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/. my : ;' ' /> _ , . ; . . . . ffff?^jggfjjmgmfi?_; ??BjWBSjBC? ffTM^^?." J. "2j|?"^...J_L.ll^J?n.-1.1''?^"J Jit- >?????-m?yii- i-ijrii r - - mmmi r ' J "tf'T-^ '?'?"?-' ' -ir-rr r ijilgr-, i- , j j- II IJ .im i_ ..j'UJ 1 L 1 * '1 ."****g****B?i?"y " ' " ' ' 'f*'" """i??'.-?*1""1*. >*I!!^W*!*****^^,*''* " Tn (ni tic own self bc (ruc, and it mu ^ ^^^^^ us r/ns night thc dug, thou can'tt nat then be JaUe to uny man." M ROBT A, THOMPSON & CO. P1CKKNS COURT HOUSE, S, C, SATUB|AY, SEPTEMBER 21,1867. VOL, ll,.NO. 52. m." . . --.??- ?? tmmmmmtmimmmHmtmmmmmm*. i ni WM*.?^^IIM>.?W>IIII L^WIUIIHIUH-, - ? ? ? - ? -^, ?"M>MM^_ - . . ^ . .?i^iwini M ???.??? MIMHIW ???- ? ? - - - - . _. - - . _ _^POETRY. [From tho Banner of tho South.] Hope and Memory. I am thinking to-day-how oft I think ! Or a Land that lias faded from mortal cyo8 A Laud, where I stood by tho river's brink, XUivl washes tho gatos of Paradiao I Ah ! washes tho gates that never ope, Though forever trembling on golden hinges; While mystical light? to the river slopo, And tho bluo Ohampak its mnr?iu fringost Whore I watchod tho day, with footsteps Hoot, Como down, liko tho Lydian King of old, And saw at thc touch of his kingly foot, IIow thc rolling sands wevo turned lo gold. But no.v-thc Lydian King has fled Nu moro hy tho gates of Paradise, Bul by red und. foaming waves l tread, And watch thc blood of Xossus risc. Thc hand has sunk 'neath (ho sobbing flood, As darkly tho billows onward roll; Butah ! it has left ino tho garment of blood, That wraps in firo my shrinking soul. I at ri vo lo tear it with quivering hands, That aro powerless now to my will, While Pain, th* Immortal, forever slauds Besldo mo and mocks-and still, yet still - ^iid all thc torturo, how oft I think, Of a Land, seen only through dreaming eyes A Land, whoro ? stood by tho river's brink, That washoe tho gatos of Paradise : And 1 ncc the day, with footsteps licet, Copio down, like thc Lydian King of old; And watch, at tho touch of lits kingly feet, How thc rolling sands aro turned lo gold l gm '.1.? ? . 11 POLITICAL. Tho Southern Dalegates in the New York Convention.What Shall They Eo? Wc believe that thc general Impression in thc South is that our delegates should not rote in tho nomination of n enndidate until thc Northern delegates have agreed upon the man, and then to ratify their selection j or, in case thc delegates from thc North should bo una ble to agree, it has bcAn suggested that the .Southam dt legifov i-^it decide tho question by their votes. There aro sonic sorious objections to cither of these propositions, leaving out of view our right nud duty to vote if wc tako seats in thc Convent iou, and if, further, wc shall bo per mitted to vote for electors. Tho Convention will be composed of delegates representing 247 electors from thc Northern States, lenv iug out thc three from Colorado not yet ad mitted, and delegates representing 70 elec tors from the South. Now, if thc Southern deleg?los are not to vote, and tho two-thirds rulo heretofore established shall bc adhered to, it will bc seen that no one can bc rromiaatcd unless he gets 211 votes, or very near tho unanimous vote of tho Northern States. ' '''wtf?y*filthcr tho two-thirds only of thc bal lots cast or thc Southorn States will ho com pelled and ought to bc, to voto, rather Utan require of the nominee that degree of strength amounting almost to acclamation, which has never been thought necessary heretofore. Tho onforcomont of thc two thirds rule under Mieh circumstances, will always and inevita bly defeat tho popular choice, oud fasten up } on tho party a man whose chiefest merit must t.be that he was too little known to excite an tagonism. If thc rule bo so modified as to require only two-thirds of tho votes cast, then thoro may |be, indeed wo bolicvo thcro will bo, some pro prioty in tho Southern delegates holding aloof and compelling Northern friends to agree among tncmsclvcs upon ?onie tuan who is ptrong enough to get two thirds of their own votes. Having scoured two thirds of tho bal lots cast or ono hundred and sixty-fivo votes for thier candidate, thon tho sovonty votes from thc South cnn bo thrown solidly for him, which will mako tho voto he receive* twenty four moro than two-thirds of thc whole num ber cast. If this course bo ndoptcd and wc hope it will he-muoh troublo and difficulty may bo avoided and harmony secured iu tho delibera tions of tho Convention. Tho other proposition which wo wish to no tioo, is that which has been generally conce ded, and wo think, without duo reflection, as thc best courso for tho Southorn delegates in case tho Northorn del?galos cannot agree among themselves-that wo should in tho last moment, and to secure a selection, join in the bnllotting by concentrating upon the strong est candidate, and thus secure to him tho re quisito tity);?hlrdif majority. To thia wo havo this objection : It would weakon tho candidate thus selected in our own party, and subject tho nominee to tho ohango throughout tho Middlo and Kastorn States. Ho was defeated by Curtain for Govornor in 1803, and his d,ofoat wa? duo mainly to tho falso ch argos whioh wore brought against him of being opposod to tho support of tho ii Union Holdlery, and tho unfortunate invasion that Stato by tho Oonfodcrato army during H?? campaign. Those oharges would bo ?gain, ?j?pa'wHh l.?ft twfci a?aiu?t Judge Woodward, and, as it is very important that tho Democracy should present candidates who would not require to bo defended during tho canvass, it would perhaps upon tho wholo not bo prudent to select Mr. Woodward. Tho other gcntlcmnu whose namo bas been mentioned from this State is Governor 1'ncker. Wo incline to thc opinion that tho nomina tion of this gentlomnn ns second on tho tick-' ct would greatly strengthen and increase tho Democratic voto in bis State, and innko it almost absolutely certain for tho Democrats. Governor Packer is a strong man beyond thc limit of his own State, and would especially give weight to tho ticket in tho States imme diately joining Pennsylvania. If wc then would make assurance doubly surd, let thc Now York Convention select J thc ticket from Ohio and Pennsylvania. I Give us Pendleton and Packer, and Rad icalism will bo routed " boise, foot and drag oons." lu insistiug aa wo do upon tho nom ination of Gov. Packer, wo yield our personal preference for Mr. Adams for tho sako of what wc conceive thc best interests of thc party. [Augusta Chronicle k ?Sentinel. The Antiqiuty and Uuversality of Slavery As a matter of history wo shall bo pardon ed for quoting from an essay by a lato French writer-ADOLPH GUAM KU DK CASSAUNAC thc following extract, which, if it lind cinto tinted from tho pen, of a Southern writer, would at once have bcon discredited. As CASSAUNAC was, however, himself an aboli tionist, his testimony must bc accepted. Tho book was published in 1838, tho year of tho abolition of slavery in tho British West. In dies. There were masters and slaves among thc Hebrews; among tho Greeks; muong tho Homans; among thc Gauls j in Franco in ?ho twelfth century; in Prussia in 1750; *;hcy I exist still in tho United States of America ; ! in all Mahometan countries, and in all tho kingdomstnud empires of ludia. When tho institutions of all peoples began, slavery was already established. Moses foun ded thc iustitutions of thc Hebrews, and slavery is found in tho books of Moses. Ho mer was many centuries anterior to tho histo ric times of Greece, and slavery is found in tho books of Homer. Tho Twclvo Tables wevo tho basts of Roman Institutions, and Romulus, long anterior to tho Twclvo Tables opened nt Homo an asylum for thc fugitive slaves of Latium. Thc Salic law, tho law ol ibo Sabons, of thc Tbcringians, of tho Ger mans and of thc Anglos, aro thc prints of de parture of tho institutions of all modern peo ples, mid slavery is found in all tho codes ol tho invasion. Wo add another very impor tant consideration, which is, that in all thc legislative, poetic and historical monuments, which wo have mentioned, slavery is not in stituted for thc first timo, but is mentioned as a fact, oxtsting, known, accepted, fixed. Neither Moses, nor Humor, nor tho Twolvc Tables, nor tho laws of tho invasion fouuded slavery. They mention and regulato it. It was, before they existed. Next-and what wc arc nbott't to say it, ni it were, thc consequence of what wo hnvc said: it now boro appears by thc study of nil traditions that slavery was ever instituted, founded, created, or that it was enacted b) statute, to uso tho expression of tho jurists. Tho statuto law took hold of tho fact of sla very, as it did of all other social facts, when it rogulatcd society ; it has taken it, in itt turn, under its control : lt has shaped and dc fined it, and so cnticrcly taken it' under its power, that when tho institutions of nation: bogan, slavery bad become a part of tho stat ute law ; but it lind a proper, and, sotospoak personal oxistence, before falling under tin action of tho civil and political law; and it ii this primitivo odstence of willoh wo say thai it does not n;.pcar to have bcon the bandi work of man. Moro than that. Returning berenfter to tho Hebrew, Greek, Roman ont barbarian legislation, which mention slaven and ovidently do not orcnto it, wo beliovo tba wo can say that wo have in rcsorvo irrcsisti ble mathematical considerations, which wi! bo produced'in their place, and which wil establish in a manner that, admits of no doubt not only that slavery, in Leviticus, in tb Iliad, in tho laws of tho Twolvo Tablos am in thc codes of ibo invasion, was not a thin? actually yr cvon nowly orcatcd ; Imt that i was an old thing, a dooropit thing, a wor out thing, a decaying thing, already past th half of its timo, half way to a groat sooial mt tamorphosis aud to its own annihilation ; s that, far from owing its existence to burna institutions, slnvory was already greatly shu! cn, and declining, when thc most ancient h ?dt lu timm B?W ?bo light. If tho lau g u ago of tho politics of those la tor yonrs bad not given a reactionary an ridiculous signification to' tho' wofds Divin right, vro would readily say that slavery is < Divino right, but wo fear to bo inmundo atuQtL Wo urefci to uso ot>W vrords, au I L"aiBtt.ii';.j?. to say that, from all traditional appearances and all historio realities, slavery universally presents itself, in tho primitivo timos of all nations, ns a fact, spontaneous, natural, au tocthon ; a fact which is con nato with na tions, without their direct assent or delibc roto concurrence j a principle mixed by God himself with tho thousand principles of hu man sooicty. ?- - - .% ? . Supplementary Report of Commissioner of Immigration* 8U1?KUINTK1)KNT BUREAU OP 1 MMK'.UATIOX, Charleston, May 18, 18C8. To JIU Excellency Governor James JJ. Orr. ?Sm : Since my last report to your Excel lency, thirty ono persons have been registered in this omeo, and havo found employment in this State. There oro now twenty persons on thc wny from Uonnany and Scandinavia, via Baltimore, and may arrive in n few days. Tho registries of lands now embrace ?}{J2,GG0. acres, iu almost every district of the State, for salo at rensonabio rates and on favorable conditions ; and nearly GOOO acres of good lands in salubrious sections of tho Stuto havo boon registered to bo glvon ns n free donation to actual settlors, upon reasonable conditions of improvement. I um glad to perceive a more favorable con sideration of our Stato in 1'luropo, and thc in dications arc, that as soon as wc can obtain greater and regular facilities fur passage, wo shull certainly receive n share of immigration. Indeed, thcro would now bc no want of well inclined labor fortis, if our people could muke thc arrangement for an outlay of tho cost of transportation. In Germany thcro arc'now three influen tial papers that advocate our causo, although j I tun sorry to say wc have, ns yet, a multitude of very bitter opponents. In Sweden nnd Denmark, our inlluonco is also extending : and, after a while, practical results will fol? ? low. In. lyolaiuL ?ovqrul f^q^fafnen ave Ir.od i ly distributing our pamphlets. 1 have men tioned to your Excellency, on a former occa sion, that I desired very much tho establish ment of direct steam communication with Europe. With reasonable sacrifices this could bc effected with Bromen, Hum burg and Glatsgow, where ship owners nrc very favorably inclined to our project. Thc railroads from Charleston to Memphis being willing to transport immigrant passengers a* one cont per milo, and their baggage nt very reduced rutes, would make this route to thc West a moro favorable ono than over oithci New York or ila i ti m oro. lt should bc out constant aim to accomplish so desirable an ar rangement, and" I trust, when our political po sition is onco moro assured, that tho Statt will liberally sustain every eliott that shuH bi .nado in that direction. I had, besides, ru t?i?d?u Lo havo published a suggestion for an industrial movement which seems calculated not only to bo of great advantage to our pco plo, gcnorolly, but would afford facilities foi tho profitable omploymcnt of a considerable number of immigrant employees. I tntcudci to suggest and urge thc establishment of a least one Cotton factory in a central and eli giblc position, in ovory district, (br thc male ing up of thc raw material into yarns, th? capital to bc subscribed in lands at a low valu ation, mid tho lands to bc sold to immigrants To make tho profits of these establishment; secure tho planters to pledge a certain nambo of bales of Colton to bo yarned ou toll. ] only indioatc tho outlino of tho plan for you consideration, dooming tho confused stato o publio affairs unpropitious for attempting it a present. It scorns thnt oven in thc City o Novk York thoro is a porooptiblo want of suf fioiont labourers for tho farmers in tho vlei nity-tho papers complaining that tho botte olnss of immigrants, however in large num hers they nrrivo, nro already, before they !e;;v Euvopo, billotod for their destination in th Western States, and that only tho worthies and indifferent romain for local engagement! This agrees ontiroly with my formerly cs pressed opinions, although it sectus thnt som of our plnntors havo obtained Inbour fror Now York. I had made arrangements wit n gontloman in Pennsylvania to furnish Inbc of any ktud, and of a superior character, I such plnntors na could comply with his.torm which wore very rensonabio-and whenever havo boon applied to I havo furnished his a? dress. But I still continuo to believe tit ? ur resuscitation must bo founded upon tl incurring of un immigration of .small farmer who Will bo followed by reliable laborers ai sktllod moohanios' o? ovory dosoription, nt I that tho most practical method of effect ii that is direct steam communication with K ropoan ports, proffers of cheap lands and multiplication of liur industrial pursuits,. I IjUVo tho honor to bo, your l?xccllpno} obodlopfc.flQ'fian?. .'. .>.?.* JOItNv A. WAdHNER. j Commissioactf of Immigration. Pendleton and Packer? It is conceded by both parties that thc States of Ohio and Pennsylvania will bo tho ol I battle ground in thc approaching elec tion? Thc candidato who. is able to carry those', two States will bc pretty nuro of an elcc^u. Tho electioua in both Inst foll gave .strc ?3 indication of their going Dcmoorotio in t^^residontial cuuvoss. Tho Rudicnls fearjM*/result, and heneo will mak? desper nto c^otts to regain their lost prestige in both. In this view, it becomes a mMtr^nf some moment to tho..U*.o?ri\;y^?at iii'?electing their candidates an eye should bo directed to lo?la influences in tliesc States. Wc believe, that to make the success o? thc party perfect ly sure, one of thc candidates to bo nomina ted in New York should bo taken hom Penn sylvania. If Hancock receives tho nomination for President then some strong man in thc West, say Hendricks or Doolittle, should bc run on thc ticket with him. If the candidate for President should bc selected from some other State, and we be lieve he will, then our true policy indicates thc selection of thc vice-President from thc Keystone State. Io. examining thc field there, wc find tho na urns of two gentlemen suggested, cither of whom would be quito acceptable to tho peo ple of thc wholo ountry. Judge Woodward is nyhorCugh, staunch and pronounced Dem ocrat of tho true State rights sehoul. He is popular not only in his own State but of paving scc'urcdhis nomination by thc votes of unreconstructed rcbols. This would bc urgid with great, force by thc Radicals and would drive many timid men from thc sup porbof our candidate. Any imptftatjon ol havtug been chiefly instrumental in securing the selection of the candidate which can bi fairly made against tho Southern delegates, mu, fcto some extent weaken tho nominee. Th?; bye' must avoid. We can avoid it,- first by r Musing to vote Uti iii thc Novihcv.i ode gate ? havo agreed among themselves ; and seco id, by going in on the first ballot, am cael] delegate or each State voting for th< man'of its choice, upon cqiftd terms with tin Northern delegates. If we were certain that tho excluded State: would bo permitted to cast their votes in tin electoral collego, wo should prefer tho latte course. Bul as there is much uncertainty up on this point, wc arc brought to tho couclusioi that, upon tho whole, tho best policy will b to abstain from taking any part iu thc contes moro than as mere loukorson and well wisher.": [ Oh ro n h ie & >SV/i I In cl. A, Word to Farmers and Tax-Payers lu view of tho fact that thc great Jacobi party has degenerated, (if that bc possible, and is now in control of thc few mon Wh were lucky enough during the war, and whij tho public debt was in process of creation, t absorb all tho bonds and evidences of credil it becomes eminently proper for tho tax-paj i og people who* support tho burdons, to ii quire into' thc. patriotism' of these' men un thc unscrupulous politicians who legislate i their interests j to inquire what sort of go\ Crn m ont theso gontlomcn will, if left to then selves finally establish. There can bo ti question that capital and labor must beconi nntigouistic, whon capital alono controls til law making power. In view of t bis fact, an thc cutiro absorption of political privileges I tho representatives of wealth, it becomes c; cry tax payer before votiug for Co.igrcssma in this^listrict, to candidly weigh tho follov ing simplo propositions : Do you oxpect to return to prosperity will thc leaders of your party nro pursuing a nc cr ending quarrel among thomsc?ves at Wasl ington ? Do you expect to pursue your avocatioi in pcou' so iong as tho politicians and dom gogucsin Congress nro thwarting every n tom pt to bring about a restored Union ? Do you ox peet to' hnvo any p?vioc' of urti so long ns tho interest of tho negro is p ahead of your own 'I Do you expect to bo nblo to live, as yi usod to livo, und ns your wish to live and kc out of debt, so long ns faVorod olnsscs are c ompt from tnxation, which ought to bo d tributed equally upon nil, rests upon' yo shoulders ? Do yW ox'pcot to bo othorwiso than anno od all your lifo with rcvonuo stomps and spf ifio income taxes 1 Do you oxpoot you can exercise any ki of economy so ns to support your family, fe clothe and educate your children, so long you aro losing-millions by tho systom of i ticnal hanks and tho payment of millions intovoBttto them? Db y )? ovor oxpoot td have any money loy*by lor a rainy day, and when you aro o ab lpjikt as all your gold" is kept to f>t?y itfor nary jlAiddioidors ? v ?OKJ?U' oxycot to roallio any. rcspnola amount of monoy for your Jnbor, go long as Congress is spending millions for political purposes, and from which no ono tut a olnss ol' lazy negroes and other emissaries of plun der and puritanism is to derive any benefit ? Do you expcot to livo under freo Constitu tional Government, suoji OB your fatbors es tablished and loft you as a legacy, while it is proclaimed by ofllco-lioldipg and offico-scok ing Vendors, that Congress can make laws out side of tho Constitution of tho United States ? Do you expect to live long enough, and be fore you dio, to seo your children Tod, clothed and educated, and on thc road to hnppincss, comfort and wealth, whilo such laws ns you aro now trying to live under, arc unrcspec tod ? If you do expect to do and sec these things, you have only to sustain thc leaders, who, ac cording to our notion, hnvo proved faithless < to thc country, its Constitution, its interests ( and its people If you don't-their rebuke and overthrow them. Mr. Palmer is thc rep- ] rcscntativc man of tho bankers, bond-holders j and niggers, and if elected to Congress will uso his influence alono for their benefit. Iowa Statesman. Questions for the Iudustrial Classes. "Who is nt prcscut keeping white mccliau ics and laborers from seeking employment iu f the South ? j Who is making a barren waste of thc most fertile-and productive section of the llopub- f lie ? ( Why is the burden of taxation 30 opprcs- , sive and employment scarce ? j Why arc there to day hundreds of thous- j and-1 of white men and womcu in thc North living in dread of starvation withiu thc pres ent year ? Why arc tho commerce of thc North and tho ship building interests almost totally par alyzed ? A 1 '1 Why is tire South throatoncd with a war of races, and civil law trampled uudcr foot in that section-7 Why aro millions of whito men not rcpro sooted in Congress ? Why have all tho' guarantees of tho Consti tution been broken down, and their rights of freo born Americans subjected .to thc arbitra ry will of irresponsible satraps? * Why are thirty millions of white mon taxed for the special benefit of a class who pay no taxes on thc great bulk of their property ? Why should there bc over two thousand millions of dollars exempt from taxation? Why should there bc special legislation for ono class of thc population, to thc serious in- ^ juiof thc interests of orery other ? Why should thc great agricultural popula-' . tion of tho ucw West bo made tributary to tho 1 manufacturing lords of Yankceland ? . If tho national bunkers aro enabled to make twenty millions of dollars a year out of thc industrial class by their speculation in tho J necessaries of lifo, why aro they tolerated? If negroes nrc Qt for freedom, why has a . great poor house system for their support to j bc kept up at tho oxponso of Northern indus try ? J Why is it that tho products of tho South havo fallon off lo a great extent? 'Why arc murders and outrages, and rob beries so fearfully frcquout all over tho South ? If tho war Was prosecuted for tho preserva tion of tho Union, why oro ton States kept . out of it? If tho South is permitted to fall uudcr no- j gro domination, will it bo fit for tho habitaci?n ^ of whito men ? j Thc industrial classes of thc North will find nu answer to all these questions in destruc tives. It ?3 to them wo aro indebted for thc 1 evils by which thc country is throatoncd.- r And tho worst is yet to como. Thc negroes t refuse to work, and tho great productiveness i of tho South is lost to tho country. Thc white men of thc freo States aro oppressed ' with taxation, that they may bo supported in c idleness. Of tho four or fivo hundred mil- r lions of dollars whioh arc raised Upon tho in- 1 dus try of this section overy year, a largo pro- 1 portion is used in tho devilish work of rover- ? sing tho natural order of tho races. t Workingmen of tho North, will you, eau you enduro this infamous work? Do you not j seo that thc perjured, plundering, Constitu tion breaking, law-dofying gang called Con gress, is striking at your rights, at your froo dom, nt your dearest interests, through rooott- . struotion ? There lins not boon a singlo act of legislation, a single measure passed in Con- . grcss that has not boon aimed at you. It is you that tho National Danks aro . fleecing. ti i's your families who aro inado to suffer that tito South may bo Africanized and oon- , verted into a wilderness. . It is out of your pookots that tho taxes to' j pay tho intorcst on uutoxed bonds is paid. j Nearly oncj-li|df your labor is mortgaged for ' tho support of a privileged class. ' Look into Jacobinism, and you will Hod itt '"''^l it thc truo cause of all tho poverty, all tho misery, all tho wrongs from which tho wbolo country in now Bartering. Tho* remedy is in your own bands, and tae timo is hastening otk when it OOO bo nppliod. Organic and* bo prepared for tho day oif a? tiouj tho day On whioh you can settle all ^eorW with tho party of anarcj.y and ruhr,,^^ilto^Si^^^ which scekr to maintain its pow?ifWonffh tho sacrifice ?f^v^ryTIghnuTo^priuoipIo vi?* dicated in the great revolution. Organizo for tho salvation of tho Republic, and rescue it from a beastly, degrading motJ?. ??<: , srerism.^ Organize to savo this hind for white tuen, y -p' and make it thc white man's inboritanca^^ -?^*: Organize to protect yourselves and families ? from tho conspiracy of an unconstitutional .., Uongrcss, and from tho uofarious designs of '\ an unprincipled bondocracy. Organizo fur tho onmncipotion of eight millions of our own race oud blood from the (, ? most galling, crushing, griuding despotism 3vcr inflicted upon v people. Third? of .what they aro to-day suffering.--^g Th ink of their ruined homes, their wasted ields, their prostrate trades, thoir hundreds \ )f poverty-stricken orphans anS wftft 1% |3r-? . Dunk of tho fate with which they aro mo?f . .. recd. Think of thc outrages perpetrated Ry i hal'.'savage, instigated to their devilritics by facooin fiends and cut-throats. Think, 'Of mis, and resolve in your hearts that jh? ?J?.-^ mrscd party which bas brought tblsTw??^ ivhich has brought this flood of ovils up?n (rho and? shall, when thc day of retribution conies, DC Or?shod into tho earth, under tito troad of ^our triumphant majorities. . .. [Metropolitan .Record. From Washington. i fe ^tj \\RA8H?NGTO?, Juno 2p.-Tho SpeaF* j uti tied to pay from tho dato of their clcotionj ! dicy claim from tho commoooomcnt of tho icssion. Tho Speaker referred thc dispute to t Xto Judiciary Committee. . ? In tho Houso, Paine asked leave to- nl?l'tW % luce a bill, supplying thc militia with arms. \ bill, dividing Illinois into two Federal ta-. :'. liciul districts, passed-it goos to tho Pr?rf?W^ lent. Tax bill resumed. Au nmendme?^Jj brbidding romovals from tho distillery iw^pw^i ;hc tax was paid,' anything in thc .*ilPto thlj^i sonlrary notwithstanding, ard all? ;>viug fifty ? louts drawback on exportations, pissed. A j f reto was received on tho omnibus bill, whioh j vas pa?sed, notwithstandiugr.yU^-^?^^ In, tho ??nate, the ?^nopidatiou bill *?njJ lisoussed all doy. An amcudmcut, inor?; .-^ ng tho salary of tho assistant^ trotwurjojp^j* :/ Jharloston from $2,500 to &4,0??, was p?Vsedw-^? Ct is said tho Treasurer disburses $7,000,000. Without concluding thc bill, tho. Sonato aasscd tho omnibus bill over tho veto-'35 to Adjourned, 'tho oinnibus bill, huviug become a law, Jovcrnor Bullock, who is here, issued a proo* umatiou, conyoniug tho Georgia Legislature^^ July -1. JL'ho veto is very brief. Tho objee- ? ions to tho Arkansas bill, without restating^ L hom, apply to those Sutes, oxce.pt Alabama, nf a which caso, in addition, thc bill violator f l ho plighted faith of Congress. Tho Proil- 1 lout has sont special agon ta to Georgia, to* ' cport tho oiroumstanoos connected with th^ uiprisonmont of oltigons of Cojumbns Iftfty Vtlauta, It 4s anctci-stoVat dat tti?^gB^|j(. y deans Committoo have determined io Tot ali rarely financial questions, ufrecting curienoy, >onds and banking, go ovor to noxt ftosslpu, .. v . HKCIPK FOU MAKING HADIOAS.-Thc fol owing rccipo, says an ox'ebango, for making adicals has been placed in our hands. For ho bnncfitof all iutcrcitcd, wo givo it a pHwfc,J u our columns : ^'^ti^^SlM u Take a large nnumut of igi ..f?b*fMlf& inlf pint of corruption; one ouuo? fjjk^?Jhy* ff lice; ono pound of Ihntrod of intelligent W^;^ ? nen'; ono pound of negro fluttery or deoop| ion. Put them all in tho unconstitutional nortar of contention ; bruise them well with ho postlo of oppression, or Brownlow's $iH* ary despotism. Thou put tho compound in ho kcttlo of tho midnight plotters. A,^,^. fnllon of thc csscn'co of negro Hftc?al cq^a^i, Joil it ovor tho fivo of confiscation, ian perceive a soum of falsehood risOwfW op. ?Skim tho scum off with tho lndol of tVfd orism. Lot it stand till ?t sotties thoti 'jp?>t?r nto tho Frccdmon'a Bureau jug. TJakt? t^fo ?nblospoousfttlls ovory night, atad work ' \t $ n tho morning, with a small doso of Kevon to oflleor's or Coltootor's^spoils^ dent is much debilitated) ns bo will bo vory ipt to bo, if ho baa any symptoms jbf truo constitutional government stilt remaining in dm (lot him tako two teaspoonful^ bf tjh? iooootion of negro leagues, ?w^et?n^d-wUj?.^' liypo??itKjftl prayor, and ho will bo oij eonflrta* id a radical ns over polluted thc So^tttU Vfitli. Iiis presence."