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PUILiSIIID ewerT wgt)3tATu tORNNGE. A. ShIuNS, D. R DURISOE & ELIJA KEESE, RorataTORs. TREMS OF BURSOIPTION Two DOLLARs per year, if paid in advance-Two DOLLARS and Fany Carra if not paid within six inonth.--and Tr aua DOLLARS if not paid before the expiration of the year. All subsecriptions not distinct. ly liaied at the time of subscribing, will be con tinued until all arrearages are paid, or at the option of l the Publisher. Subscriptions out of the District and from other Staten must invariably be paid for in advance. TO CLUBS. To Clubs of Ten the Advertixer will be furnished one year, f.r Fifteen Dollars-one person becoming responeihie and paying for the Club in advance. EATES OF ADVERTISING. All advertisements will he correctly and conspicu nusly inserted at Seventy-five Cents per Square (12 Brevier lines or less) for the first insertion, and Fifty Cents for each subsequent insertion. When only p"b lished Monthly or Quarterly $1 per square will he charged. Each and every Transient Advertisement, to secure publicity through our columns,.must invariably be paid in advance. All Advertisements not having the desired number of insertions marked on tie margin, will be continued until forbid and charged accordingly. Those desiring to advertise by the year can do so on the most liberal terms-it being distinctly under stood that contracts for yearly advertising are con. fined to the immediate, legitimate business of the firm or individual contracting. All communications of a personal character will he charged as advertisements. Obituary Notices exceeding one square in length will he charged for the overplus, at regular rates. Announcing a Candidate (not inserted until pad for,) Five Dollars. For Adv rtising Estrays Tolled, Two Dollars, to be paid by the Magistrate advertising. From the Charleston Co r . r. TRIUMlPH OF RIGHT, OF PRINCIPLE, AND OF THlE FREEDOM OF THE PRESS. The important and interesting case of R. W. Gibbes v.. E. J. Arthur and John Burdell. the Mayor and the Chief Police officer of the City of Columbia, for forcibly objecting Dr. Gibbes, the Editor of the South Carolinian, from the Council Chamber, at a public meeting of the City Council, in consequence of his refusal to submit to an inquisition, whether he designed, or not, to report their proceedings, came off, it the Court of Common Plca=, at Columbia, Judge Withers presiding, on Thursday last. The whole of Thursday was consumed in taking the evidence, and in hearing the argument on a mo tion for non-suit, which signaily failed; and the whole of Friday was occupied, by the argument of counsel to the jury, until 7 o'clock, p. in. His Honor, Judge Withers, at 10 o'clock, on Saturday morning, fully sustained the plaintiff, on every point of law and ground of principle, in a charge, to the jury, of more than an hour'. duration. The jury then retired, and, after a brief interval, returned with a verdict of $:25 damages against Mr. Arthur, (more than double the atmount, requisite to carry costs,) and of 61 cents against Mr. Burdell, the mere ministe rial officer and agent of the .layor and Couin cil, in their outrage on the person and rights of the plaintiff. Although the verdict (doubtless wrung, from a reluctant jury, by the invincible force of the Judge's charge, on the law,) is ut terly inadequate, either to reimburse the ex penses of the plaintiff, or to atone for the ouit rage on private and putblic right, it is yet a full vindication of the plaintiff's position, taat, as it corporator and a proprietor of a public press, lhe had a perfect right, without challenge, or question. to attend the public mieetings of the City Council of Columbia, and, at will, to re port their proceedings, and his forcible ejection thezrom was a trespass on his person, on is rights,'as a corp'orator, and on the freedonm of the press, which entitled him to damtages, for the unjustified and unjustifiable accumutlation of wrong. That the verdiet wa so simli is nto re proach to him. His ts the triumph of right and principle, and lie can well afford, thutts crowvned with victory, anti the champion of the freedom of the pree, to de-pise the paltry consideration of dollars and cents. The case was argued, for the plaintiff, by Jshn Batusket t and Richard Yeadon, Es.quires, andl, for the defendants. by James U. Tradewell and Maxcy Gregg, Esquires. The following are the most important potb of the Jutdge's charge: "It is a right in every corporator to attend a pumblic meeting of the local legislature of the eity of Columbia. ie may b~e expelled for di. turbing the debates, deliberations, or proceed ings of such body, thotugh the nmeetmngs anid proceedings be public or open tot the corporatora To exclude a corporator from such pumblic meet ing or to expel him from it, at mtere pletaure, or for no reason connected with the free, full and undiaturbed exercise of their functions, or the discharge of their duties is niot a lawful exercise of power-and if force upon the person be used, it is an assault and battery. "It is mat ter of common right, in every spe cies of our elective representative govermntts, that the voter sliall be allowed, upon condition of good behavior in his demneanor. to hear the public debates and witness the pubilic proceed ings of his representatives, engaged ini the per formance of public trusts. " To exclude a reporter and to exclude a cor porator is not one and the same thing. To eject a corporator from a pubhlic meeting mterely be cause it is suspected, or avowed by him, thamt he mteans to publish a replort of its proceedltmgs, is not lawful. Yet'if such corporator las shownt by previous conduct that he caluniates, asper wes, or misrepresents the Council, and mtisleads the people, their contstituoecy, it wotuld preset a que.tionm of some difficulty to say whether hte might nt, or ought. not to be excluded. It is not this cause, upon the evidence, atnd neel not be decidedI. Any corporator who attends ttay give utnfauir or false verbal accoutnts of proceeinigs. and the diffe.rentce betwetn himt and the owner of a paper is only that time latter may give his account at widier scope and more permanttiet form. But if tinder giie of the Lbcirty of th Presse, a commtnon calumniator seeks in chtarac ter of corporator to mialign tmaliciou.,1y anid to iirepresent fraudulently the acts anid debates of a public body of any sort, it would be diffi cult for him, if that fact were miade to appear, to show a right to damages, if he be foiled in such a purpose. To assiuime beforehtand thmat this will be done, however, would amtount to a cencorship over speech or the lpre s. " Without some legal and satisfatctory- reasoit adduced to the contrary, Dr. Gibbes had a right to publish a true account of the public proced-. ings." Tiux ISAt-craLt mx Nrew Yonmg.-A Nrw York letter, soeatking of the reception of Pres ident Buchanan's Inautgural address ini that city. says: It will be imposuuble to convey the great sat isfaction with wIch this paper is hailed by the Democracy of New York. No less, certaitily, was expected. Blut so full, so lucid, so clear, so democratic an exposition of the great principles which are to guide this administration, is res ponded to by acclainmation. The report of the success of our nation, the perpet-t.ity of thme democratic rule, is clearly foreshadowed by this inaugural. And the sound conservative mien of other parties are not backward) in expressing their faith thtat the administration conducted ont this basis will be one that will secure domestic tran quility and extend the glory of our commnon country, givmg us peace abroad and prosperity at home. "I hope you will be able to support me," said a young lady, while walking out one even ig, with her intended, dudmng * slippery stante of the sidewalks. "Why yes," said the somewhat hesitating swain, "with some little assistance from your fther."-There was some confusion and a pro fand alnnen. From the Baltimore Sun. THE TERRIBLE ACCIDENT ON THE GREAT WESTERN RAILROAD. We have received by telegraph, from Toronto, some additional particulars of the terrible acci dent on the Great Western railroad. The report that Thomas C. Street, the millionaire of Niag ara Falls, was among the killed, is erroneous. He was, however, somewhat injured. Mr. Sam uel Zimmerman, who is reported as among the killed, is a wealthy Canadian banker and con tractor, who owns the large tract of land on the British side of the Niagara river at the Falls, re ported to be worth several millions. Within the past year or two he has commenced laying it out in parks and for building purposes. is im provements there are a prominent feature in the view from Goat Island, and will be readily re membered by every recent visitor to the ' ails. Mr. G. was a native of Dauphin county, Pa., and formerly held a subordinate position in the con struction of the Pennsylvania canal. By great industry and good management, lie inproved his conlition, and some years ago went to Cana da and becaine a contractor on soei of the great public works of the province. He gradually en arged the sphere of his operations, and finally amassed a large fortune. For some yearshehas been identified with all the great enterprises of Canada West, and exercised an ifluence in financial and internal improvement atT:tirs second to that of no man in Canada. We subjoin the fbllowing dispatches: TonoTO, March .--We learn the fllowin" particulars of the railroad accident near Hiamif ton from a gentleman who left the scene of dis aster this morning. The accident occurred on the Great Western railway, at the bridge over the Des Jardines Canal, which is elevates some sixty feet above water. The bridge swings, and it is supposed that the train, which had passed a short time before, had sunk the bridge so much that the locomotive of the train was obstructed by the abutments to spel a degree that the pas senger cars were raised up and thrown into the canal. The number of passengers were estima ted at front seventy-five to one hundred, of which only fifteen were t'aken alive from the wreck, and of these five have since died. The water in the canal is eighteen feet deep. and nearly all those not immediately killed were drowned. The engine and tender, with the engi neer and firemuan, were pitched headlong into the canal, and are buried twenty feet below the surtace. The baggage car and two passenger cars are completely shattered, and one of the lat t.r turned bottom side upwards and nearly sub merged. When our informant arrived this morning, the parties were still busy in extricating the bodies from the wreck. In one out-house adjoining the station house at Hamilton about fifty or sixty corpses of men, women and children were lying on one floor. No inquiry into the cause of the accident has yet been held. Most of the passengers were from Hanmilton, Toronto and the adjoining towns. It is intended to have public funeral of the unfortunate sufferers on Monday. Coininittees have been forned to wait on the friends of the deceased. Manty of the bodies have already been removed by the relatives. Filly-seven bo dies have been recovered up to-night. It is agreed that no blame attaches to the switchman or engineer. The li-out axle of the locomotive seems to have broken. The engine probably was partly on the rails until half way over the bridge, when it fell from the rails to the timber fraiming, a distance of fully 1 imches. The shock thus caused seems to have snapped the whole structure. It is said that the engineer (brave fellow !) whistled " on brakes." and, while endeavoring to avert the catastrophe, wvent down with the engine. We can positively contradict thme report that the switch was wrong, and that this caused the accident. Undoubtedly the aJle of thme engine mnust have been brokeni, as the left wheel left the rail, and maked the sleepers,-k&e., on the track for sinnle ten yar-ds befo~re reaching the switch. We have enm told by one of the gentlemen who jumped off, that the engineer, insteaid of atteimpjting to escape at the liist warning, staid until the mo met when the engine was precipitated into the abyss, and was reversiag the engine, endeavor mnpf possible, to pirevenit thme fatal result. It this be true-and we see no reasoni to doubt it too m'neh praise cannot be bestowed on the brave fellow who thus nmobly (lid his duty. LORD NAPIER'S INTERVIEW WITE TE PRESIDENT. We noticed vesterday, that Lord Napier had in interview with President Buchanan, on 3Mon lay last. Following is a brief abistract of the reinrks made lby both parties Lord Napier., 'in addressing the President as the envoy of' 11er Blritaii 1ajesty, sidu lhe was instrcte'd to conver to hinm the earniest desire entertainied hb- the Queen to presere and ad vance on all occasions. thle interest and thle hap. piness of Enghand and Amierica, which are so deply involvedl ini their amiicatble intercourse, and to mmanmifest to him the hearty good wishes which Her .M1ajesty c-herishes' far the~ prosperity of the United' States. liie ventureid to congratu late the- Preside~nt oni his anece ssion toi thet highest elective dignity in this country and the worl-d. saving :" Mlay youl enijoy it ini henhhi, peacet(.. and evr increasing honor, and miay the period of~ or governenit be distingumished by all the fea tires cof pubilic welfatre. "Permit mei," lhe con tinued, "to exparesis to you iiy gratifienatiomn in beig selectedl to renew anid avow at Washing toi those relations of iinterniational friendship which have beeni so ably sustained by your rp resentative in London. '[his imorttant andl griteliid duty, might have been committed to others more capabhle of doing justice to the sentiments of benevolenice which animate myi sovereign, her ministers and every order of her subjects, lbut no one could approach your execc-l lency with greater respiect for your persni and your otlice, or a warmer good will to the Amieri. eai people." lie theni delivered the eredential letter which Her M1ajesty had beeni graciously pleased to intrust to his care. The President, in reply, ofl-red to Lordl Napier a harty welcomme as enivoy extraordinary and minister plenipoa~tentiary of'her Britannic ~MIajes ty to thme Untited States. " Your 'sovereign," he said, "1 am convinceed, could not have selected a moe acceptablle representtative t hani yourself to renew those relatiomis of international friend ship which I trust may never hereafter lhe inter rupted. Thle earnesat anid gracious desire ex p ~ressed lby her 3Majesty to preserve inad advance uoi all occasionas thme interests and happiiness of England and America, aiid the hearty good wishes which her M1ajesty cherishes for the pros periv of the United States, are cordially recipro cated on myi patrt, amid wvill elicit an enthusiastic resose fi iim thme helirts of the American peo ple. No independenit potwers have ever beein hound together by nationial interests of such mnagiitude as those which unite Great Britain amid the United States. Indeed, the parosperity f the one is necessarnily involved ini that of thme other ; but mutual interests however vast, with out miutual regardl, arc not always suiflicient to preserve frieindship betweent nations. llow hiap p, then, aim I to receive the asturance that your sovereign, her minister and every order of her subjects mare aniimiated lby sentimients of' henemva lence towards the governimnt andl people of thme Uniited States." "During mym acdministration it shamll b~e nmy agreeable ditty as well ais my earnest desire to increase the friendship amid miiutualdgcod willnmow sci happily subsisting betw-emn thec two countries; and to render these senitimnents strong andl endu-a ring, with such siiierie anid heartfelt disposition on i both sides, shoauild dilhicuilties ever arise be tween the two goverinenits, thocse will lbe easily adjusted in a spirit of mumtual foirbearanmce anid oncession. I return your Lordshuip mmy thaniks for your kind expressmous amid wishes imm refer eimee to myself, and feel confidemt thamt in ouir fu ture intercourse we shall piroceed hamnoniously and satifactorily ini the discharge of our respec tive--duties." Mona Sin Em-F:c-rs or CAanivruc Friaus. --The Leanonim (Ohio) Citizen, of Friday last relates thme followinig sad fatal occurrence at a wedding party ini that place on Mondaay last: The coampany had gathered, when one of the giest took off his overcoat, from the pocket of which dropped a small pocket pjistoil. A young ld present picked up the wveapon, wvhen a man by th pgme 14 Frederichi Spohmr asked her to) bn4 .it to ib i p ig~ whmich, by some means i was discharged, and the ball entered the left oiner nf tha righit aya f tha n~Itnna Snnar penetrating the brain, and causing death in a few seconds. Consternation and alarm seized the party, and the bridal scene was turned into one of death. The marriage was deferred, and with stricken hearts the guests left the scene, awfully impressed with the truth, that " in the midst of life we are in death." yj O tburtisr. ARTHUR SIMKINS, EDITOR. EDGERIELD. 5. C. WEDNESDAY, MARChl 25, 1857. The Rev. Basil Manly. THIs revered Baptist Minister will preach in our town on Thursday and Friday nights of this week. It is only needed to mention the fact, to fill the Baptist meeting-house to overflowing. Dr. MANLY is beloved here, as well by those who have never seen him as by those who sat under the droppings of his pathetic eloquence thirty years ago. He is traditionally treas ured up in the hearts of this people. And when he comes amongst us, it will be like a long-absent father coming back to his children and grand-children. Dr. MANLY is warmly identified with Edgefiold; he mar ried here and commenced his ministry here. Surely every one will turn out to hear his teachings. Some how or other, the face, and manner, and pathos, and purity of this eminent Divine always suggested to our mind the idea of John of 'atmos. New Adveatisements. Mark the full and taking advertisement of Mr. Euaxeso 1'ax. No dealer deserves a large and re munerative patronage more than does this old and tried citizen. We predict for him a heavy run this season. Wet. SuIAra too is telling us what he has on hand in his elegant store on Broad Street, Augusta. And Mr. IIsaev of the same city has an inviting crd on another column. We ask attention to our new advertisements as they appear, beanuse we want our readers to be properly posted and are determined that our advertising friends shall be noticed. The Advertisrr has in this way made hundreds and thousands of dollars fur the ner chanuts of Edgetield and Augusta; and now that our list of subcribers is daily extending and strengthen ing, we shall be able to do still more for them. Dis. regard not your own beet interests in this matter, is what we frankly and without adulation say toall deal. car. within the scope of our circulation. THE SOUTHERN LIGHT Is out: not by any fault of ours, hut by a stress of weather which it is useless here to mention. We will publish it again with pleasure as soon as it shall be re kindled; and we hope that may not be long. TrE SEASON. Delightful. Thermometer at 70?. Fish biting in the braiiches. Irish potatoes coining up. Moeking birds :inging. Girls giving concerts. Horses in need of hickory ashes to give thea anu appetite. Bacon high. Cows pour. Victuals scarce, &c., &c., &c. MORE DOCTORS. At the lnte Examination of the Students of the South Carolina Medical College, Charleston, the fol lowing young gentlemen, from Edgefield District, re ceived their Diplomas, to wit: Joun B. ABNEY, WILLIAx DAxYW.L, laxinr C. iAnnarT, and Loalc S. HiLL. FETCH IT BACK. We isold he glad if the muan, who has our large black stick with a clueer-looking face on the bautt end ot it, would return the samei into the use anud enjoy menit of its rightful owner. We should not only be glad. liut wouldl hiow it by treating the lman; beeause we have a fancy for that stiek. GOLDEN BUTTER. Mrs Col. Fatrzina must excuse us for thanking her through the Adcertiser for ti.nt superb dish of golden butter. It was sos fine andl so neiceptahle that ire can not retrain from psublishling it a s yellosw as goIld, as sweet as a banana, and about as firm as a rIpe peach. It hasalready buttered maiiy a himt biscuit for us, nd will yet butter several more. Goshen, stand back! Old Edgefield challenges you to the contrast. Would it not lie a happy thing if editors could always lhe thus fortunate. NOT BAD. Thait was a pretty fair joke we heard the oither dlay, of osne of our dlarkie.- evading a late ordinance of the Town Council in regard tu dogs following negriles. The palitl 'met up' with him on Sunday nado retiuir ed Isis -piSS,' which lie psroimptly delivered over for in spectionl. IHe was then about to leave, when onte of the patrol casually en.1uire'l "what budlget that was he had upon0 his hack." With a cunninig leer of tti umphilil. Cuitlee gaood -humioredly repliedi: - lie, he. ma.-sa ; its dis naigger's dlog. You white folks, wid boiss Fsen. Nisenom.AS as 'tendiusntt, mike dec law 'boumt nigger lettini' slog loller 'im : but yisu never ayi~ nuthsin' 'hsoit nigge'r tostin' dosg."'.A nl lie wenot on his way rej.'icing. A NEW POST OFFICE. A new Posst Ollise has becen establi.heid sit ".D'arn's tIol Mine," in Abbeville District, and Mr. J.tis Doy appso.ntedl Post Master. Wo~ubi like to receive aout twretnty-five siibscribecrs fromiz ysou, friend Dons. THlE PRtAIRtIE NEWS. A copsy of this spiry little patper is biefisre r:a. and we ihpe to see it oftetn hereafter. REataEN N.tsoN has a findi of gosod humor alnd hiard sense. anid is biounsd Ito e a clever editosr. lUut our P'raiirie friesnd seems to hive bseen ini a peek oif trssubhle lately. froms a scareity of hanids. Hlis biest, pritnter, J. 11. Knox, haS beeni calldl awray off toi South Carsilina. to Court. (Dy the way. that term might hatve moire meanings thani onie.) Speaking osf Joe's$ sidenlc sdepurture, the News re mairks: While we were up5 to our elbows in jobi-work, but c'ingratulting ourself thait our indlefaitigabile .-sistunit, Mr. J. 11. Knotx, whto is oine or the hest younsg prin' ters thtat ever stosid til ta a ease, was "a giniley" ahead. n ipertive summinis reac~hedl hsim, which imnde it n iecessary for him tis leave for Souith Cariolinai immiedi atel, if'not sooner. lie hass gonte : butt, like a good hoy. lie sdistribsutesd a lig case of letter b~efore he left iteds, he could not well hatve done it afterwrards. Tat's a dleservedl comipliment to one whom we have knwnw most faivoraly in our orn office. We can in fri osur brstlier chip sif the Prairie thait Jos is do ing well, and looking well, anid may get hack after a while if circumstances of ia peculhiar ntutire do not prevet. Noes verrons. THlE DRlED SCOTT DECISIOlN. We regardl this recent decisiast of the Siupremle Court of the Uniteid States as of so much iimpiortancite,I that a large part of the first page if our piresent. issue is given up tos its dletails. They will repnay the pieriusl,. il we ask all our readers (whos have nut idone s, al rely) to regarid thenst with care and retleetion. Tihe dlecisioni is a triumsphi of psrinciple upon0 which conser vative Almierica may well congratulate herself. . THiE YORKVILLE ENQUIRER. This paper (excellenit already) pironises to rise high er and higher in its future prosgress. Another able hadhas s eizedh one sof itS penls, makinig uip for the Enuirer an editoriail tii of unusual streingthi. We greet Mr. BWz.'K with pleasure, nad send tis our frienils Man.ToY andl Mii~sn a thoiusandl kindi wishes. A fairer iir a miore interesting sheet than thecirs, it wotuld e dificult toi name. It dleserves twenity thousand sub scribsers. HIOG-KILLERS. One or two of our neighbors complain of hosing fat hogs frinm time to titme, and we have experiencedl the grievance ourself at least ini ine in.-tancee. That the hogs sdo not die naturui deaths is evidenit fromn the fact that nio ecasss. no buzzard, lns bosnes ever denote that such was the caise. They disappsear in tlo,. andi are either spirited away bsy dhemonis of tfie air, oir Iiiid h nldl f, killed, and scaldeil, by floshmly huads. The latter is thought to be far the most probablle solution of the mystery ; andI we are gladl tsi learn that ai vigi lnt eye is omplouyed in ' treeing' the dlepredators. A ood lue hna already been obtained, andl sufficient frther piroof is thought ti bse ititin reach to conde'it the abominable petlpetrators of this lowest of petty larenies. We hope so. pD-The now Artesian well in Charleston has rached lte depth of seven huntdred and sixty feet. PROVIDENCE AND POLITICS. We have said that" an over-ruling Providence has manifested itself unmistakenbly in the care of the en- u tire American Republic. It is no less a fact, that this g exhibition of favor and protection from on High has p been especially vouchsafed to the Southern and Slave- q holding division of this Confederacy. However rabidly iu the canting Abolitionist may inveigh against the sin F of slavery ; however, with fiery wrath, the Henry v Ward Beechers of the North may pronounce upon us e the doom of heaven's vengeance; it is nevertheless d certain that we have thus far been preserved, and t strengthened, and enlarged, in a manner that astounds t the philosophy of the world. The South has been, r for many years. the slandered and abused of all peo- 1 ple, for many years the oppressed of its own govern- a ment; and yet a fairer prosperity, happier homes, a t higher generosity, a more elevated religion, a more devoted patriotism. a more permanent condition of r well-ordered society. and, withal, a more brilliant fu- t tuto, do not belong, have never belonged. to any other - branch of the human family. This is not mere asser- t tion. In England, ,m well as the Notrh, powerful pens 4 and powerful tongues have long been at work to in- 1 fluence the downfall of our institutions and the coo- c sequent destruction of our whoje.polity. They have t had the advantage of appealing to the passions and prejudices of men without a voice to gainsay their wild and furious charges. They have had the advan tage of attacking a (so-callei) national sin whose very name, as a watchword in the mouths of eloquent en thusiasts, might have become the instigation of an al most universal enmity to our section.. They have done what they could to lift the sl;re-holders of the South up before the world as monsters of iniquity. They have represented the condition of African servitude in our midst according to their own uninformed and jaundiced view of it, 'and the truth has nut been ex hibited to correct their one-sided and exaggerated statements. They have declaimed in the lecture-room and in the.pulpit against us, and have made the press to teem with their tirades of abuse and their appeals to the magnanimity of the Christian (?) world. They have called down upon us, in their prayers, the visi tation of God's vengeance. And yet to-day, byth. inherent justice of our cause, we are stronger before mankind and have more marked assurances of Hlca yen's continued watchfulness than ever before. To day, the products of slave-labor are more abundant than ever before, and more valuable in themselves. To-day, the area of slavery is wider than ever bofore and the prospects are brightening that it will speedily be extended. To-day. mankind are more dependent upon us than ever before, and the opening up of new nations to conmnerce is ready to double the field of our usefulness. Is there not the hand of Providence in this? We have been too the oppressed of our own govern ment; nor has it been a light oppression. Such was the fearful aspect in which it presented itself to South ern patriots of a past day that they themselves an ticipated the ruin of their country and the devastation of their homes as a necessary and unavoidable result of it. Hear the eloquent McDmera, as he pictured the fate of the South under the odious operation of the old Tariff: "Where all was' bright, and prosperous. anid happy," said that hero-orator, " they will behold nothing but decny, and gloom, and desolation; with out a :put of verdure to break the dismal continuity, or even a Ituse of the wilderness left on its stalk To tell where the garden had been.'" lie felt and believed what he was saying, and so thought and spiko many of his compatriots of that day. But the Almighty hand had planted us here as a peopmle (slavery and all) not to die hut to live, not to perish lint to proisper. And we have lived, have pros. peredi in spite of the condemnation of men and thme tyranny or political majorities. Aund now, that our shacklels are falling oil'one by one before the rays of reviving troth and justice ; now, that the intelligence if the age is learning to apprecibte our institutions aright; nr~w that thme sagacities of trade are becoming fully alive tii the vast impor-tance of our wealth andi resources to the commercial interests oif earth; now, that a higher philanthropy is willing to see the neces sity of cottiin (slave-labor cotton) to the wants of man kini; whnt limit, we ask, 'is to lbe fixed upon our on wrid mareb to increasing strength and increasing beneficence anmong the nations of earth ? God forbid we should express this faith in our future progress with aught of vaunting or vain-glory ! ahther let us; iiw in all the humility of true gratitudle, nna rever ently place the offering of' our thankfulness and praise uonllm liis altar who lhas idone. aol is doing, all this fur us in His own good time und according to his own wie inustruimentailitics. Onie ior twii of thme tangible anid piractically demon-| strative eviidences or the steadily inicre'asing herma-I necy of thme South aiii her institutions will lie ntie-i edi next. ION. F. WV. PICKCENS AND TIlE EVENING NEWS. flr' respeeteid andi esteemed ciitemoporary mof tihe Charleston Evening News~ speaks of Col. Prex'aass as having fimileid to " oltain" a Cablinet appointment' Th'is woiiuld seem toi imoply that suc'h an appointment was sought Iby him. Thme Nemcs is in error. if our con srctioni of its langungehe cirrc't. We can say with the must assuredl c'onfidlence that Col. Psa..si has never, either directly or indirectly, by) his own act or by that of any one else. s'onght office of any sort un ier this (ir any other adhministration. He holds him. self, however, readly at all timecs to do his diuty to his 'ountry in any poist where his services may lie honorna liy anid advantageously biestomwed. lie believes that it becomes his State tim take her part (mis things nomw stand) with thme great Democratic party mif the Unii to fight the battle of Constitutonal rdorm openly and nmanfully befoire the worldi. AndI if it become necesary, lhe woul nit shrink frm being aim expo met of thmat policy, on thme part mof South Cariilinia, ini the Cabinet or elsewhere, lBut lie neither courts nor (pmersonmally) wishes fir any such distinction:; Anid the News, we hail supposedl, ought to have kniiwn im hiettr than toi entertain tho supposition. We p.en this paragraphl ini slieer justice to anm eminent fellow-citienm whose uminid anid feelings we happen to koiw and up-m preite mright. The country hais no inbler ir mnore devoted Soni thtan he, nor one less dispoised to thrust himef unbeconminigly inito public affairs. JOHN MLTCiIVELL.' In Augusta last week, we had thme pleasure mof list ening to an elognenit lecture frio this celeburated Irish piatrimt, upon the subiject if "PS:ACE ons WAa ms Ec no-." Masonic Hall was crowilded upon the occasiOn with a imost intelligent and fashionable audience, anid great satisfiaction was imanifested mii all asldes with Mr. MiTenatKL. and his performance. The next day we amd alsom time privilege of hearing him coniverse up on imilar toieLs, at a tiirget-shmooting which came off anmong his irish fallow-citizens, at Shultz's hill onl the Carlinia siile of thme Savanmnah. Onm this latter ocea si there was plenmty of gomid shiouting, goodi music, good drinking, mmid good eating no doubt, although we had nio time to remaini fur thme lattter. Mr. Mivenmi .1, is ii very agr'eeabile loctutrer ail quito' a plesanit gentleman. We believe lie has determined to remain permnanenitly inm thme United States; his resi dunc at preseint is Nashmville, Tennmessee-. Of course, in lecturing upoin European affairs, sine wh has suffered at thme hands of Englad'sm royalty, could nut he expected to be otherwise than severe up on that governmmment; wore especially, when that suf ferer is mime imf time domwn-trodlden hmousehlmd of the goo St. Patrick. Accordlingly Mr. Mrfenmii. deals in miny a hitter and sarcastic fling at that boausted land of constitutional liberty. Indeed this is by no means the least interesting part of his remarks; for he hates so thoroughly that it necessarily imparts to i his satire a very concentrated quality of Attic salt.r Mr. Mivenerm.i. thinks there is no heartiniess ini thme ex-r isting alliance of the European powers ; that there area deep-setedl jealousies among them ever reaudy to tear asunder time league on trilling grounads; that there is nuthig like peace ini thme heart uof thomsa nations; and l that there mre hidden fires benemith aud throughout g E uropean society every where (except in itussia) that nust andu will burst forth in revolution before many years. So much for Mr. Jemns MrrenzW, and his opin- e ions. Both they and he are entitled to consmaeration; for he is a well eduocated and well informedl man, and his views are basemd upon rational premises. ggJ. B. Stewart, a lawyer of Louisville, Kentucky, t has realized a fee of $90,O"'h by the decision of the it-sd. ea.. in Washinuta.t GOV. HAMMOND. Our readers have seen that Gov. HAuxosD's name as withdrawn from the list of candidates for Con ruess. It was done quietly, and without a word of ex lanation, at that distinguished gentleman's own re uest. le did not care to came forward with any nnecessary excuses, although thankful to those friends rho desired thus to compliment him. He neither rould nor could undertake to fill the post at this time f life; and therefore asked that his :ame might be ropped without a remark of any kind. But we are ad there is.in the public mind a little uncertainty as o the disappearance of his announcement. Some do ot know yet that he is positively not a candidate. Ind we are advised that it is perhaps bettor to dispel 11 doubt upon the subject. We therefore state posi ively that Gov. H.uixoSD is not a candidate. We are among those who wish that he could have un. To have had the 4th Congressional Districtonce aoro represented by a man of his ab'lity and brillian y. would have been matter (if proud congratulation a us all. It would have brought to mind the greater lays of the past, when South Carolina's statesmen core pointed to as statesmen indeed, and whose re ord is a legacy of genius and learning to their pos. erity. HON. J. F. MARSHALL. ;2O-Wo find the following announcement in the at Aheville Independent Press: Nxw MAuET, March 16, 1857. Mr. Editor: In respect for the memory of our Ia ented Representative, lion. P. S. Brooks, we have ostponed to the present calling out Col. J. F. MAR ALL, to fill his place, in the Congress of our country. You will please announce Col. J. F. MARSA:.L a andidate for Representative in Congress. By so do ng you will meet the desires of his many friends. Lowan SALUDA. GOV. AIKEN AND MR. BANKS. In our last issue we copied a strung article from the lumbia Times, upon the course bf Gov. AmaKrE in naking a motion, complimentary to Speaker BaKs, it the se of the late session of Congress. It may e tha e ex-guvernor was prompted by motives of hivalry and'politesse' in this singular act; because te is (as we learn) a good-hearted and a well-disposed an. But it was certainly a totally uncalled-for step; nd, now that it has been mooted before the public, the luty devolves upon the press of South Carolina to xpress what each member of it regards as the feeling f the State in regard to the matter. Sofar as we have Beard, most persons concur In condemning the act as tut of place, out of taste and out of keeping with everything known or recognized as political propriety within the State of South Carolina. Some say they ire not disposed to think more harshly of it than as in indiscretion, weak in itself but not to be canvassed eously when coaming from a man of Mr. Azzcr.x' walibre. Others appear to regard it as a bid of that zonorable gentleman for popularity in certain Federa councils. But we confess we can only consider it it he light of a gross misrepresentation of South Caro. ina and South Carolina sentiment. Mr.,BANxs i ipown to be the head and front of the Massachusetts ,uti-slavery power, and a prime leader of the South's nost bitter enemies at the North. He is the indefati ;able agent of a party which is utterly inimical to ilmost all we hold dear in South Carolina. lie is the riend and counsellor of such men as WILson and rnxsaa, and doubtless stood aiding and abetting this latter individual in the perpetration of his infamous tsault upon South Carolina and Senator BtTLKn. He i a Black Republican, and desirous as such to over. rhelm the South with disgrace by esti4blishing her in. brioity in the Union. Mr. DAxKS may at the same im he a gentleman as the phrase goes; and Mr. tixxx may have deemed the occasion, which he s< nagerly grasped, a fit one to play off his own private sotions of gentlemanly courtesy. But we maintain he bad no right to do so in contravention of what h. night hare known would ho the feeling of his people it home upon the matter. In his private mansion ii Washington City, was the place to do what he might regard the handsome thing towards the retiring Speak ar. But done as it was, it plnees South Carolina beforc the country in the egregiously farse attitude of honey. ruggling Black Republicanism in a manner at onec lerogatory to her character and injurious to the in Leress of the South. We protest against Mr. A:KEN'. :urse as being repugnant to the wishes and tastes oc i5 entire State. THE FIRST DISAPPOINTMENT. Is nut this beautiful ? It is contributed to the Neu Eork Rome Journal by Mrs. J. II. Ilereridge, of Gal. eston. Texas. I saw a youthful mother, tOnc.e on a summer's dhay, Set dtowni a smiling infamnt To watch its frolic lay; It gamboled oin the flowers That leeked the carpet o'er. And seemedi, with chilish wiander. Each object to explore. A somesthing on the instant Its glad career arrest.s, And engerly it gazes whcre A golden sunbeaman rests; While on the new found glory It fixed its wondering eyes. Anzd truthfully reached furth its hand, Ti, seize the glittering prize. And unw its tinzy fingers clasp The treasu:e rich and rare, Which in its baby innocence It sorely thought was there. But abi! that hand uncloses, And to its earnest gaze Reveal.s no gemu of beaut No biright imnprisonued rays ! And then the first of many tears Fell on the cherub tace The firs.t sud dU:isintment In life's uncertain race! And thus it has b'een with us all, W~hoa its dlark gaume have played We've so~ught tom zra. p the sunshine, And only fouundl the shade. MISCELLANEnOUS ITEMS. pa- Tins (Wedniesday) evening, the young ladhic if the Edgefield Female Collegiate Instituzte give a Musical Rtec'eptini at Oddu Felliiws & Masonic lall. Z.- Pv.sus arc nit by any zmannzer oif meazns en ely killeid ini this regioni. There will lie. fromi pre nt appeanaees, a rensonnbhly giood stand. pa A Western editoir thus piles on the agozny o mis felicittionzs over a newly mzarried couple in his " May our young friends find bushels of bdossozm, in every limb as they wannder through the groves of heir life's spring tizme, andi' fruits to miatchi as the sea ios bring them to masturity."' pg A sweet country hiome-withi roses and honey u ckles trained to elimb over it; with goomd taste. in eigence, anid beauzty within ; toil enough to court ac uuintance with books and flowers, and the luvehiness if ature; with pece plenty, aznd love-oh ! oh ! oh! sy, cathi me ;-udont .vou see I'm faizntinig? pa The name of Miraibean B. Lamar. Ex-Presi. let of Texas, is mentioned in connection with the iurnutorial chair of Kanisas and with the mission fa- The New-York Times recalls the story of the Loztry editors, one of whom. finding the boudy of a au hangig to a lamup-post one night after his own nper had gone to press, cut it down and carried it ioni, to prevent his rival from publishing the news, nl was himself indicted for the murder. pa-9Col. A. M. Smith, of Abbeville, has been elect. ii ajor General of this Division, to fill the vacaney easioned by the reuiguation of Glen. McGowan. fa- A quaker in businiess in Philadelphia, dislik. gg the "Esq." to his name, advised a Southern cor pn esoilnt to direct hisi letters without any tail, and cevel a reply supersceribed " Amos Smith, without ny tail, Phiadelphia." ypi Is a gentleman wants a wife, he wears a ring tte first finger of the left hand; if he is engaged, e wears it on the second finger; if married, on the bird; and the fourth, if he never intends to get M0"The Collector at Charleston, and the Postmast rs at Mobile, Richmond and Tuscaloosa, have been -apppointd. jTD The Charleston Courier, of 20th inst., states eo dcrease in the receipts of cotton, at all the ports, abe 197,000 bales. The Savannah Repubican, of the 20th mL., reports . Jdecaeea 203.000 pr A Yankee proposes to build an establishment which he may drive a sheep into at one end, and have it oone out at the other as four quarters of mutton, a felt hat, a pair of drawers, a leather apron, and a quar to dictionary. #* It was credibly rumored, in Washington, on the 21st inst., that Brigham Young had burnt the Government archives and Court records of Utah, and that the Territory was in a virtual state of rebellion. gg" A total eclipse of the sun will take place on the 25th inst., but in this State, and in most of the States, it will be only a partial eclipse. According to Grier's almanac "the eclipse will begin at six o'clock in the afternoon, and the sun will set partly eclipsed at six o'clock, sixteen minutes, mean time." pi- Torn B. Walker, of Louisville, made a bet that be could drink sixty glasses of lager beer from 6 o'clock A. Msill 10 o'clock P.M., and he had finished sixty-one glasses by 8 o'clock, winning the wager. A living beer barrel. -r- Under the head of "Broken English," a Par is paper places the Londoners who get smashed up by railroad collisions or are financially busted. : - There was once a man so intensely polite, that, as he passed a hen on her nest, he said, "Don't rise, ma'am." .W Intense excitement prevails throughout New foundland in consequence of advices received from England to the effect that the New Foundland Fishe ries are to be transferred to France. Delegates are to be sent to England to protest against the transfer. p - WE learn from a passenger on the Carolina train (says the Chronicle ? Sentinel) that on Wed nesday night, as the down train from this city was about stopping at Aiken, a man by the name of Dun bar, a resident of Aiken, said to be insane, was run over and instantly killed, the body being mutilated in a shocking manner. how he came to be upon the track is not known. -x TEr Constitutionalist says that some idea may be formed of the extent of business carried on at the Augusta Cotton Manufactory, when it is known that near sixty thousand yards of cloth are spun weekly, consuming about fifty..bales of cotton, of four hundred pounds each. There are about eight thousand spindles and two hundred and sixty looms in operation, and the company find it difficult to fill with promptness the orders they receive for manufactured goods. p' Lucy STO:SS lectured at Bangor one evening lately. Her subject was "Border Ruffianism at home," in which she took the ground that the Kansas Ruffians are not so bad as those Ruffians who tyranize over their wives and families at home. She said we bear of hen-peeked husbands but there was not much said about " rooster-pecked wives." I t-Two children, twelve or thirteen years old, of Spartanburg, were out gunning on Monday last, when the younger one, named Thomas Scott, living with Mr. Garnett, was accidentally shot in the shoulder. g' The Spartanburg Express says that on Friday I weeks now fell in that place to the depth of one and a half inches. -0 TaE oldest man in America is said to reside in Murray co., Ga. his name is John hames-be was a revolutionary veteran, and is 130 years of age. p- Tus Postmaster General reports the probable number of dead letters for the past year to be three millions. p .' Wa learn through a gentleman from Sumter ville (says the Columbia Times,) that a Revival is pro grossing in that town under the efficient labors of the Rev. Mr. Tersdale, at the Baptist Church. COOIMUNICATIONS. For the Advertiser. THE VAULTS 0F ST. NICIAN'S CHECH. The mectropolis of Ireland contains an extraor dinary subterranean. curiosity : A burial-place, which, from the chemicil properries of the soil, acts with a certain enmbalmning influence upon the bodies deposited within it. I speak of tlh- vaults bencathi St Michan's Church, Dublin, where those who have the firm ness to go down and look death in the face, will find an instructive commnentary upon the dloctrines of moral humiliation that are periodically preached above. You descend by a few steps into a long and nar row p)assage that runs across tire site of tire Church; u porn each side there are excavated and ample reces ses, in wvhicht the dead are deposited. There is ntoting offensive in thre atmosphere to deter you from crnterinig. Thre first thring thrat strikes you, is to find that decay has beens more busy with thec tenement than with tihe tenant. In some instances the coffins hrave altogether disappeared ; in others tre lids or sides hrave mouler ed away, exposing the remnains3 within, still unsubdued bry tdeath fronm their original form. LIR A. For tihe Advertiser. WAGES. nY JOE, TnrE JERSEY NUT.. "The lab'ourer is worthy of his hire."--SerUras. "We andi ours," as every rnewspaper Edlitor w vrits, are unrder~ irnfinite obligations to one or oth-. er of tihe publishers of tire Edgefleld Adrertiser for a copry o~f that pape'r dlate.l Wedrnesday, March 4, 157. We did read it fromr begirnnirng to end, nsot even overlooking the spare rdevoted to adver tiseents. Refererrce was mnade irn tire paper to tre hill recently pbassedI by Congress, wich prrovi. ded for a lrncrea.e inr the pay. of the officers of the Arnmy. We, of corurse, rejoice to see~ tire act of justice to thre oficers of tire Armay; lbut our sal Iary amsounits just to nsothrirrg, in comparison uiith thrat of thre lowest otlicer ins tire armsy:-look, rea Ider, it is niothriing mrore nror less titarr 700 per an snum, arid thtis irn a large city, where thre cost of Iprovsons rn enrormsous. Arid wos still, we hrave Ia wife to sulport. Our colleague, also a rmute, hras been married rmany years, and our pen carmot do justice to his .suffe~rirngs isr all that timte, arising fro tire irradeqjuacy o1 iris salary. Our hearing aLssiates, anid ue say tis not ins a spirit of msal ice, but cornfh,e orself to thre facts in tire case our hearing associates, unmarried, get $1000 a year, whie those who are married, have thre privi lete of thre adldition of $10)0 to thseir regular pay. We certainly do not obiject to tis addition to their pay, but threre is rno reason ins tire world wiry their miute felilow-haborers shsou~d not be allowed an equality of salary with others who hear. We are y o mseans inclined to msurnmur, but now thmat we rav learnied to write arid read, and act as well as thers, we canrmot blindr ourself to injustice. In tire Deaf and Dumisb Institute in Paris, rio inequa'i ty of salary exists L-etween thre hearing anid (leaf teachers, a most remarkable thing irn similar insti tutions in peropp. To thep honor of Virginia be it said, Mr. Jop UEIE, deaf and dumb, and assistent teacher in tire Staunton Instittions receives equal pay with his hearing follow-teachers, $900 a year. I under stand that thre Directors of this Institution con tmplate raising Ihis salary. Think you that if'we were endowed with tho~e faculties of which it has pleased God to dleprive us, we would have the privilege of receiving a thou sand 'I Ay' s y '-but as a penmaltyv for thre acci dent of being unable to hear, our salary is limited to seven hundred. The Sandusky, Ohio Register, dclares that with the expenses of living at their present rates, men who live on seven hundred, can not support a family. We practice tire most rigid economy, aye, and deny ourself many of thre com forts of life, but alas! and alas, we often find our self out of pocket several hundred dollars. Pic ture, then, the forlorn condition of mute teachers up North. Our excellent mother, who has gone to her eter nal rest, remembered us in her will, by which we have been placed above the point of destitution. We expect to have a house of our owu next year. W To dispere amob mount a lam~45 and com.mne renang a e satar fromth@ 1 bl. For the Advertiser. TO I ETEAETS-ZASE. Oh ! dont you remember the greenwood, dear love ? Where roaming so glad, and so free, In the days of the past with their sunshine bright We sing in the shade merrily. And I twined you a wreath of the wil4 flowers gay, At the foot of the old oak tree, You sat garlanded there, like some wild-wood fay, And around you I danced in wild glee. And don't you remember, my own Ileart's.ease ? How soon all the Wreath's bloom fled, And I wept then as now, in my childish grief, On things that in shining are dead ! Like the hope-flowers that sprung in our pathway's light, - Shedding joy ro und the days of "lang syne" Shone a moment and died I ke a fairy spell, And left us to weep, sister mine! But the sunset's glow, on your forehead so fair, Like a halo of glory was shed, Then my tears were all dried for the earth-fowers blight, When Heav'n crowned my lov one's head. Yet tho' memory's lights are burning bright 'Round the shrine of the past I deplore, Still I long for the " home" where at last we shall meet, And the cold world can part us no more. SUNBEAM. HYNENIAL, MARRIED, in St. James Church, Augusta, Ga., on Tuesday, the 17th inst., by the Rev. J. E. Evans, Mr. Gn.us BowEas, of that city, and Miss M. A. MAGRUDER, of Alabama. - OBITU AR Y. DEPARTED, this life on the 11th inst., Mrs. ANN A. WHITE, wife of RICHxo\D M. WHIz, of this Village. and daughter of Cl. and Mrs. J. Griffin, in the 44th year of her age. Mrs. WIrr embraced religion in early life and attached herself to the Baptist Church at "Sister Springs" in Edgefield Distriet, when eighteen years old. A year after her union with the Church she was married to Mr. White with whom she lived happily for twenty-five years. Within the past three years she and her husband have been called to follow the remains of two of their little ones to the silent tomb ; and also to mingle their sympathetic tears with those of their eldest son shed at the loss of an affectionate and be!oved wife, whom they consigned to the grave. But scarcely had those tears been dried ere that family circle was again in vaded by death, and suddenly and unexpectedly that dear mother, and fond wife falls beneath his stroke, leaving that father and son in their bereaved Some four years previous to her decease Mrs. WHITE was permitted to rejoice at the conversion of her two eldest sons, and their union with the Church, at Mount Moriah, to which she had some years previously transferred her membership. Since that interesting event, she became more and more attached to the house of God and evinced a grow ing spirituality of mind fitting her for the society of the blesbed in heaven. suddenly has she been taken from a large circle of dear friends, leaving her aged parents, an affectionate husband, seven children (one an infant only a few hours old) a sis ter and three brothers, besides numerous friends and relatives to mourn her departure. Ilow ap propriate the, admonition of the Saviour. "He ye also ready, for in such an hour as ye think not the Son of man cometh. Whilst we deeply feel the loss which her family, he Chrerh, and the community in which she lived have sustained by her dea'th, we bow with humble submission to the will of our lleavenly Father, saying, " The will of tjte Lord be done." J. M. C. Greenwood, March 18th, 1857. Diao, in thia Disutiet, on the 7th inbt , of Scat let Fever, Miss MARY ELLIS, second daughter of Air. Tuoms and Mrs. M~IaT'ua ELms, in the 1ith year of her age. The deceased was an amiable and interesting young lady, and was highly esteemed by her ass'r ciates and acquaintan-es. Sihe was a dutiful und an affectionate child, a kind sister, a true friend, and above all, a good Christian. She became a mente ber or the Methodist'Chnrch, in November 1-55, and lived a consistent member up to the time of her demise. Site bore her severe afflicti,,n with un common patit nee and fortitude, anid at last qu'etly, and apparenatly willingly. fell asleep in .1 eans. Many friends, togither with he-r anieited relatives nd sorely grieved parents, deeply mourn their loss. A FRIEND. ,A UGUST A, March 21. Corro.--There 1 as been 'sonme movement in the market to-day, the fih at we have noticed for a week, and about 60)0 bales were sohl at from 13 tu 134 cents for Strict to Good Middling and Middling Fair lots. There is but little Cotton otl'ering. FrLOa.-City Mills superfine Floutr has declied 50 cents per bibl1. Cou..try is dutll at $7 25; and prics still tending dlownwarnls. Coax.-Very d~ull at 80~ax5 cents. BAco.-Well cured meat readily commands 12 ents hog round. Somte green meat is offe~rinig at ail cent lower. Linn.-Very firm at 1 ll in kegs and b~arre's, and 15 in cans, at whlesae. There is very little in market. CIlAfRLESTON, Mar. 21. Covo.-Sales to-day of 900 hales Cotton, prin cipally to one p~urchiaser, at 11a13lc. Market un changed. E EW YOlRK, Mar. 21. Coro.-Cotton is firmer, with more buyers ttan sellers. Sales 5,000 bales. Breadstu1rs unsettled. Other artic'es unchanged. NEW ORLEANS, Mar. 20. Corox.-Sales to-day of 5500 bales Cotton at stilr rates. Sales of the week 41,000 bales. Re eeits 33,5610 bales, being 5000 less than for the same week last year. Pork has advanced 25 cents. Lard in kegs 15c. Freights inactis e. Sterling 8j. 'Dyspepsia Can be Cured ! I'm there any one that has Dyspepsia or Liver Disease, and has not tried BLISS' DYSPEPTIC R EMEFDY ? If so, let them buy, say two packages and take it regularly according to the directions, and those two packages will sh~ow them that every word that has been said or written coneerning it is as true as tihe book of Genesis. It is for sale by A. G. & T. J. TEAGUE. March 18 tf 10 Holloway's Pills. WSTER onCe said that the reielle of the Brit ish drum welcomed sunrise in all regions. Equally universal is the presence of this potent remedy for diseases of the stomach, the bowels and the minor secretive organs. Its praise is written in all lan guages. Sold at the m~anufactories, No. 80 Maiden Lqne. New York, and No. 244 Strand, London; and bay all druggits, at 25oe , 62je., and $1 per box. gg, THE Friends of Maj. D AVID L. STIAW, respectfully nominate him as a candidate for COLO NEL 7th Regiment, S. C. M., to fil the vacancy occasioned by the resignation of Col. IHaauasor'. "HAVE YOU ANY CHASE 1" IF NOT, please hear in mind that EC. PENN, Agent. has just received a fresh lot of English Dairy CHEESE-a fine article. Mar 25 tf 4' 11 IRISH POTATOES.. A FEW Bbls, of a choice vaiety for Planting, just received by EC. PENN, Agt. Mar 25 If 11 Sheriff" Sale. Y Virtue of sundry writs of Fieri Facia to me direetedl, [ will proceed to sell at Edge feld C. H., on the first Monday and Tuesday in April next, the following property in the following ease, to wit: Stevens & Rountree vs. Piekens F. linmilton, one neo woman by the name of Offey, and two horses. Trms of sale, Cash. -JJA. EIDOON, U.a... Marh 1 385 3te 11