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a entRctrtic 30 utotev to outfterg 3nUgijtg, N3goout(COg N9tI cII ttgue, EL(ftettett, Ajftrildra "We will cling to the Pillars of the Temple of ou , if it must fall we will Perish amidst the RIns? W. F. DURISOE, Proprietor EDGEFIELD, S. - O., S. IEMBER 18,1851. THE EDGEFIELD ADVERTISE] PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY. W. F. DURISOE, Proprietor. ARTIU'R SiNlKINS, Editor. TERIEUS.-Two DOLLARS per year. if pai in advance---Two DOLLARS and FiFTY CENTS not paid in six months---and THREE DOLLARS not paid before the expiration of the year. A subscriptions not distinctly limited at the time < subscribing, will be considered as made for an ir definite period, and will be continued until al arrearages are paid, or at the option of the Pub lisher. Subscriptions from other States must b accompanied with the cash or reference to som one known to us. ADVERTISESMF.TS will he conspicuously inser ted at 75 cents per Square (12 lines or less,) fo the first insertion, and 371-2 for each subsequen insertion. When only published 31onthlyor Quar terly, One Dollar per square will be charged. Al Advertisements not having the desired number o insertions marked on the margin, will be contin ned until forbid and charged accordingly. Those desiring to advertise by the year can d( so on liberal terms...it being distinctly'understoot that contracts for yearly advertising are confines to the immediate, legitimate' hutiness of the firm or individual contracting. Transient Advertise muents must.be paid for in advance. For announcing a Candidate, Three Dollars, in advance. For Advertising Estrays Tolled, Two Dollars, to be paid by the Magistrate advertising. A Painful Case. An account of a recent trial at the Old Bailey, in Latidon, Lord Chief Justice Tindal presiding. . George Hammond, a portrait painter, was placed at the bar, to be tried on an indictnentfound against him by .the grand jury for wilful murder, with malice afore thought, of George Baldwin, a rope dancer and a mountebank The prisoner was a man of middle height, but slender form. His eyes were blue and mild.. His whole bearing gave evidence of subdued sadness and melancholy resignation. He was forty-one years of age, had a soft voice, and his appearance and manner bore testimony to his being a manof dis. tinguished education, in smitor verty.of his dress.. On being called o soner admitted that hi iad he deplored the a(. that on his soul and ce(..!.> i belimenself guilty. - 'lit . . en rt- - thd act of'killing adl nient rested their cns ivas called upon'for-hi. The piisonerthen adtiMserinselt to the court and jury: "My loi-d,"'sAd' lie, " my justifmeation is to be fonfid i'n a recital of the facts. Tfree yeirs ago, I lost a daughter, then four y'ears of age, the solem-iemorial left of mel lieloved wife, whom it had pleased God to recnltlo himself. I lost her ;-:hut I did iot see ler die, as I had seen her mother die. She disappjared-she was stolen from me. Site was a charming child, and but for her I had nobody in the world to love me. Gentlemeni wIhat I have suffered cannot be describled-'o cannot comprehend it. I have expended in adertising and fruitless searches every thing I possessed-furniture, pictures, even to my clothes. All have been sold. For three years, and on foot, I have sought for mly child, in all the cities and all the villages in the three kingdoms. As soon as by painting portraits I succeeded in gainting a little money, I returned to Lon don to recommence my advertisements in the newspapers. At length, on Fr'iday, the 1411h of A pril last, I crossed the Stmith fl-d cattle market. In the centre of the market a troupe of mountebanks wvere performing their feats. Among them a child was turnling on its head, its legs in the air and its head supported by a hal herd. A ray from the soul of its mother must at that m )ment have penetrate.] my ownt, for me to have recognised -my child in that condition. It was my poor chibL. Hecr mother wvould perhaps hatve precipita ted herself towards her, antd locked her self in her arms. As for me, a veil pass ed over my- eyes. I threwv myself upon01 the chief of the rope-dancers. I know noit how it was; 1, habitually gentle, event to weakitess, seized hint by his clothes raised him in the air, then dashed hitt tc thte groitnd-then againt. He was dead A fterwards I repented what [ htad done At the tmomtent I regretted that I was onl3 able to kill but one." Lord Chief Justice Tindal.-These ar< not Chtristian sentiments. Howv cant yo expect the cottrt and jury to look witl fatvor on your defenice, or God to pardo: you, if you cannlot forgive? Prisoner.-" 1 knowv, my lord, what wvil be your judgment,,.and that of the jury but God has already pardoned me; I fe it in my heart. You know not-I knev not then-the wvhole extentt of the evi that man had dore tme. When som compassionate people brought me m; daughter in my prison, she was no longe my cild; she was no longer pure aii angelic as formerly; she was corruptec body aind soul-ber manner, her laitguag: infamous, like those of the people wviti whom she had been living. She did nr recognise n:e, and I no longer recognise her myself. Do you comprehend now Tha~t main had robbed mec of the love ani soul of my child. And I-I have kille him but once." Foreman.-" My lord, we have agrem ina our verdict-" L Clie Justice,-" I understand you ger tlemen, but the law mnust take its cours< I must sum up the case, and then you wil retire to- deliberate." The chief justice having summed u d the case, the jury retired, and in an instan f after, returned into the court with the ver if diet, " Not guilty." 11 On the discharge of Hammond, th< Sheriff was obliged to surround him witi: anl escort. The crowd of women am( men was immense. Thei womep wer< e determined to carry him off in triumph The crowd followed him all the way t( his lodgings with deafening shouts and t huzzas. I Horoscopology. I MR. EDIToR,-The following list ol Horoscopes is extracted from an old scrap-book, and if you can find a place I for it in your journal, it may serve to amuse some of your readers: January.-He who is horn in this month will be laborious and a lover of good wine, but very subject to infidelity; yet he will he complaisant and withal a very good singer. The lady born in this month will be a pretty, prudent housewife, rather melancholy. but yet good tempered. February.-The man born in this month will love money much, but the la dies more; lie will be stingy at home but a prodigal abroad. The lady will be a humane and fond wife and an affection ate mother. M11arch.-The man born in this month will be rather handsome ; lie will die poor. The lady will be a jealous, passionate chatter box. April.-The man who has the misfor tune to be born in this month will be subject.to maladies; lie will travel to his disadvantage. for he will marry a rich and handsome heiress, who will make what, no doubt, you all understand. The lady of this month will be tall and stout, with agreeable wit and a great talker. kv temper. AugiuxV.-The man will be ambitions ami c'ourageomns ; he will have two wives. T'l-he lady Will be amiable and twice mar ried, but her second husband will cause her to regret her first. Seprember.-He who is born in this month will be strong, wise and prudent, but will b 'too easy with his wife, who will give himi great uneasiness. The lady will be round faced and fairhaired, witty, discreet, amiable, and loved by her friends. October.-The ian of this month will have a handsome face and florid com plexion; he will be wicked in- his youth and always inconsistent. He will prom ise one thing and do another, and remain poor. The lady will be pretty; a little fond of talking; she will have two hus bands, who will die of grief--she will best know why. Norembr.-The man born in this month will have a fine face and be a gay deceiver. The lady of this month will be large, liberal, and full, of novelty. Decembr.-The man born in this month will be a good sort of person| though passionate. H~e will devote him self to the army, anid be beloved by his wife. The lady will he amiable amid hand some, wvith a good voice, and a well pro portioned body ; she will be twice mar ried, remain poor, but continue honest. AND Wnhcr NExT ?---A gentleman riding near the city, overtook a young manl, and invited him to a seat mn his car riage. "And what," said the gentleman to the young stranger, " are your plans for the future ?" "I am a clerk," replied the young man, " and my hope is to succeed, and get into business for nmyself." "And whait next?" said the gentleman. "Why I intend to marry and set up an establishmenmt of my own," said the youth. I" And what next ?" I" Why, to continue inl business and ac~ cumulate wealth." "And wvhat next ?" " To retire from business, and enjoy ,the fruits of my labors." I " And what next?!" SIt is the lot of all to die, and I of course cannot escape," replied the young 3 ster. S" And what next ?" once more aske< r the gentleman ; but the young man hat 1no answer to make-lie had no purpose 'that reached beyond the present lire. SA FIRMI faith is the besat divinity, a goot t lire the best philosophy, a clear conscienc d the best law, honesty the hest policy, an 1temperance the best physic. d NEVER despair in adversity-. Wor and persevere. When a wiheel is goi d round, the bottom must turn upward some Ime. GO AHEAD. Go alead--.and do not tarry, Nought is gained by standing still; What though you at times miscarry, Let not tears your bosom fill; Search the causes of your errors, [ Gather wisdom'from the past, To the wind give idle terrors And you'll get ahead at last! Go ahead-in useful daring, Let your motto be-" I'll try ;" He, who is ever despairing, Bankrupt heart and hopes is nigh. What though wealth and you are strangers, Onward, onward be your aim ; And those real or fancied dangers, Soon you'll put to flight or shame! Go ahead-tho World reforming, In civil, moral, freedom's name, All those forts and outpost storming, Whieh your enem'es may claim Yield no bulwark, take no quarter, Compromise no cherished right, Freedom's treasure riever barter, But stand for them with your might! Go ahead-don't defer it, Life's short span soon flits away, If you'd finish ought of merit, You must ply your task to-day, Set the ball in instant motion, To keep it going strain each nerve, No doubt, ultimate promotion Will yield the laurels you deserve! THE PRINTER'S SONG. Print, comrades, print! a noble task Is the one we gaily ply; 'Tis ours to tell to all who ask The wonders of earth and sky, We catch the thought, all glowing warm, As it leaves our editor's brain, A nel o~nnn I.. wt-- -- ... n past with tihe present hour, And its breath-the voice of fame. a Then let us sing, as we merrily fling r The slender letters around, it A glorious thing is our laboring, d Oh, where may its like be found? fl Print, comrades, print! God hath ordained That man by his toil shall live; Then spurn the charge that we disdained The labor that God would give! t We envy not the sons of ease, Not the lord in princely hall, But bow before the wise decrees In kindness meant for all, Then let us sing, as we nimbly fling The slender letters round, A glorious thing is our laboring, Olh, where may its like be found ? Saved by a word. IN the gracious revival which we at tended at Huntsville, last wieek, there was a most interesting little girl converted and added to the church, whose salvation may, so far as the instrumental cause is regarded, be attributed mainly to one sentec from the pen of her dying mother. A few miniutes before the mother breathed her last, she called for paper, pen and ink ; and with her tremulous, dying hand, wirote the following solemn request: " My daughter, remember thy Creator in the days of thy youth !" How thoughtful the departing mother! And with pow~er does she yet speak ! Trhough the daughter was, at the death of her mother, but a few days old, yet these solemn words were carefully preseid vi; and as soon as the child could appr. ~.te them, were shown her by ther pious grand mother; and as might have been expect ed, had the desired efl'eet on her tender heart; her eyes ran full of tears, as her young heart ran over with filial emotion. Shte obeyed the instruction, written by the pale,~ bloodless hand of her mother; sihe remembered her Creator in the days of her early youth ; (she is probably about twelve years old,) and we saw her, with a countenance beaming with light and love, approach the sacred altar, and in connection with nearly a score of others -mostly young persons-and, by re ceiving the ordinance of baptism, dedica ted herself to God. Yes, she remembier ed God-sought early and found him even " in the (lays of her youth." How emphatically may it be said of this sainted mother, that she, "hbeing dead, yet speaketh." This was all she could do towards " training up her child in the way it should go." But God re quires no more of us than we can do sthis done,-done in good faith-and we Imay die satisfied, that God will be faith ful to his promlises." Oh, what a lesson to mothers! Moth c era, whether you live to see your children ;saved or not, you may be the means of - saving them. If they cannot apprecite eour faltering words. you may, with your t-mbling lOi leave to t6m, in the hani of some faithfu fiend, a salutary war Every mother, whether living or dyin should think .of: her children ; and if si can think at allle will think of then but every motieimar nlt be able, in ti last moments of disso'viiig nature, to pe her wishes, in reference to her child. 'Then might-it not be a happy precautio in a pious mother, to place a Bible, c some other-valuable book, in' the hani of each of her children;"or some frien< as a keep-sake, with sog.e admonition a the one recorded above, to be read whe she is gone ? pditihal Fromthe tnionvilUe Journal. Sep'arate Secession. We publish in anofhicoLumn the pro ceedings of a publi e.ilng held on Fri day last, at Padets Crek, in the West ern portion of this'Ditrnt. We had no the pleasure of being piresent at this meet. ing, but are infdriiidlit; was most enthu siastic in favor of the senession of South Carolina, solitary andial'ne, as soon as it was ascertaiined that ino other State would join her. The nunbiber present'was estimated at from one th usand to twelve hundred, and not a singlevoice was heard in opposition to the resol'tion or declara lion of rights and duties% which we pub ish. We are informe . also, that the neefing was one of fret discussion, but hat none attended for th~purpose except ecessionists. - The meeting va address d by the Hons. D. Will e and Wm. H. 3ist, both taking decid , roundsin. favor if South Carolina's res ing her rihts lelegated to the Gen* ciovernment, vith or without co-oper on. To this we. take ple -re in adding a econd denonstration in avor of seces ion, made in the Cou jouse .9AJni.. outhern Congress were14. secessioAstu, nd will doubtless select candidates of the ght faith. We do not feel- at liberty to idicate the persons upon Whose shoul ers the mantle ,will fall, but-we can assure ie fortunate, who ever they may be, that Icy will receive an overwhelming vote in ur District, and as we think, in the Con ressional District. In Union we believe ie future will bear us out in the assertion, hat at least eight-tenthis of.the people are i favor of secession, ivhile we are as irmly convinced, that one half of the ther fifth will cheerfully go"'ith the State vlhen she acts. Yet, notwitisiding this inparalleled unanimity in publc senti rreilt, we proroundly deplored'e necessi y of being compelled.to n"k:the issue. [he policy of the secessioij arty from he time of the first appearance of division n the ranks of the resistanee men of the tate, has been conciliation and harmony, -nion and co-operation at&me, for the ake of co-operation abroad. 'They have ~arefully and consistently avoided a course alculated to 4lrive their co-operation, and itimate secession friends from them, be ieving and hoping that era long it woul~d e apparent to all, that the aprospects, for :o-operation before secession would van sh, and that the only remaining hope-for o-operation, would be found in the act of single State secession. Georgia has long since taken her stand for the Union, in sbmitting to the past; Alabama too, has declared in favor of the detestable com~ promise ; and Mississippi, before this time, perhaps, has endorsed the abolition policy of the Fillnore dynasty. Where is co operation to come from then? How are we to get it? We answer, by secession, the single secession of South Carolina That secession wvill bring about co-opera tion, we think there is scarcely a doubt If we ever had misgivings on this point the letter of Speaker Cobb, of Georgia to the Macon committee, would remov< them. It will be remembered, that Mr Cobb is the submission candidate for Go vernor of Georgia and deniesithe right a seCession ; and yet this gentleman, in onl humble opinion, stands pledged to co operate wvith South Carolina, if she se cedes from the Union. Ourereason fo: this belief is his answer to thefollowinj question, propounded to himnbythe South ern Rights committee of a county to wit: " Do you believe that a State, by virtui of her sovereignty, has the right peacen lly to secede from the Union? Or isi your opinion that the General Govern ment has the constitutional authority ti coerce her to remain in the Union ? Ani should a call be made upon the militia, ti aid in attempting to coerce a secedini State, would you, if in the executive oftic< obey such requisition 1" After showing that such call could nc be made upon the militia, until after a act of Congress for that purpose, M1 obb nswers as follow:v. is "If a State should secede, it would be d. the most fearful issue that ever the people g, of this country had been called on to de. ie cide, since the days of the revolution i; so momentous, so vital to-the interest of ie the people of Georgia, that I should feel i in bound to ascertain the will of the people < - before I acted.' I should endeavor to be i n the executive of the will of the people of t ir Georgia. To ascertain that will, I should e Is convene the legislature of the State, and t 1, recommend to them to call a conventiofi 1 a of the people; and it would be for that ( n convention, representing the people upon ii that naked issue, to determine whether t ! Georgia would go out of the Union and ally herself and peril her destinies with the seceding State, or whether she would remain in the Union and abide the for tunes of her other sisters." Here are the sentiments of Mr. Cobb, who believes that secession will bring s about war, and consequently an attempt 0 on the part of the General Government It to coerce a seceding State. In that event, bi we maintain that Mr. Cobb is pledged to d co-operation, and here we beg our co- Y' operation friends to remember, that Mr. d Cobb positively denies the right of a State 'I to secede, and refuses to co-operate before n< secession, asserting that the question be. comes a practical one only after the act ut of secession, and that before, it is an ab- .t straction and wrong in the theory. Let it us make the practical issue that Mr. Cobb to speaks of; let South Carolina secede and " let us suppose then, that the General Go- fa' vernment, with all the army and navy it in has, is brought into requisition to coerce tul South Carolina, and a conflict, a bloody ra conflict of arms ensues. Let us suppose ha too, that thousands of Georgia's sons have d already flocked to the Palmetto standard, fo whose blood is freely mingling with that St of Carolinians in the cause of the South, ou in the cause of Georgia, and the General tlmi Government has called on the State- f en liium-in the very clash of arms-and cot who can doubt the result. Georgia will sol then eo-operate ivith us; North Carolina; m Alabama, Mississippi, and indeed the the whole South, for the same reasons, will mc soon follow suit, and a second indepen. tiO dence achieved. Secession, then, it must N be seen, is now the only. hope.for co-oper- of' ation, arid Georgia stands pledged if Cobb ou is elected Governor. do do From the South Carolinian; sol conciliation Rejected. ** Otr good friends in Camden recently (IC adopted resolutions of conciliation, and Th the Edgefield Southern Rights Associa- see tion, in their. exposition to which we al- a luded the other day, called on the co- sec operationists to unite with them in some tiv declaration of principles, with a view to at harmony. Here is the answer of one of ,l their leadingi organs, the Charleston Eve nine News:w "Where the end is the same but the means are so different we knowv not how is harmony can be produced. The limit to the duration of the convention has been pa indicated, in various letters of the imnme-th diate secession leaders, as one year from ar< the, period of assembling ir. the spring of 1832. Now this is the limit also within which these leaders are wvilling to w~ait for Southern co-operation, cc " There can be no -agreement here be- aN tween the actionists, as they are called,N and the co-operationists, because the lat ter conceive that such limit, being affron- ye tive to our Southern sisters, must and ar would defeat co-operation. The dictation am implied in thus narrowing the period of th acquiescence to those who should be our i associates is an assumption of power by hi a minority over the majority. Would this sy be borne by those who claim equality, ti whether in the Union or out of it!t Would v South Carolina submit to be thus cribbed la ,and confinedi Should she not give her ai Southern confederates, if confederates p r they are to be, the same share of credit p. rfor pride that she herself would exact ? c -It is an assumption of a most offensive b character for any single Stats to say to F r her associates in interest, in wvrongs, and " r should be in remedies, we will giv'e you fi .just one year to decide whether or not a you wvill unite with us. Thie plain mean- ' ing of this is that we will force you into ii i a position in which you must either sym- ti -pathizo wvith us or olppose us, thns dlivest- b t ing the other parties to the alliance of all tI - independence of judgment. This isw~hat ~ a is called dragooning, and the unprece- V a dented presumption of the proceeding v a would consist in one of the parties, near- r Sly the most limited in territory, popula- p , tion, and resources, deciding for all the a rest. We believe that history is without 1 t a parallel to such an extravagant assump- N n tionm of snperiority." t r, We are rather pleased than otherwise I that ihe co.onerationists are showing their a is more agreeable to separate thafa e ft. change explanations. The inducements to secession are fhe prospective advantages of free trade, the prospect of a vast Southern republic, ex tending to the Isthmus of Panama, inclaz ding Cuba, and controlling the continen; tal gateways between the* Atlantic afid Pacific-and the further prospect of doir pelling the North, by treaties, to respect from self-interest, the sacredness of the domestic insfitutions of tirer neighbork We shall enlarge upon this very impor tant branch of the question in a day oj two. A single point for the present. From our commercial restrictions, Great Britain is introducing the cotton cutard in every available corner of her colonies. To arrest this policy, free trade betweed her and the cotton States, or reciprocal treaties advantageous to both,' itis be, lieved here, wouldbe more effile t thaW any thing elser Ai more aditagedds' to the S'outh than any sciii i f tar& protection or tariff prohibition." From the State-Righte Republicn& Georgia Politics and Politician.. A correspondent, vriting from Nae6o ,hee Valley, under date of the 4th fnsfank; rives us the following interesting informa. ion respecting the prospects of. the South rn rights cause in Georgia: NACoOCHEE VALLEY, Sept. 4, You may be pleased to learn that d&e outhern Rights cause is gaining groyand k Georgia. In the.mountain districts, nder the very nose of that scape-goaf r the Union; Fillmore, Federal-pap party r Georgia-Mr. Speaker Cobb-I findo msible and intelligent men, who dare to )eak in defence of South Carolina, and to Ly she is right. Nothing has injured e -cause of progress, the diffusion of ;ht 'upon Federal politics here, ipore an the *course of the "soidistant" co. )eration party-of-Soth Carolina. Our voting in a113p iiiigupai a last resort. rayI chage as ng place hn. lic sebttetbut the ovementsof th5outh Caliascoper-; :ion party andthe laudations bedpwedr )on them.. bytle-Fillmore party, d rve fallen'like a wvet blanket upon them. eople begiir to think that there are loaves id fishes palatable to some South Carol i stomachs, too-that Speakerships ight be as available'theie as in Georgia. he entire burden of Todibs; Stephens4 obb's speechesi s abuse, tancorous and ackgardish of South Carolina. The ,ople are gravely told that Georgia never ould have felt the tyranny and oppres on of the General Government, but for -r proximity to South Carolina. .A ie commentary this, upon the intelli ?nee of her people and the honesty of -r public servants. What arrant de !ivers Toombs, Stephens and Cobb ve been, oh .:" How terribly our ar- I ty sworea Flanders." -ECHO. UAro? DisrcT:-Ata public meetig eld at Padgett's Creek, Union, Bou. W [.Gist and Hon: Dan. Wallace addressed. ae meeting. Invitations' were extiidedw any present, who differed from the' iews of tho speakers, to address the ieeting, but none accepted the invitation. 'he following declaration was then unafi nously adopted: " We, the people of the western portion f Union District, being in our primary . ssembly, do solemnly declare that we are nalterably opposed to remaining longer a this Union, as at present administered; nd that we will uso every means that od and nature have put into our hands o effect its dissolution and assert our free-: Loin-due regard being had to the senti nents of our brethren of the other South rn States; and, in furtherance of this' bject, do pledge our prompt support to any measures of redress that may be or inined by the sovereign people of Southi arolina, in convention assembled, be hey ever so speedy and ever so indepen lent in their nature, and be the mode of iction what it may." Mx. BrnT os Co-OPERATrzo*..--We myve understood from several wvhi were resent at a dinner given at' B'radley's D1d Field recently, that Mr. Burt proved o the satisfaction of his hearers that all [iope of co-operation in resistance to the aggressions of the past was in vain. A writer in the Abbeville Banner corrobo rates the statement, and says that the gentleman took up our co-States seria tim to demonstrate the- 6errectness of his opinion on this point.. Here then is testimony from an ac knowledged leader of the co-operation partv, that co-operation is out of ibe question at present.-Colum~bia South Cnalinian. - hands. The plain meanina of this re sponse by the News is that no action whatever is to he taken within the limited term of the State Convention. Their latform is becoming more and more de reloped, and, as each successive plank is xposed to view, it is becoming more man fest that the whole structure will be founud nodelled after the Georgia platform ubmission. The sooner this is known lie better, for we then can meet an enemy vithout any danger of wounding a friend. )ur friends, we think, wil see how vain t is to be casting the pearl of conciliation efore such a party. From the Anderson Gazette. The advantages of Secession. To those of our anxious politicians ,ho challenge loudly for the benefits of !cession, we would say, read the speech f the Hon. J. L. Orr, in to-day's paper. is true it was delivered some time ago, afore many of the new and astounding zngers of this measure were discovered, ?t, it contains a great deal of good sound >ctrine. Doctrine which we warmly >plauded then, and which we are even )w promulging, in our own humble way. o those who desire to adopt no mens e unless it will pay in dollars and cents, is argument will be invaluable. Here is demonstrated, in that most satisie ry of all modes, by actual figures, what would gain by secession. We pay the support of the General Govern. S mit $3.00 per head, and receive in re- ir n little else than abuse, oppression and u ik injustice. By this Government we o re already lost our equality, and it is o ly subtracting from our pockets three. s rths of its monstrous expenses. Our s ite Government, which according to si - Representative, furnishes all, every fi ig necessary for thesecurity, coiveni- :i e and lippiness. of the people, costs th P~-o all 0 amg to our creed. For lf Ruin, a& ite, complete Ruin is the penalty of re- o ining in the Union for a few.ycars, 8. n the conclusion is irresistible, that no k de of resistance can render our condi- n ri worse! But, fellow-citizens, our a rthern neighbors look at this remedy u sccession very differently from some of - modern politicians. Milliard 'Fill- P re, Daniel Welister;Henry. Clay;- what a, they cll it? Why, theofall it a dis- n ution of the Union, what they know it i T n fact and in truth.-They see in it th and destruction..to all their selish I fiendish hopes of plunder and power. h ey read in it desolation to the North- P urity and prosperity to South Carolina ! 1 the South. Yes, the provocations to s ession, and the advantages prospec- h a to the South, are very well understood the North. If it is only to ruin our- g ves, why should this Freesoil Govern- h nt be in such awful throes about it? e by should Webster, Clay, and Corwin h 'id omne genus,"-quake over~ it? If it ~ to destroy our Institutions aid emanci te our slaves, why do the Free Soilers pose it to the death, and declare that 1 SGovernment must put it down? These E i hard questions to answer consistently t th such belief. t Bozt read the followving extract from the rrespondence of the New York Herald, d it may give you a feint glimmering of arthern opinion: " The provocations to secession are ry wvell understood at the North. They a thie insecurity of slavery, and liberty, ~ .d law, and society, in the South, from ~ a active dissemination of abolitionism the North-free soil, nullification and wher law; they are to be found in the tem of taxation by tariffs and naviga mn laws, hr posed upon the South, under hich they contribute a disproportionate rge amount of the Federal revenues, id of whbich they receive a share dispro >rtionately small, in the Federal appro iations. The revenue system acts as a mstant drainage upon the South for the meft of the North-like one of those gyptian wvater wheels, which come up ith their vessels full of the fertilizing aid, empty it upon the absorbing land, id go downa empty for another supply. 'le provocations, then, to secession, are Northern aggressions upon the institu-1 an of slavery, and in the tariff system of unties to Northern manufacturers at me expense of the South. The State of outh Carolina, moreover, wvill kve n ry exalted affection for a Union in 'hioh she is sneered at, derided, misrep isented and ridiculed, as she is, by res ctable journalists and politicians of the ther States. Her love of the Union has een pretty thoroughly ridiculed and bused out of her. Living upon such rmns in the family, it is easier to drive r out thani to persuade her to remain in, nmid she Inejut in the humor in which it