University of South Carolina Libraries
Extract from a letter to the Southern Pkes? bv 4lA Northern Man." I tell you, plainly, the South was never before id such imminent danf^cr. It is now placed in a helpless, I lopeless minority, which will bo for over perpetuated by the principle of exclusion lately foisted into the Constitution by the despotism ol the majority. Besides this, the peculi r political portion of the country has never before l>enn so adverse to the preservation and maintenance of South- | ern lights. Both the party in power,! and mat out or power, arc equally arrayed against them and whichever remains in the ascendency, their fate will he (he same. Both must equal* j ly sacrifice on the altar of fanaticism, where alone they can conciliate the gods who preside over their iletinies; and their most grateful offering is the riirhts, the Dronertv. ihn existence of the South, which is thus placed betwixt a pair of shears, and will be cut by both blades. In a Idition to this, the Constitution, the only defence against the despotism of numbers, has received a mortal blow under which it is staggering. The rights of the Stages, nave also been stabbed to the heart.; not once, hut twice, and received i two wounds either of which is mortal: one in the complete overthrow of the great principle of State equality;! the other in the declaration of Mr. Killtnore, that he is determined to exercise a power not given him by j the Constitution, but by a simple act j of Congress, and that only to pro- j feet the States?aga:nst the Sia'e1 ! themselves. And here 1 cannot forbear avowing, that niethinksit would lioltni* liorn ' IIIHW UtlUIIIU ?l 11 lit 11 WIIU fll best only repre. cuts the people ofthe United States at second-hand, and who, had lie been placed before them \ as a candidate for the high office which he holds only by chance* would have been signally defeated? it better have I ecome him to follow the example of Washington in the Kentucky ca?p. than to make his an pearanre in his new character, like a i player-king, with a flourish of trum-! pet8, armed cap-a-pie, sword in hand and vizor down, followed by a train of mercenary guards. Thus formi- j dably equipped, he comes before ns, j mounted on stilts, hacked bv his I trusty squire, who "takes no step backwards" and manfully threatens to kill and e^t all disunionists, traitors and seceders. He is the very Quixotte of a "strong government, ! and fears neither lions nor w ndmills. Still further than this: bribery by wholesale, in the shape of donations j of the public lands, all either specifi-1 rallv r?r virlnullir i\lml.?/"l ???? 1 J ?UJ Iiivu^ru ?<.?! II1C (Jciy - ! ment of the public debt, is now the ! policy of every candidate for the [ Presidency, and only the question is ; who shall hid highest, and pay most to bribe the people with their own property. The general fund is to be J vested for purposes of individual am-1 bition; and all those who have here-! tofore paid for their lands, are to he i cheater! of ?nnn?r?a \r\ Kn?? votes of those who have no lands j themselves. Why, gentlemen, what ; would we call a man who, after having borrowed money on a p'edge of { his estate, were to sell it, or give it < away to Torn, Dirk and Harry/ 1 | do not deal in harsh names, but I 1 know one that would suit him ex- j actly. Congress, however, like a corporation, has no soul, and no in-! dividual responsibility. This politi- ! cal land speculation will be another ' blow to (he South, which cannot shares in these liberal benefactions, since, without doubt, whenever the occas on presents itself, the Wilmot Proviso will l>e sprung upon her, and we shall have another compromise in which one party will waive or pretend to waive, its unconstitutional pretensions, the surrender its most important constitutional rights. "Fair play is a jewel,1' as General Drum mond said, when he exchanged Gen. Brown's dead aid-de-camp for his own livinrr nnn. _ .. ? *? o v"w* Another danger menacing the South is ihe extreme probability of a large accession to the duties on import. which will bear pecu! arly h ir I on that section. I believe thai old fashioned obsolete won! 'ecovomv' lias not been whispered in either House of Congress during the last nine months parturition, wliich has pro luced such a hopeful offspring. If we may d/nw any conclusion from j the action of Congress during the lr?4 I >t /1<> a*/i 4 ! ~ a-"-- ? ? ---' - ? ^ jriiCATI urrys III IIIO SCSSIOII, WII'Jll II would seem hills were signed wilhout be* tig rei 1, there will be a heavy (leficitncy in the reve.ute; and in all human probability* the next sossion will see the pub'c lands exchanged, j not to meet the public expenditures, but to purchase voles, an 1 .Slate* by who-'osale. The entire revenue of the tfofewm:?nt will then depen I on imports, or loans, or bo'.h \ an 1 ffd must either borrow millions, or increase the duties on imports to the anrtvjm of million i. Then coinos the other branch of the great system of bribery by which the country is b^o^ht up bv States Midi sections. Tlie itrcal Onubuj Hill for public improvements, as they are called, will almost unquestionably pass next session, in goodly fellowship with a new tarill, both having only been postponed through a prudent apprehension that it might not be sate to increase the grievances of the South, until the Nashville and Georgia conventions had met and ad: JIa i>..* ?t 1-- - iijiiiiicu> ijin uiuiu is snuceiy a doubt that both will be pushed thro' Congress next session by a judicious application of thai great 'motive power,'1 vulgarly but expressively cclled log-rolling. The luminares of the West have only to form a conjunction with the luminaries of the East, and unite the plough with the r ?.wi op Iiinixg-J^IIIIJT * UIHI IIIC Iimi?? n Ui'lH,;. The former will quiet their scruples of conscience on the score of high duties, because they will afford a richer fund for public improvements, in the great West, especially that sublime project of mak ng the Oh'o at all times navigable by act of Congress; and on the otlior hand, the representatives of the manufacturing intereses will quiet their scruples on the score ol ineir share ot :uich large expenditures elsewhere, by acquiescing m lhe "higher law" ol' self-interest and consenting to pay a lit lie in order to get a great deal in return. Thcie never wa s a more sublime field for log rolling presented 1o the contemplation of great statesmen. Tl,? ?!.?., knc i ?~?i. iic; i juu111 iiicii ikicji .1 i v |Jv (ii^ iiui 11 iiif* to expect from North, East, or W est, but to pay the piper for others to dance. It is the weaker party, and experience has shown that even in a representative government restrained in its action by a written constitution?tlie weak will always be the victim of the strong. Where a majority rules without restraint, it will always mask the despotism of the will under the majesty of the law, which niav thus become as great a i tyrant as if it re'gned by divine right. Heretofore the democracy of the North was the great barrier to the rights of the South, which it should never be forgotten entirely depend on a strict construction of the Constitution, which is the only security to the rights of a minoritu. But the clem ocrac.y of the North is now enlisted 1 in the abolition crusade which can only he sucessful by trampling the rights of the South under foot. Thus far, they accord with the "National Whig Party," and appear in t' e new character of assailants rather than defenders of State-rights, wlrch with a rare inconsistency *' \y pre'end to assert at the very moment they ap jjiuh; 01 measures in uirec.i venation of their declaration of principles. Such, to me, a more looker on at a distance, appears to he the present critical position of the alaveholdin# States, one and all?for they are all i inextricably involved in the same fa'e | and will, if Abolition'sm is 1o ru'e | he all obliged either to submit, or to ! ,r..-' i r ?: th i nunc IWI ncT rjjrv"urvftiKJi!? i lii'y mn&t depend on themselves alone, and if united, they can safe'v depend on themselves alone. Hv their continned 01 position they forced the nb1 . i . i .1 tTvi I umiuii coii in ion 10 auuuciou tiu* >> u* | mot Proviso, and resort to cheating i instead of violence. Had they con-1 tinned thus uniter\ they would have, foiled the cheat as well as the ?obber: hut what they might have ga:ned by concert of act:on was lost by c'iscotd; and nothing now remains but to acquiesce in the lo?s, or un'te in the means of rega ning it. It is worth try ng. and you may be assured lhat the good people or the North, are not quite so mad, as to sacrifice the Un'on to a fanatical horde of negro devotees. FUGITIVE SLAVE IN THE NORTH. Detroit. Oct. 8. 1850. Further of tiie Effects of the Fugitive Law.?Considerab'e excitement has been crea?ul bero by the arrest of a fugitive slave, under the new law. An examination took place 1o-day. and in 'onf-equen~e of .u- it t r 1? ~r nit; iiiicitis ui u t'cu 111 niiiiui ui ii*.:groes, who armed themselves and avowed their determination to rescue the prisoner. Scott's Guards, Gray's Guards, and the U. Slates troops were railed out, and with loaded muskets escorted the fugitive from the prison to the court room.? No attempts were made to release ihe prisoner, although some stones, brirks, Rnd other nv?siles were thrown at the marshal s rarriage.? The crowd dispersed, and the negro wad committed to jail in order to get parties to procure evidence Sr.avfb?Capturing?Escape.? See TVfgraphic report! The sla\ e catchers are abroad. In the free States on the Feaboard, ihey move boldly. And the excitement is jp/pat. i it will bo greater. Avarice will mnke vimans ot Ireemen, as will be feen in the care in Pennsylvania.? But die North must he redeemed. It must purge itself, and the country of venality, of the chapge q( coward ice, of the atrocity of submitting U this law. Look to your rights, freemen* and defend them. [Cleavland Democrat. The Ashtabula (Ohio) Sentinel i says: Never have we heard our neonle talk of resist ng the laws, of secession. and dis olution, until the present week. In several public meetings we learn that efforts were made to pledge those preseht to open resistance to the Fugitive law by force of arms. Lcrd'ng men hnve opposed such public manifestations u*.?til there should be more time for re I flection and rool deliberation. But ! the indications have satisfied us that ihe arrest of a fugitive slave, in almost a 115' pari of our country, would he attend with bloodshed. This attempt on the part of Congress to legislate for oppression, to p'acc the Government in a hos'i'e attitude to freedom, to use its power to rob a port'on of our fellow men of their vjo.vgiven ng .is, nas awaKenert a spirit of resistance never before witnosse l in th's region. Indeed, we tlrnk ihnt penp'e who would tamely submit to such a law, must be prepared fo become slaves. j The yoke of the slaveholders has become galling to our neks. We nre stronff'y impressed with the belief lhat the passaTf of that infamous law will be followed by demonstra?'ous unex pected and uulooked for lv., <1 1l 1 '---1 u> '.lit; [iDiniiuiiM wmu lumcieu 11. From the IV Y. Court tf* TnquierThe 'aw for the recovery of fugitive slaves ",c an evcep'ion to these : remarks. \ Tn'ess we are preatly mistaken, thai law embodies the elements of eon''lined controversy and excisemen*. S?mio of its provisions I are so di-eetly a* wnr with what arc penerallv considered and cherished as persona' r'pht?. and are framed so expressly t do direct and wanton 011!mere to aii p-enero?is and kindly fee!;?itr, tint they w'll inevitably awaken w\1e dissatisfaction, and present po'n's for most elective appeals topopn'ar feelinar and sympathy. From that bill, therefore- we apprehend nvsebevions 'esnlts. It will not substantially aid the recovery of fnprit:ve slaves while ?t w-ll deepen an 1 strengthen the prevalent feeling upon that subject. (Jat.f.. thr /'Eron wjt.?The Paris correspondent of the New York Conner and Enmrrer says: "The ^FVoniut f*aV. with whose exploits ;n the air all Pans has been for the last two months familiar, and whom, 1 bel'eve vo 'r correspondent has more than once noticed* has rome at last to a denlorab'e crid in he exercise of his perilous vocation. rrom fans lie proTe led win ins ballon to Bordeaux. an! was there astonish'npr the town hv his ascensions on hcrscbac1'. Cla'e was an Englishman, an ! wis so unfortunate as not 'o speak French with desirahle rorre",pe?s ^nd fluency. His asrens:on had I en made with comp'e*e sn^ess. He had repra'netl the earth, and a mn'titud^ of oonntiv ttfinnin voomrr llin annt of ui>Kis>ii ho was descend'opr hud collected to flraze a? him* I) s hal'oofl, and his horse, and to extend to h'm their aict, if neressary. ''"he hor e was speedi'y freeI from 'lie he'ts, by means of wliHl lie had been suspended, and the ba!'oon. ihns discharged of a considerable we'odit, njfan became l:irhter than ihe a'mospbere, and strnjrff'ed ha?*d lo reas<*nnd. ' The directions of tho nnforlnnate man wo-e misunderstood by his willing {ivsistant*. nivl thn r?r?rdw wKIaIi had already bound the balloon to the earth fern re'y we?*e a<jra?n loosed? (x'ale a* the moment entangled in the net work. The balloon darted up, carrying Oa'e a'ong wi'h it. By a desperate e^ort, he roga'-ned the sort of fat ear whHi had been suspended above him and his horse, anu intended to carry fhe sand bags used in the ascent. There it would seem, from flu renort of his aorearance I nod conduct by the spectators below, he must have been immediately suffocated by the crass which was freely escaping from the balloon, for he lay motionless, like one dead, upon the fiat platform. What afterwards happened w'H be never known with certainty. He and his balloon were soon lost 1o the s;ght of gazers. Not returning lo Hordeaux within a reasonable time, search was commenced in lli? dirnr.tion 1 lir? bntlonn wna sncn lo take. About nrdnight, it was discovered rolling on jhe surface ol the grourd having ea ely dcFcendet without injury of nny kind. Inquiry and search for the body was ineflec tual the who'e of tl at night. "The nevt morning. a *aborer go'nj) to his work ?n the fields was ttltrac ted to something in the woods whic! was ar , object of (right to cows whicl were passing near. It was the feodj of poor Ga'e. which had fitnen i | mile rind a half from the spot wber< ' his balloon had been found. It i ' supposed tnftt the anchor* which n * the second ascent of the ba'lo<i?Lnfti i some object on the surface earth, and caused the piriform, un- J protected by any railing, upon which Gale was lying, to d p. This motion threw him off. Many of his bones were found to be broken. A portion of his face was already de- j votired by wild animals of the woods. Ciale had led a very adventurous life,! full of incident. He had been a lieutenant in the British navy. He had spent several years of his life among ( the Indians* He had be n a p ay actor. It was only since 1848 that he had adopted the new and h s last vocation of iEronaut. M uiy of your readers will remember a man | who in 1831 performed, for a hundred or more u'ghts, in rapid succession, I nt the Bowery Theatre, New York, the part of Maveppa. That man was tiale, who has just come to the melancholy end above recounted." Genealogy of Adam.?The Rev. Dr. Smyth, who for some time past 1 t ' _ 1 .v . i . i 1 1 nas oeen aovocar.ng. wun great learning and power, the doctrine ol the strict unity of the human race, thus refers to Adam and his immediate descendants: In the genealogy of Adam, hut; three of ins children. Ca n, Abel and Seth, are mentioned l^y name, and a few only of his remoter descendants appear on record. In the 930 years he walked upon the earth, his family must have been far more numerous ! than this, and his other children are ; I expressly anuuea to in tno words: I "and he begat sons and daughters." ! "The mother of all living" wab doubtless a fruitful vine, and both she and i Adam were in the vigor of their lives . j for a length of years which the poat-1 j diluvians know nothing o>. Ca n : was a married man when he slev ! Abel, and was then not less probablv i^i 1 l"W\ C tl .! I iiinii izv years pi age. oem, wno was appointed bv God to occupy die place of him whom Cain slew, was born to Adam when he was litt) years old. The natural incrces? of the, . race of man is extremely rapid when j i no hindrance is interposed. "An Island first occupied by a few shipwrecked Knglish in 1580, and discovered by a Dutch vessel in 1607, is said to have been found peopled after 80 years bv lil.OOO souls, all the dccendants of four mothers.' When the creator undertook to people a i ?vnt*l/1 urn ci?nnr?u? ll?o4 i !? " ?? vi in) fiv/ majr ou|;jm;oc dial illio providence arranged for this end, and no hindrance was allowed to interp? sc. It is believed that the death of Abel was the fir^t which occ.urcd in the family of man. It is not an unreasonable supposition. 'herefore, as figures will demonstrate, th it the family of Adam embraced 1U0,000 to 2<K),000 people at the banishment ol Cain. How many of .1 ci uicnc i;u m mi; iuiiuiicsum am, from whom a larg share descended, or whether any, we are not informed, nor are we told when he built his city. If he li^ed as long as father Adam, and built it in the closing period of his life, his own descendants born in the land of Nod, i. c. in the land of his flight, which the name denotes, were far i ore numerous i than the numbers above mentioned ! would indicate. The same remarks j will also apply to Nimvod. Though 1 he may be, as is sa'd in these lectur! es, but of 4,the second generation i from Ham/1 there was abundan 1 time for a population to have arisen ! on the eartn, after a Hood, sufticieritly ! numerous to build cities and form j kingdoms. The city Cain built was not probably extraordinary for size, but at first at least a mere stockade 1earthworkor fortress. Rome was not built in a (lay. It was on' e a hamlet or blockhouse on ihe Capitoline Mount. It was only the "beginning1' of the kingdom fonnded J>y rouieven, ucnonoin, Vyamn, ana itegon of which the historian speaks. Mr. Kendall of the N. O. Picayoune, is now in Europe engnged :n preparing designs and illustrations for his magnificent work on the Mexican Y\ ar. He frequently corresponds with his paper. And from his last lettor, d .ted Paris, tak the following interesting extracts: "Among other notables or celebrities, who are just now attracting great attention in Paris, 1 can mention the Nepauleso Princes, with | iihii dci >oirn ?. i I liny ,! arc considered fine looking men. but if 1 were allowed to take my pi?k of , the Cherokee nation, 1 could find five I hundred far more noble spec mens of , humanity* and who coukl play their ( parts as princes with as much digni* pity and decorum, and far less nonI sense and superstition. These fei, lows have been much petted in Eng. land, probably for the want of other curiosities*-1 heir drestas are cerr tainly magnificent, and very s'rtking . j withal, and a$ they sta ked about, t wrapped up in feathera and finery, at? , tracted great crowds, In ce'o ihey . resemble our Indiana in fact, we to ? you to see them passing through the 9 atreets of Orleans yon might g take them for a party of Choctaws, ft rig*** out in rt?w holiday gimcracUs. a they u*? no mc*t e*c?f?f what they 11 their fill before darting m m totouci nothing wide an. They only consent to nibble away at nuit, and lruits, so that it costs little to entertain them. I sew the entire party the o'.herday at the Hippodrome, the asc?risioti of a man in a balloon, standing upon a horse, attracting much of their attention. The appearance of the'char i i i 1 (iu mil einp", upon wnicn a no en handsome an I srnntiiv aitired girls were hoisted in air by means tinknown to the crowd, also pleased them won le tulip. They remain here a month, and then depart lor their homes ill the East. "By the last news from lnda it would seem that the grea' gun at Beejapore?once afamo' s Manratta city but now deserted?is about to bo brought to England as a trophy. It beats Com. Stockton's b g gun all hollow. The length ofibepl'rcis fourteen feet, the circumference five, and the we ght of the ball tt carries is 3,(XX). '1 he piece was never fired nui one, ana me natives not on y say that the sound of the report alarmed the inhabitants fo:- two hundred m !es around, but that the ball is still flying! Jt shou.d be hoped that it may not come our way. 'I hree thousand pounds of iron, boundingand rirorhemg a!ong through a country would be apt to hurt somebody/1 The Release of Kovmth.?A letter from C >ns*antinople of 1 lie 3d. says: "You porl ips suppo ed that the question re alive to the H ingariau refugees wa s terminated by the convention between the Porte Kuss a, and Austr a. but that is not the rase. This question seems destined to drag on, like all those relative to the Eaxt, and Austria lias ju-t raised ,)re'ens ons wli ch threaten O revive the matter with all the accessories of notes, negotiations, and interventions. According to the convention mentione I above, the Porie engaged lo keep under its guard the Hungarian refugees for a year, conceiving that ncrtod to beirn from the time when they solight refuge in the Ottoman terri'ory, un'ess (he Iranciuillity nl Hungary \v:is anew troubled will.in that period. But as everything is tranquil in the Austrian monrchy. und ns ihe term expires th s month, the Porte lias manifested the intension of resiore:ng Kossuth and his com; an'ons lo liberty. For tlmt purpose measures were taken to pla'e at the disposal of the refugees a state vessel to trans 4 _ - r* :t 1 pun mem 10 iMigian i or even lo America; and a sum ( f 500 pas'res (lii5f.) w:is to be distributed to cach h an at the moment of his Ian ling, to provide for his wants. The.-e arrangement, however, frigh'ened 1 he Austrian government, and witlrn these last lew days M. de Kie/.l. its charge d affaires at Cons'ant-nople del vered a not in which it pretends tiiat the term of a year is to com mcirc runn'ng from the tinif? w'len ihoy were removed into the interior and protests against Ihe iiheiation ol the refugee*. The For e replied, w'th energy and ai preset)' negotiations are going on with equal warmth on both sides. In an extraordinary council just held here if was dee ded that the pretensions of Austria Were illfounde.li and could not he admitted, so the m uter rests. The charge d afTaires n:? *: r i ? <1 w<iiia 111:31.* luoii uciiinis irom ins court: and, on its side, ihe divan ap pears not to yield. It lias applied to ihe representatives of France and England for advVe. The Porte is more irritated against Austria, that for some time past the Journals of Vienna contained articles accusing the Turkish government of ill faith, and of exciting a new revolution in Hungary. When the Porte complained of this, it was stated that, since the press was free in Austria the government could do no'h njr with die journals but the Porte knows perfectly well what it ought toth'uk of the matter, as well as abou* certain intrigues in the Danuhian principalities. Russia has shown aHecv tation in not appear ng iti any w ty in the mvler: it is thought however, that she is not unconnected with it as as she pretends. FASHIONABLE FALL AND __W0$JT *M j rp*HE Subscribers aeknow'edgc I JL lhe:r cb gr.tjons for a libera! i patronage heretofore cxten:led to , 1beri?, and beg leave to announc** tc j ih^ public* that they have on hanu, a larger assortment of FI^i: as?it i heap f OOIH, than usual* all of which are j( tfii latest sty e and weil adapted to the season* They pledge theinpclvfo tt furnsh. a.s inunv. as tine, nnd ha cheru GOODS as can b foumI in an} country store. GROCERIES CROCKER Y, RmUl^IiDfVAnL good enough for any body. Oui friend. and patrons arc invited toeai ami examine for themselves. Thev have also several Two ant Four horse WAGGONS ofefcHn , finish, anil two of three horses whicl they will sell on reawrtebla teim* i ' applied for soon. I ^fyVc^^ SECOND ANNLUA FA JR OF THE S05JITM OAKOLO'MA INSTITUTE. OPENED ON THE I8TU NOVEMBEK NEXT tltt rpiIE second annual Fair of the JL South Caroiina Institute, for the nromotinn r?f Art. MoclmnioiiI In.m. f 7 - T ui nuity, &c., will be held in Charleston, opening on the 18th November, and to continue during the week. Specimens of every branch of Industry ?re earnestly solicited. Premiums will be awa-ded?for the best specimens, a Silver Medal; for the next best, a Diploma. For Orig'nal Inventions, a suitable premium, ai the discretion of the iudcres. A se'ection will be maJe of the best spec men of Mechanism and the Arts?of Collon R:ce, Sugar,'! ol acco, Co' ii W heat, Flour, Kosin and Turpentine?and sent lo the World s Fair, to be held in London in the Spring of 1851. A large and eommod ous build ng has been se ected for the Exhibition, and every attention wii. be paid to the reception ai d care ot articles sent to the Fair. All artic e> mn^t I e d rented to L. M. Hatch, ( haii man of Committee of Arrangeme nts: and he delivered by the 14th of Noveml er. Commnnicat'ons addressed to Jnmes A; Taylor- chairman of Committe cn v orresponnence win meet win prompt at (cut. on. The Hon. Jos. II. Lrwrifciv, of Georgia, will deliver the /nopal Address. on Tuesday night, li e lHlli November. Arrangements have 1 een made with the South Caro'ii a Hail Road Com.) any. to'd nil article intended for the I' air return t'ee of charge. VVM. GRE<*<?. President. E. C. Jones Secretary. nATi.-c v A., v X? -V? x.i v/<l J X-J U MU3J? W?RE RC?Ma. / 'or /Ac exclusive sale of ffaccn <ir* 7?er vcnsard Duloi? and Seabrry's celebrated Grand Action Pi mio Fortes* JM nnd 23(5 Kiny Street, (sit the Rend,) CHARLESTON, S. O. Fvcri/ Instrvmeit sckl is aca trpanird with a written guarantee so that sr.? : ...i -A At i?ir?c m im ruin wtiuivvtrr to lfir J)t/rchaxer. NEW MUSIC, \ ,f R. OATfiS would respecfully invit if 1 the attention of the puttli** ^prpnillv 'o his raluct citftlogue of music ?l public i tions, tl.e copy rights of which !?hv? been secured from tho Composers. .lima liixhnp'a Grand March, founded op Bellini'** rcilebrnted Hondo Finnle, 'Ah! don't mingle,' in 'Lti Somn mbul;i.' utid introdwmc'the new vnVintion, rompo-ed by Bcltin). (never before published ?tid the property of Bocli'-n.) Emb< llisbed with rtcorrect likeness otMi?dnme p, in the character of Aminn. AtUc^ed lor the Phrto Forte by N. C. ItpvluR. Price 37^ cent*. Uvt nuit rtnnx lex Trnpiqut*: (A Night in the Tropics.) A Reverie, on ? motive from Le Deu'rt, bv Kelicicc David. fompo?'d by M >u 'ice Striucnsch. 37^ rentHOraml Polka Fax taxtigue: composed by the into eminent Oui'mist. Vincent A. (S'cbn>i<lt, author of the 'Retreat ' Are ranged for tbc Piano Forte by Miw ArtelKnlin-.tiv^lf 9 \ I'cnln Snnvvside Waltz: rmh^llinhed with n 1?? i?utifid mid correct view of Snntu>id?\ lie re*H??npe of Wiishi'i^mn Irving: w?mpotfd hv Henry T. Omes. 25 cents. Mara Wane Po/ka. 25 cents. Tta Filh <it Rrpiment Polki introducing the Jii -'H hit n l i Franc**.' 25 c?*nif. Tfvf cl'Amour Potka. 25 o?nift* Y?pk~c Dnfyllf Polka. 25 coptn. Fede>'irk Witliam'* O rdn> Polka. 25 i'Ip. u/iA T*n11tn Kt- PTUiu OK i?tc /font*, Sweet Horn*, Polka: beautiful. 2ft cent*. 7,a*t Rose or Summtr, Polka: vey popular 2ft eerita. Love not Polka, hy Rzihi 2ft cen'i. Celebrated Linda Polka, introducing 'Ah ! w aid I he hnppr day was n?*nr.' 2ft c h. Charleston Quadrille*: hy F. W?-olcoU. 37-$ rents. birpairinrt Mary, n henu*ifiil Hallnd, com* tw<e?f hr the lat?* difttingui hed vocalist, John WiNon. 2ft ei-nl*. Kt oxote Waltz*, in 2 No* : by ? J idy of South fiimlinn. ftt> r??nf? e->ch. Palmetto Ref/imcnt Quick Step?emh<*) lithe I wit h n correct n-piesentation of the Kill!. KT..It S>1 ?. ... L.. It nrw miiuwu v ii'iii, onwrp wtun. ivy /irnijr T 0 to*. 25 ( Southrrnrr Quirk embellisliod with 1 ; rert v.'-p^'^fntation of > flotitliein*r. by // nry T: Onti'K. 25f??nf*. i GiXfier Q)tnr'A$ M&tth* ( by n i ^jbjcly of 8mH.Ii CUfo!|n'?. 26 rents. JSw'/. Twt Po'ka. Hf^'erm-uklfole. 25 ota. Carnival cf Veniet Polht, very popular. ) 26 cent* j j S'e>ifrmnrki*che Fat'oriit Polka. 26 rent*, j i Aluo, nil tho Xr?r Mimic reo-|ved bv rxpre?? from the principal publishers in ihe United fim'e*. %*A libwnij discount mud# to dcllew, schoota and ?er.dnniiftrt. '! ^TO.dera f<*r thcso puhHratioRe w>wrn V be. *t>n? to ' ftEcmtSK OATFR. 234 and 2fr6 King wt.(.ii th* ht-rd) ' CfcWnM. :'} ? ? ? > , ^ ti ti rwj AT VWH, Bori?ius- Aftd I Bedsteads, can get t hem ot? re*4enable lernifi by Applying to ? H. fraFA13L PWmiwi C.H,S.C,