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-A* I ~4iIt . LARn Editor and Propritor.] VOL. VIL] WINNSBOROp ,_FEB., 7, 185. _NO 51. THE FAIRFIELD HERAID Is PUBLISIIED) WEEKLY ST F'RANKLIN GAILLARD, iK TRIN tOWN OF WINNSBORO, S. 0. Terms.-Tuu HERALD is published Weekly, in the Town of W'nnsboro, at 62 invariablt in advance. (*- Mr. V. B. PALMER is the only autho. wtfttdr Akent for this paper in the cities of Boston, New York and Philadelphia, and is duly em. powered- to takeadvertismente And subscrip. lons at the rates required by us. Prom the Washington Union, Jan. 25th. Special Message froi%the President. 'o the Senate and House of Representative.: Circumstances halve occurred to di. lurb the course of govermantal organi. zition in the Territory of Kaisis, ad produce there a conidition of thinags which renadiers it incumbeut on ilme to maill your attiention to the mttject, land urgenittly to recommend the adoption by you of such rmetaures of legiamition as the gravo exigencies of the case fap. ponr to require. A brief exposition of the circumistan ees referred to, miad of their causes, will he tecesantry to the l'ull umadermtitmidimig of the reconinaendations whicil it is pro posed to submit. Time act to organize the Territories of Nehraska and Kmmias wts a mmmnaiisat. t.1 of, the li n I.. tae oiamaiom of Coll. (Jam n *V.w great 41gnts- oII coatitm tie''til cor.I a arm on sam , i t tme demig. nat ma oniaae,~ m o a i ie Ter r toa y, nod pr Vi-1on for mts poiitical or d':11lmmla1am .mm1 aa maaiastratioaos a Ter ratory, ar meassures which IInI right l'il withim the powers of tle General Gov. ornmment; atd mime other, thit the inhabi timats of tiny amtch Territory comsidered as inm itsolonte State ire etited itm the exercism of self-government, to deter. mine for thenselves whaa. shall be their ownm domestic institutions, SuIject only to the Costitutiot and the I.aws duly tmatetitd by Coitgres under it, and to lime power of lhe existlna States to decide nt-cording te ise provmimm .ad prmei. iilmsm of the Cmntaaituiom it vlm t tame. the Territory slall le received as ma Smtame into tIme mUnionm. Sucl ire the great puihtiail riatim which tare molennly deelgred and aiflirmed by tihat mnot. iased upon this- theory, the fact of Congress defimed for Pmela Territory the outlines of republican goveraient, lia tributing publc aihority amomg lawfl ly erild ..V -.. n n. ,be. a at~melav.--.& be mtppinuatam,.inme,, Sther Geriefoi Oero'n nemt or by tme TVerl'.y. , The l-Klativo fuanctionsm I -rt intrusted to a council uad a hoatse of represetmatives duly elected anmd empow ered to eacta all the locad iaws whiclh they amight d,-em essential to their Iros. peirity, hmppimness, anod good government. pnting imm the smio spirit, Conagress also lied the persons who were Ia the first instance to be considered as tje people of eich Territory; enacting. that epver free wfite mmale inihabitiant of the Imtanfi above tle itige-of twenty-one years, $eing an actual residenqt thereof, and pus. iessinmg the quaificattions hereaifter dem. eribed, should be entitled to vote at the first election, and be eligible to Iany office witiin the Territory; but that the quili. ficatiom of voters and holding office at all subsequent, elections should be such ae inight be prescribed by the legisl. tive mssembly : Provided, however, that ,=he ight of suffrge and of holdinga office shadi be pxercised tonly by citizens of the United Suites, and those who should h1ave ieclared am oath their intention to become such, and have taken aromth 'to support the Conitutlni oh .the ,Uited States and the provjeih. o th6 'adtt A4d provided' furifiuir,ihat no ~offer, soldier, seduath, or mtmarme or other per. son i the - army or .navy of the Undited States, or ttacled to troops in thmei serviee, should be allowed to vote or hold offide mn either Taertitory by reason 'of beling on service theureina. Such of the publio otiicersof the Ter ritorlds -as, by the. provisilons of tihe at, foere -to be appolinted by time Gen~ueral Governmmeaat, haciudinag thea Gbvurnore, were appoiuted amnd canmadsijoned - tltw' miasota; , .t law manvita gd). ienact. ed~m #time Spth olt ahj B6'si d Akt rlaory of Netidaka beinag dmmtcfdmn tte .d49. of Augpst,\18*4, *taI o the 4oi.g thne dpilss irnposed b6 a i the voernur4 was that of' dl , ntg timd 'aj atnriing thle poiicil siajtiton er' specil vi Teurmor elq4$. ngthd Idl ttn * t~ pfr4m4 atd rn4ten el n md mihe returirs tmereof; st4.erari, t.aimulnihe of tim' a'mhae of(h gn amnd fousA of r apraemnageg f e ~sini1igt -appear to bae duly elhetd at &tdidrci to appclors whmat a pig : de ppriie thie megidiptive e se i In sa ~ i ,time: usqe dudfe Wte.votve4 ' iffQfn9rnor ,of No. byt nt~ prinalpis of the 0 . otfer.a'I fitiotla I I) ' neio lisi9 utf~eg~emess armnie e co ts efet 14Iet.en 05,thinf. 01.; h the designated seat of his government un. t IIth of the enatig October; and vveiI then failed to make thdfleat step in its le gal orgainization--that of ordering the census orenumeration of its inhabitants until so late a day .that the election ul the members of the legislative assem-I bly did not take place until the 80th of March, 1855, nor its teeting unta the second of July, 1855. Sit that, 1ot a year titer the Territory was consti. tuted by the act of Congress atnd the officer, to be appointed by the Federal Executive had been comnaissioned, it was without a complete government, without any legislative authority, with. out local law, and of coursa without the ordinary guarantees of peace a nd public order. In other respects, the governor, in slead of exercising constant vigilance and putting forth all lis energies to prevent or counteractt the tendencies to illegality, which are prote to exist lit all imperfectly organized and new ly associated communities, allowed his attettion to be diverted front officiali obligation by other objects, aid him self set an example of the violation of law in the perfurtuaue of acts which reidered it my duty, in the sequel, to remove him fron the office ot chief executive aitagisrate of the rTerritory. Before the requisite prepuration was accomplished for election of a territo ral legisahture, an election of delegate to Cotgress had been held in thu Ter ritory on the 29th daty of Nov., 1854, aid the delegate took his seat ins the House of Representatives without chal lenge. If arrangements had been per fected by the Govertor so that the electioan for suembers of thi legislative assembly hight be held in the several recinicts at the same tinte as for a de. og ate to Colngres, tay question alp. pertaining to the qualiistion of the persots votitig as people of the Terri tory would have passed necessarily aid at once under the supervision of Con gress, is the judge of the validity of the return of the delegate, and would ha ve been determined belre conti . Ing passions had become inflamsei time, mnd before opportunity co have been afforded for systenatio I terlerence of the pepple of indivi States. This inte~ferenes, in, so far .as (ernte its'primntr..ctiael land its i 1lsatito Commn1en, cusenti was one incidente of that PdIicious a otn the subject of 'he jooid tht clored persions 'eid to a som of tlie States, whioh h diturbed the repoop of.ou and exciged indlyiduai, triotic and law itiausdi-ected paigase ist wh ti a z St of to was tions o recourse, ral object, ure qf propagatt Territory of Kasas, it p the and natural action of its inhabitants in its internal orgaiization, and thus antiipaate or to force the determination or that question in this inchoate State. With such views, affisociations were or ganiised its some of the States, and their purposes were proclaimed through the press inlanguage extremely irritaitiig and offenisive to thtose of w hom the colo nists were to b. conse the neighbors Theme designs anmd acts had the neces sary cotsequence. to awaken etmotions of intinse indignation it States near to the Territory of Kaitas, and espe. biully in ahe adjoining State of Missou ri whose donestle peace was that the nsost directly -eidanimgered; bIut they tre far from justifyig the illekal amnd re prehedseible counteramovements which -ensued. Unader these Inauspicious olreuaismtan cei thte primtary, electiotns for meaauberp of the legIslative-a~iaambly were hteld int mo~t,lf no all, of the pimucinct$ at -the timte and the places, and hiy the. persons Tdesigntated 'td appointdba heGvu -nor accou'ig to law. )b e~u~ SAuagry .acauatains that illegal votes ha~d beata folleabounded on iall aide*g an ..hsuputationtj#'e~ madd :-l of .aud and violen . But the O,erud in the eeroIse of th p'ower, Oandjtrijd #flsoharge of the duty: confei~ed -at'd ipsdbylaw on luim ane, o1Eholally~ -reuived andi Considered the returns ;~ dgalared a Itarge unajrity of tbu amerng .rwnf the- soutlall ated lhehotbg of bllctes rl Qthawts becqgo&:ue *iy *. ie upply pi4o it itl'the farptesoE g aie oelMaauthe ntlif I g 7iy wats givent C Th doofalons qf al, Igi maybs adad~l4t aesesmbly.thtusIjbate :dct, p dptrmintesn (h#~ Inst risurt, t14g qQahl e'qionsi nnltta eleotlu9 of its stedibe Tbeaujeiciw6n, byli ~jura, petruhjma sayel ..bMp' Whateyei' ine%%ltll di ay~ red -itt~h tbel onN .Itseit-i htow t raise tkardtquostle I t9 ?4usatitjak t&%f$ pre le hi s a enl auuat~~i ti ae idbf hte generil business of Wgiadti uered upon by the legislative ass But anier a few days, the Hs solved to adjourn to anothet f'erritory. A iaw was -- tet, against ii con8e vern ar, bitt in due' orm mrny Lite sent of govert pafarily to lie "Shmawnee h . bor School" (or Mission) and r the assembly proceeded. After receiving a bill for the catamblisih f a ferry at the own of.Kmcke governor refused to sign it, andl, -Apeuial message, as. signed for reas refusnl not anything DbjectionlalhIe e bill itself, nor any preence 4l. egalimy or incompeten. ,y of the as ly a1 such, but only the act that ith 1 bad by its act ransferred th o vernmilent tell orarily from City to Shawnee fision t f . reasonm lte con ilnued to refuse titer bills,'until, it the course of a deye, he by off 'ial message, conim ieated tO h as eitibly the hiet thatk hadjl ved no. Lificationi of the ter 1 atl,.tI >ifun tionts tin governor, a duties of the office were legal 'dimvolved oh the Secretary of the Territory; thus to tile last recognizing the body as a duly elho ted and. cotistituted legislative assembly. It will be perceived thti, if any con. stitutional defect attached to the legisla. v e0cts of t11e assemily, it ie not pre tended to conlist in irregularity of elec tion, or Want of' qualification of the members, but only in the chanige of its pAce of session. However trivial this jobjetion may seemi to bo, it requires to be coiisidered, becaustt upon it is found ed all that superstructuro of act, plain. ly ugnimst la1W, whiebl now tihreatmes the pieace not only of the Territory of Kin Has, but of the Union. Suo objoetio to the, proceedings of th I laiive assenbly wawsofexception. ibl, rigin, for the rensoiin that, by the pr ess tertms of the organic law, the seat of governmeit of the Territory a,4. "located temiporarily at Fort Leav iworthi," and yet the goverior himself remaimned there less than two months, and of him owin discretion transferred he sneat of government to the Slmawtie ssion, where it in fict was at the time he assebntly were called to nmee at Pawnee City. If the governor had anty Wchi right to change tenaporarily the Jht of goverimnent, still otir had the Jegin ive assnaimbly. The ot'jectian is afex9cepioamitD origin for the further reasn that. the place indiented by the governor, witliout hiavimng amny exchusive haimu of preference in itself, was a pro. loaed town mite only, which he atnd athers were lttemtpting to locate un fually. upgl ladIl within a amiitary i 4 awtiiationi itn -ot rut' the urnoy -49pf4faitied by seutence of 66iy 1ee w7y t ::o isla ive assmitly amih -ot with p tiety A rrit , rrorial toot tramnsferrig its %ldtxig he t ha w eils b iin. W it 91 ,ndtatatm. e om-acobunt& of Spro.hibitor f -oillcon tible pro -o .jof 'fLet of. on rtis. :utm- 10o such lision exists.. -TiVt-. orgnlc act, 'as5 dPquted,Say'. "hIe.seat of Gov fit is hereby osted -emporarilV rt Leaven worthi," ah' hn.tra Altit certatn:of the public biild ngs "iiay be occupied and used umnder treeton of the Governor and'legiik a saseimibly." These -expressions (p.ossibly be construed to implf el in a previous section t.9 the a a emnoted that "thie first leg;isla tive 11y'0yall meet at suoh i pl8e. and d Uy as the Govern'tr hc10a1 appoint, d "place" means plcf. at Fort - orth, not place any where in , Territory. If' so, the Goavernor ' # have beeni the frst' to err in this ,.. r, .not only in himself havmig r-mo 'd .the seat of Government to the Shaw , Mission,, but inl again remuoving it to ' awnmee City. If there was any departur'.efrom the letter of the law, theriore,it tag his in both in. stances. But, however this A iy be, it is most unreasonmable to suppose' .that by the ternms of the orgamnic act. Congress ini. tended to do imupiedly .what it has not done expresshy-thait is, to forbid to the legislative assembly the power to ebooce ay piece it mighit sep fit as the temipov rarny seat of. its deliberations. Th'lat proved by the 'signmfient language olie of the subsequent ants of Coin on time subjet, that of March 8,. which, int wnakinag apirop riatiomns lio buildings. of the 'Teritor~ te that the sa' siahall not be eX a "uti have eIedye a e~ pre~sionq, >esop griihg~; spo3Wer it r4 'F /Drnhsksh 4iosifelinrte n 66 zed iidias such were. * P'.t a Union without a previout enablinIa a of Congress It is true thht, w Iile, ie majority of cases, a previowes act of Cu gress lies been passed to autlhorize t Territory to presenat itself. a State, al that this is deened' tl+&most regul course, yet such uian atct ladaa lot been h to be indispensable, aid, ' some Cas the Territory has proceeidM without atnd ias uneverthelesis beitd~mitted in the Unijon as a State. ItAtj with Cu gres to authorize beforelheind, or to cc lirr afterwards, m it Nrenon. 13 in no instiac las a S ; ' t-n idni ted upon the applican mae l rons at ing againast authorities d constitut by act of Congress. In ary caise is the people of the Territ 1% 1101 a pill amxiong theta, who have tie power forsiha Constitution, and-r for adim sion a, a State. No pt inciple of publ law, ndoraticte or precedeant under Constitution of thou nited 1tates, n1o ri of reason, right, or colamoh sense, at fera any sich power as thgt now clii ed by a more party in the Territory, In fact, what. has been done in of revo tionary character. It is avowedly so motivinuand in aim as reEpats the loi law of the Territory. It will becoi treasonable inisurre.etion if It reach 4 length of organized resistanae by (of to the fundamental of any iither fede law, aind to the authority of the Gvue Gouverninuent. In such en event, the pa* of duty the Executive is plain. T lu Consti tioi requiring hisn to take caire thiat i laws of the United States le faithfu exeuted, if they be o the tot tory of Kanfias, lie ma -a .ould pl at the disposal of Ie arshaaal a public force of the UniteS tos whi haippens to be witiin the judrisdicti, to be used as a portiln of thte posse Mitatus ; and, if thatis d ns suffice oumintain ordor, thet* .u ll forth I .militia of otteor inore aStasor that jeot, or emiplo-y for the samoen onject a part of the land' or nsaveal ire of i United Statea. St aso if tiviobstructi be to the laws of thle Tert*y, and it be duly presntied to him Is a case isurrection, le sey employ for its Is presion the irsilitia of anty Sitte, or anid or naval forc. of the njied Stat Atid if the te'rritorV he - td by citizenis of other Statei a er for purpohe of decidig el or for I other, and the local authoJ e fliui alite selves unable to repel o . withastatnd they will be enti led to, aI upon the f being tally ascertained, it y abal11l 111 certaumy receive the aid of tue ,-ene Government. But it Is not ti id, ror-turAnited siUatae positian by force to pres " the pui .of elections -either. in a Ste or Te tory. To do so would.be auuversive public freedom.': Ad wiether a- ltow wis or unewiluloit-toy uillollt, is to questioin for 1imntujud i be a steatuonal-thatsis, iILt A h law of ha i' nd-it is hia e ecUted,or to autgtiin the 'autorities o* t State or Tettrty-ht ekieepting- it in. position tW all 5npurreottutary-'* me Our syston 'orda to justifncatiot revolutionary lAoJsor the tonititutiu fetean of relievingiti people of uij adninistratiot una Id we, by a chanig public agents matidby repei, are ate. and mor prompt and effec-tive ci Illegal -sok'nTh aiui mansia faust bb xqra4W- gi the egreat prerogativ of po1aa at rlgity.sokiredly respectea. 4 Is the uliddubted rig the bem fble and ordehiypeople o- Territ of Kansas to elect their legislat body, maki thieia own l'- Id regul their own social inastiutio s, with foreign or dostatib anolestation. In ference,b othe oineshand, to procure abolition or prohbition of slave laboi the Territory, litn produaeilA&Lischtiev interfterence, on the other, tir its mi tenitnce or inttoductioni. iu& wr, begeta antothier. Statc ' ettt unefounaded, or grossly exeag , de cerning events witts. ~lO Itc are sedulously diffus4 States to feed thes caimosity theere; antd. exert thee.el Ady toe : a stwiatoryg iku ha piar4 yoaea isa < 4 othing aed evali .ortit nd Stuntip *i the o barac.er of thil' do'I hins tio t te fb utuire nlew 'have een a tmatwer-of Ie si test to thme inhaebitatnits ig~u tes, per pally or coll eto tI'lue a na true ath it * wI ft. V S.governmnent assured -] to them. i uou and 0e or I ganic no . A. Although.^ threatening die. a turlinces in -ty of Kaneap, It- announced to me. 0o4ihor in , lie Deciember last, w ilv quieted id without the effusion of d, and in a h ar satisfoctory manner, the I regret to reip Id vay, reason to apprehe disorders cau In, wil coitintue to oCCuP with in- shte it, creasing tendency to V until trit to somesdecisive mneasure b to dis-., ov n- pose of. the question itself, con. Mor n1- stitutes the hiducement or ion of ut internal agitation and of ext inter- frew it- lerence. son It- This, it seems to me, can Hc- apI ed complished by providing ti a the jeal it inhabitants of Kansas may d itand the 'ty shall be of sufficient Lnumbor nti mO to tute a State, a convento, atoo, as is- duly elected by the quali hail" a eo, assemble to frame a .o and m he thus to.. at 9re re glit.eagd wiuliiha ile means oF 4 JIuito the nion galt in- as a State wa m- I respeedhl dahe end t- ty - ment o a la'to Il- I reconmmendidoO eelal ap in propriatiozn be mitde fray alny ex 381 ponse which may bea fra ie iln ue the exepution of the 4 . th 11nain he tenance of' publico order n .h Tt(ritory j(c 'ce of Kansas. FRANKv.. N Pi ucz. pa ral Wushiigton, Ialtt. 24, 1856. - ob ral -t" e++ -- -its A SER:ous Loss.-Mr. Hunt, the r ror tor of the Merchants' Magazine, has re tu- ceived a letter from Einoch lale, the ait he thor of the series of historical sketches be ly on the Commerce of the United Sttes,I LO -ri- which have appeared in twelve or i en SuI c-, successive numbers of Hunt. Mr. Iile oti ny writes : ve Ch "I have met with a misfortune which i, must bring to an immediate close the co. series on the commerce of the United to States-a destructive fire in Rondout E ho on the Sth inst. pulverized the Courier PC b. office, and with it about 2,000 pages of ini ,ny manuscript, in which were ill my notes an Ale for the Commerce of the United States. bo ol I cal never again go through the labors d4 it I endured In preparing notes, and vilh. jI of out such labor the series could never be ip. completed in iny manner it atll corres. s hpning wilh the style in which they in e., have thus far been carried." at thle -- - M. . - oih he MESSAOE OF TIE GOVERNOR OF MIN- do my NEsoro 'I'Eiairoty.---Govei nor Gor- tlh m. man, in his iessage delivered on the 9th - av i, instant, avows hiiiself a supl)orter of a act the Kantisas.Nebraakat bill. The prospo. oot rity (f Miineisto is thus alluded to ral "Itis a source of. stulig -t, t ness th st d -Y elevate our moral, sotii id polideld rri. ondition. While most' of our neigh. or horing Territories, are being convulsed b, With Indian wars and internal pohitical ci t a stril'e, almost verging upon civil war, we s81 Uare ealmly moving forward to. the ac- N the coim plishiment of a high destiny, by faith- re ex. fully. observing the laws of our country, ti my avkd resting our hopes upon the virtue to OP.- ad moderntio)a of the people, with a ' firin reliance upon their capacity for self-governmenalt." h nai The Washington'Uiilon refers to the pi ust. rumtor thit 'the President was about to on ' setd into Congress a special messuege T1 pie relatiig. to-our difficulties with England, a an lid says a The effect, if not the design of all ruors of iis kind, is to excite appre. Ok ve- liensions as to a rupture between our - vernment aid that of Great Britain. To avoid an : uah consequenoes, it is' ary only ncesa for us to any that th ive whole batch of reports-of the characteI lte alluded to are entirely without founda. tion. and deserve 'no sart of attetntion from the readers of the joarnals to whil a the they are sent. They not only do gi'at r . injdstice to the President, but they pto w Dunl calculated to affect the interest of ct "( merl men, who are kept in a f th gsupetise by the repettion ot - ACONDENT AND WoRD -~f a .ANOS.-The Gran ~ '~r# Sther ~ au kig se shig hi.-ri u a of ther - jabt I I Shis haMB t'~~-te ~ ~ J us grofund, utA~4 iffdh hdb t a t 19 From the Charleston Mercury. "Whe4 guatre to do 1" No. 3. incient mythology tells us that it was feast-the nuptials of Pelous and utis--where joy and conigratulati,ns ,ned, that the apple of discord fell. sing strife in heaven, wle medkilood - d upon earth. And so, amid the mphs and shouts of party, there i steals in the spirit of selfish ambi. , uprooting harmony, aud sacrificing h pledges. in the hot pursuit of per. ai aims. No people have had the ile of discord so often cast, by soI lous. hostile, or treacherous hand, midst of their hat mony, and at st critical moments of. their existe1o the peop'e of the South. Her sta n, her sturdy, unbought patriW re witnessed, again. and again, the hering spirit o ser people, weakened, sted-until n9 distrust in her abili. to appreciate or,4ltil the destiny ich seems so clearly held out to her. As stated in our first articlel the Ad tiser proposes tlie unioh of 'the State, I the union of the Southy as the otb. ts to be accomplished by our partici ing in the Cincinnati Convention jects great and glorious indeed. But to the first? we think we have al dy shown, that it has ever been pre 'ved by Ihe very policy now sought to subverted ; and that the surest way divide the State, is to adopt the men ie proposed by the Advertiser and iers. And here it is d ue to the Ad rtiser to state, thatt between its pro sition, and that of the avowed Nation. Democrats, we cau see no practical lerence. Both subvert the established Svf the State ; both conduct hor 1 aucus,'whose unconstitutionaltv d ruption she has ever condemned; t Ike at her complete indepen party ties, and betray her into I with Abolitionimsts and Free it here be any difference, it is 1W National Democrats, who, lIa no colicealment of 'their jects. openlytolamn their -termnis commit the fortunesof e State to, Democratic party ; they ow their .4 to a National or nization, roe blush to show the tohing But the 4dvertiser, lile s . at.the same altisr, r r Aweet words of hon sotest mIfth : Sny^ SL ,. ~ lid, "ss. circum: inces alta themselvi' must ange, V1 why the 1s4 oubl r. abo th - StiQOg r Ply aguag. of t same dis. ' Uefy f ,n'oa .aiord pQ single 0tion Ibay life, glarity. f th~i'timesa ever 4 'st infuence 0'i deter t on I thank God, I'lhave a more I-man id steady rule for my own ndue le dictates of my own breast. lose L have forgone that pleasing lvis v and given up their mind to be o ve of every pophtilqr impulse, I i ely pity ; I pity them still more, if , vanity leads them to mistake the puts of a mob, for the trumpet of So, too, whon, in tlp san; 0 rii, our telnporary tells us that, "to bring for-' ird" a time,bonored * eistom, "is but reeble argument after all;" we would mind hiiniof thlesaying of Lord 'oke, h1o was both a statesman atIM a lawyer. Justom, is on0 of the main wngles of a law.;" anid of tIbjt other maxim, "a steum which exalts itseff on King's pre: gative is void ;" and ask him whiat sort respectato the prero sove ipo Usle, does II a S pnsibwire.e. vote f thandl yj 'are' compell nomi eeof their sel- I A stem * t such patti, all 'pyie ti will Son' particlia n mithse Cioqinati: Conveistion pro' ott'the umnogfbi, Sputh, indfe, Ahe fi/A? lit it will- prom iionit aghleving a party triumph,U teiygenodlghi )3ut iQ j fails, as fail-W ust, to uooijsblish hat, otlwr* nd only 110on9 n. lmh's Southm has laity reafl Ws-at rin dv.id is~ the victory.--. (r0)# glanice into' the storyo oflth queslioni shpuild sutisiv |Itatsali4,#e to nuatlil iprties is *mhb~ Af resis and fear, appealed to, to unitu theom for the struggle. The dd'p divisions and bitterness of national party strife couh Mjb1 _U aeemed. Demodracy was the Pry; and Wiiggery was the ory, and the South-the South was drowned amid the jargon. Let South Carolina, then, go into the Cincinnati Convention, and what can be accomplished at the most? Simply, a union of a party in the South, ot of thue whole South. tier act ' bli rate the national divisioiWW el where ex'st, throughout the -Sogth. will ratlier intensify them. It will strike a pang to tho- heartswof tyrusbut. scatter mn, who have watohed her course independ.-nee with patriotic prido. as of a State devoted solely to the cause of the South. She will ceaso-to be the pole-star of inteue Soutlivi n feeling and principles. Our cotemperary spenlis as though the past course of South Carolina is just cause of offence to her sister Southern States. Where is the reason or justifi cation for sueh an opinion? What io. have they a right to ask or expent of her, than that shets'bould sustain their ieasu ies, and, itf proper, vote for their nonik nees ? Georgia nud not be assured, by our sending delegates to Ciicinnati, of our readiness to stand witit her upon the platform of her Convention. She and the whole South know, in udvaince, the soit of Instil that- will receive our sup. po't. tler iifluence in making thb ito mination will be fartf-oniger. whein it is known that. she will support none but a tituindidate, than if, by going into the Convention, she were bound, with the rest, to vote for thei nomniniiiee, whoever he was-a condi ion exacted by thecau ous system, whereby the minority are Made to execute the will of the majo ritv. Where, then, we ask our cotemporary, a e the gi ounds of his expectatioa that his scheme will accoumplish the union of the South I I ', as we have seen, it Call at best eti1uet only the union of a party in the South, and that not I autherti, but itational obljects ; it It W aet SouIth Carolina hersel', What 0 in it to coinimend 6it to our appro tion I CAPT. PosKY's CorANy FOR' KANsAs. .-The Abbeville Banner, we regret to say, has the following iotice of our an nouncenenit, which was sde on what we were assurred was rehnh, autliority. We hope an effort will be niade to unake, We have not henrd the slightest inti. intion of such anl - expedition. We 11fink -it a graidehoax, and only regret that it is not true. We hive tried to let i toot a knsas staupede, under the ire.cti'i of. lWarreit P. iBloqlcr, w o is -recruiting .dr bnj. Butord's Conitnny, but regret to state that the project has not inet with a ucess conneneurate with its iiportance. The nunber who have registered their names on his list is about fifteen, all told. Mr. Beleier had appointed Wediesdny, the 30th, its the time of ttirting, and his colipaly met at this place on Tueiday evening, with the view of' lenving next day ; but on the day of rendezvouns the iitelhi gence was received by Mij. Bu ford's letter, publiahed in the Carulhnian, stating 'thalt in conseque lice of' the Mis qpuri ad Kaiens Rivers beiig blocked with ice, he had, ior this and other rea a" "tined the tiuiof' starting utiil of" ,next.---Soul/h Caroli. FoL KANsAs.--npnin E. B. Bell, of Edgenfeld,annonens that he is about organizing a eoipant of one hundred men topuroceed to naii"s, atou' the last of' March and appellls to his native State for aid,.in the no1,e that his itlla I will not bit in vain. Col. P3. 8. Brooks has liledged t'e Souih CarolIna De-lega. thon for stoo hundred and ,'fty Aallara, to. he paid so boosuithis Comipany is pr-. pared-to emilgratte. Ht itlso: offers ntire hund redl diulhtre to iech Coinipitny of I00 itsen that itnight go tu IGtsaas uinder pledge torerhnlin two yeare. .'All the Soluthern State are now nhvu id, the irihjom'I.nie of "Setti hig Kaitiee - wvith mten~ who wil.l eiihei woak or*1ftiai for the trighits.and interests of thisi ims.. portnrit 5011 tiin oif Our Coitinoji ectu tiry, and evre. ituothier year -relIe rouiid, we sae niny hear soimethinag of' her prowes, 'and valor.-.--Curo ina Timees AOW of TRIt GQ 14 10w M# -. .-Giv- Mhltieuf Mss., in hii. mnensatgegsenys thaere is a bafrie4 69405 in'epTke Smnto tre.sury. Upopgife s tlaviery qOiislion hut Iilkes a Siutfw'rnt p'oa.tigg anid argtes dt itimer - fdrialy b~it ocImff.r~,'lHe r-ecominwendfs lhe return of. -uoruain ami-invery -ty letionis recevived frin Mhaine," adfa r-e-tnfliaiiaon' of the detev.miintutio' oft - Misenissipp)i lo^)iitii tier- righzte- ttl hsardiA; leauving tha(Nordl if it tiutkest theIssue with thy Banitn on tjwe ConsI. A PiaevAa ao.Al I. idielited that Annie e~ ik tuniie oinrap fostl iut I ocgAte ao Ne Iatd i d asitipe enrgo'o k he n lit'10a hoit