University of South Carolina Libraries
4 * * Territories, and by carrying out the nefarious measure of slavery prohibition under tiie bitterest denunciations against our people and our institutions. III. Again : By interposing every obstacle to the arrest of our fugitive slaves, and by shamelessly barnissing and insulting our citizens while in pursuit of their property, the North not only deprives the South of thousands" of doliarsj annually, but heaps upon her wrongs and indignities, too flagrant for a high-minded people to bear. The North moreover perpetually annoys our people by agitating the question of slaver}' in and out of Congress, using towards us the most inflamatory and-abusive ? j ,1.. C....! epuneis, miu txprtrasmy tuc ujicu. uciuiuiiuation to f>ersist in their efforts, directed by their talent, influence and money, till slavery be driven entirely from the.Republic, : And do we not know these fanatics to be in earnest ?? "There is" says Bukkk, "one case, in which it would he madness not to give the fullest credit to the most deceitful-of men, that is, when they make declarations of hostility against us." IV. Further. Under the absolute sway of the Northern majority, the sovereignty of the individual States, the great arch pillar of Southern liberty, is becoming rapidly drawn into a buge consolidated despotism at Washington which is destined soon to be as irres-stible as it is despotic, placing the South completely at the mercy of the North, utterly destroying her equality and liberty, plucking the fruits of her honest labor, and, despite every barrier of the Consf'tution, subjecting hor to a wretched state of slavery, from which she can never he redeemed unless by the ultimate right of revolution ; a remedy always diflicult to he exercised and often doubtful in its consequences. ,This is but a feeble sketch of the chapter of our wrongs. To a people, not slumbering over j their interests and liberties, no comment on J these grievances can be necessary. They speak in trumpet tones to the brave and the freo of all sexes. They call to arms! to ai ms ! So much for the past. What are our prospects for the future ? Will not the Government ooatiuue to over-tax the South, and distribute the revenues to favor the interests of the North ? Will not the most extravagant appropriations still be made for the benefit of the ruling majority in the Union ? At the very last session of Congress $50,000,000 were appropriated principally to the North and West, while the ' Government is indebted to an amount exreeding $100,000,000. Will not this reckless extravagance cause the South to be continuallv oppressed by taxation ? Will not the central power at Washington go on increasing, till, utterly destroying State rights and State sovereignty, it will reduce the Southern States to mere dependeut provinces, and the Southern people to mere laborers for the North? Will mot abolition fanatics still agitate, and invoke all the perverted powers of the Government to effect their hellish purpose of abolishing slavery in the States? So sure as there is a God in Heaven, these things will follow, unless checken by some strong exertion of Southern power. We will know the Government in future only by its burdens and its exactions, and bv its distribution of the spoils, which as ill-hoarded wealth, it forces from Southern industry. We can look for nothing but one interrupted train trrannical and ODDressive measure*. Banks. Tariffs, Internal Improvements, prodijj.nl appropriations of the public lands and moneys, wicked schemes of abolition, and every shameful act of oppression which the genius of despotism ! can devise, will sweep over theso Southern States, iike fell besoms of destruction, carrying with them ruin and devastation. Tim South wilt be a mere tributary of the North; paving her stipend as regularly as the slave performs i service to his task-master; and suffering im poverishment and ruin amid the most systemut- | ic industry and the most fruitful labor on the ' face of the globe. Insulted, oppressed, down-trodden, with no hope of relief save in our own efforts, under the will of a just God, what ought we to do, what can we do, but resist with all our might, and with all the means the God of uaturo may i place in our hands, the blind and heartless tyranny that oppress us ? JThe amount has been estimated at ?030,000 annually. * m > ? From the Savannah Georgian. JOHN RANDOLPH, AND '1 HE RIGHT OF SECESSION. An extract, laudatory of the Union, front one of Mr. Randolph's speeches, a short time since went the rounds of the compromise presses. That its author was to the time of his death, a true friend of the Union, admits of tio more doubt than he was a friend of the South, and of his darling doctrine of State rights. Yet, J ' ? ? ? -f.i !_i . in tneseaays, wnen an assertion ui ui? rigiu 01 secession makes a man a disunionist, what is to be thought of the following resolutions, drafted by Mr. Randolph, and submitted by liitn to the peoplejof Charlotte county, Va, at the courthouse assembled: MResolved. That Virginia "is and of right ought to be a free, sovereign and independent State.f' That she became so by her own gov reign act, which has since boon recognized by all the civilized world, and has never been disavowed, retracted, or in any wise impaired or weakened by any subsequent act of hers. ffResolced, That Virginia has never parted with the right to recall the authority so delegated for good and sufficient cause, nor with the right to judge the snjficiency o f such cause, and to SECEDE from the Confederacy whenever she shall find the benefit exceeded by its evils ? tininff tho mnnno nf afenrimr liniiriinoc: U...UW MVUjj v.- ... a and not au end, to which it should be sacrificed, -y 11Resolved, That while wo utterly reprobate the doctrine of Nulijication as equally weak and mischievous, we cannot for that reason, give oar countenance to principles, equally un founded and in the highest degree dangerous to the liberties of the people." Yet this great man?-for great notwithstand)Ag his oxcentrioities he truly was, not only in (he eloquence of the orator, but in the wisdom of * statesman?yet ho, much as he was devo tod to the Union, were he now living, would expose himself, for the announcement of the foregoing sentiments, to denunciation as a disuuionist! It will be seen that Mr. I ipri placed the right of secession where. - must rest, upon the broad, immovable, ami indestructible rock of State sovereignty and independence. He thought that Patrick Henry, and Thomas Jefferson, and George Washington had by the tongue, the pen, and the sword, secured and achieved for Virginia, their country, something more than the rioht possessetfcuow by the serfs of llussia, and even their qwn African slaves. He thought that Virginia, in ceasing to be a-j province of threat Britain, did not become a province of New Kngland, err of New England and all the other States combined. He thought that her people had done something else than transfer their allegiance from King George to king numbers ? enthroned as the latter is, with despotic powers,moT-th of the Potomac. He did not think iftf.'t her long struggle, commotio- j ed by Patrick Henry in the house of bqrgesses, with the cry of "treason!'' ringing in his ears, ami ended by Washington on. the glorious field of Yorktown, bad done more for Virginia than to give to berth? right of revolution ?the right of withdrawing from the Union in case she c?uld whip the general government; and had doomed her to the fate of submissively remain"ing i:i it, in case she could not whip that govern merit. If the people of the different States?or to come home?if the people of Georgia have not the right to change their government, it is high ; time that the) did have it. Whether they may ! ever wMi to exercise it, is another thing. I5ut as soon as tin1 State shall cease to claim and insist upon the right so soon may she bid farewell to her sovereignty, and to the liberties of her people. She becomes subject to the will, j not of a majority of her own citizens, but of j an extraneous multitude whose interest, prejn- I dices and feelings are antagonistic to her good. From the Mountain Banner. UW1T rrmxTMTK 1\ GUILFORD. The Greensboro Patriot of last week con- , tains the report of a committee appointed to i take into consideration the state of affairs produced by the incendiary preaching of Me Bride, Crooks, and one Bacon in that section. The committee is convinced that said preachers are incendiaries ot the abolitionists. McBride is already gone, and the report declares that Crooks and Bacon must leave?they must be got rid of "peaceably if we can, forcibly if we must." These eiumissarios, it appears, have made a good many converts in Guilford, and we learn that there was a regular row at lTnion church 3 miles from Jamestown, on Saturday the 26th nit. It is stated that there were about 300 on the side of the preachers, and that clubs, stones, <kc., were freely used, but no one very scriously damaged. A reward of 8200 was offered for the apprehension of Crooks and Bacon, or 8100 for cither of them, after the 5th of j August. We annex a letter, published in the Patriot, and vouched for as genuine. It was written in Indiana by a former resident of Guilford : ".Before this reaches you the battle between the "respectable descendants" on one part and McBridc and Crooks on the other part, will probably have been fought; yet I give it as my opinion that McBridc and Ciooks will not be driven from your county alive; and if the "respectable" shall in obedience to law and order," slay them upon the field, their places will be again and quickly filled by "a few more of the same sort." 1 know this because I have conversed with one of their allies in this county, ; who says, that though 50 years of age, he is | ready to take their places. It is known hero, if not in your County, that there is a number of citizens of Guilford that are leagued with these men in concocting and carrying out their plans. What will the " respectable" do with \ them ? "Their name is legion," and their iuflu- j ence is not limited to their own families, while ! their horses are not slow of foot when mounted by a runaway negro, on his route north. "If this swarm of flies be driven away, their places j j will be supplied by others more hungry." I | | have mentioned these things to show you that 1 in passing in condemnation on the " respecta- i ble" viob, I am in the right use of my reason, | t)"l fanatical, but disposed to look at tbings as thcv arc, ami to submit to the laws of my country. In conclusion, let m<* say (and I speak advisedly) that wherever thesq ministers have obtained the foothold that they now have in ; Guilford, the peace and quiet of the slavehold i ing community is at an end; and much as I love wealth. 1 would not this day accept as a present, the best farm and negroes in your county, with the understanding that I should be compelled to remain with them 8 years. For whether slavery he right or wrong, of God or the Devil, its days are numbered, Union or no Union. The North has the ascomioiicv, and the power, the will and the determination, to break its bonds, and that at no verv distant period. There is an upheaving of sentiment, and a running out after "things new" a love of reform either fancied or real among the jieople of the great Northwest, that betokens this more strongly than does any opposition to the fugitive slave bill." Later from Mexico.?The barque Braziliero ; arrived on Monday at New-York from Vera Cruz, with 878,000. The dates from the City of Mexico are to July IS. Mr. E. C'onue of the Alta California, who came passenger, has furnished the New-\ork papers with Mexican news, Iroin which we ?*opv the following: Col. Kamscy is still in Mexico urging the government to give him the privilege of constructing a road from Vera Cruz to Acapulco. The Americans throughout the Republic, and especially at the Capital, complain much ol tin. InvltH ni' .> ?.i?ni...iii/>..? r. : .t iuv iuaiij \ji wui gutv?iiiftiv?iv hi Miri:iii<; uieir representatives to fulfill th? obligations of their otiicos. Unr minister has been absent upwards of six months; the Consul at Vera Cruz is also absent. Throughout the whole country there does not appear to be any protections for the Americans. The Fourth of July was celebrated at the Capital in the proper form, though the flag was not hoisted during the day. There is little or no travel to or from California through Mexico. Facilities aro bad, and obstacles great and numerous. The schooner Lllen Mar, unjuBtly siezed at Minatitlun some time since, is s'iirin posses sion of the Mexican Government. The Americans generally complain of the injustice and insults constantly offered-.tiy the authorities. IJL The Chamber of< ffe^ios were rigam in session. ^.General Arista, the President, has loffrTlfa popularity; .3ml is in bodily fe^r, being constantly attended by a large guard of dnfgopns. There appears to be some difficulty between the government and the British Representatives,in regard to the monthly payment of the interest of the British debt. The last mail steamer left Vera Cruz out any specie, and it is said to be in quence of a letter from the Representee's upon the matter, that this extra session of the Deputies lias been convened. There were no American vessels at Vera Cruz. GA-MDEN, TUESDAY EYEXING, AUGUST 30, 1851. THO. J. WARREN, Editor. ?j??"Mr. Z. J. DeHav, will act as my Agent from this date. THO. J. WARREN. August 26, 1851. The Weather. On Sunday morning between 9 ami "10 o'clock, it commenced raining, and continued without intermission during the whole day, accompanied with high wind. A heavy freshet in the River is anticipated which if it comes, will do mucn daniuge. Southern Manufactured Shoes. We announce with pleasure that our friend* and neighbors, Messrs. Alden & Murray, are extensively engaged in the Manufacture of Plantation and House Servants' Shoes, together with Leather of every description, and that they can compete with Northern manufacture, both in Price and Quality. They do not hesitate to say that they can furnish a better article for the same money, than can be bought of Northern work. We have examined their Brogans, made especially for the Southern Market, a specimen ol which can be seen at our office. Theit stock of Boots, Shoes, &.C., is complete and will compare favorably with any in the State. Death of an Editor. By the Fnyetteville North Carolinian, *. hich came to us this morning clad in mourning, learn the painful news of the deatli of its Editor; ho died on Friday last, the '22d inst. See Obituary Notice from that paper in another column. Whitaker's Magazine. The first Number of this beautiful Southern Periodical is to hand. We have not had lime to more than glance at it, but that is sufficient to persuade us that if it is properly sustained, it will be a very valuable addition to the Literature of our State. The opening article is a review of the ' Compromise," which we shall take some pains \i, W11if 11.-nr i? a itiilee in such IU j/riu?*.> ivi .lit. ?i uuuuvt - j?Q- ... matters whose opinions are worthy of resjiect.? "Obadinh Ollapod's Visit to the Shetland Islands,'the "Life ol Curran"South Carolina?Her Past and Present Position," are among the most prominent artftles in th* Number before us. * * * Senator Rhett. Titis zeaious champion ol' Southern Ilights is now making a tour of the State, and wherever he goes his presence is hailed with delight We hope in his perigrinations he will visit this District, and stir up the hearts of our Southern Rights friends; the subject requires some agitation, lor we are gettinge lukewarm; we ought to know how we standif we arc unfortunately few in number, let us inakeit up iu our zeal and devotion to the cause of our rights and our honor. * * * The Baltimore Sun Continues to snap up every little treasonable sentiment uttered by any of the submissionists in our State, and to roll it as a sweet morsel under the tongue, at the same time that it can use the most sneering largmgc against the friends of Southern rights, who, regardless of the petty horde ol" Newspaper scribblers at and adjacent (as is Baltimore) to the North, speak out their sentiments. The people of Baltimore have been fur a year or more, trying to supplant, the real North, and securing the tiade of the South. Net succeeding as far as their expectations, in* consequence of its leaning to the North, though slaveholdiug, the Press will doubtless let slip no opportunity ot venting its disappointment on the South, and especially South Carolina. Such conduct is very ' unbecoming, and we shall endeavor to do our duty by holding it up to public condemnation, whenever an opportunity offers. * * * FOOTK AND QUITMAN. The Editor of the Memphis Enquirer who was present at Hernando on the '20th ult., and heard Cion. Foote and Quitman speak, thus states the result of his observations: "(Jen. Kootc look the stand a little before II o'clock, and for three or four hours held the audience enchained by one of the ablest and most ingeuius speeches we liavo ever listened to. VV'o shall not attempt any thing liko even a synopsis Ol IIIU vanuun [luiuia ui ma ment. * Gen Fcote is certainly an able, skillful, and thoroughly well-informed politician ; and in listening to liiin we cannot resist the belief that he is sincere, honest and patriotic in his feelings and purposes. He is, indeed, a peifect encyclopedia of political history. His language is chaste and well chosen, and his manner mild, conciliatory, and occasionally broadly humorous. His defence of the Compromise, and his demonstration of tho sound policy of the South's acquiescing in it, and insisting upon its maintenance, were answerable. Of Gen. Quitman, it says: "The Governor is a fine gallant loooking man, that impressod us strongly with the idea * of his personal worth as a soldier and an hon est hearted gentlerqan. We would judge, how ever, that the sea of politics upon which he ha adventured, is beyond the depth of his capaci ties. Certainly he is no sort of a match fo Gen. Foote, either in political knowledge, o in natural mental endowment.? Weekly Inde pendent. We clip the above paragraph frerq tlie-Wades borough Argus, merely to show how very Pagy i is lor some men to believe, and try to make ether believe that evil is go&L and good evil. Gen. Quitman raay^tot be quite-;as much oi time serving, vacillating', Crackling *jfiplitician a Gen. Foote, that is a point we 'Sfer:Tf *<!)/>Xp" yield but as regards patriotism, stability ahd chruw^ten cv, he is as much the superior to H. Stuart Foot as George Washington was of Benedict Arnold Al! who are acquainted with the political coursi of the two men, will acknowledge the absurdity o the above paragraph, which should have beei I written, where neither of them were ever heard o in order for it to obtain any credit. Any "mon of the same sort," Mr. Argus? * * * Greenville Submissionist:?The subn.is sion party of this District is a parly sui generis There is nothing like it in the heavens above oi eart beneath. Milton's fallen angels warred against all the opposing hosts ofheaven and own cd Lucifer for a common chief; there was nl least unity of design and concert of action in al their diabolical proceedings. Not a bit of this is seen among the angelic squad of Greenvilh submission's. They praise and confederate with those they profess to hate. They hate their friends and love their enemies. They court the ill will of their neighbours and rc-cievt Vi n ? <-? fVkrn thn nrrvn^ tt'lll <111/4 O 1imn<tiii!otwin^ Al their and our enemies. They desire a Soutlierr Congress to redress Southern grievances and say that the South has no grievances. The) denounce the proposed State Convention as un just and unconstitutional, and say that none ol its acts will bo of any binding effect whntevei on the good people of this State; and yet, the) ; propose a long string of constitutional amend merits to be made by that same unjust and un constitutional Convention. They are Demo mats and take Gen. Thompson, the chief ol Whigs in this State, for their guide and leader Thev, or some of tlietn, aro slave owners anc denounce their fellow slave owners with more bitterness for trying to preserve that propert) than they do the abolitionists who seek to de stroy it. Such are the principles of the Green ville subniissionists. It is vain to reason witl men who show such utter contempt for com mon sense and for all rosso**. "Ephraitn i; joined to his folly and let him alone." [Greenville Mountaineer. INTERESTING FROM HAVANA. Mobile, August *21. The United States steamer Vixen arrived a Pensacola yesterday, with four davs later newi from Havana. i Gen. Lopez mn<le n stand thirty miles wc's of Havana, at MarieL Two engageme*"'ts en sued. The patriots were successful i?i both.? Spanish loss S'J officers and SOO mp. Th killed and wounded were carried tdt Havana and the former buried with great ponqP. On Friday last Celt. Lopez' force nuVtberei from twelve to fourteen hundred men, aM ac cessions were being made to it daily. Or\thi night of the 14th over 100 men left ?JavanaU< 1 join the invaders. Fifty eight Cuban dese/ten were taken on the morning of the 16th. Pre> parations were being made for the execution ol a Spanish Colonel, aid to the Governor. BINGO?A GEORGIA SKETCH. BV IMS. K. M. CirAKt.TON. A few years ago 1 attended the Superior court ot . The court adjourned late in the night, and the judge and bar being weary, retired to their be's immediately thereafter.? We were in the same room, and immediately adjoining to ns was the bar room, and the chinks or vacant spaces in the partition enabled us to see and hear all that was going on.? Shortly after we had retired, about forty men " pretty well corned and up to every thing,' entered the liquor room. No sooner had they arrived there than they commenced boasting "I am the step father of the earth!" said one " I am the yellow blossom of the forest!" suit another, and requested bis fellow citizens thei i unit flinrn bidritr " ti? Dili tbf> hlld if tlir>r dsiro ' -"V. V 3 ? ,- J " I'm kin to a rattlesnake on my mother's side? shouted the earth's ancestor. This seemed tt be a " socdoligrr" (which translated into latit means ncplus ultra;) for the yellow hlosson stopped to consider what answer lie could pos sibly make to this high claim to ancestry; j happy thought struck him. "Will you drink or light?" roared he in : voice of thunder. A silence ensued, or at least a sudden nmr mur, " 'twixt which and silence there was no' thing." Perhaps a more embarrassing qties tion could not have been propounded. The rattlesnake's so? was exceedingly thirsty; the sands of Africa were not more so; and liquoi was the idol of his heart lie loved it dearly but he loved fighting also; and here was a glo rious chance to " lick" an adversary he had longed to get at. Curia rult ad.rcr.farc. ill was deliberating between these equally pleasant alternatives, when it occurred to him thai it was possible to accomplish both. " iloth !"' responded he, " both. I'll drink first ? I'll fight afterwards." A loud shout of approbation rose from th< crowd. The liquor was called for?a pint o1 buck eye?and impartially divided into twi tumblers. The adversaries each took one, aiu grasping each other with their left hands, aiu touching the glasses together in amity, drainei their respective glasses to the last drop, thei smashed them over the heads of each other and at it they went. A clamor ensued, so ter rific that the English language has no. won that would Insufficiently expressive of it. Al sorts of encouragement was offered by th< friends of each combatant, and an amateui who had no particular predilection for eithei jumping upon the counter, aud commence singing a poetic description of all the navz fatties of America, from the time of Columbu to the present day, which somebody had th barbarity to put into miserablo verse, kcepin - time with hisdij^eis on the counter,, just as he got - to the-l#9th yefw, aud was in what he called s the ''wasp and hornet engagement," his melody - was stopped by a shrill cry from the "yallow J r blossom from the forest" who hdgrtn to fall in- ( r to the sere and yellow leaf, and gave manifest - symptoms of being whipped. "He bites!" screamed he. v': ' * "I get my livelihood by biting," said the it other, relaxing his hold for a moment, and then a taking a fresh start ' " 'Nuff, 'nuff, take him off!" i a Up rose the Rattlesnake amidst cheering?? His first impulse was to crow like a cock; then ho changed his genus very suddenly, and de' clared he was a "sea-horse of the mountain," l". t aod that he had sprung from the Potomac of B the cartb, then he was a bear with a sore head, t. a liori' *rith a mangy tail, a firing whale, in e short he announced himself to be every possif hie and impossible bird, beast ?nd fhh that tho i land or sea ever produced. ' e His wit having exhausted itself noma fwwii i | o > T} "v"" ?, excitement or novelty was requisite. * "Let's have Bingo!" suggested a by-stander. "Huzza for Bitigo," echoed the crowd. Well, thought I, I dout know who and whjit Bingo is, but I do know, tlmt when tilings ' reach their worst condition, any chance must r be for the better, I say too, "Huzza for Biugo!" Alas!?as the sequel proved, I deceived myself greatly. i A Gallon of whiskey with spice in it, and a gallon of Malaga wine, were placed on a large ' round table, around which about forty mrfcn ^ 5 seated themselves, having first elected a nwsi: dent viva voce. The president elect coj/nmau WU IUI- {^.IIIIC UY Blllgllig <tl UltJ tup Ul nigTOIWi A farmer's dog sat on the barn door J . I And Bingo was his name, OJ" v *^ v >1 j # ^ " it y ; ' And they ail shotted in chorus, , I "And bingo was pis name'Ol' "B," said the Presdent, "i/' said tho.next, ,4n," the third, "g," the fourth, "o," the filth* f and then the chorus taking pp the letter "o, r again shouted. 'r " "And Bingo was his na'me OT _ . ; ? If either missed a letter/or said Mn" for example, when he should ha/e said "i^k*8 P^'^}' ty was to take a drink ?ud tbo comp&ny r privilege to drink with him- and with such slight interruptions as time for dr&iking would ocot' py this continued for At last the p^kf^nce ot the JtThlgVw^? 16 quite a young^rtwn, and who is not squirrel's iu/fip from me while I write, becaS^'^' exhausted and ho called for the laudlord. Oar 1 host, wfho was a tailor by trade, and was also ' one oy the Bingo fraternity, made bis appear5 an c a/with a candle in his hand, ar$ka vciy aff(wtnmi;ifn driinkpti !pt>r nnnn lite .vv?l ?- ? ?vv? M'J WUIJWl/aUCV* /'Go sir," saii the judge, "into tho next room ajftd tell those*drunken lunatics if they do not dlop their beastly noise, I'll commit every one /of them to jail in the morning for contempt of M court." " ' . .. y "Oh, Judge r answered otir host, holding ?p * his unoccupied hand in token of bis gniaze!t ment, "Oh, judge, you'll give me the double " breasted horrors! Why judge, work is scarce and people's pertikler and if i was to prelimina- 4 e ry your orders to that crowd of gepttemen, '? why judge, I'd pick up a thrashing in. a little less than no time," and offdie staggered. Bingo ^ was forthwith resumed until gradually the chorus became more confused and ttiuistiiict.? p Chaos had come again. The actions of the a virtuous gentlemen there assembled leased to *V he above hoard and were carried, on under the j Sonic snoring/otheite hic?upiog, others ' cas^iiuing. Bingo had ceased to lie, except wheii^omm.sleeper, feeling some painfuf"Jensation from his attitude, &c.', would exclaim "Oh 1" whicfo^would wake up liis immediate neighbor who, ruling passion-strong In " j death, woiilu exclaim, " And Bingo was??" i: and then relapse into such silence as a drunken ) man falls into. Exclusion of Xegrors\from Indiana.?Oar : | readers have been already informed of the ' I adoption of a new Constiftktion for tne State j of Indiana, and also of the ntiajition of anar\, tide excluding colored people froq^that State, which was submitted to a separate vote of the ' | people, The clause thus adopted is it) the fol- # | lowing words, and it received a much larger t :! vote-than the new Constitution : j '"Sec. 1. No negro or mulatto shall come i j | into or settle in tliis State al ter the adoption ^ , I of this Constitution. | "Se^. 2. All contracts made with any negro JI or mulatto coming into this State contrary to ^ 1! the foregoing section shall ho void; and all 1 | persons who shall employ, or otherwise en" courage such negro or mulatto to remain in 1 ' the State, shall he fined in any sum not less | than teu dollars nor more than five hundred 1 dollars. ! "Sec. 3. All fines which may be collected * I for a violation of the provisions of this article, ' or any law which may hereafter be passed for ' J the purpose of carrying the same into execu! j tion, shall be set apart and appropriated for the ! colonization of such negroes and mulattoes, " i and their descendants, as may be in the State > j at tho adoption of this Constitution, and may ' ! bo willing to emigrate.-. ' ; ".Sec. 4. Tho General Assembly shall pass ?: laws to carry out the provisions of this article." M DEATH OF"THE EDITOR. i It is with sorrow and regret that we announce : I the death of the Editor of this paper, W*. H. i u ...... u~ a *~A fu;* I:A. _ ?u? I IJAIiir.. 11U UL'|)U(IUU U1I3 11IC VU I llKJkCkJf VUC 5 22d inst., at a quarter past 2 o'clock, p. m. f Tor some time past, he was confined to hi& > bed, unable to attend to his business; but his 1 friends and acquaintances indulged a hope of I his recovery until within the last few days. 1 The deceased was a native of Waiwuhgton ^ city, hut has been a resident of Fayetleville ? since the 4th of July, 1840, at whtete'tifoe he took charge of the Carolinian. Ho *leaves a 1 wife and five small children'lo mourn the loss 1 of a kind protector and friend, 'lb' c Since his residence in this dace, be has made numerous friends, who will long repiem ber tits many gooll qualities, d Id consequence of this sad event occurring d just at the moment of potting the paper to is press, we have not time to lengthen this ano nonncement, g [ Worth Carolinian.