The Darlington flag (Lydia, SC) 1851-1852, April 30, 1851, Image 1

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DEYOTED‘T^pUTHEM RIGHTS, MORALITY, AGRICULTURE, LITERATURE, AND MISCELLANEOUS NEWS. HUES H. NORWOOD, EDITOR.] VOL. 1. To thine ownsclf be true; And it must follow as the night the day; Thou const nut then be false to any man.—H amlkt. DARLINGTON C. H., S. C.. WEDNESDAY MORNING APRIL 30, 1851. [JOHN F. DE LORRE, PROPRIETOR. NO. 9. THE DARLINGTON FLAG, IS PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY MORNING, AT DAKLIHGTON, C. H., S. C., BY JOHN F. DE LORME. TERMS OF SUBSCRIFTIO’ir lu advance, (per annum,) - - • $2 00 At the expiration of six months • 3 50 At the end of the year - - . - - 3 00' ADVERTISING : Advertisements, inserted at 16 cents a square (fourteen lines or less,) for the first, and 37i cts. for each subsequent insertion. Business Cards, not exceeding ten lines, inserted at $5, a year. All business connected u ith the Flag, will be transacted with the Proprie tor at his Office, one door above the Dar lington Hotel, or with the Editor at his law Office POLITICAL. COERCION OF A STATE. Mr. Webster, in a letter lately writ ten by him, declared, k> reference to the movements in South Carolina, that “ secession could not be accomplished but by war.” From the position oc cupied by Mr. Webster, it is prafnmed that he speaks the sentiments and poli cy of Mr. Fillmore’s government, and his letter may be regarded as a decla ration of war, in advance, against South Carolina, in case she should choose to exercise the right which she possesses, of peaceably retiring from the Union. Tne question is thus pre sented: lias the United States govern ment the right to make war upon a se ceding State? We shall not commit the presumption of arguing a constitu tional question with the great “ex pounder;” we intend only to produce authority. Mr. Webster is great au thority, but as great as it is, it is hardly equal to that of the framers of the Con stitution. They, it is presumed, knew the Constitution better than Mr. Web ster. The following extracts from the Madison papers, an authentic record of the proceedings of the Convention which fonned the Constitution, show that the authors of the Constitution never contemplated the use of force against a State, and that they expressly refused to confer the power upon the government. The following was a clause in one of the resolutions sub mitted to the Convention by Mr. Ran dolph, of Virginia; “ Resolved, That the National Legislature ought to be empowered to call forth the force of the Union, against any member of the Union failing to do its duties under the articles thereof.” When this clause came up for con sideration, “ Mr. Madison said, the more he re flected on the use of force, the more he doubted the practicability, the jus tice, and the efticiency of it when ap plied to the people collectively, and not individually. A Union of the States, containing such an ingredient, seemed to provide for its own destruction.— The Ule of force against a State would look more like a declaration of war than an infliction of punishment, and would probably be considered by the party attacked, as a ' ' Thus did the framers of the Consti tution expressly and rejicatedly repu diate the idea of employing force against a State. How then can this power now be claimed ? Can it be given in the Constitution in spite of the expressed determination of its fra mers not to give it? The Union was plainly intended by its authors to be a Union of voluntary consent. They left it to the States to decide each for it self whether they would enter the Un ion in the first instance, and by refusing to grant them the power to compel them to remain in it, they in effect said to the States, remain in the Union as long as you please, but if you get tired of it depart in peace.” Hut it is now discovered that ours is a Union offeree, and not of consent; a Union to be held together not by a sense of common in terest, glory and happiness, hut by the terrors of the sword. Let such views prevail; let the doctrine that a State may be rightfully coerced by the fede ral sword be once carried into effect, and you erect the government of the Union into an absolute tyranny; you degrade the States to a state of abject vassalage; you establish a precedent that will invite aggression upon the rights of the States, and in the end sweep away every vestige of their sovereignty. The South, especially, cannot permit such a precedent, unless she is blind, fatally blind to her own interest and safety. The hostility of the Northern people to the institution of slavery, connected with the fact that they now have the control of the general Government in all its departments, loudly proclaims the danger to the South of arming that government with the power to coerce a State. The course of time, and in deed no great time, 1 will give an im mense preponderance to the Northern section, already in the majority, while in the meantime, the sentiment of hos tility to slavery in the Mronger section w'ill become more violent and ungov ernable. Under such circumstances tiie only possible security to the insti tution of slavery would bo the right and power of the Southern States to separate from the Union. Hut take away that right and power to hold them in the Union, as with a chain of iron, and to coerce obedience to whatever laws the majority may dictate, and you at once seal the doom of the South ; you sign the death warrant of slavery. We cannot believe the South will stand idly by and permit the Government to assume a power that will sooner or later be turned to her destruction.— We cannot believe that the South will, herself, put into the hands of her ene mies, the sword that is to stab her to the heart.—Rome (Ga.) Southerner. revious contracts by which it might bound. He hoped such a system woiild be framed as might render this resource unnecessary, and moved that clause be pdRponed. This motion was agreed to, no one dissenting.” So the clause was postponed and never afterwards taken up, or at least it was not inserted in the Constitution, so that the conclusion is irresistible, that Mr. Madison’s suggestion was adopted by the Convention, and such a system was framed as withheld from thepoxt .•This A PICTURE OF DRUNKENNESS. We take the following touching ex tract from “A Plea for Druukards and against Drunkenness,” by the Rev. Dr. Guthrie: “Give that mother hack her son, as he was on the day when ho returned from bis father’s grave, and in all the affection ofhis uncomipted boyhood, walked to the house of God with a weep- dissolution of all iug mother leaning on his ami. Give the Government A# power to use force against a State. conclusion is that grieved man track his brother, as innocent and happy as in those days when the boys, twined in each other’s arms, returned from school, bent over the same Bible, slept in the same bed and never tliought that the day would come when brother should blush for brother. Give this weeping wife, who sits before us wringing her hands in agony, the tears dripping through her jeweled fingers, and the lines of sorrow prematurely drawn on her beautiful brow—give her back the man she loved, such as he was when her young heart was won, when they strengthened, if possible, by the action stood side by side on the nuptial day, of th« Convention upon Mr. Patterson’s jdan of a Constitution, subsequently submitted. That contained the follow ing provision: “Resolved, That if any State should oppose the carrying into execution the acta ef the United States, the Federal Executive shall be authorized to call forth the authority of the confederated i or so much thereof as ahall be to ibree obedience to such acts.!’ ' Mr. Patterson’s plan was rejected; and it was objected to in debate, chiefly because it comprised the above provision Col. Mason? aid “ was struck with horror at the prospect of recurring to this expedient," [the use* ©f_ farce against a State,] Col reference to such a provision “How can force be exerted States collectively. It is It amounts to a war between the par ties.” ise of force Hamilton,-*? ami who now, while his mother by the body rocks on her chair in speechless agony, lies laid out in a chamber where we care not to speak of comfort, but are left to weep with those that weep, dumb, opening not the mouth. Relieve us of the fears that lie heavy on our heart for the character and the souls of some who hold parley with the devil by his forbidden tree, and are floating on the edge of that great Gulf Stream which sweeps its victims onward to meet the most woful ruin.” ACrRICULTURl. How blest die farmer’s simple life. How pure the joy it yields! Far from the world’s tempestuous strife, Free ’mid the scented fields.—Everett. perties which are now deficient in die soil: ami again, if many of the impor- tanlMelements for the plant shall be found, yet some one shall be in great deficiency, the plant must bo defective. It often happens, in illustration of this truth, that a soil will make the stalk of wheat large and perfect, yet the grain will be defective; the corn stalk large, the grain not so good, die weed of the cotton tine hut the bearing and filling of the tfrop poor, and vu-e versa, a com paratively small stalk will make a good have called upon one hundred and four yield. The explanation of this whole °f them, and have the honor of paying [From the State-Rights Republican.] NEWSPAPER AGENT TO AN EDITOR. My Dear Sir: I have just returned from a tonr through this State', and pro ceed to furnish you with an account of my labors and their success. 1 have been gone for three mondis, and assure you, in all sincerity, that I am fully satisfied. You furnished me with a list of one hundred and seventeen ow ing subscribers, as you recollect I and receiving her from a fond father’s hands, he promised his love to one whose heart he has broken, and whose once graceful form bends with sorrow to the §£>und. Give me back, as a man the friend of my youthful days, whoae wracks now lie thick on the wreck-strewn shore. Give mo back as a minister, the brethren I have seen dragged from the pulpits which they adorned, am^ driven from the sweet Mansions, where we have closed in the happy evening with praiae and prayer, to stand pale, haggard at a public bar. Give me back, aa a pastor, the lambs which I hare loat—give me her who, in the days of her unsullied innocence, waited on our ministry to he told ofthe way to heaven, and warned from that to hell, and whose unblushing forehead we new shrink to see as she prowls through the streets tosher prey. Give back the Mfe of this youth who died the drunkard’s dosti?—and dread M* doom (From the Soil of the South.) ROTATION OF PROPS. In a country like ours, where the | number of acres to be cultivated is so large, and where, from the nature of our crops, so nearly all of our time is cousuined, either in the cultivation or saving of the crop, we have hut little chance to reclaim or improve the whole farm; we are well assured our readers will strike back in despair, if not in dis gust, from any plan, which proposes to accoa^lish this object, first by making the manure, and then by carting it to the field. Much may be done, and still more must be done in this tray, but this remedy stops short of our wants. A very large number of the reflecting planters of our country are taming their thoughts to a rotation of crops and to rest their lands. This will lie good, much better than many of us have been doing. Here, however, a great, but not an insurmountable, difficulty presents it self, in the large quantity of cleared land necessary to its accomplishment. For with our present lights and experi ence on this subject, no one hopes to accomplish much with more than three- fourtlis of the tilled land in cultivation at the same time. The general idea, and perhaps the best is, to plant the cotton upon land which has lain fallow, having rested a year, to succeed the cotton with corn, and the com with small grain, and then rest the succeed ing year. This, as has already been suggested by one of our correspondents, may keep the land from growing worse, and if we would spare the time from our cotton pickiug to turn in some one or more green crops, would probably make them better. Our present impres sion is, that when thia process is pro- perly analized, that the benefit of turn ing under green crops of peas, grass, weeds, or almost anything which we may lie able to command, will be far above our present conceptions, and may oonstitute a new era iu reclaiming our lands. We are detered at the sacrifices and iuoonvenienccs necessary to this work, in the busy time of cotton picking. These sacrifices have got to be made, and we had as well make up our minds to it. Theo nly question to be settled is, will this meet our wants and can we by such a process reclaim and improve our lands? Experience will decidv. But may we not proceed more under- standingly? There are some general laws upon which the proper settlement of these questions are made to depend. Take one crop, com for instance, and cultivate it for a series of years upon tiie same laud, without the aid of ma nure, and, what is the result? The yield is less and less, and the quality of the grain poorer and poorer. Do more: so arraage your land, that nothing shall be lost by washing away. Still the same will be the result, but not quite so rapidly. So, to a very large extent, with all the other crops, perhaps less with cotton than most of the others, but even with that, it is manifest that a de terioration is going on. Why should this be so, when proper precautions are taken to prevent the washing away of the soil? We say our lands are tired or worn, yet, we may change the eMp, and get a good yield. This demonstra tes, then, an important fact, that the land is not worn out, but the same crop for a series of years, has exhausted most or all the food in that soil, pecu liarly suited to feed tliat plant, while there may still remain much that is sui ted to the nourishment of another plant, makingdifferent requisitions upon the soil. These, then, are important dis- cloaures, and the knowledge of these facta is to be used in setting the ques tion of the proper rotation of crop# and in the application of manures. For if by a continued cultivation of corn, or wheat or any other grain, the phospha tes should be exhausted and manure in Urge quantities should be applied, little or no benefit would be perceived, un UMMare should have these pro- mystery would be solved by an analy sis of the soil, showing, either the pre sence in excess of some deleterious matter, of the absence of some essential element. Know, therefore, before you proceed with your rotation of crops what you are proposing to accomplish. What constituents in your soilhave been ex tracted, and what crops in succession will demand least of these properties al ready deficient And learn moreover in the kindnesses which you propose to ex tend to your fields, whether these are just such as their necessities may require We have suggested therfore, that we thought important benefits would result fmmtuming under green crops. This thought is based upon the fact, that most of these crops returned to the soil in that over to your order three dollars and twelve and one half cents, being the amount to which you are entitled. I return you the list, numbered 1 to 117, and now give you the rejily of each. No. 1—Is a minister. He says in the first place, he never got one half of the numbers, (a lie, according to the account of the Postmaster,) and in the next place, your joker’s column was too scurrilous. He can't think of aid ing to sustain a paper that advertises horse races and gander pullings. Be sides, he knows from the tone of your editoriols that you drink, and paying you, would only be the means of your ending your days in the kennel. He wonders at your impudence in sending him your hill after publishing the ac- stage, would restore many of the essen- i count ot the great prize fight between necessary to most of Left Handed Smoke and Battering Hill. He wants nothing to do with you— never wants to hear from you again. No. ‘2—Is in jail for debt He has not seen a half dollar for a year. Says he would pay you with the utmost cheerfulness, if he only had the money, hut had to borrow a shirt to put on last Sunday. Admires your pa|>er wonder fully, and hopes you will continue send ing it to him. Ho wishes you to take a bold stand in favor of the abolition imprisonment for debt, as he thinks it would be a very popular move with gentlemen in his situation. If you send him any more papers he hopes yon will see that the postage is paid, as other wise he will la> unable to enjoy your lucubrations. Sends his best respects. No. 3.—Is a young Doctor. Says your paper is beneath the notice of « gentleman. Wouldn’t give a for a cart loard. Says you inserted an ar ticle reflecting on the profession. On ly wishes he could catch you here— would make you smell tial ingrediants our crops. But wo cannot do more than invite attention to these questions so intimately connected with Southern Agriculture, hoping that others will take them up, and that they will not he laid down again, until we shall he made wiser, and our lauds richer. Dignity of Agriculture.—Agri culture is an honorable, a delightful and a glorious pursuit: the first man who lived on earth was an agriculturalist— and agriculture must exist till the last man leaves it. All labor is honorable: the Great First Cause works—nature works—and every man who enjoys her fruits, ought to hold it honorable to work.—Rogers. Garden Shrubs.—Valias, or Ethio pian Lily.—This elegant plant needs moist ground, but should not lie water ed much while in hud or blossom. It should have plenty of air and light, hut j too much heat causes it to turn yellow, and its rich leaves to die and fall. This Is going , , to persuade everybody that takes vour plant is best propagated by suckers, paper, to stop it. Cuss’d your bill, and which spring up around the parent sa ys you may collect it in the best way vou can. stalk. Geraniums.—These are propagated easily by slips, placed in pots, and kept from the sun with the ground kept moist. They should not lie wet when in full bloom, but it may be done be fore the buds are expanded. Monthly Roses.—These need sun and air, when they are rooted and should be watered in propotion as they receive it. The young wood furnishes buds and blossoms. The Passion Flower.—This is a beautiful vine and requires to lie well trained and supported. They will grow to cover a large surface if properly at tended. They must have the climate of a warm room or Green House. The Honey Suckle.—This in its varieties is a desirable vine for the frame work at the door, the piazza, d:c. It may be increased by turning the ends downw ard into the ground. It should be carefully trained. Fruit Treks.—We bear complaints of the decay and death of fruit trees, but it is through neglect, or a knowledge of their diseases. Red Ants can be kept out of closets and other places by impregnating the air with camphor, as this odor is offen sive to all the insect family. A SENSIBLE SOMNAMBULIST. A curious case of somnambulism occurred recently near Bordeaux, the particulars of which is related in the Courier de la Gironde: “A small far mer after passing the evening with his family, retired to rest but at midnight he got up dressed himself went to his stable, yoked his oxen and hitched them to a plow, and proceeding to a field. S owed it completely before morning, e had been in a complete state of somnambulism all the while, nor would he believe, on returning to his house after a aeriea of violent shakes that he had been at work for several hours. No. 4—Is an old Maid. Says you are always taking a fling at single la dies of an uncertain age. Wouldn’t pay you if she was rolling in wealth, and you had'nt cash enough to buy a crust of bread. Sent all the papers she had hack a month ago, and says now that she has sent them hack, slie don’t owe you anything. Say’s she is even w ith you, and intends to keep so till the day of judgment Asked me not to forget to tell you tliat you are no gentleman, or you wouldn’t under take to slander a large and respectable class of the female jnipulation of the country. No. 5—is a gambler—a sporting gentleman. Says he got completely cleaned out last week at the races.— Couldn’t accommodate his grandmo ther with a half-dime if she was starv ing. Likes your paper tolerably— would like it better if you would pub lish more races, and would occasional ly give an account of a cock-fight— Liked the description of the prize fight amaizingly—it redeemed a multitude of , your faults. Hopes you won’t think want of' k‘ ,n * or not P a ying you now— but has got a prospect of soon having | some loose change, as he is after a rich young green-horn, who arrived here last week. Will pay your bill out of the pluckings. No. G—is an old drunkard. Hasn’t got anything, and never expects to have. Gathered up all the papers he had and sold them tor a hnif pint of rum, to the doggery-keeper, to wrap groceries in. Wishes you would send him a a pile, as they cost hhn no |>ostage, his brother-in-law being post-master, and permitting him to take out his papers for nothing. Winked at me when I presented your bill, and inquired if I wasn’t a distant relation of the man though you profess to publish a neutral paper, it is not so. Thinks be has seen a considerable squinting towards the side to which he is opposed. Meant to have told you a year ago to stop his paper, hut forgot it. Tells you to do so now, and things yon are getting ofl very cheaply in not losing any more by him. Believes you to be a rascal, and is too honorable to have anything to do w ith you, ns it might compromise him and injure his prospects. No. 1)—Paid up like a gentleman. The only one. Likes your paper fli>t rate, and means to take it am 1 for it as long as yon publish it or he lives. Asked me to dinner, and treated me like a king. An oasis in the desert! A man fit for heaven ! No. 10—Is a merchant. Expects to break shortly, so must save all his small change. Offered me a pair of breeches and a cotton handkerchief for the debt. Refused him w ith scorn. Told me to go to the devil. Long jaw. Threatened to break my head. Dared him to it. Threw a hatchet at me.— I dodged it, and put out. No. 11 to 117—Mean as rot. Hail no money—wouldn’t pay—didn’t owe. 1 swore I’d sue. Said 1 might sue and he hanged. Cursed all the little ones and hurried from the big. Never got the first red cent from one of them. The foregoing is a true extract from ni}’ note book; 1 have not succeeded a whit better w ith the patrons of the other publications for which 1 amagen*, as it is impossible to collect from those who are determined not to pay. I liave said 1 have been away three months. I have expended-in that pe riod two hundred and ten dollars, trav elling, and my entire commissions amount to eighty-two dollars and forty- five cents. I am very willing to do my share towards the propagation of news, hut more than that no reasonable man could ask. This business don’t exact ly suit me—I cant stand it Please accept my resignation and strike my name from your list of agents. I admire your paper very much myself, but it would be a queer looking sort of a concern tliat would come fully up to the requirements of everybody. One wants independence in an editor—ano ther dont want any. One wants all slang—another would’t touch a jour nal that contained an irreverent line w ith a ten foot pole. One sentimental lackadaisical Miss in pantalettes want ed nothing hut love poetry—another never read anything hut the marriages. Ail kinds of abuse I have to bear, too. 1 wouldn’t mind it so much if they only cursed you and your paper, but they curse me too! Swindler, ras cal, villain, blood-sucker. These are some of the names they think proper to bestow upon me. I tried fighting fora while, and thrashed several of your patrons like blazes, but occasionally 1 got licked like tliunker myself. Once l was put in jail for assault and batte ry, and only escaped by breaking out. Semi me a receipt for the three dol- dars twelve and a half cents, and be lieve me, yours in despair, Aaron Sweatwell. that bMted the bull off the bridge. Sort—Is a magistrate. Swore he never owed you a cent, and told me I was a low rascal for trying to swindle him iu such a bare faced manner. Ad vised me to make tracks in a little less Ordinarily aomnambulists confine their than no time, or he would get out operations to wandering about the fields w’arnmt against me as a common cheat. coming along over ridge-poles and house roofs, or groping about cellars, but this Frenchman had more sense—he set to work in real earnest and earned some thing for his family.” and have me sent to prison. Took his advioei Is, by all odds, the meanest man 1 liave seen yeti Never go near hint again, I swear! No, ft—Is • politician- ►-Says al- Cure for Redhugs.—A bit of in formation interesting to landladies, boarders, and all fiersous annoyed. Many persons complain of being jies- tered by bedbugs. It is easy to avoid the inconvenience. On going to bed, strip off your shirt and cover yourself from bead to foot with boiled molasses, Let every part of the body be thickly covered with it. On coming to bite you the bugs will stick fast in the molasses and you can kill them in the morning. The family that never took a news paper, has moved to Illinois. 'Hie old gentleman was surprised the other day to leani that gold had Wen discovered in California; and the eldest daughter was rejoiced to learn from a neighbor that Webster had been hung and now ’ she’d never again W troubled with them j pesky spellin’ books! We find the following warning in the ; New York Day Book: Ladles Beware or Gen Cotton. | —The buyers of cotton petticoats are cautioned against purchasing these articles. One worn by a lady crossing Broome street on Wednesday last, blew up! A stuttering Vermonter was asked the way to Waterbary. With great politeness he stove to mj it was right ahead, but iu vain. The more he tried, he couldn’t At last red in the face sad furious with unavailing oxtelfon he ~ ‘ ‘ with-—“Gug gjg go long urn jw! you!, can tell you