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Coldwell aud Malone, and them safel) keep and deliver to the above natner committee, on the departure of tin train. r otion, it wm resolved that th< Towr i^il be requested to provide the n- v funds to defray the ox peruses nk red by the <&umittee. Ou uio. ' the meeting then ad journed. TIIO.^ 1 POWB, Chairman. M. H. H. l/VVALL, Secretary. Chorew, S C., Sept 10, 185b James Cold well, alio* Con noil, alia Dempsey, is an Irishman, with a libera share of the brogue. He savs he ii 22 years of age?is about 5 foot 1( inches high, black hair and eycSt aillov complexion, and of medium ai?s. Hit occupation. while here, was the selling of window shades Packages to bia wore ulways addressed to Jaraos JDe.np I s?y- ' V- . ' John M alone is also an Irishmen with jet black hair, beard and eyes dark complexion, he is but little ovei five feet in height, quite stoop shouldor ed, and very glib vrith the* tongue ? Last, though not least, he is a thorougV going RIack Republican, free speech free soil, fr** negro, Fremont Dlmoerut Ilis occupation was a window shad* pedlar.? CAemtc Gazette. For the Pee Pee Herald. TO THE CITIZENS OF CflBRAW AND VICINITY. The undersigned members of the (lorn mitteo appointed at a public meeting o the citizens of Cheraw and its vieinivy to take James Coldwcii and John Malono to Wilmington and from thonce to sen. tbeitt to some Northern Port, respectfully report that they have performed the dot) aliened them according bo their iuetruo lions. un arnrme at Wilmington wo delivered to the Major of that City the letter of tb< Intendant of Cheraw written undo; the instruction! of the meeting, and Jie re ieived us fVom tha further charge o Coldweil and Malone, by piscine them ir Ore care oftte Police who took them 01 tha Oara to Norfelk Virginia. Hie Honoi the Major, also addressed a loiter to th< Major of Norfolk enclosing that of ?ni Intendant, and requested that the objcc we had in view should be carried out, Wo were highly pleased with the con duct of the Mayorof Wilmington and thoS' cilinena who wero present at th< Hotel where wc were, and cannot let thii opportunity pass without expressing oui gratification and returning our ackuowl edgainents for the kindness and oonsidera tion shown us personally, and tbeir read! ncss to aid to carrying out a measure s< necessary to our common protection frora the assaults of Abolition incendiaries. We must also My, that the individual' we hsd in charge gave uji no unnecessary trouble, but were disposed to eondoct them selves with propriety throughout the whole journey Jleapcctfully submitted, J. <1 MKDL1N, Chairman J. C PER VIS, J. B. ST HOT 11 BR, >v J r; v A ivrt Z, ELIiKltHE, Jr. For tlic Pm Dee Herald. TO THB MF.MOHY OP MY DECEASKE FBIKN 0?PROP. V. P. W. "Thy can shall no more go duwn," Isaiah QOll and 20th. r Dearest friend of my youth, how oft have *? mingled in life, la the bonds if sweet friendship. only tie know; to oarth, That ia pure and unsullied, that is unmixed witl sirife. Dearest boon, save cue,given since man's nata birth. gp 0, when I remember that thou art now oold li the pram, 'lis to me like a dream. That thy spirit hati taken its flight, 7 To the mansion* of bliss, whilst I remain ba the slave, Of sorrow and griefs moat malignant displa; of their might. Yet vivid truth flashes back, thou art gone U the tomb, - V * . Ajsd hast left this >tw realm of wuelers sor row and Woe, And soar'd above the aternal hills, beyond (hi sparkling dome, Where pain and sorrow cease, where flower eternal blow. 1 will tux wish thee hack, thiue is too ><?ppy t ? sphere, Basking in eternal light, beneath a priedea S 'erown, Bet will hope to meet thee there, ones eertbl; friend so dear, '*'1'"^,' But ir?t immortal saint Thy son more go down. i LUce to the rose U>?u bloQroe ?wl die*, he* bcM thy ebort career. W* / ' J ** J\ ,lu the morn of eerly life thy gloriomt w?n hetl 5, Aud led thy lewd friend* U> (auoin U uwroi tor* mM <4rear, &?.: Wv And drinW frotl the biter tup <4 IfWhl* Ml rtprst Sot bo mow win we Umeot the eettkf of Ik; un, Jforlol ?i keowthettbottbftft won sfUtleHnj And theegh deep grief hefatl tie when Ay ft? I ?H rue, I Tec we know, #Nek hear?, Ay nee ?hell> mere go it wo. Bet k ehefl feewr ehioe bright, ktewiflil m< I And the Barp whloh Aeo w I *h*U etrike fe eeerleerieg prafae A JN?. tmjgBbwr did Whom iho* mm* (bee t? Pfe. %? ?* ' whom the* art ttke. ^HB|H u ; V ? * U. .ALJmLJJULUU.J.1 l..~l I'l .1 L'U r J TffK "ABOUTION OF &LAVKR Y,' I flow often fid bow generally the** terra* i art) used by u.illioni of people, utterly and necessarily, and'deplorably igfiotautofwhat ' they are saying, or talking s{>ou't, or think> ing ofl They arc used every day by count less number* of mpu in *T?rv portion of Christendom, with as littlo perception of their truth, or their real pleasing, or aa little knowledge of the subject they fere talking of, m they havc'of the things of the.spirit world, or the daily pursuits of the inhabiianbt of the moon.' The white man or Caucasian is superior, * the negro or wooly haired Afrioan is Infer. ' ior. These are facts, fixed eternally by * the hnndof God,and,wo ask, bow can the 1 relation between them be altered by hu >' man contrivarices or huntsn efforts? Tbo t hogro is subordinate, not by oh an CO or ao; cident.or factitious moans, or human cun~ i nihg or j?owor, but by the act and will of the crcttor, and though ho may bo turned loose or "emancipated," though human i fully-and ignoranceatiddelusion may affect i to make him a oitiaon, to confer on him r equation*! privileges. Sic , there remains the I * eternal and unalterable fact, that if in juxI " taposition with the white mun, he must ) ruinain just what the Almighty, in bin > wivdnui and benifioenoo, saw fit to toako him?? subordinate being. Any one who 5 sees the negro an instant, knows thnt he is ! ' ia?J - . iiuttvunowintoman or some Wlitta ; men, but to oil white ?uen, to ^v?rj white man iu existence, that in in a normal condition lie see* the color of the rrngro i.ekia is vnetly.inferior to that of the white man?that it isgnsoited and incapable of ? reflecting the KonH?tions n/i<t ts;o intolloctn. al operations, end while the face of the , white man ie often en index of tbecniotiona, I that of the nogni is without expression, dull r and apathetic, relatively like that of the t inferior animals. He neat the negro * without beard, thai impressive outward hiani testation of internal manhood ? his I ebort, friasled, wooty hair as strikingly > repulsive and ungraceful; as inferior, in > short, to that of the Cuuonaian, as U the ' color of his skin. He aces hie narrow, f receding and animal'tred head, with iU > striking approximations to the monkey, the ) thick Hps and flat noeo nod protuberant r jaws, andaeneuoua expression, which ap> proaoh so closely to the animal world and f loavo such an alinorw measureless void I between this negro and himself. He sees > hie crouching attitude, hm projecting pel vie and croolcod ebi???. which moke erect ? postures physioil impost bflity; he sees, in > short, everything in this negro i? not only * widely different but vMtly inferior to the i* whito van. as positively sod unmistakably an I unirorsally so aa tha ass is different - and inferior to thr. horse, aa the owl is to the eagie, q? rr *t t com toon curia inferior 1 to the pracefui and intelligent hound, i Thin, all this, all those things are revealed - to the senses, and at ?.nc same instant (he inferior life, tl inferior m* d,an<i grosser moral nature i* just as positively though iostinctiraly rerealed c* hiiv. The most ; ignorant, the humblest white man upon the earth, feels and claims his superiority to the negro, though the ajuffct cultivated ^of hia race. Poor old .4m. 8toWW, aotnewhare iu h%r marvel ma stories about ttngrw*, reconie tha aunjiAM* a ?*m j-Shs 3*VS U "C?i|or6v" umui of oivinU/, who had once been a slave," told her 1 that though he had traveled abroad and > araccinted <;th the Sutherland* and the meet exclusive of Bri tsh society, yet *uch i a profound impression l.ad been made o# him br the. hellish" institution, that ? whenever he eatae in contact with o white man ht involuntarily shrunk back with a ? sense of inferiority And the poor ignor. ant and foolish old wouian reodMa thia ua? toral instinct .f'the inferior nngr?i?a? a Urrtble prt*?f of ihe |H?wer of *!?verv *' 1 A negro may be taken to childhood and 'ear" by roto all that white men are c?pa? ble of that la. may 'earn Jt>*t ae^roya of ten or twelve learn to read, to write, to dei claim, to make speeches, but exactly aa the hoy often, with all his learning, feels thai t! hf ut a boy, and aa a boy inferior to it*, , ! adult man, however Ignoranttho lat'er may f. bo, ao the (rntrro, b' wever lestood, or however wpcetabla, or howetfr perverted by r the delusloffa of white men, thia negro, I 1.^?i. VI i ..vnnufiMMi, VW* pi? ?lll?nWl|y AViU | like Mm Stotre'* docker of divieitj, iuvar| ibly and ioatintir ?l? acknowledges it when. ? ew or wherever be tmm in evmact with the superior being. The imtcm of the ? Bcatb, Ihe social eubordination of the inferior rtM. U thereJS;re precxi sun jjr and ? fehoreftt in ihe n.itor#?Fthiotra,and ?prib|r? spontaneously from the iveveeitM of banian * oxbreocf tiborcvoi ife iu juxujpmtioo/;.** .. / /af\. ' r There I# ?yrcet deal of foutfnV tnMr about.:> Ht>liebir?jf "nliyaryVijiitha tcrfitori* ? e*. There* iwewvb thin*,'** the ??taMb?hmatft of afatwrj-in tho tm* uoderatood. 1 in ail this land ? io *0 ihi* uefttincnt, oo nuoh ax the funnel or abn *' UwVnrtabliebiiient<>f tMdihHnRfed riarery. Ir***ta it? tb* catuHof thin;*, by the .v* r and irfH of the Almighty; by iba r*j>.*h?r and,ttai Unman taw oMr*>)/?*#ulaM? I; it.. Thr# i* uo law eatsblwbihtf 6HT fuu | I tnM oecraur dawwtiafajokaUr- iha control f ?f men ovdr wo^en -pCcdulia ottr nkUdreni aU tlmce th . *? tnb*??na t 9KM':"4 in |W tufiuft of ?ttf Ap, vmiilr p j tofrf^i *$*' X||C iVo*n ihc nto*??. flltiea ofbaowB si- '!< .,. Th* White o*?'? ?| it itpn-.*, tfct Mp it InflMit*; tti?y art ti.,0 at or eeoOiti* tooitl to^on^Oo*, Of r; to <*?W b n ruoofe |*nt?o^t5t*t*y" ?of tb? aapo, POattAM' rofettc* htajjkwj, V' U fatotto^, fee Mkr.h/UitrttWH ku Uk* MU ^ ^ ^ ^ L, H ' 1111 11B !??J . 'II IW .1.1' m | equalise*!! Can "alarery" be abolished, j ?lt if, of ooorse, so?the whole great ; Republican part j assume so;they are labpr( ing now in iiaie nod, to change this aubordi 1 nation oflbe negroV> an equality with white inea,oras the; say, for the ??ca>ia3 of freedom." and a* oo white nail in 4/istarcd of course they are laboring to 'free" the uegret; or, in other word*, to change the natural relations of the raoes and make those eoual whom the Almighty has oreat ad ] unequal,, , ' Well, what is our experience on the subject? What has been tb ? result cf the ; sffort* to change the.order of nature?the ' Work of the Almighty?and mako the subordinate negro. equal to white toon? I The British government hat expeodod eta hundred millions of money, wrung from the swekt end toil of alaven In reality? that of their own white brothers?to effect j this object, und tho result has been; of , course and of necessity, cithy to destroy the negwe or to send him back iotoaav jge-. is in In llayti, isolated and left to h,.? own tendencies, h%rapidiy relapses into his 1 orginal Africanism, while in New York, New England, all ovor, in the midst of a wbitc population, the negro naturally and ncoetarily perishes. 'Chore is no doubt or I uncertainty, or room for doubt in this mat* > tor. The study of the negro organism I \ ?the ungro nature?the uegro wants?the negmjieccsiliea?iu short, the coinphre. < b?iif'u>n of the hegro boing, .neiessariJv carries with it perception of the eternal truth, the unalterable law, the iiidcstruu. tible fact, that the negro its subordinate being, and therefore now in his normal condition at the SoutU> And all huuian experience, our daily observation, the evidence of our senses as well as our reason, . demonstrate to us every day and hour of our lives that while there rosy bo room for .reform or improvement In the relations of 1 Southern society it rente upon an eternal truth as indesmctible and unchangeable ! as is the negm being, or' ia other words, thnt the abolition of the r octal aubovdina. : tion, or so called slavery of the negro, ia,io i tlic nature of things, as utterly impossible 1 as the recreation of the negro?as entirely beyond tbe scope of human power to affect as the transformation o'woipia into men or Qien into horses. l*i nally, we heed not edelr or presume to inquire why these things are so, or why the Almighty Master of life, In His infinite wisdom and illimitable good net*, hai thus orested the negro. ft is a fact, an existing, palpable, materia], unmistakable, eternal fact, and that wo have alone to deal with?to eon form to, to adapt ourselves to, to abide by. [-W. Y. Day Book. !TUE S&GROtQUKSTION AMD THK 'XBUTH. , Philnrthropy \s universally allowed to be a aery obarsttsjj* ibss&ttrisSic of modern life, espatfutlly whan it ia masked, aa in Ronton, by some little bonk learning and snivils its periods according to the inj ' xorabie rules of rhetoric." It always re. 1 mind* as forcibly of the respectable old peutfctus'i, venerable ia gray Lairs and j the glory uT lwtntyg, who aold Moses, ibe eon ?jf Viear wf Wakefield, a %ro*x of spectacles, while' he announced to bins 1 ?L.i a.?1' V ..is- .1.. I _ tiuav ^o aa t?vw u\ ?Mf ftVlltl UUfVe 9 f ks : a*anji*. jc.<, t ,r ^ The South has bean playing Mmu for ruuny years, aad the North has beeu as , profound as the venerable Mr. Jonkioaon, on oil bar deiloieuciea and noeda; bat the time is about to com# whro wo will be shrewd enough not to swop our exoelient { family horse for a *rot* of sea-green epee* . vtclea; not ta exchange, In Act, our pro! party, our position our.hopws, fota lot of ' worthless "Y?riltefc notions," though the , Uttar tuny be backed by an cxtravnliuury j amount of seHo>astic imjmdenoe ^ Vbiiaa i thropy is a voty deconUo (king, wall dru* ! nod, offabto old humbug, but we searooly ymnt any mire of .it* apecteolus X >'? , We would ooa hare been betrayed into these remarks, bat that philanthropy has been claiming a roiaerhabt* (taft of pub* j lie-opinion ot late, and w dw it neaee* s*ry to examine whether it deserves the motxl of popular applause eo eagerly da* mamied by its worsnlppera. We are a* ,] fniid of ?? asking fsrtuffe for a ainoere i gcntlennis, Joseph Surface for an honor, j able ln'end; and bitter experience baa compelled us to submit Philanthropy, ' whenever or whoraeocver we e noon our it, 4 to a very strict and searching examination | It may be ft good patured 'fool, like Pour* <j ier, of so eloquent dreamer, like bouip RUne; bat, oe the oootravy, it mpy bo en arwnt kheve Mke Wiley, or ft dangerous jrHator Ukp Seward." Mftfly a figbtldgman wear- a Quaker's ocmtAine: many a j rcgo* *?? ?e omHe?f;?opum.<Htju>n.t nany ? -^lUr of teJugrwo npucitclWi, Hk? Mr. .fenblnfteo, or vt wooden oNukft, like ? ?. tfHoV, te#| be exceed jo*Ij droditela tbe Itfcguiqjt wbioh cluhee ktft roeoftlU/. In troth, wo lit*f )way* to peoao whoo ' ^iiu^ii^i b?Ki'i? 'ew'wpeok^ ?nd *(&,' , with the Hot. Mr. ,iJi miroo#, whetker.wt not kewrd thie on owwImw a**li Jim.*'' v*,'t v>jn th^T' -j ! tte peeotffttpUee of Phllenthmpj |? I tho Uailed fifcttca, ** ow rcedf r? pm *w?r?, I? oftw-woriAtp? it ftdoitift en hfrloan; it idroir.- hi lin.i ** wa?lp3f *k* KZZ: jX-E3G2P-*K 7Tw?i - - i * JPTVuo wdSur.ter* ? la Nef Oriaao*; Ufarit** hi* bonj betttlp and pl?r* *>d* *?&? Hh? Ticowia wb?4a ?tto #*rr??d A* long *m of tho Moiftkm* Bottoin; ilU raady > l?moridn# 9 ' ^U-d lljL ^ ; # J ,iJLLL.XIlIlUUL.---JLLi-ILJL!l^.. l.L 1 l".ll' I l"l ft f ed on tbtt well fed Southern slave, for the African in the North bee no olaim* on the aympathy of the people; he is e?u(kc*vt end stinks in the uoetrils; he cannot be duiittcl to an omnibus. of permitted to | h*e in any inoru arisbmratic quarter thar. the Five Points. This ia only natural, , inasmuch as the poor ne^ro has no earthly chance of competition io a community 1 which possesses intelligent white labor at four dollars a week, and pave two cents each for its shirts to its unfortunate milliners Recalling the foregoing facts, which have often been mentioned before, we arc I forced to certain conclusions or the relations of modern pbilanthiopy nnd abolitionism. We aru com polled to think that ; the North does nol really desire by its i Black Republicanism to elevate and imj pfove the negro, but only to humiliate the J South by the judicious use of c'ap traps whioh women (old and yoking) are always I certain to mistake for truths. This view of the question is somewhat novel amongst us. We are accustomed to receive tbe speeches of the Abolitionists seriously; to investigate theui seriond;; to answer them seriously; when in reality, thoy have no existence, save on paper, and no significance, aave in printer's ink. ' Wh?n Pnrfc?f n, l- ??l? - V L .. ? !? ? va V?? VWIV^ Mllfc HI uuu^in I freedom and the co equal rights cf tba blaoks, we havo Invariably replied to Parker and Greeley by scientific and commercial proofs <?f the necessity of slavery; ?? if the said Parker or Greeley believed a word of their elaborate gibberish I They know the negro raco m well ee we do; they do not dosirt its freedom, because it is incapable pf using its freedom it a practical end sensible way; but thay per. cfcive the weak point, or what they coneider the Wealt point, (though it is the strongest point, in faet,) of the Southern States?and, accordingly, putting on the | armOr of philanthropy, and mounting the Bosioaote of cant, they charge and shiver their laoeee on a windlbiil?invincible, even though it ia not under arms, and able I to resist their tnoet desperate assaults. | We do not mean to imply tbat^thesc men?the Hales, Sewarde and Greeleye of the North??re oOt sincere and earnest; for that would be ehildteh and preposterous in the extreme. We only say they are not sincere in tbair noisy affection for ttho African race, and care very litt'e as to whether it ia frte in Liberia, starving in Jamaica, or boused and clad and fad in the Southern States On a ?ery different idea their sincerity (fur tbev possess that 1 Rift) is baaed. They pe;1eive that two 1 nations exist on bounteous soil of ours?the Northern and the Southern;. They reoogi aiea the same phenomenon whiob ia the dtret of British polities??the incompatibility of the bonest agricultural character with that of the money-monopolist?the i difference, in * word, between Richard Cobden and tbe Earl of Derby. They be I lieve, like tbe bouryHiit* of London and Liverpool, that every fueling of national honor, every instinct of real liberty, every tuaniy principle rau-t be made subeerviont to tbe Price Ourtrent; and therefore,> aa tho South dooe pot share their views, and his not vat lurroiiifoM'! ?K? mvwl * ?' vtu pntriers hal notion* of the sanctity of the tHinily?of the chivalry required from in<}??!r1rtii)n nf fit* anrwtri.witt nf ihUllnM t/% wealth, and the right of Thought to gor* era Gold instead of Gold becoming the overseer of Though tr?therefore, vre say, they ate in earnest in their unholy oruaade against tts, and wilt proteente it to tbe hitler end. They desire to subjugate oa I politically, as a neoessaty preliminary to subjugating qn socially and ooimuarotslly.i They Irish to degrade whites, not to elev. ate black*. TJiey hays & other ambition, no other hope. What is Sainbo to tUnm or they to Sarobof Some dyspeptic woman amongst them may admire Sambo, but thr?a fourths of their number despise him and woulg whip bin oo the. sly if they had a chanee. Thoy regard the Struggle m we riew it now, in the light, of a war between two separate jRltioaalUtei?two peeves diuioct ia thfir Habits, opinion, snd faith; and baraln they are right. XW* trust eVuty Southern man will pass orsr the elap-traps a lb* Philanthropist* til ? - - * witfi coouMopt, sim examine the question from Lbs pjiut of view wrhieb wo bowel rather bestUy wrested,--/few OrhaaJk MiU- ' ' f\ * TUB NEW8 FROM KANSAS; St. Louis Sept 4, 1966. Advices from Ksnies, roeeivril bore this evening, aajr that on the morning at the SOtfti Qajptotn Reed, with three hood red prc-?la*erj" tuen, fought throe fcundNdl free sailer*; under )1V. Brown, at Om. wotomie. The battle lasted an hour, whs* the fces nikirs were routed, with the l?x?s oftweotjr killed an-1 ?v< r?l wouud?d. Mr. Brown end hb sow are reported fpwoog the bUloA Five pro-alar or; men vers hnwoded. OsfcowetOinie WM burnall thf ssgoiuDiUoo sod provisions serried away. I ^Geuerol Coir/orHvsd io..this ciij tea j'4m If* protends imtud to Knows. ^ 3/Mk N* I it. Private sdriees Jiwm Ksnaesstele that cn Twesdavfeat every fees Sum men m d*W*> &wu Lsoveaworth *k ths poiut of the boyooei, jnrf *it their property de I ^ . T ]] ,^r 'i'I' J""M Mkmhm KditokI) Please announce J0H1 A. IRGLIS, K*$., M a Candidate to rfcpn sent this District in the House of Represent* lives Id the nest Legislature. UPPKR RATTALION. M* ^Va <r?f authorised and requested I tu iounce Hon. JOHN McftUEEN unui didatefor i selection as the representative < the First Co'ipresajpnal District. September Ml*, iMftr 14?if KIT The. friends of Col- C W. BtJDL^ beg leave respcctfylljr to announce hint a CANDIDATE FOR CONGRESS* in th? j'Wrt CoHQmsxo' ul D'/fr 'ti, nt th , ensuing election. Wr t u-.t he will allow thi iue to be made of his nutn??, as his friends n? prepared to " uiake'a hiug pull, r. strong pul and a pull altogether," at the polls in Octobc neat. < MANY FRIENDS. Septemher 2nd, IR5S. * }.t?4t. 11 i i??ea>w?I'II COMMERCIAL. CHKRAW MARKET, CO H R EG 'I ID WJEKir BT J. mi. THREllXaLL, COTTON?Sale for the past woek, 2 Laic of new at 10.50. BACON?3elliog from magoa* at 913 t In 50. FLOOR?Scarce. Sells at from 7 to 7 6' LARD?None coining to market, retails n | 16 2-3 cents. < SALT- -Retells at 1.75 per Seek, aerie ; well supplied. SUGAR?Retsiis from 12 to 14 ceote. GOFFRK?-Retails Ht 12 to 14c. CORK?None offering?we tpiota et 75< per bushelFODOKR?Ralls et from 85c- to 81-00. POULTRY AND EGOS?Scarce end i demand., WHISKEY?Prom 45c. to $1 AO per trelloi BAGGING-GUNNY?ReteUs et 22 to 2 cants, * ROPE?From 12) to 14 cents, smelt set ply. THE RIVER is in good boetifig order. REVIEW or tw WILMINGTON MARKET Fro* the Circular of CUMMING A 8TTR0N, COMMISSION MERCHANTS* Sept. 10th. 1856,?TURPENTINE -Salr. for the week, 2,675 bbl9., at $2.80 for Virgin $2.80 for Yellow Dip, arid $1.40 for Hard. SPIRITS TITRPEKTl.n:?Seles for th wool, 2,396 bblt., at i'rwin 3 J 89) ; and L active demand. ROSIN?The market for Common hna rale very dull daring the n<v?t wee'r. 8ale of 4.001 bbls., at $2.l2)'(?jl $3.75 ; nominal at <1.25 u 1.T5. f Ail.?I nn receipts ot thi* article h ive beei exceeding!v light for some time pest, and con tiiied to e few mattering lots. A small pares was brought in on Monday and sold et 1.66 pe bbl.?being an advance of 16 cents. COFFEE ?Java IT to 13 ; Legnerra 13 b 14 i Rio II to 12) St. Domingo id) to 11; **COTTONv?None arriving. 9) to He. pa pound. . t CORN MEAL.?80 coats par ba?bai,ia lot as wanted. FISH?Mnllots 6-60 { Mackerel, No. 3, e 6.5$ to 6Ad : ITarrings et 4.00 to 5.00. FLOUR.?N. C. brands?Family 7.T6 I1 8.00 ; Extra 7.25 to 7 AO j Floe ?A0. N. C BACON?Ham* Ifi m 1* M'WU 13 to 13& j Shoulders 12 1-2 to 131 Hogroun 13 1-2 to 14. Western Bacon, Middling! 12' to 12 3-i j Shocldera 11 to 12 1 13. X C LAUD*?16 to W ; Wester* Lard 15. POTATOF4L?Sweet 1A0 to l.?5; IHsl l.?5 (o 2 00 * M(51?8g^l.C?U? 45 pf ?I SUGAR?Porto Rico 9 to U 1-2; Loaf at* Crusii 13 1-2 to 14 1-2. Consignees. The following are the Couaignees per 8tel mer Fairy from Georgetown Sopt 13,186(1. Morgan & Toralineon* AmoM k Coolev i T J Smith, a W Litthi. Wm Little, S W Cole > Mom k foricer,H W Marriugton,aen., F Lyneh h Dan. A Horn. J C Cttrraway. ! lite Pairt left on Saturday night, 14th, witl < Nnval feiores for K P Hill, D Gill, D Gffl i . u* - -i .a a" AIIV ciiiwi' .. i iiAdvertiscments. " VACUABCE LAND FOR SALE TW1HE aubseribor offiri Tor sale. on rtaaac ?K]C tan* fa'u V ... TWuCT OF LAND, lri?jr u? LittU Fork Crook, in Cheated#! LUtrict. B.C.. * abort dutanca ea*t of Brewer' Gold Mine, Mid near tint village of JeflTcraot OOataioing about . ?, ONE HUNDRED ACRES, rl,v about one "naif of whicL is under o iltiratlor Said Laud i? dually clay, and it wall adapt* to tbe cultivation of Corn, Wbeut, Cutton. ft< ' Said Tract of Land |a aupp-aod to contain valuable OoM WW \ lump# of gold to tb vabift of tiron briu -b^idn-i to one hundred an fi(W dollar* ktilnr baa* alaM m ? ?iu?h to It ANGUS MolNNIS; CUpt?tab?r 13U?, IWk l&~4t. F *'%flCUr!t>?? (N.C.) pflmootAloo^y itiun and Auwmrd fc> tfcio ol$w> .u. feVASsLu-^ Vt, ] I L.KM,. J mmTHRfeKAS,thm did, onSkfM I WBw&* 3*pt?mfrir, A. Ds.i*|6. Hi? h I dielwfttio* agnitiat th? ctAndnat, %6 o {** HtnidV U *b?&o? from anAfritfeoui tfe? MM !] of k? o?jiW wife i.or A Horn* *?Ktfc??y ^ .Sdf tomW, *>ikb ^Ul tk ,: fi riling, Drawing ia4 Faintso^. 1 W&2 ":FRU1T AND FLOWERS. MB- BAT<OT, dfotA Savannah, propose# to give a course of hiSifuelfoo in this community. in the above tLv.'fel RftJ Uraatneo* o tal Arts, at the Female Academy, to commence ?. as won a* a CLASS of SO Pa'ulht can be * ' )f cuitd. IN WKITI NltS. The Course couslsta of TW8LVE LESSONS# - ombrtirlfig a variety of easy and gradually f progressive eStfvises, Which lead with invariable c-eftVhtJ to the rapid aad substantial itnprovem-nt t>f the Pupil. Mr. E. has numerous spa urueaa of the ine ordvemeiit of hi# former Pupils in Barn a ell, , Edgefield, Abbeville, Anderson. 3re<i,v;!!e, Vowbcrr/, Surou-r. Outuucn and Darlington ' tin' iu; ?-<l efvewhere, ushch eo.dpared with their previous illegible scrawls, show at r j a glance the wonderful cbsng* Wrought iq sc I short h time, by a few eaUrtaloiog and instructive exercises; I NT DRAWING, The Course consists of FIFTEEN LES1 O/wiL -j 1- .-J i-i n- ?% * ? uuurjiiopiB una laiBIHglDt? to OtglUnerj, and every exercise it precise!* adapted 10 the progress and capacity of the ieam?r. who during the coarse it thoroughly drilled in the principles of the Around *t the clot#, unaided bj the Taacber, it aWe to extend hit , improvement to any degree of perfection. ' IN WAX FRUIT AND FLOWERS The Court? constat* of TWELVE I.K5c SONS, during which the Pupil acquires a complete knowledge of the Art, and when once ) <?arued is never fbrgotton. An. intelligent little girl of 10 rears, comprehend! it at once, and knving made dttjiug th? course one Vase ,t of Fruit or Flowers, can make a hundred if necessary. TERMS: "Writing, per Course of 12 Lessons $8 00 !* Drawing, " u 10 ? 10,00 Drawing and Painting, 20 * 10,00 Wax Fruit, u ? 12 ? 15,00 n War Flowers, " " 12 " * 16.00 hsr Pens, Ink, Books, Paper, I*?noils, a Paints, Moulds, Moulders. Brashes aad Wax 3 arc furnished to the Pupil Jr?t ckargt. WOT Parents and Guardians wishing to > . enter their Children and Wartls to ei\jwr of I the above Classes, will piease leave their** address, or call 0v. Mr. &A.TQN* at thalf earli'.tt cuKvcnienct, at the ACADEMY, where be will b? happy to exhibit t<> them Specimens of Penmanship, Drawing, Painting, Froit and Flowers. 10* Improvement Qoaranteed. *7H* vneraw u.. rjept. itith 1856. 15?tf. 4 oi?Fssxoiv AND I FORWARDING BUSINESS. THE subscribers bare thia dav fortn<*d a Co-partnership, 5q the above fine of buaiq j ness, under the u?me tad firm of ? j MORGAN A TOMLINSON, [ at the old stand of K T. Morgan. All busiaaea 1 ' entrusted to our car* will be prooapilv attend; ed to. K. t. MORGAN T. H. TOMLINSON. Cheraw, 8. C, Sept. 1,1818. . IS?3l I 11 ON CONSIGNMENT ' 5,000 POUNDS Westare Baca*, r 200 lbs. Prime Lard, Four hbda. Browu Seamr, , *,000 Fiat Scgarr, * 00 Sacks Salt, . Flour, P?M, Acn Ac., a ad for sale cheap for cash. MORGAN A TOMLINSON. a Cbetaw^S^C^ Sept. 1, 1865. IS?St 9 J. A. A W. i. IN6US, JlATTORNEYS AT LAW , | SOLICITORS IN CHANCERY, CHTRAW, 0,, I Fraoucs in Gheateraeid eau iu* ?ajviing District* Office on Market atreat, batwaen a Front and Second atrpeta. 2??1 jr. William L. T. Pnocc, " ATTOH,ME1f AT LA AK? SOLICITOR IN CHANCERY t Practice* is the Ooorti for Ckeaterdfcld <t Marlborough, Darlington and lfarioo DutricU Offloa at (JHBBAW, 8. C. b p JW. T. WAUB, Attorney at law - > ', / AND < SOLICITOR IN EQUITY, v , \ a "1?ILL practice in Homy and ike adjoin- , V OttceafoONWAYBOBQ', 8. C. 11?it CViqMIIVS *, SXYBOMk COMMISSION AND a FORWARDING MERCHANTS: WILMINGTON, V.?k J. d. cuxamo, c.tr.smo?, : 12, 1W#L '?-?* i *' if J ***** >i idf Mi ?>< i fi i^ii wi'i i i 14 ii m X W u. OparUicwhl^ ' " a rTtllK ,tin<Urtiyn?<l We thi? .ley formed a j. .1 copartnerahip for tW naeoafltooa of j ^ General Mercantile BwimM H , j? ^ d in the tow* of Chorew, eeder the ueme or r* ftrrn of & H. Ckrk A Co. . If ' , \ b. k. claa*, ;.v .. CW#, & a. Any. 18, 1866. Ifc-Mf. .. * 4 ~mT^ss;"" ' Boot & Shoe Maker, vg ?.i ?<> To^rt fe hi? ttne of WiJmh *lfc 4**p??%x aaifeVMSB.* ho*i>i^M, g?4 ki? ?ld *M4. h Jtf* b?* ?U*? frr |?)? t?^ of ?5 k*4* J Tk*f * fotf iu rV Jul**??#' "< ; O' v , . * ^ iBre "' -> i+ x)5pv V