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-will cling.to e Pillars of the. Temple of t "Ie il ciigtothilar o heTepl f iers, an ifit mutfal, we ilPrsamidrte, orins."gra W. . DURISOE & SON, Propeletors EDGEFIELD, C., JANUARY 1856 kiv ol~ GNjUY. .A n MWy falls pp the hear The words 'he's goneastray!' * rom thosewho shared with him the joys Of fortune's brighte'r day. jThuman for the soul to err, Beguiled by visions fair; TEhe crush it not with words of scorn, Nor drive it to despair. Whtmen some frailson of earth shall pass Benes misfortune's cloud, I3O thou a light to gild the gloom Of error's sable shroud. Pereliance if jou desert him now, Because he's gone astray, No other friend may fling a smile, Of sunshine o'er his way. - 'There's many a heart that strays afar From virtue's beaten track, Which, like the dove unto the arc, ill ere long wander back. One gentle word of kind rebuke, May call-the roimer home; No more in paths of vice and shame, His wayward feet niy roam. But, oh, one harsh, ill-spoken wor May chill the erring soul, Ana drive tie.victim far beyond The limits of. control. To see the friends of bappier days Is coldness turn away, Oft proves the bate that madly drives The sin siok soul astray.. - When you upbraid the faults of youth, Let not your words bi eold; .or chiniag tones, like melted -lead, Soon harden in the-mould. But speak in aecents soft and kind, 'The wayward to roolam; .And thud you'll dry the turbid stream, From whence his errors came. Wipe off the penitential tear - .7%t glisten on his cheek; And bid him turn.to virtue's paths, And there forgiveness seek. Upon his conscience, sick with sin, 'The balm of comfort pour; And, like the Savior of mankind, Bid him " go, sin no more " EARNING GRAMUDR. MR. EDITOR:-1 have been sendin' my .dater to school to a scholmaster in this naber hood. Last Friday I went over to the scool just to see how Nancy was getting along, and I sees things I didn't like by noo means. The Scoolmaster was larnin her things en. tirely out of the line of eddyeation, and as I think improper. I set a while in the school. house and heered one class say their lesson. Ihey was a spellen, and I thot spelled quite exceedingly. Then cumi Nancy's turn to say her lesson. She said it very spry. I was, shot! and detennined she should leave that scool. I have heerd that grammer was an -uncommon fine study, but I don't wanit eny more grammer about my house. - The lesson that Nancy said was nothing but the foolish. eat kind my talk, the ridicles luv talk you ever aeed. She got up and the first word she sed! was a I lose !" I looked rite at her hard for doin so imn. proper, but she went rite on and sed: - Thou lovest, He loves," ad I rekon you never heerd such a rigger myrole in your life--love, love, love, and nsothiuug but love. S3he sed one time, U I did -lore." See I, " who did'yer love I" Then thet schollers laffed, but I wvasn't to be put off, and I sed " who did you love, Nancy! I want to know-who did you love ?" The shoolmaster, Mr. McQuillister, put in and aid he wouhdezplain when Nancy finished dhe lemon. This sorter pacified me, and' Nams went OR with awful love talk. I got wans and wins every word. She sed -"uI might, could or would love." I stopped her again, and sed 1 reckon I woukd see about that, and told her to walk out of that house. Tho schoolmaster tried ,to interefere, but I wouldn't let him say a ,word. He sed i-was a fool and I knocked him down and made him holier in short order. I tamkt the strate thing to him. I told him I'de show him how heede larn my dater grammer. I got the nbers together, and we sent Mr. McQollister off' in a hurry, and I reckon tharn be no more gramnmer teechin in these parts soon. If you know of any rather ol dish man in your region that doanmt teach gramnmer, we would be glad if you wood send him up. But in the footure we will be ,keerful how we employ men. Young school ,masters wont do, especially if thmey teeches grammer. It is a bad thing for morils. Yours till death, THOMAS JEFFERSON SOIJE. Wuus wee are young, we are slavishly .employed in procuring something whereby we may live comfortably w~hen wie grow old; and when we are old, we perceive it is Leo late to live as we proposed. So said a jearned author 100 years ago. And is the world ay wiser yet! Not muejb, if any. It is still the grab game all over. " Get money if you can, honestly. At all events--get anoney !" Pretty lesson this, with all our would be moral principles blushing arounmd our necks. But these we contrive to hide in our pockets, and only parade them at church on Sunday. TIhe poet talks some thing about " Man's inhumanity to man." How pious we go it at church, too! But let us not depair-the world is on the wend, however slow. " Earsaers Christianity," is what the King of Siam said the first time lie hugged a E-ns girl. Not had from paganland, .N ITAMA TRAGky. A-recent traveler relates, that a favorite dranatic piece in the towns of Genoese terri tory is founded on the following .tragic story ; A few years since there lived at Port Mau rice, near Oneglia, two loveis named Anna and' Guiseppa, the children' of widows in good circumstandes, the rmer eighteen, and the latter twenty years of age. The. parents had given their consent to their union, and the wedding day was soon to be fixed; when during a short absence of Guiseppa, proba bly brought about by artful contrivance; an intriguing friend of the family prevailed on the mother of the bride to give her daughter to a more wealthy lover. Anna, overcome by maternal importunity, did what she bad not firmness to refuse to do, and promised to bestow her hand on a man for whom she had no affection. Grief, however, soon under-. mined her health, and by way of amusement, she was sent to the mountains to the olive harvest. Her mother also went to see some relations in the country, and an elder sister was left home. Anna, nevertheless, grew worse: nay, she was so ill, that her friends, alarmed for her life, sent her back to her mother's house. Meanwhile Guiseppa had returned and the report of Anna's intended compulsory mar riage soon reached his ears. On the follow ing Sunday he met her sister at mass, with the urgency, and with the resignation, of des pair, he implored her to procure a last inter view with his beloved. They agreed that he should find Anna in the garden. in the even ing by moonlight, while the only guardian domestic, an old sailor, was at the public house. : At the.appointed time Guiseppa was in the garden.and there he found his Anna, weak, pelancholy, and silent; she went up to him with faltering steps; but in vain he questioned her ; in vain he endeavored to draw from her the acknowledgement that she still loved him, and acted by compulsion-not a word could be elict-mute, pale, and motionless she tood like a beauteous statute before him. At length he isped the adored object in gn I ardent embrace, during which he buried a poignard in her heart. She fell without a ,roan. .The murderer hastily fled over the wall of the garden. The sister, alarmed at Anna's protracted absence, went out into arden, where she found her lifeless in her lood, and with the assistance of the old sailor, who had returned too late, carried her nto the house. The wretched assasin, impelled by savage renzy after strolling about All night,, again caled heaal0 f gar4r _jVgbar..h.o onger found his Anna, but only her blood, which he was busily employed in wiping up with his handkerchief; when the mother, ig orant of what had happened, returned early inthe morring from the rillegiaura, accom panied by the friend who was the cause of the catastrophe, and, unlocking the gate, en tered the garden. The frantic Guiseppa ran to meet her, and holding the bloody hand. kerebief close to her face, wildly cried, " Conosei tu quel sangue ?". (Do you know the blood ?) The mother rushed with a fear ful presentiment into the house, where the corpse of her murdered child. The maniac again fled to the cavern of the neighboring i ountains. The corpse was decorated after the Italian fashion, crowned with a garland of myrtle, and deposited the night before the funeral in an open coflin in the church before the high altar. Here a person was placed to wvatch it by the light of consecrated tapers. After midnight the assassin suddenly forced his! way into church ; the afrrighated watchman ran off, but stopped at a distance to observe his motions, and beheld the unfortunate Guiseppa covering the remains of her wvhom he had murdered from affection, with a thousand kisses and burning tears; after which, with the rapidity of lightning, he dis patched himself by several pistol-shots, and fell lifeless on .the corpse of his beloved vic tim. The unhappy mother wvent raving mad. During her insanity she frequently exclaim ed,-" Conosei tu quel sangue I" and sunk into a premature grave. THE only substitute for money is polite ness. With three bows and a smile, a friend of ours last week traveled from this city to Niagara, and lived like a fighting cock at that. Cheap trip that. As EDITOR GORGED.-A late number of the I~opkinsville (Ky-) Press has the follow ing excuse: We crave the indulgence of our readers for the scarcity of editorial in this issue. We have attended several wed dings and parties wvithini the past day or two, and consequently overcharged our ap petite. In fact, we were let loose at a table of good things and foundered ourselves. THEn " Down East Debating Society" having dismissed the question, " Where does firo go to wvhen it goes out!" have got a new and more exciting one up: " When a house is o'n fire, does it burn up or burn down ?" A Western peda ogue, in "teaching the young idea how to shoot," found it very dificult to impress t ~eletter 'G' upon the memory of an urchin of four years. He finally asked the young hopeful, by way of illustration: " What does your father say to the horses, wvhen he wants them to turn to the right ?" " Hep,! git along 2.40!" exclaim ed the youthful prodigy, his countenance lit up with animation. The teacher has since adopted a different manner of illustrating his subjcts. A wag on seeing apet poodle which had been shorn of its fleecy seat, remarked that he deemied the act which had divested the animal of its covering shecar eruelty. WEAK doses of wash-hoard are now re commended to young ladies who complain of dyspepsia. Younrg men who are troubl ed inthe same way may be cured by a strong preparation of wood saw. 'innER is a gentleman hn the legislature who can be trusted with any secret; for nothin lie c- sa will be believed. P9CB1WHNOUS.RE CEPTS. To CU'RE HA eyo-Wienyu ave snohingk your hams occasionally throwl uponthe fire a handfull of China -berries,'and it wilt lie found a preventive agiinst'skippeis. So says a gentleman who.has-seen4!t sufficient ly tested in South Alabama PINEAPPLE .LLY.-Pfe 1d gretlhe pineapple, and put it into the preserving pan, with one pound of fine whittsugar to every pound of the fruit; stir it and boil it until it Is well mixed and thickens sufficiently; then strain it, pour it into the jars, and when it has become cool, cover the jellies with paper wet in brandy, cover the jars tightly, and treat them as apple jelly. SCOTCu CAKE.-Stir to a cream a p6uind of sugar and three.uarters of a poundof bitter, put in the juice atid grated rind of lemon, a wine glass of brandy Separate the whites and yolks of nine eggs, beat them to a froth, and stir them into the cake, then add a pound of s3a flour, and just before it is put in the c'e-pans, a pound of seeded raisins. FoR THE CUuRE OF Cuoup.--A e'e o resh lard, as large as a butternut, bed with sugar, in the same way thatbu il sugar are prepared for the dressing of. .id iings, divided in three parts, and given at intervals of 20 min6tes,- will. relieve any ,ase of croup not already allowedito pro ress to the fatal point. A LiGHT PIE CRUST.-- liglit . oi) ay'be made by rubbinginto one poun our two ounces of butter worked i :ream, aidone spoonful of carbionabsd . lissolve with waier, half a.spoonfa f :aric acid, and pour it over the iRg I"' luickly adding a sufficieuicy- ofwater., to, nake it the proper stiffness for. s This is still better wven -a iell be s added to the flotr, &c',. berawth 8 put in. CUOLC IN HonsEs.-Dissolve, inquar& >f pure water, as much salt w' tho ug y saturate the liquid, and-dr III horoughly until you disaver t elief. This is. a simple and efA al ly, and has been succeB , app lgd 1 es of botts. - To CLrE.,N SiTNLE.- t I poonsful of pewdered alu q noderately strong ley, stir' oap, and remove thac tht a 1se to he surface. After'washing th r in hot vater, take a sponge, and cover ver ar' le with this mixture. When drA wI fi se X-tiefes in .w rinopsud III irighten with whiting and spirits. To RE.ovE BLACK Sro'rs PROM PLArE. loil the articles in three pints of watel, with m ounce of calcined hartshorn, dinin ly' he fire, and polish % itL soft linen rags which mave been boiled in tha same liquid and ifterwards dried, using purified whiling as he plate powder. 'O CLEAN GOLD Ci.UIN--A correspon- C lent says: " Some of your readers may be ieased to know that a gold chain washed n soap and water, with a fe6w drnps of iartshorn in it, and afterwards driel in saw. lust, will look equal to a new one." To Kim A S'roVE illM: r.--l f you % ish keep a stove as bright as a coach body y only two applications a year, make weak lum wvater, and mix your British Lustre ~ith it; let the store be cold, brush with he mixture, then take a dry brushL and dry ustre, and rub the stove until perfectly dry. hould any part, before polishing, becomie so dry as to look grey, moisten it with a1 wet brush, and roceed as above. To CURE WAurs.-Bind a leaf of house leek, from which you have removed the skin, pon a wart a few niighzts in succession, and then see where your wart is. RAIsED CAKE.-Six cups of raised dough, rour eggs-two cups of Esugar, t wo of bttetr, or sweet fried meat fat, spice as you please, and raisins. CURE FOR CoRNs.-A correspondent writes that a pint of alcohol poured in his boots caused all his corn and calluses to peel ofl, leaving his skin smooth and soit. LOAFERS SoLILoQUY.-1 stay pretty late, sometimes i'm out all night, fact is I'm out pretty much all over-out of f'riend(s-ont of. pocket-out at the elbows and knees, and always outrageously dirty. Wh'len any bo dy treats, andi rays come up fellows, I al ways think my name's fellows, and I've got too good mainers to refuse. 1 gnmess I hore this winder shutter in my pants behind, thie other night when I set dowvn on tho wax in len Srugg's shop. I'll have to get it men ded up, or ll catch cold. I am t very stout as it is, though I am full in the faice. YOUNG ladies who wish to look interest ing, should commence .by eating plentifully of slate pencils and chalk-should this fail, let them resort to vinegar as a bevcrage, and let them chew green tea. Should this fail, let them give their corsets an extra turn, and wear the thinnest shoes they can biy, especially in cold, damp weather. 'To be sure, this may induce consunmption; bu that matters very littlo-the "interesting" are of so little use in the wvorld, that the sooner they leave it, the better for them selves and every one around them. H arsh, but true. Lady loafers, we suppose, are here p)ointed at. A substitute for butter at breakfast hasI lust een discovered by sonme bright gon ins. What an age of diskivery ! Well, it is. Now, read:--Marry the nicest girl you know. You will then have her to preside at your breakfast table; and, unless you are a sadl dog, indeed, you will not have any but her! We are progressing, " I' just like to see you," as the blind man said to the policeman wvhen he told him he oud take him to the station-hiouse if lie did not move on. " A lawyer," said Lord Bironghiam, in a faetious mood, "is a learnecd geiitleman, who rescues your estate from your enemies, and1, eeps it himself."I _T - From the ik Herald. We publish, .o- the .remarks of the Ion. F. W.. Pick of South Ca'rolina, made at a reetig t the White.Sulplur Springs, in behalf he sufferers of our city. -- - The - contribionofl ; the' visitors at thel Springs was lAt ons and-liheral. The rernark's of- M-it s express a feeling andientiinbt Ahi Il find a response in the hearts of thse o s who have escaped I the devastating' poWe f the 'pestilence he so eloquently depict A long time' has e ed since the occa sidh upon hidh the re delivered, owing, as 'we are informed, A the fdct that they were written out ai nt to Judge Mason, of laryland, in a ne with a request made of.Mr. Picke p the Judge being alsent.from hone, di ot receive them un till within the past k.-.. i.e immediately forwa Ied them te n nd.-we acknowledge ur igation to hi and, on behalf of ) ; people, express ur tyratitude: 41 M r, konc whose heart nobly sympathised our iiferin. - REilis, OF Tl I1 MR. F IRN', OiO86 A;ROiNA, .deat < .i0.o Visitors al the Widle 'Sidphur Spjrings; :aid of the sulfrcrs of Norfolk and P mouth.] G ENTLE3IEY:- aye been assembled gether, in P order -i einto consideration .0inod nd n'l raising "onme -on ibiltio aid our 'w citizens of Norfolk u-'ortsiioth in t sufreringsand deep ifflili1 dfrom ~te s of y-ellow fever; mtir4.j I au.correctl formed, there cQuld e .iO sitiuoi bette lculated to enlist our id,4n1alLforth th enderest sympzithies if Fhuman heart.'. . P'-We -all know that der any circumstan ~the elow fey s'a terrible scourge. ut t Ker ire ma- ities of our country cuttomed-to its -0 .tions, and the large .jority of their- eians are more or less yJimated and exe t from its ravages. i so ohoare-tbu-' inpt are able-to aid i'deoD4 rt thore are atticked, and liere s iih generil. '"to parail'ze and ,rostrateL all classes. s ith'Worfolk Umil Porismouth-th . i eel hemslves to be exe - ' not, re ared for itswisitatio e e S, one wide spread. .;r rtte the stricken citi hl hoirors of the. resent disease has ti }ioh .i ctiidered Car mo hl" iither hi-h -e progress, - The City of Norfolk, which ordinnrily has ibout 1R,000 inhabitants, has left only about 10,000, and Portsmouth which has about [1,000, now only some 3,50-and yet )ath, ia his triumphant progress, moves on 11 desolation, and fails not to add daily to he increasing numbers he claims for his ;ictims. To add to the wretchedness of the scene, some 1,700-workmen in Portsmiouth, imve abandoned their Government employ ent ; and sore .500 in Norfolk, employed.; pon the drel.:s and streets, &e., have also tandoned their labor, and have been with ,ut daily support for themselves and families. In fact, all work is stolped and daily wages or the poor suspended. So that gaunt La. or stalks in lean and hungrysufTering through lie cities (is plague and pestilence. In ad. iion to all this, they have heretoforo been jenied all communicationl with the surround og cities and villages. .Wheni they have at emiipted to ly fromi the plague and death, hey bave beeni denied a ref'uge and home Fromn their brethren and countrymen. -t haa baeen said that even the United States' bayo re't hias been presented to them at Old Point Comfort, and they denied a landing. I men lion this to shew their painful situation, and not to blane those under strict military dunty perhaps. Th Sisters of Charity, .those fit emle.ms of Christian devotion and holy love,-,and other bjenevolent persons who have gone to the devoted cities to seek objects of distress, have entered the abodes of sickness :and misery and found it impossible to obtain the ctual necessaries and comforts of life-and aftter they have entered, the stepls of the steamboats have been raised, and those fiee-' ing from death have been refused a passage. The railroads have been stopped and all communicationi cut of!'. There they are etis of woe anid despair ! There they stand, like great ebarnel houses, with the sighs and the moans of the dying, and the fixed gaze o the dead. There is no0 police-all having fled or! died. he Mayor is left alone, and( has stood nobly to his po'st, discharging his duties bravely aindr taithifully. I am told, in one in stance, he helped with his owvn hands to car roteleven persons, with the disease, to a cnevanee to be borne to some neighboring hospital-and when lhe, at another time, at tempted to order some negroes to do some necessary work, they actually ill treated him and re'used. Such a man furnishesa higher example of true heroism and foititude,. than can b brought from the battle field-for in battle lie is cheered by those around him, amid stiring events and all the excitement of enthusiasm and love of glory: And if lie is cut off from his friends and surrounded by thiose who refnse his escape, lie can hav'e the lst resort of a brave man-to draw his sword arid cut his wvay through, or perish in glory pon the field of fame. But here is moore that' that--a Mayor, in the midst of a city with plaigues amid pestilence-those to stamnd by himi in authority, dead or dyiog, wvith wo, an~d misery, and despair-yet stands up like a manit to do his. duty-meets death te to faice, and struggles with him over nidnight scenes of lonely horror, all well calculated to make the bravest of the brave tremble. Such an example is worthy our higeest admiration and deepest love. And ini connection wvith this, anothet, should be remembered. I allude to your G*vernorI elect, Mr. Wise. .1 am told lie has opened his mansiou and spread out tents upon his lawn to'receive the poor and the distressed, at a time too, wvhen' they were denied a ref ...,. .lser, u..nder- an ida that they ho within themselvesecontagion and death. I stood-forth and defied *the prejudices of tl surrounding country, and met the dang like a man as lie is, and has given to h country an example of heroic philanthrol and noble charity. I am told itb" produco its effects, and the villages and town are no doing likewise.. The people who have r cently chosen him as their chief magistrat have every reason to be proud of such a ma Who is it that can contemplate thei things without feeling every emotion of ph lanthropy gush warm from his heart ! Her in these cilies where all the evidences 4 active life have passed- away-where wai and despair bold their mingled sway-hei where, in the darkness of niight, nothing to be seen save the midnight lamp Biekenn and flashing in its socket, in the lonely chan ber amid the dead end the dying, with nor to- Rdminister the last sad officers of human ty-here-here is someihing which calls ft all our Christian feelingsand sympathy. TI ppeal comes with great force to all, in ever place-abut it comes with double force to u situated as we are here. Here we are, wil a iky as fbright, 'and under an air as buovai as ever floated on the surface of this eartl Iere wo.are, surrounded by all the applianc of lusty life-with hope and joy flushed o very cheek and beeming from every ey Klere we are, at this bright fountain of epar] ling waters-in this sweet vale of Avoca And shall re forget the suffering of our fello, eungs ! if we are indifferent to them we turn a deaf ear to the cries 'of miser, md we, and despair, that come up to tA rrom the city of the dead-remember, thi lhe day may canme when the destroying ang< ihall visit each and every one of us, and niy'be he will no sign, no stain, upon th intels and door posts, by which to avert hi ivenging power as he passes over the land i lesolation and wrath. Let no one suppose it is not worth whil o give, because he can give so little. A annot give a hundred dollars, nor can a ;ive twenty dollars, nor even five. Let a ne think that his mite is too small-eve ho it be but a dollar, it may in the shape < rom comfort-me --1cooling comfor, reac he parched tangue of some -dying mort Alose last breath may bear upon it a praye >f- thadis -for the.*charity ; and 'that praye nay reach the throne of God, and in som lay 'o future-afflictiod hereafter, may com >ak bearing fragiance and baliy consola .in to ihe heart of the donor. INDIAN ATROCITIES IN ORECO1. eion- paer receivl by th dian atrbcitio. comimitted in that territor letter from Capt. lluwett, published i he Pioneer and Democrat, gives the followi g account of a massacre by Indians ol White River: After two day's hard work, reached th ionse of Mr. Cox, which we found robbed :onfirming our suspicious that greater mih :hief hind been done to the settlement furthe ip the -river. We then proceeded to M lones' place, where we found our worz 'ears more than realized. The house wa >urned to ashes, nd Mr. Jones (who was a ho time sick) was burned in it. Mrs. Jone vas found lying about thirty yards from th louse, shot through the lower part of th ungs, lface and jaws, horrible broken an nutilated, apparently with the head of a Ixe. The bones of Air. Jones we found, th oasted flesh having been eaten off by th togs. We found Mr. Cooper (who was lis g with Mr. Jones at thes time) about oni indred and fifty yards from the house, shi brough the lungs, the ball entering the hel areast. We buried the bodies and proceede o the house of~ W. H. Brown, a mile distani urs. Browvn anA child we found in the wvel er head downwards; the mother was stal bd to the heart, the knife entering the lel jreast, and also in the back and back part c he bead. , She had apparently started to run wvith he Thild (an 'infant about ten months old) in he 'rms; 'was overtaken and pitched into th well. The child- was below her and had ni marks of violence on it. It was not dresse< ihowing'that the mother 'had taken it froi the bed and attempted to flee. Mr. Brow was founid in the house, cut to pieces. Th left hand had two cuts, as though he ha grasped a knife, and had it pulled out, cu tig the hand to the bone. Thlere wver also two stabs in the palnm of the same han as though lie had attempted to ward off th atal we'apon. His arms and legs were hat Iy ut, and I should think there were any as ten or fifteen stabs in his bael mostly a little below the left shoulder. Ev< rything seemed to show that lie had fough desperately, and 1 think he must have kille some of the devils, from the fact that th fence where they went out from the houw had the appearance of having had somnethin dragged ov'er it; and the rails below a smeared with blood. A fter burying them as wvell as circumstano' would permit, we proceeded to the house < Mr. King, or 'rather whewre his house wva which we found burined to ashes, and wheo the most horril~e spactacle of all awaited u Mr. King and the two little children wer burnt in the house, and the body of M~. King, after being roasted4' was eaten ahnoi ntirely up by the hogs. Mrs. King wi lying about thirty yards from the ruins, a nst in a state of nudity: She was sh< lpparently through the heart-the ball ente ing the left side ; the left breast was entire ut off-she was cut open from the pit of tU stomach to about the cenitre of the abdom~e md the intestines pulled out oni either sid We pe'rformied the last s'ad rites and procee< ed hack to our encampment, and the nie. morning started for Seatile. NEGKO AMBAssADOR AT LONDoN'.--One< ihe latest curiosities corme to London is tI apparition of the sable envoy and phenipote tiary of his sooty Majesty of all the Hayti Baron Pompey. He has been officially re ieived by Lord Clarendon, 'and' it' is shily r< ported that his Lordship kept a smelling bo tIe to his dainty nose du'ring the wvhole< the iterview. What wvill be the effect< his ar cnloulad" at the first drawingr rone ast It VaI oil.--he oerihr that Iw.I'IAd. nv- of an ef"II't Ibeing nadW to cli ide areligiou 1 tract .ocety into -''%3:t. rI :ia -4it So11uthe rn. <ey sections, on) thtlromnl th:Wt- the . .rverend lihe femberp of -ti Norhern half had ides of kit their nI t !h sbject (mf lnero 1:hor.. hat which eedd'thon s m ,rervy4yhst tl;ey mut. coul noit'r.-c cn lleit#n)'Ihoirt. te etn es Ili retmain aliE-d wvilli.' Christian -.14veholders.. Perhiaps the torn-ut ol imitgma aundidi.. ig cule whi-h tile propwitioi e ith hamaade to the reveremi agitntoe-s feel nhi'what ashnin. Ses ed of themselves by this tinme. In ' cse, ca however, they still per-sist in 1'h ing ' hari. see to tho Anitly-rn Al;"n',e ,g III. draw their attetiiton to tle r. ieort of thu .n Board 'If .l 1n.r i he.isio ayS i hat ty of tie .pI,; ('arolia Metoi.st Confler.. 'ho ence. uive ill I.Ist oillnil. Firain thie1 S ces of pierd i*' mhip u uisitrts, a l - e31:'l ig rN " er"%. h-ne;. i 11";,Jgili work of e :. ';. 'Gih- - '5.1 . l to . j Vd of Sout'. ('ari5 .i iz tu o , ea besides about a .thLid -.'hi.e members, ut they hiure iowm 10,4: - culered -wmer 01 t a the circh", amld .5:590 coored Hlridiil,'re Ed, emiving religions in.tructiio frimi the -eite of chizts. All-of thete :;rs! '1di t ro -t scattered over a fiarg.- e: t'.nt II f) eiutry, OI. Se, the various pnIatms; and tile ilbors of i- the MeLthodiit unrsa.na es ae'.-suh, - that 11re they sometIire.' ~ach -tive 4-iies on1 'a-Suei. iN- day, biesides ri!ing many mik-s'n horseback ne froi pilace to place. - Ith The Notir evrerid ifdobs ily regret 1i) find that the .eltinglit Coizfersneo fly of South C!arolina does nvot coicern ittelf so about the institutios or the atate. of the be poor in New Yoak or Massachuseta tis er- doubl;ess owii, to the backward conditif'n of the 8outh 1hat the preachers of the 4 ;n. a pel to the sla:ves fiil to perceive tlyfit hs he legitimately withli the- of their du. ng ty to revile thle city where Poole.:aid B -ker it massacre each otlicr, and to -adniish the ia- people of the \Nrth thrnbthey mnat l.mnd ter their ways and take exsample- hom their aI S.>the.rnf lry'e n un1idcr imi'.tof exelusion >r- fromllho p I he'chureb nI ,It must, too, be:a jouigeT tj17ij ie cy INorthorn crynz;'ee r)o re- the South, Carolinians, fo 4 iglabjL w dilnot cont~gil..one -.w !Aiqd aaapjis ng l-nis~ -be' a IseCwe shock to the ti,| tre..t rme Or~e, T aid h It will lie time, libere ithei t'dL i oiluce such 6uat i i ~U set Meryves when'any on ope.,,l &''ti~ ro- sand can-shoy t pt Il e ily.det.fe to wi'p . 'lo dI not paV hin.---Nw-York q1:. :: hi I's th:.', Fl, he w th'orni! . u . : . n . of th railro::nd hile t' a;. t' :-ih. hf''i ton:: . o 1s. - '. :.I t' e h i d r . : TI- 1 ) V e i -tv ! fit IIh% f L:e rc-, left on U't ear. If i i n of .s' Coml); -aniw by frk'e . tSip? . e have in eIit 'idy f,it y for i .. ir p - . .Weionvistelrti)l on th 1.ject aI wVe r lieso wy.htanc ::te c!:"'i: 'iy.-c. a.0 nd anthee t ~ij-. of Sresnt colantdoi' e loul the l , w Liase f.iw paa - av~r con. i - '' t:l tt* t Il dre !iUGy.-' s d spinere thir op:1.4 41i~e-i to aff.nisI imth Itpo of suI r s ol se the~ .mt hol-rist. of huais:~ci a..:Ti ,. " I'env is asrearto bim-o th.- pepheres of theI -r; th 'citi e gratl uponi1id he t s:w:d iut lof n olies ori we:ntiee ca ie rdi-. of .ni: -*3 .s 0:1n !Itfs fid I' w n'e 'the ' I:'',.. 330' Us',s c "ild omnttl7 isent tih- has kel h~iI fm-LI that -i awfu prene r aliie o t he il wat n.l:'.vn'.i nd-tr l and he frme tnney of iler D33;17 : t uy ater shol phe hre, w1he re, thtwif ree.-;;nie ia'his treligint a 13i s polica! pryibihl;e, ilh n- sold fit--eo will sedhrch.'e impeled b eviesry wottdo1!lls ofi iruse.hI' to him-t ah nil Ithlte had ofiten ti.ii hiii P"h:uhdren i a nsve:-. f:; eill :c:i1 g, uh.in hir letiuu ti eezi is the bench 331 i h-- bi(' ltin h t ox he.'at[e. l:,ht l '-erarairwd.t. 1' r nl.z criil:11 of en"hc. iulj.:,L s' W t terw l..e it tc g Lod)qu l~V':be b .L thish one sho''j n d3 e cah riucitk. Ys rheteer P ttoo Sranwtsc . y ri-b~hak~ epe w ho thae a tiall 'uluut the owuse 'iew p ofte 'td- cath'd' h ertl ci esed of, : 1it id ' o hn fo~r hh toe he'' nor use, or dwhnerit is pat'riul. o.net od lk o. Some1)tYii dthey expec ti. jlers. an pa re . at the :ilice o they wiiltl wto un~i andlhe m- t or ltsiand ithe !'..ha te io,. 'afwll a im hyaruthti th rn thWe1 aishi oe-vr bdyaewl le remains to be seen. In England they 1 quite used to the tawny color of the v er India, but an ebony," itgger" wili he a v is eltry, bedizened in gold lace, aiid imititti >y with the accuracy of one of the moni I tribe, diplomatic airs and graces. One of w latest freaks of his dnsky- nobility is a e- lie paid this.week to Mr Buchanan, bnt t e, distinguished gentleman happened to bp < n. -- -,-. e TILE DElOC10.ATIC COMENTN. i. rit. Washington Union, comment e, upon Col. ORR'S recent letter in regard )f the Cincinnati Convention, thus discour i upon the present aspect of the politi i game: g The House of Representatives is no%% . the hands of a fragmentary fusioti. if i e appellation may be applied to those % are vainly struggling to get possession r the organization. And, since Col. 0 e letter has appeared, this fusion has practit y ly fulfilled more than his prophecies. s, find it the daily theatre of criminations : h recriminations, which we search )o!iti it history in vain to parallkl. At the pres writing there is no telling at what poin s Speaker will be selected, and, if select n at what point the disorganizing purposes the abolihion majority will be arrested. c. is an appalling reflection that to this Hou - should the democratic party fail to be u w ted in 1850, may be committed the gar if responsibility of deciding between rival c , didates for the presidency in favor ofr a who shall serve for four years from the t of March, 1857. We may have a major I of the States; but, unless we shall be fu it represented in the Cincinnati Convention, e that the candidate there nominated may s the candidate of all, a diflerence about p1 n sons may precipitate a contest into this VI [louse of Representatives; and who c e tell what the consequence will be? If UI House cannot elect a Speaker, how Ic 11 will it be in selecting a President? Surelj o is no conception of an exaggerated imagi n tion to say that a failure to elect the lat f by such a body is a much more ratio h probability than the failure to elect the l mor, and in that fearful struggle who r asure us that the contest for the presiden r may not be pushed tn the House of Rep * sentatives beyeond the period when a n e administration is to comtnence, thus leavi ubli . without a Chief 31agistra state of things not contempLat he constitution? M will stay its riotC oliti eer? Who can prot e. the fut. mad andmetcing p Vr . d wtheetoerztiC-pa n of the United States, imitate this fIi C fusion by refraining to come t.ther m Cincinnati in the spirit of union L.d harmony, in the spirit of the con,,i.uti e and of all those holy and imperisihable si timents upon which the true coistrnetion that immortal instrument depenids? 6ot Carolina should not, therefore, be inited r. the noble circle of States which ::e to t represented in the Natinmul Denoern s Convention. 1 he verV fact that i.e t been absent before is a reason vhy t s should be present then. This is ap e sive age. While we respect and vener: e the past, we should be just to the exigenae I, of the present and to the demands of i n future. Nay, it is not going too far to s e that if the illustrious son of South Caroli e (Mr..Calhoun) were now living lie wvom -see in the Demecratic National Conventi e -ertainly ini the national democratic pia it -the only element to protect the South fi a its northern enemies,'and also the invineil d champion of the federal constitution. , propoi lion as fanaticism aspires to ni I, wrougs, and more boldly lifts its hat .against the covenants we are all bound t obey and to fulfil, so is it necessary for tI fwho are placed in the trenches to deft the fortress of our liberties to pirotect the rselves by every means withinm their pows rand hence the importance of South Caroli o Iemerging from the prond isolation wI o she has occupied for so many years, and I, taking that p)osition in the National Conyi a tion to which the intellecb of her sons a n Ithe commanding weight of her einarne e among the southern people eminently ea1tl d her. It seems strange to us, we uut ct .fess, that this gallant State, which oni er, eoccasion throws her suffrages for the deni , cratie-eandidate for President, and rom oin her behalf, by the disinteresedl img;:. . mity of her position, the ,ardent felingL sthe democracy ot other Stamtes, sho'inh! ,fuse to aid her sisters of theL South, aun .encourage her sisters of thme North, withI t piresenice in those conventions upmon I he d cisions of which so umany graive initere e depend. It is, indeed, to the credit amt othe honor of the democratic parity that, wi SSouth Carolina has not mingled in thle coi 11 cils which have selected our candidates, that in all cases the pirinciples there avov s haye generally met the approbation ofI ,f investigatinig atnd impartial judgmient. A *, why, at the present moment, when the -e vice of the best friends of the constitut. s. is needed to protect that instrument agai e the efforts of its worst foes-why she r. not South Carolina come forward and tI spart in the deliberations at CincinnaLti wvl sthe democratic party meets in inationial e 1 vention? iWe confidently aniticipiate I tthe action of that convention will meet r. nplroval of South Carolina. It is easy y see that, so far as regards the doctrines th e to be laid dowvn, they will be such as ~entire South can approve, such as will br e. the democracy together as one unbrol I. brotherhood. It would be a cap-sheat t the noble column if South Carolina could present when our candidate is selected r our creed proclaimed, to add her voic f the ceremony whbich announces both to 1 democracy of' the American Union. s li AN AFFECTINGO APPEAL.-AnI Unfo1 .'nte editor in Kentucky, thus aiddresses his~i .linquent subscribers: " Frienads, we :areab t peniless--Job's turkey was a illionmaire ei ,f pared with our present depressed treasury. f day, if the price of salt wasm two e'eng a har n' fu, we.cnuAn't buyeanough to Pickle njischi