University of South Carolina Libraries
B t*? gggggggsggg g m ggggg! ^ COOKI.VO. S[7i|?lit lite Island of Jersey, England they hare a mode of cooking which is peculiar to those islanders whose govern, ; ing principle is to make a little go a great way. Independent of this, however, | when the process is properly conducted, i the delicious flavour and richness which is communicated to the smallest quantity and quality of the animal food employed, is a very strong recommendation for its adoption, which requires neither extra j tnmMc nor expense. The meat ro be operated upon, is first cut into steaks and fried with shred unions in butter, over a quick fire, until it is well browned and about half cooked; it is then transferred altogether into a j xtewpan, water being added to form a j -considerable quantity of gravy, when the process is completed ; and the whole is j left to simmer for the space of six or ! ' eight hours, when, the proper seasoning! being added, it is served up hot?a disii! tit' for a President! I well remember J meeting some friends in London, who, j ??n describing a dinner at which they were j present*! he day before, the. tickets for | w hich were a guinea each, they all spoke in fiVprufes of>a dish of beet-steak and onions co< ked aftcr thia manner, declar.; tng.ij to he superior to nil the venison gariKi" and poultry at the table. Will your readers try the effect, even with hard and-xopgh meat of inferior qunlity ; notn however., to the exclusion of ihat winch i* "young, ?ht, and tender. I am, Mr. EJTiof, a iover of good living but ^ . No EriCvRE. ^Farmers' Cabinet." }V-\v . J-. . i jTriHrt the New Genesee Farmer. Mosses. Editors?It is well known that tins greAt eneiny of the Rutu Bagu (and othVr.turjiipj crops is the small flea or flv that destroys the plants almost as soon as they appear above ground ; and as the crop is becoming extensively cultivated j is is'vcry important tbatsoine method he ! devised and made known for guardia? ngntn.st this insect 1 bnvrv long been in the practice of raising Ru*a Ragas, and for the past five ; years have not failed of obtaining a good j crop. My mode is simply to snak the ! seed21 to 4? hours in Tanner s Oil, and S then roil it in plaster to facilitate the ! sowing. A very small quantity of oil is ! sufficient, as it is only necessary to mois.! ten the seed thoroimlv. and allow it to I penetrate. The offensive odor of the oil j imparted to the seed, and the first leaves of the young plant are so impregnated with it that the flies will not eat them. 1 1 have frequently tried the experiment of towing a smalt quantity of seed without any preparation, and have almost invoriablv found these pihnts nearly or quite destroyed, while those from the prepared j st'ed escaped uninjured. 'To the incredulous 1 would say, the trouble is hut little, the expense nothing therefore, try the experiment. The oil does not seem in the least to injure the vitality of the seed. 1 have known it to vegetate well after soaking Un days in the oil; but I think two days is sufficient, and prefer it to a longer period. L. R. PARSONS. I Perry, N. Y. May 28, 1?41. i TO MARK trOOU SHINING BLACK INK. j Take two ounces of nutt-galls in coarse pou der; one ounce of logwood in thin chips; one ounce of sulpl?te of iron, three-fourths of an ounce ot loaf sugar. t> *i a - n_ _ ? j i i . .i :? i 1X111 ine guns nnu inw-jytHJU luucuici in ' three pints of water, till the quantity is reduced to one half. Then the liquor must be strained through a flannel into a proper vessel, aud the remainder of the j ingredients to be addded to it. The mix- j ture is then to he stirred till the whole is j ^issoh'ed; after which it must be left at; rest for twenty-four hours. The ink may | then he decanted from the gross sediment,.! and must be preserved in a glass bottle weH corked. Blub ink. Dissolve one ounce of, gum-arabic io a pint of water. In a part j of this gum-water, grind a small quantity | r\ f nrnociQ n hi tic* vnn nriatr ikne Knncr if t/i ! V? UWVIMK WIMUJ J W%l ii'MJ HIMV ? fc ?V j any depth or color you choose. Indigo I will answer this purpose very well, but it is not so fine a color, nor will it remain .suspended so uniformly, in the water. 1!bd ink. In the above mentioned gum.water, grind very fine, three parts vermillion with one cf lake or carmine. "Thin is a very perfect color, but may re. -quite to be 3haken up occasionally. To j .mate the common red ink such as is used by bookbinders for ruling, &c. infuse half, ? pound of rasped brazil-wood, for two or j inree days in a pint of vinegar; then filter1 or strain it, and add one ounce of gum-1 arabic and one ounce of alum. Ii may afterwards be diluted occassional!/ with *< >r. Bellow ink. Steep one ounce of tu- 1 nwic, in powder, in half a gill of alcohol; I let It rest.twenty-four hours, and then add an equal quaaiitv of water; the whole on .a cloth, and express the colored liquor, j which mix with gum-water. Kuril or i other spirits may be substituted in the : place of alcohol. A solution of gamboge < in water, writes a full yellow, but comes far short of tumeric in hnghtness. Green ink. To the tincture of tu-i picric, prepared as above, add a little prussiin blue. A variety of tints may be formed, by vatyirig the proportions of these two ingredients, and no artificial color can excel it in beauty. Purple ink. To the blue ink. as de- j jscFibed abu*'e, odd some finely ground; lake: or instead of this the expressed j juice of the deepest colored beets may be substituted, but it i? more liable to fade. an??? iiip . JUMMBBwcwnaM ibiii i. . With either of these a variety of tints may bo formed by varying the proportions. "" 9\ Q ft BiSfO 113L" In Senate. Thursday. July 8th. The bill from the House to distribute the proceeds of thepihlic lands was read twice and refered to the committee on the Public Lar^s. The resolution calling for the names of officers dismissed was taken up when Dr. Linn, of Missouri continued h speech commenced the rjav before, till the hour " - t A ^ I_ J A ' y t tor tne oruer 01 mo nnv arnvca, wnen th2. Bank Bill was taken up. B ank Bill. Mr. Walker offered an amendment proposing that a list of all notes discounted with the names of the endorsers, and a list also of all bills of exchange bought and ?ol:] bv the branches be sent to the presiding officers of the Senate and House t>f Representatives. The motion wa< advocated by Messrs. Walker, Benton, Calhoun, Allen. Olithhert and Woodbury, and opposed by Mr. Clay. It failed by a vote of 23 to 25. An amendment whs then adopted, 24 to 23, on motion of Mr. Walker, allowing ten or more stockholders to examine the private accounts of individuals with the hank. Other amendments were offered by the opponents of the hill, winch were lost, except ane providing that no part of the proceedings of the bank shall he kept secret from Directors appointed by the Government. Ju/y9ih. This dav was spent in dehating an amendment to the bank bill excluding from accommodation at ' the branches as well as at Washington, all directors nnd members of Congress, It was finally determined that directors shall not borrow more than $10,000 Aves 25, Nays 21; and tha? members of Congress shall not borrow at all Ayes 23 Nays 2*2. Jv}y U)'h. Dr. Linn continued his speech during the morning hour on the resolution calling for the names of officers removed; after which the day was con sumed in discussing nn amendmont-offered to the bank bill to prohibit the directors or stockholders from making donations. The anrendment was finally adopted, after being so modified ns to allow the stockholders but not the directors, to make donations. Monday, July 12th. The morning hour was consumed in presenting memorials and petitions, and in remarks bv Mr. Tailmadge and others on the subject of a bankrupt law, which were suggested by memorials on that subject. The follow, ing is a part of the remarks of Mr. Tallmadgc. After presenting a memorial from citizens of Missouri in favor of a general bankrupt law, Mr. T. said he had heretofore presented numerous petitions on this subject, not only from his own S'ate hut from several other States in the Union. 1 have, said he, purposely forbore to to occupy the time of the Senate with any remarks upon them. I came here to work and not tn talk. \Vf? nil anfirin.n t*>d a workincr. not a talking session. I am prepared to * ote on all questions which will he subm it ted for our consideration. And I would now break through the rule prescribed to tnysclf but far the attempt, in a certain quarter, to make improper impressions on the public mind in relation to what I deem ?>ne of the very greatest measures of relief which can he adopted by Congress at this extra session, namely, a Gknkral Bankrupt Law. A friend has called my attention to a rescent article in the Globe on this subject. I intended to call the attention of the Senate to it at an earlier day, hut did not wish to interfere with Senators who were occupying the morning hour with another matter* The article is as follows: " Tun Bankrupt Law.?We perceive a great deal of anxiety in different parts of the Union, about the fate of the bankrupt law reported by Mr. Henderson, in (he Se^'e, and we rnn (ell them something about if. 0~^T It is not in Mr. Clay's programme, and that omission is a death warrant to it. Mr. Clnv will not let it pass now. It is pood political capital, and was supposed, at the last election, to have been worlh 800 000 votes to the Federal party. Thg bankrupt law mustthen wait the approaching Presidential canvass in order to give Mr. Clay the future benefit of it. The petitioners for the bankrupt bill may, then, go to sleep till it suits Jfr. Clay's political views to pass their hill. In the mean time, the bill ;nust either include or not include hanks and trading corporations. To include them is becoming more popular every day; and it is believed that the mass of the Democrats (perhaps all of them if the State hanks are loft out) would support a bankrupt bill which should so include (hem ; on the contrary, the party will go against a hill which dries not include these institutions. If the friends of the bill which join the Democrats and puts in the hanks the bill may he passed this sescion without the license of Mr. Clay, for a bankrupt law to include banks would immediately regulate the currency and supersede the argument for a National Bank.1' It is not my purpose to attempt a vindication of the honorable Senator from Kentucky (Mr. Clay) from the unjust as. persions contained in this article. lie needs none at my hands. What I have to say is not so much op his account, as on acconnt of the sudject to which this attack relates. I had hoped to find, at least, onp sub. ject for the legislaton of Congress, upon which the deliberative wisdom of this body could pass, without reference to the paltry considerations of party. And if there be one matter, above all others, which ought to be exempt from such a malign influence, it is thai of a Bankrupt Law. From the first introduction of this measure, at a former session, down.to.the [ resent true, its friends have fiadcavored i to divest it altogether of a party charac, tcr. I appeal to all who were present at the former discussions of this measure, i whether such has not been the course of its friends. With what painful regret, then, do we see an article, the one just read, from a paper, recognised as tlte drgan of a proud and powerful party, attempting l to bring this subjeet into the arena of par tv polilic9, and to create, whether intentional or not. the most erroneous impres* j sions in regard to one of its most devoted | friends. The honorable SeDnlor from Kentucky is represented as hostile to the passage of a bankrupt law at this session, because hp wishes to keep the question open as " political capital" till the noxt Pres. idential election. Was there ever a more unjust aspersion upon the motives and 1 character of one of the most distinguished and high-minded men which this country has ever produced ? I do not wish, nor ! intend, to indulge in harsh language on :; this occasion ; but I leave it to bo judged , ! of by honorable gentlemen of any and of ii? . rw-% I*.* * 1 all panic*, l o ee Kept as political capi! tnl till the next Presidential election ! j Why, sir, what has been the uniform i eours?; of the honorable Senator from j Kentucky on this subject, who. is not at ! | this moment in. his seat ? .He has been i ; its open, zealous, devoted advocate, when* -lever it has been, presented. If, atthcj commencement of this session, he entermined doubts whether Congress would bo : able to act upon it, with the other great measures which wore cdled for by the ! country, is it to be imputed to him 'as a | fault ! Or rather, is it to be charged upon ' him as a premeditated design to defeat ! the measure ? The gross injustice of such an imputation, or such a charge, is appnr:?cnt on its face. Other gentlemen, friends of this measure, entertained the same j doubts. I was not one of that number, i j I have urged the importance of it from the "i very first call of the extra session down : j to the present time, as a measure more ^calculated to give immediate relief to the t' country than any other. I have believed, and still believe, that it can be better acted upon at this, than at fthe regular session of Congress. And I. believe the honorable Senator from Kentucky, as woll as other gentlemen, have come to the same conclusion. It is with uafeign. ed regret, therefore, i:hat I see any attempt to impeach or distort: the motives of hon oranie gentlemen in relation to tneir ac-' tion on this great notional question ; and more especially the motives of the distinguished Senator from Kentucky, when that patriotic State, through her representees here, has so gallantly arid disinterestedly come up to the relief of the unfortunate. The Land Bill. was reported from the land committe after which The Bank Bill. was taken up and various amendments were proposed by IVfr Wright, all of which failed, some of them after considerable debate. The" most important of them was one to exclude the government from holding stock.. July 13th. Dr. Linn again furnished another dose of his speech on the resolution calling for the removal of officers, after which the bank bill was taken up. Mr. Wright moved as an amendment that if the bank should suspend specie payments, its affairs should be committed to trustees, by due legal process, and then if it should not within a specified time be j ready to resume, the trustees should proI coed to close its business. Messrs. i Wright, Buchanan and Benton ndvo! cated, and Mr. Berrien opposed the moj tion. It failed 32 to 25. i July 14*A. Dr. Linn repeated his old | doses, after which the bank bill was taken up. A motion was made reserving to Congress the power to modify or repeal the charter, but again withdrawn. Mr. Clay of Ala. moved so Ho amend tVi* Kill tliiit nfVpr Kii.sinnncinn. thi> hills nf j the bank should not be received, in pay. j raent of dues to the U. States. * On moj tion of Mr. Clay of Ky. the amendment ! was so modified that the bills should be refused only during suspension. Mr. Clay of Ala. wished then to withdraw the j amendment but could not. It was then modified by him so as to make suspension a cause of forfeiting the charier. In this form the amendment was unanimously | adopted. An amendment was adopted requiring j the Secretary of the Treasury to remove j the depositee from the bank ifn case o!f i suspension during the recess of Congress. | Various other amendments wtire offered i and rejected. In the course ofifce after! noon Mr. Calhoun remarked he supposed ! the opponents of the bill might get through I the amendments which they hud to offer I I... ??_. I f^r.L , uy o<u!jiuu) me xiui. House of Representatives. July 8ih On the resolution calling upon the President to inform the House if he had sent the Attorney General, oir ; any officer of the arniv, into New York for any purpose connected with the case of McLeod, Mr. Hunt spoke till the morning hour expired, when the loan hill was taken up. Mr. Tit-kens made a speech of an hour against the hill, when in the very midst of his subject, appa| rently not half through it, he was cut 1 short by the chair. He remonstrated ! much and loudly, pronouncing the rule ! the most ahominable regulation that ever was ever invented by tyranny, and it was fill rorvo .fia/llvr nrlrrti\ni^liA/l U*? Z"1 j ins iiumuiii^iigu uy iliC V^lia II ! that he was out of order that he finally ! took his seat, giving notice that he would as soon as it should be in order, move to I amend the hill by introducing a substitute, ! giving ample means to the Treasury, but i avoiding the evils of which he complained in the bill now in consideration. Messrs. Sergeant, Rhettand Fessenden next spoke their hour, and Mr. Sattonstall commenced a speech, soon alter which j he gave wt.y for a motion to adjourr ! Mr. Sergeant's speech was mostly in rc 1 plv to remarks of sectional charactc made by Mr. Pickens, who complaine that injustice was done to the soutii h ; collecting taxes there and expending th I money mostly at the north. \ Mr. Rhett who succeeded Mr. Scrgear took occasion to make the following re marks. He believed that, next to the si cred hook of God, the Constitution of th United States was the most perfect pnpt ever seen in the universe, and he shoul consider it a? one of the heaviest calam ties, not to the people of this country n!on< hut to ail nations, should it ever go dowr Mr. R. was content with the Constiti tion. He wanted to see no inrfovatio qpon it. If Congress forbor eto trend upo doubtfnl or equivocal ground, the effect c the Constitution would be nothing bu pence and harmony, all the wild specula tions of libellous intriguing foreign! Whether uttered behind our backs or i ourpresence, would prove as false in thei result3as they were base and calumniou in the assumptions on which thev wer founded. All our difficulties?a!! thn marred our harmony or alienated our feel Lngs from each other arose from the exei ci.se of doubtful powers ; and, unless thn exercise should be refrained froin, thes alienations would increase till this might fabric of freedom, the precious labor r : our : fathers' hands, inust go down an [ tumble into ruios But Mr. R. was not on j one of those who believed that this belove i beloved Union of ours was destined to b dissolved.. The history of the past- ex hibited no instance in which a cnufedera cy of States had been dissolved. No the tendency of confederacies lay in th opposite direction. They had always be come more and more consolidated, ti some military tyrant arose and set his foe upon the neck of the whole. Mr. R? did not now fear, and neve had feared, a dissolution of this Union It was deeply founded in the affections c the People; it was consecrated by re membrances of the past, and by the mo* elevating hopes for the future : till Amer ican should forget both, they never wou! consent to break their bond of union And h? believed that the only reason wh; other nations had ever doubted the con tinuance of this Confederacy was to b found in the contentions of Representa tives on that flortr. He knew of nothing in the present state of things which brea tiled any thing like antipathy against th North ; nor was he apprehensive that th anticipations of evil in which our enemie i might indulge ever would he realized b; the legislation in that Hall. But whei strangers looked on the scrambles whirl sometimes took place in that House fo Government appropriations, and the an gry feelings which they sometimes pro duced, was it not to be expected that, i they wished our ruin, their eves woul< beam with eager hope to see it accom plishod ? Doubtless they would. Bu they were doomed to disappointment the day had not arrived that was to witnes the dissolution of the union of thest Stftes. Mr. R. had seen a very learnci pamphlet, the aim of which was to de monstrate from geographical considera tions. and the differences in climate am production, that this Union could 110 long continue. Mr R. was no believer ii this sort of geographical logic. How of ten were those whose geographical rein tion was precisely the same found at dag gers points with each other and vice versa No; his hope was in the deep sympathy which hound together the Anglo Saxoi race?In his associations of the past an< the common anticipations of the future These would hold our people firmly to gelhec, and he defied the name the malir< or the wit of man to separate then frotr each other. Notwithstanding all this however, he did believe that the Constitu tion operated unequally ; hut if it workec still more unequally; he was not going t< give it up. The Constitution was preci. ous to him in itrf permanent principles though it might be unequal in its temper ary operation. Make it hut what it wn< intended to be ; keep it above ail suspic. ion by the purity of legislative action let the Oene.al Government be what ii was intended to be, our shield against for eign nations. Do this, and union and li berty would long be preserved for our posterity. As to what had been said about rivalry between Alabama and South Carolina, Mr. R. did not believe that their interests were in the least degree antagonistic. Iiet each be content to do as well as il could, and they might long live in harmony and peace. The same was trueol the South and the North. Their interests harmoni2ed?the North furnished to the South that best of all markets in tue world?a domestic market?nor was there a man at the South who would nol infinitely prefer to wear a suit ofAmeri. can manufacture to being dependent for his clothing on any nation on earth. This was their feeling?it pervaded the whole South, but they could not give up their rights?their pride, their interest, their duty alike forbade it. Give us, said Mr. R., the Constitution ; that is all we ask; hut we cannot give up us our rights under it, and we willl not. Mr. Fessenden expressed his satisfaction at listening to the utterance of such opinion in such a quarter. His mind had been greatly relieved by it, hut he regretted to find, when the gentleman came to explain that all his attachment to the Constitution and the Union hung upon this condition, that every body else must adopt his peculiar views of the Constitution, and abstain from the exercise of every power concerning which he entertained a doubt. When closely looked at, this was but nullification in another form. However, as the time he had to speak was ?o very limited, he should not pursue that i. subject further.?He then proceeded with the discussion of the bill. sr July 9th. Mr. Hunt had ten minutes d of his hour on the McLeod case vet to y run, and availed himself of it to continue ie his speech. He was followed by Mr. Brown for 45 minutes in censure of the it course pursued by the Administration in j. this case, when he was stopped by the i- expiration of the morning hour. e The loan Bill ir was then taken up, when on motion of Mr. Fillmore it was resolved that the debate in committee of the whole on this bill shall be closed Monday at 2 o'clock. '* The house then went into committee of ^ the whole on the bill, when it was advon cn ted by Messrs. Saltonstall, Cushingand ,f Barnard, and opposed by Messrs. Wise, it Waterson, Eastman and McKeon. i. July 10tli. TheMcLcod case was disj, cussed by Messrs. Brown and Linn du. n ring the morning hour; after which the ir loan bill was opposed in committee by id ll.r IT.-I Van ITlCSSrs. lMCJYity, HOIIIU.'*, wimin, Tan e Buren and VVeller wlien the committee rose. Monday July \2. The House resolved J i itself into committee of the whole on the I loan bill soon after it met, when the hill y I was opposed hy Messrs. Jones and Athur,p ton, and advocated hv- Messrs. Davis, d Dawson and Fillmore. After which the e committee rose and reported the hill.? d The previous question was then moved e and carried, when the bill passed hy a vote of 124 to 93. ! July 13th. The morning hour was ? consumed hy Mr. Bowne on the McLeod e i Case, after which, in committee, a hill ' i to provide for the payment of Navy Pensions, and one to make appropriations j for naval stores, were passed upon and ) reported to the House ; the remainder of j the day was spent upon the pension hill, p! July 14. The morning hour was con. . | sumed by a speech on the MoLcod case ,t from Mr. Young of Now York for Buncombe, d A hill from the Naval committee pm. i. viding for a home squadron of two friv gates, two sloops, two small vessels and ' two armed steamboats, was taken up, and e after some discussion, postponed for the * present. ' The fortification bill was next taken un, l" and the greater part of the day consumed ! in discussing an appropriation of8i841 g for Fort Delaware, in Delaware river, v provided the title of the TJ. States to the n Pea Paten island, on which the fort stands b can he established. The appropriation r was finally struck out of the hill, on the . ground that the title to the ground is in ' dispute. The bill was not disposed of. r d From the N. Y. Commercial Advertiser. I university of new york city. 1 | new medical faculty.?The imuigu. ; ration of the newly constituted faculty of i s medicine, in the Universary of the city 5 of New York, took place in the chapel of j the Universaty on the 9th instant, in the . presence of a large audience, and was . throughout an imposing ceremony. [| Jamf.s tallmadge. Esq, the President t of the Council, delivered an address seta ting forth the past and present condition of the University, the orriginnl design of . organizing a medical department in the . institution, and the causes which had ? hitherto delayed this measure, fie refer, j ir ed to the circumstances which rendered j n the present dirtinctively the time for this 1 department to be instituted; and his alius. | sion tothereturn of Dr. Valentine Mott . to his native country with improved health j ? and enriched by foreign travel, was rei oeived with enthusiastic applause. 8imi. , lar demonstrations on the part of theaudi. ence were manifested during several por. I tions of this eloquent address, especially > when he announced that it was the hap. piness and privilege of the Council to place , Dr. Mott at the head of the medical facul. ty now to he installed. ; a The Secretary of the council having been . culled upon to rend the corporate act by ; which the medical department of the Uni. I t versity was organized, announced the . names of Dr. Mott, Dr. Pattison, Dr. . Revere, Dr. Payne, and Dr. Draper as . elected to the several Professorships. Whereupon these gentlemen ro?e and remained standing during the charge deliv, ered to them by Mr. Tallmadge as Pres. i ident of the Council. And when he as, sured them of the cordial respect and co: operation of the other departments of the . Univorsitv, the whole corps of Professors f belonging to the other faculties rose from . their seats in token of their acquics( ccnce. The forms of inauguration having been ( concluded, Professor Granvill Siiakp Pattison, to whom the chair of anatomy '! has been assigned, was called upon for an ( j address, which, with that of President Tallmadge, will doubtless be published ; and will be read with interest, if we may ' judge by the impression whic thejoefivcry i produced. j The building appropriated to the use of ? the .Vedical College are eligibly situated upon Broadway, contiguous to the University heretofore known as a Stuyvesant [ j institute, and have been improved and f I tv^/4 f/v onrooL'O utirlnr (hn rlii'fipfiAn . auapicu III UJ^ j/uip'^v ??w un vvuvu I of the Faculty. But while the regular j lectures will be delivered in the College, ^ all the publio exercises, commencement, introductories, &c. will take place in the Chapel of the University. The museum of Professor Mott, well known as abound- . ing in extensive and valuable specimens, pathological and surgical is to be placed in c the College. The extensive anatomical cabinet of professor Pattison, removed 4 from Jefferson Medical College in Phila- 1 delphia, together with that of Professor ( Renere, late of the same school, and of c Professor Bedford, late of the Albany s Medical college, all known to ba rich in t - L ? 88?^ ' variety and extent, will be concentrated . here, thus combining the phis;cal facilities and appliances for instruction to a degree ^ which cannot escape the notice of stu* * dents In selecting their preceptors. The exercises were enlivened by tho performances of a line band of Music in the gallery, and the ceremonies of the eventing terminated with the benediction by the Rev. Dr. Phillips. We understand that the medical lectures in this College will commence in the last week of October, and that the most economical arrangements have been made for the accommodation of students. CHERAW GAZETTE. \VEflWRSnAY Tftrv 91. Iftll. The annual meeting of the State Agri. cultural Society of South Carolina will commence on the fourth Monday in No. vembcr at 0 o'clock in the evening. The annual oration will be delivered by Gen* J. II. Hammond. New Agricultural Periodical.?A 1 new periodical has been commenced at Edgefield C. II., in this State, by Mr. William F. Durisor, entitled 44 The ' Plough Boy," tote devoted exAiiveljrto ~ the interests of Agriculture. lit i* to bo' : ! published twice a month in neat-paraph* ' i let form; each number containihg 16" ' pages, at the very low price of $1,50 per annum, or four copies for $5?payment ' in advance. The number before tia it filled with every excellent matter both original and selected. Wo have placed j it in the Bookstore under our office, for j the inspection of those who may wish to ^ examine it. Tiie Temperance Advocate.?Thi* , . . ; valuable paper has been considerably enlarged, and the able, humorous and judicious editor promises in future to devote one half of it to the subject of agricul! ture. | Cnpt. Milledge L. Ronharn has been elected Brigadier General of the 1st. llrig- ' ade of Cavalrv. i : 4 ! Mr. Calhoun's speech io the Senate on ; the McLcod case will be found on the fourth page. lie does not, like petty partizans in both houses of Congress, take the ground that an insult was offered by the British Minister and tamely submitted to by the American Secretary of StateNo movement so unmanly is ever made by Mr. Calhoun. It is oneoftheevidonees of the high character of his intellect that he never descends fnpn th$ dig- . nity of his stat ion, either io grave debate or under the more exciting provocation of the most wanton personal attacks. He is however fallible like all men, and in our humble opinion, he has taken the wrong side in this debate. None of the cases which he supposes, for the purpose of shewing the consequences to which the admission of the Secretary of State in the McLeod case would lead, are at all analogous to that case. They are as far from it as can be. - The abolitionists of Maine have lately held a political convention of their ewp, and by general consent nominated Jfere- . miah Curtis as their candidate forGoorer* nor of that State. Mr. Curtis is a very ; decided and thorough Van Buren or antiadministration man. This fact we no. tice only to shew the correctness of the opinion which we have uniformly express* ed and maintained, that the present great party divisions in tho country have no relation whatever to abolitionism. Ultra * partizand of both sides at tho South have o ftcn endeavored to mislead the public on this point; but well informed and candid men every where must and do admit that abolitionism has no affinity to either par* ' ty, and neither party has any affinity to abolitionism. - * * ' : " *; \( A negro girl the slave of a person re. siding in Georgia, was lately carried by . her mistress into Massachusetts. While at New Bedford, in that State, the girl was carried bv habeas corrvut before a - _ _ ^ ' judge and discharged as free; the courts of that State having decided that a slave . carried into the State with the consent of the master becomes free. The constitution provides only for the delivery of fu. gitives. The law is now the same in Vew York, and some other States, A man named Oglesby, ae&r Ranis )urg, Pa. affirms that he has discovered I i remedy for the Hessian fly. He asks 4 Congress to appoint a committee to test )is remedy, and, then, if thev find it effectual, to pay him for making it public, , Case of lMcLeod. The Supreme CoQrt if New York, has decided against relets, ng Alexander McLeod without trial. The ipinion of the court deliverd by Judge ])owen is of great length. It issaidthat he counsel of McLeod have determined o carry the case up to what is called the 2ourt of Errors in that state. If the :ision should be against them there, it is uppoaedthey will carry the case up t<r ue supreme Court of the United States. I y