* _ - I - -MlllfcTi if" ii JOHN C. CALHOUN. " lie whs a man of intellect merely ; a statesman who fashioned l:is~policy upon the reason that was in him. His "cuius fed upon the aliment created by itself He celebrated his prim eipies like the silk worm, by process unseen of men. lie was a man without recreations nr pastimes, and so had less sympathy with t!ie world around him Ih.in beflls apolitical leader, lie spent Ids days in constructing theories which no one could defend like himself; and when he perished from amongst men, the better part of his teachings perished with liitu. "If we are left to the instruction of those I who presume to Apeak in his name, what legaVy and genius have we but discontent, disorganization, and disunion." Such y4he language which tne picayune employs in "reference to the most practical ami successful statesman who has impressed his * character upbn the last half century. Never was a more unfounded or erroneous estimate made of any man. John C. Calhoun's char icteristic quality was the practical, real, and tangible nature of his ideas and theories. None of our statesmen were as successful as he in carrying their principles into practical operation: none have left behind such rich legacies of wisdom and useful legislation. It is true he 4 was "a man without recreation or pastilles"? that is, who did not dissipate his mind and strength in the pleasures of sense and the frivolities of the world?who did not gamble or drink, or atteud races, or hobnob with dcmatronues. But still lie had his recreations in the l?osom of a happy family, in the circle of devoted friends, in the pure, innocent, and elevating delights of rural life. What did he not accomplish ? Starting in pub'ic life at an eventful period, he was the leading spirit of the most brilliant era in our history since the administration of Jefferson.? He was the life and spirit of the war of 1812, which he contributed powerfully to conduct to a successful termination. When the war had closed, aud the absence of a circulating medimn and the exigencies of the times required it, he was the framer of the Bank of the United Stales, and so organized that institution as to impart to it great efficiencN', and restrain its evil tendency. In Congress ho was ever the leader in all the measures calculated to advance the prosperity of the nation, without violating the republican features of the Constitution. As " -" " j \r ciURrman of tee Uommiuee Of yt iiy B ana | iy the House of Representatives, no-one who ever filled tlri# office was more prompt and practical. Transferred from a Legislative positiou to an Executive Bureau, be evinces the most admirable capacity for the practical details of new and complicated duti^. As Secretary of War besjras ever been regarded as the model of Executive officers. The tales and regulations establis{jfcd by hiin have become regular precedents in all tfa departments. From Secretary of WaryJie became Vice President of the Unitea States. Who ever presided over the I Consqgiut Fathers ol the nation with more dignity, ttith a nicer regard for parliamentary law, or a more prompt knowledge of the details of legislation i Transferred by his sense of duty to his State, from the ch?ir to the floor of the Senate, we : find hirn battling with unconquerable heroism J i.) behalf of the rights'of the States, resisting i monopolies and oppression'of one portion of the j Union by another. And was lie here a uiere the- ' orist? No; he succeeded in arresting the evils he resisted, he overcame the principle of protective tariffs, established the doctrine of revenue duties as preparatory to free trade, and maintained the strict construction of the Constitution. ft was in vain Webster, Adams, and 1 Clay, those be/tux i.lf.al of the Picayune's prac- 1 tica! statesmen, endeavored to foist upon the nation their higlr tariffs, their American sys- j terns, and their grand schemes of internal im- j provements. 'l'hey all fell before the battle axe of the great theorist of South Carolina.? What of them now remains? Then, tot), to crown his career of victory j over theories flnd demngngnoism, he aided pow- j e fully in extinguishing the great banking sys- ! tern, which had become a Upas tree of corrnp- i tion and evil to the nation. Did he not succeed in this ? Who was the great, the eloquent, the invincible advocate of the principle of separating the.banks and the Government?of the subO ^ Treastffy system! ishot this an existing practicaJ measure? ^fO'trborn do we owe it but to I the great theorist ofSo^th Carolina? As Sec- j retary of Slate, tdrVhich he was called by the ; unanimous voice of the people, he arranged and consummated tjie annexation of Texas. That j -" "I" "'?? n niaasure. Why?every- | ?u>v-v " , . . , thing be ever advocated may be now found and I acknowledged Iruth or a real fact? He was the practical statesman par excellence of the ) nation. True, he reflected an elaborated well ! bis ideas before he put them into form; he was 1 a theorist in the high, the exalted, the Bacoui- 1 an sense, the man who reasoned a posteriori, who collected within the'powerful crucible of bis intellect, all the facts and ideas bearing up- ! oil a question or principle, and having them sub- , jected to a powerful test, brought forth pure j gold of truth and wisdom. It was this re- i markable talent of reflection, of deep thought of careful examination, which, united with a great contempt for the arts of the demagogue, j obtained for John C. Cidhoun the character of | the me?e man of theory and iutcl'ect, among ; superficial word-mongers and admirers of temporary expedents and quid mine politicians. But the Picayune refers particularly to Mr. Calhoun's jealousy of federal encroachments on the rights of the States, as proofs of the impracticable character of his mind and opinions.? And here, to show the competency of our cotemporary to determine matter of this sort, we will g?v? 8 slight example of his own practical tendencies, of the lucid and common-sc-use style ...i.:?[. i,A .-ua-.n-il* m.-liters and conveys his Ill IIH'.ll IIU I vtw ..... views thereof: ' The drearier outpourings wrung from an , overfraught heart hv exigencies tljat are disappearing, and the imaginings of a mind startled by misapprehensions which are not likely to he realized, are indeed discernible. But these arc 8iirli a conserve of the essence of his teachings as thowtffsages against sinners present of the | promises of the Holy Scriptures." J \Vh'si '.onl.l we think of such language from miIi.i L'ahio.in We would rightly conclude that the only " legacy which lie would leave behind hint " would be -5 even more unsubstantial than unproved theories?mere words, words, words! Hut are these " drearier Outpourings" peculiar to Air. Callmun, that for their exoressiou he should be set down among the wild theorist ? Were they not indulged by the most practical statesmen the country ever produced? Were they not "the apprehensions" of Patrick Henry, Ccorge .Mason. John Ran dnlph, of Jefferson, Madison, and the majority of the fathers of the Constitution ( indeed, are they not feelings natural to sagacious intellects and patiiolic hearts, in every land where freedom is regarded, and where a vigilant jealousy of the approaches of power and oppression is esteemed one ol Uu? first duties 01 umse enuusic.' with (Ik* defence of tlie rights of the people. -N. O. Delhi. GOV. QUITMAN AND THE GOVERNMENT. No one has given even a casual glance at the "signs of the times,since the present abolition dynasty at Washington tyttne into power, could fail to notice the continued and marked efforts on its part, of bringing into disrepute the powers and dignity of the separate States. The Government has let no occasion pass without making manifest its design ofconceutrating all the power within its own hands-, and leaving the State powerless; so that whatever the (ion end Government does, whatever unauthorized powers it may assume, to the detriment it may of the rights of the States, must not be gainsayed by them. This design on the part of the General Government, to lowei the dignity ot ?*i sovereign Stale, is peculiarly and forcibly illus trated ia the case of Gov. Quitman, of Mississippi. He has 1 een arrested at the instance of the Government, and is now in New Orleans to answer the charge, baseJ upon rumor, of participating in the late Cuban ex|>cditiou. No one believes him guilty of the charge ?not even the Government itself, which is apparent from one fact He has been forced to resign his seat as Governor of Mississippi?a position to which lie was elevated by a grateful people, with a majority almost unprecedented?depriving his constituents of services to which they were entitled?hurriedly dragged to New Orluune unit ulipp nil this haste and annareut so licitude lor the strict enforcement oi' law, the glorious and justice-loving Government finds itself not ready for trial, and holds the Governor to bail it) the pitiful sum of one thousand dollars. li it had had any ground upon which to hose a hope for conviction, it would certainly held him to hail in a much larger sum tbfui this. It requires not the aid of a microscope to see the grand.aim and design in this whole a flair. It is manifest from all the circumstances surrounding the case, that it is not the desire lor an im partial administration of the laws ; hut if we reflect for a moment, and notice the high and manly 3tand assumed by Gov. Quitman, in favor of the rights of the States, and against the j high-handed usurpation of the present frccsoil j dynasty, we see at once the secret of the whole is a sort of petty revenge. The gallant ex- ; Governor had been too bold and fearless in his i denunciations of Federal encroachments?had j stood too firmly by the cause of the South, to i suit the freesoil sensibilities of the Fillmore Cabinet; hence such relentless persecution. Let us look North for a moment, and see what is the fact, in regard to the strict enforcement of law in that region. The Fugitive slave Kill, as nlain a constitutional enactment as was ever passed, nut more than four mouths ago, in the city of Boston, was completely nulliticd and set at naught; and though the fact was brought to the notice of the Kxveutive, he contented himself with writing a long letter of excuse, expressing the hope that the good people of Boston would do a little better in future. This shows how matters stand. Hut let the Government do its best; let it vent its spleen on Mississippi, by dragging her Governor from her bonh-rs; but it can never lessen the love and esteem which the .Southern people hear towards that gallant patriot. Never. V\ lien the name ot (Quitman shall cease to he uttered with feelings of tiie deepest and J i j-_s i inosl pl'Oiouua griimuue in tvery nut: menu in ; lilt* ?hmi|Ii, tijt'ii will Southern |?atriutisiii be extinct, iiJ her sous unworthy to be freemen. A Wah.mnu Voice.?The Hon. James K. Paulding, one of the wisest and purest men of this country, concludes one of his recent communication to the Southern Press under the signature of "A Northern man and a friend to the Union," witfP this solemn and emphatic warning: "1 have lived almost four-score years; I have passed through every grade of life, from that of a poor boy, self-educated and self desendent, to a station among the highest of the laud, which 1 attained without the sacrilice of my principles or my independence. During the whole of this long pilgrimage, 1 have been from habit and inclination conversant with hooks; and have thus added t the experience of a long life, the lessons of the past; and from this experience and those lessons, I am inevitably brought to the conviction that the people of the South have now nothing to depend mi for their future safety, but united aetiuii in self defence. By this they will preserve themselves in the Union. All other hope ate idle; all oilier expedients but daggers turn- :l against their own bosoms. They must as.-i rt their own rights, and protect themselves, lor they have no other protectors. The brand of fanaticism is applied to the homes of the people and must he quenched now or never. Time trait was?time is?hut time will soon he no more" Tiik Jkws.?.Yrtr Jersey.?On the petition of the Seventh Day Baptists, a hill has been reported in the New Jersey House of Representatives, prohibiting the issue of any writ or legal process, except in criminal causes, on the seventh day of the week, against those who observe that day as their Sabbath. It also ex' tl I'llur m- nmusi'MifMit rnijHM uieiu iiiiiii iiuo .?/. ?... on the Christian sJibbat!>. lli^ht.s of Coiiscinirc.?One of the clause in the new constitution adopted I)}- the people of iidiauu, provides that "u<> person shall be rcnleied incompetent as a witness in consequence of opinions on mat tors of religion." CoTfwN.?Our telegraphic despatch shows another tumble of prices in the Liverpool market. A panic lias struck cotton, and "no mistake." That it is a panic and nothing else, we believe. The world at peace, money and credit easy, manufacturing prosperous, and the raw material scarce, there is not a solitary sound reason for the decline of 3 or 4 cents within the past six weeks. No one we believe, except Mr. G wathiney estimates the crop over 200,200,000 bales. He sticks to his extravagant figures. And be he a true or a false prophet, he : has the ruin of hundreds offamilies to answer for. When the world gets over its flight, when the English have dipped pretty deeply into the market nnd rensn'n mid fiefs resume their lemti I mate sway over the minds of men, prices will liault in their downward tendency and react. They may go still lower before this happens for when confidence is lost there is no telling to what figure it will drop. But the pendulum must swing back with the same force and momentum with which it swings forward. Meantime planters who are not obliged to sell, had better not increase the panic by forcing their crops on this mrket. Columbus (Go) times. cottox Chop.?In the report of our Cotton j market in our last issue, we stated that the Flint j Kivt r crop was nearly all in, and instead of the j crop exceeding last year's by 10 a 15 per cent, as was generally believed, until the first of De: comber, it is found that it turns out short of the | last crop. Since making up that report, our attend' n his been particularly called to this subject, and we have made inquiry as to the number of cotton yet to be received, and the crops as compared with the last year. From the best information we can obtain, we find there i< not MOO bales of cotton to be rei reived and not 000 bales left in all for shipi mont. This is unprecedent for the Flint River, for there has been no season until the present, that there has iiotjiecn a large part of the crop oil hand awaiting shipment after the first of March. It is believed now that the whole Flint River crop falls short of last year fully 15 per cent, which is the shortest cotton crop that has been j made for some years, notwithstanding the inj crease of planting.?Albany Patriot. Profits of Plunk Rnnrls.?The Syracuse and Oswego plank road is about 24 miles in length and, including its eleven toll houses, was constructed at a cost of $43,904. lip to the time of holding the first anual meeting in December, there had been received for tolls 8f?,757?the road having been in operation less than a year. Liability of Newspaper Subscribers.?The liability of subscribers to newspapers and periodicals is not, in many cases, duly considered. A case has recently been decided, which will awaken attention on the subject. Mr. Jasper Harding, of Philadelphia, not long since recovered a large sum (about 8150 we believe) for a subscription to the Pennsylvania Inquirer, of a man residing in Rhode Island. The circumstances were these: The subscriber took the pa per for some time, and then sent to the publisher a notice of discontinuance, without forward iug the money for payment. The publisher took no notice of this, nor of several subsequent notices ofivfus.il to take the papers from the post olhce.. The result was, that notwithstanding the Rhode Islander did not receive the papers for several years, yet he was forced to pay .Mr. Harding the whole amount np to the period claimed by the bill.?Farmer and .Mechanic. Judge Parsons delivered a charge recently to a grand jury in Philadelphia, in which he stated that the Macks of that city supplied nearly one-third of the criminals; while tlu Ledger says they are hardly more in number than oneeighth of the population. It says also, that "these care cankered, famished and destitute free blacks exhibit a picture of outcast wretchedness at which humanity shudder." (2<)rr,rnmrni Finnttrcs.?The U. S. Treasury statement just.published shows a net amount of public monevs in the Treasury subject to a draft to be 814,^2,201 25, of which 82?G15,000 arc in the Sub-Treasury, New York, and 8'v 700,000 in the Mint at Philadelphia. Who ark Y"ur Aristocrats.?Twenty years ago this one butchered; that one made candles; another sold cheese and butter, a fourth carried on a distillery; another was a contractor on canals; others were merchants and mechanics. They are acquainted with both ends of society?as their children will he after them, though it will not do to say so out loud. For often you shall liud that these toiliu worms hatch butterllios, and they live about a year. Death brings division of property; and it brings new fanciers; the old agent is discharged the young gentleman takes his revenues, and begins to travel?towards poverty, which he reaches before death?or his children do, if he do not. So that in fact though there is a sort of moneyed rank, it is accessible to all; three I good seasons of cotton will send a generation ! of men up, a score of years will bring them all down, and s-nd their children again to labor. The father grubs, aud grows rich; his children sitnl. and u-.e the money; their children inherit lix isi.. 'iud go to the shiftless poverty; their child, cis reimigorated by fredi plebeian blood, and by the smell of the clod, come up again. Tims society like a tree, draws its sap from the earth, changes it into leaves and blossoms, spreads them abroad in great glory, sheds them oil'to fall back to the earth, again to mingle with tho soil, and at length to reappear in the new trees and fresh garniture. Hunt's Merchant's Magazine. "Mister, lend men shillin'," said a boy to a no till! lahnn Iuqo efnn. Wl'UIUiy limn, yCSUMUJIJ, tin UID imiEi rroa p;ng into his cnrringe. "What claim have you on nic my son t" ''Cause," was the rejoinder, "vou used to sell my dad apples when you was a l?oy." The shilling came out enlarged to a half dollar. This is a literal circumstance. A new variety of French watches, that run fifteen days after being once wound up, arc in the market. THE^ CAMDEN JOURNAL THO. J. WARREN & C. A. PRICE, Editor*TfcESDA iflsVENING, MARCH 11, 1831. Our Market. Cot toil is worth from 7 J to cents. The News bv the Pacific, which left Liverpool on tlie 22nd lilt, s-how nn advance in the lower and middling qualities of Jd. The sales ot tlie wettk amounted ti> (i2 >;< I. Siiee. In Churle-rton. co'tnn is quoted at 7 to ip,;L8. RETURN DAYS For Kershaw, " March 15. !( U U OO uuuiiri) " Lancaster, " " 29. Mr. Richards Lectures. Quite a line audience was in attendance, upon Mr. Richards' lecture last night And we feel very sure that there was not one, who was not highly gratified. We only wonder that we do not see all the town there. His Lectures are most fascinatingly interesting. And we are sure that an evening cannot he spent more pleasantly and beneficially than in listening to them. Attend his exposition this Evening, and his succeeding three I.lectures, which heighten in interest as they go on. The opportunity may never again be alforded to you. U* Mr. Richards will Lecture to-night, and also, on Wednesday and Thursday nights. The Darlington Flag, Is the title of a new Paper, published in the town of Darlingion. It is a neat and hand.-oine sheet?John F. DeLorme Proprietor, and J. H. Norwood Editor. We hail the Flag with more than ordinary pleasure, for the sake of its Proprietor and Editor?and tor some other reason?.? Let it be unfurled in every family. Sudden Death. We regret to learn that Mr?. Margaret McCoy, wife of Capt Beiijaimin McCoy, of this District, died very suddenly on Sunday morning last. She fell to the flo >r and expired immediately. A few minutes before her death, she had been preparing for Church- But so true it is, we cannot tell the day, nor the hout in which the stcru messenger/ may bid the immortal spirit hence. I, Another Freshet. f* On*Saturday last, our River commenced rising very rapidly?occasioned by the late heavy floods of Rains above. On Sunday afternoon the water reached to the foot of the Red Hill in the lower parioi inn town, arising very uranv, u iiui quiiu as high as the Freshet of 1831. In 1840 we had a tremendous Freshet which cams within 10 inchesof'31, but the present is nearer by several inches to that mark, and may be regarded as the largest Freshet which has happened in our River for twenty years. We are happy to state that the Bridge has sustained no injury, Superior Cologne. We have been kindly furnished with a fair sample of Perfumery from Dollars Drug Store, a very superior article of French Cologne, put up ir. substantial Wicker covered bottles, It may be regarded as e.vtra fine, and weaie quite obliged to Mr. Do Hay for bis kindness in furnishing us so abun lantly. Southern Insurance Company. By rcferen eto our advertising coin inns, it will appear, that the Columbia Insurance Company, have constituted nil agency in this place. We may safely and confidently recommend this Company to our Citizens, composed of gentlemen of the highest responsibility. A small amount in vested by way Jof insurance, may save the hard earnings of many anxious years of labor, Call on Messrs A. M. & R. Konuedy, the agents for Camden S. C. ? *-?*?.- . . ? Sentiment in South Carolina. The National Intelligencer, in the course of i n most able article on the condition of things in South Carolina, cites the following article from the Catmlen Journal. That paper, supposing that the State should secede and that the Government of the United States should blockade her ports, says: " We believe England would ncknowledge us as an indcjicndent Republic, and come in and trade with us, simply passing these blockading ships by and coming in: and if in their passage those ships should fire on theio, why a broadside from an English sleams'iip would settle it, ice think, rather to the disadvantage of a Yankee revenue blockade culler. Recollect, our ships that have done good service against English ships have had some Southerners aboard, and in their crews no disaffected persons. This would ho different. England has never shirked a tear fir few of crippling her commerce., for it seems to flourish by war. She would clear the blockade., for the reason that she would bo glad to see this Confederacy broken up? because she trould be fighting against the North, her natural liotils of the loom. She would doit, because then she would have an open and free American port She would do it, in short, because interest would drive her to it" This is the language of an American Editor! It was said that, in the war of the Revolution, there were more tories in South Carolina than any other State in the Union; and it would seem, from the above paragraph, that the breed is not yet extinct Certain it is, this Editor has none of the blood of Sumpter, or Marion, or Rutledge in Bis veins.?Pel. Intelligencer. The above from the Petersburg Intelligencer is truly rich?like its elder the National inh.)iicri>r\ri>r?it docs not exchange with us, but. receiving its cue,from the latter paper, umbra like, has shadowed out its views. In the first place, we can inform the Petersburg man that we are not ambitious to be called an American Editor, the term takes in too wide a sphere.' And wonderful to tell, he has heard that during the War of the Revolution, there were more Tories in South Carolina, than in any other State in' the Union. There were a great many here, but a large supply of them came from Virginia?men who breathed upon the soil that ga\c birth to Washington? * and we presume t!iat//ie/r breed is not yet extinct No! tryre the occasion to c>itp, w* w ?u!d expect to see oil? houses fired, by the Editor of the Petersburg JitlrUig eneeri Who were the Tories of *761* men who wore afraid to aeeert iheir right, but submitted to the aggressions of the Gor?>mmen|^r^ need we say that the submission Editor of theJPsBg* tersburg Intelligencer, is in that catoyoryMMMpftfa^^*-. to defend his rights, and submitting to ibgjj/BEftsions ofthe Government, far worsetb?Pp^4^|r offered by England to the Colonies. " Ttiyt a'fdO* tame an appellation for hhtt;' It looks very well to accuse South Carohninus of Toryism?especially when the accusation comes from one who has a heart so tame and degraded, that be cowers beneath the stroke of the Federal rod, as 'tlio whipped spaniel at his master's feet We would say to the Intelligencer that we have not the honor of having any of the blood of Suropler,or Marion, or Rulledge in our veins. But they are filled with blood, of which we are no less proud. Not one of our male relatives in existence in fouth Carolina, from 13 yearn upwards, but what fought through the war of '76, or fefcupon some hotly c mtestrd field. In this town, our home, the British, and Tories, (and amongst them, some Virginia Tories) imprisoned one of our Uncle* r. A Tory (and lor auglil we know, one of the r#. fathers of the Editor ot the Petersburg InleJIigencer) presented his musket at the breast of our grandmother, with her innocent babe iu her arras, and nothing but the goodness of a British officer, who knocked it aside with his sword, saved her. Tory depredations left them nothing but one Tittle dairy house," from thirty or forty in number ?0 live it.?and yet the submission Editor of the Petersburg Intelligencer hints at cnir beingTV>ry. Why, we live upon the very soil lhat waa moistened by the blood of ouc Fathers?ejrery sprig seems claiming a kindred with us, becatwe in t'.ieir veins flows our blood. Sir! our hearts beat to the sains feeling?our blood boils yet, when we see aggressions aimed at us, whether Engii.-h or Yankee: but a feeling of more sunr>.mH ilisinisf tnk as hnlil of if*, when the descend ant of a Tory, tells us we are of submission breed. ty Among ilie runny blessing* attendant npori bprwf merits in the social condition and the oil verier* of our tare in intelligence is the prolongation of hruuaA- life. With the increase of intelligence lias grown up a knowledge for the element*: of health, and a rewini for thcra, and cmmenstinitely witli tlie stride* of science linve we ir. quired the means of arresting disease, and averting ita ravages. Notwithstanding the progress we liave made, statistics show that even now. one-sixth of the whole populatinn die annually of consumption. f One of the most important discoveries of the a*e. in ameliorating the conditio*, of this large class of snllerinff humanirv. is L?R. WlSTAR'S BALSAM OF WILD CHERRY. Xnndn, Livingston Co., N. A .June 20,1348. 31 r. S..W. l-i.n It-.? Dear Sir: Prompted by a sense of gratitude for benefits received from the nscof WlfvTAR'H BALSAM OF WILD CHERRY, I submit the following statement: Previous to iny taking die Wild Cherryj,I had lieen obliged to give op my business in cotoe<)aebeii of % severe alleelion of the lungs. In this distressed state I was ordered to try your remedy lor ('OXSl/MPTlOX I did so. an I in the course of a few weeks, 1*1* iwstofod to comparative good liealth, so tint 1 have silica hern-able to attend to ordinary business. Indeed, lux.tpteseuhstate of health far exceeds rcy most sanguine expectations." Yours truly. JOHN W'RNS. . None genuine unless signed t. HlTTfS oo the wropiwr, ^ fofeil.. ?i. i 'ftin i.in nt >I C.r gone that liberation hun taken pldre. It i? "eUota. if eVfi? kno'.vn to fail in breaking up the mort otwtLmic atnJ <1% trwing1 migh ufrCnlil, in a few huura time, if tlw'tUraa* liiiiiK arertrictlv n{luweth -yt} For suit- at .WrKainV Drugstore, Camden H.C, Sctt.AdvertieefiH-nt in aiuither column. , CAMDEN PRICES CURRENT^ / '**' Bagging, |>cr yd. 11 to id hial, lb 8 10 JO Bute Hope ll> to I'd lead, lb 6 tm 3 Bacon, lb 'J to I d? .MolrMHee, {rail 31 to JO Butler, Hi M to 20 |>la< karcl, IjIU b un Brandy, gall 28 to33 iNaii*, lb 41 to '4 Beeswax, lb IS to 22 Oau, hurliel 75 k'cef, lb 1 to 5 |l*ea*, bttnliel " VS (.'Infers, lb 12 15 Potatoes,sweet,bu - 5P (otton, lb 8 to 11 | Irish .bu , .?'T| Corn, burhH ?1 to 106 Rye, hnrliel'95 to' 1 Floor, hhl CI to 7, Hire. ba?hel 3 to. 4 Fodder. cu t 150jSugar, . lb 7 to. 10 Hides, dry lb 8 to 51 |Sali, , tack fk Iron, lb 5 to 61 shot. bog i.ime, bbl 2 to Sil/Pubac**, .. lb 10 .H jB Leather, sole, lb 17 to2i |Wbeat, bush ~S C NSC ?~T3i?S ?~.AiT 3 3?" IVatcree Division !V?. 9. " ' The regular meeting of thifl Divsion will be hell on Thursday evening, an Odd Fellow's Hail at 7 o'clock. By order ot the W. P. O. U. KENNEDY, R.8. :s 117 T. WALTER begs leave to aot^ouneja If to the citizens of Camden, that he bar opened a Daguerroau Room, fur a few days, at the Otfd Fellows Hall, where he will be prepared totrfjre the Likenesses of tliose who will lavor him call. Every likcnes* warranted to please. - W.T.W. March 10 h, IbSL 20 Notice. THOMAS LANG, William Anderson, Thomas J. Ancruin, William G.irdener, and Alexander Young, who have been, and now are, engaged in the manufacture of cotton good*, and other article#, > at. a place known us the DeKalb Factory, m Ker. shaw District, under the firm and etyfo at Wfiliani Anderson and Company, liave aseooiated liurweil Uuykin with them, as a member of mid Firm?and having obtained from the Legislature of South Carolina, a Charter incorpoiating the said Firm, with their associate* anil successor*, a* a body politic and corporate, in law, by the name and style of "The DeKalb Manufacturing Company," do hereby notify the ppblic that they have accept, ed the said Charter, and will hereafter conduct their bmjnees according to the terms thereof, and under the name and style of "The DeKalb Mane. t facturing Company." W. ANDERSON & CO, March 8th, 1851 20 tf Dn.,dcpita and Haders * , EAU LUST Ml. FOR promoting the growth and beautyof the Human Hair. Ju?i received at . so"*"""* ' J Lost Books* PERSONS having Books belonging to the Or. phnn Society, are earnestly requested to return them, as the Library is now about to be sold, , J NO. M. DeS^USSURE, Pres't. March li, 20 v't