University of South Carolina Libraries
i.< ?-UU uiuiuuiu their uim including tlicuiM'lvth und their Ufuriuxb between '20,000 and SO. lividual* in Stockport und Munche* Ito uro living ou the casual bounty trade, and upon \ oluntary tubscrip* ioiu. Tiio (strictest natch is kept over 'item by tho nia^isUatcti, backed by a large I roly of t roups. Tho heaviest degree ifttre.et u said to be fell by tho haud loom vcaver? of ifrhnm tlitre ate nbout 100,000 i Lancashire and on the Ismlere of York Uiiu, Tliuy are at this moment ground :jku fh tho xtnallctft portion of human nub istance, and that in prccariou*. At lllack ?uro and tho neighborhood tho hnnd loom reavercan weave DC yard* or shirting per lay by working 15 hour*. Ft* this tliey :r\ l*0d subject to deduction*. But m<> ing backward and forward w ith tho work .nd the Mack demand of the market, really caviug the workmen with a nelt receipt arv ing from 3-t 6d to As. The power-loom* vjeld Ik ?l per piece, mill an a man can cm! two loom* of thu kind at a time, they uu realize twice tho amount. Hut the and* at the power-loomu ure overstocked. A great number of workmen in the ir?m nd coal tr.idcs in Monmouthshire have wo discharged. The iron masters were nflcring tfreat depression, and large quan ti< s of iron wore lying in tho ware-house*. Trie Spiialfu Us' weavers had attempted ) haven meeting in flare street fields, but ? ore prevented by the magistrate*. They U? n>Iiil to apply f'>r the use til' Ik-thnal ?roen church. Hamburg pipers received in London ?'i1c upon authority of letters from Zante, f the 10th April, the capitulation of the ?wn of l.epinto to tho Greeks. This lews k confirmed, the siogo of Misxolon :lii will, it is now said, Ik? prosecuted villi great vigour. \ letter front Corfu, of net22d April, mentions a rejiort of an inti nation having been made by the Ionian ?owrniuontto tite Greeks, that th"j- must >ut and end to tlie blockade which they itely announced of tho town of Proves.*, nd of the coast to the north of it as far as lurto, at the entrance of the channel of t 'orfii. The UuKsian army was to be put immc liatelv in motion, "nd th*' ni'>].,%ign to be irnserutcd vvitli Vigor. The German papers to the 0th instant, vhirli ri'achiid us this morning. contain tccounts from the fronti< r* <?? NVal .tchia to the 2tth ult. in w hicli it is stated here have been several engagements he woon the Turks and Russians near Ghiur yvo, ftvorahlc in their results to the lat ??r. A palace was said to !>?? preparing t lion barest f r tn- rccepti >n ol the lim ?eror. A bill In.I hern introduced into Parlia ment finally to ahol'sh the fictitious Xink n?c Fund <:t" 1 .'jglnu-.l.?Tl.e Gluhr> >ays 'Though l!i" matter :i: > n??w la ol u< rrv.it imp'-rtance, the llill sprats lavora ?ly as to tin' disposition of the .Ministry to implifv the public ae.vinnts." ttPii.v.? X b tt'-r Innn Cadi'/, says that 'though the act by which Cadi/, is ilcclar d a free port had not vet come into opera ion, greater activity prevailed there than ?r some years past. Sevi r.il foreign mer hanis had come hi re t < *? ?!|( ; mxl bouses ?'hicli had I en nn rciipie I i ?r several ear*ar. iuiv ro:.dily let I'o in r<; \t. ?Th" following b t!? r from .isliun, d.i'.vd April :?ppe;?r> iti the Moiiitenr;'--"Ti?e government has re t,*i? . dospat. lies Iroi.i Paris whe'happear ?> bttvc greatly alarmed i* t'?r at no time :ie-e the return of l> ;n .Migm l have the .rr?**.> been no numerous. \ ou und?ubt ? <1 ly :ir?s acouainted \\ ilh the departure of lie I rcii'di frigate, the 'J'hrtt*?but w hat on : ro probably ignorant of is that this hip was scarcely 2 leagues outside the f ar k hen tho policc visited all the French set led in Lisbon who had any connection with ho officer* of tho '/'/irtis. Another cause ?f alarm to tho subjocts of his I\fe*t Chris . in Majf;*ty i;, that sinca the araival of the iespatches which I mentioned : love, tho -looks have declaimed in llr. ir m rinons -rainxt t!i.i rrcncb, atid accused their (iov rnrnent of being the oneiny of the (iovcrn .ciit Don Miguel, a!id of doing every liing to entbarass it." TAKIW. '? From tin //vj.'en Cninntt rrial f?'/>.< lit j The writer of J ho i<?U'?win;( paragraph ? make hi* emeries r,r statement* ntorefor jl.it*, would lmvu done widely to have slu ed wfio: w: o/rar/iru they were for which in gave l/i? to f 2 i??t yurd under the old ana"?what was tho original cost?what hi? (ulv;:nr(!; otherwise his tituteinunldocs ?ot neeov-aiily contradict the statement of ur correspondent '/W/M, previously puh ished. Ah I'j his Keying *ufirrl'ir American arpeting hottido inferior Kn^lish catpcting, l i* possible that tliev were specimens of iiflcremt kinds of good s?-at lca.it it not .ppear fhnt they were not, front his corn ijinjicitioti. \Vij btdinve 'JVuth to he cor ?ect, find that which dijfcr* from Truth, to V' uiurc properly denominated J-'.rror. V () n f 11K f! A 7. K T T ?'. T'.nrronti.?1 observe in your .Hi??r of thm day n communication signed ' Troth," renjiocting Carpets. I take the vritnr to be an ini|?ortcr of them. Now 1 m noither an importer nor a maker of them or in any wa v interested?hut shnpl v as buyer?and l ask "Truth,, to explain to 10 why I itadlo jfivn (perhaps to him) f)s, - 3,2 per yarl for Carpet* under the old iritl . bolhef l*2Jand I J:.-*; pur.ad ^by tltHnuo merely) to nee -mc lOugli-li :??)?! American Carpeting the it- r f ide hy side?the game patterns nd ?<'ii.?r->; instead of bein^ "inferior," s " J ruth"ossert?, tho American WMveru ? ( idedty *u/irri</r. I imagine they arc yet 11 liein# torpcak for Ihonimlvra. 'I will uivo up my name when he will ({ive up Ji lt F. A I. TRUTH. ? lur.e ?. von 'tiir cazktth. Muhibs. r,niT?R"i,?I read in your pa wr of this morning, a communication "ign d "Heal Truth," in answer to a few re narks mixta hy me on the 6th inst. on the ubject of Carpeting. I am requested to ? xplain why tne writer "had to pive fl*. to *2 pr vardVbr eort*i?tirtmi under the old ta iffs loth of 1^:4 and lh|f>." If will he re . ollerted that the peaco hetwoen France ltd Kngfond took place in 1AM; that du ring ?he war many artH"* of Import had 1 equired an unnatural valuet lioth from the and difficulty of obtaining them; f ence iit the latter dilto quoted hy "Real i'mth/' rl*. WIO, articles of merchandiao t ad not reached their levrl in thla country. thing wm artificial. The currency i,l'nip country was depreciated and it too* (time time to consolidate mercantile princi pfo* to ft statftof pAsce. If "Heal Truth" MMmm to infer, that the reduction of tho ttkf <ttMjpwifM th* roomvtlti*! jwiug to Auenctt umauhiiwrti, trow the prfco at which it vu brill la ISM, what will become of hk infererv*^ in the ottaof Canton Bilkat Crap** ton India wtw told it that puriod ?t 8RMr picot; thor have lince been sold at $lz; Sine haws at |ll~ pinco sold at $18. Now ?'R*al Troth" will nut coutoiul Uuit winter Kan manufacture* f tuwu reduced the firicc qf tdlet, as this arti cle isnot made in the country. Ill looking over the valea of a friend, 1 find that English Carpetingeold in the following | year* at tho prices quoted, per yard, via:? 11)33, Super*, $1,131?Fines, 87 ic. 1824, do 1,10 do 87|e. 1829, do 1,12 do 87e. 1827, do 1,05 do 80c. 1828, Jo 1,18 do 90c. i Now it is well known that few or no American Car|>etinga were in tho market in 1823 to 1825; consequently the redaction in price in not owing to the competition in the lionic market, hut to the fall of the raw ma terial, and tho tavlng of labour and tklll in 12uroi>o. "ileal Troth" says, "1 happened (by chanoq merely to seo some English and American Caipetinatho other day, side by side?tho same patterns and colours; in Klcdof being 'inferior,' as 'Troth' asserts, tho American was very decidedly tufuri or." This, Messrs. Editors, is a broad at tertion, and can only lie taken on the ground that "Hull Truth" is ignorant of the sub ject ho is treating on. lndoed, he says ho "isneithor an importer nor a maker of car pets;" this I Iwliovo, (or wore he either, he never would aftirin that which can becon t nidicted by ftveout of nix carpet dfcaleis in IhMton. It is in ovidence that gentlemen who have (icon in tho hahit of retailing car peting for twenty years or more in this city will not now keep tho homo made article in their stores. They have mado trial of it and lost motley in the attempt. Thit fact cannot be du/iuted because it is in the/iow rr of everxj fiurc hater of carpeting to make the enquiry fir hlmtrlf. Indeed, one of the a hove gentleman told mo that a lady of this city purchased an American carpet, and that alter a wear of a l ow months, it was taken upfortho purpose of cleansing, when tlu- \vlu>k' tiicuro was was found to bo | imprinted mi the door, from some dcfcct in the oiling or colouring. Now, Messrs. Rditors, if these facts are untrue, how is it to bo accounted for, that the American manufacturers are obliged to have their caroling retailed in this mar ket, while the old vender* of tho article will not purchase it by wholesaled If tho home made article is ho su|)erior, why are thev soli) in roiuu of tho Southern cities as a foreign fabricl And lastly, why have gentlemen who are engaged in selling for eign carpeting In-en asked, " if they would not receive the American article, and sell it as foreign"! TIickc questions "Real Truth" can solve, without knowing the writer of this essay. TRUTH. T" llir K^itor* of the N. Y Morning Herald. C?knti.kmkn.?Vour remarks in this (lav's Hcmltl nrc characterized by candour ami mnilci titioii, mid I am not certain that \ >ur opinion and my own may be ultimately found to agree, at least oji on" point the sub ject under discussion. Hut there arc very many on which we widely differ. 1 am convinccd that this country has carried the manufacturing sys too far already?that It* steps have not , been sufficiently gradual to insure perma nent success, and that the partial manner in i which that interest lias been over-protect ed, has been iniuricus to others equally cn ' titled to fair and reasonable encouragement. I All this 1 believe, without i.i any way ftel t ing hostile to American industry. I wish ! that its cnr.ourngcment should be no greater | than its deserts, and it seem* to me 'that agricultural industry has the prior | claim to manufacturing, that under the prc i sent system agriculture is not cncouraged, | is proved by the fact that Irish potatoes j have been this year imported to a large a | mount tor the supply of our market. One : would suppose that In this agricultural coun j try, wc might be able to raise at least our I own vegetables. | Besides, in the encouragement o! agricul ture we aid the cause of morality, and make I good and honest citi/ens. For it is well j understood that in no class of men Is there 1 lew immortality than among the industri ous yeomanry of a country. Such is not the c'nse with the manufactories, whtrrc hun dreds of men arc crowded together to hatch and foster vices unknown to the healthy pursuits of a rural life. ! know, Messrs. Editors, that you will shv that such effects as I allude to have not vet been produced in this country. But wc are not bound to confine ourselves to what has been done. The tendency of o j vergrown manufacturing establishments can 1 easily l>c deduced from the experience of j Great Britain. Vice, and misery, and in ' subordination, reign among those employed s in them. Whenever adversity reduces the j proprietors to the necessity of discharging ! their laborers, or of reducing their wages, 1 they become an army of malcontents, *pread i ingfear and violence and insubordination a | round them. They cannot obtain employ , nient in any other pursuit, and resort to II i legal acts to obtain it, in which they arc i encouraged by their numerical force. You may say that such things will never h ipprn among us: But what reason have yn? for sa> injj s'>, except that they have not happened.' The same causes will pro dure tilt same effects in this country as in Kngland; for man is alike every where. Y?u have cited some cases In which you assert that smuggling has not been produc ed by high duties; and 1 must confess that, to me, the statement, if made on the broad ground, seems a very haaardous one. If you argue thnt high duties do not naturally induce smuggling, I am at a Whs to know up on what data you have formed your opin ion. If you mean only to aay that, in re gard to a few articles no smuggling haa been carried on, and that because of some peculiar circumstance, then you admit the principle, ami that is all I think worth con tending tor?that a high tariff docs, when not prevented by extraordinary circum stances, give rise to smuggling. That such in the case I have no doubt, I am ready to admit that it fa difficult to bring onr minds to the formation of a judi cioua tariff*. But it h an object worthy con sideration, and one on which the reflections of all ought to bo employed. Certainly that which now exists is Injudicious?thie is admitted even by yoo?-and a* cer tainly ought ita evil feature* to be removed if possible, A MERCHANT. Friday, 13th June. A Norfolk paper state* that on th* 95th instant, the President of the United States ?rti expected to tlilt Old Point Comfort. (MKLwaraaa. wmaawttifc ; rail)AY, JUNK 90, Ittt* ? zssm bert at Pi MB Oiotk, that la coatcquence of the dUcontiaiiaaee of the Pott Office at that place, we now mall eur paper* for Ormnjpburgh. We know not what better to do under such clrcumsUmxs, ?nd will be ?object hereafter to whatever direction* they may think proper to give us. The Couar or Arraat.s, after a most labor Ions teuton at which a great number *f cases. many of unusual Interest, have been decided, adjourned on Friday last, the 19th intt. We complete to day the publication of the abstractt of the declaiont of the court, which we promited to our resdert at itt commencement, and at the judges were kind enough to furnish nt with ihete ab Mracts, they will be regarded with interest by the Bar. It wenu to be the deliberate purpoee of the Columbia Teleeoooe, the Augusta Chronicle, and the Chaneeton Mercury, to excite a prejudice in the minds of their reader*, against us; and, in pursuing the end they nave in view, they are, it seems to u?, more indifferent as to the means than becomes the generally frank and direct cha racter of the South. One of them, for in stance, hears a private conversation *e Kitod, badly remembered, and worse nslated, and presently prints it, with inferences, which carry absurdity on the face of them, of intended disrespect, on our part, to tho People of tho South. This is eagerly transferred to the columns of the t two coadjutors of this print, with suitable I embellishments.?Mit. Intel. June 18. ??To excite a prejudice" ? Yes, sirs, it has been our "deliberate purpose" to do more; to bring down upon yon the contempt of our readers, whirl) vou have long very fully deserved, and which, if wc arc not grossly deceived, you have now obtained to every deshablc extent. We hope this remark is sufficiently " frank and direct," a charac teristic of which the Editors of the Intclli Rcncer have yet to afford the first illustra tion in themselves. We deny that we have uied anv means (or any purpose which have not been frank, fair and honorable, and it will require some thing more than the sly, indecisive insinua tion of the Editors of the Intelligencer to establish the contrary. Our readers will remember the circumstances alluded to above. We reported a remark of the effi cient and responsible Editor of the Intelli gencer which was communicated to us by a member of Congress, to whom it was utter ed, as an intended insult to those of the South, who administered the one thing need ful to that Editor's Establishment. The oc casion of placing this remark before the public was an appeal by the Editors of the 1. to the people of the South for additional patronage of their paper, within a few months after one of them had declared, that he did not regret the loss of his South ern Subscribers, for they did not pay him. Were we not justified, and even called up on by a proper respect for our fellow citi zens, to publish this remark? Mr. Gales de nied it: we promptlypuhlishcdhisdenialand referred it to our author; he furnished une quivocal testimony in our behalf, corrobora ted by a third person; and the above is the first,thclast, and the only explanation which the I. has yet given of the affair. Who then, we ask the public, has "badly remembered and worse translated" the matter at issue? Do our Inferences carry "absurdity"?or do Mr. Gales' statement*' carry fal?ehoodt on their face? Have we made our charges in the dark, or failed to furnish direct evi dence to establish them? And has not the Intclligcnccr always had the means of defence? The IntcIHgcnccr continues:?Another cooktt up Home other charge, and it Is used in the name way. And,for any thing we know, merely out of spite, because of our having, some months ago, protested against the anti-constitutional designs ana doc trines of those prints and their confidential friend**, and deprecated their proposed re sistance of the laws, some twelve months ngo, thoy may, hy dint of repeated asser tions, succeed in convincing their readers that wo really are enemies of the Booth?of the South, where one of us was born and l>oth of us bred; where the parents of one of us yet happily live, and the ancestorsofthe other for generations back have found their IhiHsI ground?of the Houth, whose inter ests we have always upheld, whose rights we have slways vindicated, and the re nown of whoso patriots iind statesmen we have always lovod to cherish.?Yes. such is the force of prejudice?such the influence of vile party spirit, that even all this may come to be swalkiwed by n credulous and duped community, when administered through the regular "organs." Nay,even these Editors tnemselves may in time be lieve what they so cordially respond to one snother. Wo envy not tm minds thst are so constructed ss to be csp^hle of deriving fileaiiure from the success of Mich machina ior* against their professional brethren, and we heartily wish them some more charitable and reputable occupation. Bless us! what a convenient versatility of feet inK these veritable gentlemen possess? This, we suppose, is the amtnde honorable for past unkindnees; and surely hero is enough of lofty rhetoric and "?*garetT phrase, to gild, the deceptive dose of tot tery, ttettndem mrlem. Will not the South ern people remark, that even in this high auMst^WA t'litsenMIam PmI ^ WiuWpjnii " KQ9n|prp wwy Uv nominated "a crsdatous and duped com munity "1 A phrase, strikingly indicative oftheohamstOistis suaviter ha modo of the Lord Mayor?and extremely oonsiMtst with tl?e gwillwi and sihetion the pro found rsspsnt. #Meh he has graciously'eon desesodsd to visit Mlw^TIn Editors of llm Isb msn^ MryewTwailieei, tkt?f ofpsr secution, or hypocritical Ttie mask sit* badly indeed upo* than, wbeti* ?wthiy attempt to play a fcm for ' MM ltb*hUNOftlM? South, aad the] bi the wages of their ridkaious pcHbr? They make the magaifieent discovery that the Telescope, the Namurjr wd the Chronicle, hare eomktned to firejudk* them and trace this plot of tr?am, strata gem and spoil to the "spite" which the Trio foel at the detection of another trssson able plot of their*s and their "ooaidsatial friends" which the inlsHigsnoer mgsoioos ly discovered, and pricking up its sen, lus tily brayed daring the whole smmaer, by reeeon of great alarm for the RepabUo. It was a plot of treason Isss heinous than the preeent; that being ahned only at the dee truction of our Republican Institutions? this, against the immaoolate fomeandthe subscription list of Means. Gales and Seaton. Thsir subterfUge in this artidsis characteristic and ridiculous?evasive and unmanly. They are braaen-fooed enough to tell us, that they "protested against the anti-constitutional designs and doctrinse" of certain Editors; that they love the 8outh, ; "whose interests they have always upheld, whoee rights they have always vindicated, land the renown of whose statesmen and patriots they have always loved to cher ,ishM!J Wbv have they not manliness euoughtoar wledge that they did slan der the people of the South?and that, du ring the last summer particularly, their massy columns groaned beneath tho weight ; of their voluntary and unchqstened traduc {tions;?that so for from confining their vin | dictivoners to the Telescope, the Mercury and the Chronicle, they sold to the Coalition > their unsparing, indiscriminate abuse of the j whole Southern country. And whst wss i thc/kur/kosr which moved theee gentlemen"! J Not to rescue the constitution from the foul embrace oftraitorous machinations? not to brigliten up the chain of friendship between the different sections of tho coun try?not to yiold their co-operation to cast off the oppressions which they know wore crampingevery muscle of the South they so much love;?but their purpose was, to cast odium upon the anti-tariff states, sufficient to disconnect all other sections from us, and associating Gen. Jackson with what they were pleased to denominate the treasonable purposes of the south?again foist upon us tho bitterest enemies who over scourged us; men, who were placing their hopes of suc cess upon the very scheme of tyranny which w as already goading us to madness. And all this they, of tho Intelligencer, did, to con tinue in ill-gotten power the very man, who Itad lashed themselves but a little time pre vious, with a rod of iron, until they kissed it?and wagging their tails with all tho fawning sychophancy of the cur, they yelped submission to the man who scourg ed them. They have advocated the Tariff?end attempted to sustain every man in the na tion who has stepped forward to organize tho 'foments of that4* bill of abominations." Thry have <lev?t*a their columns to gar bled statements of partial ext. m*. from the state papers of the immortal Jefferson, wil ling to defame his memory by attempting to fix upon him the authorship of a measure he abhorred. What scheme of Internal Improvement have they over opposed, what usurpation of power by Congress?since they fell from the Republican faith?into that of the DUtrict of Columbia, whose creed consists in grappling every cent in the Treasury of the Union for local and selfish purposes? Do they remember the time when the Federal Republican loaded evrry Stage Coach that left the Post Office, and threat ened to overshadow them?when they had not 40 subscribers North of the Potomac, out of Washington; when their life blood was drawn from the South to which they have been %o grateful; when in the fullness of the heart, under the present force of deep obligation, they swore allegiancc to our rights and our interests!* The Editors of the Intelligencer, friends of the South I Crtdat Judeutl Gambling.?Perhaps there is not a state in the union where a penalty of tome tort it not affixed to the practice of gambling. In thi* state the penalty it severe, and at least a laudable Intention has been manifested, on the part of the Legislature, to guard the morals of the community and the property ol individuals from that gang of marauders which are always to b? found about every town and city (who promenade the conti nent to execute a systematized plan of dwindling; who may well be denominated inland pirates, and should be regarded hoo tea gentium, but not subject to the same mode of punishment. We understand that Columbia has been often favoured with the sedulousattentions of these ambulatory gen* t If men, and preying upon the natural pro pensity of man, they no doubt contrive to involve occasionally some of our own nnsus l?ecting citizens In the snarea which are laid to decoy every victim within their rsaeh. We should delight to see Avery Jfbrelgner of this description taught the danger of his visits here, for he does m* deserve the hos pitalities of the town nor the protection of the laws, abusing, aa he does, the one* and setting nt defiance the ethei ? And whilst our own citizens. It any there be, whn be r a. 41.1 AAAesneninM Ls ||>n * ?^ ?-?a coTTifs corn in i ro*tipcr^wirn in uic ijrrmci ptki ling which in gr*4aa)1f multiplying In ?*?? fljf |WiWmn of the dntoi| Mf iff to jttdp I'mjugs naMsiiaiiaw kaeajMOKks ? ?? am inm nVWip^ifr pSnfripiNi PO irf vn* bera of Influence, < tending that? sphere of Influence, nujjht not quences of detection, nor the sympathies of ww fpwiiu 1 |iif n pnnm| ^mvti w ? common Informer, should steadily keep his eye upon Use reason of U?e can Mil the grmyip^f III# statute ? when he un dertakes to apply iu beery penalties. If of a few months past a little stir has In Ikk town hi relation to theee which we here not choeeo to al lode to before, because they are entirely of local eoaoenw thus fiur, and being prosecu tions In limine are ofoourae ex-partej?be? cause they are aetyectaof Investigation In an entirely different tribunal from that of the prem and public opinion and because themerita of no one cast could poeaibly be known to ua. Every good cltisen should feel an Inter est in the aappreaaion of gambling, for the character and morals of the commnnHy generally. Reefy dtizen el Colombia should feel a tenfold anxiety for the sup pression of gambling Arrr?where the flow er of the rking generation, the rich hope of parents and of the state, are concentrated* in an Institution deservedly regarded as the moat valuable treasure of South Carolina, where every temptttkm held out to youth should be a temptation to the acquirement of science,and literature?the improvement of morals, character and sentiment. We have been led into theie remarks by a publication which we have been called upon to make, by one of the wardena of the town, who haa officially undei taken the bo aineaaof prosecuting for gambling. It ap pears from bis note that he ia thought by some to be very inquisitorial and to have instituted a system of etfiionage. This question we are not called upon to settle? and since, as he says, we are not in posses sion of one twentieth part of the facta, we are not capable of doing so. The charac ter of a common Informer ia always odious ?but undoubtedly should be so, only accord ing to the mrtive which governs him. If he succeeds in suppressing gambling here, according to the spirit and intent of the statute against it, he will deserve and re ceive the thanks of the community. To this extent we with him the utmost success. Fret Trade Advtalt.?U affords at vrry mtl pleasure to be able to stats (hut In consequeoce ol the earnest appeal wade through thla paper y??tf rday, and the eiertloos of Individual, who took ao inlerrtt In tbe mailer, ? number of oar cittaens have subscribed to that valuable and In dependent journal, tbe Free Trade Advocate Th. subscription* alicedy obtained nearly equal tbe amount required loeuthorise Hie continuant* of tbe work. We, therefore, again call upon oar citteeus to petioaiye a work, which baa done and is doing more lor us at I he north than the unaided presses of the south can ever hope to aecomiiliah. Lei the people of South Carolina come forward fretly?end give !?, not such an amoont >4 partrooags merely u will prwvent Us stopnage, bat sacb a liberal ud eitensive support as will eatablisb it Crmlr?*nd cucourage its tal anted and indefatigable editor to enlerge ita sine and diversify its contents We trust that the anti-tariff papers of the south will take up this subject, and press it earnestly upon tbe patriotism and interest of their respective states. Cfcer/csfen Mtreury We accord very sincerely with these senti menu, and commend them to the favor of oar readers We have read with great pleasure and profit every No. of tbe ? Free Trade Advocate," and believe, that an eiporure of tbe absurdities and iniquities ot tbe prohibitory policy?the em bargo system ol Mr. Clay?at once so able, so "Mnuleto. and so intelligible, Is no where else to be found. We are very much gratirieri ?o e<M. Hint front Intelligence which we latoly received from the editor, Mr. !Uguel,tbe work will be continued, bat It will be upon the isith of southern generosi' ty for remuneration, wbicb cannot be derived | from tbe present state ol bis sobecri|>tion list, and> we very fvfMntly make the appeal in bis be half; cow&lcntly, because we never yet knew an ansaecessfnl application from ftrespecthblssoaici for so worthy a purpose, to meet with cool indlf. ference And yet, will not oor fetJow citizens think H uMceoantable, that excepliogihe names which the editor 01 this paper basfurnlWjcd, Mr. Bagoet has reeeired but fvt ntbtcripiint |0 a)| the region south ol tbe Fotomac, since tbe ad?un elation of bis probable suspension! Is it ih* economy, and wise economy, for every inao in Sooth Carolina and every other southern state, to pny, If be can, iin?* dollars towards the sappott of n paper wbieh promise s to effect much indeed, towards tbe liberation of the count rv from a yoke wbieh Is bowing it down to tbe dust?from a vile system, which is not only (dundering him of more than three dollars of his honest earnings, bat wbicb Is drawing millions from tbe wealth of bis state, and degrading as to tiie condition of "hew ere of wood and drawers of water" to thow wboae avarice and cunning we have permitted to triumph over our rights, oar Interests, end oor feelings' Those who write (or tht manufactu rers have already chaanted a reqolem over tbe ashes of (be ? Advocate - W- are highly grati Aed that it was premature--and we are confident thet tbe people of Sooth Carolina conld not ob serve a safer role of eoodact, than to esteem what tbe manufacturers and their retainers con demn?and generously sustain whet they most feelingly and anxiously repudiate Many trnnaatlantle notlees, highly eomplimen tary, have greeted the 'Free Trade Advocate " end almost every leading .feumal in ,be unlou, which is not sold to Mr Clay end bis aystem, has bestowed Its warmest approbation upon the soundness of its doctilnes and the ability with which they are maintained. We, therefore, eonjare oar fellow eilixene to ottossd tbe hand of assistance; we promise them rich remuneration. Wu bay# rend with much interest a pa. thetlc and eloquent appeal of the Ladles of Morelia to the Mexican Confreres, ea the law for the expulsion of the Spaniards, which haa been passed by that body. The Allen Law whleh scaled the doom of a President of the United flutes, was mild ness itself compared ?othe ferocious decree of tea Mexican Coafroes The Charleston papers of the 19th Inst, notice the arrival of the brlf Catharine from Havana, bringing the Intelligence that a squadron was At ting ont at thatplM* censletlng of a 74, two frigatea, and several mailer rowels, wkh 3000 settlors, Irtottdid I for att expedition ciamt Moirtco.^v Tribute qf Gratitude.?On the lUh lost* in the County of Westchester N Y. a monu ment, furnished by subscription, was erected to the Mfcory ol Isaac Vav Wast, at Green?burgli Church, where the ashes of die incorruptible patriot repose. Fifteen hundred persons were present, and among them SI survivors of the army of the revo lution. The ceremonies were Imposing, end a very neat and appropriate oration we* pronounced by Col. Aaron Ward* which recounted some of the lending Incidents in the life of the deceased, partloulsrty that which has given him immortality, the Inter* oeption of Ufndre upen his return from the American lines* after his nogociation with Arnold. The location pi?mmn an interest, being In what was called tin neu tral ground, rendered dassie by the genius of our countrymen Cooper. Tht National Journal, which has honor* ed us with a quotation from our columns in conjunction with some of our brethren, in order to prove that there la a coming attack upon the tariff at the next session of Con grsos need not continue to be so very cxcur slvo and laborious in mustertlngupdetscb edparagrapa to prove this bet .We auurc the Journal that an attack will be made, and that too, whatever may be the course of the | administration, upon the vile system of im post, which has brought down the execra tions of all sections of the country. We trust It is destined to fall to ruins, and to crush in Its wreck the political prospects of the great champion who claims the hon or of itscoocqrtion and execution, and who is at present the Magnus Apollo of the Journal. The tariff will be brought before Congress, whether the President assumes I that task, as we hope and believe he #ill, or not. The Journal has long been sounding the note of preparation to the monopolists? the Clayites?and calling upon them to pa rade, drill and exercise their forces for bat tle. We admonish them to do so, and ex pect to find many a deserter front their ranks in the heat of the engagement. The Louiriana AdvcrtUer of the 20th ult. ssys, that much of the commercial distress of the City of New-Orleans is to be traced to the operation of the present " injudicious tariff," the decreasing exports of cotton, the unusual quantity of unemployed ship ping lying at the levee, seeking freight and the depression generally of the southern ag ricultural interest. If Louisiana, whose principal staple la among the objccts of na tional bounty and protection, and which al ways meets with a ready and profitable market, is thus suffering under the opera tion of the tariff, what roust be the state of affairs in South Carolina, which has been the subject of unmitigated depletion, with out a single tonic to brace her, in any shape whatsoever. The Louisiana Advertiser of June 2nd. states, that several cases of violent fever had occurred during the past week at tho charity hospital, some of which had proved fatal. The Advertiser expresses no attoni&h* mcnt at the early appearance of fever tho present season, considering the causes for epidemical miasma: the late constant and heavy rains, succeeded by almost Intolera ble heat, and the river declining into it* bed at a much earlier period than usual, leaving the refuse and filth of fiat boats, to engender in the son, from which the most obnoxiout|fcetic effluvia arise, spreading dis ease and death around. One ofthe Editors of the New-York Cour ier and Enquirer writes from Washington city, under date of June 9, that the Presi dent visits daily the subordinate offices; that the books are kept even with the business of the office; accounts, which heretofore required months to settle, are now settled promptly; and without doceurt to clerks; no playing of Billiards and cards, and no longing are now the order of the dayr" that thx president and hisSecretaries ate men of b^jnet*, engaged in doing the ser vice of the Koyle from 0 o'clock In the morning 'till 10 ftvnight; that abuses and defalcations have b*.n discovered where least suspected to exh^j that develope ments upon this subject wm f,0 uid before u committee of Congress whio^ w||| afttonisU even those who have hcretofoiWcdiaedthe necessity of reform. We have read the speech of Mr. Cliy, delivered at the dinner given to him ne?r Lexington on the 16th ultimo. fc(e she! tears, at least he said he was very sorry tt be obliged to abuse Gen. Jaekson?btfv yet it w^s necessary, and he let off the sliqg. whang of the National Journal for a full hotr and a half. The only articles of taterer*. connected with the whole affair that wecau And arei 1st. That Mr. Clay wishes now to retire Into private life to mend his fences, to rowft cattle, and recruit a constitution, which he has eaten down. 2nd. That he wishea to be Presides', whenever the people ehooeoto Invite him to The following bill of fare for tho great dinner i The committee prepared for the occa sion 579 tbe. of beef?OS hams of Bacon?? veals?94 sheets?30 raestetn?97 law 10 mutton*?313 lbs better?333 doe. eggs ?1000 loaves of bread?103 gallons of whiskey?S5 do. brandy and rum?ISO lb* sugar and acid for punch, fcc?all of whk.h were gratuHonely famtthed by Mr. Clay'a frietWk. ! to (he Mm D. Craig If keen appointed itent office, vine Dr. Jenee. trana the etate deportment, with hie owl Mr. On**, Hie said, iefcvoofaWy known in Baltimore aa a Lecturer en Mtiurcl PU ?no M*thnnatk?. ,