J Wr?" i I'aggegeaw^M'iiui JMIIII i Autumn la at Hand. The fcummer solstice has passed; The hot and suffocating atmosphere, which seemed to open every pore of tne body, and send from it, in copious streams, such aqueous exhalations, threatening to reduce the corpus to a state o? fluidity, has hapnilv vanished awayl Wo breathe the revivifying air of the last of September with pleasure. We have bid*adieu to summer with a hearty good will?and why should we not! "What has the done to endear herself to our remembrance t She has visited us with severe and scorchiDg weather?the like whereof the "oldest inhabitants'^ has no knowledge; she has decimated the cities and villages of our country with a fearful scourge, not oven savage from its ruthless grasp, the quiet and unobtrusive farmer, who, in the siiuDlicitv of his habits and tlie absence of excitement, does not look for so terrible a visitor ; she has taken the young and the old, the vigorous and the feeble, the poor and the rich, and prostrating them before the power of the great avenger, has laid them where the peer is on a level with the peasant. The scourge would come sometimes like a thunderbolt, striking in a hitherto peaceful village, and with the power of an avenger scattered the inhabitants to the four winds of heaven. Terrible indeed has been the devastation ; and although wo have had no ties of love or affection sundered by the grim monster, yet we ere not insensible to the fact that hundreds have been called u]>on to part with all they hold dear on earth. Families have been broken up?sometimes not one has been left to mourn the loss of the other members. Such has been some of the features which have marked the history of the past summer, and seem ?"like the footsteps of the 'vengeful god." Other complaints we have ngaintt thee, O summer 1 While spreading sickness and death throughout the land, thou hast withheld the needed rain; and hence the harvests have been blighted, the springs have been .1 . i J' i i i i i. i.. -..jr. I urteu, una man ?uu maui* u> auuer. Autuin hat its attractions. The city is lively and buoyant. The tide of travel, which all summer has been setting' countryward, now moves iu the opposite direction; and the brunette countenances of young ladies, who have romped over the rural hills, or danced a glowing vermeil tint on their cheeks in the saloons of Newport and Saratoga, have returned to us us healthy, if not as happy, as when they left; for if they have not secured that wonderful prize, a husband, it is presumed they come hack in anything hut a good humor. The woods being to lose their vernal tint?not by -the touch of frosts but by the w ithering hand of the drought. The farmers have housed their wheat, oats and hay, and begin to gather lite corn. Soon the russet crown will be the distinctive feature of country life,and flowers of summer and fruits of autumn will both succumb to the advent of winter,who will throw his cold ami icv mantle over every spot that summer h:ts performed with her roses,or autumn made pleasant with her products.? Whole World. Who are Your Aristocrats. Twenty years ago, this one made candles, that one sold cheese and butter, another butchered, a fourth carried on distillery another was a contractor 011 canals, others were merchants and mechanics. They are acquainted with both ends of society, as their children will be after them, though it will not do to say out loud ! For often you shall Jind J that these toiling worms hatch butterflies, and ttyey live about a year. Death brings a J division of property, and bring new rinau- ' ciers ; the old gent is discharged, the young I' gent takes his revenues and begins to travel | * ?towards poverty, which he reaches before ' death, or his children do4 if he does not. So ( that, in fact though there is a sort of inonied ' race, it is not hereditary, it is accessible to all; three good seasons of cotton will send a generation of men up?a score of years will 1 bring them down, and send their children to labor, lhe father grubs and grow rich? his children strut and use the money. Their children in turn inherit the pride, and go to shiftless poverty ; next their children, reinvigoratod by fresh plebeian blood, and by the smell of the clod, come up again. i Thus society, like a tree, its sap from the [ earth, changes into leaves and blossoms, spread thein abroad in great glory, sheds oft i to fall back to the earth, again to mingle ' with the soil, and at length re-appears in new dress and fresh garniture. Process of Makino Shot.?The piglead c is carried to the top of the tower by windlass ^ and chain, and worked by steam ; it is then put ip a furnace, kept constantly burning t night and day, and attended by two sets of j men?one for the tire and two to pour the malted lead into tin strainers. After passing the strainers it falls a distance of 150 feet, ' The passage through the air giving the shot their shape or form. They fall into a large tub or basin of water ; here a man is engaged i | in dipping them out with a ladle and throwing them on an inclined plane, down which >' they run to a drum heated by steam and , worked by machinery, so as to dry the shot; when dry they are passed into a revolving | drum; which stops by action of machinery every ftve minutes for polishing them; from this drum they are thrown into a hoppe: ,and from J this they p;iss over a series of inclined planes, where the defective shot are carried off, and ' then through seives into drawers, where they ' are assorted by the action of machinery on seives; then into the large boxes,from which ' they are taken and put into sock*, weighed, and are ready for use. No Docnrr of It.?The editor of the Pittsburg Dispatch, in speaking of thor marriage k of Kev. Antoinette Brown, say* Antoinette is married. Much happiness do we wirh the ^k young n< >vitiates !a md Irjmony, but we will ^vater a baby's that the t). I), will wear the preaches ana the M. D. rock the cradle. * \Lf wiie men pUy the fool, they do it%th a vengeance. !' I1 Hill, 1% 1,1 IIU, ' IggBCg?ggr Support your own Mechanics. The folio win Dffensible remarks, which we find in some or our, exchanges, wo transfer to our columns, and would earnestly- commend them to out readers in this city, and the State at large: There is no truth more undeniable than that it is the bounden' duty of every community to support its meohanics. They are . onpikn 1 e 1 I n nvnuj 1H1U muiopciiaiuro UHSB Ul IHCU, BIIU we find no town or village flourishing without their aid. Indeed their presence or absence is always a true index of the condition of a place?whether it is advanciug in weaitii and importance, or sinking into decay. Whenever we pass through a village and hear the frequent 'souud of the carpenter's hammer, tlie clink of tho black smith's anvil?that villago, we say to ourselves, is flourishing. It cannot be otherwiso,for the producers are activity employed, and outnumber tho consummere. Whenever and wherever this is the case^the people are growing wealthy, and at the same time training up the rising generation to habits of industry and morality. Where, if a city or village pursue the opposite of this course? neglects its mechanics and supports those of some foreign town?those who can will be compelled by the force of circumstances to remain, will became idlo and profligate? cense to produce and be consumers?in a few years they become beggars, and their children ignorant and vicious. If there is any truth in the assertion, that we ought as a nation to give the preference to domestic manufactures, the fact is equally true with regard to tho community ; both are sustained by the same arguments. Ifa merchant w ould have around him substantial customers, let him by every means in his powers, let him by every means iu his power support and foster tho mechanics of his village, and as they become more wealthy their custom will increase, especially in those articles on which ho makes the greatest profits, for it is undeniable, that as men become more wealthy, they also become more luxurious, and no merchant will deny that articles of luxury always afford the greatest profits. The habit of importing large, quantities of cihcap und half made articles of competition with our villago mechanics, is short sighted and wrong, both as regards the mechanic and consumer ; and if t Itn ii.Aw.tinr,t ,..,,.,1.1 1.^.1- .1 W.v IIIVIVIIUUV UW.IIU iWlk IUUUCI llltu tllU operation of things, he would find that he crossed the path of his own interest by doing so. Let the merchant bring the case to his own door, and he perhaps may better understand it; suppose that every individual who possesses the means, ar.d who uses in his fatniy four or five hundred dollars' worth of goods per anuuin, should, instead of buying of him at retail, go to some city wholesale J establishment and purchase his year's supply?would he not in bitterness condemn ] swell an illiberal course, and would he not say to him with truth that ho whs warring 1 against his own interest, by destroying the business of his town and giving it to anotb- ; er; and that his littleness would react upon him in double fold by the decrease of his property and business ! So, in the case above instanced, could the mechanic say the same to the merchant. We say, then, let all classes support each other, and by mutual exchanges keep that wealth at home, which, if necessarily expended abroad, tends to destroy the business of your neighbor, and which in turn destroys your own. Discovery of the North-West Passage. Bv the last news from Europe, we learn that Captain R. McClure, of the Phicnir,? which was sent out in search of Sir John ( Franklin, and who last year had made his way so far through the ice, when he was fro- i *cii in, as to have reached a point where he < communicated with vessels from the. other fide, has, after being locked up all winter, found his way out and returned home. He , will no doubt be highly rewarded for the feat which he has performed, but, after all, what , benefit will the North-west Passage he to navigation after it lias been discovered ?? No benefit whatever. And is this all that lias been obtained by the desperate efforts made to accomplish such a discovery, and he lives and treasure squandered in the atempts ? It is believed by some that there 1 s an open polar sea?a great ocean basin? I ii uie norm role; but suppose there is, it 1 lever can be of any benefit to commerce ; it ] s so wedged in with fields of ice that it has < iot been possible to enter it yet, and if it wciv j 'utered, the difficulty would be to get out a- ( piin. If there is an open polar basin, it vould afford evidence of the correctness of deut. Maury's theory, of the winds from the ^ quator meeting and turning round at the j tolcs. ^ Triumph ok Learning.?Mind constitutes ( he, majesty of man?virtue his true noblity. ( The tide of improvement which is now tiowng through the land like another Niagara s destined to roll on down to the latest pos- ( erity. And it will bear then, on its bosom, 1 mr virtues or vices, our glory or our shame, >r whatever else we may transmit as an inheritance. It then, iu a great measure, de- f pends upon the present, whether tho moth ^ >f immorality, ignorance, and luxury, shall < support her against the whirlwind of war, ambition, corruption, and tho remorseless tooth of time. Give your children fortune without education and at least one-half the 1 number will go down to the tomb of obliv- 1 ion. perhaps to ruin. Give them educatiou and they will be a fortune to themselves and country, it is an inheritance worth more than gold, for it buys true honor; they can never spend nor loose it and through life it proves a friend, in dent(i u consolation. asd TnB Quaker.?John Bunyan, while in Bedford jail, was called upon by a Quaker desirous of making a convert of hiin. "Friend John, I have come to the# with a message from the Lord, and after having searched for thee in all the prisons in J ring!ami, I am glad that I have found thee out at last." "If the Lord had sdnt you," returned Bunyan, "you need not bare taken so much pains to fyrd me out, for th* Lord knows I have been here twelve jpars. 'flk * || SHk-5 .. ^in ?* - - - ^p*r T egssBBasBiMMaMaaas Halhuiaatlon of GrettMio. Spinkiao, who had patnted the ball of the Angels, thought he was haunted bv the #. liA.l 3 sP i i i i. ? 1 T* mgiuiui aeras. *qkq 00 aepiciea. xi? was rendered 00 miserable by his hallucination, that he destroyed himself. One of our own artists, who wm much enraged in carricaturcs, became haunted by the distorted faces he drew, and the deep melancholy and the terror which accompanied those apparitions, caused him to commit siricide. Muller, who executed the copper plate of the Sixtine Madonna, had more lovely visions. Towards i'u? ciwmj of u)s life, the Virgin appeared to him for the affection he had shown towards her, invited him to follow her to heaven. To achieve this, the artist starved himself to death. Beethoven, who became completely deaf in the decline of life often heard bis sublime compositions performed distinctly. It ft related of Ben Johnson, that he spent the whole of one night in regarding his great toe.-around which he saw Tartars, Turks, Romans, and Catholics, climbing up, and struggling and fighting. Goethe, when out riding one day, was surprised to see an exact image of himself on horseback, dressed in a light-colored coat riding towards him.? Had cliff's fiends, Ghosts, and Spirits. Diffusiveness of Religion.?In a sermon we lately heard on the text. "Out of Zion shall go forth tho law," the preacher used the following illustration of tho diffusiveness of religion. We give the substance on[y . * . The river Baradi, whose waters flow down from Anti-Libanus, insted of passing on by Damascus in a broad current to the the ocean, enters tho city, and dividing itself into a multitude of rivulets and rills passes nlong by the very doors of the inhabitants, furnishing them with a supply of pure water for domestic pnrjHwcs while it also runs through the gardens to enrich and fertilize the soil, and furnishes a profusion of streams and fountains, the luiury of which, in that hot and arid climate, we can imperfectly appreciate. So with the wtacrs of salvation. They do not pursue their way directly to the ocean of eternity ; but they stay In this humid and desolate world, and flow up to the very doors and hearts of the inhabitants of Christian lands blessing and sanctifying all the social nud civil relations of life, ami refreshing their souls with their living streams. When you should take your IIat.? Young man, a word. We want to tell you when you should take your hat and be off. And mind what we oiler. When you are asked "to take a drink." When you find out that you are courting an extravagant and slovenly girl. When you find yourself in doubtful company , ' When you discover that your expenses run ahead of your income. When you are abusing the confidence of your friends. When you think that you are. a great deal wiser than others and more experienced people than yourself. When you feel like getting trusted for a suit of clothes, because you haven't the money to pay for them. When you don't perform your duty, your whole duty, and nothing hut your duty. IIow are you Count V said a noted wag to a spruce-looking specimen of the genus snob. 'Sir!' exclaimed the indignant swell, 'who are you; and wiiy call me count V 'Why I saw you counting ovstera in Krw YYn-k- Tn^r week, and I supposed you were of roynl blood,' said the wag. Snob vamosed. Dtosdy says, 'the re&sen why tlie ladies wear eueh small bonnets is a just idea that ladies have of making nature and arts correspond; having nothing inside of the heads, they have put as near nothing as possible outside.? What a vile perpetration ! A gentLeman playing whist with an intimate friend, who seemed as far as liands were concerned, to hold the Maliommcdan doctrine of ablution in supreme contempt, said to him with a jountenance more in sorrow than in inger. 'My good fellow, if dirt were rumps, what a hand you would have !' A bkigiit-eyed curley-liaircd hoy, hree years old, was, on his good l>ehavor, promised a child's drum to-mor ow. Early the next morning he tumid to his mother aud said ; 'Ma, is tolay to-morrow V Tiie parentage of a lie is the most litficult of all to trace. It is, a clever ie that knows its own father! Tiie N. Y. Dutchman pays that it is 10 dry up in Iowa, that the people have to sprinkle the rivers to keep the boats from kicking up a dust. Why does an aching tooth impose iilencc on the sufferer? Because it makes him hold his jaw. In lieu of attaching 'Esq.* to mcn^s names now, the letters 'S. IV are subtuted, signifying 'Some Punpkin*.' A man who advertises for a competent person to undertake tho sale of a new medicine, adds that it Will be fouud profitable to the undertaker P A oi.BAjft conscience is sometimes sold for money, but never bought with It. "I it at e to hear people talk behind one's hark St the robber said when the cttDsUoW^allcd "Stop theif ?M / HTOTOBaglPglMMro. The following anecdote is told by the Chicago Journal of Governor Reynolds, whom they call the "Old Ranger" in Illinois, when for the first time in his life he visited the seaboard as a representative to Congress from the oacK seiuemenrs. Upon reaching Baltimore, the Governor rose early in the morning and Said a visit to the shipping in the ockSj when the tide was full, and agains atnoon, when it was ebb?and not satisfied with the sudden change that had taken place, again in the evening, when the tide was in. Heretofore he had resolved to keep everything to himself, and go in pursuit of\knowledge uncler-difficulties, on his own hook?-but now his astonishment broke over its bounds aud as he returned to the hotel the old Ranger remarked that 'this was the curious-test country he ever seed in his life?two freshet* in one day?an nary drop of rain. ' M. Df. Balzac was lying awake in bed when ho saw a man enter his room cautiously" aud attempt to pick the lock of his writing desk. The rouge was not a little disconcerted at hearing a loud laugh from the occupant of the apartracnt, whoui he supposed asleep.? 'Why do you laugh ?' asked the thief. 'I am laughing, my good fellow,' said M. De Balzac, 'to think what pains you arc taking, and what a risk you run, in hope of finding money by night in a desk where the lawful owner can never fiind any by day.' The theif 'evacuated Flanders, at once. A Chance for Hostlers.?A gentleman living at Gowanus, L.I., advertises in the New Jersey Standard, for an holster. "He wishes to employ at his place, Gowanus, Long Island, a first rate JIUl?.L.h,K, wiio Mas good experience in managing RUNAWAY iIOi^SES. No one need apply who lias ever been in the State Prison, or a member of the New Jersey Legislature." A Western editor complaining that he couldn't sleep one night, summed up the causes. A wailing babe of seventeen months?dog howling under the window?a cat in the alley?a colored serenade at the shanty over the way? a toothache, and a pig trying to get in at the backdoor. Poor fellow! A vATtMTvii's dsinrrhtpr wai visito.d bv a young rustic, who finding it dillicult to keep up the conversation asked the girl, utter an embarrassing silence had prevailed for some time, 'if she know of anybody that wanted to buy a shirt?' ?\No, 1 don't she replied ; 'have you 0,0191 (ou ...of!/, ir tu nrn IIU9 Dtiiu i uonv;^ A only axed just to make talk.' A young man meeting an acquaintance Haid, 'I thought you were dead.' 'But,'said the other, 'you see me alive.' 'I don't know how that may be,' replied he; 'you arc a notorious liar, and my informant was a person of credit. spas vmawwast Book and Job Printing ^ESTABltSHMEKT/?> HAVING A FINE SELECTION OP WE ARE PREPARED TO DO WORK CIRCULARS, CATALOGUES, HAND-BILLS, WAY-1 BILLS, BALL TICKETS, PROGRAMMES, &C.' PRINTED WITH DESPATCH. China. Satin Enamel, Satin Surface and Plain and Colored Cards, Upon the Most Jiqbotybie Jclrhhi.! (BHWa WS A. ?/MM?*, iown ana unmet uovernment Intendant.?l^r. A. B. Crook. Wardma.?I). ft Wrrtriki/i, J. W. 9rokw,E?q., II. K. WirxuM*, John MoPbkmon. Clerk of the Council.?JonN W. Stokes. Eeq. Bhrriff.?W. A. McDaniki., Esq. * Clerk of the Court.?David ITokr, Esq. Court of Ordinary.?L. M. McBek, Esq. ConuniMtonrr in Equity.?Maj. R. A. Townk* WATCHES, JEWELRY, &C. JOHN J. BENEDICT Gfi. WOIIJJJ respectfully inform hi* /c VkWoU* friends that he hna returned '( ~t ^Sfroni Sew York, bringing with him A 8T0CK OF JEWELRY, J which In; is offering for sale CIIKAI', at the store of Charles Merriek. It comprises WATCHES* BRACELETS* GOLD PENCILS, RINGS, He neks an examination of the name and assures them that they will be found of the boat material. August 2A. IS tf 1 i 1 i i ' ' T DeBow's Review. ADAPTED priority to the ftonthern end Western States of the Union. Including statistics of Foreign nnd Domestic Industry and Enterprise. Published Monthly in New Orleans, at $6 per annum in advance. A few complete sets of the work, thirty volumes bound handsomely (600 to WO paces.) we for sale at the office, New Orleans^ deliverable in any of the large cities or town*. Publication oftiee, Merchsnts'Jixchange, (over post-ofle?,) New-Orleans. Postage two erftts per numb*- if pre-paid quhrferly. f*>{ ../ PHILADELPHIA AiyVERTISElJfel^ DOCTOR YOURSELF. The Pocket JEsculapine; OH, EVERY ONE RI8 OWN PHYSICIAN. ?* qnUE FIFTIETH EDITION, with One If X Hundred Engraving*, showing DisJVr eases and Malformations of the Human ill System in every shape and forui. To which is added a Treatise on the Diseases of Females, being of iho highest* importance to married people, or those contemplating ruarriagc. By WtUUM Yottno, M. D. Let no father he ashamed to present a copy of the j&SCULAPIUS to his child. It may "save him from an early grave. Let no young man or woman enter iuto toe secret obligations of marj riage without reading the POCKF'PuESCULAPlllS. Let no one suffering from a hacknied cough. Pain in the side, restless nights, nervous feelings, and the whole train of Dyspeptic sensations, and given up their physician, be another moment without consulting the jESCULAPIUSj Have those married, or those about to ho married any impediment, read this truly useful book, as it has dcen the meanB of saving thousands of unfortunate creatures from the very jaws of death. tSTAny person sending Twenty-Five Cent* enclosed in a letter, wfll receive one copy of this work by mail, or five copies sont for one Dollur. Address, (jiost-paid) . Dr. WM. YOUNG, 152 Spruce-street, Philadelphia. June 15, 1854. ? iy BOSTON ADVERTISEMENT. 0140,000 worth of B00SG. ti1b oreatf.6t ever offered to the world 1 THE subscribers having made arrangements with publishers in Boston, NewYork, and Philadelphia, havo commenced their Great BOOK SALE! which will be continued until the stock agreed upon has been exhausted.' This stock of books when sold, will leave .. .. ,.e .i a iicv j'U'ut, a |n/i null lit ?HKll lilt; proprietors will distribute, by directors who shall be chosen by Shareholders, but said.Directors shall have no pecuniary iuterest in the matter, (save and except being paid for their time and sea vices in distribution.) $15,000 will be invested in a farm, in the town of Groton, Mass. Said farm is situated withii^one mile and a half of the Centre Depot; it comprises upwards of one hundred and twenty acres of land, fifty-five of which are under tho highest state of cultivation, an orchard and beautiful garden.? There is a magnificent mansion, in complete repair, together with barns, carriage houses and other buildings attached, $15,000 A Faim in Westboro',known as the "Harrington Farm," consisting of one hundred acres of Land, twelve of w hich are woodlaud. Tho balance is well divided into mowing, pasturing and tillage?plenty of good fruit and a large strawberry bed and cranberry meadow. Buildings in good repair. The farm-house is one of the best on the "road, and is large and convenient. The w hole establishment is one of the best jjums in which Worcester Couuty is so faMfeus. Two modern built houses in Cambridge, a few rods from the Collcfe. tlm first valued at 5,000 The second at 4,500 One modern built, three story brick house, in complete repair, containing 10 rooms, in Oneida street, Huston, 6,000 One hundred gold eagles, 1,000 Two Land Lots in Melrose : ona contains 28,000 feet and upwards, 500 One do. 13,000 foetf^id upwards, 300 Five Piano Fortes oTCliickering'smako vgorth $450 each, distributed seperately, 2,250 Twenty-five ladies' gold watches, invoiced at $55 each, 1,375 One thousand gold pencils, $4 each, 4,000 Five hundred engravings, Washington crossing the Delaware, $4 each, 2,000 One thousand engravings?'UncleTora' and 'Little Eva,' $1 each, 1,000 Ninety Thousand and Twenty-Five Engravings of Different Kinds. The distribution of the profits accruing (rom the sale of the hereafter mentioned books will be arranged thus: There will Ikj one .receipt holder chosen by the proprietors from each of the cities mentioned, viz : Salem, Providence, New Dedford, Bangor, New Haven, Concord, Montpelier, Worcester, Lowell, Saco, Fall River, and Manchester, N. H. The receipt holders shall chbose a committee of five persons to take charge of all the property after tire sale, hut no one appointed shall have any interest in the sale of said books or own a ticket, or hold one of the receipts connected with the book sale. BY THE PAYMENT OF ONE DOLLAR, n person can receive either of the following I named books, also a receipt which will constitute hirn a shareholder in the profits, viz : Beautiful Pocket Bible, bound in morocco, and gilt-edged?Lives of Washington, Lafayette, Bonaparte, Penn, Franklin, Jackson, Marion, Daniel Webster, Ilenry Clay, Gen. Taylor, Yankee Tea Party, Stories of the Revolution, Old Hell of Independence, King Arthur, (by Sir Edward Bulwer Lytton,)Uncle Tom's Cabin, American Farmer in Eng land, and other works of Putnam's Library. MECHANIC'S OWN BOOK, Persons wishing to purchase two or more receipts can be supplied with any standard work at the proportionate ratio of prices.? To Clubs and Societies who purchase twenty or more books together, ten per cent discount will be made. l>ue notice will be given by such newspapers as advertise for us when the sale is completed. Ail communications or orders sent by Express (or otherwise) must be directed to our Office, No. 81 Exchange st., N. W. WETHEIt BEE * Co. AGENTS WANTED for every city and town in the United States and Canada*. A reasonable percentage will be allowed. All commnnicatiom (post-paid) will receive prompt attention. j# N. W. WETHERBEg A CO. 81 Btfl|iege Street * Boston, TflM. m . a * ^ t. nil i l IwfiailMt?1 . V GLENN BI'RING'8 1 pattA&i'xvsYiYvii. \ Rt Key. T. P. DAY* D, H, ^-officio Visitor. U?Y. T. 8. ARTHUB, ) ~ ,J.A " J. D. moCoixouoh, \ Prop**** 44 Gborg* Benton, Rector, and Instructor In . w.. Menial sou Chrmian Science, jsodcrn iamnS and History. r *> Mas. Benton, Matron. ? , Instructor in Mathematics, Nat- * urol Sciences, and Ancient Literature Prof. G. P. JXVink, (late of Limestone Springs,) 1 , Instructor in the thenrv ?-*> ' *?? - ?- iiiuvwvv ul uhflc. Miss C. M. Rod, Instructress in English. *Sosnow6Ri, Instructress in Drawing,,, Painting, and Assistant in French. Miss Sophia Warlky, Instructress in English Branches, and Assistant in Mathematics. ? Mum Eliza Pratt, Assistant in Muaie and English. *? - > N. B. The corps ia not yet complete. , . THE above Institution located at Glenn Springs, in Spartanburgh District, H. C., was openeu for the reception of pupils on the first of February last In converting this establishment into a school for young ladies, the buildings have . been thoroughly repaired and fitted up; and in furnishing them anew no pains have been spared to make it in every respect, such as home parent* wonW desire for tneir daughters. Particular attention hns vbecn bestowed upon the musical instruments, and with a large and efficient corps of teachers, and a thorough course of study, it anord* every advantage to be enjoyed in any similar Institution. Applicants arc admitted of any age, orver seven years, and placed in such class as they may be prepared to join. lue scholastic year will consist of one session, divided into two terms of five months each, begining on the first of February and July. Vacation December and January. Baths.?For Tuition and Board, including wash ing, luei, ngnt#, dc. (Sc., $ 126 per term, and there will be no exfrn charge, except for Music, f 30 nerterm, and for Hooks, Hheet Music, Drawing Materials Ac., actually used. For further information aeo "Prospectus," which may he had by applying to the ltector, or either of the Proprietors. may 1, 1H66. ' 1 . 4 ? i 1 1 The Southern Euterprlae. OUR MOTTO?"EQUAL RIGHTS TO ALL." fTTIE Subscriber will publish on the 19th of 1 May, the first number of a "New Paper," with the above name, issued weekly, to contain twenty-souk cou'mns, printed on new and beautiful Tvrr, and neat white puper, Manufactured expressly for it. It is the design and intention of its manager to make it an acceptable "FAMILY NKWSPAl'R," free from everything having a vicious or immoral appearance?excluding from ita columns the odiblo trash which too often finds a medium in many newspapers of the present day. Whilst ho will endeavor to prove it a welcome visitor to the domestic circle?making its members more happv and contented, the various classes of WORKING-MEN AND MECHANICS will find in it something to instruct, refine and elevate them in their different vocations. The Intest improvement in Agriculture, Patents of recent lm- . volition and Discovery, us well as everything concerning or nffceting the great Imliistral Pursuits n,,d Interests of our State and country will be givon. Foreign and Domestic new s, will be published up to the hour of going to press. The great cud and aiin of its Proprietor will he to make it just what its name implies?advocating whatever inuv he right respecting our common country ami hor institutions. We shall lm National upon subjects affecting the whole country, hot South crn in feeling and sentiment w hen they involve Yhe rights and interests of the sevtiou to which we are, ?>y i?irtn, itlAtlied. Report* of the Cotton nnd Provision Markets, Arrival* at Hotels, Consignees at the Rail-road, c obtained to warrunt the undertaking. It will be printed upon substantial paper of Imperial size, and will contain 24 columns of matter. It will be denominated the 'South Carolina Temperance Standard," and will ba published every two weeks, at the price of One Dollar per annum. As soon as fifteen hundred subscribers arc obtained, we will publish it weekly at the same price. Our sole object is to advocate the cause of Temperance ; nnd particularly the Legislative Prohibition of the Tratho in Intoxicating Drink*; and to prepare the masses of the people of our Htate, for tne enactment of such a Law, by convincing them of it* expediency and necessity. Wu will endeavor to make it a welcome vUitor in every family. Nothing will be admitted into ita columns ol a worthless and immoral tendency. A strict neutrality will he maintained on all suhjeeta of a political and religious sectarian character. No subscription will be received for lee* than or. year, and in every ea*e the order must be accompanied by the money. We hone all persons feeling an interest in th? success of this enterprise, will exOrtthemselve* in getting subscriptions, and as soon thereafter inconvenient send us their list*. Post masters are requested to act as Agent*. All communications intended for the paper must be poet paid, and addressed to the "South. Carolina Temperance Standard," Lexington C. H., 8. C ' 8. E. CAUOITMAN, ) J. R ItRltARf Ifc? is ?r wmuuiw ? I HUTKOrtOM, a. CORJ.EY, i LOOK OUT FOR THEMr ~ JOHN MA1TA0Y, hailing from Montreal, Canada, and JAMES M. DANIEL, from ( heater, S, a. came to fireenvilla in company, and after remaining for about a month, made their departure, each without paying hie bill. Hie former ia a mono euttcr, and the latter represent* himself as beinq a well-digger. Mahagy la about 9ft yagra old, weighs about 17ft or 180 pounds. blue ere*, dark hair, and is totnewbat lam?s from baring received n drunken fall When last heard of wan making forTunml Hill. MeDaoiel la a tall, alen- < der follow, weigh* about 1B0 pound*, and of a dark swarthy completion, having recently had the ehilla and feVer. 1 iwakothia public, that other hotel-keepera may not ho imposed upon by them and similar characters, and would want them to be npou the look out for these fellows, aad "pass thsm arouad."