University of South Carolina Libraries
. i r.l,.?ai?;i. ... ?o? i of an v advantage to her, to proclaim at this late hour the wonderful fact lately discovered hy, :intl known only to the (ireeniille Southern Patriot, thai "ice penph- of the North are fighting our hut tics for us v. nil the fanatics aiid a!>olitiuiristx.'" Suh conduct, to sny the least, cannot be. and is not bmi haul't > the cause oj Southern high's. In one word \v?? indorse fully the following re.'rtark contained in one of your late editorials:, %*'l'kr argument is es.lutusled?the debate his closed, ami tec lure, nothing', absolutely nothing to do iritk abstract fjitestions." ? Itnvingnoiv, as v. ? bviieviv presented IIO impartial ami Concise iiUiocv of the past, inula 1 fair and tiiifliiid statcnieiiV of t::e present runditioiK of ,'oiairs, there can f?o no dilficnity in %ariivino at >i eorrecji ejjncliisioii in reference to that line of conduct which duty and patriotism woulJ indicate. /. is srfh.l iii.it South C':?ro*-y? lina is to cat hose, sonar n: later, from a 0' once powerful i.nl now iotiering l:uion. l.-l ? us prepare for oar departure! Vv e have every confidence that our excellent and fearless Chic' Magistrate, with t!t3 seientitic and experienced ? gentlemen whont he lias called to iiii assistance will .faithfully and zealously perform the ps calinly nrd.i >as an J responsible duties imposedupou them:?l>nt ha^e not \>e, citu-ns, ' f -? - t * 1 t t_ soinewung u> noj Aye: mucu cw.y was.? ?. r 'Lot Piit-ry citizen,asan4t?<!ivulual do Aiof |>art. i i Mbi* "general work of~pVejr,tration. . Lrt I-iui prepare lihrrv-If, m ni.iiiy a.-Kfphy-J "illy, to ne ready \v'ieit- the conventio i roe-is t > give Ids persona! aid, if necessary, in hoisting the anchor which nilnrs the ship f?l*6tate. Let eve* vy man ha' do this, arid our life upon the isv.ie "all will he wei!." in conclusion, we re-atii in I that the ruhiro.'t h or hern r.ar.scil^Jnd Sou fit /x ml inn thus! advance, or fullback into a S'u'.e a' disgraceful ensuing? in I of in j.nanus l>,ullage. This being our true, ycftifion,ow r. a! condition, ips toi.l adr tnee or in the language of the resolution quoted above, "the federal L inon hu\ i.;g failed t? ftcco nnliali the end for which it was . designed, ire are tcniy an l iciliing, and feel if ' to be- our dufy to wi'hJraQ from it for srctnU ire cm?secede we should?jeer Je we trill I at leant j so &ys j " - LANCASTER. >0'Pro.21 thn E l^ffi.'ld Advertiser. YOUNG MEN. Itis attempted in diforent quarters, privately. and .publicly, to .raise a cry against the influ- j nnoa nf vAlin<* W V1. ft IS SUnrMlSeil llV SOTTI J I rr - that auvhncea life and grey hairs should not j onlv counsel in difficult affairs, but lead in exo- j Cution; and that youth is really but childhood, i and fitted to mingle in the exercises and amuse- ] merits proper to that age?but never to tilliide ! to the grave matters of politics?of State resistance?of revolution. These ideas are preposterous. With the greatest respect for the experience of age, we yet main tarn that in great crises, the young man, endowed with talents and filled with energy, is really the most reliable leader. It is the period when the heart's quick pulsations urge to the execution of daring conceptions of thn brain?when, unalloyed bv the studied caution and the unnatural timidity of the hackneyed politician, of j the property-holder, after many years of ncen ! mutation, and of the already famous, who dread the unbinding of a single leaf of hard earned laurels?when, stimulated hv over-present visions of hi< country's renown and by an honest ambition to link his name with the story of h?*r honor, the youthful patriot seeks to do, what may equal, if not surpass, the deeds of prcde censors. All history is crowded with examples, in eve ry walk of life, of the nolilo achievements of youth. Th-mistocles in youth, against strong prejudices, built a navy for Athens and defeated the greatest power existing on earth. Alexander, a youth, conquered the world and died at 3*2, when there was no longer an aim worthy of his genius and ambition. Potnpev el ?vated the Roman name, and assumed the title of ' Great" at the age of'25. Hannibal, in vonth, traversed the Alps for the firs' time with an nrmv, and subdued the conquerors. In late p?. rinds, the Black Prince of England, in youth, won the highest renown. Gaston dt? Foix, at 21, won the great batMo of !I tvcmn. U-vi John, the bastard of Charles won t!io still g eater victory of Lepnnto and died M an early age, like Alexander, worn out with fretting lor new fields of achievement. Washington, a youth, established his claim to the command in chief of our rev.Vutionnry armv. linonaparte at 27. astounded the worl I witli his Italian r un aigns, and, at DO, from his birthplace, an island then recently mvjuired by France, and j ist in season to make him a Frenchman, ass lined the purple of one of the greatest cottnt ies in Europe. Scott, at 2N, had ascended to the top of the military I idd"r in the United States and made a reputation wo-ld-widc. In other departments, to enumerate only a few out of the hundreds. It-icon, Pascal, Unrk, Bvron, in their youth, took position with the highest. And finally, our own Calhoun, in youth, was designated for the Presidency, and soon after, leaned, at a bound, to the summit of fullie, from which he never d >se.ended. Pshn ! decrv youth ? by it is lite golden age of in ; 's e i"thl v existence, for almost all purposes! It is successful by its peculiar 'jualilies of disinterestedness and lofty aspiration, beyond the -..i.:n,..,.n(.,,?a of ?nv oiiuo- ooriod of !ifie. Al nmst all revolutions am conducted bv youth.~ T.ie highest and nobles tnclionsou record were executed by youth. Let (headed advise-letthcm el allt out an honorable course : but lor its perfect execution, let them call in the indomitable energy and determination of youth. Without thorn, they will utteilv fiiil?with them, and their resources, there is success, in our present crisis, the youth must lend, if not guide, the action of South Carolina. And when the great cause of liberty is reposed in their liaud>, we ledieve tbat .the i?soc will not only lie honorable, but ma t loriour. Ljtiuuhy lioroas.?The Vatmnnl Intcllig nc 1 si : "it i> with much satisfaction t'<t vy? set it Mated in t m public prints that Dr. i'rj i -is Li !) . she ? a! lent a i I lea nd profirjaO o. Jo It . >. ; : >!; . !. ?.-?:! or-, hob l el-.-ct.. , rue !.: ? ' ' ' i a 11 (! ; I 11j i>? ; i ..i.t u :r t.i ji io..i>h. i?] eoii.ni'> o i.i, .'.v'cCott, L the only ot.ier iin.ira.. who Ha I icon thus complimented." ** * J? . .1 * i "Tri'ifi f I , I Wealth of JSh6v'vmi:\.?Two million six hundred and seventy thousand dollars.;have been made by showmen in the last ten years, making an Avetase for each ot'one hundred and seventy-eight thousand dollars- Tlitf' following is a list of what each man has made corn meucing with IV/lvlininaiu:. the richest dhowman in the world, he having made in the last rightyears over ?.800,000; Jenny Liiid is worth ?500,000, notwithstanding she lias given over a half minion in charity; Moses Kimball, of the Boston Museum, 8300,000; Kdwin Forest, the ureal tragedian, 8350,000; Burton* the actor, j ?125,000. Blitz, the magician, 830,000. T. S. i !l-wnhliii, of the Bo .very theatre, X. 3 870,i 000; General Welch, the great circus man, ' 800,000; Wynian, the Pii:rtv.* of magician? and tiirrofn:incers,^#o\V'4b this city) ?33,000; Gen. Tom Thumb, Bprouni'd grvr.t dwarf, 8/3,000; J. 12. Uwc*B^tlie,..<i'om.'di.i:) and proprietor of liie Musec^W550d6: llcrr Aluxanderjjbejuglor and'jirlistb. ?25,000; Mods. AdrjjWi, the Frtfich M:\jikiiia, 820,000 Butivar&ttpjfigitinl oronrietor of the Mississippi Patidlflfil, 8a5. 000; Win. flifeel.mrat.nl pritgrje*. {or of New-York, TS worih notwithstanding Ids serious losses bfj^ctei' S;ia^cnsi U^^ii(i Slesscri?er. S ilc nf il-.u Eiieilr ?-That large int. of land situated inlhentpper Wards of the City, and ! known-as Tivuii Garden, w is divided into lots, I and sold yesterday, at auction, by T110.J. D. jCoNPY. The salt: resulted, viz:?ten lots on Mettiiiig-^treet, each measuring <10 feet front by j ; 140 foot in depth, brought an aggregate price | of S 10.052; two kts o:i Columbus street, each j measuring tin feet f. out by *200 in depth, brought j a total .$1,1500; four lots on .S'.issau street, j each 40 feet front, -averaging about 140 in ! depth. sold for 740,710,750, and ?30?in-nk- j i ! ..II CiO C" O* .,.,,1 |?f JO lip O t 1:1 fill j my *j:i ?iii vnuu wiiu m.yj *.j %,?. ... ...w i sat;]ft locality, brought $500. Courier, 10 March. I _ Nrw.sI'ahkhs i.n" SuUTii Carolina.?TilC j I whole number of newspnjMirs published in this rjtate n 40, of which eiufht are issued daily.? i Each daily paper has also a tri-weekly issue j and three of them publish a weekly sheet, being merely a transcript from the dailies. Within i live years the jjntn!> ? ?' has increase I three hundred per cent.?CvL Tt ic^raoh. Co.t or uoino to rat: Wo aim's Fair.? i The New Vorl; Tribune is giving some calculations as to the expense attending a visit to the ! World's Fair. The conclusion it comes to is j as follows: { Fare going and returning in a steamer, $*200 j Gratuities to servants on steamers, - - - 5 , Railroad lair to London and back - - 14 ! Board in London for lour weeks, - 85 iiaek hire (look out sharp for the drivers) 1(5 Amusements, excursions. ?2Lc. - - 25 i Fare from London to Fails and hack. 15 ! Expeuses a week in Paris 10 : ' S100 ; : This is ns small an amount as the trip can be made for, and any body intending to make j it had hotter add t arty per cent, to the caleula-; '$yn.?BMiiiiijre Suit. I C^7" The married ladies of Fairinount, N. J. i have organized themselves into an indopeii'leat I Order of Odd Ladies, in order to be revenged upon their Odd Fellows husbands. T.ieir lodge is kept open half an hour longer at night tnan I the Odil fellows. "Cabbage,"isays the lidinhurg I'eview, "cont tains more uiuscle??ii?t.iining mit; ituviit tiiaii any other vegetable whatever, lioiled cabbage and corned Jeef malic ftlty* two as good dinners in twelve ui mtiis as a man can cat." i Choice of Thar ami I. tic was.?He that is choice of iii.s time will aJso lie eiiOice ui nis company and enoiec of actions. idleness is t.io burial of a Jiving mail.?Jemny 'J uylor. ! ____ J Cusp.* in irlii. h Letters should be Prepaid.? A gentleman v.tiling to a la.lv. A !.??!_>* writing to her tenia I e friend, to the care of a gentleman, (because too trouble ol receiving and delivci log is tax enough.) A meicnaut wiiting to another, requesting information. A friend writing to his friend, requesting some friendly act; such as collecting a small dividend to be remitted, ?Ac. Oce., too trouble being sulli< ient to prove bis fiieiiUatbp wiluout being taxed tor so doing. A'Wtys m writing in newspaper editors or ' proprietors of newspapers. The. Gem and Cuskut.?'J'lie following lines are on tiie monument of a young girl at Mount Auburn: "tflied not for tier the bitter tear, . .Nor pine witn vain regret, 'Tis lint tlie casket widen lies here? The gem is sparkling yet." , The Court.?Tie.' Court of common Picas wiiicn commenced its session in to is place on Monday, and udjouruc.i on Wednesday having , linisiieu all the ousmcss tnat was prepared tor i trial, iiaii ail tue cases ou me uockci ueen tiiud the week WuuKI have been more man sulI licieiit. J udgiug Iroui appearances wo would ! suppose that there was hut little danger of a lawyer making iiiore money iu Georgetown j limn tie could conveniently ujc. iv hi yah Observer. I .\cirsji.ii>rrs in the Stale of .Xew York.?Ac| cording to an olliuial statonient. just published, it appears tlml there aro in tiie .State of .Now \ orlt four hundred and hilly-ejghi newspapers, of whieli li ty-six are issued daily. The city and county of .New t oik alone has eighteen dailies and one hnndreil ami eight weeklies. One set I o| luev papers is to r e sent to tiie VI orlJ s l air in I.e..don, and a duplicate to bo deposited in ! tiie Ota to J.ibrarv at Allranv. : I A'/irt.v Thyself.- How can a man It now j iiiuis ! 1[ i it. ongii co.ii niij latino never, but ..liner in.ougn aclio i. mul-am to do" toy d-ty, and t..ou u ill know toy capacity, lint what is toy duty i liio exigencies ol the day. ? (r'(K 'he. TELEGRAPHIC INTELLIGENCE. Arrival of the Pacific. The steamship Pacificarrived at New York on Saturday afternoon, with Liverpool dates of the Oth. The sales of Cotton on Saturday, .Monday flhd Tuesday morning were 11,000 bales. Fair Uplands, T 3-8; Fair Mobile, 7 3-8; Fair Orleans, 7 3-4. [The Liverpool quotations of March' 28, bv the Africa, were Fair Uplands, 7 l-8a 7 3-8; Fair Mobile, 7 1-4 a 7 1-2; Fair Orleans, 7 7-8.] Consumers purchase ; sparingly, awaiting advices from America resI peering the crop.?Mercury , A'tempt not the Impossible.? Man is born not to solve the problem of the Universe, but to j find out where the problem fn-ijins. hud then re: strain himself within the limits of the eompro ! heusible. ? Goethe. 1 How to luhe a Paper.?Pay in advance, I arid fi.it.-n tlir. tiriviluitfl /if i*o.1.1111tr vour avvh " paper, instead of the publishers. If you change I vour residence inform the publinher immediatej ly, stating your name, the town you move from, | and the town you movo.to. How to slop u puprr.?The only, honest way to stop-a paper, when not wanted, is to pay into the hands of the postmaster whatever you owe Tor it, if it be only tor two numbers, and see that the Postmaster writes an order to have ! tbeaame stopped. There is no use in sending | to the publishers letters or papers, with postage ! unpaid. If you fail to do this, do not complain | if the publishers continue to send the paper. I mpommm mi. ! HMDaMUMwi iwe?aw "THE"CAM JOURNAL THO. J. WARREN & C. A. PRICE, EditorsTUESDAY EVENING, APRIL 22, 1851. Our Market. Our Cotton quotatioaa to-day, are from 7 to 11 cents. The Schoolfellow. We have received the last No. of the Schoolt'-llow. The neatest little Schoolboy Journal in America. Plank Roads. Why are the citizens of Camden, who are making no effort to build the Plank Iload, like those Fanners, who gather and consume their grain in the summer, ami make no provision for the winter? You all can tell the answer iu a few years. The Convention Will meet in Charleston on the fifth of May. We perceive that nearly every district in the State has?and the rest probably, have hv this time, elected I)~legato?. Generally, the Delegations are large. We hope all will attend?and would just here suggest to the South Carolina Rail Rnad, the propriety of passing the Delegates free ovr the Road. No meeting has ever met in | our State, in which its interests have been more deepl) interested. Friends, if you want Editorials, wri.e I i them : in some instances wo have been paid for I those which we have already written ; hut uul'or! tunnk-ly, ton often has our pecuniary interest suf] fered. Where friends have been unmindful of j ilit- fir*, that although Editors are sometimes vi1 siot.ary beings, ideal,and dwellers on the confines | of no whore in particular; \ei, they must have 1 something more substantial to live on, what time ( limy do live, than *:n[ili)iKHlnry" show tickets, i which after all is said and done, don't put much i cash in the pocket. Frequently the imagination [ of the c.rajt i-, taxed to its fullest capacity, ami ! they are under that necessity, which is said to have no law, of thinking themselves some in more ; ways than one, in order that the excitement may J be kept up sufficiently, that the wheels of our official arrangements may not altogether cease ; their evolutions. ? Sunt; time previous, that is to say. about two months ago, we sent in sundry directions, and to I divers individuals, certain little "-billet rf?cs;" and 1 whereas, .-in. e that time, but low have responded ' to suit us. We take this occasion to say, that our : sundry delinquent friends of 1^50, need not he | surprised if we should again xery stum, stir up | ilieir pure minds by way of remembrance, as we i are opposed to dunning, from principle. We j earnestly hope that this, the last appeal, which i we intend to make for some tune to come, will tie tukf ii by those in arroars as in raruest, that ive want our monov?and savo us the unpleasant reflection of arriving at thy same conclusion which an Editor 'hard i;j?* came to, in reference to some of his subscribers?that "ihey would make good wheel horses, for they he LI back so well." are ready to walk up to the line of Southern Rights, and Lhpre. stand in defence of all that belongs to the South, even '-to the last extremity." We hate compromises. We object most emphatically to the "watch and wait" policy, which has according to our view, a tendency to the temporising of resistance, even so far as to total submission. Our idea is, that tweive months is quite long enough to wait on our laggard Southern brethren, and it they do not in that | time, mend their pace and get up with us, they j mv.r will. Mark that,they twerr will! We who . arc in favor of separate State action, and resist| ance at ail har/ards?are derided by some, j and called Hot Heads and Fire Killers.? 1 Who cares, for that? Justice and Truth have I certain unalienable rights, and must be preserved. I _ ?l f.. ... #???.! Trnlli i ri lltu miiiniTiioini.t ?* " j Art IMtTb illlMH'u iiMu * ?.?u? iiicrui ui i the Federal Government ? a reckless majority <!<? j as ilvv please, and it the people ol* tlu; Suutli are no unwise as to to these oppressions, bo it so. Virginia and Georgia want a hand in the next I'r-. sithutial Game. Northern Pap is f:i!I . very uoleetablo In thousands o? the hungry halt star tvd O.lj'. e see hers, fcioii'.h ol .Mason and iJixon, I v. ho may yet be found willing to quench the last t-p.irk of patriotism,and immolate truth and prin| ciple the utdit'ly aitar* of eel fish Jfmbition. . , ?Gen. Scott for next President. We pee in the letter of th$ Baltimore correspondent of the Charleston Courier dated 12til;: i inst., "lli.it a concerted movement appears to be on foot among the anti-slavery, anli^com promise Whig presses of the North, to bring forward Gen. Scott as a Presidential candidate. Prominent in this movement are to be found, the Boston Alias, the Albany Journal, and all the New England papers of that kidney. Whether tlieir support is honest and true, or only designed a-' a ruse to affect somebody el^-'s prospects, it i> hard to say but certainly : (Jen. Ecott seems to on the last man that could be suspected of holding any sentiments in common with the individuals who are now so assiduously pressing his claims. The war bctwec-o this el.-u-= of Wni;rs and the conservative oortioii of the oartv raires with unbounded r . r ^ C7 fury, and in their domestic quarrels they seem lo forget tlie common enemy they have been accustomed to oppose." Monk's New Map. We noticed a short time since a new* work publish";! by Jac 'b Monk at Baltimore, Md. We ha7ej11.it been favored 'wi'li an inspection of a finished specimen copy, and can unhesitatingly assert that it far surpasses in the amount of geographical information contained, an) work heretofore published. It exhibits at a single glance, the whole Territory from the Atlantic to Pacific, embraced between the 7th and 30th parallels of north latitude, including of course all of Mexico and Central America, with their States well defined?also ih" West India Islands 011 the same 1 scale. An interesting feature of this valuable | work, is the distinct delineation of the territories of I'tah, New-Mexicc, Oregon, Mmcsota, and the ; new State of California, showing the exact boun1 daries lately established by Congress. This Map has been ro.rpiled with much labor and expense, frotn the most recent surveys, among whi h, are ; those of Fremont. Emory, Wiilis, AII>?*rt, Johnson, i arid other s. ientific gentlemen. Upon this Map will he fiund all the Rail Road and Canal Routes, and principal thoroughfares through the United States, and vari >us routes by land and water to | California and Oregon. Mr. Bowf.n, the gentle- J manly agent of the pu Ushers, will call upon those of our citizens who have not already secured the work, and give them an opportunity to Ho so. "Mr. A. J. D.trgan, has declared hiinseif," says ' the Wadcslwo Argus, "a candidate lor Congress ' from this District." This we are clad to hear. I ... j .Mr. Darguu is a Whig?and out and out a secessio:list. We hope he will be elected. But what, i in the report of the proceedings of the meeting, ! at which x'r. Dargau was declared, as reported ; In the Argus, that was most strange to us, was .Mr. A .-lie's sentiments. We give an extract of a . colloquy, in which is embodied the political faith, I as there expressed of Mr. Ashe: Mr. A she denied tlio light of a Stife to so- i cede. There was no power in the federal Con- | ' stitution, nor in the construction of any putt I I thereof, under which :i .State could possibly so- , | rede. The l.uited States Coiislilution, ami I all was made in accordance therewith, were the i supreme laws of the land, and that every State, 1 as well :is every individual, was hound to obey litem us such: That no State could do any act ' at variance with, or contrary to, the federal Con. | stitution; and that as Secession would he contrarv to tiio intent and meaning of that instrument, a State had no Constitutional light whati ever to secede. j .Mr. Ashe thought the supreme Court of the L*. States t!ie proper tribunal for determining t!ie cmistitutioiiality of a law. Mr. Leak asked .Mr. Ashe if he helievcd the I Chief executive of the nation had the power? ! or ought to exercise it if lie had?to call out ! the the troops of the I nited States to oppose a ; State in its sovereign capacity as a State. .Mr. i Leak wauled Mr. Ashe to give a positive and deciiled answer to this. Mr. Ashe said that it was not only the privilege, hut tiio duty, of the President to see* that al! laws made by Congress under the Conslitu I tion wore mily executed. lie was sworn *o do j so: and that when ho did not, ho was perjured, and tlicrcfoto acted wrong. That when a State in its sovereign or any other capacity, acted i against the constitution, or any laws Hindu there* ' under, it became the duty of the executive to ! use all the power of the General Government to force such State into subjection,even though i the State might be crushed thereby. Ue wis! [ ed it distinctly understood that the right, but it was Lis bounded duty to do so. Mr. Leak asked Mr. Ashe what course a : State?North Carolina, for instance?ought to i pursue, if Congress were to go outside the j Constitution ami abolish slavery i i the State*. .Mr. Ashe said that if ever Congress did I such an act, North Carolina would rise as one ! man and resist such an usurpation to the death, i .Mr. Ashe believed that every State had this ! natural and inalienable right; but thai it was a I natural light, and not derived from the I'. S. Constitution; and that it was revolution or revolt and not secession. Mr. Leak then intimated to Mr. Ashe that as (lio iuiliicol it'iiff iitaioli i tiotmriie tliuo HIV. ILULIIll IIIIK IIb U tia liJULII I lililll any of (lie States, or number of such States, there was a likelihood that such State or States i might be crodied in the struggle, and asked what then ? .Mr. Ashe said that was very true; hat that the aggrieved State or States must trust to the | justice of their cause and to their God, as did | their fathers in the revolutionary struggle, when ! lighting a power so immensely superior to themselves as Great Britain then was. We wonder if Mr. Ashe, has ever read the tenth Article of the Amendments to the Constitution f?We transcribe it: ''The powers not delegated to the- United Stales by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it, to the Status, are reserved to tie. States, respectiyely, or to the people." What power in conflict.with secession, was dalega'cd by the States to 'he Federal Government? Or, in what clause does the Constitution, prohibit secession' If Mr. Ashe haa ctor seen cither in the Cotteii'trttoe, we hare net. It is a itrnrgo read ing of the; Constitution, that we hive the right U>4B 'I ret:' It, but not to wed-. \V"h it i.-- revolting, bu^R i 1 gece/sioi;WVs*f reded ftahiEogianJ. EiigiaQ(^H[ aj denied ilut wo had ihe riabi?|whap?, how ever, 1 sli*- would have nckiiO\vfedg-*d our right to rerollJgK .'fl j l)ut! i hav !ii t i-w pri'ciselt whip end, anriv f 1 I it would 'appear if vre had, a natural, iuahenabl^C ? I right to on.', we li 4 ' > ilia other. Mr. .VMtaaayx,;lr |J j '\liat it'tli Federal, Gwrntnent nboliehee elave- Jn ! i-v in :!i' Sinr., liien \..rth Carolina will ri.?? \ 'I dj'..-a1 Htm and r?-i>t su.h ueurpatiou to the XkI ; death." We liiiuk ditfrretiily, -Tit-' 'Southern ! j State, tii.it hears :h? inJigniljy.jttid derivation ot *i J i tight, already in-ajied uj?otj tin* S ?utlt, will never w j rain? a linger tovvard resistance. The North nxajr I .... ..'-nuin ui ? -j*ni nun uiani1^ or wa- J I.:r," an?l taai.^y aa tlii? ox, ih?-y vviil nuluuit. 9 la.-t vendge of that nob'e spirit, which intim-nced the infti of *7li, will have died out/and left thani 9 j the servile Ottoman, on the p'suiw ofMUratbyii; 4 | the compromise suhmi-wioni ?t? on Smth-nt ?joil. J We iiiHTj the following, that theCami?u mer el.fci.le li ny >-ee the toinplaintH tflitde, nnd if jflst, I remove tite cause. . - j South Car ?~hsa Commission* M^uch ?ktj. j I We have heard no little complaint hereaiilkMig \ j our Merchants, against the Conj:iibK?ioH Mer, c'fi.iJits of Charleston and Camden, the ground* ! of complaint chiefly made, a re careler-suess, neg| ligencc, and, in some eases, exhorbitant rate* ] Messrs. Boger it Reese. Win. Murphy <Sw Co., ! E. Myers, and Morrison, of St.itesvilie, beside* TV | others in this and the surrounding villages, have | all had abundant reason to complain. We mention f hi-fact with no oilier view than calling the attention of these ."South Carolina (looses to the matter, hoping that if any tiling has larcitlacking ciiher in their own utanageineijL*'or the i management of Clerks not in strict aeeo. dance : with punctual business transactions, they may apply the remedy. 'J'he merchants in this section would ship more extensively bytltoway j of Charleston lint for the difficulty they fcxperii etice in rec.i'ivinc their goods from that piaeo 'and particularly Caniden. Wai/niiora sent down to llie latter place often corn? back wjth previous complaints of uncivil .treatment and of j J the troubles they had in receiving their loads,? i troubles easily obviated by a systematic attenj tion to nusinesS.- W.t'chmvi, Saiixf/uty, .V. C. C"uirnuuii-at? J, ? ] j Mkmxv F.pitoks.--Strolling through, the j ! up-conntry for ; week or *of 1 tarried at Ljin? I easterville a few tiny* during Court. To all i wl n like good eliff-r, quiet and eomfortablo lodgings, I eomioeiid tin; Hotel of Mr. \xdrk\v . M \vkit of that place?believing that the aci coinniodations nfTorcIetl his guest* are not sur I o i i ~in-. ? pnsseu?11 equation?r>y any noiej in ine upcountry. His fikl# ftre lioriMr wrporior i Although I was there in the rui?h?t of (he crowd and bustle of Court week, my room-mate concurs wilh me in the opinion, that tile bed and room allotted us, eon! I not be .surpassed in cleanliness and comfort by miv Public Hon a? { in the State. Mr. M ttUli To How ?onio\vjint celebrated for keeping one of the very best i furnished Talks. k literallv "roans under its 1 i m * I burden of choice di-shes?of ercry thing that a \ ilhigo market can afford.- And the great 1 vuhii!"!' to nie wn?, how a tit ?VhH so remote from head-quarters, could yield a supply eo vnl real and nhnndaiit. These comfort*. added to attentive servants, all directed by in obliging ; ho^t, make one fed ' perfectly at home.nv If Mr. M. occupied a weH con<trndted bqild] iaj. i?:i\i:?*r latge-and Convenient parlors and i sitting room-*, I would hazard nothing in snvk I iiig, that lii Hotel would equal any b>!>c fotliad i in our cities. His business habits, and -success in catering lor the public, indicate him asasuita! hie person, to ?u;>ervisc a much larger estab lishnii nt than a village Hotel, and it is ft matter i of Some Mirn.'i?i> that liis seVviena have notion" i ' P ; Hii-v hecn secured in some of <?ur towns or j cities. There was hut one 0|Hiiion prevailing in that large crowd, lie managed somehow -to : accommodate during Court?that his table , could not he better, and that he deserves the | patronage and support of all who dtesfre to ^ sleep or fare well. - ? t CAMDEN PRICES CURRENT* ' j Harming, jier yd. It to 18 ;fard, lb 8 to 10 ; Hale Hope lb to ! ? j Lead, Ih 8 to 7 Huron, lb 9 to 1*?? .Multnrt, rail SI to) 40 Hmier. lb 1S to 20 MarUrel, bb! 8 to? * Hran.lv, s?!l 28 to 35 iNaila, tb 41 to S Be-*wai, ill 18 to 22 Oata. bwlirl 75 '' of. lb 4 to 5 :Peaa, bwhel 80 ( liveao, lb 11 15 j Potatoe?,nreel,bu 50 | (otton. Ib 7i to lit I trot W ! :( orn. buahi-l |1 to lWi, itvo, bt?W ?5 ? 1 I Flour, bhl tii to 7!Kiro. bwtot B ? * F?Hldcr. 150iSt?r, Ib 7 to 10 odea, dry lb a y {Saft. *ck " 1* n,n- lb 5 to ,h?t. bap ? j into. bb] jo 2t:Tohoero, lb li I leather, aolo, Ib 17 to 21 | Wheat, b??b 1 For Sheriff \,f! I tiTWe arc authorized io announce 5 j THOMAS BASKIN, Esq., hs a Candidate for I Sheriffat the ensuing election. 1 | April 22, lt>50. 32 tf ^ 3 r Wo nrc authorized lo annoaaW I JOSEPH J. MK'KI.E, as a Candidate for Sheriff . 1 I of Kfrslmw District, at tho ensuing rlfctioo. i April S, 'J8 If I.rlVo are authorized (oaunoaate JOHN INtiHAM, as a candidate fop Sheriff o1 Kerslmv District al the ensuing election. April 11 i!9 91 ' 3 r The frieud* of Wni. F. Debrnltlt I announce Imri rp k Candidate for .Sheriff, at the winning election. April 15, HO ft" __ ^ itr We are authorised to astjiouuee DUNCAN McLEOD, .is .i (V.mli Into -for Sheriff, of Kershaw District, n*. t!?o ensiling election. April 15, 30 tf