Newspaper Page Text
A Plea for Horses.
We have a word to offer to onr farn>
jug friends who employ horses as their
(chief draught animals. The horse,
all animals, is one of the most sensitive
Settling a Dispute.
In Dr. Clark’s life and times of Bish :
of Bedding .the following aneodqte
of; iij related k - T* § ^
i M-r. Heel ding set between
tfee two
to sudden' changes of temgsiature, of i fieri-and the •*!&?
team of cleanliness. We speak from far .^l^t of'disp^. :(fel«n>g
observation, when we say that not half
the stables in the-country are, at this ud
season, kept in fit condition to be oc^j-pne of them . ^ y . T . ^ ^ P.
cupied by horses, .even while put in an
hour for noon feeding. - -
The droppings of horses, both liquid
and solid, are among th.e.tnost, quiykly
fermenting, easily decomposed ma
nures. In warm weather the work.ol
decay'commences'immediately, and in
a very few iffiys one-hall or . inbie - >
the weight goes off in a gaseous form.
This keeps the air constantly loaded
with noxious, unhealthy matters,
which'are j ust as deleterious to the
health' a'nd' vigor of horses as those of
man.:. During.the busy, season-.of.-liar;-
vest and seeding, cleaning stables is
scarcely ever attended to regularly.—
The animal's generally occupy them a
short time in the morning, at noon,
and perhaps in'the evening for grant:
in°- but the stables he untouched tor
days or weeks—we have seen them lie
•thus for months. The horse is tied up
for ,an hour’s feeding and rest in the
heat of the day, but'instead efstnncjng
in a cool, sweet, ventilated ' stable, ten
with scarcely a breath of air
' ' the
to the di visioii-of some property-,) when
1 i firmed up arid
"called tl.P-othef a liar. Instantly both
•ted to. their feet and rushed at eadi
start
the females sereained. and gea--
fftlier-, „ j i-
eral alarm .ensuedy- Mr. Heddro„,
proved liinfseTf equal to Hie awi.ivaiu
emergence. He rushed between them,
seized each by the collar of .his coat ;
and with hi's .head-dean-! frame and
strength, held' them at arms’-length,
face to face, but unable to strike each
other. They struggled for a moment
but found themselves as though clutch
ed in the jaws of a vi- . Iloldfngthem
at,arias’, jeiigth he commenced, .to-lec
ture them iu round terms. £
From the’hearing or' ins entire lecture
there was no escape,- and thev wn hed
under : .ts writhing power % .W mm me t
hat calmed, ir. xi ! -
us
‘‘The Softs.”
• By degrees those of the North Vr ho
profess do bo with the South-'are swept,
away by tjte strong current of Aboli
tion feeling.' ‘'Tile IMrds” .are now
all thatare felt in Now York, and
there ffre nett enough !of them to «°
any’ good. > Tlie '.Northern Wings
have kicked-off the Southern \Y bigs,
andurt the next Rational convention
we think the Northern Democrats
will kick off the Southern i) ‘
Then pefHaps’thef will willing to
form a Soytljern sectional pa}tv.. - .U*
hope indeed that we shall now hear no
more of national parties. W e # thi v
that, aiupparfevvin the South ought ; f
be ashamed''to boast -of its uattorrab
ity
which ts notditerally loaded with
fomes of his own decaying excrements,
and he goes forth tired and debihated
■instead ofrefreshed, to undergo the
severe toils of drawing the plough du-
ing the sultry hours ct the tulcrnoon. _
The remedy for this is very simple.
If the stalls do not have a free circula
tion of air, let a* board or Jwo. - be
knocked off in. from for on the'sides at'
the head of the stalls'; they can be ea
sily replaced when cold_,weather comes
on. Let some such plan be adopted,
and in every case let the stables be
made as cool and airy as possible.
Let all excrements, however small
in quantity, be removed at least once
a day, and bv all means keep the floor
well sprinkled with some deodorizing
material. A weak solution of sulpher-
muriatic. acid is excellent for this
but these are. often inconve-
ic or
uHi^a^bronblesome.cren if readily
obtained. Plaster of Paris, Gvpsum
or sulphate oflime, is very good; com
mon salt is also-good. Each of these
substances increases the value of the
manure -more than its costs. Dry
straw and muck are also very valuable
for the same reason.- - •
‘We have frequently known lime
and ashes recommended fofc this, but
these rapidly decompose the manure,
and greatly diminish its value for ap
plying the "crops, and they shQuld nev-
.erbe used unless with mu k, or with
] on o- manure which is to be immediate
ly covered in- the soil.- These
seem trifling considerations, but
•ere really of great importance.
As.before stated, horses take
very easily. On tins account
should never be turned from a . warm
an hour, directly into a wet, damp
pasture.- A horse should never be'
compelled to lie do vn over night m a
ivet unsheltered -pasture. Let them
always have a drv plot, or w1mt KS ” et '
-ter a shed -or .-stable to'retire to when
they have completed their evenings
graizingf especially if there be heavy
dews, fogs or rant. A .borse.wfll nev-
-field ■ when .a snelter-
vve-re somev
suddenly exclaimed, cast us pray,
and kneeled down bringing the two
men with him to their knees upon the
floor Still -regain!ns his grasp, ne
prayed for them in a most fervent and
powerful manner. \\ hem he
his right hand, saying, “-Pray, brother
nrav.” Soon he commenced praymer
•Hid weeping confessing his sins and
beseeching'God and his brother to
forgive him. When the first had
concluded, Mr. Heeding - shook the
other, ?ud called upon him to-pray.—
He*was the most- pugnacious of the
two, and it was i ard work -foe him f0
clear his throat so as to give utterance
of words." “A thousand frogs seemed
dogging hikspeeoh but. he at'lengih
broke through Iris difficulty, and pray-
.ed God and his brother to forgive him.
When he sai-1 “Amen,” Mr. Heckling
relinquished his grasp, and thcri ftU
rose tortheft* feet. “Now shake hands,
brethren,”‘said he,” and live as breth
ren -and love each other as long as
voa live.” They immediately embra
ced each other and almost as quickly
soothed theirdispHte. * * * uhe
two men ever after lived on the best
terms of fraternal andXhristian fellow
ship.
Queen Victoria’s visit to Paris, it is
said, brought 141,345 strangers into,
the city, if we place the expenditure of
ec-h iimhvidUHtolnri.ig-a mtayNofrteU
d avs at the low average of fifty dollars,
we airive at,a profit.for iPatis oi over
thirty-seven -.mBlion . Ii i-s stated
that for the jewelers the Hveek was
more profitable than any whole yeai
duriiisr theTeign of Louis PhiUippe’.—
Every'bra-.-1. of trade was .immensely
benetitted. * . .. ....
Death of an Editor.'
The Nashville 1V% comes to us
cladVi mourning for the death of E. F.
McGekty, Esq., onejpf editors. In
brief t-ribute to his worth} the lr ni^,
remarks :* Hisllarge circle -of personal
friends, who wlrmly felt his great.mor
al worth, will be shirked-at this.ag-
nouncemenk No mag wasmiore: high
ly appreciated fry those who knew lnm
W In" connection W i tffHiepolitical pre^
... Tenness'eer he has lor many years
t(een .kno\y a to .thefrsapds AS C-Xcel-
lent and forcible writer; but we who
have been intimately associated with
him ih the busings aiwt sqcia.1 relations
df fife- haVe'alonh known'hoWexalted
pdrtance in the ecouomy of a
—therefore it is to be regret
behMf of the commonwealth, as well
•asiof individuals, that sP important
-and useful an interest should be so
depressed- Indeed it ought not to be so. ,
There-is no necessity that it should be
CENTRAL
£«f.\UER * flijItEj CfJ.
md social
excellence,
and
PI10FIT AND LOSS..
THURSDAY, OjCT, 11,4855,
p.
C. PENDI-ET i O«» EDJtTOft,
A southerner writes to the
itentTorf to thc'tiflio'wihy Comparison.—
In the vear 1790 the nopuletion of
was liis moial
He was the very soul of honor, a
never did a man live who^ was freer
froim 'jntended wrong- or jhjusfrce .to
otlrnrS. ‘
*- -H^cafvbd'oirt'W's oten ‘fcrfuheTrofo
orphanage and penury in youth. .He
was moral, temperate, frugal, industri
ous, just and fearless, in ‘all the rcl'i-
I ■ 5 of life. He lived" and died a pi
ous roembiVof tlie Methodist- Episco
pal Church. <. . y .
It is with, the deepest 'mmultoholy
Unit w-e' 1 :ve seen luni cut oil in the
meridian of life, and from afield of la-
oor, in which he had toiled patiently,
may i isfly be said should have been
in store for him.
.ms 82,' O', and toy year 1850
it w;.s 906,000, au increase of eleven
fold in sixty-years. In 1190 the jwp-
ulation of New York was 340,000, and
•in 1S50 it was 3,097,000 bei.n. an in
crease of nine fold in sixty years.-.
AY AFT ED TuffE .SfaKE 13IT.—Dr.
Thomas, of Monticello, Indiana, reports
a case of rattlesnake bite. Mr. .J. H.
ed -38, who stands. 6 feet m his
Cotton Mannfactnring in Georgia.
Tlie past two or three, years have
S, a"e
stock.ngs—who, by
very fond of brandy;
Without
may;
they
cold
thev
ihe victim.of mistted^pam,"mrjtisr.y against;
er lie in an open -i
cd snot is accessible. -Every one must
ha-ve-obsevefr-tluat they always see.
the. driest spot to be found, and gener-
fllly lie near a fence... shed or treg. A.
Y. Times. ' >
Singula? Suicide.
A Washington correspondent oF the
Charleston.Standard relates the fohow
mg.:- ‘ y- ■ y
A meltmcnoiy ca=e
city-.
of suicide has'
Major Mathew
joeeurredm our .
Markland, formerly an enunent awym.
.of Kentucky, and lam a cleiL ia Ue,
,-Quatev-Ma^ter general to -office, w-‘ s
living in the epjoyraent-of good uealtli.
and surrounded by an -interesting and
affectionate family. - -On Sunday morn-
inglast fie stepped out of the house, J
remarking iff it-lie was goto? to spend j
the day with, some friends. For sev-'j
era! da vs nothing -was heard from him, j
when the family hecame alarmed," and
inquiries were put on foot to ascertain,
-if possible, hfs'whereabouts. No clue,
however, to-the mysterv was obtained
until to-day, when his son made an
examination of his .desk at -the AA ar
Department, where he found a number
of letters addressed'to various memoers
.ofhis family and to a few particular
■friends. These-all told of suicide o
long conternplated stlicide—and t ia ,
, too without assingning any cause, oth
er than old age and general- infirmity,
liis life-useless cither to him-
tn one of his letters
What a Newspaper does
Reward.
The result of my observations en
ables nre to- state as a fact-, that publish
ers of newspapers are more poorly re
warded than any other class of men in
the United States, who invest an equal
amount of labor, capital and thought.
They are expected to do more service
for less pay,- to stand more sponging
and “dead-heading,” to puff and tte-
fend more people, and sorts of people,
without fee or hope of reward-, than any
other class. Thqy credit wirier and
long r; get ofteuer cheated, suffer
more pecuniary loss; and are offe-ner
ed confidence, than
People pay a printer s bill more reluc
tantly than any .other. It goes harder
with them to expend a dollar on a
valuable newspaper, than ten on a use
less gewgaw'; yet every body avails
himself of the services of the editors
and the printer’s ink. How many pio-
fessional and political reputations and
fortunes have been created and sustain
ed by the friendly, though .unrequited
pen of the editor ? ' How many embryo
towns and cities have been brought in
to notice and puffed into prosperity by
the press? How many rail roads, now
in successful operation, wrtnlr| have
foundered buffer the as
‘fever that moves die world; m snort,
what branch of American industry.or
activity has not been promoted, stimu
lated and defended by the press.
And who has tendered it more than
a miserable pittance for its mighty ser
vices? The bazars of fasinpn and ioU-y,
the haunts of appetite and dissipation*
are thronged with an eager cro'-yb
bearinggoid in their T' —A .‘■“'f
commodities there vended are sold at
enormous profits, though intrinsically
! worthless and paid for .with scrupulous
i punctuality ; while the counting room
Iff the newspaper is the seat- of jewing
trade, orders and penn-es.
D is^nad/a point of honor.to liquidate
a grog bill, but not of dishonor to .re
pudiate a printer’s bill
Leader. ~ ^
the wav T was
had just - been
bitten on the inside;-of his left- heel by
a large rattlesnake, both fangs having
•been well inserted in.tbe muscles. In
36 hours lie-wassound and we]!. 1
gave him-, in the short time al udcd to
one quart of brandy and-a-gallon and
a half of whiskey—all without- mtox-
iculioro- He wanted more, iurd -1-re
fused to supply liis wants. The next
day Mr.- Ifr liis next neighbor, \yas
passing along and saw him .with Ins
pants rolled up to his knees, oarefoot-
ted and wading around in some wee*.is
and grass with his teet. IL ^
he had lost -anything ? - “-No sir.
“AYbat are you doing, then t. -i m
hunting a snake. There ain’t any
liquor only what Dr. Thomas 1ms
and he won’t let me have any. unless 1
am snakefoit; so 1 id bunting one.
The Pope vs. theSpaxish Cortes.
—The- following is a paragraph
from the late allocution or address of
the Pope to the Spanish Cortes, In re
ference to the act confiscating the pror-.
eny.of life Church in Spain : -
liaising onr voice ir, your assembly,
we complain of all that thelav goy-
Spaiu,'utfjusiTv agamSTTffe’ CWTren.
the patrimonv of the Oliurcli has been
ursurped irfspite of all Divine and hit-’
man law. We, therefore, in virtue of
our apostolic authority, censure, ab
rogate and declare without value and,
without force, null and of no effect, for
the-'past and future, the said laws and
decrees.
been a critical period to this important
interest. AVbat may b'c said of Geor
gia in this respect, is do ubtl otos m ore or
less true of all- the Southern States
where cotton manufacturing exists.
It is self evident that the manufac
ture of cottofi, at least into;the coarser
and more simple fabrics is tlie legiti
mate business for any surplus capital
that the ecfftoff-plant£rs_may_ possess,
provided the same cam be made profh-
tal)le.. Undoubtedly tlie “Up conntry”
of Gfiorgia is well adapted, in every
essential particular, fp-this business, -
and in one-important respect to wit -,
in a mild and equable climate, it- has
weatly the advantage of any North
ern or Eastern -State. It has there
fore seemed to many wise- and public
spirited men at the South, that there
must 4>e the same fitness in spinning
cotton in Georgia where it grows, that
therels in grinding wheat in per own
“Genesee countryiu either case,
saving die transportation by- .nearing
the fields which produce the raw • ma
terial. They have thought it as poor
economy to send cotton to the North
"to be spun and brought back, at their
expense, in the shape of goods, its' it
would.be for the Genesee farmer to
send his wheat to the South to be
ground, and sent back for hisconsump- | the Pope,
tion in the shape of flour. AVith some !•
qualifications, this, was tuidoubtedlv
the correct view for them to t?fke ; anti
it was this sensible idea which origina
ted the manufacturing interest of Geor-
An ImportiDt
Thtr express? train frbm |ho Fast
which aiyived-at JioC.btsfer,
day after noon 'attracted considerable
attention at tuo-4»ipot- iR -cansequenoe-
of the wheels and connexions of tlm
■cars being .entirely concealed from
vie wF Boards arei placed qii’tlyj ^teles'
iff the cars almost ^s r fbw its the rails,
and a canvass extends from one plat-
form to another-, covering all the con
nexions. This arrangement is desigu-
pd to keep down.the dust, which can
only escape attlmepd qfto.o kst,C|i^.in.
Tim train'. It will also prevent acci
dents, avoiding lu,ss pf life and limb.
No passenger or^ other person can get
from the cars under the wheel without
removing-the covering; There is no
sack thing as falling between the
wheels and thefilalforni, for thespaee,
between i . e car'L - yered wit. a can
vass capable of sttstaining' the weight
often men. This plan of protecting
passe n ge fs_ _in. .cars. J’GPJjq,. dJUi.AWk tiSl
tliat the -inventor designs to make a
further'improvement with a view to
carrying the smoke and cinders from
the locomotive under the cars also to
the fear of’tbe train. If he docs this
he may be regarded as a public bene-
factorf—Hochester Urinoil: -
This Cilice fof Safe ;
- Our reason for dffering fox salto'ihifi
Central Georgian office, -is .the same as
the planters’ when he offers fris cotton
and Rice, theffarmerhig Pigs-and Poul
try, or the Jockey bis pony, Verbum
Sat SupienU.
• 1^-The Rev. Joseph T. Smith is our
authorised Agent fd'r'tbe-
of anv business connected with.thisjia-
per. After ten years hard service in
the Georgia Qonfer .-nce as.one of her
ministers, he finds himself at the ex
piration of that time,'with health gone,
afid a dependent family on his hands.
The sad history of many a zealous^
hard-working xvlethodist PfeaeliC;.
from further active doty upon this
circuit for the balance of the year.
AVe bespeak for him a kind reception
among our friends. ,
Inoculation foe Yellow Fe¥cr.
Dr. Scott'a distinguished physician
from the West Indies, has arrived at
New Orleans, on the invitation of the
medical faculty of that city. The Del
ta says: .
.We believe lie is inclined to regard
|3j|r , AYe will send the Central
Georgian one year to any one Who
will supply us with the numbers p.f
this paper from October 1st, 1854, to
January 1st,’ 1855. Or two years, to
any one who will supply us with the
'entire -numbers Tor last year. - ■-•>■
with a favorable eye the new system
of inoculation for yellow fever, which
has been.extensively and successfully
practiced this year.. In more than 3000
eases, we understand, its beneficial ef
fects have been tested, and assuredly',
with such a ffaet before our eyes, we
should not treat the theory with con
tempt, merely -because it is a novelty.-
A Bofaparte Cardfal.—Prince
Lueien Bonaparte, second son of Prince
Charles Prince doCaninb, who has. as
sumed the t celestastical profession, is
to-be named Cardinal and Grand Al
moner to his cousin,' the Etnpefor of
the French. The young-P.mice who
is nojv ’ twenty-one, had already de
clined accepting tlie Cardinal s nab,
and declared that he had no-ambition
to be other than a simple aW?e. ne
"has only yielded out ol obedience .to
Frost. -
We had a slight frost on'the 6th
inst., and again, on the - 7th. Earlier
than usual for - this latitude. .Cotton
can be injured feu,t little by it, as the
crop has matured and .opened, much
earlier than usutfl. / From present , ap
pearances, it will neArly all be gather
ed -and sent td market before the .1st
of January, provided remunerative-
prices be offered-' - '♦
via^ and lias, noatished it ixotil - .aL. • ^nm'Cu. . "l'liey winawtr
A Sad Stor • .—About three mont-ns
aero, a party of fifty yotong Frenchmen
embarked at Bordeaux, bound tor
this eountry, for fear ot being drawn
Sweamfg.—The California Chris
tum Advocate says, “An intelligent la-
dvofour acquaintance, whose- little
boy was beginning to ‘swear, anxious
to express lo her ci.ikl her horror of
pou the novel process
mputh with soap
suds whenever he swore, It-was an
effectual cure. The boy understood^
his motlier’s sense of the -corruption M
an oath, which, with the taste ot the
suds, produced the -desired result.-—
-The practice, ife universally adopted,
would--raise the price o ; so; p..
-Cleveland
renderim
self or friynd
to his friends he saySp
At best I
would not have many days to remain,
■andThose few I am unwilling to be a
tax upon the bounty of others. M.v
mind is fully made up with all the af
fections r have for my family, and 4
ield to no man the pride of more than
I entertain, yet, for their future good
I qhoose to depart.” Major Markland
jvas upwards of sixty years of age,
and lift'd' spent an 'active, professional
life amid the exciting scenes of the
Westefn frontier. Through Mr. Crit
tenden, he was induced to remove to
this city, where he obtained a clerk
ship and has since resided. His body
has not been recovered.
- Italy.
The Paris correspondent .of the
Times writes: ... . ,
■“Letters from various parts of Italy
concur in stating that tliS probability
of serious evehts soou taking place
there is believed by. many and ac-
counts from Austria speak of a Feeling
of apprehension on the same subject,
as also of the preparation of the gov
ernment for all emergencies AYheth-
| er the war v/ith Russia will continue
limited to the theatre of its present op
erations, or whether by the force of cir
cumstances independent of her will or
that of the Allies, it will assume great
er proportions and extend over Europe,
no one can say-; but- it is on the latter
eventually tlqff the hopes of the Italian,
and, t do'ubt not, of the Hungarian and
Polish emigrations are chiefly founded.
The Italians at home and abroad antic-.
ip|te that the hoar of the deliverance
of their country is fhst -approaching.
The signs and pressages ate numerous;
the appearances are dgain too promi
sing to be deceitful. A gocd^dealhas
been said of late about a pamphlet
which, some will have it, lias been,
printed iu London—others, ,but I think
erroneously, at’.the imperial press in
Paris—which very'few have seen, and
all are anxious to see, but wbich is still
, A So URGE of SHE.E3.—Dr. Frank-
lip .having noticed that a.ecrtaiu me
chanic who worked near his office
was always fopW-
tured at length to ask him for the
secret .of his -constant cheei f. inesa .;
“No secret, Doctor,” he replied.. 1
have not one of the best wives, and
when l go to work, she- always has a
kind wo’-d of encouragement, for me ?
i uiu ; vvjicii Fgo home,’sb meets me
with a smile and a.kiss, and the tea is
sure to be ready ; and she has done so
inanv things through the day to please
me that I cannot find it in my heart
to speak an uiikind Word to Any
body.” -
The Montgomery Mail thus figures
up the party strength of the Alabama
Legislature: _
Sevate.—Americans 13 ^Democrat
anti 16; AYhiganti 2; and Independent
tal at stake renders its- ill success a
matter, of seriovs considerration. •
At this time there are about fifty
factories i-n the State of Georgia.—
Soipe of them small, illy constructed,
and worse managed :—otliers of the
vefiv best machinery and copstrncfrofi,
and’as large as factories ever ought to
be. As before stated, the post two
or three years Tuive been .very, hard
upon these factories, so. th-t at this
time a number of thefn aref stopped,
otlrers partially ko, under.circumstanced
of discouragement so greatas-to rend.er
it-yerv .unpertain .whether -tifoV vt* ^
ev$r’res um&operatibns wkhont_ a ra
dical change of ownerslrip and manage
ment. . .
It is a pity that it should be so—-for,
apart from the interests of those who
have-invepted therein with tb • imps o
koncst gain, the stoppage of these
works will be a public loss.^ «q-st
such a-loss as will be more deeply felt
'and appreciated by the public after - At
! shall have-transpired, than it would
be possible for any public to .under
stand jn anticipation. These -ft-■ ■ • rfos
have been/dotng a gor'd work- in the
South,- Jbav.ug much good yet undone,
which they .might d.o if they had pros
perity. They have, in common with
the Railroads, diverted a' proportion of
capita] from the business of planting,
lh re by helping to limit the produc
tion of Cotton to something like the
wants of the world—otherwise the
crop of the Southern States might
have reuched 4,000,000 bales per an
num, selling at 5 cents per pound,
instead of 3;000,000 bales at 10c. per
pound. - Thev have increased the con
sumption of cotton by bringing into
the
leans about eight weeks ago, and on
“the the 4th ult., the last of the fifty
was consigned to the earth.
The' Election.
An unusffally exciting election, had
just passed, and we hope that the at
tention ef-.the people will now be
turned to other iffterests—if not so ex
citing, .yet. important to the w§ll-being
of society. Our agricultural interests
we know come in for a fair sfeare rtf at
tention. The State Agricultural Fair
at Atlania Was much' 'the wbrse for
coming off in the midst of great politi-
in'naTteuCto Wiii lR'foi.brfnWi n DCi
cess. If %ome Yankee;wouldr invent a
method of getting at the will of the peo
ple without such undue excitement,
The New York Tribune regrets
that Fred..Douglass has been nomina-
‘Libcrfy P;i"ty at Utica,
His
ted by the
for State Secretary, amt aays
proper place is not as a, member o
the State administration- at Albany,
but aS it member of Congress atAN^aftii-.
ington.
A tmrions law-question has ■ aVigen
m.-London. A.manpropiseJ toa lady,
was accepted, but not fulfilrng »
his promise, is ,ffow prosecuted, it
turns out, however, that he had a
wife and couldn’t marrv, althongh
, “ Barkis was wiVlink” The question
therefore-atisi-s, “ what damage -does a
lady sustain in not being married to a
married man ?”
— .
•Three Pro-
F ranee.
IIpuSE.—Americans 49; Democrat
anti 52 ; Whig anti 5.
Frefch Persecution^
testant prqtehers at tissue, F ramj
have been, several. V fmafl.fifty, fifteen
am] ten francs* and costs, for wor
shipping with rifore than twenty per
sons* Without an auihOi lotion from
the civil power.
he would be.a public benefactor, and
entitled to eyey r body’s vote of thanks
if noth mg more agrajabletoa Yankee’s
notions should be forthcoming. We' for
one will vote him. a patent that shall
end only with' the Republic itself. But
it seems we car- have no great political
good without som?attendant secia?evil..
We are pot prepared -to admit , that
tTto'so have the relation of ’cause
and effect, and therefore' hops-, some-,
body’s wits- will .be. pt4 t0 w ^
to defuse the ways and means of re
dress in the genuses. .
* The Educational ‘ interests of- the
Wifl there now be peaee ia EiropcT
- A question this of some importance
in -this^country. * Whilst the war con* ’
tinuea there must be a depression of
the' Cotton market, though tread stuff 8
wifl rule at a high figure. If it
what will England and France do with
-their immense war establishment ? A
«r, .. .
question of some interest to Jonathan
as dShnected with his meek desires
concerting Cuba, another slice of Mex-
ic*> f the. adjustment.-on, the- principles
of abstract justice, of the Central Ame
rican question, (due protection to that
largely'bencv'ofent man, Col. Kinney,)
and a fair showing to the Missionaries
; among tlie Isles of the Pacific—toc'etli-
er with a permanent > settlement of the
new doctrines of annexation and indef-
^itiixe 'eNpans'ibn. politically considered.
Sevastopol hak fallen,, (that is a part
of it) and speculations rife as to feiture
movements.' - ’ Johny 'BnM glorifies
about as much'- as if it had been St.
Petersburg!}, with the.Czara suppliant
caplive. And.Johny Crepeau throws
up his chapeau aud.eries vive TEmpe-
rear, with && much zeal and satisfaction
table Napoleon himself, as in former
days, from Marengo an I Aiisterlitz. A
dearly bought victory, which cripp' s
Russia a little mor.e perhaps than the
taking of Savannah would the United
Stat s. It is only half done at that,
-the strongest part.-o'f the fortifications
yet to subdue, thouglrthe town proper
has fallen'. * It-- has taken near two
•years to accompilish thus much, at an
•expense of blood' and treasure that
figures can never Compute. And yet
it is conjectured that Russia will suc
cumb. If so it wilt .certainly be from
a fear of something to. bo done in the
.future, not from the wonderful success
of the Allies up to Anno Domini, one
thousand eight hundred and fifty-five.
It wbuld be a.great- pity just now
for Brother Jonathan to be baulked
in his benevolent schemes toward Mex
ico, Chiba, and the rest of mankind in
the Columbian Archipelego. It is
necessary that they shall, be made to
understand^, as well as tin? Isthmian
Barbarians, that he is after their good,
that is, all of their goods. And it is
doubtful, if tie aforesaid Johnies are
pot too-far behind- the age to be very
appreciative witnesses of' Jonathan's
amiable process, of teaching that some
folks, can attend to* some folks’ busi
ness, better than some folks.themselves.
We are inclined to .the opinion, that,
as a very clever schoolmaster, he will
be allowed his- way some .time longer,
seeing that for the present, it is of more
baulk his propensity to promulgate Via
new theory. -
There are yet ensanguined fields
for British valor and French- impetu
osity to pmet, hard-fronted battlements
for ironihail to rain upon, before Rus
sian jpndurance and sullen bravery will
give way. - If there- be one great les-
sonjof.more prominence than another
taught.by this Crimean campaign, it is
the'stern, dogged, and unyielding re
sistance of the Russian soldier. The
best' appointed - army that has ever
been* marshalled.-upon- the fields of
Eurqpfe, aided, by.all thatmodern sci
ence and- the inventive geajas of the
age- could dp. to render it doubly ef
fective, has been. foiled and baffled for
months,-- even years, beyond the effeu-
State are certainly none the better ^Vmtjbns of military men, by ’this same
fayor styles of cotton goods, such as
The Chicago Press ineutions that a
. few days ago a miser, named Andrew
Grundersoil, died in that city fjom the
effects of the miserable food bis ava
rice compelled him to eat, and be
cause he would not buy. medrcines or . wrap a up j- n mystery,
have afpliysician, lest ue snoulu be! —
called' upon to pay the expense.—
Since his death it has been ascertained
that iie liad $4000 deposited in abuiu>,
and owned- a block in the westerly
division of the city! He left no will,
and had several respectable children, -
who, when he was-.ill, flocked, to liis.
bedsid? and reife-v^d his Bufferings all
rkey could.
Etiquette if Rome. A corres
pondent of the Lundoty Daily Lews,
writing from Rome under date 28th
August last, says :
“It is etiquette here] for every one
who meets the Dope to *Dop his car
riage. and get out to kneel in the road,
whilst his holiness passes,”
'Methodists if the U: States.—
The N. Y. Express says :
In 1755, five Methodists settled in
this city and formed the first Met 10-
dist Society in America. In. 18oo,
one hundred years later, the Metho
dist Church in the United States num
bers over four million worshippers.
fjgT*A young lady named Hood,
daughter of Mr. George Hood, while
combing her hair, met with -a most
horrible accident in tlie factory m
Which she was employed at Mechan-
icsvile, Bucks county, Pa., a few days
a 'tro. she had thrown her tresses
backwards, when they were caught by
the machinery, and, with a part or tin
scalp, torn from her head; Her hauc
and arm were also badly lacerated- m
her endeavors to disengage herselt
from the machinery.
The Pope having determined to
found an English Collcge : at Rome, to
supply the w%nt of clergymen
Romish faith iu Eoglan
collection hqa been tago
of the
a general
.ud in all.
the Catholic churches
tliat country in gid oj
Dsn ablings, bags and cordage,
place of linen and hemp.
They have forced into active em
ployment, and into something like dis
cipline, a vcry'unruly and . productive
class of wbite population, who r when
idle, are, to say the least, no friends ot
the planter. ■ 'There afe now no pau
pers, to speak of .in any county of
Georgia where a cotton factory exists.
By employing the children of such,
tactoric^ preserve their parents from
want. It may be estimated that dar
ing the late scarcity of food wmch has
run through two years, the iactories
in Georgia have saved the State from
a poor tax which would otherwise have
exceeded all other taxes put together
Within the writer’s memory, which
goes back fifteen years, the factories o
Georgia, have by competition among
themselves, not only -improved the
clothing of the negro, but t hey J 1 *™
reduce^ its cost quite* to one-halt the
old rates. When we. add to all this,
the feet that these factories provide
each a local market fornufnefous items
of surplus provisions, (inffhe agrregate
a large sum,) which would ot herwise
bear ho value,-we may be justified in
declaring that they have proven them-
selves to be (in the sense of political
An IncrediWe bnt Troe Story.
During tlie freshet a little more
than a month since^ a cow belonging
to Adam Carson, near this towri, was
carried: into the flume of Austin s Oil
Mill. She was missed on the day.ot
her disappearance and through search
wds made for her on tliat and several
subsequent days without success She
a never been known to stay away;
young and fat, and! the conclusion
was that she had fell into the hands of
a drover. The mill was not running.
A day or two since it Was entered to
make repairs. The cow was found
shut up in the fiuriie, wasted almost to
a shadow, with scarce strength to more
her body, still alive. Nourishment
was given her little at a time, and she
seems now jn a fair way to recover.
She had been there, .as there is every
reason to brieve, JustVthirty days ;
and the.floods had, at that time, burst
into and injured the niill, ahd she had
been lost that lengt
incredible, *but' alt
h of time, it seems
^ the facts indicate
thatshe had s.urvived'thirty days des
titute of both water aud food.—Akron
Beacon. ...
That D \uger£eotype.—“Do let me
have your daguerreotype T' asked a
dashing Fifth Avenue, belle, lately, ol
eeonomv) perhaps the' most-productive
• - „ .1." J at the
of all the productive .interest? at
jhesp considerations, ard^f- ini'
a rather
whp had
nevish young gentleman
nfe>r sonie months- annoy
ing her with his aUentions.
Tho-gentlftnaii was delighted, and
in a short trade tue lady' received the
pieture’ She gave it to her servam,
aud asked— .
“Would you know that gentleman
if he should call ?”
The servant replied m the afflrma-
tliisperiodical upheaving of the'politi
cal masses. Religion suffers, .and
mourning turns aside to weep—tem
perance abashed and frightened,, flies
from the field. Integrity; though raising
her voice is unheard amidst the dir 6.
the conflict. Morality- seeks the by
ways till the sto-mbe passed. ,
It reminds us .of a. horse or a steam
boat-race. No matter whose neck is
broken or who is blown up. To beat
or not to be beat, are the only ques
tions worth a‘farthing. No matter
what the means, what the cost, or bow
accomplished, so we obtain succete,
that’s the goal of our wishes. A fig
for those who croak of principle. The
old maxim “ all is fair in war," is fast
giving way before the advancing light'
of clmsiianity and civilzation, but to
our shame be it said,-another and less
excusable one is obtaining in political
warfare. No scruple as to the means
or fost. We speak of party,' not Know
Nothings, or Andes, Whigs or Demo-
crats-that poisonous fungus that grows
with such parasitic luxuriance upon
politics when elections are at hand.
We are not so Utopian as to look for
unmixed good in anything political.—
The wisest political structures of patri
otism‘must evter partake of.the lmper-
Tectiofa of the builders. Nor d*we be
lieve in the n^ar approach pf the mv
linium, if we areto detennme-thatfact
by the presened of characteristic s^np.
tomS. Wn do not chime in with lu
gubrious notes,' 'nor' Fin-mad- peans
raised over the results of the election
as'fo a change of rulers. We don’t be-
lieve the country ia ruined, becau
Whi^s of Dernociats are defeated :or
intractable’ disposition that conquers
rather by stolid endurance than valor-
ffaS onset. ' •-- - V
The waT in Europe to be conducted
upon the stately process of lines an
angles, and. the most approved style
of soldier-like butchery, lest the demo-
eratic element (we demur to any refer
ence to that .invincible element at
home).Should become a party into®
contest^ which when done, blows w'
fall thick and fast, and great events to •
low hard upon the heels of each ot ie
We think, therefore* that peace *
yet a. long way off, and that brot e
Jonathan -will be permitted to exer
cise his shrewdness in profiting np°
other people’s misfortunes for an m
inite period.
School AdtertiscmcDt.
We would call attention to Mr Bra“
hdha’s Schobl Advertisement
found i
guardians,
educate
great moment to society- AIJ “
♦Lnf cmV -nrobosed
proportion that any propo. ^
Cheapens the cost, does it ,n ° r ^
interest and expand in use u ^
provided the essential matter o
oughness be not-sacrificed
^ ' A
, tlV “Well, when he comes, teU him
1 am c»gaged.-’-tJr. T. D*#*-*.
w wigs w — . ,r icliills and cryaUiltze. q e .11. sw-
gnccesaW; butinthe mml * su B f,
™.riv.trife 1« the danger. «-b.cb f tol *el,ke tl, a tfel. by a )r f)
gooX men ipust deplore <!“S W
endeavor P* gpunteCacfo
to
ipondeut ot the Boston th0
Many may wonde
bite of the rattlesnake is so
corresi:
ary^u-p,..
son—the blood bejng like
state.
proposal P^|
another coluifin. His ^
is worthy the attention °f P ar f * h
A sound -and tho o
maUer 01
©duefition for females is a 110 ^
. . in srx-.ietv. And
why
‘X
,oiso c ’
or the fluid wlpch acts as^ . q tbe
from the fangs, and W 3ecre l is id
wound made by the bite.. a „d
• l:iU />Kirotall7M tU6 ^ j)l0