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All Advertisements not having the desired number of insertions marked on the 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 be charged as advertisements. Obituary Notices exceeding one square in length will be charged for the overplus, at regular rates. Announcing a Candidate (not inserted until paid for,) Five Dollars. For Advertising Estrays Tolled, Two Dollars, to be paid by the Magistrate advertising. For the Advertiser. LEAVES STOLEN PROM SOMEBODY'S JOURNAL. FarI MoNIxo, May, 185.-The spring, with its myriad of Bower-lives, bird-voices, and sun beam-arches, is with us again. So come to the 'Feast of the Roses,' all ye spirits of air, wood, water, sky, and of human kind, and let us drink a deep health-cup to genial spring; for lovely is her presence unto us, and " beautifil upon the mountains are the feet of those who come with glad tidings." Ay, the fresh air and the green earth; the beautiful sky, and the music of the woods, have already done wonders with the " big ugly " within. Away with moping over the fire, and grave seats in the corner; away with all of Jack Frost's rough tricks; we shall have nothing now but sunlight and the flowers, and things that are good for the soul. Good humour reigns supreme this morning. In the outer world all seems glad, and in the bright sky over the spiritual land, I see not a cloul. 0, this May-morning sunshine of the spirit, is glori ou! I feel like stretching forth my hands, in friendly greeting, to every soul in the land. Es pecially do I send my love out upon the winds to my.sweet friends, FANNtE, MARY and UNDINE; Lixi and CARL. If they were by my side now I would tell them as the Germans do; that "ily heart, and the sea, and the heavens, arc melting away with lore." Out of all that is beautiful and comforting, within and witltout; and now, whilst the heart is overflowing with gladness, and is wil ling to open itself to others ;-whilst the soul-fires burn so brightly upon the hearth-stone of the In ner House, we might, perechance, be able to add another exquisitely fitting stone, to the scul's tetm pie, which we are so eagor to build for ourselves. Ay, they had better come now; for this happy feeling may be gone, long erc I see themt, and then our grasp will be cold and feeble. When am I to see them1' Answer me, ye Fates. "Ihow long must I wait 1 0, evermore, and forever more, must I stand at the beautiful gate " of Hope? Speaking of the dear ones, LIsi and Cxar., and, thtinking of their beautiful love for each other, causes me to have a half formed wisht (1) th~at 1 too had a CARL. I wonder what I should do with, him !! I gtuess I should love hima as LISA does, with all my heart and soul. Do you recall Emt merson's Essay upon Friendship?1 There is a little extract from it that I remember to have read in Miss Bremer's " Homes itn America," some two years since. It runs tihus: "A friend is a person with whom I may be sincere. B~efore him I may think aloud ; I am arrived at last int the presence of a man so real, so equal, shat I drop even those undermost earmnents of dissimulation, courtesy, and second thought which men never put off; and may deal with him with the simplicity and whole ness with which one chemical atom meets another." Thus I was journalizitng at ten this mornina, and no doubt I should soon have been as deep in to the mysteries of our social being, as ever Waldo Emmetson was; perhamps I shtould have "comi passed sea and land " with Miss Bremer and Mar garet Fuller, tnot to menttion sonme half dozen other gifted spirits whose works lay on the table beside me. Indeed there is no telling what I might have done, had not just then two little roguish eyes muet my own and a pair of tiny hands, ats soft and white as a snowy dove's wing, thrust thctnselves wide open upon the page before me. " Tome, tousin Bertic," said Jamic Hilton, the owner of these imupudent hands and eyes-a little cousin who sojourned with us-" Uncle says you must hear mine lesson ;" and thereupon he began, his voice pitched in the key of five sharps " d-e-de-b-a-s-e-base, debase; i-n-in-c-a-s-c-case. incase," &c. &c. Then camte our little mteta-sister, with her reading lesson: "I-can-a-cat-I-can --a-t-h "-"No, no, tno," said I--" well," antd she began again; " c-a-t-c-h-catch-a-rat--and-I -can-get-you--Sir--Fly-if-you-de not go-too-far-up-into-the-air." I could not help laughing at their sing-song cem phasis, but my thoughts stopped not here. I had not heard children read since I was a child. It carried me back to years of hare feet, big-aprons, and old field schools; when a wee totddlin thing, I went to Mount Prospect School. Then associations came a thousand fold. In a twinkling, I was trans formed from a quiet, tedato young lady of twenty summers, into a wild, merry child of six or seven. All along the old school path from -our own big gate at the end of the lane, to the same old log school-house, I went with tin bucket on one arm, and with my othter hand I swung my bag of books aloft into the air. And what a race Ilhad from Mr. Pollard's cows ; I am sure " I wished them in the. bottom of the red sea.'' But I did not forget to steal by thme old plutm thicket and filling my pocket with the yellow and scarlet fruit, jumped over Mr. Pollard's orchardi fence which was " hard by," shook the trees which were so heavy with red-ripe Jutne apples; and afterecratmming mty pock etsq, sleeves (!) and apron with them, got quickly into the path again, and started once more on my1 way to schtool. I looked up at the sun and judg ing from it, and miy own inclination to play, thtat it was scarcely eight o'clock, and seeing our play ground near, I thought I would run over just a little while and see if all was right at ottr play I house. A way I scampered, over stumps, ditches, I and stones; through briar-patches and broom. - sedge, to the everlasting ruin of pantalets and' skirt hems; and in a moment stood beside it. But Tribulation ! and " oh !angels of mercy defend us! !!" There it was, the whole of it in ruints. The hogs had uprooted all of tly grsen grass from the floor, over turned all the pretty rock rgats, and even upset our superbsatump-bureau, andsidehwad, which only yesterday gratned beneath the weight of glass and silver plate, thaot we had for months a been gathering from among the broken wares at j home Not only this, but the cows, eruel mon- p sirs, had pulled down and eaten up all of the per immon bushes, which we had hung on poles (a estry fashion around our rooms, to serve as walls. latilda of Flanders could not have felt better sat ied and more self-complacent, when gazing on er splendid Bayeux tapestry, than we did when re had finished a new play-house thus decorated. was just going to drive up the stakes and re-ar ange the whole, when I espied on the hill just op. iositc, that wild, mischievous Bill Nichols, and ieard him calling ont in his stentorian voice, 3ooks! Books! Well, thought I, I will wait now mtil play-time, and then T shall get Carrie Glenn, Bettie Graham and Amanda Nichols to come and ielp me fi. it up again. " You had better come dong Bertha Chatham ;" said Bill Nichols to me, >r "Mr. Buchanan will give you a very uniwel :onie greeting." Meekly I stepped in at the door iay, went behind the door to sit downf my bucket md hang up my bonnet, and was about to take iy seat with the other girls, when up came Mr. Buchanan, with a face looking very much like that of a storm-king, and just as he was prepar ing to chastise my hand with a certain, long nar row board-I awoke from this short second child hood, to find that the little urchins, Fannie and ieta had fled and left me to my visions. I can not say that I wished them back; so I began to ream again. And what, I ask in all sincerity, has become of those who went with us to the old log school-house ? Where dwell those sweet faces ? Who now hears the glad laughter which then rivalled the mocking bird in sweetness and melody. Where now wan der the little feet that used to lave with us in all the brooklets for two miles around the old play ground? Into what streams do they paddle now ? Where are all of those little blue and black eyes, that we have seen sparkle so often 1 With what are those tiny hands busied now, that we used to grasp every morning of the year 1 0, tell me of them all! Then it was, I heard a voice, as it were, from the clouds say, " and wouldst thou know of all these things again1" I looked up and thre stood before me a youfg girl from the land of spirits. Awhile I stood entranced with her garments of white, and her brow of dazzling light. I looked into the soft blue eyes, saw her radiant smile; and then I knew, that it was the spirit form of sweet Carrie Glenn, that had come to visit me in this hour of remembrance. It had been six years since she went to her long home-to " the undis covered country, from whose bourne no traveller returns." In a voice sweet and low, she said to me, " mourn not, mourn not for the past? We played together in earth's childhood-listened to the same birds voices-gathered fruits and flowers from the same gardens -played on the same grass-plots; now, that you call to mind the early days, you miss me from the old play ground. I cannot come to you now, except in spirit; but be good, sweet child, and we shall meet again, face to face, in the beau tiful land where the Blessed dwell. Together we shall wander hand in hand, upon the shores of Paradise; and if you wish for flowers, we will ather Daisies and wild Roses in heavenly groves. So saying, she shook the morning dew from her plumes and winged her flight back to the land of spirits. Now, as we turn over th~e leaves of the heart, we see a sweet prayerful face, in whose dark, dreaming eyes, there is something thoughtful and serious. It looks like sonme etherial piresenc, and seems baptized in the pure waters of Peace and Love. Such wvas Bettie Graham amongst us then -in childhood. In a little brown cottage, on one of the sloping hillsides of old Edgefield District, amid a lovely oak grove, d wells this mate. A hap py home is hers, with Father and Mother, brothers and sisters. Pleasant he her stay amongst us; and soothing lie her evening songs. In happy contrast to this sober child of thought, stands out upon the heart's canvass, the round fa ced, rosy checked Amanda Nicho~ls. Well dho we remember in days "lang syne," how we used to stand in the yard at old Mount Prospect school house, and gaze down the sunny hillside that wre might catch the first glimpse of her as she came trudging along, bearing her basket piled to the top with juicy apples whose cheeks were as rosy as any Dutch girl's, erinison cherries and golden pumes. Then how we clung to her and begged for a distribution of the fruits. "0O, for those glo rious days of the past !" She brings Hiesperian fruits to us no longer, but dwells not far from us in a hiumble cottage, with a loving husband and three pretty little Immiortals to bless her home. Besides these, there is a great merry-niaking band, whose names arc somewhat forgotten, but whose faces look like burnished gold in our " heart of hearts." But what has gone with all of that wild, roguish lot of boys'? 0, how they used te tease and worry us with their " hide and seek, fishing tackles, and ball !"' We know of a few homes imade happy by hem; of others, we have not heard ini a long while. It would be pleasant to nieet themi after ears of separation; biut we shall all be gathered ogether never again, except in Eternal Lands. C01tNEILLE. Etcio, to Co NcR.-.-The electric tel raph announces the election of Gent. Milledge L. Bonham, (nuow State Solicitor) to Congress, om Edgefield, A bbeville, Newberry, and Lu ~ens Districts, to supply the vacancy caused by he death of the lamented Brooks. His majori y ever Charles P. Sullivan, Esq., his competitor, sixteen hundred votes. Glen. Bonbami, is a entlemnan of high character and great intelli ece, anid a lawyer of eminence. He gradua ed, in the South Carolina College, in the-year 18, carrying off the second honor of his class, :he first honor hiaving been awarded to Mr. Sul ivan, his competitor in the Coggressionalecanvass. The election of Gen. Bonham will create a racaney in the State Solicitorship of the Middle irduit. Among the eandidlates, for the post, sready in the field, are William A. Owens and Winhester Graham, Esqs., of Barnwell District, bd Josiah B. Perry, Esq., of Walterborough. [heir number, if not their nanme, will soon he egion, we suppose. 'The'lectioni lies, with the tate Legislature.-Char-leston C'ourier, XaI~y 9. Tax Cnors.-An intelligent pilanitor in the eighborhood of Union Springs, Macon county, Aa.,-one of the best cottoxwgrowinig regions in hat State-in a letter to his commission house in his city, dated A pril 27th, says: " Most of the planters in this neighborhood ave plowed up their cotton and planted it over, md the second planiting is just coming up. The ~rp is three weeks later than usual. Nearly verybody has plowed up their corn and planted t over. Wheat is somewhat injured, but not urously."-C'oluimbuu Sun, May U. RA1ux, HAI AXD Cior's.-Since our last issue ve have had some very heavy rains. Durinig the hree days, Friday, Saturday and Sunday, it was aining nearly the whole time; cleared up pretty old Monday morning, but nio frost ; considerable amage done to farmers in washing their land *nd carry-ing away feneing. On yesterday morn ui we were visited with astorm of rain and hail al as large as the end of your finger. Wheat oks well, and if nothing shaould come hereafter a injure it, will be one of the largest crops ever ide in Cherokee Georgia. Planting is about lrough with-corn just up-looking onily tolera e well ; no cotton, as yet, out of the ground. Cassrdile Ma~ndard, May 7. On Saturday and Sunday last, Lanrens Dist rict 'as visited by the most destructive rains which as occurred there for many years. Bottom lands ap were never before flowed, are now almost aiegeg and bridges have been injured, nd aost ,ey fypmer in the District, the ierald sas will hge'"egmpelled to replant a retin of cropn.n ARTHUR SIMKINS, EDITOR. EDGEFIELD, B. 0. WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 1857. g7 The Rev. Mr. RKED (if not Providentially prevented,) will perform divine service in the Episco pal Church, on Sunday the 17th instant. tW Several original articles omitted this week, will be attended to in our next issue. REVISION. A strong reply to our anti-revisionists may be found upon this page. DEATH OF THOS. G. EICY, ESQ. I- is with melancholy regret that we record the demise of Tuos. G. KEY, a member of the Edgefield Bar, who departed this life on Saturday evening last in this Village. The deceased was a clever fellow in every sense of that phrase. He was witty and so cial, possessing a large fund of entertaining informa tion and gifted with the ability of drawing upon it with appositeness and taste. He was also skilful with the pen, and years ago edited the Hamburg Journal with much success. He had his frailties-who has not? but they are buried with his body. Let us re call his worth, and drop a tear over his untimely end. OUR SPACE Is largely given up this week to correspondents. We wish to catch up with them and give every one a proper showing at the proper time. On the Reri-ion question, we must ask our friends to condense their matter as much as possible. It is not a subject of general interest, and articles upon it can only attract the attention of the general reader by the qualities of brevity and pith. We regret to say that our other duties will not allow us to attend to the next few numbersof the Adrertiser as we could wish to do. After the 10th of June we hope to get to our post again with renewed ardor. Till then, Eguity asserts her authority and must be obeyed. In the mean time, we hope contributions from our writing readers will come in abundantly. AN ACCESSION. The Laurensville Herald has an additional editor in Mr. W. L. HUDoss, who has just been engaged by Mr. STOKES. Mr. HUDENS is a native of Laurens, a young man of fine intellect and education, with a pure moral character. The Herald further says of him: " Although inexperienced in the trials and duties of a weekly paper, he has contributed much valuable matter to the columns of many of the most popular journals of the State; and we feel assured he will be found fully equal to the task he has assumed, so soon as the editorial harness has settledfamiliarly on him." We greet the new editor gladly, and wish for him and our old friend a happy and a profitable- inter cour.e. Under the direction of the latter, the Lau rensville Herald has been a most useful paper. May that usefulness now be doubly enhanced and doubly appreciated! TEMPERANCE BANNER DISTRICT. York is certainly this district in South Carolina. Instead of having four Divisions of the Sons as we said a week or two ago, it is tent; and that's a Legion. ACCIDENTAL OMISSION. In re-publishing an article from the Evening Xc,ce in our issue of the 15th ult., the name of Chancellor F. 11. WAtIDLAW was omitted from the list of distin guished Carolinians who formed the Committee of Twenty-One. It occured in this way: The 1ew. had the Chancellor put down as a Secesulonist. We direc ted this word to ho taken out and co.operuatonist sub stituted. We wero misunderstood, and the name, as well as the aeppellation, was taken out, and both left out. It is not our custom to reamd the proof of the outside of our ptaperi, that being attended to by our intelligent co-publisher, D. R. D).; and so the mistake remained uncorrected. We regret it; as it nmty have the appearance of carelessness on our part in respect to the name and fame of our esteemed and admired fellow-itizen, the Chancellor. We arc very far fromt entertaining for a mom1nt anty feeling of the kind. PORTER'S SPIRIT. This delightful patper comes to us with charming regularity. The suspension of its visits a while hack was some mistake. No one, one a subscriber to Por ter, can ever wish to ho otherwise. lie is not only rich in his own fund of thought, humor and &ohoni nair, but rich too in a set of glorious correspondents who make each ptage of the ,Spirit to sparkle with the sintillations of their wit and intellectuality. Erery man, who wishes to enjoy one day out of the seven hoartily and harmlessly, should subscribe and scnd on the cnsh ($3) for "Porter's Spirit." Dnlec rat dlri pere~ of a Saturday afternon, especially when the deiree is of tha~t racey, fresh, exhilerating and yet uittxicatintg character which distinguishes ti Spir it's influences. HIYMENIA L. Married, in Yorkville, on Tuesdlay mtorning last, by the R1ev. W. W. Carothers, S.um est. W. MrL.;r, Esqj.. (co-Editor of the Yorkville Enqruirr,) autd Miss MAntY Ih sLrX Goons:, both of Yorkville. The ab~ove important fact will be duly chironiclod by our brethren of the press, who will lie pleased to ongratulate our friend of the Ewe',nirer. The hatlppy couple arrivedl in this city yesterday afternoon, on their way to the West, where they pro pose spend.ing a season. We wish them it lnc~snt time, long lifE anud great hapinss.-Locrolina inne t inat. It is an occurrence we have expectetd to see chroni le'd for some time piast, for whilst in Columblia last winter, it was very apparent tous there was a Msaring;a heart connected with the Emyni~rer.-Laurenreille lle rad. With many n3 wishes for all kinds of dishes Of pleasure, with the gold dlimes accordin, We earnestly would say to the couplle on their waty: "You're weleotue to the marriod skie of Jordan." THE MEMPHIS MEETING. It has piassed off with great clat and much fine feeling. The waters of the Atlantic and the Missis sippi have both literally and figuratively mingled. The occasion was one of goodi spbeechtes, good dinners, good fellowship, and of gootd thinigs promiscuously. The cars wont through froni Chatrleston to Memphis in something less than 00 hours, a distance of between 700 and 800 miles. A large representation from sev eral southern States was in attendance. Twenty thou sand people were in the procession. (We believe there acas a procession--there almost always is one.) No ac cident occurred to any one either going, while there, or returning. Thus are the ties increatsing that bind the South together. Is there not food for the hopeful in every such demonstration? THE VORKVJLLE ENqIUIRER. Our cotemporary is hypereriticalt. We could not for the life of us hare seen anything complimtentary lo ounrelrea, in that passing paragrapl. ;shout the En guirer, if that paper had tnot pointed it out tp us; and, to tell the truth, we hardly see it yet. If the 1?nguui rer feels it would beidoing too much for the Adeerrtiser, to send us "one of its best printed copies," the Ad rert icer assuredly does not feel so towards the Engjui-I er. It is a small hit of a compliment only, andi one which we thinik every paper ought to strive to pay its exchanges. We hadl not an ideca thtat the Enqu,,irer~ singled us out with "one of its heat printed copies" '.t 0,"3 person'S csrpeNee. Our notion is, that the E~oN ear usually has some thousand or so of " its best printed copies," and that all its exchanges are supplied from this pile. Surely, the Enqueirer'a exception to our Bill of Complimnents is far-fetched, and ought not to he sustained. A CHANCE FOR SOME OF YOU. The Boston Bee says that Hon. Rufais Choste wIll be seit to China-not, however, b~y the Glovernent as Minister Plenipotentiary, hut that-he has been en gaged at a large salatry to go out to Canuton, where he will be employed in lettering tea chests ! It is said that his peculiar style oif elhirograpihy will enable him to lput on those interesting hierloglyphics at a unuch ceaper rate than the Chinese painter can do it. We think if the company, who intend engaging the services of the lion. Mr. Ciro.tra, will address us biefore making a permanent arrangement with that gentle man, we could put them in the way of saving a "spe." Two or three of our correspondents (oe in particular) would suit admirably and would excnte their work ins = erfeet mnanner. .I. THE CONGRESSIONAL ELECTION. The Ifolluwing is tde rcsult of the Congressional Election just held in the'96 District: . L. Bunmoni. . P. Su11hr an. Abbeville.............. 1150 316 Newberry.............. 55 393 L-urens............... 493 942 Lexington............. 351 147 Edgefield............. 1,253 295 3,552 2,09:1 Majority........... 1,459 Owing toe had wenthor &c., the vole was~ itn unjuetially .PI.S ouir. COL. BAKERt AND XANSAS. Let it hie brne in mind that Saturulay next i.s the day upon which Col. ALP11Fuq LDAxF., of Kansas,.i.5 to address the peold 'e hero in relation to alfairs in that Territory. Sha.ll hie niot-be encouraged by aL full at tendance on the occasion ? He is said to bo an edu cated gentlemnan and it very :interestinag speaker. Hie will tell us p~recisely how things stand ini the debata ble land. Ile will etidightenus as tn the chances of its becoming a free State, its adaptedneis to the in atitution of Slavery, the necessities of Southern ci grants, and the South's duty under the circumstances. It is probable that Cot. Ittien will take the ground that it is the duty of Southerners to help the cause with an itconsiderablo part of their moneyed moans. We hope his audienco will- not be less numerous on that account. Dy the way, we observe in the Sumter hlntrtehman a letter addressed bjy Col. DAKaHt to the Editor of that paper; we transfer it to our columns as capitally subserving the purpose of a further and inore forinal introduction of this distiuignishad gentleman to our readers: Wixusnono, S. C., Aparil 2-1, 1857. .Dear Vir :-I have been muclh gratified boy thme pe rum). of your late editorial upon Knsas. You are right, sir. It is 11lperseverane" only that we need. What has been done has been well done. We saved the territory last year from the invasion of tbo Free soiler, and frustrated his tremendous scheme. He sent on his thousandsi and spent his millions in vain. The Southern flag still wavos triumphautly from the capital at Lecompton. Our friends are hopeful and united. If we will aid them now in the very crisis of the struggle, they will inevitably conquer, and writh out ruin to their private estates. They have spent themselves in defending our common rights. Their victory is ours as their defeat will he also. Shall Missouri, after all her gallant struggles, be forced at last to sink her haughty crest before these nigger thieves? Shall we suffer her, whom they can never conquer, to be overwhelmed ? With a heart that never wavered, a manlinessthat never quailed, she has thus far waged an unequal contest, and stood firmly in the Thermaopoelean pass, resisting victoriously the forces of out-nuinbering invaders. Let us help her. WVe hear the voice of glorious ATCHISON, calling upon us fur aid. Let us give it to him. I wish I could be at your Court Ihouse on sales-day in May, but it is impossible, I shall be elsewhere. Can you not, however, arouse your District, call a meetinag, have some spirited addresses, raise money and forward, it to Atchison, Platte City, Mfo., in a cheek on New York. If it be but $11), it is, that much. It will tell of Southern sympathy. It will' cheer them *to come up to the contest in June with that spirit that ensures success. Yours very respectfully, ALPHIEUS BAKER. ENGLAND AND THlE USMTED STAVES. Many interchanges of civilities and kind expres sioins betwee-n our own and the British authori ties oif late, had led somehow to the belief that the Dallas Claron don Treaty, as recently modified and senit b~ack, would be received and recognized. Not so. 1Hcr laaajstys- tiovernment has turprized its own liepresen tmtite ait Washington, no less than our dilalouats, by a prompt rejection of it. Why, or upon what points, has not yet appeared. Thus arc the two Giovern the Iparisnn n efineiLh TIIivm Chaletro (n Evn ingA~lrsthnkstht "heassrton f ur3igit reqirs te mmeiae anuumet f tatom393 de comac asinerpetd b te Eglsh ioern942 . O'withn thad queath c,tane vofte copactnuuith rt is onWer. ffge htteDla-lrno tin nit havore provn theSurda nextt ithe dupon wheicn progre. Aand~s eran owern.iAs Titowereunfetteredtoop-be eourge ciyAtatc furt tendC5acorngt the an He tis picy tof ob r anoed caed entlm And iserny dneesigl tpaker SHe reans.Egadwill tebuepeiel o ahns .wiandin the, jbat thle in. lelreihten f as tur that chanceslof tosar beotunaely Sfaor is hderness toerin edtithdietion of Cryhinecs.sitis orSotern aen gtsn thtoenet Sthat dthe Enderoro the retncs Ites, rbbwhat trol.Es, what etagokent0 groat rehotios theduy no SouherinErsope ahairseg land ant andonsierabhespand other rcoureedo meets Wehopo houly ouldc wit not ten esemerour tae invounelthi. aeea iagemn.Wl tBye n the aturawe l obsv ireumtiee li'nrhmut aleter addreseb oer Amera tteditor ofir thatl paerwe trapidly itha treaty ncolunt it ally subhrin Chepuon of an futher nw Oren frml t rductipeont the iting udgnutleman th Souh an donr:-Iy he Soen peopleratndb the in trstand opes lae edtal oe-one-goneas fouer are rig ou. t is prbliterance ony tht werneed. Wto ha write done~ has tiee O l onio. prossectd inhew riory thlater isrom thervason, of ter ree thier nde frustratd stemnsdrats theme fctHat iet ve wastosd and spal ielytoi bcmlssi vai. The Southe La stil has e timphatle from the sapiadfl Lctn. ou Misfriae eu andtotelii, repied. tIfe woil aidr fter thwis fhe eyion o Thu.0 stDgl,,delrsta they iliial oquer, inde wthe foldrtind tha the Souvth mstae caeo haerspelf. Themselves exaggeratesna ouchmo righs.theiBakrepb licton s ess, a ther feand iceriyo ths. Eman cipatourn moveter alThe gfact shte, the Aoledian movemt sucinkt s harlgt rst beoe going oniger-o ethiees; tShals controller, th itheay all neher timqer, caue therwase no With aart stng enough tovres it manint ha never ownitsed, soeak ahs efrythigefornt unoqua iotet had scedd in pethe Th ermoraling pasn, reaksing upiwtoris topporced tof itoutusmberingreiuaerd. Ituhl her. aWy coereaalr the voamefgorous Aemcry, hallis, poyu aforaud. Nowet s een o m.eldt mms n inplay, btsl in is truessiboe, aI sa Abolto elahre. ledan y not, houeer dcarouis itu linstt calera pmeetig,~ haesocrey spirid addoes ras money and thforlad, cio to tisn Pltteit, M., eainta chekeondNe Yolbr f itspl is betr u, dtisplthat ingh th lwig tale of Soten symah.I;il "heerthern and oruthe Cviliztin Conrastth Soth spiihtesureor TuesMis. o igna Yoursmn-lp ver ranktfulyge otm V1,eEN tents;N Chp Ur11 ilErt PrTrait Payintercane orf civptie and kind expre; Thne Twenron aun thertauthorLiies- Eate, bhanny aiedo voithes, blie Atht Dloselarn "onTeWiay, asmcethlyStr modf adustc bark, Unuet' oereFrnient hals erprze aton- Revewen Tatie Caate anigtope nofl thaSnnt ourilmac Exlo res pOmterwiejectingslety orYears waot piTa, had Te rinerTenry Whsard thetor Govern Leaning Ahrownakapnle Prpl;toethe'se Conen tin wlithits twyofsoldepstrionnso anthrits of athe pate ratnormed.so Thehrlen ricesn igTeISAI thnkvs. that ectre"o the asetoBfori-t rtiires; timdt anduet of tadtoasdedt Theac FasintPers;te bthe Enlisehb tormeTe" WThber shaforc ei t suggeston s Iutgitur ddess Vaugpreaino ta Poe mpst. stnt led Tell thane qie ota of thane hchmpac wuld eit plarto' tundoertnin subfcibes upnThe rcot ?s It per n nateuom;gta the valellaous-Cinsrction upo Airnerica pogesttmatod Amerdicultioer. wih thew rs is nowablt cofaruture athiatewd. la WJIAT TRAVELLERS SAY OF US. In a recent number of " The (Richmot nd, Ya.,) Iuth" we find a letter written from Aiken, ,. C.. most if whtch has reference to our 'district, or at least to he Ridge and ML Willing portions of it. This is rhat the writer says of the Ridge: Never was I more agrefably surprised at the aspect if any country than after completing the first fifteen ir twenty miles of my journey. I was on what is alled the Ridge. It was a fine, open country, extend. ng far away to the headwaters or the Saludn. I had ifterwards opportunities of seeing nimny lipartions of t, and I thought it altogether the finest country Ihad ver seen in the South. It is a very opi country, lottel over with farm-huses. with every sign of thrift mnd abundance to greet the eye, and croissel by seve -al stinge-roads, lending to the cities of Augusta and Jolumbin, and the smaller towns. *A good deal of otton is raised here. The lands are very cheap: they nay he rated at from eight to fifteen dollars per acre. rhe timber of phrtions of this country-the heaviest [ have ever seen-must prove a great resource. We think tei dollars the minimum and tirenty the noximum, per acre, for land in this part of our dis rict; it certainly is the case for the first twentymiles if the road leading from Edgefield C. II., to Columbia. The writer next notices the (then) pending election o fill the vacancy in CongreFs oncasioned by the loath of Hon. P. S. Bnoosc, and adds a feeling tribute ;o his memory. The crowded condition of our eol imns prevents our giving more of this letter than the :oncluding portion, in which the Mt. Willing Batal ion Review is spoken of in terms highly applaudatory: While in the neighborhood of Leesville, I went out rome fifteen miles, to Mt. Willing, to witness a battal on muster of the militia, which only takes place once a Fear. The militia law in this State is very rigidly en broed and the consequence is, that South Carolinahas, y far, no doubt, the hest disciplined and most servicen sie militia of any of the other Siates. I tell you, I relt ashamed to recollect the old field musters in Vir. inia. and their farcical appearance, on seeing the lisplay at Mt. Willing. There were somesixhundred nen on pzirade. The cavalry were all in uniform, md their officer, Capt. A. D. BATEs, a splendid look ing fellow, would have cut a figure even among the regulars. The infantry were all provided with mus Its, and they executed several difficult movements with a precision that was astonishing. I wish a Yan kee could have seen the drill and appearance of the non; the threat, hereafter, of whipping into the traces this little State, that, as Mr. Srxxan says, "lies owling." might not he repeated so flippantly. At the conclusion of the parade, Major Joux P. BATES, in returning his thanks for his recent election by the companies to that rank, made a very happy tIech, which was received with immense favor. He luded to the unhuppy state of the ebuntry as fur aishing the strongest reasons for keeping up the mili ary organization. and cherishing a military spirit in the State. It was proper to be prepared for the impending conflict. He would insure the Northern kbolitionists, in the event of an invasion, " friendly" )r otherwise, of South Carolina territory, hospitable graves; and, If they still persevered in their assaults >n the right and honor of the South, he could still usure that for erery Sumner there icould be foind a Brooks. The speech is reported to have been received with three times three." which we doubt not as we have eard several persons speak of it as a very pretty ef ort on the part of our spirited young Major. But as to the 'muskets' with which the men are "prorided" -there we are in doubt. It 'didn't nee-to-be .o'when e had the honor of striding over that same field as a ;gh prirate. But may-be improvements have taken plnce that we wot not of. This much we can say though : that the compliments to the strength and Tirit and manliness of the Batallion are richly de lerved. MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS. f" JUDGE MASON, our minister in Paris, will, it is said, remain there a year longer, as he has impor tant negotiations pending. fD IT is understood, says the Philadelphia In quirer, that Mr. Dallas will not be recalled, but be permitted to remain abroad as long as he may feel disposed. g7i-LaDY FRnKLIN~t has determined to fit out another Arctic expedition. The London Times sag gests that she should ho presented by the English public with the Resolute, for the execution of the enterprise. $$ Tnw St. Louis Repuibli-ani of a late date, says: " Unless some 'killing frost shoul hereafter be made manifest, we arc sure to have any quantity of peaches. Neither the snow, nor thme sleet, nor the ice has us yet injured them in this region." pr-Buxxxrr Powar., the dlefaulting Tax Collector of'Emanuel county, Ga., has been arrested in Texas, and brught home, b~y his security, Swain Fortner, and the money due the State paid into the Trensury. 72A writer in a St. Louis paper pretends that he hunsmde astronomical calculations showing that the comet will strike the earth .n the 16ith of next June, at twenty minutes past It) o'clock, soumewhere in the vicinity of Vide Poche, or Carondelet, Missouri. Ac cording tin this, Missouri is a doomed State. g~ WAL.KEn, at last accounts, was on the point of surrendering at discretion to (Gen. MonAt-that is, ccording to Gen. MonA's own statemtent of matters. fa Tnr. Wilnington papers say that Beef is sell ing there at 25 ets. a pound ; better he as it is with us, n't selling at all. pe-' Dr. J. H1. LouItA of Greenwood, Abbeville District, is writing a Revolutionary History, or rather ketches of the lives of the actors in that history wmo lived in Abbheville. lHe solicits infornmation fromn idl quarters to that endl. This is highly commendable. We would willingly unidertake a work of the sort for Edgeildl, if we were furnished with the tucans of so lioing. gg Tua last copy of the Aniderson (ho:tte .1 .droate wa.s well printed. We can "run and read" it.-That we addressed tihe ceditor in our complaint, cloes not prove that wre ilo not "read his edlitorials." We always address publishers thro'ughe the editor. s'nt that correct ? fr-' WAN-rEn to kn'w, ho'w much the Retired lergyanm, who advertises his nostrum through thme hay lBook and other pnplle:Whas realized in postamge imps since ho commenced his speculation. gg Tau: Laneaster Ledger is informed that 1Ham Iur-g Domnestics weigh orer 2 lis, per yardl if not juite two and a half. What we snil -was all merri nent and no satire-sorry the Le-dytr did nut so un lerstiand it. Eg Tumm: May Exhibaitinns of the Sounth Carolina Uolleg have been crowned with their tusual success. 5T Pamsnm:x-r Blt-cnmxAY has oeenmaiunal return~s jf the National-Hotel malady. The attacks seem to e periodical, but grow less violent each time. gg GooD bricks may now lie had at a certain rickyard 3j miles out on the Columbia road, Cash rice $7, take them as they come. No credit price .hatever. gg Tnux girls in Greenville have hadl a great time >f it with their May-dlay celebration. A large part if one page of thme Poltriot is filled with their happy loings and sayings. gg i short arnuy to get ric" is.often advertised n th'e Northern papers, the information in regard mp to l ein~g at the price of some ten or twenty cents. friend of puts ,egnplpded in an idle moment to rrite on for the inforgnation. lie received this recipe reply: " Every ttme you spend one dollar earn iSP Dr. JAvirs RI. PAy is a Commissioner of Emi ation for the Republic of Nicaragua, and may be pmplied to at Augusta, Ga. According to recent adnvi es, it will require but a "femc daoy." more to end this hapter of experiments. W SPRaNG has donned her green garb very rapid. since May came in. She is nearly full-fiedgedl at is writing. gg Watermaillions should he cultivated largely nd carefully this season as there will be scarcely any ther kind of fruit to be had. Yes, thore will be ilackberries and Grapes and Ground-peas and Chin. epins-ohb! we'll nut be so bad off in the fruit line ter all gg OtiE of the boys tells of a scare-crow made y Uncle Ben. It not only scared off every crow oat saw it, but one crow was so frightened that he rought back the corn be stole three days before. W' THnt are 6.15 students in the University- of irginia for the current year, 50 of whom are from cuth Carolina; and fire of these are from Edgefield 'istrict. W' Air Albany Editor thinks his property in that ity would have been carried away by the late flood ad i Dot-. bee.. for t-........ u.s sin oit. Fier the Advertiser. Mt. EDIu :-My attention has recently beeni called to several articles in your paper, on the sub ject of a revision of the English Scriptures. Al though I am not in the habit of noticing anony mous attacks upon the cause in which we are en gaged. and the objections urged by your corres pondent are remarkable neither for their novelty nor for force, I have consented, in deference to the wishes of several friends of Revision in your vi cinity, o notice briefly his communications. It is very true, as your correspondent suggests, that the eierprihe of Revision has from the first been warmly, often bitterly opposed. This is, however, by no means surprising. It would be difficult to point to a single truth, however important, that has not encountered precisely this character of op position. The Reformation was objected to, not so much because it was wrong in principle, as because it threatened to disturb the existing order of things. Luther might have prayed and fasted to his heart's content, if he had not attempted to dis turb other people's prayers and fasts. Abstract Theology was well enough; but "indulgencies" and "masses" were practical things. They had a definite, tangible value. It has been very much so with the enterprise of Revision. No one opposes the principle. That is correct enough. But seek to embody this princi ple, to carry it into practical execution,-and big otry at once starts up alarmed. Sectarianism so licitously enquires, " How will it affect me," and then with the emphasis of an oracle, it assures us that "although the Bible may perhaps need revi sion, that the time is wrong-the place is wrong the men are wrong-everything in short connected with the present enterprise, is emphatically, out rageously wrong !" The objections urged by your correspondent are very much of this character. He does not call.in question a single organic feature of the Bible Union. He 1oints to no defects, either in its con stitution, its organization, or in the principles it seeks to embody. His issues are from first to last side Issues-questions about times, and places, and men. Let us examine them: First, this Revision movement "had its -origin at the North." Now, " the North" is'doubtless a very suspicious birth-place-a second " Nazareth" it may be. Enlightened men are, however, accus tomed to judge of truth more by its intrinsic char acter than by the mere accident of Its origin. Even in this respect, however, your correspondent is sadly at fault. " Revision " is older by several hundred years than the political, segment of the Union to which he refers. Three centuries ago Tyndale and Frith organized a " Revision Associa tion " in England, and were burned at the stake for their temerity. The Anti-Revisionists of that day, like the anti-4visionists of the present day, did not want a newBible. It was not the time, or the place, nor were they the men to do the work. It was a mere sectarian money-making scheme. And like your zealous correspondent, they ex claimed, " Away with your new Revision of the Bible. We understand the old one well enough as regards the plan of salvation.". But your correspondent urges another and far graver charge against the Bible Union: "It is concocted," he says "alone for the pur poose of gulling the people and making money." Now, if such a charge can be sustained against the Bible Union, it will certainly brand the enter prise with lasting infamy. If It cannot be sus tained, it will hardly improve the reputation of its. nuthor. I regret that the "accuser of his breth ren" did not see fit to append his name to his ac cusation. As the case now stands, it is only the thrust of a masked assailant. Is such a course characteristic of the honorable Christian gentle man ? It is true that selfish, irreligious men sometimes excuse themselves from contributing to our Missionary societies, our Bible societies, and all other benevolent organizations, on the ground that thecy arc " concocted for the purpose of gal ling the people and making money." It is very seldom, however, that a man can be found who has the hardihood to say so over his own name in print. The moral sense of thme community pro tects these great public charities from open insult if not from secret assault. When, therefore, this anonymous assailant sees fit to make the above charge over his own name. and prove it, it will be quite time to consider its claims to public attention. Again; seeninmgly forgetful that he has just de clared the JBible Union to be a society concocted alone for the purpose of " gulling the people and making money," he assures us that it is the great object of the Society to substitute in the new ver sion innnerse for baptize. Now, without consider ing thme palpable contradiction of these charges, it mtay not be amiss to look for a moment at the ab surdity of the latter. Its author would really have thme world believe that a society of men, comn p- ising some of the mocst talente 1 andl pious among us, have not only conspired together to humbug the world systematically, but that, they are so hopeless ly insane as to employ thirty or forty scholars for a dozen years, at an expense of perhlaps half a million of dollars to make a change in the transla ion of a single word-a change that any pirinter can elfect in five minutes, at an expense of five cents ! Is it. possible to conceive of a more huidie rous specimen of unmitigated nonsense ! It would seem at first sight that an enterprise like tlhat of the Bible Union would at once conm mend itself to the respect and confidence of uni versal Christendom. It Is, however, painiful to ob serve the prejudice and opposition that in this and former times have arraye-l themselves against a cause so noble and a principle so plain. Revela tion seeks no lhiding place, It fears no investiga tion. It is not truth, but error that shrinks from the sunlight. The man who clings to a belief that he is unwilling to submit to the most search ing test, confesses at once his own weakness and the weakness of his system. Those who favor a revision of the English scrip tures do so from a conviction that the Bible will bear the closest scrutiny. They have no fear of marring the pages of God's word by dusting away te cobwebs that obscure it. That the present version of thme English scriptures is obscure and inaccurate, no scholar will deny. It is almost im possible to open a single book written by any bib lical scholar within the past century that is not full of evidences to this effect. Their testimony is concurrent on this point. Says Bishop Lowth, of the Church of pngland, speaking of a Hebrew word that was not found in the faulty text from which King Jamps's translators revised, " I have ndeavored to spt this matter in a clear light, as it is thme first praiuple (in Tsaiah's p~rophecy) of a whole word lost out of the text, of 1ohich the read er will find many other plain examples in the ourse of these notes." Dr. Adam Clarke, of thme Methodist church, says-and his words should burn themselves into the very heart of hearts of all who wish to be faithful to God and man, for God will hold all to strict accountability: " Most of the adrantages which our mnblelievers have appeiared to have over ertain passages of scripture, hare arisen from an inaccurate or false translation of the termse of the owiginal, and an appeal to this has genmeally si enced these gainsayers." Why should not the asses of the people be so armed with " the sword f the Spirit, which is the word of God," that hey may " silence gainsayers'!" He who teaches pious mind one new truth of Jehovah's revela tion, imbues that mind with additional power and race; he who undertakes to veil or obscure one pssage of the inspired word from the understand ng of men, is a friend neither to God nor man. But if oneonew truth of the inspired text, or ons thus important, what must be the importance of thou.sands, given as God -,ave them, and disrobed of the rubbish with which man's devices have covered them I And the united voice of all bibli cal criticism bears testimony to the existence of the evils we have named in King James's version, and is equally unanimous in the declaration that all these evils can be remedied. Let us look at two authorities on this subject. Conybeare and Howson, two distinguished min isters of the Church of England, have recently published a work entitled " The Life and Epistles of St. Paul." It has been hailed with acclamation everywhere, by the learned, as one of the noblest monuments of biblical criticism ever erected by learning. The highest authorities in periodical criticism among Presbyterians and Episcopalians have bestowed upon the work the warmest appro bation, and the authors deserve the lasting grati tude of all scholars for the floods of light they have thrown upon the New Testament. In a vast number of instances, they conclusively establish the existence of the very faulty condition of the text used by King James's translators, and in many other instances show the bad 'use made of the text that was in the hands of those translators. Thus, for an example, in 2d Corinthians xi. 25, Conybeare and Howson say: "The true meaning is lost in the authorized version, and is similarly lost in the Sermon on the Mount, Mathew vii. 25, 27." In Paul's discourse at Antioch, in Pisidia, a metaphor more beautiful than anything in Demos thenes or Cicero, is entirely lost In the authorized version. Again, these authors, on Roman iii. 25, after giving the Greek text, say: " The mistrans lation which is in ti authorized version entirely alters the meaning." These are but specimens of many hundreds of such instances given by these renowned biblical scholars. Again, the Religious Tract Society of England, composed of what are called evangelical sects, established 1799, have recently produced an " An notated Paragraph Bible," which should command the favor of the English world. It is not saying too much to say, that if such a Bible had been in the hands of the English race one hundred years ago, Christianity would have been immensely ad vanced over the world, and in the hearts and prac tices of myriads, beyond what it is. The increa sing knowledge of the English people in Bible mat ters demanded a Bible worthy of the text of in spiration; and the "Religious Tract Society" have furnished one, for which they deserve the highest honor. That society makes a multitude of improved versions in lieu of the faulty ones of King James's work. A great number of those improved revisions are invaluable, and will prove a precious boon to all who love the pure light of the Bible. Perbaps I shall be pardoned for noting a few of the many' blunders in King James's version. First, we have direct contradictions. Now in the very nature of things, it is impossible that the Ho ly Spirit can contradict himself: and in the origi nal there is no discrepancy. CONTRADICTIONS. Exodus xx. makes it sinful 1st Corinthians xli, 81 or to covet. See also Romans ders Christians to "covet ear vii, 7; xii. 9. 1st Corinthl- nestly ite best gifts." In 1st ans v. 11, places covetous per- Cor. xiv, 89, the Christians sons in the same category are again ordered to covet. with idotalors, drunkards, "Dpelht in the best gifts," railer,, with whom Christians in the -w Instance, and * de are not to eat. lighttoprophesy," in the see 1st. Cor. vi. 10 declares that ond, wool be accurate, and covetous persons shall not in- removes all appeurance of herit the kingdom of God. contradietIon. 5la thre no Ephestans v. 3-" but cove- revision needed of these pal tousness, let It not be once pable contradlctions,pIurport named among you." ing to come fro~m the pen of inspirationt? .The inspired or acles are correct and true in all these places. Genesis xxii, 1-" God did James 1, 18-" Let no man temapt Abrahtam." " You say whten he is temptied, l am shall not tempt the Lord your tempted of God1, for God can. God." Deut. vi, 16. This not be tempted with evil, language Is repeated in many neither templeth lhe any of the Propahmes anrd in the man." God did try, or prove New Testamenat. Abraham, God does not tempt atny man, would be accurate, nad remove the contrsadiciti. Exodus xxiv, 1ii-" Then John 1,18-" No man hiath went up Moses and Aaron, sen God." 1st Johan iv. 12 Nadab and Abihu. andlseena- --"No man.hathseent Godt at tv of thec elders of Israel; anid any time." they saw the God ol Israel," 'Thompson translales Exo &c. duts xxlv,10t-"Thaey saw tihe appearantce of the Godl of Ia. rael," which. Is In aecordlance with the Sepluagint andl lhe Chaldlee vernions. And we have MaISTR.ANSLATIONS.' Genesis ii, 5-" In the diay T~ sasrl mri er' that the Lordl Goda made aseltataan afthe l. - earth nnda tihe henvenas, atta aa aeh dfar hyg every plant of the field1 before vr mlela'n tread it grew, for the Lordi Godl lhnd tet omm lm ra ea not causedl it to ralin upont tihe aeia:i ieaymaim Thi liaas aurd, or~ allrpre fan f d ersw bfor tie graw weo al eanotsa Ith t, ruennat ui Thiseare ren-d ilan f'aa~al iacawae n t e ri'an :-I tha e arm y niha'ah eia," c.rLord lit lme wthaeea -n ah hi~eovensr fre any Geneis xxi 5Z.-"AalJa-pkit of th ved rsin lan ths cob war laytit fea ofihi cgmecll yrem ;mfrthe Lrd iiitlae Isaac. cola."s~ lahi wiorett, his hasmesaning.maL Gensmais xi, 1:-"i.\nah raalo,." ~op -th e foncath mfieis the ~c i niaeronin cb wreb hiaetfar of hrn iatbatem ec h itherba leatieo.") hlrn0 salfa o -thatthelacctuetnameDofithe elegongwerhalegyhwhich waseto theesisng(asAastrhbutedtottem titan. thelchiprenthesfsIisea Inerolaetion.- Awnah thad a dicoeranfslamed note.ur crtyre dere: "Aai mourn ea hthis amea nteratione Salnderton imaethable. hi-sn Dad amdea th teach the the nuf the bw.") acidren of Israel the Bowr, thod bei (the Bow) of wrte tongmrr lso, which befo themtim of Siame aind o liteaalyon. Covedaleha It botgh frt te eoleCre a: "nd avidpmoun ana p~t hem~iaes sasand aommne to eac thioea atai sater arowsofirochatrn ofwn Isimila csesw innat them~ ihru~h tehel tit thesBnse os wte brickkiln. orina roa.hds, 1 th pr they ioul of Jamoieda tiofsin of y, beut oso lteallyg ai Coverdae 24 Samuel 21, o1-" An eredon.--Dr. Adm hebougt frththepeole laerosyi: "tepssrprisbng and putthem 2mer fore and av magdoe manyored, and der arrow of r tt ntsads to arowseo, sud under ~ ~ ron t axes of iron, anturnlaoshv ot brick taming these pan theg thoucarefd osthe enseers tht eryicholarin.ow arnlrecb ound, by Kcig Jams'sBibecalingthmaGods word? ehy thik nt. hythe, hould cnot enany loveo the scredscriture oeathe sacprin tings rm vai Th WiI~ nlp pd. Dvidput hsrson-tiu are ndeaorin to ersc thi saws, thg. w oftb propc~tonof hpi w r to haxes f irn, nrie aresgcirig, he ~t kihlasi He ad them word. M iting thsparnd thei chuan othr ltunr that avrchoa nwred tpt Th t o b foun w Kinghs~so tames'standle, cing s en sectrian wor is catho ink nte larges tene shudEveryist liertof he uardspue nite in thspkwaering hi enmn nal conecBbtion Scoarsdo evisn differnt rendominatg are alred engagedr ting the work (oetspaed tha$rie anlthulghia enconte acrom texft the mostfotrm opoitich thas sro ires sd i pbic cnfiene setan Itispathyano ier ntepeo the larestsentntury ns donie.t lownie, Mr. tEitor, whtee say i nclusinat ifonar coretionden wihllr doom hsevnppoiten inomiain appehi ae engge his atice wor shl rm the oirste moster opjsitions hispo pese to ueaginsh conileei and Revity sino >Aherenteion. ou h rs n etr a oe ACowme r. Ectoreovisin Aonciaion.a L ouiscorespnet ildoKy.iapopit io Ind youpend isee th hesathes of shalr ores exercise nticem any fthe ojetironserymay he noeto n actanst the Bibme manion ad Revision tasoiaiso.el ayers, e