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w -__ -- _FOR THE DISSEMINATION OF USEFUL INTELLIGEC awra. DoLLAs A. YEAR7 ] WEDNESDAY MORNING,NOVEN . ..4 -..:I-. FO,H.ISMNAINO SFL NELGNE gvftt WKDNESRAY Moms ING, ss l vberry C. U., PE .UM, IN ?URREMOT fa saw OR PROVISIONS. ,aI v,d.r 4 t aebl *in advance. -finerai- vatbin,- Obit domncationas prvat q .a rredvrtiemaents g s-TI . U an'TUESDAY the 26th of sr-a ta: thS1tat- resideoce of :2.KflkD. dee'd. -ll the -.1i dee'd, co*siating SFAMILY n ; nBroodMares. _. d Colt. ine young Mules. . ne targefine Devon Bull. - orty or Mty head Cattle. torfrty head Hogs, ,*4 and Harness. SP1ements. ~orp. 8 5': a e eat.. and Cotton Seed. Oe- Thrasher. ' OFan. * D4ori Sheller. : Straw-utter. igsmith's Tools. - e1 and Kithei ~~~- - RM t n Kic and nang. other " esL.' & tbAdsy of .Sae the ~ofl wleh.: T- ~Kidrd -Mthe benefit'of -C E,jnsrd, to was 'yebyf. T. Ki O -23 -Agent -~ hadave-an hand a. Stoek iGroceries, ~W~*.VU seigi,s T4W as~ they cap be ."b. gh.u lauy np.country market, a O~1oExhtg9' Fo Cmtry Prodc. .PANKLNIN, '& ~~' Carleston, S. C. SRepublican Ticket. At a cenve'ntionl of the Republican party ,e4ithe~ town of Newberry, on the 4t1 Nb~efollowing candidates wpre nmi asedfor the convention:i LEE NANiCE, colore'd, 'p. 0. DUNG AN, white, A S. HENDERSON, colored. N*y,u'Gazry Chairmnan. SOUTHERN CULTIVATOR, * - IWF1DLJSBED UONTlILY, -T ATHENS, GEORGIA 3s3. ZEDNOND & JAMES ANAl, Tma-....Two Dollars pe'r year, or $1 ft azmonths-, Fifty Cents for- three month in adva gCop1 ,TftY Cent 1 stray Mulee *~DnJ~Y ilARS -MULE left is of the 17'bimst..i i yeaIid. Anyfibfomi cojIgher wilt be tha'akfu1WT ad reSIward of 1uteen Dolla~rs gil ~)ct2~443 Near Iberty fa'll. The Wife of Piero Brunoro. When the battle of Negropont brought sorrow and desolation to hundreds of families, a brave offi cer named Brunoro ldy on the bat tle field in the agonies of death. His noble deeds had excited admi ration, and the soldiers under his command had fought like lions, as they heard his inspiring words. As-'a pitying soldier removed the. sword still grasped by- the liand iiovopo*erless to defend the cause of his country, and. opened tl tiek- military coat, to give. the suferer air, a smalt, miniature er rbed.t.the ground, which the dying hand vainly sought. The soldier -restored it to the bosom fron. which it- had fallen, and as he did so it'was unclasped, dosdlosed~the! feasures of :a o'uong and beautiful face, soft and sweet as a woman's. Had it- not been for the military garb -cloth ing all that was visible of the fig ure, the man would have declared it that of a girl in the first sweet passing away of childhood. The .dying officer pressed his hand up:. on the cherishe.d picture, and held it kith all'his.failing.Strength. "-I is his.son'- perhaps," thought thesoldier as her poured between the purple lips a drop or two ofgpirit .ls canteen. It re vived th vdffi r for a .momeri a b h&ioIdier. looked- around fior help ".o carry him from the' spot-where h_e-iay, .5 wfnan, pale, ebtke, gnu tottering, .approached tliem. She was of slight stature, and evidently far adpneed, in ears. She uttered no loud cry, but- as she-looked upon-the dying face, which kindled with an ex pression of radian-t joy as she came near, she only., said, softly, "My Piero, fsit thts r must see you leave me ?" "Dear, good Bona," came slow ly from the dying man's lips, jw}oukl you. have it otherwise.? It is a glorious death, is it not:? So -else'should a soldier depart?'" 'She fell ob her knees beside hito and .kissed him.' When she lifted her fabe agairf;tiere-vas no moe thent-:-tifi soul hi'd pa'ssed in,t.hat Prief embrace. Calm and com= ,poscd,.as if itwas an- event -she 1d long beon; ;aitrng.for; she di eet6d the soldier to bring help o .bcar he dead to.a ~use near, t0e.'ittlefeld, nor did. she. vetti -ntil she-eatrght sight of the _pic ture lying- across tho mbtionless breaist. "It was mine," she -sot>bed, in answer to the questioning look of the,soldier. "He has alway's worn it.. He is mfy husband.''" ~The lan.co of thesoldier showed him ,that the features and expres sion were indeed the - same,-a though the faded face bore smal -ace of'the ipon\haf the:piture Wcrt ~.Qie 'thiiig he. obse?ved, 'btt the look had not. hardened by ag, i as soft and-sweet as when the artist -fiad' touched it years be-. fo-e. .rier Bi-unoro was borne.to his gatest, followed -by brave men who knew his worth, and - valued -li aideordiglf. ~There werg the,ofj'igh deeds and .noble hearts, and there were eFownec .eads, too, that did homsnge to the minory -of the faithful soldier And there, too, the little, pale faded woman, in a carriage by her self; close behin d -th e funeral bie r was clasping her withered handi to- her breast, and softly repeating "My Piero, not long shall we b separated." At the gate of the church-yar< the procession stopped. A mai of high-rank, an officer in the Nee politan army, who- wore his title by right of-a noble and unstarne ancestry, and badges of honor fo his own courageous deeds, opene the carriage door and lifted ou the occupant, wh6se weight wa as light as a child. She could ne stand-a moment, and he bore he to the,.side of the bier. Brunoro handsome -brow, searce altered i years, with its crown of darl cuiling locks, lay there upturne to the sun ; and the officer yielde to hei--evident struggle to kne< beside him. Her head was upo that face so long that they feare she had fainted Tenderly as o1 would touch an infant the offic< raised her head, and -as tender] laid it upon the long grass at h feet. "'They will be parted no moi rfor ever," he whispered to.one b ,hind -hirni. "She has had her~ wli .-to die byhis coffin." -In an apartment of the king: ~palace of, Algenio of {aple years before this event, a -womi was admitted, after -long waitin to th~e sovereign'. She was vsmal.lstature. fair and comely, b Sno longer..young. -So pure, ai heoaenly was her conntenan( I that she might have walked through the earth unharmed.- ] Meekly and modestly she api proached Alphonso and besought him to grant her a single ,boon. "Whatever you ask shall be be-: stowed, fair lady,"- was the kind' ] response. .She blu,shed at his compliment and -diselai med it. "I am not.fair, sire." said she. "More than forty years have passed over me, And-rnost of them.i y.ears of anxiety ad 'sorow, but it is in your majesty's power to i relieve me from all further grief." i . "Tell me how, dear lady,".said 1 the king. 1 "By restoring to his freedom one who .was unjustly deprived of it," she replied. "For years I have wearied the, ears of every prince in Italy'to giant me this, but all in-vain. -:Piero Bruenoro, a brave and gallant soldie7rdies a prisoner within the old castle of .Valentia, for revolting against Storza." "And what is Piero':Brunoro to you-father or brother ?" .4 blush as faint as, th; twhich '.dyes the -heftrtof- the" white .rose stole .ever her.faded eheek, ' she answer.ed, ".Nei-ther,sire he is my betrothed husband" Briefiy'sbe then relatedl to the king.witb a touchinrg- simyp1itity and earnestness.tbat:sh']hd,been 'p,b'aned L. thise years of age.; t at .$runoro had aved her' from want when he was a mere youth; that',having -not female relatives, he had kept.her beside him. and nobly and delicately. guaded her with a bothe's t,enieness, and with more than a brother's fond est affeetion ; tiat he had been ar rested and thrown itito prison, whither she was not permitted to follow him ; and that; grown des perate by the continued imprison ment that was awaiting him, she had come to lay her heart at her sovereign's feet, and entreat him s Christiaimr tan :Od hris tiari king to strike off the fet,ers ofa SOeeply inj Zrcd. fel?bunieig; her voice gathered strength as she spoke, and hei-little fgure di }"ted itir the emotions -under. which she iabored. 'Alphonso looked at her with adlni'ition. JRei Jong 4black 'h.iti t wieh dr~ yiitermiit a few threa ls which sorrow. not age b.Ad.ouced eithbsu'Iy, -ere 'tidoti' nacka from her faceraa'dher pale white:. -hands. were clasped. upon her" bosom. "Lady,". said the king, "you shalkyorrow :phonso of Naples can prevent it." * He: drew -a small writing-desk towards him and'.seleded~two-rolls .of-parElAnein,. Hiiga few .wprds on each. To' the dim eyes that looked u on tli,em theter!,as but .a sigshiMoMtWha seemed Jeg.ile'vbut as the -mist pf lbars. -ceared away tte gVojk b&fem ,isble to . her -seuses. ;.One ..roll contained the order for Peo u noro's release from inmpri soninieu, the otherap,poiritn lpgnito a high post iod arnwiye emolu nm,eats. Q.rateiauly sh- -knelt! and wept--her -thanks.; antgXih,a hearty. .ble.ssi,ng f r4em .zhe - ood Kiyig .AIphonso':she 'adsparted to carry. the wrelecie''Mbwa to 'the pisoner. Ten years of wveary imprison ment had doebteir .work upon the powerful frame of Brunoro, but-.the strong heVrt they. could not subdue. That was. gtill. true to the little maid,en whom he had always loved :mnd 'many sa -weary hour had been cheered by the re membrance of her whom his cruel enemies would not allow to share his confinemen t, as she had desired 1to do. Half-wakig, half' dream ing, he sat on the small, wretchedl b e"d at the hour of twilight. The door had unclosed so lightly, that he had not heard it, but a breath was upon his ebeek. and a soft t voice in his ear, that brought back ra reme mbrance of lon,< ago. In shis abstracted state he whispered, 'Bona! beloved Bona ! when will you come ?" And the sweet voice answered, "I am here, clear Piero! I will never leave you again." n She trembled as she spoke, for d hardly had the sound left her lips, when the poor prisoner fell down r like one dead. "I have killed him !" she shrieked : and the be nevolent jailer, hearing her words, rushed into the dungeon. -e It was long ere Piero Brunoro e- awoke to. the full consciousness h of the freedom z.waiting him. It wasjoy enough to-hold the beloved .y- Bona to his heart, and look ,2po s, her face, which althoughi pale a.nd a withered from its first bloom, waE g, dear as ever to him. Th~en eane of the added joy of knowing that she at was the same as -when she had fol d lowed him to the 'camp, a child , disg-se as a pme-fr thus hac .he dear Bona accompanied tier >reserver. Brunoro had no moth rnor sister with whom to trust :he precious child, and he had Iressed her like a boy, to save her 'rom the coarse admiration which ier beauty might have drawn from ;h.e rude soldiers, - Always . kind, thoughtful, and lelicate, he had watched over her, ittle dreaming that one day she ,vould be wearing. out her heart or his misfortunes.. When Bru ioro was taken prisoner, Bona, in a her page's apparel,- and answer ng to the -name of Alberto, at ;empted to force her way into the Yrison. The officers who arrested aim refused all but a parting word. 4 That parting was as solemn as eath. The - girl'a -cheek was Dlanchcd--to a deathiy hue, and Piero was suffering martyrdom in 6he thought of what the beautiful hild might be exposed to when ieprive.d of her protector. Sor o .and heartbreaking .foliowed her, but it adode no less with him. Dften,in.his dreams, he had- seer. her in the peaiis, which in his wak:1 ing momeitts, he had-shndied to think' df. ~.It had all pa .e4 _ow and the Future"bore'a bud of iromise3vhich Kould out-bloonz all -thei -hope.s: .When .Brun ozo .ad; recovered . from the-illness- ^hich 'a sudden change had occasioned,;thiy. were arried. Always from t ia.t tme, Bona claimed the right. to .follow her husb;tnd in 'his . wanderings, and it. was.only: a momentary. ab sence tlit hadeprevented herfr~om seeing hing fail; <when th tereible: stroke came npon hbr -beloed. She heard lhim utttcr his- last audi ble words, as the friendly' officer supported her to his ,side-"Love, you promised never to leave me again." There was a brief sepa ration indeed, between two souls sb intwined in each othei'. In that'eternal woril to whkh Bona. had 'followhe ' liei;, be!ved there was a speecly re-union. No more hertbreak-no. more sorrow. They -laid them in the same grave.. Thero was- little need of the grey mnarble stones, for thoir nemri-e 'ere kept green and .-sa redbvz1l who kne' them.in life; and what does posterity care for departed good&s? t:.ARRI-ED.* SAm .ROOM.- A t a at-eo hor inthe revn ing n '>arty of yontig'g:fleihef and two young ladies arrive-d- at a hotel in St. 'Paul. Tie several individuals edire- sepaiate rooms, -though al belonged to the.same party.;an'd it did not seemunreAsonaMe that-the tw.o' ladies ishoild occnpy one room, while the two gentlemen ocenpienother. On acedunt of~ thui*ddat of the hotel. it was foun m mpossible to. give each 'a gej'iarate .iooin,:and they. were so Thiorned. They then retiired 'to the hglie& parlorgand. hekdha coun .il .Of w:au-ii tkie'-suhjeets of the manner in'which t ey wer etuobe ac nmodated. ^'Aftei a short time, ne oft the yodnggentlemenl sought an intervietW ith'the proprietor 'ofh hotel, dad mi'd .he thought. he .utLgr culd-lIge ..satisfactorily arranged if .tg proper officials could be procured. . -What' officials'c doau require. my dear sir?" was the very polite but peremptory request of the host. He replied that either a clergy man. or a justice of the peace would' answer. No sooner said than done ! A jnstice of the p)eace was summoned, and,. in abouit three minmutes, the young an and one of the young ladies were made flesh, accordi-ng to the statute in sue case made and provided. This little ceremony, costing the hotel nothing, and only in volving the parties in the expense . of the fee to the justice and the revenue stamp on the marriange certificate, saved to the hotel one room, which was soon after let to an elderly gentleman from the up country, at the rate of $3 a day. DATH OF AN OLD PRINTER. We notice with regret in the Balti more Sun of Monday last, the an nouncement of the death of Mr. J. B. Nixon, formerly of Charleston. Mr. IN. was well known to the mem Ibers of the craft, having for -many years carried on business in .tbe Palmetto City. Some six or eight years since he sold out his office, and has since been engaged in va rious occupations, at one timc keeping a hotel. and afterwards running a :panorama and acting as agent for different exhibitions. Mr. Nixon was a natieof-e w Brunswick, but had resided mosi ofMs]ife"Tf the South. H is lage ive thipy , as neaginty;' What kind of a shipMias two--mate ad no captain ? Courtship. Gen. George W. Morgan made a :apital speech at Cincinnati the >ther day, of which the following was the conclusion. It is one of the bravest Northern soldiers who 3peaks and thus pleads for mercy to the conquered and peace to the country: But is no one to be punished ? Punished ! Does that qnestion ema nite from a human heart, or is it in inspiration from a fiend of hell? Punished? Why, my countrymen, aever in the history of civilized warf'are was such dire punishment. nflicted upon a conquered people is that endured by our country nien of the South. Towns and cities sacked and burned. Whole :istricts charred and desolated as if by, the demon of destruction, and millions who were reared .in af luence reduced by the shock of war to penury and want. But. is no one to die? Is no blood to be shed ? Almighty God! No one to dig ! Let the five-hundred thousand Southern graves,,around which the nielaneholy cypress stands as spec tral sentinels no.urning over the victims of a~ fallen cause, answer the hyena cry for 'blool Five hundred'thousand graves, the sad m nments ,of the-erroi' of a heroic but-dfeated pcople. Five hundredf thousand Southern homes - are draped in mourning for the loved ones s ho slumber in defeat be neathi the crimson sod. Five hun dred thousand Southern homes are desolate, and .the night wind, asit aeops'aeross, a hundred, ensan giiined'battle-ields, is still burthen ed -ith the groans~of anguish and the sighs of despair which comes from the'graves of those who died in. a lest and mistaken cause. Five hundred thousand, Southern niotbers, widows, orphans, are the living monunients of the blight of fatilidail war. And who asks fcir vcrgen e more than, this.? What demon in hnmiiinn shape cries for blood ? My' cointryme.n,.. the very earth ijstiIl red. with brothers' blood,dby brothers-shed. Oh; then, let-us taunch the gapirzg wounds of war. and check.the crimson tide as t"ekbbs aay. And our own dirdtierncs: what of' theni ? The laurel blomso'o0pne the graves the starr a -btrer, -under which they 'noit died,.aves over them. Their bodies are* dead, but their names and glorious deeds will live forever. The died for the Union they lo-ved.- for the -flag -they adored, . Oh; my:countrymen, let it nvt,be said that- .they died in vain I But: upon their -tombd, 'to consecrate their deeds, let the temple of the U~nion be restored. Ad let .as all, Northern men . and Southern men, join hand over their'graves and~i swear that our free'o)dsitution shall endure, for Industry--Enlergy. .~ If evcr.there was a time in the history of our country,;that young med should give.evidences of in. d ustry and~ energy, worthy of imi .tatiop, that -timne is now.-The' Ian. guishng condition . of things de mands at the hands of the young men of the present day, upon whose shoulders, sooner or later more grave and weighty responsi bilities must fall, that they shoukc exhibit an untiring spirit in hon est and inldependeint labor. Upor sch the prosperity, and to a cer tan extent, the safety of ou: country depend. Thle time has been, when a young man whos< only ambition was to excel at th< cckpit or in the chase, whose in dividality consisted of a hand somely~ trimmed moustache and fancy' walking cane. could .pas through society with some respect ability. But the result of the lat' war <decided the fate of these air' and brainless coxcombs ; they a no longer resp)ected, but looke< upon, as they should be, as draw backs to all industrial pursuits. Good name and respectability n longer depen~d upon proper'ty, bu upon persevermng exertions to re trieve our lost fortunes, upon enet g, upon industrial enterprise upon merit. The possession of a unsullied character and virtuou p)rinciples cannot be retained b; any one wvho leads a life unemplo) ed~in~ labor, or unoccupied in bus ness. Constant toil, like religior was never dlesigned to make ou pleasure less. Idleness is dange ois both to peace of consclene and morals, and its seductive ir fluences should be guarded againt by all young men who have an ambition t9 become ornaments t ther couty Adivorce:is hinted at betwee <the Princess Alice of Hesse, Vidt< ra's daughter, and her husban< ah is said to silltreat her. At a recent meeting of the Methodist Clergy of Charleston District, the following special re port from the Committee on the State of the Church was adopted: With the close of a sectional war, the disbandment of sectional armies, the removal by emancipa tion of one great cause of sectional strife, thousands of warm,Southern Methodist hearts believed that sec tional church differences were at an end, and looked with eager hope to the early reunion of the two great divisions of American Metho dism. The expectation in the South was general, in this district the hope was almost unanimous. But this bright vision-worthy of millennium-has been rudely dis -pelled, proving that slavery was neither the cause of disruption nor the ground of continued separa. tion. As a representative po:tion of the church, this District Confer once solemnly and in the fear of God disclaims any responsibility for the present awful spectacle of a divided Methodism. With the entrance of the Federal armies to this section came the missionaries of the 3, E. Church (North), who ,were most affectionatelvy: and .armJy wecomcd-by your, people. They were imvi.tcd .to oit.4omes 'and; in' t'he absen.ce of our own pastors, as brethren beloved, cheer fully given pdgscssion. of our pul. To our horror -and ~disappoint ment when our own .pastora re turned, ,these. missionaries,. who had breathed only-brotherly -affee tion,.rejused them admittance to their o*n pulpits, and turned upon us with military. orders, :under which they -laimed. forcible and continued possession ofour church property, and still so hold'some of it, despite our. remonstrances- and entreaties. Spring-street, Church, Charles ton,, cost us $26,000. . Of this amount, $275 was contributed.' by the' coloured .membership, now- its occipants., in the name of the M. E. Church (North), and this trans action is permitted by a church nunibering'ifs millions of d6llars, collected in' 'celebration of its cen tenarv ! What a erowing act to the centenary of Methodism ! We call Icavn and earth to witness. that as a ohurch, we are free from the guilt of dishonour entailed by such acts upon our common Mother. We most solemnly deny, what has been charged against us, that we are in any~way responsible for the revulsion of public sntiment in this section again.<'t' the M.L E Chure.h (North), or ard in any shape or formlhe anthors of the profougl contemnpt.in .which its naine is now held, nor .of the ab hotioPnce with which its agents here arc now regardeo.' They and they alone, are the sol& anithiofs ( this infamy, and we dan dury wegI over the indellible dishononir thr.e inheri-ted by our common Metlkud. .im.This ~Confercee, however cannot but believe 'that the Bishops and leading .men of 'thk M. E Chureb~ (North), arc misled by tfl nj isrepresentations. of their local agents--therefore, .Resolved, 'That the Secretary b< hareby instructed to' furnish at official dopy of this declaration t( Bishops Morris, Jnnes and Simp son, in the full expectation thta they will interest themselves foi the protection of the fair name o their church, and the enforcemen of justice ; and that copies -b>e fur nished to the Christian Advocat -and .Metho list, in New York, wviti a request to publish them. The western nortion of ou Stown, for some ntights during th p)ast week. wvas disturbed by th noise of some people who hav' their own particular way of enjoy -ig themselves. and who seem t -pursue it, regardless of propriet; or respect for the feelings of oth ers. Near the scene of these ot toies one of our most respectabl citizens was uplonl his bed of death -with his afflicted family arouni him. Death comes to him, and o1 .Friday night last, whilst his re mains are still in his -house, t'h vulgar noise is renewed and cor tinued. "Our quiet eommmunity hav long endured this and similar not turnal nuisances. beIf these pei eformances could berestricted t respectable hours they might b Sbearable. Rut honest, industrion people, use the night for sleep ari rest, and to have these disturbe iagrevance too intolerable t be borne.-Sumter Watchman. -Several "gifted but eccentric" artisi ,say the most difficult thing to draw is sohor brcemth. verton. We fnd in the New York Her ald, the following ictter-froi the llo. Mrs. Yelverton, the'usiforta nate victim of. the Xelverton di vorce case. I notice in a recent number of the NTc. York lerald that,'in ac cordance with tie piiactice of an cient and inodern authors:" I am about to give readings from. my own writings.. I -iniuft -ask you kindly to correct the eror;-aad try to explain that the "Yeltertoa correspondence" alluded to is nothing more 'nor less than the love letters written to "my hus band, Major Yelverton pr i and subsequently to our ill starred marriage. .They were written by [the silvery mopztbeams that -light the shores.df h6 glade-M45iter ranean, for onebeloved-eye-alone, or by the still moi-e'iystis ores. of thie Bosphor"~;, -i-gh'of the very tower whe3eropiried ub til Leander bfsi ele'httaeher ous wave. They werd the-'out -burst,of a you g ieart,; belieying, with earnest. faith,jn alt that is beautiful in. God's -creationK-the 4ret bloom of the. pIurt, -the :brat perfume of the7bud, whieh.htfter sinie .a desfrby4?-W1'atevee-itheir merits as "trray ipduetions, wffif eher tiir interest 7 emo -tional effu'sionls 'I'dlo aire. To-me thes_are the o i rlies of "loves yonga ' .d~now tliat the heart is brokein and the object they rs addressbdio dead to.tne---a-nmeiea gerer, unknown, iicidafd. Thd6(let te's are the s_pb cre:or f iI ral urn 'which containj4l6e ashes o all that ever vas, of t , atc.ir.can be, end it wrold. seeur d:ese cration to me tQ-cxpose.-:tbenfor the criticism or amnsement of the -public. - True, they re' been +-rought before the tstonished gaze of"betigged lawg's to in terpret or misinterprt,..to,,the best or :wrst of. h eir ..6iy,.ae cording to the. side theywere-"en gaged in.. True, that -two judges on the bench- have beep nov d' to tears in quoting them: " uit is that most people have 'an in ei b1e euriosity abot IPv6. letters, tor tlhe ,reaeon+ givc ,aby the F r o e c h p o e t . : -a g n e t t r -: Q~ui que ttreois%ct.i - t es$, it fut, oWil - Those wlQ .have. t. n4 eenl i love wish 'te gcrtain preeisely what it is like; Josc who have, wish to renew, i,Loly for .-- mo nent the-. 1easant delu ?ois... I ah;l be most.happy tO. contribiute to'these Elysian dreams, .by ren deriifk, to the best of' nfy abIiiy,. the li>yesof Heroit fld'b'elar'd, or n'importei baital -r.imst Ts .poet the-gr.een-tmef radW growmhg -ov.ex Lire. grave:of my own. , sir, yom:s trul.y,-. ER EVETON. ALBERMARLiKo gL, Oct 21,.18. PLArT Wn HEA -We in i -,that the coetten pafiTeis ~'f Georgia .should set about a oggee -the -.pre paratiori of it.fas.less effimth of tIheir best lnd foz, .wheaM. -lean the land nicely?and plough it dep Seed at sufficient quantity per tiere. and harrow it Well in. ,This Nl insure heavier erops.' Buit . the great point is to1 -eiihi.d ' few (days it will' be. toQi late,. es pecially for" vbeat.lyeand oas will do.rery wel1aowed atergbut will make much heasiet~ eve!Mf put in early. - . The planter who sfabbornl.yry fuses to see the doe~nfall of 4640i raising, and bliiidly persists in the continuation of its~ culture, is sow to the winds, and in good time will .certainly reap the whirlwind. That class we know will not- put "their houses in-rder" by a time ly and judicious change of pro ducts. They inust have another -year's bitter experience with poor Smules, and starving stouk, and hungry stomachs, and low-priced -cotton. But those who would avoid a repetition, next year, of Sanxiety, and care, and mortifica tion, and failure of the present season will eschew cotton. ([Chronicle and SentineL -During the "Black Hawk 'War", 3one Major P-. ., feelng himsbif - not exactly poste4 respecting 'the enemy, sought imformation okfene of his~ brother officere in this.wisE: -"Cap'en, wvbich of the Injuos are -the most savage-the hostil6 ones: > or them that go.o.n.foot?" A n exchange paper says: "Tha i girls of some parts of Pennsyl i vania are so hard up for husbada E ttiat the somnetimes takei up7 with > prin ters and lawyers." . . An exchange asserts thpthere i, i'man in Georgia so big that be. a fishes with a railroad line and