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/ VOLUME XXI. 4 * CAMDEN, . SOUTH-CAROLINA, TUESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 2, 18G0. NUMBER 40. . __. __ _ . ?? ? ?? 1- *w.I w?~?,K fc? POETRY. "LET ME KISS HIM FOR HIS MOTHER." DY T. M KEI.I.AU. A young man who had IcfVhis liome in Maine,-ruddy mud vigorous, was seized Willi the yellow fever in New Orleans j oud, tiiough nursed with devoted c?'-e , by friendly-strangers,'-lie died. 'When the coffin was being closed, l%Sb>p P said an aged woman who Was ^ present, "Id -me kiss him fur his mother /*' , bet me kiss him for his mother! - ,-r- V V. wsw.i ...v.. "1??af.away from home, another - \ Sure may kiss him in tier stead. -How that mother's lip would kiss him Till her heart should nearly break1 llow in days'to come shell miss him 1 ...... . Let xdo kiss him for her sake. VT; J'v-' !W'H Let me kiss liitu forbis mother 1 . v;. . ** J- Let rae kiss the wandering boy; . . It mnV be there .Is lio other v Left behind to give lierjny. Whctt llie news of vaxs the morrow.. "fifr. Burns her bosom like a ciial, She mny tbel tills kiss of sorrow * Fall as balm upon her soul . . , > Let me kiss lum for his mother! : Heroes ye; Vho by liW side r " Waited on him ns a brother > ' Till the Northern stranger died,? . ff "Ileedihg not the fool infection, > % v. Jf Brcatliiug in the fever-breath,? Let me, of my own election, Give the mother's kiss in death. '"Let'mc kiss bim for his morhjcr !''V 0 Loving thought and loving ;leed! Seek nor tear nor sigh to smother, . Gentlo matrons, while y* read. < ^ XtUDK tile UOil wuo.iuuuc ytni "4IUU1U1I, Gave ye pitying tears to slied; " " Honor ye- the Christian woinnn : - Bending; o'er'auotlier's dead MISCELLANEOUS. ' ^ ... * ' '. The True Bsmte. * , ' From a-letter written to his constituents in Charleston, by F. D. Richardson, Esq., a nieniber of the Legislature, we make the following T extract?, from which it will he seen that AlrJ ? ^fcJtieharJson takes the right view, arid occupies"! arid m!y -mfe ground, embrace the "occasion, fellow-citizens, to I declare my concurrence in utc opin.ou expressed by most of our public men,?that the election of Lincoln to the Presidency will make it-imperative upon the South to abandon the Confederacy.?Very few ai 110115 us, 1 believe, */ _ 0 entertain a di|grent opinion, it cannot, how>T ever, be disguised, that almost universal as this opinion is, it is not unaccompanied by a heartfelt sorrow, that the triumph of Cinatiei-m'or^r patriotism has precipitates) upon us the lamentable alternative. The dissolution of relations Which have constituteu'us a united, great.and prosperous Pgoid*1. i-^frlt l?y all to be an-evc t ^ 11"'J' '* i our cithjeiis, an apparent r 1*^ aM IS, OitCIl, iHIStHyCOHSirtK'U lllios^ UOlU.rf '" on their part, >f the dub/ of ininydiute xrpa-a- j The inquiry r.cccssiiriir addresses i.twijf I to every nwn?>* the elect.on. /'Lincoln, in i itself and btj itself u Iuintile act? Does it in- ! danger the peace or threaten thr liberties < / the I Si j nt h ? All admit that iiis election will Ikj j conclusive evidence of a seciior.nl domiwil o , j: avoietdhj mjijnsnre, and proclaiming'/ pu>pas, | | inconsistent with the Cnj .ytneul < / onr right- I: ^ sind the tnaint'-n tucr of Stale equably. With : this admission coming from all, without excep- | l tion, there does not appear to 111c any good i reason to apprehend that any difference of-j i opinion will long exist among ns as to the j j course which duty, as well as jtobcy and wis- ! t Join, will require us to jnirsue. Let us he care j fnl, therefore, not to foster division, !>y eliarae- j terizing as timidity, or insensibility to wrong, ' or lack of fidelity to State Lights, or to the ' lionor or interests of the South, the reluctance j which men feel to turn their hacks at once, j , with cheerfulness and rejoicing, upon the " glorious past and the bright future of ununited | people. J?ut rather let us, in the full realization , of the sacrifice which we arc required to make j of a mighty Confederacy, of which any people !. m that ever lived might justly he proud, and | which challenges the admiration ol the world, j , show forbearance to those who, still hoping 1 against hope, reluctantly \ield to mine iiceessi- (( ty. Union among ourselves?unanimity of' j opinion and determination, is of paramount importance, and every effort .should bo made to J' encourage and establish it. Let us not suspect, ! (1 but have confidence in the patriotism of ea- h , other. For myself, I am free to declare that! x the election of Lincoln (about which I enter- j j tain no douht) ought to be regarded as an j s art of determined hustiti'y ; and I regard it, also, as immediate-:y threnteuini/ lite pence ami i V *'fe>!) of the South. As such, we should not I wait till we experience the first or least of its ' , j>ernicious consequences; but, foreseeing them, j put ourselves, at once, in the attitude of iude- j jiendetice, and thus escape, or he prepared to ! , defend ourselves against them. It may i>e that . conflict and bloodshed will ensue. J>ut the x South has nothing to fear. The Cioveruuicni ;i soldiery (the main reliance of the fauatn s," ami j with which they threaten us) are but a handful "v in comparison to the force which any single 1 ( State can throw into the field. Those troops ( will speedily .melt away. llecruits are not easily obtained, especially in such a war. A j; call tor volunteers will be made. Who wi.l i rcsooud to it? The Eastern Suites? So louir . ? as the hired soldiery of the Government can be ! { mscd, these States would, doubtless, support and ( mrge the coercion of the S >uth. lint when they J arc required to undertake the task themselves, i ( their modern history greatly belies them if they < do-not display mi invincible repugnance to ^ -v dangers and sacrifices which do not pay Gutter t than battles. lie-cent experience lias shown how* tardily the work of volunteering for war $ progresses in those States. From the North. (j oven, less js to be apprehended, 'i'heir great ^ k interests are bound up in peace. Their tanati- j, fifo cisui takes the cheap direction of a show ot hands or the mustering of votes; and with these they have triumphed over right, the law, decency and the teachings of Scripture. Jim it c has nowhere, and at no time, imp.-ii d the p<opic to indulge in any iutenscr exmtunicui ... more alarming display than the hypucnt cal and vociferous routings of self-sty leu moral ] crusaders. And the .Northwest occupies no | other or higher position. Kacli of these three v sections can, at most, draw from its redundant H and refuse population, a few hired regiments of 0 .outlaws, rowdies and adventurers?(and each H would be glad of the chance to get fid ofthein) ?but that thr jjeople of either one of these sections ever expect or can be mane to eiieoun- > tcr the horrors of war, either to prevent the g r exercise of a disputed political right by the people of the South (a right which has been, t1 over and over, affirmed in their midst by their f, ablest men,) or to enforce their particular notidns of religious obligation upon us?is in- f' ' conceivable upon any other supposition than 1 that thcf arc to be judged bv rales which <1 istinguish them f/oni the rest of the white race in this or any other country. For such n purpose, I tin not believe,that ten rcgimefits could be mustered in all the fanatic States. But suppose ;t otherwise. /Wutne that those sec tionr. will be able !o raise ntty or a uiingreu thousand.or a lialfa million of yoljmteris. The South, -the less populous, < a- Tuniisii :s maiiv hikI more than tlie largest. nunien, number; mid ivUul in tin, i/m i) "' c' < id - h>! i ii/ricnlI it re r it a sua to in t.- (-mtu tinjit I'd. Willi us it will not be as with die North* and linst and Northwest, a wnrfor ? mere upi Jou, political or moral; entertained, too, 1>v littlfc more than ouo half their population, and atitagonixed b> nearly an equal mini be but it will be a^'ar ill* \Uiich tllp Strike ofevn ;/ Southern man will ImLfe, jLfOvrty nud -J' rojivrhj? Wife?Chi/7C'oi/fttry} \,Ve shall be united to a man, for it will be a wiif in defence of all we hold dear, The NortIi*will be divided ; for it will be a war of aggression, in which even victory itself would la ing with it the downfall of her prosperity, iint the victory conld not be with the North, even if. her-tieo'tile were united, :iti<J she bad,'equally with, ourselves, the agricultural pr.oducfcv.neecssnry to sustain her armies iu the field. There is, iti the coiv, trolofthe South, an element otvstrength so; potent, that neither Northern ^States, liVVr European" States, tlare disregard it?nay, which Eutdpe dare not permit the North to disregard. War once commenced between tlie North and.South, our entire agricultural labor would necessarily be applied to the raising pf jfiixindst litis for the support of our armies. Not a seed of cotton would be put into the ground; Cotton would he.useless toils, even if we could afford to divert the labor necessary to its cultivstioii fiosu the growth of grain. King Cotton would-1iave to be deposed for a lime'; hut it would be brief, lie would speedily return, tiii iteu (Midi b'j fdt venj foes. And he will have learnt, in the short period of his deposition, that as his reign is essential-to the peayc aiid progress ?I me oivuizeti wonu, so u is competent Torso august si ruler to cOti<niun-> ilx/ic n c sit least ses uyumat Itaiusdj. Tile North and all Europe are more interested than we are llisit cotton should lie grown uninterruptedly, if by the blight ot war the seed of that mighty staple Oe not permuted to germinate lit its lad ?though luil lor o??e nay, lor thr o <: mu.-t/i in which it must ne phfntcd?not all the ruin which relentless wsir has ever brought upon a striekeli people, will rival the desolation which that single event will spread through the great nmnutacturing and commercial States of Europe and America. Entrenched behind this universal want of the civilized world, we liOid the North under bonds, as well to keep the peace sis for good behavior. The South, in the event supposed, would, in the end, scarcely appreciate the loss she would sus.aiii. li the conflict lasted even for years, as an agricultural pc-opje, slie would suffer iuit slightly in cdnioarisdii with tiiose who are dependent upon tiie exchange of the products of their lauor arnf still lor the means ol ^ulxistcnco. We proatiee the miaias ot subsistence in ,ibiiiidanee,. tor ourselves, rtUi'i viiir su.pftis goes abroad, ihe .North docs not and-cannot produce^ |hen^^_ fchi^. i^ d11 11L~l|>; ^^ Ui^m upon micai feif >ubsistc:icc/ c()iisists of manufactures ui cotton. Deprive tier of cotton, and stie is deprived of a means ot exchange essential to the actual support of millions of tier population. Lie the cuniiiet ot Jong or short duration, the South has nothing to tear. J iie iinnoniic'eineM ot Lincoln's election mould summon its to immediate and active [jreparatioii. 1 wouid not wish Unit this State should take the lead in the inoreuieiit of secession. If any one State resolves on the step. :his State should, at once, unite with her. JJut t, before the period of Lincoln's inauguration, 10 Southern State shall move off, this State 1.....1.1 i ii ... i i..., iiuuivi.mui, nu jungci. iici oiuwi > <m\a nviivi Iciuaiid tiiat she should withdraw alone. J am, respectfully ami gratefully, Your fellow citizen, F. D. inCIIAUIiSUX. Political ( 'o it a es eo n i i k x c k.?Tiie present rear lias been fruitful in political correspoiileuce. A large portion of our fellow-citizens iave betaken themselves to letter writing, and Icftning their positions. .Mr. Urr wrote to .Mr. vctidall, ret] nesting his sentiments on the 'issues'' 11id topics now agitating the public mind. .Mr. vcnd dl replied, but failed to satisfy .Mr. Orr, vlio writes a seeotnl letter, in which he says: "I regret to learn from your letter that you lissent from niv reeomuiuiidatiou that the lonoratid safely of the -South require its prompt ocssio i from the I'nion in the event of tin dvctteii of a Black Ucptihlicau to tlie 1'resnlen y. Von say your "mind is equally clear that he South "has long jiad a peaceful remedy vitliin her own reach, and has it still, though 111paired hy the recent conduct of some of lie! OILS .Mr. Orr solicits au exposition of this "ready relief," and says: "Is it wise, if we do not mean to submit to -ucli consequences, to allow a Black Ucpubli aii President to be inaugurated, and put him n po.-scssion of the army, the navy, the trensirv, the armories, and the arsenals, the public irnpertv in tact, tbc whole machinery ofgov i!nii"-:i;, with its appenda .Is and apputtctiiln-.-. { It the Solitii sliould thI:it-' upon this sub t-ci :is I Uo, iu? lil.uK ncpi. oilcan i resilient K>;ili| ever v-x c:ile any law within her borders, iniess at the point <il tin; bayonet, ami over the lead [Kiiiivs of her slam suns. "1 have a profound ami abiding atl'cc'ioii or the Union of our fathers', and deeply deilorc existence of the causes whicli are rapidly ending to its destruction. During the whole if my Congressional career I sought to tran[tiilizc sectional*strife. \\ hen I first entered lie J louse, the Abolition parly, headed by iiddings and Wiiuiot, niimbeiid eight; ten ears have rolled away ml now that party is majority of the House. Is it not time I hat lie-^oitfli should begin to look to her sa.'elv ml iudependencef Air. Orr, it is hardly necessary to say, is a isiiiiguished South Carolinian, and has been peakcr of the House of Representatives. Air. iendall was Postmaster General under Jaekson. jV. )'. l out. .Idr' Iin r. - ? ???>*? A Land Patent Issued to Aukaham Ltx* oln.? A patent of one hundred and twenty [ civ* in laml I.a- just br.-n issued from the ,.t : to ... ..mill Lincoln, ti e Uepebli* an a di ate o. i resident, as captain in the ilinois in::;, in during I he IMaek Hawk war. I is staled tic;! Lincoln, while in Congress, ofed -iga;-:s; siic giaiiling of lands to soldiers rung in the Aicxiean war, vet lie has no bjeciion to taking one hundred and twenty eres for himself. ; "Ah ! iiow dntii yon like my muustnche, ifitii Lnina," lisped a dandy to a merry irl. "Oh, very much. It looks like the fuzz on lie back of a caterpillar !" What is the first thing a young lady looks jr in church ? j The Aims. I Progm>ivciie<i? of AbolitiouiMtt. Hon. W. I>. Kced, of l'hihulelphia,-delivered a speech on tlie 3d iu3t., from \vhicn ' we extract as follows : ' lint grave objections to Mr. Lincoln htjvc been revealed since liis nomination, to which? without personal disparagement, I beg leave to call your attention. Since the Convention at Chicago, Mr. Lincoln, with one exception, has maintained a resolute and prudent silence. The discussion with Judge Douglas in their canvass, * -V i ? * i... r 1 was cunracicrizcu on ms j?an, uv imiiMiv>a??u ability, and in the presence of a wary antagonist, ready to take advantage of any indiscretion, by moderation. Little more than a year ago he wrote^a letter, in which he was betrayed into /language, which, though not very precise, and n little ambitions,' was ominous. It was this: "This*is a world of compensations, and he who would be no slave must consent to have no slave. Those who deny freedom to 0111011=, deserve it not themselves, and under a just God, cannot long retain it." It is not easy to say what this means, hut it has an ugly look. Since i his nomination, .Mr. Lincoln has spoken once, i and once too often. I refer to his speech at j Springfield, abojit four weeks ago, which was the more, significant, as he appears to have hewi taken by surprise, and to' have spoken' .qu? under an impulse, his inner thoughts. "There is, I believe, a religious secftalh'd "Progressive Friends;" so, in politics, there ore-proj i/reffi'i- Republicans, ai.d to this class it would j seem .Mr. Lincoln belongs.-I infer this from his j speech, which either means this, or means | not hi ng. His language. w;is: "Mv friends, you \yill fight for this cause, four years hence, as you noW fight for it, aid ercu xlrot-prr iha? i/oti ni>w ji.ht Jar ?/, though I may he dead and gone." Mow, in all eapdor, I ask, what does this mean 1-?what do(;i^)j^2jLiii<-oln*mcun by an adjourned or in>iiflj|B?yoiifliet, by his "stronger tight" 11 crcnfrcpPT)oes it mean there is to be no repose, no seiltlcnient, no finality, ti.11 w ndiiiiidstrat.iiin ? The 'itf'rht" is to CO ! oil? nay, it is lo'he "stmiger"'then than now. | Not content with the victory of a compact ! North over the stricken and insulted South, j the arms arc not to be laid a-ide,?the array : is not to he broken,?the entrenched camp is : not to he dismantled,?pence all 1 conciliation are not even hinted at. Domestic slavery, | driven by a triumphant executive and congressional majority, from the Territories, is to be J beleaguered in the States. It is to exist My sufferance, it is to be destroyed by compression, and the varnished, plausible and (IccepMve, Republicanism el 18U0 is !c> become the aggressive AUiIuioiiism of 1804. So says Mr. Lincoln, if his language has any meaning. Nay, I n ther, 1 hold in my hand a hook puhj lislied in New York, and called the "Republican Campaign I land-book," an authoritative exposition of doctrines, north of a certain parallel, and 1 find its moral to he in so many words, that Lincoln's election is hut a step in the inarch ot "progressive huniq.ity," leading to the grain! triumph of emancipation evenwhen. its language is : "The people of those States where liberty is j not stifle." by cowardly'and brutal force, have | it in their power to insure political reform," and save the grand expanse of territory, of over one thousand million of acres in the West, from the - .t .. .i wreck .nid siiauiuol j^avcrv. 1 nis imcjac.-iu uu ; i /ngfllie;1 IfpwifcV! niTTi' "(^PprlviicWes; \md ?>v so restricting tlie evil, i tin J skiving full her land from its devastations, j | Of >i will Int./ iht ten/ to yet hi'jluir ucliieeciitcitlx. Other nations beckon lis on; England, her House of Lords roused by the ineincrable looie and eloquence of a Brougham, struck the chains off aii her slaves, and each rising and setting sun does homage to the majesty of the achievement, over the hills and vales of her happy islands. Kussin, with twenty million serfs, is, at the flat of her best Emperor, about to touch tlieiu with the Itheriel spear of emancipation, so that their iuoral nature may reach the skies. Shall we, then, with such glorious examples of the good, the generous, and the right, retroact, absolve ourselves irotn our gallant past, cut off our brilliant future,and he stifled in essentia! barbarism I In this epoch, when science flies on the wings of love, can we sanction the wor- J ship of Imte and cruelty ? This, and not less j than this, is contained in the solution of the! great questions before its. We have either to ' StlCl'tlllll) l<", ')l in rill III/III linn, nil-Mill i: jriMn-1. There is no middle course. We must t-illier have the black ilag of slavery, or oiiu scintillating with freedom, to symbolize our lioinc ami country. Our irreversible word, then, should l?c for Liberty?circling our lakes ami sciis; traversing our mountains ami (onirics; covering our cities ami villages; going forth in many ships over ninny waters; liberty for the poor, the exiled, ami the oppressed; liberty of sense inn' soul, of thought ami speech, of aspiration ' ami action." E3o(Ui<*;il ftVophcti/Jlltf. l'l admit, however?ami that is what I wish* i oil to say,?that the South will be a unit after j Mr. Lincoln's election; and further, it is my belief that the more moderate counsels of her wise and prudent men will not then prevail." So states the W ashington correspondent of the New York Journal of Commerce. The war now raging between the North and South is a war of suctions composed of civilizations utterly and essentially distinct and different. The professed object ot all parties at the South j is the defense of the rights of the States ami of j slavery. The soul ami only inspiring principle : of the Jllnck Republicans is opposition to ami j | hatied of slavery, and the desire and dctcrmi- I j nation finally to extinguish it. It is the settled j : belief ol the opponents of slavery, if Mr.Scwanl may be considered their representative mall, i that Lincoln's election will he but the initiation of this policy. Such is also the opinion of a | | majority at the South. If that event takes j place as is most probable, the prediction of the j Journal of < on.ineroe's correspondent will he j verified. As an earnest of the sincerity of the I South to submit no longer to Northern aggress- j ion in that event, we may refer to I he secessions i tiom iIn- i residential Convention at Charles-j ton which occasioned astonishment both North and South. There one State took the lead and her sistci States followed. Such will be i i it" i .i in-. >1 n lie elected. If South Cam linn, Alabama, Ueorgia, or any single South-j eni Statu withdraws, others will he compelled ! to follow. So the action of one Stato will tiring I about the policy of the co-operation party of j South Carolina and other States South. The I South though divided hv dissensions now, must 1 and will then present an unbroken front. C'jtum'/jis Sun. The Diusitv of Lauor.?It may be a eon-' solation to "stuck up people," whose greatest I boast is, that they have never heen engaged in ! any useful employments, to be told of the following facts in regard to the founders of our American "Aristocracy":? Washington was a surveyor and farmer. Franklin was a printer. ( recti was a blacksmith. Warren was a physician. Sumptcr was a shepherd, itogur Sherman was a shoe-maker. Marion was a farmer. Putnam was a farmer. Stark and Allen were farmers, j Hancock was a shipping merchant. ! Trumbull was an artist. The Southern Vcclarali'ul1 I i-dependence. V A writer in the Charleston M*rc"TV in feph to Major Perry, who asks it^tlie South ha.' sufficient causes for disunion,. answers as f'ol lows: ? f The history of our union wit!1 the Northeri States is a history of repeated Injuries and usurpations, all having a direct vbjeet?the establishment of an absolute tyranny over these States. To prove this, Jet fae^ he submitted to a candid world. Tliey have nvcrthrowu the constitution which binds us togetw', andcoiistjiot1-'8 the terms ol our union, by u total disrogW ,ts huiitations. ? They maintain that th<?|CdIli>'rcSS of the United States under thcir^^itro', >s as out nipotcnt in its legislation.-** t,lc -British rarliamcnt claimed to bc.oyer-^ur ancestors. By disregarding the soverpigi'ty ?f the States, ami establishing the wilhofn l.'ajority in Congress us the rightfuj authority P1 its legislation, they halve setup orer^-the? jjoulh ?' odious, dangerous and remorselessJ^otism. They hare rcndert'd'l^iroa^atioiis in Congress of no avail to protect , tlie interests of the South, and thus taxation tt1th0,it representation is practically enforced oyer usThcy have destroyed onr^fofcigii commerce by the most unjust NttV??*aIWi?v.Jjaws, and the most uncunstitutional and iniquitous Tariff laws. Thcv have exacted taxed f7?,n 1IS> not.only to support the comniou " ovefiH?eiit, Bnt take their property from the pcopj0 -ut the South and give it to'the people of th> North. They deny to us a common property in our territories, acquired cqnal'v bv.ol,r money and blood, on the ground time fTTc people ' of the South, with their institutions*' ?rc not worthy to colonize them. They have assailed, for i#ol? tliau thirty years, the institution of Afn^".-Sl'n'cry in the South, and J ave made oarcouPno" Legislature of the Federal Government-a p11.11' iustruiiieiit for incendiarism and abolitionThey have eompc-lled us' >? separate from them, in our churches and t$lur religious ins iiutic-iis. '''' ?:...ii?isir Stale Lctris 1 lie) iiiltc ptinnvu i?i - . laturcs, nullifying the laws of^norwS!i providing for the recovery of fugitiv4/d,lvus> although solemniy adjudicated to "be jcptistitutioual by the Supreme Court of the Uiftci' State*. * They havo organized assoi'a^u,l!< to steal our slaves and to.prevent tlicf recapture, and have murdered their iiiasti^ sucking their rendition. They .have invaded our lioiA?8 and killed our inoffensive citizens to raise off slaves in insur rection against their masters. . They openly declare their purpose to cinan| eipatc our slaves ly the poucf of the Federal Government, and that thev w'll put us to the sword if.we resist. And. to?*arrv out these h.wtilc and fiendish purposes, they "have orgain'ei a sectional party at the North to take posst?of the Federal Government; and are U^ing our towns, and striving, by distrlburiuis,irms n"d poison among our slaves, to. ile?o?,t0 l'ie South by tiro, insurrection and blood.' I u every stage of these opi^ussiocs, wc have jietitione<nnrjv^rcfc^^ only by repeated injury. ^W?^opIe whose character is thus marked hyj every act which may dclinc tyrants, are unfit (o he the cooled elates of a free people. I Nor have we been wanting in attention te our Wii-fln-rn lin.rliron. We have warned than, from time to time, of^Jtempts, by theii legislation, to extend tmwariiantahle jurisdiction over lis. We iiave reminded tliem of flit circumstances of our oniigiatic"1 mid settlement here. We Iiave appealed to ^Iicir nature, justice and magnanimity; and \\'c have conjured them by the ties of our common kindred, to disavow their usurpations, whK'h would inevitably interrupt our connection* and correspondence. Tlicv, too, have been (ileal to (be voice ol justice and cousaiiguiuitv. m e must, therefore, acquiesce in the necessity which denounces our separation; and hold il'i'in, as we liuld the rest of mankind, enemies i" wm\ in peace friends. ?? - At a Bell and Everett niecli"g in Boston, M r. 11 i i I ia rd savs : "There is '>'> man at the Hunlh ifiti) more ifenrrts to be ra/M n Southern man tfilh Northern prlnci'ute* than John Bviir At the same meeting .Mr. Billiard made <|iiitc a finished declamation, ii> the course of which, after alluding to Mr, Jjreckinridge as the accomplished eatididate of die pro-shivery ami secession school, lie endorsed Mr. Hell as follows: (.hi the other hand, how- ha-it heen with Mr. Hell .' ile has heen all his life in opposition to the dominant public seiitimeut of the South. He is a protectionist; tl'c South is for free trade, lie was in favor i>f the United States Hank; the South was not.; He opposed the South Carolina doctrine of nullification, lie protested against the removal the deposits. Of all the Tennessee dclegMinn he alone favored the reecption of petitions dor the abolition of slavery in the District of Columbia, lie opposed the annexation ol Texas. He protested against the repeal of die Missouri Compromise, and resisted the Lec.0,,iptou Constitution. There is no man at tlte South who more deserves to he called a Southern man with Northern principles than John Hell. ( ot. Cuozikh ox Lincoln's ElsWox.?Col. Crozier, of Knoxville, Tenii- use1 die following language in a speech Intel)' delivered, on the election of Lincoln to the l'refidciicy : "it has been asked,? What woMd Ercckiuridge men do in case of his cleetirn ? He did not know what others might ad vis- or propose to do in such a contingency?for himself he lien r would xuhmil?n< rev?neve'?never.? From the hour in which Lincoln wis inaugurated, he was proud to he a rebel--'ic would mount the scaffold instiCh a cause. He would consider Lincoln a perjured traitor when he took '.he oath to support the Constitution. It had heen said that the South wo1'1' w'nit for some overt act of aggression. lie would pursue no such jH'lici/, Tvranny advanced with slow and cautious approaches. Hi would not wait till hound hand and foot. He -vonld meet it on the threshold. The milder Mr. Lincoln might make his government, the hotter would he the warjie would make upon it." Cincinnati Hoc. Maiikgt.?At Cincinnati, hogs for future delivery have heen offered ijnitc freely during the past week, and bi'Vers were more difficult to find, though a concession of 10 cunts pur cental was uimle, sellers ottering to take <5.00 to $?<>.05 for early NVvember.? On tliu 18th instant. 2,000 head .fold for all December at 6.40 to ?(5.50, which is the best price paid so far. The assessor's returns from sixty-seven counties in Kentucky fhow a decrease of 334,154 in the number of hugs this year, compared with last year. Hon. L. Q. C. Lamar.?Mr. Lafliar, in a recent spec !t, said of John Bell, that however pure his motives, 'dike the mariners needle to the pole, 'always pointed North, ano that '<) a tremflr." L Jlr. iPOU^lilV WIH'II IIH; ??? niuiv v.rcrcion. The Richmond Enquirer publishes the foli lowing letter from Lvtlloton Tyler, JCs<j., one of the assistant Electors chosen from J'rincc William county, Vu., ami says it is "happy to i be informed that this is only one of the many instances in which Southern men have been . driven off from Mr. Douglas' support, by the > tone of overbearing insolence which lie h;^ as[ sinned, and the blue light Federal doctrines to., which he seems to have become a sudden convert." The letter of Mr. Tyler lends a support to the 1'rutcst of the Southern men, lately is sued from the Virginia Springs, and which will find an echo in every part of the Southern country. Here is the letter referred to : To the Editorx of the Enquirer : Woodlawx, I'rince William Co., Ya., j September l:i, 18G0. j Gentle men : ?Do me the favor to state in your paper that J respectfully decline the position of Assistant Elector for the county of I'rince William, assigned mo bv the Staunton Convention. I was a political friend of Mr. Douglas, until his recent speech in Norfolk removed the "scales from my eyes," and I beheld him, whom 1 considered the friend of the South, re-acting the part of Van lhiren in* 1848, assisting the Whigs and Know-Nothings to defeat the Democrats in Virginia, holding that the South may ri<! hi full'/ be excluded from the public lands, and that she shall be compelled by force to submit, and denouncing Southern men whose only crime is their zeal in behalf of Southern rights and honor. Such sentiments merit the severest rebuke from every being who loves the South. . I A'TIL ETON TYLER. Good Cause tor Desertion. The threats of coercion which Douglas so wantonly flung in llic faces of Southern men 'upon Southern soil, are having l heir natural effect. upon some of those at the South, who have heretofore supported him, hut whose attachment to their section, her rights ami her interests, is stronger than anv party aflifiation. It has hccu already noticed that Senator (Jlingmaii lias come out h>r Breckinridge and j Lane. At*a recent discussion lie gave his reason for doing so?a reason that should operate upon every .Southern .supporter of the submission Coercion ist. The Wilmington (X. C.,1 'Ju-niutl, in noticing a recent discussion, says : "The nest speaker introduced was Hon. 'J'. L. Clingiuan, who fully endorsed every word that M r. Brown had uttered, ami every position he had taken. He avowed himself clearly and unequivocally for Breckinridge and Lane." In reply to Duncan McRae, Ksq., the Senator said : He had always respected Judge Douglas, hut his recent menaces to the South, in his Xorfolk and Raleigh speeches, convince him that Mr. Douglas is no-.v a desperate political gambler. Those who now went for Mr. Donglas would find out their mistake. II.e had no doubt Mr. MeRae would come all right. / Mr. McRae. interposing, said he had onlv -LU-ii IL.,.r -,n * tiimVic^wSio vva.-, a 1 Douglas had not then voluntarily otfere?l his services to whip In Southern States in the interests of Alio Lincoln. He (Mr. Clingn an) ' | felt no disposition to scud a message to Mr. Lincoln to come on, mm unit lie was ivany to submit. SoiTlIEKN ].VDEP,~NDEXCE.?TIlC Allgllsta Conxlilulioiiuli.il says : We desire to ask of all friends of tlie South tlicso few questions :? Do you sustain .Southern institutions?Southern workshops? Southern capital, skill and labor ? Do you wear a Southern made hat?Southern made boots, shoes, and clothes.' Do you sustain the potters works at Kaolin, and purchase only Southern made plates, dishes, cups and saucers.' Do you purchase Southern made furniture? Or harness, saddles, iron-ware, or other com-! modifies manufactured in the South ? Do you patronize Southern in preference to Northern school books, or agriculture journals ? Do you subscribe to Northern literary newspapers iu preference to the "Southern Field i and Fircsid c," and other Southern literary i ! journals ? j A satisfactory answer to these ami similar j questions, will exhibit reliable Southern sen| tiincnts. BlTK OK A I'aTTI.KSXAKK (,'l'liK!) IX TWO Horns.?The iVtersburj* Kxpress publishes ( the following from a relial Ij correspondent: A carpenter, while engaged a few days a^o Ill pillllllg OUM II .'HI "Ml IIIHISU, IIIII1 III n-IIIIMIII^ sonic of 1 lie rotten timbers iiearthcgroiind, was , bitten by a rattlesnake. In a few nionients iiis linger was swollen t" four times its natural size, anil a reil streak eomiiieiieoil miming up liis liaml and wrist. A deadly languor eanie j upon liim, and his vision grew dim, clearly indicating that the subtle poison that was coursing through his veins was rapidly approaching tiie eitadel of life, lint a remedy was tried, merely l?v way of experiment, which, to the surprise of all present, acted like a charm, the component parts of which were onion, tobacco and salt, of eipial parts, made into a poultice and applied to the wound, and at the same ' time a eon! was hound tightly about the wrist. In two hours afterwards lie had so far recovered as to he able to resume his work. 1 knew an old negro who cured a boy that had been bitten by a mad-dog, by the same appiica- , tion. I A l'osToiTtrK Mistake?A Man with an ( Unfortunate Name.?A man lately went to the | I'ost Office, and putting his mouth to the do- | livery box, cried out; "Louder!" The clerk, j ! supposing the man to he deaf, and that lie was ' making a reipiest for liiin to speak louder, so ] that he could hear, asked him in a very loud j tone the name of the person for whom he | wanted the letter. "Louder !" cried the man. j "What name!" yelled the clerk. "Louder!" | again bawled the man, who supposed the clerk | to be deaf. Ti e clerk took a long breath, ami with all his might again bawled out into the mail's face the same question: "What name!" This was done in so loud a t ue that the echo ; seemed to return from the i.ar off hills. The 1 ] man started back in alarm, shouting at the '' i very top of his lungs: "Louder, sir, Louder! 1 I I v#ui 111.1 >*i-' Mv ii!ii)i(i is notliiiilc else." I i '"Oli! all! oil! ali!" said the clerk, "your name j is Louder, eh? Didn't think oftliat; here's your ; litter, Mr. Lender, here's your letter." Li.vcoi.n's Linr.uai.n v.?Old Abe contribu- ' toil fifty dollars to the fund for purchasing < Shnrpe's rifles for Jim Lane and John Drown | in Kansas. This sum would buy two rifles. 1 Possibly one of these rifles is the one with , ! which Lane shot poor Jenkins when lie enuie j to get a bucket of water from his own well; , and the other the one with which old Drown j ' murdered the Pnvb's-?father and son. J. A iSopoMtioit. Mr. Editor:?!u a convcrsatiniij the other day, in presence of some ladies, upon the position of the South in the Union, the probable election of Lincoln to the Presidency, etc., one of them asked the question: "If the South, or even South Carolina, would submit to this?" A gentleman, in reply, said he feared so.? "Then," said the lady, "if this be so, turn over the government to us, and we (the women of the South) will see to it, that our households are protected from that outrage and violence from which it seems our husbands, brothers, etc.. are too craven to protect us." Now, Mr. Editor, this is our proposition: If, upon the election of Lincoln, it should prove true that our men have not the nerve to secede, and thus save themselves, their wives and little ones, as well as their property, that we do turn over the- i/ovcrn men I to our wives, sisters, mothers fllid ilaui/hlers, and mi/ hje upon it, we wilt be sueed. Let us do this, and go to the more congenial calling of milking cows and nursing the babies. We know many men, several of them prominent in the South, who are better tilted for this occupation than for guiding and directing the affairs of State?many who are better fitted for rocking the cradle and singing the infant lullaby? "Hoekv-by-ljiiby, don't you erv," than like men defending their rights. What say you, men of the South, shall wc? resist Lincoln's election, or turn over the government to the women?find bless theiu? A U ESI.STANCE MAN. ? - ?? The Max foii JJcsixess".?Give us the straightforward, fearless, enterprising man for business. One who is worth a dozen of those who, when anything is to be done, stop, falter, and hesitate, and are never ready to take a decided stand. One turns everything within his reach into gold, the other tarnishes even what is bright; the one will succeed in life, and no adventitious e!reuinstances will hinder liiiu.? The other will be a continual drawling moth, bevcr rising above mediocrity, but rather falling below. Make up your mind to be firm, resolute, and industrious, if you desire prosperity. There is good in that saying of the Apostle, "\\ hitsocver thy hand findeth to do, do it with all thy might." Education and ITgiitino.?J?y a law of 1'russia, every child between the ages of seven and fourteen is required to go to seliool and to learn to read and write. In 1845 there were but two persons in a hundred who could neither read nor ^write. 2,328,1)00 children of the 2,000,000 between seven and fourteen years, attend school, in the standing army of J 20,000 but two soldiers are unable to read, la ease of her taking part in the war, 1'russia can bring into tiie field 300,000 men, in one sense the best educated military force in the world. A "Xa a vols" Item.?We often see writers praised for their ''nervous style" and graphic powers of description, but we apprehend that nervousness as.applied to lit-ratlire was never a striking exani^^^^^^; is one, upon a sub-* ject on which his readers will doubtless agree with him: "Long prayers and long speeches eat out and kill out a prayer meeting. They are death, double death?who cau bear them? Chilly ! It curdles the lifc-bluod of spirituality to hear a brother spin out and spin out, hold on and hold on, repeat and re-repeat, pray all over the world ami hack again tJneo or tour times ?then rise, make a long speech with no soul in it. Oh, what a dagger! ic/iat a dagger! Awful!?awful! " A few such passages as that would abolish the grievance, or there is 110 power in words. To speak profanely, brother New ton, they would knock it. Yea, verily. Tor the other half of a courting match there is nothing like an interesting widow. There is as much difference in courting a damsel and an attractive widow as there is in ciphering in addition and the double rule of three. Courting a gill is like eating fruit?all very nice as far as it extends; but doing the amiable to the blue-eyed bereaved one in black crape comes under the bead of preserves?rich pungent syrup. Tor delicate courting, we rej eat, give us a "live widder." ? Imi'ohtaxt Jhsi uvKuv.?I5y a careful examination of the geography of the world, it has been ascertained that the great artesian bore at Columbus, Ohio, will, 011 passing through to the opposite side of the globe, come out exactly fifteen miles from the great China j wall, on the China side, and about U30 miles from l'ekiii. This is a discovery of importune.', and must vastly encourage the citizens of rmr capital city. If they do not succeed in obtaining water, they intend, we are told, to pas* a telegrath wir.- through, so as to bring Columbus into direct communication with the Celestial Kinpirc.? Columbus jMjter. J'kiisoxal.? For the first time in a great while, it was our pleasure, last Saturday, to meet Judge Johnstone -.on haw Itangc. Although lie has suffered much from recent illness, Ids many friends throughout llie State will be glad to learn that his health is now better. Long may the learned Judge he spared to his friends and to the service of the State. Xctcbvrru ('omscrrutlnl, Omnipotence may build a thousand worlds, anu fill thum with bounties; omnipotence may powder mountains into dust, and burn the sea, and consume the skv, hut omnipotence cannot lo an unloving tiling toward a believer. Oh ! rest quite sure, Christian, a haid thing, an unloving tiling from Cod toward one of his own people is quite impossible, lie is as kind to you when lie casts you into prison as when lie takes you into a palace. lie is as good when lie sends famine into your house as w hen he tills your barns with plenty. The only question is, art thou his child ? If so, he hath rebuked thee in affection, and there is love in Ids chastisement. The I'cnsacola Obterrrr states that Col. Wiggins, one of the Hell electors in Florida, Hen. Call) and Muj. Ward, both leading Hell itos, tree infuvor nfa i/insolntion of the Union in the event of Lincoln's election. -O- ? Idiots.?There are 20,00) idiots in Great Britain, many of tliein in Asylums, while many live at their homes. An institution has just hcen opened at Lansdowne House, Greenwich, "for the training of idiots of the upper classes." ? "I meant In have told you of that hole." mid an Irishman to his friend who was walkin" with him in his garden and tumbled into :i pit of water. "No matter," says Put, blowing the mud and water out of his mouth, "I've found it." No one can liave rend the statement of the clerk of the steamer which went down on Fri* day night, without being struck by his description of the bearing of the ladies. "They were pale, but silent; there was not a cry or? shriek." The fortitude and resignation of men many have failed, but theirs failed not. So it is always in the great exigencies'which women arc called to meet. When troubles or dangers are but slight, they are more excited and tnortf alarmed than men. Hut let an overwhelming calamity bujw the fortunes and hopes of the husband, or father, or brother in sudden night, let disease or accident strike him down and stretch him on the bed of keenest suffering, then when strong men's hearts fail them, whet? their nerves are unstrung, when quaking fear or hopeless despondency takes possession of their souls, the frail weak woman rises with elasticity and calm determination to the demands of the terrible emergency, and with unttembling hand and cheerful voice she hastens to perform those blessed ministrations far which the might of men was inadequate. How many scenes of danger have we heard described?conflagration, assassinations, shipwrecks?in which women have, with heroic patience and submission, bowed meekly to their fate, and have taught the sublime lesson of Christian rcsTgiw tion to the husband and fathers who were witlr-.' them. In the hour of trial her weakness becomes strength?her sensibility is swallowed npr with faith. There were men of renown in the Lady Elgin?men whose names are known through the wide world?but none of them ever did a braver or more heroic deed than was ..1.1.:;. i i... .1 ...i i. i - ?? *? ! iiuinu?yu u> IIM'MJ nuinu nuilll'll w IJO >ai In 81' lence awaiting tlieir death. J'roeidence Journal. Cot'stekkeiting, axd How tT is Duxe.?Inquiry is frequently made, "what means are adopted by counterfeiters to produce such per^ ) feet fae similies of bank notes?" Tlic modus- j operandi is this: a new note of the kind to be j imitated is procured and saturated with sweet ! oil. This is laid face downwards upon a steel i plate, which has previously received a very thin coat of wax?the oil renders the note so* fv transparent that it is easy to go over every lino with a very tine needle; this of course produces ^ a faint tracing upon the wax. The wax ben-- 4H until every line is then removed \\i;h agrav- jjS ing tool, and acid poured over the plate, which only takes effect upon those parts from^^^^H which the wax has been removed,thus transfer-^ ring the tracing from the wax to the steel ben* V. cath. The plate is then cleaned, and the graving finished as in ordinary steel engravin^flp^H Peterson's Counterfeit Deteector. ^BjjH IIahi'i.vess.?Now let me te'I you a secret ?a secret worth hearing. This looking for- fl ward for enjoyment don't pay. . From what I know of it, I would as soon chase butterfliesfor a living, or bottle tip moonshine for cloudy' ^ nights. The only true way to happiness is Uv take the drops of happiness as God gives them to us every day of our lives; the boy must', learn to be happy when he is plodding over his lesson ; the apprentice while he is learning; The Tin Diuect.-?Among the consignet^BS||ffl|?^ by the Matilda, row about discharging fron^^^^B Liverpool, will be found the names of ilorton^H^^ it Shepherd, of Meeting-street. They leceive- HR a large order?250 packages?in Tin direct, I|?P^ being the first instance of such importation by ^8 any house working in Tin. Jf This is but another instance of the determ- i ination of our merchants to go to original sources, and if their efforts for this season are properly encouraged, they will show a large increase of direct imports for the next season. Charleston Courier. -? ? An ingeniits down cast individual, who lias invented a kind of "love-letter ink," which lie has liecn selling as a safe-guard against all action for breach of promise of marriage, inasmuch as it entirely fades from the paper in two months after it was written, was done brown by a brother down-easter, who purchased a hundred boxes of the article, and gave him his note for ninety days. At the expiration of the time the inventor called for payment, but on unfolding the script, found nothing but a piece of blank paper. The note had been written with his own ink ! An old 1 hitch tavern-keeper had his thirJ wife, and being asked his views of matrimony* replied : "Veil, you see, de first time 1 married for love?dat was goot; den I marries for beauty?dat was goot, too, about as goot as dc first; but dis time I mariics for money?and dis.is better as both !" Tu Dkstuov Wakts.?])i*s<dvc as iniicli coiiiiDDn washing soda as t lie water will take up; wash the warts with this for a minute or two, and let them dry without wiping. Keep the water in a hottle and repeat the washing often, and it will take away the largest warts. Florida Lkmoxs. ?.Mr. S. I). Dickson, Gro* eer, on ] laniard-street, near Congress, sent us, last evening, a line sample afFlorida Lemons, whirh arc superior in size and more delicate iti flavor to the Sicily Lemon, With soil and climate, and the advantages possessed so near us of cultivating this fruit, there should be no necessity of looking abroad for it, .Mr. Dick* son lias our thanks.?Saranuult Jicpublican. Said a woman to an old maid, "My husband Is not so good a husband as lie should be, but lie is a powerful sight better than none. An Illinois paper, a short time since, said of a fellow who was so very dirty that the asses* sors of the town in whieh lie lived set him dow n as "real est.'tfb.*' Cunning is only tlic mimic of discretion, and mav pass upon weak men just as pertness ia often mistaken for wit, and gravity for wiadom. ? * * ? Won't IIf.at.?"Sally," said a fellow to * girl who had red hair, "keep away from me, or you'll set me on fire." "No danger of that," replied the girl, "you are too green to burn !" He calm and quiet in your life. You arc not necessarily serviceable to others when yon are troublesome to yourself. Judicious advertising has lurlt up colossal fortunes both in America and Europe, aad when combined with honesty and integrity, success is sure. Counterfeit live dollar bills on the Stato Hank of Missouri are in circulation.