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????l??ii .ig?wr??iTMrTmmXtmm 'J?.g M ~ KNCLI-sn COMMENTS. " ' ~"f Jl is well for the political nbn-mr to keep ; firmly in mind thai the word republic will hear ' as many meanings a a a iiitfn may choose to i give it?else the contradictions exhibited by the i two great extent example* of a self-governing ; democracy Will !? apt to <iriw hint to despair. j Only a week ago, on its being 'iinioniiced that j an infinitely Ainnil portion of tile PaiUinns 1.1- i ton Jed to celebrate the bid inlay m their present , institutions by going in procession to church.; ami depositing some tlovves.s in a cemetery, the j funds began to stagger, au.i some sixty t!iou- : sand soldiers passed a uigat ami a day under ! anus. The day before yesterday we liad to record .1 second burst ol' panic terror in Paris, oc- j casioned by a report that the officers of the na- ; tiomil guard were to be elected by uuiveisal stdfrage according to thv letter of the constitution. *1 ISO same evening Ii.v .Uj.fitv !!??-? j-.ij-.-.c reached us with nccouu's of si prolonged poiiti 'col disturbance, of which the It- blest vibration ; Would have toppled down one-half of the Kn- j i-opean thrones. A fugitive negro had been i taken into custody by the United States .Mar-1 shall in Boston, under a positive enactment ot'| the central Legislature, sanctioned by an ex- j press provision of the Federal Constitution.? I The news spread. Tli'e otiicial is attacked j?v ; a mob of colored people, and 13 compelled to release the prisoner, who is forthwith carried (n triumph to the border of* a contiguous State, and thence, hv a new escort, conducted to iln> British possessions in Canada. The i.<i) k of the respectable classes applaud. The news- ' papers are frantic with enthusiasm. A proela-: roatioii is issued hv die President, derlaiing. that tho law must be enforced, and n thousand tongues reply that human legislation m st be : postponed to the dictates of the conscience and the instincts of nature. It is the extreme of violence defended by the extreme of aiiti-soci,.! doctrine. Well! you turn from the disastrous columns, and, looking to the other side of the ; page, you find yourself in a report of proceedings comeniorative of (ieneral Washington's nativity, with edit -rial comments thereon The leading men of all parties have met together to consecrate the name which is in itself a symbol of Union, and to proclaim the eternity of the hero's works. Every form of strong ami sensuous metaphor is enlisted to express the strength, the vigor, the stability of the republic. It is an eagle It is the sun. It is Of ion, with bis bolt of stars. It is the l'lcicfiys "multiplied by three.** It is the infant Hercules. It is a Colossus seated on the Rocky mountains, and batuing bis feet in the twin oceans. The verv rhet? ric smacks of-Justy and unehastcned vonth and seems to proirrsc length of days in form as subject. Clearly the federation does not mean to go to' pieces. The commotions at Boston point umlouht"dly to a real and abiding dangpr. but they do not prove drat it is any closer at hand than it was before. The tendency of the abolitionist agitation to degenerate into a disunionist movement has provoked aao.l of reaction in favot^/ of the fugitive slave law which, obnoxious it is, has been enforced with unexpected readiness in New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, nun some of the Northwestern States. The attempts to compel the extradition of negroes ill ?' ' ?--> - r..,.wl WJISHCIHl'StMlS uavr, uu mc uun i p.w.v.i froitiess, and the last failure took place under the alarming circumstances which we have just sketched, nut, as regards the popular feeliig on the subject of slavery, there is a considerable difference between. New .England and the free States which are in immediate contact with slave soil, or whi' h receive h certain propoition of their immigrant population from the South.? An arrest under the recent enactment seems to strike the Mew fchiglnndors more ill the light a foreign aggression than as legitimate, though oppressive* interference of a domestic authority.) There is much, indeed, iu the accounts we have perused, which recalls and is illustrated bv our own experience of tiie hist fo'nr mouths. 1'ufting out of the question such exceptional i.-r i tants as tliv Durliarn letter, we may asseit that the no-popery agitation grew out of conditions combinations exceedingly germane ti? the source of the ferment* in Massachusetts. We were all of us told from our infancy upwards, that popery was |>ersoctihiig and ustiiping. The religious education of Englishmen pre-suppo-es ^ 8uc.lt an article of belief. I?ut though an insig- j nifiennt section of the community had ai ways especially devoted itself to the cultivation of anti-Romish sentiment, in the great mass of j Englishmen it had become practically extinct I ' as a principle ofactiou, except so far as it occasionally colored their \icw of the cvcilasting perplexities of the It ish question. Then camel ^the Pope's Inief and the (.'nrdina's pastor al. The enetuy, who had passed into the condition of a myth, assumed a palpable and aggressive reality, and a point ofuieauing w;e given to lessons which had hitherto been sterile. Toe country seemed, for the the moment, to rally to Pwornf Hull find iiiiliiriknlhm nt nllCi Mlll'lllllOIlt began burning with an intensity which wnulu doubtless Imve been loss violent it) its imin.-di ate manifestations, if <ntrcontact with the n>urJNtig power had U?en closer ami more constant. Just s , the New F.ngluttd populations have I been brought up in conventional abhorrence of negro slavery, against which the whole ee.ono- j my of their society is a standing protest.? ; Hitherto they have content j luted it from a dis. ' tance, through the oh-cure ami embarrassed ' medium of sectional controversies at Washing ton, and they have been content to abandon its permanent condemnation to the abolition societies. The fugitive slave bill passes; an arrest is effected in their streets--aml In! the accursed thing is there in the midst of them. A first cause has l>ee n damaged by the* excess ol" irritation in which they have momentarily indulged; and it would he vain to deny that their turbulence contrasts very unfavorably with the j dutiful, though reluctant, acquiescence of the | Middle States, whose intercourse with the j South has furnished a due Corrective to their judgment on the matter. There is little room for donht that the measures which have convulseu the Boston populace were expressly shaped to that end by their authors. The recovery, under process, of a slave from New England involves so much trouble, vexation, and exiwme, that if isuwual|v i:i:possi,,!:> t:ial i! should be undertaken as a emu*uertM and ind<?l wo la-Jievo J, ni-ami?u ... ^1???^jv-r-1 that tho two -arrests attempted have heen separately traced to the malignity of a disunimiLt volunteer. As it is prolinhle thai new provocatives will !*? adiei'-.-Ntered, the decree of suhscipient danger will depend on t!ie greater or less rapidity with which New Kn?;l imlers resume their characteristic. reverence Iroat the law. i'atiiotic counsel does tiot appeal* to he j wanting: and really among the most ingtnious, | if not the most scrupulous, of the advocates ol ntadetaiioii, we must class 'he author of the i placed directed again? t Mr. (ieorgc- Thompson, wiiivii we printed voitrda'*. The titeitiher lor | tiie Town Hamlets has been ncrnmhulttiug tiie Northeastern Slates on what he styles, with considerable niir-ilr, "professional tour," and we heat tint! lie has already had the distinguished honor of creating some half dozen tints. An opponent of ks> perspicacity would have missed the advantage afforded by .VIi*. Thompson's Mngli-'t distinction; hat Lexington is down on the sore nnint in an instant, and, ilex tetously commencing with calling his victim an "Knglisb serf," lie proceed.-, to argue that a member of the British I'm liuient who devotes himself to sedition in America, must necessarily have been paid by his government to bring the Union into contempt. Perhaps this is a little two bad. Mr. Thompson's pecuniary transactions aie scrupulously routined to dealings with oriental despots, and we believe that it would be unfair to inter, from his connection with the cabinets of Delhi and Sattaru, that he is a stipendarv of Lord Paloio&ton's on mission. We find it stated that he intends to remain a little longer i:i \taeric.a, for the purpose of living dotvn calumny; but for his ow n sake, and mr the peace of the country, we trust he will return at once, and the next time he falls into I conversation with his political friend on the subject of (ienoral Haynau, perhaps he will desc.ihelo them the peculiary correct impression of a distinguished foreigner which an en; lightened moh de'i ives from rumor and the newsI papers - London Choruicle. From the Montgomery (Ala.) Advertiser. Mouth Carolina. As the pul tical position of the Palmetto 1 State is one of peculiar interest and attraction ! it this time, we inset t below an account of a ' speech delivered hy one of l?or Senators at ' Edgefield Court iluu.se, a few da}'* ago ?the ; lion. A. I*. Butler. We take it from the Edge| lield Advertiser, the editor of which is a brother-in-law of the Senator? a staunch advocate of separate secession. In connection with this speech we would state that lien. Wallace and Mr. Orr, two Congressmen from the State, are reported to have made sjieeehes to their constituents lately, in which they took ground similar to that of Senator Butler. These tilings ate not agreeable to inanv of lis who are preI ? ** I pared to hack South Carolina at any cost, hut i ft is important that tliey should lie known.? , ?>o it .appears that there are serious divisions even in-that gallant little State as to her true policy in tin- present emergency. South Camiiu.a not united?hut divided! it strikes oar ear with ominous forebodings?aloio-t with 1 terror; something akin ! tii.it awful sound of ; " Li* (J aide reel lie " to tiie ' grand army " of J tin* Liuperor ou tiie field of Wntciloo. When jriuit uohle State?now the last hope of the j South?shall have bowed to Noithern tyranny i and oppression by a quiet submission, then indeed may the South speedily prepare for that terrible catastrophe that surely awaits her? tiie abolition of slavery not only in the District of Columbia, Km' in the States. May the < J real jrliuler of nations nerve her sons to take that ' course which is the only salvation of iieiselfor I the South. If the pusillanimity of the other j Southern States shall induce them to withhold 1 tlu-ir co-operation, then let her act alone; and S|ier devoted sons, scattered far and near over ' tlm^uliol South and West, will if need he, ral !y to lie*' st.iml.ud and iipfn id tier honor. Sue ! has child en enough without her borders to . drive off every mercenary invader that mat j pollute Iter soil. A.id where is the South Cai roliiii.in that would not respond to the calls of his native State. \ vmri.: FROM SOCIKTY IIII.L. i sorikty I1im4> a [nil 1, 1851. j Hfrxsrs. Pern/Jf E'forif : (iputlemen, : I herew ftli cue lost-you five dollars lor a weekly ; i'or . 1 am in hopes to he able to send you some other names lor your rrri/ rnhnthle paper I wish it had been started 12 month * h<jo? it mi<;ht have opened the eves of our people sufheiohtly to have prevented the disgrace our mad pidilieians have involved us in; our madness is almost nt tut end. I hope, but the good and true men of our country must not relax in their efforts to place our .State iu the enviable po.-ilion she once occupied in our glorious I iiinu. \ reaction has taken place here as well as in the rest of the Slate, and I hope to see it <o> on until not a vesliife of our folly remains, (.iod speed you in your go.nl works. .4 rr<wl ion litis I a hen /'litre here. If here re tors ft> Darlington DDtriet, we deny it, and ! challenge tiie rorre>pondeiit of the Southern Patriot t<> produce tin* proof. It is a very easy matter lo ileal in assertions, ami no doulit in the above instance the hope is father to the asser- j tion. Theie are men in our District o|?pose<i 1 ti? separate State action, hut that there are any ' beyond the vicinity of Society it ill who regard resistance to Federal aggression as a ilixgriicr and charge those who are battling in t' e cause of State Rights with folly, is, w? are happy to say, not the fart, lo no movement of the penpie can entire unanimity be expected; there were those in the Revolution who opposed a reparation froin the mother country; there are those now who are disposed to hug the 'diains which tiie North is winding around their necks but we believe that the Southern Rights party of Darlington District is steadily adding to its j number fiends who can Ik* relied on when tin-1 hour of trial comes. Wo therefore pronounce the communication from Society ilill an Apiil humbug.?Darlington Flag. Never he influenced hv external appearances in forming your judgment ol a person's worth; fo niaoy n noble spit it is covered by the Int. biliioeiiU of poverty; while, not uiifieipieutlv, a showy rxteciof Concealsii villain, I From ilits Newport .>Ierci?ry. One of the str ingest infatuations of the day is that which loads certain females to advocate vvliat they are pleased to call "Woman's lights,*' as though man, from very harshness, put stumbling (docks in tiioir way to perferment, and j would in no wise permit them to rise a hove the ! ; degrading position of menials. .Nothing we conceive, can he more humiliating to every j high minded woman, than to see a large num. i her of her sex petitioning the Logislalme (as was recent I v the case in New- I'm*.) for the light to \oie. These weak, disaffected creu- | lures think the station allotted to them insigui iicant and alicgeliier too degrading; forgetting, | or rather not liiily appreciating, tiie extent of j I their power when conforming to the position ac- , ! know lodged to he the one for which they alone j J are tilled. ; I H hen a woman steps from her natural sphere, : | all her loveliest attributes forsake her; her nat- j ; oral delicacy gives way to assumed strength, j i followed by uiiseeiiiiogly boldness; and regard- i | loss ol the laws ol nature aa?l the duties incom! bent on her, sacrifices her hotter feelings to i participate in the hold and determined design i of man. ^Shc feels that in intellectual cap.iei : ty-tilte is his equal, and therefore should possens j . with him equal power; that the reins of (jovernnient should not be held bv hi.a exclusively,! j nor should she l)e deprived the privilege of enter- j ! iii'r into all his mental contests, and rather than ' 1 * ' remain subordinate, she raises a crv of "man's ! j tyranny" and Hoods the market with works on i ' "woman's ligl-.ts and duties," the "social posi- ; ' tion of woman," and the like, in which the so- 1 cial subordination of her sex is condemned ' and principles advanced, which, if received, ' would nbrog, te the laws ot nature. i In Europe, writers of this class are common t I especially in (Jerinuny and France, and we too ! are not without our "Jvmmh d'txprti" who prove themselves equal to man, lose no oppor- \ tunity of appearing in public, to the discredit of) themselves and tlrs ridiculu of their cause. Every true and highminded woman knows ; that the station assigned her is one that should j he her pride and ornament. She who would desert her trust to participate in scenes for which man alone is lit:ed, would bo faithless to all, and in i.o way qualified to make those ! ; around her happy, or to participate in the jo\s ' of a well regulated hottSehohl. Such aa one' should know that while man has to buffet tin' 1 storms oi the world, and is daily racked with ' cares that ought never to penetrate her tender breast, to her belongs all the minor duties of life ! and that it can be no unimportant vocation to ' the happiness of loved ones, nor unenviable po- I silion to become the centre of a lumpy ;iti?i u:ii I ted family. A woman so directed will never lie i led awn) bv nil the tracts and lectures |>eimed for her especial benefit; but rather will she gent\ |y labor "Willi good j Soil overcoming evil, and by mu.iU Accompli'li great thiaj*, tiy flung* ilceinnl wvak Subverting ivjrl.liv strong, and wor.Jly wi-u By fiyipty-ni"'ck.' ! Thk Nkw M ml Covrir \< ts.?The con-j i frncls for omrying the mails in this section of j 1 country have just been closed. Our Southern ! ' mail from Camden is to come by Darlington Court House, daily, in two horse hacks, at die 1 i rate of four and a half miles per hour. By this j f chang" of route an speed, our mails South will he delayed about five hours. We are also to , have a daily mail from Warsaw, on the Wil- j ! iniugton and Raleigh railroad, in addition to ; i our present daily mail from Raleigh. We dip the above train the Choraw (*>nrl!r : and hail it as the harbinger of ?ti!l hotter limes : | for old I)n: lington. We are at length to have | : a daily mail through our village, and we tru-t , i and confidently believe thai this now evidence j | of our onward progress will soon he succeeded ; I by the snoitiug of tin' iron lmr.se aaJ tin* nunbiing of llii! rail road c-lis.? i)>iflin*'un Fins: j i v A Mklxm jioi.y ?>pKc'T.\r!.r.? Yesterday | j evening tin* train of cars from I levclnnd brought , j several convicts from the city tothe penitentiary, j Among the rest were three or four mere hoys, ; who have b"On sentenced for years, in the very morning of their days, to tlio walls of a prison, : ! for heiiinus crimes against soe'ety. One hov ! I was a little over ten years of age, two others , j were only a little older; and as they rattle their j I manacles, and hobbled from the cars to the oni- i j iiibus, they laughed about their awkward li\, j j and looked hardened, and indiiicreut to the ter- j i rihle piiuishmentawnitiug tliem. The sight was j | sickening. And yet, how many parents are j ! permitting their young children to run at large, at all hours of the night, without any restraint, ! j thus inihhiing habits that, sooner or later will! ; bang tiiein to the same end.?Columbus J >ur. i A FEW DEFINITIONS. ; Marriage. ? A "State lottery," not put down. ' | War.? Congregational worship of the devil. ! .Murder to music. j Chimn'ter.?The only personal property I j which everybody looks alter lor you. Sliiji.? A cloak thrown around us at the j si'le-sccnes as we leave the stage awhile. | .\iipolrnn.? A naughty hoy who was put in t a corner because he wanted the world to pla v with. ! Woman.?The melody of the human duet. ' A golden coin, which educators plate over with silver. /Vn.? A lever, small enough to he used by one man, but strong enough to raise the whole world. Unrngr.- Hitter sweets, plucked from the | devil's garden. Quenching your thirst with i IH HIKM . Metaphysics.? Word* to stay the appetite till facts are ready. Feeling for a science in the dark. Tobacco.? A triple memento moti: dust for the nose, ashes tor the mouth, and poison for j the stomach. Lift.? One to whom we are always intro. dueed without our consent, but whom we sel 1 domquil without regret. SironL? The first hope ofthe oppressor, and < the last hope of the oppressed. Passion's spe- 1 cial pleader iu folly's court of appeal. ' . 1 Scholar.?A diver for pearls, who generally loses hia In oath before he gnt'.ers much trea- ' sure. 1 Duel.?A strange old custom, according to ' which men suffering from intlumation attempt j 1 t<> cure themselves by bleeding somebody else. Ball-room. ? A chess-board played upon by love and hate. A c nfiiied place, in which.poor creatures are committed by fashion to hard labour. Xcirrpiipcr.?The great general of the people, who lias diiven the enemy from the fortified heights of power, and compelled him to give battle in tile open field of thought. A winding-sheet, in which Parliamentary speeches are interred.?From "7 he. Council of Four." I * - - > ' -- imi ii? mmmtm THO. J. WARREN & 0. A. PRICE, Editors. TUESDAY i;VE\IN<;, AI'KH- 2l>, 1851. Our Coitou Market. We quote to-day from G to 10 1-4 cent?. telegraphicIntelligence. The Kitniomi Invasion. PRESIDENT'S PROCLAMATION. Hound Island and Paper Blckkades. Washington, April 5i(>. "The papers oflhis morning contains a proclamation from the ('resident warning all |>ersons against embarking in a Cuba invasion. Tin* President believes that military preparations are now on loot tor an expedition (principally composed of forcigu'-rs) against Cuba. The proclamation announces the penalties to which nil persons engaging in such expeditions will he obnoxious, as well as their forfeiture of all claims to the protection of the Government. The authorities civil and military, are ordered to use all precaution to arrest a I persons engaged in such an expedition, and good citizens arc urged to discountenance such schemes." / Thus it will be seen that the President, barked by the I.ion-hearted and "god-like" Secretswy of State, guards with sacred jealousy the possibility of the annexation of any Territory, v? Inch is likely to arid strength to the South. The Government voluntarily becomes the guardian of the Kingdom of Spain, intimidating by formal proclamation, those "Jurfigners'' who may meditate injury to the interes s of a Kingly power; while tin 8e ? ?! . 1,1 I II I ? O 1 tanatics who nuimy reuerai taws. aim resist rnuera! authority allowed to escape. Is the government more able to protect Spam than to preserve our own institutions! Funeral of Archbishop Eccleston. IUltimuuh, April titt?0 |?. m. The remains of the late Rev. and estimable prelate Archbishop were interred to-day. The procession was unusually large aiidvjinpositig. Some speculation is indulged, as to the probable disposition of the vacant seat, but nothing is yet known. S2T We understand that at the recent letting of .Wail Contracts,to continue fo* lour years, from 1st July, 1851. Mr. J. W. Stcagall was the successful competitor for the daily lit e frotn this place to Clientw, via Darlington C. II., and.Nociety Hill, S. iv?the present route via Tiller's Ferry, will thru lie discontinue d. Our old friend Jas. iMcEwen, Esq., (who bye the bye, has just entered upon his 73d year, hut yet, stands second to none fur a spirit of enterprise' a .d indomitable perseverance,) has again *?! < 11 r***1 I In* Ti Iv liro In < Imrlntii*. X P.. via Lancaster C. II., S. C, at.il contemplates running through to Charlotte in something less than 24 hours. Travellers via 'his route may then successfully compete >\itii a.iy other for speed.? The complete schedules of all the Ruins terminate!:.' here will be published a? soon as they are received l>y our Postmaster. Ee3ig::atiOQ of Professor Thomwell. W e regret io perceive t'r>?iti a correspondence In the Columbia papers, that this distinguished I")i\ ine, intends vacating his chair in our College. Wo extract from his reply to a committee of Students appointed to solicit his continuation innffice; "it is needless lor me to detail the reasons which have induced me to helievc that (led t as called me to another field. It is enough. to say. that had I not been persuaded it was the Divine will that I should go, I should never have consented, especiaby alter the reception ?f your letter, to abandon a position of so much promise." We understand from a private source that Professor Thoruwell has accepted a ca'l to a Pastoral charge in the city of Charleston, S. C. "What is really expected of South Carolina by her Fneuds thioughout the South?" Thus a-ks our neighbor ol the Edgefield Adier**?..! >( > if/viiLI tint ufi.pi' t'llilne 111 fn i?ap /?f < f ?*G# t <1111 j h r ?? uiiiu % i in i o ? rj ^ uu nv/i m iu i vi ui Southern Rights in South Carolina, and out of it, wn? as tri.i'ninl stniin. li a supporter of truili and justice as Col. Simkins. and would answer this interrogatory as he answers. We extract the following from his last paper, being a part of an Editorial on this subject: "What is reai.lv e.xrnrrrn or South Carolina rv jieb friends , TJIKOUr.llOUT TIIE SoUTIt It is expected that site will move steadily on in that course of self preservation, which her regular Legislative body have indicated. It is expected that " she will take no step backwards." It is expected that she will do a deed that w ill rally the Southern Eights party of (ieorgia, Alabama and .Mis Lsippi. It is expected that this deecd will be, at the very least, a declaration of her fixed purpose to hoist upon a given day, the banner ol disunion. I? i?i Kviwi'ii'd that she will indicate this our pose |?v sue It action, us will command the respect of the I'liioii and of the world?such action as u ill he worthy of having applied to it, those terms, so unpopular at this time, "definite, distinct, positive, and decided. It is expected that she will prove herself entitled to the appellation, which has been bv many accorded to her?the champion of the rights, tire honor and the happiness of the South. It is expected that she will resist the Federal fioverontent, irhrnrrrr it coincth in its military night, or in any other way, to intc-fcrv iri.h hat o. igioal independence and specially reserved supremacy of the separate Uo publics, which agreed, tor cc; tain, well-defiriai.aiid expresshfr# fl limited purposes to dwell tcrgetiier ill a Coiuf H federacy, as long as it might he agreeable to The Moultrie House. This attractive establishment will bo opened V for the nccomriio<bition of the public on Mon. I day ext. Looking out ujwn the broad expanse of ocean, with a tirni and beautiful beach in, ^ front, extending for inlh's, and upon which tho.; j j surf breaks unceasingly, its . facilities for sea' bathiiitr cannot be surpassed. The salubrity of * the Uiand is proverbial, and its convenient pros- j imity to Charleston, with which there is hour. ly communication by stenudiouts, places tho f amusements and other resources of a large city I within easy reach. Every arrangement, wo tj feel assured, will be inado by Capt. Paine to 1 secure the comfort ot his <ruests. and to mukH 1 them, wliile under his roof, feel perfectly at ^ lioiiie.?Mercury. y " . " I' fDeath of Commodore Barron., We have the melancholy detj to nprfunn (says the Norfolk Beacon of Thuosduy Tafcf,) of I anuounciiia the <L*ut!i of CuiuniodorttJ.**. Bvki %JT ] ho\| Senior Captain of the United-tJtiftes Navy, ! who expired at his residence in this city, yesterday afternoon at 5 o'clock, in the 83d year of his age. OCT"There were 160 deaths in Philadelphia i for the week ending the 19th inatai^;rfpoHng 1 thyr same tiuve there were 391 deaths in NewX?rk; of which 45 died of coPsuthption. Seventeen thousand twh hundred autfniuetysix immigrants artive'd at New- Y*rk durinir 8 Wl ? ; the la.?t week. GAl'TToN TOTHK IT'BUC. ' The unpar.i!|tle<l und aatonishrngeffiraeyhfOr1 Wtatar'n | Bal nntof Wild t'ltetry in ail diseasea. fnr-whieti it ia #e! commended?wiring many raw* after tit* akill n?lhe heat | physician* were unavailing?ha* catwal riuprineipled <4 ; counterfeiter* and imitator* lo palm off aporiouaKninnrr* of similar nntne nod aojieftrancg. ftir tins genuine Balaam. BB .NO!' HKGKIVEI* BY IMPOSTBR*. The public should be careful to get tlte.genuine artiele n? the imitation* and counterfeit*. peine g?* ?P Jto those whi> know nctliiug of mrdirine, of the nMli aNithe human system, are entirely unsafe and daitgeroaa. f e From the Columbus [Ga-] Ehunirer. Feb. g. 1848. WISTARS BALSAM OF. W ILD CHERRY. * We lave un utter ablmrattec mil kind ofpuffuand especially rnrlt as are calculated tomisleadtheinblic aa to the curative virtue* ??f patent medicine*. *n?ere are doithtl- ? roanv catch-penny notunima, daily, vended and and hourly ttaed. which are not only ofno value, but al*o : uiteiy ?u leteriou* n, the physical nmn. There are other I bjlsaras. eitnu-t. Ac., not emlirnre.l prradventura, in the j phnrmacaiiiic arrnnjreinrnt* of I he apothaca/y or regtilnr *' physician. that are in rerteitr case*. of more value than all the prescriptions of <?alt-n put to together. ,Wj?tar> Bal- _< earn of Wild t'hrrrv i* admitted by th? runcBtrent testinion\ of llioee who have proved it* virtue* to baojfthc latter class. In colds and comnmptinn asthma and ehrtmie coughs a* well ax in o'her kindred disease? Hba* been used -i with almost univemil sucre-*. In a rhmatr so cliangea- J hie a* 'hi*. stifierifiduring and aggravating the family.of ^ disease* above alluded to, this nteJirioe hata value not J 10 In* estimated. 1 Ngitv genuiue unless signod I. BUTTSfihon 1 tliu WfitpiK'r, ftir sale in Camden at MeKEI\r?*S jl i Drugstore . \Vli<4??ule-J?y4*; M. <*?fhftt?&C<?. | (.'Iwrlrrton, S. C' , and l?y Druggists generally ^ j throughout iheState. * Kr We invite those who have any reason wfeear tlmt tliey aie inclined to lie ('oftst;tap:ive; to read the certificate# of cure* ?f tlits- disease eflcclothbjf Of. A "syrup of Liverwort and Tar. They seem to be almost iui rare Ions. V Kor sale at McKtin's Drnn Rtora, Camden&C. See advertisement in another column. CAMDEN PRICES CURRENT. |*ryd. I I In lizard, lb 8 t?*W t I Hair Kobe Ih to 1*2 Ih 6 ia 7 J Karon, P> 0 in 1'2<j)lnW(K, gall 31 1*40 Rntter, !!? IS to 20 (Markarei, bbl-' 8 to 13 Kranrly, gall 28 to 35 i Nails, lb 41 to* 6 Beeswax, Ih IS lo 22 Oat*, hrt^LrI ,,73 Beef, lb 4 to 5 Pea*, bnshel 80 ('ht-cHp, ih 12 15 I Potatoes,* wrrt.hu '"50 - i ( "tton, lh (5 to JUi ! Irish bti- . .;! Corn, bu?!i?*| $1 to ltX5 Rye, bushel 95 to I* Hour, bhl 61 to 7. Rice. bushel 3 to I Fodder. rwt 150 Stiar, lb 7 to 10 . Hide*, dry lb 8 to 9 'Sail, *nrk , 11 Iron. lb 5 to 61 shot. bag H Lime. hhl 2 to 21:Toharce, -IhlO to50 i Leather, sole. Ih 17 to21 IWheol, ; Inish I Head Quarters, * 2JJ REGIMEXT S. C. MIUTIA. > Camden, 27th April, lbol. } T1 piifunnrr of nrrlem from Brigadier fo-nerat Chunk I JL Icr. the Pioneer* within the limits of the 2td Regiment i SC. Militia, aro hereby ordered to assemble at the Market i i House in Camden, at 8 oVIoek. A. M.. on Thursday the 15th May next, under the Quarter Master of the Ragnabht ? prepared for three day* service, in making preparation ibr ' the Kncanipment of the Officers and Sergeant* of the bth i I Br Lmde 8. C. Militia. ^ The 1.1. Col. and Major are chargon witn ineeuemiea j ; of this order. * lly order of Col. TAVLOR. Th? J War run, Adjutant. 1 April -ii 34 5t 1 OFFICE TRANS'N. S. C. R. R. COMPANY CHARLESTON, 22n APRIL, M5L * BY a Resolution of the Hoard of Director*, (passed 1'J'h April, 1851,) the following rate? : oi Freight on all articles below mentioned havo * I been adopted: LUMBER?to be l.wded and unloaded by otrner?. Frmn anv Station la-low Hrnnchville To Charleston, from lal May to 31*1 Aug. $2 50 1<VMl From 1st Sept. to 3()tl: April, 4 50 I ,1er j? From any Station above Branch ville vr^ " I Tu Charleston, from 1st May to 31st Aur. t 00 ,4iU ,ccr" i From 1st Sept. to 30th April, 5 00J , RKIi'K?to bo londed and unloaded by owners. Front any Station below Urnnchvilic i Tot harlejion. front 1st May to 31st Aue. $3 00 'From 1st Sept. to 30th April, 5 00 ( " From anv Station above Hranchvtlle ^pwlWA. To Charleston, from l?t May to 31st Aug. 4 00 j ^ i From 1st Sept. t<> 30th April, 6 00J V GRANITE?to he loaded and unloaded by owner?. I From nny Station on Road to Charleston,) $3 00 per too of I / ... VI-.. .. *1 ? A.I ,WM II. ^ mini 1*1 i-mjr in ""S"". - J ?VW lira. . J COAL?from Charleston to any station, From lnt May n>31*t August, ?5 50) per ton of 8000 From 1st S?-pt. to 3t)ih April, 8 50$ Ibe. RAW TCRPF.NTIISE?to ho loaded hy owner*. From any Station on Road to Charleston. From Ut May to 31st Augmt, 25 rent* | . . From 1st Sept. to 30th April, 371 rts. 5 ^ ^ MANURF.S, GOANO. GYPSUM. ANO REfGSE I.IMF. intended for Agricultnral purpueeK From Charleston to any Station on R<?d7|?t? From 1st May to Slat Aneuat. 12lo. per hundred lh*. 25 cent* r*' thousand feet lor LnmMr, .V> eenle per thousand fur Brick*, and 75 cent* per ton for Granite will he charged in addition to the abu\?- rate* when unloaded hv the orapanv. In no instance will the tompany undertake to load l.nmher, Brirk*. Granite or Turpentine. J. D, PETJ$?'H, A'nnftr1t.TranHj*irtation. Ac. South OtmTinu U H-1 nmpamr. April 29 H * I - .