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f TIiCAL., miithe Lono.pcatr -SUGARANDSLmAVE RW A survey o he present state of th Su gar question exhibits the severnitconfiet satisac oi~ h begin wi i largest, the British public has not gaimed much by the many party and sectarian maneuvres which have been achieved un der a high sounding name. - The public Mancipatin. anld -a badly-fulfil argains, it has paid long for '-slave O supwespion as the fruitless and a6o duppress the slave trade are c led; it pays a high price for sugar, - t dsfro . rin, .which n one; as . rotid. and p alil. Nothing but niortli bhr tangible gain ic,* as a'- conse tl diaon ed at the iggdric~i''00a7 M- mth .ing tii~Ttle'5ffttt)shneoas. paty tgfiyea'n b'ying-ataiipiee tif* xbr of sentiment-in sbhdilng.tears'Ver tFe kineoTelavMerj gitingfup ffrjts' .1isirit,.ta caisetingtuhulik tlh act, 44tW16r all the'ootlag Gftere is - as 'much * ' 'Ji eei terest~ast ohjviously con. qWeriid sithat idr fii-West India r rie: idri."ncld inhin'it-e. term, -udrigagees '16d dhis' -depelidea liFa West i properly ; for we cannot understand the morality, or the gense, of a distinction im plied i'an conieniptuous allusions to - mort gage~s,". letween different. kinds of prop. prt.yand vested capital.- The position of the West India colonists is-not, enviable. .Tbe.day- 6f recko.ning. has come. and. like sthq sluggard. they are -unprepared; except with enireaties for -more time-" They are exposed to all the damaging effect of the. truths mixed up. with -the fallacies of \lie.fee-traders ;; - protection" is a bad and-.hollQw.system ; it does conduce to in ertpss sad helpless reliance on artificit.1 props ;.and the- West Indias have been' inert enough. Put out of sight what we have done to the West -Indies, and they hisa no claim to what they ask us to do for them.- But it is not so easy to put out of sight our long course of - meddling. :if we had i R iorfered in thedetails of their inliitJ'iriijifients, the " monopoly" ww1iiehfiveproch.them would have beeRn . ibis day among other moqoqyoies; -and.*iohdat detriment to the W.it rudies,-r- it'wi-once only nominal. With. a fri iSort to the labor of slaves, the3yproduced sugar in such abundance that there-was a surplus for other markets than otirs, and that abundance gave Eng land the cheapest sugar -in Europe. Their " protection" was inoperative, like that of t):e Lancashire cottou-tnanufacturer at this day. And w hen. after the. war, Trinidad and part.f Guiana. were added to our ter rttorv, the acquisition of those fertile fields would have more than -compensated for a ny increase of-our population. for ages. Already able to.growy.supr enough, the British colonies obtained an unlimited in crease'to thikesources of soil. Posses sng'Britidskill and capital as well as ei were more that) equal to ed& '.ith-any rivals in' the world. We altered that state of things; first by pro hibiting the slave trade, theb by enacting Negro- apprenticeship, then by breaking the apprenticeship: we deprived the Wrst Tudies of their means ofproduction. The aouht of labor was just enough for their wants;~ hithe population that had suml ced while all labor was compulsitory bent to one task, the growth of tropical produte for our mnarket, becatr e insufficient as soon as that compulsion ceased ; the laborers fallin,. off to other occupationsa, retiring to their own little plots of land, going into trade, or otherwise briniging about that 4"blesqed -chanigo" whieh delighted Lord John Russell four years ago, and ruined the West -Indies asea property. Trinidad isaivrrun with black -squatters; Jamaica is peopled by a nation of hlf-holyday maker-s, whto have -so much amusement to do that- they have little ime to work. Liibbt being scarce-continuous labor, at certain -seasons int the process of sugar making, being peremptorily needed-wat ges have risen to sums which no longer Represent the intrinsic value of the labor, butiit~migency ofthe empalayer; and M1r. Jamesitold the House of Cotn mans the otgfer tiight, tltat sugar which it cost him feuarpence: the ;nound to groe , and ihree pence topass thtrough our Custom hotuse, spils for uiz-peace-halfpenny-a. loss of a halfpennsy on every pound produced. The Houser laughed ato the name of that low con;:: butabete wouild be little laughing tired sweresyold'at a-Loss-to dhe land own eroton-halfpeany in. the pound weight. Eroprietorsbave been 'sending. out -from isiocountry money 1.and iniptements,: to. leep their estates going, .in .hopes of. bet ter:tmnes: hut thiat ca'.not got- on for aye -.-the bettee times do not come, and sr~me already atop tleii supplies. It is now pro. posed, by way of favor,-'to deprive them even .of hope. That is the positilon in which the~ West India'proprietors have suff'ered theinselves'to be put ; but it is we who iave pui them there. To be honest,. we.dinaldlmavte equalixed the sngar dsitiets before we umeddled .i'h -the la bor market:: a~dten there wouldthave been either a rnotsiceesfuI resistance'-to' einancips -tionstn9diwiserspreparationl for'It.. .-TidBiarciffeAf'rica, isi whose' ravor the crusade has been carried -on,-iari likely to'iairano betted thani- the :Britishf people who pay or the West India proprietors who arerploudered. T'he African race are pieenliarlyodapted to the climate anid oc copations of: the .Amierican arelhipelago : they~ stand toil and the climate better than the aborigines did. The proximity of the African continent,.tl-e shortness of the voy arger. and the small eqt aofeonveying pas sengers across the nairrowest part .of the * Anaulic, jar'oiiA fricaM rshe legitima te o) ia fathe West Indies. Free enigto however, has'heen checked nd iiineted as ir itviere something to be~disburaed-a indulgence fur the tar reis, had in tfelr, aidi only to be aloIvwed. d~ iferaoce asia to a m'ani'tzed ex'ent Why? Slave otimgcountries co:nol toira an antnal stupply :roAfrica; alidfinnamuceh as Eturope .\i'ave su dr ~W, by restritintg ths 7ui~ir of free efeutus do our best to gecurre -thsat 'the stgar shall be made by the Negto as a slave in Brazil OF Cuba. rather. A bt abisanih Negroas: e efi i in-, eBrit' iai West :d ies -7Thenaaie congi'ion of the Negro in Africa isfor ghe most part, deplorable:'the sat age chiel' exercise des potic-will over life and limb; even the sanctityof Exeter ial's model farm' up the Niger could not repel the tain of slavery which pervades that whole conti nent, and which has existed East and West, North and South. from the earliest da w n of history-from ihe time of the Pha raohs, -if not from the Deluge. Many of the tribes are in the most bestial state: nihen captuireOi by our cruisers. they are found to behave like mere brutes. For them. even the slave-lahor of civilized countries is an elevation. In-the Brnzils, the slave associaies with his master's ram ily. end is at least as well of and as well conducted as an Aral horse. We judge ofslavery in the United States by our standards of right and sentiment ; but turn one of ihese-brutes.into a Virainian Negro. and he would rise many degrees in the setle of humanity. In the English West ledies, the Nero attains to the same com iforts immuniiies, and dignity, as any Brit tNh subhject.. Is it not clear that the mere fact of removal frni:Africa to the British Wesindies must he for the Negro tribes the bestapossible :change ? W hat - pro teetioil"'Ao-they nevd more than 'British emigrans;. crorsing the ocean? Secure their persoiil rights within British juris diction,-open every portal to that in gic bound. render their migration safe, and you have done ihe very best yot can for them. Even the human-brutes. that-we have seen describedi arteir tranefer fron the slave ships.- in ternhs which, though of ta-uim peacliable truth;rmay not appear in our pages. become pssing -good citizens. Ttev are highliitnisative, wih a strong social, turn.; Tteir mere r.tmoval from iative oppression, and from dehasing ex ample. acts like: regeneration. All this civilizing -influence-is obstructen by vhat ever impedes-and hitherto every act of the government, from its head in- Down ing street to its tail. in Sierra Leoie, has impeded-the free passage of blacks from Africa to the British West Indies. The Anti-Slavery -party in this country is not in a more; favorable position than those already paseed -under review. A part from- theoiginators of the movement -the Clarksous' and Wilberforces who stand distinjuiuiied fron the mere herd as much as the great men who have founded philosophical: or religious sects do from mere'sectarians-i his party may be held in consist nf-the excitable masses who follow the bell wethers of the flock, of the busy managers ic Fxeter Hall, and or those whose professional interest in the blockade of the African coast vilgarizes but at the -same time keeps alive their hostility to slavery and slavers. With the exception of the last mnterionedl not very numerous section, the anti slavery hody have been brought to a dead lock. They have abol ished personal slavery within the British dominions ; they have pitt an end to the avowed participation of British subjecte in the slave-trade.: they have -involved the country in treaties for the suppression of t hat traflic, which keeps it c:mninually hov ering on the verge (of war: but they have neither diminisihed. the athont of shivery in the world nor materially crippled the African slave trade. They stand. there at their wits end, unable to devise any means of advancing their object, and. in igno rance or out of spleen, obstructing all means proposed by-other persons. Last comes our government ; in a plight quite as unsatisfactory as that tof any of the others, and on the whole more sh~amne ful. In every stage, the part which the British goverinent has takon ini the con troversies relatinig to slavery andi the trop ical culonics has beetn undignified at the best. Government has heen simply pas sive: it has neither originated antythitig nor engrafied the suggestions it received from without upon a statesmanlike system of its own. Whigs and tories, whben in of flee, have on these qucstiotus justified the unintentionial sarcasm of Mr. Zachary Ma cauley, when, writing to a noble friend a bout Sierra Leone, he affirmed that the people in the Colonial Office wouald ido a nything for anybody who saved them the trouble of thinking. Government has nev er taken ntuo step with regardl to the sugar colonies unless from the huelief that the pressure brought to bear upon it was irre sistibale, and then itn blind obediencee to the impulse. Its first phasis was that of y ielding ; ati conseqttently, its second w as that of blundering. Instead of aaking .a comiprehiensive view of the wants and wishes of the general public. the planters, the negroes. and the anti-slavers, anti o riginating measures which might as far as possible harmonize them, it lies merely given way tn the urgency of the most ac: tive. and hase acted upon their narrow views wvithoat havink the excuse that, it believed in them. And now that necessi ty is mnakinag other parties clamorous, it passes from blundering to shitifiing. It professes to dn something for all parties, end doesinthinig satisfactory tor any.- I: cajoles the sugar consumer, by promtising to admit larger suppries of suga; it has tens to soothe the apprehensions ofthe an ti slavei-, by protesting that not an -ounce of slaye grown sugar shall be allowed to enter; and ii'keeps neither promise, for the addiiional supiply and the exclusion of slave growtt sugar will'to all appearance prove equallyj.illusory.' It. promises pro tecion'to tho planter, it whtisper-e the free trade-r that the protection shtall be ;only nominal ;'and itlbiits upoon a mnedium, whicht deprives the consuimer of his antticipated ienefit,-and the prlidnaof'a remu nero tive purice. LatyT.atr the planter with the hope of. iidditiou suippli~ee of free labor, andstjdijrinuih:of the anti slaver by meetrposid suchdimpediments as render the :coneesston a- cheat. , Tifle N.TYork MorningNews of Thturs day, says that "the Syr'acuse Convention, whieb held itsini 5sra esterday, utndotufr tedlyiiolinated Jr. Wfright utnanimwously on hte first1 tallot, as we learo,"from at ungstestionable source. that Governor JSouek had sent to it a positive withdraw al from cundillateshiip for the nomination. Snowo in A guL b Ci'ocinai pa pers'-aie thiat dnioth tum n Tues day lastliargq k# s fel ainer. - als.. . From the SoutA&Carol . - THE-VIE Wytp 4A -R61dTN E ifts of it r bl telligentilathihgetnam nowt ,Wast' ingtona ~iy, dated - - WASHINGt.ON, Aug.23. 1844... I sincerely rejoice to see that the noble and patriotic people of yourStatearelike ly to be one in opinion nod atction, as they are one in interest, in the present moinen ous crisis. We are upon.he eve:f oigh, ty events. If Mr. Clay and the Abolition ists (for the connexion is plain) come in to power, the true principles of the Union, aRd with them the public liberty, are ir retrievably lost You know the combined cliques well-and yoif kiion the -ends they aim at." Heaven and Earth will be mioved to bringhem into power. s.Not on ly their on a resources. enormous as they are, but foreign counbel And foreigo.g Id will be put in requisition to advance' their purposes. If you will look to the London Times or the 3rd inst. Vou will.see how their agents here feelin'regard'to tihe issue: Our very issue is at -stake; and it is no ime for divisiont among ours#ivei We must go as one man to the battle, and live or die by the 'Constiution.- I.justly ap preciate the patriotism of thos'e who advise imnmediate and separate' action on the part of South Carolina. I-do-notin the least, doubt their motives. The noble letter of Mr. Colcock, in the Mercury. tells of what kind of men they are composed. Howev er-erroneous may be the course they 'd. vise, their motives, iheir -patriotistm, stand nut high above doubt. I-diler with thema, but love and respect them still. Stuch I know to be the feeltngs of him whom, it is supposed by some,'they desire to wound. I read to him a portion or the proceedings, as well as the letter of Mr. Colcock. and passages from various papers in difrerent parts of the State to-night. I never saw him more deeply affected. The very idea or betraying the confidence or snch a peo ple was more terrible than death itself. .1 twould infiniely rather cut my throat." wits his stern and deep reply, ivhik his eye flashed, and every reature of his pale face seemed fixed as iron. - I told him if the people or his State knew the days and nights of labor and anxiety which he *as now devoting to seenre their dearest rights and privilegzes, it would ft him still deep er in their affections. lie replied " Yes but that they rannot know.- I am not at liberty to speak. Time alone can sheow." The piroceedings at Charlesion-the high toned letter of that glorious -man, Hamilton, have eiven the highest gratifi cation to all who have read them ; und yon may rest assured that if we keep uni ted, we shall certaiuly overthrow the com hined p-wers of Whiggery and Abolition ioi in nearly every state in the Union. The name of Whig in the Southern States is destined to brand at indelible stigma on its possessor. They are the men who are stabbingthe South to the very heart, and t'ie day of their judgment will spee4ily come. They have betrayed ts-surren dered our rights. sacrifired our labor, bar tered away our honor, and -iffered up all that we hold dear a4 a people, to the am bition of ir., Clay. and the promise of his favor. They rejected the Treaty of Au nexation, and have thereby exposed our Southern frontier to the insiduous machin ations of our deadliest enemies. 'They have proclaimed to the world and register ed the edict or tih Aholiiouists, that we shall have no more territory in the South while we own slaves ! Their denuncia tions are daggers indeed. They have re jected the Treaty with the German Pow ers, by which all the products of Southern labor would have been so greatly enhan ced itt value. . They itnve suppr'essed all the Documnents accompanying that Treaty -bid theta from the people, until after the election, and published in thei- stead the miserable glosses and falsifications of a mautacturer, named Choate. They htave refosed to publish for the tnformatio'n ofte people the becret Circular of the British Government in regard to our Slaves These are the sacrifices they have made to their WVhig and Abolition allies of the North. The People will yet find them outt and scorn and exeeration will follow them to their grasves. They have' not received their reward ; and if thme People be true to themselves, they wvill nteet with a very different one than that contracted far. To this end let all true Repimhliinasbe united and act as one nman. Dismiss, for the presetnt. all dist urbin2 qutestionis, all catuses of coldness, and heart burning6 and let ev ery rriend of his country. in Soisth Caroli tta and out of it, ratlly to the rescue of the Cottstitution and the Union, The-late E~ lections, and advices from every qmuarter. assures nts of a lorious victory. W'- shatll carry both Pennusylvanuia and New York. an'd Ohio and old Virginia will give the final bilow. to. the. hold, profligate and pre sumptnouse " Dictator," and his handed forces, money dealers, monopoltsts, and fanatics V'rom the Georgia'onsituctioalist. If in our own State enithudiasm prevails and confidlence is entertained that the dem ocratic party will ottain ai loribus triump~h in October and November next,, we are gratifted to find that in the other'States of the Ulniont,the acme enthusiastm is spretad ing atmong all ranks of the democracy Public meetings are held ins every county and township,, and orgatnizationi is the or der of the day. In New York the demo cratic spirit is gaining ground every day. hickory poles are erected every where, andi confidence in the election of Polkc antd Dallas seems to acquire atdditional strength as the day of the electiom'approachtes. .Am Herkimer N. Y. a 'demnocratie meeting. was t-ecenmly held, at whiich Bedjain Harvey presided. He is 'a Revolartotary Patriot. one hundred and nine yeais of age. IHe presided with' dignity. adsertntnized the proceedings with eare.sud s; the close sigtned them himserfina gdoi1o hand, without the aid of glasses. At ami enhusiatic ajilf inmm se meet-. ing of the demoeracy of the miou '~tio dis tint of Tennessee, ipId otihe 21~ o(last, month at McMinnville, rhe flag'o hh~onti-. try wvas held by 'Jacob Cay~le, the -flig un der which, in they most sanguindr1 ha tIes of the Revolution,. he h i'gallanlg fori ht there 'he stood-. hale. heariy, andv'e VifiA now nseaily approehinghis 4undr-el3 at. .APrnca'elPrss -hiid2ieo( { Ayti, Christophe.nnfth ErniisdFiltas tussa-cob lined for debs its he.Ciiso,fear Pais .thsuitof hr. tnaine.-- U.: ed.' 2 J - -This distuWinl ge ti man p throtgli our to An6! r, ly wi . OWin taliis ill health nd. tsi gu ke drtkned addresning ioar citizne. He Was do his way to Georgia, where he has nadd sev eral appjoiintments for:addressing he p'" pie. He was prevent-d bi .iccidenis from re;'etsing Nashville it ilhte fo6rte Deni' I cratie Ceouvemion, wiiichJie wished tout tend as a delegate from.South.Carolna. Mr. P. expressed.great regret an his fail ure to reac.h Nathville in tirme, to confronut that immense multitude. and denounce as falseand.stnderous the. charge that the Demi6rtts of Sinth Carolina-were- Disu Dionists! Please read the communication of our corresponsdent from Shelbyville-in which the speech of the Hon. F. W. Pickens is spoken of as exceedingly able and interest ing. Shelbyville, Tenn.. Aug. 27, 1844. My Dear.Sr-We have had ;a glorious jttbilee to day Such enthusiasm I never before wntnesed, We ntumbered at least ten thousand. On last evening the people were anxious to hear some of the speakers who weie in attendaance. The3 assemibled at the Couro House in great numbers. and heard thrilling addresses from the Hon. Roger Barion. of Mississippi, and Col. Watson. from Talladega county. in. your S!rite At eleven o'clock this morning. the immens" concourse of petople having as sembled in a grove about half a mile fron the Court House, were atddressed in a ost able attd eloquent speech by the Hoti. F. W. Pickens of.Sotth Carolina. a gen-le mi favorably known to the w hole country as a distinguished membro of Gonttress from his native State, "nil itt the latter part of his parliaientary career as the a ble chairman of the Cummit tee of Foreign Relatinos. Mr. Pickens commeneed by giving a history of the two great political parties, fron their origin to the present time, insis ing that while the federal party had always advocated a strongr and central government the Democratic or Republican party had stood tip maufully for the righits of the States, attd of the people. respectively. He said (ia' in a repuldie. all permanent parties divided uprmn the fiscal action -of the goveriment, because it involved the taxing power, and v.ih all who spoke the English laguage. the power to tax, anti tlte objects of taxation, formed the touch stone of liberty,; that the constitution gave the power to Congress to lay and collect taxes, to pay the debts and provide for the common defence, &c.; that a party had grown up under constructive power. who claimed that Coagress could lay taxes o ver and above paying the debts and pro viding for the defence of the country, for purpose of protecting one man's capital and lalior, at the expense of the capital and labor of others; that this was tihe great and important issue between the parties. He (Mr. P.) was for paying taxe, for the support of a jmtst government, in peace or itt war-was opposed to a resort to direct taxation, or a chatige ft lie impost syttem, but vas for no tnore taxoson imposts than was nelcessarV for a-, economical admin istration of the government He illusira ted the unjust and ewlious operation of the protective policy by argument-. adapted to ihe capacities of every hearer, and con nected it with the disbrsemenasoftbe gov. ernment, by which the saime protected in terests received ntore than they paiti, and then the -protection afierded to capital and labor in domestic manufactures, by the imposts leviedtn articles that cane into competition with their productions, gave thetm the benefit of the whole fibcal action oif the governetnt, whilst with us wve felt no. returning compenlsationt for our taxa tiont; that tuxation to them was in fact a bhessing, anid to us destrutiomn. He conanected the tariff with the curren. ev.:ttd shoned that a hight tariff first cut oiffimportations and feorced tis to impoeri wvhat wats dutty free, viz m specte, and then stocks. He-said that twenty mttlio'ns ofI specie had thus bteen brotught in this sear, besides a large amoittt of Aenericatn stocks bought in foreignt markets, anid paid for by domestic exports.-the conseguncee was. that it had been concentrated in the pto tected regions, antd had proved the basixr new credits and paper expansion, prodti cinig a correspondinig expansion tn loical prices, which had enabled the imtporter to bring ini foreigtn goods and pay the dtutiest, high as they were, and enable htm to soll in the lncal mtutrket. Hetnce,- tlte heavy ieprtaitionls nowv takitng place. whichi wotuld give tus this year a revetnue of $28. Ot00 000-nine millions metre t hatn neces ary to pay the expeenses oif the geovertn ment, anid mleet dhe demands againast it Tlhat the Federalists saw this, aad watnted this excess upon whaich to create a Bank, giving the annual surplus unider a high ta riffas a central funt it 'daposit -to check upon, precisely as'lhe last Uttited states Bank had, averaginig about ,dv.-n millions per annum from its-inception 'in 1816 till its finw blow up, enabling them. with meanis thtus wruntg froam the people, to -hatnk extesively, and to check and c'onti-ol whate they called exchange, whidh was however in trnth nothing more nor less than a pow er to control the stock interest-precisely ats they expect to Cottirol associated wealth atd corporate mioenopolics hy high prosee tive rariffsa, conistantly varied and changing tysUit theviews of ambitious a nd interes ted politicians. He contended that the gov ernment thuts assumedlto itself the power to cotrol the incomne f-one man,.for theben egr 4f-another mma,.by itndirect taxation, andl by the lazinag.potuer to:afee.t the wa gas of labor, haed wtthit itself alla the. ele mellel of despoetiam. Ahier amplifying. on this great propositiont. ,andl varying. 'its Il lusraions. Mr. P..with powerful etapha sis exclaimed..* rmilitons for defence, btut not a eent for tribuate." The vast mrultitude in atteneiance, heretofore listeninag tn re: spctful-silence, ots hearinag this coenclusioni of sotsench ae(the argumqat as-;related to the tarii,.bgrst fortj toto the most entbu siasticheerinrgs. - .Mr.. Pickenas next spoke on the annexal tion of'ITexas.-:He disdained to treat ittas a nere~ locnthquestion afecting the tnter ests. of. the South;. but-.itted..nl pon ita,. reath naportance ta1 a sationaal pontoaf view-Conteted . ith thtis slubjects he pkeuof the attempt now mnaking to raise the.ry.. qredsunsin against the State;.of otht Carolina.-Ho. disdane poticiag suei chirges, VA coming. from tnospene Nirtnl frolitisians wbo were iut9 fufetng I 4s aThii d elibrty's rfad~era tr --d by Mr '..,hgre tehoef othe .hig, party. nd (9ott eaction to the Ytord Irumpled them under h atfee: with, neorh, indcotenyt. He lked, wiy jhrs ?rea hahpionh had been silent when Mr, Ad .3tuS had introdtseed~a petiion~t lisolve Le-Ulniots,.and:ihent the sanmd getnIta had ihreteid_ dissolution if Texts shorrid he adnited? .le said!that there: were yet adjournedqgeisiOURs ofver.,city betweew ;hese coalition m-erni-; that they ere -us indissolubly united e: he Siamese twins and that a severance wl'1 Ie fatalto both that Mr. Adans & his choir mii'kht ehani dis union anti abolilinosm .with impnt).l.. as long as he could raise his voice in :',r on? of CongrPs4 and 51r.. Clay. would no dat te nounee him:-the secret of the.bdrgain was the cement which hound I hem ioxetrij er-if I hey quarrelled murder niighe "out." He pieda-d himselfthat he and his- politi j. cal friends wei' firmly an-I .ttigli attached to 'he Union-that the ballot box was the only remedy thej looked Io.naltinst Federal misrule.-He said that-meet: ings which had taken place in South Carolina, seeming mn threaten diisolutio, were but the effervescence ( f exited feel ing among a few young men and boys.; and did not speak the sentinments of the people of SoIuth Carolina-th.at on ibis subject they nere sound to the core. On c conelding his speech. Mr. Pickens was! gre-eied wih 1he most rapturous applause. --hough he thought himself a stianger in. a strange land." he was immediately surrounded by hosts of Carelinians.I anxionsly inqsuiring are you from Pendle tin?-Are you the grand son ofold Andrew. Pickens. who fng-ht ii th. revolutioit? and t on tieing antswered in the aflirmative, he was reatedl with a cordiality that made, him feel himself at home. So lar'e nas the concourse,that while Mr. Pickems was speaking, a sta.d was erected for the Hon. Roger Hart)n of Misiipsi, c who delivered it is said a very able'speech. a witoui any interruption whatever.at t.be main stand. Very respectfully. &c., STATE An RtCULTURAL SocCETT.-The .lotuntaineer of 131 inse. 4ays: "Tie first semi aunnal meeting of this body convened in the Methiodist Church at this place, ou s Tuesday last. in accordance with previous tiotici.. Members and Delegates were in attendance from nearly every section of ihe State, and the otmber was larger thou could have been reasonbly expected. - We were delighted to witnes so avnny of our distingui-hed citizens taking the lead in the important matter of Agriculiural im.' provement, as was the case on this inter.' I esting occasion. The Cattle Show took place on Wedneeday. The Stock exhibi ted ronsisted of numerous kinds. and some specimens would have lone credit to a similar exhibition in any part of the world. We heard several person remark, who have been. in the habit of attending the annual meetings in Columbia, that the Hugs were at least equal. if not superior to those generally showed at that place. 1 The day . un as as fine as could have been wished, the concourse of spectators large atnd every ceremony passed to the satisfac iion and delight of all present. This is the first time the Society has held a meeting out of Colutimbia. but it is now the intention to meet in difi'erent Dis tricts every Stmmer; and we -have :0o doubt hut the arrangement will inspire;a zeal and improvement in the Agricultral p02rsmt of our Stato, tihich has never be fore beetn witnessed.'' Health of our City.-Although.we have had put extraordinary dry summer. and we mighs add spring also, yet an overruling Providence has showered blessings uon us. and we have enjoeved good health, far bey'ond expectation. The summer's heat has passed away. and yet the cold grave claims but fewv of otur citizens, and dire epidemics have tnot visited tie so far. -The fall season, the gloomiest yet most charm ing of all the seasons, has commenced, and with it comes an ahnendancee of 'rain. to moisten the earth, and renew the wonted feelings of dissatisfied mortals en lately hid ie melaoccholy by appearances without Thie river too. has been so -very lowv. that drays have passed over, and we have seen cattle driiven across without the least diffictilty. Steamrbonts could not teach the tvharfes by some hundred of miles.--am burg JOUrna(l. We are'raimid to learn that the regu~ E xercises of the College of Charlesfon will be fully resumed oen Mmndiy..the th October. Tn consequence of the et tn ued amid lamented Illness of the.Presi lent~ the Rev.-Dr. Brantly, a gentlemaiit nently qualified for .the .duties: f.si~ partment. has been solicitedby ree]Z motes vote of the Trtsesg,- : se rvices dumring the :piesed E exmeni en the Trustee feel 'a 'confideneohi kiuoi pehliC. spirit and .initerstqjiJ stiistaiou.'thait he will .meet b~~wh should no - unfomrseen ,cireumsae~ vena-Chareston"Mcury. The counrit atens oflth .tatezA ,friesd suggestedu6fyeti day, the' following mifiere bf'wishA the couinterfeitTen eiollar b,1Ji~ft BSink of ehe State~tihtered f'own 61'dilte;' l now in oirallati&..'dray beese iin: guishetd from the genuinelei6 ~ e^4n~o riouis teow ire nt trke b.se :ete oE s bannanc figdure, betweenf~e rr des. igaing theigalue of tbe ll s.~ he word% '-Bank of the Stateof h~~ Carip lin;" printed on two htti~n:Ritiat api. it als-the gentuint8'ones in uished by a vignette of'dt fhu h the minnturesof Calhomn n by the words msBak'of Caroina," pritnted.-onhq1a.aq. je'istan tex-dsiisls.Chd Arrest of-a C ounterfeiter. daav tnight last,4 'isersonD muJan froms.ColdinhdnG alila age 'Mir irr6eeti charg'ed r o Some of th mnygafj was 'o sh same drnomnifanlchait~ter> vonsly nteejo-mour papEii nd' givnlaahedilbiC~Sgainst retei.Din a Bonethfmih1u eat uirierit money was ii rier 141k Democratd 1 JAMVES PL FOR V: GEORGE: M. A tA$ Irk Col. Wikfull'iomnc v Mbany Of&ierspof the Ith et eived, and @hall ippiearinourn The very -.Iptqinoqs,:and ptrste0e, ir the day, -i uana'toidsably' Vill' pnliiiitas irt(gbe Fir.-On the ni,;4t Ni614tir en he honis of 10 and 2o'eAnek, alfr ikon m t iemiei er hIU a al* e )3 1. ,bean for. h0res belongKin W. Pickens i Gorn and fodder.were. destroyed Te Cosi tofat' beeoWin accideal. ExnyOtiers of eteth Edi rWi~5 eived .shl ap ear hurnW., . "EurLox- Sept.14 18 "The-eollowing re'the pearticlar ofr ent calamitywhcbloNeisoii ng withi 6nifles of dgeayed enrdoiie uf'eted. in the'drijirirj away of'hii.Millia he me lanchlly deih of a'ln e rafia e brmillw it - ironginr'tiing Captain theici ni hait ofdaaies Lanurens. Froa m the -rafi4M'o-n'n ay'nihan ruesday. the -9 th and. 0th the. Crkeg- ere ;wollen to a'eorisilerable'.-ighi anaiid frt eloc.M ., onPiean oThes, ainfcah al tiiif i orci and iater ha destoyedThefiidi n o'yng pp the house, whichwa Eilding, and so,itperceptiablytathnde4 - that fie black menowho wer a I4 Id.e - Touse did not perceive thei paiiaso titi mdden crush they. wre adNioliied (h erilons situation. Three-of thurt I'nm ly rushed to the door ad leiaeforml Ird, wshich, onther-instantspartdro tiihtian rd peipitated thein" inh the Creuek ere rhile,wts runningswith gresriu idity.aThe Hillwright, Mike wa" oneo the thrimeeand a probable,:from a severe wo'u'iefe mad. ie was soistunned as toianse hisdon-. ng; -The- othertw-bnnpdi e'th The two that remained in the house,.seeingjo ichancei to jecaei thri dang ith up per pa rtof the house, which *as going joiiC - il rnind them; and.indeed,.it cannot bulte ehite the ets aistonislpatentro thatslosd the repitated thtem ind the cnu beowhi tvibr nlite was con~ih rsidably wound edlandigst oute a one .rhlfthie teo#; th otaihe w ot st nnrd 20s' t sshsow g.Thce othjiaer..iejnzi aribuale t Tbe woant emaficdinthige i--house, ingn dfchan thae iMWhc bndsychave ast d. u plornparof the hose. hi wAsgil was neaely lompletnd, adthesaidesednite cat overtiio cithean doreaes..aptosinCutiha m'eyshold hannot ese mied, s much cd-e ~Eni'd thembriedith the hihstrm oduie fn costhue timereldof th-em arkabesidegrly ond l r. ndgt u adointh hosafsdeh Aieb an~;te bi'atter, o nhei de0arl lve4s beenw de pThr aus fth ianddte istributad." t mill stner heaf~tesving benAgoedtepai we defctiotpilingo whthe miaoy haver aie ina blowafring oth houTh colmsneabtly:r cdipec~ui h ls setmted fra a t of ommever to thouandlalbfrs e eadern %dayig i'Ios cannot peoel tinoa-te, Briis nticanthe - possesingf suc iea'ipes asinkedthe combne ih te hihet odofenUuh lrjtaeensand-makableintneriydidelit ofard e n nthe lor T ssoschaernt lols Svornfe Jemyaved -,hmaben den phrs adda nihbogddcotfriesndeus Inuer tenimoferenu's o-Liiisi" fir admpe wimthe itsd nitaveyal - nrea~sed iTh aplr'easaticl e onsy tg ishiin thens.es tton coslicit butw-aeres preiorated froe wntio of ob.Whlehow iognon ithae"sebefore..or7r.Tr e aTlb - ni~l noinai fhe. heyenja .few o noney p fta-blespoin f-thepriish entieimsh~ hubes of v e ni eD ipljelpanth. a1!hieths~b ' kh eyondalltenbt. sgr W .7t abFParliameti hnirty~t?-ifi vrdsgh serus T ishiei theaetbaeoan risjEs. go tua bihedIe- dinthbi :sendo hifn't:W nceasea . T~iis'u ipalch oi uefttab stish inthe.mitefiuaisbaltie hfoured ipeliostedE the condiiof EI:9t'li ngmon, ta ygo eryrn ti s-U rlp. Weominlly aye Thneo ew or,:bone' Am~bmitnruoe~aderoitaearsernt hasfme