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s My muse a bird of passage Hie*, (o From Frozen climes to milder skies. Young. ve| Frvm the SorUhfm Wttkly Pont. ou the Paper. ny shadwell. on i?i In cities, when from sleep we rise, ? What is it on the table lies. wc And earliest greets onr waking eves ? f,.. The Paper"! When, whirling on onr iron way, on We e'en complain of steam's delay, av< What soothes, and cheers, and makes us gay ? to The Paper! At rillage inns when wc renose, oul Near qnitc summer evening s close, tin What helps us then and there to doze ? the The Paper! * forl At home, around our blazing hearth, cor Where throng the sweetest joys of earth, sul wnni sura our rears or tempts our mirth T tic Tim Paper! nfb What to the planter's mansion brings, ^ At well known hours, on punctual wings, " I The current history of things ? roc The Paper! to What in the pine-knot's glorious blaze, I 11 Spreads out before the poor man's gaze, b^8 The world's mutations and its wavsT prs The Paper f sot What to the pnrtizan makes known, thi1 The turns of the contested " bone," And tricks of parties not his own ? The Paper! What tells the housewife's curious eyes, Nice recipes for cake-s and pies, And how the rolls arc taught to rise 1 The Paper! What to the fashionable belle, The latest fashion comes to tell, * ( With those details Bho likes so well 1 "t The Paper ! ?P' ad What the romantic school-girl shows, The last grim tragedy of woes. Where love still hnds its usual close ? The Paper! ?y r i What, to be brief, appears designed, ,j To entertain and form the mini, And cheer the heart of human kind ! The Paper ? *? Igtitttltutal. s Is sloth indulgence?'tis a toil, cc Enervates man and damns the soil. l:i Young. From The Southern Agriculturist I 111 Conditions Most Favorable to Ycge tation. C{ si Mr* Editor:?This is a wide subject, if p wo take it in all its bcarinos. and a 1< C~? w dttieult one. I only mean to examine r< it in one or two points. The conditions r; favorable to vegetation are partly such b as we cannot control; such as rains, dews, ti -climate, electrical states of the atmosphere s>< Ac., and partly such as are more or less ? under our control, such as feartility ol soil, oi looseness of soil Ac. Some plants thrive h best in warm, others in cold climates, e< some in moist others in dry situations, tl some in the open air, and some in the ci shade; but all thrive best in a loose, fertile ti toil. It is to this Inst condition I wish to le direct the attention of your readers. On h< the subject of fertility, as far as depends Is upon manures, I have in several former w numbers of the Laumuville Herald said ra so much that I will not here run the risk pi of tiring your readers by repetition. What ry I have to say now shall be confined mostly pr to the condition of looseness of the soil.? on Every one inust have noticed tint in >'?' certain parts of their fields, where the ca soil is deep and loose, vegetation is more hi luxurant than where this is not the case, pi It is precisely how wo have the condi- df tions most favorably to vegetation. "Na- p< ture," says Pluche, Mdid all things beforo ? art, and better." Ilere is naturo's spcci- tli men of what every farmer desires?a p? rich soil. Cannot wo learn from natcre I bl to make a rich soil? In what does it consist! Let us examine it. It consists most- ni ]y of mould, intimately mixed with a due cc proportion of sand and clay. This mould er is mostly a compound of vegetation mat- tli ten, (I purposely avoid looking into its m chemical composition?I write for plain ot farmers.) Such a soil wo And is loose, In esily moved by the plow, drinks and in retains moisture well, without at the same nc time being too wet or oold. Such is ti< nature's moddle of a rich soil?cannot we gi imitate nature! This is a pugnant y< question, and it behooves tho farmer to ai i^icwer it esrcfhUy an*! earnest- gi ly. It has been answered already in is older countries, where men cannot go into tl the woods to clear new fields, when they it have exhausted their old; and the answer nn has been emphatically, yieh?yet we have ?i brought our lands up from a product of it from 10 to 15 bushels of wheat, and from fe 15 to an average of 20, and even 25 fo bushels* by plentiful manuring aad deep oi plowing?hy forminsr a deem loose soil in imitation of nature's model. Such is t* the nport of the progress of English pi agrietiHare by Prot Johnston. la this ej not * plain and encouraging case? and ui are the formers of Laurens.so careleaaly fo blind, or wilfully ao, that they cannot lil aee it' Carlmsly or willfully it must be, pi ievHl ie not want of capacity. Remember at wbet iny great namesake aaid: g< "Plow deep wbile aluggarda aleep, w ; And you'll nave com to aell and keep." cc liere is the secret Plow deep?break tb up your soil thoroughly ?open it to the n< Jnflueooo of tbe air, the rain and dows? d< make it porona ao that com and ootton jnay aend their rootlets wide and deep fu j ; jiu search of food and mo*sto re?remember, ?, every rootlet has its hungry mouth, and ec it in toot Enough to make room for them to M extend, but they must alts manure. If ^ yotl plow plwr land deep, H soon runs to- fa adlher ?9m1 is aafcard as evefi ?? ,...A ho P It may be said that no wUm hi the tb WofTdiethere ao muah plewMtf dot* aa in uk the mA nod cot ten raising States of Of Amerian. This hum too true, perhaps tb <4ut what Irtwd +(plowing! Five or six $ * i|Tfr'vf , * '"fat' ft'eritJ Hhh2|^ .fowl,I BB^B net a year is the land plowed, in our confi *y of doing, it to raise tneso crops, and sire oet of it in the hot summer weather* intei is ting the strength both of our land and be e >rses. On many European farms, there duti< not so much plowing done in almost as may *ny years; but when they do plow, they laws >low deep." It is easy to perceive that gove this course their lands arc not washed the | d impoverished as ours are. cogn Mr. Editor, it has been said " ?. .s easy ty w find fault." 1 fear it is easier to do so, rega an it is to mend our errors; yet I will o!>vu nturo to point out a mode ot cultivating pera< r crops which will be better, I think, than of pc e ono we practice. It is this : Prepare in jx thorough and deep plowing as above, sever d afterwards cultivate shallow. By do- Havi j the preparatory plowing in the winter no re which is the time it ought to he done? reme ( get tho mellowing influence of the suit, >sts, and avoid the hurtful effects of the fulfil r.. By shallow after culture, wo not mitin ly expose the soil less to tho sun, but chars oid cutting the roots w hich are intended temp nourish tho plant. It is said of old, the b it l>y cutting of Hydra's heads, two came know L for every one cutoff; so in modern of in] ics it has been held that hv cutting off High ( roots of corn, they wero made to shoot nient th more numerous branches. All now excrti icede the first is a mere fable, and I pre- shall ne the last is nothing more than a poe- at in] fiction. And no doubt the culture that, pacit; ?r preparation, keeps a loose surface perfoi h the least injury to tho roots is best, their lion th3 plants are young, before the forth its have extended far, we may continue neglij plow deep with benefit; hut after that, "With m satisfied that surface culture is the Bt it. That is not mere theory?I have wliicl icticed this course for several years to The e ne extent, and my experience confirms er in s common senso view of the matter. erncy Franklin. he di, M fore, part n augural Address of President Pierce, noseel [CONCLI'DKD FROM FIRST l'AOF..] Unite const ; m regard to them so much, as to see Jistri .me wuaviiunto niirir sirtJIlglH, JUKI pUf* find 1 ; the paths of prosperity and happiness, has r in the course of their growth, we should noss < en new channels of trade, and create just t ditiotfal facilities lor friendly intercourse, rjght: j benefits realized will be equal and nut- aru\ i ?!. Of the complicated European poli- unde we have herctolorc been independent jn m om their wars; their tumults ar.d anxi- whicl es, we have been, happily, almost en- Conc< ely exempt. Whilst these are confined have the nations which gave them existence, quilli id within their legitimate jurisdiction, oonii cy cannot affect us, except as th?y ap- clear al to our sympathies in the cause of hu- hardl an freedom and universal advancement, quesl ut the vast, interests of commerce are 0f th immon to all mankind, and the advan- (0 m ges of trade and international intercourse ding ust always present a noble fiel i for the jn loral influence of a great people. imno With these views firmly and honestly ivried out, wc have a right to expect, and e mil under ull circumstances require, a j ,(lon' rompi reciprocity. The rights which be>ng to us an a nation are not alone to be w),n( jgardetl, but those which pertain to eve- an(j ( y citisen in his individual capacity, at our , oinc and abroad, must be sacredly main- evon lined. So long as be can discern every rectr lar in its place upon that ensign, without j ealth to purchase for hiiu preferment, t^0 ( r title to secure for him place, it will be mc j is privelege, and must lie his ackuowlJged right, to stand unabashed, even in rec0, le presence of princes with a proud con- on|y lousness that ho is himself one of a tin- j,,ncf on of sovereigns, and that he cannot, in ^yiil igitiinato pursuit, wander so far from 0Hrl| ome that the agent whom he shalljleave wjiat jhind in the place which I now occupy, \vh:i ill see that no rude band of power or ty- 0p,,n( nical passion is laid upon him with im- jn r( inity. lie must realize that upon eve- anij j sea and on every soil, where our enter- j. jntj isc may rightfully seek the protection of ir flag, American citizenship is an inolable panoply for the security of Amerin rights. And in this connection, itenn tjierc irdly be necessary to re-aflirm a princi- tjlC v c which should now Ikj regarded as fun- mcn imental. The rights, security, and re- #Htr0 >se of this confederacy, reject the idea of p0fg( terference or colonization on this side of |ne a o ocean by any foreign power beyond u?j0 csent jurisdiction as utterly inadmissi- prov e* time, The opportunities of observation, fur- uan.'i shod by iny brief experience as a soldier, and * tnfirmed iu my own mind the impression mil itcrtained and acted upon by others from field le formation of the government, that the count ainteuance of large standing armies in hut I ir country would bo not only dangerous ed fo' it unnecessary. They also illustrated the unci) lportance, I might well sny the absolute ?pV icessity, of die military science and prao%al skill, furnished in such an eminent dc- a #pj ree, by the institution, which bas made ^ tj, >ur army what it is, under the discipline id instruction of officers not mora distiu- U8 ^ ii?J;od for their solid attainment*. galntry and divotion to tho pnblic service, mCfn tan for unobtrusive bearing and hicrli - ^ f a. lull II ioral tone. The army, an organized, cjety lust be the nucleus (around which in ev- Df f,M ry time of need, the strength of your mil* Mro ary power, the sure bulwark of your de- iaw'( nee?a national militia?may b? readily jnter rmcd into a well disciplined and efficient ^ rgnnization. And the skill and self dhro- ex'stl on of the navy assure you, that you may c..? ike tho performance of Uie past as a be^ ledge for the future, and may confidently ipect that the flag which has waved its itarnisbed folds over every sea, will still gn'oj >at in undiminished honor. But these ^o^ ce many other subjects, will be approlately brought, at a future time, to the 8tr;ct tention of the co-ordinate branches of the tingl iverwnent, to which 1 shall always look the c ith profound reepect, and with trustful an, j, mfidence that they will acoord to me jn ie aid and rapport which I shall so mnch ot|?,r ;ed, and which their experience and wis- tj,at >m will readily suggest. rcspt In the administration of domestic af- uinSQ irs, you expect a devoted integrity in the to tn< ihiic service, and an observance of rigid social onomy in all departments, so marked the d never justly to be questioned. If this expoi asonabra expectation be not realised, I are n takly confess that one of your leading act pee is doomed to disappointment, ana at m at my efforts in a very important partic- , or fai ir must reanh m a humiliating failure, en th Beers can be Wbperlv regarded only fart obecu ?l^ht of afeU for tfcn accompltiMnent Bt these objects; and m occupancy can J rest * MIA.iff ii .1 ' ^ ,*?>y > \ J ^ .rf ujI sr no prerogative; nor importunate defer rcfernient any claim, the public est imperatively demands that they onsi lered with sole reference t'? the is to be performed. Good citizens well claim the protection of good and the benign influence of good irnincnt; but a claim for office is what people of a republic should never reize. No reasonable man of any purill expect the administration to be so rdless of its responsibility, and ?>l t!;?jus elements of success, as to retain >ns, known to be under tbe influence litical hostility and partisan prejudice mitions, which will require, not only e labor, but cordial co-operation.? ng no implied engagements to ratify, swards to bestow, no resentments to mbcr, and no personal wishes to conin selections for official station, I shall this difficult and delicate trust, adg no motive as worthy either of my icter or iKJsition, which does not conlate an efficient discharge of duty and est interest of my country. I acledge my obligations to the masses 7 countrymen, and to them alone, er objects than personal nggrandizegave direction and energy to their j ions in the late canvass, and they not bo disappointed. Tliey require y hand diligence, integrity, and cav*, whenever there are duties to Ik* rnied. Without these qualities in public servants, more stringent laws, e prevention or punishment of fraud, [ once and peculation, will be vain.? i them, they will be unnecessary, it these are not the only points, to i you look for vigilant watchfulness. lnngers of a concentration of all pow the general government of a confedso vast as ours, are too obvious to srcgarded. You have aright, thereto expect your agents, in every decent, to regard strictly the limits iml upon them by the constitution of the jd States. The great scheme of our itutioual liberty rests upon a proper bution of power between the State federal authorities; and experience hown, that the harmony and happi)f our |>cople must depend upon a liscrimination between the separate s and responsibilities of the State, four common rights and obligations r the general government. And here, v opinion, are the consideration*. Ii should form the true basis of future ml in regard to the questions, which most seriously disturbed public tranty. If the federal government will nc itself to the exercise of powers ly granted by the constitution, it can ly happen that its action upon any .ion should endanger the institutions c States, or interfere with their right anage matters strictly domestic aecor to the will of their own people, expressing briefly my views upon an irtant subject, which has recently aid "C** I the nation to almost a fearful de( I am moved by no otlier impulse a most earnest desire for the perpet>11 of that Union, which has made us t we are, showering ui ton us blessings, conferring a power and influence,which fathers could hardly hnve anticipated, with their most sanguine hopes did to a far-off future. The sentiments vv announce were not unknown before ixpression of the voice which called lere. My own position upon this sule was clear and unequivocal, upon the rd of my words and my nets, and it is recurred to at this time lx?cause sii might perhaps b? misconstrued.? i the Union inv best and dearest dy hope- are entwined. Without it. are we individually or collectively ( it becomes of the noblest field ever cd for the advancement of our race, cligion, in government, in the arts, in all that, dignifies and adorns man ? From that radiant constellation, h both illumines our own way and a out to struggling nations their le, let but a single star l>e lost, and, if i l>c not utter darkness, the lustre of rhole is dimmed. Do inv countryneed any assurance that such a catphc is not to overtake them while I *s the power to stay it? It is with n earnest and vital belief, that as the n has been the source, under idence, of our prosperity to this so it is the sure-t pledge of a contine of the blessings wo nave enjoyed which we are sacredly t>ound totransundiminished to our children. The of calm and free discussion in our try is open, and will always la' so, never has l>ecn, never can Ik* traver* r good in a spirit of sectionalism and aritableness. le founders of flic republic dealt with ;s as they were presented Co thcin, in rit of self-sacrificing patriotism, and, no has proved, with a comprehensive )in, which it will always be safe for consult. Every measure, tending to ?ihen the irate *! filings of all the hers of our Union, has bad my heartipprobation. To every theory of s?e or government, whether the offspring rerish ambition or of morbid enlhusicalculated to dissolve the bonds of xnd affection which unite us, I shall poae a ready and stem resistance. I ivo that involuntary servitude, as it . ,ior ? .% - - * 111 ttuicrciii ouuc*|0( mm eonludern? recognized by the Constitution. 1 ve that it stAnds like any other adk1 right, and tliatthe States whore it ? Aro entitled to efficient remedies to ce the constitutional provisions. I that the laws of 1850, commonly i the "compromise measures," are ly constitutional, and to be unhesitay carried into effect. I beliere that onstitutcd authorit w of tile He public ound to regard the rights of the South ? respect, as they would view any legal and conemutioaal right, and the laws to enforce them should be ited and obeyed, not with a reluc[encouraged by abstract opinions as tir propriety in a different state of ;y, but cheerfully, and according to ecisiona of the tribunal to which tbeir lition belongs. Such have been and ty oonvictions, and upon them I shall I fervently hope that the question is it, and that no seasonal, or ambitious latlcal escitensepl may again tbrcat durability tfjfm institutions, or I ire the ligat of ?^pre*p?r>ty. it 1st not the foundation <4 em bmi I ipoa iran's wudmp. It will not be I iX ' I sufficient that sectional prejudices find no 1 pliice in the puMic deliberations. It will W not he sufficient that the rash eoirteels of * human passion are rejecteds It most be felt that there is no national security but r in the nation's linmMe, acknowledged de- pendence upon God and his overruling * Providence. * We have been carried in safety throtrgl c :? perilous crisis. Wise counsels, like thoac 1 winch gave its the constitution, prevailed I* to uphold it. J et the period bo remembered as an admonition, anil not as an c' encouragement, in any section of the h Union, to make experiments whore experiments are fraught with such fearful ha*- ? an]. Let it be impressed upon all hearts, that beautiful as our fabric is, no earthly " power or wisdom conld ever re-unite its * broken fragments. ft Standing as I do almost within view of the green slopes of Monticello, and, as * it were, within reach of the tomb of "Wash- ? ington, with all the cherished memories of v the past gathering aronnd me, like so 81 many eloquent voices of exhortation from ? Heaven, I can express no better hope for H my country, than that the kind Providence F which smiled upon our fathers may ena- b Me their children to preserve the blessings they have inherited. >' Death of Col. Joshua J. Ward.?From ? the Charleston paper< we lenrn the death e by paralysis, of Col. J. J Ward, ofWaccs H in i w. For ninny years he represented hi y parish in tho State Senate, and was much ^ esteemed by nil who knew him. He was * one of the largest i nd most successful Rice 11 planters in the State. Col. Wnrd wns Lieutenant Governor of the Stntc, during Govornor Mf.aas' administration. ^ LEON ARD SCOTT & CO'S. 1 LIST oe jl BRITISH PERIODICAL c PiBLIt'ATlONS. ? o Delivered in nil the principal Cities in the United States, FREE OF POSTAGE, and ii forwarded by mail, tinder the provisions of u the late Post-OHioc law, at mf.iihwv nominal 0l KATES. e 1 A The London Quarterly Review (Cons'i five.) 2 ?' The Edinburgh Review ( Whiff.) t< 3 b The North British Review (Free Church.) |* 4 The Westminster Review (Liberal.) , 5 Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine (Tory.) ? Although these works are distinguished I1 by the political shades above indicated, yet hut a small portion of their contents is de- p voted to political subjects. It is their hlera- ,> y vuoiukici * men kiu's incm mcir Clili'I || value, and in that thev stand confessedly far (> above all other journal* of their clans. Blackirnod, at ill under the fatherly care of Christo* pher North, maintains its ancient celebrity, and ia, at this time, unusually attractive, from H the Mi-rial works of Bulwcr and other literary ?i notables, written for that magazine, and lira c< appearing in ita column* both in Great Brit ain and in the United States. Such works ^ as "The Cuxtons" and "My New Novel," v (both by Buiwer,) "The Green Hand," Katie | Stewart," and uglier aerials, of which numc- . tons rival editions are issned by the leading puh.ishcrs in this country, have to be roprin- 1' ted by those publishers from the pagea of C Blackwood, after it has been issued by Mcs- ci sra, Scott & Co., so that Subscribers to the \ Reprint of that Magazine may ulwuys rely ],' on having the curliest reading of these faaci- ^ Dating talcs. ,, TERMS. ? Per snn. ' For any one of she four Reviews... . $3 00 , ? For any two ofthe four Reviews 5 UP I . ... ....y uiivi ? ! 1 in* nuir iviview*. .. .7 UU : n For all four of tin* Reviews 8 11O I u For Blackwood's .Miig.i/ine. 3 (Mr For BLckwood iV. tlircc Reviews. ... .'J 00 I For Blackwood iV the tour Reviews.. 10 00 0 I'uymente lit if made in all caws in ad- 0 ranee. Money current in Ihe State where issued will he received at par. CLUBBING. , A discount of twenty-five per cent, from the above prices will lie allowed to Clubs ordering four or more copies of nnv one or more of lfic above works. Than: Four co- n Cies of Blackwood, or of one Reviews, will e sent to one address for $9; four copies ^ of the four Reviews nnd Blackwood for $30 ; and so on. K?*?kit< ?hI Postave. The following table will ahow the great reduction which hna been made on these Periodical* since 1814, and the very trifling rates now charged. Per annum, j Prior to 1815, the |Ostage on Blackwood was 912 40. on a single Review 1 l*i From ! 184.0 to 18&I, 011 Blackwood 1 00. on a Re- > ^ view 60 In 1861-62 [average rata) on Blackwood 76 one Review 38. The present po tagc on Rkickw ood, is 24; on a Re- ej view Pi; I ,| ('Ihe rales are tunc uniform for all distan- ! jj ces within the VniUd Stales.) n At these rates surely uo objection should tie made to ri?eiving the works by mail, and thus ensuring their speedy, safe, and regular delivery. 0T Remittances and communications 1 should be idwaya addressed, post.paid to the Publishers. LEONARD SCOTT &. CO. 79 Fulton Street (Entrance 64 Gold street.] New-York. & N. B.?L 8. & Co- have recently pub" p lished, and have now for sale, the FARMER'S GUIDE," bv Henry Stephen* of Edinburgh, and Prof. Norton of Yale Col- ] lege, New I lev en, complete in 2 vols., royal octavo. containing 1800 pager. 14 steel and fiOO woods engraving**.. Price, in muslin binding, 96; in paper covers, for tb? mail, & 1ar This work is not Ihe old ''Bock of the j Farm," lately resuscitated and thrown upon hi market l THE SOUfH CABOLIVlA*, ^ Published Daily, Tri-Weekly, and Weekly. " AT C0LUKSIA, A C- jr Tho auktterilx.n. UJia I? ?L---I B edging the support they Have received since they took charge of the *>UTH CAROIJN. IAN They have apeind no toil or effort to | render it worthy of MMth anpport, and they beg leave to announce to their readers and w to the poblie their determination to do every* # thing that can be done to tneko lien acceptable journaJ. The astMaien of mil roads is n the interior will Afford ftoe opportunity to country readers to obtain dke Iciest intelli(iespatchea direct from the Worth mi from ? Charleston, they will get the anHiwat news through iU eo.aMKm . Onr terms, in accordance with the renSta* lions adopted by the jreaa of the State, will T aEUtanft-" 1; i it ? ivWs Ai V- J I . ' IISCELLANEOli PUTNAM'S MONTHLYriE stibscribfci?, rc?-punning to repeated and urgent/y pxj>^ ish of euiiuc^it and judi:iou8 pei>ui arious sections'ol the country, hii\< ided to vonuncnce, on the 1st of Jan 853, nn entirely ORIGINAL li'KRl DAL, under the above title. It is intended to couibiue the lij tiaracteristies a popular magazine igher and graver qualities of a qual iview; tilling a position hitherto t upiod in our literature. While attractive variety for the gc sader is thus obtained, there will b ttempt to secure substantial excellcfe ach department. To accomplish this wo intend th rork in all of its mechanical and hni spects, shall be such aa will meci iews of our most distinguished wi nch a medium as they would seek f< ommnnicating with the world?and s may tempt some to wntc ably rofitably, who have not hitherto con lh! to periodicals. We intend that all articles adn Dtn the work shall be liberally paid We believe that'an ample ma xists for such a work; there is no ither of talent among our writers ppreciation on the part of the rei ultlic; and that a proj>orly cond eriodical of this kind may bring to uiich true genius, as yet undevel "l'utnam'a Monthly" will be devot lie interests of Literature, Scieuco Lrt?in their best and pleasentes ects. F.ntierly independent of all merely >h interests or partiear, or sectional iga, in management, it will be ope ompctent writers for free discussic ucb topics as are deemed import am f public interest. The critical department will be w idependent of the publishers, and a s possible, influence or bias. Whole astinatious of public abuses will be a d a fair field without fear or favor. An elevated national tone and a uncrican and independent yet disc ating and just, both to the literature > the social condition and prospec oth hemispheres, will be cultivated tuiliniv twitioiavla ?La ..... ?1 "" "g I'miivijut: UI UIU nurk* Special attention will l*> given to *rs connected with aocial policy, nu ?l regulations, public health him! s? tul the practical economics of ever) ife. When a subject needs illustratioi ictoral example, such illustrations w ccasionally given, but it is not cxp< lat the success of the work is to de n what arc termed "cmbclishments. The following among many others, k pressed their hearty approval of the ] u?l will all give it their generous o ration?while nearly all of them wi nntributors to tho wo?-k: Wnshin r ing, II. W. Longfellow. Doiiahl lilchcl, Hawthorne, W. C. Bryant, Varner, author Wide WorW, liov. lawks. Geo. Wm. Gurtis, Hon. Inneroft, I'rof I.ieber. E. 1*. \Vhi lev. I>r. Kobinson, R. 11. Kimball, loopcr, Bror 15. Silliman, Jr. It, W. rson, Rev. f' Dewey. Rev. Vaylnnd,Mi^. K iki.ir.d, M;?-< Sc lg' itze Greene llallork, Rev. K. il.'Cli leo, Summer Ri. R *v. lip. Rotter, illcspie, 1'rr.of llenfy Recti. Rre* II appcu. lien. K. (i. Sijuircr, 4re., c., l'riee *3per imnutn or 2ft ccnt? umber, terms for clubs, Ac., will beg i separate eirculnrs. ' >rders received bvall book-sellers thr< ... at... ft-!. 1 ' - s ft iii me uuuuu man*, auu uy Uie put G. P. PUTNAM AO 10 Park Place, New Yorl &r PUTNAM'S l*OPULAH LI1M i *till continued terni monthly, Jui SOUTHERN CULTIVATO A Monthly Journal, , F.VOTED TO THE 1STFKESTB OF aOufl AQRIC (ILTVRE, \nd dertgned to improve both the toil an mind; toeletatr the characters of the 1 lert of the toil, and to introduce a Mure Enlightened Nf*.'em of Agriculture, Horticulture, Stark breeding, and (icnrrai Farm , Economy., -? LUJSTRATEf) WITH MJMRROU Elegant Engraving*. Daniel i.hk, m. u., ami o. hkdmax, Kdifc IfOI.UMK Eleven commenced I at nf \ u?ry, 1803, each number will do 'hirtytw-o Urge octavo pogea, (7} by 1 hca,) of cloaely printed matter, eiiinr: ic contributiona of tome of the moat i font and practical r'-ntera in every ao the Southern Statea. TERMS, 1 Copy ono year, < 0 H H li |*| 14 M M 25 ? - ? 100 M ? * II1I9V IB Aimiirc. The Billa of oil apecie-paying Bank rived hI par. All money remitted by usiage puid, at the rink of the I'uhliiih Addreaa W. S. JONES, AuguUrt, < .000 BOOK AG-EN W A NT ED FOR THE OVTHERN 4> WESTERN STA' . oatnraNUfdn A m Wdmx by t. ?, ajltht i KETCHES OP urr AHU CH 5 >ACTER?eentehiing <*fr 4W p >yal oeUvo, with 16 finely tinted R? ge, and ? Portrait of the Author, hat Mb Umod. Price Tmm> Do|larvr&# count made to Agent*. Each Agent haa a djatrict allotted af more couotioa, by We Waatbj naive control of anle^ By eneloaing 09 to the puhliafcer, dd, a apeeimen copy of tho book wf rwcrded to any part of Uka United 8 'HE DEW DEO A JOURNAL FOB Wl I " ' 'the $50 0VC'R A L' L E N G E Wi<n TITHATEVER concerns the health HI js ill f) hnppiucse qf the pciqvhvi^nt all liiu k lie oftlieiflost valuable . inpiuti/ f . f ti.K? nary for granted that ever) person will do lO^y. in their power to rave the lives of their vh drea, ana that every person w ill endeavor . promote their own health at all sacriticea. ? , ,r I feel it to bo my duty to solemnly nasi with you that WORMS, according to the opini lerly of the moat celebrated physicians, are I moc- primary' causes of a large miuoritv of diei sea to. which children and adult* are Hub! nera " >'ou bnve nn "pp^t'to continually chnngi e gn ble from one kind of food to another, 1) breath, pain in the stomach, picking at t 1 nose hardness and fullness of the bel^p, <1 cough, slow fever pulse irregular?reme ntthe ber that nil these denote. Worms, rud'j' linens should at once apply the remedy? t the HQ BENS A CJCS WORM SYRUP riimj ^ jn An article founded upon scientific nrin pica, compounded with purely vegetable si . stances, being perfbetly safe w hen taken, n can bo given to tho most tender infant w t'bu decided beneficial effect. Where Bov Complaints and Dinrrhtea have madtTThl litted weak and debilitated, tho tonic properties for. my Worm Syrup are such, that it star terml wothout an equal in the catalogue of mc lack c'neB 'n tnv'?KtotK> nnd strength to the ato f neh, which makes it nn infallible remedy I ?[. ? those nfllicted with Dvspepsia. The nst< tiling ishing cures yerfoniiod by this syrup, af ucted physicians have failed, is the best wider light of its superior efficacy, over all others. oped. THK TAPE WORM ed to and This is tho most difficult worm to destr t ag_ of all that infest the human system. It gro to an almost indefinite length, becoming .. coiled and fastened in the intestines a sell- stomach, affecting tho health so, sadly, a* lead* cause St. Vitus' Dunce, Fits, &#., that the u to afflicted seldom if ever suspeet that it is Ta m of Worm hastening them to an early grnvfi. t and order to destroy this w orn a very energe treatment must be pursued. It would, the hol|v f?rc? be proper to take 6 to 8 of my Lit r' Pills, so ns to remove all obstructions, tl the Worm Syrup may act direct upon t some worm, which must bo taken in doses ol How- tablcspeoufals 3 times a day. These din tions followed have never been know n to f pint, in curing the most obstinate ease of Ta rimi- Worm. i aud ta of If on EX SACK'S LIVER PILLl 115 No port of Ihc system is more liable -diarase than the LJVKR, it sorting iu mat- flltcrer to purify the blood or giving t mici- proper secretion to the bile; no that a rfetv action of the Liver affect* the otli . > *' important part* of the system, and resu variously in I4v?r Complaint, Jaundice, I>) pepsin, &e. We-ahould therefore w?t V or every symptom that might indicate a w roi ill l>e notion of the liver. These l'illa being coi x-te<l posed of Roots and I'lunU furnished by .r rnd ture to heal tho sick, viz: 1st. An EXPE' TORANT, which segments the seerctii have the pulmonary mucua membrane, i promotes the discharge of secreted math > ' id. An ALTERATIVE, "which changes im* s<?nie inexplicable and insensible manner t " 'KS certain morbid action of the system. 3d fft/?n TONIC, which gives tone and strength I Gr the nervous a) stem, renewing health ai Miss vigor to all porta of the body. 4th. A C. I)r. THARTIC, which acta in perfect hartno Geo. w'^ the other ingredients, and operating < i>nle how-els, and expelling the whole mas* A. ' corrupt and vitiated matter, and purifyii V?1"* the blood which destroys disease and rest or km- health. ' Dr. * 4 to rpnrAr?? J! ''* You will fmd Hic-ac PLUs w invnluai , medicine in rnnot complaint* to whirh yl ' are subject. In obstructions either total ?ct partial, they have been found of inestimal benefit, restoring their functional arrajj i pe menta to a healthy action, purify ing the blo< riven and other flaki* ao effcctualljr to put to Dig all complainta which mav ariae from feliu nigh Irregularities, aa headache, giddiuc^, dil I neaa of sight, pain in the aide, buck,&c., ai ' m ,4 offered the public aa the beat Pills for all d eases, npOD the following. . ' MEDICAL EVIDENCE iKY. Wt, the undersigned Physicians, havii i 0. had the receipt of their manufacture aubm ted to ua for Inspection, My, that the ingi K. dienta of which they are composed mak them She best Pill in use fdr all disuses iiEsa the liver, Impurities of the Blood, dir. V any thia not only from our own judgmei d the but alao from that of the beat medical a "if- thority In the United States. All diaeaa requiring the use of an ALTHIUTIV DIAPHORETIC and PURGATIVE &E ICINE, that came under our notice, I uut be , , treated with the above Pills with the rnc satisfactory success. j GEORGE WOOD. M. D. IS Sl F. CROWIJSY. M. D. U BOWEN. M. D. ra. Purahaas none but tboae liaving the ai Jan- nature. M J. N. HOBENSACR," upon e? ntnin box, aa all otlierasre worthlean imitation*. 11 in- Agenta w ishing now supplies, and all <>t wing era wishing to become agenta, must uddr. intel- the Proprietor, i. N, HOBENSACR, at I etion laboratory, No. 1'JO North HECONDatrs above Race, PHILADELPHIA. Hold by all Druggists and Merchants |1 the Ujuittd States. 6 Pamphlets giving Certificate*ofcures j>, 76 the agents. mail, ????????? *r. OAKS ORSEOET f MdMxactl ipfi ( fl miles sobtm or lahcamtbb s. ?. ) SDVAftD UYOUMXQB. Primniw TfcWKMUUft: *1 Rev. D. P. Kmmmv, Ik W. Qtnu, R. D. M. ihfni.4v? RRUMciiri ffiA lll/UH I>?AFFM L.?. WilLU^tC Jiai .'ft HI rO?#W? .JfiV'-'i'" 'I &. flpllE Aodtiaii jrwr tanaMi Ail- JL< woiwt; 4he tot wmipu an UK'S tA?, Mo?d?* in Nonnnibe*, kind ntott the : imv. Fr^iwiu AK'Wnod UM Odojwn^on *? 4 L- in ApftUnod -4<?*onto?4h* iMTal day In Bepteabnr. . v i ~i ? v >' Inlw ?l T?ltt*n Pw mmIn one Rntof. Writing,gpolRftyfll n: '' ! *' AIM m* MtofrHfcniM>y, ~ ChrotaWV/A^wmhy, (itofcfy.rf a Uf ^k^fwwwiJiNk IMfliJS^re and mkAim U ?tl It M^UmEni On Iwitiiil ? If dtt iMnMnin of It* I fer ?4*, SaiBiSi^iro " ipnr. torn*. 10 : * . i 1 ANOTHER SCIENTIFIC WONDER > _ GREAT CURE FOR - a^i^i'KPSiA. iQpglJttfUOHTON'S \?I The true Digestive FloM, or Gastric Juied , prepared from Rennet, or the .fourth stom, ache of the Ox, after direction* from Barort ^ Liebig. the great Physiological Chemist, by m" J. 8. Ilonghton, M. 1)., Philadelphia, Pa. ou This is truly a wonderful remedy for in' degestion, Dyspepsia, Jaundice, Liver Com' plaint. Constipation and Debility, curing aff? ter Nature's own agent, the Gastric Juice. py Haifa tea spoonful pf Pepsin, infus1 j ed in wnter, wttl digest or desolve Five Pounds of Roast Beef, in about two hour*/ ' i oat of the mmarh. + JL Pops?nm-*h> shiaf hmnnh.nr Great Di' f vesting Principle pf .tha Gastric Juice?the' , Solvent of the food, tlie Purifying, Preaerv-'\-H ing snd stimulating agent of the stomnch and ' intestines. It is extracted ftflm the digestive j?1* stomach of the ox. thus forming an artificial ?r digestive fluid, precisely like the natural j " Gastric Juke In Its Chemical powers, and 1[ furnishing a complete and perfect substitute >c< for it. By the aid of this preparation, the pains and evils Of Indigestion and Dyspepsia are rcmoxed, just as thoy would be by s healthy stonuieh. It is doing wonders for ?* Dyspeptics, curing cases of Debility, Emaciw* stion, Nervons Ikeline, and Dispeptic Con* M! sumption, supposed to be om tho verge of " the stave. The leienlifie said?cc upon which it is based, is in the highest degree ,#e curious and n-inarkabie. J? SCIENTIFIC EVIDENCE. t:r Baron liebig in his celebrated work on ^ Animal Chemistry, says: uAn artificial difestive fluid, analogous to tho gastric juice, int may be readily prepared ftom the mucous l')(i membrane of the atomaeh of tho calf, in Pwhieli various articles of food, as meat and re- w'" *** changed nnd digested, ail !0*t ,n ,'*C ?nlnc manner a? they would be in the human s/amaeh." ^ l)r. Comb*-, in his \ alunbte writings on the u Physiology of l):gc?ii u," observes that "a diminution of the duequnntily of the gr.s' trie juice ia a prominent and all prevailing lo cause of Dyspepsia; n and he states that tt a , n distinguished Professor of Medicine in Lenin. don, who wns severely afflicted with this nv complaint, finding everything else to fail, had l>r recourse to the gastric juice, obtained from l,M the stomach of living animals, which proved H w? in- j-rrjrcny avcceaajul," Dr. Graham, author of th* Jhuioua woik^ on * VywHn Diet," says : '* It is a remarkJ[ a bio fuel in physiology, that the stomachs of " animal*, macerated In water, impart to the ( " fluid the property of cKseofring various arti^ olen of food, and of effecting a kind of orfi/f? or rial iteration of them in no wine different from ?ho natural digHtbee proem." in Cal on the Agent, and get a dcscripLe tive circular, gratis, giving a lar[e amount of ^ scientific evidence, aimilnr to tfy* above, toto w'^ reports of romnrkitMc cures, froit* j all parts of the United Ntaten. J? A? A DYSPEPSIA CURE, Dr. Hoaghton'a Pepsin has produced tin* moat marveltmt effect*, in curing cases of d??bility, emaciation, nervous decline, mid d vs. vVrtiaemrht* btit authenticated certificates have been given of more than tiro hundred rrftfitkaMi cure* in Til if; id olefin, Vew York, ahd'Bftstoti alone.' Tnesc were iiearlvr.il tie (desperate costs, and the cures were not onlv utr | rapid and w underfill, but permanent, or It ia u great nerruua antidote, and partieulie I larlv useful fm iiinitM^.? * " L ? > > uinou* aisordc r, rc- liver complaint, fever and ague, or badly treaud ted fever and ague, and the evil effects of ht quinine, tfercary, and Other drops upon the tie digestive orpsns, after a lonp sk.-lr"aea. Alm so, fbr excess in entinp, and the tw o frequent nd use of ardent spirits. It almost reconciles is. hmlfh with intemperance. OLD STOMACH COMPLAINTS? There is no form of "Id timnach complaint* ' which ft d"es not seem to reach and remove up nt once. No matter how bad they may belt. it gives in*lant rplptf I A Single dose rere. moves all unpleas*ht?yn)ptoms; ami, it Only ea needs to be repented far a short time to make of theao good effects pernumeat. Putitu of Ve hody ami riffor ?/blood follow at once. It is ut, particularly excellent in cases of nausea, vomB itinp, crumps, soreness of the pit of thu tes etomarh, distress after eating, low, cold state K, of thfc blood, heaviness, lowneea of snjrits. LK despondency, Usidcney to lAsaahy, sllcide en fee., &c. ' . _ , *t r Dr. Houphton'a Pepsin Is sold by pearly all lbs dealers in fine drugs, and popular med icines throuphont the United mates, it is prepared in powder and fluid form, and in pr scription vials for the use of physicians, ijf- Private circulars for the use of phi sicians, ch may be obtained Of Dr. Houghton or kia v perils, describing the whole prooeaa of h- purution, and giving the autbodtka ?a whfth the claims of this new remedy are ils based. As H is not ft bierM remedy, no obSt jsctlofts against Its nae es? W? raised by phel '< oiuns in respects bio staining apd regular in prw'.iee. PrWt vn? dollar per Utile, , Oftfcrte Mw.? bu r* bottle of the irenuine 1 iAUna.aa w ? ... rr.r ctf.-y, win tfe ? ntleti ?Jcnw??re of J _ K. IKu^fctvo, M. D., m l? proprietor, fj?iU uf *V>Vbpy-rifft ?tW. tr.idr iu?*t m 0. H . W. A Mofrinof* <t Co WimwWro s Dr. f. F. Carti*, (totofliMta ; tH. J. A, JW<-4? CW fovriMe ; Crtton. rb.irir*U>n; '. . the infiitiiKk* tn-t (IIkam** of Oms ^aiMpay*-huod amMJW w ho npprt'liMul <>r ,s. eulfV-r umlor tK? dire eai)?^aHrM of 'early > jj #r prolosged lndtaereUowe?4# ail wHu fe?l? ,4 IIm exlw*uwtr?e olt'efU uf IbtiMrfvl |pk>U >to ih *W ?bo hi mUUOo* U? feeUmsf phyaiaai ?-* ri. thw victUu* ttf Oorvova a?4 maaUl i Hi3.it:>.- - F jsd&tmt awafSfc k i iR ? 1111H jukisTT , >0 T)M? v*ltuy? wrtfrft **i s ,j Tl, W. conwr of M jMm w???n. street, be u H? ?k?J?*M ktj?ln?*? Ibwul 1 fL if Mkk ^-ll-> ?? - - -* ?- I 1_ L nn^e w. ^ ^||^imu ! ammitM may add hm* Bm&? FRb, r ? <?