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THE ORANGEBtraG NEWS SATURDAY, JUIL 24, 1S09. f77J.D. C. ANDREWS, Editor. MALCOLM I. BROWNING, Atsoeiat J. FELDER MEYERS, Associate. ChiBdse Immigration. For Bev?m1 weeks past we have been publishing in our columns extracts from e changes upon the subject of Chinese immigration. These have all had a ten dency to dsmpon the enthusiasm which exist in the minds of the Southern pub tie upon the subject. Now this ardor for the introduction of this oxotio labor has been produced by the impartial and imperfect view of the matter, which has been afforded to onr people. This one sided view bas been presented by tho representations of capitalists interested in the introduction of this labor; and it has been fostered and extended by capi talists and large land holders of the South, who oan sco a prospect of wealth in the scheme, and who would ignore and disregard the future bearings of the question. We clip die following from the York ville Euq nirer, which suggests a new train of thought in connection with the subject: Chinese Immigration.?The quee ?sos of Chinese immigration to the South is receiving a good deal of attention from the Southorn press,and in some lo calities, from the people too. Many arc in favor of the movement, one citizen of this State, Hon. John Townsend, being now negotiating for a number of Chinese laborers to work on his planta tion, on Edisto Island. There is little doubt that the experiment will be tried, oh a small scale at least, in several States. Still we are somehow unable to favor the project. At present, it is true, the only aspect in which the Chinese are re garded is that of laborers. But if they come in here in any considerable num bers, there are many other relations whioh tbey must bear to our people. Many persons, in their anxiety to pro cure labor for the present unproductive fields, overlook or disregard the future bearings of this question. Now, of all people in the world, Southerners ought to be most careful about bringing into their midst an inferior raco. We aro BOW suffering the results of a similar ex periment, one which at first was forced upon these States. Why then should we voluntarily repeat our bitter expe rience ? TheChiuese aro highly recommended as laborers, but only in this capacity. They are aadly deficient in all thoso higher qualities which make good citizens. Even if we could be sure they never would be cit?ceus, their influence on the community would be degradiug. But this assurance we cannot havo, after the axperienee of tho lust five years. As eoon as they become numerous enough to be useful to designing politicians at the polls, some "moral idea" will be started for the relief of the "poor, op pressed Chinamen," and in less than no time they will be "shouting the battle cry of freedom" all around us. Now re construction and now military law will necessarily follow. Let those who aro willing to risk the chances ef such a result bring in tbeir "laborers" from China, Kamsohatka or the Focj.ce Islands, if they will. We think the South needs white men to build up that prosperity which is so earnestly desirod. Nor is there any eurer plan to repel white immigrants ?tifean the importation of mongrels. The result o'? the war has been to de grade the tone of Southern sentiment, and. ntea. wiiO wui? public- spirited' ?Uu good citizens, now bankrupt in fortune, and shorn of the influence which it con fers upon its possessor, have become re gardless of those higher and ulterior issues for the good of the public. A present advantage blinds them to future . aril and injury. Completely astounded and panic-strick en by tbeir altered condition, Southern leaders, alas I in too many instances, have either retired disgusted and disput ing from the arena of public life, or else desperate and rock lew, they, by ex sjayfe and advice would madly attempt to restore the past, or look only to the pyeecnt hour and present gain?utterly regardless of the future ruin to the tfttfeV This schema fpr the intsoduetiou of the Chinese laborer is an illustration of the course pursued and rocommended by the latter, of. these classes. The Southern aristocrat; sees in, the idea a, hope, fort- the fleitpration of the gangs of slaves, driven by the Utah, working in oheerle**, hopeless, brutal labor, tor the gratification of his bloated pride and luxury. They even say to themselves, "Bring these people, work them like galley slaves, recover our lost wealth, and when they begin to cry for emancipation and liberty we will leave the (5 od-forsaken country." Leave it to whom 7 To the monjrrol, hybrid race, produced by the horrid miscegenation which can be fore seen and shuddered at 1 To the Chinese, savage,brutal, never-to-be-civilized?and to the negro and to the poor white man who cannot prooure a gang of these gal leys, and who cannot compete with them in endurance of brutal toil I A few capitalists will aruani fortunes extorted from their pristine labor and then leave the country a perfect South Sea Island, an Australia, inhabited by the negro, the Coolie, the galley slave, the crushed Caucasian and tho hybrid produced by the miscegenation of all these 1 This will be the result, suie, swift, in evitable of the introduction of this peo ple 1 But without looking so far into the fu ture for the fleect of this scheme, its im mediate consequences will bo as delete rious and pernicious. As laborers, we do?bt not that they will be tho most enduring and the cheap est ever brought horo. But the imme diate effect of tho introduction of this labor, what will it bo ? The degradation and depreciation of labor and its price ! Such was .the consequence, of the old slave labor system, and the existence of this actuating cause, cheoked aud barred the emigration of tho honest European, who brought with his muscle, tho skill and art acquired in his foreign appren ticeship?the law-abiding and civilized trails of character, which made the good citizen and the honest man. All this result is enhanced and aggra vated by tho installation of the Chinese laborer. Tho white man could not work for what the slave did; the Coolie can work for less. The white man felt a scuse of degradation in working with tho negro; far mord'wfll he be* degraded by auy association with tho Chinese coolie. They are admitted, even by the representations of the capitalists inter ested in their exportation, to be utterly unamenable to law. A letter from Cali fornia, some time ago, says they will out a man's throat for twenty-five cents. The women are spoken of as peculiarly depravod and licen tious, vices, deformi ties, diseases, undreamed of heretofore will be the concomitants of these?the foulest courtezans upon the face of the earth. They appear to be like the In dians, impossible to be civilized, going, or rather driven along the routine of. labor like beasts. Intoxicated aud in cited by the evil-designed or by their appetites or passions, who can estimato the amount of misohief they could pro duce ? For one moment contemplate the de- j moralising influence of the very presence of these people, these women?look for one moment at the effect of contamina tion with these creatures, and tho pic ture, is complete. Suoh will he the true result of the Chinese hum ignition ! G?ood Lord deliver us! No! the South needs white men to re build her waste places. The honest German, who will, settle aud become an honest and intelligent eitizeu. "Aye f but this is the very reason we do not wish him to come hero," grouls the old regime of ?laveocracy, "he as pires to equality with us." Tnis is tho olass who agitate and press this question! He is, the honest man is, the equal of the best of the earth, he will and does become tho citizen, and not the galley slave, or tho carrieature of a citizen, when revolution makes him free. He wants wages for his labor, that he may live like a human being?but he brings his high qualities of humanity and in telligence, he becomes the muscle, the bono and sinew of the country ! The distribution of wealth by com pensation for labor; the extinction of privilege; a free man's country?these are the principles to actuate the true and. good: citiztu. All of those ory. ouU against, the tjciivQie of. Chinese immigration up ay evil and a wrong ! Education. This is n subject, whose frequent pre sentation needs no apology. Its inesti mable value to the individual and to the community ia too well known and ad mitted to need rehearsal. The oft-quoted lines : ??Where ignorance is bliss 'Tis folly to be wise, do certainly convoy a truth; they as certainly recognize a fact, that "igno rance is sometimes bliss." It is to destroy this bliss of ignorance or rather to analyze it that Educatiou finds as its first and most difficult task. Where is ignorance bliss ? Analyze the feeling of sullen content and dearth of every aspiration to realize and per form onr part in life?and it is a wipno mor to call it bliss. Could tho fooling novor be disturbed, its torpid stagnation might be mistaken for blissful rest; but to every individual thero conies a time when this fooling is shocked, violently disturbed, and realizing and analyzing tho torpor into into which he had sunk, every element of bliss disappears rapidly out of sight. Accomplish this task,analyze the sup posed bliss and reveal tho degradation and misery of ignorance, and Education finds herself appreciated and she becomes a necessity. Her blessings soon become diffused and the individual and the community exulting in tho new life and new born joys?realize even more fully the misery of ignorance. A grace, ? charm, n joy is thrown around tho routine of life's pathway, whose ahsenco is misery und degradation. No ignorance is not bliss ! 'Tis the absence, of all that constitutes the emo tion ; it is a state of incapacity for its enjoyment. But wc sec sigus that tell plainly every day that our people are waking up to the importance, the value, tho happiness of education. We sug gested some time since in our columns a practical plan by which education could bo made convenient and cheap enough for all. Wc would again to-day allude to the subject, in the hope that the de lusion of the bliss of ignorance might be entirely dissipated. Let this be accomplished and it will be eutirely unnecessary and superfluous for us to suggest plans by which cduea tion may bo brought down to the con venience and means of the people. , It will become a necessity, a sine qua now. Its cause will bo dignified, the school houses, that nru silent and becoming ruins, will be revisited, rebuilt, and resound again with the happy voice of childhood, conning those tasks that arc to fit them for life's duties and to mako them happy, the occupation of the teacher will become dignified, enobled and lucrative. Let every township in tho County take tho matter into seriouH consideration aud reduce the abstract appreciation of this all-important subject to a practical and actual operation. Lot the neighborhoods orguuizc, schools, and advertise fee fccacliers. Let the ooming fall bo the initiation of a new era in tho cause of education, which shall bo for tho permanent benefit and happiness of your uotntuunity. [From the Florida Union.] The Virginia electioD has taken place; a Republican- G-overnor and legislature have been chosen and a constitution has been adopted which will briug the state once more into its full constitutional relations to the union. The canvas was very auimnted aud the struggle lay between rho extreme wing of the Republican party, which still advocated proscription and disfran chisoment, and that portion of the Re publican party which believed that tho day of proscription and the necessity for disfranchiscment had passed. Tho luttor party drew to its support tho whole strength of the Conservative whites and elected its ticket by an overwhelming majority. The lesson of this election is plain ; its verdict is decisive against any further proscription on account of the past and fixes the principle, wisely adopted by the Republican party of Florida at the outset, of universal amnesty and impar tial suffrage Tjhe South.Carolina Republican spoak iug of, this election says : Iq the recen? sla^c faction in Vir ginia the conservative Republicans, so tcrmcd, have olectod their candidates by - - , a majority of nearly fifty thousand. Wo are well satisfied with the result. The leaders of the Wells party have all along acted in a selfish, and arbitrary manner and are personally obnoxious to many sincere Republicans. Gilbert 0. Walker, the Governor elect, is S Republican. Tho platform ou which be is elected is oho of universal suffrage and equal rights. On the same ticket with him colored men are elected to both branches of the Gcnoral Assembly. President Grant gave his powerful influence to the Walker j ticket, believing that the adherents of Wells would not be wise or safe rulers of Virginia. The victory is emphatically republi can. True, democrats voted for Walker. But when democrats nro brought to stand on the republican platform, go to the polls with colored men, aud vote for colored men as Gen. Robert K. Lee did on Tuesday last, it is one of the gr?ndest Republican triumphs of the age. Tho whole people of Virginia voted the re publican ticket. When South Carolina democracy lifts itself out of the depths of Btubboru ignorance and prejudice up on the conservative* republican platform of Virginia, it may cling to the name of democracy, or culHtaclf what it pleases ; we shall not mourn at any triumphs it may wiu. In this result we sec great promise of better things. It .is the complctcst ac knowledgment of the equal political rights of ull men ever yet given on this contiueut. We doubt uot that in every Southern state except, perhaps South Curoliuu and Georgia, the democracy will accept the full republican theory. [communicated.] Columbia, July 20, 1867. Friend Andrews.?What in the world are you about in Orangeburg ? This town is all excitement over the or ganization of a "Sawyer Club" in your County. 1 was under the impression that sound Republicanism was tho order of the day in your section of the State I trust that the. News has not gone over to the sore-head*. Let us hear all about it, and who the discontents are. It will never do to lot a County as Radical as Orangeburg proved herscii to he in tho tight last Fall fall into the hands of the Conservatives. All that is necessary for success is per fect organization and sharp work. Don't let failure result from default. Hoping that this report will prove a hoax. I am yours truly, . C ARl'KT-B AG G Kit." " A hoax ! a tiouT! TRe* Republican Party of Orangeburg County nevor was stronger than it is to-day. If there is any ''Sawyer Club," or third party about here we havn't seen it. But we believe there are a few ? sore-head-." who would like to run things to their own notion, i. e. put money in their pockets. As for the Nk.ws, going over to these fellows, net while we have any control over its columns. The aims and objects of the Oranqeuuro News, are now just what they were ou the 2d day of January last. Republican, iu every sense. Wo said iheu we intended to support the Government of the St.itc? and every true and honest move of tho great Republican party of this country ? with the admission of a slight hitch hero and. there we have scon no sufficient cause to falter iu our work. [FOB TUR OBAMaSBOBO- KKW*.] ??anobburo, S. C, July 22. 1*60. Mr. Editor :?You will much oblige the undersigned by giving this a place in your columns. 1 havo just learned'with regret, that certain interested parties have lunde the charges against me that I am in the in terests of the so-called third party, that I am a member of an organization whoso aims is to support said third party.? Now,. Mr. Editor, 1 wish it understood once, for all, that I belong to uo such organization, and further. I do not be lieve in any third party movement ; that as far as between Democrats and Repub licans, I know no Conservative party, nnd have a distrust towards any person who says he is a Conservative Republi can?I con understand what is meant by Conservative Democrats; viz, n man who is disposed to accept the situation, and although he does not like the gov ernment, still ho will support it. But a Conservative Republican here in the South, sir, is nothing more or less than a wolf iu sheep's clothing. 1 know that certain interested parties havo been poisoning the minds of the colored Republicans against myself and others; they use tho argument that I was opposed to the eloction of Cain us School Commissioner. So I was and have always been opposed to any person who I considered incompetent of holding any position of such vital importance to the people, and when the timo comes I will be the first to give way and let better men, aud men who havo more iu fluoD',e in the Countv, take position* 1 have tho interest of the State at heart, and am uot one of thoso who believe that do man of intelligence or wealth can be good Republicans; on the contrary, I be lieve that wo havo good ond true men in the ranks of the Republican party in this Couuty ; men who aro an honor to the party, men of standing ami influence; aud to these men I believe we should give our offices of honor. Because theu the Democratic party could not say that the Couuty is represented by persons who have no interest identical with thoirs as they do say now, with whut truth, I will leave the future historian to record. .Now, ouce more, Mr. Editor, I wish to define my position. I am a Union I Republican, I am a supporter of the present State Govcrnuiout, I do not now belong to any third party, nor will I I ovor belong to any party which has for its object the overthrow of tho Republi can party in this Stato. In conclusion, Mr. Editor, I believe that said repre sentations wcro made to cover up the tracts of certain parties who intend making a cats paw of a certaiu organiza tion to hoist themselves aud their friends into po.-it inii. F. DeMAHS. Avkecti.no SUICIDE. ? Henderson Hooker, who resided near Yicunn, in Johnson Couuty, Illinois, committed suicide on Friday by hanging himself in an out-bouse near bis dwelling. He had previously informed his wife that he in tended to hang himself, aud she had kept a wateh over his acliou for some length of time ; and when she saw him go into the building where he hung him self, at the time ho committed the deed, she followed him, but he bad fastened tho door, aud phe was obliged to effect an entrance by crawling under the floor. I5y that time ho had suspended himself from a beam with a rope around his neck. She raised him up, aud held him until her strength became exhausted, when she was compelled, us a fleet! tig as it may seem, to let him drop and go af ter help, and a knife to cut the rtrpc. When she returned he was dead. The Kxocutive Committee of the State Agricultural Society have chosen Geil. .John C. Breckenridgo as the orator for the annual fair in November next. Now we have no particular personal objections to .Mr. Breckenridgo; wc arc willing to see him and hear him. We. however, think that be knows very little about agriculture, and less about the practical needs of South Carolina farmers or the proper practical couhscls for them. Nor do we suppose tbe fifties in an agricul tural point of view was lor a moment considered ; still we doubc not that be js uii admirable man for such an. occasion us the executive committee intend to provide for?a sort of expanded Dem ocratic barbecue.??S'. C. Republican. "A sort of expanded Democratic barbe cue,"?just exactly our opinion.?En. News. dust as the journey across our oouti tinent has been made brief by the com pletion of the Pacific Uailroad, n now enterprise has been undertaken to short en the distance around it. Marshall U. Roberts of New York, is at the head of | a company incorporated by the Vermont Legislature and holding a grant from the Mexican Government, fur the build ing of a railroad across the Isthmus of Tohauntepec. The Atlantic terminus of the proposed railroad is Minatitlan, a river town twenty miles from the (iulf of Mexico, easily accessible to scu going steamers at all tides, from which poiut it will run due south to the Pacific, mak ing that water at the port of Ventosa one hundred aud sixty-two miles distant. The construction of the road does not involve mauy difficult its, the extreme elevation being only 793 feet, and ten substantial truss bridges required. Mr. Roberts has just signed a forfeiture bond of Sillium?) for the constfetion of a carriage road and telegraph line along the route within oightoon months. The railroad itself is to be commenced within two years and finished within three years more. The total amount of capital re quired for the undertaking is ?8,1)00, 000. The ex-President of the Royal Astro nomical Society of England startles his readers by drawing the conclusion, in a new essay, that the length of our day has been certainly increasing; that "the length of the day may be expected ulti mately to become n j/rnr."' However, one's nerves become steady agaiu when the estimate of the increase proves to be an. increase of six seconds in the course of a million of years. As Mr. Pritchard justly remarks, the day will not be length ened into a year "in our time." A Western paper announces the ill ncsfl of its editor, piously adding: "All good paying subscribers arc requested to mention him in their prnycrs. The others need not, as tho prayers of the wicked avail nothing, according to good authority." A farmor nt West Dover, Va., has been feeding out hay thafc has been in his barn for thirty-four years. It came out bricht? und rcaud^ tho oatUc ?io U weii, and it was as good in ovary res pect as hay grown last Summer. The money in the New York Sub Treasury hos recently boon counted by sixty-six expert accountants. The work commenced on the 29th alt., and con tinued eleven days. After the green back!-,, to tbe smount of over 180,000, 000, had been twice counted, end the total had beeu found to tally exactly with tho figures given by Mr. Van Dyck, tbe bags of gold and silver were attacked, the seals broken, the sewing ripped open, and the contents poured out ou the iron IInor. Then fifty small streams of the metal, "though lost to sight to memory dear," flew in every direction from fifty pairs cf hands fVont ono pile to another and back again, us one set of accountants took the other's pluco, und tho merry chinking diversified the orderly confus ion of the ineu's voices. Ncurly $70, 000,000 in gold and $500,000 in silver were thus handled and replaced in bags, sewed up and sealed. The ?3,000,000 in shining gold bars were weighed, coun ted und packed away, and on Saturday morning the tired accountants stood on their feet, stretched their bncks, rubbed their eyes, folded their dusters, and like tho Arabs, noiselessly stole away. It was found that Undo Samuel had in his coffers in New York one hundred and two million* seven hundred and twenty seven thousand, six hundred and forty eight doMurs and twenty-nine cents. Paddle your own Canoe.?Judge S. gave his son a thousand dollars, tcifiug him to go to college and graduate. The boii returned at the end of the Freshman year without a dollar, and with several agly tiou the Judge said to his sou: "Well William, are you going to col lege this year?" "Have no money farther." "But I gave you a thousand dcilars lo graduate on." "It's all gone, father." "Very well, my sou; it was nlr I could give you: you cau't stay here; you must now pay your own way in this world." A new light broke in upon the vision of the astonished young man. lie accom modated himself to the situation; he left home, made bis way to college, graduated at the head of his class, studied law be came Governor of the State of New Yoik entered the Cabinet of the President of| the United States, and made a record for himself that will not soon die. being none other than William 11. Seward.? Hull'* .Journal. Wanted the Man Thrown, In.?A Conadiun Clergyman, not long since, was ended upon hytpn I^JmIi j^irl ho iiajn r | cd how much he asked for ??marrying ..nybody." He replied, ' a dollar and a half," and Biddy departed. A few evenings later on being snm moiied to the door, he was accosted by the same person, with the remark that she had come to be married. "Very well." said the minister; bu' perceiving with astonishment, that she was alone, ho continued. "Whore is the man V An expression of disappointment pass ed over Biddy's features as she ejacula ted : "And don't you find the mail for a dollar and a-hali ?" Russian TYRANNY.?A boy, thirteen years of age, rcceutly received at War saw fifty lashes for having shouted on the public promcundc in the Polish lan guage: "Long live free Poland ! Long live Langiewiox! After being flogged, the poor l.ttlc fellow was sent to a house of refuge in Moscow, where he will he enrolled as a privat-: in the army as soon as he is seventeen years old. Rev. B. G. JONKS will preach, by request, on the subject of H.ipti.-ai. at Bethel, on the Second Sunday in August, and at White House on the Third Sunday in August. Ser vices to commence at 10A o'clock A. At. July 24 * It ( 1 KNMXE EX<UI,1NII T RUTA II AG A TURNIP SUED at JOHN A. HAMILTONS j illy 24 -\ Court House Store. Assignee's Sale. IN BANKRUPTCY?In the matter of .James W. Reed, Bankrupt, Ex purr* P. V. Dibble Assignee. By virtue of nn order of sale tt me direct ed from the Honorable District Court of the United States, for the District of South Carolina, 1 will sell at Public Auction at the residence of James W. Reed, on the Holman Bridge iload, in the Fork of Edisto, on Wednesday, the 4th August, I860, the perishable property of the above named Bankrupt, confcinting of 1 Horse. ft head Cattle. R Sheep, 1 Rock* way, 1 Wagon, 1 new Timber Cart, 1 un finished Timher Cart, 9*\ Wagon and Buggy Hubs, 400 Spoke* and Fellows, lt> Timher Cart Axle*. 1 X Cut Saw. Corn Shelter, Ocara, Bridles, Whitflctrces, Double Barrel Gun, Pistol, Silver Watch, and olhe. articles. Conditions cash, and articles to he removed on- day of sale. P. V. DIBBLE? Assignee July 24 21 TjlOB 8ALB?-220 acres of No, 1 PINK LAND. 6 miles from. I he Village. Will be sold fu..cash or on reasonable time. If net asm! hy li'*. IStfk (Vrfcebei-, will tfc offered in 10 acre lets satortBSOf !, '2. 8 ajrf 4 years time. For particulars iuquirc of B. J. OUVEltos, Proprietor; T \INSO?,lJTIC?N OP COPART. 1/ NERSHIP.?The Firm heretofore ex isting under th? dum of W. T. LiOBT* FOOT k CO., is this day dissolved by mutual consent of both parties. Either of the Old Firm will receipt for all debts doe the Firm. W. T. LIGHTFGOT, WM. WILLCOCK. Orangebarg, 8. C, July 20, 1860. THE UNDERSIGNED RRSPECTFULLY Informs the eitisena of Orangebarg and vicinity, thai ho will carry on a gaaoral re tail Dry Goods, Grocery aad Liquor Huri? ness, at the Stand formerly occupied by Mr. James Cannon, next door to Kellasaara ft Jones, Russell street. I - (i'x. W. T. LIGHT FOOT. July 24 at A BARGAIN.} 7 A TRACT OF LAND CONTAIN iii| ing 800 acres, with good two story ?Iii ouse and Kitchen, and out bouses tbert'on, 14 miles from Orangeburg C. H. 80 acrea under fence, 60 under cultivation (als year. Soil fine, clay close. I Place beallbjw' do. Bounded on tbo North by Ball Branch, a good running stream. This is a remarkable oheap place. Terms accommodating. Apply to ANDREWS ?V CO., July 24?tf ? Landa Agents-- . ? T. MXJLLER^ BROUOHTON 8TKEET, ? i ?,ii p.. fii ORANGE BURG, S. C. RESPECTFULLY" OFFERS TO THE Citizen* of Orangeburg a well selected mock of choice LIQUORS ami WINES, Usv vana and Domestic CIGARS, aad a large a# sorttnent of SMOKING TOBACCO to wBfi LONE STAR. EUCHRE. CA8CAVILLA and UNCLE SAM. My LIQUORS I will warrant to be PURE and CHEAP. The Leading articles of G roc erica con st in? tly on band. Call and judge for yov.-selves. W. T. .HULLER. July 24 mar 7 8av~ I\ 3?. TOALE, Afannfarfurer of Door*, Sash Blinds* Charleston, S. C, nAVI?le THE L.VRGE8T AND MOS* COM^LKtK FACTORY In the Sonlb ern t**:itp.?.- i*W)l lumping always on bands Inrge mnl mom c*tup!etc "lock of DOORS*, SASHES. BLINDS'. Sash Doors. 8tore Doois, Shatters, Moulding*. >'>-?-. >:e., 1 mil enabled) to sell loir und at **?**Afa*!irre#s'' price*; N. Ii.?Strict attention paid-w shipping i*V grind order, jnly 21 spl 24? \f I Sheriff's Sales, Bv virtue nfl xtindry writ* of fl. fa., to ms* f , diriua^i k*wll >"<?" IU* highest I uldctv at Omngehui ^ t'nim Her noe, on the firaf Monday /in Augafll next, lor cush the fol lowing property, vi-/-: One tract t?t luiid containing 81 aeres more or los?, mid allot' I he defendant s right. title and interest in another truer OotMfeiaing! 10O acres more or lcs*. said land* lying bel low the (lid State I'.oad in St. Mat the w? Parisb. (?evied on as tbo property ol Henry Duntzlor at the suit of V. D. V Jamison, Com niissioncr und Receiver. % ALSO One tract of bind containing 282 acres more or lesx. lying hclow the Old Stnte Road n St. Matthews Parish, also life inter**! in 0110 hundre<i iicrcK. Levied on aa the property of Win. W. ,M. Dantsler at tho suit of V. D. V. Jamison, Commissioner and Re ceiver. ALSO One tract containing 27-"? acres more or less, lying below the Old State Road in St. Matthews? Parish. Levied on aa the properly of J. J. Hair at the suit or Mel.lrcd Daatsler, Administratrix. July 10 td ALSO At the Oakland Place in St. Matthews Parish, on first Monday in August next, 1 Horse, 2 Mules, 1 Carriage, 3 Buggiea and 1 Colt. Levied on as the property of A. R. Tabor. The Colt will be sold aft Orangebarg C. II, salcsday. ALSO On Tuesday after salesday next, at the residence of Win. W. M. Daatsler, 1 Mule, 1 Horse, 1 Cow, 1 Wagon, 6 Sows and Pigs, 2 Bee Hives, old Buggy Iron, Household aad Kitchen Furniture, contents of Smoke Hons* and Floor House. Levied on as the property of Wm. W. M. Dantsler at the suit of V. 0. V. Jamison, Commissioner and Receiver. ALSO On Tuesday after salcsday next, at the residence of V. V. L. Inabinct, 2 Uovses-, 1 Wagon, H bead Cattle, 17 Hogs, 7 ?hc?pv & Bee Gum*, Household and Kitchen Furniture. Levied Oil ns the property of V. V. L. Inab4~ net at the suit of Mary A. Fair. AL80 On Tuesday after salesday neat, at th* residence of J. W. Roy 1st on, % Horace,- 4 hend Cattle, 14 head Hogs, lot of Cora and? Fodder. Household and Kitchen Furniture,. Plantation Touls. Levied on as the property of J. W. Boylston at the suit of Henry Liv ingston, Executor. ALSO On Tuesday after salesday next, at Iba? residence or J. .1. Balr, X Cow*and Car***, a. lot of Sheep and Hogs, 40 bushels Corn* more or less, 20 bushels Rico more or less,. nO0 lbs. Fodder more or lew. Household and*. Kitchen Furniture, Plantation Tools, 1 Wa gon and lot of Old Iran. Ac. Levied on aa the properly of J. J. Hair at the suit cf Mel drid Dantsler, Administratrix. July 17 td, ALSO Cow and Calf, 14 head Hogs, aad House bold and Kitchen Furniture. Levied tho properly of J. D. 1 n?hmet, at Um aunt oC V. V. L. [?Ablast. ALSO On siiicdny next. 1 Stallion Pony. Lcvicdl 0? ni the property of W. W . Wise a* the shit Clark & Cofen. AL80> Otisnlcdny next, at* thc-OaWamU Btaetvoff A. R. Tab*?, 1 dark brown Mar*. Levied: on aa the pr*pvrty> of'Abmre.GoMinl the sali. r':'.-"frv JjSaljvS*. SUrlffs Offic?. V HI ?!0??: Oraugehurg C. iL, S. C, V S. O. C July 10, 1860. j