University of South Carolina Libraries
m TT i i XLJ f* .*->* ' K? - 'f/ y JOHN C. & EDWARD I IJ IU I'i'SLB. WHERJLK, QREENmiUE, 3. O. DEALER IN m ilO S1LTEB WATCHES. CLOCKS, JEWELRY, SPECTACLES, . 18 ft 88 Carat Solid Hnvti&l Rion SILVER & SILVER-PLATElj iy WORK of all diacrli>liona in hi Ho* dona promptly. JE) Oct tl n i V ' J -? ? - -x- pi-a** n ? ? i ??? - < ? ? GREEN VILLA1 PAPER MILLS. HPHE undersigned have this da} I formed a copartnership under the name of JAMES BANNISTER & SOIf, For the purpoee of carrying on tin - ' OP James Bannister, < T. J. Bannister. TI1E Mills aro now in .excellent order, and we aro prepared tc tnrn ont a FIRST CLASS PAPER, "Which we will warrant to give satisfaction. A FULL SUPPLY OF PRINTING. COLOKKD, YAUN & WRAPPING Can be found at all times at our Agents. Messrs. David & St it a n LKY'S. September 1, 1869. 16-tf NEW MUJNimY. MBS. L. T. JENNINGS, ^ RESPECTFULLY .1 N? fonts hor friends awl th? public generally, that she MS J II I received and ^^T^VjHnjWopcat'd a r" BEAUTIFITL AND HANDSOME LOT 0* FALL AND WINTER KIlLVilN EH Y, . Which the offers at prices low and roasonable. Ladles before purchasing their ; t J*i *1 HATS, BONNETS, RIBBONS, AC. Would do well to giro bet call, at ber olid stand. Oct IS SI ?a The State of South Carolina. GREENVILLE COUNTY. * la tbo Common Fiona?Equity Bids. THOMAS C. GOWER, Administrator, es. P, F. 6UDDUT11, tt aL?Dill for Sale o; Real Relate, to fay Debit, <te. UNDER th? Decretal Order mode in the above case, the Creditors of tbe Estate ot Mrs. MARTHA LOVELAND, are required to establish the rank and amount ot tbeii claims against said Estate, before the Clerk, within Nine moutbt from this date. W. A. McDANIEL, C. C. P. Clerk's Office, September 28tb, 1869. Bept 29 19 9m E. P. JONES, Awwcosutsrara' AW MW, AND 80L1CIT0R IN JSQUITY. will piicrricK m all COURTS OF THIS STATE AIM, IN THE UNITED "STATES COURTS. Offleft OrftenrllU 0. H., t. C. July 7 ^ Ijf* TOWNES & EAST, &.TS i * ? . J V . SOLICITOUS a EQUITY, T11B UNDBRSieBDIMVINO-frdRMEI ft copartnership In the prftctioe of La? in Greenville ao4 the nrroamHeg Count ic of Anderson, Oconee, Pickens, Spartanburg ant Laurens, will (ire prompt attention teftll mud nesa entrusted to them. . . Office at Greenville, a. r. rewrites. oua ?. bast Nor 10 15 tf W. K. BASLftT. ?. ft. Hjtl.1. BASLET * WELLS, Attorneys and Coiuueiloro at Lai **&JginSSg& * WATCHW9, CLOCKS, Jcwalrjr, Periiocpic 8p?cU?lea,fco WILL ow^? M ?tr? irtkV ?n7 paraon. um Ic*"^ tloii will k? (iron to REPAIR a-m Wank* *r i?7 A** orlptiun. Boat nkriMM affair J AM lid 0. BLACK. JawtO 0 U, WM. P. PRICE. ATTORNEY AT LA\* 0AHL0NE8A, QA., WILL practica in tha ComntL* of Lamp kin. Dmim, OilBtr, Poo n to, Unlcn Town*, Whlto and Ilail. Jan 16 33 If SAHUEL BLACK. BABBEK WOUI.A n?|<Mlful!y infarm'tha pnhlii (hat ha baa Re?ioa#d (o a room U tha OLD COURT H0U8K, mhara ha ail ba prapofod to raoMaa avaUMiara m hrrofo for*,. BaiOf a BorW, h kopaa, ba attention to bualoMoa, tofatta with pomooaaa to a!?. to mailt a portico a KffiWSStA8T"?- GTvmc Jaa?o "It 1 it' 5 ORE ^ ^ ^ to J lews, ; fAILEY, PRO'RS. *?-j ?r?? '*' m? * ivwKii, uuiluR* i ) J. C. BAILEY, ASSOCIATE 1 InMUrtUR Two Dollar* ptr mibu*. ' ADT*ariBit?K?T? i?**rtoi ( the rata* of * OB* dollar \*t *quar* of twelr* Mlnioo 11m* i (this aiaad typ?) or lw^r U?o fltot UarttM, l f l*y oent* OBoh for tbo second and third Inner uignv t In their mamma's tubncN, to fond and so t r tight; g And to Atr who hath borna tham for herself J and for ma;? t , To my wife and sweet ebildren, my beautl | ful three. u > " The swiftest wing'd angel my heart shall J employ. This meeetge to bear to my soarsee of Joy,? A Which like nature's beat fountains uneeae- . ingiy give Their ineffable bounty to ma- - and I Use Their delights to enjoy. I ean look on their faces?all three Tn a nest' 1 ' At they smile in tbair dreams aad repoeein ? their reetAh I now do I hear my own name from their iipe, i In the leoderest eceenls? as my aagel tlpa V From hit wfogi my bequest. Hark?they murmtr: "'tis dear papa's ^ voice that we hear." V Sis liquid blue eyea March to see li he's ' near;? ^ And ooe little dimpled ebeek blooming with ' r; - row, ? In luvlng expectancy eigha, end dleeloeee * The treee of e tear. ll J My angel is wise, and eo, bending In love? j( Aa a good angel abould. kiseeteaob preeioua r dove, * Saying " daareat of pets, I have some from , afar, With tkeae kUeoa and love from yoer dear , papa"? Kissing each precious dove. And now wbile I gas*, the rleb porple of fl , morning w ! Usher* In the bright eon. all the boaaahold y adorning; ? V At the altar of worahlp behold my awect j three, | Breathing prayers to God for Ihemeelve* f and for mo, Sending heaven to me. 6 Oh, Qod t blase my treasure*, and may oni C ' home ba .Of V)*! I A heaven on earth, for my darling* awl me; '. May the angel that aweetea* their dree tea d with hi* kiv, Na'er be sent on a mlr*ion lea* freighted (j with bliea. To my darling* three. g , [J/orcA Jfo. XIX j | j. I -! L --J.L L .?= !!? : (Driginnl Communitattons. ' 11 " [ FOU TOE GKKKNVILLB fi&TK&FHISK. * r *SSV, from the 8crep Book of en jl' w?u jtujugibu 01 uictsTUia conn- i ty. JKM A. o'vLAEIN, G Hi* Entrance into America from j the bog* af Ireland, toiik a brief sketch of Me Travel* and He- t pcrience. Yon see, I tv.ok shipping at Liv- j erpool n ith my sister Jens, in the year 1880, in the ship called the > Mocking JSirdy lor the port if 1 Charelstoqn, South Carolina, in America just. Alter a sail ol six > weeks?having a voyage of tern- 1 r pest and storm on the high seas, J just?we landed at said port.? ^ . There 1 found my aunt Maggie . O'Flarin, with whom I left my sister Jena, and made my way up ? the country, after a travol of ten 1 day's, jnst, on foot, to my cousin * " Daniel Anderson's, in the County J of Greenville; and you see my fi cousin Daniel Anderson he had a bobta 1 sorrel mare, and I bought e l myself a bobtail sorrel mare, and ) J my cousin Daniel Anderson he a)- ] so bad a two horse wagon ; to this | . 1 bitched the two bob tailed sorrel j mares, and back I made my way, i ? just, till Cliarelstonn for my sitter f Jcua, the big cheat and the trunks i ! 1 bad left there with my aunt t Maggie. 80 you see, in our trav- 1 cling through the country back til) ' my cousin Daniel Anderson's, In 1 the County ot Lexington, jost, by , the wayside in a thick pie<? of r woods, I discovered a beautiful J thing about the size of a half . bushel, just, of a lMiUn-coloT like1 ? banging to the twig of a limb. I j went to the woods and looked af ter the pretty thing very closely, and tUM T dltl. iflM? nn.-| cniiU i see no otlier fruit on the tree but f 1 the pretty thing about the site of ! a half bushel, and bejabers indeed i I could not tell whether it was an ! J Apple, a pear, an acorn, or what it \ Was; but says I to myself, I will ? gather it any way and give it to * uoMj tweoty-Br? ?utU ?nhMqu?ut I A ,d,T#rtUw?enU "> ? t1? oonUr J ' or ti l/HlAna am a?- - M At ? Hi to- f - - ?m ihuui, iii u?/ wiu mm " Inserted till ordered out, and obarged tor. 4 Unless ordered other wire, Advertisements ; will to variably bo - displayed." 1 ' Obituary noUcce, and att matter# lourlas to ? 1 to the benefit of any one, pre regarded a* t AdventiemeeU. ~ . ,v -;v j &Hf<M fattrt}. ; ' - . ? ?? 4 j My Hurling* Tfcm. I To ony two Httl* darling*, who noatle to- t .Lit ' ni fin. jgjj_._in jLX-iX :eny] r * * 1 i" 1? politics, 3?tcUige Ofif L L 1--^?Lili-'.JLU?iCliL JJ. I iny sister Jen? in jne wagon, so I >roke off the twig to which the ?i.i.? t?*- C?-i? ?J ? wuuc MN BUtt W ( did fure, Ji*Uy and look it to the croon till my sister Jena. We tad not travelled very for, more tor the space ot a mite like, bebr^re could bear hi the pretty king, the. sound of a drum ttie, ind sure,1 indeed, then began pourng out of it a tnige bakl 1 Ay in treat numbers, abottt the aim of he end of the thamb, just, and hey bit my Sister Jena, and they bit nyself, and they bit the two horse cagon. and the big chest, and the funks, and thy bobtail sorrel ware, md my cousin Daniel Anderson's >obtai! sorrel mare, and here they rent tilting down t e hill, just, unning away with the wagon, and uey spilt the wagon out, and they Kilt my self out, and my sister >na out, the big chest out, and he trunks out, and indeed, tn.c, I tad never before seen or heard of uoli bsaote as come out ot the >retty thing abont the size of a tall bushel, that I had gathered md gin to my sister Jena, just. F&tartj far 'tl)t InVwa. tHE BEST WIFE IN THE WORLD . BY AMY BAMJOLUL "The best little wife in the irorld I" said Herbert Ainscourt. " Of course?I dare sav," rea. A J U. T? " T? - vhuou uii. jLuricrcbB. " l> 11 i rhai's your exact idea ot the best rite it> the world V Junes iajs got the best wife fn the worfd,1 because she keeps bis stockings larned, lakes him to church three iuiee of a Sunday, und never lets dm have an opuiion of his own. feokins says Ac's got the same dent teal article, but Jenkins1 wife teeps all the money, draws his alary for him, and makes hi in ire in the back kitchen, becanse he parlor is too good fur the (amiy to nae." 14 Oh ! but Daisy isn't a bit ogrejh?a little submissive, soft-voiced hing that hnan't an idea except dmt is reflected from me. I tell on what, old fellow, I'm the maser of ray own house: I come when please, and go when I pleaac, )aisy never ventures on a word of _ i. * eprvw'ii. 4 Then you ought to be asham<1 of yonrBelf, larking round at the tubs as you do, dissipated bacbeor fashion/' 1 Ashamed ! What oft' 1 Why, I suppose you owe some luties to your wife!1 4 Where's the harm t My wife loeen't care.' 'Probably yon think so, been use lie is quiet and submissive; but f she were to object?' 4 Object 1 I"d like to hear her ry it." 4 Now, look here, Ainscourt; our wife may be a model wife, mt yon certainly are not a model ?-t J n . ? ' uBimnu. rcopie are oegwnmg o talk abont the way yon neglect hat pretty little bine-eyed girl I1 * 1 11 thank people to mind their >wn business. Neglect her, inloed I Why, man, 1 love her & 1 ore my own son!.' (Then Why don't you treat her ia if you did 1' it - i n k 1 Oh ! come Portoross, that qncsion just shows what fr,regular old tachelor yoti are. It won't do to nake too inuob of your wife, oness yon want to spoil her.' Mr. Portcroea snook his head. 4 That sounds selfish. 1 don't like he ring of the metal.' And he went away, leaving Mr. linecourt to finish hie game of >illtards at his leisure. 1 What a regular old fnss budjet Portcroee is,' laughed the later. ' Always poking his nose ino somebody else's business, ["here's one comfoit?1 never pay my attention to wliat lie says.' Meanwhile Mrs. Ainsconrt was letting alone in her drawing room icr two little white hands tightly ocked in one another, and her fair lead slightly drooping?a delicate ittle app'e-bhesom of a woman, vitb bine wistful eyes and curly laxen Hair, looking more like a grownnp child than a wife of ;wentyone an minors. 4 O dear!' sighed Daisy. 4 It is >o dull here. I wish Herbert would some home, lie never spends any time with me nowadays, and I practice all bis favorite songs, and read the newspapers, so I can talk kbort the things he is interested n, and try so hard to be entertainng. It's very strange.' ^ And then her oval faro brightmod into sodden brilliance, and iparkle* stole into her eyes; for ne wife's quick car had delected ler husband's footstep on the itairs. The next moment he came n. 4 Well, pet, how are you ?" with i playful pinch of h e r cheek. There arc some bonbons for you. LLLE iter, unir ti3mpt fENvTLLEr^WTyCABOLIN ? ?? ? I t 4 . * I n neru are uiy ngia giurm i O Herbert! you are not going ( away again T *?I moat, Daisy. Tliere are a lot of follows going to drive np to High Bridge, and I'm one of the party. You can go over to my . mowers to dinner, or sond for one of your friends, or something. There, good bye, puss; I'm in a deuce of a hurry.' And with one careless kiss press ed on the quivering damask rose of a mouth that was lilted np to hini, he was gone. Daisy Ainseourt neither went to her mother-in-law, nor sent for one of her girl-friends. She spent the evening all alone, pondering on the shadow which was fast overgrowing her life. ( What shall I do f" thought the little timid, shrinking wife. 4 Oh, what Kail I dot' Bat, child as she was, Daisy had a strong, resolute, woman's heart within her, nor was she long in coming to a decision. * Da 18V.' said her husband to l*?r ! the next <lay,(you haven't any oh I iectlons to inj attending the Orion ! Bal Masque V . 1 Are masked halls nice places, Herbert 1" 1 O yea, everybody goes ; only I thought I'd pay yon the compliment of asking whether you disapproved of it or not V 1 Can I go with yon ?n 1 Well?ahem?not very well, this time, Daisy, you see, lira. I Fenchurch really lnnUd so strongly tor me to take her, that J couldn't help it.' 4 V ery well,' assented Daisy, meekly, and Herbert repeated within himself the ptean of praises he bad chanted in Mr. Portcroes* 1 I'l. . 1 M ??.- - * cam; - a ue wfli mire wire in the world P But notwithstanding all this, Mr Ainsconrt wm not cxnctlv pleased when at the telf-same (>af Masque, timing the gay period *Vf unmask ing, he saw his wife's innocent face crowning the picturcqne costnme of a Buvarian peasant girl. 4 Hello!' he ejaculated, rather ungraciously, 4 you here \\ 4 le?j lisped Daisy, with a girlish smile. * You raid everybody went. And oh, Herbert, isn't it nice !' Mr. Ainscourt a aid nothing more ; but Mrs. Frenchurch found liirn a very stupid eompatiion for the remainder of the evening. lie was late at dinner the next day, but, late as he was, he lound himself more punctual than his wife, and the solitary meal was half over before Mrs. Daisy tripped in, her cashmere shawl trailing over her shoulders, and her dimpled cheeks all pink with the fresh wind. 4 Am I behind timet Really, I am so sorry I But we have been driving in the park and?4 4 We! Who are sw!" growled her husband. 4 Why, Colonel Adair and 1? ?1- O I I A J-i- - I - tut: i/viouci Aunir tnai you go out with to much.' 4 Now look here, Daisy 1* ejaculated Mr. Ainscourt, rising from the table and pushing back his chair,4 Adair isn'l exactly the man I want yon to driva with.' 4 But yon go everywhere with hhn!' 41 dare say?but you and I are two different persons.' ?. k.. 4 Now, dear Herbert,' inter pes-1 ed Daisy, willfully misunderstanding him,4 you know I never Was a bit proud, and the associates that arc good enough for my husband are good enough far me. Let ws give you a few more oysters." Ainecourt looked sharply at his wife. Was she really in earnest, or was there a mocking under-enrreut of satire in her tone t But he could not deckle, so artless was Iter countenance. 4 I'll talk to her about it sometime/ was his interna! decision. * Daisy / he said carelessly, when dinner was over, 4 I've asked old ? -? auhto J ?V VV1UV Mill epcnu the day with you to morrow 1' 4 Oh, have you I I'm sorry, for I am engaged out to-morrow.' 4 You! Where! 4 Oh, at Deianoe ice's. I're Join-* ed a Woman's Rights Cinb, and we meet there to organfoe.' 44Toe dueco take #oman'i rights!* ejaculated tho irate hue* band. 4 Of course I d o n't believe ip 'cm ; but it's the fashion to belong to a club, and such a niece plase to go to of evenings. I am dull lu'in AVAitinm. I' Herbert's heart smote him, but be answered resdliitcly: 11 beg you will give up this ridiculous idea. What do women want of clubs V 4 What men do, I suppose.' * But 1 don't approve of it at all." You belong to three dobs, Herbert.' 4That's altogether a different matter.' X-XJ- I 111 I ... Ill . .1 ? ENTI : '.V " - ki.-.i.-i , r * ? .. ? _jl_ m AIA a CLA ounnrtu 0i v)t 9i A, MARCH 18, 187a : Bui wAy '? ? different, Herbert T 4 Hem?why t because?of conrso anybody can see wby-^it** self evident.* 41 most be very blind,* said Mrs. Ainsconrt, demnreiy, 4 but I confess I can't discriminate the essential difference.' Herbert Ainaoourt said no more, but he did not at all relish the change that had lately come over lite spirit of Daisy's dream. She did change, somehow. She went out driving, here, there, and everywhere. He never knew when he was certain of a quiet evening with her; she joined" not ouly the club, but innumerable societies for a thousand and one purposes, which took her away from home ftlmoet continually'. .Mr. A tasooert dialed against tlie bit, but it a:as useless. Daisy always had an excuse to plead. Presently her mother in law bore down upon her?an austere old lady in black satin and a ches nut-brown wig. * Daisy, you are making my son wretched.' * Am IT cried Dsisy. * Dear me, 1 hadn't an idea of it! What's the trouble?' ' You must ask himself,' said the mother-in-law, who believed?sen slhle old lady?in yonug married people's settling their own difficulties. 'All I know is the bare fact.' Rn tv;.? .?? ? ' - 1 ^ - wv *yaioj ncill Ill/IMC 1 U b II C drawingrooin, where Herbert ley on the sofa pretending to read, bnt in reality brooding over hie trouble*. 4 W lint's the matter, Herbert ?' said Daisy, kneeling on the floor beside him, and potting her soft, cool hands on his fevered brow. 4The matter. Nothing much, on?y I am miserable/ he sullenly answered. 4 But wliyf she persisted. 4 Bccanse you are so changed, Daisy.' 4 J low am I changed I1 1 You are never at home ; yon have lost the domesticity which was, in my eyes, your greatest charm. 1 never have yon to myself any more. Daisy, don't you see how it is iinhittcring my life ?' 4 Does it make you unhappy !' she asked, softlv. 4 You know that it does, Daisy.' 4 And do you suppose I liked it, Herbert V 4 What do yon menu V he asked. * * I mean, that I passed tho first year of tny mairied life in jnst snch a lonesome wav. You were never at home. You I ad no 4 domesticity.' Clobs, drives, billiardp-aying, and champagne suppers engrossed your whole timo. I, your wife, pined at horns alone.' 4 But why didn't you tell me you were unhappy I' 4 Because you would have langh,ed at the Idea, and called it a woman's whim. I resolved, when we were first married, to fritter away neither time nor breath in idle complaints. I have not complained ; X have simply followed your example. If it was not a good one, whose fault was that ? Not mine, surely.' 4 No, Daisy, not yours,' he assented. 41 don't liko this kind of life,' went on Daisy. 4 It is a false excitement?a hollow diversion; but I ? ??? vu mv ?vr mip Mftiuu rw son, I suppose, that you did?because it was the fashion. Now tell me, Herbert, whether vou won Id prefer aJashionable wife, or Daisy r * 1 Daisy?a thousand times Daisy r 4 Dnt Daisy can't get along with a theatre-going, club-iiving hasband.1 'Then she shall hare a husband who finds his greatest happiness at his own hearth-stone?whose wife it his dearest treasnro?who has triad the experience of surface life, and finds it unsatisiaetory. Daisy, shall we begin our matrimonial career anew P And Daisy's whispered answer was, 4 Yes.'" * 4 But what must yon hare thouflrht of me all this time?' *hu askctl him, after a little while. 41 know what I think note.' 4 And what ia that i' 41 think,' said Mr. Ainsconrt, Whh emphasis, 4 that yen are the beat wife in the world.'4 York Ledger. -i- --!~i j__ ! Tub theruiometer at St. Paul, Monday morning was thirty de grocs below zero, and In Chicago eight below, at Jacksonville ten below. 141 tiiink that I'have seen you before, sir," said one geutleraan to another. 44 Are yon not Owen Jones?" 44 Ob, yee^" replied the other, M I'm owin' Jones, and owin* Brown, and owin' the Green ville Enterprise? I 1EPE " ?' - "+?1 "i- ? * 1 - :==: aU uttir (Country. Agricultural. Work for tfco Month. The coi 11 crop now demands the attention of the farmer. In local itieo where danger of hard freezes is over, the sooner it Is planted the better. Where ample provision for teed of all kinds has not been made, by sowing largely of oats and other grains, onr readers will Ea don ns tor nrging that a large readth of land be devoted to coi n. It inay not be a profitable crop compared with small grains, bnt experience has 6l?own that,. as a general rule, it is decidedly better policy for the farmer to raise than buy his provisions. To one living on a railroad or steamboat thoroughfare, with land specially adapted to ootton growing, and with a good seaeon, it may be cheaper to bay corn than to raise it; but bow few, comparatively, are thus situated, and who has the guarantee of good seasons ? The corn crop is made during the first half of snmmer?tho ootton crop is made during the latter half; it may happen, therefore, that a season be admirably suited for a corn crop and yet perfectly disastrous to a cotton crop. It does not follow, because the cottgn crops fails that corn wonld have tailed also, and we ninst urge again, as we have done before, that two chances are better than one. For corn, land should be nlonvh. ed very deep and thoroughly, to gnard against drought, the greatest of ita enemies in our climate. At a farther safeguard against the same, flat culture is all important, and to render this practicable, it should be planted in tbe4 water-furrow;'or where the land has not been bedded, in the bottom of a deep broad furrow made by a large shovel, drawn by two horses. This furrow should be so wide that a little 44 list " may be thrown on tbe seed without filling the large furrow. L'lanted in this manner, the corn makes its appearance b% low tbe general level of tho surface, and permits dirt to be thrown to it in the after workings, without ridging the land. Our best authorities say, that in the early stages of cultivation, the dirt should not be thrown to it too rapidly, allowing time lor the roots from the first joint to "develope well, before those from tho second joint shall have soil to firm in. (Jul ton seed is generally considered a standard manure for this crop. It is one in which the nit rogenoue element is in excess, as compared with other important ingredients, and in substituting any other manure in its place for corn, we should follow this indication. All the small grains and grasses (co n is a true grass,) delight in nitrogenous fertilizers. Some of our enterprising farmers might do a good work, by making a series ot experiments, testing the value of different fertilizers for corn, ns has been done fn the case of cotton. The practice ot putting man are in mass near the hill ot corn, we are compelled to believe a bad one?a part may be placed there to advantage, to give the young plant a strong, vigorous start?the balance should l>c applied broad cast, or perhaps put in the furrow on e?ch side of the corn, during the second working. In this con nection, wo refer to the experiments of Mr. West, in the Feb. No., present volume, from which he draws the Inference, that in the case of cotton, whenever the amount used pa?6& a certain limit, the excess pays better applied broadcast, than in the drill. We would again also snggest the planting of a portion of the crop with the seed of some early vane ty of com obtained from the North ?it may mature before the sum mer droughts. On this point see testimony of Mr. S. Z. M., in pros ent No. As soon as the corn crop is disposed of, sorghum may be planted. With the tnnny improve moots discovered of late in manufaetnring syrnp and sngar from this plant, we doubt not it would pay those living where the tropical cane docs not grow, to make this one of their regular crops. Mr. Cook gives us full directions lor 1 planting, cultivating, dec., in present No. !' During March, the bedding of [cotton land, and distribution of fertilizer* should be pushed rapidly forward, if not already done. It is desirable, after guano, &c., has been plncod in the ground and bedded on, to let the land remain undisturbed for some three or four weeks ^before planting The manure shonld be placed pret ty deep in the ground, that if may remain damp in dry weather. [Southern Cultivator for March. Ekdkavor for the beet and pr ride for the worst. * v-s ^. * A -- ^ i f ' , ? ?!** a*-?*** 1 . V ? * v *?9 . V j #2* I , ?. ? * VOLUME IVI~.NO. 43. ti ,. ? i _/ _ __ (M 1 UK WIIUIO IIUOAIAM Vt aiiuimow ?4? California is estimated at 40,000. Never let your dignity stand in the way of yonr usefulness. Boast onlv of your self-possot* sion when it"hasbeeu tried. ? John Robinson has cleared threo million dollars in the eirens business. Tuft preacher is often as wise in what he does not say as in what he says. i.St. Louis is agjtating the propriety of Sunday evening theatrical performances. John Mobby, of guerrilla notoriety, is a candidate tor County Judge at Fauquier, Va. A new prison has been constructed in Wnkesbafrc at a cost of $206,000. A mounted police is recommended for the out skirts of .New York city, and a vigilance committee is threatened TnK Alabama Senate sent back the other day abont four dozen* bills to have the spelling corrected. A young lady being asked by a boring theologian which party in the church she was in favor of, she replied that she preferred a wedding party. Koirrn Caboltna h a 8 a hale voung gentleman of 143 summers, lias bad scrcn wives, never drank a toddy, been sixty years a widower, and is now ready for another wife. , ' . , .. , T wtll - I Hr v Gfkekal McClellan is to deliver a series< f nddi essiato the mem1 i i* il xr . a *- * ners 01 me lNammai Uuard regiment* in New York city next month, on discipline and the acquisition-of military knowledge. Tiik author of St. Elmo and Vashti is engaged npon a sequel, to the latter novel, which, it is said, will render Worcester's Unabridged Dictionary entirely useless. A man, says an exchange, who is too stingy to advertise a farm for sale, put up a written notice iu the hotels the other day. A man wlro was inquiring for a farm was re'ei red to the written notice. He replied, " I can't buy land at a fair price from any man who ad~ . vertises in that way,. He'll steal . v e * * ? " me lence, me pump handle and tho bom d< o s, before he gives possession." TurrsMB.?There are many truisms in the world. Take the following as a sample in every day life: One new bonnet will make a lady feel happy?very. One " funny man " will bother a whole neighborhood. One go' sc hiss will disturb a whole assembly. One drop of oil will stop a hideous noise. ^ ^ One "jolly row " will turn all the inhabitants of a street out of doors. , ? Olio pretty flirt will mnko a dozen plain girls unhappy for an entire evening. I One song will set thirty people talking. Death.?Instinctively, every createro shrinks back from this awful monster. The little ant and the mighty quadruped both aliko dread it. It turns the h use of feasting into mourning. It changes our countenances and sends us away. O, how cold, how dark is the grave ! No one can think of this dismal abode and not feel a deep solemnity creeping over him. There in that narrow cell the dnst of the ragged beggar and the purple clad potentate mingle and commingle. There the babe and fnll grown man decay and rot. Who can visit the torn be of the silent dead and say that sin is not a bitter thing! Who can stand by the new-made crave and say that tlin Ttihln ia # * TI 1 .o .. ? W.V I JIUMV UllUl* terable dreadfuly is death to us if we have no interest in Christ Jesus. The grim visage of the monster drives away all our friends or palsies all their powers to assist us. Alone and friendless we have to go through the dark valley and shadow of death. .In a few years it will make no difference to ae whether we arc rich or poor, learn* ed or unlearned, L?ved or despised. There are no distinctions in the grave. The worms, the noble allies of death, rccognito no diffcrr>?fa hntween the flesh of tlm nnnr mnn and tliat of the rich. But it will be ft matter of eternal moment to us whether we Are in Clitist Jesus or not. Strange infatuation ! Blind de: lnsion, to barter tbe immortftl soul, | with all its capabilities for joy, for a few short lived and, At lenst, I adulterated pleasures.