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INTERESTING doubt, operated as great drawbacks revival there It ptain of this ship, South wah _ we. o ‘ “Mr, acy ae erty - neck and “ii a nod He a singular, th — once opesedy up Rad iyott An! 0 | min rag erged with ante hee om fire, Ly e {From the Charleston (8. c) Courier, = 7 of wi cw ", cue. loods + . ibitia ‘TEE MOVEMENTS OF THE CUBAN INVADERS, | neck at the last trial, democratic, pacty in | have heard not a word » noe it the loss | Seed Crete eg Le ee was indelioate health se the tines and the exertion | _ This novel and attractive exhibition, of which nee te Be Aiiiccerina aaa | memati asec |r hl een | Become a silanes t ch * a ig, did we hear the slightest jon mi ment—a ry over the Union, and a Southern , Continue to for there was no man at = Our Albany Correspondence. In ‘principle, there is little difference between the | to the Union, or the blessings which flow from it— racy, 5 . "| the bar more tet bro ville (S. C.) Race Course on Wednesday, the 236 Auany, May 8, 1991. two en, Mee Palfrey ‘as much of a whig, om | not a word, ae msaes than iffeuch wine had never contvie » with Charleston as its oommercial em: for bis } and bis ult., under the direction of W. H. Porcher Esq... noble qualities of hoart. A the old party issues, as Mr. Thompson, the | existed. pow ‘ . | Happening in at one of the Recorder's offives the | 8* master of ceremonies; Wm. i. Si ‘The Senatorial Elections—Orators and Mass Meet- | jatter gentleman being as much pled . hatever this convention may do, that -venora Pi | herald; and Edwin Dubose, Esq.,as h x gentleman being a& much opposed to the Fa- | " Wo shall return with the thousands going down | tion for the Union, which once existed in this Stare, | other morn, | noerd a ahert obapter oa the phi | ‘The day was one of brillian i seoakios nd dalek wage— The Contest in only Four Districts—Apathy | gitive Slave law as Mr. Palfrey. Oae or the other | this afternoon, not willing to rum the useless risk of | js gone, Taioa—te | losophy of . Of the Greys—New Administration Editor at | of these gentlemen must be elected, and the friends | the malaria which flanks this encampmsat on every | cuPthe hey A ¥Y nos eedniaee stout able boded many about 40 yoars of a whose ful temperature; and at, 10 o'clock A. ML. s large med of Mr. Webster have to hope from either | side. ists, tariffs and internal improvoments, is univer- | featuros bore the traces of the oares and adversities | Concourse of ladies and gentlemen assembled to. oe APRN 4 by the Go- | °F tem, in the great work ¢ preserving the com- | The planters complain of a bad soason for cotton, | gal.’ ‘The only question of controversy is tho mode | o% life, stood at the bar, to answer a charge of | Witness and enjoy the tl secede te i election, wiich has been ordered by the Go- promise measures intact. As Mr. Thompson isthe | an from present drawbacks, they predict a short | gnd the time of quitting the copartaership. vagrancy, Being asked what he had to say for | dies occupied a spacious » erected oc~ ‘Yernor to take place on the 27th of May inst., will | least able man of the two, perhaps his election | crop for the ensuing season. Wot ‘and cold weather |” Upon this throad we hang our hopes—spon this | himself, im answer to the accusation ied, | casion by the master of ceremonies, and, without Peontested with uncommonspirit and disputation | *owld be the loast regretted by the conservatives. | has drowned out a good deal of cotton already | jssue the Union depends. “A postpomemmont ef the | ‘*well, yerhonor, lis asno more a wagr flattering, may it be said that they formed rare ; rrr . ‘The work of ‘ State reform,” so far as changing | planted. if self, orunybody else. I sees fine dressed gentlemen | assemblage of fair faces, bright eyes, and bl i certain Senatorial districts. Every one of the | the occupants of offices is concerned, is cine oa, pie so much agitation of the secession question. Northern rolang is oninian ! Ae it Balan, I the Tooka" about the corners, and inall the yearn cheeks, well calculated ‘to prompt the knightly bo~ resigned Senators will be re-nominated, with, pro- | some important changes having been made during | People are waiting for the convention, which meets realizing compromise of good faith yh good | Without anyoccupation, and why doesn't the police | $m to deeds of high em es oaapiontuaes on Dably, the exception of Stone, of the Twentieth | the last few days. Gon. Stone, of Roxbury, has | next week. feeling for the future. eat if with a post- | oficers arrest them. Now, yer honor, it isn’t proved the main stand, sEponty a large banner, with tho ¥ te: 7 t been made Adjutant-General, vice Devereux, re- i q eee ; here thi usands. Y. admonition, ‘‘ Gallant Knights, t Sonic, dampsiving the Seenieas of Madison and moved. Mr. hy who was appeinted ogistrar Cutar.eston, May 1, 1351. pene geet me oT rey eeente knows WNC le Manat teenie one never ae ‘aad 4 tds ae "BOR, yout” And another banner bore Oswego ; and Guinnip, of the Chemung and Stue- | of Probate in Middlesex, refused to accept the place, | 776 Cyisis o South Carolina and the Union—Re- | in Georgia, ‘Alabama, Mississippi, Florida, Arkan- | but loaf, and them that’s not got a cent lives the inseription, ‘South Carolina, like the mother district. There are circumstance: unless the whig who held it should resign. Now, eee 4 S i ae pated isaffec just as well as th hat’ t lent: 1 of the Gracehi, when asked for her jewels, points to- = Dies acts eusekssthies eect’ connected | Mrewbig coulda't make up his mind to Le resigned | tia of the Present Position of the State, of the | $08, and Lousiana, carry this spirit of disafection | JU £0 eh 8S a TOD Me same style, ‘The | her sons.”—Cazoon. ‘Tho main and other stands 5 equire consideration before . 9 5 North, and of the South—The stions to be Pre- | t@ the Union into the Presidential contest, the very | S00 a Ser Pp Up farther decatahedavith. ‘bi ber th is the in. Th to the loss of his place, and so he woulda’t resiga, forth, of Questions to © | best which we can expect is the exaction of some | difference is all in the dress; the officers néver takes | Were further decorated with banners aring the Ye is put upon the course again. The weakness | that being a sort of resignation loss common than | sented and Discussed at the Convention of th Fifth | new compromises from the North, to an extent Mr, | ® Well dressed man for a loafer; and yer honor maahrone of the kal hts — were to engage in the which he exhibited in permitting himself to be en- | that with which ee boar the misfortunes of car | oF May—Disunion, or @ New State of Things | Webster himself has never dreamed of, or the rapid shouldn't make any difference atween a fashionable Soren ol at AAPEE, Among Be menane Seared by Dull, will operatomaterially againat him 5 | {ieei". sellout thei I have ever heard of. Iris | nevitaWe, disintegration of the most majestio fwbric evar | Loafer ani a maa what don’t folle the fashions. | Ufone on—hope ever”—“Time “trieth, Tat” — :, rn a4 i* e v1 a it [7 3 2, M * . at another act, or breach of faith, which he eom- | said that another of the original democratic nomi- | General Churchill, of the U. 8. Army, reviewod | ¢rected\ for the benefit, the elevation, and the glory | £1) tots jist as many rich mets sons-what gradu. | “Fortitude and Preparation”—‘ Love and Patri- mitted will operate against him—and it is this: In | nees for the Senate, in Middlesex county, and who | today the four companies of troops stationed at | promises, at the very best, or the dissolution of the | te at colleges as am real vagrants and loafers, as | otism’’—\* Love and Serve’ —s Neither Rashness aletter which Gerrit Sinith has recently written to | Was peculiacly obnoxious to the free svilers, and Liar, the thing | them that nover soos the inside of one. If I only nor Fear”’—* In this Sign (the cross) 1 will hope” —~ P § . mene ‘i ‘i i ion. The theme has become fi a r r ‘ i o, - Melee Allens 06 Buflido, ho. @isitecsiy- charges | therelore set aside, was offered a clerkship in the | Fort Moultrie, and having also duly inspected the | 1 OP ecomea temptation, and till this temptation {4 | had on a fashionable suit, [here the prisoner looked | ‘* God ry Se, eae Saaeian- Mr. Stone with having violated a promise ma ar Li Secretary of State’s office, but declined accept- | works, returned to town. The several fortifications | gunorceded by something conceded of practical be- | at his worn and tattered garments, exposing a | ¥7—“ Y kone >| ing it. The third of these gentlemen isa physician, | of Charleston harbor are now being supplied with nekt to the Sat pe o & to the temptations of 4 hole in the elbow of the remains of a coat,] L knows | “Virtue flourishes under, Pressure”—* Our Liv: ng sup) P P en . him (Smith) that he would support the canal UY, | aud he will probably receive the appointment of itions of war, which indicates that the adminis- | Southem confederacy, the danger continues. your honor would discharge m: nee. The only | let them be well spent”—* Love of Ladies” — it to be ao ie Pog stay doctor to the regiment of horse rines which it is | ™un Py RE PsiOn BS ey acre: A = ag FA yg hy nay ” Os charge agin meis, that I doesn’t #ear fashionable | ‘t Honor to the Generous”—* Glory to the Brave” Ielieving itto be the wich of a large majority of 4 . ‘ angers how bi ican the al a eee No, sir, the Uniou is not safe, whatever Mr. Clay, ‘ge agin meis, h ple i sa Fig : rome sil a 5 eure y proposed to raise to wid in enforcing the Fugitive | tration have taken tho alarm, and is preparing to | y4)°\vebster, or General Cass may say of it. They | clothes; and I’ sure yer houor is not goin’ to send | — Faith is the sister of Justice”-—** Fortane, the * agente gar Posen ‘is a st { act on the defensive, should these fortifications be | may ery “pence,” but there is no peace—there is a | me down for that; becase if ye is, ye can fill the ba? paren, Minae ih Nisan a a ia =: eons. Hatch, » democrat, will be sup- |’)... pile" D8r8 assailed. That they will be, in the event of seces- | glimmer of hope; but the immediate peril is the | Workhouse in au hour, by jest inakin’ a grab at the | Poecreoe Men, sae Shenae re by: the whige. Gi i ‘dered | 208 between the high contracting parties: sian bs coral ecient | probable secession of South Carolina. na | dirty, ragged loafers ‘what stands out in the crowd | and Forever” —* Man dies, but Glory lives”—* Vir~ Pinectr « a aehina th coment of he vera ts democrats—Governor, Lieutenant sion, ned mtsernctlee rg oe, | Iman is at the point of death, there still may bo | there, lookin’ at me now.” ‘The philosophy of the | tue mus: be our guide. Ben county, on account of his activity i S menvent of ee The general convention of the Sth instamt, though | ope; and there is a hope that South Carolia will | }oor loafer ouly raised a Inugh, for he was commit | At half-past ten o'clock, A. M., the sound of tho 4m endeavoring to make that a half shire eounty, | ] Gonihentve sie veer; these tacks will not be re-nominated. With him thedemocrats | Fozccutive Council, Secretary of e Cor 8 ary of 1 far, the “spoils” have been a not an offizial or authorized body, will yet substan- | not secede. ‘The elements of this convention are for | iad: some mamnltng NEas aeons hood the iss | pee peyton ae eeenee - the mS oom tiall, ssess the power of dissolvin, etuating | secession, their proceedings may correspond and | Ward ¢ iction of the truth of his remarks onthe | twenty-six in number, chiely from the parishes o: Zoecafeald of bsing dofeated; and, therefore, he will ‘ua Dales lk Ul esrenabeeesabiia eon | oreo overt act, butstill we have a hope of mind of dhe Record Ouruscs, | St.John, Berkley, te Stephen and St; James, with be dropped, and some other person substituted. utube? 0: | Gtabe cael eusk ia the tend 5 th bli + | @ postponement, and of further time for deliberate | A ee an iniusion of Charleston chivalry. They were all Gainnip resigned with great reluctance, anticipating | jyinor appd hy weasel Hinged drools cuties etna ge Median ppc ill Lorantoepes * The Caban Expedition ag ee on i] Lorton, cep sek iar and epposition on account of the shire question ; as be pap tg |-nion, that resolutions in favor of isola‘ed sevession, Gigisere RG. Mele rorricens— | the dresses of the Knights and the saddle cloths of ‘was assured that thedemoeracy would sustain him 4 aan Pincrlpan Sigs ls 4 i i neverthel |e ‘a Z if ad . or A cavtive — the horses were ina style of rij ess, magnificence | and of direct and immediste-socesston, if adopted, | ay. cyte Conspiracy—A Suspicious Company of Eorfiowters—rue | and beauty rarely if ever surpassed, and astasteful re-nomination and re-ele in 3 the ienpress! | wit be . 5 Sou oy ii i i, i a : : impressi will be dee e of the course of South Caroliaa. | iia . P eae Po de ts M ovis Ss ExstLa oF and appropriate in design as’ they were admirabl He will be abandoned, in co usequence of the impor ty is not secking after such a vulgar thing This convention, then, of the Sth of May, is to be | Emigrants to California Leaving Churieston-- INEVITABLE RESULT OF THE a Poe Arado Each Ienight pac more See _— eres st eurzing the district with some other cau- | "The free soil rhaps, not worse than to wome extent the crisis of the controversy, ‘They | A%ther Plan of Secession—Localiand Miscelta- nite Barsucah (Ga) Hows May 1] which his colors were pendent, and. his saddle eloths ie somes of the other dist the whige will re. | mens but the ly have jecful neck Of | eee decide whether’ % *Y | neous Intelligence The Herall Creating a Sena | The city for several days past has beca full of | disclosed his device and motto. ‘The following Shake-dtemant, and show nofight. In the first, ani.| °%ttezing thelr brea: have to decide whether they shallsecedoorrecedo— | 10, ge. be, rumors about the expedition said to be orgay: were the designations of the several members of the re ~¥" up t is expected tt for » descent 0) ittle i =I. The Knight of Uutaw. 2. The e will rise in | j¢ ix only the difference between an r and an s—and | wet important matters | that the convention will be dangerously warlike we . ‘respects | have every reason to believe. The Southern Rights Cuba; but vory litte chivalric corps : session ofany Knight of the Sultan. 3. Tho Knight of St. Ste~ s of the zoverniuent, who seem deter- | phen’s. 4. The Kuight of Berkley. "5. ‘Tho Katee fm Orange and Sullivan, in the Columbia an ab Dutebess, the Chenango, the Herkimer, Rt. | Lawrence, the Delaware On Saturday afternoon last, we went over in three weeks. now before it are the Hoc proposed alterations of the constitu } of a reliablo n s Island, to call | but the offi | the ferry-boat, to Sulli upon Fort Moultrie, learning that the Seerctary of | mined tha wan. 6. The : hae enlnuantaed of E night of the Valley. 7, The Ben districts, they wil s propemsd aliers madi respects | have eve ‘ , sales oe f Cuda is levolutionized it shall not be | of : ght of y ‘ dy 4 ¢ former, the most ¢ dietory statements are | associations of the severa 3 and parishes, ay Ps yee is ay cae ‘ault. Knight of Rosthes. 8. The Knight of the Myrtle. eandidates. “But ‘in the On ntific men, on its feasibility, nod it i* | are composed of the ultras of secossion—these opea | VF Was stowing it with military munitions, as) “\yo"hentioned the fact that, on Sanday night | 9. The Knight of St. Jahn's. 10. The Knight of and Tompkins and Seneca districts, the struggle de animaied, and the contest severe. These will be the great and important battle fields; and already we Uiscover both parties arraying for the fight ‘The whigs will pitch upon those districts w their might ; and if they can elect three twelve Senators, then they will pass t fate a law. When those f 1, Stone, Skinner, and Stanton—w 18@, the democratic party t eondition, as, about in that period, ional differences prevailed to as great an extent as at any Nth | disunion organizations, prima facie, imply it. Tha ates from these associations to this Charleston 30, isuni ither sepa- - Pena 4 of course, for disunion, either Sepa | 41.4 iyroad-brimmed white felt hats. Dropping into | if antieipating a heavy siege. Among the passen- | Jagt, the Welaka left this city with the United | the Palmetto State. IL, The Knight of Santee. gers were a dozen young men, tall, strong, muscular | States Marshal and other oficers on board, for the | 12. The Knight Templar. 13. The Black Knight farmers’ sons in appearance, dressed in homespun, | $¥uth. Since then, there has been considerable spe- | M. ‘The Knight of St. James. 15. The Knight of E culation amneng ans stssane as to what was the ob- | ple Papr em te 16. Aad ine tary He V7. The t i zombi vement (ter. 4 < ject of her trip, and inuch anxiety has existed to | Knight of Medway. 15. The Knight of the Grovi ngeaeaishe i sar ae marthony m Ms Cal | conversation with them, we were informed that they | ‘now what would be the result of by voyage. Ag | 19. The Knight Of the South: 20."'The I when we say now, in the langaage of Mr. Cal- | longed to a company in Charleston, of sixty old | we stated, the reporter of this paper weat with the | Knight. 21. The Knight of Walworth. Ta houn, we mean as soon as it can be done, which | |. fom the Dablmega gold miaing d | steamer, and we expected advices from him by the | Knight of the Chase, 23. The Knight of Malta ot de till January or February. But in | MM . Matthews, which arrived yesterday morning 24. The Huguenct Knight. Ti rval the alternative will be understood, and | people will make their arrangements accord- | certain that the io m i . a ac j Se. The I ; The Knight of Georgia—that they were destined to Califo | with the Southern mail; but ho letter from him | Ophir- 26. The Hibernian Exile. were only waiting the steamer for Chogres. | hus reached us. We learn that letters have been | at the word of command, the whole troop formed ime since the party became divided. The majo7- | them it cannot succeed, even if the Yesterday they left in the steamer Isabel, and it | receive, in. the get bythe Ua ted. States officers in line hefore the galaxy of beauty, and executed ‘ties in a! those counties were much larger at the A SP cca aii wehbe fe ede. eo otherefor the | is ectod that Cuba is their e! or was; bat , "er, the ¢ hts of Walch, however, have not the graceful salute, causing bright eyes to sparkle election for Governor, in 13 Nie Tiaiaees | Penns et en eee Coacay, | Naeger emaalin eecaie pel ead acnetanimeed |Get ie occle tees she adie daeeunes | Hareplred. Tuts rumored that the Welakn was at | with new lustre, and blushing ebecks to bloom wits was raised, it may be said that a periect unity ex- | feather e Ante eae pes nade ~athparm pe gh bar hen : on ee e plot may lead to a'chango | St. Mary’s on Monday, and remained there during | new ros. A brief, but spirited and appropriate ieted, and in consequence of the disloyalty of the Our Southern Correspondences up the l Bog ‘and to on Suit. ‘Tho 2 their plans. There is some plausibility in| Monday night, for the Seapine a collecting infor- | address trom the master of ceremonies, calling om t. , i 3 (asters tothe | these rumors; for, simultancously with the az- | Mtionin regard t> the expedition, and that she cmulous knights to do deeds of daring worthy of silver greys, large majorities would have been ob- | , Medien is full of \ . i the demosrats next November. A‘ matters | Meruomst . t } ge aiteenaseee. a . a . a reef a CWaecee mere sailed on Tuesday morning tor Jacksonvi ‘he | such a brilliant presenee, despatched tl o tained by the demo-rats next November. As matters | : Til 23, 1854. § | Union, to republican institutions, to mankind; but | rival of this company at Charleston, the steamer | Sy Matthews passed et bab Gay tn ae Be. ler tet gd mons Be Mig now stand, the whigs will adopt aay canal democrat | : poi Noo ay ac “NRT a Res Se : : aver . Shemay offer himself, well knowing that, forall | Sowh Carolina Mchodist Camp Micting—Descrip- | the ovhet is largely believed, in this State, Welaka was despatched from Savannah, in | John’s river, near the latter city. menced, the contest being, with horses at’ fulé expected by the friends o it is su d, will go again: animously, and with fy ji a, “ nd i , . "~ — | Pee ae ee they Wirth the sates | nn fibe Seema digton, Petes wed Graton | Halo Burning ‘ixgrace,shaine, wl ignominy, % | parse” cfm Yemel which was tupposed to | 4 We len trom pasengers on vom the St. Mat- | speed. fo bear off & suspended ring the greatest of Beckman and Schoomaker, a suffic “Phen let our songs abound, The materials, then, and the temper and com- | have left that port with emigrants for Cardenas, | thems, that a considerate body of men (variously | number of times out of six, on the point of the ‘oth branches. Lu two dists emUc ‘And every tear be dry— plexion of this convention of the Southern Rights or some other landing in Cuba. ‘The affair has | sohville, aint that other bodie Poe Oger gor | lance (This chivalrous and manly exersise was that description have already been adopted—Llutoh, | 1 4 3 | fonville, anc that other bodies are on the St.John’s | admiiably performed, evincing a skill and grace gh Immanuel’s ground, ssociations, justify our w in Oswego and Madison, and Lyon in Jetierson and | ids on high.” parece re Hop Reae Ass: Wm. J. Bacon, a whig lawyer, | ing in April would be a! mend a compromise, or an armistice, or a postpone. to be pretty well broken up and di will run against Mr. Mann; and in tae Seneca and " . 4 t. it m o considere: c ? opponents of the administration say Tompkins district, the rae will p ing under tho sun,” north of Mason and | ment, it may be considered an omen of the safety uf | PFT 2G ‘been as expert in the case of Kha P ane, ioe morse Spprenensions. OC | created come interest here, though it is bel and Satilla rivers, awaiting transportation to con- jn horsemanship, and a dexterityin the use of | vey them to the general rendezvous of the expo- | the lance, which excited the deepest intere-t in ditionists. age. 2 | the spectators, and called forth their repeated | ‘The young man from this city, who joined acom- | plaudits. The emulation was well sustained and | pany of the expeditiouists ut Macon, some two | close. At tho end of the noble sport, there weeks since, with a view to obtain information of had been no lees than seven competitors for the Dixon. Progressive whig, and place bim ou the eoarsé | by the eli ist Stanton. Bascom, an ultra bran bread, ourierite, lan it is the practice, however, enforced | “h.:"there is danger, also, of the moro prudent drach as he has been in this Cuba business, he ate, to hold these religious eclebrations | of the bers of the Convention being cari would have been @ little more a | 2 ance, Wie ke 4 : Ste possea, Hock, ter tha "het pine | ower Ur the piouable reneeat OF ie eeqatied {comin At By eventay the. | the contemplated movement» to be used by the first prize who bad borne oft the ring an equa! es ck de ibieund btabkotin secessionists, in favor 0! “going out to some eredit for his vigilance in the presery | Deane esterday. Ad wall me we ene dearn the | umber of times. The judges, however, after con- regular old fashioued Methodist cautoz | alone. They urge thi yi of our goad faith in reg to Cuba; and if the | thews yesterday. As well as we can learn the sultation, awarded the laurel to the Knigst of ¢ the content is expected to | “us early ld. I¢ | Woods, those districts wl be severe, mass meetings ave now being is clearly seen that J o Seymour and John | ment, now in full blast. OMB ae $ moar vTihe time exbinet bad only given up a lit:le of their self-com- | {ets he went to Macon, where he mingled with South Carolina, tho largest number of hits or Van Baren have entered for the campaign in unity | Jr jg tho Sabbath. The day has been bright, | Roe er tee eee placency, and followed the suggestions submitted | te. members of the company, and by professing @ touches, together with good horsemanship in ad- and concord, These two leade-s of the opposite | | and beautiful. Five th Avudiaiekia’ Fecause the separate action of South Carolina m the editorials and Washington corr ence | eare to a orp ern their —— dition to bearing off the ring, having turned the democratic fax D versing the doubt- | Warm dnd veaubitul, five thousand’ visiters chime UP | will rally the other cotton States to her support, be- | of the Herald, some five or vix months ago, in re- | HO town tues Ag er sunation and plans. geale in his favor. ‘The vietor was one of the fel districts, and daily delivering harangues to the | from Charleston last evening aud to-day, by the rai 7 3 , | He then returned to this city, in advance of youthful chivalry of St. John’s, but in hie dis- ic opinion shall have car- | spect to the defence of our Mexican frouti rauks of submission. against the Indians, the Treasury might have inthe saved what it will now probably lose, an immense sum of money, which, we learn, has been demande t | fore the reaction | ried them too far | Beeause a single State is sufficient to beg | work; and a co-operation of any other the company, who, it will be rememb: | down as far as the ninety mile st Cectral Railroad, and turned back. ed, came ¢riminating selection of the Belle of St. John’s az m, on the “the Queen of Love and Beauty”—a choice ap- Having | proved by all, as equally due to loveliness aud le. Their united effurts will bring both see- | road, some eighteen miles, for halfa doliar, each wa. ; Fie eee fea tii debt” | Ber head. Oue train brought up two thousand passes There was much hesitancy, and m vin doubt | 86F8, more or less; and the gathering at and about the | Tort; & ns } indemnity for the outrages of the Laited | Communicated iatormation of the movement to | worth—he manifested a discretion beyond his yeai , ‘ South Carolina, in the iuitiatory act, is cither now | 88 40 indemnity for the outrages ol e United | tie 1, he con i 1 yo id 0 ken by | 1 om . oi : - ty be Consn e then returued to Macon in pwr | The seco: 4 $m relation to the wisdom n by | encampment, at noon, numbered from eight to ten ) jmpructicable or impossible. | States Indians in the territory, aod upon the lives it of gir tony destap to beteny. tha sao | meas Fe mel gp blue scarf, embroidered with the Senators who resign ud property of citizens of Mox! device, was awarded to thy ° oo Pre- | thousand—at least four to one being of the colored | cause to delay submit, if delay is extended | xico. i r} : : . . ., mists, and acco 1 ‘i , ’ to sanction that pro e the | population. Never have we seen such a congrega | to the ensuing Presidential campaign. “Aati-slavory _ Among the plans proposed for the State Convea- | nists, ss Sosa my oogr y oelory Loe! he fhe Knight of Walworth, his device and bis mtto— of election arrives, anish | 3* | will control it, elect the contemporanc sus Congress, | tion to adopt, & project will, no doubt, be eu! i i od to deaee th al Koad, where «* Animo, Perseveruntia, Fidditate his very glowing eloquence ug argu. | tlon of negroes. . * iding’ that | he attempted to leave them. But his designs appro dress, @ coat of mail, fabricated by And the day & day ofjubiloe to | Hreseribe the policy of the administration, ant ex: | ted in convention te rights, sece otton, or the pric y's boliday ; thousa arention, » ac! having been discovered, he was arrested by th Tf havi ; A the en ont: soliey of the North— | count of its incapacity to resist the power u od. ge wee » he vested by the himself, having aided in producing the decision in ene oie Canadas operlayy to‘Cuba ana Hayti | federal goverument in opea revolt, dail remain | Cubate, aud forced to wcocmpany them, with | his favor, This gallant Knight selected a lovely is| Boa Sleafons to the esclion Sf any facther aanezer | forthe prevent nomtually Pivave Untoa, bat shall | te tssucance that he ¢hould go to Cubain the front | and bright-eyed belle of Charleston as hs fair lady ments of the orator: aud wd in shed- | them. sting light among the people | abolit Whigs have at command a most powerful in- | of stocks fluence, which they are using with their accastomed | of them nre assembled together. It is the good time | tions to outhern section of the Union. suspend all political relations with it as far as pos. | TANK of the expedition Ax « matter of course, his | and first Maid of Honor to the Queen. ‘The othe tect and diseretioa. ‘Their lau ie to obtain at | eome to them and they fave taade the asost of it, | “Pccwate’ wermatter, the tackitutien of stavery and | sitie; that ft shall takeno part in the Pre ddeutial | #uation now became anextremely unpleasant one, | knights, who bore off the ring an equal nmuber of muuch assistance from the ranks of their - ¥ fuse to hold any | #2" be watched every opportunity oa the march to | times with the victor and the Anight of Walworth, nents ‘They have swarmed about the teats of their colore: y eu rd é evermed ebeek th | the commerce of the South, in the Union, will be at po eat Mage g 7 Pej or prethren—they have basked in t the {the North; i a fow yi office under the fede: orl pad p> seritson es ; ‘ or lay stzetchcd out in the shade, ‘They are comfort: | awaltinga combined moveweut of the cotton States, | Upon horthern manufactures, as far as admissible | Which were unsuccesssul, and inone of which hewas | plar, the Black Knight, the Kuight of tho Chase, ably clothed, except two, who, getting into @ | will be to wait tillthe North have secured, with under the constitution, hall be imposed; while, at Th fa a Logs “ty sag yy a oy “t | and the Hibernian Exile. The third prize, a fight, tore thelin Jand cottoa ofeach other's backs. Eng! the control of the isthmus passes, and of the frame time, premiins and bonuses shall be of. | Ths lie of march was for the station on the rail- | «f silver spurs, was awarded to the Knight of the A as porsible. A few bave been suc trapped. Among others, the names of ¢ ton, A. W. Rogbrs, aud Li. K. Smith, district attorney, collector, aad portm: and that taxes ‘#tect his escap He made several attempts, allof wore the Bagh of the Myrtle, tie Knight Tem- ol Mr. Pulk ; John Wilkinson, of Syracuse, a bunker, | Ail the matronly colored females have their heads | tin satsaaesa ‘ta Shak eae ‘valving fered as an encotragement for the establishment of Ted through Meintorh, Glynn, and Camden coun- | Grove, for the best riding, without reference to oie net ioc i ornaathl Brinda og Re coma een Boe ary ofl Bn meehrs compares, te, tans, ewan viuolving. emetic manufacturer, “Chiequas sort of disanion | Vet, tothe Satile river, ‘The party crossed the Al | euccess with the ring, andibe chose snother of the ‘Thomas Barlow, of Madison county, who has nowa | ky Wes The | Because the act of secession now will break up © continue until some others of the cotton States maha, at boig' ngtoi a canoe. The pri Jovely belles of Charleeton as his fair lady aud ¢laim for canal damages before the Canal reheaded or ia | this coalition between Lngland and the United are ready to fall into line, for the dectaratioa of an | S0HCT acted as ferrywan, and, after getting the | sceond Maid of Honor to the Queen. Garret Smith, of Madison, who owns larg ed sisters, being | States, ia breaking up the Union; and will load to act of separate nationality and independence. | So yey cone orgy toys ngcbyerts | After the awarding of the prizes, followed, ie wages at wenn, od wants the cw 8 Southern confederacy from the junction of the _ We repeat, that we have a hope that South Ca- | it%, (i Gomebe 1m the canwes it pti i a | due course, the interesting ceremony of erowni » more fully suppl surplus canal waters. There are others, of matrimonial | sult ina treaty of alliance between only democratic paper in favor | market. Aud never befure have we seun such black , is the Bugfalo Courier, » priat of | uegroes as we have geen to-day, nor such various on, under the control of the Builulo | shades of lig lors, from the jet black 1 other cotton States in the movement and will re- oocnagh pel Ale jong hg Pit er was overtaken by his pursuers, who had obtained bed Queen of _ and Beauty. Tbe youthfa gland (28 ientanding is had with the North bythe south | 8B0ther boat, aud carried back’ The company pur- | tye'3t escorted by the Knights of Walworth andi account of the cotton trade) and the Southern con- = a nding : ab ie Fe ¥ - vuth | sued their march, keeping a close guard over their | th¢ Grove, ascended the stand, and engiveled the federacy, including the command of the isthmus thon the compromise bills of TSK), by whic priconer, until within about eighteen miles of Bethel, | pope bd the lovely object of his choice with acrowm _ gentlemen above referred to shi S abner "oko the pacsages. . ta’ Herth lost—eethion’ a ofl. & in Camden county, when a favorable opportunity pi Nite h the’ and she, in her turn, invested his ie cits cree tincal Ghar Vika ied Sut macnn’ \ t P A igger—to tle Decause the act of separate secession is explicit, » LL The Fogitiv | presented itself, w oa the marek the night, btw with the laurel wreath of victory, and thence- the h only prom: _ s Zot Mounted | bared quartoroes, passable almost auyw will be eufficient, and will secure to South Carolina be wanted. The Pugitir iis to the and he finally’ effected bis éscape. e travelled {0Fthy in liew of his cap, he was seen * wearing his 9p ese, 's >> Jems 2, porneange tana Wa. Hi. | whit ty of colors, even at | an immense foreign eommerce now in the hauds of Wat the dish of thin soup was to Oliver Twists it | Le two days and nighte, when te reached, ‘Bruns: | bUhing honors thick upon him.” The Mlatts of a ut iiaee lf. ; er ~— © meeting a ee Washington. % 7 | Northern merchants, in addition to securing home bly gives them an appetit The Med | wick, where he took the boat which brought him to | Jlonor bestowed on their ctive Knights the oes Sennen sata, & Zs 8 sinoe, er 4g “i of | The encampment is in the pine woods—they be- | manufactures through ull the South Convention ot Benth Var } arles | this city, ‘Thushas terminated an adventure which, }tizes they had won, The Queen of Love and — Bh cs hw oe owed ; je whige | ir Hable to the effets of the malaria whiel | parate nationality the South oan ton Hotel today. ey nie fraternity, Striet whatever may bo thought of ite propriety, came | beauty was then loudly called for, and makin, rag - J 7 rye o Fovee, wurer the u iemtic eruples rT be er ‘ y ° e 4 ( i " | With modesty and gr 0 e! believing that their own party friends, ospe- | swamy Friclip sre isepry spre t easitalons wittas fi ntlemanly Britivh Consul, Mr. Matthews, The company from which the young man es | y and gi 0 homage and ela Fs ctl teueiie onaiahacke Pi, +8 ) ; , aor r Matthews,’ i | coped, were on their way to Burnt Fort, on the | Be assembled Knights and admiring erowd. aoe eee of te sesoetd goriies fides tas te be longer be tormented with the idea that they boarding here—a picve of informa'ion which may | CHa iver which is tobe the principal’ render. | _ The whole company then returned to’ Pineville be useful to persons having official busia sponsible for slavery in the South, b ro editioni ud wi here they partook of an elegant and > not int to go into t tial, and | re 4 seis Ta him. Before leaving, we leave to enbmit | Y0US Of the expeditioniete, aud where they expected W pa a el nt an merous arate sole aeeh a | Pe living undera separate gonerntiont. The ty eet dion of this hated, Sic Willis | rome si Georgians would be concentrated. it collation, hompitably aud liberally provided. by tke Sisk Metaeed aaa Git anetien aloes a | by treaty, teo, n feeure the safety heir du- was understood that two vessels, with provisions aster of Ceremonies—the Queen of Love and at runset number of Senators to carry the bill, if | the count they can. ‘They are wware that in case the Canal | securing he up an engage- inertic institutic and the North will no longer bo Don is also here, and is n suceessful three | #0 ready to inerease its free negro population by | ment at the theatre—after # very Southern fugitives, when no object of revenge or eks term at Savannah. and arms, were waiting for Chew at the mouth of Beauty, with her Maids of Monur, presiding at the the river, and would eoavey them to the genoral | festivity, under arches of evergreen and Mowers. In , Which is one of the theevening, a brilliant bull, numorously attended, | rendezvous of the expedi becomes a law, the greys will « o | cities. Bu » pepe Tbe New York Merali is emphatically the univer- : . ‘ c terest 18 to be subserved by it. avew J P 1y the w f i *) t Lborls ¢ (many of the ladies wi ne million’ he Bor comparathvel wpt from the a ese , anid others, urged & eges, when we calted for a copy on ROFG: | ing sc { n thouss | i Sr tebicac chicastans ve anna, comeatintetee | leaky Su seoainy son Godan veces esses toemion of onan Ce 1 ing’s arrival, replied that they were all sold, aad | 86 fome ten to fifteen tiousand mew, would be | | The whole pageant was eminently beilliant ant Jowest bidders, will assuredly dispense those farors | country South ( 2a as Weil or them Giseuseed every day, and w still in great demand. Our mon here say Boanett | 4 uccessful—and whether we consider the tasteful elegant costumes of the Knights, the rich ea sof South Carolina jast ae Mrica to their own friends»—perhaps a i ngers in the St. Matthews stato, that bodies h ng i ge portion to | as ont yey will be most eloqu nted in the Understands the polit e Sat Ball-egardless of avy other than suck as have This ¢ mesting bas the srpenrance of 0 per: f necurately ag the drift and tendencios of Seward & mps on th parison and equipment of the horses, the equestrian eurtained the « to Mr. Fillmore and his teae the Sith Taek the eompeoce | irk mating ceaaes to the action | Uo-s aud-at all events, they all bave to road the | Sed St. Jot ms orery duarter, and that it was | skill and daring of the riders, of the beaming ediministrats being as cons? ef cers od sean we Heald. Furthermore, let the Union be dissolved, | Tmores that a considerable force had already ar- | presence of female loveliness, it has never been sur ‘he change which Mr. Fil mn aecertain the whe-eal Cotton is rived, who were waiting @ steamer to transport assed, if ever equalled, in our country. them to the re ous. The steamer expected is | hat hes b ommended end the North wil There are several plans of Great after the fachion of , Macy with lation of the | to be adapted, and the are ranged in | as the policy of the Stat wing anarea | suggested, but submissi taple of & « ytured by the | : u n a 0 ent at New York. This capture may | Mie = ™ x it trom the | Georgia and Virginia, is net one of them. ‘The we . 185 us vbstacle to the expedition, as it will | PIE ser Fs sober i anol - . oul wag . we apprehend, will either bo— ° The Cula Expetitic | ; able delay. If, however, transporta- triyance, which was found on the promices of Wack he sepuinte Gnd fotepenient sceesden of quel h y | tion is all they want, wo would not be surprised | ington Gay, one of the parties recently arrested, for. | South Carolina from the Union, or Spanien Sprea— they had made bold to charter the Ree’ b yf, ¢ s f 2. A reasonable postponement with the view of | ‘The Cuban exped Jvuch other eraft es they may eoo- Teah s balldings, Se. Tt isa block of woos, cular form, about a foot in length and about four inches in diameter, pertorated with. seven holes lengthwise, four upou the outsids, each, consulting with the other cotton = of « compromise to b the refurnl of whieh t + upow a plan ¢ North; on sination are | Whether the expedition t hands on, vannah Republican, Mx bu: | Yeniently lay t t here ; ab eet From th ing set o ing ft was rumored along the Southern ort, *till continues t The whole ea ie seed he ' oA « phe % 3 — of about an inch anda quarter dinwete ” announced da 1 bamooene | kta eccameiine ? 1d sauslin of vue! | er 0 Meta sgnlen Cabs, 08 oF St. | thove wore near (wo thousand men in the vieinity of | nearly through the block’ with & mack eae more has very judiciously ¢ meted afte fashion of an emi- | Legiaat eer eee ln OF EMC | Domingo, is very problematical. The last news from | “ Burnt Fort,” and tho Natilla river, thongh it 1) | hole bored through the sides at the opposite end, e@ thet Dr. Foote would be« pe of (rood TI Ais cope o hints that things generally were in a very | Probable the number ha: becn exaggerated very | soasto cemmumeate with en Tarough the administration ani to the silver ly ped . A 2 considerably, The next steamer from the South | cofitre are three oth te 2 bee ing to Albany with his thirty ae vthe | adopt t : Ithy condition. It was aleo stated that &| will no doubt, bring more authentic intelligence, | wabed oo ns to proveet vee then cctoe tee thee - nt was being made annex the eowatry | both as regard: the number of men and the action of the cemphino with which they ar Bites 7 d. The * ax. a own paper, aur a ew) paper 5 packed, as close fy poate, on tin By ignitiv hi nd Gen. Gonaales, The Marshal, | the small holes at the Kottomgot the voce, Wr ose the Soath Caroli the Union. If they like it, the Presi 1, Weed, and woolly can ischarge bis morning ¢ wd, Bul but this all fudge, for Spain has | Of the Marebal. It was not known when tho ox holes aro covered with shoe con well attend to al 1; | Pedition would depart, nor the place whence it was | outeide holes each have atube c a expected tosail. Rumor says that General O'ilaa, | sent is for the separa- | of Kentucky, was in or near Jacksonville, as weil as tien, Loper, Oar Boston Correspondence, ¢ likely that the mov {the north-western departments of Moxie vee ~ we slaver. 7 » adoptio: ' 4 af | — The Appron ning te . hy thitd w utd wy “A apt to conf a = noe but ifthe expedition so much talked of i¢ to aid in | pd ng had warrants only for the two lattor — alewty the outer ond (the paper tube and ‘i ; * | ler Reeling to Sacer of suing ont . : mtg as it | the vation of a new republic there, the thin | (irre the Me . seach rm giving « ane ee ee | ean be dene, © gravity and decor com, ” sade en te on- | A ~ da ee "d We are precious dult here just now—flat as, homey, th | ing an net of such vast’ wa Ao meatal fecieles ghtec A> 3 ap Bae: mr sia pl PG Peper: i} the camphine flows out, and epread- iiapage. That Yao Nest es hy ap we Ci " The proce Northern States, official | *trations towards the Rio Grande eer em to aoe to oy La coy | a ~_ of flame fur s distance The taiked-of myste hat broke on | pore, di and anolictal, of the le x monthe, have added | give it some color, Another rumor aloes nor they expect t pree handred | it may, te slasede ving ip Bg tra dey or two snothiag and | up over the | that it. Domingo is the object of the Filibustezo’* | men near the st. Johns. ‘This ia ali | was burned, peckokiy 0 te eupuaeakantineae. though al , talk ob = | Brot en ‘or | Sttainment. J am inf yrined, from gentlemen, who | mere rum: ave it on undoubted authority, | ti it would take to sot fire to the comphiog. ‘Tt "™% _— al rome talk about arresting | », Fish, of tv have lately visited it, that it is far preferable to | howeve at about two hundred and fifty men lett ere blocks can beso made as to burn one more fogitive 8 900 been ; ie, od States | Cuba in all | the tweaty wile station ou I'riday last, for parts | hour or three days, as the cecasion may reqiire, Providence would seem to be frowning on ue—pro- | ate ha achasette, | tionists, whe wmcguneneee a ite bene ae Gabi beeware of the sleetion of Me: usenet. All and of Dickine ; qaabbling in | in our chy, among ° ickett Sisertan Drath ix Bostow.—Alexander Catlin ian davevealk, Geka ir teckinn’ ee iss bi Reais Sais bi ap | Congress for the «poile of the Ning river aad | Major Hawking. Thess gentlemen left here sud- | of py t. entloman of considerable | reins discovered, wulers by accident pda ne se heeath tami oddone d | harbor bill, the inteigues for n igh tart the bend- donly the other day for up the river; whether for a <p pee, Soe to his deathy a One Vareh we soneemel Wisi aes if econd an h Congressional dis ing for the Prosidency, and the temperizin y | Kentucky or some other place is not known. It was | bridge, on Saturday morning last, under the most | Mare egiee, undetected until thy fire triete, where elections are to take plat on the 26th V of the administration towards Seward and Com- | said they had abandoned all connection with tho | singslar ond melancholy circumstances. fle arrived | CC ered Pree Press, April 29 fart. "Me. Scwail, the teoceoll candidate, having 3 any, have all operated ty onsince te people of | Cxpeditin. Several “paniaris were pointed vut 0 | in thi rity oy the Bath of April, aud registered his oe withdrawn fot el fight in No. 2 will . South Carolina that the North is infected to the | me the other day, taid to be «pies in the pay ofthe | name at the Tremont House as coming from Beat- from pre Me chaed to 347. Ram sana A nae very bones with abolitionism; and that to escapo | Xpanieh consul here, or the Captain General at Ha | tleboro’. On Friday morning he called at the on a tHangulor del im. | gx TOE MBich: Beother Dearce gave ou: bis text— | js incendiary designs, the ouly way of safety is to | vane. ‘The spy business is rather bad, and may | bion, and inquired if Mr. iloward, of the Irving | MAY 2—The 1 mortalized by +1 longer to be the type | clusiee (4 chapter, 25 and Bist verses, ia- | abandon the Union. fate : : i jo more Rey eerapes, or the infliction of pau- | House, New York, had been there this week. On | Patid Bungert on« of the conte? Tumors, however, that | “es We repent, for all this, that thore ise glimmer- | ishment onthe «pier. The whole of the Cuba ex- | being informed that he had, he requested a certifi. | ™2t Complains th e feat from the Father, und sm come ato the | ing of daylight, though the darkness is gloomy i tives the Potion sad om came tre fee | tng of Galant, thes pedition was brought to light, or, pechaps, more | eate stating euch to be the fact, ax ho snid he had a | SAS" ped wunedy detain 5 this | het pending. This was given, and ho loft. He was | joy ‘utd trom, Tents, Ae the “old line demvce: will bri tae * date, ond Ihave beard Mr. Saickney*ot Linseed | oti! tu e reason to hope that | preperly speaking, was brought into heing, fw Wehtioe, it. Lord, of Salem, nomed for lace ley ‘ uth Caroline will forb: that she will ‘ wait a | jtey aflair, for which the proviows Spanish cons! | seen about four o'clock in the afternoon; and in | writ of rope ©. This was a motion to set asiée Header of the forlorn hope. ite wut ve mbeb tro |»! . like (joa nger;” and see, at least, whether upon a here had t> take hia leave. While our governmeat | the erening at ight o'clock, some mbat wander tha saver frvar te Geftuaueer apenas tte mieten: he number of totes that either of those gontle -_ J gf the strength of the under jaw. ue presented to the North, the partaersnip | is on the alert to prevent any violation lawe of | influence o! liquor, came out fro Parker's, in Court | by ts hogs been te mo A om Pere could command, thet would render n domocratia t Pear ; red by Mr. Maxwell, the Qoileetor, Lt arperd hy the counrel for the defendant that the A ald net maincaln their proree PCr judgment for the deteudant ba *, lu faet, a poor cher, dealing | is to continue or tocense, neutrality, it should also keep a jealous eye on the | Square. A carriage was standing in front, into Momination important; but such evidence of dinen, | 2, Sbattactions, inovenpreheasthle even in South | Disguise it as we may, the Union is cambersome | acts of foreign officials, and prevent the secret sys which Moses A. aul, of Dover, N. H.; Jobn gion emong Mr. Rantoul’s foriasr rupperters would Carolina. He spoke away for two mortal bourse, enough to the South, if for the provent it should be | tem of espionage which is, no dowbt, now being Car- | Trickey, a mon well known to the police; and a eaure the whigs to work the herder for Mr 1p. | tempting to prove that the Son of (od wat as old | preserved; but how it can sustain a reparate or | vied on by the emiasaries of Spain throughout our | third person, a clerk in the employ of Paul, wero hem, and per’ end to bis election. — e 4 na bie Father, a fact which, spiritually, everybody | combined movement for secession, it is difficult to | prineipal cities. just ontering. Catlin asked permission to join the whole, Fam incliggl to the opinion that Mr wraitted trom whe Veginulng ; aud whieh, in at | divine, The arguments of Mr. Ithott in support | "The Father of Waters, & few days ogo, fell 18 | Party, which wae agreed to, and they drove off. lection is BY means +0 certain ae some of | tempting to illusseate, Brother Pearse only mysti- | of immediate seccmtion, abound with temptations | inches at this point. Fortanately he sustained no Five visited 4 house of entertainment called The his friends deelare't (o be, though the chaneer are | 204 Jt a8 a poor rormon for a prowoher of such | to'try the experiment. He says that if South Caro- | injury, but looks rather don at the mouth. The | Albey, which is situated on the inain road, midway | , Mav 3—Styhen R. Parkhurst vs. fwael Kineur', Cuteia im bie favor Le on, himself, through too | &*pereuee as Brother Pearce lina hg mye py establishes » duty of ten per | great case of the burning of the ship Russia, which | between Porter's and the Colleges. The carousal | 1 “witerd end deme: W. Hole Tie war acav nity amueh sorvice not to have learned the truth of Tai. collection was taken up, a hymn was mung, and | cent in liew of the United States three por cont ave- | created so much excitement here at one time, was | was kept se until two o'clock, when the landlord beng ne referred to ome of the wasters of tl tus’ remark:—" Sprs cf premia in ambiguo; corta, | 2 Prayer by one of the brethren, and the meeting | tage ad valorem, all the foreign commerce to the | argued this week before the Supreme Court en its | observed, “ Your fiend,” pointing to Catlin, ‘is wean wetion for the iuftingement of « paten: q hich, being Interpreted, sigur, | Munstued fe dinner. “There war no revival. The | Southern Stator will enter at the port of Charleston, | merits, for the recovery of the ineurance offnted on | end. ‘The coroner's jury Yound a verdict uf death | cotton, She tanstet fepussed te eoer os ine plone eat | ’ and Sree taat all good things ary aioe dalecually ug TW vb eeeeesion, aud ihe wegco question, have, ag providedtbe genera! govermment abandons the field; ' the sbip and cargo, by Parwdive, Lawrazon & Uo. | Ly apoplesy.—dBystom Mail, May 5. A decree was entered ia the guyst for $2i,25) 28, i ‘