University of South Carolina Libraries
KEOYVEli COl' HIE 11 im'.i ?' ' ? Saturday, IVorenibe* 9,1880 With a vmv of accommodating our Su Mribera who live at a distance, the following gentlemen *r# authorised and requrrted tc act aa agents in receiving and forwarding Sub criptons to the Kkowes CocaiKa, vis: Maj. W. S. O aim am, at West Union. Kdwakd ncOaxe.Ksq., " Home Shoe. K. P. VKitNCR, E*?i., " Bachelor's Retreat M. F. Mitchell, Lsq.. " Pickensville. J. K. Hauo?t>, " Twelve Mile. T J. W?m. for Anderaon District. "The commons here in Kent nre up in arm*." Pursuant to notice on Monday last " ' l large number of the citizens of our .District met in the Court Hons* tn hear their able and indefatigable llepresentative, Col. Orr, give an account of his stewardship. Th? Colonel, in a spcech of two hours length, to which we listened with nil diminished interest ran over tin nets of injustice which had been per petrated by the ruling majority in Congress, and sketched in a graph it and forcible manner their disastrous consequences to the South ; he ex hihited to th<* niinrls of lii? nn<1i?nn< the evidence of n fierce and insatia ble hostility on the part of that ma jority to us and our institutions: h< tpld how corruptions had crept int< the Federal Government, and how strange doctrines, sue)-, as were un known to our fathers, had hecom< the orthodox Federal Faith; aiu how by them the character of the Government was being, nay, hai already been, changed from one o limited to one of unlimited uowers. For years the North had nourishei dark and insidious designs agains the independence of the South. Fo years she had concealed in her mid night councils, the toul and traitor ous purpose of changing by silen and imperceptible revolutions the original character of the Fedcra Government. At fust she approach ed her ends by slow and cautiou steps, stealing along through crook tji .11 ^ - -- ru ituu sucrci ways, and while wi slept in fancied security her wisard were working their midnight spoils by means of this dark enchant ment, one by one had the bulwark of the Constitution fallen, guaraut; after guaranty had been swept aw a; ?power after power had been usurp cd, until now she had U3 and th: Constitution under her foot. nrw backed by a fierce and turbulent ma jority who were divided from the mi nority by contending interests an< geographical lines, she is ruling tin ^ land with a lordly and unlimite< sway. In this headlong struggle fo power no means had been too wick ed to be used, and no institution to< sacred to be touched by her foul am l 1 kT oiui^ nanus, jlno consider at ions of justice, no feelings of hu manUy, no principles of religion havi been sufficient to restrain the Nortl or to cause to her seared conscience one pnn# of remorse. And now emboldened by her late success anc by our shameful defeat, she openly avows the acccomplishment of i purpose inc most fell and terribh against which human reason cai provide, or for which human pit] can shudder, and which, if accom plished would present to the work a picture of desolation and blood tlx darkest to be found on the annals o human woe. Fifteen bankrupt anc exhausted States contending in r strifo of races with all the fierce ani ungovernable hostility of servile wai for such would be the consequences which the North wnnl/t ? *VIVV UJJV/I *is hy the emancipation ofonr slaves 0JS have not the time to pursue farther the thread of this manly anc eloquent address, suffice it to say thai when tlir> mi#?? ? ?? , ?? .j?wwMvrii irna ciaikf'lJ > V lldl course are wo to pursue to escapc from the many dangers which threaten, and the answer given, dissolve the Union and establish a .Southern Confederacy, Ihe speaker was greeted with shouts of applause. After Mr. Orr had concluded his speech, as will be seen by reference to another page, a Southern Rights Association was formed, and goodly number of! he signatures oft he crowd obtained, and many persons who were desirous were forced to go away without an opportunity to sign. *? We have heard doubts expressed of thotnith and loyalty of the people who inhabit these hilt* and mountains, would to C?yd the "whole South were as true and loyal as they, there would be no submissionists or compromisers then, for the soil we tread & | upon is not the soil to give birth to 1 ^ | traitors, nor is the air we breathe the j a air to give vitality to traitors; and | g there is a spirit abroad among these | ' hills and mountains?a love of free- ^ dom and a hatred to tyranny?a '( spirit which has dwelt with us since ' (( the days of the Revolution, a spirit n which has Made every hamlet a tem- v ; pie and every hearth-stone an altar ? j of liberty, and which is firing the hearts of our people to-day, and y which, when the hour of danger shall J 1 come, will nerve their hands to emulate the great deeds of their brave ^ i and noble sires. Industry Rewarded.?\Vc learn j 1 from a friend living on Stamp Creek,' 1 that there is living in his vicinity a f. fnfmor u'Kn l,nu l>tf /linJ nf liiu " i??i i*ivi tf i?v Ullli ui iiio uwu j labor, since the 1st of September,! ( 1849, opened in the wild woods a ' V [ ! farm of eight acrcs, built a comfort-' * able dwelling house, stables and all necessary out buildings, and cribbed ( ; off of his little domain, after ft.tien- n ! ing four hogs, one hundred and sev- '1 I enty-five bushels of corn. Verily n ; our "mother earth" is a bountiful , ! giver of good gifts to those who seek I jj diligently after them. Hurrah for Greenville.-?On 1 Monday last, we understand, there ( 5 was a public meeting held at Green- t 1 ville C. H. And Resolutions em- J f bodying the right principles enthusi- . it.. n-i -i * : * ' <iii y uuu uiiiiu^i uimilllllOMSlV | | 1 adopted, only six voting in the nega- j ] t live. The Resolutions were advo- r r caied by Col. Memminger, and op- I - poser' by Messrs. Thompson and , - Perry who, our informant cays, were i t listened to with much impatience. ( Fine Fruit.?We have been pre- ^ sented by Capt. Robert Stewart, y with a few of the largest arid most 1 s delicious apples we have ever seen. ! < . frriM MITVIf I s TEMPERANCE M EKTING. lt At a call meeting of the District \ _ Temperance Society, at this place, ^ s on the evening of the 4ih inst., the ' ? following delegates were appointed , ^ lo the Slate Temperance Conven- ' tion, lo meet in Columbia on the 27th ' B inSt': \ j Rev. Joseph Grisham, J. W. Nor- . lis, jr. M. M. Norton, J. J. Norton, j Ordered to be published in the Cou < rier. ! J. \V. Norris. Jr. Sec'y. 1 Pickens (J. H.,4th Nov., 1850. I r PROPOSALS. As the Legislature of South Car3 j olina will assemble on the fourth Mon , ] j day in this month, and every true i patriot is looking to its proceedings 1 - with feelings of the deepest interest. B the people should keep themselves 1 ij thoroughly informed of uil its actings 1 n and do ngs: ! Therefore the undersigned are (It- h j 1 term.ned to place the means of infor- \ I maiion within the reach of the hum- 1 x j blest citizen, by sending the Ksows2 ? i Courier to new subscribers during the .j i next session of the Legislature, at , twenty-Jive cents per single copy. , 5 copies during the session for $1,00 | j or lk2 i 4" " " ? $2,00 j ? Payable always in advance. f The Courier will contain the Gov- 1 prnni'1*! ModBniTOO on okrl?n-.t I J W...W. W ?.*vwwu^v?li USA UMOIIdtl U| lilt? I t proceedings of the house and Senate, j ( I and of speeches made in boll* houses, ' < . together with remarks and info,*ma- '' } tion contributed by correspondents j , in Columbia. Det no man have to ask his negh- ] ? bor 'what's the news?' but send in ! ( j your names immediately?take the i Courier, and read for yourselves. I Post-inasters.and all persons friend j , ly to the extension of general intclli-! J, genee will be kind enough to act as I f , our agents in the above, and forward i t ail subscriptions by 23d November, t TR1MMIER& LEWIS. \ Pii'lfPlI* CI. H. Mr?tr ft _ - ?.1 -"I ?wv. I ^ i Mr. G. P. R. James has placed one ' i of his sops in Yale College and an- 8 ?' other in the Law School in New Ha- 1 ve n. , a . A A snuffbox of a novel construction, and designed to supersede the I necessity of using the fingers in ta- \ king the snuff, has been registered in Birmingham. The box is inverted, and upon being turned up, tw > smnl) p caps are f >und changed with the tit- n illating mixture, and ready to be ftp- f< ' plied to the ttose. t GERMANY. In IJesse Casual the revolrtionary ' deling is said to be increasing. Up- 1 /arda of two hundred officers have , 1 Bsigned their commissions in the '? rmy, which is now in a most elisor- 1 anised state. It is said that Hayiuiu ' who, by proclamation of the ftlec- c 3r, 1)rs been created commander-in-j [ hief of the army; proposes to pro- j' iote the non-commissioned officers j the vacancies. Ilaynan com- r lauded to remove those of all grades ^ /ho refuse to obey his orders, and to 1 nmediate punishment. According to letters from Frankfort ' is sa i^to be the indention of the 1 Elector of Hesse to abdicate. The * Mnce of Cossel will succeed him. ( ]n the last sitting of the College of y ^rinces at Berlin, M. de Radowif/, ' armaily announced that the Prus- ( ian Government will not suffer the I federal assembly at Frankfort to in- j 1 erfere by force in Hesse CasscU and 1 hat any at'empt to do so Would be ' csisted by Prussia; consequent upon he division of the subject of Hesse 1 lassel, a ministerial cris's has taken ( ?!ace in Hanover^ and Sturvo and the I Denver have retired. ( The two divisions of the Austrian ' rniy upon their march for Hesse !1 JaaeU have received counter orders. I lid have stopned in 1 heir prepress. ! 1 rhis, it is said, lias been the rcsu't of; t joint remonstrance upon the part j( >1 England and Russia. Prussia still j 5 i rot est s against the Course adopted ; it the Frankfort convention. The late Queen of tliv Belgian*.? The English papers announce the 1 loath, at Ostcnd. on the llUiofOc- 1 obfer, of Louise Marie Thereto Char otte Isnbelle, Queen of ihe Helgians. ni i ? " Liriuu.Mi.ii ?in.i ?jiih:i iriii^vusi were jnrly summoned and re mi lined will) ler to the last. TROOPS FOR BOSTON. Washington Nov. 4. President Fillmore yesterday ;snted an order, through tho wi>' Department, to concentrate at Roston he who'e disposable forcc of United Slates artillery and Infan'ry, to aid j n executing tho laws.?Carolinian. The Choctaw*. Five Choctaw chiefs have recently been imprison id bv an In 1'an trader for dcs'royng i quantity of whiskey be^ongincr to he latter and another trader at Fort Duaehita. The Cherokee A'lvoca'e publishes & ^communication from the [ndinns, in which they justify their ourse, and ask to be discharged. The Advocatc says: "We are truly glad to see tho stand \ hey have taken in the premises? hw and equity must bear them out, or ardent spirits have been the bane ?f the Indians ever since its first inroduction among them, and theUnied Slates, knowing it to be an evil, < lave passed wise and wholesome aws to prevent its introduction a- | norig the Indian tribes, and, it is to | te regretted that the white man 1 houln so far forget his moral oh'igaions to liiacountry and the Indians, s to attempt to introduce it among ' lif.ni." : I * General Pillow has been elected ' 'reftidenl of the Puck lliver Slack 1 Vater Navigation Company. ' New Type.?The Triburto has ap- ! eared in a new dress. Its editor i as has not. The appearance of the ' Drmer is respectable, that of the Jat- . cr quite the contrary.?Courier. | i ms taoy was the second child of the ! 1 a*e K;ng Louis Phil'ppe, having boon 1 )orn at Palermo on the 3d of April, ! 1812. The. princess Louise was a ' nost estimah'e woman. In her e n*ict years rhe did muc.li credit lothc ' ntclage ofh*?r preceptress, Ma Inme Vlallef, who had hVc.n rcommen led ( >V Madame de Gennr, 1 he governess ' >f Louis Philippe a? d ihc rest of ' Philippe Fgalite's family. Sheshar- 1 ?cj the fortunes of her fathers fanvly mtil the revolution of IS30, when she ' vecame conspicuous .is tho first jpr'n- ' *ess of'he French Roval Familv. In [831, when Be-gium became an indc- j1 icndent kingdom Prinze Leopold of I Sa\c CoboMrg, the w'dower of the < rhenied Princess Charlotte, of j Wales, and a cousin of Victoria and Prinze A'bcrt, w'ns seJec'ed 'o occupy the throne. He soon af'c wards ivas marred to he P' incess Louise The Queen of 'he Belgians was thus ntimaUily united vv'th the royal famy of England, and the Kiiui has orcn2rally showed ihnt he estimated his relationship with Krifflnnd more highly thanlhat with France; and partirMilarlv dnr'.nffthe discussion of the r-t , ? ? ... rmapisn marriages. ciul he nnd his queen look eo'dly onLoirs Philippe's pcoiccts. Still Queen Louise ronlin lied to be a dovo'ed daughter. and when Louis Philippe in 1S4^, fed rrownless to England, Claremont house ihe proper! v of K:ng Leopold was p'arod at Ms disposal. The C^ueen of the Belgian* was 'aken <=evere'y ill some weeks sin re at Ostend whither she had repaired for the benefit of her heahh: her cot pla nt was a general phfisis. aecomnanel bv much suffering; her mother, Q"een IVfarie, and her brother, the Duke of \rArv,rtlt..o 1 ? Sot'tiigrtf Sentiment.?History las not recorded a more stinging | aunt than that of Ayxa la Horra, ' he mother of the last Moorish mon- < irch of Greneda, addressed to her i mbeeilo son after his su render. As 1 le departed forever from his favorite J ity to pass into exile, lie turned to i < ake a last look, and tears stood in J v lis eyes* 11 '"You do well," said the stern mat- (t. on, "to weep like a woman for that i vhtch you failed to defend like a ; t nan." 1 I The h gh-souled woman would i lavepreferred the death, to the deg- ] adation of the child she loved. The | tame spirit animates the daughters j )f the Sou'h at the present moment, ' ,vhen a foe as crafty and as cruel as ! FVrdiuan 1, is seeking the subjugation | >f the fortress of its strength?and < persons who flinch or falter now, > ! nayepect from them the consolaion which Boabdil received in his I lour of remorseful regret. ! .< We find the evidence of this in 1 nany of our Southern papers, more | 'specially in those of Alabama, Gcor- | < ria, anil South Carolina. Not only I lo ihey give to the good cause the jtleranreof speech and song, in let- j < ers and in verse?hut they lend to oublic meetings the inspiration of I heir presence. j ' At one meeting in Alabama, the < jditor ol the Montgomery Adverii-! >er(the gallant Colonel Seibeis, who i < served in Mexico.) was presen'ed by ; | lie ladies of Mr.con crtiinfy with a | j lug with the foiiowing inscription : I | 'Secession ! if this bo treason make ] ihe of it,"?in testimonial of, ! I h/nr nn?^i*/ir??otiAn r\f I I iiivn wv lunvia ui uiu v^uu i or: m 111^ i paper. . About filled) hundred of the yeomanry of Dallas and Lowndes conn* i lie., Ala., fend two hutrlred ladies, t assembled at Old Town, on the 27th nit., under a beautiful ling, upon < whir h was inscribed: "Union of the i South.1' I SVhcn such a spirit animates the i laughters of the South?when they i lake their posMioh under sheh'R flag. ! ivlib can doubt that lifer sons will all j ! rally under Hie banner ot such an I I " Union. ' The mothers of the Rev- i DiUtion have borne daughters worthv r>f being descended from such a stork ?nor will 1 heir brothers and sons ha me such a parentage. For even ] I hose who deprecate must still res I pect such a sentiment as animates , those whose shrinking timdity is ; proverbial, and to whom publicity is j ever painful. [Southern Press. ' i fjootc out for Abolitionists!?We make the following extracjfrom a ! friend in Newberry, wlio sent us a |1 list of new subscribers: "On last even'ng the forerunner of Robinson &EMred's circus came to our tov n: he handed a couple of numbers of the Now York Atlas to some gentlemen. The paper is cram meij wnnranK anouuon sentiments. The gentleman was wailed on, and examined by some of onr good citizens, and a large number of copies of the same print found upon him; lie received notice to leave, which he did instant or, a^out 9 o'clock at night. The town council were requested to j give notice in the Sentinel, that Rob- j inson & Eldred's circus wo i!d no' ; receive license to exhibit at Newber- j rv. and so they will no! exh bit here. The circus man registered his name Hawley." IVilrf Cat.?The return of this noted clrcf to the Seminole country, has, it appears, caused grca1 evcite- 1 ment in the Creek nation. The Fort 1 Smith Herald, of the 11th. says: "Fiveor six hundred Greets start,..i ~rr .. c i - f cii on u irw (uiys ngo irom me *Jreek j nation to arrest him, hut from some , rnuse 1 hoy turned hark when within forty miles of him. He is bucily engaged in some schcmo, but is rlorcly 1 watched by ihe agent, M. Dtivnl, who knows this wily chief very well, and is acquainted with many of his tricks. Mr. Puval, we learn, has called a council of the Setnino'es j at his agency, and has called upon ' JVihl Cat to attends The government of the United States will have | to use some very decided measures with thisch'ef, or lie may cause the people on the frontier a great deal of trouble. He has now a wide range, from the Seminole country, west of Arkansas, to the Rio Grande; he has free intercourse with all the roving bands of the prairies, and wield a powerful influence wherever hecoes; lift is a proud and ambitious fellow, and prides himself ir? his cunning and sagacity;?what his present visit will [unount lowe shall w on find out." Tim Mexican election for President, it is most probable, will devolve upon the congress of that country? i focus of ^intrigue and corruption notorious enough. There are t wnl ve candidate*. 'J ne contest lies principally between Arista and Aimon e, ,.wi .u? ?i ~r A - >>u |ifp i.ikuh'cm uj rinsitt M't'iii i!iu >e$>t, but the voles ofreveral depart Tien}# have been so divided fining o do/en candida'es (hut ncm<5? fjf$? lave received an absolute majority. 1 Liberty m Jujiu;.a.?Th t 1 hiludejhia l^adgor slates lhal J\iaraii,who was one of the Opera company re;eutiy in this country, now m iJuvala, was not permitted to use the word 'liberlad' in the famous duett in II Puritani. An officer had strict oilers to seize and imprison hmi if he ised the word and ail who applauded him. The word loyally was subdiluted. Marini, about a year ago, vas scut to prison because he used he word Mibertad- alter it had been orbidden . Every body who heard he Opera in Philadelphia, says the Ledger, must remember the ellect produced by the sonorous voice ol Marini, and the enihusislic fervor .villi which he sings this fine piece. Cottov and Tobacco.?There is wery pro.-peot that these two great Southern staple will fall uncommony short this year. Wnh regard to iiie latter, as far as We can hear, we nspect there is little doubt that such ivill be the fact, and that ihe hitfli :>rices now given. will continue without material abatement for a long lime to come. The New Orleans Picayune has extracts from various Texas an I i ? ? . > . ijuuiaimm jjii|jur?, :?n lending 10 snow ihe shortness of the eolton crop in ihe regions they represent. The /Ought seems to have extended throughout thv, length and breadth of the land, so as in nfiect it in a very threat degree. Notwithstanding, a jjfen'leman, who had been a cotton planter in Louisiana for a number of years, the oilier day expressed to u.s his opinion that tho crop vvould not be found, when gathered in, to fal much below (he general average. i ne reason he gave it was this: there is always more. cotton planted than r,an be gathered in ordinary years. The amount of force can, in any year only gather a certain qnuniity. Now the weather has been ^o very fine for picking that it is probable, although ihe as much may not be made, as much will be secured, as in the bet!>ettcr growing years. This reasonng seems to be sound, but we proless not to know any thing of the Matter. [Richmond Dispatch. Constitutional Onwrvrmv iv Indiana.?This convention has adopted a proposition for biennial sessions \ p-oposition is also pending to prevent the emigration of fr<*e negroes in'o the State. u is urged th&t the laws of Kentucky and o'her slave States tend to drive the free negroes into the free State.*; and that in orcl r lo guard Indiana from a "mixed population," which is called one of the nv lo AT O 1 o 1-1- - * i/i jo ??? qiiiti isueii ti |jitjii'ijuory law is expedient. The S*a'e Journal says that there w'll probably be no separate submission of the regro question 1o the peo|)!e. and very few mom1 e s favor its incorporation in the constitution. An important uucstion has been raised in the Northern prints by those who arc favorab'c to the execution of the fugit ive slave act. It hds been contended 1 lint the issue of absconded slaves born in ihose por lions of ihe Union in'o which thev have fled, are not to be classed with their i arents as fugitives from labor. This is an attempt to withdraw the question ef recovery of runaway slaves from its true character as one of property* and place it in a false category as one of personal right.? The law of property m the South with regard to slaves must determine this question. That law makes the issue of si ves by the mothers side the property of the owner of tl e parent. The status of the slave, where held as property, must regulate the construction of an act passed to carry out a provision of the constitu'ion intended to protect the rights of property in slaves. If slavery is on institution governed by local law, all the incidents and consequenccs which attach to it by that law come of force by necessary implication. Whatever i? the law where slaves arc held with regard ty their issue must from the rule of interpretation for a statute of congres, designed to secure the owner in his right#, precisely as such a rule would gouern the courts of the State from wnich the slave had fled. It will nos do, therefore, to shield the offspring of the female slave from the eflectsof the late act of congress for reclaiming fugitives slaues, under the plea that such offspring were born in a non slavnhnlrlinir Blnto I [Evening News. One of (lie census takes for Greene county, Mr. Mct'oy, says the Xenia (Ohio) Torcli 1/ght, informs us of an instance that came under his observation in ihe eastern pan of tins county, which we vqnture to sav is unparral)ed in tJm latitude- 'A'he par ues arc a married couple, the husband 18 and iho wife 10. v They have been married about four years nnd have two children one of whirl; is over three ycaps of age, and the oilier oyer one! If a younger couple thftii iliey have cemmenced 'Adding to the jjlory ??nd greatness of their ttountfy wc* nope io hear of it. The British in India.? John Hull is very ready to certsure other peoples conduct but not apt to amend his own. At present he is disgracing hunt-elfin India. Since the close of the Sikh war, the troops there have fallen into a state of such disorder, that Gtin. Napier, their late commauper, has more than once called them a disgrace to humanity- Lately, at Allipore, a native vill.igo reaeuted some insults to its women. In revenge for this, the officers permitted a recklessmob of soldiers to sack the place. Houses were pulled down, women publicly and ignominiously stripped; the rings wnicn females there wear in their noses were focibly torn away; and one young woman, who.-e condition should have made her an obiect of peculiar sympathy, was brutally run through with a hay onet, so that she died. Those atrocities are hitherto unpara!e|ied, at least m the nineteenth century; after this we wish to hear 110 more about American affairs from our transatlantic neighbors. The Great Basin.?It is stated that i fe *r ... me mormons nave recently discovered whirlpools in the Sail Lake, wh'ch may possibly lead lo the discovery of somee outlet for the waters of the Great Basin, in which the Mormons have established their hom . This basin is some 660 miles :n d.nmcler every way, between 4r 000 and 5,000 feet above the leoel of thq sea, shut in all around by moun* lain ?, wi ll its own systems of lakes and rivers, and having no known connect.011 whatever with the sea: .1 Some of tiie Hoitou papers are try uigvery naru io rn ike liainum 'shell out ft iitrlc cnnrity, like the fair Jen: nv- They a e fert ling homilies ort the loveliness of giving?showing hihv exquisitely beautiful it is? how it. b'c?ses h:m who gives and him who receives?and all that sort of thing. But Barninn renriins dark--says nothing-^-i-hut occasionally drops away from Boston to deliver a temperance lecture gratuitously. The following account of the exordium of a lawyers soeecli. is re ported in one of Soutliey's letters: This man, gentlemen of the jury, walks into cout like a motionless Blame, with the cloak of hypocrisy, in his mouth and is attempting to screw three large oak trees out of my clients pocket." Th > N. II Pil >t slates that passed Mjdvh 6mpu II <we, Kci, and Hop* kins, w|ip w. re dismissed some MX nion'hs ago ly sentence ofcourtnwtial, for rt fus'ng to obey orders 011 board a thi^ of war, have all bvf-U restored to their original positioi 9 i.i the Navy of the United Sta ea. Their offence cons a'ed in 1 efufing to light acandle for u Lieutenant. United States and London Faik ?We learn Irom the National Intelligencer of Friday that the Seeiein ry of the Treasury has consented to the use of vessels in the revenue service of the United States for the transportation of articles of American production fcom the various port# a.oitg the atiantic coasts to such point as shall be selected for ihe departure of thp ship appropriated to convey them to the London exhibition, wherever it can he douo without detriment to the public serqice. Caroliuian. Yankee Neatness.?A green horn from the interior, recently went I lo vibit a rich rniisin ill ?li? '" ?? ?(.IIV *\J[ u| Boston. J3e;ng introduced into the sitting-room by the scrvunt, he stopped aL the door, and gazing for a moment with i? ?ch astonishment, upon tlie rich carpet on the floor; he at last observed a narrow space next the wall of the room, which it did not cover, and with long strides* marched over it oppos te the fireplafc? v here be ng obliged to cross the carped to reach his friend* (who were as much astonished as ho was) m reaching the hearth he could not j avoid stepping on it?and turning nuii gicm upi??r?iii moruncaiton to hv cousin, he exclaimed?There Polly 1 have trod on your kiverlid in ter all. Amin Bey has been visiting the public schools of Ronton, and was much surprised lo find that the girls kn^w anything?he has been fjuite hospitably lionized in the national <*y- 2 ,l;y- / rtiJ Gemn, the Now York hatter, e?t<<K..i i?i?~ Li-" hiqiv mail uy ?w u,(t pFICG |Of th(5 I Jenny Lind concert ticket, ho has oh- I tamed, at the very lowest calculation five thousand doUar# worth ol'adver I tiwpg I I ft Some of the Women at Jenny L'nds concert in Boston fainted and were taken into her apartment, whetfe received her personal attention; an I ?Xolmnf??|)aper remarks that it was not artnbunc?<J at the time, or half the men wmijd have fainted to?. ' ?*