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SHE IS DEAD." The Aldine, for Juue, contain* the following pathetic lines by Miss Osgood: Three little words within my heart. Beat buck and fori li their one refrain. Three little words, whose dull distress Means everything and nothingness, Unbidden move my lips instead Of other utterance; She is dead. Here, lingering we talked of late Beside the hedge-grown garden gate; Till, smiling, ere the twilight fell She bade uie take a last farewell, Those were the tinal words she said? But yesterday?and she is dead. I see the very gown she wore, The color I had praised before, The swaying length, where she would pass, Made a light rnstla on the grass, There in the porch she turned her bend For one last smile?and she is dead. Could I bare known what was to come, Those hours had uot been blind and dumbI would have followed close with death, Have striven for every glance and breath? But now?the tinal word is said. The last look takeu?she is dead. We were not lovers?such as they Who pledged a faith to last for aye; * Vet seems the uuite;se tome A riddle now without a key What means the sunshine over head, The bloom below?now she is dead? So new.*/ grief, its eudden haze Bewilders my accustomed ways: And yet so old, it seems my heart Was never from its pain apart: What was and is and shall be, wed With that one sentence?she is dead. Fruit Culture?Old Errors Corrected.?1. Instead of ''triinmiug up" trees according, to the old fashion, make them even, snug, and symmetrical. 2. Instead of manuring heavily in a small circle at the foot of the tree, spread the manure, if needed at all, broadcast nvw vrhnle surface. 3. Instead of spreading a small circle about the stem, cultivate the whole surface broadcast. 4. Prefer a well-pulverized, clean surface in an orchard, with a moderately rich soil, to heavy manuring and a surface covered with a hard crust, and weeds or grass. 5. Remember that it is better to set out ten trees with all necessary care to make them live and flourish than to set out a hundred trees and have them all die from carelessness. 6. Remember that tobacco is a poison, and will kill insects rapidly, if properly applied to them. It is one of the best drugs for freeing trees rapidly' of small vermin, and is better Used in this way than to make men repulsive and diseased. T* -CM r L0WEK5. r lowers Kimiuiiiii; uiuuatry as as well as lighten toil. For wc must have theui. We are cold without thein, but to have them requires ?etudy, patient culture, and uutiring determination. Every one must be studied alone. This can be successfully done only in connection with art and a kind of horticultural genius. Their culture is an art. How they breathe and eat and drink ! Hotv they ?ary their specias?under what laws! Flowers are servitors of our imagination; they bring food to the poet. They produce an atmosphere thai is peculiarly conducive to rkyrath. I do not know why it is that color and grace of motion and delicacy of form and perfume have such a tendency to make every eighth or tenth syllable rhyme, and every line begin with a capital, hut so it is. What a constant tribute to poetry pays to flowers. Can you find one of the great singers who has not at least a line, and mostly a poem, in honor of floral charms ? Take "away noble landscapes, level down the hills, make the sun rise and set in drab, kill out the flowers, and the poet's comer would becdme very speedily a bean patch. Now the flowers come to the brain with a delicate touch like the finger of a mother in sleep that takes the wrinkles out of dreams?tiny children * with their arms full of every imaginable grace. You can see purity, modesty, benevolence, ambition, watchfulness, patience, truth, all somewhere about your feet. But not only do they inspire much of the rhyme of Itfe. What do you suppose must be the power of a single fuchsia in a family ? It never catches the eve of the mother without awaking a song; it calls the attention of the children, and displays the rudeness of coarse work or vulgar contact. It doubtless has a pow' 1 n ? 1- * .1 i j r. ertui influence m maning me wnme iatriily more neat, more tasteful, more courteous, more refined. I like to take out the feeding plague of eating, by putting a boquet among the dishes. Ashes.?All farmers will find it to their interest to have the oak, hickorv. and guui, that is down in the forest, turned into ashes* This is a fine season of the year to hum all dead wood, especially where the forest has been cut down. You can burn much more, and save ut the same time more ashes than in the winter and spring. Every three hundred bushels of ashes, well saved and kept dry until the next crop, is the equivalent of any ton of Peruvian guano. Ashes cannot be misapplied on well drained land, as you may sow theui in the drill or broadcast or compost them. On many farms there is a sufficient quantity of timber that is rotting to make a large quantity of this plant-food. Ashes are good for all crops. Nothing haye we tried yet that is better. The Labor Question in England London, August 30.?Mr. Joseph j Arch sailed for Canada, August 28th. ( Before starting he delivered a last address ( to the body with which he is identified, the National Agricultural Laborers Union at Leamington; I gather from his speech that Mr. Arch is profoundly dissatisfied with the result of his efforts in England to improve the condition of the laborers on farms. At any rate lie is now convinced that emigration, which he baa heretofore discouraged, i;< a neces sity, and that eonviction has been forced upon him by the way in which the farmers are meeting their men. In the misery the laborers have had to endure through the last eighteen months he finds proof that the farmers are determined not to do justice to the men. The farmers want labor on starving terms, and Mr. Arch has made up his mind that emigration is the only answer to their policy. He spoke sharply about the refusal of the Queen to listen to the petition of her own lauores in the Isle of Wight, declaring, *.'with all due respect for her Majesty, the Queen, he must sav that he had letters from the honest tillers of the soil in the Isle of Wight, begging hiin to go there and plead their 'cause, ami if lie were not engaged to proceed to Ameriea he would be in the Isle of Wight before the close of the week. He deeply deplored that her Majesty took the step she did, when her laborers memorialised her for an increase of their wages to eeTNiteen shillings'per week., and he thought, by the course the Queen adopted, she set a Dad example to the country, it umglaud's Queen did not value her honest tillers of the soil, then he would take thein away to a countryjvhere their labor will be acceptable and well remunerated." His demand had been that the laborers should have some of the soil in this.country to cultivate for themselves, and he denounced it as an absurdity to ask men to fight for aland of which they do not own a foot. Tkei continuation of the speech is a in tonamore violent than I remember to have bea*(l Mr. Arch ?n before. He said "they had now arrived at a climax, and Parliament, the landed aristocraoy aod farmers, must look at it through different glasses from what they had done in the past, lie should deeply deplore farmers in this country being left without men to cultivate the land ; but be would ask the "aristocratic laudlords and farmers which of the two things should be? and he would leave it to the chairman and gentlemen of his class to mii'a fltn *nauMi* Tlva 1oltAi*oi*o Vtcwl tlMfwl ^i> C 111c7 uunnci x uu iuwi ci o uuu mvw every legitimate means to bring their case to the front in a law-abiding, peaceful manner. They had only asked to be paid so they might live, and that had been denied. Either he and six hundred thousand laborers must bow at the feet of a tyrannical lauded aristocracy, and a grasping and parsimonious class of farmers, or they must emigrate to another country, where their labor will be appreciated, and where they can live by their labor." He repudiated the notion of disloyalty for himself and his associates, but avowed that much as he respected and honored the Quahn, and much its he loved his country, he loved humanity more. In its interest he was to visit -imeriea, and once there there he would not ask the lauded millionaire or the aristocrat, if such there were, to tell him about the condition of the woi/cingmen; he intended to see for himself, as he had done in Ireland. _.0O-Oj>BRATIOK i-MONOiT tfAMIIjfl. There is no reason why tanners 9houi<l not combine to protect their own interest*, but every reason whv they should. Tho agricultural interest being the most extensive in the country, and being the basis on which national prosperity is built up, should by all means make itself felt.' But caution should be exercised in choosing leaders in any movement looking towards co-operation or combination, and liberal and just views with regard to the claims of seemingly conflicting interests should be adopted, lest uhhaplv impossibilities be attempted, and failure in expectation should result. The Newspaper.?Considering tho cheapness of newspapers, it is almost unaccountable that they are not to be found in every household in which there is even tho plainest education. They are widely circulated, it is true, among people of al11 * i im i:i?- . i...i most mi classes ;uiu couiuons in me, uui the wonder is that there should be u family, or a man of busiaeas ?f any sort, a farmer, a mechanic, a merchant, or anybody, in fact, either in the cities and towns, or in the country, who does not subscribe to a newspaper. The public journal that is sent out to the world every day, is a regular diary of the doings of the world. It is a narrative of the times; a chapter in the passing history of the age. It gives the latest news from all: lirceiiaililn fnifirt.irj nf tlirt MnllP. It tclld I of everything everywhere. Ami it costs less than a cigar or a ju'^p; and yet there are fathers of families who do not take a newspaper. It it strange, passing strange. _ Krei* Your Promises.?The man who forfeits his word without good and sufticeint reason, on one occasion, will repeat, and is unworthy of your confidence. If American boys and girls are trained to consider a promise as a sacred fhing, the men and women will soon be more honorable. Every day life's worries are added to, and its cares increased, by some- one forfeitiag their word. Politeness is a good thing to travel on. The German Monument of Victory. ?On the anniversary of th? victory of Sedan, the Monument of Victory erected on the Konigsplatz, Berlin, was unveiled with great solemnity. The correspondent of the London Daily Telegraph, t describing the scene after the unveiling, aays : "At the moment when the draper- ! ics fell all the bands struck up the na- < tional anthem; the troops presented arms, ' and gave out three ringing cheers; while i the artillery of the Guard fired a salute of ten guns, and all the church-bells in j Berlin rang out a joyous peal. The ca- 1 thedral choir, then, accompanied by the bands of the Imperial Guard and the Grenadiers, sang the chorale, 'Nun danket alle Gott.' While these devotional words were being sung, the Emperor, the troops, and the immense multitude of spectators present listened bareheaded, in profounded silence, and presented the ? 1 T I most impressive spectacle i nave ever . witnessed. His Majesty next proceeded I to minutely inspect the troops, greeting i each regiment, as he rode up its front; rank, with a hearty 'Good morning !' to ! which the men replied with thousand* \ voiced power, 'Good morning, your Ma-'j jesty !' In and out of the triple lines rodo the heroic old monarch, cheered enthu siastically as he passed each tribune in turn or approached the dense masses of the population hedging on the Konigsplatz. But tho most electrifying popular innovation of the day was that accorded i to Prince Bismarck,* who, as he cantered round in the suite, his hand to his helmet's brim, and his face lighted up by a stern smile, was greeted with such cheering as was never before heard in Germany. Ladies sprang up on the benches and waved their handkerchiefs, blending a shrill piercing upward note with the tenor shout and bass roar of a frantic chorus of cheers that burst from 200,000 throats as the author of Germany's unity and tlio nliamnion ef her state riirhts * 1 ? o rode proudly by; the greatest man of his age, the mighty servant cf a noble master, the living and acknowledged leader of the whole German race. It -was a great day for Germany; a greater for Prussia; but greatest of all for Otto Von Bismarck, whose reward has been proclaimed unmistakably by German lips from the very depths of the German heart. Finis coronat opus." The British Post Office.?The postoffice department in England includes a great many branches of the public service not strictly belonging to it. Besides carrying a thousand million letters ffod a hundred million postal cards, it carried last year two and a half million parcels. It has five thousand offices, which, besides being used for savings banks, are now telegraph offices too, which sent off last year about twelve million telegraphic messages for the general public, besides nearly a million for the newspapers, producing, at the average rate of a shilling, nearly five million dollars. The post-office in England also takes charge of the liccnsos which tho Government requires, of various kinds?dogs, servants, carriages, borsos coats of arms and firearms, and the sale, of a million of thc-oi produced about two and a half million aolfars. All this work is done by about forty thousond men and women, whose pay is small as compared with our own rates, but their services are rewarded by appointments (hat are as good as for life, with promotion for merit, and by small pensions, which are increased by means of savings banks, life insurance companies, mutual loan and benefit societies, *co-dpcr?tivo stores, * gratuitous medicul attendance, all of which are either provided or encouraged by Government as being a better way of having work done than by "ward politicians" or "precinct" managers. The large number of women who have found employment iu the English post-office shows how well the plan of opening up new avenues of employment to women is working in that country. The success that has attended tho gradual growth of our post office department, by adding tho luony-order office to it, shows tt'?'i>in unfair nnnn it for some of v,iwv ,,v v~ ~~J -r-_ -- ? -the other services done in the English post-office, provided always that we make appointments, to office and continuance in office, on the some souud principles of merit that prevail there. CAROLINA LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY, of Memphis, Tenn. BRANCH OFFICE AT BALTIMORE, MD. Assets, $1075,000, Hon JEFF. DAVIS, President. fen. WaDK IIAMPtON, Vice President. JOHN P: KENNEDY, State Ayeut. May 22. lUni. Drugsand Medicines M r I' Imvc ilist rec?'iv?'il t'roni the Northern u Markets, the largest stock of Drugs, 'Medicines, Prints; Oils, Var-; 7ii? hex, (Han, Lamp*, J'at en I Jfedi- ! cine*, SjnWs, and Dye-Sufi*, generally ever brought to tliia market. At the import duty hua been reduced on ninny articles, see eon sell cheaper than ever before. HODGSON & DUNLAP. November 28. tf NOTICE. HaVING purchased the entire ftoek of merchandise of Mesara. J. T. Middlclnn & Co., in Camden, we hare thin day formed a co-partnerehipnnder the firm namenf Phelpr A Billings, for the purpose of conducting a general Mercbendite and Comtnieiion busineaa. H A. PHELP8, M. A BILLINGS, 1 S. A. DsSAU88URB Camden, June 1, 1878. [June 6-tf. DIAMOND SPECTACLES. *1HESESpectaclesarc manufactured from "MINUTE > - CRYSTAL PEBBLES," melted together, and afe sailed DIAMOND on account of their hardness and >rllliancy. It Is well known that Spectacles cut from Brazilian or Scotch Pebbles are very Injurious to the eye, because of .heir polarizing effect. Having beeu tested with the polaracope, the diamond enses have been fonnd to admit fifteen per cent, less heated raya than any other pebble. They are ground with great scientific accuracy, are Free from chromatic aberrations, and produce a brightness and distinctness of vision not before attained In Spectacles. Manufactured by the Spencer Opticai Manufacturing Company, New York. For sale bv .1 a youno. Camden. s. c. From whom they can only be obtained. peddlers employed. The (treat demand for these Spectacles has induced niiscrupnlons dealers to palm an interior and spurious article for the " Diamond." oreat care should be taken to see that thp trade mark (which la protected by American Letters Patent) are stamped on every pair. September 26. 12m. Change of Nche<lnle SOUTH CAROLINA RAIL ROAD COLUMBIA, 8. C.f Jane 26, 1873. (4HAN0B of schedule tc fro into effect on and J after Sunday the L'Oth insf. Mail and Passenger Train. Leave Columbia at 5 30 a. m. Arrive fit Charleston at 1.10 p. tn. Leave Ohnrleston nt 6.60 a. m. Arrive at Columbia at 1.45 p.m. N10MT EXPRESS. Freight and Accommodation Train iSundays Excepted.) Leave Columbia at 7.15 p. m. Arrive at Charleston at 6.15 a. m. Leave Charleston at 7.10 p. m. I Arrive at Columbia at 6.15 i. m. Camden Accommodation Train. Will run through to Columbia, Monday, Wednesday and Saturday as follows: Leave Camden at ? 3 45 a. ro. Arrive at Columbia at 8a40 a. in. Leave Columbia at 10*40 a. m. Arrive at Camden at 3 45 p m. A. L TTLEJI, Vice President. S. B. PicKtua, O. T. A. Gen'l. Supt's. Office. WILMINGTONCOLUMBIA k AUGUSTA B, RCo. WILMINGTON, May 81, 1878. CHANCE OF SCHEDULE. The following schedule will go intoeflfcct oa 3:26 . M., Monday, 16th Inst. DAY KXPRKS8 TBAIM, (Daily.) Leave Wilmington 3:34 a. u. Arrive at Fluveuo* - 0:32 a, u. Arrive at Colombia >3:16 i-.m. Leave columbia . C:80 a. m. Arrive at Wilmington .6:16 p.m. niuiitmps^trai^daily, (8on(lfl)? Leave Wilmington 6:45 p. m. Arrive at Florence 11:26 P. w. Arrive at Columbia 3:42 a. a. Arrive at Augusta' 8:20 a. m. Leave Augusta 5:50 p. m Arrive nt Columbia 10:86 p. v. Arrive pt Floreuce 2:20 a.m. Arrive at Wilmington 8:00 a. m. james anderson, Gen'l. Superin't . CHARLOTTE, COLUMBIA k AUGUSTA H it. GeXUHAL StTKIlXXTBXDANT'a Oppxob. Columbia, September 22, 1872. Ou and after Sunday. September 22, the trains this road will run iu accordance with the following "Time Tublc:" coino south. Train No. 1. Trhin No. 2. Leave Charlotte 8 00am 8 20pm " . Columbia 2 40pux 3 30 am a ! a a a. t ip. - o oa arrive hi Auguain, i to p m o w a ui goimo north. Train No. 1. Train No. 2 Lenve Augusta, 0 85 i? m 5 60 p m ' Columbia, 1153 pm 11 05 p m Arrive at Charlotte, C 15 put COOu ui Standard time, ten minutes slower thau VVasliington'cify time, nnd six minntee fuster tbnn Columbia city time. Train No 1, daily; train No 2, daily, Sunduya excepted. Roth trains make close connection tonll points North, South and West. Through tickets sold and baggage checked to nil principal points. E. P. ALEXANDER, Gene ral Superlntendant. R E. Dorset. Gen. F. h T. Agent. C!mmvillu tintl Columbia Railroad. Columbia, S. C.. September 5, 1872. Daily, Sundays excepted, connecting with Night Trains on the South Carolina Railroad, up aud down; also with trains going North and South on Charlotte. Columbia and Augusta Railroad, and Wilmington, Columbia aud Augusta Railroad. ' UP , LenveColumbia at 7.15^?. m. Leave Alston 9.05 a- ui Leava Newberry 10.40 a m Leave CokeHbury 2.00 p ni. Leave Helton 3.50 p m Arrive at Greenvillent 6.30 p ni DOWN. Leave Greenville at 7.30 u mj Leave Belton 9.30 a ta. Leave Cokeshury 11.15a m T.euve Newberrv 2.30. u tu. Leave Alston i 4.20pin. Arrive ut Columbia 0.00 pni. Anderson Branch and Blur Rldgr iBviaion. 1.EAVE W a 111 u 11 n fi 1ft a in. Arrive 7 15pm Perryville t# '25 n hi. Leave fl 35 p ui Peiulleloii 7 10 a in. Leave 5 50 p fa Anderson H 10 a m. Leave 4 50 p ni Ar. at Helton ! 00 a ni. Leave 8 50 p in Accommodation Trains on Abbeville HrancL Mondays. Wedenedays and Fridays. Mn Anderson Branch, between Melton and Anderson, on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays. THOd. bODAMEAD. Uenl. Supt! J v be* Moot o.v, flenl. Ticket Agt, J I. J1IDDLET0N& CO PACTOHS Ailil COMMISSION MERCHANTS, BALTIMORE, Ml), Having purchased the entire STOCK 01' GOODS of Messrs. D. L. DeSaus.suke A Co., we will sell the suuic at COST for CASH, and for that purpose hciebj constitute t members of that firm our agentsto effect auch J. I. MIPDLETON & CO. JnueS tf f NEW KJ(JDS! AT the store oaawpiod by A. M. Kennedy, a few door* uoi Hi *1' tha Market, will be ound a atock, cauai?iMf ?f STAPLE DRY GOODS. Hardware, Nails, li t**. fftaed. Spades, Shovels, Garden Hoe*. 1<? ?/ k El well llocs, Plow Moulds, kt f iic. Ac. GROCERIES. Crushed, Coffee and Brawn au^ars, Rio Laguir and Java Coffiac*. V recti and Ilyson Teas, Smoked tmd unsinoked . Sidiiuod Shoulder 13aaua. Hams Lard GuaLti Cutter, Cot n, OaU, Salt, Stone Lime. Fiae SuperundExtra Family FFour. Soap. Candle?. Starch, Pepper, Spice,Ginger, Soda Crackers and ChNew Orlen lis Sugar House and W. I. ilolasses Canned Fruit, Oysers, Early Rose, Goodwsh, Pink Eye and Jackon White Planting Potato*?. Crockery, Glassware&c., Sa ilfllesrBrWies Shoes, Hamcs &?., All cf which will be sold at the lowest price tvr cash, and we request a callfrom all who wish to purchase. A. D. KENNEDY & CO. A. D. KENNEDY, . A, M. KENNEDY. A. M Kennedy anil gLv? his attention to the parcLass of e^l5JLA*?fc'1 tai* -""I? EtiWftn and Etiwnn Ground Bjtoe/ ' Feb 15 tf . * ' ; 1 / Mew Spring mud Summer GOODS The undersigned respectfully invites the attention of purchasers to his large and carefully selected stock of IPRING and SUMMER I) RY GOODS, V .* Embracing tim? ?4slo in the lino of LadlsC Dress Goods. AU#. A fine aMertment of MEN AND BOY'S WEAR, OLOTSriNO, HATS AND CAPS, BOOTS AND SHOES, Domtctlcs, Ac. With a fail itock of Groocri cs, ir.. ...i ,.?,i f\ 1IA/1 If A1I1Y Iliininurc HiiU VI WACl J 5 With u variety of other articles. Alfof which are o red on the aval reasonable terms. J. W. MtCURRY, Agent. April 10. tf l V'.^ / Ikt ihbrtfUrdv^ M^brjiks, tfcnihrtri, ? '; fc'rfirts.Vewth JtdLyqmskrr, I! ur Otun/tA * UstPMid XWJkS&jjQh fi'xr aadDrjuA jh /, 2i Uitffj! Hub tiuu} L wniny ^ >2 (Mfa!Jb^*Joi1lroodt&c, * ft 1" A/intutfWUmfat. F LOWSMilT PRICES, k &end-fifrPZ&lL ist. I H. MAkL & CO. P 9j..Q,t3ESmvt street. Wj i/ MKSC[/???y>' ft Tl?i?j C'ut entered kMolrdiAf to Act of Congress in tbe year|1873, ky [. I. Mali. & Co., in the ollice of the LibrirVM of Congress at W*?Uiufcl*u. ' May lU. l Jio. k$mr, book's, SASH ANDBLIDNS.; Moulding, b.suir fixtures.! Builders'a Famishing Hardware, Drain Pipe, Floor TUas, Wire Guards, (Term Cotta Wars, Warble and Slate Mantle Pieces. Window Glenn % Specialty Wlilte Plue Lumber for Sale. Circulars and Pris# iU?t? sent free on application, by . ! P. P. 10ALE, tO Hayua aud M Plnckney sts.J Oct. 8 ?ly. Charleston, 8. C( OUR NEW BOOK LIST?NO 8 Fogartie's Book Depository. FOGAKTIE, STILLMAN & CO. Chambers' Encyclopaedia. The revised edition of this deservedly popular "Dictionary of Useful Knowledge for the People" is now completed. Subscribers desiring to complete thair setts will please give immediate notice. Arrangements are made for binding the numbcrr for subscribers in cheap and substantial styles New subscribers will bo received lor the bound volumes, and arrangements made to deliver them ut intervals, so as to enable all who desire to poseess this "cheapst and best of Encyclopaedias" at a trifling inconvenience. Complete setts, in ten volumes, will be funiinged at tho following rates, viz: Extra cloth, bevelled boards, per volume, $5.60; Library Sheet marbled edge, $6 ; half Turkey Morocco, $7.50, and various styles of liner bindings. Dickens?All the various editions of the work of OharleeDickens, viz: Library edition complete in 5 vol's., illustrated by Cruikshnuks. Beech and Browne; Morocco cloth, $40.50, The Handy Volume edition, illustruieJ, 14 vols. $10.50. The Globe edition, illustrated, largo type, 15 vols., green Morocco cloth, $22. The Globe edition lovola,, half calf, gilt, $45. Tlia River Side edition, on fine paper, large type with all the illustrations froin the English editions, 28 vols., crape cloth, $50. The River Side edition, 28 vols., half calf, gilt, $112. The Household edition, |nowin couraeof publication Several volumes of tlis edition have bceu issued varying from 50c. to $1.25 por volume in paper and 50c. extra for the bound volumes. Stones of the Temple, or Lessons from the Fabric and Furniture of the Church, with upwards of .10 illustrations, by Walter Field, M* A. F. S. A., $2.50. The Life and Times of Philip Schuyler, by Lossing, 2 vols $5. Historical Memorials of Canterbury; the land, ing of Augustine, the murder of Beekct. Edward the Black Prince, Becket's Shrine, by Arthur P, Stanley, Da D., formerly Canon of C'anterburywith illustration, $3.75. The Unknown Itiver by Philip Gilbert Ham erton, illustrated by the author, $0. Meridiana; the Adventures of three Englishmen and three Russiaus in South Africa by Jules Nerne, translated from the French, with numerous illustrations, $3. The Wooda and By-Wrfys of New England, by Wilson Flagg. with illustrations, $6. Sanford's Series of Analytical Arithmetics. Th? practical excellency of these Arithmetics, characterizing the series as uniformly progress?"o olflav citmnlft and nw Knnui i vxx Sn linir analv. ? sea, bj attested by recommendations of numerous teachers and professors in South Carolina and Georgia, vis: SanforJ's Srst lessons, 36.; intermediate, 60c.; common school 00c; higher Analytical Arithmetic, $1.60, Liberal terms trill be made with teachers for introduction. Persons in'the country will bear in mind'tbat by sending their orders to us with the publisher's prioe for any book publishedjin America books will be sent to them by mail or express free of extra charge. Address FOGARTIES BOOK DEPOSITORY, No. 260 Ktno-Steeet, (in tiie bend,) Charleston, South Carolina. March 20 Piedmont and Arlington! LIFE Insurance Company OF Richmond, Virginia. ASSETS i #3,000,000. W. C. CARRINGTON, PRESIDENT # IjOS8C8 i Actually paid in KeraliawCounty within Three YearS, $28,000,00. T take pleasure in saying I have returne^ to the agency of this popular Company. No difficulties will exist in future, as to Renewals of Policies, as I shall pay especial attentionjto that branch of the business, fcyf'l will always he found at my Office (til liroadStreet, Camden, S. 0. W. CLYUURN, Agent. Jauuary 1G. 1S73. tf RICHMOND" \ BANKING AND INSURANCE COMPANY. 0:0 Capital, - - #$00,000 rKUX# wishing to insure in a. First CIhi C ly 1. iii w r?te?, will please apply t W. CLYBrRN. Agent, o. C*. ~ -???? ?-? CORN!CORN! 3.000 BUSHELS PRIME WHITE CORN. For sale bv WILLIAMS & MURCH80N, Jan. 10. Wilmington, X. 0<