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i ~ Al on, W~~~~~~ aesadonsh a pty in h N - 0 4 ( 1o th.o04dea fo di rs b ntantly 4L R J4 j -1_ , _ nW6 g 1 cl from 41 "idp al216 de dolhiaZ Dr. uhasenbear: of Lanter, In mannoj* fas f oiin powt son nothoneos .6f the~o war stat' Jeter o Dr Sauel i 4child p "1"" ay, ta 176yg.,w AT sum~as niny fahtalsm ur ao'n&ipo lns has- prgoumepe ota , I4 NOL:1 .'.',, IM B t1nfdra dlosovety ofr ith a;pu' n rk l 78thatlad pr which nil i tutoo, e41;, die rMarch a dcllve- y''ndef mnAblervatn pro !I'hs fhegrhasse graicnstal *llse d gardeno egae, ieg yers 18 afid onidn the resen't.W m~t t~Ws~igt~, eear indit oiade fic iet inmost soi, ne a i f The aier i t fe CAlie is -pomiorathnthe lime;yeal. tbulgte ,e ofn jigly bengfeiahifeeig tld's oraizn lini,4 ofea bi ancabae ribet -BOum afe ghoo dalof sulphr ronma~loer, whet, a bar yfoth cvoo n dh potesrt. b chillre'qre h~more79 that poorsoil sumlaspr of Paisalfwrafals in land ,hat ilaqksi'odash, phosphor, sada, a sen sulhur Taonme ashsiwth smon the p0 roortin of thi uiiamo e e ore nd of-h latif. ur raich is to use od enlekhed ahe Unitce Sftcorn, ~nand obhrvons iA ofthses gcompin, pta bd1oatoesjien'eeabls bufcegn in spr8adoverthehil to the irsnt hoeing. -lDws both rsl adiev tion eit, and are il defiin nm sels n thvileform.s ilTbue dema~r n thes fer ntizerih ormpotn theano the lime ,aoul bot broften highl beeftl oraise ftdi. ane. Thegoin trar enouglio, delofhulphou in grotas olornwet,atse, ard ijemller smal buetg no sulphre ba .ll eure moethnposos uJally cnogini. hr lature ofrgirs always fods o la soltble lim corune aof whichntoia, as vi a lieg andtl sulphur reme dy-thisdefectoe holumi o shs ithgyFu irgn the protino t mjst ooh omr to onebofthe ei~onmo~ alt 100gansmind 2m00e po~toe~,ps andmthing cros.A bi~lf ~rd d rjoiptgivin uicinsi th~soera ults ad eyas wil dsnd ;z; ge tgon, ci1 R., P(Oe S oven compensatg e lectualinequalityo h t~ 5Od e4 orally scv: s onl1 se placing, for tamp ~'jancg.nd 6dle-worl at tifese esii eo feliiestuai thi ti its 'i-ox ta0 eid te til not fhtmg tditam il*i ithe any' ting morealuable thanmere monoto 0 ou stm r 0ec '1-fdil atittay iun ~ iila no tls iiasjteintas iade o eQ e inubeofemale semiuaries, tablishnints which may be 6ompareds like tW'liurely-grounds for Moqgetg.MiidIs i ses It is Iever reieniAie thVtAioin'esticlife conversation i-(moi-tittportance than the needlo oficiography;-tbat a hus band is neither a Pasha dora ilazzarone, who must 0 perpetually intoxicated or unceasingly patched; that there are.. p on the conjugal dial metdv long hours of calm intimacy,6of cool coteiplation, of cold tendoinqss; and that the. husband makes another home elsewhere :if. his own hearth offers him only silence; or, what is a hundreditimes worsp merely frivolous and nioiot1nou1 discourse.. Let the woman-play theolubaivarde at. a given moment, thatis.-all very-well; let hei superintend- the laundry or the itcbii at indither, that 'is also very ivell; .but these duties only comprise two-thirds of her inission here. Ought care not to ho taken. that during the rest of heir time she could also be capas ble of becoming to h'er husbaind a ration al friend, a cheerful partner, an inter-! esting comparti6i, or, at least, an effi cient listekior, whose natural intelli gence, even if originally inferior to his own, shall, by the. help- of education, have been raised to the same level? DoMEsTIC ACCOMPLIsHMENTS.-T large/part of our daily life is a pro longed attempt-to obtain those, substan tial benefits which begin and end with ourselves; and the inevitablo "tehdendy of this is to make us sefish and hard-na tureid, unless some counteracting influ ence be sot to work. Having gdivided Imie n by the necessities of daily labor, we must endeavor to re-unite them by innocent relaxations; and on this account amusements require the deepest consid eration, for they are connected with our social well-being in a variety of ways. Business and enjoyment should act and react on one another, as the contripetal forces do in nature; we want the one to give steadiness and stability to the life, the other to provide expansion for the feelings and ventilation for the mind. But for this latter purpose itis impossi ble to work much on a large scale; we must content ourselves, for the most part, with the resources the family af fords. In the domestic relationship there ought to be no selfishness. The pleasures of one should bie the happi ness of all. Whatever elegant acquire ments we mayr chance to have made, instead of'boemg reserved for rare oc casions, should be suffered to shed their softening influence on our every-day ex istence. The prints should not be care fully kept out of sight of the children of the family, and turned over only for the benefit of the stranger; the pictures should not be curtained except when there is company; or the piano be dumb because there is "no one but ourselves" to listen. There may be less triumph, but there is surely equal if not greater happiness in singing by the fireside than in warbling in the saloon; and though the thanks of father or of brother be homely in expression, there is more sweetness in'them than in all the studi ed common places of society. A sad dor sight can scarcely be conceived than that of the spirit of dulness taking pos session .of the faniily circle, We see it in the husband who, hour by hour, gazes moodily by theofGre; in the wvife who oc cupies herself',with her mechanical em ployment,iwithout seeking to break the enchanted silence. N~either ontortains the intention of injuring the Qther, and yet they are mutually dofraude4 of the happmness they ought to enjoy. Inrsu WIT AND.GALLANTRY.--Wh the streets of Indianapolis were a peor feet glare of ice, alady pedestrian lost her balance, ai fell. A genuiie. son of the Green Isle, who on. assisting to r'aih tho lady, oelaimed, "Faith, ye inlistbe a lovely good lady; for don't the Blessed Book teach us, that it is the vicked that etand on slippery places?' e ume aith elod 4tringi Ther i tI8re' bot ya au e somep ae ladny ;it accomplished citiens -ate ravlled fqreigners. 'It must .be .thi% .t-hoio*tsome Hetmra, th resort oftho rmost polished,. theniost lei-nedy l'e'ece t'e all here 'Yhe q" Ik rapgid mannei, tlio ceaseless irpule, ,he visi blesuddenness of thought, the magnetic interchange of feeling these thi jgs also arei not wanting. Thie convei'saiohi too, is of-librty and art, of philosophy and the theatre.; There arengroups of politicians, who;rare thing!are speaking of the pcbVoe .There are otherswho 1e discussinvictories vr .tykantd and te heroic deotion ofRepublican. Blunt thereis among themi amati far gree ter than any Athens ieier say. " 6so him, 'ithloug hair far dowr, waving of hih drs, with dark eyes flashing ith genius, with features regular as those of an Antinous, with lips compres sod and disdainful, with a mien superb as of a God! But the lady who is at little intervals speaking laughiigly to him, seens all unconsciousof his great nose or divinity.a She is asinbr' and coquettish brunette, with large languid ye, and ant air of th rbs indoleit re p6se; There is soimething, however, of command een in herindolence. The mystics of her dwn land have foretold that she shall boa Queen, and she loves to remember tho prophecy. It might b6An Egyistian, who had'como to see all the 'arts and wonders which had for saken her country, to grace and em bellish Athens. Gentle reader, I have, perhaps, betrayed you .by my guesses. It is a soiree at Citoyenne '.fallidn's, in 1794. It is the first meqting of Napo leon Bonaparte and Josephine Beau harnais. MRs. IiEMAN.-An essay in a late number of Blackwood, on Mrs. Hemans, contains some interesting particulars of her private history- The fo!lowing is an extract: "Not long after the first publication of her poems, the next great event of her life took place-her introduction to Captain Henans. The young pootess was then only fifteen, in full j~lowv of that radiant beauty which was destined to fade so early. The mantling bloom of her cheeks was shaded by a profusion of natural ringlets, of a rich golden brown, and the ever varying expressions of her brilliant eyes gave a changeful play to her countenance, which would have made it impossible for any painter to do justice to it. No wonder that so fair a creature should excite the admi ration of a gallant captain. .And the love on both sides was ardent and sin cere; for Capt. Hemans, soon after their introduction, was called upon to embark with his regiment for Spain. On his return, in 1812, they were married. Of their domestic happiness, or unhap pimess, nothing is said; but six years after, in 1818, we are simply told that the Captain went to Rome-and never returned. The seperated pair never met agamn. 'To dwell on this subject,' says her biograper, 'would be unecessarily pain fuil; yet it must be stated that nothing like a permanent seperation was con templated at the time, nor did it ever amount to more than a tacit coventional arrangement, which offered no obsta cles to the fr-equent interchange of cor respondence, nor to a constant refer once to their father in all things rela ting to the disposal ofi'their boys. But years i-olled on-seventeen years of ab sence, and consequently alienation; and from this time to the hodur of her death Mrs. Hlemans and her husband never met again." .Tu WoMrENOF TURK EY. A WRITER in Blackwuood says:-"T his portion of Mussulmian population is much less un happy than one would ho led to expect. They .certainly hold a secondary station in society; but, brought up as they are in the most complete ignorance, they are unconscious of their degraded position and know not that there is a better. They are, in general, treated very kind lbytirhusbands and masters, and Snot1 unergo, as is supposed, either capricious or brutal treatment. Al though in Europe they, still believe a Tur te1do constantly surromided h~ mnultitude of ddalisks; at Constantinoplo there are very few Osmanlees, who have three or even two ives -a even tnea t~t a Ie t o us baseLty i l t as nhe mosfa: t6h perniM.ho"ev ame ambition." 1W -Ink announce MALLY BROGDON,. Esq.4Ia 'Car didaa ( the Ofic of li6f ii erDiste c, at iholeE e jIW-We ate atkthotfd -anno6nce doi.,IQHN S.1 date for the olice ofor thanna ng Election. ' sept'a27,18 - Q ~ OtrThe.Friend o jteh SAM6 ~ate; for ihe 0ffico of Soriffb t D t at theenmuing:Eectiom t Sept.2 1845. -07'We af* utfielf fe6ki .JOI:N J1ALI4.RPheg~sas e d 4':o~ Sheriff at the ensuing eet16n N . April 26thf 1i848.ti OrThe &iends OfW iA A. COLCLOUGIf, Esq.nnouncdhhim ai candidate for Sh6riffi lthe ie6xlo O April 19, 1848. -tKd :.FOR CLERK. anitounce Mvr.f I T -sa candidito for thQol e rk i at the 'ensih 6leditTd f.' " 4Corg Nov. 8 8 Mr. Editol,:-,Please aiinounce~ JOHN DARGAN JONE.9, as ei clitlate foa r eetotothe office ofOjket u for Sumter Distrjct, and oblige the. BURITEIAN5d April 20th, 1848. 28 i (QJbWe are authorized to an nlounce DANIE L H. RICHBOURG, a can didate for the o1gic pf iClere att th9disuing election. Jaii. 28, 1848.3 .:, FOR TAX .COb.bCT OR., : (fJ" We are autliorized toan nounce ALEXANDER WATTS. jas a Candidate for Tax Collector,6of Claremont county. at the ensuing Election, MANY -FRIEiNDS' Tho subscriber, havirig taken ~ orr Store, (known as Mc1ean ,wotdd ma t respec~t fly; cuan~ nis eld a ~frs ind the Public at Ir;tht aill~;~hue take pleasure to acconv Od'ld aI Cet ting and Maki. u aengfhi Fashionable ah sitsl~~fr Ho will keep constanl'ouhn rp and seasonabIaotne1,f oAink~~ the latest d'nd mnost'. hppl6 Fa hino ,an hops, by puzactuality and his desire'to plase al, ho merit a continuance of theirtn age and confidence. D. J. WYNN. Jan.15, 1849, 12 *.tf New Goods Receed, A general assor~ient of Dzyioods, Grocer ies,-HIerdwaroganid Cutlery.Crockery d.. dlery, Hat. and Caps, Boots and ghes, 1.. wvhich will be .sold low for m GLOVES. 2> A Fresh assortment of Ladies' wlit and black.Kid. Gloves, white and- bae) ilk d; Gontb and ecold k G oeq* do Berlin dg. lined with. Thpeks ekin. Alag a beautifnl assertment of ge fancy -and. bik Cravats; fuspenders, &c,. . y EB, .ANK8. Of all descriptions an .sizes, from .'e'm Thumb up tojhe Regtuc . 30 BASKETS CBAMEPAGE, 20 doz London Porter, - 20 " Madeira: ~J~iarticle. 1000 LBS. N9. CA. BAGON~ 1 Keg Goaber Dute Novi1. ki 1 - oor Oc 4., - Q scorramj Tanes Tol.ilo tFuli inor h tot~ui ad bi a recTol die d Taners Toolwa ilCuo 1~Lneofbuines all ofNhTE G o~i& us r ivd udleseds assortshet of Fihi recsaf a ocoesHor4I62t Cuatr Forkserh , fa t, f ues -kn tsN *"JEF nd~C da gt ~Maim th A l .A liBDPIO .f U dif ifU 4n4. ... andlet Wad 7W.7 -A' - - - 3 tu Weob it4mri4$ san brauvmaeu a* arag nsatatsa 4 ~ a acnncunx on run4 tak~to snus * toJ asande p4G' 6%