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W "JBKtfff' M-. ' .if* * ' " BBHT^D m VEIL, jf *" *. i<*?r*t ?' man's luBlisclosed Would cause hJrtifiB^e confusion, Should God the ol<miT<Wvnr remove. \>r veiPof sweet illusion. No maiden sees aright her fsults. Or me rits of her lover: No sick ins? guesses if 'twere best To die,or to recover. The miser drenms not that his wealth Is dead as soon as buried ; Nor knows the bard who sings away Life's treasures, real and varied. The ^roe-root lies too deep for sight. Tha well-source for our Tins heaven ward fount un<l pnlm defy Our scanning of thcfr summit. Whether % present, grief j* weep Or vet untAstcd blisses. Look for the Lalm that eomss with tears. The bane that lurks in kisses. We may reap dear delight from wrongs, Regret from things most pleasant; Foes may confess us when we're gone. And friends deny us present. And that high suffering which we drear/ A higher joy discloses; Men saw the thorns ou Jesus's brow, But angels saw the roses. LLJ1 1. - - . . . HmfriiXlATOD'gS. me True JMlladinra of Amori- I can Liberty. The father of Uis<ttountry, in his last words to his coimftym?n, urges and urges it upon them, wit!? the most solemn earnestness, to Cultivate every virtue, to improve every means of ditfuusing knowledge, to avoid every source ; of itnmorrality. and to preserve over j the affairs of tlio nation an untiring : vigilance. And these words come; down to us from an early period, are as full as ever of instruction, as worthy as ever of the jxjoplo's consideration, and as strikingly applicable to their present condition. ihough we1 have extended our territory, and iticreK-! sed of the waves, throw streams of light | across the dark tide of human events. I But while such an exalted {tositioit1 among the nations of the earth, and such inconceivable blessings at home, attend the preservation of our virtue, intelligence inid vigilance, if landing over the tomb of the past, the American citizen can interpret that solemn sound that falls upon his ear, if indeed t?..? ... *t. IIV WWUI IUI1VVQ VI 1UU lIiflVlt-VMLII et'Htury can teach liiin one useful lesson; he must have learned that vice ami eorruptoin are incompatible with the ! .existence of free institutions. The | monarch, by persuasion and cornpul -sion, by rewards and punishments, | may hold the reigns of government, n?d enforce wise and wholesome laws; hut when we shall see vice and eorrii|>tti?m stalking through the land, unre-' Uiuked, unnoticed, transforming every tihhig good into every thing evil ; when -we small see tilling the chair of State .-suid the halls of Congress, low, selfish,: .unprincipled politicians; and when we 1 <fduiil six) crowding the places of eloe-' it ions a people ignorant, rude, intoxica- ' m (ted with freedom, regardless of their responsibilities, insensible to ^jo de-' j 1 lands of duty, with none to amnister justice, none to raise an arm in defence of the constitution, none to suffer mar- j trydoui in. Ute cause of their own conn- j try ; thciflfiy we hid farewell to A merman T^ry, American hopes.? j Then our powers, so mighty for workjng good, will prove equally so for evil. Free discussion will hiss through the land. The press will become, a j foundation ??i view, pouring its corrupting stream through all the country.? Party npirit, unrest mined by virtue, will agitate the whole 111:1*3 ofthe.uatidii, Sparing neither public nor private character, neither truth nor justice.? 1 Bectional jealousies will excite their violent discords, and arraying state against state county against county,; , family against family, (map asunder the 1 -.bonds of union, and kindle civil wars ^jHi>ro shocking thatr those that stained . Grecian soil, or poured their streams of bibod through the streets of Rome. Freedom offended at. the conduct of her chosen people will spurn this soil, and hearing away all that is boatifid, lovely, and good, leave the people to evils of anarchy or the oppressions of despotism. The military ; despot, mav then commence his work.; The thunders of DemYwthones cannot amttR9 the people to harmonious, noble action. Tlie lust page of their republican history may he written, and the *?lfl temple of freedom, her alters neglected, her walls dismantled, her columns broken, her corner-stone removed will fall with the shock of an earthquake, and spread the ruins far and wide. Our halis of coucrress. our tSfchuithe* and cxdlegefw.wiu become abodes for the owl, the but and the spider ; and some lonely antiquarian passing by some broken column will read the inscription : "Hero stood a nation proud and free. The world looking to it as an example* l)av by day pl ayers Wltflt up in its behalf. It bade fair to stand forever. Jhit vice and corruptiln grew among its people. They lost their freedom and nave gone to ioin the pale natrnns of the dead!"? May tho iKXM^eo^Aiuerca f.wbid this! The s hades mltttieiit republicans forbid it 1 The blood shed in freedom's ? , . ? . . * ? Ln-?Vt\ cause cries out from "the ground against it! The spirits of the pdgrim fathers joined with the shades oithe heroes of the revolution look down from heaven, and charge us to be vigilant, ^vii tuouo, intelligent, and 6tand by th^'dqnstution n^l-the laws! JTrT. A. A Racy Stuiup Speech. The following eloquent, grand, lofty and' stupendous eflort was recently made by a promiscuous genus, who had announced himself as a candidate for Congress. Friends and fellers citizens of this coiitiictuous community, I'se ris up to give you warnin and make a political speech and what I'm goin' to speak about and allude to. Now, I'd like to have you pay particular attention, as the preacher says when the boys is apitchin' beans at his nose. I say a crisis has arrived, the .wheels of government is stopped, the machinery needs greasin,' the rudder's [unshipped, the biler busted, and hell's afloat and the river risin.' Our glori ous Ship of State, that, like a bob-tailed candor, is floated down the current of time, has had its harmony disturbed, and is now driltin' with fearful ] rapidity towards the shoals and quick-! sands of disunion, threaten in1 to dash everything into Hinders, and pick itself up in the end anyone gosling. Harken no longer vWworthy denizens ofi llog Hole, Terrapin Neck and adja-i cent regions, to the siren voice that! whispers in your cars, the too-delusive I souud, peace, peace, for peace has slo- \ ped ana flowed to other lands, or div j to the depths of the mighty deep, or in 1 the emphatic language of Tecnnmso-i roni, gone flickerin' threw the fogs of, other climes; tue ade the miser watch-, cr in his <limes. Or the great Alexander at the battle of Hunker's Bill, who in the agony of despair, franctically shrieked, <), gravy! peace has j gone like mv sehenle-boy days, and I! don't care a darn. Ho was a whole j ho-ss and a team shure. Fellers citizens and gals too?in our halls ot legiblat.iim e?infusion runs riot and anarchy reign# supreme. Ttieo up then like pokers in a tuffcr l.ateJi and i I I . I I 1 snake rue ecu tirops^wi yer minting shirts ami full into wanks. Sound tlioi tocsin 1 beat the drum ! and blow the tin horn ! till the startled echoes revurbating from hill top to hill top, and from gopher hill to gopher hill, shall roach tho adamantine hills of Mew Kngland, the ferruginous disporition of the Missouri, and the aurilerous parti-j cles of Calilbrny to prick up their, ears, and in whispered accents enquire of her valors "what's out f" Feller citizens and the wimmim?Ij repeat it to your posts and from the' topmost peak of the Ozark mountains bid defiance to the hull earth by holler in' whose afeard in such thundcrin' tones, that ouaken with terror vo'll { fogot what nigger is. Don your rusty regimentals, and grease the locks of! your guns and put in new flints, grind your old scyths and mako swords out! on'm, mount your bosses and save your nation or bust! Ladies and gentlemen?the great bird of American liberty's llewod aloft; ami sorin uj?on the wings of the \vi|?d ; and now hoverin'high over the cloudcapped summits of the Rocky Mountains, and when he shall have penetra-j ted into the unknown regions of unlimited space, and then shall have div1 down ami lit on daddy's wood pile, I; shall be led to exclaim in the language! of Raul the ostler, root pork or die. The time is critical, blood# go in' to he )>onred out- like soap suds oaten a WiLsh tub finfl nvpvv liiiin thnt'a rr.if o ? -- .7 .- "t*". e"" * son I as big as the white of a nigger's! eye'll tite, bleed unci die for his coun-l try. 'litems the times?you want men in the councils of the nation that you; can depend on?that's me! Elect met to Congress and I'll stick to yon threw thick and thin like a clean tick to a nigger's shin! I'm not goin' to make | a electioneer in' speech. I'd scorn the act. You know me I've Iteen fetched up among ye, already upon the wings ' of toplifmd imagination I fancy J seo you marchin' Up to the polls ;n solid phalanx, and with shouts that make ! the earth ring, "hurrah for Jim Smith," come down on my opponent like a thousand o'brick oti a rotten putikin. "I sat, stranger," said a cottage 11 r1 ..1.:.. ?i 1 -v vr ..i... ; i inn, in IIIC jiutHi U1 iUiMlirv* , ! a), to a Yankee pedlar, '"don't whittle j I that dog away.' "Why, he aint no ; use, no iiow?no's too homely." "O, | ; hut lie saves heaps of work." "How if" "Why, he licks the plates and dishes clean, so that we wouldn't part with hiui. nohow ; for our new dog aint got ! used to mustard yet." | Ik ]tacking a one horse wagon an ; Irishman Can take down the world.? I Wo saw one the other day start out (for n ridls. The load c^sisted of Mr. and Mrs. Mullonev, the thrtle Misses Mullonoy, Master MulloneygJke housedog, two goats, and a "slip of Jtpig" in a bandbox. Narkow ICacAPic.?Getting away from a Sheriff by throwing a somerset through a four inch crack. t. < * , Jr Master and Scholar. A lkarmed pedagogue at Nantucket, who need every morning to read passages in the Bible, ana expound the same as he proceeded, in order that, by asking questions as to how much they remembered of his comments, he miglit ascertain who were the bright boys of thaschdbl. On one occasion he read, from the book of Job, thus : uTh ~. 3 was. a man in the land of Uz, and his name was Job, who feared God and eschewed evil. Eschewed evil; that is, he eschewed evil as 1 do tobac co?1)0 would luive nothing to do with it." With this very clear and forcible elucidation of the word "eschow," he proceeded, until a number of verses were read and commented on in a similar clear and intelligible manner. Atter a long interval, when tho young mind had time to digest its food, the pedagogue culled upon one of the voilnger ooys, and the -following dialogue ensued : "W ho was the man who lived in Uz?" "Job." "Wjis he a gi>od man ?" "What did he do?" "lie chewed tobacco, when nobody else loould have nothing to do with it! was 13ob Holmes' answer. The boy was permitted to tako his seat! Caught a Tartar* Tiik following incident, said to have occurred on board a Mississippi steamer recently, has excited our risiblcs not. a little, and perhaps, in this awful dull times when the streets are running mud, navigation rather intricate, and items wofully scarce, it may be acceptable to (air readers. e hope! none of our readers in "Jarsey" will go into a "conniption lit" oil account of it. A party of gentlemen were conversing about the unhappy differences between the North and South, and each of course, had something to say in favor of his own State. One of the gentlemen remarked that he belonged to New Jersey, and was proceeding to show forth the merits of that much , abused State, when a jolly looking customer, with a merry eye and somewhat elongated proboscis, interrupted him with the interrogatory: "!>? you really come from the Jarspvs "I <lo indeed," was the replv. "Well, then, give me your hand?[ Oh ! poor Jarsey 1" lie continued with I a deep drawn sigh and a doleful conn-' tenance. "Poor Jarsey! Come sir,! what will you take to drink, you are' welcome to the very host that can be had on board this boat. The "Jarseyman," somewhat sur-j prised, inquired the reason of all this] esteem for "<)ld Jarsey." "It is not esteem exactly," he replied ; "the feeling I cherish towards the unfortunate people in that State, smacks more of compassion." "Please explain yourself," said the; Jarsey man, "I do not exuetly under-' stand you." "Well, then, the fact is," was the re-, ply of the compassionate southerner,! "I believe that people from your State1 are about as apt to be dry as any class; of men out; and 1 never met one in iiu life, who was not either too mean ?* j too poor to buy a drink, so 1 make it a point always to 'treat' a Jarsey man; whenever 1 fall in with one." * Taking him by the arm, the compassionate one led the "Jarseyman" up to, the Court of Bacchus and stood treat. , T? | a fA t i n> uapitai joko. Wk were told a few days since tho following piece of skinning/ us is was | called, and which is rather too good to, he lost, showing at the same time the desperate s'raits a certain class of gentlcnion are put to in making a raise.? A well known "case," who was laird up for money, meeting a brother chip iu the street, told him if he would walk ; across the street, go into the frontdoor J of the hotel opposite, and in walking! in be very lame in his right leg, but1 come out in a few moments and be lame in the left log, he would make it. "all right" with him sometime. Willi* out asking why or wherefore, tho fel-! low did as requested, and the "skinner" j going up ton gentleman, remarked to him now lame that man was in his left leg, who was just going into the hotel, j The gentleman said he was not lame j in his leg, which the other insisted was. so. llut to settle the matter the "skinner" immediately proposed to bet $10 j that the man was lame in his left leg, I which the gentleman accordingly took [ up. Hie money was putted, and in a few moments out came a fellow so desjKjrately laino in Jus left leg that he ! could scnrei^L get down tho steps of , hotel,an{^ otrotirse the money was lost bv the gentlemU, wfio goold scarcely ! believe hia own eyes, for although the mad canie oijt lame in tl?e left leg, lie; wu certain he went in laiue injtlie right leg, bnt at the fame tin*? hdjnever imagined any collision between the j>artiesk We have heard of many ways to make a raise,ibut this goes* a little ahead of *\\.?Alb<?fiy Knuktrbocker. # -* ' . ( \ .v~,f i&jmmx FOB THE TOWN mini FOB. 2 4 S UNPRECEDENTED SUCCESS AND ENC .a"\ in establishing a l'nper in evenr respect eqt to the dissemination of Liternrv, Religion*. Scient vocnting the great principle* of EQUAL RIGHTof our people. So far we have gi ven entire sutisf number in ourli*t of friends and nubecrioers per*. WORKING-MEN A Have found in its columns something Instructive TO UBUJIASV AS Have likewise found tlint it has afforded the lntci of tue Enterprise is to afford a reading ndnptcd U nrntrvim ?M M fmmyttyH THE SJLMS1 Local and Iii?tri< t Xewn Sketches of Character, ] eedotes, Ohok Original i - .1 Selected Poetry and M EKGIltIRT CORPS who have consented to contribute regularly to oui he found in our State. Our circulation amounts t Inst without n single subscriber. The paper stain Single Subscribers, ?1,50, per annum, In adv it will bo seen that wc can furnish the paper at t mim ami it shall he the best Thdlar Pa|>er in South Ca paper published at the same price in tho South. SubscriptiouA, Advertisements uud Cotuiiiuiiie, YT KSmFRTO " I Book and Job Printing ^ESJABUSHMEST,^ HAVING A FINK SKLKCTION OF WB Ann PREPAP.jED TO DO work iiSS ! CIRCULARS, CATALOGUES, HAND-BILLS, WAV-' BILLS, BALL TICKETS, PROGRAMMES, &C. J'UINTKD WITH DKSPATCII. Ci? dhina. Satin Enamel, Satin Surface and! Plain and Colored Cardc, Dpop the ftfost t;)bo'roblc Jcbhis.! GJStftf'iS WB A ?AJI.JS. j The Ladies' Wreath. AND PAltLOIt ANNUAL* The publishers tender their grateful no knowledgments fur the liberally with which tliev havo been sustained, and are encour-j aged to renewed efforts. In a few months! the publication of Full-length Portraits of] some of the Most Celebrated Musical Personages wiil be commenced. The following arel now in the hands ofan eminent artist, to be! engraved, viz., Jcnnv I.ind, Anna Tiiillon. II.] Sontag. Catharine llayre, Albnui, and Mia.j E. C. Host wick. If these should meet with; favor, although vpry expensive, they will be' followed by others of a similar character?nsj the publishers are determined that the W reatli and Annual shallcoutiuuo to be the] Jlest of the lioiiar Magazines, 'in... f o .ki :n i.- _ 11i*r Micim) aiiiiht mih no pniirnv on-1 ginal; froin the ablest and purest writer* in | the country. Every thing of an immoral ?ri irreligious character will be carefully excluded. We intend to present the public with a; work which shall blend entertainment with 1 instruction, and not only captivate the taste,; but aUo elevate the thoughts and improve the heart?in short, to make the Wreath and Annual "a welcome visitor in ever)' fain-1 ily." The literary Department will be ablv an#-j tained. All who are interested in a pure Family Literature, and are willing to Assist in foster- j iug the b?*st native talent. Are invited to become subscribers and aid in its circulation. Each number will contain a tine steel En ; graving apd a Thirty-two l^uge Octavo I'ag.-s, printed nn fee paper, The May hiimi?er will have an attractive Title-page, making in all Twenty five Embellishments, and a volume of Four Hundred and Thirtyfour pages! Notw ithstanding the increased cost of the work hy the advance in the price of |>apcr and printing, we shall continue to furnish the work at the following wfoeeding low price: One Dollar a Year, in Advance; Four Oop ion, one year, *3,00; Seven < 'opioa, $5,00 ; Ten Copies **,00; Fifteen Cejjiw, *10,00. . Money may .Lu m-nt by mail, nt tbe risk of the publisher*, ifpncloeed in the presence of a poettua*ter, whom) certificate will be tnkca a* evidence. I'oRtngc-stamjw may be rent in place of All etonmindention* in any way connected with the Wreath and Annual must be directj& IWIPiCK A SCOVIL. )W frrfeppwe Street, New York. JJ<XMK AyVjOVn'Ig^TlKO fleetly <Ue? a* "" W If ' 'i * ?. \ * I Wi > ? ^ AMD COUNTRY. , Eii ': f SOURAOEMF.NT 1IAS BLEST OUR EFFORTS ? in] to "the time* in which We live," ami devoted ' .itic, ami News Intelligence, at the conic time ad- ' t, and tho "Moral no<l Intellectual Advancement ? action, and we are happy to announce that we 1 me of all classes of society. kND MECHANICS and Elevating them in their different vocation#. 19 ASSlCUL'iTOaaSf >t Foreign andt Domestic Intelligence. But the i the capacity nnd wiUits of every member of !?? Historical Event#, Congressional Proceedings AnMiacdlany. We have already engaged GF CORRESPONQEHTSj r J-a per, making it one of the heat Newspaper* to A near six hundred, which commenced in May la alone upon ita merits. nneo. Clubs of ton nt 61,00 each. By Clubbing lie exceeding low price of ?vi n /i\ ft^v JLL'JUWJSp rolino, and affording ?u<^e rending tlinn other I ntion?, will inert ntt?rtioiMrv being addressed It.l.I AM l\ PHICK,llox No. M, Greenville, & V, Mechanics, Manufacturers, and INVENTORS. \new volume of t.lic SCI I-iNTIFIC AMFIII-' A X commence* uhout tfftt middle of Sep- j tember in each year. It ia a journal of Svit nfi- j lie. Met Intuitu', nml other improvement*; tit** j | advocate of industry in nil it* various hriuiihe*. 1 j It i* published weekly in n form suitable for i binding, and constitute* at the end of ?aeh year, a splendid volume of 4l)i> page*, with a copious 1 index*. and from live to six hundred original ?ngrnvingi', together with a great atnouot of pr.actiI eal information concerning the progress of invention and discovery throughout the world. The Scientific American is the most, widely- j circulated and popular journal of the kind now ! publi*h-d. It* Kd iters, Contrihntors, tutd Cor-! respondent* are among tlse ablest practical scion- j title man in tlm world. The Patent Claims are published weekly,"and i are invaluable to Inventors mid Patentee*. We particularly warn the public against pay j ing money to travelling agent*. u< v*e are not in | the habit of furnishing certificates of agency to uiiv one. Lett crs should he directed, (post paid) to ot i,u., i j8 Dillonstreet, IN. Y. TVrmft. Oni' co>>y, for one voar, ?2; On" copy, for six mouths, $1; Fivrt copses for six months. $4; Ten copies, for six months, $8; Tea copier, iWr twelve ; months, ?15: Fifteen copies, for twelve mouths,j iJUU ; Twenty copies, for twelve months, $28. i Great Economy in Time & Labor. MSi!La53S3S^S!rfS PREMIUM CHURN.I NlTtSCRIBKIt respectfully informs his ft. friend* mid the puhlin (rencrnllv that, he loss purchased the ri>;lii to Mmiufuctnfc the nhove t hum, and is now prepared 1 o cxeeute all orders for the same. Its simplicity is such ne to he un- '< derstood hy every intelligent child, and its con-' M.ruiTion is on truly ami strictly philosophical t principles, nml produces the desired result in nu almost incredible short tunc. Tl?e superior qualities of this Churn are as follows: First, the quick ami easy process of making butter w hen sitting in h chair. Secondly, In j overcoming the diftleulty which produces a swell-: ing to 0vertlow; and, Thirdly, the gathering process, ia separating the butter from the milk, j ami preparing for suiting. Persons wishing a. Churn can find them at the subscriber's work-shop, near the eorncr of Main and Buncombe streets. J. 11. MERR1LI. Grcenvillo, June 9, 4 tf , Dod^t 'N Lllerary Museiiin. i r|"MIE NINTH VOLUME of lie Museum comj I mcneed (Saturday, June 5th, 1*54, which j fur excels all preceding valines of this widely circulated and independent Literary and Family | Journal, both in typographical appearance and in the value of its original contents. The Museum claims to stand second to no literary journal in the I'nited States, lioastiiig a corps of (lifted Contributors whose names are I enrolled in ilic list of the most eminent of Amer ican Authors, ami whose effusions have long grac| ed the pages of this paper. This is the Seventh Year of the Museum's ex| isteiiee, and its prosperity lifts been one of such n sure and substantial character, as to warrant! the great and constant outlay made by the I'm j prietor, in order to secure and increase for it u j : brilliant refutation. The Editorial Deoartment i ! isconducted bv (hwiAN K ])di?i mid J. W. IIani son. TF.K.M8 invariably in advance; ! One copy, one ycnf, ft*.0O; One Volume, f 1.00. Four copies, one yew, ftl.00. j And nil almve four fopiw at the same rate. Sin1 i?lo copies to hu had at all the i'eriouier.l store* in the civilized world. I We will send one copy each, of the Museum and Oodey'l ljufyi Book, for one year, to each ulxwrihcr, for Abo the Mueeuin and the S. Knylnnd Cultivator, for one year, for $9,00. Persons wishing the direction of their paper* ehangcu should inform u* of the Poet-Otnco to which they are nov^hent, a? well a* of tho*e to i which they wkh them miiL All letter* whatever, respecting the business management or ediiorittl department, to he addressed to OWIAN R iHUXiF, Xo. 12 PchoM-itrwt, Ih ?ton. Mum. > Southern ({unrtcrlf Review. having business relations with XTjfln ?^pvtiiif?k Qvaht?.ri.v Ksvikw, will 6#r lite address their eoauuiutioationa to the publish or,'wChsrlsnfe 8ML PHILADELPHIA ADVERTISEMENT. DOCTOR YOURSELF. Cho Pocket JE sculapins; C?R, EVERY ORE 1118 OWN rHYSICIAJf. |% TT1B Plrtueru EDITION, with On# If X Hundred Engraving*, showing DisJ&v eases und Malformations of the Human ft System in every shape nnd form. To [H )y which i? added a Trentisc on the Disease* . of Females, heing of the highest impor* nnee to mnrried people, or those contemplating narriojte. Uy 11 iluan Youko, M. D. Let no father he ashamed to present a copy of he /'/W to hU ehild. It mnr save urn ipom an early grave. J^t no young limn or voninn enter into the secret obligation* of mar inire without reading tin* POCKJi'f AZSCULA' PIUS. Let no one suffering from a liscknied oiigh, Pain in the side, restless nights, nervous celinga, and tho whole train of Dyapcptiu sen milions, ami given np their phvsieian, 1>? another noineiit without consulting the ?KSC'l'LAPlUS Ilnve those married, or those shout to lie niarri:d any impediment, read this truly useful book, is it has deeu the means of saving thousands' of unfortunate ereottires from the very iaws of death. igrAny person sending VWafy-Mre Cent* endosed in h letter, will receive one copy of this cvork by mail, or five copies sent for one Dollar. Address, (iH>st-paid) l>u. WM. YOUNG, 152 Sprucc-strect, Philadelphia. .Inrte 16,1854. 5 fy ~ SOUTH CAROLINA TMPE RANCH STANDARD^ r|^HK UNDKKSIONEJ) would respectfully an1 tvounce to the friends of Temperance genrrally that they intend to eominenec the publication of a Temperance Paper, about the 16th of June next, provided a sutlieient number of Subscribers call t>e obtained to wurrnnt the undertaking. It will be printed upon substantial paper of Imperial size, and will contain 24 columns of matter. It will be denominated tho "Month Carolina Temperance Standard," and will he published every two weeks, at the nt rv-.l ' - f* " x'i,v ""l" lnc per annum. Assoon as fifteen hundred ?ul>MTtliertHrvolitninedi w? will publiilt it weekly ?t the same price. Our sole object is to ndvoente the cause of Terntwrnncc; and particularly the Legislative Proliihition of the "ft nth o in Intosicniing 1 tricks; unil to prepare the masse* of tho people of our State, for tlio enactment of such a l.nw, by convincing them of its expediency and necessity. "We will eudcavor to ntnke it u welcome visitor in every fcmily. Nothing will ho admitted into its columns of a worthiest! ami immoral tendency. A strict neutrality will he maintained on all' subject? of n politico] and religious sect urine ehnrncter. No subscription will he received for 1cm than on year, and in every ease the nrdler must lie accompanied by the money. We hone all persons feeling an interest in tho sueeoes of this enterprise, will oxort tlmmselves in getting subscriptions, and as soon thereafter as convenient send us their lists, l'opt masters nr?? requested to act as Agents. All eommftjiientiotis intended for tho paper must he p?vft^>?id, nti.l addressed to the "South (tiirulinx Tctrtjicrftiii't'StanJ?nl," Lexiugtou (.'. 1!.. S. f. >s. r. c\ run man, ) . .1. 1',. Lit FALL, ' .? K;?iT"i:s A PtiopnrtToo*. H.OOULEY, ) Tnc Southern Cixltivator, V MONTHLY .IttritNAU devoted exciuairaly t*> tin- Improve silent ?it* Southern Agriculture, Stock Breeding, Poultry, lirco, Oeovrnl Farm Keouomy, Ac., Ac, Illustrated with numerous l.legnnt Vngravit.gr. ONE HOLLA r: A YKAH FX A 0 VANCE. Damki. I.kk, M 1>., *t I>. Kf.!?moxi?, i.ditors. 77ie Ticclflh IVso'c, Greatly Jmprovcd, commenced January, is.VL v v. ? TitK Cultivator, is a large octavo of Thirty-two 1?oges, forming a volume of ?S4 pages in tin: year,. t contains n much greater amount of ivifiiftg matter than ony similar publication in the So th ?embracing in addition to tho current agricultural tonics of the dnj-, valuable original contributions front nr.any of the most intrlliyint tiuaj racIfcal Planters, Farmers and Horticulturists hi every section of tlie South and South-w eat. Terras. (hie Copy, one year, i?l; Six Copies, one year, %S Twenty live, " " ?S0; One IIun?ir?l" " $75. TiiuCasii 8ywi:v will In* ri:?i?!.iv ndhi red t?>, nn<l in no instance will the paper i o sent ur.Je^H the money accompanies tie ?r.h-r. The Bills of all spccRvpuying Bunk* re?:. i -# l at par. Ail money remitted by mail, p<vr will be nt the risk of the Publisher. Address, WILLIAM S. JONKB, Augusta, (,'n. tariv rsons who will net iu> Agents, nntl ohtuin subscribers, will be furnished with the paper at club price*. May 26, 1SB4. f j 29rawing-S?oom Companion. A Record of the Itcautiful and nuej'ul in Art. finite object of the paper is to present, in .1 the most elegant ami available form, a weekly literary melange of notable event* of the day. Its columns aro devoted to original tales, sketches and poems, by the 1IKST AMERICAN At'TIIOltH. and the cream of the domestic and foreign tows; the whole well spued with wit and humor. Each paper is DEAVTirULLV ILLP8THATED with numerous accurate engravings, by eminent artists,of notable objects, current events in nil parts of the w orld, and of men and manner, altogether making a paper entirely .* orginal in its design, in this country* Its pages contain views of every populous city in the known world, of nil buildings of note in th'e eastern or western hemisphere, ??f all th* __ . itt._ * - - principal snips aou steamers of the navy and merchant service, with line mid accurate portrait* of every noted character in the world, both nialo anil female. Sketches of Ptauiiful scenery, taken from life, will also heaven, with numerous sjiecimens from the birds of tlio air, and the tiah of the sea. It is printed on lino white papor, with new and beautiful type, presenting in it* mechanical execution an elegan-Mieciinen of art. The size of the pajier is fifteen hundred nan four square inches, giving a great amunt of reading matter and illustrations?a nianinoth weekly paper ofcixteen octavo page*. Kneh six month will make a volume of 4lt [iHges, with about one thousand splendid engravings. Trhms :?INVARIABLY ADVANCE. 1 subeeriber, one year i $3 00 I 4 subscribers," " 'f 1000 10 " * HJ , 20 00 One copy of Tub Flao/ot oi r Umo* and one copy of Oi-KAatB^'^iCTonut, when taken togethef by one per fun, for one year, for $4 00. J e \ The Prct<nual Drawinq Room Compsion may be obtained at any of the periodical dejiots throughout the country, and ef newsmen, at six cents p^r single copy. Published every Saturday by T F. CLRASOlf. ; fhrAff Trunin!ewVliw#s?hr?> 9mr**s