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. HfcfMkiitb lWNewt?irry Mtrt^iftoJatter of (Jen. ]>. U. Atchison, to ; Alptfcu* Baker, Esq^ relative to aflfa re in Kaoiitt. ThU letter flatly contradict* the assertion of thaw journals who hare been endeavoring to dofend tho action of Walker, that wo at a distance froin the contest should not ?b?i<i?mn while those who are true to interests in .Kansas approve the course "Wplfcer haB put-sued. Tho letter contains in regard to this l'10 following language, whtcli we would especially commend to the perusal of Walker's defenders. " Walker hat dove us and our ea tise more injury than | j|r jJaUyCfoi*#, or any other cboliiionisi could have done? We shall see upon what ground "Walker will next lx> defended ; if there, indeed, be any who will have the hardihood now to do so. Co., July 12, 185V. Col. A. Baker?Dkah Siu : A week or two since I received a letter from you; also I have rearl letters from you to Colonels Buford and liootie. You have nobly discharged the trust wc have reposed in yen. You have laboriously, eloquently, and energetically done your duly to the South ; nil this you have done, and every true and honest Southern man must, sooner or later, acknowledge it and thank you in his heart for it. Your mission was a diflietilt one, and you have boCn misconstrued by some and wantonly slandered by others. Yet, if it is any consolation to von, you must know that in this you stand not alono. Indeed, every man who has taken an openly and manly part in defence of Southern rights, has encountered tho abuse of the North, nnd, what is still worse, the sneers and detraction of Southern men. The most ready weapon which comes to the hands of a man in the South, is, that tho end wo have in view is not the rights nnd interests of the slave States, but our own. They insinuate that tho money raised in the South is not to bo expended in her cause, hut to lie appropriated to the uso of Atchison, Buford, Iiussel, Boone, Stringfellow, &c. Now, every intelligent man who uses such weapons is a liar, and is conscious of being so when lie circulates or publishes such a charge ; nnd try- him in any emergency, when the South shall stand in need of all her sons, lie win prove ninisen a cownru or a traitor. T see that not even thunder and lightning , "will arouse the South. I doubt whether an i earthquake?a moral and political earth- I quake, shaking the institution of slavery to i earth, and bringing ruin upon the whole : South?would arouse her to action. In ; a word, inv only hopes now for Kansas ar?* < in the border counties of Missouri ; and, bytlic-bv. any one of ten counties I could mention have expended more money than any State of the whole South in this cause.? The Executive Committee for lvan-as Terri tory will have a meeting on tlie 18th of thi> I month, for consultation, when you shall hear i from us. If the South would do hut half her duty. 1 Kansas would be a slave State; and I hope ' we will bo able to effect that object, not j 1 withstanding the apathy of the slave States | ' and the energy of the free States, and all | 1 the open or secret efforts of the officers of; 1 tho Federal Government. J Yours truly, I I). U. ATCHISON, j In a letter to mo of the 20th Jul}-, dis- I heartened by the indifference of the South i ' to their appeals for assistance, and more j 11 deeply wounded by unjust charges against b some of the best and truest of her friends in Kansas, who have ruined themselves in her service, he says, dcspondinglv : ? At times I have almost come, to the con- i elusion to curse Kansas and quit the cause of the South. It is hard for a man to de-1 I vote all his time and energies and money to' 1 a cause, and receive nothing but abuse nn<l 1 slander in return, from those who should | I sustain and co operate with him : and to bo j the object of suspicion even to good men, is s worse than all. Vet, in defiance of all litis, ( t I will not abandon our cause so long a> j < there is the shadow of a chance for success,: s and this is the determination of most of our | friends in Kansas and Missouri. Our cause ' is not a hopeless one. We always have v Jiad, up to the 1st of March last, a majority ! r of friends in Kansas, and I believe we still j I have. I will give you my reasons for still i thinking so. The registered voters amount 1 t to near ten thousand, and this registry was' i made last winter and spring, and at least ! t nine tenthtof those voters are pro-slavery j > men, for the Abolitionists refused, as a gen- j I eral thing, to register their names, and the! ? reason for their refusal was, in my opinion,' c that they knew they were in a small minor-jf itv. It was not to preserve their consisten- I cy, for Abolitionists are consistent in noth- t ing except in villainy. Now, if our delegates to the Convention sball re for the Con stitution to the registered voters for ratifica- . tion or rejection, then we will ratify the i Constitution. If it is to be referred, as Gov. Walker savs, to all tho people who shall l>e in the Ter:itory on the day of voting, then we must and will have a majority at the polls on that day. If the South would but make one speedy and united effort, all would be safe. If Walker's plan, however, prevails, it will give us infinite trouble, but it will also give the Abolitionist* more.? "Walker lia? done us and our cause more injury than Halo, Chase, or any other Abolitionist could have done ; yet, I repeat, I do not despair. One more effort! It is the last we can make, and we will succeed. I am happy to find that Walker is fnllv understood at the South. A great many I Southern men have gone to Kansas this summer, and many more will go from this region. We do not give it up. I regret that I cannot devote iny whole time to Kansas affairs in this crisis. Now is the time , for the South to act. Yours truly, D. Ii. ATCHISON. There are over 15,000 tobacco plants- J tions in the Sooth, and their annual pro-1 * ducts may Ire valued at 814,000,000. J e f # ?;!' -,. ' ' ' . , l-iLJ !?!?L?lil-SB* Law and Medicine. We make the following extract from a , well written editorial of the Journal of . Commerce, upon the character and influence of the Learned Professions, and the necessity of thorough preparation to meet their groat responsibilities: When we consider the law in all ita subjective aspects, its dignity as a science, its 1 intimate relations to property, and the progress of society, to individual charactei and happiness, and to the legislation of nations, who can de'ermine the value and importance of the legal profession ? Its vn*t influence ' has been felt even among the feudalities and aristocracies of Europe. It was the very breath of the Magna ChaHn extorted by the baronial chiefs from King John at Runnymede. It has mingled itself with the en tire mass of our Anglo American institutions, | colonial, confederate, and constitutional.? It is at this moment the supreme power in the land, every member of the present U. S. Cabinet being, we believe, a lawyer by pre- i fession, as was every member of the last, I and has been almost all the Presidents. fv> | almost every leading mind in the legislative branches is a legal mind, while, as a inalter of course, each set on the Supreme Judicial Bench is similarly occupied. These, to<\ are the men whose eloquence has adorned the annals of the Republic, while it has ' echoed through the chambers of her Capi- ! tol. Now here are considerations sufficient to fill the most ambitious mind ; to elevate the purpose and the effort above the region of pettifogging and inspire the young aspi rant with a burning zeal to excel in the best ' walks of lite profession. But let him study i diligently, and be chiefly anxious at first t? j discipline the mind in that profound science. to gain legal knowledge, and not he in to ? great haste to leap into the arms of action. The profession of the law is useful to a man ( in a great variety of ways, as is evident, from the diversified stations which lawyers occu pv. None can so effectually elevate tin profession as those wiio belong to it. Uii s worthy men will creap into it, as into all 11 other departments of action ; but we think (j it is improving, and that our own woiidt-t j fill country furnishes a first rate field for tindevelopment of the talent of the profession 1 We may resume the subject in relation t<> ' the other professions. J The true and accomplished physician pre ,j <ents an example of genious bending ovci . Itumanitv, that it may save its denied earth ... * v treasuro t roin tho grasp of the destroyer, lerhnps save a valued lite to society ; to tin ct State; to the Church ; to the service of God h and of man ; to every profession and even ,j condition of humanity. What room heritor confidence, for hope, for gratitude anil joy ! How do the qualities of the rkilfm ' and successful phvsicin wind themselves in t to nil the sinuosities of the domestic heart. 1 t and hind the affections of a whole family to t; liia person when present, to his endeared j image when absent ! Hut besides his individuality as a practi ioner, the well educated phvsician has an ^ aiportaut general influence in society, no' 0 he lightly estimated. In the use of this s' ntluence, he may he called to defend th ft trinciples of his favorite science against tin h pretentions and proscriptions of hold impos j lire and self-complacent charlatanry, evei . >? the alert to impose on the credulity ol " nan. It would be tedious to enuineinte tin -sl vavs in which an accomplished physcian nay minister to the highest of civil society. . t is a college, lie receives the impulse, whose D'imenttiui is felt tlirongh the whole of af a' er life. ol A Good Tkachrr.?At a late education 1 festival in New Hampshire, the following ncident was related : " Some years ago a teacher, about to open tis school in Charlton, heard of one hoy who ti lad always made trouble for teachers, and |, lad succeeded in breaking up several school i : .... i .1 mm -i - >y ins mi uiiieuce. i ne leacner ueiermmeti ^ o take measures to awaken the hoy's concic-neo. vi-ited liis parents, talked with him il nnde an impression. At tlie close of tinlav of the school he had occasion to tell tin j cholar that he had been a g<?od boy. The undent ial connnitlee called on him and old him lie must turn that boy out, or lie vould break up the school. The teachei cplied that he would give him a fair trial irst. At the end of the second day, the committee repeated their advice, but the eaeher replied that he must and would give n he boy a fair trial. The consequence was h hat the disorderly lad became the host ft cholar in school?and that boy was Wiliam L. Marcy, late Secretary of Slate. And dways on bis retnin to his native place lie tailed on his old teacher, Gen. Salem Town. " ind acknowledged bis indebtedness to him it or the happy transformation of charactei ti vhich had made him what lie became. I.ookino I)o\vs a Dandy.?" I was din w ng at a hotel in Philadelphia," writes a gen Ictnan of Kuoxville, Tennessee, "and siting nearly opposite Gideon Henderson, ol nl his city, a well known merchant, who was 11 >n his semi annual totir to the North to but ll roods. He had two young lathes from this c| state under Ids charge, and <>ne of them sit ^ ing on each side cf Mr. Henderson at the able. Directly iu front of liim sat a datuh a \ Sio, having tini>lioil his soup, raised his l< lyeglnss and stared steadily. first at one ami u lieu at the other of the ladies. Mr. II w eizod a heavy glass tumbler, and I thought vas about to spoil the fellow's profile by lulling it at his head ; but instead of that ie brought it to his own eye and looker) c' leliberately through the bottom of it ai the c< op of the scamp in front of liiin. The at- c< enlion of the company was fixed upon the c| el low ; a general giggle began and gree. . ill he waa compelled to quit the lublo ami he room, in the midst ot the -jeers of the fueats." e A pktktktt i? Luck.?The Chickasliaw o Miss.) Advertiser says that James T. Bnl- it .nice, formly of that place, and the publish- cl r of tlie first paper ever issued tin-re, has re- t) cully inherited a fortune of $90,(>00. Soutljctn ~ w7r PBIOBTEditor. OUR MOTTO?"EQUAL BIOBTS TO ALL" GiEENVILLE. S.~cT ~ Thursday IHornl'f, Aug. 90, 1857. ?3T We would call the attention of tlie ladies to the advertisement of Mr. H. Fcas.......... si. i ..e a.. ibiMiMH, 111 niiuuier WIIIIUII ui wu.u H p?* |>er. He lias just received a lot of fine embroideries. * 1 ? i Hot Weather. During the past few days the weather has been quite warm, the thermometer having ranged as high as 90? in the shade. Cool nights, however?for which this place is noted?we are ever blest with, no matter how warm and sultry the day may have t>een. What a consolation ! * Accident. A serious accident occurred on the Greenville and Columbia Railroad, on Thursday last, hy the falling in of a bridge across the Saluda River, as a freight train, loaded with wheat, was passing over it. The engine, tender and two box cars were precipitated into the wnter, and two firemen?Dobbins and Morrison?were instantly killed. The engineer miraculously escaped, with but slight, if any bruises. * Commercial Convention. This Convention inet at Kuoxville, Tcnn., ui the 10th inst. Rleveu Southern States vere represented, viz: Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Maryland, Misir.sipp*. North Carolina. South Carolina,Ten- I ics-ee and Virginia. South Carolina had : 3 delegates present. The Caroliua Times , as given a full report of the proceedings, nd we would like to give some extracts from Iiein, I>ni have neither time nor space. Prof, j . I). 15. DkBow, of Lh., was chosen Presi-1 cnt, anil It. li. L)k(tk akfknkk.id of Oh., Prin j ipal Secretary. The Vice Presidents and j issistant Secretaries were chosen one from | ?ch State represented. A number of reso j itions were introduced, some of which pro- | uced lenglhv discussions. The Convention outinued in session until the evening of the. ( 3tlt, when, after passing the Usual vote of j hanks to the officers of the Convention, and ] o the citizens of Knoxville, it adjourned to neet at Montgomery, Ala., on the 2d Monay in May next. * Better th an no Snake.?Mr. J. It. | Mini, while on Paris Mountain a few day* inee, killed a rattlesnake which measured >ur f^et and three itichos in length and ' ad ten rattles on it. lie did not take its ircninference, but thinks it proportionality ! irge to its length. This is better than no lake. * Deuoiitfcl.? When the mercury in the lermometcr indicates 8.5 and 90? Kali., id from every pore is issuing foith largedrops j perspiration, what would not "suffering umanity " give to undergo a cooling pro-j ?ss ? Many, no doulit. would he willing > sacrifice much?and some, perhaps, more i u?n that ? but there is no use of being exavngant when economy is as good, if not j euer. rur iu ci'iiH a most iielightroi com- j vo process may he undergone hy calling at Ir. Smith's ciearn saloon. We've tiie<l it, ' nd can testifv as to iu " cooling powers." j * i low to Do Husinkss: a New Pocket Man-) nal of 1'iactical Affairs, and Guide to i Success in Life. Kowlkk ik YVklls, Publishers, 308 Broadway, New | Voik. Price, pie paid l?y mail, 30 cents,' paper : 50 cents, cloth. We are indebted to the publishers for a j catly bound copy of the above work. It j > the last of their first series of hand-books ! >r home improvement, and is the most j implete and thorough manual of practical flairs that has yet appeared. It contains, t a condensed form and methodically ar> mged, an immense amount of informa* on on business in all its varied aspects? lercantile, manufacturing, mechanical, ag ! cultural, etc.?a great deal of sound and holesome advice, valuable hints, timely ords of warning, and useful suggestions, nd points out very clearly the means of voiding failure and securing success. To iu merchant, the manufacturer, the melanic. the farmer, the clerk lha nnm/.mica 10 newspaper canvasser, t he book agent* nd the student it is alike invaluable. It aches how 10 choose a pursuit. iiu? to e<i* cute oneself for it, and how to pursue it ilh certain success. It deals with princiles as well as with facts, and shows that tilure and success are not mere matters of liance, but that both liavo their easily as ertained causes. It is eminently a pracli11 work, and adapted to the wants of all lasses. No young man should be without Anothkr Affair of Hokor.?W learnd, oh Saturday last, that a Mr. McDuiHe, cling as the friend of Mr. Wighlirian, edit* r of the Fayelteville Carolinian, passed up i the direction of Ashetille, N. C., bearing a bnllenge to Mr. Henry E. Colton, editor of id Asheville Spectator. [Carolina Watchman. CWlesjog CamspooOetice. Charleston, August 17th, 1857. Warm weather ts row completely erne. ; oping this peninsular city in its fiery coils. It has entirely scorched of crushed all energy, poetry and sentiment from the forlornlooking bipeds that now perambulate the hot and burning pavements, from whence radiate beams of a nooi. Jay's sun sufficiently glaring to make the peerless eye of the eagle quail. If one walks down to the water, iti hopes of succes-fully wooing the fickle breezes, the eye only meets an unbroken expanse of seeming liquid fire, extending for miles, and undisturbed by a single wave, though covered by millions of tiny ripples that emit scintillations so Wight that the scene is rendered even less inviting than the cheerless streets, lie turns away in dismay, and resorts, in a fit of despeiation.to a palmetto leaf, in some cool nook, and fiauked with a glass of pure ice-wuter--entirely free from any admixture with the "crathur"?endeavors to console himself with the idea that there are many hotter places we "lead about." ft.* i- t??? .? 1 , ?v( cAnanpiv, ilium, wiivre iiiu newiy ' imported English soldiery are fighting with 1 savages, and the thermometer nt 110; or t Cincinnati, where it has reached 103 ; or St. i Lotus, where they die fifteen or twenty a < day from sunstroke, and, lastly, a certain i flourishing town, the terminus of a railroad i that leads to the mountains, where I have seen it higher than I ever saw it here.? < These, in comparison with 93 degrees, the | most we can boast of yet, render the | " weathering out " the dog days less irksome than it would otherwise be. The papers, and the visitors of the Moultrie House hops, are deploring, in the saddest terms, t' e meagre attendance on these ( occasions. Some are ungenerous enough to i pronounce it a want of pride, and partiality < for Northern watering places ; but the probability is that l!?o cause assigned by the " stay-away club," would be the sultry nights, the dread of the amount of the exertion consequent upon a thorough toe-ipula tioti of a mazurka, waltz, or polka, or to the preference to a delightful stroll on the Halten. Tnis delightful promenade is now be , ginning to be thoroughly appreciated. The crowds that used to till King street late in 1 I the afternoons, have wisely changed it for the Hattcry. Any pleasant afternoon, South Hay may he seen fairly blocked with car ringes, while White Point garden is literal- i Iv swarming with beauty, blooming and full 1 l.l.iwn .....I - ? - -1?' I XI juullg V.UVIIIjr .loops I | with all the eagerness that a juvenile of ten I summers would have shown in former years. But these model n patent hoops are full of crinoline and fascination, and they ? an quite 1 well be excused for this act of puerility. Another week of robberies, deaths bv , drowning, <fcc., has visited us. There is | scarcely one that passes by now without two or three deaths from this cause. A body was seen floating in the stream, by a steam- ' er coining into port, and brought to the ( wharf. It was exposed for the recognition ? of its fiiends, but no such recognition took i place. ' A suspicious looking box, floating in the ' bay, attracted the attention of some persons. . On sccuiing the box and opening it, it was found to contain the body of a newly-born child. Of course, no clue, as to where and by whom it was consigned to its watery grave, has been discovered, nor probably 2 will there ever l>a '!'!>? !..? <!.? ...:n i ... - ?. Wf ? Iiu may UJ(II> will ue li known or heard of it will bo tbe coroner's * verdict. ' Lieutenant A. P. Gailliurd, of the Police, ^ li accidentally shot himself on Thursday night. e lie was leaning out of a window at the tiuie, when a revolver, falling from bis coalpocket onto the window sill, exploded, in- ' Hiding a mortal wound. The bull peuuUal- I ( ed the groin, lie died from the effect* of s the wound the uexl morning. v During the lull, in traveling, our liAck- ? men ar.d omnibus-drivers are up to all sorts t of tricks, by which to secure a u fare."? ^ They consider private carriages going to the t railroad as interlopers, and lecognize them with anything but a good grace. The latest dodge is, while these carriages are wait- * ing for their owners coining down in the cars, to take ot) the nut from the wheel, and < thus com|>el them to resort to the omnibus, i You all, ere ibis, have learned that the ' American horses, Prior and Prioress, were i beaten in England. A great many are ( alarmed for the reputation of the American | turf; but those who know Mr. Tom Broeck I feel confident of his ultimate success, and ' say their being allowed to cone in fifth and ' sixth, whs only a bail for the John Bulla to uibble at. I General William Walker and suite have , arrived in town, and have taken rooms at i the Mills House, lie was received without ' any display at all. lie ia now holdiug mini 1 aturo levees. I will inform in my next in j regard to bis movements. S. Elkctiok.?An election was held in Spar- ] tanbuig District on Monday last, for Ordina t rv, which resulted in the choice of J. E. Bo- ( roar, Esq. Mr. Boinar received 1568 votes, I and Mr. R. S. l'ool 1601. I - . \f4 ' - >1 important office. Col. tfaxoy Or^ of Co ^ lumbift. As far as we can judge, lie poe- " senses, in an pre eminent degree, all the qualifl- ? cations necessary for tlie station. He would ( make an excellent Professor of History and Political Economy. He is a gentleman?a o scholar?and, what is now very desirable, c he is a strict disciplinarian. 1 f the Trustees c elevate hiin to the Presidency, peace and quiet will bo restored to the College. No ? tyianr.y w ?uid prevail, yd discipline would q bo enforced at any and every hazard. r It is rumored that the Students of the i College, or an overwhelming majority of thetc, havo resolved not to submit to the i authority of the members of the Faculty to t be elected in September, unless the docnpi tated Professors be restored. Their resolution will be based on two grounds, so it is f saiu. i lie nrsi ?*, inni lue JL'roiossora dis- ^ missed in Juno were sent off for sustaining ^ the Junior Class and the Students in the ? contest with President McCay ; and, second- t ly, that the election in September will be il v legal, and Uiereforo null and void. We v have not time to disprove both of these as jertions, and we only hope that the Slu dents will test the matter by refusing to ii obey their superiors. Let the question be s' leltled once for all ? who shall rule, the '' I'rustees or the Students. And when that a question is to be settled, we want no wiser, ? tiruicr, better man in the President's chair h than Col. Gregg. ? A CAROLINIAN. 1 NEWS ITEMS. fi Prolific Corn.?Mr. E. W. Wilting*, of [ this town, (says the Favetteville (N. C.) Oh '' server.) has Uft at our office a stalk of corn * on which there are eight ears. ' ?o? 1 Mobcuitors.? People inquire how they 11 are to pet rid of those tormentors, who, in hot and moist weather, are so troublesome. r I turn brown sugar in a shovel of coals in the ' bedroom before going to rest. ?o? '' Oun Fairs.?The Fair of the .State Agri cultural Soeiely of South Carolina will open at Columbia on Tuesday, 10th November ' prox. The Fair of 'lie South Carolina In- u stituto will open in this city on Wednesday, " the 18.h of November. I Charleston Courier. 1 Lafayette's Birthday.?The Oth ofSeplember will be tlioonehuuJredtli anniversary I i?t' the birthday of Lafayette. The Boston tl Post suggests that the day should be cele- " brated in some special maimer by the peo- I pie of this country. ?o? n Poisoned Liquors.? Sheriff Cnry, of Es- a ?ex county, Mass., states that delirium tre- ? mens in the inmates of the House of Correo- o Lion is becoming much more unmanageable h ban formerly, ami attributes the fact to the si prevalence of poisoned liquors. v ?o? h Col. Kkitt.? We find the following in a b I'hiladelphia paper : il " It is staled that Cut. Keitt, of South ZJarolina, declares bis intention to move the xpulsioD of O. IL Mat toon fioin the House j, icxt winter, if ho resumes his seat without ,, i re-election. This will bring the wlude w question of Congressional conuplion again t( uid give opportunity, perhaps, to explore q .he mass a little more thoroughly." RJ ??? al A Prince or a Bakkkki'kk.?The New B i'ork Herald, of yesterday, records the ar e?t of Stewart 13. Adams, the bar tender of he Howard Hotel, on a charge of embcz iling $20,000 from his employer, having = 11>.-11acted about $20 per day from lite drawsr for seven years before he was detected. lis wages were only $25 per month, and J el he kept fast women, fast horses, owned J' i tine house on Thompsou street, unci dress- ,T id extravagantly. ?o liUMOHKD DkATII OK GlCN. SaNTA Anna. flie liulependieule, a Spanish journal, pubisl>ed in New Orleans, states, in its issue of ? lie 28th July, that 011 the departure of the ? leanuhip Texas from Vera Cruz, rumors vure in eiretilalion theie that ex-President janta Anna had died. No particulars are '** pveu, and the liidepeudieiue adds that these v> uinors probably spiuug from the same re K>uiee with simitar ones it had received a P? ew days previously froin Llavatin. ft* ?u? to A Doo and Snake Storv.?The Man- t? :hesier Alirror relates that George F. Berry, ?h 1 boy 13 years old, while out berrying on Li Monday, was attacked by a " six foot snake th A a dark hue and red stiipe around Li* it neck,*' which wound twice around the boy's tli body, fastening both arms in hi* coils, the ri lad's dog. seeing his ma-der's lite in danger, it rushed to his aid, biting and tearing a snip k jB the snake's back. The boy got relieved tt from the deadly grasp and look to his heels, a IrUt the snake culli*l around lh? Jot r, ?- ? e> ?? " would have crushed iiiin if he hud not tl ought like a tiger. A ~o? tl The Serenade.?'1 lie citizens of our vil- tl ("ay* the l'lc-ken* Courier,) were com pi i- si nun ted with a serenade ou Saturday even- tl ug la?t, by a company i f youug gentlemen * liuiu Greenville, who are ill our luiilsl, pleasire and sight-seeing. The music was of the rery best, and, with a delightful evening for is enrapturing'cadences to float through ' memory's waste," it was not only a happy di jointing of the week's end, but soothingly & grateful to the senses and finer feelings of ~ >ur kind. The tbauk* of all are returned or this kind treat, with oar best wishes for he enjoyment of the party, and a safe re- ,4 urn to their homes. tc ieorgia. The President, in his baccaulaureate.>rietiy, but Tory ably nnd frocibly, pointed >ut some of the dangers to the mortal, sus* eptibilitios that environ the two profiiitfii* f medicine and law. Mr. Yeadon's add re? before the literarjr ocielies was altogether of a political charaoer?a discussion of the elavery question.? fho recognition by the Constitution ofabwe- . y, and the influence of the Union upon the nstitution were the questions discussed. There ivil? n v?rv 1 amn MtnnnnnM of nun. >le in attendence, and cverthing pawed off ery agreeable to them, and oreditably to he Institution.?Indejxndeiti Press. Toe Blub Ridob Tunnel.?Wo see ti'^f >aragrnph going :ho rounds of papers out ' if the State, as well as in it, that the Bine Hr iidge Tunnel will not be ready for the pw a age t?f the cars for two years. We undor-. land from Col. Croaet, the Chief Engineer, ^ hat the work will be completed in a few reeks, with the exception of eomo arching, rhich, however, he does not think iiecessa y, and which will not interfere with the inssage of the trains. The public will relice to learn that this great work is so near ts completion, and the Central Road will oon have a straight shoot through the towels of the Blue Kidge. When the con ununation arrives, there will no longer be , mountain hairier between East and Wert, nd as the Central Road progresses we shall iccoine one Virginia in interests, feelings nd social and commercial inter connnuuicaion.?Richmond Dispatch. The Buitish Ministeu a Sabbath keep;r.?The Christian public will be gratified o learn that the British Minister at Washtigton. Lord Napiei, sets a go?v| example a to keetiing the Sabbath?steadfastly reusing to receive visitors on that dav. Wo uulerstniHl that a Commodore in our Navy lot l<>ng since called at LomI Napier's resilence on the Sabbath. The servant, who ame to tlio dour, informed hiin thnt his Lordship did not receive visitors on Sunday. But I am Commodore ?replied lie visitor. 44 It makes no difference, sir," aid the servant, " he will not recoive you." But go and tell him Commodore um ..ull...t '? " I'll .l~ :r -?- - ...? I ? MW r?\r, Pir, II H'll in MSI pon it; but I know he'll not receive visitrs on Sunday." The finale was that tho /ommodore had to depart without seeing he Minister.?Prctbytcrian. Suitiso thk Action to tub Word.? 'lie latest pulpit anecdote we have seen is lie following, illustrative of the manner in diich tho celebrated preacher, Spurgeon, in .otidon, attracts attention : Ujkiii one occasion, ho told the assembler) niltittide that the way to hell was smooth nd easy, like this, said he, and he straightray opened the pulpit door, put his foot ver tlio banister, ami slid down, as you nve often seen little boys do. Ho tlien lopped for a moment, and said : But tho 'ay to Heaven is hard, like this, and pulled imself up again, which wrs rather difficult; ut the congregation received ?hia practical lustration with great applause. Deatii ok Mas. II arkisotok.?The New* errv Sun says: We are pained to anounce 'hodeath of Mrs. Sarah Harrington, ifeofDr. Win. II. Harrington, and daugh>r of the lion. J. B. and Mrs. Helen 'Neall, and their last surviving child. The id event has oast a gloom over our society, rid many hearts weep in sorrow with the fflictod parent, husband and children. OBITXJARY. ' Died, in Greenville, on the 4th of August, t the residence of Cnpt. J. W. ltrooka, ESSIE DUNCAN, infant daughter of (MO|ihino B. and J. M. Timmons, of Timlonsville, 8. C., aged 11 months. My lovely infant from me gone: Alas! so soon re.-ign your breath ; Oh. God ! Thy liolv will be done? Thou gave her life, Thou gave her deAth. EVER AND AGUE-CERTAIN CURE, No more use for Tonic mixtures, Quinine, Fowr's Solution, Arsenic, Mercury, or any of the llianoua or nauseous compounds, which only lieves one disease to implant another mora tadly, and which sends its unhappy victims tally, with a wrecked and broken constitution, i an early grave. Try Carter's Spanish Mi*- * - , ire, which contains none of these dangerous ugs, but cures by acting specifically on ths iver, purifying the blooJ, and strengthening m system, thus enabling nature to rooupcH?&'*Aa| i exhausted energies by opening the pores of ie skin, and expelling from the body alt imputies and old medicines, which clog and retard s free operation Mora than one thousand perms have been cured hy Carter's Spanish Mixire, after every thing else had signally failed. n Minjili' of its renitrkanl effects. Messrs. " ari? A Ilick*, of Autsugaville, Ala., writes at ist it eurod a gentleman of Chi-onie Ferer iff1 gue, which *11 the efforts of physicians and ?eir remedies oould not subdue. (Is only took tree bottles. They say it sells very rapidly, J itd maintains its high reputation nil through ic country. . . ? "fed 8fggSBgBg*9 Far Brigadier General. THE FRIENDS OF Mas. W. K. EASLEY, won 110 hiin a Candidate for the office of Brig*- ' ier Gene al of the First Brigade, Find Division, C. M., vie* Oon. J. W. IlAaataox, resigned. For Tax Collator. > 'y^M^iS The Friend* of James B, Pear>*t, announce him as * Candidate ft* Ts* Oletor at *-? ensuing flection.