The Camden weekly journal. [volume] (Camden, South-Carolina) 1853-1861, May 03, 1853, Image 1

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VOLUME14 ^ CAMDENrSOUTH-CAimiyA TUESDAY MORNING MAY 3, 1853. NU1IBEE .l i??????iIIIIWIJII iJ MtnwppMMM?na PUBUSHED "WEEKLY BY THOMAS J, "WARREN. TERMS. Two Dollars if paid in advance; Two Dollars- and j Fifty Cents if payment be delayed three months, and Three Dollars if not paid till the expiration of the year. ADVERTISEMENTS wilt bo. inserted at the following rates: Foroile Square, (fourteen-lines or less,) seventy-five cents for the first, and thirty-seven and a half cents for each subisoquent insertion. SingleL insertions. one dollar per square; semi-monthly! monthly and quarterly advertisements charged the same as for a single insertion. ? gyTho numberof insertions desired must be noted on tha margin of all advertisements, or they will be published until ordered discontinued and charged accordingly. ,31 Srifrtfii q-fltf. From the Waverly Magazine. THE niHATURE ; OR THE LAST TREASURE. BV.ANXA LAURA. Night's dark mantle had overshadowed the earth. It was one of extreme beauty; not a .. cloud G'espread <tlie blue ether j'all nature was lulled to rest. Lunavm her royal robes, had scarce reached the meridian of her glory; her gay attendants, decked in diamonds, twinkled and sparkled around ,her ihroue in ecstacy or joy, while here aud there one of a larger and more, steadier appearance slowly, wound its way through the void _of space, hanging like a silken curtain from the floor x>f Heaven. The time worn clock had just tolled the hour of nnaiMgQBj aoa ail ltu> uuiauinmcs ut--.nu; 4?i?v town of B? had retired to rest save a fv\v moonlight ramblers that might, be seen wahcjering here and there along the pleasant streets, indulging their romantic fancies in fairy dreams of the future: but now to our story. From one of the windows of a long row of buildings at the Tower end of the town might * be seen . a faint Jighjb as though proceeding from some midnight lamp that had almost expired ; into this room we will now introduce you; upon a small ^table stood the lamp that shed a dim light upon all around, making everything look sad and mournful; beside it lay. scattered, in confusion, a number of books.? Theg|aze oft he lamp fell upon the open leaves of Virgd, and Homer's dull pages lay as though theyjhad recently. been perused by some one, while many of. the other classics lay confusedly around. By the side of this table sat Alonzo Beau Ford. He was but a youth?his'form slender and U'ell .proportioned; his eyes, dark as ebony ; Jjis faair fell in wavy locks of raven blackness upon his pure and.unsullied brow; a forehead of Gxeciau mould told that he was no common, character. So'uiething- so noble, s<> grand, lurked beneath those dark lashes, and . a keen observer-might there have read a tale of future greatness. Sueh \vasAlonz<>; but now a sad and mournful look rested AUpon h*s countemfhce, as he turned from the contemplation of his books to another ohject that adorned the table; it was the miniature' of a young girl, that scarce look ed as though she bad reached her sixteenth year. Her hdir, black as ebony, waifccarefully looped up in braids;.her eyes, daik and expressive, complexion fair, with the tint of the rose upon her cheek *t her arms were bare and gracefully moulded; hands smallj,and fingers tapering; her form slender and graceful; though she was not. what might be called a grfiavbeauty, yet there was something in her eye that'eent forth a look of more than common intelligence. Such way the picture of Louise Gooding.; she was an only child, and an orphan ; her patents had slept in their silent graves many long I years. She lived with an uncle; she was brought up under their own roof, and taught . ? >i i. i I).., to consider tneir nresiae as tier nome. uui Stiil she always felt as though she was not one of their own; and often diij she wish sne had a home of rest and happiness. Three years previous to this, Alonzo first beheld this gentle being, cihe was one of those immortal spirits whom to know is but to love; and Alonzo did love with an almost heathen devotion, but her friends appreciated not his worth, and she was forbidden to associate with him. But now, as he gazes Upon this picture, every feature is perfect in* his sight; his only object is to woo and win the original, and for this he strives and determines to accomplish what is almost beyond his reach. His motto, preservunce. Talents have been his kind creator's gift, and he is resolved to use them to the best advan^ges in accomplishing his end; his studies have now almost surpassed his years, but still his soul thirsts for knowledge. But why this sadness upon his brow? this I miniature is his last treasure and even this is : demanded. This gift, that was once bestowed with the heart's best wish, is now cruelly required of him; she has blamed him for inconstancy ; her heart has grown cold to those feel- i ings of pure affection she once cherished; and \ now she turns upon him the blame, while he 1 has only been fostering this love deep in his j bosom, never doubtiogTne fountain that had almost dried within her breast. By the side of the picture lay a note he had received that evening, stating that she no longer wished to be anything more than a friend; and supposing his love had vanished, wished him to return her miniature. All else had been taken; hope had been denied him. Yes, even all hope; and now she wished to deprive him of this last treasure. At first he was so overwhelmed with astonishment that he knew not what to do. lie almost resolveil not to return the picture; and, to turn his thoughts from the sadness before him, he brought his guitar from its resting place, and its gentle tones soon echoed along tho streets as the words of that lovely song met the ear of the passer by? "Lipsjof love's melody, where aro yc borno-? Never to suiile again, never to mourn." But he laid it aside in despair; its gentle tones only mocked his sorrow, for it carried him back to memory's dim old halls, to the times when tho9e silvery chords were only touched for her, on some night as enchanting as the present, as he sat in the vine clad arbor f of her home, singing " La Serenade " of the olden time. * .V Again he sought his couch, thinking there to = drown his thoughts in the gentle arms of Morpheus; but soon the fairy land of dreams brings her again before his eyes. In fancy that spirit hovers around, and gently leads him back to the days in which his life passed like n dream, it was so happy ; but the early dawn aroused him from these visits to fairy land, and he Ql awakes to find it all a dream; and there lay ^ the miniature?the fatal note that had destroy- . ed his happiness,and the unlearned pages stood ^ in silent reproof open, before him. ^ . Day after day passed, but still the miniature was retained. But, one morning, as he wa- wj kened from his troubled sleep,' the resdlve ],; came ? "I will return it, she demands it; I am jj, too noble to refuse, let.the pang be as bitter as flc it may. The-midnight lamp found him pen- ajnine nn.rrp after pnL'c: in which he told, in words I ' D I O ' of burning eloquence, his devotion for the piclure. His letter was nut-a Jong list of senti- ty mental phrases, joined together by love-sick su sighs, but it was the pure and innocent devotion of the heart, that had been nurtured and eD fostered there for years. wj Finally, it was sealed, and sent; the tninia- pr turc was carefully enclosed and .sent with' it; of and now all was gone. "I,he last treasure of wi his brightest hopes had departed, but he was I he determined not to let it stand thus; see her he wi would, whatever it might cost him; and on the m next evening, though dark and rainy-, ho sought lia her mansion. She sat alone in the parlor; a vl ring at the door bell announced a call fi cm wi some one; he entered ; she received him with a smile. After conversing on various, topics, he asked her to sing the songs sfie used to sing f0( long, long ago. She seated herself at the pi c|j ano, and soon not a sound was heard save the m, echo of "her voice and the gentle tones of the instrument; her whole soul seemed to be in the t|, music, and he sat as though spell bound to tire nt. spot. Song after Song was sung, piece after Ju - - ? -v?-M r>A xrckt cfill Jio troarltw! not** hnf - waa jjuijcu, jwoi... uv >v?..v- ..w , , while she thus played, a new impulse-came over he him. _ ha "Shall I thus so easily lose my own Louise foi - her whom I had so surely won ? No ?I will ne ty agkin."' Soon she ceased?the^charm was to broken, and uuw he told the object of his visit; sh he told how the sweetest chords of his guitar m had been poured out for her, and never should on they breathe such strains for another. Words sh passed, that we cannot relate; butt ere he de- of parted, the picture was again his own ; now he di was contented; tew energies fired his brain, cy "1 will win lier in spite of friends and of for- in tune. Fame shaj be.mine, if I am spared life fai and health to obtain it. Ere another month in passes away, 1 w 31 leave my native home and dwell within the classic halls of a college; there I will finish my education that I have so di arduously begun ami th'en try my talent in the- w world, and gain, if possible, what I desire.? ec Time and expense tihaiUnot be spared fur the th realization of tbis point, and I will }et cull that ra jewel within tlie casket mine own." or Ten years have passed. What an era of time in man's existence ; but, oh, what a drop te in the ocean to his immortal being. Time rolls on, but brings with it many changes. in Let me now introduce you to a lovely cot- w taee in the outskirts of one of our eastern cities. - * t- - l _r M It is t IjtfttUtllUI CVfllHlg 111 WIC Ilium II UI i ? tember; the trees were just tinged with the m golden hues of Autumn. Around the cottage is a large yard, carpeted with the greenest ^ gra-s; here and there studded with beds of the richest Autumnal flowers. The Elm, the ^ Linden, the Willow arid the Cypress wove their t0 graceful boughs in luxuriant beauty around the ? cottage, while the vine-clad arbors scattered here and there prove the taste of the inmates. M But now let us enter. From air open window t'< might he'seen a lady, looking long and anx- {,s iously, as though waiting the arrival of some a' one; she is surrounded by all that wealth or P' taste could procure. A carpet <>f almost living ^ flowers greet your entrance. The chairs, cov- h ered with crimson velvet, cast a lovely sliade upon the richly embroidered curtains of snowy hi whiteness that adorn'the windows. A piano, o' of thrilling tone, ornaments one side of the room, while a gentle harp lies silently by its HS side. _ rt; But let us turn again to the occupant of this J?' room; with a little observation you might en- ,l sily trace in those dark expressive eyes the features of Louise Gooding, now Louise Beau ford ; she scarce looks a year older than when we last saw her miniature upon the tab.'e of ,p the young student; but why looks she so anxiously from the window, a smile of joy beam- e( ing from her face ? It is because she is expect- r5 ing \Ionzo. lie is now about returning from I ft* *111 """inn m ..on mess. j he cares of his I ! .113 - - c hn?-iiiess are now over, and hourly he is expected by the anxious Louise. At last the long looked for coach arrives, and sho is soon in the arms of her husband. In the course of the evening the guitar is brought fo forward. Yes, that instrument that has pass- m ed through so many scenes, is now kept as a precious relic of the past, and she in her turn sings the songs of long past. * ' ^ In one corner of the room stands a table of a, exquisite carving, on which lay tho relics of the th past, a book from one li'iend, a gift from an- |0 other, but the miniature, or the last treasure, ns is now the most precious object that adorns it. c;) A southern paper says:?A dentist in Wash- ki ington has taken out a patent for g< iterating gas V froin simple wood. This is no idle fiction.? b< We examined the works, and saw the light to burning in juxtaposition \vi(h that created from b< tho Scotch coal, and it was equal to it both in in purity and brilliancy. The inventor has en- fu tered into a contract with a company in Wil-, di mington, N. G\, to light up that town with his te material. Pine wood, will) which that eoun- 'n ?J.. : r ?/./I l/i onti nllw.r nurl (Ko fli try anounus, ^ prnvncu ^ umv., ?...v bi?. gas generated iVoni it costs comparatively uoth- w i?g. It is estimated that every house in Nor- vi folk, and all the public lamps, cm he lighted d? for a"sum not exceeding a dollar per night.? n< This is almost as cheap as moonshine. The in apHratus for generating this gas is extremely at and simple, and we expect in a very few years ti? to find it in universal use?accessible alike to in the poor as well as the rich. cl jflJisffUaitttiifc. From the Lady's Book. IIusbaml and Wife. It is an act of injustice towards women, and ic which ofteu brings its own punishment upon ler.ted men, when they select, as their compan us for life, the ignorant or the imbecile of the her sex, believing .that, because the}' are so, ey must be more capable of loving. If to be capable of any thing else, implies the necessity, must be granted that they are so. But of hat value .is that love which exists as a mere ipulse of nature,' compared with that which ith an equal force of impulse, combines the ghest attributes of an enlightened mind, and ings them all, with their rich produce, like overs from a delicious garden, a welcome and ipropriate offering at the shrine, wherever the ;art is laid ? Still I must repeat that it is not the superioriof talent, but the early and the best use of eh as we possess, which gives this and beauty affection, by directing it to its appropriate : ~ -I?,:? d. f or, as in ouier unties ui ?uiu?us mt, thout knowledge she cannot, if she would act, operly; so in the expression and bcstowment her love, without an intimate acquaintance fh the human heart, without having exercised' r faculties of observation and reflection, and thout having obiainedby early discipline some astery over her own feelings, she will ever be ble to rush blindly upon those fatal errors by lich the love of married life so often has been cckedv * " * * ' " * * Now, it is impossible for any woman of right dings to hide from her conscience that, if she ooses to marry, she places herself under a oral obligation to make her husband's home pleasant to him as possibly she can. Instead, ercfore, of behaving as if it was the great busiss of married life to complain it is her peculiar ity as a wife, andoue for which, by her natural nstitution, she is especially fitted, to make all r domestic concerns appear before ber busnd to the very best advantage. She has time r her troubles and turmoils, if such things must leessarily be, a fact which I am a little disposed question, when her husband is absent, or when e is engaged exclusively in .her -own depart . 1-1 .? i-- I.:. 1 cut \ and it si16 Wouiu muse ilia uuiuo ?uou ight to be to him?"an ever, sunny place"? e wilt studiously shield him, as with the wings love, from the possibility of feeling that his miestie annoyances give weight and poignanto those more trying perplexities which most en, engaged either in business or tn public afirs, find more than sufficient for their peace of irL ___ A Curious Case of Circumstantial Evi :nck.?An Irishman named Patrick Grace as arrested in Worcester on Saturday chargI with the assault upon George W. Benlley, e ca>h clerk of lire "Worcester and Nahua ilroad. The examination developed a cin-iis chain of circumstantial evidence, of which e following narration is given in the Worcesr Transcript: "Grace took the Nashua cars at the station this city, intending to proceed to Boston by ay of Groton Junction. 'While on the road, s singular conduct uttracted the attention of r. Brooks the conductor, who, at a favorable onient after the arrival of the train at the ruction, asked him where he was going ?? race, who was apparently under the effects 'liquor, replied that he had struck a man in oreester the night before, and was listening i Boston to escape, the consequences] Mr. rooks immediately and reasonably suspecting m as the person guilty of the assault upon r. Bcntly, engaged him in further conversa an, in the course of which he (.Mr. Brooks) iked him what had become of the hat he usu1> wore, and to his astonishment Grace reied that he had lost it in the scuffle! Mr. .1 ?I.?.1 IriiiH nf tinf ih tvns? , llit'II ct&I\L*U (illll nuui ui.iu ....w . ? .. ? . race replied that it was a Kossuth hat! Mr. , then asked him to describe the man whom : had struck, and Grace proceeded to do so, ving an exact description of Air. Bentley, en to the color of his whiskers!' Mr. Brooks, i it was his duty to do, caused Grace to be turned to this city, where the evidence against m seemed to derive lull confirmation in the ct that the Kossuth hat in possession* of the dice was found to fit him exactly, and heal. > answered fully the description which Mr. untley was able to give of his assailant, from hat he could see in the darkness of the night, his testimony would inevitably have convictI Grace; but it was fortunate for him that the ul assailant of Mr. Bently was discovered rough the agency of the lost hat, on Saturday orning. Grace was of course discharged on is complaint." How to,obtain* iiigiI Hraltii.?Walker iii s "Original," lays down the following rules r attaining high health. They are worth recmberiug: "First, study to acquire a composure of mind ul body. Avoid agaitiou or hurry of one or e other, especially just before and after meals, id the process of digestion is going on. To is end, govern, your temper?endeavor to ok at the bright side of things?keep down i much as possible, the unruly passions?disird envy, hatred and malice, and lay your ;ad upon your pillow in charity with all mnn wl I n? twit vmir \irontc fintriin >-nnr mnnnc IHJ. JJV, I. liwb J wui nnuvw wuvi u.i j wu. imvuw /hatever difficulties you have to encounter, j not perplexed, but only think what it is right i do in sight ofllim who seelh all things, and i >ar without repining the result. When your euls are solitary, lot your thoughts be cheer ' 1; when they are social, which is better, avoid spates or serious arguments, or unpleasant ipics. 'Unquiet meals,' says Shakespeare, lake ill digestions;' and the contrary is projc<-d by easy conversation, a pleasant project, efcome news, or a lively companion. 1 adse wives not to entertain their husbands with micstie grievances about children or servants yv to ask for money, nor produce npaid bills, >r propound unseasonable questions; and I 1 vise husbands to keep the cares and vexaans of the world to themselves, to be corn unicativc of whatever is comfortable, and leerful, and amusing." TIic JLonton Poor. The following extract, from a leading articl in the London Morning Herald presents a gl<? my picture of the condition of the laboring poc in the capital of "Merrie England." God hel the poor. What an exposition of human folly in vie; of thesad facts confhined in the subjoined, d the grand preparations in honor of Mrs Stow present to the world. Where in any Souther State in the United States, can he found a "Uncle Tom" in such destitution .and miser as the white subjects of Queen Victoria, an I he fellow-cfeatures and neighbors of the Duel ess of Sutherland, mentioned in the followin, sickening details. No more degrading exhibi tion of fallen humanity, in our opinion,'has bee; madc-in this enlightened and christian age tha that afforded by the aristocratic furor now ex isting-in England in relation to a lyi^j repre sentation of the institution ofiabor with us, am Lp the preparatory proceedings of welcome t the author of the libellous fiction. But there is no fiction in the subjoined; it i penned by those who knew and daily witnes the scenes they depict, and neither "Unci* Tom's Cabin" nor "key" can unfold such de graduation, miser}', and want: "Not very far from the spot where we writ* within no very great distance of the resident of many of our aristocracy, lies one of thos* dark and gloomy "courts" which nil over Lon don are thronged by the poor.* It is not, w< believo, worse than hundreds of others, but it i, has been explorod, and the humanity of thos* who have visited its dismal chambers, we an indebted for a description of the-dwellings an( the daily life of myriads of our swarming popu lation. The "cyurt" of which we write, Charlotte buildings, off Gray's inn-lane,, contains fifteei houses,'and these 15 houses give, each contain ing 8 rooms, shelter, upon the lowest estimate 1000 persons. The description of one of thes* houses is th6 description of all. Will our rer. ders bear with us while we take tliern through it: -? * 1 ! -1 1 __ _ __ apartments as tliev ace aesermea oy an eye witness. We begin with the two rooms upoi the ground floor. ... 1 lu tiie front room "there are no bedsteads chairs, or tables, a few ragged cloths are dry ing before a little fire in the grate, above tin mantel are a looking glass, about three inehe: high, and some torn prints of the crucifixion &c.-; in tho cupboards, without doors, are pie ces of broken crocekry; a kind of bed in on< corner, with children asleep ; the floor rottei in many parts, the walls and ceiling sadb cracked. The rent is 2s. 8d. per week, whiel is called for every Monday, and must be pai< 011 Wednesday." We are not told who arc the inmates of thi chamber, but the room immediately behind i "presents a sad scene of distress?the man, hi wife, and some children, earn a living by chop ping firewood; the man had been ill and no able to i i- y for two days; be was lying on J quaiftity of wood-shavings, and was coyerei with an old black and ragged blanket; hisskii did not appear as if it had been washed fo weeks; lie was very ill, and evidently in a stat of fever; his wife was almost equally dirty ? "We have 110 wood to chop,' was the im^fes sion of their ultimate distress. Thi? room wa much dilapidated, and they lwd suffered greal ly during the late severe weather, owing to tli broken condition of the windows. The ren was Is. 9d. per week; the window overlooks ' J .1 .... .1...I. DaCK vara, Uie conumuu ui niucu nus auutn >"g. These, it will be remembered, aro not th haunts of outcasts of society, who live by pluri tier. This wretched back room is the hiding place of a miserable couple, who, with thei children, attempt to euro their bread l?y "ni humble, an ill requited, but an honest industry The expression of their worst disteress is, "W have no wood tOr chop." "The first floor," continues the writer, "bot back and front, was crowded with inhabitant: The people acknowledged that fifteen person slept in the two little rooms last night; the wall were cracked and dirty, and the ceiling cor stuntly falls upon the floor while the inmate are taking their food. One woman said that part of the cracked hearthstone from above ha fallen among tho children. The rent of th front room is 2s. 3d.; back, Is. 9d. Contimlin; our way up stairs, we found the state of tb staircase of the rooms worse and worse. I the front room two pair, when our eyes had be conic accustomed to the Rcmbrantish gloon we found fifteen persons!! Some had been se] ling onions, &c., in the streets, some bogging one or two were seemingly bricklayers' laboi ers, and others had been working at thccarrio heaps in the neighborhood.1' The others presented the same dismal pit tore, with addition of holes in the roof, thong which the winds, and rains, and snows, mad their way unon the inmates of this wretehc teiiemenlt For these attics the rent was th k.same as for the lower apartment?an anoriial accounted for by the fact that the landlord r< moves to the upper rooms those who may be shilling or so in arrear of rent." The annus sum extorted from these miserable beings fo the hire of this one house amounts to upward of ?40!!?a rent infinitely greater, in propoi tion, than is paid for the noblest palaces ofth West-end. It is difficult to realize the appalling trutl that in one small court of this great me trope lis, one thousand human beings arc at this mo ment thus existing. Multiply this number b; that of the similar receptacles of human miser that surround us, and we may venture to sel against all the degrnduation ot Human natur that prevails over ten thousand square mile .of the most savage district upon earth, the ul tor abasement of our fellow creatures, which if at the very hour when we write contained with in the limits of the metropolis ofgreat and Chris linn England. Let men prate as they will about our pro gross, we do not believe that scenes like tlies existed in the olden time. Discomfort titer may have been?distress, and hard and pinch iug times, but we do not believe that any gor oration but our own has ever witnessed so hid eons a congregation of squallid, abject, am hopeless destitution as to be found in thes loathsome receptacles to which our busy civili zation drives its cast-off victims to rot.' I ?cttrral Htm ). ?- -; : ?= . >r Dreadful Assassination. P The following are the details of a horrible assassination in the'Island of Java.' contained M in n letter by the last overland math 0 '' It appearing for some time past tliat pecuc lalions in the coffee stores of the Government n in Ponorogo, Madiven, had been going' on, un n investigation was ordered. The native store)' keeper, (dissatisfied or perhaps alarmed, and d wishing to be discharged before an enquiry l* was instituted,) in his official correspondence S with the controller addressed his last letter ' to ' the controller,' without any othej title of resn pect, as is usual in the proper style ofa native n addressing a European ambteuaar, his immediate chief. On the receipt of the letter, Mr. Barsle, the J - ? " i-- ? ?i : 11 controller, sent ror mm aim reprmiiiuuru mm i 0 for his want of the usual formality, and told him that he would complain of it to the As3 sisttxnt President, Mr. Vincent, at whose kan3 tore (or office) he ordered him to appear tfie e following morning at 9 o'clock. Poor Vin; ! cent had already given over his office to his successor and was to leave at 10 o'clock for a e new appointment,-but came into the office at 2 the request of Mr. Barsle, for the purpose of 2 completing an official document llarsle then made his complaitit against the stdre-beeper, 2 and Vincent gave him. 1.0 days arrest with the 3 usual form of taking away, bis kits and pay2 ing, (an official amhrellairanking by its color,) j, - both,of which he delivered up and requested i permission to absent himself for a few minutes. He went outside where otTe of his attendants was waiting with his siri box and also another * kris belonging to .him, which ho must have , 1 given him to carry when he left his home early* . in the morning. He snatched the kris, told 1 the-opassers, or attendants^" wait, I wish to 3 say a few words to your master," rushed intoi " the kantore and stabbed Barsle through the s heart. He fell dead at his feet without a , groan or struggle. Vincent on. seeing this ( 1 took up the chair on which he had been sitting, threw it at the fellow, knocking liiin down, ? and then escaped out of his office; the rascal 1 on getting on his legs wauted to run amok and 2 weut into the clerk's office. All of the clerks , s except one had escaped and he was in the act > of running away, . - , The assassin parsued, hut soon gave op the . 2 chase, the country born clerks (half caste) be. ' ing too active for him. On turning round he f beheld Vincent peeping from tbexomerfof.t)re 2 building, and made for him. Poor Vincent ran for it, and would have escaped, but looking round as he fled, he unfortunately stumbled s over a stone, and before he could rise the as-_ 1 snssin had stabbed him in three places in the 3 belly, and nearly hacked off the fihgers of hi* >. right hand. Ilia young wife, hearing the noise, ran out, and seeing her husband on the ^ ground attacked by a Javanese, came up at the very moment the murderer drew out his n knife from his victim's side, and striking him in r the fqce with her hands, the fellow,instead of e stabbing her, as he might easily have done> appeared to come to his senses, looked at her full in the face for a minute or moro, and then 8 turned round and went awayc t- . _ . F . 0 ? t Cooley Labor in Cuba.?A goo<J deal was a said on Change, Wednesday last, in New York, about the introduction of Coolies in Cuba. The Herald says: e According to the account of a returned raerchant, from Havana, an interesting experiment was making in the island of Cuba, with cooley laborers. It appeared that they were being in? troduced from "English vessels, and that there . existed a good demand for them. Planters paid y vessels $160'a head for adults?the cost of their passage?and then had them bound to service |, for eight years at $8 per inouth, and found, in . food, but clothing at their own'expense. It was believed' that very feW'wouhl ever reIjj gain their former homes?that those whom hard work, cholera, atid the yellow fever spared, would s be too poor at the end of the cightyears to leave. a In other words, it was slavery of the worst kind, j in disguise. That while English -fleets were vigie lant in abolishing the African slave trade, and iu ? preventing the introduction of Africans into Cu? ba, who weitj bettor adapted by nature for the ? cultivation of sugar, they were tolerating a ntuch more cruel trade in coolies. Their own ships I tvni'P j illowed to transuort inoffensive coolies, and |] virtually sell them and doom them to slavery r for life, and to the worst of all taskmasters, the Spaniards, whose system of servitude was alike n successful in exterminating Indians, negroes, and coolies. In Demarara large numbers had been introduced, but they were prohibited in the En!' gliah colony from laboring in the towns, because their services came in competition with those of ? free blacks, to whom they were said to be supc" rior in such places. The result, as fir as English e philanthropy has gone, has been toabolisn black y slavery, and reduce another race, less adapted 5 for such labor, to a barbarous servitude in its a place, more intolerable than that of the African lI race. r ( 3 New Description of Cotton.?The editor r" of the United States Economist has received e from Messrs J. C. Henderson & Co., of New York, a remarkable specimen of Cotton, desi, tined for the World's Fair. It was procured i- by a merchant of Texas, from the "Pino/' Ini dians. It is of a texture and strength of fibre y to any ever before offered in that market.? y To the touch it has the feeling incident to cott, ton. It is a long staple and a beautiful clear o white color. The discoverer has procured a s quantity of the seed and intends to try its culture. Negro Trading.?We learn that a day or > two since, two men were arrested at the 79 mile station on the Central Railroad, charged with i. bringing negroes into the State, and selling o them contrary to law. They had brought e some eight or ten negroes from N! Carolina, i- whom they had disposed of and had one in their i. .possession wfcn arrested. They were taken |. to Macon by an officer from that city, when d they were hound in the sum of$l.QQ0 euch. to o take their trial. 'The negro found in their posj. session was committed to jail. Savannah WVics. J From the hT. 0. ricd^uhe.' \ <jjM 1/ Spanish Slave EmanCipaUoni' , '-.J ^ We alluded a few days since to tfje .t'eje-' r graphic report that Spain bad .agreed,* suggestion of England, to emancipateJmj-~ ;1 slaves, and made' some rerrfU'rks upon theluK-^ 'g torical points of that question. We, in our New York'excbanges the fdlowfrg.ej- ' J planations of the matter, hv which If wirbe'.-.; seen that the question is depiived of its un.- /-Tg r\Aidan/io frvr 'thn nrocwnt "-g The Madrid correspondent* <Jf the Chronicle makes the"following important -state? . "qB ment: tS ' Through theExertions' of. Lord Ilowdcn,. | the Spani-h Government has agreed to give 1 complete liberty, before the end of the year, to \ that class of negroes called em.-thtipadps, after ' m the completion of their five years consignation, . _ 3 or apprenticeship. Those eirtantjjados who,' 1 at the end of 1853,v shall not have finished tl.eif -3 term of servitude, shall be manumitted a?c6r? ding as their several' probationary period* ex- _ -JB pire. This measure has been occupying the i / ? British legation at Madrid, one-way of ?n<rtjf- . 3 er, for the last thirty years, and jti cOticcttjon, | now may be looked q^as an earnest Of'better -V#| things, while it is not without.its tourage'iri *2?^ the present disaffected state of Cuba."_ With all due deference to "the Madrid cor^ | respondent of the Moniing'Cb'ronicle,'* we,-- *3 would say that what he has here put fortbiias' . , J news is a very old" thing^ftavin^been the ex- i J act positron of the ouestioujbr tftgjast.thirfjuf 3 years. Under the treaty of 1817; there, established at Havana a mixed tribunal, com/ -.J posed of two* English and One Spanis^jlmg^' * - 3 for the purpose of adjudicating cases ofsfjy&rs; 1 Captured by British cruisers Slavers thus taken tm& condemned .by this J tribunal were at iirst sold, and la^3 up, in Havana, for it was found t^at thelcJtpr. ? mer owners would purcha8e4heat.aniLi5t the?b v>J out at once for another -voyage lo^, the^togfr coast.; The,negroes v^ere placed a/the."$spp*^'y - J sal of the .Spanish. .Colonial/Cioy^^^t,.^^.'^^ were by it put out as apprentices for a term of, years, in order that;(hey .night /earn the lam. guage, some uRejjfl. occupation and r the ; mentsof the Christian reiiainn. } The term of service vyas seveny^ats^d . affair was a most profitable tain General received from the grantee apref mium for each negro, varying from six ouncety^Sj ($102,) to tert ounce<(?1703> head, according to th.e Season of the year, (the demand for labor during the cqne-eutting season increasing " - ,y the price at that particular time,) and the value of the apprentice. These apprenticed negroes ,<gj are called emancipados, (emancipated,) and are to become free at the eud of their terni of < i v' - vl service. ^ For many years past the greater portion of [ the labors of the British judges in the mixed , tribunal has been the huuting op of negroes whose term of service had expired* but who had not been Resented to the Government For for the purpose of obtaining their free papers. A very large proportion of the original number apportioned would be reported dead,.and certificate of interment would, upon inquiry,. be presented from the curate of the parish. Yet, from time to time, able bodied negroes, long supposed to be dead, would fidd their way to the judges and claim their liberty. This subject.has been one of constant irritation be-' i tween the Government of Quba and the mixed tribunal, and the British Government has eda- . stantly urged upou Spain thaf she should give j to the judges of this court authority to go into the country and question every negro they might choose as to his origin and the time he had been in the country. j . . Spain clearly saw what a vast amount of accumulated testimony of hcrJlcoii$tant infraction of the treaty of 1817 would thus be procured by the British Government, in the declaration of negroes imported lit violation of < that treaty, and she has steadily adhered to her determination not to consent to it. CndW the pressure and urgency of the English demand she lias resorted fVgtn<time to time to various subterfuges and concessions which have neVef been carried out by the Colonial Government; and the present arrangement though not clearly explained in the above cited paragraph, is no doubt one of the same evasions. The fact u?* ? nfooorf ninnipnt the number of l llttl/ iX% kUC j/l vs'fc*** einancipados is very insignificant, renders the whole mutter of very little importance. It is not, however^ to be supposed thai Em gland gives up her cherished desire for the abolition of slavery in Cuba. She pursues he object with the greatest tenacity and skill. In a communication addressed by Lord Palmerston to Lord Howden, British Ambassador at Madrid in October last, the following significant passage occurs : "With reference to that passage in Mr. Miraflores's note in which he states that ihe Spanish Government canrtot understand how her Majesty's Government can seriously recommend a measure which would prove to be very injurious to the natives of Cuba, when thejr *also recommend that the Spanish Government should conciliate the affections of those Cubans, I have to instruct your Lordship to observe to Mr. Miraflores that the slaves of Ci-baS.' form a large portion, and by na means an un- . important one, to the population of Cuba, and that any steps taken to provide for their emancipation would, therefore, as far as the black population is concerned, be quite in unison w ith the recommendation made by her Majesty's Government, that measures should be adopted for contenting the people of Cuba, with a view to secure the connection betweeu that.. island and the opanisn tjrowa; ana u must be evident that if the negro population were rendered free, that fact would create a m<?st , powerful clement of resistance to any scheme for annexing Cuba to the Uuitod States, where slavery still exists." - * * The special pleading of the foregoing is amusing, but the moral conveyed and the design^ unfolded are not only instructive but of vital importance. We do not suppose England will abandon her designs so long as there is a Spanish Government to work upon. An ox 10 hands high, and weighing 3,500 lbs., has arrived at St. Louis from Weston, Mo., eu route for the New York World's Fair. A