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1 - 8BS6'WI.f.%ID4~at14E WILL CLING TO THE PILLARS OF THE TERPLE O OUR LIBERTIA AND IF IT MUST PALL, WE WILL PERISH AMIDST THE RUINS. SIMINS, DURISOE & co., Proprietors. EDGEFIELD, S. J VOLUME IIIV.-4No 22. Fer the Advertiser. 3ITALO TEEAVE TRADE-NO.XVD. I "ne war mst be carried into Afric." It Is no assumption of fact to say that a large section of clear.sighted men in the North West, and on the Pacific slope especially are desirous of remedying the anomaly of hireling sogiety in a new doentry, having a thin .population-fertile soil and genil climate. They know that slavery has been the normal relation of common laborers tc capitalists in all such countrjes as ours throughout the broad vista of historical time. They appreciate the logio of nature's laws, and more partlcularly the one, which declares that man loves power and that therefore he will impose slavery upon all the labor he can control, because it pleases him-be, cause it is better for the laborer-because slaven gives repose and stability to society. They feel the full force of what Alexis Do Tocqueville, the subtilist political philosopher perhaps of the pres. oat age,says on the tendency of modern society, to wit: "All the men of our day are driven, sometimes slowly, sometimes violently, by an unknown force, which may possibly be regulated, or moderated, but cannot be overcome, toward the destruction oJ aristocracies." Yet that ! Among all human societies, those in which there exists and can exist no aristocracy are precisely those in which it will be most difficult, to resist for any length of time the establishmireni of despotism." Bbeause "When men are no longer bound to. gether by caste, class corporate, or family. ties, they are only too prone to give their whole thoughts to their private interest, and to wrap themselves up In a narrow individuality, in which public virtue Is stifled, ***. In societies of this stamp in which there are no fi.red landmarks, every man is constantly spurred on by a desire to rise and a fear of falling. And as money, which is the chief mirk by which men are classified and divided one from the other, fluctuates incessantly-passes from hand to hand, alters the rank of individuals, raises families here, lowers them there, every one is forced to make constant and desperate efforts to acquire, or retain it." These extracts apparently involve a contradic tion of terms, by stating first that all men are em. ployed In the destruction of aristocracies; and second, that freedom cannot long exist in any gov. ernment without an aristocracy. Yet every obser. var of the world in this day, must acknowledge the truth of both propositions. Aristocracy as among white men is crumbling into fragments every where. The revolt of the United Colonies against Englandand of other European Colonies in America against their mother country struck a death dealing blow to aristocracy,."nd it has been fol. lowed up by other strokes of equal import. At this time a sweeping Reform Bill, proposing to extend the right of suffrage to multitudes who are now nfranchised is being fiercely debated in Eng land, and Lord Derby's Ministry has been over thrown because it was not Democratic enough. The next move of Messrs Bright and Cobden, or of their successors, will perhaps be to change the hereditary tenure of the House of Lords to only a life tenure. Indeed it was proposed a few years ago, in the British Parliament, by even a Peer of the Realm, to.Inaugurate life peerages. Being Premier, he was doubtless eager to conellite popu lar favor, because he snuffed the breeze of the present storm in England, demanding in tones of thunder, the white man's equal right to political power. The Czar of Russia comprehends so fully the growing sentiulent of his white surfs in favor of the white man's equality with other white men, that he has liberated his own white slaves, and re quested his nobility to do likewise. They object now, but a second French Revolution will some time roll over the Muscovite Empire, crushing white aristocracy as it did in France. The sole object of the French Revolution was to destroy white aristocracy, and it did destroy it in France forever. There is now no French nobility, not evew any French Royalty. Both the King or Emperor and the merely titled aristocracy hold their tenures only at the pleasure of the wchite eguale. The Duke De Malakoff has only a name earned by merit like the Dukes of the elder Napo leon's Battle Fields earned their empty titles. The only aristocracy which exists in one half of Europe now Is but an arristocracy of merit-sn aristocracy of title, without power and privilege or anaristocracy of the bayonet. The old Napoleon was the child of destiny to accomplish the behests of the liberated slaves. Before his time large standing armies were unknown in Europe; but since he appeared on the stage, over 2,000,000 men have been organised into a grand police of soldiers to sustain tbe artrocratic interest. Even those mighty armies failed to preserve the aristo . cracies in 1848, and now the papers say that Louis Napolean is preparing only in self defence to guide the storm of another coming Revolution against the hereditary aristocracies. One half of Europe cannot much longer be kept in arms to hold the other half in slavery. The aristocracies must fall either by the army fraternizing with the people, or by the burden of Taxation becoming so heavy as to drive the people to rise in despair and crush the army, the'aristocracy and themselves in one common vortex of ruin. The public debt of some of the States of Continental Europe has quadru. pled even sine 1848. Noblemen formerly made war upon Kings which oaused Shakespeare to say "Uneasy lies the head that wears a crown." But now the people make war upon both Kings and Noblemen In which conflict numbers must prevail, The princile that one half of the Caneassion world wus bornready booted and spurred with whip In hand to ride the other half, has had its day. The new principle that white men are all equals, potically, and that the colored races shall be the slaves is. the watchward of the age. Our own peo ple, or at least the reflecting among them, wish to apply that principle in all its breadth. While De Tocqueville admits that the tendency of the age is toward the destruction of aristocracies, and grants also that freedom cannot long exist in any country where there Is no sristocraey, he yet fails even to suggest a remedy for the want of aristocracy as a conservator of civil liberty. In his first great work entitled "Democracy in America" he actual ly deprecates th'e existance of negro slavery at the South. Yet Southern Society is the only one on the face of the earth, organised upon a basis to meet the requirements of Dc Tocqueville's posi tions, that all men are employed in the destruction of arIstocracies, and that still freedom cannot long exist in any community where thereois no aris tocracy. - Here we have no class of aristocracy among whites. Therefore the South has no aristocracy to be destroyed. Yet every white man at the South is an aristocrat as regards the negro, and all Southern white men are " bound together by casts, class, corporate, or family ties," to preserve each others liberty, and hold the negro laborers in subjection. Consequently we have an aristocracy of caste and class, contra-distinguished from the individual interest of hireling society, and so we need.,not fear the establishment of despotism among us, which reflecting Northern men see in store for them. The despotism of a mere numcri cal majority in hireling society is quite as Injurious as the one man desp6tism .of Russia and China. Tyrany is tyrany, whether It be practised by one ,mn,orvehndred,asone uknovn hnd wrote in the night time. Recall the tyrany of the many beaded monster in France. Observe it now in New York and Massachusetts, which States must in a short time fall under the one man power un less prevented by the conservatism of the other States in the Union. A strong centralized hand is sadly wanted now to curb the licensciousness of the mobs in those two States. The same lack of ballast-of a sheet anchor-of a conservative ele ment is deplored throughout the North. If the slave trade were revived there is hardly a doubt, but that at least the North Western States and the whole Pacific Slope would adopt slavery, as surely as " man will always act from the center of his own individuality." Chinese slavery al ready practically exists in full force on the Pacific Slope, just as negro slavery substantially exists in the hereling States of the Atlantic Slope. This will not be controverted by any one who is in .formed upon the present state of things in our Pacific possessions. Although California and Ore gon prohibit slavery, or involuntary servitude in their Constitutions, yet over 60,000 Chinese reside there most of them as the virtual slaves of the white man, and so our countrymen on the Pacific are "bound together, by 'elass and caste ties" against the Chinese, which produces an element of conservatism very promising for constitutional liberty in that quarter. The aristocracy of "c aste" and "c lass" does prevail there under the patron age of public opinion, as emphatically as if it were established by law and that Chinese slavery will soon be permanently established there by Constitutional enactment, admits of but small' question. The moment Gold was discovered in California, the Chinese crowded thither in thousands. They could not be naturalized, as none but "white' foreigners are allowed that privilege under the law of Congress, yet they persevered in resorting to California in face of the bitterest hostility of the whites. Congress had no power to exclude them, because the Federal Constitution not autbori. zing it and expatriation being an inalienable natural right, debars Congress from excluding any person, of any oation, of any color from the States, or Territories of the United States. The matter of admitting, or excluding persons of i. particular class, or statue, belongs to the faculty o; State Sovereignty. Hence by the time California had become a State, she reckoned almost as many Chinese as whites, within her borders and although she might have confered local citizenship upon the Chinese at the adoption of her Constitution a some of the abolition States have done in respect to their free negroes, yet she declined to do s then and has persisted 'in that drtermination. Nor is public opinion tie only potent agency for treating the Chinese as slaves on the Pacifie Coast. Apprentice laws look to the sanie end and those laws are becoming more and more stringent at every emendation of them. In the Convention which adopted the Constitution of California no effort whatever was made to establish negro slave ry under it, because nearly all white miners- were opposed to the institution upon the ground mainly that large capitalists, or slave holders would havt an undue advantage, by being able to introduce so'many slave laborers, as to exclude the powt -minor from .ither.wleldIggings on .his owa.-ae count, or from high wages, while at work for others. It will also be remembered that in 1850 negro labor was higher than white labor and that therefore poor miners in California could not have sanely hoped to purchase many slaves at the prices then obtaining. Cotton had risen so high that its producers were enabled to drive all other competitors out of slave market. As the cotton crop of 1851-2 exceeded the previous one by near 7000,000 bales, at least 200,000 new slave laborers must have been put to cotton culture in 1850-1, allowing 3J bales (the usual estimate to the hand) at the very time, when negroes were most wanted to plant slavery in California. Therefore to have established negro slavery in Cal ifornia then it was requisite not only that the stan dard value of negro labor should be abore that of white labor, but that the envy and jealousy of the poor white miners, should also be overcome, a tssk which the South could not parform with the slave trade closed. She was - consequently beaten, as she had previously been beaten, under precisely similar circumstances in Indiana and Illinois and as she has since been defsated in Kansas. But Chinese slavery has been steadily working its way in California against all obstacles in accordance with the laws of nature-the laws of demand and supply. An Overruling Providence has been car ing for the South on the Pacific, while she has been slumbering over her rights. The Chinese at first came to California either voluntarily or as appren tiees to Chinese Mandarines who enforced their right to the labor of those apprentices under Chinese laws even in California. But at the ex piration of such contracts only a few of the ap prentices returned to the Celestial Empire. They have prefered even slavery to the white man to a return to their Fatherland with its tyranical laws and crowded population.. The' society and legislature too of California have interfered several times to expell them but all to no purpose. The white miners have ever had peculiar cause for hostility to the Chinese in the fact, that the latter have monopolized and al most exhausted, the entire "Surface Diggings" of the State. The work in such mines is far lighter and more agreeable than in the "Deep Diggings," although it does not pay so well. 'I'he Chinaman las seleoted the surface DIggings-becanse of his constitutional inertness-hIs bodily weakness his inherent dread of danger and because of surface mining being a stirs business, while the deeper and sometimes muich richer diggings often yield no return for many month. of hard, expensive and dangerous labor. As a natural result, all the white miners who prefer a safe surface mnine, to a doubt. fuil deep one-who prefer light labor in the open air to hazardous severe an-1 not Infrequently un profitable labor in the bowels of the earth, have a special cause for opposing either the ingress, or residence of Chinese in California. Such white men have times without number made riotous war upon the Chinese and they have occasionally got control of the Legislature so as to pass sever penal lamil against the importation of any more Chinese, s well as to prohibit the return of those who leave the state. B~ut the larger part of society have protected the Chines'e and either the ballot box has repealed the obnoxious laws, or the California Courts have declared them unconstitutional. SCIPIO. Extracts From a communication forwarded to us last Summer by our friend and co-proprietor, E. K., which we have not been enabled to publish until the present, we cull the following passages. Be sure and read, as E. K. invariably writes interest ingly.-ED. AD. .PICKCEXs Diavaler, Sept. 1858. Mla. BD:Toen: It is said that no man will ac knowledge himself guilty of ingratitude. Ag a general rule, this Is no doubt the case. That man who could receive btenefits andl favors without a feeling of gratitude towards the donor, would never have the magnanimity to own it. I do not suppose that individuals are always prompt enough to ex press thankfulness even when it is heart-felt and profound. A. a nation, I am afraid we often come short of our duty in this regard. Are we blessed wlth abudant rons Do our looks inoease and grow fat? Instead of boasting and exultation, let thanks ascend from the alter of our hearts to the Great Disposer of events. " The earth is the Lord's and the fulness thereof." How dependent we are upon the will of our Creator! In Jackson County, N. C., on the Soco and the Oconee-luff-tee, waters of the Tuekasisgee River, -about twelve hundred of the Cherokees yet have a " local habitation and a name." Col. Wm. H. Thomas, for the last twenty years, has been their agent, and their particular friend. In the "Schem erharn treaty." by which the Cherokee nation agreed to emigrate beyond Arkansas, that frag ment of the tribe, known as Thomas's Indians, was not represented; and as a matter of course, not one of the provisions of said treaty could have any binding effect on them. It was mainly upon this ground, I am told, that the Government of the United States allowed them to remain in the country. As might be expected, they acknowledged' themselves subject to the lairs of North Carolina, and also to the Constitution of the United States. But " Uncle Sam" persisted in having their landi surveyed and sold; and consequently the Indians claimed all the benefits arising from the famous treaty. After years of negotiation, Col. Thomas at last succeeded in getting about $93,000 from the General Government for the use and benefit of his red brethren. This sum was in considera tion of their lands. Moreover, sixty thousand dol lars ($60,000) were appropriated for their removal, and subsistence one year. They are now in the annual receipt of the interest on this amount. But after all, it is not yet definitely settled whether or not they are to remain permanently in the "good old North State." They may be compelled eventu ally to go West, as the other tribes have done. Nearly all of " Thomas's Indians" have bought lands and improved them. These people, once so savage, seem now to be pretty good farmers. I saw corn enough, and to spare in some of their cribs, and their growing crops looked fine. These "Ishmaelites," as they are sometimes called, are thought by those who have the best opportunities of judging, to be, on an average, about half civil ized. Many of them are consistent members of the Christian Churth. Some 9f them can spell and read our language with considerable fluency. Others read well and uNderstandinyly in their na tive dialect. The Rev. J. W. Bird, to whom I am greatly indebted for information concerning the Indians, and also for other favors not to be forgot ten, is the Missionary, who preaches more or less every week fur his " Cherokecfriends," mad in the* winter season he instructs their children in the elements of English literature. Thus much for the general history of these Indians. I desire now to give a few sketches in which reality and not fancy, shall guide the pen. The Missionary and E. K. were on the way to the place appointed for preaching. Stopping a few minutes at the gate of a stalwart hunternamed Stoo-kee -stau-ek (Standing-in-the-door,) the fol lowing colloquy ensued. . Miesionary.-" What do you ask for that bear skin in the piazza?" Indian.-" Two dollar, and a half." Jiseionary.-" That's too much." Indian.-" Him berry cheap." , Wistionary.-" Where did yqu kill that bear?" Indian.-" Tennessee, twenty miles, ti e smoky Mountain." JXieeonary.-" What did the bear weigh ?" Indi'n.-"Four hundred and fifty pound. Me tote home two hundred and fifty pound, and de skin; and daddy tote de rest." E. K-" Were you not almost broken down by carrying such a quantity of bear meat so far through the mountains?" Indian.-" Mo sick tree week !" Indin.-" 1io" (meaning E. K.) "preacher?" Xiesionary.-" No." Indian.-" le drunk ?" Jfiseonary.-" I reckon not." And then we went on our way swiling, if not rejoicing. Stoo-kee-sta'a-geh seems to think that there are but two characters among the descend ants of Europeans,-preachers and drunkards. It was a pleasant hour in the morning when we arrived at the first ford on the Oconee-luff-tee. The waters of this purling rivulet were so clear and stainless that even the poet could not wish for a better emblem of purity. " The King of day" with his glorious disc peered down upon us from an arch of living sapphire. On each side, and not far in the distance, the green tops of high mountains overlooked the smiling vales. Halting a moment to let my horse drink, I looked up the stream and saw two Indiana fishing. Their canoe, a light and graceful thing, was turned directly 4 across the river, and it floated along like some beautiful swan. In etcoh end of the tiny vessel,1 the Indians arrayed in picturesque costume, stood erect and motionless, their heads uncovered and their halr streaming long and black in the bree. t was a scene to he admired and enjoyed. Ta king it altogether, this view presented one of the inest pictures I ever beheld; it was a most deli ate and graceful grouping of the romantic and: the beautiful. And now,'I will give you a snake story. An Indian, Se-la-la (Stpirrel) by name, was out in 1 the mountalns hunting for deer, and by chance ame upon a horned! rautlesnake. Wishing to cap ture this strange looking ceature alive and not knowing how to accomplish his end, he hastened back home for his squaw to cme ad assist hIm. On returning, they saw the horned enske agaie,. Two heada being better than one, the followingj abeme was devisod: they tore the bark from a tree, and tielog up one end, they got the ratlesnake to1 rawl In at the other. Turning up this novel trap, I the Inside of it~was too sleek for the serpent to rawl out again. Having carried their prize home, I they soon had It secured In a cage. Se-to-la was offered $250 for his snake, but being superstitious, and thinking that all the other "sarpents" might get after him, he refused to sell There is another version of the matter. He dreamed thatif any thing should happen to the snaike, then the Cherokees would pass away like mist upon the mountains. Be that as It may, Se-la-la carried the rattlesnake back to its den, and there set It at liberty. Icon-( ersed with two intelligent and respeotable gen- a tlemen, who saw this freak of nature, and gave it 1 a careful examination. They told me thatthe top 1 of the snake's head was shaped like that of a cow; that its horns were as long as a cock's spur, but more slender ; that each of them branched out so that there were four points to'ita horns. I accompanied the Missionary to one of his In dian meetings. His audience was quiet, attentive 'C and serious. The Aborigines seem to have music in their souls. I was affected almost to tears on I hearing them sing some of our good old Congre gational tunes. The Missionary addressed his red bretharen altogether through a lingiuist. He gives a sentence in English, and then Charlie Hornbuckle, the interpreter, expounds it in Indian.] The religious meeting, which I attended, was heldt at the house of a venerable old Cherokee, whose name is Wru-yak-can-tan-yak (Sianading Wolf.)t He has been a member of the Chureh for 23 years. 1 The expression of 10s countenance is benign, pleasant and cheerful. He is loved and respected1 by all who know him. I observed that he still wears the moccasin, the hunting-shirt, end the belt with a big butcher knife in it. By the way, the history of Standing lf is. highly interesting, well authenticated, and also. proves that the prayer of the righteous availeth much. In the Summer of 1838, the United States Sy roops were engaged in removing the Cherokees to I he Indian Territory West of the MississippL One )y one the Indian families are torn from their vig-wams and thograves of their forefathers. -In: C -vine and cove, from hill to .hill, was heard the roice of lamentation, and of plaintive outcries. At length, it came to the turn of Standing Wolf to )o ordered away to the Western wilds. When the ioldiers arrived, he told them, through 0. W. a Flays, their -interpreter, that he had been trying o serve the Great Spirit, for a long time, in that c 2ouse, and that he wanted them to allow him to I iold a family prayer meeting-there once more. Permission being granted, he began to pray with inch fervency, faith and feeling, that all were leeply affected. The inmates of the house wept ike " whipped children," to use the word of my nformant. Hays was stkioken down in the floor ander conviction, as it is supposed. My informa tion is that Hays tells this himself. But when I I interrogated Standing Wolf particularly as to the I iffect his prayer seemed to. produce, he -touched ipon the matter very delicately and with Christian Ike humility. He simply replied through our in-. I xrpreter, that "they had a good time." That the J iympathies of Interpreter -Hays were. stirred to t lheirtowest depth, the sequel will abundantly: ?rove. It seems that the whole of the emigrating xribe stopped a few weeks at a little Town not far i this side of "Ross' Landing." Hays then and I lhere set about devising ways and means for the 1 secape of Standing Wolf and family. As the ndians wore collected together in vast numbefs, md not very strictly guarded, this was easy of no-* omplishment. After all the preliminaries had een arranged, Hays told the gool old man, that io'would have to slip off in the night. This part if the arrangement was objected to, because he bought it altogether wrong and dishonorable, C leanwhile, several of his children died from ex- 9 osuie and for want of proper food; this circum- C itanco.conjoined with the persuasions of his friends r Lt last overcame his conscientious scrupi'. and he 4 Lvailed himself of the chance to retutia Lo "the alue hills he loved so well." In returning oiome, he encountered neither acei lent nor molestation of any kind. And now, for wenty years, Standing Wolf has been permitted j :o reside uninterrupted in his own native land, where he can hear the Gospel preached in its 3 urity, where his posterity may become not only :ivilized, but enlightcned, and where the sweet lumber of his eye-lids is not broken by the mur lerous assaults of tribes less-scrupulous and more ? avage than his own. All thuso blessings and >riviloges have resulted, under the blessings of a leaven, from that memorable prayer, to which ref rnes was hal in the foregoing narrative. Yours, ingenue, E. K. The Long Ago. )h I a wonderful stream is the river Time, C As it runs through the realms of tears, Vith a faultless rhythm and musical rhyme, Ld a broad'ning sweep, and a surge.sbllmo, .That blnd^ th-thano.aM4d:-d a low the waters are drifting like fiakes of snow, And the summers like buds between, ud the year inthesheaf-so they come and they go )n the river's breast, with its ebb and flow, a As it glides in the shadow and sheen. rhere's a magical isle on the river Time, Where the softest of airs are playing; I Mhere's a cloudless sky and a tropical clime, b Lnd a song as sweet as a vesper chime, And the Junes with the roses are ptuying. e Wnd the name of this isle ia the Long Ago, 4 And we bury our streasures there; here are brows of beauty and bosoms of snow- t here are heaps of dust-but we loved them so ! t There are trinkets and tresses of hair. here are fragments of song that nobody sings, U And a part of an infant's prayer,t here's a lute unswept, and a harp without strings, c 5 here are broken vows, and pieces of rings, And the garments that shte used to wear. here are handsthat are waved when the fairy shore By the mirage is lifted in air ; Lad we sometimes hoar, through the turbulentroar, , weet voices we heard in the days gone before, When the wind down the river is fair.h )h ! remembered for aye be the blossed isle, h All the days of life till night ihen the evening comus with its beautiful smile, j' Lad our eyes are closing to slumber awhile, I May our " greenwoo.d" of soul be in sight. THE SOLDIER'S RETURN. Seven or eight years ago, I was travelling e ietween Berwick and Sallack, and, having b tarted at the crowing of the cock, ILhad left a felrose before four in thre afternoon. On ar ii1g at Abbotsford. I perceived a Highland a odeaprntly fatigued as myself, leaning i i nwligstiek, and gazing intensely on e fairy palace of tlie mnagacian whose wand b since broken, but whose usaiti still remins. e am no particular disciple of jLavater's, yet i he man carried his soul upon hii face, and ii re were friends at the Brat glance, He wore e lain Highland bonnet and a cOse grey a reat coat, buttoned to the throat. .His dress fj espoke him to belong to the ranks'; but there e ra a dignity in his manner,. and a Bre, a lowin~ language in his eyes, worthy of. a g hieftin. His height might exceed five feet - ine, and his age be about thirty. The traces a f manly beauty were still upon his cheeks ; u ut the sun of a western hemisphere had tin- u, :ed them with a sallow hue and imprinted ti timely furrows. '* v Our converaation related entirely to the assaic scenery aiouind us ; and we'had pleas- b utly journeyed together for two or three a ies, when we arrived at a little sequestered I rlal-ground by - the way-side, near which a here was neither church or dwelling. Its nm >w wall was thinly cover-ed with turf, and we at down upon it to rest. My companion be- h ae silent and melancholy, and his eyes o! randered anxiously amnoing the graves. " Here," said he, " sleep some of my father's i, hildren who died in infancy." t He picked up a small stone from the ls Tound, and throwing it gently about ten ards, " that," added he, "is the very spt. k lut, thank God!I no grave-stone has been h aised during my absence ! It is a token I a hall find my parents ILving--and," continued n e with a sigh "may I also find their love. h t is hard, sir, when the heart of a parent is d urned against his own child." t He drooped his head upon -his breast for a ir ew moments and was silent; then, hastily kc ising his fore-finger to his eyes, seemed to lash away a solitary tear. Then turnmng ne, he continued: " You may think,. his is weakness in a soldien; but humn, - I tearts beat beneath a red coat. My father, ei vhose name is Campbell, and who was brought kt 'rom Argyleshire, while young, is a wealthy h armer in this neighborhood. Twelve years u Lgo, I loved a being gentle as the light-of a t; mummer morn. We were children together, .a m she greu in besaty on'mg sight,sthq of evening steals into glory through the ighlt. But she was poor and portionless, h -,daughter of a -mean shepherd. Our at "ment offended my father. He comman me to leave her forever. I could not, and turned me from his house. I wandered, I w not, and I cared not, whither. But I will detain -yon with my history. In- my ut tiieed I met a sergeant of the forty ndrwho was then upon the recruiting ser andin a few weeks I joined thatregiment ud hearts. I was at Brussels when the tions to the wolf and the raven rang at night through the streets. It was the her I of a day of glory and death. There were ee Highland regiments of us-three joined ne-joined in rivalry, in love and in pur e ;.and thank Fate! I was present when Scots Greys, flying- to.our aid, raised the tric shout, "Scotland forever!"-" Scot forever1" returned our ,tartaned clans - "Scotland forever I" reverberated as -the hearts we- had left behind us; and tland forever!" re-echoed "Victory I" tvens I" added he, starting to his feet, and paping his staff, as the enthusiasm of the qt rushed back upon his soul " to have cned in that shout was to live an eternity in b.vibration of a pendulum!l" 4[n a few moments the animated soul that p eloquence to his tongue drew itself back r" the chambers of humanity, and resuming iseat upon the low wall, he continued, "1 my.vn regiment with the prospect of motion, and have since served in the West kies; bat I have heard nothing of my father inothling of my mother-nothing of her I *,e."0 'While he was yet speaking, the grave-digger fh a pick axe and spade upon his shoulder, ntered the grouuid. Ile approached within fw yards of where we sat. He measured I a narrow. piece of earth-it encircled the ne which the soldier had thrown to mark Vt the burial place of his family. Convulsion ushed over the features of my companion ; he vered-he grasped my arm-his lips quiv. 6cd-his breathing became short and loud is .cold sweat trickled from his temples. He prang over the wall, and rushed toward the pot. O" Man I" he exclaimed in agony, 'whose ave is that!" " Hout I awa' wi' ye," said the grave-digger, brting back at his manner; " whatna a way 4that to:gliff a body 1-are ye 'aft ?" " Answer me," cried the soldier, seizing his ad; "whose grave-whose grave is that?" ." Mercy me l' replied the man of death, y are surely out o' your head-its an auld gdy they ca'd Adam Campbell's grave-now re ye any the wiser for spierin ?" " My father ?" cried my comrade as I ap. ioached him, and clasping his hands to ther, he bent his head upon my shoulder ad wept aloud. /I will not dwell upon the painful scene. uring his absence, adversity bad given the unes of his father to the wind ; and he had pd in his humble cottage, unlamented and anoticed by the friends of his prosperity. At the request of my fellow-traveller, I ac Pmpanied him to the 'house .of mourning. Wo or three poor cottagers sat around the L. The coffin, with the lid open, lay across able near the window. A few white hairs over. the. ~wl.iter face of 'the deceased, eies4d-o -inditaltat he diad from rrow rather than from age. The son press I his lips to his father's cheek. le groaned a spirit, an i was troubled. He raised his ead in agony, and with a voice ahuoct in rticulate with grief, exclaimed, imploringly, my mother!" the wondering peasants started to their et, and in silence puinted to a lowly bed. [c iastened lorward, and fell upon his knees y the bedside. "My nother! 0, my mother 1" he exclaim , "do not you, too, leave me I Look at toe -I a'i your son-your own Willie-have you, o, forgot me, mother ?' She, too, lay upon her death-bed, and the de of life was fast ebbing; but the renem ered voice of her beloved son drove -it back r- a moment. She opened her eyes-she at tmpted to raise her feeble hand, and it fell pon his head. She spoke, but he alone knew ie words that she uttered; they seemed ac nts of mingled anguish, of joy, and of bles ug. For several minutes he benat over the ed and wept bitterly. Ho held her withered and in his; he started ; and as we approach I him, thehe hand held was stiff and lifeless. [e wept nolonger-he gazed from the dead body E his father to that of his mother-his eyes andered wildly from one to the other, he note his hand upon his brow,- and threw imself upon a chair, while misery transfixed im, as if a t)innderbolt had entered his soul. I will not give a description of the umelan bolv funeral, and the solitary mourner. The Lthers obsequies were delayed, and the son d -b~oth his parents in the samec g:nve. Several months passed away before I gainied aformation respectinig the sequel of my little orr. 'After his parents were laid in dlust, illianm Camis1bell, with a sad-and anxions art, made inquiries after Jleamnie Leslie the irl of his early affection, to whom we have luded. For several weeks his searched roved fruitless ; but at length he learned that: nsierable property hnad been left hear fathe-r y a distant relative, and that he now resided ymewhere in Drumfries-shire. In the same garb whigh I have already de ribed, the soldijer sat out upon his journey. ith little difficulty he discovered the house. Sresembled such as are occupied by the ighest class of farmers. The front door stood peHe knocked, but no one answered. epasseid along thes pasagetu-he boqard yoices an apartmrent to the rightL--'again hc knock I, but was unheeded. He entered uninvited. group was standing in the middle of the' or, and among them a ministel! commen *ng the marriage sei'vice of the Church. of cotland. The bride hung her head "sorrow dly, and tears were stealing down her cheeks .it was his own Jeanie Leslie. The clergy lan pansed. The bride's father stepped for ard angrily, and inquired, "what do ye ant, sir ?I but instantly recognising his fea res, he seized him by the breast, and in a >iee half-ohoaked with passion, continued "Sorrow take ye for a scoundrellI what's rught ye here-an' the mair espeecially at time like this ? Get oat o' my house, sir I say, Willie Campbell, get out o' my house, never darken my door again wi' your 'er-do-weel countenance 1" A sudden shriek followed the mention of a name, anid Jleanie Leslie fell into the arms her bridemnaid. " Peace, Mr. Leslie !" said the soldier, push g the old man aside ; " since matters are us, I will only stop to say farewell-for- auld g syne-yon cannot deny me that. He passed toward the object of his young e. She spoke ne-she moved not-he took r hand, but she seemed unconscious. And, he again gazed upon her beautiful counte nce, absence became as a dream gon tr face. 'The very language he had acquu-ed rng their separation was laid aside. Na r triumphed over art, and he addressed her the accents in which he had first breathed ye, and won her love. " Jeanie I" said he, pressing her hand be ren his, " its a sair thing to say farewell, sat present I'mann say it. This is a scene never expected to see ; for oh, Jeanie 1 1 md have trusted to your truth and to your ye, as the farmer trusts to seed-time and to s-vest, and is not disappointed. @h I Jeanie, oman I this is lika separating the flesh from o bones and burning the marrow I But ye an be another's now-farewell l-frewell I" "Nrm. n ....:. Wlle alnask ezlaimad, recovering from the agony of stupefaction; "my hand is till fret, any my heart has aye been yours-save, Willie! save mie!" and she threw herself into his arms. The bridegroom looked from one to another imploring them to commence an attack upon the intruder, but he looked in vain. The father again seized the old gray coat of the soldier, and almost rending it in twain, -dis. covered underneath to the astonished compa ny, the richly laced uniform of a British officer. He dropped the fragment of the outer garment in wonder, and at the same time dropping his wrath, exclaimed, " Mr. Campbell !-or what are ye ?-will ye explain yourself?' A few words explained all. The bridegroom, a wealthy, middle aged man, without a heart,. left the house, gnashing his teetlk Badly as our military honors are conferred', merit it is not always overlooked even in this country, where money is every thing, and the Sdttish soldier had obtained the promotion he deser ved.. Jeanie's joy was like a dream of heaven. In a few weeks she gave her hand to Captain Campbell of his Majesty's - regiment of infantry, to whom long years before she had given her young heart. Sensible Talk. The following article from the Wisconsin Chief contains so many valuable suggestions, and such pithy advice to our Young men that we publish it. and hope that every person both old and young-male and female-will care fully read it and then ent it out. to re-read the next time they are afflicted with the blues. Every word of it. is true, and by remembering and practicing its injunctions, you will lie greatly benefitted thereby ; " That never'll do young man! No use to stand on the side walk and whine about hard luck, and say that everything goes against you. You are not of half the consequence that your talk would lead us to believe. The world hasu't declared war against you.. You are like all the rest of us-a mere speck upon the earth's surface. Were you this moment to go down in the living tide, but a blubber would linger for a moment upon the surface, and even that would vanish unnoticed. The heart is full of hope and ambition, but is iot missed when it ceases to.beat. One such as you would not leave a ripple. "You are a coward-a coward-in the bat tIe. There's no fight in you. You have sur rended without a struggle, and now whine. because beaten! You are not worthy of it triumph, for you have not yet earned 'it. In garret, hut, and dripping cellar, are ten thou sand heroes who would put you to shame, They must toil orstvrve. The strife is a desper. ate one with them, for they wrestle with want, whi!e ragged and despairing ones watch at the lone hearth the fearful contest. Strong men look death in the eye when their sinews are strung by the wail of hungry childhood. "Shame on :.ou I In the full vigor of health and manhood, no niouth but your own to fill, and no-back but your own to cover, and stil you grumble and call this the scourging of adverse fortune. You know nothing of the storm, for you have seen but the summer. One cloud bas frightened you, and you think you are hardly dealt by. You will be lucky if you find no darker shadows on your path. " Stand up, young air, pull your hands from. your pocket, throw off our coat, and take torwnethe gsma -be- tA again and again bbang oi. t away dt e nonsense that the world is all against you. Taint so. Your destiny is in. your own strong-arm. Wield it like a man! With an unbending will, and honor and truth for a guide, the day is your own. " No capit al, ch. You have capital. God has given you perfect health. That is an im mense capital to start oii. You have youth aid sirngti all invalunbie. Add a will to do. put sinew in motion and vou win. A man in full health should niever whine or despair, because fortune does not pour a stream of gold eagles into his pocket. if'you have no money work anI get it. Industry, econmy integrity will do wonders. From sucli beginning for tunes have been rearsd. .They can he agaiu. Will you try it ? Or will yomu wait for the str.'atu to run by so that you walk dry-shod into thme El Dorado of wealth? Or will you meet the waves defiantly, and be the architect ot'vour own fortune'? "'Try-it is glorious to conquer in the strife." 0ol. King, of Gonzales county, in Texase, who is an equal enemy of' I arzd money andi gramnmer, having a proper contempt for both, and who lives, as lie says, " down to the foot. or navigation." near Oozls a little creek which runs diry itn sitnmmer, rieentir dlelivered himself of the f.,llowinmg emphlatil: reniark: "F MI owe a tian an onjust debIt. andr I make him a litwle'ss tenider of a blanmk bill and he infuses to incept it, but persons oumt at writ for to level ott mty property, et' I dotn't make a sacrament oft /dm I li e dl-d." Soerm'' -ro 'rotcu 'rtt.: Hla.wr.-Col bride sotne whmere relates a story to thtis " Alexander durimig his march into Africa camei to a peoplle dwel~iog in peaceful Iun, who knew ineither wvant nor (ouquest. Gold beioiu otfered to hitn lhe refused it, saying thmat bis sole object wits to learn the mantt-rs amnd eutstom:is of thme inhabitants. " Stay with us," said the chief ". ma long ats it lehasethi thee." Duritng thtis interview with the African chief, two oft his subjects brought a cae:I before him for jttdgmneit. The dimte was this: The one' had bought of the other a piece of' ground, whieb after the putrchase was~ ftuntd to ennlatin a treasure, for whIch lhe felt himelif hoitti to pay. The tother refused rnny thintg, astting that when lie sold the grounid, lie sold it with all advantages apparent anid concealed which it might be f'ound to afford.-Said the chief, lookcing at the one "you have- a sont," and to the othter, "you have dt dautghtr-letthemz. be married. anid the treasure be given as a dlowry.-Alexander was astotnished. " And what," said the chief' " would have been the decision in your cou-:try 1'" " We should have dismissed the parties?'' said Alexander, "and seized the treasure for the king's use." "And does the sun shine on your country ?" saId the chief; "does the rain fall there ? are there any cattle there which feed upon herbs and green grass ?"~ "Certainly," answered Alex ander. " Ab," said the chief, it is for the sake of these innocent cattle the Great Being permits the sun to shine, rain to fall and the grass to growv in your country." SxoBnERY.-"A snob is that man or woman who is always pretending before the world to be sonmething better, cspecially richer or more fashionable than they are. It is one who thinks his position in life contemptible, and who is always yearniig or striving to force himself into one above without the education or characteristics which belong to it; one who looks down upon, despises and overrides his infeiriors, or equals of his own standing, and then is ever reitdy to worship, fawn upon and flatter a rich or titled man, not because he is a good man, a wise man, or a Christian man, but because he has the luck to be rich or con sequential." Such snobbery is to be foutnd every where ; in the humble village as well as in -the great city, it always has existed and probably always will exist ; and all the sermons that can be preached fromi itow until the day of final reckoning, will not eradicate it from the land. It is afixed institution, arid though hated and despised by all sensible people, whether rich or poor, there are thousands in the land who seem to have no iiiger ambition that to move temptible class Ot snos in Lme woru are uun who from the humble wa!ks of life, by acci dent or chance, are suddenly ushered into what is termed "upper-tendom." Forgeting the " pit whence they were digged," they are sure to forget and despise their humble friends, who, in the characteristics that go to make up a lady or gentleman, are incompar ably their superiors., SMOKING A CAUsE or INsAiIT.-The terri ble ravages which tobacco is making on the bodies and minds of the young seems to be attracting the attention of medical men in various parts of the world. In a pamphlet just isqued by Dr. Seymour, of London, on Private Lunatic Asylums, and the causes of late years, the Doctor denounces with empha sik as one of the producing cauess the practice of immoderate smoking indulged in by boys and young men at the universities and " lar. ger schools now called colleges." The Doc tor's remarks are as applicable to the youths of this country as those of Europe. No one conversant with disease can doubt that ex cessive smoking, especiolly in the case cf young people, must be highly injurious to both mind and body. Its effgct is to depress the circulation-the heart becomes weak. irregular in its action, and the pulse is scaree ly to be felt. The victim. becomes irresolute and nervois, his appetite fails, and his mind fills with imaginary evils. This may continne for years, but at length the smoker dies often suddenly; then examination has shown that the muscular structure of the heart is imper feet in its action ; the left side is thin, and in some cases, in which sudden death has occur red, there has been found little wore than a strip of muscular fibre left on that side. - The question of restraining boys from smoking is rather a difficult one to deal with, but the grave interests at stake seem to demand that some action should be taken in the premises. I 0-9 MURDEROUS PLANTS.-It is a perplexing matter to reconcile our feelings to the rigor, and our reason to the necessity, of some plants being made the instruments of destruc. tion to the insect world. There are not a few so constructed, which, having clammy - joints aub calyxes, entangle them to death. The sun.dew (doserm) destroys in a different man ner, yet kills them without torture. But we have'one plant in our gardens, a native too, than which none can be more cruelly destrue tive of animal lire, the dogsbane (apocynum androste milifolium,) which is only conducive to the death of every fly that settles upon it. Allured by the honey on the nectary of the expanded blossom, the instant trunk is protru ded to feed on it, the filaments close, and ctehing the fly by the extremity of its pro bosics, detain the poor ptisoner withing in protracted struggles, till released by death a death apparently occasioned by exhaustion alone; the filaments then relax, and the body falls to the ground. The plant will at times be dusky, from the number of imprisoned wretches. This elastic action- of the filaments may be conducive to the seed, by scattering the, pollen fro-n the anthers, as is the case with the berberry; but we are not sensible that the destruction of the creatures. which excite the action is in' any way essential, to the 'vants or perfection of the idea of a wanton cruelty in the herb; but how little of the causes and mo tives of action of created things -do we know I QUESTIONS FOa -DEDATINo SoCIrETl.-If the traveler who took the course of' human events, hai ever been heard of since ? If the hollow of a log can be heard ? If tin will make a can, what will make a canilt? If twelve inclies make one foot, how niany will mwake a leg? If five and a half yards make one pole, how manny will it take'to make one log? Do potatoes ever wear out, as we often hear ot' potato patches? If pig pens will do to write with? Wi ,ithe Cape of Go::d Hope fit a lady? C.u.-onT X A TRAP.-.Not long ago a person convited of somte subordinate crime was sen tenced to the whipping-post in Ohio, and was brought out of prisoni to undergo the sertence of the law. lIsteadi of a drearl and horror of the punishment, he laughed outright when tied up. anad enraged the executioner by a sub stantial laugh at. every stroke of the lash, and and a yet more hesarty one when the ceremno nywas over. "Now, d-n you,'' said the exeutiner, " what made you laugh so at the whipping-post?"' "Why,' said the fellow. wih a& yet longer protracted fit ot' laughter. " vont have beena woipping the wrong person! Iin niot the man. lie is in the next cell to me l'' A chair has been made from the w. ol of the hairter ()ak, in H artford, called " the Gover n~or's chair," to lie plac -d in the Executive Chamber. The Hartford Times describes it as follows: Thle chair is six feet high, and capacious enogh to hold a Jianiel Lambert. The top, o enchi post is ornamnented with an acorni springinag from a coronal of nak leaves, whtile the posts'and arms are entwined with branch es ol'oak, with h-aves and acorns. The back is surrounded by a spread eagle, and the ceter is a medallion containing the State coto-arms, surrounded by a wreath of oak. The seat is composed of pieces of oak iu blocks, showing the different grains, and making it a beautiful specimen of mosaic. A group of flags ornament the front of the seat. The chair is massive ; all the carving being wrought from the solid wood. The deign andl execution is beautlf'ul, Mrs. Swisshelm, in her letters to tha; young ladies, says that " every Counitry girl kttows how to color red whitih madde'r." This we believe to be an ethnological fact, as we have always noticed that whiih all girls the madder they get th edrthey arne. Mlany politicians bonat that they can't he bought, when they are really so worthless that they '.au't be sold. Oors IN TuxAs.-Fa am our exchanges It would appear that the rain of the 8th was gen eral throughotit the State;i and though in cer tain looations it sent the streams booming and did some little damage, yet, as a general thing, it was in the highest degree beneficial to. the growing crops. The wheat already harvested has shown a yield quite as large, if not larger than usual; corn is doing finely, and cotton has bolled, defying the ravuagesof the supposed disastrous frost of the last month. We are now enjoying fine growing weather and every thing looks properous.-Galves ton News, 19th. FEEDIxo RUsTED OTS" 'TO CrE.-The safety of allowing stock to feed on rusted oats and other grain having become a mooted question7 and, in most instances, decided ad versely, it may not be amiss to give the ex perience of a friend on the subject. He had, last year, a beautiful field of oats that was taken with the rust; feelinag unwilling to lose it entirely he turned in his mileh cows and kept them there until it was entirely consumed, withot the slightest unfavorable effect upon them. To the contrary, they thrived and grew fat; though it is but safe to say-for without it the case mtight have resulted other wise-that a large boulder of rock-salt- was tured nightly. Hie is so thoroughly convin ed that the rusted oat is harmless, that he is now repeating the experiment, hispresenterop being in the samle condition as that of l@st year-as, we regrettd learn, is generally 'the e throughout the low country-avannah We find -the following in the lat issue of the " Colleton.and Beaufort San :" WATE.BRoO', May 21st, 1859. b Wm. H. Barrnoel4 Esq: My DzAR Sit--Your letter to meiand pub. lished in the Mercury, I had not the -lesure of seeing, unil the reprint of it in the oleton and Baufort Sun was placed in my hsads by the publisher. I I desire simply to correct a mistake Into' which you have fallen: I never advanced the propo4ition of " farming out the public roads." My idea was and is, that it would be a great improvement "t the road-law, if instead 6f twelve days labor by every mald inhabitant liable to work the roads, 'ho commissioners were a'thorited to levy on each said male in. habitant, a small capiLtion tax, to be paid at the option of the tax payer, in money or labor. And furthrr, that a superintendent of -roads, in each District, should be app inted with a moderate salary, who should direct t work. ing of the ronds, and the application of. the capitation tax, whether paid in money or work. This superintendent, I would select from the working men of the country, always pre ferring those who have given evidence of sill, industry, and perseverance. . I have flattered myself such a modification of the road-law would ensure good roads, at a less expense than the present system,, and weald prevent the exposure of hands to a sum mer's sun, or to the temptation of intoxicating drink. Most res ectfully yours, JOHN WELTON O'NZaLr. TnE ExPaaon oF AUsTaxA.-The following beloi gs to the foreign gossip of the day: " The war upon which the young Emperr of Austria is now entering has been neither.sud. denly nor rashly advised.- It seems, that from tl-e very first the Emperor's mother, the Archduchess Sophia, has entertained a de'ided repulsion towards the Imperial fainily of France; and has even- been sometimes perse. fled, by her own family, for what haa. been called her old fashioned prejudice. The Arch. duchess is a woman of the most powerful intellect, and still holds her rule over her son as firmly as in the days of his minority. Her penetration is p overbial; and sheatill consulta with Metternich'upon all subiects coi'ected wi'h the interests of the Aiust'in Crown. Eve: since the marriageof Prince Napoleon, the suspicions of the lady have been aroused ; and at length by dint ot artiflce-and money, of faith in themselves and the want of it in others, the experieneed'pair have succeeded Li obtaining the full copy of the letters of Prince Napoleon and- the Emperor-of the French to the King of Sadinia, by which it becomes clear that the var in Italy is but a secondary object-that the ultimate end is the' bistowal of Lombaridy on King Victor, Rome on Prince Napoleon, Naples on Prince Murat, and the .overthrow of Austria; which leaves the road open to Russia; and then, hurrah for the long cherished idea of* the attack ca England--the deed which is to render his name imartal as that f Cesar, and efface that of the great Napoleon, by performing that which even he never dared to 'do, and aveng ing him !" Paorwv.xr:.. Es'PEY.-Yesterday as . R. W. Gibbes' and Mri H. -. Brownj the sculptor,.were ri at wagon belonging to Mr Henry Davis, close behind, became frightened aid ran of. Dr. Gibbes bearing a noise, turned to see, what was the matter, when the tongue of the wagon was driven with great violence against the buggy. Striking Mr. Brown in the back-one of tl'i, horses actually reared upon the buggy and struck it with h's fore feet. In the col lision the buggy was upset and a wheel knock ed off, Mr. Brown filling under the wheels of the wagon. Dr. Gibbes' horses ran off, and he fell and became wedged between the fore, axle and the spring, but he had presence of m'nd to call to the horses and jerk the reins, when the well-trained animals stopped sud denly, and thus probably, his life was saved. His bruises are not serious. We regret to say that Mr. Brown's injuries are more serious. He has several severe cute' upou his head, and the force of the wagon tongue upon his left shoulder blade caused a violent confusion. It was at first feared that the bone was broken. He was immediately taken to the house of Mr. Randolph, in the vicinity, where he received the kindest assis tance, and as soon as his wounds were dressed, he was removed to the residence of Dr. Gibbes, where everything that the kinidness of friend ship ean suggest will lie extended to him. The sympathy of the whole community is with him and his esteemed lady; and we trust he will soon be able to resume his valuable labors.-Carolinian, 29th nIt.. Tan Wu.Ums~oM SnalNcs.-The Ander son Gazette gives a-flattering account.f th , preparations that are being made for the open ing seaon, at this watering place. .It'says: 4 We had the opportuniiy lajt week of' noticing tho preparation that is being made at this celebr'ated iratering place for visitors this summer. The proprietors of the Wil liamston Hotel are neither sparing pains or. expense in providinir tijr' the comfort and en joynent of visitors, amnd will have soon corn-' pete'd their entire how:s' in the beat manner. One of them, -Mr. Tu..t.-, &. s oh'arge this season, and will do all is hia puwer to make a visit agreeable. " Our friend Hudgens, of the Central Hfouse, keeps it in adinirable style, and his also beent fitting outt new indlu~utaints to persons visl ting thfere, " With the adlvantage oi' superior hotels, added to the curative properties of the watet' and the plessantuess of that detdghtful village, we are quite sure 'that the invalid or the pleasureseekcr can find no place of the kind hereabout where the time will be spent more pr~fiably or agreeably; And we confidendly expect, from paresent indications, that a large number ot' the low-couuuy folk -will avail thtamselves of the- op' rtunmty presented, and that Willimaston wilbe tLe "gayest of the gay" this season.'' DoN'-r Use A CaECE B~rr.-"T'he New En; gland "Farmer', spdaking on the subject, says " Any person whos& attention has been cialb ed to the subject, agd who still persists in the S use of a light check reit. ought to have his own head placefI in a similar position to that to which hehaseruelly subijected the horse. If I were the " Grand Sultan," every man who torments his horse with a check rein should hold his arms at right yngles with his body, for an hour at a time, onice in 24 hours ha long as he continued the cheek rein.- The practice of drawing in the heads of team'hreb means of this penicious scrap, .isi~ci ruel. The horse, is enaevrn1C pel his strength, needs the free natua u&fhis head and neck. The csiam~ipoi t now enforced is alikeseve .in t~9tohorse and in any businesa,. ppd'. . a .eased . off till nature is at fres play." Ceors an Noan-rxaN Mssspl-The' Granada Republican of 'auaylast, says: The planters of this anid adjoinig counties' are jubilant over theiIr' .pects frn rops f co n and cotton. ii.past week hah been admirably adapted to the'growth and halth of both plants and,- if it coutinis'Ahere esa beo case for regrets ait thelateneus of the ,ssnthiEthey'Uro ut it'?Me: ire oruis8'tat inet hmae 'its'piaanue again ii t11/oat fllkbnt froserpt, re do not isjn