, C 7 *-' C‘..) =., , +. + 010) 1'- . _ / o ;, 6 ' / , ,D 4 `,l. . I \ yi, . 114 A l 1 li ti I Ili ° -: ‘6)7: 1 1 arte t(.111 fl , Pthaith Vcthticst ( Nittraturt, Agriculture Nortituthre, gljt iitc aith Useiii arts, exiitral, PUS Ur' O,C Pm; local 4llfamating, c.l.ltor an _c Proprietor_ SEVENTH YEAR. Ruddy aparxtittan IS PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY, BY e.erleil.r_ii.• /3 1 atee"., AT ONE DOLLAR PER ANNUM, DAVADLE IN ADVANCE. PUBLICATION OFFICE in the second sto ry of City Lt.'s Row, on Front street, five from, East of Mrs. Flurry's Hotel, 1 1 /I...ninmi LANCASTER COUNTY, PENN'A. If su'escriptions be not paid within six months, $1.25 will be charged, apd if delayed until the 'expiration of the year, 1.50 will be charged. Any person sending us rtvr: new subscribers shall have a sixth copy for his trouble. . No subscription received for a less period than six months, and no paper will be discontin ued until all arrearages are paid, unless at the option of the publisher. A failure to no tify. a discontinuance at the expiration of the term subscribed for, will be considered a new engageldent. ADy Eturtsstra RATES : One sguare (12 lines, or leas) 50 cents for the first insertion and 25 cents for each subsequent insertion. Profes sional and Business cards, of six lines or less at $l3 per annum. Notices in the reading columns, five cents a-line. Marriages and 'Deaths, the simple announcement, FREE; but for any additional lines, five cents a-line. !laying recently added a large Tot of new Jon Ann CA RD TV PE, we are prepared to do all hinds of LA IN AND ORNAMENTAL PRINT- Ism, at short notice and •reasonable priees. it liberal discount made to quarterly, half-year ly or yearly advertisers. r U WANT IT, I TOUIt WIFE WANTS LT, y OUR CHILDREN WANT IT, C ,VILL CERTAINLY PAY, A ND VDU WOULD HAVE IT, You only knew &ow USEPCL, fibre INSTRUC- TlrE, and how ENTERTAINING it is. We refer to that "first best," that largest, most inetructiue, mos* beautiful, and yet cheap rat journal in Lhe world for the iIDUSEIIOLD, for the Fut m, and for the GA KUHN', viz.: the AMERICAN AGRICULTURIST. YOU WANT IT, because it Contains so_ very many new end useful directions, hints : and auggestiens about MI kinds of out-door work, in the GARDEN, in the RIF.LD, in the ORC 11 A RD, on the Mlle plot et ground, about Domestic Animals, etc.,etc. The Agricultur ist is note stale rehash of theoretical gulf, such as goes the rounds from one paper to another, but it is tilled with useful and new practical inlormation, every word of which is reliable, because pupated by honest, practical WORK ING MEN, who know what they write abotn. Each volume contains many hundreds of use d...tit hints, and it is certain that many of these hints will each be worth to you more than a ilnliar.—As all example, a subsctiber writes, "I obtained 6 bushels more per acre on a 10- acre field of wheat, (min all 50 bushels) simply nom a hint about preparing the seed given in my Agriculturist." Another says he obtained an extra yield of 11 bushels of cot a per acrq on a lti.acre field, and with no ex , re cost for Eel lure, by applying one hint front the Arica tar -Ist. Another, (it villager,)' soya he got s43i worth extra of good garden vegetables, which he attributes wholly to the timely hints in the Agriculturist, which told him from time to time What to do, how to do it, and when to do it.— Thousand.; of others have derived Similar alt. vantages. You are invited to try the paper a year, at a cost of only $l. If you desire, you can have, free of charge, four'or five parcels of choice seeds, which the Publisher will distribute among his subscribers the present winter. YOUR WIFE wants the Agriculturist, be cause it has miarge amount of valuable and really useful lamination about all kinds of HOU S gIiOLD WORK, front Garret to Cellar. Give her the benefit of this paper for a year.— You will find your home made better, and money saved. YOUR C HILDR EN want the Agrictaiurist, fur it contains u very interesting, useful, and entertaining department for YOtrrn and C El IL- ItiILEN, which will be of great value to their minds and hearts. . The above are truthful statements, that will be cheerfully attested by nearly a hundred thousand of the present readers of the Agricul turist. You are invited to try a single volume of the Moist, which will cost only $l, ad dab . '4tly pay. Try it for - 1861 (Vol. 20.) n A t ,i ORANGE JUDD, Publisher, ' 41 Park Row, New-York. O M E TO ANDERSON'S where will be Cfound the largest and best assortment of Fruits, and Confectionaries of .all kinds, such as Figs, Dates, a cask of excellent Cooking Prucns, Citron, Bunch, Seedless; Valencia and Layer Resins, Currants, Cranberries, Hour hound & Flaxseed Cough Candy, Cough Drops, Pepper. andy, Preserved Fruit,Gum Fruit, Fig Paste, Oriental Pressed Figs, Cream Milhous, Jully Lumps, Fine Vanilla Almonds Cream Strawberries, Jujube Paste, Rock Candy, Wis tar's Cough Candy, Walnut Candy, Maple, Strawberry and Gum Taffy, Fruit Candy and candies of every quality and price. at J. M. ANDF.RSON'S, Market-st., AMERICAN STOCK JOURNAL. The Third. Volume commences Jan , y 1, 1861. evoted especially to matters relating to do inPatic animals. The largest e and cheapest pa per of the kind in the world. Published Monthly at No. 37 Park-Row, N. Y. Price One Dollar per year in advance. Specimen copies gratis. A, C. L'INS'L EY, Editor and Proprietor. 'OTIS F. B. WAITE, Assottate Editor. Papers giving the above advertisement three insertions, and sending a marked copy to A. G. HATCH, Windsor, Vt., will receive a copy AA . the paper for one year free. A. G. HATCIit, General Agent. [3t JOB PRINTING. Haring very recently added a and fash ionable assortment of Types arg entn _Piing ma terials to " The Weekly Mariettgaii" Office, which wilt enable us to do al/ kinds of PLAIN AND TikeY PRINTING, Such as Cards, Ball s, Circulars, "Programmes, Blanks, Handbills, Posters, Sale Bills, &c. And in fact everything in the Jon Paricrtwo line neatly—at short notice and at as low rates as can be done in the county. 50 BAllitrdzirgenoractiat:lhuiwskg market rates by the barrel or gallon nb . T. R. Weach. A CHOICE Lot of Books for children called A indotruetable Pleasure Books ; School and other Books, Stationary, Pens, Pen holders, &c., &c. For sale at Dr. Hinkle's. DEATH OF THE OLD YEAR By ALFRED TENNYSOD: Full knee-deep lies the winter's COW, And the winter winds are wearilrbighing Toll ye the church-bell sad and slot, And tread softly and speak low,. For the Old Year lies a-dying. Old' Year, you must not die 1 YOu came to us so readily, You lived with us so steadily ; Old Year, you shall not die. He lieth still:' he (loth not move ; lie will not see -the dawn• of day, He bath no other life above, He gave me a friend, and a true, true love; And the New Year will take them awaf. Old- Year, you-must not go; So long as you have been with us, Such joy'as you have seen, with us, Old Year, you shall not go. He frothed his bumpers to the brim; A jollier year we shall notsee, But though his eyes are waxing dim, And though his foes speak ill of him, He was a friend to men. Old Year, you shall not die; We did so laugh and cry with you, I've half a mfnd to die with you, Old Year, if you must die. He was full of joke and jest, But all his merry quips are o'er, To see him die, across the waste His son and heir doth'ride post-haste, But 'he'll he dead before. Everyone for his own,' The night is starry and cold, my friend, And the New Year blithe and bold,my friend Comes up to take his own. How hard he breathes ! over the snow I heard just now the crowing cock, The shadows flicker to and fro ; The cricket chirps•; the light burns low ; 'Tis nearly twelve o'clock. Shake hands, before you die, Old Year, we'll dearly rue for you : What is it We can do for you? Speak outbefore yoO His face is growing-sharp and thin, Alack I our friend is gone, Close up his eyes ; tie up his chin : Step from the corpse and let him in That standeth there alone, .And waiteth at the door. There's a new foot on the floor, my friend, And a new face at the door, my friend, A new face at the door. TEES COLD SPELL BY a OHN WY.lsitAntrEL, 311. Din laggard strolls the street to-day, Because the nipping frost is out ; \My window pants are full of spray, That curious Jack has tossed about! No lounger loiter near the lamps That gleam like balls of ice to-night ; Unless some wretch in freezing cramps Hugs close to death beneath their light No trickling waters cross my path, Except that leave their tide congealed ; The earth is frozen—pool and bath Are with one secret loCked and sealed. The sun was doubly bright at noon, But did not melt one sphe of frost ; To-night how glares thP bright, broad moon Down on the house tops ice4embossed I Far off I hear the heavy tread Of some lone reveler, homeward bound • All o'er the streets a crispy bed Of trodden snow creaks with the mind Once was I out in such a breeze— O never may that scene recur ! A bark had foundered on the seas, And I was frozen fast in her. Again I creep that slippery deck, Cling helpless on the splintedspars t And count my comrades on the wreck, All stating blindly at the stars. To-night I hear that piping tone— The North-wind whizzing like a whip ; This night, some mariner lies alone, Froze in the ruin of his ship ! WIIAT NEXT ? The San Franciscans are ago ahead people. The latest men tion of the Golden State is a plan to make white dogs useful. Your San Franciscan seizes up his white cur, and with stencil-plate and black ink, inscribes his business card on each side of the wretched pup, and sends him forth a quadrupedal locomotive advertisement —a daguerreotype of the fast people of a fast country in a fast age. It is reckoned that a ',lively dog will be worth at least five dollars per day or equal to a quarter of a column in a newspaper. San Fran cisco can take the hat. ar The New York papers state that it is extremely probable that the London volunteers will send by the next steamer an invitation to the Seventh Regiment to pay a visit to England. Mr. Blanch ard Jerrold, who is captain of a crack London volunteer corpse, and several other literary and military celebrities, are very enthusiastic in relation to the matter, and have interested many leading citizens of London, by whom it is pro posed t o o raise £25,000 to defray the ex perms. MARIETTA, PA., SATURDAY, :JAN:V./RV. 10,4861. "The Stuff that Dreams are Made of." Very remarkable stuff it is that dreams are made of ; the odds and ends of every thing. And the way in which the shreds and patchesa of memory are mixed with the wildest hallucinations of fancy, and worked up with them into all sorts of grotesque and arabesque phantasmago ria, puts everything in the shape of wide awake absurdity, to shame. The mova ble pictures on the magic lantern slides, that exchange heads and limbs, or turn from Jack Valstaffs into grinning skele tons, the tricks of pantomime, the trans formations of the fantoccini, present nothing comparable, in the way of ridi culous incongruities, with the queer cus tomers of Dreamland. You are never . sure of one of them for an instant, they, change countenance so often and so sud denly. Moreover, you are never certain of your locality. Crowded streets change to solitary deserts, yott drop from the summit of a mountain to the bottom of the sea : •,--and, "oh! what a fall is there, my countrymen.", When on the, point, of making your escape from a ferocious assassin, you are inopportunely struck with . paralysis, and his knife goes through you—not with a dash as you expected,, but slowly, an inch at a time—and you hear it grating against your bones with its edge, and feel its point tapping your arteries and digging into Your nerves of sensation, Sometimes, by way of *vari ety, you are hanged or drowned in a much more horrible style than would be possible in any other , realm than that of Soinnus. Occasionally you are in a house on fire, locked up in the sixth story; or tied to a tree with arniseella neous assortment of savages and demons shooting flaming arrows at _you, and stir ring you up with red hot pitchforks. In short, there is no conceivable atrocity, from the milder forms of lynching to being thrown headlong into the crater of a volcano, which is not perpetuated upon dreamers. That all these imaginary hor rors are just as unpleasant, so far as, the pain and fear are, concerned, as if they were realities, no one who has experi enced them can doubt. To be sure, there is a bright side to the picture.— The dreamer is 'now and then "lapped t'n Elysium." But upon tbe whole, the di abolic preponderates over the angelic in visions of the night. Philosophers have tried hard and long to account for the vagaries of the mind in slumber; but the only plausible"thee ry they have given us is t4t during dreams the controlling power of theaill is nullified. Conseiuently, the percep tive faculties, the reflective faculties, and' the moral sentiments, or such of these as are not paralyzed like the will, are'supL posed to go to work seperately, each on its own hook. If so a pretty mess they make of it Materially speaking, the stuff that bad` dreams are made of, is in many cases in dkgestiblc food. The man who goes, fast ing to bed, with his mind at peace, may "draw the drapery of his couch around him" with a fair prospect of lying down to "pleasant dreams." —N. Y. Ledger. Tho Earl of Aberdeen whose death took place early in this month, was the Prime Minister of England in 1855 and 1856. He was Dorn in 1782, and his age was .therefore 78. His Scotish titles were Earl: r Aberdeen (conferred in 16820 and Lord Haddo ; but in 1814 he was created wpeer of Great Britain by the title of Viscount Gordon, the family name. He was the oldest Knight of the order of the Thistle, and Knight of the Garter ; two of the three great English orders of Knighthood, which are seldom conferred on the samenobleman, and of which it is believed •there is not now a similar instance. Cr Since the constitutional restriction against the African Slave. Trade went into operation, all the original States of the Union. except south Carolina, have passed laws to prohibit,the trade in ac cordance with the spirit of that compro mise. As South Carolina has no such legislation, and as' she has fallen back upon her political status of 1733, it fol- . lows that the African Slave-Trade will be ''a legal business as soon • as she has perfected her work of Secession. tar - A well-known equestrian is now 4m, a farm in, Kansas, engaged in training, a number of buffalo to the ring,' intending to ride an act of horsemanship (i) upon one of them. He has - ten- of them in hand, which-he intends to drive. tandem before a music wagon in procession: ;It is probable that he..will so far accomplish his purpOse as to join . some coMpnny nest spring. A tandem team of bill:la -hes in procession, driven by tine person, willindeed be a curiosity. An*liEß Faxen'E' ir be remembered that Governor Pae,ker de prived John M. Butler, the drily 'oettifi ed member elect to Congress frem the 14th District:in the city of Philadelphia, of the usual certificate issued by him, whilst ho held that of the Return Judges, and that he declared Mr. Lehman duly elect ed. Mr. Butler took at once steps to contest the matter, and under an act of Congress, ,Recorder Entre is now investi gating the matter: Mr. Butler insisted upon the re-count of the boxes, which have been under the charge of Alderman APM_ullin since the election, who is known. as one of, the most unscrupulous Demo crats throughout the land. This motion was strongly opposed by Mr: Lehman's counsel, but the Recorder finally decided that the boxes must be brought and the votes counted. Considerable trouble was experienced in obtainirtg the boxes, but the counsel for Mr. Butler threaten ed to prosedte if the boxes were not produded, and they were finally brought and counted, with the foll Owing result. The recount makes the majority of Mr: Bdtlerl.26 in the whole diitrict/ and consequently elects him. It will be understood that the tally lists above re ferred to, were placed in the ballot boxes, and duplicates of them were filed in the office of the Prothonotary of the COurt of Common Pleas, on the day after the election. In .counting off the vote, it js usual to. put, the tickets up in bundles of ten, which are twisted up and in this . way placed in the ballot boxes. In the / Seventh ; Division ; , where the heaviest frauds appear to have been•perpetrated, more than half the votes cast for Judge King were placed' in-Mr. Lehman's bun dles,'and counted for the last named gen "demon.; while most of Mr. Lehman's' buhdles had one or two of Mr. Britler's tickets smuggled into them. ' The can didates for Governor, State Senator and LegislAure were upon the , same ticket as Congress, and the' result to those of ficers was affected precisely the same as the vote for Congressman. Mi. Nichols, the Senator elect, •had his majority, which was reported to be about 300, largely increased, by the discovery of these frauds. • • Amos Kendall has published anoth er of his powerful letters against Seces sion, in which he says: "Let Messrs. Bell, Breckinridge, arid Douglas, throw- . ing behirid them all antipathies and 'all' personal riinbition;meet together 'on the platfo - rin orthe -Union; ;and i bY 6, united effort save theii - chunky. .It is madness to quariel about the future command of a sinking ship. Let their only emula tion be ,whici shall do most.te save it, and the crew will hereafter know how to reward him who may have been most ac tive and devoted. It requires but an effort of these men to organize e Demo cratic Union party which shall sweep over the country life an avalanche,pury ing Abolitionism and Disunionism be yond the hope resurrectian.' CrA number of years ago Mr. Web ster' Was asked, at a dinner table, his opinion of Mr. Buchanan. .and replied that "he was a politician, but no states man." It is curious: that a short time after, Mr. Buchanan was askedlis ion . of Mr. Webster, and replied, that "be. was a statesman, but no politician." In: both judgements contempt was el. pressed---Mr. Webster despising Poli ticians who were not statesman; Buchanan despising statostnela who were not politiCians. 110 - An order has peen issued t from the War Department; at Washington, coun termanding Mr. Floyd's direction to Ship heavy guns South. One of the forts for which they were intended is 'barely above water, and therefore ,was only -.a sham on his part to get .possessien of these guns for future contingencies.— The order to ship the Pittsburg guns has also been countermanded. . . tEr Mayor Wood, of New York, in bis message, read in the Councils on Monday last recommends the :secession of ,the. city of New York from the State, aild the formation of a free city. He is not prepared, however,. to ;recommend violent, measures, therefor. , Cr A paper is in- cireulatien forslg natures, at Richniond,'lrirginia, reqUett ing John Minor Botts to leave the State, his views as expressed in a 'recent let , tor, being considered obnoxionst A 3.lexibin — bloW *his' bitains out in a bar-indm in' New, Oijeans, on Sun day evening, because ho was 'eliaiged with being a mulatto. rl -I. orl - Yls i -. 7 -CDlie Dollar a rear TEE TO-3113 ORDHAptus•CARRoLL.-11trg. Anrin4 Dorsey,., writing, from Elli cott's Mills, thus describes the, ancient se at'of„Garrollton—Doughoregan:Manor d his,,top)). „The. mansion, is distance out fifteen miles from Baltimore : • Entering the gateway we drovp through a noble . avenue, planted on each side,- witii trees With every variety of kind and foliage, which.tep. years hence will be in, their prime and soon•foend ourselves in front of the,Carroll mansion, which, is, a, lopg,comfortahle two story building, ter minated? at the north end by the hand some chapel, which,has become famous as the repository of the remains of the gallant old, signer of the Declaration of independence., ,His:torab is,set in the wall on the left of the altar, and presents a shield and scroll of white marble, on which is carved on relief a pen and roll of parchment 'surrounded, by thirteen stars ; a Latin inscription, appropriate to his great act, appears on a scroll in the centre. Below-this figures in basso fieverrepresenting Vatrie with inverted torch, and History guarding a funeral urn. The chapel is cruciform and con tains a handsome-marble altar, scirtte fine old f)ictures, a good organ, and is'deep rated with rich ,and beautiful windows of stained glase. The !leer of the sanctuary contains some foneteen 'or' sixtene pevs, level with the floor of the sanctuary, and which are occupied 'during the religions ceremonies by the family q:if Mr. Carroll and' their friends. The body of the church is paved with brick and contains about forty commodious . pews, Wbere slaves—who are ''Carefully instructed in the Catholic faith—sit and kneel. • lit'An Englishman, wlio conld not speak good German, was riding a few weeks ago :on the railroad from Dresden to Leiplid;' : then' he asked, as well as be conlcl, low long * it took to go 'through the tunnel. "The person he spoke to thought he asked how long before the tunnel would be reached, and so he an swerered, "In half an hour." When they apProacherthe place, the English man threw dowrihis carpet-bag, and pull ed off his coat. Dr a few moments they were all enveloped in the darkness of the tunnel.' After some ten minutes, a streak . Of light'appeared, and the ladies, oppressed by, the heavy atmosphere, deemed impatient to be again in the pure 9ir. .Soon ,as,, the full light came, every one took a long breath, when sud denly the, ladies. ;; gave a simultaneous shriek; and pulled their veils over their faces to bide from them the disastrous,, condition of the poor Englishman. .The poor man thought the passage, ; ,through the tunnel. would take thirty minuets, and - hid beet surprised by returning to light in the midst of toilet, which he had not been isle make•at Dresden, and for which be thongbtle would take advantage' :of the: Mipposed'half hour's darkness. The Argus: a Paper publisimd in the City of lirogheda,,lreland, coolly tells its readers -that ":the ,election by the Northern States of America of a: black: man' as President , has at• length brought about a state df feeling between the Southern and Northern States which for a long time has been fdared; and which threatens, to end in the disruption of the American Union. Since the Confecler lion was formed; n'o • Pregidential elec tion has excited so much` party feeling as has the "eleetion 'of ' Abitham Lincoln, a black gentleman, hltheko'unpiicizon ,, ota of the Statein whichheliteil—'6i at least un known as a public Min in Etirope." Car A correspondent writing from Charleiton, says that the proposed State loan of $400,000 is already parceled out among the wealthiest men of the State, .mainly in Charleston, and , that , each one is expected to furnish his share under the penalty of being considered disafeet ed. It will be a- forced loan as thor oughly as was ever any loan during 'the French Revolution, or during the chro : nic rpv,plutiops, of, Mew°. The, truth is f thepecessiop movement is in the, hands of; the mpb, and, the planters; merchants, and,o,ther men of substance, are ,power less against them. The Vicksburg (ldiss.) Whig says in a r,ece . n.t number At, the lowestp oa r sible estimate, it, will, cost $25,000 1 0Q0 to maintain ,the qtat,p,.of Alis4ssippi out ofj.he ; All of this, will, have to beraised by direck,tysation on / her • veo ple. Are they ready for any such en*, ,kency ? Let the people remember that thelfeveliithkdSts are- ditetinined't6 per'- petuate tlifs , great . .butigo On iliem:"• la - General Cass is to i re t turn toyMicli igau in about.a.fortpiglit.“)o,\Yations are being prepared all along the.rbute. NO. 27. Daxtri ov run LAST SURI'ItOR OF TBE BATTBfOF Blrxxxa. ham, the last survivor .`of Ihe battle of Bunker Hill which fobk• place on the 17th of June, 1776, over a- year before the independence of this country was de-, Glared - - , --died while on a visit at Great Falls, New Hampshire on the 26th inst., aged one hundred and four years, five months and nineteen' days. Mr. Farn ham's •house was on a farrtiof one bun.: dred acres, situated aborit half a mile from the village of-Acton, Me. The farm is managed by Ms second son, Mr.' John Farnham, who is now sixty-three years old. The old patriot was the fa ther of seven children the' eldest, who would now have been seventy-five years' old, and another are dead. There are five yet living. He enlisted, with some of his youthful comrades, shortly after Washington took eotrimand of the revo-' lutionary forces at 1 0ambridge. He • reached the camp citify Ithe day before the battle of Bunker Hill, and was imme diately marched to the expected scene of operations. He was placed in the' rear in charge of ammunition and stores, when the battle began,lintas it proceed ed was called into action. He served in the revolutionary army 'through three campaigns, from 1776 to' 1717: AIR. LINCOLN'S.; LIBERALITt.--A man at Springfield ,Illinois; recently solcted conxribations. to. enable hint t co, purchase a cork arm, be,having lost one in .firing a salute at Bloomington. Mr. Lincoln was applied to. ; , ":Who did you vote for ?". asksd: , the &resident . elect " Well," replied the man, " rdidn't rote for i you—l voted :for John Bell." . Mr. Lincoln said that *as quite right, and gave the applicant ,a twenty. dollar bill, besides collecting ten, dollars more from bystanders•for•the man!s wants: • cr Mr. Dolt, the Postmaster Geney al, lies sent orders to the sub-treasure r at Charleston to remit all the balance —535,000 on the Post,Oirica account— in his possession, immediately, to the credit of that Department. If this order is not complied with at once, he will de- , ,wand of the Federal Vrovgrnment to en force his orders. He is also - determined, as before suggested, to suppress. mail ' matter to and from South Carolina if the mails are interfered with in that State. A Sunday-school superintendent, en a visit to another . Sunitay-SCheel,.was invited to Make some remarks. The les son of the school was ' 'on the Creation and the Garden of Eden.. Frain this he took his cue, and expiated On the dc lights and beauties tiiia mist have been in that sinless Paradise--the trees and dowel's, the birds and animals, "and the little children playing among timbpsheisl Crif the South CUiolina Postrhastirs . t fail••to answer satisfaetor4 "Mr. 'Holt's circular, inquiring whether` thby tain their responsibility die 'Genera, Government, under `their oatit, he will certainly withhold the mails from that state. One effect :.of, ,t,his move„- meat will be to stop all througli mails via the seaboard line, - to points beyon'd South Carolina. ow The Rev. J. H. Ingraham, a pres . byter cif the' ppiseopiil church, well known for his 'remarkable works, "The Prince of the House of David," Pillar of Fire," &c , aecidentally shOt himself at Holly Springs (Minn.) a week ago.— , He is now in a very precarious condi tion. re' . The following • officers in the - United States army are •South Caroiini ans : Majors, 4; brevet majer, ;L -'brevet colonel, 1; 'captains; 11 ; Ist lieutenants, 8; 2d 'lieuterantS, & In ,the navy there aro 6' commanders, 3 cap stains; 13 lieutenants, 2 surgeenA 1 per 'ser, &masters, 4' n2idshipmen; and 1 en gineer. . er Mr. Gardiner, the British jailer', . has devised an imp'reverrient of • The prisoners, `at wirer.), step' i s h,e'r'tg2e",.. s. " call yip to view a letter" Vora; riiia 3 ire' a ,thns taught the alphahet while they are at Work: says a cotemporary, " y, lifYs,it " `they, ' ' :to ref id. a ebuirter idthe Bible." , Cr No - mistake - is Iteater than to sup- Tose 'that 'enjOyment• depends upon ) Itrabriliaari.and d~ffieait ebl dittoes:—'`x We•cart , Make oarsehee:very Mt' f bOura by aitepli:Niratehint 1 apj y people:'" or The small State of ,Many.achusetts sends of annually into the coinnierce the country values greater than that of the entire cotton crop of the South.