The Darlington flag (Lydia, SC) 1851-1852, November 06, 1851, Image 2
THE DARLINGTON TLAG,
i* rrnuRitKD *
El SKY T||Ui\Y UORShC,
VT liAULIXUTO^I, L. II., U\
> OR WOOD & in: JLOK7IF..
vei'iic or suim Kirnpi:
Til ::iU unci.', (p« r annum,) • • - ><i'J OU
At tlv rxnlration of »*ix months * 2 50
At tbo Mlt of the ivar • .... 3 00
AbVE&TUIKG:
ADVEtTisr.MEJmi, innorted at 75 eentu a
square (lourtwu linen or less,) for Uie first,
and Sit ctn. for earli snliapqitent insertion.
ItimitiKMCARUs, uotcxcei-ding ten lines,
nserted at i|5, a year.
' 11 11
[From I hr Sou'hrrn /’re**]
TIIF REM IT IN MHTH CIKftllll.
TVe liave looked with sonic attention, at
the spi'culation of Northern pa|ier8 0ii 'lie
rerrnt elerlion in Soulli Carolina. We
linil that they generally regard it as the
end of •Southern resistance to the Coin- .
promise,and in fact, ns a final overthrow
of the right of secession, and of all practi
cal rcsislanco to Federal usurpation. All
this is o mistake.
We never supposed that the separate ,
secession of South Carolina was a very j
probably event—nor w ere ever satisfied
’hit it wan a w ise policy. Indeed, we !
have at no time expected a desolution of
the Union to result from the Compromise, I
although we think that measure would |
hare justified it. Wo supposed that if|
two or more Southern States had do- |
clar.'d their determination to secede unless ;
the Compromise was abandoned, and the
territorial lights of the South respected,,
that the Federal Government would have |
receded. And we think the South has |
committed an irretrievable blunder in not
making that i«sue. As for South Caro- j
lina,her position remains widely different
from that of tho other Southern States. |
•She a still pledged to secession w hilst the
Compromise endures,but lenerves to her*
self tlie determination of the time and i
mode in future, but is ready to act when
ever the co-operation of another State is
obtained.
Thus, one State of tho Union has been
thoroughly alienated, and very powerful
minorities in several others. And many
of the Southern States profess to be ready
for a disruption on the occurrence of lur-
thcr aggressions, which probably will oc
cur. It is needless to rejicat what we
have often said, (particularly now, after
what has transpired,) that we have very
little confidence in these disruptive pledges j
certainly, if the compromise can be not
only endured, but accepted “gracefullv, , '
honorably, cheerfully, loyally, there is lit
tle reason to expect resistance in half a -
dozen Mipposable cases of far interior j
enormity.
But tfie most important result of the
late discussions is, tfie development of a
iarge and powerful body of men who hav.*
the sagactiy and independence to oalcu-
late the value of the Union, not only fi
nancially, Init politically, socially,and mor
ally ! and who are ready to art according
to their convictions. This party is not
predominant in any State but South Caro
lina. Hut iLis much more powurfiil time
anyefflie parties was originally that as
serted what are now the settled doctrines
of the country on its most important inter
ests. The present systems of currency [
and taxation were at the beginning (and
that only about eighteen or twenty years
■"ig 0 ,) much less supported by numbers or i
talent. And it is remarkable that they
originated in the very region, and among
the very sort of men who now assert the
rights of the South. And it is equally re
markable that they were then denounced i
by the very saint: men that are now fore
most in denouncing the present assertion
•it Southern rights, and denounced in al
most the same words.
Why, when the removal of the deposits ;
w as made from the United Slates Bank,
and also when the Government w as final
ly divorced from all banks, there were de- I
nauciatioim and predictions of ruin and ,
desolation quite equal to w hat we are now j
told would Is- sure to happen if the Union 1
were dissolved. Nay, those measures were 1
distinctly pronounced to lie revolutionary.
Mr. Clay said we were in the midst of a
revolution—bloodless as yet. So that it 1
i- no new thing for Mr.Clay to use violent
language, anti to indulge in extravagant
predictions ot the conei-qiit-nces of disre
garding his plans; but it would bo rather
new for his prophecies to Ire fulfilled. Mr. j
Webster told us also on that occasion, as
an \cubo fir making a speech in Balti
more
bath:
evidently thinks that there would tie no
SabUilhs if the Union were dissolved. If
then-fore, wo judge the future from the
past, and consider the many analogies that
present themselves, we have no room for
discouragement. The sentiment of the
Men! Right- party is neither transient nor '
trivial On the contrary, recent and com-
illg events will dev< lope its necessity.
After the perpetration of such a deed
as the compromise, the standard of publir
morality must fall so low as to invite other
attempts of a similar character. To ac- (
qtliesce In tin* compromise, is to acquiesce
in a principle and precedent pregnant with
overy enormity, and threatening every in- (
t.-r-st. It w ill whet the appetite for spoils !
to uch a voracity, that the robbers them
selves will fall out and turn upon one an
other. Already is this tendency distinctly
visible. We observe tliat the late Demo
cratic meeting at Tammany Hall pronoun-
of th
Texas and Arkansas. And when these
States make an honest demand of the
Federal Government, that demand w ill bo
rt-Miectvd. As for the labor and time
which the .*4ruggle will require, they art
t the price w hich must always be paid for
j the atiaimnent or preservation or rigida’
j and are not too high a price. Ntune men
1 may f.iiut by the way side, or sink down ,
in sullen despair, or go over to the enemy.
Bui we have an inexlinuitible supply of t
recruits in the young men of the South,
who are generally taking the right side.
There is a very wide spread^onviction !
at the south ol the necessity of doing
semcihing to preserve and restore her
fortunes. Some are for commercial and ;
mauufacitiring movements—others for j
territorial acquisition—for Cuba and for
the Sierra Madre. We shall have occa- 1
sion, from lime to time, to examine these
plans. Perhaps it is not unfavorable that
a variety is proposed. They enlist a
greater number of minds in a common o *- !
ject, and prepare them to adopt finally
that which argument and events shall
demonstrate to be the most effectual.
'jar Tilt* foBowing geiitlfiKen have
been instilled as oBcers of Da^ington
Diviaion, No. 24 Sons ofTt-mpamnec, for
die presunt Quarter:
D. A. McEachkrx. IF. P.
Rout. Hi- ORsok, TV'. A.
F. F. WaITCET, R. S.
Titos. J. Wtr.so.x. A. R. S.
J. J, Grekx, F. S.
T. J. Fu.n.n, T.
Wm. Shv, C.
HnxRV Jeffords, A. C.
Chas. Hmpitiina, I. S.
W. R. Ulster, O. S.
to wfcit
condition n# nt\0 of degradi
lio
- a
their owm
tion? N<>. 4
Camlinti ia very
any of her sistera. In all the other Uua in
States the people linv# been gulled into nn d pi
o. /Hu* dfatiiii! of Soil!
ifioii 1 111 Jroiu that GH
Dflvlinjjtou flag.
NEWS ITERS.
The Democrats, in Virginia, have
succeeded in electing thirteen out of
fifteen memliers to Congress. In the
Richmond District, Caskie, has lieaten
Bolts by a majority of 400 votes.
The question of dividing California is
becoming it serious one. If it is done,
we will douhtless have anotlier tree-soil
State ntlded to the already colossal
power ol the North.
The President has issued a proclama-
(nation against the invaders of Mexico.
Moses Summers, part proprietor of
the OuontLigr^ptandard, is one of the
.•StW at Syracuse,
five years heforl^eeflingy' 1/
ke With their Other leaden still filter*
tain such a jioKcy let tliqin prcsegl to
Us soiOeteing fcr/i^iW/- we will iheiiJPou*
aider Whether we canfo-*|ieratc with .. . ^ ,
theui,—Grteni iUr Momn/ainrcr. > ; the belief tliat the pomproinise alter an
! » not intolerable. There are divisions I
SIII TU l lRllLINY SIBUITTEU. amongst tbun—they do not foei do-
It will be seen from our telegr ‘ - graded,and if they do .ml resist, it is
despatch that Soutl) Carolina too lias because they see no neecssil v tor ii
1 struck tho colors of resistant-(5—has fu Far difierent with Hmith Camlina. II
effect declared for submission to the «ho stays in the Union, it will lie under
I Compromise. When the principal edi* | the guns of C as tic Pinckney. She will
tor of this paper predicted two months he influenced by fear, and despised lor
ago in a letter written from that State, | d.
that South Carolina would not secedo,
what a hubbub it created! Few
Southern men hereabouts, and fewer
secessionists still in South Carolina
ANf (T)M31 LSSION MEtt-
’, CHARLBSjhjNTS. C.
Ilferal ml vaiiccs on Cotton,
rid I
PrSuctApnd
attcnfloii toKhe jelui
M nvtos ordrmt th
July Iti 2u
ill give strict
ii of all ar-
im.
-It
DARLINGTON, S. C.
J. H. NORWOOD. Editor.
THI ESDYY MORNIXt. N0YE1BER 6.18§1.
AMRTS FOR THE BARL1NCT0N FLAB.
8. D. Hallforp. • Camden. S. C.
Charles DeI«orme, Sumtmille, 8. C.
i
klfOur friend. A. E. Mclver has left at j
our office a Potatoe, which measures 15
inches in circumference and about the
same number in length.
JrlF" - We baee been pained to learn that
a serious accident happened to Maj. 8. F
Gibson, of Marion Village, some lime du.
ring the past week. He with one or two
more persons, we understand, was riding
jti a canoe, having along with them a gun
heavily charged.. The gun was acciden
tally discharged and several shot entered
the thigh of Major Gibson. We are glad
to hear that his w ound is not considered
mortal.
DEATH OP COL. JOHN R. HILLER.
This worthy citizen of Sumter District,
who for forty years past held the office of
Commissioner in Equity for that District,
died on the morning of tlie 21st ult. As
an evidence of the high regard entertain
ed for him by his professional brethren,
we subjoin the following resolution which
among others was passed at a recent
meeting of tlie Sumter Bar:
ResolmL, That a committee of two Is-
appointed to raise a fund by subscription
from members of the Bar, for the purpos
of obtaining a portrait of the late Col.
John B. Miller, to he executed by Mr.
Scarborough, and to be placed in the of
fice of the Commissioner in Equity.
“THE RESILT IN SDI TII ( ARIILINA.”
We copy an article under the above i
caption from the Southern Press and
commend it to our readers, on account
of its calm temperate and philosophic
tone. Although differing with our abb- co-
temporary as to the expediency of separate
state secession, we can but admire the
prisoners arrei
It ia rumored that the Georgia legis
lature will elect Mr. Toombs to the U. 8.
Senate in place of John McPherson Ber
rien. whose t«in of office expires on
the 3rd of March; 1853.
Tlie City Council of Richmond, Va.,
tender tho hospitalities of the city to
Louis Kossuth mid his companions in
exile, and have appointed a committee
to make arrangements.
The evidence against the rescuers at
Syracuse, was closed on Saturday last.
They made no defence. The Judges
were to have given their decision on
Monday. No doubt was entertained of
their being held to hail for trial.
Greenough, the Sculptor,has arrived
at Boston, after
[ years in Europe.
piOj’t'd, during his absence in Italy, on
the marble group for the Capital at
Washington, which only awaits the
means of transportation to the U. 8.
The Charleston Cotton Factory w as
. ,o!d on *'»c 23d inst. at auction, for
$(15,000, to a company of gentlemen
lielonging to that city, possessing am-
pie capital for the successful prosecu
tion of its ojierations.
DIRECT TRADE.
Speaking of movements now on foot
the South, the New York ’rimes
would hear to it. But now alas it is says:
a sad reality. Atone time we were The regulation of juices is a chime-
strongly in favor of that State s.-ccding ra of course ; hut the project of a di-
alone hut latterly since Mississippi Al- reel intercourse between the South ant]
ahama and Georgia have declared so Eurojie which is a principal object of
decidedly for submission we have more the Macon gathering is not at all chi-
than doubted the sound policy of Smith inerical. The trade of the SdlMhem
Carolina going out of the Union alone States is large and susceptible of any
We much fear that there would have amount of extention. The prqgresa of
been sympathy enough in the surround- manufactures in their midst naturally
ing States to have enabled her to have, suggests a corresponding development
contended successfully with Federal of commerce. The commodities are
Government; which would in all proha- anijile the shijijiing procurable, and the
hility have resorted to coercion. As it is economy of saving the cost of coast
she has done no more than what Vir
ginia Georgia Alabama and MUsis&ip-
jii have set her the example in. They
passed as strong and as high sounding
resolutions, and even more so than she
did. Tho only difference is that she
considered that she had more charac
ter to lose than any of the others and
on this account it will cause more jioi-
gunney and mortificatian to those gal
lant spirits who have just been beaten
down in that State. They may how
ever console themselves in the fact
that it will only have a tendency and
every strong one too, of hastening
those^vents which all men .-it the
South begin to apprehend. The sub
mission of South Carolina will do more
to hasten abolition aggression than any
an absence of nine 1 or all things put together wliteh have
Mr. G. has been cm- ! taken place since the late com|)iom-
ise. What shadow of evidence will
the North now nave left that the South J
could he brought to the point of resis
tance for any species of aggression
. however enormous! The last hope—
the forlorn hope of rcslsiance have
grounded their arms; abolition aggres-
: sion has now no opposition from any
quarter in the South. Whether they
| proceed or stand still time will very soon
tlevelojie.
The position that South Carolina
i will now assume is a matter of great
interest to the slavery question. We
feel satisfied that she will retire entirely
from the field of strife and opposition
tu Noi liiorn aggression and wo should
not ho surprised if hemal ter she should
lie the last to rally to tho standard of re
sistance i. e, if ever suvh a thing ns a
standard of rcsistanco is raised in the
South again, which we think very
doubtful. Such a course on her jiart
will he demanded by what dignity she
has left and we trust eho will pursue
it. Let the entire Smith remain quiet
ly in the hands of those who have de
clared for acquiescing in the Into com
promise tpodaiblv they can make belter
Sudge Scarbnry, (of V«.) lias been
elected to fill the Chair of Law Profes
sor in the College of William and Mary,
made vacant by the death of Judge B.
Tucker.
'Hie Rev. Roht. McXab of Carthage,
Moore county, N. C., was recently mur
dered by two of his own negroes. He
was a highly resjieetable minister of the
Bnjitist Church.
On the 10th inst. Gen. W. B. Camp
bell was installed into office, as Gover
nor of Tennessee, at the city of Nash-
| ville.
Mr. Clay has written a letter in which
which he gives an opinion that no
State has a right to secede from the
and that the States, under the Constitu
tion, have no remedy for any grievance,
cxcejit through a legal amendment of
the Constitution.
THE lO-raVTIONISTS.
The Co-ojieration wing of the great
resistance party having carried six out of
the seven Congressional Districts, now
claim a majority of die State. That a
majority are in favor of co-oneration
in resistance no one doubts—all desire
it hut that a majority are in favor of
submission in preference to State action
in the last resort we cannot believe.—
they are unwilling at present to adopt
our method of resistance wo shall look
to them to propose a measure of resis
tance which will save the honor of the
State. Their success in the late elec-
that paper still entertains towards the late j tion , m>koH npon throughout the Un-
i compromise. Our first impulse after our
recent defeat was to giro up all as losl,
but upon malurcr reflection we are dis-
j>of>t-d still to rally under the banner of
'.-.ion, or nullify a law of Congress, terms with the North than those who
have contended lor resistance.
The result in South Carolina
wise transportation to a Northern port I
obvious. The only wonder is the
movement was not made long ago.
COL. FREMONT.
The St. Louis Union of the 11 th says
Col. Fremont has com|ilct(-d and con
firmed tlie sale of his .Mariposa tract of
goblin California. The sale was made
to a company in London for one mil
lion of dollars ; one hundred thousand
of which (thatheing the first instalment)
is to be paid to Col. Fremont in the ci
ty of New Y ork, on or about the 15th
of this month. Col. Fremont may
now he considered among the wealth
iest millionaries of the United Stales.—
He has, besides tlie Marijiosn tract just
' sold, a vast amount of property in San
Francisco.
WYU. if the right to secede is the right
to alter, amend,or abolish an existing go
vernment, and if, as you have often said,
the right to secedr- is a right to secede .
peaceably and without mofo'talion, why
lias not I'liarleston a perfect right to <•»*-
1 cede from South Carolina w ithout hin- ;
(Iratire w henever .she pleases.—Louis
ville JoumtiL
If a man has a l ight to secede or emi
grate from the Union, why has not his leg
or his head a right to secede from him?
A State is a distinct, organized, trolitical
living—with all the organs and fmicffons
of political lile that a man has for human
life. But a city has no such organization ; 1
and has not generelly power enough either
to jirt-M-rvi her polin'al or physical exis
tence—not ground enough to produce her
bread’—Southern Press,
SOUTH CAROLINA.
“Drop! from her nerveless grsap the shut
tered sjiear.
Closed her bright eye, and curbed her high
career.’’
Tint election in this Stale, for dt-lgafc*
to the Southern Congress, has resulted in
the cdmplete siiCT'ess of the co-operation
ticket in every district hut one.
A simple mmonneement of thts intelli
gence is sufficient. 'Hie banner .Vtate of
the South—that State which has for 2n
years, resisted Northern encroachment,
with more success tlian all her sisteis, has
THOMAS BONNELL,
Factor anti Coin mission -W^r-
rhanl,
No. 13 EXCHANGE STREET,
( BACK or THE POST OFFIfK.)
CHARLESTON, S. C.
Will Ytlso attenffMo Receiving and For
ward ing Goods, ami Executing all
orders foe i’iantcrb.
March 1 |f
MANSION HOUSeT
Cumden, South Cui'olina.
E. G. ROBINSON, Proprietor.
THE Irest otvommoclfrtions aiul attention
to Travellers.
Stables Large and Roomy.
June 11 15 ly
Sons of Temperance.
DARLINGTON DIVISION No. 21.
THE regular WEEKLY MEETING
of this Division will be held at their Hall
this evening at 7 o’clock.
F. F. WARLEY. R. S.
STANLY’S HOTEL,
{Sign oj ike PalmeUo.)
DA 11LI\(1 TO .V, C. //., S. C.
71. B. STANLY, Proprietor,
Is grateful for past favors, and hopes to
merit a continuance.
.March 19
3
tf
TEMPERANCE HOTEL,
< ORNICK OF BROAD VXD DF. KALB STS.,
CAMDEN, S. C„
,V. R. F. BOON I-:, Proprietor.
May *21 _ 12 tf
PEE DEE LODGE, No. 12.
I. O. G. F.
on .Vmiiiav.tlial there were no .S’sb-i „ ...
in revolutionary times. And he I ' , P ,nl of re, * w,, "'‘ cw wh,ch
I’kiild Iksx i\r%
red for a distribution
»e public lands
lit
resistance Uttered and torn though it be.
Deep as is our regret, that a people jkos-
sc-ssing the resources, and the acknow
ledged spirit and intelligence of the Sou
thern Sutes, should have permitted them
selves to be robbed of an empire which
was baptised in their own blood, we are
yet consoled by the retlection that in ma
ny portions of the South there is a gallant
minority who have sworn
“Never—while breath of life shall five,
Within them—never to forgive
Tlie accursed race, whofie ruthless chain,
Hath left on Iran’s neck a stain.”
ion as a Union triumjth and a triumjih
ot submission over resistance. Cen-
tenijituous allusions to the “chivalry”
of South Carolina, her “hragatlocio,’
and insignificance are teeming in the
Nortltem abolition ami Southern snh-
uill have one decided effect iind lidlen from her high and commanding po-
■ • ' *’ * ' 1 1 sition, and tin-last hope of tlie South is
destroyed. Deserted by her sisters—vea.
menaced by some—site \vns fortvj to
sink to their level.—DaHas (.4fo.) Gazelle
HYMEMA*.
Married—On last evening tlie 5tlt inst.,
by the Rev. Robert Najtier of Marion,
Moses R. Saxders, Esq., to Miss Martha
Ja.xe, daughter of George C. James, Esq.,
all of Darlington District.
that is ti>kill ofi the Union hu'iilmg
bubble that has been blowing up t>o
long by the federal whig party in this
State Georgia and Mississippi. No
honest man in the South now ht-lieves
that the Union is in any early danger
on account of any thing that lias been
done bv Congress, ami nil efforts in
future to form a “Union party,” |>iir
excellence, will lie looked ujion as rid
iculous in the extreme. A “Union
party,” for what? Is not every South
ern SUtte lying crouched at the feet of
tlie North ? What man is stupid
ctinough now to talk of danger to the
Union in tlie South? No—front what
lias lieen done by Congress, the Union
is not in the slightest jeojiardy.—
Would we he running any risk as a
false jirophet to jii-etlict that it (the Un
ion) is stronger lo-tlny than the intlilu-
lion of slavery itself.—Mont. Adverti
ser,
THE regular weekly meding of this
Iiodge, " ill l»- held at Odd Fellow’s Hall
on Mo/ulny next, at 7 o'clock, P. M.
By order
WM. R. HUNTER, the/n/.
W. J. KENNEDY, ~
ATTOKAUY AT LAW,
DA R LING VO X, S. C.
WILL Practice in the Courts of Dar*
Imton, Marion. Horry and Malborough.
March 12 2 tf
T. B. & L. L. FRASER, -
Altoim:)* ut Luxt.
Will Practice in the Courts of Sumter
Darlington, Kershaw and Rit bland.
Ol'l 'K t: l r Nl M J'ER VILLE, S. C-
LOG AN & GLEN,
FASHIONABLE CLOTHING
ESTA BUSHM ENT
No. ilttl King street one door North
of W. R. Babcock’s Book Store
Charleston. S. O.
Huh coitHfatiftT on linnd n full arid com-
plelo assortment of .Mens’, Boys', anil
Children’# CLOTHING,made in the most
Fasliirnable style, to which they would
| respectfully invite-the attention ot the pub
lic.
Charleston, Sept. 25th, Ift.'il. SO.tim
....
Charleston and Georgetown
Steam Packets.
Steamer‘•Nina " Arthur Ma^eo master.
Steamer “Charieslon,’’(’has. Relyea Mas
ter,
THE above Stea
mers will commence
their regular trips on,
Monday the 3d November, and continue
to run regularly throughout the season.
Married—On Thursday evening
One Bunt will leave Charlestoii on Mon
day, Wednesday, anil Friday Mornings
at half past 7 o clock, and one will also
leave Georgetown on the same days at 7
the oClock. A. M.
Extracts from a letter of a gentleman
in the West to a friend in South Carolina,
dated 2d October :
to actual settlers; and this poficy has been
sanctioned by Mr. Webster. This will de
stroy the value of thepubhe domain; and
although its worst effects will he visited
on the .South, it is also an act of snolia-
tion on the sea-board States of the North;
But whatever may come—whether tlie
decline and fall of th« Union can be aver
ted, or whether it proceed with a slow or
rapid progrt sir—it u tlie duty and interest
of all who have principle and property, to
ri-sistand retard its abuses. Tlie pursuit
of an honest policy, and its vindk-atioii by
tueh abilities as the southern party poa-
nfial effect
es, will always exert a potential
on public atlhira. The change of a few
thousand voters in Georgia, Aiahaiua, and
Miasiitsippt, wilt bring them all tu the side
of Sou'h t'arolius. together wjtji Florida,
Young men and oM men, maidens and ( . om p,.j,.nt merle of rosUtanre and
matrons there arc who have calculated w ;u heartily co-operate with them
the value of the Union, and are prepared
to give it up in preterencp to the time-
honored institutions of their native land.
There is a time not distant in tlie future
which will require the united efforta of eve
ry Soutlierii Patriot. Let us then fellow
citizens strangle tlie deiiion of civil dis
cord at home—let us forget the strife of
the few past montlis—let us regard it as
an unfortunate finnily quarrel and vie
with each other in healing Ihe breaches
which are only temporary. A higher and
a nobler deatiny beckons you on from a
mere petty scramble for jietty offices.
mission jMijH-rs.
M ill our co-ojK*i-ntion friends who
have talked so much a bout resistance
to juiat nggresinns consent to lie hailed “What say the co-opemtinn men notv
as hrotliers by the Unionist thro’- out that MUnssiiqii iron/co-o|terntpt Thcv
the country and do nothing townfdsre- cannot get co-operation till anew issue
dressing our giicvaucees—grievances is presented—secession on the
which the honor of the State ia pledg- | a State, and coercion on the jinrt ofthc
, ed to resist. V\ ill they sink into ac- government 111011 you will have co-
quiescence, as Georgia ha* done?— , operation and a Southern confederacy.
We trust not Let them prove them-j But Mr. Burt says in his letter that
selves resistance men ns they have tie- ! there is no higher obligation on South
! dared they are. Let them propose a Carolina to resist than any other State.
we
in
i carrying it out. We may however a-
gain as we have often done express the
belief that the “good men and true n-
niongst them will soon desjmir of Co
operation in resistance and join with ns
in advocating secession as the last and
only remedy.
It has been intimated that Co-ojiera-
tionists have aplatform, let them present
it and if broad enough for as to get a
foothold upon we will endeavor to
stand tlieieon. A distinguished leader of
the juirty and one jnst elected to tlie
Southern Congress, remarked to us last
winter%Co1umWa that be w»s willing
I say 'tis not so. Her situation is on-
tirefy different. Has any other State
apjiropriated money for building war
steamers, or established n manufacture
for small amis, or organized a hoard of
ordinance, or been drilling their militia,
or thrown defiance in the face of the*
government? Has any other State
lieen designated hy, name and been
threatened hy the Pr^ldcnt and his Sec
retary of State, or in the Senate hy Mr.
Clay ? Have the harbors of any other
30th ult.. hy the Rev. J. J. Bateman, Mr. j
J. G. MvMii.las ofClieetcrficlil, to Mi.-*
Hash ah Jase, second da lighter of Sami.
D. Dewett, Ef-q., of Darlington District.
On the 30th iih hy the Rev.' Richard
Baker. Gch. S. R. Chaxui.fu, of Smith
Carolina,and Mi.-** Marv J. Bcitt n, of Ma
con” Georgia.
i "
BUSINESS CARDS.
GLOVERS & DAVIS,
FACTORS A AD COMMISSWA
MERCHANTS,
Month-Atlanttr YYlinrf.
Chaklestox, 8. C.
Aug. 28 2(1 ly
Wm. M. LAWTON & cZ
FACTORS AND COMMISSION
AGENTS,
No. 13 SotTIIKRtV YY’UUIF,
CharUeUm, S. C.
Wm. M. Uw-reix, I Wm. M. Tatlor,
R. W. Bacot, j Jtistrti T. Dill.
Aug 21 25 (it
ROBERTSOB & Bt.ACKt.OCY,
Agents at Charleston,
lit a it i so &. Shackle roan,
Agents at Georgetown,
Nov. Ii K 2.n3
Valuable Land for Sale.
Will tie M>1d hv the subscriber at Dar
lington Court Hoiise, on the first Monday
in December next, the valuable plantation
and tract of land, on which Wiley Chsp-
inau Msidetl at the time of his di-cease—
containing ons hundred and seventy-two
acres. The purchaser w ill receive good,
title*, aud be allowed a credit of tw elve
months, with interest from day of sale, a
bond and oj'prOvcd personal security and
a mortgage of the premise.*, r.fl be requir
ed to secure tlie pavment of the jmrrlisse
money. JAMK8 IV WILfWi.
Ext’r. of W. Chapman.
Nov IS 35 tt
—
a LAW AND EQUITY.
The undesigned ha ve fowie-d • Co-porC
iIXsw
ractice ofLsw ami Equity
State Wn crowded with troops’for the I 1)i8tric '- T, " ir °® W *
ut-rsliip. tor tlie pn
I)i
purpose of overawing her people?
there any other State In which the peo
ple and politicians are Imth unnnimous
tn denouncing th« Union M» ft ettrse. end
, on Pearl atreet, one door above R. A R.
• 8 M. Rullik'k Store.
W. W. HARIJ.KE.
J. H. NORWOOD.
« March 6 • > < , i
SHERIFF’S SALES.
BY’ virtuu of imntlrv WsiMs ol l-ii-ri-
Fut ins to me tlirected, " jlf fit- sold before
the Court House door, ot Darlington Dis
trict. on tlie first Monday In DeCt-mlier
liext. and the Tuesday following at the
usual time, fix foflow ing property vj|:
Tlie defendants tract of land on wmich
he resides, at tlie suit of John D. Murray
i v*. Hymbrirk Barnes, tht detendanfo tract
of land on which ho resides, at the anil of
Jane Campbell vs. Leu i* Mcla-ndpii one
1 hundred ticros of kind, bounded West by
Timolhy Lee, uorili by Jesse Keith and
south by George Carter's land, at the suit
of John DnBoso ads. Daniel K. Doyal, the
tract of land an which Ihe defondant re
side*. at the suit of the executor of Bur
rell Angara vs. David Johnson.
J. H. WRJGINX. K D. D. - f
\ hm § I'tM. . . ;v> .