Valley of the Shadow
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Regular Nominee

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Excerpt:

"The only hold Mr. Douglas has on the Democratic party is that he claims to be the 'regular nominee.' Take that away and his last and only prop is knocked from under him."

Full Text of Article

The only hold Mr. Douglas has on the Democratic party is that he claims to be the "regular nominee." Take that away and his last and only prop is knocked from under him. Let us briefly examine his claim: The National convention expressly decided that it required two-thirds of the whole vote of that body to impart regularity and validity to a National nomination. The two- thirds of the Convention was 202. Mr. Douglas never received that vote. The highest vote he did receive on any ballot was 181 1/2. Had the Convention remained in session until dooms-day he could not have received the two-third vote--the vote necessary to make him the "regular nominee." It was secession alone that gave him a nomination of any kind. He is merely the nominee of a conclave of his partisans.

How does the case stand with Mr. Johnson; We suppose that he claims to be a "regular nominee" also. Mr. Fitzpatrick declined the honor of running on the same ticket with Mr. Douglas, so did Mr. Yancey. But the convenient Mr. Johnson accepted the nomination from the hands of three men in a back parlor of a hotel at Washington. How easily regular nominees are manufactured now-a-days! The Democratic party we trust will not suffer itself to be cheated and deceived any longer by this clamor about regular nominations.

Bad Faith

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Excerpt:

"They [The Constitutional Democracy] have no confidence in a public man who openly proposed to cheat any section of the Union out of the rights adjudicated to them by the Supreme Court, especially by such unmanly legislative tricks as 'non-action' or 'unfriendly legislation.'"

Full Text of Article

The chief objection to Judge Douglas is his want of faith. In July, 1856, in his seat in the United States Senate, he declared that if the Supreme Court should decide that slavery was recognized in the Territories under the Federal Constitution, there was no power on earth could deprive the owner of his rights. Mr. Douglas then agreed to submit the whole question of slavery in the Territories to the adjudication of the Courts. After the question was decided, however, in favor of the equal rights of the South in the Territories, Mr. Douglas declared, at Freeport, that it did not "matter what the decision of the Supreme Court might be, the Territorial Legislature might legally exclude slavery, either by non-action or unfriendly legislation."

It is because Mr. Douglas has thus shown his hands--because he has declared that he would submit to the decision of the Court, and they declared that the decision might be legally overthrown by a Territorial Legislature, that the Constitutional Democracy can no longer trust him. They have no confidence in a public man who openly proposed to cheat any section of the Union out of the rights adjudicated to them by the Supreme Court, especially by such unmanly legislative tricks as "non-action" or "unfriendly legislation."

Mr. Douglas's Latest Insult

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Then and Now

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Work! Work!! Work!!!

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The Cresson Compromise

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Extract from Gen. H.D. Foster's Philadelphia Speech

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Highly Interesting Document

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Township Meetings of Breckinridge Clubs

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Hope Fire Company

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Our Band and the County Fair

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Letter of Rev. Daniel Wm. Cahill, D.D. to the Small Farmers, Tradesmen and Laborers of Ireland

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The Pacific Railroad Contract

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Letter from Pike's Peak

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Democrats Organize!

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Severe Sentences

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Advertisements

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County Committee Meeting

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To the Democracy of Franklin County

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How Does It Look?

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[none]

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Old Line Whigs

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Johnson on Free Labor

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How Is It?

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Foster Triumph

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Haldeman's Proposition

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Hurrah for Democracy

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Changes in the Campaign

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Republican Mass Meeting

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Inconsistency of Douglas

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Douglas and the English Bill

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The Country in a Blaze

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Married

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Married

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Deaths

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Deaths

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Deaths

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Hon. Wm. P. Schell

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Hon. William P. Schell

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Hon. W.P. Schell

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