University of South Carolina Libraries
. MO58oss A. T E & Co., are - for the' Bannt in Sftratevrville. ' 'Mu. CUTpIO,'respectiully requests ' th! "memnb aif clea to Vdc-al Music, ae aiible dit the Male Academy, on ii ; ydat evening, the 22nd inst., at 8 o'clock. oSIgwho wish to connect themselves t -the Class can do so by appearing at e above nntioned place and time. Charlotte Igil Roa. The Pa t eiio &ladtdard, of the 13th ijjj tanit, si 1that this road is completed to 1ithin eight miles of UhesterCouyt Hous. 'rofi'table Banking. <", T a ihnlmington Herald states that the A al Bank of that'tuwn has decired adividetid of 6 3:4 per cent for the lulit six :,r sacaqt'hs. Since its organization in Au at 1847Ulivideld to the armdtnt bf -4 1 ;per cent have been paid to its stock. i"sders. This Effects of Abdlition. We have read with much interest the eech of the lion. F. W .PICCxEs, at Edgefield,on the 7lh\' Iul $Ibis a must * ; i ectivo .jtddress, fo'e orce of its reasoning -and in its a ng, nanly elo * :- quen'e. From the cont d1(ing portion in w r ,; tvhich.lhe has- drawn forth into proninence ithe perils that await. the South in the near approach of Abolition, we make the ful lowing extract. A part of out- ruture is z here depicted in a feet Vignrous strokes. Mr. Chairman ! has any man thought kerigusly of the tettible effects of Aboli ti9n when brought to our homs and to eurgfiaidel 'T'hree millions of black "1es, turned loos: upcn the community. would present such a scene as the world never before conceived. They would come directly into competition .vith the white k r ned anics,'artizans and common laborers " of the whole country. They would work for little or nothing-a bottle of rum and twist of tobacco: what would become of the free artizanw, enterprising mechanics, in'd industrious laborers of our country ! Brought down to a degraded competition With-threo millions of slaves made free. Now they are regulated, and labor in an entirely difTerent field. Who, then, could ' "" jliye here ? Now the white man feels free dom to behis privilege and rank-it sepa. rates him from the caste below h n. lie will then have the black man put as :,is equal, and they will sink together into a pmton but degraded level. 'he wealthy n an if h6 is mean enoogh and base enough to desert the country, may be able C. ve something and do so, but the poor s fate is.fixed from necessity in d de0 sa .6PiLe counItt, is :i" ere, jI ~rj Pfo ea-.4lp i_-i-o s-. joinmaiihi:'to. thImselfi the fatial delu sintlat lie is too poor to feel the wei thmng lilight of that dreadful curse, if it ht:id ever come. There is none so high, aninone so low, but lhe will shiver imder the hovling of that dreadful blast. There - vill be'no peasant cottage, that hangs uponi ~otl lills, however humble, but will fall be. fore ttat muidnigh-t storm. There will be - (o uign upon- the door-posts or Iintels or any chosen andr eletr by Wicel. the destroy Ng angecl may know to pass by." lesistanco Meeting in Yorkvle. ~.e hiave receivedl accounts of a spirited n-eeting of the citizens of York on the 4thI nhg~ ..dddresses were delivered hy Gen. 3ouiy A. ALSrON, of York, and Col MAXCy REuta and Gon. J. If- Atxis, of Rich.. Lnd. The meeting adopted an address, the - calm, conciliatinag, yet resolute, tone oIf * whicht miqt exercise a hiarmionizing iniflu. aj~c poui the varions divisions of the true Veststance'party. P10following resointions were unani. rhlously agreed to: ~ 4~. Rcolred, Tliot t~se secessioniiSs of York astrict hceey reathrm~ that they will earn. i sly entdbaa~r to proenre tho. casoperation *fany or. all the o her' Soutliesiur Mhates With this Stato in resistance to'past. P'edeval * *ggression ind usu0rpation. . 1 That we will bie freetnehl of thetcin-. gle gRepubbec of South Carolina, rather than slaves of a, despotic iUnion of 3() Yepuliam ;' aid' that wheh' all' reasona ble uind haonortdle noans to obtain' the co-ope atmotn of other Stcts shall httoo faitdwe wdf~.l tuarr as our enly fimpe- of success to the secessann of Southe Carolmo from thme - Union Simgfle and alone. S Co.operation in Yor.. (V li th instant, two days after the - rneeirfg- of the separate actionl party of that *District there was an assembinge of Co (Iperationists in Yorkville. Long hleralded forth. and i itendeid as n cont'inuation of the C' > harleston- movement, we had, with much *eXpectation, awaited accounts of its pro aedings. Thiese we have at last receivedl. A partisan in tinmokank satates that it wvas a triumphanit dlelionstration, that the hall hase been fairly set in motion, that the Co. operationg party have achlieved wmost sig nal triunfif,.uand that " Old 1'ork has5 spo. lien nlt*olee f thunder that which must, c'at a shall be heard." * lhe dlemonsitratio~n certainly was respec tablo in poinlt of numbers, about fourteen or fif'teen hundred persons being said to be ~re t n the occasion. The meeting a vs qrg 4ised by calling SAMUEL RAINEV, h i~ar, and appointing Messrs. * BB L Secretaries. Ad *eses e by Messrs. B. C. regand BAMUEL ~ALJ~JLY;1~X ahreiot and reso tIens wore offere y, Col. BBamT, and apinousl; adopted 3,s report, from its mat nah w- ar.. 4io tolaeoL ""' awtt zevu hehl. oj;vii a careful ertsl. ill askihem, in all catde'r, to i ler'rIr ont tines nre o changet a a iaidm ois'traiinn can in ar y satee be denininateh it triumarijl it one. What too{ sure oir tnurse do's it iroposo which may enable th (otriumph over the foes who do.isultingly beset ts ? What ball have they set in uotion ? Have they given art, impulse to manly resistanti' ; have they struck thi't 'noblest chord in the human bre et vjifh fespnidk even to the loath vhii a country calls for exertton andself. devotion ? There is not -in these: Niilu tions a single sehtirnr it which savors of bold 'resistance -in the third being found the nearest tpiroeinimation to such a feel :tg. and that only comnits the meeting to ac quiescerice In Southern ,act ien, to a share in thu destiny of rhn South, in a case frot - Southern Council should result it South.. crn Confederacy. We ask what ball th s meeting has set in motion. What other tiou that whth the Greenville meeting firs; thought to g:ve propulhon to, but which remaied inert un. til these York Cu-operaionists lenit their aid to roll it on in its levelling reavolutcamta ry course ? .We refer to the 5th1 re.olue which firs. chiages political Iraidc upon the Legislature of South Carolin.g a 'al then declares that the Cdnventun, horn ouet tit such fraud, can be legitamatited only by the recognitions of the' mu ltitude. Truly we are fast learning Northern ways, wh-ni the determination el the t'o.intitu ial re. presuntative of South Carolna's sovereign ty must seek fir v.iid.ty and efficacy by courting popular ancl.on:taons. If after a review of all tli it was ajiil an I dor.e on that occas;on, the fatar warrant tite assert inn that -1 lId York h.is %puken ;t a voice of thunger," again t whom has it lauchLe. is mo10t sca':einug Ughe' eangs I io, against thoses% whose gre~ateset f:uit it is. if fauit at ail, that they are only too zealous partisans of the South, certaay is respe: :< the enlem.cs of the Soe it, theat meeting aggravated its voce:es th at. he N; e t.. ot ten, after refiV't: .mn nI reoarcd as gently :s -an 'twere aey ni,:hun:dle. RF1.4401AU'TION., ADOPTED. Rear!ced, That the puhic sentiment inanifes;ed in the non-slvehohlg states of this union-the: abolt-on feeli!g a and conduct developed by the great prwers or the European world-and the unfriendly. discourteous, utnjust nild ag'grecive measures of the general governmcen' demonstrate, that the imenstiatien of sla rv is in imoitritwn pertl, that its tin:al overthr..cv is seritusly and mischiecvousv contemla. ted,. andl the entire aholtion at si lery mnus: he the eevitahei and disastroles result, in our present position, irrue a petseveranee in these nefarious practices and ag gressiuns. Reoled, That looking to the admonni. tions and eXamuple of the pat riot-sttt'atsmn of the revolution, in a like eimergency when their rights and liherties were in peril, and recurring to the instruction of Caolina's great statesmani, John C. Calhoun: "without unit i an I concert of action. there can benoeffective resistance,' h'et'eiice, as ciound policy or wI~iotn, which does not colninence in coeunisel amntg those or a respectable ntnhner of those, wcho'se rights aret etee lly vcie.atedl, wcchose interests woctuldl be ecial y e'ifected, wholise amb0!Ltiion it mntic he equtr ly to SCnne a defeat, no matter wh.lat. tie disastr, orn equral:y~ iatlhieve a triun, ph l~rurna-hed u.:th glory. Resolved, That ccwe leevee that the southi, having ce~ofiuon k ge, ,rcon..e oen mOSt te. tiluse ccoin.anron miuieires Ic> tedries, eaemai l dangers to ;avoed itand rOili~tom b~~eeitsa tee secure. $houbi~l ceoicei togethler, *eand mi the. spirint ot freemuenr, determia:ne a le cinetio of a "their duty, to throwv oil our peent~e 1' m of g~enerail p 'ernent, to) provide nrew'guree ton their tuture: secuarii,--ard to .nistittie a ne0w governen~it, havmgc 1.4 ltounadat i.1 tol sneh priianupl,.anid orga. n z..g its poiwers ini sneh torm, as teoI 'to iiiall seeme mosit dlkely to ellect thec.r Imety ar. j hiapphea... --hncrely p Ialedng oeurselvcese sehouite a southern coiulteierny1 lie the re tilt cot s eie deliberaetion;, we 're:l le ,eeled of the .souith and1 c wtie thle in ulth .' r wcea, or we. RI.-a~1red, 'Thnt wecc arie "pposa'cl to theC s'eparnate sti'essi ort Soeuth Ca roenla, a ra-li iad viseonarny--not redres~N~,g IL engie grievanlce ofl wichi wOtc eee i jeompa.a - turiilaheig leo "new~t gueards tfor our tutere sec urI y,"' but to uise the settent oe f eeig. I inguiseh e i eo i of~ eork, (.Judle..'? \ \.thler, "pilcinag the state iln a pesitceee te~tchyia n tr:ed anrd Li R Xatuphl ed, 1e ungm ieg {,e s . the least, into the dhank nie~sterre's ef the tuture, as yet net I iutned by L a~ hngle rael heght I liat 6l:is re:whle A our uS.e er.' e lIeselved, T'I' t. wcl aheout attaicht cr-lie toc the: great bodly oft the ilngh-lantueae, w. e be. I evce,, that lii.e :- ung ithe eetiien eel delecces: to' thn state co .e enit in ate be hieldi as early aes it was tlsdered, wcc as teed eeicved- ia poheticael L iei.d----that, Le hhte., ..e o? saud 'tconVelt ll m:t.y, ac c ribe'g tee thai mere foret h iew, ab ie bodoc' vt le deleganies cit saide coivuient lk e mi een genteral ly elected by a licnelor.l y eel vet es lm the electti dhst rIlet, we bel.evi, tO IUI the spawits, the eleietI cria-le ofee conrstittt e't t- is.-state,csind thCe geleu,, e': aenr dltemocrtic msC'ttuonis. .'aice tct'litlne, it it deterner one t the act ot se per . se. cessionl, shlaou1:1 sewr back sucd miasuire to the juedgmaent oet the pceophc' of Sout h Caroha at the haillit boex, ;oa thleir ret. eii at ion or rieertiona. Jalated, Thait a central cal elaittee 0; correspiondcence--ccttw e'v-e mi mianherie--. b.e apposintedh, wehote dhi'y it ,cehail be ice Or gauinze aluxehary (innlit'ee, ccI ceerrae cit. dhetec jet thte d st r e; to ceorresncdec w cih like commecitees in the r4'ate, amed througch otut the~. south. antd to ede a!i oteelr art-, which,ina their jiudgmcnimt, ae cal late i dte promliote the caus 11(lct o -Lapiraeteen. Unider the hied net "a rmynv ittelbIgenece, the New York Heaed of Satuird!av 5 .y "eeI?, learn lhat ate ordecr ha ibIeen re-. ceivacd fromi W ashaington, fir lic remm: a! eof all the troops aIt //aus statione to /lrcck .eoura T'his is probtably 1 th' renewcaI of the ordier iseuaed som le Ititne sincec andec soubseqliem 11 ncouniterlnandaed, for the realnov:d of ee.I troopw-to'the Sonithaerti eslannei. A gne.et nrXctemett iaroese at that timae, lrcit lhe fact ltat it wyas sutpposecd thaat troopse were al. oteded to operatie agaeiinst thoe' who eeecre Lengagedh int the Cua i ' epal:' Ii T'he dea wavs quliated by the ca :radoe Lae f cthcl madl of the G;ove'rinment, andathi lhe sL pro-. bably to carry out wchiat was then intenacd -a mere tratnsfer of the troop. to the sotith, For the uriter Banner . A! S.ES3, Augut. b Mlr. Eitor I seemtas to nei received opinionta itlis section trict tiat, Colon.de JoiIs S. PRETONI JuAMs CHESNUT, Jr., aro f'r the m aostfi and compotent persons to serve our cauise the cause of Southern Rights, in a South ern Congress, and as the large nass of our ellow.itirans' h.tve never seen or heard the former ,.;ention.an discuss this impor tant subject. Why ib it that ocr citizens have not called a meeting. atapimul d it day and invited those gentlei'aen to ou: ikatric1 far tu' purpose of addressing us I Permit ane to suggest, Sir, that a ineetinL' h called forthwith, conrnittees apponted amd arran!emetits made for this purpose. luel I knew to be the desire of a lirge nurnber of our people. Respectftlly yoturl, lFRAMPTON. From the Charleston Mercurji' Responses to the Co operation Meeting Amnong these responses we may tlar y recani Use arecent access.on of U. S. troop., n our htiLaun; for thotgih ils I taning . the pau a )ns (oiaurlebtoig into an artillery canimp ut Mr. Fihitinore's army, may hane lbna ietetIrmined ons before the date o. the imeettg, it wvat, ntA deoeiedi Ii;I the lora. ion tfi pia iy iasaihtl.eu to the act ion il the State was unequivocithiy indicated, nut: .t was lti put mo execution till that pal 1 tend orgamaL and goat. actively to worli in prove that sectsii wasita madness, amc tt af South t'rarit.ia acted alone, sit would be ruined. Let us ctntsider a mnoment the proolh that tilt, concentratioi of troops and. mum. Lions of war, at nuod Charleston, m meant tc overawe us with the threat a: coer mion. The armv of tih United 6 t...., ia very smilall cnompared wi I the wide held Qi .ta dutu!,. and tlere has lately been an extra. art.i.nry cali for ast services itn the West, to supplress indelan hostllhues. Thtit ser. vice has been lame y pernlrued, ttoIlo the want ll sutlicient troops, and it is tuder. 50tooid tiat lie.-vy recnaatiois have been mad- i.pcut our Gho erment by lexi'e, oil act (onut 01 te r aav., ud hus irin our ttle, % h1,i the Unaitet J:late., uuder the re. eem treaty, pledgeti tienseive to restrain. t is sl tlie tin i the n alt o1 usetiti ccen. panot lor the armaty that it is gat it ae. tire .iai.reaser, the companies snitt i:: .0rc wt tidrawt room oth. r posta, w.hkh are thus ;cit dCfenaCeles, to complete thte army O .;a.1.t[ay lower on out liibor. I inatiy, ine a-t Leo groi threw tut the bi': raking approir.attunas for l'irttliatin ' aid :iu. let nit ationey legally apptcatie to the ;arrvinig on ".. Such wor.ns. Fort Sutite', time o..iy toriress a'o. ge t renilh it our ii I tic l., t disIS ,ur aietd it it, itend Ld a. mirant tis e2 rangL., a gns--tit illy per range utpOt the p arnpct. 1 he portho.ais for thi ;aeweat range ntre buashed, but *nteret are a platftortms tor the g uns, and to mimaith e.ven tn., tier, will reqire a very cots.icr. abde expendaiture, not one d~ollatr ill w ochi h:wt been appropr;teo by Coniress. T'here are tao barracks dor the troops, no quarter tar officers. The whole mterior is rough, w.t h heatpa cf. Mtinawrat cocliected to tahmli the Port. ''here is never .un i.pproir.at.ot to arm a fortress till it i+ fiashed, atnd It would take two years to complete thei mork ccordiiig.o its deagn. It e under these crctumstatnces, that. the .President undier. takes to g.'rrtson Fort Sumter, without au thority of law, and without preceucnt. Can 'TaiIsi tIe a-~ULua tme ,LienL i=C...'ftrms cl.cre have been scarcely men enough hers: to protect I he wo~rtxe and muaa.it.icns fi'rom ithe usisialis of rats. Naowt, C aial Pmetukaey, wich hcat sicarceay htad a girinon 'it thii m semotary oft matn, isi alive w.tan artilh-ery practIee; Fort alura n at au t tr men, .i n .etaly mt~ade a dlispluay oh Federal tta'aa.e ana i :a.,tiy, l~y reauuaing to- aaiaw the cau. zens of Charie satn to celebrate a gltormusit event af the p;.bt w'.ithmi. its enc laosure~; daml hast y, thle utatina.ahedh fortresst ta the mr.die af t he htarbo r is pretmtiture'y armied ;ia tm;ainnedt, wa imiot nar trantt ot law, tao g ve priotf of the dletertiiunat on of Fedearat aaav. crnmtenat to draiw thae award .aga .at, iha sun e. Thes~ie pareparatiso:.a aire mtean t foi r us, and athey aire ntaothallg .eS tha~t a ade. ca un: ., a of wair agamtit Gontha C.aro in. Ga.aaanot~s New:~s rnoMt Usroi.----h Uimonvatlla Joiaunl, 0; thae 9thitntsta, mi ant excel lent ediiorial saiys :'- Front the.. rea. cceii oppor'unaiities we' htave had ot ascer tab:ing tie opmaain.a of thie ctazens o1ft na ibastriel, n e cant ~ay wtiaout liei at on1, thiat weI htavye tnevecr kna i any bapepl tin ataroghly us*taitedl mi apiin.i'o uponl anay --ut,. yeto , as oir prapte aee uaponta hle ptest.ooi ofi ia er!S'ion." Wa,negiona 1 larahil tuarnaishes~ the itallowing' it~Sumar the Caon gress mni- electon m lt istrict, '. ~i~cl~. .7th a" \aa .Atc 7th) a" lva. .atl I (~ 'm stli thh latter. Areeed iscukey. rain (,'Wi m. -Ms.r CAsh. ~ ;haar he .-e Jadard .::'iv.traiopa a.ve Wh~dlii aitiltr. em Jak ont~nes Cl on "arath th a~nra.- it.h.I elA meing I , l thel ' ci:.zu emet Iof 'rave contylI.I Gerita, hatve deuterined aS t miaii. :0he Iiollin :,peakr odsnstecn .--t..tu hoa t y a nd:ty au jm- ti o (then. t comptil thar8'an Geodrgia osCb, Ste. say lphe s ToI r, Jen11! me, 1srtc f p ms, aaiit'w Wtard, J.i att1. oierrien, C. .ie~on,~ie. :abal,-u iia i1/3110 2'Colqi. a ckson, di. Jinie, tFroma ai sotha ('aorarlia-\{ont.iit. iee t lion.c tAt c ' P.a Unlr in. l W .a, .li )Anwell. ia Tone andaia patdlt isace ofdic iia atocanir iF".e Naoate--The Graleanaahel Mn ter taierao taJni, y a -9t, coniems the re. I lit a.is t rt te~ :rovernmen of~ ~h tU.nIeldc S'ttat ln~aeqia.tot ao 90.0t0i toeond eun-ty of moystaxl.- Leihemtwl tuan ai abotati~eas 'arge ..thawhble unil f.md st e frpr aenivation rya . "' UPR3U J m &u ji ro New.Or. E. ':1Lis *'w it.wjtl~ir LhaIL11t the Cuhiitils have pair. itstf.j Iletact stcsia iert, andii thiat thlofie 3(3itloard Iortaacd tin .a ~x.I t.rv kirce ":x;,ai'tctcl t~y the 1'.alrioV' :tomt the Uited S. .11021. It is iiiqalasb. IJ.O ta ci iijot ore t Lai1l3,J ti ii 3.3 tllty r,altt C::,s tt. Willii ra33Ohl .iiate budged vro'..r, t,8nl'~hlii a iaa r rala' ile IIatteI ail3(I :tilt+111: 'I,.. haII.iio I a ll l i s , :iiir, 11111.'1.i Lii It Willi it a.\cl!t .t" I' italic 1I! n,:a III rleg~.la air the. lii l ! 't vtfl aiu.v Lr~lap1ir.ri fgiti (aiala. 'l'ist! dItst llt~tli'!ai o Ihrii K'-.1" ' i tiaaaa:LL!y li.,t A ..of ' :v" . ,he r'Imtr..aa.' it, 1'.l :,,. I -it "., i.. .;s s": ty:'23,I~ l!a ItC Iitt v"U 1 it- **' 3 .i 1) oI!Ii'3a tI*-i. the of 'iii jal 3aiLi tlt"t Way ofi i("it 111 L r. In . I.. 3 t III .:fitll sty~ S r it, i I Vdaati , ;:I 11"" :1x ii ocr Ia:.I 1":,Ilo tn'. aav.I , :.ar'ri 1\ 2ii3'i aaik1aaa.1vaa to lII: Il)a . ."-. :1 :':'" 1Praa'aa-a *, 'Ir 1th thea 41i,; a'lle 3di..e ii tIII, av +a',111311 Cail d.a:.a.i, eire ill(: ta.wn ;andi viI i11 '.. (raa'e, ". iil IIa al t~c'aSBl! :o 83301, v'et,I llu lt ar. 1iid, otIi,! .i0 i I III', tat lillO. (;.*I 1313-i IV1' , ia :S '...il tII lao u I.''3i ia33 f-It"c n ro h asa.r len slud.aig. 'Wile Wit ' 3 opal l..,r1 f 01 'a!i'a d~oes re.a 'hi (iOIJ,OtlO, ;t1 of IlL a" t( ali1"rtd and .'iaave sos mialty. '1'i1 I a,.a:a' \\!a.a-5 .arn I 10(0), 21131 iaII 'r'a v a~f!'r~ "i111 ,000, ha. :. 1 I0,OttO. tall i,33hn cuajt: ".;e al (i~tt i1r In, 13338 amil Li'.ralaIt, it IS a.:tad, to t he rrtv(,i it~ . ( )jaj'usaed 11 Ila.., ,a .o teare tiI 000) Spniards. li.a arigilag, to 3 lao Ista aui, 111 galWill declare tii. : woariIld (:LllCuai Il;38 se'veredl the I.nik that 'rrctI d lair w'.*Ii t ai or rivertis, ita~ ila are sir : :aia. i', mt'iid lair ages. Youars %' r t V, .a. Tidings of Sir Johnl Fi.'unklin. in t he I)udeo l :1s1: A ert ILsr oflist:t 2:x11 Tilt. Ita. .11 1u ipeel0. by~I Iii' 3 lW.4 3r lhii: 51,t .n;a+ t '3iy creitit~' ira 1".., :,;II * J)r'Ni-Er:, Jla3' ..,::1, 1 - I. Mr. Ilritir,-''lia.,.,la tiie taaa'~tl1 tl Il youar higly .-~~ ,111x! l.3pi:r, I hlrt. .I'~~ tihe fa.llsaf a~rtiaala...tat J'riI~ut ars ba.ca the 11 pia I~a i)3caulery of ,Iii l"raaies 1/" ['oir ..2ijlp c,.' f s1u,a1,'d /f ,:ifi "" 9 1/a' CrewI f, ah re,... .aqaau~aiv'd Sirr .1'11 i ka"'sa/,iaa. -.. ii aaIl, J. It1.a:a!,a3-r, %%;'.i: IIa.- liena alit r~n lli l 2 it har v, .;, i'd iw atll tStro ailess8 . r, n": 'r.: ic"r II .thi :a 11 ia.l 1 r by atn.-4. A bu'L!i"r &.* r." tI III ~A a. 11 al aaiit, ivM..1.'I.it, a " I. a- ) $r'*: 3raa:i 111: h-r '.ia'r. 1i: l; 1). ali a elaate 0 Ill.. fl' t - 11. Ita L" Ii !It- 'Ia hiller' ;1:- oiarr it f": 'In 1 ebruarv :ast! cr p:arta"ahiy athara.i... i ' ;.t t,,-1' 1: . a I I ai barge 83111'a l' I; . - 1" a:it.1,",'"r t lii taIy res i'i-ts lir'a' 't ' or-n betard, and lr!'3ar ,1 :I "Iral tall t iaperatio1l .'1e If ,"l1 :, '1a at thl~at t i. tve npltlr frozraa tap n I!,lclatf i & I~II _ Iin oniotl Sfur L'x.11r:a.,3:38 *WQ I !II iwallWIl past v ' I i'ciqluinaa Iradh'nnii, 333w: +;~ nluns. ber; Lhirv had 33 ." .gha. keowe'"dgc ofl 1aar hangu age, theoy ina~ia~red Whaether the were Eniglish ear Arneriatal.A U,1 being s'atLalaied in I ha ;afirithe .1.... lield I worilnted TEnIU4.E RAVAGES Or CHOLE5A Aw SMALL Pox Aiura TIEE IitI si.--The St: Louis Republican has gathered from Majo' H. Picot, of the American Ft rCompany, who has just coma from the Indian country, the following partleulars of the ravages of the cholc-ra durifig the past two years: At Pbort Pier fe, in the year 1850, the first case of cholera occurred on the 4th of July. Otlt scnses followed this, and the disease eorith ued to spend until somt. three or four hundred Missouri Sioux Indians had fallen viet imis to it. I'ho ravages of sickness were not toniiiued to the Intians, It would appear. The cho!era comininunicated to the cattle; and Major Picot says that, from his own knowledge only, some flity heatd of cattle died of a sickness for which hie cannot account, unile.s it were cholera. They were seized suddenly with vomiting and purging, and in many instances, indeed in tI., majority of instahdes death ensued o!ter live or sax hours from the mnanifes. tatios of the first symptoms. Vhen the disease was raging most vio leit ty .winoig the Indi-ans, a council was hel I, alter whose decision the entire nation strue: camp, and separated for various tinarters. A port ion of them tonk refuge in the miountains, and the remainder jour. nered mwfirds the North. 'lhe eholera followed the party who had repaired to the mountains, and continued conuanit wad ravages among them. 'I'o add still more to their misfurtunes, tile small-pox broke cut wnong them about the same time, :I while It ran its co urse there were from live to six hundred of their numbers who loll victims to it. The traders did all that Loy in their porer to alleviate the sufferings about. them. They were fortunately well pry ovbleila.1 w'th vaccine matter, ani Major l'icaot suaptoses that no less than fifteen to twenty thouuand indians were vaccinated bv them to start from the occurrence of the first case. The most frightful panic spread itself anau tg he! 1ud iants on the appearance of choelera in such a malignant form. Neither miaerest, nor frienlhip, nor parent age were suflicient bonds to keep them together in this tine of allietion. Wives were ahi :mw idoncied by their husbands, parents by their ir:ends. The chollers, amid also the small pix, fingcretd fron July, 185t1. to Jily, 1W01, ab-t inog in winter to a cons:der able extent. li that time, numerous chtdren and heltpleiss woten, and okl ml, whoit had been suddenly abandoned by those Ih:t hied hitherto at pp arted them, were picked tip and taken charge of by the trailers. ''hae fact may not he without its interest, that in the pre.tPt year. when the party of 8.onx (cin.ast.i ut one thousand 'aiadhes) t otit to the Nor I. they fell in with a war :rty of I:,ackfeet, who uere i scarch of hie Crow 1 ldianat. ''he '.nux attacked 111tm, anid ui rdehtred every person mo the party. Not ta lamgle one was left to bear the ali: to b;s n:ation . After the occurrence of the irat few caeats T Ismall pox those lad:tim who haid retired to) the unorth becane particularly taretul in their itcrcomaimuaicati km with c"tr, aiers. Guards were stationed about thair , it' ges, whose duty it was,o warn alt straners .on approachintg tiemra, and f'arrther ,I shoot down: such as persisted in crois.stn; the line of; their otacaospiennt. Maoj. ct adds that very Imaj 'Iidians of foreign tribe:, as weliMa of the Sioux Tribe itself, was uaurdeyred for. the reason that they. disrgarded this regJi!ation. RiEMARX. nLw At TOMIATO' 'FREE.-We hrnen-iniikorJ)Qftnity., ainya. the-Wol~verhaemp. atm lrertid; (~Eeghuon,) of mrspectita,-at heazir . f iwheetamn, on Thur-day~t ;m ai ut. mastoni, at. noel mn itsi actioni as it is beaut tui1 in. design. Thl.s remarkable paec ofid mehnismu consists of a hawt horn rt-e int tuil bloom fuathfaily copiedi, the irntedl sir s.emi-phrrishedj bark of the titlruk anrildie !o'inige be.ang miost natturally inn ta ne ;ail usn .veral tof the brancehes two s:uitLd i'inmnaug birds are pt roh 'd, w isch,. noiw waav.nig : he.r w~ngs and anssn hopping !rmai spray teo s~irray, and pourmyg fourth a tIlood ofi aiu-ic:, aatmo'st chiawam the spectator un:. te tee i il~t lit atis a pleas.nog realhty', anad anot a ati!!us on, wichl is represenuted to hais inimi.rig v ew. One oif the tiny' ca-. ures5 junpa l'reams one branch to ano' her in jan -n : of :laes anda inseicts-another lijes tuacko. in a a" of the haawthoern flowers, ia n rdt s aya its nle-t. wiist sevt'ral s otiers ire hd..Tjed in ad l1erenat parts of the tree.1 Teaiiing of the hires is nout only ati-i r.iace iauniar I1, buta the motioan is also awl. miaribe!t,' . *of: themi tlymge troni one beranch toi .anther, a lhsai'ac of amut ceit tacthes, w .the :re st piv-sibl.e pree~n,-and at w t-G irating ton:piletely rweumt ini go-. wr aarnmg, drl u tthouit .anything be' a a belaveil to c'.s sucht i ans effect, or vo tee dt o.Vt r the miuieon oft this tunitinle -'heA- mi tpciei'n of ind~ustrial .ert. Onh tane as, t ti f,. of ra.p , tmi t ie coaisntitanst lhw:b .: (c.tnsiedte ief a mtriutnal which, -a-I eetlth- s appleears moaest suited to theI Ieur1oe)' wnht .a aa.bier of sellt, &c.,&~c, re.Y i~ r :mdat Chuinese tty-catc'her, a hihi :ru f a ailal pluagee, adhelatter iS tmec~taitly pteekoai the carase of at ''ilen bieete aongt the mnass in thin ai re .grontd, nola a ad thaena stoppiwig tto,.i I, tbnw, " bi it hie mayu have wwmanaged to cull wiath hi~ s.i'l'nerihenk. The aytit has ac Inceed .a ork of which lie may lbe just atn!, thlo en~'ulsh'~ teeing sich as to strk the t.ielht'rs withI inivelaamtary woi dermnntata whl.t the itta st eriath to urwait hrlo. gi-et tr ltruittwor tl hut aimy~i wou', hail to-di nn.n .lh the ingmawtry from the realh ut lih.,t se.ht. Tlh. whotle is enaclosedew iin a hi.' ca.ii, anad lias beeni producedl by that rL~enowned P'ariuma, Ste'venard. .D a am Ra TnE (L'taA't lA'ranatrg.....The Newa Gerk coerrespotndeent e f the Phia. elih-htaea l'itaorer say's that lie is credibly ma'it'nd byv onei nu abouwtisld knw', that mtore thIea thriee tail rtd wmn,-tfuly armeada :tat esiaped, hive sial a ruomi thaut port tier Ca u, ts atid the patriaits ijagainst t hae treats ofa~ 0 tie Goiverainment . TIhe wrnter t The wer shipedi fromna diht lower ends ea: Staten.i h:i~e, ,awtd so ihpatk were- the aame enwts, that athem leople of thae teigh-. ht a hen. itonlht it w~a only- an excursion yw a. Theyicw.e t tell' in a lin caipeper tar g :atnl awa in a fewt dlays be alt thme pouint nIti r dletnanonia. I ari toeld shec sailed ih:at S eurda~y aight. 'The teeliing ini this niy'' ai Iav tee Cl(ubana indeLpendenice is rowi~ ing strnler every dlay,. tande I shall naot hei siarperaeIi f ait Ieaist a thoucasanad mena oe tee thle ad tIwf those who are conteidiaig teir hb'rty. TFhe whaole ashkir heas bceai ssn.igtd, ha'ths-r, w itha stuc'h cauation and e'rr'ev ast it w ll ho imapossible for the govearnmaent aolileials to timid who are thue I e:eleis a aw the swaeveiaent. % "Tlhe iris sbel threse w'ho werre arrestedl for padrt i -pat a'n an thie oather expedwit ion are set (town for Septembehr, but it is ex ceedingly doubtf'ul if they will ever bo b'rouaght to trial, and if' brought to trial, here is not the slighnoest frobabihity that a single-conein il olo. If !n t'wolir,,M t tu e ourie your feet lie Upon, b t theoaiher beside you-closr yet---were leated a awu e. faced girl, with a. pretty little footJy) log out upon the hearths ta bit of-laqe running arounI the throat, and the hir: parted to a charm over .tf*e forehead, fair as any In your dreams, dnd if you could reach an arm through that chair. back without fear of oironce, and suffer your fingers to play idly With those eurls that e8ape down the neck; and if you could clasp with your other hand those little vhite taper fingers of hers, which lie so temptingly within reach, and to talk softly and low in presence of lie blaze, while the hours slip without knowl edge, and the winter winds whistle uncared for; if, in short, you were no bachelor, but the husband of such a sweet image dream call it rather-would it not be far pleasanter thana cold, single night's sitting. counting the stick,, teckoning the length of the blaze, and the height of the falling snow ? Surely Imagination would he stronger and purer if it could have the playful fancies of drawing womanhood to delight it. All toil would be torn from ind and labour, if but arfothefr heart grew into this present soul, quickening it. warning it, cheering it, bid. ding it ever God speed. I-Jar face would make a rich halo, rich as a rainbow, atop of all such noisome things as we lonely soula call trouble. Her smiles would illumine the blackest of crowded cares, darkness that now seats you despondent in your solitary chair for days togeth-'r, weaving bitter fancies dreaming bitter dreams, would grow light and ths, and spread and float away, chased by that beloved smile. Your friend, poor fellow, dies--anever mind; that gentle clasp of her fingers, as she steals gently behind you, telling you not to weep-it is worth ten friends. Your sis'.er-sweet oneo-is dead burled. The ttorms are busy with all her fairness. Ilow it makes you think earth nothing but a spot to dig graves upon! It is mote. She says she will be a sister; and the waving curls, as she leans upon your shoulder, touch your cheek! and your wet eye turns to meet those other eyes.Uaod ims sent an angelsurely! Your mother alas for it-she is gone! Is there any bit. :erness to a youth, afore and hetnless, like this! You are not alone; she is there; her tears softening yours, her grief killing yous, and you live again to assuage that kind sorrow of hers. 'T'hen-those children, rosy. fair-haired; no, they are yours. Toss away on the green sward never mitd tIm nyacinths, the snow-drops, the violets, if so they are there; the perfume of their healthful lips is worth all the world. No need now to gather %tild bonquets to love and cherish; flower, tree, gun, all dead ihuigs; things livelier hold your soul. And, she, the mother, sweetest and fairest of all, watching, tender-catessing, loving, till your own heart grows paimed with fen derest jealousy. You have no need now of a cold lecture to teaclryru thankluiness; yout heart is 't-il of it. No need now, as bursting blossotns of tees taking leaf, and greennes.:, tor turn thought kindly and thanktully; for ever beside you there is fruit for wi ch eye, heartend soul are full of unsopjenjibecause unspeakable, thank. of'r lil.- Fk."Martel. A LUcKY 1'uincnAsc --At Tours, there lives an old -mnat, who his wife-I do not isate this as a fatuteY iftir. to.Tours, or to this man, bitt as anecessat preliminary to what fol ows. The - hubI~ieiovgh&.. pair or pianmiloons from a soldier, and whe:V he had wvorn thetm ouit. the wire unsewved theim, in order to utilize them as a bed quilir orI wmdc'm' pane; in one oh then ipemis she founuid a nute on rhe ikenk of France for a Itousand francs. Trho old mian, su~ppo3 tog it to lie an~ assignat of the old republic, and utterly valueless, pasted it upon a brick in te wall. A visituor infoirmedl him of his error, whereupon. he cut the brick ont of its cohid bed,~ and- carried it bodily to one or the principal banmkers. The note was too closely attachedi to be removed, but it was evidently good, and was cashed on the spot. TIhe old gent was overjoyeid, that havimg come to the bank with a b~rick in) his piOcket. h~e probiably n~ eut home with one in his hat. A BSmvi U.Ax Cour.--lit the South Americant Republic of Chili, we learn from, an article ini the Christian Review, there is a Dometii Conettt-"a'tribunal to decide iin hr ca.se oef mitnors compihlainitng of the reinm. sal of parents to-permiat thieir marriage'. Un less the defendant can show satitufctory cause for refusal, the Court deerees the miarrieie to take p'ace."' Tho effhet ,or thi.s arranm1,et, it ir stat'ed, it to cause rinaway imatebhes- to be comparatively scarce in CThi!i. F:FTY Toua Fosry.-TIhe people of Oregoni st t mnaintain that their northerit bioundary is nothing short of 54.4O, amid a good maeny arc fnund of the siuno opinion im othier parts of our gluriouse Union. Late dleveloptments in thte region above the hiine of 49., have prov'ed the existence of rich gotld deposits inear the shore of the Straits, and by the newsi by the last Oregon ail is to the eli.:et leat heundre'ds ol northern, neighbors are about to tak' uip their quarters in what htave been deemfled by certain crc. dtilousr people a pir, of her mhajesty's dloni'mons. IL appears, hiowever, that the r yl .1power of Ernglandl has determined. to defenid these niines fronm intrusion; by calling the crttire force upon dle Pacific coast to renidezvous at this point; and i the ttlempt iv mode t o ust the occupanuts we- may thiid seome elemens ini thec presidentiail catmpaigni for. 1852, wvhich the pwilitician wets riot of at present. Thei Sandwvich Ilands iand 5',40e may be Pacifik respo~inse to Cuba atnd all the Canadms. Whlich of tte canrdiduatos for the Whrte hlouse wi the first to) shosw their handid &acramen.~~iJ'o Tmes. Arr. Diubb Doddingtoio, whein- onlv M r, Bubb, and before hnc had succeede'd to the more important patronymic o1 D~oddington,- expected to be sent as Envoy to the Court of Spain. Speak. ing with thne oclebrated- wit,- George Selwyni, hue regretted thie shortness of his name: "Thte S ponish gaondees, I under. etianid," sai< lie, e" tave a great inumber of names, and usually very lohg ones. They think litnie of sutcN'shhrt tnms as miine-libb- Ibbh ! I wish r'couldl lengthe n' it in any naturi'waiy, George, can you suggest anything 1" "Certainly," replied Selwyn ; "icalt yourself' Silly Iliibb," (sylubub ). 19!ob in Georgi'a. -. A desepatch to the Muacon Jot Massaenger say's that a negro man w, ti beenf coenvicted of a most horrible erlt but who had- boen pardoned by 1V rownes, was taeken out of the jail by the -.itisons to the nutnbar of 40.0, and hiaged A) a pin4 tree brek~o7the jeil: that the o ehe now P oi ti repr dwie n sucl. amay tie lgsi. de as it n return' p~ l or artsiadpoeto is ndprtecio scoprdedo citzens.- J'he area or th'e .gro siquare mlies capable of.suppo its present population (80,0W. ion dollars worth of Amer - is annually co rned.J me ty" mdhent ,p n ip ne J fr . poasesmi le sauga tations, In h and other - provements large umnshave,; ed. The An Board. have expend. omwhaere n 0Min their b "ftions, have ti the group fifty or more iies - valuable homenteads. Th a rican population touching at ths annually is not far from Ir5,00sJ, e and voyngers, from some 400 ves efa, --:p: A Parisian papir exceedingly enjoys t following: A proof of the originality of British manners is the genuine regard of the English for the game of thess. Tua wards the end of the year 1848, Ca ahi Thomas, who for six months had playing a game of choes with Mr. lamson, wvas ordered to the Cape .o lope. The gentleman agreed to ue the game by correspondence, th being live hundred guineas. They several moves by lotter, but Capt. as, during a Cafyre battle, was wou4 and died. Before dying, however, he drew K up a statement, in which, combining all the possible and probable moves of his ad4yer sary, he terminated the game, and the i placing the men, he enjoined one ofh iiIb colleagues to play out the game.' r'r; Williamson agreed, and after a strugglep three months bctwon himself testa.m nta ry execu'or of Captain Thomas, in which, of course, all the Landon amateurs interest ed themselves intensely, the latter was de. clared the victor. This, adds the journal J ik one of the rarest and most curious higi dents that we recall. NAII.ED TO THE COT rEn.-WVe heard it bruited about that Chancellor Dargan in' a !:mte'lpec':h had repud aed Mr. Ithett. The Chancellor promptly contradicts this misrepresentation. in concluding- a Jet. ter he says of Mr. Rhett: "If Mr. Rhett is charceable ig fanaticism,' I am equ-lly so. not 'mad, but speaks the word-s oftuth, soberness.' I wish we had more mad, of the same stamp. 1' did not on that occa sioi charge political fanatici:m upon ,a party or &nrdy of tea i South Carolin I do not know that sdheh opprobrium jus:fy attarh to any party in this State' less, indeed, it i.e to those who fir iove in awe of the great IdlI at Washih t are movim heaven and earth tor.g onil, Carolina own from her rfty poi tiqtra plunge her into a aste wto And di-grace, whidhwill ma m ieioaurz stock of her sister States E and render her forever impdteh to dovan' act for the vindication of h1 hts, inithe recovery of her independent -" "I repeat, that the supposed imputatidn upon Mr. Ithett has alone induced'iti to wr:te this letter. I could not' be quiet,; and st r the impression to exist'that I.iad aimed a'blow (feeble though it might be - at this able. fenarles.atriotic ehampio - SouthC'atoina. WA~sING O? -ritzE TfG a large and respectable au~dience werp - present to witness the experiments of lit. McCormnick. "the Antipodean." Though' riot very fluent as a 'peaker, he explained4 his tiheories in a clear and satisfacri matiner. and ha experimaents were ;*y applaumded. - T1he great feat of walking on a polise'\ marble slab,-head utownwar-d, wao verttably p~erfortmed incrednible as it may be se,. : M r. B. t al ing several st eps, and walk the whole leunth of the slab of some ten or twelve feet. After the conclusion of the' performanices, a meeting of thtose present was organized by appinitinig William Mt. Shinm, flag., President, and-4ol. J. Heron' Foster, Secretary. A seriesi of resolutions . were thet adopted, expressive of the great' satisfaction ot the audieniee.-Pittsbrh Commncecial Joutrital. br A MEI.ANcIIOLY SI~nT-Dri- Reidt a traveler through the high'ands- of Peru,' found lately in thle Desert of Atbcama, the ! dried remaims of an assembhlage- o'f hiumaft beings, live or six hunidred in'nuriter,inen,.4~ womern andl chaldren, seated in a semi-circlio ' as whetn alive, and Etaring into the burrn " waste before them.: 'Phey had net buied; life hnd- not departed before - thus- sat ea-sttm4i but hope was goneiht' Spjmh inivad-er was at hand, and,# no escape being left, they had come hither ., - die. They i~till nit itmmoveable in that7 dreary desert: dried like aununies by thie. etfiect of the hot air. the~y still keep theirr poisition, stting4 up as ini solemn~countcil, w eovrthat dread Arcopagus" ailence broseverlastingly. THE SOstERSTsr-This is the nam of a new dance which bids-fair to-knoeil~b Wahta, the Miuzurka, the P'olka,' theI~ dIowa, amid the Scot tish into a cockedthatt This last nmammed dnance in by far the inest ridliculous affair that ever was participated' in by sane people. We never see it with2 out thiinking ot a ganider balancing hIm self on one le,, atmd ti hdding atyactonately' and aamuor~aisly on his favorite goOSe. But from all accounts theo Somaersetski is :tbE dance of the Rge. It is daneed' hy out persons--t wo-habeis and two gente~ T'he ladies are dyessied in a frock- ms to th~e knee, and the continuances ar, 0! stbckinet fitting as closo as pdssible talthe' skin. One l~ady we.ars' a white stocki' ada black stocking, anid thi ether de one green and one redel:stocking. Igent lemetn are d res-ed ina ,.burtn, and stoeking~s airb of pink a:At purpf6 eo - The diansn begins by the gentlemen trurnaing somnersets over the ladies;' after which the laudins turn somlersets vve~ hqe gentlemnen; arid then the w hohe party tui s'omersets oveechm, other, priniscuopnt y. and m'iscelianeously. During thia hast' named movemient, the performers.'Ah their vairiegated costumeos, preset. all. the chatnes of thme Kaheidescope. "Thoso ivho' have seen tiidanceo admire it lr~ty. It util douitbtlessc .V in vognie at f c th6 ' wvaterimg places ithis seatson. SamaimAma iv BInD AOWE. -The Fren h '3 nal 1le Phr- i~' York, pubblal e' a h-tier frotm Paris, in~ gwhi ch it 's st ate~d {h':t tan amr. n .ui in ,h1it ~titry,'at the. Rttegcstiotn ot a Monainsf' ;ienry Gabrru'x. reei v1 constructeg ad rerylcar,im which he m: d a n a 44e n on ant wa Mgdmawn by M"wans ini .rec'tir4'f contrurgto the wmdc. and ait r td'at a'spot An tip m.