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Cr- ' THE SOURCES OF NAT 1AL WEA LT H' By Rev. Mr Burna Baliknore. What is wealh In what does it consist ? Weolt 's everything that supplies the hum wants, natural or -artificial. ere is, of course, an end to its multi plication. The artificial wants of nan kind have no limits, of course/wealh has no bounds, but the productiveness of nature, and' the capacities of human industry. And what'a're human wants. The first is food ''his can be procured only from the-s6i1. Hence, the first and most universal of human pursuits is agri. culture. The first item, in a nation's wealth is a cultivated land. Before this livery other species of property dwindles into insignificance, and strange as it may seem, the greatest investment in this country, the most costly production of -human industry, is the common fences which divide the fields from the high lands, and seperate them from each other. No man dreams, that, when 'compared to the outlay of these unpretending monuments of monuments of human art, our cities and our towns, with all their - wealth are left far behind, You will scarcely believe *e, when I say that the fences of this country cost more than twenty times the specie is in it. In many of the counties in the Northern States, the fences have cost more than the farms and fences are worth. It is This enormous burden, there can be no doubt. which keeps down the agricultural interest ofthis country, and it is freedom - from it which enabled the North )f Eu rope, with a worse climate, and an in different system of cultivation, to under sell us in the markets of England. There, travellers tell us, fences are al most unknown.-The herds and flocks are under the care of herdsmen and shepherds, and thus an untold.expendi ture is saved, besides the loss of the land which the fences occupy, and the accu% mulation of soil, that, with the most careful management is apt to be thrown by around them by the plough. The farmer contributes to the wealth of a country by his perpetual toil. Ev ery thing beging with him. Every day of the year has its various and its con tinuous operations, all directe', however, o this one point, to bring the greatest - quantity of produce from a given number of acres. Such is the nature of his work, that little can be done to every field mnustbe passed over by the plough.-the rate -of" t'ventj-miles -an hour. The ploughian, therefore, must rise early and work late. His labors too, must be generally confined to the hours when the sun is above, the. horizon. In an raniind inwinier these are few. He ' uiiirik'th harder during that part of heearwhen the days are long. . Every industrious farmer is continually adding todh ibiubstantial and permanent wealth ~*, -:of a itetin Heiscontinually- adding to tIss odctvepower, which is the bestspecies of wealth.-His savings, if any' he maakes, go back into the soil,.to increase its fertilit'y, or they go int'o fix tures, which adtl comfort or diminish the labors of all coming years. The savings of the farmer,-and he cannot make any thing only by the most assiduous' labor, -increase the fund that is most wanting especially in such a country as Ithis ; i. e. agricultural capital. The farmers of this country con do nothing, they say, for the want of money. H-ow are they ever * to get it, but by the improvement of their farms'1 As things have been managed in this country hitherto, there hias been a tendency to deterioration., The radical mistake his been commit ted of supposing that the best investment for the farmer is thme purchase of more land, ~ whereas, in mist instances, the better policy wvould have been, the better cultivation of thamt which he already had. --The plan has be-en to exhmaust the one field and then -turn to another Such a plan carn result in nothing but ruin. Nothing has beetn more neglected in this country than agriculture. The soil of the United States is capable ofsustaining twvo ha~ndred millions of inhabitants bet ter. than if sustains seventeen. Eighty years ago the population of England arnd Wales wvas only six mil lions, and a Mnost miserable living 'did *they get, black bread, barley cakes and oatmeal porridge, were the miain food of 'the ruirals population has more than dou 'bled, and, in ordinary times, fare bet ter th'an half the number did then. Their annual agricultural productions have in, creased more thtan two hundred millions of :dotlars, and yet-the productive powvers of the whole island are scarcely as great as thoselof the single Sateof Illinois. -. -- Butt agriculture, to flourish, must have a marketC for 'its surplus' productions. And whitisamarket?. Does that magic word reside'in any place '1-most peopie seem"sto -thidi' so., A market is every wvhere. It' is podple, riot a place-pee pel not engaged in agriculture,.but em. ployed in something that supplies human wvants.'- And the nearer it is fouind. to the farmer's door the better, the less of his productions are spent in getting them to market. Agriculture can flourisil, then, only where there is-a large. popu lation engaged in manuflhctures and commerce. * The second sonrce ofrnational wealth * is manufacturinj industry. No nation ever became wealthy by raising the raw material, an~d then exchanging it for the - - manufactured- article.' The manufac tl uig people ilwvays hiave~ the adlvantatge. They wvork day and night, summer and * winter,'in fair and stormy wecather. $~AnuagriculturaJ population wvork only in 7 the lay time, when ti earth is free fromnfrosts, and whe e clouds are not dispi'rdening the elves upon the earth. A manufucta ' g population can avail themselv to any extent of the aid of mach ery. The fall of warer in the. t of Lowell is made to do the work fa tmillion of human beings. Every thindthe farmer raises must be brought out of:the earth by main force, by hard work. The farmer's productions are bulky, and are often almost consuned in getting them to market. The manu factured article is usually comparatively light in proportion to its value. The farmer, moreover, is obliged to take the chances of unpropitious seasons, and occasionally a short crop.. But no va riations of the seasons has ever been known to produce a short crop of boots and shoes and drought has never deen so great as to blight the labors of the loom. With these advantages, a manufac turing people will always continue to keep an agricultural people in debt. Towns and cities will spring up among them, and the very fact of a condensed population gives them greaa advantages. An exclusively agricultural people, in the present age ofihe world, will al ways be poor. They want cities and towns, they want a diversity of employ ment... They want the enterprise and activiiy,<which is engendered merely by bringing masses of the people to act on each other by mutual stimulation and excitnement. * Why is the balanc of trade continally in favor fo the North I Be. cause ou labor is not sufficiently diver sified, betause the raw material goes from this very city to the North to be manufactured, and comes back to be worn by our citizens, while we have among us thousands & thousands who might work it up, but who are lying here idle, many of tl-.em supported by public charity ! One of the postulates of national wealth is education universally diffused. It is this alone that can give skill to the hand, and.wisdom in the general con duct of affairs. Without that, the stren gth of the'physical power of a nation is like the sightless Cyclops, working in the dark. Physical strength is generally available in proportion to the intelligence by which it is guided. Most of our readers have heard ofthe Lowell Of fering, a periodical written exclusively by the girls who are engaged every day in carding, spinning and weaving. Mr. Dickens tells us that he carried home to England a number of that work, as one of the most wonderful phenomena of the Western World. I mas told myself, at that place, by one of the superintendents, that the principal writers in that publication were the most profitable operatots in the several estab lishmnents, obtained the, highest wages, ad made the best use of their money. So, after all the sneers cast upon literary ladies, to them blue stockings is ne disqiialification for the most common employments of life. So':it is, all the world over.' The schoohimaster's wag~s, is aninvestment, which yields, in an economical point of view, the highest per centum. Itis to enlightened education that we must look for the extinction of that false sentiment, so adverse to the true pros perity of a nation, the degradation wvhich sometimes attaches to personal toil. No community can ever grow rich, wvhere it is thought to be more respectable to be a genteel loafer, thran to get an honest living by the labor of the hands. No nation can be prosperous and rich without am good government. And what is good government ? I t is one which protects, instead of mnakiing war upou property. It is one which hiallows the marriage between capital and labor two things, swhich God's pi ovidance has joined together, and nothing but human folly will ever put asunder-a union from wvhich proceeds the fair family of industty, wvealth, harmony, and peace. Once divide them, and the whole structure of society is broken up. Remorse of Conscience.-The house of a widow lady was broken inito by night, and she and ther servant girl stab~bed in several places. The girl died, but the mistress recovered. Th'e house was robbed of all the money it contained. An investigation was made, but without success, or any suspicion of the real criminal, who unex pectedly appeared and delivered himself up to justice, declaring that the thought of the mutdered girl absolutely haunted him to such a degree, that life had becomeI a burden to him. lHe stated that ho had thrown oiway the monmey he had taken from the house, or given it to the poor, in the vain hope of banishing from his mind the thoughts of his crime. Finding all his attempts to do so utnavailing, he at last dletermnined to miake the only repara ion in his power-to give himself up to justice. Many instances have been related of similar effects of remorse, even whon slower in its operation. We shall only advert to that of bessus, familiar to every reader of the classics, who having slain his father, escaped detection for twenty tears. One day, being in company with strangers, they happened to find a swal low's nest, andh the birds begant to twitter, when Bessus in a fury, struck the nest down with his spear, and trampled them to death. .8urprised at his conduct, his compainions demnanded an explanation. He repliedl, "Di-l you not hear the corsed swallows how they belied tne, saying that I had killed my father !" They piromptly arrested him, when he made a free con fession and disclosure his guilt. Bu t even when the instinct of self-pre servation triumphs over 'he.auggestinns and claims of conscience, she.nften makes her vengeance felt- It is in vain thatthe rmminal walks unsuspected. among.Lbis fellow-men; in vain iiitxiches, honors or domestic comforts hger around bir in his.'cdreams1he y iisees ghastly figure in ethesao tiiof~ihengh the last groan sings forp J, hias .ears and go where he dgy b egis'shudlde ring iseio'us'n^ - l67omnip resence ofihefin Ildse tem ple he has deniolis1ed. While the faclit with cith'crimitali of the deepest dye es epe eidcorivietio -while in the. ac ideoce and i contempt of common kiey are pro tounced innocent by; e hiohave n doubt of their gh i excites ti alarm of she philaa p it Iodoes no think it necessarylbat" epale a man life to the protectionji*ld have taker the life of another ~ wished tha those who are tles e leedto crim could but look into fbeea fithe acquit ted felon. They woulI'd find no encour agemeut there. Couience. is a judg that cannot' be s aged or perverted h: sensibility-an executioner that cannot b escaped.-Palmeto Bier. Amiable Girl. T iis.a young lad; of pale and pensive conenauce-no pretty, but inte-est'ng She dresses ii which, and wears. aboitAct A gentle men is introduced for the . nt quadrille She bows her head andimoves grace fully to her placeinhnag,: by the way the fragrance of her inseparable boquel A mostlinteresting and 'ediffing conver sation-then takes place h'Vieh' consiI of a drawingroom soliloqgiyby the gen tleman with echos of :smeof his word at appropriate intervals byitielady. T all direct questions she retuirns the shor test possible answers.:Slie has fet proceeds in some degrebfr6n' miuvai honts; but, in reatiegree, fror having nothing to say.. Yet, though sI is icy to you, she thaws-wouderfully, yo hear, amongst her intinies. Them she is highly accomplislfedg' She d-aw beautifully, and sings divinelIy; it is said but cannot utter a note1itFany one i present, she is so nervous She is ad dicted to novels, butlilIj7se of a sen timental order. She marrtesMr. Raw son, alittle Atty., inelarge$ay of busi ness ! and the "amiable girl" become a matter-of-fact woman.M e ' Sudden Discovery:- "Frnny, don you think that Mr. Boled 'liandsom man 1" ; "Oh no-I can't endore&his looks He is homely enough:"-. "Well, he's fortuinate, atiall events of an old aunt has jusrdieiaindleft hir fifty thousand dollars." "Indeed ! is it true 1 M ol, now come to think ofit, ihsre:;tea-certai, noble are about him, and the se a fin eye-that can't be denie WA REOUf 6 riber b have: chiyijd tror lath'hWGifie,Esq .... . the CotioisWarehous in Hatmburg, recently occti'lieil by Di-. J. I Grifln, and formierly by Mesurs. H. L. Jeffer & Co., situated at the foot ditthe Itill, and ini mediately at .the head, or ie main bttsmes street. From it. superior, lo'cation,.and betna surrounded by a stream of water it as comipai atively exempt from the casualty offlire and ei tirely above the reach of hiigh.freshaets. They propose to carry on'exclusavely the wAREHOUs E & GENERSI, FACTORAGoE B USXJV.B 8S,. under the firm of GEIGER & PAtRTLOW. Having engaged an expeiienced and comr pctent assistant, in additio:Uotl their own per sonalatteintion, and pnssessing means to imakt liberal advances on Prodace consigned to thei carc, they hereby render tlieir services to P1ari ters, Merchants and othecrsf itithes torage ani sale of . I Cotton, Flour;-Bacon, - and other Prodl nee, in Receiving and Forward ing Merchandise, and purcbasir goods to or der. Their charges will be teg' iaey the usut rates of the place. JA MES Y. BPrARTLOW. H- amburg, June 3, .1846. ; juni 9 - am 20 Summer CIo , .&c. B L ACK Summer Cloth for Coa ti & Panit White and brownDrill, and other Pat taloon Stifs. h Marseilles, and othear~estings u -, Children's glazed. Leather~elts,-. Travelling Bags or Satchells. 1. 8. ROBERTS. june 16t 21 N~otics to Sh slka es TH E Graniteville Manuf~cturing Compi nay.-.wish to purchatse a MILLION o Shingles, to be delivii and stacked.a Graniteville. For Shingleu18 inches. long inches wide 5-8thick~of primesiufF, well drawn they will give $3 25 per thousaad; for similai Shmngles e inch thick $2 35< Jfmade on th: C~ompanies land, a fair allo wauie will be re ritied for the Tiimber. WM.- GREGG, Pes G. M.Co. april7 3m 12 Notice~ C T HIE Estate of Gilbertjummerall bdin~ Derelict, all those hatgdemnands, are requested to present them,3 dyattested, anl hose indebted to make imtatadit payment ti he subscriber. Smay20JOHN- H Th OF. D. ALL Persons haying derdunds agairist-the estate of Henry Cate' ~e~ re reqnest id to present them legIi at~~, aindthpes tdebted are reqnestedni e ndiate pay nent. THOS; LAKE ~iinisralor. Cupping4a A FINE Cutpping'Cie as'es' ith I. Nipple Glass, AirPond clarifidator Ec., only $11 00. A - juna2. 8.OBERTS. PANAMA & LEGHOQii HATS. I dENTLEM2EN'S Pan'ama and Letrhoru lxHATS, also Boy's aridCildren's Pal netto Hats, for sale b IR 8 ROBER 8. narchr-24 'V itf- 9 BACO1--BACON. ~ JUST. RECEIVED, A NEW lot of very superior Bacoll which will be sold low for CASH. Also-A lot of fine Flour. J. A. WILLIAMS. jnne 9 , itf 20 Note to Carpenters. IVE or six hands wanted soon, ihee four common hands, immediately. J. M. W ITT. Edgefield C. H. S. C. june9 tf 20 Siorn's Creek Beat Comp' JT T ENTIO! s N Election for a Captain to the Horn a Creek Beat Company, will be held a t Saturday the 10th July next, between the honi e of 10 and 3 o'clock,at the usual Parade Grouni Managers.-Lieut. Hughes, Lieut.' Carpei ter, and F. M. Nicholas. By order of Col. G. D. MIat. e jnne 23 3t 22 * State of South Carolina. EDGEFIELI) DISTRICT. JUNE TERM-1847. RDERED, That an Extra Court of Equil t for the District aforesaid, be held on tI a third Monday in July next, (being the 19th dr . ofsaid month,) to continue in seisoin until ti unfinished business now on the Docket, shr be disposed of. June 12, 1847. - - J. JOHNSTON. A true copy from the Minutes of June ter 1847. S. S. TOMKINS, C. E. E. D. june16 5t 21 r' Sand Soap Balls. 2 HESS highly perfumed Balls surpa 'any Flesh .Brnsh, in cleansing the pan s of the skin, and ladies riding, gardening, 0 painting, and gentlemen- shooting. huntin - fishing, &.c., will find the improved Sand Ball pleasingly efficacious, in removing all hart. ness, stain, redness, &c., and render the ski soft and pliable. n They form a fine cream lather, with ti e hardest or sea water. * For sale by SR. S. ROBERTS. " june 16 3t 21 . Pure White Lead. POUNDS pure and No. s 20 0 WHITE LEAD, 2 barrels LINSEED OIL, 2 " Spirits of Turpentine, For sale by R. S. ROBERTS. june16 3t 21 ,s Notice. A LL persons lddebted to the estate of D t Augustus W. Burt, dec'd., are reqieste to make unmediate payment, and those havir demands against said estate, are requested 1 present them for payment, properly attested. . 6 WM. M. BURT, Adm'r. june 16 tf 21 -Earle's Pile Rene4y. Hs 1HI certain safe and efficacious remed . has never been known to litil. The a ficted should try it. For sale at Edgefield ( House, by . R. S. ROBERTS. n june9 . tf 20 e Valuable Lands for Sale. HE Subscriber now offers for sale it f tracj of Land on which.he now reside ying on Log Creek, nine'miles -west of Edg field Court House, containing nine hundre - nd'nine acres,of which there is about five kih dreds acres of woodland. On the premises a large and comfortable Dwelling House, ar all other necessairy out buildings. The plant n' tionlis in good repair. Those wishing to pu 'chase'can call and examnine for themselves. 5' . J. F. BURNS. - -april 7 . 3m 12 -New Trusses for Ruptures s5. - ; IDDEL'S TRUSS AND ABDOMI NAL SUPPORTER. 71H E Subscriber having bought the Pater 1. Right of Riddel's Trusses and Abdom nal Stuppoiters, recomnmend them to the pntl lic, as the most valuable, and perhaps only ir strumnent of the kind that perforii ar enrei almost every case of Rupture. It is adapte to the anatomical structure of thre Pelvis, andi admirabily calculated to relieve these severe er eses of Prolapsus Uteri, or falling of the womat which maethe patient snffer so munch, to tli runiversaldestruction of health. Thme Athdonm nal Smapporter is enmii'ently serviceablei Piles, never failing to cnre themr by remiovia the cause. Persons hiaviing Negroes rupiurced, may hav a cure guaraiiteed, and the termns not iiore tha one third of wihmat the hand would be increaise in value. Where the enre cannot be effecte. Ifrom thi: destruction of the parts by time, thi Truss will enable the wearer to encounter thm mste severe work ofanay kind. Plainters woiil do well to attend to this notice. Price of Truss $5 without gparantce, an $50 or $100, or as may bec agreed on h';r a curt R1. S. ROBERTS. may 26 3t 18 ALEMN WITCHCRAFT OUTDONL. Mr. T. Rowand-D~ear Sir-For fourc five years I have suffenred greatly from Rheci matismi in my head, whlichi during the last-yea became wore and worse. For fonr or fly weeks previous to the 15th inst., I ~iad soffere wvithout. intermission, my general health we .much impaired, my sight mijured, and my henr ,so sensitive, that I could scarcely~ rest it upo the pillow. Two days since, a single applice ',don ofyour "MAGIC LOTION,"'relieved mi trtirely..in two or three intutes. I have up: plied itoccasionally since, arid the sorenessi niarly igone' So grat and sudden was thm change, that I can scarcely icealize that I at the samne man. I have also cuied one of my alhildren, and female friend of~ headache in two or three muir utes. So great is my confidence in the "MAC LCTION" thaut I would riot be wvithmout a bot the for "jifty times its cost." Yours respectfully, .J.ACOB W. SOUDER, No. 350 Market street. Philadelphia. Janunary 17thm,.1846. Prepared and solI Wholesale and Retail, bj J. T. Rowand, 376 Market street., Rt. S. ROBERTS, Agent, Edgefield C. HI. Sonth Carolinia. may 5 3t 15 NOTIC0E. ALL Persons indebted to the Estate o .1.George Pope, deceased, are hereby noi Ifled that it is absolntely necessary to collect al the money due the Estate, arid that those wh<m do not pay will be sued before return day. The Notes are in the hands of N. L. Griflin o: J. WV. Gibbs, Esqrs. T hUS. H. POPE', Executor. "Jan 3 tf 2 1* Dentist's Teeth. A FRESH SUPPLY of Stockton's Mine ral Teeth, chreap, for Cash. .1R. S. ROBERTS. junetf . 19 Leghorn Bonnets. 0NE CASE fine LEGHORN BONNETS at $2 75 each, just reccived and for salh by. R. S. ROBERTS. tnamy9. . . . 3t 17 -I- - moti .4. NEW GOODS. S HE Subscriber is now receiving a splen. IT did Stock ol N E W GOODS at the lrick Store formerly oncenpied by Presley & Brysn, consisting of ill kinds'of DitY GOODS, GROCERIES, HARD WARE, CROCKERY, SHOES, AND HATS, r to which he invites his' friends and the public to call and examine for themselves, beforc pur chasing elsewhere. N. B. Goods very low for Cash. B. C. BRYAN. . April 6th 1847. -tf 12 " * NOTICE. s H E undersigned have formed a co-part . nership under the name of J-HnN LYoN ,s. & Co., for the purpose of carrying on the . Merchant Tailoring Business, and will keep at the same place formerly occn pied by John Lygn. ' A UANDsOMS ASSOnTMENT OF CLOTHS, CASSIMERES, VESTINGS, - and fancy atticles, will always be kept on hand, which will be sold on reasonable terms. JOHN LYON. JOHN L[PSCOMB. January 7, 1847. y . e We also would inform the public, that we are y receiving from New York and Charleston, a e splendid assortment of Goode suitable for Gen II tlemen's wear, consisting in part of Sup; black French CLOTH, Do. blue do. do. 'n Do. brown do. do. Do. black do.' Doe skin CASSIMERES' Do do. faney do. do. Do. fancy check summer COATS,. a large variety, s A splendid assortment of VESTINGS, u A fine lot of white kid Gloves, black do. n Black'satin and fancy Cravats and Scarfs, Suspenders, silk under Shirts and Drawers, Cotton and woolen Drawers, Also, a variety of Goods belonging to the trade n -snch us MILITARY TRIMMINGS, &c., al. of which will be sold and made up, in a style that e will please any that may favor us with their patronage. March 15, 1847. 3m -9 Time subscriber returns his sincere thanks to the citizens of the District, for the liberal man ner in which they have supported him in his business, and hopes by strict attention, that the public may find it to their advantage to con. tinue their patronage. JOHN LYON. New Dry goods! AT ROBERTS' CHEAP CASH STORE. L INEN Cambric Handkerchiefs new style, Fancy Sill Parasols, Corded Skirts; r. Fancy Bonnet Ribbons, d Lace Edgings. g Black Hat Crape, o Striped and plain Swiss Muslin, Shaded Purse Twist, Black Net for Cap3 Black and fancy Prints and Muslins, - Fancy Vestings, White Marseilles Vestngs, y Boy's Glazed Belts, F French Prints and fancy Ginghams, Colored and white cotton Hose, ladies' and children's, Dress Whalebone, assorted, Gauze Cap Ribbons, White Perforated Board, - e 'Together with GROCERIES and DRUGS, a very~ large issornieit, will be sold low for Cash. R, S. ROBERTS. d juna 2 ~ tf 19. d 1NOTICE. - R.ROFF; who held-conditional 'n n a toHterests' the rightof'Ede~eld istric' -t has never gomplied with said condition, thero fore lie hl ds no interest,' and has no right to - sel! or ma e .any contract for said Wheels. , We, the nndersigned are the owners, of said right, and a ight purchased from any other, . unless our ogenmt, will not he good. Mr. 3. T. WEssaER, we authorise, with full ipowver to act as our agent. COTIIRAN & MOORE. March 1, 1847. - tf 6 TO TRlE PUBLIC. S-T HE undersigned would s .respectfully announce to . g Tramvellers and persons vis * * iinig IHamburg. that hehs a taken for a term of years. *the hotel, long known as f ' lHubbard's Armericai sul bhc it i purpose to keep as such a house faorl bim aetiad will omnly promise to all who avrhmwith a call. thaut lie will do all in hisi power to please; amnd where as muclh comfort e Sand quiet may~ be expected as camn be found in t Sany Public House. SA careful amid attentive Ilostler .wvill be kept constantly in tihe Stamble, and Ih orses shall be r attended to in a way that shall give entire satis Incionms.. A liberal patronage is respectfully solicited. WM. KETCHAM. IHamburg, March 8-10 tr - 7 ri -. t ODA Ah S Warrianted to Cure. H EMO RR H OIS, OR PILES, is a disease produced by local irritation, costivenecss, pturga Stive stimulants, numdue determinmationi of blood to the hmemmorrhoiduml vessels by excessive iiding or wvalking. or a congestive state of thm liver, h ,and pecliarity of thme constituion itself. It is usnally considered under three- forms.,i or varieties, as follows-Binmd Piles, WVhite -' Piles, and Bleedimng Piles. This disease is so common, andJ so very well knnuwn, that a description of its symptooms isa mnot dreemed necessary. Tme success that has followed thme misc of thme Emobrocaition ini thme cnre of ml. is disease, hams hecen trimly astonmishmimng. Physicians now ad- S vise their patients to try it, as time only. Pi itinloet Medicine, Imn Piles, ito ets being a positive remedy for thePiesittieerfitilb to enre that iNTOLE. - ABLE ITCH ING, which is so very comimon, ]: and has its location in time same parts as the Piles.i Renal thme following, from the editorial co umns of Alexander's Weekly Messenger- r Foundl at last-A cure for "the Piles.-Physi- a cians and Chemists have long been anixionms to n discoiver a medicineo that womuld cure onme ofthme E imost troublesome diseases, the Piles. Success y has at Inst been time result. Dr. JA CKSON'S al PILE EMBIROCATrION not only stops all di bileeimng, amllamyt pinm amid inflamatiomn, subdues ci that intolerable itching, btut ell'ectually cures, like a charm, and in a very short time, personms whose lives-have beenm rendered umiserable fur years. For sala, by R.. S. ROBERTS, Agent, at Edgefield Court Hotuse,.SoutltCarolina,~ march 10 - if '' L alt _~ ' .;i. 7f ACOUSTIC:OWL L TNE OtILr4URE .Os -5 OR' the.cure of DEAFtN P the discharges .ofratterafrt e Uso, All those'. disngreenble na, il' uzzing of insects, falliughf, nt Ji . team, &c., &c., wlbijk are roaching Deafness, and alsoJa nt with the disease. Manype een d af for ten, fifteen and twen1 , , vere obliged to use ear trumpr i.ig one or two bottles h hrown aside their trumpets, ectly well, . -- :,:' a The application of the Oily4 mt on the contrary anageable ndfp ensation. The recipe foi t~ 4A icen obtained from an' AM -P ion', who has found;. fror'iing'o hat deafness, in nineteen eases vas produced cither..fromjuaIWa1i he nerves of hearing, or a dryness j4 its object, therefore, , was ta'ddEd .hat would create a healthy condi' pitrts. After a long series of exp fforts were at last' crowneidwit lie discoyery of this pripactioi eceived the name of "SCARPlk O POUND ACOUSTIC- OILP D@I' . ined in this country about si wvonderful has been its efiects iILuc a c aning the deaf, that from pure wnoti: itanity, it is now offered to the iIf nay have an opportunity of provng'i w. A long list of certificates' niitigo' a ii iutsuch is the confidenceii'them in high its reputation, that butffeif ye published-. - ' It ii only necessary to add, that this te mi been recomtnended and used b he best phycsicians and surgeons ia{ . tmd in'this country.- : . ' t For sale by I. S. ROBERTS;Agqt ield Courthouse, South Carolina. march 10 tf - Beckwith's Pills H HE Proprietor,.many years searching for a remedy feiof ill r health which the prescripticmof-th "ailed to benefit, to hit npon-the domij~o~ hese Pills, and they proved eiitiei tI n restoring his health. Theica i was freely communicated to ini pylyo md it was not the design'bf tieI hey'should extend beyondrib, >f himself, and that of hisiil~ici li lications for them, however, 'eg ablb sly, and lie was advised by' many oa onal brethren, and other gentlemen, ocbeha. teter and distinction, to prepare. a iantiityo hem and place them in the hands of hecary. Even this seemed iniuffiiien e was urged to send them;by''m~r'e6rajia broughout the countr:. Cilme 'ad o r teen a commmn domestic remedy.L:|e as scarcely a family in which a ilifit was t o ' o be found, and in which it wairnotusid i, degree of freedom from which'a elliiuinf"o :d l'hysician should shrinik. A tion too seemed to exist'among man 'aculty. Hardly a ease w ias ibe vhether acute or chinie, wi ichcalQ vas not given, in som vithout fear or" reflectian n till suffertingTroi its p n ue?i mel.ist witigddult,.(iin'os tie, and iu solne eases :maybe d asential, but it'shlsldintbei'ck ist of-domestierei di uily under itieiudel ' I eta fCathlig itrbh''i * s thysiclans: and;-)the a be -abstn~efirTre large numberiaiibe n~ i o trity, and.thie larg'edensanifrih :lea of obtaining a Pateiit fo'lit nteruained, norknihe'bi ay twas believed that -bf giviig'thent a lazi arm and circblating them throujhilf oib jr~ bousands would .-be -benefitted'b~ jiw who would. otheiw*iitnever her ription and never learn that~a'preparation ht een compounded which rendered tl-iis isiil riminate and pernicious use. of.ldalonielii ecessary. Thdse were some o~ ths".irdiicer* ients wh ichb led the inventorgof; dlie:Pills t consent that they should becornie auiidbject ofi one ae genuine ivithont tih aur9-O JNO. BECKWITHi,~M. D~ For sale by. R. S. ROBERTS, Agent, de~ eld C. H,. South Carolina. -~.j A pril 28 - 6mn~ 'I4 IT H AS PERFECTL Y CUJREDNE. PHILADELPHIA, December l372 To Dr. D. Jayne-- Dear Sir-The astonsh ig and miraculous beneficial effectst ye^ f l able EXPECTORANT had on iglne ,~ ie Rev. M~r. Rushing, mae'o ao ressioni onmy mind, that after consutinjih everal friends, and learning'that yotsd '. egular Practitioner of Medicine, '1callednpot on,and.purchased half a 'doseitioies ani mid you that if I lived to take thein, yofihiz ave a good report from me. ? am alive and well this days!, toha cerciful God, and your Expecturant; i n" come forward cheerfully to fulfil ng p'iiose For twenty long years had.I b'een iua-cod uffecrer from the effects-of a itr/:e ain in the breast, and difficulty .of bredihiijg, me last five of which, chills and 'feers~ejil tring and full, added tom:-is porn away to a mere skeleton ; wi th du at st difficulty only could I get up-~and ouF' airs; my appetite was gone, and-iny srii d2~ ad so far failed me, that my friends -ewe mnded I could not survive many usez l~ obt.sed relief'- Indeed,sir, my situatuo~~~ perfectly miserable to myself,-inudiP ~esigt my amily,.that I felt willigi~. thnvritsould please the MastetjJ ae home. Untt I lieqrd of your addidi~ii elief came. Yes! it proved th'e "B'alio ilead" to my poor afflicted bodymBn i~ f td taken onE normE, I experieie 'aT .~ muion of all my symptoms,- and y 1 found in the continued usre of it-ie iest relief. In short sir, IT HAS MADEA ERFECT CURE OF ME-andicantrilj ty, I have no desire to be better. .. Rt. S. ROBERTS is Dr. D. Jayne's~u genit at Edgefield C. H. june 16 3 TATE OF SOUTH CARQU[I ElDGEFIELJD BISTRICT4 IN THlE COURT OP ORDINARY~ thin W. Hlolly & wife, and -. others, Applicants, 8 ald vs. aniel D. Holly & wife, and I - ii111. others, Defendants. J [T appearing to my satisfaction, thit1 . H lyadwife Mary, distribu'tseieI al estate of George Latesey, dee'dWeia' ithout the limits of this State,itithie' -dered, tat thiey do appear in 'm ogica.~T dgefield Court House, -on or -be orethp onday int August next, and ihsode I y, why the said lands should not-b sdi o vided, our their conisent to thei~tmi~.i itered of record. - JOHN HILL, .E~eD D ales NORTHIERN HOMI!SN S For sale by jun16~ ,-* R S ROBESIT june16- - -- S