IK infill raw r V5 I 51 A-.V? PRICE $2 PER TEAR In Advance. A FAMILY PAPER DEVOTED TO POLITICS, LITERATURE, AGRICULTURE. MAKUFACTURES, MINING, AND NEWS. PUBLISHED WEEKLY.)- T J RUFUS M. HEBRON, Publisher. ROBERT P. WARING, Editor. " &V -.States Ulstinrt as trr Silbm, bat one as f a NO. 51. CHARLOTTE, JV, FRIDAY MORNING, JULY 14, 1854. VOL. 2. 1-1 . i . , T KnstflfJj Curbs, &f. Office in Loner gait's lilorney at JLavc, Brick Building, 2nd Jloor. CHARLOTTE, If. C. it II 2 1 I' A ROBSON, FACTORS 80 COMMISSION MERGHANTS, iVo. 1 utiil 2 Atlantic What, CHARLESTON, S. C. tV Liberal advnnrt s ma:e on Consignments. TT Special attention given to the talc of Flour, Corn, 4c . ami from o r 1 iur expa rience in the buu;ucs, we feel confident of giving B-ilistjc'ion. March 17, 185. 34 6m Dry Goods in Charleston, So. Ca. ItHOWMM. A lEJIAN, IMPORTERS OF DRY GOODS, Nos. 209 and 211 King tfrvct, corner of Market Street. CHARLESTON, S. C. PUnt ttioa V..okii. Blankets, Sec, Carpetinrrs and Certain Material, Silks nd Kicli Ottmm Gobdp, Cloatka, M till is ;ind Shawls. Term- Cash. One Price Only. M.r.-h 17. 1854 34 ly RANKIN, PULLIAM & CO., Importers and Wholesale Dealer in FORRIC2I AND DOMK8TIC STAPLE AM FANCY NO. 131 MtETINO STRKF.T, tepi 23, '53 ly CUAKLESTON.S. C M : nufneturer and Dealer in PANAMA, LEGHORN, FUR, SILK & WOOL AH, OTPOSITE CIIAKJ.KSTOX HOTEL, set.! 23, '53 ly CHARLESTON, S. C. THE TWO MERCHANTS ; Or, a .oxl I h vestment. LEOPOLD COIIN. & COHN, N. A. LUUEN. N. A. COHEN I P' 'KTERS AM) HEALERS IN FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC DRY GOODS, NO. 175 EAST BAY, (10-lv.) CHARLESTON, S. C. WABDL4W, WALKER & BI RXSIDK, M ERCHANTS, WHARF, CHARLESTON. S. C. GoaWMM for selling Cotton Fifty cents per Bale, pi S3, 1861. 10-1 y. AND C O M MISSION NORTH ATLANTIC s. MI RAMSEY'S PIANO STORE. SIC AND MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS. N UMIIS &. CO.'S PHtent Diagonal Grand llANOS; Hallet Davis & Co.'s Patent Suspension Bridge PIANOS; bickerings, Trivers'and other best makers' Pianos, at mm. mm the Factory Prices. Columbia, S. C, Sept. Q3. LS53. lO-1y. CAROLINA BY JENNINGS B. KERR. I hnrtolte, Jl. .'. January 29, 15:. 23tf Jlrs. A. W. WHKALAN, MILLINER Aim BBESS MAKER. (Residence, on Main Street, 3 doors south oi Sadler's Hotel,) CHARLOTTE N. C. 1X7 Dresses cut and made by the celebrated A. B. C. method, and warranted to fit. timers toiiciicu aim pro.i.ptly attended to. Sept. y, IC-cj a-i HUE & LAJIBERT, 210 KING STREKT, CHARLESTON, S. C, IMPORTERS & DEALERS in Royal Velvet, Tapes try, Brussels, Th;ee ply, Ingrain and Venetian C A BP K TINGS ; India, Rush' and Spanish MATTINGS, Bugs, Door Mats, &c. ttr . OIL CLOTHS, of all widths, cut for rooms or entries. IRISH UNENSt SHIRTINGS, DAMASKS, Diapers, Long Lawns, Towels, Napkins, Doylias, &c. Ac extensive assortment of Window CURTAINS, CORNICES &c, &c. C7" .Merchants will do well to examine our stock before purchasing elsewhere. Sept. 23, 1853 10-ly The American Hotel, CHARLOTTE, N. C. I BEG to announce to my trit-nds, the pi blic.and pres. nit p.ilrons of the above Hotel, that 1 have least d the arne lor a term of years from the 1st M JaMtl next. After which lime, the entire property will be thorough ly rep:-ed and renovated, and the house kept in first class Mjrl. Tins II itel is in .i r the Depot, and pleasant ir situated, rendering it a desirable house for travellers ami ianiiius. D-c 16, 1853. 22t C. M. RAY. Baltimore Piano Forte Manufactory. J J. WISH ft BROTHER, Manufacturers of Boudoir , U.-md and Squire PIANOS. Those wishing a good and substantial Piano that will laat an age, at a lair price, may rely on getting such by addressing the M m.it ieturers, by mail or otherwise. We have the honor of serving and reterring to the first families in the State. In no ease is disappointment sufferable. The Manufacturers, also, refer to a host of their fellow citi zens. J. J. WISE dt BROTHER, Feb 3, 1851 23-(m Baltimore, Md. m CHAPTER L " C:.n you loan me two thousand dollars to es tablish myself in a small retail business ?" inquir a young man not yet out of his tfens, of a middle-aged gemtemnn, who whs poring over a pile of ledgers in the counting room of one of the lar gest whole sale establishments in our city. The person thus addressed turned towards th speaker, and regarding him a moment with a look of sur prise, inquired : What security can you give me, Mr. Stros ser ?" " Nothing but my note," replied the young man promptly. " Which I believe would be below par in mar ket," replied the merchant, smiling. Perhaps so," replied the young man, " but Mr. Rirton, remember the boy is not the man ; the time may come when Hiram Strosser's note will Le as readily accepted as that of any other nan." True, very true," replied Mr. Barton mildly, M but you know business men seldom loan money without adequate security otherwise they might soon he reduced to penury." At ibis remark the young man's countenance became deathly nale. and havinir observed a sib-pec of several moments, he inquired in a voire whose tones indicated his deep disappoint ment " Then you cannot accommodate me, can you r ' Call upon me to-morrow, and I will give you a reply," said Mr. Barton ; and ihe young man re.ired. Mr. Barton resumed his labors at the desk ; but his mind was so much upon the boy and his singu lar errand ihnt he could not pursue his task with any coriectncss, and alter having mauo several blunders he closed the ledger, took his hat and w enl out into the street. Arriving opposite the store o a wealthy merchant upon Water street, he entered the door. Good morning, Mr. Hawley," said he, ap proaching the proprietor ol the establishment, who was seated at his desk, counting over the profits of the week. " Good morning," replied the merchant blandly, " happy to see you; have a seat? Any news? how's trade ?" Without noticing of these interruption?, Mr. Barton said : Young Strosser is desirous of establishing himself in a small retail business in Washington street, and called this morning to secure a loan ol two thousand dollars for that purpose." "Indeed," said Mr. Hawley, evidently surpris ed at this announcement ; " but you do not think ol loaning tht sum do you ?" I do not know," replied Mr. Barton, " Mr. S r "ss r is a young man of business talent and strict integrity, and will be likely to succeed in whatever he undertakes." 44 Perhaps so," said Mr. Hawley, " but I am heartily Urd of helping these young aspirants lor commercial honors." Have you ever suffered from such a course?" inquired Mr. Barton, at the same lime casting a roguish glance at Mr. H. " No," replied the latter, for I never felt inclin ed to make an investment ol that kind." '1 hen here is a fine opportunity to do so. It may prove belter than stock in ihe bank. As for myself, I have concluded that if you will advance him one thousand dollars, I will contribute an equal sum." " Not a single farthing would I advance for such a purpose ; and if you make an advanco of that kind i shall consider you very foolish." Mr. Barton observed a silence of several mo ments and ihen arose to depart. M If vou do not feel disposed to share with me in this enterprise, I shall advance the whole sum myself." So sa ing he left the store. Mr. Hawley, the in the preceding not rally, among wbori fcas merchant introduced to the chapter. " How did you manage to keep above the tide 7" enquired Mr. Hawley of Mr. Barton, one mornmg, several months after the events last recorded, as he met the latter upon the street on his way to his rila- of business. "Very easily indeed, I can assure you," re plied Mi. Barton. " Well, do tell me how," continued Mr. Haw ley; "I lay claim to a good deal ol shrewdness, but the strongest exercise of my wits did not save me; and yet you, who were by far the greatest sufferer, and whoe liabilities wee twice as hea vy as my own, have stood the shock, and have come off even better by the storm." " The truth is," replied Mr. Barton, I cashed my paper as soon as it was sent in." " I suppose so," said Mr. Hawley, regarding Mr. B. viih a look of surprise ; but how did you obtain funds ? As for my part, I could not obtain a dollar credit ihe banks refused to take my pa per, and my friends even deserted me." A little investment that I made some len years ago," replied Mr. Barton, smiling, " has recently proved exceedingly profitable." Investment !" echoed Mr. Hawley, what in vestment ?" " Why do j-ou not remember how I establish ed young Strosser in business some ten or twelve Tbc Nature and Relations of Water. Extract from a Lecture by Professor Draper, f tb New. York University. No living tbjag can exist, except it contains water as one of the leading constitutants ol the va rious pans of its system. To so great an extcut does this go, that, in a thousand parts ot human blood neafLy eight.hundred are pure water. The distribution of organized beings all over the worJ is to a great extent regulated by its abundance or scarcity, h seems as if the properties of this sub stance mark out the plan of animated nature. From man, at ihe head of all. to the meanest vege table that can grow on a bare rock, through all the various orders and tribes, this ingredient is abso lutely required. Insipid' and inodorous i'self, it tMes the peculiarities of all other bodies ; assumes h ith readiness ihe sweelness ol sugar, and the acid ity of vinegar. Distilled with flowers, or the aromaiic parts of plants, it contracts from them their fragrance, and with equal facility becomes the vehicle oi odours the most offensive to our years ago Oh, yes, yes," replied Mr. Hawley, as a ray of suspicion lighted up his countenance ; " but what of that ?" M He is now one of the heaviest dry goods dea lers in the city, and when this calamity came on he came forward and very generously advanced me seventy-five thousand dollars. Vou know I toid you on tin morning I called to offer you an equal share in the stock that it might prove better than an investment in the bank." During this announcement, Mr. Hawley's eyes were bent intently upon the ground, and drawing a deep sigh, he moved on, dejected and sad, while Mr. Barton returned to his place of business with his mind cheered and animated by the thoughts of this singular investment. imagine A Sitiffulnr Personage. M Rhoderick," the Baltimore correspondent of the Washington Star, gives ihe following account of a very singular personage : There resides in Baltimore county, not far from our cily, a very singular and extraordinary per sonage, who has thus far passed through life un obtrusively. His history yet remains to be writ ten, and lew, if any there are, that could do it justice. He has lived the life almost of a hermit, seldom appearing outside the walla of his hermit age, except when special occasions require. There is a marked singularity in his dress, gene ral appearance and manner. Though upon the turning point of fifty, he has remained a bache lor. Humble in his profession being simply a III IRC II 6c SHARP, AUCTIONEERS and COM MISSION MERCHANTS, tULl JllilA, S. C, TTTILL attend to the sale of all kinds of Merchandise, VV Produce, See. Also, Real and Personal Property. Or purchase and sell Slaves, ttc., on Commission. Sales Riom-Xo. ) Richardson street, and imme diately opposite the United States Hotel. Feb 3, lS3t Tiios. h. march, j. a. I. sH.vir. Livery and Sales Stable, BY S. II. K i: A. VT the stand formerly occupied by R. Morrison, in Charlotte. Horses fed, hired and sold. Good ac cj.uniodations for Drovers. The custom of his friends and the public generally solicited. Fi-hrii.irr 17, 18"4. 30-y R. HAMILTON. R. M. OATES. HAMILTON & OATES, COJIlfllSSIOft MERCHANTS, Corner of Rickardton and Laurel Strtett, COLUMBIA, S. C. June 9 1854 , CHAPTER II. Ten years have passed away since the occur rence of ihe conversation recorded in the prece ding chapter, and Mr. Barton, pale and agitated, is standing at the same desk when first introduced lo the reader's aiteu'ion. As page after page of his ponderous ledger was examined his despair became deeper until at last he exclaimed : I am ruined, utterly ruined !" 4 How so," inquired Hiram Strosser, who en tered the counting-room iu season to hear Mr. Barton s remark. " The last European steamer brought news of the failure of the house of Perleb, Jackson & Co., Loudon, who are indebted to me in the sum of SifD.OOO. News of the failure has become gener al, and my creditors, panic-stricken, are pressing my paper to be cashed. The banks refuse me credit, und I have not the means to meet my lia bilities. If I could rally again, but it is impossi. ble ; my creditors nro importunue, and I cannot much longer keep above the tide," replied Mr. Bar ton. What is the extent of your liabilities !" in quired Mr. Strosser. Seventy-five thousand dollars," replied Mr. Barton. Would that sum be sufficient to relieve you ?" M It would." " Then, sir, you shall have it," said Strosser. as he sleppvd up to the desk and drew a check for seventy-five thousand dollars. " Here take this, and when you need more, do not hesitate to call on me. Remember that it was from you I received money to establish myself in busi ness." 41 But tho debt was cancelled several years ago," replied Mr. Barton, as a ray of hope shot across his troubled mind. 44 XruP" replied Strosser, 44 but the debt of gra titude that I owe you has never been cancelled, and now that the scale has turned, I deem it my duty to come up to the rescue." At this singular turn in the tide of fortune, Mr. Barton fairly wept for joy. Hia paper was taken up as fast as it was sent in, and in lees than a month he had passed the a - a rfV.I . crisis, and st'oa perieeity saie aoo secure; nis credit increased, and business improved, while several other firms sank under the blow and could repairer of clocks he is proud, and looks down upon those of hiuh rank and wealth with a degree of contempt. He is lord of his own castle, and inhabits it solus has no friends, no companions, and wants none. He eschews nvmen, consider ing them a useless expense, and a source of mul tifarious vexation. Wealth, to his philosophy, is an absorbing evil, and money in any shape, ex cept so far as it contributes to higher enjoyments, mere dross. This singular person has existed in the same hut, same locality, for many years, and still his nearest neighbors know him not. He spends only so much of his time at physical labor (mending clocks) as will procure a plain, scanty living, and obtain other requisites for mental enjoyment. He visits Baltimore about twelve times a year on foot, and then so arranging in point of time, that his entrance and exit are made in the night. His pas sion is books and mental culture. Though in seeming poverty, he has a well selected library of several hundred volumes, containing all the classics, besides other works. His visits to Balti more nr generally of a literary character, always taking home books of a rare quality. To see him, the beholder would suppose he be longed to the ignorant, unlettered division of hu man nature, (a ibis, however, the few who were fortunate enough to form his acquaintance found themselves mistaken. Contrary to all expecta tions, he proved a scholar of superior fin if h, versed in the classics thoroughly, and master of Latin, Greek, French, German, Italian, Spanish, Hebrew, and many other languages, all acquired without a tutor. He is also larniliar with the va rious sciences, accomplished in manner, address, &c. He converses freely, fluently, and sensibly, upon the most abstruse and complicated subjects; is well posted in politics, and knows the history of the past and current events accurately. He de lights particularly in oriental literature, and pos sesses a fund of information relaiing thereto. He professes alliance with no religion, and yet observes a code of scrupulous morality. His best costume is extremely antiquated, parts of it having been in use probably twenty years, and all together if put up at auction, would not command ten dimes. The casual observer would suppose him a poor mendicant, and feel inclined to extend the hand of charity, yet he is surmised to be comfortable in tho world's lore, and proves himself to be enviably rich in all that appertains to a refined and highly cultivated intellect. - His name I do not feel at liberty to mention at pres ent. I have given you the outlines of a reality which, up to this period, has probably never been thought of beyond the ordinary routine of life. The 44 Learned Blacksmith," John McDonough, Peter the Hermit, and Stephen Girard, were not more peculiar ittaa the hero of this brief epistle. Within the past year he has mastered the arts of stenography and phonography, and reads and writes them with ease. Among the curiosities lately added to Schenec tady Museum, is a mosquito's bladder containing twenty-four misers and the fortunes of twelve prin ters nearly half full. fj3 The export of Wilmington N. C. are said to be about 6,000,000 worth per annum. 0r Thos. Sr.lmoud, Eq , president o.' the Branch Bank at Camden, S. C. died suddenly on the 30;h u!t, senses. We talk about the uses of water, and ihnt Nature furnishes us a nerennial sunnlv. The common philosophy of people is, doubtless, ad vanced so far as to admit that in some unknown manner this substance is created in the cloud, de scends as rain for ihe uses of animals and plants ; but whence it came, or where it goes, never once enters into consideration. Men constantly forget that in this world nothing is ever annihilated ; an atom, once created, can by no process be destroyed. The liquid that we drink to day has been drunk a thousand limes before ; the clouds that obscure the sky have obscured it again and again ; and if the sorrows of mankind are us many as the philanthro pist may well fear, he might suspect a great part ol the ocean is, perhaps, made up of tears that liave fallen from the human family. In the air their sighs die away, and in the ocean the tears are all lost. This using over and over again is a striking characteristic of the ways of Nature; the beauti ful and the vile the great and ihe small are all mingled together; the tears that you shed in ihe depth of giief to day may be squirted tomorrow through a hose pipe lo clear the dirt off ihe street ; or whistled away through the sqr.eak of a locomo tive to scare some dilatory cow off the track. So much for the sorrows of man. What then becomes of the immense quantities of water, which, thus entering as a constituent of the bodies of animals, gives their various parts that flexibility which enables them to execute move ments, or combining with vegetable structures, fits them for carrying on their vital process? After the course of a few years, all existing animals and vegetables pass away ; their solid constituents dis integrate and take on other conditions, Ihe water lost, perhaps for a time in the ground, at last escapes in the form of vapor into the air. In lhat great and invisible receptacle, all traces of its an cient relations disappear it mingles with other vapors that are raised from (he sea by the sun. From the bodies of living animals and plants, im mense quantities are hourly finding their way to the same reservoir. In a crowded city, from the skin, and by the breath of its numerous inhabitants, clouds of vapor are continually escaping we see this visibly going on in the cold weather of r inter; and, though invisible, the process is equally active in summer the escape arising from the drink thai we lake, from all those various portions of the sys tem that are dying each moment for the life of an individual being is made of the successive death of all its constituent par Melee. In the same man ner, from the forests and meadows, and wherever vegetables are found, water is continually evapora tive, and that to an extent far surpassing what we at first suppose. In a single day, a sunflower, of moderate size, throws from its leaves, and other parts, nearly twenty ounces weight. How enor mous then must be the quantity which escapes from the surface of a great continent! Yet all this is thrown into the air; and there it mingles with other portions, some of which are coming from living races, and some from the decay of the dead, some derived fr?m the surface of the ground, and some from the remote regions of the sea. It seems as if Nature had taken sure means that here ail traces of identity should be lost. The winds, pro verbially inconstant, blow at one time irorn the costs of Europe, at another from Africa, at another from Asia. In the republic of the universe there is a stern equality, the breath of the king inter mingles with the breath of the beggar, and the same quiet atmosphere receives the exhalations of ihe American, the European, the Asiatic, the African ; the particles that have risen from dead intermingle with those of the living; and as if th's were not enough, the winds and tempest ob literate every distinction, and dash in one com mon confusion these relics of every part of the globe. A man of average size requires a half ton weight of water a year; when he has reached the meridian of life, he has consumed neaily three hundred times his own weight of this liquid. These are statements which may seem to those who hear them for the first time very wonderful; and as they are easily verified, they might lead you to doubt whether Ihe existing order of Nature, as dependent on the waters of the sea, could fo any length of time bo kept up under such a heavy consumption. The human family consists proba bly of a thousand millions of individuals ; it would be a very moderate estimate to suppose, that the various animals, great and small, taken together, consume five times as much water as we do, and the vegetable world two hundred limes as much as the animil races. Under such an immense drain it becomes a curious question what provision Nature has made to meet the demand, and how long the waters of the sea, supposing nothing re turns (o them, could furnish a sure supply. The question involves the stability of existence of ani mated Nature, and the world of organization ; and no man, save whose mind is thoroughly imbued with an appreciation of (he resources upon which the acts of the great Creator are founded, would. I am sure, justly guess at I he result. Thereexists in the sea a supply which would meet this enor mous demand for more than a quarter of a million of years. Such is the plan of Nature, and such are rhe resourceson which she depends for carry ing out her measures. For the well being ol her or ganized creations she can fail back on a gigantic supply. Wyoming County Mirror iV' Y. Japan, Rnusla, and the United States. By the Pekin we have received papers from Hong Kong to the 5th, and from Singapore to the 13lh inat. Tho most important intelligence has already appeared in our Saturday evening paper, namely, the conclusion of a treaty between the Americans and ihe Japanese. Some particulars, extracted from the Friend of China, will be found below. The Americans have obtained two ports for trading, and a coal station. Japan yields plenty of coal, and it will be brought from the mines for the use of steamers. The most impor X&t fact that hasranspired is that the Japanese Js?ve expressed their wilHngness to make commer cial treaties with any other nation which may seek them. prOvhted. it is done peaceably. To what are we to attribute this entire change of policy ? Why has this long sealed empire opened ut the touch of Commodore Perry ? We suspect that the war in China with the English made a profound impression upon the Japanese. They saw the utter inability of that vast empire lo contend ngainst Europeans, and dreaded in volving Iheir own country in calamines like those which had befallen their neighbors. So long as Ihe foreigners kept away voluntarily, the reslrictive system answered; but the instant demands were ..,,) rn. Jmiccinn ImeL-pii hv n naval force winch iiiCtUl' IU1 HUllllOtJIVII WW V u V J j fMiil.l nnl Uo nnnmapA ihpn thn necessitv of COlk- ( ciliation became manifest. The Japanese are well aware that the Americans and English are not Jesuits in disguise, and do not fear fiom them a renewal of the disorders which caused the expul sion of the Portuguese. Whether they will allow Protestant missionaries to leach there is another question, and it would be imprudent to urge this upon them at present; but that their hatred of Christianity, which was entirely political, will be ultimately overcome by free intercourse with Euro peans, is not to be doubted. It seems to us evident that had our government taken s'eps to procure admission to Japan immediately after the ratifica tion of the recent China treaties, they would have met with a reception similiar to lhat of the Ameri cans, at least if backed by as strong a force. Ii was long ago said that there is no ambassador whose persuasive powers are equal to those of a line of battle ship, and of this the speedy settlement with the Americans is a proof. It is singular that the Japanese should deny having made any treaty with the Russians. Can the assertion have been a mere piece of Russian diplomacy, intended to cover future aggression ? Not unlikely. The European nations would have no means of ascertaining ihe falsehood of ihe as sertion, and had the Russians, under the pretence of a cession, invaded and taken possession of the .Japanese portion of ihe Kurile Inlands, the Euro pean Powers would have had no right of interfer ence. Had Russia remained on good terms with her neighbors, this would probably have been her next step in advance in Asia, Persia being reserved for a more convenient opportunity. This scheme, or any other which may hnve been plotted for acquiring a portion or the whole of the Japanese territories, is now defeated. Diplomatic relations having been opened with one maritime Power, which will no doubt soon be extended to two or three more, accurate information will be obtained of the proceedings of the Russians, and their rig- gressions instantly stopped. The accumulation of Russian ships in the Chinese waters points to some such obiecis for they never can have been sent out in contemplation of a war with France and England, in which they could only hope to avoid capture by instant flight to the desolate ports of Eastern Siberia. But to cover a disembarkation on the southern Kurile Islands, or any other part of the Japanese territory, such a squadron would be necessary and sufficient. Calcutta Englishman. Mexican treaty, the administration, on its part, naa perfected a treaty settling the fishery dispute and providing for reciprocity in trade with the British North American Provinces. Negotiation have also been actively progressing for ihe settlement of all difficulty with Spain respecting the Island of Cuba, and it is now believed by some who have every opportunity of forming a correct judgment that die Island will belong to the United States, either by purchase or conquesS in a comparatively brief period. WUhih a few weeks vr&bfH heard of Com. Perrv's success in forming a treats; with Japan, in wh?ch three of the principal ports of that region'ate to be thrown open to our commerce. We know that negotiations for the annexation of (he Sandwich Islands have been completed, and we are aware that the representative ol Honduras is already at the capital seeking admission into our Union. Never at any previous period in the history of our country have so many important national measures been brought forward during any one session of Congress, and yet the journals and letter-writers at the North, our own correspondent among the number, tells ns that nothing has been or will be done by the legislative and executive branches of the administration. An examination of facts will teach them that the .administration is not quite as much to blame ns they would lead people lo suppose. Charleston Standard. IK?af JTIutc marriage. A novel and interesting murriage ceremony look place in New York a day or two since. The parties were Miss Tray Tubs, a graduate of the deaf and dumb institution, and Mr. Lewis Peet, one of the instructors of the dinf mutts. About two hundred and eighty persons witnessed the ceremony. The bride was dressed in elegant w hite salin, wilh a tulle over-dress. She wore a tull veil, which fell gracefully over both shoulders, and a natural wreath of orange blossom and of myrtle leaves in her hair. A beautiful boquet of wHte flowers was -in one hand, and a bunch of choice flowers in her bosom. Nothing could have been more neat, appropriate, and beautiful. The bridesmaids were each dressed in rich pink silks, with pink tulle over-drcsses. The flowers were appropriate in color, and profuse in number and beauty. The bridal party received general admiration for the taste and elegance of their dresses and fine appearance. The marriage services were simple and without restraint, very impressive. The bridegroom in terpreted, in the sign language, to the htdy beside him, the words of the aged pastor, and at their close the bride kissed both her husband and tho minister who had united them in the bonds of holy wedlock. The bride received many handsome presents, such as gold and. silver plate, elegant gold brace lets, pearl ear-rings, Parian pitchers, &c. Congress and the Administration What has been Done? The weaiher is beginning lo seriously affect our j usually calm and unruffled correspondent, as well as everything else in and about Washington, ns will be seen by his interesting letter in another column. He gives us a vast deal of information, sp:ced with complaints in abundance. In the first place he finds it very difficult to gnther news, be cause the weather is so warm and the season so dull that there is little stirring at the capital per fectly natural ; what man or thing would stir these hot days if it could be avoided? Next, he is dis posed to find fault with the administration because Congress neglects to act upon all the important measures suggested in the President's message and the accompanying documents from the Depart ments. Why the administration should be held responsible for the neglect and procrastination of Congress, a separate and indeppndent body, we are at a loss to divine. It is the duty of Congress not the President to make laws. However, the shoulders ol ihe administration are broad, and as it would be rather a difficult job to divide and lay upon each Congressman his individual share of dereliction, we suppose our correspondent on this occasion thought it w-oulu be much easier and just From the Lancaster Ledger. The subject of education, once regarded as of secondary importance by many, is now begin ning to he regarded in its proper light by the great mass of people. Consequently it behooves us to bring to notice such institutions ns we con. sider, from the characters of their conductors, worthy of public confidence ond support. Such an institution is Providence Academy sit ualed twelve miles from Charlotte, N. C, and for five years past under charge of E. C. Kuykendal, Esq., n gentleman of sound, able and varied scholarship, bland and unassuming manners, and above all of deep and ardent piety, and possessed of an earnest devotion to the cause of education to which he has given the best years of his life. At present, worn out from sickness and disease, contracted by too severe application lo his duties, he has gone to seek a brie) respite from his la. bor and toil in ihe hope of restoring his wonted heulth and vigor. Should it be restored, he will resume the exercises of his school at tho earliest possible moment. The number of students generally varied from Uvenly-five to thirty. They are poled for their correct deportment, industrious habits nod schol nrship. From these und other causes, Providence Academy offers unexampled inducements to young persons desirous of obtaining a school nnd teach er qualified to prepare them for the Sophomore class in College or to fit them for the common du lies of life. L. " Bayard Taylor ow Nutmeos. On our return to the ship wo visited a nutmeg plantation. The trees, which are from twenty to thirty feel in height, are planted in row, at intervals gf about twenty feet. The leaf is dark green and glossy, resem bling that of ihe laurel, nnd the fruit, at a Kttla distance, might be token for a small russet color ed apple. When ripe; the thick husk splits in the centre, showing a scarlet net-work of mace, enveloping an inner nut, black as ebony, the ker nel of which is ihe nutmeg of commerce. The clove tree, not now in ils bearing season, has some resemblance to the nut, but the leaf is smaller and The foliacrf mnrf InoaJ. on. I arronAntw Xm taA A r-sMr a as well to cast the entire bulk of complaints upon throughthe orchard the warm air of noon was Ir. Fillmore has been taking a Western tour as a; as te fajjf of Smnt athoy. the administration, leaving the members thereof to get rid of the misfortune in the best way they can. But, seriously, as our correspondent seems impressed wiih the belief that little or nothing has been done by either the administration or Congress at this session, let us take a glance at the calender. A great and important principle has been re affirmed by large majorities in both houses by the passage of the bill for the organization and settle ment of the territories of Kansas and Nebraska. A treaty hay been consummated between this government and Mexico, by which we acquire a 'rge amount of territory, including a practical route for a railroad to the Pacific, an extinguish ment of the enormous claims against us under the treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, and various other advantages and considerations all for the small sum of ten millions of dollars, and at a time when our treasury is overrunning wiih surplus cash. In addition, bills are pending, and it is hoped will become laws before the close, for the withdrawal of our squadron from the Coast of Africa, for the re-orgu mzation and support of the A rmy and Navy, and for the establishment of a marine apprentice ship system, in order to ensure an increase of sea men. Bills for the modification of the i a riff, the construction of a railroad to the Pacific and for numerous other purposes, have engrossed attention during the session, but owing to She more pressing necessity for early action on other important Patters were obliged to be deferred, Beside the heavy with spice- The rich odors exhaled from the trees penetrated the frame with a sensation of languid and voluptuous repose. Perfume became an appetite, and the senses were drugged with an overpowering feeling of luxury. Had I continu ed to indulge in it, I should ere long have realiz ed the Sybarite's complaint of his crumpled rose, leaf. .,. A Cass of Scare. The Cleveland Herald tells the following good slory about one of those trou blesome tittle imps of brightness that scatter sun shine and music through many household. It will do to localize almost anywhere: 44 A friend of ours has an 4 equal undivided in terest ' in a charming piece of personal property, a bright-eyed, intelligent little girl, of five sum mers ' experience, who rejoices in ..to name of Alice.' In the family is a servant girl whom horror is rats, nnd who, chancing on one of the long tailed animals in the cellar, makes a most an-Chineae stampede, shouting 4 rats.1 44 Alice sleeps in a crib so low that placing one foot on the inside of it, she can easily spring in. A few evenings since her mother was attending her to bed, when she said, Mamma, do you know how I get to bed quick 1 4 No,' was the reply. 4 Wetl, said Alice, in great glee, I step one foot over the crib, and then I nay rata, and scare my self right m if If ' any five year olds can beat that trot Vm out,'