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1, 41 n ~t6 im n pronapon oimd wasiae td D ilp it fit,15 ina im aqyfo'atie f P.,-A thne -letters 'heois pjroved -to be ths ~erareoted one to Dr. -d the other to T. J. arg;sandupon opening .ththt one. directed to two Noe. of the cele oad y' ublibdtion,. signed S other toT.' .Glover, One Ci tho6amne. Below e edthat you 1 Ch.Grolina, I take ing youto drop into g you.way, the on 6ough ornpratively : k0 -' the iBery'e ,a aioinion, who 68li Trefrdewhloh'will. not biy t location t. hehn you willpardont me for Ha~mi butle .t youmay eli4thgitn Io take , u p , Hlarwood, dr o.. t kedDublin, In ekoJohn M. r CIf,8C., anti mtraelling W. no he pinci. Sere toocdeeply ethe -r.have :thy He tor other motives, S1" pIoiingat the wrong; edncfto strength ~ rung. - M'least I '~4 bc~h.iBarreut comirng l'Cslaveri.1ed. I want id comnoback prepar ~ a ~. ~ ~ etenaisiwarfVare hrislithiionk I hate r t of.it." 1e on. aturday, at f a tih ed, rid spoke in a enitmoosly agreed . t en 4&ith'i I proceed. Y iten agnit him. An A~~~radeaf'the fiits berore G. sugon which-a warrant rhis arrest, and being ~ irnsmfor ex.amiriation, was INn rtrh kPtAeU ro in stating that - afed with the utmost %i~ltW d Mn1tA I disposition to o et& cpended. by the r tnajiappoarance. Ie seems % ~nno reat astuteness, and just -s a st might be exfcted would ~nrev4by hePN(~hprn Hive of~b. firepa bnQdIb rern ininglbat O demisser vetM wanther isr , Al re 4i*~ ~ of himself is ~ Is a ~ont or Mesars.'E. ~ to ollect ,itile and ai~rfitIo for a Gazetteer, be pahid d, and that heran. 8bpob 11'aI nyl letters or do. ts t t 4y . Taking the ~V~le CI~p~ntiabetogether as gleaned * cI1~ ~ir4 ~adjjnhis possession "justified in his fIntending only si~u~t'~ qhil~be done-at the same lime, - tashowitheir adherence hoilove for her peaco dI1a~~W;b its* el as Words. '1'e i~ti at Gazette states.--We ofa number' cases been administered to epot atisfactory A - raise to - ;'ba~ thei Yt ~%' i tJ n .&kri~ien ha r l~ ~ 'der. jdier R - j7' Amo en r ie *1 ay ki;x I, ta od ryn ain U00 Are h 0i U.&qon'~ gets t, but-his who pnjoye I. .Rhean Ts not lk' ed, whatever.-:he isck~ amis. Who wvill udot kja ' on a*~ver lieve Auiage W.'aoe' d to b uot to be rich. At the gate whilh'sseprelon en~ ters, love goes out. .:BzLtis -AN4I DA&HLAs-A mode'r wrier, whohasevidently deply studied the chariig prodluctiopsof nature,. says. thiat "Dahlias are ljke1 ruost beautiful women without ittllectuality; theyr saikosviu ith astonishment by their sitbrior splenJdr, "but are-miserably destitute of 'those , properties which distinguish and render agreeable: leas C imposing flower.' Had natui-e glien the fragrance of the roson stock to the dahlia, it. would have, been the most magnificent agemi of the garden-butiwanting scent, it i ke ac fine woman without a' mind. .. EPIGRA S.r "Flacus" his hapless loves ,-heares In strains that-read like nonsense-verses, Yet sometimes makes a-slight pretence a To poetry and common sense. t "Flactis,*'thou'rt tod nmeh "half'anid half." Dost mean to make us cry, or laugh Too-serious for burlesque thou art;. t Too like burlesque tu touch the ieart. [To a priarily sexecrable Flute .Playen.] The lyre of -Orpheus moved both beasts and a Yourflute, Enodes, does the same;;but thlen There's this light difiace: when e would i To him they ran-from yon thegtrun away. I saw a mourner standin atkbveltigie over the grave of onerdearest to aka on earth Tf.he memory of joys that wce past came a1 crowing on hissoul "And this," said he, p "is all that remainskof.eorb so loved andsso lovelyt I called, beno voide answers. 0, my loved will not heart 0eath! inexora ble Death! what hat thou doniet. i.'tme lie a down and feggt mysor v in the slumber of TWhehe thought thfo in , the. form ti of Christianity.cani y. He heard the sbrig h and transport of the grneat multitude which no man can number, around the throne; there C were the spiris of the just made psrfect. b there the spirit of her he mourned. Theirr happiness was pure, permanent and perfect.r The mourner then wiped he tear from his l eye, took courage, and -thanked God; "aill the a days of my appointed time," said he, "will I wait till my change comes;" and ho returned to the duties of life, sno longer sorrowing a i those who have no holie. I Editors must respect themselves if they S wotuld be re pecte by others, and must cease to be mere cats-paws for political domagouso. C It is a toilsome life in which a man is seldom . compensated for his labor. Few of *.he pro- e fossion are selected to fill public station, al though no persona undergo more fatigue of body and mmd to elevate otners.-gliper. . TnlE SPIRIT OF PEACE. 0 Where hiathn the spirit of peace his home? ,. Loves ho o'er the earth or ocean to roam! lie dwvells in the deep sequesteredl glade, Where the lveri step ha h a foot pe adc; b He lurks in the bowers where birds have sung 'i To their fluttering mates when the day was b ByThe rver pool, 'neath the waterfall, h Where the rock-sprung trees have formed a a pall, Solemn and dark o'er the-depth-abelow, As bestbefits its majestic flow; d Where hidden wild flowerm scent the air e ure the Spirit of Peace is there. ththe woods at eve, when the birds are still, d And naught is heard but the tiny ifl, Which, noon and night, makes music sweet, As it leaps its brother nil! to meet; Where naught is seen by-tpie straining eye, But the -.rees, like spectreq, standling by I have met with thu wvodman'sloiv y cot, Where I thought thnt'the homee of man was r -not; I have heard his evening praise -and prayer, And I felt that the spirit of peace was there nooKS. Let us consider how great a commodity of t doctrine exists in books; how easily, how se- v eretly, how safely they expose the nakedness of human ignorance without putting It to shame. These are the masters who instruct r us with rods and forules, wvithout hard wvords t and anger, without clothes or money. If you approach them they are not a sleep; if, in in- r vestigating you interrogato them, they conceal o nothmng; if you are ignorant, they cannot laugh j at you.-Philobiblion, by Rlichardl do Bury, written in the reig of Eward III, and late- ti ly translated.] .a Once from a cloud a drop of rain Poll trembling inathe ses; 0Aa when shp saw the wide-spread main. Ihme veiled her modesty. i "W atpe in this iwide sea havo I, Wiat roont Is left' for mes) hure it wore better that I die, In this iniensityl'," Blit Whbile ii aba i gfear e Its lowliiosa confossed n A shell received mlt aWelcom'c~her, F And press'd her to lis east. And nour-ish'dl there4 the drop became A pearl for royal eye- ti Exalted by its lowly shatme, li And humbled but to 11iso. r. F'eed the mind and it will fond tho bod. . MO. of fl6 ediPa Paid to ,tht4 dg s e i aed* th0egn t. 4wo t. ap aer orcy POX tf Rteceeti otii as Infa Y ~ ~ ~ ~~t Us14telki:qc4 aeltnd-totxqe~o mfifsoho 6*fa. orabl terms.:Foyt partibulare enqire o 9 ,7aAton.Pices from :.-4 t $2 T~jerPoufid.. , ~Ih~fEx-Praein Polk. And they, whol earts are drty a dust, Burn-tu iho socket. 'The reiegraph per 'fultimore on Mon. ay 18th inst. ,comnunicated to do peal l0 oftheouthrnStates the melancholy 1tolligende that JAMES KNOX PoLx had eparted this'life at Nashville, Tenn., on ,ridaytheo12th inst.. The n'ews we can. ot say was undipected for we weie aivare tat he was held a-victimnby that universal courgei-the chronio diarrhea, but, never. eless; coming ds It did with lightning-ike apidity we were dstound6d. 'Vhen .we 1nk of a great and'good man, how seldom is we ever deem hm mortlal. It is but a )w fleeting months- since, he retired from post, If not:the highost, the.most honora. le in the world, the chief Inagistracy by io peoples choice, after an administration arassing a'id arduous,: yet the most rilliant since ihaiof WASHINGTON. A ition mourns hIs- is, and 'it is. 4 nation's iss. 'fis home willbe recordejJ on th6 gs'of history .Rni posterity wil .revere KJAM.Es KNox .POLK,s Was born at lebklenburg, N.., C..November 2, 1795, nd consequently atteined his 54th year..' le entered public lire as a member of ie Tennessee Legislature in 1823, where e served two years. In 1825 he was' lected to Congress, and continued a rnem. or of that body for fourteen years.. du. irig four of which he presided over its Oliherations as Speaker with eminent bility. He was then elected Governor' f the State of Tennessee, which station e occupied fortwo years, and in 1044 e was elected' President of the United tates. "His transition from the pinna. Il of earthly honor to the lowly tenement f the dead, has been sudden and unpect' di, and his friends and his countrymrenc tight wvell have anticipated for him many ears enjoyment of the dintinguished hon. rs he land so fairly earned in the service I' his country." Mr. Polk leaven no bildren, and the sympathies of the nation re enlisted in behalf of hisq amiable wvife. 'o her, who had shared wvith hinm the urdens and vexationsq of public life, who ad been his confidential friend and true Llviser, this loss is terrible, her prospects re. darkened and her life hereafler ren sred a blank. His loss wiil he severely it by his aged :mnther,.though coupled 'ith the. gratification of seeing her son esoend honored, rovered and beloved I to the grave; a nation joining in her tournfual sorrow. 4th OF JULY AT CHARLESTON oR Co. LtrBAr.-It will be seen, by our adverti. ng columns that the-South Carolina Rt. .,. with its accustomed liberality has re uced the fare~ so as to enable individuals igo either to Charleston or Columbia ith one i-educed fare. By an arrange. teat with the Geogia and Wecstern Rail. >ads, t ley, also. arc enabled',to furnish -avellers this summer w itli throtigh and 3turn tickets either to Dalton, 407 miles, r to Rome, 385 miles, from Charleston, >r 815, and to A thens, 251 miles for $10,r tus placing it within the power of any I rae to 'enjoy the cool balmy breezes of to mountains of Georgia. LADY'S BloK.-The July number of us beautiful ai~air in received. It is hat it pretends to be-a book for the udies. The embehshments nrc a groat eat, and there are no thirteen of these a squisite specimbns of art in the present I umber. Among these are rThe First arting and retured from his Travels, aperb rnezzoItinats; 'sparkling contribu. ons from Grace Greenwood, Miss Les. e, Tuokerman, and oilier noted wvriters, mnder the Lady's Book one of the mostr tracitive of periodioals. raf et knv. 'V 114160- ' o .io our s t b bolitiOnspress of the.couhfiand"3j i nWCongress. d I Mire' t heo*wer to:4othedl iy erritresmLg the p.4ishipt 'uq i on r d' beI6il e [ Ptitt, on resist aO th od ous 1d. tn ress, and te ttemp ra n nade, bedaneu ge toha T. nsult to the chaialtlr :ontemplatod as the d n'd not even emotely ti f slavery. Thisliadedb r f the'old Hartf'rd OW resent daya: dk nly organmet foe frh ympathiesadded o it deigg f it, lad not been for S vo n inopf terrio - led to the country s es a rom the adoption' of the oiVi60*7 -, he present day? h Iarty li this country never h republi nshould extnd beyn Id Thirte Colonie tiempiing topnish the8 h v rh ewelled the numert tthiit tuts. lal -see: Whether they can rallflano cod. ' CENSUS.-Capt. JSAA6 .8s has furi shed us with' eturns ofi umter;Distriot, 2Oth and44th Regiments,) which will ommence publication of i drncane a a they :aro ofPidbnsiderable utilly dri mportance;we would bekleavo tordminI ur readers to preserveth Yanner. Capt.' Keel sate w asaccp us thanks for hisattention. Co-rron DrOOm.-We wore, presented withe 20th inst wvith a bloom of 'cottori vhlch' had-been' gathered the paevious day rom Col 'WILDR!5 a-' utb i 'i h eighborhood of this villag. This is':as arly, if nrot the'tlrsi, a blonNs an - ho state. Sons or TaEr ER ANCE.~ D vision, styl he WEENEE DIvreroN, No.- was initne2 n Thursday night last'en 1i~tr~yei bviD V. G. P. MonToom1unT Modeaassisted b) trothers Graham, W. F. B. HaydebworthlN ewie, J. Green and M4 M Noah, Jr., of 'Ele. 'ER Division, and lBro. Conyers of.Coxrnrggg )ivision. The Division onsa under the rightest prospects and bids fair to be a cease ~s co-wvorker in the cause. Oyvedeni~ ~embers were' 'instited,' a dth ti'ollowita ros, chosen ofilcers~ N. G. Rich, W. P. H. Thorn, - W. A. E.' J. Porter, .L 8. A. I. McKnight, A. IL S. James E. Fulton, P P. 8. Boon,, ' C. WV. 0. Bradley, .C. S. E. Fulton, I. S. J. H. Salters, 'O. 8. The Rev. .Jas. A. Wallace was' appointed -. W: P. From the earnestness with whicli lhe members went tof work, we trust soo'di e able to chronicle some of the bedtefls~e ulting from the establishmenmiof the Weene )ivision. Weenee is a4 vdry'approptite amne, being the Indian appellati of tle Ila'ck River. - THE CRPs.-.A recent tour of t(e0 aDisr as convinced us that,noittithstandin th aosts, etc., we will have as latgie' a'yisk 'a ver. In soms places floldA offettoiria e seen iti blossom 'and edfi'i earing.'d ever witneissed e-bettet proapi'ct than the rope now present. A friendl, wridarg thu tz tates that he has th'o beat pnrdspeoi ofa croj: e ever had, cotton blossomar by the hundreds I0T The Great'IBarrington, Mass., Courji nyu. the principle occupation of-the maki i4, abitants of that village, at preseut, is pitch. og pennies. Well,'we are better off', for tilt :>lks here, great and 3mallin this town d< othiing now bat. hunt, if shooting marbles may be, considared-jaswa .MMMMR* * * 4 e d " wi, AK b 4t I-M !". 401 fAf wenth A I . ow ntd dj, e ie ~4j~ y inbyfo ga1qa Thdenwsotiasretre. ld t h Junerrifthsa ahdds ti agrP9M9 . Col on t14 to Te City Couuil t~a~a Istu Fting andi'y. ~The same boyhaw we ~ 1 esirtssile of theire yaZ.P et)oj tino 6the ~eai ent of the pblic omeles w@ ~oni e O W ddie~ Pc~.-b be~i~4en atia byghe'B*uonets wichaT~ h~ wt it is49 .oidered th an hastnean s Irein fote alt lIoyh smasmmamom soommen!m 1 -M a m~x=-=...--. . .4* 744. 2i 405 , -A I1. It Ii eth_ 7 .ge, g~g~ ire.w-rrw rv~ w~, i. MQKS~? t - 1 p ~nimi enen a - . .e - anar som o BE Emm