The independent press. (Abbeville C.H., S.C.) 1853-1860, May 18, 1855, Image 2

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ligion nn<l tlio strongest guaranties of constitutional freedom, we should shake this very continent from sea to sen, with the convulsivo throes of one general popular earthquake, until every vestige of opposition to our republicanism should be trampled into dust. Old party hucksters, to whom the only beauties of the government arc visible in the spoils, should be tumbled overboard, and brave men substituted, good and true. A pure party should ho formed, ^ having for its object the dissemination of the principles of a pure Americanism, and an eternal hostility to every sect, party or influence, in any way opposing it. Our grainiest boast as freemen is in the excellencies of our form of government, and it belongs exclusively to the American people to make unmistakeahly manifest its vast superiority over the other governments of thhearth. Georgia. The Ai&en and Corn Survey of the Savannah Valley Railroad. The survey of this route, we perceive, has been commenced ; and .1 considerable portion of it has been completed. We are informed, that so far as the survey has been completed, the most sanguine expectations of its friends hnv<? bn?n innro ?' ? From Aikcti to Edgefield there will not be a single culvert required?and the excavations and embankments will bo but slight. Beyond Edgefield village, in the direction of Dorn's,?so far as the survey has advanced, a distance of ten miles,?tlio grade will be easy, and no serious obstacles are found to exist. It is now understood that in the cuurse of two or three weeks, the able and indefatigable Engineer, Major Arms, will be able to submit a full report to the President and Directors of the Savannah Valley Railroad, on the cost, practicability, <fcc., &c., of this road, from Dorn's to Aiken. We see from the Edgefield Advertiser that there is considerable enthusiasm felt by the citizens of Edgefield in behalf v/1 *.1110 CUIIC) , illii.i nv UUI1UI IlOl UUl inai tliey are prepared to coine forward, with a hearty will, 111 furnishing substantial aid toward tlie construction of this connection with tbe Savannah Valley Road. The route surveyed will pass within a short distance of the village of Edgefield, and will diverge but little from a direct line from Aiken to Dorn's. The distance will be about forty miles from Aiken to Dorn's. It is supposed that the cost of the whole road will be about $600,000. Two hundred thousand dollars of this sum will be raised in Edgefield. Has Charleston any interest in this Road 1 We think she has. In the first place, by the building of this connection with the Savannah Vallev lionil ,?;n i.?? - j v.mi looivi* " 111 UclVtS i% direct connection with the Rabun Gap Road, at Anderson. We say direct, because it will only boa divergence of about ten miles from an air line between Aiken to Anderson. It is now generally conceded that an air line route from Aiken to Anderson is impracticable?1st, because it will then be too near to the Columbia and Greenville Road for good neighborship, and hence can have no support along the line already occupied by another road ; 2d because the air lino route would be much more costly than a slight divergence, as proposed by the route now under consideration. In addition to these considerations against an air lino from Aiken to Anderson, and in favor of a slightly diverging line to the West, there arc other considerations not less potent. Charleston wants a direct communication with the Rabun Gap Road. But she wants more. She wants as clicap a road as possible, as profitable a road as possible, and one that will pick up by the way as much new custom as possible. Will the Aiken and Dorn and Savannah Road answer all these purposes for Charleston ? Wo think it will. This connection with tho Rabun Gap can bo had at a cost to all the different interests concentrated in Charleston of about $400,000. Could these different interests expect so great a boon at a less cost ? Would the great city of Charleston itself, unaided by oiner.interests clustered around her, feel unwilling to render so small an aid, in the accomplishment of so desirable and important an end? The small interior city of Augusta was willing to have given even more than this sum to the Savannah Valley Road if this company had been willing to have coasulted her peculiar interests in the location of the Savannah Valley Road. It cannot surely be that Charleston, in her en# terprise, would suffer herself to be outstripped by her country neighbor, Augusta. We undertake to say that Charleston can get no such connection as is now proposed to be given to her, with the Rabun Gap Road, at as little cost as that now asked of her. As w me prontRDle character of this road, we mean tue Savannah Valley Road, with its branches to Charleston, by the way of Aiken, and to Hamburg and Augusta, directly down the valley of the Savannah river, it does seem to us thut no proof can be required to make it manifest The Rabun Gap completed, there is no qustion but that this . - road will be the great thoroughfare of travel ahd transportation, not only for the prodace destined for Charleston, but for that intended for Hamburg, Augusta and SavannahIt must be a good paying road. . If i Charleston wants to open to herself a new field, here Again she will be secured by this \ . road. _ The Savannah Valley country has al' ways belonged to Augusta, by reason of the T . ' ' Savannah river navigation, and the vicinage of . Augusta to this portion of Carolina. Thin valW 1? * * ?ry u? (icueuaiea iron! Jdaiubtirg, almost to the mountains, by the 8aValley Road. Hie connection of ib? Aiken r and Dora Branch will bring all of the richest portion-of this valley into ri?k nothing in saying, that of all the upper portion ofcBouth Carolina this is among the, most wealthy sad h%hly#jltivated of them all; and the new field ' thus opened to Charles*oo ^ill b? worth sjl ?ho i# called on that U t * i g* ? ;# deeply interested in tlio Savannah Valley ltoad, as it is proposed to be connected with the South Carolina Koad at Aiken. The only remaining question to be propounded is one which Charleston almxt can answer : Will Charleston do her duty in this matter, and thus secure herself this rich boon at a moderate cost? We hope, for the sake of 1 the enlarged interests of the Savannah Valley i Railroad, that there is no doubt in this mat! tor. 13ut for the sake of our cherished city, Charleston, we would even make our hopes stronger. Hecause if sho should fail to have the sagacity to perceive her interests in this matter; or, if seeing it, she should lack the enterprise to improve the opportunity, wo confess that we should have doubts of her ' future career in attaining the position, in fact, I of till' Olionn C.itv of Jim - ? _.v I Progress. i tue=independen^7mss i IS rt.'ULIBIIEU K V Ell Y SATURDAY MORNING. O. O. PUOEBTT, I m. ^QOKETT, {Editor?. Individuals, like nation*, fail in nothing which they boldly attempt, tehen sustained by virtuous purpose, anddeter miticdrcnolutioti,?Hknrt Ci.ay. " Willing to praise, yet not afraid to blame." TermB?One Dollar a Year, in Advance. abbevYlle o. h. FRIDAY, MAY 18, 1855. Our Agents. William IIill and John McBryde, Esqs., are our agents. Any orders left with them will be attended to. Fresbyterial Minutes. Tiik editor of the Laurensville Herald requests us to say that tho Minutes of the hist meeting of tho Presbytery will be ready by the 20th instant, and that those designed for the churches in Abbeville District will be left with Rev. Mr. IIoyt and R. H. Wardlaw, Esq., at this place. A Long Adieu. Srcii arc the words which close the long and interesting letter of-'Ben Lane" on the preceding page ; and very sorry arc we to hear them. Nevertheless if he will allow his corporeality to follow the adventuresome wanderings of his soul, we hope both may come out unscathed. We are not informed as regards his destintion. The Eastern War. Accounts from Europe, since our last, contain little of importanoc except that the allies have opened their batteries upon Sobastopol in earnest. There is now, it seems, no prospect of peace until one or the other "conquers a peace." We shall probably hear by the next arrival from that quarter of some grand or humiliating results. Answer to Enigma. We have received several answers to the little enigma in last week's issue. The one below was the first, and is correct. We recommend a trial of Miss "L. II. B.V' skill upon the poetical puzzle in another place. She will agree with us, we think, that that one "is hard to solve" :? Mr. Press : The following is the answer to your miscellaneous enigma: Cat, Ilonie, Cant, Sin, Pan: the whole, Thomas C. Perrin. Not hard to solve. L. H. B. The Valley Railroad. In our last issue wo published tbe proceedings of a meeting held in the town of EdgcGeld, on the 23d ultimo, to take into consideration the proposed branch of the Savannah Valley Railroad from Dokn's to Aiken, by Edgefield. Wo intended to have accompanied the publication of the proceedings of this meeting with a few remarks of our own, but from the press of other matter were compelled to defer it to the present issue. Since then a very pointed and sensible article on the subject has appeared in the Charleston News, which we herein re-publish, as worth the attention of our readers. The editor of the paper referred to very warmly commends the cause, and urges upon Charleston the duty of aiding it We are not in the habit of intruding railroad articles of our own manufacture upon the market, because, partly, we have never been so fortunate as to feel able to enforce our precepts by very convincing examples; or, more literally, to draw forth a long purse ourselves when we ask others to do so. And, again, we are ever conscious of the existence of many around us whose more thorough acquaintance with the subject, befits them to be much better apostles of the cause than ourselves. Nevertheless we venture occasionally an opinion, and offer it at its simple worth. It gives us great satisfaction to see that onr neighbors of Edgefield have the prospect of so favorable a railroad connection. We must congratulate them upon their good prospects of once more catching op with the age and getting back into the world. It always atfords us great pleasure to see any portion of our State blessed with railroad facilities. But the peculiar advantage* which the Savannah Valley Railroad is likely to afford to one of the richest section* of our State, n, in our opinion, a peculiar cause for congratulation to ?v?rj one who wishes well_ tp the. State. .We . know of no aection of South Carolina where railroad is more needed than in the YaJJoy of the Savannah River, and we know ofho mL ' %. * 8 j)irft ^SHH section where its advantages are likely to bo more manifest. Blessed with a fertility of soil, unsurpassed by any portion of the State, the Savannah Valley country needs but the invigorating influence of steam to miike it again what in times past it has been?the garden spot of Carolina. The object of those who now have this v-u?:i j?ris? in cnarge, scorns to l?o to L?uil<i a road that will not only answer the wants of the Savannah Valley country, in transporting its produce to market, but also to form a connecting link between the Rabun Top Rond and Charleston, by a line approximating an air line. To do this, they propose to have one branch of tlie road from Horn's to Aiken, by the way of Edgefield; and another branch to Hamburg, for the accommodation of the town of Hamburg and the city of Augusta. If this 6chemo can be carried out, (and we confess we see no reason why it should not be,) it will be a magnificent work of improvement to a large and wealthy portion of the State, embracing a part of Anderson. Abbeville and Edgefield Districts. It will at the same, time give to Charleston, if not the best, certainty as good a connection with the Rabun Gap Road as any other is likely to obtain. We say, then, to our neighbors of Edgefield, and to our friends in the Savannah Valley country in general, a hearty Godspeed to you in your noble nti-rprise!? You will have difficulties to contend with in carrying your work through. It would be no work if you did not. Cold and selfish friends, who would like to reap with you the rewards of your labor without contributing to aid in tlic work; open and secret foes; these will oppose you. Hut you must not stop to fight tliem off". Strengthen your own arms?levy additional tribute upon your own means and energies?and a steady perseverance will enable you to ac complish your work. And be assured success will bring friends, and wc shall hear of no patriot-Carolinian who will not rejoice with you. JEIxchange Notices. Soctheuk Quarterly.?The April number of this work contains papers under the following heads:?Benton's Thirty Years in the Senate; Louis XIV ; The Chief Justices of the United States; Ruskik's Architectural Works; The Ilusso-Tuikish Compaign ; Principles of Art; Ruth Ilall; American Education; Observations 011 the History of Virginia; Applications of Chemistry ; and Critical Notices. These are all interesting subjects, and from the ability J _.u!-U II- 1 -* rrmcii u&uuny cuaracierizea tne pagCS of the Quarterly, we judge this number is an exceedingly entertaining onef. We wish the Southern Quarterly long life, extended usefulness, and merited prosperity. C. Mortimer, Publisher: Charleston. Tue Schoolfellow.?This little representative of juvenile literature very gracefully displays his treasures for May. The Schoolfellow is a monthly of forty pages*, (octavo,) filled with entertaining and instructive stories, and so forth, for school children. Edited by W. C. Richards, Esq., formerly of Charleston, and published by J. S. Dickerson,Ncw York, at one dollar a year. Wo have no doubt it would bo worth twice that to any family of children. The editor of- j ier? 10 give a copy ot tuc achoolfclloio as long as it exists, togetlier with all the back volumes, (six in number,) handsomely bound, to any one who will givo a reasonable answer to the following puzzle :? Sir Hilary charged at. Agincourt Sooth twos nn nwful day I Although on that old age of sport? The mfflcra of the camp and court Had little time to pray: 'Tis said Sir Hilary uttered there Two?yllables by way of prayer. My firtt to nil the bravo and proud Who see to-morrow'* bud ; Mv yW-rt wit.ll lll>r onlrl nnil nliin* nlnn-1 To those who find their dewy bliroud Before to-day's he done: And l>oth together to sll blue eyes That weep when a warrior nobly dies. Madron Messekoer.?The promise of Messrs. Fildes & Barefoot to establish a paper at Madison C. H., Fla., "under the above title, has been resolved info a reality, and we are hi receipt of the first number. It is a very creditable sheet, and we have no doubt will meet success. The price is two dollars. MONTGOMERY MAIL.? AS BOOH JW We heard that this paper was presided over by the inimitable author of "Simon Suggs,'*' we despatched a messenger to press it into a "reciprocity treaty" w;th us. The result was as desired, and we have the Mail, brim, full of the life and spirit of that interesting quarter of our "great country.". The Charleston Standard.?Last raentined, but not least welcome, of our recent acquaintances, is the Charleston Standard. We find it a most excellent news paper?-enncing, id a mgn degree, the talent, industry and fine taste of its conductorsWe are under many obligation# to the Charleston press generally, for its dally and tri-weekly issues. Chronicle and Skntjnbl.?This paper, published at A agitata, Ga, is offered for sale. It has been doing a fine business for several years, and to any 6se Vbo has a taste for Georgia Whig politics, it wiH be a splendid ftwestm^nt, . ;<; r> *,' V 't* ' * . wltlttkn kor tiie indbl'enoknt press. My Old Professed Friend. "Aii !" flaitl Edward, "is thia you V* .and passed on. I suppose I viight have looked indifferent, but was not conscious of it, as Edward passed me; but, as I learned, lie | was hastening on to liis recent acquaintance, ! M rs. Somkhs, truly a lovely and intelligent ; lady, and her son, a most genteel and polite gentleman. I thought Edward was doing! j well in associating with, and making the acj <piaintanceof the Somkks family. IJut, on | learning the reason why ho passed ine so i cavalierly, the other day, there was not a j little astonishment in the reason to a calm ; and unsuspecting mind. I was strongly reJ minded of the saying of an old author which I read in my childhood, and which my father greatly admired. The sentence runs thus: "Thine own friend and thy father's friend, forsake not." The impression made on reading this, (proverb, we may call it,) remains on my mind, and has ! in it a great dual of good, strong and cxceli lent common sense. lint wlien we look off into the world as it now is, and presents itself to our view, we are constrained to believe tliat the above proverb is entirely forgotten, ns one of obsolete character. An old friend?for such, I according to onr proverb, must be a father's | friend?has something of the quality of ani old book?has become musty ; and it is I time, in this jige of progress and steam, to | be casting old things aside and getting | something fresh. Edward, as I learned, i supposed he had gotten all that was or could be profitable out of myself. However corrcel his judgment on this point, his decision suggests an unenviable sequence with regard to himself, viz : that the Someks family may soon be deserted, too, when new faces appear. The present ago has but one admiration, and that is bestowed on some- j thing new, just made, or just imported.? True, there are two old things at present much admired?old corn, and old wheat; and people run after them and embrace them as their friend and their fathers'friend. But we aro not talking about corn and wheat, but about professed friends. We do not intend to conic out and say, in so many words, that there is no such tiling as true friendship, and yet wo are somewhat skeptical.' We often hear the sweeping remark made, but to agree to its truth would bo to reproach ourselves, and the good opinion we have of our dear self; and this we are reluctant to part with. We believe that wo are flesh and blood, just like our neighbors, and as the good Book says somewhere?(notwithstanding the new notions of some old fogies, for it is a positive fact that old people have young no| tions, else why do old men get young wives?)?"That God hath made of one j blood all nations of men for to dwell on all the face of the earth, and hath determined the time before appointed, and the. bounds of their habitation." But old folks do not believe, or all of them do not, all the Bible says, for some of them say that all the nations of the earth are not one blood, but many. Now, if we could believe this, I we should be inclined hence to account for j the great fondness discemable for new things?new acquaintances, new friends, we say if there be such a being on enrth as friend?and with all our skepticism, we say we believe there are many. But ii Is B sad truth, that there should be so few true and trustworthy friends, reliable at all times and in all emergencies. The dav of ndvpraitv <-> - -V ? J lowers, and wo look out for friends and sympathy, but find neither, and wo feel sad, and almost weary of life, and quite so of tho world. There are many professed friends, but the most of them will sell you for a dollar, and some even for less. Professions are not to be trusted ; they are seldom, if ever, reliable. Men sell their professed politics for a little popularity; change their Church connection (at least many do) for worldly gain; change their friends for worldly advantage; and their religious faith for distinction.? Professions of friendship are mostly empty, and unworthy of confidence, for, like a windy cloud, they soon pass away. My old professed friend, where is he? He has not evaporated, but has to tne become obsolete. I would call bim back, but for me he has no ears, no eyes, and no hand. My old i friend, my father's friend, I would not forsake without most cogent reasons.- And yet I would utter this cautiously, for I, too, am but a man. I wilt therefore put on the mantle of charity, and say, he sees some unworthy feature about me which I do not oaa ts/k orA oil Klin/1 a aiiv /tmn OWJ IUI ??V mv .w VMS VTTU aauius And why should I expect too mach from the world, as I have never done much to ameliorate the world's condition f Indeed, I am inclined to believe that the expectation of men in general is too great from th<e> world. They expect more than they re& lijse, and disappointment always sours the mind, and tends to make us misanthropnMa disposition ever to be depreoated. Let I.* _ _k_ _ J -t? - It .i ' ? me cuiurauj a una reeling 10 mi toe family of man?I mean all that descended from Adam and Ev*?as for the tqonlef rfcoe*, thftfc sprang frotn some other race, no one , . ' * ' * 1 ' ' ' . *.? / can Icll from wliom, where, or when, with these I intend to claim no affiliation, until 1 * I regularly, and by authenticated lineage, T am introduced to the family. But I would , vie with all my compeers in feeling kindly i toward my species. It may he my old i friend will yet return, and we shall enjoy many sweet days of intercourse and instruction together in a firm and stronger friendship than we ever did in our palmiest days of communion. This is a changing world, and the wind does not always blow from the same point. It sometimes brings storms, and oven tornadoes, with the desolation of every fair hope; again it brings sunshine and showers, and all destroyed beauty and prosperity is restored, and every fond hope revived. Then I am determined I will not repine, complain, nor murmur.. I will look forward when the peaceful slumbers of tin; tomb shall shut out all the turmoils and si rues 01 mortality, and anger, and malice, and envy, shall die to live no more. Biiooks. Tho Black Warrior Affair. The I'arts correspondent of the New York Times writes : "It is well known at Madrid that this troublesome affair is already settled. Mr. Perry, our present representative at that Court, has, it seems, obtained from the Spanish Government all that has ever been asked by our own. That Government recognises fully the illegal conduct of officials; condemns them and disavows their acts ; promises to dismiss from its service all who tool ;i responsible part in tliat transaction; and as to those who are no longer in her service, from General lYzuela down, to bring them before the Supreme Tribunal of Justice to answer the accusations of the Government under tb.1t process, peculiar to the Spanish laws of the Indies, by which the CaptainGeneral and other high oUicers of the possessions beyond the sea may be called before the Supreme Tribunal to give an account of their conduct whilst in office during a year after their return to Spain, and, if condemned in any particular, be made to suffer tho corresponding pains and penalties. At the same time Spain offers full and complete indemnity to all who suffered by that out rage upon the presentation of their papers proving their damages. This arrangement is understood to have gone to Washington < some time about the last of February, and < the Government of Madrid is only waiting . the return of the mail, which ought to bring I the formal acceptance of the arrangement I... .1... /'..I !-- ' ' f\ im; \yrtuiucL at vv asumgton, in order to ! lay*all the documents before the Cortes." Commencement Speakers. We mentioned, last week, one of the i side dishes that might be expected at the 1 annual festival in Erskine College. We i might have stated that the Alumni Address . is to be delivered by Robert A. Fair, Esq., 1 of Abbeville,S. C., from whom much is ex- ] pected; and we undertake to say there i will be no disappointment. ( It is our privilege now also to announce i that Gen. Samuel McGowan, likewise of < Abbeville, the Athens of Carolina, has s been invited t3 deliver the Anniversary Ad- < dress before the Literary Societies, and that he has accepted. This is a capital selection. The General refused to give us the k is: nnn ? i ? i* ?+ " v?,wuu, winter, uul li 11 was to uo over 1 again lie would probably vote right. No 1 doubt bo would have done it then, but for the fear that when the floodgate was lifted 1 it would be hard to get it down again. Be ' this as it may, we know that he has always 1 been a friend and advocate of Erskine, and 1 he may expect a greeting on Commencement day that will "do him good." Being a lawyer of the first eminence, and a gentleman of well known literary tastes and ! habits, and withal one of the finest speak- ? ers wo have ever heard, we will expect something rich from our Anuiversary Oraior.?Due West Telescope. , Funny Case of Robbery.?Our read- ' ers will remember that we gave a day or 1 two ago, on the authority of the Lexington Telegraph, a paragraph to the effect that f Col. Barr had been nearly robbed and mur- ^ dered between Columbia and Lexington, or at least had been stopped by two men on t.llfi rnn/1. Ttioon oomn man ? W..W. *..wv wuxiv IUVII) IIUUW IKUUCir c siveand laudable occupation is declared to r be that of painters, have written a letter to the Columbia Times, setting the matter in a rather ludicrous light It appears from I their statement that they had killed a snnke r in the road with a revolver, and espying a rabbit by the side of the road, they were preparing to serve him in the same way. \ It was in this position of affairs that Col. c B. came up, and, thinking an assault was t intended him, ho cried out "there were more i behind.' lie was now about eighty yards i, distant, (and never was any nearer,) and 0 the "robbers," thinking ho meant more rab- r bits, turned their heads to look for them, g when the rider clapped spure to his horse i and rode off.? Charleston Standard. JjT 1 * ? The English are discovering that it is <( impossible to carry on a oheap war, and the taxes are beginning to press upon the " nation. The London Times, reflecting up- 1 on the thirtv millinna nf nnnn/lo a nnn. c ? -?J - ? ? I " /?"*? , which the war now coats, says, that, in order to pay for one soldier at the seat of war, or 1 one horse, or to supply a Lancaster gun for v half an hour, they must pay what would c maintain four or five families in conjfort, 8 keep up a good parish school, provide an ' active clergy rtian for a neglected district, or ' do some other good work, that, may be, e will never now be done. As there is now no prospect of a peace, new expenses must be incurred to carry on the war successfully. ? * - v ? ?? . 1 Masokk? conortss.?A grand Congress of Masons is to be held in Pariaon the first j of June, proximo, for the purpose of con- t sidering -the conditio^ of Masonry over the Globe. The Grand-Master of ure Grand = Lodge in Parish*? extended at ifrvitatiop t to Amenean Masonry to be j the occasioip# , .. f Methodist Missionary Society.?Tbo appropriations made for tho ensaing year by the Board of Managers- of thcr Missionary Society of the M. E. Churcb South, at ihcir recent meeting in Nashville, nmoantetl to $100,000. Of this sum $12,000 are appropriated to carry on the mission in China, and about tho same amount in California. It was determined to establish a Mis* Rionary post at Santa Fe, New Mexico; also, one in New Grenada and CentralAmerica. About $100,000 was appropffrated to the missions among slaves. Im poiitajct to School Teachers.?A case has just been decided at a special term' . r .1... c?. r v.i uiu oupreme VJourt that a watch belongs ingto and used by a school' teacher, is exompt properly, atid cannot bo reached by a1 receiver under a Judge's order on proceeding supplementary to execution. Judge Cowles held that the watch of a school' teacher comes within the law, and is as necessary for liirn in his occupation as the hammer of a mechanic is to the latter; and allowing the watch to be but of an ordinarily expensive kind, that it is exempt frouro execution. Escaped from Jail.?From the Athena* (<?a.) Watchman we learn that Thomas Gunnels, who was imprisoned for killing hiswife, and very neatly killing his daughter, it < * - - - ?vm.w ior murucring his father,? and Jesse M. Garner, for selling a hired horse, escaped from the jail in \VatkinsvilIer on the night of the 4th instant. The Sheriff offers a reward of two hundred dollar* for the airest of the two first, or half that amount fur either one. The other raau (Garner) there is no reward for. Awful Casualty.?On Wednesday night, at the plantation of Mr. Benjamin Motley, in the ninth district of this county, a negro house caught fire, and four negro children perished in the flames. All efforts to save them proved unavailing. No one saw the children even in the house at the time. It appears that t.hp. - ,.. "Vjj.W. were engaged at the crib in shelling corn, and had left a fire burning in the house. Columbus (Ga.) Enquirer. Richest Man in The Indiana Penitentiaky.?Ripley Circuit Court, last week, sentenced Mr. Muir to the penitentiary for two years, for forging a note of 820. Mr. Muir is probably the richest man in Ripley county, Indiana. It is supposed his property is worth near $100,000. It has been his strife to be rich, and now he will have the honor of bragging of being the richest man in the penitentiary. Won't that bo something of which to be proud ? Indiana Sentinel. <? i Female Hospital.?The New York correspondent of the Charleston Courier rays: l>r. J. Marion Sims, formerly of your State, is fast earning the title of a philanthropist. After years of toilsome struggles, he^iias at ast established a hospital for the disuses peculiar to females, in Madison Avenue. Vjt s now open for patients, and receives tlie jncouragement of our best people. An implication ir inn/1/> r* J J ? ...?.UV w VIIU VUIII11J M11 VUUIljil for a donofion of ?2400, supported by # such endorsements as the names of Peter hooper, James Boorman, and others. IIuno.?The Pickens Courier, of last Saturday, says: uTho negro boy Jerry, vho had been condemned to be hung for violating the person of a married lady, was sxeeuted oh yesterday .about 1 o'clock. lie ssaid to have met his fate with the same inconcern with which bo had lived. There ivas a large crowd in town during the day, svho witnessed the execution." One of the largest distilleries in Scotland, Lhe Leith distillery, where 1,200,000 gallons af whiskey used annually to be made, has just been converted into a flour mill. Counterfeit $100 bills on the Hamburg Bank are afloat, A fellow lately purchased ft horse from a gentleman in Georgia at paid him one of those bills, and received $25 iq good change. Durino the last three months, 4,045 paslengere arrived at San Francisco, against 11,700 in the same oeriod of lRn4. A clergyman was hung in effigy at Larrange, Tenn., last week, for selling a poor nan's note at auction. The sctamer Afton, with two thousand >ale8 of cotton, has been burnt on the Yazoo iver. ? A SURE REMEDY.?If yon are troubled rith a Cold, Cough, Hoarseness or Bronchitis, . >t any affection of the Lungs or Throat, yoa ire. advertised to make trial of STABLER'^ LNODYNE CHERRY EXPECTORANT, whicb ? really what it professee to be, a "good medi' ine." If it were not suoh, it would not haver cccived the decided and warm approval of ome of the most celebrated, intelligent and) ligli-minded physicians in the country, who* lave been made acquainted with the recipe? rom which it is compounded, and who'say ttiafr it will effect more good than any of tho nu' serous preparations with which the eoubtry i& aundated." An array of testimony,- such v an be shown in favor of Stapler's Anodyne' Jherry Expectorant, and STABLER'S DIAR-' tHCEA CORDIAL, could neter b? produced inles* they were really and truly "good medi' ines." Therefore we advise you to make tri* v 1 of thenv with confidence. See ddieriptive pssapblete, to be had grist" . i of tbe'agenU. Price of each, only 50> ents per bottl^oftfii bottles** $2 60, ' E. H. STABLER A 00 ; -Proprietory - Whblwtie DrUnrflfiste. Baltimore. told by Djt RR0ARY, Ookeabijrys ' ' m Tf ! . ? m * Z&Vobhj fiity.' - . ' ... . . -