University of South Carolina Libraries
- r *---. - 'a- t We will lun to. thePillars of the Temple of our Liberties, and it a: must fall, we will Perish amidst the Euins -- VOLUME 1. E&dtffeX&ourtfMouse, . C., pril 10, S444 *.1.* EDGEFIELD ADVEII.TISEIR BY W.F. DURISOE, PROPRIETOR. - NEW TERMS. Two Dollars and Fifty Cents, per annum, if paid in.advance-Three Dollars if not paid before the expiration of Six Months from the -date of Subscription-and Pour Dollars if not paid within twelve Months.t Subscribers out of the State are required to pay in advance. No subscription received for less than one year, and no paper discontinued until all ar rearages are paid, except at the option of tie Publisher. All subscriptions will be continued diless 'therwise ordered before the expiration of the year. Any person procuring five Subscribers and becoming responsible for the same, shall re ceive the sixth copy gratis. Adcrtisemcats conspicuously inserted.at 621 cents per square, (12-lines, orless,) for the first insertion, and 431 cents, for each continu ance. Those published Monthly, or quarterly will be charged $1 per square for each inser tion. Advertisements not having the number of insertions marked on them, will be contin. ned until ordered, out, and charged accord ingly. All Job work done for persons living at a distance, must be paid for at the time the work is'done, or the payment secured in the village. All communications addressed to the Editor, post paid, will be promptly and strictly attend edto ,LAIYP OIL. A CHOICE ARTICLE. for sale by H. A. KENRICK. Hamburg, Nov. 25 tf 14 SHAWLS. R ICH Satinahd Chamelion Silk Shawls, and Cardinals; &c. &c. &c. Just received by - .4. JOHN 0. B FORD. Hamburg, Feb. 20 tf 4 J. O. B. FORD, S now opening at his store in Hamburg. A general assortment of Staple and Fancy DRT GOODS. February 16 tf 4 HARS. CHOICE Sugar cured HAMS. for sale by - H. A. KENRICK. Hamburg, March 12. tf 7 BALTIMORE HAMS. choice canvassed Baltimore HAMS, just received, and fot sale by H. A. KENRICK. Hamburg. Nov. 25 tf 44 UTECONOMY! ECONOMY!!.g THE SOUTHERN MEDICAL POCKET BOOK. T HE Subscriber having anticipated the publication of his MEDICAL POCK ET BOOK, prepared expressly for the South ern States, but, being disappointed in publish ing it as a book, now proposes to issue the work in sheets, twice a month, until the whole work.shall be completed. Each number will comprise 32 duodecimo pages, on excellent paper. making, when completed, about 300 or 350 pages. This method has been adopted because it is the cheapest and safest mode by which the work can be delivered to subscribers. The principles of Medicine, Disease, Prac tice, and theory. so far as relates to the Botanic remedies, are full and comprehensive. In fact, the Medical Pocket Book is so arranged as to render every man, or head of a family qualified to act as their ewn physician. In urging the POCKET BOOK upon the pubic, he deems it only necessary to state, that (not as heretofore.) the work will be free from Mysterions Technicalities-and, tit all the light within the reach or comprehiensidft of the writer, has been plainly set forth. Disease' wvith the various treatments. preparatrions for, and application to. are rendered so easy no one who reads can fail to comprehend. This course has been pursued in all the divisions of the work, particularly in Anatomy, which is con densed from volumes of seven and eight hun dred pages. downu to a compass of, tperhais, be twveenr thirty and fifty pages-embracing the major, nnd most important functions, internal and external, of the human lframne. It wvill be found to answer the purpose for which it is designed. and its adaptation to all classes. ages and sexes-and will prove to, be a cmnpamion to all who may constult its pages either thco retical or- practical. The following is the order in which the sev eral parts of the wvork will appear. and the difierent subjects that will be therein contained: viz. 1. Preface,. .History and Theory of the Bo tanic Practice. 2. Practice of Medicine. 3. Botanical Materia Medica. 4. Cdmpendious Anatomy. 5. Obstetrics, abridged. 6. Dispensatory. 7. Popular and -valuable Recipes, between 100 and 200. 8. Suargery, iabridged. 9. Comprehensi'e Glossairy. 1. In'dex, arranged for each part separately. Trh'iifon-of the work will bet issuaied' about tledrstl of May 'i.hse wvhio wish to avail themselves ofthe-work will forward their subscriptions. throgh tbeir respective post offices,-Postastersaareauthorized to forward letters containing money .for. a publication of this kind, free of postage. - The work, when completed,.can be bound in any style to suit the taste of the purchsr. -'ITerm.-For a single copy, $2 50. Five copies; $10. Ten copies, $17 Twventy co. pies. $30.1 The postage will be the samne s onf newspapers. -Each number wvill be carefully. ftded in an envelope, aid forwarded to eaich subscribr separately.. . - -~Mress, freo of postage, F.' . BRONSON, LaGrange. Ga. Those E lier"vho'receive this prospectus will confVr fti ivdrbv publishingf it in their co lumns for a fieweevis.' The numbers of the Pocket Boot will be sent to all who publish as March 27 -.tf t A t:ROP OF GIN. Gin! Gin! a drop of Gin Vhat magnified mobsters circle 'herein Ragged, and stained wit filth aid mud, Some plaite-.-poated, and some with blood! Shapes of MliseryShamr and Sin! Figures that make as loathe and tremble, Creatmessetarc Iinman, that wore resemble Broodsof daabohcal kin, Ghouie and Vampige, Demon and Gin! Gin! Gin! a Drop ofGin! The dream ofd.uan ! the liquor ofSin! Distilld-from the fell Alembics of Haell,n 13y Guilt and !)eath,.his own brother and Twin! That man wig", fall Still lower than all The meanest creatures will scale and fin. But hold-we are neither Barebones nor Prynne, Who lash with such rage The sins cf the age ; Then, instead of making too much a dia, Let Anger be mute. And sweet mercy dilute, With a Drop of Pity, the Drop of Gin! Gin ! Gin! a Drop of Gi! When darkly Adversity's day's set in, And the f-iends and peers 01 eirlier years Prove warm without, but cold within, And cannot retrace A familiar face That's steep'd in poverty up to the chin ; But snub. utbleet, cold shoulder and cut The ragged pauper, misformune's butt Hardly acknowledg'd by kith and kit, Because poor rat ! He has no cravat: A seedy coat,-and a hole in that! Nor a change of linen-except his skin, No gloves-no vest, Either sec:ond or best ; And what is worse than all the rest, No light heart, tho' his breeches are thin, 1% bile tine elopes With all golden hopes, And even with those of pewter and tin, The'brightest dreams. And the best of schemes; All knocked dowr, like a- wicker by Mynn Each castle in air Seized by Giant Despair, No prospect in lil worth a nunikin pin, No credit-tin cash, No cold mntton to hash, No bread-not even potatoes to mash; No coal in the cellar, no wine in the binn. Sassh'd, broken to hits, With Judgtments and writs, Bonds. bills, and rognovits distracting his wits. In the webs that the spiders of Chanceryspin, Till weary of lite. its worry and strife; Black visions are a ie of a razor, a knife; Of poison-a rope-' louping over a liun." Gin! Gin! a Drop of ' Oh ! then its tremenduous tetnptations begin, To take, alas! To a fatal ~class, And happy the wr.et-h that does not win To change the black hue Of his ruin to h!ne While Angels sorrow. and Detnons grin And lose the thenmatic' Chill of his attic By plunging into the palace of Gin! London Chvarivari. AGRICUJLTIJRA . From the I{estern" Farmner and Garde - r WATER WI l'ClH.ES. The foll.,wing letter has been handed to us by a gentleman, ton welli known in this vicinity tis atn old and respectable early settler in Ketntucky, atnd a preacher of the Word, to require our say'ing more, thatn that itmplicit reliance taty be placed on all his statements. He is since deceased. We have no doubt lie will ffnd lew believ ers in the "witchery" of rt-e matter; hut we cat assure our readers that ii is getner ally bselieved in thes~e parts-indeed, we can name individuals, well knowt aill over' the West, who are thorough believers. For ourselves we saty noting.- E. ..Hl. Messrs. Editor's:-l am about to give you a few remarks of my experience, on-a stiieet ott which, I have tno doubi. y'our self anid most of your readers will *bo as inmed~ulous us I was at ontimie. You shali have the facts as I tmyself wvitnesaedl thetm, or knew thetm to take place. I will not ptetend to assign any cause, or give a reasoin why such things are~, btt leave every oneO to do so for himself. My subject is that of certain individuals beitig able to fiod and point out the exact spot where an under-current of water flows,. as she best poitnt fur diggitng a well ; and of their also being abtle somnetmes tostate the precise depth at n hich the water will he fo~und. Snch persons nre generally knowit atd spoken of int Ketntucky as "Wuter The- first instance of which f wiif speak is tii. As early as 1840. wvheni salt, as it is welI knowni was searce atnd high in this then ntew~ cotutry, tn ot twelve tneighibors of tus entered into ati agreetment to sendl for a "water nitch." who had already lhe come tnted ont thiesombi sidle of the Ken tucky river-by namtze, David Cook-and have him'searebh fair a spring of salt wva ter ott our resp~ective latnds, and wherever he should determinte as the best spoit there we were to dig at our joinit expense, and divide the salt wve should mtake. I had no faith whattever in any thling of the kind, though some of the othere hadl. Cook came ; he lived 100 miles from my pliuce. All the company met at tmy house-, .'md aifter Cook had prepared his 'divi- ing rod,' tve went ont. This rod wvas a forked neach tree twig.; the. forks about two feet long. Grasping the points of the rod in each hand, bending them outwards sufficiently to allow-a firm hold, the jpoints wtoards the thumbs; the plahn of the hands being turned up, and the point of the fork -also directed upwards-he walks steadily along over the ground to be examined,:until. as he nears a vein of water, the rod begins'to tremble in his hand.; as, he approaches more elosely to the spot beneath which it flows, the rod, of itself, turns downwards; end, as he walks past the spot, it gradu ally rises again, and will turn so far tack ward as to, rest against his breast. The rod evidently turns, not by the agency of ,he holder. us it will twist so as to sepa rate the bark entirely from the wood, even twisting the woad around as in making a witl.e;. in fact, if held petfeetly tight it would be apt to break. Cook, when he went into my yard, held up his rod, and at once-seemed to decide on the course to take. He walked steadily onwards, in the direction of a deer. lick about a quarter of a mile from the-house ; when within abou-t forty or fifty yards. of the lick-which, however, from the brush abnou: it, could not possibly. be seen--the rod pointed do?!pwards, and he told us that there was the spot to dig for salt water. I drove in at that spot a black locus( peg. leaving its top about two inches under ground, and marked the sten of a spice bush whici Stood within eighteen inches of it. He traced the vein of water to its source, but retured to my peg, stating that to be the ies't spot. In answer to the doubts I ex pressed; Cook gave me the rod in my own ands. and standing behind me, he took 2ne of my naked wrists in: each of his iands. We walked about thus in various lirections, but the stick did not move un il we crossed the vein, when it pointed .ownward-most a turedly without any agency of mine! Still I was ae- utbe ievcr. This was in May; between then and the Deitber following' cire6ttmstances ind oc :urred to prevent us sinking a well-in Jeed we had given tp all thoughts of doing to. About this time, there came along by ny, house another water-wttch, by the iaae of Moses Scott, who had never been >n my farm. lim I resolved to put to the est ; and, having stated to hitt the result )f Cook's search, he told me he could find he identical spot. This he actually did, iter I had taken hit, by a circuitous oute, half a tmile beyond the vein of wsa er! lie turned back, and followed a per rectly straight course until he crossed the vein, which he traced until he pointed out o me the sate spot where Cook's peg Was buried, and found the peg itsell! [his, too, in a spice-wood thicket, with a rututners growth added to it since our ormer search. I might give you several other equally ingular instances which came under my )bservation, but will not have rootm fur ore than one. This occurred about ten years ago, on the farm, in the lower part of Ad Campbell Co., which 1 sold last year o Mr. Cleveland. I found it necessary to dig a well, and o:mnenced doing so. I went on until I tad incurred an expense of one hundred lollars, and gone to a depth of over fifty eet, without success. I now thouv'ht I etter try a water-witch ! I tried i neigh or of my own, John Arnold, (a brother of squire Arnold. of Covington.) lie pointed it a spot in another part of my yarn. There I again sunk a locust peg, which was also designmted as the proper spot for good well by another witch, of the name >f Smith, who had -no knowledge of Ar old's hling selected it. I dug there, and ound one of the finest wsellseof vater ia the utstrict, at a deptht of thirty feet. What adds to the singulariry of the .vhole matter, is, that thtey cannot thetm elves tell how or why they a thus gif ed ;i nor will thtey receive any thing; fotr ervices so rend'ered. If you think these stattements f what ~ou may be assured actually catte under nly own observation, and are related cor -etly as far tts mtytmemory setryes me)- of iullicientt implonanc~e or interest to deserve' place itn your valuable paper-, you may usert themr. 9Va. tNTAG dE, s~t. From the Southern Cuiluator. PEmARinaGE, Harris Co., Ga., March 8, 1844. Mr. Editor-k ntticed. in one of the F'ebruury Nos. of your valuable paper, a etter fromt WV. W.- Bates, of Eulatin, B~arbter cootnty, Alabtatma, in which he tranes that nmatny hogs and cattle have been ost in his beighorhood, during last fall md win'ee, by turning -them :into pea lelds,- atnd asks a remedly, through the :olunsf the Cultivator. I have beentregaged i'n the pl'easant ha .iness of farmting for the last' ibur 'or five years, curing which lrise' Ibavo' raised tour crops of peas, which I cotsider a very itlportant article of food .fo6r hogs. My prtetice is to feed my stock lounti ruily f,.r three or foutr .days previous- to turntint themr upon peas,- witlta heavy feed ust ts they nrc turtted in the field, wheore they remnain utntil thte peas are destroyed, havin; at frt:' nteess of water aitd a plenty of sal. and ashes during tkeir st-iy. I amt htappy' to say, I have yet to loose mny firs; htog er hrnre ftrm attinir peas. 1 have neve- sutfered my cattle to be turned upon fresl pea-fields. I am,1sir, yours, &c.. Tloas H. ISENToN. Origin of the tern Cavindish Tobac co.-fThere lived in the cooty of Meek Icrburg. and Colony of Virginia. some se THE-FIFTH" VOLUME OF 'THE Hitasbrgg Jrrna. OUR years have.ne'arly elapsed si.ce th FJouial first mide its np'pea rance hbfore a geuerous public ; and although having met with a due portion f saupport, the Editor would iat this time. invite the attention of his, old friends, and those who may feel a desire of sus taining his efforts, and extend additional en couragement, to lend a-helping hand towards the commencement of a new volume. We makun earnest'ap peal to ourifriends in South. Carolina. as well as those in other State's; to assist -us in the circulation of the Journal, and clear away-those' weeds that have grown around the Old Palmetto 'Tree. Now that we have preferred Heiry Clay to Martin Van Boren, we can only expect a desperate effort to be made:to crutsh us, and consign the HAMBoR JouRanL to oblivion. - Though we fear not those who would injure our interest, beeause the more we are trampled ou, the bet ter we wiii thrive : still. we. wish to have the. consolation off knowing that our. course meets iith response-from the n1.rts of freemen. To conduct a Press in South Carolina in, nposition to the established mandates of those who d'ic tale, is like.trcading on the~ foibiddenground of sonic eastern mosque-no christian dare. pass it, unless barefoot. Yet ice have dared to make a venture -on this land, and ferret out that which. should be removed. -And now we leave our cause in the hands of our friends, and present our efforts to their con sideration; to say, whether we must be disap pointed or, be supp rtid with liberality and kindness. The Journal is published once a week, at the very-low price of rwo DOLLARS per annum. in advance,and contains at least twelve columns of reading matter. Will our brother editors, of either party, ex tend a friendly act. by- giving the above a few insertions? J. - W. YAEBOROUGH. Hamburg, S. C., March, 1844. Match 27 9 - DR. CH AMPIONS Vegetable Ague Medieine. A Safe and certain cure for the Chills anc Fever in all its complicated forms,also ae effectual remedy for fevers ofevery description This Medicine has been used by the propri etor a number of years in extensive practice during which time, he has treated some thou. sands of cases of fevers and from the succeer 'f this mode of.practice. he is confident it mat and will be the prevailing practice in fevere It never fails to perform a cure of Chills ant Fever the FInST DAn. Bilious, Typhus, Nervous, Congcstivc, Wl'ints' and Yellow fever, all yield to the use of th: Medicine, t-4 are cnred by this system e' practice in a ..ster time and with much mort certainty than by any othet system of practice that has ever been recommended. CEiRTIFIC ATES. SHEFFIE.LD, Fayette Co. Ala. Jan. 10, 1842 Dr. (:hampion:-Dear sir, I have been a great favorite of Dr. Sappington's Pills. and until last fill had tint heard of your piils. Youm agent has left some in this country, and I have used them in my practice to a considerable ex tent, and I can with pleasure say, that as for as my knowledge extetis, they are much cope rior to any medicine I have used in cases of Feyers. I am so forcibly and from personal knowledge convinced of the salutary and all important effects of your pills, that I am ex treinely anxious to have you make an agent im this vicinity. 'T'here can be a large amount sold here for cash. Yonre truly. [I. P. LEONARD, M, D. DALLAS Co., Ala., April 4, 1843. Dr. Cliampion:-Dear sir,-Of the pills wvhich I received from you, I have found sale for a considerable qunutity. I think that it will be sickly here in consequence of the wet spring Your pills give such general satisfac. tion here, that I am persuaded by my nei.h bors to write to-you for a- large supply of both kinds. ft is now known that I keep them, and people will conic 30 or 40 miles for them. Please send them soon, as I expect to sell all that I have written for by the time your agent is around in July. Yours with much respect, BENAIJAHI IING. Each box contains 24 pills, 12 of which are sufficient to cnre anuy orditnary case of Chills amd Fever. Price $1 '25, atnd --A LetO DR. CHIAMYP1ON% VEGETAnLE. ANT t-Bat~tiUs, ANTi-DYSPEP TIC PUtIFYJNG AND CATn %RTIC PILLs. Possssingr four inmportant properties. for thec cure of discarcs, carefully and cor-reedy combined, one article to assist the ecfect of asnuter, for thc benJft ofthie health of mankind. This umedicine is recommended to the aten tion of those afflicted with Liver Complaint. Dyspetisia, Dropey. Billionts habits, Costive-. ness, Cholera morbuts, Rheumatism. Scrofulo, f ol Stomach,shepraved appetite, Worms, Con dialgen, [which is known by a sinking sense ion at the pit of the stomach,'j Janndice, Head che anidsickc stomach, palpitation of the heart, Diarltwa, Dysenttery, or flux, Nervous atffec ion Heart burn, White swelliing, and all those diseases arisitng from impure blood. Price 25 cts. per box, anid for sale by FRAZIER & ADD ISON, Edgef eld C. H., S. C. RISLEY & CO. Hamburg, S. c.. HAVILAND, RISLEY, & CO. Augusta, Geo. Also, in nearly all ofthtle towins and vilinges, and by nutmterotis country agenits in all the Western and Sotuthernm States. June 2 . ~ . 6mn 22 Remnoval. DI ABBEY, Saddler and EFarness Maker, . has removed his establishmnent to the Storo-adjoining B. 3. Rtyan's Grocery, where he will be thatikful for all favors in l'is line of business. Jan. 10 tf 50 Shirtings & Sheetings. b~l4.4, 5-4, 6.4. and I'2-4, brown,and ,3U I bleached Shirtings and Sheettngs, Just received by .5. JOHN 0. B. FORD. Hamburg, Feb. 19 . t. ti '4 . FLOUR.. UhbBBLS Canal FLOUR, S100 boxes ne w Raisins, 2 hngs Altids. Just received and for sitle by - SIBLEY & CRAPON. TInmbuzrg Nov.2 93 1 441 t'edtly'and five years ago, a Colonel Cab anis, a successful planter, and "prosperous gentleman? Now, in those ancilent days of Virginia, the habit was to export the tobacco grown in the Colony to the mo ther country, to be .manufactured, and thence to be re-ex ported to Virginia, there to be mnasticated and spirited upon its na tive 'soil. Otir. worthy:Colonel Was the first to start domestic manufactures in the South, on his owir hook, by the erection of i pri vate esiablishmaent for the manufacture of chewing tobacco on a small scale. And a prime aitiele was turned' out from this infant, and we rhay say, isolated nanufac tory of the olden time.- And the good Colonel, who was a member of the House of Burgesses, would at every anuual'visit to Williamsburg, pu.t into his saddle bags a choice twist fur each of his brother mem bers and chewers of the House ; and anx iously indeed, was his advent, or rather that of his saddle-bags, looked for, while. many a smacking of lips, as well as sha king of hands, greeted the arrival of the panufacturer of Mecklenburg Capital. Now the Cabanis twist beat all compe tition ; it had tasie, the twang, the real game flavor, and many and earnest were the inquiries as to the nodus operandi by which such ati exquisite article was pro duced. At length the Colonel. divulged the mighty secret. He always pressed his prime the real Cubanis, In an ld Bee Gum! Gentle readers, wIio are iasticators of the weed, rejoice !' After the lapse of three quarters of a century, the truth, the mighty truth, is out at last. So let us bear no more of Caveudish Tobacco, but of Cabanis, No. ,-real Bee Gum, and no mis take. Management of Pork.-In Europe, the Russian perk bea-rs a high price, and its quality is supposed to be owing to the pic kle in which it is preserved. This is cal led -the Empress of Russia''s brine." and is prepared as follows: "Boil together, over a gentle fire,- six ponds of common salt, (that in common use in Russia is rock salt,) two pounds of powdered loaf sugar, three ounces of saltpetre, an'dcthree gallons of spring or pure water. Skim it while boiling, and when qnite cold pour it over the meat, every part of which must be covered with the brine. Small pork may be sufficiently cured in fouror five days; hams intended for drying, two weeks, un less they are very large. This pickle may he used again and again, if it be fresh boil ed up with a small additiot io the ingre dients. Before putting the meat into the brine, wash in water, press out the blood, and wipe it clean. Pickling tubs should be larger'at the bottom than at the top, by which means,- when well packed, the pork still retain its place until the last layer is exhansted. When the pork is cool, it may be cut up; the hams and shoulders reserved for bacon, and the re tnainder salted. Cover the bottom of the tub or barrel with rock salt, and on it place a layer of meat, and so on till the tub is filled. Use the salt liberally, and fill the barrol with strong brine, builed and skim' med,- and- then cooled. From the Augusta -Constitution61ist. Air. Guicu-Will insert the enclosed in his useful paper, and oblige perhaps a score of subscribers. Cancer.--The following article iscopied front an Edinburgh paper: . "-While I was at Smyrna,- there was a girl aflicted' with the' Cancer in her lip, and tl:e gum was effected. The European physicians consulted on the measures to. be taken, and aigreed that they saw, no other mtethod than to cut -it'out; an'd the girl had alrearly subniitted hierself to that dlacisiotn. By an accident of that nattrre which' men cannot accoutdt for,- an old Armtenian-came tolbhemr ju-st in time to provent the aplil-ation of the knife. "Do nothing,".said the Artnenian, "-I will core her," and when he liad pledged himsel f strongly, thle pihysicians consented. H le procured a copper' Vessel,'newvly tiinedimy the inside (an essential coneur rence,) and having poured a quantity of olive oil into) it, he m~a'lo it. boil over a. sm-all Si-c, sufficiently to lkeep it gently -ag itated, atnd so for three times tm;24 hotirs. With this, thte oil resolved itseffto the consistency nf at ointmnent anf bhy con stantly rubbling thme pai-t affecied, he-cured her in '4' days. Nothing else was done. "The physicians, supposed that the oil received its virttue fro-Cth e tin, and that it wvas communicated by its long boiling over ihofired Nero and important ZIwention.-It is stated that a citizen of Ladiesburg, Fred erick-couniy, Md., has completed thietwork iogmnodel of a maichtine which iseconsider ed. by many to be- the greates discovery ofthe age. yt is the appliention .of'the povef &f .tfe sdrew to. whieel-inaclibiled where by 'the gain arpower ieso greit that withI a screw-weighning rononeo oine-and a hralf tons, a w'an would- bidabtbcopropel a train of cars on saraitib'doith is'much force and velocityaas is w iebd by the locomri-en citizen of.Missabliusetts has. invetfeda powd r lodon'or thetha'm factnri of.Marseilles jmuis'with.amuch hirnility -uSbes'common- bYoeyt sheeting which 6nsts ninecentira yad.- These quilts a're constrict~d n Europe by hand looms, and aire grealf prized by the o uildat The resuilt of t his inventiorin ti~l be to Iiin the price' wvithin thiie means of almost alt. The same person has inaveuted a gewver loom flr weaving carpets with the same re piditf that the looms of our factories turn out the nlinnnest tnneoanet fabrics. A certain rich capitalist at the eastward;a:' expended we ar ;etghty thousand~dol lars, in assisting ibjinventor in his varous experimenta to ring it to perfection, which lie has at length-succeeded'in doing.' - The inventor has been offered eighty itbousand pounds for his paientright in Engl A MISCELLANEOI . From Noua't Messengerr F t ni s H E D!-A sktc - A word iiigeneral uspen.4of very sig- - nifiant import; ;. - A young girl who-had passed ibree years in a hoarding school, gathered a su perficial knowledgefoo bet own language and the French :. acquired- a .profound knowledge of the art; of dancing, vith a -fashionable know~ledge of music, is said to be finished-thjt is, ready for a husband. A student wiQio'has passed four years in a college, learned to rob hen roosts, drink rurm, smoke:cigats, play at games of chance, and spend the liberal allowance of a kind parentin every species of unworthy excess-naakes a common. place speech, receives hisldiploma, -ud-is finished. That is, ready for the devil. The prodigal, who wastes at the' aming table and in ise haunts of 'debauch ery, at -., spendid patriinoby, and then blowsout his ?<' brains in a fit of despair, is aid by those" who tempted him' to his ruin' to be-finished' It is finished, exclaims the man of 'fash ion as he surveys the completion of all es sentialsof a splendid entertainment, which he is about to giveifve hundred men and women, who, fa frominidulging a' friendly feeling for their host, will-laugh at him in their sleeves, as they sip hiscostlywines, and imprudently criticise his person and. air, while they are wasting and'devouring his substance. It is finished as the poot wtidow his pers, while her sunken. eyes dilatendina light up-with a mournful joy,-us she flfd- , the*'garment, the making of which wilL). give y'o herself and fatherless ones, the course' and scanty loaf for another's dajf2 subsistence. It is finished, the needy, pale and ema&= ciated author murmurs, as Kith trembliog fingers hegathers page after page of th work which he hopes will give food,' fame he looks nut for,.to the youbg wife ath h side and'the little babies that cluster his knee. It is finished,- with derpairiiig violebce,. shouts the homeless-wanderer, as the sledt' descends on his' unprotected head, and 'the icy blasts 'congeals the <urrents of life, and he lays .him down, unda'red for . ,s brother man', It is finished,' gasps out the man of bloo'dY and violence, as he lays. his head on the scaffold, and pays to the societyhe has',. waired upon,- the' forfeit of his crimes. Finished ! is~ the life journey,, what joys are expressed in this one word, wh t - duubts m-ade.certain, what hopes reali what forebodings confrm-ed. Finished say' thifond .parents, as the= realization of all chdir prayers sleeps. sweet!y in the, cradle they tre bending over. Finished! ejaculates the eepinga vo man drooping over tyre totub'. Amusement.-."I have bioughtfixt tbis. bill until I am' fairigsick and tired.,otit, said a colleetre to a teditor, upon\vhom he called at leasftlbrty ilmes. "You are,- eh'" cooly rejoined-the credi tor. - "Yes,-' I anr,",dV the-response. - "Well, then, you .had better nd presabh it again.-Thereiwrflbe tw o'f us, lease l if you do notifofto tell the'plain ruthL am sick and tirdfseeiug hatindeutcil bill myself.~ ez&a This was. giretiy fair but not so gend as. the reply~ of Sheridan to adun..whoh4 repeatedly idallad' "podhun for umal amount. -'The bill hird hen Eso oft are seoted' to the mad. wag-that th e ect complained of its-soiled ahd taiter8 tgte and said he was' ashamed-of it *'PLitel1 you what I'd' adviise yoau'to do wiih-imy'. friend,' said Shierideq: "take.zf bain'9fst write it upon parcli t. - A Novel Divorce C w t z fore the N"ew Jnreysar r)o nesday. 'Peter G0 f y'c wick, represents by ptti 6 haii once peti'aioned'the -eihttlk vorce from his wife, and that a bill- was -passed, hemanpg~~ woman',-aud lienosJeards 6oha'h that'he twas' m'g'ade the-Legsilature'wff relie asr'hiiil fying hic first marriisge,. ti~ den save~ bim from the eo~ty of 1dea. splneand itrerutits- aisi to onlofilhe peftentiaries in Philadelpia - the o ther day, a gentilean asked tiewitr den-, how many pirisoners were' in copfine - mnent? "'Three hundred adfo'rty,'h' replied. "Wlia'is the ihgsni lif~e ^ever ~hed. att one ?" in stranger-. "Four frundred ansi -- the wiarden: ."Why hitis- 'rajYflft ofif-oite huindred and tweeycliessf*a .s liaieccaioned it ?"K"I think4iijh warde ithat'ifi owing ci~~~. Ten pirapce )~oradio ~.' Z. gg& o ose in - shipped-already this season -' leans amarkeT, 4,100 barrels, o each-of wiibh co6tained -ninety, which iishNF OrIans sells 'To cure Snake bie'A rez3th Ratleigh Register,.says'tet codit moistened with wvater andbcedupon tb. wound, will cure the bite of tlje'most yoen omous ehake..