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Sl":* " J?**tX''"' * " * ? in Acceptance of the Democratic Xoiai* I nations. Concord, (N. H.) June 17,1852. Gentlemen:?I have the honor to acknowledge your personal kindness in presenting to me this day your tetter omciaiiy inrormmg ?? ?> ? nomination, by the Democratic National Convention, as a candidate for the Presidency of the United States. The surprise with which I received the intelligence of the nomination was not unmiugled with painful solicitude, and yet it is proper for ine to say that the manner in which it was conferred was peculiarly gratifying. The delegation from New Hampshire, with all the glow of State pride and all the warmth of personal regard, would v not have submitted ray name to the convention, nof would they have cast a vote for nit, under circumstances other than those which occurred. I shall always cherish with pride and gratitude the recollection of the fact that the voice which first pronounced tonne?and pronounced alone? came from the mother of States?a pride and gratitude rising far above any consequences that cau betide me personally. May I not regard it as a fact pointing to tlie overthrow of sectioual jealousies, and looking to the perennial life and vigor of a l^nion cemented - by the blood of those who have passed to their reward?a Union wonderful in its formation, boundless in its hopes, amazing in its destiny 1 I accept the liomitiarion, relying upon an abiding devotion to the interests, the honor, and the gio ry of our whole country, but beyond and above all, upon a Power superior to all human might? a Power which from the first gun of the revolution, in every crisis through which we have passed, in every hour of our acknowledged peril, when the dark clouds have shut down around is has interposed, as if to baffle human wisdom, out. march human forecast, and bring out of darkness the rainbow of promise. Weak myself, faith and hope repose there in security. 1 accept the nomination upon the platform adopted by the convention, not because this is expected mA on o ann/li/loffl Kit# Vinnniico tKn nnn/tltiloc VI uic w a tauuiuak^ vuv utuiuog i>uv |/uuvi|vivw it embraces command the approbation of my judgment; and with them I believe I can safely say there has been no word nor act of my life in conflict. I have only to tender my grateful acknowledgments to you, gentlemen, to the convention of which you were members, and to the people of our common country. I am, with the highest respect, your most obedient servant. FRANK PIERCE. To Hon. J. S. Barbour, J. Thompson, Alpheus Felch, and Pierre Soule. Sekate Chamber, June 22,1852. Gentlemen: I have the honor to acknowledge the receipt of your.letter notifying me that I have been nominated by the Democratic Convention as Vice President of the United States. VThis distinguished manifestation of the" respect and confidence of iny Democratic brethren commands ray most grateful acknowledgements, ? -IT _1 i* II _ ... I if J 1 ;_1 ^ana a cueenuuyaccepiineuomiuauouttuu uuicu ^^Jt>ave been honored. Throughout a long public life I am not conscious" s*bat I have ever swerved them those priusustaint'JL ? ""1 T by tfce otoJWratic party; auci m w!!ar?ver situa ? ?"tionl may be placed my countrymen may rest assurred that I shall adhere to them -faithfully and zealously?perfectly satisfied that the pros perity of our common country and the f't-uminency of our free institutions can be promoted^ and preserved only by admiuistering the government in strict accordance with them. The platform as laid down by the convention meets with my cordial approbation. It is national in all parts; and I am content not only to stand upon it, but on all occcasions to defend it.. "?r For the very flattering terms in which you have </C ;M; beeo pleased, gentlemen, to characterize my puby lie services, I feel that I am indebted to the personal regard which I am proud to know you in dividual ly entertain for rae, and that you greatly overate thein. The only merit I can lay claim Jp to is an honest discbarge of the duties of the various positions with which I have been honored. This I claim?nothing more. With the highest respect and esteem, I am gentlemen, vour fellow citizen,, WILLIAM R. KING. To Messrs. J. S.. Barbour, J. Thompson, AIpheuB Felch, and P. Soule. The Whig Nomination. We have another laborious mountain delivered <f its mouse,?another National Convention | assembling, and, with infinite big-sounding phrases taken from the slang dictionary of patriotism, selecting the inau who is to lead them 011 in the next charge upon the United Stales Trea?u-; ry. The Democrats chose a man who had scarcely been mentioned beforehand; the Whig* i Kav# f'hjif fine 'iiraitwf \i-h<nn si m ii. .l it "" v ? -f, ' '""J *; ; of their party had declared unforgiving hostility, i Yet, ou the one hand, no sooner was that man nominated whom nobody was commi?sioiied by ! the people to vote for, than all the faithful organs sounded forth, "excellent! the very best possible choice !" and on the other, no sooner is ; the man against whom a majority of the Whig i Convention is pledged and instructed, than the ! still dissentient members swear fidelity, and the : choice is declared unanimous! Such is party,! and of such stuff is fabricated the honors which ' the people shower on distinguished merit! Will the Whig party ratify the choice of the Convention ? We answer, yes, with scarcely a note of dissent. Those who think differently, j ? *1 1 .? ao uut cuusiurr mm, me rem tjuesuon lit lllC next Presidential election, is simply which of the two parties shall have thespendiugof fifty millions a year, for the next four years. Those who dream that any portion of the Whigs will be backward ; V at taking tickets in this great lottery, will find ont their mistake in a short time. And in regard to their chances for the purse, the Whigs have chosen wisely. Gen. Scott has more strength than either of his competitors. Mr. Fillmore is a dall, decent sort of man, whose superiority consists in his having grown up like a bunch of grass on the hillock of Gen. Taylor's grave. Otherwise he would have been a very common grass. Mr. Webster is a super.i'nima t^d political lawyer, who, afier many un*uccoss ful attempts to become a leader bv following the leader* or hi* own party, has ended by a flash v imitation of Gen. Oiss, in making faces at ah the foreign nation# that, were either so feeble or I , eo far off as to deprive the griuiaco of all dan? x ' ' "-V.-W j -'V : > ger or meaning. Neither of these men have any hold on the people, or could make a respectable run against the Democratic nominees. We do not believe that Gen. Scott can he elected, but he has a great deal of positive strength, and is surrounded with the specious tinsel that is so easily taken for gold, and he will give his adversaries trouble. If they, beat him, it will be by i a ......a ii?ii u ?wift aiiu ^uuu v.viiuiiv(.? Charleston Mercury. Gen. Scott in Geokgia.?Judging from present indications. Georgia will give but a slim support to the Whig Ticket. We quoted the Augusta Chronicle yesterday. The Savannah Republican of yesterday is equally decided in re pudiating the nomination. The Macon Messenger is still more vehement against it. It says: u We view the nomination of Gen. Scott as a triumph of the enemies of the South ; and it now remains for our political friends in the State to take such course as will best cotiseivc the interests of our section." We have not heard froin the Milledgeville papers; but the agreement of the three leading journals we have mentioned, leaves little doubt that at least, a powerful divition of the old whig party of Georgia had made up their minds beforehand not. to submit to the nomination of the Seward candidate. A notice appears in the Macon Messenger, signed by the President and Vice Presidents of the Constitutional Union Convention, convoking another Convention of their party to meet on the loth of July next, to decide upon this Prcsi- j dential difficulty. It is not bv any moans improbable that a third candidate may be nominated. We expect to hoar much the same news from Alabama, Mississippi and Florida. liut the defection of the Whips in all these States will not much affect the Whig party in the country at large.?lb. Important Decision in kegaudtothe Maine Liqiok Law.?We stated a few days since, the decision of the Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, in regard to the seizure of liquors in transitu.? There were several other points touched upon in the decision rendered, the most important of which were as follows. We lind them in the Bath Times: "There is nothing in the act indicative of au intention of preventing intoxicating liquor being property, when possessed by a persou for his own use, without any intention to sell. The act cannot prevent the transport of liquor from one town or city to another, or through the State, when there is no intention to make saleof the same. The declared design of the law was the usuppression of drinking house sand tippling shops," and the law should receive a construction coin patible with its design. The gen- ral ianguag' of the act must he rest noted so as to aecoinj lisli the general intent and d-eland purpose thereof, or the jirovision in relation to the holding of j>roj> erty niu<t be pronounced to b" a ] lain violation of the provlsioiw'ofthe Con-tiluiioii. No positive .enactment is found in the law, that no person t?an acguire jwoperty 1n intvxientiin; liquors. It would be absurdity to d il nc an article of commerce not property, and by the same law empower agents to sell the article as the property of cities and towns. The Constitution secures to the people of this State the right of acquiring ^ivperty and protecting it; but the Legislature mav^letermine that articles injurious to the public heSUinud morals, shall not constitute property withirT^sjurisdiction. when used for the purpose of injaring^uublic health and morals, and there would be no oC^-don for complaint that a provision of the Constit iftcn was void. In his concluding paragraph. Judge Shepley offer* us either horn of a dilemin", as follows: ' It may be said that a court of justice's not authorized to introduce, by construction, such limitations?that it savors more o1 legislation than of construction. It may be so. And if the Court may not introduce any such limitations, without encroaching up??u the forbidden province of another d"partment of the government, it cannot omit its duty to declare that provision (that in relation to property in liquor) in violation of the j Constitution and void. Nonsuit set aside, and a new trial granted.? According to this decision, many cases where liquor was taken by officers from on buard vessels, and from wharves while in transit from one place to another, and destroyed, were in violation of the law, and a claim for damages may he instituted. We are glad to have a construction to the law at last." Cure for I>vsenterv.?A highly respectable ? j > ...l? i...? i ana ajn'U caur^i'uiiuciii, whv un^ ivwi mm uuui the account of the prevalence of this distressing complaint in Newberry district, as publislied in Saturday's Courier, r quests the publication of the following specific for its cure, which, though very simple, has never f tiled under his observation for many years, viz: Take an equal quantity of good sweet molasses, olive oil and good West India rum, stir together and simmer over the tire. Stirling whilst simmering until the decoction is well incor|K>rated together then take it off the tire, but continue stirring until the mixture is quite cool. It is thou ready for bottling or use. The dose for an adult, if the disease is very violent and system much reduced, is one table spoonful three times a day, morning, noon and night ?it not very severe, twice a day, morning and night?and if the attack is slight, one spoonful, taken at night, will have the desired effect. For children and young persons, in proportion to age; for infants, a teaspoouful is sufficient. It is also a tadical cure for summer complaint in children. If the disease should be checked loo sud i**iiivt so as to occasion cosuveuess, reduce tue dose, and use a little castor oil.? Courier. j Bairibii Postal Akiuxgemests.? When the new ocean mail contiacts into which the English Government lias recently entered, come into operation, the whole cost to the nation for conveying its correspondence will amount to nearly a million sterling per annum. Ilsocean mail packet lines served by this country will then be about sixty thousand miles in length; and the number of miles which the lhitish mail packets will traverse annually will be nearly two millions five hundr< d thousand. The number of letters which naolroU Will ill t!?i /? 11IVII .if 1 IVIe at the present postal packet rates, it is estimated, J will bo about thirty millions. I ir?firl rtimMM - . pg!. 5 THE SEMLVEEKLY JOrPAL, Tuesday Evening,June 29, 1852. THO. J. WARREN, Editor. Rain. We liave had rain in abundance. The crops in this vicinity have been greatly favored, and we have great hoDes that an abundant yield will reward the farmers toil. We hope that our River will not get unruly and transcend its limits; such an event would be very ruinous to the river plantations, where the prospects are so flattering at present . Temperance Celebration. It will be seen by their advertisement that Kershaw Division, No. 9, intend celebrating their fourth anniverary on Saturday next the 3d of July. Death of Bishop Gadsden. Bishop C. E. Gadsden, the venerated head of the Episcopal Church in South-Carolina, expired in Charles ton on Thursday morning last at eight o'clock. The Evening News thus refers to the melancholy event: Death ok Bishop Gadsden.? It becomes our melancholy office to announce the death, at his residence in this city, this morning, of the Right Reverend Christopher Edwards Gadsden, of th/ Protestant Episcopal Church of South CaroliA and Bishop of this Diocese. Bishop GacKaen was the grands.m of Christopher GadAen ot Revolutionary memory. He was a WWine no less distinguished for his long and finest services to the Church, of which he wa^n ornament, than for his solid learning. simAe piety, unassuming manners, and ainiabloAporcinent. He was 613 years of age, and hA been suffering for some time with sickness ard protracted debility. Bishop Gadsden was * graduate of Yale Col lege, in the same das' with Mr. Uainoun, ana was ordained a d'-ac<vi hi 1807. by Bishop Moore, of New York, and priest in 1810, by Bishop Madison, of Virginia. He was fiist called to the Rector-hip of Biggin Church, St. John's Berkley, in 1808, resigned in 1810, at which time he was called to St. Philip's Churck in this city, as assistant minister to the Rev. James Dowar Simons. At the death of Mr. Simons, he was eh cted Rector of that Church, in 1814. In the following year he received the degree of I). D. Irom the College of South Carolina. In the office of Rector of St. Philip's, he continued until 1840, when he was chosen Bish op of this Diocese, and consecrated in Trinity Church. Boston, on Sunday, June 21, 1840. While we are writing, the bells are tolling in t respect to his memory. A Good Suggestion. It lias been suggested to us (and the suggestion is an admirable one.) t'"at a Society or Club be formed for Educational purposes. The plan is simple and effective, and would doubtless be the means of doing great good. Let each member contribute yearly, say 5 or 10 dollars. Let this fund be kept for the sole purpose of educating thoroughly, some worthy, intelligent boy in our community, who may not have the means for the accomplishment of a complete education. This fond, :?r ? ptirt r.f it laa nv.inli mny bo nooessnry) could be loaned or given according to circumstances; and when the party becomes able to pay it back, it might be used in the same way tor the education of others. Think how much good might be effected in our community, if each individual would only feel it in his heart to do something for the cause of education and morality. In place ol having scores of idle boys, loaling around shops and thronging our streets, they might be taken up, educated and made to do something for themselves and for society. There are many instances where this plan has been productive of the greatest good. Sonic of our wisest and best mon, whose attainments in different departments of science and literature, and who challenge our highest admiration, were proteges ol such associations as we ate in favor of forming. Wo have only at this time, a deRire to call attention to the project in order that some of our friends and correspondents ma}' lavor us wun meir views n cxtenso. The subject is one worthy to be discussed am' of deep interest to all who love their country. It is o^r duty to aid in promoting the common good; and while the motto may be?"At the public good we aim," t&C fear it is only in name, and not iu We could enlargoherT^o^TeTT42Misiderablo extent, but deem it wholly unnecessary, as wefit^tf? soon to bo favored with the views of others more able tll&n ourselves to give light upon this important subject. Free Soil Convention. A circular has been issued, signed Samuel Lewis, Chairman, calling a Convention of Free Soil Democrats to bo held at Pittsburg, on the 11th of August next, for the purpose of selecting candidates for the offices ol President and Vice President. Friends of the principles declared at Buffalo at the Convention of August, 1848, are invited to send delegates. It is stated in ? ?.:.k .I.,|inl ,lom,.r.rntir. mom. I'UIJIIt'l IIUU Willi IIIIOIMII, killlVCV?.ilU MVUIV/?..*..V ...V... hers of Congress will oppose the election of Piercpand King?among tliein, l)r. Townseml and Mr. Chaso' oi Ohio, and Mr. Durkee of Wisconsin. General Scott's Chances Improving. Telegraphic despatches from Washington state that advices are daily being received, which tend clearly to indicate that General Scott's chances of success are improving. The enthusiasm in the large Statc-s is increasing, and the feeling of disappointment at tirst exhibited bv the adherents of Mr. Fillmore and Mr. Webster is rapidly wearing oil', and giving place to a strong feeling in fayor >f the nominee of the Whig National Convention, so that there is every probability that an undivided front will bo presented during the ensuing campaign. Our Exchanges. Newberry Sentinel.?We observe that Maj liArlington has withdrawn from Lis connexion wtih Mr. Giles in the editorial department of this excellent paper. Carolina Spartan.?Tlie last number of tho Spartun comes to us in a new dress, and with the addition of "Carolina'' to its title. The oditors stato a fact which is not generally known, that in the Stato Conetimtinn their district is called "tho Spartan District," and not Spartanburg as it is now called. Farmer and Planter.?The July number of this useful Monthly has boon recoived. As usual, it contains a variety of useful matter for the/armers and planters n. M The Lo Roy Gazette, of New York, says ativaj/fef Jenny Liud has been discovered in the Fomalc Seminary at that place. She is a Miss Jay, and can do tho echo song to the life. f A Texas paper, in speaking of one of our Presidential aspirants, says that as he has got no moroty he had better go for the Vice Presidency. / Tho Cincinnati Commercial announces tha/ueath, by cholera, at Covington, Ky., on tho 17 th infant, of Col# Morgan, President of the Covington ?od Lexington railroad Company. La'ge portions of rock at Niagan/falls had fallen into the river, producing considei/ule commotion in its waters. The falling rock was/mtached from the under wall of '"Point View." Mmy fine specimens of Gypsum and Mica have beep^rought to the surface by this phenomenon, and^c whole army of explorers for Geological specimenp^ay bo seen engaged in the busy pursuit. / Kossuth was? have spoken in New York on Monday night iu/ehalf of his family, which he leaves in ' this counter having no means of his own to provide for their^upport in his absence; and not feeling warranto^ diverting to his personal use the money entrust to him for another purpose, yfhe number of sun strokes that occurred in New /fork and vicinity on the 16th inst was fifteen. The Government of the United States, it is stated, has ordered the Pacific squadron to cruiso neai the I island 01 JUonos. 10 protect ^.luoitcuu oui^uj6 ? , I in the guano trade. Parch half a pint of rice until it is brown?then boil it as rice is usually done. Eat slowly, and it will stop j the most alarming diarrhoea. Lady Johnson, the only daughter of Lord "William Campbell, who was once Provincial Governor of South ' Carolina, died lately in England. A Long Term.?A man named Francis Schidel. at the last term of the St. Louis Criminal Court, was sentenced to one hundred, and four years' imprisonment? five years for an assault with intent to kill, and ninety-nine years for shooting and killing a deputy con. stable. j North Carolina Twins.?Two colored children, connected by the vertebrae, and said to bo quite a i match for the Siamese twins, are about to be exhibited in the Northern cities, commencing at Petersburg, Va. Of 299 interments at New Orleans for the weekending the 17 th inst., 129 wore of deaths by cholera. It is said the Hon. Henry A. "Wiso is about to take the stump in Virginia, in behalf of Pierco and King. The family of Gen. "Worth, it is said have applied to Compress for a pension, to be paid them in consideration j of the public services of Gen. W., who, at his death, was unable to leave them any property. The sum asked, we have heard is $600 a year. The Chinese Junk Keying, which, it will be recollected. was exhibited in New York several years since, j was recently sold at auction in London for ?2900. The Courier des Elals-Unis, after narrating the events : of the Whig Convention, concludes by saying?"Genj eral Scott, according to all probabilities, will have surI passed his competitors only to render more sure the | triumph of the Democrats. The he? o ot Mexico will j be vanquished in the electoral held by one of his more j obscure Lieutenants.'' Census ok New South Wales.?The colony ofXew South Wales, the South Eastern subdivision of Australia, of which Sydney is the chief port and capital, had I a population iu 1831 ol about ou.uuu; oy me ccusus of 1841, 128,726; in 1846, 156,730; aud on the first of March, 1851, 139,951?having thus trebled its popu. lation in 17 years. Love can excuse anything except meanness, but meanness kills love, and cripples even natural affection. The nomination of Gen. Scott has been received in Boston with mingled feelings of dislike and approbation among the Whigs, the friends of Mr. Webster eeing greatly chagrined. In Concord. N. II., the nomination of Gen. Scott has been received with great dissatisfaction among the Webster Whigs. At Portland, also at Bangor, with rejoicing by the Whigs. At Pittsburg with enthusiasm among the Whigs generally. At Cincinnati also with rejoicings. Mr. Clay was very low at the last accounts, although with a cessation of his cough. Washington, June 20.?The House of Representatives passed the Land Bill to day. [This bill proposes to grant public lands to all the ca.jt.ws of the rate of one hundred and fiftv thou sand acres for each Senator and Representative in Congress, and to each of the organized Territ ?nos and the District of Columbia one hundred aP'l fifty thousand acres. The States of Missouri, Alabama, Iowa, Miehi irran, Wisconsin, Louisiana, Mississippi, Florida, 1 Arkansas,^aliforliia, Illinois, and Indiana to ap1 ply their shaKJ" the construction of railroads. r and the remain^'' ?t the Stotirs to <j*ffend their grants for educatuM ' purposes.^^Cll the land granted by .any otbfa* act fHpjftg the present 1 session of Congress to HMy^tate to aid in the construction of any railroari therein to be deducted from the amounte^by tljk .act to said State.] Messrs. Stephens and Toon^s.?The follow ing we extract from the Augusta^ftromvie amJ Sentinel of Friday: \ As considerable anxiety has been Manifested to know the position of Messrs. SteprfRP* and Toombs in relation to the nomination, it aft)rd* ns great gratification to lay before our reaaP1"8 the following telegraphic despatch received yer tcrday: \ Wasiiisoton, June 23,1852. James W. Jones Esq.?Scott is nominated. J We do not believe that he ought to be supported by *110 "Constitutional Union Party" of Georgia, but we will abide by the decision of their Convention, when it assembles. Alex. II. Stephens, IioBT. Toombs. Railroad Accident.?The Marietta (Geo.) Advocate, of the 24th instant, says that the engine of the passenger train on the State Road I..-,.,,,,, tl,? n-i^L- nn Tnpsrlnv* mnminrr ?(M 1III1/1T ...... v..v. v. J 6 by running over a hand car that had been placed upon the track some two or three miles from Atlantic. A fireman, Mr. Benj. Houston, was killed, and one or two others injured, but not very seriously. A very remarkable circumstance occurred with the passenger cars which continu d their course down a grade, as the engine and tender were detached by the collision, and com pletely out of the way. The speed became very rapid and continued so for several raile3, carry- sjjjs ing the alarmed passengers, among whom were J3 ladies and children, with great velocity across . ..-1 the bridge at Whetstone, and the Chattahoochee M bridge. The concussion at the time of the accident was so slight to the passenger cars, -that . " very few of those within knew for a considerable .JS time that anything unusual had occurred. *. Monument to Calhocn.?We feel proud, as a Carolinian, of the movement made by our fellow-citizens of St. John's Colleton, and trust that < the example so worthily set before them, will be jfl followed by the people of every District and Pa- -^1 rish in the State. Why is it that the people 'of our State have so long neglected this pious work to perpetuate the memory of the illustrious dead? -m It cannot be wilful forgetfulness; is it, then, cul? pable neglect ? Surely, our people have not so soon forgotten now that he is dead, one to whom T they were sod ">ted when he was living. They '|a cannot but feel that the proudest monument they . j -Js! can erect to virtue so exalted, and to genius so * unequalled, would be inadequate to com'memorate his illustrious services. There would.be an .X/t untold power and value in such a structure; not . |Sj nf fit a o>ron f on/1 rrlrili rvtia in. _ jM viuy ao <% iiiciiujulv vi buc emu ^iw?ivud tellectual achievements of the man, but. as an incentive to youthful miDds to emulate them. Columbia Banner. . J Music.?Every heart that has not become ad- ;1 aniantinc loves music. Every sound emitted by ; " | the sweet voice, every note drawn from theinstru- * ment by skilful hands, strikes a corresponding chord, which thrills through every fibre of the sjl' human heart and trembles like the soft breeze on the strings of an Eolian harp in every breath Nothing is more humanizing, more touching, more soothing. It transports the soul into world of harmony in which every uiscord that j| agitates life is forgotten, it changes our being and verv nature : vet will it be believed that there are beings, heedless, frivolous beings, who will.. during the most touching performanc&tChat, :'Wk. gossip and laugh whilst the performer, at the- r^ffi solicitation of these very pretenders to musical . I enthusiasm^ is alinost choking with mortification . at their treachery and rudeness. ' We have often experienced sensations of the "'$ most painful nature when present at suchunpardonable vulgarity. It is a misfortune not to love ; Xj music, but it is a crime to desecrate that worship W by a public confession of infidelity. J Are young ladies?for to them these lines are more particularly addressed?are young ladies aware how much their reputation for politeness, J for good breeding, suffers by such revolting conduct ? We should think not, for we are coufident ' JH that their good sense would soon point out to them how greatly they injure themselves and mortify others, and they would, wo are sure, refrain from an act of so bold an aggression, which must. recoil on their own heads. - j Charles Dickens, in a late number of his Ijfl 44 od>hnJt1 U7/vw7o " oftor ?irtnm<irafinnr fllA ftfiri* ~V'- I king facts of the cotton trade, says: ... Jfl 4'Let any great social or physical convulsion*. T j visit the United States, and England would feel "VjH the shock from Land's End to John 0'Groat's. m The lives of nearly two raiHions of country- '^| men are dependent on the crops of America; .\'lm their destiny may be said, without any sort-of x hyperbole, to hang upon a thread. Should any ' IB calamity be fall the laud of cotton, a thousand of our merchant ships would rot idly in dock; > al ten thousand mills must stop their busy looms; j J two thousand mouths would starve for lack of * food to feed them." e xothe sick. 1 For the effectual rooting out from the system of all v JH diseases brought on by indigestion, billiousness and im- - ifl purity of the blood, it is a widely and well known fact that WRIGHTS INDIAN VEGETABLE PILLS ' M aro the great PANA CEA. Throughout the entire South, these Pills have long been held iu the highest v . fl repute, both by private individuals and by the Medical^Sf M faculty of our country. Southern fevers and Southern H diseases generally, yield to their influence at once; and the unfortunate victim to "earthly ills and woes" is raad?? ?-r> tlmnW Hpuvpn that a soverciirn balm has been dt6- H Let each try them for himself and if tho medicine B fails to satisfy, the experiment shall cost him nothing. . 9 Tuos. J. Workman, Agent for Camden, S. C., and sold by Druggists and Merchants throughout the eoun- '' B try. Juno 28?ly. Copied from the Louisville Courier. ! .QTWo have seen tlie young bride blooming, as it ' ] were, as the bird of paradise and the fair flower of hop tJM the pride of her father and the joy of her mother, her ' jj^B cheek flushed witn anticipation, and her eye beaming . with the soft expression of love?the gay dreams of life yjl dancing on her fancy with the rich and variegated tints of tho rainbow promise. We have seen all this changed j II ?ay, the wedding garment for a shroud, and the bridal chamber for tho sepulchcr of the dead ; and all this from neglecting a common cold. Now, before it is too ^^B late, use Dr. Rogers's Liverwort and Tar, whiclf gives . immediate relief, as thousands of our most intelligent families now admit of its most extraordinary cures.? '^Hj The gay, tho beautiful, and the young speak forth its' praise, and will, so long as it makes positive cures, and cheers tho despairing familv fireside. For sale at T. J. Workman's and Z. J. DeHay's ^ ^B Drug Stores, Camden, S. C. See advertisement iu another column. ? ""another scientific wonder./ 'wB important to dyspeptics. Dr. J. a HOUGHTON'S PEPSIN, the true diqkS tive fluid, orGASTRic juice, prepared from RENNET, or the FOURTH STOMACH OF THIS OX, afterdire<S^HM lions of BARON LI KB 10, tho great Physiological Chemist, by J. S. HOUGHTON. M. D., Philadelphia.'*? This is truly a wonderful remedy for INDIGESTIONJjHPB DYSPEPSIA, JAUNDICE, LIVER complaint, mM CONSTIPATION and DEBILITY, curing after \turc's own method, by Nature's own Agent, tho G; Hfl YRIC JUICE. Pamphlets, containing Scientific/ \ ffl fitVi100 'ts va'uo> furnished by agents gratis. Se</ JSt tipSamong tho medical advertisements. j . flH mVrIED?On 2-tth inst., by Rev. / Bronsi*fc ^r* T. V. Walsh, of Catudon, to ft j Ellen lollt10' Sumter District. JqI Estate IPle of Personal Property, wju T"*v rw?r ;<J'?n of John It. Joy, Esq., Ordinary for 1?| JLS *Kerehawl District, W'H bo sold at Vendue oa |H| Thiirsdnv thol3th of Jul3" next, at tho lato residenco H of JaS'R iK?iD' in Camrlon. th0 PKKPN-flNAT. 'W PROPERTY 821 deceased, consisting of two old fifl u- Uone a nurse and tho other a cook,) one S Calf, a Book Case and Books, two ? Guns,anumbef0' Bod.8faU\BeddiDg' Houschold ofV M r???0 vii^vJP11 iurnituro Ac. JM TenliH?T ?1 rolIars an(i undcr cashi over that sum H .. J 1st of January next?noto with approa credit til tho^-from day of sale. ved security, y ?> JOH^QSSER, ExoY. Juno 29^^ - ? ta A J