University of South Carolina Libraries
TWO ^OLff^l fSjT AifNJJB. r *?.vwiijif) if... r VOLtJME 4. HfUMt tt I-fi^3<.i*41 ,?,!?.??! I Tl.] I ? iii?>.?ri 1<i MivlalU ?rfi io\ .?statt* ' ri?<< !y?;.?^?> j? . do:inuc .i(,f.:-f j? Ifen II.w ?I i vnc.:i: l*tr ??lf j b*lma?d ;?t?w ! mil .0731 ?f .lOHAtf /fACUtJT ,f * 1 . ' - Meal lad&MMpi 97*4 ? nq ?>al4 1 oo ,\?viM -.!*.t a itm^i >? - ttaiMMio . U :y.[1 .w;ii?Jl uioitato' i5Toort<??-il<i,i ? ?sawajac &7*n e*'nq ?* ?-to;? e*ll4|H#0 AT OBAWGIBURG, 8. O. ?:o:? <*JTAS. ff. HALL et CO. ?WD PROPRIETORS. TERMS OP SUBSCRIPTION. One Cepv for an? year. $2.00 4? 4? sis Monthn. 1.00 Any one, sending TKN DOLLARS, far a I Clnb of .'New Subscribers, will receire aa EXTRA CorY for ONE TEAR, free of oharg'tt. ' Any one sending PIVE DOLLARS, fcr a Club of New Subscribers, will receive aa EXTRA COPY for SIX MONTHS, free of I OP ADVERTISING. t Square 1st Insertion. $1.60 j ?4 .r?. fr) m . i.oo K Square consists ef 10 liaee Brevier or eue leek of Adverwtifag npr.ee. Aeadaanrtrator'i Notices, .-...$6 00 .Neficcs of Dismissal of Guardians, Ad ministrators, Executors, Ac.-$9 00 <?ifc*tlt Advertiseiaenfa inserted upon the vnostfilseval tertse. ? ?to:? MARRIAGE and FUNERAL NOTICES, not ee leeorag one Square, inserted without ?karge. ?ar Terms Cash iu Advance. -?? F. M. WANNAMAKER, ATTORNEY AT lAW, Will be at ORANGEBURO, en Mondays, ' Fridays and Setardaye. At LBWIST1LLE ea the ether days ef the Week. feb IS . tf .-^_-1 Augustus B. Knowlton, Alloru?ijr a% CoaHNcIIwr aU Leyv. AT LRWI8VILLE.?Wednesday and Sat tirday. Besides aa "Oakland" near Fort Motte? 4. C. dee 18 Sat UW JfOTIajJK. DeTreville & Sistruiik, AtTOHNKYS AT LAW, ORAMSntTRO. S. <, P. O. Statac**., urn ???? ?in "tfc?r GLOVER ft GLOVER, ATTORN K YS abb C*UXSEt.^OEta AT LAW, ORANGSBURG C. H., 8. C. Taes. W. Gl?vbb. lfoariuaa Glovkb. >-? _, u HDTS0NS & LEGARE ATTORNEYS AND SOLICITORS. Will attend the Courrs in Orangeburg, Harswall and Beaufort, and theUaited State? Ceuvte. OFFICB AT ORANGEBURG, 8. C. W. M. Horaow. W. P. Hctsob. T, C. Lbsabb. je* SS e ly IZLA? 4 DIBBLE, ATTORNEY8 AND SOLICITORS. OR A NVXIt CR G\ S. C. Jambs P. Ixlab. 8amcb?. ?ibble. feb SS ? lj MALGOLM I BROWNING, ATTORNEY AT LAW, ORAlVOEfiUttG ?. H?, So. <?n easgSI ly ^MXTEE8lHB"e^ DEXTIST. Will be in Oreageburg ovary Thursday. Priday and Saturday. Office in rear ef BULL, SCO VI LL Sc. PIKE, feb 20 _t? DR. E W. KENNERLY, OBlN?EBlBti, TT AVING REMOVED TO THIS PLACE, JtX Refoectfully offers hia Professional Services to the Ottisens und Viciaity. Office ea Ruaecli Street, oppoaite Bull, ?eevill dt Pike s. 18 2m FACTOR AND COMMISSION MERCHANT, CHARLESTON 8. C. Liberal advances made ea Cotton. WarBBKScss?First National Bank, Peo ple's National Baak, Messrs. Jno. Fr?ser k Co., Charleston, 8. C. july 81?ly g^AUtnvr MAKKK AND UN* l^y DKRTAKER?I respectfully solicit work ia tl.e above line, sack as Coffin* of all styles, repairing Old Puraitcre, putting New Cane Bottoms in Chairs, and all other work ia ike above line done with neatness and eiapatca. AU work warranted. Give see a trial. B. J. LOYD, Market-84,, dee 11?8m Next to Jno. A. Hamilton ?PKCIAI4 xoiK i;. Te parties In want ef DOORS, SASHES saed BLINDS, we refer te tka advertisement of P. P. Teela, the largo manufacturer ef those goods ia Charleston. Price list furn ished oh applicative. #VFl7a fce G. ?>. KEITTV Lumber an<i Timber Factor, and Geuc- I ! . ral Commission Merchant, Prepared to Advanea liberally on C meats when in hand. ' 1 . j CHARLESTON, S C. d?e 11 3m Sweet w>r re J?. If. BernAam, ! < * 421 Klag St., 81ga Rad Mortar, just below Calhoun St., Charleston, 8. C, rar w an xa Drugs. Medicine*, Chemicals, Alcohol, Pur? Wines and Liquors for Medicinal Par. poses. Perfumery, Soaps, Brashes, - Fancy and Toilet Articles. act 2 GEORGE a HACKER, sa8h Bl^I3Sri> AND DOOR F AO TORY. KING STREET, OPPOSITE CANNON, CHARLESTON, 8. 0. - j A large Stock of the above on hand. AU orders for the same promptly filled. sept 18 6m WM. C. BEE & CO., Factors aad J COMMISSION MERCHANTS, '] ?I A DOER'S WHARF, CHARLESTON, 8. ?. Wau 0. Bs*. Tnsonoas D. Jaavar LIBERAL ADVANCF8 made upon Coa eignmenta te tan above House, ?or the Char-, leatan, New York and Liverpool Markets. Apply te ' JAMES BROWNE, earns 4?tf At 1?. Louis' Stare. REEDER & DAVIS, COTTON FACTORS OUIERAL COMMISSION MERCHANTS, A DOER'S NORTH WHARF, COXSIOXMBXTS RESPECTFULLY S0 Oswbll Raaaaa. Zimmbbjia* Davis, aug 28 wee IP^KlBI^^ WORKS, 117 Mfeting-Street. Charleston, So.- Ca. MONUMENTS, HEAD STONES. MAR ble and Stone Tile, Bias Flagging end n Stone Work, of every description. SCOTCH GRANITE. ?IONUMENTc5, Ii a. a. wuits. a. n. wnrra. may 1 a 12m EDWARD PERRY, 155 MEETING STREET, Pppenlte Charleston Hotel, CHARLESTON, S. S. THvEALEH IN SCHOOL, LAW end MEDI I ? eel Hooks. LAW BLANKS, Ac. BLANK BOOKS of all Styles on hand and made te order. STATIONERY of all kinds. PRINTING ef every description executed with promptness and at reasonable rates. PRINTING PAPERS and Wade A Ce.'s Hook and Job PRINTING INK. eet 2 6m Campsen Mills Flour RECEIVED THE FIRST PREMIUM At So. Ca. State Fair, Columbia. S. C., 1869. The undersigned efter te (heir Country Frirnds und the F?nfte in general a choice and pure article of Flour. They have on hand and Grinding Daily e full supply of Choice Family Eitra and Super FLOUR. Also. Northern and Western Floor at low. est merket price. CORN, OATS and HAF?SOtr'* as. Prime White and Mised Corn. 2000 w 1 Prim* Otts end 60b bale* Prime Eastern and North River Hay. JNO, CAMPSEN A CO., dee 4?3m Charleston, 3. C. MILL POND nud CHANNEL OYTEltS supplied in quantities to suit purchasers. Orders from ell parts ef the interior solicited. Address THOMAS MoCRADY, Agent, P. O Res Ne. 8:19 Charleston, S. C. Rerxesvcns?James Adger A Co., Hon. J. B. Campbell. Dr. St. J. Kavenel, David Jen nings, McCredy A Son, W. G. Dingle, John 8. Ryan. aev 20?3m jP. i\ toale, Manufacturer of Door*, Sash Blinds, Chtri aten, 8. C, HAVING THE LARGEST AND MOST COMPLETE, FACTORY in the South ern States, and keeping always on head e Urge end meet oomntete stock of DOORS, 8 ASH EH, BLINDS, Snsh Doors, Store Doors, 8hutters, Mouldings, Ac, Ac., T am enabled te sell low and at mannfaMnrera' prices.' N. B.-4Uriet at teat ion paid to skipping in good order, jaly 21 apl 2? ' ' jy ?r t ii !Tf*e*? erne mmtfree?Mpft| ^?jBM S?a)|ff ^We* "JP^fc^fc I TT *!^ * ?'^?w*n*eet ?>? ,iliaa Weylande ream*, ebeck blanched to an unwonted whiteness, aa I aha ^tood before bar brother ta tfca albas, 1 : cramped room Which ejenatitated h^'nMnH '3 Charley War land, a handsome, pated-iookin* youth of two or thrae and twenty, with bold black eyee, and a saer-j ry mouth that seamed made only tosiuiic, stood opposite bar, looking balf-repen taut, half defiant, aa tha spoke. ?'Lily, I coutdo'a help it. I tall; was hard up. A fallow mu*f hare mf't baa worsen doa't know anything about the temptations and necessities of the world R iJT?'S? C?s?T," she '?dfc yon ] know bow tha same world as you phrase , it, looks at the deed you hare just ooai nutted' dn, Charley;' and her voice I grew low and tremulous, "it is forgery !" "Nonsense; Lill 1 It's only borrowing part of old Glencross' unused millions aid aay needs. I wrote and asked hi tu for cash, and he, the unmannerly loot, refused. Well, what could he expect 'alter ?bis, boa that* ibnaM heap aay. eelf?" 5 "How dared you Charley ? That Waylaud should come to this /" she' wailed. "Dared!" he echoed recklessly; "h\ wea but a stroke of the pea, after and old Oleocroaa would be a paltrier aeiaer than I take him to be, if he makes i ' fuel about a metier of five h wad red del* laren "It is the right sod the* justice of the thing," eried Lilias, almost frantically. '?If we could pay him .a auy way ; beta I have suld everything that remains ot ? oar former wealth. * See i" and aha looked rouud ,the miserable apartment, 'sce ^how / frtrf?ff until midnight sewing, to have a little money to pay the rent. L hare not a jewel left, nor a trinket!" "Oh, bather, Lill! If old Gleocroee eats up rough, it is only taking a ran across the water. I know lots of ship eaptaina that would stow me away wader their holds, almost aoy moonlight night/* Lilias looked despairingly at him. Was it, then, impossible to make him comprehend the moral obliquity ef the deed he had just cum mit ted ? 'But I can't stsy fooling here," ob served the young man, with a tose af bis blsck curls. **I most be off about my business. ? Good bye, Lill. Give us a kiss, my girl 1 Except that you're un common foadef lecturing a fellow, you're not a bad sister in the main." After he had gone, Lilias eat down te try and realise the new situation in which ehe aad her brother were j laced. All now depended upon the spirit in whieb Paulus Glencross should receive this aew encroach men t upon his purse and patience. Lily had never seen this distant rela tion, yet abe had formed an opinion of him in her inmost uiigd, aa we ell are apt to do of unseen persons whom we hear a great deal about; aad whenever she thought of Mr. Gleneroee, the image of a hook-uoaed old man, yellow akiuaed aud cadaverous, engaged to sortiag over piles of mortgagee, or counting begs of gold, suggested itself to her mental aye. "But he must be human, at least." thought Lily, in the agony of her dis tress. "If 1 go to him myself, sod tell him jast whet poor Charley's necessities were, and bow good-hearted he really is, ia spite of all hi* faulte and thought lepsueee-? if 1 ssy iraukly to him that 1 have uo money uor jewels to reimburse him, but that 1 will stay sod work for him, aa a servant girl might work ia the kitchen, uutil 1 have discharged the hor rible debt, surely, O sur ly he eauaot base she heart to refuse. 1 can do a great rnaay things. 1 can aew and em broider, aad 1 could make good bread aad biscuit, and poor mamma always said I was a good housekeeper, and if Mr. Gleocroee ia rwally so miserly as Charley thinks, he would look at the economy of the thing. At least, it is worth trying. Bo favorably did Lilias Way lead re gard this idea, broached ia her sore ex tromity, that iu two days from the even ing ia which she bad,bidden good-bye te her handsome, reek lees brother, .aba stepped from the cars at Uta New York depot, dressed iu s sober brown suit, that made her look like a shrinking little i mouse, with her carpet-bag ia her hands. A Utah* Jnqairy sufle*d to bring her b#n, to flatttt dauoitelv of the Colored ?amnsngnV r ?????[ _ij-ii.^, '-i^c^,. woum *wr?-#J^Bah Lihaa waaahowu in taiaed wax* heavy rich cotor splendor tuade fctt ti? ?M U ruadofi in {he 1 is LiKas eaten rag with a pearaoee of her gas i* ?? ? eofe, wait tor the ep cousin, the I Out ni?.et*nu* >fr kam ?W tha kitahjU? aapeaditute.! Sog^^Cf^? " The thought W Ha^ te^lt. atthctto-J opened, and a < thirty years air/' tViaml ?hat I wished to & self io her miod, whea i ther awi of the room sal! handsome man, ot age, entered. "t?X hag jour fjilias, all ha ? flatter,,\ see Mr. Gleucroat.' ?I am%*r, fAWno*oe*J_ *s?g,m*Wo again, coloring vivid scarlet. This then, Was their "far-off" cousin, . and how widely different from their dreams and faaciea! Apparently the gratelnan raw and pitied her painful contusion, for ha said politely : "May I aak in what manner I ana he neefal to you ?" ?I am Lilies WayhttferPisha answered, in a tone that was scarcely audible. " Way land K' A shadow, faint, yet distinctly perceptible, overspread bis face at that word, and Lilias saw it with a failing heart. She fofgut the labored tpecch of palliation and exenae that she had prepared.- She forgot that he was no silver-haired patriarch, hat a hand, some young man, surrounded with all the adjuncts of wealth and luxury. She remembered only peer Ch-rlsj and her own sickening idea of debt, disgrace, and rdin; nod sinking on her knees at his feet, she sobbed out her pitiful story. '?Be is so young," ehe wailed, "so young, surely you will not refuse to give him another ebenen tor name and fame I I will work and toil far yva until the fire hundred dollars are every cent paid. 1 will be a servant; a seamstress?what you please, only preeuiee me that you will not visit him with the penalties uf the lav 1" Her voice died into quivering aHcace, bat her eyes still appealed. Rise, Miss. Wavlaud," said the young man, after a moment's grave con sideration. " 1 promise thai this offene? of your brother s shall he overlooked, for the sake of the sister ?vhu bas pleaded so eloquently for him " "Aud 1?what nan I do for yon T What mutt I do? For if I can not re pay the money in aqmw shape or other i shall die ot shame and mortiieation If* "1 will take the matter into consider ation," said Mr. Olencroee gravely' yet not without n certain gleam of amuse meat in the corners of hie mouth at the idea, of that pretty' slender creature rea der! ug ap to htm the eqaivxleot of the fire hundred doUaca. "And now, cousin Lilias?dor 1 ?vettere we may claim relationship, although it ia somewhat distant-?I skull insist upon gnu a* my guest for a while. Let me ring and sead for my mother!" Mrs. Glcuuross,a stately old lady ia black silk -and Vslcaasaaaea lace, wel comed Lilias Way land with a entiling hospitality which belonged to the an cient -rtghtit; sad atmest bafoiw aha knew it the girl found betas if chatting inno cently away to hor hentaas, as if ska had livvd all her lite in tue eaaahSsa'sfthat pleasant stui|e; while Paalaa Glenoroea, ' i japwra at a table-he wifeVotlV? ?naet' 'sneisglBg'eoun with a uow interest. 1 v >i ,rt|* ^acTCTmwJwan n'i.mfy then fa?> life," he thought, "?ke profile is es fM?y, tarn tWw eotjftl* % an ? eiiuieeeleiie?'t** "' '??*??? ' When Lilie, wrote her happ, letter Sp that night, Mr. Gleuel added a ewt e^ipt, end ?'tM*?'??1 lend knee that bis ae**? of peri! whs ?Wr ' ?? , Lilv had beet nearly ? aaonaa ift? ge^c>^eJh^e^ k*d t&ncienne? ik^!*he% ehe ?A> Paulus, coming suddculy into the pur ple twilight ^tilh4^^j^6^b^i6. km sittisg all alonawttK' fpr*oTOMglit tering on bar psaehyVheek. ?? Why, Lily, what ia the matter?" '?Nothing, Paulus'?they had grown to be good friends by this time?"only I have been . dreaming very pleasantly and the time of waking has come at last." "You mysterious little sphinx, what on earth do you mean ?" She colored, aad cast down her eyes. "Tta fire hundred dollars, Paulus? they ere yet to be paid. No?don't in terrupt aaa. 1 cannot consent to indulge jour generous impulses. I must pay you; aad there ia ao ether way for me than to. seek a situation aa governess or instruc tress in mane seminary- 80, Paulas, I have written a< advertisement, and if you will be ee kind as te take it down to the office of some one of the daily napara?" ? "Give it to me !" he interrupted. . G[he placed it confidently in his bsnd ; he tore it deliberately ia strips. " Paulus ! sbf cried, ia amasement. uJUly, thai ia all nonaenie. It .you wane to pay me, yon can " "Baa, Paulus; yon know I bare noth ing in all the world P* ?*Yo*d?eve vonraelf?to me |jsWe*eWi*^ tains.? ' I don't andere and you " "Must I spa.k plainer? Well, then, Lily, give urn yourself. I love you, darling, aad would fain make yon my ife. Are yon conteut to pay me in thiaeoinf" "Oh, Paulus!'' aha faltered. "I never dreamed of snob happpiueas." And so Lilise Wuytand'a indebted oeae waa settled moat satisfactorily. The Mat Convention?Circular or the State Institute.?The follow ing circular letter has been eddreased to the officers sad members of the county agricultural societies : Charleston, February 15. At a called meeting of the members of the South Carolina Institute, on the 9th instant, among other procoediugs, the following resolution was submitted by Hoo. W. I). Porter, end, on due consideration, waa unanimously adopted : Ktsolrrd, That the neeaedeot of the South Carolina Institute be requested to invite delegations from tho various county agricultural and mechanical and immigration societies throughout the State to assemble in Charleston, on the first Tuesdsy (3rd,) in May next, to take iotq consideration the questions of labor And imnrrpretiuto, and means for further development of the agricultural interests of the State. Gentlemen.?As the executive offi cer of the South Carolina Institute Association, 1 take the earliest oppor tunity to lay before yea the appended resolution, and respectfully to invite an earnest consideration of its import, and the appointment of such number of dele gates as year association, club or org aoiaetion may deem proper. Authorized credentials from the pre siding officer of thtVrUpVjctivo Societies will pass delegates 00 the South Carolina Railroad for half the usual fare, as doubt less will be adopted by other lines of rend. The paramount importance of e broad and onjitei organisation, as iudicated hy the resolution, is self-evident. To Induce settlers, immigration and efficient laborers to till the fertile and genial leads of South Carolina, and bring out her varioua resources of manufactur ing aad other talmnrial pursuits, de mauds co-operative action of the people, from the mountain region to theses board, and the iaauence ef all true men ought fo be enlisted. The metropolis ef the State, with the various ?iaes of roads a>id steam and sail ahipa at eommaad, with enterprising and wining merchants, nfcema by the parent Inspire noj?f fdtnrn andian&r' anec^obvWus. V ****** I jhnvc/flU bop6t: tojtendeT my ?Ib^ President South Carolina Institut?. ?t{ ""na*li--', median Mr ft nu* liedjl * .???lq itv[ .?!, : jestrucU from the Records of the Top sail |Agric*ktira! Aasociatlon, February, ??0,1870. rfiioi TTJli*lP8. J&atement of D. McMillan.?The Und I planted in turnips was a city subsoil which, had been improved by previous , 18619, wbi$i was harves^ea' in yoneVol-0] i*w% iWt ^r^e -Sf*"T.^M^}**^' about four inches, with a single pV during the Utter part ?f July- I tneu had 300 loads of compost, made with mud and the cleanings of. the stables, one-fifth of tbo compost being from tho the stables, spread broadcast on one and an eighth acres. Plowed ft In nine inches deep. The ground was theo h t rowed. and tho drills opened two feet1 apart. Two bags of Peruvian guano and two of Baugh'b raw bone phosphate were then mixed, put into the drills, and covered ready for sowing. The-drought prevented .sowing until the 30th August. 1 planted the seed in hills eight inches apart, got a good stand, but the drought ef September caused a slow growth until October. One-third of the acre was sown in English Norfolks, one-fourth of an acre in Winter turnips, and the re mainder in Kuta j,agas. On the 16th November, 1869, took an average of the English Norfolks which was ?t the rate j of 745 bushels per acre. On the 29th December took another average in the P+eeence of J. B. McMillan and?*. H. Pcarco, aud found it to be p\ the rate 6f bushels per acre. On the 27th __ibe. took f*?rerage of the Rufen jBagas which v. m '603} bushels per acre. Oa the 30th February took another ave rage and found it 8921 birshcls par acre. TUB MI'S. Statement uf C. W. McClammy.?1 applied 75 loads of mud to tho aero, broke in shallow, then scattered broid east AO loads decayed pine straw, and re broke with a double plow, then dragged the Und and applied 80 bushels lime, laid off the rows 15 inobes "apart, and applied in the drills PeruvUn guano at the rate of 400 pounds per acre, and then thinned to a stand 8 or 10 inches apart An estimate was Uken on the 16th November. The result was 6-16 4-5 bushels to the aero. They com menced rotting at that time aud were dug. POTATOES. I planted a half acre in sweet potatoes, which was manured from my cow-lot. The rows were 3J feet apart. The yield was 200 bushels. POTATORS. Statem.nt of D. F. McClammy?1 first cow-penned the ha'f ncre intended for sweet potatoes, then broadcasted 20 loads of stable manure on it. I then ran off the rows three and a half feet apart, and drilled- stable manure in the rows. The half acre yielded 226 bush els. Home. -Home ia a thing, a law, a life that has no necessary couiiootiuu with abounding wealth. In the absence of this it beautifies and ennobles a cottage, a room, a fireside, and plays the angel with the careworn face, the tired body, the decrepid age. How many cry out givo us money, wealth, influence, and we, too, would be happy ! Not so, certainly. The first desidera tum is home; a place where all beauti ful feelings and things?which are not born of any otrouinsii!>oe? ubjund ; where the spirit of love, peaob, virtue, contentment presides. A place of safety and of rest. A retreat from the o >u fused world, into whose sacred chambers the tumult and clamor of rivalling passions, and tho raea for riehen never break?where mother, father, wife, sister, brother, children are natural, true, ooufiding and Think you each a place is the creation of wealth? Think you such a haven is the result of the wild conflict in the world's marts of batter and speculation ? Nol If such a home is never secured before the heart goes hankering after gold, it comas not after. r? r TTrlffflan' tovir iTmwvi-b" 8e^4wiaeas is ?Mi ?IwkJAar.rf tana*. established wealth, destroys the.chance Wealihf ? gtoV?.ooUD.?m 1 rejoice that it k? within every noneatarid' iadufctodo* roseate passen? a<ket3aJ rxntWef ei?fcwarid's ?Jf&Uh; !hot feg !?4 woghfesa^, tjfcf^jnff fM? 8P?*??j g Influence* off^a well established and thoroughly guarded'^bme.' lio man ur IrfSkW #?# BeibWeecn ?ne,nuo> aeWJ man is in your way; nor are yowaisaay/ ? man's way who does his proper,wpck,. dI: // How. bapj?J. # jrV* '*reRir!?>. J^p?f ?M,,, humble though^ it be, where this truth ?in*! understood.' * Where industry nn3s,t,n tbhe td'toyfwith 'q?tei, and'p^rogfeae tiiite^1 fen* on ' 'vEe-lwtwgs-nf peace, anaVwhe*a? aojbHter Jmeeand eavydf ann?hern state h mdd .poWsious,, fia4;,a footed, i It was long ago?long, bng ago. There Ls^lhe^S^at w.ltt;WclSe1aMH^ ! lighted room, the block that ticked for company? iti- ! tfce tarnhr, andriba causa*-.. <resent rosy. swnotoess of the hou*oaif?[fL.;; charms, blcuded i with the n>y storing harmony of children's vokvs. and the echoing footsteps of a father's coming! Ohr?^onga^.^"J^Ce* March. - 11 h.??!?,! i , ..-t ? , . Hcmbold, the great modicine man of New York, occupied an entire page nt the Sun with his announcements. At the published rates of that paper,4bj? h i. tic one day a demonstration coat him , exactly $030?a greater sum than some sleepy, old .'ogy business known in twen ty years' time. Lut' it payr. From L poor .. an a short time ago, HerobohYnV 1 now a nnllionnirc ; and all f rom adrcrrii tistng. ,1 %4 ; 'i ? the bus ,b*?ty A ohap in $hfi Jntegipt:;of Ntw York is mtki^g.money be commitiug suicide He goes to a.hotel, tell* a pitiful sYbry Lo?jam of fuuda, and tlint he has uo one ^Jififroh"care** him, and fiu:il*j? go^s/tn ' his room and takes "pistn.V 'J^he crowd rueh to hia room, give him all emetic-, he throws up) the ?'magnesia,'' a purse U raised for him, and he, goes to the next tiwn and p?: forma, again. ^Thia Is 'the' sharpest pracucn,jefcjaud if^sjato.? sc i h <ld out he is good for a fortune. A gentleman who was in New York last week states that trade bs very dull thero tbia widtcr, in all hnnnlimiTafr mercantile business. While at the cus tom house, on Tuesday last, he was told that no vessel had arrived from k"fbh' eign port for the forty .eight hour*^rei' ceding,'a circumstance that had nut oc curred before for the past twenty year*. Them were at the timo nearly ou^huw^ A pr oporoT9tho*frans%f>' p'rlvDfege,' Plutt writes : ' I urn a mais remarkaMo fir my honosty.' ,4I am a mod-1. may s.y, without fear of contradiction, that I; am a dragon, of virtue, and yet I write you this with a gold pen tln.t Uncle Samuel paid for, on stationery intended for the use of the overworked and underpaid public agents, and, .when done, I will fold it in an envelope from .he Same source, aud mail uudcr;the frauk of an honorable member. Now, if this can be done by a dragon of vir tue without pangs of conscience, what m ist be the abuse on the part of the, V ry wicked ?" -??????-? ami ? Cuai'ITY.?Tho best charity \* not thai which giveth alms, but that win h pro inj s us to think and apeak well of our felluwraon. It is a uoble chanty. |T they bo condemned, not to gall ?f?M wouuda by multiplying knowledge pf their offi n e. __ Wo are all ashamed to confess that our quickest iustincts arc to think ill of others, or to magnify the ill of which we | hear. There is a universal shrugging of the shoulders, as much as to say " Well, I suspected as much," "It's just like him," "I have suspected her some time," "I could a talo unfold," and so o\t through tn endless chapter, with wh h | every person ia mom or lese familiar. He who aaya "I eonld a tale antukV* yot holds it beack, leaving the hearer to ioler any and every evil, stabs character with tho meanest, deadliest blow ** Yet rho is there that carries not this evor ready wispon, th s poffm ?d digger? The charity that gives tr heap, and not . to httadltate, is good, btu tbo ci}?r. jpakea us "think; uo evil'; U ua seek to possess this charity and practice it, for U alone ? the "ebUr ity that eoveroth a multitude of ajna."