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TO FARMER BOY8. "I'm sick of lftfeing in the corn, And following the plow; Of working hard from dewy morn Till eve, with heated brow. No longer will I stay to mow Or pilch the scented hay; To the great city will I go, Where wealth it gained by play." Tat, tat my man, hash up that song; *" Let wisdom be your guide; That dream of wealth may lead you wrong, * And wreck you on the tide. Sit down with me upon this stoneTour team will makenoharm; If we are not king upon a throne, We are king upon a farm. God's healthy breezes round you blow, His birds your music make; And sweetest rest is yours, you know, When night doth overtake. The harvest will your toil repay; Those fields of waving gram And growing the sunny day Ana in the summer rain. Men work as hard as you, in sliade, Ws* O'er book and papers bent; The work of life is easy made HRgfe Only by sweet oontent. It may be news, my friend, to you, But 'tis the truth I tell: i A 11 wavlr 10 vomt harH t/^ lift. To those who"do it well. mOi In speculation you must stand The rough commercial shocks; may in safety reach the land, 99 j You may land on the rocks. I Your Pay is certain on the farm, f%:. :r ' "! \ Though grain may not be sold; " \Inpanics you feel no alarm? ? \ Wheat is as good as gold. fick up your whip, tfnd bid your team BBBHw \ Drag on the noble plow, ^ddonot let an idle dream 9HH| in years toeomet when children roam, HWra You'll take them by the arm, B9flf And say, "You'd better stay at home, 'Upon the good old fcrm." fnmaHma gtjrartmnrt. | w(Hl GAME OF POKER OK THE CARS. A traveling correspondent of the CourierJournal tdh the following story of a game of , rail mad boker he saw played recently: We were soon enlivened by the appearance of a Cincinnati support en route for the < springs, and a Louisville clothier going to i New-Orleans, who began to play a lively j game, twenty-five cents ante, and no limit at all. Our sympathies were soon arrayed on the side of Louisville, who played a square i game, and against Cincinnati, who rungin all the foul tricks he knew. Louisville was a < little dark-haired, bright-eyed man, a German Jew,'but as honest as day. Cincinnati was a j big, red-feced mustachio, pretty sharp, and i thoroughly unscrupulous. When: Cincinnati had won about three hundred dollars, one of us took Louisville aside and told him what was going on, while another stack an ace up one sleeve and a king up the other. i "Now," said they, "he's been cheating you i from the first, and if you want to get even, you must do as we tell you." j Louisville said he would. i They told him to wait until he got two aoes or two kings; then to fetch down one of the odd cards from his sleeve, and to "go in." i The very next hand he got four kings. They began to bet, Cincinnati saw his ten and went five. Louisville went fifty better. Cincinnati raised him a hundred. Louisville came to time and added a fifth to it. Cincinnati responded and put on a hundred more. ' Louisville .said, "I'm in," and called him. , There were nearly seven hundred dollars on i the table, and Cincinnati laid down four aces. Louisville raked the money in his lap and l-!3 J ^ J..* XttlU UUWU Jtvc Kinya. . "Why/ says Cincinnati, "that's barefaced I swindling/- . ^ ; "Swinalin* pe damn," says Louisville. "It's i peen swindlin all de time," bringing his fist < down flat "Go in, Israel," says a voice. I iM^_^WgU^8gs^incinnati, rising, "I think \ ??- "Oh my Abednego," says another voice. jj But little Louisville rose up, and poking out his neck and hands as far as they could reach, says: "Fight, is it? Fight? Py Gods I fight you mit de bowie knife, mit de pistol, mit de derringer, mit de Colt's navy, mit de gun, mit de sword, mit de cannon, or mit de dara'd old musket mid de bayonet! I fights you mit anyding, an' I fight you right now. Vich you choose?' Cincinnati concluded he wouldn't fight. He said the crowd was against him, declared he coul&i't get fair play, and got off at the nest station. A Hard WiND.-^Old Peter H lived in a one-story wooden house of not very extensive dimensions, and when it was subjected to the force of one of those hurricanes so numerous of late years at the west, its powers of resistance were insufficient to withstand so great a pressure, and it yielded the point withouta struggle?however, it was not upset, nor torn to pieces, but merely moved a few rods. In the course of the journey the stove was upset and the fire spilt out, and the danger of conflagration was imminent. Old Peter was too much excited to notice the removal of his house, and seeing the necessity of immediately applying water to the burning embers on the ^ * * 1 J J i. L* floor, he seized a Ducxet ana aaneu out w bind the house, when great was his astonishment to find all the traces of his well obliterated. After bolting in blank astonishment a moment, he c tiled out to his wife: , "Sarah, I'll be blamed if the wind has not blown the well clear out of the lot!" ST Jarvis, the bacchanalian artist, was once employed by a gentleman to paint his wife?a miracle of plainness?under the stipulation that a pint of wine at a single sitting must be the extent of his potations. Jarvis assented, and in a short time produced a perfect fac-simile of the lady. On exhibiting it to the husband, he seemed disappointed.? "Couldn't you have given it," said he to the painter, "a little less?that is, couldn't you give it now, a little more " "If you expect me," said Jarvis, seeing the husband's drift, "if you expect me to make a handsome portrait of your wife, I must have more than , a pjnt Q^wine ft a fitting*. I couldn't get up I my imagination to make her even good-look-' ing under a quart, at the very least." t&r An Irishman made a sudden bolt into a druggist's shop, took from his pocket a sodawater bottle, filled to the brim with some pure liquor, and handing it across the counter, exclaimed : "There, doctor, snuff that, will you ?" The doctor did as he was directed, and pronounced the liquor to be genuine whiskey. "Thank you, doctor," said the Irishman. "Hand it to me again, if you please." The doctor again did as directed, and asked what he meant. "Och, thin," said Pat, "if you will have it, the priest told me not to Hn'nlr #nv nf this unless I crot it from the doc tor. So here's your healtfi and the priest's health." I?" An old German farmer, named Peter Mock, at a late court day, at Grayson, Ky., * was a party in suit in which a jury was empanneled. The Judge asked Peter if he objected to any one on the jury. "Yes," said reter, earnestly, "I objects ter Pill Franklin." Why, Bill Franklin is not on the jury," said the Judge. "Veil, I don't care a tam, chudge; I objects ter Pill Franklin anyway ; he's middling mit my pisness all der time, and I ob jects to Pill Franklin on brinciple all der! time." The following is a verbatim copy attach-1 to the return of a postmastmaster in Shawnee j county, Missouri: "I hereby certify that the ' fonr going A Counte is as near Rite as I know I how to make it. if there is any mistake it is not Dun a Purpers." ? ? ? Why is the earth like a school blackboard ? Because the children of men multi-: ply upon the face of it. Agricultural grpattmeut. OATS versus CORN. Assuming it to be the true policy to raise our own provision crops, and thus save the money that would be required to buy them, the inquiry naturally arises, which are the safest, surest and most profitable of these crops to grow ? ft is an indisputable fact that the cotton growing jaart of the South (by comparison with morendrthern latitudes) is not a good grain growing country. The climate is against us. Tne usual droughts in June and July are destructive to corn crops. I may safely assert that in more than one year out of five the <)w>nn)if onto nflP tliB mrn oron a fourth. a half. UIVU^UV VWW VM ?MV yv?? ? - J- ? J ? , and sometimes causes an almost total failure. Notwithstanding these drawbacks, it is cheaper to make it than to buy it, pay the costly transportation on railroads and the hauling from depots, at the heavy expense of wear ana tear of mules, etc., beside the Iobs of the side product of fodder, shucks, and the run of the j fields; therefore, it is important that we make I our own corn, but with the drawbacks arising ; from our climate, it is' n6t amiss to ascertain [if oats may not, to a great extent, be substitu, ted as the surest, safest and most profitable feed crop. Heretofore, the oat crop has had but little attention, and then only to make up the deficient corn crop of the previous season, and sown on our poorest fields, without manuring, reserving the best lands and manures for the corn and cotton crops. The result generally is (what might be expected) aJight^Yield. At the urtoSIng considered tediAis, V Wi reTato my own experience. 1 For the past sixteen years I have cultivated my present form. Originally, it was lhin, piney woods land, and had been in cultivation about twenty years before I came in possession, and was well exhausted by the usual careless, scratching system. During the sixteen years I have operated the farm, with liberal manuring and careful cultivation, I have had only two good corn crops, making respectively twenty-four and twenty-five bushels per acre, manuring well each year. I have for the past fourteen years experimented with . oats, beginning with seeding five pecks to the acre, and no manure, resulting in crops hardly worth cutting. By manuring with one hundred pounds guano to the acre, I succeded better, getting an average of twenty bushels to the acre. Since, I have gradually increased the seeding, and for the past two years have sown three bushels of oats to the acre, with fifty pounds flour of bones and fifty pounds Soluble Pacific Guano, plowed in together, and a top dressing of one hundred pounds ' Peruvian per acre, about the middle of February, resulting in thirty-five bushels" clean fanned oats per acre, besides losing full five bushels per acre by allowing them to stand too long. I sow what is known here as the ' non-rusting and non-smutting oats,and during ' the time (about twelve years) I have cultivated this variety, they have neither smutted nor rusted. (I have no seed to sell, having sold all I could spare this year.) My experience is, that I get, with the same ' manuring, about three times as many bushels of oats per acre as I can of corn, on an average. I obtain this result with very much less labor. My oats, which I sow in October, November or December, are ready to cut the last week in May, up to the first of June. Those I sow after Christmas, about the 10th of June. They mature before the summer droughts while corn is still subjected to them. Oats are better food for horses and mules than corn. With half a Deck of oats and one bundle of fodder, or equivalent in hay, three times a day, my horses and mules keep 1 in fine condition?hair glossy, and since they 1 feed exclusively on oats, have not had a case i of colic or any disease among them. ] My plan is now: fifty pounds flour of raw 1 ioones, fifty pounds Pacific Guano, sown on 1 plowed in "With a turn plow? not deepqr than to turn the stuff under. I then tross it with a harrow, (a brush can be substituted) then roll with a pretty heavy roller, then a sack of Liverpool salt to the acre, (the rolling and salt to prevent winter killing) and one hundred pounds Peruvian Guano top-dressing, the middle of February. By this manuring I hope and expect to get fifty bushels. In some cases I am substituting fifty bushels cotton seed in lieu of the flour of bones and Pacific plowed in; the top dressing not to be omitted. The cost of this high manuring will be, including salt, about twelve dollars per acre; salt omitted, nipe dollars. W. H. Y. P. S.?I find that, by sowing a less quantity than three bushels seed to the fccre, I get a coarse, heavy straw, while three bushels of seed gives the heavy yield of oats. The straw is finer, and my mules and cattle feed on it well.?Southern Farm and Home. ? ? ? EXPENDITURES FOR MANURES. Millions of dollars, says a writer, are annually expended for manures that ought to be anvpfl for. with adeauate painstaking, a farm whose stock is rightly proportioned to thq number of acres tilled, will furnish all the m'tt* nure necessary to keep the farm constantly increasing in fertility. Barns should be so arranged as to shelter and save all the manure, both liquid and solid ; then as a load of solid manure is taken from the stable to the "ordure room," there should be thrown over it two or three times its bulk of refuse straw, sods, weeds, leaves, bean and pea vines, mulch, swamp muck, tanbark, sawdust and shavings, pouring over the heap as much liquid manure as the compost will absorb. By the constant repetition of this process, there will be created an enormous amount of fermented manure, sufficient to supply all reasonable demands of the farm. If eight or ten hogs are fattened, by means of the same process, the hog pen is made to furnish a bountiful supply of manure for the garden and a large field of corn. Any farm may thus be made to manufacture all the manure for the crops grown upon it, except potatoes, and those should have plaster instead of manure, as the latter increases their tendency to rot. Potatoes should be planted on a dry piece of land, after buckwheat, and the land" well sown \sith plaster, *ur the planter may throw a handful of plaster into each bill. Ashes do very well as a substitute for plaster : potatoes are not liable to rot planted with either. Guano is good and valuable for farm use; but every farmer should save from the droppings of the hennery enough for home use, instead of buying the imported article. Privies should be so constructed as to readily yield up their accumulation, either from a tight box, so hung as to b6 easily moved, or from a sliding drawer, whence the contents should be conveyed to a heap or vat of absorbent re- j fuse, which should also be the receptacle of kitchen refuse and thus bedroom deposits. A j compost heap is thus formed sufficient to enrich a garden to the highest degree of fertility, and by the use of chloride of lime, or some other disinfectant, all offensiveness may be avoided. The following deductions, drawn from years of observation and experience, are worthy the attention of farmers: ! 1st. Farming cannot be profitably conduct-1 ed without careful reference to the laws of waste and supply. 2d. The sature of the waste must be understood, and the proper remedies applied. 3d. All these supplies should be drawn from the resources of the farm under culture.? Maryland Farmer. Land Measure.?An acre contains 4,840 square yards. A square mile contains 640 acres. A mile is 5,280 feet, or 1,760 yards in length. A league is three miles. A fathom is six feet. A hand (horse measure) is four inches. A palm is three inches. A pace is three feet. *?* Handsome apples are sometimes sour. ; |M?0 tit the fabbatb. i CONDUCTED BY ' REV. ROBERT LATHAN. WORKING IN FAITH. Many American Christians have been made more or less familiar with the work and method of George Muller, the founder and manager of the Ashley Down Orphanage, in England. He began in 1834, without any other resources than prayer, or any other capital than his feith in God, and his supplies have never failed him. He has employed no 1 collecting agents, made no appeals, enlisted especially no denominational pnde or interest, and yet much has been accomplished by his instrumentality. Sixteen day schools, that now have 1,165 children under instruction, have been entirely supported, and twelve others assisted. Sunday schools and others for adults have also been aided. In the latter 1 u 1SQA 3 RQ3 adult nil. were nave utwn, umw v,w? 1? , pils. The number of Sunday school scholars has been 4,463, and the number of scholars in the day schools 10,619. "Thus," says Mr. I Muller, "without counting the orphans, 18,- j 775 souls have been under habitual instruction." I In his annual circular, or "Narrative of I facts," Mr. Muller asks his readers to jpray "that God would be pleased to work mightily 1 in the hearts of those who were formerly un- j der our care, in bringing to their remembrance the truth which was then set before them." On the 26th of May last there were 1,722 nrnhiuzFuiuder his care, a work which has exhibited excellent results. Nor is this tlje whole scope wQiis laborsv: since 1834 he has sold or given awpt 18? 747 copies of the Bible, and has engaged so actively IhlbVironi" of both home and foreign missions, in Devonshire, England, and in Spain and in China, that, during the last year no less than 179 laborers were sustained, all men of faith and working on the most economical allowances. "Without any one having been personally apf)lied to for anything by me," writes Mr. Muler, "the sum of ?323,692 7s. 9Id. has been given to me for the orphans, as the result of prayer to God, since the commencement of the work, which sum includes the amount*eceived for the building fund for the five houses." This brief record of authentic facts, which we gather from a recent article in the London Freeman, carries with it a lesson of faith worthy to be noted by gospel workers everywhere. Only a shallow and nasty thinker would deduce the notion that Mr. Muller's peculiar method is the best adapted to all circumstance* and all nrnnosed undertakings, good as its results have been, for the real teaching is deeper and more valuable, as could be vouched for by the patient and prayerful men who have borne the sacred burden of many of our own great undertakings for the cause of Christ The true lesson is this:?that, in spite of all the sneers of infidelity, the cold unbelief of mere business morality, and the yet more chilling and injurious "doubt" of nominal Christians, prayer has its power and its answer, and faith has its promise and its victory, with no less real and manifest certainty at this present time than in the days of Abraham s pilgrimage or Paul's ministry. The Lord our God is a living God, and he is by no means deaf to the cry of his children, nor will he at all fail to comply with the request of the loving ones who rely on Him. The strong workers of the churches, whether known or unknown to their brethren, are those who kneel and rise again with an expectation that their requests will be granted in the way which to God seems best, but that they will be granted. Where there is true love of God and his kingdom, there is' and must be faith and power in prayer, and where love grows cold faith must fade and die. It is useless, therefore, to urge upoq any that they exercise more of faith, but rather that j th^y should set their souls to the ob^lience off t!iP'5r8t,a5Tgr?5t con^mjHiJmeutTlBn^Tn?! selond which is like unto it" Evidently tins is where Mr. Muller began, and there cannot be any other beginning. To those who have thus begun, we fully believe that there is hardly an attainable limit in the sure and steady growth of their power for good, unless we may assign some limit to God's power to give?and love laboring in faith has the whole world and its future before it, as the field for the achievement of its sure victories. To those who have not thus begun, we can sorrowfully poiut to all the unaccomplished work of winning the world to Christ, and ask them if they can find therein no strong incentive for quickening their spiritual purposes, and accepting God s promises as to the vital, I>ositive, undying power of the prayer which is made by loving and undoubting faith. PREACHING CHRIST IN PRIVATE. It is a false idea that to preach the gospel, we must have a crowd before us. In the early history of the Church, God blessed his own word to small assemblies. Peter preached to Cornelius and his household ; Paul to Lydia and her household; Philip, on the desert 'way, preached to a single hearer. Such sermons are sometimes the most effective. A single soul is inestimably precious, and a single convert has sometimes proved himself a host. "NVe have read of sermons addressed to a mere handful of persons that have proved the seed of abundant harvests. An humble ploughman taught the celebrated James Harvey some useful lessons out of his humble experience; and who can tell the influence of these lessons ? It is marvellous how much good was accomplished in Scotland and Geneva by the eminent Robert Haldane. To trace the streams of good that have flowed from the fountains of his influence seems like romance. Yet of him it is said that it was to the conversation of a pious stonemason, with whom he once walked some miles through the woods of Airthray, that he attributed his first clear conceptions of the plan of justification. That stone-mason was a preacher. No me- j tropolitau pulpit could have added dignity to j his work, ile preacnea me gospei more iruij i and effectually than many who have attempt-! ed it in gown and bands. Perhaps if he had ^aspired to do it in the sacred desk, he would have made a failure. The grass-grown path through the woods of Airtnray was pulpit enough for him, and content, yet faithful, in his humble sphere of influence, his words have | already, through his single hearer, gone forth j to the ends of the earth. The prosperity of the cause of Christ depends largely on the fidelity of the private viembers of his Church. There is work for each one to do. Every one may find a pulpit of his own, and in that pulpit he should discharge his duty with all the solemn earnestness and fidelity of a "man of God." It may not be a very elevated pulpit. It may not be very conspicuous to human eyes. It may be as humble as the seat of a Sabbath-school teacher, or a chair by the fire side. But if the I living truth as it is in Jesus may go forth I from it, that will change it into a pulpit. A j single soul led to Christ will infinitely more j than compensate for all the effort made; and j many a soul that would, perhaps, never be 1 1 mow Ko tunn I reacnea Dy me ouuuaui sciumu, muj uv j by the gentle tones of Christian friendship. | Think.?Reader, do you ever think? You ! have a soul as well as a body. You must die j one day. After death comes the judgment, j Do you ever think ? Want of thought is one simple reason why thousands lose their souls forever. They will not reflect on their latter end, and the certain | consequence of their present ways. And at last they will find they are lost for want of thinking. Believe me, this is not a world in which we ; can do without thinking. Least of all can we in the matter of our souls. "Don't think," whispers Satan; he knows that an unconverted heart is like a dishonest tradesman's books; it will not bear close inspection. "Consider your ways," says the word of God?stop *fld think?consider and be wise. Well says the Spanish proverb, "Hurry comes of the devil." Just as men sometimes marry in haste and repent at leisure, so they make mistakes about their souls in a minute, then suffer for it for years. Just as a bad ser-j vant does wrong, ana then says, "I never gave it a thought," so men run into sin, and then say, "I did not think about it?it did not look like sin." Not look like sin! What woul^ ( you have ? Sin will not come to you, saying, "I am sinit would do little harm if it did. Sin always seems "good, and pleasant, and desirable" at the time of commission. 0, [ wisdom, get discretion! Remember the woru3" of Solomon, "Ponder the path of thy feet, aaftl1 let all thy ways be established." (Prov^-4: 26.) It is a wise saying of Lord Bacon, "IM nothing rashly. Stay a little, that you mftyjj make an end the sooner." u, learn to oe tnougniui i ijearn w wui sider what you are doing, and whither you arj going. Make time for calm reflection. Corgi muue with your own heart and be still. Kej member ray caution. Do not be lost raerelj for want of thought?Rev. J. C. Ryle. The Pen of Heaven.?The most con * mon action of life?its every day, every host is invested with a solemn grandeur, whefcw think how they extend their issues into etej nity. Our hands are now sowing seed fa* that great harvest We shall%meet again aS we are doing and have done. The gravel shall give up their dead, and from the toq&i of oblivion the past shall give up all thatjt holds in keeping, to be witness for, or witneo against us. 0, think of thqtl 1 Tn v"Ttl^V hall of theTnquisitio'u; o"aj(*^Hii*i ??' us should be. Within those blood-staineo( Jmkr ^xami oat&n. Hehasbeey| assured thatnothingbe reveals gEall be wntten for the purpose of being used against him. While making frank and ingenious confession, he suddenly stops. He is dumb?a mute. < They ply nim with questions, flatter hlnf, threaten him ; he answers not a word. Danger makes the senses quick. His ear his fyuicrhf. a. onitnri he lintpns it. tip? kin tanmie. *"""6"* ~ J ? 0~." An arras bangs beside him, and behind it he hears a pen running along the pages. The truth flashes on him. Behind that screen a scribe sits committing to the fatal page every word he says, and he shall meet it all again on the day of trial. Ah! how solemn to think that there is such a pen going, in heaven, and entering on the books of judgment all we say or wish, all we ! think or do. Would to Goa we heard it? everywhere, and always heard it! What w check! and what a stimulus! Are we about to sin, how strong a curb; if slow to duty, how sharp a spur. What a motive to pray for-tfttk blood that blots out a guilty past, and for such grace, as in time to come snail enable us tbl walk in God's statutes, to keep His judgments, and to do them. "Knowing therefore the* terror of the Lord, we persuade them."?Dr. Guthrie. Pbaying Families.?Among a circle of. four or five familes, all shoots from the parentstock, family piety blossomed with uncommon beauty, and bore fruits of rare excellence., ; As one child after another attained to years , of accountability, the claims of their Redeem- ' er were acknowledged, and a place sought among his people. What was the secret of all this? We near the answer in the very 1 words of a member of the favored household. "I trace this stream of Holy influence back 1 to the prayers of a pious ancestor. Grand- 1 father was ~u eminent man of God, and he prayed much for his children's children?in the fields, in the woods, at morning, mid-day and evening. He prayed for them to the \ third and fourth generations. His last years mnM lUarallv orient, in nraver After lnainorlJ his mind upon all other subjects, he could/j lead the family devotions as no one else could.?l "What blessings a praying parent may calfl! down from heaven upon his children! HfCM py indeed are those families in which Godj^S dren and chUaren's children; ana wretched^ and poor beyond expression are these famv^ lies where God is forgotten or his name mentioned only to be profaned! The parent who stays away from Christ, is not only shutting himself from the kingdom, but is making it difficult for his children, who would to enter in.?Exchange. "Not as the World Givetil"?"My peace I give unto you," was the benediction of the Master as he told the faithful few of his departure to his Father's many-mansioned home. "Not as the world giveth, give I unto you," said He, for the gift of the world is weariness and tears, in place of peace and hope, which are the gift of God alone. How often in the strife of life, when failure meets us, or when trouble greater than seems our strength to bear comes to us, does the weary pilgrim look up with a face white through suffering, and eyes dimmed with tears, and tremblingly yet earnestly thank the Master that His gifts, unlike the world's, are peace and rest. Happy is he who can with his burdens and weariness come to Him who taketh burden and its bearer, and in Him find peace beyond expression. One who has known the unequaled peace of Christ the Lord, can but have nitv for those who, like them, have work to do, burdens to carry, tears and grief^ to whom failure comes, and yet who know nothing of that parting gift of Christ?the peace of God. Saddest man of all the world should he be who has no Christ, no Saviour, no refuge in distress, no shelter from the storm. 0, that the world might know the peace which is the Christian's gift from heaven. Efficacy of Prayer.?I no more believe that God leaves a right prayer, offered in the right spirit, to pass unnoticed, than I believe that He will let this whole summer pass over without a drop of rain or dew. In securing answers to our requests, we must co-operate with the Lord. Some people ask Him to do their work. "Father," said a little boy, after he had heard him pray fervently for-the poor at family worship, "Father, I wish I had your corn crib." "Why my son ?" "Because, then I would answer your prayer." I have heard professing Christians pray fbr the conversion of their children, while they are taking them night after night into scenes of frolic and dir^ sipation. We may nmke-ftobftittialdfe^P but the Almighty will never le^us make a " fool of Him. "God is not mocked; whatsoever we sow, we shall also reap." Neither does God ever mock us. "All things are possible to GodTo Christ the power of God in man, To me, now I am all renewed, T fVirmiffh Him am formed again. And now through Christ, from sin set free, All things are possible to me." ?Cuyler. Hints for Young Christians.?1. Nev-1 er neglect daily private prayer; and remem-1 ber that God hears your prayers. 2. Never neglect daily private Bible reading ; and remember that God is speaking to you, and you are to believe and act upon what he says. 3. Never let a day pass without aiming to do something for Jesus; every morning reflecting on what Jesus has done for you. . 4. If you are ever in doubt as to a thing being right or wrong, consider whether yolk can ao it in the name of Jesus, and ask God's blessing upon it 5. Never take your Christianity from Christians, but ask yourself, "How would the Lord have me act?" and follow him. 6. Never trust your feelings, or the opinions of men, if they contradict God's word. 7. In deciding questions of truth and duty, remember that the wrong side has a crafty and powerful advocate in your own heart jEjT There can be no friendship where there is no freedom. Friendship loves a free air, and will not be penned in straight and narrow enclosures. It will speak freelv, and act so too; and take no ill where no ill is meant; nay, when it is, it will easily forgive, and forget too, upon small acknowledgements. i ? f|is?n?W0U$ A LEGEND OF KILLABNEY. One of the legends of this beautiful lake, situated in the heart of Ireland, is that once "Svery: seven years, on a fine morning, before $he nrst rayB of the snn have begun to disperse the mist from the bosom of the lake, the O'Donoghue comes riding over it on a beautiM snow-white horse, intent upon household aflairs, fairies hovering before him and strewing his path with flowers. As he approaches his ancient residence, everything turns to its former state of magnificence?his castle, his library, his prison, his pigeon-house, are reproduced as in olden time. Those who have courage to follow him over the lake may cross the deepest part dry-footed, and ride with him in the opposite mountains, where his treasures lie concealed; and the daring visitor will receive a liberal gift in return for his company; but before the sun has arisen, the O'Donaghue recrosses the water, and vanishes amid the ruins of his castle. " Another relates how a young and beautiful girl, named Melcha, when wandering along the banks of a beautiful lake, after the last rays of the setting sun had gilded the horizon, saw bv the nale licht of the nilverv mnnn. which had just risen, a plumed head rise out of the lake. Gazing on the phantom, she distinctly saw the form of a chieftain on a white charger, gliding slowly toward her. They had an interview. She loved. He promised her a happy life under the green waves. She agreed to he his own the next May morn. May mom arrived, Melcha was ready in her k~jal dresa:-.dj&e stood on a high rock on;' WPborders ofHhe lake, as the sun begaiKtfl gild the surrounding mjMG&iiLC' Soon she rftptCr?Ha mttftir" the -air was perfumed with delicious odors, and she behela a train of beautiful damsels arise from the water all clothed in white, scattering spring flowers, Ihen a group of young children with fragrant flowers, and, behind, ? O'Donoghue on his white horse, which was led by Naiads. As the train moved on, boys and damsels came 1 up and followed till the whole were opposite Melcha. He wore a glittering helmet, bright i armor, and (the crimson scarf Melcha had given him when they parted. She knew not what to do, 04 how to join her love, but directly'she stepped back a few paces, and ruj/*r ning, made a big jump off* the rock; O'Dondgh- 1 ue rushed forward and caught her in his arms before she reached the water. The enWAiin/1 AIM AM J I I ti i c ti a ill gauicicu iuuuu tuu uujci auu uijq bride, and all sunk beneath the waves?nor Has the lovely Melcha been seen from that 1 (lay to this. p- "HOW'S THAT F()A HIGH J? Brick Pomeroy, in his aJemocrat, thus explains the paternity of theWoove popular interrogation. In answer to a correspondent, Pbmeroy says: ~ , Henry Ward Beecher is the author of the sentence which has become so popular. At the time of the Cleveland Conventiou, in 1864, when John Cochran was bv certain disaffected < Republicans nominated for the Presidency, Henry Ward Beecher, the author of the phrase, "It's mpst d--d hot," was at the ' spaulding House, Binghampton, New York. While there, waiting for the train to bear him west, he beoame acquainted with a few gen- 1 tlemen, among them a conductor of the Erie : railroad, named C. O. Graves, who was a 3trong Republican, a great admirer of Beecher, and a member of tne same church. To while away the time before the train ' which was to bear him westward should arrive, it was deemed best to seek a little quiet amusement in a private parlor, by indulging in the popular gam&aL"gevafl1 wMiwV To this, game Mr. Beecher made no objections, stating that he played all such games as checkers, back-gammon, chess, euchre, wbisf, etc., etc., at home with his family, and that , he oonmdered it no harm to seek such Sbg&temertt when traveling, jor even to carry, wThima pack of cards or a box of chessmen, as he generally did. . Graves and Beecher were partners, the party playing for the lemonade. On a fourhanded game Graves and Beecher were struck, and "sawed" to see who should pay for the lemonade. They played a single game to decide the matter. At last it stood, Beecher six and Graves five, with his deal. By accident or design Graves turned the jack of hearts, which put hira six. It was then a question of who had the highest card to go out Beecher looked at his hand, found nothing in there of note, and he laid down the deuce on the table with the remark : "I give you your Jack; that puts us six apiece. Here is the deuce; how's that for high ?" . The remark was so original, and the joke so'good, that everybody laughed, and Graves ordered in the beverages. The story was told first to one conductor and then to another along the line of the road, and, at least ran over the country, till now nearly every one uses that as .a slang phrase which has become as popular as "You bet," "Red hot," or "Shoo fly. Afraid of Death?A Yellow Fever Incident.?During the recent alarm excited ^thep revalence of fever, a good many persons adopted all sorts of preventives. Any suggestion which tended to accomplish this purpose was seized with avidity and applied without scruple. A young man of the reporter's acquaintance was of this number. His insane dread of the disease amounted to a monomania. Every conceivable nostrum was taken, dnd every possible liquor imbibed as a preventive ? lemonade, brandy and water, wine, citrate of magnesia, mineral water, buchu, cathartic pills, and iron lozenges were taken successively, the same day, ana in turn rejected for newer and more efficient remedies. Toward night he began to feel bad. His stomach was in evident disorder, and racking pains prevailed in the region of the head and oack. Satisfied that Yellow Jack was laying siege to hira in earnest, he sent for a physician and begged of him piteously to save his life. The doctor examined him carefully. "You haven't got yellow fever," he said, "hut. vou've eaten something that has die agreecf with you. I shall have to give you an ! The prescription was forthwith ap-pflUi, an3 the result awaited with impatience.' Suddenly the odor of brandy filled the j room. r "Why, you've been drunk," said the doctor. . "Wait, doctor, wait," gasped the patient, in his paroxysm. | Then came lemonade. "Why, its pnnch you've been drinking." i "Wait, doctor, yyait." And then, mingled with these compounds, j came the smell of buchu, thesickening pffluvia Df nitre, tempered and subdued by port wine, j 1 "Why, man, what is all this ?" cried the astonished man of science. "Wait, doctor, we haven't got to the bottom yetand then came out a dark liquid, which the patient in his distress denominated fmolasses and water." Then came gin, whiskey and Madeira, to be succeeded in their Jura by Congress water, Vichy and Kissingen. The doctor was in despair, which was augmented by the now frantic enquiry of his pa?p?t: r "Doctor, have I got the fever?" "Got the deuce! No. Yellow fever, cholera or small-pox would be a waste of material with .you. Have no dread, sir; nothing less than aft earthquake can ever do you any damage," and the physician took his leave, and the patient rapidly recovered.?New Orleans Picayune. V. General Lee's Coolness in Battle.? As an instance of his coolness under trying circumstances, it is related that during one of the hottest fights in Mexico he was with Gen. Scott making observations, when a ball from the enemy struck a post or tree very near him, knocking the bark and splinters in his face. Gen, Scott excitedly exclaimed, "Lee, are you hurt ?" to which the latter replied. "No," and carelessly brushing the bark and dirt from his person, proceeded with his observations as if nothing unusual had occurred. He had but few "bosom friends," and there is not an officer in the city now with whom it can be said that he was very intimate. His manner being reserved, he was not easily approached though he was always regarded as the perfect type of a dignified officer. When he resigned nis commission in the United States, army Glen. Soott was deeply affected, and remarked to a fellow-officer that "Lee was a valuable man, and his services were worth millions a day to any Government."? Washington Star. ROMANTIC MARRIAGE. The New Orleans Picayune, of the 18th ultimo, has the following: A few days since a well-dressed and handsome youth, of some eighteen years of age, appeared before one of our city magistrates and asked if he could engage his services to perform a marital ceremony. The reply was in the affirmative, and the young man left, but shortly afterward returned, accompanied by a sombre-looking female, middle-aged, and dressed in black. "Is this lady your mother ?" inquired the magistrate. "Oh, no sir; this is the lady I desire to marry !" replied the youth, as the lady drew aside her veil, disclosing a countenance wrinkled and sere, but on which for the moment gleamed a sort of icy smile. "Indeed." "Oh, yes, sir." . 1 "But are you of age PV...- ' "Not ygt~ -this lady is my guardian;" "Andshe gives her consent? "Yes, sir." V The magistrate was in a quandary. He didn't know exactly what to do. He hated to sacrifice the youth, and join the brightfaced May to the gloomy, icy December. "Isn't this rather a strange union V' he asked. ' "Not at all, replied the expectant bride. "I have a large amount of property which I desire to leave this young man. As I have relatives who might dispute the will were I to give it to him as a legacy, I prefer to marry him." !t "And you are content to marry this woman fojf her money ?" asked the justice, i>; "Well, I shouldn't marry her for anything else 1" frankly replied-the boy lover. "She ain't pretty. And without more ado the ceremony was concluded. The Western Hog Crop.?The Cincinnati Price Current says: "There has been an active demand for hogs, and prices advanced to $8 gross. As regards the future of the market for hogs, there continues to be considerable speculation. The general impression is that prices must rule low, but the difficult point is what may be regarded as low prices. That there is to be a large increase in the hog crop, none pretend to deny, but what prices will be safe are matters causing great perplexity in the minds of packers. Sales of hogs have been made at $6.50 gross, delivered here any time before the middle of next January, and there are not many buyers at this rate, nor are there many sellers. Prices ; of pork have been so high for the past seven i or eight years that it is difficult to educate public sentiment to what are really low or J rather safe prices. There can be no doubt t that the season, now close at hand, is regarded 1 by the trade generally as exceedingly hazard- J ous, and the packer who does not observe ex- j treme caution will doubtless suffer severely." blAC unuit AO U1JU4AV/UO. UlUUV MAC OUVjObft UAA" til there is no lingering doubt in your mind. Avoid the places, the persons and the thoughts that lead v the temptation. Frequent the places, associate with the persons, indulge the thoughts that lead away from temptation. Keep! busy; idleness is the strength oC bad habitq. Db not giVe up the struggle when you have broken your resolution once, twice, ten times, a thousand times. That only shows how much need there is for you to strive. When you have broken your resolution, just think the matter over, and endeavor to understand why it was you failed, so that you may be on your guard against a recurrence of the same circumstances. Do you think it a little or easy thing you bh.ve undertaken. It is folly to expect to break off a habit in a day, which may have been gathering strength in you for years. farMlr inquirer. TERMS?IIV ADVANCE i One Copy, one year, 9 3 00 One Copy, Six months, 1 50 One Copy , Three months 100 Two Copies, one year, 5 50 FiveCopiee, " " 13 50 Ten Copies, " " 25 00 To persons wno maae up ciuds oi ten or more name9, an extra copy of the paper will be furnished one year, free of charge. ADVERTISEMENTS Will be inserted at One Dollar and Fifty Cents per square for the first, and Seventy-five Cents per square for each subsequent insertion-less than three months. A square consists of the space occupied by ten lines of this size type, or one inch. No advertisement considered less than a square. Semi-Monthly, Monthly, or Quarterly Advertisements, will be charged Two Dollars per square for each insertion. Quarterly, Semi-Annual or Yearly contracts will he made on liberal terms?the contract, however, must in all cases be confined to the immediate business of the firm or individual contracting. Obituary Notices and Tributes of Respect, rated as advertisements. Announcements of Marriages and Deaths, and notices of a religious character, Inserted gratis, and solicited. Personal Communications, when admirable; Communications of limited or indivual interest, or recommendations of Candidates for offices of honor, profitor trust, will be charged for as ad* vertisementa DR. SHALLENBERCER'8 Fever and Ague A NT T T n n T TT, XJ. xi J. x ? x vx O. JU Always Stops the Chills. This Medicine has been before the Publio Fifteen years, and is still ahead of all other known remedies. It does not purge, does not sicken the stomach, is perfectly safe in any dose and under all circumstances, and is the only Medicino that will CURE IMMEDIATELY and permanently every form of Fever and Ague, because it is a perfect Antidote to Hal aria. Sold bv all Druggists. THE STAR SOUTHERN REAL ESTATE ADVERTISER, MARION, 8. Cr A SIDE from general intelligence?Religious, /V Agricultural apd Political?one of the Leading Features of our paper, will be the adyancement of the interest of those who desire to PURCHASE OR SELL REAL ESTATE. Jt*4Jrect communication with the Leading and Most Responsible Agents and Auctioneers or Real Estate in every part of the country, will at once give it Prominence as AN ADVERTISING MEDIUM for the sale of lands of every description, and lead to inquiries between those who desire to purchase and those who desire to sell. Each tract or parcel of land advertised will be numbered, and the address of the party wishing to sell given, so that correspondence may he opened directly with tfce advertiser. Communications descriptive of lands, soil, and sites for mills or factories, the health of localities, or in any wise relating to the geography of the country, solicited for publication. To save time and correspondence, parties are requested to forward the amount they wteb to invest with their advertisement, and a paper will bo regularly mailed to the address of tne advertiser. Parties are requested to write their names aqd post-offlee address leeibly. Address W. J. McKERALL,, Editor, Msrion, 8. 0. j ATLANTA 13 SOUTHERN LIFE Gen. JOHN B. GC ASSETjgpjE j ' DIYTDEEDS TO P^K-HOLOE Progress unequalled by any (Jpmpany This popular Southern Company INSURES and on the MOST FA It is managed most economically, and It invests its surplus in the States from whi to enrich fort . . ^ - mHIS <X>M?AJCT hutovn < > mptiedyrittrtbe-D 4 "dnlffiT a LARGE ANt> SUCCESSFUL BU THOUSAND POLICY HOLDERS in the State ( SAND MEMBERS in the fourth' year of its exi - CASH & W s i v OFFICE IN CC JAMES MASON, Resident aoent, YorkvUh REFERENCES O John S. Bratton, Guthriesville. Dr. J. R. Bratton, Yorkville. Dr. A. I. Barron, Yorkville. Col. W. B. Wilson, Yorkville. THE "SINGER" NEW 1 riv JfMM A FAMHY^SEWING JfiyiHIKE, WITH ATTAGHXErrg FOE ALL MRp WOEX, j Is fhst winning favor in the ffoAttngas shown by the Sales of last year, amogajflfcg to eighty-V six thousand, seven hundrOMAa eightyone Machines, which far exceed those of any other oompany L This new FAMILY MACHINE is capable of a range and variety of work such as was thought impossible, a short time ago, to perform by Machinery. we claim, and can show those whom it may concern, that it is the cheapest, most beautiful, delicately arranged, nicely adjusted, easily operated, ana smoothly running of all the family Sewing Machines. It is remarkable, not only for the range and variety of its sewing, but also for the variety and different KINDS OF TEXTURE which it will sew with equal facility andperfootlon, using Silk Twist, Linen or, Cotton lliread, fine or coarse, making the INTERLOCKEDELASTTC STITCH, alike on both sides of the fabric sewn. Thus beaver cloth, or leather, may be sewn with great strength and uniformity of stitch, and in a moment this willing and never wearying machine may be adjusted for fine work "" "" jyrci* " ,i "in *nrJaVrm tarletan, or ruffling, or almost any other work which delicate Angers have been known to perform. . ... Purchasers can soon be convinced that our new Family Machine embodies NEW and essential principles?simplicity of construction oaao of operation?uniformity of preciae action at any speed?capacity for range and variety of work, fine or coarSe, leaking all rivals ^behind it. THE FOLD0G CASES. The New Family Machine may be had in a variety of folding covers and coses. Some show in polished surface only the grain and tint of the wood, while others are finished in all the elaboration of art. THE ATTACHMENTS For Hemming, Felling, Ruffling, Braiding. Binding, Cording, Gathering, Tucking, Embroidering, and so forth, are not only numerous, but now brought to great perfection. Most of them can be attached or detached by a simple move of the hand. The aualitv of the work can only be fully appreciated on observation and examination. MACHINE TWIST, LINEN THREAD, SPOOL COTTON, OIL, AC. We hr.ve and shall keep in stock at oar Central Office and Agencies (on spools of various sizes) Twist of All sizes and colors, Linen Thread, Spool Cotton, Oil, and all other articles neoessary in the use of onr Machines. We wish it understood that we manufacture the Twist sold by us: that we shall aim to haye it excel in qnality, and exoeed in quantity, for a given price, that of other manufacturers, and that the Twist (made by us in our new and extensive mills, supplied as the ware with the. most improved machinery and skilled labor) can be- relied on for the desirable qualities of tmiformitv of size, evenness, length of thread as marked on each spool, strength, excellence of cojor, and beauty of THE SINGER MANUFACTU*NG CO., No. 458 Broadway, New York. M. JONES, Agent, Yofkyllle, S. C. November 3 44 tf A Delightful Tonic. 117E TAKE great pleasure in offering the OLD f? CAROLINA BITTERS to the public. They are compounded with great care, and contain some of the best Tonics in the Pharmaoopia. As evidence of the superiority of our BITTERS over all others, we have certificates from many of the leading physicians in our State, who have prescribed tnem in their practice. THE OLD CAROLINA BPTTERS Will be found invaluable for WANT OF APPETITE, GENERAL DEBILITY, CHILLS AND FEVER, DYSPEPSIA. We do not offer OUR BITTERS as a ctire for all diseases, but as an Aromatic Tonic, they have noequaL 1 T4" omrrurhprp Ivor sale dv uruggiaie buu vitiA,uia vtv.j .._? Principal Depot GOODRICH, WISEMAN & CO., Importers of choice Drugs and Chemical#, CHARLESTON, ?C. March 24 12 ' % I*. P. TOAL|, CHARLESTON, S. C.T {Largest and most complete' Manufactory of Doors, Sashes, Blinds, Mouldings, ?tc., in the Bf Southern States. ft?- PRINTED PRICE LIST DEFIES COMPETITION. -CO pS~ SEND FOR ONE. -9^ Seat Free on Application. April 2J 16 ly - ? IVOTICp. > APPLICATION will l>e made to the Legislature at its next session tor an Act to Incorporate the Town of Yorkville. August 18 33 3m EPARTMENT 1 INSURANCE CO. )RDON, President. 7^' ' , . ' ;. fa} :R #900,000.00,% ? r r ' i. fn ? 1 - 4 B8, JULY 1,1869,40 PBX CEJT. y? ; '' ' ' j , _ . . ' ' it- j doing business in the Southern States. , j? ->c!< LIVES upon all the IMPROVED PLANS, VORABLE TERMS. is very careful in the selection of risks. ch it is derived, and sends no money North t '4.X iiigngpapitalists. - /, eporiLLtws in the various Southern States, ia now SINESS in all of them; haft .nowi^Ly. TWO >f South'Carolina, and numbers SEVEN THOUatence. _ . '* ARING, General Agents for South Carolina. )LUMRIA, S. C. , .> ?- ? : . -V YORK COtmiT. CoL I. D. Witherspoon, . ..Yorkyille. Dr. W. E. Erwin, ;.......YoikTille. Lewis M. Grist,... : ?YMfk*ffle. S. G. Hemphill....... ....Guthrimville. SOUTH CAROLiyA R. ROAE^ G ENER ALSUPERINTENDENT'S OFFICE, > Charleston, S. C., September 16, 1860. j ON and after Thursday, September 16th, the Passenger Trains ofthe Sooth Carolina Kailroad will runas follows: . FOB AUOU8TA, ; ? 'mi Leave Charleston, &60 a. ni. Arrive at Augusta...... ...?.A46jx m. Connecting with trains for Montgomery; Memphis, Nashville and New Orleans, via. Montgomery and Grand Junction. .J.. .V i : FOB OOLUKBXA. Leave Charleston, .............8.9Q a, in. Arrive at Columbia. 40 p. m. Connecting with the Wilmington and Matiaiester Railroad and Camden train. ! FOB CHABLEBTON. . ' lii: Leave Augusta, ;. 8,00 a. m. Arrive at Charleston, 4j00 p. m. Leave Columbia, a. m. Arrive at Qharleaton, .. ..... ......4,00 p. jm. inor?M nam nviim fomtni*. hm*?^.i. t Leave Charleston,.?............. ~.ZA0p. ?. Arrive at Augusta,.? ?jllO a, m. - Connecting with trains for Memphis, Nashville, and New Orleans, via Grand Junction. . Leave Augusta* Pt 1H. Arrive at Charleston,., :....... ~fJ4jQ6 a. m. COLUMBIA inOHT EXFRK88?(8UKDAYS EXCEPTED.) Leave' Charleston. <..?...8.05 p. m. Arrive at Colnmbu itta to. Connecting (Sundays excepted) with. Qrasaville and Colombia Railroad, and oh Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays with Charlotte and South Carolina Railroad. <. ?T (i a ' Leave;Colombia,............... mm..,*H.^*.?AfiO p?- M. Arrive at Charleston, ?JU? a. m. 8UHKEBVILLK TKaCf. Leave Charleston, 2.50 p. m. ArriveatSammerville, AlOp. tt. Leave Sammerville,.-.. rrZJP ? / ArriveatChniifKton,..;..?a. m. . OAMPtoT MUNCH. ' _ tweeu Camden day*?xoepM^omMirtiMvitii up an$ down Day FseeenLeave Camden, Wt ^ Arrive at Columbia,......' BALTIMORE THE OLE PAVOBITE OF jjjBf PEOPLE. NEWS AND 1IT?HATUIE COMBINED. TIIS Standard Journal, celebrated as the cheapest First-Class Family Newspaper known, continues to maintain its high character sad popularity as NEWS AND LITERARY JOURNAL, by it adherence to Principle, Moderation and Truth. It has stood the test of time. Its reputation for excellence is surpassed by none of its contemporaries. It comprises all those characteristics of a newspaper which adapt it to the wants of the people of the Towns, Villages and Rural Districts. To Southern and Western Renders especially, it is invaluable as a cheap, prompt and complete medinm of the Practically Useful and Pleasantly Entertalntog. Through no other medHtecan families and in dividuals be so well snppBed with promr literature, and a fail knowledge of the world's whole news, from week to week. The low Price of the WEEKLY SUN renders it available to all classes. Look at the Inducements baaed on its policy of TERMS, CASH IN ADVANCE: One Copy Six Months or lees, 1 00 One Copy One Year,....,....'. 1 00 Club or Six Copies, One Year, 8 00 Club of Twelve Copies, One Yesr, 16 00. Club of Fifteen Copies, One Year, 18 00 Club of Twenty Copies, One Year.. 88 00 Club of Twenty-five Copies, One Year,.....;. 86 00 Club of Thirty-five Copies, One Year, l?t|H 86 00 Parties, then, should get up Clubs in their towns, villages and neighborhoods, and thus aecyrethe advantage of these very low rates. The regular diffusion of the light and intelligence which such a journal affords will be a moral and social advantage in any neighborhood. AS AN INDUCEMENT To those parties getting up Clubs to THE WEEKLY SUN, we will mail hereafter to the address of any one sending us from one Post Offlet at one time, a Club of Twelve Subscribers, an extra copy of the Weekly Son, gratis, for one year; tea Club of Twenty Subscribers, we will send a copy of the Dally and Weekly Sun for six months; for a Clnb of Twenty-five Subscribers, we will send a copy of the Daily Son for one year, and is the sender of a Clnb of Thirty-five or more, we will mail both the Daily and Weekly Son for one year. Address A. & ABELL A COPublishers, Baltimore, Md. THE WORKING CHRISTIAN ORGAN OF THE BAPTISTS OF S. CAROLINA. THE second volume of this excellent religious and fhmily newspaper will begin win the first number in July. It is now published in d~n ?J ?I... an AKU/imm nfadifalHL ItlA VIUUICBWU) BUU 1MW au sum ? . ... ? ? Proprietor is assisted by Per. Jr. L. REYNOLDS, D. R, and Per. L. H. SHUCK. Tba,"Swater* ^ School" Department and that of "General In trior genre," are conducted by OLIVER F, GREGDuring the first year the paper haa gained a circulation of 1,500, and la stfll gaining ground. It i -bids fidr to be,one of the most popular and uefttl religions papers in the South. It is devoted, to :tte Interests of the people of South Carolina. ?Aa of living ana deceased ministers will be dfttfhued from week to week, daring the next yMr. Besides religions reading, it will contain rwttable reading on Education, Agriculture, and itf &ct every suqject that has p bearing on the . prosperity of our country. It is probably the best medium in the State for general advertising, going as it does into all the business centres of the The following are the terms of subscription, in advance: Singl6COpy,HMI?*. MM.^ 2 50 Five Copies, 11 25 Eleven Copie*,.... - 20 00 /BT* The Enquire* and Working Christian will . be fornished one year for 14.50. Address WORKING CHRISTIAN, Charleston, S.u THE CHRONICLE 4 SENTTO PUBLISHED AT AUGUSTA, GEORGIA, DAILY, TBI-WEESXY 492 WSBKLY. CONTAINS all the latest news by mail and telegraph, embracing full Commercial and Financial Reports from all the leading centres, together with the latest political and general information upon all subjects which interest the public. The terms of the D4.ILY are 16.00 for sfc( months, and flO for one year, The TRI-WBJ5KLY is |3.50 for six months, and |6 for one year. The WEEKLY CHRONICLE AND SENTINEL is a rpammoth paper of thirty-six columns, SI led with Bditonam, Telegraphic Dispatches, nmmunications on home matters, together with Agricultural, Commercial and Financial articles, making it one of the moet desirable and valuable papers in the country to the planter, former and merchant. The terms are fs per annum, or $1.60 for six mopths. All subscriptions are required in advance. Liberal commissions paid responsible agents. Address all letters and communications to the CHRONICLE JL SENTINEL. Specimen copies sent free. August*, Ga.