University of South Carolina Libraries
?:s'iroTai> to literature, the arts, science, agriculture, hews, politics, &c., &g. *-- j A ' ' . . ' . . TERMS TWO DOLLARS PER ANNUM,] .. & ^L^it be Instilled into the Hearts of your Children that the Liberty of the Press is the Palladium of all your Rights."?Juniua. [PAYABLE IN ADVAN6E. *i " . ?? .' Kts*. * ^ ; -., ?f . * . ' _ " aolume 5?no. 39. abbeville c. ii., s0^tit-:fg4r0^na%ifriday m0rnin(j, january 29, 1858. whole number 247 RATES OF ADVERTISING. The Proprietors of the Abbeville Banner and Independent J'tcxx, have established the following rates of Advertising lo be charged in both jmiiers I fevery Advertisement inserted for a less lime than three months, will be charged by the in- j eertion at One Dollar per Square, (11 inch j ?the space of 12 solid lines or less,) for the first Insertion, and l-'ifty Ociils for each subsequent insertion. The Commissioners, Sheviff's, Clerk's and Ordinary's Advertisements will be inserted In both papers, each charging half price. C3P Sheriff's Levies, One Dollar each. r Announcing a Candidate, I'iVC Dollars. Advertising nn Estrny, Xtvo Dollars, to he nniit liv flii> M mrici t.. ? 1 1 "J """ Advertisements inserted for three months, or longer, tit tlie following rates : 1 square 3 months $5 00 1 square 6 months 8 00 1 square 9 months - - 10 00 . 1 square 12 months ------ J 2 no 2 squares 3 months ------ 8 on 2 squares 0 months ...... l.{ 00 2 squares 9 months 18 00 2 squares 12 months 20 00 3 squares 3 months ...... in no 3 squares fi months ....--it; no 8 squares 9 months ...... 21 00 8 squares 12 months 25 00 4 squares 3 months .... - - 12 00 4 squares 6 months - - - - * 20 <10 4 squares 9 months ------ 2l> on 4 squares 12 months ..... - 30 00 K nmliirjia 51 mmitlia ------ 1 r* m'l 5 squares 6 months 25 Oi) 5 squares 9 months 31 00 6 squares 12 months ------ 35 00 G squares 3 mouths 20 (V) / 6 squares 6 months ..... . :to rjO G squares 9 months ...... ;>o (.in 6 square? 12 months - - - - 40 nO 1 squares 3 mouths ...... 25 00 V squares fi months ...... n.=> on *7 squares 9 months ...... 41 nO 7 squares 12 months 45 n0> 8 soiiiires 3 months an <111 8 squares G months ------ 40 00 8 squares 0 months ------ 4f> 00 8 squares 12 months ------ 50 00' t Fractions of Squares will he charged in proportion to the ahove rates. Business Cards for the torni of one year, will lie charged in proportion t<? the space they occupy, at One Dollar per line epaoe. est For all advertisements set in <louhle col- 1 umn, Fifty per Cent, extra will be added to th? 1 above rates. DAVIS <fc CREWS, ; for Banner ; j i-EE ?fc WJLJSUM, j| /'or 1 MISCELLAmr. c ~ , Prom Washington. Emigration to Central America?Utah Military < Expedition?The Admission of Minnesota. Wasiiixotox, .Jan. 14.?An office has been i opened in this city for llic encouragement- of i emigration to Nicaragua and oth-r portions of c Central America, the ohieet beincr ueueefnl i colonization, as recommended ia tlio Preai- I dent's Message. The capture of Anderson is believed to Jiavo 1 put nn extinguisher upon all filibuster move-' "< Uients in that direction for some time to <?me.> < It is announced, tliis morning, that the SJili itarv Committee in the Senate will report a.gniust. the raising of five new regiments "ttK. march against the Mormons, and.propose, as iv 1 substitute, that ihe regiments already on duty j ibe inerensed to the extent of two companies < each- 1 he entire cost ot the I.uiu expedition, thus far, is put down an tlie fabulous sum '.of iiearlv $8.01)0,000, and another million at least it is calculated, will lie swamped by tlie-lofs of animals during tlie present winter. . ? The Territorial Committee, it it? understood. A 'will report, on Saturday, in favor of t$e ademission'of Minnesota. with her present^Constitutien. It is destined, however, to meet 1 with considerable opposition, especially from the friends of the liecoiiipton measure. ^ jjbxtary Serbnadk.?Judge A. 13. Longttreet, i / . President of the South Carolina College; ariiv-, ' ed in our city last evening for tlie purpose'bf- . \j.\ assuming tlie responsible post which he has i- been chosen to fill. About It o'clock the stuy . dentA of the College, with it bund of music, cab | jX, . led upon the 1'resideut at. his hotel, and were add leased by him in a few pertinent and wejj, , 'j- timed remarks. Mr. Rutherford, of Newberry, i'pify" upoji the part of the student?, replied, welcom- ' ; :,'t ; ing the Presadent to his new held of usefulness; 1 and extending to him the expression of eonfi- j 'f-'j - dence anil esteem upou tlie part of those lie had ?-C> -.'a ..ii.J i * 1 i ;w ueeu uiuieu ujion lu govern. ; Judge Longstreet finding the n&senibhige unwilling to disperse, again addressed them, exK^V. pressing devotion to tlie institut ion over which HP lie was tiow to preside; and retelling to the r 'intimacy which had previously existed he- J SjSaffit'- tween himself and Messrs. Calhoun, Elmore, ?f ;' . MeDufRe, and other lending men of South C'aiolina, whose view# and principles were in aecordance with,his own. Ilia remarks were received with loud applause, and we congratulate all fe/yV " parties uj)on the favorable auspieea- under ' which the President and students have, for the '>" - fjrat time, met. We trust that the same good feeling may nl waj's prevail, and that the rela%' Jtipo may ulways be equally as plAsant. " Columbia Timet, 15th . . unvb ? iJu^nru mjiur, writing Jgr-ff. * fronVNuhia, 5ri Upper Egypt, ?ny8: '-Those friends of the African racc who point r"t' t? Egypt (M proof of what that race has accorn' v fpiMhed are wholly mistaken.'- The only negro , 'features represented in Egypt sculpture are .of staves and captives taken in Ethfopean Vnniofthe rharoahs. The temples nnd pyrap^'Jmida throughout Nubia. as far as the I)aref*#nd ^fy>Aby?1hiaj?H-bear,?hc hieroglyphics of monnrchs ?ani the'rrf'is ifo evidence in ail the Valley ofthe that the negrp race evegjattaincaa higher. tEw&rawOTe&df eiviHfcatiofi than tfftt present exhibit' a.<>~a A?i?* i "? - -? ??* '??? ??,u t?pu?iu(fcj/' i mention xms, Dp^ ; .'. fronj aoyjeolihg hostil* to that rAcVbtit simply a <m)ToviBrt an opinion very prevalent iu some ' ;part*kof.tbe Ilbitcd States." ' hhgl;. 'jI/Slskpy Utmdb amd Disoi'stpp BntDteoiuxrti.? HBP. iTfe-Courrier do Lyonssays, tbnt at n marriage |^Sf ; '6f k ^onng coup]e; daring tho long exhortation *6f the'priest, the bride went, fast ndeep^ The jH^^crtiOm discovered iCjasftas ho tphh about to put ?n We rlhg. Hfwaa muehAnnoyed, but con K&&,. .JealeA ft' tut,oT/espf <;t to'the Hbly place. ^ But , ? ?>Oft aiith^seryjoe.'was over, he-, got into a ; T^.*.'><carfrage tyfth.hij friends'and dtoya off, an' //tooUflprrti'td th# bvide's fatter tjjf.t he wm leav frothing- could ?hanre his reaohit.ion. He -C stipulated iVthe Important nto.m Mexico.?The steamship Tennessee has arrived at New Orleans from Vera Cruz. She brings two weeks lutcr intelligence from tlie City of Mexico. A large party?consisting of a large majority of the people, outside of the military force? i had risen against the Taeubaya proiiuncimento overturning the eonstitution and declaring j Conionforts"le and absolute dictator. Coinonfort left the capitol on the first instant, at I lie head of a division of troops. 11 is 1 destination was unknown. Before his depnr- I lure the organized ministry?among whom are j Aleennt riz.c, Ksparta, Credo und 1'avno, together with most of the diplomatic corps, paid : tltyir respects to (,'omonfort on New Year's j day. Tho British representatives were nl>- j sent on this occasion, which fact caused much j surprise and remark. a rumor oi the ucatit ot ?_icn. Alvnrcz, pre- j vailed. (ieii. Parodi had issued proclamation a- : gainst Comonfort. This action will have aj tendency to make hirge levi s on tlie troops. ' Vera Cruz has recalled tlie acceptance of the j proninieiiiicnto.?(Jivil war appealed to be inevitable. L'Vom the Mexican Journals "and letters received hv the l'ieayunc, it apjtrX-s that the rccent. revolutionary proceedings Cortionfort, assisted by Gen. liacz, In the city of Mexico, had been received with much dialuvorin many of the interior portions of tlie country, and a hirge number of States bad opOnly declared in the most violenttufln'ner against tlie new order of things. Many of the principal . towns, including Vera Cruz, hud also join&'d iu opposition to Comonfoii, and u formidable military coalition was in process of of organixation to assist in the movement, against him. In several portions of the republic troops werealready in motion, and.another change iu the executive njiii'jti' nnnaiiKAil ., ? ,1,.. ad views to be imminent' ?<? Memphis TuadkJ?Since the projection of our Railroad system, with almost every rail laid down, the trade of Memphis has felt an expitneive'impulse. , During lust week our worthy frieiid on I'ront How, Mr. D. II. Townaeml. sold a hill of groceries for Abingdon, Va., and we heard previously of a similar hill bv Messrs. Gat^s and Wood, for Knoxville, East Tennessee. . It has Imuii ascertained that such articles as sugar and luolassep can he obtained kcre, notf onlV cheaper, but purer and fresher khan apywlferc on the Atlantic eeaboard. When >thjc Chattanooga nnd Cleveland and East Tenae^?e and Virginia roads shall be completed, a hogshead of fresh Louisiana ?u gar, or a barrel of molasses, can be delivered Miywhorv tu the Kast, Tennessee or Western Virginia from this place, fit as low, if not lower rntes, thaVf from 11113' of t.lie Atlantic ports, sy.ith the proper entcrpi ise on the pnrtif our grocery merchants, there can be no doubt, hut that a larger trade rrt^y be brought horp from tliaj, section of the iToion.?Memphis Appeal, Daiunc Robheuy.?Our worthy fellow-citieen, lohu- Venl, bus met with a .sad loss, in owhicb lie has the sympathy of th? comumnity. OnFriday night, his.itore was entered ant robbed of jewelry, wjt?&hc& ?<fc.. Srorth. about four thousand doIlirB^.Tlw thieves ineemto have acted1 audi caution," sl? ItlH fcllA Apfl?tvip"aili*hii1.V ?ixAAA railroad inciNin <MA?!?!?chuiaM\ has also established a p?l>cr cailedv;th0S*Auiyican StaUsrryin, devoted epptfcitilljF.torlfce vindication of the memory v6f Calhoun " ' Bat* -This distinguished poet and traveller watf hj^Jaofcf&ccougttj, t^ith- Jiis bride, at Gottfa^He yrite^to tbe^rcditor pfthf Irooie'Joftrn'a) thjil frj has inst return cdfoj-rn tf* bridal-touJrfo'loAdon,' arflj was *d<in)icUgd For' the jm-seril at.the obfoerviitory, wh'ich is' the n;sidentfe of. hU father-in-law, the professor, of astronomy at $!.9thn/y li's intention is ^paes the comt^jvjn.ter in Gf&ce, apd,th0fcfo)lo\vjng summer, -in Tiug^itt^ tifoping to rotUBD t<? Aoiefioa in the aqtmfin 0f.l8.'i^^ ', * *' 'SUSPENSIONS JR^TUk CoWON THaDE.?A*idlS-, Datcli frnm !..? *1 v ! ^ , .... miou wuvio navejieeneightsuspensions \jy the.'c^tUrn trade in that ei t vw i th 10 the part fe w days, and twq, in New Orleans, 1ft atflSition to tlii'ee telegraphed last week. Theie afopeftalons'are caused mainty by }he heavy fall in cottdn. the past"month, < reri- ? dered ft upposaible fbj**psHiqa t&meet "engage- < incuts which had been predicated npon tjiccotton they toldvbeing?vorth jl "to 13 centa, instead of whioh it had deollfloa r.-eently fco.ri}-, and is UQW pjgjy quoted^ri per lb.**. g .> ' . _ < ExTENilfK I^OB B ElUT.-^10,000 * vannar, JAn/'lfi ?'TwoyoUpg^nerx' from North Carolina,- #?rd rdbb??..pf ten thousand dolUft' , at Femandina. Fli; dii 8a4ordfty night- laSfc < Niue thousfifid fiveibundfed dollars of the mpg-'1 ey was in bills'of the Batik* ofc-WilmingtoiS N>. C; and the^baiance^n. l>iU 8 of batiksm-South Carolina. ^A^e*?Wof%b ?boiisa?d ?dolfcr? s is offered for tt^reoov^ryof tbetldef aid mem-' ey-' \ '.Si - -ALABAMA AND Kansas. ^UofwoHp*, W.;?n In tlfe Legistatare of Alah%ma,^hur&<j^y, both branches pvgftcri unanimously a resolution Authorizing tho Qoyerno/to aa^?mR&.Oj|at6n]n tion, in tk? ovebtof Coftgre??'r?fu?Ing'io ' iwhnit Neandor and Gieseler. i The study of Church History?one of the I noblest and most profitable of all studies? I is beginning to engage amongst us something of the attention it deserves. The controversies of the day call for a large acquaintance with it. The inner Christian life needs the nourishment it is fitted to afford. Anil no one can claim to be a wellread theologian, who has not followed up, nlnmr ?fs tin* aP Pln?!e?!.??i teaching towards its source. ^ lint in pursuing it, good guides are needed ; and at present there are no two more worthy of cordial commendation than the great Germans whose names stand above. Willi the exception of their teachings as to the first constitution of the Church, and here and there a tingeof rationalism, we hear:ily join with the Presbyterian Banner and Advocate in what it says of them below. fEDS. OK THE REC.] The great master-pieces of Ecclesiastical History, by which the literature of this age is distinguished, are the works of Neander and of Geiscler. For more than a quarter of a century, these eminent men were engaged in maturing the productions which, in after years, were to be associated in honorable connexion with their names. Gieseler and Neander were contemporaries, and, to a certain extent, they wero competitors for fame. In many points they resembled each other, while in others their respective char acteristics stand out in remarkable difference, and even contrast. Germans by birth and throughly Germans as to their education, they were equally attached to the study of anliqiiitv. Koaallv callable of tr.i versing all the records of llie past, in whatever language the information was to be found ; and equally characterized by assiduity in research, and honesty in recording the results of their labors, without bias or influence of party; still, their mental idiosyncrasies are stamped tin all their perforininw Tt.? fV- 1 - ......vv.-. i .>>- >ti umg ui iiuuuiii;]' arvs cilllnently subjective, while the history ofGieseler is as decidedly objective. The same materials put into the hands of these two men, nsstfnicd two entirely different forms ^hen they had concluded their respective labo?s. Neander digested his materials, anVfbv a process of mental assimilation, (nade them all his own. He then gave them forth in a flowing narrative, in which his own temperament appears un every j j?Hga. In hi$ hands, history is a living exhibition of the past; whereas the object of Gieeeler is to construct a work which, by its wording, shall record the actions doctrincs of the bodies and individiU|^|*wUo'8e rtames are inscribed on his pages. ^'itR'9 <Sf Neander, the leading worthies (!jf*a tiifrpnty u all pass before us, but they vpeak the language and wear the dress of WisAndisir.-' Gifcseler takes the actual words apffieologians.of camions and councils, and *fcf?a>few sirnpfe phrases of liis own, he fin^a them "together, and thus he makes 'UremAheiro'wn tale. Thus he gives the .'mftferiafe of history, honestly and full}', Jtheil ho-permits the reader to construct the ptlieory for ^ himself. Neander gives the theory and the facts, nnd he imbues them both with life ; a>:d all ia done, in both ca ses, by the band of a master. It ^'ere no difficult task to show ^bow a partizan or disingenuous writer might mislead, bis readeip, whether he followed the lead of Gfoseler or Neandcr. A dogmatic sophist tnay easily construct a plausible theory, and, iu the manner ofNeander, fill up fiis worlf by vivid pictures,of lifedike transaction. His error lies in his premises, and ,jn the forced Application of^his facts, to subtitftf assumption. 80 in the case of Gies $ler,;dt ? notorious thai" the words of theologians, the language of counoils and Church' assembles, may bo quoted and united together, wBile Uie lesson inculcated by the narrative may 'be altogether untrue. Still where the writer is honest, where he is la , " * ' . f4-' berioua in collecting his materials, faithful in making his^extracts, and aims merely at retcordlr)g the actual occurrences of the past 5t fftobviojis thfl|t the ?prir\ciple on which Qiefeelet hrfs constructed his great work, is the safest, though not.the uiost brilliant iu it??&uhS.: .. - T9 fe, reflecting rOirad that can thinlcfor , itself, Greseltr' supplies the material?, and they caii be nU without fear as to their accurrenicy^yi the cause of trutha'nd righteousneMb It is this feature^ of bifr great worjc which constituted ita chief excellence. His honesty, his erudition, and bis accuracy, arc equally remark able and 'conspicuous, in every page 01 uis wnnpgw^ ziegpe yn?',vh>1&. which suuftfe ^londfiQ e^Iesiastical ; Harrati ve, so far aa. structure 1# oonofcro^J, aeter of a skeleton, tliat it requires to b clothed with the drapery of life and aetioi Tiiis has been done by Neander, and tlm the one is the complement of the other. Tli two, when united, form an admirable hi* lory. Hence it is that we advise all posse? sors of Neatider to procure the work of(iies eler, and the possessors of the latter will fee the propriety of adorning their shelves b the addition of Neander. Separating the Sexes in School. On this point, Mr. Stowe, a celehratec Glasgow teacher, uses the following Ian guage: "The youth of both sexes of ou Scottish peasantry have been educated to gelhcr; am) as a whole the Scotch are tli most moral people on the earth. Educf lion in England is given separately, and w never have heard from practical men tha any benefit has arisen from the arrangemcnl Some, influential individuals there mourl over the prejudice on this point. In Dul lin, a larger number of girls turned on badly who had been educated alone uuti they attained the nge of tnalurily, than c those who were otherwise brought up; th separation of the sexes has thus been foum to Ik*, injurious. It is stated, on the bos authority, that of those girls educated i the schools of convents, apart from boys the greater majority go wrong within month after being let loose in society atn meeting the other sex.?They cannot, it i said, resist the slightest compliment or flat terv. The separation is intended to kee; them strictly moral; but this umiatmal st elusion actua'ly generates the vcrv princ.i pies desired to In; avoided. We may repea that it is impossible to raise the girls 11 high, intellectually, without the boys as wit them, and it is impossible to raise boy morally as high without girls. The girl morally elevate the boys, and the boys intel leotually elevate girls. But more tha this : girls themselves arc morally elevatei by the pressence of boys, and boys are it telleotlially elevated by the presence cj girls. Girls brought up with boys are moi 0...I 1.?- I -I-. : uivim, nuu uujyn uum^JlO up 1 schools with the girls, arc morn postivel intellectual by tlie softening influence of tli female character. In tlie Normal Semin: ly at Glasgow, the most beneficial effect have resulted from the more natural coursi Hoys and girls, from the age of two or tlire years to that of fourteen or fifteen, have beei trained in the same class-room, galleric-i and play grounds, without impropriety and tliey arc never separated except a needlework?Authur's Magazine. n . c\ p ' 1 uaituknuf a uriiosT.?ror several nay past, says the London Slar of 1 7tl a considerable deal of exciteinen. s beei caused in the neighborhood of London st Dock head, in consequence of its being r< ported and actually believed by many, ths one of the houses was haunted by a verily ble ghost. So strong was the belief, tha every day thousands of people collecte about the street, putting a atop to busines and creating much annoyance to tlic peac< able inhabitants. The house in questibi was inhabited by a workman named Baket and his wife and daughter* While tli inan was out in the day time at his woii singular noises were,, heard in all parts c the house, and breaking of crockery, glas* <fcc; which were thrown about in all direc lions by some invisible hand. Tiiesa nois< soon attracted the attention of the passer by, who collected nbout, and in a short tin: tlierenort col abroad that the'house in Que ? c 1 tion was haunted. The nuisance becair so great tliaf the clergymen eonnectcd wit parish wore acquainted with the circun stances. The Catholic priest attended, bu would have nothing to do with the subjeel Mr. Hancock, a gentleman .connected, wit the District Visiting Society, inquired int the circumstances, and soon found out tha the ghost was n'o other than tho daughtoi a young girl about twelve years of age. T prevent hei^folldwing her bad inclination! she was confined to the house, when sh broke herfather's crockery and-furniture i such a mysterious way as to causo the r< nnrf. Iieinrr snrnml ll?:U. the limwn ??? Imnr ted. The father, by the advice of otllei personsj gave Jier into custody, and she wi brought before Mrj- Combe, charged.- wit committing the wilful damage to her father goods. : f The father said he hqd no idea at fir that it wnsshe who.broke his things, as h wife told him that she was in the same root J" ft ' , . .with the girl when the things were throw about and shi^did not see Dor touch anylbinj Ti.n* k,.?u ii,?< it ?Vl u xii^jr uum uchctcu uinv ?w naq biiu wum V a ghpat, and that the .houWwas haunted.. Mr. Combe inquired whether it bad bee ascertai n ed h o w sh 0 cohtrivfed to brenjc tl crockerywithout, bei ng ?pereeivtjd ty hi mother f ' HeV father snid that he lyagle u Rising in the world. i. You should bear constantly in mind tliat s nine-tenths of us aie'froin the very nature and necessities of the world, born to gain our livelihood l?y the sweat of our brow, j." What reason have we. then to presume that I i our children are not to do the same ? If V they be, as now ami then one will be, endowed with extraordinary powers of mind, those powers tnav have onnnrtnnWv -l?. * I I J v* 1 veloping themselves, and if they never have - that opportunity, are always to he laborers, the harm is not very great to us or them. Nor does it hence follow that they are the L* descendants of laborers. The path upwards l- i? clflun .....I l~..~ t._ . .W|/ imiu IVMI^, IU uv nine. lliUUMry, e t-kill, excellency, in (lie present parent, lay t tl.e foundation of a rise, under more f;?vo(. rabbi circumstanccs, for the children. The n children of these take another rise, and by> by-the descendants of the present laborer t become gentlemen. This is the natural ! progress. It is by attempting to reach the >f top at a single leap that so much misery is e produced in the world, and the propensity to :1 such an attempt has been cherished and enit couraged by the strange projects that we 11 have witnessed of late years for making the >, laborers virtuous and happy by eiviug them a what is called education. The education il which I speak of consists in bringing chilis dren up to labor with steadiness, and with skill ; to show them how to do h11 in the [? best manner; to set them an example in !- industry, sobriety, cleanliness,and neatness; - to make all these habitual to them, so that t they shall never be liable to fall into the is contrary; to let them always see a good livh ing proceeding from labor, and thus to res move from them the temptations to get at Is the goods of others by violent or fraudulent I- means.? William Cohbet. A Melancholy I'kkdicament.?To be in a "strapped" condition is uudoubtely to be in a bad" phix." The "strap" thus understood refers to a peculiar condition of ^ I . 1. ^ l..i _ r v. 1 ^ -i * * liic [jmckcl ui pniuuiooii!*, nnu noL 10 the legs thereof, as in lliis instance of being ^ strapped. Most of our readers are aware 0 that an old fashion fastening one's legs on by straps to his pantaloons, passing under * his feet, is about to be revived. This fashion is not now so absurd as it used to be, for u Linton, of tiie Amphitheatre, having inau11 gurated the new style of walking with the *" feet up, it becomes a necessity that people so walking should have suspenders on thai 1 end of their pantaloons which is uppermost to keep them from slipping down. So s n traps in iuis wise are wise, we don't'any it that the party who was in the following n "melancholy predicmcnt" was in the habit ; of walking feet uppermost; but we do say )- that on the occasion in question he was init dined to 44 feel up for the ground that lie i- walked home "feeling up for the ground," ,t and not exactly knowing which end he was d standing on. These arc holiday times, s, lie has a wife? or, n wife has him, and ?- she told us the story. lie came home in n the small hours and found his way to his , apartment, his witVs apartment, and began ie to make preparation for retiring, by sticki, ing his toot into a bootjuck with the design .e ? i.:_ t?. -- * n vii leuiuvtfiiiij ins uool?no, leaving ma Doot j immoveable and removing Ilia foot from it ?liia nightcapped spouse watching the Js operation and liis eccentric movements about s_ the room with indignant regards. With ,e some ado be succeeded in inserting bis foot, s_ into the bootjack* and made a desperate ,e pull. The effort was utterly abortive, and, |, with the same no result, was several times v repeated'. lit) .became desperate, jerked and t_ pulled himself into a fever of oxoitement and finally turned to bis wife with: . '"See bere?bio!?old lady, I'm?hie!? 0 coming to bed with my boola on?hie,! t l am, certain?IncI ?sftee it'1 don't?hiu! t old iady !" o You're coming to bed wilh your boots on, pre you, Mr. ! You are !" screamie ed'the indignant lady, who bad been anxi* i) 4ou*ly awaiting his coming, thinking some3. tiling serious had happened to her absent 1. lord, and found that lie was only seriously 'S inebriated, and that her anxiety for-his safest ty had been' wasted. , *, |) J "You are coming to bed with your boots 'u on, are you J* You ftre. intoxicated, .sit! You have been off on & spree, sir! Take st< off your boot?, sir! You can't come, inttf is -tbis bed with them on ,wr.M _ n "I'm c-coming tobed.wltb my boot# on n X?hie, tifadaui If- Iniusl! I c-can't get them ?. ?hie?f>k* wrt^tbaufcxplanation of tho af>f? flioted benedict.. are tight?-you are drunk, sir i n .You ajfght t?xbe* ashamed of youraelftor ie vodimpg hpme.ia that condition,"'and'the jr ^wrife nroafe to see if she couldn't do som* . tbifig to relieve the .efnbarraMed circling rV 'luineeaother lord. A glaoce placed l^eV unclouded-faculties jn .possessforkof \Xt> factff ~ .1. I.io vncro, OIIU *lltJ fJUIULOlI UUfc IU9 course New ^-Wyment.. ' "The melancholy days have come, 'SW* 1 Tlie saddest of the year," When notes ore due, and lengthy bills Come in from fur and near ; When "here's a small account of j-ours,'' Is whispered in your oar, And won't you please to settle now, Is nil the talk you hear. You scarce can take ? morning walk, Without ere long you're met, By Mr. Snooks, who wants to know If Von can't "si-It 1<< vel. And tli(j hour of "dusky eve," When you do homeward liio Upon the parlor table, lo 1 A pile of bills to lie. Ye ?*linji!?, whose salary amounts To ten times ten a year. Who sport your paternal leather boots, With such a "foreign sir."? And wear your thirteen dollar "tight*," And jfolden buttoned vest, I wonder not when New Year comes, You seek in vain for rest. Ye girls with empty bonnets stuck, Upon your empty heads, With high-priced silk find satin things, With hoops, and flowers, and hei.ds? I wonder what "papa" will say, When Mr. Rpriggings calk. With ju*t that little bill of his, For bonnets, hoops and shawls. And now my st\-lish little chaps, And fushionnble little inuid, I'll tell you what you better do, When those long bills arc paid, Just spend as many dollars now, Upon your addled brain, As you have spent for costly clothes, And tee how muc'- vou'H ijniii. Ax Earthly Paicadise.?The correspondent of Harper's Weekly, who is writing a series of letters headed "Travel Notes in Bible Lands," for that excellent paper, in speaking of the vulloy of Kadesha, in which is situated tlio once renowned city of Tripoli, tlie knell of whose greatness and glory, like that of ancient Rome, has long since been sounded, uses the following chaste and beautiful language in reference to that paradisaical spot of earth : 'Never may man hope to see a lovelier valley than that of Kade-ba, where Tripoli stands as its outlet on the sea. All that the world can furnish of the grand and beautiful unites here lo make the place a paradise. Lofty mountains, sublime summits, resting ou the bluesky, look down on the calm and peaceful valley where a stream wanders among dense groves and luxuriant gardens?now by a palace, and now by a ruined castle of a crusader?now by a mosque, and now by an old Deverisb college, while the air, laden with perfume, and always lit with a serene suDsbine, is an atmosphere of heaven. "Some day, when I am done with the world, I will come here and take one of these ruins on the bank of the Kadesha, and live out the rest of my time in glorious luxury?dreaming old dreams, recounting old stories, hearing old songs. T d.oii ii,,i I have not, to write you of the glory of Tripoli. IIow its walls, on a moony night, ring with the war-cries of brave men in brave days?how I t/ace the arms of Raymond of Toulouse here and thereon ruined cnstle and fortification, for Raymond oncfe possessed Tripoli as a fief?how the old legends tell grand histories of the knights of Tripoli." ? t ? Some Noise.?A neighbor of the London Illustrated News thinks the Hoe's Last Fast1' a nuisance. Tie has sued the proprietors, and his evidence says that the court which ! separated his premises from the defendants , was only four feet three iochcs wide, and in the month of March last the defendants set up an American printing machine, worked 1 by steam, which created the nuisance now 1 complained of. The printing began every , Thursday night, and was continued all Fri; day and Friday night, and sometimes on Saturday, and such was the noise from tho machinery that it was scarcely possible to hear onesejf speak in the'plantifTs parlor. The screaming, whistling and thumping of the boiler and fly-wheels rendered the plantilT's lie-use uninhabitable, and the noise was compared to that of an express train passing by, hilt never gelling away. .The result was that the plantifTs wife wbr not. able to live in the house, his customers forsook the parlor, and the port wine and beer in tho cellars were rendered thick by the vibration. The vibration was so groat that it would gradually cause the glasses to tumble oft' the shelves in the bar; or, if one were left on the cask in the cellar, it would after .a time tumble off and get broken. f . . A Beautiful Paragraph.?The fuJV . *? *' *Ll lowing lines are taken from 8tr, Humphrey Davy's Salmonia: "I envy no quality Ojthe niihdsor intellect in others-*be it genins^ power, wit"! Taney?but if I could choose whrft would be most Delightful, nncj t believe most useful to me, I should prefer & a firm religious'belief Many olher blessing Vfor. it makes lift! a disciplioe ofgoodnes^rbreathos new hope*, vanishes and/throws over tWr dewy, til* d?trubt?oo o^existenoe. the mc? ~ gorgeous Of ftfljigfit; awakens\life even in jieatii, ap^ from corhjptionjnd. dScay ^aflls up to beautt Ahd iJJvitiity.; m?k?**?n in truWt Judder of 'i 1 ^^on of earthly I8>pe*,l?ilk up Utemoit; I! of tlwi bleat, anci . Aaron J?urr. Oiy, Lieutenant ('niotu-1 in u^-A.rnjy.'.or^e. JjeVoliftibn, U. S. Senator, Vice Prusidefrr-Q^ti^JJtiited StrtttiS. (tc. Hv J Vnhfnn alillinp ous Poetry of the Knglish Language," of Horace Greeley," &c ; pp. 700, 8 vo. son Bros; 108 ami 110 Duane staeet; Russell <fc J ones, 251 King street, Charleston^ S. C. ; tf-_ To attempt the life of Aaron Bl:rr at this clay argues, no little audacity, and this ^ quality alone will commend the work to many. This exhibition of audacity in this ense, however, will not surprise any one when it is remembered that the author is the biographer of IIouack Greelf.y, and the husband of Fanny Fern. A friend, of some critical experience and observation in men and books, has examined this volume and reports to ns the following results: There i* a good deal of merit in this book, aixJ more pretension. Perhaps, we should have said, there is a good deal of interest irl. it, which arises, alter all, from the mystery , and bad eminence of tlie subject of the biography. We remember hearing one of the greatest editors of our day giving advice to a young man whom be had employed td. asist him in the use of the scissors, say that any paragraph which brought men and women together in the matter of scandal and ..,..0 k.. _.:.L ? vimii^ 11 no icnu uv uuui at'Aua wim uviuiiy* Bcmi's reputation for gallantry has made his life of muro general interest, we suspect, ' * ? than any mystery which hangs over his political movements or his trial for treason< Novels have been written about him, and tales have derived their interest from his name and intrigues. , Nai'Olen used to speak of the military glance?the glance whereby at once tho warrior saw how to avail himself of the chances and the changes of the contest? _ when to seize the banner and pass Lodi< when to bid the Old Guard to charge* l Here is also, an oratorical glance, so to sp?nk, Mr. Clay and Lord Chatham and Mikaueau had remarkably?the glance which caught the tone and temper of whaever assembly they might be addressing* and gave tliein the power to adapt their speeches and manners to the occasion. It may be said that there is also a biographic glance, whereby the biographer atoned comprehends the character of his subject* This glance Mr. Parton certainly has not; This bouk is a thing of shreds and patches, lie often contradicts himself?saying in one piace lor instance, mat uurr was never melancholy, was always cheerful, and in another for hours he would gate on bis | daughter's portrait, while the tears would roll down his cheek in sflence. Burr was ^ too proud a man to expose his griefs to tbo world, and too cautious to commit even his sorrows to paper; but he felt them, nevlei^ tbeless, and all the keener that he bid them I ?as the bird feels not the less the barb of the arrow because her wing hides it. Talleyrand, we know, in the last year of his life, wrote in thesileut midnight on a bit of paper on bis table his unquiet and bis unrest?and the uext'm&riiiug wben he went to court what an imperturbable old man be! Tbe greatest comic actor of France went to ptiysician to whom he was unknown to get a prescription to cure his low sprits, when he was recommended to go and see himself. < , act 1 ^ liurr had qne great great gift, self-reliaoc'ek TT? ,??o I.,,.., o ...1,1;,.. i.:? ^;.,4 m.? '' t.4.v ??MO W'll n CJV/ IVIICI j UUU 111 o UJIUU TTH8 UK . * just thnt cast to gite him success at the baft ? ilc asked no favors of tho opposite coUtl* sel, atul lie was not opt to grant pny. When ?v .r he was twenty-six years' of age and wished to be married,(by the by, to a widow with"- i two sons, and she was ten years his senior; it is strange what marriages' this Style of" then often makes) he' studied law but nine* month, when he applied for admission U) the bar. o He had hired an astute old law* " yer to answer him whatever legal questions . ho might put to him, and stndied in tbM '' *" /Pi . . i' * v way. murine oj mo coun require^ tfte previous study of three years before admit-.. tarce to the bar. liurr could get uo lawyer , /f" to lliu application lor liiriu. lie sought tjr$Vv- a private interview with the judge, (to>* lilfk t> ?,him!) and being received favorably, V? made the-mo'tion for his own- ad d mission itv court and succeeded, vv The account of his duel with Hamilton is. .l very interesting, and from the way in which : > the present' biographer puts tbe,cA?y,- her was entirely jusiiliable iu calling Hamilton, , out. But wo cannot agreewitb Mr.Pafrtoq^ : when he says at the ejid of his bodjc.' j (Burr) upon the wliolg,l-,ai?. think, a better iqan thai^H*niilton, Burr, in bia expedition, was nothing mora ; '1 than a foiled filibuster,p*a?ij ihtj pifyitljijk ? is very interesting'. B'ut the" ' salient poTtit in Burr's cliarnct^rww bisrloy?,rfor his daughter?and 6ne>yhawaa w ' by such a, noble and intelleuthWfcfeiftg, must , - . have had heart arul eentibly,. . . < - = "Ank why ch? lox?(J hit?f Curiou*/?ol$>a WiJlj.'' v .1, la hn'aia?rlo?V th?growih bfUuman To her lie might U> teixderticM.^; ' ' | So By{0? spy? of ?Ud'lpye*oF i yl tJonraJ. It is natural. > lb at ft d^ug^M?^': < should Joy?-bW. fa.tjier,. and <)pv<Syhv&tife'? >V ,.inofe tbe'rttore the \Yorl<UrawGe ujw b'irxv ,,.t^ ?-auch is thejnaUya"of woman ho lay 'ibiU***j Kkeibesi^^