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-T" .ill.. r ' ' -M,.L , ... ...J , I uvyu.,,! *. vt t. v V *, * - ?\" " /^ >t- *? v* "* i ? ' * ' <*? *? - ^ \" . . , Liuimr; i1 ?L..LLt_ii^ij:_. J.L 1 ijiii ?n J m ...JJ L ! ? ? _M_in t , U __juJCt ' DEVOTED TO LITERATURE, THE ARTS, SCIENCE, AGRICULTURE, HEWS, POLITICS, <5cC , &C. ~ J T poLLtBB ,? AOLUME 5?NO. 23. ABBEVILLE C. II., SOUTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY MORNING, .OCTOBER ft, 1857. WIIOI'.E NUMBER RATES OF ADVERTISING- I chario? Lamb. > ? - - The Proprietors of the Abbeville Banner nnd Independent J'rett, have established the following rates of Advertising to be charged in botli papers: Every Advertisement-inserted for n less time than three months, will be.charged by llic insertion at One Dollar per Square, (ljt inch r?the space of 12 solid lines or lcs--s) for the first insertion, and Fifty Cents for each subsequent insertion. The Commissioner's, Sheriff's, _ Clerk's andOrdinary's Advertisements will be inserted in both papers, each charging half price. ZW Sheriff's levies. One Dolliireach. i KB nuuuuiiuillga UUllUldUlC, rive llolIan. . ' Advertising an Eutrny, Two Dollars, to be paid by the Magistrate. , Advertisements inserted for three months, or !o?gef\ at the following rates : 1 rtqUrtfc 3 months - $ 5 00 1 S'^>iare 6 months 8 Oil 1 square 9 months 10 00 1 square 12 months 14 00 2 squares 3 mouths ...... g qo 2 squares 6 months 14 00 2 squares 9 months 18 00 2 squares 12 months - ... - - 20 00 3 squares 3 months 10 0O 3 squares 6 months 10 OO 3 squares 9 months 21 00 3 squares 12 months - 25 Oft 4 squaroe 3 months 12 00 | 4 squares 6 months 20 00 I 4 squares 9 months ...... 2tt 00 4 squares 12 months 80 00 5 squares 3 months 15 00 5 squares 6 months 25 00 5 squares 9 months 31 00 5 Bqu.irca.J2 months 35 OO G squares"5# months 20 00 6 squares 6 months 30 00 .6 squares 9 months 30 00 0 squares 12 months - - 40 00 1 squares 3 months ------ '25 00 i 1 squares 6 months 35 00 j 7 squares 9 months - - - - 41 00 | V squares 13 months .... - - 4"> Oil 8 squares 3 months 30 Oh 8 squares 6 months 411 (In 8 squares months - 40 00 8 squares 12 months DO 00 : Fractions of Squares will be charged in proportion to the above rates. IJusiness Cards for the term of one year, will be charged in proportion to the space they occupy, at One Dollar per line tpscA. tar For all advertisements set in double column, Fifty per Cent* extra will be added to the aborc rates. DAVIS <fc CHEWS, For Banner; LEE A WILSON, Fur Prrsn. -?? ? bum n an mi 111 MISOELIiAlTg. Hawing the Central America.?The New 1 Vort Post ?ays it is reported that negotiations Mr going on between the Boston Submarine Armor Company nod the underwriters of the Central Anieriea,. to raise her hull, wliieh is supposed toiUe id about twenty-eight fathom* water. The specie in her alone wonld furnish ijmple inducements for the experiment, if her position can be accurately fixed, and that it can/It probable, from the faet that. Captain llcndets6q was reported to have given her position.to ,Twie vessel which refused to come to his relief Should the work be undertaking promptly, there is thought to be a remarkable chance Of success. -" Stuaiortknino thk Hack."?It is a custom in Brnnkswidfeshirc, England, among women workers in the field, when their backs become much tired by bowing low down while slinging turnips with ehort-shanked hoes, to lie down upon their faces to the ground, allowing others to step across the lower part of their backs, on their lumbar region, with one foot, several times, until all pain of fatigue is removed. Burton, in his "First Footsteps in East Africa,"narrates a very similar custom in females who lead the camels on fee'ing fatigued, and who "lie at full length, prone, standing upon each others back, trampling and kneading with their toes, and rise like giants refreshed." This custom is called "jogsi" in Af riefl : in England it is "straightening the back." CoJiqKrr CAN KILL, AND CONCEIT CAN curb.?-It ir computed tlint ten millions of franks are paid yearly in Paris for flowers. H..? w ?l I." ? ? j>uv iv is duiu uirji iinvu iiic-ii jiunis its well as charms. Some kinds have a most deleterious effect upon tbe atmosphere ; and often their effects are exhibited upon the nervous system; but oftener their imagination does thd mischief. A young lady, of most sensitive nerves, was relating that she had a horror of tbe rose ; ''the perfume of that flt\>ver,"said she, "gives inea vertigo." The conversation was here interrupted 4>y tbe entrance of a friend, who wore a rosebud in her hair; immediately our delicate lady grew pale, tlirew up her arms, and fell gracefully back upon the ^$or goodness saka, madam, retire. Do you tee that it is you who caused this snasm f" 4tMe V replied tbe astonished friend. "Certainly ; it is the perfume of that rosebud in your hair." , "lteally, if that is the case, I must give * tap to you tgp guilty flower ; but pray ex* einine bflfortf-conderoning it. <jhe jhen took the flower from her hair, banded it to one of the persons who '"^ uddreaaed her, antk their inquietude soon < .gave way to another feeling?tbe fatal froaebod was artificial ! ''V Romantic Funeral Co^teok.?A ,% TuneVal cortege of unusual proportions passed % rough Abe streets of the second district one evening last week. The htarae whp. V drawn by four white horses, aud fifty carriage followed. By the hearee one man walked with hie hat in bis band, ijhilst the remain* der of tbefcllowers were in the carriages. The peculiar circooMtances of Uie funeral Vef? these: About three months ago, two 'German oitizen^ well circumstanced in life, were on a drinking frol>o together. During \hefr^onm!alityf ibqy diswvered that they Were bolh/rotn a particular part ,of Ger" Many. Tbey (hereuponratified a perpetual friendship, and under the enthusiasm of the V?cca*km,~ went eo far as to make a fuDeral fcomjnot, the provisions of which were that tj>6 Drst one to die should be buried by the '^ber, the survivor to pay all tbe expense*, /ffrjpi? * U? bearae < frawn by four, white iltot*eSj and followed by fifty carriages, and to bimaelfby the tide of the hearte as to dwlasUw??k; the othaf fulfilled lufcom &tw Oritur* CrttctnU ' ' ***,{ r ' + *+ % * t - v . . * 1 yt; ~ ? r.?-V. ''f- --.A-'. An essayist in Harpers' Magazine, writing of the humorists, says : Perhaps the most delightful ami popular of this class is Charles Lamb?a man cosi j ly domesticated by the heart's fireside o his readers. Such wit, such humor, sue! imagination, such intelligence, such senti ment, such kindliness, such heroism?nil s< quaintly mixed and mingled, and stutter ing out in so freakish a fashion, and al blending so finely in that exquisite eecen trie something which we call tlm ter of Charles Lamb, make him the iuosi lovably of writers and men. llis essays? llie gossip of created genius?arc of a picct with the records of his life and con versa tion. Whether saluting his copy at Chap man's "Homer" with a kiss--or sayinjj | grace before reading Milton?or going tc I the theatre to see his own farce acted, ami I join in the hisses of the pit when it fails ? ' or safely wondering if the Ogles of Somerset were not descendant of King Lear?01 telling Barry Cornwall not to invite a lugubrious gentleman to dinner, because hi? face would cause a damp over a funeral ? or giving as a reason why he did not leave oft'smoking, the ditliculiv of finding an equivalent vice?or striking into a hot controversy between Colridge and Ilolcroft, as iu wnuiuor mini as lie is, or man as ho is to be, is preferable, and settling the dispute by saying, "give ine a man as he is not to bo"?or doing some deed of kindness and love, with tears in his eyes and pun on his lips?he is always the same dear, strange, delightful companion and friend. He is never?the rogue?without a scrap of logic to astound common sense. "Mr. Lamb," says the head clerk at the India House, "you come down very late iu the morning !" "Yes, sir," Mr. Lamb replies, "butthen, you know, J. go home very early in the afternoon." And then with what humorous extravagance he expresses his peevishness at being confine J at such work, with curious ingenuity running his malediction on commerce along all its lines of influence. "Confusion blast all mercantile transactions, all trafic, exchange of commodities, intercourse between nations, jill 11.<. ?s__ ? v^.^miitbiviiitiiiiuii, una wealth and amity, and link of society, and gelling rid of prejudices, and knowledge of the face of llic globe ; and rot all the firs of the forest", that look so romantic alive, ami die into desks." It is impossible to cheat this frolicsome humorist with any pretence, anjr exaggerated sentiment, any of the dome-goodism of well meaning moral feebleness. A lady sends him "Coelebs in search of a Wife," for his perusal and guidance. He returns it with his quarFrain written on a fly leaf, expressing the slight disagreement between his views of matrimony and those entertained by Miss Hannah Moore !? If t .. . ....... _j > wni;, I'll marry a landlord's daughter And sit in tin; bar nil day. And drink culd brandy and water.'* If lie thus slips out of controversy by making the broadest absurdities the vehicles of the finest insight, his sense and enjoyment of absurdities in others rises to rupture. The non-seuscial ingenuity of the pamphlet in which his friend Capel LotTi took the ground that Napoleon, while in the hands of the English, might sue out a writ of a habeas corpus, threw him into ecstacics. And not only has the quibs^ and quirks nnd twisted words for all hd sees and feels, but he has the plcasaulcst art of making his very maladies interesting by transmitting thein into jects. Out of the darkest depths of the "dismals" fiy some of the happiest conceits. 4,My bedfellows," he writes to Woodsworth, "are cough and cramp. We sleep three in a bed." "llow is it," he says, "that I can not get rid of this cold ? It can't be from a lack of care. I have studiously been out nil these rainy nights until twelve o'clock, have had mj' feet wet constantly, drank copiously of brandy to ally iufiamation, and done cverv thing else to cure it,and yd it won't depart"?a sage decision, worthy of that physii : ....... ...... luiu ins ji.iLit'iu inai ii lie had no serious drawbacks he would probably be worse in a week. To crown all, and to make the character perfect in its winning contradictions, there beats beneath the fantastic covering and incalculable caprices of the humorist the best heart in the world, capable of courtesy, of friendship, of love, of heroic 6elf-devotion and unostentatious 6clf sacrifice. The Ccsxino Thhcbii.?There is much more intellect in birds than people suppose. An instance of that occurred the other day at a slate quarry belonging to a friend, from whom we have the narrative. A thrush, not aware of the expansive properties ofgunpowder, thought proper to build her nest on a ridge of the quarry, in the very centre of which thoy were constantly blasting the roi'lf. At firut !"> -?? * " ....u .tiio %viy mucn tiiscomposed by the fragments flying in all directions, but still she would not quit her chosen locality. She observed that a bell rang whenever a train was about to be flred, and that at tho notice the workmen retired to safe positions. In a few days, when she heard the bell, she quilted her exposed situation and flew down to where the workmen sheltered themselves, dropping close to their feet. There she wonld remain until .1 - - uie explosion bnd taken place, And then return to her nest. Th* workmen observed tbis, narrated it to their employers, and it was also told-to visitors who came to view the quarry. The visitors naturally expressed a wish to Witness so curious a specimen of intellect,-bat, as the rock could not always be blasted when visitors came, the' bell was rune Instead, unit ?' ? .? J w ,v, ?. iv n biutca nuawuroa lhe"?arae^)arpo?e. The truab flew down close w where they stood, btftVbe*p?aoeived the change, and it interbred with .the progteseof incbbtffen; the cooMKftenco was that a/terwardk when the Ml Wat rung the would peejp^rtfr 4he ledge to ascertain not ih^ wouU nttaib' Wfore a^TW . London l?i(er<try Journal. + ' . r~r.< # * 1 . ** # ' * matrimony. ; JIY MISS ItOSAMOKl) Cb'KHV. Now, girls stop looking at tho young r gentlemen; do something sensible, mid " stop building air-castles and talking of lov' i ers and honey-moons. It makes ine sick ; 1 it is perfectly autiiuonial. Love is a farce " I ?matrimony is a humbug. Husbands are ' | domestic Napoleons, Ncroes, Alexanders, " | sighing tor other hearts to conquer after ' ' they are sure of yours. * | The honey-moon is as short-lived as a luci" I for match. After that you may wear your 1 j wedding dress at breakfast and your night" cap to meeting and your husband wouldn't ! know it. Von may pick your own pocket " handkerchief, help yourself to a chair, and " i split your gown across the back in reaching ' I over the table for a piece ofbntter, while he ' ; is laving in his breakfast as if it was the 1 ,last meal lie shou'd cat in tlie world : ' j When he gets through, ho will aid your digeston, while you arc sipping your first enp of coffee, by inquiring what you'll have for dinner; if the cold lamb was all ate 1 yesterday ; if the charcoal is all out and how much you gave for the last green tea you bought. Then he gets up from the tai ble, lights his cigar with the hist evening's paper that you have not had a chance to read ; gives too or three whiffs of smoke, which are sure to give you a headach for : the afternoon, and just as his coat-tail is vanishing through the door, apologizes for not doing that errand for you yesterday? thinks it doubtful if ho can to-day, so pressed , with business. Hear of him 11 o'clock tak: ingan icecream with some ladies at the conI ? ; iccuuiiit;', wuiie you arc at home newj lilting his coat sleeves. Children by the | cars all day ; can't get out to take (lie ' the air ; feel as crazy as a fly in a drum. Husband comes home at night, nods a ; | how d'ye do Fan ? boxes Charley's ears ; j I stands little Fanny in the corner, sits down | I in the easiest chair in the warmest nook ; j put his feet up over the grate, shutting out | all the fire while the baby's little pug nose ; grows blue with the cold ; reads the news paper all to himself, solaces liis inner man j with a cup of tea, and, just as you are , laboring under the hallucination that lie will ask you to take a uioutliful of fresh air : with him, he puts on his dressing gown and , slippers and begins to reckon up the faini' ly expenses ; after which he lies down on | the sofa, and you keep time with your i needle while he sleeps till 9 o'clock. Next morning, ask him to leave you a little money ; lie looks at you as if to be sure, that you are in your right mind; draws a j I sigh long enough and strong enough to in- ; | tlate a pair ofbellcws, and asks you what j [ you want with it, and if a half dollar won't , do. Gracious king ! as if all these little , shoes and stockings, and shirts could be had for a half a dollar ! O, girls, set your affections on cats, poodles, parrots or lap dogs, but let matrimony j alone ; its the hardest way on earth to cret I si living ; you never knew when your work | is done. Think of carrying eiglit or nine ' children through measles, chicken pox i rash, mumps, scarlet fever?one of them J twice over. It makes my head ache to think of it. 0 you may scrimp and save I and turn and twist, and dig and delve, and ! economize and die, and your husband will ! marry again, and take what you have savI ed to dress his second wife with, and she'll j take your portrait for a fire-board ! But j what's the use of talking?1*11 warrant eve! ry one of you'll try it the first chanco you i get, for some how there is a sort of bewitchS ment about it. T wish one half the world I were not fools and the other half idiots! i Ktiqckttk*?Etiouitte. snv the lf?*??.n j graphers, is the poiite form or manner of I doing anything; the ceremonial of good manners. We believe that nature more than art has to do with etiquette. The "jjoffa itascitur, mom Jit" of the Latin bard is as applicable to tlie truly polittjjnaners of the j peel. Wo might say Nature, not Turveyj drop, is the model of deportment; and everj lasting truth, not temporary taste, the source j of etiquette. It must be admitted however, : that localities necessitate suitable adaptabil- j i ity of the ' raw material," in such a degree I as will not lower or muke eccentric the posi sessor, nor infringe on even the prejudices I which temperature, association, custom,and i the relations of youth and aire have raised to a certain standard. The saying tliat** in Rome one must he a Roman" is applicable to every locality and state of society. Etiquette consists in preserving a manly or womanly dignity suitable to every clime, and wliich is as easily recognized by those beneath as those above von. Instructions for human perfectibility in this respect are generally as shallow as they are impertinent. No one can make a standard ; much less that one who looks on society for the sake of noting its usage, and arranging them ns it were to the tone of ita own mind, as words to music. In such a case much depends on the harmonious disposition of the observer; for if not actuated or moved by something'higher than a common place %vr wv VHIICI iMC v-l lliu Ul lUHrtlliei* Ull society,a very discordant and one sided ] series of "rules and regulations" will be the result. One of the best publications we have erer met, having in view the ends and purposes 1.A.,A t 1-!_ ? !- un.l.H. Vf ? no umc inrau speaking oi( is "uoiin s manual of Etiquette in WashingtonThis work may really be termed an excellent contribution to the polite literature of the day. It is not overlaid with ridiculout'tosumptions of D'Orsayisms or Willis-isms. It is based on human nature and that common rense which is the truest and most understandable link between mortal and mortal. It suggests more than order*^and in this respect may be regarded nan friendly monitor-more than an officious cicer-one or austere duenna. t.? vyw?Tt u. v.. iu?r? wwi imiu?|i? ? ?mbryo more tlrt?n w?i? thro /and ktfr' feet IdUj; " * ' *} , K 4> ^ > '. * v P ? ' . . *. * ^ The Knickerbocker Magazine, tor September, lias been issued by its punctual publisher, and it is full of the good things which its popular editor, Mr. Clark, is ^o i famous for collecting. The editor gives the s following amusing report of "one of the i coolest examples" of "enforced curiosity | that ho remembers ever to liavo met | with"j < Abuut noon of the day of my arrival .it i < I St. Louis, I strolled into the bar-rooin of ; I liarnum's Hotel, and calling for a sherry t cobbler, seated myself by a small table \ near the bar. I had just finished my glass when a well dressed, respectable looking t personage, apparently about forty years of i age, came in, and seeing no one else pres- 1 cnt except the bar-keejier, accosted me with ! r me salutation : v "Good morning, Bir." r "Good morning, sir," I responded. f "Baltimorcan, sir 1 "No, sir." ,j "From New York ?" "Yes, sir." , "One of tlie excursionists ?" t "Yes, sir." "Will you allow me to look at your s ticket ?" 1, "Certainly, sir," (exhibiting it.) I "(Carefully penisitig it.) Mr. , I 1, i am happy to see you, sir. Is your lady c with you ?" u "No, sir." t "Sorry for that, sir ; sorry for that. My j I ; name is W ; I nm one of tbo commit- | j1, j tee of arrangements for the reception of vis- ii itors on this occasion. We, of St. Louis, j; | do not intend to be outdone in hospitality d ! by any other city, especially Cincinnati ; r j hut we find that many of the excursionist#, s I llf nniiluir". '' ? r ...v. ?. "I'l'V>u uin iDiilllliLlL'f lor n quarters, have gone to tlie hotels for rooms. J lu all such cases, the committee aro desirous of paving the bills, as thsy arc xetreme- d ly unwilling that the guests should be at e any expense during their stay in St. Louis, c May I ask if you are staying at an hotel ti and if so, at what one 1 for it will give me great pleasure to arrange for the settlement b of your bill." s: I replied that I was not permanently lo- n catcd at any hotel, and that I did not f??l ?. disposed to avail myself of the hospitality of h the city to a greater extent than I had already ii done. a "We shall insist upon it, sir ; and I trust vou will notify me when you are set- si tied."' t. Just then a person in a seedy suit of h black, a man who had evidently seen better days, entered the room and approached l< the bar, when my new acquaintance said to him, in a stern and authoritative manner : "Doctor, you can't have anything this ? morning." c Whereupon the poor Doctor, turning to him n saddened look, replied : ?1 "I haven't asked for anything yet." ji 4'You had better go?yuu can't have s< anything here. Go." a Willi nn expression of unutterable de- s< spair the poor fellow turned on his lieel and left, when ir?y companion remarked : "That, sir, is one of the most talented h men in the State. Ho i* a physician by a profession, nnd once bad a handsome prac- 1 tiee ; but, unfortunately, he had given way to his habits of intemperance, audi fear tl that he ia irretrivably lost Perhaps I did s wrong in speaking to him in the manner I o did ; but I knew that if he called for a drink q at the bar, lie would be insulted, and I u thought it would mortify him less to send ii hi in away. By the by, 6ir, won't you take u a sherry cobbler !" ii "No, I thank you, sir ; I have just taken 1< one." e "Tako another." u "Excuse me, sir : I seldom drink any- o thing in the morning, and my fatiguing t ride of last night has alone induced me to deviate from my usual practice " o "Then, sir, with your permission, I will a take one." v lie accordingly walks to the bar, and s< orders his cobbler, and while it is being prepared he resumes his seat by tne. Pres- li tntiy the bar-keeper hands hiin a glass over i: the counter, and in doing so, savs to him : "Look here ! how many drinks do you o owe for now ? This makes forty cents r you owe. I don't wish to open any accounts with you. sir!" f< Not wishing to mortify my "new friend h by my presence, I left. ? a Violent Tornado in Ohio.?From tlio e officers of the Bteamer Ohio No. 2 we learn c that during her last trip upward, on Friday, 11 21st, when twelve miles below Gallipolis, she n encoutercd n heavy storm attended with an ti exceedingly high wind amounting to a s tornado, and the most terrible thuuder and e lightning. For a few minutes it seemed as ti if nothing could withstand tlie raging tempest; large forest trees were prostrated liko reeds, and a number of barns and out-houses ' were blown from their places by the slifcr " force of the- wind. A man driving a nay wagon, named William T. Harrison, was " struck by lightning and instantly killed, as v were four horses at the same time. A farmer named Wilson was also injured and stunned by the fluid, but not fatally, and fourteen ^ slieejT were destroyed. The violence of the v storm expended itself in less than half nn * hour; but there must have been much ^ damagn done in the vincinity, if not else- 1 where, in that brief period. Cincinnati GazttU, Augutt 38. 1 s CoNVICTKn at LaBT- MYnil nnnrlit C marry." "Never." 1 know n good gir flor * you." "Let me alone." "But perbap* yoa 1 don't want her." *8be b yonng." "Then c she if sly." "Beautiful." The mora dan- c gerotta." "Of good family.'* '*Tbea she h 1 proud." is tender hearted." -Then J aha la jealous." "Slje baa talents." "To < kill rue." "And one hundred thousand i pounds." "I'll take her" I " ? ? I It la sound policy to eufRr all extremities ] rather than to do a mean and baae action. < The native tribal of Afrio* regard the ) akhk cdubklido as an affsei of AitadMM. I fV .... ' % V 1 ' The Power of Woman's Love. A fashionable young lady. Ircsiding on ' street, who has been Affianced dur- i ing the past year to a gentleman in whom ! die professed to recognize her ideal in every respect, and who is really very handsome, polished, refined, intellectual, and generous ?owing to one of those "dissensions" pro:ccding from slight cause, which the poet :hrotiicles as prone to estrange "hearts that ove,"?compelled her betrothed, in order .o preserve his pride^aud self-respect, to v it lid raw from the proposed alliance. Such a denouncement was not dreamed >f by our fair Helgmvian ; like most wo nen, she did not think that her lover could j eave her, even after she had criven him. or ! my man of spirit, abundant cutbseto do so ; nul when her mamma heard how the curents of llieir attentions liad gone away, she eared tor her daughter's heart, health, and lappiness, knowing how deeply "Lucie" had lectured her trust. A note was placed in the hands of mamua, which she was aware must contain the xegesis and adieu of the offended love. llow could the fond parent break the ad news to her wayward but devoted child ; low prepare her for the sudden shock ; low cast the thunderbolt at her feet ! The ndy could devise no means by which she ouhl avoid it, and was racking her ingenlity in vain, when one inorning she discovired Lucy sitting listlessly and lovely in I j" ?- * " *' " - IUI oouuoir, tearing ;i ueautltul bouquet to ' ieces, becausc he did not come, and relicv- ' iig lier wounded vnnity by half-tearful comilaiuts of his cruel neglect and inexcusable lelav, and dropped the billet Irixte?much esctnbling in style, and which we half! uspect was an adaption from Armaud's ! lotc to Marguerite Gatithier?into her j aughter's lap. Lucie snatched it up, recognizing the adIress at once, and ran her eye over the few xpressive anil bitter lines, then let the deliute paper fall upon the velvet carpet amid lie scattered leaves at her feet. Down dropped the soft white lids of her rilliaut eyes, and the long lashes upon her iitin cheek, while (lie tears fell like summer nin upon her jeweled hands and the laceraid flowers; profound sighs, as if they rent er heart, trembling through her lovely beig ; but all in wordless silence?profound nd painful. "Oh, my darling," implored mamma, as he cast herself weeping before her daugh- ( 2r, "do not so distress yourself. Forget . iin, dearest, he is unworthy of your love." "But then, mamma," (sobbing hystericalf,) "but then?" "What, my precious one?" ?4*f.. ># i*iy new "Never fear as to my new gallants?you fill find enough. We will say you dis- ' arded him for his presumption." "You?do-?not understand?it is more linn?that?(with great effort, and speaklg rapidly, as if to relieve her overcharged jul at once,) "my new dresses are all light, nd I can't wear them now, so late in the eason ! Doctouisg Wink.?Mr. Musgrave, in : is account of a visit to Champagne, says of wine manufacturer, Monsieur L?of llieiins : lie here pointed out nine casts lying in lie court yard, containing a ton of while ugar from the Isle of Bourbon, every pound f which cost ninepence. Hereupon I revested him to show me some nf the genine liquor?in the state, that is the state ti which it leaves the presaoir after the reg- ' lar fermentation process and before sweet- ' ng the syrup is added. lie presently sejcted a bottle from some bins at hand, opned it, and poured out a glassful. A more npalatable drink, under the denomination f wine, I never tasted. It was like Sauerne mixed with wormwood. "Now," said Monsieur L?, I have taken ut two glasses from this bottle. Here is bottle of sweetened syrup, from which I rill fill up the deficiency you iiave just een created." "That," said he, "will at no distant date ' ccome a bottle of the primest quality. It J ? the Verzenary growth." ( At dinner, at the house of Monsieur L?, n tlio same day, lite following see tic occured : "And now," said mine host, "let me ofar you some of the beet w-no we have to oast of at Rheiins." The string and wire were instantly cut, nd away went the cork on its aerial travls. Our classes overflowed with the reamy stream, and my lips with compli- J nents on its unsur passible excellence im- ( nediately afterwards. It was indeed, boauiful wine. When hII the eulogiuin which Uch a creditable sample elicited liad l?een * xhauntcd, and the sober certainty alono re- f nained of having lived? t Thus to clasp perfection, < lie Announcement was quietly made, of the 8 Kittle just emptied being the identical one rom which I had endeavored, in vain, to Iriulc a quarter of a glassful two hours pre- * <iously. - 1 m i ? < Andrew Jackson, Jr., is the son of Ml*. 1 wines l>onelson, who was a brother of tlie i * rife of General Jackson. Another brother, I iIr. Wm. Donelson, now Jiving in Phila- I lelphia, was born at tbe sathe time, that is < o say, Wm. Donelson and the so-called 1 'Andrew Jackson, Jr.," are twins. When be twins two days old?as General Jaek- 1 on and his trifo had no children?they took i ?ne orfthen^nij adopted it as their own 1 liild nammff it "Andrew Jackson, Jr." rbe "Andrew Jackson Jrnn grew'up as the ; ibild oflheJQanerrtl and his wife. Be has iften been'confuted with Andrew J Action i }onelw>n. Thp Utter h his cousin. Mr. lactam lyw tliree children?two gont and >ne daughter^ The oldest, Samuel Jackson, I a living on a plantation in Louisiana, not i kr from New Otleaea. The other aont | lamed after the fathet, la a aWdgpt at the ,\ Military Academy atw West Tom. The i laughter la ranrned to Joha sod IHtes *ith her haabao^ ntfat tl? net* . BjUage; j , V ^'nrV. .. % a . - 4 ..V? ' . ' ^? . +. . - -? ' There's Work Enough to Do. The blackbird early leaves He rest To meet the smiling morn, < Ami gathering fragments for its nttt From upland wood and lawn ; i The busy bcc that wings its way * 'Mid sweets of varied hue, . | And every flower wonld seem to say?? ^ "There's work enough to Uo." i The cowslip and Uje spreading vine, . Tlio daisy in tlie grass, t The snow-drop and the eglantine, t Trench sermons as they pass. s The nut, tviihin its cavern deep, jWould bid us labor too. i t And writes upon his tiny heap? | "There's work enough to do." ^ The planets, at their Maker's will, Move onward in their cars, For Nature's will is never still? Progressive as the stars 1 The leaves that flutter in tlie air, j ' ? vs wu"' ll One solrmn truth to mnn declare? I "There's work enough to do." "Who, then, can sleep, when nil around. ' Is active, fresh and free I 1 Shall 111:111?creation's lord?be found Less limy than the bee ? Our courts and alleys nro the field, If man would search them through, The best of sweets of lahor yield, And "work enough to do." To have n tear for those who weep, \ She sottish drunkard win ; 1] To rescue all the children, deep In ignorance or sin. t To help the poor, the hungry feed, d To give him coat and shoe ; .1 To see that all can -write and read? I t "la work enough to do." S The time is nhort?the world is wide, I Jj And much lins to be done ; \ j This wond'rous earth and all its pride, ^ Will vanish with tlic sun! t The moment's fly on lightning'* wings. And lifu's uncertain too, j. We've none to waste 011 foolish things? r "There's work enough to do." ^ "Whisper to a Bride."?Theso Utile paragrphs contain many excellent sug- J " jest ions : 1 " J lie great secret is to l?car will) oacli j 1 other's failings, and to bo blind to tliein ; j 1 thai is either an impossibility or a folly. c We inust see not feel them. If we do neither they aie not evils to us, and there is 1 obviously no ne<;d of forbearance; but to | throw the mantle of affection round them, J concealing them from each other's eyes f to determine not to let them chill the affection ; to resolve to cultivate good-tempered forbearance because it is tho only way of mitigating the present evil, always with A view to ultimate amendment. Surely it is not tho perfection, but the imperfection of human character, that makes the strongest claim in love. All tho world must approve?even enemies must admire?the good and tiie estimable in human nature. If husband and wife estimate only that in each which all must be constrained to value, what do they more than others? 4,Itis infirmities of character, imperfections of nature, that call for tho pitying sympathy, the lender compassion that makes each the comforter, the monitor of the other. Forbearance helps each to attain command over themselves. Few are the creatures so utterly evil as to abuse generous confidence, a calm forbearance. Married persons ^jould be pre-eminently friends and (! 1.11.? !- .? - * ** ' ' C iKifiny is me great privilege ol tricntfshp. TI?o foihearanre here contended for is not weak and wicked indulgence of each other's 1 fault, but such a calm, tender ?f>servance ' uf them as excludes all harshness and anger, und takes tho best and gentlest methods of * pointing them out in the full confidence ' of affection." Hulks for Growing Old.?At the late ' commencement of Yale College, liev. Dan- ' iel Waldo, as the oldest graduate present, (i?f s the class of 1788,) thus closed a speech to 1 the assembled Alumni: > "I am an old man. 1 have seen nearly a 4 sentury. Do you want to know how to 1! ?row old rIowIj' and happily. Let me tell 3 pou. Always eat slow?masticate well. ? [*o to your food, to rent, to your occupation c smiling. Keep a good nature and soft ' temper everywhere. Never give way to ^ mger. A violent tempest of passion tears ? iowu the constitution more than a typhus k Vi'^r ^nlfivnfA a (irnArl inpmnro nntl Ia ti ? vv? V"". %v lo this you must alwnys bo communicative; * epeat what you rend ; talk nbont it. Dr. I Johnson's great memory was owing to Jiis ' ommunieativeness. \ ou yotfng men why h ire just leaving college, let m? advise you o ehoSse a profession in which you can ^ xercise your talents the best, und ut the v ame time be honestf fllinmSlTV SiTlailion Tl.? l/l? 1IIU i IUICIMW roi respondent of the London Morning 0 Post lei Is this good story : "There is n story ? )f an ImperiHl Iligliness waltzing thrice in 1 he same evening with an English lady nt c lie court of ltarlin. She naturally fell and f "rankly expressed herself highly flattered by 'j the compliment. "I did not intend it as n 20m pi intent," Was the answer* "Then," jj *aid the lady, some what rebutted, "your HLuU * L - - - # ? '? * *? w "T ' iigimens iiiusL oe very iona 01 aancing. -i jetest dancing," whs the still nnMtisfootory ) reponse. Undeterred by be> ill success, J our fair connfryvr6riJ?n still prosecuted her * inquiries. "WHint, then may I i?<>k. can be rour Imperial Highness, motive for dune- * ingf ' *** ll? ekalted personage J reply, "I dance Iq pertpireP 1 C?y?TTB?'Ae young lady triiH more J beauty^lign s3ns?^?mere accomplishments than learning ^ inoce charms of person than , (*rnccs of mind?more admirer* t|?an m I- -1 ' - *" u^hub?njurt). tooifl WtB , wi*e iom tor rg ttt&ldffat. %- v.w . - ' Printers become dead wstkit at the Age of rfTirty-mglit. * * . ' i m "v-. - .rV . y. ~'>Vl "/ > ? ' " * '" * ?. " ' 4 ?. * * ^ ' i A Monatar .;?V A correspondent of- if* Abingdon DejttO^ jrat, waiting from NVulngt^irtV Lee couttf Vh., who is, aatbe Duhlgtfw.isanfea ila Itcr3? >rs, "a gentle rtwn in %l)ptn implicit confilenie m?y h$. jjIaceU," J??viea. {be following. iccouot of t&? killingr ot- a monster reptfl* ? ti i-- ? * ii xxmiau counyr, tty. M(pn>y>; About three weeks ago fire men 'irent to {ather whortleberflair id the" jnoujUafhotia ? )?rt of Harlan couuty, Ky., and iff' llferr ravels caftiO ton small branch n(, the "foot >f a steep ridge, whero ihejr disoovered 4 mooth beaten path^'or rather slide,'that ittf roni the ohuieb ufir the -ridge. CJarionty empiing tbeiu to know its meaning ' tbout an acre of ground ^pimecttysnvtx^ md dealitute^of vegetatlolfi; rrear the OAO-. re of wliinh thou rfisKin-o""' *" - ?-J a BUIMI HOB >r cave, large enuught to admit a salt/l>arreli They concluded to drop id a few etouca, md preaeutly their ears were sainted with a oud, rUmbling sound, accoropSbigd with a atiling noise, and ah enormoUs .Bet-ptbt nade his appearance^ blowing and spreadng his head, at^'his foiked tOBgue protruled. The tuen were struck with wonder md affright, and 'suddenly the atmoftpbnte % vas tilled with a smell so uayseating that hree at' the five men fjRte taken veiy sick j he two, discovering the conditiou Of their :oinpauious, dragged them awa? from that ibode of death. About ten feet of'tfaQ.snako 111,1 In r?.?i? ii.Jti. ' vlien they burned liome and iad seeu 16 their neighbor. The next day were mounted some tea of he hardy mountaineers, arijied with riaes, leteimined to destro^sibe monster. Q^ap roachjng within one hundred yards of he dwelling of bis snakeshjp their horeel uddenly became reskive, and qehher ktodicssnor force could make them go* nearer^ L'be meu dismounted, and, hitchiug tfiei** lorses, proceeded on foot, with rifles oocked< o th6 mouth of the cave. They hdrfed tn bree or four large^Btones, and fell back oine fifteen steps, when the same noise waa teard its before, and out oajne the dreaded* i- ? * cjmiir, rciiuy, t?a uis iooks indicated,Ho crush he intruders. About the same length of the snake had ppeared from the hole, Mien eight or ten>ullets went though his head, and <9 lha nonster died Le kept crawling ou?, bbi\\ wenly feet of that huge bon lay inotionleip >n the ground. It was a rattl?q?ke -with wenty-eight rattles,-ftie first wad four inches n diameter, the rest decreasing in ?ii0 to lie last. With difficulty the ovd dragged um home, and his skin osn now rJ>e >y the curious iu llarlin County.Appearanc s an Deceitful. Mr. J??apd Miss J3?rvffcj-e at an evpnigg >arty, at whicJh wdte some thirty cottple* r?>wns the leader aori life - qf all' re* iorts till near 12 o'clock, when otJCo ic took liia scat and became yerjr ijn^, tfo perenasion or remonstrance flora, bit riends could induce bim tojeave bis seat >r give any reason for J)is stra"hgo conduct Vom that time till the,pafly broke up* but" jeing rather eccentric at times, bis friends :amc to the conclusion that que df bu jueef frtfcks liad cotfie ovef bim, jmd hought no more of it.- The time at length ?rrived to disperse, and the parties patted >ff and started for home, soma eight' *>r ,en in the company with which w<*have to!o, among them Mr. J?and his laty Itflre ihead, and immediately behind him 'Mias ti?, who had hitched fast to a younirmaQ )f sober and deacoii like appenrmJ9t4 who die was at groatrains 10 .it he cost of iifiicli of h e* diu a ^ h i I artyy. lining the early part of the etetMna J?bad >litained Miss U?'a hanAoyohjeT. acd aba jad forgotten it until novV. TSnJrTlatt fcsk:d liim for it, and he refused to giir? it op. she coaxcd him for it for sorao time, and le still refused. Soon, however,- be saw >ne corner of it protruding frbttt bis pocket wliitwl nrwl rrrHKTIPjl it. *nri h^inn RAfTlfi vlial otrt"of*pat>ience with him for keeping it io long, slie managed to cling lo ilin spite of ill liis exertions to the the-contrary, till finally hiding he could not loose her grip, he e?:laiined in the hertt of hi* tXftrtiofts, '-"For foodness' uake-, Miss lot go . qf my hirt tail, and I will give you your ha?d\ :o'rchtef." The secret war out. His. srtiohs in the early part of the evening had ieen too much foi his prfntaloans ap<F proluced rt refit suflhientjv large to adroit th? ?cape of IhafVhich Miss 43?bad fulfill* en for her hMi<tkeruhief,.and to preve& lie exposure of which had kept nitn so till during the Utter part of the evening 'orhnps tho^p tvasn't some abotttt flfttghL-r about thu (line, and tlien % again per* 1 inps there was. However parties 'at eugth reached liomc: JwlA'W-^JjQt * amr wndkerehief, but hns not betsft 4ivored vitlt tlio company of ibo Voting Tleacon ?, row that tiino to this; f I)EseniPTibN o? Love.?From <? wry iId Magazine.-^-Love U like Gie devil tewttse it torments as ; like heaven, becui* t \vrnp? tbfl sotil in bits#-] . , :nu?c it is relUiiing.; ilsa paper, limine h ?ften set* as on fii^e ; HkeSugwr, Deeeusd it & awcoi; n kg n rope, oeeauae it is 4JKen tbe leatli of a man ; like rt pK^on, because It nakes ona miserable. \ like; ftine, b4&i6?e it nakea (is Impyyliko a -man,. btfdtaM U is ere to-day and gone tojndrrow j/*Rke * iroman, because t hero 1b no getting >id of -3 t ; like a beacoli j lx?cau*ei.H guidea ona to heWMshdi for \xjri } lilfe a will^Mbe-wibfc Kjcnustj it tffttm lead# one jnto \ fie rag counter, because it o(ty| rtins. *1ifaf , vitkona ; like a ri(lhiNp<>nywW^^ iVi(J?? - v )les nicely with ono ; like Jiito c fern 1 log, or like the. feat of'a. gritty wcWa^. >w.niue 4hey tfcriu make amafrrtirt fnwtSike a fifoofte4 btfoanw it " * ssnsKmnrrn i ipoti. ^ * "* * - . -y|