University of South Carolina Libraries
BY CAVIS & TRIMMIER DfVrtffrto 00Mll)fm jaiO[l)^ ^01^ iltilr $2 PER AKHtTK VOL. XIII. SPARTANBURG, S. C., THURSDAY, NOVEMBER <>, 1856. N5C3SF" gBMggaaeaaegBBasggaBggBBgggBeagagBggBggggBWBgggggg**'^^i*B'' 1 ? ? lAfi UAttUL-LNA b PART AN. BY CAVIS"&~TIIIMMLER. ] T- 0. P. VERNON, Associate Editor. fi Price Two Dollars per annum itu advance, or ji $'3.50 at tho cud of the year. If not paid until e ? after tho year expires $3.00. ir Payment will be considered in advance if made n within three months. c: No subocription taken for less than six mouths, tl Money may be remitted through postmasters nt u our risk. <> 8: Ad'*ftil*nMl* Inserted nt the nsnnl rates, and b contracts mflnn reasonable terms. ci The SrAftTAK circulates largely over this and is , adjoining districts, and offers nn admirable medium te our friends to rcaoh customers. Job work of all kinds promptly executed. di Blanks, Law and Equity, coutlnuolly on baud P or orinted to order. CAROLINA SPARTAN, jj A POETICAL DIN. 11 8.1 Some friend has sent us, under n blank cover, n C( oopy of the subjoined very clever nr.d very practical ;ll jeu d'eaprity addressed by the editor of the "Metli- w odiat Protestant" to his delinquent subscribers. We ,j copy the article simply for llio amuscinent of our ^ readers; for, as Mr. lUndolph used to s:iy of his j( constituents, we have the best nod noblest set of SJ subscribers that ever honored and sustained n pub* plie journal. They therefore as a boJv need no such ingenious hint, but should there bu found lu re and there an exceptional case he is at liberty to consider p the lliawathenn appeal addressed to himself,?A'a- ctional Intelligencer. [1| Should you n.ik us why ihis dunning, Why these sad eomplnints and murmurs, l Murmcrs loud about delinquents tr Who have read the p iper weekly, j It Read what they have never paid for, V Read with pleasure and with profit, ! si Rsad of church affair* and prospects, j w Read of news both home and foreign, Read the essays and the poems, | T( Full of wisdom am) instruction; ! Read the table of the markets, j t|Carefully corrected weekly? j w Should you ask us why this dunning, t 2. We should answer, wo should tc!l you, From the printer, ftvnn the mutter, From the kiml old paper maker, Frotn the landlord. Irian the carrier, From I lie man who taxes letters lb With a stamp from Uncle Samuel? d< Uncle Sam the rowdh-s call him: >? From them all there .nines a n?e?-Hire, w Message km I, but ft inly Km k.n. Ma "Please to p ly n? \V|;at yn owe us.'' ni Sa<l it is t<< hear such nvs am* tli When our funds are all exhausted, Wlielt the last hank n?Ue has l.*lt ?*, When the gold coin all has vitulshi d, (li Gone to | av the paper maker, Gone to pay the toiling printer, Gone to pay the I indtord tribute, , Gone io pay the sahle earr rr. Gone to pay the laiihful in.iihT, Gone to pay old Uncle S umftd? Uncle Sam the r>>w.| call him ? Gone to pay the W * crn paper N," Three and twenty hundred dollats I Sid It is to Itlrtt <>ur Icd.-er, Turn the leaves of lies otd ledger. Turn itn 1 see what sums are due us, . til |)ur t..r volumes long since .-nd.d, ! w Due for year* ot pleasant reading, Doe for years of MilsoMlc labor, Due despite oar patient waiting, Due derp to our constant dunning, '1 Due in sums from iwolo twenty. y Would you |ift nburileu fh?m u>? \' Would you drive a spectre Irom you ? t( Would you taste a pleas.ml slumber / Would you have a quiet Conscience ? s? own you read a paper paid Jur s| Hcnd us ni'HH-y??*? nd u? mudcy, h Solid us money?tend u* tn<>ncy; L>( Send tii* Monkv tiut vol' owe it. ! ^ A SO*? FOl't octrois CIS. g Ofjliiboi' *trcws tlio woodbind o'er t> With y a lirili nit color; w The world is brighter tlian bclorc, j. Wliy should our heart* be duller! ... Sorrow and tlio scarlet leaf. Sad thought* uud fiuiiuy weather? s( Ah inct this glory and this grief 1) Agree not well together. This is the pnrting season, this It The tune when frii uds are flying; |, And lovers now', with many a k ss, i Their long farewell* are sighing. . Why is earth so guyly dressed! 11 This pomp that autumn Itcurclh HI A funeral seems, where every guest Is A bridal garment wearetli. \ Knelt on? of us inay often hear, n On some blu? morn hereafter, i(l Return to view lit* gaudy year, Rut not in boyish laughter. "W? shall then oe wrinkled men, ! j* Our brows with silver laden, I " And thou this glen m ty'st seek again, on Hut never more a maiden. ' |( Nature perhaps foresees that Spring C; Will loueli her teeming Imaoni. Hl And thinks a few brit I lhonths will bring The bird?tlio bee?the blossom. Ah! these forests do not know, Or would less brightly wither, It The virgin that adorns tliem so |4 Will never moreeome hither. e. A Monat. CnaMrioN or Freedom ami Mo- (l ralitv.?"Gen." Lane, the ,4freo stato" leader in w the Kansas troubles, is one ol the models ol pe ce fr end morality held up for admiration by the He- , publicans. We published some time since the fact | y that his wife had been compelled to flee from liim | in consequence of ill-treatment, and sue lor a di- J*' Voree, which was grunted. The editor of the J>a- ! i" .venport Gazette has had an interview with Mr. llal- . \\ bridge, the father of line's late wife, who atatts C( Jlint: "When his precious eon-in law induced his ? daughter to go to Kansas, he sold her property, amounting to $18,000,and, after reaching Kansas, n he procured a mistress, uml treated his wife so badly at that she was forced to leave fur home; and he t>>|d t J, her he had paid her passage on the steamboat to In- .,| dinnn, when in fact,after the boat started, she found ' och was not the oasa, and it was with difficulty 1 that she raised money cuough to pay hor passage. Of Lane had tubbed her of her fortune, been guilty of gt adultery with a mistress, and s-iit her lionio pcuni- ' less, and, after sin: had left, fried to get a divorce from her through tlio very Territorial legislature which he is denouncing as bogus and illegal." What ohoico instruments the Republicans uso to R* advocate their cause! IIow proud the Republicans fo mast I eel who have idolized this licro ol freedom! j What a happy text the life of this Kanana hero has furnished the pulpits of our political clergy!?I'tic a i Observer. ?' ni Fian with Laos.?The Rochester (N. y.) j,', Union aaya t{y?t several fishes, with four legs each, . have been brought from Fort Defiance, New MexiCo, where they were caught in a small stream. They t Is are about seven inches long, and resemble n j th young codfish, with legs like an alligator. They ! oc have been sent to Prof. Agnseiz, at Cambridge, j Mass. ? ? tir Thr Effrct or Pomticai. Preaching.?The nn Rev. Mr. Smith, of the Shawmut church, on the last Sabbath, In an attempt to nronae his people to Christian labor, stated as a fact that there are three n hundred less members in ?he Evangelical churches of Boston now than thero were ten yeart ago, not- ^1 withstanding the large increase of population. k" ? [Boetim Poet, Od. 15. gi k ? Horrible Crubltv.?Child Burnt to Pealh. -A tragedy took place at Lock port, N. Y., on 'msduy, exhibiting Mich revolting cruelty ns to bo Imost incredible. A little boy, five years of age, donging t" Mrs. Story, was roasted olive by a end in human shape?a white woman?named 'regg. The evidence elicited before the coroner's lry shows that the violiin was left with a smalhr hild by its motlu-r, when Mis. Cr< gg, who lived 1 i another portion of the house, took iheopportuniand entered the apartment, and proceeded to the locution of the deed which she had previously iroiitened. With horrid imprecations, the child as held on the Jire hj its tormentor until its leg* nd Lotcel* uere burned to a cinder, then, with itanic revenge, the body of the child was reversed , r the murderess until its buck tctin masted to 0 risp. it died in a few hours after, and the woman now iu jail. Mamnk Monster on Ska Serpent.?A I/in- ] on paper of October 4th says that when the ship rinccs* was on her way home from China, duly th last, in Int. 34 f>G south, long. 18 14 east, the aptuiii (Trenicarne) espied at no great d stance an jject in the water that somewhat resembled a tree, i rnd.tally a head appeared which looked liken lnlict. Captain T. fired a shot which struck the ( ritual so that tlio man at the wheel believed he iw bloo<l. The entry in the leg book of the Prinss" is: "Tuesday, July 8, 1856. Gentle brcixe id P'.ie weather; at 1 1*. M. saw a very large fish uli a head like n walrus, and 12 fins similar to iosc on a black fish, but turned the contrary way; ie back was from 20 to 30 loot long; also great ngtli of tail. It is not improbable that this nioner luw been taken .for the great Sea Serpent. ! ued nud hit it near the head with a rifle ball." FsmaLe Equestrianism.? At the Connecticut tver Valley exhibition in Bradford, Vt., Inst week, ght ladies apjx-ared to coin|>ele for the tqucstriau r.zes, the highest ?-f which, 815, was won by Miss elly Chase, of Kecne, N. II., fourteen years old, ho rode the Green Mountain Morgan around the uck without saddle, and w as immensely applauded. 11fore the start Mi?n Kate Embank, of Danville, t., was kicked on tlio leg by a white stallion, hut ie afterward* appealed on tlu-field with her father, ho made the horse knrd lor her to mount, and ie took tin sixth prize, ?10. Mrs G.<car 1". ilain, of llait'ord. Conn., took a prize of 815 for the till with which she drove u pair of bays. The ot for $100 was won by J. J Bowcn, of Bethel, ilh his roan mare: three mile heals iu 2.45, 2,14. 12. Tun Pxricv at Jerusalem.?S me of tlte forgn papers slate that the report is Assuming more insistency relative to the translation of the seat of i<- Papacy from Home to Jerusalem. It is now -elated that this question hud already been most' riously examined; even so far hack as the t:me lieu the II shops met to determine on the jninuy-ule conception of the Virgin a large number of the embers, and I'ius IX hiutrrll, were favorable to '? project. Epitaph on a Snu Francisco money-len- ' er: Moreties ??1?1 thirty-five per o nt., The mot ? lie made the iimrc lie lent; Tin- more he got the more ho craved; 'i h rn??re lie made the more he uvwi; C?r?at God! can such n inul bo savoW" Tiik Camels in* Tunas.?The Galveston own contains correspondence from Castro illo, Medina county, Texas, dated lOthult., urn which we tnk?i the following interest, it: jinriieuUis in relation to the camels hich have lately been imported there l?v ! 10 Ui ited States Government : I hud the pleasuro of making the ac- ' uninttinco of Major Wa\no, for several' ears attached to the War Department in 1 Washington City, who went out last year , > Asia and introduced the camels into this , Mititrv, which arrived at ludianola last ring, an I are now kept at this post. It a* been sclcctc 1 by him as the best adapt- I 1 to that service for which lie intends I lein. When wo arrived they were out | razhtg, some two miles distant, attended , v the Arabs who have charge of them,: hen M.tj. Wayne very kindly sent out and ' ad them driven in for our inspection.' here arc altogether thirty two, including ' , mo young ones, and are till in excellent ealth, and seem to be doing well. The males are kept separate from the fe tales, in the coiyell, and when all were oused and we had examined them careful , necompanied by Mttj. Wayne, who gave 1 s a verv interesting account of tlreir habits ; ad peculiarities, lie ordered one of theuito I is iihi nui juui JomlCii as it lor a journey. I , ,fler kneeling to receive the pack-saddle, i most cuiilbroui load uf itself, hut such ro used in tho country from wliicli they unc, a load of corn was placed on the nnind's l ack, suflieient fur two mules to draw i a wagon, with which he started otl* at a j ikkI round pace. A dromedary was next , d out, which is the saddle animal of the unci, anil after kneeling to receive the uhlle, ho wns mounted by an Arab, who | ailed off across the prairie at a pat e which | tented to me not touch short of a two for , r lick. This pace they can keep up for , ours in succession, traveling with perfect j tse from eighty to otic hundred miles p(<r ay. They can also subsist for scverul days , ilhout water, and their adaptability to the ontier service for which they are doMgu- , 1, is now a matter beyond doubt. Maj. , fay no informed mo tlmt ho had forty mom < timals coining out, and ho is now buildg a stable in which they will bo kept, , llich ho expects to get finished before the ( >ld weather sets in. Tiik liantn'n Imkhior.?In tho course of ' paper read before the Scientific Congress ( , Albany, by Dr. Winsiow, ho observed ! iat the more a geological student con torn- j sled tho sedimentary strata, the moro he I list become convinced that tho solid crust j tho plnnet is a yielding envelope of no , eat thickness, overlaying a globe of fluid, ; iiijuci 10 dynamical influences of such vast , nver, lliat mountains and continents mi- . ilato upon it as fields of ice follow the ( la! action of the sea. Tho causes and j rces of this vast phenomena were consitl- i ed to bo the tension and dynamical agon- j ( of the molten and fluid matter in a state i . motion underneath. Homo think this j otion corresponds with tho tides, and a , ench savan attributes it to the action of : o moon. Dr. Winslow attributed it to o action of tho sun, and supported his / oory on the ground that these phenomena . cur more frequently when that body is ( sarosl tho earth, as in winter, at which ( no more volcanic eruptions occ^ than at , .1 ?**'- . 1 y other season. .jHEUJ c i ' "What a stinngo thing it is," MtyWflwd frenchman after making jKp/itjr ofJrho ' uited Stales, "that you kIioUW JirUa mdrcd different religions and "Chly otitp avy r c Old Parties and New. Mksshs. Editous : The fall of tho Charier Oak, thai time-honored landmark of liberty, is an event well calculated to arrest our attention. There is a significance attached to it, which should not bo lost eight of; and if at this timo we turn fiom the heat and smoke of tho coute.-t for tho Presidency that wo are engaged in, to take a look at tho past, and a>k ourselves if wo arc emulating tho heoric devotion and atom chivalry of our ancestors, wo may learn a lesson of forbearance that will snve us from futuio disgrace and a sea of troubles. Wo live in a world of changes; each generation have their own cares and responsibility, which human progress imposes; upon us lias devolved issues of magnitude, and history w ill faithfully record our decisions. In all former campaigns of which 1 have any recollection, the battles were waged between Whigs and Democrats with commendable decorum and bonorablo warfare. With but few exceptions, partisan speeches and newspaper columns were devoid of that gross personal abuse and perversion of truth that has appeared through the whole course of Muck Republicanism thus far. Whigs and Democrats always managed to find some salient points of ditVcrciice at homo, something near, touch'.air a vital ialcrc.it. that wc could feel we had a personal concern in. The stnigglo wai a fair, manly, hand-to-hand tight; it was a party warfare that could be participated in bv every Slate in the Union, and the conqueior and the vanquished could alike feel that they had inet on equal grounds, brother with brother. They entered the lists "Willi that stein joy wlrch warriors feel In foe me a worthy of their steel.11 The grounds of difference were always great national questions, never sectional; and each party, in success or defeat, carefully watched over the best interests of the whole Union. Their numbers being nearly equal throughout tlie fice States, the Abolition party, to our shame bo it remembered, for years held the balance of power, although they had but a small number of votes. Still, they proved enough to slip between tho two great parties, and managed to hoist into office creatures of their o\\ it, and kvop up, ia our Stalo and National Legislature-, the fires of sectional stiif.-. The same issues they have always presented. Under tho name of "Republicans," they givo us now, absolutely nothing in which we, as citizens of New Vork, have a direct interest. They are all foieign to uiir hordcts, and they nsk us to meddle with the business >>f other American citizens in a way w11? ?'\ uuwai rantahle. They dare not avow die whole black programme in their appeal# for the campaign. They pre-eut nothing which at first i>calculated to shock our patriotism. Hut 1 >k a little closer, and you will find concealed under the black pall, something more than abstract ideas, something tangible and teal, thai shows wc have an interest it* this issuo that will live while we live, and be transmitted to our children. < hi a mem rablo occasion, the charter under which Cotisicc'.ient enj"V? i superior advantages was concealed in the body of that noble old Oak which has just fallen t>? recall us t > our duty, and tho agents of IJtilain were foiled in their atLr-inpt to deprive the citizens of that Stale of its acknowledged rights. Yoikus ok N k\v op* ^ oiik ! aaiL-as has a charier from the failed Stairs O overt moil ; sn a t.i. Tin: lrl.ACK lvEI'UllUCANS take AWAV thai CHAnrmt ? That is tho issue in this contest, and they have pt> s.-ntod no other t > ihe citizens of this Union worthy of present consideration. A world of words has been wasted in this campaign, in depleting the breaking o}> of the Mi-nouri Compiomb-, l?nt it will he well for us to look lor ourselves, and see wherein our ruins have l?o-n infringed. We generally understand thai slavery was admitted South of ."50 00, while North of that line was to he tree. Now, long before Kansas was thought of. New Mexico, which lie- South of dO 3(5, was provided with a Territorial government, and the question of ?lav. ry was disposed < ! in precisely tin .-ante terms as was recently done in K msas, thus \irtual!y doing :twa\ w ith the <Jotnproiui.se South of 30 30. Whv was there tro noise made about that} Simp ly hecau-e the South, with a magnanimity thatoviry good Democrat or Whig inu-t applaud, was willing the leave the hardy set I lets of the wrildehicss to make their own laws. Hut if the liberal charter granted to Kansas was a fraud upoji the SVvrth, then tho chatter granted previously to New Mexico was a fraud upon the South. What* aver wo may think of this matter now, wo -annot lose sight of tho fact that tho United States have restored to the inhabitants < f Kansas the precise rigftU tlrcy enjoyed in overy Stale of this t"nton before they went lo Kansas. They hold no arbitrary reins jver them hut leave them as the citizens of the States are left, to make thoir own law cut the subject of slavery. And now there rises up a party in our mi 1st that objects to fill this. With Kueedom inscribed up< n their banners, they seek to deprive the peo pie of Kansas of rights granted them by a charter from the United States. They seek lo do this with your votes, llow tho priv logo of making thoir own laws is to law-re.ted from Kansa.', does not appear <>n these Hlack Kopublican banners; hut, one hing is quite sure, the settler- that have jccii going there the pas', two years, if they nave one apatkof the tiro that burned in the >ld Slate of t'onnorticut, will contend with hem manfully for their chartered light. Dkmoci .1 ok Mi:w VortK and iiik l."xiox, >ve must stand by our guns to help them, f need be. Never, never, let it ho recordid hi history, thai the United States broke ailh with Kansas, and turned her over to he tendci ineicie-* of such men as Heecher, ircoley A t'o. Do not bo deceived with he other equally delusive inscriptions on ho black banner, "Kiee Press" and 'Free speech." If wo bio to have more latitude wider tho Itlack Re publican rule than they invo tnken under Democratic -way, God |^lp Us. \Vo have no further occasion to be alarm!<] about the trouble* hi Kansas. "We have % - been grossly deceived j?r toilteir original extent; but the influence they will exert, not over yet. I uu? mistaken if some the infuriated leaders of the Black Itepub cans do riot feel the wrongs they have be guilty of when the election is over. Tin consciences will tell them thoic is such tlitng as murder; that a man may live Brooklyn, New York, or Boston, and s' be guilty of plotting, originating, ntid ins gating murders in Kansas, with all the In lid train of brutalities at which the bet chills and sickens. There may be no h man accountability for all this, but a day coming for calm reflection, when the exeii meut of party dies awav, and the spirit the innocent victim wakes a scorpion tli never dies. Those who shamefully outrn ed the laws of God and man. must, eitli hero or hereafter, reap their own ju <t i ward.?-tV. Journal of Commerce. Unprofitable Farming. The following extract from an address 1 Mr. Greeley, before the Krio Countv Ag cultural Society, at Buffalo, N. V., conlai some useful hints: ' The truth which I am most anxious impress is, that no poor man can afford bo a poor farmer. When I have recot mended agricultural improvements, 1 ha often been told this expensive farming w ' do well enough for lich people, but we w are in moderate circumstances can't affo it.. Now, it is not ornamental farming tli I recommend, but profitable fanning. It true, that the amount of a man's capii , must fix the limit of his business, in ag culture as is in everything else. But. ho ever poor you may bo, you can afford cultivate land well, if you afford to cullivr it all. It may bo out of your power to ke a large farm in a high state of cultivatk but you should sell a part of it, and cu! vale a small oue. If you ate a poor in: vou cannot affoid to raise small crops; y cannot afford to accept half a crop fro land capable of yielding a whole. If y< arc a pool man, you cannot afford to fen two acres to secure the crop you ought grow on one; you cannot afford to pay lose tin) interest on the cost ?>f 100 acres land to get the crops that will grow > f.O acres. No man can afford to raise bushels of coin per acre, not even if I la?-J were given him, for 20 bushels | aero will not pay the cost of the miseral cultivation that produces it. "No r>oor man can nil' >r.i m i j land in siK'li a manner as will cause it {deteriorate in value, (iood fanning i: ! proves the value of land, and the farm ] who launagt s his faun so as t<> get the It . ge-t cr.?p it is capable of yielding in urea? 1 its value every year. "V. f.o',:< r can all a I to produce wee. ilh<y grow, t.i l.o sure, without cull! vatic they spiing up spontaneously on all Ihii j and especially lieli land; lull though tli ! cost no toil, a fanner can't alfonl to rai , thent: the -aiue elements that feed tliei i would, w:ih propel cultivation, notiii-li I crop, niwl no f.iniici > in atlmd to e\pei i on we Is the natural wealth which was I i stowed l?v 1'iovi lence to till his granarl I am accustom d, my fiiends, to estimthe ciuistianily of the localities ilirou; which J pa--, by the ah- lice of wee is < or about the faun*. When I sec one cc eiod with a gigantic growth of weeds, lake it h>r granted that the owner i* a lit then, a hcietic. or an infidel; a t'luisii ho cannot he, or ho would not allow t heritage which < > >d gave him to dress at keep, to b so defoimcd and profaned. At to make an app icalion of the above i mark, I must say. there in much mis-ion ry ground between Now York ami Uufia Nature has been honutiful to you, hut llu is groat need of better cultivation. I prevent the growth of weeds, is cpiivaV j to enriching \?>ur land with manure; for , retain in it tin* elements of which crops a ' formed, i- a-> pi Ilia' !e as io bring llu { there. It is beltci that weeds should n I gr. w .a all: 1 .t e. hen they e\: : rud y< I undertake to destroy them, it is cotton to gather them up and carry them to vo : barn yard-, and e >uveil them into in mil ^ ou will in t! i? manner rent re to yo farms the fiuiiiiy of which the v.ec ls h : drained it. "1 aimers cannot ad'onl to mrniv ei oil :t >ii tli.il does not contain the natur elements that enter into its composite W In-ii yi'U burn a vegetable, n huge j>. of it bulk passes aw.av, durim; the pr..c? of combustim, into the air. Hut there always a residuo of mineral matter, co si?tin<; of lime, potash and other ingrei outs, that entered into its composite Now the plant drew those materials out i the cailh, and if \ou attempt to ({row tli ! in .a soil thai is deficient in thew in^tei cuts y on are driving an unsii<v? ?*t d lot ness. Nature do -, not make vegotab! out ot nothing, and vou cannot expect i take croj> after crop oil'from a field th ' doe* it'-t c ntain the elements of which ' is formed. If you wish to liiaintain l! 1 tirtilily of your fauns vou must oum.iii i restoie to tliotn the materials which a withdrawn in cioppmg. No farmer c: aliord to sell h;s iisl>.>* N .m ?*?n?i.?i!? i<oil from west-in New York a i;;r, amount of potash. l>epend upon it, the is nobody in the world t<? whom it is wor o hi lull is it i> to yourselves. ^ >>11 cm all iid to sell, but n f irmer can well all ? to buy iislies at a liighei prioo than is pa by anvb ly that doe* not v is!i t > use tl ? as a fertilizer of the soil. Situated as tl tin mora of this country are, in the r.eig boihoodofncitytli.il bums large ?,n in tics of wood for fuel, \ ou should make ii part of your system of faiinirg to seen ih? ashes it produces. When your tear go into town with I l is of weed, it won c >st e Hiipnraiively little to bring bach Ion of ashes and otlu-i fettilizers, that won improve the productiveness of your faru "No i ror farmei can afford to kue po fruit trees that do not bear good Iruit. (ii? fruit is always valuable, and should I raised by the farmer, not oulv for inaik< but I'm huge consumption in his own tan ly. As inoio enlightened views of diet pi . vail, fruit is de lined to enpplant the c iid ccssivc quantities of animal food that are is consumed in this country. This change of j will produce better health, greater vigor of >li- body, activity of mind, ami elasticity of en spirits; and 1 cannot doubt that the lime i'ir will come when farmers, instead of putting a down the larger quantities of moat they do in | at present, will give their attention in au ill 1 tmnn to lite preservation of largo quanti ;i- I tics of excellent fruit, for consumption as a >r- j regular rticlo of diet, the early part of the irt following summer. Fruit will not then itl- appear <<n the table as it does now, only as is a dessert after dinner, hut will come with le- every meal, and be reckoned a substantial of aliment." iat ... 7 . ^ , lime to bur Ai'i'le i hees..?October ^ is one of the best months to transplant aprc I''? trees. After the fro*t has so nipped the leaves as to stop the circulation of the nip, the trees may be taken up and tiatispiauted. It is a question whether this work is ' best done in the fall or the spring. Each season lias its advantages. We have more |.Q ... ? | tune in autumn, and as we can so easily I hank up the treo with earth to support it, and to keep away the mice, we need not fear to set our best trees as soon as they 11 ! cense to giow. I If any one would set trees Wfore the 1 frost has nipped the leaves, ho my do it by u> first -tripping off all the loaves, for these will I no longer draw forth the sap, and no risk will be run even when the trees are taken i!| up in September. L,l By throwing up a little hank a:ound II each tree at this time of year the labor of N staking will bo saved, and tiro mice will do ? i no harm unless the trees are set near some ue I i . oi>i wall, in which rase particular care ('P should l>e taken to guard tliein. "! The mulching may all bo done in the II spring after the little mounds are levelled l"' ' down?or it may be done at the time of 1,11 setting, provided proper euro is taken to III cover ii]) all the straw, iVe., about the trees. 'u After all it is of but little consequence tu how or when the trees are set, unless you lu take care to procure good ones. If you "r take the refuse trees from a nursery?or " ' buy lliciu of a strolling dealer in cheap arL)"1 ; ticies, you may as well set them in one :l way as in another. Hut good trees will ,e ; bo sure to produce fruit by the fourth year K'' 1 after -otting.?.Vtt.st. Ploughman. ?le | ? ,,, Tkeument ok I loos when Taken vr. ns ?ah hi'gs when first taken up for fattening, j should receive three or four doses of Hour 11 , of sulphur, and as many of copperas, in do vr 1 mcs of a table spoouful, at intervals of two ii" days apart. These should be given llietn ' '* it) mosses of meal. Such doses serve to cool tho blood, strengthen the digestive or b- , gaiis, and remove those worms which somej times attack iho kidneys, d- T. cir food for the lirst two or three c} weeks should be pumpkins, apples, roots and other vegetables, which would bo the " belter of being cooked and mixed with !l bran, or meal of some kind, the latter be"d ing increased f?oin dav to day, gradually, " > that when the hogs come to have corn p>- | nr meal allogeth r the change may not be injuriously felt by then . ' Whether torn or corn meal be foil out to tin bogs, a great saving will bo effected v by having either cooked, and it is immatei rial whether it be boiled or steamed. A I saving may bo effected by cooking of from :ia i 15 to 'JO per cent.?btr grinding into meal t and cooking 30 per Cent. nd TuASsri. vntisu Turks.?This is an ex-{ iv cuilont >e.is. >u of the year for transplanting ! la trcs. In choosing garden trees you should j lo. be careful to select those having strong and j re vigoiotts slocks; and the larger they are ! Jo the better. As a general thing it is much r.t bettor to pay a high price, and thus purto chase a tree which will commence bearing re a year or two earlier, than to give a low i ni price, ami have to wait a long time for the ! ot fruit. In setting out the tree, a hole should ' on bo dug of suflicicnt depth to allow of the ! y ' tree being placed a little lower in the' ut groun 1 than before, and if tho soil is of a ; re. i hard, cdayey nature, the bottom should be tir covered with a layer of loam. Then, after j :nl spreading out the fibres carefully, till in, o. cnsi-.inaliy shaking the tree so as to allow . . ' tin- eaith to settle well about the root*. a; H.c m il about the roots -hottld he well n. watered, and the earth, after the hole is ut filled, should be stamped down hard. 1 It pi" sr. ri Tiir. Pit Ap.?The whole secret n- i of k< ep ng tho p ar, is to preserve them in II bairels; if the (juautilios are small, let thent <n. be put together, with tlio simple separation of of a double sheet of clean thick brown pa at per. If the selection of sorts which ripen ii at the une time is judiciously made, they sj ; may all be taken out at once, ripened up (>- in n slightly higher temperature, ami pro- j to laced in all their beauty and excellence, ut Wii -ever lias hesitated about growing the it winter t ar* or. account of the difficulty of ( lie j ripening, inay dispel their fears, if they will iv ; try this method of keeping them. in I low* to Makp Lkatiikk Watkr Tioiit. j x ?Proem e 1 pint (Knglisli) drying oil, 2 ,<o , oz. yellow wax, 2 oz. spirits of tttrpeuline. r? and 1 oz. Hurgundv pitch. Melt them to th gether over a slow fire, and rub the mix l'l lure over the new leather, at a little distance rd from the fire, until it is completely natural ill ed. IV'sidea being impervious to water, m boots mi l shoo* treated in litis way last lie murh longer than they would oilier wise do. ( Itrrm,..-. ?r ' ? i -i Miti.? Juki) a pint ol! a cream and u quart of milk, ('.t:r it well to ;? ,'.??! .} three ai. \ the meets ot a doz-! n- i'ii liuitemuts pounded in a mortar, and! Id lial: a teacup of augur; Mir the sugar and ; d? egg* together, tlien mix in the butternut* id with the milk; stir till well mixed; add nutis. m< gs and liake, and you will have a very or licit custard. \u. To Prkyent Jams from Graining,?A , correspondent informs us that to provent ,, jams, preserves, etc., from graining, a teatf. spoonful of cream ot tartefmust bo added to x. every gallon of i un 01 pre ers? . The Poison Strychnine, Thin diug, which has lately become so notorious for destroying tlie lives of tinman beiugs, is a moat deadly organic poison. A dog lias been killed with the sixth part of a grain ai d a human being with less. When introduced iTito the stomach it acts with fearful energy, and causing lock-law immediately and death in a few minutes. It is odorless, but so intensely bitter as to be petceplihle to the taste when one pan is diluted in a million parts of water. The composition of strychnine is carbon 4 J, hydrogen 24, oxygen 4. nitrogen 2 equivalents. It is colorless, and forms soluble chrystalizable salts. It is an alkaline base, as is extracted principally from the Strych not nux vomica. Tlio ireo from which it is obtained is of moderate size, and grows in several parts of the Rust Indies and the Island of Ceylon. Its fruit are largo or ange-colored berries, the pulp of which is the favorite of many birds. The seeds contain the deadly poison. They are flat aud round, about an inch in diameter, and gray in color. These needs wc"6 used as a medicine, and as a poison, by tl e Hindoo*, long before llicy were known in Europe. Many of the natives of UitulooMnti often use it as people use opiutn. Tl ey com inenco with taking the eighth of a nut a day, and gradually increase their allowance to an entile nut, which would bo alxmt twenty grain*. If they eat it directly bo fore or after food, no unpleasant efleets ate piodueed, but if they neglect this precaution, spasms are the result. The hark of the tree is also poisonou*, and from its resemblance to Angustura or Cusparia bark, a tonic medicine imported from South Amotion, caused a great deal of alarm and excitement in Germany in the early part of this century by being mixed with bark. No sure antidote ha* yet boen discovered for this poison, but some chemists have attained to great skill in detecting if, when administered as a poison. Tlio following is L>r. Thompson's method of detecting the one-thousandth part of a grain: "Having placed a drop of strong sulpha tic acid on a piece of glass, add to it a small quantity of the susnoefod MihdatiM ?n.i I "I *' stir the wholo together so as to favor solution; then sprinkle over tire mixture a little powdered bichromate of potash, anil gently move a glass rod through the flui?l. If strychnia be present, a violet color of con sidcrablo beauty will ka almost immediately produced, which, after n few minute*, will fade into a reddish yellow, but ntay be renewed by the addition of more bichromate, as long as any strychnia remains undestroyed in the mixture. In this way the thousandth part of a grain of that alkaloid may be made to yield a very decisive indication. The points to be noticed are that sulphuric acid alone produces no apparent effect, and that the action begins at once round each particle of "the bichromate, so that if the glass be held in a vertical position, streams of a violet colored fluid may be scon to flow from each particle; and if at this time the wholo ho slowly stirred, the entire hulk of the fluid will speedily assume 'lie same characteristic tint." Sn.viisi'eauk and Dante.?Shakspeare almost always implies a total difference in tmture between one human being and another; ono being from the birth pure and at" f.'clionate, another base and cruel; and he displays each in its sphere as having the nature of dove, wolf, or lion, never much implying the government or change of nature hy any external principle, 'i here can he no question that in ti e main he is right iii mil v?ew 01 num.in nature; still, the other fiwm of \irtuo does exist occasionally, ami w as never, as far as 1 recollect, taken tntrch note of by him. And with this stern view of hiimnnily Stalk* pearo joined a sorrowful view of f?to, clojely icsotnbling that of the nncionU. lie is diatineui.-lied from Lkinte eiuiccntU l>y liir alwaxs dwelling on last cause it.stead o* iiist causes. Dante invariably points to the moment of the sont's choice which lived its fate, to the instant of the day when it rem! no farther, or determined to giro had ml vice about I'onestriuo. lint Sh.akspearo always leans on the force of fate, as it urge' the final evil; and dweil-t with infinite bitterness on the power of the wicked, and the infinitude of result, dependent reomingiv on little thing-. A fool briogs the last piece ol news from Verona, and the dearest lives ol its noble Ionises me lost; they might have been -avert if tber sacristan hail not stumbled as he >'iilked. Othello mislays his handkerchief, and them remains nothing I r him but ?i atli. Hair,let gets hold ot the wiong foil, and the rest is silence. K-l luut.ii'ii runner is a moment too late at the prison, ami the feather will not move at Cotdelia's lips. Salisbury a moment to. late at the tower, ami Arthur lies on the stones dead. (Jonnril and I ago have on the whole in this world. SUak?peare sec*, mndl of their own way, though ihcv como to .a had (lid. It is a pin that death pierces th< kind's fortress' walls with; and carelossnc*? and folly sit, scepierod ?r?d dreadful, side l?y side with the pm-armed skeleton.? Hits kin. Impom ant Trial.?At a remit Metho dist meeting in.one of the town* in Erit county, in this Si.ite, the preacher under took to instruct his hearers in their duty a the coming eloction. lie ilenounced tin piesent National Administration of the gen oral government, a* well as the 1 >cnu>crati< and American parties, in the most viol* tu milliner, and called upon ail tho voter* ir the congrcoai ion to veto for free speech, fret Kansas and hreniGr.i. tine r?f hie hearers an Anuiituui, being somewhat excited, ux claimed: 4,0l?l fellow, I will bet you ten it five dollars there are more Fillmore iner present than there arc of tho Negro wor shippers." The offer was <lecl ged by tlx preacher, and the person making the offei was complained of, under the statute, foi disturbing a religious meeting. Tho facli being submitted to a jury, thev decided tha' the meeting was not a religious, but n po litical meeting, and tho Fnlmore man w.e discharged.?Albany Atlas. . J F" Extraordinary Walloon Ascension. On the 23d ult. Monsieur Godard made J balloon ascension at Thilndelphia, in company with several companions, of which the papers give lite following account: 'About'six o'clock this party descended on tho farm of ^Ir. Carter, near Chester Creek. There they took supper, iheballoou being secured meantime. After this tk?y i le-uiined their aerial journey, and again descended a few miles further on, w\jere they were entertained at the house of Ms. Felton, of the Baltimore Railroad Company. After leaving Mr. Felton's It was found that the balloon had lost tnuch gae, and it was consequently unable to take up ail the excursionist. Messrs. Howling* and Butcher accordingly remained on Irrrtr Jirma, while their companions again ascended, and linally came down at North East, Md., t ten o'clock at night They returned to the city next day, delighted j with their trip. Tlie balloon was at time* ! over Wilmington and Norristown, aud it crossed the Delaware and tho Schuylkill i rivets more than once during its journey. It is believed that the balloon reached tho height of fourteen thousand feet above the earth, .and that it performed a journey of sixty mile*. At Wilmington Mr. Godard I descended, sufticiently low to Converse with a number of citizens of that place. lie 1 again descended, aud cattle down along the road and shook -hands with revoraJ astonished individuals. The passengers on this novel excursion say the sight front their lofty position was the most magnificent that can bo imagined, litis was particularly so to those who wore np just as the moon began to rise and tip hill and valley with her silvery beams. One of the peculiarities of this uight was tbo remarkable echo at the height of sonto ten thousand feet. Mr. Godard snug a song, and each verso was as distinctly sung by an echo as i sweet and melodious as the voice which uttorcd the words. At '.his altitude could also be heard the barking of dogs and ?ran the cackling *>f chickens. Rerolniionary Reminiscences. The following is n copy of the Declaration of Independence made by the Vestry of St. Paul's Church, Eden ton, X. C., on the 17th day of June, 1776. It is like the Mecklenburg declaration, anterior to the declaration of Congress?preceding the latter just sixteen days. "Wo, the subscribers, professing our allegiance to the King, and acknowledging the constitutional executive power of Government, do solemnly profess, testify and declare, that we do absolutely believe that neither the Parliament of Great Britain, uor any member or constituent branch thereof, have a right (o impose tnxru upon these colonies, to regulate the internal policy thereof;and that ail attempts bv fraud or force to establish and-exercisesoch claims and powers arc violations of the peace and charity of the people, ought to bo resisted to the utnio?t, and that the people of this j province, singly and collectively, are bound j by the acts and resolution* of the continenj tal and provincial Congresses, because in both they are freely represented l?y persons ; chosen by themselves; and we do solemnly j and sincerely pronii>.o. aud^engsgc, under the sanction of virtue, honor, and the sacred lovo of liberty and our couutry, to maintain and support all and every the acts, resolutions, an.I regulations of the said continental aud provincial Congresses, to tire utmost of our power and ability, in testimony whereof we have hereto reir linnJ- ?r.;? 1-r.L. ? % ? uivum -, 11)19 1 i vii ul June, 1776. KlCll.VHD 1 lortkl N3. JThusC BoKSKR. 1 >a\ ii. l.'icti. W:\ lloYD. Aaron IIxi.l. tiTio-s, Benbvrv. P. W ' YWittUAll BsttVTKTT. ; VA'm. INjUERTS. ! "LoroEn."?A man via'olj went to the |u>*t otfice, ami putting hi mouth up to the delivery box cried out ?l*Hid<?rl" The clerk, supivi .ing the man to l?e d? af, .Rial that ho was making a roquet oJ liini to speak loader so liini iio could hear, asked him in ? very, loud tone lha name of the j?crson for whom ho Vflitltd the letter. 4,I oude) !n cried the man. "What name V yelled the cle>V. ' louder!'' again bawled the man, who now supposed ?he cletk to be deaf. Tlife clerk. took a long breath, and with ' all his might again bawled out in tho man's ! t'ac-s toe same rpir?tiiSn, "What name ?" This was done- in so loud a tono that the 1 echo seemed to return from the far off hills. Tho man started l>aek in alarm, shouting ! to the very top of his big lung*: \ "Louder, sir, Louder! I told you Louder! my naras is nothing effce!" "Uh, ?h ! oh, ho raid tho clerk; your ' name is Louder, eh ? l?idn*t think of that; ' here's-your letter; Mr; Louder, here's your ' letter."?lfV*'mio/*>? Star. I,! TiinouiK.-j OoNtmnsjNo Eakthqcakiw.? ' There are now two prominent theoiies held , I by Kient.flc IU'a renpeet ng the causes of . earth, o <>ne?.f thc<r>. is what i? called tho igneous theory, which maintains that j ill - e.iith was once n molten fiery ball, and ! that its interior, is still a iiery mass, and is , sometime* etu*ed t<> stem-rate wave*, which pi >ihi *e r>*?i Uation* on the Mttli'i surface. I .iv m\ iii'l i- uhal i- known a* the electric theory, which attribute.-. the ehovk# to diainrbed magnetic >?eih>n in the eru*t of the globe; that the shocks nre nothing more ! than poweiful electric shock*. A* earth1 quake* nre local, iLo-m> who dispute the 1 igiieori* theory a.-fitthat if the int?>??or of tha earth were n m?n?Xi mmv a* held by sonic, and earthquakes wcrecm-tcd by wares ' of thin fluid, then the o*ctfCMten? would *, l>e felt equally Mrong on overyear! of the ? ! ?*rtb'$ craat. j People nre prone to condemn in others * " > . r' what they practice in thcmfecWe* without r temple. Plutarch tell* of a wolf, who, in , pee|rfng into a hut where a company of [ shepherd* wora regaling them?elf?N with ft i joint of mutivu, wtvlniine<l,"VVhat a clamor would thoy li&ro raised if they bad caught meat t>u< b a banquet!"