University of South Carolina Libraries
x 4 " ? TO THINK OWN SELF OB TttUB, AND IT MUST FOLLOW, A3 TUB NtOttT TUB DAY, THOtf OAif'sT NOT TKBN SB Villi TB AJft MAN." VOL. 2. PICKENS COURT HOUSE, S. C., SATURDAY, JANUARY IX, 1851. HO ?i 1 ir""T~1 1 i in?n i i i i irr?.in1 m ?r- ?i ' LL^? .!? ? -? THE KEOWGG COUKIKDt, FUINTKD AND PUDL16IIKD WKKKI.Y BT TRIMMIER A LEWIS. W. K. Easley, Editor. TKRIVIS. One Dollar and Fifty Cents for one year'* sub scription when paid within three months, Two dollars if payment is dolnyed to the close of the subscription year All subscriptions not clearly limited, will be considered as mado for an indefinite time, and continued till a discontinuance is ordered and all arrearages pai.l. Advcrti*cm?nt* inserted at 16 cents per square or tho first insertion, and 87 1-2 cts. for eitch continued insertion. Liberal deductions inado to those advertising by the year. wr All Communications should be addressed to the Publishers post paid. TR V. GOOD-BYE. 11 BY RAtrn WAIDO T.?K*SON'. Uood-byo, proud world! I'm goinpf home? Thou'rt not my friend, and I'm not thino,-^ Long through thy weary crowd# I roam, A rivon oak on tlio occart's brine? I,on of I've been tossed like >ho driven foam; But now, proud world 1 Tin going homo. Oood-bye to flattery's fawning face; To grandeur, with his wise grimace; To upstart wealth's averted eyo; To supple office, low and high; To crowded halls, to court and street; To frozen heart", and hasting feet; To those who go nnd those who como? Oood-byo, proud world I I'm going home. Fm going home to my own hearth-stone, T>?^ . ?.l ?-iii ? i liwawiiicu in v?xi nv?u nuiH mono? A sccret nook in a pleasant land, Whose proves the frolic fairies planned Where arches preen tho livelong day Echo tho blackbird's roundelay, And vulgar feet have nover trod? A spot that's sacred to thought and God. Oh' whon I'm snfe in my sylvan home, I tread nn the pride of Greece and Rome, And when Tm stretched beneath tho pines Where tho evening star oo holy shines, I laugh at the lore nnd pride of man, At tho sophist schools nnd tho learned clan; For what are they all in their high conceit, When man in the bush with Got! mnv meet t Hero U Morris* "Season? of Love." Seldom linvo the benign effects of tho passion been more felicitously painted:? The spring time ofloro I? txiin nappy r.nd gay. For joy oprinkle* blo*.?oms And balm in our wny; Tho sky, earth, and ocenn, In beaoty ropopo, And all the bright future la couluer tU row. The summer of lore Is tho bloom of tho henrt, When hill, grove, and valley, Their mu*ic impnrl: ./led tho pure gTow of honven Is seen in fond eye*, As Inkes rhow the rainbow That's hung in tho aides. < - > I ... Tho nntumn of love ^ . <j T? llin nitiiEnn /if nliM"1? Life's mllfl Imlinii summer, The smilo of tho yenr, "Which comas, when the Rolden Ripe hnrvcet ia ntore?}; ^4nd yield* it? own blessings? llepose and reward, The winter of loro the beam tfmt we win, While the ntorm *onwln without, From the nun*hine within. jLove * reign l? eternal, * The heart)* his throne; ^ wJMr. j And ho ha* all ncaBons Of liiu tor hi* own. i J. ^ - - ' - ;t"'~?tt- ~ Ho is a mosi lively, good-humored and plo .-.ills of life as if and mis to tai ?u#?h nnd sn ootli wilh an ^ fual ^ountanance. This sori of umxMkieti philosophy is ihal host (riff tliat nature can Mstow on her children*#! llMftbtlUhe burden of rare, and turns every fable, and ghastly hue of memory, to bright] and splendid colours. There is no one 1 enjoy s<|."murfrjns I do him^a cap ati.i bells is a crown to him; a tune upon a flafteotaf isu concert; (if the sun shines, he sports himself in its beam*' rf ihft atnrm m***o skips gnyiy along, and vvh wet to i out a plea* ant story, while he is drying hin^eMi&t the If you nre THE BALANCE OF TRADE, b In the comments we made yester- Jf day on that part of the Treasury Report, in which Mr. Corwin compares the exports of the country with its S| imports, and expresses his alarm at finding that we have brought more wealth into the country than we have v sent out of it, an accidental mispla- | w cing of part of two sentences, made j F o <^*.0 I the mailer is of great importance, we P here reproduce the entire passage, " corrected. v 'Mr. Corwin has made another dis coverv, which alarms him very much. We have sent abroad, in the past ?, year, merchandise and specie, to the 8' value of about one hundred and fifty- f' two millions of dollars. At this dis- j't covery, Mr. Corwin's hair rises on ;u end. Here, he exclaims, is nn ov- h travagant and unsafe importation, f? here is a vast debt due to foreigners. ? 'Bovs, when they take their first J lessons in political economy, are often beset by similar fears. When M they learn, however, that the goods b which we send out are greatly in- ci creased in value on arriving at a foreign market, that, in the ordinary ei course of commerce, they are sold 9 there for prices which coverall the j f< expenses oi men* transportation, ant! 11 yield a profit besides to all who are c concerned in forwarding and disposing of them, their alarm abates. I 'They then begin to see that, to e pursue a healthy and successful trade, ? our imports must exceed our eyports 1' in value; we must bring back more a than we send away- Mr. Corwin ' says there is a balance of twenty-six h millions against us, Ho should have v said, there is a balance of twenty-six S( millions in our favor. We are twen- a ty-six millions the richer on account Cl of our foreign trade. We bring back in the proceeds of our goods, so much ^ more tnan we exported.1 ni We have before us JBastiatV Soph isn,c of the protective Policy,1 an exceedir-gly clever book, translated by P ??r itf ri. ? c o .1 i ci ivirs. iTxi;vy?ira, 01 ouuui v>aronim, which we would recommend to the " 1 |JV1UDUI ?l 1UK VUI Will, IKJIUI't! no makes another annual report to Con- >c gress. If he were to learn nothing P1 else from it, he might, at least, be instructed that there are ?some ahsur- ^ dities so completely* exploded, thai it is well to avoid them in such a state . paper as the annual Treasury Report, ,r if only for the sal e of escaping the ?' imputation of ignorance in regard to c< Ihe commonest matters. YVith re- lr spent to this fancv of Mr. Corwin, hi about the balanre of trade, it appears a' from Bast ia fa treatise, that the shrew vv der part of the French protectionists 21 give it up, as too preposterous to be insisted upon. Mr. <?authi#r de Ro- n| rrs:!!y savs: 'Assuredly no one wish di esto call up from their graves the de F funct theories of the balance of trade. n Others, however, like Mr. Corwin. c? cling to it with a certain stolid tenac- < c< it V. nnd amnnflr thp.cn in nnp \fr 1 no. I fil tibudois, who states bis position thus: 'The amount of importation isaug- h< mentingr and surpassing that of ex- c< portation. Evi&ry year France buys more foreign prodnre, and sells less native produce. In 1842, we see ',v the importation exceed the exportation by two hundred millions. This appears to me to prove in the clearest w ' Id* i i-- i ? - maimer, umi imuve ihdoi" is not Slim- F' cienlly protected, that we are provi- si tied by foreign labor, and that the Y1 competition of rivals oppresses our y( industry. A country may spend, dis- pi sipate its previous savings, may inv w poverish itself, and by the consump- tc tion of its national capital go gradual ly to ruin. This is precisely what bi we are doing. We give every year n two hundred millions to foreign na- tl tiono.V ! Ip>S?5i.C;1.' f ?* The position here taken is nr?ri<w?1v O' that of Mr. Oorwm. The^Frenr.ll tl protectionist finds that France im- tc ports more than she exports, to the rt 6 (amount of two hundred millions of . f?;^fK yearly. The American finan- "J cier observer, that the United Slates {? Import yearly twenty-six millions of h< dollars more than they export, and & concluding that we either lose ?Uat amount, or are running up a debt to {? The* French economist 'n advises protective duties as the rem- e; flfiv. (W rinoll thnBA moi'iftnn '' , 7 -yr BMW A ? HIUI IVIkll t31 ti" " ry. 1&*mW m; ui The fallacy of both the frenchman * n||d American, is eo neatly and unan- ! ?werably refuted by Hgaiiat, I hot Wo W copy the passage here, and inasmuch ? an Mr. Corwin noes not, wo believe, tc sen curious to compare on this sub- hi ict, the accounts 01 the counter with bf lose of the custom house, interpre- w ;d by Mr. Lestibudois, with the $1 jnction of our six hundred legisla- p< >rs. jf Mr. T. despatched from Havre a ai fisseh^freighted for the Uniten States bi Mth French merchandise, principally C 'arisian articles, valued at 200/1001. d< 'It was sold at twenty per cent, m rofit on its original value, which c( eing 40,()00 francs, the price of sale hi ras 330,000 francs, which the assign- m o counted ii;to cottons. The cot- v< >ns again had to pay for expenses m f transnortntinn. insiimnrn. r.nmmis- tli ons, &c., ten per cet. so that when tli le return cargo arrived at Havre, w s value had risen to 35*2,000 francs, w nd it was thus entered at the custom th ouse. Finally, Mr. T. realized a- IF aiu on this return cargo twenty per th tint profit, amounting to 70,400f. th *he cottons thus sold for 42*2,400f. 'If Mr. Lestibud* is requires it, I vv 'ill send him an extract from the ti< ooksdfMr. T. He will there see b< rcdited to the account of profit and ir >ss?;;ia! is 10 say , set aown as 1 u rl, two sun^t the one of 40,000, the in thei* of 70,400 fmnc; and ]VTr. T, u ;els perfectly certain that, as regards lese, there is no mistake in his ac- 1c ount. bi 'Now what conclusion does Mr. m estihudois draw from the amounts I\ ntered at the custom house in this peration? He thence learns that ranee has exported 200,000 francs nd imported 352,000 whence the nnnmnlo rloriiitv pnnfln/loo llioi oli/i ft ws V?VI w V?\> W ? J V v ? 11 \SJL UV.I V, Lj I I KiV OIIO 11 ns spent, dissipated her previous sa. nn ings, that she is impoverishing her- ti elf, and that she has squandered on w foreign nation 152,000 francs of her apitau a 'Sometime after this transaction, nr Ir. T. despatched another vessel gain freighted with national produce > the amount of 200,000 frrncs. But uj le vessel foundered on leaving the s? ort, and **"r. S. hnrl n?lu in i??. 3ril>c on bi Jooks two little items tc nis worded: 'Sundries Hue to X. 200,000 francs, b >r purchase of divers articles des- o< atcned by vessel N. IN 'Profit and loss due to sundries b< DO,000 francs for final and toti.1 loss a f rarffo.1 CA 'In tlie meantime tlie custom house sc iscribed 200,000 francs upon the list i exponauons, ana as there can ol "< iiirse be nothing lo balance this en y on the list of importations, it cnce follows, that Mr. Lestibudois & nd the Chamber must see in this 'y rreck, a clear profit to France, of (1< 30,000 francs. ill 'We may draw, however, yet a- di other conclusion, viz: that accor- ci ing to the Balance of Trade theory, T ranee has an exceedingly simple tanner of constantly doubling ner tt ipitol. It is only necessary, to ac- th >mplish this, that, she should, after P? itering at the custom house her ar- gi ol?o ? <1 ~ I/IV9 awi cApui tnuuili Ullinu IlltSlII to |J' 3 thrown into the sen. By this jn iurse, her exportntions can Sfjeedily w 9 made to equal her capital; impor- ?< it ions will he nothing, and our gain U1 ill be a!! that the ocean has sv/al- ri iwed up. d( lYon are joking, the protectionists m ill reply. You know that it is im- tl ossiblr that we should utter such al> L irditieb. Nevertheless, 1 answer, b< rni do utter them, and whut is more, ! < ran give them iife, you exercise theni ol ractically upon your fellow citizens o\ i much, at least, as in your power c< > do. di 'The truth is, that the theory of the If alance of trade should be precisely li| jvcrsed. The profits accruing to ^ le nation from any foreign com- tc lerce should Ira calculated by the re verplus of the importation above ol >e exportation. This overplus, af w >r the deduction of expnses, is the ai ;ai gain. ta Here we have the true theory, and a? 1 _ ! I ? ? ? -? -? ~ is ojio wnicn leans directly to treeam in trade, i now, gentlemen, a- d< mdon you th:.a theory, as 1 have in ane all those of :he preceding chap ki ICS. I>(v with it as you please, ex- "1 fgorate it as you will; it has noth- at ig to fear. Push j it to the farthest w Ktreme; imagine, if it so please you, ct tat foregn r.atmns should inundate di s with useful produce of every de- m sriptton, and SSfc nothing in return; w lafpur importations should be irsfi- al tk4ftud our exportation* nothing, fcn na?ino all th?s, and still I defy you th i prove that we shall be the poorer ?t i conseiuence.1 '4 (?' If Mr. C01 win should still have ai iv doubts concerning bis doctrine of fil ie balance of tracSo, it will be eftRy cr >r hmi to re.mav<|;them by a little d< ?periment m his own account. ?? [r. Corwiu ifi from Ohio, and pork w thi jfnwt fltftpl? of this State- 'toil re m>i? . m ' % m make a purchase of one hundred it irrels of Mess Pork, at Cincinnati, h here it may cost him, perhaps, c 1,050, and let him cause it to be ex a jrted from that city to New York* t? he should fcet back for it in money id goods $1,237 50, which it would tl "iriiir nt tlin nracont r>rin?n 1W? n ?>Q ??? ??1V J/I MUVMV |V? ll/VO IllylVf JLTJLI CI orwin, according to the theory laid t< )wn in his report, will have lost loney. Ilis imports will have ex- g jeded his exports by nearly two 11 mid red dollars, and lie will be so t mch the poorer for having sent his b ;nture of pork to the New York r iarket. A plain man in counting e ic money, and comparing it with le original cost of the commodity, cl ould assure Mr- Corwin that h? n as a gainer by the transaction, but u lat would be clearly against the r leory of the balance of trade, and il lerefore the plain man must be in ti le wrong. r On t lie other hand, if the pork v ere to he spoiled in the transporta- r on to New " ork, so thai it should ri 3Come a total loss, Mr. Corwin hav- S ig exported goods to the amount of 1< thousand dollars, and got nothing s i return, would be able to congrat- v fate hirqself that although ni'opl? in v eneral might look UDon him as a t Nsei'i yet by his own theory of the c alance of trade, he had doubled the F loney invested in ihe enterprise.? c I Y. Ev. Post. c ? ? ? ? c From the N. O. Picayune- 1 The Russians or the South.? t "But the honorable secretary and p ic other gentlemen who sell their r len to work on the cotton planta- li ons and their women for somi'ihinnr 1 rorse." t ' Hem. Ah! Did you ever meet r Russian? In your own country, I e lean ?(England*) i< "Yes, 1 met one at dinner once." g "Did you go out of the way to be c pcivil to him, because he owned c jrfs?" 4 ' 8 "No, but didn't go out o'* my way a ) be uartic.ularlv cranial with him/1 I 1 "Exactly- Ttic cases are precise- ] r parallel. The Southerners are J nr Russians. They come up to the s Forth to be civilized; they send their i ays here to be educated; they spend t good deal of money here. We are e vil to them but not over genial? 1 >me of us nt least are nct."^ s This precious extract is from an ar- r c)e in Fraze'r Magazine, (London,) j illed "Catching a Lion by a New 1 orker," and republished ill Si ringer * Townsend's International Month' Magazine, November, 1850. We Dubt not the source of the article ; f le pen-holder out of which "this < lintv driblet ran'1 was held-in the so- s illed "Metropolis" of the Union.? t here are natty phrases, cant terms ~_i n i._ 11 1. ?i -? . ii ia cm umrHMi eiiuugn 10 snow inai i le writer knew the locality well; al- < lough he may be one of those ink- t >t bandits from England who mi- i rate to New York and hire out their > ?ns for a living; or possibly a genu- J m American, honestly believing hat he writes?for that the fciilir.g a F many in the North towards we c Russians" of the South, isdul) des- r bed in n?r extract, will not bear r snial amoiur those who hav#? livr?H s inch in the North, especially with F ic teachers and literary circles.? t et the paternity of the extract, then, 1] s either alien or domestic, we be- li Bve the ideas developed to be those v f a somewhat influential class of v Lir own countrymen, and shall so v insider them. That there is a lu- s icrous tone of annoyance, and a a <rdly di ;dain of each other in the t lerary cliques of the three jyreat forthern cities has long-been evident I >the outside.?The"Mutual Admi ition Society" Boston?and odd mix ["clergymen who meddle least of all ith divine thinpps, rampant old maids fl id sweet singing poets?hold the ir, tallow, calico and Wall streets 0 iatocracy whom Willisscented with h weiice!> an*i imptisod into " Japonica- gi )in," kid glove* and French patents, h great contempt. The huge pump- ! in regards its brother vegetable,the y Dutch cabl.;*#?," with eye askant a id i oils over t o th-j other side. Mean* *j hile the "Philosophical Society" n slique ofPhilp.delpnianovv and then p their fingers into Uncle Sam's mt, and dilate largely on the days ben the right-angled city was not toflrelher rirovincial. Cnrions is it . deed to lie hold a u Wistar party" at 1 is latter home of all the talents, J ave professions, erudite editors f ometimes,) potential office-holders, t( id sucking poets, gather over the oaoing taole of oysters, terapin and salad, and *6ttle the fate of v >ctors, medical schools, magazines I id humble aspirants to "the club;" if hich laborious duty done the lucky n iu rJ i;^w. fr e. 1 mny at times, low down in the small ours, be seen following irregular urves around right-angled corners, nd have been known to go off at a mgent over the eurbstonel. 'These be your gods, oh! lsreal.' To liese sets of worthies?to Cambridg nd Yale, to Saratoga and Broadway o the medical schools of Philadelphia ,1? ... . iL. n - r ,1 f -' -uu *vw, iiiu jLvussrans 01 me ooum, ;o yearly to be civilized and edicated. We spend our money here; "argal," we are civilly treated. iut not genially. Oh! no of course iot. But our dollars are genial nough! Now, without alluding to the slanier on slavery implied in the coinnenccment of the extract, or giving induo importance to the impertilence of its writer, we ask our reades f there is never to be a time when he South will be independant in tiind. SOP.ififv. and mimiifantiiraa? vhy may not Now Orleans' by earying out box contemplated improvenents, stand (orth the exponent of Southern civilization! Aro our coleffes always to be effects, and our cnools hot-beds for Northern uni ersities? Have we not self-respect, vhich will spare those who think with he magazine contribut9rs the need if nnnlmvinrr finr l/onn'miy Aiir . YC"1 >any f It is useless to say such feelings lo not exist. They do; and the evilence is the catalogues of Northern !olege?, the millinery bills of Sou thern adies, the rush of Southern planters o Northern watering places; and the >ublication of such articles in a ETuopean magazine of note, copied for lome circulation into a popular New |rni'lf npnnilioul. WO hovo nn rlacirn , ' ~ ~ o fan* the present sectional excitenent, and, so far as that is concernid, we can afford to laugh at the stores of "chaining negroes at ni^ht in ;iu-uuusesi mid ieeaing inem qn ooiieu ;otton seeds;" of Secretaries of the sabinct at Washington vending their laves at New Orleans for prostitution ird similar amiable stories of the 3utchinson Family, Whitter, Russell Lowell, and other Abolition poets. Hut we are earnest, for a total seces;ion in matters of education and for dependence thought on what is >est for southern manners and interests. A few more kicks in the face ike the one that we have copied, :ui i? - uiu ijunaiu^y wumuy liavc tt Dvglltning nado at Home literature; and our >laniers will discover that the south 8 "genial1' as well in summer as in vinter. Truth is Powerful.?TV. HerJJ LI!.L 1 i .1 ^ iiu, puuiisnen ai ine oourt i-icuse ot [TlarVe county, in this State, in its islue of the 25th instant, makes the bllowing announcement: "Our renders will perceive, from he following article, that we have ihanged ground upon the great quesion of the day, and are now battling or what every Southern man should, riz: "Equality in the Union, or Inde>endencc out of it." The reasons civpn fnr *fi ire strong and cogent; we regret the crowded state of our columns will lot permit us to lay them before our eaders. The Herald has been a trenuous advocate of the the comiromise measures from their first inroduction in Congress. It is now, 11? ... iuttcvoii omioiiet'j null HUH 1116 man* iness to avow it, that the theory vhich appeared plausible on paper, vhen put in practice works but one vay?the North's portion, excluding lavcry from the territories, works admirably, while that apportioned out o the South, can't move a wheel. We Wftlr.onm nnr friftrula of herald to full fellowship. [Montgomery Advertiser. Small Pox.?The Asheville, N. C. fossengfcr of the 1st inst says: 4iWe will state for the information f all, that thus far, the Small Pox as ho/>n strictlv rnnfincrl fn Won/1fS?? ?VV* I.V AAVIIliUI onville and its immediate neighixjrood, and that there have been just 4 cases in all, onHy one of which has et. proved fatal, All other repor'3 re entirely false in every particular. Iiero is one more, however that is ow doubtful." The editor of an exchange paper ItA viAtrAM ?a?ar In 4- mV-> ?< J KV9UV urvvi o?TT uiu mitJ miU mt was ihe ghost of a sinner who led without paying (m his paperrwfts horrible to took upon?tha host of Hamlet was no circumstance > it. Toj make a blockhead jf>ass for a rit, bestow upon liim a fortune of 10,000 a year. There ia something t.the voice of doubloons that comiand? attention in the best regulated I Death op Editors.?The Wft* mington Commercial of Tuesday announces the death of Henry 1. Toole, Esq., editor of the Aurora of that place. Mr. Toole has been for some years connected with the press pf North Carolina, and / xs a man of more than common ability. The commercial says of him: "ttis social qualities acquired a large circle of Attached friends, and his talents commanded respect in every situation !* was called to fill." From the Aiubama papers we atm pained to learn the death of John McCormick, esq., late of the Monttromerv Advertiser, who hns for m* ny years boon a distinguished member of the editorial corps of Alabama. He was accidentally drowned while crossing the Alabama river, on the 24th ult. The West Alabamian refers to him in the following terms: The deceased was a man of strong mind, which had been highly improved by reading and reflecting, of great sociability of disposition, of warm anil generous feelings, a high-toned gentleman, an upright, public spirited and useful citizen- As an editor, he had but few equals in the State. He leaves a widow and three children to mourn hts umirwoljr death." W? learn from tho Vicksburg Senj tinei that Gen. C. M. Pnc?, for ten years the able and efficient editor of the Mississippian, died at Jackson on Friday n orning, the 20th tilt., at 3 o'clock. Mr. Lemuel Gill, publisher of the Eutaw (Ala.) Democrat, died in Mobile on the 3H)th ult. He arrived there a few day? previous, suffering from diarrhoea, which became aggravated and caused his death. South Carolina Atlantic and Steam Navigation Company.?The Charles* ton Courier says: "The entire amount of private subscription to this com pany, one hundred and twenty thousand dollars, was taken up yesterday forenoon, in a very short time after \Vifs Socks were opened. By the Act of incorporation, a like amonnt. of 125.000 will be loaned to the company by thi? State, and Ihey have au*> thority to extend their capital to one million nf rlrwllore If Jo w? M- V ID CC5HIIiaiCU that the subscription, made yesterday, will build the first ship, and that she may be put afloat by the first of July next. One subscription only went to the highest amount limited by the law ($12,000,) the rest wa& for smaller sums, many being for a single share, $1000. Gentlemen, our West.?[They seem to have good standards, off toward the Prairies. We have received a copy of a Discourse, delivered by Rev. J. H. Linebausrh, at Baton Rouge, La., which is full of the chivalric sentiments and judicious teachings which a new country most needs. The following passage will show the tone of it:?Home Journal.] "Manners alone make not the gentleman. They may be, and are one of the evidences of a gentleman, because of their connection with good principles and good feelings A? dissociated from sterling principles and benevolent feelings, they Rrer nothing worth. Bv gentlemen, we mean nim who in character is honest and honorable, who, through the loftiness of principle scorns to do what is unjust, or dishonest, or dishonorable, who never deceives the unwary* nor imposes upon the unsuspecting* nor defrauds the ignorant, nor betrays the innocent, who has continually abidingly, in the language of Mr. Burke, that sensibility of principle, that chastity of honor which feels a 11 _ * "T si mn ntvo a wovina. w e rowft him who, to the loftiness of virtue, adds the gentleness and forbearance of a generous and magnanimous chivalry; who shields and protects the person a*>d character of the humblest and most friendless female, Secause she wears the form, and has the weakness of woman; who to Ms enemies is lornearing, mougn ho has the power to injure; who to thr poor is cond' sccnding and kinc, tnougli they have no power to repr^; who to the rich, and great, and distinguished, is respectful without being obsequious, civil without being servile; who to the humility, genlleness and chesty of the christian, adds that firmness, dipt imy mm neccssary lor in? vindication of nis own honcis when impeached, fot the preservation of hi# own character, when assailed." B*'; : . I y Truth?He who speaks lightly ?f I male society is either a numskull ?* | knave-the iormor not having . enough to discern ;ts benefitj?^?n? th? <uu cu? viv**, - ' .>