico re- into New Mexico The soundness of the general doctrine held on this point I think cannot well be questioned or disproved and if the question related to a Territory situated as Oregon was when the United States came into possession of it property in slaves would be entitled to the protection of the laws and Constitution of the United States but the question is more doubtful and formidable to the interests of the South where it is raised in reference to New Mexico where there has been an organized society and government for two centuries and where slavery was prohibited by the local sovereignty before and at the find The conceited or pride-swollen portion verb eating among mountains AND this division consists principally of English ROUSE THE WHOLE COUNTRY TO A end American residents abroad who standing Th Brown Barbecue at Crystal Springs The given to the Hon A Brown at Crystal Springs yesterday was largely attended The crowd numbered about fifteen hundred and great enthusiasm was manifested for Breckinridge and Lane The speech of Senator Brown was able and eloquent and while he had some slight objections to Mr letter of acceptance and the platform upon which he stands still Gov Brown will give the ticket his warm support The who attended expecting comfort at the hands of Gov Brown returned disappointed We shall not attempt to give a report of his speech as it will soon be published in full He was warmly greeted and frequently applauded After partaking of a fine dinner the crowd repaired to the stand and CoL Roberts of Copiah briefly addressed the audience In answer to calls udge Stone Purdom Esq and others spoke in behalf of Breckinridge and Lane The meeting evinced the fact that Copiah will give a good account of herself in November next We have the evidence of the New Orleans Crescent one of the leading Belleverite organs in Louisiana that Mr Bell generally voted with the Northern Freesoilers This is but in accordance with facts which can easily be shown from his record He voted against the South for the reception of Abolition petitions he opposed the annexation of Texas in 1844 a great national and peculiarly a great Southern measure he voted against the Clayton Compromise bill upon which the South rallied in 1848 he voted against the Kansas- SPIRIT OF RESISTANCE to the attempt I upon a purse-proud platformaflec't a'd cbred XtcHpI to subdue them to our dominion there are audwtece rarely cheers The truth ia that those who believe that a greater calamity may 'n 'JeQfl an4 importance which the genuine every point was well taken and well sus-befall this country in the further prosecution and educated French gentleman regards with taiDed A sketch of this ereat speech in- ineffable scorn Their minds become rapidly 1 impregnated with the dangerous disease which infest society and under the demoralising influence of which a people mentally constitute like the French alone live Some of our Americans attempt while citizens of the only Republican Government in the world to enforce with unflinching exactness the ettiquette practised at court and look with no lenient eye upon any improvement of the rules which it provides for the regulation of social commerce No American ought to live here in a of the war (Mexican) than even such a result as John Bell if any should now desire to know my poor opinion upon the proper mode of terminating this (Mexican) war 1 say to them make the best treaty with any existing Gverament you can If you must have the territories of New Mexico and California get a session of them if you cannot do that come back to the Rio Grande to tho boundary you claim title to and thus savs your honor John Bell advice is stop the country as you would a city doomed to pears in the Free Trader of the 24th but that sketch contains an important error and makes Gov McRae say what he certainly did not say directly nor indirectly 5id which places the Governor and his audience in a false position I allude to the assertion that Gov McRae instanced the act of Kansas prohibiting slavery within its limits as a case that demanded the legislative protection of Congress As I have asserted the Governor never stanced actof to the pieyev at aaid i with the statates in support of the great principles of equal rights It had but two opposera from the South in the Senate (John Bell and Sam Houston) and very few in the House The measure was favored by the truest spirits of the South in fact it was a measure which the i duly perfected aea hill in Uf ITZJL Ji tierej That this order be published above for anddoaag the term of thirty day Gfvxx nader my baud end ssul of said at Pbttadetpbia this the 9th day of (Asgmst A 1869 ang 15 wim SL ROSS destruction by fire from Heaven John Bell any any Territory gimplv prostyle contrast with principles I hibi tng slavery that Territory Nor could have done so for every man of sense and I do not approve of their keeping Nebraska bill and the repeal of the Missouri I restriction in 1854 which was a Southern and a constitutional measure because it repealed i an unconstitutional statute he voted against the admission of Kansas with her pro-slavery Constitution in 1858 and in fact wherever the contest was between the North and the 8outh in almost every instance Mr Bell will be found arrayed against the South and vot-branches ing side by side with John Quincy Adams STATE or NlMUilPPL Nnaoaa Cotnrrr At Chancery Mid before the Clerk Any 6th i860 Jssss Warren vs Bill to Fsrfoet Land Titloa Thomas Coopwood WHEN AS Jsoseo Warren has filed is tbs Ctaaesry Quart at Batata bit bill oousty 8TATE OF MISSISSIPPI I In Chancer Court- Naanos County Sept Term A i860 FN10 all perse ns claiming or having any interest either legal or equitable in the lands hereinafter described st the time the same were sold for for taxes aad all such other persons as may be intonated therein Whereas I tars filed my bill in the Chancery Court of Neshoba County State of Mississippi to have perfected my title to th South-half of section twsaty-ains township tan range twelve East in said County said tract of land was sold and convoyed by Boyd ton Tax Collector of eaid County to James Backstrotn and Little Berry Austell oa tbs 27th day of March A 1843 for tha taxes due thereon for the year 1842 aseed gainst William Dowsings and afterwards sold aad conveyed by said Backs trom and Austell tome You are therefore notified to be and appear in aid Court at tbs Courthouse of said County on the 3rd Monday ia Sepsetnber next and show cause against aaid tax title end why my title to said lands should not be confirmed Ang 1 w4t PAYNE CITATION TO tba unknown owners of the West half of Lot number fifteen in West said lot ta branded by Capitol street os the North by Pearl street a the South James Mullaly on tbs East aed crossing the A Railroad oa the West to Short street containing two aad eissty-fire hundredths acree mors or less TAKE NOTICE that writ of ad quad dam man has bssa leased by th Clerk of the Circuit Court ef Hiada Csasty ea application of the Southern Railroad Company to condemn for a depot and aarstaass for add read th wsst half of said lot of toad aad that a jury of inquoet will bo sum Olid aa required by law to make true inquest of tho damage th owner of said land may suffer in data of cession to the United States and I its passage It was demanded by the whole where under that prohibition slavery had I South as a sheer act of justice The Demo-ceased to exist The Constitution in applies- cratic party took the part of the South and in tion to this i emtory is expected not merely to protect property in slaves as in the case of Oregon before there was any exercise of sovereignty upon tho subject one way or the other but to supercede the local laws in force prohibiting slavery when the United States came into possession of it If the obstructions interposed by these laws were removed then the principles of the Constitution would be left to their full and fair operation and the South might look with some confidence lo the protection of slave property in this Territory through the Courts of United Cong Globe uol 22 1094 From this it will be seen that the proof conclusive that Mr Bell does not believe that the Constitution of the nited States in its application to the Territories protects the owner of the slave in his rights of property in all the Territories but only in those like Oregon where there has been no prior to its acquisition That in New Mexico the case is different Here it is doubtful whether property in slaves would be entitled to tbe protection of the laws and Constitution of the United States here the local laws are supreme and of superior force to the Constitution Away with such squatter sovereignty! Let Mr Bell read the treaties and he will find that by the terms of the cession and the laws passed at that time the Government is bound to protect the citizens of the Territories in the enjoyment of their right of property whole Southern people asked at the hands of Congress The Legislatures of all the South- era States in session while the bill was pend- ing with a unanimity scarcely paralleled instructed their Senators and Representatives to vote for the Kansas bill whi effectually repealed the Missouri Compromise Let us quote some of those We can lay our hands on several Both of the Tennessee Legislature passed resolutions on the subject I he following is the Senate resolution which passed with but one dissenting vote Me solved by the General Assembly of the State of Tennessee That the bill now pending before Congress called the Nebraska bill the tatives to give it their hearty support The Georgia Legislature unanimously but that the same is an institution over which the people alone in forming their organic law have full power and control meets our cordial approval and is sanctioned clearly by the ciples of the bills creating Territorial ments for New Mexico and Utah and we earnestly request onr Senators and u- of hi MM to the West ef leetloe fear mated ia ata arid for the Iirklead Stariff span-gorical equipages with bvered servants to air themselves in I will write no more on this point at present I will reserve other com- ments and criticisms for another occasion when more leisure and a more thorough ac- qusintanee with what I have already seen i will justify me in diseasing affairs more correctly and elaborately I approach now the most difficult of enig knows that under the Dred Scott decision such an act would be simply noil and void and requires no legislation from any quarter the courts having full jurisdiction as it sta- under the Constitution The Governor instanced instead unfriendly legislation by taxation or the non-passage of suitable police regulations and this was alt These are really the only cases which will require Congres- 03" The struggle in Texas is between slavery and freedom slavery that killeth and freedom that maketh alive New York Tribune The struggle in Texas is that of the most demoniac passions against law civilization and humanity Houses are burned men murdered children massacred women outraged and then consigned to death and all in the mere wantonness of cruelty and crime As well say that the outrages of the Druses are the struggles of pure religion as ascribe the horrors of tho Texan border to the love of liberty Position of an Old Line Whig We take the following extract from a correspondence of an old line Whig from the Macon Georgia Beacon There are daily evidences of a growing adherence to the rights of the South in MI our exchanges My policy is for this circumstance to make Mr Breckinridge the choice ot every Southern State County and man south of Mason and line and then a united South can take Chase Seward Sumner and other Abolitionists But we intended merely to call attention to the article in which Mr Bell is charged with voting generally with Northern Freesoilers The following is the mas the character of Napoleon III It is sional legislation 0 War- of Court at ti doao of thtoari tbe When the principle shall be established by the party that it is the duty of Congress to protect and tbe interference of Congress shall manifestly become necessary Congress will then interfere I wish Gov McRae coul havebcen heard by every man in Mississippi for I doubt if a better Speech bfc delivered during ihi canvass (She at the pen-- pabbmtiaa in 1 ta the otty of Jnek-Kri Bsao door la the tews at FMafiMphtai fita Mtirty days to Tbes Coopwood aad aU psmoas stalmiug or having aa interest stihsr nr squitaris ta aaid lands at tha timslhs am wss sold toe ta tarn do to ta aad ay poor ettat ahri law of tho Obea-- ia tafifi a (ta (tart Mean ta the a the Sid Maaday of 8ep- taay sea why osry Oortto tow at Pritou scaasqaaass of tE asm by arid Soottarn purport sf rtrtld aad 11 fer ta 23d dsy 1999 i at which time laad for ta purports lo owner or owners taw cans ia taoir as 34 fit alt wit Insurrection in Georgia By a passenger last night from Atlanta we learn that intelligence had been received from Adairsviile on the Georgia State road that a negro plot aers been detected in that neighborhood can also nd sppsar nd Last Saturday night was to have been the time A Northern white man concerned was run down with dogs and killed by the i Montgomery Mail 21th ult tains condemned and used Railroad Company for the that aaid inquwu a been of September is tbs year said lory will be upon said when and where can alao be nd appear a own bhalf the premises WH TAYLOR Bhenff of Hindi Co ROUTH C3ROLISA aaid that circumstances make men a sudden dormant mind and awaken it to is nothing more ises which pro- i continuance How i in their origin I in result None to forget the past I mind of its most sight of the menu- I which would be has been com- I inctinau3 boyhood paper under date of May 28 1858: Mksbrh CRrrTFvoEv afi Bkll These distinguished gentlemen from some unac-i pnn- I countable cause now-a days generally vote 8YmPhthy and support they could then point difficult of Solution than tn Govern- with the Northern Freesoilers and in opposi- tbu agricultural and manufacturing men of dnee success and secure its tion to the members from that sectiou of the Represen- Confederacy it was supposed they intended to represent at least in part If the one rep- resented Vermont and thaaothar Michigan there would be little difficulty in accounting for theqj action by one process or another but I as it 13 we cdnfcss we are together in the dark unless as has been stated on numerous occasions lately Presidential aspirations have outweighed and overslaughed the duty and council with the North ior the integrity of the Constitution and the safety of the Republic We lave many friends at the North let us strengthen them by giving them our united agricultural and manufacturing the North to a united South tby could direct ship builders and of commerce to take a look at our front if any thing will reac and check too anti-slavery war-cry that WTH IT nothing will then it is sheer nonsense to talk of Union The Union cannot be preserved with one section in arms against the other If it must be dissolved let it be done now I think I speak the sentiments of nine-tenths of the fathers of the oountry when I to be about Ettle ones I chaise may strike the with celestial fire wonderous action There its disconnected how dissimilar what strangeness of unity of the immortal few attempt which would be to rob the valuable jewels nor loose ments of pleasures and pain the work of one whose being posed of those frigid aa will be 4aly aM i to ta pass- liberty and religion until they come into the ed the following: Union as a State The compact alone binds Mesolved That the opposition to the princi- 2 10 PTOteCt mUCh l6M th0 COnStita PSlthof sfotsreed toe £opfo Uon- 1 of Georgia as hostility to the rights of the Hon Edward hfch baye leJ a mjganlllro)V cares of the world are apoleon the Berrien and Hon Everett lb Another Abduction Case in an hood of inert wbm tbo cUre unsound ness on the slavery question was made against Mr Eerett Senator Bemen being called on to defend his vote for him as Minister to Eng- South and that all persons who partake in I fealty they owe their immediate section! i such opposition are unfit to be recognized as On the 19th inst the bill of Senator Clav component parts of any organization not hos- of Alabama to repeal the fishery bounties betj'reen my household go ds and th- i came ud for discussion and dagger or incendiaries torch I love tile the South came up for discussion and determination I say that prefer my when that hour comes I prefer to place my dagger nr incendiaries torch 1 love 1 scvassqClak EM ftOM is STATE OF EDGEFIELD DISTRICT IN KQUFIY Sarah A Ktkrtdg 1 Bill for Account fflfio ciF th dame of Equity is this case a Is hereby gtvsa to Stephen Norris Karris Ilaasy Stidham ami Elisabeth or their next of kin or dead sod all other per-butrts of Mary White latsof XforioU District who died intestate to 1 poor thoir claims before th Coart of Edgefisld District within three months (tap Iks pohtisattan hsrsof on pain of being krtTid frnm nay share ia th Estate of said In-otat XW CARttlLE ck Cosm'rs Offie daf 28 w3m ivissssoy ws Kask if they bo lirin si rsprsssata tires if they be iso ritlhitr tab otetrib SaWT" rats Equity I On its final passage the vote stood being my country and pray that it may remain intact but if it must go assunder let it tct but ff it must go aasunoer it go now i TATE Of 4ee before I by yeas and nays as follows I Yeas Messrs Bayard Benjamin Bieler let every man know his brothers pl and iv ClnnJS his own-let us bo a unit Now a good Bright Brown Clay Clingman Davis has learned that the assential components which regulate control and direct the pressure of prosperity a state of existance fa talto any one endowed with ordinary human feeling unless it is mingled with the advantages of adversity Who can bear a continued flood of prosperity in which there is no ebb-tide The mind may rest happy and con- to And the following preamble and resolution passed the Mississippi Legislature without division or the calling of yeas and nays Whereas efforts are feeing made in tbe Congress of the United State and elsewhere Asy 31899 Loafis Ttfls 14 kia Mil Douglas Fitzpatrick Gwid Hammond Henderson I Hunter Iverson Johnson of Arkansas John- 1 of Tennessee Jones Mallory Mason time to unite we have good men In cay humble judgement by giving to Breckinridge and Lane a united Southern vote we would settle tins vexed question restore harmony land vindicated triumphantly both himself and Mr Everett in his address to the people Of Union Maori And the people of Georgia eotKiem nd Mr Berrien for that very act A vote of csnSege against him passed the Georgia Legislature almost unanSmoosiy for sustaining the liomi nation of Mr Everett a Minister to England indeed He was condemned by the very tribunal (too people of Georgia) to whom he addreuradhts to prohibit the introduction of slavery in the Territory of Nebraska a manner not ac- th ririt and intentof theFed- I no son Jersey cordance with the spirit and intent of the Fed ''LSSSSKS Sebastian Slidell i country renew fraternal re- 1 and Yulee 30 Toombs Wright yjjfonsdth the North draw floer and render touted In that sphe forabnef penodbutsoon- Nays-Messrs Allen BelL Broderick stronger the bonds of Union and become the I er or later the equilibrium will be lost and Chandler Clark Collamer Crittenden I greatest country the world luicvr s7'7 happiness as well as other attributes on in Kraus Itladteat aad Organs flVSIl) aad repaired with entire satisfaction JL er bo ehorgs Plano being too load and nk eaa bs rendered soft to it origiaai tone rises eat to tot et Mr Mory' stars Jackson tel Address ms at Canton Hiss PROF BIYINAC Julytd Sra -w late of Memphis To our Patrons in Carroll Holmes and Yl azoo rank Hatch Esq is our authorized agent for the Mississippian and will visit our friends in the above-named counties during the present month of September Mr Bell on Scpi-ressino the Slave Trade in the District of Columbia Tho bill on which Mr Bell made his speech in 1850 on the suppression of the Slave Trade in the District of Columbia preposed that slaves brought into the Distsict should be emancipated Mr Bell opposed emancipation as a penalty but said bill should be so ameneded as not to augment an evil that already weights heavily upon the country Make the penalty for violating the provisions of the tall a pecuniary one Let it be twice the value of the slave if you please If that is not enough imprison the offender So according to Mr Bell a man who would carry his slave into the District of Columbia from Maryland Virginia or Tennessee to sell although his necessities might require him to sell him should pay twice the value of tbe negro or be imprisoned feelings and sensibilities at tho North demand that tbe slave trade should be abolished at the seat of the National So eaid Mr Bell But are tbe rights the sacred rights of Southern men to yield to the feelings and sensibilities at the North Let the BeU men of Tennessee respond Nashville Union Of? Pri Maori Chart ri We learn that while toe family of Col Christmas of this State were sojourning at Mrs on Lake Harriet in Minnesota a few weeks since the premises were invaded by tbe Sheriff accompanied by a band of ruffians for the purpose of capturing tho servant girl Eliza slave of Mr Christmas They succeeded in finding the girl in one of the out-houses where she had taken refuge from the mob The Sheriff said he had warrant for her which he did not exhibit and took the girl before Judge Vanderburgh who decided that she was free The Abolitionists immediately gathered around the slave of Mr Christmas and hurried her off from the presence of her owner The Minneapolis Atlas a Black Republican sheet in speaking of this outrage uses the following characteristic slang in reference to one of onr most talented and highly respected i citizens the examination before Judge Vanderburgh yesterday Mr Christmas tho former owner of the girl Eliza Winston acted tbe part of the well-bred high-toned gentleman which he doubtless is John Freeman who acted as counsel for him gave ample ovidence of his plantation breeding and manner II is probably a seedy pettifogger when at home who hires some decrepit old nigger to lick occasionally so as to show Ms devotion to the 5 I I I I ir Mtofiasriao TO AlMtnYFmVRare Chance unorm oalldy fob ialx hestagerakorkod in a different eat ttan far ala th old tb-faltary (foeewly Telign't) over Jsskisn Mississippi file wB fitted and faraishsd and 96 yarns i this Gal- I the an- litoieu hhawr ctest for only liN-u th and Wilson 25 I will do Absent or not Messrs Bates earn- 1 Breckinridge and Lane despomngas before I tory a record but he has also experienced eron Fitch Green Kennedy Reid Thompson of toe orth and South or both a catalogue of miseries and warn tortures of Kentucky and Trumbuli-8 ed giving Mr Bell enough votes to make him preafiQrc3 and eDjoymmts and jo J8 Very bad company for Messrs Crittenden tiie lce and Bell to be in We trust it is not an in- 1 dication that they prefer the society of Northern Freesoilers to that of their own Southern i brethren It looks so however and deeply I Bell in New Jkksev Great Enthus-regretful are we that stern truth compels iasm Out of more than sixty papers pub-even this tacit admission What all the lead- hghod in New Jersey we know of one fevor- ot the South and hopes that well entitle him to renown and glory He knows that ears and trouble let your is a noble maxim which should be engraven on the breastplate of every one and the sooner its power and effect are learned by the inexperienced the eral Constitution therefore Mesolved That the bill now pending before Congress organizing territorial governments for Nebraska and Kansas in accordance with the principles of the Constitution of the Uni- ted States and in the opinion of this Legisla-I ture just and proper and that our Senators are instructed and our Representatives are requested to support said bill by all honorbie means Approved March 2d 1854 Southern men of all parties approved the Southern Legislatures asked its passage and even the Oppositionists tried to claim the credit of repealing the odious Missouri restriction At a grand State ratification meeting held in the city of Jacksen in 1856 to ratify the nomination of Millard Fillmore for tbe Presidency Geo Potter offered the following resolution which passed unanimously Be it further resolved Our opponents being thejudges that Millard Fillmore by his ap- 5ji i Look out for A man calhag himself t- Thompson has bu swindling a number of gentlemen from the South now residing in la is vicinity as well as hotel-keep re washerwomen Ac and for the public gied we give 9 deseripti of his person and pratwktea He thick -set until with blade hair raid ejm divsscs well complains of aa ailment in lus foot or leg and is with 'something Of a fodfes man He sometimes claims to be eired broker in New Orleans but say ha rerados art Kenner about 20 miles above to avoid the oofroua taxes of tl city He Wsaj that he owns property la ieL cnes alley Iowa It been ascertained that be wa formerly a teffwui teacher a erf Feans vivkDKR Hk klitil fit the South will confer a ivar by publishing the name of in Jcratsy 64 Maui Democrat BOYD Mwnfhts Tenn better for the the future which otherwise may never be destined to ripen into practical realities Nhpoleon HI is not only master of his own pass tens but fie is great in hw control fJ men The spirit of England had become vexed and her population suspicion of his wwatry a sptondid land so 5 M0 Bear u- MOREY ing enemies favor should brine forth it seems to us the opposition of ever? i 0CtKn of Everett- true Southern man 1 We behave Mr successor has already been appointed by the Legislature of Tennessee Once we should have deeply deplored I and' L( a YES for th Chorokee Rmdy his departure from the councils of the nation but now alas worse than saer llmr tavigorator and Uataartic pm ai tha 1 arery valnabl medJola Bd to advenirameat in aoa to rtu oa tha I anbtt iiz PLnnoa OhiohsrioK A Bobs bort MM 9 Priggs' patent (ddllios to th ahoy hgoswfor 8toiBw7 bo roooiood In MOREY (A98-9) a onr dart.

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Pages Available:
4,806
Years Available:
1833-1863