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THE CAMDEN JOURNAL H VOLUME 3. CAMDEN, SOUTH-CAROLINA DECEMBER 24, 1&52. NUMBER 103. IT?????????? THE CAMDEN JOURNAL. published semi-weekly and weekly by THOMAS J. WARREN. TERMS. The Semi-Weekly Journal is published at Three Dollars and Fifty Cents, if paid in advance, or Four Dollars if payment is delayed three months. The Weekly Journal is published at Two Dollars If paid in advance; Two Dollars and Fifty Cents if payment be delayed three months, and Three Dollars if not ?aid till the expiration of the year. ;ADVERTISEMENTS will be inserted at thefollowag terms: For one Square (fourteen lines or less) in the cmi-weekly, one dollar for the first, and twenty-five cents for each subsequent insertion. In the weekly, seventy-five cents per square for the first, and thirty-sc ven and a liaii cents lor eacn suoscquoni msmion. oiugle insertions one dollar. Semi-monthly, monthly and quarterly advertisements charged the same as for a single insertion. riT-The number of insertions desired, and the edition to be published in must be noted on the margin of ill advertisements, or they will be published semi-weekj until ordered discontinued and charged accordingly NEW CASH-STORE. A returning my thanks to my friends, acquain* 1X ces and the public generally, for their former liberal patronage, 1 offer to them a variety of Groceries, Dry-Good?, Crockery and At wholesale and retail, consisting in pari, as follows GROCERIES. SUGARS?Muscovado, New Orleans, St Croix, Loaf, Crushed and Powdered COFFEES?Java and Itio MOLASSES?N. Orleans, Muscovado and West India SALT?Constantly on hand TOBACCO?Yellow Bank, Ellis, and a variety of common, at prices from 12 to 75a per pound TEAS?Gunpowder, Green, Hyson and Black SEGARS?Bio Hondo, Gold Leaf, Sylva, Palmetto, and a variety of common, prices from 6 to $40 per M. CANDLES?Sperm. Adamantine and Tallow CREESE?Goslien and English BA CON?Sides, Shoulders and Hams LARD?Constantly ou hand FISH?Salmon, Herring and all numbers of Mackarel FRUITS?Figs, Raisins, Almonds, Currants, English Walnuts, Ac. SPICES?Allspice, Nutmegs, Cloves. Cinnamon, Ginger, Mustard and Pepper PICKLES?English and American, a variety KETCIlUPS?Mushroon, Walnut and Tomato PRESERVES?Citron, Orange, Lemon, Pino Apple and Ginger BRANDT-FRUITS?Peaches, Cherries and Limes JELLIES and, JAMS?A variety LOBSTERS and SARDINES?UermelicaHy Sealed CANDIES?Otall kinds CRACKERS?Y\q Nic, Soda, Buiter, Wine, Water and Sugar CROCKERY Assorted, SADDLES?Biding and Wagon WHIPS?Carriage, Buggy, Driver's and Wagon CARDS?Cotton and Wool POWDER and SHOT ALSO A new and complete stock of DRY-GOODS, consis in part as follows 200 pieces Prints, nt prices from 5 to 15c. per pard 75 do Long Cloths from 6 to 18c. 300 do Brown Homespun, from 5 to 12c. 250 pair Negro Blankets lrora $1.50 to $2 25 pcrpair 100 pieces Kerseys, from 12 to 18c. Oznaburgs?DeKalb always on hand ALSO?A VARIETY OK Muslins, Alpaccas. Irish Linens, Tickings, Apron Checks, Shirtings, Drillings, Ginghams, Linseys, Flannels, Salicia, Serge, Cashmeres, Pocket Handkerchiefs, ll/k?lnrtr nf nil Lrirtria* (JlnvOH ?f viavous, ouopvuuvio, AVBiviji v* ?? . ? ? all kinds; Linen Shirts, Merino Shirts, Cloths, Cassimeres, Satinets, Tweeds, Ac. Together with a large assortment of Keady-ZVIade Clothiug. ALSO Violins, Double barrel Shot Guns, from $11 to $15, Rifles, flint and Percussion locks $9 to $12 And a groat variety of articles, both in GROCERIES and LRY'GOODS, too tedious to mention. ES-I will attend to the Receiving and Forwarding Business as heretofore, and I am prepared to make liberal advances on Cotton shipped to Messrs Chambers, Jeffere <fe Co., Cliarleston. I intend selling exclusively for Cash, and most respectfully invite any who wish Bargains, to give me a call, and they will find the cash system decidedly pre* # LI lerauiu. ryCall at his Old Stand on the corner. B. W. CHAMBERS. Camden, Oct. 5. 80 tf FRESH Solaf Oil?Received yesterday by Nov. 2. T. J. WORKMAN. SPERM and Lard Oil?For sale by Nov. 2. T. J. WORKMAN. Mexican Mustang Liniment, IN Bottles at Fifty Cents and One Dollar. For sale at Z. J. DeIIAY'S. Mexican Mustang Liniment, IN bottles at 25, 50c. and $100. Received toby Nov. 2. T. J. WORKMAN, WoollenGoods. A ?, noonrtmont r\f Ail WOVHil'VUtl V* ALL-WOOL PLAINS KERSEYS; LINSEYS SATTINETTS, TWEEDS JEANS, Ac. Ac. Ac. Ac. For the Plantation and House Servants. Purchasers will please call, as they will be sold cheap, by Oct. 21. W. ANDERSON. QARrgr'xu, LEATHER! LEATHER!! ALDEN & MURRAY have now on hand, a choice Jot of BAND, UAliNESS and UPPER LEATHER; of their own tanning, whicli will -e sold }pff. also A superior lot of NEGRO SHOES, of their own manufacture, very heavy and warranted good, at prices from 50c. to $J. also Expected in a few days a choice lot of PINE SHOES, pf every description, comprising many new and beautllul styles. Sept. 28. QAA LBS. of the handsomest Candies ever offered OvV in this market. W. C. MOORE. Charleston Prices. HARNESS, Saddlory, Trunks, Military Work, Ac. manufactured to order, and warranted, at Charles, ton prices. j3?"Tc;n per cent, discount for cash within 30 days. LUKE ARMSTRONG. Camden, April23. 23 sw2wt TRUTH IN A WELL. The following pleasant and spicy reading is cut from the Knickerbocker Magazine for November Once at mid-day toiled a youth In the bottom of a well, Delving for i.o mystic truth Down whne sun-light never fell. All he sought was the revealing Of some stream from living fountain, Through earth's hidden arteries stealing From the heart offender mountain. Which should spring, a well of joy, To the sacred homestead ever; Sweet and pure without alloy, And bounteous as the all-bounteous Giver. Upward looked he to the light And the span of sky afar, And behold, as at midnight, Shone at noon a sparkling star! Then first learned he that the sun And the glare and stir of day, Were but shrouds and darkness dun To the high and far away: That the light, so prized, which made The near palpable around us, But the tyrant with us played, And to dust with short chain bounJ us. Only when the darkness falls, Veiling all the objects nigh, Look we treely o'er these walls To the glorious spheres on high! P -1. _ T 1 C.._ , rruin me iauiuuii cuii. Tax on Knowledge?American and < English Newspapers. < The taxes on knowledge must be repealed ere 1 Lng; no one doubts it. Argument has settled i the question in every mind acquainted with the ' subject, and it only remains for an adequate i number of minds to give their nttenticn to it, ' and the thing is done forever. The press in I England once liberated?liberated not by a mob I revolution?but by full discussion, both within | and without the walls of Parliament, will never ' be enslaved again. Enslaved! some reader may exclaim?yes enslaved, we repeat. The news- s paper press works in fetters. It is chained to I Downing street?chained to the Excise office? ' chained to the Stamp office, it is trebly chained; ] it works under the load of a paper duty, a stamp i duty and an advertisement duty. How it works t at all, is the- wonder; and we doubt not that the I lion's share of the fruits of its labor goes into < the pocket of its oppressor. Nothing can more i irrefutably demonstrate its bondage in England i than the contrast with America. There the periodical press of every cla^s is really free.? < No dutv of any kind cllccks its-mwwiwtiu. i What is the consequence? Take New York and Liverpool, two great commercial neighbors, with- in ten day's sail of each other. In New York, i at least 100,000 copies of daily newspapers are - circulated in the city alone. In Liverpool there > is not one daily paper. Thecontrast with Loudon, I the fountain of English daily papers, is almost I as glaring. London, which numbers its popula- tion ly millions, hasten daily papers. New York, i which reckons its population ly hundreds of thou- '> sands only, has fifteen. London ought, by the same I proporti <11, to have forty or fifty. Three-fourths 1 of all th j families in America take a daily paper < I ?every skilled operative takes one?nay, almost < every workman enjoys the privilege of the sub- < I ?..--I r?j? ? ?11 u:? ...... 1 SLIUliai LiUUUUU I'lLIiXIl, ituu IlitS HIS utvu uciir paper regularly with his breakfast. s Such unquestioned facts, as these affirm, be- < yond the possibility of denial, the bondage of ] the English newspaper press. Our manufactu- I rers of the raw materials, our printers and pub- < lishers, our editors, are no ways inferior to the i American in skill and enterprise. We could J boat ihpni. Wftdn beat them in ?*vorv nianu- i facture which is free at home. We send them ] our textile fabrics, and our hardwares, even in spite of their high protective duties. In cheap production of almost every kind, no country can i surpass us, and certainly not America. There j can ho, then but one reason for the humiliating t disparity of our newspaper circulation, and that f is, that our press is heavily fettered. It is to t little purpose to begin calculations attempting to i prove that the burdens on the newspapers arc f not very heavy after all. That the paper duty is only an amount per sheet which no coin will express; that the penny stamp is but twenty per cent, on a five penny paper, and the advertisement duty but cightecn-pence for each inscr tion; the broad answer is, that the working of all three combined, is such, that Xew York takes ' 100,000 copies of the daily papers, while Liver- 1 pool lias not a single daily paper of her own, and, 1 at most, takes a few scores, possibly a hundred 1 or two, of the London dailies. By a little con- 1 sideration, indeed, it is easy to see the execrable 1 working of three duties. Every man of business ^ knows that the Excise regulations and interfcr- ' encc augment the cost of paper probably as much * as the duty does. Then the stamp and the ad- j vertisement duties necessitate the expense of in- 1 creased capital, on the part especially of the ac- ' tual sellers of the pnper, the newsmen. Again, 1 the limitation of the sale, but the increased cost ( of the paper, re-acts upon the cost itself, since 1 every newspaper is obliged to incur preliminary 1 expenses for each impression, which, it" distribu- 1 ted over double or treble tlie number of copies, ( would lower tlio proportion of those expenses 1 which belonged to each copy. It is obvious that in these ways, and others which might be men- 1 tioned, the three taxes enhance the cost of the 1 newspaper considerably beyond their own abso- 5 1??4a omnnnt ' llllU ftU'VM.iv. Tiie Last Anecdote.?"Who's that ero Mr. s Scattering, that always gets a few votes at our i town metings ?" enquired an old lady, a fow days since, of her spouse, as she was busily engaged in i perusing a newspaper. I "I do not know," said he, "nor never did though i the people have been trying to elect. him ever { since I began to v<>to." | The American Character. Europeans who have visited the United States have given a great variety of descriptions of our national character. In tact a description that will aj ply to all parts of the country is impossible, for there are as many piloses of character as there are diversities of climate and institutions in our country. Among the attempts to portray the American character, the following, by a Mr. Casey, an English traxclcr, is as discriminating as can be expected, and is not without merit: "Vieing with the Parisian in dress?the Englishman in energy?cautious as a Dutchman? impulsive as an Irishman?patriotic as Tell? brave as Wallace?cool as Wellington?and royal as Alexander, there he goes?the Aineri- ; can citizen ! In answering your questions, or speaking commonly, his style is that of the ancient Spartan; but put him 011 a stump with an ! audience of whigs, democrats, or barnburners, and he becomes a compound of Tom Cribb and Demosthenes, a fountain of eloquence, passion, sentiment, sarcasm, logic, and drollery, altogether different from anything known or imagined in the Old World States. Say anything?as public men?untied with conventional phraseology, ' lie swings his rhetorical mace with a vigorous j arm, crushing the antagonistic principle or per-j son into a most villainous compound. See him at dinner, he despatches his meat with a speed which leads you 10 suppose him a ruminating aniinal, yet enjoying his cigaiita for an hour af- j 1 M *1 ' - 1 ! . <? . CI. ... I tor warns, witu ;ne gusto ana ennui or a ?pan- , iard. "Walking right on, as if it were life against time with the glass at fever la-at, yet taking it cool in the most serious and pressing matter, a compound of the Red Man, Brummel and Frank- j lin?statesman and laborer, on he goes?divided find sub-divided in politics and religion?professionally opposed with a keenness of competition, ; iu vain looked for even in England; yet let but j the national rights or liberty, be threatened, and that vast nation stands a pyramid of resolve, uni- j ted as one man, with heart, head, hand and purse, burning with a Roman's zeal to defend iuriolate the cause of the commonwealth. "To him who has lived among the Americans, | .?.! II.. < l,? ?..a I uiu ivsuiva migi'ij ni> tuc tucvsijr uuu pinwuvv vi iieir government and its executive, there remains J 10 possible doubt that the greatest amount of | personal security and freedom has been produced 1 "rom the least amount of cost of any nation in , ,he world. Culling its principles and wisdom j 'rom the history of all empires, it stands the nearest of all earthly systems to perfection, because 1 t is built on, and embodies, those principles which God hath proclaimed in his attributes. ' ] noticed that the Americans set less value >n life than Europeans; that is, he does not think j lie loss of lite t.htHjronT/ESl. locc, tho tiltimutmn. [ When a man dies you sec none of that sentiment 1 ?I use the best term I can think of?which sur I ounds such an event in other countries. The | American is silent in manner, embarrassingly so i it first, extremely accurate in his observation of liuman nature, and any man that cannot bear Lo be scrutinized had better not coinc here. The American judges much by the eye, and has a most enviable power of estimation; your temperimeut, looks, speech and acts, are all taken in by l?iin ; ami if you can get a tablet of his judgment, you will find a remarkable daguerreotype 1 if your exact worth written. They arc phrenologists and physiognomists, not merely as philos-1 )phers, but as practical applicrs of those indue- i :ivc sciences; and beneath a show of positive lasiness or languor there is an amount of energy j uul action, mental ami physical, perfectly sur- ; prising. They arc not averse t.> the higher i jranches of science and literature, but they bend j ill to utility, ami are, as a nation, the best arithmeticians in the world; and this science alone jives a terse matter of fact to their mental working; in fact, when a man wants to reflect on a imposition, fieshvs?'Wait till I figure up.'" A few days since, two little girls, one griming an organ anil the other beating a tambourine, were performing in front of one of the hoiels. After the "tune was out," the tambourine jirl stepped up to a "greeny" and held out the .ambouriue for him to drop in some of his penlies; but lie, thinking she wanted to make him a i present of it very innocently said : "I don't care anything about it?I can't play." rrum i/ie jjusluu viivc u/unu/i. Speaking One's IHiml. Many a man has upset his dish by speaking lis mind too freely, and yet there arc persons vho take great pride in speaking out boldly all .hat they think. "I am no hypocrite," say such arsons, "I always speak as 1 think." And thus .vliile priding themselves that they are no hypoMill's, they plunge n dagger into the hearts of valuable friends, and make many bitter enemies. Such persons show a lack of common sense and cllow-fculiug. Of what possible service can it be or a man who might easily hold his tongue and njure nobody, to set a whole neighborhood by die ears, just for the privilege of speaking his Bind ? There is vs isdom in the following remark , )f Steele: "Nothing is more silly," says he, "than he pleasure some people take in speaking their ninds. A man of this make will say a rude hing for the mere pleasure of saying it, when an ; >pposite behavior, full as innocent, might have in-served Ids friends, or made his fortune." "Be slow to speak, but swift to hear," is good idvice, and from the highest authority. "A fool ' lttcreth all his mind," says Solomon, But if j iome persons know a circumstance that will bear jgainst the reputation or the happiness of anoth- < jr, like a boy with a copper in his pocket, it burns io that they cannot rest till they have got rid of t t, to sotno other person. i You may think a man a fool or a rascal, but t may not be good policy to tell him so. If not .rue, you only create a difficulty where none ex- j sted before. And if it be true, you very likely . ;et yourself into a hornet's nest, and just for the privilege of speaking your own mind?a privi lege which nobody doubts, but in regard to the propriety of exercising that right, every body would doubt. It is always well to think twice before we speak once, and then the words should be chosen. "Words fitlv spoken are like apples of gold in pictures of silver," it is said. And the man named by Wisdom, was commended because he "sought to find out acceptable woids." Let no one be too fond of speaking his own mind. There are other minds which should be consulted when we are about to speak. "Its an III Wind that Blows Nobody Good."?The Worchester .dtgis states that insane man who escaped suffocation at the recent fire at the Worchester County House, was called upon to testify before the Coroner's jury, and give his evidence as intelligibly and correctly as any witness. He wrapped himself in a blanket and lay down on the floor, with his face to the vintiiator, and thus saved, himself. He is not now considered m aue, though he was before thought to be one of the "incurables." But.for the calmity of this fire, which afforded this poor wretch the means of proving the possession of his wits, ho might have lingered the remainder of his days a prisoner in company with the out casts of society. There is much reason to fear that there arc inany persons lield in confinement as insane, who are both harmless and rational. Advice to Young Men.?Socrates did not urge his friends to enter early upon public employments ; but first to tike pains for the attainment of the knowledge necessary for their success iu them. Are you stepping on the threshold of life? ? Secure a good moral character. Without virtue j\.u cannot be respected ; without integrity you can never rise to distinction and honor. Be careful lest a too warm desire of distinction should deceive you into pursuiis that may cover j you with shame, t>y setting your incapacity ana slender abilities in full light. People who have the rashness to intrude into stations without proper authority and the requisite preparation for the service of the public, not only involve others in loss, but subject themselves to ridicule. The tricky, deceitful, and dishonest are rarely prosperous, for when confidence is withdrawn, poverty is likely to follow. The shortest and surest way to live with honor in the world, is to be in reality what we would appear to be. When once a concealment or deceit has been practised in matters where all should be fair and open as the da}', confidence can never be restored any more than you can restore the white bloom (*? tLu gcuipo or Jill l 111 iliaL-jaiU Liai-o on on |irof.o4 . in your hand. Beautiful Contrast.? I he following happy passage is from the pen of Mrs. Sigouracy: "Man might be initiated into the varieties and mysteries of needle work; taught to have patience with the feebleness and waywardness of infancy, and to steal with noiseless step around the chamber of the sick; and the woman might be instructed to contend for the palm of science ; to pour forth eloquence in Senates, or "wade through fields of slaughter to a throne." Yet revolting of the soul would attend this violence to nature, this abuse of physical and intellectual energy; while the beauty bf social order would be defa cod, and tlie fountain ot cartns rcncity oroKcn up. We arrive, then, at the conclusion, that the sexes are intended for different spheres, constructed in conformity to their respective destinations, by Ilim who bids the oak bravo the fury of the tempest, and the Alpine flower lean its cheek upon the bosom of eternal snows. But disparity does not imply inferiority. The high places of the earth, with all their pomp and glory, are indeed accessible only to the inarch of ambition, or to the grasp of power; yet those who pass with faithful and unapplauded zeal through their humble round of duty, are not unnoticed by the "great task-master's eye;" and their endowments, though accounted poverty among men, may * ? .1 1* 1 / IT It prove (luraDie ncnei in meKinguom or neaveu. How to Grow Rich. A correspondent of the New York Journal of Commtrce asks the editor to publish the following for the benefit of those young men, and children of a larger grow th, "who drink, chew, smoke, and otherwise squander their shillings and small change." We think it might suggest a good idea to the temperance reformers. If they would establish a Temperance saving fund institution the gradual accumulation of capital would soon hoi id of union, and prevent huti .~ .. dreds from violating their plighted faith. The article reads as follows: 1st. If at the age of 21 years, a man will lay up eighteen pence per day, and keep It at com pound interest every six months, lie will find at the age of sixty, or in the thirty nine years, it amounts to sixty thousand dollars. 2d. The Island of Manhattan was originally sold by the Indians to the Dutch for fifteen dollars. If the fifteen dollars had been kept at compound interest until this time, it would have amounted to more than the whole wealth, real .....1 .v.jnnol at fliie rimo in NV>\v YYirk. til ill I'VIOUIHU, ??V V...W - 3d. One German banker sent to a bank in England, a bottle of wine four hundred and thirty years old, which originally cast fifty cents. The English banker computed the compound interest for the time, and found the bottle of wine to cost more than the present national debt cf Great Britain, 4th. If a note shaver start with a capital of $10,000 and get one per cent, per month, (the usual rate) in five yenre ho has $20,000; in ten pears ?40,000; in fifteen years, $80,000; in 20 pears, ?160,000; in 25 years, $320,000. Young men, you often ask how Jews get so rich; answer by observing the ab .ve rules. And remember it is what you save, not what you make, that you have on hand. From the N. 7 Courier & Enquirer. The Gold Crop of 1853. The Mint returns and the Custom House ta bles exhibit an increase iu the quantity of gold in the U. States without a precedent, and give ! assurance that the present cheap rate of money ! must continue, if indeed a lower rate of interest | is not soon caused. Much as has been' said in i rifnwo r?f fSilifnrnia irnlrl fiplHs. nnrl lnrone ns bavft i been the profits of raining, no one who carefully ; reads the advices from the Pacific coast, can resist the conclusion that the future will exceed the past. The great bulk of the gold thus far sent to market, has been the produce of surface mining, or of such other rude processes as require nothing but a hardy frame and habits of industry. Quartz mining, though the results have been as good as could have been expected from a business in which everything had to be learned, has yet to show its full power in extracting from the bosom of California her golden treasures, A few of those mining companies whteh, to proper machinery, have added economical management, have made returns that must satisfy the most avaricious, and the others now preparing to work, cannot fail of similar results, by pursu I ing a similar policy. The company having the largest and best equipped force, the "Grass Valley Mining Co." under charge of Gen. Winchester, will no doubt soon settle the question whether the quartz has been over estimated in value. The arrival at San Francisco of a fleet of over due ships having an important part of its machinery on board, will now enable it at once to proceed with a success equal to the anticipations of its stockholders, and other companies in progress of formation, who can estimate their prospects of success by the labors of this company, which enters the field with all that makes success probable, whether as regards its machinery, or what is better, the intelligence and energy of its managers. Not despising the day of small things, the Grass Valley Company has added to its works, a saw mill, so profitable in its operations, that were the quartz part of its operations totally valueless, its lumber trade will pay a profit that would make most stockholders I iiirlifluranf In 4Kfl npnl/t Tho oncninrr traor rrmet IllVilUVI^lIb IV mv ^V?U? JL MV VIIWUIM^ J ***** Wmww develop the resources of the "gold State" to an extent now difficult to estimate oven", and unless all the opinions of those who knpw California best are worthless, the quartz machinery will be the means by which the greatest progress, and the riches proBts, will be secured. Growth of the United States. In a letter to the National Intelligencer, Mr. William Darby, who has devoted much attention to the subject of the statistical histoVy of the -Cwittd St?tca, makes the^fbllditiri^'r'eilliifts'on the growth of the country. He says: These periods have been three. First Orioriiinl rnlnnizfltinn find nrrxrroca tr? the revolution commenced in 1775, and terminated in 1783. Second period. Accession of Louisiana and Florida; which, in all statistical principles, we may regard as enchainments of the same course of events, and also, without any material error, as so nearly equal to that of 1783 as to justify the assumption of their equality. The third and most extensive accession was thpt by which the domain of the United States was extended to the Pacific ocean and gave to those States the Pacific coast of North America, from th?j Mexican to the Russian boundaries, completing a connected sovereignty from ocean to ocean?a sovereignty with internal and external advantages of position and extent never before combined on the earth. In a comprehensive view of the subject, we have before us a connected part of a continent spreading over temperate latitudes from the Atlantic to the Pacific ocean, and comprising three millions four hundred thousand square miles of that continent; and in its relative position the territory of the United States embraces the mid die or temperate latitudes, occupying very nearly, on North America, similar latitudes with, and in extent not materially differing with all Europe, and, as will be shown in these papers, with a residtnt population amounting in 1850, to upwards of twenty-three millions, and increasing at a ratio of one-third decennially, or, in plainer terms, gaining one-third in each ten jears. The law of progressive population in the United States of North America, which any arithmetician can verify with the data afforded by the several decennial enumerations from 1790 to 1850, contains, we boldly assert, one, If not the most important fact in the history of the world. The existing generatiou can, if it choses, glance into futurity through the glass of experience, and prepare iu advance for future consequences. 7?.. Ann 1\o % r* livid tVAi*1/4l r*4> isttu X . Utlllti- van vg uvuv iu vuiw *? v/i 114 without energy. It is necessary in public, bus!ness, and domestic life. Wherever you are, or whatever you are doing, be energetic, if you wish to be successful. Nothiug is more painful to look upon, than a man without energy; he- is swayed first this way then that; in no steady employment, incapable of holding office in put lie or of taking tfie stand that ho should, in private life. It requires gre at energy to pursue the course you have marked out for yourself, in face of the ridicule which you must inevitably meet in *11 the paths of life. It is useless to start in any of these paths, with hopes of success, without first feeling the assurance of being able to withstand the crosses and obstacles you will certainly meet, and laying in a good stock of energy. Olive Branch. It is said that Barnutn has purchased a lot at the corner of Broadway and Spring streets, New York, on which to erect a new museum building. The newspaper is a book for the indolent, a sormon for the thoughtless a library for the poor, it may stimulate the most indifferent, it may instruct the most profound.