University of South Carolina Libraries
-r???BBP?^seaa(s#te#e9BBB?? aqmtMt Umttmf tm Iiwy. The eqmitterr flfidlwas fete ? meeting cm the 1st iustnnt, aUdjB&hree toil** frpm Fort _ , l,t ;ivnworth. The eomrafUe# appointed to give cxpr?ioh to tfe vioWs of tfiv, meeting roi?orteu two sets of resolutions. The report of the majority wss'rejectod, after a long de- ? bate, anil that of the uiiuority adopted. The account from whiotfb# copy goes ou to say: ? , "There being a cRbeon the part of tome pors<>u* present to ascertain how many Aboli- a tioui ta or Freeaoilera were. present a sense y of the meeting was taken as to whether y Kansw should be slave or free territory. All q I hose present who werefavorable to Kansas being made a slave Swte were requested to riso it* responc ibthis'enll: prc-vut who were favorable to Kansas being made a free State were reqnestcd to make it * manifest by a similar sign. But four per- ? sous in that-vu^t assembly* were favorable to ] that motionJV . > _ The meeting adopted a preamble and rcsoiuuwns approving anu pledging tDeinselvcs to support the present organisation of the "Kansas Squatter Society," aud tlieir law, j and regulations, until altered or annulled bv i the citizens of Mho Territory. The prominent regulations anAprincipkaijhu?endorsed ate tlio follow iugiv. > That i\4iyaa;j territory (aud as a consequence the State of Kansas) ..of right should bound therefore shall be slave'territory. I That every free white citizen of the United j State, over flic age of twtuty-one years or ^ the head of a family, is entitled to a pre-emption upon any unoccupied government laud within tlio territory. That we do not recognise the right of any Rotllcr to select more tliati one claim of a ^ quarter section, either in his own name or ^ in tlio nutno of other persons. That the individual w ho shall btazo the ' lines of his claim and put ?p a tent, or commence the erection of a cabin by laying a foundation, and shall show by his actions his intention of prosecuting his claim, shall be deemed the first actual settler. That, to entitle any person to the protcc- * lion of tlio society, he shall register his claim i Wit It I till n.toi'nct porrlciA* fit to ? . iv\t kliv Mw?*IVOU 1'^tOlCl VI II1IO OW.lV.lVj Ol^ll 2 tlio constitution of the association, ami con- t form to the regulations of the Kansas Squatter Society. Tluit, as this society embraces nine-tontlis of the present settlers of this territory, we are i entitled to and will exercise the riglit of ex- t palling from thp territory, or otherwise punishing, any individual or individuals who may come among us, and by act, conspiracy, or other illegal means, entice away our slaves, or clandestinely attempt in any way or form j to uifcct our rights of property in the same, j. Professors. Never was there such a dragging down of loftly titles as in this country. Every little * paltry school, dignified with a college charter by tlic Legislature of the State?and such |J colleges spring up like weeds in the West? ^ showers its titles annually upon men who . don't know the Latin words they represent. * Crops of D. 1)., LL. L>., come with every l1 annual commencement, until the whole thing ti has become ridiculous, and but few worthy ja men accept the proffered distinction. This whole mutter of conferring degrees lias been "run into the ground" so far?if the expression is a pardonable one?that it is more a mark of distinction not to bo written 1 >. 1)., f< or IAj. ]>., than to have the common handle c, follow the name. Bungtown College and Smugglcton University, out in Iowa, or near Oregon, make licv. Mr. J'uggins, or ltev. '< Mr. Whanger, in llardscrabb, I>. D.'s and < t< old Ci vein fits, the member of Assembly, and ! e. I'utemtlirough, the inventor of a new cider mill, became suddenly wiser and greater ' with an LL. I). A man will have to be very obscure to avoid these degrees, but they a come, thick as leaves in Vallambroea. The v most abused term, however, is that of pro- S( feasor^ once honored in academic halls, and ^ meaning an instructor, oceupying a professional chair in a college or university. Now-a-dnys the public are informed that h professor this or professor that is ready to tl give lessons in writing, phrenology, or slight c o'band tricks, in necromancy, or cards. The ^ whole rabble of travelling showmen, vagrant venders of universal panaceas, itinerant, lee- 11 turers on phrenology, spiritualism, biology, N and mendicants generally,are all professors; b an illustrious crew, certianly, and though ^ professing much, poor specimens of mankind, taken in the aggregate. As for generals. colonels, ami the lower military dignitaries, the militia furnishes an abundance of such titles, and j*on may find generals in men of P; the most nnmilitary occupation, and per- w haps a colonel, certainly a major or captain, ft, to mix a cobbler or mix ft julip at the next re- j staurant republicans as wo are, proud of talking ft our democracy, titles don't come P4 amiss ; and if we don't say "your lordship" 111 and "your grace1"?Bishop Hughes being " the only.vmpn in our State so called?we show our innate love for titles in the more republican form of reverend, right reverend, doctof, general, captain and squire.?Buff a- *1 lo Commercial Advertiser. ti Exousn and* American IIome Life.?I ^ rather think this wny of relatives living toget her is more common here, in England, than it is in America; and there is more ol idea of home permanence connected witli the al family dwelling place than with us, where ^ the country is so wide, and causes of chansre and removal so frequent A man builds a m house in England with the expectation of living in it and leaving it to his children; while we shed our house in America as enai- Si ly as a snail does hia shell. We live awhile cii in Hoston, and then awhile in New York, q, and then perhaps, turn up at Cincinnati.? Scarcely anybody with us is living where | they expect to live and die. The man that "J dies in the house he was born in is a wonder. There i9 something pleasant in tho permanence and reposo of the English family ra estate, which we, in America, Know very fp littlo of.?Mrs. Stowe. * ^ SriRTT IlArriNor;?Cents knocking at the tb different doors as they go home late at night. fa > * > jflP % % v n i ?i^ in?LU- 1m Ji""" , " i1 "jja &\)t <?nictVnst \ cni&ygsjmw^JMa, & <9. " Friday Morning, Sept. 89, 1854. AOKNT*. . W. CARR, N. W. cor. of Walnut and Third-st, Philadelphia, u our authorised Agent . M. PEMiN, Fairview"P. O., QmaiilU Dial YM. Ci BAILEY, Wallace'# Factory, Spartanburg Y. W. SMITH, MorriUvflle, Greenville District . P. M'KINNEY, Wabtovrn, P. O., Aaderson DWt RESIGNATION. L. M. McBek, Esq., lias resigned llio of ice of Ordinary for this District, and at election will be ordered by the Clerk to h held on the first Monday in November nexl PICKENS OlSfatCTi J His excellency Governor Manning has ap [jointed Robert A/Thompson Commissione in Equity for Picken district, in place o Joseph W. Ross, deceased. ef MISS RRENNAN. Wis learn from the Patriot, of yesterday hat this talented and much admired, vocal st intends giving one more Concert ii .Jrcenville, beforoshe leaves for Europe. " EXECUTEO. i , ? The unfortunate Kinmas, sentenced U lcath for stealing negroes, was executed a L.aurens C. II., 011 Fiiday last. We did 1101 cam that he made any confession. ? NORTH CAROLINA. The Western Baptist Convention, reccntlj icld in Macon County, strongly recommend ;d the Maine Litpior Law, or its equivalen n the shape of a Prohibitory Law. A1 niuistere of any note, within tho jurlsdic ion of the Convention, liavo declared them iclvcs in favor of the reform movement.? Temperance and the temperance principle ire fast gaining the favor of the people o his State. May it continue 1 ? DR. GUNTER ARRESTED. The Wiunsboro Register says that Dr S. L. Olnter, tho murderer of Jkssr K. icnntv "was captured in tho town of Ash>oro, Randolph county, North Carolina, and .alged in the county jail. Mr. Fowler and Ir. Brown Lewis, were his capturcre. Tliero was a reward of ?2,000 offered by lie brothers of Mr. Scurry: 1,000 for Dr. r. t r:...*1...: -.1:-*- ? - ' .. vunivi) viiv. jiiuiiuuinw inuruercr, hthi :l,000 for his brother, K. Guntcr, an accomilice. Messrs. Fowler and Lewis mako the ine littlo sum of $500 each by their energy nd firmness displayed in the pursuit." THE FEVER IN SAVANNAH. We have been permitted to make the >11 owing extraet from a private letter rceived by a gentleman in this place: * Savannah is still scourged with the Yel>\v l'ever. The city is almost depopulated, >r all who could get away have left. The >restsfor miles around aro full of the poorer art of the population, who are in camps.? Very baker is dead?the market deserted, nd those who are left are in a state of staration. Augusta, Macon and Atlanta are Miding them bread daily. Most of the 'hysiciaus are dead, five died last week, but everal humane physicians from the country avo voluntarily gone down to minister to I _./V iiu Hiiiicnng. . . . fMXty bodies were arried to the grave-yard in one day lost eek and ten of them could not be interred ntil next day, for want of laborers to do it. lany of the most respectable citizens aro ttried in a shroud only, for Collins cannot e procured." ollar Week\j Times-?Cincinnati. Wo have received a copy of this excellent riper, published in Cincinnati, Ohio. It is ell conducted, contains no advertisements, nd more reading than any dollar paper we ave seen, as well as one of the largest pairs in the country. Wo take much pleasre in performing the request of its editor to X." All who wish to be on tho right side nowNothingisin would do well tosubscribe r the Times. ne Edtato Clarion. We have received a prospectus for tho irk nuK1t(Mi#iAn of *1'^ -* ^ V ^uunvauuii KI1 mo uuinre ]??per si VJTngcburg C. II, by 1*. II. Laihct. The larion proposes to advocate tlio principles f States' Rights. We wish the editor !l success, nn?l long may his Clarion notes e heard and felt by the sturdy sons of old jqgpgeburg. jtgrRrruRNg from remote towns in the Ate of Maine, have been gradually redung Morrill's supposed majority for the ovenorship, and it is now thought that he ill lack about a thousand votes of election r the people. JSTThe Clarke County (Ohio) AgricultuJ Society, intends giving three prizes, worth rc hundred dollars, as premiums for the ree finest babies, not over two years of age, ey may be entered for competition at their ir on the 5tli proximo. fcuamflL'- TrriJn mu ./ iwm mum. >i i TRIBUTE OF RE8PECT. At a meeting of Recovery Lodge, No *1, A/. F.-. M.s liekl ou the letfi ultimo, tft$i Ibving preamble and weohtrtonswem unattiinously. adopted: < r.; Whereas, it hath pleased the groat > itect of the Univorae, in whose hands is the destiny of mew and of. Masons, to call 1 even before the high Jwelve of his life, our beloved brother, LEWIS S. THRlTSTON, from tho labor and c*re of this -mortal ealetence, to the unbroken refreshraeht of imthorg r - .? * ?! a*fc tsJity above ; and tho brethren of Reoovery - Lodge, Ancient nljarbj^,'with i peculiar bitterness in the general -sorrow b which this melancholy event must produce, ? are desirous of expressing their aensibitity on the occasion. TheTelbro Rrtotoed, That while* we recognise and - bear with humble submission to the wilt of r the Almighty, gratefully acknowledging his f manifold menage, tipd constant forbearance towards all his creatures, when we .remember all the'virtues which strengthened, adtt all the graces .vhich adorned, ids character/] , DUt deplore with full and unchanging hearts - the eternal absence of our l&other. J Resolved, That while we would not ob* trade ourselves within thai sacred circle which grief has made doubly holy, nor offer them the hoHow mockeries of consolation, we yet ) deeply sympathise with his afflicted family t and in the midst of our sadness rejoice that t they do not weep with all the bitterness of those who mourn without hope, remembering, as they must, that the chain which has here been so painfully broken, will be rcunir ted beyond the clouds? and that again they -! shall dwell with him in that bright and t beautifid land "where the wicked coasc from 1 troubling and the weary bo at rest." Resolved, That the brethren of Recovery - Lodge wear for thirty days the usual badge - of mourning. , ' < Resolved, Hi at a copy of these resolutions f l>c presented to the family of the deceased. Resolved, That the Secretary be instructed to record these resolutions on a pace to be set apart for that purpose in tho records of Recovery Lodge. Jtettofved, That these resolutions bo published in the Town papers. For Use Southern En t40h*o. TRIBUTE OF RESPECT. At a regular meeting of Mountain Lodge 1 Xo. 15, 1. O. O. F., held on Friday, Scj?tem- . ber 22d insL, the following preamble atxh resolutions were unanimously adopted Whereas, it has pleased die Almighty Disposer of events, in tho dispensation of his Providence, to take from our midst, our , lieloved Brother Lewis S. Thrcston, with , whom we have been intimately jvwemted in all die relations of Brother, friend and citizen, we do sincerily mourn his loss, and his absence from his midst causes universal' gloom among us, who have only known him hut to love him for his many virtues. He J was devotedly attached to tlic Order. lie was among those'that organized this Lodge, , over which he was soon called to preside.? It affords us, on this occasion, a mournful satisfaction to add to die general grief which fills the community, our testimonial of his merits, and our respect to declare that in life we honored him and in death lamented him. To those bereaved ones who loved! him more dearly than their life, we dare not offer consolation, we can but request the] privilege of mingling our tears with theirs,; j and with them bow in humblo submission ' to the will of that Almighty being, to' j whose decree wc must all yield with humble | resignation, and before whose footstool wc: must all seek for comfort and protection.? j lie it therefore ..... /|. Resolved, That in the death of our wor-Tj thy brother, Lewis S. Thrcsto*^ we have sustained a loss of no ordinary magnitude, and we cherish his memory with respect a?a^ affection. Resolved, That the Lodge Room be clothed in mourning for six months, arvT'tTinY we will in testimony of our respect nt)d esteem^ ^ , wear the usual badge of mourning for thir% i ty days, and thai a blank page in our retr cord book be enscribed with his name an<? \ dodieatod to his memory. ' Rrvolwd, That * copy of these resolutions { be sent to the family of the deceased. Resolved, That a copy of these resolutions , be entered ca 'he Minutes of nur Lodge. > and a copy be sent to each of the papers in this village for publication. 1 1) diTrtnl i ?? n 0. u. on&nmAM, (secretary 1 ;?' Qujceh Statistics.?For hardening the ' heart politics are nearly as bad as law. We saw the other day a member of the General Committee figuring up the effect of the cholera on the fall elections. lie struck a large balance in favor of the whig* thus,? . On ever? hundred who die of the cholera, 85 are Irish. Now,eight-tenths of the Irish are democari*?ergo every time 100 men die-" of the cholera, the whig party make a clear gain of 72 votes. Who but a politician . would ever have entered into sucli a calcula- , tion } la Savannah lately the last blood kin of , Geo. Whitfield, tho eminent divine, who eame out with Oglethorpe, "was followed from a garret to the grave." ? few* - * - Colombia; &fL ft, 1854. < i Mr. hklitor:?We de*ire to warnthe resets t* your valuable sheet, Ugafast bw- j iieving the many rumors which are now , circulating .extensively in the. up country, as J regards the prevalence of the yellow fever < ia Columbia. Without wishing to detract ) from the Writs of othercities, we state as a positive fact, that a flhlthier place than , Columbia cannot bo found in the Union.? i During the summer just ended, we were ex- < erhpt from the Various diseases which proved fatal to so many in other sections of the , <kmntry, and now cases of sickness very 11 I rarely ooeur. Three person* have died of < Yellow Fever daring the month, but each one of them contracted, thf disease in Char- [ leston. Others are sick, and cases of the \ same sort will doubtless oocur, until the 'epidemic, which is now ravaging Charles- ? ton, Savannah and Augusta, is stayed.? 1 Hundreds have fled from those sickly cities j fought refuge abroad^ It. Mr, V. J. Wnt**,tvbo served in Gapt. D*?? j ^AUitsma's oompany during the Mexican i War, died l\ere on Sunday last, after a long 4 and severe illness. - ilis remains were at- j tended to the Presbyterian Church by the , surviving members of "Company H.," and i after and appropriate discourse by Rev. 6. M. ' Palms a, I)., D., were committed to the 1 Tomb. The Odd-Fellows, Richland Volun tecr Rifle Company and the Governor's Guards, also took part in the mournful pro- ; coedings, and htiried him "not only aa^a I soldier, but as a brother." Jirquiescat in ' pact! | September has almost gono, and nature | no longer is arrayed in green. Flowors are < withering and dying, and the sun looks down 1 in pity on the forests and fields, which no ' longer glistens with buds and flowers, or with the golden grain. Tie sad thus to notice the old year hurrying to a cloee?to know that seasons which can never return are going by. A truce to these musings.? Now for a few plain matter-of-fact details. Hie Exercises of the South Carolina College, and every school in Columbia, begin on Monday next, October 1st Tho Court of Common Pleas for Richlaud District, also, begins on that day ; so wo will have between ,ScboolH and Court, a busy time. Monday week being the period of Election for Senator and Representatives to tho Legislature, all tho Candidates and their frilhd* are "flying round" at a hurried rate. It is Really gratifying to notice how little drunkhess there has been during tho progress iof tho Campaign in Richland this summer?one of the most exciting probably ever known in her borders. And we wish the sentiment of One Candidate in our District would be re-echoed by every other throughout the State, viz: "If I cannot be elected by eober men, I care not to be elected at alir , It is proper to state, thnt by quoting the words of one candidate, we mean not to designate liim alone, particularly, as opposed ft 44tPAlhnffW Kill tft iltlAW VL.lint W ?HIVtf H Uf*<t vpiIIIUlIS leading men in 'Old Richland" now open- 1 ly proclaim. j Print tiiis if you can decyplier its roysti- < cal letter*, and you have a corner to "fill < out.* BAYARD. , Patrick Henry's Eloquence. Tub power of Henry's eloquence was due, ' first, to the greatness of hie emotion and passion, accompanied with a versatility which ' enabled him to assume at once any emotion > or passion that was suited to his ends. Not less indispensable, secondly, wns his match- < less perfection of the organs of expression, including the entire apparatus of voice, in- < tonation, pause, gesture, attitude, and indescribable {day of countenance. In no instance < did he ever indulge in an expression that ' was not instantly recognized as nature itself. 1 Yet some of his penetrating and subduing > tones were absolutely peculiar, as inimitable as they were indescribable. These were felt 1 by every hearer, in all their force. His mightiest feelings were sometimes indicated by a 1 long pause, aided by an eloquent aspect, and pome significant use of his fingers. Hie < sympathy between mind and mind is inex- ? plionlde. Where the channels of communi- ' Cation are open, the faculty of revealing inpaid passions great, and the expression of it I Midden and risible, the effect* life extraordi- nary. Let these shocka of influence be repeated again and again, and all other ideas | ate for the moment absorbed or excluded ; the whole mind it brought into unison with I that of the speaker; and the speU bound lis- ' tener, till the cause ceases, is under an en- 1 . JL - ? - ure laacinauon. men perhaps the charm ceases upon reflection, and the infatuated hearer teeumes his ordinary state. I r ' A collision occnred on tlie Georgia < Rail Road on Thursday night, bolow Ca- ( raak, between the up passenger train and a | down freight train, by which tlie engineer \ on .the up train, Robbrt Stikcu, and a < fireman named Chaklui Marsh were instant ly killed, and Hsnar Doasar, engineer, and ^ Thomas Gibbon, fireman on the down train, ( was seriously injured. Jonx Baldwin, ma- , ehiniatfWae badly scalded; a negro, belonging to one of the trains, was also slightly inju red. Some others received some injury*? None of the passengers sustained and damage. The accident is said to have been caused by the freight train being out of time. I . "tej*" -V- , "A pleasant journey to y?i; remembered ne^to tboee M km*t^ ^ V own. Ash? turned awny^ we eoald perwive the grorkings of the romembnuice of tome, and the emojineut of early life, rising ip in his memory, Atid in rapid end brilliant janorama, passing before his recollcotiou. Homer Were his parents there, with whose | mages were enlwiuod thw earliest, fondest ncmorie* f DM th?v not rise before him with their silver locks waving in the hind is he saw them watching his last departure! n*t sister?the earliest playmate of his childhood and the dearest and nearest friend >f his boyhood?-was not her bright but tear* ful face before him like a rose washed in iew t 'Home/' How swift the mind flew from the dusty, noisy, busy streets, back to the shadowing trees of the old homestead?to the dear t>rook bubbling through the green meadows ?to the lowing of the distant oowt in the ninny morning as they moved lazily along tn inssir naatnna Ati fKo K?U wittering of the martins in the box which tie had made himself for them by his chamber window?to all thuae images of a country home which he had relinquished in all ta health and in vigors tion, for the contract if the fevory city, the life struggle which can >nly be terminated by the grave.'Remember <ne to thoae at home v Did he think then of that blushing face, and that sweet voice, pouring fourth tnat gush of rich music, in the little gallery of the humble church f or of those moonlight walks by the diver streamlet when jrouug love first beat I was she included in this memory of blessedness f Young man! cherish these memories, if you would escape the contaminations around you. Let the feeling?'remember me to those *t home F come into your heart, when temp ted to join the drunken orgies of the midnight revel. Let you conduct bo so blameless and useful that you can never feel your ;heek tingle with the ahame that would prevent you from saying, 'remember me to those at home P?Hartford Courier. The Sagacity of a Shetland Pony. The newspapers tell us of a farmer in Canida who had a large number of ponies, and ?mong them a very handsome and playful )ne, which was a great favorite with a little lioy about ten years of age?the only child if the fanner. One day the boy was sent several miles on an errand for some money, : with a warning to return before night, as j lie country was infested with robbers. IIis riait was so delightful that he forgot the iommand of his parents, and did not mount lis pony to return till it was quite dark. His oad lay through a thick forest, and it was : lot long before a highwayman attacked and i Iraggod hiin from his horse which ran swifty homeward. Meanwhile his terrified parents sat trcinbing by the fireside, awaiting their boy's return. They were just preparing to go in >earch of him, when, when the heard the Mattering of hoofs, and soon after a loud kicking and pawing at the door. On opcung it, they saw the pony in a state of great excitement, with his saddle and bridlo dandling about liim. He ran from them a short listance, then frisked about, and seizing the hiker's coat in his teeth, pulled him along. Ilie agonized parents followed the animal, who ran ahead, constantly turning back, and i leighing to ur^e them onward. After trav- j illing many miles through the wood*, they same to the place where the boy had been -obbed, and found him tied to a tree stripped >f his money and clothes, and and half dead with fear and cold. We do not know that there is any thing ncredible in this story, nor is it a more won1 f..l : j -? - jciiui vviueuce 01 insuncuve power then has cften been given by brutee. Why Should any Man Swear f I cokckivk of no reason why he should, [>ut of ten reasons why he should not 1. It is mean. A man of high moral standing would almost as soon steal a sheep w swear. 2. It is vulgar ; altogethei too low for a lecent man. 3. It is cowardly; implying a fear either >f not being believed or obeyed. 4. It is ungentelmanly. A gentleman, according to Webster, is a genteel man?well 3red, refined. Such a one will no more twenr, than go into to the street to throw mud with a clod hopper. 5. It is indecent; offensive to delicacy, Mid extrem ely unfit for human ears. 0. It is foolish, "Want of decency is sant of sense."?Popk. 7. It Is abusive. To the mind which conceives the oath, to the tounge which utters it, and to the person to whom it is timed. 8. It is venomous; showing a man's heart o be a nest of vipers, and every time he wears one of them sticks out his head. 0. It in contemptible; forfeiting the reelect of all the wise and ^pood. 10. It is wicked; violating the divine aw, and provoking the displeasure of llim "ii" win not noia niin guuueas wno tatcs Liu name in vain. A Doctor Killkd by his own Msdicinb. ?Dr. George Duchanan, of Hillsdale, Ohio, tilled himself the other day by an over-dose >f morphine while suffering from an attack >f cholera morbus. It would seem that he vas a little inclined to give large doses of hat medicine, as he had a short time before >een arrested for mal-praotioe in oausing the leath of a child by K. Grace Green word has taken to swearing, ihe said of an old mill which bad gone to lecay, the water hating dried away in the itreain, "it wasn't worth a dam. "Gramma, whatll be the last card playng I" Tarn sure 1 don't know what dear P "Why when the angel Gabriel plays the ast trump." < ?* The Chiojjso secret order, called the ^Triad," bftaoeen so frequootly m^itiotoodof and the ftwt,' that no doubt many of our readers wfftttolgkid ta^know something of it* character. nom a recent essay published in a Parisjflpcr, "called "La Fattio," it seems that thovninosc name of this order is "the Society of the United Three or of the Triad, that fa to say, of heaven, earth and man." There is a . distinctive b-?dgo to he worn by the member#, when they date do so. -It is a blue silk scarf tipped with thread lace, but as they are always opposed to the Tartar government of (jlnna, it is rather a dangerous badge to wear. In some provinces, however, tncy aro sufficiently numerous to brave the govoniineui and _w?w it publicly. The Triad Ifkenll the Other secret safeties of China, constitutes a great j>olitical Conspiracy against the Tartar dyriastv, and they are now die active and vigorous propagators of the insurrection. * The number three is the mystic one of the Toad. Their supreme directors are three chiefs, and a Triad member displays the member wherever he can in his actions. Thus he takes his cup of tea with mroe invitations to oe stated, etc. lUu Triad dates from tlio usurpation of the foreign emperors, and the Tartar government is more severe towards its members than thoso of any other society, bocausc of the wider ramifications of the order, and their avowed and unconcealed hatred of the Tartar race.? They have their meetings in Calafbrnia, and' wherever else Chinese may be found. Their statutes are wriiien upon scrolls of linen t which at the least alarm of danger are sunk in the bottom of deep wells. Tho details of their organization and working are unknown but the ceremonies of initiation have been ascertained. l>KNTisTnY is now a scieneo; but thero are travelling operators "011 tho froiiters/* w ho set teeth 011 edge w ithout any scientific knowledge whatever. A Certain notable of this questionable kind, who Was known among the "masses " as a " tooth carpenter," was fortunate in receiving an order from im old ladyJor tho manufacture and placing of an "entire sot." Ho went to work with commendable zeal, and in duo time?much to the momentary satisfaction of his patient ?lightened up her smile with tho "counterfeit presentment" of pearly rows. In n few days, howover, matters changed, for 0110 tooth after another dropped from their golden encasements, and were eschewed from the mouth w ith almost the plentifulness of cherry stones. The dentist was sent for, and charged with unprofessional skill; lie stoutly denied any want of merit 111 his work, and ascribed the mishap to some constitutional peculiarity of his patient. After much speculation, he asked his victim if she had not, in the course of her long life takcu a great -1 I , 1* /-I * * m-ju ui cwoinei i u|H>n being answered in the atlirmative, he gravely told her that this calomel had so entirely entered into her system as to make it impossible even for fain teeth to stay in her hend ; and, with .an expression of injured iniioccuso and real professional sagacity, he bovid himself out of the presence of his astonished patron. A Kkmakkablk Colo men Man.?Samuel Williams, a colored man, lias one of tl?c finest farms in Washington cvuuty, Md. Tins lluggartown Herald states that, at the ng*? of 33 years, lie was a slave in Stafford couur tv, Va., but subsequently purchased Ids freedom from his own earnings, lie then bom>l himself two yearn of servitude until liocottM purchase his wife and children, which he accomplished when he was 40 years of age.? Now lie own# a farm worth ! 0,000, and! personal property amounting to several thousand more, all earned by his owu labor. He is now 73 years of age. Tub editor of the Louisville Democrat says that if the ladies knew tlgit wearing light colored gaiters add at least one-fifth to the ajpparent diameter of the foot, wo aro sureiney would discard the ugly things, and put their pretty feet back again into the dainty black and brown gaiters, which Alone are proper for the street. The prettiest gaiter or shoe of any kind is black. Unless a woman has a remarkably neat foot and ankle, and desires to show it by light colors, let her cling to the black. | Return ov the Mormons;?A western paj?er savs that a few days since a train composed of' nine wagons and fifty persons crossed the Missouri oatwurdly in search of a new home. They had left Salt Lake City on account of the oppression and immorality of their church. Poetical Modesty.?Jolid O. Saxc, in corresponding with his own paper, noticing [ the celebration, at Yale, says: "Of the poem before the Phi Betta Kappa I say nothing, as the author is the husband of my wife, and is not entitled to an opinion of his own vermi.** | A Woman's Maonimitt.?A miller's dogbroke his chain ; the miller ordered the maid servant to tie hiifr up again ; she was attack-, ed and bitten by the dog. On hearing lien I cries the miller and his people ran to her as; siatanco, "Keep off T iaid she, shutting the I yard door ; Mtho dog is mad ; I am already | bitten, and must chain hitn up alone." Not. withstand:her hi* Kitim? L:? , -m ?? j,, ?o uiva uwv rev MINI So, but chained him up, and then retirred to er chamber and with the noblest resignation prepared herself to die. Symptoms of hydro- , phobia soon broke out, and she died in a few days. The dog waa killed without doing any fhrther mischief. Pirok, a French author, having been taken up by the watchman of the night in PurI is, was earned on the following morning before the lieutenant of police, who haughtily interrogated him oonceruiug his business or profession. ? "Oh ! oh ! a poet are you 'Wid the magistrate, *1 havo a brother wbopiia jkxjL1 Then ws are evon," s?itl I'irou, "foial have a brother whoAft fool."