Rensselaer Gazette, Volume 3, Number 15, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 3 August 1859 — Dissensions of the President and Vice Presidon. [ARTICLE]

Dissensions of the President and Vice Presidon.

“Occasional” writes to the Philadelphia Press: “The bi'ter feelings of the President against the ViC? President are well known. They were exhibit immediately after the election in 1856, and t<*?e jealousy of the old man against the young max'.' was manifested on repeated occasions. “He seemed to be ful'y impressed vC.'th the old English proverb,-that ‘the heir apparent, is always in oppositi n to the crown;’’ .and when the Vice President refused, patriotically, to put himself upon the shameless platform of a slave code in the Territories, he filled the measure of his unpopularity at the | White House. The object of Mr. Buchanan is to create the impression that after killing off Wise, Hunter, Davis, Stephens, Orr, and Breckinridge, J. B. is the only man that can be selected at the Charleston Convention, and therefore the article referred to may be regarded as ex-cathedra. “It is astonishing that the imprudence or stupidjty of the local organ of Philadelphia shoulfl-have allowed it to disclose the hostility of the President to Mr. Breckinridge, and to place it distinctly on the ground that he had not advocated Lincoln—a Republican—in opposition to Douglas, which the Administration, over and over again attempted to disclaim for itself.” Garibaldi a Scotchman.—Scotch journals are trying to make out that Garibaldi is a Caledonian. His father, they say, was a shoemaker at the Auld Brig o’Stirling, and his name was Garrow. His son’s Christian name was Baldie—a common Christian name in some districts of Scotland. In consequence of some freak or other the son went to Italy; and the natives of that sunny clime, being unable to pronounce the names of Baldie Garrow, transposed them to the more mellifluous Garibaldi. — CCTPublic meetings have recently been held in Missouri for the purpose of adopting measures to prevent the driving of Texas cattio through the State to Che North. It is alleged that these droves leave malignant diseases along the route, of which many Missouri cattle have died.