University of South Carolina Libraries
>/**. ^ ^ --V", : - * ' , s<- c * . ' ' "w , ;?.; ?ll_ ' ' ^ _ V':; 'v:^'":' xl^ji3 ILiO^ f> Ik?^ ,i|^ V_ fg "Ipj v_T (_ ___J _ _ DRVOTBD TO MTERATtTHE, THE AETS, SCIENCE, AGRICULTURE, HSWS, POMTICS, &G., &G. " *'." 1 ? R M S OK ? DOLLAR PER ANNUM,] "Lot it be Instilled into the Hearts of your Childron that tho Liberty of Jie Press in the Palladium of all your Rights."? Junius. [PAYABLE IN ADVANCE -'' VOLUME 3?NO. 48. * ABBEVILLE C. II., SOUTII CAROLINA, FRIDAY MORNING, APRIL 4, 1856. WHOLE NUMBER 152. . . A* .. VS - the i>di;i?i:\oi:vt piiess rUCtlRIICD \TKF.KX.V, AT ADHKVILLK, ?. C.t C AT ONE DOLLAR A YEAR, HAS a circulation of nearly one thousand j in Abbeville District, and is constantly increasing. Its circulation in this Stale fa 1 -about fourteen hundred, and its entire list of i subscribers numbers over sixteen hundred. It ; is therefore offered to tlic mercantile and busi- 1 ttess community generally as the best adverti- J ?ing medium iu the up-country of South Car- n olinn. RATK8 OF ADVERTISING. ? 'I square 3 months ------ ? 4 00 c 1 square 6 months G 00 ( 1 square 12 months 10 00 2 squares 8 months 6 00 i 2 squares ft months 10 00 s 2 nquaies 12 mouths ------ 15 00 3 squares 3 months 8 00 ? 3 squares 6 month.) - - - - - - 12 00 j 3 squares 12 months 20 00 4 squares 3 mouths 10 00 N 4 squares 6 months 15 00 c 4 squares 12 months ------ 25 00 o squares n monius - - - 15 00 5 squares C months ------ 20 00 r G squares 12 months 30 00 car Advertisements inserted for n shorter J , period than three mouths will be charged 76 cents per square (12 lines or less) for first iuscr- ] tion and 37-J per square for each continuance. ET An y one advertising bv annual or semi- e annual contract can change his advertisement c monthly, if he desires. ? ?3?" Subscribers to the paper who do not ' pay their subscriptions within the year will be j charged $1 50. [April 20, 1865 { lYEISCELLANY^ [l D [kortjie independent muss.] The Republic of the United States in ( Contrast with Anciont Republics. Every tiling funned by the hands of . man is subject alike to decay. Governments, like the machines of the mechanics, have a limited period of existence. States and empires, like tho frees of the forest, have ' fallen, when least expected, of their own accord. The instances connected with the *' great Republics of Greece and Rome, show ? that thev have lw?<?n flin nn??i<?rQ nf timiv a own downfall and ruin. - ? li Tlie world lists been surveyed almost from pole^ to pole; the risu and downfall c of every State and empire that has ever existed have been studied and reviewed with great interest and attention ; none seem to have possessed tboso stable and sound principles upon which tbo government of the United States is leased, none had their institutions so well' developed, none enjoyid that freedom which we have so long enjoyed. At-one time tbo progress of ancient Greece in civilization was wonderfully rapid. though subjected to manv vi<*.ifminwli.? ~ ' I and disadvantages; such, for example, ns the invasion of the Persians, intestine wars, &c.; but she declined almost as fast as she advsfticcd. - Rome, too, with her great philosopher^, made rapid .strides towards civil! * "aationr from her'infancy until tlio second S Punic war;,,she had a glorious career from that time to'.tti'o reign of Augustus; when the aspect, began- to change ; ignorance and ' superstition again spread their black crimes ^.over-Hie Whole country. j. _ 'Ii iVindeed, strange that su?h Republic s lies as..Greece and Rome, with all their wealth and magnificence, with their great philosophers and law-givers, should be .' St l\. ' : f.i. -- fc-i ? - - .u??ruiruwii vvitn so mue uuncuity, and cles ; '^potisnfc "and jmarchy bo made to reign in t their most degraded forms. Ignorance, nnd ' :'tKo.Jfeebleness of their laws, no one will doubt, were the causes which brought to to ihese.great Republics so sad a fate. Barbarity* v degradation and despair spread their plagues and curses of darkness over the whole land ; recovery seemed almost impossible; their endeavors to establish : * harmony was-fora considerable time un- It successful.'^'Civil au3 religious libertv was trampled to the dust. Agriculture, com" merce, and nil that tends to civilize a nation, y V?8,neglected ; nothing wjtt. effected in any v \vay to^pypmote tho great. cause of edU- fa cation. ' ^ ' J IIow can-a nation exist without laws to ^ - protect thea$?v. We* tlio people of the UnlSig V*#'niay thank our % are for the n " ^eat-governfcfcqt under which we hftve fa wise fofefathere J> . wholaid its foundation, and banished from ott/qjiK:iafid crlaejiy and vice, which see in n ^1>$voj^en" tho pr^doni inali ng power in i Tlfe fiefoniiihinfr nrotrrw:.* Snfi* ina/U ,? md clad, than the inhabitants of any other :ountry in the civilized world. By pursuing a wise policy, by protecting r< ililce ngriciillure, manufactures and com- tl nerco, by extending to each department of ti ndustry its fostering care, it has succeeded p n securing to all an unexampled degree of irosperity. Tho ancients had their great 0 Temples, Pantheons, and other works of ^ riandour and sublimity ; but now the most ? >f them lie level with the ground ; their c nasses of mouldering ruins arc the only rcl- a l-P. 1 -t ? i-a ion iu injirK mo places where they once 1 tood. Tlicir great philosophers and law- ^ rivers have long since been laid beneath the ? > r? p ;reen sod of their country. It was the <] vant of laws which caused the destruction t >f such great things. t The men who laid the foundation of our ? ;reat Republic wisely studied all the furtns t >f govern meat which had gone before tliern. I hcy endeavored to construct a code of t aws entirely difi'urent from any that had 1 ver existed : in nril??r ?/-> '<-> ? !?> ^ , V..V-V ..VK | ; ibliired to be original in almost evcrv furm. ! 1 ? o I L .'heir first object whs to lay a firm and last- % ng foundation ; this tliey accomplished (c o the envy and admiration of tlie world. 1 rhe grent and wise laws under which we j low live may bo justly considered the fruits v ?f their labor. Wo have inherited from a hem the great boon of civil and religious r ibertv, which we are bound to transmit u:i- * mpuircd to posterity. "In the over-flowing lip ot philanthropy, many are the drops of ?at riot ism." It was the great aim of our ! Liri-fathcrs to exhibit to the world a mo hi t It-public; one lo protect the welfare of her itizens, and to extend happiness and peace t, vcr ns wide a field as possible. View her 5 s she now stands. All the other nations j: f the globe would net wisely in imitating ( or example, and copying her institutions. J. T .? - * - in me annals ot history, the United ^ >tnU'S will ever be the most conspicuous. ? Junior. t [kor the independent rr.Ess ] c Ou tho Death of Miss 8. I>. ' The King of kings a warrant sealed, And sent it forth by Dcotli, , And charged him to lay the same Upon her feeble breath. ' . 1 Death came with speed and seized on licr, [ v As she in anguish lay ; n He laid his cold hand on her heart v And took her life away. r Angola immediately came down, ^ "With power from on high, To henr lii>r i.~? To dwell beyond the sky. ' Sweet pleasure, all the way she wenl, h She found did multiply, t; From angel-songs which sounded loud? t "Salvation now is nigh 1" v The pearly gates stood open wide, ? And Jesus in the place? lie welcomed her with words and stuilc.*, 0 And joyed to sec her face. He loud proclaims the sovereign wonl, C And bids licr enter in, |j And says?"My child, I've died for thee t And blotted out thy sin." n r' .] Ot now licr soul with angels sing Amid the heavenly choir; ? Her talk, her walk with Jesus is, winch was her soul's desire. ' ' ^ And now her dust shall rest iu hope, e ' Until that happy day i? When Christ shall raise our bodies up, k To dwell with him nlway." ? ' SONCA. D Uanic Robbery.?On Thursday night ' wt, about one o'clock, some dnring thief or l' hieve.% by means of a false key, entered tie office of Geo. C. Gibb?, AgeoV for the Planters' Bahk Of Fairfield." and stnln d herefrom a package of money, containing, p re are in for mod, about b'jx thousnntl foi^r n undred dollars, in Bank b*lls, chiefly of li lie Banks of Charleston a^ Fairfield. Mr. tl Jibbs was jual about 6tartin& by tlie Caro- ci na for Srttuli Carolina to settle up; his ac- 7 ounts with the Bank?and had taken (lie h lonoy out of the safe, and packed it with ti ia books in the bottom of his trunk, pr$- if >aratory to coin# on board the .boat. Re- n rig cufojl out a" sbortNvhile, b^ 'left bia h rut?k locked in his office, the night being c , bright moonlight oney an^ street be- p rig thronged with people. '-IsSt tlio thief, y rhowa*' no. doubt awaro of his purpose, o nd luuj watched lns xnotionv' took advan- d agejM hU fchort -and entered the w fflce b^meflin^of a fttlfe key, (breed the c i^sp of jho trunk. tnmM?*d ?lir> hWW *n? u Tbo Duty of the North. The New York Evening Post lias ft full eport of a long address on this subject by lie notorious Theodore Parker. Wo cxract the following statistical and political aragraphs: These 300,000 slaveholders own 4,000,00 of bondmen, whose mailed value is at ?ast ?2,000,000,000. These slaves are en-'l ;aged chiefly in agricultural labor. They iroduce cotton and tohaeco, which form onsiderably more than one-third part of II *1 " ii me exports <>t the country. Now, as lie 300,000 slaveholders own the ?2,000, 00,000, and furnish $1,000,000 of value o be exported every year, that gives them ;reat power in the money market. Acuorlingly they control the money markets in h'19 country; <.hey control the lending capialiats, the great merchants and the ;reat manufacturer". There are some very lonorable exceptions, but, as n general liing, slavery controls the great capitalists. Controlling these, slavery is lord of p1" f the great commercial centres. Itisi..,.*cr of Baltimore, New Oilcan*, Cincinnati, Philadelphia, New York nn Boston, with ill the vassal towns which are subordinate o these. Wheresoever the soil is paved villi stone?the stone of commerce and :onccntrated wealth?there slavery is the ti -1 - ii.ioh.-i. mis is me way it gt-ts pecuniary )ower. Now, cot.trolling the pavement, nas'.er of tho purse, it easily controls* the vealthy pulpits of nil denominations. There ire some very honorable exceptions, and I ieed not go a great way from the city of STew York to fiml some of tlietn. But, as t general thing, the same power which conrols the press controls jilso the pulpit. Now, see how our masters at the South lOl'rt nc/wl tl?A ? ? - 1 ...... v,.., ?iuicn \vc nave given hem. First, Slavery appoints ihe Presilout. Of tvwlvi' Presidents, eight were mm in the slave States, and four ill the Northern States; and of these the one most Northern in his birth is Southernmost in his lolitics. For he who was born in the Old iranite State of New Hampshire, nearest lie North Star of Liberty, has gone down, ike the serpent in the Book of Genesis, w?v. j:ng on tt's ly.-i'v, that lie may do hi* naslcr's will and cat tlio devil's dust. Of lie. eiclit Southern Presidents, five liave iron re-elected; of the four Northern, not >no has been chosen twice. The South has lad her President fifty-two years; the North ixtoen. 13ut there never has heen an antilaverv President. As the Vice President, lowcver, is only the fifth wheel to a canion, whilethe South has had six, the North las been allowed eight, and one of these ias actually put on the Presidential nxlej nd served to carry the Federal cannon there it did most efficient scrvice for slavey. In consequence of that service, the lew American partv has just nominated I Jr. Fillmore for its Southern platform.? Havery next appoints tho Judiciary. Out ?f thirtv-five Judges of the Supreme Court, ineleen have been from the South, andsixsen from the North. And the Chief Jus-j ice, who moulds these vessels?I was going i o say of honor?of dishonor, just as lie! in, is almost always a Southern inan. Tliej blest man here cannot remember when the] i"orth liad the chief-justiceship, for it was ixty years ago. The North has held it for leven years, and the South for fifty-five.? 'here have,been thirty-five Attorney Gonrals, and to eight from the North there ave been fifteen from the South. In 1854; nere naa been two hundred and sixteen len appointed to diplomatic offices; of liese ninety-nine were from .the North and ne hundred and seventeenfrom the South. >ur /Masters must always have the largest umber. Jiut these figures do not'deseriho lie enormity of the fact. For at the presnt day, in all our diplomatic ofijc.es, there ( not a single man abroad who was ever nown even to have uttered an anti-slavery ord. And if any man of them should ow utter a single word for freedom, the oxt steamer would carry out his recall.-? Mius Slavery controls the great offices of ie country. AnciiDisiiop Usher was, in )iis younger; ays, wrecked on the coast of Ireland, nt a laws where his person and character were i like unknown. Stripped of- everything,j e wandered to the house of a dignitary of 10 Church in search of shelter and relief, raving assistance as a brother clergyman, he dignitary of the ^Church, ttVibck with is squalid appearance after the reek, disgusted his taje jfldWotibtedvliV clipractcr, nd said that,so.far from b?ing ^ clorgylAn, he dldfriot Relievo jlje <c&ul4?f?ll him. ow many command m enfa an at once s^jpfy you," said tlie Archbishp.'HUat I, am not the ignoi^j^tapostor ou <ake me for. Tliero aWtri^rv-cpmlandmenta." ThJ# onftioAr AliiifcrfJ * ignitary in -life au^icions, nnd.Jie replied, !Sd'ike Speaking la Congress. About one-fourth of the "Bunkum" .speeches which "go to the country," from the halls of Congress, arc, in fact, never delivered there, whilst a large majority of tliose wlii'.h are really delivered are received in the manner described below by'acorrcj spondent of the Charleston Ifeics : The subject of sending for persons and | papers in I lie Kansas contested ele?.?,.on case, is entirely worn out, yet members persist in inflicting dry speeches upon the House.? They are scarcely listened to. Once in a while an interesting oiF-haud speaker puts in, and affords, ns it were, a green oasis in the desert of dry discussion. Most of the novices read their speeches. The result is that the orator has his eyes on his manuscript, which lies on his desk. His hands work backwards and forwards' in meaningless! ffl'StlllPS. Tlift Snniil-Oi' oi?o in ItSa ' I n? ?- - Aim V.U.UI iUHl heeds not the itommenwmont of each new J paragraph of the speech which begins with addressing hiin by his official title. Tlumembers, whose attention is every minute invoked by the orator to some strong point he is about to make, turn a deaf ear to the force of the aforesaid point. Some are writing letters. Others are clapping their hands on the desks to call pnejes to do some errand for them. Some are loitering in the! I 11 - t ? * * 1 lonuy. i ue oaiance are laughing and talking. The member who is speaking keeps his eye so intently on his manuscript for fear he will miss a word, that he knows not j of the inattention that is paid to him. And | yet this dry and prosy speech, if the manuscript w;is thrown away and it boldly spoken to the House, as if its author did not care a cent for anybody,"would have effect. Ilis boldness would attract attention and insure him a respectful hearing. Maxims for Young Men. Keep good company or none. Never be idle. If your hands cannot be usefully employed, attend to tho cultivation of your mind. Always speak the truth. I Never listen to loose or idle conversation. You. hud hotter be poisoned in your blood tlian in your principles. | Your character cannot be essentially in jjnrod except by your own acts. i If any one spe.de evil of you, lot your ! life be so virtuous that none will believe | him. | Always speak and ?ct as if in the pros| ence of God. j Drink 110 intoxicating liquor. j Never nlnv at anv kind of crnmo , * # c Small and steady gains give competency ! with tranquility of mind. j Avoid the temptation, through fear that ! you may not withstand it. Earn your money before you spend it.. ! Never run in debt, unless you see a way ! to tret out again. Never borrow, if you can possibly avoid it. Be just b'-forc you are generous. Keep yourself innocent, if you would bo happy. Never think that which you do for rcliir ion is time or money misspent. Il<>ad some portion of the Bible every day. Often think of death and your accountability to God. "Woiitii Tkluxo.?Mr*. Polly Becman, of Birmingham, Connecticut, is iu her 92d year. Her husband, Tracy Beeman, died a short timo since; ho was two years the senior of his wife. They had lived in the same farm-houso sixty-nine years. They l.?i ? si? -e ' I'n -? niim ? kiiiiiiv ?? iiiiiu cunuren, iliu eldest | of whom now is 78, and was married when sho was 14. *0f the grandchildren the.ro arc now forly-nine, the oldest of whom is 50 years. There are one hundred and fiftysix great grandchildren, and ei^htech great great grandchildren. Tho family enjoy jjron constitutions'. This venerable woman can call,, two hundred and thirty *of her lineal jwdigree around her thanksgiving table. Their united ages now amount to 7,724 years; so that, if this family had ioilowed each other consecutively, the first might have been nn old Jndy of *ev?>nteen hundred summers at the day Adam woke up and ate forbidfteh fruit with his partner. Our Connecticut old lady intends to take a long journey next week behind Jtho "ironhorso." She ought to have a free ticket. gg- Hartford "Vourant. Wb' quite agree with the editor of the JNa?|)Vitro (.iHzette when ho says: hnt has a soul worth a sixpence must ertpoftfc to have erffejies.^It is utterly impossible for the best.6f"men lb please tho whole world, and tho ioo'ncr this is under, stood, and a position taken in view of tho fact, tho better. Do rljgfbt??tlf<?bg!i yon have enemies. You cAnnot elcapo them bv doiiiff 'wronfip. Aftd -ifta JW il? ? ? c* O 7 " . ,M haMI barter * way your; honor an$. integrity, and dif *4t yoiin^lf of fnordl ??<r?g^ to 'gwn, what? Nothing. Better abido by tho truth thft fftftlinir mnct > i A SB 1 , 1 "'i-l I* . Savannah Rivor Valley Railroad. At ? call meeting of tlio City Counril of Augusta, the fo'lewiug preamble aud reso- p lutiona, intiv jt'cvd by Mr. Butt, were j li adopted : ; Ji Whereas, A majoiity of the Committee appointixl to report upon the propriety of g the City's aiding in the const!urlioti of the " Savannah Valley Railroad, and said major- / ity being supposed to reprcseut the views of a majority of the legal voters of tlm city, ?; therefore, tt Resolved, That the City Cottticil will, ii with the concurrence of a majority of the n legal voters of the City, to he expressed in v the mode prescribed by law, subscribe ?500,- n I uuu to the capital slock of said Company. Ii on the following terms, as a basis for future i* negotiations: c 1st. The subscription not to be obligatory, unless the Savannah Valley Railroad Com- n pany shall, within six months, obtain good tl and reliable subscriptions of 11,000,000, payable without qualification or condition, fi except the condition of the whole sum be- p ing made up from parties other than the t City Council of Augusta. li o.i .1:?:?;?-v 11 1 iiu ui-"i:i uiiuiHuosi snail ever iicmflUe n against this point. In any future arrange- v inent of freights, whether lomil or through, e Augusta shall participate fully in thendvan- s tages of the minimum rate, whether it be a in the up or down eliarge for the transpor- h tatiou ot passengers, produce or mcrchanI disc. d Tt.o u...: ?u? j/i mi i|'<?i uuaium unu'.u ana jn | work shops of the Valley Road to be in Au- ft gusta. 4th. The construction of tho Valley Rail- .v road shall bo commenced at Augusta and ii proceed continuously to its junction with n the Rabun Gap road, and shall, from some t( point to be designated by the City Council, n be constructed on the northern or river side o of tlio Augusta* Canal, so as to make the Canal embankment on that side tho bed o oi saiu roau trom tltc point so designated, to some other point to l>e in like manner designated, between Rae's Creek nod the head wall of said Canal. ' t, 5th. The connection between the Valley R Rond and tho Georgia Railroad shall be at t j sotne point West of Camming street, and t | that of both of these Roads with the Souilt t j Carolina Railroad shall bo between tho new a I Eastern terminus of the Georgia Railroad ; land tho through Depot lot of the South e Carolina Railroad, South of Walker street, t and this latter connection shall be by horse poxcer only. c Gth. For the connection herein proposed, ^ the Railroads in interest shall pay, or cause t to be paid to the City Council of Augusta, c such sum as the Council may deem a jnst t equivalent for the same. a 7th. The City Council of Augusta fo be \ secured one-third of the Directors of said- j; Valley Railroad, and that the Direction thus t, provided for and secured, shall he mutually q nominated by the City Council. r, Our Emigrants. n The Kansas Association of Charleston n forwarded its second corps of emigrant, by railroad, this morning at seven o'clock. It 81 is composed of a fine body of spirited and n active young men, numbering twenty-eight, 81 -who go with a firm purpose to advance, by a industry, their private fortunes; and to maintain, by their manliness as citizens, law ? and order and Southern rights in TCnnr.n? ? They procced under the business charge of Mr. F. G. Palmer, a graduate, of our Cita- a del Academy, and a practical <-.ivi! engineer. Tliey embrace a number of mechanics and artisans. Not a doubt can bo entertained that they will well represent South Caroli- t( nn. Their equipment has cost the Assoria h tion a considerable amount, a portion of p which has yet to be met by voluntary con- <1 tributions. It is to be hoped that our citi- ii zens will promptly step forward and make ii them, and also enable the Association to con-1 y tinne its patriotic and urgent work?- I ? A body of fourteen or fifteen other omi- (] grants, mostly from Orangeburg District, a procoeded on from Brnnchville yesterday. v\ Charleston Nnes. } ^ -o . | A Nbw Gux.?A new fire-arm baa been c patented by J. \V. Po6h It is ft repeating c< rifle which can be loaded and discharged ? thirty times n minute; is light and conve- b nient, baa but one discharging barrel, find mi does not revolve. Under the barrel?rin b place of the ramrod in otber guns?is* a ni tube'jwhich-. receives -thirty acorn-shaped, d water-proof balls, " each containing within hi itself powder and percussion for propulsion. . 511e act of cocking the 'piece plaeea n ball m tho breach, and the wtjjSjJSHw may he T discharged in the most r'apf3 At p a late trial, the gun was'^?eh?rgcd ten ? times in ten seconds. Tb&oalV is shaped tl like that Minnie rifle, ntf<! the gun b welt ns rapid firing; i^ > A rcw d?y? jH.r^garWn, residing " f*n'the LwbnYo rtfad, neatBelfast, foiirfd in g the gfmrd,of* Cochin-China fowl, a tn?r: * At^ss bolt(>n/Jj m i.i??rmmm*0 The Uae of tleiaomborlng. "Whsil'a the use of reiuetnbering all this!" eltulily cried a boy, after his father, who ^ lad been giving him some instruction*,' .ad l?;ft tbe room. "I'll tell you what, remembering ? of ** rent service sometimes." said hi* comin Let inc now road to you from the Living kge. Plen;o hear." "My dog DhsIi was once stolen from tne," R7? Mr. iticld. "After being nbient ihirmouths lie one day entered my office 11 town with a loug string tied round hia eck. He hml broken awny from the fellow ?bo held him prisoner. Our meeting wo* joyful one. I found out the thief, had iin arrested, Hiid took him before the mag* itrnte. He swore the dog wm his, and ailed witnesses to bear him out. "Mr. Kitld" naked tho lawyer, addreaning ie, "can you give any satisfactory proof of liis dog being your property?" "Plaeinif mv mouth to tlie ??r? w ?? -" ?? rst giving bim a knowing look?I whi?ered a little communication known only ' o us two. Dnsh immediately reared npon lis bind legs, went through a series of maloeuvres with a stick guided by my ?yea, irhieh set tbe whole court in a roar. My vidence needed notliing more, the thief tood convicted. Dash was liberated and tuong the cheers of tbe multitude, merrily ounded homeward." "There, boy, do you hear that! That ? og's remembering was of service to hitn; , was taken as evidence in a court, aod it urly got the case. ** "Yes, he was set free, ami a thief conicted. Well, if remembering n master's istruetions served a dog so well, bow much lore likely is it to be important for a body o treasure up the instructions of his father, ot knowing what thrv may keep him ut of." Tho lesson i* a pretty good one, and tbers might profit by it. Dlavory in Kansas. The Lawrence papers are laboring hard o convince their Yankee brethren that lavery does not and cannot exist in this 'orritory. They* may succacd in satisfying heir Northern friends in this, but how will hey get over the census returns, which will how over one thousand slaves in Kansas f Vn examination of the Assessor's book of acb count v. will nrohnlilt/ cumt-Toa j j g yu.|*..rv VUl .Wr ? orial brethren in Lawrence. They Kill ind that several hundred thousand dollars t* if slave property is owned in Kansas, and \ , n'ofitfibly employed ; and what is better,^-, % ho master and slave both satisfied with the :ountry. The addition to the property in * his country is gradually increasing by the rrival of wealthy farmers from Missouri, Virginia, Kentucky,-.and other Southern tates. In every instance where it^aafceetfr^ " ried, their labor has brought to -their pwprs a larger return than where they,jformeflyv . ??.i?"?i?1 - ** , nnu mis puiiiicrjrojn v irginiflj wfio ^ as been iu the liabit of supporting CfciWr . egroes, will find that in KansasthevTMrti: ot only feed themselves but be ft profit >to : lieir owners. The climate nnd soil of K*o-"7. is are peculiarly adapted to slave, labor;.nd hemp, corn'," wheat, tobacco, ftnilijptlieri, aples, can be as profitably producedhere"*/? in Kentucky or other Southerti 'Stfttci. _'.* nf view of these facts, it bccomes the do?r . f every Southern planter who is" not inir,. + f itig money fast in tho South to remove 'itli his slaves to Kansas, where a fortune waits him.?Squatter Sovereign. q , D . i Miss Peooy Land.?Our friend, James * l. Doyle, Esq., of Pickens District, stated ) ii9, whilst.attending Pichens Court j that <? had seen somo notice .of "ours about tlfo rofits of farming, in Uial District, and hp osired to sav a word tons about the farmlg of MisB I\<ggy Land, fc' young^.woroan 1 liia neighborhood, about twenty-four ears old. She was left, somo 'years ago, ith.anaged mother to support by ber in- . _ nstry. She tried weaving* - warding. #g]q- ? ling and sewiug, and found that "Jordaiji^ , ?' 'naabnrd r$ad to travel*-, live r-hotj- <r sny-, wHereupon, sue concluded to jent it lece of 1/ind, and-make a cropof cotton, orn nnd wliPHt. The !n?t year mrtdei otton wliicili netted her $103. 'Her cor#* rop was 260 bushels, worth sixty CCTtp- jfc ushel, nnd she made-thjKy-five busheW^bf'J lioat, worth, ono dollnr and 6fty, oerita-n ~ ushel! This Tog^y did liereelf/^ wiUjotit. oy assistance or uirintr. -*Sho nloucdvwl rove the cart, cuUhcr wheat and* cribbed ^ ar corrf, fce -r-^$out?iern Patriot. - *1 ** . : ,?; P4*:4* : To Make a "BAilsr' IIonSB Dra>v.? ' ; he London Times gi?es a remedy wkjch' luw roved juccewftij. ^After fljl sort? Qi meanR . hd tofen trl^L and iirt;jLwmpte remedytried m^ In?di?4b?fW* -. >*;- . a tried-Mlwfc iiv to. get a ??#H ^op* M ~ Ut?oh it_to one 'of thd